Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915, November 21, 1912, Image 3

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    Wo Have the Best Assorted Stook of Doth
Rough and
Surfaced Dry
LUMBER
In CENTRAL OREGON, and oan
glvo you what you wantwhen
you want It ALL THE TIME
SUNSET LAKE LUMBER CO.
Lakeview, Ore.
Yard on Center St.
Phono 721
SONOMA VALLEY DRIED FRUIT
At Wallace's Store in Lakeview, and at Dorian's
Ilakcry in New Tine Creek at the
following prices:
l'eaclies in L" pound boxes $2 00
Prunes $2 00
Silver Prunes $2 50
Pears " $2 50
Apricots $2 75
Ivvaporatcd A pples in 50 pound boxes (' 10c pound
Purncsby the sack of about 100 lbs (") 7c pound
This fruit was dried nndjiackcd by
8. J. 8TUDLEY & SONS - SONOMA, CALIF.
l'.STln rfttHtm thin fruit in m rlii-nit, tlivrv im tin iiihJiJh im-n.
ANNA RIVER IRRIGATED LANDS
Productiveness demonstrated by growing
crops. Lands surround new town
of Spring River. Best in
vestment in Lake1
County
Dodson Realty Company
LAKEVIEW - OREGON
WALLACE & SON
f Wm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lake County)
UNDERTAKERS
PROMPT ATTKNTION AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Parlors, next door to Telephone Office
WATSON BUILDING
Twin Valley Land Co.
- Incorporated -C.
R. BLOOD, Ast. Sec; C. O. MISENER, Cen. Agt.
We have for sale:
Orchard and Alfalfa Lands
Farm Lands, Timber Lands
Homesteads and Desert Lands
Special attention given to O.V.L. Land Holdings
We are agents lor
The Fairport Town & Land Co.
FA IK PORT TOWN LOTS now on &.- e. Make
your selection before the best ones are sold. A
big investment for a small amount of money.
CONSOLIDATED STAGE CO.
OREGON
P. M. CORY,
LAKEVIEW
Operate! Stages, carrying; llnltcd 3UteiMalla, Eaprcaa and Passengers ta
following rotitaa:
LAKEVIEW TO PLUSH
KLAMATH FALLS TO LAKEVIEW
AUTOnUBILES OPERATED IN CONNECTION WITH THB 5TAOB5
Klamath Falls Route
Plueh Route
PARESi On Way Round trip
. . $10.00 $18.00
. . 4.00 7.00
OCFICBSi-
Lakavlaw
I'lu.h
Klamath pal If
Staf Office
Sullivan Hotel
Anerkan Hotel
SEES MUCH FOR
CENTRAL OREGON
That winter grain enn be grown
with splendid remits without Irrlga
lion on the plateaus of central Oreg on
Is the conviction of Professor Thomas
Hhaw, arglculturist of theUrest North
ern and Northern 1'sclflc railways.
Professor Shaw has lust completed it
tour of inspection of the central Ore
gon country, ssys tne Portland Journal.
Professor Shaw la the man sent to
Montana a few years ago by James J.
HIM to report on the possibilities for
transforming that stste into a grain
producer and the 25,00),(X'0 bushels of
wheat harvested In that slate this sea
eon may be attributed largely to the
successful experiments carried on by
I Professrr Shaw since 1909. It Is said
that if there ever was a man who
! could make two t lades of grass grow
I where but one grew before, Professor
1 Shaw Is thst man.
"Central Oregon Is most wonderful
' country," ssid Frofesaor Shaw, "and
the possiDilitlca for development are
immense. There is no more fertile
I soil to be found anywhere, for volcanic
i ash la more enduring than any other
soil that we know of and the entire
1 central Oregon country consists of vol
i canic ash.
"Nearlv all the grain crops in cen
tral Oregon should be winter crops, not
'only winter wheat, but winter rye,
' oats, barley and vetch. The climate
may be too severe in a few places but
only a few.
"The a Ivantage of winter grain is
I that it gaina enough strength during
; the wet months to carry It through be
fore the prolonged dry spell of the
summer. Winter wheat should te sown
; the last part of August and the land
should be summer-fallowed. It should
also be kept plowed and clean. A
i splendid way to keep the ground
I clean, too, la to grow a crop of fodder
corn. As Boon as the corn is cut the
ground is ready for the whest.
"One grest weak nets in central
Oregon is that he people as a rule do
not seem to realize the great impor
tance ot porperlv preparing the soil for
a crop, it snouia oe sept clean, aoove
all things, and then it will retain the
' moisture.
i "Milo maize, corn, alfalfa, and po
tatoea should be spring-sown crops.
Alfalfa will soon be one of the most
! Important crops of central Oregon. It
I will be grown lor hay ana seed. Al
' falfa grown on non-irrigated lands pro
' duces better seed than that grown un-
der irrigation. Under the dry farming
'system alfalfa must be grown In rows
like co-n and cultivated much in the
esme manner.
"Observations lead me to believe
' that in central Oregon west of the Cas
cade mountains there are 10, 000, 000
' acres of land ready tor cultivation.
I These 10.000. 000 acres would produce
120.000,000 bushels of wheat, or more
than twice as much as is now produced
by the entire Pacific Northwest fac
tion. Taking these figures into con
(deration, one can readily ce the im
portance to Pol Hand and to the State
of Oretron of the rapid development ot
central Oregon.
"Central Oregon will some day be
come one of the moat famous wheat
producing sections of the world. These
are immeine ateati that can be Irrigated
by but pursuing the proper methods the
day lands will be made to yield large
crops. It ia all in the working of the
soil. This we have proven in Montana
and we are now proving it in central
Oregon on the sage brush land for w
have eBtablished an experimental sta
tion near Ontario in Malheur county."
Professor Shaw makes his headquar
ters in St. Paul.
DON'T EXPERIMENT
You Will Make No His.
take If You Follow
This Advice
Let The Examiner Figure on Your Next Job Work
Never neglect your kl lueya.
If you Imve ptiin in the back, urin
ary disorder, dizziness and nervous
ness, Its time to act and no time to
experiment. Tlieaa Hie common ayin
ptoins of kidney trouble, and you
should seek a remedy wliiih is rae
comendt'd (or the kidneys.
Dunn's Kidney Pills lit the remedy
to use. It ban cured many stubborn
canes iu thin vicinity.
Can Lakeview citizens demand fur
ther proof than the following teatl
aaoiital? Mrs. George Bell, Washington 8t.,
Klamath Falls, Ore., Bays: "Some
time ago I tiegau to Buffer from palna
in my back, due to disordered kid
ueya. The kidney secretions were al
so unnatural, caueiug uie annoyance.
Hearing of Doan's Kidney Pills, I pro
cured a supply and began their use,
Tbey completely cured me. I ran
highly recommend Doau'a Kidney
Pills to other kidney sufferers."
For aale by all dealers. Price 60
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., buffalo,
N. Y., sole agents for the Uutted
States.
Remember the uume Doan's and
take no oilier.
RECLAIMED LANDS
NEED ADVERTISING
According to the Portlsnd Telegram,
Director P. II . Newell, of the Recla
mation Service, has been taken to task
by Ctorge M. Bailer, president of the
Northwest Townsite Company. When
the director savs thatafW the Federal
Government has spent 175,000,000 In
arid land reclamation work, and yet
the farmers of the Middle West and
Knit do not come to tske the land for
agriculture, "does he not corfesa his
own incompetence? ssks the Townsite
president.
"Everytime 1 wslk down the streets
of Portlsnd or sny other large Ameri
can city,' saya Mr. Bailev, "I see the
dead walls plastered with large color
ed, expensive lithographed poaters
showing how ea y it ia for the young
men of America to see the world by
ioinlng the United State Navy. If
the Navy Department can spend money
advertising for whst it wants, why
csn't the Department of the Interior
do the same, and thus put settlers on
these Irrgiated lands?
"What would you think of any pri
vate corporation that would spend
S75.0OO.000 in reclaiming waste land
and titling it for cultivation and settle
ment, and then sitting down and won
dering why American farmere who
live 2000 miles awav do not come and
take the land? Yon would say that
what the enterprise needed was expert
publicitywouldn't you?
"The state of Oregon waa given
1,009.000 acrea of government land, on
condition that it would reclaim it ty
irrigation. It can either do thia itself
by creating a department ot public
worka. or it can be sub-let the contract
to irrigation companiea which ia now
being done. My own company haa a
eoniract with the state, and is now
reclaiming 12,000 acres ot land at Pala
ley, in Lake county, Or., under the
Carey act, which we hope to have com
pletely nettled within the next three
yeara. But if the state of New York
can raise f 101.000,000 to build barge
canal, why cannot the state of Oregon
raise enough money to build irrigation
canals, and thua let settlers have the
land at the actual coat of reclamation?
Thia can be done, I believe, by adopt
ing a plan which will aecure settlers
at the same time that the state secures
money for doing the work.
"Under the present law, any citizen
or group of citizens in the state who be
lieve that they know where some Gov
ernment land can be irrigated, take
the initiative themselves and get up
preliminary aurveys and mapa and lay
them before the State Engineer. It is
his duty to investigate their scheme,
If he finds that it is practical a more
detailed map, with specifications of
cost, is prepared, and the Desert Land
Board requests th Secretary of the In
terior at Washington to withdrsw the
land in question from homestead entry
and to hold it thus segregated until the
state of Oregon has an opportunity to
reclaim it by irrigation. Then the pro
moters of tne scheme go before the
Desert Land Board, and if they give
1 bond and otherwise convince the
board of, their, responsibility, they are
given a contract to build the dam,
reservoir, canals and other works, and
are permitted to charge the settler a
fixed price per Bcre tor tne perpetual
water rights. Of coarse, this price
includes a profit to the irrigation corn
puny and this profit is what attracted
my company to come out here Irom
Philadelphia and engage in tnis work.
"but why should not the state of
Oregon take charge of this Carey act
business?
"It is time that every newspaper in
the country took up this cause of our
own land. The American newspapers
should carry advertisements telling
about the irrigated lands awaiting
settlers, and the sapce should be paid
for bv the Government at advertising
rates, just as the space ia raid for in
which the Navy Department asks
young men to go on board of our big
battleships and see the world.
Mining: Property Cleared
As has been stated in this paper be
fore, the settling of tne attachment on
the Consolidated Mines Company of
Bidwell, came up m Alturas laBt week,
ssys the Alturas New Era. All par
ties interested were present and the
mire was sold under attachment. There
were several bidders present, but Mr.
J. M. Stone, the principal owner of
the mine, bought in the mine for $29,
500. The attachment was made by
James Williams, who held the largest
claim against the Mining Company.
Mr. Stone will now get the proper
ty in anape, and in the early spring
will begin operations anew, Thia ia
one of the finest properties in the High
Grade district, and will soon be among
the leading Droduoing properties of the
coast.
TONIGHT
Tonight, If tou leel doll and Btupld,
or bilious and constipated, take a
dose of Chamberlain' Tablets and yom
will feel all right tomorrow. For
sale by all dealers.
The best butter Oliver 10 cents
per pound at Bieber'a Cash Store.
HOTEL LAKEVIEW
GKECTEDIN 1000
.WOm-KN
niROUOHOlT
:. ( .'II
FIRST-CAL55 f:wH.r"
AcconnoDATioNs Affii k ' t i
For COnnERCIALAUj,; ,, f.4 tt(t CffiXt felSiiS
TRAVELEP51
COURTEOUS
TREATMENT
LIQHT & HARROW, Proprietors
F. F. LIQHT GEO. HARROW
THE
LAKEVIEW ABSTRACT & TITLE CO.
ABST ACTS TO ALL REAL PROPERTY IN LAKE C0UXTY, OREGON
Our Complete Tract Index
Inmureat Accuracy, Promptneem and Reliability
Huch an Index is the ONLY IthLUBLE system from which an
Abstract can be made, showing all delects of title.
We Also Furnish ZAV&fttfSS
.
H. W. MORGAN, Manager, LAKEVIEW, OREGON
POSTOPFICK BOX 23 PHOMMt7f
Lakeview Ice, Transfer
and Storage Co
Telephone Xo. 101
J. P. DUCKWOICTII, Manager
Buss to Meet All Trains. Transfer
and Drayage. Storage by day,
Week or Month
"OUR CUSTOMERS ARE OUR ADVERTISERS"
LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY
Incorporared.
A Complete Record
We hare made an entire transcript of all Records In Lake
County which In any way, affect Real Property In the county.
We have a complete Record of every Mortgage and transfer
ever made In Lake County, and ever Deed given.
Errors Found in Titles
In transcribing the records we have fonnd numerous mort
gagee recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many
deeds are recorded lo the Mortgage record and other books.
Hundreds of mortgages and deeds are not Indexed at all, and
most dllticult to trace up from the records.
We have notations of all these Errors.
Others annot flod them. We have pat r-undreds of dollars
bunting up these errors, and we can fully guarantee onr work.
J. D. VENATOR,
flan age r.
SHAMROCK STABLES
HALF BLOCK
EAST OF
COURT HOUSK
CON BREEN, Proprietor
Special Attention to Transient Stock
Horses Boarded by the Day, Week or Month
Always Open Phone 571
LAKEVIEW
OREGON
THE BEST
LAGER BEER
AND
WHISKIES
IN TOWN AT THE
KENTUCKY SALOON
POST A KING. PROPRIETORS
NEVADA -CALIFORNIA -OREGON RAILWAY
Daily Service Reno to Lakeview Except Sundays
No. 1 Arrives Lakeview at 8:35 P. M.
No. 2 Leaves Lakeview at 6:45 A. M.
Daily Except Sunday
rullrnan A liuffett Service Between Lakeview and Keno
C. W. CLASS, AGENT :: LAKEVIEW, OREGON
aa'asajaiawii-wi
I Read The Examiner W: d A ds
a.