Monday, November 8, 1915 ASHLAND TIT1I N 08 PAGE SEVEN FINANCIAL STATEMENT OF SPRINGS WATER COMMISSION, Week Ending November 5, 1015. Date. 10-30 11-1 11-2 Vr. No, 1285 1286 1287 1288 1289 1290 1291 1292 1293 1294 1295 1296 1297 1298 1299 1300 1301 1302 1303 1304 1305 130G 1307 1308 1309 1310 1311 Name of Party Issued to and Items. C. H. Metcalf, balance of salary for October as auditor $ M. J. Duryea, October salary as publicity manager N. E. Swlgart, salary for month of October as sten ographer to manager publicity M. S. VanLeer, sharpening plows Void. Frank Jordan, mason, 43 hrs. labor at $5 day. . . . H. Dean, 31 hrs'. labor at $2 day : ' W. L. Stonebreaker, 41 hrs. labor at $2 day J. kerr, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day L. M. Eagon, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day I. Bailey, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day...; F. Hendrlx, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day W. A. Bibby and team, 24 hrs. labor at $4 day F. Putnam and team, 8 hrs. labor at $4 day It. J. Shaw, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day J. Galbralth, 48 hrs. labor at $2.50 day F. Babcock, 48 hra. labor at $2 day H. N. Stratton, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day C. A. Shuttg, 48 hrs. labor at $2 day H. R. Ling, Inspector, 48 hrs. labor at $3 day... M. Morgan, 7 loads manure Southern Pacific Co., freight on wire and crossarms A. L. Lamb, balance due on bandstand contract.. Ashland postoffice, postage stamps Ashland Improvement Co., office rent for publicity department for November R. W. Leonard, carpenter, 2 hrs. labor at $3 day. . Thos. H. Simpson 1 inch stopcock $1.00 4 lbs. nails 16 5 lbs. wire 25 1312 1313 11.41 Emil Pell, 95 lbs. wire Provost Bros 1 inch stopcock 1 inch bushing 9 1 inch pipe straps 1 inch plug 1 hose nipple gal. lard oil 1 1 Inch plug 1 lx bushing 2 doz. hose washers 6 x8 bolts 2 rakes 1.30 3 handles 90 1 sprayer 35 1 hose coupling 15 1 sprinkler 35 100 feet sewer tile 11.00 Amount. 10.00 200.00 60.00 3.75 26.82 7.71 10.20 11.94 11.94 11.94 11.94 11.97 4.00 11.94 14.94 11.94 11.94 11.94 18.00 11.50 39.05 272.14 2.00 10.00 .75 1.41 4.75 17.73 $ 1.35 .10 .25 .05 .15 .65 .25 .10 .30 .48 1314 1315 1316 $17.73 MacRorie-McLaren Co., 218 lbs. grass seed Ashland Transfer & Storage Co 12 loads gravel $15.00 1 load sand 2.00 Cartage 50 . $17.50 X. M. Lane ' 1 drill $2.50 Blacksmith work 1.85 $4.35 1317 Morris & Lidstrom 8 gals, gasoline for motorcycle $1.75 Repairs to motorcycle 3.20 gal. oil 45. $5.40 1318 Oregon Gas & Electric Co., October gas bill for camp ground 1319 City Truck & Storage Co., freight and cartage on wheelbarrows 1320 Morris & Lidstrom . . . .' 34 gals, gasoline $ 7.00 Labor on auto 95 gal. oil 45 4 dry cells : 1.60 18.53 17.50 4.35 5.40 4.35 1.64 10.00 TEST "ALL WOOL?. BY FIRE. 1321 1322 $10.00 Western Union Telegraph Co., 2 messages to San Francisco Ashland Lumber Co 300 lln. ft. 2x4 $ 8.00 300 ft. ship lap 5.10 2 2x12-14 90 1 2x6-14, 1 2x12-14 67 100 ft. ship lap 1.70 1.51 11.42 $16.37 Credit by lumber returned 4.95 $11.42 1323 E. V. Jones Garage : Labor on car $13.85 Telegram 50 Repairs 4-95 lAuto supplies 2.55 21.85 $21.85 1324 Western Union Telegraph Co., telegraph service for publicity department 1325 Ashland Printing Co., publishing financial state ment, 11-1-15, 108 lines at 5c 1326 Provost Bros., 4 coils for fountains at $86 each.. 2.51 5.40 344.00 Total . $1,260.75 Park Camp Trans- Improvement Fountain Publicity Ground mission mentFund. Fund. Fund. -Fund. Line Fund. Palance last report.. $2,019.70 $4,130.34 $2,740.98 $14.85 $3,500.00 Money from gas me ters 9-12 to 10- , 25-15 17.00 Transferred from Wa- ter System Fund. 351.97 $2,371.67 Disbursements as above 526.55 $4,130.34 42S.25 $2,740.98 262.56 $31.85 4.35 $3,500.00 39.05 Balance this date. $1,845.12 $3,702.10 $2,478.42 $27.50 $3,460.95 Other funda stand as follows: Physical plant $27,951.54 Operating J91-60 Incidental 3,000.00 Finishing 5,000.00 W titer system "1.75 J. P. DODGE,' Secretary. BERT R. GREER. Chairman. If each of us would abstain from throwing tin cans and waste papers In the alleys and empty lots the ap pearance of the neighborhood would be greatly Improved. Monday morning's newspapers In dicate that a great many people feel that Sunday Is an excellent day on which to get drowned in bathing or smashed in an automobile accident Honesty is the best (ire insurance il policy; M FIRF Insurance means more than honest INTENTIONS. Six out of every seven fire Insurance companies organized In this country have failed or abandoned the business. To liVe and furnish real indemnity a company must have abundant RESOURCES to back up Its honest Intentions. An agent is known by the Companies he keeps; a man who has a wide acquaintance in fire insurance companies said recently regard ing the Billings Agency: jWou, have the finest bunch of companies I have ever seen in one office."- . . ; V . ,! For insurance tliat insures", ser " BILLINGS ; AGENCY '; -,.; Established J&88. ;'. - .''. . J To Detect Cotton Fibers Burn a Sam pit of the Cloth. Until tbe proper labeling of textiles has been made compulsory there are certain simple tests by means of which one may determine whether an "all wool" fabric is really all wool or not The old way of telling by feeling and looking is no longer reliable, fur cotton can be made both to feel and look like wool. The only sure way Is to take samples of the goods home with you and make teats of them there. If a piece of cotton cloth Is Ignited it will be found to burn ratber rapidly with a bright, steady flame. There is no dlsngreeahle odor, and when the mnlerlul Is completely consumed there will be left only a small amount of light gray, fluffy ash. If a piece of pure wool Is lighted it will be found to burn much more slowly and with a less steady flame, emitting a characteristic, mild, hissing noise and u strong odor very similar to that of burned horn. There will be much more ash remain ing than In the case of cotton, und It will be in the form of u crinkly, black, crisp ball, In (implying this tent to a fabric the whole sample should not be burned at once, for if it Is a so called wool piece containing considerable cotton it will be very difficult to determine whether It Is burning more like cotton or wool. Threads should be taken from the sam ple, several each from tbe warp ami the woof, and burned separately. With a very little practice one will be able to detect the cotton threads by the char acteristic niar.ncr of burning. Some times it is well to pick a thread apart with u pin and test the individual fiber with the flame to determine whether the thread Is entirely wool or mixed with cotton. Jean Donaldson Murtln in Mothers' Magazine. QUAINT OLD INN NAMES. Some of the Peculiar Signe One May Read In England. "Man Loaded With Mischief' is the name of an inn in the Madingley road, Cambridge, but it Is not stranger than many others. At Underwood, Notts, Is an Inn called "Tbe Toad In the Hole," and in the neighborhood of Somer cotes. "The Old House at Home." An other Inn ut tbe same place Is called "Tbe Old English Gentleman." It is a debatable point whether the sign of "Tbe Man Loaded With Mis chief was painted by Hogarth. But it Is like his sutlre. for it represents a man carrying a woman. Many peculiar signs are tbe result of a misconception. "The Bag o Nails" Is really "The Bacchanals." "The Gont and Compasses" is an Ignorant shut at the old motto, "God encompnsses us," while "The George and ('mimm" is a modern corruption of George Canning, who was prime minister when the inn was built. One of the funniest of these corrup tions is "The Iron Devil." a corruption of "Illrondclle" (swallow). It is said that tbe bin called "Tbe Tig and Tin der Box" was originally "The Ele phant and Castle, but' a very poor artist was engaged to paint the sign. and somebody said It looked like a pig and tinder box, and the-nanie stuck until it ousted tbe old one. "Tbe Tlurn and Feathers," an Inn In Oxford, should be "Plume of Feath ers," and "The Rose of the Quarter Sesslous" was originally "La Rose des Quatres Salsons." One might think "The Ship and Shovel" belonged to the same category, but it does not Tbe reference Is to Sir Cloudesley Shovel, the powder monkey who became an admiral in the reign of Queen Anne. London Tit-Bits. Italics In the Bible. Words in tbe Bible printed In Italics Indicate that the words so printed do not rightly form a part of the original text, but were adopted by the transla tors to make tbe sense of tbe original clear, remarks an exchange. As used In the Bible, italics have no relation to tbe common practice of using them for tbe purpose of emphasizing cer tain words. In the early history - of printing those portions of a book not properly belonging to tbe main work, such as introductions, prefaces, in dexes and footnotes, were printed in Italics, the text itself being In Roman. Lost Humor. Mark Twain was once asked by an English clerk in a London bookstore to write his autograph. , "My chlrography Is becoming less and less distinct" complained tbe au thor whimsically as he complied with tbe request "If this keeps on I'll have to be getting somebody else to write my autograph for me." ''But, sir." seriously responded tbe clerk, "nobody would want it then." Safe From That. "Now that you have been married a year what can you say of your experience?" : "Well," he replied solemnly, "I can truthfully say that I am sure that big amy is one crime that I'll never com mit" Detroit Free Press. 'CULTIVATE JUDGMENT. Mai) Its Poiiewion It What Makes a Suoceieful In Buaineea, It was one of the intellectual shocks of my young manhood to discover that an analytical chemist could often get only $50 a month. I bnd long looked with awe upon the accurate percent ages and detailed reports of the ana lytical chemist. This water contains 2.341 grain of such and such sub stance per gallon. I wondered at the marvelous iiiun who could get out such flue results, and to learn that he nt times gets but $50 a mouth was a shock. Tbe explanation Is this. The chem ical analysis of ordinary specimens is a technical process of a perfectly definite character. If n work is dellnlte and therefore capable of being reduced to clear cut Instructions tbe pay that It commands Is not likely to be high, even though the work Itself Is complicated. It requires good memory and painstak ing obedience to Instructions. Muny persons have these qualities. The scarce attribute Is Judgment, that in definable quality capable of meeting a new situation and handling it with common sense or gumption, to put it In a homely term. Judgment Is indefinite. We cannot lay out instructions in advance to tell the manager how to meet situations. To buy good raw material he must learn to know the raw materials, and many of the tests he applies are too fine for words to reduce to Instructions. He must decide for Indefinite reasons that now Is a good time to enlarge or retrench; that here Is a good place to open up business; that now Is a good time to buy or to run low on stock; that tills man needs to be hired; that this man needs to be tired. It is In the making of decisions that successful management lies. And most of these decisions are beyond rule. They are Indefinite. They are Judg ment Engineering Magazine. SHE WAS SYMPATHETIC. Idyllio Love. "Daughter,1 don't marry that young man.. Hell never bring borne tbe ba con." ; . r . . How foolish you are, dad! What do I care about tbe bacon If he'll only bring home :the bonbons." Pittsburgh Post i .. .. Brown Btudv. . ., - i Tho tprm "hmwn atmlv" la Mirrnn. tinn of hrnw utiilv. hmw bplncr iforiVMl from the old German "braun," meaning the brow. , '. . Wa call . i M Wa, make oor:. fortunes.. But Her Attempt to Be Chatty Brought an Embarraising Moment. This Is an extract from a letter writ ten by a woman who Is willing to shnre a good Joke, even if the laugh is at ber own eMense: "It was a damp, windy day the sort at day that turns straight straggly blond hair like mine Into a mass of strings and ends that stick out about the face and neck with frightful effect I was downtown on a shopping expedi tion that was exceptionally trying, nnd I knew I looked so bad that 1 care fully avoiJed ull chance of glances Into mirrors, for I was sure I could not un der the circumstances. Improve my ap pearance much. Recklessly I entered a tearoom with a friend whom I hap pened to meet "As I placed my shopping bag on tbe floor near the table at which we were to sit another bag, exactly like my own, was put beside it. Quite naturally my glance followed tbe hand and arm up to the face of my neighbor, and as I met ber look I said to myself. 'She has hair Just like mine sticking out In every direction and she looks even worse than I do, poor thing!' "Naturally, my heart went out to her In a great wave of sympathy. We smiled simultaneously as our troubled eyes met and I said aloud and quite distinctly. 'If we are not careful we shall get our shopping bags mixed!' "The moment the words were out of my mouth I wished very earnestly tbut the floor would mercifully open and let me through. It did not require the sub dued snicker from tbe nearby tallies to awaken me to the realization that I bad been addressing tho image of my self in the mirror of which the entire side of the shop was formed. Do you get the picture?" Youth's Companion. ' ' A' Natural Inquiry. Helen was a very inquisitive child who greatly annoyed her father each evening with endless questions while he tried' to read tbe newspaper. One evenuig, Among other tblngy, she de manded, "Papa, what do you do at the store all day?" Exasperated at her persistence be an swered briefly, "Oh, nothing!" nelen was silent a moment and then asked, "But how do you know when you are done?" Harper's Magazine. . . , EXPOSITION VISITORS Stop at the Fine New Hotel Bray ton 50 TURK STREET . AT MARKET CENTER OF BUSINESS AND THEATRE DISTRICTS San Francisco ROOMS $1 PER DAY AND UP PRIVATE LAVATORY TO EVERY ROOM ROOMS WITH PRIVATE BATHS AND SHOWERS SINGLE AND EN SUITE Free Bus On arrival in the city take UNIVERSAL BUS direct to Hotel Brayton at our expense. How Do You Make Circle? The Intelligence of people may be ganged by asking them to muke a circle ou paper with a pencil and not ing In which direction the hand is moved. The good studcut In n math ematical class draws circles from left to right The Inferiority of the softer sex as well as the male dunces Is shown by their drawing from right to left Asylum patients do the same. London Family Doctor. Had Followed Directions. 'Now," said the nervous old lady to the druggist "are you sure you buve tbut medicine mixed right?" "No, ma'am,' said tbe conscientious apothecary. "I wouldn't go as far as flint, but I've mixed It the way the doctor ordered It" Chicago News. Snubbed. . 'Yes; we pay spot cash for every thing.", "Ah, I often speak to my husband about tbe time when we bad tor Puck. A Long Sidewalk. Tbe annual product of bricks in the United States, is .25.000.000.000. This is enough to lay a five foot. sidewalk eight times around tbe world. Ask Investigation Of R. R. Mail Pay Claiming that if the railroads' compensation for transporting the malls is not adequate, the burden necessarily falls upon the shipping and traveling public, the San Fran cisco Chamber of Commerce, through its board of directors, has adopted a resolution calling for an Investigation of the railway mail pay subject by the Interstate Commerce Commis sion. The text of the resolution fol lows: "Whereas, The railroads of the United States claim and vigorously maintain that the compensation ac corded them by the postofflre depart ment for the transportation of the mails is inadequate for the service performed; and "Whereas, In various rate advance cases the carriers have insisted that their total net Income Is Insufficient, and their claim haB been an impor tant factor in such cases; and "Whereas, If the carriers' compen sation for transporting the malls be not adequate, the burden necessarily falls upon the shipping and traveling public and also upon the public at large to make up the deficiency through higher freight and passenger rates; "Resolved, That it is tbe sense of the San Francisco Chamber of Com merce that the fact should be speed ily ascertained as to whether the rail road companies are receiving ade quate compensation for the mail serv ice; and further, that the Interstate Commerce Commission is the proper body to assist in ascertaining the' facts, and that this commission be authorized and directed to Investi gate the entire question and report as speedily as possible Its findings and recommendations for the guidance of congress; and further "Resolved, That copies of this res olution be forwarded to thegiostnias- TIIKItE AKE TWO WAYS , OF 1MHN01 THINGS but we only learned the one way the right way! If you bring your vehicle to us to be repaired the work will be done properly and at a low price. That's the way we retain our old customers and gain new ones. Dring it to us. N. M. LANE Corner First Avenue and C Streets Successor to A. L.'Lamb. Coffee Who can afford poor coffee ? Only the extravagant, who don't know good 1 The satisfaction of fine coffee, costs almost no thing, if you use Schil ling's Best. Its economy is in its freedom from bitterish chaff, its even grinding and the absolute protection of its full, rich strength. The airtight tins scal-in the flavor and keep-out odors. ' Schilling s',.,1 ' ! :." BestA::,;;:'; ter general and to' the members of the senate and house of representatives." Portland Stock ItoMrt, Novemle-r 1. A small run with steady prices Is today's market In the cattle division. Steers went fast at $6.60 to $6.75 for best grades. Cows sold at $5.25, with, heifers. going at $5.25 to $6.25. Hogs The largest run "of the sea son (over B.aoo head being counted in), with a weaker market, constlJ tuted the day's business. Buyers were ' very slow to take hold, but finally got together and hogs began to movo rapidly at $6.75 for tops. hulk at $6i60 to $6.65. With the winter, months coming pn the hog runs are expected to be larger than usual. Sheep Not enough sheep came forward to make a market, 240 be Ing'the total number received;' prime lambs'are bringing $7.35, .ewes $5.50 and yearlings $6.' ' ' Get' your watch repairing done at Johnson's Jewelry Btore. 97-tf Congregatjonal sale November, 2 Qr Dngs, bags. , . 46.-tf GOTHIC THE NEW ARROW a for 25c COLLAR IT FITS THE CRAVAT CLUtTT. PCABODV CO., INO., NAHMS . , -. Good Reason. .- "Wby. Bve in tbe past? Why not for get it?" -. . - '( i Our Guarantee We have had splendid success in preying Shipping, Cases. In every instance we have been- advised that the bodies arrived in splendid condition, and often have re ceived letters of appreciation for our. careful and pains taking .work.. . :i Our past experience and success in this work enable us to absolutely guarantee the, delivery of all bodies in. good condition at poiut of destination. . In all cases, bodies prepared by us may be held as long as desired before interment..,, J, P.; Dodge & Sons,, Undertakers I .1. (Tbe bill collectors, won't.-let.ine,"- i ill iii i h 1 1 1 1 1 1 jj i f tbem fata. Alro. . Loulsvllle Courier-Journal. JM.I- .-'.j. ' .