.tc tacq OREGON. MARCH 8. 1907. PROFESSIONAL CARDS; POINTS ON SPRAYING from the ravage of these bird. Bat I have said before, we are reposed M. FINDLEY, M. D. Practlc limited to EY E EAR, KOBE and THROAT. Glasses fitted and furnish!. Office hour 8 to 12; 2 to ; aad om ap pointment. Talophonaa 281 and 77. GvAMTS PAM, OaB0 Continued from first page. 1)R. J. C. SMITH PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Phones, Offloe 365; Has. 1181. Residence oor. 7th and D atroeta. Office at Natioaal Vrut Store. GaAiTt Pass, - - Oaauo )R. W. F. KREMER PHYSICIAN AND 8 U KG EON Offlia In Courier Building. Oflii phone 91 1, residence 413. K) Ualed aud glMM fitted. GhantsPas, - - Ojiwioii. g LOUGIIRIDGIi, M. D. Oitv or country call r day. Klxth and H, luff's building. Office Phono 31. GbahTH I'ash - . Oaioow. (Jmruhatitm amd Acuminatum Frt CMrm A (hnfmmrnt Out a Svmilto. CLARA BASHAW, D. O. ANN ETTA HHCKWITH. D. O. OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS 602 D Street GaT Fass, Oaaotn. Graduates of American Bcbool of Oa teopakhv, KirfcsvUle, Mo. this will apply to acaley oranges from ! California as well an local fruit. ! Suoh frolt will be oondemoed aod des troyed and the owner will be the ! loser. All frolt tree and shrobhsry that have not been properly sprayed ; with the aolution prescribed by, the jOrpgou Board of Horticulture and fieed of pent by the flint of April will be cut down and the cost assessed again it the land and collected by the county aa are tales. There will b do exception to this rule and all will bate to Jiay the penalty if they neglect their treed. A lute decision of the Oregon supreme coort (fives the fruit inspector the fullest power and the hw can be as rigorously mforcwl a cim the law for killing Ihthus ith the glanders or cattle with .tubercu losis, or fur the quarantining of per sons with smallpox or other conta gious diseancri. As to how to eradicate 'he pcMH the PHYKICIAN AND MUM , Koa. Phone 714 " 'V' .7. , .i . attended tlgnl sorine-u oy mo wii-gnu i' ticulture, the state hoard having con trol of the enforcement of the pent Ihwm. and not bv borinir the trees and inserting tulphor or any other ma terial. This method of fighting pests by inoculating the trees or roots with some preparation is as old as the I first coming of the pests, aud though ' a hundred means have been tried all have proven failures, lhe erratic charaacter of some of the pests like the Han Jose scale has led persons to Ixdieve that they had fooud a ma terial that inserted in an auger hole in the tree would be taken op by the sap and carried to the bark ti the death of the peats. An instance of how an orchard "ill be free of scale while all the orchards ull about will be reeking with pests .was to be seen ill i ... cXard on the Wheeler farm, two miles north of Grants Pass. The Uulon shipped a quantity of pear from this orchard that were absolutely free from scale while pears on trees less than a half mile distant were worthless from scale. This or chard had not been sprayed for three yean but it was free from scale, while this year it is liable to tie alive with the pests. Warts are equally as er ratic and there are persons who be lieve that to walk around the haru with a cob in your hand will drive the troublesome pests from your fingers yet the only sure way is to spray the wart with an acid solution. While persons of au experimenting turn of mind have bored trees and pat iu sulphur, vitrol and many other chemicals aud driveu nails into the trunks and did all manner if queer tilings yet the only sure method is by spraying. The experts of the Department of Agriculture and of the (State Agricultural Colleges and also hundreds of careful orchanlists have tried all manner of fighting fruit tree pest and every method that had the leust merit ha 1hcii thoroulily tried. Huii inoculating trees proven a suiouas it would have been in general use S'i years ago aud the fully f I.OUO.UOO invented in spray in.irhliies iu the I'liited States would have benu saved to the fruit a total failure. George H. Parker, a nursery agent of this city and for merly an orange grower in Florida, states that he kDew of orange growers of that state tryiDg the boring method 18 years ago to caoibat the orange scale and that it was a failure. The experience of many other persons could be given in proof that the pests oy inocu . .,1 ..in Tnird lpffisla- to destioviog an our ""B tioo and killing 99 birds on account or the sins of one bird. We were anxious to ameod our present law if necessary to give pro tection to fruit growers. We have the highest praise for E. D. Briggs of ii.i.wi n.-hr, was working for the can not be killed oa a tree dj iuw-u- "'"""' . ... orower8 at the chemical. ! iniereBvo ... j Could this method be good friend of i.wuH ... - ii,.(.v, n is a maue a buuiw . ,tD,u , . a . . .... .. L .. ki. a MS I, till UJH UV w ,. !. of It -. -" i "-. Bill ." ass s viz and aimout s, auu , , !. parkins refused to do this. On other small fruits and rose bushes Mr. Perkins account ui inn iot.. . . 1 feited the interests of thu v?ry men he All thene must be sprayed to conform to the law. The scale is alo on wil-, lows, populars and some other forest trees, but it is the experience in, other sections that wheu the ecale is killed on the fruit trees that it soon, dies out in the forest, the fruit, trees being its nutroal breeding place. ! CHAKLES MKSEKVE. ! Fruit Inspector for Josephiun County. oregonaudub6nsociety Continued from first page was supposed to represent. WILLIAM L. FINLEY, President Oregon Audubon Society. EDWARD II. WHITE, DOCTOR OF DENTAL MEDICINE Office Hours 8 to 12; 1 to 6 Office over First National Hank Grants Pass, Oiuoom u B. HALL UNDERTAKER, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND LICENSED EMBALHIR. . orth 01b at., near Court Flow. Oflloe Phone 761, Ken. Phoae 717. timAMTa Pass, Oaaeo. JJ, D. NORTON, ATTORNBT AT LAW, Praetloe Id all State and Federal OoarU. Otlne 1 Opwa Housebuilding. Ukamtb I'Afln, OaMOM t C. HOUGH, ATroRN E Y-AT-LAW, rraetloM In all StsUaud Federal Uoart Offloeover Hair Kiddle Hardware Co. Gsast Pass, Oaaaoa QLIVER S. BROWN, LAWYER. Olflce, upstairs, City Hall. Grant Pas, J. II. AUSTIN, .Orsoon. A'rrollNEY-AT LAW Uuion;ilulldlug Keshy 11. 15. HKNDIUCKS CUV NHKl.l.iillS-AT LAW Civil and criiuinal matters attended to In all the court Keal oslate and liioiiiv. OtNce, rtth street, opx.sit I'ustofflee. WILLIAM P WRIGHT, I!. H. 11".1M'1Y Sl'llVKYOK M1MNU KNUINKKU AM) DKAl'Ull 1'mM N till) Ht , mirth of Josphin ll.W. Hatar I'ih, (koon iKire.1 Honie vin ina Charles Costain IZIVXJIZ WihkI Working Shop. Went of flour mill, near K. R. tiack TBruiii. Ht-nill Work, .tsir Work, lUn.l SiUK.t sUuvt Work, Wood I'ullavs Haw FtUiiji siul suiiiiuluft. Kilr1iiK ail kindi I'rtn nulil The l opulsr Berber Shop Got your tinoiial woik done i IK A TOMPKINS' h.iii House Hill 3'o permits the indis criminate killing of all owls, which is a great mistake. Houso Bill permits the so-called "apple bird" to bedistroyed without limit. "Apple bird" is a local application knowu only to the framers of this bill. It may refer to a robin, chickadee, flycatcher, Bparrow, throBh. grosbeak, or any other bird that lives about an apple tree. Many of these species are of the highest economic value -why permit their destruction? The work of the Audubon Society and the efforts of honiane societies i and other organizations are educa-1 tional. They try to encourage child- I ren aud to teach them to protect and love wild birds, and in this connection j there ia a side to the question that has its importance, even though it may be called sentimental. Under our present law, we have a check upon the tendency of the boys to kill useful song birds for sport. Under House Bill 3157, the gate we have relied upon is thrown wide open and the boys may roam the fields and woods with sling shot and gun to shoot all owls, blackbirds, wood peckers, and under the term, "apple birds," tiie tauagers, robins, chinpiug sparrows, flycatcher?, waxwiugB, thrushes, grosbeaks, chickadees, and all others that live about our orchards. We wish it clearly understood that the Audubon Society is not defending birds merely from a seutimental 8t iiiid point. We are defuuding song birds as a class, becauHo the Depart ment of Agriculture at Washintgou has proved beyond doubt that they are of rual economic value to mau. We cannot agree with Mr. Perkins of Medford, who told us that ho con sidered birds more harmful than henefii-ial. Ui told tne further that he could net along better without the mrds thau with them, because they pec ked and destroyed so much of his fruit, lie stated emphatically he had been shoot inn birds that came iuto his orchard aud would continue to do to, even if it was coutrary to our present law. Now, if there are certain birds in lexaliess of boring trees and filling the 1 the Koue Hiver Valley that are do cavity with sulphur and other sub- ing more (Niimife than good in "the stances yet this method has h.HUi iu i fruil growers, we are inxiiiiis to ure vogue year after year In- Jost phinn ' our influence to prgtect orchardixt ,.. Tl . .1......! I'tiMin,. x ill' iiit-tiium iitiini.n tiot'n To District School Clerks. County School Superintendent Lin rulu Savage has recently sent out the followiug circular letter to the clerks of the various school districts: Grants Pass, Ore., Feb. 'il, 1U07. By this mail I am sending you a district library blank, ou which I have put the amount of your library ap portionment for l'.Htfl. You will, with the help of your board and the teacher, select books for your library from lists aent to you, beiug careful in selecting books that yoo do not have now in your library, unless it should be some books of wnich yon want more than one copy. Have your board add to this amount as much more as possible out of the 15 per cent of the state and county ap- portinments and from the spe-ial tax of your district, or from any other available source. These order blanks are to be made out, signed and sent to me at any time not later than August 1, 1U07. I do this at this time because in July our schools are out, our teachers are gone, and we have so very much other work to do that we sometimes neglect these small but important things. Yours very truly, LINCOLN SAVAGE. rowers. With all the proof of tlie uttsr une- BAKTLETT PEARS-Several thous and strictly first-class, one year old Harnett fear Trees 4 to ti rent nigh, Also Walnuts aud ornamental trees, shrubs aud roses. J. B. Pi Iking' ton, nurseryman, Portland, Ore. Have you ever seen a Sunset? A beautifully illustrated monthly magazine of the wide awake West with fascinating short stories, picturesque personal point-of-vicw description of the interesting development of the West, and the romance and his tory o' the wonderland of the eatth. Ask your local newsdealer for current issue or send $1.50 for year's subscription. The book, "Road of a Thousand Wonders." 120 beautiful Western views in four colors will be included free. SUNSET MAGAZINE CI OOI! III'U.IHNO SAN KiASCIVO CAllVORNIA Oil Silh Stuct 'Hire r.akh Union iu ivnniv lloi) n. i:. kr.Ri:v, PIONEER TRUCK and DELIVERY Kurnlturci and Piano Moving CHANTS PASS, OREGON. Palace Barber Shop ;NAIK HATES. Prop. Shaving, Hair Cutting laths, lite. Kvet) thing neat and cloan and a work i lrsl-CI. not ilclur others from trying tins hoy's play. For the informal ion of several otherwise intelligent men 1 w ill i vr I a few instances where boring trees i has proven a failure i.i killing poits. Oioige I 'l' nit bored the trees I KM year iu a line five acre orchard he lutd wei-t ot this city and in the Pall he sold the big crop of apples fur l a' toll to the vinegar f.ictory for they wi le loo scaley to slnp. J. S. 1'itd on liiltiert crei k above town, Uire.1 Home bin pesr trers aud subse- : .rs to the hok,-, ,tl i biiii.l!'. HoriuK fruit treon is no receiit frenk with Josephine coiuitv tree owners, hi k proen by i vi r.d rrchatd. Hurrv Ueed, who lull rented l.cl .trllu Caldwell place four miles et of tills city cut several huge ap ie tiee tint hvl beieini' ( luurh .bad ft . 1 1 tie mvnkch of the scale s.id other pests that they were no louder of value When I'utimn them up for Wood he ( und iu iMi'h au :iik: i h. lo, bn, d so Satisfaction Mo Prliom Ho Oouponu Ho Orookary WHERE MILLIONS GROW IN BUNCHES ...GOLDFIELD... 'The Wonder of tlie -A.g-e There is no question that GOLDFIELD IS THE GREAT EST (JOLD CAMP ON EAR1H. It has been brooght to this distinction by leasers who have cleaned up millions in the pa" t two yea aud will add tens of million! more in the corn- ! ing year. $584,246.11 I the exact amount of a check reseived by HAYES and MOXNETTE for 47 tons of ore, paid to them by the Selhy Smelting and Lead Company, January 21. 11)07 The four who were interested in this leae on the Mohawk made almost a million dollars each from the ore shipped since Aagust 1, Vm. Cbe Goldfield mining $ Ceasing Co. had secured three leaned on some of the most valuable ground in the immediate section of the famouHM OHA K. One lease is on the Northwest end of the VELVET, considered by -wrts to be as valuable a piece of ground as three la in the camp There are, at least, three veins of pay ore, known to crocs this ground, proved by diamond drills and surrounding workings; in fact there are six producers closely adjaoent. Another lease is on the SILVER PICK, adjoining and end litieing the famous January claim of the GOLDFIELD MIN ING CO now one of the properties of the Fir TV MILLION DOLLAR CONSOLIDATION. The January has produced more than a million. This lease alone is soffioient guarantee in itself. The third lea.'e is on the C. O. D. which adjoins the At lanta. Milltown and is on the trend of the MOHAWK, FLORENCE, COMBINATION FRACTION and JUMBO ore zones. Suveral neighboring leases are already in ore. Property foldings The compnay also owns four full claims, 80 acres of ground, adjoining and being the extension of the GOLD FIELD MONTEZUMA where there is a shaft down 200 feet and upon which a complete hoisting plaut U being erected. Surface assays run from 4 to $16 per too. Capitalization The Gold Held Mining and Leasing compauy is capitalized for 1,000,000 shares with 400,000 shares in the treasury. The officers are : President Edward T. Patrick, president of the Goldfield Stock sud Exchange Board. Vice President -Oil. E. A. Braden, New Yor Secretary W. T. Watson, Goldfield. Treasurer J. H. Reniger, Goldfield. Directors J. F. Heddeu, General Manager Tonopah aod Goldfield railroad and J. L. Lindsay cashier State Bank and Irost Company, Goldfield. Consulting Engineer, Forest J. Swears, Goldfield. We have been appointed fiscal agents for the sale of this stock and the first allotment of 100,000 shares will be sold at 15 cents per share. No orders will be accepted beyond this amount at 15 cents. The next allotment will be placed at 20 cents if it is necessary to dispose of farther shares. mork in Progress Work is already under way on one of the lease and will be prokecuted more vigorously as soon as the DoutiDg plauts are installed. The leases, having a year to rnn will be pushed with rapid speed in order to get to the known ore bodies and at. thd same time the property of the company will be worked. Get In Olitb the millionaires The lessing system has made Goldfield and Goldfield has made the leasers. There are hundreds of leases working'the uiosi vaiuaoia properties ana nere is a chance for the small in vestor to profit from this vant storehouse of al that is as yet scarcely touched. Buy this stock now while it is only I5c per Shcro. Worth the money on the holidugs aloue. Worth much more with the valuable leases on the cream of Goldfield'a terri tory. W.C, COX & COMPANY, Inc. Members San Francisco end Tonopah Mining Exchange Suit 2 13-24 1 Monadnork lliiilding KS JlAKHLE AXD GRANITE WORK: J. n. HADDOCK, Proprietor. 'u ..pI!p.a.rM .to ,urnl8h anything in the line of Cemetery work in anv kUi ui .Tiiiiuir? ur viraniie. - N'warlu tlii ..r . ..... .!. i ' . ; -r-iu nie -uaruie Dusineflfl WB.rrAnt.fl mv 84 vie . V vrry ml manner. Marble? S''0tCh Swede or -n"0an Granite or auv kind t' From street, next to Urwn's UuiiBhoo. THE FASHION LIVEUY ...FEED and SALE STABLES Ion.; H tlitt t lit' v T w ii ,'vi r. tii.it . .irv t 1 1 1 prrti-v t p:it In tin rv .1 lt vi.ir bought w ci.t of t. w ii, h. apple trci s .into w, din'ant'il t.i found iu the trunk 1 lll ll'tf'.V . Ti' ! ,11 i f u', I: ii r r 'if ,l.y it hhk '. l.lll'll.'T. v.ho llniumni frm .' IU II1K iK'UU' old '"l tlat fti t'1.' lender n trtnl'ln, i'f each all stiver lr W Never Sold in Bulk- :i Ikit'y 1, 2, 2H and 5- 1 i id Pound Tin. Onl. I ffltV A I , San Francisco ' ' r- UtaaTimilllsjiiiwiiii I I tC&JA. - iA T 1 I. VmmmmKmmnmmammrWMmMumHmmtMmrmmiw hmuhm.. 1 : 1 . i hole fn'l of su'.phur and ouu , tlier uish-ri il. J H S.jrr, ',, i f tl.i oilv and lio wh forniiT'.v n fruit grower in Kansas, Msun ii;at lie tru.l mil pluir, vitru.l mill several otlur cIk iiitva's in In frail tree lieu tne i'M apprarrd in inn or, Lard JS yearn ago and Mm: id" n , , ,;'..u nig piuve,! Grants Pass, Orefjoo a "V i r rrinrv Medicated StocK Food For Horses. Cattle, Sheep and IIo,!;s Foods on tho nuirkot and animals in t ho best of con- Ono of the bost Stock ono hioh will koop tho dition. I.AKtii: MZli PACKAGE 50c MODEL DRUG STORE DR. lYlUKROWS ANTI-LEAN Makes Lean People Fat Through the uervcous svstem Tte , pttoptv a hall 8 'S ulJunousor Hable to produce IT' Till- C.RKATKST Tnvi. rv Kach bottle r,.,.t3 .: : 'Ti. ltU WUXU. Li liiiiiirn C TAn,n.AU& - iidimcui c;.is ilrilH' store AXTI-LKAN MEDICINE -R. Portland Oregon. $1.50 at anv Prepared 1 Oregonian Kr.; fir th,- and costs CO., A A T I L. E A 3'