Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1898)
51 WORD MAIL I Published Every Friday Morning. A. S. BLITON. WAN WAS BORN TO HUSTLE. He is of tew days; bill Quite a plenty. SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 PER YEAR. entered In toe Poatolhoe at Modford, Oregon as Second-Class Mall Matter. Mkdfohd, Friday, May 27, 18P8. THIS PAPER U gfcttsS vertleliie Agency, M and (Uv Mcrehanta Ex eaango. San Krauolsco, California, wburo con tracts for advertising tan be made for it. ' Our Clubbing; List. Thk Mail and Weekly S. P. Cull 12 23 " Examiner 2 S5 " ' ' ' Chronicle 2 35 " " OroRonian 2 00 " " Cosmopolitan ... 2 10 " Weekly Cincin nati Enquirer, , - 1 75 NEWS OF THE STATE. In Harney County $45,000 have been paid out during tbe last sixty days tor cattle. The Oregon State Horticultural So ciety will hold its summer meeting at Eugene on June 9th and 10th. The state convention of tbe Univer sale Church is to be held in Portland on June 3d, 4th and 5th. A good pro gram is promised. Six hundred head ot horses will be required in Sherman County this har- Test to operate combined harvesters. Besides these there will be at least 40 steam threshing outBts at work. The marshal of La Grande is a muscu lar man, but the Chronicle of that city does not think he will be able to "wring" the curfew bell, as one of that paper s contemporaries suggests. The murrea on the rocks off the Jurry County cout will soon begin lay ing their eggs, and preparations are already being made by those on shore ior at oounwui narveet 01 these birds' egga. Tin at Tirrdtna (ha nst.l uil nVH.u1 Sunday evening, the supposed victory of Sampson's fleet. A hose cart in tbe proci aslon ran over two men, killing one 01 them instantly. The other died in abort time. ,. A Salem lady would like to have tbe city counoil pass an ordinance for a three-foot sidewalk for pedestrians just uuuiue tee street euro, ana mug not interfere wun oioycusts. it IB appar ent mat this lady does not ride a wheel Twenty Christian Indians, from the Nez Perces reservation, are holding campmeetlngs near the agency on the umauua reservation. They are mem' bera of the Presbyterian Missionary Society, and were educated at tbe Lapwal and Mount Idaho Indian schools. It will require one thousand tons of iron pipe to carry water from the reser voir to the factory buildings of the new sprecKies oeet sugar factory In California. The pipe ranges In size from six to thirty-six Inches in diam eter and It Is ot interest to note that it 1b made in Oregon and shipped from roruana. A Spaniard, named LoDez. indulged in some slighting remarks against the government in the presence of a num berof Indians at Yainax, last week, and soon found his neck encircled bv 1 rista, the end of which was passed over me jimo 01 a tree near oy me lniurlatefl rea men. ma pleadingB and the timely arrival of the Indian police alone saved mm a nance in tbe air. The Shakers of Mount Lebanon. community of simple, honest. God-fear ing men and women, have prepared the Shaker Digestive Cordial for many years, and it is always the same, simple. honest, curative medicine that has celped to make the Shakers the Healthy, lone-lived neoole that thev are. The Shakers never have indiges tion. This is partly owing to their simple mode ot life, partly to the won derful properties of Shaker Digestive Cordial. Indigestion is caused by tbe stomach glands not supplying enough digestive juice. Shaker Digestive ixn-oiai supplies wnat s warning, bflak er Digestive Cordial invigorates tbe stomach and all its glands so that after awhile they don't need help. As evi dence of the honesty of Shaker Dletea- tive Cordial, the formula is printed oh every bottle. Sold by druggists, price m cenw 10 i.uv per oottie. After Years of Life Together. From tbe Portland Welcome. In 1868 at Jacksonville, Ore., Henry yrosin iea saran taae, men a rosy cheeked rural lass, to the altar and made her bis wife. The couple lived together happily for nearly 80 years, when the husband heartlessly desprted his Bharer of happiness and sorrow for : over a score of years, and failed to longer support her. This has now led to Mrs. Crosin filing a suit for divorce, the matter being made public today. The grounds upon which a separation is asked is desertion. The plaintiff also wishes to hear again the pleasing sound of the name of her youth, so she asks the court to restore to her her maiden name Sarah Eads,. City Council Proceeding. A special meeting of the city council was held last Tuesday evening week. At tbU meeting H. L. Gilkey was ap pointed mayor. Mr. Gilkey upon his removal to Ft. Klamath tendered bis resignation aad the same was accepted, but upon bis return to our city for permanent residence tbe counoil im mediately .proceeded to put him back in the position to which he was elected. The Southern Oregon Pork Packing Company was given permission to use waste water from the ditch when there was . more tc the ditch than was re quired by Messrs. Jones, Denton and Crystal, which gentlemen have a prior privilege. The above company will lay a pipe from the ditch to their slaughter house where the water will be used for watering stock. Mo-To-Bm tor Fifty Cent. Guaranteed to'iiaoeo habit cure, makes weak 1MB strong, Mood pure. Wo, II. All druggist. The Camp at Henley, California, Tho town of Henley is situated in SiHkiyou County, California, tuul is about one-half a mile from Horn brook, which is a lively little rail road station. Tho ground iu this vicinity shows one the energy of the minor, and if one is to judge from the number of prospectors wo see pass, we may look, for good re sults, if labor and perseverance count for anything. Henley is having quite a mining boom. Several quartz ledges are being worked here with good 8U0' cess, and the two quartz mills are kept running night auu day, em ploying from thirty-five to forty men. Mr. Gilson is preparing to add ten stamps to his already rive stamp mill. ' Both the grain and fruit crops look well in this section. There are a good many Jaokson County people here, among whom are Andrew Payne, Mr. Coker, L. C Rodenberger, Wiu. Stidham and Miss Mary Magruder, ot Central Point. Mrs. L. C. Rooeniierokr White Ghost, the Brule Indian chief who has offered to raise 2000 warriors to help Uncle Sam, a few vears ago while on a visit to fort Hale, wanted a gun made a present to him. hen asked if he wanted to kill the soldiers with it, he fa cetiously remarked: "No, Indian use club to kill soldier. Want gun to kill cowbov." Real Estate Transfer. H B Mitchell to Frederick W Mitchell, 40 acres, sec 16, tp 38 a, r 3 w Cora B Lyon to Louisa R Parker, 1 acre, tp J?, r 1 w John Coleman to C L Corwln, ISO acres, aeo ID, tp 38 a, r 1 w Mary A Prjce et al to James Hays, lota b and s, btk , Gold HUI. Ben Thurston to J B Scott, A C Merrill and Iihm Ward, a mlnlna claim in 500 low so Humbug district 400 jnuiniuiDU) nuiun o oarnusa, Mia 4, 6 and t, blk K. R R add to Ashland, and lot 11 and a K of lot 10, blk M; also lot 2, blk 9, in Helms place; also lota 1, 3, S, 4, 6, 6. 7, 8 and 9, J H Barnum's add to Medlord W B Cotton, executor of estate of Wm L Slaughter, to Ethna I Flook, lota 4, 6 and , blk F, R K add to Ashland....... Kdwln Pierce to J B Scott, A C Merrill and James Ward, Little Julia claim, Humbug district. B B Olson to J E Olson, 2.70 acres, tp S7 s. r2 w sso W I Vawter to N w Powell, lot 18, blk zl.Medfora nining Locations. W H Grow and Wm Murrav located, on Aoril , tne uiack tsear mine, in rilot kock ataincl. Tnoraas Houston ana James Murray located. on April 25. tbe Little Chief mine, PUot Kock district. James Murray and W H Grow located, on April 25. tbe Gray Eagle mine, same district, loslah H Mcvav and Thomas Houston lo cated, on April 26, the Lucky Boy mine, same district. John F Scott and James Murrav located, on April 84. the Silver Bell mine, same district. Wm Pryor and W D Tlllatson located, on April 34, the Copper Bell mine, same district. Joslah H Mcvay and John F Scott located. on April 94, the Last Chance mine. In same district. Win Pryor and W D Tlllatson located, on April 85. the Crown Point mine, same district. R P McCullack located, on May 6th, 1000 locoes oi water irom urave creek. Alex orme located, on Anrll 25. a Dlocer claim in Foots creek district. N F Inman located, on Julv 8. 1997. a mine in Grave creek district. F M Deehed located. May 5. a nlacer claim in same district. These Were Fortunate. At the late teachers' examination certificates were awarded to tbe follow ing: First Grade Alice Bacon. Edna A. Harvey, Agnes Owens. Chas. W. Bovee. Second Roberta RioDev. Mira Carlton, Maltie Carter, Elsie Nye. Third Isabel Culp, Aileen Webber, Grace Odgers. Miss Martha Cardwell was a successful applicant for a stato diploma. Miss Mamie Rippey's grade was sufficient for a certificate, but in compliance with instructions sent out oy ine suite superintendent, none waB issuea to ner as ene is under seventeen years oi age. How's This? We Offer One Hundred Dollars Reward fnr any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by a ail Biurra i,ure. K- I I'll I'V l.'V . tn Dm.... T" I .. .! r We. the undersfirned. taavn known r.J CIimm ivr we nit id cars, ana oeuevc mm penectiy honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligation made bv their firm. West & Trd ax, wholesale druggists, Toledo, O. VVAl.MinU. 1V1NHAH & 31AKVIN. WnOIMUUP All ff. Hail's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act ing directly upon tbe blood and mucous sur faces of tho svstem. Price 75o. per bottle. 8old uy an urugmsia l esumoniais iree. Hairs f amily Fills are tbe best. CLIMATE AND CHARACTER. National Traits Often Molded by the Na ture of the Weather. . The civil war is said to have been caused by a difference in climate, and the question is now being discussed hcther a hot or cold climate has the greatest effect on national character. It has been widely believed that a se- ere climate produces the greatest ef fect, because it compels effort and self- denial, and thus promotes energy and inventiveness, says the New York Jour nal. . , ' It would also seem that tbe influence of climate upon the national chr.rael:v has been greatly exnggciatcd. As syria, Babylonia. Egypt and Corthagr. situated in hot latitudes, were among the. most masterful nations of antiq uity. Mohammed and bis conquering legions issued from the burning Wilder ness of Arabia, and at a later period his successors were able to beat back the repeated attacks of the combined cru sading nations from the north. The greatness of a notion depends mainly upon intellectual and moral qualities, and these have often been conspicuously developed among the In- Habitants of hot cIimateR. It is im portant, too, to remember that the same, nation, occupying the same re gion, may be great and powerful In one age and weak and contemptible in an ther, i he difference between the an cient Greeks, Romans and Saracens, on the one hand, and their modern de scendants on the other, cannot have been due to climate. WE ARE GREAT LITIGANTS. Mora t'lvll l.uw stills Hero Than In Any Ottiur Country In the World. A mail of ingoiiiiiiiH inliul, ami appar ently timpk IoIkui-o, lins gouo to tint trtmblu ot figuring out Hit) number of luwsullh liiMtirlit In each country in u year, unil ho has roaclic-d the coiiolu sion that tho llnltod Stato is a bolter country for attorneys and couiikoIoi-s Until any other ulvlltr.ed land under the sun. lie ll;uri'N us lawsuit civil no tions only, taking into no necomit pro ceedings of it crlmlnul uhuruutor brought by tho publlo utithuritloN against individuals. Ho litis tmoer tulned that, tubing the lljnn-oH for the lust IU yours as a fair nvortigti, there are 1,3.10,000 lawsuits brought in Kng litnd every year, TfW.uuO In I'raiioc, 1,. 400,1100 In Italy, i),!IOO,000 In Germany and 5, S00, two in the United Stutes. It Is not to bo inferred from this, snya the Now York Sun, that the people of one country uro union mm-o prone to lltigatiou thau are tho H-oplu of an other, but the explanation Is to be found lu the fuet that the conditions of litigation vary oxceodliigly, tloing to law iu Kngluml Is very expensive busi ness, for It entails out lays in the form of coats and exH'nses so large that many of the courts are praetienlly elosod to persons of modest moans, anil a long litigation unsuccessfully pur sued ends ofteii lu bankruptcy. lu Frauee the number of lawsuits is kent down through the generul prnotice of "arbitration." us many us 100,000 eases in a year, especially those arising from disputes ever wages, being settled by this agency without onerous cost to either party. In lierniany a grout ma jority of cases are petty ouos, involving a small amouut of money and due. many of them, to customs or usages which nro not sutllciently defined to be, iu all cases, similarly understood by both parties to an agreement. This is especially tho case In the farming dis tricts of Germany, and there are many legal disputes in the manufacturing districts, too. The number of cases credited to the United States seems enormous, but it is probably accurate. There are, for example, eleven district courts for the disposal of civil cases in New York city, in one of these courts, by recent report, the number of actions brought in a year was shown to be 9,100. These courts have before them each year, on the average, 78,000 cases. The cases brought in the state courts of New York amount in a year to about 150, 000, and of those brought in the fed eral courts New Y'ork furnishes a verv large number. Taking the whole coun try through, it seems that the average number of cases per thousand of pop ulation is in the neighborhood of 78 to 80. The number of lawyers in the United States is materially laruer than in any other country in the world, and the amounts in dispute here are much greater than elsewhere. THE QUEEN CLEANS HOUSE. Old Apartmemia In KeBalnattoat Pal ace to Urn Pat Im Order. Queen Victoria has given orders that the old state apartments in Kensington palace, which have long been disused shall be put in order and opened to the public indefinitely, says the New Vprk Mail and Express. Nine rooms wli.'be renovated, among them the bedroom in which her majesty was sleeping on the memorable June morning nearly 61 years ago when the news came to her that tbe archbishop of Canterbury was waiting in the council chamber to tell her that she was sovereign of one of the great kingdoms of the world. All these nine rooms are denuded of furniture and almost knee deep with dust. The ballroom In the Denmark wing, where the men and women of the aristocracy held high revel for two cen turies, baa been found a handy place for tucking away things which were not wanted elsewhere, and it looks like a regular junk shop. Rusty barrel or gans, broken-down tables, unseated chairs and pictnreless frames lie on the floor in heaps, and over these hangs In ragged strips, aa though to cover the desolation, the tapestry which former ly decked the walls, a striking illustra tion of tbe "base uses" to which a royal p-ilace may come. Another of the rooms to be restored is Sir Christopher Wren's famous ban quoting hall. The chamber in which the queen was bom will not be opened to the genral public, but admission may be gained by n special order from the lord chancellor. In this room, which has been kept In order, a brans plate has been placed, inscribed: "In this room Queen Victoria was born May 24. 1819. WEIRD PLAINS OF LA MANCHA. Melancholy Rains In This Land of Dead. the Starting from the Argamasilla be fore daylight our little mule hod (nidged during eight long hours the dc r.udetl inhospitable plain of La Manclm where the unchecked cold blnsts from Ihe Sierras held wild riot In the winter, and which was now lying prostrate un der the furious caresses of the sun. soys a writer in Scribner's; her parched soil bursting now and anon with dull sounds tike the moans of a creature lu pain, hen we became aware of the proximity of the highway we were looking for, it was by Borne ruins, in evitable concomitants of this land of the dead. . lie fore these silent, melan choly remains and in the absence of the living, one can feel the presence of the dead. 'Tis as if tbe past centuries were walking by the aide of the traveler, keeping him company and little Im agination is needed to people airain this great artery of human, communi cations thrown across the undcfiled country by the Romans with Iberians Goths and Moors, with Spaniards of the time when Spain was the most power ful country of the civilized world and see Isabella, Charles V., the somber Philip, speeding on in all the splendid paraphernalia of royalty, and with their retinue of haughty C'astilians. What n sense of the awing of history one has in such places, and before the eternity of nature how ephemeral and inconse quential human life seems I W. H. PALMER, WATERLOO, IOWA. "Saved From tha Horrors or Nsrvous Pros, ration" by Or. Mllai' Nervlns, COlKltl dues uot always Imllcate consumption. Mr. W. II, I'almur, Waterloo, Iowa, writes: "1 was tukuu with a norvous stricture ot tho bronchial tubes, which dovelupwl Into uervoua proa- truuon, i was so weuk I could uot alt no. got uo sloop fur days except when under the Inlluenco of opiates. For four months I auf ferod uguiilos uuil prayed Unit I mluhtille ami bo at reau Ouo pliyalclua said I had coiMuuiptlon, lor 1 had a tough that gave, ma no rent. Hut a good old physician whose mudlcliio had failed. advised niu to use Dr. Miles' ltostorailve Nervine and I thank Ood that It has bright ened niy days, lougthonud my llfu and saved mo from tho horrors of norvous prostration." Dr. Miles' Uomcdlbs are sold by all drug' lists under a positive guarantee, Brat bottle bonottta or money refunded, Book on Iloart and Ntrvca sent free to all applicants. DB. WL8 MEDICAL 00., Elkhart, lad. PREHISTORIC AMERICA Rains of Magnlflreut City In tluateaaala A l-alace ISO Feot Long. At a recent American association meeting at Buffalo Mr. ,1. It. Chundler described a visit to a wonderful ruined city of Central America. The road to the ruins of Tzuc I'oku- ma. In Guatemala, runs through nit Im mouse plno forest, and they include the foundations of what was once a popu lous city, with temples, palaces and other structure. These were described by Mr. Chandler. He suld tliuleverv temple stood In a plaza, around which had been ranged the dwellings of the priests. Kvery strategic o!ut on the mountain wsaonee fortllletl by a castle tort or pyramid. The central poliicc was 190 feet long, with wulls eight feet thick. On the highest oiiit stood a fortress 240 feet long, with a pyramid 40 feet high, the whole built on termers whence the Tzac l'okuinn can le seen in its entirety, as well as the hills, vol canoes, valleys and rivers for linn drills of miles around. This splendid city could have held three times as many persons as now inlutbit Guatemala. Few utensils wen: found, and no statues, sculptures or nierogiyphies. 1 here is also a eonii-u hill called Mlluniz, with a sneritlciiil pyramid, through which goes a wind ing passage, said by tradition to lead to a rich subterranean city. A LACK OF LIONS. It la Now found Nnenarr to Preaervo tbe King of lleaata In India. uritisn ntinters or lurge game are bittorly lamenting the gradual extinc tion of Hons in India. They arc no longer found there in any number outside of one region, the forest of Gir, in' KnUnawar, says an English exchange. They have disap peared from the hills of Burda, tho country of t'sjkot, and other places which formerly enjoyed a high reputa tion on account of the abundnnec of lions in therm. In the forest of Gir it is fenretl that their extinction will not he long de layed. Formerly few European hunt ers (hired to venture inlo this place. which was infested with fevers and bandits. Now the forest is belnff cleared and fevers and bandits are dis appearing and with them the lions. To prevent the total extinction of these animals the durbar of Kathiawar has prevented the hunting of them for six years. Wates la a Uaa'a Dsa. In the Hungarian menageries a fa vorite sensation scene is for four whist players to sit down and play a rubber in the lion's den, while a fifth stands by to tee fair play on tho part of the Hons. I thonght, writes James Pay in the Illustrated London News, I had played whist under all possible dream stances, and in company with the very strangest specimens of created beings, bat this experience is beyond me. Some people are made nervous by folks look ing over their head, which (unless they are my adversaries) does not affect me at all, but I don't think I should like this from a lion: the greater attention he paid me the less pleased I should feel by the compliment. I am sore I should be very muoh put out eren if ft were evoked by a mistake of my oppo nent's if he roared. Hungarian play ers da not seem to mind these things. The other day, howevor, It appears this very interesting performance was given nee too often. The lions, with dell- ate forbearance, abstained, It is true, from Interfering with the players, but they went for the fifth man, whom they doubtless considered superfluous, and made very short work of him. In spite of the selfishness that is often, though moat unjustly, attributed to eard play ers, tha rubber broke np at one. - , The Anemone, The anemone Is named from two Greek words signifying "the wind flow ers" an allusion, to tha habit of thin plant of living in an exposed situation. According to one classical legend, the flower originally sprang from the blood of Adonis; according to another, It sprang from tho tears of Venus at the death of one of her many loycrs. J. Nervine An Old Man's Last Hope. Made helpless as a baby by a dreadful nervous diS' ease he read of a case like his wn, and had enough faith to follow the example it set him. Now he is himself an example to others who are suffering from disorders of the nertvus system. Swlng wood, working In hit garden, Walking three timet a day lo and Irom his place oi business Hum lorm part oi Ihe dally routine ol Edwin K. Tripp, Pott muter oi Middlelicld Centre, N. Y. He b put his seventieth birthday. Nearly fifty yn a blacksmith I thirty. two years Justice ol Ihe Peace I three years town clerk, then postmaster i forty-sis. years a rcaiocnt ot tnc town ne now Uvea In these are the bar outline! oi a useful life. Mr. Tripp's career is a type. His story will be read with heartfelt sympathy by thousands. His hearty endorsement ol Dr. WUllams' Pink Pills tor Pale People will be echoed by tens of thousands. He said I "In March, 1892, I was attacked by what I afterwards learned was locomotor ataxia. "Two skillful doctors did everything they could for me. I steadily became worse. Was unable to dress myself. "Later I could nol move even about Ihe room, but was carried In my chair. "I gave up hope. The doctors gave mc no encouragement. I did nol expect to live very long. 1 was more helpless than a baby. I sank lower and lower. "In June the tide turned I From Ihe lowest ebb, it began to set toward health and vigor. "The turning point was a newspaper article. Aa KMisTllsh lloy'e Iteadlsvsj. When you have to play football and go In for house runs aud do Jirtip., to say nothing- of spending soiuo hours a day lu form, yon don't get Tory muoh time for reading. Deaidus, It's rather smugplsh to road much out of school. The thing to do is to road In form, which is quite easy wheu your form master is shortsighted. Just stick your book iu the lid of your desk, uuder your construe, and you can read away aa muoh as you like. Only it baa to be a thiu book. Tho best for this purpose is tbe "Hed Rovers of Mexico. " becauso it is priutud on very thiu paper aud has a paper cover. Besides, It ouly costs a penny, aud even this expense may be diminished by tearing out the pages and passing them rnuutl as you rend thniu. Every chap In the upKir fourth has read tho "itod Hovers of Mexico." It's wull rather steep, you know. You cau't buliuvo all of it, hut it really isn't nun baa. Academy. Kl.h.. la Line. It is not uuusual at the acinarium to see in a tank tha fishes nil together side by side and heads in a Hue, like a pla toon or section of men. They remain thus fur a considerable time. Moat fishes are gregarious, they keep together lu schools In the water, aud hero they seem to keep together for oouipruir's sake, Sometimes all tho fishes In a tank but one will bo lined up iu this wnv side by side and beaded iu one direction, while tho single fish will bo back of tbe others aud headed tho other wnv. Then tho suggestion of soldiers convoyed to tho mind by tho Ashes In lino is strengthened. For tbe single Ash seems to be a rear guard, lookiuit out for the enemy in (bat direction Mew York Bon. Osve Her Agm Away. Tboy had not met for yean. "Do yon remember," he asked, "tho littlo aa ri ling we planted together as a boy aud girl?" Her eyes softened at tho recollection. "Yes," she answered, "I remember It well." "That Banllna. "ho continued dream ily, "must be a strong aud sturdy oak now." Tho softness all died out of her eves. and tho conversation lagged. Pearson 'r Weekly. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS la due not only to the orlo-lnalll v ami simplicity of the combination, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by sclentlflo processes known to the California Via Svnup Co. only, and we wish to impress npon all the importance of nurchnslno' tha true and original remedy. Aa tha genuine Syrup of Figs la manufactured by the California Fra Strop Co, only, a knowledge of that fa, will assist one In avoiding the worthless Imitations manufactured by other par ties. The high (tending of the Oali vornia Fio Sirup Co. with the medl cal profession, and the satisfaction which the p-cnulne Svrun nf vim i... given to millions of families, makes the name of the Company a guaranty of the excellence of Its remedy. It la far In advance of all other laxatives, as it acts on the kidneys, liver and bowels without irritating or weaken ing them, and it does not o-rlnn nnr nauseate. In order to get Its beneficial effects, please remember the name ot tho Company , CAUPORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN rBANOISOO. C.I. sVeCUVILLB, Kf. XXW TOHK. W. ' "It told how a man, who lulfcred as I' had lullered, had been cured by Dr. WU. hams' Pink Pills lor Pale People. " ll gave me faith and hope. 1 look two boxes of the pills I then (our more boxes. "My gain was steady i my return lo health was a source of dally gratification. "In all I took eighteen boxes ol the pills before I was entirely well. At first 1 paid 50 cents a box, but afterwards I saved money betting tlx boxes tt a tune, fowe my cure entirely to Dr. VUlkmi' Pink PUls for Pale People." To clinch hit remarkable story and add lo Hi helpfulness to others, Mr. Tripp mad affidavit lo itt truthfulness before Homer Hanna, a local Notary Public. Prom helplessness, suffering and despair Mr. Tripp was resto-cd to the heallhluU useful activity suggested si the beginning of this sketch. Hit experience Is like otliers. While locomotor ataxia Is one of live most baffling nervous diseases wilh which physicians arc called lo contend, lit cure by Dr. Williams' Pink Piiis for Pale People hat become a mailer ol almost dally oc currence. Smaller nervous Iroublet yield much more readily lo the powerful Influ ence these vegetable pills exert in restoring waited nerve iorce and In purifying and enriching Ihe blood. Druggists everywhere sell Dr, VUltiMs'i Pink Pills foe Pale People. J BUTLER. ...JEWELER Watch Repairing Oddosius Hotel Naab Motf s Nerverine Pills The great remedy tor nervous proa tratlon and all nervous diseases of the ffenerativs or- nainw. (ant ol cither tea, such as Nervous Prostration, Failing or lost Manhood, Impotency, Nightly Enus skmi, Youthful Errors, Mental Worry, ex cessive use ol Tobacco or Opium, which lead to Consumption and Insanity. $1.00 P" box by mailt 6 boxes lor $5.00. .VITTS CHEMICAL CO., Prop'i, Cknlimf. OMa. For salo by G.H. H ask Ins, Med ford. "161011 Slop J. K. HABDEM, Prop'r All work Btrictlv flrnt-olnnB and my prices are the low est in the oily,,,. Shop on Seventh Btrent. op poBite Union Livery Stables. BAST AND SOUTH BY THK The - Shasta - Route OF THF SOUTHERN PACIFIC COMPACT. EXPRESS TRAINS LEAVE PORTLAND DAILY. Houth North 8.H1 s. m 4:17 p. m BOO p. m 8:0Op. m 0:rAa,m IM s. m Portland Meilford Hsn Frsnolseo Above trains ston af. nil ., Imimri, Pnrtlnnit Dnri Ml r... - w " . ' , ... Alliany, Taofront, Bnedds, llalsy, H.rrl.hurg, Junction City. Kusnno, Coitaifo Oro, llralns, Oakland and at all stations from Kose burg to Ashland Inclusive, ROBItnURG MAIL DAILY. ' 8 a. m I Lv 6-sO p. m I Ar Portland Rosebury Ar 1 41SS p. m Lv I7)a. m Dining Oars on Ogden Rout. Pullman Bufftt Mliwpera and Recoad Class Bleeping Cars attaohiid to all through tralas i , Between Portland and Corvallis. WKHT B1DR DIVIHIOK. Mall trains dally, except Boadayi 7:80 a. mLv 13:16 pan Ar : Portland Corvallis Ar I (kM p, m Lv itOB p. m At Albany and Corvallis eonnset with trains ofO.O. B. railway. Express Trains dal.y.exotptaundsyi 4:lto p. m 7:S0p.m 8:30 p.m Lv Ar Ar Portland Ar MeMlnnvllls Lv Independence Lv, :9fta.m S:Ma. ro 4ifO a. m pireot connection a-. Hart franciHco with Oc. cl otital and Orlontnl and Pacific Msll ateam. Sh n HtieM for Jlinan mnA lUnm UaIIImm rf.ln. on application. nnies ami iickois nna to Rasters points and Kiirnpe, also Japan, China, Ifnnnoltilu and Australia can lie obtained from W. V, Llpnln oott, Agent, Mcdford, R. KOKIir.KR, Manager, P 0. B, MARKI1AM, U. K, at V A OftfOON. PORTLAND.