Image provided by: Rogue Valley Genealogical Society; Medford, OR
About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1894)
ASHLANDTIDINGS. P U B L IS H E D Issued M ondays and Thursdays. ASHLAND W. H. LEEDS, E d itor an d P u b lish er. ASHLAND TIDINGS. S E M I-W E E K L Y . TIDINGS. Issued Mondays and Thursdays. R ates of A d v ertisin g K uruished Upon A p p licatio n . SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One y e a r .......................................... $2.50 Six m o n th s ................................................. 1.50 T hree m o n th s................................................. 75 VOL. XIX. ASHLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1894. NUMBER 58. THE BEST EQUIPPED JO B OFFICE . IN SOUTHERN ORECON. PA Y A B LE I S A D V ANCE. O F F IC IA L D IR E C T O R Y . SYRACUSE’S SAPPHO LAST USE OF ARMOR. I'SITED STATES. T he W om an W h o W an ts to lie an A m eri can P o et L au reate and P resid en t. I t W as In 1799 and W as a P ictu resq u e and D ia b o lica l Scene. President .......... Bank of Ashland ..G ro v e r C leveland A dlai Stevenson W alter Q. G resham Jo h n G. C arlisle Huge Sm ith .D anl. Lam ont H ilary A. H erbert J. Sterling Morton .. .W alter S. Bissell .. R ich ard Olney Vice P resid en t Secretary of State Secretary of T reasury. Secretary of In terio r ... Secretary of War . Secretary of Navy . . Secretary of A gricu ltu re Post m aster-general ....... A ttorney-G eneral H a s on its L is ts STATE OF OREGON. U. S. S e n a t o r s .............. .............[J. H. M itchell I J. N. D olph . I B inger H erm an n C o n g re s s m e n .............. » W R. E llis A ttorney-G eneral ...G . E .C h a m b e rla in G overnor ............ S ylvester P eunoyer Secretary of S tate .. .. .G eorge W. M cBride State T reasu rer............ ...P h i l M etschan Supt. Pub. In stru ctio n E. B. McElroy Slate P rin te r .............. . F ran k C. B aker iC. lC. E. W olverton Suprem e J u d g e s .......... <R. S. B ean (F. t A Moore i t A. M acrum R. R. C om m issio n ers.......... ’J B Eddy tH . B. Compson Clerk of R. R. C om m ission .........Lydell B aker CHOICE ORCHARDS O f a li a g e s an d in la rg e or s m a ll a c re a g e F o r S a le o n E a s y T e r m s . FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT. W estern Id v isio n . Ju d g e H. K. H an n a E astern D ivision Ju d g e W. C. H ale P rosecuting A ttorney H, L. B enson Member B oard of E q u a liz a tio n ... A C. A uldou C. S. LAND OFFICE ROSEBURG. R eceiv er.......................................... A. M. Crawford R e g iste r........................................ ........ R. M. V eatch H o u s e s fo r re n t or s a le an d a ll p a rts o f th e c ity . d e s ira b le b u ild in g lo ts In JACKSON COUNTY. C ounty J u d g e .... . . . . . Jas. K. N eil C o m m is s io n e rs ......................... ) W. H. B radshaw (S am uel F urry 'o u n ty C lerk . N. A. Jacobs C ounty Recorder. . . . G rant R aw lings Sheriff............ Sylvester P atterso n Senator ......... ..............8. H. H olt iG . W. D unn R ep resen tativ es — <J. A. Jefliey <8. M. N ealou rer ................ .........D avid L iun Hu perin*'--. «lent . ..G us N ew bury J. L. W oolridge or ............................ R. W. K ennedy r ..................................... Dr. D. M. B row er NO TROUBLE TO SHOW PROPERTY. L e tte rs of in q u iry c h e e rfu lly a n d p ro m p tly a n s w e re d . C a ll or a d d re s s , BANK OF A S H L A N D , ASHLAND PRECINCT. Justice Jonstttble ................... ..............W. N. L uckey ....................... ................J. H. Real ASHLAND, ORECON. CITY OF A!SII LAND, Mayor ............................ . .. ...........J. R. Casey ...Milton Berry R ecorder ....................... fie a s u re r ......... E. V. C arter ...C . P. Jo n es Street t d .n m issio n u r ................Ira C. Hodge tap L City W ater Works Geo. W. Sm ith M arshal ......................... E. 1». Briggs City A ttorney ......... f i t . P Neil j W B. Beebe K. N orris Joiiuci linen .................. j J. W. A. C ordell | W. J. Schm idt [ K. E. Ixromls R egular m e e t i u g of city co u n cil o t A shland held in c o u n iciT c il cham bers in city h all on th e c evening of th e first M onday in each m outh, CIRCUIT COURT. Meets on the first Monday in A pril, S eptem ber »ml D ecem ber. RAYING OUTFITS! I have in stock S P R A Y IN G P U M P S , COUNTY COURT. Probate c o u rt first Tuesday a fte r tlrst.M on- l»y of each m outh . C ounty C om m issioner's co u rt—first W ed n es day a fte r first M onday in each m o n th ' S n ra y in g H o s e , N o z z le s , E x te n s io n s , & c. Syracuse has an aspirant for the posi tion of poet laureate of A m erica But, being a loyal member of the Union, 6he does not wish to be called by ., title as suggestive of the effete monarchies as “ poet laureate’’ and has therefore de clared iu favor of “ national poetess. ” She is Mrs. Sarah U lricht Kelley, and she modestly describes herself as hymn w riter and prospective national poetess of the U nited States, nominated by a very large m ajority of editors. Mrs. Kelley is a rem arkable woman. She proposes not only to be national poetess, but president as well. She in tends to sing herself into glory, domin ion and power. As poetess laureate of these great United States it will be but a step to the presidential chair, for by the act which congress must adopt her salary w ill exceed that of the chief ju s tice of the supreme bench and w ill be inferior only to th at of the president himself. Concerning this vital feature of her set plan, M rs.Kelley said: “ If I were national poet, I should give all my salary away. I w ill leave the ques tion of compensation to congress, but I w ant it fixed at $12,000 a year. ” Mrs. Kelley has liberal notions as to the treatm ent of men when she is presi dent. H er cabinet, she says, will not be composed entirely of men or women, but there w ill be a fair and equitable compromise. She thinks th at Susan B. A nthony’s great mistake lies in her a t titude toward men. An example of Mrs. Kelley’s poetry, called “ Syracuse Iu a Rainy D ay,” has some gems of thought. She says, refer ring to a w ar claim which she has against the government: In January, 1799, at the town of Aquilla, in the Abruzzo, then held by a garrison of 400 French troops, the peasants broke into the town, and, though they were driven out by the French, they continued to give serious trouble. They even drove the French into the fort and made ready to bom bard them w ith heavy guns. The French Were in an awkward position. Boulert, the officer of artillery, ran sacking his brains for the means of send ing out men to spike the guns on the glacis, under the fire of the insurgents from the neighboring houses, suddenly remembered that he had seen in his magazine some suits of plate armor, and he proposed to try whether, protected by them, men could not sally ont and work in security under the musketry fire. He got together 12 complete suits and dressed ont 12 gunners and grena diers thus, selecting big men, he it re marked. A t a certain hour the garrison lined the covered way, and from thence and from the fort opened a steady fire of musketry and of artillery on the lines of the insurgents. Then out marched the 12 knights of the eighteenth oeutury, much in Da vid’s state of mind when he complained he had not proved his armor. The meu carried handspikes, hammers and spikes. Moving naturally slowly and awk wardly in their heavy steel m ail, still they succeeded in completing their work under a hail of bullets from the insur gents. The scene is described, as we can well believe, to have been most re m arkable and to have had something picturesque and also diabolical about it. As the m ailed figures moved in s i I hope d e a r congress k in d ly pays m e m y ju s t lence among the gnus, their handspikes w a r claim looking like maces, their silence and F o r w h a t he sp e n t fo r com rades w hen he g ain ed h e ro ’s fam e. the slowness of their actions seemed X tr u s t th e F if ty -th ir d w ill ap p o in t m e lau reate. unnatural under the steady hail of bul I m ade a g re a t sacrifice. I ought to sit in state. lets. The insurgents were believed to —New York World. have thought hell itself had sent forth F o r'a sore th ro a t there is nothin'; better these extraordinary antagonists, ghosts th a n a flannel bandage dam pened w ith of a past age, w hile the French on the C ham berlain’s P ain Balm. It will nearly alw ays effect a cure in c,ne n :p h t’s tim e. ram parts, true to their nature, the first T his rem edy is also a favorite fo- rheum a moment of anxiety over, burst into roars tism and has’enred m any very severe cases. of laughter.—Pliipp’s “ Marshals of N a 50 cent bottles for sale by Ashland D ru ; poleon. ” ____________________ Co. H. C. Messenger has rented the planing mill on Granite street and is again in charge at the old stand and ready to execute any orders in the line of mill work. * The A B C of Good Cooking. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. L ionel R. W ebster A cstin S. H ammond W ebster & Hammond. A TTORNEYS AT LAW . 0 . O. F. B uilding sh o rten in g , for all cooking p u r p o s e s . I G ood cooks who have tried it never go back . I I. C . M Y E H , Medford, Oregon. Jfi'tce— 1. Always use Cottolene, the new ”^ ^ " 1 keep W hale Oil Soap, so much used in spraying. Hardware, Stoves & Tinware. 1635 C. B. Wat3on, A SH LAND, ATTORNEY AT LAW. to anything else. OREGON Better ASHLAND, OR. ) dice w ith W. N. Luckey on east side of Maili st , opposite foot of G ran ite street. cooking, b e tte r m food, b e tte r health J. H . M c B R ID E , P ro p rie to r. Dr. J. S. Parson, is bro u g h t to any h o m e ' PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. by A shland , O regon . fO T R tffice a t resid en ce o n M ain stre e t, n e x t door to P resb y terian c h u rc h . [11-42 Dr. S. T. Songer, CENTRALLY LOCATED Cottolene PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. ASHLAND, OREGON. Office in Odd F ello w s b u ild in g , seco n d floor, [11-12 o n M a in s t r e e t . E. P. Gaary, U . S . have it in yours ? Has been completely renovated and refitted throughout, and is now open for the accommodation of the traveling public SUBSTANTIAL BRICK BUILDINC. F R E E BUS MEETS ALL TRA IN S. Cottolene. W ill y o n j A PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, MEDFORD, OREGON. f » “Office in H a m lin ’s B lock—R esid en ce on C S t r e e t. 13—50 tainent. G R E A T V A LU E for little money, W E E K L Y N E W S of the world for a trifle. THE NEW YORK WEEKLY TRIBUNE SURGEON| is a vegetable pro duct, more healthful, appetizing and economi cal than any shortening known. Have you tried it? Bold in 3 and 6 pound pall«, by all grooars. Or. 0 . M. Brewer, PHYSICIAN AND ASHLAND, OREGON. W T i ifltce in G an iard 's o pera ho u se block, sec o n d flo o r . 18-17 Caldwell & Davis. Mechanical and Operative Dentists. a twenty-page journal, is the leading Republican family paper of the United States. It is a National Family Paper, and gives all the general news of the United States. It gives the events of foreign lands in a nut shell. Its “ Agricultural” department has no superior in the country. Iis “ Market Reports” are recognized authority. Seperate departments for “The Family Circle,” “Our Young Folks,” and “Science and Me chanics.” Its “ Home and Society” columns command the admiration of wives and daughters. Its general political news, editorials and dis cussions are comprehensive, brilliant and exhaustive. Otfioe over th e B ank.— [12-331 J, L. Wood, DENTAL-SURGEON, A shland, Oregon, All m a n n e r of Metal and R ubber P lates m ade in th e latest ap proved m ethod. Gold an d porcelaiu crow ns an d b rid g e work a specialty. All work w arran ted to give perfect j satisfactio n . Low prices. ----- -Office in O dd F ellow s’ b u ild in g , u p stairs. M. L. McCall, 5. Deputy Mineral Surveyor. T h e N . K . F a irb a n k Com pany, ST . LO U IS a n d C h ic a g o ,N e w Y o r k , B o s to n . W. L. D ouclas C U A C W r iW b ASHLAND, OREGON. Chase com binatio n d e n ta l p lates m ad e w ith gold and a lu m in u m roofs. Gold fillings inserted in p o rcelain te e th to per- tect ap pearance. Gold crow n and co n to u r work a sp ecialty . E xtracting and u n av o id ab le calls from 8 to 9 i. m. an d 4 to 5 p. m . M ade o n ly by A S PE C IA L CONTRACT enables us to oiler S. CORDOVAN, FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALF. ¡4*3“ F ine C alf ^K angaroo This Splendid Journala , , d Ashland Tidings ‘ ♦3.5PP0UCE,3SOLES. F O R O N E Y E A R FOR O N L Y ^0 (T he regular subscription for the two papers is $3.00.) Subscriptions may begin at any t i nie. A ddress all orders to A .s lila n < l T i d i n g s . »END FOR CATALOGUE _ A STICK OF LICORICE. W h ere th e P la n t G row s and H ow I t Is P r e p a r e d F or C on su m p tion . Black licorice is made from the juice of the licorice plant, mixed w ith starch to prevent it from m elting in hot w eath er. The licorice plant grows for the most part on the banks of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which flow through immense treeless prairies of un cultivated land. The clim ate of these great plains is variable. H alf the year it is m ild and pleasant, but for three months it is very cold, and for three months In summer hot winds sweep across the country, raising the tem pera ture to 104 degrees for weeks at a time. The licorice plant is a shrub three feet high and grows w ithout cultiva tion in situations where its roots can reach the water. The usual tim e of col lecting is the winter, but roots are dug all the year round. At first the root is full of water and must be allowed to dry, a process which takes nearly a year. It is then cut into small pieces, from six inches to a foot long. The good and sound pieces are kept, and the rot ten ones are used for firewood. The lic orice is then taken iu native river boats of Bassora, whence it is shipped in pressed bales to London. As the valley of the Euphrates con tained one of the earliest civilizations in the world, it is probable th at licorice is about the oldest coufectiou extant, and that the taste, which pleases nearly all children today, was fam iliar to the little brown boys and girls of Babylon and Nineveh 3,000 years ago —P itts burg Dispatch. • L ’D O U C iL A a ' BR O C K TO N ,M A SS. When Baby w as sick, we gave h er Castorla. When she was a Child, she cried fo r Castoria. When she becam e Miss, she clung to Castoria. When she h ad Children, she gave them Castor!« Over One M illion People wear the W rite vour n am e an d address on a postal card, send it to Geo. w e ' f k T y B uilding, New Y ork City, an d sam ple copy of THE NEW N ORK W EEKLY TRIBU N E w ill be m ailed to you. W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory T hey g iv e th e b est valu e for th e m o n e^ T hey equal custom Shoes in sty le and I ... Their w earing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform ,— stamped on sole. From $■ to $3 saved over other m akes. * If your dealer cannot supply you we can. Sold by R A C K E T P IT A N O S • K N D S T < )1 < E . • Want’ One? ibrthecurei ‘ i — » to the undersigned and he will tell you how and where you can buy a Kimball Piano or Organ (given ist prize at W orld’s Fair) or Newman Bros, organ cheap for cash; or on the installment plan. Fully warranted 5 years. C. p. S h ep h erd , A S H U A tiD , O R E C O fl G atarr C o ld in tn e h e a d C a ta rrh a l Deafness andSore.Eyes.lt restores taste REfttYK BAD TASTE «a. UNPliASANT BREATH. Í riujar Q ^U K C . ^ P M bietitc W 'è fOK PRYNER— OROVIU^-CAL. 400 Miles to the Land Office. Lakeview E xam iner. £lie following is the text of the Christ- 1 Lizzie J. Anderson arrived with her mas letter mailed to President Cleveland witnesses from Bowden, Or., last Satur by Governor Pennoyer: “Christmas has again visited otir day, to prove up on her land in that sec stricken laud with its prostrated indus tion. Bowden is about 200 miles eaat of tries aud its idle throDgs, willing but un Lakeview in the extreme southeast able to work and uuwillingly forced to corner of the state, and as they had to beg or suffer. Your panacea, a change I come in a roundabout way, they traveled iu th e Sherman law aud the tariff, have I over 400 miles and were more than a been administered but there is no change I week on the road. in the sad condition of our unfortunate A Ijessou for the Governor. country. Pendleton, Dec. 26.—Christmas day “After two years of ruinous delay aud mismanagement, you have, thank heaven, Frank Fletcher, of the Milton neighbor at last discovered the real trouble, al hood, shot James Ashworth, of Dry though you have not proposed proper creek, Ashworth is a prominent citizen remedy. As you now concede, the coun and whs a candidate for sheriff at the try netds more money, but it does not convention last spring. Frank Fletoher want the worthless stuff you proffer. I t was pardoned by Governor PeDnoyer last needs gold and silver money with which June. He was in the penitentiary for to pay debts, and it does not want blank life for killing Charles Petrie on Linkton rags with which it cannot pay debts. mountain in September, 1892. Reports “Sixty years ago the democratic party by telegraph say Ashworth was shot iu had a president who defied the banks in the leg and is not seriously h u r t The officers captured Frank Fletcher the interest of the people. Has it now a president who defies the people iu the on Basket mountain. He claims the interest of the banks? shooting of Ashworth was accidental. “All traditions of the party which Both were drunk. Fletcher will be pros elected you are for gold aud silver money ecuted to the extent of the law on ac and against bank currency. Do you count of this and former acts, prior to aspire to furnish an example of treason Governor Pennoyer pardoning him. to the cause entrusted to your care which New Land Office Rulings. will be without any parallel, except one, in all the annals of American history? The secretary of the interior haa re “Your party in both houses favors the cently rendered the following new decis restoration of silver as a standard money, ions: the people who are actually suffering First—Land embraced witbin the claim from the existing prostration of business of a qualified settler nt the date a rail favor it, and will you not stand with road grant becomes effective is excepted them in overturning the monometallic by such claim from the operation of the policy of the British monied oligarchy grant. which is fast degrading our fair country Second—Evidence o f voting will raise to the condition of a subjugated province ' a presumption of citizenship, as fraud on and our hitherto free people to a condi the part of the voter is not to be pre tion of financial selfdom? sumed. “Always remembering the unemployed Third—The sale of a soldier’s addi multitudes all over our broad land, I tional homestead right and attempted pray Hint God may give you light and transfer thereof by power of attorney to strength to do the right.” locate the right of said certificate is made good in the hands of the purchaser by the act of August 18, 1894, and such Oregon Prisoners. purchaser is accordingly entitled to the From advance tables of Superintend possession of the certificate. ent Downing's forthcoming biennial re Fourth—Timber and land eutries made port it is ascertained tbHt, since the re for speculative purposes are fraudulent port made January 1, 18913, there have and will be cancelled. been at any time in the prison: For 1 Fifth—In the investigation of a case larceny of all kinds 419 couvicts; murder where fraud is alleged against au entry- in the stcoud degree 42; manslaughter man, proof of other acts of a similar na 30; burglary 80; robbery and assault to ture doue contemporaneously or about rob 7; rape, and assault to commit rape tbe same time is permissable to show 27; forgery 49; obtaining money under such extent. false pretenses 18; selling liquor to Sixth—Repayment of fees aud commis Indians 2; sodomy 2; assault to kill and sion may lie allowed where the entryman, with dangerous weapons 34; embezzle to avoid conflict resulting from an error ment 5; arson 4; perjury aud subordina in the local office, iu good faith relin tion 3; aiding escape of prisoners 1; re quishes his entry and takes another tract. ceiving stolen goods 5; robbing United Seventh—A deserted wife may make a States mails 6; bigamy 3; counterfeiting homestead entry, with credit for previous and passing same 9; mayhem 2; robbing residence on the land, where her hus postoffice 2; uttering forged checks 3; band’s entry thereof is cancelled for fail incest 4; sending obsceue matter through ure to make final proof within tbe sta tu the mails aud obscene writing 2; procura tory period. tion 2; defrauding the government 2; Eighth—A joint entry cannot be al fornication 1; seductiou 2; abdnetion 1; lowed where there is but oue residence riot 2; malicious injury to property 2; aud 6et of improvements maintained and adultery 2; other chargee 32; total 806. occupied in common by the parties, with Of this number 79 were under 20 years tbe intention to take separate tracts of age; 371 between 20 and 30 years; 218 wben tbe land is open to entry. between 30 and 40 years; 81 between 40 Ninth —The possession and occupancy aud 50 years; 17 between 60 and 80 years; of a tract by a qualified settler at a defi 1 over 80 years; the average age being 31 nite location ot a railroad grant, serve to years. except tbe land covered thereby from tbe Six per cent could neither read nor operation of tbe grant, even though the write aud four per cent could read only. settler at such time supposed the land The character of the offense of 141 was belonged to tbe railroad company. against the person; 646 against property, Tenth—The expiration of a pre-emp- and 19 ugaiDst public morals. tiou filing without final proof and pay On the first of January last the total of ment will not alone be accepted as proof the inmates was 366, and at the present of abandonment of the settlement claim it is 350. at such time so as to relieve a railroad Only twenty-one percent were murried. grant therefrom. Iu religions 278 were nominally Protestants; 326 Roman Catholics; 8 Wanted. Jewish; 37 heathens; 157 nothingarians. Bear, mink, marten, fisher beaver, wolf, Eighty per cent acknowledged having been more or less addicted to drink, and skunk, fox, coon, otter, and all kind« of D. L. sixi y per cent attributed their downfall furs. Highest cash prices paid. M inkler & S on , Ashland, Or. to liquor. Total of nativities'. American 566; Foreign born 240. C atarrh Cannot be Cured. Sixty-five per cent came of poor par with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they ents; twenty per cent of comfortable cannot reaoh the seat of th e disease. C a parents; and fifteen of well-to-do, or un ta rrh is a blood or constitutional disease, known parntage. Eighty-five per cent and in order to cure you m ast take in te r were city born and fifty per cent in the nal remedies. H all’s C atarrh Care is tak en intern ally , and acts directly on th e blood country. »2. workingmen ’ s » 2 * 1 7 « BOYSSCHOOLSHOES. •L A D IE S ' CASH IN ADVANCE. T h e IS THE BEST. FIT FOR A KING. Not a California Bear. Anybody can catch a cold this kind of w eather. The trouble is to let go, like the m an who caught the bear. We advise onr readers to purchase of the Ashland Drug Co. a bottle of SAN L'A A B IE , the C alifornia King of Consum pti n. Asthma, B ronchitis. Coughs and Croup Cures, and keep it bandy. ”f is pleasing to the taste and death to the above com plaints. Sold a t 50c and $1.00 a bottle or 3 for $2.50. CALIFORNIA CAT-li-CUKE gives im m ediate relief. The C a ta rrh a l virus is soon displaced by its h ia lin g and penetrating natu re. Six m onths tre a tm e n t $1.00, sent by mail $1.10. Pennoyer’s Respects to Cleveland. T h e “a” and “ap ” In Surnam es. The small letters a ami ap as they ap pear between the Christian and sur names, as in Tliouias a Keiupis and W illiam ap Hugh, are abbreviations of L atin prepositions meaning “ o f,” “ at or “ from .” They generally refer to the town or place where one was born or to the fam ily estate. Iu the case of the first mentioned person above, the fa mous author of “ Im itation of Christ, the a denotes “ from. ” His real name was Thomas Hammerkiu, but he was born in the town of Kempen, near Co logne, and on that account was known during his school days and always after as Thomas a Kempis, which was equiv alent to “ Thomas from Kem pen.” In modern times these prepositions have been almost entirely elim inated from our nomenclature and are now only found in the contracted forms, as in “ Pugh, ” a surname which was formerly “ ap H ugh.” —St. Louis Republic. Blow yourihorn all you can, but E. B. Smith of theJRacket Store will give you 15 ote. cash for every dollar’s worth of goods bought and paid for at his store 1 during the Holidays. A Successful Worker W ork can n o t be successfully continued unless there is an active m ental in terest in it. I f the m ind is not clear, brig h t and buoyant, th en the w ork is drudgery and th e worker is a m achine. An occasional dose of Moore’s Revealed Rem edy will n u t th e body and m ind in such h arm o n y th a t th e lia"3est tasks will seem as play. This Means Business. and m acoas surfaces. H all’s C atarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of th e best physicians in th is conn - try for years, and is a regular prescription. I t is composed of th e best tonics known, com bined w ith th e best blood purifiers, acting directly on th e maoous surfaoes. The perfect com bination of th e two in gredients is w hat produoes such w onderfu 1 results in ouring o a ta rrh . Send for te sti- ir .n n ia la frgxx* F. J . CHENEY <fc CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by D ruggists, price 75o. All persons indebted to the under signed are hereby notified that all ac counts due me must be settled by Jan. 1, 1894. All remaining unsettled at that date will positively be placed in the hands of a collector. S. T. S onger , M. D. Ashland, Or., Dec. 10,1894. The success that has attended the use of Dr. J. H. McLeau’s Volcanic Oil Liniment in the relief of pain and ,in curing diseases which seemed beyond the reach of medicine, has been tinly re markable. Hundreds supposed to be crippled for life with^arms and legs drawn up crooked or distorted, their muscles withered or contracted by disease, have been cured through the use of this remedy. Price 25c, 50 and $1.00 per bottle.’ Sold by Ashland D rag Co. T he M ind R ea d in g B oy. C a rrie Ore ne King The policeman had been standing on the corner for about ten minutes, aud a foxy looking boy sitting on a nearby doorstep was watching him. The boy’s By P u rify in g T h e ir Blood curiosity overcame him at last, and he sidled along up to the officer. H ood’s S arsap arilla M akes Pure “ I say, Mr. Copper,” he said at a Blood, Cures S cro fu la, Etc. safe distance, “ w hat are you standin “ My experience w ith H ood’s Sarsaparilla haa on this corner for?” been very effective. My little girl, five years “ T hat’s my business,” he replied old, had for four years a bad skin disease. H er arm s aud lim bs would break out in a m ass of curtly. sores, discharging yellow m atter. She would “ Well, yon seem to be 'tendin to it, ” scratch the eruptions as though it gave relief, I and te a r open the sores. ventured the boy. “ T h at’s w hat I ’m paid fo r.” T w o Bottles o f H ood’s “ Alle samee,” chirruped the lad, “ I S arsaparilla can te d the eruptions to heal and know w hat you’re standin there for. ” and th e scabs pealed off, a fte r which th e skiu “ I ’ll give you a nickel if you’ll tell becam e soft and sm ooth. A s a family medicine m e,” bantered the officer as he held out a coin to the kid. “ Throw it to me, ” said the boy, keep ing his distance warily. “ Not much. You tell me w hat I ’m standing here for, and I ’ll give it to ; you.” The hoy came up close enough to reach the coin. “ You’re standin here we believe Hhod’s 8arw q » rlll« has no <;qual»nd I recommend IL” W. L. K in o , Bluff Dale, Tex. fer ten minutes, ” he said, w ith a grab at the money, and the offioer chased him Hooci’s Pills are b e ,t landly cathartic, In vain.—Detroit Free Pres«. genii ’ • ! live T . j a L j x - X .cut». Save the Children HOOD’S Sarsaparilla CURES