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About Bohemia nugget. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1899-1907 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1900)
BOHEMIA The Prosperous Buslneu Men of Cottajrc Grove Advertise in the Nusrsrt' Bring Your Job Work to tiu Nugget Job Office. Prices Reasonable mm J)eyotcil to the Mining, Lumbering au Farming Interests of this Community, to Good Government, and Hustling for a Grub Stake.- VOL. II Cotixige G-rove, Oregon, Friday, August lO, 1900. 3STO. BO PROFESSIONAL. GET. J. E. YOUNG AtlormU'U-t-I'ti-w ()nlce mi Mntn "I ti-rt. Writ Hide COTTAOK GKOVK, OlU'.. J. S. MEDLEY Jltnrnoii'dt-Lauf o o o : -(Ultra nil Mnln ntt( ! COTTAOK OKOVIt, OkK. L. L. STEVENS tmionie,il'(U-L(iw o o e Hccrlnl Mtti!iitln kIm MItiIiik IIikIiicm ml riillccUiiim, Euc.knk, Okk. JEROMfi KNOX jt Horn cy-u.t-Law . I'rollt l mtetlllnll Jil In MIllllIK llurllipH, Cottaok Gkovk, Okk. . i. HKLVl'H W. TIIOMfNlN ClUn. t, lUKHY. THOMPSON & HARDY .itforneisititd C'oitnselors-at- Law Koll iilleiljliill KjvlMitho 1wiif Milieu. Euoknk, Oku. L. T. HARRIS .ifonu'i a ml Counselor nt-l.it ir Vr ntlPiilliill Kl veil to the lm '( Mini'". Tlrti NMioiml Hank IInIlilliiK. EUGKNK, OKK. IC LTAliLIC MSSATS. Uiii1f !)' mull tri-rho pmiiit tieiillm. FRANK P. WHITE, COITAIIK illOVi:. OKK. Olllre wllli Jmiicii llnm-iiwn)-. Muin M. 1,1.11. w LUlYll. T. w. NnviM. Lloyd & Ncvill minimi i:miinkkiw 1 l-.H. Hi:. UTY MINKIt.W. HimVKYllltH IIimjiih .TO-.Wi I lumlicriif Ciiiiiliieri-c , r , itux low . H. ,C. PERKINS Dejuttu V. S. Mineral Sur'reuor , Sriiil attention given toMltiliiX CUIiik unit iruiMirliiK' 1'i'Iomh. Grants Pass, Okh. Mrs. Kallicrine Sclileef, M. D. W&m of Women anil Children Cottaok Gkovk, Ork. HUSINESS. GO 'lO-an. MRS. PET SANFORD'S for Fasliionithh Drcssiiiakinu. MAIS HTKKKT Cottaok Gkovk, Ork. William Renshaw THE EXCHANQE--,s AW WAI.KB't. MiiKer. DHAI.KIt KJ PINK WINKS, IJQUORS, CIGARS. Main Mreet, Uolluga Jrov', Orr. OALI, OK B. L. PICKARD & SON For IIOUSK I'.VINTINO, I'At'KIt IIANOINO, HION WORK, (JARRIAOK 1'AINTINM. Work Kuurantced Cottaok Gkovk, Ork. EAKIN & BRISTOL BANKERS' TraiiBact a Oenorol llaiikiiiK Hunlness In All Its Brunches. Cottagb Gkovk, Ork. CY. MILLER & CO. General Blacksmithing -Two doori North o Eakln & Drlstow'i COTTACK GrOVB, OrK. A large line of Shirt Waists that we are closing out without regard to cost. If you want a bar gain now is your time to get it. A few pairs of Men's and Women's Shoes in odd sizes, will sell you at 50c on the dollar. Eakin & Bristow. oHOBSBSBOHt FOR MISN. We handle Sarunae Glove Company's KimhIh. They are Hiuiddercd the bent glove iii tliu market. Good Y How Oil Stock with patented etring fitHii'iicr 50 mid 75c. Our Kteaiii IVcxif lino nrn n H)ft, plia lilc glove, iih well tiH durable; iiniili! with patented hiring fant ener SV, $1 and $ I L'5. I'nlined Kit, soft finish, making ii very nice driving glove M '-' Siiriinnc Iluck, light weight, fine stock, mi baud, open hack, Porter (aplc ncr, welted, wax linen thread Huft mill plialile; undoubtedly tin lit-rt glove in I lit- uiaikct. . . . 1 50. Uiilineil C1ioikt Mil, oil grain calf c kin Dlk! and l.itictl Kit ("Sloven, line Hlock fl. 1 u c ... v-x-JLva.fj.xjLxi j--i- ii --'-'.---- sv 0 1 H OB0BB8BHBB0B6BaBeBRaBB9HBBBBBBOHBeB9HBBBeH8H0BBB8HeBeB0B0BH0H ELITE o Shaving o Parlor Cottaok Gkovk, Okk. GRIFFITH & CRAIG, Props. lir.o. O. KNowtr.c. Cii a iu.ru Okttyi. NOTARIES PUBLIC Hohkmia, Ork. Olllcc at MiiMi'k Mliioiind Elephant Mountain. D. J. GOVER Prospector and Mine Locator. For Information on Iiohemia Mining District write me. Heolal Attention (llvon to Correniionilenpo UOHKMIA, ORE. J. a JOHNSON and F. G. EBY Httorneis and Gounselors-at-Law Special attention given to Mining, Corpotationnnd Mercantile Law. Office in Old P. O. building, COTTAGE GROVE, ORE. J. W. BENTLY, The practical Boot and Shoe maker, located in the Case building, two doors cast of the Postofflce. Repairing neatly and quickly done and satisfaction guaranteed. Call BELGIAN HARES. Here is a chance to get your boy into a paying business on a small capital. I have a choice lot Of ; high grade Belgian Hares that I will sell in pairs at very low prices. There is no need to send to California when you can get the same thing here at home. Lord Britain, Sir Styles, Fashoda, Yukon, Red Rover and other fashionable strains aie in stock. V. A. Rankin, Eugene. Shirt Waist Sale! f ieBeB9HBOBB9BBeBOBODOBeBeieREBl0BOHeeH0RBHMBO C0TTAG& GROVE, ORE. I-OR HOYS. Cotton Swt'tterH, pood quulity, in tiiuriHiii iinil aHHortt-d Htriped colorH 00c. All-WfNl, Hpht weight, iipported col onsl HtriKl 1 -'5. FOR MKN. Cotton, good quality, dolor ma nmii 50c. Mixot Cotton and Wool, medium heavy, inarooii Spc. All Wool, good nunlity, mediiiin iieavy, maroon $1 10. .Sunlit ih uhove, only liner wool, as Horted solid color 1 (15. All-Wool, very line quality, in as sorted colored ntripeo 'l 'li. White, liiislinm heavy $2 50. A MOTHER TELLS HOW SHE SAVED HER LITTLE DAUGHTER'S LIFE I am the mother of eight children and have had a great deal of ex perience with medicines. Last summer my little daughter had the dysentery in its worbt form. We thought she would die. I tried everything I could think of, but nothing seemed to do her any good. I saw an advertisement in our pa per that Cha.uberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy was highly recommended-and sent and got a bottle at once, it proved to be one of the very best medicines we ever had in the house. It saved my little daughter's life. I am anxious for every motder to know what an excellent medicine it is. Had I known it at first it would have saved me a great deal of anxiety and ray little daughter much suffering. Yours, truly, Mrs. Gko. F. Burdick, Liberty, R. I. For sale by Bknson Drug Co., Cottage Grove. Lyons & Api'LKGATK, Drain Druggists. Griffin & Veatch Co. carry a full line of Canton Clipper and John Deere Plows. None better. STORY OF A SLAVE. To be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of disease is the worst form of slavery, George D. Williams, of Manchester, Mich., says: "My wife has been so help less for five years that she could not turn over in bed alone. After us ing two bottles of Electric Bitters she is wonderfully improved and able to do her own work." This TPincdv for female dis eases quickly cures nervousness, sleeplessness, mejanciioiy, ache, backache, fainting and dizzy soells. It is a godsend to weak, sickly, run-down people. Lure guaranteed, utuy 5U "J Bknson Drug Co., druggist. Suhacribofqr the Nugget all tho Bo hemia mining news, fl,50 per year. n o FOR CHIIvDREN. Lawn Hoods, made of laco open work; very pretty designs .'15 to 05c Kmhroidered and Tuckeil Muslin and Swine, di(Ierenr. defigns 76c to t 35. Ladies' Sun Bonnets, made of eham hray, full hack crown, Btitched and lined, assorted colors. .50c. Our line of Loose Ktnhroideries, Kih hons and Drygooda Notions id large. Ladies' Summer Skirts, large vari ety; in price from. . . .50c to $3, Shirt Waists, different colors and kinds 50c to $0 75. Ladies' Neck Wear in latest stvles. . 15c toCOc. W. M. Casley (Dill MeKinloy) was in from the mines tlii.s week. Mat Sehr was down from Black Butte the latter part of the week, re turning Monday in company with W . K. lloweu, who will probably stop there for a time. Oscar Ridtnour and Bert Xunn, who have been engaged in mining at Black Butte, have taken a contract at the Helena, Bohemia, and will commence work next wpek. Mrs. J. It. Stewart, who has been visiting her daughter", Mrs. Garnian of this city, soveral weeks, returned home to Brownsville this week, accompanied by her grandchildren Jeflle and Willie Garman, who will visit her a couple of weeks. Mrs. James Hart and daughter have returned from a two week's onting in Bohemia at the Musick mine. Mrs. Hart reports an enjoyable- trip, and added to her pleasure by picking and bringing in 5 gallons of huckleberries which grow abundantly there. Mrs. J. AV. Holmes of Tulare, Cali fornia, sister of Mrs. W. II. Blair of the Sherwood, Is oil a visit hero and will re main some time. The hot climate of the San Joaquin valley has been very wearing on her and she hns sought rest and health in our delightful and in vigorating surroundings, Mrs. Frank Blair, daughter-in-law, mid MisB Mamie Blair, daughter of Col. W. H. Blair of tho Sherwood, came down from" Portland this week to gladden tho hearts of tho old folks at homo and have a pleasant visit with their relatives ami many friends here about. The colonel is wearing his blandest Hinllo now and there is much joy in tho Blair household. B. A. Goodman was a guest at the Sherwood for a few days and went to Portland. Ho is just from Salt Lake and for the past three years has been connected with mining in tho Tintic district in Utah. Ho is favorably im pressed with what ho learned whilo hero and expects to return in about two weeks and make a tour of Bohemia dis trict, and perhaps will locate permu' ncntly. MINES m The Eighth of a Series of Articles on the Geo logical Construction and Formation of ' Mineral Zones. r t , i The geological period at which we are in the history of the configuration of the existing continents, embraced that por i tion of geological time during which the great mountain chains of the globe wer " uplifted into their present commanding positions. There is good renHon to believe that these lines of 'elevation are of great' geo logical antiquity, and that they have again and again been pushed upward durin y great terrestrial disturbances, but the intervals between these successive up j thrusts were probably often of immense duration, so that the mountains, bein exposed to continuous and prolonged denudation, were worn down sometimet , i perhaps almost to their very roots, hut only in Tertiary time did they attain the! present dimentions. Tho final upheaval that gave the Cascades their colossal hulk did not take pine until the Miocene period or later, for the Miocene strata have been involved in th ' earth movements and have been thrust up, bent and broken. ! The Pliocene is the last division of the Tertiary series of formation, and lay , ' before us the history of the geological changes that brought, about the presen , general distribution of land and sea nnd completed the existing framework of th ' .' continents. Contrasted with the previous Tertiary groups it is, on the whole, insigniflcar in thickness nnd extent, and it probably records the passing of a much less perio of time during which tho amount of terrestrial revolution was comparative!, trifling. Only in the basin of the Mediterranean are there any Pliocene strati ., worthy of note on account of their thickness. : , We have now arrived at the last main division of the geological record, tin which is named Post Tertiary or Quaternary, and which includes all the fornu , , tions accumulated from the close of the Tertiary period down to the present daj : But no sharp line can be drawn at the top of the Tertiary groups of strata. " The gradual refrigeration of climate, the crag, was prolonged and intensified in Quaternary time. Ultimately th northern part of the northern hemisphere was covered with snow nnd ice, whic! extended into the heart of Europe and decended far southward in North Americi i The previous denizens of land and sea were, in large measure, driven out c : even in many cases wholly extirpated by the cold, while northern forma advance -southward to take their places. The reindeer, for instance, roamed in great nun j ' hers across Southern France, and Arctic vegetation tpread all over North Amet i . ica, even as fur south us the Ohio river. 1 After the cold had reached its climax the ice fields began to retreat and th northern iloia and fauna to retire before the advance of the plants and anima! I which had been banished by the increasingly severe temperature, and at last tl( ! present conditions oi cumiiie were reacneo. aosiowiy ana graauauy am inegree jr . cold disappear that the Ice Age insensibly passed into the recent or existin; ucriod. ' "' rrttorn .on lm nn r!m, lit flint mnn n nnnn i i i .- . . ; t 1. : .. - . . nail uecoiiie us liiuu us it uuiv ia, lur jua associated with the bones of Arctic animals in Central Europe, nnd traces of hi1 presence in rudely chipped stone instruments occur in deposits which point t . frozen rivers. Indeed, in n certain sense, it may be said that the Ice Age still ex ists among the snow fields nnd glaciers of Europe and America. ' Wo aro still surrounded with monuments of the geological patt, but thes monuments are being slowly destroyed by the very same processes to which the owed their origin. Air, rain, frost, springs, rivers, glaciers, waveb and all th . other connected agents of demolition are ceaselessly at work.wherever land rise'" above the sea. i It is in the course of this demolition that the characteristic features of th scenery of the land are carved out . The higher and harder parts are left us inouri tains nnd hills, the softer parts are hollowed out into valleys and the material' worn away from them are strewn over plains and, as it is now, so doubtless ha it been through the long ages of geological history. Decay and renovation i never ending. Cycles have followed each other since tho beginning of time. Btr 1 amid these cycles there has been a marvelous upward progress of organic being It is undoubtedly the greatest triumph of geological science to have demonstrate. 1 that the present plants and animals of the globe were not tho first inhabitants (, .l.i nn.Mi Ki.t tlmt tlint. lin.m nnnAilrArl as the latest comers in a majestic procession which has been marching throug. 1 1 an unknown series of nges. ( ' At tho head of this procession woourselves stnpd, heirs of all the progress a i j the past and, moving forward into the future, wherein progress toward somethiiv higher and nobler must still be for us, ns it has been for all creation, the guidin, law. This ends the series of articles on historical geology. Wo will now take u structural geology, treating of the mineralized character of rocks, their modec occurrence, origin, etc. E. S. A. THAT THROBBING HEAD ACHE. Would quickly leave you, if you used Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for Sick and Nervous Headaches. .They make pure blood and build up your health. Only 25 cents. Money back if not cured. Sold by Benson Drug Co., Druggist. E IT IS HERE! -CONSISTING op- Shelf and Heavy Hardware; Stoves and Tinware; Pumps, 5 S Pipes and AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS ! , ; Guns and Ammunition, Studebaker Wagons, 2, EI Canton Clipper Plows,. Harrows Etc. 2 1 C For Miners' Supplies, the only house South of Portland. S , p: Give us a call. 3 E GRIFFIN & VEATCH, , SE; COTTAGE GROVE, OREGON. 3 j 11 mi . MINING. LUUJMTKI1JUTLJ.J .i . now arrived, one of the most important which is revealed to us by the shells ( ' ' mil nnnn tlio fanrtli lioffii-n llio f.ltmfit1 t a ' t o jiiiii. jiui&?a uuu uuue iijjiiieiiieius ureiuuu r, ,!.. .1 -1 i , l . r ? nnlv na tnn iirti.nnrlqtita nf n ifnat nnuotr vH IT HELPED WIN BATTLES. Twenty-nine officers and metis wrote from tbe Front to say thai for Scratches, Bruises, Cuts. Wounds, Sore feet and Stiff Joints Bucklen's Arnica Salve is the bes in the world. Same for Burns Skin Eruptions and Piles. 25cts. c box. Cure guaranteed. Sold bj Bknson Drug Co., Druggist Take the Iwheinla Nuyge';. 3 r. 111 ill 111 111 111 hi 111 111 Vi ' "i A