1 VW rv JACKSON COUNTY la llio unnKiii .fait ill llio iiroal HtaUiulOri'Kuii. Itmintalii. PttltlT. MININO, AOHICULTUKAL and MMDFOltl) J U a llicivlDK oily of mat vm tnliab IWiitn. It In illiiuwd minimi In Ilia con lor ill llio oimiily ami In Um vary Imnrluf llio iironloal Irnll ralaluv aculluii ut luo Unlud blulon, ur ui llio worm T II E MAIL 1 Um InruMl anil liiml nownpapnr uutill.liadlli JuvUmm ouiltily. It tilalm. a alroulltllull or IWJU Hurt buck llio UHMurllun wllli llio iiiti iluvll mi Um omiimIM oorntr ur lUUpniio FBOVEBBIONAIi OARDB. QOLVIQ & CANNON i.Awrmm Will prnollm In all Cmiru o( Ilia aula mill In IJ. ft. Court fur Diwrlri or ( iroiion Omcouvor Hunk of Mmllonl t 8. BI.ITON, . a. cimuiHHioHKH, DiftTiiiurnrnniiooN lldunwltmcl nml Tliniinr IjiihI ,IIII,''K. urool. mailt, Toatlliioliy taken In laml "Mill- Oflico wllli Moitforfl Hall. Mwlloril, Orn(on ; W. L. OAMlCItON, l'HVHICIAN AND HUltOKON pm In Hamlin llliwk MmtfonJ, Oregon iu.lilii. Hi Ur.. Imilroot'. ro.llmv CLARENCE W. KEENK, 1'IIYHlalAN AND HUltOKON Ofltoo In Ailklin llluck Mmlli.r.l, Oroiion GEO. F. KINO, UOVEKNMUNT LAND LOCATOIt Mi'illortl, Ori'Kun Cn locato Darllo.nn vKlimliln ilmtitir or aitrl- Clltlurit iUnilii Wr(lt luo for full llifntnmlliio Onlco wliu K. M.HIownri rrl cUm Klit J. 1). PIIIPP.S, D. 1). S., llgSTIMT (liner. In Ailklll. Illuok, Drua Hiuro avilJiiloliiK lla.kln.' Moillurn, Ortuun DR. II. N. 1IUTMCR, OSTI'.OI'A'nilHT ' llnom. a and t, Opiira lloiiiio hlook, ovor HlrniiK'a I'ruil HKiro. Knainlnatlnn. Ir M.illorit. Oregon Q T. JONES, COUNTY HUKVKYOIt, Any or all kind, nl Survojlim pmnintly dono. ' The l.'oiinly aurvoyor can glvo you llio only '""'"' Mrd.uid.OroKon K HAMMOND & NaRRKCiAN ' ' ATTORNKYH AT LAW Vontce In Siowarl Dlk. Modford.Or. J, B. HOWARD, UUnVKYOH AND CIVIL KNUINKKK 0. . Deputy Mlnrral Hurvryor lorlli.BUlo ofOroaon. I'OMtorno. aildm..: Muirord. Orcuon. K, B. PICKIiL, CHYBICIAN IAND Blllir.KUN, Omoe houra-ll tola a. nl. Hiid I : U3 p.m. X'Hay LalHirauiry Kiaatlnallona yi.Ml to t.ft. OHM: llakln Block. Mniroi.i or W. I. Vawthii. Proa. II. F. AUKlrla, V Proa . . U. It. LINDI.KY, OaaUlor ...CAPITAL, Iso.ooo. MEDKOflD, ORKGON Loan moaciy on approod Hoourlty, rccotro do poiiltfl Bubjoot to ohrok and trnu.aot a tfonnra banklliir bu.luimN. Your liualiioMM Millollcd.... Oorrn.Miii1ontN: I.add A llimh, Hnlom. Analo California ymik, Kiitn Fninolnco. l.adiT A Tlllon. 1'orlland.fJorbln llauklng Co., N. Y. B. K. ANKEKT, I'ro.ldout. J. E. Enyaht, i;u.lilor. J. II. Htewaiit, Vies I'roaldent. M. L. Al.roan, AkmI. Caabtor The riedford Bank Mcorono. oncqon Capital, $50,000.00 k General Banking Business Transacted BTOOKIloLDKKB I H. fltownrt, II. It. Ankeny, K. II. Whltohcnd, CO. llcokmnn, Hnraon Polton.Men llayniond, Jainca Pollou, V, II, llrnilKlinw, J. It. Knynri fvi.iT DR. JORDAN'S r.Tf f MUSEUM OF ANITOMY f OBI MARKET IT., MN PRANOtMQ, CL Y.af IW 0.1,'O.lhlo a, Mm oTai A wonrfMinil itMT MM wi.k. 9m ; .A or .iif .. SSjSSy M. MMMrHWMTMIMAlU S"aK "m ' arotfoaa, ay apooaM c.tlon.i ft Mad toff an Kwr MllaiY far KanlaiiV ASuW ta . aura fori PU. rlwar mm. Minla,a ur flaaihoda. Byienr HA!!! apprtnnwlttraa1va rima atMnfen i hiiMmfuam. ituiuBan f:iru MrfKtHotlywtni Trefttma.it panotMlr or by iattar. Wrlr fur nr.h tUtlLAKAPBT V MARllIAOKi nfAiLBB FhmMi lAmaWa book for man,) HorwiH ON. JORDAN It CO., MtrkU R Couuty i la aaaavEr A XsS5iiS&Sf of VrluaUn u. W feaaklnUa al A E.ni.dl.a. at (rut ouratM ai.ay, lhaOota( T MiiLl ki. troOMoV H.JnifSVA aaly .DTprolmra.jllal. MiiL ktft alraaaiitnff oura. Tha Doau am aat ttaU Utfrlmi nlraalM, out u wxi kaowa kkiUMl puara rhjriilouvi .nl ffc-. mmbMu la ciaapMiaiir ai.oaooa o aa. ffra VOL. IIV, Fit LIT LAND BARGAINS FOOT ll!M 71 mnm.NJ uema In ftulllvfttioii i bulaiico bruah. I' air Iiouho, barn and out hulhlliiKH. LlvltiK witwr from Mountain uprlntf plptd (II root to residence M ocron MoortHil to alfalfa, Only 1U iiiIIoh from Central Point Kvdry Hero unod orulmrd luud. I'rloo pvitX). Crop runorvod VAMJOY IIOMK-'uoru Iruot adjoining- Central Point town mUj. 20 acrca In cultiva tion. Hum 1 1 boii ho nuil burn, 15 aorea good fruit laud. '2W. A nice hnuiu for nomooim UKAIN KAMMI-HM. acrra In anuaro. All In cultivation. Itlch, black noil, which fruit 111 on claim will prove udaplrd to trroa. Fair fence but no butldtnK. Only two inllnH from town. Tho pruaont crop apoaks for the quality of Um muII. I'rliw S0,uW), Crop ruaarvud A LKAOICR Jiwi nerea orchard land at bao of foothill, two mllea from Central Point, all but uIkjuI Nvv acrca of which la tho very bual of fruit land. IJOacrc of ttuibor land ooa wllli tho plnce. An excellent 7-room dwelling houao I nil) ml and pi ante rod ; brick milk houao. Uood barn and gran try 1 wood hull irwilia.tiM.iM, Mnrf oiillmli.Hiiia. 'I'Wnwnlll t.f (Witt wiliir KnLlrn plnco vialblo from realdunon. Tli l la the peer of any trull MO I, MIC A RROS IPadfic Broad cast Seeders Plows Harrows All kinds of farming machin ery. New stock just being received HUBBARD BROS. H New Lumber Yard O. Rough and Dressed Lumber Fir Rustic and Flooring Three Year Old. Thoroughly Seasoned. Medford Oregon J; I am prepared to furnish HARNESS, SADDLES, ETC. First-Class Goods. Moderate Prices Call and boo mo 7th Street .S 0 at Bedford RJachine Shops Boiler and Engine repairing Engines, Boilers and Pumps Bought and Sold EXPERT MACHINE WOllK OF ALL KINDS Gasoline Engines end GAULT& COOK, RIEDFORD PLANING Ml I MEDFORD PLANING Wo manufnoture Doors, Sriph, Kstimatos furnished on Store soft wood,' ContraoUiift nnd Buildlntr, Mill on North D Street MEDFORD, Advertise in THE MAIL and get good results Fine Job Printing a Specialty. MEDFORD, JACKSON CODNTT, A rnt bargain at fAMJO. Crop JrOHorvcd location In Jackaon count tf POINT ja CENTRA Medford, Oregon THE MORTAR DHUG STORE, tt. H.HASKIS Prop !. ! thi ui or Uruit. fatenl Mrdl.'inca, Hooka. Htatlonety PAINT5 and OILS Clgara.Tobarro.Tollot Article., Ktc Prcacrlptlona Carefully Componndcd - 7th St. , Medford, Oregon E. GORSLINE & SONS MANUFACTURER!) Or AND DEALERS IN and Pine Shingles Yard Houtb 0 V tall man's Warehouse all kinds f IS J. G. TAYLOR, . Medford, Oregon ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft ft S a specialty. Seoond hand Spray Pumps on Sale Projrielors 1 MILL CO., Proprietors mouldings, Rustio nnd Flooring and Office fixtures in hnrd or OREGON mm OREGON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, A The Democratic Congressional campaign committee have deoided to carry on "a permanent cam paign," whatever that may mean. But this is not at all alarming, few people will pay any attention to what they say. W. A. Laidlaw, selecting agent for the Throe Sisters Irrigation Company of Eastern Oregon, ap peared before tho State Land Board Saturday and filed the balance of tho papers completing the applica tion for tho reclamation of arid lands in Crook County, aggregating 27,084.83. A deposit of over $27,000 was made to cover the cost at a fraotion over $1 per acre. Tho land, if sold, will be irrigated and de veloped for agricultural purposes. Norman Gerke has a pet coon which he keeps at the Russ House, says the'Albany Herald. The coon took a tramp around the neighbor hood recently and killed $1.50 worth of chickens for a neighbor. Norman paid for the chickens and resolved to keep Mr. Coon at home, but yes terday it got its owner ito trouble. It found an uofbrulla on a front porch and proceeded to make fancy ribbons of the rain pro tector. Norman paid the bill, amounting to $1. The coon is for sale, and if you want to have fun in your neighborhood, juBt buy it. Norman says ho has plenty, "more as plenty." A Boston attorney has filed a petition, asking that he be appointed administrator of the estate of John Hancock, the Revolutionary pa triot. John Hancock, late in the 18th century, was to some extent an underwriter, taking insurance risks on vessels out of the port of Boston at the time when relations between France and this country were Btrained. Some of the vessels so insured by Hancock were cap tured by French privateers and condemned in the French prize courtB. The underwriters had to pay the insurance and Hancock, like many otners, was a loser in this way. I be purpose of the ap pointment of an administrator is to recover from the United States the money which John Hancock was compelled to pay. The water of Silver Lake is quite low this season ; in fact, there seems to be less water in the lake at this time than at any former season for years paBt, with the one exception of the dry Summer of 1889, when tho lake was entirely dried up, says the Sliver Lake correspondent of tho Lakeview Herald. At present there is a large traot of fertile land lying between the lake beach and the water's edge, and extending the entire distance around the circular lake. On the lake bed thus uncov ered are swarms of all kinds of wa ter-fowl that find a rich feed ground covered with insects and fishes. Over tho lake each rooming hangs a heavy fog, whioh affords a good oover for the hunters of that section, and onables them to bag ducks and grese in groat numbers, if they ar rive on the ground before the fog begiaa to rise, about 8 or 9 o'clock in the morning. Silver Lake, whioh is quite Bballow, will no doubt be rained at no distant day-, and up on its fertile bed hundreds of valu able homes oan be built. Much of the romance and all of tho mystery of the Orient is likely to disappear when the completion of through rail communication from Paris to Pokin, whioh is promised within a little more than a year, enables the traveler to take a sleep ing oar for the whole distance. This sorvioe is to be established eaily in 1904, and the annual sale of through tiokets i9 estimated at 28,- 1902. NO. 48. 000. At the outset the trip will re quire about 20 days, but when everything is running smoothly, it is expeoted that it will be made in 14. The average speed per hour at first will be as follows : Parie to Berlin, 63 'j miles; Berlin to Alexandrovo, 40 miles; Alexandrovo to Moscow, 84 miles; Moscow to Irkutfk, 23 miles; Irkutsk to Lake Baikal, 17 miles; Lake Baikal to Inkow, 20 miles; Inkow to Pekin, 23 1 miles. Russian railroad build ing does not warrant confidence in the maintenance of high speed at present east of .Alexandrove. It will be a journey of unusual inter est whichever way the traveler goes. As the result of being struck by a local train while walking along the Oakland Mole, Vadlemar Vogt, about thirty-fire years old, who may be the robber who held up the Northern Pacifio passenger train at Bear Mouth. Mont., on October 24th, lies dead at the Morgue, and his companion, Earl Smith, claim ing to hail from Portland, Or., is at the Receiving hospital, suffering from a broken leg and other injur ies. The men bad beaten their way from the North and were run down while walking along the road. The thing which connects Vogt in some way with the robbery is that in his own handwriting in a note book is a copy of the reward offered by the. Northern Pacific. He also had two Northern Pacific money order receipts. He bad sent $05 on October 12th to his sister. He formerly resided at 22 Ganson street, New York. He was at Butte, Mont., seventy miles from the scene of the robbery, three days after the hold-up. His companion at the hospital stated this afternoon that his father is F. W. Smith, of Horn brook. Wash. The Best Remedy for Croup. From tha Atchison, Kan., Daily U lobe. J This la the season when tbe woman who knows tbe bust remedies .'or croup In In rlRmund In everv neighborhood. One of tbe most terrible things in the world is to be awakened in the middle of the night by a whoop from one of the children. The cronp remedies are al moat aa aure to be lost, in case of croup. as a revolver 1b sure to be lost In case o: burglars. There used to be an old fashioned remedy for croup, known as hive syrup and tolu, but some modern mothers say that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is better, and does not cost so much. It causos the patient to "throw up the phlegm" quicker, and gives re lief In a shorter time. Give this remedy as soon as tho croupy cough appears, and it will prevent the attack. It never rails and is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by Cbas. Strang, druggist. . A Big Reward. How would you like to find a box of gold dust worth $20,000 lying on tbe street, return said box to its owner and for your trouble receive the munificent reward of $1.50? That is what happened in Seattle this week. Some time ago a shipment of gold dust was received from-the North on one of the steamers and was ordered taken to the United States Assay Office, on Ninth and Cherry streets. The Seattle Trans fer Company undertook the job and, somehow, in the delivery of the preoious metal, the driver lost one box of the dust. An advertisement was inserted in the papers, saying that a reward would be paid for the return of the gold dust. A poor workingman found the box, which was heavier than he could carry and had it carted to the office of the transfer company. In his imagination there floated visions of the huge chunk of dust the owner would give him when he restored to him the box. Tbe owner was notified, rushed breath lessly into the office, identified the box, opened it, found the dust all th'ere, rammed his hand desp into his trousers pooket, and gave the finder $1.50. Shocked beyond description, at the "big" reward, the poor working man staggered out of the office, murmuring "Thank you!" flTUfTITTT . A TTaTVT i 220O THE MAIIhMlttand Ita publisher la not afraid to awear to It STATE O? ORKGON, l Coon It of Jackaon (" I, A. 8. lilllon, bain a; flratduly aworn, dopoae anrl aay ihat I ant tho Publisher of Turt MKDronb Kail, a weekly news Japor publlahed In the Olty of Medford. aoknoD County. Oregon; thnt the Dum ber of Medford Mafia printed each week la WOO. and that this numbar has boon printout eaih wak. fjr ttii pi I eight months and orer. A. 8. BUTON Subscribed and aworn to .before me tMn2lBt day of July, 1903 ,-, y. St BTKWAHT 1: bbaij, .Notary Publlo Klamath County Items. Prom the Klamath foils Kx press. E. S. Terwilliger has bought E. C. Ball's ranch near Merrill and will move over there shortly. Ho paid $7000 for the place which con tains 160 acres all under the Adams ditch. In Dairy, Ore., Sunday, Novem ber 18, 1902, Miss Mattie Michael and Mr. Thos. Patterson were mar ried. Both are well known people of Klamath County,- Mr. Patterson being one of the successful farmers and stockraisers of this section. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. B. Griffith. They will re side in Swan Lake valley at Edge wood ranch. One of the largest deals in farm lands made in Klamath County, in recent years, has just been com pleted by F. H. Mills. Tte pur chaser is Francis J. Bowne, from Pipestone, Minnesota, and formerly from Iowa. The tract consists of 2400 aores of sage brush land, com mencing at tbe town of Bonanza and extending west three and one half miles. It is all riparian to LoU river along the north side, with a small part lying south of the river, and consisted of fourteen different ranches, nine of which are improved. The purchase of these ranches removes an obstacle to tbe irrigation scheme of the Summit Lake Irrigation and Power Com pany, .and about 1000 acre3 will come under its system and be de veloped next year. Lost river rises on the upper end of the land, bub bling out in monstrous springs, and. 1000 acres more will be put under irrigation by aootbdr system from this point. Stepped Ag-ainst a Mot Stove. A child of Mrs. Geo. T. Benson, when getting bis usual Saturday night bath, stepped back against a hot stove which burned him Beverely. The child was in great agony, and bis mother could do nothing to pacify him. Remember ing that the had a bottle of Chamber lain's Pain Balm in tbe house, she thought she would try it. In less than, half an hour after applying it, the child was quiet and asleep, and in less than two weeks was well. Mrs. Benson is s well known resident of Kellar, Va. Pain Balm Is an antiseptic liniment and especially valuable for burns, cuts, bruires and sprains. For sale by Chas. Strang, druggist. Went through Bridge. A band of over two hundred horses being driven from the range in Lake County, Oregon, to the S. P. Co.'s railroad at Marysville, for shipment, met with diro disaster at a place known as Peck's bridge. which crosses Pit river. The bridge forms a part of the highway' be tween Burney and Cayton valleys and has a length of orer two hun dred feet. The weight and tramp of the baud of two hundred horses proved too much for the structure and it went down with a crash, . tumbling the frightened horses into the swollen waters of Pit river. The frightened animals after striking; the waters struck out for the banks and swam to shore, all succeeding in landing safely but three. Con sidering the confusion into which- the entire band was thrown, that only three of the animals were lost is most remarkable. Get a free sample of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets at Chaa. Strang's drug store. They are easier to take and more pleasant in effect than pills. Then their.use is not fol lowed by constipation, as Is often the case with pills. Regular size, 25c per box. LHVIoTWCO'8 ENGINEER'S OVERALLS San FnnNonoo; CAU Tim Mail has the news while Jit ia news- .;...