Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, October 21, 1912, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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    - s
Monday, Oftohw 21, 1012.
ASHLAND TIDINGS
PAGR SEVEN
England's labor
UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK
First National Bank
i
BERHAeLE
-IS THE-
PIONEER BANK OF ASHLAND
DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE OPENS
Oldest National Bank in Jackson County
Efficient Service Courteous Treatment
GATES TO COMPETITION.
TO THE JEW FIRST,
Mark vii, 24-30; Matthew viii, 5-13.
Is Wilson
Hope
mifc
Security-Service
CAPITAL, SURPLUS, UNDIVIDED PROFITS
AND STOCKHOLDERS' LIABILITY OVER
$175,000.00
DEPOSITORY OF GOVERNMENT SAVINGS BANK FUNDS
twsaatssi
nmaaai
DR. W. EARL BLA"KK
DENTIST
First National Bank Bids., Suite 9
and 10. Entrance First Ave.
Phones: Office, 109; Ties., 488-R.
DR. J. K. EXDELMAN
DENTIST
Citizens Banking & Trust Co. BIdg.
Suite 3 & 4
ASHLAND, ORE.
DR. F. II. JOHNSON,
D E N T I S T,
Beaver BIdg., East Main and First
Sts., Ashland, Oregon.
I' hones: Office 178, Res. SoO-Y.
SPIRITISM SAID
TO BE
DEM0N1SM.
Appeal Sent British Manufacturers to
Help Establish Free Trade
Britons Spurn Offer to
Sell Out Country.
c
DR. J. 8. PARSON,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office a Residence, Main Street
Phone 212 J.
G. W. GREGG, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Office: 1 and 2 Citizens Banking and
Trust Co. building. Phone 69.
Residence: 93 Bush Street. Resi
dence phone 230 R.
Office hours: 9 to 12a. m., 2 to 5 p.
m. Calls answered day or night.
A most Interesting little brochure
has recently come off the press setting
forth with Bible proofs that the com
muuicntions received by and through
Spiritist Mediums Is of Demon origin
The writer traces his subject through
the Scriptures from the time when
certain of the holy angels became dis
obedient. He proves from the Scrip
tures that these fallen spirits per
sonate the human dead, with whose
past history, spirits, though Invisible,
are thoroughly acquainted. He shows
that they ulso frequently person
ate the Creator and the Redeemer,
comruandiug their deceived ones to
pray, do penance, etc. This, however.
Is merely to lead them on and to briug
them more thoroughly under demoni
acal control. Sometimes by breaking
down the natural barrier, the human
will, they possess their victim, and rule
him more or less to his ruin frequent
ly sending such to the mad-house
Numerous illustrations; Scriptural and
otherwise, are given. The price of the
little book is but five cents; it should
be in the hands of all interested in
Spiritism or who , have friends inter
ested therein. Enclose stamps to the
Bible and Tract Society, IT Hicks
Street, Brooklyn. N. Y.
public."
the Pro-
and sets
party to-
JULIAN P. JOHNSON, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
Specialist in diseases of the Eye, Ear,
JSose ana l nroat.
nfflpft! TTnstalra Corner Main- and
Granite streets.
Entrance from Granite street.
A. J.
D.
FAWCETT, M.
Homeopathic
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office. Payne BIdg., adjoining Cit
izens and Trust Co. BIdg.
Residence, 9 Granite street.
Massage, Electric Light Baths, Elec
tricity.
With Dr. Fawcett, Payne Building.
JULIA R. McQUILKIN,
SUPERINTENDENT.
Telephone 300-J.
Every day excepting Sunday.
F. A. KORMANN, PH. D.,
All kinds of Analytical Work, includ
ing Assaying. Accuracy guaranteed.
Laboratory with Hygienol Chemical
company.
ASHLAND, OREGON.
"We believe In a protective tariff
which shall equalize conditions of
competition between the United
States and foreign countries, both
for the farmer and the manufacturer,
and which shall maintain for labor
an adequate standard of living. Pri
marily the benefit of any tariff should
be disclosed in the nay envelope of
the laborer. We declare that no in
dustry deserves protection which is
unfair to labor or which is operating
In violation of federal law. We be
lieve that the presumption is always
in favor of the consuming
This quotation Is from
gressive Party platform,
forth the attitude of the
wards a protective tariff.
"I believe in a protective tariff, but
believe in it as a principle, ap
proached from the standpoint of the
interests of the whole people, and not
as a bundle of preference to be given
to favored individuals. In my opinion
the American people favor the prin
ciple of a protective tariff, but they
desire such a tariff to be established
primarily in the interests of the wage
worker and the consumer."
This quotation Is from Theodore
Roosevelt's "confession of faith" de
livered before the Progressive Na
tional Convention at Chicago August
6, 1912; and it sets forth the posi
tion that he occupies in regard to
this much mooted question.
Contrast these two statements,
both of them fair and outspoken In
their straightforwardness, with the
following special dispatch to the Van
couver (U. J.) Province or October o,
cabled from London, England, by a
reliable and truthful news agency:
Woodrow Wilson -
Asks British Ate
jj
tial Gentile.
SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland
Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new
subscribers. Regular price of Sunset
Magazine Is $1.50 per year.
For Paint and Wall Pa
per, or work in these
lines, see Win. O. Dick
erson. Residence phone
494-R. Store phone 172.
We can save you money
w.
F. Bowen,
Phone 232-J.
E. O. Smith.
Phone 2C0-J.
BOWEN & SMITH
ARCHITECTS. f
Rooms 7 and 8, Citizens Banking &
Trust Co. Building. Phone 164.
MISS THGRNE
Graduate Nurse
01 THIRD STREET
PHONE 309-J.
MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA
Mahogany Camp, No. 6565, M. W.
A., meets the 2d and 4th Friday
of each, month in Memorial Hall.
M. S. K. Clark, V. C; G. H. Hedberg,
Clerk. Visiting neighbors are cor
dially invited to meet with us.
CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB.
Regular meetings of the Chautau
qua Park Club second and fourth Fri
days of each month at 2:30 p. m.
MRS. F. R. MERRILL, Pres.
MRS. JENNIE FAUCETT, Sec.
Civic Improvement Club.
The regular meeting of the Ladies
Civic Improvement Club will be held
on the second and fourth Tuesdays of
each month at 2 : 30 p. m., at the Com
mercial Club rooms.
Tows Fish Brand
PommelSlicker
Keeps both rider
and saddlcperfedhj dm
Made for rouqh wear and
.long service in ihe weitest
weaiher.
SatisfactionGuaranteed
IookforThisMark
VT or Excellence
$3.50 EVERYWHERE,
A.J.IOWER.CO.
HSHLHND
Storage and Transfer Co.
C. V. BATES, Proprietor.
Two warehouses near Depot
Goods of all kinds stored at rtasona
ble rates.
A General Transfer Business.
Wood and Rock Springs Co.il
A
s
I
BOSTOH.
Tower Canadian Ltd.
TORONTO.
LETTER TO OLD COUNTRY
FIRMS POINTS TO VALUE
OF FREE TRADE.
Suggests That English Merchants
Help Finance United States
Democratic Campaign.
Sit
1
Phone 60.
Office with Wells-Fargo Express.
ASHLAND, OREGON.
A Good Advertiser Can Sell
Good ProperlyAny
Time, Anywhere
He must keep his ad at work.
It must be THERE when the
possible buyer looks and he
might not look mora than one
day out of ten. Of course, he
might see and investigate it on
its first publication, or, per
haps, the fifth or sixth time it
appears. The good advertiser
knows that, however persistent
a campaign may be required,
the cost will be an easily for
getable thing when the sale is
made!
London, Oct. 5. The Woodrow
Wilson campaign is not confined
to the United States. British
manufacturers are being flooded
with appeals for assistance. A
letter from the National Wilson
and Marshall League, of which
William C. McAdoo is president.
has been sent to all big manufac
turers in Great Britain, and in
the letter is the statement that
a complete record will be kept
of those who help to make the
great Democratic victory certain.
The appeal for funds has been
Bent broadcast to big houses in
industrial England, conveying, of
course. the impression that
should Woodrow Wilson win,
practical free trade would come,
and British manufacturers would
get a new foothold in the United
States.
Tne circular to British manu
facturers has at the head of it
the names of William McAdoo,
Charles R. Crane and Stuart S.
Gibbons.,
Crane' is the Chicago million-
Hire who subscribed $70,000 to
Wilson's pre-convention fund.
Gibbons signed his name as sec
retary on the circular.
A. Stoneham, one of the big
men here in possession of a Wil
son circular, in discussing the
appeals to English manufactur
ers, said :
"England is not interested in
the Democratic party or its free
trade programme. We are plac
ing some lids on free trade prob
lems here. Later on we hope to
have the tariff on the Iine3 of
the United States. England has
lost millions by free trade.
There is no money in England
to be had by Mr. Wilson."
"Get the habit." Sena your social
news to Miss Hawley. Phone 3-9.
Known By His Friends.
"A man is known by his friends,'
says the old saw, and this seems to
apply today as well as when it was
first enunciated. And it applies to
Theodore Roosevelt, Progressive
Party candidate for President of the
United States. - Who are Roosevelt's
chief friends? Well, there is Jacob
Reese, humanitarian, uplifter of th
lowly and oppressed, lover of truth
and admirer of Roosevelt. There is
Thomas A. Edison, the greatest in
ventor of the age, who says Roose
velt is the man needed at this hour
to manage the tangled affairs of
state, to oust the crooks, and to use
his clear vision in guiding the nation
towards its destiny. There is Oscar
S. Straus, former cabinet member,
nominee for governor of New York,
friend of tho tenement-caged deni
zens of few York's congested dis
tricts, and sterling American. And
there are hundreds of others, all of
them big, strong, honest men. Why
do they like Roosevelt, and boast
Oct. 20.
Him ihnt romelh unto lie I trill in no
vise cast out." John vi, S7.
IlEIUO IS general confusion
amongst God's people respect
ing the relationship between
the Gospel of Christ ami the
Jewish nation and between the Jewish
nation nnl all other nations. The Di
bit! tells that until the coming of
Christ yea. until three and a bnir
years after Jesus died, arose and as
cended the Divine dealings were con
fined to tin- Hebrew race.
The whole world is involved In the
penalty that came upon Father Adam
because of his disobedience under in
vine sentence as being unworthy of
everlasting life or . relationship with
God. The .lews were no better than
the remainder of the race, so far as the
Scriptures tell, hut God, having from
the first determin
ed to provide a Re
deemer fur man-
kin d. t It rough
whose Kingdom all
the woilil should
ultimately be bless
ed nnd have the
privilege of return
to Divine favor.
made a selection of
Abraham's posterl-
tv. because Abra
ham was a noble Corncitu.
character v h o s e
faith in !od was tiins rewarded.
As soon as the limit of time expired
God manifested His favor toward the
Gentiles by sending the Gospel to Cor
nelius, a reverential, holy and gener
ous Gentile. Since then God s favors
are as open to the Gentile as to the
Jew "the middle wall of partition"
has been "broken down."
It is from this standpoint that we
should read the Apostle's statement
that the Gospel of Christ "is preached
to every creature under heaven." He
did not mean nor would it have been
true that the Gospel had been pro
claimed to all. What the Apostle
meant is that the Gospel is now unre
stricted, free to be preached to every
creature under heaven, no matter what
his nationality it is no longer confined
to Jews as nt first Now, whoever has
"an ear to hear, let him bear" the good
Message of the Kingdom. Whoever
hears and has a heart to accept God's
gracious Message, let him present his
body a living sacrifice, holy and accep
table through Christ. (Romans xli. 1.)
The Syro-Phenlelan woman of our
study was a Greek not a Jewess. Her
daughter was possessed of an evil
spirit She heard that Jesus was near
the border of Juden. and she sought
nim out. imploring that He would cast
out the demon.
But Jesus said to the woman, "Let
the children first be filled, for it is not
proper to take the children's bread and
cast it to dogs." She understood the
force of this statement. The Jews
claimed to be God's people, and the
Gentiles were styled "Gentile dogs,"
because they had never been in covenant-relationship
with God. Yet the
poor woman's faith in Jesus and her
desire for the relief of her daughter
moved her to press her ense and she
answered. "Yea. Lord, but the dogs
eat of the children's crumbs." Jesus
replied, "For. this saying go thy way:
the devil is gone out of thy daughter."
She got the crumb; her faith prevailed.
Today the Israel of God. to whom be
long all the blessings and promises and
favors, are the Spiritual Israelites.
These, through full consecration, and
the imputation of the merit of Jesus'
sacrifice begotten of the Holy Spirit
are embryo sons of God. Inheritors of
the Divine nattire and Kingdom.
The Centurion's Servant Healed.
Palestine was subject to the Roman
Empire, and little garrisons of Roman
soldiers were stationed here nnd
there, usually un
der a Centurion.
One of these knew
of Jesus' mighty
works, and when
his faithful servant
fell sick be went to
Jesus asking for
healing. This was
another Gentile dog
desiring a crumb
from the children's
-I ay to one go, table.
and lit goeth." The Centurion's
faith, our Lord declared, was superior
to anything that He had found amongst
the Israelites. He got his request.
Jesus took the occasion to say that
the Israelites, who were counting so
much on their relationship to God as
the children of Abraham, would find
themselves greatly mistaken. Being
the children of Abraham did mean that
they wpuld have special privileges, but
these they were enjoying und not ap
preciating. God took out of their nation the "Is
raelites Indeed"; meantime the rest
were blinded, and for the past eighteen
centuries He has been completing the
Elect Kingdom Church out of all na
tions. Rut ne Is selecting none except
such as have the faith and obedience
of Abraham nnd the spirit of Jesus.
Nevertheless the Scriptures most
clearly declare that the Jews are still
heirs of a certain promise, which In
due time will come to them. To them
will come the great privilege of being
the foremost nation amongst men dur
ing Messiah's glorious reign, when the
Cht'reh. glorified, spiritualized, will be
with Him In Ills Throne.
Telephone your social items to
Miss Hawley between 9 a. m. and 4
n m. each day. Call phone 39.
German passenger trains are not
remarkably fast, but usually keep to
schedule.
P. DODGE & SONS
House Furnishers
AND
Undertakers
Deputy County Coroner
Lady Assistant
Apples
Apples
DO YOU WANT TO SELL?
H What sorts and quantities, and what price? We are not
tendering (or anybody's fruit.
II Do you want to consign and chance the markets?
suit us and we will give you quotations.
II In every case we send the sellers sale notes.
York we use our own sale note, and do
apples sold by auction.
W. N. WHITE & CO.
70 PARK PLACE, NEW YORK.
Con-
In New
have
. a. A AAA A A A A A A A A A A AAA A AAA AAA A---1----- -- -- -- -- . J- -t .
THE PORTLAND HOTEL
Sixth, Seventh, Morrison and Yamhill Streets
PORTLAND, OREGON
The most central location in tlie city, and nearest to
the leading theaters and retail shops. You are assured
of a most cordial welcome here. Every convenience is
provided for our guests.
, "J The Grill and Dining Room are famed for their excel
lence and for prompt, courteous service. Motors meet
all incoming trains. Hates are moderate; European
plan, $1.50 per day upward.
G. 1. Kaufman, Manager
Om Special Of f est
the Ashland Tidings and
LaFollette's Weekly Magazine
HOT 1 1 A KILL YEAR FOR OXLY
S2.SO
You can read every week what Senator Robert M. La Follette,
the fearless champion of the people's rights, the leader of the pro
gressive Republicans, thinks and says for
ONLY 50 CENTS MORE THAN THE
PRICE OF THE TIDINGS ALONE
A stirring and momentous campaign Is opening. You will want
to he posted. You will want the record of your congressman. Does
he represent YOU? You will want Information about the great
issues that you and friends are talking about. Senator La Kollette
knows what is going on at Washington. He Is on the ground; be
hind the scenes. He tells you all about it In LA FOLLETTE'S
WEEKLY MAGAZINE.
Sixteen pages of crisp editorials and interesting special arti
cles each week.
LaFollette's One Year, $1.00 Our Offer:
The Tidings One Year, $2.00) $2.50
To new or old subscribers who pay in advance.
Address nil orders to the Tidings.
'19
if-7.-