IIMI MX OFHICIAL DIRECTORY MtTIOKAL .... Wlllam ll.Taft '"!!'.'.'.'. ..Jsincs s. Slir.n.au lkiun.l..r (V KmoK I'teal'tent Vli-e rri'itl"t Sw,r"ia'ji ol !'" ,,.ity ! Tr..ury. Serrvtary of ar .ttorn.'V iviotI .. Hoatmatr u.-m-ral . lUrwIkfTltr VV ... '. Franklin MrVitii Javot ll. ln-aina n iirorv Wlcaeisnani Krana H. Hi tern-oca ti.-or' Vim I.. M''1' ' .'. HICliar.1 A liHnT Ppvri-iurf Interior ferrwarv nt AsN.-nluire Svrrviary CimmoM .Jam. own Charlv-s NatTi-l Ohlol Jiisint Vi-itIi S'llur 1, :.".',V.i-n.. it' 8.'olilpn foitimlMinne? I- rKLr".":r: . f. una C srvrs. F v. Benson Governor v w. Benson ST ,,"8lt m,.o. A. Wee. Trea-nrer a. M.rrlorl Aimrnoy lienoral . .,,,.rmi,n r. Induction .1" ,, w ay PMnlci i vv ii.li.. liRiry m". nii . ... i l J iim - ...-. Jnhoothao Hounr. jr. I ti.H. A. llinib.-rlain iV. t . II It .v jV. R Kills V.S Senators.... ConiiresMnen iiTimrT R S. Bran Cbi.-I Justice K. A. M re ' R.o.i-ri K h k I i l!l U. K .IX I V. T.s.ater Associate JllSltCOS 1ITH ji'MctaL wr!"i. , , (;,.. H. Nolwr-d Jtttr ..... v Kukkendal. Atornry f LtvlSLATlVE vj. II. Meirymoi Joint Scnatoi J H. I'. Heikuap H. A. Brallain Re pn-s n t a r. vea . . t.Atvfct utM' . '. " K. W. tayiie , Aiu.ri I ii . K. . h.triu A J o-t. t J Hilar Clcis ... Sneriff . rrrnrr .si.t-r it k Je sun Scnool supt . . ...... !"C M. Faulkner , C. A. Knn H R. H ryinni .Win. I'roudtoot Surveyor Comtnissioue r .... Slot k liitpw mi. TOWSOKLAfctVtEW. Hsr Haili-y Mityni V. Snrilina I D. J. ilcox J. S. !soi J. 8. Lmiip i w. B ttmJf r i.Bieut'f . Co inrtlun'i . Trvurcf U S.I AM) OFFICE. J.S.Win Pretl V. CrtiuemUlcr LAKEVIEW.BOAKDOFTRAPE Prvsulent 'ffi SSSVT-... : "m'H Agricultural p- v- Rik- n- Hedqiirrers for Sirn'p r LODGti UiKtlOKV k. O. l W.-I.AKEV1EW UHXiK SO. 111. Meets evtTT ond and fourth Thur-ty ol each monih. in taitoi:lc Hall. Laneview. Chas. Tonniufriwn. W.M.: Wm. C.nnthcr. K. DEGREE CF HONOR LA KEH ORE 1.HW.I So. T7. H. of H A. O. V. W.. Mli first anil third Thurwlavi of each mobtli in Masonic Hall. Cora Ur'een, C. of H.; sjelma Price. L. ofH.; Vida (iuntber. C. of C; Frances Ny waner. Recorder. L O. O. F--LAKEVIEW LODOE, No. 63, I. O. O F.. meela everv Saturday evening in Odd FtUows Hall, at t:8U o'clock, from October 1 to April Land at 8 olclock from April I to September 30. A. E. Cheney, N. li.; E. F. Cheney, Secretary I. O O. F.-LAREVItW ENCAMPMENT No. 1 I O. O. F., meets the Brut and ihirdThur; day tveniUKs of each month in Odd Fellows Hall. Lakeview. CD. Arthur, CP., A. H. Bummersley, Scribe. REBEBAH LOIX.E LAKEVIttt LolXjE. NO 22. I. O. O. F.. meela Ihe second and fourth Fridava of each month in Odd F.-llowa' Hall, ' Mis. M . L. Heryford, V.G.; Mrs. Ida Hery ford, W.G.; Mrs. M. D Mosa. Secretary ; Mrs. L. J. Magilton, Treasurer. O. E. 8. ORIENTAL CHAPTER, NO. 5, LAKE view, Oregon, Meets oil Tuesday, on or be fore full moon and two weeks thereafter, in kasouic Hall, at 7: ft) o'clock. Visiting members are cordially Invited. CORNELIA A. WATSON, W. M, IDA CEBACH. eecrtary CHURCH DIRECTORY METHODIST EPISCOPAL I HCRCH THE first Buuday In each month, preaching at II a. m. Aside frore this, preaching every Sun day at 11 a.m. and 7:.tup. m. at Lakeviaw Sunday School at 10 a. m. Ltr-je at6:S0p. ra. Irayer Meeting Thursday 7:30 p. m. Ladies Aid Wednesday 1:3U p; m. Choir practise Friday 7:: p m. A cordial invita tion iscxteuued to youu. I. C. PARKER. Pastor. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF LAKEVIEW Preaching service at 11 A M and 7-3U V M on 1st and 3rd Sun. Sunday 8c ho. d atlOA M . Junior Society at 2:30 P M. Baptim Young People's t'nion at6:3oPMon each Sunday. Prayer Meeting at 7:80 P M Wednesday eve. tiing. Every body Invited to attend all ser vices. Pastor. CATHOLIC CHURCH EVERY 8CNDAY MAK8 and Benediction at 10 o'clock a. m. Sunday school after Benediction. Week day Ma at :30 a.m. 1. A VASTA, b.J. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH OF GOOSE LAKE at New Pine Creeit, Oregon. Preaching ser vices at 11 A M and 7::fti P M of each Sunday of everv month Sunday School at 10AM. Prayer Service at 7:So on WEduekday evening of each weed. All are cordially invited to attend i be services J. HAYDEN HOWARD. Pastor. PROFESSIONAL CAKDS L F. CONN Aitorney At Law ltkrvlew. Uresva OFFICE-Dalv Building. D. VENATOR Attorney at Law, I .and Matter) Nperlalty OFFICE Dalf Building. (JHAKLE8 UMUACU Land and Law Office Abstractor of Titles Esotallahed 1188 Lakeview, Oro- Y. LAIR THOMPSON Attorney at Law Office: Over Bank of La view Lakvikw, Oregon THOS. J. POWELL Attorney at Law Office In Daly BulUIng Lakeview, Oregon, r- AFRICA A Trip to the Big Game Country By Frederick U.Toombs OOPYKICHT.I90AIY AMCHICAN MCW ASSOCIATION II E O I O It ii ItOOSKVKLT ll:ts IK'ViT Iwn HCl'tlMtHl 'f do- lu thlnj: on n sui:iI1 sonlo. nnil w l o n lu an- llOUIH-fHl Ills III- teiitlon uf trav eling ovor IMHH) irl'cs d risk his life In Afrli-nn Jiiiiille shimtlni; ik one wm Bur prlswl. Such r rosnlve, comltift from him. nvtu- uiiy st-fieti immoui'liu-o. anil on hi return. If he escapes nllve from the 0ndly rtar.jrers confrontltiK him. he j will no doubt I well nlile to dosrrlbe tvnllstloallT the similarity cr difference between punnlnc for trust oetopi in Washington nnd forest behemoth nlnnir thu oiilinfnF ....... n - . y Never was a huntlnK and exploring party better equipped for Its particu lar purposes than Mr. Roosevelt's, not i only as to arcouterment. but ns re- j gards the personnel of the expedition. I While Mr. Hoosevelt himself will be j chiefly concerned In shooting and sight seeing, his son Kermlt. now nineteen years old. as official photographer has peculiarly Important duties, undergo ing more personal risk fnm injury by wild animals than probably any other member of the party. The official pho tographer roust always be In the very forefront of action afleld to secure the ( - r . ;,f. AfjAxmJtii t-A .--r ... :' i most accurate and the most effective prints possible, and. handicapped by the bulk of his caniern, he cannot pos sibly carry a guu in any position to be of speedy use in the many emergencies that may arise. Dr. Edgar Alexander M earns. D. S. A., as chief naturalist, assisted by Edmund Heller, the twen-ty-slx-year-old Riverside (Cal.) explor er, hopes to discover hitherto unknown specimens of both animal and vegeta ble life. Professor J. A. Loring. us field naturalist, completes the scien tific department. On entering the lim itless wilds of the dark continent the party will be recruited up to from 200 to 4.r0 men. The cos: of the equipment of the members of the party leaving the I'nit ed States uuiuuius to about S.i.000 a man. Fart of the necessary parapher nalia consists of tents, guns, u.ii muni tion, cumo ntenslls, rations, khaki and leather hunting suits, waterproof bugs for clothing, hunting boots und shoes, medical supplies, surgical apparatus, pith helmets, sleeping bags and blan kets, filters, bunting and skinning knives, folding bathtubs, folding brass lanterns, bullseye lamps, cuiiules, hot water Ixittles, alcohol lamps, tic Bervl enble tents are u chief neces sity. The Afrlcuu adventurer should have tents mlide of the tiucM green water; Toof silk, free from defect to exclude pi I onous iuKe'-ts. and the Roosevelt p riy la so equipped. Al though each tent can be r ilsid to a height of el'ht -feet and h Id four persons. It weighs less tUan one poui d Instilling the wel lit of t Ji pole, a thin telescope pole luo.'.e of the best bicycle tubing. The tenis are green to escape at tracting unduly the attention of roam ing jungle tuouMtera, who are frequent ly Irritated by the glaring qualities of white materials. Rhinoceroses, for In stance, have been known to charge at white tents and crush sleeping inmates ruthlessly underfoot In the dead of night, plunging headlong through en tire aquada of native attendants. la the matter of guns Mr. Rooeerelt la no novice. He la no mean authority V - a r 1 . MRlFli. 35 CALIBER m:': fetea mm 1 Jfl on the different styles and enlller of hunting ns well ns purely nil'ltury and target Iron ami their vniylvg u es, on the peculiar differences l:i n:ninttnl tlon. on veli cliy, windage, rniure and trajiH-tvry. as well ns on the Intricate silence of balllsilt-s. lie has chosen four typos t guns for Ills Mrsonnl use during the trip. Irons sulreil to meet uu varying conditions of a til'hly dl versli'.eti ehnse. He has the vicious English Express rltle, ) caliber, carry ing a lead slu over a half Inch thick and two Inches lung, fsed nt short range, this rifle's bullet strikes a blow of 3.WX1 pounds en an object. Mr. Ele phant will usually drop dead when a ton and a half of concentrated energy hits him on the forehead It Is the weight of the shot k and not the vclix--Ity cr H'iietrntlon of the missile that makes this weajwn Inhumanly effec the. and. moreover, the bullet has a hele nt Its tip. causing the lead to spread or "mushroom" when It strikes, tearing an Immense hole through a carcass. The second type of gun Is a specially constructed shotgun, which Is used as n rifle, for the s'.iell used therein contains a solid lead slug In stead of small shot. Accurate at short range ni'd crushlnly effective, this shotgun Is used only when the animal Is within fifty or sixty yards distance. Outside that aoi:e the gun Is unsafely Inaccurate. Whatever living thing this bullet hits within Its xnne will not stop for repairs; the repnlr siaire will have pnssed The two guns mentioned are for elephants, hippopotamuses, lions A?aAiAat AaaaUA 1 i ..(( i ' W - and rhinoceroses. They will stop a charging behemoth when all. else has failed. Tearing Its way through bone or flesh, the bullet leaves a bole as lurge as a cocoauut where It emerges. For long range Mr. Roosevelt has a high power, high velocity, smokeless guu, carrying soft, lead pointed, metal cased bullets that weigh 300 grains and have a muzzle velocity of 2.150 feet a second. The bullet strikes a blow of a ton and a half. This gun Is used in shooting fleet footed, man shy animals, such as antelopes and colobi. The fourth type of gun Is without doubt the most valuable of the collec tion, as It Is effective at both long and short range and Is the hlehest type of emergency and long distance weap on. This gun Is the autoloading rifle, which. 11 Is predicted, will one day arm the armies of the world. It sends a 3.1 caliber bullet, metal cased, lead pointed, through spring steel over a quarter of an Inch thick or through forty to fifty Inches of pine. The bul let weighs 200 grains and has a muz xle velocity of 2.000 feet a second, striking a blow of 2.000 pounds. In Germany the corpse of seven men were stood In a row in the positions soldiers wou'd take, and a bullet from this gun went through five of the bcrtles Five bullets fixed In a clip and placed In the chamber can be tired In n scrd nnd a hnlf by an ex perienced rifleman, surely more than enoii'.'h of n reserve battery to stop the wildest bull elephant tusker thai cr onrns'n'il a human assailant. This soft, lend nosed missile, only tMrty.flve c" 'undrctHlis of an Inch thick nt I i "mil lirooms" as It strides and. p t--s!iu throu; 'i n body, lenvett a hole i big as n man's band nt Its point (.f . ress. This Is the gun that Mr. It" " elf's head nin carrier v lll hnnd hi' i a' t'let moment that nines to mt Invader of the African "t ! the :! nt when n wounded eleplcint. I' "i or rhl'cveroK, half "'iriid b; I'm- thin'; pain, charges or aprlngs ai. 'i;ion Ps 'ssallant, whose life ,C- on steadiness of nerve, eye net' ! "d. with the bloody laws of death yawning and oncoming two it tbrre seconds away. The re coil of this gun Is utilized silent Ide ally to eject the spent shell, cock the rt:l and simultaneously reload It. Forty per t ent of the it coll U thus utilised In tutu h the same tunnuer that the recoil of the sixteen Inch dis appearing gun In forts I used to car ry the caution b u k to be ivlondcl and roslghted. A tpc 111 iiiiioli u Ing gir.i vtlih gold sU'n i and mount l:o(i has been ninuuf.f lured for Mr House velt's exclusive use. A inoie vailed Itinerary for a v wa tt m trip than Mr. liiioseveifs l rarely seen New ol k to Naples. Hie Mfdl tclTitnean rouie. III." sle.imers follow ing whl. h stop at the Azores and t;iiiiliar; ilten a two day him nl"n the shores of Spain, passing close b the I'l.ilearii' Islands of It I a. Minrcil. Majorca and later hist die Sinllnla; then open v.'.icr not-then u waul to the vine coxeicd slopes of Capri, from whose lofty heights for years the no-' torlous Tyrrhenian pirate chiefs spied and swooped down upon Ihe richly ladeu craft pl.tlng to nnd from the neighboring bay of Naples. Changing nt Naples lu a few hours from the North tiermnn Lloyd steamer to one of the Certnaii East African company, the l.WU mile slant past the sulphur i-llils of Sicily and across the Mediterranean to Alexandria will fur ther Interest the notable American party. In four days they wlil be ashore In the land of the Ptolemies, the Kgyptlan land of mystery, the Inud that was old when ancient Rome was new. Rut the one time city of Alex ander the tlrcat. PoniHy'a pillar and the Pharos light must swiftly puss, as alo'the Interesting Nile delta, dingy, dirty, degenerate Port Said and the Sue?, canal, for southward nnd east ward the course of Mr. R i sevell's empire takes ps way down the Red sea. south through the strait of llnb el-Mandeb. Arabia In !'' on t'.n' left. Abyssinia on the rlgh.- canwurd agal i through the gu'f of Aden, 'i'ti ise dark. It try heights on the south shore ure the Ingall moiintslt: of Hrltl-di Somali. .Now conies another shl.'l of tin course- southward around the hidden ro k ribs of Has Al ila nod ihe t reach ermii Cape C,tiar.la?ul. on Soiual.!;nid. where full many n ntllant s'ili iiml bet galla-it men have disappeared. O p-iioitb'g Hie (!! tto- waters of i'i typhoon swej.i lri!lan ocean spre..tl on tery M e It s now n south am' a south by vest run of I ..Mm miles to one of the preliminary objective points of the exptslitli n. Mombasa, the romance lu-iren-il capital of the pro le t. rate of trltlh East Africa, a Io ta' of about seventeen days from Nn ples. It Is in Kliindlnl harbor that th. party disembarks, the port nearest Mombasa, the mediaeval seaport forti fied III l'tM'i by the Portuguese. Mombasa, on the coral Island, con nected with the mainland by a bridge. Is the terminus of the celebrtited Fgaiida railway, built by tho Itrltlsh government ut a cost of 24,OOO.tM to tap and develop the vast and richly productive East African protectorate. Loading their immense bulk of sup plies and equipment on a specially ar ranged train and obtaining a part of their retinue of native helpers required In the wilderness, members of the Roosevelt party will now tingle with excitement, for the magic door of the big game treasure house Is swinging Ien. Port Florence, 584 miles to the west by north, on Lake Victoria Nyanza, becomes the second preliminary objec tive point, for it la there that the rail way ends, and a steamer takes the party across the majestic queen of the African lakes to the very heart of the big game hunting region, to Uganda, on the plateau of which country the principal bunting is to be done. But there is much to do before reaching i . i ; i ! I i f By Special ArrangemenL with the SAN FRANCISCO DAILY BULLETIN San Francisco's Leading Daily t II f ' Lake Ggunty Examiner Is Enabled to offer Old and New Subscribers I In Luke Ct mi nt, y Examiner, per year fj 00 The H tin, Dully, p. r yeur ;j (k, Both Papers, one year, - - $3.50 This i ii extn. ordinary offer and may he withdrawn at any time, -vve Miest that all old suhserihers in arrears pay hack accounts, that the. may take advantage of this special rate, TIlIv IUILhi; I IN is famous from Coast to Coast for its fitfht in the defense ol -jood government, and is read hy more people dai ly, than th combined circulation of all the San Francisco dailies. You wdl appreciate the value of this offer when you consider that any of the other San Francisco papers will cost 8.00 per year. SUBSCRIBE TODAY I r t Tort Tforenre, Tor en rome atong tno railway Is the Nairobi district, where Mr. Roosevelt gets his first shot at ele phants, lions, hlppoa and rhlnoa on the IVl.OOO acres of William McMillan, nephew of the late United Ptatee Ren ator McMillan of Michigan. However, Mr. Hoosevelt will see the Jungle monsters In their haunt before he reaches Nairobi, for the Uganda railway route traverses primordial fastnesses where many of the speci mens of gnmo his license allows libit to shoot can I seen from the cur. The railway Journey to Port Flor ence la In Itself well worth an African c I tl'l'l) inw e . Nik. v ' i.U-lV.-'-t-'-'r ' e..-'--'er ' IIOTOt N SIIKLt. KOH ai.KIMIANIH ASH ri.Ar rikm ki nr iucamukh m i i.kr. trlii. Itlslng from ihe unwholesome const, the train reaches nu uliltuile of over 7.0O0 feel, crossing vnlbys and winding n round mountain heights, af fording rarest vl.-ws of great peaks and sweeps of country At I.ondlnnl 1 tho rond I: 7.1'"' feet nbove sen level, j An IiisiIm:: t lew of Mount Klluiun Jaro. about IU'Hhi feet liL'h. Is r vealed. Its lofty top i-rowiicd with ever lasting khow despite It closeness to the eountor. distant only three degrees 1 northward NOIIvCI! I OR I'lill ICAIION Deiiatruient of the Interior, U. K. ' LhihI Oftlce at Lakeview, Oregon,' April U, IIHUI. Notice is hereby given thitt FRANK ! A. CALOKHWOtJl). ti'. Adel, Oregon n tut mi .May 1H, I'.HKi, made lioniesteail Entry No. ISI'.in, (Serlsl No. OIHWi, , for N hall SE ttirter, NE quarter SW ipiarter, KE quarter NW (piarter, Hection II. Towiinhlp ;7 h. . Hnllge 2.') E., Will Meridian.: has tiled notice of Intention to make Final five yeur Proof, tu establish cIhIiii to the land nbove ilecrilied, before Register und Heceiver, at lakeview, Oregon, on the 2Mb day tf .May. I!'i Clainmant iin-nes as witiipe: N. ; E. Culderwood, Harry Chldersood, , of Ad-I Oregon, James McKee, of Plush, Oregon, Oakley Clark, of War tier Lake, Oregon. ' A2M2tl J. N. Wutsou, Regl .tr. Koilre for I'ultllrat laa I Department f the Interior. U. 8 ' Laud Oltlce at lakeview, Oregou, April 13. r.m. ! Notice is hereby given that Til OS. YOUMJ, of Lakeview. Oregon, who: on June 27, l'.K)3, made HomeHtcud ! Entry No. :)WI, (Serial No 01107), I for Ijots 5. 0. NE quarter SW quarter, ! SW quarter SW quarter. Section 12, Tnwsnhlp 40 H.. Range !'. E , Will. ! Meridian, has filed notice of Intention to make Final five year Proof, to I establish claim to the land above described, before Register and Recei ver, at Lake? lew, Oregon, oo the 21st dav of May, HWJ. Claimant names as witnesses : J sines Voting, John C. Motrin. Alfred Mor ris, and John Noble, all of Lakeview, Oregon. AI5M20 3. N. Watson, Register. Notlct of Sheriff 5al n r closure. Under and by virtue of ail ectillou In foieclonire, lasueil otu the Circuit Cotitt of the stale of Or gnu for I lie County of Lake, on the 22ud day of April, HM, to medl. act ed and iltllveied In a suit In said Court tor said County and State, heteu Oeorge II. Aivm and (ua .Mdilngel, psttners, doing business under the firm name and style of A j ree A Hohlauel. as llsliitllls, "ecovered Juilgmeiil susinst John West In lie, j ns def. iiilant, fot the sum of Eight Hundred Nlnty eight and Hi 1 Itollais KlM. 1I ) and coats Mild dls burseuienls taxed at TwenlV eight Dollsra (r'.'H.oii) n the 2.tid day of October, 1IKW said Judgment l-eur-lug Interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum from sunt October 23rd, I'.HiH, and also a decree to foreclosure ami order of sale huh i list said defend ant, and by direction of id order of said Cotci nod said execution, 1 am coinmuuiled to sell the following des cribed rem pioperly, to It: '1 he South-west Uuurfer of Kicllon Thlrly-fonr, In Township Thirty nine Houth, of Range Twenty two East, of the VMIIumelte Mel Id Ian. In Lake County. Oregon, for the ur pone of sHtlsfy lug said Judgment of (he plalutllfs and the costs and ex-pi-mi' of such shIr. NOTICE IS JI r.KEHY til YEN, That on Friday, the 4th day of Jifie, ltKm, at the Court llouae door ou the front and Eh ft aide of Ihe Cottit house of Iike County, In the Slate of Oregon, situated lu tho town of Lakeview. at the hour of ten o'clock In the fore noon of raid day I, will sell at public auction to the highest tddder lor cash, all the right, title and Interest which the said defendant, John West b.ke. bud ou the 2nd day of Februarv, l'.HCi, In and to the lauds hereinbefore (tenet I bed or so much thereof as may be necessary, to satisfy said Judg ment ami the cos' a nnd expense of making such sabs Dutot this 22nd day of April, ltHHI. ALHKKT DENT, Sheriff. of Lake County, Oregon. Mill! Hy W. H. SNIDER, Deputr. 8ALK OF TIM HER, PORTLAND. Oregou. iprlll, USUI. Sealed bids maiked outside, "Hid, Timber ta Application, April I, UKK, Fremont" nnd addressed to the District Forester, Forest Service, Port land, Oregon, will be lecelvrd up to and luclodlitg thi 22nd day of May, I'.K'.i, tor all or any I art of the merchants! I dea l timber standing or Iohi, ami the lle timber marked for cutting by the Forest tdllcers located on nu urea to be ilclliiitelv drslgusted by the Foiest oltlcers before cutting begiuaof sbiiut 220 seres lu Sec. 10 and II T. 40 H.. li. IS E.. W. M. within the Fremont National Forest, Oregon; ct In iitid to be 2.77d.rH) feet 1. M. Of Wlstrro yellow (due, saw tin her, log scale, more ot less. No bid of less tlso tJ.'.'i er thoiisnuii fi it II. M. for live and (lend timber will be considered and a deposit of tVloo, psyble to the order of I he r irst Nstlouul Itiink of Portland, Oregou, aiusl be sent to that beak for each bid submitted to the District Forester. Tlmler upon valid claims la exempted fiom ss's. TLe right to reject any and all bldij Is reserved, cor further Information and regulations governing sales, add reus (i. M. lugiam, l'orest Buyer visor. Lakeview, Oreiron. r E. T. A 1.1 I v. District I 1 1 der V.H REWARD. A REWARD of lift t dollars la tier by olfered for iuformstlou that sill lead to the arrest aud conviction of nnv teison who lias stolen wires en other property, from our Company and t lie same reward Is hereby offers.. for Information that will lead to tfisl arrest and conviction of auyone iM troyiug the property of the Company, Chas. cnitscn, Secretary Lake Co. Tel. k Tel. &J ltitt Stelu:illoch;clotbiDgat Lakeva Mercantile Co. th-