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About Valley record. (Ashland, Jackson County, Or.) 1888-1911 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1896)
* lase! a»w •< VALLET RECORD- VALLEY RECORD FINE FEINTING OF EVERY ■Hl DESCRIPTION NO MONOPOLY VALLEY RECORD. PRICES ! Give us your order for Letterheads. State ments, Envelopes. 6cc. A.SHLAND, VOL. IX. JACKSON ASHLAND OREGON, Chief of the County Papers Published every Thursday. E. J. KAISER, Proprietor. COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 189«. NO. 20. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year.................. <> 75 Six Months................. ;...................... , tn) Three Months............ . fO Advertising rates given on application —— A Politician In Limbo. Professional Cards PRESSED In April at the republican county con vention in the court house appeared verv prominently an active young man with fiery red hair and flambouyant air and JJR- J. S. HERNDON, demeanor. Though a resident of the coun ty only one year and scarcely known at all he came within one vote of being elected a PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. delegate to the republican state and con gressional convention. He was an active ABHLAND, O regon . striker in the June campaign and was a member of the Mazama excursion to Crater fl^Office—In Townsend Building, on lake. Today he sits in the county jail in Oak Street, Opposite Hotel Oregon. default of bail, to await the action of the grand jury in December, charged with stealing a horse from Wm. Crane, recently HINMAN, D. D. S. in the livery business at Medford, which he rode to Klamath county, sold and pocketed the money. Constable Wolt brought him back to Medford and he was bound over by DENTIST. Justice Jones. It is said he is also default er as cleric of Trail creek school district His name is Robt. Bond and he says be <^“ln the Masonic Building np stair, lost his reason and didn’t kno w what he was doing. over Post Office. Are You Tired J")R. S. T. SONGER. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. Novelty Block, Opposite Hotel Oregon, .... A shland , J^R- C. O regon . All the time? This condition is a sure ___ ___ in dication that your blood is not rich and nourishing as it ought to be and as it may be if you will take a few bottles of the great blood purifier, Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Thou sands write that Hood’s Sarsaparilla has cured them of that tired feeling by giving them rich, red blood. Hood’s Pills act easily and promptly on the liver and bowels. Cure sick head ache W. BARR. Dental Parlors in Odd Fellow’s Block. A shland , O regon . BORN. CHILDS—In Medford, Sept. 26, 1896, to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Childs, a son. TTf- * H work pertaining to modern dent istry. Painless operations a specialty. MERRIMAN—In Medford,Sept, 29, 1896. to Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Merintan, a daugh ter. JJ M. BROWER M. D. MARRIED. PHY81CIAN and SURGEON, O regon . GRAY—SMITH—At the home of the offiiciating minister, Rev. Chas. Hoxie near Medford, Sept. 29,1896. Mr. Clarence A. Gray of Ashland precinct and Miss Office—At Residence, intersection of Me Anne P. Smith ot Garfield. Wash. chanic, Laurel and Main Streets. PANKE Y—VINCENT—In Jacksonville. Sept. 30. 1896, by Rev. J. M. Shulse. Chas. Pankey and Miss Mary Vincent of SOCIETY DIRECTORIES. Sain’s Valley. STURGIS-SULLIVAN—At Tolo, Sept G. A. R. 30.1896. by R. 8. Dunlap, J. P , Fred Sturgis and Miss Ida Sullivan. BURNSIDE POST NO. 23. Meet in Masonic Hall, on the 1st and JONES—AMY—At Central Point, Sept. 29 1896, Fred L. Jones and Miss Laura Sd Saturday of sach month. Visiting Com Amy. rades cordially welcomed. A. C. S pknceb , Commander. ARZNER—PRATT—At Lakeview, Sept. G. O. V annatta . Adjutant. 26.1896, Xavier Arzner and Miss Belle Pratt. W. R. C. DUKE—CANTNER— At Lakeview, Sept 27.189*1, Sam. P. Duke and Miss Lottie BURNSIDE RELIEF CORPS NO. 24 Cantner. Meets in Odd Fellows hall at 2 o’clock p. m. on the second and fourth Fridays of each month. Mas. J. I). C bockeb . Pres. DIED. Mu. L ydia G riswold , Sec’y. A shland . » KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. WILSON—Near Talent, Oct. 6, 1896, Mr. Joseph C. Wilson, aged 65 years, 2 GRANITE LODGE, NO. 23, Knights o months and 3 days. Pythias, Ashland, Oregon, meets every The funeral took place in Ashland ceme Friday evening. Visiting Knights in good tery 8unday H e has been a resident of standing are cordially invited to attend. this section for two years and of the Pa F. D. W agneb , C. C. cific coast for mauy years. S. G. E ggers , K. of R & 8. PURKEYPILE—At the family residence in C entral Point, October 1, 1896, Martin MASONIC. Porkeypile; aged 53 years 6 months and 6 days. SISKIYOU CHAPTER, NO. 21, R. A. M. Regular convocations on the Thursday next after the full moon. DR. E. V, C arter , H. P. E. A. S hebwin , Secretary. ASHLAND LODGE, NO. 23, A. F. & A. M. Stated communications on the Thursday of or before the full moon. E. A. S uerwin , W. M. C, H. V aüfel , Secretary. ALPHA CHAPTER NO. 1, O. E. 8. Stated meetings on 1st and 3d Tuesdays in each month . Mas. L‘M. C aldwell , W. M. Mas. S. C. C handler . Secretary. I. O. O. F. ASHLAND LODGE, NO. 45. Hold regular meetings every Thursday evening at their hall in Ashland. Brethren in good standing are cordially invited to attend. F. M. D rake , N. G. H. 8. E vans , Sec’y, P. O. box 102. STEELE CURED DARRIN. BY DR. Marshfield News.] The advent in this city of Dr. Darrin recalls the wonderful cure he performed eight years ago on one of our townsmen, Dr. Steele, after the failure of fifteen other physicians. Dr. Steele was in a critical condition for a long time, with neuralgia ot the head. He was cured in Portland by Dr. Darrin in ten minutes by electricity, and has enjoyed the blessings of health since, with no recur- rence of the disease. Dr. Darrin was among the first to introduce electrical treatment in bis practice and has perfected himself in bis application. Dr. Darrin is crowded with patients. Cal. Eubanks was in the valley this week. Eagle Point has organized a strong Bry an club. E. N. Young of Wimer has entered the State Normal school. For first-class dental work see Dr. A. Hinman, Masonic block. Mrs. Chas. Young and infant returned home to Gold Hill ounday. Mrs. Hilt of near Coles was in town Monday on a business trip. Ed Casebeer and wife were in from Sprague river the past week. Miss Nettie Tharp of Klamath Falls has entered the State Normal school. All kinds of razor grinding aud repairing at the Gem barber shop, opposite town hall. Gen. Thos. G. Reames, the Jacksonville banker, was in Portland and Eugene this week. Will Shook of Klamath county has been visiting old Jackson county friends and relatives. Otis Helman’s orchestra will give a series of Saturday night dances at the Granite hall this winter. Dr. A. C,Caldwell, the Jacksonville den tist, was here this week. He is a red-hot Bryau boy. Thos. Jones, the enterprising Henley merchant, and his son were over Monday on a business trip. O. T. Brown and family of this precinct leave next month to again take charge oi their farm near Keno. When you drink tea get the best—Ito Blend—it will please you. Take no other. J. K. Van Sant, Ashland. The Harvey farm near Talent has been rented to the Creed brothers of Big Sticky who have taken possession. Miss Ida York, the Applegate teacher, is taking review work at the normal pre paratory to an examination for a state diploma. Mrs. J. W. Haiuaker of Klamath Falls has gone to Eugene to keep house there this winter for her sons, who are attending the state university. Mrs. Dors McDonald and children who have been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bagley, returned home to Dunsmuir Sunday. Dodge has a big stock of hammocks, comprising cheap, medium and best grades at prices to suit the times. County Judge J. M. Chiles of Josephine county was fined $100 for buying a small piece of J sephtne county script from a customer in his store. J. H. Houston returned from Portland Friday and is fixing up a lot of freight to go over the Ashland road for his winter supplies at Klamath tails. Baldwin & Reames have dissolved part nership in the hardware business at Klam ath Falls, Evan Reames retiring and Geo. T. Baldwin continuing the business. Wm. Bybee’s hotel at Bybee’s springs on Evans creek, was destroyed by tire last week. The loss amounts to several thou sand dollars. Mrs. R. M. Presley was the landlady. Pete Hagerman, a resident of Ashland previous to railroad times, was in from Adin, Modoc county, last week. He is a McKinley man but says Modoc county will go 50 to 1 for Bryan, Mrs. B. F. Reeser and son Horace have returned from Portland where the latter had an operation performed to cure a defec tive sight in one of his eyes. The opera tion was successful. K. K. Kubli, the world-famous athlete and Brvan orator of Jacksonville spends his Sundays in Ashland. Kap finds some thing else to do besides tai king politics when in this man’s town. PILOT BOCK ENCAMPMENT, NO. 16. A REMARKABLE CURE. Meets in Odd Fellows’s Hall every 2d and 4th Monday in each month. Members in good standing cordially invited tc attend. Mrs. J. W. Noah of Coos County Cured H. 8. E vans , C. P. of Consumption by Dr. Darrin. R obt , T aylob , Scribe. Coast Mail.] To the E ditor —Having noticed Dr. HOPE REBECCA DEGREE LODGE, »0. 24. Meets on the 2d and 4th Tuesday in each Darrin’s advent in Marshfield I wish month in Odd Fellows’ Hall, Ashland. to state what he did for my mother, Miss E mma S tephenson , N. G. Mrs J. W. Noah, five years ago, while M iss N ina E meby , Secy. in Portland. My mother had been af flicted with bleeding of the lungs, cough A. O. U. W. and called by many physicians linger ASHLAND LODGE, NO. 66. Meets in lodge room in Masonic Hall ing consumption, for eighteen years every second and foubth Wednesday in prior to going under the doctor’s care. each month. All brethren in good standing The treatment proved successful. She are cordially invited to attend. was cured in a few months with home M. R. M oore , M. W. treatment, and is now enjoying the J. R. C asey . Recorder blessings of health. My mother lives on South Coos river, seventeen miles east ORANITS TkNT NO. 4, KNIGHTS OF THB of this place. I can be referred to by MACCABEES. letter or in person. Postoffice address, Meet in regular review on the second and Marshfield. J. L. Noah. K. o . t . BRICKS. m . In Talent precinct last week Edw. Jacobs had his right leg fearfully broken by a scaffold tailing down with him, while engaged building an addition to the resi dence ot Joshua Patterson. John Jacobs andC. B. Gtllson, Jr., were here Monday on foundry business. Mr. Jacobs leaves next week for Butte county to run a mill for a company that J. E. McLaughlin, formerly of Pokegema, was foreman of. Gus. Walden of Pokegema was at the Falls last Thursday. Mr. Walden is the leading merchant of the lumber city and one of the pioneer store keepers of Siskiyou mountain railway construction days.— Klamath Falls Express. Harry T. Bragdon, formerly in business in Ashland, but late clerk in the leading hotel at Oregon City, was arrested in Port land and taken back to Albany, where he was charged with forging an order on Olds King aud stealing the money. The Bellview Lyceum ot the State Normal School has elected the following new officers: President, Jerome Fitzgerald ; vice president. Miss May Phipps; secretary Miss Kittie Wells; treasurer, L 8. Newton; editor, Miss Nora Sydow; sergeant-at-arms Mirt Sill; censor, Miss White; librarian, F. L. Dlen. Salem, Oct. 1. — The governor today granted a full pardon to John Penniger, of Jackson county, upon recommendation of the district judge. Penniger was sent up for five years for assault with a dangerous weapon, and had served two and a half months. He was an epileptic and thought to be partly insane The Crescent City A Grants Pass tele phone people have commenced the con struction of a branch line from Anderson's in Josephine county, to the tsiskiyou Cop per Company’s mine, and thence on to Gak Flat, on the Illinois river, where several companies own placer properties. The branch line will De about20 miles in length. fourth Thursdays of each month at Odd Fellow’s Hall, Ashland. Visiting Sir September Weather Summary. Knights cordially invited. G. W. C rowson , Com. Following is a summary of weather ob C has . H. G illette , R. K. servation at Ashland during the month of August, as reported by F. H. Carter, local observer for the Oregon State Weather Service: Contracting & Building House Raising H S ® e e and Moving All work entrusted to my care done with dispatch, and on terms to suit the times. See the undersigned be fore letting contracts and save money. Oak Street, Ashland. Q ALLEN J« B. RUSSELL s { Dealer in S $ — I — I — I — i—I—I — I — I — I — 1—I Granite, Marble Freestone Monuments and Copings. Also agents for IRON FENCES. Satisfaction guaranteed Date. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Max. Min. Mean. Temp Temp Temp. 72 56 64 48 62.5 77 50 68 86 96 51 73.5 94 74.5 55 55 73.5 92 54 70 5 87 39 57 75 36 76 56 37 57.5 78 39 77 58 36 75 555 30 52 74 68 34 51 55 63 47 35 66 50.5 50.5 37 64 73 36 54.5 51 61.5 72 44 75 59 5 81 43 62 75 48 61.5 48 75 61.5 48 60 5 73 73 38 55.5 83 35 69 52 69.5 87 42 62 82 42 59 76 42 78 60 .... 1 Miss Hattie Caldwell, the 17-year-old young lady who recently ascended Mt Shasta’s summit on horseback the first time it was ever performed, assisted by the Suide. Tom Waison, returned home to old Hill last week. The second silver edition of the 8. F. Examiner contained several prominent pictures of the young Precipt’n lady as well as a big write up and as that in inches. issue of the Examiner will be well scattered over the United States, Miss Caldwell will .01 be the best known and read about girl in .... this county for awhilo. .... .... Monthly School Report. r • • • « • • e No. days taught, 20; No. of holidays, 0; days of attendance, boys 4387J^. girls 4524, • • • • total, 8911>i; days ab-ence, boys 198, girls 118H, total316}^; cases of tardiness, boys 34, girls 33, total 67; who'e No enrolled on • • • • register, boys 244, girls 253, total 497; new .... scholars, boys 244, girls 253, total 497; . . . • average daily attendance, 446; per cent of • . . • attendance, 96>i; No. visitors, 84; cases of .70 corporal punishment, 4; tardiness of teach ers, 0; days absence of teachers, 2>£ The total attendance is a trifle greater than for September 1895. The enrollment in the higher grades is increased as is the .06 attendance of the High School. The class of '97 of the High School will be larger than the class of’96, the present enrollment of ,04 that class being almost double that of the class of ’96 The record of tardiness is --T - very good, being the least number of cases in any month during the last two years. It is hoped that the schools will show no cases in October. .... ‘ • • • • Mean temp., 60.5; Max., temp., 96, or. 4; Min,, temp , 30, on 13; Total preetp. P. O. Address: YREKA, Siskiyou Co.. in., .81; No. of days clear 18; partly cloudy 7; cloudy 5; dates of light frost 26; killing Cal. frost 13; prevailing direction of wind, N. W. Average rainfall 15 yrs .79 in; mean temp. 15 yrs 60.4 degrees. FOB SALK BY ALL DRUGGISTS. LOCALI POLITICAL NEWS. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report The Progress of the Campaign—Cen tral Point Club Changes on Senator Wm. Colvig will be sent to the Willam ette valley and Eastern Oregon by the union comnntte to campaign for Brvan. Ex-Congressman Ben Butterworth of Ohio speaks for the republicansdn the Chautauqua tabernacle next Mondy even ing. Ex-Congressman Binger Herman will make only one speech in Jackson county for McKinley, at Medford, tomorrow (Friday) afternoon. Jos. G. Pierce, editor of the Klamath Falls Express, came in Saturday on a visit with Jackson county friends. Joe is a life-long republican, but as a free silver man he and his paper are for Bryan in this fight. Thos. Tongue spoke in Ashland Saturday evening and left the next day to give Klam ath and Lake county a thorough canvass. It would be interesting to know the kind and variety of eloquent lies be will palm off oi^the people in those remote sections. Prof. H. Allen Sborey, a Portland real estate manipulator who was fora time a promoter in southern Oregon mines, has been campaigning southern Oregon for Hanna & Co. This campaign gives pro motors out of a job something to do. Hon, Henry L. Barclay, the great free silver Republican orator, the celebrated “Black Eagle of French Prairie” will speak in Ashland Saturday, 8ept. 10th, for Bryan and free silver. Don’t fail to hear him. He is an oratorical star of the first magnitude. Some stirring eastern orators will be in the state this month for Bryan and free silver. The state committee writes that Tom Watson will be sent here by the pop- plists. Senator Tillman of South Carolina by the democrats and Judge C. C. Goodwin the editor of the Salt Lake Tribune, and M. F. Tavlor of Colorado by the free silver league. This will make some hot talk. Conductor Geo. W. Lynde, of the Ash land—Red Bluff passenger train, stays in Ashland most of the time now days engag ed in political‘Tooting." Lvnde likes his new job and is getting a splendid reputat ion at Fourth and Townsend street, and the knowing ones predict that Huntington will promote him to the position of one ot this company’s professional lobyists, to do primaries, conventions, courts and the halls of Congress. The polling of passenger trains, which are now days composed of people riding on passes, drummers and a few wealthy tour ists and people generally belonging to the privileged classes, have been reported to death in McKinley newspapers. The Portland-San Fnrncisco flyer is composed almost entirely of people iiving in Oregon. California and Washington, there are no passes on that train and the people pay their fare Conductor Ed. Huston, a gold- standard tepnblican, polled the flyer before it reached Ashland Monday and out of 68 votes p it in the hat Palmer received 1 Levering 1. Hanna 1, Blank 4, McKinley 30 and Bryan 27. Considering that the Biyan party expect to get their strength from the poor people that cannot travel, the above result shows up well. Jury lists and threshing machine crews still poll nearly a total vote for Bryan, however. DEAFNESS CURED MINUTES. IN TEN Marshfield Sun.] Dr. Darrin’a visit in Marshfield at the Blanco Hotel has been marked with good results. Not only has be been crowded with patients, but his mar- velous results achieved in the new treatment by electricity are a’ most beyond belief, Oue cure in particular is that of Mr. Lickstrom, well and favorably known in Marshfield and North Bend, where he is employed, whose card we publish below, The art of curing diseases by electricity can be classed with the other discoveries of the day, and who knows but what all diseases and ills ot the flesh will be con quered by this subtle force. It is a theme for study and reflection. also read this . M echanicsville , St. Mary County, Md. —I sold a bottle of Chamberlain’s Pain Cure sick headache, bad ■ ■ a to a man who had been suffering taste in the mouth, coated ■ I I a* Balm with rheumatism for several years. It tongue, gas In the stomach, ill made him a well man. A. J. M c G ill . distress and indigestion. Do " ■ ■ ■ Ww For sale at 5Q cents per bottle by Aah- not weaken, bat Imre tonic affect. 28 cente. wiy rm» afr» with hwci skrmMnw. DWg Cb. * A bsolutely pure JOHN CLARK RIDPATH. Our Great Historian Gives Out Bis Plat form as a Candidate For Congress. Wo want our currency system put back precisely where it was under the statute and constitution for tho first 81 years of our existence as a nation. Our statutory bimetallic system of currency was taken from us in 1873 by a process which I do not Caro to characterize in fitting terms. Now we proposo to have it back again. The restoration of our silver money to tho place it held before i» tho people’s cause, and the people in this contest are going to triumph. They aie going to triumph in the open light I of day under the clear gleam of light nud truth. The silver dollar was from of old the unit of money and account in the Unit ed States. That dollar to this hour has never been altered by tho fraction of a grain in the quantity of pure metal com posing it Every other coin, whether of gold or silver, has been altered time and again, but the silver unit never. The silver dollar wa3 the dollar of the law aud tho contract. It is to this day the dollar of the law and tho contract. To the silver unit all the rest, both gold and silver, have been conformed from our first statute of 1792 to that ill starred date when the conspiracy against our old constitutional order first declared itself. The gold eagle of the original statute and of all subsequent statutes was not made to be ten dollars, but to bo of the value of ten dollars. The half. eagle was not made to bo fivo dollars, but to be of the value of five dollars. The quarter eagle was of the value of two and a half dollars, and the double eagle was of the value of twenty dollars. Even the gold dollar of 1849, marvelous to relate, was not a dollar, but was made to be of the value cf a dollar. The subsidiary coins were all fractions of the dollar, and the dollar was of silver only. Not a single dictionary or encyclopedia in the English language before the year 1878 ever defined “dollar” in any terms other than of silver. In that year the administrators of the estate of Noah Webster, deceased, cut the plates of our standard lexicon and inserted a new definition that had become necessary in order to throw a penumbra of rationali ty around the international gold con spiracy. The way to obviate the further disas trous effects of this international gold conspiracy is to stop it. We want the system of bimetallism restored in this country. Bimetallism means the option of the debtor to pay in either of two statutory coins, according to his own convenience and according to the con tract This option freely granted, the commercial parity of the two money metals will be speedily reached, nor can such parity ever be seriously disturbed again as long as the unimpeded option of the debtor to pay in one metal or the Other shall be conceded by law and the terms of the contract. The present com mercial disparity of the two metals has been produced by the pernicious legisla tion which began 23 years ago, and which has not yet satisfied itself with the monstrous results that have flamed therefrom. What do wo proposo to accomplish by free coinage? We propose to do just this thing—viz, to break the corner on gold and reduce the exaggerated purchasing power of tliat metal to its normal stand ard. Be assured there will be no further talk of a 50 cent dollar when the com mercial parity of tho two money metals shall be reached. Every well informed person must know that the present dis parity of the two uncoined metals is but the index of the extent to which gold lias been bulled in the markets of the world. It is not an index of the extent to which raw silver has declined in its purchasing power in the markets of the world, for raw silver has not declined in its purchasing power as compared with the average of other commodities in any civilized market place of the whole globe. No man shall say the con trary and speak the truth. This great question is hot upon us. It can be kept back no longer. It is a tremendous economic question, that ought to be de cided in the court of right, reason and of fact My judgment is that tho American people, in spite of all opposition, are go ing to reclaim the light of transacting their business, and in particular of pay ing their debts according to a standard unit worth 100 cents to the dollar— neither more nor less—and that they will not accept the intolerable pro gramme which declares in fact, if not in words, that they shall henceforth trans act their business, and in particular dis charge their debts with a cornered gold dollar worth almost two for one.—John Clark Ridpath. MR. LACKSTROM’S CARB. Karl’s Clover Root Tea is a sure cure for Headache and nervous diseases. Nothing relieves so quickly. For sale by T. K. Bolton. Liat of Letter« edy for sore nipples; chanped hands, chil blains, frost bites, and chronic sore eyes. For sale by druggists at 25 cents per box. Field Marshal Count von Blumenthal, at 86, has started on a long tour of Sweden and Norway. Right Rev. Thomas Ewing Sherman, son of General William T. Sherman, has taken his final vows and is now a full fledged Jesuit. Billy Ward, a minstrel of New York city, was converted the other day in South Bend, Ind., and has decided to become an evangelist Aaron Haydon of Robinson is one of the largest poultry raisers in Maine. At present he owns 2,000 chickens and 1,000 hens. His daily average of eggs is about 700. The empress cf Japan and her ladies have taken to the steel horse and cycle on a maze of walks made on purpose for them in a secluded part cf tho im perial gardens. We are closing out over 100 boxes of Fine Stationery at cost. Don’t miss it. D. L. Minkler A Sons. CÂSTORIA Fer Infants and Children. Try Dr. Cady’s Condition Powders, they The fae- are just what a horse needs when in bad condi tialis ’.Mt tion. Tonic, blood purifier and vermifqga SlgU *- For Bais vy D bvw O». 4 I H. C. MYER + + ♦ ♦ + ♦ I POPULIST OPPORTUNITY. Now Is the Time For the People To U m the Reasoned Lever. * 4- £ ❖ ♦ < Ashland, Oregon. * V To the P ublic : While adverse to parading myself in print, I cannot let the opportunity pass without giving my experience with Dr. Darrin for the benefit of others afflicted with deafness as well as tho public generally. For years before undergoing treatment with Dr. Darrin, I bad been gradually growing deaf in one ear accompanied with ringing noises. Dr. Darrin has cured me with electricity, much to my joy and comfort. Refer to me at North Bend, Or. W m . L ackstrom . Remaining uncalled in the Ashland P. 0., for Oct. 5, 1896: Corum, Thos. Bunker, A. E* votui | Hields. Mrs. H.G. Devor, , ante Alice a. A. Courtwright, Rev. C. W. If Troubled With Rheumatism Read Persons calling for same will please say “advertised.” W. H. B bunk . P. M. This. A nnapolis , Md., Apr. 16, 1894—j have used Chamberlain’s Pain Balm for DISEASES OF THE SKIN. rheumatism and found it to be all that The intense itching and smarting inci is claimed for it. I believe it to be the best preparation for rheumatism and dent to eczema, tetter, salt-rheum, ana other deep seated muscular pains on the diseases of the skin is instantly allayed by market and cheerfully recommend it to applying Chamberlain's Eye ana Skin the public. J no . J. B rooks , dealer in Ointment. Many very bad cases have been permanently cured l>y it. It is equally boots, shoes, etc., No. 18 Main St. efficient for itching piles and a favorite rem ++<-^-5-«~1- í -+++4-+-Í-+-5--5-{-++-H.+++++++4.+++++++ í .4.+.:.. j .++++4 ++++ A Mitchell for Re-Election—Barclay Here Saturday. Central Point, Oct. 2.—The Bryan dub, with President A. S. Jacobs in the chair, met thiB evening and listened to K K. Kubli, who delivered an address on the political issues of tho dav. He occupied the platform for over half an hour and his address showed deep and earnest re search on the financial question of the times for a man so voung in years, and we predict something great for him ih the future as time may ripen his judge ment, and experience lend him that training so essential to all our efforts io life. After Mr. Kabli’a address L. E. Hen derson of Willow creek, Josephine county, took the the floor, proclaiming himself a hayseed, but proving to be a veritable warhorse campaigner capable of meet- ing any of the public speakers in the roetrum. epeaking Chairman Jacobe After the speaking called the meeting tn order for the trans action of business. R. C.Henslev offered the following resolution which yaa unan imously adopted and sent to the county papers for publication, also asking the other clubs of the state to take up the war cry and carry it on to victory : Resolved, By the Bryan club of Cen tral Point, in meeting assembled, that Whereas, The Hon. Senator John H Mitchell hasebanged bis views in regard to the manner of obtaining relief on the financial questions of the day more par ticularly in regard to obtaining the free coinage of silver; therefore we respect- hilly ask our representatives to vote for some good roan for senator who believes that the Umted States can and ought to adopt free silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 without waiting for the consent of Eng land or any other country. R. C. H f . njsley , Acting secretary of the Bryan club of Central Point. | "9 •I •I- ♦ + ♦ : ♦ ♦ ♦ ? ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ 4> ÿ + ♦ -> -> t Í HARDWARE and TINWARE 1 .... The best line.... IN SOUTHERN OREGON. ♦ + ♦ ♦ Agricultural Implements It is to be regretted that some of our old time pioneers, who for 10, 15 and * 20 years have been blazing out tho path I I I I way for just this opening that all have * striven to produce, should now consider • • • Garland Stoves and Ranges. It in their line of duty to withhold sup port from the Bryan ticket to join the Socialist Labor party. Time may prove titeni in the right. But it is a strange SAWS, GUNS, : AMMUNITION, CUTLERY. conclusion to think that to be right necessarily requires one to maintain a hopeless minority relation In a move ment In the United States laws are made ; by will of the majority as expressed at | the ballot box. For 20 years the op- i ponents of a gold basiB plutocracy have ' centered their fire and directed their energies under a common banner apart from both tho old parties. We have X striven to force a combination of the monopoly forces under one leadership. In this tho present campaign marks our success. To now withdraw at the cru cial time when every vote is required to test the stability of free institutions is to certify a preference for continua tion of oppressive rule and gives the lie to professed efforts to culminate in vic tory the desires for which we have been laboring. We are accustomed to quoting Lin coln as a worthy example. Let all such procure the September number of Mc Clure’s Magazine from auy newsstand and read Lincoln’s great speech deliv 7 M ain S treet , O pposite P laza . ered at Bloomington, Ills., May 29, 1856, before the first convention of the ZP-A.IJSTTS JP-A-USTTIElZEdS’ TOOLS, Republican party in that state. TI as WALL PAPER. Q-JLJLSS. ETC. speech lias never before been reported. B uilding P apers , W rapping P apers and T wines . ARTISTS' MATERIALS. Compare utterances with those of our young leader today. There was more compromise in Lincoln’s utterances than in tho speeches made each day by Mr. Bryan. Lincoln boldly announced it not the purpose of the Republican party to interfere where slavery was already an ! “CUPIDEHS- institution, but merely to prevent its ex • f J This great Vegetatili tension into free territories. Did the *» « t itailxer.tbeprescrh» “ f?n‘OUH French p'.yaidan, will quickly cure you vou oi all Her i:er —‘“‘ mu tly - ii cure Republican party in elevating him to vons or *4is*’ixscs of t&ic £c>it*r«xtivc ctkhiim «« f <>ci «Hall vr«> > Iasoniuiu, falnsln the Back, Seminal JjuA, Neri^n.'DeUuTv tho presidency gain more or less than i^pU'fcUuflljjss to Marry, Exhausting Drei.,2 VariXx^J "xl coi.stiu-.tlon. Itttnps all losses hr <lay or night Prevents z- its original objects? Which It not checked lands co Hpertnatorrh<&*Snd The People’s Party has forced one BEFORE aho Ar. EH ir «'VHinKNKcle.msealheUve?, tho t-idnejsand tho urinary organa nf nil iinnurill.e-A. * great party to cast its Jonahs overboard. CUPIDENE strengthens and restores small weak organs. _ TI1O r< ason sufferers ure not cu.eJ by l.'.g-tors Is because ninety ner cent are trouhled «vlth We are taking for granted the majority l*r»at at ■ t ia. C UI I DENE Is the only known rentedy to cure whliout nn operation tnuo testiin-. jt- of that parly are honest and in line a % A written gu-rantee given and money returned if six boxes does not toffeet a lirmaneutcurw box,six forfo.O'j, by mall, bend for FliEKcircularand testimonials. pvrruuu<.in,<.ur« with (lie demands as laid down in their Address DAVOL MEDICINE CO., P. O. Box 207«, San Francisco, ‘TaL platform as tho Populists are who for FOR SALE BY E. A. SHERWIN. mulated tho St. Louis platform. The forces in the Democratic ranks who are striving to hold Sewall on the ticket are no more in earnest for success and yet quite as much as are the Populists who, so hardened to minority service, cannot longer train with their party and help seal the vantage gained by years of struggle and sacrifice. It is not the easiest task in times like these under conditions not of our own shaping to be consistent. Nor liavo we yet to learn wherein even the sacred Scriptures teach consistency as a rule in life. Had we the shaping of environments, consistent practice would bo more possible. The Free Soil party did not elect a president. The antislavery and liberty parties were only factors in the growth of tho party of Lincoln. Under the arrangements made to suit existing ballot laws in the different states earnest Populists can maintain Cieir party organization aud hold their machinery in readiness for whatever •mergency the future has in 6tore. This is a year when men should be governed by reason and patriotism. We condemn selfishness in our neighbor, yet the unselfishness that some are betray ing proclaims a willingness, yea, a de sire, to trudge along another 4, 8, yes, 20 years more, in fact says we don’t want auy reform; we want sim Blank Forms, ply to exercise the prerogatives of free citizenship and kick. For one, we have Mining Locations, been on the kick since years before our Always Kept in Stock. majority—kicking for an opportunity to kick out the devils whose operations in law tell your boy and my boy he has no business on this earth. There is an opening now to give them a knockout kick. To that point we ere husbanding ELY’S our reserve forces and will not throw DR. JORDAN & CO.’S down a Populist lever either just at the time it is seasoned for the te6t to go GREAT MUSEUM OF ANATOMY CREAM BALM 6prout a new one and wait for it to ma lOi 1 Market St., Kan FraucUco is quickly’ absorbed. ture.—Parkersburg (W. Va.) Tribune. .Between 6th and 7th Sts.) J MINERS’ SUPPLIES ASHLAND MILLS ÇÔÜRÏ PATENT ÏTLÔÜR VIRGIN & C©., PROP’S. H. S. EVANS, A.SHLAND-OE PAINTING. PAPERING, ETC. i M80B RESTORED Job Printing Prompt Work and Bottom Prices Mail Orders a Specialty Le£aJ Blanks CATARRH Cleveland and Carlisle« Cleanses the Nasa' Passages, A 11 a ys Pain and Intlamnia- tion, Heals the Sores Protects the Mem Private Office—same Building brane from addition iO51 Market Street— Diseases ot men*, al cold. Restore- stricture, loss ot manhood, diseases of the skin the senses of Task and kidneys quickly cured without the use of mer and Smell. Give cury. Treatment personally or by letter. Sene Relief at once, and fcrbook. z» it will cure. Long established and reliable piactitioners A particle is ap plied directly into the nostrils and is agreeable. Price 50 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS,56 Warren St., N. Y. Go and learn how wonderfully you are mode and how to avoid aiekness and disease. Museum enlarged with thousands of new objects. Admis sion 25 eta. The telegram of Mr. Cleveland to the bondocrats of Louisville on the occasion of the notification of tho bolters that they had been nominated was most nat ural. Mr. Cleveland during liis last ad ministration has been so busy in bond deals that it is natural he should mis take bondocrats for Democrats. But it is a little odd that Mr. Carlisle in his communication should call the goldbug bondocrats “the old fashioned Demo crats,” when he declared in 1878 that this bondocratio “conspiracy which seems to have been formed here and in Europe to destroy by legislation and otherwise from three-sevenths to one- half of the metallic money of the world is the most gigantic crime of this or any other age. ” Will Carlisle have the Baine faith in Cleveland after the 4th of March as he now has if he does not get a fat place in New York for his servicee Water of any temperature desirea Natural Temperature 85 deg’s. i as secretary? It is to be hoped that the Morgans and the Belmonts will retain both Cleveland and Carlisle as long as TV DRUK THE WATER IS A TOIIC Residence Lots for sale In they live for their faithful service to Being Sulphuric and Alkaline it eradicates Pokegama, on reasonable them.—Silver Knight fungi and animalcules, and neutral izing and correcting all acidi terms. Lots sold on the in What Lincoln Feared. ties it promotes a normal and stallment plan. healthful condition in every At the close of the war the prophetic part of the system. soul of Lincoln expressed itself in a let lso 2,000 acres of choie ter to a friend in Illinois thus: “Yes, Sugar and Yellow Pine Land for sale on the Klamath River. Terms made to SWIMMING RINK. we may well rejoice that this cruel war suit on application. Address, has come to a close. The best blood of .nclosed and covered, the same medics CHA8. COLE, the flower of American youth has been water, always clean, for the springs run a freely offered on our country’s altar in Pokegama, 8iskiyou Co. Cal, heavy volume- more than twelve hun order that our nation might live. But I dred gallons per hour. see in the near future a crisis arising that unnerves me and causes me to trou i'ou may dive and swim and have more fun than “anybody”—come out as “fine ble for the welfare of my country. As a as silk” and “white as wool”—rejuven result of the war corporations have been ated and happy. enthroned and an era of corruption in Located on the high places will follow. The money power of this country will endeavor to HELMAN LAND, HALF A MILE prolong its reign by working on the NORTH OF THE PLAZA. prejudices of the people until this re public will bo destroyed. God grant that my fears may prove groundless. ” COLD ' n HEAD ASHLAND POKEGAMA BATHING 150 Choice A j* job porting« BtrourtlUfirt. Pittprietfer RECORD OFFICE.