Lane County leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 1903-1905, August 21, 1903, Image 7

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    OREGON NEWS OF INTEREST
Hlü PKOHTS IN FARniNO.
may
be
f o r e st r e se r v e .
Valley Rancher* Will Do Commissioner Richards Q|ve, Reasons
Well Thl* Year.
for Withholding Large Tract.
Register Dresser, of the Orevnn
Willawctt*' valley farm er, are
¡11 over the prospect for good City land office, has received from
-AU in almost every thing they
>ner W A' Richards of7b“
" to sell this year. Not only are la t lv e to 7 h * * i i “ d ° m re ' 11 'c tle r re^
1 , good, but yields are large and
™ * ,the te'esram of recent date
7 consequence there will be more
pertaln Public lands In
The
* . m the valley this year than that district from settlement
de- letter directs the withdrawal, tem
°?e has been for more than a ■!«-
porarl y, of all vacant unappropriated
OTeatTt' Salem Is quoted at 70 ands in townships 5 to 13 south, both
with the mills paying a 2-cent 7 e l Uv8 V<\ r a n g e 4 ' ‘a s t ' fro m « - 't i l e
"“¡„m m ordinary years all above ment, entry, sale or other disposal
“ nt. would be clear profit, but be- under the public land laws, pending
^termination as to the a 1
of the high wages paid to farm
in this season it will take from 52 the CBs0 f Hlnrhl<li,‘S Sai<l area within
?5 cents to pay the cost of produc- the Cascade range forest reserve
Regarding the rights of settlers
The average yield, so far as
„ be learned, will be about 20 btiBh £!udehi T ?i!ready loi'a,e<> on lan,,s In-
. to the acre or more. This means « oner i l Lhe specified area. Commis
„tear profit of from $3 to $3.50 an Bloner Richards says:
L on Wheat, after allowing for all .1
this temPora ry wlthdraw-
¿nr and expenses. Oats have turn­ •I, nor the permanent reserve of the
lands
which
may follow, will affect
out better in proportion than
beat and the large yield, with . any bona fide settlement or claim
Ice of about 25 cents per bushel properly Initiated upon the lands
III leave a good profit on that crop tPw r th °
date hereof- Provided
The season has been very favorabls that the settler or claimants continue
hay and yields have been good. to comply with the law under which
, prices quoted at present are from their settlement or claims were Ini­
to »8 a ton In the local market for tiated, and place their claims duly on
' e hav Farmers say that about record within the prescribed stat­
w of this price Is profit. Yields run utory period. The withdrawal oper-
two to three tons per acre, mak- ates to defeat all settlement claims or
g this crop a better paying one than ? l , er dslm s initiated subsequent to
this data, regardless of the date upon
H,’ps promise a price ranging from which you receive the telegram.”
cents upward, and it is generally
d a ily attendance sm a l l e r .
ttrtd that all above 8 cents Is profit,
ourh growers who hire all their
trlt done and give their yards a good Though Oregon's School Population Has
rtying say that the cost of produc-
Greatly Increased.
n Is 10 cents a pound. At any
Superintendent
of Public Instruc-
le there seemB to be an excellent
tlon
Ackerman has Just finished
-it this year.
The prune crop Is large, and though compiling the annual school statis­
. domestic market has not opened, tics as gathered from the reporta re­
cently filed In his office by the sever­
. been making sales at Its owa al county stiperlntendsnts. As the re­
ee, a 2*i-cent basis, which price
ports for last year covered a period
m the grower a "better than fair" of
16 months, there is no basis for
rgln.
except In a few partic­
Ill through the year dairy products comparisons
ulars.
'• brought an extraordinary price,
The school census for the year end­
eren country butter has found a ing in June, 1903. shows that there
y market at paying
figures, are In the state 143,757 persons be­
oigrowers Bold their fleeces this tween the ages of 4 and 2# years At
r at a high price, and sheep have the same time last year the school
i in demand all through the year. population was 138,466, so that an in
crease of 5291 is shown.
The average dally attendance In all
CATTLEMEN r b f u sh t o s e l l .
the public schools of the state during
the preceding year has been 64.219.
Scarcity of Pnd They Hold for while for the preceding year It was
Better Figures.
66,779, or a decrease of 2560, A de­
XcTsr In the history of the country crease in the average daily attend­
nod Dale has the cattle market ance at the same time that there Is
i as unsettled as It Is at the pres­ an Increase In the school population
ume. Prices offered by export- Is probably due to the scarcity of
yen are extremely low, and the labor and the high wages, which, to­
gether, take many of the older boys
raisers are refusing to sell.
Crowding on top of this, there Is a out of school during the greater part
nrclty of hay as compared with last of the year.
x and prices are running moun-
Protest Against Withdrawals.
talgh. Hay Is selling In the field
110 per ton, whieh Is $4 higher
A special meeting of the Rosehnrg
n It was last fall. Cattle-raisers board of trade and citizens generally
ho have not a sufficient supply are has been called to protest against the
tag to contract for all they can se­ withdrawal of any more public lands
from entry In that portion of the
re, but the farmer will not sell.
Again there are more cattle on the state. Other commercial bodies In
nge this year than last, without suf- the western part of Oregon will be
ient feed for them. Notwithstand- Invited to co-operate In protesting to
the discouraging state of affairs the officials In Washington, D. C.. and
Ich confront the cattleman, he Is to our senators and representatives
lling to wait for further develop- In congress against the further ex­
tension of our already Immense for­
ti.
The export cattle-buyers who have est reserves. Such recently proposed
.«In the country have had to go to extensions will work ssrlous hard­
er parts because they could not se- ships on many bona fide sutlers now
re the cattle here. The buyers located on some of these lands,
! Portland quotations here at $2.70
To Clear Coos Bay Channel,
hundred for cows and $3.35 for
’tn. The average la $3.75, and
Replying to an earnest request
fit better prices than that were ro­ submitted by Congressman Hermann,
ved last year. If both the buyer based upon a petition of the Coos
the seller continue to hold out. It Bay chamber of commerce. Secretary
believed that there will be a ntim- of War Root wires that he has appor
of forced sales on the part of the tloned $10,000 as an emergency aid
«binen, and that they will sell at for removing the recent skoal forma­
loss to themselves.
tion In the Coos ba yentrance chan­
nel, which delays deep-draft vessels.
As the shoal Is constantly enlarging,
No Orass to Fight Over.
commerce there would have material­
There Is no range war in the Upper ly suffered had It bees necessary to
'tauten valley. On the contrary,
're Is the peace of desolation. The await congressional action.
jllainette
■ge was overstocked and eaten out
4 no grass worth making war over
mains. Where neat cattle and'
‘roes once throve by the thousands
ere Is now none too much feed for
lew hundreds. Twenty years ago
ere wss no finer grazing region In
* United States. Men who now ride
'la? In a cloud of dust tell of the
me when the grass was up to their
Wt as they bestrode their horses,
cattle fairly wallowed In the feed
I covered the 30 miles of present
‘•t between Bend and Prinavllle.
Cowlitz Navigation Obstructed.
During the recent freshets a sand
r formed at the mouth of the Cow-
1 over which greatly hindered the
ration of the plant belonging to
Columbia A Cowlitz River Boom
0mpany. A dredge will shortly take
*7 ° rk
clearing the channel In
after which the company will
i ra two new piers and rearrange
* Meer boom. When finished this
Bi wit] be one of the best on the
- a - 1* r,TPr an,l wl" be of great
stance to the loggers
T» Have Brand New School House.
to *"/0’’ r'*,v
have a new and
\
eehool building that will be
holt« *°
town. The school an-
l
sre advertising for bids for
Z «Wtrnrtlon. The building will
0 *torles high and will have four
in
recitation rooms. Its cost
1,1 B* about $3000.
Inspecting Farms.
nt Hood River, presl-
tav» i u * ^,a*e Board of Hortlenl-
n C™» county on a tonr of
^Tille there Mr. Smith
i M mo*t of the principal farms
ZTt*U t'n Smith
11®* county
PORTLAND MARKETS.
Wheat— Walla Walla, 76®78c; bloe-
etem, 78(»81c; valley. 79@80c.
Flour— Valley, $3.«0@3.85 per har-
rei ' hard wheat straights, $3.90<*3.85;
___ 1 wheat, patents, $t,10@ 4 50;
hard
graham, $3.8*1*3.75; whole wheat,
$3 I 65(84.00: rye wheat, $4.00.
Barley— Feed, $20 per ton; brewing,
$ 2 II;
1 ; rolled, $21(821.60
Oats— No. 1 while, $1.*7M ; gray,
$1 05 per cental.
Millstnffs— Bran. $23 per ton; mid­
dlings, $27; shorts, »23; chop, »1*;
linseed dairy food, $18.
Hay—Timothy, old, $20 per ton;
new $ 14 ® 15;,'clover, nominal; grain,
its; cheat, nominal.
$12
Butter— Fancy eresmerv, 20(822Mc
per pound; dairy, nominal; store, 1«
®17e.
_
Cheese— Full cream, twins, 14c;
Yoong America, 14c; factory prices,
1<* l ) i c less
Poultry—Chickens,
mixed,
11®
I jtZ c per pound; spring, 19® 17Me;
hen's, 12® 12X c; broilers, $2(83 per
dozen; turkeys, live. I<V8I2c per
pound; d r e s s e d . 14®15e: dneks, $4«»
per dozen; geese, $5(89.50.
Eggs— Oregon ranch, 19*20c.
Potatoes—Old Burbanks, 70« 76c
ner sack, growers’ prices; new pota­
toes. Oregon, 80e® II per sack; Cali­
fornia, lc per pound.
Wheat Backs—In lots of 100, 5**c.
B eef — Gross steers, $3.75®4.25;
dressed, 6 M 9 7 * c per pound.
Veel— 8c per poond.
___
Mntton—Grose. $3; dressed, 5>4®
9e; I am be, gross, $3 50; dressed, -r.
Hogs—Gross, $5.50®5.75; dressed,
U ‘ h*
of P” « o . , . r . Sh. Obey.
Honor's Dicta ten.
, .
From one's reading „f Kentucky
miotal* *torle* lu new «papery and
magazines he is accustomed to asso­
ciate the women aa
WeH as the men, of
tho«« part* with tm-
i*outh dress, vulgar
apeerh and habits
Janything but cleanly.
IjThe average female
rwho dwells among
the feudists is ple-
Ijtured iu his mind as
a tall and angular
^creature, who wears
short
skirts
and
MRS. J. B. EWE.t.
chews
tobacco;
whose vocabulary of oaths la a varied
one and who carries a gun and helps
make moonshine whisky. This may
be the typical mountain woman, but
there la at least oue wearer of petti­
coats in the Kentucky mountains who
lias education and refinement coupled
with grit and determination which are
truly phenomenal. Her name Is Mrs.
KI b I b Kwen, and she lives at Jackson,
Ivy. Most women would run away
and abandon such work as she Is un­
dertaking. Losing her home, having
her husband made an exile wandering
through the country dodging nssusslns.
Imaginary or real, she does not regret
the steps he has taken.
Her husband, Capt. J. B. Ewen, had
several contracts with large firms,
from whom he borrowed money and
whom he was paying back by loading
lumber on ears. Among those for
whom he worked were the Hargises,
one of whom Is a judge and friendly
with Curtiss Jett, the man who shot
Attorney Marcum. This assassination
was witnessed by Capt. Ewen. Ho
saw the bullet fired Into the brain of
the attorney, and, although offered $.*>,-
000 to swear that he did not see It and
threatened with dire punishment If he
told the truth, he followed his wife’s
advice and declared he would swear
on the witness stand to what he had
witnessed. A week later he was burn­
ed out of home and driven from town
by threats of murder. Ills wife, how­
ever, stayed behind and will carry out
her husband's contracts. The men
whom she employs have l>een refused
hoard, so she gives them shelter and
meals. AH her neighbors are hostile
to her, but with her six children she
feels she can carry ont her plans. Two
of her daughters are well educated
girls and the others will he similarly
trained.
GOD MOTHER OF
BLAST
URNACES.
Miss Helen E. Reed of Sharpsvllle,
Pa„ Is an unrivaled godmother of blast
furnaces. All western Pennsylvania
operators look upon her as the person­
ification of good luck. She has start­
ed the fires In more furnace« than has
I jE . J
K HtWMKlI
PHYSICIAN à SURGEON.
I I -t a x s of Uie Eye, Ear end Noe* ere 8 poo
let tie*.
Olili-« In the Alltaou
Ro.ai.ra la th« Horae.
At least, that Is the hsppy conclu­
sion drawn by Lavlnla Hart, wilting
In Collier's Weekly on “Social Prob­
lems in the Home.”
Most g rls about to marry, says the
writer, tell each of their girl friends,
In strictest confidence, that they have
made up their minds to be "boss.''
AH men about to marry swell with
the consciousness that they were horn
to boss—and their lives must Justify
their birthright.
The attitude of the man Is s relic
of prehistoric times, when min con­
sidered himself the chosen sei. end
woman wss of a different mental and
ntrral construction fTom the woman of
today.
The attltud« of the girl Is more
often s matter of self-defense.
She
makes what she considers deep deduc­
tions from the lives of married folk
around her and decides that she must
boss or be bossed. She chooses the
former.
Sometimes she Is very successful—-
as a boss. The man she marries Is a
peace-loving Individual who would
rather give In that have scenes. The
spevl.-s Is seen much abroad. He has
the out-habtt and never goes home
ontll all the other places are closed.
Sometimes she mantes a man who
■Iso has the boss bee In his bonnet.
This Is very hard on the native* with­
in hearing distance, and not easy for
the children.
With both parents
bosses, one la apt to get petted or
pounded to death. Tim * does not ad­
just cases of this kind, which go on
until one boss or the other expires
from the wear and tear of friction.
Then sometimes the girl who would
be boss marries a man who never
thought about being one of the choaen
tax, who care* neither to boaa nor ba
bossed, whose sole motive and every
means are to make the girl he marries
the happiest woman In the world. tAnd
If such a one’s skill In loving be as
great as his good Intention, bis wife
forget* all shout wanting to boss, she
obeys his unspoken wish as he fulfills
hers, they mutually serve and sacrifice
and yield, their house progress«« with­
out a heed, but with plenty of heart,
without a master, but wholly mas­
tered, and In co-operation they solve
the problem of domestic b.aslsm.
So 1-ongfellow solved It In ''H ia­
watha
As unto the bow the cord le.
So unto the man Is woman;
Though she bends him she obeys him.
Though she draws him, yet she fol­
lows;
Useless each without the other.
Jc
Madsen Building.
as promptly and as thoroughly as do
the sons. These spoiled children will
have to love very earnestly and ten­ J|k B. R. JOB
derly If they are to be really suc­
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON
cessful home-makers.
The ability
All oftlls promptly attended.
they have; the training needed, they
often have, and can always get It they
Office, Maiu St. next door to !*eader office.
see their need of It, even If the Illu­ Phone, Xo. 114.
COTTAGE GROVE, OR.
mination cornea after marriage. I t I*
the disciplined nature which will be
most needed; the habit of doing dis­
tasteful things, and doing them cheer­ £ T . ANDERSON, M. D
fully and continually; the power to
give up cherished plans; to devise
ways of helpfulness about things of
Surgery and Fumale diseases A Specialty. A ll
■mall tntervet In themaelvea. and the calls promptly attended to.
Office in Slier wood block: Night calls a l
regular practice of forgetfulness of
New Era Drug Store. Phone 166 Mala.
self and remembrance of other* In the
recurring trifle* of daily life.—Wo­
man's Home Companion.
Physician and Surgeon
H in t s C o n c e r n i n g T o u r C o n a r v .
Put slippery elm bark In the drink­ Q E N T I S T
ing vessels.
D R . H. H. P E T R I H
For colds give a canary one drop of
sweet oil at a dose.
A ll Work Warranted.
A bit of flg or apple, and for one of
the larger birds a live worm, will
Office First Door West ol Bherwood Hon
prove a tonic.
Taste the bird seed youraelf to be
sure It la pure. Never uae hemp seed.
Be careful to dry thoroughly the J J R E. C. MACY
perches after cleaning the cage. Damp
perches are the chief cause of rheuma­
tism.
D EN T IST
Never hang the bird out of doora.
Some one Is sure to forget to bring
him In when It grows too hot or too Dr. Snapp’s Building.
cooL
Thoroughly wash out all the vessels
with hot water every day. The aphae,
t Q Km r
the parasite that forms In water left C J ohnson
■tending In a cage, la the deadliest
EBY &
enemy of a bird life.
I f the bird show« signs of general
ATTORN EYS A T
LA W
debility, as moulting out of season,
Cottage Grove,
Oregon.
give him Iron In much greater strength
than he can get from a rusty nail In
th* water, end counteract the one bad
effect of Iron with sulphnr.
U. K IN O
Keep the bird out of draughts. It
la beet to hang hla cage about live feet
from the floor. I f hung higher than
Special attention given to Collection!.
that he will be too warm, for heat
OREGON.
rises, end the hottest place In a room COTTA GE GROVE,
la near th* celling.—Philadelphia In­
quirer.
Attorney-at-Law
O ld M a i d s a a d B a c h e l o r G l r l a .
The Old Meld was a woman who
couldn’t marry.
The Bachelor Girl la one who won't.
The Old Maid was a creature of tea
and toast and tabby cats, and a fringe
on the edge of somebody e le e ’s family.
The Bachelor Girl la up on fashions
and sport, football and polo, and the
backbone of the community In which
she Uvea.
The Old Maid was an object of pity.
The Independent, Joyous lot of the
Bachelor Girl makes her an object of
envy.
All of which goes to show the change
In the attitude of the public towarn
the atatue of woman.—Philadelphia
Evening Bulletin.
V e a e s n e le n
J
E. YOUNO
ITTOlltIT-lT-LAV
Bee on Main Street, West Side,
C o tt a g e tir o ? # , O r.
M ISC B U eA lN B O U S
JJO B T . G R IF F IN ,
+ W H G O N -T O W K G R +
C o r
Repairing and Refilling Is Our Trade.
All work warranted.
M a i n A i s t h t ».. Cottage Grove, Oregon
W om en.
Veneenelan women are Indeed heau
tlful. Descended from Hpanleh and
Indian ancestors, they combine In their H. C. M AD SEN ,
persons the beauty of the two races
and with their lovely face* and grace­
ful figure* make a type of feminine
loveliness that Is unsurpassed. The Watches Clocks and Jewelry
Venezuelan woman's complexion la
At Lowest P rices..........
clear olive, bnt her rounded cheeks are
painted by nature with the loveliest
crimson and her beautiful dark eye*
teem to express all the emotions of her
heart. When ahe smiles her cheery Q H. WILLARD
lips reveal tha most perfect of teeth
CONTRACTOR 4 BUILDER
and ahe look* so absolutely bewitching
Estim ates made and all kind-* of carpenter
work executed ami satisfaction guaranteed
that you long to aee her smile again.
Watchmaker
This smart little hat le Intended for
wear with shirt waist and tailor-made
any other young woman In the coun­ gowns. Of hand-plaited rice straw,
black velvet ribbon le the sole trim­
try, and the success that has attended
ming. The Tam O'Shantar crown ex­
the enterprises so Inaugurated has
tends almoet to the brim and a bow
been phenomenal.
ef the velvet reets on the hair.
Miss Reed's fame baa extended be­
yond the borders of this State, and
fiaesa Helena a Cook.
Queen Helena of Italy la a royal lady
the last fiery christening over which
she presided was In Toledo, Ohio. who has a very practical knowledge of
At her father’s curiously
Nowadays Miss Reed's services are In cooking.
great demand. Her home Is In Sharps­ homely and unpretentious court Queen
vllle, where her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Helena learned many useful thing*,
and among them the art of cooking.
Philo Reed, reside.
The Prince of Montenegro Insisted
T h e T rees W e R ead .
that all bla children should learn a
Nine successful novels recently pub­ trade—a rale which, by the way, ob­
lished lu the United States had a total tains In the German Imperial family—
sale of over 1.600.000 copies, says the and the future Queen of Italy became
Chicago Dally News. Since the aver­ not merely a good plain cook but aleo
age weight of each book sold was prob­ skilled In the preparation of the curl-
ably twenty ounces, a little calculation •us sweetmeats end patisserie of which
will prove that these 1,600,000 books orientals are so fond. The late King
contained
approximately
2,000,000 Humbert Insisted on tasting his daugh­
pounds of paper. A manufacturer of ter-in-law's cookery, and so pleased
papers asserts that the average spruce was he with the dainty fare she set
tree yields a little less than half a before him that he conferred on her,
cord of wood, which is equivalent to with mock ceremony, the title of “lady
about BOO ponnds of paper. In other high cook to the King of Italy.”
words, these nine novels swept away
O i r Spotted C h ild r e n .
4 000 trees, and they form bnt a small
The girls of today have been petted
part of the fiction so eagerly read by and made much of from tbelr cradles.
Everything has been done to make the
, the American public.
M SS It ELEN E. REED.
Albania.
Albania lies 180 miles on the Adriatic
sea and is 50 to 100 miles wide. It
was formed originally, says \\ illinm
Jackson Armstrong in his “Heroes of
Defeat" from part of Illyria, all of
Epirus and part of Macedonia In the
Eleventh eentnry. From this terri­
tory sprang Pyrrhus, who defeated tha
Roman invader Philip and Alexander
of Macedón, the conqnerer. and Per­
seus whose fsme as a soldier covered
the world sixty years after Christ , and
Seam ier berg. who. for forty years, de
feated armies sent against him by the
Turk Ancient Albania lay In Asia,
just east of the Caucasus.
Plswlag will B u rn ed s t H a in e s .
!«ni*, mlu ”
Fnmber Company's CHope— 1902 crop, 15#19c
I t s o m e t i m e s H a p p e n * H is t Way.
Tallow— Prime, per pound, 4®6c;
s T IL T 11J ■* Heines. was burned
Teas—why did he msrrv h«r?
Pact „ * T,,,“ 1o** 1* $500«. The No. 2 and grease, 2H # *«-
„ .
tack—He didn't. She m .rrled him
’ , _7®ne'1 by .Tames Mitchell.
Wool - Valley, » 7 * ! * ; * • * • « —Somerville Journal.
- *r City, who carried n o In sn r- Oregon, 1 2 « 1 5 c ; mohair. 36«3< >8«.
W h y Sh« L e ft.
Mistress— What! going to leave al­
ready? Why, you have not been here
a week!
Maid—I know It, mum; but I can't
stand It here. Things ran too smooth­
like, mum.
Mistress— Why, what can you mean?
Maid—You see, mum. I has always
been In places where they keep three
servants
Misti* * * —Oh. you are lonesome,
then?
Maid—No, mnm, not lonesome; but,
yon see, I misses the confusion.
E ffe ct
of
C ontract work a sjiecialty.
COTTAGE GROVE, ORFOON.
J. W BERQ
W. H. BERO
BERG BROS.
A s s n y
O ffic e
Cottage Q rove, Oregon.
Assaying and analyzing of ores, working teste.
Cyanidlng, etc., etc., by the latest methods of
Prof. Falkenau’s School of Assaying, of 8an
Francisco, Cal.
Mall Orders Solicited.
Satisfaction A ssured.
Three doors east of the postoffice.
H i e * H e e l« .
The picture shows the bones of the
foot according to nature and as they
hard places easy and the rough road* are deformed by wearing hlgh-beeled
smooth. There Is a grading and level­ shoes.
ing In the schools nowadays In order
No Klepolnic T e a rs .
that children may learn without their
Clande—Mias Thlrtyodd seems to
knowing It. A sort of "Ignorance ex- hold her age well.
tracted-wlthont-paln sjatem ” It I*,
Maude—Hold her age! Why she
from kindergarten to c liege At home. hasn't let go of a single year since
If not at school, American children are she's
been twenty-lira!— Baltimore
regularly and unhlushlngly spoiled; Herald.
and while the effects of such whole­
T h e H c l s h t of Shrewdnoeo.
sale Injury to the chlldleh life often
Mrs. Muggins— Mrs. BJones Is a
wear off with boys as soon as they
go out Into the world to compete with pretty shrewd shopper, Isn't she?
Mr* Rtigglna— Yas. Indeed. Why.
their equal« on every aide. In the case
of girls the tonle of mingling In th* I hare actually known that woman to
affaire of life and work, without flat­ get a bargain at a church fair.—I
tery or favor* of any kind. 1* usually attle Times.
I f T l i e r 1,1 v*.
denied. With girls the petting and
Mr. Cawker (quoting!— Boy* will be
coddling continue long after woman­
hood la reached, and so (he daughter* boys.
Mr*. Cawker (correcting)— Na; boys
do not get over the effects of the
American manner of spoiling children will be men.
EA ST
AND
—VIA—
SO U TH
T h e S ha9ta Route
— O F TH E—
SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPANY,
Trains leave C o t t a o k G r o v r for Portland
and way stations at 2:14 a in
12:56 pm
t v Portland
“ n «• a m
Lv Cottage Grove
2:67 p m
Ar Ashland
12:66 a rn
Ar Sacram ento
6:oo p m
Ar San Francisco
7:55 p m
8:30 p m
2:06 p m
12.36 p ns
4:35 a m
8:55am
IM illm an a n d T oiarln t C a r s
on both trHins. C h a ir w it*, 8 *ora-
mnnto to Ogden and and £1 Paso and
T o u ris t
C ars
to Chlodffo, Hi Lou in.
and Washington.
New Orleans
Connecting a t Han Francisco, with several
steam ship lines for Honolulu, Ja p a n , China.
Philippines, Central and South America.
A t Albany
and Corvallis <
with C e l ' l Ky trains.
Independence Passenger dally, except Sunday.
7 M A . tL I tv
10 :
reJPertfaMi-___Ar |*M *. d
a. M. ! Ar M cM innville.....Lv j 3 06 r ■
II: A . M . I Ar.Independendence.Lv | 2 06 P.
11:46a. m . i Ar..........CorvattaI.........Lv I 1*0 F.
Roe Agent Mr D T Aw brey at Cottage Grove
address
W I COMAN,
U F A Pass, Ag%
F O R I LA N D , • OREGON.