CLASSIFIED
ADVERTISEMENTS
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1 i cent per word for each insertion
thereafter; 30 words or less $1 per
month. No advertisement inserted
tor less than 25 cents. Classified
a,ds are cash with order expect to
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the office.
MISCELLANEOUS
CHAIR DOCTOR It. II. 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.
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 4C4-J.
VOICE CLOTURE, tone placing, ar
tistic singin
Address Mr. Mac
Murray,
183.
East
Side Inn. Phone
25-tf
PASTURE Fine alfalfa pasture at
the end of Oak St. Call at 99C
Oak St. or phone 291-R. W. D.
Hooth. 39"?l
FIRST-CLASS BOARD in private
family. Also large front room for
rent, with hot and cold water. 262
Hargadine SL 38-lmo
WANTED TO BUY Five-year-old
horse -weighing about 1,200. Must
bo gentle. Also dozen and half
first-clasa White Leghorn early
pullets. Address H. It. King, Tal
ent. Residence near Frederick
station.
FOR RENT.
FURNISHED , HOUSEKEEPING
SUITES, gas for cooking, electric
light, bath, toilet, fine view, cen
tral location, upstairs or down to
suit. Apply at millinery store op
posite East Side Inn. 27-tf
B1GYCLES FOR ' RENT New and
6econd-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-tf
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 Furniture, almost new,
also wood heating stove, cheap.
Call at 155 Factory St. 41-2t
FOR SALE Baldwin and Spitzen
burg apples, 50 cents per box while
they last. V. L. Moore, phone
810-F-4. 41-6t
FOR SALE Acreage located on the
Boulevard, near railroad. Call on
or address Mrs. C. W. McKibben,
Route 1. Ashland. 82-tf
FOlt SALE Span of mares, six and
eight years old; weight about
2,-COO pounds. . Phone 409-It 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 havefor sale. Try it.
FORS ALE 3,000 shade trees, box
elder, elm, ash, locust and several
kinds. Cheap if bought by the last
of October. James Purves, 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-lmo
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. Deliv., 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
sfir.vicfl 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-
NOTICE FOR, PUBLICATION.
Department of the Interior, U. S
Land Office at Roseburg, Ore.,
4 September 11. 1912.
Notice is hereby given that Llew
ellyn Grissom, of Ashland, Oregon,
who, on November 10, 1906, made
Homestead Entry Serial No. U4U7&,
for E. Vt SE. V SE. V. NE. V and
SW. Y SE. V Seqtion 20, Township
40 S., Range 3 East, Willamette Me
ridian, has filed notice of intention
to make final five-year proof, to es
tablish claim to the land above de
scribed, before W. H. Canon, United
States Commissioner, at Medford,
Oregon, on the 1st day of November,
1912.
Claimant names as witnesses: W.
S. Thompson, of Cling, Oregon; Win
field L. Davis, of Ashland, Oregon;
Herbert Grissom, of Cling, Oregon;
Nathaniel N. Davis, of Ashland, Ore
gon. B. F. JONES,
3 1-1 2 1 Register.
Star Laundry and French Dry
Cleaning Company. Phone 64.
f. ' ' !
.... ) I
I
G. L fl
TALENT, OKECJON,
i'or Representative ' to the legisla
ture from Jackson County.
I believe strictly in the principles
of the progressive party and also the
prohibition party, which I think goes
just one step farther.
In the absolute protection of labor
without impairment of the rights of
capital.
The strict regulation of all trusts.
In the suffrage for women on the
same terms as men.
In the strict prohibition of the
manufacture of liquor in any form.
I believe in liberal appropriations
for Oregon enterprises where they
will be of state-wide benefit. '
Good roads legislation must be en
acted whereby counties or communi
ties can have as good roads as de
sired, and in a way that they can get
the most for their money.
I believe' the people are supfeme
and their wish should control.
Statement No. "1 should be carried
out.
Paid Advertisement.
STAR STEAM LAUNDRY
And Dry Cleaning
S. N. LINDSEY, Prop.
Good Work Fair Trices
Satisfaction Guaranteed
PHONE 64
The Manx
imVly tUriMSIiea KOOmS j
Centrally located. Well ventilated,
Gas and electricity. Everything new, I
neat and clean, reasonable prices, i
319 E. MAIN STREET.
Airedale Terriers
The dog for the city or country.
Guards, pals and sporting.
LADDIX KENNEL
ESTACADA, ORE.
Read "WHY SOME MEN
SHOULD NOT MARRY,"
by Lloyd Vivian of Aus
tralia. An enthralling
lecture ' for interested
men. Self-cure secrets.
A dollar discourse for a
silver dime, this week
and next, bo klet form, postpaid.
Address L. V. Starr, 1927 Toberman
St,, Block 57, Los Angeles, Cal.
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 just out of town, un
improved, from $350 to $1,500.
5-acre tracts, improved, from $1,200
up to $5,000, and more, according to
improvements, location, etc.
10-acre tracts from
near town.
$1,100 up,
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.
Star Laundry and French Dry
Cleaning Company. Phone 64.
1 The Home Circle jj
Iliuu-lits from (lie Editorial I'en
h
The Old Home.
Well worth the lecolleclion of an
occasional hour.
Boys, do you ever sit down and
talk for an hour over the scenes and
adversities and the Miocenes of
childhood? Do you ever take time to
look back over the hiil "of life and
call up the days of e olden times
protecting care ol a tond tut her and
a devoted mother? Do the early
days spent possibly in a p;oneer home
ever occur to you as the 'happiest
home' of your eventful life?
These questions are for the "old
boys," those who have passed the
meridian of lire and now are on the
down slope, and who from natural
causes will soon pass into the un
known beyond, where they aie to en
joy the rewards that tome of a well
directed life.
Boys, think of the old home where
were father, mother, and the charm
ing brothers and sisters whose whole
aim was to keep home happy and
make life a pleasure rather than 'a
burden. You remember lather's cor
ner behind the big fireplace, do yon
not? See him as he sits and nods in
the twilight of the dim fire and
dreams of the day2 when his boys
will be senators and will not have
to stand the bitter trials of the-.dark
forests or the treeless prairies.
Perchance he has toiled all day in
the clearing, vigorously battling
with nature for the ascendency of
the arts of man. He did these things
you know and all for you too. His
trials were bitter. His aims were
noble. His object was happiness
prompted by a motive of love. The
home was crude, compared with the
gorgeous palaces of these days. But
the joy was there because father was
and love because mother was. Yes,
see her as she sits at her work over
in the corner. She is the perfect
embodiment of happiness. Her boys
and girls are all at home. They are
yet in their innocency and she knows
their every thought and observes
with pride' their every act.
Father and mother, brothers and
sisters. The old home! What
depths of meaning lie in those words!
There is comfort in them. They re
call the innocent prattle of younger
brothers and sisters. They recall
the kindly directed efforts of the sen-
io s to secure the joy and peace that
comes from the fraternity of home
with its bonds of affection.
Th ,lin, f0,.f ,, t.
expanding prairie are there too. The
low murmuring rill with its beautiful
song is there. We were all there
when we were young, but now we are
old and all that we can do is recall,
recall, recall.
Do this, boys, and see if you do not
appreciate more fully all that you are
and have. It is but just that you
should affectionately look upon the
past.
Mourning for the Dead.
There are few things in w hich men
and women show themselves so irra
tional as in prolonged and consum
mate grief for the dead. It is not in
human nature to be philosophic when
me eunn nas ciosea over one we
love, but to nourish agony and sor
row is nearly an abdication of eason
itself. The God who orders our
births, orders likewise our deaths.
All must die. To die is as common
and as natural as to live. Being
common, universal, certain, it can
not be an evil. Those who have gone
before, no matter how long their
days, seem to have lived and van
ished as creatures of the hour, so
that even over the death of the
young we should not lament at the
seeming untimeliness of their taking
off. It is indiscreet to assume that
the death of the young is a peculiar
calamity and hardship. How can we
tell what they have escaped, or de
cide that they are not singularly for
tunate? Who finds life such an un
mixed blessing as to grieve lonpj over
the translation of those who are yet
innocent and happy to serener
spheres. It is vain and unavailing to
grieve over what has happened and
cannot be altered. It does no good
to the dead and it Injures the living.
It is also mutiny against the Presid
ing Judge of all. To honor the dead
aright Is to cherish fondly the mem-'
ory of good dispositions and deeds,
and make that memory a guide for
our own ssplritual attainments. This
is better than marble slabs, glowing
memorials or devouring pangs of
fruitless -woe. The ancient world
never clothed death with the terrors
which came in with the church and
the middle ages. Who grieves for
ever has no faith in a reunion. Such
tears silently proclaim the fear of
annihilation, the despair that forgets
God.
We want girls with hearts; girls
with tenderness and sympathy, with
"teais that flow for others' ills," and
smiles that light outward their
sunny thoughts. Wo have clever
girls and witty giiU and biiiliaut
giil (iive us a consignment ot jol
ly, ' i'i'cciud, natural girls, war lu
teal I girls, with lots of fun and
no t iieiii ss; girls who can go out
and i
snow
ham;
it n ,
frol:,
i;ii in the snow and wash the
.'i ti'ih others' faces, tug at a
J. roil a suow bail and think
lorleiture to their dignity to
with their teii-vear-ohi Ij; oil;- , i
ers. V, ith a lew moie Mich girls the j
wori would brighten up as J uue
doe- i
the il.
thei.s.
affe
of r-j'
der.
uder showeiy weatiier. Speed ! T
y wnen tiie world is full of ' ?
to t
io extinction of the airy, ,Z
1, brainless minxes who think J
.tin
but of self and face pow-i
I!
beti'
blet
;nl and cheese and kisses are
' than sumptuously laden ta
rt ith no expression of love.
Joui i!.;li.st Jmiali Defends (lie Faith.
A v.i-w champion of the direct pri
ma;. iias risen the . Portland OVe
goni.iu. An. i- ten years of strenuously bat
tling against popular government,
the (;egonian is now posing as its
star nc best defender.
1m Mie independent nomination of
Joi:;i;iun Bourne, the Oregonian pre
tend., to fear the annihilation of the
Oregon system. j
The shameful violation of the cor
rupt practices act to defeat Bourne
aroi'cs not a word of protest from
the Oregonian. It is openly com
mended. But the idea that an ap
peal front the party faction to the
people of the state should be made
by the victim, is revolutionary, in the
eyes of the reactionary journal.
The sole object of the direct pri
mary is to let the people rule.
When the political party became
the creature of the bosses, who con
trolled it for selfish ends, the direct
primary was devised, to smash the
bosses and give control to the rank
and file.
When by means of law violation,
misrepresentation and corruption,
the control of the party is seized by
faction, the remedy also lies in an
appeal direct to the people.
There is no reason why the repub
lican party in Oregon, which is pro
gressive, should be boun 1 to support
a reactionary and Selling is a Taft
standpatter because reactionary.
State party nominations mean less
than ever this year. It is the person
ality of the man, his record, his be
liefs, his ahiitly that count not the
label that he wears.
Jonathan Bourne has made good
as a progressive as well as senator.
La Foleltte gives Bourne highest
praise as a true progressive. He
ought to receive the support of all
La Follette progressives.
Rooseveit strongly commended
Bourne's course as a progressive. He
ought to receive the Bull Moose vote.
Bourne voted with the senate dem
ocrats on tariff revision and other
progressive measures. Bourne and
Chamberlain voted alike. Bourne's
course ought to please democrats.
Because of Bourne's progressive
ness, Taft withheld all federal pa
tronage for Oregon from him. But
his record of accomplishment ought
to appeal to the standpatters to sucfi
an extent that their regard for the
state's welfare would outweigh fac
tional prejudice.
If the direct primary is to lie pros
tituted by corruption, it will go the
way of the convention and some
other means be devised to let the
people rule. t
The way to preserve the direct pri
mary is to rebuke corruption by de
feat at the hands of the people at
election as the manipulation of the
primary through the assembly was
rebuked.
Put politics aside It would take
six years for any of the candidates,
even if their ability was as great, to
reach the st-ategic position now oc
cupied by Bourne In the senate and
Oregon cannot afford to lose six
years.
Bourne is fortunate in his ene
mies. The Oregonian has been so
openly unfair, unjust and false to
the Oregon system that its support
will of itself damn any candidate
with the people. It is the Jonah of
Oregon politics and its opposition al
most equivalent to an election.
Medford Mail-Tribune.
Seattle Kegistntrion Itrraks lU-rords.
Seattle, Oct. 16. The books In the
registration office closed last night
at midnight with a total of 85,4 26
listed, the greatest number ever reg-
Istered in Seattle, and 10,791 more
than voted at the general election'
last March.. 1 A majority of those reg
istered as women, and among the
number are several young ladies who
will cast their first vote November C.
SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland
Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new
subscribers. Regular price of Sunset
Magazine Is $1.60 per year.
Remember that the Tidings want
ads bring results.
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John W, Campbell
KCSEIU'RC;, OREGON
Progressive Candidate for Congress, First District
Contesting for the seat now occupied ley W. C. Hawley.
Inn On Mountain KoimiiU.
Governor Marion E. Hay of Wash
ington suggests the building of a
beautiful inn on the summit of Mt.
Spokane, the loftiest peak in the en
tire Spokane country. This was the
mountain in the recent christening
of which the governor played an im
portant part. From its top a view
can be had in all directions as far as
the eye can penetrate, and Governor
Hay believes thousands of visitors
to the west would be impressed
greatly by a few days' stay on the
summit. An automobile road already
has been constructed part way up
the mountain's slope, and hundreds
of people have gained the eminence
this summer. This winter "open
house" will be maintained on the
mountain by Francis H. Cook. There
he will entertain such hardy folks as
are able to enjoy the cold months at
such an altitude. For the present,
his guests are expected to be none
but those of the pioneer type, for
the "open house" will be in a primi
tive but durable log cabin.
gvojpu, Ni & M HomeLaundry
Rough Dry at Reasonable Prices. New Machinery.
J. N. NISBET, Mflr.
Office and Laundry 158 Fourth St. TELEPHONE 165
CMIE.KON PATTY
ardware & Furniture
NEW AND SECOND HAND GOODS
345 East Main' Street, Ashland, Ore. Phone 121
Get Our Prices on Tents
L.N.Judd
Orchards, Homes and Farms
In a Thriving Center in One of the Garden Spots
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
and examine.
Land for Sale!
74-acre tract, good house and barn, 2 mlle9 from Talent, on
rural mail route; telephone In house; 4 mile from school; bearing
trees; & 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,
$0,000.00.
91-acre tract, part of which Is In the town limits of Talent, and
an Ideal place to cut Into town lots or acre trncts and larger tracts.
All good land and mostly under Irrigation. This is a good chance
for the right man. Will be glod 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. If Interested call on or
write
PHONE NO. 371-11-5, Ashland.
TALENT, OREGON.
X
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llest and most elegantly furnished
rooms in Portland at Hotel Clark.
Tenth and Stark streets, $1.00 to
$1.50 per day. Ninety rooms 2f
with private hath, $1.50 to $2.50 per
day.
IIOI'SE OF COMFORT
Powell Street at O'Farrell
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 Me at the Manx."
TALENT, OREGON
JACKSON COUNTY
r i. ' ?
Hold Manx