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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1917)
.'S-.V.i',t'V ' Cregon Historical Socletj sm s ., r Ashland Grows While Llthla Flows" ' City of Sunshine and flowers Ashland, Oregon, Llthla Springs "Oregon's Famous Spa" VOL. XLII ASHLAND. OREGON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1917 NUMBER 37 Ashland n TTV If TV T" 1 - Local Students To Enter U. oi 0. Several local high school graduates will enter the University of Oregon ' Monday. Formerly, practically all of Ashland's students have sought high learning In the Oregon Agricultural College, with but a small number at tending the state university. How ever, the tables have been reversed this year and practically all of the local young people who will go ahead with their education this year will enter the University of Oregon. Among the local students who will enter the U. of O. this year are: Miss Fern Murphy, vice-president of last year's graduating class; Harley HolmesT treasurer of the class of 1917; Amelia Esparza, a graduate of last year's class, who will enter the university to fit herself for a mis sionary for service In Mexico; LeRoy Ashcraft, president of the class of 1915 of the local high school, who will enter the school of Journalism, and Lelth Abbott, who leaves tonight to accept a position with the Eugene Register and to take a course of Jour nalism In the U. of O. Johnny Fin neran', a member of last year's class, ;ls thinking seriously of entering the university soon,. Ruth Brown, a graduate of last year1, left recently for Seattle, where she will enter the . University of Washington. Mary Mathes, a graduate of the class of 16, left this morning to enter the V. of 0. Among the boys of last year's grad uating class who would prohably en ter the university this fall but for the fact that they are enlisted with the 1st company. C. A. C. at Fort Stev ens! are: LaVerne Buck, Forrest Wolcott. Fred Payne, Frank Tinker, Reld Harrell, Oliver Anderson. Oscar Silver, Aubrey Furry. Robert Keller, Elwood Hedberg and Cleo Kirk. Members of last year's class who en listed but who were rejected In the physical examinations are: . Claude "Warren, Lelth Abbott and Ernest Ab bott. V. 'White Hussars ' Saturday Night Dunbar's famous White Hussars, a singing band numbering nine people, come to the Chautauqua Saturday evening. September 29. This attrac tion has played over the Keith's east ern vaudeville circuit and also the Orpheum circuit as the headline ac at a salary of $1,000 a week. They are now starring over the Redpath Chautauqua circuits. There is absolutely no doubt but what this organization Is first class, and those who attend the en't,ertain .ment at the auditorium Saturday ev ening will be treated to a full even ing novelty vaudeville and musical program which will be highly pleas ing. On account of the troupe being booked on short notice, It was Im possible to receive, their excellent line of advertising matter which is generally used previous to their ap pparance. All grammar school children are to be admitted for ten cents which should prove a rare treat for the kid dies. Six hundred seats Immediately In front of the stage are now on sale at Ros,9 brothers, at 35 cents, all oth er seats are 25 cents. These prices are less than half what Is charged elsewhere for this entertainment. The curtain will rise at 8:30. Dr. Lance Briscoe Called to Service Dr. Lance Briscoe, who has been Tisltlng with his parents, Superinten dent of City Schools Briscoe and wife, for the past month, awaiting a sum mons for military service, received a call yesterday morning and left last i night for Bremerton, Wash. Dr, Briscoe took an examination for surgeon In the navy early last spring. He passed with high honors and received an appointment as as sistant surgeon. He expects to be placed on a battleship for active serv ice soon. A large crowd of hi many local trtends were at the train last night to wish him godspeed In his new ven ture'. The state highway commission has let the contract for a road from Ore gon City to Canby, at a cost of $145 731. ,- Lamb to Build On Opera House Ruin A. L. Lamb, well-known Ideal con tractor, who was connected with the building of the Chautauqua auditor ium and the local city hall, has been awarded the contract to erect a sub stantial and attractive building on the old Opera House corner. He ex j pecta to start work as soon as the i necessary materials can be collected. The plans for the new structure, which have been approved by the owners, show that the building will have a frontage of 60 feet on Main street and 100 feet on Pioneer av enue. The building will be but one story high. However, plans are be ing made to build the walls so that another Btory can be erected If It Is needed. The new structure will be divided lntp two business rooms with full .plate-glass fronts, with a large plate-glass window added to the room on the west side. The building will have a flat roof and will be construc ted from brick and concrete through out Sale of Blue Ledge Mine Falls Through Mail Tribune: The sale of the Blue Ledge mine to the Ladysmlth smelter syndicate, pending for sev eral months has fallen through, ac cording t,o word from the purchasing syndicate, who desired the mine on account of the fluxing character of the ore for use In the smelter. Had the sale materialized It was the In tention to do extensive development work to ascertain whether the ore body was sufficient to justify a rail road. In the meantime the county would be assisted in road construc tion and ore hauled by truck. The reason of the failure to make the deal Is given as the "Imposition of such onerous terms and condi tions' by the Towne estate, owners of,' tlra property, 'that. negotiations were abandoned for "the purchase of the ' property. ' The res.umption of copper mining1 In the Towne proper ties in Mexico Is said to have made the owners Indifferent as to whether the Blue Ledge was sold or not. The failure of the deal Is a disap pointment to local mining interests, as a Bale meant the development of the mine upon a large scale and the eventual building of a railroad. The prospective purchasers are high-class developers and not speculators, and their advent would have resulted In the development of a successful min ing district. Arrested Man Not Guilty Lloyd B. Johnston of Grants Pass was taken from one of the conscript traina Tuesday evening by Southern Pacific Officer Atterbury, on the charge of not registering when he was of a draft age. He was lodged In the local bastile Tuesday night. An investigation was made Wednes day. It appears he was broke in San Francisco and boarded one of the drafted men's trains. The officer in charge of the train did not notice him until after several eating sta tions had been passed and Johnston I had no meal ticket. The officer ! promptly looked Into the matter and when Johnston could not produce a registration card he was turned over to Mr. Atterbury when the train reached Ashland. The local officers later found that .he had registered but had lost his registration card. He was released and advanced $3 In cash after he had given a good watch and chain as se curity. TELEPHONES PROM FORT. S The fact that the local boys at Fort Stevens are not out of immediate reach of local people was made evident Wednesday morning when Fred Payne5, one of the local boys at Fort Stev ens, called up Johnny Finneran at Enders' store and held a few minutes' conversation with him over the telephone. Fred Is one of the men detailed to care for the fort telephone exchange. The rate from Ashland to Fort Stevens is $1.75 for the first minute and 90 cents for each additional minute. Fred talked three minutes. He recently had a payday. . . ' Fall Gives Bates A Fractured Rib C. F. Bates was made the object of a brutal assault by a terror-stricken lamb at the stockyards Saturday , night. The young sheep used foot ball tactics and made a leap for Mr. Bates, striking him In the side with such force that he was knocked over and fell on a lantern which he was carrying, which resulted In one of his ribs being fractured. This is the sec ond accident which Mr. Bates has j suffered this year. He had his collar jbone broken last spring. He is still Confined to his bed as a result of his .recent Injury, but he Is Improving i rapidly. Soldiers Muss Things Down Depot Way The drafted men who made up the last train of conscripts which passed through the city Tuesday evening evt - rtentlv thought thev wer to he made into a troop for tearing up barb-wire out an trimmer, t a sin af tha fmnf and that they should start training early, for they left the depot district look-,hich the local people have. ever had Ink like a section of "No Man's occasion to hear. Besides the regu Land." A huge counter and display l&r band music, consisting of music stand which occupied a space near Curt's restaurant were picked up and deposited one on a main part of the street and the other on the depot plat - form: a long piece of a new railroad 'hose was cut into Innumerable pieces; a nearby lamp-post- was decorated VIile rusis. aim umer muiviuuui ea ip sign tne iouu cuiiBervauuu with several parts of a baggage truck! 'musical selections the kind that pledge which Is being sent out by the to say nothing of several "this way Illustrate the word "Jazz" to perfec- head of the order to every subordl to the llthla fountain" and other sighs tlon. jnate lodge In the United States, which were pried from their places! The entertainment will start Exalted Ruler Choate of the local and used in decoratine the various promptly at 8:15 In the Chautauqua lodge has appointed a committee cars of the train. Local Share For War Library Small The local library board report there has been but 916 contributed A - 111 i- a u i . t ... . so far in the campaign, Ashland's i n - a mi i i i i ii nil tire ib fiov. me uua.ru muugui !ko It 1,1 h. ..nnnnna.n.n I. sort to a house to house sollcltat on i j to get Ashland's share of the fund, as tnere are so many people in tne !cuy wno tane an acuve interest in 1 1. , 1,1 1 . . A 1 1 1 .111 iae iui'ui nurary, uui unless me cur- zens respond more energetically j within the next few days they must j fall back on this resort as a means of j raising Ashland's quota. Practically I every city in the state has responded j quickly to the need. The latest re- !port from the state shows that $2, - 1 421.50 of the state's auota of t45.- ,000 has been raisedv Portland's j share, in the sum already raised is j $1,000; Roseburg, $94; Astoria, ! $24.59 ; Eugene. $146.50; The Dalles, the cement. j$116; Baker, $300. The company has adopted the plau j The local people can make their 0f employing local men only in oper ! contributions at the library, at Mayor atK the plant, under these experts jLamkin's office1, with G. G. Eubanks wh0 i,ave spent many yea,rs in the In ,or with any member of the local dU8try. Gold Hill has a large popti- ; board. .lotlAn nf ovnort 1fntrlrnl wnrliprs. ' " Big Grain Shippers' Get First Service The western carries, in discussing wars and means of properly handline: jthe great grain crop of the west, in the face of the ever-increasing de- Imand for cars, are said to be confer- ring upon a plan ror the run use or all available equipment In a manner ! calculated to be of the best advaw- I calculated to oe oi me uest aavan- ;tage to the people at large. j The roads are expected shortly to notny snippers mat tney win jieiuse to allow light loading of grain, and that all things being equal, the man who loads to 110 per cent capacity will get first service of available cars This policy will be justified on the ground that the roads have no right to deprive shippers of grain of an adequate part of the car supply be cause some other shipper elects to use two cars when one would suffice. Freight traffic men explain that shippers who are obeying the gov ernment's advice to load to full ca pacity are demanding that the car riers meet their demand ahead of the man who perlslst In wasting space, contending that by doing so the larg est amount of business and the great est number of shippers will be pro vided for. The practice of furnishing cart tip on demand is likely to he superseded, It Is alJ. hy the shippers Informing (Continued on Page Eight) F. B. McDonald New ; Man at Vaupel's fTIS. McDonald of Portland, Ore., has been secured as a successor of u. vt. uuc.o u0 ucuu ui me senile- , inose living on me racuic mgnwayone design are to be a part of tha men's, furnlahiug goods department east of the city, are being continually I ammunition that will be used In the in Vaupel's store. Mr. McDonald has molested by men who Insist on shoot- 'Liberty loan drive to start before Oc had a great deal of experience In 1ng at game birds and animals froni:tober 1, according to local Liberty work of this nature, aB he has been the road. Several farmers have re- loan headquarters. The contracts connected with large clothing stores ported Instances of extreme careless-, for the powers and cards have Just in Portland and other cities for the noss on the part of passersby In! been let, by the treasury department past many years. He is a brother of shooting at digger squirrels, birds, ; and the awards were made after n iL- G- McDonald, who recently accept- ed a position In the shoe department of Enders' store. Mrs. McDonald and three children will arrive as soon as Mr. McDonald secures a house. Band Promises Real Conceit for Tonight The' Ashland, Central Point and Bedford bands that will combine in i the big massed band concert at the Chautauqua auditorium tonight met ' Tuesday evening for practice, anti from renorts of the band leaders to - i night's' concert will rival any concert of everv variety, there have been a number of features added to the pro- gram which will Insure an evening of ; unusual attractions. There will be songs by a trio of young men who! jstng after the fashion of real vaude- . i . i ni j . J1..U...1 auditorium tonight. Cement Plant Will Start Work Soon An Important event In the devel opmert pf Gold Hill's industries will lva ihi nnariitlnn tha tl 00 000 i.i. vv n n...... cement plant of the Por lltnd Beaver rmAnf Frnmnnnw'a fairimr nn tha vcuicuv vumpouj nil t all I rtfl tt CVlO cliV Til A ftVir ET1 II I Z- , . u , n ..I ation plans of President Fletcher ... . .,j Linn have been successful, and from present maicaiiuiia me uinnmvo ma- cm.., u una ,,,.-.. , u-,. nln.l n.111 liA mmH,l(V TlOVt H'OdIT ihhjil w """"'6 h.m, Fifty laborers and machinists have been employed the past two weeks overhauling the machinery and re- opening the quarries. und?r the su- perintendence of Engineer J. A. Blank, late of the Allentown, Pa., 'and Mason City, Iowa, cement dls- trlcts Victor Delfenderfer of the same districts Is expected dally from the east, and will be Engineer . Blanks' first lieutenant In producing! I , , . . . ... . machinists and mill men, who htve had considerable experience in the mines in this district, and these em ployes are readily adadpted to this new Industry in Gold Hill. The elec tric power from the California-Ore r,v ; " " " n.i Wn Power Company w s recently turned on, and this week the massive machinery, which requires many hun- vegetal)Ie8 grown tn war gar. dred horsepower, was tested ot-!dens- Th)g hflB resuited , the or. proving to be In first-class working, .,..,.. vi lDllo,) fc tha well-known Hunt Engineering and Construction Compny, cement plant , constructors. ; Crude oil from California will he usea tor iuei m uie iun., large quantity already stored In the Immense tanns on tne ractory (Continued on rage Eight.) Roseburg Cops PonfllfA Rn07f vaJJtUlU UUULv 1 Sheriff Qulne of Douglas county and Southern Pacific Agent Mahoney upset a bootlegging attempt of large proportions Monday when they cap tured a shipment of 244 quarts which was on Its way to Portland In a re- frlgerator car consigned as bananas. The detection was" the undoing of a clever plot .by the officers who had been on the alert for the car for sev eral days before the capture. The booze was consigned to Port land parties, It was all whiskey and ent by uno, Fran- c'0 flrm Farmers toArrest Careless Hunters Many farmers In the territory sur- rounding Ashland, and particularly etc., and in doing so endangered the lives of all living creatures nearby, The following section of the state law deals with the matter: "Chapter ,232. Section 22, state laws of Oregon: Tt till oil 1m unlawful of Drtir rlma In I " '"diers with aeroplanes and battleships the state of Oregon to shoot or dls-n the bBckgronndi The lnscrlptloa charge any gun at any game bird or ,g taken fr0 one of g, ,fe. game animal from or while upon any Adqo,B gpeecheg( gllall we bfl ora railroad, right of way, or any public tendor hJi om dolftrg road or highway." It would be well for hunters to no tice this section of the law, as these farmers have determined to arrest and prosecute all offenders. , ElkS PlSd&6 SUDDOlt , D CF For Conservation The members of the Ashland lodge of Elks will take part in the national food conservation campaign which hasbeen launched by the grand lodge of the order. Every member of the Ashland lodge, in common with all other Elks In the country. Is expect - i . i I, , .I composed of Messrs. I. E. Vinlng, E. V. Carter and Ira Shoudy to circu late the pledge for signatures. The pledge as proposed by the grand lodge of Elks is as follows: I. A.' That one meal each day shall ! be served without wheat food. I B. That one meal each day shall be Berved without meats. C, That no butter shall be nse for cooking purposes when a eatlsfao- - That bread shall be sliced dur- Ing each meal only as required for . ,, , ' , immeaiace consumption, , R m each week ' nf lonat nn a Htoh oil all It a ftaMiad nra. unconsumed at pre. 1 vious meals. ! The committee may also request the local hotels and restaurants to observe the same rules In so far as possible. Library Receives Food Saving Manuals j The public library today received from the National Emergency Food Garden Commission of Washington a bundle of storage manuals for distri bution In the food-saving campalgrv. These manuals are free and addition al copies can be had by readers of this paper by writing to Charles Lnth- ' ' ' . . n "'' ' . ", mn lnilr rvfisn I il art t nf tlia Untlnnnl Emergency Food Garden Commta slon, 2 10-2 2d Maryland building Wnslilneton. D. C. The commission has been conduct- InB a natl,on-wlde food-saving cam- n)w ... ... . . . t. . BHIII.1UIUU Ul Will buiuuii CAumua, throughout the country. P. S. Rlds- secretary of the commls- .. B,on( Bay8 tnere are Btj a few prj.eg certlfcateg of merlt t0 be apport,oned t0 thlg Btat6i and thnt offical8 of war garden exhibits or fa,rg ghould comraunlcate wltn tne commission at once. A close estimate, based on early reports to the commission, says the women of the country have placed 1460,000,000 Jars of canned stuff on 1,19 Panty shelves this year and that a j00(j conservation records have been brokem Warning to ITunters, The undersigned take this means of warning all persons that their! property has been turned over to the game reserve and all persons caught hunting thereon will be prosecuted. MARK TRUE, BUTLER WALKER. 37-4t ' W. L. TINKER. Permanent works along the Colum- bla river at Portland. In the way of dikes and revetments, are to be start- ed soon. Plan for Liberty Loan Drive Ready Four million posters of eight de signs and 500,000 window cards, lu competition In which 150 sketches were submitted without cost to tha eovernmpnt The first design chOstTi represents Uncle Sam pointing to khakl-clad sol- lives of our sons?" The second design shows thej Statue of Liberty at sunrise and tha sky'la interwoven with the flag. Tha inscription reads, "Before sunset buy a Liberty bond," The third design presents the old Liberty bell and carries the Inscrip tion, "Ring It again." The fourth la a soldlor and sailor with clasped hands under the Ameri can flag. The fifth deslsn Is of two llttla children saying, "My daddy Is fight ing at the front for you. Back him up by buying a Liberty bond." Design number slxls a bronze tab- Iot effect can.ying a plcture of Prej!l. dent Wilson and the American shield with the president's statement: "The time has come to conquer or submit. There is but one choice and we have made It" Design number seven has the pic ture of the treasury with the inscrip tion, "Lend your money to the gov ernment," The eighth design shows an Immi grant ship arriving In New York har bor with the Statue of Liberty. Ellis Island and the tall buildings In tha foreground. The window card has a bronze steel , tablet effect reading. "Second Liberty Loan 1917. Buy a Bond." . Jt sunnlv of the Dosters Is exnected , a Bnort time Soldiers Stop Here On Way East The 3rd Oregon infantry, excepting Company C and the sveral other1, companies which remain in the state on guard duty, passed through the city at 7 o'clock Wednesday morning en route from Clackamas to the bis cantonment at Camp Green, Char lotte, N. C. The train was divided Into two sections. The early morning' section was composed of companies I and K, the regimental band and headquarters staff. Colonel May, for mer Aslilander, was In charge of thai train. It stopped but for a short while In Ashland. The second section arrived about II o'clock. It was composed of about 100 men of the quartermaster corps and details of men from different pompnnlos. The train was composed chlofly of freight cars containing; PP"- The men were allowed a ,uw m'u,B """ " joye(l the park thoroughly during tl.9 .stop here. They wore all clean-cut. few hours' stay m Asliianu ana en- quiet, orderly young Americans, an example of what military training 'will do for the undisciplined drafted men who passed through the city re cently. Camps Raided; No Booze Found Special Agent R. O. Porter and as sistants raided two camps In the Sis klyous of employes engaged In work on the Pacific Highway, Tuesday. The raid was without' result b far as finding any liquor concealed In tha oamps. A number of foreigners, mostly Italians, are employed on the highway work, and the authorities have known for some time of their having liquor. In fact!, there hava been several disturbances In tha camps because of drinking. As the camp contained no booze, the officers feel confident that tha liquor Is cached on the nearby moun tain sides. Women working In the box fac tories In the northwest may save tha apple crop of Washington, Oregon and Idaho.