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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1918)
TIDINGS CLASSIFIED ADS Classified Rates: On cant per word, first Insertion; ft cent per word tot each Insertion thereafter; SO words or less $1 per month. No advertise ment Inserted tor less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order except to parties daring 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 S. P. R. It. Offices, M. F. and H. Bldg., opposite poutofflce, Medford, Ore. Phone C67. 21-tf DR. ERNEST A. WOOD Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and ' throat. Office hours, 10 to 12 and 2 to 5. Swedenburg Bldg., Ash land, Ore. 73-tf CEO. T. WATSONTaTnTerTnd P perhanger. Phone 202-R. 166 Ohio street. 40-tf BIIIj POSTER Will Stennett, 116 Factory street. Bill posting and distributing. 64-tf 1R. KCIIEMjER, Osteopathic physi cian nnd orthopedic surgeon. Of fice 291 K Main, phone 147. Hours 10-12, 1-4, others by appointment. E. D. IJR1GGS, Attorney-at-Law. Pioneer Block, Ashland. THE JOHN5TONES CURE Hydro pathic treatments for chronic cases. 31 Gresham street. 41-tf Dr. Chas. M. Anderson VETERINARY SL'RGKOM Livestock inspector for Jackson County Residence, Ashland, Oregon Day Phone 59 Night Phone Res. Miss G. A. Thorne GRADUATE NURSE Residence nt Mrs. DosloUoh's Telephone 320-J aVIO IMPROVEMENT CLUIV 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. FOR BALE MlSCc.TiLAEOU8 roil SALE Hedroom suite cheap Call 842 Boulevard. Phono 432-R. FOR SALE Unlce Gravensteln op pics. Finest for cooking. De livered In city 20-pound box 73 Call phone U-F-ll. FOR SALE Broccoli plants, 20c per dozen. Phone 83. 323 lower Almond. 23-7t FOR SALE Fresh milch goat, also some good milch cows. A. I' Maneely, Clayton Orchards. 20tf THREID-good cows, fresh. Will sell or loan to responsible party for their ken. Phono ISO. 20tf FOR SALE REAL ESTATE YOR SALE Nice Portland lots on easy terms or exchange. Box 24 Uaksdale. Washington. 2'j-:!t FOR SALE Furnished cottage of .1- rooms. Modern Improvements, close In on Improved street: law lot. Terms $2"i0 cash, balance same as rent. Liberal terms to rlaht narty. riione 375-J. 20-tf FOR SALE Very desirable modern cottaKe, large attic, 0 rooms, sun porches, front porch; well, cooler: bearing fruit trees, ber ries, sidewalks; shrubbery and flowers; built less than two years. For particulars call or address the Talent Mercantile Co. store, Talent, Ore. . 20-7t FOR RENT FOR RENT lcy. -Bungalow. 143 N'ut-2C-f.f FOR RENT. Two furnished apart ment3; light and water furnished. 63 N. Main. 21 tt FOR RENT The best located store building on East Main street. In quire at 214 C street or phone 459-R. . 11-tf FOR RENT Two furnished bunga lows. Inaulre at 115 Granite street. 91-tf FOR RENT The Bungalow for the season from June l'to Nov. 1. Is equipped with hot water heater, gas stove, Bhow cases, counters, ta bles and chairs to accommodate 80 people at a setting. Good dance floor and the coolest place to get confection! and Ice cream in the valley. Located at the big park entrance. See Bert R. Greer, at the Tldlnua office. tf TO EXCHANGE ?1 200 Will exchange 1 4-room cot tage and 1 2-room cottage on 50x 100 loj In town of Lung Beach, the best summer resort In the north west, and largest cranberry grow ing section in U. S. Employment for young and old. Want prop erty in or near Ashland, Ore. Own er, E. Utter, Long Beach, Wash ington. 26-3 FOR TRADE Dandy modern seven room house close in, 'in goqd neighborhood. $900 can be paid any time. Will take good auto mobile and balance of equity In monthly payments. Good range and heater goes with place. Some furniture If desired. See Bert R. Greer at Tidings office. 2C-3t WANTED WANTED Infants and children to board. Mother's care. Good ref erences. Inguire 101 4tli st. !)tf NOTICE If the ludy wanting ti purchase a ranch suitable for cat tle or sheep, III correspond with J. S. K. A Tidings, she may find somotliii!; alio wants. 20-.'it WANTED Second-hand wood heat ing rtove. .Must lie In first-class condition and cheap. Phone Tid ings office. I.E(;.Ui XOTH E 08S01 DEPARTMENT OK THE INTER IOR 1,'. S. Land Office at Kosc burg. Oregon, AugiiKt 14, 191 8. Nolle? to hereby given that Frank J. IUtchson, of Hernhrook, Cal., who, on May 27, litis, made homestead entry, serial No. 0S91 lof the W M, of NE4 and S. or NWV4 of section 24, township 40 S, raiiKO 2E, Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make final Jhrec-ycar proof to eh tahllsh claim to the land shove, .dc-scribed, before F. Roy Davis, I'. S. Commissioner, at his office at Medford, Oregon, on tho 23th day of September, 191S. Claimant names as witnesses: Al Hopkins, of Ashland. Oregon; Riley Kennedy, of Ashland, On? rcn: Claude Long, of Ashland, Oregon; Frank Long, of Ashland. Oregon. W. It. CANON, 23-9t Register. 09037 NOTICE TOR PUBLICATION U. S. Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, July 22. 1918. Notice Is hereby given that Frank Silva, of Buncom, Oregon who, on September 5, 1913, made Second Homestead entry, serial No. 09037, for a tract of 26.74 acres in sec. 26, twp. 39b, R. 2W unsurveyed, beginning at corner No. 1, Identical with corner of sees. 22. 23 26 and 27. of twp. 29SR 2W, W. M., thence .N 89 deg., 34 min. n., 26.40 chs; thence S 40 dog., 31 mln. W., 17.31 chs; thence N 89 dep. 05 mln. W., 14.95 chs.; thence N 0 deg., '59 mln. W., 12.70 chs: to place of beginning, lias filed notice of intention to make final three-year proof, to estab lish claim to the land above de scribed, before F. Roy Davis, U. S. Commissioner, at his office at Medford, Oregon, on the 17th day of September, 1918. Claimant names as witnesses: Nelson Pursel. of Buncom, Oregon; Mrs. Cora Crump, of Buncom, Ore gon; Jamea Rcnoalds, of Buncom, Oregon; C. C. Pursel, of Buncom, Oregon. W. II. CANON, 23-9t Register. S. LOSS SINCE WAR REGAN TOTALS 1II,47 Casualties In tho United. State3 overseas forces, announced by the war and navy departments during the week ending August 18, number ed 1335,. compared with 4Ulb for the previous week. Total casualties announced to date number 21,467, Including 367 In last week's army list. Total army casu alties number IS, 707; crrns lists total 27.60. the marine The summary of the army casul- ty list now, including last week's list follows: Killed in action, 2809. Died of wounds, 1189. Died of disease, 1556. Died of accident and other causes, 6S2. Wounded In action, S7S3 Missing In action, including pris oners, 1C26. Total to date, 18,707 The summary of the marine corps list follows: Deaths, S37. Wounded, 1830. Mlsrlng In action, S8. In hands of enemy, 5. Total to date, 2760. Ashland Transfer I & Storage Co. C. F. Bates, Proprietor ! Wood, "Peacock" j : and Rock Springs : Coal and Cement PHONE 117 ! Office 99 Oak Street, Ware house on track near depot. Ashland, Oregon I SMOKh. TisiT At All Dealert. Th Flavor Lattt Tht Million Dollar SraoKo Tisit Cigar Factory, Makers J. M. Alnutt, Prop. CRUELTY AND LUST WEAPONSOF HUHS Conquered Peoples Shamefully Treated for Advantage of the German State. Prussian Officers Callously Tell How Starvation and Abuse Ars Mads i" to Serve Their Purpose Cap. ! tive Women Made Slaves. 4444444444 I 5 This I have teen. I could not believe it unlets I had seen it throujh and throue. For 6ev- f eral weeks I lived with It; I went all about It and b.-.ek of j it; Inside and out of it was S shown to mc until finally I came to realize that the Incrccll. ble was true. It Is monstrous, A it Is unthinkable, but it exists. tt is the Prussian tyatcm. F. $ C. Waleott 4, 4t444444444444t44? No more graphic description of tho rnruges of tho German soldiery upon the civilian population of Invaded countries has been given than Is con tained In tho brief nnd rlmple state ments of F. C. Wulcott, now connected with tho United Stutes food adminis tration, who was assistant to Mr. Hoover whllo America was fecdlnj Belgium, Poland and northern Fcnnce. In one of these statements Mr. Wal eott nays: Even now I find It hard to describe In comprehensible terms the mind of official (jermuny, which dominates and shapes all German thought nud action. Yet it is as hard, as clear-cut, us real as any material thing. I saw It la Polnnd, I saw the came thing In Bel- glcrn, I heard of It In Serbia and Rou rnntilu. For weeks It was ulways be fore me, nhvuys tho same. Officers talked freely, frankly, directly. All the stuff officers have tho same view. Let rue try to tell It, as General Yon Krle9 told me, In Toland, In the midst of a dying nation. Germany Is des tined to rule tho world, or nt lenst a great part of It. The German people are so much humnn material for build ing the German state, other people do not count All Is for the glory and might of tho German 6tato. Tho lives of human beings are to be conserved only If It makes for tho stab's od vancement, their lives are to be sacri ficed If it Is to the state's advantage. The state Is all, the people ore noth ing. Conquered people signify little In the German account Life, liberty, happiness, huniun sentiment family ties, gruce und generous Impulse, theso have no place beside the one concern, the greatness of tho German state. Starvation must excite no pity; sym pathy must not be allowed, If It ham pers the main design of promoting Germany's ends. "Starvation Is here," said General Ton Krles. "Candidly, we would like to see It relieved ; we fenr our soldiers may be unfavorably affected by the things that they see. But since It Is here, starvation must serve our pur pose. So we set It to work, for Ger many. By starvation we can acconi' pllsh In two or three years In East Polund more than wo have lu West Poland, which Is East Prussia, In tho last hundred years. With that in view, we propose to turn this force to our advantage. "This couutry Is mennt for Ger many," continued the keeper of starv ing Polnnd. "It is a rich alluvial country which Germany has needed for some generations. We propose to remove the able-bodied working roles from this country. It leaves It open for the Inflow of German working peo ple as fast ns we can spare them. They will occupy It and work It" Then with a cunning smile, "Can't you see how It works out? By and by we shull give back freedom to Tolund. When that happens Polnnd will appear automatically as a German province." In Belgium, General von BIssIng told me exactly the same thing. "If the relief of Belgium breaks down we can force tho Industrial population in to Germany through starvation and colonize other Belgians In Mesopo tamia where we have planned large Irrigation works; Germans will then overrun Belgium. Then when the war Is over and freedom is given back to Belgium, It will be a German Belgium that is restored. Belgium will be a German province and we have Ant werpwhich 13 what we nro after." Thnt Is not nil. Removing tho men, that the land may be vacant for Ger man occupation, that German stock may replace Belgians, Poles, Serbians, Armenians, nnd now Roumanians, Ger many does. more. Women left captive are enslaved. Germany makes all manner of lust Its Instrumentality. Tho ether day a friend of tnlno told me ot a. man Just returned from north ern France. "I cannot telt you the de tails," he said, "man to man, I don't wnnt to repent what I heard." Some of the things he did tell shocking mutilation and moral murder. Ho told of women, by tho 6core, In occupied territory of northern France, prisoned In underground dungeons, tethered for the uso of their bodies by officers and men. If this is not a piece of the Prussian system, it is the logical product of dis regard of tho rights of others. Germany has limited the amount that prisoners may spend to $15 a week for oflicers and $12.00 for privates, NORTHWEST STATES ARE NOT IN SPECIAL CALL Adjutant General Crowder has called on 18 states for 5709 white oran registrants witn a grammar school education, equipped for gen eral servlco to be gent to special training schools. The northwest Atates aro not Included In this call. Secretary Baker declared in a MMement to tho house military com nillteo that no general exemption of married men, simply becauso of their married status, wag contemplated by ti e war department In preparing the proponed cvteruiion of draft ages. The secretary said his previous re carks has h"-n mlsconHirucd. Hi t tales that married men not support ing their family or engaged In 1 uselwl occii alien should fight. M'.IVDAU AM) I. My (Jran'd.i l fought in sWy-onn And won I, I have slaycd the whol" war thru, Pill lost a leg and ha l to quit, ' For gone fiom him was spirit too. They patched him up and sent him hoiii". "We pity you. What will you do?" Was alLhc he ard from morn till night 'Till out of heart and downright ble, lie sat and thought, then thought some more. A cripple's hurt, that hurts the worst Is not tho ;ai:i he must endure. But when hla septic wound is nur'd By friends most patient, tender, true, Me sees so well that In their brain They think him "done for" helpless, lost, Dependent, useless all In vain For him to ever rise again Yes, that's the hurt that goes so dee;, And little do his ntir.es think When they prepare him for a sleep IHa eyes he'il clo o them just to pic:: : But, oh I he hll that' he mm t knoy Alone, 'miJst friends, h-arl-lirokeii he. Mil friemls !T"me his greatest foe Vith constant words of sympathy. And sUin: and tc: rs and talej of woo Now that !.-, what my Grun'dad said Drove him to drink, and sink so low. The land war. full of tramps, said lie So he was not the only one To feel the depth of misery When cruel war was fought and done. fcoir,Fo:is we took. They got my leg. And as I lay norn'j weak from pain, That life of Gran'dad to mo camo I saw his Faddcncd face again, I knew tho "hurt that goes so d .".'" Just for an Instant that was all, For nurses came at once, thank God! And took away my cup of gall. They smiled and hit me on tho cheek, And liado mo quickly to get well, For there was work for me to do- Tliis pulled ma straight right out of hell.. A man with leg of cork came next, With sprltely step und milling face And left a book upon my cot. (He was employed thus at the base).' He hnd a jolly chat with mo And In tho book ho pictures showed Of things thnt men like us could do. He said our friends found out our s load, So now do plan to teach us trades. Cod bless them all! I still c::n serve ' My country dear for years, perhaps. They got my leg, but not my nerve' Mrs. Dwight A. Hong Marlon, Oregon Phone job orders to the Tidings. ran Correct Lubrication for the VaJve-in-HeadType Motor The Valvc-ln-head-type en gine illustrated here, like all internal eombuttion engnea, requires an oil that holds its lubricating qualities at cyl inder heat, burns clean in the combustion chambers and goes out with exhaust Zerolene fills these require ments perfectly, because itia correctly re fined from aelected California asphaJt-base crude The Standard OilforMotGi' Cars It Keeps the EngineYoung! Experts agree in recommending ZEROLENE because it keeps tiie engine young, full-powered, smooth-running, and economical in fuel and oil consumption. The majority of motorists are 'now using ZEROLENE, because they have learned by experience that there is no better oil to be had. Correctly refined from selected California asphalt-base crude, ZEROLENE gives perfect lubrication vith less wear end less carbon deposit. Less wear because ZER OLENE keeps its lubricating body at cylinder heat Less carbon because, being made trom asphalt-base crude, it burns clean and goes out with exhaust. ZEROLENE i3 the correct oil for all typea of automo bile engines. It is the correct oil for your automobile. Get our lubrication chart showing the correct consis tency for your car. At dealers everywhere and Standard Oil Service Stationa STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) SAFE OVERSEAS (By Margaret E. Dill) Only a scrap of cardbonrd And tho message Is printed, too, Hut my heart fills up With thoughts of you Our hoy who sailed safe overseas. The ship on which you sailed With hundreds of comrades brave Left each a heart as tense as mine; Had eaeli a prayer that God would save And guide that ship safe overseas. With every hoy there goes a prayer, A prayer from a heart ut home . That God will keep and guide, Will Ideas their service "over there" And send them hack safe overseas. But, since I know that now upon n foreign soil little white crosses mark the place Where khaki-dad hoys gave life; Self I renounce, and only pray that you he bravo Through all the strife, Dear hoy of ours, who sailed safo overseas. Cleanliness. Personal Attention and Courtesy Combined lo Make the Eagle Meat Market Popular L Schwein 81 Pure flilk Pure Cream 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 . x LateHs iD)0 Print Fruit Labels cheaper and better than any other printers. May we figure with you on your next order? ? r : ft FiVffJ.'W?;'!'.!!'.' "Nearest to r!viM-?C!l-i'l rvorvllilno-" IT! Everything' m HOTEL MANX Powell St, cit OTartcll Sa.i Francisco III itlif h C!ic f:eat cf the 6:$ fcushess, shopping pa! f nnd ihcatre Cistnct. Kunu.ns azuma ice water in every roo.u. Our contmodious lobby .fir.cservice,! Homelike rcstai:ro;it will attract ycj. European Plan rates $1.00 up. Ml urn era mi V 1 fi: Managcistnt (y'Aa W.B.Jamc p(Y':?W INSPECT onrmarKet and your confl- dene will be behind tbe pieasnre of eating our meats. The Knowledge of cleanliness and a sanitary work shop will aid your digestion. N. Main Phone 107 EBEBII.