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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1906)
ROGUE RIVER COURIER. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. MARCH 7 V "The best remedy I can prescribe for your In digestion, madam, is Green's August Flower. I know of several other physiciaus who pre scribe It regularly." tTIndigestion is making an awful record ' as a cause of sudden deaths. It is beat-1 ing Heart-failure in its ghastly harvest. . tfYou read in the papers dailv of armar entlv healthy and even robust men being suddenly attacked with acute indigestion after enjoying a hearty meal, and of theii dying in many cases before a physician could be called in. JThis should be a warning to you whc suffer with regular or periodical attackt f indigestion. If tVteu imfnrinti.u '-J Z Ji .7.,: .. . V.F 01 BCUle maigesuon Dart taken a "Vjknall dose of Green's Autrust Flower he. Tfore or after their meals they would nol nave laiien a prey 10 sucn sudden seizures. 1st flower prevents indigestion by g good digestion. It also regulatei er, purines the blood and tones uu creating g the liver, the entire system in a natural way. t CJTwo sizes, 85c and 75c All druggists. Fur Bale by Dr. J. C. Smith. If You Enjoy Grand Scenery You will bo more than pleased with what you see from the windows of the Purlinzton's thro Tourist and Standard sleeping cars leaving Salt Lake City every day for eastern ci'i s. v These cars run thro the heart of the Rockies and you have choice of routes. Scenery is not the only attraction, for the cars are modern and comfortable Plousep to give ymi further information . W. l 0. r. 3d THE LIVE RY FA A AND SALE C. A III' lii! H Street between ril'ih ,inl S't(, BIQQLE Baadwaelr Prlatas sad Baaatllallr Maitrataa. BY JACOB BIQQLE No. l-BIGOLE HORSE BOOK All about Horses a Common-aense Treatlae, with mora than 74 illustration! ; a standard work. Price, 60 Cent. No. 2-BIOQLE BERRY BOOK All about growing Small Fruit read and team how. Beautiful colored plalca. Price, 60 Cents, No. 3-BiaOLE POULTRY BOOK All about Poultry; the beat Poultry Book hi existences tella everything;. Profusely illustrated. Price, AO Cents. No. 4-BKJO.LE COW BOOK All about Cowa and the Dairy Business: new edition. Colored plate. Sound Common -sens. Price, SO Casta. No. 5-BIOQLE SWINE BOOK All about Hoea Breeding, Peedlng, Butchery, Diseases, etc. Cover the whole ground. Price. 60 Cent. No. o-BIOGLE HEALTH BOOK Give remedies and trp to-dste Information. A houaebokj oeceaaity. Extremely practical. Price, 60 Cenla. No. 7-BIQOLE PET BOOK For the boya and girls particularly. Pet of all kinds and bow to care for them. Price. 60 Cent. No. 8-BiaOLE SHEEP BOOK Covers the whole ground. Every rage full of good ad vice. Sheep men praise it. Price, 60 Cents. Farm Journal la your paper, made (or you and not a misfit. It I 2 years old; It is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-lhe-head, Quit-after-you-have-aald-it Farm and Household paper in the world the biggest paper of its aiie in the I'nited States of America having rrrnre than Three .Million rrirular reader. nuip -1 h. ninnl p rooks, and tha FARM JOURNAL I YEARS (remainder of "! all of 1907, 1909 and 1910), aent bv mail to any address for A DOLLAR BILL. Sample ol FARM JOURNAL and circular describing BIOOLE BOOKS, free. WIL1HBR ATKINSON CO., rnumai or Paul Journal, PiiuaaiFiu, MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS J. B. IMDUOCK, Proprietor. K? I am prepared to furnish anything in the line of Cemetery work in any kind ol Marble or Uranite. ...... . ' 1 Nearlv thirty year of experience in the Marble business warrant my Baying . that I can 611 your orders in the very beat manner. Can furnish work in Kcou-h, Sed) or .-.mericao dranite or any kind ol Msrbl. Fioat s'.reet nex' to 'ir-e .'a Jun.hop. I HOLLA ' I) Koy Wells as in Hollaud one day ; tins ween on business. The snow has gone and warm rains are. nnikin? ti e grass grow. Mrs. J. F. Kellogg and Mrs. T. A. Glynn and children were in Holland Saturday. r rank fowler, manager of the Gold Pick Mine? Co., returned from Kerby where he had been cm business J. B. Griffin and wife and Mrs. F. S. Coatea and daughter, Aleue, spent Sitnrday, March 17th, in Holland. A. J. Fnlk came in last week from the Erigga miue at the bend of Sucker creek and reports six feet of new snow and still enowiug. A Scicntilic Wonder. The cures that stand to its oredit make Buck leu's Arnica Salve a scien tific wonder. It curtd E. R. Molford. lecturer for the Patrous of Husbandry, Waynesboro, Pa., of a distressing case of Piles. Ic heals the: worst barns, sores, boils, ulcere, outs, woand, chil blains and salt rheum. Only 2oo at all drng stores. Fine wedding Courier office. stationery at the FOSTER. a-enper and T oket Agent. Bmlnigt n Knme, & Stink tits.. Port and, Ore. SHION FEED STABLES OH, P11 print or. i.NK KSl Grants; I'aaa. Oregon A Farm Library of unequalled value. Practical, Up to date. Concise sod Comprebesalve. BOOKS I rWWVSA.VW AAA V " T IT I'm. IT MY ? ' 1J u .ia .1 All mailer for this by the tyrant J'ass Temperance Union. column is supplied Woman's Christian A large cumber of the bis niagtziues are dropping the whisky advertise, inputs through the advUe and protests of their readers. This is taken to mean that the majority of mngaziue readers have do love for liquor aud take the liberty of telling the pub lishers their (entiuieuts. Patent mediciues which contain alcohol also are being refused advertising space iu many publications. It may be doubted whether the larger number of pocple who read magazines are temperance people. But those who are Dot, do not express their views and make a campaign for preservation of the liquor advertisements, while the others lose uo opportunity of getting iu a telling blow against liquor wherever they fiud it. The advertising motto "Keep everlastingly at it" briugs re sults in one campaign as well as in another. xriaay aut-rnoon, march 23, wan observed by the nuion here us Neal Dow or Prohibition Bally day. Neal Dow the "Father of Prohibition" is honored everywhere and by means of the written word "Ha beiug dead yet speaketh." At a great meeting in Leds he offered this resolution : "That stroug drink breeds infinite mischief to the nation and infinite misery to the people." Nobody voted against it though be says rum mies by the. hundreds were present. He then offered this: "We declare that the suppression of the driuk traffic would be an incalcn table bless ing to the government aud the people of Great Britain." "Doen anybody object to that" he a.-ked aud was de claring the vote unanimous when a liqnor man hi Id op his hat on a stick whereupon he said "Only one nega tive aud that's only a hat on a stick no brains in it, no heart uuder it that's a reasonable vote after all." He said "Some of our good people think it is quite secular in a man to vote as he prays. You say I musu't talk so hard? But I must talk so, UDtil you learn that blank cartridges are no match for shotted guns. Yon say Ibis is a 'hydra-headed monster.' I know it, beuoe we must not only cut off each bead, but singe each stump. Tint's just what Wa're doing here in Maine.' Bot returning to the subject of the afternoon. Mrs. Savage had prepared a program which at the close was de clared to be one of the best we have had for some time, aud that mauy more should have been present to eujoy it A paper by W. M. Hair on "Prohibitiou from a Business man's Standpoint," one by Mr. Savage on "The Teacher's Viewpoint," one by Mr. Mangum stating a mining man's reasons for his belief, and a talk by Mr. Becktnau giving the Preacher's ideas were all excellent. Mr. Bobbins took the other side of the question, saying in his apology that he must have been hypnotized to prepare a paper on that subject, but li s profession demanded that he should defend criminals of all kinds, and as his principles are well kuowu we caa understand the plea. Miss Ella Savage favored us with an instrumen tal selection and Mts. Duuis u, ac companied on the piano by Mis. Ora Hood, sang a beautiful solo. But iu closing this report, let us have the final sentence' of Mr. Mangum 's paper. "The Temperance question is no longer a minor issue in Ameri can politics. Not only must it be recognized, but it must be solved aud when Its rapidly growing forces are marshalled for the fintl conflict and the bat'le fought you will hear the shouti i victory from every hill top of our fair land aud America will be fiea from the most dreadfal curse that ever blighted any country." Torture by Savages. "Speaking of the totture to which ome of the savage tribes in the Phil ippiues mbject their captives, re minds me of the iutense suffering I endured for three mouths from infla-u-mation of the Kidneys," says W. M. Shrman, of Coshing, Me "Nothing helped me until I tried Electric Bit ters, three bottle 0: which cooii lntely cured me." Cores liver complaint, dyspepsia, blood disorders aud Malaria and restores the weak and nervous to robust health. Guaranteed by all druggist. Price 50c. The Courier is the farmers' for Rogue River Valley. paper Cured Consumption. Mrs. B. W. Evans, Clearwater. Kan., writes. My husband lay sick for three months. The doctors said he had quick consumption. We prooured a bottle of Ballard's horehonnd Syrup, and it cured him. That was six years ago and siuoe tben we have always kept a bottle in the bouse We cannot do without it. For coughs and colds it has no equal. Natiooal Drug Co. and at Rotennund'a. A Guaranteed Core for Pitta. Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Protrud ing Pilea.. Druggists are authorized to refund money if PAZO OINT MENT fails to cure in to 14 davs. 0 cents. The End of the Season Transl.i'cd from the French by Lawrence B. Fletcher. A IX. Aiin-.ir.r.. The coH'.ioiutUtan crowd ot v:ti-..N la r.uiidly thinning. An ele gar.; v..,.. urruur.dtd by rU.wer twda tn.i: hav, .1..-; '.b( ir glory, anil lawns dotted with lHiltr. .cavea. 1', rsor.iK:s: l.yri.i d Avl'.a, a dnziMnir Creole beauty 0; 13. with coal-bluck hair, piercing eywa lr.d liu- rtd with health and. Fplrlta. Mme. d'Avila, her mother. Flfty-ftve; a t pical parvenue; rouged and enameled; ton marly nicknamed "Mme. Cardinal o( the Tropics." Marc de Sallly, a Kood-tooklna; young-fallow of 30, with an engaging manner. Lynne (glancing at the sparse prumenatler on the avenue) Well, thin i the end, and we have another Mriison to our credit. Mine. d'Avila To our debit rather. Another failure! The third this year, counting Spa and Houlgate. l.ynne It isn't my fault, I am sure. I hare done the impossible, almost, to win the prize a husband! Mine. d'Avila And so have I. Lynne Yea. You have done too much. Several times, when I thought 1 had mure than a nibble, you arrived n the scene and pulled on the line so hastily that the trout slipped off the hook and got away. ' Mme. d'Avila Oh, yes! Insult your mother after all the sacrifices Lynne Were they nut partly for vourself chiefly, I should sty, seeing that even if we had caught one of your old reprobates, it was not you, but I, that would have had to marry him? Mme. d'Avila My dear, I had perftfet confidence in your ability to tame the worst of them after marriage. But we never got that far! l.ynne And we never shall, with your system. Your ideas are too grand. Yon aim too high. Mme. d'Avila Oh. I admit that I ninde a sad mistake, but there is no ue in qunrreling about it now. It is time for action. Something must be dune at once. You saw our bank state ment this morning? l.ynne Of course. Twenty thou sand francs. 8ay eight months' re spite. Thpn the altar.or Ah! Thers :k M. de Snilly with his hnt in the air. Vmi don't know much about him, do ymi? Mine. d'Avila No. I have inquired f several people, but their answers were contradictory nnd unconvincing. l.ynne He is not bad looking, at all "vents. I could learn to love him so -xitcli better than your old cripples. 'Int. perhaps, as you know nothing definite nhout him, he is crippled too tinnncially. Mme. d'Avila Well, it is the last 'innce nnd it mny be worth trying. Have you had any conversation with him? l.ynne Only trivialities. We have met two or three times. He asked me fur a waltz the other evening. . . . He is coming this w ay. You must con trive to leave us alone for a few min utes. (Hat in hand, M. de Snilly approaches nml pays his reapecta to the ladies.) Mme. d'Avila (after the conventional civilities hnve been exchanged) Are they still nlnying in the card room? De Kaillv I think so. It is almost the only thing left. Mine. d'Avila I feel a mad longing to hazard a few louis. Allow me to confide my daughter to your care, M. de Sailly. l.ynne Oh, mamma! Mme. d'Avila (going) A few lnln utea. only. Just long enough to lose eny 500 francs l.ynne (aside) Neatly done! (Aloud) What mnkea you smile, monsieur? lie Saiily Your mother's words. I-ynne (uneasily) The 500 francs? De Sailly No, her confiding you to my care. l.ynne You will be a faithful guardian, I trust? De Sailly Oh, the honesty of the guardian, you know, depends upon the value of the treasure. l.ynne (ostentatiously changing the Subject) Hnve you been here long? De Snilly Let me see. Ten days ago I had the honor of being present ed to you by my friend Marcellin. I had arrived the day before. Have you spent the whole season here? l.ynne Almost. My mother and I are very fond of Aix, and are among the Inst to leave, as you see. De Sailly Are you going back to Taris? Lynne No. We are going first to i'ouittiue, for the hunting. Mamma bougiit a chateau there last year. - De Sailly (tentatively; louraiue? I kuow the country thoroughly. What purt of Touraine? Lynne (eiuoarraased) A few miles from Tours, near Vaiencay. (Quick ly and gushingly) Oh, how I love the raud, free, open-air country life, ilh its horses, dogs, sports of all ..inda. Are you interested in the country, monsieur? De Sailly Very much so. The care of my estates occupies much of my time. Lynne (with a good deal of curiosi ty) Then your estates must be ex tensive. De Sailly Yes, very; and, aa I am an only son, I have the entire care of them. In addition, I have one pas sion, yachting. Lynue I have the same. I adore the sea. When I lived in Hrazil I often went out on ray uncle's vessels. De Sailly You are a lirazalian, then? Lynne Yes. Do I not show it but too plainly? My father, whom I lost few years ago, made his fortune in the diamond mines. Hut you must know all this already. De Sailly No. How should I? Lynne Oh! watering place gotsip or your friend Marsellin. De Snilly He met you tirst at Spa, you remember, and only passed through Aix. 1 saw scarcely any thing (if'hiin. Lynne Why have you waited so long before coming to to have thia friendly little chat with me? De Sailly How about the grand duke? Lynue Which grand duke? De Sailly Come! You spoke of gos sip. -It seemed to be entirely' occu pied with your approaching marringe to his royal highness. Lynne (Mattered) Oh! with a cousin of the emperor! How absurd! llesidus, to spunk frankly, his royal highness is rather mature. No. I am one of those rare and peculiar women who do not believe in mar riage without love. De Sailly Then you ought not to have interrupted my paradox, as you called it. Lynne Were you going to speak of love? It is easy to talk about, but difficult to demonstrate. De Sailly Meaning that you would not have been convinced by my dem onstration? Lynne Even if I had been con vinced I could not with propriety, considering the shortness of our ac quaintance, have confessed that the demonstration was agreeable. De Sailly (sadly) What a pity it is! Lynne What is? De Sailly That one's wild dreams cannot be realized. (In an altered voice) I do not know, mademoiselle, whether we shall ever meet again especially after what I am going to tell you but since you wish proofs, I will make two avowals. The sec ond of them will be the proof of the first. Lynne (coquettlshly) Begin with the second, then. De Sailly It is not so easy or so pleasant as the other, and the fact that I make it shows how strongly you have interested me. Your words of encouragement have made me re flect that 1 was on the point of acting very dishonorably and I cannot so act toward you. (Speaking with ef fort.) Except that I am a man of honor within the meaning of the code, I am in no respect what I ap pear or profess to be. Lynne (amaed) How? De Sailly My name is not De Sail ly, but Marnier. I have no estates, no yacht, no fortune. I am a poor man, my only heritage being a few thousand francs which I am squan dering as economically as possible in' places where heiresses congregate, in the hope of finding one credulous enough or sufticicntly in love with me to mnrry me. There is my honest confession. I hope you will pardon my former words, which were simply professional falsehoods. Lynne Why do you tell me this? De Snilly llccnuse and this is the first avowal, which you would have last because 1 love you. Lynne Since this morning? De Snilly 1 Joved you at first sight. I have loved you a little more every time I have met you, and I have tried to meet you every day. Hut in love I am a skeptic, nlmoat an atheist, and that I hnve dared to tell you my love shows how completely it has mas tered me. This is, perhaps, the first time In my life that I have acted up rightly. Do not be too angry with me. Lynne (much affected, dreamily) You are right. It is a pity. De Sailly That we are now so far apart? Lynne No, but that we are too near together. I am in the aume po sition us yourself. I have neither chateau nor horses, neither yachts nor diamond mines. I am hunting for a rich husband in the same coverts Vat you are beating down for a dowered wife, and I am not very pa tiently awaiting the portion of happi ness or misery that fate may bring me. I am tired of playing the role of cnndle to decrepit moths with golden wings. I am pretty, you ace, too pretty, nnd so I hnve no right to anything but what I may fetch in the market. I am only a chattel like a railway bond or a Sevres vase. Your frankness deserves a return, and it hall have it. I, too, have another confession to make. It will be as harmless na yours, aince our two im pecunious fates can never be one. In the short time thnt 1 have known you I have guessed, from various trifling signs, that you were not enormously rich, but atill I believed you had oh, how shall I express it? De Sailly A modest Competence, as people say? Lynne That is It And on this foundation I built a romance the first heartfelt romance of my life. I gave up pining for the stars, and was happy in dreaming of a modest, sim ple existence with you. De Sailly (sadly) We were de signed for each other, but destined never to reali.e the design. Lynne Like so many others in this queer world! De Sailly And, loving each other, we shall each contract the most stu pidly conventional of marriages with some one else. Lynne And regret It all our Uvea. (A long silence. Then their hands claap as if by instinct.) Lynne (in a choking voice) la it adieu? De Sailly Au revolr, rather, for who knows? Are you doing Nice this winter? Lynne Yea, and you? De Snilly- Of course. Perhape we can help eneh -ither. , Lynne (more cheerfully) Agreed! Au revoir, then. (LV Sailly preseee her hand and is gone.) Mme. d'Avila (returning) Well! How about De Sailly? Is he com lng on? Lynne Oh, mamma, mninma! He Is colleague. N. Y. Post., No daugeurons drugs or alcoholic C moct ous are tkken into the stomach when Hyomei is need. Breathed through thn Klmler. the balsamic healing of Hyomei pene trates to the most remote cell of the noo aud throat, aud thus kills the catarrahl germs, htals the irritated mucous meitibrituo aud ghs complete and permmittnt cure. Hyomei is (he simplest, moat pleas ant and the only guaranteed cure for catarrh that has been discovered. Complete outfit f 1.C0; extra bottle 50 cent). For sale by Rotermnud. Miners' blinks at the Courier office. TIE CONTRACTS. Bids for furnishing 45.000 fir ties, hewed on two aides aud bark strii ped or square sawed, not less than iiva inches of heart, to be delivered at points to be designated along the right-of-way of The California & Oregon Coast railroad between Granta Pass and Love's Station ; said ties to be of the following dimensions: 8x7 in. by 8 ft. No bid will be con sidered for less than 1000 tios and the company reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Kor further infor mation apply to the company'! assist ant engineer, .John b Richardson, Grants Pass, Oregon. T. WALN-MORGAN DRAPER, 83'2t Uenetal Manager. NOTICE OP SHERIFFS SALE. In the County Court for Jospehine County, Oregon. P. H. Harth, Plalntiffi vs. ,J. F. Cochran, Defendant J Notice is hereby given that by vir tue of an execution issued out of the County Court of the State of Oregon for Josephine County in an action wherein P. H. Harth is plaintiff aud J. F. Cochran is doleudant, com manding me to sell Lot 5 in Block a in the town of Napoleon, commouly called Kerbyville, in Josephine County, Oregon, to satiafy the sum of tl34.35 United States Gold Coin, with interest iu like gold coin at the rate of ten per cent per annum from Jan uary 11), HKXI, and the further sum of $74 costs and disbursements and ac cruiug costs. Now therefore, in the name of the Sttte of Orngon and in compliance with said writ, I will offer for sale at publio atiotion, to the highest bidder, at the frout door of the court house In Grauts Pass, Josephine Couuty, Ore gon, on Monday, April 0, l'JOO, be tweeu the hours of nine o'clock a. m. and 4 o'clock p. ni., to-wit: at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m. of kaid day, for terms cash in baud, all the right, title and interest of the above named J. F. Cochran in aud to the aforesaid real property. Dated at Grants Pass, Oregon, this Uth day or Maroh, A. D., luotl L . . . OKOHOK W. LEWIS, bluing of Josophiue Couuty, Oregon. CITATION. Iu the County Court for Josephine County, Oregon. In tho mattor of the ) Ksta'e ofjamtts Lyttlo, V Deceased. J T? L1?8 Iiytt,e Jn Lyttle, Hannah LyttK Peggy Lyttle, Robert Lyttle, John Lyttle and all other heirs and next of kin and other persons inter ested in the estate of James Lyttle. Greeting: In the name or the state of Oregon you and eaah of you an hereby oited to appear iu the above entitled oourt and cause on Monday. April a, lUutl. at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the ('.?rt ,on"e t Orauta Pass in Jose, phine Conuty, Oregon, at the regular April term of said Court, theu aud there to show cause, if any, why an order should not be made for the sale of all the right, title aud interest of the above entitled estate in and to the 8. 4jj or the N E W the N. or the. S. b. v the 8. E. L' 0r the N. W. A o, ,U.?,H,,(l 4' ! township 41 S . R. .9 W. of Willamette Merldlai ii Josephino County, Oregon This citation Is published by order of the Hon J. O. Booth, Judge of said Court, dated March a, m, roqulriug publication thereof in the Rogue River Courier, a newspaper published at Grants Pass, Oregon, for a period of four iticneasive weeks prior to the date of such hearing Witness the Hon J.O.lfooth. JudgO , "0Drt.n,l the seal or said Court A D S 21 d"T ' M"r':''' n , .8 V- CHESHIRE, Oregfoo Jll'iue County, NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the Dis trict Boundary Board or Josephine iu Grant Pass, at 1 :!)0 o'clock, p. m. on Thursday, April 5, 1U0U, to act on a petition to change the boundary line between aohool districts Nos. 6 and 43 to read aa rollows: Begiuuina at thepoljt where the west boundary line or district No. cuts the north side or R. 8. Toliu's plKf wLFTt.Hb,p 88 S,,nth of K"K 7 West Ihenoe ruuuing east to the west line or Section 18; tWce south ?uthe" corner or said Seo L,ni 18;.,,'euc81e,'t two miles; thence south three miles to the southeast L .if .of8uotin Township 88 f. .v?8 7 We8t' hich will Ji 97d 'Sm',0' 3 "n of Sections 81. . 87. 88, 83 and 84. the east hair of Section, m 8 and 8J , of the north line of R L. Tolln'a 7 West. T"DMp 88' 8ooth of LINCOLN PAVAfJK. Dated in Gran', 7 " -''V