THE LAKEVIEW ABSTRACT & TITLE CO. ABSTRACTS TO ALL REAL PROPERTY III LAKE COUNTY, OREGOK Our Complete Tract Index Inaureai Accuracy, Promptness and Reliability Such ad Index in the ONLY llKLl MILK system from which an Abstract can Is made, showing all defects u( title. We Also Furnish '.V!?; H. W. MORGAN, Manajjcr, LAKEVIEW, OREGON rOSTOFFICt BOX 4S RMONKtTt WALLACE SON iWm. Wallace, Coroner for Lake County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION AND Parlors, next door WATSON Lakcvievv Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone Ho. 101 J. 1. DUCKWOKTII, Manaokk Buss to Meet All Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by c'rry, Week or Month "OUK CU8TOMKKS AUE OUK ADVEUTISEHS Goose Lake Valley Meat Market R. E. WINCHESTER, Proprietor We endeavor to keep our market well supplied with FRESH, SALT AND SMOKED MEATS 5 lbs. Lard, 90c; 10 lbs.,;$1.80 Your Patronage is Respectfully Solicited LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY Incorporated. A Complete Record We have made an entire transcript of till Records In Lake County which In any way, affect Ileal Property In the county. We have a complete Kecord of every Mortgage and transfer ever made In Iake County, and ever Deed given. Errors Found in Titles In transcribing the record- we have found numerous mort gages recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded In the Mortgage record and other books. Hundreds of mortgages and deeds are not Indexed at all, and most difficult to trace up from the records. We have notations of all these Errors. Others .annot find them. We have pat hundreds of dollars bunting up these errors, and we can fully guarantee our work. J. D. VENATOR, SHAMROCK STABLES SS, COV BREEN, Proprietor Special Attention to Transient Stock Horses Boarded by the Day, Week or Month Always Open Phone 571 LAKEVIEW - - - - OREGON EMBROIDERY SHOP Alger Land Co. " Handles t'lt v Property HentnlH FANCY WOIIK KXCIIAXGK rr.., Pure I.inen Handkerchiefs, Xew ; Pillow Tops, Scarfs and Centers. Xun's Jloll-Proof Luster Collars for L'm broidery. Tucs Paid und Rentals D.M.C. Threads of all kinds. Art , , , , . , , , Linen by the yard. ' tor Son-residents Embroidery Work to order. MRS. H. B. ALGER OPPOSITE lll'.li WORD liLVU. OWce Opposite llery ford Uullding SATISFACTION GUAR ANT KE1 to Telephone Office BUILDING Hanager. Just the Very Cut you want In what you trt when you order meat from tlii market. Just tlin very quantity too. We don't cut off linlf h pound or so over in order to increase, the sales. We don't have to.' Our meats ire so well known that it keeps us busy supplying the tlemands of regu lar customers. Hut we have room for yon on the list. Lakeview MeaL Market, HAYES & GROB, props SELECTION OF THE DAIRY HERO SIRE Dairying la the very beet bualneaa luown to the farmer, write a corre spondent of the lowft Homestead. It la tbe only meana of fariulug known whereby the skilled tuan can take a poor piece of la ml and make It grow richer year after year. The longer ho follows It the -more fertile the land becomes from the products of the farm Itself. It la no case of robbing your neighbor's farm of Its fertility to build up your own. The longer thin Is fol lowed the richer and more Intelligent the farmer becomes. It will be assumed that you already i have a fair grade of milk cow. It la I Kilo ford Bell til., the pur bred Ayrshire cow here pictured, was champion over all breeda at the last National Dairy ahow. 8h ta a cow of tine dairy type and a splendid representative of the Ayrshire breed. Kiln ford Boll III. waa th winner of tha Valentine stiver trophy, a $500 cup that la given for the beat cow of any breed at the National Dairy show. common knowledge that you can take a fair grade of milk cowa and breed them to a sir u little better than they are and the female offspring will be better milk cow thun the mothers. These youug cows can be bred to a sire iH'iter thmi themselves, and the next generation will be still better. The belter the ancestry of the aire the better l lie offspring. If this plna is carrhsl on up the line the trouble will be in gettiug sires tetter than the cows. This, however. Is the plau to work on, for 114 soou ns the sire be comes no better tint 11 the cow there Is no advancement made. As soon as he , becomes issuer the value of the In- crease in the herd m-couics rer 1 Consequently it behooves ns to keep in step mil I get only suitable aires u. 1 head the dairy herd In selecting the sire Is sure that he has sprung from high class milkers. His mother should lie 11 high class milker, and the mother of his father should also be. The farther back this can be trnc.it the more likely will his offspring be th" kind of milker you would want a I'd expect it to be. Then. j too, do not forget the individual him self. He is tbe one to do the service, not his predecessors, l.isik him over : well. lxs he fill the bill? if ao you should buy hi 111 even though he costs a few dollars more than you think you can afford to pay. Here is the one place a man can stand up aud smile when he thinks he has paid too much for a sire. A good sire hands back a . prize box when you pay for him. Upon opening it you do not find nickels and ; dimes, but he answers In terms of ten, tweuty. fifty and now and then hun dred dollar bills In the way of better' calves, better cows, more milk, larger cream returns and larger pay checks. Silage For Wethers. Breeders who have fed silage to In lamb ewes have generally had very good results. Trouble has come from feeding silage that was not erfectly weet Moldy or frozen siluge or silage , from very immature corn should not. be fed to em. It Is absolutely necea sary to see that each ewe gets the amount iitfeuded for her. Two to four ' pounds isr head daily-is quite general-, ly considered enough for best results. This is eighty pounds for twenty sheep, and If fed carelessly It Is mighty easy for one or more "piggish" ewea to get six or eight pounds daily, and disaster may follow, when the silage will pet the blaiiie and not the man. It will make good feed for fattening wethers In connection with other roughage and grain rather rich In pro tein. The same care must be used as In feeding the ewes. National Stock man. Indigestion of Horses. When u horse has Indigestion it may I be that his teeth are irregular and sharp, says Farm Journal. Have them attended to by a veterinarian. Allow him a box stall in the stable and bed with shavings or sawdust, if he enta his bedding, if he bolts his feed give it from a wide bottomed feed Ikix and also put some cobblestones in the box. Feed whole oats, wheat bran aud tbe best of hay. allowing one siund of each for each 100 pounds of body weight, us a day's ration. Carrots or parsnips would be good for hltn. Do not let him stand a single day idle la the sbible. If the trouble persists mix In tho feed twice daily one tablespoon ful of a mixture of two parts powdered wood charcoal and one port each of granular hyposulphite of sodu, ground gentian root and powdered nux. Cow Stable Ventilation. The cow stable should have plenty of ventilation, but this docs not mean that there should be an Incessant draft because of P001" doors and leaky aldea In tbe barn. A born that la sided up with cracks big enough to throw a cat through la uo place to keep a dairy cow. NOOZtftS ARK LOSER, rhere are some folk that love to lie In bed moat of the day, And thus the bailor pari of life The aleepara wait away. But I'm tht kind that Ilk to see The sun rla o'er lh hill And eovr evervlhlna with fold And all with iilory nil. It la than lh tilrila elh sweetest; It ta then the 4nvely rtowera Ct lh moat bewltchlna" vertume Krom their dewy, aun kissed bowers; It Is thrn Uisfe pue seems round me In th blossom scented air Ami I see tha Hod of nature And Ma glory everywhere. "Ufa la rrnl, and Ufa la earnest." And It wss not mail for sleep, And there now nra sleeping virgin Who will hi tor wak to warp. They who give their days to sleeplnc And their nlKhl to revelry Are but burying their talents As the precloiia moment Ilea. "Ufa la real, and lira la earnest." And earh has his part to do. And It you tine life for Bleeping Who will do your work for youT Day for work, and night for reeling Kvrn then our time la ehort To fulfill the tuk assigned ua And achieve a good report C, M. HARNITX. KURIOS f ROM KOR RESPONDENTS Q I nolo the tiiiuie "SlmkelMig" la 1 given by cocktlghlers to a large specloa : of game. Why the name? A. -The ' tilaiit or Herculean game waa called shakebag because at a main It was I customary to shake (hem out of a bug j Into the cockpit and thus uo trickery ! could give the one an advantage over j the other. Q. A butcher has kindly offered me fresh blood to feed my , hens. Is It all right to feed raw In j the mash, or must It be prepared In i some way? A. It should be bulled In j a sack and not much should l' fed at I a time. Q. Whnt makes a hen bag j down behind? A.-Overfat Kenernlly. The muscles break down. They etin't J hold up her fat Istdy bustle. Q lo you consider nroseih glass goou tin ior oultry? A. No. It punetiirea the di gestive organs. 1 have a cck bird that bullies the hens and will not let them eat How can 1 stop this? A. Put another nsistcr In the coop ami let him lick the brute. As with hu ll an, be will then go to the hens for sympathy. Q. How may I distinguish sex In geese? A. The gander haa more rubber neck and Is large mid course, while the gistse gabbles much In a voice loud and course, t). What Is u poult and a kivl ? A.- A young turkey. 1 young guinea. FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS, The cold storage law f Pennsylvania ,V(nires u,;it stored :irw lie kept no tm,,.r n,,,,, ,.aut months. To defeat ,ljK ,ne ,.k.u ..Mmblcr withdrew eggs from storage 11 ml then entered them again as new fre. eggs; :flXMl crates, thirty dozen to the crnle. were thus changed in Philadelphia alone. As hens do not la ' plentifully In win ter and egg gamblers are not ill the habit of paying the price of fresh win j ter eggs it shouldn't le a hard Job for the state detectives to catch the swln j tilers. Congress also Is investigating 1 this matter. No less than twelve bills In quick succession were introduced de manding that Hie depart meld of Justice invi-sf igutc the cold storage business on account of the high pri-e of winter eggs. We arc glad to see the investi gators headed the right way and th' public 110 longer blaming the hen r the egg producer, but the fisid gam blers. All the poultry genites arc not 011 big pluuts nor thc-poullry papers. Not by u jugful: Many of the best man aged and Isst paying thicks are 011 farms and town lots, where there lire big reeult. but no horn blowing. Poultry leel uii-s at farmers' Insti tutes comma ml a tine lieurln and In most sections are I he most popular, the women especially turning out en musse to hear them. This is certainly eiicouruglug to those who are striving to Improve farm pouitry An Indiana poultryinaii spent $.r.0t0 on Ids annua! catalogue mid as much more on general ndveetising. and bis sal en of stm-ks, chicks and eggs for that season were over $.V).000. Others may have Just as goisl stock, but fall to reullze because they fall to advertise. Many big city papers now give a spe cial page u week to poultry. These editors sis? the importance of the vast poultry industry and wish to help the town lot hen man as well as the farm er. Their efforts are rcciprocaieu, 101 tbe Mllltry artl.,.s ,irw ml. poultry advertising and new subscribers. Some editors, however, do not observe the signs of the times, prim no poultry In formation und lose accordingly. We have visited numerous poultry plants where we were asked to figure I out why Hie s.'iis were damp. We ,' found in some plants Hint the litter was too thin anil not renewen orieu enough. In others (he dirt Honrs were wet from the moisture of droppings or poor outside drainage, and of cour-e wet the stni-.v and affected the sir. There are other uses for a bone cut ter besides cutting gnsui bone. Dry bones may be cut up for fertilizer and vegetable sliced for the chickens and rattle. When then; Is soft green corn It may bo cut up. cob und all. and fed. thus It Is saved from molding. This Is the season when canker ap pears, and it Is not difficult to cure If taken early. The growth should be gently removed and peroxide of hy drogen applied, and after a few appli cations tbe trouble disappears. The county commissioners of Spo kane county. Wash., appropriated 'TiO toward the Christmas exhibition of the Inland Umpire Poultry and I'et Stock association Other county commission ers please copy. MODEL HOMES OF ESSEN WORKMEN Germany a Leader In Solving Problems of Housing. GUNMAKER AS A PIONEER, Foresight of Germans Provided Com fortable and Adequate Housing Fa cilities For Workers Krupp First to Put Idea Into Effect. The foresight of the tieruinns was rc8Musitilo for the provision of com fortable and iidc4uute housing facili ties for the workers, says Wllhelm Wlegaud In Town pevelopmeiit. Over fifty years ago it was realized that au Investment for ethclency was the most profitable Investment ikissIIiIo, and this realisation was followed up by the con clusion that such elllclency ran be se cured only when the worklngmaii Is so housed ami cured for that his health aud happiness are assured The truth of this li.vHit heals Is now so generally tcanotv lodged that Its stntetiieul ap pears trite. Hut fifty years ago the theory had never lieen tried and proved true, and It must have been dlilienlt to atinnder good marks and pfennigs for the consummation of 11 visionary Ideal. Tbe founder of the grout Krupp gun works at Kssen. however, with more than native (ierman sagacity, was per baps the llrst to comprehend the con crete v til lie of the vision. So III the year IMSO twelve houses that were to rent at a most modest llguro were built for the convenience of the Krupp cm ployee. After that the iidtance was rapid. Within seven ears IJIH more houses had tiecti added to the colony, and as the plant grew year by yeur the number of houses Increusisl until there are now' over it.oon Kven this uum Ix-r of dwellings, however, pro Ides for but one third of the emplutees of the great shois, for the Krupp Interests furnish labor for nlsiut -!Uhi Unlike other colonies I tin t Inive I'm'tl founded to provide u home for the workman at the least hmIIIc cost, the IbJ It m IS . i V T- a , . -a 'iw ' 'Tfc. P'l J mr. -w x Isrzz. -r LK y&!& MOOKHS uorsKs Of Kill I'l r.MI'l.llVI'.tS. colony of Ksseu has not been forcisl to sacrifice beauty and eoinlorl t mere utility. Itullt primarily to serve the purpose of utility, compactly arranged for the strictest economy of space us the houses are. they maintain an at mosphere of chnrin and Individuality that g'H-s far toward making them real homes for their tenants. Indeed, a glance at the ivy covered walls, sh.iilisl windows, putches of shrubbery and flowers, gives one the Impresslou of a small agricultural village rather than of a thundering Industrial center. Tho buildings have Ivecn a r ranged so that every family may have its bountiful share of light and ohii air. Kach dwelling has a small lawn and a gar den space for vegetables and (lower gardens. The Interior of the cottage I is us attractive as the exterior Kvery j house contains at least two rooms, , and the great majority have from four to six i;ooms ami oili-n a li.isciueiil. In accordance with tin- prevailing cus tom the main rooai serves the double function of kitchen and living room. This room, always Immaculately clean, Is always comfortably warm from the heat of the stove. The whiten aslnsl italla are covered with tint shining kitchen utensils that are Used through out the country as wail decorations. For comfortable habitations in Ksscu the workmen pay from loo to 1100 murks a year, the higher llgure provid ing a five nsnn cottage In the most fa vorable environment. Imagine any bouse In America renting fur froiu $'.m to $7l.4u s year! At Ibis price, of course, the proprietors cau make no money, ami. although they calculate their gain at 1 per cent per minimi, the expense of deterioration tniibt be estimated at 3 per cent, ho that the Krupp company stands a yearly loss of 'J per cent on overy house. To off set this loss, however, the company has discovered through the experience of the fifty years that the elllclency of their worklnginen has been tripled and that tbe loss from strikes and labor difficulties In general has been roduced to a negligible fraction. That the com pony baa never questioned tbe wisdom of sacrificing a small amount of money to a great guln in service Is most con cluslvely demonstrated by tho continu ance of tbe policy of home building. A HOPtrUL M0VKMINT. To me illy planning la (ha most hopeful of all municipal movements llrst, because It mean a rlaunllxrllon of the city aa a iNisslhlo agency of great good to mankind. Heretofore we hnva linked upon It aa to evil, aa a behemoth. Now wa are beginning tu reallr.o that It contains great ssslbllltles of BoihI; Hint poverty can be mini mized; that the houses pis. pie live In cau be controlled; that th city of tomorrow need not be whnt the city of today l men. nee to our clvlllattou. Over a hundred cities In this country hare already undertaken ambitious town planning proj. ect. l.'iich week adds now cities) to Hie list i: pelts are being employed, tbe architect, the landscape nrtlst and the engineer are being culled lit for the ablu tion of these problems. Amer ica awoke to this problem later than did tiermnny. I'ranre or Ktighiud, but with our unbound ed resources, with our fertile Imaginations, I believe that In another generation tho Amerlcnn city will outstrip even the cities of (icrmnuy In Ita municipal achievements. l''or It must ts remembered that the American city Is on a democratic basis. It Is acquiring freedom to act ninlcr home rule legislation, and whatever the failures of demM racy uiiiy have been In the past I have faith to Isdleve In tbe evidence already before ua that democracy will solve the prob lems which now confront It more elTWtlvely than have even the t - r i t must advanced tuitions of the old X world Hr. V. C. Howe. f --M-M-M ENTERPRISING FRIENDLINESS. How Dctur Citi(n Won th Hrts of Incoming Locomotive Worksre. ' When an Industry moves from oue community to another the change moans for many of Its employees) de sertlng liouies dearly paid for, taking children out of school, breaking of church mid lodge limitations. It was for this reason thai iHs-atur. III., through Its cJinmlMr of commerce, determined to do everything in Its (tower to make the lisomotlve shop men employed by the Wabash railroad like their new place of residence when the road moved Its machinery from the old shops In Sprlnglleld to the new plant In liecatur. one of the lnrgt of Its kind III the world When they learned that they were to Is transferred to His-slur the shop men sent n committee to Ihnt city to Investigate. The rcsirt was unfavor able. The shopmen were Informed that vacant houses were few, that rents were high mid board excessive. It was then tbal the li'Utur cham ber of commerce Inlerestisl Itself. An Investigation of almost every Istardiug house In the city dlsprovi-d the report thut ImuiiiI was excessive A miM'tlng of builders was culled, ami. though no definite promises were secured lis to how niiinv houses they would eroct, the chamber satlstbs) itself that enough would Is proi I'lcil by the following spring Thi'oiuh lis secretary, John M. Myrtle, the chamber compiled s list of Istard iug houses, secured the liniiies of the shopmen who were coming and env couraged real estate men to write them with a view to Ihnling out their needs. On the morning the advance guard of the newcomers. ,souie bringing their wives and children, were due to arrive the chamber of commerce oltlchils, ac companied by thirty citizens, each with his automobile, met the train, escorted the shopmen to the waiting machines ninl took them, on a tun mile ride over the principal stris'ts and through the park. At the end of the ride any lingering feeling of prejudice and hostility bad las-u removed and Minpiucii shook hands with their hosts. The news traveled buck to Sprlnglleld, with the result that shopmen who hud been planning to go elsewhere divided to remain with the Wabash and make liecatur llielr home. It required little ell'ort for a city tu kIiow itself human as well as enterprising- Survey . First Efficiency Exposition, The llrst National I'.tllclcncy exposi tion and conference will be held In (he new lira ml Central palace, New York city, from April -I to 11 under the auspices of the Klllcleucy siwiety. Incorporated. The exhibits will show the increasing application of scientific methods to modern conditions, and there will be assembled displays Of appliances, methods mid products In fhe Ibhls of Industrial, mechanical, governmental, edueiitiounl and house hold cllli lcni-y Special Invitations to liartli'lpate in the conference to be held during (he exposition will be Is sued to sclent lib' organizations, state and municipal ollidals and authorities on elllcleney. Chicago Social Recrtation. West park No. 2 In Chicago, known us Stanford park, recently celebrated the close of Its third year of play a very busy yeur of genuine social recre ation us Is shown by a perusal of tho director's brief page of statistics. There was a total ntleiidunco of 750,110 per sons, 0.400 of whom organized Into clubs; (iH.OOo used the reading room and l.'8,(KK) tho swimming pool. These numbers can bo, as Director Teller ad vises, Interpreted only lu terms of "justice, nelghborllneas, democracy, good citizenship and brotherhood." t I