Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 23, 1902)
minmeti VOL. Will. LAKKVIKW, LAKH COUNTY, OlthCJON, THURSDAY, JAN. Z, V.m. NO. :;. AN ESSAY ON LEASING Mr. Huntington f Portland tilves nn Unprejudiced Opinion on the WesultH of Leasing. Mr. .1. B Huntington, who w'l" ll "1 Hint Uigl-tei '( lli" I " -! Mutes liinil ulllri' til llnrup. tttx littf, iiml n iiiiin nl i'niiHii'iiili!i- - i i xa-i 1 1 it' i ic at the present tune, 11 ii n iil"'iil i.l P..rthiml. The K-n 1 1 - i f i now engaged in compiling mi atguii.ei.l against I iii'l leasing '' Hi'- g.lVfl IIIMfl.l . W llll-ll I" t" K" t" I'll'll HI' liri.l I ..hki.-i", n. li stock ! Hint i-ii ami kindi'-d niv iiiiili"ii. mil cvciy in-a h i ..t -r writ "I li... l:rkv M nn ii t :i in . ,,,., I,,, Hi.M-k hi laid, i familial with tin' range sections, ha made Ins RiiltjiTt a study, nml m not I naiicially Interested in the subject. Ilin argument will Im well printed in pamphlet form at Inn own i'iH'iini.. Mr. Huntington endn I lir following communication to The r'.atuiiiT on the subject of I .ami leaning : Portland. Oregon, Jiuiuary It, I'.W.. (To thi Editor.)- Having noticed an ed ilorial r. mini rn t in a recent innue of your paper iimn the toiu: of "Government LrianiliK of llm I'uliln: Oninain to Imlivid nala, (inpanuMi ami (irMrtlon," by whii h thr atorkiiifn ol your virinity ar laki'ii to ta.k dr their ncfiiiiiiit inlifTi-r- fini-n in a mailer of mirh vital iiiiKirlaiirn In thiMii 1 am iiiii.rlli'il to hav to them throiiKh your lmeil for i-oiirteay, that Kleven yeara ao ahe wedded Ir. Doni tliey are by mi mean tie on ly t lana of i "real, and eame to Lakeview to reside vilitetiH to U- e(Tei te.l. K the propnped ' neitrly mx yeara ago. Ilpceaae l led a lull li.'.'iiiin'H a law even tnwii in Kantern ; ipiiel home life, and nil her affection ami Southern Oregon will be Heriounly i i:entereil on her htiHband and chil injure.l. I'rn.'lirallv eery cnnill ntoi'k ! drcii. Tho--e who were intimate with until will be legiHlnied nut nl biiHinenH ! her and knew her U'M had a high oj.in- ami iiinuigralinii In f.HrMi ly wltled urn of her worth uml admire.l her f r i - ounij inemiH, w an a liamlsome, ilaHti iniinii ien will be ut no end. Heelrtiiui- the many womanly iiulitiea nhe ii'K and acroiiiplihhcd woman, who linn nl it i nl lain U w lit .viiHc ex. i-.t in ho ' et-hf.l. She wan u true eh rinl iau, nnd a created happincxN uml euiihhiiie w her (ar iih I., imiiiri' the gi ow th ol the mitiir- devout member of the t'hriatiau chiin h. ever fho appeared. All were proud to al urn-H.-H ..r the henls ol leKee. Sev- ' ..I,,! ,ii,.h in Oiei-.m umil.l iirai tii ullv l In-il. i.ni.iilali.il I 'I he mm h talked ..i I I . i.m. v be- .w.,',l,.,',.i.,. i, ami .'altlemen would I i t j. men be gi.-.illy intensiin- I. No bill ImweXi'l i'.Ultlb Inl lull i.l! i d will. It H ollld III. .lili-ii.- "I ill lhe Mat.- and I cnii'd be I the inli- I I itorn"- in Hie v . l ,il ! em pi I'd to be ein- liiaced A lew Mll.il I ow II. ' iu, L'1'" . to Is. s i situale.l that they would Is' Leu elitttsl by a "Lease I. aw, "and these to gether with the I n lie owners are the only citieiiM to be bemtlitle.l. All other business men should goon record against it. It would ho a severe blow to Wcst oiii Civilisation. Tbe strong inlluence ollargtt i R'ital is behind the measure and this should be offset by the express ed will of the voters of the West in terms nut to be misomh-i stood by their -ei vants in Congress. .1. I'.. lll STIMITON'. firs. Wm. II. Morley Married. i Mrs. Win. II. Motley, formerly of I akevlew, now of Ci diti villr, was nini lietl in AltiitiiH last Thursday, January liilh, to Joseph Page of Surprise valley, lhe wedding ociuiicil it I the Combs Hotel, uml the knot was tied by Rev. Teller, of the Methodist church of Ccd Hi ville. The bride is a charming young widow, attractive, and highly esteemed -by a large number of frieudi, uud her husband is Haiti to have a large ft I low Ing of f i hinds also. The newly miir i ietl people will residit in Surprise Val ley. The many friends of the bride in Lakeview will join w ith The Examiner i iu wishing for her a full ineitsuro of j happiness DEATH VISITS TWO HOMES The Wcnpcr .Send Twotjood floth er to the I msI l-ong Sleep and i taken .uiMliinc Away. IIAI III; I.OMI-I I A DliMOKL.ST. Mm h visit ill the dragon Heath in nur M-niiimiinity I'-hm-h behind more terrors n li '.in ii-k li. on to tin verge ol tin, grave. Tin- grim visitor leuvea behind it Hail o mourning m whatever 1'iriii it I'.inH-f. mi. I whomsoever I h marked lor n l.tllll ; l"ll IIIMtl' tlltlhle i tl.ii havoc roiighl 1 1 - f that vi. tnu nil mother, w hose l.n I v ilu ly is In ten. lei ly cure (..r nn. I guide tin' l'..ilfti.H i.f wee untitling babe. It in nur i.iinlul iluty tu ihion i j n le t he death nl 1 1 at t le biruttH lctnor- til, Im'I .vimI w ifc of I r. O. F. Jlcinorcht , j the resident dentist. Few ol our mm.. j knew that she i ill until tin mil I news ol lirr death was announced at 9 o'clock on Friday evening, January li.tli. Site breathed her last in the presence ol her husband an. I a lew kind friends who attended lirr in her last hours. For a few days before, lirr u fTer 1 n tc were ter rible, hut when death catne alie was in peace ii.l without pain. Hatlie Iiretta Shreve, wat tiorn in Italian. Polk county, Oregon, .'IS yea 2 ago. She waa the daughter of Mr. anil Mm. Ana Shreve, old residents of I 'oik l ouiity. Sho waa a tnumlior of a lauiily i of three hrothera ami thrtre aiatera. 1 1 la lelt that f he Iiiih lef I to Ihiiw w ho Inved Hii-t it.liiiired her a name w hi. h thev will hereafter fondly cherish. Ut : ""' trl"'t"l a',l' ,l' chrihtian, o 1 '-" ilnlly huI.Iii.... in ,h perfect resig- ! i nation to lint will of Providence, enable : the bereaved hui-baml to feel that '' I le ! d'H'th all thiiii: well." j Sun. lav iilleinonii the remains were Snnler- inzciit be in ht-iihihlu that uo borne to the grave, followed by a throng , effort of bin could pay an adenuate trib of tiyinpathi.iug (ii. ii.Im. Hi".'. I'. W. ule to the eiiiiohling traits of character I loll. .m m i.f the HaptiMt church held fum ral si r i t-s at the residence. !,..' censed leaves besides the sorrow ing bus- I baud and li it'll. Is, live little children j the eldest, u son ten years old iiiul the i youngest a daughter of three years. The Kxamiuer joins with the uiauy frien Is of 1'r. l'l'inorest in heartfelt sympathy for him and his little ones in their irreparable loss. To the father , uml mother, bowed down with age uml sorrow, and the loving sisters ami brothers who were u liable to reach hero before her face was hidden forever bv i thecollin lid, a full measure of svin- ; put by is ex tended. The lloral offerings were profuse and beautiful. A1AY SNIDl.K.VINZENT. Nearly everybody in Lakeview will re- I member May Snider, eldest daughter 'of l he Sunset Coming. Mrs. Lehi Snider, and the late Andrew j ,;,,rK0 lXm Mcl u. land, Coast Man Snider, pi neer n.c.eluint of Lakeview. j ll(,(.r for the Sunset Telephone Company, Ami everybody who knew her will like- jH Ilow ; Xl,VUtj,, extending tho lines of wise he pained to learn of her .laatli. tilMt ,Iltully. Next sumuifr the Sun After a brief illness she passed away at j Hot liie wi ,,0 t.xU.lltit,j to Altttras and her home in Berkley. Caliiornia, on Sun- tlion oit to Lakeview. The Sunset has .lay, January liUh. About 10 years ugo ;?(12 holll,B , 0)i,rulioll iu nM Blld the sho becumo the wife of Ole Vinr.ent, a liuluher is increasing daily. member of a once prominent and wealthy family of Oakland. She was happy in her inuirL'd life and to a cer- (nin extent gave up society for love of lhe little children that cume to bless her '' ,i -; ... 7x ;- , - -Tyr? -V vt -'v:- w TIIK BATTLESHIP IOWA. T)i balUnhip Inwa u luu ms out far th. inMita of tk Uniud State oa Uw Panama i He of the Utlniiiia, wliilai lh Mwhiaa and Marintta am duuif a nmiW doty at Colon. Marint-a frnm tia Iowa wr promptly UwImI by Captaia Parry wba tha row batv.ra th. ( olninhina (.iTrriiuiant and th insuntaata tbraalcnad tha auapaoaioa of railway truffio ana ihf iathmu.. lisoauaa of tba aUoa of Captaia Parry Uaiaa baro baaa k.pt ruaaiof a.arly oa aciiaduia tiiua. life ami home. Shooting at Henley. May Sni.ler-Viiuent boru at Old A looting affray occur red in a -aloon Kort Warner, a one-linn-prominent mil-! l ,,'nley. m'1 ton ovt!r lhe s' itary jmihI in Lake county, Oregon, on "'youa. early on the moroinfr of Janu- Iei etnljer 2.1, 1X72, and waa aged 29 yn. and 24 daya at the time of death. (She leavea a IiumIihihI, and four children, Andrew aged 7, Marjurio aged 5, Helen aged 3 and a hahy girl A niontha old. Her mother Mra. 1-ela Snider, and two ialert, Meiulatnea Lulu Jonuaon and Olive Merrill diirvive her. She was also related to C. I'. Snider of I-akeview, who ret't'ived iintilieation of the vad death, by w ire, lanl Sunday. IeeeBHml, an remeiiihered bv her Ijlke chutu Her as a native tlaughter Ot Lake , fount y, Oregon. No affair was coin pH'li williout Her preceiice- -she was a leader ol every entertainment and function. lWc.e.l of a beaulifnl voice and hamlNiime form ami face, ie was "the admired of all admirer." From what the writer has learned of May which has ever distinguished her throughout her pure life. But she it) dead ! She was ill but a few days. The '"''I medical k ill, and the tender care "f loving relatives and liieiids, availed nothing. The last tribute to the worth of a noble woman has been puitl ; she has been borne to the grave and left wrapped "in it" l "it slumbers. Her once active lorm lies cold, and still, robed in the habili ments of the grave. Doubtless, her spirit has risen alxive the din and mists of earth and now floats amic the "sunlight cf Heaven" front whence she looks down upon her children us a star to guide their footsteps through life. This death is felt us a personal loss by all the friends of the good woman in her childhood home, Lakeview. (let the Bulletin, grand Sunday edition included, every day, with the lake County Examiner, one year each, at fC 50 cash. tf 1 a:y 12th, which resulted in the mor tally wounding of Charles Sears, a young man of Hornbrook, and the cracking of the (kull of his assailant, Charles Rhode i, a barkeeper of the lime town. These men had an alter cation, and later having made friends again, appeared at the Henley saloon about G o'. lock in the morning. Wliilt Sears was standing at the bar with bis bat k to Khndcs who had seated him self, the latter drew his pietol and with out any warning began shooting at Sears, three shots taking effect, one passing through his liver. Sears, not withstanding the fatal wounds seized an iron cuspidor and made for the as- sailant, U-aling him over the head near j hjtration Couinntteeof the Grand Lxlge. to death before fainting from his own a. O. l?. V. A late law passed by that injuries. order is to the effect that a beneficiary Sears is an Indian half-breed, w hose j f any lm.niber shall not be entitled to father was murdered a few year ago injHMV insurance if the member commits his store near the same place. The mur- j puj,.i,ie within three months following derers were afterward captured, taken to ; tliH initiation. A case at point is now be Yreka, and with two other inmates of j (uri, ,le order, ami Mr. Boyd being ono the Siskiyou county jail were lyn . bed , of ,iu. M arbiters, has U-en called to by a mob. Rhodes has a criminal j assi!it ,lt, two otiH.r t. ,iit, eiiien in record. He was arrested some few : the disposition of the matter. It appears months iwo as a suspect of robbing the : that tU. widow beneficial v carried the I-akeview -Ager stage near Kesw ick. Taken to Salem. W. J. Moore, accompained by lr. F. K. Smith, started last Tuesday morn ing with the former's son Ralph en route to Salem, where, it is intended, the un fortunate buy will be placed iu an hospital. The Examiner mentioned two weeks ago the misfortune that befell the boy. His right ankle became sore from the constant rubbing of the boot while skating, and the colored hose he wore adhered to the wound ami poisoned the member. Blood poisoning followed, ami the patient has been hovering be tween life uud death ever since. The intending physician concluded that the only remedy remaining to save the boy wus an operation, uud as a result he bus gone to the hospital, where amputation ; Taylor came to Robinson's assistance may follow . Much sympathy is express- j ami a t'usilade of shots followed, the of ed for the youth in dire distress, uml for Jieets returning the tire. Robinson fell, the purents w ho dote Upon their bright ; after being pierced w ith four bullets, tw o boy. It is to be hoped that Ralph's life J ot w hich went through his lungs, anoth will be spared, and thut he will return j other in the abdomen, ami the fourth home fully restored to health. They i through the jaw. Officer Taylor contin started noiith, via Reno and Sacruuiculo, I tied in pursuit of the fleeing burglars, nnd iu case the patient's condition be comes alarming on the trip he will be taken to uu hospital either at Rcuo or Sacramento. Mrs. Moore accompanied her sou us fur as New Pine Creek. INFORHERS DISCHARGED Eight Men not Indicted by Grand Jury kemain in Jul Upon New Warrants of Arrest, The M'sloc. grand jury filed indict- 1 ments last week gHins J. J. lot:er, j Claud Drown, W. J. Mel Unit-Is, Henry I Knox, Sam Parks. Oerves K'esge, A. L. jcolburn, L. Tolim-nter, John Huiton ami Claud Morris, for murder. Judge i l'o-t of the prosecution in the lynching case-., obtained the di-cliarg- of the two iiii-ii, Hutton and Morris, who turned states eideuce. Kight m-!! still re I inaiued in the jail who were not in- dieted by the grand jury for Complicity in the lynchings. These men were E. S. Trowbridge, O. A. Trowbridge, J. K. Myers, Sr., Fred Robert. R. S. Nichols, J. V. Ieventon, F'red Roberts and Claud Morris. Mrs. Mary Lorens, a daughter of Calvin Hall, immediately swore to a complaint against each of the men, charging them with murder. The warrants were served and the defend ants still remain in jail. The men io icted by the grand jury have challenged certain members of that body, claiming that they had no right to investigate any charge against the prisoners indicated on the grounds of prejudice and bias. They charged grand jurymen Heard and Cannon with being detectives in the employ of the prosecution; and charged D. P. Browne with making prejudicial statements in regard to the lynching cases, and also that he is a resident of Lake county, Or egon, and has no right to act as a grand jurymen in Modoc county, Cal, The court denied the challenge and reman ded the pr goners to jail Gone to Portland. Will T. Boyd started for Portland , yesterday to attend a meeting of the Ar- case to the courts upon the refusal of the Grand Lodge to pay the lienefits. Ac cording to the law governing the order and covering such cases the matter should first have gone to the Arbitration Committee. If the committee deter mines that the order pay the Wnetit it will be done ; if it decides not to pay it, then the order will become a defendant in a case at court. Killed By Burglars. Sas Fkamisco, January 21. Four burglars were attempting to forcibly en ter a hardware store on Valencia street at an early hour this morning, and were surprised in their work by police olhver Kugene Robinson who attempted to ar rest them. The burglars opened lire and mortally wotin led the officer. Officer and wounded and captured one of the quartet. The captive g.ive the name cf Wm. A. Henderson, uml a full set of burglars' tools was found on him. Ron insoti died ut 7 a. in. TT