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About The Plaindealer. (Roseburg, Or.) 1870-190? | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1904)
Oil Drilling at Myrtle Creek. Meetings at the Big Teat. "GOOD GOODS Have Made us Many Customers PRETTY NOVELTIES Have attracted customers and by means of this advertisement we seek to gain new customers to please, along with our old ones : We want to call attention to the new goods arriving constantly, many of which are pretty novelties that have made big hits in the cities, and which we have made special effort to procure in order to more thoroughly demonstrate the fact that we keep abreast of the times THE PEOPLE'S STORE MS I i HAMILTON DRUG M i 111 We Dispense Soda Water at 34 Fahr. THAT'S COLD ENOUGH All our Syrups ar-iVrepared from Special Material by : : BEST METHODS In Preparing our Ice Cream we use Clean C eim. Rich in But ter Fat Only 20c Per Pint. For nervousness tiy Osteopathy. School supplier at Marsters' Drag Store. Oakland w ill probably build herself an electric light plant. One Yoncalla man raised nearly HM bnshels of peiehes. Bnrb Brockway is in attendance at the state fair this week. J. P. Johnson, dentist, Grave's build ing. ta Why rnn the risk of vo ir life by an op eration when Osteopathy will cure you. Dr. and Mrs. 1.. A. Kent, f Brockway. have gone to the Galice creek mines to remain for a few weeks. Robert M. Smith, of Grants Pass, remocratic Representative in the Legis lature, was in town Tuesday. If yon want to keep posted on county affairs, snbscrilie for the oldest pa)r in the countv, the Pi.aisdbalkk. County bridge builder, II. Jennie, is : l HAMILTON jWjjy L -J uusy with a torce ol men niaKing neeiieo to Mr igra,n partner! Mr. Kndi repairs on the Oakland bridge. anj L-a. -sj onD to tirain E. R. Hanan has sold and is deliver- ing his cattle in Klamath county and will soon return to Roseburg. Jos. Micelli has just finished burning another kiln of 450,000 brick, being Ids second and last kiln for the season. Miss Hazel Drennen, of Portland, is a guest of her aunt, Mrs. Abner Hamlin, and many friends in thai city. Sheep shearing is in progress in the Calapooia valley and other parts of this count" and an average lleece ia general ly reported. A car load of potatoes was received from outside points by Roseburg mer chants this week. What is the matter with the L'rnpqua valley farmers? Wm, Abernethy, of Dora, was in town Tuesday enroute to Forest Orove, w here he is moving his family to give them the advantage of the university at that place. E. H. Ewart has returned from a trip to Klamath county, returning via Crater lake and Ashland. He was very favora bly impressed with some portions of the country. If yon don't understand Osteopathy, see Dr. Studley a!out it. He is in a po sition to present the question to von better than those who know nothing ! abont it. Nathan Fnllerton made a brief trip to making arrangements to deliver a car PorCand this week and on bis return ! load of this fftiit to the Umpqua Valley was accompaniid by his wife who has j Prune Association of this city. Here been enjoying a pleasant visit with her j ports hop picking about complete.! at parents at the metropolis. ' Cmpqua Kerry and a fine crop. RICE & RICE FURNISHERS Can Furnish Ycur House Complete Largest Store Can we sell you a sew ing machine? Call and we will convince you we hold no rela tion with agents and can save you at liast 1-2 the price they want K You Can Save Money by Buying Your Furniture of Us RICE RICE WHOLESALE AND RETAIL HOUSE FURNISHERS HONEST PRICES Enable us to Retain our Customers Selrool lajoks and school supplies, the beat an! cheapest, at Marsters' Drag Store. lon't over look our Crockery lepart ment. We have the largest stock in the city and tin- prices are right. Kice, The House Furnishers. Kice .V A good many forest tires have been burning in this county this week and some good timber has l)een dest roved . ... , ", 1 he smoke has Iwen more dense than ... at anv other time this vear. Prof, and Mrs. O. C. Hrown went to J Drain the first of the week to resume their duties as instructors in the Lain- ing department of the central Oregon . ' , . , , , Mate Normal BcMMM at that tdace. ; The smoky weither that is prevailing uere ai preasani seems w oe general throughout Western Oregon, as several of the valley pipers lately contain al lusions to the murky condition of the atmosphere. If you are in need of I. ace Curtains we have a large stock, but if you want something especially nice wait for our new line which we exiavt in a few days. The swellest ever brought to the city. Kice ft Rice. The telephone line from Rosehurc to the Cannon place on I'pper Ieer Creek Valley via of Pixonville. has been com pleted and is in operation. It will prove a great convenience to the farmers of that productive little valley. 'Why," said a memlier of the church loard. 'I thought yon worked for souls." ' I do," replied the minister, "but I cannot eat souls, and if 1 could it would take a lot of them the size of yours to make a square meal." S. P Shutt, late of the Myrtle Creek Mail, took his departure Tuesday for Portland, bis family having preceded j him to the metroHis, where they will reside Mrs. Shutt will enter a Port- i land hospital in hope of recovering her lost health. W. W. Kndicott has sold his residence nroirtv to a Mr. Mxjre, of Roseburg. anil hjg interest jn lJie hlarksmith shop Douglas county, where they will remain ! the coming winter. Myrtle Point En- terprise. Do you know that Rice k Rice have j more goods in their store than a", the; other furniture store in Douglas ct anty. -1 aai sell it at lower prices, this liecanse thev buy in They can do j carload l"ts i ami save freight and can save you money. Come and get onr prices and make com parison. The Coles Valley Sunday school will give an entertainment and box social. Saturday evening. Sept. 17, 1904, at the church. Ice cream, cake and lemonade will also lie served. Evervlxxly invited to come and bring w ell filled liastets and expect to liave a good time. A good many families have returned home from the Cmpqua Ferry and oth er Douglas county hop yards and report too ma-y pickers to make the work profitable this season, the driers being nnable to handle all of the hops gather ed the pickers have been reiuired in most yards to work on half or three quarter time. Jess Shambrook, the TJmpqua Ferry hop anil fruit grower, was in town Mon day displaying some fine samples of cured prunes of this season's drying, which were firm and meaty, and of more than average quality. He aaa J Largest Stock ALL KINDS OF SEATS IN STOCK Don't throw away old Chairs. We can re-seat them at a small cost to yon Ail the new and U-atitiful In Bed Room Kuril tuie at very lo price. All laie wc ll patterns from the heaped 3-plece U!t 114 to best polished oak at SSU. Surel Iron eai Kt KLit to .'-r. Handaome Drern- rt. full ..., -. 4 to :i0.QO : : : : Hvautilul new CarjicU In all the la ii tfeawa anil eateriaaa, It will jy you to we them l'rleei from 25c to $1.4) r yl Fifty roll of Matting fluent line you I pat saw at Iriun 15? ft a5c per yard : The Peer ol alt the acme of perfection our line of Slove and kangea. Heatera $2 25 to 116. Cxili Move - Ml to . Beautiiul Steel Ranges with high closet ISO for 4-h lc; fii.W and sift for 6 hole, delivered to mur nearest railroad station without extra cost T. P. Simpson left Tuesday for Salem to atten 1 the lair. The leaves seer and hrown have began to fall. Karlier than usual. Marriage license has been issued to 11. II. Melton and Maggie J. Poe. Mrs. M. E Loan left for Kiddle last night for a week s outing and visit with relatives. .. .. ,, , -"19S Late Hanson and Marv I lo:tk, , t. . . , , ,, . , . left Mondav mght for 1 ortlaml to re- main indefinitely. p. V. Clarke, manager of the W oolen JiiUa situated at North Bead, was in the oitv Tuesday enroute home. iu . , , , ., Attorney CI. I.evingood and wife and . .. , , , . . , , . . chiul, returned last night from Leoaaoa where they have been for some time. jie ilm,t t.n reached. A man in Washington was mistaken for a coyote and shot, fortunately not fatally. Rev. M. W. Hampton, of Ten Mile, was In town today and carried one of the Plainoeai ek premium maps home with him. 6. Worthiugton and son, of this place, plasters and brick layers, went to Drain yesterday to replaster W. W. Kent's vtore building. A girl gambler won fljMO at faro at Keno, Calif. Then she lost it all and WO ttesides which she had saved. Banse old storv. Fireman Kred Iteard and wife left for their home in Portland yesterday. They have leen visiting relatives in this vicinity for the past month. Mrs. llert Westbro3k, wife of the manager of the Hotel McClallen, left Tuesday for a weeks visit with relatives and friends in Albany and Salem. Mre- ariz, who for the pan month visiting her sister. Mrs. M. Josephson, of this city, left last evening for her home in San Francisco, I. I., Greninger. of the law firm of Buchanan tV (ireninger. left Tuesday for i Ashland, where he will spend a week visiting his parents and attending to business matters Ir. Iowe, the optician, accompanied by his wife passed through this city Tuesday enroute home from San Fran- , ,sco where he had tieen attending the Knights conclave. The Portland baseball team passed through Tuesday enroute home after a series of games in California. Among them was Kaymond, formerly with Al- v. ..f 1. . f wmm - Heo. M. Moulton of Chicago was elect- ed grand master ol the grand encamp ment ot Knights Templar ol the I'nited States, in San Francisco last week. The next triennial conclave will be held at Saratoga. New York, in 1907. Justice ot the I'eace, John T. Long, and Attorney J. A. Buchanan returned home from CoquilleCity Monday, where they spent a few days in attendance at Circuit Court, looking after the interests of their clients in certain cases. They : report dnsty roads and a hard overland trip. While here this week Mr. Kramer purchased anew pump for the water works system that he is installing in the town of Myrtle Creek, the pipe for the Banal was ordered some weeks ago, but the plumbers strike delayel the comple tion of the connections. However the I'ortland firm from whom the pipe was purchased will ship the order this week. I'ortland Telegram. Jos. Micelli, I'ast (irand Master of the Grand lxdge. I. (). O. K. of Oregon, be ing one of the delegates elected to the Sovereign (irand lalge of that order will leave for San Francisco Friday evening where the Sovereign (irand Ixnlge will meet next week. He will be accompanied by Kobt. Robertson and I.ee NVimberly and the trio will be chap eroned bv Carl Hoffman. The one dollar souvenir gold ooina commemorative of the Lewis and Clark exposition have been received by the I'ortland hoard of directors and will soon be placed on the market at porhaps $J each In the discussion of the matter a suggestion was put forward that the coins he sold by the committee regular ly at $'J, and that the proceeds from every sixth coin should apply to the Sacitjawea monument fund. The execu tive committee placed in the hands of this committee c .in No 1, to be pre sented with its compliments to ,Miss Alice Roosevelt, daughter of the ('resi dent of the I'nited States Unnatural Father Found Guilty. ConriLLK, (Jr., Sept. IS. A. E. Suckau was convicted by a jury late last night of assanlt on hia 15-year-old daughter. Sentence will be pronounced next Thurs day. The maximum penalty, life im prisonment, will probably 1ms imposed. Tiiere is no likelihood of appeal. Suckati lived eight miles Mow Ban don with his family. His daughter, tes tifying against him, said that he had first made her his victim when she was ten years old. A-I-Farms To Rent. 1 have two good grain farms, with goou nuuuings ana other improvments and will rent these for a term of years, j Also two stock ranches, with or without Quicksilver has been discovered with stock, teams and all kinds of farming i in the city limits of Cottage Grove, implements for sale. I That jg nothing. There is plenty of gold A. F. Brown, Oakland, Ore. I in Roseburg-in the banks. It is retried that work is sonn to he resumed on the oil well at Myrtle ('reek. This well is already down 1"0 feet, at which poial it rm abandoned several nontha ago on acconnl of lack of funds. If oil is not found at a depth of 3000 feet the project will be given up entirely. According to geological re ports the strata of the district is favora ble for the location of oil. Special Railroad Rate. The ('(invention of the Oregon Irriga tion Association, will be bald at Ontario, Oregon, Sept. Ill, to 31 , inclusive. The Southern Pacific Company has granted for this occasion, rate of one and one third fair on the certificate plan, to Portland and return. Same met 1km! w i I Ihj ottserved from Portland to On tario and return. Cases Filed in the Circuit Court. Murphy Grant A Co n M McGca Co, motion for confirmation. F. W. Itenson and Curry .V. Mays attorneys for plaintiff. II. Wollenberg, administrator of the Marks estate vs Jacob Chadwick, mo tion for continuation. F. W. Benson at torney for plaintiff. Probate Notes. F W . Havres. administrator of the Batata Of Geo. llawics. sr. is ordered to cancel and release the mortgage the es tate holds again-1 the property of A. S. ( a.-ton. The final account of I. F. Bios, adinin strator of the estate of J no. Canadv, de.eased, is allowed. The will of Chariot Fi-her i- admitted to lie probated. Theodore Castor is ap po nteil administrator under a band of 1000 and Daight Keed, I. K. Kice and Z. L. Dimmick are aapoiaied appraisers Temperance Mass Meeting. The Hon. I. M. Olass. the eloquent platform orator of Californit, will ad dress the people of tioeehurg on the quest ion of " Pro hi hi t ion of the Lis, nor Traffic" on Saturday night at the Bap tist church. He will Omanj the pulpit at . the Presbyterian church Sunday morning at eleven o'clock, an I w ill ad dress a union BBOBiiag of t! a churches at the M. K. clmrch at s p. m. Come and hear him. Oregon's Population. According to the figures just compiled by Labor Commissioner O. P. I luff, based urxn a statistical system, the population of Oregon fot l'OI num'iers 470,034 against 4l:l.o3; in 1!00, an in crease of K,4M nasala in the t four years. The population of Douglas Ciuntyin H8 is placed at I4,WS and in MM at MjMtV, an increase of IS30 luring Hm four year". Brakeman Villi Keener. JiMTio City, Or , Sept. 14. P.r.ike man Fred (ioilin. injured at Fugene yesterday, is reting at his home here. No bones were broken, but a serious jam j of the hip bones wa the result ol bis being ataahad bataaaai moving '.rain and a dray. Svi ral cuts and bruises are also di-tributed over his body, but it is probable that he will recover in ten or twelve davg. Have West was apprehended in the act of carrying out a deep laid conspiracy against the editor this morning in which he sought to cast aspersions and deroga tory reflections upon the aforesaid ed itor's ability and qualifications, by seek ing to bribe the foreman in'o inserting the following libelous paragraph in the I'lainoeai.er: "For some days the ed itor of the I'laindk u en has been mak ing arrangements to enter the Koeburg High School, for the p'iriose of refresh ing his lost college instructions, but U( on learning that he mut pass the eighth grade examination before entering that institute, lie has given it up." irinee Mr. West has admitted the error of ids way and frankly apologized for his un usual conduct, the incident is cloeed. Talk alajut anxiety, the sting of an ac-1 casing conscience and the wages of sin. all combined, are nothing to what has been suffered by a lievy of our dial la-1 guished and well meaning, but indis creet citizens, who l ist Saturday night i indulged in a little frolic and tarried, aye, too long at the festive lioard, where the flowing bowl was ne'er allowed to overflow. After the festivities revelrv followed until the bevy came face to face with Policeman Jarril and the stern re alities of the law , when came sudden repentence and remorse. There was not a fellow in the crowd but what ex pressed a long cherished admiration (?; for the big officer, but would have pre ferred to sign the pledge and turn a neu leaf rather than to have I ecu ,ip prebended when end where they were, e-pccially with the strong probability of an exposure in the polim court. Police man Jarvis had given uariiing that if called up at night on complaint of dis orderly conduct he was going to do busi ness and so he kept his word. Since this is the lust offense or the first time caught at it the I'i.mndkm kb will re frain from indulging in personalities and heaping humiliation upon our naughty fellow-townsmen, whose family relations are far above the plane to which these gay Letbarios descended. On the dead level square, there is too much of this kind of double life practiced in exalted circles in this enlightened community, and a little publicity portraying high lifeiu low places would no doubt be pro ductive of good results from a moral standpoint. Hut ln. tiddler has been paid, resolves to be good recorded, and the curtain drawn. Company "B" Attention. All members of Co. "D" are hereby ordered to report at Armory Hall for drill, Thursday evening, Sept. 15, 1904, at 8 o'clock. F. B. Hamlin, Capt. Co. "D" The revival services at the tent are progressing nicelv. Mr. Stephens is winning the favor of the large audiences by his forcible and logical sermons. He is a 9 neat 8eaker and a good Bible scholar and these two thing- are India paatible to good preaching Mrs. Steph ens' sweet song- are touching the hearts of the multitudes and making many lives happier for having heard them The following are Mr. Stephens' sub jects until Sunday night. Come and hear all of them if you can. TOPICS POa THK WKKK. Subjects that will be discussed at the Big Tent by Evangelist L. F. Stephens. Thursday, loth, 7:30 p. m, "The Evi dence God has Given for Belief iii His Boa." Friday, "The Old and New Covenant." Saturday, "Is the Con science an Infallible (iuide." Sunday, 11 a. m. at the Christian church, "The Christian Armour." 7::t0p. in at the Big Tent, ' Will Morality Save a Man." All are in ged to hear the Evaagaliat on these topics. Sixiial singing each evening. Patent Rail Fastening. John W. Howell and Win. T. Morri son have just received a patent on t c .mhiucd railway tie and rail fastening, the patent having leen issued from the patent office at W astiinglon. D C , Aug ust :i0. The device is a simpleaud prac tical one and greatly simplifies and strengthen- the rail BonnecUona an. I has a sc ire of inerilorous pints and im provements over the old method of con- nec ing railroad rails. The improve ment will no doiiht soon le recognized an. I adoptel bv the various railroad companies and will surely net Messrs Howell and Morrison a snug little for-j tune The device will soon be patented in Canada also. Weather Report. Wkvthlk BrKK.tr Otvaca. RosEBrRfi, Ore. Week ending 5 p. m.. S-pt 14, l!Jl M ixitmim temperature M M the 8:h Haaiiai temerature, 45 on tlie Utfi Hamfall for the week, none. Total rainfall since 1st of month. BOM Total lainfall from Boat. 1, l'AH, to late. none. Average rainf ill f-om Sept. 1 to dat- 0.41. Total excess from Sept. 1, 1M04, to' late. 0 II. Average precipitation for 'S7 wet ea-- Tiios. iiiB-o. olr-rver. Daat'l hear any more about Judge o I : : . . . I iaer so iiiiiiiuig. ater must lie get ting odd. 'iran 1 Millinery Opening at Beli Sis-: ton, Monday, Tuesday and Wedne-day, S-pt 1H, 30 and Stat. Mrs. C. K. K.berts and Mn J A. Townsend arrived last night from New N.rt where thev ha I been for the past three weeks. Col. Day, C. A. and W. (i. Friend of Hallaarein the city, having business, batata tha probata court, arriving last night. W. (i. Friend is the admini-tra-taraf the Plaufc estate. II J. Wilson and two daughters, Bes sie and Joie and son Frank, and Miss Inez Colvig f Canyoiville stoppl over today enroute to Corvallis. where the young people will enter the Oregon Agri cultural College Attorney and Mrs. Preecott (.iatley, who have been guests at the horn of Mrs Gattoyi parents. Hon. and Mrs. Binger Hermann, took their departure Wednesday evening for their Washing ton. I). C. home. They will atten I the St. Louis Exposition enroute. They ex pressed th-mseA-es as being greatly pleased with their Oregon visit. W. M. Wiley, formerly of Myr tle Creek who has been spending the past four months in Josehphioe county is in Kosebnrg to-lay a witness in a timber land contest case in the I'. S. land office. Mr. Wiley informs the Pi. inaaui kr that he will soon goto the Starveout mines in the aonth part of this county to spend several months looking after his mining interests. The Pi. irxnaaura will visit him regularly. Prof. F. H. Appelhoff, director of the Roseburg orchestra, is heading a move ment looking to the organization of an orchestra of about 30 Southern Oregon musicians to play at the Lewis anj Clark Exposition at Portland next year, taking the Reshurg orchestra of eleven pieces as a nucleus. Collec ive practice will begin in Roseburg as soon as the instrunient.itiou can be completed. The project is a good oaa sad the musicians will no doubt be well remunerated for their trouble. Canyonville. Frank Sillivan visited Roseburg Sat urday. George Bull en Laugh 's hops were pick ed last week. Mark Briggs returned Saturday from the Gold Bug mine. D W. Wight and wife of Myrtle Point are visiting relatives here. Will Brown is at Riddle, doing car penter work for Thos. Dyer. Mr. Kuslev has purchased Jas. Over street's property in the canyon. Misses Bessie Gregory and Laura Par- dee attended Teachers Institute at Rose burg last week. Cyrus Russell is digging his well and will anaa commence work on Iub resi dence near Jasper Yokum. Mr. Ramsey of Med lord is again in town. It is not the climate or scenery that calls him here so frequently. Wilson and l.evens have had their new wen ong, and ivork will soon com asanas on their new store building. Dunbar and Hoes' sawmill is keep busy furnishing lumber for sidewalks, dwellings, etc., and is unable to supply the demand. School will opened Monday, but the atten, lam e will probably be light for a few weeks, owing to the busy season not yet being ended. Trot. H. 0. Stone of Washingtcn, a teacher of experience, is principal ; Miss Sallie Weaver, inter mediate; Miss Aliae Rudolph of Salem primary. Amicus. FALL OPENING Of Gage Pattern Hats Tuesday Sept. 20 19 0 4 JOSEPHSON'S IT OAK TIMBER IN DEMAND Douglas County Oak Clad Hills to be Turned into Money. The time is rapidly drawing near when the oak-dad hills of the t'mjua valley will yield a valuable lumber product, and will be denuded of the giants of the forest, the mighty oak, which up to the present time have only been considered of valua for wood. At several points in the Willamette valley sawmills equipped especially for the manufacture of oak lumber and timbers have been estab lished w ithin the past few years and are I '(dug a flourishing business, this prod-' net commanding a very remunerative price. .Already their product is finding a ready market in adjoining states many carloads of this class of lumber Mng 1 olwerved passing through Roseburg from time to time billed to California points. ! This class of timl-er is somewhat limited in the Willamette valley, but is almost inexhaustible in Douglas county, the foothills and valleys from Drain to Rid dle, a distance of sixty milee being al most solely timbered with giant white and black oak. Already eastern lumbermen have ap peared in the Calapooia valley and have secured an option on a fine body of oak timber from which beer kegs are to be manufactured by machinery to be in stalled for this special industry. A little later we may exp-vt oak sawmills to be established with equipments for turning ut wagon tongues, single trees and wheels, as well as lumber for the manu facture of tine furniture. Let us put forth an effort to hasten the establish ment of such industrial institutions in the countv that valuable returns mav le derived from another of our undevel o?d resources, these oak-clad hills now being utilized or com idered valuable only for their pasture lands. DIED. GALL. At the Oregon Soldiers' Home Monday evening. Sept. 33, 1W.M. Bt "tt Gall, aged H years. The deceased was formerly a member of Capt. Iamerick's company in the Rogue River Indian war of ISM. He was admitted to the Home from Sam's Valley, Jackson Co., on July 39, 1"M. He has a brother in Sam's Valley. The funeral and interment were held at the Home cemetery Tuesday afternoon. WILEY At Mvrtle Creek, Sept. 14, I90L Henry Wiley, aged St years, of j pneumonia. Mr. Wiley was one of the oldest pio neers of Douglas county and a highly esteemed citizen. He came here in 1S53 and is survived by two daughters. The funeral was held at Myrtle Creek today, Thursday. Married. QU8TAFSON HEFTY-At the home of the bride's mother in Drain. Wednes day evening, Sept. 14, l'.04, at S o'clock Anton F. Gustafson and Miss Jennie L. Hefty, Rev. Geo. H. Bennett of Roseburg, officiating. The bride i the daughter of Mrs. C. I S. Hefty of Drain, and is a very charm ing and highly esteemed young lady. The groom is a very exemplary young man of the Gardiner precinct where he' Is engaged in the life saving service. The Bafts home was beautifully decorated with flowers and ferns for the occasion and a dainty wedding repast was served at the conclusion of the ceremony. The Pi.AiNDKAi.KR joins in extending congrat ulation and best w ashes. Dr. Chradlr Succeeded by Dr. Strang. Dr. E. M. Cbeadle sold bis dental pArlors, tool- and fixtures in this city today to Dr. J. W. Strange, who will take possession tomorrow. Dr. Strange is so well and favorably known through out Douglas county, where he formerly spent several years in the pursuit of his chosen profession, that he needs no in troduction through the columns of the Plainokalkk, but suffice it to be said that since he last practiced his profes sion in this city, he has taken advantage oi every opportunity to acquaint him self in the new and advanced methods in his line of work and has kept thoroughly abreast of the time. With the addition of his own tools and fixtures to those he purchased from Dr. Cheadle will give him one of the beet equipped dental parlors in Rieeburg, and his work will all be fully guaranteed, while his prices are sure to please. Dr. Cheadle has proven himself a thorough ly up-to-date dentist and a very genial and exemplary gentleman, and with his estimable wife have made a host of friends in this city who regret to learn of their decision to locate elsewhere, no definite locatiou having yet been select ed. However, all unite with the Plain dkalkk in welcoming Dr. Strange back to Run burg. We have the exclusive sale of Oage Street Hats and Pattern Hats, a com plete and carefully selected assortment of which will be placed on display Tuesday, Sept. 20th, 1904. Gage Hats positively cannot be obtained else where in Roseburg ::::::::::: We Display Fall Lines of Skins and Waists : Coats and Cloaks McDonald Union Made Shirts Sorosis Petticoats FL0RSHEIM SHOES FOR MEN Yoncalla News. Prune drying began this week. The crop is very light. Hops at the Theil yard are reported asod and plenty of pickers. Miss Ruba Westfall left Tuesday for Salem where she attends school. Our good wishes go with B. F. DeVore who this week went back to his I school work at San Francisco. Peritt Huntington baa returned to Connecticut to continue his studies ' and his many friends here wish him a pleasantand profitable time. Barton Helliwell, who for nearly s year has been at San Francisco attend ing business college md doing office! work, is spending his I acation at home. So far diphtheria has not visited us but typhoid fever is causing much un caeiceae Those reported ill of this dis ease at present are John Meinzer and Mrs. Mary Richards. Mrs. Fred Mein zer is sick of the lever at Cottage Grove. XX. . T. L Stencil s Isatt Eater ni. Last evening when T. R. Sheridan went home he was surprised to find that someone had been there before him. some one had broken in and gone through the house opening all the bu resa drawers and upboards and in fact disarranged the place generally, leav ing by the back door, but fortunately taking nothing of value. M. Devaney. living just across the street said be heard a noise about three o'clock but suppueed it was some one working in the back yard and thought no more about it. As Mr. Sheridan's family is at present out of town he knew noth ing of the burglary until he went home in the evening. Jewelry Stock st s Bargain. I have decided to retire from business Oct. 1st .and will close oat the balance of my stock of watches, rings and other goods at a bargain. I have a few solid gold and gold filled spectacles at a great bargain. Remember this is my last notice. W. E. Cumsexprkl, Jeweler and Optician. Max Weiss, one of the best known business men of Southern Oregon, is looking over North Bend with a view of locating here. Mr. Weiss is the pro prietor of a large brewery and cold stor age plant in Roseburg and it is his in tention, if given sufficient encourage ment, to put in an establishment of that kind in this city. North Bend Post. The Cottage Grove Leader is out with a fine large map or plat of that progress ive town, surrounded with an ad di rectory of the live business men of the place. Commendable enterprise, broth er Gage. Patronize your home merchants. Nearly every day we see agents repre senting all classes of business canvassing the town. There is nothing to be gained by patronizing such men. Your home merchants will sell you just a manv bars of soap for the money. Or just as good or a little better suit" of clothes for the money. Just as glol dry goods or shoes for lees money, and just as good gr.veries and better'weight for the same price you pay these agents, who are not traveling over the country for the good of their health nor for their sympathy for mankind. They are in for what money there is in it for them, and thev always see to it that they make a good profit. School School Get ready for the opening of the Public School Monday, Sep tember 1 2th, by purchasing supplies required by the pupils MARSTERS GROCERIES FRUITS : PROVISIONS We keep the largest and best assortment of Staple and Sancy Sroceries, JresJk fruits and farm Produce in the city, and can snppy your aants at as cheap or cheaper prices than can be had anywhere. Remember that me haep the SSest. KRUSE & NEWLAND W antrd. Industrious man or I ! as permanent representative of bis i nfacturing company, to look after its business in this county and adjoining territory. Business successful and es tablished. Salary $30.00 weekly sad ex penses. Salary paid weekly from home office. Expense money advanced. Ex perience not essential Enclose self addressed envelope. General manager, Lomo tsioeJc, Chicago a 33-t: Look At This. A complete and up-to-date line of street hats shown at the Bell Sisters. -mall Fam for Kent. A 3 acre farm suitable for gardening poultry raising and baying, one mile and a quarter east of Roseburg on Dear Creek, plenty of farm tools and impli ments on the place. For farther parti culars call at Millikin's Shoe Store, Roseburg. tf Has Soto A Pile Of Chamberlain's Cowgh Remedy. I have sold Chamberlain's Congo. Remedy for more than twenty years and it has given entire satisfaction. I have sold s pile of it and can recommend it highly. Joseph SicElhiney, Linton, Iowa Yon will find this remedy s good friend when troubled with a cough or cold. It always affords quick relief and is pleasant to take. For sale by A. C. Marsters A Co. Shropshire For Sale 15 thoroughbred Shropshire Rams, fit for service in fall ot 1904. W. G. Hughes. Moat Alto Ranch, Glide, Oregon. City Marshal's Notice. All parties are hereby notified that ! the gutters along the street in front ot all business houses must be kept free from garbage by order of the City Conn ed made Ang. 11, 1904. )al5-3t D. J. Jabvis, City MarshsL Books Supplies DRUG STORE