1 ASHIAXD TIDINGS Monday, April 80, 1917 rAOK TWO Ashland Tidings Established 1870 Published , HVEIir MONDAY AND THTRSDAT By THE ASHLAND PRINTING COMFY (Incorporated) United States Battleship Louisiana utitifiiiiiti Harrey R. Ling. . .Business Manager Bert R. Greer Editor Ljun Mowat City Editor Offical City and County Paper Issued Monday and Thursday " TELEPHONE 39 subscription rates One Tear $2.00 81i Month 1.00 Three Months 50 Payable in Advance ; No subscription for less than three months. All subscriptions dropped at xplration unless renewal Is received. In ordering changes of the paper always give the old street address or postofflce as well as the new. KOTICE TO ADVERTISERS. News print has doubled In price the last four months. It necessitates as advance in advertising rates, or we will have to quit business. Fol lowing are the advertising rates In the Ashland Tidings after this date. ; There will be no deviation from this rate: ADVERTISING RATES. Display Advertising Single Insertion, each loch. .2Sc One month " " 20c Six months " " 17 c One year " " 16c Reading Notice 6 cents the line straight. Classified Column 1 cent the word first Insertion, cent the word 1 each other insertion. Thirty words or less one month, $1. All written contracts for space al ready In force will be rendered at she old rate until contract expires. Cards of Thanks $1.00. Obituaries 2 Vt cents the line. Fraternal Orders and Societies. Advertising for fraternal orders or octettes charging a regular Initiation fee and dues, no discount. Religious and benevolent orders will be charged for all advertising when an admission or other charge is made 4 "T J lx W i . W 'TP Home Poets UKHT THK r'AVHV'H"S M SINK'S rv tat tiu- u tke wet! tvt. Oh. rih not hitker, thttisw ' la a frulles que! Of th.t which others UU too u nior blct. Thy djty done with pleasurable lost, jTtien leave unto thy father, God. the ret. i "MY dream: (By M. W.) Once upon a noonday fiery I began a little diary Containing countless information on the history of my past. I was writing, half-way singing, Suddenly there came a rlng'ng As of someone harshly banging, Banging hard and banging fast. 'Tis that crazy bill collector, will drive mc mad at last, He will ruin me at last. Imwm Our Banking Facilities THK First National Bank may be made en tirely adaptable to the business and bank ing requirements of Firm, Houeehold and Individual. Among other things, it affords: Chocking and Time Deposit Departments; Safe ' Deposit .Vault; Foreign Exchange, Travelers' Cheques, Telegraphic Transfer of Funds; also Col lection Services. One, or all of these departments, is at yonr service. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ASHLAND J OREGON t.V.CAQTER. President C.H.VAU PEL. Vic Pies, J W.MCOYCa5ifh CLAKK BUSH AWT.CSH. he' Photo by American Tress Association. The Loulsi.mn cost $7,42.".I13 and hns a displacement of lfi.ono tons, being 45H.3 feet In length. Her big guns consist of four twelve-lm-lier ti ml eiylil eluht lncheM. She Ih tunnned by a crew of 85(1 ofllcers Mid nieu and eau go 18 8 kuoU an hour. Here and There Among Our Neighbors j Wllford Allen, editor of the Rogue ', Bullet and shrapnel resistant River Courier, was Tuesday appoint- trench helmets have been adopted ed a member of the state Industrial accident commission, taking the place of Lieutenant-Colonel Carle Alirams, chairman of the commis sion1, who Is new with Oregon troops. for the United States marines, ac cording to word received by Sergeant Bradbury, In charge of the marino recruiting office in Eugene. These "soldiers of the sea" are the first American armed forces to adopt this i But my eyelids came down slowly, That I thought I was going to my home up In the sky, I observed this from his manner jo that rare and radiant heaven that and the countenance he wore, i u far above the sky. Through the window I perceived T lw. , V. .. .v. n.nn ..!:.. 1 A I i uai nil? iiinii nag jfictcu. Soon my courage I did summon. Weakly muttered, "Ye3, I'm comin'." Here I staggered, wcRk and trem blng, Then I opened wide the door. There he stocd, and on my his whole soul he did outpour; Then he threw me to the floor. Long I lay there, gasping, sighing; I Imagined I was dying. Presently I felt him trying To help me once more to my feet. As I looked him In the face, I thought I srw a little trac Of deep regret and fellow feeling. Then he said, "Here, take a seat." Here he wheeled a chair up to me and his order did repeat: "You are weak; here, take a seat." i When offered the commission, Mr at the regular ratea. When no ad- . Allen stated that he would accept .t spitzer-prooi neaagear, ana to ad mission is charged, space to the with the proviso that Colonel Ahrams ' ually prepare for its manufacture amount or nrty lines reading win ne nave acain unon tht cloge of the The new marine corns helmet, with t Bfnk into the ehnlr and muttered. which tho entire corps will be "Thank you, sir," my heart then flut equipped, is a compromise between tered, the French and the British types. It And the last words I heard uttered The hoys of the Eugene high conforms to the size and shape of the ( Were, "Great guns, man, please school recently received their first average head and can be snugly fit-1 don't die." Instruction In military drill, under ted by lne adjustment of a cloth cap ' the state law passed by the last 8es-;'nBlde' 11 Is raade ot 8 s'ngle piece slon of the legislature, making pro- ' chilled steel. Under test the hel vlsion for Its Introduction in the met resisted eight steel-Jacketed bul- mHnrA allliniil aKinu 111 A A At. Monti Tat regular rate. ;ar lf he 80 deslred.-Uogue River The Tidings has a greater circala Couriei1 Jon In Ashland and 1U trade terrt-1 tory than all other local paper com blned. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postofflce aa second-class mall matter. Ashland, Ore., Monday April 80, 10' BIG IKMAXI VOn FUKXISHKD HOlBrX. state of Oregon upon petition by the j'eta at 100 feet, from the Springfield students. Ninety five per cent of the rifle- and brolte only uPon tne Impact Eugene boys signed a petition which ot the nlnln missile. Eugene Regis ter. Already this spring there Is a big demand for 'honest to goodness" mod C. E. McBride, well-known South ern Pacific engineer, will leave here on May 1 for .Pittsburg and other was presented to the board of educa tion two weeks ago. Virtually every boy In the school has announced his rn, furnished houses. Not for no intention or taking part. There were bathtubs and tin bathtubs, but for 1 150 boys who reported for drill Mou- ehlnlng white porcelain. Not for out-j day. Drill will be hold every day, j eastern cities, where he will spend houses In the back yard, but for good ifrom 3 to 4 o'clock, according to the , several week's. He will be accompa etools In neat bathrooms. Not for old, announcement made by Superintend-J nled by Mis. McBride. After visiting dirty, worn carpets and ramshackle jent of Schools W. It. Rutherford. ! at Pittsburg, where they have reh- furnlture but for clean, neat, simply Members of the CoaHt Artillery : tlves, Mr. and Mrs. McBride will go All men applying for enlistment In the United States army and rejected on account of defective teeth will find Eugene dentists ready to remove the bar. Announcement was made by he Lane County Dental Society re cently that teeth of all such persons will be repaired free of charge. Eu gene Registei. Where we all y,o when we die. But soon my heart went beating And I saw the bill man eating AH my most expensive chocolate, Thinking no one else at home. Then I arose and grabbed my cush ioned chair And sent it whirling through the air, And watched It till I saw It land on his fresh and ivory dome, On his fat and hollow topknot which the doctors terms his "dome." Then I heard a voice come roaring To my room, "Hey, can that snor ing." I awoke with such a Jump It sent me reeling to the floor. And as now I sit here blinking. You may be sure that I am thinking That the owner of that shadow that lies floating o'er the floor Will drink more 'cocktail nevermore! The Tidings Is on sale at Poley'e drug store, 17 East Main street. ASHLAND LUMBER COMPANY Dealers In LUMBER Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Roofing Papers, Gordwood, factory Block Wood Mrs. Muggnee of Bakersfleld, Ore., Is In Ashland at present, visiting her aunt, Mrs. A. B. Caven, on B street. Tyrone-iV ARROW format COLLAR CLUETI, FEABOrJY&COk MAKERS Eighteen Prlncvllle boys left last Monday with Corporal Davis, of the recruiting office, for Portland, to en list in the army. Most of these will join the Coast Artillery. This brings Have Tour Clothes Hade at Home John for Clothe Tailoring for Men and nomas John the Tailor Cleaning' and Pressing A Fit or No Sale Nilli-McCall Bid. Room Sii ell-pa'nted, neat houses or from fourl to six rooms. Such houses, so fur nished, will bring $20 per month for the four looms, $25 per month for 1he five rooms and $30 per month for TRKMKXDOrS ATTIt ACTION'. The great thrillers contracted by thn rnundnn nnsnrltlnn Insure the lile- the six rooms. Somebody had better j , ... . . ..,,j I Rest wild west show ever pulled off negin remodeling aim cleaning up me old houses and yards and neatly fur fi'sh their rent property. If they do I.a iLNnnavtit nrltl lin itAAIinlfirl Vl lo ,,.w ' "'" furl the biggest flag on the Pacific year wtlh good paying tenants Al- C0Mtth,rt flve ,)V Beventy.five fPPt ready more than a dozen Inqu rles the ,as the patrIo(lfl gomp of jiasr ween nave neeii inuno ov me i Ings office for such houses. As one man put It: "I have been shown a on the coast. Now a much bigger and ; better nhow than last year Is assured. I The Hy-iu 'He-he committee will un- fialf dozen houses they call them furnished houses but some of thm re hardly fit for pigsties. I want an honest to Cod furnished housr'V ,id am willing to pay for It and take It all summer." One hundred thousand dollars fhould be spent th's year In Ashland for new paint, neat furniture, bath tubs and modern remodeling. I the b'ggest and best bands on the I const will furnish mus'c, the big pa 'rnde will be a dream, and Ashland I will entertain 100,000 people din ing July 3, and 5. The usually well-informed Ashland ! Tidings made an erroneous statement in its issue of the 6th Inst., when it placed the total number of men em ployed by the Weed Lumber Com pany at GOO. The company now has more than 1,200 men In Its employ, neighbor. Weed Lender. - DESTROY THE POISON OAK. The poison oak senson Is on. Al ready some citizens have been 'nfeot d. It Is highly essential that a'l poison oak be destroyed this spring. Every citizen should mnke It h's busi ness to destroy all sueh shrubs on bis premises. It will never do to allow the danger to thrrntr-n tourists com ing here. Many of them do not know the plant whn they see It. and Ash land should protect the visitor by de troy'ng every snrlg of It. Every citi len should get busy with his grubbing Iioe. LAD IKS ARE LIVE ONES. ' PARK WORK PROGRESSING. James Oalbreath is doing fine work In the park, under direction of the nark board. He has thousands of flower plants In the hotbeds, has about finished setting out the new ahrubbery lately purchased, and the lrhole park is assuming a spick and apan appearance. Lithla park w!'l certainly be a bemity epot a?ain th's jyear. Aga'n the women of Ashland have demonstrated their successful meth ods In pulling off the big Country Store feature for the Red Cross bene fit. The women turn out en masse, and work work harmoniously and effectively. That's the reason they never fn'l. We have never heard It said of an Ashland woman that she would not work on 'a committee be cause some other Ashland woman was on the same committee. Snlem, Ore Taxes totaling $288, "3X have been paid into the state treasury since the first of the month, Deputy Treasurer Ryan has an nounced, and It U expected that huge sums will be paid In this week, for the stale tax Is due on May 1. Tilla mook county has the distinction of being the first to pny the first half of Its tax. FINISH JHK KOI'XT AIN. The stops lending from the Riitlr Perozzl fountain to Granite street should be finished th's spring We do not know whether It Is the business of the donors or the park board to do It. The unfinished condition of tho fountain detracts fifty per cent from 'ts art'stlc beauty. The mall boats started operations on the Upper Lake Monday for the first time this year, and carried 22 passengers the first day and 36 the next. Most of them are going to the lumber camps. Klaratth Falls Her ald. Tho Southern Oregon Medical As sociation will hold Its annual meet'ng In Grants Pass on May S. H 1s as sumed that the mere presence of the august body will be sufficient to exor cise the cpldem'c of measles and all other disorders. furnished houses for light honsekeep-; Corps, Oregon National Guard, who;to Minneapolis, where they will at-; '"r "u","c' "u,u 1 lu j r . . . . I. j .1.. i ,..,- forty. i a. InB- With a few pretty flowers, and are siuaeuis in me ihkii scnuoi, are ii-nu me niiiimu convention or snrin no tin cans, In the front yard. Fori acting as officers. Eugene Guard. !ers. They will go erst via the south ern route and will return by way of Portland, Spoknne and Seattle. Mr. and Mrs. McBrldo are looking ahead to a very enjoyable trip. Roseburg Review. The Eugene Fruitgrowers' Associa tion cannery commenced operations Wednesday with ftprospect of a con tinuous run until fall. Large quanti ties of rhubarb have been delivered by growers, and this crop and broc coli are expected to supply the neces sary raw material until gooseberries are available. The Algoma Lumber Company's logging camp resembles a beehive of Industry. iN'ew railroads are being built, new shacks are being put up, and preparations are being made to The Tlrst National Bank of Union, to aid tho farmers End stock growers near there, has purchased a number of carloads of hay which It is selling out to those who need it. In small lots, at the same price as it cost. The snow is entirely gone there now and cattle and sheep are being turned out on the grass, wh'ch is getting green fast. Seventy per cent of the male stu dents of Albany College have joined the United States army or navy since tho formal declaration of war against Germany. This, It is believed, is the highest percentage of enlistment from any university or college in the United States. Prior to tho opening of hostilities thirty young Ren were enrolled at the college. Of this num ber twenty-one have enlisted. Al bany Democrat. I Frank Jordan is going some on the new Chan Inn mi a ImMillng. The frame work for the large structure Is nearly ; make this the biggest year since the completed and the concrete Is beln camp started Sity five men are em poured. There Is some work attached ! ployed now, and this number is con- to building concrete walls for a struc turo 190 feet In Its greatest diameter but the whole structure must be com pleted by July 10, the opening Chau- stantly being increased. When log g'ng operations commence in earnest the camp will employ 150 men. A new donkey engine, a Seattle of the i and supplies, thereby opening navlga taunua day, and It will be ready for latest type, will arrive In a few days, tlon on the lake. Klamath Falls the big show. I Klamath Falls Herald. I Herald. Up to noon Monday between 170 and 175 filings had been made at the local United States Reclamation Serv ice off'ce on the Tule Lake lands, and It Is expected that the total number will reach In the neighborhood of 180 for both the Oregon and California land tracts. Klamath FallS Herald, j The Pelican Bey Lumlier Company started operations today In the lum ber camp on Upper Klamath Lake, i and although the full force Is not on hnnd, every effort Is being made by . the company to secure the 300 hands j necessary as soon as possible. The j steamer Klamath, belonging to the company, forced her way through the ice last Saturday with a load of oil ?j Comply With the Law AND USE Printed Butter Wrappers ACCORDING to the ruling of the Oregon Dairy and Food Commission all dairy butter sold or exposed for sale in this state must be wrapped in butter paper upon which is printed the word "Oregon Dairy Butter, 16 (or 32) ounces full weight," with the name and address of the maker. To enable patrons of the Tidings to easily comply with this ruling this office has put in a supply of the standard sizes of butter paper and will print it in lota of 100 sheets and up ward and deliver it by parcels post at the fol lowing prices; 100 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces $1.50 250 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces $2.15 500 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces $3.25 Send your orders to us by mail accompan ied by the price of the paper ind it will be promptly forwarded to you by parcel post, prepaid. We use the bpst butter paper obtainable, and our workmanship is of the best. Let us have your order and you will not regret it. Ashland Tiding's Ashland, Oregon