The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909, July 16, 1897, Page 4, Image 4

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    IE JJEDFORD MAIL
Published Every Friday Morning.
A. 5. BLITON.
MAN WAS SORN TO HUSTLE.
He la of few daia; but quit a plenty,
SUBSCRIPTION $i.8o PER YEAR.
made tho two mm and wl(o. About 10
o'olock tlioy loft for tholr home In
Ploataut Hill precinct, as hnmiv
pooplo oould bo. Mr. Shelley la a wU
to-do fnrmor and a aobor industrious
niau.
THE MO
k -. t iiBit
w DEATH
Blared In tb Poelotoco at Medford, Oregon
aa Second Class Mall Matter.
Ukdford, Friday, July 16, 187.
NEWS OF. THE STATE
S. B. Parish, formerly ohlof of police
4)1 roruana, is aeaa.
A postofBce bu boon established at
Winona, in Josephine Oounty,
Walter L. Main' great circus will
exhibit in Eugene Thursday, July 29th.
1 E. B, MoElroy, instructor of loelo
Some of our exchanges are treating
inie numorousiy,
There were 1104 inmates, 765 fe
males and 848 males, in the Btate asy
lum on June 30th.
Judge Sears, of Multnomah County ,
has decided that the slot machined
cannot be licensed.
B. S. Ward, county treasurer of Clat
sop County, has been found to be more
loan aiZjUuu snort in nis accounts.
Capt. S. B. Ormsby, president of tho
, soiaiers' nome ooara, nas oeen ap
' pointed special agent and supervisor of
forest reserves, at a salary of $2500 per
jear.
The penitentiary stove foundry will
hut down for a month, while the
cupola of the building is being re
paired. About 100 more convicts will
be idle during the lime.
There seems to be plenty of money in
circulation around Sumpter. The re
ceipts of a saloon there on July 5 were
41010 for cigars and liquors alone. The
gambling receipts are not known.
. The presentation of that silver serv
ice to the battleship Oregon was made
at Portland-last Tuesday.' Captain
Barker ol the ship was there to receive
it andiGovernor Lord made the presen
tation speech.
At a recent meeting of Salem Grange,
No. 17, resolutions were ' adopted se
. verely censuring County Judge Terrill's
method of conducting county affairs,
and also the action of the minority of
' the late grand jury.
. Mrs. Wade sued the City & Suburban
" Hallway ' Company, of Portland, for
$5,000 for causing the death of ber little
child some weeks ago, by mangling its
body under car wheels. The court this
week gave her judgment for $SO0
S. N. Alford has been appointed
superintendent of the registry depart
ment of the Portland postoffice to suc-
coeu uuu&a r.pping, woo sianas ac
cused cf entering into a plot to rob that
aivision. - aiiokts oonas are eio,uuu.
In Linn County there are 71 church
organizations, 45 church edifices with
a seating capacity of 13,845; 21 halls,
, with a seating capacity of 1155; valua
tion of church property, (117,275; num
ber of communicants, or members, 3495.
The Drain school district has donated
; its public school buildine to the Drain
, normal school, and it' will be used as a
training school for the seniors. Here
tofore the normal and the public school
'. have been conducted in the same
building.
Bob Hinman, the notorious Douglas
. County criminal, has been placed In
toe saiem penitentiary under a sen
tence of five years for burglary. Hin
man has not yet recovered from the
wounds he received in Arizona while
a fugitive from justice and was taken
to Salem on a stretcher. '
The countvacourt of Marlon Countv
allowed $104 of the bill for $875 pre
sented by Assessor Hobart. Mr. Ho-
bart says he will bring suit for tne re.
mainder. The bill arises from claims
for pay of deputies, the assessor claim
ing the law entitles deputies to t4 per
aay, wmcn tne court reiuses to allow.
In 1844 setting on juries in Oregon
was not very profitable. An act of that
year fixed the pay at only twenty-five
cents for each case tried, but there was
. in those early days a greater dispatch
tooourt affairs than now, and it seldom
required long to dispose of a case.
There was swift justice at two-bits a
case. . . s
There Is a military cadet to West
Point to be appointed from Oregon's
first congressional district within a
very short time. The present appointee
from this district will be graduated in
June, 1898. but the rules reauire the
appointment of a successor to be made
almost a year in advance.' Here is a
chance for somebody who' has a son
whom be desires to have -educated by
Uncle Sam in the art of war;
In 1891 the state of Oregon brought
suit against Baker County for back
taxes amounting to about (14,000. After
five years of litigation, Referee B. F.
Bonham. aDDointed bv the sunre.me
court, has rendered bis findings to the
eneci mat. uaner uounty must pay all
but about (3000, barred by the statute
of limitation. After adding interest
suu costs nuKer county win probably
conclude it had better have paid with
out litigation.
Hon. James P. Gazley, who died in
Whatcom, Wash., July 4th, was buried
in Canyonville. Mr. Gazley waB one of
the well-known pioneers of Oregon,
having been for many years prominent
in politics and public affairs. He was
a lawyer and was one of Oregon s presl
dental electors on the Lincoln ticket.
Of late years he had retired from poll-
hk anu maue nis nome in wasnington,
where he had property interests. Mr.
Gazley left three sons and two daugh
ters. J. P., Elmer and Clarence Gaz
ley, Mrs. G. W. Riddle and Miss Minnio
uaziey.
Eugene was the scene of a romantic-
marriage Thursday morning, says the
vuuru. several months ago f . W.
Shelley, of Pleasant Hill, through a
matrimonial agency, commenced cor
responding witn Miss Enoree Jay, aged
23 years, of AuguBta, Ga. As time
went on a real love affair resulted, and
at last, after first-class references bad
been exchanged, an engagement was
the result. Thursday morning a comely
young woman was met at the north
bound overland train by Mr. Shelley,
find was escorted to the Hotel Eugene.
The meeting was a joyous affair, al
though the parties had never met be
fore. A few hours later a marriage
license wsb procured, and Elder A. C.
JenningB performed the ceremony that
A Mitral aa Isapreaalte Citatum
mt th Moravian.
Clifford Howard coutxihute to the
Latin' Home Journal an Inlrrvvt Ing ar
ticle upon the Muraviausof IkMlileheui
l'a., aud their religious customs: .
"Upon th death of one of the emigre
(ration,'' Jk writ, "the event I nn
uouuml, not by tho mnnntouous,
mournful tolling of tin- bell, but by the
deep-breathing, mriodtou muate of
troiuboura, playcri hi die opeu belfry
at pie of the churah by the trututnte
choir; and aa the dni, sweet noUw of
the familiar hymn are burnt.' to the pro.
pie below they revmatly drop tiwir
work to listen. 'Uarkl' they wfelaner,
'the horn are blowing; teiue una bu
gone home!' Uoae home. perhaps
nothing more beautifully exemplifies
the perfect, unquestioning faith of these
devout people than that expressive ut
textuice., the sincerity of wbteb la t
kont rated by tie lack of mourning
at the passing away of a member ot the
household, however Brarly belovwl ; an
true and heartfelt la the Moravian be
lief that death la but the entnuion tu
a brighter, happier home. The trom
bonea are aleo ueed at the touching
funeral service bld at. the gruve; and
amid their aad, yet inspiring, strains
tbe departed one la laid to his eternal
rest. On all occasion, whether of
death or joy, the trombone lend their
sweet solemnity la fitting breath
From the steeple they herald the fe
tivsl day of each of &h choirs, .itid in
all open-air services their mellifluous
tones are ever preeevivt,"
Barlleet Cheese Esperta..
" urat exports or .-h. f.... .
United States are believed in h.r. iw.
oouv isjb, when Henry BurreU. of
aarKuner countv. N. V nni ,
I n r i . . n . .
uwo wnn Kjigiand.
Kaa-le Fair i.i. .
Eagles do not hare different mates
every season, a do hirH. n.n..
they pair for life, and sometime oeeupy
t he same nest for ma n v
That not only animals hut plants
aiso will have some of their juices or
liquids freeze in the winter time
well known. Twigs will siuiu easily
when the thermometer is below zero.
nnd ice crystals con lie indi!y discerned
by the microscope. But the nuestion.
asks .Meebaa's Monthly, is do they
freeze solid? The contention is that the
active living cells cannot do this, and
still live.
The True Remedy.
W. M. Repine, editor Tiskilwa. 111..
"Chief," says: "We won't keep house
without Dr. King's New Discovery for
consumption, coughs and colds. Ex
perimented with many others, but
neyer got the true remedy until we
used Dr. Klne's New Discovery. No
other remedy can take its place in our
home, as in it we have a certain and
sure cure for coughs, colds, whooping
cough, etc." It is idle to experiment
with other remedies, even if they are
urged on you as just as good as Dr.
King's New Discovery. Thev are not
as good, because this remedy has a
record of cures and besides Is guaran
teed. It never fails to satisfy. Triak
bottles free at Cbas. Strang's drugT
store.
THE COLD l CRUEL.
Dwellers la Rortaeaat ilkerla
aerler.ee fatal taaTerlaaa.
Hie St. Petersburg Geographical
society has published the results of an
exploration among the Vakuti. a oeo-
ple dwelling in a region of Northeast
oioeria, covering an area of over 2,000,
000 square miles, yet numbering no
more than 200,000 souls. They are
gathered mostly on the banks of the
great rivers; The climate 1 a terrible
one. There are not more than 06 days
m me year tree from frost, which be
gins in the middle of September and
.lasts to the middle of May. By October
la me land is covered with a solid man
tle of enow and Ice, which befins to
melt at the end of April.- The cold la
me most intense on the" globe, and the
temperature is lower than any record
er rouna tne pole. It is greater on the
soirtbern plateau than further north on
the shores of the Arctic ocean. DunW
it continuation the atmospheric con
dition is one of undisturbed calm. There
1 not wind enough to move a twig, not
ui cieaves ine sun air. i ne silence
is complete, and all nature is in deep
sleep. Yet the climate is exhilarating
on account oi its dryness, and day and
nigbt have equal temperature. The
snort summer is sudden and very hot.
The people are of Turko-Tartar origin.
Reminders of the Coaiaiaae.
Parisians constantly find awful re
minders of the days of the commune
ntaring them in the face. Kecently the
water supply of the city was beinjj
ameliorated, and in order to build some
storage tanks works were carried on
in the Charonne quarter. Ther?,
wrapped in. their grent coats or blank
ets, no fewer than 800 bodies were
found all victims of the bloody fights
which took place about Mav. 1871.
These remains were gathered up and
buried in a corner of the Cheronne cemetery.
Sales
Talk
With Hood'. Sana pa
ri Ua," Bale Talk," and
how that this niedl
cine ha tnjoytd public confidence and
patronage to f raster u,tnl than aocord
ad any other liroprlatary usdlolu. This
is aimjuy.befauni u poaaaaiaa greater
rant mi. produce rraatsr ours than
y taker. It It not what' wa say, but
what Mood1 aartaparllla dot, that fell
toaatory. v All advert laamsat ot Hood's
DaiMparlU, Ilk Hood's Baraaparlua it
sail, at aoneet. We have Mvar dacalvad
tba public, aU this with It luparlatlv
aadlotnal merit, Is why to Mopl hav
asismg eonnaenra in it, ana buy
IniOOdl
s
Sarsaparilla
Ataloit to the exclusion ot all others. Try n.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood a Co, Lowell. Mass.
a ,, naa are the only pills to take
tlOOd S PUIS witn llood'a 8ariarlll.
WHERE RHOOE ISLAND LEADS.
Taa Lllll Slat aa m reuale ta Ike
aara Mile.
In 1800 only the country between the
Atlantic and theMisaiasippl belonged to
tbe United State. Since that the Louis
iaua purchase in 103, the Florida in
1621; the Mexican acquisitions In 1H1U.
liJO and 1653, and Alaska in 1B07, have
been added.
The increase, excluding; Alaska. ho
teen from 627.S41 to 3,029,000 aqua it
mile, or 3, but the growth of popula
tion has- been from 5,308,463 to 82,021!..
250, or nearly twelvefold.
.In 1600 the inhabitants were a little
lea than seien to a square mile (in 17U0
they had been Jes than five); iu ltj'Jo
they were over 31.
The place where the population Is
densest ia tbe District of Columbia,
which bi 3,839 to the mile; the next is
Rhode Island. 318; then Massachusetts.
2T8; then New Jersey, 1U3; Connecticut,
15; New York, Hi; Pennsylvania, lit)
Maryland, 105. '
The other states and territories run
below 100, down to Montana, Wyoming.
Arizona and Nevada, which have leu
than one Inhabitant to the square mile.
loe census commissioner note that
in Rhode Islund and Massachusetts the
density of population is ns irreat aa in
many of the most densely settled Eu
ropean states, and that the antir..
.North Atlantic division, preeminently
the manufacturing section, has an aver
age of over 100 inhabitants to tbe square
mile.
But It may le a surprise to some that
among the old atstes Mains has nnlv
22; New Ilampaliire, 41; Vermont, 26.
Fniladelphla Ledger.
Honey In Mutter.
Parisian restaurant L.. n.
le honey with their butter. This vIi-m
an agreeable taste ami flam. ... i
makes the inferior butter more isilat-
"1 crave but One Minute." said the
public speaker in a buskv voice: and
then he took a dose of One Minute
Cough Cure, and proceeded with his
'3rtory.-. One Minute Cough Cure Is
nnequaued lorthroatand lung troubles.
Strang, tne druggist, Medtord; Dr. .1.
nume, central roint.
HEAT PHOTOGRAPHS.
Klamath County Items.
Kikiii Din Remilillouh.
ll. H. Ooditnrtl, D. P. Twogooii
and C, S. 1'holpB, noar Tnlont rmi
dtmls, woro iu town yeaturdny on
route for tho i;)iowuuoqu uuuutry
A ooyoto with a dookod tail, with
an upper Blopu nnd umlor bit In
riglit ear and an undor sIoihi in loft,
h at large, lie wag caught on Lout
river Sunday morning by will
Weetlon and Lou MiUnoy, and thus
diBiigurod, was turned loose, and
now probably fools badly ohagrinud
among bis kindred.
Near Hoards, on tho tlosort, in
Butto oreek valley, Fred W. Slope,
a young man about 1S7 years of age
was accidentally Bhot through tho
chest. Ho had placed a ritle, which
he thought was unloaded, agaitiHt
a sngo busb. In pHlling it out, with
tne muzzle toward mm, it was dis
charged, tho ball entering his choit
on ine right side coming out under
tho arm, I. C. HigKins and P. E.
Johnson started with tho unfortu
nate man for tne rails, arriving
nere 'luosday evening at lUo clock
He dlod the following morning at
b o clock from hemorrhage.
Tho flume of tho Little Klamath
ater Ditch Companv, being con.
structed acroHs Ix)st rivor under
the management of J. P. Adams,
will be completed thin week. The
flume is '200 fuel long, 32 feet wide
and 3 feet doep, and will carry over
lu.uuu inches of water. On tho
completion of tho flume tho ditch
will bo completed from Whito lnko
to the east bank of Lost rivor tvhoro
work on the now survey will conso
for the Beason and from which
point a ditch will be constructed
down the rivor's bank to tho old
ditch. This fall, winter and next
spring further work will bo done ou
the new survoy. Parties porforuiing
work on sume will be paid in bo rip
wmcn win oe reaeemeu uy water
payments. It may bo several years
yet ueiore the ditch is finally com
pleted to the lower end of Tulo lake
valley, a distance of 20 miles, but
that it will be, sonio time, is assured.
Tule lake valley is rich and fertile
and oflerB many inducements to
bomeBeekers.
From Klamath Palls Express.
L. F. WilliiB and wifo started to
Ashland this morning. V. A. Dun
lap will have charge of the Electric
Cash Store during their absence.
A. C. Hubbard and wife of Med
tord returned Sunday from the east
ern part of the county and remained
in town until after the colcbration
Monday.
P. L. Fountain arrived yesterday
from Dairy accompanied by bis son,
and niece Miss Eflie Weiss. They
left for Ashland today to attend
Chautauqua and bear Bryan Saturday.
Jacob' Crawford, an old resident
FANCY-DRESS CALL IN LONDON,
lOnallsli WfS aad Wituieii Take Their
Pleasure Hrrluualr.
A fancy-divan bull In IsiikIiiii IshIiiiv
The streets urimiid Commit gui'den on
it fiuicytlrvKS liall ulglit lire iin solemn
ns Scotland Itself, say Herlliner, A
few homeless IaiikIoiici'm iiiu kopt ut
resHH!lful distance by the miIU'i, while
a prwrwloii of cnrrluges t'oes slowly
under the archway uiiil ilepii'iilsserliiUH
ilierry-uiakors, dressed iishIiivi's, light
house, nionks, lump mill vigetnbles,
Owing U thsv iilnboralo illHguUes the
journey piwt the tk'ket-liiki'rs nnd tu
the bull room la slow. On tile Imllromn
floor olllclala, Uitelly void of u settse of
humor nnd drrasml In lilnek velvet nrnl
cut steel buttons, kivp tin terof the
flour cleur, iipsireiitl,v fur their own
use, mill Mu in I rciiily In subdue iiii.v
hurst of light hraHcdiicHH that, might
apeur In lh circle that Is kept moving
about them, Tho geuenil tittlrr are
"keep moving olong." Tbi mini who
manages Die Hcarchllght, from one of
tbe top boxes, probably enjoys the bull
ths most. He eertsluly does more to
help IC The center of Interest Is
wherever he will have It, Ilooan make
n dull costume liright and it auiuier
rty in nun of the Imxw proud: ami
he onu almost remove the irlooiu euused'
by tbo olllclala In lilnek.
Teacher "What was Joiin of Ar-i
niuld of."' Ilrluht Pupil -"Mmle of
uut.- nosum Trunscrlpl.
"1 seem to lie getting pretty close
o the home pliite." chuckled tlto bur
glar, softly oHnlng u dmwer In the
sidfhoiuil.-Cblfugo Tribune.
'Wouldn't. It lw better to cull It an
liiternephew war? The nelees never
have iiuyllilng to do with war." Har
per's Hound Tiible.
-She (seutiiuentiilly)"U'liiil 'isiet-
ry there Is In a lire!" In (siullvl
Ves; u great deal of my noelrv bus
gone there."- Ilarier' llamir.
A Siiarraw's Utile In a Kir Wal.
Hlnls liiive all sorts of iiieir nilveu
liires. hut perhiips wluil. ii ii llm uildcsl
one of I'cecnt days is Hint n lileh befell
n sparrow at Anrterwui, Iml, ll lli tv In
to u knife nd liar fuelory, mill, gelling
Uhi iii'iir n small wheel, wmh suelird In.
The wnrMiigmrn notlettl It (fri Into the
wheel, hut Iiiionlng' that the .cylinder
wan revolving at, a StI of I .'HI revoln
lloua Ik luluule, ItMili It for granted Mini
Die bird hud been killed, When tbr
factory shut down si noon Ihf! 'inen
were astonished ti hear a gent In chirp
from the wheel, mid lo, thnre, w the
sparrow lis well ss ever, 'i'huy nuuil
Hint the bird had eluiig to the strength
ening rod ot Hie wheel nnd was In
emi-darcd eouilltirm. They pleknt
hi in up and put him on a table, and
thence, after colleetlng Ills wits, llutlll
He bird Hew lo freedom. Ths wheel
Iu which the blnl rode made M l,il)0 rev-
nliilloiis while It was upon It, and so
the lltiy frill hered erenture traveled
si veiity-three and elglit-toulhs rollea In
the riiihruee Of a Hying wlieel.--f.1evr-
laiul i'laln Denier. . i ,
ft asked the iiuMlion "llavu vmi cot
A stomach?" it would Iki safe on lien
ors! principles to answer " Vos." lint,
if ...... u ...... ,.f i. i. it
II JUl, qi V QUI V VI II, bllWV IV, Jf Jlltl QTUr
feel any, distress uiltir eating oe any
pains of wtuitttver (Inscription In Hie
region of the stomach, you have got
something moru ihun an ordinary
stoiuiivh; in other words, you have, gut
a diseased stomach. The stomach la a
isiwerful musolo, and the proiier rem
edy lor a tlrud niusulo Is rest. Try the
Khnkor Dlgosltvo Cordial, for thin
product not only contains digested food,
which will nourish tho system without
any work on tho pari of tho dlsnased
organs, but it aids tho digestion of
other foods as well. You oun u.st Its
value, lu your vase for thu trifling sum
ol IU uetits. Siimple bottles at this
price aro carried by all druggist.
' Luxol Is thu best medicine for uhll
dren. Doctor recommend It in pliwn
of Castor Oil.
4
NDY CATHARTIC
tot
25 SO'
CURtCOHSTIPATIOri
aaaMa-aj mmwm-
atU.
IiBSOLUTELT GD1E1ITEED I? " 7-rf-tis.iioc cm u. ts.ia.tj u.l
7;. i "ulu'a"UMU'MM.S.tMfTl arsrls. Sat r.aw .asi astarslrwslt, lui
JACKSONVILLE
WBLE
mm
J CWHIPP
Does General Contracting in all lines.
iPropr.
GRANITE AND MARBLE WORKS.
J acksonvillo,
Sahataseea Ssaalllve tn Weak RsSla-
los fro am a Heated HoSr.
The invisible radiations from a heated
body possess 1be jvower of effoetingcer
tain chemical decomxitious much aft
er the manner of lights, as, for in
stance, in photography, soya the St.
Louis Globe-Deinocrat. Among the
substances sensitive to weak radl
tions of hat may be mentioned paper
saturated with cupric bromide, or a
mixture of sulphate of copper and
potassium bromide, which has a faint
greenish tint that becomes olive brown
in radiant heat, and if green is used a
brown image can be obtained in a min
ute by exposing to the radiations from
a gas stove ami on treatment with sil
ver nitrate this image becomes black by
reason of tthe reduction of the silver.
Bichro mated paper is affected by radi
ant heat, as by light, and paper impreg
nated simply with sulphate of copper
yields a feeble image, which becomes
nearly black when treated with silver
nitrate. A mixture of sulphate of coo
per and oxalic acid gives a paper which
uecomes Drown on exposure. Chlorate
of copper is also very sensitive, the faint
oiue color becoming a deep green.
Similarly used bromide of tin behaves
as if exposed to light, hut unexposed
parts become very blank when, f rontal
with silver nitrate. Nitrate of silver,
piii:u is marseuiy acted upon by light,
. aiiKuuy Drowned when exposed to
neat, rauiatioo, and the tint is deepened
) ojuroijumone orgalllcncid.
on Lost river near Merrill, diet
Wednesday afternoon. Tulv 7. 1897
oi neart laiiuro. tie was taken
suddenly ill with a pain in his side
snortiy alter noon and JJr. Wr ah
was sent for. Before he got started
however another messenger arrived
announcing .Mr. Urawlord's death
lining Locations.
J H Bbotwell locsted July 1 Una laches of
iiuw i . i . . i c jippiciraio.
W UC'arvllle locate! Juno IM a placer claim
W II
Church located Mav 17 unarm, ih
near
water
ry Urlnor located June S9 100 Inohos of
from Kvansoroek.
t.'has Uoslev and Knht T.wlor nt-A t..n. in
nuarn ciaim ia n agncr creek dla-
i W 1
Whr She Pawned the Kettle.
A poor Irish woman took a eonner
kettle to a pawnshop in order to secure
some money. "I should think von
would not, want to put this up," re
marked the pawnbroker. "What will
you cook your dinner In?" "Sure, it's
to get money to buy meiit with to nut
in it that I'm nawnin' i he thing."
John Griffin, of Zanesville, O., says:
I never lived a dav foe tbf e.
without suffering agony, until a box of
DeWitt's Witch Hazol 8alve cured my
ptleB." For piles and rectal troubles
cutB, brulsos.HnrHtns, eczema and all
skin troubles Be Wilt's Witch Hanoi
Salve Ib uneniialcd. Strnnir. the iin,,cr.
gist, Medford; Dr. J. Hinklo, Central
Point.
hVianons Why Chamberlain's Colic.
viioiera anu Liiarrlioea Kem
edy Is tho Best.
1. Because it affords almost Instant.
renel in case of nain In the stomnoh.
vuuu unu cnojera morDUS.
2. Because it is the only romcdy that
never falls In the most severe caseB of
ayacntory and diarrhoea. '
3. Because it is the only remedy that
win cure enrocic atarrnoca.
. 4. Because it Is tbe only remedy that
mil prevent ouiouB eono. - ,
5. Because It is tho only remedy that
will cure epidemical dysentery.
0. Because it is the onlv remedy that
tun si ways oe uepenaea upon in ail
oases of oholera infantum.
7. Because it Ib tho most prompt
and most reliable modiclne In uso for
bowel complaints.
8. Because It produces no bad results.
0. Because It Is pleasant and nafo to
take.
10. Because it has snvncl thn lives
of more people thun any other medicine
In tho world.
Tho 2;j and tiflr. sl'en fne snln he C, Vf
Haeklns, druggist, ,
A sfek person trvinr to keei tin on met
stimulating tonics is like any one pretend
ing to swim while supported by a belt. The
insiani ine support la witudrawn down
you f o.
NearW all diseases result from a
seated impairment of the nutritive nowern
wnicu cannot oe rcacnea dv anv fmnnrar.
exhilaration. The onlv rnuil that onw nmA
icine can do la to increase vour own natural
powers of recovery and make you able to
wnu iot Tourncu.
The debilitating weakness, nervousness
nd digestive disorder which indicates this
state of mal nutrition can only be overcome
by a scientific remedy like Hr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery which sets di
rectly upon the digestive and blood-making
tlon of food into rich, healthy blood, which
carries genuine permanent vitality to every
corner of the system.
It Is vastly more nutritious than tnalt
extracts. It does not paralyze the nerves,
but feeds them with health. It Is better
inan cou liver oil emulsions. It is assimi
lated by the weakest stomachs. It does
not make flabby useless fat. but mnsculnr
sirenrin ana neaitny nerve-force. It Is the
niy perieci invigorant tor corpulent people,
Mrs. Klla Howelt, of Drrby. Perry Co.. Ind..
wrllts) in the year or 1S94 I was taken with
stomach trouble nervous dyspepsia, Thare was
i .7 ,n m'. oinacn, nno a weight which
seemed like a rock. Everything that I ale gave
me ST rat pain; I hsd s bearing down leiiiarion;
was swelled scrota my stomach; Imd a ridge
around ray right side, and In a short time I was
Bloated. I was treated by three of our best phy
sicians hut got no relief. Then Ur. rleroe
oolden Medical Discovery was recommended to
r"1 1 s . nn cemmencen ine use or It, I
began to see a change for the better, 1 was so
weak I could not walk serous the room without
amiliitnnce. I took Dr. Pierce's Oolden Medical
Discovery and one bottle of the PaaM pt.
lets.' I began to improve very fast after the use
ols rew bottles. The phynlclnns who stlrmled
me said I had 'droiay 1 and that my illuaie was
lending Into pulmonary consumption, I had
quite n cough, nnd the home phvuidnns gnve me
kptodlc, IthankGodtbat mycureltiieriiiancnt''
No-To-llso for Klfly '. nl,
GuamntGcd toliaecohuhlt euro. umUon wr.ni
tnon strong, blood pure f.0o,U. Alldrugulsts,
CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY
Oregon.
THE VERY BEST OF
BRICK AND MASON WORK.
S. CHILDERS,
gCtlTHAOTOn np DUILDEn.
I manufacture a splendid article oi Brick-8ee ' s'am plea
everywhere about tho city, .Yard ono block north f
Brewery. Residence north C street, Medford, Oregon.
fONTRAOTOR ano gUILDER.
JOBBING OP ATJ. TrTXTT-iQ
All work guaranteed first-clasfl. Plans and ARtirnntAR fMrtiinlitfirl a 9
all kind of work either brick or wood.
Bills of LUMHKIt of all kinds filled on short notice. Bssh, Doors and Mill wo of al
kinds any ttilnv in ths shape of wood work oan be had 00 short soUee.
Medford, - - - - - - - Ores-cm
fwwww.www-i.--.l..yiyva,a,uva.
E. C. BOECK
Wagonmaker
Now work mnilo to order,
h'ull slock of material for Jr5x
all ill nils of wagon and
buggy repairing... 'H1
All work guaranteed II est
class. Shop In rear of Mor-
riman s 'inicksmlth shop .
There Isn't
a Branch ...
SHERIFFS SALE.
piirsunnci! of sdenroo and ordnr of mile
rendered in tlllt f!lrr,nlt. I'norl nt lh. M,.,t r.t
uruRun, wrniiii nnn tor the County of .IiicUson,
on the; tho With duy of September, A. I)., IMM, In
',Vr. 'lllr'. Plaintiff, Slid ngiilnsi
C'hsrles Milton, ilolumlant, for the mim or tW.m,
nnd lllO flirtllfir Hlltn nt fltllO nUn nlloraiiv r..,,u
Iin? 6''"ts niid illHUurBOmenls taxed ut
IM.TO, with legal Intorost theseon, togolhor
with accruing oosts. on which JIMgmont thnro
liss been nsld nnd orodltod tho sum oflMt.00,
leaving a bulnnno of JI0.00, with legal Intorost
lhnM.ni, Imm .1... ....... ,wu
exposo for sale nnd will sell, ns tho law directs,
nt tbo front door of the court house of ssid
(.oimty, In tho town of Juoksonvlllo, Htuto of
Oregon, on
Saturday, July 31, 1807,
St the honruf l.wn n'ltlnnlf n. m.. thn rnllnutl.,-
ilcsorlhi't! ruul iiropcrty, to wlt:
i.ois uve y,j unu six (in, in ihock snvenlyTour
I?-!!, lis dftHlur111ll.1l iiriit .Itnwn inlnn lltn rn.n..i,..i
plat of the ri own of Medford, .Inultson County,
regan.
,., . , , A, H, TlAHNKS,
t-llMrlff of JnrkMnn ( mm!,, 1.. n
fiatcd at JiickKonvllle, tlnigon, June 'ifi, ISII7.
Dr. Miles' Psla till slop Headache.
Of IDaoksmithing that 1
do not fully understand,
and my prices will not
cripple your purso, nor will
tho shooB I sot cripple your
horses. I do all kinds of
wagon and carringo work..
J. R. WILSON ...
RIITI.P.R
....TEWELER
Oppnjilln
llotol NiihIi
Watch Repairing
Tn Oars Constipation rnrever.
TlLlfll r'liMl.nrntu "..nil,, I'.ill.nw. I., inn nr 'I,-,.
If 0. U. a. lull to euro, druggists rofund mum r.