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About The Medford mail. (Medford, Or.) 1893-1909 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1900)
t The largest niul inn l mirnmififiil biiHlnnHft (miioniiiM of Mm mm n try tmlny urn piumim uf llio miwiimtpuitt, . iihIiiu llimo lutvuiK Hi" lui'M"it (iM'i'iilutliMt. Why not follow ihn Iriitl urtlmmt who hitvu roi.tiliinl til!) tOJMHHl hOinilMI' li titirntiiiHiir tit MdVltrtlMlMH MpiiccT 'I'll w Maii cifTurrt cxirt'lloul liilvmitomiK willl nit urn uuuuluiluii uf j PBOFKBBIONAL OABDB. 1 L. ARNOLD, . UKNTMT. PalnloM extriluu t teeth. omc eoer Vau Uyko aturo. Moerure, uien. G, T. JONKH, COUNTY SURVEYOR, An nr all lilndaof Hurfltvlna DrnjBBIIr don. Tliu t;unif uurroyur a live yau ma uniy logal wurk. Mastoid, Oregoa I)R. O. B. COLE, PliYttlCIAN ANU BUKOKON, OAoo otor Woluire A llowarri'a Oroeeijr fltore. Modfurd, Oregua. Q, W. 8TKPHKNSON, PHYSICIAN AND HUrtOllON. Oalla promptly attended to n on 7lh and 0 MM., li U10 Adkla blook-upaialra. Modioli, Oregon. 0. P. 8N1SLL, ' ATTORNHY AT LAW. OHM) of Jaokaoa County Aburacl aid OoUco U00O0. Haulla Uulldlag , Hadlord Oregon. JJAMMOND k NARREGAN ATTORNEY! AT LAW Omoo la Slowart Blk. Modlord, Or. E, KIRCHGESSNKR. PUYkMCIAN AND SUROKOrJ, Central Point, Oregon. Medford ofl)oo-I.ln1ly nnlldlng, Wednoaday and Hatutday, t;W 10 It a. m on and alior April 10, iw. J, 8. HOWARD, ' , MURVBYOK AND OIVIL BNOINERK. 0. B. Dnputy Mineral Bureeyor for tho Buto f Orogoa. Poalofflo addreu: Medford, Oregon. J. B. WAIT, , PHYSICIAN AND HOKOHON, Omce In l.lndley Block Medford, Or K B. PICKEL. PUYBICIAN IAND BlIHOfcON, Oflloe noma II UWa. m. hi. .1 1:3014)3 p. m, X-Ray l.obomiory-Kanilnatlon fl.M 10 $'. OiAco! Rankin Illock. Modford. Or W, I. Vawtrr. Pre. II. '. Annuo, V Pro II L. CIILKBY, Caahlor. ... CAPITAL, $30,000... MEDFORD, OUEGON Loan money on approod aoourlty, reoetro da poalla autijoot to ohook anil tmnnuol a (inner banking bualmm. Your uunlnonn aoltotted.... OorreMiKiildeuta: LRdd A Uuah, Haloro. Anglo California Hank, Hall Kranolaco. Lodd A Tlllon. Portland. Corblu Hanking Co., N. Y. J, H. Btmwaht, H, K. ankkmt, Proildont. Vlco Prolent. J.E, BNYAitr. OniUlor. The Hedford Bank Mcdtohd. oniaon Capital, $50,000.00 A General Banking Business Transacted ' DIBKOTOKB t u bi.m.1 if H. Anlinnt. W. n. Kdberta County r V 'w.8. Crcmoll. K. H, WhltoheRd W.lT.Towue, Uoraoo l'olton S. Childers, ...CONTRACTOR and BUILDER, All kinds, of. Brick and Stone Work done; can furniHh material lor any kind of work. Estimates promptly given. ' 1 See Me before tou Build. Kullatilo iiurHtinHof luu'Tli'iiili'nl .r luvclillvo . drnlrinir ntnnioilio I'arln JpnMtlull, Willi v alnry niul i'i n' ni'' p-ii'l.iiniiiil LTlui . Xlio J'ATUNT ltKCOKD, JUnltlruorn, litil Md, VOL' XII HARDWARE, GINS AMMUNITION. J.BeekSCo. uu nn First-class Rljs Fast Horses UNION LIVERY ,rjn 'ua ,nn ua H33 E. It. JENNIN08, Cor. Seventh ana B Sts. - nn U'J na uu J Specls 1 Attention to Commercial Hen ran m ! -1.. 1- -1,-1.. 1 .-J -1,1 i. -1 I. A. WEBB, Dealer in Furniture. Carpets, Wall Paper The Largnet and Bant Sflleatod a took ol furniture, enrpeta, wall pnpor, window ahadea and liouiw furuleliiDK (Xdi to b found aoywhors in Southern Oregon. UaderUklng Oooda kept on hand. Picture lrmin(r d upholetering. Seventh 8treet, Mx!fercl .Oregon IT IS UNFAIR To aond out of town for artlcloa that can be procured at heme. THE MERCHANT ripeou all tbe people of town to trade with aim. And lbt ! uC proper And right, beeUM It Is fair bualneu proposltloo. IT 18 JU8T A8 FAIR for mill men to exprot merchant and All builder, ta buy tnaar Dwrj, Suk, Mauldla(. Phwrlng, Ruttk, and all Mill rrodueta at koine. GRAY 6 BRADBURY'S la a home Inmtliatloo. Wby New Lumber Yard TV Rough and Dressed Lumber Fir Rustic and Flooring; Three Year Old. Medford, Oregon Thoroughly Seasoned. !Presovirt.ioias Main Street, FRANK W. WAIT ..: STONE YARD Genoral oontraoUng In all lines of stone works Cemetery Work a Specialty All kinds of marble an 3 granite monuments ' a ordered dlreol from tho quarry.. ' Yard on G ntroot 1 Commorlolnl Hotol Blook JBCKSOHVILLE HIHRBLE J. O. WHIPR'ProDr. Ooes General Contracting in all GRANITE AND MARBLE WORKS: VTaoksonville; THE MEDFORD MAIL for MEDFORD, JACKSON COUNTY, Carsfiil Drirsrs STABLES Prop. rWdforal, Or. 4.a - - a i .1, -t- -T-Arrfk PLANING MILL not patronlta It I our - tin , LI Jd na, Vnii W DU caj ou , S3 ? Brjit uf O. E. GORSLINE & SONS MANUFACTURERS OF AND DRAI.ER8 IN and Pine Shingles Yard Houlb ol Whllmun's Warohousi THE MORTAR DRUG STORE, G. H. RASKINS, Prop'r. Ha tihi. in tmc tin Of Pure Diuga. Patent Medlclnea, Booka, -Stationery, , PAINTS nd OILS. Tobaccoea, Cigar, Perfumery, To let Articles ant Everything that la oarrled m a flrst olasiDKUlJ STORK Carefully " : Compounded. ... Medford Oregon. "MEDFORD, OREGON Lines. CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY : . ; ;-.n" Oreo-on.-. ;r, ; Fine Job Work' JilllL OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 5, IS I A LITTLE OF Whloul logs from 11 to 23 inches in illeBakter are north from $105 to ,1116 a thousand feet in Rotterdam. Poplar is worth 138; white onk $45; biokorf $54. .,; . ' The governaieat of Queeoslaod, Australia, has eng&gvd Dr. Maxwell, the famous sugar expert, of Hodo- lulu, forkfi ye years, at a salary of. $20,000 a year. The laU Duke of Edinburgh's life was insured for .300,000, aud scarcely a siogle Boglisb insurance company was without some interest iu Prince Alfred's life. There were 1,057.938 acres seeded to sugar beets io Gurmany last year. The yield is about eleven and a (quarter tons per acre of beets, cob taioiog 12.7 per cent of sugar.' Johu Sherman is broken in body find mind. The aged statesman is Rapidly foiling. He has removed U'rooj Mansfield, Ohio, to Washing '.on. His estate is valued at $4,000, ;ooo. "' -" ; The phylloxera destroyed 450,000 teres of vineyards in Spain in If 99. Vines in Spain or France are not vorth cultivating unless they, are rafted with the American vine rhich renders them proof against he insect. Switzeiland imported 15,027 hi - lycles in 1893, the bigheot priced nes, $65.30, coming from Belgium, md the lowest, $42.16, comiog from A-nerica. The American wheel is ti fitted to be the best as well ss ch, apest. Ooly twenty-one wheels were imported in 1895. Here's the story of Majuba "Kill ,o a nutshell: Sir George Colley jhad between 000 and 700 men; the Boera aumbered about 150 men, under Genoral Smite, The British camped in a natural bowl at the top of the hill, and set no sentries; the Boers clambered up the hill by night and attacked in the early imormng, taking the rtntisb com pletely by surprise. , The village of Morriaton, Minn., was struck by a tornado recently, 'tnd a bam was raised in the air tnd dropped directly on top of Paul GatSL'ke's saloon, where sixteen peo pie had taken refuge from the storm. rtin saloon collapsed, and all its occupants were buried in the debris. At present it is - said eight dead bodies and three injured persons have been taken from the ruins. Laboring classes and farmers in Belgium wear wooden shoes, cost ing from 8 to 20 cents a pair. On Sundays they wear leather shoes, ousting 75 cents to $1.25 a pair, or cloth slippers, costing from 25 to 75 cents a pair. No fine ready made shoes are to be had and custom shoes cost from $4.50 to $6 a pair. Buenos Ayrss supplies all the leath er for the foot wear of the Belgian army. The annual report of Third As sistant PoBtraaster-General Madden for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900, which is soon to be published, will show that the total number of postage stamps of all kinds issued, noluding ordinary stamp?, postage due Btamps, stamped envelopes and postal oards, reached the enormous total of 5.333,000,000,. valued at $98,000,000 an increase of over 400,000,000 stamps over the pre ceding year.' ,The use of what is known as "special request" envel-. opes, on which the postoffice de partment prints the purchaser's re turn addross free of charge, basin-; creased over J.5 per cent over the previous year," the total number is sued being nearly 450,000,000. The use of these' stamped enye!lope8'',iSi confined largely to business con cornP,'ohd the imlrienpe inorqase l's significant of increased business. NO. 40 State Veterinarian Tells of the Disease, Its Symp toms and Cures. Portland, Oregon, Sept. 17, 1900. Mk. R, Brown, Stock Inspector, Jackson Count. Dear Sir: Ihve just returned from Medfoid, where I went to examine Mr. J. W. Wiley's (hog sickness. I found it to be swine plsgoe, a most contagious dineaee. closely related to hog oholera, both being produced by a bacillus, only that the bacillus of swine plague is non-motile and is cot so tenacious of life, while the hog cholera is motile bacillus and is much harder to destroy. Both diseases are fatal to the hog when they get the dis ease bad. In swinq.p.ague the lungs aad air passages are the principal seat of the disease in the start. As the disease runs on the lymphatic system as well as other tissues of the body become involved and be fore death we find a general flabby condition of the whole body. The symptoms generally consist of a cough in the start, rapid depletion in flesh, a feverish condition of the system, wanting to drink plenty of water, with an inclination to vomit after great quantities of water have been drunk. Other more severe symptons show the nearer the ani mal approaches death. Hog cholera is more of an intes tinal trouble, operating more like typhoid fever.' There will be ulcer ation of the bowels, more particu larly the small intestines where they enter the large. ' At what is called the ileocaecal valve, there1 .. will be found in almost all bad caaest ulcers in a greater or less extedt-some cases great patches of ulcers. There will also be lit.Ie red spots or specks here and there all over the internal viscera. Diarrhoea of a most fetid smell is very characteristic of the disease, yet we may have diarrhoea in tbe later stage of swine plague. We also find the same rapid de pletion of the body in both diseases, that is, speaking of tbe acute form. In both diseases we find a more chronic, or slower type of tbe dis ease, that does not destroy life so quickly and consequently does no. show symptoms so severe. The treatment of both diseases must be prophylactic. Destroy and burn up all tbe badly effdottd ani mals ; separate the sick from the well; feed well on an easily digested diet; better scald the feed if it can be done as it makes it more aseptic. Medicines are but little use in either disease after the disease has' got a bold, as there is such rapid destruc tion of tissues that repair cannot possibly take : place sufficient to save the life of the animal. In reference to the disease in question J would recommend the above proph ylactic measures being adopted a3 to the care of the animals. I would not allow anyone, nor ' even a dog to go from the sick hogs to where there are well ones for fear of oarrying the germs on the feet or. olothiug. The dead should be burned for fear of the crow or other scavengers eating them and pos sibly flying away to auotner farm where hogs are kept to start the dis ease anew, l would recommend disinfecting the troughs or' pens with a strong solution of lime and concentrated lye or probably car- LEVI STRAUSS & CO MM Bnsliiess Methods of to 3 ay require a complnto and n cully printed line of titutlonei-y. Your buHliieHH Hhould Do repre sented in hi ultmcllvn munnor upon evury pluco of fttauonory you neiid out, It cottn but liiilo . more In tho Ioiik run und ourrloa with it nn air of properlty. TUB Mail Job dbpurtmeut l jepitiu wlib fiictlltlerj for printiiig lellur head, cmclopcrt, tarda, olc. That Win. bolio acid. A stronger and better disinfectant is to take one half gal lon eauh of crude carbolic acid and crude BulpLuric acid, mix slowly in an earthen jar, keep cool in water after it ha? been mixed, add twenty gallons of water and use to diein feet. As to medicinal treatment for the well and slightly effected, I would take five pounds of hyposul phite ef soda, two pounds of sulphate of soda, mix well together and give a heaping teaspoon ful once a day to aeb 200-poand hog, adding in add ition about ten drops of carbolic acid to each dose. If there is an inclination to the bowels getting loose add charcoal in about the same dose as; the powder. These medicines may . be repeated twice a day, remembering tbe successful treatment of all diseases of this character is to prevent the animal from taking the disease and that ia what we want to do here. '- ' Respectfully yours, Wm. McLean, ;; State Veterinarian. New Process for Drying Prunes. From the Salem Journal. : . ; : John L. Lsraen, of Shaw, brought ua samples of Italian prunes dried by e team beat in a drier of his own luven tion in 15 boars, and Silver prunes In 21 hoars. By this process the prunes are nut dipped io lye, but are cured by slow s earn heat. '. His drier, he claims, will never scorch or burn the prune, and he claims the buyers have offered him 1 cent a pound more than for any dried by hot air. The samples shown at this office were certainly very One. His drier at Shaw lias bandied about s carload of., dried prunes, and is of 125 busbels capacity. He claims the steam drier is Breproot and will not burn up the' buildings, as is frequently done by hot air.,, The hot air is produced by radiation from steam pipes. Tbe fruit is dried near the ground and does not have to be elevated. A new remedy for biliousness is now un sale at Chas. Straug's drug store, it is called Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. It gives quick relief and will prevent the attack if given as soon as the first indication of the dis ease appears. Price, 25 cents per box. -Samples free. , William K. Vanderbilt has given bis check for $500,000 to his daugh ter the Duchess of Marlborough. The gift is in the nature of a thank offering for tbe Duke of : Marl borough's safe return from the war in South Africa. . When you have no appetite,' do not relish your food and feel dull after eat ing, you may know that you need a dose of Chamberlain's Stomach, and Liver Tablets. Price, 25 cents. Samples free at Chas. Strang's drug store. Already the census man , has found over 528,000 manufacturing establishments, as against 322,638 in 1890. This looks as though the trusts were not crushing out indi vidual enterprise at such a great . rate. . ... , ,; ,,.,,. For spraius, swellings and lameness there Is nothing so Rood as Chamber lain's Pain Balm. Try it. For sale by Chas. Strang, druggist. The main provisions of the Meat Law recently enacted by the Ger man Government, affecting among other things the absolute prohibi tion of American canned meats and . sausages, took place Oct. 1st.- The penalty for violating the law is six months' imprisonment or a fine of of 15,000 marks," or both. Tho goods siezed will also be confiscated whether they belong to the offender or not. ' . . ' T 1 .... I : ' A.