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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1917)
Thursday, January 18, 1017 ASHLAND TIDINGS PAGE THRU i Attractive real estate offerings never I meet with indifference when made through J i the classified columns. " Classified Rates: One cent per word, first insertion; cent per word for each Insertion thereafter; 80 words or less $1 per month. No advertise nent inserted tor less tban 25 cents. Classified ads are cosh with order xoept to parties having ledger accounts with the office. PROFESSIONAL. DR. F. A. HALL Dentistry and all Its branches. Swedenburg Bldg., Ashland, Ore. Phone 167. 6-tf DR. J. J. EMMENS Physician and surgeon. Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses sup plied. Oculist and aurlst for S. P. R. R. Offices. M. F. and H. Bldg., opposite postofflce, Medford, Ore. Phone 667. 21-tf C. B. WATSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Consulting and General Practice. Pioneer Building. Of fice with E. D. Briggs. Ashland, Ore. DR. ERNEST A. WOOD Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office hours, 10 to 12 and 2 to 6. Bwedenburg Bldg., Ashland, Ore. 73-tt CONTRACTING AND BUILDING Frank Jordan, general contracting. New and old work; cement walks, cemetery copings, brick, cement, woodwork, lathing and plastering, cobblestoue and general building contracts. 4-12nio. CHAIR DOCTOR R. H Stanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relald and repaired, bedspriags restretched, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies, window cleaning, house cleaning, and furniture packing done expertly. Call at 381 A street or phone 403-R. 91-tf DR. G. R. UTTERBACK The Chlro- praetor and Nerve Specialist. All functions of the body are controlled by nerves. Electric, cabinet and spray baths In connection. Office at residence, 108 Pioneer avenue, opposite Hotel Austin annex. 18-tf GEO. T. WATSON, Painter and Pa perhanger. Phone 202-R. 166 Ohio street. 40-tf miscellaneous BILL POSTER Will Stennett, 11 Factory St. Bill posting and dis tributing. B-tt CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB. Regu lar meetings first and third Fri days of each month at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. S. Patterson, Pres.; Mrs. Jen nie Faucett Greer, Sec. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT CLUB. The regular meeting of the club will be held on the second , and fourth Tuesdays of each month at ?:30 p. m., at tho Auxiliary Hall. MONEY TO LOAN Mortgage Com pany Holland-America has plenty of money to lend on good farni security. Isaac Beat, agent, Grants Pass, Ore. " l"4 FOR RENT ITOR RENT Five-room flat, nicely furnished, close in, on Main street. Rent reasonable. Call 317-J be tweea 8 and 11 a, m. 67-tf IFOR RENT Six-room house at 366 Granite street. Large lot. $6 per month. Inquire at Tidings office. 43-tf lfOR RENT Furnished bungalow; adults only. 143 Nutley. Key at 147 Nutley. 64-tf LOST IjOST Suitcase, at corner Oak and A streets. Return to telephone of fice. 68-3t WANTED WANTED Infants and children to board. Inquire 366 B street. 5 6-tf. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS (OREGON & CALIFORNIA RAIL ROAD CO. GRANT LANDS Title to same revested in United Statee by act of congress dated June 9, 1916. Two million three hundred thousand acres to be opened for settlement and sale. Power site, timber and agricultural lands, con taining some of best land left in United States. Now is the oppor tune time. . Large sectional map showing lands and description of soil, climate, rainfall, elevations, etc., postpaid, $1. Grant Land Lo cating Co., Box 610, Portland, Ore gon. 6 7-3 mo. FOR SALE Good transrer, storage and coal business. Reasonable. Apply to City Truck Co., D. Guy Good. 81-tf TOR SALE Beardless seed barley. Box 11?, No. 2 Ross Lane, Med ford, Ore. 68-lmo. FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE Property close in, 104x 198 feet; comfortable house and barn, large lawn, shrubs, fruit and garden. Price $3,000; one naif cash, balance on reasonable terms. Address E. G., care Tld lngs. 35-tf FOR SALE Modern cottage of six rooms, on 1 acres of ground, mostly meadov, under Irrigation ditch; young bearing fruit trees. Price $2,000 cash. Bargain. Ad- ' dresr E. O., care Tidings. 85-tf FOR SALEAT A BARGAIN Dandy little modern four-room bungalow with acre of ground, so located as , to go like hot cakes If subdivided for tourist bungalows. Will sell some good furniture to purchaser. Worth $2,000 or more. Will take $1,500 for quick sale. 8ee Bert E. Greer, at Ttdlnga office. - FOR SALE Old established business In Klamath Falls. Other business In view, roason'for selling. Will make it an object for quick sale. If you have $2,000 to invest in go ing business, for particulars ad dress P. O. Box 432, Kalmath Falls, Ore. 67-6t MODERN six-room house, well built, and five-room old cottage on. cor ner Nursery and Rock streets. Price reasonable. Address owner, James Chumos, 312 Fulton street, Seattle, Wash. 6 4-1 mo. FOR SALE LIA'KSTOCK FOR SALE Hamblotonlan mare, cheap, If taken at once; in good condition; perfectly gentle; good driving, riding or working animal. Will give trial to responsible party. H. L. Sinclair, at Tidings office. COUGHS Bern's Ei'CyjtiiS 01nir?itnt rr eil ruin ?Tf,nr Home Poets S Words of love and words of kindness, Gladsome words and words of cheer, Truthful words and peaceful words Words devoid of fear. Words of courage, potent words, Words of faith that live. Words replete with helptuineBs, Freely let us give. Mary Agnes Daily. The Oregon City paper mill plans another addition similar to the $1, 000,000 unit about completed. Roseburg Five thousand acres In F'lournoy valley have been pooled to drill for oil. Hermiston county proves adaptable to prunes, with yield heavy and re turns large. Donald, Ore., is shipping about $7,000 worth of hogs each week. PLtTMB'NG Installed or repaired also general repairing. Prices rea sonable. GEO. L. CARRV. 462 Allison Phone 3I4-.I INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO. Leave Ashland for Medford, Talent and Phoenix daily except Sunday at 9:00 a. m. and 1:00, 2:00, 4:00 and 6:1b p. m. Also on Saturday night at 6:30. Sundays leave at 9:00 and 1:00, 6:00 and 10:30 p. m. ueave Medford for Ashland dally ex cept Sunday at 8:00 a. m., 1:00. 2:00, 4:00 and 6:16 p. m. Also on Saturday at 10:15. On Sundays at 10.30 a. m., and 2:00, 6:00 and 9:30 p. m. Fare between Medford and Ash. and, 20 cents. Round trip, 85 eenta. HSHLHND Storage and Transfer Co. ' C. F. BATES Proprietor. Two warehouses near Depot loods of all kinds stored at reason .ble rates. A General Transfer Business. Wood and Rock Springs OoaL Phone 117 Office. 99 Oik Street, 4SHI.4VTV ORfi-nnV ASHLAND LUMBER " COMPANY Dealers in LUMBER Shingles. Lath, Sash, Doors, Roofing Papers, Cordwood, Factory Block Wood Flour, Feed and Poultry Supplies A Full Line Ashland Fruit and Produce Association FRUIT and pARffi Oregon Fruit Crop Huved By Station, ial Investigators in the field, and Corvallis, Ore., January 16. If it I watch two-year-old steers grow In a had not been for the bulletins, dem-j minute not! I onstartions and inductions given on "The prices of $1.75 a pound on spraying for codling moth, the apple foot for a steer, and $28 a hundred crop of the state of Oregon, worth for the champion carload, are merely $5,000,000 last year, would not have symptoms. Not every layman can in-j been worth 50 cents, because it would terpret them aright, nor can the wild- 1 have been absolutely eaten up by the eyed, leiither-lunged bellower for ; worms. If It had not been for the boycotts and embargoes prescribe a Information furnished on spraying sane remedy. Those knowing the for San Jose scale, there would not trade conditions understand what It be an apple tree left today In the all means. And even they were1 state. E. H. Shepherd, editor Better scarcely prepared to see the record Fruit, Hood River, Ore. , j of the first International, set at $1.50 Antbracnose is a disease that made a pound in an enthusiasm which sad havoc in Oregon orchards uutil sought to encourage the firm estnb- j it was controlled by formulas worked Hshment of tho show, so far Rur-J out by Dean Cordley, now director of passed. It was an altogether worthy the experiment station at Oregon Ag- object on which this stimulating ricultural College. The editor has price was lavished, the young white-' seen orchards since they were saved, face steer from tho Golden Gate. Not loaded with fruit. The method has the least of tho lessons emphasized saved orchards in other parts of the is that prime' beef can be made from state and is generally used for this barley, outs and bran. More slgnlfi disease throughout the entire world, cantly this coesl triumph, winning a F. H. Shepherd, editor Better champion and reserve with bullocks Fruit, Hood River, Ore. bred and fed in the college herd, The fungus disease known as apple Illustrates how faithfully these edu crab was at first controlled by Bor- cational institutions are striving to dcaux, which prevented the apples lead the industry Into lines of profit from being scabby, but in wet condi- able production." tions caused them to be so badly rus seted that tliey are unmarketable. Again f he Agricultural College shines as a saver of the fruit industry, as Dean Cordley, through several years of experiment work, developed a treatment of lime sulphur that pro- tects the fruit from the disease with out injuring it. E. H. Shepherd, ed itor Better Fruit, Hood River, Ore. High Cost of Good Meat. According to the Breeders' Ga zette, "An agitated press and emo tional women's clubs should fall more vigorously than ever to beating the tomtoms. The grand champion steer at the international, California Favorite, sold for $1.75 a pound, and the millionaire automobile makers in Detroit, to which city the bullock went for holiday beef, will not be able to buy prize-winning rib roasts and porterhouse at the old-time price of 25 cents a pound. Therefore sum mon grand juries, 6pend thousands of dollars in putting a horde of spec - Fight for Closed River on At Salem (Portland Telegram.) vuvrnwuiiK tsiiw Salem, Jan. 15Fish legislation! llflf fll "Real RfOnCV promises to be one of the features; WUltU iial MlV.lt jf of this year's session of the legisla- j ture and tha opening gun of the skins of Klamath county jackrab battle will probably be sounded to- bits will bring from 15 to IS cents a morrow when it is planned by the poimi jn st. Louis, according to a let combined Southern Oregon delega- ter received this morning by the tion, led by Representative C. M. Thomas of Medford, to introduce a bill providing for the closing of the Rogue river to commercial fishing, This bill will later be supplemented, by bills closing the Willamette river ; ana me upper coiumma river to com- merciai nsning. In past sessions this has been one of the big fights and thousands of aonars nave oeeu spent in loooy.ng Dy me commercial iisnermen in meir struggle against the anglers. District Attorney C. H. Buffington, of Curry county, and the Medford Sportmen'a club will participate in the struggle to secure the passage of the impending bill controlling fish ing in the Rogue. The Southern Ore gon delegation In the senate and the house will hold an informal meeting tonight to map out the campaign in behalf of the proposed measure. "Within the last two days," wrote Mr. Buffington to Mr. Thomas, "I have prepared a petition to the legis lature asking that seines and set nets be done away with and copies of this petition are pelng circulated by vol unteer workers and will be presented to the legislature." Roderick Macleay and his forces enforced by Frank Seufert, of the you wni find It decidedely to your upper Columbia, are expected here ! interest to collect these skins, and we tonight to take up the biennial cam-jnaVe an outlet for all you can ship, paign against the . proposed legisla- j "Under separate cover we are mail tlon. In sessions gone by Macleay jng you our trappers guide and sup has waged a vigorous fight against !piy catalogue, which will no doubt any legislation wnich might close tne Rogue river to fishing, which he se cured by purchased from the estate of the late R. D. Hume. The Rogue river measure to be In troduced by the consolidated South ern Oregon delegation will prohibit the use of seines, set nets and fish wheels in the Rogue. Tbe Multnohah and Clackamas county sportsmen, .backed by their j por Orford mills will ship 30,000 respective clubs, will introduce this feet 0f White cedar to the Bremerton week a similar bill closing the WU- navy yards. lamette to commercial fishing. It Is, . claimed by these interests that com-j Klamath Falls The new $13,000 merciai fishermen come to the Wll- steel bridge acroa Link river ls com lamette for a period of six weeks, pleted. clear the river of salmon, and then ship the catch to the lower Columbia Phone job orders to the Tiding Sliiflinj; I'arm Machinery Credits. The International Harvester Com pany has advised its agents that the recent ruling of the Federal Reserve Hoard flint nntpn pivpn hv fiipmcrs fm th(j ag(j Qf furm cultural machinery and other farm operating equipment are eligible for discount, provides a means of financ ing such purchases without disturb ing tho credit relations with the farmer customer. By discounting such notes at the bank, the agent can get cash for the implements sold and at the same time the farmer can have as much time for payment as when the agent carries him. The Interna tional Harvester Company has here tofore been carrying notes of agents and farmers in stupendous amounts. The total in 1913 was $40,173,752, and this rose in 1914 to $42,589,510. It is expected that a considerable part of this huge accommodation will In ' future be handled liy the reserve j banks. river canneries for packing, leaving the Oregon anglers without a supply of fish. 1 Klamath Commercial Club from Funston Bros. & Co. There is an outlet for these skins in any amounts that can be furnished, says the letter. Tne fre,gnt tQ gt , 6 enta a poundi wnIcn would ,eave a margln of 10 or n centa. The, letter from the furriers is printed below in full, that local peo- ple may know Just wnat the outlet rof Jackrabbit hUm ls "Replying to your letter of recent date, beg to say, we shall be glad to receive all the jackrabbit skins you can collect, and will allow you from 15 to 18 cents per pound for them, delivered St. Louis the price de pending upon the quantities that can be furnished and the general condi tion of the skins. "It will not be necessary for you to stretch the skins on stretchers just lay them flat on the floor or on racks to dry, and when they are dry and as fast as you can get a good sized lot bale them up and ship by freight. On receipt of the skins we will promptly remit to cover. The skins may be taken off either cased or open. If there is any other in formatlon'desired we shall be pleased to hear from you. We are confident interest you. "Awaiting your further favors, and assuring you of our best efforts in your behalf." Klamath Herald.. Roseburg will ship 150 cars of broccoli this season, also 50 cars to g0 from Riddle. All go direct to Chl- cago. Semi-Tropical Southern California CALIFORNIA with its oranges, its Winter flower-, i t s beaches, its mountain resorts, its time-ntrtined missions, its delightful sun shine and out-of-d.ior life u'ely the call is irresistible in January. But a two days j urney away on daily' trains of the delightful SHASTA ROUTE Shasta Limited California Express San Francisco Express You can secure tickets or complete Miformation from any agent or write JOIIX M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon Southern Pacific Lines Legislative Notes Of County Interest Attorney General Brown desires the passage of a prohibition law that will not be hard to enforce, and one that will satisfy, as nearly as possi ble, all the people of the state, and not one that will satisfy some par ticular faction. Mrs. Sylvia Thompson, representa tive from Hood River and Wasco counties, and the only woman mem ber of the legislature, recently ad mitted before the Portland Ad club that election to the legislature had not fully satisfied her political am bitions. "I am a housewife by pro fession, a legislator by election, and a 1'nited States senator by pre-destl-nation," she declared, and added that "1 am right now looking for some ono to manage my campaign." Mrs. Thompson is a democrat. . Representative Thomas, who was instrumental in bringing the two speakership candidates together, was offered the chairmanship of the rules and joint rules committee, but declined. Mr. Thomas is a member of three of the important committees as far as Jackson county and South ern Oregon is concerned. He will be a member of the horticulture, manu facturing and revision of laws com mittees. As Buch he Is In a position to look after the best Interests of Southern Oregon in horticultural and manufacturing matters. A matter which la going to be of importance to Jackson county 1b the bill which will he introduced per taining to the lime industry of our state. This bill will be drawn to per mit the using of convict labor In ex ploiting the lime deposits of the state and disposing of the product for fer tilizing purposes. Representative Gore is kept quite busy. As a member of the capital building and grounds committee, that he contemplates some radical changes is a foregono conclusion. Mr. Gore ls a member of a very important committee for Jackson county, that of roads and highways, and having made quite a study along this line, bis advice and counsel ls much sought after, and he will be one of the leading members in moulding this legislation. Mr. Gore ls also a member of the commission on forestry and conservation. Representative Sheldon of Jackson county Is chairman of the house com mittee on expositions and fairs and a member of the following committees: Education, mining and revision of 70 YOU DREAD WINTER? If every man, woman and child in this vicinity' would only take one spoonful of IP nffpr iripals fnr nnft month, blood to withstand the rigors of winter weather and help prevent colds, gnppe ana winter acicness. SCOTTS is a fortifying medicinal-food of particu lar benefit in changing seasons, and every drop yield direct returns in richer blood, stronger lungs, and greater resistive power. No alcohol in SCO IT'S. Scott BooBloofUU.r.l "M MESH (tarns Peel Right OH Witniels-IP 2 Drops, and the Corn is a "Gonerr When you've got to walk on tho Hides of your Blioe to get awny from those awful corn-pains, tlidrts'a only oao common-senna thing to do. E 7 v "' t i Um 1 He "CHa-lli" Your Cornn Wnnt Swell III V liter. lleNltli-N, They'll Mirlvel, l,iHNea anil J'eel Oil! Put 2 or 3 drops of "ficts-Tt" on the corn- riht nwiiy. Pulii unil inllnm mution will iliHiipriimr, tlifi I'orn will In fill to Hlirlvol from Unit InsUint tin ii It Ioom lis ntul falls rUlit off. T lire's no other corn-reinovor is tli j worlil tint arts like "Ct't.i-It" N new discovery has been tnado In corn-Timivem Rlnee "tietH-lt" wim born. Don't forget thnt fart. "Gct Jl" does nway forever wltli the uh of ciilves that Irritate, bnmlnKes that nmkc a bundle of your toe, pbu toi ti lit half do tho work, knlveH ui,. si Issorn thnt draw blood. Ue "fl I;" no more dlifKliiK or cutting." "fletB-lt" Is KOld everywhere. 4fio bottle, or sent on receipt of prlco lr K, Ijiwrencu fc Co., ChleiiKO, 111. t-. Sold In Ashland and recommended as the world's best corn remedy by J. J. MciNalr, McNalr Bros. laws. He was the only Jackson coua ty representative to draw a chairman ship. Mr. Gore ls a member of the following committees: Capitol build ing and grounds, forestry and con servation, and roads and highway. Thomas Is a member of the committee on fisheries, horticulture and manu facturing. Northwewtern Inventors. The following patents have beea Issuod recently to northwestern cli ents reported by D. Swift & Co., pat. ent lawyers, Washington, D. C: Idaho W. E. Gray, Boise, copy holder attachment for typewriter; G. M. Milner, Buhl, computer; J. H; Richards, Moscow, rotary engine. Washington C. L. Gell, Cath lamet, basket holder; K. W. Hoerne gol, Point Roberts, picture hanger; R. R. Neal, Wilbur, automoblta spring. Oregon W. D. Edwards, Portland, Internal combustion engine; W. A. Gill, Portland, lubricating means fof rotators and their casings. A nlatlnum ledge discovered eart of Roseburg Is causing great Interest M nn it would DUt vilJOr in theh TV C - . 1