MOftBAt. A viti f t , «MT.* ASHLAND B A U T TIDINGS PAOS cordlng to the airmail contract signed,here recently between the Argentine Postoffice and the La- tecoere Company of Franck The new airmail service is scheduled ABERDEEN, Wash., April i t — to commence on September ylst, - (IP)— Experiments conducted by 1927. the Polfon Loggihg Company have By means of this new service, Rédwood Found tb Be Fast Growing demonstrated that the redwood Is o se Otti a Wort Per Insertion. Ho Ad Lett Than 25c. FOB RENT — FOB RENT — Housen FOB RENT— 1-2 acre o f gar­ den and all kinds 67 fruit and nut ment. Close In. Phone 278-Y. trees with 6 room furnished house 186-tl garage and chicken run. Close to FOB RBNT—■Furnished apt., high school and normal school. 96 Laurel, phone 289-J. 167-tf Brown A Rice, '63 N. Main. * 187-2 FOB RENT— Furnslhed email PÖB R^iltT^Furnlshed apart­ FOB BENT— Five room home, apartmenta and cabins with ga­ ratea. Reasonable by month near normal with range and or week. Barber Apts. 163 Gran­ heater. Write to P. O. Box 96, 187-3 ite. / lii- tf Talent. f 6 b BENT— Furnished house FOB KENT — Furnished apte., with garage, garden spot, near and unfurnished flat, 36 Bo. Sad 8t. 26-tf schools. Call at 663 Holly, phone 317L. ‘ ________________ 181-tf WANTED FOB SALE— MISCELLANEOUS WANTED— Your 1927 spray­ FOB HALE:— 1 crypt. In maus­ ing. New rl*. Six years exper­ ience. J. W. Watkins, Talent, Ore­ oleum. Call at 161 Fourth street. 188-3t* gon. 163-1 mo.* . WANTED—-To buy fresh cows ' FOR S A L E — Water power and springers, Charles Brolll, 448 washing machine, 581 East Main. . , . 187-3* Helman St., phone 407-R. 169-1-mo.« FOR HALE— Fresh cow, 1401 185-tf HAMAKRR TRANSFER a n d Boulevard. Storage Co. office at residence, FOR HALE—Asparagus roots, l 7 t North Main. Phone 410. 1-2 cents each. A few butternut ANS GIRL IN TROUBLE-—May Communicate with Ensign Lee o L th e Salvation Army at tbe W hite Shield Home, 666 May- fair Ave., Portland. Oregon. trees, I year ol(K50 cents each. C. A. Gray, 1372 Iowa. 185-6 one of the fastest growing trees in this district. , Robert Polson directed, the ex­ periment of planting redwoods fmiii mm id ENFORCE W INS LAW Would Wake up People at Four O’Olock by Shoot­ ing a Canon when fully functioning, a letter dispatched from Buenos Aires to LONDON, April 11.— (IPP-Peo- Paris, for instance, will have Its FOB SALE — Béal Estate reply arrive In Buenos Aires ten ple of Great Britain. Belgium, w . This . _____ Holland, and France will lose days „ ta later. exchange cannot POR HALE — Modern seven- on cut-over lands and—-declared, now, r be SadTIn TeiT’than ~f5Hy- ~»5-.t)OO,nO‘ everybody get up at 4 A. M. letter to (ravel to New York, ac- ment. - The stafe of Oregon is only 70 per cent majiped, according to L. B 825.00— Hughes De Luxe Mag­ netic Belt. Regular price 135.00. McArthur. The declaration was made {lur­ Guaranteed 20 years. The Best Mode Belt on market. Send 8 2, ing (he course of an address on FOB EXCHANGE — Beal Estate balahce C. O. D. prepaid. Resl- government map making. ident agent wanted. T. C. McDear- TO TRADE: Northern Oregon mon, 2106 San Antone’s Ave, Al­ city and country property for ameda, Cal. 183-6* Ashland property. F. L. Nutter, 840 B. Main. 188-2* FOR HALE — Nice California home to trade for acreage near Ashland, see Brown and Rice. • 187-4 feojR HALE or TRADE— 160 FOB HALE—Violet ray, phone 289-Y. - " - 183-6* NEW LOCATION— We sell on easy terms expert repairing on all makes. Few special bargains in both treadle and electric. Call, write or phone. Singer Sewing ma­ chine Co: 130 W 6th, at Grape. Phone 494J, Medford. 183-6 You Will be P leased - with Every ^Printing Order - Maternity Home MATERNITY 'HOME — 163 Granite. Terms, Including every­ thing, 84.00 per day. 162-tf Lumber Figures Show Increase PORTLAND, Ore., April 11.— An increase of nearly nine per cent over the 1925 figure of lum­ ber cut in Oregon and Washing­ ton was revealed by the forest service and board of census In their annual estimates. In 1925 approximately 11,243,- 000,000 board feet was cut while In 1926, 12,268,000,000 board feet was the output. Oregon’s ihcrease according to the estimate, was about 5 per cent, or 7,832,000,000 feet. Information was based oh Iden­ tical mills representing 65 per cent of the total « output of the two states. Oregon and Washington are said to be furnishing about one- third of the total lumber cut of the United States. WE DO FOR YOU. • Regardless of what kind of printing you may need. WANTED— By middle aged wo­ man, practical nursing, Mrk. Mad­ eline Briscoe, Rt. 2, Box 135 or BERKELEY, Cal., April 11.— call 175 Meade St. 172-i-mo.* (Lp)— The student who is forced to / get out and “dig” for a living out­ side school hours, makes better grades than the youth who gets his education out of father’s pock­ etbook. And the harder the work­ ing student has to work the better grades he makes. A comprehensive study of con­ ditions at the University of Cali­ fornia over a considerable period of time has revealed that of 1964 men who woTk enrolled at the university, 1348 are making bet­ ter than average grades. The average grade of non-work­ ing students stood at 1.20; those working 2 to 4 hours a day, aver­ aged 1.22, While 606 students who had to work more than four houfb Outside of school hours to remain at college, averaged 1.23. Less than 10 per cent of self- supporting students were dismis­ sed from the Institution for defic­ ient scholarships while of those WHY KEEP SOMETHING youths Who did not have to work, YOU DO NOT NEED? 12 per cent found themselves “cashiered'’ for falling below in their grades. The survey developed further that college athletes got better grades generally, than thofjp not engaged in athletics. This was at­ tributed to the fact that students SMALL-COST WANT AD. in athletics must meet certain scholarship standards In order to ; LETTERHEADS, STATEMENTS, ENVELOPES, BOOKLETS, OR WHAT NOT. THE TIDINGS PRINT SHOP can handle it quickly and to your entire satisfaction at reasonable price. Phone 39 AND WE WI^L BE GLAD TO CALL. ; Try a Daily Tidings By Taylor ' 1 i CHICK »510 MB SAW ANO T hat v s e * looking S a l e s m a n in A booth T H IS RS s Y a UAAHT"— in i C A N 'T a f f o r d T o 6 A r AT THESE PLACES BUT IT VJlLL BE WORTH THE PRICE IF x (S an IH nd out what f TNTÇANDTHAT STRANGE# HAVE’ UP THEIR S L E E V E S -T . T h EVRE IN TH U N W BOOTH. ■á ¿ U - ’ Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 164-J. ' Home Phone 1Ô4-L Office Phone 188-J Residence Phone 108-L OFFICE HOURS 10 to 12 a. to e p. Building ----- OFFICE HOURS 10-12 A. M. , 2-5 P. M. First National Bank Building DR. ERNEST A. WOODS Proctieo Limited To Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat X-Ray, Including Teeth Office Hours: 10 • 12 and 2 - S Swedenburg Building Convalescent Home 153 Granite Where the sick and aged are cared for In pleasant home surroundings. __ PRACTICAL NURSINO__ CHOICEST FOOD Physician and Surgeon Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office Phone 120 First National Bank Building DR. MATTIE B. SHAW Physician and Burgeon 108 Pioneer Ave Office and Resident Phone 38 Office Hours 10 - 18 a. m. 4 - 6 p. m. . 6:30 - 7:30 p. m. Call Jerry O’Neal for your next Job of ------Piombili g , Phone 188 Res. 8« MoMon St. Reasonable Terms WM. E. GOULD Cbhtractpr . Builder Repairing, remodeling and new work. Day or contract. 404 Mountain Ave. I’hone 153.1 T. L. POWELL General Transfer Good team and motor tracks. Good service at a reasonable prffce — Phone 88. t * JORDANS SASH AND CABINET WORKS Corner Helman and Van Nass. Phqne 161. 194-tf PAINTING— Ambro S. Park, palntlhg, Duo Tone wdrk, 711 Llb- £rty. Phone 466. 160-1-mo. * WM. E. GOULD Realtor , Bargains In Ashland and vicin­ ity homes. Insurance. *04 Mountain Ate. Phon« 488J during the summer months. To enforce his scheme he sug­ WHITTL1 TRAHdrtft gested that all shuttered windows A STORAGE 00. should be taxed, that candfes should be rationed, and that Coal, Wobd and Storage church bells ehohld be rung loud­ Packing, Crating aqd Shipping. ly on the appointed hour of rft- Long Distance Hauling Ing. Further ho proposed- fttht’ .Í < Auto Freight Terminal If ’there were sleepy-heads that slept through the church-bells, Phone l i t "cannon should be Bred In every street to wake the sluggards ef­ Office 89 Oak fit fectually. " Under his scheme no- one “regardless of rank, wealth or privilege’’ was to be exempted lous about getting well-settled from early rising. before his marriage." Sir James was married at 28. 80 CALLED IDEAL AGE FOR GETTING MARRIED PROFESSIONAL WOMAN ADVISED NOT, TO MARRY LONDON— CLP)— Acoordlng to Sir Thomas Lipton, bachelor, the ideal age for getting married is between 70 and 80. In an Inter­ view Sir Thomas admitted that he would be 78 in May, but ad­ ded. "Still I, have not yet given up hope for myself." Other prominent Londoners In­ terviewed were Sir William Arbuthnot Lane, the famous surgeon— "Early mar­ riage Is all In the Interest of morality, and of closer under­ standing In the home, since the couple are young enough to adapt themselves to each other." Sir William was married at 28. Miss Sybil Thorndike, actress —"In cases of real spontaneous affection, early marriages are to be encouraged as likely to be bet­ ter for the community.” Miss Thorndike was married at 26. Sir James Marchant, Director of the National CouncH for Race Regeneration—"I think the Ideal age Is 22 for women and 24 for men. Unhappily the nilddleclass young man is often unduly anx- LONDON, (U>) — So long . aa home-making and the bearing and rearing of children are regarded as of lefts importance than the training of armies, or the drawing up of agendas and balance-sheets, the professional woman should not marry, Mrs. Stanley Wrench, the novelist, declared here re­ cently. Mrs. Wrench asserted that the only time that a professional wo­ man should'marry was on the con­ dition that the man would admit her as an economic unit in the family and treat her as a comrade. \ "It Is a wonder that the married professional woman make the suc­ cesses they do,” Mrs. Wrench de­ clared. "When a man goes home he shakes oft the office, but when a woman goes to the office she cannot shake off the home. "Some women— many of them cleverer than man— are indus­ trious and keeh and can make a success of whatever profession they enter, but they should leave marriage alone." Chuirh Directory Mom and Pop < Physician and Swrgson Painting, tinting and papering, try Cliff Burlingame. 681 Mt. Av. or phone 98. 167-1 mo. Pia« Student Workers Get Better Grades Dr. Charts« A. DX. X O U X D ALUBR FAINTING c/4 acres of land In Siskiyou, Cal. On Pacific Highway. PPlenty of wa­ ter, near county school For fur­ ther particulars address Tidings, DAIRY — Hills Dairy, Walker Box 91. 183-2mo.* Ave., milk from high "grade Jer­ ’-------------------------------------- sey cows. We aim to please. We POSITION WANTED — Female use Surge Milker, qts. 10c, pts. 6c. Phone 30F2. 173-1-mo.* WANTED by young woman work by hour or day. Mrs. Made­ line Briscoe, Route 2, Box 135, 176 Meade St. 172-1 mo.* Business and Professional Directory WELL, M R . T \ T 6 - VJHAT DO YOU T hink OF ium PROPOSITION? 7 WfcU.«X> t> LIK6 TO THINK I t ONER, MR. VAN SLEEK — $ PO SB T W LOOK Mfe UP IN « DAT 0 ft S 0 ~ ~ Methodist Episcopal Ctinrch. N. Main and Laurel streets. H. F. Pemberton, Pastor, 117 Laurel street. Phone 87. Presbyterian Church . Main and Helman Btreet* ugh T. Mltchelmore, Pastor, 182 N. Main St. Photte 491-L. 3 Lutheran Chtarch Services In Odd Fellows Hall. II. H. Youdg. Pastor, 638 Boulevard. Sorvlcos 4th khd 6th Sundays, Church o t Christ >dlh Pioneer Ava. ft lenti ___ Smith, First Mrs. ____ Reader, 78 Fourth St. Phone 471-J Christian Church B and Second Street*. V. K. Allison, Pastor, 630 Boulevard Cnthotlr Church Sixth and C Streets The Rev. Fathkr, J. A. Carmody Sixth and C Streets. Phone 106 Church of the Nuareste Fourth an« C Streets P. C. Thatcher, Pastor W ll Gospel TWMple Bouleva^ J. 8. Murphy, Pastor Pentecostal Church Stoue Church, Fifth and Main . streets ’ E. F. Bingham, Pastor trin ity Episcopal Church second Btteet Men P. it- Hammokd, Yienn .’3 Second Street. Pftobd >1» ■»! ■■■■■» I I « '-*■*— I I Iff* -• Con