Thursday, January 20, 1921 BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL One cent the word each time. ATTORNEYS PHYSICIANS. DR. FRANK M. MOXON— Physician BRIGGS & BRIGGS— Attorneys-at- Law, Pioneer Block, Ashland. and Surgeon. Hours 9 to 12 and 1 to 5. Office, 425 E. Main St., L. A. ROBERTS— Attorney-at-Law. Opp. Public Library. Rooms 5 and 6, Citizens’ Bank DR. ERNEST A. WOODS— Practice Bldg. limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Office hours, 10 to 12 and ARTHUR L. DORN—Attorney-at- 2 to 5. Swedenburg Bldg., Ash- Law; Camps Bldg., Phone 184; land. Ore. 73-tf Ashland, Oregon. DR. J. J. EMMENS— Physician and CHIROPRACTORS and Surgeon. Practice limited to eve ear nose and throat. Glasses Oculist and aurist for DR. U B. MOORE— Chiropractic supplied. Physician. First National Bank S. P. R. R. Offices, M. F. and H. Bldg. Phones: Office, 112; Res. Bldg., opposite postoffice, Medford, ----- Oregon. Phone 567. 21-tf 207-J. DRS. SAWYER & CRANDALL OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS Pioneer Building. Res. 274-J or 367-J Phone 260-R. DR. GEO. J. KINZ— Chiropractor, Suite 8, over Mitchell s Clothing Resi- Office Phono 103. Store. dence Phone 401. T. L. POWELL—GENERAL TRANS- MAKE your own body cure you. Lat- FER—Good team and motor trucks. Good service at a reason­ able price. Phone 486-J. MURPHY ELECTRIC SHOP Complete Stock Electric Supplies. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL Exfde Batterle». est scientific methods used here, Try Dr. Scheller, 15 No. Main St., a 13 ) pl mow Ashland, Ore. Phone 147. 109tf ----------------------------------------------------- INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO. Effective March 29, 1920. Daily (Except Sunday) LV. MEDFORD LV. ASHLAND 7:15 a. m. 7:15 a. m. 8:00 a. m. 8:00 a. m. 8:45 a. m. 8:45 a. m. t 9:30 a. m. 9:30 a. m. JERRY’S PLUMBING SHOP. 10:15 a. in. 10:15 a. in. 11:00 a. m. 11:00 a. m. Beaver Block, No. 15 First St. 12:00 Noon 12:00 Noon Phone 68. 12:45 p. m. 12:46 p.m. Plumbing of every description done 1:30 p. m. 1:30 p. m. Right, Quick and Economically. 2:15 p. m. 2:15 p. m. 3:00 p. m. 3:00 p. m.1 TAXI 3:45 p. m. 3:45 p. m. 4:30 p. in. HOWARD’S TAXI—Just say 47, or 4:30 p. m. 5:15 p. m. 5:15 p. m. 106tf 230-J, please. 6:00 p. m. 6:00 p. m. FOR SALE. 7:00 p. m. 7 ;00 p. m. 8:45 p. m. Sat. only 8:45 p. m. FOR QUICK SALE—1 twin pedestal 9:30 p.'m. 9:30 p. m. solid oak dining table, 1 all glass 10:3 0 p. m. Sat. only 12:15 Midgt China closet, 1 large electric read­ SUNDAY ONLY ing lamp, one samll reading LV. MEDFORD LV .ASHLAND lamp, one carpet sweeper, one 9:00 a. m. 9:00 a. m. water power washer, 50 ft. of 10:00 a. m. 10:00 a. m. 12-in. hose, 1 electric iron, 1 elec­ 11:00 a. m. 11:00 a. m. tric hot plate, 1 heating stove; will 12:00 Noon 12:00 Noon consider trade for good milch cow 1:00 p. m. 1:00 p. m or good hens. 3 63 Laurel St. 2:00 p. m. 2 00 p. m. 3:00 p. m. 3:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. 4:00 p. m. FOR SALE—A breeding pen of 11 5:00 p. m. 5:00 p. m. White Leghorn hens and rooster. 6:30 p. m. 6:30 p. m. Tancred strain, Mrs. Booth's stock 9:30 p. m. 9:30 p. m. 117-2* Call 219 Granite St. Ashland Waiting-—East Side Phar- FOR SALE—Fancy Newton Bennit macy. JACKSONVILLE-MEDFORD Seedling Apples $2.25 delivered. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY $2.00 at ranch; X-Ray 120-egg in­ LV. MEDFORD LV. J'S'NV'LE cubator, $16.00. Dried prunes 7:20 a. m. Van Fossun Ranch, 200 8:00 a. m. 15c lb. 9:30 a. m. 8:30 a. m. yards on left hand road at end o 10:00 a. in. old highway, North Main. Ad- 10:30 a. m. 11:30 a. ni. 12:00 Noon dress Box 25 116-3* 1:00 p. m. 1:30 p. m. 2:00 p m. FOR SALE—Three used sewing ma­ 3:00 p. m. 4:30 p. in. 3:45 p. m. | chines, all in first class condition. 5:00 p. m. | See Mrs. Lane at the Tidings 5:30 p. m. 7:30 p. in. Sat. only 7:00 p m office. 114-6 9:30 p. m. Sat. only 8 :00 p. m. FOR SALE—First class alfalfa hay( 10:30 P- m. Sat. ouly $26 a ton delivered. Call 404-R. WE RUN ON SUNDAYS. 113-6* MEDFORD-GRANTS PASS FLATIRON BDG. PLAZA & N. MAIN “ Daily and Sunday ;---------.------- — FOR SALE LV. G’T’S PASS LV. MEDFORD tables, suitable for restaurant use, 10:00 a m 10:00 A. m. $3.50 each, also chairs to match 1:00 p. m. 1:00 p. m. at $1.50 each. See Georgie Coffee, 4:30 p. m. 4:30 p. m. I at Tidings office. 102-tf Grants Pass Waiting Room—The Bonbonniere. Phone 160. GARAGE WORK AT HOME. Office and Waiting Room: No. Íi HAVE YOUR WORK done in your S. Front St., Nash Hotel Building. own garage. .FORD work made Medford. Phone 309. special. All work guaranteed. Prices reasonable. Notify J. D. Conger, 427 Palm Ave. 103-18* . Several special made , . HANDY MAN. * WINDOW WASHING, chimney clean­ ing, janitor work, tree pruning, rose trimming skilfully done. Best results. L. H. Jacks. Phone 290-Y. 104tf Whittle Transfer Company FOR PROMPT SERVICE C. B. LAMKIN COAL BARGAINS IN Real Estate Clty and Ranch Properties • Houses to Rent. CITIZENS' BANK BUILDING BUY A HOME FIRST! Every man should strive to own bis own home; put some of your earnings into a home for the family; almost everything else will cost you $2.00 for each $1.00 of value; In homes you can still get $1.00 In value for 60c to 75c in money; now is youri time to bny a home. 8-room hard finished house, goc 1 plumbing, fine condition, two large lots, lots of fruit, barn and garage, good location; $3,100.00—$1,500.00 down, reasonable terms on balance. 5-room bungalow, good bath, sta­ tionary tubs, full basement, good condition, close In; garage; $3,000— $700 down, balance $25 per month. 5-room dwelling near Boulevard, bath, toilet, hot and cold water, three large lots, fruit, etc.; $2,500—half cash. Other bargains In dwellings, acre­ age or farm property; a fine proposi­ tion for wood timber; can’t be beaten for location. AND STORAGP. Peacock lump coal. . . .$18.00 ton Spring Canyon lump coal ...................... 18.00 ton Half ton« of cither... 975 Quarter tons of either 5.00 Whittle Transfer Co Office Phone 117 Do your feet hurt ? If they do — if they are not entirely comfortable at all times — stop in here and see our Practipedist, a foot comfort expert He has studied foot anatomy and — the famous Dr. / Scholl Method of I I /) Foot Correction. I . This expert will f .) examine your feet. I I /.) "7) of find Jour out the caute trouble I and give yo« his y / advice Billings Agency t Real Estate and Real Insurance, Established 188». He knows how to hit Dr. Scholl’s root Comfort Ap- pl es so you will get immediate relief Business Men! and correct the cause of your suf- fering. Try our 50 cent Merchants’ Lunch, at Hotel Austin Best meal in money. the city for the Served every day from 12 M. to 1:30, P. M. : Otherwise All Right. A prominent clubwoman says that woman’s besetting sins are envy, lazi- liess, gluttony, jealousy and revenge. Outside of that, she is. we presume, the angel we have always liked to pic­ ture her.—Boston Evening Transcript. ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS. ■ ■■ moonuni Mr. Richards, a Scholl Expert, at our store Sat­ urday, January 22nd and Monday, January 24th. Examinations, advice and suggestions free. We urge foot sufferers to con­ sult with him. ; : “he boot nco / (aswaso/ J OREGON ■ mm HAS SEIZED GERMAN TRADE — AMERICAN GOLFERS WILL TAKE THEIR BEST TO ENGLAND Japan Said to Be Furnishing Practi­ cally All of the Buttons Now Used in China. PAGE THREE i, j i GLYCERINE MIXTURE SURPRISES ASHLAND The quick action of simple glyce- rine, buckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka, is surprising. One spoonful relieves ANY CASE gas on stomach or sour "stomach. Adler- i-ka acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel and removes al lioul accum- I ulated matter which poisoned stom- 1 ach. Often CURES constipation. .Prevents appendicitis. One lady re-1 ports she has no more pain in back I of head or gas on stomach since us- Effort Will Be Made to Win Honors ing Adler-i-ka. T. K. Bolton, drug The style has changed in Manchuria that, just after the establishment of the republic, set many Chinese wear­ ing the garments of the West, and needing naturally western buttons. Such buttons, says Consul General Al- | bert W. Pontius, writing home from Mukden to his government, were im- | ported about equally from Japanese ou British Links Next Summer by gist. and European manufacturers, but now American Champions. the Chinese have pretty well gone back to their own style of dress, and the one European garment that still re­ By HENRY L. FARRELL mains popular is the heavy ulster. One (United Press Staff Correspondent) no longer needs buttons, except for NEW YORK, Jan. 20.—Havin one’s ulster, and these are now chiefly . succeeded in winning a British tennis imported from Japan, for the Chinese costume does very well with “frogs.” championship, America will make a But buttons, no longer seen, are evi- I most serious effort next summer to dently needed somewhere, for in 1919 annex the English golf titles. China imported about $400,000 worth Funds have been in the process of of them, bone buttons, composition hut- ¡solicitation since last fall to send a tons, and mother-of-pearl buttons, and big team of the best American golf-1 about 85 per cent of these buttons— ... , • .. .. , , . „ , . ers after the British championshin were made In Japan. The war has . - , OhBoylthats ie given Japan almost a monopoly; one and success of the finanacial drive might say that Japan buttons China. seems sure. protection Looking toward the amateur title And so it Is, says Consul General Pon- 1 for you. this, with needles to sew the buttons of the Isles, the United States Golf Look forche Reflex Edge on. Before the war China was import- Association has announced plans of OWERs e ing approximately $900,000 worth of similar proportion. AJ.TOWER CO. needles a year, chiefly from Germany ESTABLISHED 1836 “Chick” Evans, present American | and Austria; but now the Japanese eOSTON.M __ FISH BRNO $ champion; S. Davidson Herron, last needle manufacturers control the Chi­ nese market, and that is sad for the year’s champion; Francis Ouimet, Chinese needlewoman or needleman, former title holder; Bobby Jones, | UP AND DOWN because the Japanese needles do not Nelson Whitney, "Buck" Wittemore, Price continues to be dominant in keep their sharp points anything like as Regniald Lewis and Max Marston ! „ ... the public mind. Declines can be; long as the European needles.—Chris­ , have agreed to make the trip across expected and are in evidence—where tian Science Monthly. the Atlantic. Robert A. Gardner, advances have been made. Just who has made such a splendid show- where the drug store stands in this FIND MAKES SCIENTISTS GLAD ing in last year’s championship also matter is clearly set forth in a re- i . ... .1. . cent statement by a prominent Chica-, may join the invaders. go Wholesale druggist: Discoveries Recently Made on Scottish Miss Alexa Sterling. Mrs. William "In the first place, you must real- Island Are Declared to Settle A. Gavin and other noted women ize that the average of all price in- an Old Dispute. players are also planning to make creases in the drug trade did not . .... __ ", n , reach over 33 and 1-3 per cent, over trip ... Discoveries of great interest to | the ... over to meet the best oI...,,. 1914, he said. A . large eastern the British women. house, by analysis, found the exact archaeologists have been made on the England is somewhat aroused over figure to 27.8. Those on proprietary Island of Risga, in Loch Sunart, Ar- gyleshire, Scotland, where a hand of the invasion and some of the lead-medicines and toliet articles, we . 1 . found, only increased 17 per cent, scientists has been searching in huge ... ing Authorities through the press For that reason there will never be shell mounds. are trying to lead the more pessi- the same sort of a reduction that The director of the party Is of the mistic followers away from the be- there already is in other lines. opinion that the discoveries made in In sharp contrast a report from lief that the American contingent this rocky and uninhabited island have the Department of Labor shows that gone far to settle the dispute among will be impossible to lead. Ginghams increased from 12 British players who toured Amer- 7 4c a yard. Muslin from 9c to 45c a archaeologists as to whether a break intervened in the human occupation ica last summer took back with them yard. Sheets from 70c to $2.50. The of the British Isles between Palaeo­ generous tales of the improvement same ratio prevails in many other lithic and Neolithic periods. He says: iin the American game and they lines. . ....................... ... .... , , ... Briefly the situation is this: What “Vestiges of human activity ex­ sounded a warning to their country- didn't go up can’t be expected t tremely like the ‘Azilian,’ as the inter­ Drug store merchan-. mediate period is called in France, man to wake up and devote their come down. (f dise advanced very slightly and | attention to the • development have now been recognized In Scotland else America would step therefore only a very slight average' in the island of Oransay, adjoining youngsters, , , , . decline can be expected. Our cus Colonsay, and the name, of Oransay in and take away from them their tomers will get instant and full ad­ has been riven to this period in Scot- prized dominion of the vantage of every lowered price. land.” The Risga excavations disclosed re­ Truth Is Worse. mains of the Oransay man's dwelling When folk lie about you don't get places, with his food, refuse and rude angry — suppose they had known tools, made of flint, jasper, quartz and The truth about you and told that!—Bos- quartzite, horn and bone, and many large implements made from the ant­ Ion Post. lers of the red deer. Did you ever face a beatins W2.4 Storm ina Ba FISHC BRANDg Reflex I i Slicker? " n a NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING IS COST-REDUCING MACHINERY Advertising reduces selling costs by increasing sales volume and sales velocity. It is like the modern machine that enables a manufacturer to produce more and better goods in less time and at less cost. McNAIR BROS. Sfori Windows of Life. Every call and challenge of life has its appropriate window. Some are of the stained-glass variety, heavy lead­ ed, but permitting no vision. The win­ dow itself is the thing beautiful and the beholder is not expected to see be­ yond it. Even the sunlight is changed as it passes through the glass. Such windows are usually stationary and are the end in themselves. The clouds and sunshine Influence what Is within hut nothing without can enter. Other windows are of the prism variety. They give rainbow effects but reveal nothing as it really is. Such windows bewitch and enslave, but never reveal the outer life or permit the inner self to flow out into the great throbbing, panting world. These windows adorn and beautify, but we need the crystal glass to help us get the far vision and grow upon the lessons of life.—Grit. Says Swans Are Useful. A pair of swans, to replace others which escaped during the war, has been presented by the lord chamber- lain to the Royal Botanic society of London. These are not merely for ornamental purposes, says the London Daily Chronicle, but are to be em- ployed on useful work in demolishing the water weeds which have accumu- lo ted in the society’s lake in their gar­ dens at Regent’s park. The absence of the swans resulted In the lake be- ing overrun with water weeds, brought there, is was believed, by a heron which periodically visited the water tor fishing purposes. Lightning's Deadly Work. A jarring crash of lightning Inter- rupted the rest of two herdsmen re- cently as they slept near their flock of 1,250 sheep on the range above the American Fork canyon, in north cen- trai Utah. A hurried walk of some 200 feet brought them to their charges, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. Striking the close-gathered flock, the lightning had cut two wide swaths, about 250 sheep in each. Between these swaths and on either side, the animals were not touched. Record Parachute Drop. The official record for a parachute drop has been accredited to Lieut. John H. Wilson, U. S. A., of the Ninety-sixth Aero squadron, Kelley Field, Texas. There has been a ques­ tion as to whether a parachute would open satisfactorily in rarefied at­ mosphere. The lieutenant demon- strated that it would when he leaped from an army airplane at an altitude of 19,861 feet, and 17 minutes later made a safe landing.—Scientific Amer­ ican ‘Che &ank. the Chima, C/och Fit MEMBER A FEDERAL RESERVE B SYSTEM "WE HAVE SELECTED YOU - BECAUSE, ETC” HAVE you ever been on such a ‘pick­ ed’ list of propsects to share in the great profits to be made out of such and such gold mine or oil well or what not? If so, no doubt, you will testify you were ‘picked’ all right— if you came in. If you establish a connection with The First National Bank, consult us before investing. Savings draw interest and arouse interest. ’'LfirstNatioiutíÍ^attk ASHLAND. OREGON (.-aww 8 ‘CARTER PRES Il VAUPEL VICE PRE Wi MCCOY, CASHIER f 1 j | | 1 | j Car of Portland Seed Co. DIAMOND BRAND POULTRY FEED | | Just received Bought right and priced right | Also Fertilizing Sulphur for Alfalfa. j . Ashland Fruit & Produce Ass’n Keep Warm TRY THE FAMOUS Would anybody argue that a machine capable of increasing production and decreasing costs was EXPENSE-or that the buy­ er of the goods produced had to pay for the machine that pro­ duced them? Advertising by merchants or manufacturer saves you money in the same way. It is the great modern machinery that moves the merchants goods faster and enables him to sell for less mon- ey, and to sell a better quality of goods. ASHLAND TIDINGS ADVERTISERS Rainbow Rocksprings Coal and you will really have the fuel question solved. Fir, Pine and Oak Wood Send it to the Laundry Ashland Lumber Co PHONE 20 RESULTS