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About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1914)
T I M B E R L A N D S CURTIS & UTLEY, REAL ESTATE L AKEVIEW, OREGON 120 nt ten orr Cottonwood rrr-ek, 35 ac.reii into Timothy, Alfalfa, Grain, ami a nice ftnrdcn, water rifcht, nn iilcal nmnll dairy or poultry fnrrn, lota of outside RraziriK, housr, arn, tannery and other out-buildins. I 'rice, $1800, half caali. 1 1 mile from Lakeview. H room residence in Drenkrl addition, near City Park, two lota 100 by 150, barn and krn house. I 'rice, $2000, half cah at 6 per cent. The price in Irs than cost. . 320 arrca good land, part into jjrain and alfalfa, near Union School, all fenced and rroM fence, barn and corrals. Stock water in creek always. This ia a good farm, at $20.00 per ut re. . 310 acres three mile north of Lakeview, 200 acres fine alfalfa land, about 100 acres now in cultivation, 100 acres pasture land, part of which can be planted to fruit Warner Creek flows through the land and a nice spring that can be piped to the house and barn. Place fenced, house and barn. Price $ 1 6 per acre. 80 acres of meadow land, cuts 80 tons of hay. At head of lake, price $15 Per acre. 6tt0 acres 8 miles north of Lakeview for $15 per acre. 80 acres into meadow, cuts 100 tons, 40 acres pasture land and all the balance is fine grain and alfalfa land, good water ritfht, new home and large barn, 500 acres fenced. This is sure a bargain. 40 acres timber good wood claim, I I miles from town, has between 800 and 1000 cord of wood, good road and level land. Price $350. Two and one-half lots in the Sherlock Addition opposite Dunbar new residence. A bargain at $550. Act quick. We have several good ranches for cattle and sheep. Send for our large bulletin giving prices of land all over Lake and Modoc Counties F A R M L A N D 3 R A N C H E S TLnftc County Ernmlncr Til I' lt.lA Y, ',Mtm lit, I'M I niikiy vi:tiii ii mi-oiii For wk en llim March IS. IBM. IKMI'KIMll UK I Nil.' If J , MAItX-IKK i. . i v "'' I . . I' v I'Klx, .,!,, ,( Amoiinl It I'M 't l"i y lninly 11 M :n u mi I'li ur H I M :-n 'i.i i . r II I in ai iih) I . r In ' lik II II ml li ar 17 1 In i a I 'll nr It I I I .11 II " I l . r I. I liOIT, (HWKItVKH. HtmUiD II lulli'K NnriliwiDi nl l.m vl BRIEF MENTION Tr'b liUnki'tH but ti robes, sweater: and cloves ut the Mercantile Co. K. (1. Mchmikt of Kort indwell (pent several dnya In thlH city IohI week. Waller Dutton wim up from Havls Creek liiNt week mid spent n few davi In Lukuvlew. A Hon win born on March 2ml to Mr. iiml Mm. Iluvn I'.uty (m- Cluru Stanley. if Ft. Hid w-t:. Mrs. J. V. McAulilTo returned homo liint week after hii(IIiik a few iiiniithM I h 1 1 1 ti k In Chicago. T. A. Crump, u HiicceHHful farmer of the lower Warner Valley, wuh at-ti-liilliig to litlhliii Hrt hero u few (lil.VM thin wc k. liny For Sale- Ilaleil gruli and wild 'ih.V, abto Heed barley, for Halo, rii ii cr uddr-Hi W. It. Meriiaid. Lnkc vlew, On-con. Mch l'i-tf C. N. McArthur, speaker of the HotiBn ut tho hint Legislature, Ih euniHdate fur the Itepublii'uu noniin utlnn for Congress from tlm Third Oregon district. Lnlle of the I'n Ion Sunday Hehool ut New- 1'lne Creek will bold n pillow llp sale Sjturduy, March L'8 I'ro eeeilrt will Ih lined to puy cluctrle Unlit bill a Christian Church. MIsm Allro McUrath, rcprcsenllnK I ho Kxamliicr PubllHlilnn Company, Is spending a few days In tho towns of Alturiiri, (Vdnrvlllo nnd Ft. lled well. Cal., I:i the IntereHtii of the pa per. Jiihoii Klder, who for the pant iev eral weeks Iiuh been employed In thu Fremont National Forest otllre in Lukevlew. lu-eompanled by bin wife, Monday returned to their home! at 1'nlnley. ilaker, Oregon has et-tal.lNhed a precedent In the wa of taxation by makliiK u levy of oiie-hlf mill on all taxable propi rty In the tov n for a fund for un annual Fourth of July rolei, ration. If. K. StrashUurner. traveling freisht and puHHisiiKer UKent for the Southern l'acllle with heudouiirterK In l.ukeview, Monday returned from a buHlnens trip down the N.-C.-O. line. He will make a trip to Iteno thin week. Fort Uo k Times : Tho lutter part of lust week while on IiIh way to ltend In li Ih uutomoblle. Harl Hous ton liutl the inlHfortune to nprlnK a leak In the giinolliie tank, it cuuRht (Ire and the Par burned up. The metn! frame wa all that remulned. Considerable plowing U belns done on the West Side, and It In nuld the farmera are preparing to how u lurge acreuge In that section thin seuon. Plowing Ih ulso lielng, Hturtod on dev eral farniH on tho eut Hide of the vulley. and fall grain everywhere is reported to be looking fine. 1. A. I'liderwood Ih building a handsome residence on his Center Street property, Just east of tho lum ber yard. Tho house rontaliiH live rooms with hnth, puntry, hulls, clo sets, porches, laundry room und basement und will surely ho u hand some, addition to that part of town. The presiiienl and Mrs. Wilson have announced the engagement of their youngest daughter, Klnnnor Randolph, to lion. William (Jibbs McAdoo, secretary of the Treasury. Mr. McAdoo is B0 years old. while MIhh Wilson is 24. lie is a widower und hnu six children, ono sou und one daughter being married. In replacing a rullroud trestle re cently burned along the north Hhore of Grent Salt Laku, engineers have Just found that the piles are still per fectly sound after 4 3 years of ser vice. Looking for the cuuse, since these were only of local pine and fir, they found the timbers were im pregnated throughout with palt from the lake. An excellent duuee was given on Thursday night of last week by the members of the A. O. U. W. lodge. About 75 members of the Hegree of Honor and A.O.U.W. lodges, with in vited guestd were In attendance. Sup per was served at midnight, and con sisted of sandwiches, saladH, lettuce, cakea, coffee, etc. The committee in charge consisted of K. 11. Kvarett, John Anener, A. K. Garrett and It. U. Vandervort. Curt Ih A. t tley buv fins. I'lgs for Bale, soven shoals and For Free Sweet I'na seed Hen offer j "w- Apply ut this oHlcc). on In 't pare of HiIh It-sue.- Horn In l.ukevlew, March 17. to It. A. Ogg of the circulation do- Mr, and Mrs. Cltas. George, of J'liinh, partial nl or the Iteno Cu.etto vus In a c'aiu-hter. .iikevle v Tin Hilny. i linriK-y Gruman In In town this Mitishali Ayres nnd wlf) last week ; week from the Jtehart runcli at went to Fort Hid well where they ex- Crooked Creek. pert to remain permanently. J Andrew Morris, the Warner Valley Mr and Mrs. C. II. I'urker ami son dairyman, vim In Lakeview last week Arthur, spent several das In tow u w Itli a load of cream and butter. this week from their homo at Adel j For Sale Cheap- Gasoline llght Uh hurd Guliieo passed through ' Ing plant,' fiiltablu for bouse or store. Lakeview last week returning to his ; lniiilre at this oltlcn. Men. 19-tf In, lim In I'aisley lifter a trip to San , Two addlli ciul relMent? .f t.i': Francisco. Cnlled Stales Infantry wnre dlspat-;!:- F. M. Miller returned to Lakeview ed to Ti xaa last week to allay .hu Tuesday niglit, following a buslnes.4 : fears of raids by Mexicans along tin; and pleasure trip to Berkeley und j Texas border. San Francisco. Wm. LaSater, who for ihe past 2C Jumes iledden wus in town Mini- ; months lias served as deputy Gume day from lila farm west of here and and Flrh Warden In Northern Lake took homo a load of new machinery ; County, has severed his connection to begin bis spring funning. Director; of tho I i.ltej Stiles Kx press Company of New York voted unanimously to liquidate Us affairs and dissolve in the shortest possible time. with the State Commission (Jeorge WeKtlnghoiihe died In New York March 12, following a Ion. per iod of illness, lie wu;i tho inventor of the airbrake and president of 30 corporations" whose arregate capl- The new city council of K!-malli ! tork " 120,000,000 Fulls iihv decided to contribute. S0' Merrill Kecord: Mr. Harvey, the toward tue advertising Hind winch Is ! Luke County man who was Injured being rai'.i d by tin- Chamber of Com-! while rl Unit a bucking horse In Mcr iiirrce. trill some week. a,'o, is slowly recov- i, i , i ti.i cm Schroder f ! crlng. Mrs. Harvey in with l.-r hus- Sllver Lake was successful !n secur-j Ht lv-rslde Jio'el. In-.: the contract for carrying n.all ! City Marshal Striplin is living from Silver Lake to Cliff. The term j notification that tomorrow will be of the ccntriu t Is lour years, effective cleanup day on Water Street und July 1 thls'ycar. that property owners and tenants W. W. NauKhton. pre,.de.,t of the V to h ive all trash and refuse San Francisco IT.-ks Club, dean of from the gutter to the middle K. Keller nnd wife of New Pine Creek wer visitors in Lakeview the first of thu week. A line of reasonably priced ladles and chlldrens house dresncs at the the Pacific Coast spoiling writers, an I known the breadth of tho coun try, died In San Francisco last weel. from heart dlsyuso. W. K. McCormack und family of Summer Lake have gone to Portland where they expect to take up per manent rerldence. Mr. McCormack has sold bis large property Interests ut Slimmer Lake to Withers Bro thers. Tho LndlcH (Mvlc Improvement (Muli will award prizes this senaon for the belt lawns und best flower gurdens. The prlneH will be about the same as given last your, which matter will be decided definitely later. N. J. Slnnot of The Dalles has filed his declaration of candidacy for re election C.mi-resrt from th Second District of Oresoii. i'! na.-i adopted the slogan: "Itural credits. i;ood road, liberal linnet lead laws anil a majority rule " C. 11. Leonard of llnrns in com pany with Thos. Alien and S. J. Hern of the French-Glenn Cattle Company were In Lakeview lust week on busi ness connected with the bearing of the above Interests aguinst W. Z. Moss concerning the ownership of cattle. J. Chas. Smith, of the Parisian Millinery, has bought the F. O. Hunt ing property on Main street, on which Is located the building occupi ed by the milliner store. The prop erty has a thirty-two feet frontage, with a two Htory frame building and the consideration was $3000. Cednrvllle Kecord: I). S Denehy lust nock purchased James Williams' Interest in the D. S. Denehy Mercan tile Co. of this place and sold a block of the compuny stock to Jas. Street, Sid Street and Fred Street. The busi ness will ho conducted us heretofore of the street. President Wilson last week signed the Alaska railroad bill, which pro vld' for the construction of a rail roi.d Into the northern gold fields of Vlu-ka.. The president used two pens ono of ivory and silver and one of ivory and gold. Klamath County is soon to have a cheese factory says the Northwestern. It will be located in Langell Valley on the C. L. Holiday ranch and al ready Is In thfe course of construction. The factory is exp-ictod to be In oper ation in a few months. It Ih now stated that the sole ambi tion of Villa, the one time bandit, is to become president of Mexico, and that it will remain so until he U either dcud or president. If Mexico could possibly he any worse ofT than at present. It would be for Villa to take Huerta's place. i W. D. Trout of Iteno, who comes highly recommended VIII give a pub ! lie lecture In the M. E. Church Wednesday. March L'5. at 7.30 p. m.. on the subject of "Masonry." Ad mission will be free, but collection will be taken up at the end of the meeting to defray incidental ex peiiHes. U. A. Hooth of Eugene lu.s AM his declaration as an aspirant for the Republican nomination foi United Stales Senator. He asks that the fol lowing twelve words be published after his name on the ballot: . 'Cre dit restored. Labor employed. Pro duce protected. Lands reclaimed. Oregon developed. Homes protect ed." Portland's harbor front tuflered Its most devastating conflagaration In history lust week when two mammoth grain docks laden with wheat were completely desroyed, and two large vessels were ruined almost beyond re- Lakevlew Mercantile Co. Horn at the Lakeview Hospital In j Lakeview, Oregon, Tuesday, March , 17. 1ft 14, to Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cogburn, a 94 pound boy. .Mrs. George Chandler Is reported to be qutte ill at her home at Abort Lake, suffering from an attack of appendicitis. George Hentz Is now the pos 'icsMor of a Ford car, he having purcha.M!d one this v.eeu from Au ten tc. Jei.nings. County Attorney O. C. GIbbs, Mon day left by horseback on a business trip to the nortnern part of the county. The many friends of J. B. Blair were glad to see him upon the streets this week following an operation re cently performed by Doctors Smith and Everett. Dr. W. Hayden Fisk is now the proud papa of a fine baby girl, who : made her arrival at the Lakeview Hospital Tuesday, March 17, Mrs. Fisk and daughter are doing nicely. The baby weighed Dine pounds. The petition of Wesley O. Smith, of Klamath Falls, who will be a candidate for re-election to the of fij of Representative from this judicial district, is heinn circulated an-on,-; the voters of Lakeview. F. P. Lane has ordered a new 1914 Model Cadillac automobile; throup-h Auten & Jennings the local dealers in Cadillac and Ford cars. It is expected that Mr. Lane'scar will arrive today or tomorrow, be Ins driven down from Bend. Catching thirty fish, a broken ear and a walk of sl or eight miles were some of the experiences of the party, composed of Harry Bailey, A. L. Thornton, F. P. Light and W. F. G.-ob, who went to Drews Creek Tuesday In Bailey's car. Lakeview Encampment Lodge, No. 18 will confer the royal purple de gree on six candidates in the I.O.O.F. Hall tonight. The Initiating cere monies are to be followed by a ban quet and a large attendance of mem ber is requested. under the name of the D. S. Denehy pulr and a dozen buildings were more Muiv-intlln Co r less scorencu oy urivms nun.tra Leo Huael has purchased the house and lot belonging to Chus. Cmbuch on Dewey street, formerly i occupied by Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Lonzway, und will take possession immediately. Mr. and Mrs. Lonz way have taken rooming appart ments in the I'mhach building on' Canyon street. This will be onu of the most pros perous years in the history of Silver Lake. Is the opinion of the leader, which bays that there will be more business buildings erected ant', more new enterprise atarled than in many yeurs, und thut more now homes will un elected and more city work com menced thun In any year In the past 20. The corner lot. west of the W. V. Heryford residence, on Dewey street has been purchased by the Presby terian Church of Lakeview and plans are now under way for the erection of a church building on the prop erty. The church owns an Inside loi In the same block und it is saia to be for pale since making this last purchase. Bid well News: Geo. 11. Ayres, lo cal representative of the Modoc Co. Irrigation Company was served Fri day with a $10,000 attachment of the company's charts, surveys and office equipment. This Is the first step tor the early commencement oi ,ork on the Cow Head project, as this move la made to force the company to do something. The total loss caused by the fire is eftiiiialed a' nearly a million d.Mui&. A jury trial of John Duncan vs. Kehart Borthers, a suit for wages uniounting to $128, was held before Justice of the Peace Chas. Umbuch last Monday. While a case of this nature should ordinarily be decided In favor of the wage earner, the jury considered the claim of the de fendants that the plaintiff was gross negligent and returned a verdict in their favor. Dr. Smith was called to the Mc Culley ranch west of town Saturday night to attend Clareuce Anderson who sustained quite serious injuries from falling from his wagon near that place while returning home from Lakeview. The following day he was removed to his home on the West Side, and wliLe his neck was injured quite seriously, he is report ed to be recovering as well as could be expected. George B. Whorton, proprietor of Ye Olde Inn returned home Monday from a trip to Stockton, Cal., where he visited Mrs. Whorton and child ren. He also made a slioit trip to San Francisco. Mr. Whorton has taken a lease on the Drenkel build ing on the corner of Water ard Can yon streets, now occupied iy the Combs Pool and Billiard Hall, and will take charge April first. Mr. Combs states that he is undecided about re-openlng in another building here. Will Investigate Kates Sacramento Bee: The State Kail- road Commission Has begun an inves- tlgatlon on its own initiative into all the rates of the Nevada, California, Oregon Railway; and a public hear ing will be held before Commissions Gordon at Alturas, Modoc County, on March 27th. o Scores Votes For Women George Wlngfleld, mining million aire, is quoted in the Sacramento Bee as declaring that if women are allowed to vote in Nevada by the adoption of the Suffrage Amendment at the coming election he will close up his interests, including farming, banking and mining and leave Nev ada. o Unemployed Army Diserslng ' With the food supply rapidly di minishing, and a raw north wind, making life unpleapant on the Yolo County, Cal., saud levees the "un employed army" around the Califor nia capital is said to le rapidly dis Integrating. Only about 300 out of the original 150a now remain. o Chautauqua Circle The Lakeview Chautauqua Circle will meet with Miss Hall at the home of Mrs. Bailey, Monday, March 23, at 7:30 p. m. Program, Roll Call, current events. Subject, Studies in the Poetry of Italy, Chapter VI. The Renaissance and Ariosto, Miss Hall; Chapter VII, Tusso, Miss Knight; Chapter VIII. The Period of Decad ent e and the Revival. o Martial Law Although no proclamation was Is sued, martial law existed at Sun Diego the first of the week along the border for miles each side of Tecate, Cal., following the destruc tion by fire of the penerril store con taining the United States postoffice and customs ofllce and the murdei of Postmaster Johnson, Saturday night, by three men declared to be Mexicans. Anti-Mxlcan feeling is said to be aroused to fever heat In thut vicini ty of California. o Destroy Trash All trash about the farm should be burned during the first dry weather. Weeds, rodunts, insects, germs, and bed air find refuge in piles of decay ing plant and animal matter. "An ounce of prevention Is worth many pounds of cure," says A. L. Lovett, crop-pest specialist at the Agricul tural College. Wm.F.Paine&Co REAL ESTATE LAKEVI E)W -:- OREGON "E 8c W" SHIRTS "Troy's Best Product." Take a look at our Spring Showing of these high grade Shirts. Priced at $1.50 to $3.00. "GORDON" HATS The Rival of any $5.00 hat on the market. Price $3.00. All the New Spring Blocks. "MUNSING" UNION SUITS The last word in Underwear man ufacture. Try a suit to be convinced of the comfort of a perfect fitting Union Suit. Priced at $1 .50 to $3.00. WALK-OVER SHOES BRITTEN 8c ERICKSON The World's Largest Factory Making Women's Fine Shoes Only: DAILY CAPACITY 1 700 PAIRS EMPLOYING 5.127 PEOPLE Nothing but merit in the article made can build such a busi ness as this an organization of shoe specialists with but one ambition: To Make Better Shoes Every Day. It means just what the mame implies The Queen of Quality. This name on a shoe is your guarantee of Excellence in Style, Fit and Comfort. It means the last word in beauty of design and fashion We are showing the new Spring Shoes right now. It is a feast for the eyes a showing of beauty and real art in shoe making. We want you to come in and take a look. You don't have to buy all we ask ia to show you. You will understand why we are so enthusiastic when you see what we have on exhibition. . Prices $3.50 to $5.00 Lakeview Mercantile Company