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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1913)
V Miriift W!4$& oieei 4 n r sLine NITRO CLUB SHOT SHELLS Steel Lined Speed Shells for Fart Birds BIRDS have a right, of course, to flush up Y,hete ever they please and fly off at any unexpected angle! What you want is the nearest thing to point blank aim the shortest possible lead. Shoot the tptcd htth Remington-UMC Stfl Lined Arrow and Nitro Club. They 8 To"' l kir1 quicker than ... .k.. htl known to the hooting fraternity. Their steel ;nc-r encu wwwu w m - ------ ----- I;.;... nim th. nowder. avnnB your shot charge the lull benefit of the .xploeiv. force. . U'a a Reroington-UMC idea that steel lining so if you mnt tpeed you must sea that you get Remington-UMG Arrow or Nitro Oub. Tee win bm a ran ' "w Tr"7 V. : , , ei thia eecttoa. Identify thorn by the M Ball atari oa. the boa. '-iii Remington Anns-Union Metallic Cartridge Co. 299 Broadway X3 N" Yrk 1 1 Send This Coupon Today It will bring you information as to how YOU and your 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 may send me 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 HOTEL LAKEVIEW F. P. LIGHT MANAGER ERECTED IN 1900 Sample Room for Commorclal Traveler Modern Throughout. First Cass Accommodation NEVADA-CAL1F0RN1A-DREG0N RT. Daily Service Reno to Lakeview Except Sundays No. 1 Arrives Lakeview at 8:40 P. M. No. 2 Leaves Lakeview at 6:40 A. M. Daily Except Sunday , I'ullman A Buflett Service Between Lakeview and Reno C. W. CLASS, AQENT :: LAKEVIEW, OREGON SHAMROCK STABLES S CON BREEN, Proprietor Special Attention to Transient Stock . Horses Boarded by the Day, Week or Month Always Open Phone 571 LAKEVIEW - - - - OREGON Iciiiii iicnne iiiict REPLACE BIG ONES The day of raisins great herds of eattla on the free and open ranges of tbs Northwest baa passed. Cattle klna, prompted by high prices of bvef nave "cashed in." leaving this section ot the country in the midst ot a cattle famine. Nouns! conditions will return county of the Northwest a totsl of 10,000 csWes arc "knocked in the heart every year." The excuse of the daryman is thst it Is cheaper to sell the calves, ss the profits on milk and cream are about 90 a year for each cow. To realise thst much on a cslf it woold be nec essary to feed It for about three years. The present conditions In' the North west are described as a change from one stage of progress ta anothet ana higher one. The hog-ralsing propa ganda has already had its effects, as not a single live hoir fass been imported only in the end of a period of trans! tlon when the farmer with r.all,to0 frotn N,brilU ,inc Au kdT.Bj4 aAlAnliflhalla hiau4 i I a s w uciu viwii.iv.ij s i vcJt will Haw SUBSCRIBE FOR THE EXAMINER. taken the piece of the stockmen whose tbouisnas of esttte rosmed the ranges and merely grew. These are contentions advanced by Randall K. Howard in the leading article of the September number of The Gentlemen, entitled "Getting Ahead of a Meet Famine." The suj csption ot the article is "An opportun ity for the Small Stockman and Fsrmer." So sesree Is feeding sloes todsy, according to Mr. Howsrd, that buyers sre scouring the Texas Psnhsndle and Southwest, prsctically begging stock men of that territory for an opportun ity to purchase cattle to shis) to Oregon. Washington, Idaho and Mon tsns, so that the Nortbwestern rsnc era rosy bsve a profitable opportunity of using the hy they have grown. And the success which tnese buyers are meeting is aptly described by an interview which Mr. Howard had with an official of ona of the biggest cattle loan and feeder companies of the Northwest. Ho quotes the inter view aa xollows: "Bat what are you going to M Where are you going to get feeders to ose op the bsy in the Northwest this year? I asked. "We're sitting on a tack." be re plied, meaning the bank official. We can't get feeders. They're being held too high, down in Mexico and Texas. They ask 162.50 for cows and calves. They wsnt 962 for two year-old steers that can't be bandied here for less thsn $7 more, and that won't be worth more thsn 175 after the farmer feeds them for four months. So we're sit ting on a tack." "What are the hay ranchers of the Northwest doing?" "Some of them are setting pinched." The history of cattle raising in the West is briefly trsced in the article from the time when cattle were not raised bat "grew," when the stock men began to raise hsy, when the rsnges became crowded and cattle and sheepmen were at war, when Uncle Sam assumed control of thousands of acres of Nstional Forests and the com ing of the irrigation sge, when the cattleman was driven still further back to seek grazing land for hia stock. All these stages of development were merely steps towsrd the inevitsble passing of the cattle king, and the coming of the time when cattle in the West must be raised ss tbey are in the East in comparatively smsll herds by tbe farmer. Quoting from Mr. Howsrd 's article, tbe natural results of the influx of settlers and develop ment of Northwestern lands has brought about . tbe trsnsition period of the West, and Mr. Howard describes its effect as follows : "The cattle kings have been largely forced out of business. The small stockmen have been drifting under j pressure of decreasing range and tbe recent high prices have persuaded most of them to 'cash in.' Yet the orchard land boomers to tbe contrary notwith standingthe Northwest is primarily and most naturatly a stockraising country. And tbe Northwest must turn about and recover its lost live stock prestige if it ia to put to the highest economical use its dry farming grain fields and its irrigated alfalfa lands. The day of tbe big cattle herd on the free open rsnge is practically over. 1 he day ol tbe small cattle herd on tbe farm is just beginning." Mr. Howard then takes up, ss aa example, toe history ot the bog raising industry in the Northwest. He tell of its rise and its sudden decline. Tbe revival came with tbe establishment of tbe Union Stockyards in Portland, and tbe subsequent campaign of educa tion among farmers by agricultural colleges, packers and the Oregon State Bankers' association. Even the sohool children were taoght the significance of tbe stock raising revival. Portland livestock and marketing interests imported carloads of elecet bogs, disj tribating tbem among farmers at cost price. Special trains bearing expert went among the farmers and spread the gospel of tbe back-to-tbe-livestock movement. The results are strikingly apparent. Tbe receipts at tbe Port land stockyards tell tbe story best in figures. It is no longer nccesssry to bring hogs bere from Nebraska. The Northwest is supplying its own pork. A movement similar to the "back-to-tbe-bog" campaign is on foot to reestablish the Northwest as a csttle raising country. Because tbe returns sre neither as prompt oor as promising as in pig business, the movement of necessity is progressing more slowly. One reason for the slowness, according to Mr. Howard, is the practice of sel ling eaives. Mr. Howsrd writes : "It is estimsted that in Tillamook County, Oregon the premier dairying ust, 1011 In 1911 83,769 came from Nebraska, representing about 40 per cent of all the hogs that passed over the scales. The campaign of eluca tion among he farmers will also rastore the oattle industry to a normal basis in the Northwest, according to Mr. Howard, who concludes his article as follows "the "wheat miner" Is being taught that his ssfest msrket and his largest profits are secured by keeping his produce on the farm until it is con verted Inio self tranpsortstle meat products. Tbe msny open rsnge stock men who have 'cashed in' their herds and moved to town or city during tbe psst 10 yesra are bsing replsced by more contented smsll stockmen ana farmers. The states of the Hacifie Northwest are being stocked up large ly with high g'ade cattle and hogs. And perbapa not least, science is being inlected into the stock-raising revival. SIOOO Dollars Reward We. W. F. Detert aad W. D, Duke, own . all tbe cattle branded 70 or XL and formerly owned by Cox & Clark and tbe Heryford Land A Cattle Company. Tbeae cattle are now on th ranges ot Modoc and Lasecn Coontiee. For Information leading to tbe arrest and conviction nf any party or partlea Illegally branding, killing, driving- off or dis posing of any of the above cattle we will pay ONE THOUSAND DOL LARS and tbe coats ot arrest snd proHccutton. Bend all Information to K II. Day, A It urns, Modoc county Cal., or to us at Latrolw, El Dorado County, Cal. It guilty party mlRht es cape, promptly notify tbe Sheriff ol the county In which tbe Illegal act wan committed and advtae na by wire nt our expense. W. F. DETEKf, W. D. DUKE. DANCE It IN DELAY Kidney dlseuses are too dangerous for Lakeview people to neglect. Tbe great dang-er ot kidney troubles is that they so often gets flrtn bold before the sufferer recognises them. Health will be gradually undermined Backache, headache, nervousnetw, lameness, sorenesn, lumbago, urinary troubles, dropsy, gravel sod Brlght's disease often follow la merciless suc cession. Don't neglect your kidneys. Help the kidneys with Doan'a Kidney rilln. which are ho strongly recom mended right here in this locality. Mrs. M. J. Wllhoum. 100 B St., Ashland, Oregon, Hays: "I have used Doan'a Kidney Fills and found 'hem so good that 1 willingly recommend them. I keep a supply In the houne all tbe time. Whenever my back and kidneys bother me, I take Doan'a Kidney l'llls aud they quickly drive the trouble awnv. I never knew tf another remedy that gives Huch good retmlie. AU kidney sufferers would do well to give Doan's Kidney Pills a trial." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mil burn Co., Buffslo, New York, sole agents for the United States. . Remember the name Dona's and take no other. TYPHOID DEATHS and itcknesi art ao more neo eeMry than Smallpox. Army medical experience baa dem onstrated le a 1 moat tnlracu loua efficacy of antityphoid vaccination. Be vaccinated now by your phytic Ian, you and your family. Ask your physician or drug 11, or tend to ua for Information concerning Typhoid Vaccine and result! from iu uac. THE CUTTER LABORATORY. BERKELEY. CAL. MOMciria vaccinia a siauaa w-oit v. a. ucinii ao. a $1,000 REWARD line will Tbe Oregon Cal ifornia and NeTada Lire Htock Potec- Ion Atnoolaton, ol men tna undei ned lea membei Site IIIOOUO reward for evidence leading to the r reat aud oonvlolloo of any part; or par tleeeuiallni boreee, oattle or mulee be lonirlngtoanj of Its Demiwri. in addition to tbe above, tbe anderelaned offere on tbe same oondltlon tKOM for all bora te branded boree-ehoe bar on both or eltbet lew. Brand recorded In elf bt oountlee. Range Harney, Lake and Crook eountles. Horeet vented when eold. None bat grown boreeiiold, and only In larg eniiobet W. W. Blown. File. Oregon. Deafness Cannot Be Cured br luce, piIUllon, ea the? rannot rrt'tx tbe dlwM.fd portion of the tar. TIhto I onlr cue war tu eura uVafncaa, and that la br conatltutlon al ri'uitiillea. Dvafneaa la canned kr an Intlaiued condition of tliu rauooua lining of the Kuatiichlun Tube. When tola tube la Inflamed rou liav a rumbling aound or imperfect bearing, and wbn it la eutlrely cluard Deafneae la the reaull, and unleaa tbe InSammatloa can be taken out and thla ti'bu reaturcd to lie nurniul condition, bear lug will be deatrored forever; ulna caaea out ol lea ar cauaed br Catarrb, which la nothing bul au luiUnied cuulttio,i of the munoua aurfaiea. We will glva iio Hundred Ihillura for any eaat of Deafnua (cauaed br catarrb) that cannot bi cured br iiell'e Catarrb Curt. Bend for circu lar., fraa. CHENEY CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Drugglata, Toe. Take UeU'g a'amU fill, tor conetlpttloD. Advertising Will ROUND OUT Your Business Advertising is not a mere ad juncft to sellingit is a NECES; SARY PART of it. True, goods are sold every day with out advertising, but so are men earning a living every day who have had the misfortune to lose an arm or an eye. In the case of the unfortunate man, the handicap is plainly visible. In the case of the non advertised business, the handi cap is not so openly apparent, but it is there just the same. A whole man is in full posses sion of ALL his faculties. A goods-selling campaign CAN NOT BE WHOLE AND COM PLETE without advertising as a part of it. This much is fundamental and permanent. It remains only to apply to any business to YOUR businsss the kind and amount of advertising to fit its special needs. The trained advertising man will help you here, precisely as the trained mechanical engineer will help you to enlarge your power plant, or the trained chemist to improve your pro dud, or the trained architect to build your new factory. The advertising man justifies him self by the help he gives by the SERVICE he performs; and not merely service in the abstract, but direct and positive service to you. . Listen to him as to a FRIEND for that is what he is.