Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1913)
HOTEL LAKEVIEW ERECTED liN 1X) WOHEKN t11rouohwt first-calss ACConnonATinNS SAHPLE ROOn For COnnERCIAL TP A V ELE armr..'A COURTEOUS TREATMENT 'tTH'A':- .-.-4 i5 LIGHT & HARROW, Proprietors P. P. UQHT GEO. HARROW We Have the Best Assorted Stock of Doth Rough and Surfaced Dry LUMBER In CENTRAL OREGON, and can give you what you wantwhen you want it ALL THE TIME SUNSET LAKE LUMBER CO. Yard on Center St. afce vq W Ore. PnOne 721 Lakcvicw Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone No. lOl J. P. Dl'CKWOKTlI, Manageb Buss to Meet AH Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by day, Week or Month EST "OUK CUSTOMEKS ARB OUIt AIWEKTISEKS WALLACE 8l SON tWm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lake County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Parlors, next door to Telephone Office WATSON BUILDING Twin Valley Land Co. - Incorporated C. R. BLOOD, Ast. Sec; C. O. MISENER, Gen. 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 for The Fairport Town & Land Co. FAIRPORT TOWN LOTS now on s. le. Make your selection before the best ones are sold. A big investment for a small amount of money. LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY Incorporared. A Complete Record We Lave made an entire transcript of all Records In Lake County which In any way, affect Ileal Property In the couuty. We have a complete Hecord of every MortyaKe und transfer ever made In Lake County, and ever Deed given. Errors Found In Titles la transcribing the record we have found numerous mort gages recorded In tho Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded It. the Mortjt'itfe record cid other hook. Hundreds of mortgages und deed are not Indexed at all, and moat difficult to truce up from the nx-onln. We have notations of all these Errors. Others .annot And them. have pas hundrou-. 'A dollars hunting OP these errors, and we can fully jo.rarjt.-e our work. Manager. J. D. VENATOR, TELLS HOW PRIZE WHEAT WAS GROWN l'ortland Journal : "Good 'dry farm ing' methods" produced the wheat which wou for Nath & Bmigsman nf Clyde i'ark, Mont., the S5000 prise for the best five bushels of wheat exhibited at the Minneapolis Land Know, accord ing to Joseph F. Nash, who gava des- j cription of the mehods used in raining , the wheat. Nash is hers with his wifo and six children to claim the 15000 piixe ami take it bock to Montana with him He called at the office of the exposi tion and waa given a certified copy of all score and an order for the Pig Vonr "SO" gas tractor, Emerson-Branting-ham plows, eto. Then he called on President Howard h'lliott of the North ern Pacific and received further con gratulations. He told Mr. Elliott how the whest waa raised. and demonstrated that good dry farming methods or just common sense, will produce nut only good wheat but the maximum yield per acre. "The five bushels which won the prize whs grown at an altitude ot 49(H) feet where the rainfall does not ex eeed 17 to 18 inches. One crop had been produced on the land before we seeded to this Turkey Ked wheat, the seed for whih came from the Gallatin val ley, said Nssh. "vVe summer fallowed the land in 1911 ty plowing with a mould board plow not lesM than six inches deep in the last part of May and first of June. We drsgged it down as soon as possi ble after plowing, the idea being to perserve the moisture by dragging within two days after plowing or soon er. After any rainfall of consequence the ground was dragged as soon is it was poseiDle to get on it with a tesm. "AboJt the first ot July we double disced the field. The last ot August and first week of September, it was drsgged and then the seed was planted by drilling with a double d isc Kenturky drill which put it down at least four inches. Korty pounds of seed was used to the a-re and we prefer less rather than more of this amount. If the IhiiJ is strong and clean it will not require this amount. "With such methods of farming moisture is preserved sufficient to start the seed to germinnte immediately whether there is rain or not. "In the spring of '912 the field wh harrowed or dragged as -non as the land was dry enough to permitit. One: or twice later we dragged It. This is done to keep a mulch on the land anil keep it from baking or drying out. "The soil of our ranch is a dark mountain loam, beneath which is a limestone clay subsoil. The wheat wan produced clay subsoil. The wheat whh produced without any artificial means or sub-irrigstion though we have con siderable winter enow which helps pre serve the wheat through the winter Wheat in this section seldom or never winter kils and never heaves out by frost. The character of the soil l similar to that in all central Montana, particularly in the Judith basin, the Crow creek, Smith river and Mussel shell valleys. There are hundreds of acres of similar land open to homestead entry in Montana." . As a resjlt of his sjecess in raising and selecting wheat, Mr. Nash has been offered a pasition for the winter installirg the permanent exhibit of tbe Northwest Development league in St. I'aul. He his accepted ind will ' remain in St. i'aul until time to go oui 'and produce another crop of wheat Let Tho Examiner Figure on Your Next Job Work Good Pack Animal We notice that several of the stock journals are commenting in favorable terms on the use of pack burros to fol low up a band of sheep, thus enabling the camptender and herder to pitct camp wherever nigft overtakes the flock. It is contended that this method is far better than driving the sheep each day to and fro from any particular bedding ground, especially when one considers the extra amount ot range trampled, the wear and tear on stock and other incidentals. Burros are be ing used to some extent for this pur pone locally, but we believe their use could be made more universal. NOTICE TO DOO OWNERS Notice is hereby given owners of dogs within the town of Luke view that the license will be due on January 1, 1913, and ten days thereafter doi not hav ing licenses will be impounded. The license fee is $2.50 f jr males and $5 for females. M. WHORTON. Town Marshal. 3t Stamps for Exposition The Ssn Francisco World's exposi tion of 1915 is to oe dignified with an Ibsjc of postage stamps in denomina tions of one, two, five and ten cents. These Panama-Pacific commemoration stamps have been placed on sale to dayJanuary 1. The S, H. Caledonia arrived at New York the other day with 5000 cases of Scotch whiskey aboard, a dozen bottle to the cats. A statistical expert of on of the newspapers promptly ascertained that this amount of wbiskev would make 1,200,000 hiKh balls. -o- 1L, s B'OULTRYi NOTES BY crf.avRMTZ UTVTRSIDE lA. o CORRESPONUENCt SOLICITED Ik. W8M (Thane artlrlMi and llluatratlana must r.ot be reprinted without speclaj permta Inn J NATURAL METHODS WITH GUIN EAS. KnlxliiK guineas ou the cannry cage pluu la a i ric k which wt have yet to see succeed bei uuae the guinea, like the turkey. Is not yet denaturalized. There are certain conditions ueeeiwiiry for guliieit eKK to be strongly fertilized to Iw ten well mid for the keels to thrive and mature perfectly, and our pictures tell the story. Mother liuinea wus not ruined In a bnndliox. She mid her mutes roamed through wood and field, drunk from crystal sorlUKS, lurched with the birds Photo by C M. Barnlti. IS NATCllK'S WAT. and fed mostly on protein, nature's diet, found iu the worms, luseets. frixts. greens. Kl'i'i'e "d eeUs on rullKC This meant egk's. uiuiiy tnj;s. ckks with MtriMig, livable Keruis, iiml one day Mother Ouluea Mole uwny and hid her uest under a fa lieu tree top In the woods. Hut It was what hHturnl Instinct dic tated. It wuxn't fancy She simply scratched n hollow In the earth and laid there, but the nest was clean mid the moisture from the ground added what wus needed extra for perfect lu- Clllllltioll. There she sal. aereened frotu crows and prowlers and undisturbed by bun plliiK humans until her patience was rewarded by the Mppcanuice of twenty- four lively polka dot darlings that with j a Ktroim kick came from her twenty four egns Did she at once lend them to the coriKTili and shift their little gizzards with fattener'; Did she Invite thetu lo drink from the cow track In the barnyard and ili:: rot and myriad niicrol.es for them from the lonuure pile? Ah. no! That's the nature fake stunt of the old. lousy. Hi'iiMiy leguetl cluck, the guinea keet mid turUev poult illlcller Mother Guinea heard the eull of the I wild, und her llttlo birds wen- hardly ! v. v : r $ V-'- ' ,'.. Photo by C. M. Durnlii TUB MATDKAl, OOINKA MKST. batched till they were out of the nest into the brush und the green grasses, and their mother led them and fed them In nature's own good way, and when the "front was on the pumpkin and the corn was In the shock" she marched from the fields with her handsome Hock. What did their feed costT Nothing. What did they do for the furmerT Killed lots of worms, Insects, ate many weed seeds and scared away the chicken hawks Mr friend. In mixing guineas and turkev follow nature's way, and It will pay DON'TS Don't w it Me lime nod feed trying to orate fatten fowls of the I-eghorn type. Don't IhiI her Irving to .tlJilsb culls Once a eull always s eull Don't feed fowls on range hoary They often get eiiuiiajh from the nat ural run to keep tbein in uininer Don't let flint ponltrv tsnt get rank, li'rf n ftetH lit hi t . h.-n hiii) a melt flee f(. -lien I ' t ipf the rras gniw under ymif ft -i i i ihhi v dlow fiinr an huHllh Keen our fnwiK . !! gi'MSH run TIIK Ol PKHT HsTHt.lsllH Kit A I.TV HUM IN HOl'THKRN ORHIO.N ONE TO 12,000 ACRES OF LAKE COUNTY BEST LANDS Fom.ilf vitlirr for or atW- culturnl oro."es. J. W. MAXWELL A. SON MMVItW, ORIOOH J. L. LYONS. I). I). 3. Dentist Orflce In Watson's Klock, Lake view, Oregon glti Yrar't tf lm In UrtJual ( liotpr.lir nl MlrhU.n 1 I . .At ,. TWO f tryw : him I "l. -J. . r ll. Mrsnd' IIOI15E BRAND WAIST O VCR ALU new pair REE they rip Ml lr EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR THROUGH TRAIN TO PORTLAND Leaves Bend 0:30 A. M . Redmond 7i1B A. M. Arrive Portland BtSO P. M. AOREGOtlTRUffiHV. CENTRAL DREGDH LINE DIRECT CONNECTIONS FOR LIMITED TRAINS TO Seattle, Tacoma, Spokane, Minneapolis, Qt. Paul Chicago, Detroit, Omaha, St. Louis, Kansas City and All Points East and South Via the North Bank Road, Northern Paoltlo and Great Northern Railway. Fare, achedulee and detail wvlll be tupplled on roqueat. W. B. COM AN, Cen. Frt. A Pa. Agt. J. H. CORBETT, Agt., Bend, Oregon. CONSOLIDATED STAGE CO. P. M. CORY, LAKEVIEW - OREGON Operate StagM. carrylpf 1'nitcd 5ltrt '.Malta, RiprMa and PasMnftrt on IB fallowing roitUa: LAKEVIEW TO FLUSH KLAMATH FALLS TO LAKEVIEW Airronosu.t'5 opi hatiui in connection with tmk 5Taoi:s PAUK.i On Way Hound trip Klamath Falls Route - - $10.00 $18.00 Plueh Route 4.00 7.00 OIWICI'S: UkivKa . ..... 5li' Ofllca Pluih . . , . Sullivan Holal klaoiih Falla . . . . American rlotal SHAMROCK STABLES CON BREEN, Proprietor HALF BLOCK tAsr or COUNT HOUSt Special Attention to Transient Stock Horses Hoarded by the Day, Week or Month Always Open Phone 571 LAKEVIEW OREGON Lakeview Steam Laundry HARRY C. HUNKER. Prop. We give efficient service and do good work. Send your washing and give us a trial. TELEPHONE No. 732 Wc are now ready to roll your Ilarley at any time THE BEST LAGER BEER ' " ' AND WHISKIES IN TOWN AT THE KENTUCKY SALOON POST 6k KING, PROPRIETORS A WANT AD IN THE Lake County Examiner WILL BRING RESULTS