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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (June 19, 1913)
DEVELOP TRADE BY CO-OPERATION VALUE OF THE SILO ON DAISY FARMS A. PRIVATE STOCK 1 ij- j j tlx- 7 i 8 Yi A fc3r &&XKKy oy A r An added pleasure for smokers of r;. .V" .!n- is a smoke wit li tlw real, genuine to l.i.to tiisic l hut brals all artificial tastes. J '.very jrain of it is pure, clean tobacco. TueLril into a pie, or rolled into a cigarette. it. IIKllvCS II (Icli.'.'lltl'lll Mlolv.C. Il'jmi him- iint Hiimkril Duke' Mixture, made by l-iHk"11 v v yiyrrt lit DiiiIuiiii, N. ('., try It now. in mlil it 11 n tn inn' U II J (I half miner j of fine Virginia anil North Carolina leaf, witli each .'o nark of Duke's Mixture j-ou iiuw (jrt a lawk of rljjarette papers free and A Free Present Coupon These coupon! are jjimhI for hundred of valuable presents. There are shaving m-U, jewelry, cut glass, base balls, tennis racquet, talking mm liincs, furniture, cam era, and dozens of other arlicli 1 untaUc for every member of the family each of t Item well worth Mivlng the coupon for. As a sprrUl offer, dur ing June and July only, tie uill send our new illustrated cata logue of these presents rIlii,E. Jiif t sriiil us your B I 1 s I 1 e am! al. Id rem on si S ('Mpml Item w'l Afi rtutr mav tmivtltttu .1 rnf HORbE SHOK. J. T., 1 INSUY'S NA TUKAL 1XAK. CHANf.lR TWIST. r-i r FOUR ROM-IS ( ttnduh;tnt4i. PICK. I'LU CUT. PIED MONT t IG ARETTltS. CUX IH.AKLI iu, a Mr Premium Dept. ST. LOUTS. MO. Jtj 2B a r.A 'V-i P i a r . . 1 ' s. - r si m mm r.s r. "tia ivn vi 1 w w Wo Have to Laugh hen first tlnif hu.irs t thin murkvt tt'l us to rut titT h vrry s tn. ill quitiitlty hrrins tlirlr families ure "surh sninll meat raters." I'or i? kiinw one" they taste mir meats tliey will never suffer from that eom ilalnt nxalri. Try us with an in iter. Woultln't ynn rather iay for meat than medicine? Lakeview Meat M rket, HAYES & GROB. props 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 ior . The Fairport Town & Land Co. FAIRPORT TOWN LOTS now on s. ie. Make your selection before the best ones are sold. A big investment for a small amount of m ney. SHEARING CORRALS at the old Mulkey place, Northwest of town, will be ready for service by June 1st, or as early before for any one desiring to shear before that time. I will personallj' supervise all work and guarantee the usual high staiM ard of service. Shearing crew will be .composed of practically aU the sanv.1 men employed last year. 1 , JOE AMBROSE What a Wisconsin Town Did f'criis Emulation. IMMUNITY SPIRIT TELLS. Orst Once Git In the Street of Delavan, Wis., but That Was Before the Citizens Learned to Keep Trade and Profit at Home Three Hundred Per Cent Tax Increase In One Year. I i l:i vim, VK. In mi ex( elW-nt exiirn- tit of 11 vlllrii.1' ii-iiti-r iirnuiiil ulili li i linn i-lin"l oiM- of tin- must irii"ii-r ) oiih iiikI riiltnr-il 111,'i'li'iiltiiriil -! 1 1 1 11 11-iillli-x Twenty live yriirs nco. wi'lUt imI with n .".(i'iimi rnllruiiil iiiurtifiii.'i'. It wim 11 nli'i'i.v Iimvii, with uni Minds 11 ml untidy ynnla. I'oorly k'pt ru:nN l'iull:iti'il tlirim.'li lli rural UiM tniln I.lltle wiim ileum for tin farmer oilier t lift is to miily In nil ImlllTerelit manner hlx fvl n 1 1 ! -r reqiilremi'iilM. uml farm lniuls were nut vnlntil tin highly iiroiinil lielnvnn ni iienr two of the lnr Ker tuwiiH lii tlie county. AlHiut this tlino 1111 it wakening took place Tlie I'ltl'.eiiH paid the railroad liuinli'il (li-l't In one year, even tliutiuh the t(IXe were IncretlHeil nearly M-r cent. Then foltoweil 11 new hl'ti hi IiooI Imllillntf. city waterworkn. Mewerne. electric Ik-lit ilniit. Improved Ktreets uml eounlry routl A womairti Itn lirovement tilth elenned mid raked and h'TuMii-iI the town Hnd estahllshed a atandurd of civic pride that ban made ft; . 1 1 12 '.i8A PINK STOIIl3t AltR A BIO ASSET. Iieluvan one of the nhow towns of southern WImcuii.sIil Tlio Chautuuijuu usHciuhly was organized In 1S'.I., and an additional opportunity for Intellec tual and Hplrilual uplift was ulven our cotiutrydlde. The busliiesM part of the towu was practically rebuilt. Euter prixliiK merchants, w ith fine xtores and excellent utocks of tuerehaudi.se, ac tively competed with the larger nelRh- I borlnn cities of Ilelolt. Jauesrlllu. 1 Whitewater, I!urlIiiton und Lnke Ge- neva for the fanners' trade with ever j Incrcas-li; mici ess, I The merchants, in addition to the ex ! eellent values offered throughout the year, established a Delavan week sale in inlihvlnter, ntjvliicli time every storekeeper made especially low prices oil goods and nlo eotitribuled money to provide free entertainments at the opera house and picture xliows for all visiting farmers und their families. In tryliiK out a new process creamery $t50.00 was Rpent Farmers' Institutes and poultry shows were held. Con certs, theatrical entertainments and winter lecture courses were malutalned und were patronized by town and coun try people alike, l'.aseball panics. Held days, carnivals and celebrations were of frequent occurrence. A free public library was established, and out of about l.".0( pulrons' cards outstanding over 400 are held by farmers und their families living from one to seven miles outside of the town. The result of all these things has been that the town has made the farm ers prosperous und the farmers have made the town prosperous. Ueul es tato Is fully 'JO per cent more valuable In Oehivaii township, according to the last assessment figures of Wulwortb county, than nny other township In the country. A live town Is a better market than a dull one for all kinds of farm produce, with keener competition among busi ness men. And if the farmer can read ily sell his produce in a town be is cvr mln to buy the towu merchants' wares In return. Fine stores with large und varied stocks of up to date merchan dise are Mji assets to tiny town and are equally valuable to the neighboring farmers They spell prosperity for both. American Agriculturist Smoke Costly to Chicago. Smoke belched by locomotives costs Chicago $7.ias.27d every year, accord lug to statistics JttKt published by Al derman Theodore IOtig. which will be submitted to a committee of the city council that Is considering 11 n ordinance for the electrification of railway ter mlnnls. The total smoke damage ex reds tlie city's receipts from saloon licenses, and the average loss to each family of $1.1.48 Is figured 11s greater than the annual personal property tax Alderman Long's figures give the dally number of locomotives in Chicago as l.ti."ti and their dally coal consumption as Ti.tiiil tons Pamtige by smoke of all t ices is esilmaei1 -it iMS.-JC.l.llHS un i nually Tulips Always a Garden Favorite. There is nothing more attractive than 11 tulip bed placed la nil appro priate part of the grounds mound the bouse. The iiiutilcolo! m1 (lower must k I ways tie n finoilte by reason of IU beauty uud variety. Flhis and si Inge mean more to the dairy fnriner tluiii most of us hnv Any conception of, and In the future It will be used more than It tins been In the 1'iiMt, writes Hugh Van Pelt In the American Agriculturist. Commercial foodstuffs hnve. doubled In price during the last fow years. The time him come when the farmer muM rely more find more upon his own e (Torts (o (irislm e and preserve upon his own farm those food Unit will supply the needs of his dairy herds. Me must pm' th e Intensive farming in the broad est sense, Thai which In the past has U-en wasted will In the future meas ure to n great elent the profits. And I dure say there Is no one thing thnt could be added to the farm equipment that would promote intensive farming ao greatly ns a g'sid silo. The silo will make It Hsslble to produce two ! von nds of milk where one was former ly produced, and In ho doing fertilizing constituents will be made available that when returned to the land will In crease the productivity In the same proortiims. Like any other farm Improvement ! i however, the building of a alio Incurs ! considerable expense, yet It la quite doubtful whether or not nny other , building can Im built for the storage of muchness ns will the silo Oonipnr- ( Ing the digestive feeding nutrients. which Indl'-ate more marly than any thing el-e the value of f'HiilstufTs. we Cud that one ton of lover hay, which r J ; Photo by Cornell university The Guemney bred of dairy cat tle I becoming very popular In this country because they ate superior dairy animal and have the ability to yield rich, high colored milk. They are larger and more ruKtccd, a a rule, than Jersey and are In demand for building up milk herda from common cattle. The Guern sey cow doe not stand for beauty, but for profit. She has no pro nounced weak point and U admi rably adapted to tbe conditions of the average farm. Guernsey are economical producer, and their milk test hlK-h In butter fat The Guernsey bull shown I Lcdyard' Warwick, and he la owned by Cor nell university requires the same space for storage as eight tons of silage, contains SSd pounds of total digestible nutrients, while eight tons of corn silage contain 2.(MV4 pounds. Thus two aud one-third times as many digestible feeding nu trients can be stored In the silo space ns lu the haymow. Vnrlous crops have been used In the silo, but In states where corn Is tbe principal crop this product alone will be found most satisfactory In making silage, for several reasons, the main one of which Is that If corn Is not put Into the silo the stalks, which rep resent a large ercentiige of the feed ing value of the corn, will be wasted. While clover or -other grains which might be used for silage can be stored In a small barn or even a stack and aa some dry foods are necessary with silage, the advantage of storing these In dry form becomes apparent In filling the silo there are many precautious which must be taken into consideration, and It will be found that to make good silage Is more difficult than to mnke good nny. If allowed to become too dry before putting Into the silo the com fire fangs, while If cut too green It will be very sour. Either one of these conditions makes the silago unpalatable aud lessens Its value for dairy cattle. Worms In Horsea. The very best treatment for worms In horses Is n good purge following a fast of n day or two The best purge is given In the form of a ball, but If you find difficulty In administering such try a quart of raw Unseed oil Into which have been shaken two ounces of oil of turpentine In a drench, being careful not to strangle the animal, as this will set up a fatal pneumonia. Do this twice, n week apart Follow this with Fowler's solution on feed, say a little bran twice n day for a short pe riod. Olve one-half ounce of standard Fowler's solution to each horse. If a mare Is near foaling hesitate about giving the oil purge. Dr. G. F. Babb. Dairy Breeding and Feeding. In ull breeds milk records are broken so frequently that the last few years "the world's record cow" has held her title but a few months or not more than h year at most, says the Kansns Farmer. Superior breedlns bns been largely responsible for the big records, but the breeding could not have assert ed except, for a thorough understand ing of feeding for tullk and with this good care. Each Is necessary to make dairy breeding count. We confidently predict (hat with n more general spread j or 1 tie Knowledge or reeutug ror mtiK production more high records will be established. mm of good Wines and Liquors should be in every home where the aged are in constant need of a little pure stimulant. We can confidently recommend our brands of Wines and Liquors as being perfectly pure, perfectly matured, and decidedly wholisomc. They have not that fiery taste that repels, but rather the mellow, fruity flavor that makes them both pleasant and pop ular The prices will meet 3011 r approbation. KENTUCKY SALOON POST & KING, Proprietors LAKEVIEW ERECTED IN 1900 -rf L - T. 2, MODERN THROUOHOIT SAnPLE ROOfl For COnnERCIAL, TRAVELERS t-w COURTEOUS TREATMENT LIGHT & HARROW, Proprietors F. P. LIGHT QEO. HARROW LAKE. COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY Incorporared. A Complete Record We have made an entire transcript of all Records In Lake County which In any way, affect Keal Property In the county. We have a complete Record of every Morta:aje and transfer ever made in Lake County, and ever Deed (rlwn Errors Found in Title In transcribing the records we have found numerous mort gages recorded In tbe Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded to the Mortgage record and other books. 11 and reds of mortgages and deeds are not Indexed at all, and moat difficult to trace up from the records. We have notations of all these Errors. Others annot fina tbem. We have put 1 uuirdb of dollars bunting up these errors, and we can fully goarnntee our work. J. D. VENATOR, flanager. CONSOLIDATED STAGE CO. P. M. CORY, . LAKEVIEW - OREGON Operate Stage, carrying United State . Mali. Expreu and Passenger en the following routes: LAKEVIEW TO PLUSH KLAMATH FALLS TO LAKEVIEW AUTOrtOBILES OPERATED IN CONNECTION WITH THE STAUES PARES: One Way Roand trip Klamath Falls Route - - - $10.00 $18.00 Plush Route 4.00 7.00 OEFICES: Lakeview . Stag Office Pluan . . . Sullivan Hotel KlaasMtb Fall . . . American Hotel WALLACE & SOW (Wm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lake County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Parlors, next door to Telephone Office WATSON BUILDING Lakeview Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone No. It J. P. DUCKWORTH, Manager Buss to Meet All Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage y day, Week or Moth OUR CUST03IERS ARK Ot ii ADVERTISERS" Let The Examiner Figure oh Your Next Job Prlnltnff