The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907, April 03, 1902, Image 1

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    JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. THURSDAY, APRIL 3. 1902.
Vol. XXXII.
SOUTHERN OREGON NEWS
THE GRIP AGAIF LATEST DISPATCHES.
A BRIEF RESUME OF HAPPEN­
A Simple Suggestion as to Hov.
to Guard Against it and
its After-Effects.
TALL TIMOTHY’S MEASURE TAKEN.
P ortland , Orc., April 2.—Furnish, of Umatilla, was nomi­
nated for Governor on the first ballot by 76 majority. Dunbar,
Bean and Moore were renominated for Secretary of State, Su­
preme Judge and Treasurer by acclamation.
Every year upon the approach of spring
grip ae«BMi to make its appearance. One«
every few years it spreads and assume»
alarming proportions. From all appear
MINERS ON A STRIKE.
mines this is one of tho years in which it
will seize upon a groat number of vic
B utte , Mont., April 2.—Three thousand miners are idle in this
tims, for every day new coses are re­
camp. The engineers of the Anaconda, Parrott and Washoes
ported both in the east and west.
Like scarlet and typhoid fever, th< companies’ mines went on a strike today.
after-effects of grip nro often worse than
These
mines were closed, throwing out of employment a great
the disease itself. Tho sufferer is left
f
with h debilitateli system, »hort of breath i arnly
men. . The engineers want more salary, and have been
upon the slightest exertion, affected by threatening to strike for some time unless their condition was im­
every change of the weather and in n proved by the mine-owners.
physical condition to invite the attack oi
Until the present time the idle miners arc quiet, but it is feared
tho many diseases induced bv the incle
the more turbulent element will soon make trouble unless the dif­
mi nt weather of early spring.
A timely suggestion as to how to en­ ference is settled favorable to the striking engineers. The mine­
able tlx- system to resist the inroads oi owners are determined to resist the demands of the strikers. As
grip raid its after-effects is given in tlie an extra precaution against rowdyism the city officials are swear­
experience of Miss Mary E. Chose, an ing in special deputies for the protection of property and those
operator in a shoo factory, living nt No.
2775 Washington street, Roxbury Dist.. whom the miners have grievances against.
Boston, Mass. She says:
“I hud an attack of tho grip in 1898,
SOLDIERS WERE MANGLED.
which left mo in such n weak condition
t lint 1 liecame afflicted with it complica­
L ondon , April 2.—A cablegram from Lord Kitchener, in charge
tion of other troubles. I suffered from
nervous dyspcjisia and «disease jtoculiai of the English South African troops, reports a serious railroad
to my sox. There was a laid feeling in accident, in which 39 soldiers were killed and a number seriously
my head, yet. it wus not Headache. 1 injured.
to.il: cold easily and hail periodical spelli
The accident was caused by the train jumping the track while
of nausea. I would faint frilqaontly,
loaded
with troopsen route to the front. The accident took place
and was completely run dowq in every
way. I tried seveinl doctors, and t<w>i on a heavy grade, which made the loss of life heavier than if it had
various remedies, but without fuvorubh happened at any other point on the road. The cars were piled up
results.
in wild confusion find the suffering on the part of the mangled
“Finally a friend, who had taken them
caused
even the stoutest hearts to quail. The ambulance depart­
herself, advised me to try Dr. Williams
Pink Pi 11s for Pnle People. I did so, anc ment was on hand almost immediately and did everything possi­
was feeling better when 1 had taken out ble to alleviate the suflering of the injured.
box of the j ills. I continued in the ns<
The wreckage is being cleared away, so that other troops may
of th« pills until I had taken six boxei
be
rushed
to the front.
and they made me well and strong.
“I luivo n commended Dr. Williams
TRAIN BLOCKADE BROKEN.
Pink Pills to quite a numls-r of peoplt
na a cure for troubles like mine. I know
S t . P aul , April 2.—The blockade on the Northern Pacific
by personal experience, that they wil
caused by flood is broken. The first coast train in a week arrived
give Wonderful resnlts.”
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for 1*010 Peo­ here this morning.
ple are sold by all dealers or will be sent
Owing to the flood west of here passenger traffic has Iteen at
{suitjmid on receipt of price, fifty cents a
x>x; six boxes for two dollars and fifty a standstill for several days past. The railroad had its entire
cents, by addressing Dr. Williams Medi­ force repairing the damage resulting from the flood.* It will be
cine Uoiujiauy, Schenectady, N. Y
several days before the road lied is in such shape as to permit
trains running on time. The passengers were well taken care of
by the railroad employes.
WOMAN’S RELIEF
A really healthy woman has llt-
tlo pain or discomfort at the
menstrual period. No woman
needs to have any. Wine of
Cardui will quickly relieve those
smarting menstrual pains and
the dragging head, back and
side aches caused by falling of
the womb and irregular menses.
WINE°F CARDUI
has brought permanent relief to
1,000,000 women who suffered
every month. It makes the men­
strual organs strong and healthy.
It is the provision made by Na­
ture to give women relief from
the terrible aches and pains which
blight so many homes.
OxmwooD, La., Oct. 14,1900.
I have been very sick tor some time.
I»" taken with a severe pain In my
? . 1Bn<l «mid not get any relief until
J *’’*•„**bottto of Wine of Cardui. Be­
fore J ,luMl uken •>*of “ 1 w“ relieved
I feel itmy duty to aay that you have a
wonderful medicine.
Maa. M. A. Tovar.
Ch a im no oga Medicine Co., CbaUanoosa, Tenn.
A ustin , Texas, April 2.—The Cpurt of Civil Appeals today
knocked out the anti-trust law. The best legal talent in the
country appeared on behalf of the trusts. The court handed
down a brief opinion holding that the trusts did not conflict
with the law.
INGS AND PROGNOSTICA­
TIONS OF INTEREST.
April «bowers are with us.
All kinds of wood tor sale. Wells &
Shearer.
■’ Mrs Mattle Sowden went to Grant’s
Pass yesterday.
Don’t forget to register.
It will
soon be too late.
Mrs. Helen Harrigan left for Red­
ding, Cal., this morning.
“Kittie,"the child’s hat for 1902, in
di fferent combinations, at Mrs. Palm’s
Trespass notices, printed on cloth,
on sale at T- ie T imes Printing House.
Miss Bailie Maury of Pooh Bah is
visiting with Mrs. J. C. Hall of Gold
Hill.
L. C. Pankey of Klamath county is
visiting relatives and friends liviDg in
this county.
W. A. Cook is in charge of the Tolo
section, and tilling tbe position
satisfactorily.
Harry Langell has entered the
employ of Cook & Howland in Jump-
off-Joe district.
D. Orrand W. W. Christie of-Spike-
nard tarried among their Medford
friends Tuesday.
Carl Cofer, who is well known in
this section, is located at McCloud,
Cal., for the summer.
Mrs. Chas. Rippey of Ukiah, Cal.,
is visftlng with Mrs. A. L. Harvey of
Gold Hill, her mother-
The wife of Conductor Blew was
operated on for appendicitis in a Port-
land hospital this week.
Messrs. Wilcox and Manifold, prom­
inent Josephine
county miners,
spent Bunday at Gold Hill.
The regular monthly session of the
county commissioners’ court is being
held at Jacksonville this week.
Mr.and Mrs. Paul Edwards of Siski­
you are visiting at Grant’s Pass. The
former’s health is not the best.
Mr. and Mrs. Asbury Beall of Pooh
Bah visited with J. E. Harvey of
Gold Hill and his family Sunday.
Glenn Owen, an excellent mechanic,
has taken charge of the barbershop
formerly conducted by Mr. Farren.
Congressman Tongue
was
re­
nominated bv tbe Republican congres­
sional convention which met at
Roseburg tbis week.
Re?. 3. C- Tabor of the Seventh
Day Adventist church, who naw lives
near Roseburg, is io Jackson county
on missionary work.
Messrs. Kershaw and Dunlap, who
are excellent photographers, are in
Josephine county with their outfit, to
remain several weeks.
Miss Nellie Blackburn, the clever
deputy postmaster of Gold Hill,
has been appointed an agent for
the S outhern O keoonian .
Subscriptions for Mr. Bryan's paper,
The Commoner, tbe leading Demo­
cratic newspaper in the United States,
are taken at T he T imes office.
Joe Slinger, who is an excellent
manipulator of the trombone.has join­
ed tiieorchestra of "A Trip to the Cir­
cus Company.” Success to him.
Robt. H. Moore, ex-treasurer of
Jackson county, nas taken charge
of J. W. Merritt’s store at Gjld Hill.
He will be joined by his wife soon.
No. 14
If you want tbe latest in furniture,
call at Norris’ shop in Jacksonville
and see one of bls folding Daven­
ports. They are superior to anything
in that line. Everybody should have
one.
The membership of Phoenix’s lodge
of the A. O. U. W. is Increasing quite
rapidly. Saturday night a dozen can­
didates for admission were Initiated,
and eight more will be at tbe next
meeting.
Mrs. N. D. Wilson has left a supply
of Native Herbs, Oil and Balaam, the
great blood purifiers and kidney and
liver regulators, at T ub T imes office,
where they can be obtained at tbe
regular price.
J. W. Hay, Gold Hill’s chief of
police, makes a typical peace officer,
although* sometimes lacking discre­
tion, as he makes no distinction be­
tween newspaper men and the balance
of humanity.
The celebrated Snap Shot, the best
medicine in the world for allaying in­
flammation in man or beast, can be
found at Dr. Robinson’s dtug
store, also at Dr. Hinkle’s, Centra)
Point. Trv it.
The Democratlccounty convention,
which will nominate candidates for
legislative and county officers, will
meet at Jacksonville Saturday. Tnere
will be 102 delegates, and an interest­
ing session is expected.
A. S. Rosenbaum of Wolf creek and
his wife (nee Alice Mathews) were
on Sunday’s train, bound for San
Francisco. Tbe latter, whose health
has been poorly for some time, will
have an operation performed.
When in Medford ask for Myers, the
popular jeweler. His stock of goods
cannot be beaten in Southern Oregon,
if equaled. He sells and repairs dia­
monds, jewelry, watches and clocks,
< cheaper and better than anvone else.
Headache often results from a dis­
ordered condition of the stomach and
< constipation of the oowels. A dosé or
two of Chamberlain’s Stomach and
Liver Tablets will correct these disor­
ders and cure tbe headache. Sold by
City Drug Store.
The case of Main & Winches­
ter vs. Huldab Hoover, et al, to quiet
title to the brick building in Medford
situated on the southwest corner of
Seventh and B streets, which was de­
cided In favor of the plaintiff by Judge
Hanna, has been appealed to tbe
supreme court.
J. H. Draper, who recently pur­
chased John S. Lacy’s farm situated
in Pooh Bah precinct, will engage in
the breedingof thoroughbred Poland-
China hogs on a large scale. He re­
cently received five pigs from Kansas,
which are among the finest ever
brought to Oregon.
The jurors empaneled for the April
term of circuit court have been dis­
charged, with one exception, who will
be held until a jury ha9 been drawn for
the trial of Featherstone, the burglar
who escaped from the county jail
some time ago, and who was captured
n Humboldt county, California.
R o V al
Baking Powder
Makes the bread
more healthful.
Safeguards the food
against alum.
Alum baking powders are the greatest
menacers to health of the present day.
SOUTHERN OREGON’S MINES.
Some day there will be a big mining
excitement in Southern Oregon. For
years the country has been the Mecca
of prospectors who have washed the
gold from the gulches and gouged it
out of pockets where they could get it
with the least expense and work. Un­
til the last few years there had been
no efforts at deep sinking. It was a
poor man’s country, and the prospec­
tors were content to pick the gold from
the surface. No one knows the quanti­
ty of gold thus mined. As high as
2200,000 have been taken out of a single
pocket, and the finding of nuggets and
pockets with lesser amounts have been
common enough to attract scarcely
more than passing notice. Since ’51
the hills have yielded a steady harvest
of gold.
During the wild Klondike
stampede and other gold excitements,
when the tidal wave of humanity
shifted here and there, taking men
from every mining center in the world,
very few left the Southern Oregon dig­
gings. They preferred a certainty to
lighly colored rumors. There was
gold enough at home to keep them;
and while other prospectors were un.
dergoing the hardships in Alaska,
blazing the Chilkoot trail with their
bones, plunging to death in the swirling
White Horse rapids, “mushing” over
Lake Bennett at the heels of starving
dogs, and dying by the scores in Daw­
son city of chills, fevers and other
sickness caused by exposure and in­
sufficient
sanitary
arrangement«;
while these things were being ex­
perienced, the miners in Southern
Oregon were comfortably mining gold
at borne, their only care a fear of dry
weather whereby the water supply for
hydraulicking would not be so large as
usual. Sometimes such comparisons
are needed to teach people the ful-
blessings they enjoy at-home.
Mrs. C. E. VanDeusen of Kilbourn,
Wis., was afflicted with stomacli
trouble and constipation for a long
time. She says “I have tried many
W ashington , I). C., April 2.—President Theodore Roosevelt
preparations, but none have done
AMD
me the good that Chamberlain’s
will give Michael Sheridan the stripes of Brigadier-General. The
Stomach and Liver Tablets have.”
new Brigadier comes of a fighting strain, being a brother to the
These tablets are for sale at City
late Phil. Sheridan of fighting renown. The official appointment
Drugstore. Price 25 cents. Samples
free.
will be made in a day or so.
Does your horse “feel his
W. H. Barr, the horticulturist, car­
ries a desp scar on his f rebeid, the
resultof an accident which might bave oats” ? What a difference be-
been fatal. He was tearing down an
old building on his oaughter home­ tween the grain-fed and the
stead tn Big Butte preciqct, which
The first
fell sooner then expected and caught grass-fed horse!
For sale: 225 feet or ii-inch pipe,12- the ax he was handling in such a
inch taper, 2 elbows. No. 1 giant, with manner as to cause it to descend on strong and full of ginger, the
Did you ever compare a delicious, flaky,;' nozzles. All in good order and used his
head.
second flabby, weak and tired
but little. Enquire at T he T imes
delicately browned loaf of bread made;; office.
out before he begins. The
Strikes a Rich Find.
from
,
1 ■
J. L. Hammersly ha« taken charge
years
ieeding makes the difference.
“
1
was
troubled
for
several
_
of the Gold Hill postoffice as deputy
postmaster.
He will soon be the with chronic indigestion and nervous
Children are not alike either.
“whole thing.” It is a good appoint­ debility,” writes F. J. Green of Lan­
caster, N. H. “No remedy helped me One is rosy, bright-eyed, full
ment.
until I began using Etectric Bitters,
Mark
Baker,
the well-known
did me more good than all the of life and laughter, another is
With the sad results achieved from the use of cheAjoer flour?; > mechanic, is in Medford. A few days which
medicines 1 ever used. They have al­
since
be
cut
oue
of
his
hands
severely,
The ont, the highest triumph of cookery—the most useful of;I while at work in Weeks’ factory at so kept my wife in excellent health pale, weak and dull. The feed­
for years.’ She says Electric Bitters
all the arts; the other, a monument to wasted energy, blasted 1 Phoenix.
are just splendid for female troubles: ing again is responsible.
hopes and poor judgment. But why continue the compari-; [ I. Reynolds, who lives near Jack­ that they are a grand tonic and in-
Sickly children need special
a veteran of tbe Rebellion, vigorator for weak, run down women.
son? If you have made the mistake in the past, trying to ! [ sonville,
went to Roseburg Tuesday, to enter No other medicine can take its place feeding. They don’t “feel their
exist on inferior flour, redeem yourself by ordering Snowy', tbe Soldiers* Home. He is suffering in our family.” Try them. Only 50c.
Satisfaction guaranteed by City Drug oats”. Scott’s Emulsion adds
Butte flour only in future.
; ’ with dropsy.
G. W. Mackey has re-opened the Store.
just the right richness to their
Medford Photo Gallery In Adkins’
Retail
Market
Report.
Every up-to-date dealer
building; C street, opposite Jackson
diet It is like grain to the
County Bank. Up-to-date work and
The following quotations were
Handles it
reasonable prices.
*
made up this afternoon, and is an horse. The child gets new
the prices paid appetite and strong digestion.
Rev. A. Haberly has been holding a impartial report of tbe
protracted meeting at Gold Hill, by Jacksonville dealers:
Wheat—75c per bushel.
Scott’s Emulsion is more
which was well attend and produc­
Flour—»1.70 (a) 21.80 per 100 pound«.
tive of good results.deHe is an able
than food. It is a strong
Oats—36c per bushel.
and cogent speaker.
Barley—Rolled,21.25 percental.
medicine. It rouses up dull
H. A. Murdoch and Frank A rant of
Hay—Per ton, baled, 212.
Klamath Falls, who are delegates to
Potatoes
—
21.75
per
hundred.
DON’T FORGET TO CALL ON
children, puts new flesh on thin
the Republican state convention, pass­
Onions—2(a>3 per pound.
ed through the valley Monday, on
Butter—10e(<ia0c per roll.
ones and red blood into pale
their way to Portland.
Beans—K<*8c per pound.
ones. It makes children grow.
Lard—15c per Douud.
About 1600 voters have registered
Eggs—121 3t6 per dozen.
so far, which is considerably less than
Scott’s Emulsion makes ordi­
When wanting anything in tbe
Sugar—D. G. 25.00(a>55 50 per cwt.
half of tbe total number.
It would
Poultry
—
23.00
to
23.50
per
dozen.
not be surprising If 4000 votes were
nary food do its
Hams—lMc per pound.
cast in Jackson county next June.
Shoulders—12ic per pound.
duty.
W. H. Runnels of Gold Hili, hard­
Side Bacon—156220c per pound.
This picture represent«
ware dealer and groceryman, can still
the Trade Mark of Scott**
be found at the old stand, where he
Emulsion and is on tbo
Line. They are giving special prices on goods of this kind, and has built a nice trade by square deal­ County Treasurer'a 27th Notice.
wrapper of every bottle.
ing,
good
goods
and
reasonable
prices.
Max
Muller,
county
treasurer,
gives
particularly on Summer Lap Rolies, of which they have just re­
Send for free sanpl*.
J. M. Whipple of Woodville, C. C. notice that there are funds in the
ceived a large and varied assbrtment. Manufacturers of Heavy Taylor
of Roxy precinct and J. U. county treasury for the redemption
SCOTT & BOWNE,
Stock Saddles, Team Harness, Buggy Harness, strap work and Wllleke of Medford have been ap­ of outstanding warrtnts protested
409
Pearl St., New Yoifc»-
pointed deputies by Assessor Pendle­ from Die. 1, 1898, to Jan. 31. 1899,
everything jiertaintng to this line. A ll W ork ( guaranteed .
50c and $i. all druggist«.
ton. All are well qualified for the both dates inclusive. Interest on the
Seventh Street, MEDFORD, Oregon.
same will cease after March 2119J2
position.
A BRIGADIER GENERAL.
Snowy Butte Flour
L. A. LUCUS <fc SON,
Harness and Saddlery
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