Lakeview Saddlery A conipK lc line of wKon and butffty harness, whips, robes, bit. Hates, spurs, quilts, rose ettes, etc., etc. iV- s If Everything lu the line of carriage and horse furnish lugs, ltcpalrlng by competent men. THE BEST VAQUERO SADDLE ON THE MARKET AHLSTROM & GUNTHER, Inc. Successors to S. F. AHLSTROM PLAN Hi CREATE THE CMC IDEAL Scfnma to Survey Washington, tl)8 Capital Ciiy. MODEL FOR LESSER CITIES. 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 Jehn Purrey Mitchel Outline What U Needed to Make Washington a Stand ard of Efficiency to Whioh Smaller Municipalities May Turn lit Solving City Problems. Writing In Town Development, John Purroy Mitchel tells of a plan that be and Henry Hruere, director of the bureau of municipal research, submit ted to President Wilaon during last spring. "A rinn For the Establishing of a Model Government in the Pis- trlct of Columbia." At the suggestion , or the president, the commissioners of the District of Columbia are mak ing a careful study of the subject an J will submit their nudiugs to him. The part played by New York's new mayor In this great clvlo proposition BETTER HOUSING. The Idee of Ix-ttcr housing for the poor must Ih made practical, and then It ran be made very easy to con form to the law. Hut It uiiiMt "Se made practical at all times and not chimerical. The ldin of the use of public money for building better homes for the poor la not Ui or practical. I desire to Impress upon you that this can be done by men who are wllllug to resp good, souud In terest, but who at the same time will allow the tenant to renp a substantial reward in regard to good byglcno. The laws regulating the build ing of houses are becoming bet ter and are In harmony with hu man nature, but the chief diffi culty aa you will now find It la with tlio people themselves. One of the greatest steps toward progress that can be made Is the education both of tho landlord and the tenant to work not In harmony with themselves, but with the law. William Howard Taft in Address ltcforo National I lousing Association. 1 acquires particular interest now ttiut be Is about to deal with vast and com plex problems of government in the greatest of American c'tles. Mr. Mitchel says: It cannot happen in a d ly nor a month nor a year, but one national administration should allow time enough to make of W.islilnutui a standard of etllcleucy arnou. diies. a giant laboratory for ui : 11 ici :i t re search, a finished product of (In- ills tilled municipal wisdom galhered here, there and the other place by its-or cities working Independently to tin. I solutions to civic problems There are certain fundamental prot eases which nil cities inut adopt, ir respective of their several forms of CENTRAL OREGON LINE The Owl for Busy People DAILY TRA1X EACH WAY BETWEEX CEXTRAL uREGOX POIXTS A XI) I'ORTLAXD. TOURIST SLEEPIXG CAR (BERTHS fl 00). FIRST CLASS COACHES. SAVE A DAY EACH WAY A I--'. 1 I I. ft f.'t.'i.- ' L t . : .'.V t - FROM CEXTRAL OREGOX Leave Bend 8 30 I'M " Deschutes H 4S PM " Redmond 9 10 PM Terrebonne .9 24 PM " 'ulver ..10 02PM " Metidius 10 20 PM " Madras 10.10 PM Arrives Portland 4 10 AM TO CEXTRAL OREGOX Leave Port In nil TOO PM Arrive Madras tt 00 AM " Metolius 6 IS AM " Culver 6 2S AM Terrebonne 'ft!? .4.1 Redmond 723AM Descbutes 743AM " Dend SCO 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 tad Clatsop Bench points. Puget Sound, Spokane. Montana, Colorado, St. Paul, Omaha, Kansas City and Chicago. Fares, time schedules, and other information by letter, or upon ap plication to R. H. CROZIER, A. G. P. A.; W. C. WILKES. A. G F. P. A., .. . COllBETT, Agt., Portland, Oregon. Bend, Oregon. ZT& me HE ouCHT ft Fl.fOOl BO YS PI T GREA T FA 1TH in the opinions of their parents. What "Pop" says and chooses has great weight with the small hoy. What tils father uses the son will swear hy. If his father happens to use our brand of Whiskey, for in stance, the youngster will com mend his parent's taste, because he is sure to have heard the "old man" smack his lyis and praise the flavor of our Liruors and Wines very often. KENTUCKY SALOON POST ASKING, Proprietor A POINT ABOUT OUR. HARDWARE SERVICE is its thoroughness and courtesy. He are here to serve you with what you want not what it is most to our interest to sell you. If you don't know the name of what you want, point it out and we will show it to you. If the first doesn't suit keep on pointing till you are suited. T. E. BERNARD "EVERYTIllXG IX HARDWARE AND FARM IMPLEMEXTS" LAKEVIEW, OREGON 9 1913. by American Preea Atoclutlon. JOHN rURIlOT MITCH2L.. government, und it is the best of these, each after Its kind, that we would like to see discovered, standard ised and codified in Washington. We have evolved, it seems to me, a very practii-nble uud sensible plan. In the report which we have sent to President Wilson we nsk. first, for a survey of the city looking to u precise knowledge of just what it needs, and. Becoml. for the president's Influence to be put upon the three commission er of the I)istrict of Columbia to have pnt Into practice there all the valu ' able thlnu's discovered lu all the Amer i lean cities By this nieiins we hope to produce a scheme of government for Washington which will not only meet its own needs, but by its adoption else where work a similar benefit. The Importance of the preliminary survey must not be overlooked. We do not want to go down to Washington and construct an "ideal city" out of some mnn's bead. We want to flud by the most scrupulous snd exhaustive search what It Is that Washington stands most in need of, and we pro pose to supply her lacks by means of the information we have collected in other cities. That is to say, we do not wish to do It ourselves. Mr. Ilruere and myself have no ambition to get the Job or even the supervision of It. We hope merely that President Wilson will find us reasonable enough and promising enough to set out along the linos we hare suggested and that when the need arises for expert service in the execution of the plan he will be able to ret the best brain of the country to assist him. Will the project we have outlined af fect the physical aspect of cities? That la rather a difficult question at the present stage of our work, but I should say that It will. S7 are deeply Interested in the lay ing ont of cities. Much more depends on ft than beauty, valuable as that Is. Ten. I think that if our plan matures tbtsre will be no need for ugliness in oar cities, ut least not that ugliness which comes from lirnorance. CITY PLANNING IN SCHOOLS. Philadelphia Children Interested In New Course of Civio Instruction. An Interesting departure has been made In his course on civics by Charles K. Taylor, executive director of the committee on moral and social educa tion of tho Homo and School league and the Civic club of Philadelphia. The now Idea is to teach city planning by making tho students plan a city. In an Interview Mr. Taylor thus dv scribed it: . "Without warning or notice paper Is distributed to tho children, wUo are prepared with rulers ami ivenclls. They are then told to think of the composi tion of a city. Its streets, public build ings and the like. They are then told to plan an lde.il city to the Ix-st of their ability. Of course they make a dreadful mess of it. knowing uothlng about such matters, but the experi ment proved to them that they really tlld lack knowledge. Then they are j given a series of t.-ilk, some Illustrated j ou the black hoard. In which they are j given Ideas as to what nn Meal city might be like. They are told the value j of radiating avenues, open squares. pluygrouiids. worklngmen's suburbs, j and so on. Kx perls from outlde the ' school have been asked to talk to the ! children on the subject. Ir. Alexan- I der M. Wilson of the bureau of health and Mr. Andrew Wright Crawford of the municipal nrt Jury have been of great help In giving the children of j the schools where the experiment has 1 been made clear anil valuable Ideas . concerning elty planning and the 'city beautiful.' "When the children have their bends j full of practical Ideas concerning the j planning of nn Ideal city they engage In a competition to see who can plan the JH'st city, nnd these plans, made by ! children of thirteen nnd fourteen years of age. are sometimes remarkable. With schoolboys of this age gaining such Ideas, in a generation we cou'd have a strontr popular supriort of Im pro log the city. "The result of this planning Is that the children become immensely Inter ested in the 'city' Idea, so that now is the psychological time for studying the political structure of the town and city, department by department, if pos sible having representatives from the different departments going to the schools and describing the work of their department and the relation of their department to the city govern ment ns a whole. Thii has already lieen started, nnd different gentlemen In the dry hall have already spoken concerning their work, and others have promised to do so when the time comes." BUTTONS FOR STREET WORK. Philadelphia Inspector Devises Schema to Win Children's Co-operation. Mrs. Kdith W. Pierce, street Inspec tor of the department of public works In Philadelphia, has devised a new way of winning the cooperation of school children in the movument for clean streets. She has designed a but ton containing the legend, "For clean streets. Philadelphia," which will be nwarded as a budge of honor to chil dren w ho do something to Improve the condition of the streets. The button Is round and white, with a blue H'piare bearing the legend, em blematic of the streets surrounding a city square. Tho Itlea of using city colors Is carried out In n yellow center for the button. Mrs. Pierce is working for "preven tlve street cleaning." The buttons will be supplied to the schools, the leagues of good citizenship, social workers and settlement houses to dis tribute to children who have earned them and will show that the wearers ore volunteer Inspectors ami real wel fare workers. Paris Historic Exhibition. Ftich year Paris holds an exhibition In the historic Library of tho City of Paris. Tlie subject this year was the promenades and gardens of Paris from MIS to 1h:io. It was a thorough study of the famous gardens of Paris, such as the Tulleiies and the Luxembourg, and clearly demonstrated the practical and aesthetic value of such breathing spots in a city. A handbook was pro pared In connection with the exhibit which forms a compact nnd valuable reference work. LULAL option valid i.igtoit ioiukm m: joihoii IIV St TIIKMK COt'llT j)crs hny IHs-lslon (Jlic Council High! to Vote Drouth Hy Be. fusing Licenses A blow was dealt to the liquor In terests of the statn last week when the Supremo Court held that local option elections last November In Hu lem charter amendment rase that a field, Ureshani and Hllsboro. all of which voted dry, wore valid. The Court even went further In th Sa-1 lent charter amndment ens that a j City Council, by refusing to Issue a saloon license, ran make a city dry, , or the residents of a city run make it so by passing an amendment or ordinance to provide against the sale of Intoxicating beverages. That the opinion In the charter amendment case practically gives the ProhihllloiilHts fur more opportu nity to suppress tho sale of liquor through licensed saloons Is the opin ion advanced by lawyers. They ssy a majority of tho city council or Portland could make that city dry by refusing to Issue licenses tti the siilooiimen. and that the coun cils of all other cities and towns could do likewise. By tho home ruin amendment to the constitution, says the opinion, a municipality has the exclusive power to license, control and prohibit the sale of Intoxicating liquors, except It shall bo subject to the provisions of the local option law. When the Council refuses to prohibit, the people may so provide by ordinance or In their charter, not as a local option proceeding, but aa an Initia tive measure. The local option law Imposes no restraint thereon, and In no sense In exclusive. HIS is the time of the year when attention should he devoted to your season's er Job Printing We have the material--ve have the ideas. Phone your wants to Examiner Job Department No. 522 Examiner Publishing Company I'llOMS Kditorial Rooms 5'2l -:-Job Department ST. HOTEL LAKEVIEW F Zt ERECTED IN 1900 Sample Room tor Commercial Travelers Modern Throughout. First Class Accommodations THE. PALACE BAR O'CONNOR & DUGGAN - - PROPRIETORS A Gentlemen's Popular Resort PHONG 32 CHOICE BRAND WINES, LIQUORS, CIGARS NEVADA-CALIFORNIA-OREGON RY. Daily Service Reno to LaReview Except Sundays No. 1 Arrives Lakeview at 9:45 P. M. No. 2 Leaves Lakeview at 6:30 A. M. Daily Except Sunday Pullman A lIuffettHervice between Lnkeview and Keno C. W. CLASS, AGENT :: LAKEVIEW, OREGON