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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1913)
Monday. April 14. 1013. ASITLAKD TIDINGS PAGE FIVB The Man Who Has to Rob the Baby's Bank For Cat Fate will always be hard up because he hasn't learned to save. Often for want cf a small amount in cash the chance of a lifetime to secure a home or business interest is lost. Opportunity slips by the cashless, thriftless spender. Don't let it slip by you be ready with ready money In your Savings Account. 1 If you haven't on. start one here now today. One dol lar is all you need. Your money will draw four per cent interest, too. GRANITE CITY SAVINGS BANK ASH LAND, ORE. A- O. K. S., Attention. A good Attendance is desired at Alpha Chapter No. 1, O. E. S., Tues day evening, April 15, at 8 p. m. Vis iting members cordially invited. Pro gram and social time after chapter session. By order of the worthy matron, . NELLIE BIUGGS. LEAH M. CALDWELL, Sec. - rmWC AND PERSONAL 1 Fruit Inspector Smith of Talent was In Ashland on business Friday. E. D. Briggs transacted business at Talent and Medford Friday. Clif Payne makes cozy corners. C. J. Foster was here from Hilt to spend Sunday with his family. The Tidings Is for sale at W. M. Poley'8 Drug Store, 17 East Main St C. A. Malone went to Medford to day on business. Wall paper at Dickerson's. Select your new wall paper at Dickerson's while the stock Is fresh. W. D. Hodgson went to Rogue River this morning on real estate business. ' Carl Swenson of Medford visited W. W. Ussher of this city one day the last of the week. If you are in need of an A 1 book keeper who has had valuable experi ence, call Main 474 at once. 88-tf Rev. and Mrs. H. T. Chisholm -went to Medford Friday to visit friends. - Dr. W. R. Bagley and family of Talent were among those in the city Saturday. Get your violin, banjo, mando lin and guitar strings at Rose Bros.' Bring your films to Whited for developing and printing. Good work d ue promptly. 92-t Mr. and Mrs. Hartzell of Three Oaks ranch were in the city Saturday visiting Miss Margaret Tomlin. II. Jennings, who has been looking after his residence property here, left Friday night for his home in Port land. H. C. Stock went to Central Point Friday to take charge of the Funeral of Henry Daley ;of Eagle Pcint', who died Wednesday. The remains were brought to Central Point for burial. One of the large plate glass win dows in the Enders building on East Main street was broken by two worthless fighting curs Friday even ing, entailing a loss of $50 that is not covered by insurance. The Pythian Sisters will hold a cooked food market at Cameron & Patty's" store Saturday, April 19. 92-2t Messrs. and Mesdames Bert R. Greer and O. J. Stone motored to Ray Gold Saturday on a fishing trip, but the weather proved unfavorable for the sport. The families of T. W. Atkinson and W. O. Dickerson, who are under quarantine for scarlet fever, are get ting along nicely now, the victims of the disease being all improving. One of Mr. Atkinson's family, a daughter, was not expected to live for some time, but is now entirely out of dan ger. For sale A top buggy with rub ber tires for $40. Address C. F, Shep herd, 658 Boulevard, Ashland, or phone 326-J. 92-2t Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Andrews and Mrs. Andrews' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Knox, arrived a few days ago from southern California and are contem plating making the valley their fu ture home. Ernest Stewart, who dropped out of sight en route home from Wyo ming, has been heard from. His mother received a letter from him a day or two ago dated in Nevada, where he had stopped to work in a mine. Ladies, when you clean house this spring better have Kale Shep herd tune your piano so you can keep things in harmony. 92-2t Mrs. G. W. Reeves and little daughter Mildred of Medford came up Friday and staid until Saturday evening with Mrs. Reeves' parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Norwood. Mr. C. R. McCoy and daughter Bessie, who have been residents of BANK STATEMENT No. 22. Rep'ort of the condition of the State Bank of Talent, at Talent, Ore., in the state of Oregon, at the close of business April 4, 1913: RESOURCES. . Loans and discounts $27,706.29 Overdrafts, secured and unsecured 914.37 Bonds and warrants 12,267.06 Banking house 4,900.00 Furniture and fixtures... 2,100.00 Due from banks (not re serve banks) 2,088.56 Due from approved reserve banks 5,571.14 Checks and other cash items .. .v 179.00 Cash on hand 1,801.20 Expenses 1,045.27 Other resources 20.71 PUEPAItrXG FOK SHltl.NKKS. Dallas Will Give Them Time of Tlielr ' t Lives. Total. $58,593. CO LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in .... $20,000.00 Surplus fund 1,000.00 Undivided profits 619.49 Undivided profits, less ex penses and taxes paid. . 619.49 Individual deposits subject to check 30,987.74 Demand certificates of de- . posit 302.70 Cashier checks outstand ing 318.84 Time certificates of de posit 5,358.46 Liabilities other than those above stated 6.37 86-tt Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Burgan of Tal ent were up Saturday afternoon on business. Brooms. Ask your dealer for the product of the local factory. 87-tf Your Household Finances should be run as systematically as your business finnnces. . Making deposits in this bank regu larly to cover household expenses and issuing checks to pay them, is th sensible, business-like way to conduct the business of the heme. Thi method will enable you to keep your expenditures well in hand, will offer an incentive to economize, and will help you to accumulate a re serve from the fund set aside for liv ing expenses. Household accounts are invited at this bank. -Citizens Banking and Trust . - Co "The Bank That Helps the People, ASHLAND, OREGON. , . Total $58,593.60 State of Oregon, County of Jack son, ss. I, E. B. Adamson, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. E. B. ADAMSON, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th day of April, 1913. J. C. MASOX. i Notary Public. Correct Attest: EM.METT BEESON, R. E. ROBISON, -JOSHUA PATTERSON, Directors. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McNair and P. W. and Harold Moore, Mrs. Mc Nair's father and brother, who are here from Missouri, went to Medford Friday to take in the sig'uts of that city. When the outdoor world is call ing you, take a Kodak then leave the film at Whited's and get it de veloped and printed right. 92-4t Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Billings played hide and seek Friday forenoon. Mr. Billings, who had been in Idaho on business the past month, telegraphed his wife to meet him at Medford and return with him on No. 13. The mo tor was late that day, ami she, not thinking of missing No. 13, went to Ashland for some time past, left for I Medford on it. The trains passed at the central west this morning, via Phoenix and when she got to Med- Capital $50,0CO Surplns $5,000 vr. v. POHT-AND. Prem R V. O. N. SMITH, Cashier, W. A. TURNBR. See E. L. DAVENPORT, Asst. Cash. ROY G.WAI.KER. Asst. Cash. Portland. They will go direct to their former home at St. .fce, Mo., and later take up their residence at. Fort Scott, Kan. Several Medford and Gold Hill Oddfellows, members of the Canton, were up Sunday visiting the' local Canton. Mrs. Elizabeth F. Reed has been quite sick for several days at her home on Church street, bui some im provement in her condition is noted this morning. O. G. Steel of Yreka and T. G. Bradley of Fall Creek were over to attend the meeting of the California Oregon Power Company employes club meeting Friday evening and re mained till Saturday noon visiting C. A. Malone and looking over the city. Mr. Steel was formerly super intendent of construction for the company and has many friends and acquaintances here who were glad to meet him. The Masonic bodies have put a fine new carpet on their hall, costing nearly $500, and also installed a vacuum cleaner to care for It with. Dodge & Sons furnished the carpet and H. F. Simpson the vacuum cleaner. A. Edward Krull, resident agent for Oregon of the Title Guaranty & Security Co., ScYanton, Pa., is here from Portland today renewing his ac quaintance with a number of Ashland people after a lapse of six years. Chief of Police Olen had an 80 mile speedometer attached to his mo torcycle this' morning, w.hich means trouble for the automobile speeders who have been ignoring the very reasonable speed regulations pre scribed by this city. Now is the time to fertilize your layn and garden. Complete No. 1 fertilizer $2.50 per hundred at the Ashland-Klamath Exchange. A large delegation from the Pres byterian church will leave tomorrow and Wednesday for the meeting of presbytery and the Women's Presby-' terlal Society at Medford, j H. J. Boyd and family, who have been touring California for several months, returned to their home in this city Saturday night. They report a yeryr pleasant trip T)uV are glad to get back. . , - If -you want to buy a rubber-tire top buggy at about one-third its cost p. neii., vice Pres. ' come to C. F. Shepherd, the piano dealer. Has also a good top spring wagon very cheap. 92-2t. ford he was at Ashland. She re turned home on the afternoon train. Mr. Billings reports business very quiet in Idaho. Encourage home Industry. Use the Ashland-made broom. They wear better. Pb.one 809-F-3 tells where to get them. 92-2t Central' Point Herald: A press dispatch from Washington gives the Central Point postoffice the dlstlnc tion of being one of the few offices in the state where the present incum bent has no opposition for reappoint ment. This is further evidence of the general satisfaction 'the efficient service of Postmaster Guy Tex is giv ing to the patrons of the office. This added to his general popularity might well leave him the lone aspirant to the position his friends deem him well entitled to. Buy your pianos and player- pianos of the only exclusive dealer in Ashland capable of properly tun ing, repairing and warranting the same. Fine samples of mahogany, oak and walnut at 658 Boulevard C. F. Shepherd & Sons. 92-2t My stock of shoes must be closed out before May 1, and o do so unheard of prices will be given C. J. Coburn. 82-tf Insure against fire. Clif Payne can save you about 40 per cent, tf Dallas, Texas, April 14. Mike H. Thomas, whose varied career em braces that of cowboy, pretther, cot ton factor and business man, and who is now engaged hi the big task of getting Dallas in readiness for the meeting of the Imperial Council, An cient Arabic Order Nobles Mvstic Shrine, May 12-15. declaieR that all preparations have been completed practically a month ahead of the big national gathering. Every man, woman and child in Dallas has been made a member of the courtesy com mittee and the pupils of the public schools will wear fez cans with Courtesy Committee" thereon and will be at all times ready to give at tention to the comfort and care of every visitor. Mr. Thomas said: "As an illustration of the great interest Dallas is taking in the Im perial Shrine meeting, more than 15,000 home owners have signed pledge cards to beautify their homes, lawns and gardens and assist the civic committee in making Dallas as attractive as possible. The civic im provement committee has achieved wonderful success in this campaign under the leadership of Noble Harry A. Olmsted, its chairman. Twenty thousand school children have been busy for weeks past planting flow ers, beautifying their school grounds, cleaning up the school districts and calling upon the home owners to as sist them in the work. When the visitors arrive in Dallas they will be treated to the unique sight of seeing every boy and girl them meet wear ing a fez, emblematic of the Order of the Mystic Shrine. Tuesday, May 13, will be declared a general holi day, so that every one in Dallas may participate in the festivities of pa rade and pageant day tf Shrine week. We plan to give an entertain ment similar to that of the Mardi Gras in New Orleans and prizes will be offered for ttye most attractive costumes and dominoes. The homes of the city will be throwa open for the entertainment of Shrine visitors, their ladies and members of their families. Preparations for the meet ing are being rushed to completion and every detail of this work is well in hand." One hundred members ol the Arab patrol of Hella Temple have been ap pointed a reception committee to meet arriving patrols and bands. They will see to it that the members of these great Shrine organizations are- given the time of their lives. Many features have been provided for the entertainment of patrols and bands and all will be quartered at a big military encampment at Fair Park, where C. W. Davis, captain of Hella Temple patrol and chairman of the reception committee, has a large number of workmen busy fitting up comfortable quarters equipped with every convenience.- The program for Imperial Shrine week, giving every detail of the en tertainment, will be ready for distri bution in the next few days. This week will end the PIANO CONTEST. All votes must- be in by 10 o'clock Saturday evening. Winners will be' announced Monday. Buy merchandise certificates. 500 votes for every dollar. 3000 votes for $5. Good for full value in merchandise at any time. Boost your candidate. It costs you nothing. i Kohagen's 5, 10, 15 and 25c Store "He who gives most gets most." L. K. SHEPHERD Factory Piano Tuner Phone or write C. F. Shepherd & Sons, 658 Boulevard, or P1IOXK 320-J. Ashland Billiard Parlor 10 East Main St. J. P. Saylc & Son 4"H.,"M..fr4MM Carpenter Wanted Spirella Corsets. Mrs. Myra McNeill, 190 Oak street, phone 344-L, is the only rep resentative now la Ashland for the very popular flexible, comfortable Spirella corset. lt-Mon. Ready for Work! The value of fire protection de pends largely upon the readiness of the fireman to respond to any call and his willingness to face any dan ger The value of fire insurance de pends largely upon the readiness of the company ; in which you are in sured to respond immediately to your loss and its- ability to meet any loss which may come to it. That's the kind we have always ready for work. They pay promptly every honest loss, big or little. Let us write your insurance and we'll give you the kind that WORKS ALL THE TIME. BILLINGS AGENCY ' ESTAB. IBB3 ' 41 E. Main St. Thone 211-J. i Who will take two choice residence lots in Bnunerd, Minnesota, as part payment on con tract for construction of five-room bungalow in Ashland? Brainerd is a cily of 10,000 in habitants, with a payroll of $100,000 per month (rairoad shops). A good mechanic can always find work there. Lots in best res idence section. For further particulars see SB. W. TALCOTT With Ashland Tidings NEWS TO BE CENSORED. Extensive "Gag Orders" Secretaries. Issued to Washington, April 10. Secretary McAdoo's "gag order" has been ex tended from the assistant secretaries of the treasury, to whom it originally applied, to every bureau and division chief of that extensive department. Nothing whatever concerning govern ment business there may become known until the secretary's office has passed on the desirability of its pub lication. Surgeon-General Blue of the public health service' is forbidden to give out any news whatsoever of the prog ress of the government test and in vestigation of Dr. F. F. Friedmann's tuberculosis vaccine or to warn the public directly of danger of disease or epidemics; the life-saving service is forbidden to make known news of a vessel in distress or of measures taken for the relief of an endan gered crew. The revenue-cutter ser vice is forbidden to send public warnings of derelicts in the pants of navigation or give the news of send ing one of its ships to a distressed vessel. The AVronR Target. Medford Sun: They have been shooting at the public dances for years as a factor in waywardness among boys and girls, and wasting their powder, for this is a condition within the jurisdiction of the home. When1 15-year-old girls make their appearance athe Saturday night af fairs, 'alone, the principal trouble is with the parents, not the dance. A girl alone at a public danco is worse off than a boy on the streets for the police do have a chance to watch him. Sugar per 1 00 lbs. $5 Net The following subject to 5": cash discount: 15 lbs. Sugar $1.00 One-half lb. flat Oregon Red Salmon 10c One lb. flat Oregon Red Salmon 17c Special for this Week 7 bars Swift's Pride Laundry Soap 25c IDEAL GROCERY CO. White House Grocery Block 388 East Main Street. Phone 15G Overland Model 69 T 30 H. P.Touring Car With Electric Starter and Lights Near Pittsburg, a wild man who had lived for 10 years In a cave has been captured and sent to an asylum. Cars Fully Equipped Warner Speedometer. Robe Rail. Foot Rail Tire irons In rear Clear vision rain and wind shield , -IT J All cars are standard and are sold under our "Free Repairs For One Year" guarantee. For demonstrations see