r :T"-? L T-'' 7"' T' T-l'T-1JlT- T-' "1 1 : I The largest I Business Methods and mtiHt KitcrnNitfiil huittiioM puiu'tii-iiN ot I In) ruonlry lodny uril tMlt loilM llf 1)1(1 tMWHitnfi, ttnhiu iIiohu tmvtnK t hit litrtf""l cii'fiiiliiUtin. Why not follow lint Inn! of ilium wlin Imvti iimioIhhI Him itii iiikI idicniiiu it niiruliimor ol iiilvcrllnliiK itimec? Tltil Maji, ti fit 'I'M HXUI'llliIlt UilVIUlUKOH Willi bWUI'll Ull'CUlHtlUll ut 1 a a a a ii PROFESSIONAL OARDB, L. AttNOM), DUNTIHT. Pt Inter exiriimloii ot inotlt. Onkit ovor Vitti llyllo'n ntum. Mcdrurd, Olt-KHn. Q, T. JON ICS, COUNTY 8UKVKYOH, Any "r "l I1'"1" Hurvoylnii promptly dono. Tho County Burvoyor con ivo you ttio only luiial work. MitiIIoiiI, Oroiioii Qt W. STlil'IIlSNSON, 1'llYnlCiAN AND HUIIUKO.N, Cull rumully nilmiilwl in Omnii on 7lli nml U Bin., tit ilia Auklitit lilimk upuliilm. Madlonl, Ori'iion. C.P.SN1CLL, ATTOHNKY .AT LAW, Orriro of JaoUum County Autlrul uil Oollno nun Co. Hamlin Uulldlni, Medford OreKOn, JJAMMOND A NARREOAN ATTOItNBYH AT LAW Omco In liewarl II1W. Modlonl.Or. , KIRCHGESSNER, IMIYHICIAN AND HUKOKON, Central Point, Orovon. Hed'ord ofnee Llnlloy riullillnir, Weilnnnrtoy nil Malutittty, U:8o to II a. m., on AtiU niter April Hi, w. a . J. S- HOWARD, (utlVrSYUK AND CIVIL KNUINKKK. U. H, Deputy Mineral Surveyor tor the Bute or OroKou. l'otomc ntluroiMi: Mcrifnrd. Orriron. j; B. WAIT, PHYSICIAN AND HUKOKON, arricr In Llmllcy Block Mtrt'ont. Or K. ,B. TMCKKL. J PHYSICIAN IAND BtMl'r.UN. u'rtf-e hourn-U lol. ro.nuJ 1:4) lo!l p. m. X ltny l.olxirntory-Knuilnallonii J.SO to tH. ' 'inirvi llnnkln Dlock. Hertford. Ilr W.'l. Vawtkk. Proit. II. V. AliKiNn, V Pro 11 L. CI1I. KEY, Cublcr. Jackson County Bank ... CAPITAL $50,000. MEDFORD. OREGON Lain moov on mmrnod security, rtcoivo do iKMtliH Htibjoct to cht.k nml triitmuot a ironor tiuiiktnir huiflni'iw. Vour IniMnnrtti wil letted.... I CompoiidcntH: Lmlrt 4 Htiiiti, Suloui. Anulo Ofillfornln Uutik, Hon KrimcUco. I.ntm Til ton. fortluml, Corljtu Hanking t'O,, N. Y. J. II. 8TWAI1T, H. K. ANKUBV, ' 1'nmlriont. Vlco President. J, K. ICNYAiur, Caihler. 1 The Hedford Bank ' McoronD. Oucoon Capital $50,000.00 A General Banking Business Transacted DIltl'X'TOKS I ll.Siownrt, ll.U.Aukcuy, W. II. Itoborta vi, a. uniwon, k u, wriuiueiiu W. K.Towttc. Ilnrkuo Pulton t visit DR. JORDAN'S Qnnxf fHUSEUQ OF AriATOHl 1 05 1 MAP K El AT., 9AN FRANOOCO, CAL . (l)ttMuHUlhkiittltik ThnlnricitAimlomlanl Mium In ilia Wor.tl, Ortttt attrttfitton in th City, A iOondtirtit tiylttjor vitUort, M'nknonniM. or uty 'jnntrnfl( (llH'-'UKU.IMUllllTCly vni-ctt llj til? titili: flPfcliilKitin lite I'Milil OR. JOIIDAN-fniVATC DI&SA8EB TotiMir tnrn and tntrtdl nari-Ml nuw wlio mrm huCTerliiK fruin tho flfvctn of joutbinl tnilltv erptlum or tfxucuaii In mauirtr W-1.1l anil tlllVMlCJll UAhllllV. I Ml. ItMncr, Luil Matihuud Umlllwcompll. a cHtloiiitl dUruMtorrloii, Prainir- W -.1. ib tliiiinrrluria 1UI Wf ni w (If.vriiiuuwi, it m vuuhiiiuh v rt in ed ten. otun'Ht ourallTo owtr. tht DootAr T " only a (Turd Tin met! In t relK but plriaiuiant i our. Tho Uuutor iIopr not claim (optrtomj f ralrAolM, but Ih vel known i b a Inlr and 1 tuuiira PliyNliiInn nnd Hiirtfdoii.nre-tmlutat u litomoriiU"-rfM aitMN of Men, lLuaurrnriRtf( till troutmnbt tliai U will not . N1Tl"llKxn luirougniy vrnuioniau iron I tho nj'Htoiu without 4hc mo of r py. Ti'umbm fit tirti by an Rxntrl. Rfidlft1 i our fur nuiinr. A quick aut) mdy r Bum for lM I'laaurn nd ri-uln.Uy i Dr. Jordnn'a ippclitl intlnlrw mt)icrta, ' RVKltT onjlrlniTtftJ'willrotlrt i our AonMl on (if lila ni Ujln I f. Ws wilt bunrntttt a W6TSIVX CUXttt i tvtryms toe wutovtnk. . UfinmiKaiKin r triiv umm "w".' K'lTmwm OltAHOHU VhHY HSA.SOk-AUl,A -TrouuuBiit pntnonn'ly or ny lwtir. . Writ f,.r n.mk. I'lllMWOPBT F MAIIIIKAUK. Mahht. Fhia. AVHuabl book lor mii.) (allorwriu fill. JORDAN A CO., I D0 1 MlfKflt 51., I. r. VOL XIII. rJrJJLn. or.:... ENAMELED WARE 1 Stransky Enameled Ware in Blue. Opal Enameled Ware in Oreen. Crescent Enameled Ware in Grey. J. BEEK & CO I GS First-class RIes Fast Horses tan E2 ' E. B. JBNNINOS, nci Cor. Sovcnth and B Sis. J nn 'LILI tp Specie 1 Attention to Commercial Hen 7- I. A. WEBB, Dealer In Furniture, Carpets, Wall Paper Tho Luro(tt nnd Bent ' Solootud Btook of itirnllure, cnr)el, J wall pnpur, window nltiidi:. nud ItouHO-furnlblilnij goods to bo w found Hnywhoro in Southern Oregon. w Undertaking tlood kept on hand, IT IS UNFAIR To aond out of town (or articles that can bo procured 01 bomo. THE MERCHANT eipeou All the people of a town to trodo with ofm. And thai is quite proper and rlgbi, bvcauao U la ft fulr bunlncba propoHltlon. .. t IT IS JUST AS FAIR for mill mrn to rxpoct mcrchontH and nil but Idem to boy their Door. Moulding;, flooring, Kuillc, and ull Mill Products at bome.fV GRAY & BRADBURY'S 1 Iti ft home im m Hut lot.. Wbjr New Lumber Yard O. Rough and Dressed Lumber .. .. . Fir and Pine Shingles Rustic and Flooring Three Years Old. Thoroughly Seasoned. Medford, Oregon iClHH Ii'escrirtiona Main Street, FRANK W. WAIT SS: ... STONE YARD Donor-lil contrnotlitR In nil linos of stono works Cemetery Work a Specialty All kinds of mnrblo nn3 irrunitc monuments ordered (Hreot from thn quarry.. Ynrd on G Rtrcet Cotnmorlclnl Hotol Ulook JfiGKSQHVILLE Pill J. O. WHIPP, Propiv Does General Contracting in all Lines. GRANITE AND MARBLE WORKS. tTaokscrtiville. MEDFORD, JACKSON COUNTY, Trrr brought' to Medford, in tho following lino: Careful Drirers Prop. Pw fledlord, Ore. l'lcture Iraiuinff and upholstering. j Oil' ' Ci'J i r eej Ill Seventh Street, Medford ,Oregon $ PLANING MILL not patroniio It E. GORSLINE & SONS MANUPACTURKHH OP AND DKALRK8 IN Yard Pcuth ol Wbltmttn'H WurohouHe THE MORTAR DRUG STORE, G. H. HASKINS, Prop'r.- H ftNVTHINO IN THI UHI OP lui'e Diiiga, Patent Medicines, Hooka, HtatMmery, PAINTS and OILS. TobnocoM.CIcrira.Perllimery.To let Article, and Kveiylhlnir tlmt U enrrltd n a 6mt- UKL'U S'lom; Carefullv "! Compounded. . - - . Medford Oregon. MEDFORD, OREGON CEMETERY WORK A SPECIALTY - " Oregon. OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 1901 A LITTLE OF The golf playing that goes on in the United States cobIh $15,000 a year. 1 wu -3li ike, the old .Soiiix (fbief, 'Olongllie implacable too of tin white man it reported to be dying Khiisoh has abandoned the sub treasury scheme and is going after a U. B. mint to be established at KtnsnH City. A New York party claims to have secret information of the death of Aguinaldo, which, he saye, occurred six weekn ago. Another instance of growing is the fact hat postal receipts have passed tho 100,000,000 mark. The defiuit is' reduced to less than 11,000,0:0. Trade with Cuba, Porto Rico, ( Hawaii ' and the Philippines ban reached $50,000,000 or about three times what it was formerly. In a few years it will be in the hundreds of millions. Pouring oil on tio ibled waters iin't always what it is cracked up 10 be. Down in Southern Califor nia trouble over rival oil claims gives excellent promise of ending in an amateur war. St. Joseph, Mo., and Boston, Mass., have adopted a novel plan of having portable echool houses to move about to take cure of the ov erflow from the schools. It is g iod idea and might be adopted in the country in some district?. Ilis almost certainly decided that Paul Krugr will visit America in February. Me will probably be ac companied by W. T. Stead, who will make a ringing campaign in favor of stopping the war. Preparations for making the second in-.uguration o? President MuKinley a memorable eveut are bein rapidly pushed in Washing ton. A guarantee fund of nearly $50,000 has olready been sub scribed. Chicago must look to her laurels if sho wants to keep up with New York. A thirteon-year-old boy has just been sentenced to tho Juvenile Asylum in tho latter city on the charge of being a professional gambler. A land dispute now pending' in the Russian courts is said to have been begun five hundred years apo. Sime men when they once begin a fight, never give up, butthe original plaintiff and defendant in this suit must Burely be a little weary of it by now. At the close of business hours for the nineteenth century ( and the yjar 1900, Assayor Fred A. Wing, of the United States assay office, at Seattle, 8id that in the past twelve months his reoeipt shave been forty six and one-eighth tons of gold and silver. Russia is said to have a war fund of $500,000,000 in gold and France $600,000,000, while other European countries have largo sums accumu lated for the same purpose, which is a little disquieting to hoso who look for an era of universal peace early in tho twentieth century, Fire broke out in. the Rochester Orphan Asylum, in Rochester, N Y,ntl o'clock' Tuesday morning in ffuhbell Park' and the flames spread rapidly to other feclions of the institution. It is known that twonty-one of the chi dren perished and it is feared that many more victims may be reported later. Twenty-five were ' injured, eouie doubtless fatally. ' The postmaster-general's report shows that there are 76.088 post offices in the country. For the year ending June 30ih Inst there was $102,354,579.29 of gross rev NO. enues, and a loss of only $12,518 78 f om iinuflicient bonds. Tliere were 510 notices sent to sureties notify ing them of delinquencies of post masters. There were 18,386,332 pieces of registered mail handled; 1704 pieces were lost, of which all but 355 were recovertd. An actor has brought suit against t mining man of Spokane for $50, TOO, cold cash, for alienation of his vife's nfleclionB. It happens that he defendant is the son of a mil ionaire, hence the big damage suf fered. If he was a poor devil, with out property, it might happen that the despoiled husband would give him a bonus for taking the woman off his hands. Theie is in Paris a hotel which has 4000 employes. The smallest kettle in its kitchen will hold 100. quarts, and the largest 500. Each ; of the 50 roasting-pans is big enough for 300 cutlets. Every dish fori baking potatoes will hold 2251 pounds. When omelets are.on the bill of fare, 7800 eggs are used at once. For cooking alone, bu cooks and 100 assistants are always at the ranges. ' ' ' President McKinley declined lo pardon the notorious Capt. H. W. f'owgate, whose prison sentence for embezzlement of government funds expired December 29, and the presi dent was right. Howgate escaped deserved punisument for many years through "pull" with those who prutably shared in bis stealings, and when at last he was put on trial wtiB clearly proven guilty. He has no just claim for restoration to citizensbio. In a recent address to the stu dents attending his course of gyne cology, Prolessor Friedrich Schauta, of Vienna, expressed the opinion that law . and other professions should be thrown open to women, because at present too many of them ' crowd into medicine, for which few are fitted. . Of every 100 female medical students, he said, only 33 became physicians, the others being incapacitated by the horrors of the dissecting-room and other impediments. Pn sident Hays, of the Southern Pacific, arrived in San Francisco, this week, and formerly look charge of the management . of the road. He stntet that the company will titke no part in politicf, neither Btate nor national, and that it will be conducted squarely upon busi ness Hoes in the interests of the stockholders and the patrons of the road. The new president receives a salary of $55,000 a year. When he started out as a boy he worked for $40 per month. The total quantity of gold for the year was 1,345,123.41 troy ounces, with an assayed value of $22,038,' 755.12, and it represented the in dividual deposits of 7,100 persons Over $16,900,000 camo from the Klondike, and the remainder. from other parts c.f Alaska, British Co lumbia, Washington and other states. The highest mark was reached in July 1st, when over four teen tons of the yellow metal was deposited iu the assay office in twenty-six working days. Nome's output was $3,723,271.14. ' .; In a letter w:itten from the Phil ippines just before election, to his folks in West Superior, Wis.Capt. Harry W. Newton says that at that time the encroachments of the na tives were worse than they hud been at any time during the veir pre vious. As one instance of their feroeity, he writes: "The other day they jumped a detachment of our Twenty-fourth, numbering about twenty-two men, and captured six teen of 'them.-'! One 'of .them 'was found terribly mutilated, showing ign of being skinned while yet alive. The postmaster-general estimntpp that 31,000,000 of the 90,000 000 people in the United Slates now , or toJay require a com pi o to nnd neutly printed Hoe of titatloiiory. Your tiUhlnenH should bo roprc flented In an attractive mnnner upon every pleco of ttlationory you Hem) out, It con la but llulu more In the loitK run and carries with It an air of proHporfiy. Tim Maii. Job dopimment is repleto with fucilltios for printing luttor beads, onvclopon, curds, etc. - That Win. have the benefit of the free mail de livery. A few years ago none but thoso "well-healed" could afford a daily paper, now nearly all even in the country are in a position to have the morning daily plaoect at their doors before the Bun ' setflw The pojtoflice department machin ery runs smoother than that of any - . department of the government, and the United States postal service if incomparably superior to that of any other country.' The annual sale of article-- ac cumulated in the dead letter office began on Monday in Washington ' and tin catalogue which bad been, issued listed more than 4,000 lots, , ranging from fplse . teeth to dia- . mond rings. It is a miscellaneous! collection of small articles which, have gone astray in the mails. It is noticeable that nearly every . other package on the list contains-'-. come' article of a woman's wardrobe Among other things there is a col--. lection of "false switches" which is-v comprehensive. The catalogue.. does not offer any explanation of' the reason for sending "false switch's'' through the mail, . One would suppose that the sender of such an article would be partictL-, larly careful to direct it properly- Mr. Rockefeller's latest gift to' , Chicago University makes a total -of about $9,500,000 which he has given to that fortunate institution, . which he founded in 1890. This makes an average of nearly $1,- . 000,000 a year for each year of the decade. Nor have his gifts been confined to that university. A year ago he gave Brown University $250,000, and he has added large 1 sums to the endowment funds ot Newton Theological ; Institution,. Wellesley and other colleges. , In addition, he has been generous !o ' his gifts to church, charitable' and " missionary enterprises. , "If all hist benefactions during the past three ' years were summed up, it is calcu lated that they would exceed $15x 000,000. . Philip Uanforth Armour, philatn- thro pi st, financier and ' multi-millionaire, and head of the vast com mercial establishment that bears his name, died at his home at 2115 Prairie avenue, Chicago, at 5:45 Monday evening. . A muscular ti feclion of the heart known as tuir . cardis was the immediate cause off , his death. . He had been slowly re covering from pneumonia, that for three weeks had threatened Ma life. At 9 o'clock Monday morning his heart gave way under the strain of his recent illness, his pulse run- . ning up to 103. That was the be- -ginning of the end. Mr. Armour has been the head of the greatest -pork packing establishment in the 1 United States for many years and had amassed a fortune estimated at from $30,000,000 to $50000,000. -;. He was also heavily iuterestadi in--other great publio enterprises, snjah.- as bank, railroads and insurance " companies. He was well known for his charitable bequests and was. highly honored and respected by his business associates and em ployes. - ." lEPISTIlilIMM OVERALLS am Francisco, CaW