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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 1914)
Monday, November 16, 1014 For Sale Homes with moderate houses 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 balf 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 postoffice 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 woodhouse. Price $2,000. Lot with 50-foot'frontage on paved street, 200 feet deep; house of 7 rooms, bath, pantry end screened porch; all furnishings. Price $2,500. A 5-room house (bungalow), never been occupied; strictly modern throughout; lot about 45x90. Price $2,400. An 8-room house on a 2-acre tract within 5 blocks of business, about 2 Vt 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 about 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 half cash. ' So. 214 A five-room, modern bungalow; two rooms upstairs, unfin ished, can be added, making it a seven-room house. Lot 100x160. This is a comparatively new house. Price $3,500. This property is on Palm avenue. No. 84 A seven-room, two-story house on Boulevard. All modern im provements; 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 bouse and barn. Price $1,700'. No. 167 On Granite street, house of six 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 fora 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. Barn with garage. 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 t i r " r ! 1 1 ,r ... ... . 1 1 r i LOCAL S. P. TIME CARD. Northbound. Leave No. 14 , 7:50 a.m. 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 p.m. Southbound. Arrive. Grants Pass motor - (city depot) 9:20 a.m. Grants Pass motor (main line depot) . . 9:30 a.m. No. 13 ...... H:35 a.m. Grants Pass motor (city depot) .. '. 3:10 p.m. Grants Pass motor (main line depot) 3:20 p.m. No. 15 '.1 4:50 p.m. DR. W. EARL BLAKE, DENTIST. First National Bank Bldg., Suite 9 and 10. Entrance First Ave. Phones: Office, 100; Res., 230-J. DR. D. M. B ROWER, GENERAL PRACTITIONER. Residence, 216 Factory St Phone 247-J. A. W. 8WEDEXBURG, M. D. Surgery of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat a Sjtecialty. Fitting of Glasses. Swedenburg Block, 299 E. Main St., Ashland, Oregon. Massage, Electric Light Baths, Elec trlcity. JVLIA R. McQUILKIX, Superintendent. Payne Bldg. Telephone 3G-J. Every day excepting Sunday. E. A. FISHER, Christian Science Practitioner. 105 First Ave. Phone 71. R. 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. N. Florence Clark Violinist and Teacher. ON ' SATURDAYS AT COLUMBIA HOTEL AT ASHLAND, ORE. CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB. Regular meetings of the Chautau qua Park Club first and second Fri days of each month at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. A. G. McCarthy, Pres. Mrs. Jennie Faucett Greer, Sec. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT CLUB. The regular meetings of the Ladles' 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. 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. L. O. VanWegen AUTO SERVICE DAY OR NIGHT 6-Passenger Carter Car Phone: Office 103; Residence 350-J 3$83Jt!3fJ3a CITY FIRE ALARM SYSTEM. Fire Chief, phono 6. Chief of Police, phone 88. Residence, phone 123. 2-0 Bella Cor. Main and Wimer streets. 2- 8 Bells City Hall. 3- 5 Hells. Cor. Granite and Nutley streets. 4-fl Bells Cor. Main and Gresham streets. Itells Cor. Iowa and Falrvlew streets. ' 6-4 Bells Cor. Fourth and A streets. 7-3 Bells Cor. Sixth and C streets. What do you want? A Tidings want ad tells It to more than two thousand people In a day. Twenty five cents does the business. , Phone newt Items to the TMingi, ASHLAND POISON OF NICOTINE." It Affects the Coronary Arteries and Product Tobacco Heart. Tobacco beirt' is a condition well known to physicians. It Is really a pbase of arteriosclerosis, due to exces sive smoking, and Is generally charac terized by angina pectoris, a severe pnln In tbe chest. The New York Med ical Record, commenting on some sta tistics published lu Germany by Dr. J. Pawinskl. says tbe important con clusion to be drawn from them is '"that tobacco has a certain, possibly a spe cific, affinity for tbe coronary arteries." These are the arteries of the heart it self, those that supply Its muscles with blood. That nicotine is a powerful poison bus long been known, but there Das been a wide divergence of opinion as to whether tobacco smoke contains nicotine or not Tbe investigations of Zullnskl mid Zebrowskl prove that it doeR. The quantity of nicotine ab sorbed by the body from tobacco smoke is probably small, and if smoking be indulged in with moderation it will not injure healthy adults, but when car ried beyond tbe limits of moderation or when Indulged in by young people it Is certain to do harm to the heart. Its effect is to cause a considerable thickening of the inner membrane of the coronary arteries, a pronounced de generation of their middle coat, which is composed of muscles, and marked changes in the nhiscles that contract and expand the heart, thus bringing about disturbances of its rbytbmicnl beating. EGGS AND THE HEN. Life Work Nature Has All Laid Out For the Young Chick. "There is water n-plenty In a fresh laid egg. but no more uir than there Is iu a hammer." said n dealer in eggs. "So long us you can keep air out of tbe egg it will remain sweet and fresh, but ito one has ever succeeded iu keep ing it out by fair means more than sis days. The oxygen Is bound to find Its wuy through an eggshell's pores, and tbe only way to save that egg then is to eat it. it sounds funny, but the moment you give uu egg fresh air that moment you ruin its health. "A got!, healthy ben not speaking of any particular star breed, but Just ben does not fulfill her destiny until she has accomplished KK) eggs fifty dozen. That's what nature has fitted up the hen to do in the way of Just uncoached nud unstimulated egg pro duction, and she gives the hen eight years to do it in. "Tbe hen divides the fifty dozen stunt up among those eight years. Some years she may uot turn out more than a couple of dozen, but when the eight years are up she wilt bare man aged her annual output so that tbe to tal has come out alt right. Then the hen has ended her career as an egg producer, and too often, if she is in the hands of a thrifty owner, begins another career, short and delusive this time as the summer boarder spring chicken." Pittsburgh Press. Weight After Meals. There is. or used to be. an idea that one weighs less after a meal than be fore, but that Is nonsense. There is always a definite increase of weight after a meal, and with most people it Is curiously iinirorm. After nu average dinner washed down with the average amount of liquid-three-quarters of a pint the average man will invariably find that be weighs two pounds more than be did before the meal. There seems to le no reason why a really determined diner should not double that lucrease. A half pint tumbler or water or a breakfast cupful of ten weighs ten ounces, so that probably over half of the two pounds Increase of weight after dinner is accounted for by the liquid part of the meal. Man chester Guardian. The Speed Limit. Motorists going through a small town up in northern Indiana bear witness to' tbe fact that sarcasm reaches a high stage of development there. Going into the town one Is met by a sign reading. "Speed Limit 111) Miles nn Hour." "Mighty decent people In this town." thinks the motorist. Rut before he has gone far he realizes the sarcasm fully. The streets are so rough and the road through there to Chicago has so many turns In It that It would be Impossible to go faster than ten miles an hour without running Into some one's front yard. Indlauupolis News. Three Hard Words. There are three short and simple words, the hardest to pronounce In any language (and I susicct they were no easier before the confusion of tonguesi. but which no man or nation that can not utter can claim to have nrrlved ut manhood. These words are, "I was wrong." Lowell. The Art of Flattery. Madam-With this goose I hare been awfully cheated. It Is old and tough and still it looks so young and tender! Cook iwho likes to flatter ber inlstressi Yes. madam. One can never tell by appearances. Toil. too. look much younger than you really are. Flle gende Blatter. The Beggar's Retort. She I shan't give von unvthlnir h-. cause I anspect you aren't blind at all. He That may be. but 1 can assure you tnere are momenta when 1 wish 1 were. Pele Mele. Trimming. The old fashioned woman who used to trim ber own bat now baa a daugh ter who trim ber busband for ber haU.-Clnclnnstl Enquirer. TIDINGS PACKAGES IN PORTUGAL Messengere Carry Them, aa Stores Do Not Ute Delivery Wagon. Light delivery In Portugal Is done al most entirely by men and women. De livery wagons, such us are used in Amerieancltles. are unkuown here. Some of the large depart men t stores are now using motor trucks. tint none baa introduced a special parcel c arrier. Lisbon , and Oporto, the only large cities in the republic, are built on hills, and most of the streets are very steep, attaining a grade of IT per cent. They are paved with stone and generally are In good condition. The ronds immedi ately about these cities are fair and tbe grades are easy. County highways are a mixture of very good and very bad. They are not kept up as they should be and for short distances are apt to be extremely rough. Nearly all articles such as are de livered in tbe United States from a light wngon or motor vehicle are sold here by men and women, who go through the streets crying their wares. Klsn. fowls, vegetables, , brend. oil. fruit etc.. are all carried ou the head or shoulders of the vendor. Delivery of goods from small shops Is made by hoys or by the "galego." who Is found at every street corner. These men also transport pianos, furniture and other articles of a similar character Con sular Report MILITARY MESSAGES. Some That Were Made Famous by Their Pith and Brevity. Of famous military messages there are scores, beginning with tbe never to lie forgotten "Veni. vtdi. vicP of Caesar and that equally famous dUv patch of Commodore Perry. "We have met the enemy and they are ours." but both were beaten for brevity by Gen eral Sir Robert Boyd, who while gov ernor of Gibraltar, being in need of beef for his troops, wrote to the agent In England this laconic dispatch "Browne, beef, ' Boyd." Browne sent the stores with lie reply, "Boyd, beef. Browne." And this In turn recalls the story of Peter de Dreiix. the celebrated fighting bishop of Beauvais. who. being taken in arms by Richard Coeur de Lion, was Imprisoned and fettered. Pope Celes- tine III. remonstrated In behalf of the prelnto. and In reply the king sent the bishop's helmet and armor to Itome with this neat dispatch takeu from Genesis xxxvli. ,TJ: "Know now wbeth er. It be thy son's coat or no." The pope declined further intercession and replied that the coat the king hud sent did not belong to a son of the church but of the camp, and the prisoner, therefore, was at TMchard's mercy. Detroit Free Press. Every Woman a Nurte. Every woman, or at least almost every woman, has. at one time or an other of her life, charge of the personal health of somebody, whether chilo or Invalid in other words, every woman Is a nurse." livery da v, sanitary knowl edge or the knowledge of nursing, or. In other words, of how to put the con stitution In such a state as that It wilt have no disease or that It can recover from disease, takes n higher place. It Is recognized as the knowledge which every one onrtht to have distinct from medical knowledge, which only a pro fession can have. If. then, every woman must nt dome time or other In her life become a nure namely. hnv charge of some body's health how immense and how valuable would be the product of her united experience If every woman would think bow to nurse. Florence Nightingale. Values In Exhaust Steam. A common error among plant owners Is to ascribe undue economy to the heat that mny be carried In water resulting from the condensation of steam. They conversely greatly underestimate the heat curried In exhaust steam. As a mutter of fact the heat in a pound of water at 212 degrees Is only ISO Brit ish thermal units reckoned above the freezing point, whereas tn a pound of steam nt the same temperature the heat units number 1.1. TO. Hence if this steam is condensed In n radiator It gives out i7( heat units, and the drip will contain ISO beat units. Engineer lug Magazine. His Experiment. An Irishman went Into a hardware store to buy a looking glass. The shop man brought him some to choose rrom. Put left one on the counter and. walking back a few feet, closed his eyes. "What arc you closing your eyes for?" asked the shopkeeper. "Hedad." said Put. "I want to see bow 1 look when I'm sleeping." Chi cago News. On Time. "Is this train running on time?" "I should say so." answered the con ductor. "It can't run any other way. The company has had to get so many extensions of credit that the whole rond Is now running on time." Wash ington Star. Making Sure. ' "I will show my love not by words, but by deeds." . "I think, dear, you had better show the deeds to our lawyer." Baltimore American. , Ought to Be Warm. "Walter, this pudding la quite cold." "Impossible, air! This Is the fifth time It baa been warmed since morn ing." Paris Journal Amusnnt. An archer la knowo by hla aim, mot by bis arrows -Old Saying. I 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 "ad vertislng 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 ror 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, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies. 26 First Ave., opposite First National Bank. Telephone 413-J. 20-tf AUTO LI VERY Floyd Dickey, ephone 342-Y. 81- Tel- WANTED Uirl for housework, fam ily of two. Phone 175. 49-3t AUTO WANTED in exchange for two tots m uaKlanu, Cal. Phone 353-L 1 49-3t I R v. p A i if i vn c.,... ..rnrfr-T7- I oiiwmu i.Aj'ci i uiviuiuycie re pairing. Percy Grisez, fire depart ment. 45-tf B IlXTPOSTEDViir StenuettTT 16 Factory St. Bill posting and dis tributing. 54-tf FOR" RENT FurnTsTiedinswiTh or without board. Mrs. M. B. Riley, 131 North Main.' 45-6t W A NTE 1) TO" BU Y A norgan7Tn first-class condition. Address 137 Almond or phone 700-R. 49-2t TO EXCHANGE for Ashland proper ty, 19-roem rooming house in Gold Hijl, Ore. Cunningham & Co. FOR CITYnjAmUAGE-AND(5AR". 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 & Edgington. 47-tt FOR RENT New modern bungalow, three acres of alfalfa, some fruit. Well located. V. O. N. Smith, at Citizens Bank. 49-3t FO RR E NT Fi fe-rooTirb urTga 1 o w "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 Washing and mending, nursing by practical nurse having hospital experience. Can give good reference. Alsio room for rent, reasonable. Inquire 72 Fifth street or 637 B street. 47-1 mo. DR. J. J. EMMENS Physician and surgeon. Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. 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 6 MONEY 6 MONEY b Loans may be obtained for any purpose on acceptable real estate se curity; liberal privileges; corre spondence solicited. A. C. AGENCY COMPANY, 75 X Gas-Electric Bldg.. Denver, Colo. 440 Phelan IMdg.. San Francisco. 49-4t-Thurs. 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 ope 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 Ciose in Ashland property, 80 acres of good farm land adjoining town of 1,000. Produced 48 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 for improved or close in Ashland property, 284 lots in growing town of 1,000 in Okla homa oil field. Clear and selling at $100 each. Not a vacant house In the town. Good for quirk cash by man who knows how to handle town lots. Inquire of Bert R. Greer at the Tidings office. Business Opportunities A drug store, in small town with good territory. A splendid opportun ity. $1,500 will handle a good business, centrally located. Cunningham & Co. ASHLAND, OREGON IT f :' i PAGE SKVKrf POR SALE. FOR SALE Good milch cow. C. P. Bowling,227Oberlln. 4S-4t FOR SALE Seven-borsegas engina traction wood saw. Call at Ashland nre department. 36-tf 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. 48-4t FOR SALE Thor ugh hired Indian Runner ducks. (J. W. Kennard, R. F. Box 10!). Phone 13-F-14. 49-3t-Thur. FOR SALE $100 "set Encyclopedia Britannica, 30 volumes, sheepskin, for $30. Also $50 conceit violin, for $25. Phone 414-R. 49-2t FOR SALE Twenty yearlTngcalves and one 3-year-old Holsteln bull. Can be seen at Kerby Bros.' Wag ner creek ranch, or address Talent. 42-tf For Sale Good seven-room furnished house, close in, on paved street. Paving and sidewalk paid for. Can arrange for half cash payment If desired. Aiu 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 co.st you noth ing to Investigate. 45-St I FOR SALE Horse an.! Imh.,.v" Broke single or double. New har ness an J buggy. $100 cash. Call 424 North Main. Phone 436-.I. 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 FOR SALE Eight-room house with two lots.' Strictly modern. Good location. Splendid bargain. Fur nished or iiniiiinislied. Inquire. 10S Fifth and C streets. 49-lmo. ! FOR SALE -2 40 acres. Willow Creek Valley, four miles from Ager. Two creeks run through place. Would make a fine ranch. Write Box C2, Hornhrook, Cal., for particulars. 4 6-1 mo. Tl lOROi'GII BR ED W 1 1 if 15 LEG HORN'S Pullets and cockerels for sale at 35 cents each at 104 Lau rel street, as long as they last. nave aiiout roity to start with. 48-lnio. FOR SALE Swell little bung"a76w home, large lot, near West Side school. Nice lawn, flowers, cher ries, apples and berries. One of the neatest homes iu 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 ATTHXTIOX, "llOMi-:SKEKEKS! East Ashlcind lots nnd acreage in bearing orchard ami alfalfa. Near hinh school. At a sacrifice for im mediate sole. S. F. Starr, owner, 64 California at reel, Ashland, Ore. 48-Sf. FOR SALE The Tidings" has anad vertlslng 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 the Tidings. FOR SALE For improved Ashland property to $7,000 or $8,000, bal ance terms to suit, 140-acre dairy and hog farm, Willamette Valley, Oregon; 90 acres cultlvalton; liv ing stream; new buildings; mac adam roads. Price $14,000. Ad dress owner, R. F. D. No. 1, Box No. 8, Sublimity, Ore. 48-lmo. MUSIC AND ART. SIMGINQ Vocal tecbnlque, tone placing, artistic singing. Mr. Mac Murray, Director of Music, Pres byterian church. 1 37 Oak St. 30-tf TEACHER OF PIANO Mrs. J7"kT Robertson, 340 Almond street. Ad vance piano work and Burrowea kindergarten classes. 4 4-tf $2 THE YERR $2 Strictly in Advance) Southern Oregon's Big Twlce-a-Week newspaper Ca Ashland Tidings - STRICTLY IN ADVANCE,