PAGE TWO ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS. Ashland, nssc.sTidings 311s APS U Published Every Evening Except Sunday THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY PAPER. TELEPHONE 39 Subscription Price Delivered in City One month ................................... I .65! Three months ......................... Six months ............................. One year ................................. 1.951 3.75 7.50 P ULIWiI.D AMED BY RED CROSS FOR MASSACRE Mail and Rural Routes. One month ............................. $ .65 FOREAX LIVES DESTROYED AND Three months ....................... 1.95 PROPERTY CONFISCATED DUR­ Six months ............................. 3.50 ING JAPANESE INVASION OF 11.50' One year ................................. UPPER MANCHURIA, ACCORD­ ING TO REPORT. ADVERTISING RATES: Display Advertising. Single insertion, each inch. . . . 30c PROMINENT MAN 40099994903930339 Productive Denizens of the Sea. ENDORSES THIS © JUDGE MAY PAROLE FOX © The teeth of the shark sell read­ HOUND FOUND GUILTY ily and are utilized by manufactur- Spirit Known as “Natalite," Made In Prominent men would not lend ; their names to the endorsement of a © Papua, Put on Market Cheaper remedy unless they were convinced WINCHESTER, Ky., Jan. 20 Than Gasoline. of its merits and knew from personal —“Old King,” a fox hound own­ experience what It would do. The The rivers in the sugar-growing dis­ following letter from Mr. J. W. Lind­ ed by Frank Jones, was convict­ ’ tricts of Australia will run less sweet­ say, proprietor of The Clayton Hotel ed of sheep slaughter by County * ly uow that the government has re­ in Sacramento, California, will pro Judge Lew E. Evans after days ’ moved the excise duty of a shilling a to the most skeptical that Anti-Uric of deliberation. Conviction for ? gallon, which has made unprofitable will do all that is claimed for it. Mr. this offense usually means • the local manufacture of industrial Clayton writes as follows: “Your preparation Anti-Uric is a • death, but Judge Evans prom- alcohol. Every year, so writes a cor­ wonder for rheumatism. I have | • ised to withhold the sentence respondent of the London Times been bothered for months after , if Jones will send the dog away Trade Supplement from Sydney, hun­ not using it. Rheumatism caused me. from the county. dreds of thousands of gallons of considerable Two puppy trouble in the past and | molasses have been run into those I am very grateful to Anti-Uric for * sons of the hound were exon­ rivers because there was no profit in the benefits I have received by its • erated. “Old King,” has for using the molasses to make alcohol ; use. I am very glad indeed to rec- • years been an inseparable com­ but the removal of the duty comes as ommend it to all who suffer w:. panion of Jones, and the old an important part of the movement rheumatism.” Anti-Uric has been successfully ! * man has not said whether .he now under way to replace petrol with industrial alcohol and thus make Aus­ used for rheumatism for a number ® can bear to kill the fox hound tralia able to produce her own liquid of years. It is purely herbal, con- • or send him away. tains no mercury, salicylates or min­ fuel. can be relied upon to al­ One immediate result has been the erals and help in rheumatic conditions. formation in Australia of an impor­ ways have used it with the very Oregon leads the west in the manu­ tant company to manufacture Indus­ Hundreds best results. If you suffer with facture of woolens and produces the trial alcohol : and one future result rheumatism in any of its many forms seems to be that Australians who now or gout or lumbago try Anti-Uri finest wool in the United States. speak of petrol will eventually say It never disappoints but will always i "hatalite." In Natal a patent spirit give satisfactory results. Anti-Uric. which has been given this new name is sold under a strict guarantee of Is already being marketed at a price relief or money refunded and the lower than petrol, and the making of manufacturers are squarely behind this liquid fuel Is about to be under­ this guárante. Get an outfit of ih taken on a large scale in Papua, where great, herbal remedy today from THE EAST SIDE PHARMACY plants and trees have been discovered that are expected to yield about 73 A sterilizer for dotor’s and den­ gallons a ton. A hundred square miles of country have been reserved on tists’ instruments manufactured in which some 5,500,000 gallons of natal­ Oregon by the Halvorsen Co. is sold ité a year are considered a reasonable throughout the United States. beginning with the likelihood of in­ creasing the output to at least 18,- 000,000 gallons when a system of re­ . , THE DIAMOND BRAND. 37 planting the land has been put in operation. The plan goes further, and d boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon, vz will seek to engage farmers to co- y Xakeno other Buy ef your • ) for CIILDHEerEL g operate by raising crops of sorghum, / Drugglat. DIAMOND Ask EKAND PiLIs,2 years known as Best, Safest, Always Reliable with an estimated yield of 80 gallons SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE of industrial alcohol to the ton, for a share In the profits. ♦ REPORTS FROM EAST INDICATE CRISIS PASSED Comply With the Law AND USE Printed Butter Wrappers ccording to the ruling of the Oregon A 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 sheetsand up­ ward and deliver it by parcels post at the fol­ lowing prices: 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, 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 ALL KINDS OF PRODUCE NEW LIQUID FUEL By C. E. HOGUE United Press Staff Correspondent) | One time a week..................... 271c SHANGHAI, China, Jan. 20.— ' Two times a week..................... 25c Atrocities of which Koreans living | Every other day....................... 20c on Chinese soil were the victims and 1 Local Readers. Each line, each time............... 10e which were brought about between To run every other day for one October 9 and November 5, 1920, by month, each line, each time.... 7c Japanese who have arbitrarily in- To run every issue for one month or more, each line each time. . . . 5c vaded the territory of upper Man­ churia, are described in a statement ! Classified Column. by the Korean Red Cross. One cent the word each time. T run every issue for one month or Slain and injured persons total more, the word each time. 2.933 in six counties, the report as- Card of Thanks, $1.00. I serted, while 1,982 buildings were obituaries, 2 % cents the line. | destroyed in the same area. Twenty- Fraternal Orders and Societies. Advertising for fraternal orders five churches were burned and nine or societies charging a regular initi­ school buildings wrecked. ation fee and dues, no discount. Re­ Not only lives and property were | ligious and benevolent order will be charged the regular rate for all ad- destroyed bv the invading Japanese vertising when an admission or other l but food supplies were confiscated, charge is made. the indictment stated. Among other foodstuffs said to have been either The Tidings has a greater circula­ tion in Ashland and its trade terri­ removed or destroyed were 53,256 tory than all other newspapers com- picult of grain. A pienit is 135 lbs. bin | Major General Sato, representing Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, the Japanese war office, has attempt- Postoffice as Second Class Mailed to justify conditions in Manchuria Matter. — i by a statement in which lie blames | the missionaries. He said, accord­ ing to the Red Cross report: AS HE SIZED UP THE VISITOR “The missionaries who are now I accusing the Japanese troops of Hotel Clerk Was Pretty Sure That He cruetly are themselves the cause of Was Not Likely to Come in Very Early. the tragedy. I regret that the Kore­ ans are not alive to the fact that their real grievance is against the Cortlandt Bleeker said at a New York roof-garden supper: mischief-making missionaries. “Apropos of New York as a summer It is a coincidence that many of the resort, I heard a story the other day. plotters who have been executed were “A westerner blew In here and ap­ Christians, but the plotters in many plied for a room In a hotel. The hotel cases ally themselves with the Mis-clerk said to him: Western Bankers Encouraged By sionaries for the sake of the secur- • “ ‘Very sorry, sir, but we’re so over- News of Clearing Financial Situa­ ity thus afforded.” crowded that I’ll have to ask you to tion—Speedy Return to Normalcy share a room with another gentleman. Will that do?’ Expected. SHRINERS TO MEET IN DES MOINES JUNE 14-16 “ ‘Hm. Yes, I suppose so,’ said the westerner reluctantly, ’but will this chap turn in early? I’ve got a lot of PORTLAND, Jan. 20—According TACOMA. Wash.. Jan. 20.—Ellis work to do here In New York, and I’ll to the view of Portland bankers, the financial situation is clearing in the Lewis Garretson, imeprial potentate need a lot of sleep, and I don’t want to of the Mystic Shrine, has announced! he disturbed, by crinus.’ East. This is taken as a favor- able omen. On the Pacific Coast that the next meeting of the Shrin- “The clerk laughed. ‘“You’ll have your night’s rest com­ .the general business situation is re- ers of North America will be held in pleted before this gentleman ever gets Des Moines, Iowa, on June 14. 15 garded as less acute than on- the Plans to make the session in,’ he said. Atlantic seaboard and in the inter­ and 16. “ ‘Sure of that?’ said the westerner. ior, and therefor a quicker return a purely business meeting have been “ ’Certainly,’ said the clerk. . ‘You to a normal plane of prosperity is abandoned, Mr. Garretson stated, and see, the man’s been stopping with us expected in this part of the country the various temples will be present every August for the last eleven years, with their bands and patrols as in and this Is the first time he’s made the than elsewhere. the past. The meeting of the Shrine trip without his wife.’ ” Early revival of manufacturing in in Portland last June chose Atlantic! the East, accompanied by new buying Seeks invigorating influence. of raw materials and food stuffs City as the seat of the 1921 session. Life’s greatest need is to expose it­ produced here, are expected to be but the officers of the order can- self to enlightening and invigorating celed that place on account of ex- j in evidence shortly, and it is not Influences. The world Is impatient to cessive hotel rates, Des Moines was doubtful that such a condition will impress itself on the Individual. Like finally chosen over Savannah, Ga. manifest itself in movement to mar-: excluded sunshine it needs but an opening to flood Itself unstintedly Into kets of wheat, flour, packed fruits Los Angeles, and other cities. every nook and corner of possible in­ and salmon, wool, hides and livestock' fluence. That does not mean that mind at rising prices. Wife as Man’s Discipline. grows by passive acceptance of every­ Wife and » hildren are a kin« of dis- With the opening of spring, re­ thing that seeks entree. It just means newed activity in the lumber indus­ cipline of humanity, and single men. that the materials upon which the try of the Pacific Northwest is ex- though they may be many times more mind should react to grow properly are pected. Improvement in any or all charitable, because their means are all about us trying often in vain to less exhausted, yet on the other side, of these direction« would be felt im­ they are more cruel and hard-hearted, bestow upon us the benefits we need mediately in easier bank credit and because their tenderness is not so often but studiously reject. Everything activity which follows smooth sail­ called upon.—From "The Essays of about us, from bird song to perspir­ ing toll, can be made to minister to ing with payroll industries. Francia Bacon.” our well-being If we will turn It to account. There’s more opportunity about most of us than we are able to use. If we grow prematurely old and tiresome It’s because we do not open the windows. YEARLY CONTRACTS. Display Advertising. Thursday, January 20, 1921 Handle Gasolina Carefully. Those who handle gasoline as a mat­ ter of ordinary custom are often quite oblivious to its potential dangers. An English journal tells of a motorcyclist who removed the cover of his electric horn and flushed it out with petrol, Having replaced the cover he start- ed for a ride. At the first attempt to use the horn the result was startling, for there was a terrific explosion and the cover crashed into the rider’s ribs. The horn was, of course, full of ex­ plosive mixture, which was Ignited by the electric spark. To Spell at Pleasure. Iowa professor urges that every one should be allowed to spell as be pleases, to save all the time spent in learning the prevailing fashion. It probably would not save much time for the reader of such spelling. With the typewriter to do the writing and the adding machine to do the arithmetic, and history discarded as useless, free­ dom In spelling would go far to do away with the need of any schools at all.—St. Paul Pioneer Press. An ing jewelers in ornaments of one kind or another. From the blood of the sea mammals we now get the basic substance for a very superior kind of waterproof glue, which is used in rhe preparation of laminated or built-up wooden stock from which the propellers and other parts of air- craft are today fashioned. SAFETY RAZOR Blades Like NEW FENTCIÄTO Barb Wire, Dandy Cedar Posts and Yew anchor posts in carload lot ar­ rived. Plows and tractor tools of all kinds. Heider Tractors. New and Second Hand Sewing Machinen for sale or rent, at CORNER PEIL’S BY THE PARK For Bargains In Rea! Estate Bring in Your Blades and Let Me Sharpen Them. For Safe and Sound FIRE INSURANCE. 85c Per Doz., Single Blades. 70c Per Doz., Double Blades. For Loans and Notary Work. W. A. Shell With Courteous Treatment. the barber 175 E. Main Street Ashland See Beaver Realty Co Payrolls CHICHESTER S PILLS äCITIZENSg ‘ BANK * OFASHLAND SAVING Few people save much unless they have a defi­ nite plan. Spasmodic sav- ing seldom results in large accumulation. A GOOD PLAN: and Prosperity C Oregon needs more and larger payrolls. Prosperity is a concrete condition, not an abstract thought. It is created by the opportunity for work, the investment of money in new and enlargement of old projects, the development of trade, the meeting of producer and consumer, the exchange of labor for purchasing power. The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company, representing a payroll of ap proximately $3,000,000 per year in Oregon, has reached a point beyond which it can­ not go with its present income. It has asked for higher rates which will enable it to maintain its service, meet its payroll obligations and earn a reasonable return up­ on its investment in Oregon... If it obtains this it can carry on its constructive program, offer more work in Oregon, enlarge its payrolls and take its proper part in the progréss of this state. If it cannot secure adequate rates it must limit its ex­ pansion in every way, abandon its plan for extensions and lay off its construction crews. , The rates asked for will not work a hardship upon any individual; they repre­ sent but a small increase per station over present rates, but in the aggregate would permit the telephone company to continue to fully serve the public, carry out its plans for the development of Oregon, and do its part in creating and maintaining the prosperity which is essential to this state. Adequate service is dependent upon adequate rates. Set aside a definite sum The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co “I Athena Underwear THIS WELL KNOWN UNDERWEAR FOR WOMEN IS MANUFACTURED BY MARSHAL FIELD CO., OF CHICAGO, AND IS OF GUARANTEED QUALITY IN EVERY RESPECT. ITS FITTING AND WEARING QUALITIES ARE ABOVE REPROACH. EVERY GARMENT IN STOCK PLAC ED ON SAL E AS LISTED BELOW: $1.00 per suit Values up to $2.00, Sale Price Values up to $2.50, Sale Price $1.15 per suit Values up to $3.00, Sale Price Values up to $3.50, Sale Price $1.25 per suit Values up to $4.00, Sale Price Values up to $4.50, Sale Price $1.65 per suit Values up to $5.00, Sale Price Values up to $5.50, Sale Price $2.25 per suit ♦ $1.50 per suit $2.00 per suit $2.50 per suit Alike. Mother was washing her hair, which was fluffy at all times but when wet decidedly curly. Five-year-old John watched the process with great con­ cern. “Mother,” he Anally remarked wise- | ly, “your hair is a lot like grandma's ! face, isn’t it? When you wash it, It i wrinkles up like everything.” Big Values In made to measure suits and overcoats. at Ashland, Oregon Tailors for men and women EVERY KNOWN STYLE MADE IN UNDERWEAR WILL BE FOUND IN THIS COMPLETE AS 30RTMENT. STILL A FEW GOOD BARGAINS LEFT IN LADIES SHOES AND MEN'S FURN- ISHINGS. DON’T FAIL TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE WONDERFUL BARGAINS. VAUPEL’S QUALITY STORE 4 an