ROGUE RIVER COURIER. GRANTS PASS, OREGON, JUNE 8. 1906. It. M 4 7 . . r yon The season for Strawberry Short cake ought to make everybody smile. Berries now coming in quite freely but we need more sunshine to have cheaper berries. Price this week $1.25 per crate, 3 boxes for 25c, Doxes tor dc. Z) Crape Fruit Fancy Naval Oranges 40 and 60c aoz Lemons 20 and 25c d Bananas 30 and 40c New Potatoes, New Red Onions, New Cabbage Tiat Mild Cheese 20c per pound. Boiled Ham, we slice it, 30c pound. Heinz Apple Butter. Just arrived, auolber Fresh Lot of O. & 8. COFFEE and TEA. One PoMEiigllsli Breakfast Tea 25c. One pound of (Toffee (better than the average 25 or 30c kind) for 20c at Uha White House GROCERY COMING EVENTS. Jane 18, Monday Annual encampment begins at Grants Pass of Sou; hern Oregon Soldiers and Sailors Reunion Association. Jane 20. Wednesday Annual encamp msnt begins at Grants Pass of De partment of Oregon, G. A. R. Jnne 23, Saturday Meeting of fruit growers at the Oourier ofiioe at 1 p. m. to organize a fruitgrowers nniou. July 11-20, Southern Oregon Chautau qua Assembly held at Ashland. Christian Church Annual Basket Meeting Next Sunday Next Sunday there will be an all day service at the Christian church. Mr. Bower will speak in the morn ing on "The Elements Which Make the Church," after which a dinner will be enjoyed together in the lecture room. At 3:30 p. m. the church will meet in business session to hear re ports of all departments of the work for the past year, to choose elders and deacons for future work and to make some definite plana as a guiding star for the coming year. The evening services and the Sunday school at 10 a. m. will be as usual. Members from all over the county 'are urged to be present and friends will be welcome at all service. Readers can draw their own conclu sion from the following item in the recent proceedings of the Med ford council as published in the Daily Tribune of that place : An ordinance to regulate the salaries of polioe omcers was read three times. and passed. Salaries were placed at $58 per month. Equal to $4fi real money, and officers were forbidden to graft. Steel Range with at Cramer Bros. reservoir for 135 Loveridje ...ART STUDIO... II St bet 6th and 7 th Portraits In -Platinum and Tlrlato Platlno A Specialty Perfect Satisfaction Always vvvvv Cbunt, weigh and mewmrt everything fmy." American Uroeer. All. BANNARD At the Big Furniture Stote, North Sixth Street, is receiving new goods almost daily in Furniture and House Furnishings Also a very large lot of WALL PAPER se cured ju st before the big fire at bottom prices. A large lot'ofjold Istock Wall Paper atJlyonr own'price. Building Paper at 25Jofusual price. Goodsjsoldjon installmentplan. 1 You lose'money byjnot visiting Bannard's store. i Undertaking. ; Items of Personal Xi Interest. ; Win. Fiy baa taken a position L P. Orr'i drug store at Ashland. Lonnie Moon of Portland is visit ing friends in Grants Pass this week. Misses Muselle and Adella Mnlkey left Wednesday evening for their home at Myrtle Creek. Mr. and Mrs Bert Barnes and baby, ara visiting friends and relatives in Ashland this week. Mrs. Emily Stevens of Gold Hill is spending a few days in Grants Pass, the guest of Mrs. M. E. Horr. Miss Gertie McCallister left last week for Seattle, Wash., where she expects to remain for some time. Miss Vesta Terke, who is employed on the Glendale paper, is visiting her mother in Grants Pass this week. W. L Sweetland was at Medford Tuesday on a business trip in con nection with bis meat market in this city. Lyle Stevens, went to Oakland, Ore., Staurday evening to visit his parenta He returned to Grants Pass Tuesday. C. R. Wilson, who made a rich quartz find on Saidine creek . near Gold Hill this past Winter, has sold his claim to Eastern men for 120,000 and they are now developing it, to put on machinery. Miss Vida Moore, daughter of Dr. J. S. Moore, now of Portland and formerly of this city, is spending the week in Grants Pass visiting friends while being a guest at tbe home of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Jewell. Colonel W. S. Wood left Thursday evening for San Franolsoo where be will go into business. Mrs. Wood re mains in Grants Pass and with her son, John R. Hyde will continue the management of the Palace hotel. ' J. H. Austin, the Kerby attorney who lacked but a few votes of win ning tbe democratic nomination for representative in the late primary election, was in Grants Pass this week attending to legal business before the county court. Miss Dolly Williams returned to Grants Pass Tuesday evening from Santa Lucas, Cal., and will reside here with her father in the future. Miss Williams was accompanied by Mies Brown, who will visit with her for several weeks. Mrs. Will Hill, who was operated upon two weeks ago by Dr. Lough ridge for appeodioitis and for the removal of an abdominal tumor, is now able to be about "her room and will soon leave the Southern Oregon Hospital for her home in this city. Rae Benson, formerly of this plaoe but later of San Franolsoo, has re turned to Grants Pass to reside and will resume his position as book keeper with the California Pine Box & Lumber Co. Mrs. Benson and the children will join Mr. Benson later. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Stovall went to Corvallis Tuesday evening to at-, tend the wedding of Mr. Stovall's sis- j ter. Mr. Stovall will also deliver an , address to the Alumni Association of ! the Agricultural College at that plaoe. i Ihey expect to be absent about 10 j days. A. E. Voorhies left Tuesday to join Mrs. Voorhies and Earle at Portland, I en route to attend the National Ed- j itorial convention at Indianapolis. Tbey will visit friends in Chioago and Ohio points, and also visit Mrs. Voor hies' parents at Greenville, Mich., where Mrs. Voorhies and Earlo will spend the Summer. Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Green have traded their property on South Sixth street for the store building and stock of goods on Sixth street opposite the Court House belonlgng to Mrs. M. in Brown. Mr. Green Is a professional candy maker and they will add a fine assortment of pure, fresh home made candies to their stock of notions and dry goods. Coroner Flanagan was called- to Galice Tuesday to investigate the cause of death of Francis Pendleton, found dead in his cabin in the settle ment. From indications the man had been dead a month and from natural causes He was an old soldier, 75 years old and lived by himself. He had no known relatives and the body was in such a state that burial was made near the cabin. Mrs. Lee Calvert and children re turned last Friday evening from Phoenix whete they bad spent the week with relatives the greater part of the time at tbe home of Mrs. Cal vert's brother, W. R. Coleman, a merchant of Phoenix and who was elected by a large majority olerk of Jackson county at tbe electionMonday. Mrs. Calvert attended the Decoration Day exercises at Phoenix in tbe ceme tery of which is interred the remains of her father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. John Coleman, who came to this Valley in 1863. T. L. Masters, who left Grants Pass last February for the Blue Ledge district on the Upper Applegate, was in this city Monday and Tuesday. Mr. Masters has taken up a quartz claim on tbe head of Elliott creek seven miles east of Joes Bar that several assays show to be very promis ing. Several other claims in that vicinity are being developed by other parties that are showing up well. Mr. Masters thinks that the distriot about tbe head of the Applegate river will become one of the richest oopper and gold sections of Southern Oregon. W. R. Rannie, plumber for Hair Riddle Hardware Company, lost his right eye Monday in a most peculiar accident. He was filing on a boiler when the file slipped and the end penrtrated the eye cutting the ball so seveiely as to totally ruin tbe sight and make its removal necessary. This was done by Dr. Find ley at the Southern Oregon General Hospital. The injury is healing very fast and Thursday Mr. Rannie was able to leave the Hosplal and go to his home. So soon as the cavity is healed a false eye will be fitted to it by Dr. Findley so to protect the delicate membraue and to prevent disfigurement. The other eye not being injured Mr. Ran nie will be able to resume his work in a short time. ART SCHOOL Of Grants Pass Conducted by Prof. Geo. O'Brien Through conrse of instruction in all branches of fine and industrial art, ao oordsng to the Methods in vogue in the large eastern acadmiea. Drawing, Painting, Modeling, Architroture etc. Clan Tuition 25 centi and upward For further particulars apply at room 6, Maeonio Temple, from 9 to 18 a. m. BORN. LONG At Grants Pasi, Ore., Satur day, June 2, 1908, to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L Long, a daughter. DAVIS At Grants Pass, Oregon, Wednesday, June 6, 1906, to Mr. and Mrs. James Davis, a son. MARRIED. HUTCH1N3 McAHRON In Grants Pas. Ore., on Wednesay evening. June 6, 1906, at the parsonage of j tne xtewmao jn. r,. cnurcn, cuwara W. Hutchins and Miss Lnra Mo Ahron, both of Medford, Rev. C. O. Beck man officiating. VEATCH PARKER In Bethany Presbyterian chnroh in Grants Pass on Wednesday, June ft, '.906, at 8:30 Lin.. Mr. Elbert Veatch to Mis ura Parker, Rev. Robert McLean officiating. Pmwinflv of thA Hma flrnd in ttlA music of Mendelesehon's Wedding I Marob rendered on the piano by Mrs. : H. C. Kinney and Miss Ethel Palmer the bridal procession patted from the church parlors to a place before the altar where stood Rev. Robert Mo- change comes pretty near telling what Lean and in the simple, yet beautiful constitutes a true gentleman: "A service of the Presbyterian church j man that's clean inside and outside; made the young couple husband and ! who neither looks up to the rioh nor wife. The bride was attended by her down on the poor; who can lose with sister, Miss Gussie Parker and the ; out squealing and can win without groom by Roy Hackett The church j bragging; who is considerate to was tastily decorated with roses pink women, children and old people; who and white being the color effect, j i too brave to lie, too generous to There were manv friends nreient and chest, and who takes his share of the ' the presents were numerous and both 1 artistio and useful. Thursday morn ing Mr. and Mrs. Veatch left for Portland and the Sound on a short : wedding tour and on their return they ! will occupy a neat cottage on North Third street that Mr. Veatch has bad I built. Mr. Veatch Is a bookkeeper in tbe Grants Pass Banking & Trust i Company's bank and is a young man of fine character and manly habits and his bride is the daughetr of Mr. and I Mrs. Geo. H. Parker. Sbe is a young lady trained in all tbe attainments that go to make a perfect woman and ' she is popular in tbe full circle of her acquaintance and both have a host of ! friends who feel certain tbat marriage ... . . .. ..... i will not be a failure in their home. DIED. LEMMONS At Williams. Ore., Jnne 6, 1906, Charles Lemmons, aged 87 yearsand 10 months. ' ' ; A Brief Record of ' c Local Events. Hammocks from f 1 np at Cramer Bros. Tbe Palace hotel is now under the management of John R. Hyde, who will assume all accounts and collect all bills. June U will be "Flag Day" throughout the United States and the National colors will be paid due honor on that day. Miss Azella Mulkey and sister Miss Mulkey of Grants Pars came np today for a few days visit ' to Ashland friends. Ashland Tidings. M. E. Horr is having an addition built to his dwelling, on Second and O streets, that will add both to tbe convenience and appearance of his house. "Tbe Dalles hus set the paoe for Oregon on tbe clean-up proposition," says the Portland Journal in an arti cle telling about it. The paoe is all right, but the stopping is what hurts. We don't know what to do with the "rake-off. "The Dalles Chronicle. W. H. Tate, lately in business in Ashland, has rented the Hall building on Sitxh and C streets and has opened an ice cream, oon feet ion and notion store. Mr. Tate is fitting up an at tractive stand and announces that be will serve the trade with the best in bis line. Secretary of State Dunbar has had printed and will oirculate throughout the state a large number of notices, printed upon white muslin, to be posted in tbe timber sections as a warning to violators of the laws for the protection of tbe forests and tim ber of the state. The Co-operative Creamery Associa tion has been organized for the por pouse of building a creamery at Cen tral Point. The Herald says: "The following were elected as an executive committee to represent the subscribers during tbe erection of the creamery R. C. Henley, Tyson Beal, J. M. Upton, M. Marshall and S. K. Adams. A handsome improvement is being made by the Chautauqua Association at the north entrance to their park between the Camps building and the Elk's Hall. A ten foot walk has been graded down the center and about five feet of lawn has been planted down each side, making a great improve ment over its former appearance. Tidings. Kesterson Sc Silsby of this city who for tbe past three Summers have operated two mills on Evans creek are operating but one this season. The upper or Pleasant creek mill, they have moved to West Fork and have it ereoted and will put it in operation next week. With the two mills it is expeoted to put out 60,000 feet of lum ber por day. all sugar pine. Grants Pass Assembly, No. 8, Lin coln Annuity Union, initiated nine candidates Saturday evening. The local Assembly is the oldest in the state. There is now 46 thriving As semblies in the state of Oregon and the Order is making the greatest growth of any Order on the Pacifio Coast. There will be over 20 candidates initiated in the A. O. U. W. hall Sat urday evening. Friends in this city have received word from Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Scott that the Btork lias mado its first visit at their home and left in their keep ing a fine girl baby. Mr. Scott is an electrician in the employ of tbe Con dor Water Light & Power Company and he and his wife resided in Grants i Pms ontil this Spring when he was transferred to Central Point to take I.I - tt. . ' K 1.. . L. . . uimrgv VI II I B KUm'9UIJ WUI. 1U ilia. town. The following definition in an ex- world and lets other people have theirs." Tbe Young People's Christian Tem perance Union gave a Silver Medal Contest st the Woodman Hall last Friday evening. It was one of the most interesting prorgama In that line, that has ever been given here for a long time. Tbere were five contestants and each one was deter mined tbat tbe medal should be awarded to them. This made the oon test very close indeed. The contest ants were. Misses Wilna Gilkey. Ethel Riggs and Ella Savage and Messrs. Georse Birdseye and Harry Gordon. In., u.j.i . . i-a t uiu wiin Ill, MWI TT wv .. . . .u,.,.. - i..n. there were six or seven musical num bers, both instrumental and vocal, making an exceedingly interesting program. SOME BARGAIN POINTERS News Note From the Business Men to Readers. Dr. Flanagan, Physioian and Dentist Dr. M. C Findley, Ocalist, Anrist, licensed optician. Goto Coron for Plumbing. Sewer Pipe at Cramer Bros. M. Clement. Prescription Druggist. Tents and Wagon Covers at Cramer Bros. A splendid line of Royal Charter Oak Ranges at Coron 'i Order seals and rubber 'stamps of A. E. Voorhies. Letcher is the only licensed optician in Josephine uounty. Fishing Taokle that catches Ash is sold at Cramer Bros. For a e'eau bed and a good meal try the Western Hotel. Maps of Oregon Wash in ton and California at the Musio Store. White Mountain Freezers at Cramer Bros. New Shirt Waists. Prioes cannot be met at Mrs. E. Rebkopf & Co. And still I am insuring and selling real estate at tbe old stand. J. E. Peterson. Pattons Sun Proof Paint guaran teed for five years is sold only by Cramer Bros. Placer and quarts location notoes, mine deeds, leases, eta, at tbe Courier office. New Spring goods arriving every day. All the latest novelities at Mrs. E. Rehkofp & Co. 4-Btf Camp Stoves with cast Tops at Cramer Bros. Send your family washing to tbe Sream Laundry. All rough dry work 25 cent per dozen. Phone 878. Photos made at Art Gallery (big tent) on F street are good. Stop in, see samples and be convinced. 6-8 2t Dr. W. F. Kremer will hereafter be in his office in the Courier building from 7 to 8 o'clock each evening. 2-tftf Your clothes called for and delivered and all flatwork that goes through the mangle washer, ironed at 28o per dozen. Grants Pass Steam Laundry. Phone 873. Bailders Hardware at Cramer Bros. Letoher has Just received another stock of lenses and oan fit all kinds of eyes. His apparatus for the testing of vision is all up-to-date and tl. moat reliable kind. 0 sVmios Unns.&Ca ' tint C lolhu Makers I1 F you think you alike, Clothes. The way they and a big one. tailoring is responsible materials are as good Just drop your "Raady-Made" long enough Schlobs Suit. You'll find than the averge custom-tailor's work. We have all the latest styles. Come and see them. Suits P. H. Harth Walk Over Shoes. Fish 11 If your tackle is all right, and that means Flies and Hooks as well as Line, Pole and Reel. We have always been able to sell the tackle that brought the fish, and can do the same this year. If you are going where there are trout, come and see our stock. Cramer Bros. Odd Fellow' Block Cane Poles. Expert Reels. Who la It Wants to buy or trade Grants Pass residence property for a first class, up-to-date newly furnished Hotel in Willamette Valley town on main line of S. P. Ry. Everything bright and new; good, commercial trade. No opposition. Address Box 104, Halsey, Ore. 6-1 It. Tea was cultivated in Cbini years before the Christian era. ,8700 OtfcWCO O.W Iw, Bite all ready-made Clothes are haven't seen our Scnxoss look is one difference Extra good styling and for that and the as the tailoring. predjudice againBt to try on a it far better $10 to $25 & Son, Inc. Stetson and Panama Hats