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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1914)
Lakeview Saddlery Indians Camp on Skyscraper ATrWAITrt . So as to Feel "at Home" In Chicago II EETRIGG V .t J V , -. t- ,j- A complete lino of wagon and buggy harness, whip, robes, bits, rlte, spurs, quilts, rose ettes, etc., etc. Everything In the line of carriage REGISTER. and home furnish lugs. Itepalrlng KOCKrORIXlAJ by competent men. COftRfJPONDtNCC SOUCITLO mm IIP THE BEST VAQUERO SADDLE ON THE MARKET AHLSTROM & GUNTHER, Props. Successors to S. F. AHLSTROM Lakeview Steam Laundry HARRY C. HUNKER, Prop. We give efficient service and do good work. Send your washing and give us a trial. TELEPHONE No. 732 The Owl for DAILY TRAIX EACH WAY RETWEEX C EXTRA L OREGOS POIXTS A XD PORTLAND. TOURIST SLEEPIXG CAR (BERTHS $1.00). FIRST CLASS COACHES. SA VE A DAY FROM ('EXTRA L OREGOX Leave Rend 830 I'M " Deschutes 8 PM " Redmond 9 JO PM " Terrebonne 9 24 PM " Culver 10 02 PM " Metolius 10 20 PM ' simiius io::o pm Arrives Port laud i 10 AM Prompt despatch of freight, Between Central Oregon and Portland and Portland and Eastern cities. Connections made in Portland to and from Willamette Valley, Astoria and Clatsop Reach points, Puget Sound, Spokane, Montana, Colorado, St. Paul, Omaha, Kansas City and Chicago. Fares, time schedules, and other information hy letter, or upon ap plication to R. H. CROZIER, A. G. P. A.: W. C. WILKES. A. G. F. C . A., .. II. COR RETT, Agt., Portland, Oregon. Rend, Oregon. i.ti'inlfr.r i i iti ,n "a ,': A HARDWARE. fgTOHAft DWARE l"-H!- in favor of fis store is the fact that the moat skilful mechanics always come here Jor theirs. You don't have to be told the reason. You can easily figure it out yourself. Pcrluijts you do not know how com plete our stock is. Well, what you cannot get else where you can always find here if it's good. T. E. BERNARD "EVERYTHING IS HARDWARE ASDIFAltM IMPLEMENTS" LAKEVIEW, OREGON ilvY. CENTRAL OREGON LINE Busy People EACH WA V TO ('EXTRA L OREGOX ' Lea ve Portia nd 700 PM Arrive Madras 8 00 AM " Metolius 613 AM Culver... 6 28 AM Terrebonne 7 OS AM " Redmond 723AM " Deschutes 743 AM " Rend SOOAM AX AMERICAN G ESTEEM AX'S DICIXK cannot bf too high tnalitinl nnr too pure. The wholesome tiavnr of our line Rye is a passport to it popularity with good judges ft? line liiuors. Every home should! have ii supply of these goods for the use of guests and callers Thin high grade Liiuor has also u high im-dii inal value, and it is recom mended by the best physirans, who understand its perfect parity ami tonic effects. KENTUCKY SALOON POST & KING, Proprietor ARGUMENT (Tats matter muit not be reprints with out special permlMlon.J Souie markets prefer a pure white egg and some those that are a rich brown. There seems to be no good reason for tbla difference except mere whim. Connecticut, for many years suppos ed to be quite outside the limits of the peach belt, this season gives prooiUe of a yield of 1.000,000 baskets of this fruit, or 2.000 carloads. A ben la a small institution, bat when she goes on a rampage la a neighbor's garden she Is a larger lac tor in kicking up neighborhood 11) will than anything we know of. Now that the fly killing campaign is Id full swing It will Ih lu order to kep fly poison out of reach of the Utile folks In the home. Many die yearly because of getting hold of it Millet Intended for use us a forage ration should be cut nlmrt iy after the blossoms appeur and before the Klrd seed heads form. The liny will le tie Oner if the ground Is Heeded nr. arr heavily. The reason for the shallow c r. a- tlon the last time throush the mrn Is that by that time the In tern I ro tn have spreud u good deal, and setting the shovels deep would tear unci de stroy them. In one or two counties In cen.Tnl New York the tent caterpillars are so numerous that they have stripped irult trees of all their foliage and are swarming over the ground In search of other green stuff. Twenty thousand pounds of AuAlru lion frozen beef were sold one day re cently in New York city, the price paid for It being l'i cents per pound less than the prevailing market price for American beef of equal quality. In many sections of the country the potato grower Is this yeur freed fVora both bis worst pests bugs and blight He Isn't able to explain the situation on any scientific basis, but he's mighty thankful it's so, however. Effective work on the part of govern ment forest rangers in the Cbugach national forest reserve in Alaska re cently resulted In extinguishing Dree that threatened the 28.000.000.000 feet of lumber which the reserve is svM to contain. A former Japanese student at the University of Wisconsin has lately purchased a Holsteln bull in thut state at a long price for shipment to Japan, there to become the bead of a herd of dairy cow which this breeder Intends to establish. There is little gain in waging a cam paign against the different diseases from which the farm animals or poul try may suffer if one does not at the nme time clean up and tborcigbly disinfect the premises whereon these tume diseases have developed. Not In years have we seen the gros beaks go after the green peas in the pod as hard as they have this season. This is doubtless due to the fact that there have been no potuto bug larvae, which usually constitute one of the chief items in their bill of fare. A handy torch for burning out nests of the tent caterpillar Is made by wind ing a coil of old rags or waste at the end of an Iron rod and fastening this to a pole of some kind. Where the trees are not too large a handy and quick method Is to do the Job on horse back. Much may be done toward improv ing the quality of fruit at picking time by removing as mou as possible all fruit that shows defects of uny kind. The nourishment that would otherwise be needed to ripen this Imperfect fruit will thus be diverted to apples that ere of good shape and free from dis ease. A couple of months ago the writer nailed up a second wren's house (a tin cun w ith a small triangular bole cut lu the endi u few yards from a can that was ulready occupied by a pair of the birds. They paid no attention to it, but now thut their little ones hate left the iiit the parents buve started housekeeping In the uew quarters. A report recently published by the Canadian department of agriculture Etutes that Dominion farmers lose 000.000 a year through merely leaving the male birds with the hens after the breeding seusou is over, about the mid dle of June, thus resulting in partially incubated eggs. If Canadian farmers suffer such a loss as this It is fair to assume that the loss to American funnels from this source would tfi several times us great vri;iisKN V' W-: W ' v 1 SJWt vi ' ' ' ' k- V. ij.''tr , - rpx t-;1 jzs; tM, i i- We pitch our tepees high above the gorge Here on the summit of vour storied hill Of city life that shelters maddened men We near the stars and see beyond your ken Wild in pursuit of pelf, of pelf galore, The distant plain the wealthy plowman's voice While pelts suffice us for our winter store. On prairie land and wonder at your choice! Chief Eagle Calf, Poet and Interpreter of the Glacier National Park Reservation, Montana. C , Hlt'AOO. I'miv the roof top of cer National park pitched their tepee village as the inoct desirable sjHt for sleeping quarters during their three weeks' stay tn Chicago In attendance lit the I'ldted States IjiihI show. In selecting this unique camping place, high above the roar of trallic. these Kocky mountain Indians not only found conditions congenial to the high altitude of their native environment, but they commemorated the spot ujsm which their brothers of the Pottawato mie tribe had their lodges long before there appeared the (lrst evidences of the great city to which they gave the Indian name f'hl-ca-go. Kagle Calf, Interpreter of the visiting band of Itlackfeet, found Inspiration when bo gazed over the parapet of tne great hotel down Into the "antlike working" Industry of white men surging to and fro lu the throbbing life of civilization, which presented an unceasing motion picture panorama such as he never before had beheld. "More white men than I ever saw In my entire life," was his comment. The more be looked down upon the busy scene of Chicago bustle the more nultnated he biK-ame. The foregoing verse he scribbled with a lead pencil and pre sented to Kngene Belfeld. one of the proprietors of the hotel. Mr. Helfeld was so Impressed with the lines that he had them framed and hung In the lobby. It was the first time bo ever knew that an Indian was capablo of such poetical expression. FHglo Cnlf wns educated In an Indian school and speaks Kngllsh quite fluently. The rhythmic thought, he explained to Mr. I'.elfeld, he absorbed from nature, which, he explained. Is garbed In Its most sur passing beouty "upon the roof of the continent" lu the Itis'ky mountains, whore ho grew up. Hundreds of uuesta of Hotel Sherman visited the Indians' roof top camp during their stay In Chicago, end at the Coliseum, where the Innd show was held, they nlso had a village established In the annex, the entire space of which was given over to the Olacler National park exhibit Installed by Louis W. IIII1, chairman of the (treat North ern railway. It U estimated that more than l.'o.ooo people passed through the entrance to the Olacler park exhibit, a portion of which was devoted to a lecture room with a seating capacity of 1,000. In this lecture room moving pic tures of Olocler park were shown revealing the scenic wonders of I'ncle Sam's newest playground. The walls of thu exhibit room proper were hung wlih co-itly paintings, which to the hordes of Chlcagonns proved a marvelous scenic revelation of mountain grandeur, beautiful lakes and awe Inspiring glaciers. The actual photographic reproductions shown In great sections of brlllliintl.v Illuminated f rnnsp'irenclcs were even more wonderful to them. Tlicfe hitter actualities the Indians pointed to with pride, explaining to the throng of ejaculating paleface vis itors. "This Is the country where we live- where the (Trent Spirit .-rented his wonders." Nobody doubted after beholding the scenes of nrllstlc splendor shown in oils inn photographic reproduction. In the throngs of sightseers were in any people who had visited Olacler park. They came, enthusiastically lead ing friends by the hands through the Olacler park esldbll. pointing to this scene and that one as If confirming natural wonders the existence of which their Mends had been unable to conceive. REGISTRATION LAW UNDER OUI REGIME Books Will Close on May the First For Primary Election. Stating the election laws of the State provide that when any of their pro visions are uncertain or ambiguous, the usual custom shall be followed. Attorney General Crawford rendered an opinion advising all county clerks to close their registration books May 1 for the primaries to be held on the 15th of that month, and to re-open them as soon as possible for registra tion for the general election. The opinion disposes of a question which arose when the Supreme Court declared the permanent registration law unconstitutional, the decision re sulting in a conflict in the law relating to the registration of voters and the measure fixing the time of the primaries. The last legislature paesed a law providing (the primaries should the hkyscrasT building. Hotel Sherman, be held on the third Kriday of May, and that falls on May 1 1, this year. 'Ibis measure was in harmony with the permanent registration law, but when it wuh pronounced void the old regis iraiion law, providing the rcgistrbtion law should bo kept open uniil May 15 was revived. To continue register ing on the day of the prunuries and at the same time turn the registration books over to tne precinct boards would be a physical Impossibility, and the county clerks were at sea as tu what course to pursue. Suit Over School Funds A suit to recover from State Treas urer Kay school fund securities total ing 93,992. 758.71 and to put them into the custody ot U. G. Brown, the clerk of the State Land board, has been instituted in the Circuit Court at Salem. Contending chat the clerk and not the State Treasurer is, under the law, tbe legal custodian of the securi ties, Governor West and Secretary of State Olcott, at a board meeting some time ago, voted te Instruct the Dis trict Attorney to bring suit. Ever since the schoul fund was created the State Treasurer has been the custodian of seouriiies, and, con the Itlackfeet Indian chiefs from fila- tending he is legally entitled tn hm die them, State 'IreuHi.ri r Kav will resist thu suit. He will In repnsented by Attorney (jcnerul CruwforJ. The Klamaln Full Northwestern and the Kvuning Hcruld aie the vic tims in an action attempting to repud iate moie Klamath County warrants. The total mutant involved is $2000. Somcthing.uver $1700 of this amount ot warrants attacked ia for payment for publication of the delinquent tax list in 'the two .papers named. The open letter to tax payers in the North western, amounting to Is Includ ed. COUUH MfcUJOINK KO!t Cllll.l.RKN Never give a child cough medicine thut contains opium iu uny lorm, VVIieu opium is tlvcn other aud more Ht-rlons diseases may follow Long experience lias cleinoimtriited thut theie is no better or aalir nu'cliclno for coughs, colds aud croup lu child- en than Chamberlain's Cough Uein edy. It Is equiilly valuable for udults. Try It. It contain) no opium or other harmful (lru. For Kale by all dealers. TJIK, EXAMINKU FOIt J OH WoKK