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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1914)
Monday, September 21, 1914 FAGG SIX ASHLAND TIDINGS. RELIEVE YOUR ASTHMA IN FIFTEEN MINUTES If Asthmador does not instantly re lieve tlie very worst attacks of Asthma Bronchial Asthma and tlie Asthmatit symptoms accompanying Hay Fever, w authorize tlie druggist listed below tc return your money. He is selling Dr Rudolph ScliilTmann's Asthmador anc Asthmador Cigarettes upon these terms :No matter how iuveterate or obstinate your cae, or how often of violent tin attacks, Asthmador will instantly relieve yon, usually ia ten seconds but alwayi within fifteen minutes. The druggist has hecn authorized I13 ihc Doctor to sell every package of hii Asthmador on a guarantee to return tin money in every single case where it doe; not give instantaneous relief, or is no found the very best remedy ever used "You will be the sole judge yourself an tinder this positive guarantee you ahso lutcly run no risk in buying this famou remedy. Tcrsons living elsewhere will be sup lilicd under the same guarantee by theii local druggist or direct by Dr. R. Schiff mann, St. Taul, Minn. For sale here b; McNAIK BROS. Political Announcements Paid. Adv. Trip to Oregon Caves Continued For County Recorder of Jackson County, Oregon. I hereby announce myself as the democratic candidate for the office of County Recorder, to be voted on at the general election on November 3, 1914. If elected, I will do tiiy duty as I have In other responsible posi tions that I have held. LEE L. JACOBS. To Exchange Eighty acres, all fenced and summer fallowed, In Central Oregon; under the Tumalo water project; adjudlcat--ed water right for 76 acres; im proved. Want business in Rogue River Valley. Grocery or general store preferred. CUNNINGHAM & CO. Lithia Water Fresh from Ashland's Spring New Lithia By J. F. Rocho. From the tragical point we related in our last we went toHhe American Falls, King's Palace'the Queen's Din-, ing Room with table set for the in vited guests (who never appeared), through a narrow passageway to Par adise Alley. Should this be the real road to paradise, I venture to say very many would turn uacK, looning for a better and more convenient way of reaching same. You go on all fours for some distance, not mind- ng sore shins and sore heads, on to Grandma's Teakettle, down Satan s Toboggan Slide, which landed us at the feet of old Satain himself; next N'iagara Falls, Green River Falls, Queen's Throne, and the three Sene ca lakes (which are little beauties to behold), back to the Bacon Room with its slabs of bacon piled up for years of famine or for supplying the allied forces, whose stock will soon be exhausted. After passing Satan's Hitching Post we landed in the Queen's Reception Room. Next came the Fat Man's Grief, which certainly exhausted all our strength getting Glowing Tribute To the Pioneers In an address to the pioneer re union at Heppner, R. A. Booth, now republican candidate forthe United States senate, who once rode the ranges ' in eastern Oregon, paid a glowing tribute to the men and women who brought civilization to the wild places. Probably the most striking phase of the address was the tribute he paid his parents, them selves pioneers, and in this devotion he glorified the early settlers of the state. In part, Mr. Booth said: "To me there can be no other peo ple like the Oregon pioneers. To me there can be no other land like the one of my birth, from whose bounty I have always been fed. Over her borders the, stars gleam with more gladness; the rivers race with greater joy; the forests sway in deeper rev erence, and her fields yield greater abundance. "My knowledge of the pioneer does not come from historians' records or the romancer's tales. I know tiieni. They were and are my kin. The first thought of protection that came to me was suggested by the tender care i COLD AND REFRESHING Always on tap at Grieve's Soda Foun tain. Try two glasses each day for that Kidney or Stomach Trouble. , The Results Will Surprise You. through the same to Joaquin Miller's of a pioneer woman. The first emo Chappel, Apple Tower, Washington's tion of my heart was born in response Monument, Lake Michigan, Mt. to her affection, and in the years that Shasta, Garden of the Gods, with its have since followed there has come Brussels carpet, up the Golden Stairs to me no Impulse more noble than (a fifty-foot ladder) to Bridal Veil the one to make more restful, nio'-e Falls and Cascades, Dante's Inferno, cheerful the declining years of that Bridal Veil Chamber with 'Seven Sis- woman.' I cannot speak with coul ters, through into the Ghost Cham- placency, for what I did seems so lit- ber, with fear and trembling. We tie and came so late. The v words anxiously waited and watched for the that I now speak are for the purpose unknown to appear, but it proved the of kindling in some heart a flame same as all ghost stories and we re that will make some work-weary very much disappointed. This is the pioneer moyier more happy. Out be largest room in the cave, some 520 neath the sunny skies of southern feet long, 80 feet wide and 40 feet Oregon a granite shaft beans the high. At one end is the Kancade name of that pioneer woman. Moth Dance Hall. From this point it Is ers of Oregon, forgive me for speak possible to go one-half mile farther Ing in a manner in any sense personal in through a narrow passage 6r crev- to myself. I do it because there is ice (too small for your humble serv- no other way In which I can convey ant with his 220 pounds of avoirdu- to you the regard, the reverence I pois to venture Into), but took an- have for you, for what I have said other course to Paradise Lost. The of my mother can be said also of you. Shower Room is at this point. You "And I see the old log cabin built are five-eighths of a mile from the by a pioneer father. Its construction main upper entrance and we have seemed to me the acme of skill and now taken about a three ana a half strength. Its builder, to me, was the mile trip underground. You can master of all things. A few swings reach the upper entrance by a short of his ax and the forest supplied tils cut of five-eighths of a mile. The wants. He touched the earth and it wtjjle trip took up three and a hair yielded a harvest: His toil brought hours In passing through these won- us bread and the wasting of his years derful works of nature, the grandeur added to ours. He still lives to cheer of which I can only faintly describe us, always full of sympathy and love. or tell; they must be seen to be ap- More than four score veara have predated. passed over his head. T I f .1 lt..l x tU1 1 I x .mu.u.eu ial lwo flsmanu ..Th d . x offep !... 1 i. ...I i 1 l I u0, mv w.nier, men no Kuiuei were father , offer a,B0 tQ you , (;an do present, enieieu tne caves ana in nn vvh,( , in rnr many places marred their beauty by children; yor country, your race, the uauuing tne wans in many places world , beyond a wordg tQ de Some Small ACREAGE TRACTS Eight acres; 2V4 acres in bearing fruit, 2 acres of young fruit and ber ries; 8-room house, nearly new. This place is two miles from Ashland and nicely located. Trice $3,000. Part cash. Ten acres In the city, commanding a nice view of the upper valley; 6 acres of fruit, acre of pasture, bal ance wood timber; 6-room house, large barn, woodshed, chicken house, eome personal property. Price M.jOO. $2,000 cash. Two and three-quarters acres, atl In berries, acre of strawberries; good 6-room bouse, city water and lights; about 1V4 miles from Ashland postoffice. Price $2,800. $1,000 cash, terms on batanco. with black paint. They are well Known to tne authorities ana may yet pay the penalty for their evil doings. scribe. Such acts can never again come to any people. There is no more west; there are no new worlds to subdue; there Is no other prize so The guides informed us that there voIuable no other hands able to per- whs a. .ower entrance, recently ex- rorm no other hearta 80 8trong and piorea oy lowering a man down auout true two hundred feet with rope, that ia claimed will excel anything now opened up, and can be made accessi ble by building about two hundred feet of ladders (zigzag), which will probably be done next season. "With the rapidly recurring events of a century passing more rapidly than the weaver's shuttle, what the pioneers did will soon be but a dim memory among the living and It will tie left to the cold pages of history Best Method for Preserving Fruit Marketing specialists of the De partment of Agriculture who have been following the fruit situation call attention to the fact thak in almost all wholesale markets peaches for canning and preserving' are very bountiful, and are being sold at prices advantageous for canning in spite of the Increased price of sugar. While the peach crop has been somewhat short . in some sections, heavy crops from other states have been shipped in and have tended to keep prices at a figure which encour ages canning.. Later, after the height of the crop movement, prices for fruit have a tendency to rise. Retailers are urged to enable their customers to obtain fruit for canning at prices commensurate with the present low wholesale price. A great many housewives are now being deterred from canning and pre serving their usual supply because of the increase In the price of sugar. There is no Indication, however, that the price of sugar will fall materially during the present fruit season. It is estimated, though, that with peach es at their present prices the com bination of peaches and sugar neces sary for preserving will not make a prohibitive total cost. Moreover, there are successful methods of can ning fruit which call for much less sugar than that usually employed In this process by home preservers. The department recommends the following method of putting up peaches and apples without and sugar for those who find sugar prices pro hibitive for canning: "If the price of sugar is prohibl tlve one ' may can peaches so that they will keep indefinitely by using plain water Instead of syrup. The following recipe may be used: "Remove skins fryhV peaches by Immersing in boiling water for about one minute and then dipping In cold water. Place whole peaches in glass Jars or tins nd fill jars with hot water. Place rubber and top in place and sterilize for 15 minutes in hot water bath outfits, 12 m'nutes in water seal, 10 minutes at five pounds steam pressure or five minutes at 10 pounds steam pressure. "Of course the peaches when re moved from the Jar will not taste so sweet as those canned in syrup. How ever, if sweetening is desired it may be; added when the fruit-is to be eaten. "This same method Is good for canning with syrups containing vary- lng amounts of sugar. A very thin syrup may be used if the housewife does not wish to dispense entirely with the sugar. "Apples may also be canned (for apple sauce, pie filling, etc.), using plain water instead of a sugar syrup Department specialists have repeated ly canned them by this method. In the case of apples, jars should be sterilized 16 minutes in hot water bath outfits, 12 minutes In water seal,, 10 minutes under five pounds of steam and four minutes under 10 pounds of steam." J yOI rests on the genuine merit jc fe. Supreme Sodas jMf I A, Free Treati Collect 12 end labels from "Supreme" M. h W baked crackers or cakes of any kind, mail direct to us and a VUl Y " wrprise package containing a complete 1Q assortment of "Supreme" Baked at your dealers w" Dainties will be sent you by" fC"!, O parcel P0i,t. absolutely free. rJpVl .F. F. HARADON l frw PORTLAND. ORECoTt'T,,,'ll M They Keep Crisp Longest. Will Pay High For Stolen Beer It is hoped that the government to teI1 the 8tory of the weatward win put tnese caves into the national n,arch and the follndlng of a 8tate .CD. c. .in a nue.ui appropriation It ls left for llg ot a ,ater generation luo" ,u,eB lB" UH ",luie one OI ine to ennoble the work of the pioneers great wonders of the world for "beau- by transmlttW the heroic character ty and grandeur." It Is claimed they and lntegritv of purp0se that they cannot oe excenea uy the famous llo8BeMed t0 those who conie after, rr a. 1 . Ti I Ul Miiiucy, urams rass To do le8g ,8 to ,)e worthy of a place cou.u, uy taKing tnis matter up with ln the ne of transmission and a blot the Southern Pacific Company (out on thell. nieni0ry. What thev bought of the hands of a few "sports" who wlth their lives and gervee ha8 teen are out for graft), make this one of aenVered only In small part, for out the greatest attractions for tourists from all over the world. ot the coming years will be an ever Increasing heritage to all whose feet Through the kindness of our guide, Ltand npon the 0reRon land and R. W. Rowley, who Is the most ac commodating and pleasing entertain er one could wish to meet, everything was descrilMul ln detail as you went along. The government could have made no better choice for a caretak er. After bidding our friend good bye, he refusing all compensation for his kindness and bidding us come again, we started for camp. This was some six miles "off, all the way a down-hill pull whose hands labor for Its develop ment." Paid. Adv. Homesteaders Leave Extended by Law Cunningham & Co. ASHLAND, OUEGOX $2 THE YEHR Btrtctly In Advanco $2 Southern Oregon's Big Twlce-a-Week newspaper THE Ashland Tidings STIUCTI-V IN ADVANCE. Stock Market Holding Firm Receipts for the week at Portland We reached camp have been: Cattle 1,384, calves 54, at dark, hungry and tired after such hKS 3, OSS, sheep 6,794. Btrenuous day's work. Providing . Cattle liquidation comparatively ourselves with a good supply of milk light. Market firm In all depart from a nearby ranch, we enjoyed a nients. Best light steers sold Monday good bowl of milk , and bread and at $7.3o, bulk steer sales $6.75 to retired for the niuht feelinit well re- $7.10. Butcher stock in small supply paid for our trip. 'th prices steady. (To be continued next Issue.) Swine receipts Inside of 3,000 for week. The average run of hogs at You have something you do not this time is not a prime quality, due need. Somebody else needs It and to tne nign prices ot grain. Bum 01 has what you want. Twenty-five best light stock sold at $8.40 to cents puts your proposition before $8.50 two thousand people' through the A good-sized run of sheep and "For Trade" column of the Tidings, lambs with steady to strong prices on yearlings and eweB, the former be' 1 - . . . What do you want? A Tidings ng up a nickel, at $5.30, and a buncn want ad tells It to more than two of ewes selling at $4.i0. No fancy thousand people In a day. Twenty- stock ln the laT.b division. five cents does the business. ' The Tidings Is on sale at Poley s I drug store, 17 East Main street. If. R. 13717. An act to provide for leave of absence for homestead entrymen in one or two periods. Be it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the Unit ed States of America in congress as sembled, That the entryman men tioned in section 2291, Revised Stat utes of the United States', as amend ed ty the act of June 6, 1912, Thir ty-seventh Statutes, 123, upon filing in the local land office notice of th beginning of such absence at his op tion shall be entitled to a leave of absence in one or two continuou periods not exceeding in the aggre gate five months In each year after establishing residence; and upon th termination of such absence, in each period, the entryman shall file a no tice of such termination in the local land office; but in case of commuta tion, the fourteen months actual rest dence, as now required by law, must be shown, and the person commutln be at the time a citizen ot the United States. Approved August 22, 1914. Phone Job orders to the Tidings. 3 CITY FIRE ALARM SYSTEM. s Not less than two years in the state penitentiary at Salem is the price Henry Williams and Pat Murphy wiri pay for the few bottles of beer which they took from the Barager saloon in July, says the Grants Pass Cour ier. The sentence pronounced by Judge Calkins, following the convic tion of the two men upon indictment for burglary, was an Indeterminate one of from two to five years ln the penitentiary, parole being possible af ter service of the two-year minimum if the men are well-behaved prison ers. illianis and Murphy were con victed of complicity in the theft of a barrel of bottled beer from tbe sa loon. The Farlow brothers, indicted upon the same charge, have not been apprehended, .having escaped from the county Jail three weeks ago. Booze is also responsible for a pen itentiary sentence for another man, Charles Galigher, who pleaded guilty to a deadly assault upon Fred Ara- mosia, a 17-year-old boy. The men were of a party of a dozen in the jun gles west of town, and after becom ing filled and crazed with alcohol, engaged in a battle in which Aramo- sia was badly slashed with a knife. The sentence pronounced upon Gali gher was from one to ten years in the state penitentiary. William J. Young wm found guilty bya Jury upon the indictment charg ing larceny from a dwelling. The evidence bore out the charge that he had stolen clothing from the rest dence of Charles Hanson. The jury was out all the afternoon before It could agree upon a verdict in this case. Attorney W illiams, for the de fendant, entered a motion for a new trial and was given thirty days ln which to perfect it. The case against Charles Moore, who was Indicted along with William Crawford charged with aiding a pris oner to escape from the city Jail, was thrown out of court upon a directed verdict from the Judge. He ruled that Harrington, the man whose es cape Moore was charged with assist ing, was locked up ln the jail on a John Doe warrant, and that there had been no evidence presented to show that Harrington was the man wanted upon the 'warrant. The point was raised by Attorney Johnston, appear ing -for the defendant, who argued that Harrington was not hold by due process of law, and that whoever aid ed him in his escape was not guilty under the statute of aiding the es cape of a "prisoner held by legal pro cess." Fire Chief, phono 66. Chief of Police, phone 88. Residence, phone 123. 2-0 Hells Cor. Main and Wimer streets. 2- 8 Bells City Hall. 3- 5 Hells. Cor. Granite and Nutley streets 4- 0 Bells $ Cor. Main and Gresham streets. t Bells S Cor. Iowa and Falrvlew streets. 6- 4 Bells Cor. Fourth and A streets. 7- 3 Hells Cor. Sixth and C streets. Not a property in Ashland but that can be sold by Tidings "For Sale" ads in less time and at less cost than through the regular agent channels. Try it. Prof.H.Isaac announces the opening of his third season of instruction in Voice, The ory, Definition, Analysis, Conducting, Harmony and Elocution. Special work for children. Normal training for teachers. Quartet and chorus drill. Studio, 712 Boulevard. 32-4t Here's Something Interesting! A 340-acre ranch, ideal fool hill location, lots of oat-range, abundance of water, for irriga tion. $18,000. A beautiful 8-room new mod ern bungalow for rent to right kind of tenant. Furnished com plete. . $2 $2 THE YEHR Strictly in Advance Southern Oregon's Big Twlce-a-Weelt newspaper Uhe Ashland Tidings STRICTLY IX ADVANCE. A business block in Ashland for trade. STAPLES REALTY AGENCY New Bullet Shield Used. The Canadian troops when they sail may be equipped with an imple ment which would be useful both as an entrenching tool and as a bullet shield when defending an entrenched post against an infantry attack. It is a new form of spade, which would be used .to dig shallow trenches during an advance. In the blade an oval aperture is made. After the trenches were dug the spade would be spiked to the ground, then, lying prone behind It, the soldier would fire through the aperture. Placards for Sale At The Tidings For Rent Cards For Sale Cards Public Stenographer Board and Room Rooms for Rent No SmoKing . . . . 0b Unn Card Board Printed Sign Cards of all Kinds in stocK. We are prepared to supply your needs at all times. Th Home Of GoodlPrlntlng" THE TIDINGS