Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (June 6, 1908)
[ city JACKSONVILLE FURNITURE CO. [ F > L House Furnishers and Undertakers E. A. LANQLEY, M«r. jackso > villfî , oris . T RAIL LUMBER CO. JACKSONVILLE, ORE. Rough and Dressed Lumber of all Kinds ESTIMATES FURNISHED J. W. HICKEL DEALER IN JEWELRY, WATCHES, CLOCKS And Jeweler’s Sundries Repairing of all kinds a Specialty and all Work Warranted Opposite U. S. Hotel Jacksonville, Oregon FRED J. FICK Contractor and Builder Estimates Furnished on Buildings. Repairing Jacksonville Phone 48 A FULL LINE OF Paints, Oils, Calcamine, Brushes, Sash and Doors Patton’s Sun Proof Paints. FRED J. FICK SILAS J. DAY Office one block Houth of Courthouse JACKSONVILLE, OREGON Filings made on homesteads and timber claims. Correct plats weekly showing all vacant lands. Notary Public and Convevencer I .egal papers of all kinds made out. Special attention given to papers in settlement of «‘states. Al> ,t i , h t of Land l it :« . Most complete Het of abstract books in the county. Abstract made promptly and accurately1 Real Estate and Insurance Fine list «if county and town property for sale and rent. Money Loaned Warrants l»ought and sold, (’ollections made. Taxes paid Rents collect»««!. Prompt reply to all letters. Charges reasonabl«*. References Hon II K Hanna, judge 1st judicial district, and any Jacksonville busmens man. PROFESSIONAL CARDS GUS NEWBURY Attorney-at-Law Will Practice in All Courts of the State Office «»n California street, one block south of th«« court house C. L. Reames A. E. Reames REAMES & REAMES LAWYERS Practice in All State and Federal Courts Kahler Block. - JACKSONVILLE H. K. HANNA, JR. LAWYER Office: One block south of depot. JACKSONVILLE, - OREGON DR. T. T. SHAW DENTIST Office in Ryan Building, California St., Upstairs JACKSONVILLE. • OREGON JACKSONVILLE BAKERY SOLICITS YOUR IRADf fOR Bread, Cakes Cookies and Pies GfORt.t SCHILLER, PROPRItTOR UPWARD TREND OF MORALITY. fly P. J. Dolliver. In my opinion, the largest evidence of the moral progress nf the American people lies In the recognition, now well- nigh universal, that at bottom all the problems of society are not simply problems of politics and government, but are In reality question» of applied religion. There Is no unanswered ques tion In legislation that Is uot answered In the gospel of Christ. Those mighty oom j vim problems that have brought our philos ophy amt statesmanship almost to a standstill, If they have any solution at all, will find it In the practical ap- plication to the dally life of this world of that ancleut law which we have Inherited from our fathers and moth era, the law of Christ revealed to te. world in the go»- pels. And for that reason It 1» with hop«; nnd courage that we look toward the future; and I venture to predict that the time Is at hand, nearer than we know, when we shall realize that the world In which we are living. In Its literature, Its law, In the building of cities. In the em ploying of labor, In the Investment of money, and In its civilization, Is only a bouse of prayer and every mau is a brother. rï EGOTISM IS NOT COURAGE By John À. Howland. In the business world It is no mark of ca pability In a inau that he shows bis egotism. It 1» a hnndlcap, especially among those who have graduated into the practical truths of life and work. An old employer observing the egotism of the young man sees only weak ness tn the mark. Confidence in his own equipment for Ills work must be necessary In any man who accomplishes things, lie must know how to do his work, and he must do that work. Ttie work Itself Is the measure of the man's worth. He may know how the work Is done and yet not be able to do it, which Is valueless; or he may be able to do cer tain work, not knowing bow It Is done, and be too great a risk as an employe. But when he knows and out of Ills knowledge does his work to the mark, uo further assurance Is required of him. If be shall go further and through wordy re iteration and swashbuckling movements attempt to un load a surplus personal Importance ui»>n his fellows, lie bec unes a target for all those things which his fellows may alm at him to his downfall. The young mail afflicted with tills egotism well might devote a little time to discover in himself the earmarks of the trouble. Courage must not be confounded with ego; courage is a uecesslty. But egotism 1» a weakness, and the young mail wtio would be truest to hluiBelf should be rid of It by a course of self-training that will blot It out forever. drug store ] Complete Stock of Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumery, Stationery, Blank Books, School Supplies, Fancy and Scenic Post cards, Magazines, Cigars. Special attention given to Prescriptions. J. W. ROBINSON, M. D., Proprietor By Dr. Paul Mategatra. Exact little, exceedingly little, of your bus hand, nnd you will have gone more than half way along the path that leads to the peace of the fireside. This done, all that the man. ever an egotist nnd always less loving tlinu the woman, concedes to you will come like an unexpected gift, a dear surprise. If, on the contrary, you measure the happiness of the family In the balance of justice you will ex pose yourself to the most disagreeable surprises, to the bitterest disillusions All the husbands In the world fall Into two grand classes, the good and the bad. The good are always the same. They love their wives above everything else, and the first thought 1 b to render them happy. They seek riches, honors, glory Itself, but to weave a garland to place on the brow of the beloved woman. They neither command nor obey, for they consider themselves neither above nor below their w’lfe, but her equal. They dis cuss with her the big and little problems of life, and they always finish by arriving at the same conclusions with her. Over their head burns alws.vs the sun, a sun which does not scorch but warms, a sun -which never sets. WOMAN SUFFRAGE IN AMERICA. By Mri. T. Cobden Sanderson There are two classes of women In the United States u;>on whom the chief hope of woman suffrage rests. The one Is the college girl. I am bound to say that as a rule they know little about the question, perhaps be cause they approach It from a different stand point The Idea of the thinking college girl is to go Into polities In order to purify It. The other class Is the working woman, or rather the laboring woman, whose only means of Improv ing their condition and obtaining better wages is by combination and getting political power. Woman suffrage Is not likely to be grunted by separate legislation In America. The thing 1» too complicated. There lire five States altogether tlint have adopted ft, but only Colorado as a State—the others Introduced worn an suffrage when they were Territories. And of course that doos not touch federal government. So I think that women will have to wait until the Amerlran Fed eration of Labor is strong enough to have Its way—for woman suffrage Is part of Its program. “What’s the matter with you, Jim mie?" asked the kind hearted employ er. “Didn’t you get enough sleep last night?" “I feel klndn sick, sir," replied the Junior tnenilier of the office force. "I wasn’t sleepin’." “That's rather unusual," commented the kind-hearted employer. "A som nolent condition seems to ho normnl with you. Conte over here and let me see you. lint! You look rather flush ed. Ta>t mo sec your tongue. Hull 1 Quito red. This may be serious, Jim ml«." The boy shuffled Ills feet uneasily and Ills eyes wandered about the room, "There’s a good deal of grip about,” said the kind hearted employer, serl ously, rubbing I i I b chin. "Do you think that you have got the grip?" "I dunno, sir," replied the hoy. "Because If you have, the very heat thing you can do Is to remain quietly In a warm, even temperature. I think the office Is Just about right for you ' Perhaps I could arrange It so that you could sleep hero to-night nnd send 1 word home to your mother no she would not he worried about you " "I don't think It’s the grip, sir," nn'd Here arc Carnegie’s gifts In a nut the hoy. shell : “Whore do you feel nick?" Libraries tn ths United States.$.V>,n0.1,000 "Klndn nil over, sir." Carnegie Institute. Pittsburg. 18.000,000 "That looks like n compllcntlon.” College professors' pensicns. . 1.5.00(1,000 said the kind-hearted employer “It Carnegie Institution, Wash ington ...................................... 10,000.000 might be a cnrdfnc affection, with a touch of laryngitis nnd a sympathetic Libraries In foreign countries 10.000.000 Inflammation of the medulla oblongata. Scotch universities .................. 10.0OO.000 Hero fund neneficiaries........... S,000.000 I«oaslbly there’s n derangement of the Carnegie Steel Co. employe». fi.00O.000 epigastric nerve. I don’t think It Dunfermline endowment .... 15,000,000 would Is> wise to neglect this. Have Polytechnic school, Pittsburg. 2.000.000 you got shooting pains In the lumbar Peace temple at The Hague.. 1,750.000 •eg I on?” Allied Engineers’ societies... 1,.500,000 "1 don’t think so. sir," said the boy Bureau of American Repub lics building............................. 7.5O.000 “Any buzzing In the ears?" “No. sir." Total of large gifts............. $ 109..500.000 "It's a curious case," said the kind Miscellaneous gifts in United hearted employer, reflectively. "No States ......................................$20.000 000 buzzing In the ears? Well. No spots (lifts to small colleges in Unit floating before your eyes, either?" ed States ............................... 18.000.000 Miscellaneous gifts in Europe 2„50o.OOO “No, sir." "You think your eyes are al! right— Grand total ... $1,50.000.000 your sight, 1 mean? You think you could distinguish moving objects at a To Le«$cn Their Ht«k. distance?” The Berlin branch of the Imperial “I guess so," replied the boy. squlrui Insurance Company has set aside the Ing yearly sum of $2.5.000 for the purpoaa "And your lungs? You seem a little of providing a dental Institute tu the husky, but that might be bronchial. city for worktngmeu holding Its poll- Do you think your lungs are so that cles. Th« Institute will provide arti you could yell at the top of your voice ficial teeth for all workingmen need for about three hours at a stretch? ing them. It has been found by the Supposing you were looking at some company that men provided with thing that made you want to holler, do good dental apparatus make a better you think you could manage It with risk than others, and the new Insti out serious pain?” tute is expected to save mn-ti mon^ "Maybe.” replied the boy. "But I to the company In a few years. feel sick," he added “Hl telephone for an ambulance at There never was a church so small once." said the kind hearted employer. that It didn’t seem plenty large enough —*“■ •• air of coutLBrn "Which hoepl on prayer meeting u'.ghL Silent and llrsmMls, The most dramatic of silent men wus Wallenstein, the antagonist of Gustavus Adolphus and the command er of the eui|HTor’a armies tn the Thir ty Years’ war. He insisted that the deepest silence should reign about him. Ills officers took care that no loud con versation should disturb their general. They knew that a chamberlain had been Imaged for waking him without orders ami that an officer who would wear clanking spurs In the command er's preset«-« had Iteen secretly put to death. In the r<M>nis of his palace the servants gilded as If they were phantoms, and a dozen sentinels mov ed about bls tent chnrgcd to secure the silence the general demanded. Chains were stretched across the streets In order to guard him against the disturbance of sounds. Wallen stein's taciturnity, which made him shun speech, and his love of silence, which caused him to he Irritated at the slightest noise, were due to his consti tutional temperament. He never smiled, he never asked advice from any one. and he could not endure to be gazed at, even when giving an order. The soldiers, when he crossed the camp, pretended not to see him. know ing that a curious look would bring them punishment. Ila! II n! So Funny. "A firm uptown." said Joakley, “has got up something new to enable you te pick your teeth." "A new m»rt of toothpick?" queried Coakley. "Well. It's a catalogue showing pho- tographs of the handsome false set, they manufacture." — Philadelphia Frees. Turning Defeat Into Vfletery. She (In tones of rejection)—Well, George, to be plain with you------ He—But yon can never bs that, never, never, yon are too beautiful. She—Well, then—yes.—Boston Tran script If you have an ambition to be popu lar don’t tell people about yourself; let them talk to you about themselves 1 4 : CITY DRUG STORE; INDULGE YOUR HUSBAND AND BE HAPPY tai do you prefer, or have you any par •OLD GLORY” REARRANGED. ticular preference?" “I don't want to go to no hospital." "What do you want to do?" “I wanta go home.” "You want your mother to care for you. of course. Do you know of any bright, neat, careful, Industrious boy whom you would care to recommend to till your place?” r ”1 think I’ll be well again by to morrow. sir." said the junior member of the office foriv. "If I can Jest lie down this afternoon------ ” "Where Is the game going to be. Jim TUK XKW STAB FIKI-D. mie?" asked the kind hearted employ By order of the War Department th» er. -Chicago Dally News. field or union of the national flag It use In the army consists of 4fl stars In ANDREW CARNEGIES GIFTS. fl rows, the first, third, fourth and sixth rows to have 8 stars, and the' second and fifth rows ~ stars each. This ar rangement leaves space for an addl tlonal star In two of the six rows, sr that the next time a state Is made the field of "Old Glory” will uot have to b» materially rearranged. 1 THE RECEPTION _____ Z~~ Zl LUY & KEEGAN, Props. Zl Sole Agents Albany Beer