Monday. July 26, 1915 ASHLAND TIDnfGS PAGE FTVB A. F. A. VL Ashland No. 23 Special communication of Ashland Lodge No. 23, A. F. & A. M., Wed nesday evening, July 28, 1915, for work in the Second degree. Visiting brethren are cordially welcome. Meet at 8 o'clock sharp. W. E. BLAKE, W. M. W. H DAY, Secretary. I LOCAL AND PERSONAL William Briggs la making an ex tensive tour of Oregon, Fresh honey. Ashland Trading Company. Get your automobile license and Insurance from G. H. Yeo. 18-tf Harvey Ling of Medford was a vis itor in the city Saturday. J. S. Fryo and wife of Grants Pass visited in the city Saturday Mrs. Ralph Summers visited over Sunday with friends in Medford. Ed Blnns, a meatman of Medford visited In the city Friday evening. Mrs. G. F. Billings and the Misses Scott are camping at Long's cabin. The Depot Hotel will pay 15 cents, live weight, for large fat hens. 16-4t County Clerk G. A. Gardner was in the city transacting business Friday. B. M. and M. F. Martin of Monta gue were visitors in Ashland Sunday L. Walton was a business visitor to Medford the middle of last week Jack Cowley and Irwin Bebe mo tored up from Central Point Friday, Mrs. J. F. Carson of Butte Falls was a visitor In the city last week Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Frame were up from Talent Saturday morn ing. H. F. Meettser and wife of Clear water, Fla., were tourist visitors Fri day. Invisible or unseen suspenders In white only 50c at Mitchell & Whit tle's. It O. N. Nelson and daughter of Med ford climbed Mount Ashland Satur day. Jimmy Hibsch Forded to Medford Sunday evening with a party of friends. Long shirts with long arms for the long men. Two grades, 50c and f 1. Mitchell & Whittle. It J. S. MacMurray is up from Grants Pass tor his regular week-end visit in the city. John R. Whitman of Klamath Falls attended to business affairs in the city Friday. Try Kaffee Hag it is coffee with the caffein extracted. Ashland Trad ing Company, phone 122. Joseph Morcom visited and trans acted buisness in Jacksonville eeveral days laEt week. Miss Agnes Storey visited with Mrs. Vinnle Kyle and family in Cen tral Point last week The biggest crowds of the season thronged the park and visited the plunge baths yesterday. Mrs. J. L. Helms has returned to her home in Medford after a visit -with friends in the city. Martin J. Reddy was a visitor from Medford Sunday evening, motoring up with a party of friends. Hugh A. McKenzie of Oakland, Cal,, transacted business and visited friends in the city Saturday, Hon. John Burke, treasurer of the United States, passed through Ash-. land Friday on train No. 14 :' Clothes tailored to your individual measure by Ed. V. Price & Co. are sure to be just right. , See Mitchell U O. Orton of the U. S. Forest Service, with headquarters at Med ford, was a visitor in the city Fri day. , C. M. Sllnger motored to Ashland from Medford Friday evening and spent several hours visiting with friends. Rev. H. A. Carnahan Is expected home today or tomorrow from the Oregon Presbyterian synod at Eu gene. W. B. corsets the largest selec tion to choose from. W. B. brassiers are guaranteed to fit. 50c and $1 Ashland Trading Company. - & Whittle. It THE CITIZENS BANK O FASH LAN I Going to the San Francisco Exposition ? It is the greatest fair ever held, and Is attracting thousands of visitors. If you go, you will need some of our Travelers' Checks the safest and most convenient way to carry your money. Used by the most experienced travelers should be used by YOU. SAVINGS DEPOSITS L4on The annual Gold Hill fair will be held this year September 17 and 18, and will be larger and better than last year. Charles F. Elgin and wife of Salem were tourist visitors who prolonged their stay in Ashland over Saturday night. W. A. Crouch and wife of Milwau kee spent Saturday In the city, stop ping off to break up the trip down the coast. We are headquarters for the fam ous Conqueror hats. All colors, Bliapes and sizes at $3. Mitchell & Whittle. It Grapelne, the hot weather drink. It goes seven times as far as grape juice. Sold by Ashland Trading Company, phone 122. W. A. Beebe was called to Albany Friday by tho serious illness of bis mother. Mrs. Beebe will join him there this week. 0. J. Emerson, wife and family were among the tourists who spent Sunday in Ashland. Their home 'is in Clatskanie, Ore. H. B. Tronson of Eagle Point re ports that a fine crop of Sudan grass has resulted from an experiment with the new forage crop. Earl Veghte of Klamath Falls mo torcycled over Sunday and spent i few hours with relatives here, return Ing yesterday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Hodgson, daughters Marlon and Margaret and son John, started last week on an auto trip to Crescent City. Burton Winne and Oliver Anderson returned the last of the week from a trip by blcyle to the Josephine Caves by way of Grants Pass. According to rumor, William Jen nlngs Bryan will speak at Medford next Thursday after a trip to Crater Lake by way of Klamath Falls. The citizens of Coos county are cir culating petitions calling for an elec tion for the purpose of voting $440, 000 of bonds for road purposes. Mrs. M. F. Eggleston and Misses Francis Hamlin and Ruby Palmer spent Sunday in Medford as the guests of Mrs. Burdette Dodge, Jr. Entomologist W. E. Glendenning and assistant of the government serv ice left last week for an extended trip into the mountains of this district. Robert Goodyear, a former Ashland boy now located at Berkeley, Cal., is visiting his mother, Mrs. Jennie Good year, and other relatives in the city. J. B. Eaton of Salem spent Friday in Ashland and renewed tho acquaint ance of old friends besides looking after several business matters In the city. Get yqur automobile license and Insurance from G. H. Yeo. 18-tf E. R. Lawrence, manager of the Lyric Theatre, returned Thursday from Grants Pass, where he spent several days looking after business interests. Bert Bashnahan left Thursday to join Johpny Finneran at Weed, where the young' men have secured employment with the Weed Lumber Company. Miss Verna McCann, a trained nurse of Grants Pass, who has been attending a case at the Granite City Hospital, returned to her home Fri day evening. Marion J. Miller, a former Ashland boy now living at Los Angeles, is visiting relatives in the city and re newing the acquaintance of old friends. ' Tom Wright, recently employed in the big department store of the Mc Cloud Lumber Company, has returned to his home in the Nob Hill district of Ashland. A divorce case o local Interest which was brought before the Circuit court of Jacksonville last week was that of Zepha Caldwell vs. Walter Caldwell. Among the Medford young men who spent Sunday In Ashland were Frank Ray, Horace Bromley, William Beveridge, Harvey Ling, George Gates and several others. Paul Williams motorcycled out to the Medford Country Club Saturday and was an interested spectator of the opening round of the southern Oregon tennis championship. Fred Lockley, pen picture artist for the Portland Oregonlan, was In the city last week and made several trips over the park, out to the springs and over to the Lowe ranch. .; Mrs. Kathryn Murray of Forsyth, Mont.,' and Mrs. A. Grieelener of Pueblo, Colo., spent Friday In the city, stopping over while en route to the San Francisco exposition. Dr. Lillian Fowler, accompanied by her parents, arrived Friday evening from Eugene and have moved Into the Bovln house on Third street. Dr. Fowler will practice In the city. Carrol Wagner returns today from Eugene, where he has been employed since the close of the 1915 term of the University of Oregon and will spend a ten days' vacation In the city. The Siskiyou grade was one of the most popular places In the county Sunday. A number of Ashland par ties made an all-day trip over to the California line and took dinner along. The Rev. J. K. Baillie of Phoenix has been named by the state presby tery as one of six Presbyterian min isters In the state to have charge of the extension of foreign mission work. E. N. Butler of the Plaza confec tionery, who has been fighting a combined attack of grippe and rheu matism, is now back on deck minus a few pounds of weight but feeling fit. Ice cream social. Watch for the Japanese lanterns at 108 First av enue Wednesday night. Refresh ments 10c. Everybody invited. It Kenneth Williams of Grants Pass, well known In this city as a ball player, now with the Cincinnati Na tional league, closed his first week in the big brush with a batting average of .341. J. C. Barnard, pedagouge, has re signed as a director of the Fruit and Produce Association owing to school duties out of town, and N. C. Dozier has been elected to fill the vacancy on the board. C. E. Haight, who according to the Siskiyou News Is a popular tonsorial artist of Yreka, brought his family over last week for a couple of days' visit with friends In Ashland and Medford. Sport shirts and sport ties tor men are the popular things for. these hot days. Shirts $1.25 and ties 60c at Mitchell & Whittle's. It J. J. Kenney, wife and family of Astoria were tourist visitors in the city Sunday and spent the afternoon in Ashland canyon. Jack Bey and P. S. Kenney were also members of the same party. A new drink which Is becoming popular throughout the valley is lo ganberry Juice. A new Industry Is being built up with this new drink which will open up an immense field for the berry raisers. Miss Vernon Pyland of Spring field, Mo., has been elected teacher in the second grade of the West Side school, filling tho position formerly occupied by Miss Silva Brown, now Mrs. George Icenhower. Howard Frame, who suffered a broken jaw and serious cuts about the head in a recent automobile acci dent, is obliged to undergo an opera tion. His jaw failed to set straight and It must be .broken again. The Southern Pacific railroad has Inaugurated a new convenience for tourists passing over Its lines. Lunch boxes are now being sold on trains Nos. 16, 13, 14, 15 and 53, operating between Portland and Oakland, Cal. Miss Mabel Nickerson of Sacra mento arrived the last of the week and will visit with her aunt, Mrs. M. Wagner, and other friends and relatives In the city. From here she I will go to Klamath Falls for a visit with relatives. John W. Curry, representing the bureau of the census, department of commerce of the United States gov ernment, with headquarters at Wash ington, was a business visitor for sev eral days in the city the last of the week. J. M. Wagner returned Friday from Los Angeles, where he attended the Elks convention as a representa tive of the local lodge. He also visit ed relatives In San Diego and other California cities and visited the ex position at San Francisco. Among the distinguished visitors to Crater Lake early in September will be Irvin S. Cobb, magazine writer and humorist. Cobb and party of friends left New York last week on an auto tour of the land, and scenic spots of the Pacific northwest will be visited. Get your automobile license and insurance from G. H. Yeo. 18-tf Mrs. Mary Lea of New York city, whose wealth Is estimated at $40,- 000,000, and niece and maid, were among the distinguished visitors to Crater Lake this week. Mrs. Lea is one of the world's richest women. She Journeyed by auto to Crater Lake, thence to Klamath Falls. The thermometer climbed up to 104 In Medford Friday, according to the Mail-Tribune. A cool breeze kept the temperature here below the 100 mark. Traveling men from Califor nia say Ashland is a paradise com pared to the Intense heat of the Sacra mento valley cities. , Mrs. William Patterson and daugh ter Margaret arrived in the city Sun day and will remain for the rest of the summer. They have recently been visiting their son and brother Harold at Portland. Miss Patterson attended the Oregon Agricultural Col lege last term and expects to return In the fall. We are giving a good liberal reduc tion an all silk and straw hats. Mitchell & Whittle. It H . L. Kelly of Oregon City, newly appointed master fish warden, spent Friday Inspecting the Gold Ray dam flshways and left Saturday to inspect the Anient dan fish ladders. He Is on a tour of Inspection of the rivers of the state and promises to Investi gate conditions at the mouth of the Rogue. He was formerly fish cultur ist at the Elk creek hatchery. Mr. Reynolds, vice-president of the Postal Telegraph Company, passed through Ashland Sunday evening on train 16 en route to Portland and other northern points on a tour of Inspection. M. A. Walsh, the cattle buyer, has begun suit against the Southern Pa cific for dnmages caused by being shaken up when the enclne bumped the caboose in which he was seated, causing him to lurch forward, loosen ing his teeth. He asks $2,500 for mental and physical anguish, $23 for doctor's bill and $12.50 for hospital fee, a total of $3,037.50. Albert L. Grutz of Portland is visit ing CheBter Stevenson for a few days. He has been taken all over Ashland, the park and to the springs, and Is becoming more enamored of our city every day. Mr. Grutz Is Investigat ing valley conditions for the William McMasters Company of Portland, who are looking for investment proposi tions. Salem Journal: Mrs. C. H. Ward of Boise, Idaho, has written, to Gov ernor Wlthycombe in an effort to lo cate her husband, whom she thinks might be in this state. She states In her letter that she is in the last stages of an Incurable disease and Is expected to die at any time. She asks him to return home and take care of the property and urges haste as she says she Is nearly gone. If a wheelbarrow runs too long without oil it squeaks, Your watch, poor . little thing, also squeaks, though you can not hear it. Take it to Whlted, the S. P. watch inspector, and have the "squeak" extracted, the watch cleaned, oiled and adjusted. 18-2t The stamp mill of the Opp mine near Jacksonville will begin opera tions next Tuesday with a force of eleven men after years of Idleness. Ore enough is ready to keep the mill In operation for three or four months. Tho gold values run from $5 to $6 per ton. Ten Rtamps will be operated. The mill is a twenty stamp. ' The Opp mine is one of the best gold producers in the county. In 1834 grandfather could guess the time within 15 minutes some times. That might have been near enough then; today, accuracy is de manded. The watch that you guess by these days we will make run cor rectly, guaranteeing our work. Re member the place, H. L. Whlted, S. P. watch inspector, on the Plaza. 18-2t Winn Crowson has established a camp at Long's cabin and Intended spending c couple of weeks In the cool of the mountains with only an occasional visit to town. The con tinued hot weather has necessitated his almost continual attendance in the ice cream manufacturing depart ment of his popular confectionery, but Winn does not seem to take the interruptions in his vacation much to heart. ' New harness shop, new stock, new pads, straps, bridles and collars at Pell's. 85-tf Howard Frame, who was Injured in a recent automobile accident, un derwent an operation at the local hospital Saturday, having his jaw which was broken and failed to set straight, rebroken and patched up so that he will be able to make connec tions with his upper and lower mo' Iars. Howard was about again Satur day evnine with a rigging on his jaw to keep It where It belonged but otherwise looking like bis former self, Get four watch repairing done at Johnson's Jewelry Store. 97-tf Medferd Tribune: While swim mlng lii the Natatorlum at Ashalnd Friday night Deputy Sheriff Curley Wilson had a narrow escape from drowning, sinking for the second time before being rescued. Wilson and paity of friends were making merry ft the tank. His companions prevail upon hml to leap from the springboard. Wilson did, though he could njbt swim. He bacame stran gled, an In his frantic efforts to keep afloat liffocated himself. .At first bis friends thought he was joking, but whin they realized the serious ness ofKhe situation pulled him out. The alatm bell et the tank was sound ed and the life savers responded. MM Ml I HMM M I It II 1 1 I M M l HHIMUg JULY CLEM-UP SPECIALS I i 1 . An Gloves 1 mf Kaiser Leatherette Gloves Better Than Em Now Many lots have been re-assorted and T 3 1 greater values put into these lots, i T T i ii i T i rnces continue tins weeK. Better Waist Values Now $1.75 to $2.00 waists added to $1.19 Lot $2.25 to $2.50 waists added to $1.49 Lot J I Spring Coats-M.SO and $7,85 I One lot $12.50 to $15-00 spring coats.. now $1.50 t One lot $15.00 spring coats now $7.50 Parasols Re-assorted 1 $1.95 lot now includes values from $2.50 to $5.00 X Other lots 49c, 85c, $1.19, $1.49, $2.95 f First Fall Suits Arrive Small advance showing are now on display. Our . . . .... a x stock ot suits will be entirely new this fall for we have t none leit to carry over. These are priced $t9.50, $25.00, $30.00 Wide Imported Pongee, 58c I Our second shipment of Imported Pongee delayed X !n tronm't In nut intn l, CO- -Ml- ..1. T. 1 X iu tiauoii, io jiui luiu me uou buk. sate, ii is a apion did quality, has the width and a low price. 1 . WASH GOODS PRICES LOWERED i 9c- Lot 12 1, 15c ginghams, lawns, white goods, arid' other wash goods, 9c 12u 25c ratine, now 12c. 1 lot 25c French ging hams, printed flaxons, voilies, etc., 12Jc. 19c- A big lot of 25c to 50c voiles, organdies, cre pes, French ginghams, white goods, etc., 19c. 29c Printed 40-inch voiles silk, stripe voiles, Bed ford cords, etc., values up to 50c. II 1 1 1 1 1 Ml 1 1 1 1 1 1 It II I It Ml H Blumauer-Frank Drug Company of Portland has started a move to estab lish drug farms for raising different drug plants. MIsscb Helen Cook and Marie Brown spent several days the last of the week visiting friends in Medford. One hundred and forty men are busy laying track on the Willamette Pacific from the bridge north on Coos Bay. Kendall Bros, will start work on their 30-mlle timber railroad out of Roseburg soon. WM I 1 1 1 I II I MMMI M CdDfifice. Poison I Removed from the Colfee Kaffee Hag 1 1 is (be name (or coffee with 95 per cent ol (lie caffein removed. Yon can now nse cofiee without (be injurious after-effects. The Ashland Trading Company now has the Kaffee Hag in stock at 25c a pkg.