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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 28, 1919)
Frfdy, March 2. 119 ASHLAND TIDINGS fACB BETES TIDINGS CLASSIFIED ADS Iiine Heasures to be Voted Upon in June toW MLLE0 One cent the word each time. Twenty worda one month one dollar. DR. MAUD INGERSOLL HAWLEY Chiropractor and Physcultopathist s Office Second Floor First National Bank Bldg. Opposite Hotel Austin Phone 48 81U and Cabinet Baths, Hot and Cold Spray Baths, Electric and Swedish Massage. Rest and Medical Gymnastic Rooms MICKIE SAYS r, tit Tw6 H Twt B0 CITY PiR, Wl NOV) OONTf READ EVRf UNt m 'EM, IN CUOOlNO iMt AOS, LIKE "Y0O DO IN TV4E MONSft PKPER. oo nOu imov r j PROFESSIONAL. DR. J. J. EMMEXS Physician and surgeon. Practice limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses sup plied. Oculist and aurlst for S. Pl , H. R. Offices, M. F. and H. Bldg., opposite postoffice, Med ford, Ore. Phone 567. 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 K. . D. BRIGGS, Attorney-at-Law, Pioneer Block, Ashland. CIVIO IMPROVEMENT CLUB The regular meetings of this club will be held on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month at 2:30 p. m., at the Auxiliary Hall. PIANO TUNING GEO. W. CROSS, Medford, Ore., Piano Tuner and re pairer. A tuner to particular : Musical people. Endorsed by the leading musical people of Southern Oregon. Leave orders at Rose Bros. Phone 213. 52-tf WATCH REPAIRING STRICTLY fine watch, Jewelry and ptlcal repairing; engraving, ev erything nicely and promptly done. W. A. FREEBERG. ll-3mo FOR RENT FOR RENT Modern 4-roorn flat furnished. Phone 3 17-J. 15-1 FOR RENT Good 6-room close in. Phone 3 13-J cottage 15tf FOR RENT f-room bungalow, fur nished. Phone 359R. 10tt FOR SALE FOR SALE A No. 1 baled hay, 2nd cuttlne alfalfa. Phone 1F13. 14tf FOR SALE Barred Plymouth Rock ecus for setting. 15 for 75 cts. H. II. Leavltt Phone 415L 13tf FOR SALE Indian Runner ducks and duck eKR8. Phone 369R. 10'f EGGS FOR HATCHING RHODE Inland Reds. Eastern strain claim Ing trap nest record of 289 eggs . la year. 15 $1.00; 60 i3.uo, 100, 15.00. Miss Edna Hoag. 9-lmo. 475 Beech St BROWN LEGHORN EGGS For hatching; carefully selected stock. Phon 494R. 11-lmo MRS. HERRIN'S W. LEGHORNS in fn. tinth(nff And dfiV - old OfiBH iwi 11 - ehlcks. Order your chicks early aa the supply is iimuea. uepusn required on all chick orders. Tele- nhnna 9Q1T 1 Ott miMPDrn CTPAT.V While Leghorns ' 13 years of continuous trap nest ing. .Hatching eggs $1.50 per 15; ' $7 per hundred. A few hundred baby chlx left. Mrs. W. D. Booth. m,nn. 9qi.t? 11-lmo 1 UUILV HI. - FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 8 acres with onYMtn and modern house, on paved hign way, for $2000 until April la only. House alone worth $180 o. Address A-Z, care Tidings. 1" FOR SALE At a bargain, modern residence, No. 464 Mountain Ave., or will exchange for Klamath. Ad dress owner, E. G. Argraves, kibi- if 3 vy FOR SALE 15 acres 2 miles from center of city. 1 lot 50 x 100 ft. on good street one block to main business section. Apply at this ! office. IMt FOR SALE Improved acre; five- room cottage; barn; chicken house; city water; on Lincoln St. Price reasonable. Easy terms. Write owner, Fred L. Ulen, Lew lston,, Idaho. 8-3mo USED CARS FORD CAR FOR SALE Good as new 1913 model. Bankable note $450 or $425 cash deal. S. P. Shutt, 44C Allison St., Ashland 15-3 FOR SALE A nice Chevrolet car. See Dan Kay. Phone 90, Ashland Vulcanizing works. 15tf FOR SALE Good second hand Ford car. Call Park Garage. 9tf FOR TR1DE WANTED TO TRADE 166 acres in Douglas Co., Oregogn, for home In or near Ashland. Terms. Phone 40 iR, or address 448 Helraan St 15-1 mo. FOR TRADE Fine Ashland reel dence for Portland residence. Ad' dress 6913-45 Ave. S. E. Portland, Ore. 14-8 I WILL TRADE My 160 acre wheat ranch near Merrill, Oregon, 145 acres of which will be under ir rigation next year, for a small farm suitable for chickens and dairying. Price $30 per acre. Al so will sell or trade 6 room resi dence In Klamath Falls. Address P. O. Box 54. Merrill. Oregon. 14-2friday WANTED WANTED To do plain sewing. Mrs. Hogue, 391 Beach St. 13-3t WANTED Men or women to take orders among friends and neigh bors for the genuine guaranteed hosiery, full line for men, women and children. Eliminates darning. We nay 50c an hour spare time or $24 a week for full time. Experi ence unnecessary. Write, Inter national Stocking Mill, Norris- town, Pa. 10-8t TIME TO PRUNE ROSES (Continued from page six) should be used only after the prun ing but following the first cultiva tion of soil. Spray In condensed form may be purchased at any floral or seed shop and may be put on by any amateur jtrower with the use of a small hand pump. All rose growers unite In the be lief that soil cultivation should be continued thuou the entire rose season and should in a measure re place profuse watering. "Rose plants are of the same species as apple trees," said Mr. Holman, In explain Ing this theory of added soil cult! vatlon and less watering. "AnDle' orchards at Hood River used to be Irrigated. Now the Irri gation is thought to be secondary In Imnortance to soil cultivation. The soil is kept In a dry, pulverized con dltlon, keeping the water within I few Inches of the surface. Too much watering brings the roots of a rose plant to the surface, while by keep ing soil friable roots are forced deep Into the earth. "I am not superstitions and there fore I do not believe that watering should take place at any exact time of the day. It is true that on a hot day the leaves of plants watered In the morning will cook slightly, and so If a sreneral rule la to be laid down, the evening might be consld ered the beet time. "Roses are like persons they need rest After the June bloom is over and if a fall bloom Is desired, rose plants shjould be left tolone, until August. About the first of August the ground should be saturated with water and no attention other than soil cultivation should be given them. Blooms will be brought forth thru September, October and November by this treatment. "Too much water hurts rose plants. A rose bush Is not a swamp plant. However, water is one of the best methods of freeing rose plants from insect Hfo. With a fine spray from the garden hose the leaves can be cleaned as well as with many of the patent preparations. Leaves are the lungs rather than the stomachs of the rose plant. They are filled with little breathing holes which take in nourishment, '.later elaborated into sap. These breathing holes are apt to be filled with dust during the dry summer months and an occasional watering cleans them out." For persons who are Just com mencing their rose gardens, and who were not able to plant them last fall and winter, Mr. Currey has given the following directions: "It is far better to put a 15-centjsIs of rose soil requirements. Nine measures, referred to the people by the last legislature, have been placed upon the ballot for a special election to be held June 3, in Oregon. These measures reflect the work of the lawmakers during the forty day session and embrace most of the subjects upon which argu ments waxed warm in both legisla tive houses. "Highway work and the ousting of an alleged patent pav ing trust," from control of such con struction, state aid of various kinds for returned soldiers and sailors, re construction work and building of structures for state needs, as a means of employing discharged soldiers and war workers, and Irrigation and re clamation legislation these were the issues upon which forensic fights were in legislative halls. These sub jects are included In the nine refer endum measures which are as fol lows: Military Highway A proposed appropriation of $2,- 600,000, contingent upon the appro prlatlon by the federal government of a like amount, to assist the United States government In constructing a military highway from the city of Astoria, thru Clatsop, Tillamook, Lincoln, Lane, Douglas, Coos, and Curry counties of Oregon and to the California line. A constitutional amendment to permit the bonding of Oregon for five million dollars for the promo tfpn of reconstruction reclamation and land settlement projects. A proposed law providing that honorably discharged soldiers, sail ors and marines from Oregon may at tend any private or public lnstitu tlon of learning in the state, and have their necessary expenses not to exceed $25 per month, paid by the state for four years. A constitutional amendment for the construction of state market roads under supervision of the coun ty courts. For Reconstruction Work A bill to bond the state for $5, 000,000 for reconstruction work, in cluding construction of hospitals at Portland and Salem, and other state buildings at Corvallls, Eugene, Mon mouth, Pendleton, Astoria, Marsh field, Baker, Bend, La Grande and Medford; to develop reclamation pro jects or arid, swamp and logged-off lands, building a new penitentiary, and to provide settlement of land by discharged soldiers. A constitutional amendment pro posing payment by the state of Irri gation and drainage district bond In terest for the first five years by Issu ing state bonds, on condition that such districts are found to comply with required conditions. A constitutional amendment to raise the present two per cent limita tion placed upon counties for creat ing debts for permanent roads. A constitutional amendment to provide for a lieutenant governor, which office does not now exist in Oregon. A constitutional amendment to permit the erection of a reconstruc tion hospital In Portland. FISHER LAUNDRY GO. General Laundry BiudncfM Phone 165 also FRENCH DYE CLEANING and Dye Works Phone 100 bush Into a 50 -cent hole than a 50 cent bush Into a 15 -cent hole," he declared. "A hole from two to two and a half feet deep and two feet wide, If for a bed, and three feet wide ilf for a row, should be dug. The eod token off the top of the hole should be put into the bottom, then a few inches of manure'should be deposit ed, before the remainder of the soil, which has been mlxod with manure In proportion of one part manure to two parts soil, Is placed around the UBh. "The roots of the plant should be spread out horizontally as much as possible and then after, putting in the soil I would give the plants a slight pull that will bring the roots to a gentle slant. The soli should be kept in pulverized condition. '' By planting late in the season, not much of a bloom can be expected and the plant must be pruned down close." With the exception of tea roses, he believes sand is harmful to rose plants. Any soil that will grow a ennri hill of notatoes will Crow a beautiful bed of roses, Is his dlagno- FARM AND HELD (Continued from page 3) Is being practiced much more gener ally this spring than ever before. Fewer early hatched pullets were marketed last fall than In previous years, Indicating, the specialists say, that poultry raisers realize the value of their early hatched pullets and have held them for their own use. Hog-Cholera Losses on Decline. Since 1913, when the United States Department of Agriculture began work to control hog cholera, the dreaded disease has become less and less destructive each year. A force averaging 165 Federal veterinarians has been maintained, working In co operation with state authorities in charge of quarantine and other regu latory measures necessary for the success of control work. During the fiscal year 1918 more than 5,500,000 hOKS were Inoculated with anti-hog- cholera serum, and more than 2,200 farms, found to ljja infected with cholera, were cleaned and disinroct ed under supervision of the depart ment veterinarians. Altogether, representatives of the department visited more than 15,000 farms to Investigate reported out breaks, to apply preventive measures and to clean and disinfect premises. How great a menace hog cholera ha been to the Nation's swine Industry may be judged from the accepted es timate that 90 per cent of hogs lost from all ailments die from cholera. In 1918 the death rate of swine from disease was placed at 42.1 per thous and. Thus the loss was slightly above 4 per cent for the United States, the lowest on record, accord ing to the department's figures. Supports Family by Homo Canning. The sale of her canned fruits and vegetables has enabled a woman In Albemarle county, Va.. to feed and clothe her eight children the last two years. When war waa declared her eldest son enlisted in the Navy. In a few months the second son went Into the Army, and the mother was left to wrestle with the problem of pro viding three meals a day for the nlBht younger brothers and slaters. About this time the home-demonstration agent of the United States De- nartment of Agriculture and the State Agricultural College was teach ing the women In that locality how to can. With a garden which could -if j U When Time Presses "VTHI WTT.I, Mmmiti nady-to-servv fasty metis, veguU and soufs. All tliy require is winning Arough dttj'v been eooLad. With tLa you out pfvptre dainty yet ubsUotiJ araJ in a nv mnrotM. Let ua send you supply of our esnaad goods. In taste ad eMamio thrr an to Li tlx etxMM, rah goods that yeas probably eould not tell tLa dUTaranoa if you war to Male aida by nda eompanaon. Good and Price Plaa Gfocefy raise plenty of fruit and vegetables, and with wild fruit to be had for the picking, the mother of ten decided therein lay the solution of her prob lem. Results have proved that her Judgment was right. Thousands of cans of fruit and vegetables have been put up and sold from this coun try home. One lot the home-domon-stratlon agont helped her sell brought $125. BIDS FOR KLAMATH ROAD ARE ASKED FOR Sealed proposals are asked tor by the district engineer, bureau of pub llo roads, United States department of agriculture, at 886 Mills building, San Francisco, to be opened April 21, for construction of three units of the Klamath river forest highway In the Klamath national forest, SUkl- you and Humboldt counties, Califor nia. One contract calls for the con struction of 15 miles, another 7.4 miles, and tho third 10.4 miles. The contracts call for the comple tion within 250 weather working days, and all of them have consider able rock excavation. Maps, plans and specifications can be examined at 886 Mills building, San Francisco, or at the district ranger, Happy C4mp, California, or Orleans, Cali fornia. Work starts on Aurora-Salem Highway. Only the very Choicest Parts of the Wheat Berry Used Not the coarse dark flour of Wartimes, but a rich, 0hte, patent flour made from finest Eastern Hard Wheat and finest Western Blue stem. Scientifically Blended and Manufactured by FISHER. FLOURING MILLS CO. J TACOMA MT. VERNON BLENDS MAH FRIEND" turmd on LanJ iw eai Will Satisfy Ton. Telephone 78 Auto Painting We do all kinds of Auto Painting and do firstclasi work. rrlces range from f 10 for En amel Coat for Ford car to $35 to $50 for high-class 3-coat Job. All Work Guaranteed J. M. Hughes Corner First Street, Back of Vinlng Theatre Hotel Austin Barber Shop X. O. BATES, Prop. First-class Service and Equipment. Shoeshlning Parlor Baths. . Ashland, Oregon. , ' of our "9