Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1917)
. Thursday, December 6, 1017 ASHLAND TIDINGS PAGE HKVWH TIDINGS CLASSIFIED ADS Classified Rates: One cent per word, first Insertion; cent per word lor each Insertion thereafter; 80 words or less $1 per month. No advertise ment inserted for less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order xcept to parties having ledger accounts with the office. PROFESSIONAL DR. 3. JT. EMMENS Physician and surgeon. Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses supr piled. Oculist and aurlst for S. P. R. R. Offices, M. F. and H. Bldg., opposite postofflce, Medford, Ore. Phone 687. 21-tf DR. ERNEST A. WOOD Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Office hours, 10 to 12 and 2 to 6. Bwedenburg Bldg., Ash land, Ore. 73-tf GEO. T. WATSON, Painter and Pa perhanger. Phone 202-R. 166 Ohio street. -tf CONTRACTING AND BUILDING Frank Jordan, general contracting. New and old work; cement walks, cemetery coping, brick, cement, woodwork, lathing and plastering, cobblestone and general ulldlng contracts. BIIL POSTER Will Stennett, 116 Factory street. Bill posting and distributing. 54-tf THE JOHNSTONES CURE Hydro pathic treatments for chronic cases. 31 Gresham street. 41-tf 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 meetings of the club will be held on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at 2:30 p. m., at the Auxiliary Hall. B. D. BRIGGS, Attorney-at-Law. Pioneer Block, Ashland. FOR RENT . FOR RENT Good four-room house with good outbuildings and chick en yard, on Granite street above the auto camp ground. This Is the old Johnson place. $5 per month for the winter. Inquire of Bert R. Greer at the Tidings office. S -tf FOR RENT Fair six-room house on Granite street, above auto camp ground. $5 per month for the winter. Inquire of Bert R. Greer at the Tidings office. 89-tf 1OR RENT Two nicely furnished sunny rooms. Inquire 614 Boule vard or phone 408-R. 62-tf WANTED WANTED Man with team" to cut and haul 500 cords wood. Drag aw can be arranged. 115 Granite street. -tf DEPOT HOTEL wants chickens. Phone 18. 54-3t FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE Good as new used Chev rolet. Weldon Zundel, Medford. at the Alco. . 44-tf OLD PAPERS FOR SALE at the Tid ings office. Twenty-five for B cents. 102 tf EVERBEARING Strawberry Plants Peerless and Progressive, 35c and 25o dozen. Plant now and have fine berries next summer. J. L. Harner, 303 Oak St. 49-lmo. FOlTsALE Good family cow; Jer sey. Phone 11-F-a. a4-5 FOR SALE A few nice weanling pigs. Inquire Geo. Irwin, 48 Lau rel. 60-tf FOR SALE CHEAP One Tieavy pick plow, suitable for heavy rock ditch ing. Inqulro at the Tidings office. FOR SALE Twelve White Orping ton pullets, laying. C. E. Davis, Talent. Phone 6-F-3. 56-3 FOR SALE HEAL ESTATE FOR SALE My residence and 736 ncres Alberta Land. W. A. Tur ner, 159 North Main. 56-tt FOR SALE Property on Oak street, 95x175 feet, one-half block from Hotel Austin. Will divide lot 47xl75 or 95x87 feet. Call at 154 Oak street. 40-tf 40 IRRIGATED ACRES, $3,500. This improved farm in fertile Illinois valley Is probably the best buy in southern Oregon this fall. Terms If desired. Frank O. Mee ker, Talent, Ore. 53-1 mo. FOR SALE BY OWNER Large lot with small house on Meade street, Ashland, Ore. Price $150. War rantee deed and abstract. Address Mark Hebron, Boise City, Okla. 52-lmo. FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE for land or other property in southern Oregon or northern California, 133 acres two miles south of Eugene depot; well fenced with woven wire; 45 acres in cultivation; good roads. Also fine high residence site of ; three and one-third acres wltn 4 beautiful trees, near car line, and ' three lots near Eugene high school. H. C. Galey, 670 Fairvlew street. Phone 431-J. 61-lmo. FOR SALE OR TRADE Eighty acres, near Rogue river, uooa road, on telephone line,, near school. Good wood proposition. Address-A. C. W., care Tidings. 49-lmo. .WHAT HAVE YOU in or near Rose burg, Ore., In exchange for Ash land Improved"? Mrs. A. Van Duyn, Jtoseburg, Ore. '5 6-1 mo. FOR SALE LIVESTOCK FOR' SALE, CHEAP A team with harness. For further particulars address E, G.. care Tidings. 15-tf LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE. By virtue of an (execution In foreclos ure and order of sale duly issued out of and under the seal of the Circuit Court for the State of Ore gon for Jackson County, dated No vember 8th, 1917, in a certain suit therein, wherein Helen O. Dillon, as plaintiff, recovered Judgment and decree against H. G. Stoeck man and Anna J. Stoeckman, de fendants, for the sum of $2,711.00 with Interest at 9 per cent from Octoher 3rd, 1917, and $260.00 attorney's fees and $191.71 paid for taxes, and $16.00 costs, which Judgment was enrolled and docket ed in said Court Octobar 27th, 1917. Notice Is hereby given 'bat, pur suant to the terms of said execu tion. I will on December 15th, 19171, at 10 o'clock a. m., at the front door ot the Courthouse In the City of Jacksonville, Jackson County, Oregon, offer for sale and sell at public auction for cash. to the highest bidder, to satisfy said Judgment, within the costs of this sale, subject to redemption as pro vided by law, all of the rleht. title and Interest that H. G. Stoeckman and Anna J. Stoeckman Jointly or Individually had on June 3rd, 1912, or have since acquired or now have in and to the following described property, situated in Jackson County, State of Oregon, to-wlt: All of lots numbered Nineteen (19), Twenty (20) and Twenty one (21) of Parker Place, a sub division of Lot 4 in Block 3 of Barr's Addition to the town (now city) of Medford, Jackson County, Oregon, according to the official plats thereof, now of record. Dated at Jacksonville, Oregon, November 8th. 1917. RALPH G. JENNINGS. Sheriff of Jackson County, Ore. . By Leslie W. Stansell, Deputy. 61-6t-Thur. INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO. Leave Ashland for Medford, Talent and Phoenix dally except Sunday at 9:00 a. m. and 1:00, 4:00 and 6:15 p.m. Also on Saturday night at 6:30. Sundays leave at 9:00 a. m., 12:30. 4:30 and 6:30 p. m. Leave Medford for Ashland dally ex cept Sunday at 8:00 a. m. and 1:00, 4:00 and 5:15 p. m. Also on Sat urday night at 10:15. On Sundays 10:30 a. m., 1:30, 6:30 and 9:30 P. m. Fare between Medford and Ashland. SO cents. Round trip 50 cents. Home The best place on earth. Now Is your time to buy a home. Put your savings into a home and have some thing, that every family should strive to own. With the price of lumber and other building supplies climbing, the value of the home investment which can be made today is very much enhenctJ. Good homes all ready to move Into, at much less than what, you could possibly build for, if you owned the land. Good reasons for selling. Seven-room well-built house, good conditiqn, large plot of ground, good .location, close in, $2',700. Five-room house, hard finished. near high school, $800. House and lot in Nob Hill addition, $700. ; Billings Agency Real Estate and Real Insurance. Ashland Transfer & Storage Co. J C. F. Bates, Proprietor Wood, "Peacock" and Rock Springs Coal and Cement PHONE 117 Office 99 Oak Street, Ware house track near depot. Ashland, Oregon AMERICAN The heaviest Non Skid Tire on the -Market for the price Here and There Among Our Neighbors Pete and Paul Miller, sons of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Miller, are home on a 6hort furlough from Bremerton navy yards. The boys, with 68 oth ers, were recently transferred from the battleship Oregon, at San Fran cisco, to Bremerton, where they will form the gun crews on tho trans ports Great Northern and Northern Pacific, the big Hill liners which are being transformed from palatial pas senger ships to war transports. The Northern Pacific was just put In dry dock the other day and will not be ready for service until February or March. Big guns are being mounted on the boat. Pete and Paul Miller have qualified as first-class seamen and are gunpolnters and trainers. They are looking forward to their sea ventures. Albany Democrat Rev. E. O. Ballls, former pastor of the Presbyterian church of this city, writes that he Is on his way to France as a Y. M. C. A. secretary with the American expeditionary forces. He says he has never forgotten the kind people of Cottage Grove, and If any wish to write him. his address will be 31 Avenue Montaigne, Paris, France. Rev. Ballls was Just about to accept the pastorate at Enumelaw, Wash., when he received the call to go to France. Cottage Grove Senti nel. A letter from O. D. Matthews of thU city, who left last week to Join the 20th engineers lumbering bat talion, conveys the Information that he has passed his examinations suc cessfully, and that the regiment will soon leave for the front. The letter also states that W. J. Johnson of this city has enlisted as a private in this branch of the service. Klamath Falls Herald. M. G. Brown, alias Kelly, holding membership under the latter" name in the I. W. W., and Geraldo Revello, an Italian, both suspected of being slackers who had avoided the mili tary registration for the draft and who had been held In the Douglas county jail pending proof to the con trary, we're able tpday to both prove to the officers that they had duly registered for military service, and wera both given their liberty. Brown had registered at Morris, 111., while the Italian produced evidence that he had made registration before the authorities in San Francisco He announces his Intention of enlisting in the army voluntarily. The name assumed by Brown in which he en rolled in the I. W. W. that of Kelly is supposed to have been for cam ouflage purposes, and. it Is held, in dicates that the man Is not entirely depraved, as he still had the grace not to use his real name in connec tion with his membership in that or ganization. Roseburg Review. Coos Bay has been gctts a sam ple of old times when mail was brought by stage and packhorse over the mountains and when communica tion was cut off for days at a time during the winter season. In spite of the new railroad and new tele phone and telegraph lines, this local ity was entirely isolated on Thanks giving day. The main trouble was due to a big slide on the railroad which prevented the train from get ting here and in consequence held up, the mail. The heavy rainfall of the past few days also made wire trou ble. The Western Union and tele phone wires along the railroad track were broken down by slides and there was trouble at other points. Marshfleld Evening Record, Shipping statistics compiled by Deputy Collector Haddix show that 21 vessels loaded at the lower Colum bia river mills during the month of November and their combined car goes amounted to 16,727,601 feet of lumber, the smallest shipment in sev eral months. Twenty of these ves r Ravt Tour Clothes Made at Bom Joha John the Tailor A Fit Cleaning" at rreMiaf See 'em at Eastern Supply Co. sels carrying 16,128,000 feet went to California points, while one laden with 599,601 feet of lumber Is en route to Australia. During the same period 10 vessels loaded 10,183,073 feet at the up-river mills, making a total of 26,910.674 feet of lumber that was shipped from the Columbia river in cargoes within the past 30 days. The miscellaneous shipments from Astoria by water during the month include 472 tons of flour, 12,- 018 cases of salmon and 1,000 cases of cranberries. The lumber product shipments comprise 8,174 bundles of shooks and 50,000 shingles, all of which went to California. Morning Astorlan. Roy Beck, who is well known in Klamath Falls, had a narrow escape from death a week ago today, accord ing to an article appearing In the Band Press. Falling three stories from a building on which he was working, with a wheelbarrow full of brick, which covered him as he struck the ground, he miraculously escaped death. After having his various bruises attended to at the hospital, he is now able to be around again. The ore haulers from the Blue Ledge mines went on strike this week as a protest against a cut of $2.50 a ton In the price of transporting ore from the mines to the railroad at this city. The haulers assert that with the advent of the rainy season the price for hauling should be raised rather than lowered. Jacksonville Poet. The body of Alma Hunt, the 16 year-bid young man who was drown ed Thanksgiving day, has not yet been recovered. The circumstances under which the youth lost his life were, particularly sad and unusual. With two others he went to New creek to spear salmon. The creek flows directly into the ocean. The water is not of such great depth, but the place is treacherous. When the three boys were apparently in safe water a great wave dashed in from the ocean." All three of the boys were thrown off their feet. Two of :. WALL Reliable, fCTl rnn.,.i..ni 4 AX Office Phone 35 Res. 166 Drivers Trips Anywhere SERVICE Stand at Eastcrling'g Restaurant W. P. Brooks Piano Tuning and Repairing Call Kohagen, Ashland, or Palmer Piano Place, Medford. .49-lmo. C. V. BEELER TAXI S. SUKVICE J Seven Passenger Hudson Office Phone 140 Kes. 432 K Reliable Driver. Trips anywhere. Stand at Alnult & Pracht Billiard Parlor C. A. CHAPMAN, Agent Singer Sewing Machines Baldwin Pianos Cleaning-Repairing. At Provost Hardware 60-lmo. Howards Auto Service Two seven-passenger cars. Special attention given to calling and sight seeing parties. Stand at Hotel Aus tin. RESIDENCE Phone 408-R Reliable WfhtS27,L Taxi Service Any Stud at fAwarAa f.ric07 PrnriC Tailoring" for Men and Womta for Clothss or No Sale 81 OaU Street AUTO Buy American Tires of us and Save Money Big BICYCLE SPECIALS $28.00 for a New $35.00 Bike $10.00 for a good 2nd hand Wheel $12.50 for a good 2nd hand Wheel Gel the boy a Bike for Xmas. Pick 'em out now Eastern Supply Co. Big Concrete Building Opposite Public Library, Ashland them gained a footing and got out all right, hut the Hunt boy, helm; carried out by the receding water, was swallowed up and disappeared before any aid could be given him. The companions were helpless to at tempt any reocue and the young mar. was seen no more. Marshfleld Her ald. After nine months in tho navy and a trip of 20,000 miles, George C. Col- ton, university student, says that the nawy service Is about as good aa any one can get, and that the Friday the 13th on which he enlisted was a lucky day for him. "It's a great life," he declares. Colton, who has just returned from South America, where he has been for some time, go ing as far south as Peru, spent the day here Saturday visiting with his fraternity brothers at the Sigma Nu house and with his many other Eu gene friends. He is on his way home to Portland to enjoy a two weeks' furlough with his parents while waiting to he transferred to the avia tion branch of the sea service,, in Cost Is Little More io go East through Attractions offered: Sacred summits of Siskiyous, Mt. Shasta, San Francisco, the cosmopolitan, the Old Missions, Del Monte, Santa Barbara, 100 miles along the seashore, Los Angelas, Sunn)' Southern Cali fornia, the Apache Trail, and the border camps. Stopovers permitted at various places. 4 Trains a Day from Portland Inquire nt any S. P. agency or address John M. Scott, (iimrnl Passucr Agent Portland, Oregon SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES trwWMMM'iiTiiiiitiMiiii' Ji' a irFT-iiiir TTiiJiTt nmwrini win Stories upon Stories with high ideals 12 Glorious Serials or Group Storie9 and 250 Shorter Stories and every one with "lift" in it. TheYmtfts Companion Indispensable In quality, lavish In quantity no other publication in the world like it. THE 1918 PROGRAMME Includes the ablest Editorials written, Articles by the world's brightest men and acknowledged authorities, Current Events, Nature and Sdence, Family Page, Boys' Page, Girls' Pae, Children a Page, Doctor's Corner and constant run of the world's choicest fun. 52 Issues a Year-not 12-$2.00 TUB YOUTH'S COMPANION, BOSTON, MASS. CUT THIS OUT 8eod tUi coupon (or U oim i it nittvo ill 2. All remaining 1917 WseRlj Issues FREE. 3. The Companion Horn Calendar for 1918. SUBSCRIPTIONS RECEIVED AT THIS OFFICE f Ashland Tidings (twice a week) X Youth's Companion (weekly) BOTH An Appropriate end MIMHMMIIIMtllMH TIR ES si which he says there Is more chance to get ahead. He was among the first of the jackies to arrive in South America after war was declared, and tho people there were very glad to see the lKys from the United States and made them their guests, he said. Colt,on enlisted last spring just be fore graduation, being a member of the class of 1917. While in college he was prominent In dramatics, and was associated with the student pub lications, the Oregana and the Emer ald. He Is now second class machin ists' mate In the United States navy. Eugene Dally Guard, George EsterVy of Waldo returned Saturday from a trip to Alaska, where he went to look after mining interests. He was a passenger on the ill-fated Mariposa, which was wrecked, and was then taken on board the Spokane, which was also wrecked in Alaska waters, While there was an element of danger In each of the experiences, Mr. Estorly treats them In the light of novel ex periences. Rogue River Courier. California of (hit paper) with tm Tto lor mUU WW w moama r mi , .12.00 . .00 FOK IK3.au Dandy Christmas Present