t ZJ&-S-Z OREGON SEHTINEi. PUBLISHED SATURDAYS AT JlCKSONniLFJlCKSONCeilNTY OREGON BT KRAUSE & TURNER. T E R M S t One copy. Per Tear, In advance, t!t 60 OREGON SENTIHEL. -ADVERTISING RATES. Oaaiqvaia lQtlati or! tit BntlaiutloB.T IM tacniooMqoanunnruoa. ........ i 1 s, a jnont&l. . ..... , 70 ' " 6 IS CO Oaa-ibnrthColiiiinl month. Tl H 5 in a Ona-half " , I -" 30 M " 8 ' 15 M On Caiman S month. ' o to W MM( i CO A Discount ta Yearly Advarllaars. $3 PER YEAR JACKSONVILLE, OBEGO& APRIL 29. ISS2. VOL. XXVII--1VO 17. - - - t" , i HHHBBHHHattlMflHHHHHHHaMHaflMHBMHHflllflHHHiiaaHlHHHHHHHHMH 1111 1 I I I I n I &:. rjy. iis i y i ii ii it i Jf 7 I, .111 LI I L AMBBne' SSVL I I 1, .1' I LI, 1a iNR "y '" ri a ssmm:' r 'Ktszn:z- sir r v "y w t " wv i y - ' '" llll1 " '"" ' ' Y - -v - - ; . -ii . -a - . i .. . , y f PROFESSIONAL CARDS. P. P. PRIM, ATTORNEY & C0UN3ELOR.AT-LA.W Jacksonville, Ogn., 'Will practice in nil the Courts of the iSutc. Office in Mrs. McCully's build iine, corner of California and Fifth streets. G; II, AIKEN, M. D., pHYSlCIAN AND SURGEON, JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. jarOnii oppotlle P. J. Rjan'i tor. - j. w. e0bin30n, m. d-, Physician and surgeon Jacksonville, Ogn. "Office in Mrs. Ganung's building, Caiifor nia street. All calls promptly attended to day or night. MARTIN VROWIAN, M. D. DHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. Office up-stairs in Orth's brick. Resi dence on California street. "R.kjr. SOROGGS, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Offlce up "stairs in Orth's brick building, Jacksonville, Oregon. Residence, opposite the Court House. Specialty, operative, surgery and treat ment of chronic diseases. Offlce hours afternoons, from 4 till (J. B. F. DO WELL, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, jACKSnSVILLK, OREOON. AtUaiiniM plaella ray hin.WwIll ral prompt atOnllM. -JicWl attention slwn to cllec tisat.x WILL. JACKSON, E N T I S T, JACKSONVILLE, OREGON. 0 TKKTII KXrUC-KD AT AM. 3nflW JmlnlfterM. II .iMiiri-n, mr which eir r.r will b tnmila. nfle. nl rHuf coruer f Cfurnl and IMi ttreeK. a. c. nmnv. L. B. STRARKf, GIBBS & STBtVRNS, A TTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS, Rooms 2 ami 4 Sirowbridge's Building, PORTLAND, OltKGON. 111 practice la all Ociutn.f KrenrcUn Ihe Stata of Oreontid Wlnhlnnn Trrrilory: and pay par ticular attantlon to ImnliieM In Federal Conrti. ST. CHARLES HOTEL, Caraer Front nml Jf arrlaon, rortlanU. (On the European Plan.) THOS. GUINEAN, PROP. (Late of .the Arcade, Sacramento.) 'Tliis'hotcl isthorough'yflrc-proor. Con Mains 120 elegantly furnished suits and -single rooms, which have been refitted and ;rcfurnishcU in modern style. Free coach to and from all trams and iboals METROPOLITAN HOTEL, 3CA.CANAN, - Prp. rjgThe Metropolitan is the only C ttrally Located House in the City of Ri Ccn- e- Iburg. . , , 8tagcs arrive at and leave the Hotel everyday. . , . ... Goodrnccommodations, and civility to all. "Extra yalns taken to see that fam ilies are made corstortablc. 5PA parlor for Ladies and Ladies to wraitupon them. LIKKVILLE HOTEL, LAKE COUNTY, OGN., f. C- Oreenman, Proprietor. THE undersigned Likes pleasure in an jouncing that he has taken charge of this house and that the management -will be first-class in every particular. The tabic will always be supplied with the bet the market aflords. Terms reasonable and satisfaction guar anteed. 'No- pains spared to meet the wants of the traveling public W.CGREENMAN. 3StJ I J Dl8ami)'cs worth $5 rfrce. Anarw tm ox to., t-on;anu, mc. ... w : . .t-ir- J. NUNAN, California Street, Adjoining HOLT'S NEW HOTEL, Jacksonville, Oregon, DEALER IN CLOTHING MEN'S, YOUTHS' AND BOYS' ! Latest Pattern'and made from mm cm lanou DUOK & DliMIN OVERALLS AND JUMPERS. SHOES, ETC., LADIES'. MISSES', CHILDREN'S KID & CALF SHOES, MEN'S AND BOYS' BOOTS; aLEXIS TIES AND BROGAN8. All California Make. A full Assortment of . adics' Dress & Fancy Goods, Also a large line of Men's and Boys' Hats. . Qcntlemcn's Undcrware, Suspenders &c., I also keep a full line ot GROCERIES, ETC., Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Spices, Canned goods of every description, a. full assort ment of Stationery,' TOBACCO & CIGARS. A large quantity of , Crockery arid Glassware, All of which I will sell FOR. CXA-SH AT Extraordinary Low Prices. My motto will be "QUICK SALES and SMALL PROFIT." Country Produce taken in exchange for goods. a I am also ugent for the following Stan d:nl Insurance Companies: Foreign Imperial, London, Northcn and Queen. Foreign London and Lancashire, Home Fireman's Fund. Home State Investment Ins. Co. Horns Commercial Ins. Co. Home Western Ins. Co. Traveler's Lifcand Accident of Hartford Conn, i Risks taken al lower rates" than any Aeent in Oregon, and will guarantee in case of loss, prompt payment. JERRY NUNAN. ASHLAND Livery, Sale & Feed Stable Main St., Ashland. 'PHEUNDERSIQNhD TAKES pleas L ure in announcing that lie has pur chased these stables and will keep con stantly on hand the very best SADDLE HOUSE?. BUGGIES AND CAIIOI GKS, And can furnUh my customers with a tip top turnout at any time. HORSES nOAKIIKD On reasonable terms, and given the best attention! Horses bought and sold and satisfaction' guaranteed in all my trans actions. HENRY NORTON. the Ashland Woolen Manufacturing Co. Take nlcasurc in announcing that thev now have on hand, a full and select stock of 1 i &&)EaEIp BSEK0ED MS HS)0EKYp ; Made of the very best NATIVE WOOL And of which they will dispose at very . reasonable rates. i Orders lrom a distance will receive prompt attention. Send them in and give' our gooas atrial. . Arhi.akd Wooi.uk M'f'o On. Criterion Billiard Saloon! CALIFORNIA ST., , James P. McDaniel, Prop. rpniS popular resort, under new mnn J agement, is furnishing the best brands ot liquors, wines and cigars. The rcadirfg tahlc is supplied with Eastern periodicals and leading papers of'theCoast. Give me a call. jtryQA-WEBK. $12 a day. at ho.me.ease 3? &ly,maae. CostlyOutfitfree-Atl. i - -- .; i -r - -- -- dress trck & Co., A-ngusta, Kainc T. G. REAMES. -E. B. EKAMES. REAMESBKOS., California st., TacksoHviild, - - - Oregoa, AHEAD AS USUAL ! ! BY ADOPTINQ A CASH BASIS !! THE .GREATEST REDUCTION IN PRICES AND THIS LARGEST STOCK or- GENERAL MERCHANDISE ! THE GREATEST VARIETY TO SELECT rRM IN Any On Store in Southern OrgCBtr B cittern California. ALL FOR CASH!! OUR STOCK CONSISTS OF FALL & WINTER DRYHSOODS, FANCY GOODS. LADIES' DnESS GOODS. CASHMERES, AND DIAGONALS. SILKS. AND S TINS, BOOTS SHOES, CLOTHING. ETC,, LADIES' CAL, MADE CLOAKS w E CALL THE ATTENTION OF THE nn had the largpt and bestdpct(d aort rnent - rLADIES' DIIESS GOODS and FAN CT GOODS ol every dnctiptlon in South trn Oregon, and we will henceforth make thin line of goods onr tprciality and tell :Vra at Cheaper than the Cheapest. To the BtntUmi'n we will ray, if you wixnl A No. I SUIT OF CLOTHES ynu mutt go to Reamed Broa. to bay Ihcra at we claim to have the best STOCK OF CLOTHING In Jackson county and will allow none to un-di'-ell lit. Thete'gois were all purchased by a mem ber ol our firm from FIRST CLASS Iloufei- ir San Francl'co and New York, and w will wairant every article and sf It tliem as cheap for cath a a'iy honsc In the coanty. We also keep on hand a lull slock of GROCERIES, Hardware, Cutlery, Glassware, CROCKERY. A FULL LINE OF A8H LAND GOODS FAUM AND FREIGHT WAGONS Plovrs, Gang Flows & Sulky Flows In fact everything from the finest needlr to a threshing-machine. Give ni a call and judge for yourselves as to our capacity of furnishing goods as above. The way to make money is to are il. To :ave it buy cheap. To bay cheap pay CASH for your goods and bay of RKAMKS BROS. DAVID LINN. AJTD DEALER TX corrnvr trummevgs. COFFINS FURNISHED ON THE shortest notice and cheaper than at any other establishment in-Southern Oregon. Furniture of all kinds kept on hand or made to order. Hides, Skins And Fnrs. a I will pay the highest cash price far beef hides, deer skins and all kinds of furs. .Will pay cents, cash, tor gooa necr skins. Come and see me: .N. FICKE.. Jackonyille,-Nor.-1971861. '. BUCKINGHAM .c5cHErtrS BOOTS & SHOES tfHAJfo 4 BXSTf And cost no more than other brands; and if the Merchant with whom you trade doc not keep our Goods," it is because it pays belter to sell a pair of Boots or Shoes every two months than everv four or five. WE GUAR ANTEE EVERY PAIR WE MAKE. All Merchants in good credit can procure these Goods at our Warehouses in Portland or San Francisco. Try onr 'HERCULES" Patcnli Boots. HECHTBROS.&CO. mil 3m THE U. S. HOTEL, Cor. 3d and California 8ts., Jacksonville - - Ogn, JANE HOLT, Proprietress. O. & C. tage House. FIR.ST-GLASS ACCOMMODATIONS. . MEALS AT ALL HOURS. ROOMS TO LET BY THE DAY, WEEK OR, MONTH. Prices Very Moderate, OUR NEW HOTEL BLTjWa DE ing completwl lor occupaccy, the un dersigned lakes pleasure in announcing that we are prepared to entertain the trav eling public No pains will be spared to provide for the comfort of our guests and to make them feel at home wita us. 1 he most modern improvements have been in troduced, andLUhe accommodations of the United Stati will not lag behind the best appointed inland hotel on this coast. Our Libles will always ba supplied with the best the market affords ana served in the best style by a corps ot obliging waiters. The beds and beddmg arc all new and fitted up in the most comfortable style, suited to the accommodation of single oc cupants or families. JANE HOLT. Jacksonville, March 5, 1881. Free to Everybody! A Beautiful Book for the Asking! By applying personally at the nearest Office Of THE BINDER UANUFACTURttO. CO. (or by postal card if at a distance) any adult person will be presented with a beautifully illustrated copy of a New Book entitled GENIUS REWARDED, .OB THE Story of the Sewing Machine, containing a handsome and cosily steel engraving frontispiece: also, 28 finely en graved wood cuts, and bound in an elab orate blue and gold lithographed cover. No charge whatever is made for this hand some book, which canjbe obtained only by application at the branch and subordinate offices of The S ngcr Manufacturing Lo. The Sitwr Mannftitnrin; Co. Principal Office, 84 Union cquare, New York. Piles! Piles! Piles! A SURE' CURE FOUND AT LAST1 NO ONE NEED SUFFER! A sure Cure for Blind, Bleeding, Itching and Ulcerated Piles has been discovered by Dr. Wil iam, (an Indian Remedy,", called Dr. William's Indian Ointment A single box has cured the worst chronic cases of 25 or 30 years standing. No one need suffer five minutes after apply ing this wonderful soothing medicine. Lotions in strumenta and electuaries do more harm than good. William's Ointment absorbs the tumors, allays the intense Itching, (p.'-rticularly at night after getting warm in bed,) actB as a poultice, gives instant relief, and is prepared only for Piles, itch inr of the private parts, antl for nothing clsc Head what the Hon. J. M. Coninbeny. of leveland rys nbout Dr. William's In dian Pile Ointment: I have used scores of Pile mes, and it attorns me pleasure to say 'hat I .have never found anythms which gave -such immediate and perma nent relief as l)r. William's Indian Oint ment. , ... For sale br al druggists or mailed on receipt or priee. ?1.C0- HENRY & CO., Proprietors, , Cleveland, . HorxE,T)ATT8fc -0.,'Wholeeate Agents, Port and, Oregon. vjsjvi-week In your own town Xcrms rSODand $5 outfit Iree. Address H. Hallktt & Co., PoftUai;Mala jiUftSf31Sv WW MsPH-liHaiTiTflKM cglEfAgF ARB- VJSLJi , JESSE JAMC8 WIBW. Ike Tclli the Starr T Bb Conrtahlp aad BarrlseMer Hmnbandf Carer. Special to tha Moraine Call. Chicago, April 20. A special to the Times" from Kansas Ciiy gives an extended interview with the widow of Jesse James. She tells of their court ship, which lasted five years, and was opposed by her parent, who lived near Kansas City. This was in 1869, just after Jesse James, who was her cousin, had been declared an outlaw, wun a price nn nis neau " -. -, . HeT visite3 her there and she him at his mother's in Kearnev. Once they hid in the rard, when Finkerton's detectives were after him. They were married at her sister's in Kearney, April 24, 1874. They then went to Sherman, Texas, making the honeymoon on the pro ceeds of (ho Blue Cut robbery. She says Jesse was not in the Hot Springs robbery. The Gadshill robbery netted him only $200, and the reports about the proceeds of his robberies are great ly exaggerated. They went from Sher man to Dallas in September, Mrs. James returned to Kansas City that Winter, while Jesse took part in the Corinth, Miss., and Muncle, Kas., af fairs. Thev went to Edzefield. Ten- nessee, then to Baltimore. Jesse, she says, was not in the Huntington (West Virginia) robbery. They went back to Nashville. While there, the Baxter Springs (Kan.) and Otterville (Mo.) robberies were perpetrated. She tavs Jesse was not in them. He was dealing in fast horses, and lived there in March: during the time Jesse was a delegate to the State Convention which nominated Governor Foster. He was in the first Glendale and Burl ington raids. In March he went to Kansas City and lived till September 1st. The Blue Cut robbery was planned here, and the outlaws- lived in the house afterwards. They moved several times in Kansas City, and finally to St. Joseph, where he was killed. She says he did not take Dart in the Rannas City Exposition robbiry, nor the staje robberies in Colorado or Texas. Aa Idea. Twas a calm, still night; net a breeze xtirred the leaves as they lay. sleeping in the trees. The sun had al ready gone down, and mother earth xeemed to be taking a nap. The Thomas cat hopped from fence to fence and sang his sparking songs to his companion, and the cricket chirped his lay. When these had stopped, it was so silent youi could hear a house drop. As she lay nestled on his man ly bosom a thought struck her, and she said: "Alplionsux, I have a bright idea." He said he knew a brighter one, and when she asked him what it was, he answered: "Your eyes, dear." There was ailence for a moment; then he said: "Ahem!" Intermission for two minutes; then she laid ber head on the rim of his ear and wept. He raised his lips to hers, and the first thing heard was a farm er's voice from behind a bush, inquir ing if that was his cow stuck in the mud and was trying to get her hoofs out. An Ohio Editor in Dead Earnest. -The people will take the Chineie question into their hands if the Gov. ennment does not a&brd immediate re lict The importation of the licentious offscourings of a heathen country has come to be too grievous to be borne. The .generous invitation which this country -extends to the people of for eign -nations -is not intended to pro mote a systematic immigration of thugs, 4epers, slaves and prostitutes. It is not intended to introduce in this country an -elainent that degrades labor to a level lower than the sUve system which it took two decades of agitation and a, four J ears' bloody war to wipe out. It is not for the purpose of making the United States a dump ing ground for an insinuating com munity that has not a single emotion in common with our institutions, but which is vile) to the -uttermost. The people of this country, so Iargly work ing people, will not compete with a pmal sysiem. They will not submit to be degraded in occupation to the possibilities of the coolie,4ind they will not have their social condition reduced to the standard of the inhnntan beings who cluster in filth, laugh at virtue and discount the value, of the. .houses they live in. Cincinnati Enquirer." LUCKY BASS. It is curious to note that in India a rainy day is considered unlucky for a wedding, and that in Scandinavia Thursday, the day of TJior, or thunder, was also a bad omen. St. Eloy, in a sermon, warns his flock from keeping Thursday as a holy day; and Dean Swift, in a letter to Sheridan, rhyrass Thursday to "cursed day." The .Est onians consider it unluckr, and in De vonshire it has but one lucky hour, Mr. Jones, who, by the way, makes no mention of Thursday as the fatal day. of the Tudors, docs not attempt to gen eralize from these curious facts; which, indeed, we have picked out from var ous parts of the book. Unlucky days in Cochin China perhaps among the Mohammedan Malays, but we are not told are the. third day of the new moon, being that on which Adam was expelled from Paradise; the fifth, when the whale swallowed Jonah; the six teenth, when Joseph was put into a well; the twenty-fourth, when Zachar iah was murdered, and the twenty-fifth, when Mohammed lost his front teeth. '9k ancient Egyptians were like the Chinese in their careful observance of lucky and unlucky days, and Mr. Jones may turn with profit for his next edition to Mr. Mitchell's amusing ''cal endar," in which they are detailed at length. Mr. Jones says that from an cient Egypt the evil or unlucky days have received the name of Egyptian days, given them in "a Saxon MS. (Jott MS. Vitel, c viii. fe. 20)." They are the last Monday in April, the first in August, and the "first Monday of going out of the month of Decemlor," which leaves us somewhat in doubt as to all the Mondays in that month. Saturday Eeview. Colored Glass. Much has been said about the inability of modern glass manufacturers to make window glass imbued with the rich and beautiful colors peculiar to the windows of old cathedrals in England and on the con tinent. It. isnot. generally known, however, that tho secret of securing those wonderous tints has been discov ered by one of our glass monufacturers. After a long series of experiments con ducted in conjunction with Mr. Thos Garfield, of Boston, a cousin of. the martyr President, ho has found that rich eflects in those old cathedral win dows are owing to the poorness of the quality of the glass. Owing to the imperfect mixing of tho ingredients by the old glass makers, the substance did not unite closely, and in consequence it became porous, and the minute parti cles of soda in tho. composition are ex. posed and act in tho function of radia tors, which give brilliancy to tho colors of the window. In making window glass in the colors now, the makers prefer to leave the surface rough, in order that by exposure to the elements it may go through the same beautify ing process alluded to above. "Brass." The man who travels on the railroad and sits down by the side of lone females, while laboring under the impression that ho recognizes a likeness in their faces to his wife's aunt's cousin, met his match on one of the roads in this vicinity lately. Ho sat down in the half seat, the other half of which waB occudied by a pleas ant fared young lady. His first ques tion was. "Pardon me, Miss, but is your name Jamesl I have a cousin of that name whom yo'u greatly resemble." ' ."No, sir, was the reply, my name is not James. But pardon me, sir is your name Zinc or Copper" "Zinc or Copper? No ma'am," said the astonished man. "What led you to suppose I had such a name!" "Excuse me," was the polite reply, "but I thought you must be the first cousin of a brass foundry." The man fell over two seats and kicked a bird cago half way down the car in his haste to get into the smoker, while the young lady smiled a gentle"-' smile behind her handkerchief. It was a proof of the -old adage that a witty answer turnath away bores. Ono day last week, in an Ohio town, lightning missed two theatres, eighty nine saloons, a couple of gambling dens, the Board of Trade building, a sewing machine agency, three breweries, and a distillery, and struck a Unitarian .church in three places. Of course, no sensible man believes there is any Pro vidence in anything like that, but it made, the Unitarians just as mad as tlinnd'i'j. - . . Governor Crittenden on Uie aUUlag f Jeuc James. I'hava no excuses to mako, no apol ogies to render to any living man for the part I played in this bloody drama, nor ba3 Craig nor has Tituberlake. Tha life of one honest law-abiding man, however humble, is worth mora to society and a State than a legion of Je&se Jameses. One is a blessing, the other a living, breathing, pntnd.canie.. f1 atn no aMrer ot any pf the acts of the outlaw. Ho may .have occasionlly .done a gooddeed; if so, like the corsair, lit was "ono virtue linked with a thou sand crimes." I am not regretful of his death, and have no words of censure , for the boys who removed bim. They deserve credit is ray candid, solamn opinion. Why should these Ford boys be so abused If they are guilty of a heinous. sin against society, others are also equally guilty. With out fear or favor I say these boys did an act that will redound to the pros-, perity and advancement of Missouri and remove the great shadow that has hung so long over,, this great State. All honor to the brave officer who ac complished the work. If you want to know the value of the deed, ask the managers of banks, ask the owners of land in that part of the State, ask tha managers of the many railroads con structed in this State, ask the ticket agents at St. Louis, Kansas City, Omaha and Chicago, ask the hotel keepers at St. Louis and Kansas City, ask the property holders and real estate agents at Kansas City and in Jackson county, ask those who own land in Clay and Platte, hear all their re sponses, and then say it was not a good ' deed in behalf of law, order and general prosperity. From an Interview in the Kaiuaa City Journal. rrotpeels arihe BUI. It is now quite certain that no action will be had en the Chinese bill in the Senate until next week. It ii lielieved that the Massachusetts manufacturers, 'through their SenaTors, "wllf make"''" strong effort to impair tho value of Iho bill, by inserting in it a provisos, that skilled laborers may come into the country from China. A lobby is open ly working with that object in view. Tho discovery of this fact strips tho flimsy disguise from Hoar and Dawes, and shows thai they are not opposed to the bill on sentimental grounds, as they make believe to be, but are simply doing the dirty work of a lot of soulless men who have already earned the rep utation of being the most exacting em ployers in the country. The cotton ' manufacturers of Massachusetts havo ground their factory hands down year after year, until at present they receive less wages than the coolies of this State. At the same time their factories aro earning enormous dividends for them. It is to help them to still furth er oppress tho operatives in the cotton factories of "New England that Dawes and Hoar are opposing the passage of the Chinese bill. We venture to say that 'their constituents will discover their treachery before many months roll around and will reward them ac cording to heir'3eserts. It is reported that their machinations are likely to prove ineffectual, and that the bill will p.iss in nearly the same shape that it received the approval of the House. The people ef the Pacific coast earnest ly hope this, may prove true, and re ault in the confusion of the enemies of free labor in the United States. S. F. Chronicle. IIow Lnima t'llnilxd. There is a good deal of difference in tho way things are put. For instancs, Emma Abbott told a clergyman in Denver: "When I was a poor kitchen girl and found I must wash dishes for a living, I resolved to wash them bet ter than anybody. "When I became a singer in on opera company I resolved to sing better than anybody in the troupe." The clergyman was niuch af fected. Would he have been as much affected if Emma Abbott had said: "When I became a sjnger in an opera company, I resolved to have nobody in tho troupe who could sing better than I could." Mamma, is the hen going to.be, wot away for tho Summer!" "No,i Charlie; but why do yon askl'.' "Well, I heard papa.tell the new governess .that thay would have. a. line .time when .he bent the old hen awaytfor thoSunirotr." "Maniniput Uttls Charlie to" bcil