7r" ifSJA!? vWW.?'ir-'l(fw-nli5!. v Jlondny, AprU 0, 1914 ASHLAND TIDIXG3 PAGE SEVKV SJiff-'.'tfo. r: DR. W. EARL BLAKK DENTIST riitt National Bank Bids-. Suite 9 and 10. entrance First Ave. phones: Office, 100; Res., 230-J. DR. J. E. ENDELMAN DENTIST Citizen Banking & Trust Co. Bids. A FIGHT WON WITH A BROOM. Suite 3 & 4 FOILED THE MAJOR He Had tof lee at the Last Battle of the Revolution. ASHLAND, ORE. G. V. GREGG, M. D. Physician and Burgeon Office: Payne Building. Phone 69. Residence: 216 Weightman Street. Residence phone 222-R. Office hours: 9 to 12a. m., 2 to 5 p. m. Calls answered day or night. The Engagement Was Short, Sharp and Decisive, and In It the Patriot Spitfire, Mistress Day, Earned the Right to Her Title and to Fame. DRS. JARV1S & lJOSLOUGH, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, PAYNE BUILDING. Office Hours, 1 to 3 P. M. DR. D. M. BROWEH, GENERAL PRACTITIONEIt. Residence, 216 Factory St. Phone 247-J. IR8. SAWYER AND KAMMEREH, The only Osteopathic Physicians in town. Women's and Children 8 Diseases a Specialty. Pioneer Bldg. Phones: Office, 208; Res., 242-R. MnKiire. Electric Linht Baths, Elec tricity. JULIA R. McQUILKIN, SUPERINTENDENT. PAYNE BLDG. Telephone 366-J. Every day excepting Sunday. Ir. R, P. Bradford and Wife, "KI-RO-PRAK-TORS" Chronic cases our specialty. Consultation and examination free, Heurs 9 to 5. Sundays by appoint ment- only. S1 E. Main. Freeberg Bldg. Phone 58. DR. G. R. UTTERBACK, D. C. Chiropractor. Spinal Adjustments. Acute and Chronic Diseases. Remove the cause. Nature cures. Rooms 55 and 56, above Vaupel's tore. Hours 9 to 12; 2 to 5; 7 to 9. E. A. FISHER, Christian Science Practitioner. East Side Inn. Office hours, 10 to 4. Phone 68. 211 E. Main St. BEAVER REALTY COMPANY. A. M. Beaver, E. Yockcy. Keal Estate, Insurance and Loans. Exchanges a Sjiecialty. ASHLAND. OREGON Resident Agent for all makes Rebuilt Typewriters Expert Typewriter repairer. E. A. JHLLEARY P. O. Box 122, Ashland, Oregon MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA Mahogany Camp, No. 6565, M. W. A., meets the 2d and 4th Friday of each month in Memorial Hall. F G. McWllliams, V. C; G. H. Hed berg. Clerk. Visiting neighbors are cordially Invited to meet with us. CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB. Regular meetings of the Chautau qua Park Club first and third Fri days of each mouth at 2:30 p. m. Mrs E. J. Van Sant. Pres. Mrs. Jennie Faucett Greer. Sec. Civic Improvement Clnb. The regular meeting of the Ladies Civic Improvement Club will be held o the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month at 230 p. m., at the Carnegie Library lecture room. HSHLRND Storage and Transfer Co. C. F. BATES, Proprietor. Two warehouses near Depot Goods of all kinds stored at reasona ble rates. A General Transfer Business. Wood and Rock Springs Coal Phone 117. Of five 99 Oak Street. ASHLAND. OREGON. The lust battle of the Revolution was not at Yorktown, nor was it any of the muny 'small "skirmishes that occurred after the surrender of. Coniwullis and before the formal declaration of peace in 17S3. The last buttle whs of the na ture of a duel, and it happened on the day the British evacuated New York. The great day that was to see the last of King George lll.'s regiments leave these shores finally arrived. The British army wan to board the ships that lay in the harbor. Washington and his troops were waiting at Kings- bridge and McCJowan's pass to take possession of the city iiiiinedately on their departure. Major WlHiam Cunningham, the British provost marshal and command er of the prison on the common, gave one last look about his office, tossed the key on the table and went out Into the sunlight, slamming the door behind him ill much unnecessary violence. infamous reigu was over, There were few forms or. cruel ty that he had hesitated to practice on the luckless Continental prisoners In his charge. Among the mildest were the contamination of their drinking water by throwing rubbish Into the well and the appropriation and sale of their rations for his own profit. The friends and relatives of his vic tims were flocking back to the city tri umphant, and it behooved Major Cun ningham not to linger. So he left the prison, turned Into the common, and crossed It to gain Broadway. He strode along muttering curses under bis breath. At the curlier of Broad way and Murray street something caught his eye. lie stopped, hesitated, then turned aside and hastened down Murray street. "What audacity: What monstrous audacity!" he thought. But It was like that rebel spitfire. Mistress Day. He would teach her one final lesson. He reached the Day house, which was a tavern near Greenwich street, opened the gate and shook his fist at the Stars and Stripes that fluttered from a tall flagpole, as If waving n triumphant welcome to the Continental troops. Wrafhfully be seized the halyards and begun to pull the flag down tb- pole. There was something about the action that soothed his ruttled feelings. He would at least take back to Eug land with him one captured rebel ban ner. But he bad reckoned without Mistress Day! From her kitchen that patriotic wo mnn heard the creaking of the pulley on her flagstaff. She tiptoed to her front windows and peeped out She knew the major only too well, and she determined to prevent this final out rage, sue new iiacn 10 me kiu-ueu anu seized her broom. lu the meantime, with his hack to the bouse, the major was hauling away vigorously. A few more Jerks and the flag would lie within bis grasp. Baug! ills hat suddenly flew off and went scuttling down the yard. In his as tonisbment he continued to pull me chanically on the halyards. Bang, whack! The major saw many times more than thirteen stars, and the pow der flew from bis wig lu all directions He dropped the rope and turned about. purple with Indignation. Wouiuu, do you realize what you are doing?" he roared. The broom stick was In the air again, and the major dodged. Whack! It struck him squarely across the bridge of his nose, and the field ut once became ensan gulned. The bleeding 'officer now began to take hasty counsel with blinkelf. He was late for the embarkation, the American troops would soon be upon the ground, his hat bad received an Ir reparable dent, his wig was In the wildest disorder, his regimentals were stained with marks of the bloody af- frav,' his head was yet spinning from contact with Mistress Day's weapon, oud there were unmistakable signs A HISTORIC BELL From the Guerriere to the Constitution, Then to a Mill. One would hardly expect to find an object of historic Interest lu so pro Rale a place as a New England mill an object older than the oldest title of the English peerage, an object made before the English parliament was lormed. Yet such an object is In dally use in u factory at Saylesvlllc, R. I. It is a bell, whose history Is a most In- i terestlng one. Around the bell, about j four inches from the crown. Is this su- j perscrtptkm: "Peter Secest Amsterdam, i Anno me fecit." j The date, together with other well ; authenticated facts, leads to the belief j that the bell was long used in a cou- j vent belfry in England and was taken therefrom for public use during the leformutlnn. But the connecting link between irs life In the old world and its advent to America is the famous Ciiiiifl: all the Guerriere i naval battle between and the Constitution. The Guerriere, a helpless wreck, was j rolling in the trough of the sea. while j her brave but defeated commander. 1 Captain Dacres of the royal navy, on i the deck of the American frigate, the j Constitution, was offering his sword to j gallant Captain Hull. i The two officers had been friends in time of peace, having often exchanged hospitalities at the Mediterranean I ports, and now Hull's magnanimity ! Rhone out. "I'll not take your sword. Dacres," Bald be. "Keep it." j In the meanwhile the boats of the 1 Constitution were busily engaged In transporting the crew of the defeated ship to the deck of the victor. A mid- shipman reported to the first lieuten ant that the ship's bell had been car ried away by a grapeshot from the Guerriere and that there was no way of announcing the time to the ship's company. At that moment the Guerriere gave a succession of heavy plunges, and the clear tones of a tine bell rung over the water. Go get the Englishman's bell," said the lieutenant to the midshipman. "There will be no further use for It ou board that craft." The Guerriere surrendered at 7 o'clock in the evening of Aug. 10, 1812. and at 8 o'clock the same evening Pe ter Secest's lell in sonorous tones rang out the hour ou board "Old Ironsides." With the lapse of time the bell, amid the confusion and debris common to a great navy yard, became misplaced. lost its Identity and was thrust, care lessly to one side. It found Its way to the scrap heap, was afterward sold by the United States and finally came to rest In its present quarters. Boston Post AN ANIMAL- IN PAIN. MAKE THE HOTEL MEDFORD Your Home nd Itest'infc Place. Visitors to Medrord.wlll find this modern hotel both convenient and accessible place from which to shop and meet friends. Rooms $1.00 up. Hot and cold water In every room. Courteous attention. Ladles will find large, comfortable n.rinn and reception room. Meals served a la carte In spacious Meais ' . Moim Pron. - dining room. .nn -.- YOUR RESTING PLACE. . Women who do not want to part .1.1, hnlr daughters' company ahould not get their husbands elected president. It Suffers Lets Than Man an Account of t Low Intelligence. It Is a platitude that "pain is as one feels it" But that statement falls a considerable way short of the truth. The measure of pain undoubtedly de pends ns much uon realization, com parison and constructive memory as upon sensation, in other words, the individual with the most highly devel oped Imagination enjoys and suffers most intensely, though not perhaps most violently. Pain and death are I terrible In proorlion as one is capable of relating theto to experience. To children they are not terrible In this J sense, because children have small experience and even smaller powers I of Imagining relations. i In the esse of animals the power of constructing a memory picture and re- i laling the same to present conditions la proltably exceedingly low, If not en tirely absent Pain to an animal rep resents an unpleasant experience begun and ended sharply. It Is un related. It has no social or moral sig nificance. H Is not terrible In the wide sense. An animsL lives rroin moment , to moment At any given moment Its j happiness Is n question In the main of j physical comfort. The caged skylark (though It must not be supposed thnt I this Is any defense of an objectionable ' practice) experiences none of the ; misery of the caged num. It does not ' know that Its lllierty Is hopelessly lost, i It cannot relate Its present position 1 to past experience In the way In which j a prisoner can and must do. The cage j Is merely an accidental obstruction j which may at any moment disappear. Should the bird stop titruggling it docs so because struggling is unpleasant. I mat Mistress ways arm wus uy uwj- - - i mean weary! Some warning bugle l " notes from the Battery decided the matter. He turned about and strode off. picking up his damaged headgear on the way. . Mistress Day. smiling contentedly, returned to her kitchen to continue the baking and brewing fur the evening festival. It took the major some time to re move the evidences of conflict before be appeared at the Battery. He must hare been bard put to It to explain his lateness and his disheveled slate to his superior officer, His career after his return to England continued to be dis reputable. Ho was executed for for gery eight years after he left New York. As for Mistress Day. the wo man who flew the first American flag In the evacuated city and who fought and won the last conflict of the Revo lution: she deserves a wider fame than she has enjoyed. Youth's Companion. Chronicle. Hightly Practical. "Your business college for young la dies seems to le all right" "it Is all right." "Do you give the girls a good practi cal business training?" "In reply to that question I can only i any tbot K per cent of our graduates marry their employers the first year." Louisville Courier-Journal. Plaint of Argentina. The roads of the plains of Argentina have deeper dust In summer and deep er mud In winter than those of any other part of the world, consequently the wagons used on them have wheels that are from six to fifteen feet In diameter. en mm 10 1 (GMT LOOK At Some of These Offerings POSSIBLY ONE OF THEM WILL INTEREST YOU About eighteen acres, one-third cleared, part in crops; neat little house, been built three years; city water, lights and phone; several hundred dollars' worth of wood on the place. It can be developed into a fine fruit ranch, chicken ranch, or a small all purpose ranch. Price $2,100, on easy terms. A two-acre tract on Terrace street; a four-room house with two porches and basement. The two acres are all in fruit, just coming into bearing. These trees, as well as the whole place, are in good condition. There are about one hundred cherry .trees, balance are apples, pears and peaches; about one-quarter acre of strawberries; good barn, chicken house and wood-shed. There are seventeen hydrants on this place, and every foot of the place will produce. Price $2,700. Terms on part. We have a client in southern California who wants to trade a nice bungalow for cheap land in Jackson county. This prop erty is free of incumbrance. We have a client in Portland who wishes to trade a resi dence lot for a home in Ashland a small home costing from $1,200 to $1,500. We have different classes of Idaho propery to exchange for property in Ashland and vicinity. We have 240 acres in the Dead Indian country to trade for a small ranch close to Ashland. Cutting Remark. If we Judged ourselves by the aama standards we ue for Judging others Chilly Text. Mother Tommy, what was the gold en text at Sunday school today? Tom my (who lives In Alaska) Let nie aee. Oh. yesl "Many are cold, but few are many of us would be cutting our own frown." Judge, acquaintance. New Orleans Picayune. uI A wis man contents himself with Try a new way If toe old way floes CUNNINGHAM CO. Real Eslate-Loans-Investraents-Insurance 240 EAST MAIN ASHLAND, OREGON TELEPHONE 63 Tba Tlalngi let trtlstlo prJntlnf. I not g0d rulu.-01d Saying. an,Wi Un to fl0 food as bis situation IM. .-Lord BellDgbrok