Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, March 29, 1921, Image 1

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    -- -------------------------------------------------- -
Malaria Germs cannot survive
three months In the rich ozone
at Ashland. The pure domestic
water helps.
VOLUME 2
D aily T idings
ASHLAND
(Successor to the Semi- Weekly Tidings.
Ashland climate without the aid
of Medicine, cures uine cases out
of ten of Asthma. This is a
proven fact.
•
-.............................. ........... ;-----------------------------
ASHLAND. OREGON, TUESDAY. MARCH 29. 1921
Vol. 43.)
—22
89
87
MAN GIVEN
JOHN BOROUGHS
DIES ON TRAIN IN "BLOODY ]>' WARD JAIL SENTENCE
ITALIANS
FIRED UPON
BY GUNMEN
(By the United Press
(Dy the United Press)
NEW YORK, Mar. 2 9—John Bur-
roughs, the naturalist, died today on j
a train enroute from Pasadena to
Poughkeepsie, according to a tele­
gram from his secretary. Dr. Clara
Barrus.
PORTLAND.
WOMEN AND
CHILDREN BEG
ID REMAIN
( By the United
I
|
♦
Press)
CHICAGO, Mar. 29—The lat-
: est tabulation shows ten
ed and fifty injured.
kill-
: TRACK TEAMS
SHOW PROMISE
OF GOOD YEAR
Mar..
29—Robert
Douglas, a former lieutenant of the
spruce division
Vancouver,
sentenced today to thirteen months
at McNeil’s island by the federal
court, charged with obtaining money
under false pretenses, from an O. A.
C. girl.
Douglas is alleged to have courted
the girl, and obtained all her college
money, amounting to seven rundred
and fifty dollars, then he disappear-
ed. His home is in Warsaw, Ind.
ETHRIDGE
IS CHARGED
WITH FRAUD
The death of John Burroughs re-
moves from American life its best |
CHICAGO, Mar. 29—Several per­
loved naturalist and one of its most. |
sons
are reported killed by a bomb
prominent essayists and critics.
It
explision in the "bloody nineteenth ’
was the unconventional in writing
i ward of the West Side, today.
and in nature that appealed to him |
All the ambulances and the police
and gave his efforts a style peculiar
NEW
YORK,
Mar.
29
—
“
Please,
ohi
reserves
have been rushed to the
By HENRY L. FARRELL
to him alone.
His literary quality,
(By the United Press)
(By the United Press)
(United Press Staff Correspondent )
gained its fascination from the acute-please, don’t send us back.” That is scene.
The
“
bloody
PORTLAND.
Mar. 29—Fraud in
nineteenth
”
has
been
TACOMA, Mar. 29—Patrick Piazza ness of observation rather than from I the tearful cry of despair, uttered
NEW YORK, Mar. 29—Track and
the
scene
of
many
battles
lately
the
procurement
of his citizenship
any
elaboration
of
literary
exprès-
time
and
again
at
Ellis
Island,
by
is believed dying in a hospital today,
field athletics will have the greatest
papers was charged against John Lad-
opposing
history
.
...
Frank Keliä may be fatally wounded sion.
. ...
. .. ,
. scores of immigrant women and child- Several recently were injured when
brooke
Etheridge, ex-president of II).
The
Penn
relays,
the
“
intercollegi-
I
In
1904
he
made
his
famous
attack
and Raphael Milelli is suffering from
ren
who
are
the
victims
of
false
pass-
Morris
Bros.’ bankrupt bond house
a
hall
was
bombed
in
which
a
politi-
j
ates
”
and
the
“
nationals,
”
the
three
bullet wounds received in a mysteri- on Ernest Seton Thompson and one
cal
candidate
for
fake
United
States
I
in
a
suit
to cancel his naturalization
"1 nondi46*n *" city council was classics of the American track, will J
ous attack by an unknown gunman, or two other naturalists, sharply crit-ports, includili
filed by United States Attorney Hum
w ho fired upon the three Italians and* Rising statements made by them in consulate vises, obtained at Danzig making a speech.
be conducted on the most elaborate |
29—The Whit- phreys in the federal court today.
BAKER.
Ore.,
Mar.
Six
were
killed
in
today
’
s
expío-
,
a fourth man. who was not hit, near their works on nature, and referred and Warsaw
lines.
man national forest has received no­
This action was ordered by Attor­
St. Leo’s church on Yakima avenue to them as “nature fakers.”
Harry H. Schlacht, commissioned by sion, according to early reports front i
The Penn relays will be almost a |
tice
of
the
postponement
of
the
date
2119
1
.
the
Maxwell
police
station.
Eighteen
ney General Daugherty of Washing­
.
Burroughs was born at Roxbury, the department ot labor recently as
last night.
miniature Olympics, with a strong
r
°
,
’
" “
’ — i for payment of grazing fees. Under ton.
I N. Y., April 3, 1837, of a stock Eng- head of the immigrant aid at Ellis Is- of the known injured are in nearby I international
flavor lent by the pres-
,
, .
. 2
,
a law passed by congress just betöre,
lish on his fathers side, and a strong land, said that he was convinced, af- hospitals. Fire crews from the en­ enee of English
and French college .. ...
adjourning, grazing tees mav now
dash of Irish on his mothers side.ter thoroughly investigating person- j tire city were rushed to the scene.
teams.
The games will be much .
..
. .
_ .
.
.
It is renorted
o+y 11A
9
be .
paid on or before September
He spent his early youth between ally 100 cases of passport frauds, that
reponen a
a whole
wnoie city
DOCK more representative
nationally, also,,
, . 1. The
The explosion was
, ...
,
former requirement was that the i
study in the country school and in former residents of the United States is demolished.
as many institutions, especially the
fee
must be paid 30 days in advance I
the field. He said of himself that were responsible for "defrauding heard all over the city and windows United States Naval Academy, will
of
the
time the stock were admitted
his originality was fostered by grow­ these poor, helpless women of their were broken in the radius of a mile, be represented for the first time.
to
the
forest.
Efforts to get in touch with the
ing up among people who neither read worldly all.” and that action by the
The appearance of the French team
Failure to make payment on this
books nor cared for them.
United States state department would district by telephone are futile, in­ promises to create as much interest
date
will result in the forfeiture of
dicating the explosion has destroy-
At the age of 14, he began writing be necessary to stop it.
and real competition as the English the grazing permit, and stock will
team that came over last spring and
essays, and at the age of 19 was a
“Owing to the immigration rush ed all telephone communications.
be subject to penalty for tresspass for
contributor to the Atlantic Monthly. to America from Poland, long lines
e on the forest
the time they
Andre, a hurdler, high jumper
At the age of 17 he left home and of people, with their children and of the Joseph Weil Paper Co., at
and
will remain the
“looked for a place where the crust packages, come in front of the pass- Fourteenth and Halstead-streets. Of-runner, perhaps will be the most
not- same, it has been announced.
was pretty thin, to break through port offices at Danzig and Warsaw, I ficials of the company said they be- ed member of the French team, He
By HENRY L. FARRELL.
into the world.” as he put it. He first sleeping on the ground while wait­ lieved It was caused by a gas leak.. competed at the Olympic games
(United
Press Staff Correspondent )
and
entered Ashland Seminary and in ing in line. They are approached by They claimed they had no labor trou-proved himself one of the most
NEW YORK. Mar. 29—“They may
the year following, Copperstown Sem­ alleged Americans, bearing passports bles nor feuds. The police, however, satile performers in the Held,
not agree with me every place, but
immediately went to work on the I
inary.
He
then
began
teaching
I’m thinking the American is the fai-r
and
vise
stamps.
They
explain
to
(By the United Presa)
school, devoting most of his time to these women that it will be unnecas- theory that the explosion was caux- augmented this year by the first na
sport in the world.
LOS ANGELES. Mar. 29—Jail.. .
, - -
.
that profession for the next eight or sary to wait for by paying a small edbya bomb, and was a part of the tional intercollegiate meet which is
Leaning back in a swivel chair in
holds no terrors for Bebe Daniels, I nine years
up in the tower ot
sum they may obtain passports The political feud waged in the "bloody to be held after the eastein inter-
the jesting screen actress, who pre-
i
. -
Burroughs was a close personal women are duped, usually parting nineteenth for years.
Tex Rick-
i collegiate and western conference
pared today to serve ten days in the
-,
, „
17
tnend of Colonel Roosevelt. and the with all their cash, above the price’
A torpedo cap was found by Chief and the various other sectional meets.
rd waa talking recently about sport
Orange county bastile, where she was ..
two often enjoyed tramps through of t the steamship
Upon of Detectives Mike Hughes,
who
passage.
DENVER. Colo. Mar. 29—There’s
The “national intercollegiates" is
sentenced by Justice Cox of Santa .
.
1
.
the woods and dales bent on study reaching’America, the land of their reached the scene soon after the dis-
“I always did think the American
one
big-hearted man in Colorado,
the idea of the University of Chicago
Ana for speeding.
! of bird and animal life, as well as dreams, they learn they have beenaster.
was willing to give the other fellow
A cordon of police was im- | which will stage the event on June lb ’s Harry Popst.
------
fauna.
defrauded and must return to the mediately thrown about the scene 11. It is planned to have represent-
Popst startled court officials here a fifty-fifty break, but 1 became con-
During the past few years, he has old country, there to take up the to keep hack the frantic Italians who,
ed the eastern colleges, the Southern when he told them he didn’t want vinced of it the night the last six-
spent most of his summers camping weary task of earning enough money rushed to determine if any relatives
I Conference, Missouri Valley, Rocky money and that he gave it to needy day bike race started.
with Thomas A. Edison and Henry to bring them back with proper cre­ were among thé victims.
“We had two Germans entered—
I leasant. Mountain, Pacific Coast, Western and persons as fast as he made it.
i mannered Italian women, wild with
,
Ford ,the party usually seeking some dentials.”
Rutt
and Lorenz. There must have
Popst, ragged and unkept, was
other conferences.
j
fear
that
some
of
their
loved
ones
wild spot safely removed Hom the
The national championships like- picked up half-starved by a police been at least 3000 ex-doughboys in
| were killed or injured, battled with
centers of population.
the house and the field of riders in
wise will be conducted on more ex­ man here. When broug ht into court |
I the police.
By turns Burroughs was an artist.
replycluded
French, Belgian and Italians.
tensive lines. Los Angeles will stage as a vagrant he answered, in
"
“
Just
a few days before the race
A thousand men, women and child­
naturalist, poet and sportsman, but
the meet early in July. The date is to a question of what he did with
the doughboys had-become aroused
ren, held back in repeated efforts to
Plowing under the cover crop is always without the least pretense of
,
a departure from the usual custom his money:
rush the police lines, gasped and fell
best done when the land itself is in passion. The reader of his works
"I came to Denver to have a good by a meeting in the Garden protest­
of holding the meet late in the sum­
good plowing condition. If the cov-could hardly resist the impulse toi
into silence as they saw two bodies
ing against the ‘Horrors on the Rhine’
mer.
Robert S. Weaver, president time. I had it by giving my money
and I must admit that 1 was nervous
with
their
heads
blown
off
Nulled
er crop is not turned under soon get out of doors and enjoy the full
of the A. A. U., was instrumental in to those more needy than I. In the
out and put on stretchers. The foot
•
enough it. becomes rather woody and significance of surroundings which
the law I’m a vagrant, In. before the race started.
| of a girl, stilt neat with a satin having an early summer time set in eyes of
,
on
top
of
all
this,
was
ham
does not rot easily afterward.
It had previously been meaningless.
Rutt
order to permit college athletes to my own heart I’m a gentleman, gladi
Because of the increase in cost pump, was pulled out and put on a
Burroughs was a member of the
will act much as straw, keeping the
to
enjoy
God
’
s
blessings
without
ed
in
a rumor as the Phantom flyer,
compete 1 before they have broken
furrow slice from joining the furrow American Academy of Arts and Let- without increase in funds it will be white canvass stretcher, wating for training.
craving for man’s supreme creation a German aviator that did a lot of
'
necessary to slow down Oregon soil the remainder of the shattered body.
damage to the allies during the war.
bottom, causing the land to dry out ters.
—money.”
Mr.
Burroughs
had
planned
to
cel-
surveys
by
the
college
station
and
The
police
estimated
the
loss
from
badly.
Another danger in delayed
"Discharged,” said the judge.
W. R. C. Club
(Continued on Page Four)
plowing is that the cover plants will ebrate his 84th birthday with Henry the U. S. bureau of soils, from two the explosion will reach the million
The Women’s Relief Cor ps Club
This included the wrecked
take out too much of the moisture Ford, H. S. Firestone : n 1 Thomas counties a season to one county a mark.
held
its regular meeting at the home
in their growth that should be con- Edison, on April 3, and was return- season, and to do deferred chemical factory and the little homes near it.
of Mrs. Trask on the Boulevard yes
........ — -----
served for the growth of the fruit ing from the coast with this idea in analysis in greenhouse fertilizer tests.
terday afternoon, at which a large
Additional
field
fertilizer
tests
should
90909999999093996
mind
trees or crop plants.
company
were in attendance and en­
~ be arranged in chief soils on fairly | • • • • • • • • • © •• • • • •
joyed
a
social
gathering with their
permanent basis. It is a fundamen- re-SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS
fancy work. Refreshments were ser­
tai necessity that a perfect system of 0$@ @ 0090066 • * •
ved
by the committee assissting the
soil management be developed be­
hostess
who were Mesdames Howard
(Special to the Tidings)
fore the virgin fertility of tire soil is
Kaegi,
Hawkins. Carlton, Jordan,1
.SAN FRANCISCO. Mar. 29- Fol­
exhausted. The city as well as the
Smith, Erickson and Rathbun.
country is concerned because the soil lowing are market quotations:
«NOE PAYMENT
among
ACTRESS
JAILED FOR
SPEEDING
political factions, season of
this summer.
I HMN-
IU I U U I I UIVLD
» FANS GAVE
GERMAN RIIIEBS
A SPORTY SHOW
The blast occurred in the factory broke a world’s relap team record.
. . . . . . .. . money only
TO GIVE AWAY sact"Tten. ..men.
COVER CROPS NEED
LAD V
l AKL i
DI IAIAI
LUWIN]
MUST SLOW DOWN
SOIL SURVEYS
Woman Legislator
Gives Approval of
New Marriage Law
Plan Program for
Bringing Settlers
From Middle West
is the basic source of all wealth and
the city is the first to feel the coun-
I try’s poverty.
WEATHER FORECAST.
For Oregon—Fair, frost.
The Garden Plot
CM, Mar. 29—The cost of bad heritage from their parents, who
maintaining the several state insti- themselves are not well horn. Every
tutions which, at the recent session feeble-minded person is a potential
of the legislature, was reported to criminal
Unable
to
distinguish
aggregate $985,000 per year, is one right from wrong, they drift into
of the most convincing arguments : crime or pauperism.”
why the taxpayers of Oregon should
------------------------- - ----------
approve at the special election to be -, - -
held on June 7. the measure making/VL
it incumbent upon all persons seek-UIg
ing a license to marry to undergo“”
HURRY UP AND, SOW
SOME SEED IM
“ HUNoRY I AM
C AIOLTLD
AUIIIT0
both physical and mental examina­
tions. according to Representative
W. S. Kinney of Clatsop county in a
statement submitted to the secretary
LONDON—( By Mail to the United
of state today for publication in the Press)__ “England will never take
voters’ pamphlet.
»her place as the foremost film pro-
This measure was approved by the aiucing country, until she has 2000
legislature at
recent session.. more first class cinema houses—but
with the provisio that it should be England has certainly an immense
referred to the electorate for finali future in the film world.”
acceptance or rejection.
Thus spoke J. Stuart Blackton,.
The annual cost of operating the the pioneer of the photoplay, who
several institutions referred to by has just arrived here from Americ
Mrs. Kinney follows:
Feeble-mind-
Blackton’s aim is to ilevelop on a
ed home. $150.000; state hospital. large scale England’s “featuring” 1
$465,000; eastern Oregon state hos­ possibilities. For his first play to be |
pital, $135,000; industrial school for produced in England, he has signed
girls. $25.000; state training -school the famous beauty. Lady Diana Coo-
for boys.
$60.000;
penitentiary. per. daughter of the Duke of Rut-
$150,000.
land, as heroine.
“The great mass of mental defec­
‘ Several other society people. Lady
tives. inherit their feeble-minded- Diana’s friends; will also take part,"
ness.” said Mrs. Kinney in her argu­ Blackton
explained.
“I am quite
ment. “Sometimes defectives occur sure that wonderful things can be |
in healthy, normay families, but au­ done in the ’movie’ line with the old, |
thorities agree that tyro-thirds of all historical backgrounds with which
feeble-minded persons are victims of this country is studded.”
EGGS—30c.
HENS—38 ©40c.
BROILERS—58 @ 60c.
I DO bELIEVE
THEY’RE USTI
10 WHAT UP
ARE TALKINO
I ApOOT
AS SCREEN STAR
(Capergli)
DAD, YOU KNOW WHAT
10 BO IF I WAS y0U-
WAIT. UNTIL 50ME
DARR AND CL00OY
NIGHT AFTER All Tl®
BIRDS HAVE ÓME T0.
RoosT AND TEN 50W
THE SEED - BUT PONT
LEAVE ANY MARKERS
.‘(AUSE THOSE BIRDS
n ARE WISE
j
brought to Oregon in a body. Defi­
(Special to The Tidings)
nite assurances have been given by
PORTLAND, Mar. 29—A compre-the railroads that they will co-oper
hensive and far-reaching
program ate in every way with the proposed
I for bringing settlers to Oregon on a, plan. Homeseekers rates which were
wholesale scale from the middle west- suspended during the war were pic
ern states during the coming summer into effect again last Tuesday fo!
1 was announced by the Oregon State lowing a conference of railload of
j Chamber of Commerce Friday, fol-ficials at Omaha. Wm. McMurray.
I lowing an all-afternoon meeting of general passenger agent of the Union
the executive committee at the Ore- Pacific lines, wired from Omaha on
gon building. This plan, which has that date, informing the State Cham
been “in the making" for several ber that the Union Pacific would co-
months, includes the routing of hun-operate in every way possible in the
dreds of homeseekers to Oregon in a proposed plan and that the home
body and a personally conducted tour seekers’ rates had been put into et
by automobile over the entire state, feet on the Union Pacific line serv Ing
The State Chamber will devote its Oregin.
Taking advantage of these rates.
entire energy and resources to the
this
plan
through
ef-
which
permit of stop-overs on any
task of putting
fectivèly during the coining spring point enroute. the party of home-
•
■
•
I
and summer, it was announced.seekers would arrive in Oregon, the
Briefly, the program adopted by rail trip coining to an end at the
the board of directors is as follows: most advantageous point. From that
Early this spring, agents will be sent point a personally conducted tour
to canvass the middle western states over the entire state by automobile
including the Dakotas. Iowa, Kansas, would begin
Nebraska. Colorado, Wyoming. Mon-
The routing of the party through
tana and Utah, for the purpose of the state would he in the hands of a
interviewing prospective immigrants committee from the State Chamber
who are contemplating a move west- This committee would select the most
ward. Advices received by the State favorable itinerary which would en-
Chamber during the past few months able the settlers to investigate the
indicate that this westward move-wool and wheat growing sections, it-
ment will be on a larger scale this | rigated lands, fruit districts, ami all
summer than in former years. and the agricultural and industrial I re
these advance agents will gather to J sources of the state.
Great care
gether a large group to move to ‘ would be used in selecting this itin-
Oregon on a fixed schedule and
so that
representative
date.
certain
| district of the entire state would be
believed that a party of at I covered by the party in the shortest
least 500 prospective settlers could space of time consistent with a
; be grouped together in this way and ’ thorough investigation.
I
F: 105.2