Ipfc HAS THE GIRCULA TOV- PRINTS THE NEWS- REACHES THE PEOPLE THE EXAMINER IS THE OFFICIAL RARER OF LAKE COUNTY VOL. XXXIV. LAKEVIEW, LAKE COUNTY, OREGON, AUGUST 7, 1913. NO. 32 ! V r, . SWEET PEA FAIR PROMISING EVENT Premium Will De Award ed cind Many 8lde At traction Given. lb I !! of the M. E. Church arc completing th plant for tha "Sweet ra" Fall to be bald Aug. IS and 16. Tba room ona door north of B.iil'i alortj will ba prettily deooratad and tha sweet paaa entered for premluma will ba tba center ot attraction. Varioua bootha will ba In evidence presided over by tha different eoramltteea. A lunch counter, where ona may obtain a good hioeb of horoo-eoohad food will ba provided far both daya. Alio on Saturday there wilt be a cooked food ealo where ona may obtain delicaolca for tha Sunday dinner, without being obliged to cook at home In tba heated kitchen. Tha fair will ba open to tha publio at 10:30 a. in. Friday. Thoia bringing eweet peaa for entry tor premluma will please bring them early Friday morning, ao that tba committee will have ample tlma to arrange the dia play. An admlition fee often centa will be charged for thia fair. Come and aee the aweet pea and the (sweet) bablea aa there will be a baby ahow on both daya of tha fair. RAILRlDlfER PRAISESCOUNTRY Charles Moran Makes Trip of Inspection to Fairport Resort. Fairport, Calif., Aog 5 (Speclal) Cbarlea Moran, of Maw York City, identified with the Morans, ownera of the) Nevada California-Oregon railway, waa here yesterday accompanied by T. F. Duiiawav, vice-preaidont and general manager of the road. The trip waa purely one of inspection and Mr. Moran expreseed hlmaelf aa being well pleased with the progreaa mad by the various sectiona along the line of the road. "I am pleaaed at these evidence! of progreaa", he remarked. "Condition! appear to ba more favorable than they were lest year. .The settlement of the varioua aectiona along the line of the road mutt ultimately mean much. The Madeline violnity and the Gooae Lake Valley ahow unmiatakable evldenoca of progreaa. "Gooae Lake ia, Indeed, a beautiful body of water and compares favorably, in a acenle aenae. with Champlain and the famuua lakea of tha East. There ia no logical reason why thia should not become the favorite resort point for the people of the three atates tra veled by the road. You have every thing demanded to make it an import ant point." The party will leave tomorrow for Reno, Mr. Moran returning to New York. INSPECTOR FINDS RLIGHTGENERAL Recommends Cutting Out and Use of Strong Spray Twice Yearly Deputy County Fruit Inspector J. L. Hampton of Paisley,, writea tha Exam ner under date of August 5, that he baa just completed an Inspection ot practically all of the orchards in Lake view and wltn few exceptions he found tbera affected with blight. Down the valley tha oonditiona are the aame, and ao below the atate line, atates Mr. Ilampton. Ha further writea: "I bava written tha Inspector of that district to cooperate with oa In stamp ing out the disease. The people bava without any exception promised prompt aotion. Tba disease affecting tha apple and crabappla ia a fungua growth and should be cut out and burnal. "Clean culture la very essential to the orchard. Spray with a atrong solution of lime and sulphur In lata fall and early Spring with from 140 to 160 pounda pressure, which will also kill tha aphis. Destroy the Weeds On account of tha late aommer rains during . tnv present season injurious and noxloua wetda on summer fallow aa wall aa vacant fields and lota and along tha publio highway In the country and towns, bava become more rank than for several years. Tba county and atate aathorltlee should call the attention of all ownera and lessea to tha 1918 atatute requiring ownera and laaaea to deatroy tbeaa weeds. A maximum penalty of 160 fin la provided for tba first offense in allowing aucb weeae to grow on the place or on tba highway In front of a place. For tacb auccesive offense tha maximum penalty la 1100 fine. HANLEYlillBS WITH CELEBRITIES Sageof Central Oregon Is . Royal I y Entertained In the East. Entries in William Hanley'a diary for the last few weeks that, ia if he keepa a diary resembles a "Wbo'e Who" directory, for in these last few weeks "Hill" who stopped in Port land recently on bia way to bia Harney County ranch from a trip "back East" haa been hobnobbing with some of the notables of the Nation some ot "the boys." aa he calls them, aaya tha Uregonlan. He went East primarily to go fishing with J. J. Hill, which is a .are distinc tion in itself, but it didn't swell the site of "Dill's" bead. Me atopped on the way to aee hia double," whoae Brat name rlso is "Bill" and who now ia holding down the job of Secretary of State In Preaident Wilson'a Cabi net. Mr. Hanley and Mr. Bryan are close friends. He met Preaident Wil son In Washington and tilled luncheon ngagementa with a group of mora or leaa distinguished Senators. Army offlcera and awar-atateamen, all of wboaa asms bekdees not now recall. 1 hen tie atopped In New York and visited for a brief few minutea with hia friend, Mayor Gaynor, and inci dentally met a number of the Gover nors returning home from the recent Gettysburg reunion. On the way Weat he waa captured at St. Paul by hia friend, Louis W. Hill, who took him on an automobile trip to Glacier National Park, where be met another distinguished company of particlpanta in thereoently conduct ed Glidden tour. While in Portland be waa enter tained bv Carl K. Gray, president of the Great Northern, and J. II. Young, president of the Nortn Bank road. EXPRESS LOWERED TO PARCEL POST Commission Orders Swe eping: Reductions In Par cels Everywhere. A dispatch from Washington, D. C, under date of August 4. aaya: The Interstate Commerce Commission to day ordered sweeping reductions in the express rates on parcels everywhere In the country. These tanu from 10 to 60 per cent. The order becomes effective October 16tb. The commissioners declare that for two years the rates will be experimen tal. .Practically all tha rates on par- oela under fifty pounda are radically lowered. In the case of small pack ages carried mora than JOO and leaa than 8,000 miles, the rates are nearly all lowered to the parcel post rate. Over 8,000 miles the express and parcel post ratea are identical. The order of the commission sim plifies tha tariffs. It establishes the block or zone system of tariffs. A committee, composed of members of tha commission and representatives of the express companies ia organized by the order to devise the beat avenuea of transportation, .and eliminate cir cuitous routes. The commissioners asert that tbe express companies give away $2,000, 000 In free aervice each year through franka. T. J. Sullivan, a aubstantial tuslnesi man of Plush, apent aeveral daya In Lakevlew tbia week. STATE POLITICS BEGIN ANOTHER CANDIDATE SLATED FOR GOVERNOR OF OREGON George E. Chamberlain Will Again Be Can didate for U S. Senator Governor West Says He is Through With Politics We are led to telieve by tbe Portland Telegram that tha political pot for next election ia beginning to elmmer, and tba situation la partially lined up tbaaly : According to intimate irienda and political aaaociatea of Governor Weat, tha Governor will not at the ex piration of hia Gubernatorial term become a candidate on the Democratic tlcfet for United Btatea Senator, nor for re-election aa Governor, but will enter instead Into the Chautauqua. lyceum and magazine field. W. N. Catena, who served aa private secretary to Senator Chamberlain when he oc-upled the Governor's chair, ami wbo Is now circuit juoge in jnuit nomth County, ia grooming himself for the Governorship, snd will before long announce hia candidacy. Senator Chamberlain has already an nounced that he will be a candidate to succeed himself aa senator, and be and Catena will head tbe Democratic ticket at the next general election, if tha political torecaata of the frlenda of VARIED FARMING JELL EXEMPLIFIED Walter M. Pax ton Has Bullded Ideal Country Home'at Profit. Thai diversified farming can be sue- cessfully and profitably practiced in thia vallev has been thoroughly demon strated hy Walter M. Paxton. who owr.a an ideal country home a tew milea north of Lakeview. Mr. Paxton and family have been living at their pres ent home but comparatively a ahort time, tut t"e many improvementa that hava been made emphasize tbe fact that energy haa been the chief factor in bringing about these developments. Their original holdings consisted of 40 scree but tbey bava since acquired 80 acrea more, giving them 120 acrea of land which laya both above and be low the main road leading north of town. Mr. Paxton thia year haa 25 acrea of oats, a sample from wbiuh now in the Examiner office measures 5 ft. and 8 inchea from root to tip. In addition to this be ia raising, wheat, alfalfa, potatoes, garden atutfa and ia experimenting with Bald Barley, which glvea Indications of producing a fair yield snd of becoming a staple product in this valley. Mr. Paxton is quite extensively en gaged in the chicken business from which ha realizes a substantial profit. He also has nearly 100 head of hogs, and baa milch cows from which be sells milk and butter. Young colta can be aeen in the barn yard, and in fact near ly everything can be found on the plaoe that ia a revenue producer. In thia way can be aeen the real advan tage of diversified farming. The stock la fed and fattened by produce grown on the ranch; the different modes of production are adopted that best wora in conjunction with eaoh other: there la alwaya something to sell and little to buy hence the profit. Nearly all the hillside land on thlb ranch, that can be done so convenient ly, ia farmed to Spring wheat which will aurely produce better than 25 bushela to tha acre. The remainder of the bill land will be utilized for rang purposes for dairy stock, and thus nu part of the plaoe will lay Idle. Now that he baa tha producing elements of the ranch under development, Mr. Pax ton will be able to devote more time to convenient and luxurloua improve menta about the house. (However, no apologies are required for present con ditions, as tbey now hava a beautiful thia Democratic triumvirate are ful filled. Landing credence to tbeae declara tion and political predlctlona ia the fact that recently Gatena conferred with Governor Weat In Salem, getting from bim tbe atatement that the Gov ernor would not ae a candidate to aoc cead bimaelf, and announced later to the coterie of politiciana who now father proohecies that with West out of the field he would become a candi date for Governor. Repeatedly within the iastaix months Governor West haa Istiued declarationa that he would not be a candidate to aucceed himself. Coming on the heela of the Democratic victory In the Na tion and a rumor that Senator Cham berlain waa scheduled for a federal appointment, these deniala were con atroed to mean that the Governor was making preparatinne to aucceed the Senator. Financial reasons are given by the Governor'a Irienda for hia decision to retire from politics. COMPLAINT FILED AGAINSTCOMPANY Operators and State Of ficials Envolved In Road Grant Scheme. The devioua processes by which the Federal timber lands paa-cd from the ownership of the people to that of tbe Southern Oregon Company, a private corporation, ia related in a bill of com plaint filed in a auit in equity in the United Statoa District Court, which impticatea besides tbe company. Gov ernor Oawald Weat, and A. M. Craw ford, Attorney General of Oregon. Tbe complaint sets forth that atate officers are named because tba State of Oregon baa been negligent in fulfilling a trust imposed in it by Congress, which in 1869 granted to the state a atrip of land approximately VI milea wide ex tending from Koseburg to Coos Bay, on condition that a military wagon road be constructed between those two places. It was provided that the land grant ed, some of the best timber and -agricultural land in Oregon, be sold to actual settlers in quarter-section tracts to each settler, for not more than 2. CO an acre. The complaint alleges that all terms of the gratt hive been violated and asks that the titlo to the land now held by the Southern Oregon Company ba returned to the Stale of Oregon. The complaints auk the court to set tle the case de'in tely by ordering me Southern Oregon Cunipauy to quit claim to the laid It is a so atd that an injunction be is.-ued against the further cutting of timber from the land and that a receiver be Appointed to collect for all the timber that has been out. Approximately 100,000 acrea are affected by the present auit. home.) Preparations are being made to install a gasoline pump and tank at the well to make water available for Ught Irrigation purposes aa well as more convenient for domestic uses. What haa been accomplished by Mr. Paxton can be emulated by every other farmer in the valley, aa all conditiona in the virgin atate of tbe land are aim ilar, if not identical, to those aa they wore on thia plaoe. Diversified farm ing, including the raising ot ataple products, stock, hogs, cnickens and dairying can be carried on successfully in the Goose Lake Valley. All that ia required la tbe push, energy and management like baa been applied In bringing about tha development of the Walter Paxton ranch. W. P. Is Stronger Complete abaorption of the Western Pacific railraod by tha Denver it Rio Grande ia the lateat big finance-railroad plan. It ia proooaed by Preaident Benjamin F. Bosh of the Missouri Pacific, which owns both roads, and while It ia not definitely aet forth, the probability ia great that all three linea aoon will be united into one sys tem. President Bush la now in New York City, where be went to present bia plana to tbe bankera who finance tba ayatem. Bia refinancing proposi tion incladea a plan thereby ah tbe mortgages, and bonds now beld againat the Western Pacific will be assumed by the Hio Grande. IiHElifiTAll MEETSWATERLOO Alturas Is Planning a Big Tournament and Shoot Next Month. Tbe Lakeview ball team met their Waterloo last Sunday in tbe game with Altutaa. There were 62 tieketa aold at the Lakeview depot and all wbo participated in the excursion report a good time. Tbe home boya offer no ex cuse for losing the game other than just "bum" playing on their part and clever work on the part of the Tigera. K. A. Clark, the regular Lakeview twirler, waa unable to go owing to having . met with a slight accident which injured hia thigh, and Paul Drenkel aubstituted in bia atead. Paul waa also slightly incapacitated on ac count of a bad thumb and waa unable to pitch up to his usual standard. The Lakeview nine aucceeded In making one tally in tbe first inning, which fortunately they old not load aa it waa tbe only one in (he entire game. Tbey kept Alturas tu tbe "gooae egg" column, however, until tbe end of the fourth inning when the Tigera got turned looae and from then 'to the end of the game ma4e nine rtngeraj. maK ing a final acore of 9 to 1 in favor, of Alturas. Tha trsp a'hoot contest did not take place owing to the local team being unable to attend. Tbia waa due to varioua reasons., principally on acount of the present busy aeason and because some of the sportsmen were out of town. Alturaa ia making arrangements to hold a large base ball tournament in September, beginning tbe 22nd. There will be $1125 bung op in purses, and it ia expected that aeveral teama will enter, including Lakeview. Thia will be tbe time ot the Modoc County fair, and in addition to the ball tournament and other amusements, a trap shoot conteat will be held with a puree of $50 or 9100 and the entrance teea for the winning team. HUNTERlSFjNED FOR MUTILATION J. A. Donovan Brings Deer Into Town and Pays a Fine. J. A. Donovan, who ia well known locally, having formerly come from St. Joseph, Mo, last Monday came to town w.th a deer after a few days hunt near Burnt Creek east of town. Owing tn the hide and carcass having been to mutilated that it waa impos sible lo discern the sex of tho animal, Otmu Warden McKimmens arrested Mr. Donovan who paid the mini mum fine o' 925 for the charge. Other members of his party said the deer waa a male, and Warden McKimmens elated tbfit he ww reasonably sura of this fact, but owing to the atipulation of the law, It was necessary to tine the slayer on the charge of mutilation. The Oregon code on tbia reads aa fol lows: "It ahall be unlawful for any person, after having killed . any deer, to ao mutilate tha dead carcase thereof in any manner ao aa to intentionally dis guise the sex thereof, and prevent the aame from being ascertained or deter mined." . . Klamath Falla bai decided not to change the datea for the convention of tbe Central Oregon Development League on aocount of tbe arrival of Secretary of the Interior Lane. The meeting will be beld on the datea of August 19, 20 and 21. aa originally planned. ACCOUNT SYSTEM TOBEENFORCED Work Will First Be Taken Up With County Clerks Over State. VVork on the state 'a uniform account ing ayatem, provided for by act of the laat legislature, baa been actively started ty State Insurance Commis sioner J. W. Ferguson. Tbe first work to be done will be to deviae a oniform, simple method of handling accoonts of the clerka and atate Inatitotiona. Tbe new law pro vince that tba new system must ahow details of the source and amount of all expenditure and receipts. Tbe ayatem must also be ao simple and ao easy to under tarn that any outsider can go into any office and with a little studying become perfectly cognizant with the work of the institution or office. Ona of the first t Sg practical jobs that these men will ondertake will be the auditing of the county books. Tbia ' will not Le started for several months, and possibly not until early In 1914. At any rate, whenever tbe work ia none it will be thorough. Home industry will be patronized in this line of work and public accountants of Oregon will be employed. stociuiarRet has dull appearance Beef Prices Decline and Demand For Sheep Is Lacking. Receipts for the week have been; Cattle 1887: Carvee 215: Hogs 2479; Streep 48fl2fHorsee 7. , Heavy receipts of cattle tor tbe week, and the fact that tha beat stuff was not offering baa caused the mar- ' ket to decline from 25 centa lo 50 centa. Good choice stuff is in demand and would still bring at good price, tat ( there ia no demwri for poor quality, which just demoralizes the market. The dehorning of rattle is 'strongly urged, aa in many instancea shippers receive from 25 to 40 centa leas on account of the bruised condition of the stuff offered. $3.25 ia the top on steers when good ones are in evidence. One extra choice lot of cowa brought 7.50, but good cowa are selling around 6.75 and 7.00. Fancy heifers would bring good pricea but there U a wide range in tbe class offered, as in tbe ease with steers. Calvea steady and bulla a shade lower. The hog market baa dropped from ten centa to 19.70 for best light swine, and will probably go lower, as packers needs are temporarily supplied. The sheep house wsa slow and draggy, probably due to the hot weath er. Not any receipts. Good ewes would bring 3.50, top . wetbera 3.67 to 4.00, and top last of the mountain lamb 5.50 to 5 75 but a general apathy exists in tbe sheep trade. GOVElliiTWILL HELP MOVE CROPS Funds Will Be Placed In Large Banks and Dis tributed. Secretary McAdoo bas prepared to distribute the promised $5,000,000 to $50,000,000 of Government funds to the agricultural regions of the south and west. The aeoretary ia receiving information as to tbe needa of distrlcta where harvesting; is now under wsy, and expeeta to have the money in banka in ample time for the movement of the cropa. It ia expected that the Secretary'a plan would be a powerful faetor in averting or relieving the prospective tightness of money char acteristic of the crop-moving season. The money will be placed in the banka of tbe large cites in the agricultural regions of the aoutb and west on the condition that they will distribute the money to the country banns at reason able ratea of Interest. J ft-