Â.SHLAND TIDINGS. P U B L IS H E D Issued Mondays and Thursdays. W. H. LEEDS, ASHLAND F. D. WAGNER. LEEDS & WAGNER, PUBLISHERS. 8UB8CBIPTIO N BATES. O ne y e a r ......................... .................................$2.00 Six m onths............... ................................. 1.00 .............................. 50 T h re e m o n t h s .............. O F F IC IA L D IR E C T O R Y . UNITED P resident Vice P resid en t secretary of state S ecretary of T reasury. Secretary of In te rio r Secretary of War Secretary of Navy Secretary of A gricu ltu re Post m aster-general A ttorney-G eui-ral STATE OF We are still In the Lead STATES. ..G ro v e r C leveland A dlai Stevenson W alter Q. G resham Jo h n G. C arlisle Hoke Sm ith . Danl. Lam ont H ilary A. H erbert 1 J. S terling Morton 1 ... W alte r S. B issell j . R ich ard O lney w ith bargains th a t m ake our com petitors’ eyes stare. Some of them try to keep in the race b u t are ‘‘not in it.” The prices quoted below are only a few of the m any bargains we have for you: )RE«ON. . tJ . H. M itchel) 1 J. N. Dolph . t B inger H erm an n C o n g re s s m e n ............ 1 W . R. E llis . . C. M. Id lem an A ttorney-G eneral W. P. laird G overnor H . R. K incaid Secretary of S t a t e ........ State T re a su re r.. . . . Pltil M etschau Supt. Pub. In s tru c tio n .. G. M. Irw in W. H. Leeds Slate P rin ter rC. E. W olverton Suprem e Judges 'R . S. B eau fF. A Moore ir A. M acrum K. R. C om m issioners . . I J B Eddy t l i . B. Compson J lc rk of R. R. Commissi) >ti ......... Lydell B aker IT. S. S enators ' 1 | 1 J MENS’ FIRST JUDIC1 AL DISTRICT. W estern D ivision. .. . 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 li, L. Benson Member Board of E q u al z a tio n ... A. C. A tildou U. X. LAND OFFICE RosEBUKG. R eceiv er............................ R egister ..................... • A. M. Craw ford j .......K. M. V eateh ■ OVERALLS, light weight, only 25c. MENS’ OVERALLS, extra heavy, rivited, “Boss of the Road.” ,lLevi Strauss” and “Samson,” lined or unliued, 50c, MENS’ HEAVY WOOLEN COATS for 82.50-w orth three times the money. MENS’ HEAVY WOOL PANTS, worth from $3.50 to 85, our price 82.50. MENS’ COTTONADE PANTS, sold everywhere for 81.50, our price 90c. MENS’ HEAVY COTTON UNDERWEAR, sold by others for 75c. our price 35c MENS’ HEAVY WOOL UNDERW EAR, always sold for from 81.25 to 81.50, 50c MENS’ RED FLA N N EL UNDERWEAR for 75c and 81. MENS' AND BOYS’ HEAVY SEAM LESS SOX, 5c a pair. F IN E LAUNDRTED SH IR TS only 25c. JACKSON COUNTY. C ounty J u d g e ___ C o m m is s io n e rs ............ Jas. R. N eil .. t W. H. B radshaw (Sam uel F urry County C lerk .. N. A. Jacobs C ounty R ecorder.............. ........... G rant Raw lings Sheriff’ lv ester P atterson .s. H. Holt ce H . C. M v in e PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. OREGON. Office in O dd F ellow s b u ild in g , seco n d floor, on M ain stre e t. f 11-12 Hardware, Stoves & Tinware. E. P. Geary, M. D. ASH LA ND, OKKOON. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON J MEDFORD, OREGON. Office in H a m lin 's B lock—R esidence ou C ' street. 13—50 j EAGLE ROLLER MILLS. A sh la n d , O re g o n . <3. F A R N H A M , P r o p r i e t o r . AND SURGEON M anufacturer of Choice Steel Cut Roller Process ASHLAND, OREGON. fc$5' Office in Gani&rd's o pera house block, sec­ ond • door. 18-17 ___________ ___ ____________ __ Chase com b in atio n d en tal p lates m ad e w ith ! gold and a lu m in u m roofs. Gold fillings in serted in p o rcelain te e th to per- | feet ap pearance. Gold cro w n an d c o u to u r w ork a specialty. E xtracting an d u n av o id ab le calls from 8 to 9 j « m . an d 4 to 5 p. m . and ¡3 Jo YOU u«e C otto lew el THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, ST . LOUIS a n d C h ica g o , K aw Y o r k , H oatcn . W.L.Douc Cl CU AC 909 nW k FIT FO R A IS T H E B E S T . KING. 3. CORDOVAN, FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALF. ¡4*3.50 fine C ali & K angaroo . ♦3.50 police , 3 soles . .«go 52 .WORKINGMENS W ’ -E X T R A F IN E - 32.$IZ?B0YSSCHQ0LSH0Ei •L A D IE S ’ F lour and M ill Feed for sale and to exchang for w heat at all tim es on best term s possible. SEND FOR CATALOGUE _ r. L _ . D O U G r I_ A B R O C K T O N , .M A S S . 3 ’ Over One Million People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our shoes are equally satisfactory U. S. Depsty Mineral Sarveyor. A gent b delicate, d e l ic i o u s , health fultc o m fo rtin ^ RollinK Barley for Farmers a Specialty. It. L. UeColl, Estate C ^ O T T O L EN Rolled Barley aud Feed of all kinds at lowest cash prices. j-gjl” Offioe over the Bank.— [12-33] Heal fo o d c o o k e d in. C O R N M E A L , G R A H A M FLO U R , Etc. Caldwell & Davis. Mechanical and Operative Dentists. ASHLAND, OREGON. f /ia f uKcorn/orhkfc/e fe e lot of t o o m u c h r ic h n e s s 0 fro m fo o d e o o lfe 4 »n. la rd . M A DE ON LY B Y Dr. D. M. Brower, PHYSICIAN An I keep W hale Oil Soap, so m uch used in spraying. Dr. S. T. Songer, ASHLAND, purpo se«, * S T ory . oitice w ith G. F. B illings. Real E state an d lu s u ia u c e A gent. L io n el R. W kbstek Surveyoi \ A shland , - - O bbgon . Mineral! Railroad! Agricultural! ■ Need’nt Dwell On It ! T hey giv e th e b est valu e tor th e m oney. T hey equal custom Shoes in sty le and lit. Their w earing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform ,— stamped on sole. From Si to $3 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can. Sold by e . 13. s m i t h . H. G. P O T T E R , A T T O R N E Y -A T -L A W , 1106 Q STREET N . W ., WASHINGTON, O. C . For m any years ex a m in e r of C ontests, M ineral and M ineral vs. R ailroad, an d late c h ie f of th e m in eral d iv isio n in th e general lan d office. C orrespondence solicited. For Over FiOy Years. A n old an d w ell-tried rem ed y .—M rs.W inslow 's S oothing Syrup has been used for o v er fifty years by m illio n s ot m o th ers for th e ir c h ild ren w hile teeth in g , w ith p erfect success. It soothes th e c h ild , softens th e gum s, allays all p a in ,c u r e s w ind colic.and is th e best rem edy for Diarrhoea. Is p leasan t to th e taste, hold by d ru g g ists in ev ery p a rt of th e w orld. Tw enty-live c en ts a bottle. Its valu e is iu calcn ab le. Be su re and a sk for Mrs. W iuslow 's S oothing S y ru p , an d tak e no o th e r k in d . ASHLAND TIDINGS. S E M I-W E E K L Y . W e’ll n o t ask you to dwell long on th is point. Make it short an d sharp. We sim ply rise to re m a rk th a t K in n ey ost or erect until I was sure it hud been eutirely a mouument at each corner of his surface routed from my system. The ouly signs ground, aDd at the point of discovery or left of the dreadful disease are the scars diaoovery shaft should fix a post, stake or which ever remiud me of how near death’s board upon which should be deeiguated door I was until rescued by the “Dis­ the Dame of the lode, name or names of covery.” I am now eighteen years old locators, number of feet claimed, and iu aud weigh 148 pounds; and have not which direction from the point of dis­ been sick iu five years. Yours reepectfullv, covery. HARVEY M. HOLLEMAN, It is essential that the location notice Agt. for Seaboard Air Line. filed for record shall, iu additiou to the foregoing description, state whether the For constipation and headache, use Dr. entire claim of 1500 feet is taken on one Pierce’s Pellets. side of the point of discovery, or whether it is partly on one side and partly on the Dr. Parkhurst on Clubs. other side; and in the latter case how many feet are claimed upon each side of Dr. Parkhurst will pay his respects to the discovery point. I t is important that clubs aud club-life in bis article iu the great care be takeu iu making, describing Dext issue of The Ladies' Home Journal. and marking mining claims in the notice “I consider the club,” writes the great of location for record. Au application reformer, “to be one of the cleverest de­ for mining claim survey may be declined vices of the devil to prevent homes being by the mineral deputy surveyor where made, and to sterilize and undermine the location is not properly matked on them wheu they are made.” the ground and recorded; and wheu he makes such survey he must give in his How's This? field notes the bearings and distances of W e offer O n e H u n d re d D o lla r s re w a rd his corners to those cited in the location f o r a n y c a se o f C a ta r r h t h a t c a n n o t be notice, and the same must be shown on c u re d b y H a ll’R C a ta r r h C u re. the official plat of the suivey to enable F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. W e, th e u n d e rs ig n e d , h a v e k n o w n F . J . the department to deteimme the legal propriety of the survey. The provisions C h e n e y fo r th e la s t 15 y e a rs , a n d b e lie v e of the law must be strictly complied with h im p e rfe c tly h o n o ra b le in a li b u s in e s s n s a n d fin a n c ia lly a b le to c a r r y in each case to entitle the claimant to a tr a t n a s n a y c tio o b lig a tio n s m a d e by th e ir firm . survey and a patent. In all cases, if the o W u est < fe T euax . W holesole D ru g g is ts , location was properly made, it was marked T o led o , O . upon the ground. If the survey of it was W a l d in q , K innan & a b v in , W h o le s a le D ru g g is ts , T o led o , O . properly executed, it must have been H a ll’s C a ta r r h C u re is ta k e n in te r n a lly , within the limits thus maiked, an 1 if lie marks of the location aud those of the a c tin g d ir e c tly u p o n th e b lo o d a n d m u co n s survey are identical the facts must appear s u r fa c e s o f th e s y s te m . T e s tim o n ia ls s e u t P ric e 75c. p e r b o ttle . Hold by a ll stated in the official field notes. - [ M ming free. D ru g g is ts . and Scientific Press. any man that the east possessed that the suggestion was delicately conveyed to the eastern Republicans that he might consent to deliver an address in New York city. If there was no great belief on the part of these able eastern Repub­ licans in Mr. Lincoln’s higher intellec­ tual cultivation aud quality, there was on the other hand something of curiosi­ ty to see and hear this man who had overthrown Douglas, and who had crys­ tallized public opinion in the west. The congregation that assembled in Cooper Union ou that now historic even­ ing was a splendid one. Many of the distinguished Republicans brought their wives or members of their families. Ev­ arts was there, curious to see and hear this man of whom he had heard so much, but for whom be had not at that time the most admiring opinion, perhaps be­ cause of premonitions that it was Lin­ coln who was to defeat the darling hope of Evarts and of that great company of eastern Republicans who had cherished for four years the desire to see Mr. Sew­ ard nominated for the presidency. Gov­ ernor Morgan was there, and Moses H. Grinnell, who might have been govern­ or had his partner not objected, aud young Colonel Arthur, who was after­ ward to be president, and Professor Dwight, one of the profoundest lawyers New York has ever had, and William Cullen Bryant, eveu then seeming ven­ erable in appearance, aud, in fact, near­ ly all of those men who had been con­ spicuous in the service of the young Re­ publican party in New York city. Mr. Lincoln was introduced, and very happily, by William Cullen Bryant, and when he stepped forth upon the platform a great throng saw a man con­ spicuous above every other one in that hall for height, with a sort of awkward grace suggested by his loose jointed fig­ ure, a careless indifference to nicety in his dress, bis face clean shaven, homely snd his hair tossed about his bead seem­ ingly as though his fingers had been run carelessly through it just before he arose. His appearance for the moment was not such as to greatly impress those who saw him. He spoke in a voice pitched upon a high tenor key, but it was no­ ticed that his words were distinctly enunciated, and his voice carried easily over that hall. His first sentence surprised the ac­ complished orators and thinkers who were before him. They expected to hear a flowery, rhetorical and showy exor­ dium, but there was no exordium at all. He plunged immediately into his sub­ ject, taking as his text a paragraph front a speech delivered a few’ months before by Douglas in Ohio. Before he had spoken five minutes these able men perceived his intellectual strength and began to understand why he had gained the pre-eminence which distinguished him in the west. There were no flowers of rhetoric in the address, but it was noticed that the diction was singularly accurate, simple, appropriate, and that it was used with such remarkable fe­ licity as enabled him to express abstract ideas so that they were understood upon the moment of hearing. He had that great and distinguished audience completely in his power with­ in a few moments after he began to 6peak. Curiosity had vanished, ana there came in its place that impressive recognition which intellect gives to in­ tellect. Before he was half through it was perceived that he was setting forth the tremendous issues of the day in such a manner as had never been done in New York, and when he had finished these able men turned to one another and with common thought exclaimed, “ That is a masterly address.” The pre-eminent ability revealed by this address caused the profoundest im­ pression in New York city. The speech and the man were the chief topics of in­ terest when Republicans met on the fol­ lowing day and for many days there­ after, and when the news came three months later from Chicago that Mr. Lincoln had been nominated for the presidency there was probably not one of those who heard that address who did not recall it and find consolation in the recollection of it for their disappoint­ ment over Mr. Seward’s defeat. E. J. E dwards . A Pertinent Paragraph. “Our country if righi, should be kept right; if wrong should be put right.” is a political maxim which paraphrased ap­ plies to other conditions of life, thus: our health if right, should be kept right; if wrong should be put right, especially in bodily ailments, such as pains and aches, which St. Jacobs Oil promptly cures. Many out of work should heed to give it a chance to cure and it will give them a chance to go to work cured. Another adage is; “ ho doeth best, who doeth well.” Well, of course, you want to be well from all sorts of aches, and the be6t thing to do is to use the great remedy. He who does so is doiug well indet d. Novelties in Evening Toilettes. Now th a t th e season of social gatherings, balls and th e a tre parties has fairly set in. e v ­ ery w om an's in terest is once m ore centered on th e appropriate ev ening to ilettes. The bodice is a m ass of some filmy labric, th e ultra-fash- ionalqle o n es—irrespective of sk irt m ade of an o th er m aterial—being in v ariab ly of crepon or em broidered m ousline de soie. m ade over a foundation of silk w hich, in color, m atches the sk irt. R osettes of lace usua ly finish th e bod­ ice. Jeweled eorseiets a re very popular. They have a silk foundation and are freq u en tly set w ith real gems. The crepes afford an o p p o rtu ­ n ity for producing, a t a m oderate price, very artistic effects. They com e in all tin ts . The ribboned crepe is a very dainty novelty. Sleeves rem ain as w onderful as ever iu size. T hey are of the sam e fabric as th e sk irt. As for the latter, it is conspicuous for its p lain n ess and its pronounced flare. A great variety of m odels are to be found in the McDowell F ash ­ ion M agazine. These u n eq u alled periodicals offer an inducem ent in th e way of special coupon p attern s w hich alw ays follow the la t­ est, the most fashionable an d th e most p racti­ cal styles. Both “ La Mode de P aris’ aud “ Paris A lbum of F a sh io n ” cost $3.50 per year, or 35 cents a copy; “ The F ren ch D ressm aker” is $3 per an n u m , or 30 cents a ehpy, As for “ La M ode,” It costs only $1.50 a year, or 15 cenis a copy. If you are unable to procure eith e r of these jo u rn als from your new sdealer do not tak e any su b stitu te from him , b u t apply by m ail directly to Messrs. McDowell