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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1909)
FRIDAY,. AUGUST 27, THE ROGUE RIVER COURIER. PAGE TWO PROFESSIONAL CARDS z . v m .. Practice limited to J, EAR, NOSH and THROAT. Glasses fitted and furnished. Office hours 9 to 12; 2 to 6; and a appointment. Phones 261 k 77. trants Pasa, Oregon. S. LOUGKEIDGE. M. D. PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON Res. Phoie 714 City or country calls attended day r night. Sixth and H, Tuffs Bldg. Office Phone 2(1. OraaU Pass, Oregosi. B. F. DeVORE, M. D. ' PHTIICIAN AND SURGEON aty and County calls promptly answered. Oflce hours, 9 to 12 a.m. and 2 to i p. m. Phones: Res. 471; Offloe 941. Rooms 1, 2, I, Bballbora Bld. Grants Pass, Orrf: DIt. II. O. KIMHLEY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN General, Acute and Chronic Practice Office Hours: 9 to 12 and 1 to 5 p. m. Other hours by appointment Phones: Office 176, Residence 1053 Roams 201 and 202 Conklln Bldg. Grants Paas Oregon NASH & PUTTER Carpenters Day or Contract Work Hox 478 819 N. Tenth St., Grants Pass, Ore. 8-20-4t J. S. McMUIUlAY Voice Cultuie Studio over Residence nail's Art Store T16 Lee Street H. D. NORTON, ATTORNBY-AT-LAW Practice In all State and Federal Courts. Office Opera House Bldg. Grants Pans, Oregon. OLIVER S. BROWN, LAWYBIR Office over MIJou Theater. Grants Phhh, Orcgou. 6, S. BLANCHARI), ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Practice In nil State and Fttdoral Courts. HnnUIn & Trust Co. Bldf. GriuitH Pans, Oregon. GRANTS PASS TRUCK CO. V. ( '. Try, 1'i ojm ii . IT.OMI'I l III I I Mtl.i: sri; K i: I'iiiui's mill (h-mui H ' i' 1 1 1 1 I ; 1 1 1 i 'III. lie - I 1,1.1 'I i .1-' . It C E M E ii 7 C E I'vl E i v 1 i;. ii. (.11 1 ii, I. w I'linne 711 (.iMuth I'ahk, ore. First National Bank OF Southern Oregon (ium r,e Oiq mh Sonittof the Sn vice that a Hank Renders the Public DEPOSITS Till' Mll'"t I Mlupll-l war et kwnii(i your mill') ii by iii'io.iliii(! It in H lUlml'lc l,iiik. This iuW rweivw l" piiail hjrct tn ( lii, or an ditintn1 ( iirtillmtiM t 4il or nu tlnm tVllfti'!! lit lH'iilH. On ttii duptwltn wt pay 4 PL'S CUNT INTb'RESl DRAFTS Th lMt Ulil chrapasl t to liamfar mnaav it Iv Phi I lrfv W II frru pajaUa In ftll parti of tut wintry. tOANS Ob of Ua m Impor toat (hwMlMi W Ua IKak. W hAmtm ta I'fly ail rvaaonabl Ji a( tur rttia. 3iteUi4 olni trt00 jahfcWf ' AUitUDlt Kvib4irtr M.o orrtcERs L. . Mtu, fpaaUanl i, 0. Uivtau, TWa-TrM. U Iun, CaaaVau ft. 1. aacvm, A4. OaaMat THE UNITED COPPER- GOLD MINES CO. Work Ml the Property on rickelt Creek I'rojtrt'ttHluK Road Completed. Things are very lively these days down on Pickett Creek, In the new mining camp established by the United Copper-Gold Mines company. A crew of thirty men Is employed In the development of the property and the general Improvement of the camp. A fine mountain road haa been built from Booth ferry to th-s main tunnel of the property, and over this road the company Is now hauling Its machinery and equipment for the extensive development of the mine. A compressor, machine drills and power plant are being Installed, and the driving of the tunnels will be pushed with the best possible speed. Though Pickett Creek Is one of the older placer districts of Jose phine county, Its quartz mines have not received much attention till re cent years. It has come to light that many promising ledges are awaiting development In this district. While most of them are low grade, the values are stable and dependable, and present a composition that offers excellent Bmelting possibilities. The main ledge on the property of the United Copper-Gold Mines company holdings Is In the form of a huge lode, fully 600 feet in width, but with excellent ore on a breast of 150 feet. The values, as shown by assay, average close to $20 a ton, In the proportion of $6.40 In gold, $3.20 In silver and $9.80 In copper. Develop ment Is being done by direct tunnels, two adits being driven on the lode. As the ore carries an abundance of silica, lime and sulphur, It Is a fine smelting rock, and the company is planning, In fact, has contracted with a Portland manufacturing com pany, for the construction of a 50 ton smelter. This reduction plant as a first "unit" will be Installed on n site selected for It nt the base of the gulch below the tunnels, to which nil ore, even from the deeper levels, can be conveyed by gravity. The company owns seven claims, I lie Trio, Deer Lick, Contact, Frac tion, Modoc, Alder and Alder Frac tion, all of which are heavily limber ed with plenty of water for inllllnn and camp purposes. The company's hcM(l(uarters are at Salem, Oregon, I'nif. F. K. Newberry liein' presi dent. O. A. Thomas, a hustling .umii'-' minim; man, formerly of tills . Ity Is L'etieial manager. I!, l.oonoy, of 1 1i is i !t , li see rot a rv of t lie com ictiv. The enterprl ;e Is backed iy ' 1 w .;'iial, a'id ;is i mi -111 v and a well as i a ! ei i;:; m e and s s- i ' 1 i ' o' .. : i Me ' . 1 I'l'l'o ' ' u 'nil , . I i ! w i ii li i n it 'i ' Is lo'-a' I lint in iv i,. ' i; ,,,i ihs. i m i i 1 .'.,':!!;. i:,,.,l p.".' . I: ' '.'., " ! V'. ' M ! ', t;,.. ,. !',!'' 1'. , , V in! ;i i ' .1 1 ! ;i 1. 1 'M ii ii -i I- i ai-d '"i i: t v;M I ''' e ! ,." , ',' ;l'!,.t.,l i li ll ,i I'li'l 'l.il le ( i,,i. I'l" : ' I c "A I : I . ', i'l ' I , 1 1 i I'll" I ' 1 ' ' inn I i'i i ,1 it ;i !do ' r,''v ill ( M i".',i m . l ,1 t 1 1 e 1,11 tll : . of ' i 1 i ' ; ' 1 1 i I ; e I o 1 1 1 1 1 iioiild in.i K . ;i note of It, I'tid. r ii I i '..i I ion el i ll will I'l oil nee .1 II eliov iiioiis v li lil. A special l" I In' I'oi t I.i'id Journal from A 1 1 '.i 1 1 r.Ues tin lellow in:; ; " V ('. t lust run::, t osldlim I n miles sent In ast of lian , w ill real lo a profit of $ I MM on I acres of vetch this year. Incldeiitallv lie III i h ar itl'out $r.iMni on a farm of 4 (in acre, for which he pays an an nual tetital of $I'om, Some other I. Inn comity fanners aie dolnn al most as well ranitliiK in the Wil lamette Valley Is imylnw better this year than for many year. "Armstrong hml 140 hitch In vetch. 1 1 mow cil 20 iutcs of It nnd nrter morlnn hi Imrtm full of loiw hay fur Ms winter' supply, had rnoiiRh loft over from the 20 aeres to lmh 20 ton, worth f 13 a ton. The vetch on the rt'tnalnttiK 120 ncres wh threshed for need ArnmtronR had 70 tons of denned vetrh need front hid 120 acre This Is worth 4 cent n pound. After Arm strong pays nil ripense of threahlnR nnd rlesnlnR ho will reallie n net profit of $4 800 on tht veteh d alone, to sny nothing of the vetch hay hi" haled. "In addition to hi 140 seres In vetch, Armstrong hn 200 acre in r.ood spring oats. GROWING 200,000 TOKAY CUTTINGS Earl V. Ingalls has a ten-acre nurs ery two miles down the river In which are growing 200,000 Tokay grape cuttings. They were put In the ground last Bpring and cared for ln the best manner from the very first. When the dry season came on a duiiid supplied water for Irrigation and the result is that the cuttings give evidence of being healthy growers and many of them have al ready reached from two and a half to three and a half feet in height, and without doubt another foot or two will be added before the season closes. The one Idea that Mr. Ingalls had in view in starting this nursery was to supply a demand for home grown vines which each year is largely In creasing. The planting of vigorous home grown vines has many advan tages as they can in many cases be taken from the nursery and planted In the vineyard the same day with the result that the shock of trans planting is scarcely felt, and thus the percentage of vines which live Is largely increased. There is another Important advantage to be gained which Is that you have an opportun ity to examine the vines before pur chasing and thus know what you are getting. Those who contemplate planting a vineyard next year should engage their vines without delay and they will undoubtedly make a choice of the home grown. Intense Colicky Pains Relieved. "For some years I suffered from Intense colicky pains which would come on at times and from which I could find no relief," says I. S. Mason, of Heaver Dam, Ky. "Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy was recommended to mo by a friend. After taking a few doses of the remedy I was entirely relieved. That was four years ago and there has been no return of the symptoms since that time." This remedy is for sale by M. Clemens. Individual Drinking Cutis Demanded. Hoards of health are in many states taking up the subject of drinking cups at public fountains and In railroad trains, '('lie subject is very wisely attracting wide spread attention as it Is generally conceded that many diseases are spread through this means. New Jersey, however, is the first state to take ac- j t im regarding the drinking cup-. .Members of the stale hoard of health in a resolution adopted have con demned the drinklii': c it ; or glass in use on railroad t rains. j They foi'ipaHv asked the officers i of reads running through New Jersey ji it It i ! I', in. i; , ' "I eV" I e to 'in ' ell : :, V el I'l 1,1 oof ll I i I'K i !' U ' r , - of !.!) ;c;.:ie !:" V. vvb'i It t it ' 1 !, 1 1 "V 'i nw,:y af'. r u ur m pi i in i lie r;i r.; j ' '. i v "nt in;o !i i v s i a :'- ii. .1 nil, , ,M.,. TO C0!K!rv9RATK I I ! I';. ,l ii ,, h. i . , . , ni I ! , , ' I . ,i ,., ,i i ,ii I in , a '.. el 'A ,, . i 1 , i , ' i I S', i. ' i 1 i, '. 1 ' . i "' I'M " li - ' ' !,i , i ! I'-f ' "I till' 11,,, : , . I I.e., . i::, !'.;: r I, mile l', 1"' in en ' i , l.n , , i. li a n a p : : n ; i i -I ion w a-- Made h t he M itiii" ol i I ; -'.ii ii : . last wiet.-r, , a s ; i, , '.V shall et St ( I.iikI era nit e, nine l . et lii-.li and a;i'io.i lately I us. f i I n d. 'I'lds nias,ai-ie was the t mil tiieie e nieiit ol an Indian war and a s.-i I. -. of luassiieies which cost the lives of over IMli'il whites. The Indians were of the opinion that the tinerntaciil liavlim a rchellloti on hand would he mialilo to punish them for the atrocities they committed. The war cost the Indians more In lives than it did the whites and It settled for ever th" Indian intention In the state of Minnesota. Women Mut 1ren Propel y. An order Issued last week hy the San niego, ("ni., police department fortdils women appearing 'on the street with kimono. The housewife who In case of an cmerRency slip down to the corner drug store for medicine or make a hurried trip to the comer grocery store must dies properly for the occasion. Otherwise, she must be able to dodge a police man. The order comes about through the effort of the police to control the denliens of the "red HkM" district, although no distinction I mnde In the new law. Respectable women. however, who prefer kimonos to anv other costume In this hot weather, are highly IndlRnant. WATER AND SOAP IN CHICAGO SCHOOLS Kmploy Widows to Scrub Dirty Hoy- and Gills Ilefore They Enter Class Rooms. Chicago public schools In a practic al way lead all other schools. It will be remembered that this year the schools of that city were run all sum mer for the benefit of those children whose parents wished to lose no time In securing for them an educa tion. Fully 10,000 children at tended these summer schools. Next we hear that the school board has chosen a woman to have charge of the schools and they are paying her a salary of $10,000 a year. They made the choice regardless of sex and pay her the same as they would a man had one been chosen. This new superintendent is Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, a woman of reputation as an educator. She has had charge of the Chicago Normal school, the training school for the teachers em ployed by the 17 public schools of the city. This woman is doing things In a motherly way and It remains to be seen how soon the schools of all the great cities adopt the same methods. The last move is that the board of education Is advertising for 17 widows to be employed to scrub some of the children attending the schools before they are permitted to enter the class rooms, No one but a widow need apply, and she must be brawny, even tempered and In every way cap able of handling any squirming youngster who attempts to escape the soap and water so heartily feared by numbers of youths of the poorer dis tricts. In 17 public schools bathrooms are supplied, with an abundance of hot water, towels and soap. The hearts of mothers might be softened, and unmarried women could never do the work. Therefore the widow Is elect ed. From this it will be understood that the Chicago school board be lieves not only that "cleanliness is next to Godliness," but have added another maxim which 18 water, soap and towels are an evidence of a higher civilization. ( Iminlx t lain'H Colic, Cholera and Di iirilioea Itointtly Never Known to Fail. "I have used Chamberlain-? Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Honied;,' since it was first Introduced to the public in Is'L', ami have never found one Instance where a cure was not speed ily effected by its use. I have been a coiiiiiK rclal traveler for eighteen ye;irn, mid never start out on a trip without this, my faithful friend," says li. S. Nichols of Oakland, Ind. Ter. l''or sale hy M. Cli mens. Iff A ' im i.'l jrr;:..::A-j cf-v r - Seattle During A-Y-P vaillC Exposition Yellowstone National ParK Yosemite Valley LaKe Tahoe ALL YOUR EXPENSES PAID If you have friends in the east who want to visit the Pacific Coast we can arrange it This Is Your Opportunity For cotDflrt Infomutioa addirw Peaches, Other Fruits Can be taken care of by uyeing our FIF&UOT JADS We have some good second hand Jars just as good as new, or you can have the new ones suit yourself we have either kind. CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST Ike M. Davis MONEY LOANED ON REAL ESTATE Long Time, Eaty Payments Reliable Representatives Wanted. The Jackson Loan & Trust Co. 120 West Capitol St., JACKSON, Mississippi. BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE SAN FRANCISCO BULLETIN San Francisco's Greatest Daily The Courier is enabled to offer old and new subscribers both papers for $3 per Year The Bulletin publishes the Associated Press report of the entire world, and in addition covers every important town on the Pacific Coast bv special corresp ndents Kvery inch of it is alive with crisp readable material. The Bulletin is famous from coast to coast tor it-- fight in r'e'ense of clean government and is read by more people daily 'ban the eomlr.n d circulation of all the o her San Francisco dailies. In a word. ' It is the wane-earners paper" and always a welcome v -itor after von have once te d it. A Choice of Four zs Is Offered You SUNSET TRAVEL CLUB E Pears, and