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About The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1902)
©emorrutic ilimro. Vol. XXXII. JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. THURSDAY, JANUARY 30. 1902 No. 5. J JOSEPHINE COUNTY ITEMS. F. G. Nelson has become a resident of Selma district. Mrs. A. C. Hough has returned from her visit in California. Harry Kessler of the Chicago Racket Store is In San Francisco on business. Mrs. R. D. McHugh Is in Grant's Fas», visiting her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Presley. As T he T imes went to press the ground was covered with a light mtn tie of snow. Mrs. Bessie Plymaie of Medford was tiie guest of her sister, Mrs. Alta Weston, recently. A. P. Estabrook, Gold Illll'a leading druggist, made his many Irieuds in Grant’s Pass a visit recently. J. A. Cook of Foots creek and W. A. Cook of Gold Hill were at Grant's Pass a short time since. John R. Harvey, the mining man, is at Portland with bls wife, who is receiving treatment at a sanitarium. Capt. E. B. Brown and Lieut. A. E. Voorhies of the home guard have re ceived tiieir commissions from Gov. Geer. Newt. Chatham, tiie genial mining man, left for ban Francisco Tuesday morning, but expects to return before long. J. T. Hartley and W. F. Bowker, two excellent citizens of Williams creek precinct, were in Grant’s Pass recently. Hariy Lewi., wiio Is engaged in raislug'stock In Gance creek district, was in Grant’s Pass last week. J. A. LarseD, the expert tailor, has purchased Chas. Mathews’ Interest I d the Grant’s Paas Tailoring Co , which is doing a big busine*>. Don S Rae of Louse creek was la Grant’s Pass a few days ago. lie is well pleased with developments at the mine in whicn he is interested. TO CLOSE Our Wet Weather Goods NEXT THIRTY DAYS We Offer You for the Ladies’ Mackintoshes Regular $4.00, Now $2.85 Misses’ “ “ $3.75, “ $2.65 Men’s $6.50, “ ‘ $4.65 U MEN’S AND BOYS’ OVERCOATS, OREGON ALL-WOOL MACKINAWS. J LARGEST STOCK. Prices Always the Lowest ' NUNAN. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Did you ever compare a delicious, flaky, delicately browned loaf of bread made irom GEO. O'B. de bar , m . d ., PHYSICIAN 8UÍQKOK, AND Jacksonville, Oregon. •OfFos ‘n Kahler's Building. <ip-«talr». Res idí a >• on California street. Dav or niant cani attended nrotnml» i .i ■■■■ — ■1 ■ i *** " *“ ~ J. M. KEENE, D. Ü. ». L ra TIVK DENTISTRY A SPECIALTY Orno«» .n tbo Adklna Douai block Oregon. ledford. H. D. NORTON. fORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW, Grant'» Paaa, Oregon. I Wn>. M. COLVIG, LAWYER. Orelo». aeksonvlll*. I Snowy Butte Flour With the «ad results achieved from the use of cheaper flour? ’ The one, the highest triumph of cookery—the most useful of all the arts; the other, a monument to wasted energy, blasted hopes arid poor judgment. But why continue the compari son? If you have made the nrstake in the past, trying to exist on inferior flour, redeem yourself by ordering Snowy Butte flour only in future. "EtV&ry up-to date dealer Handles it ÂRE YOU DEAF? CASES OF DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARINC ARE NOW CURABLE Amos in Kn« Mon's Bu Idin Jacksonville, Oregon. by our new invention. Will practice In »11 court, of th. R.nta. Ot ic« In the Oourt Houae la»t door on the lebt from entr.no« Only those born deaf are incurable. HEAD F. NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY. A. WERNIAN, OF BALTIMORE« BAYS: * B altimore . Md., March 30, 1901. X will now give you — GentfcntfH ‘ — Being entirely cured of deafnem. thanks to your treatment, A. C. HOUGH, ATTORN ey - at - la w ■t'a Pu... Ur.g.a. - Jdlceover Hatr-R.ddle H»rdw»re Store. A. E. REAMES, ATTORN EY-A Jacksonville. • T-L a w , ROBT. G. SMITH, toRÄEY AND OOUNHEL.OR AT LAW, Graat*» Paaa, Oregon. Praetloea In »II th. oourt. Building up-atalra YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICAGO, ILL Office In Red Men’s Building. \ a full history of my caae. to tie uaed at your discretion. About five year» ago my right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost tny hearing in thin ear entirely. I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months, without any success, consulted a num ber of physicians, among others, the most eminent ear specialist of this city, who told tne that only an operation could help me, and even that only temporarily, that the head noise» would then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever. I then saw your advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treat ment. After I had used it only a few days according to your directions, the noises ceased, and to-day. after five weeks my hearing in the diseased car has been entirely restored. I thank yon heartily and l>cg to remain Very truly yours. • F. A. WERMAN, 7308. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. Owr treatment doe* not interfere with your ttxual occupation. Oregon • i ; HEAD NOISES? P. P. PRIM & SON. ’ORNEYS AND COUNSELORS AT LAW s OHloe tn Rank Location Makes No Difference. The Best Photographs Arc still being made by A HT - land SOUTH H. C. MACKEY & BOYD, VI* The • Shasta • Route —or th »— SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY. ■rain loara "Medford" for" Portland andway stations st 4:81 a M and I .IW r M_______ 6:30 r M H .10 A M ««•uve Portland 11’40 AM 11:45 r M ««•it ve Medford IS :3ft A M 111:55 A M »•’ilVO Anhland firtn A M Irrlvc Sacramento 6 0ft P M 6:5» A M (rrlve San FranoUco 7 S6 P M 7dX) A M 4 fifi A M irriva Ogdon »1& A M 8:M) a » krrtve Denver 7« A M arrive Kan»»« 011y 7 Ä A M 8:30 A M ( r r 1 V 0 Chicago ~T:<> AM irrlvc I xm Angeles S OÚ r m irrlv« Houston ‘TÖ5 A trrlve New Orleans 6.30 r Arrive Washington 6:48 À i<:IO r Arrive New York » J H H M 8 Oft A M 7:00 A M 6:30 T M 4:49 a m f»:IO V m Pullman and tourtat cars on both trains. Chair cars Sacramento to Ogden and El •neo, and tourist oars to Chicago St Louts tsw Orleans and Washington Direct connection at Han Franctaco with Jesmshlp lines for Hawaii. Japan. China, the ■hlopptnea and Australia. ■ For -.btough tickets and rates call on or sd ■res. W. V. Llpplnooo Agent. Medford. ■ R K(EHLER R H MILLER I Manager 9 F a F Ag't Kortlano Or IN MEDFORD Mr. and Mrs. M. Wilbur have irone to Eastern Washibg' on, which will be their ftture home They carry with them tiie best wishes of many friends. Dr. S. Abbott, JoMpnine county’s leading veterinary surgeon, lias es- tabiistied his Headquarters at .1. h. Kerley’s feed stables. He can’t Lei beaten in his lioe. Remarkable Cure for Croup. A LITTLE BOY'S LIFE SAVED. 1 have a few words to say regarding Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. It saved my little boy’s life and I feel that I cannot praise it enough. I nought a buttle ot It from A. E. Steere of Goof S- D., aod when I got home with It tne poor baby could hardly breathe. 1 save ib.3 medicine as di reeled every ten minutes unt-H he “threw up,” and then I thought sure he was going t<> choke to death. We had to pull the phleam out of his mouth in great long strings. I am positive that ir I had not got the bottle of cough medicine my boy would not be on earth today.—J oel D emont , luwuod, Iowa. For sale by City Drug Store, Retail Market Report. Tiie following quotations were made up this afternoon, and is an impartial report of the prices paid by Jacksonville dealers: Wheat—75c per bushel. Flour—$1.70 (a $l.80 per 100 pounds. Oats—36c per bushel. Barley—Rolled, $1.25 per cental. Hay—Per ton, baled, $12. Potatoes—$1.50 per hundred. Onions—AS3 per pound. Butter—30c($50c per roll. Beans—3(a6c per pound. Lard—15c per pound. Eggs—15(tf l8 cts per dozen. Sugar—D. G. $5.75(q>$6 per cwt. Poultry—$2.50 to $3.00 per dozeD. Hams—16ic per pound. Shoulders—12|c per pound. Side Bacon—156z)20c per pound. To Care a Cold In One Dav. Tske Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets, Al d■■ugg ists refund the money it it fails to cure E W Grove's signature is on each box. 25c For Sole. The undersigned, living on the Moff place, If miles southwest of Central Point, offers for sale the following articles: A bee gun, $1; a fine young cow, Jersey and Durham, will be fresh Marcii 1st. $45; a set of good heavy harness with breeching, used one year, 128; a tongueless cultivator, $3; a dropilead sewing-machine, al most new, $18; a good eastern hack, with canopy top, u«ed one year, $60; also a hand corn planter, shovel, hoes, rakes and numerous other articles. D. C. G rim . IG TENT An AT THE C Street, Opposite Van Dyke’s Store. Ancient Foe Jacksonville, Or., To health and happiness is Scrofula— as ugly as ever Since time immemorial. It causes bundles in the neck, dis figures the skin, inHames the mucous membrane, wastes the r.'usclee, weak ens the bones, reduces the power of resiatance to disease and the capacity for recovery, and develop! into con sumption. Are the Leading Dealers in Gent’s Furnishing Goods, Hats. Boot and Shoes, Crockery, Glassware, Groceries, Cigars, Tobacco Confections, Tropical Fruits, Stationery, Notions, Etc., Etc. “A jun.’i nppesrix! C5 th. lift side of my neek. It eanaed great pcila. was lanced, and became » running Miro. I wtnt Into a general deeliiw. I whs persuaded to try Hood's Sarsaparilla, and when I bad taken sli boti les my aeck was healed, nad I have never bad any trouble of the kind since." Mas. K. T. S nt » kb , Troy. Ohio. MAX MULLER & CO Sarsaparilla Goods are Fresh and First-Class and Prices the Best Hood's and Pills L-.~J~-~LTTZu*u-irl'h~r“ *«**»*H***»«** **»**^»*d^*O^*SAAAAAA» GIVE US A CALL will rid you of it, radically and per manently. aa they have rid thousands. NEW SHORT STORIES Politeneaa a Handicap. R. R. Sheffeld, the fullback, came up from Princeton the other Monday to address the West Side Young Men's Christian association at Princeton, and in Illustration of one of his remarks he told an Interesting anecdote of the football field. I’lsber, the giant center ef the Princeton team, was unable to make the team at first, for, while he had the requisite physique for a fine player, he seemed to luck that essential element known it: football parlance as "ginger.” “We could not understand this de fieieney in him." said Mr. Sheffield, ‘'until one day in practice a coach who had kept bls eye on him noticed that he stopped and begged the pardon of his opponent for going at him in such an enthusiastic fashion in one of the mass plays. Fisher's fault was dis covered. He was too polite. He had always been very gentlemanly and courteous off the field, but on the grid iron there is not room for much polite ness.” Fisher was instructed to play hard and clean and beg no man's pardon for it. He obeyed and made the team. —New York Times. i.tamlan Canal Cominls.lo.. The Isthmian canal commission got together here and is now hard at work flnlsblng up its report which It prom ises to have tn the preslc'snt’s bands long enough In advance of the meeting of congress to enable hin. to make use of It In preparing bls annual message. The president of the Panama Canal company is here trying to get the com mission to report in favor of buying bis canal. It will be remembered that in Its preliminary report made to Pres ident McKinley last year the commis sion declared against such a purchase. Farm io*- Sale. A good farm situated one mile noribeaet of Phoenix lying alongside vùuuiy road, contain-1 ing lóti. 12 acres. There will be sold with it, it desired by the purchaser, 40 acres of wood land. The place Is all enclosed; about 150 acres of It is under cultivation. The improve ments consist of a dwelling-house, a large barn with sheds for stock, smoke, wood and poultry houses. There is a good well of water at the horse and one near the barn; an orch ard in good condition, containing about 60 fruit trees of assorted varieties, mostly apples, school-house tear the north end of the fa-m, Terms. *3,000; St,000 in cash, 11X00 in jne years and 11.000 in two years, deferred payments to draw interest, or all cash at option of pure has er. Inquire of S ilas J D ay , Real Estate Arent, Jacksonville. Oregon. WANTED—SEVERAL PERSONS OF Character and good reputation In each state (one in this oounty required) to represent »nd aiterttse old established wealthy business house of solid s^ncial Blanding. Salary 818.00 weekly with axpeMM «tai&CF1- »** payable in cash each Wednesday direct from head 0B- ces References. Enclose self-addresseJ stamped envelope, ilanager, 316 Caxton Build ing, Chicago. This signature is on every box of the genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet« the remedy that ewe» ■ ooM la » m day FOR THE HOUSEWIFE Josiah Read'» Invention. The inventor of the cooking range died the other day, says a writer in the New York Mall and Express. He was ninety-two years o'd. and he lived at Everett, Mass., a suburb of Boston. H's name was Josiah M. Read. The name Is not in “Who’s Who,” and the okl man was unknown to fame, al though his invention effected a more profound and momentous change in American domestic life, perhaps, than Morse’s electric telegraph did, or Whit ney’s cotton gin, or even Howe’s sew ing machine. There had been stoves before Read. E'ranklin made a stove which still goes by his name. It is sim ply an open grate on legs, with a pipe. The feet can be warmed at it, and the room can be tilled with smoke. There were rude cooking contrivances before Read made his ranges, away back in the thirties, but they were crude af fairs. Men who are now not old can remember when women baked in a Dutch oven—a movable tin box, which was shoved up in front of a hot open fire. The cooking range made possible an elaborate and careful arrangement of the humblest cuisine. It was eco nomical in the sense that it gave a great deal more heat from the same amount of fuel. It saved heat and time, it enlarged the American bill of fare. It Increased the complexity of the do mestic organization and abolished old fashioned rustic simplicity. VT—- - ■ — For the Sickroom?^-— - Accessories for the sickroom cannot be too dainty in appearance, but above all is it important that they shall be washable. A pretty medicine glass cover made of a piece of circular white linen mn.v be embroidered in some delicate design and the edge but tonhole stitched. Near the center two small eyelets xiiould I m » worked. Then a piece of glass corresponding in sise and shape should l>e obtained at the glazier's, and ibis. too. should have two small boles similar in location to those In the linen. When the work is fin ished, the linen is tied with baby rib bon to the glass, and a most service able and at the same time attractive article for an invalid is ready for use. The Best Pre.crl.tlon for Malaria, Chill, »nd Fever is • bottle of Gunn's T ast » t ass C rii . i . T okio . It I« stmoly iron »nd qui nine in a ta.tales, form. No oure. No pay. i Price 50c. K o $ l Baking Powder Most healthful leavener in the world. Goes farther. St. Rrle’n Tower. St Rule's tower, in the town of SL Andrews, is an evidence of the link which binds St. Andrew, whose feast all good Scotchmen keep, to tlie eotin- try of whom he Is the patron saint. The legend runs that a monk called Regulus, or Rule, brought the bones of St Andrew from Constantinople, to Scotland and burled them near the sea coast on the spot round which the present town of St Andrews after ward grew. Whether the story is true or not, there seems to be no other way to explain the connection of this partic ular saint with Scotland, for he seems to have passed the whole of his life up to the moment of bis martyrdom in the j east James II. certainly associated him with the country across the Tweed, for it was be who founded the Order of St Andrew in 1687, to be conferred »□ the king and sixteen knights.—Lon don Chronicle. How the Te» Plant Started. As you drink a cup of tea do you ever think how tea came to grow? Tell your next visitor the story. A Persian prince on his way to meet his betrothed vowed that he would not sleep until he saw her. After traveling seven days be stopped to rest under a shade tree, and there, being no longer able to resist the temptation, be fell aooad Sleep. When be awaken ed, h? yaa 10 SSi'rt that he cut off his eyelids and threw them on the around. — From them grew the tea plant It is“ rather unfortunate thatthc gtoryustops liere l»eciHfl£_lt would be interesting to know what the lady thought of a sweetheart without eyelids and wheth er it would be possible for them to grow again. HOME « JI Am CHILD Does your horse “feel his oats”? What a difference be- tween the grain-fed and the grass-fed horse I The first strong and full of ginger, the second flabby, weak and tired out before he begins. The feeding makes the difference. Children are not alike either. One is rosy, bright-eyed, full of life and laughter, another is pale, weak and dull. The feed ing again is responsible. Sickly children need special feeding. They don’t “feel their oats”. Scott’s Emulsion adds just the right richness to their diet It is like grain to the horse. The child gets new appetite and strong digestion. Scott’s Emulsion is more than .food. It is a strong medicine? It rouses up dull children, puts new flesh on thin ones and red blood into pale ones. It makes children grow. Scott’s Emulsion makes ordi nary food do its duty. This picture represent* the Trade Mark of Scott’» Emulsion and is on th» wrapper of every bottle. Send for free »ample. SCOTT 4 BOWNE, 409 Pearl St., New Yodt 50c and $1. all druggist*,