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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1912)
I SHOE BAR'GAINS WW Shoes at less than cost price are offered to close out broken lines including the Star Brand, Florsheims and Wizard Shoes for men and Star Brand Shoes for women and children. Only from one to four pairs in a lot and if your size is among them you will get the biggest shoe bargain ever offered you Children's Coats Children's Coats from $2 50 to $4 60. worth from $S.OO to $12.00. Boys' Suits Made of the best quality Cassimers ami Cheviots, in dark and medium dark shades. These suits were made t sell for twice the amount we are now offering them and they are guaranteed for satisfactory wear tf 1 and service. Price as low as, a suit H Fresh Cranberries Nevada Flour Creamery Butter M.J.B. Coffee Pure Maple Sap EasternBreakfast Bacon THE OUALITY STORE WBMBlWr!WnMIIIW it fit i' i f a "Apple Day" Monday, November 18, is to be made j for tee northwest ard REGISTRATION OF VOTERS CLOSED " wj vuv. - j everyone is requested to eat at least one apple for Health's sake. Friit growing orcanizbtions eve'ywbere are joining in the agitation for "Apple Day" and ; Lae County Has 772 Re Irom an parts or me racinc voast word come that there will undoubted- , ly be a large consumption of apples nn that dav. Stickers containing the an- j nouncement of Apple Dav will soon be i issued by rortiand interests, and will be given to business houses to put on i every niece of mail sent out. j publicans, 325 D e m o -crats and 88 Socialists ROOSEVELT NOW AT OYSTER BAY Colonel Is Satisfactorily Recovering: from Wound, Physicians Say Colonel Roosevelt who was last week shot by a would-be asMratn. left the Merry hospital, Chicago, Monday of thia week for hia home at Oyster Hay. I he following message under dato of Oct. HI, wa nent out from aboard hia private car at Pittsburg. Pa. : Although Colonel Kuesevelt was weary from hi all-day ride from Chi i ragn to Pittsburg, he showed no other j III i' fleets on hia arrival here tonight, and the physicians whoaie accompany j iig him were conll lent that he would j reach Oyster Hay in almost aa good : condition as when he left Mercy hoa ! pita). Colo tl ItiioMcvult wa taken to I Mercy hospital the night ho whs shot at Milwaukee by John Schrank. Ilia 'condition i weak, b'lt satisfactory, physicians say. i Colonel Ko iscvelt spent the dav in reading magazines, talking and alep-j : ing. Aa booh aa he was brought to . nia car in Chicago he went to bed and ! ! remained there throughout the day. I The colonel was aulferieg irom tier I vou exhaustion a hen he left Chicago : aim he found the motion of the train j mint tiresome. l)r. Alexander Lambert of New York who, with Dr. Scurry L. Terrell of Dallas). Texas, is caring for Colonel Iumwc .elt, said the wound hud bind, some during the d iy, hut thm the' bleeding was merely the result of the i training of the wound ami was un indi-1 cution of the healing pr.ieess. IUillelina were iatued oy the physi-' ciai'S during the day, but they merely reported that the Colonel was resting eay and that h i condition was un- j changed. Aided by the X-ray exainina- tion made yesterday, Dr. Lam ert j ws ante lo determine the exact posi tion of the bullet bv an external ex amination today. He placed a linger on l he precise spot. "'lhe bullet ih imbedded In the ma : jor pectoral muscle," said Dr. Lam bert, "and as the X-ray photograoh Forester Leaves State Mr. Max Kothkugel, who holds a ,lu.mu u,c F.tCn. time r ure.-i , A e Jf u c,se , , ne ,ur,n fih Ass start of the District Forest Office, j ,he ri(ht ,le- wi be a ijnijle Portland. Oregon, was a business viai- matu.r ,() remove the j,unet ater tor at the locsl rremont otlice during! Noted Potato Section Klamath Herald: According to D. E. Burrerr, who is In the city on busi ness, Fort Kock Valley bids fair to develoD into a great potato raiding country. Mr. Burrerr, who owns a farm in the valley, says that one of bis neighbor.- experimented this year in raising po tatoes with such good results (bat next year many others will put in crops. The first crop consisted of five tone, and the quality is said to be excellent. The oad work between Chiloquin and Silver Lake is progressing rapid- ly. "We have almost completed all cf the heavy work," said Mr. Burrerr. "We will be entirely through in. a week or ten days." Tbe registration booka of voters closed last Saturdsy. The total regis tration in Lake county for 1912 ia 1227, of which 772 registered republican,. 325 democratic, 83 socialist, 1 prohibi tionist and 7 refund to answer. The registration by precincts iR as follows: Silver Lake, 115; Summer Lake, 3."j; Paisley, 143: Crooked Creek, H4: North Warrer, 75: South Warner, 57; North Lakeview, 138: South Lake view, 200; Drews Valley, 16; Cooae Lake, 40: Cogswell Creek, 147: Lake, C7: Ft. Kock, 127: Thornhs Creek, ."10. the past week. Mr. Kothkugel expects to leave ahortly tor the Argentine Ke oublic, South America, where he has accepted a postilion aa Aefcistant For ester of that country at a salary of S1000 per annum. Mr. Rothukgel has had considerable experience in Fores try nd although his departure from this country is regretted, it ia realized that bis new position is a much better one with a correspondingly higher salary. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE EXAMINER SufferaG Meeting ! Next Tuesday evening Judge Henry L. Benson and Dr. B. Daly will ad-' dress tie citizei.s of Lakeview at the court house on the subject cf Woman Sufferage. Considerable local interest ! has been manifested in the insue this election and no doubt these able ora- i tors will te gretted by a large audi ence. A Freak Curio C. E. Trink who is farming the John Flynn place on Cottonwood west ot Lakeview, is exhibiting a four leg ged chicken that was recently hatched at bi-i pou try yard. Aside from the two normal extremities the excess legs protrude from under either wing I myself, have sons i of the freak bird. It lived about two days, and when molested wuuld move two legs at a time. Mr. Trink has placed the specimen in a preservative and will keep it for exhibition purposes. The singularity of this curio would make it worthy ot tpace in any of the dime museums. should Colorel Roosevelt wish it." There ia little doubt in Dr. Lam bert's mind that Colonel Koosevelt would be well rnocgh to address the campaign rally planned for Madison Square garden on October 30. The colonel is traveling to Oyster Bay on tne privxte car Ideal, the car on which President Taft made his two month's tour last year. Me is guarded bv two private detectives. Colonel Roosevelt is due in New York at 8:08 a m. tomorrow. Hia car will be taken direct to Oyutcr Kay and before; 10 o'clock the colonel will prob ably be in bed at Sagamore Hill. HAVE YOU VISITED THE BUSY PLACE YET? Eilers Music House which is the largest musical institution on the Coast has a music store in Lakeview. This Store DOES NOT KEEP PIANOS, very long at a time, because the call is so great for pood pianos that IT SELLS THEM. The first carload of Pianos brought here to Lakeview is nearly all sold and have wired for morfc to meet the demand. Don't fail to get acquainted with these in struments. See them in the Store, in the Homes, in the High School. The aim of this firm is to satisfy. Once a customer always a customer. City Superintendent O. M. Gardner of the Lake view High School has bought 9 pianos of this firm and has only words of appreciation for quality, prices and terms. Prices are very reasonable and terms are made to suit every one. CORNER CANYON AND DEWKY STREETS C. O. ROE - - MANAGER a'id that of itself. 10 some extent, la punishment. I think you have had a lesson burned into your minds and hearts, to auch an extent thnt you will take no other foolish chances of thai sort. lhe case of Uuchanan vs. iiiichnnan was dismissed for want of prosecution. ; costs. lury was discharged Tuesi'ay and no true bills were returned. In the cae of Pot it va. Chcwaucan Land ft Cuttle Co., over the deputed number of torn of hay stacked by plaintiff, the suit was dismissed upon motion of plaintiff who i to stand CIRCUIT COURT SESSION CnntiMi d 'frn firtt linn fad a w t 'fcf! to be equal to any Beer brewed. Bot tled and on draught at all leading saloons 7! I? Reno Brewing Co. Inc. Visits Richmohd T. H. Cloud, of the Froat Kandy Kitchen last week made a hurried busi ness trip to San Francisco to purcbaae his holiday fc'kida. While away he alao visited the growing oil town of Hichmund, Calif., where he held two lots. He listed hi9 property for Bale while there and the transaction was mane before he returned home, with a net profit of 100 per cent on a two year's investment. Mr. Cloud hia the agency for lota in Wall's Second Addi tion to Richmond and feela very en thusiastic over the futnre of the town for an inveament. He aays the second addition haa aa good opportunity aa the first, and will further invest in property there. High School Notes The teachers had a pleasant meeting last Tuesday evening. A set of supplementary readers have been furnished in the fourth grade. Splendid maps have been furnished in all rooms needing them. Mrs. White, the sixth grade teacher was ill Wednesday and her place was supplied by Margie Bernard, who is taking teacher's training work. Supt. O. M. Gardner and Prin. F, E. Dunton went to Palaley laBt Satur day on their motor cycle where tbey attended a teachers meeting and made addresses" in the evening. George NelHon, of the West Side, one of the trial jurors Tuesday receiv ed word that one of his bovs was vary ill. He hired a horse and went out home, and after finding the child im proved, returned In time for tervice the following morning. - ler thnn either of you, and I appreciate the fact that a young man, in a moment of weakness, or follv, can do a verv cross wror.f, and yet he U not lost to society, aa a good citi.en, if he haa a spark of manho-jd left in him. 1 am confident that you possess that innate manhood in you, and that you will make gjod citizenH, and succeed in burying the history of this one wrong in a life of honor and respectable conduct. The parole, aa I will explain to you now, will be up n these condition! : The first, (that governs all paroles,) pro vides that V')U Hhall conduct yourself in a liiw-atudini; manner, and you can not violate any law without having this parole evoked; you cannot violate any of the conditiona ot the parole without having it revoked. And, the sheriff of thia county can follow you into any part of the Unite 1 States and bring vou back, and if you go wrong again, all the months or years that have elapsed in which you have been good, wilt not count upon your senten ce, and yoi will have to serve the whole sentence even then, whenever this parole U revoked ; but, aa long as you regard the conditions of the parole, you are as free as any other citizen. 1 shall expect you to report to me, either in person or letter, every thirty days; tell me where you are, what your post office addreas is, what your occupation ia, and how vou are behaving. Whe ther you are with your family, or some where else. I must know as to veur whereabouts and your conduct, witb the same anxiety that I would one of my own children, and that is one. of the conditions of the parole that you must not fail at any time to report to me. either in person or by letter a letter from each of you every month will be satisfactory, but give me full details each'month as though you had never made any report before. "JIaving said this, I think I have said all that I intended to say, except I have considered also the fact that you have already been imprisoned in the eounty jail something like two months, L. (.1. Ihnmaa et al. vs. K. C. Iliruston, water suit, application to Me amended answer allowed. Albert Dent vh. C. K Kice, foreclos ure. Sale of propcity conlirmed. C. C Duncano vs Alma jodahl et al., foreclosure Pluintilf re.-iivers. Tne old grand iury completed itn investigations triday and nicuhera dismissed after returning two John Due indictments. The regular October term of court convened Monday, with the following assembled grand iury: J. A, Pond, foreman, J. W. O'Neil, W. M. Paxton, C. S. Heneficl, Nel. Calderwood, S. P. Dicks, and Nate Wilcox. The grand U. Prlne. of Metoliua, Crook county, who has been held in the county iail on a cnarge ol larceny ot homes by bailee, was released from ruatody, the prose cutlnj; witnesj failing to appear. Tuesday and Wednesday were spent in trial of the ease of T. J. Sullivan va. The Warner Valley Mercantile Co. This was a ease to recover the value of merchandise lust in the New Pine Creek fire about one year ago. The Mercantile Co. freight team was haul ing the goods and the plaintiff claimed that they t' us become common carriers. The iury whs out but a few mltiulei when they decided hat lhe defendant was nut liuhle for the Iokh. VOTER ATTENTION One- ol' the gmi test questions to be de-iiled by the voters of Lake County at the coining election is the High School Fund Xot the old County Hih School Uw, but a law that tfives to all parts of the county a square deal. This law five's to the farmer's boy or iirl an equal chance with the city children. The law does not provide for building orexpensiveap paratus, to be paid for at the expense of the taxpayer, but simply provides free tuition to pupils who have passed from the eighth grade schools. A light tax of aboia V of a mill, which means 25c on $1000 of property would pay the tuition this year of every High School student in Lake County. This law equalizes taxation and provides lor high school work in various parts of the county. Other states have tried this law and find it just what they want. Seven counties of Oregon are now usinj; this law and their systems are the best in the Suite. Now. Mr. Voter, For the good of Lake County, For the good of civilization, For the good of our boys and girls, vote for the HIGH SCHOOL FUND. YES'. L. R. AhJcrmnn, Stale Superintendent. J- Q- Wilils. County Superintendent, O. M, Gardner, Supt. Lakeview Schools.