ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS Monday, June 18, 1921. I I BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL COURT NEWS One cent the word each time CHIROPRACTORS PHYSICIANS. DR. ERNEST A. WOODS— Practice DR. GEO. J. KINZ — Chiropractor. Marriage Licenses. Earl B. Stewart and Pearl E. Suite 8. Over Mitchell’s Clothing, Store. No. 25 the Plaza. Office Atuar" Wm. B. Kincaid and Lola Freeman. Phone 103. Residence Phone 401. Willard Hayes Pendleton and ATTORNEYS. Madeline Silver. DR. J. J. EMMENS— Physician and Merrill E. Butterfield and Mary Surgeon. Practice limited to BRIGGS & BRIGGS— Attorneys-at- Law, Pioneer Block, Ashland. eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses Phillips. supplied. Oculist and aurist for Circuit Court. S. P. R. R. Offices, M. F. and H. L. A. ROBERTS— Attorney-at-Law. Rooms 5 and 6, Citizens’ Bank George Finley vs. Big Bend Mill- Bldg., Medford, Ore. Phone 567. Bldg. ■ ing Co. ; order. DRS. SAWYER & CRANDALL T. E. Pottenger vs. Ross Kline et T. L. POWELL— GENERAL TRANS­ OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS FER — Good team and motor­ al; order. trucks. Good service at a reason­ Pioneer Building. State vs. Rowell D. Hines; Motion Phone 260-R. Res. 274-J or 367-J able price. Phone 83. and order. Maybelle H. Miller vs. Delmonte INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO TAXI. D. Miller; summons. Effective March 20, 1920. TAXI—Acklin's — Rose Bros. Phone Dally (Except Sunday) State vs. Henry H. Marsh and 213.136-tf [LV. MEDFORD LV. ASHLAND Charley Long; order. 7:16 a. m. i 7:15 a. m. City of Medford vs. Joseph West FOR SALE—REAL ESTATE. 8:00 a. m. 8:00 a. m. 8:45 a. m. Lawton et al; to quiet title. FOR SALE—Ideal home of two ami 8:45 a m. 9:30 a. m.. a m. Frank J. Holbrook vs. Theodore one quarter acres located on Ash- • 10:15 10:15 a. m. 11:00 a. m: Ice; republication. land street between Beach street 11:00 a. m. and Mountain Avenue. Six room 12:00 Noon W. C. Foster vs. Robert Miles et . , . 12:00 Noon modern cottage, newly painted 12:45 p m. 12:45 p.m. i al; execution. good garage, barn and large poul- 1:30 1:30 p. m. w. c Foster vs. Nettie Norman ; m. P. try house. English walnuts, apples, 2:15 2:15 p.m.I m. P- peaches and other fruit trees, ber- 3:00 3:00 p. m execution. m ries and roses. Half acre in al- 3:45 P. m. W. C. Foster vs. John I). Keifer, 3:45 p m. faifa, with plenty of garden 4:30 P. m. m. 4:30 p. execution. P. ground. Price $3,500 cash or 5:15 5:15 p. m. P. m. W. C. Foster vs. Sam uel McClin- $3,700 on terms. See E. S. Mor­ 6:00 6:00 p. m. P m. tock, execution. rison at the Automotive Shop. 7:00 p. m. 7:00 p m. 239-13-eod.» W. C. Foster vs. Minnie Smith. 8:45 p. m. Sat. only 8:45 p. m. 9:30 p. m. execution. 9:30 p. m. FOR SALE—Or will trade for a good car, the Fourth Street Meat Mar ! 10:30 p. m. Sat. only 12:15 Midgt Probate Court. SUNDAY ONLY 23-41* ket. Est. Jessie W. Monroe; proof of LV. ASHLAND LV. MEDFORD 9:00 a. m. publication. 9:00 a. m. . FOR SALE. 10:00 a. m. 10:00 a. m. Est. M. J. Clifford; proof of pub­ 11:00 a. in. FOR SALE—Reversable reed baby 11:00 a. m. lication. 12:00 Noon carriage, good condition, cheap. 12:00 Noon 1:00 p m. Est. Joseph Waterman; proof of 1:00 p. m. Call Sunday at Hotel Austin, 2 - 00 p. m publication. 2:00 p. iu. Room 104. . 239-2* 3:00 p. in. 3:00 p. m. Est. Geo. R. Lindley; proof of FOR SALE—Clean alfalfa hay, $12 4:00 p. m. 4:00 p. in. publication. 5:00 p. m in the field. F. E. Garle, Talent. 5:00 p. m. 239-4* 6:30 p. m. Est. Julius Lietz, bond and order. 6:30 p. m 9:30 p. m. 9:30 p. m. Est. Simon P. Matthew, order. FARMERS, SPECIAL PARGAINS IN Ashland Waiting—-East Side Phar- Claude A. Pauley, Ella E. Pauley, CEDAR FENCE POSTS AND macy. SHAKES—I have a limited num­ O. N. Powell assume business name JACKSON VILI E-MEDFORD ber of large 7 foot posts, which I DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY of “East Side Meat Market.’’ will deliver any distance up to 3 LV. MEDFORD LV. J'S'NV'LE Real Estate Transfers. miles south of Ashland, at 20 cts. 7:40 a. m. 7:20 a. m. each, or will deliver anywhere in Etha W. Hall et al to Medford 8:20 a. m. 9:00 a. m. Ashland or between Ashland and 10:30 a. m. 10:00 a. in. Mining & Dev. Ass’n.. four mining Phoenix at 17 cts. each; also have 12:00 Noon 11:30 a. m. | claims, $7. some 1500 7-foot shakes or boards 1:30 p. m. 1:00 p. ni. i C. E. Terrill to C. C. Hoover, land split from one inch to two inches 3:00 p. m. 2:00 p. in. seven inches 4:30 p. m. thick and from 3:45 p. in in sec. 27. tp. 35. S R 1 West, to twelve inches wide; would 5:30 p. m. 5:00 p. in. $114.81. make fine roof or garage floor. 9:30 p. m. 7:00 P. m Ashland Dev. Corp, to Jesse Win- Will deliver these around Talent 7:30 p m. Sat. only 8 :00 .. P. m. , at 7 cts. each or in Ashland at 10 10:30 p. m. Sat. only 9:50 p. m. burn, W*2 of NE. SE of NW NW of cts. each; also all kinds of wood | I SE sec. 32, tp. 9, S R 1 E. $32 00. WE RUN ON SUNDAYS. Tele- ! cheap. Adams Transfer. M EDFORD-ROSEBURG Ella Cook et al to Wilson Mc- 239-2 phone 460. Daily and Sunday Ig lot in Jacksonville. $400. LV. MEDFORD LV. ROSEBURG ' ’ FOR SALE—Cheap, One Auto Trail­ 11:00 a.m. 100 p.m. er. See Fitzwater at 4 4 Morton MEDFORD-GRANTS PASS PRINTERS' LINGO. street, or at post office. 237-6t* Daily and Sunday limited to eye, ear, nosè and throat. Office hours, 10 to 12 and 2 to 5. Swedenburg Bldg., Ash­ land, Ore. 73-tf LV. G’T’S PASS (Homerville, Ga.. News.) FOR SALE—Ford touring car, type­ LV. MEDFORD 10:00 a. m 8:00 a. m. "William. put General Washington furniture, writer, household 1:00 p. m. on the galley, and then finish the 11:00 a. in. cheap. 370 Hargadine street. 4:00 1:00 p. m. .. _0 p. m. j murder of the girl you started yes- 232-tf. 4:30 p. m. 6 :16 p. m. terday. Set up the ruins of Hercu- Medford Grants Pass Waiting Rcom—The laneum and distribute the smallpox. BUILDING MATERIAL Cement Brick and Block Works, Bonbonniere. Phone 160. You need not finish that runas runaway Office and Waiting Room: -No. 5 match but have the high water in specialize in all kinds' of building products. Corner Fir and 10th S. Front St.. Nash Hotel Building, the paper this week. Put a new head street. 225tf to General Grant and lock up Jeff Davis. Slide the old dead matter into “OR RENT hell and let that pi alone until after ¡dinner. You can put the ladies' FOR RENT — Two housekeeping fair to press, and then go to the 239-3* rooms. 129 Granite. I devil and put him to work on Dea- All Suits $25.00 con Fogy’s article on ‘Eternal Pun- FOR RENT—3 room furnished apt. j ishment.’ ” for adults only. Inquire 166 Har- up extra gadine, or Phon.e 264-Y. HEY THERE! Wool and with at trousers CHICHESTER S BRAND. PILLS W THE A FOR RENT—Lithia Garage. Inquire of E. F. Smith, 21 Oak . 2-17-tf c Tailors for men and women Sold or rented by the month. All Kinds of Fence Posts and Fencing PE IL’S CORNER BY THE PARK BARGAINS IN Real Estate Block of ten lots nicely located, two-room plastered house; lots of fruit and berries; good garden land; would make fine chicken ranch—$1,500.00. Terms. Good 5-room cottage; about half-acre lot, small barn, fruit and garden—$2,000.00. Terms. Special Bargain.—6-room house, good plumbing; close in; cash price $1,200. Also some five-acre tracts in city limits. Ulty and Ranch Properties Houses to Rent. The Children are | | 1 1 i LITHIA Black Silk Full Fashioned Hose and a handsome Sport Hose in black and | white combination. See our new mahogany oxford for growing girls EST Bread on earth, your mon­ ey’s worth, in Graham, Wheat or Rye. B ND WE can bake that Wedding Cake, and every brand of Pie. nowing how , you must al­ at $6.00. K E R low, gives us the right to blow. . ach loaf is right, in brown or he bet neo OREGON. ′ I 1 Hosiery Billings Agency Marshfield lumber industry adopts $3 as minimum wage./ | bored in our buying: Onyx white; here’s where we knead the dough! olls , Cookies, Buns, and Tarts by tons, are in this famous Cakery— OU Always win, when you drop In, at tbe WELLKNOWN LITHIA BAKERY. | 1 j sad Tre As: gie 1 1 sfir 7 203 ss I ' j MILKING TIME OT.1 AWA OXT.—If i.!' e Canada were segre- community of their own they would form a city larger than any in Western Canada. They numbered 275,060 in 1919, accord | ine tn the government’s final fig- | ures on the dairy industry for that dairymen of gated into armers delivered at These creamerie 2,821.149.557 pounds of milk and 71,351,336 pounds of cream For this, they received $107,412 542 which was $24,000,000 more than ‘hey had received for dairy products the year before. The production of creamery but- ter for the year was 103,890,707 pounds, valued at $56,371,985, as A FAIR DEMONSTRATION The growth of dairying in West- compared with3.93208¿4 8 pounds ern Canada in recent years has been valued at >4 859 156 the previous phenomenal. The West in range year. he va lue of, cheesepro- days was a beef cattle producer and duced in, 1919 was $44586 168, as later a bonanza wheat country, compared with , 39 456,632 in 1918. | Settlers who have gone upon small Ilie average price of butter was 54 | farms farms have have accounted .a for c.s the de all ­ cents as compared with 45 cents. velopment of the dairy industry. The number of employes in dairy industry was 10.716 wages amounted to $7,629,997 amount of money invested creameries and cheese factories $56,776,062. the and The in was The tendency of the entire West now is toward diversified farming. Establishment of good creameries throughout the western provinces has been greativ aided by financial . advances fron the government THE GREATEST GAME in this country and perhaps in any country is baseball, it is clean, exciting iu a wholesome way, fine exer- cise, and a game of skill. We supply all the needed equipment to play it, from uniforms down to counters. Also sporting goods of all kinds. The Midsummer Cape. | remem REPEATING CAP PISTOLS SCOUT CAP PISTOLS HORNS, ROOTERS DEVIL ON THE WALK KRAZY KRACKER STICKS CAPS FOR PISTOLS FUN MAKERS NOISE MAKERS Season for One-Piece Dress. The season for the one-piece dress of serge has also arrived. When there is no cape or outer wrap then the street gown is of serge or the suit Is of that or some other light material, The suits, when they are smartest, are quite plain, with long waist lines and with straight lines that are neverthe- less fitted to follow the lines of the figure with a delicate nicety. They are worn with trim little hats and with blouses that, while they are most- ly plain, are still made with quantities of handwork and a sufficient number of frills to make them becoming. The serge dresses are made on the simplest of lines. Really they have the slightest amount of fit and the smallest amount of material to make them notable. But they are apt to he embroidered in some way or trimmed with little facings or edgings DAIRYING FILLS TILLS OF FARMERS WITH MILLIONS OF DOLLARS YEARLY Hat, Shoes, Gloves in Gray. One of the favorite methods of wear­ ing gray when the whole costume is not in tone is to have the hat ami and gloves of that color, each of them matching each other exactly in tone. Noi a few of the gray silk crepe dresses are adorned with fringe. ami this is always in the same tone as the materials from which the frock is fashioned. Gray capes and those <>f that color combined with one por­ tion of dark blue are among the smart- est that are to be seen upon the streets. One is a model fresh from the workrooms of Jenny in Paris. Its up- per section is made in gray woolly ma­ terial and the lower section is made of some thick material in black em- broidered with threads of the gray drawn through it to form a plaid de- sign. The cape is one of those new Unes that are quite scant in width and perfectly straight in line, hanging from a little yoke that, fits the shoulders snugly and supports a straight collar. The hat worn with the cape shows how large the hats can be worn when they reach the limits of the French fashion for this season. Indeed, there is no limit to the extremes of width which they attain, and even then they “THE ELHART WAY” We have a large It you injure a man, and he obtains a damage verdict against you, you’ve got to pay it. Estab. 1883 Phone 211 41 East Main Gray Is the predominating color of | the moment. If there is any doubt as to the truth of this sweeping state­ i ment, writes a New York fashion cor­ respondent. then visit the smart res- I taurants at any hour of the day or take a walk up Fifth avenue or any other street and note what is seen. There is so much of this shade, indeed, that one stops a moment to wonder just how long it will last and what the next change in color will be. There are signs pointing toward the lighter shades of tan, for now and then a champagne gown or coat or cape Ja seen, and it brings a nice relief from the preponderance of the various tones of gray. Just now if a costume Is not al) gray from tip to toe then It seems to take pride in having some touch of gray about it, if It Is only the feather drooping from the brim of the hat or the shoes of gray worn with a frock that Is otherwise quite dark and in­ conspicuous. Gray, Indeed, has taken its place along with the shades of dark blue and black as being an accepted out-of-doors color as well as a favorite tune fur wear within doors. It is good fur the young and for the old. In fact. It recognizes no class or dis­ tinction as to age or stature. It is the all around good color of the season, and women are making the most of its popularity to use It In every possible way. °C —02a 10) 2.54) f / nr Drugeist. lx Jr .5 Py -I SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE See Our Window. It you were carrying $5,000 or more of cash in your car you'd want to have it insured. Real Estate and Real Insurance Combination Promises to Be Popul ar , When the Weather Becomes Too | Warm for Wraps of Any Kind. I Pilis in Red and Gold w. boxes, sealed with Blue Ribboa. VZ Take other. Buy of your V Ask for CIII-CIIES.TEE g DIAMOND EEAND PILLS, for as years known as Best, Safest, Always Rellabic CITIZENS’ BANK BUILDING Don’t Expose Your Property to Loss Don't risk your house, your bank account, your business. Let a first class automobile policy stand between your worldly goods and the result of that possible accident. DO IT NOW. A few dollars today may save yon a few thousand tonight. | | DIAMOVI» new shipment of If you haven’t the cash, your property can be sold to get it. USE TAFFETA, LACE TRIMMED • | NEW GARDEN TOOLS. New Spray Pumps. New Spray Hose. New Garden Hose. Used Sewing Machines. New Iron Age Hand Cultivators. New Sewing Machines. A FEW BARGAINS FOR SALE BY BEAVER REALTY CO. But are you not driving your car, with about all of your prop- erty exposed? Shade So Much in Evidence Causes Wonder as to How Long It Will Last. metallic Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of School District No. 5 of Jackson County, State of Or­ egon, that the annual school meet­ ing of said district will be held at the City Hall, to begin at the hour of 2 o’clock p. m. on the third Mon­ day of June, being the 20th day of June, A. D., 1921. This meeting is called for the purpose of electing two directors and the transaction of business usual a such meeting Dated this 6th day of June, 1921. - G. W. GREGG, Chairman Board of Directors. Attest: F. S. ENGLE, • District Clerk. 234-2 Mon. all they are worth In their rather iso i luted way. GRAY IS COLOR OF THE MOMENT sots cisele YBMMFR/a. NOTICE OF ANNUAL SCHOO1 MEETING. PAGE TEREB In some bright color of silk or silk braid that gives them that fresh chic which makes them notable. There are any number of gray dresses made of worn with big black or dark blue hats, and then there are the popu- lar little street dresses, made of a light, say gray, upper section, and a lower section of the black or dark blue, a narrow belt of the darker tone being used to hold them to a semblance of form about the waist line. Evening dresses have their predilec­ tion for gray, and when it is not ex actly gray then those tones of mauve ami light blue creep In and become that shading between gray and some | m<r all the way round, as were displayed ti number of taffeta the case may be. The trimmings are dresses <»£, this sort with very full scanty and artistically posed upon the skirts, sometimes ruffled over their en­ spreading brims so that' they tell for tire surfaces. SIMPSON’S HARDWARE gnousn!™""""’ “Che Ë>ank, with the Chirria Cloah. P MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE •SYS TE Ma PRESENT HARD EXPERIENCES The present hard experiences- in the agricultural and business world are not an unmixed evil, provided they bring us back to saner stand­ ards of, living and spending. Many depositors of the First Na­ tional have decided to save for real prosperity rather than to indulge in showy appearances without the money to back them up. « $ ^TkFirstNatiotiaJBatik “I ASHLAND. OREGON# U SAEDEE E'Se 6 W MC COY. CASHIER zituuuuiuuuu." j IililIIIIE i‘il! Ilil# III I ' III ■ W II I Try a box of our Milk Chocolates in five differ­ ent flavors; 80c a pound, or black and Milk mixed at 70c a box. Labelle Crater Lake, Velvet, Chop Suey and and Nut Tops. Enders Confectionery LESLIE PRICE. Prop. Comply With the Law -....:----- ===== ======== and use ============ Printed Butter Wrappers CCORDING to the ruling of the Oregon Dairy and Food Commission all dairy butter sold or exposed for sale in this state must be wrapped in butter paper upon which is printed the words “Oregon Dairy Butter, 16 (or 32) ounces full weight,” with the name and address of the maker. To enable patrons of the Tidings to easily comply with this ruling this office has put in a supply of the standard sizes of butter paper and will print it in lots of 100 sheets and up* ward and deliver it by parcels post at the fol­ lowing prices. A 100 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces . ......... $1.75 250 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces $2.75 500 Sheets, 16 or 32 ounces $4.00 Send your orders to us by mail accompan­ ied by the price of the paper and it will be promptly forwarded to you by parcel post, prepaid. We use the best butter paper obtainable, and our workmanship is of the best. Let us have your order and you will not regret it. Ashland Tidings Ashland, Oregon