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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1913)
Lakeview A complete llneol harness, whips, spurs,qullts, roae etts, tc, etc THE BEST VAQUERO SADDLE ON THE MARKET AHLSTROM & GUNTHER, Props. Successors to S. P. AHLSTROM THE LAKEVIEV ABSTRACT & TITLE CO. A2s:n:cTS to all seal property in lake county, oregor Our Complete Tract index Inturoai Accuracy, Promptnam and Reliability Such an Index is the ONLY RLLUBLE system from which an Abstract can be made, showing all defects of title. We Also Furnfsh fcn?J&ZZS' H. W. MORGAN, Manager, LAKEVIEW, OREGON POSTOFFICB BOX 243 PMOMttTt LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY t Incorporated. A Complete Record We havr made an entire transcript of all Records In lAke County which In any way, affect Heal Proiierty In the county. We have a complete liecorJ of every Mortgage and transfer ever made In Lake County, and ever Deed given. Errors Found in Titles In transcribing the records we have found numerous mort gages recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded la the Mortgage record and other books. Hundreds 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 fiou ibem. We have pat Hundreds of dollars bunting up these errors, and we can fully guarantee nor work J. D. VENATOR, Lakeview Steam Laundry HARRY C. HUNKER, Prop. We give efficient service and do good work. Send your washing and give us a trial. TELEPHONE BARGAINS in REAL ESTATE 100 acres on Thomas Creek, all meadow land and good water rights; five miles from town; cuts 175 tons of hay; all fenced and a fine dairy. Price $22.00 per acre, one-third cash, G per cent interest, easy terms. 120 acres on Cottonwood Creek, about 25 acres into Timothy hay, wheat and oats. Small house . and barn, good outside range, SO acres tillable, lots df water, a fine small dairy ranch. Price $12.50 per ftcre. A nice 4-room house, furnished, and large lot for sale at $1,000 at Plush, Oicgon. 4 acres, a good house, out-buildings, good gar den. and orchard, for sale at $1,000. A snap. VYearc blocking up the O.V.L. Tracts. If you Care to buy or sell tell us your wants. We are Agents for the Bankers Life Insurance Company. Curtis 8l Utley Real Estate, Lakeview, Ore. Read The Examiner Want Ads Saddlery Everything In the line of carriage and horse furnish ings. Repairing by competent men. Hanager. No. 732 m-i-m-h miniimi mm ALL AROUND THC DAIRY. 8t1iikl smite lira it and corn chop on the calf's nose after It Is throiiKh drinking, its sklm milk Qmly one third corn chop, however). It soon gets a tante of feed In this way and thus wl'l learu to est. If you would Imve the hunk lie count lutlnnce In your favor, he sure to feed the dnlry caws a balanced ration. Take a three-fourth Inch roo about ten feet Ionic (auy old roe will do). Tie the rhd tog-ether and drop It over the cow'a buck Just forward of the rump. Let It hang down over the lours Just above the ganibrels. The cow will never try to switch her tall when being milked. The cow that Is naturally n little nervous or Impatient can be spoiled very easily by rough handling. This Is something that should never be accorded to any dairy cow. It Is better to slve a cow six to eight weeks' rest between periods of lactation, but some cows are so persistent In their milking habits that It Is danger ous to force them dry. ' nmn i i 1 1 1 1 1 i i 1 1 m i i STOMACH WORMS OF LAMBS. QasoHne Treatment Is Advieed For the AfflicUd Animals, Stomach worms cause more fatali ties among lambs than any other com mon disease. The symptoms are soon well defined. The lamb has a sickly, drowsy appearance; the ears droop: nose and mouth have a bloodless ap pearance. On catching the lamb It lacks weight, and by parting the wool you will Immediately observe the skin Is white and colorless Instead of pink, as In a healthy lamb. Now. as to a cure. Our most rellabh remedy has been the "gasoline treat ment." but It must be administered by an experienced or careful hand, snys a writer In the Orange Judd Farmer. I want to repeat this warning no careless or Inexperienced person shoii'd ndmlulster this remedy. Our method Is lis follows: Procure a four ounce bottle. Have a Jug or bucket of new or sweet milk: put three ounces of milk lu the Imttle niwl one tenspontifut of gnsollne: stand thfl i ft , r m . .'mww .aia. J T.I itr. ' tit" i e : ' ' ' ' '.v-- T - '- : -li g ;: i Ncllilnn tmprovrs tin- looks of the farm and 'the reputation of the fannvr more than n clean, well kept lawn. To this should U- add ed, of course, fields that aro ron Hpicuously clean, barnyards free from noxious growths and fence corners free from weeds. Where dandelions und the various burs and the many poisonous creepers prow, there you lind the lazy or the overtaxed farmer. And, In a meas ure, every tiller of the soil Is de linquent ulong these lines. Few have the time to punh n lawn mower or bend tQ the uprooting of wetda. What Is needed is a living lawn tnower, and we t;avo this In the. patient sliecp. You may run your tlock In the jnost luxuriant of pas tures, yet thu Hhei p will nlhhle at the noxious weeds and dtHtroy them Their peculiar appetites re quire this chanKe from Ki'axsca and clovers Country Uenlleniaii. Iamb In a corner of Ijiilliliir,' or pen: stand astride of lumli a u.I liold its head only high enough that it can swallow the liquid. Now tnko mixture anil shake well und keep on shaking nutil bottle U ready to put In lamb's mouth; pour It In slowly; remove bot tle and rcKhake If necessary before It has all been given. Oue or two facts I want to Impress on my readers are: First, you must mix the dose for each lamb separate ly, as gasoline and milk will not mix without continual shaking, and If giv en pure n few drops only kllf the lambs: second, the jambs should be kept up without food for at least ten hours before the mixture Is given. Two applications are usually all that la necessary. After the affected lamba begin to show Improvement they should he well fed and given a tonic for the blood and given frequent change of pasture. Experiment With Hog Fssd. The Virginia experiment station has carried on an extended trial xf feeding bogs on two diets, corn and digestive tankage and corn and sklmmllk, with the result that the latter shows slight advantage over the former, principally becauso of the appetizing quality and added moisture of the sklmmllk. On a commercial ImkIh very little differ ence was found. MILKING SHORTHORNS FOR THE NORTHWEST (By PROP. THOS. 8HAW.) There Is now In the quarantine' at South Quebec the largest Importation of milking Shorthorns ever brought to America. Heretofore only a few Individuals of this class have ever crossed the Atlantlo for this country. These cattle were purchased In Eng land by Mr. J. J. Hill, and will be brought to his North Oaks farm not tar from 8L Paul. Mr. Hill Is strong believer In the value of the two purpose cow, that is, the cow for milk and Mao for beef, usually spoken of now as the dual purpose cow, and of cows of this class he regards none as superior to the milking Shorthorns, called In llrltain the dairy Shorthorn. He believes that this type of cow Is one that Is admirably suited to ths needs of the average farmer, and In this he Is unquestionably right, not withstanding the teaching of many In our experiment stations to the con trary. Many In those stations have taught that there was no. place for the dual cow on the farm. They have said she was "a myth, a deluslou and a snare." They have claimed that to keep her on the farm was like "going to bunt prairie chickens with a, hull pup," or like "riding Into battle on a heavy draught horse." TIiom men were hon est In their statements, but they sim ply did not know. They thought they knew, but they were mistaken. More over, - they claimed that dual attle could not be bred. For twenty-live yeara some of those men have been diligently propagating that nons'n, and the public funds have borne the expense. The folly of such teaching will be apparent from the following: In Ki.g lacd there is today an association for promoting the Interests of this breed. This association has now 185 mem bers. In 1I2 It published the records of milk pc "Hon from 234 females, of which .,uite percentage were bolters witb their hrt lactation pe riod. The average of milk production from these was lictween 7,000 und 8,000 pounds for the year. Homo went higher than IU.uimi pounds. At Kol enscott. l.echtatle. Cltr.icestershlre, the owner, Robert llobhs, has kept mill ing Shorthorns constantly since 1S7.V The herd now nutntiers nearly Cws In mill.. Since lyus the averag of all these. Including a larc. lot ol heifers. In milk production has been considerably more th in fi.nou pound each year. The cow I mlde 7th, lth a one-year milk record ending May 31, l'Ji:i, gave 13.f33 pounds, and the cow Hose 37th 14,277 pounds. Many otber Instances of similar production may be cited. Cows of this breed stand tlrst in the milking trials of the shows more frequently than those of any other breed. Including the milking breed6. While the production of milk Is thus fclghly satisfactory, all the males not wanted for beef are grown Into bul locks. Tby rpr1 on skim milk and adjuncts during the milk period. They are rold at the fie of eighteen to thirty months. At twenty-four months they usually average not les-; than 1.200 pounds, nml sell for iinu to $12f each. They sre favorites w ith the butcher, us there Is less loss In cutting up the carcacs than ,iHth bul locks reared on the dams. There Is n larger proportion of leun and less un desirable fat on the hand reared steers. It Is a fact that fully ' per cent of the mll'. used In Britain conies from pure and grade Shorthorn and nearly as high a percentage ot the meat. Mr. Powell, the venerable secretary of the Shorthorn association, told the writer that even tnany of thi; breeders of Scotch Shorthorns arc now milking their herds. Think of th? prices which those caltle bring. At the dispersal sale of Car-ett Taylor last year females of all ages sold for an average of A."S:i, lCs, ed. The people of .Argentina. South Africa New Zealand and Australia are no?, buying thei-e cattle In large number and yet the wise men of our tUi.ttons claim that Ihey can't be bred. Mr. Hill'n Shorthorn Importation consists of twenty-eight animals, ot which three ure males. The female!' ere young cows from two to six years old. They are all now milking and will calve asairi In due time. Individ, ually they r:ink high, having been chosen with much care. They have milk reconN running from (i,0!0 tr 10,000 pounds s year. There Is certainly large room for this class of cattle In all the North western states'. This does not mean that there Is' no place for the dairy breeds.. There "fa a wide place also for the dairy breeds, but viewed from the standpoint of the present and pros pective demand for beef there Is a much larger place for dual cattle This In future must come from the arable farm and It must come mainly from dual cattle that will be milked. MOTHER OP EIGHTEEN CHILDREN "I ain the mother ol eighteen child ren and have the praise of doing more work tn an any young woman in my town," writes Mrs. C. J. Martin, Boone Mill, Va. "I Buffered lor five yearn with stomach trouble and could not eat as, much as a bUcult without suffering. I have tuken three bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets ant am now a well woman and weigh 168 pounds. I can eat anything I want to, and as much as I want and leel better tliau 1 have at any time In ten years. 1 refer to any one In Iiooue Mill or vicinity and they will vouch for what I say." ('Iisiuberlnln's Tab lets are for sale by ull dealers. U. S. 'AIDS IN R0ADMAK1NQ. Imprevsmant Marked and Many ttatsa New In Line. Improvement of the public roniN of the United flutes Is to Iw greater this year than ever, according to tho re ports received from all pnrts t Ihe country by ex-Heeretnry Wilson of the United (Mates department of agricul ture. A Joint committee of congresa Is riiKsgcd In an Investigation of the feasibility of federal aid In the con struction, Improvement and mainte nance of public highways, anil a uutn ler of the state legislatures have con sidered good rond legislation. In con nection with the funeral Impetus that tho good rnd movement baa recently had In all parts of the country, the director of the office of publlo roads says: "Too much stress cannot bo InM upon the Importance of maintenance In connection with the work of Improving the roads. The people In nearly all the statea are filled with enthusiasm for rend improvement and are spending enormous sum of money In tho con struction of euperb roads. "To maintain the roads In gtwsl con dition year after year requires a con siderable annual outlay, but this out lay Is Indefinitely less than the loss which must fall upon th-peopl even tually If they allots; their ronds to go to utter rulit. The thing for all advo cates of good rosds to do Is to urge continuous, systematic matutcntim-e and setting aside every year of an amount per mile estimated by the en gineer In charge to U siidlcletit for the maintenance of tho road a course I wnicn must miikv ir economy bum efficiency." Nstienal Fudtration Meeting. The National flood Komls federation tins closed an Interesting meeting at Birmingham, Ala., where much enthu siasm was shown uMn the subject of U'lter public highway. Officers elected were John II. Itiinkhead. Unit ed States senator from Alabama, pres ident: Uulted Stnten Judge W. T. fJrnhb, treasurer: J. A. Ilountree, sec rotary. The vice presidents are: I Hl M. Totter. ArUonn: K. J. Watson. South Carolina: John W. O'Neal, Ala bama. The meeting was well attend ed. there Ixing HMil delegates present from twenty-four stste. The next meeting will be held In St. I.onl uol later than Nov. 1.V Ro.ids Belong to Public In theory the rom! are "public;" In fact the rondi are the property of the private citizen; in theory the roads srr controlled by highway otllcliils; In fii'i the ronds are controlled ly any man who lu moKt bx-n. I :!(-! uses them for hU own linlhiilii.il purpose nnd In auy way and nt any time of the year. SITHSCItlUK ft lit THK KXAMINKR t' tU ir!Mjrii!T!rj JV j v 1 91 ev? WALLACE & SON (Wm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lako County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION Ahh Parlors, next door WATSON Lakeview Ice, Transfer and Storage Co .Telephone No. Kit J. I. DUCKWOltTII, MA.NAfjKit i Cuss to Meet All Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by day, Woek or Month "OUIt CUSTOMERS Deafness Cannot Be Cured by liiri, apiilli-utliiiiH, tlu-y i-unnot rom-b tho UlM-mu-d i-irtlon of Hie rur. Th-'ii- U only un ny l-ur ilinfni-. unit Hint l liy rcHialltutkiU- I rt-iiHMlU-i. lM:nriit-h 1h i-tftiMfd by itu liillainetl (-oiHlltlvn 'f tbH mui-oim llnlnif of tli KuhIhcIiImu Tube. When tbla IiiIm In lufliinit-d you havt a rumbling wuiml or luiH-rff-rt bfuring. and ht-n It U entirely -lot-d Ib-nfiu-M In Urn rrult, mul tinli-M tlie liitluiiiiiiatlon -M b tuk'-ii out mill thU tulw rt-btim-d to ltd uoriuul rouilttlou, bi-ar-Ing wlli lw dpNtroyi-d forever: ulna cmumi out ol t-u ar riuwd by Catarrh, wiiU-U la nothing bul au Intlann-d t-oiulitlon of thft inumua aurfai-oa. We will glvti One Hundred Hollara for any raai of Hcufui-iu, (i-auNi-d by -trili) that eanuot lit run-d by llall'a L'utarrb Cure, Knid for clrcu lura, free. K. J. rilKNKY (U, Toledo, 0. Sold by Prugglnta, Vk-. Tiiku Hull's t'uuilly l'illa for constipation. IN Cattlb burelv Phsvintk, CUTTEirS BLACK LEG VACCINF Calilnrou'a lavoi itu, thu ii.om tuc ci tiliil. eualcal uiud and low. .' nike.d reliable vneemo iiimltf PuwUor. airing or (illl lot in, Vm :ur In u bluck fg liooLii-t. the Cutter laboratory liliRkUl.tV, CAL. . If your druggliil doi-a not atocOB iMtiitct. older direct irom ARISTOCRATIC 80YINES BOUGHT BY J. J. HILL John U. Shaw Is In receipt of a let ler from bis brother, Thomas Shaw, who la now In Kurope purchasing thorough brrd csttle for Jamos J. Hill, giving the Information that many aris tocratic bovlnea will be added to Mr Hill's herd. The very best which can bo found across tho water aro being selected, and the question of prlca la not entering Into the matter to any great extent, as 11,000 has been paid for a bull, and .others aro being bought at correspondingly high prices. The letter states that twenty-eight shorthorns and twelve Ayrshire have been purchased, and that tho writer baa visited many landa before buying tho shorthorns, aa ha was determined to get only tho best. He continues: "I am positive that we have bought the best herd ot shorthorns that over left England. ho average price for them waa 6oo, tnd for tho Ayrshlres, I3S0. One of the bulls cost 13,000, and waa a 4 year-old at that. No one can toll me dual purpose cattle cannot be bred. The highest priced cattle In Kngland are the dual shorthorns. Many give 10,000 pounds of milk per year, and at ths same time produce the best ot beef steers. 1 have secured twenty-two Oxfords and twenty-two Shropshire sheep, and Mr.' Hill baa cabled me to get three Angua bull, and I am starting tonight for Aber deen, Scotland, to get them." before returning, Mr. Shaw will visit Holland for the purpose of obtaining a berd of Holstelns, and from there wilt go to France to buy French dairy cattle, a breed tittle known In tbla country, Mr. Shaw was for several yeara bead of the agricultural college at Uuelph, Ontario, and waa afterward na Inatructor In the University of Minne sota. He la the authorof fifteen worka ou agriculture, many of tbem being used as text books In the dif ferent colleges, and Is designated by James J. Hill as one of the best If not the best agriculturalist to America. Attorney General Crawford hsi an nounccu that now that the motion lo dlnmiss tho appeal In the suit Institut e1 bv Ernest Ituigo to restrain Secre tary Oh'ott from referring the work men's romienr-ation ad to a 'tte ot I ho people, has been denied, the tToils of the sllornuys will ho dircetei toward advancing it on the supremn court dorket in order lo secure a decision in time to pIsco the messure on the bal lot. The supreme court having denied the motion, the esse i now before that tribunal ton its merits. Tho Meat Question lit rutiUy wiswerrtl If you buy It erv. I-'nr we tint firlmrnt xrHileit only und experienced wtnnen will tell you that fye c lie ii i test c ii tii from mieli meat a nre lur choicer than tfie niont exfii'iihlve from Inferior stock. Lakeview Meat, Market, HAYES GROB. props SATISFACTION GUARANTEE;) to Telephone Office BUILDING ARK OUIt AD VKRTI9KR8' $1,000 REWARD The Oregon Cal tfomls sod Nevada Live Htovk rotec- lou Aiaonlatoo, ol whli-b tbe nnder Igoed las member will give t),uoo.oo rewsrd lot svldenoe lead lug to tbe ' real iud ouotiu(iu ol any party or Pr Ilea aleallug horaea. tialtleor mule be longing to any of Its meui uura, io addition to the shave, the uuderalgned iBeiaon the aame uondltlon tUO.OO lor all hora. a branded bonw-shoe bar ou bulb or eltber aw. Brand recorded Id eight couutloa. Hangs Hariief. and Crook eouutle. Uorsul 'eiuua when aold . None but grown hones aold, and onlylu large miii-he. ' W W. Bbowm. rile. Oregon. Let the Examiner figure on your next lob Printing. W A