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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 16, 1913)
FOR THE DINING-ROOM TABLE WW X'rWr we are showing a JltiC of Carving sets and general cutlery that cannot be surpassed and is mighty hard to equal A young couple getting their cutlery here are fixed up for life in that respect, so hard and durable is the steel in it. It is the same high stand ard us all our hardware. T. E. BERNARD "E VER YTHIXO IX HARDWARE AXD FARM IMPLEMENTS" LAKEVIEW, OREGON Send This Coupon Today It will bring you information as to how YOU and jour entire family can visit the San Francisco Exposition in 1915 on the dollar-a-week plan. Not only that, but everything will be of the best, everything reserved and it will cost you less than if you pay when you go. CURTIS & UTLEY, LAKEVIEW, OREGON Agents for SAN FRANCISCO EXPOSITION TOUR CO. You msy send roe free literature about the San Francisco Exposition Tours. Name , Address THE PALACE BAR O'CONNOR DUGGAN - - PROPRIETORS A Gentlemen's Popular :: ' Resort :: PHONE 32 CHOICE BRAND WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS Fall and Winter Woolens Now that we've got our wondefrul line of Woolens ready for Autumn and Winter wear, we hope you are not going to let them go by you without getting some of the benefit. You could'nt possibly want better values and styles than the kind we give. Come in and give our display of Woolens an X-Ray examination. Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing. LAKEVIEW TAILORING CO., Next to Stage Office WltliHk V GLASS cRSTCLrf ! P"5;E T O 600P OLpJ&OU DRINK YOVR HEALTH and you certainly will It It Is drunk In our matchless Beer. We are proud of Its quality and Its purity, and sure that Its equal has not yet been brewed. Not only as a palatable and refresh ing table drink, but as a tonic and tl'-sh builder It Is famous. We want you to try It, because we know that, afterw ards, you would not care to be without It. KENTUCKY SALOON POST & KING, Proprietor FOR SALE Six hundred Lincoln Buck Lambs, first of Sep tember delivery. For particulars in quire Pyramid Land & Stock Co., Reno, Nevada TBZ OM)E8T ESTABLISHED KKALTY FIKM IN BOUTUEK.N OREGON ONE TO 12,000 ACRES OF LAKE COUNTY BEST LANDS For sale either for stock or agri cultural purposes, . W. MAXWELL & SON LAKKVIMW, OKMGON ANGER j VII T 1 T II 1 I 11 I I T ABOUT YOUR HORSL IN WOMAN'S EREAST ALWAYS BEGINS a SMALL LUMP LIKE THIS and ALWAYS POISONS DEEP GLANDS IM THE ARMPIT AMD KILLS QUICKLY m giv ES1000 IF I FAIL TO CUKE any CANCER or TUMOR I TREAT BEFORE it Poison Bone orDeep Glands SUBSCRIBE FOB THE EXAMINER - - r-t- i rt:trt- r. No KNIFE or PAIN Ha Pat Until Cured Mo X Ray or other swindle. An Ulund plvnt makeatha cure ABSULUIt CUAKMItt Any TUMOR, LUMP or Sore ou tiie lip, face or vooy long it i tuoer It N(.8f Pfilntuntil ln.it staga. 129-PAGE BOOK cut free; teetiiuouuj. tA tl'mw-O'ls ctjnxj at hoir.a Wsllfci 1U HUM If ANY LUMP IN WOMAN'S BREAST la CANCER. We refiua thouaanda Dying, Cams Too Lai. We have cured lO.OUO in 20 yra. Address DR. & UBS. DR. CHAMLEY & CO. A 436 VALEKCIA ST, SAN FRANCISCO, CAL UNDLY MAIL this to tome ane wilu CANCER Clean the filth from tb soles . . I! of colts' feet with a foot pick every day that they ar kept Id ' stable and after remortug th Bltb wash the soles of the feet and also the coronets with cold ' ; water, oslng a sponge. This will ", ', ', protect the feet from becoming ; ; diseased with thrush. ! I No horse should stand a single T T day Idle In the stable, and when I . , there is no work for him to do . ; ; ; the feed should be cut down and ! the bowels kept actlv by feed '. Ing bran and If necessary mix- ! '. Ing a few ounces of glauber'a ; ; salt in the drinking water. ', ! Water for the horse ought to ! be cool and fresh. It should be giren often and not very much ' ; ; at a time. ; ' If the bone's shoulders should '. '. show signs of becoming sore, ; the skin being unbroken, a very ! '. ; ; good application la sulphate of j ; sine, half an ounce: sugar of ! ! ; j lead, half an ounce, and water, ) one quart, and an excellent lo- ! ! ; ; tlon for hardening the shoulders, ; ; . even when they bare not yet ' ; I shown any disposition to become ; !sore, is powdered alum, on ounce: sulphuric add, on dram, ; ; and water, one quart f n hi i ii n 1 1 1 mil n n n TMI WATER QLAaa tQO. The watt-r giaws egg baa com to suiy, sdq ii renaitiiy does pay. Tbst one In the picture was a year oia wnen rn.si. we at It, and aa a critic on eggs we must say , It waa vuiij. aiiv rvriainiy ars su)enor to ii.... .i 1. 1 i . . .. . uiiiv Mtaimi auu com storage egg The shell snows little rhinn th n. tent TBrv but lltlla frum thm mnnmmm. snce of the fresh article, and tbey is sie sweet ana nsv no anusual emelL Cold storage egg sr so different Ther ma bo flr imn nl.l .. n J know end then-well, well not describe toe emeu, nut the water glara egg is I what VOU Riakat It Van knnw Its nrlirln J and Its age, and if you put them up ngoi you ii nna tn last in the crock maim na iwrri as ioe one on in lop. Bo ninny are prenerTtng egg In tb cheap sesson to uh when eggs are so Ll-L ....J - . . umu, inu an uia uj arv looaiDg ror a rMal)la) rerliUL'anrl an mm nHnt im and advlN them to paste it in their scrap dook ror nom na ana ror that COST OF POUND OF PORK. Feeding Balanced Ration Found t Pay Best In Growing Hoflo. Few feeder of hogs can tell you how much of the grain they put Into a pig turns Into flesh and bone. Only la a genera way can many tell bow much their feed ha been worth to them, es pecially when the grain and the hay and pasturage are bom grown. A test wa made at the Kansas ex periment station. The bogs were dt rided Into lots of ten each and fed dif ferent combinations of grain and roughage, with different results In ev ery case. One of tb ration fed was what la called "standard." This is composed of C2 per cent corn, 30 per cent abort and 8 per cent tankage.. It 1 a bal anced ration, and the hogs do well on It It may be fed wet or dry, with the same feedlug value either way. If it la fed wet not much will be wasted, but if water bus to be carried the coxt of labor would mooii be greater than the value of the feed wasUtl. The unluials lu tlie test were spring pigs that hiul Ik'OIi curried iik stix kers There were ten In tlii lot. The aver age weight at tlio start was 125 pounds. They were nut fiit. but gimd healthy lius. micIi r.itht lie found on any farm. They were allowed no wallow, but had plenty of clear water to drink, and j ,v '''' ' 'HmCX'y' 2 Gren forage haa a high value for uae In por production. Spring t.own crops cannot take the place of earlier aourcea of green feed for swine, but should be used to supplement them. Data secured by the Ohio station Indicate that the green feeds used In experlmenta rank as follows in order of efficiency: Red clover, dwarf Eases rape, soy beans, blue grass. Seasonal Influences have an im portant effect upon the value of forage crops. Owing to the fact that spring planted crops - are not subject to these Influences for the entire year, they have. In respect to these influences, some advan tages over such crops aa blue grass ' and clover. Blue graaa, on account of Its being particularly suscepti ble to drought. Is not so useful for midsummer uu as ars some other crops. The use of gTeen feeds In connec tion with corn will diminish the need for nitrogenous concentrates that exists In dry lot feeding. Photo by C. at. Barnlts, A Of UBS BOO nUBTX friend who want to know bow to bav good egg In winter and to save good money easy. Secure a three gallon stone crock or wooden vessel and on pint of wa ter glass tslllcste of sodai. Tour Into the vessel eight quarts of water, cool ed after boiling, and stir in the water glass. If a number of vessels are used It Is best to mix the Ingredleuts for each vessel separately. Use eggs not over two days old. sound, clean and perfect of shell, and Immerse each one In the ltuld and lay it flat In crock, a three gnllon crock holding about twelve doten normal sized egg i'ess may be placed In crock a few at a time and used a needed The vessel should be covered with a stone or wooden lid and set In a cool place. As the silicate of sodn plutrs the shell pores. It Is necessary to mnke a small hole in large end of egg or tbey will crack while boiling Water glass eggs And n ready sale at a good price in winter, but to avoid unpleas ant complications the seller should comply with all the requirements of the law In regard to the sale of pre served eggs. their skins were treated occasionally to prevent disease. It was found that they ate 3.72 pounds of mixed ration for every pound of gain. These fact being used as a basis, It was learned that it takes 0.29 of a pound of tankage, 1.11 pounds of shorts and 2.3 pound of corn to make a gain of one pound. It isn't bard, therefore, to figure. out what your hog gains cost you, according to the prices of your own district. Country Gentleman. Hogs Hste Hot Sun. It is a very poor bog lot. wherein shade is not provided. A hog suffer ing from the heat can grow little, Th ideal place for bogs in summer Is in a wood lot through wblcb passe a little brook. In such a place bog will grow remarkably fast, even with out large quantities of grain. Shad costs practically nothing. It mean much ir the profit derived from bogs. NaUonal Stockman and Farmer. Don't Let Sows Est Their Pigs. A Wisconsin subscriber of the Iowa Homestead says that be has found the feeding of lime to brood sows will ab solutely remove any tendency that they might show to devour their pigs. Wood ashes answers the purpose quit well, he claims, but marl which Is IM) per cent lime he has found to answer the purpose best. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. Ordinary lawn clippings, dried, amount to little for winter feeding Sow white clover on the lawn and the clippings will Ih rich in protein. "Crowded stock never thrives." This Is an old saying we recommend to the fellow who Is tempted to hatch more chicks than lie can take care of as well ns to the friend who Is about to (my land to go Into the poultry business Chickens require plenty of room, and because this was not provided for at the outset many a poultry farm has beeu a failure. Willis McBratney. a boy living near Unlontowu. Pa captured teu black skunks and a groundhog in one bole. The skunk skins brought him $35. For the recent trapping season he made a record of 104 skunks, 80 groundhogs. 10 possum. 4 gray and one red fox. We congratulate Mr. McBratney as the champion polecat catcher of Pennsylvania and also the poultry raisers of bis vicinity on hav ing such a poultry pest killer bandy to snve their rooster. We advise farmer who 'go to shows to buy stock to inquire before buying If it was bred by the double mating method. If so we advise them uot to buy, for the double mating system Is unnatural, and the birds cannot pro duce offspring bnving their characteristics. There ure times when two male birds get along peacefully together with the same bunch of bens. Often er they quarrel, chase each other, fight over the feed, and in the end nel tber amounts to anything as a breed er. Use such scrappers alternately In the pens for best results. The poultry product has reached a billion dollars per year, and the im portance of the hen should be recog nized. Every state should carry on ao Investigation in poultry culture, promote the industry and issue up to date bulletins for the Information of the people Massachusetts Agricultural college did itself proud at the Boston show. It had a great exhibit part of wbtcb was forty fowls representing twenty varieties. Of the throngs that visited the booth a thousand requested that the college poultry bulletins be sent them. An Ohio Inquirer writes, "How do you make pen cock lay?" The only method we know of to make a peacock lay Is to use on ax or a shotgun on him. Ills pen hens will lay If fed a natural ration, most of which they will pick up themselves If on a good rang. aT-TJUVVuV . The Housewife Who Saves Something On half of her pur chases saves an in spiring sum in the course of a year! MAND SOME house- UU LI nit although no one except ad readers do or could. The possibilities of eco nomical buying are open to all housewives who study the ads. And it's a fine way to feel your way to that sort of per sonal head-upness which money-ii)-pocket gives! A shopper who saved a dollar or two the other day through read ing the ad of a particular store will not need to be urged to watch the ads of that store pretty closely. You will generally find that the merchant who does not advertise has nothing, in his; store that is worth while mentioning.. Lake Go. Examiner The Leading Advertising Medium