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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1906)
flow to Oct on the Ticket. Are you (mini to lx r candidate for office at the coming election in Ore con? If no you will need to study carefully the provision of the new post olllco nrlmarr nomination law. Political ! stated and nominating conventions a they have long existed in Oregon are aliol Ishcd by the now law and there in an entire revolution in the method of obtaining nominations for public ofil cea voted upon by the people. The first move a enndidnte 1 com pelled to make is to file with the sec retary of stato or district office, or with the county clerk, if for an office tn l filled in one county, or with the city recorder if for ft city office, a copy of liia petition signed by him self in the following form: To (See. of state or county clerk) and to the members of Mie -party and the electors of (state, dis trict or county in the state of Oro- Kvery sheet of the petition must uou place in Ma office and keep it contain a sworn statement of some 1 posted there until after plumy rlrc registered voter that he is acquainted ' t0n. with the person who signed it and lie must then have print ed on the that the slcnaturcs are genuine, the official imllots, the Kepuhlloan ticket (Ton). I, (name) reside at - - and my post office address is - - I am a duly registered member of the - - party. t t .. iiiMiilnnted for the office of A . - - at the primary nominating election to le held in the (state, coun ty or district) the -JO day of April. 1900, I will accept the nomination and will not withdraw, and if I am elected I will qualify as such officer. If I am nominated aud elected I w ill during my term of office (here the candidate can use 100 words to state his platform). The foregoing petition for nomina tions is to be separate from but at tached to the petition to be (signed by the voters who desire to see the candidate's name on the ballot. a copy of the latter petition is to be fil ed w ith it and the heading must be in the following form and addressed to the secretary of state, county clerk or city recorder, as the case may lie. We ,the undersigned members of the party, aud qualified electors and residents of precinct, in the county of ....,state of Oregon, re spectfully request that you w ill cause to be printed on the official nomina ting ballot for the party, at the aforesaid primary nominating elec tion, the name of the above signed as a candidate for the nomination to the office of by said party. The man who is a a candidate for either house of the legislature may sign one or the other of the following statements, but should he refuse to sign either of them that fact will not effect the filing of his petition: aud residence correctly that they are registered voters of the party. There must be a separate petition for each precinct in which it is desir ed to obtain names. A voter in one precinct cannot sign the same sheet with voters of another precinct. No voter can sign a petition unless he is registered as a inemlx-r of the party in which the candidate is seek ing nominaiton that is, no other names w ill le counted on such petl- t ions. At the priu aries in Oregon this year there can be only two parties participating. A party In the inean iug of the primary law, is an organiz-; atioti for political purposes, wincn cast at the election of June, 11HM, at least 'i per ceut of the votes cast for the office of congressman, hence ouly the Republican ami Democratic part ies fulfill the definition of the law. Persons who register under any other affiliation, "Independent Democrat," "Independent Republican," or any other title or change, will have no weight on any petition for nomina tion at the primaries and will not be allowed to vote at such primary elec tions. A candidate for n county office must obtain signers to his petition iu at least one-fifth of the preciucts of the county; if for a state or district office and the district comprises moro than j one county, the necessary signers must include electors residing iu each of at least two counties; if for a state office to le voted for by the whole state, the uecessnry number of siguers shall include electors residing in each of at least cue-tenth of the in each of at least seven counties of the state; if for a congressional office, the signers shall include electors resid ing in at least one-tenth of the pre cincts of at least one-fourth of the counties. The number of signers required on every such petition sliall be at least 2 per ceut of the party vote, but for state or congressional offices the uum ler required shall not be more than one thousand, nor in any other case shall the number required exceed oU. A voter can sign as many petitions as come to him, even for the same ottlce. The retitious for state or district offices must be filed with the secre- iu black ink on white pacr, the Democratic ticket iu black ink on blue paper, nnd any third party in black ink on yellow paper; also dub licate Wllots on cheap colored paper in different colors from the regular ballots. The primary elections will bo on Friday, April 20. The general election will be on Monday .nine 4. 1 he total number of votes cast til Irfike county for the Republican can TjVlaleforVpiigrcmiii l'.NAl was 471, so the total nunilier of signers neces sary for al Republican candidate Is and they'iuust represent at least II NEW PHASE OF HO AD WORK." out ot the 12 precincts. The total Democratic vote for congressman was 22!' and the number of signers requir ed for a candidate of that party for a county officer is .", which petition must also represent at least II pre cincts out of the 12 in Iike county. To lo precinct committeeman of either party a petitiou must also be tiled with the clerk sigucd by at least two signers from the precinct iu which the applicant is a candidate. Aspirants for nominations for the office of Joint-Senator or Joint-Representative, iu districts where several counties are joined together to form a Senatorial or Representative district, must file their petitions for nomina tion in the office of the Secretary of State, while aspirants for seats iu the Legislature to be tiled by election in one county culy, must file their ix-tl- tion iu the County Clerk's office. This distinction is important not only because of the place of filing but liecause one seeking a nomination for Joint Senator or .Joint Ueiireseiitii. preciucts : tive nni!.t ,,tit;t)ll j,v March W, while other Legislative aspirants have until April 4 to file. In all cases w here the election dis trict comprises moro than one county, the candidate iu the direct primary must file his petition iu the office of the Secretary of State. I'ROITiSSIONAU p A. WlflPM, M. D. I'llVMK IA fit. I Ml ltUKO s: Paisley, Oregon. lilt T V II I.I. I'hj stria mmt Harare Ort'lCK- New Pal llulMlii. I.. K. ( Attorn-)- m Law Omi'K-Kaljr llull.lnitf. I. I. Iikrvlew, Orrgoa Uw Agricultural Depart. Will t'a Collection of l.antvrn Mllila. There Is a hne of the road work of the department of agriculture that from now on will receive more nttentlou than ever and will be of the greatest lutorest to every community In the United State that expect to build ll road, and especially to the agricultural college that are helping In this work, ays tlio Washington Btnr. It Is the lautcru slide department of object les ions and missionary work. The road office since Its establishment has ac cumulated one of the moat unique col lections of Inuteru slides on the road question that have ever coino together. There are pictures front nil over the Tutted States, nnd many from abroad, showing roads of nil sorts, givxl, bad and Indifferent. Some of the bad roads of the Fulled States, by the way, nro about the worst In the world. There are pictures of roads In all stages of construction, showing the material used and how It Is put together and the ma chinery used In the work. There Is ev ery phase of material getting, from the work of the convicts blasting out rock at the Folsam penitentiary to the lat est Improvement of rock crushing machinery. Then urn tiuiiiiti of llnwn aHite . i furnish a dorcu series of pictures, each rwy wv '' M I..... .. - I.. I .....I .... .1 I. ..II. II .1. . , L' .., L k . . h. .... . n ii-viiiiu in iit'ii uu loilil ifililillllK, llt j V i.nr.iirn r.n j ru I .,1 r. I , rll. in, n need of roads, the difference In trans-1 'S i"'ru Om li ami porta t Ion that the coming of r od roads 'v lulai limit., Aiii.1 fli, lilufikfi tt r. in. I.i mi. I ' f . ... 'kS t'. P.. W, J. Mimiiir. Hcrllw. $ it HUNjiorumoii nil vrr wiw couiiiry. ' PS These picture are being arranged In series nnd will form an Illustrated clr-1 dilating library for the agricultural col-' JS. TT.TT.Tnj "J leges of the country that want them. They nre to Ik Ion mil out to Hie col- KLAHATH LAKE ....RAILROAD.... . . . TIMU TAIH.IJ . . . In K fleet Msy A, UMlrt. Thrall ,. A, M l. v. I'iinaania U 41 A M Ar. It.. . n'A " H I lir'a- fl " Kail fr'a . 7 00 " Kl h Hii'km 7 ID " IHiln S.l " I'uki'imiim n.'.ti Ar. I il in .... ni.M " KrhHill,40 " hull ( n-i li 11.41 - Hi'i'l lir'gx 11 1 " ffoar it h u;a r M 1 1n Mil .... .1 .rv VKNATOH Atlorriry.at-Iiw IjiikI natlrra MMrlall) orm K- Paijr ii ti i ui i nar. iirnnniiru nr Tiir urnnm Ukrvii w y nuuumcn ur int nuniUc.mt.No.tai ) Mrrtann llii 9l anil 41 ll Wr.ni'iljr ot mrli iK'tmh In Mniniili' Hall, at S p. m. j t. niaiiKiH K.i Haul ( umiiiaaili'r. . Ugi iHH. ( lurk. I. i. . K. iiii'i-t. I In- ll ami 3.1 Thnr ilajr ivitilrii!if i-m h monlli In O.I lowa Hall. Ukiniix. K. K. Aiiijtik i S r. P., W. J. MmikK. Hrrlliiv 1 v,;.fts..t.tsrs,,.s,.i-s..r,.fr. i,jes.s.s:r,.rl.jrj$ a. IS. S Thnr. ll Ffl- K OK. (C 'I further state to the people of Oretary of state not less than twenty gon , ns well as to tne peoplo of my legislative district, that during my term of office, I will always vote for the candidate for United States Sena tor in congress who has received the highest number of the peoples votes for that position at the general elec tion next preceding the election of a U. S. senator in congress, without re gard to my individual preference." "During my term of office I will consider the vote of the people for United States Senator in congress as nothing more than a recommenda tion, which I shall be at liberty to wholly disregard, if the rea:-oii for do ing so seems to me to be sufficient." days liefore the primary election, that is not later than April 1. this year. Petitions for offices (except district attorney) to be voted for in one coun ty, must be filed not less than lifteeu days before the primary election, that is April 5 of this year. Thirty days before the primary elec tion, or by March 2", must send two notices to each judge and clerk of election in each precinct. Not more than fifteen days aud not less than twelve days before the prim ary election, the county clerk must arrange the ticket, certify to it under seal, file the same in the office, uud po.-t a duplicate of it in a couspic- WATERPROOF OILED (LOIHIHG? f5LKIR5.POMMEL 5UCKB5 AM HAT3. following oun successes AT PHILADELPHIA CHICAGO A NO OTrteR CXPOSITIONA WE WON THE .HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD; T THE 6T.L0U13W0RLD3 A J TOWfR I l'MUMII i i T0l tAMAXAJl 0 UMlTttt fGKANDl r t;:.j a.- .-v IT I Mouse Painter New Pine Creek, Taj ll T'a ' Paper Manjrer . Oregon THIS PAPER U kept nn nil' al K. C. P.KI't Attvi rtllii Aii nr 1.' Sun- mum- sirt-. i, San Kraix lM u. t .. wlu-ri' i coniracu lor alvvrllilti ian Ui mailt lir It Every nuin owes it to himself and his family to master a trade or profess ion. i Read the display advertisement of the ! fix Mow Schools of Telegraphy, in thi issue and learn how easily a yuur.k; man j or lady may learn telegraphy and be assured a position. aug'!-4m r. PR-EE Subscribers The Great AMERICAN FARMER Indianapolis, Indiana. The Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation, Edited by an Able Corps of Writers. taaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa The American Farmer is he only Literary Farm Journal pub lshed. It fills a position of its own and has taken the lead ing place in the homes of rural people in every section of the United States. It gives the farmer and his family something to think about aside from the hum drum of routine duties. Every Issue Contains an Original Poem by SOLON L. GOODE. A BAD KOAD IJCVKltW'iNT. legpn, with or without lectures accom panying them, and will form n valu able auxiliary to any school that l teaching mail making, hcsiilcs making an Intcrentlng lecture for the communi ty at large, aud the Hinaller towns espe cially are very much alive tfj tliU sort of entert.'ilum-ut and education. The net of slides Is a eolleetlon that none of the Hinaller colleges could ever get for themselves, tioth on account of the prohlhltlve cost nnd the difficulty of fludliig Just what Uiey wanteil to illus trate a particular phase of the work at n given time. It Is the sort of thing that the government, with agents ev erywhere, can get together at compara tively little trouhle and expense, and It will he made available for use In a score of colleges year after year at practically no expense to the govern ment and none at all to the school. ! O nlinrrlla-ri to 1 hi- Kiamlni-r wlui ri-tnovr (rum urn- Inmliiv to amiilii r. ur i-tiaiiKr , Ihi lr iimiiirhn- a.lilfi . nlmulil r. iii.-iiiIht hi . ilroji ihln ultiiT a runt o Ihi-lr pupi r ran lie ail , drtnai-d lo tin- ritlil iiiiltli-i'. 1 o Cure a Lot J In One Day Take I. A X ATI V K liKOMO (Jl'IMNK Tahleti. All IiunKits refund the moin y if it fails to cure. K. V. tinive'a diitnuture is on each box. D.'k-. J Look at the ilcxcnption of the land j liMted Midi The I'xam ner this week (or ; u!e, and fein t your piece before it ha 1 been mld to tiiiie one i-'He. tf THE 1906 Within the Next Ninety Days We Offer Two For the Pake of One: The County Examner The Leading County Paper and The American Farmer BOTH ONE YEAR FOR $2 This unparalleled offer is made to all new subscribers, and all old ones who pay up all arrears and renew within ninety days. Sample copies free. Address: C. 0. rietzker, Lakeview, Oregon. Valve of l.enil Iloaiia t I'rnprrty. The question ,-l)o good roads pay?" Is being continually demonstrated by such facts as tills, taken from n Flori da paper: J. ('. Sloth, the real estate broker, could have loug1it a certain tract of laud a few months ago at fOOO. An "object lesson" road was built Jn the locality, and ho was authorized by a client to pay $3,200 for It, but found when he tuado his tetidar that It had Just been aold for $2,700. The valua had been enhanced by aa amount suffi cient to pay for half a mllo of Im proved road, and the gain on valuo of half a mile of abutting property at the same rate would pay. for ten miles of good roads at the same cost. Encyclopedia Klamath Springs Special. I v. Thrall l.!M I'. M.l.v. Kl'h Mp'gpt 4t I', M Ar. ll.. u. M " Ar. I all ( w ki t) " Hiin-l Mr 'aril A " ki.tI HrV 8 in ' " Call I'ri'i'k a. i,.uii H.ytl " " Kl'h Ht'ata H,W " ' 'I lirall . . S.iA LAKUVIHW ALTUKAS aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVaaaaaaaaVaaaaaaaa STAGE LINE II, K. IUmkicr, I'rnp'r. Office In Illcbcr' 5torc a Stage leaves lakeview ilully, rs. vpt r-tindsy at 0 a. in. Arrive at Alturaa nt tl p. m. luvei Alturu for l.akeview at (! o'clock a. in., or on the arrival of the stage from Madeline. Ar rives in lakeview in 12 houra af ter leaving Alturaa. freight - Mnttcr - (Jlven 5triit - Attention first - Class - Accomodations. Western . Stage . Line J. 1.. VADIN, Proprietor. Office In Unhide I'otel Kit math Talla. Daily from Toke'cmit by Keno, Klam nth 1-mIIh, Dairy, l'.oniiiira, nnd lily to lakeview. Duilv from I.ukeview bv lilv. I tuna nun Dairy,' Klamath Kails, Keno, lo To-ketiema. From Klainnth I-'hIU In K'i.m.i bv steHiner and from Kcro to I'oki-).ema over the Hinaet Fotir-llorse StiiK" Line. Good Stock LAKI-Vll-W Lasy Coaches IM.USM STAGE LINE S. L. McNAt'oiiTov, I'rop. Rural Delivery Notes England has a rural mall delivery dally except to very distant farm houses, which are served triweekly. The states In the northern part of the Mississippi valley ar the ones In which the rural free delivery business has been extended the most. Illinois leads all other states with 2,008 route in operation. Ohio is second with 2,302. "Rural free delivery has made a considerable difference In the amount of memorising that postal clerks on Indiana routes have to do," said ono of the number, according to the In dianapolis News. "Fire years ago there were 2,202 postofflces in Indiana whose names we bad to remember, and sow there are only 1,01)4. The re duction of over COO offices is due to the rural free delivery." Miss Susie M. Btolta la the only wo man rural mall carrier in IUInolsor la Wabash county, says the 8t. Louis Fost-Dlspatch. Miss Btoltz Is nineteen ' years old. Her home is at Gard'a Point, ten miles northwest of Mount Carmel, In Wabash county. She has bad a rout out of Mount Carmel for the past eighteen months and In all that time bas only mlsd on day. That was when she went to a convention of rural carriers at Olney. Miss Stoltz's rout Is twenty-slz mile long. She drives that distance in a buggy every weekday of the year, in sunshine and rain, through flood and mud and snow and ice. World Almanac and Encyclopedia i i I IS ON SA US ALL OVUK TUB UNITED STATUS. It is a volume of nearly seven hundred pages and sells for 25c. Sent by mail fot 35c. A Reference Hook of un- sual value, almost indispens able to any man of business, or in the professions. It contains information on more tlianJl.OOO timely top ics and presents over 10,000 facts such as arise daily for answering. Election statistics, agricul tural, financial, educational, lailroads, shipping,ctc, etc., through all the list of topics where ncwfigures are most valuable. 34- columns of in dex. Send for this -'Standard American Annual." Addr ess THE WORLD, Pulitzer Building, New York City. Office at .Mercantile Store Hau leaves Lakeview Mondays, Wed nesdays and Fridays at l a. in., arrives at Flush at U p. in. Leave I'msli Tues days, Thursday and Saturdays, at 6 a. in., arrives at I.akevirw at 9 p. m. l'aKHeiii.'er fare fit oiii way or 5 for round trip. Freight lates from May 1st to Nov. lt f.7f t r hundred; froir Nov. 1st to May lnt $ 1 .IK) per liumlre TIMIIKIt I.IM OTI4 K 1'iiitetl .S'tati-H Land Oflire, Lakeview, OreKon, October Ltllb, llM).r). Notice in hereby jt'veii t,Ht in eompliamn with the provisions of the Act of .lune:i, "8 entitled "An act for the sale of limber lands in the States of California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory," an extended to all the l'nblic Land Hlates bv set of Autftisi 4, IHM-J, Frank Hall, of Klamath Falls, county rf Klamath, state ot Oregon, lias Ih's day filed In this office his sworn atatemeuts No. I!015 for tho purchase of the Nw SK'f Zi'. Xw M bf.yt Nw4 and lot 2 of section l'J in township No. 34 S., Harige No. Id K., w. rn., and w ill offer proof to show that the land sought is moro valuable for its timlHir or stono than for agricultural purposes and to establinh bis claim to said land before (ieo. (Jhastain, clerk of Klamath county, at hisoffico at Klamath Fal's, Oregon, on Saturday, the 13th day of January. 1!)01. lie names witnesses: C. II. MeCutnlrtsr, of J)airv, Oregon; lierlairt Cremnier, Fred JUmsing of Klamath Falls, Oregon, Bud K. A. McUulley, of MeCloud, Calif. Any and all persons claiming adverse ly the alwve-desjribed lands are request ed to Gle their claims in this olllco on or before said 7.1th day of Jan., JtHM. 41-1 J. N. Watson, Kegister. THE CLEANHINO INI) HEALING cvuk iron CATARRH Ell's Cream Balm Euy and pleasant to in Conlalut uo In jurious drug. It is iiii(-kijr antornoa. (Jlvot ltoliuf at ones. It 0ins and Cleanses' Heal and I'rotocU the Mnitiran. Keatorel tlif buuM of Taata and Hinall, lt 8sn, U cents at Druggists or liy mall) 'I'riitl Blae, lOcenia by mall. ALX DUOTUUitti, M Wsrreu BUwl, New York, :atarrf ' ir r s m MIIKKP IIHANDH. James Barry f,.htVf.1; for wethers. Boms (wti Hquars Crop and Bill "a". jr nrana hi, Jiangs, crans Lake. fostnfflcs adilruaa. Ikavtnw. nn.ii tat II IllinUI 111 ear, Wall UndororoD o rlghl for ewes; re trse for wathors Tar Brand W. Kanga, Fish Creek. J'ostofflos address Lakeview. Ores-oil f )