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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1912)
Monday, July 29, 1912. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS One cent per word, first insertion; cent per word for each insertion thereafter; 30 words or less $1 per month. No advertisement Inserted fpr less than 25 cents. MISCELLANEOUS CHAIR DOCTOR R. H. Stanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relaid and repaired, bed springs re stretched, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies. 26 First avenue, opposite First National Bank. Phone 413-J. WANTED A-good secolid-hand sin gle buggy, cheap for cash. Ad dress Box 354, Ashland. Phone 306-J. 16-3t FOR TRADK What have you? 160 acres in Weld county, Colorado; small house, plenty good water. Address J. Baron, 304 Mechanic St., Ashland. 13-lmo. BARGAINS IN TENTS A few new tents, used for only ten days dur ing the Chautauqua, at special re duced prices. 345 East Main St. Cameron & Patty. 15-tf HOWDO" YOU DO? YesTit is" hot weather. You want a carriage? All right. Where to, at what time and place, please? All right. See E. N. Smith, 124 Morton St., phone 464-J. 17-lmo. LOST One bay mare, 9 years old, weight 1,000 lbs.; small bronze bell on neck, roached, brand a. One bay horse, 9 years old, weight 1,000 lbs., slit In right ear, lame in left hind ankle. $25.00 reward when delivered at Ashland Meat Co., Ashland, Ore. Mrs. H. A. Thomas. 17-3t FOR RENT. FOR RENT Bedroom, with use of sitting room and bath. Also table board.' Mrs. Nathan Durkee, 64 Third St. FOR RENT Seven-room modern house, furnished or unfurnished: large lot, iruit. Reasonable rent. 773 Boulevard, L. H. Klum. 17-lmo. "FOR RENT Furnished housekeep ing rooms; ground floor; hot and cold water; bath. Call at mil linery store. Second street, near Hargadine. 56-tf BlCVCLES FOR RENT New and second-hand bicycles for sale cheap. Bicycle repairing, prompt service, good work, low prices. All kinds of tires and supplies at cut prices. Eastern Supply Co., 104 North Main. 77-tI FOR SALE. FOR SALE An Oliver typewriter. See Gillis at the Tidings. tf HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE for sale. Good as new. Call at 520 Terrace St. 14-lmo. A GOOD SPAN of matched geldings for sale, also harness and hack. 1167 E. Main, J. A, Orchard. 16-tf FOR SALE Acreage located on the Boulevard, near railroad. Call on or address Mrs. C. W. McKibben, Route 1, Ashland. 82-tf IF YOU WANT an A 1 fruit ranch, plenty of water, in exchange for close in city property, call at 520 Terrace St. or address Box 532, Ashland, Ore. 15-4t TIDINGS" WANTADS"are little real estate salesmen. A 50-cent want ad will put you in touch with somebody who wants the property you have for sale. Try It. FOR QUICK SALE A 4-rooni house on large lot, well located; bath, pantry, toilet, hot and cold water, garden, fruit, and chicken pen. Will sell cheap. 156 Eighth St. 16-lnio. FOR-SALESingle harness-$7 "and up; with collar and hames, $10. Made in Ashland; our own make. Don't buy factory made harness. Eastern Supply Co., 104 North Main. 77-tf FOR SALE A span of mares, six and eight years oa, weight 2,600. Can be seen at Wells' ranch, four miles east of Ashland. For par ticulars inquire 76 Lincoln St. or phone 409-R. 15-4t FOR-SALEOR TRADE A 34-36 H. P. Rambler automobile in first class condition. Will exchange for lots or acreage. Call at Nims & Saunders' grocevy or E. E. Bagley, 141 High St 15-4t CLEARANCE SALE OF FORE CLOSED CHATTELS One heavy spring wagon, 1 light buggy, 1 set light double harness, 1 set breast single harness, 1 set collar single harness. Call at Trefren's, 438 North Main, telephone 226-R, and examine the property. 4tf -' FOR SALE 500thoroughbred" sin gle comb White Leghorn hens, Wyckoff strain, one year old. Any one wishing a start of the very best egg-producers cannot do bet- ; ter than to purchase some of these hens. They all must go, as I need the . room for my young stock. Price $8.00 per dozen. P. O. ad dress, O. O. Helman, Ashland, Ore. Phone 145. 16-lmo. FOR" SALE OR EXCHANGE Eleven acres; all fruit; free soil; pears, apples and alfalfa; three crops; sub-Irrigation; electric lights; fine well, best of water; engine, tank, spring, half acre of lawn, shade trees, shrubbery, bungalow with screened porch, all new buildings; fine location, grand view; district of prize apples; first-class grocery service one mile west of Talent, and high school, five miles west of Ashland; short walk to experi ment station. $6,500. Owners, Brown Bros., Talent, Ore. 12-lmo. Star Laundry and French Dry Cleaning Company. Phone 64. i Weekly Oregonlan and Ashland Tidings one year, $2.50. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, May 21, 1912. Notice is hereby given that George H. Grover, whose postoffice address Is Wellen, Oregon, did, on the 25th day of May, 1911, file in this office Sworn Statement and Application No. 07236. to purchase the SW. V, NX Vi and NW. V SW. Section 12. Township 38 S., Range 1 East. Willamette Meridian, and the timber ! thereon, under the provisions of the act of June 3, 1878, and acts amend atory, known as the "Timber and Stone Law," at such value as might be fixed by appraisement, and that, pursuant to such application, the land and timber thereon have been appraised $200.00, the timber esti mated 620,000 board feet at 35 and 50 cents per M, and the land $90.00; that said applicant will offer final proof in support of his application and sworn statement on the 9th day of August, 1912, before E. D. Briggs, United States Commissioner, at Ash land, Oregon. Any person is at liberty to protest this purchase before entry, or initiate a contest at any time before patent issues, by filing a corroborated affi davit in this office, alleging facts which would defeat the entry. BENJAMIN F. JONES, 2-10t-Mon. Register. Farm for Sale 40 acres 35 in cultivation; No. 1 8-room house, large barn; orchard, all kinds of berries and 8,000 straw berries; 3 miles from town; water piped to house and barn. Price $5,500; $2,800 cash. $400 span of horses, wagon, $50 cow, some chick ens, crop and other stuff all go with the place. Possession at once. Write for free price list. C. O. BURGESS SHERIDAN, Route 1. OREGON. James R. Jennings TEACHER OK Piano, Singing and Violin A sixth year trained graduate of "The Mexican Government's" Nation al Conservatory of Music, 'Mexico City. A pupil of Dr. Lebert, Stutt gard, Germany, and voice pupil of the world-noted Italian operatic sing er, "Quintile Leone," gives lessons in your own home at very low rates. Consular and private ' recommenda tions as well as certificates and dip lomas are at the disposition of the public. Address 107 Fourth street, FOR SALE For the balance of the season I will sell $5.00 Indian Runner duck eggs for $2.00. $5.00 Orpingtons $2.50 2.50 Orpingtons 1.25 Two settings. 2.00 $3.00 White Leghorns 1.50 Two settings 2.50 Barred Rocks, good ones 1.50 Black Mlnorcas 1.00 Also have some nice Berkshire pigs $10.00 up, a fine Jersey bull calf and two two-year-olds. . Address E. A. KRUSE ROSEBURG. ORE. WOOD FOR SALE! Hard block wood, $3.00 per tier Fir and pine stove wood, $2.50 per tier Also one steam wood saw at 'a bargain. 4-h.p. engine andJ5-h.p. boiler in good repair. Forty acres of good land 2 miles from Talent. A fine place for a home. Five acres cleared. Address TALENT. OREGON. Beaver Realty Co. REAL ESTATE-LOANS-INSURANCE 108-acre farm, woodland,, partly good for orchard when cleared, in good orchard location, stream of wa ter, small buildings; 2 miles from railroad. Wood enough to pay for the place. Price, $35 per acre. (120 acres of land In southwest Texas, under ditch, no buildings, to trade for Ashland home. Wanted to list Good ranches, large and small, to trade for Ashland property. Lots for sale in choice addition to town, from $75 up. Wood. ranch for sale. Down hill pull to market. Good terms. Exchange made 1 nail kinds of real estate. Have places In different parts of Oregon and in California to trade for Ashland property.. City property for sale; also farms, large and small, improved and unim proved. Easy terms. For particulars inquire of Beaver Realty Company ASHLAND. OREGON. 211 E. MAIN ST. ' Phones: Pacific 68, Home 3-L. Scale receipts at Tidings office. ASHLAND n ii REV. DR. STEPHEN WISE. Prominent Raformar, Rabbi of Fro Synagragua. Naw York. CHANGE OF ROUTE. Coos Hay Line Inactive South of Wind Creek Tunnel. Marshfield, Ore. The Evening Record says: It may be taken for a certainty now that the Southern Pacific will build no railroad this side of the Wind creek tunnel this season. In formation has reached the Record that Implies the first story about work being stopped for the present was the correct version of the affair, and the talk of changing grade seems to have had more than a grain of truth in it. Locating Engineer Brown has been on the bay since last Friday and it is known he is con sulting with local employes of the Southern Pacific. The MacArthur- Perks people cannot go ahead with the work they had planned, and therefore are about to remove their headquarters to Eugene. Parties who have received copies of the Congressional Record up to a very late date find no reference whatever to any attempt on the part of any railroad company to obtain consent of congress to cross Coos bay with a bridge, and the records are complete to the first part of last week. A leak has occurred which lAs It that the location of the line between Gardiner and the bay will undergo several important changes in the final survey for the railroad, two of which are changes on North inlet to avoid two drawbridges which the, present plans call for. This will mean putting the line through from the Resin place on the west side of the inlet to the bay, without any crossings where drawbridges must be maintained. This seems to be the secret of the whole matter. The grades and loca tions must be changed, and the com pany is not ready to say just where the lines will be run, and therefore there is no work here for the Mac-Arthur-Perks people until they are completed. All the talk about grades being washed away and deteriorating is passed by with whatever credit it deserves, for it is a sure thing that a grade which has been made and settled for a year or more is much more suitable than a fresh one just finished by contractors. , FUGITi.E FUND EXHAUSTED. Stute Will Have to Make New Appropriation-. Unless provision is made by state or county within a week, persons ac cused of crimes ranging from va grancy to first degree murder will be able to escape the police immediate ly upon leaving the city, as the re sult of a conference between Secre tary of State Olcott and Detective Captain Baty. While a fugitive fund exists, it is not large enough to provide for the expense of catching criminals who seek refuge in other cities. County Judge Cleeton and Commissioners Llghtner and Hart recently refused to put out further county funds, to be replaced later by state funds, un less the state would guarantee the return of the funds. This the state through Olcott re fuses to do. The tangle has been on the verge of becoming intricate for some time, but the efforts of the po lice department to collect the amounts spent in the chase of W. A. Tanner and Hazel Irwin, accused of the murder of Ray W. Wallace, pre cipitated the confusion. The amount was $40.15. It has been the custom of the po lice to pay the expenses of capturing and taking criminals to Portland to face trial, later getting reimburse ment from the county, which in turn was repaid by the state. According to Captain Baty, Secre tary Olcott will not allow further state funds to be spent for the cap ture of criminals until the appoint ment of a state agent. The agent fund has not been arranged and the matter will have to be presented to the legislature. Chief Slover of Portland holds that in the meantime criminals will ."make monkeys" out of the local police. Forger Admits Guilt. Greenwich, Conn. Stanley Bea dle, held under $5,000 bonds on a charge of assault, has admitted that he Is wanted in Seattle, Spokane and Los Angeles for passing fraudulent checks. A card found on Beadle showed he is a former secretary for the Western Sales Company of Los Angeles, Scale receipts at Tidings office. A-- I 'iy v i 3 ( TIDINGS "RUSTY LEAF" NO INJURY. Irof. O'Gara Tells of Nature of Fruit Mite. A number of pear growers have become more or less anxious over the condition of some of their pear trees on account of the peculiar ap pearance of the terminal leaves, said Prof. O'Gara recently.. "In most cases the Bartlett pear shows the greatest injury, although it is more or less prevalent on other varieties. The injury is by no means serious, especially in the case of vigorous trees, but it is well for pear growers to know what to do in case the trou ble should become serious.; "The foliage has a peculiar 'rusty' or 'russett' appearance, and is also somewhat curled as though by drought. The browning or russet ting is mostly on the under surface of the foliage, and, as a rule, the twig itself has the same appearance. In some cases the fruit also shows a slight russett. .Many have mistaken this trouble for sunburn or tip-burn, but the two troubles are very differ ent. Sunburn or tip-burn causes a peculiar drying of the tip and margin of the leaf, making it brittle. How ever, in the 'rusty leaf the foliage does not become brittle, but loses its gloss, finally falling off, leaving the terminal bare. "ihe cause of 'rusty leaf is due to the presence of a very small mite of the genus Phytoptus, and is related to the blister mite. I have seen as many as 10,000 mites on a single pear leaf, but the number is often much greater. However, unlike the blister mite, it does not produce small galls or blisters. It works wholly on the surface of the leaf and does not enter it. In fact, its action is very much like the rust mite of the orange and lemon in tne south. For a number of years the effect of the rust mite In the citrua districts in California was ascribed to a fungus disease, and the same thing has been said of the 'rusty leaf of the pear in this valley. This is a serious mistake, and simply shows a lack of knowledge and ob servation. In a paper to be pub lished later a complete description of this mite will be given. The mites are related to the spiders and are not insects, but near relatives of them. "Where the 'rusty leaf mite be comes serious, self-boiled lime-sulphur, or even dry sulphur, may be used. Tobacco sprays, oil emulsions, etc., are also effective. Unless the attack is very general, no . great amount of damage is done. The in jury is confined largely to the ter minals as the mites like the juices of the fresh young leaves. Where young trees are attacked, it is more often necessary to spray than in the case of bearing trees. Naturally, if there is any indication that the fruit will be russetted, spraying Bhould be done. Where the fruit is nearing maturity, it is best not to use any spray which will discolor or spot it." FORMER ASCENSIONS RELATED. aVd Parties Asserted to Have Reached Summit in 11)1. Seattle. The failure of the Parker-Browne Mount McKinley expe dition recalls the fact that this was the third ascent of the Alaskan peak, two parties having reached the sum mit in 1910, when the discussion over Dr. Frederick A. Cook's claim of having scaled the mountain was at its height. The first ascent was accomplished April 3, 1910, by a party of four, led by Thomas Lloyd of Fairbanks, Alaska. The Lloyd party attacked the mountain from me north side, starting from Fair banks in the winter so as to reach the mountain before the snow began to melt. After the return of Lloyd the three other members of his par ty, Pete Anderson, W. R. Taylor and Charles McGonnigle, repeated the feat, reaching the summit May 17 of that year. An aneroid measurement taken by Lloyd placed the height of the peak at 20,500 feet. In the summer of 1910 two other parties, one led by C. E. Rusk of Chelan, Wash., and the other by Pro fessor Parker and Mr, Browne, at tempted to ascend the mountain from the southwestern side, follow ing the route over which Dr. Cooke claimed to have reached the sum mit. Both parties reported the mountain inaccessible from -that side. Professor Parker expressed doubt concerning the success reported by the Lloyd party, but this year decid ed to follow the course laid out by Lloyd and approached the peak from the north. The party left Seward, on the Alaska coast, early In Febru ary, and spent much time working around to the north side of the moun tain. Professor Parker was a member of the party Dr. Cook led to the moun tain and was one of the first to dis pute the Brooklyn physician's claim that he had reached the summit. With Professor Parker and Mr. Browne in the present expedition are Merl Lavey and Arthur Aten, pack ers. A party sent out by the Fairbanks (Alaska) Times attempted to scale the mountain last spring, but was un successful. SITUATION ALARMING. London Strikers Piny for Death of l)eveiiM)it. London. Fearing that some zealot from the strikers' ranks may try to assassinate Lord Devenport.chairman of the port of London, as a result of the public prayers of 20,000 strikers on Tower Hill that "God strike Lord Devenport dead," 24 policemen are guarding Devenport's home here. Hourly the suffering among the striking dockkmen is growing. Hun dreds of women and children are virtually starving, and with the growth of their distress the fear or the government Increases that some bloody assassination may bring the trouble to a crisis where a settle ment oa some kind may be forced. i iniin -wnr.r zir.i .a. Miss Head's School ItERKELEV, CALIFORNIA. Boarding and Day School for Girls. Twenty-fifth year begins August 20, 1912. MISS MARY WILSON, Principal. Catalogue sent on request. Belmont School for Boys B ELMO XT, (ML. (25 miles south of San Francisco.) Is trying, and we believe success fully trying, to do for the moral, the Intellectual and the physical welfare, of Its boys what thoughtful parents most wish to have done. Contrlbu tive to this end are the locution of the school, removed from the tempta tions and distractions of town or city, the fineness of its climate, the excel lence of its buildings and other equip ment, and the beauty and extent of its grounds, with the wide range of foothills surrounding them. We are glad to have our patrons and gradu ates consulted. For catalogue and other specific Information address the Head Master. W. T. REID (Harvard). Head Master. G. N. BRINK (Pomona), Assistant Head Master. A Seattle sea captain sailed for Panama recently, where he will seek for buried treasure. DANGER IN DELAY Kidney Diseases Are Too Dangerous for Ashland IVojtlu to Neglect. The great danger of kidney trou bles is that they so often get a firm hold before the sufferer recognizes them. Health will be gradually un dermined. Backache, headache, lum bago, urinary troubles, dropsy, gra vel and Brlght's disease often follow iu merciless succession. Don't neg lect your kidneys. Help the kidneys with Doan's Kidney Pills, whlclT are so strongly recommended right here in this locality. Mrs. George Bell, Washington street, Klamath Falls, Ore., says: "Some time ago I began to suffer from pains in my back, due to disor dered kidneys. The -kidney secre tions were also unnatural, causing me annoyance. Hearing of Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured a supply and began their use. They com pletely cured me. I can highly rec ommend Doan's Kidney Pills to other kidney sufferers." For sale by all dealers.' Price 50 cents. Foster-Mil burn Co., New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. To Subscribers. Whenever extra copies of the Tid ings are wanted for sending to friends, they can be secured at this office if we are notified before pub lication day. Scale receipts at Tidings office. Good Work Done Promptly AT THE Rough Dry at Reasonable J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office and Laundry 138 Fourth St. TELEPHONE 165 afctkfLAjrlk4nWaarkaWaJraWaaaaJLal a - . ffr J -fa. .. aa m m m m a A aa rTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT'fTT I Tl TTTTTTTf f TW I 1 TTTTTtTTtI'T V'f tTT L.N.Judd Orchards, Homes and Farms In a Thriving Center in of the Rogue Land for Sale ! 74-acre tract, good house and barn, 2 miles from Talent, on rural mail route; telephone In house; Vi mile from school; bearing trees; 8 acres In alfalfa. Do not have to sell, but If a person Is looking for an all-round place this Is hard to beat for the price, $8,000.00. 91-acre tract, part of which Is In the town limits of Talent, and an Ideal place to cut Into town lots or acre tracts and larger tracts. All good land and mostly under Irrigation. This Is a good chance for the right man. Will be glad to show interested parties over this proposition any time. Talent is the town that Is doln' It now. Large or small tracts, close In or well out; fruit, farms, dairy, alfalfa or, in fact, any kind of lands. If interested call on. or write PHONK NO. H71-R-3, Ashland. I TALENT, OREGON. PAGE THREW ST. MARY'S INSTITUTE REAVERTOX, OREGON. Boarding school for young ladles and girls. Academic, Commercial, Intermediate and Elementary De partments. Teachers' Preparatory Course. Special advantages Id mu sic. Write for catalogue. Address SISTER SUPERIOR. - Portland. Orecoo for (.lrl. Conducted by the SISHBS OF THF HOIV NAMES OF JESUS AND MARY. Crad., J.adroU tnd Cillttiatt CturMU Muiic. Art. Elocution and Commer cial Deptl. KiHdmt and Dat StuJmli, Refined Moral and) Intellectual Tralainf . Write for Announcement. Addrraa SISTKR IVKRWH. Si. Afarr'i AiaJm. h'lltod PARSONS' PRIVATE SCHOOL Hoarding school for boys under twelve and girls all ages. Careful home environment. Primary, Gram mar, College Preparatory. Special attention to Health. Terms, $20 to $40 per month. Permanent board ers taken to mountains in the long summer vacation. 886 Thlrtyfourth St., Oakland, California Oregon Agricultural College This great Institution opens its doors for the fall semester on Sep tember 20. Courses of instruction include: General Agriculture, Agron omy, Animal Husbandry, Dairy' Hus bandry, Bacteriology, Botany and Plant Pathology, Poultry Husbandry. Horticulture, Entomology, Veteri nary Science, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Mining Engineering, Highway Engineering, Domestic Sci ence, Domestic Art, Commerce, For estry, Pharmacy, oology. Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, English Lan guage and Literature, Public Speak ing, Modern Languages, History, Art, Architecture, .Industrial Pedagogy, Physical Education, Military Science and Tactics, and Music. Catalogue and Illustrated litera ture mailed free on application. Ad dress: Registrar, Oregon Agricul tural College, Corvallis, Ore. School Your hiih September SO. Good Paint and Poor Paint. If a dealer tells you he sells the best paint in town, ask him for a written guarantee. If he nuy a thing and iWiihth to give It to you In writing. It looks bad. We cheer fully furnish you a written guaran tee with GOLD SEAL PAINT because we know that 1t Is the best wearing pal lit in the market. Swensou & Mo lt ae. f Raaldent and Dy School for Glrla ln" charge of Hiatffra of Ht. Joha Raptiat ( Kpiacopal? Collagiate, Aeaaamle and Etamanlary Dapartaaaata, Uaile, Art. Elocatlon. Ovmnaitam. For catalog aililn-aa 1IIK MM Kit KlifEUIOK Office ! St. Helena Hall N.&M. Home Laundry Prices. New Machinery, 4- TALENT, OREGON JACKSON COUNTY X One of the Garden Spots River Valley. t