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PAGE EIGHT ASIIMXI) TIDINGS Monday, November 4, 1012. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS One cent per word, first insertion; 14 cent per word for each insertion thereafter; 30 words or less $1 per month. No advertisement inserted lor less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order expect to parties having ledger accounts with the office. MISCELLANEOUS CHAIR DOCTOR R. H. Stanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relaid and repaired, bed springs re stretched, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies. 26 First avenue, opposite First National Bank. Phone 413-J. Wanted- Hotel. -Chickens at the Depot 43-7t TAXIDERMISTS, FURRIERS AND TANNERS Natural Science Est., 10 Granite St. 38-tf READ THIS Any time you want the city carriage, see E. N. Smith, 124 Morton St. Phone 464-J. WANTED Steady employment by a strong, ambitious young man of this cit Phone 268-J. 46-3t WANTED Work on ranch by the month, by young man. Call at the Manx rooming house, Ashland. 46-2t VOICE CULTURE, tone placing, ar tistic singing. Address Mr. Mac Murray, East Side Inn. Phone 183. 25-tf PASTURE Fine alfalfa pasture at the end of Oak St. Call at 996 Oak St. or phone 291-R. W. D. Booth. j$9-8t LOST Thursday last, a pair of gold rimmed glasses in case. Return to 236 North Mountain avenue lor v reward. 46-2t LOST A 12 size thin model watch, silverine case, monogram J. G. M. on back. Finder return to this office for reward. 4 6-3t FORTEXCHANGE Teh acres on'Ya quina Bay, adjoining the town of Yaquina. Several acres bottom land, plenty of wood, running wa ter, and sewer in house; eight room bungalow; running stream through place; splendid Bait water fishing, salmon, etc., in front of place. Would like few acres with house, or house and esveral lots In Ashland. Address owner, O. Middlekauff, Benton County Bank Bldg., Corvallis, Ore. Cut this out if interested, as this will be in serted but once. 46-7t FOR RENT. FOR RENT-r-3,500 acres pasture land six miles east of Ashland. Apply Miss Mollie Songer, 35 Hel man St. FOR RENT Suite ot tnree fur nished rooms for housekeeping. All modern conveniences. 166 North Main St. 44-4t VOTE FOR G. A. GARDNER TALENT, OREGON, COUNTY CLERK If elected, will carefully scrutinize the needs of the office and make any changes that will help to systematize the work, without unnecessary ex pence to the county. Duties per formed according to law. Due court esy to all visitors or Inquiries. Busi nessllke administration assured Republican nominee and voluntarily endorsed by prohibition party. Can didate has been resident and business man of Talent for several years, serving the public in various ways. Home vote in April primaries 102 out of 111 votes cast for republican candidates for county clerk. NO. ON OFFICIAL U ALLOT, 89. Paid advertisement. Fuller's Overcoats Fuller's Suits Fuller's Raincoats at $15.00 up The beBt cold weather investment that you can make. Sturdy, all-wool cloths in new patterns and color blendings, skillfully tail ored into proper styles for men of all ages. Come in tomorrow and look at Fuller's clothing you'll find it good. . J..-.':' &ji Aiitf l&fflXXJUSJ 9 Wear Fuller's Clothes and be well dressed Mr. Blake, the expert ladles tailor, Is with us. ' " T.T;' We clean gloves, hats, and make old clothes look new. FOR RENT Continued FOR RENT Six-room house, fur nished. Address 66 Second St. or phone 459-J. 46-2 FOR RENT A comfortable bedroom wtih use of bath, also table board. Mrs. Nathan Durkee, telephone 309-J, 64 Third St. 43-lmo. FURNISHED- HOUSEKEEPING SUITES, gas for cooking, electric light, bath, toilet, fine view, cen tral location, upstairs or down to suit. Apply at millinery store'-op-posite East Side Inn. 27-tf BiCiCLES FOR RENT New and second-hand bicycles for sale cheap. Bicycle repairing, prompt service, good work, low prices. All kinds of tires and supplies at cut prices. Eastern Supply Co., 104 North Main. 77-tf FOR SALE. FOR SALE A Jersey cow giving 3 to 4 gallons a day, to be fresh November 15. See F. C. Homes, Jr. 46-4t FOR SALE Baldwin and Spitzen- burg apples, 50 cents per box while they last. W. L. Moore, phone 810-F-4. 41-6t FOR SALE Acreage located on the Bouievara, near ranroaa. uau on or address Mrs. C. W. McKlbben, Route 1, Ashland. 82-tf FOR SALE 3,000 shade trees, box- elder, elm, ash, locust and several kinds. Cheap if bought by the last of November. James Purves, 186 Weightnian St., Ashland. 46-2t TIDINGS WANT ADS are little real estate salesmen. A 50-cent want ad will put you in touch with somebody who wants the property you have for sale. Try It. FOR SALE Single Harness J7 and up; with collar and hames, ?10. Made in Ashland; our own make. Don't buy factory made harness. Eastern Supply Co., 104 North Main. 77-tf FOR SALE Drakes, Harshbarger blue ribbon strain of the new Stan dard Light Fawn and White In dian Runner. White egg layers, from 280 egg strain. F. W. Mc cracken, phone 813-F-3. 45-3t FOR SALE Two houses on Rock and Nursery Sts. and a large lot 120x247 feet on Boulevard and Sherman St. Make an early offer. Address J. G. Chumos, 312 Fulton St., station P, Seattle, Wash. 46-5t FOR SALE 160 acres 7 miles from Silverton, Ore. Part in cul tivation. Price $5,700. Would consider good city property as part payment. Good chance for a dairyman. Address inquires to Stanley Taylor, Shelburn, Ore. 44-3t FOR SALE Lots on level ground near high school, with building re strictions, insurance clause. Four summers' growth of peach, apple and pear trees. Reasonable prices, easy terms. Ten per cent discount until December 1. H. O. Frobach. 42-6t FORSALE One team mules, 7 and 8 years old, weight 900 each, har ness and 214-inch wagon, $185. One 1,000-pound saddle mare and saddle, $65. One good 3-inch Weber wagon, $65. J. A. Schoen thal, R. D. 1, box 42. Near Nor mal, on Boulevard. 45-tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Eleven acres; all fruit; free soil; pears, apples and alfalfa; three crops; sub-irrigation; electric lights; fine well, best of water; engine, tank, spring, half acre of lawn, shade trees, shrubbery, bungalow with screened porch, all new buildings; fine location, grand view; district ot prize apples; first-class grocery service one mile west of Talent, and high school, five miles west of ABhland; short walk to experi ment station. $6,500. Owners, Brown Bros., Talent, Ore. 12- Crescent City, - Special facilities for tourist par ties at the Bay Hotel and annex, Crescent City. Hot and cold water, baths and rooms en Buite. 22-tf John Arnell, prohibition nomi nee for state representative, appears as No. 69 on the ballot. Vote 69 X John Arnell. Paid advt. 45-2t Phone job orders to the Tidings, WEST PLAYS ATPOLITICS CRUSADES ALL AGAINST REPUB LICAN OFFICIALS. BOOSTS DEMOCRAT CANDIDATES Charge Made That Famous Clean-ups of Oregon Executive Are All Made to Benefit the Democratic Party Seems Well Founded. As days go on the charge that the famous clean-ups made by Governor West throughout the state of Oregon have been made for political pur poses seems to be getting pretty well proven. It is markedly noticeable that in nearly if not every instance the state interference has been in places where the officials were re publican. It is known that lie has refused to interfere in some towns where the need was even greater than in places where he has inter fered, and that in the latter places the officials were democratic. Not only that, but West, who' is governor by the grace of republican votes, and who has throughout his term of office pretended to stand on a plane above party politics, has dur ing this campaign written repeated letters endorsing democratic candi dates for office and invariably under some specious claim of their merit in some direction entirely non-partisan. It is the old, old democratic scheme of trying to deceive members of other parties into thinking that the democratic candidate was but a ! poor democart at best and should have their support. The letters sent Attorney Kelly of Medford and Colonel Tou Velle, pur porting to be non-partisan praise from a state executive, are as simply democratic campaign dope as if sent out from democratic headquarters. Governor West's action in these mat ters has gone far to shake the belief in his sincerity In his reform atti- i tude, and his praise of democratic candidates will be taken at much less than face value by all thinking peo ple. The Kite's Tail. Oregon City Courier, Octtober 18, 1912: There has been .some criti cism of the Courier because it is supporting a progressive candidate for congress and the Courier al ways likes to explain. Go out on the street and ask the first dozen men you meet who the democratic nominee is, and not one of them can tell you. They don't know not ten in one hundred DO know. When trie democrat was nominated it wasn't intended anyone SHOULD know. He was NOT nominated to be elected. He had no hopes to be in fact, did not even file h's accept ance until 11:30 when John W. Campbell was nominated by the pro gressives at Roseburg. The democratic nomination was simply an aid society to Congress man Hawley's standpat machine, and the nominee was simply a tail to Hawley's kite. And the Courier isn't very strong on kite tails. The nomination put up to the dem ocratic papers of this district a buck etful of whitewash and a brush and told them to use it. It was a situation rorced on them, one in which they could have no sym pathy and mighty little interest. You know Mr. Hawley's record. You know how he got into Joe Can non's Sunday school class in less than fifteen minutes after he got down to Washington, and how he forgot Oregon under the smile of tho politicians and became a big business preacher. His record published last week speaks for him and for itself. And now when the republicans nominate J. W. Campbell a man who stands for what we all stand for is it the duty of this sheet to hang onto Hawley's kite tail? Well, not the way the roads are! We are not that quality of a pol itician not quite "regular" enough yet. The Courier editor wrote the dem- ocratic nominee July 27, asking if there was any truth in the rumor that he had not qualified for the nomination; assuring him that if he was in the race to win the Courier would work hard for him, but if he was not going to make a canvas there was no use. This paper never got the courtesy of a reply from Mr. Smith. Before the Roseburg convention nominated Mr. Campbell, this office phoned to the secretary of state and was informed the democratic nomi nee had NOT filed his acceptance at that time. Four months after the primaries, and he hadn't made up his Air. Dooley on the Political Sitoowa tion. "I see be the paypers that Mr. Tou Valley ia publishing his prrivate cor respondence in Medford Mail Tri bune. Now to me minw that Is a rather oncertain way to elict himself county jedge. How does he know the Hon. George Chamberlain or Os sie West would like to have their private letters exposed to the pro fane view of the common public? Be the shades of Tommy Jefferson, I take it they will be mighty mad when they discover this after the election is over. For if it were not for the republicans, where could they get votes enough to elict themselves sen ators and governors? There's not enough democrats in Oregon to elict one side of ither of them." "I thought, said Mr. Hennessey, "that George Putnam was keeping his lily white hands off the eliction." "Shure he is, but it is this way, you know. George runs an indepen dent paper, and when he prepares letters for his friend Tou Valley's benefit and sends them out for sig natures he naturally feels under ob ligations to publish them in a disin terested way, you know, when he gets one back properly signed over the telephone." "How about the Hildreth letter from Butte Falls?" said Mr. Hennes sey. "You see, it's this way: It appears from the county records that one Dunn was county judge once on a time, and this same Hildreth con ceived the idea of having himself ap pointed supervisor of one certain road district and occupied the atten tion of the court the better part of a day explaining to the judge his great qualifications for tho office of road supervisor, but it so happened that the judge did not agree with him as to his ability, and knowing he was always looking for a scrap with one John Barleycorn and often being ac commodate in that line, the judge turned down his application, which of coures placed the judge in the 'in grate' class, whativer that may be." "Did you read the Colonel Mimms epistle in the Tribune?" said Mr. Hennessey. "Sure, I did. The colonel's kind heart is torn and bleed ng in behalf of Mr. Putnam's friend Tou Valley. Wasn't it awful the way that small coterie of politicians, slumbering in the southern suburbs of- Medford, handed a lemon to poor Con. Leever? Divil the thing did 'Con.' know about it, either. And he and his friends and neighbors were just supporting Dunn with all their might until Mr. Putnam, 'tis said, framed up the car cass of a letter for the colonel's sig nature and artistic embellishment. Now it's all off and there will be an awful surprise after the election smoke clears away." "Well, Mr. Dooley, don't you think Mr. Putnam is more or less disinter estedly concerned about the election of his friend Tou Velle?" said Mr. Hennessey. "Oh, no, he's not interested at all; he's just sitting back and look ing on. Well, well, politics do sure make strange bedfellows, just before election. But there'll be a mighty commotion in certain rooming houses after election." Not to lie Keen. Caller Is your husband in,-Mrs. Maguire? Mrs. Maguire Yis, sor. Caller I'd like to see him. Mrs. Maguire Ye can't, sor. He's in for three months. At Woodbrooke, England, there is a school for social service, where men and women from all parts of the world study various kinds of so cial work. The institution is affili ated with Birmingham university. The Italian city of Leghorn, the present population of which is about 100,000, at last has an ample sup ply of good water. Polishing with stone gives alligator leather its beautiful gloss that neith eh japanning nor varnishing can im itate. German experiments are said to show that dried potato greens are as &ood for stock as is meadow hay. mind whether he would accept or not! And now with a voice that sounds as if it needs machine oil on it, once in a while a democrat will moan, "The Courier isn't standing by." If you democrats can pull any pathos out of this situation go to it. The Courier Is out for a man for congress who will stand by the vot ers of Oregon. He's a republican a Bull Mooser, if you will but he towers a mile over the big business handy man we are sending down to Washington. It's time to slip the halter, pull off the tag and vote for men who ring true. Give Hawley the harpoon and elect John W. Campbell. Send a man to Washington who will represent Oregon. GEO. W. DUNN Taxpayers' Candidate for County Judge on the Republican Ticket A vote for Dunn November 5th will be a vote against reckless extravagance and in favor of road improvement along sane and scientific lines. frtHfr..H..Hi"tM t GF0. W. DUNN'S PLATFORM t 1. County credit to be restored and county warrants made worth face value at earliest possible date. ' One dollar's worth of value demanded and obtained for every dollar expended by county. Permanent roads, scientifically and economically built as rapidly as funds are available. Home labor to be employed in construction of public im. provements, so far as possible. Strict observance of law and of will of people in all matters concerning bond issues. Square deal in all respects for each and every section of the county. Rigid, scientific and satisfactory inspection of horticul tural, agricultural and stock interests. Choice of men for appointive offices to be governed ab solutely by their qualifications. Probate records to be systematized and new probate matters carefully supervised. Officials required to give ample bonds and render correct monthly statements. 2. 3. 4. 7. 8. 9. 10. With gradients of 92 feet in 1,000, a railroad in Brazil is the steepest in the world of any built of ordinary rails. Typhoid bacillus may remain alive in the intestines of the fly at least six days. Round Trip One and One-Third To PORTLAND SALE DATES. . From points south of Roseburg, Nov. 18, 19 and 20, and from points north of Roseburg, in cluding points on the C. & E., P. R. & N., S.,F. C. & W. and branch line points. Nov. 18, 19, 20 and 21, with final return limit of Nov. 25. JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. t King George of England Is an or chestra conductor. He was never known to sing a note, but Is excel lent at handling the baton. There were only 6,998 females among the 38,053 persons who immi grated to Cuba last year. Fare VIA THE Account Pacific International Dairy Show and Pacific Land Products Show NOVEMBER 18 to 23 For further details as to fares from any specific station, train schedules, etc., call on nearest agent or write to IV) I SUNSET I lOGDENiSKASTAl I I t ROUTES I I mnri.: 'ff in