Image provided by: YMCA of Ashland; Ashland, OR
About The Ashland advertiser. (Ashland, Or.) 1893-1898 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1896)
The Ashland Advertiser. Published Every Wednesday, First Class Accom in odat ions. + + + rionarch of the Amateurs. 11 Second E ditor , . . P ublisher . P roprietor . — TERMS. — Subscription. One Year................... $.50. “ Six Months, ................. 25. Sample copies mailed freely. Advertising rates,i vr„ , , _ Discounts, ....... J Made ''«own upon Terms to Agents,) applieatmn. NO Class 11 Prices. + + C hinese E mployed . $1.00 a Day —- house Ran"e Rouse, Prop’r. _______ 7 Boarding by the Day, Week, or Month. MEALÔ 25 CENTS. CENTRALLY LOCATED. e e o q EKESH BREAD. FREE BUS TO AND FROM ALL TRAINS. OF"A11 ads., notices, etc., when not paid in advance, run until ordered out. Entered at the post-office at Ashland. Oregon, as second-class matter. LOCAL SOI IBS. If you don’t read the A dvertiser , you P. FISHER, NEWSPAPER AD- don’t get half the news. Subscrilie. vertising Agent, 21 Merchant’s Exchange, San Francisco, is our author D ied —At his home near Talent, Friday evening, October 2, 1896, Mr. J. C. ized agent. The A dvertiser is kept on Wilson, aged <5 years and 2 months. file in his office. Funeral services were held in the M. The “ADVERTISER” has the Largest UirculntLni E.church, of Ashland, Sunday afternoon, of any Amateur Newspaper in the World. Oct. 4, at 3 o’clock. Interment in Har- gadine cemetery. The deceased was ASHLAND,................WBDNKBDAY, OCT. 7. 1896 formerly a resident of Ashland. He leaves a wife, two sons, ami a daughter. His death was the result of a facial cancer. Fresh creamery butter at Wm. Hev ener’s Grocery. jEfiF*Remember us for J ob P rinting . A tramp, by the name of John Finlay, met with a very severe accident last Dr. Darrin, the celebrated specialist, Sunday as the south-bound passenger train was leaving the Ashlaml station. arrived in Ashland on Sunday and has In trying to perform the “break-beam taken rooms at Hotel Oregon. The first act,” ha fell with his right hand upon patient came immediately, and, as will the rail. The train passed over it. The be seen by the following testimonial was hand was amputated at the wrist Sun day by Drs. Parsons ami Songer. The afflicted with a stubborn chronic ail injured man is now’ staying at the Ash ment, which was immediately cured. land House. Mr. McCrary has resided in Jackson Hard wood for sale. Leave orders at ville a number of years ami no one in the A dvertise office. this country will doubt his testimony. Try the Ashland House for a good square meal. J acksonville , O re ., Sept. 21, 1895. Hon.Thos. H. Tongue, congressman To Whom it May Concern : elect, addressed a large turnout of the I wish to state to the public that Dr. citizens of Ashland in the Chautauqua Darrin,of Medford, cured me of deafness building last Saturday evening. His statements were brief ami to the point, of many years’ standing. My deafness and his presentation of the condition of was accompanied by a disagreeable ring the money question was somewhat in ing noise in my ears. I was the first pa advance of those presented by any tient to visit Dr. Darrin upon his arrival speaker of previous (late in this pface. in Medford and am happy to say that he FOR RENT.—A piano. Inquire at the A Hi land House. cured me before I left ljis office. I have George Potter, a local scrapper of no resided in Jacksonville ten years and mean reputation, was arrested Sunday will gladly tell anyone of my restoration evening by Marshal Jones as the result to hearing. I am a poor man and was of a fistic set-to with Herbert High. treated free by the doctor, excepting for We understand that young Potter com menced the trouble, and came out second medicine. A. F. M c C rary . best. A fine of live dollars was iin}wised by City Recorder Mil ton Berry. After Dr. Darrin, the celebrated specialist, one day’s confinement, George paid the will be at the Hotel Oregon, Ashland, remaining three dollars of his fine, ami Oct. 3 to 17 for the treatment of all was released. Herbert High also was chronic ailments. Consultation free and fined a like sum, which he paid. This is young Potter’s third or fourth the poor treated without charge except offense, ami the reform school stares for medicine. him in the face. ------------- —------ Everything to suit the traveler, at the Try Hevener’s fresh Eastern Sorghum , Ashlaml House. First class accommo 65 cents a gallon. dations. *» 1, 1)1?. DARRIN ARRIVES His Great Reputation is Fully Sustained. Awful Railroad Accident. Yesterday morning about six o’clock, a fatal accident occurred on the S. P. railroad between Roseburg and Green’s flag station. Conductor Wall, of the south bound passenger No. 16, having foigotten his tickets at Roseburg, stop- }w.*d his train at Green’s station and de taching the engine, started back un announced to Roseburg. An engine had been sent with the tickets from Roseburg to overtake the train. Each of the engineeis of the two engines was ignorant of the approach of the other, and a dense tog prevailing, neither was seen in time to reverse action. The en gines collided, killing t wo men and in juring four others. KILLED. Fireman McGonigal, Brakeman Toy. BADLY INJURED. Engineer Porter, Fireman Happersett. NOT BADLY HURT. Engineer Conductors McCully, Wall and Lohr. The accident delayed the train five hours and twenty minutes. E ditor A dvertiser , Sir:—I desire to use a little space to correct some errors which have been before the public since Sept. 17, when the “Valley Record” published an item under the head of “Salcon Men Indict ed,” in which the reference to my rela tion to the Salvation Army is mislead ing. It is construed to blame the army for my action. I have had no connec tion with that organization for several months, and never had any official rela tion thereto. The article implies that “they” (Mr. Clayton and myself) asked for whiskev to cure a cold, which is a false statement. The statement that only a part of the liquor was paid for is also false: we paid for all we obtained, and received no money back. My part in the matter was wholly unpremeditat ed, and was prompted by the local W. C. T. U., who made the complaint against the sab win men for not observ ing the law to close saloons on Sunday. My appearance before the grand jury was as a witness only. “With charity for all and malice toward none,” I make this statement to place the responsibil ity of the action in question where it belongs. S. H aworth , Ashland, Oregon, Oct. 6, 1996. Never was a more grievous wrong «one the farmers of our country than that so u>-Justly inflicted during the past three years upon the wool growers. Although among our most useful citizens, their in terests have been practically destroyed. —McKinley’s letter of acceptance.