APRIL 9, 1914 LAKE COUNTY EXAMINER PAGE THREE HIBERNIANS TO " MEET AT IIEPPNEI1 (From the Irish News) The following Inttor In solf -explanatory: "Hccrolary, A. O. II., Your letter of February 27 wan Uld over until our meeting March 17. Oil Hint lay, State President Doery being In attendance, wo decided to hold tho fctuto Convention of tlio A. O. H. In tlio latter part of October. MohI of tlio members of this Divi sion are sheepmen, and an they do not return from tlio mountains until tlio mlildlo of October, you can oiinl ly sen that It would bo lmpomill.lv) to hold tlin Convention until tlio Ut 0jd. Wo certainly would liit'i to ficcomodiito tlin Lakovlow hoys In the matter hut circumstances hero will not permit It. Regretting that such Is the rune, and wishing all success to you Illu sion rod Its worthy rhapliun, I re iniiln dear Ilrother Jlrennuii, Fraternally yours, (Itov) T. J. O'lluurko, Iter. Kecy. Ileppnor, Oref:.n. 6 Illicit Hcliool Note The Freshmen furnished a song for UKHombly Wodnosday morning. Tlin Juniors hail a very successful class party Tuesday evening. Tlio Seniors havo nearly complet ed their "Theses" and most of them aro handed In. Tlio activities of tho Sophomoro dsns aro moving along pleasantly and they will ho hard from Boon. All school movements aro now centered lit tho Annual Number of tho HK llrusli Kcho. The friend of the school aro linked to assist as much as posHlble, ho that their first annual may be u hiiccijhh. It seems to those wli.t lire closely connected with the IIIkIi School mid Us various phasi m 1 work Hmt:lI v the chief v.ork f the pilpllH who lit lind the Instil u! I n mid that the school liulldlng should be the center for educational and social functions. Several persons have In n rather complaining way suggested thul "you have too much going on at 1 1 school building and keep our young people out too much." While the real truth of the subject Is thnt the young people are ul school fu net loin very few evenings. Only one enter talnmnt has been given this ear and then many of tho pupils were too busy to practice 111 tho evening ho nearly ull of the rehearHliig was dono after school. It Is expected that schools of thlH kind should have social gatherings anil perhaps no better plan could bo suggested thuil under the teacher's guidance. The real truth of the matter Is that with from one to three dances near ly every week, one or two niovln : picture shows every night, lodges that -draw on the school folks for hoc hi I committees and the churches with their various social require ments and entertainments, together with some private affairs planned for the High School pupils that there Is but llttlo tlmo left for school do ings and when Home work or plea sure Is planned it seems that the pupils are "ho busy In tho school." Perhaps one of the best arguments In favor of the Bt hool activity Is that discretion Is used In arranging the tlmo and very few evenings aro us ed during school week but meetings are deferred until Friday night. When practices aro planned during tho week they are along hcIioo! lines and aro always short. If this mat ter Is looked at squarely, tho JiiBtlco of school claims will surely bo evi dent. Friday evening, April 10, tho Do mestic Helenco CIuhhcs of tho High School will servo a dinner to the public In tho High School Dinning Itoom, from 6 1'. M. to 7:30. The main objects are, to give tho pupils experience In this lino of serving, and the public an opportunity to nee them at their work. Tlio prices aro regulated by "what you out." Tho proceeds after tlio expenses are met will bo divided between the two classes to help finish out tho ye:iri work. Cuaraiiteo tickets will bo sold for ten cents, this to bo de ducted from tho hill when presented to tho Cashier. Tickets on Bale at Thornton's Drug Store. Following la the bill of faro (subject to change). SOUP Consommo.ric Oyster Soup, 10c. fish Creamed Salmon, 10c Oyster Patties, 10c MIC AT Itoast Hecf, 25c Uoast Pork, 25c VKQETAHLKS Creamed Corn, 5c 8callopod Tomatoes, 5c llaked Asparagus with Cheese, 10c DKSSKHT Uasin Pie, 6c Chocolate Tie, 10c Orange Bavarian Cream, 10c Prune Whip, 10c Cako, 10c Coffoe, 6c Toa, 5c potato, Bread and Butter served free with 25 cent orders THE INOW A BLEMINOL This rlma la for the fallow Who knock about tha mow, For that ha la ungrateful Our almpla Unaa will ahow. now railing through tha atmoaphara Claana, purine tha air, Just Ilka tha atmunor rainstorm Whan a rainbow ahlnaa up thara. Snow fnllt down on tha growing whaat And, Ilka blanket whlta, It keeps tha grains and craaaaa warm And aava them day and night, A winter without anow, my friend, Would mean no bread to aat, ' No areas anithny for oattla And of courea no Juloy meat. now melta and waters grtwlng (rain; It alnka down through tha sod Until bnlow It inakea o'erflow - Tlio hidden aprlnga of Uod. Theea hidden aprlnga an oraan form Ilennnlh the mi r fare deep, Where mid tha Untie cavra and the rock Tha cooling wulrra awaep. Theea help to keep the earth's cruat coth', They fill the welH and aprlnga; Ther furnleli coo! Ufa giving; drink To nourish living tlilnga. Now, let u prelim Uod for the anow That blanket tha cold earth and Ihunk him fur In beauty And Ha tremrndoua worth. C. I. DARNITZ. A Cure for Hour Stomach Mrs. Wm. M. Thompson, of Battle Crook, Mich., writes: "I have been troubled with Indigestion, sour sto mach and bad breath. Aftor taking two bottles of Chamberlain's Tablets I am well. These tablets are splen did none better." For sale by all dealers. MORE CHICKENS SOLUTION OP MEAT PROBLEM. Our friends, tho vegetarians, thibk tho Joko I on the meat enters snd console themselves with the thought that Amerlcuns will eventually get down to a diet of robbiige, beans, po tatoes and turnl'm. This seems to depend on whether people In general ruiso chickens. In six yenra beef production ha dropped 3 per rent, over 1.4UMNJ0 less cattle wero slaughtered st Inspected slaughter houses In that tlmo, a short age of TNO.tkKMMK) less pounds of beef, and meat euisumtlon has dropped ten pounds per capita In three years. This Is ascribed to tho high price of feed, rnttlo ticks, hog cholera and other disomies, tho slaughter of calves and tho fact thnt grazing country Is being rapidly changed Into farms. Some way iniixt U; found to 011 this rood shortage. Authorities at Wellington tnko a poHHlmlNtlf view of the whole situation. They hold no hope for nn Increased tr ndeiUiite beef Mid pork supply for tho future, but even sny of poultry. "There Is. therefore, no prospect of In crease In products of this tins In irreuter mtlo than the Increase In pop ulation." We rather think this st:ite ment shows our Washington iMiultry proi'tiosf lentors are In tho Weeping Jeremiah chins. The poultry census on which they luKe their cliilm docs not fully repre sent the poultry of the I'ultcd States. This fan leu' enumeration does not In clude the millions of fowls and egg produced In cities, towns and hamlets of tills country. It Is restricted to farms mid shows a poultry popuhition on them of 4SS. MS..".", I. a viint Increase, ICi s-r rent of the whole 1 ! ti tl chickens. Tho same shows farm e'gs Jumped from 1."'.).'!. ti(;j.4::.l dozen to I..VM.::i.:i71 dozen, mi Increase from 17 dozen Id 17.3 doz en per capita mid the per capita this jeiir Is estimated to reach IS dozen. Poultry products ull over tho coun try are 1nTi-:ts!iig. and we believe here is the solution of the meat deficiency. Missouri. Iowa. Illinois, Indiana. Ohio. Ka'iixns and Texas made vast advances last year and produced .'HI per cent of tho (Miiillry rop of tho country. If other states get on the sumo hustle there will ho chickens and eggs to burn. Farm hens aro said to lay but sixty cgg9 per year, and at this rate they roach 1..V.M.31 1,371 dozen annually. What a vast Incrense better care or a better bred hen would make in the egg crop! There wore D,(mT.753 United States farms that reported poultry. Let these anil our professional poultry men and our town hen men just do a llttlo better, and tho vast aggregate of Increase will solve the meat prob lent In short ordur. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. It is not Just the cold cash you get from iMiultry that you count ou the protit; there's the pleasure also. This Is well put in tho words of a business mini and fancier. Said he: "I have kept fancy poultry now for many years and they never havo falltsl to pay inc. Now and then when I havo hud some doubts as to whether or not tho lu romo was keeping up with tho outgo, I would walk down to the hen yards, look over my best birds, study their fluo points for an hour or so, then go back to my otllco and credit the birds with $.10 on account of personal pleas ure derived from their ownership. In this way I have managed to show a good, safe prollt every year." Add to this enjoyineut the bealthfulness of the employment Pigeon doctors have various remedies for canker, oud the most successful seems to bo burnt alum. This Is blown Into the mouth or throat, where the affection is located, after the white patch Is gently removed.' The department of agriculture, Wash ington, recently warned housewives against buying chickens stuffed with sand. Such swindlers should be hyp notized with a stuffed club. Jupan has about nine fowls to the acre of cultivated ground. The United States has about half a fowl to the aero. China and Japun have offset the shortage in beef production by a large Increase In poultry production, a trick this country may well copy. , "SONS OF LHIN" AKKIVE IN LAKE TRIED GRAINS FOR NORTHWEST. ' Kxi'oiliui nt which hare been con- Jit' ted during the past ten years at tha . Hoiifh, Dnkotii experiment station un der the direction of the United States department of agriculture have result I rd In the following recommendations I ss to heat viirlctlc of wheat, oats and (From tho Irish Nows) ! barley to grow In the Dnkotas and Nlnotoeii "Sons of Krln," not on adjoining territory: Whest-Kubanka of whom Is over 30 years of age, and Jur""'- Hayne bluestem. Ited Fife hut four of whom are over 21. ar- w""-""h,w n" I nllfff I In ln floe lists ftim a rived in Lakevlow last week and ex j a,Hlr)(,t Mnn,.hurla and Odessa; forth. pect to make this country tholr fu ture home. TIioko who arrived were: Pat rick leader and Patrick Brown, of Olounulougha, Kingwilllamstowu John T. llcrllhy, Mock a, Klngwil llumstown; Michael Herllhy, Moenti (luck, Klngwllllamstown ; William O'Keefo, Tureciiduffo, Klngwllllams town; Jerry M. Barry, Dan McAulll fo, of Newmarket; Ben Walsh, Glen laru, Newmarket; James O'Keefe Curraduffo, Newmarket; Itlchan. Tarrant, Coollgh, Newmarket; Tom Daly, Nod Murphy and Michael Daly Commoqs, Newmarket; Tim Murphy j Meelln; Mlko Curtln, Uowells; Kich .....I I - ........ I I .. 1I.1IIn n. ' mil rvuii'Tuii, r remou 11 1 , n iiiiuiii Singleton, Cullen; Dan Rahllly Droiimtarrlffc; Con Oulnoy, Gloun reu, Klskoam. All appeared to bo strong and hearty after their long Journey, and wo wish thorn success In tho "land of tho free." central district. Ilanmiieri, and for the western, (.'nlaml and Marlout. The department names as the main re quirements for crop Improvement and Incrpssed production, better varieties, better seed, better rotations, better soil treatment, better tillage and cultiva tion and more favorable economic con ditions. Farmers desiring the details of tho experiments and suggestions above referred to may secure tbeni without charge by making application to the division of publications. United States department of agriculture, Washington. D. C. for the bulletin. "Kxperlments With Wheat, Oats and Barley In South Dakota." ED. I II MM AN DEAD .H HltOTIIKK OF I.. (J. THOMAS OF LAKKVIKW Milvvaid l. Thomas Victim to Acute TuIktcuIosIn ut Hunitoriuni in Sun Francisco The Urn llanos (Cal.) Enterprise, Saturday, March 28: Tho commu nity was shocked lant Saturday af leruoou as the news was received here that Kdwnrd D. Thomas had died In San Francisco. Death oc u red at 3:10 that afternoon at the Ituenn Vista Sanltoriiim nt 21 Huena Vista avenue from acute miliary tn tierculosls of tlio general or typhlod lorm. Ho had been ailing for about three weeks and had been taken to San Francisco as a last resort but U'.e Incurable dlseare could ' not be combated. I 'd ward D. Thomas w as born near Sacramento on October 14, 1872. muklug 'his age at his death 41 years, five months and seven days, lie was tho sou of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Thomas. His mother died In 1882 ntid his father passed away In 1909. Ho has lived In different places In California among them being Wil- THE MEANEST MAN. About the meunest man on top of ! God s footstool is the fellow whose wife has darned his socks, sewed but tons on and patched bis pants, washed his dirty duds and got him three meals a day for nobody knows bow many years nnd yet who. In spite of all this labor and service and a whole lot more, 1 keeps her so short of money that she has to get down on all fours every time she wants a nickel. Great Caesart If alio were the (toorest klud of hired girl imaginable she would get at least $3 a week and board. But perhaps the chaps who constitute this tribe think that the pleasure of their company cancels the amount of cosh due week by week and that their wives are really indebted to them for their clothes. The only fitting retribution thot comes to such fellows Is to marry a second time and have their new wives read 1 tli em the riot act and make them band vi-r i ue uuuku in large waus. mis happens quite frequently and is calcu lated to entertain those who are famil iar w ith the tightwad tendencies of the victims. HIGH PRICED TRASH. With cioVer seed selling on retail markets at or near $7 a bushel, there would seem to tie mighty little excuse j tor any farmer monkeying with cheap stuff from some other state which is more than likely to contain the seeds of many noxious weeds, besides dirt sand mid trash. The need of giving this so culled "cheap." yet very ex pensive, seed a wide berth Is shown In the analysis made several years ago by the botanist of one western exierl mint station. Of 13U samples of this lmiMirtcd clover seed examined, nearly every sample was found to be full of bad weed seeds. Twenty-one of the samples contained Canada thistle, nlne-ty-elght contained buckthorn, and ten contained dodder. One sample con tained 10.3H1 weed seeds to the nound. Hams In Colusa county. Redding and - ncUjinK fourteen varieties, besides Dutch Flat. Ten years ago he locat ed In Newman nnd was employed for four year In tho Kane mercantile ei tabllsment. He then camo to Los I!;inos nnd entered the employ of the Miller & Lux department store and has tho reputation of having never missed a day. His fellow clerks say of him that during his employment they never heard of his losing his temper, and as a requisi tion man this Is considered very ex ceptional. Ho leaves two brothers and four sisters: L. G. Thomas of Lakevlew, Oregon, and C. E. Thomas of Col ville. Wash.; Mrs. Walter Gusha of Redding, Mrs. William Gerome of Oakland, Mrs. Jennie McChesney of Seattle. Wash., and Mrs. C. R. Meins vt Portland, Oregon. L. G. Thomas. Mrs. Gusha and Mr. and Mrs. Jerome nnd little son, Raymond, attended the funerul held here Wednesday af ternoon. The services were hold under the auspices of Mountain Brow Lodge, No. 82, I. O. O. F.. which had charge at the cemetery, the church services being at the Methodist Church and In charge of the pastor, Rev. C. N. Wood. , Uenldes the relatives named the deceased loaves ft widow and two children Ruth aped 15, and Arthur rgod 14. The pall bearers were Odd Fel lowsthree from the Newman lodge and throe from the Dns Banos lodge Tho tloral pieces were very numer ous and beautiful. dirt and trash. In view of the fact that from $14 to $10 per bushel was paid for clover seed that season. It meant a pretty lofty price for weed seed and dirt in the showdown. , RHEUMATICS. A friend of the writer who Is not far from t No "eighty" milestone stated the other day that some years ago be was atllicted with a severe att-ick of Inflam matory rheumatism. lie tried all the doctors in his locality, but without their being able to render him ma terial relief. As u last resort he pour ed some kerosene on some flannel j cloths and wrap;ed these about his . knees, keeping them there fur some : time. He states that this simple treat- i meut gave him relief and that be has not suffered from this ailment since. Of course It Is possible that the treat- j meut mentioned may not hare bad anything to do with the relief, but flannel cloths and kerosene are cheap ' and any one atllicted can prove or dis- ! prove the effectiveness of the cure to ; his own satisfaction. l oit Hock Komi Activity Bond Bulletin: According to For ost Supervisor M. L. Merrlt the set tlers In the Fort Rock neighborhood are showing great interest in the proposed new road from that dis trict to Bend and many of "thorn are already at work on It. The road will bo especially valuable to the homesteaders In the northern por tion of the county who now have to go south to Fort Rock to get on tho present road and then turn to the north again. Under the new plan they will simply come straight north through the forest until they strike the Burns road. Htomiitit Trouble Cured i Mrs. II. G. Cleveland, Arnold, Pa., writes, "For some time I suffered from stomach trouble. I would have sour stomach and would feel bloated after eating. Nothing benefitted me until I got Chamberlain's Tablets. After taking two bo'ltles of them, I was cured." For sale by all dealers, o THIS EXAMINER VOR JOB WORK THE COSTLY RAT. Where it docs uot freeze In the barn or stables un effective rat trap may be made by filling a water pail half full of chulT and scattering bran over it with a few kernels of corn on top. This should lie left for several nights, a few kernels of com being added as it U eaten by the rats. When they havo got used to going to the pail the chuff should be removed and water put in Its place. A coaling of bran should bo placed on top of this, also n few kernels of corn. The rats wiA come us before, but will drown, having no footing. The approach of the rats to the pall will be made the easier by placing a board from the floor to tha top of It. BEES AND SKUNKS. The contributor of an eastern paper who some weeks ago called attention to the fact that his dwindling hives of bees were due to the nightly uttacks of skunks, of which he succeeded in catching three by setting traps In front of the hives, seems to bare over looked the fact that these attacks could be entirely prevented by putting a circle of One meshed chicken fencing around each blve or the entire space occupied by the hives. It Is a safe as sumption that the destruction by the skunks of noxious Insects would rep resent a mighty good luterest return on the sum luvested in the fencing. HOTEL LAKEVIEW Z.J:1?t ERECTED IN 1900 Samp0 Room Tor Commercial Traveler Modern Throughout. Flrtt Clam Accommodation SONGS YOU HAVE HEARD 4 'THAT HYPNOTIZING MAN" W H Y not come in and let us change you into being a clothes-contented human bein;. Pick out. Lhe Woolen and Style. We'll put our tailoring WIZARDS to work, and presto ! You'll have the finest Spring Suit any man could even wish for. We are showing a complete line of LAMM & COMPANY'S Fabrics. LAKEVIEW TAILORING CO. Cleaning; Pressing and Repairing FTC 3! i: hi I 'i !'rf I'lj.'rt, km 9 PORTEOUS DECORATIVE CO. RENO, NEVADA Above Is mi illustration if our lilth' silrut salesman, h booklet shon-lnff over l'4 ilitl'vreut snmtles of our Wall lJafers ull in stock all reaily for delivery. 1'iiees triven on fe Imek of each bm tuple write for it ire will he platl to semi it to you. We can supply yon with everything you may ueeil in the Wallpaper, I'aint or Brush line, ami at prices to please you. tiet your 'arnishes of us; fret your Paints of us; pet your Wall I'aper. yanitas, ilnrlaps of us. We ar here to please yon ire are here to inert comjietitioti opposite I'ost OttUe. MASOMC TlMl'LL, IIESO, SUV ADA HIS is the time of the year when attention should be devoted to your season's Job Printing We have the materialwe have the ideas. Phone your wants to Examiner Job Department No. 522 Examiner Publishing Company PHONES Editorial Rooms 521 -:-Job Department 522