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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1919)
VIMIMtS Wednesday and Thursday THF THFATFf7RFAUTlFUL SS CHARLES RAY Tlie Busher" is poesned of as slppy a curve you ever saw. Lots of upeed but no control. He's dead from the neck up. Until but that's when he ceases lieing a Lusher. This yarn leads to tho IcaKun, we'll say. w EE i U 1 E K" 66 J Also, Billy Parsons Comedy 8 BIG REELS New Screen Magazine Ray turely puts a War laugh right over the home plate In this baseball photoplay story. The women will be able to understand It without a diagram. 9 NW I st Me" a COMING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY nr to t rmn jfi lie w omasa leoii wye By HALL CAINE ALL STAR CAST I ADMISSION: Adults 22c, war lax 3c, tola! 2c; Children 9c, war tax 1c, total 10c S3 E ,1 itiii-n - '' i't A '4 ' -1 A f ' "lASitiii p v 1 ( M i::asn:;;'.Uw;;;nUUXUU;:a:a 1 ft., v. U. L. Walker, pastor of the of the resolution at Atlantic City. IIOMK IJST IV HUE First Methodist church of DunsmulriThe working men of America do not To the Editor. The Social Realm 1 reading the service. 5!1ks Poley and Dr Mahnl Cnneer w-r bride at- ascnsBncranHHww- , icndan(g and B B B)gelow ,. Cave Dinner for Bishop. a, best man. Following a wedding Honoring tfap visit of Bishop. dlnner Mf and Mrg Cober ,eft fof ."Utt 8. Hughes, who visited Ashland I ft ftw week. tQur of the bay cU,cs ynd preached in tho wntnoaisi church Sunday morning, Rev. and .Mr. Charlct A. Edwards gave a din ner at the parsonage Saturday eve ning. Those present were ut. ana Mrs. II. Jl. Van Fossen, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Fuller, Mra. M. C. Reed nd Dr. 0. Wl Grbgg. Mr. Fuller -wxus a fraternity man from the same aialversity as Bishop Hughes. . liuncheon for Mra, Thompson. -Colonel George P. Mima of Med tforcf entertained at lunchteon Friday In konor of Mrs. Alexander Thomp son, representative to the legislature from Hood River, who baa Uen vis iting In this section during the past -week. Mra. John H. Dill of Ashland and Mra. J. R Crewa of Medford were Invited to meet Mrs. Thompson ;at the luncheon. Charming Home Wedding. . "A pretty home wedding took place jit noon today, Tuesday, August 19, when Miss Allle q. Shlnn Uecame the bride of Howard J. Barrett at the home of. her parents, Mr. and Mrt. Frank X Shlnn. on Oak street Only relatives and closle friends of the bride and groom w itnessed , the ceremony which was read ly Rev. C F. Koehler, pastor of thle Presby terian church. An Informal recep tion followed the ceremony, after which WncheAi was cerved. The iouse was attractive with greenery and flowers, and the dining table decorations werb carried out. In pinV and white Guests at the weeding bes!de tl bride's father and mother and Yellowstone Park. Bishop as Dinner Guest. Bishop Matt S. Hughes of Portland Was the Sunday dinner guest of Mr. nnd Mra. J. H. Monroe at their home at Moravia ranch In South Ashland. ' ' Married at Llthia Park Oliver F. Olds and Miss Eva May Santee, both of Grants Pass, were married Saturday In Ashland In the presence of a few Intimate friends. The ceremony was performed .under gathered togctlA-r his; BCiwty be longings (as be was junt that mouth need or .want beer. W. 11, Sullivan, formerly a real-, discharged from the bankrupt court dent of Ashland, and now living at of the sixth Judicial district of Mln- Chicago Physicians, Health Com-j jfarcola, Ore, met with; a heavy incsota), and located at Ashland. In mlssloners, Physicians of Cook Co. j08g Saturday night. He awoke to1 a few months, with absolutely no Hospital, Surgeon Chief of St. tlnd ther iovely norae tn fiames. He Luk'e's' Hospital and others, all agree Bt once aroused his wife, and x to Beaver. Realty Co. THE POPULAR REALTY 00. . Ill E. Main St., Phone 68 "A man can borrow moniey on what he puts Into a home. He can't on what he pays out for rent." "I want to see every wage-worker own his own home." w n witimn. TT. 8. Sec'r of Labor. have several choice homes as well na harealns In acreage. Some can be sold on small payments and easy terms. '.groom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Klncald, Rl. P. Campliell and daugh ters, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Paulserud, Rev. and Mrs. C. F. Koohlor, and Nell Shlnn. Both Mr. ami Mrs. Bar rett are well known and popular young people of Ashland, and the wedding or today Is pne of much In terest to their hosts of friends. Al tho quiet and Informal as the cere mony was, the best wlsheo and Wear tlest congratulations are showered upon them at this time. The bride Is the only daughter of Mr. and Mrs Shlnn, and is a graduate of the Ash land high school of the class of 1913. She Is a charming end winsome young woman w ith a faculty of mak ing and keeping friends, whom, she countB by the score In this city and the trees of Llthia park, Rev. R. V. Rhodes, of Medford, officiating. Mr, and Mrs. Olds will make their home at Soventh and A streets In Grants Puss. Courier. Ronclfll-Jolinsoa Wedding. Tlte marriage of Miss Clayre M. Johnson of this city and Charles Z. Rondell of Pendleton was solemn Ued In ' Jacksonville . last evening, Monday. August 18. The service that a wonderful decrease In death rate and disease will follow Nation al Prohibition. , . An amusing cartoon appears In the National Issue. The. Police Judge sits asleep at his cobweb cov ered deski A policeman drops his cjuj, itretcbJM aridi yas ",0h, Hum, No Beer, No Work" in City government these days. "World Prohibition by ' 1925!" Isn't that a' splendid challenge? Don't you want a part In the making It a fact? O, you Oregon people, you would not go back to the old days of terror and want and crime,' nev er! But if it Is good for our state and for our nation, aren't you anx ious that other nations shall be free indeed? If America has beerf lifted up .to be a light to the Nations, to bring hope to the oppressed and lib erty to the captive, let America give this larger liberty, the freedom from sin and the curse and bondage of drink to other lands. How Is this to be done? Pray, study, give. Help the campaign to send literature, speakers and workers overseas. Many are already gone. Wewant many more. If you are a world pa triot you will do your bit. Ashland citizens were more jthan 100 per cent loyal In levery war undertaking. What a splendid thing it would be if Ashland citizens were equally loyal in the. support of World Prohibi tion. Let us carry on. . ; Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Barrett. th4?rd ,,v Rev- A- "' G?mns; pastor or the rresoyienan ciiurcu m their horror pieces of the delllng In the living room were already falling. Their home was a beautiful nine room bungalow on the banks of the silver Mohawk river where they have resided for six years. Eighteen years ago Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan oaida to AOhJand. With their family of seven little ones, Mr. Sullivan had to be carried to the station, so weakened was his condi tion from years of inexpressible suf fering with asthma. But hearing of a spot called Ashland, far to the west of the titanic Rockies, wliere any one who breathed It hallua air would be permanently cure J of that terrible malady, asthma, he medicine except Ashlaindl's match less air, and healing water, and the congenial brotherhood of Ashland's people, be found .himself a well man aiid worked twlve years for the Southern Pacific railroad company, never losing a day in all that time by sickness. And stranger still, during that twelve yeara of labor, the hours of overtime he worked aggregated to eighteen month! over time. Oil! wHjidKirful, beautiful Ashland, with your fountain of health, and sources of wealth, and schools beyond compare. Ashland's climate la an unfailing cure for, astlima. , " MRS. MARY E. SULLIVAN. Home made ice cream composed of the best and purest material made right, wholesome and sanitary, Rose Brothers. S0-7t St. Johns wants street car line and electric terminal. Cliff Payne makes bread boards. PAVIflDn MEDFORD NAT uMiLUnu Motor- PVPICQ HARLEY-DAVIDSON andBi- U1ULL0 Jacksonville!. The bridal party was accompanied by Dr. end Mrs. R. L. Burdlfc and Otte H. Johnson, Jr. They will leave this evening fo: Pendleton where they will reside, The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mr. O. H.' Johnson, and Is one of the popular young women of Ash lend where she has spent much of her girlhood. She Is an efficient stenographer and had held positions in Ashland, Medford and other places for" two or three years, and later had been located in San Francisco with her sister, Mrs. Pearl Dodg. She had only returned home a few weeks ago to prepare for her marriage. Mr. Rondell Is a rising young attorney of Pendleton1, and Is late of the .elsewhere. Mrl Barrett was Junior 1 "lleu owi -.-, parser of the tailoring firm of the rank of lieutenant. ne 0e Taulserud & Barrett for some time ' Mrs., Rondell s friends In previca. to the summer of 1917, Aahtand go with her and her hus- when liia entered the United States i', ,u military service with the old Oregon First company. Since his discharge from the service last winter he re sumed his former position, and is one of the promising young business men of the city, fter the ceremony the young people left for en auto mobir trip to Crescent City, and pOFSIbly farther down the coast. Af ter Septcm1er 1, Mr. and Mrs. Bar rett will make their home In tho Boslough bungalow on Vista ' and Terrace i,tijotfl. A carpenter planes the nice white planks And makes them smooth and flat, And children marvel that he's paid For having fun. like that. MIbs Eva PoI'tt was in Dunnmuir ljut week where she participated as n attendant in the wedding of her cousin, MIks RiTnice Pouter, who waj married to Benjamin A. Colier. The and others that organized labor is wfdding took place at the home of, oppose! to prohibition. The Ari-, V.-.i bride's i.arentH, Mr. and Mrs. zona President of the Labor Feder-J Frank L. Foster, Tuesday ot 4 p tn,;alion, promptly rvlgnod on hearing j TIDINGS OF TEMPERANCE It Is always noon-time somewhere And across the awakening conti nents From shore to short?. Somewhere our prayers are rising evermore." The American Train Dispatchers' Association at Its Chicago conven tion unanimously endorsed National Prohibition. Total abstlnance Is one of their requirements for member ship in the association'. Many Lalor Unions of States chal lenge the statement of Mr. Gompers ipltl SBC For quality , ' 1J Shoes for . style. Shoes at the lowest prices. We have a complete stock of new up-to-date goods. . Let us serve you. 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