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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 15, 1917)
Thursday, February' 15, 1917 ASHLAND TIDING PAGE THIRTEEJf Royal Arch Masons Siskiyou Chapter No. 21 Stated convocation of Siskiyou Ashland Lodge No. 23 A. F. and Aa M. Special communication of Ashland Lodge No. 23, A. F. & A. M., Satur day evening, February 17, 1917. Chapter .No. 21, R. A. M., Thursday Work on the Third degree. Visiting brethren cordially welcome. J. A. GRAHAM, W. M. W. H. DAY, Secretary. evening, February 15, 1917. Visit ing companions are cordially wel come. P. K. HAMMOND, H. P. . W. H. Day, Secretary. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Scholerof Pilot Rock were In town Saturday. They g report that tho winter In their coun try has boon an Ideal one, being so high up they were above the fog. Mrs. Lottie Pelton has returned from Oakland, Cal., where she has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Ma- I LOCAL AND PERSONAL F. H. Carter of Eugene arrived here early In tho week for a visit among the old home surroundings. Sheriff Jennings was a visitor in the city from Jacksonville Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. E. Carter have ra turnod from a several months' stay In Texas. C. G. McAllister and other Ashland folks went "to Talent by auto Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Agnes Herndon loft last Sat urday for Springfield where she will visit relatives. Maxon Mollinger visited at the W. A. Cooper home in the country Sunday afternoon. Many of the automobile ownei s ( will take good Ashland property for of the valley are docking their cars part payment. Also a farm in Sams vith American flags. vailoy, Part paymfint jn Ashland Mrs. Maud Port of Jacksonville is (property, fialance 6 per rent. Bil rt present visiting her parents, Mr. 'lings Agency. 70-2t and Mrs. A. H. Peachey, on Lincoln o. A. Paulserud has bought the old street, j Edward hous-j on Oak street, just be- "Radlnm" sockare made In Mar!-How his present residence, and will tta, Georgia, of a good long staple , convert It Into a model residence, cotton. We have them In black, tan n. M. Shoudy has gone to the state and grey at 12 cents a pair. Mitch-w Washington on a business trip in ell & Whittle. It 'connection with land Interests In that County Clerk G. A. Gardner and section, where ho formerly resided. County Assessor Coleman were visl- j Mrs. E.M. Miller of Granite street, tors from the county seat Monday j wj,0 BUffered a stroke of paralysis which slightly affected her left side bei Jacobs. Mrs. Pelton's son-in-law, Guy Jacobs, is at work for an auto company in Oakland. We have a few small sizes In sweat er coats in oxford grey colors which we will soil at $1.50 each. Sizes 34 and 36. Mitchell & Whittle. It Mr. and Mrs". Fred Hcrrin rejoiced over the arrival of a fine baby girl last Saturday. Mis. R. E. Sloan has returned from a visit wih Mends and relatives ai Klamath Falls and Montague. A farm on Williams creek for sale. TONE IN TONE Columbia DOUBLE-DISC Records will prove a tone revelation play ed on any instru- ment. II IKLVU:V !ilt IV. tJ I i MA 1 H ! of fa i tlsini afternoon. Homer Scholer hr.s returned home from Portland, where he visited his sister, Mabel. Miss Mabel Scholer lias gone to Washington to visit rela tives for a time Dr. J. J. Emmens, oculist and aur Ist of Medford, who has just com pleted a post-graduate course In New York and Philadelphia, has returned and has resumed his practice. It John Hunt of Portland, identified a few months ago, is reported to bo quite ill. For men's all leather shoes In good staple styles at $3.50, $4.50, $5 and $5.50 see Mitchell & Whittle. It A. M. Dyrud, who recently returned with his wlfvj from an eastern trip, has returned to Wood, where he will resume his job of engineer on the Weed logger. W. A. Shell of Edmonton, Alberta, Such artists as Mary Garden, Lillian Nordica, Josef Hofmann, l'allo Cnsals "the g'i'alest man who draws a bow today," are numbered among tho talent secured exclusively for tho Columbia. Hear the new records at POLEY'S DRUG STORE l'oley A Elhart, Druggists -iinrlfr,i;iriri .ii tki tuiff mtii1iimi)lMri riiilhaiilJ Hood as chief engineer of the South ern Pacific lines In Oregon. . In this event, It is understood F. J. Burk haltcr will succeed Mr. Barlow. Mr. Durkhalter is well known among the railroad men of this vicinity and they aro pleasod to learn of his pros pective promotion. Spring woolens at Orres' Tailor Shop. It O. S. Butler has sold to the Med ford Commercial Club twelve boxes fancy Newtown apples for adver- j Using purposes. He raised them in 1 I Ashland on non-Irrigated land. Parti of them wore sent to Representative I Thomas at Salem for distribution to j the state legislature. I Loom is i Nelson, grocers at the I corner or u ana f ourth streets, are j making extensive Improvements in ; the basement of their business block, j excavating being done for solid con-j crete floors under tho main portion of tho establishment. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Dryud returned recently from an extended visit with relatives and friends in Wisconsin. They went east by way of New Or leans and returned by the northern route. They were caught ill the bliz Izards which held up tho wpsthound trains recently and spent four days in Laramie, Wyo., but despite that In i convenience report a delightful trip. : Mrs. M. G. Lawrence has returned from an extended stay at Pasadena ' and other southern California re- Pianos AT COST We a' e going to discon tinue the piano business, and in order to close out the two pianos we have left will sac ri fi c e our profit and give then to you at our cost. One $650 Player Piano at $150 One $125 Piano at $250 MUSIC DEPARTMENT The 5 -10-15c Store Jack liailoy, .lack Mi-.ttorn and Wil fred Carr Journeyed down to Rogue river last Sunday and spent a very unsuccessful day whipping its waters. Although fishing Is reported fine at Gi ants I'nss, none of the local parties have met with any success in the up per river. Orres cleans clothes. Phone 64. It 'Miss Frances MnWIIIIams, daugh- G. McWilliams tor of Mr. and Mrs, F sorts, to look after property interests i0f Ashland and a 'former teacher in With stock feeding and shipping in hag j,urchased tho Rogers & Saunders terests, arrived here on Tuesday for bar)er Bhop on Main gtreeti taking a visit with relatives. 'possession last Saturday. The fam ily will reside on Nutley street. Alfred Beaver and Walter Hern don, former Ashland young men who have been conducting a hardware business at Springfield, have sold their establishment to M. C. Br eas ier, also formerly of this city. A number of Ashlanders attended the "Bird of Paradise" production at the Page theatre, Medford, Mon day evening and report a crowded house for the drama which was mak ing its third visit to the Rogue val ley. The new shapes and colors In C. J. Hosklns of .N'cwborg, banker and former state senator, spent Tues day night in Ashland while en routo to California. He is an old friend of Mrs. I'pdegraff and was a guest at Hotel Ashland whllo In tho city. H. T. Burger, an old-time Rogue River valleyito who taught school in Jacksonville in 1876 and 1877 and since has traveled all over North America, visited Ashland for the first time In nearly forty years last week. N'iin Long is carrying his right arm in a sling while a break In the con- hS F ASHLAN Pjh The I men's hats for spring are both good j nection between the arm and collar and conservative. We have them at ' bone is mending. Mr. Long thought 65c, $1, $1.50, $2 and $3. Mitchell the injury to be rheumatism until an & Whittle. It x-ray examination revealed the true Miss Winnie N'chols, formerly an ' state of affairs. Ashland girl, was recently married to Bargain, quick sale, Swiss milch an engineer by the name of A. C. 1 goats, bred. C. P. Good, phone Hagerty, at her home in Cottage '' 17-F-2. 75-tf Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Hagerty are! w. L. Mollinger is now preaching L. Gartner of the Ashland junknow at tl,e homo of tneir trienia In ei the Talent Christian church on at Buckhorn Lodge, In the Tolman Springs district, east of Ashland, which has been occupied in the mean time by John Gearing as tenant, In the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Law- schools thero. rence. - Sewell R. Reeves, former resident of this vicinity, died at tho Veterans' Home, Retsll, Wash., January 29. Funeral services were held January 31 and interment was in tho Elks' burial plot at Bremerton, with mili tary honors, in which a Knight Tem plar escort participated. The de ceased was a member of the Masonic chapter and commandery affiliations here. the Ashland schools, who has been teaching in the C'aloxlco, Cal., schools for tho past two years, Has been elect ed to tho prlnclpalshlp of one of the dealers is leaving for San Francisco : MIltaseno, Wash. on a business trip for fifteen or twen- Montague Messenger: Sunday evening, arriving home by Wright auto 'n t'me t0 fl" M'8 pulpit here as Masterful Work Of saving is demonstrat ed every day by thrifty people who bank their spare cash regularly. Are you one of them? An account with us will give you the right Incentive. ftfvy SAVINGS rro11 deposits. ty days. He asks that anyone having 1 Hicks, who recently underwent an, usual. The Talent preaching must anything in his line please hold it , operation for appendicitis at Yreka, needs bo somewhat early In the even- until ho returns. His place is now j returned to Montague Thursday , ln8 ln order for Mr. Mellinger to fill closed, but will be reopened upon his ! morning and wont over to Ashland, two pulpits at onco. return. It A daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Daugherty at Salem Feb ruary 11. Mrs. Daugherty was for merly Miss Ethel Drew of Ashland. Mr. Daugherty is a clerk in the Salem postoffice. S. F. Starr, who has lived in tho eastern part of tho city for several years, has engaged to operate the where he will visit with his parents j Farm wagons, cultivator, harrow, for a few days before rosuming his cheap, 115 Granite street. 75-tf work here. Frank Langford, expert mining op- Special values in suits to order for, orator with headquarters at Eureka, the balance of February at Orres' j Cal'.!' arrived on Monday for a visit Tailor Shop. it i with his brother, G. Langford, whose Miss Sarah Fox has gone to Hllls boro for a visit with relatives, partic ularly with the R. A. Payne family, formerly of Ashland, who live in that dairy ranch of Georgo Morse nearitown durlng the w(nter and at New. Talent and will take charge of tho same in the near future. Call and let us tell you about our Early Dwarf garden' peas. We have the best variety we ever had. Holmes Grocery. It Mrs. A. C. Howlett and daughter and Messrs. Ringer and Edsell of Eagle Point were guests in the A. H. Peachey homo on Lincoln street, Sun day. Mrs. Howlett is manager of the Sunnysido Hotel In Eaglo Point. D. Perozzi transacted business In northern California last week. L. L. Mulit of Portland was a vis itor in tho city this week. family from Tacoma are temporarily occupying the Goodyear residence on Church street. According to reports received Sat urday, Mr. Barlow may succeed Wm. port in the summer months. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Storch of Seat tie, accompanied by their infant son, TflltOrOrfllll NO. 1 are visiting relatives in tho family of This old United States is a won- F. D. Wagner. Mrs. Storch Is a sis- jdejrful country. It overcomes all ter of Mrs. Wagner, and as Miss Ida sorts of olratacles. A year ago today Case was formerly an instructor in j there was a real shortage of good the normal at Ashland. woolens In this country. Today that Central Point News: Mrs. Benton sh'ortage does not exist. Our new Bowers, Jr., Mrs. Mary Burkman and showing of spring and summer fabrics A. Whitney, ail of Ashland, also Mr. and Mrs. Ismore of Klamath Falls, lis better than it ever was, which merely proves our ability to over- were dinner guests at the home of; com ovory obstacle Mrs. M. J. Frederick on Thursday of this week, having motored down from Ashland. Orres, Tailors For Men and Women. A hearing was held at Salem Sat urday for tho purpose of considering the proposal of the Southern Pacific Company to reduce the freight rate on canned goods between Ashland in termedials points and Portland from 30 cents a 100 pounds to 20 cents, in carloads with a minimum weight of 6Q.000 pounds. No objection was made to the proposed reduction and it is probable that a formal order will be Issued by the public service com mission some time this week grant ing the request of the railroad com- pany. A bn,ly daughter was an arrival at the home of Mr. and Mrs.-A. S. Payne on Wednesday, February 7. Robert VanBunklrk left recently for Copco, Cal., where he will enter the employ of tho California-Oregon Pow er Company. Charles Henry, who underwent an operation at the Sanitarium recently, Is reported to bo doing nicely this af ternoon. He spent an easy night and it is believed that he will recover, barring further complications. W. A. Freeberg returned yesterday from southern California, where he has been for the past several months. W. A. unfailingly brings with hlra such weather as the perfect (Spring like offer that the weatherman gave us today. Miss Mayo Glover has just re turned from California, where she has been visiting friends for the last three months. She visited in Lodl,"! Stockton, Sacramento, Frultvale, Con- i cord, Berkeley and San Francisco, but i spent most of the time with Mrs. C. ' C. Darling In "Oakland. j March 4th, Inauguration Day Clothes will play their usual im portant part at the Inauguration. From President Wilson to tho merest looker-on, good clothes will predomi nate, proving their attribute to suo- cess. Be well dressed. Let us hand tailor your clothes, mado to fit your body lines, and bring out your good points to tho world's attention. A successful appearance bespeaks suc cess In every walk of life. Get in line. See tho special Inauguration novelties at Orres Tailor Shop The Home of Good Tailoring in Ashland. 1 Classified Advertisements TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY. IWNI) A stickpin containing an opal. Owner can havo sumo by calling at tho Tidings office and paying for thls ad. 77-tf FOR S.vr.E 01 rT 1 1 A h EM y homo" place on Nuicery street, consisting of 1 1-5 ucres, well improved; six room house, gaingo, woodshed, lots of fruit of all kinds, fine view of Mt. Ashland, two blocks from school and church. The best buy in Ashland. Will cell on eaoy terms, or trade for house and lot close In. Also a two-seated surry, nearly now. Will sell or trade for top buggy S. A. Hawks. 77-tf FOR RENT Two lurgo, beautiful, sunny housekeeping rooms, with private entrance. Phone 455-R. 77-tf FOR SALE S. C. White Leghorn eggs from heavy laying strain. Set ting 75c. 100 $4. J. S. Crawford, Talent, Ore., half block from S. P. depot. 77-luio. FOR SALE Young span of hoi-sos. Good workers. Apply at Tidings office. 77-4t Must Be Sold Team, Wagons and Harness also one Mule 115 GRANITIC STREKT HOSIERY We strongly urge you to make your hosiery purchases as early as possi ble. The present outlook among mill men predicts a 100 per cent increase. Our stock is new and more daily ar riving. We want you to realize on these: Chren.,8.H.0.8:. 15c,20c,25c Ladies' Cotton Hoso, and ele- 10 gant value at present. Pair I OC Ladles' Cotton Hose In white OC, and black, Burson brand.. LDC Ladles' Fibre Silk Hoso; these r A are becoming very scarce. .' OUC Ladles! Pure Silk Hose with lisle top, "La Franco" 1 9C quality 10 Men's Holeproof 9rt Hose OUC Men's heavy Iron Wear Sox In 1 P black and tan IOC Men's Work Sox In black and OC tan grey mixed, two pairs. . CoQ, Men's grey and black Silk rn Hose, a splendid wearer. . OUC Men's black and white Fibre or Silk Hose, pair ODC Men's Holeproof Silk Sox, per 7C pair fuC The Price Prevailing Among Mills and Jobbers Are in nearly every instance as high as we ask now at retail. The wise shopper should make this store her store; the qualitiesNoffered here at these prices are every one a bargain. DRESS GINGHAMS More than 3,000 yards of the newest patterns are here to select from, at 121-2C SHIRTINGS We particularly call your atten tion to our line of Otis Shirtings at, yard 20c BLACK TAFFETA Through a fortunate purchase we are able to offer a Black All Silk Taffeta, 36 inches wide, for, per yard $1.50 This today. quality commands $1.75 BEFORE BUYING YOUR SILK DRESS come in and look at our "Money Back" Taffeta In black, brown and green. It's guaranteed two seas ons' wear and is the silk that doos not tear. Per yard $2.00 WOOL SERGES In the famous "Broadhead"quallty that gives you the greatest serv ice holds Its color. You can buy a 36-inch serge in many colors, also plaids that you can boll, at, yard . . NAINSOOKS ; In beautiful shear weaves at, 20c-25c-30c 75c ALL GENUINE TABLE LINENS in U. S. A. are in retail merchants' hands. So buy your season's sup ply now and save discomfort as well as paying double prices later. PERCALES We offer 2,500 yards of 36-lnch fine quality Percales at , 15c The new prlco must be 18c and 20c. PREADNAUGHT WORK SHIRTS for men. This shirt Is cut big and roomy. There is no better value than this shirt. 75c LONG GMTH This fabric at 15c makes dainty underwear at a saving. Others 18c-20c-25c INDIA LINONS We know our 12c value is one of the nicest to be had this season, and while we show others at 15c-18c-20c-23c this 12 Mc value is a good one. CORSETS Try our "Bon Ton" Front Lacing Corsets. They are a splendid fitting corset and our sales are increasing dally on thlsr AA make. Pair J.UU Other values $1, $1.25 to $3.60. Headquarter! for Fine Footwear No other line in So. Ore. compare with our showing in price and quality. Everything that's proper is here. The Store That Does Not sacrifice Quality for Price Ashland, Oregon Don't Forrfet Oar Shoe Department offers a greater variety of colored high-top Ladies' Shoes at popular prices than other A Q rA stores. Priced, pipU IUJ0.)U White Goods Here, Uko lust season, we aimed to outstrip all other showings, and now offer the very best muterials in an 'array of designs that spell the very best and latest In White Wash Goods material. Here you will find the very new Overshot Basket Weave Skirt ma terial in a yard wide at, the yard ' 50c Now Bedford Cords, also Miss Stripes and Checked White Skirting r A material 36 In. wide, yard OUC Beautiful 36-lnch weaves for wait ings and dresses, in OC. A A master designs, yardJDCf tUC Swiss dots and Swiss Lawns woven in stripes at, yard . . New Dimities for babies' summer dressos .... 25c 18c, 25c CHECKED DIMITY for undorwear, 36 inches wide, yard 15c ONE LOT of Gingham Remnants In good lengths. Special at A lUt yard 1