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About Roseburg review. (Roseburg, Or.) 190?-1920 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1908)
5S - - EVENING ROSEBURG REVIEW ISSUED DAILY EXCEPT .SUNDAY REVIEW PUBLISHING COMPANY Office Review Building, (first floor) Jackson Street. Telephone Main ool. L. WIMBI-RLV, Edlto'. DAILY Vet Tear, bj mall ' Per monlti, delivered to Per week, delivered 16 H K M I - w u:k XLV Per Year ri Hit Moulin H.ui (X-nUlKU UH, 11(08. SIDEWALK LAWS. (Continued from Tuesday.) Section VIII. All curbs and side walks Included In the following dis trict, to-wlt: That part of the City of Htwehiirg bounded on tho north by the South bank of Deer Creek, on tho South by tho North line of Mosber street, on tho Kant by the Went line of Kuril) street, and on the West by the center line uf the South ern Pacific main track, also north side of Lane street from the center line of Uio Southern Pacific Muin track to the Uinpgua Hlver Ilrldge shall be constructed of concrote and along the following lines: Tho width of the roadway between curbs on all streets sixty feet or less In width shall he thrco-Dfths of the total width of the street; on streets sixty feet and over In width the (roadway shall he .16 feet wide. Section IX. All sidewalk pave ments shall have a fall toward the glitter of one-quarter of an Inch to one foot, Tho curb grade shall be parallel to, and tho proper depth be low, the property line grade allowing for the fall In width of the slde wulk. The grade of the gutter shall be parallel to and six Inches below, tho curb grade. Tho grade of the center of the street shall be as shown on the profiles, and the crown of tho street shall bo .85 of a foot for 3(1 foot roadway, .71 of a foot for a 30 foot roadway. .E7 of a foot for 24 foot roadway and In the same pro portion for streets of other widths. . Section X. On ull business streets the sld?walk shall be paved the full width from property lino to curb Hue. On residence slrectH the paved por tion of the side walk shall be as follows: On GO foot Htreets the sidewalk pavement Hhall be six feet wide and tho outer edge four feet from curb Hue; on fifty fuot streets the pave ment shall he live feet wide and the outer edge four feet from curb Hue; on forty foot streets tho pavement shall be five feet wide and the outer edge two feet from the curb lino On Htreuts over sixty feet wide, the sidewalk pavement shall bo six feel wide and the outer edge eight feel from the block Hue. Section XI. Shado and ornnment at trees shall be located hilf way between the curb line and the outer edge of the sidewalk pavement. Section XII. On all streets In the City of Kosehurg, outtdde of the here inbefore described dhUrlct, the curht and sidewalks may be constructed of either wood or concrete accord ing to plans and specifications ap proved by the City Council of the said City nf Itoscburg, and along the following lines: The width of road way between curlm on nil streets of M) feet or over In width shall be 28 feet and on all streets less than 1"0 feet In width the roadway shall he three-tlfths of the total width of the street. On t'0 foot streets the side walk pavement fdiall bo six feet wide and the outer edge eight feet from tho curb line: on fit) foot street the pavement shall be five feet wide, and theouter edge ft feet from the curb line. On 40 foot tdrcets, the pavement shall be live foot wide and the outer edge two feet from the curb line. On streets over tiO feel In width, the sidewalk paveiuenl shall be six feet wide and the outer edge eight feet from the ttlock line HiKvltlcittiniiH for Curbing uml Hide Walks. Section XIII. All curbing and sidewalk pavements In tho City ol KoHchtirg. Oregon, shall be construct ed to the eslablirdied lines ami grades, and In accordance with the following sped flint ions. Plank WnlkN. Section XIV. Plank walks sholl be coiiHtrurted of a good grade of sound Oregon fir lumber, free from Shakes and loom knots. The string ers shall be four by slx-lurh timber not less than sixteen feet long. The joints In the strliiKers shall be sptU-ed with a two by four, four feet long, securely spiked to the side of the stringers. Section XV. On the six foot walk there tthnll bo three stringers, one In the center and one six Inehep from the edge. On wider walks the stringers shall he not to exceed thirty Inches apart, center to center. The planks shall be two by six or two by eight, surfaced on the upper side and securely nailed to each stringer with two ten-penny nulls. Where timber curbs are put In they nhiiM be made of four by twelve Inch plank, sixteen feet long, with a two bv twelve Inch plank, four feet long, spiked the side of the curb nt the joint. The curbing shall be held In pi am by extending one ef Hldcwnlk planks out to the curh every eight feet and spiking ft securely to the curb. Cement Walk. Section XVII. Cement walks shall be constructed of Portland ce ment, snnd and broken stone and gravel. The cement used shall be of the best high grade Portland cement. It shall be sound and of such fUm nesa that i& per cent will mkk through a Number 100 sieve. Bri quettes of neat cement, when seen 1 days old. shall have a tensile strength of 4.ri0 pound per square inch. I XJrlquettes made of one part cement BfSCASTBRIA d tSMJMJ For Infant, and Children. ALCOiiOL.3 PEK CENT. s (mlla Uig the Rwd aiKfReguta ling (lie Siomadis oadiiowebof PromofcsDigwlionOcfifrl ncss uwl RestjCantalns ne tarr Opitmi.Morphine nor Moral. NOT ARC OTIC. AjrafOMlkSIMXiniaa Aperlecl Remedy for Consflf non . sour 3iuirkKii.uuiiLiK Worrasfoirvulsmisfeverislr ncss awl Loss or Sleep. facsimile Signature of NEW YOMC 1 The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of i ww nr Exact Copy of Wrapper. in Use For Over Thirty Years (.ASTORIA u nd three parts auud, when seven days old, shall have a tensile strength of 120 pounds per square inch. The sand used for ull concrete and ce ment mortar hIiuII bo clean, course and sharp. Tho broken stone used for the concrete shall be clean hard Hone, free from earth and dust, and he fragments shall vary In size from 1-8 to 2 Inches In the greatest HmeiiHlons. If grnvel Is used for .lie concrete, It shall be clean, hard ;ravel of the same size as specified or broken stone, and It shall be ,'ree from broken earth and dust. All -oucretu shall he made of Portland :omcnt, sand and broken stone or ;ruvel, mixed and placed ns rollows: )ne barrel of cement shall be thor tughly mixed dry on n platform with I3.fi cubic feet of sand. The cement ind hiiikI shall be wet and mixed Into i still mortar. The mortar shall be tpread out and 17.5 cubic Teet of wet broken stone or gravel thorough y mixed with It until the mortar Is evenly distributed. The mixture hall be of such consistency that It -an bu tamped solidly in place. It 4hull he put In place and thoroughly umped within thirty minutes nfter he cement is wet. All points In con rete masonry where the concrete has .et before the new material Is added hall be grouted with neat cement mortar. ltcfore the walk Is laid the sur ace of the ground shall he brought 'o a uniform subgrade four Inches below the finished surface of the walk. When filling Is necessary It ill at I be put In In four-Inch layers and thoroughly tampt-d until the 'oundutlou Is solid. Kour-fneh by :our-lnch form shall be put In at ach edge of the walk. These shall ')o set true to the Hue and grade and wcu rely fastened so that they will not be moved In tamping the con rete. The walk shall be composed )f a three-Inch concrete base and a wearing aurfuce of one Inch thick, i ml tho flultdicd pavement shall he the full thick iichs t four Inches), lust before the concrete Is put In the ground shall be leveled off and sprinkled. The wearing surface of the walk shall be one Inch thick, made of one part Portland cement and two parts :oarse sharp sand. The sand and .ement shall be mixed dry am) then wet and mixed into n stiff mortar. The mortar shall be used within thirty minutes after the cement Is A'et. The wearing surface shall be put on before the concrete base has et. and It shall be thoroughly trow eled. After the surface Is troweled it shall be laid off In sipiares. with t marking tool, the Joints extending to a depth of not less than one hnlf Inch, and the edwes of the walk rounded off with an edger. The sur face of the walk shall be corrugated or finished rough, so that It will not he slippery. The walk shall be pro tected with a covering of sand about .me Inch thick, and ft shall he kept wet for not less than six days after It Is put In. Concrete C'ltblng, Sect Ion XVII Concrete cu rblng shall be constructed true to line and uade and It shall be of the form and dimensions shown on the plan. n tile hi the otllce of the City Re corder. Forms made of two-lnrh lumber shall he used for the curbing, se curely fastened, so that they will not be forced out of line In tamping the concrete. The concrete shall be mixed and placed as specified for ce ment walks. The expired f' nd the top of the curbing shall be flu Ished with mortar one Inch thimk, mode of one port cement and two parts sand. The mortar on the outer face of the curbing l.alt be tamped folidly ngalnst the forms with Iron tamping tools ns the concrete Is put In. and It shall hae a smooth, even face. The mortar on top of the curbing shall be put In before the i concrete hat set, and It shall bo troweled smooth and true and the outer edges rounded off. The curb ing shall be marked off with a mark ing tool In lengths of five feet. The joints extending to a depth of one hnlf Inch. At street Intersections and driveways crossing the sidewnlk the curbing shall he rounded off at the corners to a radius of five feet. The curbing shall bo kept wet for six days after it is put in. Section X V 1 1 1 . That It Is here by made tho duty of any person or persons owning corner lots and con trucliug sidewalkB under the pro visions of this Ordinance to have the names of the Intersecting streets des ignated In the pavement within a dis tance tif three feet from the Inter secting lines. Section XIX. Tho City Improve ment Committee shall have power :ind 11 Is hereby made their duty to regulate the time and manner of the oiiHtructlon of said walks and gut rs and the necessity thereof, and when ordered by said Improvement 'ommlttee the walk, curl), and gut er, or all. shall be constructed by he owner of the abutting property, ind If the said owner refuses or neg lects to conform to the requirements made In writing by said Committee or by a peraon authorized by said Committee to give such notice, then he said Improvements shall be or lered made as prescribed by the "barter of the City of Roseburg for 'lie improvements of streets and said improvements shnll be n Men upon 'be abutting property as provided for Ihereln. Section XX. The owner of the abutting property shall he given a notice In writing that his or her side walk has been reconstructed and said notice shall given the owner a period of thirty dnys In which to comply with the requirements of said no'lic and this Ordinance, and In case of re fusal or neglect to comply therewith within the said time the city shall proceed as provided for herein. Section XXI. That all Ordinances A Most Valuable Agent Tto glycerine employed In Dr. Phre UHllclunn greatly enhance tho medlclim properties which it extract from nativ. mudfclnal roots and holds in solutlu much hotter than alcohol would. It ab posscMus medicinal properties of Its own being a valuable demulconl, nutritive antlptle and antlformcnU It add Brratly to thr . fllcacy of tho ltlack ( berry bark, Hkx-irout. (JoMen iul root, Utom root and (Juurn's root, contained li "Golden Madtral Discovery " In suUluhu chronic, or lingering couths, bro:ichhti throat and lung iTm Hons, for all of whlcl these agents are nt ommendod by Und ard medical authorities. In all cao where there li a wactlnr away of llwh, losa of appetite, with woak touinfh, as In tho early stages of con lu-nifitim, there can bo no doubt that gty. ctrtneacta ai a vsluable nutrlttvo and aids Coldm Se.il root. Stone root, Quet(iJ rof.t and lllack Chorrybark In SromuVpgfliRcsnon and bulldlm up th Mb nnKfrvnt;tli, controlling Uto comd nd brtniiihft about a healthy condition nf ihn trvtiAlft vtm nr f,mt-H n .. not be ejected to work mlrucles." It will nut curuyunsiimpiion except tn its earner njUvhsti Uroa. It will v-nr.V vt-v feyere. c' nl- II it not so e In uf.it'' coTiJTii TTlS In tbn hnuorlnu nnir-oD couKiis, or inojteoi ion siumiimc ven wh.tn accompanied t.y Nevdimt fren lungs, that it has pur formed lu most marvelous cures. Prof. Flnlcy Kllingwnod, M. D., of Pen nett Med. CoUegt, Chicago, says of gi cerine: In i1tpimU It Bre an etcrllrni punxv HoMiiuf UkI guhiiilty ot the icnt,ict mi bT(liWtn In hitlon.lt Is m of Hi mr Bianuffe'turvtl prvdu-lof U prvvnt Uki h It tctlun uinvn enff-rtiltxt !. rxlvriH) uu setts, piped ally It ihore l ulc-rai1on or Ca tarrhal a.triu (catarrhal Inflammation ot U'tnaoM, II la irwi-tt efflctant prrparattcn WjvrriMe will rvhrvp mnycaesof tvi Ihpartbunt) and eicenslT vsstrlc (stomach VUlllT." "O-'Mpn Itedlcal ntwevrr? enrlrhr nc purifier the Nc-d eurii'f Nolche p'melp mpiiiMi, cnrulou awelllno iml uJJ aura or uh-er. an. to t R. V rremsof Poftala Tl Y.. tor five hooWIrt iIUef all about hf natl BBMlrlnal n cvmpoxlnr this otHitrrul wilii.lnfc Tbra la aw sJoufcol la tt l-OIl TIIK 11 UK A K FA ST TAHLK we suggest a nice steak or p few chops will be found more susta'nim$ than a dish of sawdust and milk. And If you buy your meats here there will be none of the don't-rare-for-breakfast talk at your nouse. Hubby will eat a meal that will do him till lunch time. You will enjoy breakfast aa heartily as you do 'Uiy meal of the day. The Economy Market Geo. Kohlhagen, Prop. and parts of Ordinances In conflict to this Ordinance lu so far as tlwy are Inconsistent herewith, are here by repealed. LOCKS JAILKH IX CKLL. Hllck Murderer Kscnpes nt Yrekn Whh Ut he Sentenced Thursday. YRKKA, Cal., Oct. 27. Denny Hazel, who was to have been sen tenced on Thursday for the- murder of Joseph Silva, last night effected his escape from the county jail, leav ing K. C. Dudley, the jailer, locked, in his cell. For half an hour Dudley attempted to make known his plight, and in the meantime the convicted murder was fast making his wuy Into the hills. Hazel was standing behind the cell door In the darkness when Dudley led a squad of trusties Into the cell. As the jailer stepped In Hazel stepped out and turned the key In the lock. A pospe of 20 men Is In pursuit of tho fugitive. Would Mortgage tho farm, A farmer on Hural route 2, Em pire, Ga., W. A. Floyd by names, says: "Hucklen's Arnica Sulve cured tho two worest sores I ever saw; one on my hand and one on my leg. It is worth more than Us weight In gold. I would not N without It If I bad to mortgage the farm to get it." Only 2f.c at A. C. Mursters & Co'b. drug store. WHAT FIHIOS COST IS. F. W. Fitzpatrlck, contributes an article In the November McC, lure's on "Fire An American Extrava gance."1 He says: "Fires have cost us as many as 7000 human lives In ono year's time, and our loss In money value, through the destruction of property. Is almost as appalling. The production or gold In the entire world, something like $400,000,000 per year, would not recoup for our losses by fire, and the Incidental expenses accom panying them. In the same period of time; the value of all the coal min ed In this country in a year's time would just cover thff rost to us of our Hres; the value of our lumber production Is only n trifle more. We are fond of luxuries, nnd lmpont a great many, yet the value of all that Importation Is but a fifth of our fire cost. We are great and persistent 'tdvertisers, nnd spend large sums In that accessory to business, but, vast as our advertising bill Is, It equals but two-fifths of our fire bill; and all the Industrial dividends paid in 1H07 aggregate but three-lifths of the amount of our fire extrnvagance. "In 1 i17 there were no great conflagrations; it was what might be termed a "normnl year;" but we actually destroyed buildings, nnd property contained In (hem, to the value of $215,000,000. Don't think that piles can't be cured. Thousands of obstinate cases have been cured by Doan's Ointment. 50 cents at any drug Btore. Hot water bottles, fountain syr inges, bulb syringes, and atomizers, the finest and most complete Hue In the city. Sold at the lowest prices on our guarantee to give satisfaction Look at our line and you will not buy elsewhere. Hamilton Drug Co. li.M IIA TirKWlUTKKH.) A 4 4 An rDKUWOOI, almost 4 4 new, nt a bargain. 4" 4 SMITH IMtKMIKIt, good con- 4 ditlon, very cheap. 4 4. KKMI.NUTON, old model, re- 4 built; good shape; cheap. 4 several other muKes, lio f 4 and up. 4" 4 Hose burg Tyjc writer Exchange 4" Elmer E. Wlmberly, Mgr. 4 4 Roseburg - - Roseburg 4" The Jewelry Store Umbrella You will generally find that It's an altogether superior article. Haven't you notice It? Yes, it costs A Healthy Family. 'Our whole family has enjoyed good health since we began using Dr. King's New Llio Pills, three year? ago," says L. A. liartlet, of Rural Route 1, Guijford. Maine. They cleanse and tone the system In a gentle way and does v 1 good. 25c at A. C. Mursters & Co's. drug store. more, but think what you are getting. Why, often the handles In one of the umbrellas that we sell costs more are worth more than half a dozen dry goods store whole umbrellns. We show a splendid selection. WOULDN'T YOU LIKE TO SEE IT? and while in, look around nnd see the different lines of goods we carry. All new and up-to-date. You will appreciate the values we are able to offer in all sores of Jewelry needs. W. E. Clingenpeel TIIK JKHKI.KIt ANI OITICIAX, National Hank Hldg. l'liouc 2143 The Rovlew docs job printing. Stop-don't do the work aMachine can do The Yost Gearlcss motor will do it, simple as A 15 C, self-oiling will last a lifetime. No metal coging. We invite your personal inspection. Roseburg Furniture Company Jackson St., Roseburg, Ore Umpqua Culd Cure Is a guaran teed remedy. Quick aud sure, at Hamilton's. TF Where Bulla's Flew. David Parker, of Fayette, N. Y., a veteran of the civil war, who lost a foot at Gettysburg says: "The good Electric Bitters have done Is worth more than Ave hundred dollars to me. I spent "Jjuch money doctoring, for a biU case of st niach trouble!, to little purpose. I then tried Elec- f trie Bitters, and they cured me. 1 now take them as a tonic, and they keep me strong and well." 60c at A. C. Marsters & Co's drug store. PLOWS All Kinds at J. F. BARKER & CO. Implements and Vehicles Jubilee Singers The student body of the high school is fortunate in securing the services of Watkin's Jubilee Singers for Wednesday, October 28. They give a first class performance in every respect. The proceeds of the evening will be used to supply the high school reading table with periodicals. The balance to go into the student body fund. Come and hear the darkies sing, costumed as in the days of slavery. General Admission 50 Cents Children and Students 25 Cents Reserved Seats 75 Cents Reserved Seat Tickets on Sale at Agee's Book Store. General Admission Tickets may be Ex changed for Reserved Seat Tickets Do You Appreciate an Easy, Good-fitting Shoe? Yes; most all women do, and we have just opened up several cases of fresh, new shoes made of American tauned kid--the "glove fl'3 AA fitting leather." Every woniat ways dressy, always neat for every occa Every woman should wear kid shoes. Al- (JJ'J Cn John Kelly has made these over uew, perfect fitting lasts. Call. and Kxt'liiflive ncRler In Ilcary and Floe-shoe!, R,. L. STEPHENS Next Poor to I'uHtofllce Hhone loss All Work Guaranteed H. C. RITZMAN, Up-to-Date Plumber Special Sale on Fixtures, Including Towel Racks, Soap . Dishes, Tumbler Holders, Sponge Racks, Etc Ut mo make an eMIraala on your work. Steam and not Watar a Specially Foot of Jackson St,. ' Rcpair Woii Nea0y j,,, , I Announcement! We are now doing busi ness in our elegant new store. Commercial Club Building. Call and inspect our new stock. Your orders will re ceive our prompt and careful attention. Himsaker--Guesti Grocery Company Roseburg, Douglas Co., Oregon