THE LAKEV1EW ABSTRACT & TITLE IIP. ABSTRACTS TO ALL REAL PROPERTY IN LAKE COUNTY, UhtbuR OUr Complete Tract Index J Intureti Accuracy, Promptnosa and Reliability Such an Index ia the ONLY KhLUKLE system from which an Abstract can be made, showing all defects of title. A C,..M;,f,t SURITY BONOS iro niou mimioii firkin INSURANCE H. W. MORGAN, Manager, LAKEVIEW, OREGON osror-csoJt fmonkih WALLACE & SOSM Wm. Wallace, Coroner for Lake County) UNDERTAKERS FROMPT ATTENTION A Nil SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Parlors, next door to Telephone Office WATSON BUILDING Lakeview Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone No. 101 J. P. DUCKWORTH, Managkb Buss to Meet AU Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by day, Week or Month "OUB CUSTOMERS ARE OUR ADVERTISERS" Goose Lake ValleyjMeat Market R. E. WINCHESTER.Proprietor We endeavor to keep ourjnarket well supplied with FRESH, SALT AND SMOKED MEATS 5 lbs. Lard,190c; 10Jbs.,r$1.80 e&- Your Patronage islRespectfuUySoIicited LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY IncorporareU. A Complete Record We have made an entire transcript of all Records In Lake County which In any way, affect Real Property In the county. We have a complete Record of every Mortgage and transfe r ever made In Lake County, and ever Deed given. Errors Found in Titles In transcribing the record we have found numerous mort gages recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded la the Mortgage record and other books. Hundreds of mortgagee and deeds are not Indexed at all, and moat difficult to trace up from the records. We have notations of all these Errors. Others .annot find them. We have pat hundreds of dollars boating np these errors, and we can fuJly guarantee our work. J. D. VENATOR, Hanager. Lamb Chops For Breakfast when nicely broiled, run ken an blfnl ilisli; hut ton of en what Is culled hi mli is only In the mime Sow If you want rent Hfirimr lunih chops, taken from iiif , yoiiiifr, t nuer. Juicy hitiih kins, uiitl not uui'ii hi it tuns, .if; run always lie unsurrii of f.'1-ttiiin the leal tliinu lit Lakevif w Meat Market HAYES & Gf-CB, props SHAMROCK STABLES CON BREEN, Proprietor HALF BLOCK CAST OF COURT HOUSK Special Attention to Transient Stock Horses Boarded by the Day, Week or Month Always Open Phone 571 LAKEVIEW OREGON EMBROIDERY SHOP WOMANf? EXCllASGE Special Prices an Pillow To,n, Filet Ket Scurfs and Cushions with Mutcriitl to Word. A new lot of Pure Linen Hand kerchiefs. Embroidery Work to order. MRS. H. D. ALGER OPPOSITE ULRYVOllD DLVO Alger Land Co. Hunches City Property Rentals Tuxes 'J'uld and Rentals Collected for Kon-tvsldents WHEN LANGUAGE FAILS. There Mir time ulitti umilii mi empty To xph'i Mil you would For Instance when I ho pipes frrese up While you have brn awny lou return, ami. oh. the picture! I'ipes are "busted" to I he around. Cook stove ruined, hnuse all flooded, I'laster falling all around. There's that other time, my brother. That you bouiiht that Christmas turk. Tou had tried to plesse her mamma. And you thought thla plan would work. So you took the turkey over To present your mn-ln-luw. And you took It In the parlor To present tt with eclat But the bin bird threw Its mlnss up. And, for all that you rould do. It went crashing through that mansion And then through a window flew. Mirrors smashed and lump shades mingled. Stovepipes, china, brio-a br:ic Looked Just like a Kansas cyclone Had been there and left a track. And her mother lust spoke volumes Threw round lancuniie by the ton. And her tongue upon a pivot lfmnt.t likM I ( f hi II III ir Mt i. ill Hiinti j There you stood amid that wreckage I Hut you could not say a wonl. Tomcucs. vocahiil.utis. cus wni.ts They were simply all absurd. Lt-t them make new dictionaries; Let them make such every day. i Words In such a situation j Like thin vapor float away. C M. HAKNITZ. THE CITY BEAUTIFUL CINCINNATI TACKLES ITS SMOKE NUISANCE. KURIOS FROM KOR RESPONDENTS (J. When is au egg fertilized. Ik; fore or after the yolk escatiea from the ovary T A. After, In upper part of oviduct Q. When does red blood first appear In an egg under iDcubation? A. In forty-eight hours. Q. In what way may an egg under Incubation be opened for observation with least Injury to the contents? A. Open In halves under water. The con tents will float out without being bro ken and water may be drained off If desired. Q. Which byproduct of wheat has most mineral matter? A. Bran. It con tains 6 8 per cent. Q. What breeds of poultry In the American Standard have Ave toes? A. Dorklugs. floudana. Silkies. Sultans. Q Which are beat to batch late. Leg- horns. Hocks or Cochins? A. foghorns. They mature and lav soonest Q. What Is the general error In to uousuccess of rearing late chicks? A. About us It is trying to raise them on I ground made rotten by the droppings ; of former broods. I Q What is wrong with chick feed i when it. feels hot to the band? Is it fit to feed? A. It Is musty from heat. : damp or Hge and should be burned. Q Is uir slacked lime good to put on the dropping boord and about ttie poultry house? A. No It destroys the ! virtue of the droppings and Is breathed . by the bens and is thus injurious. UWce ('(ifonlte Ueryford llulldiux , FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS. Only II per cent of American farms ; dil not report chickens at the lust i census These were likely truck farms. Now. If the farmers on the ft.O.Vl.T.'Vl i farms reporting bens would raise UK) i more chickens and produce Just UK) more eggs upiece per year, what an i addition to the food supply that small effort would make: The heii tale comes from Omaha that a man set his nelghlsir's hen on u si t : tins of goose egys anil the neighbor j went to law to recover the hen's waites 1 lost while she was doing the hatching stunt After two lawyers had Jaw 1 wrangled the case for three days the Judge gave Judgment In favor of the liens owner for.Jl" cents as a pnir price for the hen's month's hatching. ; If a hen can earn this much while slt i ting still how much more does she learn while working with a will? Fancier who visit experiment stn tlons often criticise the stock seen there as a "hunch of mutts." unfit for show Hut many show points are only artificial: some show birds are but n bunch of beautiful feathers. Expert- I ment stations keep business birds, and compared with the business birds all over this country the ultra fancy Isn't a drop in the chicken cook pot. Kxiicrliuciit at Washington wlti eggs from the nest In the weeds. In the strawstack aud from under the hogpen and eggs kept In the farm house have convinced experts that two thirds of the loss In eggs is due to haphazard methods on the farm. A sample of the pluck of American poultry women is shown when Mrs. Ilayncs Shoiip of Idaho shipped a pen of White Wyandottes to the North American international egg laying contest. Storrs. Conn. They travi-led eight miles hy muleliiick. twenty eight by stage and the rest of the long Jour ney li.v rail and. notwithstanding their long Journey, made a splendid record, holding the highest pen average for over twenty four weeks In succession. A poultry writer declares California grains are delli ient In certain elements most needed iii the production of eggs lie 1 1 oi-s not explain what these ele ments are nor does he explain Califor nia's crop of Hue, big eggs. A first class bone cutter cuts meat, gristle and Imne all fine. it shaves the bune tine and does not make those sharp, curly splinters that choke the hen or pierce her crop and gizzard. The automatic self feeder Is best, as It cuts even and saves much extra labor. English visitors to American mar kets are surprised to see so few white skinned, pink meated chickens, like the Dorkings. Orpingtons and l.itng shans, but almost all dressed stock, even to ducks, yellow. American vis itors to Kngllsh markets find about everything pink and white, the yellow birds few and low priced. Both mar kets cater to the call. The, City Has a Soolsty of Crusaders Against ths Evil. Cincinnati Is setting an example worthy of emulation In a successful rrttsado against the smoke nuisance. In 11XX1 a group of public spirited men and women of this city, actuated by the desire to Improve conditions, hit upon a definite project of aiming to rid tho city of Its pall of smoke. They organized tho Smoke Abatement league, ami for seven years this or gatil7iitin has followed a consistent policy of education, for It declared that the smoke problem was an eco nomic one and that Its solution was one of education, says the National Municipal ISevlew. At Its seventh annual meeting the j superintendent. Kdwnrd S. Jerome, preset! tea a report mar. was a recora NEGLECTED QUARTERS IN AMERICAN CITIES. A Healthful City Cannot Have Insanl tary Alleys. f. m mm? s- v.T. Thoto by American Press Association. AH CXAMI'I.B OF THB IVOKB RCISANOK. of distinct gain. He stated that no other city In the Ui.ited States had supported for so long a peiiisl a volun tary association liavn.g for Km one oIh J('t Uie abatunieiit o. the smoke uiil sunce. Emphasizing lio Iucutioual aspe t of tliu campaign, he Mild: "it liecomes luoro and more uianlfent that we are In a campaign of educa tion. Those engngtsl In It realize more keenly than ever before that lltful. spasmodic efforts accomplish little. To go out and watch a smoking stack is the simplest thing In the world; to make uu arrest of an offender 1 not dlUk-ult; to secure the imposition of a fine Is comparatively au easy matter. nut to actually stop tho smoke ah. 'there's tho rub." This campaign re quires the dissemination of literature bearing on this subject, calling atten tion to it and throwing light on it It Involves speaking here and there throughout tue city in order to awak en Interest and to keep that Interest from (lagging and dying out. It needs an arrest now and then of those care less and indifferent, who must be made to realize that this is imt a mutter of opinion, but of ndmlhiMniUoii of the law. It requires a happy admixture of tact and firmness to secure the co operation of those responsible for this nuisance, and that's the great public without whose co-operation our efforts will be well nigh fruitless." It la unfair to discriminate In favor or against any particular section or class. Is tt morally right to neglect any portion of our city any more than for a patient to neglect a crippled or weak minded child? Is not our civic duty Just as binding as Is our family duty, since the results of civic duty re act Just as strongly upon each hull ; vldnal citizen as do the results of the family duty upon both parent and child? asks .1 Ualley Imuran, chief ell glued' of Annapolis, In tho Aiiui'lran City. J We cannot sipiare the I ho opposing I facts of a healthful city with Insanl- tary alleys or side streets any more I than we can reconcile the fads of a healthy human being with a disorder ed colon. What the Individual In such a condition .needs Is a good Infernal bath. And docs the city. Hut the city cannot get this bath by beautify ing and sewering her finer residential streets nny more than can tho man by Jumping Into a tub and then drsslng tip In his Sunday riot ho Tills does not help bis Indigestion. "Tliero Is no Improvement so local aa to be of no general benefit." And there Is no place In which this wise saying of Lincoln's Is more to the point thau In the case In hand. It Is to be regretted that public Improvements are often made and accepted aa piece meal favors of a local or Individual na ture. And since this view Is so tena ciously held It is rather easy to see why certain sections of our cities are neglected, for are not these usually the sections In which the residents lack both the power to Intercede and the ability to make return In any material way for the so railed favors? Hut looked at from a purely selfish point of view. Is It not Important that atten tion be given to the sanitary better ment of the streets and alleys where pople live who wash our clothes, who cook our food and who 'nurse our babies? The neglect of thee serf Inn In PRICE AND NOT QUALITT COUNTS Cheapness Is the Only Ro qulslto of Mall Order House Goods. (Hardware World) The life of a community depends largely upon the success uf its business etablishnients and enterprises. The rirrtilation of money within a town community Is aa essential to its life and well-being as Is the Mood within the veins uf a human being, dive any community commercial prosperity and there can be 111 t lo doubt that Inltllrct iinI, niorsl suit physical progress will follow. The. reversn of this is also true: Win re there is business stagna tion the to n Is bound to be limp aril lifeless in all its activities, says su ex change It naturally follows thst each and every resident of the town and district should psrttorizc the business houses of tils lui slity, ai such support licnchts not only the entire community but the individual himself. Yuu don't plant oats upon a hill A hundred miles away, Aril somewhere else your corn to drill You know would never pay. You plant at home to get the yield, Whatever crops are grown For planting In some other fir Id Will never help your own. And its the same with dollars, too For dollars, loo, are seed; The cash today away yuu throw Tomorrow you may need. Don't send your wealth afar to roam, But wiser learn to sow Just plant your money there at home And watch your dollars grow. The greatest enemy the . country tewn and small city have tudsy is the mail order house. In the Isst ten vrsf, eight of the greatest ststes in the nninn have lost in smsll town pop ulslion. Uf this humour t'ennsylvsnl leads, its towns being depicted the fustest. 'I his fart is sigmficsut, ss rslalog iiounrs openly admit that the ird to .units, Inn nHrttrnlnrlv foster. ! Keystone slate is the largest buyer of a feeling of unjust discrimination that j ,nHl1 or.bjr goods among the common Wrt would ibl Well tt i11cnnr!ii't Much ' Heslths. BENEFIT OF CITY PLANNING. ; class or racial prejudice could bo over- come If all were made to feel flint I their Interests were !elng enris! for at I least In a fair degree. Would we nil ! not be placed on a footing of more effective co operation for the city's progress if no one felt thst his tiocus sarlua of life were tsrliig withheld? Tho neglect of health laws on the part of the city breeds slovenliness In the very places w Iters the seeds of cleanliness sre In the most need of being sown, and where even the sowing Is futile If the plant Is not afterward nursed with care. For wo are all cren tures of Iml'atlnn, and. since Imitation Is so potent a factor In our lives, ex ample must be the podde-s of destiny It Is certainly a civic dutv lo set an I example by way of good snnltatlon. so ' that itultntloii may have a clrun e to j show results. We find this spirit of "following suit" cropping out where any public betterment Is made. If a street or road Is paved we find house and fence renovation promptly follow ing. When n sewer Is Installed we find back yards Improved, gutters and pavements put In order. 1-ucourage-ment la a great tonic and one which we all need. City planning would first In vestigate all the physical ills of a community. It would diagnose them; It would determine all those matters which need Im provement: It would determine In consideration of all points of view the relative urgency of the various needs; it would plan. In view of this, a consistent pro gram of procedure; it would work out solutions for all of these problems, keeping a due relation and proportion among them; it would meet the peculiar needs of the community and preservo tho city's Individuality; it would concentrate, on the vari ous problems and get tangible results. City planning would so model the setting of tho life of the community with regard to health, safety, convenience and comfort as to mnke it tho Ideal place In which to live. Than this there is nothing in which a city may more Justly bo proud. George B. Ford. THE WISDOM OF SOLOMON. NEWBURG REHABILITATED. The New York City Takes a Survey e Itself. Tho city of Newburg, N. Y., baa re cently completed the prisr-ess of taking a social survey of Itself or. In other words, taking Its own social measure ments. This undertaking was Initiated by Newburg citizens and was (InancetJ largely by local contributions. The en terprise had good backing nnd. like vlmllar movements elsewhere, met wltSi some local opposition "s , Among the sube-ts selected for In quiry were public schools, publj"? health, housing, public library, chari ties and municipal administration. Two definite results have been accom plished, n r.ew educational force he been provided and a new public Inter est In civic n ff. i Irs has been aroused. Kansas Town Builds a Recreation Hall Which 8erves Many Purposes. It la natural that the rich agricultural sections, where prosperity has reigned many years, should give early expres sion to the new community help. Solomon, a prosperous town In Kau sua, typllles aucb a community. Around i It ore valuable farms. Here Is the ! n..cifr aiinnnuuiil fwi.niuipaltmi r. . 1 1 i I ... I. luint .ui.m;oiiiiii lvwji.-i n w , u iuiii iij- ers' association In central Kansas. It has existed a dozen years aud owns two elevators which handle hundreds of thousands of bushels of wheat ev ery season. When the school board met last sum- I mcr It decided by li unanimous vote to ; spend $5,000 to build a recreation hall. That was later Increased to SU.'OO. but what Is that to n district with $'J.000, 000 valuation? The hull was dedicated recently aud every foot of the big room wus crowd ed with patrons of the district The big thing about It Is the object for Allien It was constructed. The build ing Is of brick. 40 by 100 feet, with a high basement mid a large auditorium. Tho basement has a cement lloor, shower baths, rooms for manual train ing and domestic science classes of the high school. The auditorium Is the town's own. At one end Is a pret ty stage. The hardwood floor Is mark ed for basketball. The winter lecture course takes place In tho auditorium as well as debuting contests, basket ball tournaments and all entertain ments that are for tho goud of tho people. Street Vacuum Cleaners. In Manchester, Fngland. a patent vacuum street cleaner, recently In vented, la being tested. It Is sold that "the experiments so far Indicate that the new cleaner Is far superior to the old type In that there remain no weepings to be cleaned up by manual labor and that dust raised by the horse drown broom Is avoided." 'Ihtsu I act and a little logics! de duction mase it apparent tnst the counry merchant will go out uf busi ness if tin lural nisi i.i t i.i tti in tt grip of thete foreign conrertis. Thst the elosii g of the mercantile, establish ments of town is detrimensl to its interests, is evident. Another ecouomio result is the ob jectionable tendency of concentrating' population and industry In the already overrrosded and rongested cities. It is no seorel to business men that the succiss of the "cat" houses does ntt d pend upon the quality uf the goods they handle. It depends, rather upon shrewdly dratted catalogs and cheapness of gouils irrespective ot qual ity. '1 he null order concern nictates its own I urchssing price. Ilit ir buyer l proHcli tuu manufacturer of an arti cle and tell him that they must have the goods at a crrt.in figure. It is not a question of quality tut one uf price. The manfacturcr gives the mail order concern an article he has cheapened until he ran tell it at a margin of prolit in spite of the price stipulation. If it happens to be an atticte made of metal, then an interior grade is used. Fsint is often used as a substitute for enamel, and there are many other expedients used to force the cost of manufacturing down to, meet the mail order buyer's price. 'I he outward appearance 'of these articles, if exam ined superficially, may compare lavor- bly with those carried by the local merchants, but The merchant paid more; and he got more for his money. He buys stand ard brsnds of goods and gets the qual ity he orders. The careless concumer compsres the local dealer's price with tnst of the catalog house, and because the former may be a trifle higher, jumps at the conclusion that he can do tetter by trading at the latter place. But the careful buyer realizes the par adoxical fact that cheap goo is sre usually most expensive. ) Curran Had Reply it was difficult to nubdue the high spirits of John Fhillpot Curran, the Irish lawyer and wit. Indeed, many of hie most brilliant witticisms were uttered in the staid and somewhat musty atmosphere of the courtroom. On one occasion when Curran was making an elaborate argument in chancery Lord Clare brought a large Newfoundland dog upon the bench with him, ana 'during the progress of the argument he paid much more attention to the dog than to the barrister. Grad ually the chancellor lost all regard tor even ordinary courtesy. In the must impurtsnt part of the rase he turned himself quite aside and began to fon dle the animal. Curran stopped at once. "(Jo on, Mr, Curran; goon," aald Lord Clare. v "I beg thousand pardon, my lord." replied the wit. "I took It for granted that your lordship was em ployed In coninltation."