Image provided by: Friends of Jacksonville's Historic Cemetery; Jacksonville, OR
About Jacksonville sentinel. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1903-1906 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1904)
H. W. Grimes, who with his family moved last fall from Jacksonville to Rai ding Califo-nia, is prospering ami has steady employment at good wages at bis trade, that of carpentering. Miss Mae Grimes has given up printer’s work and is now book keeper for one of the leading stores in Redding. Prof, ami Mrs. K. E. Washburn are now in Seattle, where they will sjieud a month, guests at the home of Prof Washburn's sister. Prof. Wash burn writes to Jacksonville friends that the weather is ideal on the Sound and that business conditions, while not on the boom order of last year, are good and Seattle and the other .Sound cities are prosjierous. The first ot Sept ember Prof, ami Mrs Washburn will go to Silverton, Oregon when tlie Professor w ill have charge of the town school for the ensuing year, at the same salary he had in Jacksonville. The Silverton school has six rooms ami it has a standing as high as that of anv other school of the Willamette Valley. Prof, and Mrs. Washburn arc greatlv pleased with Silverton, counting it as prettily located as Jacksonville ami a handsome. pros|>erous town of 1N00 l*»p* ulation. Chris Kegan, who with John Jacobs is conducting a marble works in Ash land, was in Jacksonville several dais this week placing a tombstone at the grave of an infant child of,Mr. and Mrs. Tyson Beall and at the grave of Fredrick Grassbner and in soliciting orders for other marble work. Though Messrs Keegan & Jacobs have been m business but a few months, are building up a fine business and are steadily extending their trade to outlying towns. They are both skilled workmen and their tomb stones and monuments both in ratable and granite are the equal in finish and style to the beat to be had at any shop in Portland. Rev. J . Merlev. pastor of the Baptist churchoiCcntr.il Point, writes that the work of rvpainting and furnishing their church building is nearing cotnjietion. The interior of the building has lieen made to look like new wijh paint ami (xiper ami the exterior is soon to be painted. Fine factory made |>ew* have tieen put in the church, an appreciated comfort to the congregation. The at tendance at the services has steel- ilv increased since Rev. Merlev become pastor, last Sunday there being a large congregation present and at the service s|>ecial music was furnisred bv Mrs. J. W. Myers and Mrs. J. W. Merritt. Frank Ennis, a former will known mining man of this section but now a retired capitalist and resident of Calisto ga. California, ami who has been in Jacksonville the past week a guest of Theo. Cameron, his oldtime friend ami former partner, left Tuesday for Galice creek where he will spend a month with old friends in that locality. He will be joined next week by Mr. Cameron w hen they will put in a week on a fishing jaunt, io the profit of the small boys of the vicinity, though they claim to be very successful fishermen. Roseburg had a »mill fire Sunday morning that destroye<l the building accupied by D. Jackson’s gunshop ami badly datnage«l an adjoining building occupied by the Cruiser saloon. The buildings were among the oiliest hi Roseburg ami were of no great value. The gunshop was damage«! about f too while the saloon stock and fixtures wire not injured bv fire, but while the st«»ck was being carried out of the building about fPNl worth of it was stolen. The origin of the fire is not known. For sick headache take Chamberlain’s Stomach and I.iver Tablets and a iiuiek curéis certain. For sale by City Drug Store. A fine assortment of picture moulding. Bring in vour pictures ami have them framed. ' The workmanship speaks for itself. At C. W. Conklin s. Rogue River Creamerv. Medford, man ufactures the C. E. G. brand fancy cream erv butter, that is clean, elegant and guar anteed. Ask your merchant for it. Miss Corinne Linn arrived home The August Woman’s Home Compan Saturday from a two months trip ion contains features for every body. north during which she visited her “The Wonders of Modern Bridge Build brother George l.inn. who is a druggist ing"is a popular article that reads like in Eugene, and brother Fletcher Lmn fiction. “House-Boating on Lake St. who is president of the Oregon Furnit Clair” is a vacation feature In “Which ure Company, of Portland and her sister is the Beautiful Sex?" Henry T. Fink Miss Margaret Linn who is stenographer advances the theory that men. as men, for the same company. Miss Linn was are more beautiful than women. Ed also in Seattle to visit Mrs. E. J. Gray ward A. Steiner. Tolstoy's biographer, who resides in that city. tells of a pilgrimage to his home. The I have, 1 believe, sold fifty Loxes of Rev. Frances E. Clark, I). D.. writes of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets Christian Endeavor. The fiction is not on the recommendation of «me lady here, second in feature. There are short who first bought a box of them about a year ago. She never lues of telling her stories by Miss Spofford, Agnes L. Pro neighbors and friends alxmt the good vost, Bert Taylor and Emerv Pottle. qualities of these Tablets.—P. M. Shore, Published by The Crowell Publishing• Druggist, Rochester; I ml. The pleasant Company. Springfield, Ohio: one dollar purgative efiect of these Tablets make them a favorite with ladies every where. a year; ten cents a copy. For Sale by City Drug Store. David Force's little boys have a novelty Campers will find the lx-st «>f canned of a j)et, it being a young coyote. It, meats, oy sters, clams ami canned fruits with four other little fellows, was pickets syrup and other lunch basket caught on Applegate bv Canby Buck necessities at Miller & Bailey’s. Fresh and it was brought by Mr. Buck to bread daily and cakes furnished to order. Jacksonville and given to the Force boys. The traveling public can secure first They keep it chained to a tree and feed it ' class accommodations ami good home, like a dog. It stands captivity quite ccxiked meals at Mrs. A. D. Flory'sboard- well but is very restless, seldom lying 1 ing house on Fifth street two blocks down during the day more than half north of court house. an hour at a time. It shows no fear of Suits made to look dressy an like new a woman or child but goes to the end of at the Medford Cleaning Pressing ami its chain if a man approaches and if he Dying Works. Fine work a specialty. gets near it will show fight. Instinct- To get perfect rest use one of those ivly the poultry gives his coyoteship a silk floss or cotton felt mattresses. They wide berth. Chickens it makes little are the best. C. W. Conklin. effort to catch but if a goose or «luck ap Miss Margaret Krause went to Cole- proaches it makes vigorous effort to catch stein this Friday to spend a few «lays it. Mr. Force has two dogs of which the with friends at that resort. coyote shows no fear and would play Keep your floors clean bv the use of with them if they would condescend, Dustine. Solti at Conklin's furniture but they treat the coyote with disdain store. and do not come near it except to eat If you want to rent a farm or have land to rent see T. C. Norris, Medford. food that the coyote has refused. lewis ami (hirk ( «-iili-iiiiinl. Machinery lor Smeller. The smeller to I m ? built at Takilma in Waldo district 40 miles south will Jack sonville, is liktly to la- in ojieratioti curly this winter mid it will be the first smelter in Southern Oregon. Of the recent arrival of machinery for this smelter the Grants Pass Courier lias the following to say: . There now stands on the S. P. trucks at Grants Pas.», three carload» of ma chincry, furnace, stacks, ore cars. etc,, for the It Ml toil smelter lieiug installed at Takilma bv th« Tikilma Smelting and there arc vet two carlomla to arrive. These Cars have I « eh »hipped some Huie ami will probably arrive ill a few «lav». Four of the carloails comprising tile smelting plant are from H irry Holthofl, Cudahy, Wis. and will cost, when com pleted in the tieighborbwal of f.'WMMM) it is a st andard blast furnace, water jack eted ami with a capacity of l<M> tolls daily. The plant is to I m - locate«! on the old Darkis place below the Wuldo and kfueen of Bronze mines, 4-< miles from Grants Pass, the nearest railroad point. Charles L. Tutt of Colorado Springs, one of the leading smelter and mining men of Colorad««, is presuleiit ami a.ss<M iate«l with him arc K. R. Babbit, Spencer Penrose and C. M MacNeil, who control smelter at Colorado Springs. E. W. Walter, of Silverton, Colorado, has ju*t arriveil and will supcrillteml the work and also have the local management of the c««mpam . Ten teams were it« Grant» Pass Tur«- to transport the machinery to the mine*. • International »<o|s- 1» a»»ut«-d to the Lewis and Clark Ct lltennial I X|si«ll|o|| to Is held at I’ortlaml. Oregon, from Jlim 1st to th tola r 1«, I'NI.. by Pi< s|d< lit Ro,,»« veil’s approval of the m t of Ci-ng res» making an appropriation for th«- I s |s>»ition, and In» invitation to foreign countries to |»irti< i|site Portland's Ex|»»- sition w ill represent a total oliti.«« of over ¿.’«,(MM).«HMI fhoiigli covering IO."» acres ot land and natural lake, it will Is com pact 111 form, and th«- aver «g< persoli w ill I m * able to -ce and compri Itemi it all in a few days at imxli rati cost. I'll«-« ream of the torcigliami domi »tic exhibits lob«- mad«- at St. lami» this year will Is- trans- ferrcrl to I’ortlaml at th«- c I om - of th«- Louisiana Purclinsc E ximwi I k 11. 'I In i'ill led States exhibit will I m ima cd entire to Poitlaml ami imtallv<l 111 building lo I c »|«eciallv crrctc«l This exhibit wdil«- worth ¿ mini . inni . In addition Fortini d w ill haw maiiv f« attire» which w ill not lie seen it St. I.otii», »m li 11» • xliibit demon stratiog the life, 1 listoni» unii industrie» of China, |ap«n, Hawaii, Sil« ria, Rii»«ia, Alaska, Australia, New Z< aland, th«-Phil ippines and India. Tin Lewis ami Clark Centennial will I h -the first internationnl ex|smition under Government |»itt«>iiagr m-r held on the Pacific Coast. It will I m - in evert wav a Western exposition. Tile railroad» will make low rat« » from Missouri mid Miss issippi river 1»,mts to I’ortlaml, and « x Ceptioiialli low rates will lx- in « it«-« t In tween I’ortlaml mid tile Rocky Mountain region Ill-Fitting «Shoes Make People Ill-Natured 'I’ltc Walk-* >vct Shoe Ami the S<-lz Sinn- Arc the Shoes That itl'akc Brought 190 o/s. Gold. W. J. Wimer of the Deep ('.ravel Min ing Co. at Waldo came to Grant» Pass I Tuesday with I'.MI ounces ot gold, the result of a test run of seven days ami nine nights, with a two-inch nozzle at ISO lbs. prt »»tor There hate Irtn several cleail*U|>w this season all of whuli gave »plemlul returns. Th«- flume» and am! race» were cleaned up ami this test run made with the water of the sea son. The company, which is compoar-d of W. J. Wimer ami A. E. Re.«me», of Jacksonville, last year installed a ilemly elevntor which It.«» proved a splendid success. It is a tubular elevator, the pi]H- la-ing Hi inches in diameter. an«l the gravel is raised H feet. Th«- gobi taken out runs about flH..'«l) to #1 !» |>er mince, bring the test run to about ¿.’»'« in ).—Gr mt» Pass Courier. Notice Io Creditors. NOrICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned. Emma Lucinda Hnf- stailer lias la-en app>int«-<l administra trix of til«- «-state of Cll-irb s E. Hufsta- der, decease«!, by the County Court for jacksoti County. Oregon, ami all |>enmns having claims against »ai«l estat«- are hereby notified to present the same, proja-rly verified. to the undersigned administratrix at the office of Peter Applegate at the Court Hous«- in Jackson ville, Jackson County. Gregor., on or la-fore six months from th«- «late of the first publication of this notice, which date of first publication and the «late of this notice is lune 24, A. D. I’.MM. E mma L icimia H i fstajikk . Administratrix. CITY Men Comfot table Anil Good-Natiitcrl. In Ladies Shoes We Have a Hine Selection in Tile Latest Styles and <>f the Best Quality That are Sure to (iivv Satisfaction and At Prices That ate Right. J.M. C ronemiller . NOTICE. In the matter of tin- guardianship of DcllM-rt E Yoc«-ni. Notice is hereby given that th«- under signed has Ix-en ap|>onited by Jackson County guardian of Ih-Ha-rt I. Yocum, a minor. All periions knowing themselve. indebted to »aid estate sre requeued to make payment of ilie amount to III«- utKlersigned an«! ull claims against ».mi estate are to I h - presented to the umlcr- signed guardian. July 21>t 1904. O kiax Y ocvm MEAT HENRY W. ORTH, MARKET PHOP ALL KINDS OF FRESH MEATS :: WHOLESALE and RETAIL :: Special attention given to orders from a distance tor .Mining Camps and .Mills. Meats shipped promptly and in first-class condit ion.