Medford daily tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1906-1909, August 03, 1908, Page 3, Image 3

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    3
7,000 PEOPLE
EARLY DAYS
100 NOTICE 100
Just received, one hundred new patterns and styles in
Kings, direct from the factory. Come in and look
them over.
MARTIN J. REDDY
The Jeweler Near Postoffice
Fine Watch and Jewelry Ropalring a Specialty.
IN 20 MINUTES
IN JOSEPH
El
E
How Large Crowds Oan
Be Handled at Portland
Good Roads Meet
POKTLAXI), Or., August 3. Seven
thousand people iu -U miuuten. That's
the rate at winch the various n ran spol
iation interests of Portland have as
Huri'd the directors of the county club
and livestock show that the erowdM at
tending that event in Septoinber will
le handled. Kvery day at the grounds
is busier than the one preceding. J he
intense interest of the whole north
west is evidenced by the great number
of entries alrendy made, while the na
tional interest is shown by :i heavy ad
vance correspondence from every part
of tho lTnited States.
linn. Wilbur K. Newell, president of
the Oregon state board of horticulture,
and equally well known in Washington,
has at the refpiest of the Oregon De
velopment league condensed his ideas
on good roads into I MO words and they
tell the story:
Tor Better Highways.
"Bad roads nullify advertising, repel
immigration, increase cost- of living,
render the automobile useless, and will
deprive the farmer of rural free deliv
ery. "Stale aid and supervision of road
construction is essential.
"In equity because n public bene
fit; state should pay i!" per cent of the
cost, county 5(1 per cent and the adja
cent property 25 per cent.
" Kor thoroughness Trained engin
eers and si rict supervision of all work.
"For economy Levy taxes and pay
as we go. or on short time certificate
plan.'
"For education liegular ami corre
spondence courses in road . building at
Oregon agricultural college and Uni
versity of Oregon.
"Let us build good roads all summer
instead of talking about thema II win
ter.
The Oregon good roads conference!
will convene promptly at N::til a. in.!
Tuendny, August U, iu the convention
hall of the Portland Commercial club,
sixth floor. Another meeting will be
held at - o'clock and perhaps an eve
ning session. A feature of the conven
tion will he the attendance of many
mad supervisors and practical road
officials.
A great cement plant is to be built
in Portland, the first instance iu Amer
ica in which Portland cement has been
manufactured in a city of that name.!
Portland and Salt Lake capitalists have'
organized a company wil h capital of
$1,'nli,iHm, and the limerock will be,
brought from Itoseburg, where they!
own a tract of 100 acres of choice rock.!
Big Cemeut Plant. i
One thousand barrels of cement a day I
will be manufactured at the beginning.
but the plant is so designed that thisi
capacity can be doubled at any time
with very slight change. Iiuihliugs and
grounds will occupy a site of 15 acres
in the suburbs of Portland, with both
rail and water transportation.
t'. W. Nibley and associates of Salt
Lake City hold one-half the stock, with
Portland capitalists the other half. Mr.
Nibley has extensive interests in Ptah,
Idaho, Oregon and California, anil is
president of the I'nimi Cement company
at Devil's Slide, Ptah. which has man
ufaetured 2000 -barrels a day during
two years of successful and profitable
operation.
Building permits exceeding $1,000,000
were issued iu Portland during July, nn
increase of $:tno,n00 as compared with
that month last year. Transfers of
choice business properties were never
so numerous, uor building so active.
MYSTERY STILL VEILS
ASSAITi7TON TEACHER
fiALH'K, Or., August .1. An atmos
phere of mystery still hangs around
the mountain cabin out in Gal ice mining
camp, where Miss Km in a liobinson, a
former Portland school teacher, wat
brutally assaulted by an unknown
masked man two weeks ago. Though
Sheriff Hussell and his deputies made
a diligent and thorough search, they
have not hern able to locate even a
semblance of a elm1, and the perpetrator
of the cowardly deed is still at large.
Tin mnners of the camp also took it
upon themselves to scour the woods and
hold up every suspicious character, who
entered or left Cilice shortly after the
assault, but were unsuccessful, though
a number of suspects were required to
give detailed accounts of themselves.
Miss liobinson will add nothing to
what has alteady been published.
ORE AT SMELTER PLANT AT
KENNETT GOING ITS IMIT
KKNNKTT. fa!.. August .1. The
smelter of the Mammoth Copper Mining
company at Kennel I is nt present mak
ing its maximum production. For the
find time in the hitory nf Shasta eoun
ty five mammoth furnaces are reduc
ing a total of P0 ton of total charges
daily.
The huge cars operating on the new
gravity tram bring to the smelter a
thousand tons of ore from the Mam
moth mine every 1- hours.
The quart x ore bunkers, too. have
been well supplied, no much so. in fact,
that shipments from th company's
quartz hill ore fpply have bef-n cur
tailed ree carloads a day to nc
war for Utah or0
A White Girl Burled on
Graves Creek Exhumed
by Indians
With regard to the origin of the name
"Josephine," II. D. Harkness of Lib
erty, Wash., writes as follows to George
11. Parker, the authar of the recent ar
ticle on this subject in the Outlook:
Dear Sir: In the Pacific Outlook of
July 11 1 notice an article signed by
you ou the origin of the name of Jo
sephine county. I was a resident of
Josephine county for many years, living
in the vicinity of Lei a ml and Grave
Creek from IS5( to 18S9, and ame some
what familiar with its early history,
especially with regard to that portion
of your article dealing with those two
places. The story is handed down to
us as follows:
Dng Up Remains.
Some peoplo passing through to the
Willamette valley camped ou Grave
creek, and white there a young woman
of the company died of consumption
and was buried under the largo white
oak tree yon mentioned. Then, fearing
the Indian wnud dig up the body, they
herded their work oxen over her grave.
Rut, notwithstanding all their precau
tions, the Indians did find tho grave
and dug up tho remains (presumably for
the clothing) and hung the body over
one of the limbs of the oak tree, where
other travelers .found it and reburied
it, but n a one seems to know just where.
The identity of the grave is lost.
Some time after theso events, hix or
seven Indians were killed then, and as
the old grave had not been filled up and
the Indians had made (juite nn excava
tion in digging up the girl's remains
with their rude instruments, the bodies
of the dead Indians were thrown into
the old grave and covered up, but not
erv deeplv, I imagine, as it was said
that some of their feet stuck out of the
r nut ml some time later. At any rate,
when I left the old ranch the outlines
of the graves could be readily seen.
It Was Fort Leland.
The old postoffice was called Leland.
At our time there were quite a number
of volunteers stationed there and it was
i-alled Port Leland. That was iu 1855.
flic cauutv was said to have taken its
name from the girl 's second name
osephiue and t he creek was called
Grave on account of people wishing to
lesignate is at "the creek where the
grave is." The stream was really
named Leland creek, but it never lost
its original name of Grave creek.
lames II. Twogood, now a resident
of Itoise 'ity, Idaho, could probably
give you more of the facts, as he lived
there as earlv as 1-S;VJ, I think, liarnov
Simmons of Itfil Bluff, Cnl if he is
living, could nlso give you valuable in
formation of early days, as he is said
to have built the first log cabin an the
reek.
Hoping this may be of interest to
you, I remain, very respectfully.
U. D. IIAKK NT'SS.
DEMOCRATS TO PLAN
CAMPAIGN IN OREGON
Democratic leaders of the state will
map out t Iu1 coming presidential cam
paign next Saturday afternoon, when
the executive committee of the demo
ratic state central committee will met
n th1 office of Stale Chairman Sweelt
T Portland.
"liainunn Swei ic has culled a met
ing of his ex'inive committee for Sit
icdav afternoon and at that time the
political situation in Oregon from n
democratic viewpoint will be discussed
and the plans laid out for the Ilrvan
campaign.
It is the intention of the democratic
committee to open the state campaign
in the near future and to keep things
humming from that time on. Accord
ing to the democratic lenders the out
look for a Jtrynn victory in Oregon is
very bripht, and a strong effort will
be made to overcome the republican
lead in the state and send back four
lenmerntic electors to the electoral col
lege.
The members of the executive com
mittee which will have the direction of
the Bryan campaign in Oregon are as
tollows: John Montag of Portlaud, W .
II. Wehrung of Hillsborn, Will M. Pet
erson of Astoria, Lark Hilyeu of Eu
gene and S. M. Garland of Lebanon.
Chairman Sweek is ex officio a mem
ber of the committee.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby given that tlx under
signed will apply to tbo city council of
the city of ledford, Oregon, t the
meeting to be held on August 3, 1908,
for a license to sell spiritous, cinous
and malt liquors in quantities less than
a gallon, at hit place of business, at
lots 10 and 11, in block 21, in said city,
for a period of six months.
Dated July 80, 1908.
JOHN HARRINGTON.
NOTICE.
Notice is hereby glren that the un
driigncd will apply to the city council
of the city of Med ford, Oregon, at the
uext meeting for a license to sell spir
itous, vinous and malt liquors in quan
tities less than ft gallon for th period
of six niunHis, tit his place of business
si lot 11, in Work 2o. ia the city of
fc-dford, Orn.
Dat July 10. 19i
V. tt4UUMT.
CD O
MOHAIR AND ALPACA.
Tht Fabrics Come From Two En
tiroly Different Animals.
The other day I henrd a couple of
tueu arguing about mohair and ulpaea,
uue of them gravely asserting that
tUey were different named for the nuiue
fabric," said a New York Importer.
The assertion was very far out of
the way. The elolb known as alpttea.
If genuine. coineK from the wool of the
niiluial of the Maine name, which
thrives only In the Andean regions
of 1'cru and Chile In South America.
The ulpaea, or paeo. whleh resembles
llie llama, looks u good deal like our
louses tie sheep and bus n most beiitttl
ful nVeve. limit rloeks of them browse
ou (he highest ranges of the Andes
and are the property of the native In
dians, who shear them 4 nice a year.
Many efforts have been nin.b' in breed
the alpaca In different parts of Ku
rope uud Australia, but wtihoiit suc
cess. A eurgo tif Ibein was brought lo
Itultiiuoi'e sunn? lime lu the middle of
the lust century, but llie experiment of
raising them in the I'lilted Stales was
likewise u failure.
"The eloili known as mohair comes
from the Angom goat, a very different
animal from the alp.iea. 'the atiguM
Is round iu South Africa, but the lar
gest (locks are found In Asia Minor."
Exchange.
PARIS AND LONDON.
Contrasts In People and Manners In
the To Great Capitals.
In the siivets t'lvtich tratlie all goes
to the right: London coachmen driw
always to the left. I'arUians liw to
gether lu large Ictuses like Ici-im.-!;-;:
Londoners Imve one family iu a bo:i.;e.
The London r has a lah hltc.v. I he
Frenchman u cou'dcrue.
Tnris has lis cafes, London its Huh.
I'arisiau beds" are up hi ji!-mo lit
llie wall: l.omloiiers stcci in i'ic m c!
Jle of the iti.ou. Londoinr i il:e ilnve
r four meals a day. I'arlsi.in-. iwi.
I'ails nines. London eai s. I 'an
ion ves are long. Loudon lm c i ate
i(uare. I'nrls drinks wine. London
beel. I'nrls luUt-j coffee. London i-i.
I'reu limeii while dining talk to ih.-ii
neighbor and enjoy cnh . tiller's -
Ifly; Itrllotis sit alone ;ti table and
lou t say much, but enjoy i ielr f ...d.
London norkmou work In llu-ir onli
nary clot lies, call each oi her
smoke Hay pipes and puin-h ca-li olb
.-r's he;uls ovcn.sJoiiaJly ; PiirlMan w-.rl.-men
do their business lu blouse:. -ali
their friends 'Vlllzen" or "sir," no'
.'Itrarettes, lake I heir bats o:f to i . h
ulhcr uud do their Uulilln- uiili
feet. London Tit Mils.
Defective Education.
An i'Id (larky iu Alabama alU d
'tcroiS the fence o hj neiti 'tor's
oho Is a student S I In Altauin tmi
eriiy, siivs a wiler In tin I'hMade!
ph!a Ledger.
"Look byar. boy," he said, "you ko-s
io school, don't ver';"
"Yes. si ," replied the hoy.
"ileiiiit': e.lue.ii'ntu. ait.'l t r':"
"Yes. sir."
"Lamina 'riihmetie an' liirijeniitf on
A Mlale, ehV"
"Yes. sir."
"WmII. Il iloii' tak two whole dayn
ler make nn hour, do It':"
"Why. no." answered the boy.
"Waul." said the old man, "you was
Ifulng ter brliiK that halchet buck lu
an hour, wasn't yer? Au' hit's been
two whole days sence you borrered
hit.
"What's tho uhe of yo' education ef
you K" ter school a w hole year an' den
can't tell how lou hit tales ter fetch
back dat hateh?t':"
It I Odd.
Gyer-Inn't It queer that the bump
of benevolenee U h ated ixuetly nt
the top of i man n head? Myer
Wbfll'i queer about It? Oyer-Why.
It'n ni for from the K ketlKMik n
noMlbl. Chlengo Newa.
Hftppliwta roimlHlH of thinking ao
aad iUtkliig to lu-MaucJjwur I'nlun
We have
EMENT
and will sell you a sack, u barrel or a carload. We handle several grades and
will give you the testB of all. Cement sidewalks are going iu all over town
and what looks tw cheap or thriftless as an old loose board sidewalk in front
of your proportyf Consul"-- a cement contractor and you'll find his price
right. The big demand now on for cement is going to make it hard to get
and naturally at an increase, iu price.
Grater Lake
Lumber (&o.
Oak Park
Addition
On railroad on the West; Side, north of depot grounds
and conveniently located for business men seeking home
sites close in. These fine lots are offered for sale cheap,
on good terms, and the owners are in position to offer
building inducements to anyone wishing to make the right
kind of improvements. Why go out. to the faraway
suburbs when such fine residence lots can be ohtninad at
prices ranging from
$200 to $350 per Lot
situated where an advance in price is assured, and where
the first benefit will be derived from the completion of the
railroad to the timber?
It pays to figure on such investments in a live town like
iUedford, and the present prices for these lots will look Like
a veritable gift to the buyer in a year or -two hence, h'or
full particulars apply to the
Rogue River
Exhibit
THE GRAND
PltOORAM FOR MONDAY AND TUESDAY NIOIIT3:
Tho Bout Bill of the Sonxon
SUBJECTS:
TIIK LOST rillUHiKN A MM AT KD YATIIAY1
I I'TTI N( U K X SWKIKN A (Jt'lKT MOTIM,
llh.Mln.ted I'.allod "WAIT I'Olt l K I'.Y TIIK M I ' I JlKlf Y TltKK"
I'mrnni rhnncs mi Mondays, U'idnemluyH mid l'rid:iyn. AdmiHsiuii
10 rents. Matinee every Nntnrday nl Ilrltn i. in. AdniisHiiin to mat
inee, niily "t eenlM.
ADMISSION 10 CENTS.
W. W.
fFTV TAILOU
8onietliinj; whirh m of considerable
Intcreat to the publie generally and
whirh In perhaoM not generally known
is the Bvnt of prepaid onb-ra now io
"flVrt b'dwier: Rtntionft of 1 he Houlliern
Pacifie rotnpnn .-.iifl nil point in the
t,nited State Ity maiu rtf this nynftn
tieketi may ne purrhnH' d at Med ford
from any plac in the I'nited Htatea and
mailed ur tUrgrapL direct to tha
Land Comp'y
Building
fur t lie wil nn weather. Yon know n
inn. 1 1 thin von 're reading about it in
1 1 1 i h ad. hon't eheut yonrnelf but got
n i'hoI, emu furl able Hummer mi it lit ft
Kieat redih'linn. We make yon n tyl
i-li foiirnner suit at L'0.
Kail mid winter "'d nie here in nil
Hie late HlindeH.
Patronizo homo ihduHtry. Koop your
money at homo. Trench Dry Gleaning
and PronHiiiff Neatly Dono, A Perfect
Fit Guaranteed.
EIFERT
party wihing to rume here. Weeper
Acrnmmodatiiiiift and mnall iiiuoutita of
piinIi in rniieftinn with tlmae tieketi
may nlto be fnriiiihed at thfl fatnr
tirne. '
O
The first "try" In any line of effort
1h not umially enough. "Try ,M(aln" Is
a nlogAn an old a oxpfrlenca of hu
man affairs.
Don't Bother to Cook
It's too hot. Get what you want alrea iv
prepared; we have it.
We cater to those who want the best.
THE DELICATESSEN
C STREET, NEAR EIGHTH
Which Will It Be?
PliNUAPlMiE SH13RHKT, ORGANGE SHER
BET, STRAWBERRY TCK (HtKAM, VAN1IJA
ICE riiEAM.
ORDERS DKIjI VER El) TO ANY PART OF
THE CITY.
W'TTERAI I EK AND SWEET (''REAM AL
WAYS OX TAP.
it is up to You
What Will You Do?
If you do a lot of thinking, if your brain is active
and the strain is wearing out your nerves and breaking
down your system day by day, then you may reflect for
n moment, if it would not be wise to drink the strength
of roasted grains, to buy at your grocery store a pack
age of
Golden Grain Granules
No man can consume his strength and retain it at
the same time; he ought to j'eplenish an equal amount
daily. GOLDEN G R Al N "GRANULES is far super
ior to Coffee, although it looks like coffee, tastes like
coffee and smells like coffee. A big package can be had
in any grocery store for 25c. Order a package today.
All grocery sell it.
NEWPORT
YASHIN A DAY
Oregon's Matchless Beach Resort
The Place to Go for Perfect Rest and Every Conceiv
able Form of Healthful and Delightful Recreation
ITS FACILITIES ARE COM V LET E -Best of food
and an abundance of it. Eresli water from springs. All
modern necessities, such as telegraph, telephone, markets
freshly provided every day. Fuel in abundance. Cottages
partly furnished or unfurnished to be had cheaply. Strict''
municipal sanitary regulations.
NEWPORT is reached by way of the Southern Pacific to.
Albany or Corvnllis, thence Corvallis & Eastern R. R.
Train service daily and the trip a pleasure throughout.
Rale From At ed ford
SEASON SIX MONTHS' TICKET, ?10.00
Our cliilioruU now miiuiiicr lunik given n cimrise description of Newport,
UK'liMliiiK a list of bottilH, their rnpatrity uikI rnteB. Cull on, U'lopboue or write
A. S. BOSENBATTVI, WM. McMUHBAY,
Look! Agent, Moil l ord Oeneral Paenongor Agent, Portland '
Tribune Ads
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