Valley record. (Ashland, Jackson County, Or.) 1888-1911, October 25, 1894, Image 4

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    VALLEY
RECORD.
V/ASHiNGTON
Interesting Items Picked Out from the
The People’s Paper
ASHLAND. Or.......Thursday. Oct. 25.1894
NOTES.
Dally Dispatches.
Letters from the civil service commis­
sion have been sent to federal employes
throughout the country informing them
that they need pay no attention to de­
mands for campaign assessments. Politi­
cal assessments in any guise are pro­
hibited by law.
The sugar trust officials, Messrs. Have-
meyer and Searles, were arraigned in
the criminal court of the district of
Columbia before Judge Cole and pleaded
not guilty to the indictments against
them for refusing to answer the ques­
tions of the senate sugar trust investi­
gating committee. The proceedings
were merely formal.
The Postoffice Museum has been for­
mally thrown open to the public. Post­
master-General Bissel has taken especial
pride in the museum and has forwarded
its success in every way within his
power. The preparation of this exhibit
lias been under the direction of Chief
Clerk Thomas of the postoffice depart­
ment. The museum includes all that
was in the World’s Fair, and some ad­
ditional features. The postal car Grover
Cleveland is not there, but there is a
complete model of this postoffice on
wheels. The museum is in a large room
in the court of the Postoffice building.
The late news from Honolulu of the
abrupt check given by the Dole
government to the negotiations by com­
missioners from England for special
concessions for a station in the Hawaiian
islands for a projected cable between
British Columbia and Australia has
been received at Washington with great
satisfation, because of the positive at­
titude of the Hawaiian government in
refusing, on account of prior exclusive
treaty engagments with the United
States, to make any such grant as that
requested by Great Britian.
According to Commodore Chadwick,
chief of the bureau of naval equipment,
the coal bills of the navy are steadily
increasing, owing to the greater con­
sumption of coal by the modern war
vessels. The annual report of the bu­
reau shows there will be a deficiency of
$30.000 in the appropriation for equip­
ment owing to the fact that $191,291
was expended for coal in the past year
than in the year previous. There were
purchased at home 42,190 tons of coal,
costing $198,163, of which 9,505 tons
were purchased on the Pacific Coast at
an average cost of $7.02 per ton, and
32,635 tons on the Atlantic Coast at a
cost of $3.34 a ton. There were spent
abroad for coal $462,192, at an average
cost of $8.86.
Present Day Physical Science.
The working theories that have been
followed in physics and thrown away
when they did not square with the facts
discovered under them are well describ­
ed in a paper by Professor D. W. Her­
ing of the University of the City of New
York in The Popular Science Monthly.
In investigations of any sort a working
theory must generally first bo mapped
out. But, like the result of explora­
tions in central Africa, the facts discov­
ered frequently show the map to have
been dead wrong.
Profossor Hering calls our attention
to the fact that modern textbooks of
physics, or “philosophy,” as it used to
be vaguely called, contain no such divi­
sions of “simple mechanical powers”
as the ones of a generation ago did.
Sound, heat and electricity are merely
forms of energy. The mechanical theory
of heat is fully accepted. This is the
theory that heat is produced by motion
of the molecules of a body among them­
selves. The more rapid the motion the
greater the heat. This motion is called
the "kinetic energy of the molecules.”
All that is is now divided into force
and matter, mutually acting upon each
other. Tho one central or universal
energy u^mifests itself in different
ways under different conditions. Thus
variously manifesting itself this uni­
versal energy is variously known as
heat, light, sound, electricity, magnet­
ism, etc. There is now accepted also
one universal ether, pervading all
things. Through vibrations, slow or
rapid, of this ether the universal energy
acts. It is likely that the science of
vibrations will receive greater attention
In the immediate future than it has
ever dona The vibrations of a univer­
sal ether seem to explain many things.
The question the scientists cannot an­
swer as yet is whether the ether is mat­
ter.
Light is caused by vibrations of the
ether. These vibrations are called light
waves. The distance across from the
crest of one of the movements to the
next is called a wave length, and it is
by measuring this distance that many
wonderful discoveries have been made.
It is denoted by length of time between
two vibrations.
When an object is approaching a
given point, a greater number of light
wave® from it will fall upon that point
As it recedes the number will be less.
This fact and the spectroscope have en­
abled scientists to distinguish whether
the heavenly bodies are receding from
or approaching one another. It has been
found that tho sun and all its planets,
earth included, are moving toward the
great star Arcturus at the rate of 4 3-10
miles per second. Thus at 6ome very
far distant day the people of our earth
may experience the sensation of falling
into a star many times greater than
our sun, if at that time there are any
inhabitants left on this little globe.
Nobody knows just what electricity
in It is such a different manifestation
of energy from anything hitherto known
that the wisest are at sex The problem '
immediately before students is to dis­
cover what causes positivo and negative
electric currents. Beyond doubt they
will find oat
Meantime in the matter of electric
lighting Tesla has discovered that
“vacuum tubes become luminous in a
properly prepared room with no wires. ”
Tesla has found that wires are not nec­
essary to conduct electricity. “Ere loisg
intelligence, transmitted without wires,
will throb through the earth like a pulse
through a living organism.” The earth
is one vast storehouse of electric force,
and man’s next task will bo to utilize
it We know hardly the beginning as
yet of the wonders that are to be.
The most wxsteful and antiquated
piece of machinery still employed in
this age of invention is tho steam en­
gine, in Professor Hering’s view. It is
by tapping tho source of exhaustless
power the earth offers us that we shall
be able to abolish the hot, noisy and
dirty steam engine. It will be abolished
when we are able to “hook our machin­
ery to the machinery of nature. ”
Signor Tanlongo, the Roman banker
who was acquitted by a jury of frauds
of which he was undoubtedly guilty,
has retired to a monastery of Passionist
Fathers. There he will devote himself
to religion. Signor Tanlongo ought to
have done that before ho committed the
frauds. But perhaps he then would not
have had money enough to give the
church so large a thank offering because
he got free. A good many more Chris­
tians are like Signor Tanlongo. They
expect to get even with satan by giving
to the church part of the money they
made under the guidanco of satan. They
will miss it awfully.
First we had to have ironclad wooden
»hips for the navy. Then we had to
have iron ships ont and out Next came
6teel ships, because they wero better.
The steel ships were armor plated to
protect them from shells. Now the steel
armor plated ships must be sheathed
with copper, so that their hulls will not
rust out. What next?
Some “green” farmer repretentatives
in Easteran Oregon are telling the loca
papers what bills they are going to have
passed by the next legislature. They
apparently forget that they will have
to submit all measures of any import­
ance to the Portland bosses, for their
approval. Country representatives were
elected for the “honor” of the position,
and to vote for Dolph for senator, not to
bother themselves about laws.—Portland
Welcome.
Senator Brich thinks that the railroads
could not form a trust under the present
law. The senator ia right, bnt no one
knows better than be that railroads do
not act under the law, but over it.
A branch of Coxey’sarmy is going to
invade wall street. If any of the Coxey-
itea have articles of value about them
they had better deposit them for safe
keeping before making the invasion.
A False Diagnosis.
La Grippe is confounded by many per­
sons with a severe attack of catarrh, which
in some respects resembles the former.
These individuals suffer severely with pain
about the forehead, eyes and ears, with
soreness in throatand stoppage of the nasal
passages, and in fact, are incapacitated for
work of any kind for days at a time. These
are catarrhal sufferers. Ely’s Cream Balm
has been used with the best results in such
cases. The remedy will give instant reiief.
Cure for Headache.
As a remedy for all forms of Headache
Electric Bitters has proved to be the very
best, It affects a permanent cure and the
most dreaded habitual sick headaches yield
to its influence. We urge all who are af­
flicted to procure a bottle, and give this
remedy a fair trial. In cases of habitual
constipation Electric Bitters cures by giv­
ing the needed tone to the bowels, and few
cases long resist the use of this medicine.
Try it at once. Large bottles only Fifty
cents, at Ashland Drug Co.
¡.ate War New».
The Japanese legislature has convened
in extraordinary session, in response to
a call by the mikado. Bills authorizing
the government to borrow 100,000,000
yen were passed.
Great Britain has made overtures to
the European powers to negotiate peace
between China and Japan. The inter­
vention is purely diplomatic and is of­
fered to lx>th combatants in the friend­
liest manner.
Chinese troops are being massed at
Tien-Tsin. By the end of the month
100,000 soldiers will have arrived.
A detachment of 1,800 wounded Jap­
anese have arrived at Chemulpo. There
is a large number of wounded at Seoul.
In addition 2,100 wounded Japanese
have been sent to Japan.
At Ping Yang there are 1,200 wounded
Chinese in the hospitals. The rebellious
Tong Hais of Southern Corea are rest­
less and only the fact that they are not
provided with arms prevents them from
breaking out in open revolt and moving
on Seoul, for which many of them have
started.
Four hundred Japanese soldiers have
been stationed at the king’s palace,
Seoul, as the king’s brother is believed
to be leagued with the Tong Hais.
The Chinese are mobilizing a force at
Kiren and gathering a strong force at
Pow Ting Fu.
The British consul at Seoul states that
a dispatch bag which was officially
sealed, must have been opened while in
transit from Chemulpo to Seoul. This
must have been done, the consul adds,
with the knowledge of the highest Jap­
anese officials at Seoul, because they
have since shown that they were ac­
quainted with the gist of the contents
of the bag. The consul has requested
his home office to cable him instructions
as to what action he shall take in the
matter and some sharp interchanges of
diplomatic correspondence are expected.
A fierce battle was fought recently on
the banks of the Yalu river. Both sides
lost heavily. The Japanese were re­
pulsed.
Judge Ross in the United States cir­
cuit court at Los Angeles decided the
application of the Postal Telegraph
Cable company to be accorded facilities
by the receivers of the Atlantic and Pa­
cific Railway company for constructing
its telegraph line along that road favor-
ablj’ to the petitioners. In deciding the
matter Judge Ross filed quite an elabor­
ate opinion, in which he holds that the
contract of the Western Union Tele­
graph company with the railroad for
exclusive privileges is not valid. The
ruling of the court upon the questions
raised is regarded as one of more than
usual importance. Attorneys say he has
covered the points more fully than has
occurred in any previous decision.
The test case of J. D. Snyder of Los
Alamos, Cal., against the Central Amer­
ican Insurance company, after 21 days'
trial at Santa Bai bars, is ended. The
jury was out just eight minutes and
brought in a verdict for Snyder. He
was accused of setting fire to his hotel
to secure the insurance. He was tried
and found not guilty. For two years
the companies refused to pay. The case
was hotly contested. Insurance amounts
to $12,000. The other companies inter­
ested are the German-American Insur­
ance company, Patriotic Insurance com­
pany of Ireland, Imperial of England,
Northwest Insurance company of Mil­
waukee and the Sun of California.
The grievance committee of the Ore­
gon Bar association has filed a protest in
the supreme court for the disbarment of
O. T. Mason, U. S. G. Marquam and C.
C. Thompson, attorneys of Portland.
The committee charges that Mason was
indicted by the grand jury for libel com­
mitted by publishing scandalous articles
in a Sunday paper, and also that he at­
tempted to extort money from Major
General O. O. Howard. The charges
against Marquam are that he fraudu­
lently appropriated .$600 while acting as
receiver of the JAL. [Wash.) Shingle
Mill company. Thompson is charged
with fraud and corruption and violation
of the rules of common decency iu form­
ulating a plan to unlawfully prosecute
» Chinese firm of Portland.
Order yonr job printing from the Record
office and save money.
A first-class parlor piano for sale cheap.
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
WMM’a FtUr HigWM Medal Md Dipleun. I Inquire at this office.
Thomas Blanck. the murderer of bar­
keeper Charlc3 II. Eridwell of Seattle
and Marshal Jeffries of Puyallup, has
been convicted of murder in the first
degree and sentenced to death at Seattle.
Blanclt has made several desperate at­
tempts to escape since his arrest.
J. H. McFarland, ex-sheriff of Walla
Walla county, Wash., and traveling
agent for Brown Bros., nurserymen, has
been arrested on a warrant from Port­
land and charged with “larceny by
bailee. ” McFarland says the charge
has no foundation and is prompted by
personal grievance.
At Chatham, Ont., Nelson Huff, a
young Indian convicted of an assault on
a young white girl and recently sen­
tenced to a month's imprisonment, with
15 lashes at the end of the first two
weeks of his imprisonment, received a
whipping in the court house yard on a
recent night. The prisoner cried most
pitifully.
Father Gey of St. Peter’s Catholic
church, Chicago, ended mass the other
day by abruptly leaving the altar, and
though rolled in his sacred vestments he
collured a bold thief in the main aisle.
The thief, George Adams, an ex-convict,
pretending to be a worshiper, had sud­
denly grabbed the pocketbook of Mrs.
Reis, aged 70, and was making his es­
cape. Adams was locked up.
E. L. Titus and Miss Mary Duff were
found dead in a bathhouse at Sea Cliff,
L. I., the other day. Miss Duff died
from the effects of chloroform and Titus
shot himself. It is thought Titus at­
tempted to alleviate a severe headache
from which
and
. .. Miss
. . Duff
j , was suffering
-t
, •
that he administered too much ot thè
—
.»„«in.
h
O
r
¿
oa
th
w„
lk X
anesthetic, causing her death. He then
what
you
CAN
do
Richard Mansfield ia negotiating for
Missouri Presbyterians are active in
the campaign against the liquor traffic. a long lease of Harrigan’s theater, New
Adolph Kraus has bought the Chicago York.
Times.
Professor Herrmann, the conjurer,
Chile has refused China’s offer to pur­ and Manager George W. Lederer havo
at last settled amicably all their diffcr-
chase six warships.
The Berlin municipal council refuses 3UC3S.
to limit a day’s work to eight hours.
John T. Kelly, the Irish comodiaD,
The executive board of the Western will not star this season, but will stay
and Southwestern railroad lines have at homo to write songs and get a good
entered into an agreement to abolish all piece for next year.
passes after Jan. 1 next.
In all probability Mrs. Langtry will
The missing doctor, A. B. Conklin of fake Lillian Russell’s time at Abbey’s
Cassopolis, Mich., has returned to his lheatpr, New York. The engagement
home and tells a gauzy story of having Will begin on Nov. 4.
:o:
been kidnaped by masked burglars and
The arena scene in Robert Downing’s
carted about the country.
{reduction of “The Gladiator” is an
The federal grand jury at Chicago has exact reproduction of Jeromo’s celebrat­
returned an omnibus indictment against ed painting of the gladiatorial combat.
Debs and the other officers of the Amer­
and
James G. Blaine, Patrick Egan and
ican Railway Union, and a large num­ Admiral Gherardi are impersonated iu
ber of parties charged with participa­ i “Old Glory,” tho new play by Charles You can buy any of those tine suits,
Wo guarantee our U. S. Mail $3.00
tion in obstructing the mails on different T. Vincent, which A. Brady has pro­
sacks, frocks, cutaways, square cor-
shoes equal to any other brand at
roads last summer. In all 66 persons duced.
ner, double breasted, or in fact anv
$4.00. Try them and we will con­
are included in the blanket indictment.
style in the $18.00 and $20.00 lines
vince you. You can buy a splendid
It requires moro electrical apparatus
for $15.00
working shoe for $1.50 per pair
The apparently authorized announce­
to produce “Off the Earth,” in which
at O. H. Blount’s Cash Store
at O. H. Blount’s Caeli Store
ment that the Princess of Wales and
the American Travesty company is play­
ner daughters have taken to riding tri­ ing, than is carried by any other organ­
Bovs’ saddle seam boots 12 to 6 for
Good heavy business suits, neat pat­
cycles is expected to give a tremendous
$1.50 per pair
ization on tour.
terns, $5. $6, $7, $10,
boom to the manufacture of that class
at O. H. Blount’s Cash Store
at O. H. Blount’s Cash Store
Thomae Canary will build a theater
of cycling machinery, which has been in
Boys
’
A.
1.
school
shoes 12 to 6, Riley
a state of decline for several years. Po­ in New York. It will be situated on Mens’ woolen pants, neat patterns,
Pebble make, $1.50 per pair
lite society has always professed to re­ Broadway on tho northcast corner of
at O. H. Blount’s Cash Store
$1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 up
gard cycling with scorn as an essentially Forty-second street. It will bo completed
at O. H. Blount’s Ca6h Store Remember the entire line of Clothing,
vulgar and plebian form of exercise and by May 1, 1895.
Hats, Boots, Shoes and Furnishing
It is worthy of note that Nat C. Mens’ heavy riveted overalls 50cts
amusement. Tlie Princess having set
Goods is offered at CASH prices
the fashion, fashionable dames and their i Goodwin has never known a failure in
at O. II. Blount’s Cash Store '
at O. H. Blount’s Cash Store
middle class imitators are bound to fol­ his life, und ho has played in more
low it. Much gratification is expressed pieoes and made moro productions than
J^'You only pay for what you get at our store. We
that the Princess did not take to tho bi­ has probably any other actor of today.
have
no losses to make up.
iyviv
uou <11111
cycle auii
and “ iciuuuai
rational uii'Si,
dress,“ tuo
the use
and
Fred C. Whitney manages more light
„ _,x
ab’?e of
have brought a great opera singers than does any other man­
Not one dollar’s worth sold on time.
deal - of undeserved ridicule upon this
shot himself. The young couple were form of healthy recreation to benefit ager in the world. There are to bo 80
engaged to be married and were greatly solely the artists and writers for comic people in tho Rob Roy company, 67 in
H.
The
devoted to each other. A suicide theory papers. It is said the Princess of Wales support of Louise Beaudet in "Clio-
qnette” and 65 in “The Fencing Mat­
is not credited because they were wealthy
-ASULJLJSrnD, CLELEG-Onsr.
eommeuced tricycling by the advice of tar.”
________________
and had no cares or troubles.
her physicians.
Parks' Cough syrup cures Coughs, Colds
F. C. Warren, a young civil engineer
Mrs. Crittenden of Elyria, O., is the and
Consumption. Mrs. Catherine Black,
of Cheno, Mexico, lias arrived at Irapu- oldest person in that state. Her age is of
Le Roy, N. Y., says: “I took one bot­
ato more dead than alive from a jour­ 138 years and she is healthy and cheer­ tle of Parks’Cough Syrup. It acted like
••
magic. Stopped my cough and I am per- • • ••
ney across the Sierra Madre mountains. I ful and does not look to be over 70.
|
fectly
well
now.
”
Sold
by
E.A,
Sherwin.
•••
He started six months ago from the city
•••
*‘l consider Chamberlain s Cough Reme­
of Oaxaca and crossed the mountains to
THE
MOUNTAIN
LABORED.
dy a specific for croup. It is very pleasant
the port of Salina Cruz. He then pro­ to take, which is one of the most import­
ceeded along the coast of Colima, where ant requisites where a cough remedy is in­ And It Drought Forth Death and Desola­
tion to r State of Columbia.
he fell in with two Americans named tended for use among children. I have
known of cases of croup where I know the
About 1 % miles from the town of
James West and George Crenshaw,both life
of a little one was saved by the use of
of Philadelphia, who were making a Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.” J. J. La Rio Blanco, state of Cauca, Colombia, a
pleasure tour of Mexico. They proposed Grange, druggist, Avoca, Neb. 50 cent remarkablo geological phenomenon has
recently created groat excitement. A
an overland trip across the mountains bottles for sale by Ashland Drug Co.
to the City of Mexico. About 10 days
Miss Anna Londonderry of Boston, mountain ridge, called Cerror do Cruz
ago they were passing through a mount­ who left Chicago on Sept. 24 with only Loma, suddenly cast a largo part of its
ain gorge in the vicinity of Los Colchos, 3 cents in her purse, to make a tour of upper levels into neighboring rivers,
about 90 miles from Irapuato, when the the globe on a bicycle, has arrived at carrying death and destruction in its
rain began to pour down in torrents. Toledo, O. So far her trip has been wake.
For some days beforo prolonged sub­
Mr. Warren was riding in advance of without incident.
terranean sounds—a sort of hoarse rum­
his companions, when without warning
Mrs. Georgo Coffer of Kent, Wash.,
bling and roaring—were heard, indicat­
a terrible landslide occurred. West and
becoming enraged at her husband’s de­
ing that something serious was about to
Crenshaw were caught and crushed to
votion to poker, went to a saloon where
death and Mr. Warren narrowly escaped. he was playing and compelled him at occur, and on the date mentioned the
Viscount Drumlaney, eldest son of the the point of a revolver to leave his upper part of the hill suddenly caved
Marquis of Queensberry, was accident­ cronies and accompany her home. After in, the enormous quantity of earth de­
ally shot in the head recently while they had reached home and Mrs. Coffer scending to and obstructing the course
shooting over the coveys of Quantock had put away her pistol her husband of tho rivers Guachicono, Molino and
others. It is feared that tho overflow of
Lodge, Bridgewater, Somersetshire, Eng­ beat her with a bottle.
the rivers will occasion an extensive in­
land, the residence of Edward J. Stan-
John Noble and Arthur Barnes, To-
Jey, a member of the house of commons. .ledo, (O.) wheelmen have started to undation, or that, breaking away the
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castor!«.
The viscount’s grandfather met his wheel around the world. They will go earth dam, whole villages and valuable
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
qeath by the accidental discharge of his to San Francisco, thence to South Amer- properties will be destroyed. As an im­
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
owfi gun at Kinmount in 1858. A for­ ca, Australia, Asia and Europe. They mediate result of this occurrence 12 per­
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria.
mer viscount was killed by the acci­ will take nothing with them except sons were killed, besides a large num­
dental discharge of his own pistol in their wheels and the clothes they wear, ber of horses and cattle.
It seems only natural to attribute this
1743. This accident changed the succes­ and they expect to complete the trip by
phenomenon to the eruption of tho So-
M ain S treet , O pposite 1’ laza .
sion to the title with the result that the the first of May next.
The Colima volcano is in eruption.
tara volcano, which for some time has
Dukes of Buceleuch became the Dukes
James Anthony Froude, the English been observed to be covered with enow- ZF-A-IUSTTS, ZPJLIHSrTEJRyS’ TOOLS,
Frederick M. Steele, a Mont Clair (N. of Buceleuch and Queensberry. The
J.) geologist, while prospecting for ame­ Duke of Buceleuch’s eldest son, Lord historian, died at London a few days like vapor and clouds. Tho departmen­
thyst crystals in the Montclair mount­ Dalkeith, was accidentally killed while ago. He was born in Dorrington, Devon­ tal government, justly alarmed by this
WALL PAPER. G-X j JLSS. ETC.
ains recently unearthed a box 18 by 5 deer-stalkhw ip.. ,1886. Viscount Drum- shire, April 23, 1818. He was a graduate occurrence, has appointed a commission
inches bound with steel bands. The box laney’s uncle, Lord-Francis Douglass, of Oxford and ordainefl^a deitenn of the of engineers tb investigate tho matter.
B uilding P apers , wrapping P apers and T wines . ARTISTS’ MATERIALS.
was easily opened with a spade and1 Was was also killed by r. fall from the Mat­ Church of England in'1844. For a time •L^nidad NacionaL
he
was
connected
with
the
high
church
found to contain gold nuggets which terhorn in 1865. Viscount Drumlaney
THE PLAGUE BACILLUS.
had been melted and a broken letter dropped in the rear of the party. A shot party, and was the author of quite a
crumbling with age was found in the was heard, but no notice was taken. number of books prior to 1856, when the It Is Different From Any Ever Defore
box. This letter was written by Israel Later, as he failed to join the party, the first two volumes of his history of Eng­
Found In the Human Dody.
Van Gehon, who disappeared from West others went in search and found him ly­ land, “From the Fall of Woolsey to|the
The
news
that no fewer than 120,000
Bloomfield, N. J., in 1838. He subse­ ing against a hedge with his head terri­ Defeat of the Spanish Armada,” ap­ persons have been swept away by tho
quently died in California. The nug­ bly injured. He died before the doctors peared. The balance of his histories plague in the district of Canton gives
appeared from time to time until 1870,
gets, as claimed in the letter, are worth could arrive.
when the last volume appeared. In 1869 interest to the results of the scientific in­
about $15,000. Van Gelson had no'heirs
vestigation of the disease which havo
and the gold will be appropriated by the
A gas welt di^ge^ near Muncie. Ind., he became rector of the University of St. just been received here. Two Japanese
JLSILZ j JLJSTID, O regon .
Andrews
and
in
1870
he
visited
the
got dowj| 120 fCet when his drill sud
finder.
experts
who
have
been
studying
for
United States and delivered a series of
An international anti-gambling asso­ denly dropped as if in a bottomless pit. lectures on the relations between Eng­ several years at tlie Koch institute wero
Subsequently
soundings
showed
that
ciation has been incorporated under the
Reopened, Refurnished and Completely Renovated.
land and Ireland. After 1871 he pub­ sent by their government to make in­
laws of Illinois, with headquarters at 10,000 fret of rope was not long enough lished several interesting books, includ­ quiries.
Chicago. The incorporators are Ed­ to reach the bottom.
-------- --- -
under ew Management
1
~ h ==
They report that the period of incuba­
ing “ The Life of Thomas Carlyle, ” and*'
ward F. Goff. Rev. William Kirk and
In Tarrytown, N. Y., the memory of one of Lord Beaconsfield.
tion is from two to seven days. This is
Thomas.H. McCauley, all of whom have revolutionary heroes was honored by the
FREE BUS TO AND FROM ALL TRAINS.
Mrs. Eliza Carson, aged over 70, of followed by prostration with high fever,
hitherto taken active parts in moral re­ unveiling of a handsome monument on
ending in delirium and coma. Both
forms. The board of managers includes Oct. 19 to the memory of 76 soldiers Chicago, has a mania lor crossing the physicians declare that they identified
ocean.
Some
years
ago
she
inherited
Miss Frances Willard, Alias Ada C. from Tarrytown who fought in the war
tho plague bacillus, which is different
Swett, W. J. Onahan, Dr. Sarah Hack­ for independence. The day was the 113th $110,000 and shortly after her husbaud from any evor before found in tho
died.
She
then
began
living
on
Atlantic
ett Stevenson, Edward F. Goff and anniversary of the surrender of Lord
steamers. She has crossed the ocean 120 human body. They describe it as slen­ F. W SETTLEMIER.
250 ACRES.
others. Tho organization is the out­ Cornwallis at Yorktown.
times and has spent about $80,000 on der, straight and short. It devastates all J. H. SETTLEMIER.
4,000,0000.
growth of the anti-gambling crusade in
the
principal
internal
organs.
Life or Death?
these trips. Tho old lady frequently
Chicago, and the purpose is to enlist
Experiments in breeding plague ba­
It is of vital importance that it should be crosses and recrosses the briny deep
ESTABLISHED 1863.
lecturers and otherwise excite and crys- understood
by persons whose kidneys are without leaving the steamer. Her son- cilli and inoculating animals with virus
talize public sentiment throughout the I inactive, that this condition of things is
invariably produce within two days
I finally inductive of a state of the organs in-law at Chicago recently endeavored death under symptoms of the plague.
country against gambling.
to
have
a
guardian
appointed
for
her,
| where life hangs in the balance. Bright s
, disease, diabetis. albuminuria are all dis­ claiming she was of unbound mind and Dr. Kitasato, being satisfied there is no
For Sale or Trade.
eases of a very obstinate character in their
other alternative but that either the
A first-class parlor piano, of reputable mature stage, and all have a fatal tendency. that her money would soon be all gone.
bacilli or the patient must die, is on the
Mrs.
Carson
has
about
$30,000
left
of
manufacture, brand new; took first prize They often battle the most practised medi­
world’s fair. For Bale or will trade on a cal skill, and the most approved remedies her fortune. As soon as the insanity lookout for bacteriocides, but it is too
deal for town lots; or hay, potatoes or of materia medica. But opposed at the case was dismissed at Chicago she early to expect definite conclusions.—
—that is to say, when tlie kidneys be­
Loudon Cor. New York Sun.
We carry the largest and most Complete
hogs. A good bargain, well worth ih- outset
gin to discharge their functions inactively started on another trip across the At-
vestigation. Inquire at or write R ecord i —with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters,the dan­ lantip.
_
„
„
Assortment of Decidious trees on the Coast.
office, Ashland, Oregon.
gerous tendency is checked. Very useful,
Ladies imported trimmed hats just re­
also, is this household medicine for those
at The Fair. 75 cents to $3. Call
An interstate whist tournament is be­ ailments of common occurrence—‘constipa­ ceived
tion, biliousness, dyspepsia, and nervous­ and examine.
ing held at Tacoma.
ness. It is a safeguard against malaria,
Otto Zeigler, the San Jose bicyclist, and averts chronic rheumatism.
Frank Shoemaker, a German lunatic,
made a world’s record at Sacramento
hanged himself with a towel at Stock-
Germany an«l Hqllaud.
last week. His mile was covered in 1:53.
Tho destiny of little states is to be ton,
The next day Johnson lowered this time absorbed sooner or later by some power­
Mrs. Jessie Cougliill has been arrested
at Waltham, Mass. Zeigler has gone to ful neighbor. For Holland that neigh­ at Fresno for abandoning her six-
Los Angeles to try for more records.
bor is Germany. Holland has vast col­ months-old baby.
Frank Dekuin, president of the Port­ onies which enriched her in times past
Fifteen high-priced horses were burned
land Savings bank, died recently,
and made her commerce flourish. But to death at Monticello, la., recently.
Kristian Kortgard, a bank president,
W. II. Buehler, a member of the the colonies now are dear luxuries for
board of education of Los Angeles, who the mother country and are far from has been convicted at Minneapolis of the
We warrant all of our trees to be as represented, and
was found gnilty of unlawfully detain­ being profitsble. This would not be the larceny of $13,000.
free
from pests. Send for special prices on large lots.
ing a girl named McCurday in the rear case, naturally, if these colonies be­
At a bull fight in Puebla, Mexico, one
longed
to
mighty
Germany.
Catalogue free.
of his drug store, was sentenced by i
of the bulls jumped among the specta­
But there is another reason for the tors, wounding eight persons.
Judge Austin to pay a fine of $500 or be
confined in jail for 500 days in default absorption. In the coming great war
J. H. SETTLEMIER & SON,
Anton Pfeffer of St. Cloud, Minn., the
Belgium and Holland will be the apple ■ »hoe man, was robbed of $2,400 by a
WOODBURN. OR.
of .payment.
of discord between Franca and Ger-, bold daylight robbery.
Dr. P. A. Skinner, of Texarkana. Arkan­ many. France will capture Belgium
William C. Lippard, one of the boodle
sas, is enthusiastic in the praise of Cham­ and Holland, too, if Germany does not
members
of the Detroit school board,
berlain’s Pain Balm. He used it for rheu­ take good care.
has been sentenced to five years in the
matism, and says: “I found it to be a
Historically, Holland is of German 6tate penitentiary.
Catarrh in the Head
most excellent local remedy.” For sale by
origin. She formed part, np to 1648,
Ashland Drug Company.
Will T. Martin, a Clark county (Miss.)
of the “Cerdo do Bourgogne.” Her
Tae annua? meeting or me nirrman language, intellectual life, tho history farmer, killed his child because it cried An Unfortunate Inheritance —How
-:o:
It Was Destroyed.
Car company was held at Chicago the of her dynasty and its branches in the too much. He is now hiding in a swamp
other day. The total revenue for tho reigning German families all go to as­ and a mob is waiting to lynch him.
“Spokane, Wash., Aug. 9, 1893. f
An express package containing $2,000 “C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
year was $9,595,067 and expenditures sign Holland to Germany. The Hol­
“Gentlemen:—I wish to add my testimony to
$7,274,650, leaving a surplus of $2,320,- landers are more German than they in gold was opened somewhere between
-------- THE--------
416. Of the disbursements $2,880,000 wanteto admit. Jean Paul was right Cheyenne and Ogden, on the Union Pa­ the worth of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My little
girl
has
been
cured
by
it
of
inherited
catarrh.
was paid out in dividends on the capital when ho called them “a cheap edition cific road, about two weeks ago. A
had colds continually every month and yel­
stock. The statement shows that no of Germans, upon ordinary paper and Pacific Express messenger is now sus­ She
low discharge, but since taking Hood’s Sarsa*
profit was made at the Pullman shops without engravings.”
pected and is under surveillance at
during the year. The revenue is made
We Teach Shorthand and Typewriting: we teach Telegraphy and Penmanship;
At the present time the Dutch are op­ Ogdeq.
up of earnings, patents and dividends, posed to annexation, but there is a way
Perry Beal, a well-known placer
our Normal Course is becoming deservedly popular; prepare yourself for
interest, etc. Total assets are put at to get rid of their opposition. Let a miner, was shot by a highwayman near
au8efullife; write for particulars.
$62,042,608. The number of passengers German prince become the husband of Butte, Mont. Beal and his wife were
carried during the year was 5,282,323, the young queen. That prince should taking $2,500 in gold dust to town. Mrs.
and the number of miles run was 197,- be the heir to the throne of Germany. Beal whipped up the horse and escaped
408,503. During the previous year 5,- In this way he would in time become robbery.
678,129 passengers were carried and emperor of Gel-many, king of Prussia
There is more Catarrh in this section of parilla lias been entirely cured. Hood’s Sar­
206,473,796 miles were run. The year and king of Holland.—Berlin Neuo
the country than all other diseases put to­ saparilla I have found of great help to my
just ended shows a decrease of about ] Blatter.
gether, and until the last few years was other children.” Stus. L. M.
f
per cent in the number of passengers
supposed to be incurable. For a great
Feifiaps
some
of
our
readers
would
like
Carried and of about 4 per cent in the to know in what respect Chamberlain’s many years doctors pronounced it a local
Hood’s Pilis arc hand made, and perfect
number of miles run. The value of the Cough Remedy is better than any other. disease, and prescribed local remedies, and In proportion and appearance. 25c. per box.
manufactured product of the car works We will tell you. When this Remedy is by constantly failing to cure with local
treatment, pronounced it incurable. Sci­
was $4,347,817, and of industries, in­ taken as soon as a cold has been contracted ence has proven Catarrh to be a constitu­
and before it has become settled in the
cluding rentals, $578,014, making a total system, it will counteract the effect of the tional disease and therefore reqtfires con­
Attention. Co. D.
of $4,925,331, against $18,414,708 for the cold and greatly lessn iVs severity, if not stitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
previous year. The wages paid amounted effectually cure the cold in two da.is’ time, manufactured by F. J. Cheney <t Co., To­
N COMPLIANCE with Brigade Orders,
lien of a tamou» 1- rench physician, will quickly cure you of ail ner­
it is the only remedy that will do this. ledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure
Co. I) will be mustered and inspected at
vous or disease* of the geuerativc onrau*. such m Lost Manhood.
to $4,868,548, against $7,751,644 fur the and
on
the
market.
It
is
taken
internally
in
It
acts
in
perfect
harmony
with
nature
and
i
-
-----
----------
,
Insomnia, l*:uns In the Sock, Seminal Emissions, Nervous Debility,
their armory Friday Nov. 9th. 1891, at 8
preceding year.
' _ a teaspooniul. it o
Pimples, I outness to Marry, Exhuustim; Drains, Varicocele and
aids nature in relieving the lungs, opening I doses from 10 drops to
’
clock
p.
tu.
No
excuses
will
be
accepted
Constipation. It stops all losses by day or night. Prevents quick-
the blood and ---------
mucous sur­
the secretions, liquefying the mucus an(1 i acts directly on th-
n. ss of discharge, which if not checked loads to Spermatorrhoea and
Parks’ Tea clears tnc complexion. Mrs. causing its expulsion from the cells of the faces of the svstem. They offer one hun­ for absence. Any delinquents will sutler
AND AFTEP »11 the horrors of Impotent J*. CirPIDKNRclemiae» the liver, the
BEFORE ____
N. Meyette. of Le Roy, N. Y., savs: “I lungs and restoring the system to a strong dred dollars for any case it fails to cure. the full penalty of the law.
.
kidneysand
the urinary organsoi all impurities.
By order of
ITPIDEXE ntrengthens and restores small weak organs.
have tried Parks’ Tea and find it the best and healthv condition. No other remedy Send for circulars and testimonials. Address
The
reason
sufferers
are
not
cured
by
Doctors Is because ninety per cent rre troubled with
BRIG.
GEN.
H.
B.
COMPSON.
remedy J have ever tried,” Sold by E, A. in the market possesses these remarkable
F, J. CHENEY & CO, Toledo, O.
ProstatitlM. CÜPIDENEis the only known remedy to core without un operation. 5000 testimoni­
J. L. MAY, Capt. Commanding.
Sherwin.
Sold by Druggists.
als. A written guarantee given and money returned If six boxes does not eíleci u. ¡»eriAiuuualcure»
properties. No other will cure a cold so
$1.00 a box, six for f 5.00, by mail. Send for frkk circular and testimonials.
quickly or leave the system in as sound a
Address DA VOL MEDICINE! CO., p. O. Box 2076, Sun Francisco, Cat Jbr Sato by
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder condition. For salé by Ashland Drug
•‘Listed for the War,” a drama to be
,,’rivj oqj,, m ‘pmX rad sjuao
jnwdwèô Won bjf fire King'a Drug Uteri.
fl pu» 01
pa® »WM‘infida jfftB 1
>Mii Mldwinttr FairrWFraatw. Company.
JkSUnLAJSTD XXR/tTQ- OOMFA1ÍY
Testimony iu me Worden case at
Woodland is being taken.
The discharged Company G of the
National Guard of Washington held a
meeting at Spokane and decided to con­
test the governor s order of discharge.
E. A Gilbert, postmaster and tele­
graph operator at Dungeness, attempted
fcuicide at Port Townsend by cutting his
throat with a razor.
A mortgage ol $750,000 given by the
Sunset Telephone and Telegraph com­
pany on its lines in California and
Washington has been recorded in 22
counties in the two states.
A three-lap cement bicycle track is to
be built at San Jose. No expense will
be spared to make it the fastest bicycle
track in the world.
Mrs. John beabnry of Son Bernardino
doctored hex cnickens at night with coal
oil to destroy vermin. She had a tallow
candle lw ngnt. One of the hens got
too close to the flame and caught fire.
Seven others were soon ablaze and run­
ning. All the blazing hens ran to the
haystacK and set that afire. The vermin
was killed.
S. J. Matthews, formerly business
manager of the Ukiah Republican Press,
who was arrested some time since for an
Assault committed on A. L. Pounstone,
has been sentenced to pay a fine of $150.
ueputy Internal Revenue Collector
Griffin has seized the distillery and
plant at the Lind vineyard, five miles
east of Fresno, for illicit distilling. The
illicit brandy was found hidden under
the vines.
The captain of the revenue cutter
Grant, now at Tacoma, who has been
cruising for wreckage of the bark Ivan­
hoe, says he does not believe it is lost.
He thinks the Ivanhoe has been driven
out to sea. The treasury department
has ordered the cutters Corwin and
Grant to search for the Ivanhoe.
Dr. A. F. Schiffman has been granted
at Los Angeles a divorce from his wife,
Katherine S. Schiffman, and the cus­
tody of his two children. The parties
to the suit are well known not only in
Los Angeles but throughout the North­
west. They are from St. Paul.
Rev. J. S. McDonald, missionary for
the northern part of California, opened
his report in the Presbyterian synod of
California at L ob Angeles by referring
to the financial condition of the coun­
try, laying the blame upon the mer­
cenary character of our lawmakers and
statesmen.
An indignation meeting was held at
the Y. M. C. A. hall at Ban Jose by
members of the alumnt and friends of
the college protesting against changing
the name of the University of the Pa­
cific to the “ San Francisco University. ”
Resolutions were adopted in which the
trustees are petitioned to reconsider
their action. It was intimated that un­
less they do the courts will be ap­
pealed to.
WITH THE
HARD Coid GASH
Pay as you go, G»©t full Malue for your money,
be Prosperous and HappY.
BLOUNT.
0.
Clothier.
HARDWARE,
• •••
••
STOVES and RANGES,
Mining!
-
Suppiies.
«INNEY & PROVOST,
ASHLAND,
:
:
OREGON
H. S. EVANS,AS,,LAM '■OE-
PAINTING,
PAPERING,
ASHLAND
ETC.
HOTEL,
J. H. McBRIDE, Prop.
THE WOODBURN NURSERIES
We are also headquarters for Orna
mental trees, Evergreens, Climb­
ing Plants, Roses, Etc.
MEDFORD BUSINESS COLLEGE.
Practical Business Training School of Oregon,
HOOD'S
Sarsaparilla
CURES
Our New Building is now Completed.
N. E. RIGBÏ, Principal.
MEDFORD
I
OREGON
MANHOOD RESTOREDSS
RESTORED