Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1909)
4 i i. . I FRIDAY, JULY 23, 109. THK ROGUB BTVEB COURIER. Y - imm , PROFESSIONAL CARDS I JUST ANOTHER BROKEN HEART M. 0. FINDLEY, M. D. Practice limited to BYE, BAR, NOSH nd THROAT. Glasses flttod and furnished. Office hours 9 to If. 2 to 6; and appointment. Phones 261 4b 77. Grants Pass, Oregon. S. LOUGIIRIDGE. M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Ros. Phone 714 City or country calls attended day r night. Sixth and II, Tuffs Bldg. Office Phone 261. Grants Pass, - Oregon. DR. C. A. CAMPBELL, OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Graduate American School of Osteo pathy, Klrksviue, mo. Chronic Diseases and Diseases of Wo men and Children a specially. CONSULTATION FREE. Rooms 1, 2, 3, 1st Nat'l. Bank Bldg Phones: Ofllce 771; Res. 793. Grants Pass, - Oregon I f l CtUnt .... v. iu !v the xernwiT ehjc tnomy w u w . bont money to come here with, and also us soumu . . - ereed.to pay her way back, If everything was not satisfactory. It Is understood that he kept his wora. B. . DcVORE, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON City and County calls promptly answered. Office hours, 9 to 12 a.m. and 2 to 5 p. m. Phones: Res. 473; Office 941. Rooms 1, 2, 3, Sballhorn Dldg. Grants Pass, Oregon. H. D. NORTON, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice In all State and Federal Courts. Office Opora House Bldg. Grants Pass, Oregon. OLIVER 8. BROWN, LAWYER Office Cor. 5th and F Sts. Grants Pass, Oregon 0. S. BLANCIIARD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Ranking & Trust Co. Bldg. Grunts TaNS, Oregon. Hi WeuroffroHnm-lltir illrwt fnmi ui .NO AGENTS Our Trii nr Knmti iitrlrflr WITHOUT IRRIGATION Wrllo (nr fn-e rnlloil. Lurwi tlork nf vun.'tli nKuilnl.lt' fur iinni n iul .-n lmr.l Oa'f (nil, Nut tud OrnimiMilnl Troi, Qr,p Vitwi, Bmill fruit Plants ind Shrubbery TlllC DaM.KS Nl'ltHMIlIKH lUluOltlwi, llruuil Ava.l'iirtUnii.Oro. First National Bank OF Southern Oregon Grants lVss, Oregon Boms of tho Sorvice that a Bank Renders tho Public DEPOSITS '1 lie nudist ami Miiiikt wy nt ketiiiiK your iiiaiuy U ly i1xMtlnn it in lUlialiU lirttik. 'J'liU Hunk receives lu- pOPtU ,UlljtH't l "CK, or on ilimmml IVrtillfntcN o( dectmlt or on Uuie feriinVsU of DeponiUi. On time deHiti py 4 PER CENT 1NTEFES1 DRAFTS Tlio best ami chtiaptwl w to irmitifsr money Is l.r flunk Draft. Ws unll lrlu pvl)li In all lrl of the oouuiry. LOANS Ons ul the saott Impor Unl faupUom of ins Htnk. We endeavor to supiily all roMouaUlt n(li of our ouitomen. Under the above caption the Med ford Morning Mall publishes the fol lowing story which reads like a rom ance but which Is undoubtedly true. The matrimonial newspaper seems to thrive by the patronage it receives from a class of women who are look Ine for husbands. Here Is the story without further comment: Wanted A wife, by a man hold ing a responsible position In a west ern city. A widow witn money win be preferred. Am well fixed finan cially and am known by every one where I live. Correspondence so licited and photos exchanged. Ad dress E. R., Medfoirt, Or." After considerable correspondence In answer to an advertisement in a matrimonial paper, Mrs. Addle Stow ell a widow of about 40 years of UKfi, decided to take her chances and cohie to this city from her comfort able home in Holyoke, Mass. She arrived here Tuesday evening, and after waiting about 20 minutes, Ed Root introduced himself as the man 8he was waiting for. Root Met Her. People around the depot at the time wondered who the nice-looking lady was that Ed was talking to and who appeared to be on the verge of fainting. She talked with him for a lew minutes,' anu nurrjiug nwnj, looked up Chief of Police Shearer, to whom she related her tory. The chief got her a room at the Emerlck and yesterday afternoon she took the train back to her home, a Badler and, it Is to be hoped, a wiser woman. To a reporter of the Morning Mall Mrs. Stowell told of how she came to tako the Journey here and what she expected after she arrived. "I saw the advertisement in a matri monial paper," she said, as she tried to keep back the tears, "and I wrote to the address more In a spirit of fun than anything else. I have been a widow for six years and thought If Hit' man who had the ad was a nice one I would like to have com pany, as I nm nil alone.' Corresponded Si Months. "After corresponding for about hIx months, Mr. Root wrote me that If 1 would come here that he would meet nio at Ashland. We were to u;o lo Seattle, and after getting mar ried see the fair and return to live In Medford. I had the photograph he sentr me In return for the one I Hint him. I looked all around the depot at Ashland, but failed to see tiny one who looked like the pic hire. 1 then came on to Medford to look him up. After 1 had waited nhonf 20 minutes nt the depot nuin I had seen nt Ashland ap oniarhed me and Introduced him self." "What did vou think then?" she was asked. "For merry's sake, don't ask me! uiis her reply, Mr. Knot, dressed In his best suit of clothes was nt the depot whim the lady was waiting for the 3 train going south, lie was also there when the train pulled out, but the lady apparently failed to look out of the window of the tourist car w here she had her seat. Renily for Wedding. Mrs. Stowell also stated that she bud ;ot everything ready for the wedding ami bad two trunks full of things with her. When she left she wns not tho same looking happy faced woman who arrived the day before, but had every appearance of one whose heart had been broken. Those who knew the circumstances connected with the case felt sorry that such a sad thing had happened to any one coming to Medford. In justice to Ed Root it should ho stated that it Is said on good au- Cet DeWltfs Carbollzed Witch Hazel Salve when you ask for it. There are a great many Imitations, but there Is Just one original. This salve is good for anything where a salve Is needed to he used, hut . It is especially good for Piles. - Sold by all druggists. Daughter of Confederacy Dead. Mrs. Margaret Howell Jefferson Davis Hayes, daughter of Jefferson r .-v,n Hipd at her home at LfariOj " " " l Colorado Springs, Colo., Monday last, aged 54 years, will rest with the Davisos in the family lot at Rich mond, Va. According to present plans the funeral will be held from the Colorado Springs residence, Wed nesday, attended by Immediate friends. The body will afterwards ho rakpn to the receiving vault at Evergreen Cemetery there, where It will remain until fall, when It will be taken to Richmond. Special ser vices will be held at St. Paul's church, Richmond, the family church at the time of the burial. rv dav of our lives. Barns ana scalds either slight or serious are bound to happen In your family, be prepared by having a bottle of Ballard's Snow Liniment handy, u relieves the pain instantly and quick ly heals the burn. 11.1 MESS YOUNG BLOODS TURN HOLDUPS A dispatch from Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, dated last Monday gives most astonishing news. Charged with holding up and rob bing Charles Reyn, a Swede, of $17.05,. in the rear of the Lake City hardware Btore, Marshal Nevlln, or Los Angeles; Horace Peyton, son of Colonel I. N. Peyton, Spokane mil llonalre and pioneer, and Percy Thompson, son of D. M. Thompson a wealthy Spokane man, were arrest ed here last night, Thompson and Peyton being later relensed on $500 bonds each. Nevlln was placed in jail and Is held under $10,000 boiul3 because Hip nurse aliened to belong to the Swede was found in his overcoat pocket. Officers claim Reyn was en route home with a bottle of beer under his arm, when throe' men took him Into an alley, claiming to be policemen, and went through hi Dockets. A crowd assembled, and secret service men took the buys I; charge. Officer Steele held the bovs near the Silver drill. Nevlin cUunh', he knows nothlng,of the purse in lib pocket or how It. came to be there. JepiWla&d Suxplui 7I,000 Stoctholdsn' Additional i Responsibility $M,000 OFFICERS U. H. IUm., IWdinl J. O. Curmu, VlM-l'rM. II U Oti.siT, OMbtor R. tC, lltuim, ,A. 0hUr Williams' Talcum Powder Four reasons for the rap idly growing popularity of Williams' Talcum Powder. 1. The finest Talc the world affords. 2. The sweetest, dain tiest perfumes. 3; Most artistic boxes. 4. The Hinged Top that prevents sticking, leaking and loss of per fume. For Sale By t n SELLS VKUlrt The Rind That Always Holds Jewell Hdwe. Co. N. E. McQREW, PIONEER TRUCK and DELIVERY Furniture and Piano Uovlng (I RANTS PASS, ORISON CEMENT CEMENT Coffee The kind that mikrs the break, fist -ival Coffee throuRh and through - always the aame. Your frwer will grind it better if ground at home not too fine. TcrKt'i80!.M ami Curt news. Time was nnd not so many years since when it was considered bad form to say "Thanks" Instead of "Thank yon," nnd children were rightly rebuked by their ciders for so doing. Again, a vulgarism that has even crept Into the vo alnilary of those who might reasonably he expected to speak with greater pre cision Is "sorry," which Is used in lieu of "1 beg your pardon." The telephone Is undoubtedly re sponsible for many abbreviations which we now use In the course of our speech, but the whole tendency of the time Is toward tersr-iies, as It Is called. As often as not It, conies perilously near to eurtnos-i, and cer tainly It Jars most unpleasantly on sensitive ears to hear conservation carried on In what can only be de scribed as the di.tlon of invoice clerks, to whom every moment and almost every syllable counts. The average person In private life however, Is not so pressed for time that he or she must express them selves alphabetically nnd monosyl lahlcally, to use two very long words. Pedantry of speech bores and slang Is often most expressive, but this cutting down and chipping off can in no way bo defended. The Income Amendment. Congressman Hnwley of this dis trict has kindly furnished the iourier, lor publication, the pro j posed amendment to.the constitution jof the I'nltod States which will per- tnlt a tax to be levied on Incoiuei. I The Joint resolutions passed by the senate rends as follows: ; "Resolved by the Sennte and i House of Representatives of the , I'nlted States of America In Consrof s assembled (two-thirds of each House concurring therein), That the fol lowing article Is proposed as nn amendment to the Constitution of the Vnlted States, which, when rati fied by the legislatures of three' fourths of the several states, shall be valid to all Intents and purpose. as n part of the Constitution' " 'Article XVI. The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on Incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, nnd with out regard to any census or cnum'r: Hon.' 'Tasted the Senate .T nlv tin 1 OUR n run blOlLll 0 FEED AND BOOKS CHICHESTER S PILLS THK 1HAMONB ItKANn. A I.aiiU .I A.U your ItrupirUt lot , ('M'i'tiuiMi'r IHutnonijI lirnnd I'lll. in lird .ml Gold nietalllc t.on, ic.ilnl itn Hiu Kiiiuon. TLa nn ttthfF. Ilnr ff Tour lniirtt- Askf'orf'IIM'IfV.M.TFn lIAMI)M ItltAMt rll.l.. f. r B5 rears known u nest, Sufeit, )'. - kfllal la SOlDBVORtlGGISTSEl:.,.AHEGE HERE IS RELIEF FOB WOMEN. If you have pains In tlie lack, Urinary, Dlad dot or Kidney trouble and waul a cerluin, ploaaaut herb relief from Women's Ills, try Mother Gray's "At'Sl'KAl.lAN-I.KAr." It la fate, rcliablo ro -iil.iior, ai d relieves all Femulo Weakness, liieliidini! In'lfimtivition and ulcerations. Mother ir:iy's Aintriilinn-Lout' is sold by Drnrel-ts or e-it '' mil for 60 cts. Sample sent t KtE. Addriiw, Uco Mother Gray Co., LoKoy, N.V. Grants Pass Feed Store Corner Gth and J Streets. MAXZAXITA .A school for boys, Palo HALL Alto, Cal., will give your boy a thorough preparation for college, wnlle training him to be alrong, self-reliant and manly. Spe cial attention given to preparation for Stanford. Absence of rigid classi fication permits rapid advancement. Ample facilities for" athletic sports. Write for Illustrated catalogue. W. A. Shedd, Head Master. 7-2-8t Legal Blanks at the Courier. Poison Oak Poisoning. Ballard's Snow Liniment cures it. Mr. O. H. P. Cornelius, Turner, Ore., writes "My wife has discovered that Snow Liniment cures 'Poison Oak Poisoning,' a very painful trouble. She not only cured a case of it on herself, but on two of her friends who were poisoned by this same ivy." Price 25c, 50c and $1.00. As Usual Fence Four Carloads delivered last week THEUK IS MORE PAGE FENCE SOLD IN THIS COUNTRY THAN ALL OTHER MAKES COMBINED THERE IS A REASON BKST WIRE, HE3T STYLES, MOST MEASONAliLE PRICES Page Sabbit, StocK and Poultry - - - - Fences LEADS THEM ALL AND WE CAN PROVE IT Why pay almost as much for a soft, flimsy wire fence that the manufac turers of insist for "protection against stock, three, four or more strands of barbed wire" should be stretched along side the so-called rabbit fence to protect the hinge Joints and trip hammer klnki from Injury by stock, when you can buy a real 54-Inch PAGE Rabbit-Stock FENCE A fence that is all fence able to protect itself, stands the enormous com bined breaking strain of over 17,000 pounds, requires fewer posts, has 5 spaclngs at the bottom of only 1 V Inches, next spaces only 2 Inches and so on up, We assist In the erection of and guarantee every rod to be superior to any fence of this style sold In this country and this fence sells for ONLY 5Sc (PE(R DOD) Remember that fencing is our business and If we hare not whal yon want we can get It for you. ' , Investigate all other fences then call and let us prove to you the vast superiority of PAGE FENCE and get our prices. Gaddis & Dixon "Tt PACE FENCE MEN" J. D. FRANKLIN, Local Representative Oil'ce with C jron-Ilooth Hardware Company GRANTS PASS OR.ECON ii,I lbon 744 limtita !', Ore, !.-.uhmj'slib; S