- In ASHLAND TWXSQ9 Thnrsdsy, May 2t, I BIT TAGS TWO Ashland Established 1870 Published EVERT MONDAY AND THURSDAY By THE ASHLAVD PRIXTIXG COMP'Y (Incorporated) Harvey R. Ling. . .Business Manager i v. n f ' hnirnF lH'rv IV. unrr JUJV' j Lynn Mowat City Editor Offical City and County Paper TELEPHONE 39 SUBSCRIPTION RATES ' j ese, Cninese, Italians, Germans, Eng- On Year 12.00 j jlgll Americans, and men of any oth- 8ix Months sSler nationality who are of the desig- Tbree Months 60, ' Payable in Advance In&KiA ages, must register. Aliens w m7wI7TT.; ,,. will nt be drafted for war duty, of No subscription for less than three 1 months. All subscriptions dropped at j course, but a complete record of them xpiratlon unless renewal Is received, i Is desired. In ordering changes of the paper 1 Who Is Exempt No male resident always give the old street address or 1 between the ages of 21 and 30 years, postofflce as well as the new. ADVERTISING RATES. . tHsplay Advertising Single Insertion, each Inch.. 2 5c Six months.... " " 20c ' One year " " 17V4o Heading Notice 5 cents the line straight Classified Column 1 cent the word first Insertion, cent the word each other insertion. Thirty words or less one month, f 1. Cards of Thanks $1.00. ' Obituaries 2 V4 cents the line. Fraternal Orders and Societies. Advertising for fraternal orders or societies charging a regular initiation lee and dues, no discount. Religious and benevolent orders will be aharged for all advertising when an admission or other charge Is made, at the regular rates. When no ad mission is charged, space to the amount of fifty lines reading will be allowed without charge. All addi tional at regular rates. The Tidings has a greater circula tion in Ashland and Its trade terri lory than all other local papers com bined. Entered at tho Ashland, Oregon, Postofflce as second-class mall mat ter. Ashland, Ore., Thursdny, May 24, '17 THE TRAVELERS' LUNCHEON Among the other economy meas ures planned in connection with the war, Is the proposal that dining cars be left oft railroad trains. It is planned to reduce pas3enger trains as much as possible so as not to in terfere with freight traffic. To traveling people, who are used to certain regulation comforts, this .m .nA T la o vilagaiirA tft Pflt will. fcv uaiu. v 10 " , - " In a leisurely fashion In a dining car while the country goes whirling by. But people with simple tastes will not suffer greatly If they have aubstantlal box lunches. A few years ago It was considered bad form and a stingy economy to eat a picnic lunch on a train. The high cost of restaurant service has changed that feeling. Maintaining a dining room on the railroad train Is a costly and luxurious plan, and trav elers have to pay well fop the privil ege, as well as rewarding the waiters handsomely. Probably most of these dining cars are not profitable, and the railroads would no doubt be glad to cut them off. BIG OOIiMB IS CHAUFFEUR OF MASTER'S MOTOR CAR Gear shifting, of course, Is outside .the limits of possibility for him, but xcept for this operation a big collie, owned by a Poughkeepsle, N. Y., au tomobile dealer, Is able to drive a notor car. Everybody along auto row Jn New York city, was completely dumfounded not long ago when the dog acted as chauffeur for bis mas ter. While weaving in and out through Broadway's traffic, however, the owner had an auxiliary control at hand to help the animal out of tight places and avoid the danger of a mishap. But on ordinary occasions irhen congested streets do not have to be negotiated the collie drives along ilke a man, turning corners and avoiding other vehicles with surpris ing facility. On such rides his mas ter sits beside him, or in the ton seau behind. On a track, where the chance of accident is eliminated the dog drives alone with nobody In the car to help him. No special device la fixed to the steering wheel to as sist him. From the June popular Mechanics magazine. The national forests of Alaska are elf-snpportlng. For the fiscal year 1916 their receipts were nearly 15,000 greater than the expenditures necessary to looking after them. Tidings IMPORTANT FACTS TO REMEM BER ABOUT THE WAR CEXSIS. (Cut this out and put It where you lean find it.) ! War Poneim Tinv Tupsdav. June , , b PreBldent Wilson In his official proclamation. Who Must Register Every male resident between the ages of 21 and 30 years, inclusive. This Includes I aliens as well as Americans. Japan- inclusive, is exempt from registering, 'those to be exempted from military service will be determined later, but first all must register. Where to Register Registration must be made in the home precinct of the man registering. Register at your regular voting place. Hours for Registration Booths at regular voting places in each precinct will be open on War Census Day from 7 o'clock a. m. to 9 o'clock p. m. Don't wait until the last moment. Register early. Registration of Absentees If you find you will be unavoidably absent from your home precinct on War Cen sus Day, you should apply at the earliest possible date to the county clerk of the county in which you may be at the time, whether in Oregon or elsewhere, who will fill out your reg istration card. He will then give you the card, which you must mail to the registrar of your home precinct, In care of the sheriff of your home coun ty, in time to reach the registrar by War Census Day. If you live in Port land, or a city of over 300,000 popu lation In another state, mall the card to the registrar in care of the mayor. ( But remember, the burden of hav ing your card reach the registrar of your home precinct by War Census Day Is on YOU. Registration of the Sick Men of military age who are too ill to go to the vfltlng booth to register must send-a competent person before War Census Day to the county clerk to ex plain tne ciroumsiauueB, uuu ociiuio lngtructlong from the federat regula- . . ... plain the circumstances, and secure Hons which these officials will re ceive from the government. Penalties The penalty for falling to appear to reglstei, or for giving false, misleading or Incorrect ao- Rwnrs. Is IMPRSONMENT. There is no alternative of a fine. Big Crew Busy On Forest Phones Twenty men in - the government forest service are at work putting the trails and telephones in shape for the coming season. There are 890 miles In trails and 300 miles in telephone lines in the Crater lake forests. The forest service has a special insulator on their telephone lines which allows the line to fall to the ground without breaking when trees over-weighted by snow crash into it. Three miles are down now on the line to Odessa, but telephone service Is still main tained by calling In at certain hours during the day. The line is ground ed in so many places that the bells will not ring, but the voice is trans mitted perfectly. While the person who writes the woman's page in the newspapers Is frequently a black browed man smoking a clay pipe, the one who writes the garden hints Is probably a lily faced girl who knows all about embroidery but never touched a hoe. Phone news items to the Tidings. "Contour "aim Arrow F O R M - F IT COLLAR ClPlTT,HAOPy hr CQ.IM. JMakrrf 1 1 I I I 1 1 I M I I t M M 1 1 I I I I I I I I I I I t I t t f t t t ' ' I Here and There Among Our Neighbors j To Twohy Bros, of Portland has been awarded a contract for Immedi ate construction of 300 freight cars for the Southern Pacific. Grants Pasa Courier; Twelve re cruits from Brookings left last night for Portland, having enlisted In the government service. They were John W. Judy, Everett E. Daniel, Harold C. Welch,, Edward Wigney, Carl Jones, William Chllders, Samuel Mor rill, John Irvln, Herbert Kentner, Jr., William P. Stwart, Walter L. White and Homer L. Davis.. Albany Democrat: A new sawmill started operations Friday In Benton county at Galloway station, nine miles northeast of Albany. The mill Is owned by the J. Al Pattlson company of Portland and is employed In cut ting hardwood lumber. Oak is being worked on at present. A logging crew had been busy for three weeks prior to the opening of the mill. The Philomath Roundup Associa tion, alive to the spirit of the hour, has determined that 10 per cent of the' gate receipts at the great three day tournament shall go to the Red Cross Association. As the receipts last year reached about $25,000, this concession to patriotism means con siderable and is characteristic of the free-hearted men who are managing the big show. Astorlan. Through a deal consum mated this week, Franz Kankkonen has purchased through the Astoria Land Company 150 feet of water frontage in Taylor's Astoria, just south of the tannery, upon which will be erected an up-to-date building which will be used for the manufac ture of rubber cement, for which there Is a steadily increasing demand in this country. Astorlan: Monday the first car load of machinery for the new paper mill now under course of construc tion on Youngs Ray was received at the port docks and Is being trans ferred to a barge on which It will be conveyed to the site of the plant near the McEachern shipyards. The machinery which has been expected here for several months, and which when intsalled at the plant of the Astoria Flouring Mill Company will give that establishment double Us present dally capacity of 600 barrels, has arrived. The work of installing it Is now in progress. New Hand Laundry A St., next to Wah Chung. Wa Lee, Prop. Phone 334-R. We do all kinds of laundry work. Reasonablo prices Work called for and delivered. Ashland. "Nearest to everything" HOTEL MANX Powell St., atO'Farrell San Francisco In the heart of the business, shopping and theatre district. Running distilled ice water in every room. VUI IUIIINIVUIUU ,, lobby,fineservice,and j iiomeiiKB restaurant will attract you. European Plan rates $1.00 up. imH"-H'mf 1 1 Attention t ( m m Management p W.B. James K V5) i A Six-Weeks' Teachers' Training and Review 1 I Preparatory to taking the T nn nA be conducted by Mrs. Evelyn L Walker I Superintendent of the Teachers' Training and Methods department of the Central Point High School, at the Medford Commercial lollege T 31 North Grape street, Medford, Oregon, from Monday! May 28, includ X ing Saturdays to June 30, 1917. Tuition for course f 10, or $2 a week. For further details, phone 15-L, write or call at the office of the Medford Commercial College (MIIIIIH IIIIIIMIIIIHIItltllMIII Hf Ten thousand certificates of award for punctuality in attending school, in neither being absent or tardy dur ing the year, are being sent out by State Superintendent of Public In. structlon Churchill to the various county school superintendents. The certificates of award are signed by Superintendent Churchill, and are to be signed by the county school super intendent and the teacher of the school where the award Is given. Medford Sun: Mark Austin, gen eral field superintendent for the 13 sugar mills of the Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, who left last night for Salt Lake City, after a careful examina tion of the beets In this territory, said that the beets look better, further advanced and more thrifty here than in any of the fields of the company at that time. lie Is Immensely pleased with the southern Oregon country as a sugar beet district. Marshfield Record: The bankers' convention to be held In Marshfield on the 8th and 9th of June is already declared to be so well in hand it will be a big feature of the summer on Coos Bay. The local committee of bankers who sent out the Inquiries about how many are coming have re ceived to this date acceptances from about one third of the membership, and 70 notifications have reached here that the bankers are coming. Lake County Examiner: Hay sold for $6 per ton near Connley last week and this valley is perhaps the best supplied with forage of any section of Oregon. That the men who run stock in Lake and Crook counties from now on can figure northern Lake county and "The Desert" as their best bet when the other portions of the county are short of hay goes without saying. Low priced hay means much when the snow is deep and one is far from a haystack out on tho range and a big loss staring him in the face. Eugene Register: There will be a good majority for the $6,000,000 road bonds when the ballots are counted on the night of June 4, Is the opinion of E. J. Adams, state highway commissioner, who was in Eugene yesterday for a short time, after a trip through the state. He was on his way to Creswell for a joint debate with C. E. Ppence, state grange masted, on the bond question. Mr1.. Adams excepts Lane, Baker, Linn and Curry counties when he makes the statement that every county In the state Is expected to give the bonds a majority vote, although he predicts than In some of the other counties the vote will be exceedingly close. Marshfield, Ore. The Oregon & California Lumber Company of Brookings has shipped the first car eo of lumber for 1917, amounting to about 400,000 feet. The consignment was transported by the steam schoon er Quinault, which loaded with the cable apparatus with which all sup plies have been landed at Brookings. The dock being constructed at Brook ings is under way and will be finished within the enxt two months, it is stated. The company's new vessel has not received its engines, which were shipped from Norway some time since, and therefore will not be In commission for some time. Pendleton. Ore. The herd of 16 goats bought last year by the Pendla ton Roundup as a possible attraction has proved to be a profitable invest ment, regardless of the fact that they were dropped from the program of the show last year. They were to be featured in a goat-roping act, but It was found that the act would be too slow to fit In well. The herd was kept, however, and has been brows ing all winter on the Rounaup grounds. They were sheared this '! HI' Teachers I H 1 1 1 Course Examinations for Primary, .man sartifisntaa will H IT may be . Military, Agriculture, Munitions, Supplies, or Finances. BUT, in addition to these, IT SHOULD be THRIFT the prac-, tice of Thoughtful Buying, Practical Using and Carelul Saving. No matter who you are, you want Peace, Propperity and Happiness. Then do your share for mankind. The banK account systematizes spending and regulates saving. Open a Thrift Ac count NOW. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK ASHLAND 2T OREGON .V.CATER..PResiOENT J.W.McCOYCa;hihi week and each yielded a fine fleece. Since mohair is worth 60 cents a pound, the Roundup directors are well pleased. Roseburg Review The members of the camp ground committee of the Roseburg Merchants' association today connected up the electric plates and made other- arrangements pre paratory to opening the grounds for the season of 1917. Reports receiv ed from San Francisco and other California cities indicate that more tourists will visit Roseburg during the coming summer than ever be fore. The camp grounds have been put in the best of condition and will probably be patronized by hundreds of tourists during the season. Last year the merchants found that the grounds were a great success and brought considerable transient money Into the city. Twelve Ships To' Be Built in Oregon Contracts for 14 wooden ships to cost in the neighborhood of f 300,,000 each were let on the Pacific coast last Thursday, 12 of them going to Oregon yards and Involving an ex penditure of about 16,000,000 in Ore gon alone. Six will be built by the Peninsula Shipbuilding Company of Portland, four by the Coast Shiubullding Com pany of Portland, two by the C. A. Smith Lumber Company of Coos Bay, and two by the Sandstrom Company of Seattle. Died. S. P. Moss died at Us home in Lakeview last Thursday, aged 77 years. He was a native of Illinois and a pioneer of Lake county. His funeral was held on Saturday, Inter ment being In the Odd Fe'lows' ceme tery at Lakeview. The deceased was a banker and landowner, his holdings of realty in the Chewaucan valley be ign 5,000 acres. His daughter, the wife of City Attorney W. J. Moore of Ashland, is in Lakeview, and Mr. Moore left for that vicinity on Satur day night, going by the way of Sac ramento and Reno. Mr. Moss leaves a widow and seven children. . Phone news items to the Tidings NOW! is the time Why? There is a steady upward trend of the lumber market. The mills are running day and night and cannot keep up with their or ders. The wooden ships which the U. S. is building will take mil lions of feet. There are many indications that lumber will go high er and that it will remain so. We believe that lumber is cheaper ;a Ashland today than it will be for several years. Labor Is getting scarcer from day to day. You will save money both on material and on labor by building now rather than in the fall. We have on hand about half a car of 24 s suitable for general rough work, which we will close ont at $10 per M Carson-Fowler Lhr. Co. "In the Heart of Town" Your "Bit' C.H.VAUPEX.ViciDiiS. CLARK BUSH Asst. Cask Bend The Brooks Scanlon Lum ber Company Is to seed many acres. Development of logged-off lands may result In big aid to stock-carrying for owners. Practically all land cut over by the company in its operations last year-, amounting to 2,000 acres, i3 being fenced, and experiments with grass seeds recommended by County Agriculturalist Blanchard made on a selected section. Automatic Protection all the way mm-- Cclurahia River Route ask Parallels America's Great Highway Joint Wnt and East wKh Boukranl of Steel PORTLAND CITY OFFICE THIRD and WASHINGTON Wm. McMtmajr, G. P. A., Portland BUILD to r -J,tJdt,lij. Mi.,,;.Ma