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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1913)
PAGE FOUR ASBTLAXD TIDINGS Monday, June 9, 101.3. jini i In the Social Realm '"i'in mill unntni Society Kens. Please phone all news Items,-so ciety or otherwise, to the Tidings, No. 39. It is often necessary to leave late items over until the next issue, eo as to insure insertion please phone them in as early as possible. The Tidings goes to press early each Monday and Thursday afternoon and items must be in and in type by noon if possible. The Women's Civic Improvement Club will meet at the Commercial Cub rooms Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. A cordial invitation is ex tended to all interested in civic work. May Cambers, secretary. The Women's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian church will meet at the church parlors Thursday after noon at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. Emma Jack will be leader and the study will be a review of the book on Mormon ism. All ladies are invited. The Upper Granite Embroidery Club had a royal good time with Mrs. Bert Freeman on Granite street Fri day afternoon. She received the guests in her home and when they had all arrived took them through her yard across the creek into the grove, where they spent a perfectly lovely afternoon. One feature of the afternoon was , a Victrola concert, and the embroidery needles flew like magic, inspired by the sweet music. All agreed it was an enchanted spot. Mrs. Freeman served ice cream, strawberries and a variety of cake. She was assisted Ly Mrs. N. M. Long and Mrs. A. S. Hubbard. Twelve members enjoyed her hospitality. The club voted to have a picnic in the park for their next meeting. The Qui Vive Club met at the home of Mrs. A. A. Young, 9 Granite street, Friday, June 6. After the regular order of business a program was rendered, led by Mrs. Schutt. Mrs. Young read an-article entitled "The Land of the Golden Sea;" Mrs. Thornton, "A Marine Memorial;" Mrs. Sayles, "It's Up to You;" Mrs. Wilcox, "A Good Motto;" Mrs. Schutt, "Seeing Things;" Mrs. Young read another article, "The Joy of Do ing Good," by M. Torgis; Mrs. Go mar, "Near Shady Wall a Rose Once Grew." Mrs. Thornton then gave us some music, after which Mrs. Young through her Indian guide gave some splendid messages. There were 6 present. The club meets every Fri day from 2 to 4:40 at the same place. All ladies welcome. IMcnic Supper. The Ladies' Chautauqua Park Club will meet Friday afternoon, June 13, at the club house In the grove. All members please bring well-filed bas kets and Invite your families to come and partake of a picnic supper and a general good time. Entertained Abofs. Miss Margaret Tomlin entertained the girls of the Abof Club at the home of Mrs. Van Sant on Oak Btreet Wednesday evening last. A number of the boys "smelled the eats," and also joined the party, which enjoyed a most delightful evening, games and music filling the time. There was a very appetizing lunch' served during the evening, and all voted Miss Tom lin a capital hostess. ' Returned Hospitality. Medford Sun: A number of Med ford's younger set gave a dance to a number of Ashland friends last (Friday) night and returned their hospitality of last week, when the Ashland boys and girls were hosts at a picnic In Ashland canyon. Most of those present went last year eith er to the Ashland or the Medford high school, and the evening was spent delightfully in dancing. Light refreshments were served. C. L. S. C. Dinner. All the members of the C. L. S. C. were present at a German dinner party given" at the home of Mrs. Rocho Friday evening. June 3. Mrs. Rocho and Mrs. Putnam were host esses. Among the distinguished guests were the German emperor and empress and Duchess of Cumberland. This dinner marked the close of the work of the club for the year. Dur ing the evening all enjoyed a delight ful program- consisting of talks on German life and selections from the operas of German musicians. Farewell Party. A farewell party In honor of Gladys Leslie, who left here Tuesday for her new home In Tuscon, Ariz., was held Mouday evening at the -home of Hazel Dalzell, 311 Granite street. Those present were Misses Ruth Porter, Hazel Bruner, Madeline Silver, Kathleen Silver, Marguerite Brown, Bessie Homes, Gladys Leslie and Hazel Dalzell; Messrs. LeRoy ininii II Ashcraft, Lawson Riley, Merlin Wll son,' Fred Schuerman, Harold Simp son and Winn Hays. Refreshments were served at a late hour and the guests left wishing Miss Leslie much happiness in her new home. A Free Lecture. "The Origin and Perpetuation of Political Government" will be the subject of a well-known man and lecturer, whose name I withhold as a matter of surprise. He is not -a Sabbatarian but a strict Sunday ob; server. Therefore while phases of religious persecution through politi cal government may be shown, the Sunday agitation for religious legis lation will not be taken up. Conse quently those of you who may have convictions along these lines will not have them disturbed. So fill the S. D. A. church, corner Fourth and C streets, Wednesday, June JL1., 8 p. m. The lecture should be specially helpful to those who have recently assumed the responsibilities of the elective franchise, but everybody is welcome. Ladies of the Maccabees'. Margaret Hive No. 22, Ladies of the Maccabees of the World, at their regular hive review June 4 had their ritualistic draping of charter in mem ory of their late sister, Mafy L. Stan ley. The relatives and friends of the late member were invited to attend and witness this beautiful tribute to her memory. Mary L. Stanley was an honored member, being a charter member and having served faithful ly and efficiently as an officer and member. She successfully filled the office of record keeper of Margaret Hive several different terms and has received certificates of merit from the Supreme Hive for her faithful service. She will be missed and mourned by all who knew her, and especially the members of Margaret Hive No. 22. An Anniversary Surprise. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Milner were pleasantly surprised at their home near the normal school by their neighbors Saturday evening. The oc casion, their third wedding anniver sary, gave their friends ah excellent pportunlty to spend an evening with them pleasantly. Games, guessfhg contests, etc., filled the evening. Mr; Harris won the honors in the guess ing contest, while Mrs. R. M. Hedges drew the consolation prize. The events in the life of Mr. and Mrs. Hedges, given in shadow, proved in teresting to their friends, as did also the weddings of other guests, datfes of which, and even the exact ages of the brides were secured by the curi ous men. Delicious refreshments were served near the close of the evening. Beautiful flowers and best wishes were showered upon the bride and groom of 1910. The following guests, were present: Messrs. and Mesdames J. A. Milner, E. C. Rich ards, W. F. Shaw, R. M. Hedges. J. A. Schoenthal, Harris, Lloyd, Moore and W. G. Gordon, Mrs. A. C. Briggs, Misses Margaret Gordon, Frances Briggs and Pearl Boggess. How Americans Treat the Rich The United States' is perhaps the only country in the world in which money, in itself, carries no public honor with it, and in which even the most lavish heaving of coins to the rabble goes unrewarded. An English Carnegie would have a seat In the house of lords twenty years ago; a French Rockefeller would have sport ed the grand cordon of the Legion of Honor before he ever sported a tou pee; a German Morgan could never have escaped the Red Eagle and privy council. But In the United States a great fortune is the most effective of all bars to public dignity and preferment, and even in private respect. Our Ryans and Harrimans are not idols but targets; the one sure way to make a stir In politics is to attack them successfully, or, fall ing that, merely savagely. And our spectacular philanthropists, our Rockefellers, Carnegles and Sages get only mocking for their philan thropy. They are public butts, fair game for every wayside clown and spellbinder. Imagine the roar that would go up if it were proposed to erect a monument to one of them, or to send him to congress or to make him president. H. L. Mencken In June Smart Set. Spirella Corsets. . Mrs. Myra McNeill, 190 Oak street, phone 344-L, is the only rep resentative now in Ashland for the very popular flexible, comfortable Spirella corset. . lt-Mon. More small towns in Norway use electricity than In any other country owing to the abundance of water power. INFORMATION IMPORTANT. . . . r . . Exact Date of Veteran's Birth Essen- - tial. ' - - ";- "I have received a number of in quiries from comrades as to the meaning of the inquiries sent out by the pension bureau asking for the exact date of their birth," says the adjutant of the Klamath Falls post in a communication in the Klamath Falls Northwestern. "The ascertain ment of this fact was made necessary by the passage of the automatic bill, providing 'for the payment of in creased pensions when the pensioner arrives at the specified age. "Under the previous law the pen sion rate was advanced upon appli cation by the pensioner when he ar-rived-at 65, 70 or 75. "Under the present law his pen sion begins with the exact date upon which he arrives at the age, and he is entered upon the rolls for that ad vance without any action upon his part. Therefore the pension bureau has not only to know the year when the pensioner becomes 62, 65, 70 or 75, but it must know the day of the month. "All the certificates which are now going out have the exact date upon which the advance will begin. It is, therefore, necessaryo know the date of birth positively. , "The muster rolls of the war de partment only have, as a rule, the age of the soldier in round years. Thus he is reported as 18, 19, 20, etc., according to the circumstances. "Pensioners will find it to their Interest to promptly answer the in quiry which reaches them and fur nish such evidence as they can as to the precise date of their birth. "They have no need to fearJhat this is gplng to be used in any way against them, but it will be greatly to their advantage." How a Moderate Income Goes. New York Sun: The Chosen Peo ple of God were well able to pay a tithe of 10 per cent, for they lived in a God-fearing age and were God-fearing people. Since that time Diogenes had to search with a lan tern for an honest man. Imagine a man with an income of $4,000 a year and upward, with a plot of ground, a "place," in the sub urbs, as is common all over the United States. Suppose he overpays for every commodity he purchases. Suppose that merchants, down to the milkman, have two prices, one for him and one for the smaller house- noiaer. : suppose ne pays nis seM vants, who also receive out of his in come a commission in the overcharge of the merchants, pays once a legal wage and once an Illegal toll. Suppose he pays an Illegal toll to the feedman, the gasoline man, the veterinary surgeon, the cook, and to heaven knows whom not! Then the land-owner will pay twice over, nev er receiving full value for his money. If he keeps three servants the waste in butter alone will amount to $100 a year, the Interest on two $1,000 bonds at 5 per cent. The actual waste, deliberate throwing away, hogging of food, damage and destruc tion to property and theft around a "place," not to mention around a man's place of business, will amount to one-third of a man's Income a year. This is 33 1-3 per cent taken from a man before he has had a chance to make a free-will offering to charity. If after this shortage he gives an additional 10 per cent to charity he has been mulcted of 45 1-3 per cent, almost half of his income. Then a tax Is imposed, upon him by the state for charity, and to all insult to in jury the United States government proposes to tax all ability that pro duces an Income exceeding $4,000. So that more than half of his labor goes for nothing to his glorious coun try, whichever way you choose to phrase it. Verily, the man of means has not a living chance. A man must be poor or else very wealthy In" order to retain the reward of the sweat of his brow or the creation of his Intellect. Sixty per cent of his earnings is filched from him. , Question. A very pretty but extremely slen der girl entered a street car and managed to seat herself between two men. Presently a portly colored mammy entered the car, and the pret ty miss, thinking to v humiliate "the men for their lack of gallantry, arose. "Auntie," she said, with a wave of her hand, toward the place she had Just vacated, "take my seat.'.' "Thank you, missy," repl'ed the colored woman, smiling broadly, "but which gen'man's lap was yo' slttin' on?" Magazine of Fun. "From Manger to Cross." Star Theatre Tuesday and Wednesday nights, June 10 and 11. The grand est five-reel feature ever shown in Ashland. Great reductions in ladies' hats at Enders' this week. ' WMIIIWmMHmMMMHHHHHMIMMMMnMMMMMMMMIIIIIM ill li You buy your clothes in one of three ways. Which do you think is the best way? L--'You may go to a custom tailor and have them "made to order." You have delays, "try-ons," you don't know , what you're going to get, and if he's' a cheap tailor $23, $30, $40 you don't get very much. Yu may pick out a piece where, and waif If the suit "makes up" as you expected, if it is trimmed as you hoped, if it fits as you want it to, you're lucky. 3. You may go to a dealer in clothes, see them ready, not merely a piece of cloth; see how they look on you, not In an Illustration or on a dummy figure; see the linings and trimmings, not merely words about them; see how the suit fits, before you buy, not after; see if It's becoming to you, not Just guess at it; and take only a few minutes of your time. ' at $25.. " . I ASHLAND ! I.A.I.J.J.AJ. a jij,a AAA JiAAAA A AAA AAA A AAA a TtTTTTtt TTT lrV W 'Vr W TTTTV I TTTTVTTTTT1 Ti LEAGUE IS ORGANIZED. Ashland to Have Branch E. L. of O. C. Pursuant to call, a number of Ash land people met In the rooms of the Commercial Club Friday at 4 p. m. and organized the Ashland branch of the Oregon Citizens' Educational League. The following officers of the local branch were elected: President Superintendent George A. Briscoe. Vice-President B. R. Greer. Secretary Mrs. D. Perozzi. Assistant Secretary J. O. Rigg. Executive Council Mrs. E. C. Gard, Prof. F. E. Moore, R. P. Campbell, Miss Armeda Kaiser, F. W. Moore, G. H. Billings, H. G. But terfield. The work of the league is to pro mote the study of questions neces sary to enable the voter to pass intelligently- not only upon the men up for office, but upon the measures upon which the initiative or the ref erendum is Invoked. There Is little doubt that it will prove both of in terest and value. English Wear Detacliable Cuffs. The Worcestershire sauce in half of the "old English" restaurants is Heinz'. So far has the American in vasion gone. All Englishmen who have ever heard of America, and can afford it, wear American shoes. All English vaudevilllans sing American songs, picking out the worst infalli bly. The American garter hugs the slim legs of the nobility and gentry. American whiskey has begun to trickle down their throats. Ameri can bathtubs have changed the Eng lish bawth from an esoteric debauch to a genuine bout with soap and cur rycomb. The trolley car, the type writer, ragtime, the phonograph, the incandescent light, detachable cuffs, floating soap, the union suit, the sec tional bookcase, the slot machine, steam heat, the gas stove, the press agent, the shoot-the-chutes, the fly ing machine, graft, poker, condensed milk, fake Pilsener, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the two-step, the crayon portrait, the portrait, the canned book review, the virtuous chorus girl and the telephone all American Inventions have been adopted and naturalized by the Eng lish. There are now, indeed, almost as many telephones in London as in Toledo, Ohio. But don't mistake me; there is a limit, and at times a sense of its rigidity is pressing. In all London you will not find a single American 5-cent vdgar. In the whole of the Strand and Fleet street, between Tra falgar Square and Ludgate Circus, there is but one tobacconist who sells American plug tobacco. Search, this capital of the world from center to perimeter and you will not find a single bootblack who knows his busi ness, or a single barber who pene trates the true technique of the hot towel, or a single real first-class soda fountain, or a single box of decent matches, or a single corncob pipe, or a single bartender with enough pride in his art to wear a diamond stud. George Weems Peregoy in Smart Set. Germany forbids the sale of hair dyes containing colors dangerous to health. - A shipment of the new Balkan blouses at Enders' has just arrived. of cloth from a book of samples; send your specifications away some- This third way is right; you pay less than in 1, than In 2. As a demontstration of It. ask us to show ' -. , TOUR AROUND THE WORLD. Spokane Lad Earns It Selling News. pajK-rs. Spokane, Wash.,- June 6. With money he earned carrying papers in Spokane, Bertram Puckett, aged 17, has started on a trip around the world. He sails from San Francisco for Honolulu and the Philippines this week, and at Manila will meet his brother, Roswell Puckett, a school supervisor on the islands. The brothers will complete the journey together, going to India vand through the Suez Canal to Europe. Bertram Puckett is the Bon of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. E. Puckett of 905 Pittsburg street, Spokane. He began carrying a newspaper route five years ago and had $700 saved when he started the trip around the world. He will be gone six months, returning in time to complete his high school course next June. - Lost Dog Located at Ashland Saves Thrashing. San Francisco, June 6. General Manager Scott of the Southern Pa cific is relieved today over the find ing of a dog named Fluffy, which the company had lost In transit. Walter Farnum, Jr., of Seattle, promised Scott "a licking when he got big enough" unless Fluffy came home. The Southern Pacific special po lice were on the job and Scott re ceived word today that Fluffy had been located at Ashland, Ore. THE M1GER TO TEE. CROSS A PICTORIAL DRAMA OF THE REDEMPTION OF MANKIND Prodoccd In Authentic locations in Palestine and Egypt Reels Kalem's Biblical Masterpiece 5000 Feet TAE THEATRE Tuesday and Wednesday, June 10 and 11 ADMISSION 10c AND 20c and get more value" vnu ntip nf nnr sulfa - - : OREGON t If you want a Joy ride, a trip Crater Lake, or your photo taken, see to Boyd, the Photographer Phones : Residence 252-J, Studio 63 RIGHT IN THE NECK is where the dealer should get it who for a few cents extra profit will foist an inferior flour on his customers. The way for you to avoid such im position is to always ask for HIGH FLIGHT flour and take no other. Then and then only are you sure of getting the best flour milled. It's the wheat we use that makes the flour. Morton & Son DISTRIBUTERS PHONE AO