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About The Ashland advertiser. (Ashland, Or.) 1893-1898 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1896)
The Ashland Advertiser. Published Every Wednesday. flonarch of the Amateurs. E ditor , . . P ublisher , P roprietor . — TERMS. — Subscription, One Year,.................. $.50. “ Six Months,.................. 25. Sample copies mailed freely. Advertising rates, Made known upon Discounts,.......... application. Terms to Agents, t^T’All ads., notices, etc , when not paid in advance, run until ordered out. Entered at the post-office at Ashland, Oregon, as second-class matter. P. FISHER, NEWSPAPER AIK vertising Agent, 21 Merchant’s Exchange, San Francisco, is our author ized agent. The A dvertiser is kept on file in his office. T The “ADVERTISER” han the Largest Circulation of any Paper of its Class. ASHLAND,............WEDNESDAY, JAN. 22, 1890. EDITORIAL. If there ’s a hole in a* your coats, I rede ye tent it ; A chiel ’s amang ye takin’ notes, And faith he ’ll prent it. —B urns . Through no fault of ours, there are no Normal School Notes this week. The Manchester, Iowa, Herald, “America’s Smallest Weekly,” appeared in new' dress last week.—A great im provement. Among our best amateur exchanges we receive regularly is T he Asm. a nd A dvertiser , of Ashland, Ore. This W’eek it appears in an enlarged form and overflowing with interesting reading matter. The A dvertiser is a model amateur paper and the press w’ork is an excellent example of fine printing.— Sharon, (Pa.,) Star. Outrageous in the extreme was the conduct of Conductor Streit of the Southern Pacific R. R. Company tow’ard S. P. Hart, a passenger accused of hav ing a scalped ticket. Had Mr. Hart’s ticket been a scalped one, the case would stand in a different light, but the statements of other passengers in the same car are to the effect that the ticket was a good one, and that Mr. Hart re wrote his signature on the face of it for ’ comparison by the conductor, but the conductor would not listen to reason. Although the R. R. Co. is desirous of making a cash settlement, Mr. Hart will undoubtedly receive more satisfac tion by suing the Company for heavy damages. Central Point Pointers. LOCAL SQUIBS. Harry Harvey, brother of John Har Save your dimes for Jan. 25th. vey now attending the Normal School at Fish every Friday at Poley & Gris Ashland, was quite badly hurt last Sat wold ’s. urday while playing at foot ball. Our meetings at the different churches Mrs. W. P. Parsons is having the Blue are taking on quite a different aspect as Front fitted out for the reception of a to rudeness under the surveilance of our bakery and restaurant. new’ policeman, L. C. Rodenberger. For manzanita w ork, call at Sherwin’s On January 18, the legal voters of the Pharmacy. • • . school district met and voted a tax of Remember the annual B Class enter seven mills to pay off the indebtedness of the district. They also voted to dis tainment, which will be given January continue the school after the first of 25, in the Opera House. . March until Fall. The pay car passed through Ashland Sunday. It was quite a surprise, and sadly so, w’hen, from his pulpit on Sunday eve Emil Peil, doctor of sick plows, etc. ning, we w’ere informed that our worthy The Bellview’ School District, No. 73, pastor, Rev. J. Merley, would close his ministerial services among us. We re I voted a four mills tax at their meeting gret very much to have it so, but, being held last Saturday. obliged to take charge of his farm near C3j~Rememl»er us for Job Printing. Medford compels him to do so. May Tambourine Drills, Dialogues, Essays, prosperity, both temporal and spiritual, Orations, Recitations, etc., etc., at the be his wheree’er he goes. B Class entertainment, January 25. On Sunday morning the new church Last Monday evening a large number bell sent forth its peals of gladness, re of people attended the lecture by Hon. minding us of the regular morning ser vice. And we would say to the young G. M. Irwin. Supt. Public Instruction, people and all w ho assisted in the pur in Ganiards Oj»era House. The lecture chase of this memorable gift that while j was a g«>od one and enjoyed by all. its tones are reverberating from sabbath Monroe Doctrine illustrated Jan. 25th. to sabbath, and we hear the echo and Leave your orders for rye flour at the re-echo of its welcome sound, let us be come oblivious to all that has been said Depot Grocery. and done in the past, and, as we hear P.M., W. II. Brunk has had a desk and this church bell ringing, may it be as a conveniences for writing placed in the beacon to guide us in the right and bet ‘ lobby of the post office for the use of the ter way. “M.” public. A veiy useful addition. Go to Klum A Crisler, Central Mar W. c. T. U. SPARKS. ket, for clean, pure pork made entirely j on cooked feed. Be a woman ! on to duty!. See Emil Peil alunit repairing that Raise the world iron, all that’s low; wagon. Place high in the social heaven Republican Club meeting has been Virtue’s fair and radiant .bow’; , called to meet Friday night at 8:00 Lend thy influence to each effort That shall raise our nature human ; o’clock. There is important business to I come before the meeting. Be not fashion’8 gilded lady,— C. II. Gillette, Sec. Rep. Club. Be a brave, whole-souled, true wo man. E dward B rooks . Why pay two dollars a year for your local news when you ran get the same A Fisherman’s Story. news a whole day earlier for only fifty In a fisherman’s hut, in the extreme cents a year. Economize by subscribing northeast of Scotland, is the picture of for the A dvertiser . our Savior, and the fisherman thus tells its story:—“I w’as ’way down with the I Do you know’ what will happen drink,” he said, “when one night I W’ent Jan. 25th? into a ‘public,’ and there hung this pic- j Klum and Crisler our enterprising ture. I was sober then, and I said to butchers have butchered this season, 600 the bartender: ‘Sell me that picture; this is no place for the Savior.’ I gave hogs, of an average weight of 260 pounds him all the money I had for it and took each; the average price paid w as three it home. Then as I looked at it the cents a pound on foot. w’ords of my mother came back to me. i A. E. Hildreth, Buel Hildreth. Win I dropped on my knees and cried, ‘O Radcliffe, H. M. Hicksand Roy Hargrove Lord Jesus, will you pick me up again and take me out of all my sin?’ ” No went over to the mine of Hicks. May and such prayer is ever unanswered. To Hicks last Sunday to commence laying day that fisherman is the grandest man ! pipe to the mine the first of the week. in that little Scotch village. He was As soon as the pipe is laid, a force of asked if he had no struggle to give up about tw’elve men will be employed to liquor. Such a look of exaultation came work the mine. L.V. May is now’ at the mine, as stated over his face as he answered: “When in a previous issue of the A dvertiser . such a Savior comes into the heart He | takes the love of drink right out of it.” A special meeting of the City Council was held last Monday night. All pres MARRIED. ent except D. F. Fox. A ten mills tax was voted,as follows: FRAZIER—W’ARTH EN. Street fund,.............................................. 2 mills In Montague, California, Sunday, Jan General“ .................................... 3 “ - uary 19, 1896, in the Frazier Hotel, Mr. Water “ 5 “ Geo. Frazier and Miss Maud Warthen, formerly of Ashland. I Total, 10 mills.