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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1915)
Thursday. February 11, 1915 ASHLAND TIDINGS. 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 wort for each insertlea thereafter; 80 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. BeUeview and Vicinity MISCELLANEOUS CHAIR DOCTOR R. H. Stanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relald and repaired, bedsprlngs restretched, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies, 26 First Ave., opposite First National Bank. ,' Telephone 413-J. 20-tf AUTO LIVERY Floyd Dickey. Tel ephone 342-Y. 81- REPAIRING Expert motorcycle re pairing. Percy Orisez, fire depart ment 45-tf BILL POSTER Will Stennett, 116 Factory St. Bill posting and dis tributing 54:tf TO RENT Three acres, house and barn, near Boulevard. See Mrs. S. L. Allen. 67-tf-Thurs. MRS. W. D. BOOTH will take orders for Rhode Island Red baby chicks. 996 Oak street, phone 291-R. 74-tf LOST A gold-mounted brooch, eon Granite or North Main. Finder please leave at postoffice. .Reward. 72-tf FOR RENT Housekeeping and sin gle rooms, light and clean, at the Park Hotel. Inquire Royal Bak ery. 72-tf TANNING D. C. Wilson does moth proof tanning and taxidermy work. Leave orders at H. Hosier's cigar store. 73-3t WANTED, BRICK' ,WORK If you want a good bricklayer to fix your chimneys, see Nyby, 296 Maple street. 74-2t FOR RENT Building, centrally lo cated, suitable for garage. Call on or write O. L. Young, 77 Oak street. 74-tf BARBER First-class married bar ber wants steady Job by May 1. Address O. B. Wheeler, Lock Box 645, Rlcevllle, Iowa. 72-4t TO TRADE Fine surrey, . family farm mare and harness to trade for a Ford auto or for a piece of land. Call at Eastern Supply Co. Ashland. 62-tf THE CLASSIFIED ADV. THAT IS Important to You at AH IS APT TO BE Very Important You MIGHT overlook the classified ads for a month without missing a really valuable opportunity. And yet on any day of that month there might be printed THE ONE ADVERTISE MENT which you could not afford to miss under any circumstances. FOR out of the complex world of "offer and quest" there is apt to come, on any day, a clear and unmistakable message Xor YOU. AND that message may be more important to you than any that has ever come to you by letter, by telephone, tele graph or messenger. IT may be a call to higher business op portunities. It may be a chance to buy or to rent property such as you alone can fully appreciate. It may be a business opening that would lead you to the realization of your plans and purposes in life. It may. be a chance to buy just what you are look ing for or sell something you have no use for. IT may be that, years ago, you "missed" some particular classified advertise ment which would have changed the course of your life, greatly for the better, or made you considerable money. IT may be that such an advertisement Is printed today or that It will appear Borne day within the course of a month or so. When it DOES appear, FTND IT. WA TCH THE Tidings Classified FOR TIIE Best That's Going If you want to buy or sell any thing, try Tidings want ads. They Co the work. 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 6ff MONEY 6 MONEY 6ff.M0NEY Loans may be obtained for any purpose on acceptable Real Estate se curity; liberal privileges; correspond ence solfcited. A. C. AGENCY COMPANY, 758 Gas, Electric Bldg., Denver, Col. 72-8t MUSIC AND ART. TEACHER OF PIANO Mrs. J. R. Robertson, 340 Almond street. Ad vance piano work and Burrowes kindergarten classes. 44-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE Shetland pony. A. M. Beaver. 74-tf FOR SALE Cow and chickens. Ap- piy to tne Beaver Keaity Co. 62-tf FOR SALE $150 Spaulding surrey lor 90. inquire of J. B. Hunter, Phone 10-F-5. 69-tf FOR SALE JIomeBtead relinquish ment. For particulars address R F. B., care Tidings. 18-tf FOR SALE Big work horse, 1300 pounds, cheap if sold at once. In quire of W. M Hibbs, 172 C street. 73-4t FOR SALE One No. 10 Globe incu bator, 240 egg rapacity. Hot wa ter system. Address Incubator, care Tidings. 70-tf FOR SALE On corner Fifth and C streets, house with two lots; small barn; yard fenced, and garden spot. Inquire 62 Fourth street. 6 9-1 mo. FOR SALE Setting eggs, and orders booked for baby chicks from my trap-nested thoroughbred Rhode Island Red hens. G. W. Benedict, Ashland. 64-tf FOR SALE Reliable gas stove, suit able for bathroom or small bed room; in good condition, with pipe and connection. Can be seen at The Tidings. tf FOR SALE At a bargain, 50-acre ranch, barn and outbuildings. Stock and implements. For par ticulars communicate with D. E. Combs, Talent, Ore. - 70-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE Five-horsepower Harley Davidson motorcycle In A 1 condition, tandem, Presto tank and light. Bargain for cash or will trade on good milch cow. 632 Walnut street. 73-3t FOR SALE By owner, large lot with small' house; centrally located in Ashland, Ore., on Meade street. Warrantee , deed and abstract. Prico $450. Address Mark Hebron, Boise City, Oklahoma. 68-8t FOR SALE A four-room house, close in. With cement sidewalks, sewer, electric lights and city wa ter. Fifty dollars cash, balance $10 per month.' Price $850. See McWllllams & Edgington. 65-tf FOR . SALE Completely furnished bungalow. Five rooms, bnth, slcep- . ing porch, largo cellar, lawn and flowers; fruit trees. Part payment and balance liko rent, if desired. J. K. Choato, Jr. 139 Wimer street. Phonal 0-R. 18-1 mo FOR'SALE A'homFsterdTelinquiBh 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. R., care Tidings. J56-tf THOROUGHBRED S." C." Rhode Isl and RedB. Even red plumage; true Red type. Especially bred for winter laying. Eggs $1 per setting, $5 per hundred. Utility eggs 50c per setting. Mrs. W. D. Booth, 996 Oak street, phone 291-R. 70-lmo. FOR SALE, IMMEDIATELY Five acre ranch, with good sheds, well with pump, furniture, electric lights in house, ground all plowed ready for planting; right at the edge of town, 20 minutes' walk from center of city. An ideal place for chicken ranch.. Can be bought with small payment down, balance like rent. Better act quick. Ad dress H. L. Sinclair, Ashland, Ore. 74-tf HSHLHND Storage and Transfer Co. O. F. BATES Proprietor. Two warehouses near Depot. Goods of all kinds stored at reason able rates. A General Transfer Business. Wood and Rock Springs Coal. Phone 117. Office, 99 Oak Street, ASHLAND, OREGON. C. S. JOHNSON Carpenter and Contractor . CHARGES REASONABLE . SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Phone 423 Y 52 Roca St. The first of last week the seventh grade of Belleview challenged the eighth grade for a debate. The ques tion was, "Resolved, that the country school is of more benefit to a child than the city school." The seventh graders took the negative. The fol lowing are the ones that took part: Negative, Bertha Howard, Mr. Joy, Olive Howard, James Gibson; affirm ative, Miss Milam, Merrltt Randies, Capitola Beagle, Lee Mow. After the debate, .In which the negative won, a literary society was organized. The following were elected: Robert Gib son, president; Lee Mow, vice-presi dent; Bertha Howard, secretary; The literary society will meet Thursday, February 11. We heard last week that the tent of Jim Beagle, who Is trapping be yond Tolo, burned 'up, together with all the things inside. J. E. Miller spent a few days In Sams Valley with Mr. Gibson, who owns a 160-acre farm there. Miss Elizabeth King entertained Walter Gibson and family to dinner Sunday. The wind did a great amount of damage. Several barns in the dis trict are flat, also chicken houses and woodsheds. The big pine tree in front of the F. C. Homes, Jr., house was uprooted. This tree will be missed very much. Other big trees are either split off or uprooted. All of the telephones in the district are out of commission since this terrible wind. After the wind had ceased some what Sunday a few of the small boys around here got an old wagon with both wheels off and fastened on a wheelbarrow instead, and took a Joy ride down the Boulevard. It is a good thing there are no police in this part of the country, or these boys would have been "pinched" for speed ing. , Last Wednesday morning N. C. Dozier fell just as he was going up the steps into his barn, and' hurt his chest quite a little. Belleview has added two new scholars to its already good-sized number. Charles Homes has about complet ed the bridge across Emigrant creek, on the Lewis place, where he Is liv ing. There was no Endeavor meeting at the school house Sunday evening, al though seven members came over. While the wind was blowing so hard Sunday a limb from the large pine near M. M. Tucker's soda spring broke off and struck a calf, killing the calf. . A. C. Briggs of Ashland has been out to his place several times lately. The Parent-Teacher Circle will meet Friday evening. A professor j from the state university will lecture on the subject of Canada. A turnout Is desired as this will undoubtedly be of interest and instruction. Get scale receipts, legal blanks, etc., at the Tidings office. What to Feed is Farmers' Problem Wheat soars and keeps on soaring. It went to a dollar and the farmers were glad. But it didn't stop there. So rapid has been its advance that farmer and speculator alike have been dazed. They don't know where it will stop, and such a sudden and tremendous rise up to and even past $1.50 makes 'hem fear bad breaks later. However, everybody may be sure that wheat is going to be high. We wouldn't presume to say how high It will go or where it will stop, but as long as Europe spends its time with machine guns instead of farm machinery, just so long will wheat command a premium. It follows very naturally that the farmers who own wheat land are go ing to put every acre they can spare in wheat. They are going to stretch their individual wheat belts and be grudge everything else even standing room this season. They are not rais ing this wheat for feed, either, but to sell. There is going to be money in wheat and they are doing their best to get their share. And the farmer who has no wheat land feels somewhat disconsolate. He can't grow wheat and wheat is so high that he can't raise his usual quota'of livestock, for what Is for the hungry soldiers in Europe, for wom en and children deprived of their nat ural support. When human beings demand flour, hogs, cattle and chick ens must get along without wheat. There is both danger and an op portunity for the' farmer right now. If he has wheat land he Is in luck and he knows it. If he has no wheat land, if he Is a small farmer, he is apt to sell off every hoof on his place and try to get along without stock. ThlB Is the peril, for if nobody raises pigs, beef cattle and chickens, where are our pork chops, sausage, beef steaks and eggs coming from? Prices will go ' sky-high after wheat and there will not be enough to anywhere near meet the demand. It Is a problem, this meat question, In view, of the price of wheat, and It is up to the farmer to solve it, and to the farm paper to help him. It needs thought, and if it is solved it is going to mean a big profit for the meat raiser. "Wheat Is out of the question," said William H. Daughtrey, president of the Portland Union Stockyards Company, when he was asked about It. "The next thing is to find some thing else. For a time the farmer will have to buy some feed for fat tening. We are In the same shape ourselves and are making a few ex periments. "I have purchased some cracked corn. Corn has as great a feeding value as wheat and probably more, and there is no question but what we can buy It in Nebraska and Kan sas and lay it down here cheaper than we can buy wheat. One difficulty we experience Is that the animals here have not eaten corn and it Is hard to get them to relish it at once. Whole corn la more economical than cracked corn. "Kaffir corn is said to be an excel lent substitute. I am .'negotiating with parties now, and will know in a few days how much It will cost laid down. It Is particularly good for chickens and hogs', I am told. "But no farmer should buy feed for long at a time. The small farmer should raise it, and now is the time for him to study his land and find out what he can grow for a fattening ration. For some, corn will solve the problem. I hope to see much more corn raised this year than last in the Pacific northwest. East of the moun tains, kafflr corn might prove pro ductive and satisfactory, as it is a dry-land crop. Then there are field peas, which possess considerable fat tening value, and there are other feeds which may be used as a substi tute for wheat." In this valley the beet sugar fac tory would prove a blessing for the stock raisers, as the beet pulp makes the finest kind of fodder. ' Christ Naegeli, proprietor of Hazel wood dairy farm, Oregon City, Ore., has recently been converted to the use of dried beet pulp, and in com mon with many other dairymen and stock feeders, now takes pleasure In recommending it to others. Here is what he says in a recent letter to the Oregon Farmer: "After much persuasion I consented to give dried beet pulp a trial for the feeding of dairy cattle. Dried pulp Is as good feed as the green beets, and as a milk producing feed when the grass is gone I have not yet found its equal notwithstanding the fact that we of the Willamette Valley can raise cow kale to perfection and very cheaply. Last season I did not start to feeding beet pulp until very late, but this year will commence as soon as the grass is gone, and will feed It in connection with mill feed all winter." " Dried beet pulp is proving its worth not only to dairymen but to stock feeders generally. It Is greatly relished by hogs, sheep, goats, horses and poultry, as well as cattle, and malfes a highly profitable combina tion with alfal.'a or in Jact with almost any other feed." s n. RAHMAN B. I. VAMUU.DCR MEDFORD PAGE TRUES "ThSbMlf JUfcnMttMs, 31 N. Grape, Medford, Ore. BUSINESS, SHORTHAND AND ENGLISH DEPARTMENTS If you want a good position be one of our 1915 graduates. MEDFORD ASHLAND EITHER WAY Car leaves Ashland for Medford, Talent and Phoenix Day trips at 9:20 a. m.. 12:45 p. m., 3:30 p. m.. 6:45 p. m., daily ex. Sunday. Saturday night leaves at 12:15 a. m. Sunday trips at 11:M) a. m., 6:00 p. m., ,10:30 p. m. Car leaves Medford for Ashland at 8:20 a. m., 11:30 a m, 2-30 p m 5:15 p. m. daily except Sunday. Leaves at 11:15 Saturday nights' Sunday leaves at 10:00 a. m., 5:00 p. m. and 9:30 p. m. -Ashland waiting rooms at Hotel Oregon, Ashland Hotel, East Side Pharmacy, Poley's Drug Store and Rose Bros.' Confectionery. TAKE BIG GRAY INTERURBAN CAR THE INTERURBAN AUTOCAR COMPANY NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT AND TO PRESENT CLAIMS. In the County Court In and for the County of Jackson, State of Oregon. In the matter of the estate of Sarah Lowden, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the will of Sarah Lowden has been admitted to probate by the Hon. F. L. Ton Velle, judge of said court, and Mar garet Beswick has been appointed as executrix thereof. Any person having a claim against said estate must present the same to the execu trix, or her attorney, E. D. Brlggs, at Ashland, Oregon, within six months from the date of the first publcation of this notice. All claims must be duly verified and accompanied by proper vouchers. Date of first publication, January 14, 1915. MARGARET BEOWICK, Executrix, Ashland, Oregon. 67-5t-Thur'. C. E. FR0MAN H. C. DIGO Carpenters We Build Houses and Fix Things TRY US. PHONE 372 R-4 TALENT DR. JOHN F. HART Physician and Surgeon TALENT, OREGON, Boxing! NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT OF ADMINISTRATRIX AND TO PRE SENT CLAIMS. Standard legal blank forms of every kind may be procured at the Tidings office in any quantity. Marshfleld dedicated a Carnegie library last Week. They have a li brary of 3000 volumes. Hercules stump puller, a bargain; work and driving harness, bargains. 115 Granite street. tf The Tidings is on sale at Poley'i drug store, 17 East Main street. Phone news items to the Tidings. Strength 'for Motherhood MOTHERHOOD a not a time for experiment, but for . proven qualities, and nothing; exceeds tne value or rood cheer, needful exercise and SCOTT'S EMULSION. SCOTT'S EMULSION charges the blood with life-sustaining richness, suppresses nervous conditions, aids the quality ana quantity oi milk and insures sufficient fat It. COD UVER OH. flt th .rs Bf cIU, Its LIME ud SODA halp raid rkkate awl aak twiUosMay. In the County Court, Jackson Coun ty, Oregon. In the matter of the estate of Louisa M. Parslow, deceased. Notice Is hereby given that the above court has appointed Minnie M. Parslow as administratrix of the above estate. Any person having claim against said estate is hereby notified to present the same to the said administratrix or to her attor ney, E. D. Brlggs, at Ashland, Ore gon, within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. Date of first publication, January 21, 1915. MINNIE M. PARSLOW, 69-4t-Thur. Administratrix. We teach you by Correspondence. Detail for stamp. National School of Training, 411 Kpler Block, Desk 6, Seattle, Wa.h LET US I SERVE YOU 1 Phone job orders to the Tidings. All we ask is the opportunity X of doing so. We feel assured X that our endeavor to serve you X will be a strong factor in per- X suading you to become a per- X iiiaueui imiruu oi mis DanK. T Our Interests are mutual. $ State Bank of Talent I TALENT, OREGON. N.&M. Home Laundry Good Work Done Promptly AT THE Rough Dry at Reasonable Prices. New Machinery. J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office and Laundry 31 Water St. TELEPHONE ffi Mill Street, Near City Park Phone 152 I Parte Garag'e MORRIS & LIDSTROM, PROPS. We personally conduct Repair and Lathe work and DO THE WORK. Our Repair facilities are unexcelled, our system complete. Our stock of Auto Supplies is right up to the minute. . Michelin tires in stock. Other makes on short notice. 12 h. p. Traction Engine for 'sale. 52P Our Vulcanizing Department will please yon. LET US SHOW YOU PARK GARAGE