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About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1896)
NEWS OF THB STATE Rev. Desmarala to the A. P. A.' Heppner has a warm city election on the boards. Bob Burdette, the humorist, is soon to lecture in several Oregon towns. The Albany creamery has filled a 1500 pound order of butter for Alaska. The Portland police force has been reduced by discharging eleven mem bers. There is an exodus of the unemployed from Portland all bound for California prints. Stella Finley, a 13-year-old Pen dleton girl, committed suicide last Fri day by taking strychnine. Heppner. has levied a 15 mill special school tax, which with the county levy makes the tax 37 mills for that town. Prisoners who are in the future con ined in the Dalles jail for minor of fences will have to work on on the rock pile. Salem people are fearful lest the Willamette river changes its channel and runs around ihe bridge, thus leav ing it high and dry. Toledo stone is to be used in the construction of the bie union depot at San Francisco. It will take some 15, 000 tons and this will cost some $173 000. The water, system at Portland has been tested and it was demonstrated that it was capable of carrying about a million gallons an hour from Bull Run. The Pilot Rock postofSce, near Pen dleton, was robbed last Saturday night. A stock of cigals was rilled, but no money found, i0 ciue was iouua w the robbers. Motormen and conductors on the Portland Consolidated street railway have been ordered to carry revolvers while on duty -to defend themselves against highwaymen. Charles H. Clarke, a runner for the Morhants hotel. Portland, was ar rested as a deserter from the United States army, and taken to Vancouver to stand court marshal. Charles Montgomery, who is under indictment at Oregon City charged with murder in the first degree, pleaded not guilty last Saturday morning and his trial was set for April 27. The new union depot at Portland is tnhnnened in about a week. The ii Bt.rnnture is undermined and weakened to such an extent that only a few hours work is required to remove tne last trace oi it. The O. R. N. steamship Columbia mot with an accident off the mouth of the Columbia river last Saturday morn- imr while on its way from rortiana to San Francisco. It was towed back to Astoria by two tugs. A Lebanon man has gotten up two bicycle inventions, one oi mem is la run the wheel by compressed air, the rider to work the air pump ana ue nthpr is a steel tire, overlaid with short bent strips to serve as springs Rev. G. R. Wallace, pastor of the Consrezational church of Portland, haa resigned. asU seauel, it is thought, s t.h sensational Shorev affair. He claims that the reason is because the phnro.h debt is too large. The debt exceeds $50,000. An important murder case is on trial at th nresent term of court in , Union Kelsey Porter charged with the muder of the Mache family. While the case is said to be very strong against him, a public meeting was held to raise money ior ms ueieuw a Raker City dispatch of the Slst ult says: Superintendent John McNally in f mm the Virtue mine with several sacks of the richest ore ever taken out of the mine. Fifteen thousand dollars caid to be their value. He also brought in a $13,000 gold retort. x "notice to mariners" has been published to the effect that the Coos uv whiatiins- buov. painted black and white, perpendicular stripes, marked with a letter "K" in white has eone adrift from its mooring about ti- miles outside the bar. and will be replaced as soon as possible. c Vt. Martin, while hunting near Thurston Lane county last Friday .oiriAnta.llv shot himself. He was 'iwlinor throush a rail fence with hnt. iriin. which id some way became .,rhtand was discharged, the load takhie effect in "the heart. His body taken to his former home in Ivan sas. Grants Pass has been pretty badly. cfcuken ud with religious revivals i.,rincr the past several weeks, in To the A. P. A. 'a of Southern Oregon and in a special way to the Med ford A. P. A. council, greeting in the Lord, Alleluia! It is indeed with pleasure that I hasten to make light the heavy burden weighing upon the minds and harrowing the souls of our beloved brethren of the Medford council. It is of course my imperative duty, as a profes sedly Christian man, to treat you kindly and lead you to the light of truth. With all your faults, I love you still . Now with your articles as inserted in the columns of The Medford Mail: Firstly The source of your oppo sition to Romanism is very plain. The oath of the A. P. A.'a assures us that the source of your opposition is to be found in the spirit of bigotry and ignorance. It is not the spirit of Christ and it is not by any means the spirit of the sixth article of the United States' constitution. If your opposition, as you say, is based upon our Canon law and papal encyclicals, and if you are certain that you hold in your possession the absolute proof for all your asser tions, why, in the name of heaven, do you not accept my challenge and conditions as published in the Jacksonville Times of December 6th? Secondly The Catholic church is not opposed to our American pub- ic schools. All cainoucs pay meir school taxes and many send their children to public schools. Arch bishop Ireland exclaimed, "With ered be the hand that is raised against our public schools." 'lhose are my sentiments. The principle of our public school system is non- sectanamsm. 1 ne catholic cnurcn and her priests do not interfere with that principle. But who does? I am inclined to think, indeed, that we might well reproach many preachers of protestant churches with the stigma of sectarianism when thev, with a King James' bible in their vest pocket, prowl about the public schools and harrow the souls of our childreu with long- winded prayers to the Lord.AlIeluia! NEWS OF THE WORLD. THE GIST OF THE WEEK'3 HAPPEN INGS AS TOLD BY TELEGRAPH. Interesting Items From Europe, Aula, Africa and North and South America, With, Particular Attention to Impor tant Home Mew. whir.h all the Protestant cnurcnes have participated. Tnis. together with God's Regular army has brought in nwr a hundred converts. The army has decamped, and gone to Rose burg. W. W. Saunders, who was sent to the for life from Linn county w irillino- Chas. Campbell, and who snhseouentlv pardoned by Gov ; Pennover. is now in Spokane and has Dinted assistant district at- ft is reported that he is to be married on March 15 to Miss Minnie Allison. A full pardon has been recently granted him by Gov Lord. J Lloyd Bryson Montgomery is his full name and he was hanged by the sheriff of Linn county in the court house yard at Albany at 7 o'clock last Friday morning. For several weeks he has insisted that his first confession was extorted from him by unfair means, and that by constant importun ing he had been lead into a condition of mental irresponsibility and said what he did to gain relief at the hands of those who were persecuting him to extract a confession from him. Mc Xercher killed his father and mother, ' he claimed, and he killed McKercher. This story he closely adhered to when- ' ever interviewed concerning the crime, until Friday . morning. When only ahout an hour . remained before the -Mm A for the execution, several min- ' asters who were with him for the pur 7 nose of offering , spiritual consolation, nr wailed upon him not to die with a fie on his lips. After talking to him for some time, he became very deeply impressed, with their advice, burst out . !J U .,foa oil crying nu smu ue wuuiu cuui "I am guilty," he said; "I killed them .'. all .i I will write it out." His written . confession contained nothing more ex cept an imploring tu umuc uuiiin.j( ti is hod v was handed over to the doc mm for an autopsy. , his relatives hav- ing refused to" have anything to do rth Thirdly You say, "The. chief studies of the majority el those thousands of students in so many Catholic universities, is the cate chism and the doctrine of the cer tain damnation of protestants.' This eratuitous assertion, which you dare to present to honest pub lic readers, 1 brand as an unquali fied falsehood. If you can maite mod that assertion, when you ac cept my challenge (if you ever do), I will forfeit one hundred dollars extra for the public school of Med ford. If you fail to prove your point in this question are you ready to forfeit a like sum for the said purpose? Seel Fourthly Tne "union oi cnurcn and state" has nothing to do with American institutions. Ergo! If you think so, the challenge would determine that question and will prove that you are laboring under the imoressions of a nightmare. Fifthly ou claim the honors oi Columbus and Latayeiie now sanctimonious and modest you are in vour nretentions! Sixthly You say, "Pope Inno cent III annulled the people's charter and excommunicated the twenty four barons." This is another unqualified falsehood. Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur. Accept mv challenge and we will see I Seventhly Mv circular "Did the Irish desert?" is it the right thing in the right place to shut up all slanderous tongues on that question? If you think it is a fraud, why, you have only to spend a four cent stamp and get the war deparment to inform you and your brethren. Eighthly The fires of Piedmont and Smithfield have been and are now repudiated by the Catholic church, and if you do not think so, why, accept my challenge. I wonder if the ax and the fires of "Good Queen Bess" and the fires of Puri tanism in Massachusetts have ever been repudiated by the A. P. A's ? Now, gentlemen, this is not going to be a newspaper controversy, at least, as far as I am concerned, and hence I refer you to my challenge and conditions of December 16th, a copy which you will no doubt obtain from our reverend friend Eli Fisher, pastor of the Christian church, at Medford. With eratitude to the editor oi The Mail for the publication of this reply, I am with good wishes to you all, in Xto Jesu, L. P. Desmarais, Pastor of St. Joseph's Church. Jacksonville, Ore., Jan. 29, 1896. Are You doing to Prove up? Parties who contemplate making final proof on their land can save a big item of expense by having us prepare their paper, which work we will do free of charge. Bring or send us the name of party making proof, description of land, the names of four persons who appear as witnesses and the date upon which proof is to make, giving time for six weeks' publication. All kinds of wood for sale, Belli Several members of the Ohio legis la tore have been indicted for bribery. The .Kentucky legislature is dead locked on the United States senator ship. A. S. Pennoyer, the well-knowm the atrical man, died at Philadelphia, aged 70 years. , The new United States gunboat Hel ena was successfully launched at New port News, Va., recently. John W. NoWe, ex-secretary of the interior, Is confined to his home in St. Louis by a seriOus attack of la grippe. American residents hi the Transvaal have requested Secretary of State Olney to send a special diplomatic agent to adjust matters. Fraak D. Lewis, government attorney for the Mission Indians, has sued the Los Angeles Herald for $50,000 damages for alleged libel. Upon the person of a miserly Ameri can who fell in a fit on a boulevard of Paris were fonnd papers showing he was worth $400,000. The belief is general ut the capital that the Pncifio railroads funding bill will pass both houses of congress and be sitmed by the president. C P. Hunt ington is at Washington. Hugh Dempsey, ex-district master workman of the Knights of Labor of Homestead, Pa., sentenced to three years in the penitentiary for complicity in poisoning non-union men during the great strike, has been pardoned. "The Sparrows," a girls' social club of Newton, Kan., has decided to branch into other lines and is making arrange ments to speculate in Cripple Creek (Colo.) mining stock. The members have pool ed their pin money and have $500 to begin operations. Juitln McCarthy has announced his intention of resigning the chairman ship of the Irish party, the cause being given as failing health ana personal considerations, which he will detail to his colleagues in Dublin. Mr. Sexton k spoken of as his suocessor. The Standard Match company, capi tal $5,000,COJ, has been incorporated in New Jersey and will have offices in big cities of this country and in all the principal cities of Europe, Asia and Africa. The concern will deal in mate rials used in making matches. John Morley, chief secretary for Ire land in the Rosebery and Gladstone cabinet, speaking at Arbroath, Scot land, said that Lord Salisbury blun dered in questioning the Monroe doc trine, to which America is strenuously attached, lie also said that if ever there was a case for arbitration it was tha Venezuelan boundary dispute. A City of Mexico dispatch sars: The secretary of the interior. General Cosio, has ordered the governor of Chihuahua to send 5.000 soldiers if necessary to stop the Maher-Fitzsimmons prize fight if an attempt is made to hold it at Jua res. Cosio is determined in the mat ter, but the promoters of the series of fights declare that the report is false and that the tournament will come off. The Rhode Island authorities have discovered that the new law requiring all persons performing the inirrriage ceremony to register yearly is identical with one enacted 70 years a-jo and which has been a dead letter. It is said there has not been a legal marriage in Rhode Island for 60 years and application will bo made to the legislature to have all acts of unlicensed clergymen made valid. The trust created by the wilk of the late James G. Fair iu favor of admin istrators has been declared 'by Judge Slack to be invalid. It is held that the trust is invalid because it is h trust created in real property that is, to transfer and convey the remainder lifter the death of Fair's children which trust the law of California does not permit to be created. Thus far iu the litigation the decision is a victory fur the children. A dispatch to the London Times from Washington, commenting upon the at titude of the senate, says that nobody can say what might happen should the Yenesuelan difficulty pass .from the hands of the executive iuto those of congress. It is stated that there is a sincere desire for a friendly settlement at the White House, and that Great Britain's acceptance of arbitration would be followed by au explosion of delight in America. The ship Louis Walsh from Cnllao, Pern, brought two of the crew, Stew ard Chase and Cook Mitchell, of the ship Parthia which was burned at sea several months ago, 1503 miles south west" of Juan Fernandez island. The Parthia was coal laden from Liverpool to San Fraucisoo. The men in one of the boats which left the doomed ship were 14 days m reaching Valparaiso, and for six days they were without food or water. David Jones, an Amer ican actor, who was a passenger, be came insane and was tied down for two days, when he died and was placed. in the sea. If the reports which have reached Washington are to be Believed there will be an influx of Florida orange growers into California during the com ing season. The frosts of last year have been so disastrous in Florida and Louis- iana that they almost completely anni hilated the orange growing industry of those states. On Senator White s re cent visit through Florida he was as tonished to find the extent to which the frosts had devastated orange groves. Throughout the . Indian river country be found tk groves to be in snch a con dition that it will be impossible for the tree to bear fruit profitably for several years to come. . , WASHINGTON NOTES. Interesting Items Picked Oat from tha Dally Dlspatohas. Free delivery mail service will be ex tended to 18 postoffices April 1. Po mona, CaL, is included among them. President Cleveland received the members of the National Board of Trade during their vitsit in Wash Representative Hilborn has intro duced a bill appropriating $T0,000 for the erection of a public building at' Woodland, Yolo county, Cal. W President Krneger of the Transvaal is said to favor reforms in the way of concessions to foreigners. Local gov ernment for Johannesburg is possible. The shortage of Librarian Spofford of the congressional library amounts to $61,000 and the sum may be increased by investigation. Experts are at work on the matter. Arguments in the Wright irrigation law before the supreme 00 art were com pleted Monday. The case of the gov ernment against the Stanford estate is now being argued. The matter of censuring Ambassador Bayard for his utterances in speeches iu London is still hanging fire in the house. Party lines are drawn and the result cannot be foretold. The statement of government receipts for January shows $69, 337,670 and ex penditures $32,606,430, leaving a deficit for the month of $3,459,160 and for the seven months of this fiscal year a deficit of $13,813,875. The house committee on Pacific rail roads is hearing arguments in favor of and against the refunding bilL Repre sentatives Maguire, Bar hum, Bowers and Hilborn of California made able arguments against the bill. Senator Tillman of South Carolina violently attacked President Cleveland in a speech on the financial question. His language was the most remarkable ever heard in the chamber. Among other epithets he called the chief execu tive a "besotted tyrant " Representative Johnson has intro duced a bill authorizing the president to appoint four boards, of three .mem bers each, to examine and class mineral lands held by the Central Pacific, West ern Pacific and California and Oregon railroad grants in California, Representative Broderick of Kansas has introduced a bill providing a pen alty of 80 years' imprisonment for per sons shooting at trains in Indian terri tory, throwing missiles at or derailing them. If any person is killed by snch acts the crime is made murder, with death penalty. At a diplomatic reception at the White House Mrs. H. G. White, daughter of ex-Senator Sawyer of Wisconsin, was standing in the inner corridor crowded with diplomats, who were like herself wearing jewels. Two women In even ing dress approached her from either side. It appeared that the two women met like friends, ine crowd was so dense Mrs. White could not move. - After shaking bands these women dis appeared. Mrs. White discovered that her diamond pendant, worth $3,500, had been wrested from her t hi oat. SOMETHING NEW IN THIS.' The Petroleum Wacon Within Reach of Many People. The practicability of these carriages seems to be placed beyond doubt. Since 1892 thev have been growing in favor In France and the only wonder is Unit wc have not seen them over h ere before now. The future, says the Lon don (Saturday Review, would appear to belong t them, if all be true, and we hardly doubt lhe bona fides. , They are easily worked as a tricycle prob ably easier. A novice, as many wit- ess, is able on the first trial to drive his carriage over 200 miles in twodaysof ten hours each. Tourists have' wandered over half a dozen departments in them, and the taste is spreading every day. Soon the enthusiasm will reach Eng land, and then well, it is difficult to say what will happen then. 1 or, among the great advantages of the petroleum carriage, is its remark able cheapness. The cost of a carriage is not much in the first instance. They are built, as we have said, with touch ing fidelity to old forms. There is' the dog cart, the wagonette, the phaeton,' the "break" and the "mylord," as our French friends have it. From a purely lay contemplation of these vehicles, we are not disposed to think, that finality has been reached in regard to their shape. w hen the first railway carriages were constructed, either out of loving conservatism or trom a desre not to offend, they were built upon the lines of the stage coach and colored to match. In time they achieved their own independence anu individuality MM. I'anhard -and Levassor will probably find ' time and experience ripen their invention" in this respect. At present a voiture a deux places costs 168; a voiture a quatre places, forme dogcart, costs 300; the phaeton. 212, . and, . naturally the "mylord heads the price-list at 240. These cannot be reckoned extravagant prices. And when you have once purchased a voiture to your taste the saving seems amazing. To begin with, two horses can be dis carded; and horses, we believe, are roughly estimated to cost 25 or 30 a year apiece to keep. A purchaser of petroleum carriage reckons that it costs him from 1.50f to 2f a day. The manufacturer's reckoning is 4s per kilometer for a two-seated carriage, and 5 cents for a four-seated carriage; let us say on an average some thing between a halfpenny and three farthings a mile. Compare this with the expense of horses. Let us say a cab horse costs some 36, and is available for three years; that constitutes a yearly charge of 13. Addoto this 25 for food and keeping and we get a total of 37. The initial ouUay on the vehicle may be ignored, as we are also ignoring the initial cost of a voiture. A horse, year in and year out, would hardly do more than 15 miles a day. Out of these fig nrvs, which are, of course, rough, one may deduct something like twopence a mile as the cost of a horse carriage The advantage is in favor of the petro leum carriage by three to one. PERSONAL. Dr. John A. Brooks of Memphis, Tenn.. has received a call to the Lon don tabernacle, one of the largest re ligions institutions in Europe. Elizabeth Irving Ryan of Portland has been granted a divorce from A. G. Ryan. Mrs. Irving-Ryan is about years old and is worth over half a mill ion dollars, while her husband was for merly her hostler. Her children per suaded her to get a divorce. George Bliss, partner of Governor Morton in banking, died in New xork city. He was a native of Massachu setts, aged 79 years. Bliss engaged iu the dry goods business iu 1845 and later became interested in telegraph, rati road and bank companies. He leaves a fortune of $15,000,000. Dr. Yoshimntsu of Tokio, Japan, has a core for cancer. Injections of strong solutions of oarbolio acid are used upon cancerous growths. Some American physicians think it will not be effective. They say any drug that will destroy cancerous cells is likely to also kill the healthy flesh and possibly cause death of a patient. Dr. P. T. Rhodes, a prominent phy sician of Newville, Ky., is under arrest on a charge of killing Jared Robinson, a wealthy farmer. Rhodes is also sus pected of murdering his own wife. He attended Robinson in sickness aud the latter died. Soon after the doctor mar ried Mrs. Robinson and at once con verted Robinson's entire estate into cash. Not long after Mrs. Rhodes died, it is alleged, from a criminal operation performed by her husband. CRIMES AND CASUALTIES. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Land offlce at Roseborg, Oregon, January . 1S9S. Notice Is hereby riven that the fol lowing named eettler has Died notice of his In tention to make final proof in support of hi claim, and that said proof will be made before , J. R. Nell, county judge of Jackson county. Oregon, at Jacksonville. Oregon, on March 2JL 1S86, viz: HENRY J. GORDON- On homestead entry No. 5972 for the a',i of sW, eii of nw'4, sec. m, tp. 33 s, r le. . ' He names the following witnesses to Droro his continous residence unnn and cultlvtlon of. said land, viz: ' jonn (Jiemons, or Central Point. Orezm. H. Booth By and S. 8. Aiken, of Prosoeet. Oregon, and Joseph Hark, of Leeds, Oregon. m is K. H. V batch. Kcglster. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. land Office at Rosebnnr. Oreron. Tannarr - 18BS. Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of bis IntenMaa to make final proof in support of his claim, aad that said proof will be made before J. it.. Neil, county judge of Jackson county, ' Oregon, at Jacksonville, Oregon, on February 14, la96, yte: On homestead eutrv No. 6644 for the aeK of ne'4. eU of se X, sec. 83, tp. as a, r 1 east. - He names tbe following witnesses to mm his continuous residence uoon the enltivatloK uf. said land, viz : ' obn Com d ton. T K Nichols. John Ashneln. and T J Conover. all of Kaele Point. Oregon. j-10-f-U K. M. Veatch, Register. BUTLER, - ..JEWELER Watch Repairing utler, Barrett & Stewart. OONTR ACTORS U " BUILDERS We furnish estimate on all work In tbe bnllding line. A guarantee goes with every piece 01 work we execute. It must be entirely according to eon tract or no pay la demanded. Give bonds for fnlitulment of contract. Material furnished trom ground to roof when lesirtd To Protect Africa's Elephants. Ilerr Carl Hagenbeck, of Hamburg, the animal trainer and collector, gives it as his opinion that the best way to protect the African elephant from ex tinction is to prohibit the exportation of tusks weitrhing less than tn kilos (twenty-two pounds) and to stop the killing of females and young bulls and encourage hunters, by offering them prizes, to capture the animals alive and bring them into the trading stations. Something will have to be done, and this soon, for at the present rate slaughter a African el minated. of few rears will see the pliant practically exter- Artist "My next picture at the academy will lie entitled 'Driven to Drink." 11 is Friend "Ah! Soniepow erf ill port nival of buffied passion, I sup pose?" Artist "Oh no; it's a Cab ap proaching a water trough." 45 pare Moments. CATARRH is LOCAL DISEASE and it tha mult el colds and udden climatic changta. Itcan be cured byapleasant remedy which is applied di rectly into the nostrils. Be ing quickly absorbed it give relief at once. Ely's Cream Balm ! . . a a & .1 u tklu.Jt Mna fna mf w rwf tmomn in na ma irruvi uiueuuku vuiu Nasal Catarrh, Cold In Uead and Hty Fever of all remedies- It opens and cleanses the nasal passages, allays pain and Inflammation, heals tbe sores, pro tects the membrane from colas, restores the senses f taste and smell rocesvaaturureisieoroymsu. ELY BROTHERS, M Warren Street, New York. Tlclou Acts of Lawbreakers and Losses by Fire and Accidents. At Hollidaysburg, Pa., the boiler in a nail factory exploded, killing three persons and wounding 20. An engine of the North Pacific Coast railroad vent through the apron at the 8ausalito pier and William Turney, the engineer, was killed. Philip Rat.r, the most depraved mem ber of a gang whose Tile actions against little girls horrified San Francisco, was sentenced to 20 years in state s prison. Bellinger & Co. are in the field fnr vour work in the dray line. All work done with dispatch Every line of tention. Popular Science Nature. Invention. NEWS Chemistry, rtedlcine, HEALT Hygiene Formerli Boston Journal of Chemistr CNLSROCD AND iMPROVtO Pnninin a lnrtrn number of Short. Easy. Praotical, Intoresiiug and Popular Sclentilio articles, that can be Appreciated and Enjoyed bv anv intelligent reader, even though he knew little or nothing of Soienoo. and care. work given especial at- Legal Blanks for sale at this office Profusely illustrated and Fre trom lecnnicaimes Newsdealers, 10 cents. $1.00 per year ' pf Mention this paper tor a sample copy, I jinrest Circulation of any Scientific Paper in the World PUBLISHED MONTHLY BV BENJ. LILLARD, New York Opposite PostoOca PAINTERS, Butler & Green, . . Paperhangers Decorators Special Attention Given to Frescoing and Panel Papering ... Office Fittins; g) Is one of our special lines the quality of our work is proven 'xj oy its Deauty ana usie. House Painting and Sign writing. J. A. 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