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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 1913)
Town Property :KMK).Oil ' For a fins new 30-rnom hoaae with large lot, 75x125, cIoha to center of town und High Heboid. Koay term. t'.VWKMiO For (Trunin new luinuulow, an Ideal up-to-dato home, clow to center of town oo Bernard Htrvet. Kaay term. " Yucant I-olt on Hiim Htraet at a bargain. flSuO.OO For n new 4 room bouse and. wood ahed, lot 60 x 113, good location, fcaay truiN, ItOAO.OO For tin tip-to-dat new bangalow, In cholos reeldrnre part the city. Kimy terms. "Wo Soli Tho Real Earth" O'NEILL & DUNLAP GENERAL REAL ESTATE Lakeview : Oregon More Bargain Just received, for quick sale, tome of the best Valley Land at the following bargains, riz., $12.50 per acre: AO Acre la HectlonJlO, Townabfp 39, Range 19 320 22, 39, It At S12.50 80 " " 2a, " 39, " 19 240 28, 39. y 19 PCT ACTO 160 " " 29. " 08, " 19 Xaftc County Eramtncr TIIUUHIJAY. .IAMJAKY 3. II3. BRIEF MENTION Write It 191S. KiiIiiIim luadn Lakeview (film him. Tho lucal merchants are now buty in ventoring their stocks. Found, tuitcane. For furtlitr Infor mutton. npply ,lt thin ofllee. tf John Flynn and Irvln (Jarrett this' week left on a ahort trip to Han Fran cisco, ' Liquor license fees In Pcnd have been rained from SHOO a year to llfiOO payable semi-annually. I I'rlndpal Kichards of the New Fine j Creek arhonla - waa a huaineas visitor j In Lakeview Saturday. Mr. Eva Kirc, sinter of Mra. Jamus Judge, waa up lant wrck from J tune Valley, Mo luc county, visiting rela-: tivea and friend. Michael I'. Harry, the Guano Valley: rancher and stockman, was In town the forepart of thin week attending to niattera of buBiness. ' Secretary or State Hen W. Olcolt and Miaa Lena Mutton were married Chrlatems day at Salem. Mra. Olt-ott ; la a sister of Mrs. West, wife nf L!ov-1 ernor Oawald Went. ! If you desire good freith candles the; famotia Pouter & Urear Candies can j I had at Thornton'a Drug Store. It' vou II try them once you'll amack your ' lipa and you'll come again. j Ranch for nab lito acrea on Cfiuin ' I'rairln. I.VX) cords wood; k"' xl j hearing corrala; lariv Iioune, burn mid out building, Addrcaa Aoxa Mcllshti-ls, lakeview, Oregon. A2U Gordon Kobertann. local reprenenta-' live of the Reno Brewing Company la suffering from a quite seriuu apell of rheumatiiim. He la now taking treat-; ment at the mineral springs bath houae. ! Stanfield Thompaon, the Weat Side rancher, waa plcaaantly aurpriaeil laat week to receive a viait from hi mother and sinter, whose home la in Ely, Nevada. Mr. Thnmaon haa a leaae on the Stevcna ranch. j Register A. W. Orton of the II. S. j Land Office haa reiiumvd his duties af-j ter a couple of week leave of absence, during which time he superintended the moving; of the o 111 re into the new quar- ' tera in the I It ry ford building. j Foatmaater Ahlirom informs us that the fir lit parcel post package to be sent out came in atamped with eight cents in postage atampa which were void as it ia mandatory under the new law that ' parcels stamps be used. This is a point- j er that the public must remember. j Rev. U. T. Morgan, pastor of the ; Presbyterian Church ia confined to his' bed with an attack of Inflsmatorv rheu matism. Owing to his illness no ser vices were helm Sunday in the local pulpit, lie ia under the care of Dr. li. Daly and is reported improving. j Revenge, it is reportod, prompted a ! man by the name of George Gowen to dynamite the Beck home laat week In Klamath Kails, and as a result of a i premature explosion of the powder the j would-be murderer received injuries 1 from which he died a few hours after. Thu United States Land Office I now located in ita new quarters in the ! ileryforu Hroe. building, immediately over the postotllce. The entrance, ia on Main street, next to the posture. i The quarters are very commodious and have been arranged especially for the j otfke. Sam Bailey had auite a serious ex periment laat week when he mistook a j turpentine bottle for bayrum and j poured a goodly portion of ita contents : upon his head. The turpentine poisoned him fearfully and it too1 several days and the aid of a physician to fully re cover from the efTeota. The New Year waa uahered in at Lakeview with a bright aun Wednea day morning. The snow in the valley ia from three to four inches deeD. The 1 atmusphere remains clear and crisp and indications are favorable for ty pi- cal Winter weather which is welcomed I by those who are engaged in their an- nual he jharveat. Send Bulletin: J. E. Sawhill, sec-j retary of the Central Oregon Develop- j ment League, who has been attending the land shows at Minneupolia and , Chicago In the Interests of Oregon, 're turned to Rend Sunday night. He says that the shows were a great success, that Oregon gut the lion's share of at tention and that next aprlng will sea a larger migration of Easterners to this state, and especially to Central Oregon, than haa come any previous season. Rainier beer on (Ira light at the Inn. C. W. Dent Is over from Warner Valley. Rainier on dratigth or in hottb'M nl the Hrewery. 2t Famous mld-wlnb-r tour of thi world, watch for later announce menta. It ia announced that the i'ernly I.aa on road will be completed to Suaanvllie by June. County Commissioner F. E Ander son is down from his home at Fort Rock attending County Court. Mr. and Mra. II. W. Drenkel thia morning left for San Francisco where thy will remain about a month. A, very dollKhtful watch party waa held New Yean' eve by the Rebekaha In the I. O.O F. hall at which a large crowd waa in attendance. Si Henderson came over last week from Coleman valley where his sheep are being wintered. He rrno-ts thst his stock la in lairly good condition. Chaa. Dunlap, the local buBi eaa man, ia digging a well on bia houae lot in Drenkcl'a addition just south of the High School. The water secured will be used to irrigate hia garden. Cedarvlle Record: Lou MsCullev left last week for Santa Rosa, on a vimt to hia brother Tom, who haa been at that place for seversl months, and who we undertand ia Improving. Little Misa Mary Conn, daughter ot Attorney and Mr. L. F. Conn, is the proud possessor ot the large dull that waa drawn by the lucky number at the Cloud Kandy Kitchen during the Christ mas season. The old Chinese cuatom of observing their New Years beginning with our calcnnar date, February 6, ia being changed to the American cuatom, both in the United Statea and the Orient, January 1st. Al I'alzer met defeat in the 18th round with Luther McCarthy New Yeara day in Kenu. On the assumption that Johnson has been eliminated from the lighting game, McCarthy is now pro claimed the heavyweight champion. San Francisco On Christmas eve at Lotta'a Fountain burned a giant ham mer, before a large gathering, to sym bolize the end of petty contention and criticism . Now let each of us follow the example by burning a little ham mer. Assistant Forester Norman Jacobson and Ranger Pearl Ingram of the Fre mont National Forest laat week return ed from the Flush country where tbey had been the past few weeka doing re eonnaisance work and incidentally some trapping. The N.-C.-O. Railway ha issued a new time table showing the change of the southbound leaving Lakeview at 7:05 in the morning instead of 0:45, which went into effect New Years morning. No change haa been made in the arrival of trains from the south. As a result of the dynamite conspi racy trisl that has been in progress the past three montha at Indianapolis thirty eight labor union oinciala have been found guilty of complicity in the MoNamara dynamite plots, including the wrecking of the Los Angeles 'limes building. Fifty dollars is being offered by the Fort'and, Eugene & Eastern Railway, probably the largest electrical enter prise in the United States, for the most suitable "nickname" to be applied to it, the competition to be state-wide. "Webfoot Route" is muun supported and opposed. Having made mention a few weeks ago of the completion of the Oregon Almanac the Examiner haa received requeata from extern subscribers for copies of the book. The almunae was compiled and issued bv C. C. Chapman, state immigration agent, 1'ortland, Oregon, and requests for copies should be addressed to him. lien Daly waa the first to take ad vantage of tho new parcel post lawt Lakeview, he having sent a parcel weighing 43 ounces to Delaine, a iiew postofflce In eastern Lake County. It coat him just 11 cents to have the pack age transmitted whereas it would have cost him 43 cents under the old regula tion. An exciting runaway ocourred Mon dsy morning nut when a team telong iiiir to the Mammoth Stablea started from the vicinity of the new lleryford building, round the First National bank corner and went tearing up Water atreet toward the stables. Several teams were on the atreet at the time and it ia a wonder to all who saw the excitement that neither people, animals nor gigs were injured. Rainier on drauKth at the Hotel bar. M. B. Boawortb a borse buyer of San Francisco is registered at the Hotel Lakeview. F. Dean Bradley, of the Bradley Engineering Co., was up Saturday from Falrport. Frank Dobkina adminiatrator of the eatate of the lata James Msrtin. is down from Fsisley. 0. T. Anderson and wife of Bly Sst urdsy came over to Lakeview and left on Monday's train for California. F. A. Fitzpatrick. auperintendent of the ZX ranches, Tuesday .came down from hia Cnewaucan headquarters. Dr. E. D. Everett was last week rslled out to Vallev Falls to attend the little child of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hotchkiss. Lakeview Lodge I.O.O.F. No. 63 Ssturdiiy night initiated two new mem bers intn the mysteries of the initla to.y degree. While making your New Yeara reso lutions resolve thst you are going to buy your drugs from Snyder. & Rey nolds. They appreciate your patron age. The expensea of the Roosevelt Com mittee during the last Presidential camnaign, according to fig urea tiled with thu secretary of New York atate, were C41,780. The Examiner is in receiptor a copv of the Portlsnd Telegram'a Handy Al manac, Encyclopedia and Atlaa for in teresting information and data of the atate, beaidea the yearly almanac. Now that the holidaya are over and resolutions made, and maybe some bro ken, we can look forward to a year of much activity and development for Lakeview and the Goose Lake Valley. A new typewiting record waa made aome weeka ago in New York city by Miss Florence E. Wilson, who wrote 171 words a minute, thereby winning the World'a Typewriter Speed Cham pionship, t A. D. and L. D. Frakes, residents of the lower Warner country, were in town for several days this week. They ex pected to go from here to Bidwell to look for some horses belonging to them on the tange. Gga Uhde last week made final three year proof on hia homestead on 'Cot tonwood before the U. S. land office is witnesses were Clarence D. Lake, Monse Curry, Charlea B. Mellott and George "Stevens. Mr. and Mrs. Michael M. Barry, now residents of Plush, were guests of lo cal friends over Nw Years. Mr. Barry ia in business at Plush, while Mrs. Barry, who was formerly Miss Laura Snelling, ia teaching the school at thst place. Aside from the numerous watch par ties thst were held Tuesday night in Lakeview, an all night dance waa given at the Snider Opera House. Before midnight it waa conducted on the leap year atyle and the ladies had charge of the floor. The Harney County News last 'week containa announcement of the birth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs. Chaa. M. Faulkner, at their borne in Burns, De cember 17. Mrs. Faulkner ia a daugh ter of Mr. and Mra. V. L. Snelling, of Fairport. Not including the assessments that are made by the atate board of tax commissioners, the assessed valuation of Uregon for 1912 is S793.095.181, or an increase of nearly 39,000,000 over last year. Lake county's valuation is given at SS,G31,654, or $272,355 more than in 1911. Punderson Avery, an Oregon pioneer of 1847. died December 23 of pneu monia in Los Angeles. He was a bro ther of Mrs. Florence Jones of Paisley and an uncle of Mra. W. B. Snider of Lakoview. For aeveral yeara he was a cattle grower on an extensive scale in the Chewaucan valley. ' The regular meeting mgbt of the Local Chapter Eastern Star came on Tuesday night, New Years eve, an oc currence that haa never before happen ed in the hTstory of the Lakeview lodge. The members met with a number of Maaona and an enjoyable watch party was held. A light luncheon was served and a very pleasant evening spent. The parcel post guide and directory received by the local postofflce clearly seta forth the various zones and rates for sending packages to any part of the United States. The directions show that the system has been worked down to a scientific basis and can te readily determined by anyone. The guide, and map can be bought for 75 cents by placing the order with Postmaster Ahlatrom. John Ward came In Saturday Iron) bia homestead on the Weat Side. Mrs. John McCully, of the West Side, was one of Isst week's local visitors. Apnrnpriste New Yesr'a seivices were held Wednesdsy morning in the Catholic church. Mra. Auguata Rschford of Alturss dided laat week at the age of 76. She was the mother of R. L. Sloaa of that place. State School Superintendent L. R. ! Alderman has received an invitation to deliver addresses on the Oregon school system before the Boston City Club and the Ford Hall Club at Bos ton, Mass., March 1 and 2. If he ac cepta the invitation it is to be hoped that he will return with a better opin ion of the eastern country than was formed b Mr. Winahip of the west when he was here last Summer. A very pleasant Leap Year party was given Monday evening at the home of Mies Emma Arzner. about thirty aix local young people being present on the occasion. Each of the young ladies j were obliged to go to the home or her gentleman friend and escort bira to the party, see that he had a good time while there and that he reached home safe and aourid after it waa all over. It ia needless to say that everyone pres ent had a good ime. 1 On"' Thursday evening next the Ancient Order of United Workmen will have a ioint installation in the MaBonic hall with the Degree of Honor ladies' auxiliary. A pcogram, to include sup per, is being planned for the occasion, ; although nothing definite has as yet been decided upon. All membera of both lodges have been requested to be , present with their families on that evening, and it ia expected that quite a number will respond to the invitation and attend. Christopher Evans, the noted Calif ornia desperado who operated witn John Sontag in the mountains of California 20 years ago, and who la now out on parole given him by Governor Johi.son of that atate, baa appealed to Gover nor West of Oregon to ask the gover nor to aid him in securing a full par don from the California Governor. Evana ia not only weighed down by yeara but balf blind, having lost one eye and an arm in bis last battle with officers when bis arrest was made. His partner Sontag was killed in the light. Doe and Mrs. Berry. Mrs. N. Wingbeld expects to leave with her daughters soon for bcr borne in San Diego, ,Cal. ;W regret (very much to have them leave our midst. Last Thursdsy at 7:30 a. m. Dec. 26, 1912, David Wortbintgon an old pioneer and citizen paaaed quietly away. He bad beenaick only a abort time of pneo n onia and death came .as quit a bock to everyone. He was a member of tb Baptist Cburcb. Rev. L. Henderson conducting . the f funeral service after which irterroent waa made in New Pine Creea eemetry. Tbe)deceased leaves a bust of relatives and friends to mourn bis loss. NEW PINE CREEK ITEMS (Ry Stuff Correspondent) Tnere waa a grand ball at Wendt's Hall New Yeara eve. Mies Nita Reid is entertaining friends from Surpriae valley. Miss Simmons spent the holidays with relatives in Lakeview. The dining room of the High Grade Hotel has opened up again. After two weeks vacation the teach ers have taken up their schoel work again. Mr. and Mrr. Albert Griffith enter tained Mr. Jaa. Atkinson at dinner Xroas. Mrs. Geo. Hamroeraley has been suf fering with a very severe attack of tooth ache. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Freeman enter tained friends Christmas with a sum ptuous dinner. Miss Cora Berry left tor Davis Creek Monday to resume her duties as teacher in the school there. The public ChriBtmas tree given at the Opera House waa splendid and a large crowd attended. Mrs. Lura Cloud and Oddessa Gib bins of Lakeview spent Monaav in New Pine Creek, visiting relation. Mr. Maiean spent a couple of days last week with his family. He ia em ployed in a factory at Keno, Nev. Mayor Keller and son, Richard lett for Santa Rosa, Cal., last Monday to spend the holidays witn bia family. Mias Spargur and niece Miss Hulse returned Saturday evening from a viait with relatives and friends in Reno, Nev Mr. and Mrs. Al Gallagher enter tained a number ot relativea at Xmas dinner and a very enjoyable time was had. Frank Griffith returned from Lake view Tuesday where he bad been help ing Mr. Cloud in bis confectionery store. Ed and Hayea Mulkey came up from Alturaa, Cal., to attend their Uncle'a funeral, David Worthington, last Fri day, Dec. 26. Mra. Bessie Briles, Mrs. Fanny Guillaroa, Mr. and Mra. Oliver Berry spent the holidays with their parents While They Last TjTOne, two and four JJ buckle Overshoes, "German Sox and Rubbers. Also Felt Boots and Heavy Rubbers at greatly Reduced Prices. CALL AND SEE BRITTEN & ERICKSON til B2k A Picture of Contentment All men look pleased when they smoke this choice tobacco for all men like the rich quality and true, natural flavor of ei m..0iA Wish 1 i Smoked in pipes by thousands of men everywhere known to cigarette smokers as "the makings." We take unusual pride in Ijgg'tt &f Mpert Duke's Mixture. It is our leading brand of granulated tobacco and every sack we make is a challenge to all other tobacco manufacturers. Every 5c sack of this famous tobacco contains one and a half ounces of choice granulated tobacco, in every way equal to tbe hett you cao buy at any price, and with each aack you get a book of cigarette papers FREE. 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