Oregon Hlitorteal EocUty, 307 Second St HLANB IBING SUNNY SOUTHERN OREGON ASHLAND THE BEAUTIFUL VOL. XXXVIII . ASHLAND, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1913 NUMBER 49 ENDERS' STORE BURGLARIZED CLOTHING AM) JEWELRY FOR TWO TAKEN. SIMPSON HEARS FROM KNIVES Police at Marslifield Picked Up Two Hoboes Who Had Nearly Thirty of ftimpsou's Knives in Their Posses sion. . I. W. Paulson Reviwits Ashland. Paul .W. Paulson of Portland ar rived on No. 13 yesterday and has been kept busy ever since greeting his many Ashland friends. He re ports Mrs. Paulson well and says they are getting to like Portland very much, but that Ashland still looks good to him. He commented upon the beautiful new armory and the handsome improvement of the city hall as especially appealing to him. He will remain here several days. REBUILT CITY HALL WILL LOOK FINE STRUCTURE APPROACHING COMPLETION AND ITS BEAUTY ATTRACTS ATTENTION AND COMPELS ADMIRATION OF ALL H. G. Enders & Son were the latest victims of the epidemic of burglary. Their store was entered last night and two overcoats, two suits, silk stockings, stickpins and other jewelry and several velvet neckties were tak en. The burglars secured entrance through the rear window, tearing off the Bcreen, breaking the glass and releasing th! window fastening. The work appears to have been that of two men who wanted outfits. "Gopher" Invade Ashland. Mrs. D. H. Hanscom of St. Cloud, Minn., and Miss Alice Abbott of Port land visited at the home of Mrs. James H. Doran last week. Mrs. Hanscom will spend the winter in Ashland, having spent several previ ous winters nere. sue ien miuue- sota clad iu snow and was delighted to find rotes blooming here. The new city hall in its appearance is exceeding the expectations of the friends of the project of rebuilding and is even converting many who thought it impossible to make a good looking structure out of the old building. Much credit is due F. Hi Fitch, the architect, as well as to the city council for the great improve ment. Mr. Lamb, the contractor, is doing first-class work and makini good progress, all things considered. It is uncertain as yet when the re corder's force can occupy their new quarters. The young lady clerks de clare their hair is turning gray. Partly with the waiting, they Bay, but mair.iy with the 'mortar dust which Has drifted into the office during the operations. T Is Fighting The Beef Trust Thos. H. Simpson received a tele gram Monday night from the chief of police of Marsbfield asking him If he ad lost any cutlery. He replied in the affirmative and inquired If they had secured any. The chief of Marsh field reported two hoboes arrested there who had in their possession 26 or 27 knlveB bearing Mr. Simpson's brand. The officers there were no tified by Chief Porter to hold the men and the local police sent Constable A. L. Irwin over after them. , He left Tuesday evening and is expected to Might or tomorrow with them. It is not known whether or not any of the stolen money was recovered. American Victim of Wreck. Lelun, France, Nov. 12. E. A. Magee, an American, "was believed today to have been killed in the wreck here a week ago, when 16 per sona met death. Seven of the uni-' dentified victims were buried this morning. Thought It An Abandoned Auto Throe Pays Only. I have just received from the fam us Scotch Woolen Mills a large con signment of high-grade woolens In the very newest patterns, regular t2 to 130 values. Suits and over coats tailored to your measure. will put these on sale for three days oly. Saturday, Monday and Tuesday your choice at only $18. Remember, ly three: days. Leave your meas ure and save a few dollars. My per sanal guarantee goes with every or j Son disDlav window. Orres' Tailoring Shop, 71 North Main. Two weeks' sale, cent reduction on all linery at Mrs.. Simons', trading stamps. Twenty per lines of mil Ask for Blue 48-4t Thanksgiving Offerings Asked The Tidings is in receipt of a cir cular from the Boys and Girls' Aid Society of Portland asking that it solicit Thanksgiving contributions of foodstuffs, olothes, etc., and stating that the railroad and express com panies would transport Btuff properly marked dead head. The Tidings has no doubt that the object is a worthy one and the society reliable, but there is a Sunshine Society in Ash land which can place all donations of this eort w'th worthy poor in our own city, and: charity should . begin, at. home. -Nearly every family in Ash land could contribute something to one of these causes and enjoy their Thanksgiving dinner the better for having done so. About a year or more ago, when the big packing interests had a stran gle hold on the existing butcher shops in Medford, John Dunnington of Jacksonville, who had been supplying the county seat with home-grown meat raised on the ranges of the Ap plegate and Illinois rivers, opened a shop in Medford. As usual when a man goes athwart the "powers that be," he was given but a short lease of life in the opinion of his competi tors. The people of Medford, how ever; saw fit to patronize him in pref erence to the other markets and to day he has one of the leading mar kets of Medford. Mr. Dunnington has Invaded Ashland and established a market at 86 North Main street. He says but little, but has "Fighting the Beef Trust" in big letters clear across the front window of his mar ket, and that is not all. He is tak ing the public into his confidence by bulletining his priceB In his windows and in the columns of the local press. He will without doubt repeat his Medford success in Ashland. R. E. Allison says the Tidings was misinformed as to the circumstances of the accident Saturday night. Mr. Allison states that the motorcycles were running without lights and that he saw the reflection of his light on the headlight of Sayles machine and thought that it was a machine aban doned at the right side of the road and so swerved to the left to avoid it, seeing too late that it was a mov ing "motorcycle. Mrs. Allison says that he did not lose his head, but that the fact that Sayles was running without a light was the cause of the accident. "Blondy" Sayles is improving from the result of the accident as rapidly as could be expected. Special Meetings. There will be a series of special ' revival meetings at the Christian church, corner Second and B streets, the rest of this week and next week. The -service will begin promptly at 7:30 each evening. Mrs. Clara G. Esson, formerly of this city, is to speak tonight concerning the Sunday school work in Oregon. Then Mr. Browning will do the preaching for the meetings .each night thereafter. The congregation has pledged the" pastor that it will be faithful in at- i tendance. The people of the city are all cordially invited. Mr. Brown-ngs sermons will be educational as well as evangelistic, nere are some oi his subjects: "The New Testament Church." 1 "What Name Shall We Wear?" "New Testament Baptism." "The Lord's Unanswered Prayer." "Seeking the Lost." "The Unpardonable Sin." "Christ's or Satairs." "What Would Jesus Do?" ''The Terms of Pardon." "The Handwriting on the Wall." ASHLAND'S 'ICE PLANT IU'SINKSS OF ICING CARS STEAD. ILY INCREASING. iSOME DETAILS OF MANUFACTURE IM'al Institution is Sustained Almost Entirely by Railway Traffic Trailo IjochI Consumption Very Small Details of Manufacture. EUGENE REGISTER THANKS ASHLAND JOR VOTE Paper from University City Expresses Appreciation of This City's ' Splendid Majority lor Referendum Measures McGuire Recants. New York. Nov. 13. George Mc Guire of Syracuse, who denied under oath Thursday he sent a telegram to John Hennessy, former Governor Sul zer's graft investigator, relative to the political contributions, has ad mitted he was author of the telegram. A threat of a perjury indictment was hanging over him when the admis sion was made and, he left the stand almost in a collapse. McGuire was testifying for the second time in the John Doe inquiry into Hennessy's charges that contractors on state work has been sandbagged into mak ing campaign contributions to Tammany. Peach Tree Grows Ten Feet in Single Season. A. W. Stone, who owns an orchard on the Jacksonville road, brought into the Medford Commercial Club Saturday a ten-foot shoot of a young peach tree, the entire growth being made this summer. He also brought in- giant beets and carrots, weighing ten pounds apiece, grown between rows of young fruit trees all of them produced without Irrigation. How many Ashland people ever gave a moment's thought to what the Ashland Ico & Storage Company's business means to the city? Seldom, is it given a thought except as one ..V. IIU'1 II 1 V. 1 . " I II . 1 v" 1 .V V u cheap ice garnered from the lakes and rivers of the north central states complains of the expense of jce here, and terms the company robbers. A Tklings representative chanced to drop into the office ot the plant a few days ago and C. W. Root, thw manager, showed him some idea of how the ice is manufactured and in cidentally of the amount turned out $25 REWARD for the capture of persons who bur glarized our store Wednesday night. They took two suits of clothes, two overcoats, half dozen pairs of silk stockings, two or three dozen velvet and Us cost Th6 ice is manufactured neckties, several stickpins and other on what ,g known a8 the direct ex jewelry. It H. G. ENDERS & SON. That Lane county appreciates the n-qrk of Jackson county in the late university referendum campaign is evidenced by a letter received by the Tidings from the Eugene Morning Register. The letter is as follows: Eugene, Ore., Nov. 11, 1913. The Tidings, Ashland, Ore.: Gen tlemenPermit me to express to you my personal thanks for the splendid support you gave the University of Oregon appropriations at the recent election a support wnose vaiue was , into who ot farthest north. evidenced uy tne spienaia voie given i Dr. Cook at It Again. Washington, Nov. 13. Dr. Fred erick A. Cook arrived here Tuesday to ask a congressional investigation Grants Puns Hostler Drinks Carbolic -Ada.--- - Grants Pass, Nov. 13. Hank Brown, an employe of a local livery stable, missing since Sunday morn ing, was found dead on the roof of the barn Tuesday morning, an empty bottle that had contained carbolic acid lying by his side. As it was plainly a case of suicide, no inquest was'held. Despondency over drink was the cause. Threaten Arrest of President Sproule San Francisco, Nov. 13. Word re celced here Wednesday from Sacra mento stated that John S. Blair, dep uty state labor commissioner, con templated obtaining warrants for the arrest ot William Sproule, president of the Southern Pacific railroad, and other officials on charges of violat ing the state law, which provides that all discharged employes must be paid immediately on their dismissal. Blair alleged that numerous com plaints had reached his ofClce from workingmen who said they had been forced to wait for weeks for their checks. Prices cut below bedrock at Boyd's Studio. Full sized cabinet folders for $1.95 per- dozen. 48-tt pansion system, ammonia being the agent used. As Mr. Root terms it. the ammonia acts as a wheelbarrow; takes a load of heat out from th water or from the cooling room anil dumps it outside and comes back for more. The ammonia, expanding In coils surrounding the water vats or coils in the refrigerating rooms. rapidly absorbs the heat from the surrounding water or atmosphere. When condensed hy pumps the heat becomes active, the ammonia after being condensed heating the pipes through which it is pumped, instead of cooling them, and having to be run through hnge coils of pipe upon which water drips. The company turns out two grades, or rather styles, of Ice, one used for refrigerating purposes and the other for use In drinking water, etc. The theory and. belief is widespread that "white Ice" is not aB pure nor has it as great refrigerating power as clear ice, but such Is not the case with manufactured lcei Tne cause of tho (Continued on Page Eight.) For Sale. Household furniture, apples, 25 to 50 cents a box, pears, chickens.. 242 Granite street. It PASTOR GILLESPIE GIVES SECRET OF LONGEVITY Preacher Delivers Powerful Sermon in Dreamland Theater Says the Resurrection Day Is 1,000 Years Long the university by Ashland. Very sincerely, FRANK JENKINS, Managing Editor. First Statewide Welfare Conference Portland, Nov. 12. The first state wide welfare conference under the Oregon minimum wage law, called by the industrial welfare commission, closed tonight after a hearing which began October 15. Recommendations made public t'o might concerning, women workers are: Minimum wage for experienced women, $8.25 a week; minimum wage for inexperienced women, $6 a week. Maximum apprenticeship tor beginners before joining experienced class, one year. A maximum of 54 hours constitute week for women. 8:30 o'clock at night to be the limit to which women may work in mercantile establish ments and laundries. The commission must give hear ings on recommendations before pro mulgating the rulings. School Census. Secretary Pohland of - the school board and F. D. Wagner will start a the canvass of the school census next week.. It is very important that none be overlooked in this census, because for every one overlooked the school fund will lose ten dollars. Mr. Wagner will canvass the west side and Mr. Pohland the east side. Citi zens should give them every- assist ance possible in this work. Apparently General Felix Diaz Isn't aa brave as be looks. 1 Obituary. Mrs. Elizabeth Peters was born in Tiffin, Ohio, January 10, 1S30; she was called to her heavenly home No vember 9, 1913. Her maiden name was Kroh. October 25, 1855, she was married to Eli N. Peters. Three daughters were born to them, of whom only one is now living, Mrs. Florence Studebaker, who has made her home with her parents the last few years. Besides her granddaugh ter Bernice, who is now visiting here, she leaves one grandson, Robert Stu debaker, of Efland, N. C. "Grandma" Peters, as she was affec tionately known to many, was a beau tiful Christian character. Always looking on the bright side of life, she spread cheer and sunshine all about her. She had a kind word for every one, while a smile never seemed ab sent from her face. She gave herself to her Savior when but a small child, and worked faithfully in the kingdom all of the years of a long life. When she came to Ashland in 1907 she united with the Presbyterian church and was a constant attendant at its services up until within the last few weeks. At the last she suffered no pain. She gradually grew weaker, and with a smile on her face fell asleep and awoke in glory. The funeral services were conduct ed on Tuesday at 2 p. m. by her pas tor, the Rev. H. T. Chisholm. Inter ment In Mountain View Cemetery. "O love that will not let me go, I rest my weary soul in Thee; I give Thee back the life I owe, That in Thine ocean depths its flow May; richer, fuller be." Many Abstracts Are Being Made Local attorneys report a decided improvement in real estate transac tions as indicated by the examination of abstracts, e! D. Brlggs informs the Tidings that he has examined more abstracts to be used In sales and trades during the past month than in the year previous. Mr. Tref ren informs the Tidings that practi cally the same conditions prevail with him. He states that out of seven abstracts examined in his of fice the past week six were for sales and only, one for a loan. A pretty good showing for quiet times. Whether a man Ig older or young er than he feels depends on how lie has been tveating himself. Railroad Officials Visit Ashland General Superintendent Campbell and Division Superintendent Metcalf were in the city yesterday afternoon, coming in from the south on a freight train, Mr. Campbell having his private car Siskiyou and Mr. Met calf with 'the Shasta. The gentle men, piloted by Agent Kramer, spent tho afternoon looking over the town and meeting the business men In their places of business. Fresh sweet Ashland Creamery butter, special this week 70c per roll, at the Ideal GrocerM. I GEO. E. BOOS BOOSTS BIG MEETING MOVEMENT ON FOOT TO HAVE THE PACIFIC HIGHWAY ASSOCIATION MEET WITH PACIFIC GOOD ROADS ASSOCIATION . 13. "All along the A movement is on foot to have the building talk," says Pacific Highway Association meet Boos, who has ' also in Medford In the game week se- Medford, Nov, line it's road Secretary George E. just returned from Redding, Calif., where he attended a meeting of the officers of the Pacific Coast Good Roads Association. - Fifty-two mem bers were enrolled in two days, and the growth of membership in the as sociation is phenomenal. Every mem ber becomes a booster and advocate of good roads. - At this meeting the date of the 1914 convention which is to be held at Medford was discussed, and Sec retary Boos will shortly call a meet ing to get the sentiment of Medford's wishes as to the date. leeted for the Pacific Coast Good Roads Association. This would bring a large number of people from the three states, from the British border on the north, and the Mexican border on the south. The success and attendance of this big meeting will shortly be up to Medford, in whose hands it will rest. Mr. Boos has his quarters with the Rogue River Valley Canal Company, corner Main and Bartlett streets, and is devoting all his time and energies to the interest of the Good Roads Association. There was nothing slow about Pas tor Gillespie's lectin-? here yesterday. He held his audience entranced white he carefully opened up the Scriptures on the subject, "Victory O'er the Grave." lie appealed only to the Bible for support and his points wore well made and clearly nnd conclu sively proven. We. give a brief report of li is sermon for the benefit of our readers: Life on the Ell. We have reached the position j which we now occupy by menus of the many victories we have won along tho pathway of our experiences. All mankind has advanced by overcom ing difficulties, and each victory pre pares the way for the succeeding one. Among our many achievements, how ever, there is one great and sad thing lacking we have failed to gain any victory o'er the grave. Man's greatest enemy Is death. In stead of man conquering death, death j has been conquering man. Man once had perfect life, and no such tning as death existed. When man dis obeyed, he became amenable to the death penalty, and since then death has gradually been gaining the as cendancy. Before the flood the aver ago man lived about 700 years before he became the complete victim of death; immediately after the flood the average fell down to 120 years, whereas now the average length of life is little above 30 years. Even the proverbial "three score and ten" years Is already a thing of the past. If something is not done soon, what may we expect for our race In the f m m. 1. course ot a lew centuries: maun. God, the Bible points out a relief, and assures us that it will come before it is too late! Our Only Hope. Like so many tributaries flowing Into one great Tier to swell its vol ume and ultimately to be merged Into the great gulf below, bo, century af- t?r century, have the lives of men finwAii into the one rreat river of death which terminates in the gulf or tomb. There was no hope of deliv erance until Jesus came and volun tarily "poured out His soul unto death;" Ho also went down this great river of death info the gulf or grave. For three days all seemed lost, but on tho third day God raised Him from the tomb, lie was the first one to gain victory o'er the grave. Since Jesus paid Adam's penalty, Adam and his rare are legally free, and in God'u appointed time they will nil be set free and given an individ ual trial in tho Judgment Day to prove whether they are worthy of eternal life or death. It was Jesus who opened the way from death unto, life, and eventually "All that are lit their graves shall hear His voice aud come forth." Jno. 5:2S. (Continued on rage Eight.) Rev. J. A. Slover Dead at Berkeley Rev. J. A. Slover, formerly a resi dent of Ashland, died at the hom of his daughter, Mrs. A. F. Eddy, in Berkeley, Calif., this morning at the advanced age of over 89 years. Tim remains will be brought to Ashland and laid beside those of his wife In Ashland Cemetery. The funeral par ty is expected hero Saturday morn ing at 7:40 and the funeral services will be held at the Baptist church lu this city Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mr. Slover came to this section In 1881 aiM left Ashland twelve or thir teen years ago. He leaves four chil dren, two sons residing in Grants Pass, one daughter hi Berkeley and one In Spokane. ' A Splendid Bargain. Exchange New and second hand store. Address P. O. Box 22 or phone 171. ' 'It