Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1914)
LAKE COUNTY .EXAMINER THE LAKEVIEW ABSTRACT & TITLE CO. pRSTfflftTS TO ALL REAL PROPERTY IN LAKE COUNTY, OREGOi Our Complete Tract Index insures Accuracy, Promptness and Reliability Such an Index is the ONLY KfcLlMtL-E system from which n Abstract can mailf, showing all defects of title. Wo A iso Furnishl Jf&VR Z" H. W. MORGAN, Manager, LAKEVIEW, OREGON fOSTOFFICK BOM 23 fMOMt tTf UNFAMILIAR FACES Historical Characters of Whose Looks We Know Nothing. THEY LEFT NO PORTRAITS. WALLACE & SON Wm. Wallace, Coroner tor Lake County) UNDERTAKERS PROMPT ATTENTION AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Parlors, next door to Telephone Office WATSON BUILDING Lakeview Ice, Transfer and Storage Co Telephone No. 161 J. P. DUCKWORTH, Manager Buss to Meet Alt Trains. Transfer and Drayage. Storage by clay, - Week or Month DO- "OUtt CUSTOMERS ARE OUR ADVERTISERS" Goose Lake Valley Meat Market R. E. WINCHESTER, Proprietor We endeaVor to keep our market well supplied with FRESH, SALT AND SMOKED MEATS 5 lbs. Lard, 90c; 10 lbs.,i$1.80 r Your Patronage is Respectfully Solicited LAKE COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY Incorporated. A Complete Record We have made an entire transcript of all Records In Lake County which tnanv wav, affect Real Prtiertj- In the county. We hRve a complete Iiecord of every Mortgage and transfer ever made In Lake County, and ever f)e-d Ken. Errors Found in Titles In transcribine the records we have found nnmwmn iuort Kanes recorded In the Deed record and indexed; and many deeds are recorded In the Mortgage record and other book Hundreds of mortgages and deeds are not Indexed at all. and mot difficult to trace up from the records. We have notations of all these Errors. Others .annot find them. We have put Hundreds of dollars bunting up these errors, and we can fully guarantee our work. J. D. VENATOR, Hanager. 1 Balance the Cost of. our meat anainst that of the coarser grades a ml' you w ill find ours the cheapest Jn end. There's no waste t o such choice meatsas ours. Every ounce can lie used, eeiy parti cle eaten. To buy here is not alone to fet the best, but to practice went economy. Lakeview Meat Market HAYES & GROB. props SHAMROCK STABLES yZ&'rZi:, CON BREEN, Proprietor Special Attention to Transient Stock Horses Boarded by the Day, Week or Month Always Open Phone 571 LAKEVIEW OREGON EMBROIDERY SHOP FANCY WORK IiXCll AST, i: Pure Linen Hand kerchiefs, Sew Pillow Tops, Scarfs ami Centers. Sun's JloU-ProofLusfer Collars for Jim broidery. J).M.C. Threads of all kinds. Art Linen by the yard. Jim broidery Work to order. MRS. H. O. ALGER OPPOSITE JIliRYFORD JILDG. Alger Land Co. lla nchesClty i'roperty Ren tnls Tuxes i'uhl and Rentals Collected for Son-residents Office Opposite Ileryford Jtulldlnff Many of the Famoua Figures and He roe a of Colonial and Revolutionary Timee Are Blanks tor Us 80 Far aa Thair Paraonal' Appoaranca la Concarnad. In the seaMi for Hrtrnlt of Thom as Wlllett. the first mayor of New York, the committee from the City club Tlslted nearly every print denier In the city In uddltlon to scores of pri vate collectors of Americana. Hut there waa no portrait to be found. Any one who hits ever attempted to mnke a collection of the pictures of the big men of early New York wxin realizes that there are ninny blanks. For Instance, of the four Dutch gov ernors Peter Stuyvcsant Is the only one of whom we have h correct por trait. Of Peter Minuet. William Klcft aud Wouter vnu Twlller there la abso lutely nothing accurate, although vari ous caricatures have appeared from time to time. The same Is true of a etlll more emi nent New Yorker. William Bradford, the first printer, who founded In 1725 the New York Gazette, which waa the first newspaper printed In the prov ince. Bradford was so prominent a man and so active for years, both In Philadelphia as well as In New York, that It is miller surprising not to have something worthy of being called a true portrait, If there was. perhaps his feature! might be on the tablet erected on the site of his printing of fice, now of the Cotton Exchange, at I Hanover srpiare. The lack of 1111 authentic mrtralt of Nathan Mule, the martyr spy of the Revolution, is somewhat better known, although the sculptors MacMonnles Partridge and others have not al lowed this to restrain them from de pictitisi the features of the young sol dier in stone or bronze. Of Colonel Ethan A lieu there is no known or trait. 11 ud the same is true of the doughty warrior. General Nicholas Herkimer. One of the heroes of Bunker bill. Colonel Richard Gridloy. has left no portrait. He' was the artillerist and engineer who built the fortifications j the night before the battle. Other prominent Revolutionary fighters of whoui no pictures exist are Colonel William I.edyard. the defender of New London, who was killed by a British officer wheu Ledynrd surrendered the fort: General Thomas Conway, leader of the notorious a Initio depose Wash ington troin the command of the army in 1777: Colonel Seth Warner, who wns prominent in the attacks on Tlconde roga and Crown point and in the but tle of Beiiuington: General Seth Pom eroy of Massachusetts, and General Samuel Holden Parsons, one of the board which tried Major Andre and was appointed by Washington as the first Judge of the northwest territory. No accurate portraits exist of two of the fifty-six signers of the Declaration i of Independence. John Morton of Penn sylvania and .Inhii Hart of New Jer sey, although a portrait which is said to be that of Hart hangs In Independ ence hall in Philadelphia and Is said to have been painted from 11 miniature. There is nothing extant of the fa ther of George Washington. Augustine Washington, nor have any portraits been discovered of Colonel Ball, fa ther of Mary Washington, mother of the general, or of John Dandridge, fa ther of Washington's wife. Martha Washington. A portrait which a great many col lectors of old New York material would give a good deal to obtain Is that of Samuel Fraunces. the West In dian tavern keeper, whoso best known house was the old Fraunces' tavern, now owned ly the Sons of the Revolu tion, restored since they purchased It a few eurs ago to Its original condi tion, it is on lower Broad street, ou the corner of Pearl street, and the famous long room in which Washing ton took farewell of his otlicers has been restored as closely as possible to its original form. There is no portrait of William Cun ningham, the heartless keeper of the provost jail in a corner of City Hall park during the Revolution. Betsy Ross, the celebrated maker of the lirst stars and stripes, has no portrait. Cap tain Miles Staudish Is among those who have left nothing of their per sonal appearance, nor is anything known of the Intrepid French explor er Jollet. who traced the sources of tho Mississippi. Others of more or less nolo of whom there lire 110 portraits are the old Eng lish dramatist. Christopher Marlowe; Richard Savage, another well known English dramatist, who died in 1743; Mariuls Duiuesno. from whom Port Duquesne, now Pittsburgh, got its lirst iniuie from the French; George Clin ton, royal governor of New York from 1743 to 1753 and father of the British general In the Revolution, Henry Clin ton; Colonel John Henry Cruger, Gen eral Oliver de Lancey, Governor Wil liam Tryon, General John Forbes, Baron Dleskau, General Robert Howe and Bourrlenne, Napoleon's famous secretary, who wrote an excellent life of the great French emperor. New York Times. BUSINESS WOMEN'S HATS Neat Millinary, Simply Trimmad, In Good Tatta. 1 I'hotoa $k by American rreas Association. 1 RIBBON TBJMMKD BATH. I Hats for the business woman should be becoming and neat aud such that wind ami lain will touch them but lightly. These two elements are sure to act disastrously on any hut after a time. A hat which Is trimmed with tulle, gay tlowers or a mass of plumps will be shorn of Its elegance by the first lively spring breeze or soaked to a shaiK'less pulp by the copious April showers. This season the vogue of fancy straw liows combined with well wlnd ribbon ones makes the hat problem of the business woman much simpler. The attractive 11 ml stylish h it with the silk r satin crown Is. h never, not for 1 her. ' A close tilting hat of well woven straw, with a simple IiIhoi trimming like that of either of 1'.. hats jllustrat' ed here, wjmld be a : Iiolce. JUVENILE WOOES. Dainty New Fkic That Launder Easily Are F'arular. White was never i.mc popular for children's ilic--.es It is this sea sou. Willie theie Is much to be said In its favor, the huv mother dreads the amount of laundry work necessary in order to keep the little frocks spot less. I'lilcss they aie kept Immacu late their charm Is ot. This season, however, many of the crape weaves require very little IroniiiL'. and this Is the most difficult part of the laundry work. The majority of iimthcrs solve the problem of color by arranging enough NO SLUMS IN UVN YORK. rdiot of an Espert After a Bearoh Throuoh tha Cty. I have made an niuuxing discovery. It Is the result of three days and nitidis of Kolng to and fro In New York-somellmes alone mid sometimes with a wise hut not cynical detective. And the unnmlng and dlsconcetiiig dis covery H tUls: There are no slums In New York. You can tlnd crime and criminals: you can find vice, poverty, drunken ties, disease, but you cannot tlnd a slum-such slums 11s blacken and fester In Antwerp. Genoa. Naples. Paris. London and many another old world city. The reason Is that oil cannot have a slum without tilt li. and New York Is a clean city. Neither crime nor sverty nor crowds make a slum. Yom must have tilth 11s well, nnd that l what New York hasn't got. 1 looked for It east 11 nil west and north, from river front to river front Everywhere, nuy where, were crime, vice, mean poverty. Everywhere thieves, rogues, outcasts, men and wo men Isolated from their kind by sin or mere suffering, but 110 slums. Dirt, of course. Is relative, but the tenements even the old nests of low houses lined with fire escapes-were habitable human dwelling places. And the night going detective, declared he could show me nothing worse. I want ed to see the fetid caves where wretch edness lay moaning 011 garbage, heaps, the windy garrets where It starved, and there were no fetid caves. In the old streets and the dingy court of Paris you can still tlnd hun dreds of them; you have but to walk peerlugly through the street of the Three Gates or the Mrcct of the Irou Pot; you' have but to go Into the suburbs that lie outside the fortifica tionsfur year by year the centrifugal force that stirs In every great ag glomeration of human atoms has thrown Parisian beggitrdom Into that dreary circumference. But lu the washed aud lighted un derworld of New York there are no slums. There Is not one slum that half deserves the name. Wretched ness all you please; hunger In the streets and on the housetops. It may tie. but none of those gangrened holes of tilth without which no real slum can exist. 1 speak almost with the decision of nil exert. for I sficnt many years prowllngly Investigating the slums that rot and blacken the surface of Europe from Moscow to Llslnin. Vance Thompson lit New York Kun. AArlce is seldom welcome. Those who need it moJt like It last.-Dr. Johnson. 4 W-'t :. i ' i 7 ft." 1 n 1 V. 1 f Vf THREE EMPIRES. Monarchies That Practically Sprang Into Being Overnight. Prior to Jan. 18. 1871, the German empire, as we know II today, hud no existence. Instead it was u Jumble of kingdoms, states, duchies, grand duchies and principalities, nil Joined together by a like language 11 tut com uioii political aspiration, it Is true, bin otherwise ijuitc separate mid distinct. Then came the historic ceremony lr. the II. ill of Mirrors at Versailles. Par Is had Just been captured by King William of Prussia, and It was held to be a lilting lime ami place to proclaim him the tirst German emperor. Never since the dawn of history was an cm pile born more dramatlcully. By a strange Irony of late, too. It birth took place amid the ruins of the French empire. Itself the creation of a day. or, rather, to be strictly accurate, of a night. France uent to bed 011 the evening of Dec. I. 1S.M. a republic. When it awoke next morning It was an empire. During the hours of dark ness Paris had been occupied by troops, and the prince -president had become NapoleonJll. Equally sudden aud almost us sensa tional In Its way was the birth of the modern Greek empire. After the yoke of the Turks had -tteen thrown off lu the wur of Independence the country became u republic. But the people soon tired of that democratic form of government and promptly proceeded to assassinate their first and only pres ident. Then they met together, elect ed a king and settled themselves down to be ruled by him In a quite orderly and contented fashion. 4 f v y 1 I KTllII'l.'l) OIXOI1AM MOWN. wnlte dresses for wear on special oc casions and, for every day, colored frocks. Among (he latter there is a great variety kuf new weaves as well 11s the staple ginghams, cliaiiibrnys, lawas and percales. These latter ure offered In such up to date colors and designs that even the most exacting will not hesitate to employ them. As for wear, these old siaiidhys cannot ho sur passed. Blue nnd white striped gingham was used for this very sensible school frock for a little maid. The collar and cuffs were of white linen. Two rows of white crochet buttons adorned the front of the bodice, and n belt show ing h bias arrangement of the Btrlpei encircled the waist. A shady panama hnt udorned with a blue band waa worn with the dress. High Cost of Living Again. I Prosperous ex-German (on visit to fallierlaudi - Douner und blltzeu, what are you glvlu' us? Forty pfennig for this sausage: When 1 went away a few yeurs ago I used to pay only 20 pfennig. a Tho Walter They wus different sausages. The P. ex-G. Precisely tho same. The Walter No, you're wrong there. The old ones was bigger. New York Post. . In Good Company. A contemporary wants to know what's become of tho old fashioned man who used to suy, "I says, says I." When Inst seen he was Btundlng on a street corner In close conversation with tho old fashioned man who says, "Sezee to mo. sezee." Cleveland Plain Denier. Homo Secrete. Teacher Tommy, next time you are late bring an excuse from your father. Toiniuy-Who? Pa? Why he ain't auy good at excuses; ma finds I1I111 out every time. -Boston Transcript. Poated. "However did you hear such dread ful things u bo ut Mrs. Hubcr?" "You forget she was once my dearest frlend."-FIIegendo Blatter. The world does not require o iuucU to ih informed as to bo remluded ITannab More. NOTES C.M.IVARN1TZ UTtRSIUK PA. o 4 t l COKKESPOVPrNCl SOLICITED mm lTh artlelre and llltmtratlona niu.t not br reprinted without aix-vlal prrmUelon. J WIND PUFF. "Welt, what 011 earth alls that chick? It looks like a balloon." "Only n case of wind puff. lady. It will not blow up If punctured lit time." It seem contradictory, but wind puff Is caused by a puncture and cured by a puncture. A chicken has no sweat glands, nnd most of the Ixsly's moisture, plus the cnrhotilc acid gas, must ho thrown out In the breath. The lungs do not hold sufficient air for this, aud so nature has supplied most birds with air sace, or spoclal reservoirs of air, that communicate ultli the lungs and thus furnish an ahundiiut supply of air. In some birds these sacs extend Into the large Imue of the wing, breast Isine and thigh, so that If mouth Is closed . ; f - wv . '- . J f .; '.;rf i --":t::T'. : ll I'holo hy C. M. Mnrntt I'lll ll.li tip. the bird can breathe through a broken bone. A chicken has nine of these membranous air sacs 011 Us body, four on the sides and one In front at the middle. J lice mi. s ih.-it supplement the lungs III their double work are sometime broken by 11 strain or punctured by .1 broken rib or a sharp blow. The outer skin then becomes dls tended with air Then all one must do Is to puncture ti c outer skin and let thi' air es.-npe. und 1 1 1 1 - must Is repented until the trouble ceases. lit. b u III not be loliu A hen on 1 omit of Its peculiar con struction n mt Uivitlie much faster than a 111. in. ami the moisture thrown 1. 5 1 i mf i-?4:.'3LJ Photo by ('. M lliirnlu. HAMU rllICK, NATI'IUI, HIZK. out In the breath lu winter becomes frost on the walls and celling unless ventilated out. The hums and aux iliary breathing apparatus if fowls re semble that of a tortoise and Is ground for the belief of scientists 1 1 til t they belong to the reptile group. DON'TS. Don't forget that good timimgc uicut figures much lu success. If you can't manage your wife can Just one trial and you'll be convinced. Don't drive 11 willing horse too hariH If you hold ribbons over men hold back your horses now and then. Don't stand in your own light. Wheu envy tries to make you do It eschew II. Don't argue 011 both sides of 11 ques tion, nnd don't argue with your wlfu at till. Don't prowl because you don't get lis big prices for your poultry as your neighbor If your stock Is Inferior nnd you don't hustle. Don't forget that a lieu makes eggs of it variety of juntci'liils, mainly ce reals. Good cut bone, greens, exer cise nnd grains for gains Don't 'teed one grain exclusively. Oats Is good In wet weather, as the hulls bind and tend to stop intest ,11111 troubles caused by wet