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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 12, 1914)
Thorsriay. November 12, 1914 ASHLAND TIDINGS PAGE SEVKV For Sale Homes with moderate bouses on small tracts and lots. We can give terms on all of them. One acre of ground, part full-bearing fruit and berries. About one half in garden tract, and as fine gar den land as exists. House of 8 rooms and bath, woodshed. This is within a 15-minute walk from postofflce and is adjacent to City Park. Price $2,600. . Five-room house with basement, 3 blocks from business street. Loca tion ideal. Good barn and lots of fruit and berries. Grounds 100x173 Price $2,500. One and one-quarter acres of good land, 4-room house and one smaller house, barn and woodbouse. Price $2,000. LOCAL 8. P. TIME CARD. Northbound. Leave No. 14 7:60 a.m.1 Grants Pass motor (main line depot) 9:30 a.m. Grants Pass motor (city depot) 9:40 a.m. Grants Pass motor (main line depot') 3:40 p.m. Grants Pass motor (city depot) 3:50 p.m. No. 16 4:30 n.m. ' Southbound. Arrive. Grants Pass motor (city depot) 9:20 a.m. Grants Pass motor (main line depot) 9:30 a.m. No. 13 11:35 a.m. Grants Pass motor (city depot) 3:10 p.m. Grants Pass motor (main line depot) 3:20 p.m. No. 16 4:60 p.m. EXPERTS CHOSEN TO JUDGE APPLES Bateham, Hamilton and Thorn ber Will Pick Winners at Annual Spokane Show. A SOLAR ECLIPSE. DR. W. EARL BLAKE, DEXTIST. First National Bank Bldg., Suite 9 and 10. Entrance First Ave. Phones: ' Office, 109; Res., 230-J. Lot with 50-foot frontage on paved street, 200 feet deep; house of 7 Tooms, bath, pantry and screened porch; all furnishings. Price $2,500. A. W. SWEDEXBIRG, M. D. Surgery of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat a Specialty. Fitting of Glasses. Swedenburg Block, 299 E. Main St., Ashland, Oregon. A 5-room house (bungalow), never been occupied; strictly modern throughout; lot about 45x90. Price $2,400. . Massage, Electric Light Baths, Elec tricity. JULIA R. McQUILKIX, Superintendent. Payne Bldg. Telephone 306-J. Every day excepting Sunday. ' An 8-room house on a 2-acre tract within 5 blocks of business, about 2 M blocks to Er.st Side school, about 5 blocks to High School; fruits, nuts and berries, and fine garden ground; good barn and some pasture. Price $4,500. At the prices, these properties are good as investments. If you are thinking aoout buying a home in Ashland, it will be well for you to come in and talk with us about some of the properties listed below. City Homes No. 216 A nice home on Boule vard. Lot "75x142. with six-room house, modern. Price $4,500. One- balf cash. Ko 214 A five-room, modern bungalow; two rooms upstairs, unfin ished, can be added, making it i seven-room house. Lot 100x160 This is a comparatively new house. Price $3,500. This property is on Palm avenue. N0 84 a seven-room, two-story bouse on Boulevard. All modern im nrnvementR: barn: lot 66x160. Price $3,500. $1,000 cash. No. 5 A place of one acre, located In west part of city; commands a nice view of upper valley. All kinds of fruit and berries. The improvements on the place are old and in only fair condition. They consist of six-room house and barn. Price $1,700. No. 167 On Granite street, house of hIt rooms and woodshed. These Improvements are old, but the loca tion of this piece of land makes it a fine investment. This lot is 85x247 and offers a fine location for a house, Price $2,500. No. 217 A five-room (exclusive of reception hall, bath, etc.), strictly modern house In first-class condition only 1 blocks from Boulevard Ham with earaee. Large lot. This place is nicely located and Is one of the nicest homes In Ashland. Price $3,200. $1,000 cash. Cunningham & Co ASHLAND, OREGON 1 DR. D. M. BROWER, GENERAL PRACTITIONER. Residence, 216 Factory St. Phone 247-J. The committee of judges for the seventh National Apple Show to be held in Spokane the week of Novem ber 16, has been annoupced as fol lows: A. P. Bateham, former presi dent of the Oregon Horticultural so ciety, Benior judge; Charles Hamilton, of North Yakima, chief inspector for the North Pacific Fruit Distributors, and V. S. Thornber, former bead of the department of horticulture of the Washington State College. All members of the committee are thoroughly familiur with the apple in dustry of the northwest and the varie ties that will be entered in competi tion. A new departure In judging will be put In practice this year. All rib bons will be up, If possible, after the second day of the show, and for the first time in the history of the show the score cards as made up by the Judges will be tacked up with , the competing exhibits for public exam ination. This feature of the work, it is believed by the trustees of the show, will add materially to the educational value of the competitions, and exhib itors as well as the general public will be given an opportunity of seeing where the blue ribbon winners excelled. Whin Totality Oocurt Nature Takoe en an Awesome Aspect. A total eclipse of the sun is a won derful sight. Where the eclipse is but partial the disk of the moon will creep across the face of the sun little by little, but will never completely ob scure the orb. But where "totality occurs the sun at a given moment will be entirely obliterated and the inhabi tants of the regions across which the black band will stretch will perceive the most wonderful phenomenon known to astronomers the display of the "coro na" of the sun. Great waves of incandescent gas hundreds of thousands of miles long, reaching out from the sun Into the ether, will be perceived. The country side will take on a sinister, night gray color, and tints of nature will pale and deaden ns ut twilight, the temperature will diminish sensibly, the birds, be fieylng night has come, will cease their song and seek their nests. A person who has never seen this strange mani festation of nature cannot form any Idea of lis awesome aspect This eclipse is a recurring phonom enon. At the end of every period of eighteen years and eleven days the moon comes between the earth and the sun at just such an angle that the sun's light is completely shut off from a portion of the world and partially shut off from n much larger part- New Yurk World. Result-Getting Classified Columns THE ONE-ATTEMPT MAN OR WOMAN who, for example, publishes a Want ad once, and if it does not bring the result desired decides that "advertising does not pay," should study the practical results, in all lines of endeavor, of perseverance. The law of "try again" is as potent in want advertising as in any other effort or enterprise. Classified Rates: One cent per word, first insertion; cent per word for each Insertion thereafter; 30 words or less $1 per month. No advertise ment inserted for less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order except to parties having ledger accounts with the office. MISCELLANEOUS CHAIR DOCTOR R. H. Stanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relald and repaired, bedsprings restretched, (hairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies. 26 First Ave., opposite First National Bank. Telephone 4 13-J. 20-tf FOR SALE. E. A. FISHER, Christlon Science Practitioner. 105 First Ave. Phone 71. DR. ETHEL J. MARTIN, OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, in charge of the practice of Drs. saw yer and Kammerer. Pioneer Building. Office phone 208. Hours 9 to 5 and by appointment. COLLEGE MEN WILL TALK TO GROWERS V Agricultural Schools of North west Plan Work' at .National Apple Show. N. Florence Clark Violinist and Teacher. OX SATURDAYS AT COLL Mill A HOTEL AT ASHLAND, ORE. CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB. Recular meetings of the Chautau qua Park Club first and second Fri days of each month at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. A. G. Mccartny, ires. Mrs. Jennie Faucett Greer, Sec. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT CLUB. The regular meetings of the Ladies' Civic Improvement Club will be held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month at 2:30 p. m., at the Carnegie Library lecture room. The four northwestern agricultural colleges will have extensive exhibits at the seventh National Apple Show which will be held iu Spokane Novem ber 16 to 21. Reservations have been made by the horticultural departments of Washington State College, University of Idaho, Oregon Agricultural College and University of Montana. Manager Gordon C. Corbuley has extended special privileges to these schools, and their exhibits will be lo cated at the left of the main entrance to the big show. . They will uttlize over 3,000 square feet of space with graphic illustrations of the horticul tural work done by their respective institutions. Each school will have special repre sentatives on the ground to explain exhibits and answer questions of the growers. Many of the men In charge will take part in the discussions of the fruit products congress, furnishing lectures and special talks on different orchard problems. A BILLION DOLLARS. The Time It Would Take an Expert to Count Them Singly. .1 wonder If we realize when we talk of a billion dollurs what an enormous sum of money it means? We nil know how rapidly an expert counter of coins will manipulate them. You can scarcely follow the motion of his fingers as he shifts the coins from one pile to another and counts them. The treasury experts will count 4.000 sliver dollars In an hour and keep It up all day long, but that is their limit. Working eight hours a day. then, un expert counter of coins will count 32. 000 silver dollars in a day. but how long will it take him at that rate to count $1,000,000? Thirty-one days. But that is only the beginning of the measurements of great figures, for if this snmo man were to go on counting silver dollurs at the same rate of speed for ten years he would find thnt he had only counted 100.000,000 of them and thnt to count $1,000,000,000 would re quire 102 years of steady work at the rate of eight hours a day during every working day of every one of the 102 years. -O. I. Austin. Former Chief of Bureau of Statistics. AUTO LIVEHY Floyd Dickey. Tel- ephone 342-Y. 81- REPAIRING Expert motorcycle re pairing. Percy Grisez, fire depart ment 45-tf BILL POSTED Will Stennett, 116 Factory St Bill posting and dis tributing. 54-tf FOR RENT Furnished rooms with or without board. Mrs. M. B. Riley, 131 North Main. 45-6t TO EXCHANGE for Ashland proper ty, 19-roem rooming house in Gold Hill, Ore. Cunningham & Co. FOR CITY CARRIAGE AND GAR DEN PLOWING see E. N. Smith, 124 Morton St Phone 464-J. 2tf FOR RENT Four-room house, close in, partly furnished, $7.50 a month. Inquire McWilliams & Edglngton. 47-tf LOST On Boulevard in June, light gray short jacket belonglgn to suit. Leave at Ashland Trading Co. Reward. Mrs. C. G. Rush. 4S-2t FOR SALE Good milch cow. C. V. Bowling, 227 Oberlln. 48-4t FOR'SALE Dry "cord woodr$4T75 per cord. Phone 423-Y. 48-2t FOR SALE Seven-horse gas engine traction wood saw. Call at Ashland fire department. 36-tt FOR SALE Homestead relinquish ment For particulars address R. F. B., care Tidings. 18-tf FOR" RENT Five-room house and large lot for $6 a month. P. A. Van Nice, 1307 Iowa. 4S-4t FOR SALE A good supply of bed linens, practically new, at a sacri fice. Inquire R yal Cafe. 48-2t FOR SALE Light wagon, cart, har ness, bicycle, 30-30 rifle and heif er. M. Nyby, 296 Maple street. 47-3t FOR SALE Twenty yearling calves and one 3-year-old Holstein bull. Can be seen at Kerby Bros.' Wag ner creek ranch, or address Talent. 42-tt FOR RENT Five-rooin bungalow on Palm avenue; water and lights; large lot, with, privilege of using adjoining lots as garden or for chicken park. Call or address 214 C street, city. 39-tf WANTED Wauhing and mending, nursing by practical nurse having hospital experience. Can give good reference. Also room for rent, reasonable. Inquire 72 Fifth street or 637 B street 47-lmo. DR. J. J. EMMENS Physician and surgeon. Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and thrqat. Eyes scien tifically tested and glasses sup plied. . Office 228 East Main St. Hours 8:30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 567, Medford, Ore. 21-tf BUSINESS PROPERTY WANTED I have a customer who will pur chase improved business property on the Plaza or East Main) street He wants it for an Investment and the price must be so that it will pay a reasonable net interest rate. I want the listing direct from the owner and shall expect to make a commission on the transaction. BERT R. GREER, At the Tidings Office. SEEK CHAMPION MAKERS OF PIES L- O. YanWegen AUTO SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT 6-Passenger Carter Car Phone: Office 103; Residence 350-J CITY FIRE ALARM SYSTEM. Fire Chief, phone 66. $ Chief of Police,-phone 88. Residence, phone 123. ' 2-6 Bells Cor. Main and Wimer streets. $ 2-8 Bells g City Hall. x 3-5 Bells. Cor. Granite and Nutley streets. 4-0 Bella Cor. Main and Gresham streets. e ft-3 Bella Cor. Iowa and Falrvlew streets. $ 6-4 Bella Cor. Fourth and A streets. 7-3 Bell Cor. Sixth and C streets. What do you want? . A -Tidings want ad tells it to more than two thousand people In a day.N Twenty five cents does the business. Three Big Contests Planned by Na tional Apple Show. Fortunate maids and matrons who are able to make delicious apple pies are being eagerly sought by the trus tees of the seventh National Apple Show which will be held In Spokane the week of November 16. A considerable sum of money is of fered us prizes for the best apple pies exhibited at the show. This year there are three apple pie contests open to housewives, high school stu dents and a special for women outside of Spokane county. In each of the three classes there will be three lots, with first prize of $5 for the winner, $2.50 for second, $1.50 for third and fl for fourth hon ors. The lots include tne nest apple pie made from fresh apples; the best pie made from canned apples and the best pie made from dried apples. In each entry the recipe must ac company and be a part of the exhibit, and the prize winning recipes will be published In the Apple Annual which the show will Issue for distribution throughout the United States and Canada. Every baker of a prize pie will be given credit for her prowess in this publication. Wind and the Sun. Wind does not always go down with the sun. but niny blow from high to low. after sunset If wind starts to fill .up a low pressure nreu before sun set it is liable to keep pouring in until it Is filled and equilibrium restored. If wind stops exactly ut Instant of sun set one may rest assured that the area of barometrical depression Is filled. If wind blows from sea to lund by day it may atop at sunset and reverse direc tion., If it does the cause is Hint at sunrise the sun's radiant energy heats the land more than it does the water. The land warms the air. Increases Its rarity, and It rises, producing a lower pressure area, and cooler air from over the ocean rushes In to fill it. After sunset land cools in less time than the water, and the direction of How Is re versed. But this niny not always oc cur. ..Local causes, ns fog. saturation of air, electrical conditions and others may prevent New York Journal. TO EXCHANGE for improved or close in Ashland property, five good residence lots In city of 40.000. Good value at $2,000 each. Will trade one or all. Lo cated in best residence district, sur rounded by fine homes; paved; on beautiful elevation; on street car line. Inquire of Bert R. Greer, Tidings office. TO TRADE for improved or close in Ashland property, 80 acres of good farm land adjoining town of 1,000. Produced 4 8 bushels of oats to the acre last year and now planted to oats. All tillable. Price $10,000. Incumbrance $2,100, due in six years. See Bert R. Greer at the Tidings office. FOR TRADE or improved or close In Ashland property, 284 lots in growing town of 1,000 1n Okla homa oil field. Clear and selling at $100 each. Not a vacant house in the town. Good for quick cash by man who knows how to handle town lots. Inquire of Bert R. Greer at the Tidings office. For Sale Good seven-room furnished house, close in, on paved street. Pavlug and sidewalk paid for. Can arrange for half cash payment if desired. Am offering this property for one-third less than value as my business re quires me in other places. Will sell now for $1,900. Address C. J. B., at Tidings office. Will cost you noth ing to investigate. 45-8t , I MUSIC AND ART. Sometimes Happens So. The Tamily had gone off for their holiday in a taxi. Twenty minutes Inter the taxi snorted back up tbe road. "Forgotten the tickets?' cried a neighbor. "No," said the irate householder. "but my wife's Just remembered that she's left a kettle boiling on the gns stove." He dived Into the house and came back the next moment with a ghastly calm on bis face. "All right now?" said the neighbor cheerily. "Bight! I'd forgotten thnt I'd turn ed the gas off at the meter, and now we've two hours and a half to wait for the next train." Glasgow Dispatch. SINGING vocal technique, tone placing, artistic singing. Mr. Mac Murray, Director of MubIc, Pres byterian church. 137 Oak St. 30-tf TEACHER OF Robertson PIANO Mrs. J. R. 340 Almond street. Ad vance piano work and Burrowes kindergarten classes. 4 4-tf FOR SALE Horse and "buggy, llroke single or double. New har ness an J buggy. $100 cash. Call 424 North Main. Phone 436-J. 4 8-tf FOR SALE Reliable gas stove, suit able for bathroom or small bed room; in good condition, with pipe and connection. Can he seen at The Tidings. tf Phone news Items to the Tidings. APPLES ARE RICH IN FOOD VALUES This Will Be Shown At the National Apple Show. "An apple a day keeps the doctor away." "Apples contain as great food values as meat" "Health's best way eat an apple every day." "School children should eat more apples and less glucose." These and other facts will be brought out clearly and emphasized at the seventh National Apple Show to be held at Spokane tbe week of November 16, as a part of the educa tional side of tbe show. . Father of the Dreadnought. To the Into Admiral Cunlbertl. mem ber of tbe Italian nnval engineering staff. Is due the credit of having sug gested the modem Dreadnought It was he. also, who suggested tbe mod ern type of scout, and he was one f the first to study the question of tlio application of liquid fuel to marine boilers, it was tils Influence which led to the adoption of this fuel in the Ital ian torpedo bout service. Business Opportunities A drug store, in small town with good territory. A splendid opportunity. ' $1,500 will handle a good business, centrally located. Making Sure of Her Sleep. "I knew you were coming tonight to call on my sister," snld dear little Jimmy. "How did you know?" Inquired Mr. Nor ergo. V "Because sis has been asleep all tbe afternoon." Cunningham & Co. ASHLAND, OREGON Encouraging. Young Mnn-So Miss Ethel Is your eldest sister. Who comes after he Hninll Brother Nobody ain't come yet but pa says tbe first fellow that comes can have her. 5 $2 THB YERR Strictly in Advance Southern Oregon's Big TwIce-a-Week newspaper, $2 Love in itself Is not Joy; It Is always service, and It may be a sacrifice; It means tiring, not receiving asking, npt answering. . , Uha Ashland Tidings STRICTLY IN ADVANCE. phone nsws Items to the Tidings. FAT HOtiS FOR SALE Why pay 3i cents for bacon when you can buy a fat hog and make it yourself at lesB than half the cost? P. A. Van Nice. 1307 Iowa. 48-2t FOR SALE One Macy sectional bookcase, two (jressers, one daven port, and other pieces of good second-hand furniture. 349 Moun tain avenue. Phone 4 0.1-R. 46-4t FOR SALE 240 acres. Willow Creek Valley, four miles from Ager. Two creeks run through place. Would make a fine ranch. Write Box 62. Hornbrook, Cat, for particulars. 46-lmo.t Tl lOROl G IIBRED WHITE LEG HORNS Pullets and cockerels for sale at 35 cents each at 104 Lau rel street, as long as they last. Have about forty to start with. 48-1mo. FOR SALE Swell little bungalow home, large lot, near West Side school. Nice lawn, flowers, cher ries, apples and berries. One of . the neatest homes in the city. At 341 Almond street. 4 4-1 mo. FOR SALE A homestead relinquish ment of 160 aires, two-roomed house, barn, chicken house, with garden tools, plows, etc. Well wa tered and on Pacific Highway. Will trade for Ashland property. Address A. It, care Tidings. 36-tf ATTKXTH x7h7mTSkKKERS ! East Ashltind lots and acreage In bearing orchard ami alfalfa. Near high school. At a sacrifice for im mediate sale. S, F. Starr, owner, 64 California street, Ashland, Ore. 4 8-St ATTENTION. HOMKSBKKERS We can x sell you homes like paying rent. Small payment down, $10 or more a month. In choice locations. Stock ranches for snle on which we could take some Ashland property. For special bargains see Beaver Realty Company, 211 East Main street. 30-1 r'OU SALE The Tidings has an ad vertising contract with the Port land Hotel whereby we have to take part In trade. Anyone going to Portland to stay for a day or longer can save 15 per cent on their hotel bill by applying to tbe Tidings FOR SALE For "improved AHhlatxi property to $7,000 or $8,000. bal ance terms to salt, 140-acre dairy and hog farm, Willamette Valley. Oregon; 90 acres ctiltlvaiton; Hir ing stream; new buildings; mac adam roads. Price $14,000. Ad dress owner, R. K. D. No. 1, Box, No. 8, Sublimity, Ore. 4 8-1 mo. FORJRENT One of tbe finest bouses In the city. Two blocks from Boulevard. CUNNINGHAM A CO.