Image provided by: Jacksonville Boosters Foundation; Jacksonville, OR
About The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1894)
Simrs. C has . N ickell , E dito ». THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER to, i«94- TO ADVERTISERS. lb' TIME* hM • rtrrai*U<>0 ot AU). U m argest sajoyad by say newspaper published between Hinland and Marysville. < allfumla,- a dlsieareot 7U) niles. It tberef'ire offer* the beat ludaresaraU to advertisers. O»J list 1* nnarlpally er..fiard to Jack*»». Josephine and Klaauti* eiiaalles. thuiaes* men iboeld take sots of this. A Terrible Tragedy. W. F. Beckman, the bru’e who killed Mrs. C. H. Hargadine cf Langell valley 1* his wife and stepson near Roseburg not paying a visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. long since, claims that he acted in self J. R. Casey of Ashland. defense; but the magistrate who held the There is a movement on foot to build a preliminary examination held him to combined opera-house and armory for the answer without bail. The circumstances nee of Troop B., O. N. G. of the tragedy are about these: Mrs. ! Louis Gerber, a well-known cattle buyer, Beckman was getting breakfast while her drove 225 head of beef to the railroad last thirteen-year-old daughter and another week ftom his ranch at Horsefly. girl named McGee were on the hillside C. C. Cheringtoo and wife of Klamath playing. The latter heard some shots agency have been spending a few days with fired and ran towards the house. Robert, friends in the Rogue river valley. who was in the yard near the bouse getting i. F. Em mitt, brother ot B. A. Emmitt of an axe and wec'ge ready to go into the Keno, has been nominated by the Nevada woods and cut rails, put his coat and axe Republican convention for lieutenant-gover near the fence and it is supposed he start nor. T he Democratic party throughout the country has cause to rejoice that Senator Gorman's followers have been beaten in Charles county, Md. The Democrats of 'hat state can do nothing better, either for themselves or for the party throughout the country, than to hit a Gorman head wherever it appears. T he New York Republicans have nomi nated Levi P. Morton, an old man and fos silized politician, who is a tool ot Boss Platt and distinguished for nothing but bis wealth, for governor. Senator Saxton was nominated for lieutenant-governor and Judge Haight for court of appeals. P oet land ’ s proposed daily newspaper, which will be called the Sun, will soon be launched into the field of journalism. The printers who were thrown out ot em ployment by the Oregonian's type-setting machines are the principal promoters of the scheme. The T imes wishes the enter prise the fullest measure of success. J uixie H aves of Oregon city and Toll. Thompson, who were arrested for alleged bulldozing of Melcher, a Portland wo man, whose property was destroyed by fire and insured in the State Ins. Co. of Salem, were discharged after having had an ex amination in a justice’s court. It is said that the matter will be laid betöre the grand jury. ______________ ¡T is said that Gov. Pennoyer will par don W W. Saunders, the journalist, who murdered Campbell at Albany in 1887,and was sent to the penitentiary for life. Saunders has been punished severely al ready for the crime, for which be is deeply penitent; and we are of the opinion that hi* excellency could exert hi* clemency in a much more unworthy cause. O ne ot the conspicuous benefits of the new tariff bill is going to be the making of .¡«-wool clothing cheaper. Some varieties, ot clothing are cheap enough already, but it ha* genera'ly been made so by introduc ing shoddy and other substitute* for wool into it* manufacture. Under the free-wooi tariff we ought to be able to get all-wool cloth* almost as cheap as we now get an inferior article for. T he Portland Dispatch has given up the ghost and the journalistic grave-yard has swallowed another victim. Tony Nolt- ner, who had sold it to Frank Morrison, attempted to regain control, and the par ties who held a chattel mortgage on the plant intervened ar.d have advertised it for sale. Th« Sunday Welcome is now the only Democratic newspaper at the me tropolis. and it fill* the bill well. -■ J-2 CALtrthtNlA EBUITS \ive «old well in Londou. paying a profit to the growers after meeting the expense* of handling and transportation for 7,000 miles. To get to Loudon the fruit has to pay tribute to the railroad* for the haul aero*« the conti nent, after which it ba* to climb over our tariff wall, get down into the chilly, unpro tected ocean, cro** the Atlantic and take it* chance* in a free-trade market. FiFTY-THREF. dnehartered ship* lie at anchor in San Francisco harbor, and a larger number and bigger ships are bound for Portland than ever before. As the season advances idle ships will become anxious to engage and the prices of char- ters, now so high, may decline. Should this happen, and Liverpool prices go no lower, wheat should make a slight ad vance. /.bout 36 cents per bushel is the present price of charters, and a reduction of 35 per cent, in them would be nice for the farmers,_____________ Mt. C leveland ' s letter to Gen. Catch ing» is much like ilis letter to Mr. Wilson. It expresses the same sentiments and con firms the impression made in the Wilson communication that Cleveland has aban doned as hopelessly impracticable the non partisan dreams of the Mugwumps. In effect it is a message to party voters, con veyed through an officer of the party or ganization The President has set several new fashions, and this one of dealing direct with bis party organization is one of his best innovations. Nothing could be more in conformity with American insti tutions. Curious as it may seem, Mr. Cleveland's is the band that has brushed mugwumpery out of the path of politics. Democrats are determined to obtain free raw materials for manufacturers and free markets for consumers. Cleveland and his party are together for once. We shall guard against treachery and half-hearted ness. ' ____________ » T he opponents of the free coinage of silver claim that if the United States coins silver at the old ratio of 16 to 1 this will b« made the dumping-ground for all the sil ver iu rhe world, say they. The facts show how absurd are their arguments that Europe will bring her silver hereto te converted into American coin. France has nearly one-half of all the silver in Eu rope. and it is absolutely at par with gold. Her coinage ratio is 15% cf silver to 1 of gold. It will he sees at a glance without argument if France sends her silver here to be converted into American coins she would lose the difference between the coin age ratio of the two countries. It is a very simple problem to solve bow much she would lose by the transaction. Her >750,^x1,000 of silver in recoining into American coin would be a dead loss of <33,000,000, as that is the difference in the coinage ratio of silver relatively to gold of the two countries British India would be still worse off, as her ratio is 15 to 1 There would be a dollar's loss in every 115 If now the two metals are at a parity with each other, wbat possible motive would there be to bring their bullion to our mints ? QUESTIONS. MINING NEWS. KLAMATH COUNTY NEWS. Notices for the location ,of placer and quartz mines, etc., for sale at the T imes office. A number of small transactions in min ing property in Sardine creek district is reported. That is becoming a lively min ing district. The American Mining Code, standard authority on all subjects pertaining to mining, water-rights, etc., is kept for sale at the T imes office. The company which is running a tunnel A number of people have arrived here ed for the bouse. When within ten feet of to tap the old channel of Foots creek has the door be was shot in the breast, falling from California of late by team. They are left the cement and struck gravel. They upon his face. The girls, after seeing looking for a location, having wearied of the expect to reach bedrock in a short time. golden state. Robert fall, ran to a neighbor’s, about Paul Cirac, who recently returned from B. B Gristly and J. B. Faith have arrived ball a mile distant, telling them what had from Bogue river valley, accompanied by California, has leased the Joe Blatt mines happened. The neighbors hastened to the their families. They will become perma in company with another miner and is en house and found Robert lying dead where nent residents. gaged in putting them in shape for next he had fallen. On entering the house J. C. Mitchell, the cattle-buyer, lc In the season’s work. they found Mrs. Beckman lying on the county buying beef. He is offering nearly S. P. Conger, who has been crushing sitting room floor dead, having been shot a cent less than he did a year ago, which is quartz from his mine with a Tremain mill in the back. Beckman, after doing the unwelcome news to our people. has ceased operations for the present. He shooting went to a neighbor's near by and Martin A Brandon’s new flourmill on Tula told a man what he had done, and said he lake hae started up. They will run three says that he is not satisfied with the work was going to kill himself. Of late the mills this season. One each at Keno and of his machinery. Beckmans have hc.d several quarrels, and Klamath Fall* beside the Merrill mill. Sexauer Bros, of Louse creek district, she bad begun suit for divorce. Deputy It Is reported that there is a movement Josephine county, are still crushing ore Sheriff Shambrook immediately went to on foot to make a Populist organ of the Star. from their ledge with an arastra and get the scene and found Beckman walking on Bowdoln will step down and out and leave ting good returns. They evidently have a trail on a ridge about a mile from the Connolly In full control, Dame Bumor sayn. one of the best ouartz mines in southern bouse and ordered him to throw up his H. F. Murdoch and Judge J 8. Orr have Oregon. hands, which he did. He was brought to formed a co-partnership for the practice of The Sterling Mining Co. will not finish Roseburg and lodged in jail. A pistol was law. They are both young men of ability cleaning up tor a month. This will prob found on him when arrested. The coro and Industry and will no doubt be success ably prove the largest and most remuner ner held an inquest and the jury returned ful. ative season they have ever had. It is Arthur Whitmore, who recently arrived a verdict charging Beckman with the rumored that several hundred pounds of murder of both persons. here from Garfield county. Wash., was ar rested by Sheriff Dixon ot that county on a gold dust will be taken out by the time the Klamath Curiosities. charge of cattle-stealing. The officer said run is completed. the case against him would probably not Judge W. H. Reid has returned to Tolo, amount to much. accompanied by J. C. Fairchild, treasurer of Pierce county, J. B. Cromwell, a job Weather Bulletin. printer, and J. L. McMurray,justice of the The following is the Oregon Weather peace, all of Tacoma, Wash. Tbey are Bureau’s report for the week ending Mon the owners of mining property in that dis day, Sept. 17, 1894 : trict and will proceed to develop it and WESTERN OREGON. erect a mill at an early day. The temperature averaged daily four de The company which took possession of grees cooler than the normal, being de 'the Mountain Lion mine in Missouri Flat cidedly cool at places in Josephine and district last August have commenced ac Jackson counties on the 13th and 14th. tive operations and have already worked Some frost occurred. The precipitation a great change there. Quite a force of men was greatly excessive in the coast and are employed in developing the property, southern sections and normal in the Wil as also a ledge which is distinct from the lamette valley. Hop-picking is the work old one. There is every evidence that the which i* demanding attention in all hop enterprise will prove an entire success. growing sections. Pickers are scarce, which fact has induced some growers to The Corean War. grant the demands of labor for increased The Corean situation is enlivened by compensation per box. As to the amount the news of a naval engagement which of product, quality of crop and injury by was disastrous to both sides Both suf lice and mold, the opinions differ much in fered a heavy loss of life and ships, and sections. Clean picking has been the rule while there was no decisive victory for in some counties. In many places mold either party, yet it seems that the Chinese and lice have worked considerable dam got the best of it The Japanese squadron age. Farmershave nearly finished haul that made the attempt was foiced to retire, ing off their grain, so that no damage can while the Chinese succeeded in landing result from the inclemencies of the weather. what was left of their large force. It was The yield of potatoes will be light and on evidently the purpose to land these troops ions will be plentiful. In Linn county to reinforce the garrison at Ping Yang, at Looking After Indian Claims. seeding on summer-fallow has commenced. which point the Japanese gained such a San Francisco, Sept. 17.—Charles B. The prices offered are lower thin ever be great victory a short time before; but they Howry, assistant'attorney-general of the fore known, but the grain is weighing un came too late. Still it leaves a consider United States, arrived here yesterday. He usually heavy. Silver prunes in Douglas able body of Chinese troops in Corea to started west to look after half a dozen of county have been injured by the rains; take the place of the surrendered garrison, the largest Indian claims cases, some of other varieties are doing well and abund and will give the Japanese winter enter which are in California and others in Ore ant. Fruit shipments continue large, tainment. Il will keep the war trom gon and Colorado. He has charge of the through the rapid ripening of late fruits coming to too sudden a termination. All of treaty and Indian cases against the gov EASTERN OREGON. these engagements, both on land and sea, ernment, and also the immediate charge of The temperature was normal in the Co have been characterized by a fierce ferocity •II care* growing out of depredations of lumbia and Walla Walla valleys and cool approaching brutality. Indians. These cases number nearly II,- er than the normal east and south of the 000, and involve 000,000 in round Blue mountains. The precipitation was This Should Interest You. figures The assistant attorney-general slightly excessive. Light frost occurred It is just as necessary for a man to get said: Of the large claims we indeed soon on the 14th and 15th. Heading and good reading matter as it is tc get good to make test cases. There arc fix or threshing continued notwithstanding the food. We have just made arrangements eight in all, and I expect this winter to frequency of the showers. Grain con which may be of interest to you. The ar move the United States supreme court to tinues to yield a full average in most sec rangement is this: We will give you that try them, and thus get them settled one tions. The price is the lowest in the his greatest of all Democratic papers, the way or the other. The Indian claims tory of the countiy. The potato crop will New York Weekly World, and the S emi cases are not brought against the govern yield light. W eekly T imes , both for one year each, ment alone, but against the United States for >3, or we will send you this paper for CENTRAL POINT POINTERS. and the Indians alleg'd to have committed one year and the Weekly World for six the depredations. If judgment is ren months for the regular yearly price of this Capt. Rawlings will soon become a res dered, and the particular Indian tribe has paper alone Here is the opportunity to ident of the county-seat. claims in the form ot money or otherwise get your own local paper and the leading Robt. Ashworth and wife were at the against the government, the amount metropolitan journal of the country at ex county-seat one day last week. found is taken out of the claim. traordinary low rates. Does this interest Dr. McNaul is no longer a resident of you? If it does, and you think it worth Religious Appointments. our town, being now engaged in practic while to take advantage of this great spe Elder David Brower will hold services ing medicine at Red Bluff, Calif. cial offer while it lasts, send o and get The Weekly World for six months and al Ta ent on the first and third Sundays of We are sorry to learn that the health of the T imes for one vear. •ach month; at Enterprise school-house on Hon. J. W. Merritt is not the best. His the second Sunday, and at Lynch school many friends hope to hear of hi* early Look Out for Mineral Lands. house on the fourth Sunday. recovery. The Roseburg Review publishes a notice The following are Rev. R. Ennis’ ap A. C. Bagby, who has been stopping at that the O. & C. R. R. Co. will make final pointments: On every Sunday morning, excep ing the third, he will hold services at Central Point for sometime past, has proof on certain tracts of land in the Rose the Presbyterian church in Phoenix; on gone to Texas, but will return here in the burg district, some of which are in Jack- son county. The limit of time in which to the th.rd Sunday morning at Jacksonville, near future. and every Sunday evening he will preach The public schools re-opened last Mon dispute the claim of the company to the at the Presbyterian church at Jacksonville. day with a good attendance. Prof. Free land is sixty davs. The total number of M. E. Church Directory, W. B. Moore, man is in charge, assisted by an excellent acres in the tract is 13,475.6a, much of P. C.—First Sunday,Jacksonville,n a . m ., corps of teachers. which lies in mineral districts, so that the Central Point, 7 P. m . ; second Sunday, — ♦ ■ ■ —~ company may find several contests on its Two for the Price of One. Central Point, 11 a . m ., Jacksonville 7 P, hands. Most of the land in this county is M.; third Sunday, Jacksonville, 11 A. M. From now on the N.Y. World, which in townships 40, r 3 and 4 west. The de Central Point, 7 p . m . ; fourth Sunday, has been coming to you regularly once a scription of the land is posted in Jackson Central Point, 11 a . m ., Jacksonville 7 p. week, will come twice a week. This is in ville at the postoffice and court-house, and M. Prayer meeting Thursday evenirg, song service Saturday evening. Sabbath line with modern progress, and is a part may also be found at the T imes office by of that large policy of advancement that anyone wishing to examine it. school, 10 A. M. Mass will beheld here on the 3d Sunday has made that newspaper the wonder of Notice to Traveling Public. of September at 10.30; on the 3d Sunday of the land. Those wishing the Semi-Week The strike is off, and harmony prevails. September at Jacksonville at 7 and at ly World and S emi -W eekly T imes can Tell all your people—and don't you torget obtain both for the small sum of >3 a year. Medford at ic; on the 4th Sunday of Sep it—that the Northern Pacific R. R. is now tember at Jacksonville at 7 and at Ashland The winter season is fast approaching and open and running through trains on sched new is the time to supply yourself with at 11; on the 5th Sunday of September at ule time between Portland and St. Paul, Jacksonville at 10:30; on the 1st Sunday first-class reading matter at hard-times without change of oars. No delays or trans prices. of October at Medford at 8 and at Jack fers. This is the only lino running uphols sonville at 10:30; on the 3d Sunday of tered tourist sleepers, which are as comfort October at Jacksonville at 7 and at Eagle JOSEPHINE COUNTY ITEMS. able and more convenient to the passenger Point at 11; on the 3d Sunday of October Chas. H. Basye is at Jacksonville ana will than the palace cars of any other line that at Jacksonville at 7 and at Medford at 10. oc.n take charge ot the Chapman blacksmith cost you three times the amount of money. The N. P. also runs free Colonist sleepers shop. Keep Your Money at Home. nd the most luxurious Pullman Palace A full assortment of blanks for the use Miss Clara Bkeel of Medford Is paying our sleepers. If you are going east, take this of justices of the peace and constables can town a visit. safe, reliable roufe, as rates are as low as by always be found at the T imes office; also Mrs Mee and her eon Frank vtsited rela- any other line and you need not go to the deeds, mortgages, bibs of sale, leases, me -tve* and friends at Central Point last expense of a life or accident insurance pol chanic’s liens, bonds and every legal week. icy, For tickets or information apply to A. J. O. Booth, aocompanied by .his father. D. Charlton, Asst. Gen. Paas. A Tkt. Agt., blank generally used in Oregon. They Portland or B. F. Cass, First National Bank, are printed after the latest and best forms, Rev. Robert Booth, have returned from a Grant s Pass, Oregon. and will be sold at Portland prices. There trip to Coos oounty. A camping party of Salem men is just home from the Klamath country. They are very enthusiastic regarding the scen ery, and challenge any place beneath the sun to produce more grandeur to th< sight than the rugged lands of that section. The Klamath reservation is a fine region and inhabited by a hearty race of Indians. Mr. Patterson says an Indian that weighed 375 pounds, who had curly hair and a number of other characteristics, was no ticed. This is hardly what could be clas sified as phenomenon, as a negro barber lived only a short distance away in an adjoining town. But the grandest sight, say the hunters, was Crater lake. This is a body of water 4^x6^ miles in dimen sions, having no apparent outlet. Not a fish of any kind inhabits the waters. Two efforts were made to plant the lake with trout, but it seems that they have no means of living and die off in a short time. While the party was at the lake they en countered a surveying outfit, who were making a geodetic survey, and their fig ures snowed that the lowest blu ff on the lake was 350 feet from the top to the level of the water. It was found that the depth ot the water was 1996 to 3ooo feet, clear as French plate glass. is no necessity for sending away fo your egal blanks.______ If the Baby is Cutting Teeth. Be sure and use that old and well-tried To the Public. remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup After Sept. 30th barley will be rolled, for children teething. It soothe* the child, graham flour and corn meal manufactured softens the gums, allays the pain, cures at the Medford Nurs-iyon the last three wind colic and is the best remedy for day* of each week. diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a boitle. The Latest Styles. A. Ttaeh.tbe merchant tailor of Medford ha* ju.t received a full line of first-class fashionable goods, etc., and le better pre pared than ever to satisfy the wants of his customer*. Give him a oall, for he will give <atl*factlon in every particular at the lowest prices. He ktaps only the best and most stylish patterns and guarantees a fit. Sewing Machine Supplies. ARRIVALS IN JACKSONVILLE. - Queries - - - - - - That - Appear I Not Some Puzzling Hard to Answer. Deeds, just the thing tor transferring mir.ing property of all kinds, at the T imes Printing House. i j If a goose weighs 10 pounds and a half its own weight, what is the weight of ■ the goose? Who has not been, tempted ! to reply on the instant 15 pounds? the oorrec'. answer being, of course, 20 pounds. It is astonishing what a very simple query will sometimes catch a wise man napping. Even the follow ing have beau known to succeed: How many days would it take to cut up a piece of cloth 50 yards long, one yard being cut off every day? A snail climbing up a pole 20 feet high ascends five feet every day and slips down four feet every night How long will the snail take to reach the top of the post? A wise man having a window one- yard high and one yard wide, requiring more light, enlarged his window to twice its former size, yet the window was still only one yard high and out yard wide. How was this done? This is a catch question in geometry, as the prjeeding were catch questions in arithmetic. The window was dia mond shaped at first and was afterward made square. As to the two former, perhaps it is scarcely necessary seriously to point on t that the answer to the first is not 52 days, but 40, and to the second not 20 days, but 16, since the snail, who gains one foot each day for 15 days, climbs on the sixteenth day to the top of the pole and there remains.—Pittsburg Dis patch. _______ A full assortment of ne 41 s of every TATLOK HOUSE. Geo Burton. 8 F F Hensen A wf. Aslild description, oil cans, attar’ ■» nts, oil and GK Child. “ W J Fenton. Gts Pass ig machines Louis Mel, “ J McKnight. Portland everything pertaining to 8 C Pier. Mich F Hurd. Elliott Creek can always be found at tl . F. Variety H Westacott, Pt land E Faucett, “ store in Jacksonville Ti. est 1 Jas Murray, “ goods at UNITED STATES HOTEL. the lowest prices guarant..0. F Dewey, Glendale Edith Dewey, “ J S Shaw, Soda Spgs F Jones, Yreka M Lindley, Gold Hill F Hemington, Mich D R MiHs, Ashland C A Knox, Bolt C H Basye, Kubli Frank Lewis. Wash M Watkins. Watkins W Burke. Ptland MARRIED. B Scribner, Ashland Paul Cirac, Calif E M Jones, Calif FGoulon, Klamath FIs VINCENT-CONLEY—In Jacksonvtt.e. Hept. 19. 1894. by S. J. Day. town recorder, John K. P G leave, Applegate Vincent and Mary M. Coni. y. W E Coul, Medford CHAPPELL HOUSE. A B Ragan, Medford A 8 Hammond, Med Wm Slinger, “ ’as Herd, Her'ing C W Yates. Aplegte T E Hills. Ashland M Hanley, Tolo AS lohnsou,Sterling H Ras.-müssen, Apigte BORN 4w«r<Ld Gold Medal Midwinter Fair, San Francisco. CROWELL— in Jacksonville precinct, Sept. 15, 1894, to Mr. and Mrs. H. M Crowell, a aon. SLAUGHTER—At Salt Lake Utah, Sept.!, 1894, to Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Slaughter, a son. To aid Digestion take one Small Bile Bean after eatiug. 2Se. per bottle. KING—In Medford, Sept 10, 1894, to Mr. and Mis. W. 8. King, a daughter. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder are lost annually, directly and indirectly, by people who cannot do their own figuring, write their own letters, or koep their own books; and who do not know when business and legal papers which they must handle every day are made out correctly, tiff“All there things, and much more, we teach thoroughly. Hundreds of our graduates are in good positions, and there will be openings for hundreds more when times Improve. A’ow Is the time to prepare for them. Besides, a business education Is worth all it costa,for one's own use. Send for our catalogue, to lea.- what and how we teach. Mailed free to any address. Portland Business College, A. P. Armstrong, Prln. Portland, Oregon. j . a . Wesco, Secretary. Where Woman Come» Last. An Arab—meaning a tent dweller; in an equine aense the town dweller is no Arab—loves first and above all his horse. No ono need to recite the oft sung affec tion he will lavish upon him. Next he loves his firearm. This, poetically7 speak ing, ought to be a six foot, gold inlaid, muzzle loading horror of a matchlock, which would kick any man but an Arab flat on his back at every shot, but actu ally, in Algeria or T unis, when he live« near a city, it is more apt to be a mod ern English breechloader. Yon must fly from the bnsy haunts of men’to find the matchlock. Next to his gun he loves his oldest son. Last comes his wife—or one of his wives perhaps. Daughters don’t count—I mean the Arab doesn’t take the trouble to count them unless in so far as they minister to his oomfort, dietetic or otherwise. Until some neighbor comes along and proposes to marry—in other words, to make a still worse slave of ODe of them —she is only a chattel, a soulless thing. And yet she is said to lie a pretty, amia ble, helpful being—said to be, for no one by any hap ever chances to cast his eyes on one worth seeing. This disre- gartl far women, be it said to their hon or, does not always apply to the Bedou ins of the Syrian and Arabian deserts. —New York Journal. “Counselor Therefore.** JACKSONVILLE PRICES ----- AT------ {EAMES, WHITE Æ GU.’S i Í <D STO K E, FOR AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER. Mason’s Fruit Jare.% gal, per doz |1 25 Coal Oil, per 5 gal can ” ” ” quarts ” ” 1 00 Cedar Water Pail« Best Side Bacon........................... 121-2 Cedar Wa«h Tubs......... ......... fl 40 ......... 20 to 25c 12 1-2 Willow Clothe« basket«. ■ . $1 to |1 25 50c Eagle Chocalate, per tl> ......... 25c Beans per lb...................................... 4C Eagle Condensed Milk, per can 20c Pearline per paper.............................. 15c 3 lbs Goldduet Washing powder for 25c Best Ham................................. Jelly Glasses per doz.......................... Best Rolled Oats, 15 lbs for 1 00 Rag Carpet, per yard ... ............. 40c Best Roller Flour, per sack,....... 80c Matting, per yard,....... ....... 20 to 25c Royal Savon Soap, per box, $1 and $1 25 Ladies’ Shoes, all size«, $1 25 to $1 35 Coal Oil in bulk, per gal................. 30c Men’s heavy Shoes....... ...|1 51) to *2 Sergeant Kelly, a celebrity of the Irish bar, bad a remarkable habit of drawing conclusions directly at variance with his premises and was consequently nick named ‘’Counselor Thereiore." Is court 82 75 Ladies fine hose, worth 50c, for.... 25e on one occasion he thus addressed the Coal 0i', per 10 gal case jury: “The case is so clear, gentlemen, that you cannot possibly misunderstand Men’s and Boys’ Clothing, Furnishing goods, Hats, Dry and Fancy it, and I should pay your understandings goods, and Everything in our Store will be sold cheap as the a very poor compliment if I dwelt upon, cheapest and for Cash or produce only. No Credit. If yon it for another minute. Therefore I shall at onoe proceed to explain it to you as 4>we nq, plee.qe call tva-i settle, • jo -we> no&A wut tn ,nOy. - - — minutely a* possible.' ’—Green Bag. Soliciting the Patronage of Everybody, Yours for Cash Trade, «EAMES, WHITE & CO. The Annie Wright Seminary. 1884. A Boarding School for Girls, . FOR THIS YEAR. with Superior Advantages. ----------- riri------------ —THIS PAPER— Tn> Izrrmnioz 1 Givn Czurtn I iTTtmoinTnl -----WITH----- THE SAN FRANCISCO SEND FOR CATALOGUE AND PRICES, PRICK Si.85 PKR Yi AK, Address, ----- OR----- MRS. SARAH K. WHITE, Principi, THE SAN FRANCIS 0 Morning Call! W. H. PARKER Attorney-at-Law. PRICK »B.OJ l'Ht YEAIC. HK MOItMNG CALL Ci'V <«sv«b A WKKK) Is * live metropolitan daily. It Is the MOST RELIA BLE, sud is recognized as being the LEADING NEWS PAPER of the Pacifie Coast. Either Of the sbove papers we will send po tuaid ss a pre mium on receipt of the follow, ing subscription prices tor the combination: DAILY CALL AID THE PAPEB, P23 YEAR, r$8.00 j IN ADVANCE. WEEKLY CALL And This Papar, Pdf Year, MORAL >’ hivzursm WTILLECTDAI.’ J or t.n PHYSICAL ( trsMon. ZEzzcellerxt Tesiolxers, Weekly Call! ------ ri-------- SAN FRANCISCO WEEKLY CALL a handsome eight- page papei It is issued every Thursday, and co»t»ius all of the importaut news of the week, gleaned fri»n every quar ter of the globe, complete up to date of publication. It fur nishes the latent and most reliable financial news and market qn .talious, and gives special attention to horticul tural and agricultural news, and Is in every resiect a first- class family paper, appealing to the interest of every member of the household. ------ H k ------ TACOMA, WASHINGTON. Eleventh Year. 1894. JacAxonrille, Oregon. A. N. soliss Notary Puitlic. PARKER & SOLISS, JACKSONVILLE, OCR. CONDUCTED BY TH* SISTERS OF THE HOLY NAMES : WILL BE KESL’MED tor BOAHri- ers and Day Pupils in Sept« m biz L<.1894. S TUDIES R-al-estate. Financial. Insurance Aroni. and Investment Brokers General Convev anc -rs and Searcoers of Records Tltl«w t<> land examined MONEY loaned on best ae curlty at host rates. Real-estate bought and sold on commlssioD. Special attention de voted to collections and remittances promut ly made. Moderate rates, immediate acti«>n' quick reports and prompt returns Dentati ' tlons taken. r LECTED88 8ETTLED AND »ENTS COL- The course of study In this institution is thorough, embracing all the branches be.oDg- ing to a firet-cluBS education. Languages, drawing and v-.mai lessons In class being . Commercial litigation, mercantile collec included in the English course, torin no extra tions atm matters in probate given SDecia' charge. attention and economical management iruar’ Young ladies w shinirto follow the higher anteed. Correspondence solicited. art course or musical course are afforded COLLECTIONS A SPECIALTY. special facilities in each. The usual modification Is made when more than one of the same family attend the Acad, etnv at the same time. Assessor’s Notice to Tax There will also be attached to the Acad« my Payers. a day school for boys In a separate building. Jacksonville is conceded to be the most healthy place In Southern Or« gon and easy of of access. Rogue River Valley Railway Co.’s otice is hereby given that t « r trains run within a block or the Convent. board ot equalization for Jacksitn cimnt v For further particulars address the State of Oregon, will convene at the office'ot SUPERIORESS. the count/ clerk In Jacksonville on f Jacksonville, Or. N CREAM BALM. C atarrh Apply a particle « the Balm well up intc nostrils. After a moment draw stronu breath through th nose. L’s»* thre times a day, afte meals preferred and before retiring. ELY’S CREAM Balm opens and cleanses the Nasal Passages, allays pain and intlaimnatinn, heals the sores, pr tects the membrane, from colds, restores) Monday, Oct. 1, 1894, tor the purpose of publicly examining the as sesi-ment roll and coriectlng all err«7r* <n uation, description, quantics of lamhi lUta or other property. Said board will r ..-ssion fromday’oday until said roll has b^n duly exanilntxl. oeen All parties Interested will take _ govern themselves accordingly. o,lce and J. L. WOOLDRIDGE, Applegate, Sept. 3. 1894. CountJ' Awesstm. AN EVERCREEN TREE I -FEVER the senses ot taste and smell. The I alm is quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. Price 60 cenis at druggists or by mail. ELF BROS. 56 Warren St.. N. Y. j~$3T6oi ~~j IN ADVAMK. WIT’HOLT'I' CJOSn? We will send you bv man small evergreen tree alapt, * to^m’r^i^ °.ne with instructions tor planting climate, it. together with our o „ «5 n??n« for stock, if you will cut out thia adUif„Nurl,er>’ mark on it the name of this *erae’1’. how many and what kind <if trs2^ki“<’i tel! you would like to purchase r^n8«“Ql P-«nts wish to piant them. 8 ’ and wbe“ you We will quote you lower EVERGREEN NURSERIES Evergreen, Door Co., Wi8. Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powde* Wsrid’t F*lr tlUhnt Awerg. W P. ác CO.» tkik 12» CuliAiabu*. U Children Cry for Pitcher's Uastoria: