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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 18, 1912)
Monday, November 18, 1012. ASHLAND TIDINGS PAGE SEVEN REFUGE FOR AN OHIO VIEW OF IT UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK GAME BIRDS M. J. MrALLIKTF.il FA KM OX NEIL CHEEK SO DEDICATE!). Eastern Puper Writes on the Fruit Growing Industry and Sees Successful Future. First National Bank -IS THE- PIONEER BANK OF ASHLAND Security-Service CAPITAL, SURPLUS, UNDIVIDED PROFITS &inr AAA AA AND STOCKHOLDERS' LIABILITY OVER $llt),UUU.VU DEPOSITORY OF GOVERNMENT SAVINQS BANK FUNDS PHEASANTS ARE TURNED LOOSE Gume Warden Hubbard Heceived Shipment of These Beautiful Rirds Wednesday for the McAllister Game 15ird Preserves. DR. W. EARL BLAKK DENTIST First National Bank Bld&., Suite 9 and 10. Entrance First Ave. Phones: Office, 109; Res., 488-R. DR. J. E. EXDELMAN DENTIST Citizens Banking & Trust Co. Bldg. Suite 3 & 4 ASHLAND, ORE. THEY HAD A HARD TRIP II. L Walthers Tells of Kxperienees in Trying to Cross Siski yous Recently. DR. F. II. JOHNSON, D E N T I S T, Beaver Bldg., East Main and First Sts., Ashland, Oregon, rhones: Office 178, lies. 350OT. DR. J. S. PARSON, Physician and Surgeon. Office at Residence, Main Si.reet Phone 242 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. JULIAN P. JOHNSON, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Specialist in diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office: Upstairs Corner Main and Granite streets. Entrance from Granite street. H. L. Walthers of Medford, dis trict superintendent of the Oregon California Electric Company, and Sidney Sprout of San Francisco, su pervising engineer of the same com pany, were in the city Tuesday on their way from .Medford to Yreka. Mr. Walthers, when asked why he was not traveling by auto, gave some of his experiences on his last trip from Yreka to Medford the last part of last month. He and Mrs. Walth ers were just 24 hours making the trip. They found themselves two miles from Colestin at dark. Leav ing their machine by the roadside, they walked to Colestin, only to find the hotel closed and no one there. They finally found the man who lived near there and watched the ho tel and induced him to unlock the building. They built a fire, then rummaged the hotel commissary and succeeded in appeasing the pangs of hunger. Next day they secured a team to pull them down into the val ley. They finally arrived home and Mr. Walters has sworn off mountain motoring for 1912. M. J. McAllister, who owns a 640- acre farm on Neil creek, has dedi cated it to the state as a game bird preserve. Under the terms of the agreement Mr. McAllister binds him self to the 6tate to neither hunt nor permit others to hunt on the place for the next five years. In consider ation of this promise the state will stock the place with game birds, es pecially Chinese pheasants. Two dozen of these birds were received Wednesday from the state game warden and were met by Deputy Game Warden Hubbard, who took them at once to the McAllister farm and released them. There were also several of the same kind of birds released upon that place a few years ago. The penalty for killing Chinese pheasants at any time of year is not less than $25 for each bird killed, and may be more at the discretion of the court. Anyone shooting on the McAllister place will also be liable to the regular penalty for tres passing upon the property. There are other places along Neil creek which it is expected will be dedicated as game bird refuges, and they will be stocked with quail and grouse, according to advices received from headquarters by Deputy Game Warden Hubbard. The pheasants received were raised upon the state game farm at Corvallis, Ore. LAND PRODUCTS SHOW Ashland Exhibit Started Tuesday for Portland, to He Put in Place. Toledo Illade: One of the weekly periodicals which specialize in agri-! culture raises and discusses the ques- I tion, "Will fruit-growing be over- done?" . I Upon one side it observes the great ! profits j licked up by orchardists in recent years and the consequent planting of new trees, the opening of new on-hard lands, and the boom ing of sections which may or may not prove good at orchard growing. All this might tend to decrease prices, choke the market, for fruit is world wide, it is not alone hazardous, as it is by nature, but a poor paying business as well. Upon i tie other side, this periodi cal notes that the markets are widen ing daily, that old trees are grubbed out rapidly, that poor management has not yet been banished, and that. because of failures due to poor man agement and poor transportation and the wayward elements, the good managers and the lucky ones are getting prices indicative of an unsat isfactory demand. Several tragedies have been re' corded in the fruit-growing business which were outgrowths of ill-consid ered and unjustified booms. The farming history of Ohio chronicles not a few of these. But it strikes us that this present boom in fruit-grow ing, if activity and enterpri.se can be called that, differs widely from those older passions in specialized agriculture. The early booms devel oped largely out of the discovery that certain lands were peculiarly fitted to some form of fruit-growing, to lo calized demands and to advertisin pure and simple. Today the market for fruit is world-wide. It is expand ing constantly. Its measure has not been, and cannot be, taken. With that spur to enterprise alone, would seem that there is little pres ent need of orchardists to worry lest their industry be overdone. Oldest National Bank in Jackson County Efticient Service Courteous Treatment Sleep With the Head to the North, j Itananu Trust to Be Prosecuted. Columbia University has been try-I Washington, Nov. 16. For viola- ing an experiment in regard to a ' tion of the Sherman anti-trust law, theory that has long been in practice ! the department of justice here in- by certain old-fashioned folks, and ; tends to file suit against the United that is, if people will be certain to ! Fruit Company in the near future. turn the head of their bed to the 'it is charged that the company has north on retiring, they will sleep I built up a country-wide distribution soundly and better than in any other i and resorted to unfair practices. Thu direction. This may look silly and I company has an authorized capital The PORTLAND EVENING TELE GRAM and Ashland Tidings one year, $5.00. A. J. D. FAWCETT. M Homeopathic PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office, Payne Bldg.. adjoining Cit izens and Trust Co. Bldg. Residence, 9 Granite street. Massage, Electric Light Baths, Elec tricity. With Dr. Fawcett, Payne Building. JULIA R. McQUILKIN, SUPERINTENDENT. Telephone 306-J. Every day excepting Sunday. F. A. KORMAXX, PH. D., All kinds of Analytical Work, incltid ing Assaying. Accuracy guar anteed. . Laboratory with Hygienol Chemical company. ASHLAND, OREGON. W. P. Bowen. Phone 232-J. E. O. Smith, Phone 2G0-J. BOWEN & SMITH ARCHITECTS. Rooms 7 and 8, Citizens Banking & Trust Co. Building. Phone 104. MISS THORNE Graduate Nurse 04 THIRD STREET PHONE 309-J. MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA Camt). No. 6565, M. W. A., menta the 2d and 4th Friday of each month in Memorial Hall M. S. K. Clark, V. C; G. II . Hedberg, Clerk. Visiting neighbors are cor dially invited to meet with us, " For Paint and Wall Pa per, or work in these lines, see Wm. O. Dick er son. Residence phone 494-R. Store phone 172. We can save you money mm You don't know now much real comfort vou can take out of a rainy day until you havo worn a TOWER'S FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER The onlu slicker with the famous Reflex Edge (pat'd) that prevents water from running in at the front. Made for hard service. 1 wo colors black or yellow. $3.00 Everywhere. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. A. J. TOWER Co. BOSTON Tower Canadian Limited, Toronto 1013 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 LadiesJ Civic Improvement Club wui do nem on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month at 2:30 p. m., at the Com mercial Club rooms. A1 RtPLEx Edges Protect You Wateb Cannot Run In At The Front. (! Storag HSHLHND e and Transfer Co. C. F. BATES, Proprietor. Two warehouses near Depot Goods of all kinds stored at rtasona ble rates. A General Transfer Business. Wood and Rock Springs Coal Phone 60. Office with Wells-Fargo Express. ASHLAND, OREGON. PRINTING That Attracts The Tidings has one of the best equipped plants for commercial printing in Southern Oregon, and is prepared to turn out first-class worV in the line of Dodgers Placards Circulars Envelopes . Kill Hends ix-tter Heads Calling Cards ISusiness Curds Dunce Programs Wedding Invitations Wedding Announcements Tags, Tickets, Labels Notes, Receipts, Ktc, Etc. Ashland Tidings Phone 39. The Pacific Northwest Land Prod ucts Show, to be held in Portland November 18-23, inclusive, promises to be one of the biggest displays that has ever been held in the west. Ex hibits are expected from all over the Pacific northwest, and there will he keen competition for the many prizes offered. The Ashland exhibit went forward Tuesday, and it will be supplemented by additions from Grants Pass. D. M. Lowe leaves for Portland on the 13th inst, where he will take charge of the displays from this locality and Grants Pass. The dry farming prod ucts exhibited at the recent District Fair here will be the chief attraction from Ashland, supplemented by the finest apples to be found in the Pope and. Cook orchards, also field and garden seeds, and canned and dried fruits and vegetables forming a por tion of the main exhibits from the Ashland View and Vallew View ranch properties three miles north of town. The Southern Pacific Company iB not only offering a handsome silver cup for the district making the best display of agricultural products grown along the lines of its system but is also affording other incentives which will spur competition. Gen erous cash prizes are offered by the land show management, and Superin tendent Low declares that the Ash land district is going after some of them. The Commercial Club has gotten out a small folder relative to dry farming conditions hereabouts, enu merating the crops raised by these methods under actual experimenta tion on various tracts in this vicin ity. This literature will not only be distributed at Portland under the auspices of the land show, but copies are available for general circulation the folder having been arranged in convenient form as an ordinary let ter enclosure. Not a "Rest Girl" Left in This Town Panther, W. Va., Nov. 15. Cupid has done his work well in this town With a population of 800 people, the town now stands without a marriage able woman between the ages of 13 and 40. A year ago there were 20 girls ranging above 16 years, who were open for proposals. The past year seemB to have been remarkably productive of matrimonially inclined swains, as the marriageable list rap idly dwindled until the town is abso lutely barren of a "best girl." Of eligible young men the town has plenyt. Many or the young beaux are in a quandary and have already begun to depopulate the town on Saturday and Sunday nights Phone nows items to the Tidings all that, but it is claimed that in numerous experiments which the above university has made it is clear. ly proven to the satisfaction of those having the matter in charge that the theory is correct. There is another old practice, which is to bury the dead with the head to the north. Just where all these practices come from has not yet been explained. SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1."0 per year. of $35,000.(100 and owns the entire capital stock of the Tropical- Fruit Steamship Company, operating IS steamers between the West Indies, South America and the United States. The government, it is said, intends to push the impending suits as fast as possible before President Taft goes out of office. The PORTLAND EVENING TELE GUAM and Ashland Tidings one year, $5.00. If It Is Tidings work It is the best. Celluloid Collar Hums. San Francisco, Nov. 13. Wallace Haynes, a farmer, wears celluloid collars, lie went into a barber shop. "Singe?" suggested the tonsorialist. "Sure." Puff! Illoomp!- went the) collar. Haynes and the barber are in adjoining hospital cots. Phone job orders to the Tidings. N.&M. Home Laundry SHORT IS LONG CHANCE Bus Driver Finds Boss Is Short On Name Instead of Change, Says Portland Patter. Good Work Done Prcmpily AT THE Rough Dry at Reasonable Prices. New Machinery. J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office and Lnundry 158 Fourth St. TELEPHONE 165 CAMERON lWfY Hardware & Furnitere NEW AND SECOND HAND GOODS 345 East Main Street, Ashland, Ore. Phone 121 Oregonian: His name was short and to this circumstance is appended a short story. He came in on a delayed tra'n from Seattle yesterday morning and, without the slightest hesitancy or in quiry, took a seat in the automobile bus of the Hotel Oregon. The bus runner came in to collect the fares. The man from Seattle made no move that indicated an in tention of paying. "Fare, please," said the runner. "I'm from Seattle. I'm Short," answered the stranger. "Well, If your short, perhaps some of your friends will help you out." Whereupon several passengers sig nified their willingness to help out a fellow traveler, declaring they had been there themselves. "You don't understand," said the man, flushing. "I'm from the Seat tie Hotel. I'm Short." "No wonder you're short if you stopped in Seattle for any length of time," said one of the passengers "I've been there." "Well," said the runner, "if you haven't got the quarter, I can have it charged on your bill at the hotel When the Oregon was reached the runner told the clerk he was short one fare. The man registered as "Al D Short, Seattle," and was warmly wel- corned by the clerk. He is manager of the Hotel Seattle, owned by Wright & Dickinson, who own the Oregon and Dowers hotels in Port land. The bus runner Is still short one fare. Clara Morris Becomes Illind. New York, Nov. 11. Clara Mor ris, in her day the greatest emotion al acturess- on the American stage is totally and permanently blind. Such was the admission made last night at The Pines, 537 Riverside avenue, Yonkers, by the former stage favorite's husband, Frederick C. Har riott. The specialists, who for more than a year have employed every resource of their craft to sustain her failing sight, said her power of vision had left her forever and was beyond hope of restoration. She is in her 66th year. The condition of her health has made her a virtual invalid for several years. Her activities during this period have hen entirely literary, and her unsparing use of her eyes in con nection with the memoirs, novels and short stories she prepared for publi cation undoubtedly hastened the com ing of the darkness she and her friends dreaded. The Tidings for artistic printing Get Our Prices on Tents j i t i i i i i i i .t. t. t .t-1. 1. 1-1. t.j ......) . 'r WWVWWWWW TTtTTP V TTTTTTTT HMTV TTTTTTTTTtTTTTTWTTWTTTWW P. DODGE & SONS House Furnishers AND Undertakers i Jo Deputy County Coroner Lady Assistant .t. .t. j. i. .. 1. 1. j. i i 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1. 1 .1. 1. 1. .t. -- WW wWWlr'l' WW'V 'f 'F WWVWWWWWWWWWW'rW " 'i " i V 'I' T'l'TTT T,l,,tl T 'VW W 'W "IF VI1 'I' "I" W sssatj.tMfr T THE PORTLAND HOTEL Sixth, Seventh, Morrison and Yamhill Streets PORTLAND. OREGON H The most central location in the city, and nearest to the loading theaters and retail shops. Vou are assured of a most cordial welcome here. provided for our guests. Every convenience is The Grill and Dining Room are famed for their excel lence and for prompt, courteous service. Motors meet all incoming trains. Rates are moderate; European plan, if 1.50 per day upward. G. 1. Kaufman, Manager Apples Apples DO YOU WANT TO SELL? II What sorts and quantities, and what price? We are not tendering for anybody's fruit. II Do you want to consign and chance the markets? Con sult us and we will give you quotations. II In every case we send the sellers sale notes. In New York we use our own sale note, and do not have apples sold by auction. w. n. white & CO. 70 PARK PLACE, NKW YORK.