T AGIS FOUR ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS ASHLAND T ID IN G S the (E stab lish ed 1876) Published Every E vening Except Sunday by . E ditor B ert R . G reer. TELEPHONE 3 9 SUBSCRIPTION RATES D E L IV E R E D IN CITY: One M onth, D eliv ered ................................................................................................... 50 One W eek ...................................................................................................................... 15 Subscription R ates By Mail O utside o f City: One Year, by m a il.....................................................................................................$5.00 Six M ouths, by m a il................................................................................................. 2.75 T hree M onths, by m a il.......................................................................................... 1.50 No out of tow n subscription tak e n for less th a n th re e m onths. • One Y ear ........................................................................................................ $8.12 Six M onths ...................................................................................................... 4.31 No subscription for less th a n six m onths. ADVERTISING RA TES: D isp lay A d vertisin g— Single in s e rtio n .............................................................................. each inch 30c YEARLY CONTRACTS: .............. D isp lay A d vertisin g— One tim e a week, each in c h ..................................................each tim e 27% c Two tim es a week, each in c h ...................................................... each tim e 25c Every o th er day, each in c h ...................................................... each tim e 20c Every issue, each in c h ........................................................... each tim e 17 % c L ocal R eaders— E ach line, each tim e (6 wrords to l i n e ) ...................................................... 10c To run every o th er day for one m onth, each line each tim e .............. 7c To ru n every issue for one m onth or m ore, each line, each tim e . . . . 5c C lassified Colum n— One cent the word, each tim e. To run every issue for one m enth or m ore, % c th e word, each tim e. C ards of T hanks, $1.00. O bituaries, 2 % cents the line. F ra te rn a l O rders an d Societies. A dvertising for fra te rn a l o rd ers or societies ch arg in g a re g u la r in itia ­ tio n fee and dues, no discount. R eligious and benevolent o rd ers will be charged for all adv ertisin g when an adm ission or o th e r charge is m ade, a t th e re g u la r rate. The T idings lias a greater circulation in A shland and its trade territory th an all oth er new spapers com bined. E n te re d at the A shland, Oregon, Postoffice as Second Class Mail M atter. DAILY TIDINGS MADE LARGER W ith th is issue The Tidings is en larg ed to an eight page paper. How long it will continue eight pages de­ pends on th e ad v ertising patronage. F rom now till a fte r the holidays the dem and for a d v ertisin g space will be heavy and we have increased the pages to m ake room for th e ad d i­ tio n a l ad v ertising w ithout sacrificing th e in te re st of th e subscriber. It is th e am bition of th e p u b lish er to give A shland as good paper as the business will ju stify — even a b e tte r — for we feel th a t a city is judged largely by th e class of new spapers published and supported. We do not expect to m ake profit from th e daily th e first year. All of th e earnings will be put back into b e tte rm e n t u n ­ til A shland has as good daily as any city of its size in the country. T hat is ou r am bition. Horner McKpe once u n ite a prayer in which he said: “Blind me to the faults of the other fellow, but reveal to me mine own. A p a r t o f w h a t w e m ig h t te r m th e o p tim is t’s p h ilo so p h y is: I f y o u c a n m en d a s itu a tio n m e n d it; if y o u c a n ’t m e n d it, fo r g e t it. Is it a good p h ilo so p h y o r is it fo o lish n e s s? O F F IC IA L C IT Y A N D C O U N T Y P A P E R B y Mail O utside o f U nited S tates— ONE MAN'S PRAYER KITCHEN CABINET THE ASH LAND POINTING COMPANY. M onday, Novem ber 3, U H » "Deafen me to the jingle of tainted money and the rustle of unholy skirts. “Teach me that 60 minutes make one hour. 10 ounces one pound and 100 cents $1. HELPFUL SUGGESTIONS. If the dishes in which ice cream or frozen dishes are served are chillet} in the refrigerator the prob­ lem of melting ices is practically solved. Salads, too, should be served on cold plates to avoid wilting. Frozen dishes molded in melon molds should he served sliced in pie­ shaped pieces, cutting from the center of the Serve a t once on cold plates. Cream is whipped enough when the egg beater leaves its p r in t 'in the beaten cream. Longer beating will often cause hits of butter to form in the cream. A sufficient quantity of white sauce may be made to last two or three days if kept covered in the ice chest. Flour th at has been sifted several days should always he re.sifted when ready to use. If a cupful of flour Is called for in a recipe do not dip the cup into the flour, but till it lightly with a spoon. All recipes in the mod­ ern books call for level measurem ents of all ingredients. The usual recipe serves six people amply. By cutting down the ingredi­ ents to halves or thirds it suits the needs of a small family. If fortunate enough to have a large one double the amounts. In making French dressing use half lemon juice and half vinegar or dilute the vinegar with w ater or fruit juice, using three times ns much oil as acid. A convenient way of making the dressing Is to put all the ingredients inio a fruit ja r and shake until It thickens and then it is ready to use at any time with a few preliminary shakes, and will keep indefinitely in a cool place. In molding gelatin m ixtures the chilling may be hastened by having at hand a dripping pan tilled with cracked ice into which the molds may be set. A little salt sprinkled on the ice quickens the chilling. Do not wasli mushrooms but brush with a butter brush to clean them. Use the peelings cooked in a little water and drained as flavor for sauces. The flavor is in the liquor, so the peelings nyiy be thrown away. “Keep me young enough to laugh with my children and to lose myself in their play. “Grant, I beseech thee, that I may earn my-,meal ticket on the square and in the doing thereof that 1 may not stick the gaff where it does not belong. "Guide me so th at each night when I | look across the dinner ■ table at my ; wife, who lias been a blessing to me, I I will lufve nothing to conceal. ~* ■ “Help me to live so th at I can lie i down at night with a clear conscience, i without a gun under my pillow and un- ¡n au n fe d by the faces of those to whom ; I have brought pain. “And then, when conies the smell of flowers and the tread of soft steps, and the crushing of a hearse’s wheels in the gravel out in front of my place, make the ceremony short and the epi­ taph simple, ‘Here lies a man.’ ” DOUGH MADE FROM 191» W HEAT RAISES KA PI DIA in th e grow ing ch a ra c te r. W ith th ese v irtu e s firm ly planted in a boy’s m ind and a habit of his daily life d u rin g his form ative years, th e re is little dan g er of his fo rsa k ­ ing them en tirely in a la te r life. These virtu es a re m ade vital by a program of activities which gives a boy o p p o rtu n ity to put them into ac­ tu al practice. He is given com m is­ sions to perform and is tru ste d “on his honor as a sco u t” to c arry them into effect. The fea tu re of service to oth ers is em phasized by encouraging scouts to do “ a-- good tu r n ” to som ebody ev6rv day. This “ good tu r n ” idea is taken very seriously. It has in­ spired th o u san d s of boys to th e point w here th e volunteer to wash dishes and tend babies. And th ere can be no severer test th an th a t! The idea of th rift is driven home by req u irin g a scout to earn and de­ posit money in a bank before he can A REAL NEED— AND WHAT advance from the ran k of T enderfoot FILLS IT to th a t of Second Class Scout and W henever a real need exists, soon­ from th e la tte r to th e coveted posi­ e r or la te r som ething is found to meet tion of F irst Class Scout. it. A real need existed for som e­ B ravery is expected of Scouts as a th in g to fill with wholesom e activity We w ant an active, in telligent th e spare tim e of boys— and th e Boy m a tte r of course— m oral bravery as m an with car, who can give re fe r­ Scout m ovem ent developed to m eet it. well as bravery of spirit and physical ences as to his reliability, to handle This organization, which has spread bravery. farm lig hting and pow er p lan ts in The scout principles are m ade in­ his hom e d istrict. so am azingly d u ring the last few Experience not y ears, has m any claim s to considera­ tere stin g by hiking, cam ping, first necessary. tion. but none are so fu n d am en tal as aid, knot tying, w oodcraft, cam ping, Exclusive te rrito ry and big pay to th is basic principle of keeping the pioneering and all th e o th er th in g s i the rig h t man. W rite or wire if you boys so busy doing useful th in g s th a t of th e sam e c h a ra c te r th a t boys like can quality. Stark-D avis Co., 212 th e re will be no tim e for them to en­ to do. T hird St., P o rtlan d Oregon. • But no activity is included in the ' gage in h arm ful activities. The th in g about the Boy Scout Boy Scout program w ithout a good m ovem ent th a t has surprised m any reason: each m ust serve its purpose people is th e fact th a t it works. Peo­ in co n trib u tin g som ething to t h e ' ple had become accustom ed to con­ c h a ra c te r developm ent of the hoy. ] sid er bovs as being * n a tu ra lly mis- Scout activities and the scout oath chievous and destructive, to look and law are so closely interw oven upon the period of adolescence as a th a t it is im possible to sep arate tim e of trib u la tio n , like th e teething them . The Boy Scout m ovem ent does not age of babies, which m ust be borne in te rfe re in any way with a boy’s w ith patience and resignation. “W h a t!” they exclaim ed, “ Make duties a t hom e o r in school, but it To e n larg e th e payroll of A shland boys w ant to do useful th ings? It does supplem ent these tw o great ju st c a n ’t be do n e!" Then the Boy tra in in g forces w ith a th ird which by buying hom e m anufactured Scout m ovem ent came along and did com pletes the circle. It used to be it. I hom e, school and undirected leisure. goods, especially when I can get the Scouting has been a success be­ Now it is hom e, school and scouting. best and m ost for th e m oney, a t cause it was built to fit real bays And the g reatest dan g er point in a and not a m ythical anim al. The boy’s life— his undirected leisure Boy Scout plan goes rig h t into the tim e— has been covered. realm w here real boys live and brings Schools and hom es are both begin­ them the food th e ir sp irits crave— ning to feel the beneficial effect of a code of honor, rom ance, m ystery, the new force which has en tered the adventure. Now th a t the job has lives of hun d red s of tho u san d s of R. C. JORGENSEN, Prop. been done, it is easy to see th at it Am erican boys. is a very sim ple th in g — no th in g nt all but m aking an in te rp re ta tio n of life th a t a boy can warm up to and BRITISH FIGH TERS W ER E GOOD FARM ERS u n d erstand. F irst of all. a boy scout m ust tak e LONDON.— The B ritish arm y was an oath. T h a t’s a perfectly n a tu ra l doing som ething o th er th an fight in thing. The K nights of the Round the last y ear of the w ar. according Table sw ore an oath end so did the to the arm y a g ric u ltu ra l com m ittee p ira tes th a t sailed the Spanish Main! renort nr>de public today. It c u lti­ So th e Boy Scout pledges him self: vated 6658 acres of land in th e i 1. To do my duty to God and my country occupied by the hom e forces co u n try and to obey th e Scout Law. alone, and m ade a profit of about 2. To help o th e r people a t all $50 an acre. tim es. In F ran ce thousands of acres were From 3. To keep m yself physically cultivated hv th e soldiers, and vege­ strong, m entally aw ake and m orally tables w orth no less th an $2.500.- stra ig h t. 000 w ere produced. The Scout 1. w referred to in the Bv irrig atio n th e arm y in Meso­ oath covers tw elve points: A scout potam ia beaam e self-supporting so is tru stw o rth y , loyal, helpful, frien d ­ fa r as vegetables were concerned I ly. courteous, kind, obedient, cheer­ and th e grain crop was valued at ful, th rifty , brave, clean and rev­ $15.000.000. Very Special Prices by the erent. The Saloniki arm y also was busy These a re stu rd y virtu es th a t ap­ c u ltiv atin g th e soil back of its lines Barrel for a sh o rt tim e. peal to th e spirit of chivalry th a t and in addition to h arv estin g crons lives in th e h e a rt of every boy. and w orth som e $300.000 saved 52,000 when enhanced1 by th e sacredness of tons of ships which would otherw ise a solem n boyish oath they have a have been used to carry supplies to gripping appeal th a t w orks w onders th a t fa r o ff front. Salesman Wanted / Sure W ill Do My Part F rom available statistics, it was cideut th a t w heats grown th ro u g h ­ out th e N orthw est vary greatly from year to year, even when tak en from th e sam e field. This variation in ­ cludes m any im p o rtan t c h a ra c te rtis- tics of the grain, but p articu larly those re la tin g to th e breadm aking qu ality of th e flours from these w heats. F o r th e past two years, ou r P a ­ cific N orthw est w heats have been ex- ’ trem ely high in gluten. G luten i; th e m uscle and tissue-buildin property of the w heat, and is quite sim ilar in com position to th e lea;: or m uscular tissue of m eat. This year, due to clim atic conditions a f­ fecting th e soil and th e grow ing grain, w heats c arry considerably m ore starch and proportionately less gluten th an d u rin g th e two years previous. As a consequence, they a re m ore ten d e r and th e flo u r will r.ot stand as m uch ferm en tatio n or i ‘ raisin g ” as th e flo u r from last y e a r’s w heat. B read-m aking specialists agree th a t th e average tim e to r raising the dough from a 1919 crop wheat, should be a t least one h o u r s h o rte r' th an th e tim e for raising th e dough from a 1917 or 1918 crop w heat. So fa r as bread resu lts a re con­ cerned, it is very much m ore p re fe r­ able to have th e bread rise less, r a th e r th an th e required a m o u n t.' It is especially necessary to watch th e rising of the dough in th e pan, and not allow it to a tta in its m axi­ mum height before p u ttin g it in the oven. F a ilu re to observe th e ie pre­ cautions is very likelv to resu lt in bread of grey color, which will lack expansion in the oven, and in loaves which will lack flavor and dry out too rapidly. LOOK FOR THE LAXACOLD KIDS IN OUR WINDOW They tell of one of the N.val favor­ ite rem edies. Used to "B reak up a AND T H E GfRL W ENT Cold” in a jiffy. C ontain no quinine EAST LIVERPOOL, Ohio.— An to cause “ ringing in the e a rs.” Once a irp lan e elopem ent is th e latest. trie d alw ays used. C aptain John C. W ebster. San Di­ ego. Calif., here m aking exhibition Get them a t th e Nyal Agency. tlig h ts, becam e acquainted with Miss G ertru d e Polk. It was a case of love a t first sight. C aptain W ebster and Miss Polk flew to Y oungstow n and w ere m arried , re tu rn in g here to re­ POLEY & ELHART. Druggist® ceive th e p a re n tal blessing. Polcy’s Drug Store ■ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ » » - ADOLLAR SAVED ISAS GOOD AS TWO EARNED SAVE YOUR MONEY — BY BUYING — FLOUR, FE E D , SCRATCH, CORN, MILL RUN, BRAN. PANCAKE FLOUR, DAIRY F E E D , ROLLED BARLEY, ETC. — Of th e — ASHLAND MILLS ♦ - » ♦ ■♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ : A s h la n d F u r n itu r e Co.: • H ea ó (t ì S ? r-s fö r : * Complete House Furnishers ♦ ♦ ♦ Furniture, C arpels, Linoleum , Cooking U tensils and Cam ping O utfits. and 92-94-N oi tli Main Street. Not only the size to m eet UTILITY every lum ber yard req u ire­ m ent, but a m oney m aker to hitch behind a sm all tru ck , enabling it to draw th re e tim es the load of cord wood. At the present price of wood, rigged w ith a light » « » J 1 • Setni-Trai tomber Typ« x tru ck and a U tility T railer, z you should h a u 1 enough wood in a few w e e k s to C onstructed in sizes to m eet any lum ber yard requirem ent. F ram e b u ilt of I-beam steel w ith heavy forged tru ss rod braces. Coil springs over axle give fram e rcsilency. This type of sem i-trailer trip le s hauling capacity. m ake you independent for life. YOU WOOD MEN SHOULD GET RICH QUICK. W E CAN H E LP YOU. Medford Motor Co. Successor to P ru itt-H ittso n Mvdford. Oregon The Lithia Bakery Anybody Can M ake Bread As While as Snow Sperry’s Drifted Snow Flour H .P . HOLMES P R IN T IN G ! We give you Job P rin tin g th at pleases. W hether your needs be Lette*’ H eads, Envelope*. f a d in g ( 'arils or Posters, vour p rin tin g will he ch aracteristic of YOU and representative of Y O U R business. BE DISTINCTIVE You m ig h t a- well be d istin ctiv e in your P rin tin g — It doesn’t cost any more and we will do it prom ptly and well u s an ord er for the first P rim ed th in g you need—use th e telephone G iv e THE ASHLAND TIDINGS GROCERY •’Ç- :T. V ZV 4 ’ 5. V z ! ...-.’ J ■ ♦