TIIW 1IBN1) nULMWIW, BKNI), OKK., WHDNEBDAY, JANUAHV 27, ItJIfJ. PAOR If. a- 4' -a BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIHKCTOKV. HOIIICIIT II. OOULD I Civil It 11(111(1 Oregon KiiujtuCcr HOIIHIIT W. HAWVHU NOVA It Y PUIILIU llullotln OIllco. Uond, Oregon J. II. Hull A. W. Mine CIIOOIC COUNTV AIIHTltACT COMPANY (Incorporated) Rucoossora to TIiu J. It Ilnnor Abstract Co., I'rlnovUtn. Oro. Abstracts IriHiirancn W. W. FAULKNHIt, I). M. 1). DUNTIHT OIllco Ovor Pentoffleo llond, ... OroRon WILLAItD II. WIItTZ L A W Y It I'rlnuvlllo, Oregon. 0. H. 1IUN80M Attorney At L n w llonson Ilulldlni;, Vnll Mreot llond, Oregon. VUItNON A. KOItlHCa Ii A w y i: It First Nntlonnl Honk Ilulldlng llond, t-l i-i OroKon OHO It OB 8. YOUNO Civil nnd Irrigation Knulnccr. Itoom C First National Hunk IhilldltiK Hoprctontntlon hoforo tho Des ert Land Hoard and Blato HnKlneor ItOIIIlUT CKCIL WYOANT Attorney nt Imw Irrigation Masonic Wntnr Jtlghta IlnlldlriK Desert I.imd Hnlein. HnclnrerliiK Law Oregon J L Uooflnp; of nil kind. Hopnlrlnp; promptly donu. J. A. MacCLOSKEY TINNINO AND Furnace Contractor Guttering, Spouting, Cornices nnd Skyllghta. . K8TIMATH8 CIIKKHPULLY FUlt.MHIIKI) Jobbing Promptly Attended To J. J. RYAN Plumbing and Heating I m t&ZlJi TO THE RESCUE (WMMnnHM WHO DOES uou LAIND ? Mm DEr rjnMMHiuyMi "We will at your llntn, but you rami not Mlt much tlmi vattlng our rou band at work, LOW PRICES, BETTER SBRVICB Bend Steam Laundry. AND 1)UY OLKANING Put Your Duda In Our Suds" O'DONNELL II. IUloAHMOND IjAU'VKH Orojion Htroot, llond, Oregon II. 0. MLL18 Attoniey-iit-I,mv United Htnte Coiiiiiilmtloner Klrat Nntlonnl llnnk IIiiIMIiir MUNI), OU1500N DIt. J. II. CONNAUN HKNTIHT Ofllco In Sntlior Iliilldlng. Ilourii It to 12, 1 to 6. Hundnya nnd ovonlriRs by Appointment, - 0, I. NlSWONQKIt, Hmid, Oro. UNIiKHTAKKIt l.lronned Kitibnlmer, Funcnil Director. Phono. Lady Asalstnnt. nit. it. o htowicll Nipriiinllile riiyMrlim Offle ovnr Miller l.umle- Ci. Wnll Htroot Mourn D to 5 Phono Itod 01 J. I!. Iingebretson Plumbing nnd Heating (lend, Oregon A. M. Crawford Jumoi W. Crawford CRAWFORD & CRAWFORD LAWYERS 13 Yoara Attorney Oonoral Water Rights Irrigated Lands Probata Iluslness Corporations Hankruptcy Will apponr before all Stato De partment 054-G Northwestern Hank Hldg. POHTLAND. OIIKOON Fraternal Societies I. O. O. V. Ilrnd latino No. !JH. . lingular mooting ovory Mon day nlRht at 8 o'clock In Bath er's Hall. VliltliiR brother cordially wolcomo. 1.. II. OI.K8H. N. 0. OKO. P. QOVK, Boorotary. ItOYAIi NKIOIIHOim OK AMKItlCA. Ilfliinvr C'flniii No. (toil 1 . , ltogiilnr meetings pecond nnd fourth Tuwilsrit. Hather'a Hall. MUH. J. II CONNAUN. Oracle. MHH. A. OUCJTT Hecordor. VtYlttVY ALTAMONT HOTEL Tho in out ooinfortablo hotol In llond. Commodloun. steam hunted, well furnished rootni wltn runnloK water. Oood, homo cooked inoala sorvod In dining room thrco tltnca every day. ? MIm A. I). SpaldlnK, Proprietor i HUM), OIIKOON vvvvvvvv --- For Winter WEAR got a pair of WOULD'S WOItK SHOES WR alio liavo tho agoncy for NAP-A-TAN Qhota for won and boys. R. H. LOVEN Tho Shoo Itcpalr Man Dond Street llond, Oro. DRAYINQ Bend Hauling Co. It. N. PAMIUUTON Wood for Sale Onico avHIi It. P. Mlntor OMlco Phono lilack 0(1 llcaldouco lilack 4iiii BROTHERS PAYROLL OF CIVILIZATION MET ER WANTS NO "DEADHEADS" ON LIST OF EMPLOYES. A CALL UPON THE LAW MAKEflB TO PnEVENT U8ELE0S TAX UPON AQRICULTUnB. t By Peter Radford lecturer National Ionnr' Union Tho fnrmor la tho paymaster of Induatry and aa biioIi ho muat meet tho natlon'a payroll. When Induatry pay Ita bill It tnuit mako a alRhl draft upon agrlculturo for tho amount, which the farmer la compellod to honor without proteaL Thla chook drawn upon anrlculture may traral to nnd fro oeor tho highway of com diurco; may build cltlea; girdle tho Rlobo with ban da of attel; may learoh hidden treasurea in tho earth or travorao tho eklea, but In the oml It will mat upon tho soil. No dollar will remain auapouded In midair; It la na certain to took tho earth aurfaco aa an applo that fall from n treo. When a farmer buys n plow ho paya tho man who mined tho metal, tho woodman who foiled tho tree, tho manufacturer who oaicmbled tho raw material and ahaped It Into an ar tlclo of uaoftilncse. tho railroad that tranaported It and tho dealer who aold him tho cooda. Ho paya tho wagea of labor and capital employed In tho tramactlon as well aa pays for tbo tools, machinery, buildings, ota, used In tho construction of tho commodity and tho same applies to all articles of uso and diet of bltn solf and thoia enticed In tbo sub sidiary llnea of Industry. Thero la no payroll In civilization that doea not rest upon tbo back of tho farmer. Ho must pay tho bills all of them. Tho total valuo of tbo nation's annual agricultural products Is around $13,000,000,000, and It Is safe to esti mate that (5 cents on ovory dollar Rooa to mcotlnR tho expenses of sub sidiary Industries. Tho farmer does not work moro than thirty mlnutca par day for himself; tho remaining thirteen hours of tho day's toll he devotes to meeting tho payroll of the hired hands of agriculture such at tho manufacturer, railroad, common clal and othor sorvanta. The Farmer's Payroll and How He Meeta It Tho annual payroll of agriculture approximates 112,000,000.000. A por tion of tho amount Is shifted to for eign countries In exports, but tho total payroll of Industries working for tho former divide substantially aa follows: Itallroada. IUG2.000.000; manufacturers, $t ,168.000,000; mining, 665.000.OOD; banks, $200,000,000; mercantile $300.000.000, and a heavy miscellaneous payroll constltutca the remainder. It takea tho corn crop, tho most valuabto In agriculture which sold last year for $1,002,000,000, to pay off the employes of tho railroads; tho money derived from our annual ealca of livestock ot approximately $2,000. O0O.0CO. tho yearly cotton crop, valued nt $920,000,000; tho whoat crop, which la worth $010,000,000. and tho oat crop, that Is worth $410,000,000, an required to meet tho annual pay roll of tho manufacturers. Tho monoy derived from tho remaining ataplo crops la used In meeting tho payroll ot tho bankers, merchants, etc After these obligations are paid, tho farmor has only a few bunches of vegotablea, somo fruit and poultry which he can sell and call tho pro ceoda his .own. When tho farmer paya off his help ho has ver7 little left and to meet theao tremendous payrolls ho haa boon forced to mortfago homes, work women In tbo flold and Increase tho hours ot his labor. Wo are, there fore, compelled to call upon all In dustries Cependont upon tho farmora for subsistence to retrench In their expendtturca and to cut oS all un necessary expenses. Thla course la absolutely necessary In order to avoid a reduction In wages, and wo want. If possible to retain the preaent wago aoalo paid railroad and all other In dustrial employes, Wo will dovoto thla artlclo to a dlscusston ot unnecessary expenses 'and whethor roqulrod by law or per inlttod by tho managements of the concerns, la wholly Immaterial. We want all waato labor nnd extrava gance, ot whatever character, cut out. Wo will mention tho full crow bill as H ntustrtSng the charactor of unneces sary oxpenses to which wo rofor. Union Opposes "Full Crew" Olll. Tho Texas Parmora' Union regis tered its opposition to thla charactor of legislation at tho lac! annual meet ing held In Port Worth, Tox., August 4, 1014, by resolution, which wo quoto, aa follows: "Tho matter of prime Importnnco to tho farmora of this stato Is nn ndo quato nnd efficient marketing system; nnd wo recognize that euch a systom Is Impossible without wdoquato rail road facilities, cmbraolng tho grdatest amount of norvlco at tho least pos sible cost. Wo further recognize that tho farmers nnd producers In the end pay approximately OB per cent of tho exponses or operating tho railroads, nnd It Is therefore to the Interest of tho producers that tho oxponoos of the common carriers bo aa 'small as la posMblo, consistent with good sen vlco and safety. We, therefore, call upon our lawmakers, courts and Juries to bear tho foregoing facts In mind when dealing with tho common oarrlers of this state, and we do espe cially reaffirm tho declarations of tho last annual oonvontlon of our Rtato Union, opposing tho pasaego of the aooullod 'full-crevr' bill before the thirty-third legislature or Texas." The farmers of Missouri In tho laat election, by an overwhelming' ma jority, swept this law off the statute book of that state, and It should oome off of all utatute books where It appears and no legislature of this nation should pass swell a law or similar legislation which requires un neoeesary expenditures. Tho tamo rulo applloa to nil regu latory measures which Increase the exponses of Industry without Riving corresponding benofita to tho public. Thero Is ofttlraes a body of mon as sembled at legislatures and they havo a right to bo thero who, In their xcat for rendering their follow associates a service sornetlmc4 favor aa Increaso in tho expenses of In dustry without duo regard for tho men who bow' their backa to tho summer's sun to meet the payroll, but these committees, whilo making a record for themselves, rub the akin off tbo shoulders of the farmor by urging the leglslaturo to lay another burden upon bis heavy load and under the lash of "be It enacted" goad him on to pull and surge at tho traces of civil ization, no matter how ho may sweat, foam and gall at tbo task. When Icglslaturea "cut a melon" for labor thoy hand the fanner a lemon. Tho farmers of tho United Statoa are not financially ablo to carry "dead heads" on their payrolls. Our own hired hands aro not paid rnlcsa wa havo something for them to do and wo aro not willing to carry tho hired help of dependent Industries unless thero la work for them. Wo must thoroforo Insist upon tho most rlcld economy. Legislative House-Cleaning. Needed. Wbllo tho war la on and there la a lull In business, wo want all legisla tive bodlea to take an Inventory of tho statuto books and wlpo off' all extravagant and uselcsa laws A good house-cleaning Is needed ami econo mies can bo Instituted hero and thero that will patch tbo clothca ot Indigent children, rest tired mothers and lift mortgagee from despondent homes Unncoeesary workmen taken off and useless expenses chopped down all along tho line will add to the pros perity of the farmor and encourage him In his mighty effort to feed and clotho the world. It any of theso Industries have sur plus cm ploy os wo can use them on tho farm. We havo no regular sobcdula of wages, but we pay good farm banda on an average of $1.50 per day ot thirteen hours when they board themselves; work usually runs about nlno months or tho year und tho threo months dead time they can do tho chores tor their board. It they prefer to farm on their own account, there aro mora than 14,000.000,000 acroa of Idle land on tho earth's sur faco awaiting the magic touch of the plow. Tho compensation Is easily ob tainable from Federal Agricultural Department statistics. Tbo total average annual sales ot a farm In the1 continental United States amounta to $516.00; the coat ot operation la $340.00; leaving tho farmor $176 per annum to livo on and cducato his family. Thero la no occasion for tho legis latures making a position for surplus employes of Industry. Let them come "back to the. soil" and share with ua tbo prosperity of tho farm. When honesty la merely a policy It la a poor virtue good Lazy farmers are just aa usoless aa . dead ones and tako up moro room. When tho soul communes with tho spirit ot naturo tho back to tho farm movement prevails. Tboro aro two kinds of farmers. Ono tries to take all tho advice tie hears and tho other won't take any at all Demand for tlio Jttldent. Alort, kocn, clonr bended, healthy men and women era In demand. Mod era bualnosa cannot uso In office, fac tory or on tho road, porsona who aro dull, lifeless, lnort, half sick or tlrod. Keep In trim. Ho In a condition that WartlS nf llln(l Vnlnv nttHmrUn Tablets clonn tho nystem, koop tho siomacn sweot, liver notivo and tho bowels regular. Pattorsan Drug Co. Adv, You will find our bread on oalo nt tho following groceries nt 6 conta per loaf; Shuoy'a, MeCilncy's, McCuIs ton',. American Hnkory, Wall The Wright Is Bend's Leading Hotel WHY? It is a fireproof building -It I thoroughly modem It I comfortable, commodlon, clean itoo.MH fiiom r,o cbnts up Tlio want nt all aro ntlf)Ml well at TIIU WltlOHT HOTHL Automobiles to all Interior Points THE WRIGHT HOTEL CENTRAL OREGON'S KBAS -......-. . PLATK GLASS, AUTOMO- Lcadlng INSURANCE Agency uilb, huhety jionds. REAL ESTATE City and Farm Property AUBREY Lots $150 to $350 HEIGHTS ( TERA1S: $5 Cash and OROKLA) 3 Monthlr JUIliaATKD LANDS A SPECIALTY J A CJ A CTCd Office on Oregon Street . C3 1 C& BEND, :: OREGOX Headquarters for Commercial Men BectriC Lighted Throughout THE BEND HOTEL HUQM O'KVNC, MANAOKR OoodRooms BEND,OREQON Free bus to and from trains The United Warehouse Company Storage and Forwarding Genera! Commission Merchants WE HANDLE OIL, GASOLINE, SUGAR, FLOUR, SALT, HIDES FRESH and SALT MEATS HAMS, BACON AND LARD E United Warehouse Co. A. M. Pringle, Mgr. Bend, Oregon Btroot. Adv. Application fur Ornzinn; Permit, NOTICE Is hereby given that nil applications for permits to grozo cattle, horsca, and sheep within tho DE8CHUTI38 nnd DK8CIIUTK8 DI VISION of tho PAULINA NATIONAL KOIIH8T8 during tho Bonaon of 1010, must bo filed In my office at Hond, Orogon, on or horbro February 10, 1915. Full Information In regard to tho grazing fees to he charged and blank form to lin tnuul In mnklntr applications will bo furnished upon rcquoai. M. It. MCJUIUTT, 46-47-18 c Supervisor. - Special Attention to I Transient Travel T Oood Meals All arrangements made for persons desiring to go south and east of here 4C 1 t : ft UNION MARKET m