Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915, May 27, 1909, Image 1

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    LAKKVIKW, LA K K COUNTY, ORKfiON, MAY 27.1909,
NO. 20
VOL. XXX
4
ALTURAS PAPER
HAS PRAISE FOR
WORK OFTIIE
0. V. L CO.
Sees What Benefits Lake
view Will Also Ileip
the Entire Tribu
tary Country
Tim Altiirar, ( iillf, New Era, of Mm
l!Kh Hint. hHit till tHiiV'f the effort
of the OrrUnn Vfil ly Land Co., to
settle, till tt.U country :
The fact that AlHiniH Im to be .con
ne.-ted w'th Lakevln- by mii huIoiiki
tlle lin U now assured. Tim pro
luolxrx or thin scheme were hi AKurn.
and It ha lint 1hpii given nut e to
the arrangement, hut it In assured
that the work will tie commenced on
thU line w It ti tit the next week, hint
thui il.i.i Kill tut tu operation by the
ftr iif Aiunst. A regular mil
r..u.i
grad will be made between this place
Hint limine Luke, and largo autumn
lilies will eminent with the IjohI on
Mm lake. A nimt U mi th way, ami
Itn urn-lion will omnim'iu'H im
mediately. The construction of the
boat will eot til the liolghbol hood of
Tim right of way have nil been
aecured tu tin- most denirah'a route,
mid tho rim.t will be kept In prima
condition mi't will be. traveled by
nothing hut automobile Wo r In
formed ihut m very large force or mini
hii I tiMiniM will i put enmp ""
t'ltt River thin week. Tli tout ami
equipment being already here.
tin. is the scheme of the Oregon
Valley Lmi 1 Company, aud the object
the lino i to ti uimi t the huge tinni
er of people that are coming here In
Augu to ho present Ht the Oregon
Vailey land uratng. 'ttil company
huN gigantic scheme working In Lake
aud Modoc counties, in which they
wllj bring thousand of people tn thin
nrt of tho country, and settle them
on good Inn ). They liavvi thousand
of nore of the finest land that Ibjh
out of dior and will ooti have fam
ilies ou every ten acre or more.
Thy are uow nt work on irrigtation
scheme that will put nil of thin land
under water. ThV are putting in
taw mills to cut their own timber.
The machinery for t lelr mill,
rock crusher ami road equipment
have already iiouo through Aliura,
and thin company in now
niBiiBtfinif ,
one of the lnrtfi-.it propoHltloua
nub
thl couutry hah ever nefii.
Thivite ate tl) thliitf that develop a
country and it Ino rwuiaiued for th
iirHunn Vnller Laud Co., to oooie
here and develop our country
reap the beuoflU, to which they
justly entitled.
W have aUo heard It eald.
Hruily believe, that by the time
dfawinu come off, the N. C. ().
have HHHMud Into other handu,
and
are i
, I
nd i
1
w'''
that rate will be made Tor paaMtnKrC0llutrv urtl vwry enthuaiastlo over
that will make It poaitbilo, wlthoiii I f hnt district and declare that long
paying the present exorbitant price.
It is sate to say that the Oregon
Valley Land Compar y know what they
are doing, and thnt they would nut go
to the expeite tl'fV are now i'i fit
ting in this boat nuu auto Hue if they
were not sure of better railroad
prices. From what we ere now aide
to learu. we hail with delight the
a ivont, of the Oregon Valley Laud Co.
ui.d we wish them all the success they
are sure to meet w ith.
GOOD FARMERS
LOCATING HERE
Heager Pros, this week closed up a
deal for the J. W. Andersun nlace ou
the West Side with llahuer ,V Uoehl,
late of Chicago, ho will establish a
stage station, and will also establish
un orchurd and fruit nursery. They
also Hold the M. O. Anderson place
to Clareuecj W, Anderson, late of
llutte, Montana The purchasers of
these places will at once put iu grain
aud potatues, and probably will get
enough tint of their tirst crop to pay
tor theii t m rii: h, and have a bunk
account besides. They have discover
ed from old timers that such things
will grow here, but tho () T. nfore
eaid complain: "tirow, of course
potatoi'8 will grow, but, who iu h I
wants to dig in the ground fur thoniY"
They had rather let some one else
produce them.
A recent arrival tu Lakeview Is
Telefred Mlexuer, of Sun Friinclsco,
who uurchnsed. a :. acre tract or me
Lakeview llevelopmont Co., two miles
from town. He is an experienced
gardiier, and Intends planting his en
tire tract to garden truck aud pota
toes. Like many of the other new
settler wiio liave located here Mr.
Mlexuer is a thinker and a doer. He
does not ook at the oouutry a It la
now, but looka ahead to Its possibili
ties, and therefore bought fund and
wlll'at oiica tai'a fcteii to make It pro
ductive. In is to such men witb whom
tbe future welfure of this county
rest.
A license to wad was issued last
week to Wm. Taylor and Mis Franois
Dunn, Loth of Paisley, Oregou.
Klamath and Lake
view United from
Shipping Standpoint
A finnt, t Im comlntf of the railroad
to Klnmiith I'm 1 1 tho Ooon liny IUr
hor ri'iiiHikn: Klnmt:lh I'mIIh U to
have a rnl ralrloH't anl u "Kiiilrinil
Par" will Im ci-lnhnilfd Mondiiy,
June llth. I'roinii'i'iil iiumi fn.m ninny
Hi'cllona will tm pri-Hont. Thcrii are
lot of the rommonllieH in Orctfon
that would tm del lhlrd to hold
klmllnr ct-lidiral iiniM In thU coniii'C
ti.iti tii S.iiki'vlfw lloanl or Trade in
worklnuAith Klnmiith 1'nll toward
I hi' cniiMlnicIl n or rnadit whlcn will
Kivn Lnkfvlcw It Moire of buflt
from the new rallrmid.
WANT RINEHART
AS LOCAL REGISTER
Repulican and Democrat
Unite on Watson's
Successor
I.nUovli'W Or
. Mhv 1 nd lea-
K. KiiH'tiurl III he
1 tloiiM are that K
iiucci'HNor to J. N. WhIhiii, who him
rnifii" I H ri'KiHiiT of the l. ikwvli'w
Lho I Oitlii Mr Uliidh irt U oiih of
t lie mi lint mil 1 it I clii'im of t din county,
l-'nur yniirH imo he ttcrvt-d iim county
kherllt for mm term, un I him wince
ln'i'ii eiiKiiutd In I tie Hiiwmlll ImihIiihuh.
He Ih mcII unl lll.-il to till t tit poxl
ti'in and him t' imdoi itiMiient if the
I ii'inocrat m iih wrll im ot the Kipntj
can party, of which he turn alwaya
(unci n iniiiiilicr. Mr Klin-hart has
ri'hldt'd in Luke county for ninny
yeai'H, mid hlii appointmiint, will be
Kttuernlly nalihaictory. Kt-ulxter Wat
Hon Iihh beitu in poor health for ftcv
crnl month. He l now Hcrvin hia
nccoiid, term iih reHer. It in not
likclv Unit tie wlil leave Lakeview.
OIG BOOM ON OP
IN TIMNTRY
Reno Begins to See What
Is Going On Here
Iinuo tiaette, 11: The trade iuto
Northern Nevada, Northern Calif
ornia and Southern Oregon in increaa-
,UK raij
and it hat) now become
Decennary for the N. C. U. to beitfii
iruuniiitf Tore traiue. hlvory train in
I to the northern country ia crowded
and from all reports concerning that
portlou or ttie country, there ia a
boom on there at present that prem
iums to eel ipso any boom that has oo-
cured in the went for many months.
Men are euitaued lu mluliitf aa well
as in the openiuu up of large tract
of agricultural laud.
All men arriving from the northern
i)Bfrrt lhe Western I'acitio U niuoiug
trains there will be several good
slzid towna iu existance. They also
declared that when the Western Facl
tlil goes tirough that portlou of Nev
ada now being opened up, tliere wi 1
be a boom that will startle the whole
country.
BASE BALL GAME
IS ML PLAYED
The Alturas Boys Carry
off the Laurels
The game played Suuduy between
the Altuias aud Lakeview nines was
a very exciting one. Tbe honors
wei with our vuitors, tne lauy
standing 7 to 5.
We never jiiw a more goutlemuuly
contest. There was no ill will mani
fested on either side, and the decis
ion of the umpire were without ex
ception accepted without question.
The A (turns visitor were gentlemen,
aud they promised to come up
to the tournament the fourth
of July, and whether they wiu or lose
will lie cordially welcomed.
The following is a roster of the
partv: W. L. McOruth, John C.
Callahan. A. K. Tussey, M. L. Kerr.
James Pnrtin. Chester (Jodfrey, Purge
Warner, James Padego, Lenter Arten,
F. N. Smith, (1. F. Higley, W. C.
DorriH, and o, Collins.
Through a mlsuuderstaudug The
Kxainiiier lu its last Issue gave the
i Alturas base ball eutbusiaats n rather
severe jolt, aud we boreby make the.
amend honorable.
"For they are jolly good rellowa,
wb loh we all must allow."
' While returning from Alturas last
Tuesday after conveying the base
ball team home, Clarence Kiuehart
broke the .frout axle of bU auto. Tbe
maobloe was left at tbe foot of Sugar
Kill and Clarence oame on to town ia
the llankins auto. He weut down
yesterday with a new axle and re
turned iu the evenning witb the car
PORTLAND
SLEPYJLD TOWN
Calmly Snoozing While Her
Neighbors are Securing Her
Natural Birthright
The Portland .lounial is no fool.
It doe not leipilre a fhidge-hammer
to drive an Idea into it head, w hudi Is
so palpably the lamentntile con. lit loll
of its i'sti-emi-d conteniporarj'.
The Journal very clearly oherves
the path, into which the apathy of
I' .rtlnd ha been Mill fly pursuing the
even tenor of It wa, ntt.ry obliv
ion of the fact that I hat path is beset
with rivals, who Meek o niaiutaiu
trade with Kiistem )r-giti. It tie
lieves and iiltlrm vigorously, that
si iito pride slioul.l make a streuuou
eltort to obtain the trade east of the
mountain, but which. Inst. ad. i go
ing and will continue to go to Calif
urn In and Nevada rivals In the hiird
liCKMumld The Journal reci.gii le
then- untoward condith us for I'ort
land' future welfare, and voices it
self in vlgoioiiH Kngl'sli, while it
esteemed coute mpot ury Is uttering pla
titude atioultho awful l'i luury law,
htHtemeiit No. 1 and other thing, nil
detrimental to the grafting y,t litl
cinns. but which me of Breutest beue
fli to the common people!
The peri le of KaMtern (Jregon
naturally look to Portland for relief
from the intolcrahle conditions to ;
which thi part of the state bus been ;
subjected by ttie llariiinan bunch.
Hut, our voice, ca ling out of ttie
wilderness, has fallen upon deaf cirg !
Instead of a vigorous campaign that
would arouse the hiixineiig meu of that
Kleeny Hollow town, by what ia sup
posed ti lie the chief mouthpiece of
the Pacific Norhwest. are fed upon
political bumbuome outing back to
the fiiuriau uge ! When the people
at lust hecume aroused tn a realizing
sense of the condition of Oregon, so
far aa co icerna the lailroad question,
and took atepa to remedy the evil,
then thli great orgau of reaction,
blind a the toads recently rudely
released in Colorudo from their rocky
embrace of a million or more years.
THE BOARD OF TRADE MAKES
MOVE FOR NEW HIGH SCHOOL
The Board of Trade bad a very
satisfactory meeting Saturday evening-Several
letters from men who desire
to uudertake to provide this section
with electric railroaj transportation
were read, but no action tbereou was
taken.
The question of providing better
schools, and for raUing the district
to the dignity of the second class
were discussed, aud it was unani
mously agreed that something should
be done iu p-ovidlne a high school
buiUiug at ouce. With that end in
view several committees were appoint
ed, which are to report at the next
regular meeting of ttie lioard on the
evening ot June 4th.
Everyone present confessed the
ueed aud importance of schools that
SMALL FARMS A
PROVEN SUCCESS
The Examiner has had repeated aud
numerous enquiry as to whether or
uot, tbe small 10, 20, 30, or 40 acre
tracts are large enough to sustain a
man aud his family, lu reply we cau
ouly say: given a productive soil such
as we have heie. coupled with irriga
tiou. both Bssuted. that success will
depend altogether ou the man.
Conditl ma here surely are certaiuly
as good as they are in Illinois, as we
have uo distinctive storms to contend
with, and with the right aid of sun
shine, productive soil aud water as
much or little and when you want it,
the advantage would seem to be iu
favor of the lloldon (Jooao Lake Val
ley. '
We make specific mention of Illi
nois, because it ia stated lu the
newspapers, as au illustration .of ttie
value of intensive farming, that C. W.
Pottinger, head furuier at Duuuing,
where 4,000 pauper, lutuue, aud con
sumptive patients ot Cook county are
cared for, grew ia. w.i worm oi veg
etables and pork upon bis 100 acre
farm last year, aud bis busiuess
methods have a lessou for every farm
er. Sixty three patleuts, most of
them Insane, lire with blm, and
thirty-two work lu the fields. His
entire expeuses weie $0,005, leaving a
balauo to tbe farm's credit of K!,
008. There were torty-slx different pro
ducts all figured at moderate prices,
as, II a bushel for wax beans, bO cents
for tomatoes, 70 ceuts for onions, 92
for strawberries, 00 cents for potatoes
IS A
sets up a yowl that reaches from Dan
tu Hernheeha, tliu it was a monstrous
Idea, socialistic, and childish, to
think ol a utate built or stBte owned,
or s'sle operated railroad ; that poor
Mr. Harrbnaii must not be spurred to
net ion : that he must not lie harried
to en ter, pool, patient fellow, and
when he gets good and ready he
will give r.BH'eru Oregon needed rail
roads! So tie will, but not for the
benefit of Portland, you poor old
innocent !
The Journal, however, sees the real
and iilltiirate trend of attaira Bnd
says, pointedly and firmly, that
utiles Puitlaud awakens from its
letlinicy, ami makes nn effort itself
to reach this (ireat Inland Kmpire
that our future enormous trade which
should be made subservient to the
relfnre and unbuilding of Portland
will be tiken from her and handed as
a free gift to Sun Francisco. It well
and truly says: "Harriman is now
plmning to carry all the traffic of
Houthern Idaho. Eastern Oregon and
much of Montana direct to Hun Fran-
clnco by way of Klamath Falla or that
othei branch of the Sacramento
river. " which latter means the head
waters of the Pitt river at Lakeview!
The Journal, with ttie feeling almost
born of decpuir, further says :
"Oregon and Pottlmid may hope
and wait tor Mr. Harriman. If they
or ly wait long enough and sit suoine
enough they will see their birthright
slip au ay. They will seethe great
output of products from the irrigated
and unirrigated zones of the vaet in
land empire diverted to San Fran
cisco, and Oregon made in transpor
tation a vassal province of Calif
ornia. How do Portland and Oregou
like the propsect?"
.Meanwhile "the greatest paper of
the Pacific Coast," aud it twilight
pr.:geny. sits supinely, helpless, voice
less, vhile a city is being despoiled of
its birthright nv a modem buccaneer I
Nero also fiddled while home was
burning !
should keep pace with the growth of
our little city, and such i-eofiment
and purpose must result in giving us
better school faciiltise.
Miss Corlson the bright young
editor of the Llosborg, (Kansas)
News in commenting upon the state
ment of the Atchison Olobe man that
men liked to smoke aud litter up the
house without let or biuderance, and
get tired of making a goddess of their
wives, naively asks: "Does a man
evei treat a woman like a goddess?
A ad does a real woman want to sit on
a pedestal w hen a rocker or er soma
other place is so much more com
fortabley" A 13 year old boy with dogs, treed
a big cinnamon bear aud killed him
with a rile.
910 a tou for wiutre beets aud 6l
ceuts a pound for dressed pork. Tbis
farm supplies Dunning with veget
ables, potatoes ouly being bought. In
UK)7 tbe crops amounted to if 1S,7U!.
So much care is given to double
cropping that one year Mr. Pottioger
got '130 acre aud another year 149
acres of crops from 100 acres of land.
All potatoes are followed by other
crops the same seasou. A great com
panion, crop for potutos is tbe Ford
hook squash; they are plauted in the
potato Held lu rows 12 feet apart by
simply hoeing out two hills of potatos
for a hill of squashes. Tbe latter do
not iuterfere with the cultivation and
after the potatos have made their
growth, the squash vines spread out
to cover the ground. The Pnrdhook
will keep all wiuter. Spinach lettuce,
wax beaus and other crops also follow
potatos. Likewise pickle grouud
grows a crop of Kolrabui, early beano,
sluapch or radishes before the cucum
bers are plauted. And there are many
other combinations
The Examiner is not aloue in think
ing that railroad transportation of the
future of tbis sectiou will treud to
ward tbe Ooldeu (Jate, rather thau
over the mountaiua to Portland. For
Instance tbe Portland Oregouiau of
the 4th lust, says: Work has beeu
coraaieuoed on tbe line to run from
Klamath to Alturas, on tbe Nev
ada, California and Oregon. Tbis
will also be a feeder tor tne r riano
Hue of the' Southern Pacific.
the Knocker is an
i Undesirable Citi
zen in any Country
The Harney County Tlmes-Hei-ald,
with righteous Indignation takes this
shot at ? class of people found every
where, and we reiret to say there are
tone or two of the gentry In Lake
county: "Now and then a settler
here is of a elms that continuously
"register a kick " !' the sun shines
and ttie iCads are dusty the country
is going to dry up; if it storm it
is too stormy; then if it is warm they
say it is too warm for this time of
year; the; say they see nothing but
wild (age brush 'and with nothing of
any greet value growing on it, and
where th'-re are good trowing spots
they sny it is a favured spot and such
ueciiParities are known to the the
old settlers only ; that should such
crops be raised on all our vast domain
it would not no ' be open to settle
ment, and all "jolly rot" of this
kind. To such men we say "git,''
"skidoo, " tke the next stage and
move out; yon are "undesirable citi
zens" here aud should go elsenhere.
THE HOG CROP
BIG JN VALUE
American Farmers Rea
lize Half a Billion
from their Porkers
The hog crop of the country, count
ing only the hogs sold to packing
bouses and not those slaughtered and
old to local meat merchants or for
borne consumption, nearly equals the
cotton crop of the country, amount
ing for the year ending February 28
last to i37,7iiO,0OO. To reach the
actual cost of tbe meat product there
most be added all tbe incidental ex
penses, such as slaughtering, pack-'
ing. etc. The bogs are mainly
elaugbteied aid packed in the West, I
the bouses there paying out ?358,000,
000 of tbe total paid to the bog rais
ers of tbe country. Tbe total number
slaughtered and packed reached about
35,0U0,000 In weight tbe total pro
duct of tbe last year was about 950.
000,000 pounds, or about 116 pounds
per capita of the population. As most
of tbe pork product is used in tbis
country, it would seem that we are
a poik-eatiog people.. When tbe
rork raisers of tbe country can draw
from tbe packers about $130,000,000
a year our farners are not doing so
badly after all. If all the figures can
be obtained, it is possile the value of
tbe pork raised each year would reach
well up toward S550.000.000 or within
a trifle of the value of the cotton
crop.
RENO MERCHANTS
GETTING ALIVE
The N. C 0. Is Drawing
Business From Them
Reno, Nev., May 17. Tbe merchants
of Reno claim that they will no
longer stand for tbe unfair, excessive
and discrimatory freight rates charged
by tbe . C O. railroad, and have
appealed to tbe Nevada Kairoad Cum
mission, through the Keno Commer
cial Club for relief.
Tbe railroad commissions will not
appeal tu the Interstate Commerce
Commission or begin action against
the N. C. O.. but will endeavor to
secure better rates for tbe Reno ship
pers by an agreement secured by
peaceable negotiations. Negotiations
are already beiug carried on with T.
F. Dunaway, tbe local lepreseutative
of tbs company.
Tbe merchauts claim that the mer
chants of Portland aud Sucrameuto
are invading tbe territoiy iu tbe
Lakeview country and tbis trade
rightfully belongs to the merchauts
of Reno. They believe that they will
be able to secure tbis trade after new
rntes have been granted by tbe
N. C. O.
MISS PEARL HALL
NOW IN MEXICO
The Mexican Herald, published in
theCitvof Mexioo.gives the followiug
meutiou of Miss Pearl Hall, a lady well
known iu Lakeview fiom loug associa
tion with the schools of this city,
ller many friends here - will be glad
to learn of her success iu the Mexi
can metropolis: The Herald says:
During all or part of the vacattou
of the American school, Mlsa Pearl
Hall, a welllknowu teacher here will
conduct classes at tbe school building
on Calle luduetria 95, tbe board of
managers having given her permission
to use tbe school building but having
no responsibility with the work.
Arrangements for tbe entrance of
pupils should be made 'directly with
Mlsa Hall, who will b at the school
from 9 Jo 10 o'clock' tba morning,
tomorrow and Friday. ,
Tbe first session ' of. tbe school
opeued Monday May 3.
EASTERN OREGON
BOTTLED UP BY
II
But Will He be Able to
Maintain His Present
Hold on this Big
Rich Empire?
Tbe government iu its merger salt
at Portland to show that Harriman
had combined rival roads into one
contrary to law, also elicited a lo of
testimony to tbe effect that be had
also bottled up eastern Oregon in
restraint of lawful trade. In com
menting uoon the question tbe Ore
goniau said: If a "water pass is
essential, llrrimau has a monopoly on
eastern and Central Oregon, iu tbe
opinion of Colonel C. E. S. Wood.
But two nter grade outlets exiet 'o
an area nf labia land comprising 30,-CM-O.0W
acres of arable land, of which
20,000,01X1 are in Oregon, aczordiog
tu big evidence.
Colonel Wood described tbe dis
trict as having once tieen tbe bed of
an iu-aud sea, which was finally
drained down the Malbenr River to
the west and down tbe Crooked - and
Deschutes rivers to tbe North. Tbe
railroad routes afforded by both
etreams are controlled by Harriman.
Colonel Wood said that there was an
available route out of tbe district up
tbe Klamath or Pitt to tbe Southern
Pacific connection at Klamatb Kalis.
''There are millions of acres of land
in Eastern Oregon that could be made
bountifully tributary to man," he
said. "They lack nothing but trans
portation. 1 was through that
country in an Indian campaign In
1878, going north into what was then
Washington territory, and farther
north tban Spokane At that time
the only railroads in tbis country
were tbe small ilne to Corvallla and
a part of tbe Northern Pacific, which
baa b?en built north from Kalama so
that they coud bold tbeir land grant.
"At that time Eastern Washington
and Eastern Oregon looked mucb tbe
same and 1 never supposed it would
be anything but Indian country un
til tbe end of time. Eastern Oregon
is still practically undeveloped, while
tbe Palouse country in Washington ia
a solid wheat field.
"Land in Washington that was once
thought to be valueless, baa been
turned into good farming lands and
the whole country is developed. Tbe
railroads did it. Tbe railroad made
the Yakima Vialley one of tbe show
places of tbe west. Development
always follows tbe railroads and Ore
gon is just as capable of development
as Washington. Tbe railroad ia tbe
pioneer the fore runner. M
Colonel Wood said farther, that
in bi opinion, railroads could be
built into Eastern Oregon by routes
other than tbe Malheur or Deschutes
rivers, but at a much greater expense
aud by the overcoming of big engin
eering difficulties.
CROOK COUNTY
SICK OF HARRIMAN
Eiguring on Building an
Electric Railroad
The people of Crook county have
lost taitb iu tlarrimau au aie now
taking steps to build au electric line
from the Dalles on the Coluiibia
river to Madras, Prlueville, Red
mond aud other points, They are
begiuuiug to feel that Uod belpa
those wb) help themselves. But
as a matter ot fajt steam roads cau
not compete iu any way with electric
lines, and ouce Easteru Oreyou is
thus gridironed with au outlet ou tbe
Columbia river the people here cau
snap tbeir fingers in the face of llarri
uiHu. or Buy other railroad maugate.
Horace O'eely, when tbe questiou of
specie payments was beiug agitated
said: "The way to resume is to re
sume." And the way to get railroads
is to builJ them yuisevlea. I bat
is all there is to it, and the uiau or
meu who will give Easteru Oregon
electric roads will uot ouly make a
fortune but will also open up oue of
the fluent aud richest most productive
sections of the eutire west.
It appears from the itemized state
ment of tbe expenditures of the
Republican uaMoual committee that
more money was speut for advertising
and printing thau for campaign
speakers. Tbis seems to demonstrate
tbe proposition that more value is
put on what tbe people read than on
what tbey bear. It is deserved appre
ciation of tbe mighty power of prin
ter's iuk in one form or another, and
shows that experience based on tbe
entire length and breadth of tbe land
demonstrates that those who Beek the
widost publicity must iely altogether
upon tbe newspapers. Tbe columns
of the Examiner begin' to sbow this
trutb, but there are 1 others who eau
come in, to tbeir advantage.
HARR AN
NOW