Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, January 01, 1886, Image 2

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    THE
ASHLAND
TIDINGS
THE YEAR THAT IS ENDED.
NEGLECTED BY THE STATE.
The following from our exchanges of
This week the T idings is issued oh
New Year's day, that milestone upon the Lake and Klamath counties will show
• highway of time, where each traveler is that the people in that portion of our
EDITORIAL NOTES AND NEWS.
prone to pause for a retrospective glance common-wealth are, as the T idings stated
President Grevy, of France, has been at the scenes which he has left behind not long since, somewhat resentful of the
re-elected.
forever, and, when he lias taken a linger­ apparent neglect with which they are
« ♦ c-
There are now 428 inmates at the Ore­ ing look at thesu. to turn his gaze to the treated by the metropolis of the state.
front and strive to pierce the mists of fu­ They pay taxes in Oregon, and are in­
gon insane asylum.
turity that hang about the morning of cluded within the geographical limits of
The Yaquina Mail has suspended pub­ the new year. Pausing in its weekly la­ the state, but in every other way will soon
lication, for lack of patronage.
bor of news gathering, the T idings will become more a part of California than of
take a brief review of the year which Oregon, unless everything possible be
A citrus fruit exhibition will be held
ended yesterday, so far as its impress done to attract their commercial interests
at Sacramento from Jan. 11th to the
upon the little circle oi our own com­ toward the north :
16th.
munity is concerned.
» — — —
In the Klamath Star of last week is an
Following the bustling, prosperous excellent article upon the recent annual
Lake county paid $3,347.63 state taxes
last year, and will pay $3,666.37 this period of railroad building in our valley, report of Donald Macleay, president of
i the year was expected to be one of dull­ the Portland Board of Trade. Comment­
year.
ness and depression in comparison, and ing upon his description of the resources
The accounts of Ben Buttler as treas when the general stagnation of business of different parts of the state and their
I
urer of the national soldiers' homo arc in the country, the low price of staple relation to the trado of Portland, the
said to be $220,000 short. Ben will ex- agricultural products in Oregon and the
Star says:
plain.
(
crop shoitage in our own valley all came
We wonder that Klamath county,
----------
It is rumored in Jackson county that together upon the heels of the sudden especially the country in and around
Link ville, w as not alluded to in Mr.
the mail service between New York and withdrawal of the railroad building stim­ Macleay's able address. Klamath cottn-
Philadelphia is to be cut down to a tri- ulus, it was feared there would be ‘‘hard ty is certainly deserving of mention, if no
times” in reality in Jackson county. To more, for it is certainly a portion of Ore­
weekly.
some
extent the fear has been realized. gon if its mail service has been reduced
The New York Herald, in a long edito­ i Money is sciyce, and economy is general, to a tri weekly. Mr. Macleay says; “I
rial, declares that the complete failure but we do not know “hard times'' here am pleased to say that the wagon road to
of DeLesseps' Panama canal is no longer such as the people of some parts of Ameri­ the Cœur d' Alette mines has been com­
pleted,” and “it was built mainly by the
doubted.
ca have experienced. Improvements of subscriptions of Portland merchants,”
which h;is had a beneficial effect in in-
The land office has decided that the all kinds have continued during the year. i creasing the trade with Portland from
Northern Pacific land claims to a hundred Towns and villages in all parts of the val­ that district. It may be possible that
miles in Washington territory are not ley have new buildings and new inhabi­ | tho trade front that district is of greater
good. This decision will throw ojien two tants to place to the credit of 1885. value to Portland than is the trade of
, Klamath county with her thousands of
and a half million acres to settlement. Farms have been improved and new iI acres of arable land, with her flocks and
lands brought into cultivation. The herds of a thousand hills, with the im­
Clarence R. Greathouse, who for the scarcity of money, in comparison with mense amount of trade that must have
past two years has been editorial and the year before, has not been of sufficient an outlet somewhere. If the board of
business manager of the San Francisco consequence to check the steady develop­ trade had only put a few hundred dollars
Examiner, has retired from the ranks of ment <>f which these things are evidence. on the road from Ashland to Linkville,
journalism and resumed the practice of And even the Sentinel's gloomy forebod­ a few years ago, it might have been the
I means of binding forever the entire trade
law.
ing of a decline in the value of real es- . of southeastern Oregon io Portland, the
♦
Dynamite circles in Jersey City, N. J., tatehasbeendispelled, the assessment roll, ■ point where it rightfully belongs. Will
i the board of trade and merchants of Port-
are excited over the presence in that city the Sentinel's own pet gauge, having per­ | land stand idly by and see the California
versely
gone
up,
instead
of
falling
as
of Capt. Phelan, who, it is claimed, went
I & • >regon railroad completed before a
thither from Kansas City with the avowed had been predicted.
move is made to secure tho immense
The year past is the first in which the I trade of Klamath county? Will the board
purpose of killing O’Donovan Rossa and
exportation of grain from our valley has of trade, the merchants, bankers and
Dick Short.
figured to any extent in the balance sheet business men of Portland, as well as those
who have an interest in Oregon, not make
E. M. Roberts, a New York theatrical
of the community trade. It marks the some move this way?
manager who died last week, held a
beginning of the railroad era and will re­
[Lakeview Examiner J
mirror in his hand and watched the
lieve the farmer’s mind of the fear that
Lake
county,
is placed on the map,
changes in his face as death approached,
the market may be glutted by a big crop and is in name only, as a part of Oregon.
until at his hut gasp the mirror dropj>ed
and large acreage of wheat in this valley. Our county seems to have no interest in
from his hand.
But it is to be hoped the farmers here common with the balance of the state.
Judges Sawyer and Deady decided the will be able before many years to do bet­ Her metropolis is situated over 500 miles
case of Sharon vs. Hill in the U. S. dis­ ter than raising wheat to ship to Port­ distal.t, and it is a long and tedious
journey for any person who is obliged to
trict court of California against Sarah land.
travel tho road. We get three mails a
Althea last Saturday. The court ex­ i
Within the past twelvemonth, there week from Portland, and six a week
pressed the opinion that the signature has been aroused in Jackson county, a from San Francisco. Our merchants buy
to the marriage contract between Sharon wide-spread interest in the development thousands of dollars worth of goods from
the Golden Gate, and not a dollar's worth
and M iss Hill was a forgery.
of quartz mining property. Gathering from Portland. Like county’s immense
------- ««»
-----------
The Albany Democrat has strong headway, week by week, it has finally i amount of wool goes via San Francisco,
and Portland does not handle a $’s worth
doubts of the constitutionality of the reached the condition of an incipient i of our stock. As we said before, we have
i
registry law, but since the courts might mining boom of the regulation, exciting, nothing in common with the balance of
rule that registration is a mere incidental fascinating character familiar to people the state. If we want any favors or con­
requirement to carry out the provisions who have been in the large mining camps veniences, we look to the metropolis of
California for it. The city of Portland
of the constitution it advises all voters to t that have become famous in the history contains too many moss-backs; too many
of the Pacific Coast. What proportions
register when the time comes.
men that are blind to their own interests.
the boom will reach, it is yet too early to They have loo many men that want re­
The silver question is up|>crinost now i predict with any accuracy—the fever has turns from their investments fifteen min­
in the minds of people interested in cur i just begun to assume the form of an epi- utes after they have put their money into
rent politics. The Eastern states want ; demic. Some experienced miners ex­ an enterprise. They are blind to the
silver coinage stopped; the West and press the opinion that Jackson county wants of many portions of the state.
They can see nothing in the act of assist­
South want more silver coined. The will, within a shoit time, be one of the ing portions of their own territory to
difference between the President and a best mining regions on the coast. This better transportation ur mail facilities.
There are many cities in the world that
large portion of his party on this question may be simply a wild, random predic­
is watched with much solicitude by tion, but it is nevertheless true that the have not had one tenth the advantages
that Portland has, and still to-day, they
frien<U of ♦
«<1n»ini,4r->fir>n
li,,.,>o-l
,.f t,ro«<>ectin<* -'I-
’■ *ïfê*éir
’ ■ —
1.0'
a 1;
-,
.■e has developed a number of very trade, ami better facilities for conducting
Seer«?
i promising ledges, the safest prospects business with the interior towns.
V| ,
s warfare upon the land and cat-
We wish that it were not so. We had
tle^monopolies of the middle plains who J showing, upon assay, from 815 to $75 hoped that ere this, we would not be de­
I per ton in lodes of ample width. These pendent on another state, for all our mar­
who are undertaking to retain unlawful
I ledges bid fair to soon dispel the wide- kets. We pay state taxes, and are de­
¡Hissession <>f public lands for their cat­
I spread impression that all the quartz scribed on the map as a part of Oregon.
tle ranges. Civil and criminal proceed­
leads of Southern Oregon are pockety, That is all our citizenship amotin’s to.
ings will be instituted against many firms
We might as well be located on the Fiji Is­
and therefore slippery property for in- lands, so for as Oregon benefits us.
in Kansas, Nebraska, Dakota, Colorado,
i vestors. Let the plucky miners now at
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming.
Bill- Introduced by Hermann.
I work once convince the capitalists of the
Tho Benton Leader has been pur­ mining centers that Southern Oregon has
When the toll call of states in the
chased by the Oregon Pacific railroad, quartz leads which will yield good returns House of Representatives reaches Oregon,
and will, we understand, still retain its from a uniform, fair-grade rock, and we which will probably be soon after Con­
political character and place of publica­ shall soon hear the roar of stamp nulls in gress re-assetubles next week, Represent­
tion, with Mr. L. Pipes and W. R. the ravines and gulches reaching up from ative Binger Hermann will rise and in­
Skipworth, of Corvallis, as editors. The the fertile valley into the picturesque troduce the following bills and measures:
Corvallis Gazette also changes hands this mountains which form its southern and
Bill for relief of citizens of Oregon and
week, the purchaser being a gentleman western border. In the bowels of the Idaho who served in the Nez Perce and
from the East named Geist, who will as­ hills upon the east are found traces of Bannock Indian wars.
Bills t<> provide for an appropriation of
sume control in a few weeksx—[Ex.
Bonie of the baser metals and various $500,000 for a custom house in Portland.
minerals which may in time yield a great­
Bill fixing the salaries <>f the several
The latest report concerning the con­
er revenue to the country than the gold judges of the United States district courts
test between Hermann, of Oregon, and
at $5000 per annum.
mines.
Maikham, of California, for a place on
Joint memorial of the Oregon legisla­
M<
modest in its dreams than tlie ture for indemnification fur spoliations by
the House committee of rivers and har­
gold mining boom, but surer in its re­ Indians during the Rogue fiver war of
bors is that Speaker Carlisle has an­
turns, is another industry which has late­ 1855-50.
nounced his intention to give Markham
Bill for payment of claims of citizens of
ly begun its growth in the Rogue rivet­
the appointment. Hermann's friends
Oregon
fur supplies furnished volunteers
valley—fruit culture. The planting of
in 1855-56, during the Indian war, which
still hope that he may also be put upon
young orchards has been one feature of were audited by the war commissioners.
the committee, as there is a recent prece­
the year, especially about Ashland.
Petition of George Bennett and twenty-
dent for placing two Pacific coa6t mem­
Within the past two years many thou six others, asking for 8100,000 for im­
bers on that committee.
sands of fruit trees have been set out in provement of the Coquilld river.
Memorials of Oregon legislature for an
The Washington National Republican this part of the valley, and the clearing appropriation to open the channel of the
claims that a careful canvass has shown of brush land in the foot-hills for peach I mpqua river as far as Elkton in Oregon.
Memorials of the Oregon legislature
the position of members of the House to and apple orchards is proceeding steadily
be as follows on the question of the sus­ through the present winter. The hill asking for an appropriation to continue
work on the jetty at the mouth of the
pension of silver coinage: 143 democrats land is especially adapted to the culture Columbia
river.
and 52 republicans are against suspension, of some of the choicest fruits, and when
Bill to provide for the retirement of
and 39 democrats and 91 republicans the citizens of Ashland can stand upon Brigadier-General Rufus Ingalls as major-
favor it. A noticeable feature in con­ the rim of her mountain wall and see be­ general in the United States army.
Bill to provide for the construction of
nection with the matter is the division of neath them on every hand little fruit
a public building at Oregon City for the
members upon sectional lines The W est farms of five or ten or twenty acres, each I luted States land office, post office and
and South are practically a unit for coin­ yielding a comfortable living for a happy United States signal service office, th cost
age, while the East and the Middle family, then the town will know a solid, 850.000.
Bill to provide for the construction of
states appear to lie almost solidly in fav- enduring prosperity, and will be the cen­
a public building at Roseburg, to cost
of suspension.
ter <>f a community iti which the life work $50,000.
will be of a kind to elevate and strength­
Also bills for the relief of the follow­
The famous case of Ben Holladay
en the character—a group of attractive ing person«: Thomas Guinean, S. B.
against his brother Joe, of Portland, a
and happy homes, such as the oppulent Cranston, John Fitzhugh, B. Jennings,
A. D Babcock, P. C. Davis, Eiizalr.'th
spit brought to recover possession of some
fruit centers of the Golden stats Support Bates. Thomas J. Miller, 11. B. Oatnmn.
$400.000 worth of real estate which Ben
in surprising ntfriitwr. Will Ashland see John Alexander, Tunis Swick, George H.
says he gave Joe as security for $100,-
this day. The T idings believes it will, Washington. F. M. Vanderpool, Hadley
000 borrowed of him, has just been de­
and the enterprising people who are turn­ Hobson, J. H. SftMih. John Hageaur,
cided in favor of Ben. The court con­ ing the Lill sides into orchards are de- Christina Edson and Michael Riley.
• ♦ •
cluded that the deeds, as alleged by Ben, termineiythat it shall.
Sad Drowning.
were given as securities only, and were
A sad case of drowning is reported by
in the nature of mortgages. Attorneys
A Wlul Man.
a Mabie, Linn county, corres)>ondent to
employed have filed claims for $50,000
The Albany Herald is authority for the the Albany Herald. Jimmie, the 9 year-
fees. Joe may appeal the case to the statement that a wild man has been found old son of Thos. and Clara Patterson,
Supreme Court. [Seme of the lawyers in the mountains above Lebanon. It is was drowned in the Muhawk on last Fri­
supposed to be John Mackentire who dis­ day morning. The boy started out with
hope he will.]
appeared about four years ago from Le­ his father hunting. On reaching the
river, Air. P. crossed on a log. but told
A dispatch of Dec. 25. from Washing­ banon and who was never found. A few­ the boy not to cross until he came back
days ago a Mr. Fitzgerald, while bunting
ton says: It is almost an assured fact in the vicinity of Bald Pate butte in the to help him over. When he reached the
that Hermann, of Oregon, has won liis Cascades, in company with some others opposite side he looked back for the boy
tight for a place on the committee on saw the man who was without clothes, but could not see him. He wist his eves
down the stream which was very swift at
riven and harbors. Morrow and Felton but whom they said had grown hairy like that point, and saw the boy’s head above
a wild animal and was eating raw deer
chilled on Carlisle yesterday in regard to
meat.
When he caught sight of the water once about a hundred yards l>elow.
committees, and were informed that hunters the strange man tied. Isaac The neighbors were notified and turned
Markham was a little too far south to Bauty claimed to have seen the same man out en-masse to help in the search for
the laxly. About noon Saturday, after a
properly represent the Pacific coast ou in the same vicinity two years ago. The hard search, the body was discovered,
men
who
say
the
strange
man
resembles
the committee on rivers and harbors.
the lost Mackentire are given as men of and it was interred on Sunday.
The speaker expresses an opinion that reliability and it is hard to doubt their
Gilmore’s Neuralgia Cure is a positive
the apfiointmcnt should go further north. statements. A party is being organized
cure for Neuralgia in the the face, side and
As none of the other California delegates to go in search of the man.
storuath. Fur sale at the City drug store.
had put in a claim for that place, Felton
The wife, mother and maid who suffer
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is recommend from female weakness, will find Gilmore’s
hud Morrow concluded the speaker would
Aromatic Wine a positive cure. For sale
assign Hermann to that committee. ed by physicians of great eminence, on at the City drug store.
both sides of the Atlantic, as the m st re­
Carlisle did promise that some one from liable remedy for colds, coughs, and all
Croup, W hooping Cough and Bronchi­
the Pacific coast should go on the com­ pulmonary disorders. It affords prompt tis immediately relieved by Shiloh's
relief. No family should be without it. Cure. For sale at Chitwood's.
mittee on rivers .“.nd harbors.
i
PROPRIETARY
REALESTATE - GROCERIES -- MISCELLANEOUS.___________
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, ETC.
MEDICINE»
FRIDAY
i
A Safeguard
PARTIES DESIRING TO PURCHASE
Tl»e fatal rapidity with which ajks.
Colds and Coughs frequently de\7k;p
into the gravest maladies of the tlfoat
and lung-, is a consideration which s>ou.'t
impel every prudent person to kec* Ï
h.11!.I.
a lion -, lin’d renicih. n hot!
AY1.1FS CHEintY pl.t I'ohAL.
No'hiirx else gives such immediate
•t
: i .:<1 works so sure a cure in all afi’< <
is
< I 11.:- clti's. That eminent plivs
I.
Fluf. F. Sweetzer. of the Maine Jh
d
School, Brunswick, Me., say>:—
“Moilica! M-k'iice l.as produced lin otliernpo-
• lyo • expectorant » g«>
as A yer ’ m C hlrh Y
I’E' -oiiAi.. Il ¡ m invaluable fur dUcuwt» of the
throat and lungs.”
*
Dwellings, Farming or Fruit Lands
Or, in short, any kind of
REAL ESTATE,
--------- OiXiOOi >o-
i
'Hi ■ sanie. opinion is < \'pre»e<l by: the
I
• x • !!>'..noxvii I >r. L.J. Addison, of Chicago,
Hi.. xx ho mivm :—
“I have nvxvr found, in thirty-five year* of
conlinu »us Htudy and practice of medicine, any
pri'p-'iration of «w i?r< :.t valueas A yer ’ s C hbmky
rEiToit.xL, for treatment of di^cascB of the
throat and lungK. It not only breaks up coMa
and cures severe coughs, but is more eflec ive
than anything else in relieving even thejpiost
»vrioua bronchial and pulmonary affections."
SPECIAL NOTICE.
Will do well to consult with the undersigned
BEFORE
We are prepared to make the fol­
lowing reductions in our stock of
Men’s Clothing:
AYER’S
Cherry Pectoral
I . not ;i new cl.tiimint for popular confi-
d> u.-e. but a medicine which is to-day
saving tlie lives of the third gcnerali’it
who have come inio U ing .since it was
lii't offered to the public.
Tli. re is not a household in which this
inclinable remedy has once been in­
troduced where its use has ever been
abandoned, and there is not a peraon
who has ever given it a projier trial
for any throat or lung disease ,sib>cep-
lilde of cure, who lias not been made
Well by ii.
AY I It’S CHERRY PECTORAL has.
in inmiberles- in-tanee», < ured obsl. >fe
e.i..e-, of chronic Bronchitis, Larynx
.
¡md even acute I'neunionia, ami lias
sa. I many patients in tlie earlier stages
i f I’nliiionary Consumption. It is a
tn (li.-in ■ that only requires to be taken in
o r:’’ <h.-e*. is pleasant to the taste, and is
' I ii every liou-e where there are
I.
<i ii . ii . there i» nothing so good as
YER’SI IIERRY PE< TORAL fortreat-
i
>f Croup and Whooping Cough.
Tii’ <■ are all plaiu facts, which can be
v rith-.l bv anybody, nnd should be rc-
ns icb I -<l by everybody.
$20. SUITS
<«
18
15
12 COATS
4«
IO
REDUCED
TO
44
44
44
44
$15
14
12
8
7
PURCHASING.
■' ■—
J
o-----------------------
A residence in Ashland of many
years, and a thorough acquaintance
with the soils and products of the val­
ley enable me in many instances to
show parties just what they wish, and
at a fair price.
C. F. BILLINGS.
Ashland, Or.
ß^^Call and inspect our stock before purchasing elsewhere.
A new and elegant line of Fall Styles just received
from San Francisco.
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral,
Parties who are afraid of a Real Estate Agent are referred
• to any business house in the city,
ALFORD & BRAGDON.
I’KEPABED BY
Di J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Maas,
Sold by all Druggists.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
SHERIFF’S SALE!
J. S. Howard,
Notary Public and Conveyancer
MEDFORD, OREGON.
Just received and now open for the inspection of purchasers at the store of
---------ooo---------
All kinds of real estate business given careful
attention, and information furnished con­
cerning property in the new town.
Dr, John S. Farson,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
A shland , O regon .
£®“Oflice for the present at Chitwood’s
drug store.
[6-4.
MYER BROS.
The undersigned, having bought the
general stock of Samuel Arendt at a
great reduction from original cost, will
offer the same to the Public at
Complete Stock of finest Club and Rink
Slaughtering Prices.
Announcement.
ROLLER SKATES.
Dr. D. B. Hico,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
A shland , O regon .
Office at the City Drug Store:
the woolen factory.
residence near
Special attention given to diseases of wo­
men.
l'J-1
The stock is new and fresh.
No
shelf worn goods. Consisting in part
of general
J. T. Bowditch,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
ASHLAND, OREGON.
Will practice ii all courts of the State.
Collections promptly made and remitted.
9-4
T. B. Kent,
Attorney and
DRY and FANCY GOODS,
at Law.
Counsellor
OIL
JACKSONVILLE,
ill practice in all the courts of Oregon.
Office in the court house.
i.IO-3
—s.
——-X-,---- *“4——
Groceries, Boots, and Shoes, Hats,
and Caps, Gents’ Furnishings,
Trunks and Valises,
Albert Hammond,
CIVIL ENGINEER and SURVEYOR,
ASHLAND, OREGON.
Will attend promptly to any business in the
line of land surveying, locating ditches, etc.,
and everything pertaining lo civil engineer­
ing. Satisfaction guaranteed.
10-12
®^“Oflice nt the postoflicc.
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE, Etc.,
Miss Alena Weber,
Teacher of music at Ashland College, will give
instructions in
PIANO, ORGAN and GUITAR
All of which must and will be closed out within
Ninety Days. Come early and get your
choice. Remember such bargains do. not often oc­
cur.
To a limited number of pupils outside her
college class.
Residence nt Mr. A. G. Rockfellow’s oi: Church
street.
A. L. Willey,
CARPENTER AND BUILDER.
WILLARD & EUBANKS.
Ashland, Or., Dec. 9, 1885.
Safe and Fixtures for SALE, not for rent.
(Formerly of Watertown, Massachusetts)
Has located in Ashland, and is prepared
.to give estimates, furnish material and
do labor, such as
Yours, truly,
Construct Buildings,
CARO BROS.
Both in nnd out of town.
All work warranted to give satisfaction
The undersigned would announce to
the people of Southern Oregon
that they have purchased the stock
of General Hardware, Stoves, Tin­
ware, Etc., of Miller & Co., in Ash­
land, and will continue tlie busi­
ness at the old stand in McCall’s
block.
Soliciting a continuance of the liberal
patronage accorded our predeces­
sors, we hope by fair dealing and
close prices to secure a fair share
of the trade of Southern Oregon
in our line.
(S-o.
ASHLAND DRUG STORE
MAsonic Block.
Ashland, Oregon, Jan. ist, 1886.
E T. Bartlstt,
LARGEST STOCK of DRUGS
CONTRACTOR and BUILDER,
A shland , O regon .
Will furnish estimates and take contracts for
Buildings of all kinds.
A share of patronage solicited.
(8*:>5
Patent Medicines, Druggist's Sundries,
Shop located just Mute the lirery stable.
E.
School Books and Statioiiei\y !
Artists’ Materials, Lamps and Lamp Stands.
DePEATT,
ATTORNEY & COUNSELLOR at LAW
ASHLAND, JACKSON
COUNTY,
OREGON.
Prescriptions a Specialty.
Will prac tice in all courts of tills state. Office
in Odd Fellows' building up stairs.
J. H CHITWOOD & SON.
Agent for tile following named
Insurance Companies:
Tlie Liverpool and London and Globe.
The State Investment and Insurance Company
The Western Fire and Marine Insurance Com­
pany.
The Ixrndon Com mereiai ssuranee Company,
of London. England.
XV. H. ATKINSON,
President.
E. V. CARTER
Cashier
The Bank of Ashland.
HENRY JUDGE,
Saddle and Harness,
M. L. M’CALL.
A. P. HAMMOND,
MANUFACTURER.
Hammond. & McCall,
M k I d street, opposite JI<Hiuk’s Hotel,
REAL - ESTATE - AGENTS
ASHLAND
....
OREGON.
— AND—
Keep, constantly on hand a full
supply of everything iu above
line, which will lx- sold at prices
as low as can be offered anywhere.
CONVEYANCERS,
Ashland,
Oregon.
ALL
Loans negotiated. Property bought and sold;
collections attended to: Abstracts of title fur­
nished.
ffl^p-Survcying of all kinds satisfactorily and
promptly done.
Repairing Neatly Done
C. W. AYERS,
We offer for sale tlie following described real
property
The Hargadine property, consisting of
very desirable town lots, improved and un­
improved; and farming lands and stock I
ranches iu sizes to suit purchasers, up to
6000 acres: also,
A G ood S tt k R anch , 060 acres, six miles
East of Ashland—good for summer or win­
ter range.
T wenty A crks of good wood land near
own.
at low rates, and all work done promptly.
DESIGNER and BUILDER
ManjfactBrer & Wood-Worker.
.
Will make estimates an<1 bids on all buildings
public or private, and furnish all material for the
construction of the same.
ASHLAND, OQN.
ansact8 a General Banking Busiue?
Interest allowed rn Time Deposits.
Collections made at all accessible points <>u fa­
vorable terms.
Sight exchange and telegraphic transfers sold
on Portland, San Francisco and New York-
Gold dust bought at standard prices.
Have opened a dress-making establishment in
the building next door to Farlow A Miller's
on vest side of Main street,
BRACKETS,
OREGON.
Ornamental Sawing and
Cutting and Fitting a Specialty
Plain Sewing
Of all kinds neatly done.
Prices the Lowed
share of patronage solicited.
[10-2-j
.
I
Following are cash price for work
I’laniug and matching.
per ’
per Inch, per fl.
' ‘
— AND —
Norma School,
ASHLAND,
....
OREGON.
P bbsidknt .
HAGAN’S
Sash, Doors, Blinds, Moulding
ASHLAND COLLEGE
M. G. ROYAL, A. M.,
ASIILAJXI}, OREGOIV
MRS. K. PHILLIPPAY and MISS MARTHA OBER
H. JUDGE.
[9-48
Office andfactory on Granite street.
DRESS-MAKING.
ASHLAND,
ORDERED WORK
Will be made so as to give entire satisfaction
Magnolia Balm
is
"M to beauty
’ nr fresh*
------- THREE COURSES OF STUDY.--------
1st. The State Normal Course.
2d. The Commercial course
:td. The College Preparatory.
TUITION.
Tuition variea. according to studies pursued,
from to $12 per term.
BOARD.
’’onrd can l>c obtained at the College Boarding
’1. or in private faprilies, at $1 per week.
- —>giie aC further particulars, an-
pjeddent.