Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, May 02, 1918, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    Thnniday, Mar 2, 1018.
ASHLAVn TTDTITOi
PACT) THRB9
Step Lively! Corns
Quit with "Gets-It"
The Great Corn-Loosener of the
Age. Hever Fails. Painless.
Watch my step? What's the use!
I go along "right side up without
-care," even with corns, because I use
"Gets-It", the painless, off-hke-a-ba-nana-peel
corn remover. I tried
other ways galore, until I was blue
Com Simply Csa'l Stop Us.We UmMU"
In the face and red In the toes. No
more for me. Use "Gets-IL" It
never fails. Touch any corn or cal
lus with two drops of "Gets-It,"
and "Gets-It" does the rest It's a
relief to be able to stop cutting
corns, making them bleed, wrapping
-them up like packages and Bslng
sticky tape and salves. It removes
any corn clear and clean, leaving
the toe as smooth as your palm. You
can wear those new shoes without
pain, dance and be frisky on your
ieet. It's great to use "Gets-It."
"Gets-It, the guaranteed, money
tack corn-remover, the only sure way.
costs but a trifle at any drug store.
Jl'f'dbyE. Lawrence & Co.,Chicago, 111.
Sold In Ashland and recommended
as th world's best corn remedy by
McNalr Bros.
7
(
OiumfaSmHtBoflnformmtlvoArtUloB
a Dontal ByglvuNo. S
Increase Children's
Efficiency 99.8
AN Inreitlsitlon In the
MtrionSchool, Cleveland,
Ohio, showed that 7 of
the Kbool enrollment bad it
ajot or irresnlar teeth . Twenty
seven ofthete, from one to four
years behind in their grade,
were organized Into a dental
squad. At the end of the year
there had been a M.8 iatnan
U werklac effleieacy of this
quad.
A similar experiment In the
Buckman School, Portland.
Oregon showed treat results.
The new Prophylactic or Pre
ventive Dentistry bas for its
principle KEEP THK MOUTH
AND TEETH CLEANI This
doesn'tmeantbatpeopleshould
merely keep their front teeth
clean and white on the outside.
It means thataJf the teeth must
be kept clean on all their sur
faces, front, back, sides, and
down to the gums, and below
the gums. To mike this state
of cleanliness possible to a very
bitch degree, teeth mustfirstbe
made smooth, and, then highly
polished.
After this worltjhubeen done
ifproperdailyattention is given
the teeth by the Individual
they may be easily kept clean
ana healthy.
PublUludbttho
t Btato Dmtal Amodathm
of Onto
Plaza Barber Shop
"On the Plaza"
Hair Cutting and Shaving. Special
attention to Children's Hair Cutting.
J. A; Yco, Prop.
Ashland Transfer
& Storage Co.
C. F. Bates, Proprietor
Wood, "Peacock"
and Rock Springs
Coal and Cement
phone iTt
Office 99 Oak Street, Ware
house on track near depot.
Ashland, Oregon
Come in and
Examine the
TIRE
With a thous
and claws.
All sizes
SOLD BY THB
Overland
Millner
Co.
timiimiiniiimiiiiiniiniiiumuttw
Army and Navy News
Letters from the members of the
65th regiment of Oregon Coast Ar
tillery have heached relatives in this
city, which details the glad news that
the boys have arrived safely oveseas.
Communication is of the briefest,,
however, especially in the first let
ters, as the Ashland boys, 'realizing
the anxiety of their parents to hear
from them, have been particularly
careful about what they write in or
der that the letters will not be with
held by the censors. Among the late
letters from Europe is one from Har
old Simpson in which' he merely
states that they are somewhere In
Kurope, but leave much to conject
ure as to their whereabouts. As the
65th has had no heavy artillery train
ing It is thought the regiment will
not be sent to the front for some
time yet.
Patriotism seems to burn brightly
In the Wolcott family. Sergeant H.
G. Wolcott of the Oregon Coast Ar
tillery and his two older sons went
cut with the 1st company when It
left this city last July, leaving Phil,
17 years old, to be the head of the
family at home. Phil Is 18 now, an1
has felt the 'call of his country too
strongly to resist. The following ap
peared In the Portland Telegram one
day last week, in regard to this young
lad,, who has Joined the colors: "Phil
A. Wolcott, aged 18, came down from
Ashland this morning in order to
beat his father and his two brothers
tc France. And to that end he en
listed in the regular army at recruit
ing headquarters at Third and Oak
streets. The father and two brothers
are stationed at Fort Stevens in the
coast artillery."
Soldiers' Letter
Mrs. Anna Erickson Is in receipt
of the following letter from her son,
Sergeant A. E. Erickson, of Battery
C, 65th Artillery, A.E.F.:
"My Dear Mother: I wrote you a
letter yesterday, but may Is so un
certain that I don't know whether
yqu will get it or not. We arrived
here safely after a hard trip across
the ponjl. This is a very beautiful
country, everything Id so old and
quaint. We had a very Interesting
ride across this, foreign land after
we got off the boat, on one of their
quaint trains. We never get to see
a newspaper any more.
'.'Write me and tell me the latest
news, as everything is censored here
We don't know what is going on In
the outside world. We are at a rest
camp again, but we don't get muck
rest. I can't write much on account
of the censorship. I could surely tell
you folks a lot of Interesting things,
I am in the best of health now after
my seasickness. We are having a
lots of fun with the foreign money,
They won't take good old U. S. money
here, and we are scared to take theirs
afraid that both sides will get the
worst of It. Will write again in a
day or so. With loving regards to
all, Your loving son,
"ARTHUR."
MORE STOCK ALLOWED
GRAZING FACILITIES
District Forester George H. Cecil
of Portland announces that the total
numbers of cattle, horses, sheep and
goats authorized to graze on the na
tional' forests of Oregon and Wash
ington during the season of 1918 are
202,950 head of cattle and horses
and 1,206,800 head of sheep and
goats, an Increase of 16,810 cattle
and horses and 44,220 sheep and
goats over the figures for 1917.
This increase in cattle Is due -to
increased carrying capacity of the
range, while the Increase in sheep
is made possible by the discovery of
new ranges and readjustment of the
boundaries on the old ranges. Be
cause of war conditions and a heavy
demand for meat and wool, extra
stock was grazed last year to the
extent of 19,478 head of cattle and
29,102 head of sheep over 1916. The
Increase In cattle authorizations for
the last four years has been 70,000
headr
It is the desire of the forest serv
ice that ranges be used at this time
to the extreme limit of their carry
ing capacity. In addition to the in
crease in the number of stock run
on the ranges there has been an in
crease in value: due v to improved
grade of animals turned on the
range. Stock growers and the for
est service co-operate ,to bring about
better range conditions, both as con
cerns the range Itself and the grade
of stock carried. Well-blooded stock
use no more range than scrubs, and
bring much larger returns on the
market.
A navy flying boat, equipped with
Liberty engine, flew from Hamp
ton Roads, Va., to Washington, a
distance of about 180 miles, in two
hours.
People's Forum
' Ashland Slackers
"Auntie and I ore doing son.otr.lng
a;l the time to help win the war."
writes Edwin Klrktfatrick, a retired
Nebraska farmer and nrotfcer of J
M. Klrkpatrick of this city. "Wo
are chairmen of a lot of preclrv.t
end county committees and there is
lots of work attached to all of them.
We get pay In more work. As chair
Juan of the Nehawka minute men I
1 ave tour men and three women
speakers and I will put them against
any other seven speakers In the state.
We certainly make the welkin ring
boosting for our boys. First it was
Y.M.C.A., then Red Cross, Armenian
Relief, Belgium Relief, Liberty bonds,
thrift stamps, then more bonds, sugar
famine, flour and meat famines. We
are eating corn meal, corn and rice
flour, oatmeal and ten other substi
tutes. But it Is all right if we can
only get the kaiser licked. Wish we
had some of your fine Ashland ap
ples. They are retailing here at 10c
a pound.'
The above Is commended to the re
tired men of Ashland, who refuse to
help in patriotic work. Here the
burden of selling Liberty bonda and
doing similar service falls upon
young and middle aged men who are
forced to work hard for a living.
Most of those who are Independent
ly wealthy seem content to sit around
and growl at the way things are done,
Instead of lending a helping hand.
Their long experience with men and
money admirably fits them for this
sort of public service. Whtft moral
rlghthave they to stand back and
force the burden onto those less able
to bear it? Time is money and al
truistic work should be done by those
who have the most of these commodi
ties to spare.
' In New York and three other
eastern states a recent law compels
every able-bodied man, rich as well
as poor, to have some regular, produc
tive employment. We need such a
law in Oregon.
The other day a tired housewlfo
who had been laboring for hours in
the Ashland Red Cross room com
plained bitterly of the idle men in
a nearby pool room. In Minneapolis
the pool rooms, which take the place
of saloons as centers of vice and
crime in prohibition states, were raid
ed and a thousand slackers rounded
up. In Eugene a committee of One
Hundred warned all idle men to keep
off the streets during the war.
Speaking ' of ' slackers; what
about orchardlsts who are cultivating
trees which have never borne a pro
fitable crop and never will? There
are thousands of acres of such or
chards in the Rogue river valley oc
cupylng land which should be produc
ing grain and hay. These fruit trees,
useless cumberers of the soli, are
kept alive for the sole purpose of be
ing used for "sucker bait", the own
ers hoping to sell them to people
who are unacquainted with their use-
lessness. ' Is this right? A compe
tent commission should condemn or
chards which are and always will be
hopelessly unprofitable and order the
land planted to those crops of whlcn
there Is a scarcity.
. ' O. H. BARNHILL.
Dr. A. W. Boslough, who has en
listed in , the medical reserve, left
Friday night for Fort Riley, in Kan
sas, where he will be stationed.
AT WAR 'WITH YOURSELF 1
HELP NATURE TO DEFEAT THE
DISEASE IN YOUR BODY.
Kwp up the light: do not give np.
Nature is trying tu servo you In conquer
ing the wrongs that may exist.
lied blood, vim. courage, vitality, all
sown lacking. No wonder you are nerv
ous and discouraged.
Why not call to your aid a strong,
dependable ally? Dr. Pierco's Golden
Medical Discovery nas ior nearly nny
years proven its merits as a most Hiwer
inl tonic ami blood builder to tho many
thousands who liavo been returned to
good health by Its use. .
Clear the coated tongue, get rid of
unsightly skin trouble Let this remark
able remedy rid your body of tho Im
purities of tho blood, let It tono and
strengthen you. It often cures the linger
ing chronic cough.
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
Is absolutely herbal, free from alcohol
or dangerous habit -forming drugs. All
druggists. Liquid or tablets.
Portland. Orf.o. "I certainlv can rec
ommend Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery. I had liver trouble so bad
in ac i was lust
yellow and had in
digestion, too.
Also had woman's
trouble, and I was
weak and nervous.
I decided to try
Dr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery
and his 'Favorite.
Prescription.' I
took six bottles of
each and was a
well woman.
"Mv husband had
trouble with his lungs. Ho was very weak.
I giivn lilm ' Discovery ' and it cured him.
"I cannot speak too highly of Dr. Tierce's
Remedies." Miw. FltEU 1'atthkson, (B0
ivirhy Street.
Portland, Orko. "For biliousness and
torpid liver and to regulate ,lin bowels,
there is nothing that can equal Doctor
Pierce's Pleasant Peliets. I have used
thorn over twenty years and have always
found them good." A, W, Uum'HJtKYa
10'J K. 75lh Street. N,
KB
Copyrighted 1917
Bruio'eeerKincaiJ.ClorW
Can't go wrong when you buy
a suit of
Brandegee Kinc
Clothes
because they are backed by one
of the very best of high grade
clothing manufacturers. Don't
forget us on anything men wear.
Consistent with quality our pric
es are right.
Mitchell & Whittle
"THE MEN'S STORE'
Cigarette books, book covers, and
papers Invoiced at the American con
sulate at Nantes, France, for the U.
S. during 1917 were valued at nearly
$1,000,000.
The large shade trees on the
Plaza by the Plaza grocery building
were cut down Monday morning.
The trees were old and deteriorating
and were much in the way.
R. A. Mlnkler of Portland, a form
er well known merchant of Ashland,
Is spending ajow days in this city,
t. guest of his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
D. L. Mlnkler.
A Business Should be
as Big as Its Job
If bigness is of benefit to the public it
should be commended.
The size of a business depends upon the needs which that
business is called upon to serve. A business should be at big
as its job. You do not drive tacks with a pile-driver or piles
with a tack-hammer.
Swift & Company's growth has been the natural and
inevitable result of national and international needs.
Large-scale production and distribution are necessary
to convert the live stock of the West into meat and by-products,
and to distribute them over long distances to the
consuming centers of the East and abroad.
Only an organization like that of Swift & Company, with its
many packing plants, hundreds of distributing houses, and thou
sands of refrigerator cars, would have been able to handle the
varying seasonal supplies of live stock, and meet the present
war emergency by supplying, without interruption:
First The U. S. soldiers and the Allies in Europe by shipping as
much as 800 carloads of meat products in a single weekl
Second The cantonments in the United States.
Third The retailers upon whom the American public depends
for its daily supply of meat.
But many people ask Do producers and consumers pay
too much for the complex service rendered ?
Everyone, we believe, concedes the efficiency of the Swift
& Company organization in performing a big job in a big way
at a minimum of expense.
Swift & Company's total profit in 1917 was less than 4
cents on each dollar of sales of meat and by-products. Elim
ination of this profit would have had practically no effect on
live stock and meat prices.
Do you believe that this service can be rendered for less
by any other conceivable method of organization or operation?
l8l
m
These questions and others are answered fully and
frankly in the Swift & Company 1918 Year
Book sent free on request.
Address Swift & Company, U. S. Yards, Chicago
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
i