iV 'SUC'OIKI St Ashland "Ashland Grows While Uthfa Flows' Ashland, Oregon, Llthld Springs , "Oregon's Famous Spa' V City of Sunshine and flowers ASHLAND. OREGON MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1916 VOL. XLI NUMBER 58 Hooper Again Flies the Coop Horses Killed Rider Unhurt More Publicity From Railroad Tidings John Austin Hooper, whose sensa tional career of gentlemanly crime ranging from throwing ammonia In the face of the ttogue River bank cashier to forcing the manager of the Hornbrook store and his wife to help him rob the Jones store, with almost every kind of holdup and banditry to his credit up and down the coast, has again asserted his Independence and escaped fro the Missouri penl- I tenMarv. where he was nlaced fori killing a policeman. Details of the , Cardinell, there are only eight acres escape have not be"en received, but In Brazil planted to apples, the fruit Hooper Is thought to be headed for8e"lns there now at $1 a dozen, the coast. I Witn one ecePtion. a11 tlie mem- . Hooper did not have any killings of the delegation, which Balls to his credit on the coast, holding 1 from New York In a few weeks, will them unnecessary In scientific crime. e made up of Pacific coast fruit He claimed that at the time of kill- men. On the seventeen-day trip to Ing the Missouri policeman he ! RI Janeiro the members will have thought the policeman was going to Portugese tutor to teach them the hold him up. language. At the time of his arrest in Mis-1 Horace Cardlnell attended school sourl Hooper was being sought for,here a timber of years ago and having escaped from the county jail j moved frora 1,ere to Portland. at Grants Pass In August, 1915. He was being held In the jail there upon the charge of robbery of the South ern Pacific depot and of a bank at Rogue River, and was aiso a parole breaker from Folsom prison In Cali fornia, where he was under a sen tence to tne penitentiary lor lire, .us ;tho tourist ambitions of Ashland and escape from the valley jail was spec- tlle Northwest generally was settled tacular, and he has been implicated favorably when the interstate rail In a number of spectacular stunts road commission in session at Chi Bince leaving Grants Fass, always j cag0 a)0ilshed the differential In finding some way to escape when t0rlst rates which have heretofore taken by the officers. Hooper Is con-, made traveling from the east to San Bidered one of the most daring des- j rranclsco cost $17 more by the route peradges In the country. through the Northwest than by the I southern route. A number of public AUtO Thief FailS ' 8erv'ce '1omm,ssion9' state associa To Reach Oregon , A stranger driving a Hudson super- ix roadster arrived in Montague last Thursday, says the Siskiyou News of Yreka, and made an attempt to sell the car, finally disposing of It to Dr. Dwinnell for $500, taking $20 in .. V. nA V. 1, 4 . I " t",cv'"- '" lu .u rluv..u u, lu:ditlonai cost of railroad fare, will whom he had offered the car resulted In the srrlvpl of word that the car was the personal car of the San Francisco Hudson dealer and had been stolen. The man was arrested and taken to San Francisco for trial. He was thought to be headed for Oregon but was out of funds and could not get gasoline necessary to make tho mountain. Wet Throats and Dry Throats Swell Total . . ., . ... ! 1J1UUUI 1U1UUIIB 1UIU IBIUUUU UJ - rnllrnnri freight And exnrpsR Increased : - - almost 100 per cent in November over the October totals. Two hundred and j thirty-one quarts were shipped in dur- ing October for beverage purposes and 448 during November. In Octo ber 244 quarts of alcohol were ' freighted inyto the drug stores for 18 quarts in November. The bone dry law and the fall rains, which have mnrlA (ha Tra A a nt wGaTl Tiora anrl tllfl , , . first California oasis, thirty miles south, practically impassable in the Slsklyous, are the main causes to which the increase is attributed. A peculiar phase of the proposition lies in the fact that beer shipments are increasing despite the cold weather, all out of proportion to the whiskey Increase. Ten hundred and thirty-five hobos . v.cu . . hotel by the police during he put ' mon h the majority remaining over uigui jii me ijuai LcrB yruviutm. vvuuu for a stove is furnished. Three burglaries have been report ed, the largest amount secured con sisting of $6 and a quantity of chew ing gum. But two arrests have been ! made during the month. One, case of scarlet fever has been reported by the 'police.. 4 ' Sixteen doors of business houses were found unlocked by the night pa trolmen. The summary of liquor importa tions is bp follows: By Wells-Pargo Express Company: Qts. Bew 195 Whiskey 160 Wine . . Alcohol 4 1 350 By. Southern Paciflo Company Beer 96 1 Alcohol , 18 Total Impcrtatkm. If Will Teach Fruit Growing In Brazil Horace Cardlnell, a former Ash land boy and a graduate of Oregon Agricultural College, '1915, who has been working on local fruit ranches, has been appointed pomologist of the Brazilian government at a salary of $2,400 a year, with transportation and expenses. He will be assisted by seven other American fruit experts. Their work will be to establish the apple industry in that country. cording to reports receded by Ac Mr. Tourist Rates Are Equalized i A matter of vital importance to tions unu uuimerciai ciuus ui ure- : gon and Washington joined In the j protest against the differential. As the central route is slightly gnorter , b(J that rateg over tne jcentra, rout(J may be ,eft 8ghtv ,ower than tho nonhern and gouthern but t any ratfl the cnance8 " thal , 0t nrnnnrtinn n. tha , tourist travel which has been kept away from the Northwest or the ad- now come or return by the northern route. The commission in its investiga tion found that a passenger travel ing from Chicago to San Francisco over one of the central routes and returning by way-of El Paso and New Orleans must pay an all-year pas senger rate of $110 for the round trip, while if he goes west over a central line and returns over a north ern road, or vice versa, the fare is $128. For summer excursion d trlp tickets tne are has been f u.uu uy inv Buuiuuru ruuie ami $90 If a northern route Is used either way 1ITV.I1- kl 1 4 . . .1 i -1 tvijijo hub jb iiuo ui ruuuu irii fares, the commission found that the one-way fare between Chicago and San Francisco Is the same whether by central, southern or the northern route. - ' - 4 Shasta Route Only Reason. Investigation further showed that ithe $18 discrimination against the j northern routes was made by the car .riers in order that the Southern Pa iciflc might receive $20 from each 1 . , round trip ticket to cover travel over I the Shasta route, the only rail con- nectlon Letween Portland and San Francisco. The railroads at the hear ing admitted that this was the only reason for the differential. The commission found no support for the railroads' contention that half tho Palfln Pnnat trflvpl ta hv vdt M Qn c) the mogt reliablB ,lgure8 ,t couI(J ob. thftt from g tQ from Ch, San Francisco and return went by way of the northern routes. This it held was a clear evidence of dis crimination in routing. The commission specifically holds ; that the Southern Pacific cannot elect U a rtnn ti In Vi lsturAi avonralnn tawo by its southern route and at the same time refuse to concur in the lower excursion fare via its Shasta route without .violating section 8 of the interstate commerce act. Jarvis For Springs Water Commission Dr. Jarvis has been ' urged by many to allow his name to appear on the ballot as a candidate for springs water commissioner, and petitions ,.ar, out today and being generally signed. B. R. Greer is ths retiring msmber and will tot be candidate. County Budget ol 16 Mills Adopted At a meeting of the county court held Thursday protests were received from members of the Jackson County Taxpayers' League concerning the proposed levy for the coming year. The recommendations pf the league are printed elsewhere In this Issue. The tentative budget was adopted by the court for the coming year. Medford District Election Dec. 27 The election to establish the Med ford Irrigation district has been junior yearling Holstein bull, con called for December 27 and an active j signed by Dernhard Meyer of Fln- cnmiiBtLMi Ir helne wacetl bv the lr- -i i!,.i t ,.oii ti, no,,... i ifcaiiumoia ui me ioiicj, unit In Park Lighting Bill Problem; Who will pay for the lighting of the paiko, Is the question with which the council wrestled over a half hour Tuesday night and finally dropped until after election. The present ar rangement includes leaving a few lights on around the Butler-Perozzl fountain and the drinking fountains and one or two down through Chau tauqua park. Briefly stated, the situation In re gard to park ilghtlng is as follows: The electric light department has papers of the valley are a unit In Livestock Show at Portland for $21, recognlzlng the necessity of lrrlga-!500, the highest price ever paid on tion. Medford has been practically j the Pacific coast for a single ant insured of a beet sugar factory mal. lie was purchased by John von should the district be formed and ! Herherg, owner of ninety head of water placed on the land. pure Ilolsteins at Kent, Wash. charged the lighting up to the park that special consideration be given board until, to quote Superintendent by you to the matters herein suggest Strlckland, the light department isjed, with a view to reduce the tax "the goat to the extent of $750." The j levy for this year, park board has refused to pay this! The financial condition of the and, according to Mr. Ashcraft, threw county and of the Individual property the keys down in the office and re-1 owners is such that taxes are a heavy rusea to nave anyming to qo wun; the park lighting. A motion to charge the park lighting to the gen- eral fun'i was lost because it was that the following recommendations deemed that the general fund would j will meet general approval' of tax have a hard time meeting Its other i payers: obligations. The light department therefore remains "the goat" until after election, when things will have settled down so that a definite ar rangement can be made. Lights are necessary at the foun tains so that vandals will not steal the money from the jcup venders or break the glass. The Butler-Perozzi land was deeded to the city and the fountain erected with the provision that the fountain he lighted, and the donors state that rather than run the risk of having vandals mutilate the fountain, they will fence the whole works up. Residents of the Granite street neighborhood go home at night through the park and, as Mr. Lamb expressed it, "put up an awful how-1 when the lights were turned off alto gether." Mr. Stricklajid stated that the lights could be turned off at 10 o'clock, after a suggestion by Mr. Banta, by installation of an automatic switch, thus effecting a small saving, but Mr. Poot called the council's at tention to the fact that the switch would cost more than the saving made between now and election. Mr. Banta in the course of the discussion ventured the opinion that "anyone who went up there after 10 o'clock wouldn't want lights." At present standing most all of the lights in the park are turned off and enough burning to protect the- foun tain and light the main patch. The cost of the current Is about $13 per month under the present arrange ment. The whole argument revolved around the fact that the park board had refused to pay for the lighting and that the electric light department was determined not to be "the goat," since it was the goat last year for several thousand dolalrs of street lights and the impression was liable to be gained that it does not cost artfSp thing to manufacture current. I Mr. Nlninger made a positive stand on the matter, advocating "since the park board had agreed to run the park for a two-mill levy, make them do it." The school board of Paisley, Ore., has let the contract for a $36,000 school. ' . Oregon City has contributed $8, 000 toward building a $16,000 arm- Firemen Pass Engineer Exam At the examination held last week In Superintendent Metcalf's office at Dunsmuir, the following firemen suc cessfully answered all questions and were promoted to engineers of the Shasta division: T. Lafferty, G. F. Irvine, E. F. Young. J. A. Carey, S. R. Stanley, E. P. Webster and J. M. Rogers. Holstein Bull Sells For $21,500 Flnderne Mutual Fayno Valdness, Morno V I c.i,io,- in ,.il I.. ...... ... .... .. , iu um iixm i acme j niernaiionai Taxpayers' League Recommends Changes The Jackson County Taxpayers' League met last Thursday at Med- i ford and presented the following rec- ommemlatlons to the county court, who placed them upon file, receiving them with thoughtful consideration: To the County Court, Jackson Coun ty, Ore. Gentlemen: We, the budget com mittee of the Jackson Coutny Tux payers' League, to whom has ben re ferred the matter of tax levies as ad vertised In your budget for 1916, ask burden end must be reduced to a mlnliuum We believe from our investigation. While it appears that county school, high school, general road, tax collecting and assessor's expense is in excess of what should be required, we believe the levies advertised can well be reduced below the amount asked for. For circuit court expense we find the actual expense has been below $4,000 and recommend that this levy be reduced to this amount. For county court general expense and traveling expenses we believe a reduction of $1,000 should be made. For juvenile court expense also a re- ! ductlon of $1,000. j rigid curtailment We believe by a of expenditures these amounts can be saved to the taxpayers. For county advertising purposes we recommend the elimination of $1,000 for promotion expense. The levy for the care of the poor should be materially reduced. We recommend the adoption of methods by which a saving can be made, and suggest that this levy be reduced at least $5,000. ' Court house expense can he re duced by the reduction on incidental expenses and by the consolidation of janitor and jailor. We recommend that this be done and that this levy be reduced at least $500. We ask that a reduction of at least $800 be made in the levy for county surveyor, $1,000 for school superin tendent's expense, and $1,000 for the enforcement of the prohibition law. WThlle there is a vague possibility of a special election being called dur ing the year, such an election is very improbable. We believe the levy of $3,500 for this purpose should be eliminated. Vary respectfully, THE TAXPAYERS' BUDGET COMMITTEE, By Benton Cowers, Chairman. Medford, Ore., Dec i 7. 1916. ! Edwin Dunn, sonjif G. W. Dunn of Ashland, was a member Of the O. A. C. stock-judging team which won first place in a competitive stock-judging contest held at the Paciflo International Livestock Expo- altlon at Portland. Teams from the University of Idaho and Washington State College competed with tha Ore gon boys. Blachleyj Or., Is to treat a large anion graded acbooa.. J. M. Dodge of Medford, while re- j turning from tho soda springs above Ashland Friday evening, very nar rowly escaped death and suffered the loss of his team of horses at a cross- lug about a mile this side of Medford the Southern Pacific trains between when struck by No. 16. Dodge had Portland and San Francisco. Two hauled a well-drilling outfit to thejof these were Issued some time ago springs and was taking his team i ami the third, describing, in the or honie, riding one of the horses. The'der In which they are Feen, the at horso lie was riding was thrown I tractions which will be seen from twenty feet and the other thrown ' train No. 13, has just been Issued, some distance. Dodge escaped with- Ashland Is given a prominent place out serious injuries and rode the injurles and rode the i. i. ... - ,it,....nn t.. i. mile. Upon arriving at home he fainted. An hour later one of the horses died and before morning the other succumbed. The team was vtfl- ueo ai 1UU, Dodge stated that he heard the whistle but thought ho had plenty of time to cross the track. The fact that he was not killed lie attributes to lighting on a soft pll of dirt. Grahling Players At Lyric.This Week A bill of exceptional excellence will be given at the Lyric theatre on Wednesday and Thursday nights, De cember 13-14. The Granting Play ers, composed of former members of the Orpheum, Sullivan &. Considine and Pantiigcs circuits, will be heard in two sensational tabloid dramas on Wednesday night "Vice and the'j Woman," the play that has created a furore wherever heard, and on Thursday night "Watch the Watch," a comedy which contains a laugh in every line. In addition, two complete changes of vaudeville will be presented. Gra ham & Norton, harmony singers (for merly of the S. & C. circuit), will give twelve minutes of splendid song and rapid-change chatter, while K.ub!ak and Vickroy (formerly of the Orpheum circuit) will render violin and saxophone numbers. Five reels of photo-plays will complete the bill one of the best that has ever graced the boards of the Lyric. Chaplin and Sweet At Vining Tuesday Charlie Chaplin in "The Vaga- !ond" and Blanche Sweet In "Public Opinion" will be the two pictures! which will combine to make an ex ceptionally bis and good show at the 1 Vining theatre Tuesday night. Char lie needs no Introduction and as the vagabond he is at his best. Miss Sweet appears In an exceptionally gripping and appealing film play. Tonight. A road show, not a motion picture, Is at the Vlnlng tonight. "Th,e Win ning of Barbara Worth," from the famous Harold Bell Wright novel. Representatives Confer at Pass The Jackson county representa tives are in Grants Pass today meet ing with the other southern Oregon solons in a conference from which much good is expected to emanate. The closing of the Rogue river and many other questions will be dis cussed, and it is said that the repre sentatives from this section will also decide upon the stand which they will take in the fight for the speak ership of the house. Lithia Bakery Changes Hands R. C. Jorgensen, baker at the Lithia bakery, and who Is well known in this city, where he has made his home during the past seven years, has purchased the Lithia bakery and restaurant and took charge last week. Messrs. Rinebart & Taylor, the former owners, are undecided as to future plans. Mr. Jorgensen's ability as a baker and cook is too well known to require introduction, and patrons of the Lithia are assured of even better service and food in tha future than in the past. EugenetT-Theii Booth-Kelly Com pany hai let contracts for T,000,d00 feet of logs. The Southern Pacific Company is Issuing to Its agents all along its I lines, both in the big cities and the smallest villages, letters describing the things which may be seen from i In this letter, receiving the greatest In this letter, amount of space of any of the de- scriptions, which are necessarily brief, owing to the fact that the let ter is written on a single sheet of letter paper, one-third of which Is taken up with pictures of points of Interest along the Shasta route. A picture of the lit It In fountains at the S. P. station and of the mountain scenery on the Siskiyou grade are among the seven views shown. The letter says of Ashland: "Ashland, railroad division point, fruit and agricultural center, Is bet ter known as 'Oregons Famous Spa. .Mineral springs gush eternal from mysterious mountain depths, bring ing n message of health pnd rejuven ation to all mankind. Several of Ashland's springs play through the fountains on the Afhland station grounds, and every passenger must have at least one drink of refreshing mineral water. "Ashland Is a natural resort, 1,890 feet above sea level, with an even. Invigorating climate. - Beautiful for situation at the upper end of tha Rogue River valley and surrounded by wooded, picturesque mountains." These letters are a guide to every Southern Pacific agent in describing the attractions of a trip over tha Shasta route, and Ashland Is hound to receive a great doul of publicity from them. Carload of Bad Ones Bound North Wednesdny a government prison enr passed through Ashland frora San Francisco en route to McNeal's Island. The windows of the steel car were covered by iron bars. The transport prison was comfortably filled with opium smugglers, white slavers and others charged with de- frmwllntr fT C' 1 .... .. Tl, 0 "'"- rtnora wara onfalv ohonLlnH nnrt Hia , ' " I car was well guarded. The unfor tunates Included all colors front' white men to negroes and Chinese. One "chink" who commanded atten tion was over six feet tall. Seattle Pastor Accepts Local Call Rev. G. S. Brett of Seattle has ac cepted a unanimous call to the pas torate of tho First Congregational church of this city. He will preach next Sunduy morning and evening. S$sS$Sj?$i$'S$3 $ MAIL CHRISTMAS I'ACKAGKS S KAKLY. S $ Here are the rules which pa- S trons of the postoffice are re- 3 quested to observe In preparing ? their Christmas packages for S $ mailing: J Prepay postage fully on all $ parcels. $ Address parcels fully and ? i plainly. Place name and address ot sender on all matter. $ Pack articles carefully and wrap them securely, but do not 0 $ seal them, as sealed parcels are $ subject to postage at the letter rate. I ? Mall parcels early. They may $ be marked "Do not open until Christmas." Insure valuable parcels. Written inscriptions such as "Merry Christmas," "Happy S New Year," "With Best Wish- $ es,' and numbers, names or let- S $ ters for purpose of description 3 are permissible additions to J i fourth class (parcel post) mail. 4 Books may bear simple dedlca- tory inscriptions not of a per- sonal nature. Other written ad- 0 t ditiona subject .parcels to letter postagay., ' ' ' ' .lil'Jl