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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (April 17, 1913)
PAGE FOUll ASHLAND TIDINGS Thursday, April 17, 1913. 1 1 1 1 II I HI 1 1 M I M I 1 1 1 H I UttiHH e t 1 1 1 Ml l In the Social Realm Society Xews. j Mrs. C. A. Malone and Mrs. P. B. Please phone all news items, bo-. Fuller entertained the Monday After clety or otherwise, to the Tidings.! noon Ebroiderv Club at the home' of ieave3late It'ems SunUMn.S-, ' 0Q Monda A issue,- bo as to insure insertion please 1 verv pleasant afternoon was spent phone them in as early as possible. by the ladies, light refreshments be The Tidings goes to press early each ig sorved. On Wednesday evening ".lT?"?f !Le??.n. "?!the ladies of the club and their hus- if possible. Mrs. C. H. Vaupel entertained the Thimble Club at her home on the Boulevard last Friday afternoon. The afternoon was devoted to fancy sewing and embroidery, and delicious refreshments were served. Those present jvere Mesdames Cunningham, Swedenburgj Veghte, Beach, Shep herd and Grace Turner. The dramatic club of the Ashland Polytechnic school went to Ray Gold Saturday for a picnic and had a most merry time. The crowd consisted of the cast which-produced "The Stub bornness of Geraldine" and included the following students, supplemented by Eugene Carpenter, Bruce Llnin ger and Ed Steele, the three chauffeurs. bands were entertained by the same hostesses at the Malone home. The rooms , were . handsomely decorated with spring blossoms. Five hundred was the order of the evening. Mr. and Mrs. L. Roy Davis won the high scores for lady and gentleman and W. H. McNair drew the consolation prize. One of the features at the regular five hundred party at Elks Temple last Thursday was the presentation of two fine pieces of hand-painted china, to Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Pierce, in honor of their twentieth wedding anniversary, which took place Fri day. Mr. Pierce, as secretary of -Ashland lodge Xo. 944, B. P. O. E., has been untiring in his efforts to make ladles' day a success, and the ladies appreciate that fact. At Thursday's meeting of the club Mrs. Alex Liv ingston won highest honors, while Miss Frances Mulit drew the con solation prize. West Side Ciirle. The West Side Parent-Teacher Circle had a special meeting Thurs day afternoon for the election of of ficers. The following were elected to serve during the ensuing year: Mrs. B. W. Talcott, president; Mrs. D. Perozzi, vice-president; Mrs. F. S. Whittle, secretary; Mrs. B. R. Greer, treasurer. The question of changing the day of meeting to the third Tuesday of each jnonth will be voted upon at the next meeting. Miss Alice Poor and Miss Minnie Rickman entertained a number of their young friends at tho home of the former on Friday evening. Games were played and light refresh ments were served. The following guests were present: Reta Card, Ruth Chappell, Ada Parton, Mildred Gearhart, Helen VanDyke, Agnes Hedburg, Laura Wiley, Louise Gil lette, Gladys Good, Charlie Brady, Leon Baughman, Fay Phillips, Ar thur Maxedon, Leslie Schwimley, El wood Hedburg, Howard Cole, John Rickman, Arnold Rickman and Don ald M inkier. Hncli-Spiering. j . On Wednesday, April 16, 1913, Miss Eva Spiering and John C. Bach, both of this city, were united in matrimony by Elder Frank Lind blad, at the Brethren parsonage. The groom is baggage man at the Southern Pacific depot and the bride a daughter of Mrs. Kate Kuder, 517 Iowa street. Mr. and Mrs. Bach left the same evening for Eusene, and after a short visit there will go to Portland and thence to Corral, Idaho, where they will visit his parents. Mrs. Kuder and Miss Esther Spier ing, a sister of the bride, left on the same train for Eugene. guests Mr. and Mrs. Otto Winter, Miss Hortense, Paul and Francis Winter, and Misses Mabel and Xellie Russell were present. Mrs. Winter, Mrs. Walter and Mrs,. Potter are daughters of Mrs. Russell, this affair partaking more particularly of the nature of a birthday party for Mrs. Russell. On Monday evening the arrival of the Hill family in the valley was cel ebrated at the beautiful home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Winter on the Boule vard. Mrs. M. L. Gillett3, one of the sisters of Mrs. Russel', arrived Sunday evening from Los Angeles, and J. B. Russell, a son of Mrs. A. H. Russell, arrived from Yreka, and were present, as were the others of the party of the previous evening, and the following Ashland descend ants of Isaac Hill: Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Gillette, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Gillette and daughters Louise and Margery, Mrs. J. K. Van Sant, Judge and Mrs. George W. Dunn, Miss Ada Dunn, Edwin Dunn, Horace Hill Dunn and Miller Dunn. In addition to the 14th of April being the sixti eth anniversary of the arrival of the Hill, family in the Rogue River Val ley and the seventy-fifth anniversary of the birth of Mrs. Russell, it is the eleventh anniversary of th9 birth of Francis Winter, the grandson of Mrs. Russell. TARIFF BILL IS FRAMED. President Has Assurance Jthut Bill Will Pass House in Present Form. The Eastern Star people held open house Tuesday evening in honor of the new hodge room carpet. In addi tion to the usual order there was a beautiful musical program, several of Ashland's best musicians assist ing. There was also a committee Celebrated Anniversaries. Monday, April 14, is an important date in the families of the descend ants of Isaac Hill. On that date sixty years ago, April 14, 1853, Mr. Hill and his family finished the ard uous and dangerous trip across 'the plains of the middle west and over I the mountains and arrived in the beautiful and then almost unsettled Rogue River Valley. - On witnessing j Its beauty they decided to make their future home, and Mr. Hill took up as a donation claim what is now known as the Kingsbury springs place. With the family were three daugh ters, who afterwards became promi nent citizens of the valley, being wives of three of Ashland's well known pioneer residents. These appointed to form a round table for girls afterwards became Mrs. T. the benefit of those who do not play I Dunn, Mrs. M. L. Gilletto and Mrs. cards, the committee consisting of Mrs. D. R. Mills, Mrs. Ellen Wagner, XI re. Eugenia Atkinson, Mrs. D. L. Minkler and Mrs. Ella Young. Light refreshments were served during the evening. Over 100 members and others were present. Being showered with blocks is not usually a pleasant experience, but the kind which were bestowed upon Mrs. Hackard of Klamath Fall3 last Mon day at the home of her mother, Mrs. Sam Lindsay, on Third street, the occasion being Mrs. Hackard's birth day. The blocks in question were "patchwork" blocks, and enough were contributed to make two com plete quilts. Light refreshments were served. The guests were Mes dames Price Fowler, R. E. Patty, W. A. Schwimley, H. C. Stock, Xicholl, J. B. Saunders, S. B. McXair, Lydia Lamb, J. C. Barnard, S. Arnold, Ab ble Morthland, Delphia Cotter, E. Fowler, J. Elliott, N. Moore and Miss Verna Halght. A. H. Russell. The day of their arrival in the val ley chanced, by a curious coinci dence, to fall upon the birthday of Mrs. Russell, and the. two events have long been celebrated together. This year was no exception, the cel ebration covering two days and mem bers of the family and,, descendants coming from Portland,. Los Angeles and intermediate points to take part in the festivities. On Sunday evening at the home of Mrs. Russell fourteen relatives sat down to dinner in honor of ' the event. Mr. and Mrs. II. L. Walter and daughter Ruth of Portland and Mrs. J. M. Potter and daughter Mar garet and son Russell of Weed, Cal.,. came specially for the event. The place cards at this function were photographs of Mrs. Russell, on the reverse side of which Miss Mabel Russell had painted the names of the guests and the dates 1838-1913. On each card was laid a bunch of fresh violets. Besides the out-of-town Washington, April 10 Assur ance that the tariff bill would pass the house practically in its present form was given President AVilson to day by Representative Oscar Under wood of Alabama, chairman of the ways and means committee arid ma jority leader In the houso. Under wood also predicted that the bill would reach the senate within three weeks. He expects the house to act speedily, a few days being devoted to general debate and then the bill being considered under the five-minute rule, schedule by schedule. President Wilson expects the bill to have an easy time in the senate too. Underwood denied today that the income tax provision proposes a tax on insurance beneficiaries, asserting that death and endowment benefits are not considered as incomes. The house democratic caucus con sidered today the wool, cotton and flax schedules. So far the assaults by the advocates of protection upon the proposed tariff bill have uniform ly failed. ... ... Underwood admitted ho expected the hardest fight on the wool sched ule but was confident that free wool finally would win. Representative Dies veiledly criti cised the president's demand for free wool, intimating dictation. Repre sentative Ferguson of Xew Mexico and other southwestern members When You Put Your Good Money Into Clothes You Want to Put it Into Quality and Service. HART SCHAFFNER $ MARX Has Made Clothes for you With These Requirements Bached by a Strong Guarantee of Superior Fabrics, Workmanship, fit and finish. You'll do us a great pleasure and yourself to come in and look this won derful line we're showing this spring. They're different from the ordinary, run of clothes. Their appearance is lasting. Every good style and pattern now on display at our store. SUITS FOR MEN OF ALL, AGES $15.00 to $35.00 i ClAJS ftf iTi -StH u :: r Copyright Han ScbafTner Sc Marx ASHLAND & Kinney OREGON $) AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAiTntiAAA tfiAAitnTi A li A ifiii iti iTiit Aiti A A A AtliiA A A AJi A A - 7 ITTTTTtTTTTTTTTTttTTTTt rTTTVTTTTTTyT'n'TTVFTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTyi' BURKE FILES ROXD. I'. S. F. & G. Co. Gecomes Surety for Treasurer U. S. supported Dies. MedfordGirl in Beauty Chorus. Seattle, Wash., April 17. Claud ine Rose of Salem, Ore., and Evelyn Carey of Medford, Ore., are the Ore gon representatives in the "beauty chorus" of coeds who will dance and sing In the production of "Princess Bonnie" by University of Washing ton students at the Moore theater on April 2 4. The presentation of this opera at a downtown Seattle show house will mark tho first uni versity theatrical affair held off the campus for years. Blendine Hays of Olymj ,1a, Bessie Hassett, Mrs. K. P. Bemis, Harold Gray, Ethel Porter of Seattle, Xed Edris of Spokane, Claude Harmon of Tacoma, and Lawrence Williams of Belllngham are the principals, and about sixty coeds and students are In the chorus. Washington, D. C, April 1. John Burke, former governor of North Da kota, who today became treasurer of the United. States, filed a bond for $150,000 with the federal govern ment to insure adequate care of every cent of the nation's money in his custody. The guarantor of his honesty and faithfulness is a seven-million-dollar corporation of Balti more, the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company. While the total of the treasury's funds will run nearly a thousand times the amount of Governor Burke's bond, all the other treasury officials who share with his the care of the money are bonded and the ag gregate security bears a. much larger proportion toward the total funds. Besides, the largest loss for which a treasurer was ever held responsible was $ 600, the contents of a sack stol en by a laborer some year ago. A Real Indian Paper. Its historic treasure, tho plant of the old Cherokee Advocate, a paper which for half a hundred jears was a part of the national life of -the Cherokee Indians, was recently sold by that nation. It was the only newspaper in the world printed in an Indian language in Indian characters. The once powerful agent, now a sou venir, was purchased at public auc tion by J. S. Holden, editor of the Fort Gibson Post, more as a matter of sentiment than anything else, $151 being the sum paid for the outfit. Bandits Bul led Coin Dug Up at San Jose. San Jose, Cal., April 15. More than $1,000 in gold coin, believed to have been buried by Tib'irclo Vas quez, a notorious California murder er and bandit, was unearthed at Los Gatos, near here, while an old adobe house was being razed in a park. The coin is In the city's treasury. Even Exchange. Eggs and produce taken in ex change for dry goods, shoes, gro ceries, etc., at the Ashland Trading Company. 71-tf .... , . i TTTTTT TT .... T T H Twelve thousand structures ' of various kinds were erected in "New York city last year, representing an expenditure of $207,000,000. Very best Klamath seed potatoes 75 cents per cwt, at tho" Ashland Klamath Exchange. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per year. In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Jackson County. In the Matter of the Estate of Alice R. Gibson, Deceased. Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned administrator ha3 filed his final account in the above entitled matter and that in pursuance of an order of the County Judge, made therein, the hearing upon said mat ter has been set for May 17, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the Coun ty Court room in Jacksonville, Ore gon., when and where all parties in terested may appear and show cause, if any, why said account should not be allowed and said administrator discharged and a distribution made as prayed. JOHN R. GIBSON, Administrator of the Estate of Alice R. Gibson, Deceased. First publication April 17. 93-5t J P. DODGE & SONS o House furmsners AND Deputy County Coroner .Undertakers Lady Assistant X 'jadMMtffli Meal Estate Bargains 1. I am offering for sale one of the best mercantile busi nesses In the city of Ashland, a good, clean stock of goods and large lot on paved street. Excellent patronage. Cheap rent. 2. I can offer for quick sale 12 acres of fruit land, 8 acres In bearing fruit, 2 acres or more In grain hay and balanco in brush and timber. A sightly location, right in city, with city water, for irrigation. Good 6-room plastered house with bath. Barn, pack ing house and new chicken house. Price only $2,800. Nothing cheap except the price. 3. 17 acres on Boulevard, 2 miles from Ashland. 15 acres bearing fruit. 8-room bungalow, modern in all respects, in cluding furnace for heating. Well and water' piped to house and garden. A fine suburban home that will yield a good income. Price $8,500. Would exchange for merchandise stock on coast. 4. What have you to trade for 80 acres in Tillamook county near Tillamook Bay and near railroad. Cash price $800. w.o. Nooeofts Real Estate -Insurance Rentals Cor. E. Main and 2nd Sts. Ashland, Ore. tmnm........ rTTTTTTTTTTI fAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAifnfi.1i , J I TTTT TTTTTTT TTTTT TTTTT 1 Hoe Itioe i For every member of the family at reductions that cannot be equaled in Oregon. Read the prices f ! ono I n d50 mi ATJ I EXCLUSIVE SHO STORE .50 Shoes $3.95 , $3.50 Shoes $2,95 $4.00 Shoes $3.45 $3.00 Shoes $2.65 $2.50 Shoes $2.00 Don'l overlook this opportunity. It'syourlastchance