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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 26, 1912)
Thursday, TWembrr 26, 1912. ASHLAND TmiG8 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 for less than 25 cents. Classified adB are cash with order expect to parties having ledger accounts with the office. MISCELLANEOUS CHAIR DOCTOR R. 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. BILL POSTER Will Stennett. 116 Factory St. Bill posting and dis tributing. 54-tf taxidermTsts, FURRI E RS-AND TANNERS Natural Science Est., 10 Granite St. 38-tf READ THIS Any time you want the city carriage, see E. N. Smith, 124 Morton St. Phone 4G4-J. VOICE CULTURE, tone placing, ar tistic singing. Address Mr. Mac Murray, East Side Inn. Phone 183. 25-tf FOR EXCHANGE A Densiuore ball bearing typewriter in good condi tion for a second-hand Oliver type writer. Enquire at the Tidings of fice, tf FOR RENT. FOR RENT Furnished sleeping rooms over Vaupel's store. Steam heat, hot and cold water? Rent by week or month. Inquire 63 North Main St. Office phone 16; resi dence pnone 2 89-J. 50-tf FUKN1SHED 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 BiUYCLES 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-tf , FOR RENT Furnished apartments, Allen building, opposite motor sta tion. Gas, electric light hot and cold water and bath. Best apart ments in city. Inquire 63 North . Main St. Office phone 16; resi dence phone 2 89-J. 50-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE An alfalfa ranch. Ad-! dress Owner, care Tidings. 55-tf FOR SALE Hercules stump puller, cood as new. A bargain. Phone 420-J. 51-tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Ten- acre fruit tract. Address Owner, ! care Tidings. 55-tf FOR SALE Two horsesTvery cheap! about 1,000 pounds each; ride and j drive; single or double. H. C. ! Sparr. 5 6-tf FOR "SALE A good home. Nearly 2 acres. A producer, 4 blocks from ' business center. Address owner, I care Tidings. 55-tf 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 SALE Dry wood." Cord wood, pine or fir, $6; block wood (16 in.), $2.50; block wood (12 in.), $2.25; split stove wood, $2.75. J. F. Rocho, phone 420-J. 59-tf FO RS A LEO R EXCH ANGEHouse, two lots, well located, near high school. Would take stock as part payment, time on balance. Also 160 acres in California. Would trade. Address Box 573, Ashland. 5 6-1 mo. FOR SALE New and second hand stock of hardware and furniture at a bargain. Would consider real estate as part payment. See J. A. Campbell, proprietor, at store, 74 North Main St., Ashland, Ore. 58-tf FOR SALE RUFUS RED BEL GIANS, all ages, for sale. Breed ing and bred does a specialty. No inbred stok. The only thorough bred Rufus Red Belgians in this section, direct from Conover, Ohio. Pedigree if desired. Prices with in reach of all. T. F. Smith,, one mile north of Talent, on Medford road. Phone 374-J-2. 51-tf-Th. FRSALE Beautiful home of 10 acres one mile west of Talent and high school. Bungalow; grand view; excellent location of bunga lows and prize apples; spring, well, best of water; engine, tank; sub-irrigated; pears, apples and alfalfa; lawn, shade trees, shrub bery. $6,o00, including horse, wagon, buggy, hay, tools, etc. Brown Bros., Talent. tf . FOR SALE OR TRADE Lands in Texas, California, Washington, Al berta, B. C; also lots in Port Al bernl ttrminus of the Canadian Pacific railroad; also orange lands near Fresno, Cal., from $150 up; also timber lands; lots in southern Oregon, in Medford, Ashland, Tal ent and Phoenix; also commercial orchards, poultry ranches, and al- falfa farms. Inquire, inclosing stamp, of Luman N. Judd, Talent, Ore. 54-8t RSHLHND Storage and Transfer Co. C. V. BATES, Proprietor. Two warehouses near Depot Goods of all kinds stored at reasona Tile rates. A General Transfer Business. Wood and Rock Springs Coal Phone 60. Office with Wells-Fargo Express. ASHLAND, OREGON. POLYTECHNIC COLLEGE BUSINESS ENGINEERING New Term Opens Dec. 30 GOOD ENROLLMENT ASSURED Large classes will be immediately organized in Commercial Law and Arithmetic. New Shorthand Instructor A graduate of California. There is a best time to enter. IT IS NOW! SEE THE ASHLAND MILLS for all kinds of MILL PRODUCTS White Carnation Fiour, sack.. $1.50 Royal Crown Flour, per sack.. $1.25 Best Grain Hay, per ton $14.00 Custom corn and feed grinding done for ye old time one-eighth toll J. J. Morton & Son Phone 40. First and A streets, Popular Mechanics Magazine "WRITTfM SO YOU CAN UNDERSTAND IT" A GREAT Continued Story of the World's Progress which you may begin reading at any time, and which will hold your interest forever. 250 PAGES EACH MONTH 300 PICTURES 200 ARTICLES OF GENERAL INTEREST The "Shop Note" Department (20 pages) Rives easy ways to do things how to make useful articles for home and shop, repairs, etc. "Amateur Mechanic" (10 pages) tells how to make Mission furniture, wireless outfits, boats, engines, magic, and all the things a boy loves. $1.50 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES 15 CENTS Ask your newsdealer, or WHITE FOR FREE SAMPLE COPY TODAY POPULAR MECHANICS CO. llWWMhlnrloitMICAOO) CHUNG RAY Chinese Iiaandry Satisfaction guaranteed. A STREET, ASHLAND, ORE. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, December 18, 1912. Notice is hereby given that Orrin M. Wilson of Talent, Oregon, who, on October 24, 1907, made Home stead Entry Serial No. 04328, for NW Section 8, Township 40 S., Range 1, west of Willamette Merid ian, has filed notice of intention to make final five-year proof, to estab lish claim to the land above de scribed, before W. H. Canon, United States Commissioner, Medford, Ore gon, on the 7th day of February, 1913. Claimant names as witnesses: William Fox, of Talent, Oregon. George A. Biner, of Talent, Ore gon. ' ! i George Trask, of Talent, Oregon. Alonzo Wimer, of Talent, Oregon. B. F. JONES, Register. First publication, December 23, 1912. 60-12t California Woman Seriously Alarmed. "A short time ago I contracted a severe cold which settled on my lungs and caused me a great deal of an noyance. I would have bad cough ing spells and my lungs were so sore and inflamed I began to be seriously alarmed. A friend recommended Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, saying she had used it for years. I bought a bottle and it relieved my cough the first night, and in a week I was rid of the cold and Boreness of my lungs," writes Miss Marie Gerber, Sawtelle, Cal. For sale by Poley's Drug Store. The Tidings for artistic printing. POPULAR MECHANICS r Bftftsv Of? i MM MH . . Uye . . itiome Maker I EDITED BY ALICE V. TALCOTT. l 11111 Shall We Refuse to Listen? In the January, 1912, number of The Mothers' Magazine there is an article entitled "Refuse to Listen," which advised mothers not to listen when tales of the misdemeauors of their children were brought to them. It surprised me and set me to think ing. Is the stand taken by the writer of this article a wise one? 1 sympa thize with the feeling displayed but believe such a ' course would work harm to the child. A mother cannot safely take it for granted that her children are models of behavior when away from home, and a mother who is afraid to hear any remarks about them js in dan ger of. having children who will not be very welcome visitors at the neighbors'. I should very much dislike to carry such complaint to a mother and believe if parents keep a care ful watch over their children it will be seldom necessary. I should also be deeply pained to have a report brought me of the misconduct of a child of mine, but if it were true, and I was In ignorance of it, would it not be real kindness to let me know it? Far better be pained by the knowl edge in the beginning of the wrong and while it could be more easily corrected, than that it should go on until all the neighbors were familiar with the wrongdoing of my child, while I remained in ignorance. Teachers frequently find it neces sary to go to parents with reports of th emisconduct of their children, and wise parent; will listen and endeavor to co-operate with the teacher. Un wise parents, however, refuse to lis ten and often are eventually com pelled to listen to an officer of the law. W. W. in Mothers' Magazine. SoUs. Soup is an article of diet which does not receive the attention it mer its, in the average household. Per haps this is partly because poorly made soup does not appeal to the family appetite and many cooks do not know how to make a good soup; and partly from the notion that it is expensive, because it is always served at the dinner tables of the rich. The truth is that soup is an economy, as it may be made from very cheap ma terials, largely from odds and ends that would otherwise be wasted and lessens the attack on the heavier and more expensive meat course. To be appetizing it should be well sea soned and served in small quantities, a heavy soup with a light meal and vice versa. A .lighter dessert may be served, or a smaller quantity of it when there is soup, or it may be omitted altogether, to the advantage of the family health and purse. There( are three classes of soups: those made from meat stock, vege table soups and cream soups. The best foundation for the first is a soup bone, which is either a beef shank or a large joint. Both of these are full of gelatine, which is extract ed by placing the bone in a quantity of cold water sufficient to cover it and simmering a long time all day, if possible. The meat and bone should then be removed and the stock allowed to stand over night, when the cake of fat may be taken off and clarified to use for frying. Many put the vegetables in to cook with the meat, but this impairs the flavor of the meat, which otherwise may be served in a nui.ib.T of ways and prove quite as palatable as Ue more expensive cuts. What is known as soup meat con tains no gelatine, but makes a soup which has a stronger flavor of the meat and is therefore preferred by some. Soup may also be made from scraps of meat, gristle and the bones from roasts, stews and steaks, as well as from fowls. Many cooks keep what is called a stock pot on the back of the range, to which such ma terials and also the trimmings of vegetables and left overs of cooked meat, vegetables and cereals are add ed from time to time. To keep this kind of soup from souring, it is nec essary to empty the pot two or three times a week and thoroughly cleanse it and start a new batch. With a foundation of stock a great 'many varieties of soup may be made. A clear soup Is made by taking a por tion of the stock which has been clafiried with an egg shell with a lit tle of the white of the egg sticking to it, heating and seasoning it ac cording to taste, and coloring it, if wished, with a little beef extract or flour browned in the oven. Rice, macaroni, vermicelli, pearl barley or left over cereals may be used to thicken it. If a vegetable flavor is desired, It may be obtained by add Ing small quantities of raw cabbage, turnip, carrot, tomato, onion or cel ery, or any combination of them, finely chopped. As before stated, the cooked left overs may be utilized in the same way. A bit of rice, mac aroni, etc., or cooked corn, beans or peas in too small a quantity to use otherwise, may thus be used to ad vantage. It is said that a French family will live well on what an American family throws away. This is one of the ways in which it Is done. To tempt the palate soup bhould be well seasoned and a variety of condiments is desirable, in order that one should not become tired of it. Besides the usual salt and pep per, celery salt, bay leaves, poultry seasoning, parsley, paprika and gar den peppers, thyme, summer savory or other herbs, which are easily raised or may be bought dried for a very small sum, should be used sing ly or in combination. A vegetable soup is made from any of the vegetables above named, chopped and put into boiling water, with the exception of peas and beans, which should be soaked in cold wa ter over night and put on to cook in cold water also. Onions and car rots combine well with any of the other vegetables, and left overs may be used as in meat soups. A tasty addition to any of these soups is made by frying an onion with a lit tle bacon or salt pork diced. A puree is made by putting the vege tables through a sieve made for the purpose, or put through the fine plate of a food chopper. Purees are improved by the addition of a little milk or cream and thickened with a little flour rubbed Into butter. The liquor from corned beef or a ham bone or joints of veal or mut ton make good foundation for soup. Cream soups are purees with a larger amount of milk added. If the recipe calls for a quart of fresh milk, water may be substituted for half of it and condensed milk may be re duced even more. When tomatoes are used a little soda must be put in them to counteract the acid, and the milk should not be added till time to serve. Beets, spinach, lettuce, corn, celery, onions and carrots are espec ially suited for cream soups. As a change from crackers, bread dice or rice to serve with soup, es pecially with bean or pea soup, cut pieces of stale bread into small squares and brown in hot fat or in the oven. Caramel for coloring soups is made by placing a teacupful of sugar and two teaspoonfuls of water in a sauce pan over the fire and stirring con stantly till it is a dark color, then pld a half teacupful of water and a pinch of salt, let boil a few moments, take off and, when cold, bottle. Noodles, dumplings and pres.sed meat balls, also chopped boiled eggs or poached eggs, make an excellent addition to thin soups. IVessed Reef. Boil until tender a beef shank; chop fine and season with salt, pep per and sage. Boil down the liquor and pour over the meat; press in mold and, when cold, cut iu slices. HlaiHiuctte of Veal. Slice roast veal into thin strips and warm in the following cream nauce: Melt two tablespoonf uls of butter, stir in gradually two table spoonfuls of flour, pressing out all the lumps. When thoroughly blend ed, add slowly one cup of milk, sea son with salt and pepper. Garnish with chopped parsley. Cocoa 11 ut Itlanc Mange. Put two cupfuls of milk and the rind of a lemon into a saucepan and bring to the boiling point. Strain to another saucepan, add one and one-half ounces of cornstarch r.i'xed smooth mith one-half cup of milk. f:lr together till boiling, then add lour tablespo'jnfuls of chopped cocoa nut and two tablespoonfuls of sugar. Cool slightly, add one teaspoonful of vanila and pour into wet molds. Turn out when cold and sprinkle over with cocoanut. Decorate top with jelly. Toad in the Hole. ' One pound of round steak, one pint of milk, one cup of flour, one egg, salt and pepper. Cut the steak in small squares or grind coarsely, removing fat. Beat the egg very light, add the milk, then one-half teaspoonful of salt. Pour this upon the flour gradually, beating until very light and smooth; butter a two quart dish and put the meat, well seasoned, into it, then pour the bat ter over it. Bake one hour in a moderate oven and serve hot. Near Possum. Take a. pound slice of pork steak and roll it about the following dress ing: Boil and peel two medium sized sweet potatoes and press through a colander. Season them with two ta blesoonfuls of brown sugar, two ta blespoonfuls of cane syrup, one egg, salt, red pepper and a little ginger. Tie the dressing securely in the steak, rub with salt and pepper and put in dripping pan with one pint The V, imWW only ipyfJiJ tel. SsQEiiB!SilPciirMep ibsotelyPure No Alum No Lime Phosphates of hot water. Bake one and one half hours and serve garnished with halved baked apples. llcnefitH of Pun-els Post. Washington, Dec. 23. How Amer ican citizens will profit by the in auguration of the parcels post was set forth in an interview with the United Press hera today by Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr., of Oregon, to whose efforts the passage of the law is largely due. He said: 'The parcels post adds 1,100,000 miles of new transportation facilities to the I'nited States in its applica tion to rural routes, the comfort of citizens will be increased, and the cost of living to 20,000,000 people served by rural routes reduced. "The ability of the farmer to send 11 pounds of farm products over his rural route for 15 cents should be an incentive for increased produc tion. The parcels post affords a me dium of transportation between pro ducer and consumer at a less cost than the individuals themselves could furnish, and will result in mu tual benefit to all the people within the scope of its activity. Phone news items to the Tidings. Good Work Done Promptly AT THE Rough Dry at Reasonable J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office and Laundry 15M Fourth St. TELEPHONE 165 P. DODGE o housc rurmsners Deputy County Coroner Do you need Drainage or Irrigating Tile? Increase the yield of your land 25 to 50 per cent. WRITE US FOR INFORMATION . Jacksonville Brick and Tile Co. JACKSONVILLE, OREGON THE PORTLAND HOTEL Sixth, Seventh, Morrison and Yamhill Streets PORTLAND, OREGON j" The most central location in the city, and nearest to tlie leading theaters and retail shops. You are assured of a most cordial welcome here. Every convenience is provided for our guests. The Grill and Dining Room are famed for their excel lence and for prompt, courteous service. Motors meet all incoming trains. Rates are moderate; European plan, $1.50 per day upward. 0. 1. Kaufman, Manager made from Royal Grape cjianar. Southern Oregon Dentists Organize. A meeting of the ethical dentists of this section of the state was called Saturday evening at Hotel Medford, the following responding to the invi tation: Doctors Walker, Flanigan and Macey of Grants Pass, Davis of Central Point, Johnson of Ashland, C. G. Van Sioyoc, W. Van Scoyoc, Demie, Phipps, Foley and Riddell of Medford. After partaking of a fine dinner which had been provided for by the local members of the profession, a business session was held at which it was unanimously decided to organ ize the Southern Oregon Dental As sociation. The officers elected for the ensuing year are: President, Dr. K. G. Riddell of Medford; vice president, Dr. F. H. Johnson of. Ash land; secretary-treasurer, Dr. W. VV. Walker of Grants Pass. Quite a number have signified their inten tion of joining th eassoctation and another meeting will be held at Med ford in the near future. Try Tidings job printing. The quality is remembered long after the price is forgotten. Phone job orders to the Tidings. N.&M. Home Laundry Prices. New Machinery. & SONS AND Undertakers Lady Assistant