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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (July 4, 1901)
lakh county t-XAniNiiRj lakhvihw, orf.(Hn, jdly 4. iwl: 2 ihc Count,, examiner 'MORE RAILROAD Publlhsl Ev.ry ThuraJay J BEACH & AVGARREY Mnoik Pultillnf (One Year, $2.00 TllRMS: - Six Months. 1.00 f Three Monttis, 50 lakMit vr, nmvov Jl I V 4. Itmi. !5urvelnz Crews Out In Northern Shasta and Southern Modoc For kallroaJ Through Lake County, Oregon. I here is great reason to 1 .'li-v- Unit a j syn.ti. ale i Hose capital is 11111 j c i" -e-ih 1 1 11 l build h railroad ivacbii:g There will be fewer State elections in the ptc-cut war lli.wi in any oilier your ince lit- close t the Civil War Hint fe thi-iii are of more than l'al impor tance. The l-iitt!u'itiM ( low have called their State nominating cotiven tion to iin-'! at Cedar K.ipids n August 17th. A governor and some lier im portant citiccr art1 to In nominate.! ami there lm leen s,,nie 'a.k of the no'iiina tion of K. II. t'uiip'r, American minister to China, ly the I ju t'l ifaic. There T.ill he ai; elect 1 m !'r g vcmor oi I hio, and there is alrea Iv subsi nitial agree- througii the limher helt of noi thenstcrn Shasta com. tv. the roii'.e in view seem toheex. 'lv along the mule surveyed I by the I Hion 1'acilic tailtvad (totn ; llimtitikto on the Oregon Mimt l.int nt the Orv'K"'' Idaho line through south cas'ein lOcgoi, through MxliH" ami Mia-'a eo-: n 1 ie.s anil finally connecting wiili the main line at a lx.ial dose to I broSling. I The pari if. ho are apparently getl ing f readt to iniiht tins railroaT eimt-l it nto I one ot the laigc.-l lumbering concerns ol 'he nest, il.e Walker sytidica'e of Vin- ne:i'iis ot which 'I homa It. Walker i i the heaii. 1 In) route runs through WHEN PEOPLE TAL . 1 1 r.c meiit noon the raiiiliilates. tieorge K Vash. i:-..ull.lieau. to le nominate I for ! thoii-and. ol acres of magmheent liinU-i re-election, anil James Kilbourne is the prospective 1 m'icratie nominee. There will be an election (or governor of Vir ginia, in which State the term is four years, and it will be the first belt! under the terms of the new Constituion to be agree J urio at the Jane convention at Richmond. Under this Constitution Vir ginia Republicans will have atill leu rbance of success than they have had at any tima heretofore. Massachusetts will hold its annaal election with th tame certainty of tb choice of a Ftpublicaa tte ticket that Virginia oflera to tha Democrats. Still another of the States it hold an election this year will be New Jersey, in which a successor to Governor Voorheei will be voted for. All the present State officers in New Jersey are Republicans, and the last Legislature had a Republican majority of thirteen in the Senate aj.d thirty in the Assembly, there ls?ing enly four Democrats in the former and onlv fifreen Democrats in the latter. There will lie no congressional j 'en elections thit year, except to nil vacan cies where they exist by death or resign-tion. A smart Ohio young women named Miss Kinnia Schulier stopped at a hotel in Massillon, and wishing to extinguish an elect ri: light, so as to have the room dirk, tried to blow it out. Failing in the effort, she flung her dress over the Ipmp to hide the light. The lamp caused the dress to catch fire, from which smoke pervaded the entire floor, with quite a blaxe gaining considerable headway. The door was finally burst open, and the (ire extinguished after a hard fight, liesides rescuing the young ladv almost suffocated. She had heard a g.d deal about gas, but the incandes cent lamp ma new thing to her. Three, men of Mod uc County, Califor nia, have leeti indicted for lynching five men and lioys a month or so ago, liecause the victim were known or suspected to be petty thieve?, says the I'ortland Tele gram. This is a commendable course, so far, and if the murderers are properly punished it will furnish a much-needed lesson to men who are inclined to resort to lynch law on slight provocation and often on a mere suspicion. Whenever you hear an old "blow hard'' talking loud enough to a stranger for everybody within a bbrk to hear hirn, about the country not Is-ing tit for aiiytliiug, and no land in the county left that would, if cultivated, keep a jack rabbit alive, von can put him down as a "chronic kicker'1 and "calamity how ler," who is no good to himself or any lysly el-e. A man who thinks his own him v is no good ouu'bt to move out. An I i 1 1 r ilown in ( ..lilornia, some where al-out that hot town of Willows, sai l r. iitlv that silver buckles on gar ters were becoming fashionable, and hoped to see more of them. Ilin wife sued him for divorce, and the only wo man in town who had silver buckles on her garters cow-bided the editor until he was as raw as a otato. Maine pecple have been celebrating the Mad anniversary of the enactment of the prohibition law, und everylxjdy who :.nte. to celebrate by becoming hilarious or inebriated on liijuor could do so just us easily as the same could be done in any other state. It was the eel-'hrsition of ou years' failure. I'oit 1 1 Icrani. which is owned by the bi company. News of the m-cratioiis was brought j to Reditu, g Friday by A. .1. (idyk, j prominent Unuer of Cavtoti Valley. He i states that two surveying parties com-! prising tietweeii thirty and lorly men each, are now in the lieid. tine party is ' cau(txl 111 the White lloise country in Modoc county, and the other at Dry Lake, sis miles south of Xurney, on the Tamarack road in Shasta county. Though the parties are larife each is endeavoring to secure more men to assist in the work at hand. These surveyors can re sume the work of surveying for the rail road just where the I'nion l'acitic left off. The former survey was thorough as far as it weat. The work did aol sod with reennnoissance, but stakes ere set and all that remawMi to tie ran as the grade survey. For the past two yar the Walker svuilicaie tiaji beeu ouietlv but actively I operating iu Shasta and Siskiyo'l count- I' P T QUnTriLlv I'urcliase alter pim-nase 01 iins tracts of timlK'r fiave U-en made know n I SA through the till to? ot deeils for record. It . JU 1 r W would be difficult to estimate how many J v mJ thousand, of acre, lying south from Mt. j0cated , new postofflce Olltsv vine iiytitj nun uwiini a 1 (iI;M5 PlIRNISMINO (iOODS, DRV (iR()CI:RII;5, l-TC, AND t)V (H)OD lLACI;5 TO IUJY THI-.M, OUR SiORIi IS SURI; TO l: l-AVORAULV MI:M lOMID. We have the newest Spring Cloth injr. Shirts, Shoes, Hats, Etc., AND Wl; WANT TO SVM YOU A MONO OUR I-ARLY CAIJ.I'RS, TO (HIT YOUR CMOICH. ...Complete line of Tin and Agate Ware... H1C1ROTHE & CO 1 , the leading herchakts of uke coiity. f'ir--aiii r 1 Vf I rations toward ttie establishing of a i chain ot mills and the builJing of neces sary railroads and wagon highways have been progressing since last fall. Me i bers of the syndicates have thoroughly explored the lands in person and expert woodsmen have estimated and recorded the amount of lumber which can be cut from every tract. The nulling opera tions are to be on a gigantic scale. Trie Walker syndicate is not the only Mii.nesoia company interested in this timber region. In WJ Hon. Kussell A. Alger made a visit here, returned home and Col. John McAlpin came out imme eia'.ely and Isiught and hs-atcd :'(, in) acres of sugar pine for Mi'.higau and Minnesota lapitalists. One of the sur veying parties is now camped in this tract. While it is itossible that a sb irtcr lim of railway is contemrilated. r'"i.ie wl have talkeil with the men in charge of the surveying parties are inclined to lieve that the plan may include building over the identical route which the I'nion Pacific was forced to abandon while Cleveland was in offke. Starting at Huntington on the Oregon border, the route crosses Malheur and Harney counties to the California line, traverses Modoc county diagonally into Shasta county and follows the general course of 1'it river, going through the Hatclmt creek mountain gap, touching Millville, foiiiteeu miles east of Redding, and making for the main line at Redding or Anderson, or possibly Red Jtltiff. Aside from its service to the lumber syndicates this line could be opera' ied at a profit, so rich is the country which it t raver m s. A railroad man in Redding Friday said that railroad building pros pects, for this whole region are very bright. Redding Free Press. The 3am. Old Story. J. A. Kelly relates an experience simi lar to that which has happened in al most every neighborhood in the Cnited States and has been told and re-told by thousands of of others, iiesays: "f.an'l summer 1 had an attack of dyspepsia and purchased a bottle of ChumlHirlain's Colic, ( 'holera and Diarrhoea Remedy, w hich 1 tisisi according to directions and with entirely satisfactory results. The trouble was controlled much quicker than former attacks' when I used other remedies." Mr. KtUey is a well know n citizen of Henderson, N. V, For sale by Reall's Drug Store. L''i 1 4lta?lf t 1 1 15 I?"" Watchmaker and Jeweler -V. i.Vi f building AI work In my line fully Guaranteed j. a- j.- W9 WJw wjw WJm 9V wyp Wj9 9W 99 WJw jt'J J Lakeview- Plush Stage Line OfO H SUVINS, Proprietor fHi- l.nk-vi-Mr Mitilnw himI Kri- !it nii't .it iift nt TnVltM k n in, 'urn h rn-At'iiK' r. 1 rtt Ufx n nicl Kr.'.-.'U M'i'lM' I f A Lakcview, - - - orrgon " ..Vegetable btore.. T ilaaillrv Hnndley A Clondonon LKEVIEW - FLINING - MILL Mala ftlrrM. Ikrvlvw OONrTRAOTIICO Ac 3CBX7ZXXXZ4rO Sash, UHnd5, Moulding, Window and Door Casings, Ptirniture made to order ) I in- only . K-( ntilf stop' 111 likeview ihlM-ati'1 run- iliMir a) son th el hank of 1 akevl'W. All v. . tal.l.n aud r'riilt can h fuanil at Una tnrp In 0 anon, (iicral Mi-rchan- 1la, I itar ami Toliai i'iii, ) Kre lielln ry. fRANK BARMS, Proprietor. EE BEALL '7 s J. M. ates Isiught lust week in county a large number of sheep iker aid ocracy is now talking of run- : i. t 'li-veiaipl f . r- I 'i cideiit , as a third- ;-rm caedidatc. ..Mr. Cleveland would j tllC llrt,t shipment of -7 car,'. .ad- .roi-.ihly come as near winning as any ,r'"" Express. This is claimed to be one . .... in the count ry. of the largest single shipments of sln-i-p ever niadu from KuHteru Oregon. They A l!ediiing newspaper heads an article j are di'Mtined for Nebraska and other 'A Slight Jlunanay." This aort of an Kastern Htates, where they will be fat epesodo is on a par with the "2uiet tened lor the Chicago market. The Wedding" that is so prevalent through- j price paid was $2 for yearling- and DRUGGIST f:vcrythlnj( known to the trade carried In .stock I 'INI! Soaps, Per fumes, Toilet Goods, Etc. CKJARS.. .STATIONIiRY Frank Smith's Barber Shop Hot and Cold Baths Write U5 for estimates on all kinds contract work and material BEEHIVES MADE TO YOUR ORDER HANDLEY 5c CLENDENEN lee Cream Parlor sat ..y ill Lr-i.. A-WD... ipd loom i . Mi 7 K W 7 7 -( 7 j j j C. H. DUNLAP, Proprietor. atth. W. L S. P. Ahlstrom Manufacturer of the z I LAKEVIEW Wck.Oi;nlcil ,i I '-c I ? t . Wilson .'iml !iio;: t Itcniiii'ii) of ;i i i i SADDLES 5 llim.r. Wl:', - !,'. ! (t it iris, I'osi'llcs, !.'('. o kinds, by m j t 1 1 ( in n. Vt an 4 IrKdrnm f9 a- -f out the country. j'or two-jear-oius. One iloor aoutlt of 1IA.VK - V-.. V