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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1909)
LAKE COUNTY EXAMINER, LAKKVIEW, OUEflO.N, THURDSAY FEB. II, 1WK SIX FFICIAL DIRECTORY FYatKtrnl Viro-fTraKVnt . . Pocraiat; ol State Srci'iar? ol Treasury... Secretary of War literacy tieneral .... lyxtKIKKtcr Oenrt al . . Secretary ot Navy fcrerr Interior . .. Secretary ol AurlruUure Sea reiarvol ummm. Theodore Kooeeyeit Cbaa. W. rairbenk Klthu Ko. I ..CSeo. B. 1'ort'Wou Wm. H.T.i! Cbu J. Bonaparte Von U Mrvrr V. t Metoail " Ju . UatSelil JtmH Wllenn nt V. tarau-a MeivllMW Fuller V' o .rW.' I'" """ t'ommlaslnnet wrJKirh .r.K V. . lnd l omanasionoi mtm. Governor ... Riipimir Jude S. re-art ol Mate ... . Treasurer A Hornet I.etieral . tui. I'ublie lnirurtlnti I'riniri DatrT ami food Com .... C. S Senator. L'oncrt'iwmrn Ceo. I Chaoiberlaia .. T. '. Bnoii . . uro. A. Nri l A. M. Craw lord J H . Ai .W. 8. Puntway J. W. 3i- I John M.tiearta I t . w. Fulton Binrr Hernm j. N. Wllllama itm irnic.n DiBTmi. Oco. H. Solar-d Jorffr Joiui Smatoi 11. H. MrirjrniH H. P. Feltaa Representatives. A. bratiam W. J. Moore Attorney. V S.I.ASP OFFICE. J N. Watson Fredl. I'ronrmllU r mi coi'NTT. . Reg Ist .Keoeiye Judge Cleft Puerto . .. Treasurer. . . . School Supt . Surveyor B. '.. r. W. Payne Albert ! .. F. O. Ahistrnn. A ) Fot-r . . R. B. Jac'aon ..C. M. Faulkner i C. A. Rehart i H R. HeryloM ..W m. I'roudioot Commissioners Stock Iniwlor TOWN OF LAKEVtKW Har Bailey Jliyot Co incilmen V. Bnr!ilnn ( D. J. W I'oox I ). X. Watson) J. 8. Laoe t w. B. Snider A.Bieuer .Recorder ...Treasurer LODGE DIRECTORY A. O. V. W.-I.AKEVIEW LODGE NO. 111. Meet eyerv aecouil anil lourth Thurwlay of each mouih. in Mairlc Hall. Lakeview. Chaa. Tonningsen. W.SI.; Wm.Gunther. F. " r0oVoF(r0o7r.r;? third Thursdays of each month in Masonic Hall. Cora Green. C. of H.; eelma 1'ni-e. L. of H ; Villa number, C. of (; France Nys- wauer. Recorder. I o O F-Lakeview Lodge. No. 63. I. o. "o F..' meets eerr s-tuilay evenin mOld Fellows Hall, al 7:30o'cliH-k. from 0c,,r 1 to April Land t oiciock from April l to September i. E. F.cheney, N. g.j t. F. Cheney, sr.tary t.O. O.F.-LAREVltw encampment NO. 18 $.?efrn?. Hill. Lakeview. H. R. Heryloro, G. r.; Meuker, Scribe. rafldlty and determinlnatlun were the EEBEBAH lodge-LAKEVltw LODc.E. so. . tualn characteristics of the man who 2" I O O F.. meets the second and fourth , . .. Fridays of esch month in Odd Fellows' Hall. : revolutionized newspaper work in the Mts. Alice Buntinit, N. G ; Mrs. W. L. Hery. j Kri,sh Islands. K:5'.sii!orfMW'iM He is good to the eye. Plenty of j hair, so wavy by nature that a severe rHIIDrH "niDPrTHDV ! weekly cut cannot prevent that char CnUKvll UIKttilUKi : acterlstlc of wariness from snowing. I surmounts a round bead of agreeable ZZZZTZ Jieat ee and firm P" l first Euuday m each month, preaching at 11 : you southward to an aggresKlve chin, a. m. Aide from ihi.. preaching every tjun- Ag for ,h t of L, be , fine, day at 11a.m. and 7::jp. rn. at Lakeiiw. , ' Sunday Sihool at io a. m. Lirrrae at 6::so p. j prciMrtioned, broad and big. There are m. F'rayer Meeting Thursday 7:30 K m;, nbout Qim a swiftness and finality of Lad es Aid Wednesday 1:30 Pi m. Choir , , ,. practise Friday 7 :: p ra A cordial "lnviia-1 manner that explain him, explain all tion is extended to ouc' PARKER i.astor about Llia, explain how the obscure re- J porter of twenty years ago has be Tt , , . f ; come the power that Lord Northcllffe FIRST BAPTIST CHTKCH OF t.OOSE LAKE al New Pine Creek, Oregon. Preaching ser- IS IOU.I. vices at li a M and 7 ::su p M of each Sunday i lilg brawny, direct and forceful, he of every month Sunday 1-chool atlUAM. ... , - , , . . Prayer Service at 7:W on Wednesday eveninr : squared himself off In his room at the of each weed. All are cordially invited to gt ijegls and Spoke his mind. tte"J 'bc,;rVllYDtN HOWARD. Pastor. 'What," he repeated, "to the thing ' which chiefly strikes my eye about the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF LA REVIEW Preaching service at 11 A M and 7:30 P M on lt and 3rd Sun. Hunday School at 10 A M. Junior Society at 4:So P M. Baptist Young People's Union at 6:30 P M on each Sunday. Prayer Meetintr at 7:30 P M Wednesday eve ning. Every uody invited to attend all ser vices. W.A.HOPKINS. Pastor. . j vv ' CATHOLIC CJICRCH- EVERY BCNDAV MAS8 .iJ? H.ndi.noM .no o'clock a.m. Sunday i school after Benediction. W eek day Ma.-s at i 6:30 a. in. l. A. v; PROFKSSIONAL CARDS L F. CONN Attorney at Law l.stkeview. Orejsi OFFICE-)lv Buiiiling. J D. VENATOIt Attorney at Law, liiid 91 altera Mprlalt OFFiCE-lJalr Bnlldlng. CHARLES UMBACK Land and Law Of. Ice Abstractor of Titles Established 1HS8 Ikevlcw, Ore- Y. LAIR THOMPSON Attorney at Law Office: Over Bank of La view Lakeview, Ohkoon fllOS. J. POWELL Attorney at Law Office In Daly Bulldlnjs Lakeview, Okeoon i Buy Lots In Watson' Addition Before you bay lota any where in thia vicinity see those in Watson 'a addition. Close to business center, of Lakeview. 33 tf. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININfc Tablets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. YV. Grove's signature is on each box. 26c. PEER WHOHUSTLES. Views, Plans and Career of Lord Northcliffe, the Noted Publisher. A BIG MAN, KEEN EYED, - DIRECT AND FORCEFUL Fathar of Redhot Journalism Abroad, Who Hat Coma to tha United S'ates to Stuw'y an Amariean Pratidential Campaign, Critieiaea Our Ntwipa pars, Daclaring That They Havo "Takan a Stap Backward" His Noval Paper Schema. "Your American newspapers, follow countrymen, are getting worse every year, most of them that is, they are getting worse Id ne respect, that which Is known to the newspaper man by the technical name of 'makeup.' You can't And an Item of news In most American papers, because It Is obscured by glarli.. box beads, and your unseeing eye wanders vainly over the paper without ever discovering that Mrs. Beisel has shot Captain Erb, or that Bulgaria has declared her In- dependence, or that the Cuba have won the pennant, although those things are Just what you are looking for and are staring at you from the front page. 'Makeup' In American newspapers has gone mad." These Incendiary sentlnents are pro claimed by the father of redhot Jour- nallsm abroad, says the New York Times, the man known to Americans as Sir Alfred Harniswortb or better as p f Inrmiwoi .h and now I-ord . Airreu v,. uarmsw oi in anu now iru j Northcllffe. He arrived In New York . recently prepared to study an Amerl- i presidential campaign at arst hand , and later to go to Newfoundland to su- iwrrlw the firat sttemnt on a larce PfTise me nrst attempt on a large scale to solve the paper problem. . large, husky, square built man Is Lord Northcllffe, and suddenness Is the manner of him. Nobody in his bas any doubt about who is me DOSS. .NOlKKiy wno ever saw mm had any misgiving about the fact that progress of Amerlcun newspapers since 1 wun here lust' Why, the chaotic slate of Uiakeup into which most of your newspapers are pluuglng; the Increased and increasing diiliculty of finding uuy item of news you are look- lug for in au American uewspaper. "My Impresslou on lauding when 1 , purchasud all the New York uewspa- i,ers Was in most cases I don't Hay every case one of confusion, uud cou- ' fusion even to an eye accustomed to reading many newspapers every day. When 1 tried to read the news of the day I couldn't find It." His keen eyes, under a wide brow that is good to look at, opened wider as he flipped this sentence sharply out. "What Is the worst feature of Amer ican newspapers?" ho repeated In his abrupt staccato. "The exaggeration of the unimportant and the hiding of the Important. Outside of the fault of makeup I have no criticism to make. The American newspapers are very good ones aside from that. When you can find the news In them, which is no easy task, "It Is customarily good and much more accurate than it used to be. They are customarily well read. Is that a peculiarly British phrase, or do they understand it over here?" "Newspaper men understand the word 'read,' but the average reader wouldn't," he was told. Well," eald Lord Northcllffe, "say, then, that they are well revised." Then he reverted to the subject of makeup. "Why," said be, "the Amer ican newspaper men were the first to study the art of makeup and were the first to produce a lucid newspaper so arranged that one could find the news according to its importance. Decided ly there has been a backward step." Lord Northcliffe did not seem over enthusla8tlc about the accuracy of the American reports on the Balkan ques tion, which, he snld, was a subject of discussion In England for some time before Bulgaria's rev 4 "Your news papers here," he said. ,?et dispatches from your correspond V and print tbem. In England on n nutter of this Importance we get two sets of dlu patches from our correspondents one set for publication and the other a private set for the guidance of the editors and before we print anything we know that we are right. This sys tem enables us to be always on th Inside track." The Newfoundland paper plant scheme, which is really what has brought Lord Northcllffe to the TTnlted States, Is going to be one of the blg- BRITISH tNt schemta Of, the age. ' Eirterta say that U wUI probably solrff the problem I to' Klk kaaa tMiUAi, IMVaLanaa W " Sal Ma TI M V . -J MVf ! J T"! UU lUbera for generations. That problem has been the relation of the paper sup ply to the rash In Ihe newspaper cash box. Lord Northcllffe has solved the prob lem In a way characteristic of his own hustling self. He Is going to make his own paper. To that end he has scoop ed out a large tract, amounting to 1.400.UOO acres. In Nova Scotia, of wild, unsettled land where they arrow spruce trees, and here he Is going to make his own product. The Mm Dor land will be used to the limit, and the output at Oral will lie not leas than 1.000 tons a week. During a visit to the United States and Canada in 1KM Lord Northcllffe, to whom the paer problem had long been a matter of Importance, tegau to hear of the Immense depletions of American forests, which were then a leading topic In the press. On his re turn to Europe he made Investigations and found that the Swedish and Nor wegian forests, which formed the chief European supply, were also being rap- Idly reduced. This minnllod him with an Idea. He sent out a large staff of expert, who were to travel all over the world and ascertain where the best location would be for a newspa per plant that would produce Its own paper supply. The verdict was for Newfoundland. There the new Harms worth plant Is being erected, and from there It will supply the forty-five pub lications which now represent Lord Northcllffe's activity In the newspaper and periodical business. Lord Northcllffe's career has covered a period of about twenty-five years. He Is forty-three years old now and does uot look It His father, a bar rister, destined him for the law, but he did not like the prosiiect and ran away from home to become a newspa per man. or Journalist, as they call it abroad. When only a boy he was a writer on a weekly paper In London, which be left to Join the editorial staff of the Illustrated Iondon News, which una under the same ownership. At twenty-two years of age he bad got far enough along to get married, and It was lu the same year that he con- celveI the Idea of Answers, bis first periomcai. wnicn ne nrsi eunuea An- swers to Correspondents. It under- 1 took to give Information not only gen- j eral, but specific, and for that purpose '. experts In various lines were engaged to answer any question that might be i asked. This paper was the foundation 1 of his fortune. He started here the j iaea or competitions ror prizes ana tne 1 various other novel schemes which have since been a prominent charac teristic of his publications. The first entry was a comiietltlon for a pound a week for life to any one who should guess the nearest to the amount of money In the Bank of Eng land at a certain time. A soldier in the British army won the prize. This competition brought the circu lation of Answers up to 205.000 a week. It was the mother of the HarniRWorth publications. The list now Includes re ligious papers, women's papers, boys' papers, comic papers, an art collectors' magazine, an ntlas and gazetteer, etc. The London Mall has a dally circula tion of JC0.000, rising at times to 1,500. 000. The advertising rate for a page Is $1,8)0 for a slnule Issue. Ills novel methods are still contin ued. Answers, for Instance, carries $5,000 Insurance, covering a week, for any one who has a copy In his pocket. It has offered $.",00 nnd three years' rent of a shop to any news agent, to gether with extra prizes amounting to $1,000 for the assistants In the shop and their wives and daughters, who get the greatest Increase In Rales of Answers for twelve weeks. The foundation of the scheme was mutual and free advertising. He saw the possibilities of owning a large number of periodicals, each of which culd advertise In the others without cost, and has perfected It so far that today. If he should start a new period ical, he would have forty-five newspa pers and magazines to advertise in without Its costing hlm a farthing. About seven years ago, while in the United States, he suggested to Joseph Pulitzer bis plan for a "tabloid" news paper, and Pulitzer offered him his paper to experiment with. Harms worth had only twenty-Tour hours' notice, but accepted the proposition and turned out a paper which created a lot of talk, but did not satisfy the ambitious Briton himself. He went back to England and started a "tab loid" newspaper of his own, the Lon don Dally Mirror, which is of almost pocket size and abundantly carries oat bis ideas. Though It has been es tablished only a few years, it has a cir culation that makes most newspaper men's mouths watei. How Harrigan Registered. When a man with ruddy cheeks and smiling eyes went Into the elec tion registration place nt 1276 Lexing ton avenue, In New York, the other day he was told of the new rules by which the would be voter must sign the roll or answer a lot of searching questions. "Your name?" asked the chairman. "Harrigan," promptly replied the cit izen. "Write it," said the chairman. "No; I'll sing it," replied the citizen And he did. He will vote too. Powar of Bryan's Voles. When William Jennings Bryan, tha Democratic presidential nominee, re torned to his home In Lincoln. Neb., tke other morning from bis trip through Missouri he said, "I made thirty-one anee' hes yesterday, and I felt Just as fresh when I made the last one aa v hc n I made the first one." Ills vole showed not the slightest trace of tha tremendous strain upon it. welt for Margaret Taylour to be for ever quoting her, aud she la fun, but she go around bring original In the wrong way. that nobody admires that la. she does what she wants ami uot what other penpiv waul her to do. Mara.irrt spends her miiiiinera at lilu Bay. aud I spend mine at Newport, ... I.-..- and l ui uot going 10 have Mrs. a dcr Wlndt down 00 uie or ou my brother either If I cau help It." "Thanks for your gHHl ad Ice," re plied I 'otter airily "But may be. when you hear what Mrs. I'ltchley had to ay to me you'll change your tune." Mrs, Eaa Kay rained her eyebrows, but her eyes would look curious. -What could Cora riu-liley say that would bare auy particular effect 00 uier" the nuked. "Site know a n r a fact thai ahe Isn't to be asked to the pink ball ou the id uud lUut Mrs. Van tier v Unit her self wranUiu jour uuuic ou the IIM before she sailed for Europe." Mrs. Ess Kay s face weut a dull, ugly red, aud she laughed a loud laugh which souuded as if it Mould be the ! "' color. uudcrauuid, "As for Cora. I can but 1 dou I bellete Ihe Aoiuati would hate dared to try to ex elude 1110." she hu it) In a qillvery volcv. "Why shouldn't she bare dared, when you come to think of It?" "Well, auyhow-ahe don't dure uow." "No. n.uiir.illy. abe won't dare uow. You're as smart as they make em, Kath." Then, for some reasou, they both turned and gazed at lue with a "thauk-gooduesa-berv's-a-floattug-apar" son of look, while Sally examined the grounds in her teacup with that fuuuy little three cornered smile of hers. "Was that Ihe thing you thought would cbatige me toward Cora i'ltch ley?" asked Mrs. Ess Kay "Yes. I thought It would give you a , t n . T ii... w.rt or teiiow u-eiiufc-. "It doesn't." said she shortly, "aud uobody but a man could have thought it would It makes me feel all the more that i don't waut to be mixed up with her. for for Betty's sake." Cutter whistled, with one thumb lu a breast pocket. "For the cue-lid's sake." be remarked dramatically, aud Mrs. E.w Kay looked angry. "I shan't invite the I'ltchleys to my : big affair." said she "the affair I'm going to have for Betty." -oh, but jou must please not put yourself out for me!" I exclaimed. "I should be so sorry to have you do that." i0tter laughed. "Don't you try to ber of her dearest triumph. Lady Daisy. You're the big gem for the middle of the setting. You're the Koblnoor." "Totter! You ought to be ashamed of yeurself. talking to her like that!" said Mrs. Ess Kay. "But all he means, Betty, Is that I shall be very glad to do anything I can to make your visit pleasant, aud It will be no trouble at all for mo to give an entertainment, jou may be quite sure." She said this as the aueen tnhzht sat that It dldut matter to her whether there were seventy-five people or aev.i.?ftny "'"V''1 " positive cure foi enty-slx asked to a garden party, and fitf 1 icu,u,eu iuai s waa auuooeu, au said no more. Ask Yours 1 1 lha Qucetlunn Why not use Chamberlain's Llul-I ment hen you have rheumatism? I We feel sure that the result will be prompt and satisfactory. It has cured others, why not you? Try it. Itj coots but a trifle. Price 25 cents: 1 arge size 60 cents. For sale by Daly & Hall. Haw's This We offer One Hundred Dollars Its ward for any rase of Catarrh the cannot be oured by Hall 'a (Jatarri UM V. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, O We, the undersigned, hare known F. J. Cheney for the laat It) years. j ",lDOW hlm 1rT honorable la all bus In ess transactions, and fin an j py bl to c,rry Cmuf obllga tloos mails by his tlrm. WaMinit Klunnn ft Marvin ' Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure ta taken Inter nally, actlug directly on the bio. si and mucous surfaces of the sTftnui. Testimonials seut free. I'rlcs 7& r per bottle. Hold by all drug I gat a. Take Hall's Family BUI. for conatl patloo. 00 KKWAKD. A REWARD of fifty dollars is here by ottered for Information that will j lead to the arrest and conviction of any prison who lias stolen aires or I other property, from onr Company : and the same reward is herebv offered for Information that will lead to the 1 arreat and conviction of anyone dee- '7- Hecretary Lake Co. Tel. A Tel. Co. IC.tf. Notice. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, notice Ik InTt'liy kIv'H tlmt nil Irrljrn tlon, or inlllntce dltrhca nil nil trout atreaiiia throiiglit Lnke County, ()r Kon. iniiHt be ttcroeiied with n ainall nutih wlrv scri iilnt nt their heiul or Junction with thn timln channel of stream. Also nil dains or obatrnct Ions mi said ntn-auiN niiiHt lav pro vided with a fUli-ladder, or other eaav ineatiM of piiNnngr. at orn-'itr thetuld dle of the innln rhaiinel, an a to al ow ihe piiMHane of trout at all times of year, a provldtil by law. Said work to 1m ilniie at low water ttin. "' ; v.m,h.--.. . r... ,, ,m,4. By order of J A. Barhain. s,M-i,. i.,v 11. 1. iv IIPlll,,! ffj ,W I . . 1... ........ I S 1 .. S a as a,. I JikeCounty. Oreuon $1,000.00 Reward. The Orison. California & Nevada Livestock Protective Association will Rive IKMK) Beward for the. con I vlctlon of any party or part lea steal I Intr borne, rattle or in 11 lea In-IoiikIiik to any of th follow In iiiciiiImth of . this Aiwoclwtloii Cox ic Clark, Chcwaean fjnid A Cattle Co., Heryfonl land & Cattle Co., Itke County Land & Uvcotock Co.. W aruer Valb'y Stock Co., Win W. Brow n, eo. M. Join-, tieo. Han kin. H. It. Chnndler. C. A. Rebart, N. Elne, W.a. Currier. Frank It. Hiniers. J. C. IlotchklMM, Calderw-ood Bros., T. J. Brattaln & Sons. T. A. Crump, Cresler & Bonner, W. T. Crelcr Maud I. .Vuinlio. lu....rllJ.W'. P. ItKliYKoito. PrvNld't. "MKHM1F. M..M11 i.KK.Sw&Trviui. I W. P. IlKltTKoldl Finance C'm.F. .Nt. Uhkkn I S. B. ClIANDI.KK ECZIiMA and PILUCVUU f RLE Knowing what It w n 10 m:f. ,l'r-1 wl lv " '' - CHAKdE lief. Dont suffer longer. Write F. W. WILLIAMS. 400 Manhattan Avenue, I lorn. i-.ncioHe stamp. CASTOR I A For Infant! and Children. Die Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of Your Next Commer cial Printing: Job Can Best Be Done By Us Whether it he LETTER HEADS ENVELOPES STATEHENTS shipping: TAGS PROORAMS BUSINESS CARDS INVITATIONS BOOK PRINTING Telephone or Call at The EXAMINER OFFICE CATARRH mm?. IYFEVER Ely's Cream Balm Sure to Clve Satisfaction, oivia atLiip at ONCg. It rlnanNea, annlhra, heals and protecta Ihn dlwawil iiirnilirane reaultlng fritn Cularrli and ilrivra away a Cold la the llrud tpii, klv, Kent o the Senwa of Twite and Km, II. .' v ! tiN. Ciiilnlna no injur!, na lri-, Applied Into the rvmtrlla and aWrW.I. Irui HU. 50 cents at Prtnurlata or l,v innll. Liquid Cr.m Bajra for ue la slotuiM r, 75 renta. liT fROTHPHa bO Warrea II.. Na Vara it ciimmiHi'iji",fti SAN fRANQSCoT "CHRONICLE" TV 'Otr.l" rmww tr t' r r V-a, r (nI J u .ui i ! ! Iti 4tlj pkvmm" j ia.it Itwtlf rtiiilu mmt mtif Ibr M'p Ulr vt hi but lrata of t t r I'. r(B. fmhjexts) vkifli trnngt, aiif l kmrm t aJiatl ua avii tfn rt. . fnilf grmmmr ! BjMrrfcartt " cM) all uLka arwtvara tmm m i u MAIl SUBSCR1PTI0M R ItS fx 'I;, an. yaar llaHa4las Sirts t r'!. ait aimiks diwti .' r l. ikrra ssanlaa iIm-I'i1 ar " "l I'm r, !,. moats llaelttil.af f,jm.' V !. on. y..r I ! aiaala. . . . S i nsf, on. tr ' Suuda, als aias I Th3 Weekly "Chro-; :. The very best weekly nrwrn pa tills brd la the entire V c... $1.50 a Y;:r fn'Hwtlnt ansTis m mmf aart of h. I I S'o. sisit. a o4 M.tlaa iS- lfr I pi . , II lot aor.noo. ar.iiir. artatl- . ' nwa uf Ik. ,oi'u M.'k ,r. ti fff' itfl ws. .! Pjlf llhia is'liy . - It as. awial 4Hriarai. ir.o la AoaicTirttss risino HosTttrt.Tuaa ii'isATrsi roULTBV a.s;i:oK Ufl STOOm aaS SrO-fS Tbfo. ar. so,. dltuca b vms taoroaa t.ois. of t.oir ( ' lb. Ta. BSfOS Sor4 I ArU-ullura llurtl niliur., PobJist aa4 aa4 LI. Sisrk ' w.il IllnatrasW aa4 SUoS wltb manor ..' lb. troatoat boUooot W all nat li. Ikoo. iBvlaatrloa, rvory II ao .in( wriiiri. t tha wko ar la rlao. Iiairh wilt. tlUoaa an ula aa Ik 1. aal. ! aonaUaa ta vr subaerlptlon, addraa M. H. de YOUNQ, 9mm r.aarfUi.a CkraaJolo," Ian Froiri. Csl. monATtom ditaxtmemt. The Examiner has a supply of first class butter wrapper paper on hand now, at th following prices: For 0o wiappere, printed, tlM, for low printed It. CD. tf