o 7 llllliilljiiiillllllllilljljllliljllilliliM Town and County ooo ooo p KATHLEEN SHERLOCK. The sweet little infant, Kathleen K., daughter of W. A. and Anna Sherlock, died Wednesday morning at 5o'clfck, aged 11 months and 10 days. Little Kathleen was a beautiful child and is deeply mourned by parents and friends. The funeral will occur today (Thurs day) at 2:30 p. m. from the M.E. Church. Frank P. Light is ill with (stomach troubles. Mrs. G. W. Wise, of Plush, is again rejorted seriously ill. William Harvey has gone to San Francisco on a business trip. P. N. Tonningsen and A.L. Howell are going to San Francisco this week. See the beautiful sample line of new fall and winter suiting- at The Mono gram. 34-2 S. II. Chandler this week sold f00 dry ewes at 2.50 to Willis Barnutn, of Clover Flat. Whorton A Fitzpatrick have now on hand a full stock of the celebrated Jese Moore Whiky. 34 tf L. I). Frakes arrived from Warner Monday and sent several days in the hub on business. Born At Warner Iike. Lake county, Ore.. August 2', HHX), to the wife of A. (i. Frakes, a daughter. Drink nothing but Jesse Moore whi-ky and you'll always Imj happy. On sale at Whorton A Fitzpatrick's. 33-tf Fine, well-fitting, handsome pattern readv made clothing, at The Monogram. Go there and try on a suit. 34-2 Born At Warner Lake, Lake countv, Ore., August 22, 1900, to the wife "of Claylorn Fisher, a daughter. Mrs. Joe Burrus intends to start for Reno, Nevada, in a few davs on a visit with her sister, Mrs. W. T. Boyd. Lon Long was down from his ranch at Chrisman Lake this week. Lon has a fine stock ranch up there and is doing well. E. E. Emerson, who left here two years ago with A.W.Charlton for the Klondike, is expected to arrive home next Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Green, of Warner Lake, have gone to Williams, Cal., to visit their daughter, Mrs. J. C. Stoveall. They will be absent about six weeks. Jim Dunn, the 'sheep-buyer, arrived Tuesday night from Amadee. He has just shipped 10,000 head East from that point, and is here after another lot for shipment. Postmaster Wilcox has been informed (unofficially) that the Lakeview post office has been elevated from the fourth to the third rlass. This will make the position of our postmaster a salaried one. M. A. Phelps, the piano tuner, from Ban Francisco, has been in town the past week doing' what vork there is in his line. Mr. Phelps will leave for 'Alturas the last of the week. You can't "beat the Dickens" any more than you can beat Charley Graves on gents' footwear. See his fine line of shoes. 34-2 While Schminck is waiting to get into his new br:k store', ire is offering bar gains in tinware, agateware, guns, etc. He is selling cheap so as to put in a select stock when he gets in larger quarters. 34-2 J. S. Field and daughter, Ottie, will start next Sunday for San Francisco. Mr. Field will purchase another Targe stock of general merchandise for his new store, and will be absent about three weeks. On h:g horseback trip from Silver Creek to Lakeview John Venator made the XL ranch at Abert Lake, 82 miles, the first day, and from there to Lake view, 52 miles, in 5 hours, and he wasn't riding for a doctor, either. Mrs. X. P. Fuller and daughter, Mrs. C. F. Clarkson, have returned to Sisson after an extended visit in Red Bluff. They will reside at Sisf-on in the future, Mrs. Clarkson having accepted a posi tion in the Sisson public school at a salary of f 70 per month. : Ted Jaquish, of Cedarville, was here last week looking for a residence into which to move his family for the winter. He will probably be successful. Some enterprising man with capital would find it a paying investment to build a dozen cottages in Lakeview. S. J. Studley, a prominent farmer of Goose Lake valley, was in town yester day. Mr. Studley got 3,300 bushels of wheat tfiis season from his 100 acres, some of which was volunteer. He sold 100 sacks to H. C. Rothe & Co., and 50 to Bernard & Son at a cent. W. M. Harvey started last Tuesday for Jacksonville, accompanied by his daughter, Josie Harvey, and Misses Pearl Wilshire and Maud Fine, who will enter St. Mary's Academy for the com ing term. Mr. Harvey will visit Port land and other points during his ab sence. Frank P. Lane will leave to-day for Portland and San Francisco. Miss Laura Snelling will accompany Mr. Lane to the railroad, and then go to Jackson ville to take up her studies in St. Mary's Academy. Mr. Lane will purchase the fixtures and furnishings for the New Lakeview Hotel, in San Francisco, and upon his return will be accomparied from Portland by his wife and little Vinton Miller. While camping on Deep Creek last week Mrs. Delia Cobb, Mrs. Frank Houston and Essie Cobb caught several hundred trout. Nor was this their greatest feat the ladies ran short on wood during the absence of George Han kins, and, nothing daunted, commenced with their axes on a pitch-pine tree four feet through, and in less than thirty minutes felled the giant to the ground. There is no question about the exact size of the tree, as Hankins measured it after arriving in camp, and everybody knows George takes after his namesake Washington. iiliiilliiiiiii MAGGIE BRUMMETT. F. Trie death of Maggie, beloved wife of James A.Brummett, occurred at Crooked Creek, near Lakeview, August 24, 1900. Deceased was the daughter of .David B. and Cora Dickinson, and was born at Yoncalla, Douglas county, Oregon, Oc toler 9. 1870. She was married to James A. Brummett on October 9, 1892, at Drain, this state. Mrs. Brummett is deeply and truly mourned by a loving husband and all who knew her. She was a true and devoted w?fe, a self sacrificing and affectionate mother and a kind neighbor qualities which make up a noble womanhood, and left her an unfading memory. Deceased leaves a husband and two small children, two brothers, three sisters and other rela tives and friends to mourn her early death. The funeral occurred on August 25th, and was held from the Baptist Church in Lakeview. Many people followed the n mains to the last resting place. Timber Land Purchasers. The following people visited Lakeview during the past week to prove up on timlier claims on Wood River: R. Mc Kinnon, Pokegama; Mary J. Clawson, Joseph Clawson and S. J. Meeker, Hen ley; Joseph W Downing, H. Horn, Hornbrook: H. Gisbrecht. A. C. Davis, Alice R. La Flesh, Julius U. Miner, John T. Miner. D. J. Blackmore, W. R. Parhall. Klamathon, and M.W. Claskey f nd Cordelia C. Claskey, Eeswick. Mr. Downing, of Hornbrook, was formerly a railroad encineer on the S. P. line, but is now the lucky owner of the Klondike mine in Siskiyou, which he purchased as a "worked out" claim, and the next day put in a blast and shot out $12,000 in nuggets. The Miner brothers, Julius and John, are also fortunate miners. Alice R. La Flesh is postmistress at Klamathon. H. Horn is the eon of the man after whom the railway station, Hornbrook, was named. The Lakeview Public School. An additional room is beine attached to the Lakeview public school building, to be used for the Primary department. This room, 36x36, will not be connected with the main building by doors, but is attached to the building on the west as a separate department for the younger pupils. The School Board believe? that all necessary repairs will be made and the room completed in time to open each department of .the public school on Monday, September 17th. Many families are preparing to move in from the country to prepare to send their children to school on the opening day. The corps of teachers engaged for the ensuing year, and .the departments, tto which they have been assigned, unless some change is made in the assignment later on, are as follows : J. R. McCor mack, principal ; Miss Gertrude Ver non, adyancedidepjt; Miss Pearl Hall, inter mediate; Tdiss .Etta Johnson, 2d primary; Miss Rose Coleman," 1st primary. tf