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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1900)
fiuhr Count o Cxaminrt PnbllilMd Ef J Tharadajr BEACH & M'GARREY Editors and Proprietors Mamak BaiMInf PROCLAMATION President Names Thurs day, aQth Day of November TERMS (One Year, $2.00 : Six Months. 1.00 (Three Month. 30 LAIiMIKW. BKCWV V. . IMC. Lake county, Oregon, I in favor of con rin tied prosperity. David Fagan, a deserter from the Twenty-fourth Infantry, has been cap tured lead i nu a force of 150 Filipino. Fagan held the rank of General among the insurgent. The United States has made reply to the British-German agreement respect ing the maintenance of the "open door" and territorial integrity of China. This country ratifies the agreement. Anna Gould's Count de Castellane is a very expensive luxuiy. He S?nds a million of Anna's money annually. They come high, but American girls who can afford it must have them. The Louisville Evening Post prints an affidavit of Fin ley Anderson, the tele graph operator upon whose testimony Caleb Powers was convicted of complici ty in the murder of Goebel, in which Anderson swears his story told on the stand at Georgetown was perjured. A belated dispatch from Pretroria tells of the failure of British negotiations with General Botha for the surrender of the Boers. Iiotha received General Paget's flag of truce courteously and ac-knowledged-defeat, but said it was im possible to treat for surrender as long as the burghers wished to continue the war. It is rumored that the French are pre pared to send a thousand tnxjps from 8al Gonn to Canton. This report, to gether with the presence of numerous warships, has aroused suspicion among the Chinese regarding the Freiuh de signs. Tim reformers threaten that if! railway the French attempt to seize Canton, the ! Cantonese will lay the city in ruins. I A the Time for General Thanksglv Ing anil Prayer Throughout the Republic. Washington, Octoler IN. The State IVparlmcnt to-day issued the following : By the President of the I'uitod States of America. A PROCLAMATION. It has pleased Almighty God to bring our nation in safety and honor through another year. The works of religion and charity have every where been manifest. Ourcountry has been blessed with abun dant harvests. I.ahor and the industries of the people have prospered beyond all precedent. Our commerce has spread over the world. Our power and in fluence in the cause of freedom and en lightenment have extended over the distant seas and lands. The lives of our official representatives and many of our people in China have been marvel ously preserved. We have been gener ally exempt from estilence and other great calamities, and even the tragic visitation which overwhelmed the city of Galveston made evident the senti ments of sympathy and Christian char ity by virtue of which we are one united people. Now, therefore, I, William McKinley, President of the United Mates, do hereby appoint and set apart Thursday, the 29th day of Noycniler next, to ! observed by all the people of the United Slates, at home and abroad, as a day of thanksgiving and praise to him who holds the nations in the hollow of his hand. I recommend that they gather in their several places of worship and devoutly give hint thanks for the pros perity wherewith he has endowed us, for seed time and for the harvest, for the valor, devotion and humanity of our armies and navies, and for all his tiene tits to us as individuals and as a nation, and that they humbly pray for the con tinuance of his divine favor, for concord and amity with other nations and for righteousness and eace in all our ways. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to lie attixed. William McKinlky. Chas. M. Hays, general manager of the Grand Trunk line, has been selected as the successor of Col lis P. Huntington for President of the Southern Pacitic President Hays will reside in pending for the sale of the Southern Pa citic road in Oregon to the Northern Pa- citic Railway Company, and it is said There is a lietter tone to the wool tllat ti. Validerbilts w'ill have control market and the sales show a liberal J of the entire Southern Pacitic system. -,., ,i i ... i .. : i .i A great revolution in railway matters margin over the slow business of the ., i I is exjecleil. last fen- months. Prices are firm and i i- i i i i u I red Spangeiiburg is haiinng red lire dealers are looking for an advance with-; rock from the Crooked Creek iiuurry to in a few days. Fleece wools have shown j the site of the tow n electric light plant more activity during the past week than j to '-' bedding the boiler for the at any other'time during the few months ' !""' )" 'rll " aifi"U a' it y of rock, ami has been thoroughly 1-Ht past, and several heavy lines are ! d ,, ,,, ierfl.ttly ,ire ,,riJof. , recorded as sold to manufacturers. ; wjl stand a red-hot heat, then cool off ' - - and be in s;rfect condition. It would Porto P'n-aii-) cannot vote as American i make an elegant building stone. citizens. Justice Friedman, in his de-j James Young, of Surprise valley, has Vision upon the application of Frank ' moved histhawmill to a jsjint about Juarhe to register as a voter on the ' thrCli "lilc'M wt",t " Kagh-ville, where, ..... , ! the Record savs he has a tinu body of ground that he became an American . ' , i ! timber to worn on. We were in hopes citizen by virtue of the cession of Porto tiiat lne report was correct that Mr. Rico by Spain to the United States, says j Young would move to the West Side, that the treaties taking over the Island .opposite Lakeview, but presume it is nf l'rtn . ., t . i .i -it-. I "all off " no. Good luck to vou, anv-i ei l orto l.ico uji not make the inhabit-1 , " I t : way, Mr. Noting. I ants of the territory citizens of the ! , , I i Mr. Samuel Hawkins, brother to our i l. mted Mates, but, on the contrary, left . r n n i i i - ' 1 1 townsman, J. H. Hawkins, arrived here tne ueiermination of their civil rights j fr(),ii "Old Virginny" last Saturday, and and of their political status to the future ; w ill visit his brothers here mid in Ore action of Congress, which has not vet!1"" 'or time, Reese Hawkins, of acted. " j Lakeview, also being a brother. Mr. 1 Haw kins states that he hail h pleasant "Most serious trouble," says the tri'' ul"1 'H fav"ral,1y impressed with Shanghai correspondent of the iJaiy our country. Cedarvilie liword. I.-xpress "is brewing in the Yang-tse ; The lise in the price of horses is phe- ..,,,, i ,, .. .. , nominal. At a recent miction sale in region, whither the Lruprcss Howager1.. . ,. ... , , ,. , , . . . i lloli.-ter 2o0 was bid and declined for a lias ftcnt emissaries to raise nowerful 1 , i i i i uib. powi.nui ! Mj,an i)l work animals. I wo year olds armed bodies to exterminate converts j and yearlings averaged fS5 pur head. and exjM;l foreigners. She has appointed Horses purchased at the Hardin sale a Yu Chuan, a notriously aiiti-foreitfn ', ar a?" '""""is'''' double the pri:e paid General, to be military mm.nmr f Yank-Ue district." In tlje prov ince of 1 PRICES PRICES PRICES I PRICES THAT TALK 1 1 PRICES TALK THE WORLD OVER We have just received our j stock of Fall Dry Goods which will be sold at prices ik heretofore unheard of in Lake County 1 25 YARDS OF CALICO FOR $1.00. All other goods sold in proportion. 1 Hi Ci ROTH E & COn THE LEADING MERCHANTS OP LAKE COUNTY. THE WORLD OVER A terrific storm swept F.ugland on Oc toler 'JTth. Many houses were Hosled at Newcastle and. other cities, and rail roads in the low lands were inundated. MOVED INTO MY NEW BRICK STORE NEAR OLD SITE Monday,. OctoU-r ll'th, was a day of tragedies. Py the explosion of a large wholesale drug-house building in New York scores of jH'ople were killed and injured ; in a New York jail break mur der was done and several persons were badly wounded ; an accident occurred on the Northern Pacific at He Hurt, Mont., in which seven ieople were killed and several wounded. then. Kan lieiiito Advance. ; The Grand Central Hotel at Alturas, ; ii.i, ,. .,... ,.i it i i'.,;u Kwang Tung, a.-cording to the Hong-j iH ra.idly acMuirii.g the reputation of kong correspondent of the I'aily Mail, the best hotel in the northern country, i uie rebellion is subsiding, ow ing to the j scarcity of arms and ammunition. The Hhanghai correspondent of the Times aays: "Li Hung Chang has wired to Chang Chih Tung, the Wu Chang Vice says the Alturas Plaiiidealer, Hick knows how to conduct a bote! and treats everybody alike. When yon go to Alturas give him a call. j If you have Rheumatism, and the ( doctors have failed to cure you if you i roy, that the peace negotiations aru ! "ave sciatica, lame hack, knlney, liver, i i stomach troubles, etc., enclose postage uatisfactory, but to other leading ollicials stamp to T. C. Little, Lakeview, Oregon, I for ll'H page book that will tell you how lie has telegraphed exactly the reverse, bidding them prepare forevcntualities." the Klcct ropoiso cures w ithout the use of medicine. Oregon luinlsTinen have Is-en asked to contribute the lumber necessary for the erection of the entire forestry ex hibit from other states and Canada, fniiu the South American Republics and from newly acquired American possessions, at the proposed Pan-American exMisi tion to lie held in Iiuffalo in 1!H)L No state in the I'moii can make as varied and valuable an exhibit of lumber as the State of Oregon. The purchase of horses and supplies by the German government for shipment to China, from the Pacific Coast, has ceased. Some .'J.'SMj he.1i! of horses and mules have been shiped from San Fran cisco thus far to reinforce the Kaiser's army in the Celestial empire, while over ,IMM) head how at Sun Francisco and purchased in Oregon and California will be held there awaiting further instruc tions. The growth of the I'nited States in the past ten years has been an increase of nearly twenty-one mt cent. Theolli cial announcement of the total popu lation for l'.MH) is 7i,2ti,':'0, of which 74,i27,lK)7 ure contained in forty-five states, representing approximately the population to be used for apportionment purposes. There is a total of 131,158 Indians not taxed. The total population in H'.X), with which the aggregate popu lation should be compared, was (ili.Oiii), 75li. Taking the IH'.io population us a basis there has been a gain in popula tion of l.'i,2i)5,-f,-i during the last ten years. "I will take any one worthy of con sideration in the matter to n man whose business it is to semi out agents to I scour the country for girls who, under promises of good situations, are brought to this city for hellish purposes. Never was that business more flourishing than at present. In June, IH'.IH, one of these cases got into print. Fifteen young women were brought to this city from the neighborhood of Allentown, Penn sylvania. Those cases got into the courts j hundreds do not. The details of this commerce ure the most shocking of all that flotirith. His a trafliu that invades the sanctity of the home, hun dreds of miles away. It tugs at the heartstrings of mothers." Franklin Mathe ws in Harpers Weekly for October. Everything In the line of Gents' Furnishing Goods UNDERWEAR, SWEATERS, MATS and CAP5, GLOVES, ETC. BEAUTIFUL LINE OF CHRISTMAS NOVELTIES BLANKETS and COMFORTERS for Cold Weather ....C. H. DUNLAP.... ' 14 l W '"-'If w S. F, AHLSTROM Manufacturer of the Celebrated RECOGNIZED AS THE BEST BUCCAROO SADDLE IN THE UNITED STATES WACON 4 DUCCY HARNESS, WHIPS, ROBES, ETC. tffl" -33 I Guilty Chinamen Die to Escape Punishment for Their Crimes. The Chinese Minister at Washington has received a dispatch stilting that Kuug Vi, a member of the Cabinet with Hung Lu, and one of the intense anti-foreign lenders, whose punishment was demanded by the Powers, died of illness on the IHth instant; also, that Yu Sicn, the late Governor of Shan Si, who Is said to have been resonsible for the death of many missionaries, has committed suicide by swallowing gold leaf. Min ister' Wu regards this act us a sign of the disfavor they have received from the throne. Kaug Vi was one of the ringleaders and held the position of Assistant Grand Secretary ami President of the Civil Hoard, and also was one of the statesmen making in the Privy Council or Cabinet, which is the body nearest the throne. Following the demands of the Powers for his punishment, an edict was ismed handing him over to the board of Censors to consult and decide upon a penalty for his misdoing. The same edict ordered the punishment of Prince Tuan, but it was thought that the Tuan influence would secure leniency for Rung VI and for others. The dispatch shows, however, that Kung Vi himself recognized that there was no hope of imperial favor. Although the dispatch to Minister Wu says that only Hang Vi "died" on the IHth instant, it is thought that his "death was the natural result of the disgrace which has overtaken the anti-foreign ami li oxer element. Governor Vu's method of suicide is iieculiar to ('tiiua. It is a means by which high personages take their lives, the gold leaf being representative of their high station. The leaf forms a ball in the canals of the body and brings death from suffocation. Minister Wu's advices also show that Prince Tuan had been visited with severe censure from the throne, and to such an extent that it would lie no surprise if he followed the course of Kung Vi and Yu. He has been pre vented from accompanying the imperial court to Siting Fu and remains at Shan Si, cut off from further influence on the throne. It is expected that he will be banished, which, to a Prince of the blood, is worse than decapi tation, and under the idea of propriety, suicide is likely to he his end. Minister W'l laid his dispatch before Secretary Hay, And, still, these reported deaths may be u lake.