FEBRUARY OFFERINGS ,owest S)WITH our feHJ remainder of our Left-Overs are priced with the object of selling out the entire broken lines. Remember, too, that when we sell you something worth $2.00 for One Dollar You Save One Dollar of Real Money. The Spring and Tailor Line is on display. We respectfully so licit your order. Suits from $16 to $30 delivered TOURISTS HAVE ENJOYABLE TIME Novelty Journey Proves of Great Interest to Happy Travelers The trip around tbe world last Friday evening was the social even of tbe season is tbe verdict of all. A perfect night favored a perfectly carried out plan. By special request of tbe Methodist Ladies' Aid tbe weather pro ided f r tbe trip was absolutely perfect, tnJ when the hour for departure 7 pm. came tbe waitirg room (Clouds Candy Kitchei) and the platform was crowd ed with esger excursionists, and ticket agent Wil ox, and train despatcber Striplin witb bis assistant Leonard, experienced men at the bnsiness. found themselves taxed to tbe limit to hara'e the crowd.. Tne first tra n loaded to the guards left on the dot, and the condition of the track being perfect, arrived in Mexico City (Mrs Newell's) on time and Mrs 0. M. Gardner punch ed all tbe tickets not the passengers. After seeing tbe sights and eating tbe "hot st iff, " all aboard was called an 1 the jolly crow 1 started for Japan (Mrs Uracach'e) and the vovage was made (o the flower kingiom witho t a mishap. It would be impossible to I describe the glories of the Court. ! Everyone enjoyed the singing of the little Jap a d were enteitained with! the gracef j1 courtiesies cf tie host an i ' hostess, even if it was hard to tell which was which. After a short stay the enchanted visitors reluctantly tore themselves away and set sail for Hoi- j land (Mrs. W. R. Bernard's). As the shores of the land of windmills, dykes mux mm r v mmmm I lf-V- ; J2jr JP ? 42" V - Si GUARANTEED to be equal to any Beer brewed. Bot tled and on draught at all leading saloons t , 4 X R.eno Brewing Co. Inc. 1 Possible Prices present offerings of . . aise you gam advantages 01 great saving. The reductions made by other stores, as a rule, only meet our regular cash prices. The to you. Chicago prices prevail here. and pretty girls witb wooden shoes' came in view it was an effort to res train the eager passengers from leap-1 ing into the sea and swimming ashore. Hfre the noted Dutch scholar, Prof. O. M. Cariner and the gifted song ar tists saw that all were properly done the stunt not the visitors. With great anticipations, whijn were not disap P'lrted, the trip to Ireland (Miss Rice's) was begun and as tbe Liner neued tbe Emerald Isle iie company's mirth was at the boiling point. Genuine OJld Irish w t and hospitality bubbled , over. One of the chief attractions outside of the pretty lr sh girls was a visit to Blarney Castle and if some of our citizens are a little more gifted in tbat line you know the reason. It was fitting that from this point tbe trip boaii to America (Mrs. W. P. Herv ford'b) should beign, after a perfect voyage thrs pleaded tourists reached the shore'' of their own U.S.A. A glad welcome aaited them in the person ot sucti celebrities as Miss Liberty, Miss Pocahontas, Geo. and Martha Washington, and your old standby Lncle kam. the progress of our! country was displayed. The repast, good music and the hospitality of those in charge nude it hard to leave and mary lirg red to a late or early hour before departing to different sections ' of the land. i The La ties' Aid and those assisting deserve great credit for this splendid I social treat. Tbe receipts from the j tickets netted over $1 in, A ttorney General Crawford has re versed his former interpretation of the home rule amendment and recently ren dered an opinion to tbe effect that home rule elections cannot legally be held excepting the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November of any year. Previously he held that such elect ions could be held at the time of any regular city election. ' j ') 'J",l't" s 111 ", '.ay.' J 'J-F' ffiit mm 7f Winter Merchan- . r x QUALITY WOOL MARKET IS AT A STANDSTILL Not a Pound of 1913 Crop Yet Oontracted In Oregon In regard to the wool situation the Oregonian gives the following: So far as can be learned not a single pound of 1913 wool has been bought in Uiegon or, contract to date. There was a rumor of some business having been done at Baker in wool on the sheep's back, but Investigation failed to confirm it. Buyers in this state 'rep resenting eastern houses have received no instructions to enter on contracts and they d) not look for any. With the tariff situations uncertain, it is prob able that all buying will be deferred until the wool has been sheared. The same conditions are likely to pre vail in other parts of the West. "Efforts thus far to contract in the vVest have proved futile, owing to the refusal of the growers to accept what are'eonaidered as fair prices l.y buyers j from the East," Bays tbe Boston Tran- script "Many houses have men in the j West, some on their usual trips at this season, and others looking tne field over, posHibly to see what ciin be done i in securing individual clips before 'shearing time. Shearing is just begin ning in Arizona, but nothing is report ed us sold. "In regard to the report that Ohio farmers hud been getting rid of their sheep, in "anticipation of a radical change in the tariff h reperscntative of one leading picking house says that a big movement of this kind in the late Fall and early Winter has about 'petered out.' Western farmers re member very keenly tne sudden droping sneep values which followed the pas sage of the Wilson bill. The recent shipment of sheep to stockyard centers was merely a pre autionary effort to avoid larger losses in the future." Conditions in tbe Eastern market are reported by the Boston Com mercial Bulletin as follows: "With so many unfavorable circumstances at tendant upon the wool market at the moment, it is not Btrange perhaps tbat there is only a sluggiBh movement in wool. Indeed, it would he strange if there were any marked activity. Notwithstanding this state of affairs, there is nut much pessimism apparent so far as the immediate future is con cerned and from the present attitude of manufacturers, dealers are not lacking who express It as their hrm conviction that an active market will be in evidence again within a month. "Prices have shown little or no change within the past week. There has been the usual clean-up of odd lots, which nave brought various prices and which are hardly ouotable anyway, but wools of good description have com manded pr ces equal to those of a week ago. Dealers state demand is not lack king for good wools, but that it is yet possible to move stocks at the prices some holders want." Several hundred scrs of limber land a few miles west of Paisley was bought last week by Messrs. Kubic and Love Lint. The ChewaucMn lnaiay8 iheje gentlemen will immediately begin the erection of a 30,000 capacity saw mill on tbe property. NEW BILLS INTRODUCED Continual from flint pagf 11. H. SST, by Carpenter To regulate moving picture shows in wooden buildings. 11. R. .141, ty banking committee To permit bsnks tu borrow for temporary purposes, not to exceed capital paid In and surplus, pledging assets as se curity. t 1 II. B. 357. by' Cerkln-Provldlng all judges, district and prosecuting attorneys must be edmitted to practice flaw. II. l 858. by Csrkln Providing that Justice ot the Peace must be admitted to practice lew. II. H. 362. by Ilinle. To provide free education for blind. 11. B. 363. by llinkle. Kclstlng to code of civil procedure. j 11. It. bv llinkle. To abolish Ksstorn ' Oregon normal school at Weston, Or. I 11. B. 392, bv Ilowsrd-Msklng I it special duty of certain officers to' prosecute violations of local option law. II. 11. 80S, by Latourette To abolish office of county fudge. H. li. 401, by Latourette To require fire drills In schools. 11. B. 406. bv Abbott Repealing flat salary for State Printer. II. K. 42, by committee on exposi tions and fairs To authorise holding of conuty fairs. Bills introduced In Senate : 8. B. 159,bv Joseph Requiring min ister or priest who solemnizes mar riages to file evidence of his suthority with the secretary of state. S. B. 162. by r.rrell-Making it in valid to assign wages of less than to married man without written con sent of hia wife. S. B. 165, by Bean-Exempting all; fair erounds and utouertv of talr as-1 sociatiens from taxation. S. B 171, by Thompson Kesloring Repliubcan party to representation on election boards. One Year Certificates At the Oeremt'rr examination of teachers the follow icg named persons were granted one yetr certificates: j Summer Lake: Frank A. Everett! and Nell Benjamin : Silver Lake:! Albert Atendrath. C. II. Milam, j (ier.rude Krizzel; 1'ort Ruck : Jewell K. Todd, Nellie Pattison: New Pine I Creek: Laura A. Simmons: Lake view ; Edna Moore. High School Fund Following are the rulings of the State Board of Education to get iho t eiictit j of the County High School Fund: I 1. At lea-it eignt month of school i must be maintained each year. 2. No one-room school teaching grades below the seventh shall draw fr in the county high school fund. 3. Recitation shall average at least thirty minutes each in length, and in cI.ihhps of mure than ten pupils the recitations shall avreagc at least forty minutes In length. 4. All pupils must have at least four recitations per dav. I It is also moved un i carried that the Superintendent of Public Instruction be requested to include the subject of agriculture in the branches required for examination for an eighth gride diploma, provided thut this subject ( shall not te required prior to the regul ar examination in Muy 19i3. At the first session this meanure failed to1 carry, but wan resconsidcred, and later I adopted. L.R. ALMEKMAN, Supt. Public Instruction. Mrs. Marion Yount Dead Mrs. Yount died January 29 In Saw- telle. Cal. from the effects of a stroke I of paralysis. The docea'-nd lady was a j former citizen or this valley, she being ; the mother of (Jeorge and Harry 1 Yount of Lakevie. Besides these two ! Bona she leaves to mourn her death a hu-bandand two daughters, Mrs. Jesne : Webb! of Stockton, Cal. and Mrs. Z. Ballard, of Salern, Oregon. Mrs. Yount ' with her husband have been residing j at Talent, Oregon but had gone to Sawtclle to spend the Winter. Stock Shipments The big stockmen of this vallev have just started to ship out the vast amount of cattle and sheep which they have been feedm here lor the past I several months, says the Merrill It-1 cord. Louis Uerbcr took 100 beef cattle and , 1300 mutton sheep to Klamath Falls this, morning to bo shipped to Sacramento. ' Bloomingcamp and Borrows sent 2 j cars of sheep to Midland to be shipped! to Johnson & Son of Sjn Francisco. , They and the Gerher stock will make a train of 20 cars and will be run on a ! special train Saturday to their desti nation. , I Interstate Bridge A strong; demonstration has been : made in favor nf the proposed interc alate bridge between Oregon and Wash ington, crossing the Columbia River at Vancouver. Joint committees from the two state Legislatures went over the site chosen for the structure end looked cim lully into the merits of the prr jei l. Al u later meeting in Portia id, attended by u.tizu.s nf both stdirs, .trng sup port was routed fur the biiiigc and it seems likely the plan will be accom- Ipliabed. 13 CHAPTERS ADDED Continued froifi flrat page should set ss County Clerks. II. M. 17, by Csmpbtill-Kepesling sections rsistlng to time terms of cer tain officers commence. II. U. 41, by lifw.lllng-Abolishlng tbe office of Stsle Land Agent. II. B. 47, by llelttel Providing for the manner of executing the sstirfac tion of mortgsge. II. B. 84, by llinkle Relating to el iminating Indebtedness of Irrigation districts. H. B. 91. by llinkle Relating to decrees of divorce. II. II. 126. by Mann Relstlng to reglstrstion lists of automobiles by County Clerks. II. B. 145, by MoAHMir-KHatlng to crimes against nature. ' II. It. 104, by (5111 - Repealing sec tions resiling to binding children ss apprentices. II. B. lift, - by committee on revision of laws To repeal sections of code pro viding for westher snvlce. H. B. '-IK), by commilics on revision ot laws Regaling s.ctions relating to spproprla tlon snd condemnation of land. , This record of 13 bil's pssslng both Houses snd receiving th signature of th Governor within the first three weeks of the session Is a reenrd-brcsk-er. So fsr there hss been no veto mes sage coming from the executive office, the majority ot the bills going into t)ioc olllcers being bills repealing obsoleto sections of the rode. In the house the tntnl number of bills presented Is 433, wnere two hsve been voted down, 13 have been withdrawn and 16 indefinitely postponed, in ad dition to the fit'i that hsve panned, in tte senate 10 bills have Deen defeated on ro'l rail, eight withdrawn, Yi indefi nitely postponed, and 42 passed, out of 210 It troduced. Half ot the session is over, un'ess the legislator of 1913 sro more pstrio tic than usual snd insixt upon stsying longer than the 40 ilsys for which they re psid. 'Ihe40dsys will expire Feb ruary 21 on a Friday. Usually there Ih su-h a rush at the last that the sess ion runs on over Saturday and into the following Sunday morning. I'c spite the gnod start mn lc, the, groat hulk of work is to bo done In the re maining half of the session. Moth houses have agreed tu forbid the introduction of bills after the twenty fifth diiy of the session, except upon consent of three fourths of the body In which a bill is offered. Thin may or rriHV not prove to be an etfective bur to new bills in the last dnys. All will depend upon how far the members will all iw "courtesy" to govern them in allowing the introduction of each other's bills Tplay, February 6, concludes the twenty fifth day of the session. Pass Eighth Grade The successful applicant at the Eignth (Jrado Kxaminiitinn recently helil in districts thHt bad clahca resdy to take the llnal exan.i'iii'iori were Cogswell Creek: James Powell, t'auline Sanders. Earl Cogghurn, Dora Vernon, Crane C'eek : W illard Vernon, Lake view : Roy Benefiel, Nellie Duke, Essie Duke, Mildred Struck, Emma Arz ner, Will Harvey, Clarence Ogle, Virgil Brattain, Virgil Hanks. (.lady Chand ler, Ada Warren, 'Jessie Myers, I.Vira Wright, Vergiu Harris, Eihel Kcrles ton ' Adel, Esther Crump: Summer Lake, Nestor Sivenius. Virgil Brattain made the highest average of any in the county. Chautauqua Circle The Lakeview Chautauqua Circle will meet at the home of Miss Delia Snelling MondHy, , Feuruary 10, at 7:30 p. m Program: roll call; current events: "Ciristian'X ot Denmark; (Iristaf V of Sweden: Haakon Vll of Nor way; Derno-artic Monarchy," Cha itau quan chapter V. "The nsw Paganism and the Old Faith," Power's Mornings with Mast ers of Art, Mrs. K D. Everett. M. E. Ladies Aid The Methodist Ladies Aid yesterday fternooi held a very pleasant meeting at the home of Mrs. F. P. Lane. Thoue present were : Mesdames James Bernard, D. Crone mlller, McCombs, Foster, Myers, C. D. Arthur, Ulazier, Hayes, Walters, Howard, W. Bernard, John Arzner, Dykeman, T. F Bernard, Leonard, M. S. Barnes, Harris, Russell, Miller, Bradley, Dora Lane, W. R. Steele, Orton, Sr., Mrs. Co in Is, Sr., Mrs. Combs. Jr. and Mrs. F. P. Lane. Goose Lake Valley Meat Company ' R. E. WINCHESTER, Proprietor We will endeavor to keep our Market well i supplied with the choicest Frest, Salt and Smoked Meats 5 lbs. Lard, 90c; 10 lbs., $1 SO YOUR PATRONAGU RHSPHCTFULLY SOLICITED HILL-GOULD ALLIANCE Continued from flrnt sg convertod n!o t standard guage. The lllll lints will secure lomt ownership of the Western l'aclfls, sc. cording to the plsn, then conned It with the Oregon Trunk, now operstlng to Bend, In centrsl Oregon. This will afford a connection with the remainder of the lllll system in the northwest. In turn the Hill northwest system will hsve an entrsnce Into San Francisco over the Western t'ariAc. Apropos With the snove, the follow Ing which Is prsutlcslly oi the ssme substance but more complete In detail, is tsken from the Portisnd 'lelcgrsm : Rsilrosd offlclsls In Portisnd expert sn esrly otflcisl announcement from either the Hill or Could Interests thst the two systems hsve formed combi nation whereby the former lines will gsln an entrsnce Into Ssn Francisco and tne latter roads will secure term insls in Portisnd, Sesttle, Tscoma and Spokane. ' hat the railroad men call "break" la looked for within the next week or ten dsys. 'the sgrrement which, it is declsred hss slresdv been enter d into, mosns invasion of all leading points In Oregon and Washington by the Cotilde snd a smllisrlv direct en trsnce of the Hills In'o the Southern stste. The Harrlmsn embsrgo sgalnst com peting lines hss proved to he the biggest boomerang railroad game the West has kown in years snd every op posing rosd hss the knife out for the Hsrrimsns. The Islttr system made an arbltrsry decree some time ago thst freight destined for the Pacific North west points and originating east of the Missouri River must be handled Into llenver by the Union Pacific and thence into the Northwest over one of tbe affiliated roads the Short Line or the O.W.R. A N. It was announced that unless the freight wss routed via the llarrimsn system from the point of origin, these rosd would not deliver it into Northwestern territory. The plsn of reprisal snd retaliation ss outline by a leading rsilrosd man of Portland, recently, i that the Hills contemplate the acquisition by purchase or lease of the Nevada, California & Oregon Road now being operated be tween Reno, Nov., and Lakeview. Or. This line is to be made a standard guage road and will be completed at once to Doyle, Cal., where it connect with the Southern Pacific. The Hill system will secure joint ownership of the Western Pscinc which is now being hsndled in to operations snd tariff departments by men who aro known to tie friendly with the (real Northern crowd, should the pres ent program be followed as outlined. That beiii accomplished physical con nections will be etst lishdil with the Oregon Trunk now completed into Bond, Or. L. C. I. C. Dance An all night dance will be given Fri day night, r'chruary 11, at Hnider's opera house under tho auspices of the Ladies Civic Improvement (.'tub. Tbe proceeds raised by this move will go into a fund to be usod in beautifying the city. Among other improvements planned by the society this veur is to plant a row of trees on Center St. leading from the court house to the depot, as well as further work on the city park. Prizes will also be offered for tho best kept old and new lawns in the city, and for the most attractive II ower garden. The ladies are maaing grand prepar ations for tbe dunce and such a laudable purpone merits a liberal patronage, which it will doubtless receive. $740.50 THAT'S ALL IT WILL trike to stop you p.'iyin rent .'iiid put you iu your own home NHW 2-KOOM IIOnSH, Kj x Ii8, nicely pnpered, fur nished, oti larjjc lot, fenced i'ut your money .where it will jjrow. Don't IcAve this for the other man but Call up Til 15 ALC.IJR LANUCO.aionee, Phone S'.)2, or Utter still, kro riht over to the Hos pital IWd., and see them about it.