Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1916)
Rifininy » . pioca. Beautiful snow every day now. 'i'.Is il,;;:iut and del. . c h is *“TTTn Cwllini warin*‘Medford Situr- -tllw pLúck». ■ t ..a.-t lUUIUuLis cult! vut»d very extensively In the Malay day. SATURDAY, JANUARY 15, 191 ‘"“I.tAvis Ulrich w at Medford "fhurs ptuiuguia. where its cult ::e 1’ almost entirely in the liamls of tlie Chinese. <>ay. , Tbo tubers of tlie plant (Manihot utilis Mrs. Jack Refer was a recent visitor sitnilt. which weigh on an average LOCAL NEWS horn ten to twenty live pounds, are at Medford. The coasters were out in full force first scraped and then carefully wash ed, after wbiclt they are reduced to n You can find a Notary Public at this last night. pulp by being passed between rollers. office. Harry Lewis was over from Central This pulp ts carefully washed aud Babe Kennedy was a recent visitor Point Sunday. shaken up with nbumlance of water separates and passes in town. Marion Bowen was a visitor in Med until the felcula tine sieve into a tub Lawrence Brown wa3 a visitor in ford Thursday. through a very placed beneath. The flour so obtained Medford Thursday. Are your New Year’s resolutions Is repeatedly washed und then placed Mayor Emerick of Medford transact holding good yet" on mats nod bleached by exposure to ed business ir this city Tuesday. the sun and air. It is finally converted Mrs, R msc Singler wad a visitor at If you like this paper, drop in an i i i Medford Thursday. into tlie pearl tapioca of commerce by subscribe. Only $1-50 per year. i being placed in a crudo shaped frame Ben Ryan of Watkins was a recent covered with criiiifiS. It is slightly Mr. and Mrs. John Hall of Sams Val visitor in this city. i moistened and subjected to it rotary ley were recent visitors in this city I.. G. Gentner of Medford was a vis motion, by which means it is grand- Chinese pheasants are reported th be itor in town Monday. i lated. It is uext dried in the sun and quite tame since the snow this week. i finally over the fire in an iron pau Alfred and Joe Norris Wer« visitors I greased with vegetable tallow and is Attorney Newton W. Borden of Med at Medford Saturday. ’ (lien ready lor the market. ford was a caller at this office Friday. Louise Ensele was a visitor at Med- Irish and Buster Coleman of Med foid Sunday evening. Brides In India. A bride in India never sees her hus ford were visitors in this city Wednes Juilee TouVelle was a visitor in Med band until after the marriage cere day. ford Saturday evening. mony. The parents <hoo.se the wife T"Mrs. Hattie Deneff left Wednesday Curley Wilson was a business visitor for the sou of the house without con | >r a visit with friends at Red Bluff, sulting either party. Sometimes the ttt Medford Thursday. Cilif. bride is as young ns fourteen. The Ashland is planning for a monster child Is gorgeously dressed and placed W. P. Quinlan has been named by on a dais behind fl street, the women President Wilson as pcstmaster at Fourth of July this year. Cack Phiester of Medford visited of tile family being in attendance. Grants Pass. Ou the other side of the sheet are the Mrs. Mattie Thompson who has been friends in this city Sunday. bridegroom uud many of bis young Mrs. Seth Bullis of Sterling is visit s riously ill at her home is reported to men friends. The groom keeps throw ing friends in San Francisco. be improving. ing over jewels attached to flowers, Miss Lucile Rader of Medford was a which the women on the bride's side Get your stationery printed at this remove und place In her lap or on her offly?. Our work is guaranteed and visitor in town Friday night. our prices are right. Mrs. Frank Smith and Mrs. Guy Har person. This first ceremony is called the Mr, Benjamin B. Beekman of this per were in Medford Friday. sliadee, and. although a man is allowed Miss Jewell Hailey is ill at her home four wives, no other ever bolds the iity left Wednesday evening for a short b isiness visit to Portland. with an attack of the grippe. same position as the first chosen for We print Trespass Notices and Nd him. The others are of little Impor buring the winter months the City tance. living their lives more or less as Briig StOkfl Will cloSe at seVen o’clock Hunting, signs, at tnis offics. servants to tlie first wife. As tlie first every evening except Saturday, Mrs. Katie Grieve was a visitor at wife gets to middle age she is known Better get your butter wrappers Medford Wednesday aftertloon. ns the begum.—Pearson's Weekly. jfririted at this office and comply Miss Bernice Collins of Glendale vis Mystery of a Ülplamat. y^ith the ldw governing the salii of ited friends in this city Monday. Of disappearances most mysterious Butter products. Mary Bagshaw arid Jewell Bailey was the case of Benjamin Bathurst, W. M Shaver died at his home near w ?re recent visitors in Medford. who vanished Nov. 25. 1809, while en Phoenix, Wednesday, January 12, aged Louis Mitchell is in from the ranch gaged on n secret mission for the for 8'i years. He had been a resident of s t the Little Applegate this week. eign office. Vienna was the young di i- e valley for nine years. Grace Marlowe of Medford visited plomatist’s objective, and. with tils friend and valet. In a post chaise. Perle The Christian Endeavor will hold its friends in this (iity Tuesday evening. befg. a small posting town in north iti mtnly business meeting in the basc People will read a neat printed bill, Germany, bad been reilclled. Here riis.lt df the church, next Tuesdav eve- fling. An invitation is extended to all. l ut will not look twice at a bad scrawl. Bathurst supped and slept, awaiting Five eclipses, three of the sun an! the arrival of freSli horses. Waking, The recent rains and snow indicate a two of the moon are scheduled fdr 1916 he asked were the horses ready and passed out of the door to make in flrosperperous season for the farmers E. D. Briggs of Ashland transacted quiries. Eight people saw him go out. Of the Valley. Piacer minerà ate get tili' buày as bees in a buckwheat field business at the court house Thursday. but none ever set eyes on him again Mabel Reeves ot Medfflrd visited Various theories were set afoot—Na . William Perry, an insane man of the friends in this city Sunday after poleon's spies, robbers, illness. In Evans Creek country was committed 1912 in tlie forest near I’erlebcrg a noon. to the State Hospital for the Inaaiie by skeleton waa discovered with a bole in C. C. Chandler, an orchard man of the skull as from a heavy blunt In Judge TouVelle Wednesday forenoon. Snow 36 inches in depth is report/d 5J <jford transacted business in this city strument. Was it that of "the English lord," as Perleberg people surmised? at Gangwisch’s mine four or five miles f'riday. Rev. Bandy of the Presbyterian northwest of this city. On Sparks’ Investment ftartfims. Heights about half amile from the city c’turch will preach at Applegate tomor The investor who picks lip desira row afternoon. the snow is ten inches deep. ble property when everybody is sell February 5 is our Child Welfare Day. Ralph Bailey left Sunday morning ing and no one buying will have to Flags will ba sold at 10^ each. The f >r Eastern Oregon where he has se wait only a reasonable time to secure his reward. 1 recall when real estate money raised to be used for literatute cured employment. ill Several large cities was a drug on and extension work in the state, con The Republicans of Jackson County the market. Everybody seemed anx ducted by the Oregon Congress of propose holding a banquet on Lincoln’s ious to sell and no one to btiy. but mothers. birthday, February 12th. the buyers in those periods have real The Gotland Robinson Art exnibilion A number of persons from this city ized enormous profits, far greater than which was announced to be held at went to Medford Friday night to hear one can get in the Slock Exchange. The mail who lias money, even if It la Medford J an. 14, has been postponed Skovgaard the violinist. but a small amount, can always turn Until January 21 ‘ bwing to the illness Miss Hester Long of Sp ik-ne, W ish, 8r Miss Robinson who has teen suffer who had been visiting friends in this It over to advantage if lie will wait for the opportunity. Don't go with ing with lagrippe. the crowd when every one Is wild to city returned home Tuesday. Reports from diffeient points in For several years the Mail Tribune buy something, hut quietly abide an Washington, state that 70 per cent of has been “nollering its head off” about opjsjrtunlty when everybody Is anx the logging camps aud lumber mills are commercial fishing being the cause of ious to unload and buyers are few. At closed down temporarily on account of scarcity of fi "h in the Rogue river. such a time the bargain counter opens. toe recent heavy snows. It is expect Now, however, Georg» says the scarci —Leslie's. ed that work will be resumed in a few ty was due to low water. The Spit of Ceremony. days. Among the Aklkuytl of East Africa, J. H. Carlt >n of Central Point was The Parent-Teachers Ass c'ation will lost for two days and nights during the described by Mr and Mrs. W. 8. Rout meet Fridav evening at 7:30. An in snow storm last Saturday and Sunday. i ledge In "With a Prehistoric People." teresting program is being prepared. It appears th it he made a trip into the to spit upon a person or thing indicates Discussion—Growth and Development mountains to inspect a mining proposi good will. "The blacksmith spits upon the sword he has forged before hand of the Child. Light refreshment will tion and was overtaken by the storm ing It over to tlie owner. So, too, be served. Fathers and mothers are and becoming bewi dered spent forty courtesy demands that a man should earnestly requested to be present. eight hours in making a distance of -pit In 111’ hand before offering It to a friend, and the female vlsl ors spit Mrs. Ellen Sidley, aged 60 years, died three mile’. upo'i tlie newly arrived youtitxter as a at her home near Lake Creek, Tuesday >igli of Welcome " Even In England January 11. Mrs. Sidley was a native there >i;c relics of the same custom In of Ireland and had resided in Ja’kson Ford Pesce Par y ¡Jreairinj Up the* li.’hit ii'-.'ollg the lower < I simhvh ot County for the past 31 years. Funeral -pit: Ing on a colli. Services were held at the Catholic The Hagu >, via London, Jan. 11 — o Beauties. church in Medford, Thursday forenoon : indy approached Fifty students, mombers of th! Ford interment in the cemetery at this city. at a l’eu nay I va Illa peace cxnc liti >n, h ive I 'ft f >r Ritter- A coasting party of some sixty per dam from where they will sa;l today on sons came over from Medford Tuesday the steamer Neordam tor New Y irk. evening and with about an equal num About 10’1 Am -rican members of the ber of local people repaired to the Linn expedition remain in The Hague. Most ranch about a mile west of this city of them will sail for the United States where several hours were pleasantly | January 15. spent in coasting. The ground bsing The members of the perm : lent peace A Good Plan. smooth and the snow in proper condi boarl will remain here with the mem "We should strive to turn our troll tion a livelv time was had. bers of the boarl from the other neu lilc Into sin-cess--s " "That ’ what. I know an actor who Col. H. H. Sargent delivered an ad tral nations. did that When people threw vegeta dress to the 7th company, O. N. G. at ------------- «on» ' — tiles he caught 'em on a fork and made the armory at Medford, la»t night. The It the lilt of tlie performance"—Louis Order Americans From Mexico ■ ubject was "The battle of San Mateo ville Courier-Journal. and the death of Major General Law ton.” The Colonel is specially quali Some Bird. Eagle Pass’, Tex., Jan. 12 —All cm Tlie roc. a fabulous bird often refer fied to talk on this t'remc and those pl yes o’ the American Smelting an 1 present state that he handled it in a R ifining company w .-re ordered to leave red to in the "Arabian Nights." wax l^llcved to be of such enormous size masterly and entertaining manner. Mexico, in a telegram from the compa and strength as to he able to carry Representatives of several Film com ny's offices at El Paso today. The even elephants In Its talons. panies have been looking over the val m iMago was receive! here anl relave I Teach«» a Lesson. ley this week with a view to locatii g over Mexican government lines via Pie Money Is never spent to so much ad >. W. N ,* v • extensive studios here. With the many dra’ Negro« to r ■*. r >n. J. « n'***n ion tune been .’lie t- c •ar days and the unparalleled natur man, a mining e gine-* one of the venr al scan my for backgrounds there i* no tn 1» icre victim’ in Chihuahua, form- e-l out <>r it. t at one stroke you have pi roti - - ed prudern e S< hopenttiiiier. g .*. 1 r ason why this vail- y should not erly liv - I in E igle Pa s, in i has rel .- prove equal to Southern California as lives here. His mother's home is i t Those who ml’Ll’e cvl! for «"*«! <>r a work shop for the movie makers. Keene, N. H. good for evil will never attain to bits.» Jacksonville Post I K»ir Hardie's Rough Attire. B usine ß ckrds James Keir liardie. the British la- bur. .lcudec,__ uever relUiituisbed bis worklug class garb, mid many were the occasions when his rough nttlre led (.US NEWBURY to mistakes on the part of others. Oue Attorney-at-Law story is that Keir Hardie, then many years mi M. 1’.. was challenged by a Will Practise in All Courts in the State policeman outside the bouse of com mons, The officer asked Mr. Hardie If OREJON MEDFORD. he was working there. "Yes." "On the roof?" (which was undergoing re pair), No," answered the leader of 1). W. BAGSHAW the Independent Labdr party, “on the floor." Another time a landlady re- Attorney at Law fused to let him have rooms until he gave references.. lie looked too rough, NOTARY PUBLIC AND CONVEYANCE!: Office with Jacksonville Post. The good woman was astonished w hen Mr. Hardie mimed a number of the - OREGON most prominent men in parliament, I JACKSONVILLE. ________ tie was arrested in Belgium once on T suspicion of bvitig in collusion with a notorious anarchist whom the police II. K. ’JANNA had detained. The Belgian police nev er could understand why a British M. I awyer I*. Was not elaborately attired.—Phila delphia Ledger. Office in Bank of Jacksonville Building How to Slay a Grudgd. OREGON “I forgave you once, anil 1 won’t for JACKSONVILLE, give you again.” This is what we heard one brother say to another who find unwittingly broken his chisel for DK. T. T. SHAW the second time. He would not listeu to an explanation. "You shall not use another of uiy tools.” he contfimed. Dentist. The next day he wanted to borrow a book from that brother. But before he asked for it he remembered be had Office in Ryätl Buikling, California St. said he would not lend Ills tools any Upstairs more, lie said lo himself: "Well, I ffou't care if 1 did. He owes me JACKSONVILLE OREGON something for breaking the tool, so 1 will just ask for the book.” And he did. “Certainly you can bitte ft and Weather Report. keep it as long as you want it.” replied tlie brother without one bit of grudge in his heart. The effect was good, for Following is the report of IL S. Vol the very next day lie asked his brother to go with him into the tool room, and unteer Cooperative Observer. E. Britt; there he said, “You can use any of lacksonville, for month of December. them If you w ish, only please be care Latitude 42 deg. 18. min. north; longi ful not to break them." The grudge tude 123 deg. 5 min. west. bud disappeared.—Christian Herald. The Oldest Death Sentence. The oldest death sentence extant is found In the Amherst papyri contain ing the trials of state criminals in Egypt, about 1300 B. C. Tile criminal in this case was found guilty of magic, which Ills Judges state "was worthy of death, which he carried out. mid lie killed himself.” apparently by stab bing, as In the Jaimnese iiarakii-i, which Is also of very ancient origin. Among less civilized (leoples drown ing would seem to have been the ear liest method of legal punishment, for about 430 B. C. the Britons killed their criminals by throwing them into a quagmire, Of other than capititi pun ishmehts tile oldest recorded comes from Chaldea, where It was enacted some 6.000 years ago that when any one maimed a slave "the hand that thus Offended should pay him each day u measure of cdrtt,” They Paid the Price. The corporation of the eity * Glas gow wanted th purchase the Whistler portrait of Carlyle ant! h> due course waited on tlie master of the gclitle art of making enemies about the price (l.bVO paineast. They admitted it was a magnificent fifefnre. but "lie you not think. Mr. Whistler, the sum a wee. wee bit excessive?” “Didn't you know the price before you came to me asked the muster. With suspicious blandness. •'Oh, aye, we knew that!” replied the corporation. "Very well, then." said Mr. Whistler in his sun vest tones, "let's talk of something else.” And as there was nothing else of Interest Io detain t lie "corporation" they paid Hie price and made ail ext client burgaiii. An Eye For His Colorí. Haiti appears to breed ii spirit of sell sltlve patriotism unknown in oilier cernitili'!• Home yearn ago a general In the Unitimi iiHiij' m lered mi urtili ial «je The maker did ids bed to execute tip' order satisfactorily, lot the <■.»<• was rettirmsl from Port mi Brin e, with II letter eomplululug that "the eye you forwcidi ,1 me is of n Hin that re seinl ies the Spud’ll ling. I am far too patriotic to wear nny colors but tliose of my own country.” After its<-ertaln- ln.' from the ministry of marine the '■olor--, of the Haitian standard a scar let and green e; e was dispatched, and tills met with enthusiastic approval. Perdi«’» Panacea. Totn l'urdle un ol,l manservant hi Sfr Walter Scotta lioilsetmld. ir-ed to tuli» of tlic rantolìi "Wii volley Novels" as "olir books” and snid th.it tlie r**u*i ing of theiii was thè grcntest comfort io bini "Wlienever I imi off m.v slccp," Ile ontldod to .Inmes Sileno. thè nutlior of "Memori’ of Sir Walter Scott." “1 bave otily to tuke mie of ilio novels. and bufere I bave read twn p.iges it I» soie to set me nslei'P " Flooding the Magazine. A flooding device to prevent the ex plosion of tlie powder magazine Is fit ted to most lilg tiHttleslilp». By sim ply turning on a innnlier of tn|H sea water Is all »weil to rush through pifies Into the powder store, which Is ren dered harmless In case of tire I« It Summons. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF T1IESTATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF J.LQICSON. Charles A. Cripps, Plaintiff, vs. Jeanette Cripps, Defendant. To Jeanette Cripps,.'the above named defendant.. , .... *» "» IN THE NAME OF. THE STATE OF OREGON, You are hereby requir ed to appear ard answer the complaint , filed against you in the* above ebtitled i Court and cause, on or before six weeks from the date of the first publi cation of this Summons, said first pub lication being on the 15th day of Janu ary 1916. And you are hereby .notified | that if you fail to appear and answer said complaint, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to above entitled Court for the relief demanded in the said Complaint to-wit: That the bonds of matrimony here tofore and now existing between plain tiff and defendant, be dissolved, and that the plaintiff be released there from, and for a decree of this Court forever annulling and dissolving the said bonds of matrimony, and for a de de ree of absolute divorce from the de fendant herein. For such other and further relief as to this Court may seem just and equitable. This Summons, by order of Honoi- able F. L. TuuVell Judge of the Coun ty Court of the State of Oregon, in and for Jackson County, regularly made in open t i iirt in Jacksonville, Oregon, on the 14th day of January 1916, is served upon you by the publication thereof for a period of six successive weeks in the Jucksonville Post, a newspaper pub lish«! regularly once per week at lack- sonville, Oregon, and of general circu lation in said County and State, the ; date of the first publication of this Date Maximum Minimum Precipita summons being on Saturday January tion 15, 1916, anil the date of the last publi 1 43 29 .0. cation thereof being on the 26th day of 2 41 60 .0: 41 3 55 .21 February 1916. 4 34 53 N ewton W. B orden , 5 35 50 .8u Attorney for Plaintiff 43 6 51 .20 4»> 7 49 .01 35 8 .04 56 At The Churches 35 9 .11 52 10 33 44 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 32 11 45 34 12 0* 48 39 13 45 20 Services held every Sunday morning 36 14 0: at 11 o’clock in I. O. O. F. Hall. 43 31 15 42 26 16 Everybody welcome 36 34 17 ---------- *.v. — It 40 31 18 41 PRESBYTERIAN 30 19 48 >0 39 Morning worship with sermon at 11 OC 48 41 21 49 0: Subject: Is Christianity a Theological 44 22 52 Priestly and Lay Religion. The spec 42 13 48 ial music will be a quartet: “Pilot 37 >4 46 32 25 49 Me.” (Ira B. Wilson) 44 24 16 34 Sunday School at 10 a. m. 25 27 35 The auxiliary will meet with Mrs. G. 33 28 40 A. Gardner, Thursday afternoon, Jan 29 27 34 10 11 uary 20th, at three o’clock. Evening •"6 11 21 32 2T.I worship with sermon by Rev. Hutchin son, at seven thirty. This is a union Temperature—mean max. 44.93; me. n service, occasioned by the absence of mir. 33.39; mean 39.17. Max. 60 on 2, the Pastor to supply the pulpit of the Minimum, 11, on 30. Greatest dailv First. Baptist Church of Medford, at range, 21. Total precipitation 2.51 t ie evening service. inches, Greatest in 24 hours, 0.80 in . on 5. Number of days with .01 inch or more precipitation, 16, deal, METHODIST 2; partly cloudy, 11; cloudy, 18. Sunday School every Sun lay at 10 7. OS Precipitation for season, Precipitation for last season 7.00 o’clock. W. G. Caudill Superintendent. We are doing pratical work tn the E. B ritt , Cooperative Observer Sunday School. We recognize the fact that youth is the Spring time of life; farmers are careful wnen selecting THE THRICE-,T-WEEK EDITION their seed; it pays them to sow the best OF THE NEW YORK WORLD procurable. Parents who send their children to us rest assured that the seed sown in the Sunday school is the best. We desire to seethe youths of Practically a Daily at the Price Jacksonville becoming youthful citizens this can only be accomplished by them of a Weekly. No Other individually accepting the great funda mental truths of Christianity. The Newsp p T hi the World pastor’s sp< cial address to the young folk on Sunday miming will be on — Gives so Much al so L'*s:’ons f nm the magnet Parents and their families cordially invited. Low a Price. Preaching service 11 a. m. Subjec : H an n Beacons. There has never been a time wh*m a Epworth League 6:30 p. m. Lead* r newspaper was more needed "in th<- Denver Marsh. Union preaching service »t the Pres household. The great war in Europ has now entered its second year, with byterian church 7:30. A cordial invitation to everybody. no promise of an end for a long time, R. A. Hutchinson These are world shaking events, in Pastor. which the United States, willing or un willing, has been compelled to take a ♦ •Si* part. No intelligent person can ignore Public Se vice Coin nissioner such issues. The Präsiden ial contest also will soon be at hand. Already candidates Fred G Buchtel, Deputy State Seal for the nomination are in the tie d, and er of Weights tnd Measures has an the campaign, owing to the extraordi nounced his candidacy on the Republi narv character of the times, will be of can ticket for Public Service Commis* supreme interest. No other newspa sioner for th** Western District. For per will inform you with the prompt merly the title of this office was Rail liess ard cheapness of the Thrice a- road Comm isiooer. bit the last I gi - Week edition of the New York World. Public Servi, e THE THRICE-A-WEEK WORLD'S lature changed it to Comini’»ion*r. regular subscription pri-e is only $1 00 Deputy State Sealor Buchtel is the per year, anti this pays for 156 papers son of Joe Buchtel, the pi nicer photo We offer this unequalled newapup. grrpher and Fire Chief of Portland, and and is 34 years old. After graduating JACKSONVILLE POST from the common schools he completed his education in the high school of Port together for one year for *2.00 casli land. His public career begun as Cle-k only. T’ ■ if the County i! * ird of Relief of Mult The regular subscription price of th- nomah County, when Ju go Lionel R. two papers is Í2. *0. Webster as Coun: y Judge, and Frack t ' Barnes aud W. L. L ghtrn r present Ont begins to surmise that Mr. Jus-1 County Commissioner constituted the ;- >p.,’ Ion makes one sharp In it* pi-xti'-i- mid dull in every lice Hughe« would rather be justice i Board of County Commissioners for the • than president. County. other.—Sir Philip Sidney.