Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927, June 08, 1906, Image 2

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    PROFESSIONAL CABM.
3J C. FINDLEY, M. D.
Practice limited to
KYK, EAR, NOSE and THROAT.
' Glasses fitted and furnished.
Office hours to 12; 2 to 6; and on ap
pointmttut. Telephones 21 and 77.
Ubants I'ahh, - - Obeuo
JJRS. DOUGLAS & DOUGLAS,
e. ft. noroLA ahsa k. Douglas, m.d.
rbvficiun and Diseases of Women
Burgeon, and Children.
Phone 631. Tien. 1051.
Cor. Bixth and E streets.
Gba.nts Pahs, - - Oregon
JJR. J. C. SMITH
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Ofllce at National Drug Store.
Phonos, Office 855; lies. 1045.
Iiusidence cor. 7th and D streets.
Gbants Pahs, - - Ohbooh
J)R. W. F. KREMER
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office In Courier Building.
Office phone 911, residence 413.
Eyes tested and glasses fitted.
Grants Pahs, - Obkoon.
I)R.
T. E. BEARD.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Ofllce over Hair-Riddle Hardware.
Res. cor. 4th and U Streets.
Phones, Office 254 ; Res. 321.
Gbants Pass, - Ohkqon.
LOUGIIRIDGE, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND 8UKGEON
Res. Phone 714
City or country calls attended night
or day. Sixth and H, Tuff's building.
Office Phone 201.
Grants Pasb . Obeoon.
DR. A. J. WILLIAMS
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Office at Western Hotel.
Hours: 9 to 13 A. M. and 1 to 5 P. M.
Consultation and examination free.
JJt B. HALL
UNDERTAKER, FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND LICENSED EMBALMER.
orth 0th st., near Court IIouho.
Office Phono 761, Be. Phone 717.
Gbants Pahh, Ohkqon.
EARL V. INGELS
ASSAYER AND CHEMIST.
AH work guaranteed accurate and re
liable. Office opp. I'. O. Phone 1003.
Grants Pahs, - Orkoon.
J, D. NORTON,
ATTORNEY-ATLAW,
Practice In all State and Federal Courts.
Office in Opera House liulldlng.
Gbants Pass, Okeoon
y, C. HALE,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office over First National Hank,
Grants Pass, , hkuon.
C. H. CLE I NTS
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Practice in State and Federal Courts.
Office on 6th and C streets opposite
Court House. Phone 1001.
Grants Tabs, - Ohmion
A. C. HOUGH,
ATTORNEY-ATLAW,
Praotloos In all State and Federal Courts
Office over Hair Riddle Hard ware Co.
Grants Pass, Ohkuon
J. H. AUSTIN,
ATTORNEY-ATLAW
Union Building
Rkrby
Ohku m
WILLIAM P WRIGHT,
U. 8. DEPUTY SURVEYOR
MINING ENGINEER
AND DRAUGHTSMAN
0th St., north of Josephine Hotel.
Grants Pash, Ohkuon.
FRED MENSCH
U. 8. DEPUTY SURVEYOR
Surveys promptly aad accurately
snide.
Leave order at Courier office.
J. E. PETERSON
nmv w sr u
.. I
FIRL, LIFE AND ACUUtNI INsUKANLt
IREAL ESTATE
A 'out Big Horn Basin Land Co.,
V liming.
Anchor Wli Force. ;
'11" iii-iii. i .n
- . J
Lharles Costai n
ci I
Wood WOrklUg bllOp.
West of flour mill, near R. R. track j
Twain:, Boroll Work, Stair Work, Hand
rawing . ""Hf '7- i
rUinaid BumoiliiK, Repairing ail kinds.
rrioes right
ui.
ROGCE Ri'KR COURIER. GRANTS PASS, OREGON. JUNE 8, iM)6.
-- - ; " vntT rAN'T
PRACTICAL POINTERS
FOR GOAT RAISERS
!
How to Curn Poisoned Goal and
to Protect Them from
Coyotes.
i Nannies that clip 2, ponnds their
Editor Coorier: ! increase will clip '6 on an average or
There are a good many things to 1 i0 increase in wool on every 100 kids,
overcome in goat raising. First is the A buck clipping seven ponnds of mo
coyote which can be overcome by hair is worth 40 and he will pay
taking a small pop two weeks old and seven per cent on the money invested
raisins him on a Nannie so he knows
no other mother. Let him norse two !
times a day then take him and train
him to stay with the kids till fonr
months old then let him go with the
old goats and be will learn the rest
himself. I have a dog 14 months old
that I trained that way and he takes
the goats iu the morning and brings
them home at night and there is
nothing that can come near bis goats.
He will hold np a man or teams in
the road till he can get his goats out
of the way. Cattle, hogs or ooyotes
he will drive away, if he can't make
them go he takes his eoats away.
Do goats pay? My experience is
yes, providing they are taken care of.
Does a gold mine pay? No, if one
does not have it worked or work it
himself. So if one does not take care
of his goats, or what other business
be or she may be in, will not pay to
let someone else look after It for you.
Diseases and and their antidotes.
First and the most daogeroos is the
goitre or the sweling of the glands on
the neck. It is a contagions disease
and will spread through the flock in
time and one can save a very small
per cent of the increase by nsing a
first clam liniment aad keep at it till
it is entirely gone.
Second and one that kills old goats
is the Azalia found along water
eoorses or on swatnpy or marshy
land. Symptoms are vomiting, grind
ing of the teeth, food or a Btreak of
food that has been chewed np aronnd
the mouth. Antidote two table
spoons of lard, one teaspoon of soda.
Warm, mix well together. One dose
is generally enough; if they are still
grinding their teeth in three or four
hours after first dose, give another.
Use a long neck bottle. Another
trouble is the Greesewood or the thorn
chapperall. It does not affect the
Nannies bnt it pnts the backs in great
pain lasting from two to 13 days and
they will lay around and bawl and
got np and lay down again and strain.
Antidote sweet npirits of nitre, one
half teaspoon in two tablespoons of
water from one to two hours apart
during the day and np till 10 o'olock
at night then the first thing in the
morning again; as a rule it will enre
in one to to days time bat they will
show the effects of that sickness for
a very long time. Aif soon as they
stop bawling, stop the medicine.
Another is the foot rot which is a
very easy disease to cure if taken
when it first makes its appearanoe.
The goat is lame; look between the
toes and you will find a littlt red spot
and fever in the foot. Antidote is to
take a quart jar and pat one-qaarter
blaestonn and balauce water; jnst jab
the foot in It two or three times and
if it has been taken in time, one treat
ment will core it; if it has run some
time, it will take three to fonr treat
ments, morning aud uight.
Feeding and oaring for goats.
Goats should have a good, warm
place to sleep in nights, after being
oat in the rainy weather aud it Bhould
be a board floor and cleau it oil every
day bo it will be dry for night.
Shoo Id there be a heavy snow, have
some alfalfa hay to feed them and a
little crushed barley. Two tons of
hay and 10 sacks of graiu 1 on an
average year sufficient for 150 head of !
goats. Dout' fall to give them plenty
of salt, rock salt rerfeired.
As brush cleauers Goast will not
clear op laud to any extent uu
leJS confined to a tract of land.
To clean up land, five goats to
oue acre will do good work ; 100 head
to 60 acres. One should have three
or four fields aud change them after ,
me reeu get snort in one neiu to
another, keeping one field to pot them '
i,","',"u ,u K"'u ion lor
I tl" wtn,er nd in ,hwe "n ,n'y I
will kill oat two to three acres of I
I.. . -I. j.. a i:n a
land to the goat ( based on 100 head I
aud sometimes more. Weathers will
olearnp from three to five acres per
j head in thre years time as yon run
: them on the laud longer than Nan
nies aud not injure the goat as it
is a hardship on Nannies to carry
their young and live on close oou
finement and too moeh hark. They I
will do a good deal of their killing by 1
stripping off the bark of trees, brash i
,nl lneT coanoi reach the top of.
Small brosh is killed bv eat inn off
the ends of from one rears growth
i r
Oot of Goats-
Say one paid $5 per header 100 head
or 500. First year clip of mohair
average of 9 V pound to the gvat at
80 cents a round is 175.
Allowing yon
vsrage vain
raise 60 kid first year,
of 3 at six months or $150, kids and
mohair. I2.'t5. ExDense. two tons of
har and 10 for grain or 130, leaving
you a profit of 205 for the year on 100
head of goats, and if one will lookout
for good bocks every two years he can
increase the mohair one pound every
year, for instance a buck that clips
seven pounds of mohair pnt with
in him besides 30 cents a head for
every kid. While I have bocks clip
ping from teven to 10 pounds per
head, I also have Nannies that clip
from three to nine pounds of mohair
apiece. Some years there is a bigger
profit made than others, while last
year I raised 100 per cent of my kids,
I only raised 60 per cent this year.
What do I lay it to? Both goitre and
a heavy crop of acorns. An over
feed of acorns is as bad as an overfeed
of corn to stock of all kinds. It o
velops the young too fast and makes
them cripples or oat of proportion and
while we have tips and downs in all
things, why shouldn't we in goats?
Don't think goats will live on old
shoes and tin nans; while they will
live on paper signs and green sticks
and leaves and grass bat tbey need all
four of these to live on and excuse the
old shoes and tin cans.
F. A. PIERCE.
Merlin, Ore., Jane 6. 1900.
Formers' Daughters Contest.
One of the biggest schemes for ad
vertising Oregon has been undertaken
in Portland by Philip S. Bates, pub
lisher of Oregon's great agricultural
monthly, the Pacific Northwest. The
proposition is nothing less than the
taking of 83 young ladies, one from
eaoh county of the state to the James
town Exposition which will open
May 15, 1907, at Jamestown, Virginia.
I lie exposition is to commemorate
the first settlement of the English in
the United States which took place in
1H07. This historical event in the
history of our country is one which
gives opportunity for a wonderful ex
ploitation of the great strides which
have taken place in the past 800 years
and the Jumestown Exposition, from
an educational standpoint, will no
donht prove an exceptional andertak
ing aloug these lines. Oue farmer'
daughter from each coauty iu Oregon
will be taken by Mr. Bates. She will
carry a large amount of literature for
general distribution along the lines
of travel which it is expected oni
Boards of Trade will furnish.
The method of choosing our candi
date rests wholly with the farmers'
daughters of our oonnty. They are
all entitled to compete for the honor.
It is a simple proposition depending
on the number of subscriptions sent in
by the candidates. The cost of the
paper is 50 oents a year and from oar
knowledge is folly worth a dollar.
All expenses will be paid and the es
timated cost of the trip is over $10,000.
It will prove a wonderful advertise
ment for our county as Mr. Bates
makes no charge for the work be will
do for ns and we trust his efforts to
make Oregon better known through
oat the United States will receive the
support of everyone in our county.
Very respectfully,
PHILIP S. BATES, Publisher.
New Ruling on Timber Land.
A recent ruling of the land depart
meut requires that timber land entry
men shall show the coadition of land
as ascertained from a personal eiaral
nation NEAR THE DATE OF
PROOF. The department has not
made known by decision just how near
the proof date this examination mut
be made. The evidence, at date of
making proof, must show the condi
tion and charaoter of the land at that
time, and should be based on an ex
amination made sufficiently near the
date to render it reasonably certain
that no ohange has been made in the
condition. The local land office will
hold that 60 or 90 days is not
"mifflnlentlT near th ilnra " Tnaa.
moon M tllere BDOTr,D time
,,mit it would be well for .ntrvm.n
t ...i , n ,
deD0, Mto the condition of the land
at a time not n.ore than two weeks
nrlnr , nr Min. ,n
, ... n .,..-,UUJ .
This may be a precaution as to date
which may be considered by some as
unnecessary and a greater length of
, time might iutervene between date of
examination and the date of proof,
j aud the proof be accepted by the de
I partment, still there is the chance
that it might not be accepted in
which event the matter of additional
affidavits, trouble and expense is sure
10 "P-
Aacknt Rom
is now merely a memory of the put.
Ballard's Snow Liniment is the
family liniment of the twentieth cen
tury. A positive cure for Rbeama
tism, Baros, Oats, Sprains, Neuralgia
etc. Mr. C. H. Ranyon, Stanberry,
Mo., writes: "I have need Snow
Liniment for Rheomatismm and all
pain. I can't say enough In its
praise." For sale by National Drug
Co. and Rotarinand.
ORIGINATED NEW KINDS
OF FINE CHERRIES
C. E. Hoskins. the Noted Cherry
Expert, R-etires From
Active Work.
In the retirement of C. E. Hoskins
from active horticultural work
Rogre River Valley and all Oregon
loses a most valuable man in that in
dustry. Having attained ample
wealth and he and Mrs. Hoskins hav
ing pat in a long, active life they
now propose to enjoy the pleasores of
travel for a year and of visiting the
scenes of their early life in the East
ern States.
Mr. Hoskins is one of the best
posted horticulturists in Oregon and
he is an acknowledged authority on
cherries. He has been making a
specialty of cherry growing for
many years and worked along the
same lines of the famous Burbank, the
California plant wizzard, iu originat
ing new varieties. Several of the
cherries originated by Mr. Hoskins
show remarkably fine qualities and
are likely to prove valuable additions
to the commercial orchard.
Mr. Hoskins came to Rogue River
Valley several years ago from near
Newberg, in Yamhill oonnty for the
health of his family. He located
near Gold Hill where be planted oat
the largest cherry orchard in South
ern Oregon. This orchard he has
sold but be retains two large orchards
that he own near Newberg.
Weekly Crop Report.
The week opened and closed showery
and cool, with an intervening period
of from two to three days with
mild temperatures and clear skies.
The rains on Tuesday and Wednesday
were excessive over limited localities
in the northeast section of the state.
The Umatilla River overflowed its
banks, and did considerable damage
to the streets in the city of Pendleton
and to the bridges and fences along its
coarse from that city to its mouth at
Umatilla. In a fow other localities
in that section farm lands were badly
washed by heavy rains, bnt the good
doue in the larger .territory where the
rains were only moderate, much more
than compensated for the damage
done in the few limited areas where
they were excessive. Friday morning
the temperature was dangerously near
the frost mark, both in the eastern and
western portions of the State, bnt no
frosts were reported. The winds dur
ing the week were generally light aud
me sclv from the west, but some of the
rain squalls were attended by wind
rushes of short duration.
Wait For
Hunger
Good Advice From Rotermund as to
Create an Appetite.
Any physician will tell you that It
is unwise to eat unless one is really
nnngry. it is tar better to miss a
meal than to eat without appettie.
But do not take a tonio, stimulant,
or appetizer to make yon hungry.
Rotermund says that the best way to
create an appetite is to restore the dl
gestion to health by the nse of Mi-o
na stomach tablets, a reliable remedy
that he has used with the best of satis
faction. When Mi-o-na is ased, the irritation
and inflammation of the stomach
coating will be soothed, the gastric
follicle will be strengthened so that
they will poor out the natural diges
tive fluids with regularity, and the
food you eat will be perfectly digested
without distress. All headaches,
sleeplessness, specks before the eyes,
poor appetite, tired feelings, nervous
ness, hack -aches, and other troubles
caused by a poor digestion, will soon
disappear and yon will feel well all
over.
A large box of Mi-o-na stomach tab
lets is sold for 50 cents by Rotermund,
aud it'la so successful and reliable in
caring indigestion and other stomach
troubles, with the exception of cancer
of the stomach, that he sells it under a
guarantee that the money will be re
funded unless it does all that is
olaimed for it.
If you have any stomach weakness.
here i au opportunity to be cored
without risking a cent yourself.
A Guaranteed Care for Ptls.
Itching, Blind. Bleeding. Protrnd-
Ing Piles. Druggists are authorized
to refund money if PAZO OINT
MENT fails to care in 6 to H days.
The Courier is the leading paper oi
Josephine County.
has stood tha
bottles.
Ikv thk tw
' 11 ' - mrmrm -a
BTBJCIOSSI wittwajry
tl ' BB
Buy
IIEKE WITHOUT BECOMING
A FRIEND TO THE STORE
Scores of come again-and-again
customers testify to this. The
only reason we can give for this
clothing 6tore loyalty is that our
suits wear longer, fit better, look
dressier, than other stores for
the price,
$7.oo to $22
a Suit
Southern Oregon Supply
...Company...
Sixth Street, opposite City Hall
Outfitters in Clothing, Tailoring, Gents' Furnishings,
Groceries, Flour, Feed, Hay and Grain.
Hair-Riddle
Only
r uu
J 1 ' cai
toofT
-fMNiKOKALrlLiS
se-re exnd nlia.bU. the
overcome WMknm, tn.
visor. Iwnuh pains,
no romadv miii. nu
?0JJ?ENNVIYAL PILLS
S&ve's 1 asteless Chill
test 25 yean. Aveni A.a.i cT,
miuSjt V m awes
1 or merit a&peal to von ?
lliiL
va lUta tfc
Clothing
ill
Miss China Lee
You soon will see
Is just as neat as she
can be.
The reason why
You soon will spy:
CHI-NAMEL is her
old standby.
CHI-NAMEL is a liquid finish for
floors, interior woodwork and furniture
that is far superior tu any other made.
It is used by the Chinese to give that
fine brilliant finish to their bamboo and
other wares, which withstand bending
and banging, without cracking or mar
ring the brilliant and glossy finish.
It conies in all the hardwood
finishes, such as Oak, Walnut,
Cherry, Mahogany, Rosewood,
Satinwood, etc., and will withstand
hot and cold water and soap.
We will boil it in water for you
or pound it with a hammer, and
will guarantee that what we sell
you will stand the same test
FOR SALE ONLY BY
Hardware Co.
One Tubular
Separator
The Sharpies Tubular Separators thk only
tubular cream separator made.
TUBULAR SEPARATORS
Have supply cans hardly waist high-a simple
S: ?1? enclosed, self oiling gears-a
single ball beanng-and the world1! record
W and turniD- Let me
K,vc you a cataloe.
1 1 c ' y Medford, Ore.
fs;
kPUe
Dr. WlllUmn' tndlmn Pll
Ointment will cure Blind.
HlMHlitll. InH ltjhinf
Piles. It abflnrtis thn tumon.
allays tta Itching at once, scu
let. Dr. Wuiudu-Indian Pile Olnt-
i.. .v ' "prepared for PI lea and 1 ten
-5. Pr"rt Parts. El-try box li
o nf . i arumista, 07 mall on re-
mm
Tonic
vIIIC
vAr3 009 0 HKiaca
No Core, No Pay. 50c
Ml
u
Vi.. -ropa Cleveland On:
; vussjaf
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