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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1913)
w db a r Monday, Jannary 27, 19IS. ASHLAND TTDIXGS u PAGE T7TR1 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS One cent per word, first insertion; 4 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 It. 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. SILL POSTER Will Stennett, 116 Factory St. Bill posting and dis tributing. 64-tf TAXIDERMISTS, FURRIERS 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 464-J. VOICE CULTURE, tone placing, ar tistic singing. Address Mr. Mac Murray, East Side Inn. Phone 183. 25-tf FOR TRADE Equity in residence property in Rogue River for team, harness and wagon. Address V. A. Beck, Talent. Ore. 67-tf TOR EXCHANGE A Denimore ball bearing typewriter in good condi tion for a second-nand Oliver type writer. Enquire at the Tidings of- tlce. tf GET YOUR PRUNING DONE by a practical pruner of 18 years' ex perlence. Contracts taken for large orchards. J. A. Orchard, 1167 East Main. 68-tf FOR RENT. FOR RENT Three furnished rooms. Apply at 80 Hargadine or phone 353-R. 69-tf .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 FOR SALE. FOR SALE Fine mare colt, age 10 months. Address R. F. D., Box 9 68-3t FOR SALE Hercules stump puller, good as new. A bargain. Phone 420-J. 51-tf FOR SALE Fawn Runner ducks. Chestnut St. and tan Indian Enquire 439 67-3t CHICKENS FOR SALE One dozen White Leghorns, good layers. Call at 117 Nob Hill or phone 199-Y 69-2t FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Beau tiful home, bungalow, 10 acres fruit and alfalfa. Box 83. Talent, Ore. 65-tf FOR SALE Two horses, very cheap; about 1,000 pounds each; ride and drive: single or double. H. C. Sparr. 56-tf TOR SALE By owner, large lot with small house, on Meade street in Ashland, Ore. Ten minutes' walk from postofflce. Warrantee deed and abstract. Price $350. Mark Hebron, Btation D, Kansas. City, Mo. - 64-lmo ?OR SALE Beautiful home of 10 acres one mile west of Talent and thigh 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,t00,' including horse, wagon, buggy; hay, tools, etc. Brown Bros., Talent. tf yOR SALE Land at safe and sane prices in one of the finest valleys in northern California; unim proved prairie land; will range from $15 to $25 per acre. Also snaps in Ashland property. Half acre lot and two-stofy five-room house, only $550. Nineteen acres, party iu city limits, two-thirds in full-bearing fruit trees, $5,500. " Nib acres, two miles from post office1 in Ashland, nine-room house, all planted and nearly all full bearing, price $4,900. A big bargain in inside business prop erty. Buy now before the boom starts in the spring. I am dealing in snap bargains only. On present market. See F. G. McWIllIame, 175 East Main St. 68-tf SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per yeat J. M. -- J- -M rl JT1T TT f I 11 Talent Mercantile Co. BROWN & COLEMAN, Props. DEALERS IN- General Merchandise "Preferred Stock" Canned Goods "Crown" Flour Golden West" and "M. J. B.' Coflcc Wc specialize in Dry Goods, Shoes and Hardware Spot Cash for Butter, HAlHi The Talent Tidinas TALENT ATHLETIC CLUl. Talent Young Men Organize Athletic flub FJect Officers. The young men of Talent complet ed the organization of the Talent Athletic Club Thursday evening, electing the following officers: President H. O. Simpson. Vice-President Floyd Guyer. Secretary-Treasurer Jay Terrill. The club starts out with twelve charter members, with good pros pects of a large increase in member ship. The club decided that it was too late in the season to try to launch a basketball team this sea son, but will be on hand with a baseball team which will cause the valley to sit up and take notice. The quarters will be in the old school bouse, where a good gymnasium will be fitted up. Special Offer. Send 50 cents in stamps and re ceive Sunset the Pacific Monthly for four months, beginning with the Jan nary issue, and receive, free, the beautiful Christmas number contain ing 16 full-page pictures in color. This number alone is well worth the 50 cents. In addition, we will send you, without charge, the famous Sun set Indian poster. Send your order to Fred Lockley, Northwest Manager, Sunset Maga zine, 304 Wells-Fargo building, Port land, Ore. 56-tf What He Would Do. "What would you do," asked the lieutenant who was instructing the class in aviation, "if you were up 1,000 feet in the air and the steer ing gear should go wrong or the engine should fall?" "I'd hit the eart hin about twenty seconds, I'm thinking," replied Ser geant McManus. Chicago Record Herald. SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per year. DR. JOHN F. HART Physician and Surgeon TALENT, OREGON, C. A. HAZEN Painter SPaperhanger PHONE 7:M.a TALENT, OREGON A Bank's Obligations Tl Just as our clients plan to meet their obligations . here when they become due, the of ficers and employes of this bank plan to meet every obli gation imposed by its relations with its clients, Safety Of iinhey held In trust; substantial aid in the i J, promotion of depositors' inter- meritorious projects; recom pense for service based on equity these are some of the obligations which are recog nized by this institution, on the basis of which it invites busi ness, individual and savings accounts. i State Bank of Talent TALENT, OREGON. Eggs and Produce I 101.1. NURSERY ABUSY PLACE Wagner Creek Nursery Co. Has Sev eral Men at Work l'rMir iug Root Graft. The premises of the Wagner Creek Nursery Co. ;ust north of Tal ent is a busy place these days, even though the inclement weather has prevented active field work so fan There is a crew of four men at work most of the time preparing root grafts and budding seedlings for future stock. The company will have about 125,000 home-grown trees ready for the market this year and about 15,000 next year. They also expect to erect green b on pes the coming summer and han dle flowering plants and shrubbery. Mr. Lester, who is iu charge, has had considerable experience in south ern California as a nurseryman and as a government expert, and he says that as a continuous money-making proposition it has worse years than southern Oregon ever dreamed of. Mr. Lester lost 25,000 seedling or ange trees, wortn $i each, in one night down there, and he says the present loss will. prove to be under estimated rather than overestimated. Mr. Lester in a strong believer in southern Oregon fruit, but he is an equally ardent advocate of diversi fied farming. He says the Rogue river valley should not ship in any farm produce, and that Ihe rule as to the valley should apply to the individual. No rancher should buy anything which it is possible for him to raise. Had California's crop this year been in part such as the freeze would not have ruined that, state would be in much better condition today. PLACER MINERS HAPPY. Heavy Snows Insure Long Working Season in 1013. The placer miners of southern Or egon and northern California are jubilant over the heavy snows that have fallen the past few weeks. These snows will insure an unusu ally large amount of water this spring and the placer mining season will be considerably lengthened. S. S. Bullis and R. S. Bullls, fath er and sou, of New York, are in the valley making preparations for ex tensive work on the Sterling placer mine near the head of the Big Ap plegate, Tula mine has been idle for some time. From all directions come evi dences of Increased stir amonsj both placer and quartz miners and It 1 expected that much will be done the present season. The comparatively small returns from the fruit crop last year have caused many mining men who have been interesting themselves in fruit to return to their first love, and it will result in In creased activity in the hills this sum mer. Fame's Pathway. Lina Cavalier! will sail from Paris next week for New York to begin an American tour lasting three months, in which, she will appear with Mura- tore In 70 ooalume concerts in differ ent parts of the United States. "For four consecutive years I vis ited America," she said. "It is a country of hurry. I love it, and obey the old proverb, 'When in Rome do as the Romariri dd,' Countless re porters assail the visitors with re markable questions. Their imagina tion is amazing, but I sitHmit. for hi the land of business owr; bo.ly con tributes to business." More Work, 188 Flirting. Seattle, Jan. 23. Segregation of boys and girls, and the enforcement of uniformly simple dress for girls attending high schools, are the sug gestions of former President Wil liam Piggott, of the school hoard which will be considered by the school board here today. He also suggest that an hour be added to the school day. All of Piggot's suggestions are op posed by Superintendent of Schools Cooper. Natural. Marks They say the absconding cashier had been a lamb In Wall street. Parks Then his skipping was quite natural, ' eh.' Boston Trans cript. During these long evenings a pair of good reading glasses are pretty comfortable. Walk Into Whitod's optical rooms and get fit ted. If you do not need glasses he will tell you so. 68-3t Phone Job orders to the Tidings; MONDAY, JANUARY 27. TALENT IXM'AL NEWS. Indoor quoits is the prevailing pastime in Taleat these days, the Spitzer livery stable being the scene of the contests. The boys are ready to challenge auy team from Ashland to a game. C. C. Gummo left a few days ago for Red Bluff, Cal., to join his fam ily, where they will make their fu ture home. The Methodist Ladies' Aid Society met with Mrs. Louis Brown Thurs day afternoon. A very pleasant af ternoon was spent, at which ar rangements were made for a musi cal entertainment to be given soon, probably on Lincoln's birthday. Moxson & Brynor will move their box factorj' up the creek to a point near the sawmill, this spring. The boxes, however, will be on sale In town. The Moxson & Bryner sawmill will start to running as early as pos sible this spring, a? they wisti to get out considerable lumber for the use of the box factory. Mrs. C. D. Burgan and Mrs. Peter Vandersluis were Medford visitors on Friday. John L. Burgan went to Ashland Friday afternoon to look at a team for Vandersluis & Burgan J. N. Pace has recently completed a neat cottage which will be for rent. M. C. Bressler was down from Ashland Friday lookine at real es tate. : Frank Works gave a dance in the ' I. O. O. F. hall Friday evening. Mrs. Bell was al Medford most of last week, having been called there by the critical Illness of her daughter-in-law. Mrs. Mary Wise and her daughter, Mrs. Ada Roberts, of Griffin Creek, visited at the Bell home a couple of days last week. Weldon Beeson underwent an op eration for hernia at the Granite City Hospital in Ashland last week. He is reported as getting along nicely. J. H. Lacy will open the hotel op posite the Talent Mercantile Com pany's store about the first of March. John Bryner was over at the Tal ent Coal CompanyY. mine last week, removing some machinery out of the danger of high water. He brought back several samples of coal which are on exhibition at the Talent Mer cantile Company store. It is a fine looking coal. Knew Him or Old. Duar Say, old chap, let me have fiver, will you? I'll let you have it back before the end of February, Dunn February of what year? Boston Transcript. The PORTLAND EVENING TELE GRAM and Ashland Tidings one year, $5.00. Wagner Nurseries (Formerly Wagner Creek ! . . nursery and Orchard Co.) Talent, Ore. focadkm mile north of V. O., ttti Pacific Highway. Ij X Fiifl line Home Crown Slock I I n i T .1. I vunie anu see uh. we em- T f ploy no agents. PHONE 373-J-4 Ml 1 1 fHH.H4. tfr'H 1 1 1 1 1 1 wi II m I v OUR CHANGE-OF-FIRM SALE is still on. Do not overlook the fact that we are selling Shoes and Dry Goods for less money than has ever before been asked in the valley for these staple lines. Vanderstois , Wc pay IHIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIlllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIinMf THE PORTLAND HOTEL Sixth, Seventh. Morrison PORTLAND, , The most central location in the city, and nearest to the leading theaters and retail shops. You are assured of a most cordial welcome here. Kvery convenience i 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 arc moderate; European plan, $1.50 per day upward. G. . Kaufman, Manager 14 IMII M FINE NEW BUNK HOUSE Suncrest Orchards Make Fine Im provements and ExKct to Du More Building Soon. The Suncrest Orchards recently completed a fine two-story boarding house which is a model of conven ience and of comfort for Its em ployes. It contains a large reading and lounging room, a dining room 20x30, besides kitchen, pantry, ice chest, and a bedroom for the cook on the first floor. The second floor contains room for 29 single beds and also has a bathroom and toilet on that floor. The Suncrest Orchards will prob ably erect a residence for Mr. Camp bell, of Medford, the proprietor, re model the foreman's residence and also build a garage later in spring. the Proof of His I-ove. "But," she asked, "haven't ever told any other girl that loved her?" you you "Yes," he replied, "I have told a dozen other girls I loved them. I thought 1 did, too, but you are the first one I have ever really loved. I know now that I never realized before what real love was." "How can you be sure that this is real love?" "On each of the other occasions I was unable to keep from wonder ing while I was telling my love how I would be able to support the girl if she accepted me, but now I don'l care." Chicago Record-Herald. Wonderfully WUUu Friend What has your fiance been saying to. 'u? You're all smiles. Rich Heiress Just think! He's going to let me give him a motor car. Fliegende Blaetter, Star Laundry and French Dry Cleaning Company. F'WPne 04. The Tidings tor artstp printing. Notice For puslioATIAn. .Department of the Interior, n. a Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, January, 1913. Notice is herehv P van Mw. i T f ... ' Va,'0n ()f narron. Jackson county, OregoJ1( fti,n, on September "3, 1910. niiiJi; 7ToniAufonl ihnii. . nn- 1 1 on No 0t i f,ir liiih, i'V",of,,tl!e northwest quarter (sw XiM 54), Section 34, Township 39 Ij south, Range 2 Fast, wiiiamette .uuiiuiuii, uao meu notice or inten tion to make Final Commutation Proof, to establish claim to the lund above described, before K. D. Brines United States Co!iimlnsloner, at his oruce in Ashland, Oregon, on the 14th day of March, 1913. Claimant names as witnesses: Giant Bllderback. of Ashland. Orogon. L. Shermer, of Ashland, Oregon. Lydia Powell, of A3hland. Oreuon Lottie Bllderback, of Ashland, Or- PfTOIl B. F. jonks. Twiur First insertion, 27, 1913. Monday, January 70-12t SUNSET MAGAZINE and .Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per year. Cash for Butter and aid Yamhill Streets OREGON ! Hill 44 I I i I I 7 Do you know there is a lur fac tory in Ashland? Buy your furs at the factory and save money. We have the largest stock of ready-made furs in Ashland and are selling them at Chicago prices. Inspect our goods before buying elsewhere. Furs al tered, remodeled and repaired. Nat ural Science Establishment, 10 Gran ite street., two doors off of Main street. , 44-tf DKCIDK YOURSELF. The Opportunity is Hero, Hacked By Attldand Testimony. Don't take our word for it. Don't depend on a stranger's state ment. Read Ashland endorsement. Read the statements of Ashland citizens. And decide for yourself. Here Is one case of it: M. Powell, 263 Oak street, Ash land, Ore., says: "I suffered a great deal from kidney trouble and back ache and sometimes I could hardly get around. On arising in the morn ing I was stiff and lame and the kid ney secretions annoyed me by tnelr irregularity in passage. As soon aa I commenced taking Doan's Kidney Pills 1 imprpved and I am now in good health. I still use Doan's Kid ney Pills occasionally, however, but more as a preventive than anything else. I always insist upon Doan's Kidney Pills for no substitute could be as effective as they." For sale by all dealers, . Price 50 cents. Foater-Mtlburn Co.", Buffalo, New York, sole agents, tor the United States. . Remember the name Doan'a and tak. no other. vjlow To Pull Stumps' A most valuablo pamphlet. Tells and illustrates how to clear stump land at the lowest known cost per acre by devices Just perfected. Frea to owners of stump 'and who.' send me their names. John t, )urmii 1112 WcHtern Ave., HuMUf, Airedale Terriers The tlog for the city or country. (lUftrds, pajs and epprtipg. ' L-ADPIX KENNEL F9TACADA, pitp. 4"M"i i i 1 1 1 1 1 ''j ii ii evs Stand TALKNT. OUICaON. Cigars, Confectionery, Sta tionery, Soft Drinks Iitxwt I'npers and Magazine I The Ashland Tidings ALWAYS ON SALE ' I Post Cards of all kinds j 1 1 -H-H ! ! Burgan Eggs K2SSXSESS3