Uregon Historical Society PORTlAHD J) (omfcaler. Vol. XXXVI ROSEBURG, DOUGLAS COUNTY, -OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 21, 1904. No. 58 SHOT BY BROTHER-IN-LAW'S WIFE. W. W. Korn, of Mohawk Valley, Filled Full of Bird Shot. Eugene, Jul' 2o W. W. Korn, residing about three and a half miles above Mabel, in the Mohawk valley, was shot and seriously injured by his brother-in-law's wife, Mrs. James Kiuman, about seven o'clock last evening. - ; -The shooting was done with a shotgun loaded with No. 21 shot. Several shot entered the abdomen, some struck him on the breast, one in the mouth and others in the limbs. According to the story of the attending physician, it appears that Korn and Mrs. Kininau had not beeu on the best bF terms for some time. It seems that yesterday morning Mrs Kinman found Koru's cow on her place and tied it up with a rope belonging to her. Korn hunted nearly all day for his cow aud finally finding it, drove it home, taking the rope with him. Mrs. Kinman shouted to him to bring the rope back, and if he didn't she would shoot him. Korn refused to do so, whereupon the woman went to her house and getting a double-barreled shotgun proceeded to make good her threat. As Korn approached her with a milk pail in his hand she fired at him at a distance of about 20 yards, the shot taking effect as before stated. His family and neighbors at once gathered at the scene of the shooting and carried him to the house. He suffered great pain all night, but was resting more easily when Dr. Atwood left there at nine o'clock this morning. The doctor, however, has been expecting a summons by telephone all afternoon to again attend the man, as his condition is considered quite serious. The injured man is aged about 35 years and has a wife and several children. He is considered ja good citizen and has the respect of his neighbors. The af fair has created great excitement in that neighbor hood and of course is the sole topic of discussion there. Mrs. Kinman had not been arrested up to the time Dr. Atwood left there this morning. R. W- FENN, CliZIL- ENGINEER Lately with the ovdrnmiatordphical ail gtwlogieal survey of Braril, South America.) U. S. Deputy Mineral Surveyor Office over Postoffice HOSEBUfG, OEGOfl. Correspondence solicited A VENERABLE STAGE DRIVER. Reminiscence of Pioneer Days in Which Tom Burnett Was a Prominent "figure. 1: MftDMAMO' IsSS ICE CREAM PARLORS WUtllVIAPiO Egg FINE CONFECTIONERY wHENDRICK'S BLOCK OPPOSITE THE S. P. RAILROAD DEPOT. gffpg II The Best ice Cream Soda JUST RECEIVED 2 CAR LOADS 2 Mitchell Farm Wagons Road Wagons Surreys, Buggies , Hacks " Champion Binders, Mowers, Reapers, Hay Rakes, Etc. Wecan:save you money on anything in the Wagon or '-'Implement line. Give us a chance to figure with you and you won't i egret it. J. F. Barker & Co,, Grocers. Phone 201 Tom Burnett, one of tbo veteran Btage drivers of the old California and Oregon Stage Company, that in pioneer days run stages from Portland to San Fran cisco, shortening the run as the railroad was built out from each of those cities until the two sections of railroad were closed in the Siskiyou mountains south of Ashland, is here on a visit to his cousins, M. J. Hanley, K F Hanley and Alice Hanley. Thursday Mr. Bur nett was in Jacksonville, where ho and V. G. Kennoy and S. P. Jones, two other C. and O. stage drivers, had a reunion and spent an hour in recalling incidents of the days they handled the ribbons and whip and swung their teams along the roads of Southern Ore gon, in daylight and darkness, in storms and winter snows, nothing stopping them but the bottomless mudholes that each winter put sections of the road all but out of use, says the Jacksonville Sentinel. Mr. Burne:t drove the last stage out of Roseburg, and which was drawn by the famous six-horse gray team that was on the Roseburg section for many years. The railroad had been completed to Myrtle Creek and the day following, the mail train was run on to that place. The next extension was to Riddles, then to Glendale and then to Grants Pass, reaching Medford Janu ary 1C, 1SS4, and Ashland soon ufter, where a long halt was made while the railroad was built across the Siskiyou mountains to a connection with the rail road that was being built north from San Francisco. Mr. Burnett was con sidered the crack whip of the road and so expert was he in handling the long lash that he could pick a fly off a leader and never disturb a hair of the horse. On that eventful morning, that Rose burg was to bid goodbye to the stage, a big crowd was out to weep at the passing of the old order of things and to cheer at the new order that the railroad would bring. A brass band added to the excitement of the occasion and Mr. Burnett, when all was ready to start, swung his whip to give a gentle touch to the leaders, but instead of doing that with the artistic touch of a Hank .Monk, as was his wont, he knocked bis bat off instead, like the veriest green hand on the road. It so upset Mr. Burnett's pride that he came near falling off his seat and all that trip his whip bung limp in his hand so disgusted was he with his ignominious failure of the morning when be intended to go out of Roseburg with a grand flourish, as be come the crack driver and the crack team of the road. Mr. Burnett now lives on the donation land claim that his father took up in the early fifties, at Robert's Hill, near Roseburg, where bis home overlooks the old stage road, the railroad, the Umpqua river, where Mr. Burnett is spending his days in quiet. 'A. SALZMAN, ,J Pratical WatchmaKer, Jeweler, Optician. Watches, ClocKs, Jewelry Diamondsand Silverware Watch Repairing a Specialty. EUGENE'S MODEL ROAD. Will be First of its Kind on the Pacific Coast. EroKSE, July 13. James W. Abbott, special agent for the Rocky mountain and Pacific coast division, road inquiries of the United States department of ag ricultural, is at Eugene, Or., where he making arrangements for a good roads demonstration under the supervi sion of government experts. The sam ple road to bo made at Eugene will be the first to be made under government auspices on the P cilic coast, and is therefore arousing widespread interest. Some time ago the enterprising citizens f Eugene wrote to the department of griculture and-asked that the experi ment be made, and Mr. Abbott was or- lered here in response to the request. rhe sample road will be from half a mile to a milo in extent and of the beat macadam class. Lane county w ill fur nish the transportation, and the road making machinery concerns of Portland will be given the opportunity to demon strate their latest machinery. "There is no section of the United States that does not need better roads," said Mr. Abbott, "and I suppose Oregon needs them as much as any other state. The people of Eugene have taken hold of the matter with great energy and de termination to make the demonstration success. The government's part in the work is to furnish without charge the experts and supervision. If the pre liminary arrangements can be completed without delay I think we can begin work at Eugene early the coming week." Albany Mayor Divorces His Wife. Albany, Or., July 19. The divorce suit of Mayor W. H. Davis against Mrs. Davis came up for hearing laBt evening, before Judge William Galloway, in the Circuit Court. The complaint charged intemperance, and to this the defense demurred. Tho demurrer was over rulled and the .defense refusing to plead further, the plaintiff introduced his testimony, the case was submitted with out argument, and the court granted the decree. The case attracted consider able attention here, owing to the promi nence of the parties. It is understood that the parties have made a satisfactory arrangement regarding property rights, and that no appeal will be taken in the case. Pay and Qet a Nice flap., For tho next thirty days to all who pay us two dollars on subscription, we will present them a nice map of Oregon ana a map ol the world. The value O he map is one dollar. PEACE OF EUROPE TREMBLING IN BALANCE Russia Proposes to Siezc British Vessels Carrying Ammunition. THE BRITISH LION LIES IN WAITING England Says Russia Must Give Up the Captured Liner-French Navy Is Now On War Footing. BONDED FAMOUS BRIGG5 MINE London, July 20. It is rumored aud not denied that the British naval squad at the Suez Canal has been ordered to treat as pirates and sink the two Rus sian cruisers which captured and are holding the Brit ish liner, Malacca. Admiral Freemautle, one of the foremost of the British naval officers, said in this con nection: "Were I Corainander-in-Chief of the Mediterrane an fleet, I should take the law into 1113' own hands, and order my ships to escort all British ships through the Suez Canal and red Sea, and protect them from an' interference at the hands of these Russian ships. I hope the government will adopt stroug measures in this matter. If the cruiser of the American Confed eracy, the Alabama, was a pirate, and Americans have always considered her as such, what are these two ships flying the Russian flag? It is my own opinion that the' are pirates, and should be treated as such." CAPTAIN COMPLAINS OF RUSSIAN TREATMENT. Port Said, July 20. The captured Peninsular & Oriental steamer Malacca, bound for Libau, on the Baltic, has arrived here, manned b' a Russian naval Captain, four officers, 45 sailors and firemen. Mem bers of the Malacca's crew were declared prisoners and no communication with the shore was permitted. An armed guard blocks the gaugway of the vessel. The British captain and passengers complain of the Russian treatment. The former carried his pro tests to such length that he was threatened with ar rest unless he desisted. The Malacca is declared to have on board no con traband articles for Japs. Her cargo of 3000 tons in clutes 40 totis of explosives for Hong Kong. BRITISH AMBASSADOR PROTESTS. St. Petebsburg, July 20 (6:35 p. m.) Sir Charles Hardinge, the British Ambassador to Pussia this afternoon, in behalf of his government, presented a strong protest to Russia against the seizure in the Red Sea and the detentiou of the Psninsular & Orien tal steamer Malacca, which was carrying 300 tons of British government stores for the naval establishment at Hong Kong, cases containing such stores being marked with the broad arrow, which is the govern ment stamp. The Ambassador also presented a gtueral protest against the action of the Russian volunteer fleet steamers in the Red Sea. RUSSIA REMAINS FIRM. St. Petersburg, July 20 (5:18 p. ra.) Russia seems prepared for any representations Great Britain may make on the subject of stopping ships iu the Red Sea. It is understood that before sending the cruisers the Russian authorities became satisfied through an elaborate system of espionage that an immense amount of contraband was going from England through the Red Sea to Japan, and they decided to stop the traffic. It is understood that if this traffic is now di verted to the Cape route the Russian Admiralty is prepared tc send ships to the Cape of Good Hope. If Great Britian objects to the passage of the Dardanelles by more vessels of the volunteer fleet, the ships in tended for cruising off the Cape may be sent from the Baltic. In this connection very important develop ments are believed to be imminent. FRANCE MAY PARTICIPATE. Cherbourg, France, July 20. Orders were issued today to all subalterns and sailors attached to vessels of the French channel squadron here, who are now cn leave, to report forthwith to take part in a general in spection. . . This unexplainable measure has created great ex citement in Cherbourg, and the report is circulated that the fleet, will be ordered to the orient immediately. E. T. Staples, of Ashland, Now in Control in the Sucker Creek Discovery. Aihlxnd, July 19. E. T. Staples, of tbia city, has bonded the famous Briggs gold mine on Thompson Creek, in the Sucker Greek country, the property which haa caused so much excitement during the past month in Southern Ore gon. A ten days' option to purchase at $100,000 recently expired, and Mr. Staples was successful in bonding mine. He arrived in Ashalnd, Saturday, and exhibited some marvelously rich speci mens from the mine to a group of friends at Hotel Oregon. Mr. Staples has had much experience in mining in Idaho, where he has handled and pro- motel some extensive gold mining propositions. He has the following to say of the rich Sucker Creek discovery : "I spent some days there and was given liberty to exploit it from a pros pective buyer's standpoint. It appalls a man who has been examining $10 and 20 freemilling properties, and going there, as I did, expecting to see a "pocket." I was not prepared to Q ft fabulously rich quartz vein exposed for 16 feet in length by three feet deep, the gold lying in chunks and slabs along the walls and running through the quartz from side to to side in seams as large as two fingers. "It is so rich that the owners are in an awed and frightened state of mind and are afraid to continue to extract the gold, as it accumulates faster than they dare chance handling and carrying it out to the market. As to the extent of the gold-bearing ledge, no man can answer, but the appearance makes it safe to chance it for a couple of hundred thou sand dollars. The owners did not solicit a buyer, but have concluded to sell, and I have taken their bond, hoping to ac quire full ownership. "I must confess that I have the gold fever, and who wouldn't, after helping pick out $5, $12, 40 and H00 gold nuggets frozen along the walls of a ledge, while the ledge itself stands aglow with the infusion of the gold metal? It may not surpass ine steamboat, tnat pro duced 120,000, or equal the Gold Hill, that yielded 1180,000, but it is in the neighborhood of these big finds, and eo far as worked has excelled either, and as a matter of fact I doubt if the world can show a record of f 25,000 free gold from the same sized excavation. "It is a veritable bonanza, and that's enough said." "Oregon ranks high among mining states now, but with the immense dis coveries being make in Josephine and Jackson counties she will scon lead or I iss my guess. Until recently the miners and prospectors have cared but little for low-grade ledges, for the reason that the rich so-called pocket finds were numerous, and when the rich chute was worked out from the surface they began to search for another. So it was that many rich ledges have been abandoned when they failed to pay by use of pick, shovel and hand mortar." GOT A GOLD BRICK. Washington Delegate Says Bryan Was the Hero of the Hour. Noam Yakiua, Wash., July IS. Delegate A. J. Splawn, who returned yesterday from the National Democratic Convention at St. Louis, says this was the most interesting of all he has at tended from a "do-nothing" fctand-point He said : "They handed us a gold brick at St Louis. There was no sentiment in the convention. It was a cold-blooded proposition from start to finish. Bryan was the hero of the convention, al though he did go down with the rest of us fighting for Democratic principles. He is the man who received the applause of tho people. He is the man who fired the enthusiasm of the delegates. Ho is the man who led us fighting to the last ditch for free silver. The nomination of Parker was not the voice of the people ; it was the jingle of the dollars rolling out of the coffers of Wall street that sent him to the head of the ticket. I did my best to defeat him." Oregonian Lauds Bryan. A lean v, Or., July 19. S. M. Garland, of Lebanon, a delegate to the National Democratic Convention, returned yester day from his trip East. He was gone six weeks, and during that time visited his home in Virginia, and some of the large Eastern cities before going to St, Louis. He rode with the Virginia dele gation from Richmond to St. Louis on their special train, and spent consider able time with the delegates from that state. He says that the convention was ono of the most interesting gatherings ho over attended, and speaks in high terms of Brvan, who of all speakers bad tho greatest control over the convention. ho says, and was best able to make himself heard and to secure order. OPERATIONS AT THE LIME QUARRY. Development Work Progressing-Tramway is to be Constructed. Work in the lime and iron ore quarry on the Plinn Cooper place southeast of this city, is progress ing very satisfactory. The company of Portland capi talists who bonded the property, have started work in earnest and now have a force of 12 men there. Among the preparations being made, is the construction of a tramway from the quarry to the site of the proposed kiln, about one-half mile distant. The iron ore de posit is considered even more valuable by the company than the lime stone and in due time a smelter will no doubt be erected at this point, the lime rock necessary m its operation, being right at hand. As previously stated by the Plaindealer this new company lias sot fully divulged its plans, but it is the general .under standing that a railway spur for transportation of the products of the quarry is to be built from the South ern Pacific Company's track, near F. B. Waite's place. The present plans of the company, so far as known, involves simply the burning of the lime and its ship ment to Portland to be used in the manufacture of cement, the kiln to be of the modern continuous pat tern. The development of this great Douglas county mineral deposit will certainly encourage the develop ment of other similar dormant resources in which the county abounds as well as the great timber interests of this section of the state. FOUR THOUSAND WERE KILLED. Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets Better than a Doctor's Prescription. Mrs. J. W. Turner, of Truhart, Va., says that Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablota have done him more good than anything ho could get from the doctor. If any physician in this coun try was able to compound a medicine that would produce such gratifying results in caees of stomach troublos, biliousness or constipation, his whole time would bo used in preparing this one medicine. For sale by A. O. Mar tero& Co. Chefoo, July 19. Members of the crew of a Chi nese junk arriving today five days from Port Arthur, say that on the eleventh inst. the Japanese captured and occupied with four thousand men one of the east ern forts. The Russians then cut them off, exploding mines which resulted in the annihilation of the entire number. The night before the junk left Port Arthur a Russian torpedo boat sunk a merchant ship, mistaking her for a Japanese transport. The ship is . believed to be the Hipsang, now long overdue. The crew was rescued by the Russians, but a number of Chinese were drowned. London, July zg. Press dispatches from General Kuroki's headquarters dated today state that the Rus sian losses in the Molien laud fight are now computed at two thousand. The Japanese total losses will not exceed three hundred. r. ff. BKSSON, Prntdent. A.C.XAS8TXX8. VleelTiataxitt. Douglas County Bank, Established 1883. Incorporated xgo, Capital Stock, $50,000.00. BOARD OF DIRECTORS F. W. BESSO.V, E. A. BOOTH J. H. BOOTH. 3. T. BBXDQE3 J03.LtOXS,A.C.MAB3TSK3 K.L.SULLEB. A general banking business transacted, and customer! grrea every accommodation con?istent with safe and consorratiTe baaMa. " Bank open from nine to twelve and from one to three. James Arrance Machinist Is now prepared to do all kinds of machinist . work, such as turning, milling, drilling, grinding, huff ing and polishing. Saws gummed, knives, ground, shears ground, clippers ground on John-Van Ben schaten clipper grinder. New Arrivals Every day brings something now in Spring Goods. VIOLE the latest thing in dress goods for suits Skirts and Waists. Also the "Cotton Crepe" we are the only ones in tho city who have imported this goods direct froin Japan. It comes in all colors and will sell for 20ots per yard. WOLLENBERG BROS., Phone- 80!.