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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 17, 1912)
Thiirsday, Ortolxr 17, 1012. ClASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS One cent per word, first insertion; .i cent per word for each insertion thereafter; 30 words or less $1 per month. No advertisement inserted for less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order expect to parties having ledger accounts with the office. 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. TO LET Cozy "room" 1 2 5Wimer street. 37-5t TAXIDERMISTS. FURRIERS AND TANNERS Natural Science Eat., 10 Granite St. 38-tf READ THIS Any time you want the city carriage, see E. N. Smith, 124 Morton St. Phone 464-J. WANTED Ten men to cut cord wood on good ground. Inquire of C. R.Eliason, 217 North Main St. 38-tf VOICE CULTURE, tone placing, ar tistic singing. Address Mr. Mac Murray, East Side Inn. Phone 183. 25-tf PASTURE Fine alfalfa pasture at the end of Oak St. Call at 996 Oak St. or phone 291-R. V. D. Booth. 39-U FIRST-CLASS BOARD in private family. Also large front room for rent, with hot and cold water. 262 Hargadine St. 38-lmo WANTED Man not afraid "of work", with good team. Steady job all winter, hauling wood. Can aver age $5 or $6 per day. E. J. Ma- ban, 290 East Main St. 40-2t FOR EXCHANGE Equity in good subdivision land at Medford for city property;- 40 acres good land in Bitter Root valley, Montana, and 20-acre garden Tanch in California for city property. Equity two city houses for ranch. J. A. Campbell, 523 North Main St, Ashland, Ore. 39-3t FOR RENT. FURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING SUITES, gas for cooking, electric light, bath, toilet, fine view, cen tral lnrntinn iinstRlrB or down to suit. Apply at millinery store op- nosite East Side Inn. Z7-ti Rii!Yn.p.s 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 Coal heater, Universal make. Cheap! Call at 70 Third St. 40-tf FOR SALE 370 Nanny goats. Will sell all or part. W. B. Jones, Tal ent, Ore. 40-6t FOR SALE Three horses, cheap. I. R. Bateman ranch, half mile north of Bellview school. 40-2t FOR SALE Acreage located on the Boulevard, near railroad. Call on or address Mrs. C. W. McKibben, Route 1, Ashland. 82-tf FOR SALE Span of mares, six and eight years old; weight about 2,600 pounds. Phone 409-R or call 76 Lincoln St. 35-lmo. TIDINGS WANT ADS 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 SALESTOtTlhade trees, box elder, elm, ash, locust and several kinds. Cheap if bought by the last of October. James Purres, 186 Weightman St., Ashland. 39-5t 9 ACRES 900 fruit trees, half in bearing; three houses, two barns, other buildings on place. City sewer in. Price $10,000, half cash. Inquire at G. F. Billings'. 38-ltho FOR SALE Single 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 By owner, large" lot with small house, in Ashland, Ore., on Meade St., ten minutes' walk from postoffice. Address Mark Hebron, Gen. Jeliv.,' Kansas City, Mo. 40-6t 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-- A Marvelous Escape. "My little boy had a marvelous escape," writes P. F. Bastlams of Prince Albert, Cape of Good Hope. "It occurred in the middle of the night. He got a very severe attack of croup. As luck would have it, I had a large bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in the house. After following the directions for an hour and twenty minutes he was through all danger." Sold by Poley's Drug Store. Star Laundry and French Dry Cleaning Company. Phone 454. Talent Meat Market F. T. Guyer, Prop. CHOICE MEATS Tel. 370-J. STAR STEAM LAUNDRY And Dry Cleaning S. N. LINDSEY, Prop. Good Work Fair Prices Satisfaction Guaranteed RHONE C4 The Mans: Newly Furnished Rooms Centrally located. Well ventilated. Gas and electricity. Everything new, neat and clean, treasonable prices. 349 E. MAIN STREET. Ashland Billiard Parlor 10 East Main St. J. P. Saylc & Son Car Load of Salt Just received a car of hay salt. Price $13 per ton. Ashland Feed Store TEL. 214-R. An Appeal to WiVcs You know the terrible affliction that comes to many homes from the result of a drinking husband or son. You know of the money wasted on "Drink" that is needed in the home to purchase food and clothing. OR R1NE has saved thousands of drink ing men. It is a home treatment and can be given secretly. Your money will be refunded if, after, a trial, it has failed to benefit. Costs only $1.00 a box. Come in and get a free booklet and let us tell you of the good ORRINE is doing. McNAIR BROS. WHY DON'T YOU TAKE BETTEF CARE OF YOUR HAIR i Don'l let 5t turn grey. Don't let th Dandruff get a foothold and start the hai falling out. It's not natural that young women shouk have thin grey hair that they cannot drew becomingly. It should always be natural-colored-lux uriant full of life and radiance free frorr ug'v 8rey hairs and annoying Dandruff. Nature intended that a woman's hah should be one of her chief attractions. Why not help her to keep It to ? USE IUrSHAIR HEALTH I mm JOBS $1.00 and 50c at Dru Storet o'r direct upor receipt of price end dealer's name Send 10c toi trial bottle. Philo Hay Spec Co. Newark. N. J. FOR SALE AND GUARANTEED 1JY McXAIU BROS. Beaver Realty Co. REAL ESTATE-LOANS-INSURANCE Now is a good time to Invest In a home in Ashland. Special bargains' may be obtained in both city and country property. We will be pleased to show you around and to extend to you the courtesies of the town. 5-acre tracts lust out of town, un improved, from $350 to $1,500. &-acre tracts, improved, from $1,200 up to $5,000, and more, according to improvements, location, etc. 10-acre tracts from $1,100 up, near town. Small dairy ranch, near town, for sale cheap. City lots $75 each and up. Exchanges made on all kinds of real estate. Have places in Oregon, California, Washington and Middle West for Ashland property. 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. 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. ""SUNSET MAGAZINE and" Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. ' Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per year. 0 ? ASHLAND WORK OF THE FIELDSTATION FOREST INSECT STUDY OF PRAC TICAL VALVE. MUCH TIMBER MAY BE SAVED Interesting and Valuable Information as to the Insects Which Are De stroying Forest Trees of Southern Oregon and Northern California. The work of the entomological bu reau of the Department of Agricul ture Is probably as little understood by the masses of the people as any branch of government activity. The work in the horticultural line is bet ter known than is the forest work, however. It may not be generally known that the national government is ready to co-operate with the pri vate timber owner in an attempt to stop the destruction of timber by in sects, but such is the case. The field station, which is officially known as No. 6, which was recently opened in Ashland with W. D. Edmonston in charge, has handed the Tidings the following communications bearing upon the work of the station. The following circular is sent out from Washington by A. D. Hopkins, officer in charge of the forest insect investi gation: IiiNect Control in Private Forests. "The problem of insect control in private forests is one in which there should be direct co-operation be tween the bureau of entomology of the Department of Agriculture and the private owner, in which the bu reau furnishes the technical informa tion and the owner makes the prac tical application, if he considers it advisable. Therefore it is desierd to bring the matter to the attention of private owners; primarily, to secure their interest and co-operation in the desired attainment of practical re sults from the utilization of informa tion acquired through many years of detailed study by experts on forest insects; secondarily, to lead to the giving of practical instructions and assistance in the inauguration of insect-control policies wherever there appears to be special need of it and where there are at the same time fa vorable conditions for the attainment of success, in order that the results may serve as practical demonstrations I toward furthering the more general adoption of practical methods of pre venting losses from depredations by insect enemies of forest trees and forest products." Mr. Edmonston, the official In charge of the local bureau, has also kindly furnished the following re garding the protection of the pine timber of this section from depreda tions of bark beetles: "Extensive investigations carried on during the past five years by the Department of Agriculture have re vealed the fact that a large percent age of the timber within small to ex tensive areas in southern Oregon has been killed in the past seven years by bark-mining insects known as the mountain pine beetle and the western pine beetle. "The conifers, which are the pre dominating trees of this part of the country, are subject to a high death rate from insect attack. The pines, the spruces and the firs have each at least one destructive enemy. "The little genus of Dendroctonus beetles, or tree-killing beetles, is rep resented in this locality by at least two species. These insects are small, stout, black beetles, less than a quar ter of an Inch in length. "Dendroctonus monticolae, the mountain pine beetle, attacks the yellow pine and sugar pine, and evi dently all other pines of the northern Rocky mountains and Pacific slope. The adult beetles fly in the period from July to October, and attack the main trunks of the living healthy trees by boring into the bark and ex cavating long,- nearly straight egg galleries between the bark and wood, the eggs deposited by the beetles hatch and theyoung grubs, or larvae forms, mine the inner bark. In this manner they completely girdle and thus cause the death of their victims, but the foliage of the infested trees remains . green and apparently healthy until the following May and June. It then begins to change to a pale green and later to yellowish and brown. By the time all of the foliage is dead, about the first of July, the over wintered broods of beetles begin to emerge. By the mid dle of August most of them are out of the dead trees and have entered the living ones. "Dendroctonus brevlcomis, western pine beetle. This species is next in importance to the mountain pine bee tle as a destructive enemy ' of the pine, and the two species often com bine in their attack. In this com bined attack the western pine beetle is a secondary enemy of the trees TIDINGS because it follows the attack of the other .-secies. When it Is the pri mary enemy it is responsible for the death or a few scattering trees each year throughout the forest, which re sults ii the accumulation of dead timbtr. in the aggregate this ac cumu .itive loss is very extensive, In volvli,ir. as it does, the largest and best in es. "This insect can be con trolled and the living timber protect ed fr.jni its ravages by felling the in fested trees during the period be tween die first of October and the first uf June and removing the bark from the main trunks and burning it. It is ne essary to burn the bark be cause tlie broods of this species trans form in the outer bark. They are not octroyed by simply exposing the inner hark, as is the caes with the moui tain pine beetle." I SUPPLIES WORLD'S TUNGSTEN. Metal Ultfch Revolutionized Light ing Found in Colorado. Tungsten, the wonderful heat resist ing metal which has come inta such world-wide prominence the last few years, is mined most extensively in Boulder county, Colorado. For a long time tungsten was used only to add strength and hardness to armor plate and it was unknown to the un scientific world. No large deposits of this strange metal were known and it commanded a high price in the. metal market. It was also used to some extent in tool making as it gave additional hardness to metal- working drills, etc. It was especial ly' valuable for such work where high-speed metal cutting was desired, as the friction caused by such ex cessive speed would fuse ordinary steel-cutting tools, while tungsten, being diffucult to melt, remains reas onably cool. One day the world was startled by the wonderful discovery that the new metal could be used for the filaments in incandescent lamps, producing a clearer and whiter light, and at the same time giving three times the light for the same cost of current. This was a wonderful discovery and the demand for tungsten sent pros pectors and miners looking for the precious ore. The world's greatest known supply of tungsten ore conies from Boulder county, Colorado, 45 miles west of Denver. These depos its cover hundreds of acres on a steep hillside, the ore being piled in huge masses over the top of the ground. The rows of tungsten rock on this "farm" in Colorado were originally veins that were near the surface of the earth., The walls of rock that confined them were eroded away. At the same time the action of heaUand cold broke down the veins of mineral and converted them into small pieces. The method of harvesting the "crop" on this tungsten farm is simple. Workmen gather up the rock and send it by chutes down the mountain side into bins just aove the railroad track. Two pounds of tungsten will fur nish material for filapients for about 50,000 Mazda electric bulbs, for each filament is only one-twelve-hundredth of an inch in diameter. The current passing through the filament heats it to an incredible degree until it is almost white hot, producing a mellow, clear light of great bril liancy. SUPPORTING A NEWSBOY. Spokane Ad Club Is 'Looking After Injured Hoy. Spokane, Wash. Four hundred advertising men of Spokane are mak ing weekly contributions of 10 cents each to care for Jimmie O'Neal, a 12-year-old lad who lost a leg in an acci dent during au automobile parade given by the Spokane Ad Club. Jim mie was an uninvited guest in a place of honor at the rear end of one of the big auto trucks, and1 when the machine following got beyond con trol for a few moments and bumped into the one immediately ahead, the boy's leg was crushed so severely it had to be amputated. Fearing the driver might be blamed for the acci dent, Jimmie at first refused to tell the police how the accident happened. As soon as news of the mlsfortuife of the boy was brought to the atten tion of President R. E. Bigolow of the ad club, a special meeting was called and it was determined that every member should pay 10 cents weekly to the support of the boy and his widowed mother. That is why someone passes a hat around at every meeting of the club. Outclassed. A dialogue which may be anticipat ed In 1950: First Child I guess my family Is just as good as yours. My great-great-grandfather was in the battle of Gettysburg! Second Child That's nothin'. My grandfather was at Chicago in 1912. Ashland Tidings and Weekly Ore gonlan one year, $2.50. "" """" 111 it J ' , v, "4 Mm- r.v WW John W. ROSEHURG, f Progressive Candidate for Congress. First District Contesting for the seat now Plans for San Francisco Sul-Ti'cas. ury Accepted. Washington, Oct. 15. Calling for an unusually strong building, the re vised plans for the new sub-treasury at San Francisco are accepted today by the government's chief architect, Wenderoth, who announced that the building would cost more than $1, 000,000. The site has already been selected and paid for. Best and most elegantly furnished rooms in Portland at Hotel Clark, Tenth and Stark streets, $1.00 to $1.50 per day. Ninety rooms 25 with private bath, $1.50 to $2.50 per day. Calcutta, with a population of nearly 1,500,000, is the second city of Great Britain. For side by J. J. McNair, East Side Pharmacy. Il'How What long nerve-racking days of con stant torture what sleepless nights of terrible agony itch Itch Itch, con stant ltoh, until it seemed that I must tsar Off my vary skin then Instant relief my skin cooled, soothed btiri healed! The very first drops of D.D.D. Pre scription for Eczema stopped that awful itch instantly: yes. the very moment D.D.D. touched the burning skin the tor ture ceased. D.D.D. has been known for years as the only absolutely reliable eczema J. J. McNair, East 4- L.N.Judd Orchards, Homes and Farms f In a Thriving Center in of the Rogue River Valley. Has for sale fruit, garden and alfalfa land. Tracts from 5 to 1,000 acres; also timber land, a livery stable, lots In Talent, Med ford and Ashland. Write, enclosing stamp, or. better still, come i. and examine. r Land for Sale ! 74-acre tract, good house and barn, 2 miles from Talent, on rural mail route; telephone In house; Y 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, $6,000.00. 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 doin' it now. Large or small tracts, close In or well out; fruit, farms, dairy", alfalfa or, .in fact, any kind of lands. It interested call on or - write PHONE NO. 371-R-5, Ashland:1 TALENT, OREGON. PAGE THREW i nil ii iimn 1 1 ntl. Campbell OREGON occupied by V. C. Ilawley. HOUSE OF COMFORT Motel Manx Powell Street at O'Farrell i SAN FRANCISCO Best located and most popular hotel in the city. Headquarters for Oregonians; commodious lob by; running Ice water in each room; metropolitan service. Bus at train. A la carte service. Ideal stopping place for ladies traveling alone. Management, CHESTER W. KELLEY. "Meet Mo at the Manx." I Itched! remedy, for It washes away the disease germs and leaves the skin as clear and healthy as that of a child. All other druggists have D.D.D. Pre scription ko to them it you can't coma to us hut don't accept some big profit substitute. IJut if you come to our store, we are so certain of what D.D.D. will do for you that we offer you a full size bottle on this guarantee: If you do not find that it takes away the Itch AT ONCE, It costs you not a cent, Side Pharmacy. TALENT, OREGON JACKSON COUNTY One of the Garden Spots