Image provided by: Rogue River Valley Irrigation District; Medford, OR
About Central Point herald. (Central Point, Or.) 1906-1917 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1907)
CENTRAL POINT HERALD. THURSDAY. AUGUST 8, 1907, If You Love He The Ball Game. H I I H -l-H ' I I I I 111 I 1 H -I-» Don’t be afraid|to tell her so. She will not The Jacksonville boys came over hurt you. Bracejup,.l>e a;brick>nd again Sunday and, as usual, trimmed ! t ib local team to a fare-you-well. Our boys played ball all right at the start, but they couldn't hold out and in the Don't make any mistake in fthe question; closing chapters of the tragedy it was ;ask her sweetly indigently: “ Dearest, will something awful you join me investing some of that delicious Wilcox, of Jacksonville, started in to Ice Cream at .Sam Moore’s Confectionery?’ act as umpire of Sunday’s game, and it is probale some of Mr. Wilcox’s decisions discouraged the Pointers, and when he jumped the job in the middle of the game and Nash was called in to finish the game it was too late for them to make good. The trouble with Central Point is that 2sS AND PINE STS., CENTRAL POINT they have no organization and no prac tice. They have no 'regular team and l-l-l"l"l-I-H -l- l"l- l-l-’.-l- l- H 't"M"l"I't -H - -H - l-l- l-H -H '-H -H -H p j. hardly ever is the lineup the same. They need a manager who knows how IF YOUR HORSE HAS CORNS OR CONTRACTION OF | to coach the players and who will do it THE FEET. SEE and who will see to it that they work out in practice games through the week. If Central Point wants a ball team and if the players expect to continue playing they should get to work. The town should give the boys some sup port, both financially and morally, and the boys should work out, study the rules and play the game. If base ball is worth while it is worth playing well enouge to win a game once in a while from some team other than Phoenix. The lineup of Sunday's game follows: l-H -I-H -l-M-t-H -l-W- H H i l l H-t'H M -H -H -H -l 'H 'l iH -frH M -H H -I-fr 4‘Pop the Question” C L O T H IN G SUITABLE FOR and She’ll say “Yes.r G. S. MOORE.' Old Men, Young Men and Hoys. Price, the Horseshoer. LATEST STYLES, HANDSOME PATTERNS, SERVICABLE FABRICS. J acksonville Our Mammoth New Stock is Now on Display. But Chamberlain’ s te lle . Cholera Diarrhoea Remedy Cured Him. Cranfill & Robnett, Central Point, Oregon. PINEULES JUCB. 25C. L a ro b S ix * SO c gold by Mary A. Mee. K . A . Blacks and | A n A rizona G ir l . Why Fret and Worry when your child has a severe cold? A dose at bed time ueu- You need not fear pneumonia or other ally relieves the m ost pulmonary diseases. Keep supplied severe case before morning. with Ballard's Horehound Syrup—a positive cure for Colds, Coughs, Whoop ing Cough snd Bronchitis. Mrs Hall, of Sioux Falla, S. D., writes: “ I have 1 used your wonderful Ballard's Ho' e- | hound Syrup, on my children for five P D flU L B M EDICINE CO. I years. Its results have been wonderful. ” CtUCJLCO. U. » . A . Sold by Central Point Pharmacy 1 Sold by Mary A. Mee. H A W K j G e n e ra l B lu c k a m ith ln g Repair work of all kinds. fcaWood Turning and Scroll Work. ’ Horseshoeing and Wagoirwork jCast Iron Brazing CENTRAL POINT, OR. AU Jüods o f Repair Work Promptly Done . . S a tis fa c tiu * • 1 • CENTRAL Jeffers & Peart G e n e ra l B lack sm ith * & W o o d w o rk ers HORSESHOEING A SPECIALTY Post Office Hours. A * ♦ W e tre a t you a n d y o u r h o rse s rig h t GENERAL DELIVERY HOUR8. Open 7:30 a. m. close 8:30 p. m. Sundays, open one hour after each train. MONEY ORDERS. No money orders issued or cashed on Sundays or holidays. ■M -H 'l-l-M-M ■!•■! l-I'-I-M-H -H -H -H -l-l-H -M-H -'H -l-H- l-l-I- l-'l-H -H - H -'H -tf- MAIL CLOSES. No. 13, south bound, 11:50 a. m. Due 12:21 p. m. No. 16, north bound, 4:50 p. m. Due 5:19 p. m. No. 11, south bound, 7:00 p m. Due 11:15 p. m. No. 12, north bound, 7:00 p. m. Due 3:52 a. m. G uy E. T ex , P. M. F in e S a m p le H o o m n B u ru p e a n P la n HOTEL T h e H o m e o f Conuaior- eial en d M i n i n « M en HOT El. NASH CO., PROPS. DINING ROOM UNSURPASSED. REFURNISHED THROUGHOUT^ M ED FO RD . OREGON Ghamberlaln’s Ooflc, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy, Better Than 1 1' 1 Three Doctors. “ Three years ago we had three doc-1 tors with our little boy and everything j that they could do seemed in vain. At last when all hope seemed to be gone we began using Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and in a few hours he began to improve. Today he is as healthy a child as par ents could wish for.” — M rs . B. J. J ohnston , Linton, Miss. For sale by Mary A. Mee. Seriously Injured. Walter Chapman, a well-known resi dent of Sams Valley, was very seriously injured last Saturday while at work at Glass’ threshing machine. Mr. Chap man was pitching to the machine, when by accident he was struck in the left eye with the end of a fork handle in the hands of another workman. The blow was a hea7y one and all but de stroyed the eyeball, and at this writing his physician has not determined wheth er or not the sight will be affected. The injury was very painful and Mr. Chapman collapsed before he could be taken home. Dr. Campbell, of this place, was notified by phone and did everything possible to make the patient comfortable. Children In Pain never cry as do children who are suffer ing frc*i hunger. Such is the cause of all baby's who cry and sre treated for sickness, when dhey really are suffering from hunger. This is caused from their food not being assimilated but devoured by worms. A few doses of White’s Cream Vermifuge will cause them to cease crying and bagin to thrive at once. Give it a trial. Sold by Central Point Pharmacy. NASH •H - l-H -H -l-M -l-H -l-H ■14-4-C 1 1 1 I » ... R E T A IL DEALER IN WOOD D . C. G R IM C it y . G r a y i n g a n d T r a n s f e r All Kinds of Hauling Promptly Done, s-------------------------- CENTRAL POINT, OR. -M-M-M-H -M 1 1 1 I I I 1-1 H i l l H -1- H e r e « a S n ap !! 190 acres first quai it y foot-hfli fruit land, about 80 acres under cultivation. All un der fence. Small bearing .orchard and one acre in grapes. Three Sme springs capable of irrigating conwderable land. Fair hoLSM'. good barn and othw outbuild ings. Price $8,500. For further information, inquire of S. A. PATTIS0N, Herald Office. Central l’oint. Ore. J-Î-1 1 l-H -H -H -l t l' l 'Ul I t H '* » Tempe and the penitentiary is at Yuma. I course, there are a number of Indians The land here is watered from canals. here yet, but they are not dangerous, They dig ditches and have canvas all peaceable. It looks very odd to see Editor Central Point H erald:-) tapoons to put in. They have to irri the Indians come to Phoenix and sit Glendale, Arizona, July 24, 1907. gate whenever the water comes—day down on the sidewalk and eat or rest. I am an Ariaona girL Have lived or night. Within ten years’ time 545 They sell their trinkets along the ire ten years, one mile and a half from miles of ditches have been dug. streets as odd as can be. They carry iioenix and two miles and a half from There is no forests at all in the val their trinkest in large flat baskets upon lendale. In this part of the valley ley nor no trees except what is planted, their heads and I should judge as high ie climate is dry. It is very warm in but in the cooler climate there is the as 25 pounds are carried in each basket. ie Summer. The 3rd day of this month largest pine forests ¡in America. The Indians dress very odd, too. The was 122 in the shade. It is so warm The scenery here as magnificent. The women wear Mother Hubbard dresses, iat the people here break out with Grand Canyon is 200 miles long, 4) with their bair hanging, bare-headed ¡at and look like people broken out to 12 miles from rim to rim and 5000 and bare-footed. The married women ith measles. The sum is so hot that feet deep. The petrified forest cavers paint their faces, but the unmarried kills the leaves upon the vines, it two square miles. The Montezuma' women do not paint. The mother car so cooks eggs done that are laid on well is a very interesting sight. It is j ries her baby, or pappoose, in a basket ie haystacks, and the water drawn 20* yards in diameter. The natural upon her back. The men wear their om the wells is warm enough to wash bridge is 600 feet long, 500 feet wide hair long and have shoes, but no hat. shes in. The Winters are perfectly and 200 feet deep. Cliff dwellings are We have a very large Indian school vely. It does not snow in the valley, found throughout Arizona. here. They leam everything that is to it one can see snow on the mountains, Mining is the chief industry of this be learned. About two years ago one will sometimes freeze the fancets so place. Gold, silver, copper, lead, iron of the lady teachers married one of her iat we have to pour hot water on them and limestone are the metals found. Indian pupils. •fore we can get the water started, Stockraising is a great industry here. Our schools are as good as any in ires have to be build in the orange There are 250 different grasses grow on the United States. The Glendale ■oves so the trees wiU not freeze, for the range. school took first prize at the World 's ■ange trees are easily frozen. The manufactures of this place are: Fair at St. Louis. The surface here is mountainous. It Smelting of copper, lumber mills and Last Friday (July 12) the neighbors insists of large plateaus There is boxing fruits. Ore, hay, grain, cattle, had a rabbit drive. Jack rabbits are insiderable desert here, which has hogs, fruit and honey are the largest very distinctive. There is five cents >thing but weeds growing on it. The commerce. There is more alfalfa hay bounty on them. At the drive they got itive tree, or bush, which is greese- raised here than grain. When water is 2556 rabbits. It seems as though six ood, grows to about six feet high, plentiful four or five crops of alfalfa is rabbits have come to every one killed. f course there are other trees here - put up in a season off the same ground. Tempe has a large trade for canta ilm, olive, umbrella, ash, cottonwood, Hay sells here all the way from $7 to loupes. They go as far as London. r, date, etc. »14 per ton and if it is straight hay, no From one to eight car loads of water The population of Phoenix is 16,000. weeds, it will go as high as $18 per ton. melons are shipped every day during hoenix has eight public schools, one Hogs are selling at 9 cents a pound a t the season. Mr. Hicks, a farmer living gh school, two business colleges, two the present time. 13 miles from us, brought a watermelon e plants, three flouring mills, three There is a sugar factory one mile to Phoenix that weighed 50 pounds. mber yards, four large hotels, electric east from Glendale. The inhabitants There are several large orange groves reet railways, parks and gardens, of Glendale are mostly Mexicans. They here, one of which is on the place where he insane asylum is located two miles | live in small frame houses and tents 1 live. •om Plmenix. The normal school is at with brush shades all around them. There are about five ostrich farms As history has told us, the white man here, two of which have 100 birds each. took Arizona from the Indian. So, of The birds are very clumsy and the pictures do no flatter them in size or beauty. The small sized eggs average 161 inches ia diameter. The feathers plucked from the birds, without dress ing, are very valuable. A feather 20 inches long sells at $1.50; a feather 22 long, natural crimp, sell for $3. 30 DAYS’ TEEATMENT FOR $1.00 inches Now just step over and take a Turk Satisfaction guaranteed ish bath. Please don’t think me a land or money refunded. agent, for I am not. All About Arizona. BACKACHE lacks It is with pleasure that I give you , i this unsolicited testimonial. About a year ago when I had a severe case of measles I got caught out in a hard rain and the measles settled in my stomach and bowels. I had an awful time and had it not been for the use of Chamber lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy 1 could not have possibly lived i; \ but a few hours longer, but thanks to this remedy I am now strong and well. I have written the above through sim ple gratitude and I shall always speak a good word for this remedy. —S am H. G w in , Concord, Ga. For sale by Mary A. Mee. Suit of Clothes FOR ALL K ID N E Y B L A D D ER T R O U B L E . R H E U M A T IS M AN D LUM BAGO Blacksmithing HAD AN AWFUL TIME Don’t fail to look it over if you need A few doses of this remedy will in- iriably cure an ordinary attack of arrhcea It can. always be depended upon, ren in the more severe attacks rf •amp colic aad cholera morbua It Is equally successful for summer arrhcea and cholera infantum la illdren, and is the means of saving ie lives of many children each year When reduced with water and veetened it is pleasant to take Every man of a family should keep its remedy In his home Buy It now. C entral P oint j > Peart—Pankey McIntyre e Boswell Wilson 1st Farra Dunford 2nd Sanderson Hoefs 3rd Clark Stout if Shaft Shultz If H. Peart Wendt cf Boss Davidson ss Peart F. Stout Score—Jacksonville 11, Central Point 5.