Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919, June 06, 1918, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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    TIDINGS CLASSIFIED ADS
Classified Rates: On csnt par word, first Insertion; cent psf word
fat Men insertion thereafter; 80 words or less $1 per month. No advertise
ment inserted (or less than 16 cents. Classified ada ax cash with order
axoopt to parties having ledger accounts with the office.
PROFESSIONAL.
DR. J. J. EMMENS Physician and
surgeon. Practice limited to eye,
ear, nose and throat. Glasses sup
plied. Oculist and aurlst for 8. P.
R. R. Offices, H. F. and H. Bids..
i opposite postoffice, ueatord: Ore.
i Phone 667. Jl-tf
DR. ERVEST A. W(X)D Practice
limited to eye, ear, nose and
throat. Offloe hours, 10 to IS and
i 1 to 6. Swedenburg Bldg., Ash
land, Ore. 73-tf
GEO. T. WATSON, Painter and Pa-
perhangen. Phone 202-R. 166
Ohio street. 40-tf
Dr. C; E. McDonald
EYE SIGHT SPECIAL'ST
Citizens Bank Bldg.
Office Hours: 9-12 a. m., 2-5 p. m.
BIIL POSTER Will Stennett, 116
Factory street. Bill posting and
distributing. ' 64-tf
1R. SCHELLKR, Osteopathic physi
cian ana orthopedic surgeon. Of
i flee Camps bldg. Phone 147. Hours
10-12, 1-4, others by appointment.
THE JOHXSTOXES CURE Hydro
pathic treatments for chronic cases.
31 Gresham street. 41-tf
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.
E. V. BRIGCS, Attorney-at-Law.
Pioneer Block, Ashland.
lm. KEENLY FERRIS, B. S., M. D.,
M. H. Homeopathic physician and
surgeon. Office, Baptist parson
age, 247 Oak street. Hours, 9 to
12 noon. 85-tf
LOST
10ST Ring. Small diamond sur
rounded by onyx and circle of
pearls; near postoffice. Liberal
reward. Mrs. Glelve, Sanitarium.
3-3t
WANTED
WANTED A small, furnished house
close In. Man and wife only, fall
842 Boulevard. Wione 432-R. 2-3
FOR RENT
FOR RENT Two furnished bunga
Iowb. Inquire at 115 Granite
street. 91-tf
FOR RENT The Bungalow for the
season from June 1 to Nov. 1. Is
equipped with hot -water heater,
gas stove, show cases, counters, ta
bles and chairs to accommodate
80 people at a setting. Good dance
floor and the coolest place to get
confections and ice cream In the
ralley. Located at the big park
' entrance. See Bert R. Greer, at he
Tidings office. . tf
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
POR SALE Thoroughbred steel
gray flemish giant and New Zea
land reds,, utility does and bucks,
cheap. H. W. Stanley, Hilt, Cali
fornia. 4-2
FOR SALE 145 ewes, 114 lambs, at
R. R. Mlnter's place. Lee Steers,
Eagle Tolnt, Ore. . 1-5
FOR SALE A set of double harness
and fine team for ranch work.
For particulars address E. Greer,
Hilt, California. 96-tf
FOR SALE REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE I am going to sacrifice
my five-acre ranch, one mile east
; from postoffice, on East Main
' street, for $2500, one-third cash,
: balance $15 per month, 7 per cent
i fcterest. No agents. This place
i lias to be seen to be appreciated.
' Address H. L. Sinclair, Montague,
CaL 103-tf
LEGAL NOTICES.
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION U. S.
i Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon,
I May 4, 1918.
1 Notice is hereby given that Clay
; Q. Sanford, of Plnehurst, Oregon,
who, on March 27th 1913, matte
! homestead entry, serial No. 08723
for SE4, section 32, township 39
! south, range 4 east Willamette
I Meridian, has filed notice of in
' tention to make three-year proof,
! tn oatnhiich rlalm to the land above
i described, before F. Roy Davis, U.
i S. Land Commissioner, at his or-
; flee at Bedford, Oregon, on the
j 17th day of June. 1918.
; Claimant names as witnesses:
' Mr. C. W. DeCarlow, of Plne-
i hurst. Oregon: Mrs. C W. DeCar-
I low, of Plnehurst. Oregon; Leland
1 A. DeCarlow, of Plnehurst, Ore-
I gon; Ralph Springsteen, of Flne-
! t,Oregon.H cANoN Reg!gter
First publication May 6. Last
' publication June 3, 1918. 1009t
NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE By
virtue of an execution In foreclos
ure and ortler of sale duly issued
' out of and under the Beal of the
' Circuit Court for the State of Ore
' gon, for Jackson county dated
" May 13, 1918, in a certain suit
" therein, wherein George O. yen
'. and Minnie J. Ogg, as plaintiffs,
; recovered judgment against Oren
M. Murphy and his wife, Maude
' Murphr, Omer W. Murphy, and his
wife, Emma, Murphy, W. P. Mur
phy, L. A. Murphy, and his wire,
". Ales Murphy, Otis' L. Murphy, and
LEGAL NOTICES Continued
his wife, Ella Murphy, Ivan E.
Murphy, Mable Murphy and de
fendant, S. Cecil Murphy, heirs at
law of E. E. Murphy, deceased, for
the sum of 51021.05-wlth interest
thereon at 8 per cent per annum
and $53.00 costs, which judgment
was enrolled and docketed in said
court May 11, 1918.
Notice is hereby given that, pur
suant to the terms of said execu
tion, I will on June 15, 1918, at
10 o'clock a. m., at the front door
of the courthouse in the City of
Jacksonville, Jackson County, Ore
gon, offer for sale and sell at pub
lic auction for cash to the highest
bidder, to satisfy said Judgment,
with the costs of this sale, subject
to redemption as provided by law,
all of the right, title and Interest
that above named defendants joint
ly or individually, had"bn Septem
ber 19, 1911, or have since ac
quired, or now have, in and to the
following described property, sit
uated in Jackson county, State of
Oregon, to-wit:
Beginning at- the northeast cor
ner of the J. K. Leabo lot as laid
down on the official map of the
City of Ashland, Oregon; thence
north 5 degrees west along the
west side line of Granite street 100
feet; thence west 150 feet; thence
south 5 degrees east 100 feet;
thence east 150 feet to the place of
beginning, all in the City of Ash
land, Oregon.
Dated at Jacksonville, Oregon,
May 13th, 1918.
RALPH G. JENNINGS,
Sheriff of Jackson County, Oregon.
By Leslie W. Stansell, Deputy.
103-5 thu
NOTICE OF SHERIFF' SALE By
virtue of an execution duly issued
out of and under the seal of the
circuit court for the state of Ore
gon,, for Jackson county, dated
May 6th, 1918, in a certain action
In the Justice Court for Medford
District, Jackson county, Oregon,
wherein C. E. Conser as plaintiff,
recovered Judgment against R. A.
Rowley and Isabella Rowley, defen
dants, for the sum of $148.00 with
Interest thereon at 10 per cent per
annum from January 19, 1917 un
til paid, and the further sum of
$35.01 with legal Interest thereon
from August 1st, 1917, until paid,
and for $25.00 attorney's fees and
$10.60 costs, which judgment was
enrolled and docketed In the of
fice of the Clerk cf the Circuit
Court of the State of Oregon for
Jackson county.
Notice Is hereby given that, pur
suant to the terms of said execu
tion, I will on June 8th, 1918, at
10 o'clock a. m at the front door
of the Courthouse in the city of
Jacksonville, Jackson county, Ore
gon, offer for sale and sell at pub
lic auction for cash-to the highest
bidder, to satsify said judgment,
with the costs of this sale, subject
to redemption as provided by law,
all of the right, title and interest
that the above named defendants,
jointly or individually, had on May
6th, 1918, or have since, acquired,
or now have in and to the follow
ing described property, to-wlt:
The northeast quarter of lot 2
In block 4, and the east half of lot
1 in block 4, in the Pierce sub-division,
in township 37 south, range
1 west of the Willamette Merid
ian in Jackson county. Oregon,
containing 4.35 acres.
Dated at Jacksonville, , Oregon,
May 6th; 1918.
RALPH O. JENNINGS,
Sheriff of Jackson Co., Ore.
By Leolle W. Stansell. Deputy.
. 101-5t thu
PURCHASE OF W. S. S.
BIG HELP TO
The nation Is preparing for the ob-
oorvance of a war savings Btamp
pledge day, June 28, on which date
it Is expected to pledge Itself to tne
purchase of $15,000,000 worth of
war savings stamps before January
1. 1919. Every man, woman and
child in the state is supposed to have
at least $20 worth of war stamps
by that date, If Oregon is to main
tain Its record in support of war fi
nancing propositions.
Every time you buy a thrift stamp
SMOKfc.
Al All Ml wm
ThV""' I I C I I "
risvtr I I J I I Dollar
Uiti " 1 " " SmoKe
Ttait Cigar Factory, Makers
J.M. Alnntt, Prop.
Ashland Transfer
I & Storage Co.
C. F. Bates, Proprietor
: Wood, "Peacock"
: and Rock Springs
: Coal and Cement
PHONE 117
(Office 99 Oak Street, Ware
house on track near depot.
Ashland, Oregon 1
and .every timeou exchange your
sixteen thrift stamps for a war sav
in ga stamp, yon are in a really big
way contributing to th,e strength of
your country and Its cause. That Is
only part of what you are doing, how
ever, i
In an equally big way you are con
tributing to your own strength, for
you are laying up money in the saf
est possible way and at a good rate
of interest. ,
You are learning the first lesson
of success saving. Really you are
dolng'more for yourself than you are
doing for your country, and yet your
country gets the benefit of It Just
as if you were not doing anything at
all for yourself.
So of all the twin benefits that
ever came walking down the trail of
time, this little green stamp is the
most remarkable.
At one and the Eamc time dt de
fends and teaches helps to defend
us against a foe insistent upon tak
ing from us the most precious thin.?
we have, and helps to teach us the
lesson that we must learn in order
to keep and really use these precious
things after we have driven off the
devils who are trying to take them
from us.
It gives to two parties at the same
time.
It gives to the government and It
gives to you. It spends for the gov
ernment and it saves for you. It en
ables a person to eat his cake and
still have It and that is a very re
markaMe thing.
For it helps to provide the money
that protects your property and your
life and at the same time that money
and more will come back to you at
the end of a few years.
So it comes that the thrift stamp
is a very wondarful thing, and on
this day, which Is set aside to em
phasize It3 value, every man, woman
and child In the nation should get
acquainted with its numerous and un
usual advantages by buying one or
more.
YEAST r.RE.'.I CALL ,
- FOR USE OF WHEAT
In response to many inquiries as
to why bakeries and logging camps,
along with hospitals, are made ex
ceptions in the agreement which the
food administration has asked all
flour dealers to enter into, discontin
uing the sale of wheat flour through
the month of June or longer .periods,
H. II. Haynes, chief of the bakln;;
division for the food administration
In Oregon, explains:
Legging camps and bakeries are
already under federal license and reg
ulation, which curtails their use of
white flour substantially and neces
sitates the use of a heavy percentage
of substitutes. That Is one phase of
the matter.
Many persons wonder why, if the
housewife isexpected to make wheat
less breads, the baker is not also
asked to do so. The answer will be
obvious to anyone who will give the
matter a little cbnslderation, and
here is another phase of the situa
tion: There are many formulas for quick
breads that call for absolutely no
wheat, and these are available to the
housewife, whose product is eaten
hot or at least while fresh. Such
breads are made with baking powder
or soda. But these breads will not
do for the baker, who must produce
a loaf that will "stand up" under
repeated handlings, transportation to
the retail dealer, and delivery from
retailer to consumer, arriving in good
condition and palatable to the taste.
Extensive experiments have shown
that baking powder or soda loaves
cannot be depended upon to meet
these difficulties. Therefore, we must
make yeast breads, and it is diffi
cult to make a yeast bread without
a considerable percentage of wheat
flour.
. Bakers are now making It success
fully with two-thirds the volume
made up of substitutes. Some of our
bakers have produced successful
loaves with a higher substitute con
tent, Our bakers' chemists are con
tinuously experimenting In the effort
to still further cut down, the wheat
flour percentage- and at the same
time produce an acceptable commer
cial loaf. The problem Is not an easy
one. Our bakers are all co-operatlns:
with the food administration in a
splendid spirit and are doing all that
Is practicable to cut down their con
sumption of white flour.
Conditions in the logging camps
are similar to those of the bakeries,
and that is why they , are, with the
bakeries and hospitals, made excep
tions In the food administration's re
quest. I'OCKETBfMiK.S AltE H.IM ,
HIT BY r.N'CLE SAMUEL
War taxes took 156,070,000 from
the pockets of the American people
In February, or $251,890,000 In the
eight months since July 1. These
figures, reported by the Internal rev
enue bureau, are the tax increases
for those periods over the same per
iods of the year previous, and rep
mldk0ST IN THE LONG RUN milM&M
M . .... . T:rm"-m..
THE trench, which alwcys encircled the Hcrr-n c-C-tra,
cr canp,was brought to France y Jdli-o Gxirr
and U3cd by him on the very batilcficl i vacrc to-day
the Allies end the Huns have 25.0C0 miles cf trencher.
With' rinc cf trenches, gradually drawn pmal!
rrchsbiy the fcrct modem trenca vcriare, the I url;
ite took Uandia.
Vauban, builder cf
l:rct pjrellcl trenches,
Defeat, not foresight, turned the Gcrrr:ar.3 to trench
r'srfarc. Dut Goodrich r.cvcr had to &?,
Since twenty-two years cf.o Goodrich rr.:
the first American pneumatic automobib tire. Goodrich
has driven ahsad to the bi& graceful, riactcrlui
But whether Goodrich was revolutionizing tire manu
facture by bringing forth the first American clincher tire
Or originating the one practical non-skid, the cross
bar, safety-tread, or tough black tread rubber,
Goodrich built tires to one end-SERVICE VALL'B
-what they are worth to the motorist on his car and
on the road in COMFORT of an easier riding car
ECONOMY in gasoline saved.-end LONG MILEAC3.
Small difference whether you buy GOODRICH
SILVERTOWN CORDS, or BLACK SAFETY
TREADS, you get SERVICE VALUE TIRES.
Pi I
L: 1 THE B. F. COODRICH RUBEER CO. j
TKE CITY
GoodrichTires andTubes "WHITE STAR GARAGE
N. DIX
347 East Main
resent substantially the result of
heavier war levies.
Considerable information on the
volume of business in various- lines
of commerce is disclosed In the re
port. Freight tax collections indicate
that $154,173,000 worth of hauling
business was done by the railroads.
Most of this probably was for Janu
ary, as reports on collections were
several weeks late.
The month's passenger fare bill of
the nation apparently was $55,820,
000. Pullman fares paid by travel
ers must have been $4,468,000; since
the 10 percent tax brought in $446,-
800. Express taxes indicate that the
amount of business done was $15,-
355,000. Fron the tax. of five cents
on each telephone or telegraph mes
sage of 15 cents or more, $1,063,000
was raised.
The nation's theatre and amuse
ment bill for the elgh months ap
pears to be $37,083,000, as $3,708,
000 was collected from the 10 per
cent tax. It also is indicated that
the American people spent $3,659,
000 for club dues every month, 10
per cent of this going as government
tax.
Apparently people are not buying
as many decks of playing cards now
as a year ago, for the revenue figures
show that tax was collected only on
1,788,000 decks In the month, as
compared with 2,896,000 In Febru
ary, 1917. Revenue was greater,
however, owing to the raising of the
federal tax from 2 to 5 cents a deck.
The tax of 3 per cent on the sales
price of automobiles and motorcy
cles yielded $3,320,000, Indicating
that ta:: was paid of $77,352,000)
sales.
FARM KKS RALLIED TO
SUPPORT OF COUNTRY
v.
Next to the aggregate number of
subscriptions perhaps the most strik
ing feature of the Third Liberty loan
was the support given It by the farm
ing and rural populations of the
country. Not only did the farmeri
purchase liberally of the bonds, but
the rural communities as fa rule were
more prompt In completing their quo
tas of the loan than tTie larger, cities.
More than 20,000 communities in the
United States subscribed or oversub
scribed their quotas, many of them
on the first day of the campaign, i
Verdun, h K7Z employed the
Uc system cf U:o pre:
OF GOODRICH
8 SON, Props.
M. L. CROUCH, Mg.
The majority of these were not cities
but country districts.
Iowa, a typical agricultural state,
was the first to subscribe its quota
and was followed by Oregon, Arkan
sas, Kentucky, and other states in
which agriculture Is the leading In
dustry.
It Is Impossible to give accurato
figures but It Is estimated that while
only 2 per cent of the farming popu
lation of the United States subscribed
to the first and second loans, prob
ably ten times as many subscribed to
the third. The significance Is in
creased by the facts that the heavy
subscription was made at a season
when the farmers are ordinarily on
the borrowing and not on the lending
and Investment side of the warket,
and when the farms of the country
are speeded up to the limit.
This wide distribution of the third
loan among the whole people shows
that the body of the nation has he
come aroused and gone into action
that the sense of duty and the neces
sity for Individual support of the
country hasi permeated the whole
people. Secretary McAdoo may justly
be enthused over the result and call
It the soundest national financing In
the world. Every Liberty bond hold-1
Cleanliness, Personal Attention
and Courtesy Combined to Make the
Eagle Meat Market Popular
INSPECT oar marKet and yonr confi
dence will be behind the pleasure
of
s-' of
L Schwein
81
Pure llilk
Norton's Clover Leaf Dairy
E. N. NORTON, TELEPHONE
Proprietor 392-J
Strictly Sanitary. Thoroughly Up-to-Date. Good Ser
vice to Any Part of Town
Ik W-fl
U .'ST. . S. ft T.HR:
inured . kiMm I
a ''
akron, ohio.S;: -: -::;; 1
Phone 116
er Is an active force backing the gov
ernment. Our soldiers In France and our
allies are heartened and strengthened
by the knowledge that 17.000.00ft
American citizens are backing them
with their money, and our enemies
must learn with fear and dread of
this great reserve force upon which
their adversaries can rely.
To keep the good work up tho
American people must adopt scien
tific saving methods; save money, ,
save materials, save labor, and save
time. Tljus wo will bring the war
to an earlier and victorious close and
save the lives of American soUyers.
and save our rights and our liberties
and save the world to democracy,
justice and civilization.
' Card of Tlumks
We, the undersigned, desire to
thank the friends for their many
kindnesses and tho beautiful floral
offerings during tho illness and de
parture of our beloved one.
J. R. MAXEDON,
MRS. MARY V. SHAVER.
MISS HAZEL SHAVER.
Old papers for sale at the Tidings
office.
eating our meats. The Knowledge
f cleanliness and a sanitary worn
hop will aid yonr digestion, ,
cleanliness and a sanitary worn
N. Main
Phone 107
Pure Cream
I-.-'
3
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