The Ashland advertiser. (Ashland, Or.) 1893-1898, July 22, 1896, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    The Ashland Advertiser.
Published Every Wednesday.
Honarch of the Amateurs.
Co. D, O. N. Q.
Company Order No. 18.
All members of Co. D, O. N. G., are
hereby ordered to report at the Armory
next Monday, July 27, at 8:00 p . m ., for
SPECIAL DRILL.
— TERMS. —
Fines and penalties for non-attendance
will be rigidly enforced.
J.L. M ay ,
Captain Commanding.
Subscription, One Year,................. $.50.
“
Six Months................... 25.
Sample copies mailed freely.
LOCAL SQL'IBS.
Advertising rates, Made known upon
Virgin’s Granulated Patent Flour—
Discounts,..........
application.
seldom equalled ; never excelled.
Terms to Agents,
B orn .—In Ashland, Thursday, July
t^“All ads., notices, etc., when not 16, 1896, to Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hooper,
paid in advance, run until ordered out. a daughter.
—Clarence Clements, a Normal stu­
dent, will leave for his home in Drain on
this evening’s train.
The attendance at the minstrel show
last Thursday evening was very small,
most people preferring to attend the
Chautauqua lecture.
While working on the road, Edward
Spencer and the Hum brothers cut out
i 136 trees that had fallen across the road
between Ashland ami Pelican Bav.
•»
The first water melons shipped into
Ashland this year are for sale at Bert
1 Sayles’ candy store.
George W. Pennebaker, of the “Bee
Hive,” is having a front addition built
onto his residence on Terrace street.
George Riggs is doing the work.
Blackberries are now coining into
market. There is an unusually large
crop.
Since the Chautauqua Assembly is
over, people are leaving for the moun­
tains and summer resorts to remain
during the hot weather. Parties are
almost daily leaving Ashland.
TheG.A. R. Reunion and Encamp­
ment is to l>3 held in Ashland August
11-17, and extensive preparations will
make it the grandest one yet held in
Southern Oregon. A large streamer has
been suspended aliove the plaza an­
nouncing the event. The program will
consist of sham battles, court martinis,
camp fires, political speeches, literary
entertainments.
Tents, horse feed,
straw and coffee will be furnished to all
R. A. R’s. “Come early to avoid the
rush.”
If you don’t read the A dvertiser , you
Entered at the post-office at Ashland,
don’t get half the news. Subscribe.
Oregon, as second-class matter.
L arson is the only first-class photo­
1 P. FISHER, NEWSPAPER AD-
grapher
in Southern Oregon. He makes
vertising Agent, 21 Merchant’s
Exchange. San Francisco, is our author­ the platino and the porcelain picture.
ized agent. The A dvertiser is kept on
The rifle range of Co. D, O. N. G., is
file in his office.
now in condition for use, and target
practice will be commenced next week.
The “ADVERTISER” has the Largest Circulation
of any Amateur Newspaper in the World.
Millfeed $12.50 per ton, wholesale;
$14.00
per ton, retail, at Ashland Mills.
ASHLAND,............WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1896
Virgil Wright and Mr. Cary spent the
latter part of last week on a fishing trip
W. C. T. U. Work.
along Jenny creek. They remembered
1
A dvertiser with a nice string of the
A visitor, in taking in the entire edu­ ‘ the
•speckled beauties.”
cational work of the Chautauqua Assem­
wood for sale. Leave orders at
bly just closed, would be impressed with | the Hard
ADVEHirisR office.
the fact that not least among the educa­
Smoke is very dense about Ashland at
tional forces was the W. C. T. U. i present.
The intensity of the heat from
School of Method, treating as it did of the sun is'somewhat modified by ic.
OF GENERAL INTEREST.
its six divisions of work—organization,
Last Friday night, the rim of the front
*
preventive, evangelistic, educational, wheel of Clif. Payne’s bicycle w as brok- i Peter Maher, who is to meet Chovnski
social, legal—showing most clearly that en by a collision with ClarenceClements’ in the prize ring, arrived in San Fran­
the temperance movement of to-day is wheel. The accident occurred on the cisco Saturday night for training.
a great, wide, deep movement, centering boulevard.
Cornelius Vanderbilt, one of the
Don
’
t
forget
to
call
around
when
you
in temperance and reaching out into
world’s wealthiest men, is slowly recov­
want
anything
in
the
Job
Printing
line.
ering
from his recent severe illness.
ever wider and wider circles until it has We turn out, without exception , the
reached every avenue of life, and the best work in the city at the lowest price, i Battery A, Company A and the First
Regiment Band will go into voluntary
great do-every-thing policy of the W.C.
The
wreck
of
engine
No.
14,
that
was
T. U. is a natural outgrowth of this im­ burned in Portland some time ago, was j encampment at Clatsop about August 4.
Phil Sheridan, one of the most noted
portant fact. Scientific cookery, hered­ ! taken through Ashland last Saturday to
trotting
horses in this country, died at
ity, prenatal influences, the labor ques­ the 8. P. machine shops at Sacramento.
Racine, Wisconsin, last Friday night.
tion and the awakened woman are all This was one of the oldest locomotives The world’s record of trotting hitched to
problems embraced in the temperance I on the O. & C. lines.
a sleigh—2:26—was made by Sheridan.
movement of to-day. This was all en­
L arson makes Cabinets for $3.00 per
John F. Stover, of the Stearns Racing
dozen,
larged upon and interestingly shown by
Team, and the great pacing stallion,
Chehalis, (2:04^) are to meet in a con­
forcible words and blackboard diagrams
The Normal summer school opened test
on the Irvington Park
by the instructor, Mrs. Additon, whose yesterday in the W. C. T. U. rooms track of in speed
Portland
next Saturday, July
devotion and enthusiasm is assurance across the hall from the A dvertiser 25. The stakes are five hundred dollars
office, with an attendance of eight pupils : a side.
that success must ultimately crown her —
Florence Dodge, Eva and Georgia
efforts. Her zeal is an inspiration to Jacobs, Mrs. Henry, Mrs. Sauve, Jer­
other women loyal to the white ribbon. ome Fitzgerald, Walter Parsons and Special to the A dvertiser .
S an F rancisco , July 19.—British ship
Herbert McCarthy. The enrollment is
R eporter .
“Blairmore,” that capsized in this har­
increasing.
bor last April, was successfully put upon
A song with the title, “There’s a Sigh
According to a recent decision of the an even keel and docked yesterday.
fire
and water committee of the City of The three bodies that went down with
in the Heart,” was sent by a young man
to a young lady; but the paper fell into Ashland, the people residing west and her were recovered.
north of Ashland creek are entitled to
the hands of the girl’s father, a very un­ use the water from the city water mains Special to the A dvertiser .
sentimental physician, who exclaimed: for sprinkling or irrigation purposes on
S an F rancisco , July 19.—The steamer
“What unscientific rubbish is this? Monday, Wednesday and Friday of each “Columbia,” that went ashore a few
week, and people residing east and miles down the coast last Tuesday in a
Who ever heard of such a case?”
south of Ashland creek may use city
fog, is a total wreck. She is
He wrote on the outside: “Mistaken water for like purposes on Tuesday, dense
pounding hard on the rocks. Every­
diagnosis: no sigh in the heart possible. Thursday and Saturday only of each thing movable on her has been removed
Sighs relate almost entirely to the li^pga week. Any violation of the regulations to tugs and brought to this city. It is
is punishable by forfeiture of the right expected that she will go to pieces when
and diaphram.”—Youth’s Companion.
to use the water.
rough weather sets in.