HOTEL LAKEVIEW ERECTED IN 1900 rMROUOHOJT .irrr 1 v r SAHPLE ROOH For COnnERCIAL'-l-- . AftBll TRAVELERS T, ..feJ-1 COURTEOUS TREATMENT LIQHT & HARROW. Proprietors F. R. UQHT ' OO- HARROW IF YOU INTEND TO BUILD during the coming Spring or dim mer, it will pay you to begin mak ing preparations now, while you have the time to spare. We hare several books of house plans to show you. We also have a complete line of Lumber, both dress ed and undressed, that we would like to show you. Come in and let us talk it over with you. Maybe we can save you some time and money. SUNSET LAKE LUMBER CO. Yard on Center St. Lake Vie W, Ore. Phone 722 ' Lakevicw Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone Xo. 11 J. P. DUCKWORTH, Manager Buss to Meet All Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by day, Week or Month t& "OUR CUSTODIERS ARE OUR ADVERTISERS' WALLACE & SON Wm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lake County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Parlors, next door to Telephone Office WATSON BUILDING Twin Valley Land Co. - Incorporated C. R. BLOOD, Ast. Sec; C. O. MISENER, Cen. Agt. We have for sale: Orchard and Alfalfa Lands Farm Lands, Timber Lands Homesteads and Desert Lands Special attention given to O.V.L. Land Holdings We are agents for The F airport Town & Land Co. FAIRPORT TOWN' LOTS now on s. e. Make your selection before the best ones are sold. A big investment for a small amount of money. LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY Incorporated. A Complete Record We have made an entire trannorlpt of all Records In Lake County wbicn In any way, affect Real Property In the county. We have a complete Record of every Mortgage and tranHfer ever made In Lake County, and ever Dwd K'ven. Errors Found in Titles In transcribing the record we have found numerous mort gagea recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many rteeds are recorded In the MortKHjre record aud other book. IlandmlH of niortifHeu and leed are Dot Indexed at all, aud Uiost difficult to trace up from the records. We have notations of all these Errors. others .annot find them. Vie have put nuudreda of dollar bunting up these errors, and we can fully guarantee Oor work. J. D. VENATOR, flanager. JEWISH SETTLERS COHINGTO LAKE Hebrews Will Begip Farm. Ins: In Northern Part of the County A party of Jc ixh wit lira left Port land last week for their hiwit'ateatl in the northcaotern part f Lake onunty. They are fho advance truard of sever al families who already have claim in that section and upon which nicy will begin farming at once. 'I here are about fifty more families who will join the colony in the near future. Every thing fhat ia necessary for the pioneers will lie taken with them. The move ment Is backed by a powerful Jewish organization whose object is to induce the Jews to return to the soil and emu late the example of Isaac and Jacob, who were the cattle barons of their day and feneration. The society will furnish funds for their maintenance MAKING GOOD CITIZENS. Human nature cUmands play a necessity. If twt thwart this dsmand wi arc in dang.r of rearing criminal instead of good cititens, for the starved natures, balked in their natural desires, will turn to evil it they are not helped to the good. Money cannot buy good citi tens, but a judicious outlay of a comparatively small sum will do more than any other one thing to turn the activities of child life into the proper and naturrl channels which lead to good citizenship. It ia the very parody upon common sense to appropriate money for play grounds and refuee it for super vision. That ia indeed eaving at the spigot and wasting at the bunghole. Jacob Rut. IMPROVEMENT THE DUTY OF EVERY ONE. until thev become self-supporting. FARMlFWE NEW COUNTRY LIFE W hat he is to te. what his surround- ! ings will be, what will be the spirit ard purpose of the man. Secretary McKeene of the Illinois Farmers' In tulla us In the following words: "The fBrm pioblem of America is not in bursting rarn, nor high bred stock, nor soil fertility, nor even in the rural school, but in the tanner himself. Its solution is in the ind vidual known as the new farmer. The dreary drudgery of the old farm existence is fast passing awav, and in its place is coming a broad, rich, free livelihood, never known before 'the new country life'. The new farmer lives the Jnew country life: the new farmer builds tor his wife and children a modern, sani tary, attractive home: the new farmer makes hard roads. He installs a tele phone, receives his niHil by free deliv ery, and encourages interurban ser vice, supports a thriving rural church, and demands an efficient consolidate! school course fur his sons and daughters and removes the othtrs. The new farmer reads and thinks: he studies his own environment sees his opportunities and limitations, improves the one and removes the other. The new farmer is not only a scientist but a sociologist. He works in harmony with his neigh bor, for the general goor and uplift of bis immediate communitv, and above all else he realize the dignity and import- ance of his own professiun and individ uality in the permanent and national wellare." j Would any sensible, right spirited t man obiect to being that kind of farmer and living that kind of a farmers lite? If not, why then look forward to it as teing something worth while to ac complish? Reduced Fare Granted Ever since the announcement s.ime months ego of the Grand Army en campmtnt to be held at Reno, during the month of June wa published, var ious organizations ard concerns have bten rr.akir.fr arrangements and plans to take charge of the vast influx of business and people that such a gather ing is bound to bring to Nevada, says the Reno Journal. The latest news along those lines is tliat the N.-C.-O. railroad will sell round trip tickets for the encampment at the one fare price from any place on its line to Reno. It is expected the encampment will bring more than 14,000 people into the state. Try to Do Something Every Day, No Matter How Small It la. Every one la both colleetlrely and Individually responsible for the part of the world ho lives lu aud should aim to niiike It and leave It as ln-iiutiful aa Ilea In his Hver. If little opMrtunl ty la granted little will be expt'Cted. but for that lit t It tie aliould be credit ed equally with the accomplishment of the more fortunate. It may full to the lot of one to be able to plant a few How era, to another to btait a tree or to make two blade of grass grow where was In-fore but one. tine may make and keep attrac tive but one little garden. Another may present to the public a hiiKe park, with funds for it.s permanent upkeep. Fountains, utatuea. picture or other object given to public Institutions or displayed in public places nil contrib ute to the W-autlHcatlon of the world, and all of n are expected to contrlli ute lu accordance with means or op Krtunlty afforded. The render who ha followed thus far may wonder what la expected of him or her or what Imtli may do to con tribute their portion. It la not neces sary "to Maud In public places" to be a benefactor. Home offers the greater opportunity to help beautify the world and make beautiful ttie live of those about us. To make home Invitilii:. at tractive and sutlsfylnir to your family and Incidentally to friend ami visit ors Is one of the noblest tasks ever un dertaken, the value of which collec tively overwhelms that of all parks and public Institution built since the world was HrM peopled. Interior and exterior should harinonle ami be equally attractive, iivoldhm the over shadowing of tli ie nt tin- expcii'- of the other. Vn'.e yoni home decora tion simple and .'-! I" !omi-s and out and vnu have laru'el hi'tii oil vo'tr duty to nil. t'i.-e. i . f- name may never l e "eli:b!.: cr , d !: lb, i:iIU of fame" l.os Aau-e'es Tin Let The Examiner Flfirure on Your Next Job Work Legislators Barred That no member of 0e Leginlature may accept a pesitlon as County Attor ney under the bill passed by Uie last Legislature, even though fiey should resign as rnemhers of the Legislature is the gist of an opinion furnished by the Attorney General at the reque.it of Governor West. He declares that the constitution pro hibits a member of the Legislative Assembly from accepting an appoint ment to a lucrative office which is created during the term of the Legis lature at which the person in question is a member. Rochester Overdone The conditions as existing in the new Rochester mining camp, which has bean extensively boomed by the Nevada papers, is alzed up as follows by the Alturas Plaindealer: Tom Frawley returned last week from Rochester, the new Nevada min ing town. He reports everything over done. He says there are about sixty men at work in the minea, out of a population of 1500. There are 60 saloons and aa many aance and prosti tution bouses. There is much sickness at the minea and many deaths have re sulted. Altogether, Tom thinks Ro chester ia a pretty good place to stay away from Chlidreiio' JiauiiHou iWowu Mh.ch UHt in, good ahapca and none better for wear. Merc. Co. A PLt FOH PLAYGROUNDS Suppose the more fortunate m?rnr.ers of the community alto were denied the opportunitiee which the row enjoy for recrea tion and amusement. Suppose, if you will, that lews were passed prohibiting them from running automobiles, from playing golf or tennis, and imagine the effect upon them of the enforcement of such requirements. And yet for all practical purposes these are the conditions that exist among the poorer members of the com munity. They are as virtually denied opportunities of recrea tion a if they were living under such a statute. Lawrence Veil-ler. WINTER IMPROVEMENT WORK. What to Do to Help Your Town During Cold Weather. When the winter aeason 1m on It la necessary to regulate dance Mulls, mo tion picture and vaudeville kIiowb. Es tablish rest rooms or comfort atutlons In your club life organize civic league for the study of these and kindred top ics. Form a civics current events class. Let each member take up a separate brunch of work and stick to It until she has mustered every phuso of 1L Let her biin;; "'e phase of that branch to the class at each meeting. If each one of a ( hiss of ten would do this, at the end of a club yeur many phases of civic w ork would be Intelligently Krasp ed. and the civic league could then take up Its chosen task, well fitted to engl neer it to a successful conclusion. American City. Value of Civio Beauty. We think ourselves far ahead of Eu rope, and In some respects we ure. but the GermuHa and the French builders of cities have learned what many Americans do not yet appreciate that civic beauty has a practical value L closely related to nearly every form of trade. Denver Republican. Ugly cities are a reproacU to ordi nary good sense, and America Is fast learning the lesson. Out of the quick ening of civic pride, now go conspicu ous In many places, ia bound to come a finer town life everywhereNew York Herald. Progress Bred In the Bone. It Is all right, say? a bulletin of the Httlem 1 1 II. I Civic leugue. to want kin provemeiits. "but what Salem badly need along with that big wishbone Is more backbone" a sunt comment widely upplicabie and often with more force than lu awakened Halem. A Prophesy A propliray linn hern nuule that aoine iluy nil rclnil piuno stores will he conducted ly the iiiniHifctur era thrtnselvra. The rrnaon itivrn for this ia the unrclialnlity of ninny of there ngents who mkr prom ises which cnniuit lie fulfilled. Should this prophesy tome true the purthnarr would he much bet ter satisfied for he would not he buying through the unrrliuhle mid dle man. If contemplating a piano or play er piano we refer possible pur chasers to Shepherd cV Sons' rec ord of eighteen summers business in Lake County aa fuctory repre sentatives. I'.very promise and guarantee has been made K'001'. proven by hundreds of purchasers who can K've us reference. Address either Ashland or Klam ath Fall for our proposition. Forty-six yean one business in one family Shepherd 8c Sons Factory Representatives A Panoramic View O F HIGH GRADE lTp ninid the peaks find crajs of t lie Warner ranjje of mountains in Modoc County, California, fifteen miles south of Lake-view, u new and rieli dis covery of jjold has been made. Hundreds of miners from the fold camps of America have been to the discovery and pronounce it "GKIiAT," and hundreds of other miners will rush into the district when the snow is 'jone in the spring. The sensational mine and the one which has produced ore as rich as $UU,(HM) per ton find from which a carload shipment brought $218 per ton, is the SUNSHINE MINE I'rintcd matter about this mine and the magni ficent view of the district, showing the mines ami the surronndinr country, will be mailed FRIUv to everv subscriber of the Lakevicw Lxamiuer upon re quest. Wr(te to CHAS. L. FULTON', HIYA Monad nock Building, San Francisco, Cal. Mention this paper. mm Colonist Fares WESTBOUND March 15thr.to AprililSth, 1913 Send for the Folks WHILE the FARES ARE LOW The Low Fares apply from the following and many other points in the East, to any station on the O-W. R. & N. in Idaho, Oregon and Washington Atlanta, (iB M 70 Haiti mori', hti M 75 Hottini, Mam M 1,0 Jluffalo, N. V 47 Hi CiiurlemoD, S. C 6.1 U Detroit, Mich 4:tS0 Fort Worth, Tex 40 75 Minneapolis, Mioo Loulmllle, Ky 12 ." MeinpllU, TVnil 42 All Milwaukee, Wl :t170 Montgomery, Ala bo 1ft Mimkogee, Okla 3A -M New York City 65 00 New Orlcaui 48 00 HI. i'aul, Minn 80 00 Cliicaxo 88 00 OklnliainaMty f:( !2A l'hlUi, l,hla I'a ..... M 7ft rituLurK. I'a 47 00 HI. UuIm, Mo :i7 10 Ixmivit, colli 80 00 Omalia, Nib Slow) Kantian City, Mo :u IX) 1.1'avuiitvurtli, Kan... .10 00 PREPAID ORDERS Tickets will be delivered without extra charge to anybody at any point where Colonist Fares apply, upon deposit with any O-W. R. & N. Agent of the amount. For full particularsMrop a card to H. D. PATTER SON.JAgent 0-W.R. Lakeview.lOregcn.