Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, August 13, 1921, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
Ashland
Established
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS.
Saturday, August 18, 1921.
fic company while George N. K ram er
is on a vacation:
“ In the past, on lum ber and for­
est products destined to territory
east of the Mississippi river In the
states of Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky,
Minnesota,
A rkansas,!
Michigan,
Wisconsin,
Ohio, Ontario, New!
York, Pennsylvania and W est Vir­
ginia, routing has beeu restricted
to the Portland gateway.
"Effective Septem ber^ 10, 1921,
we have arranged to publish the
same rates via the Roseville-Ogden
gateway. This will give the ship­
pers two routes instead of one,
which they have heretofore en­
joyed.”
Tidings
1876
Published Every Evening Except
Sunday
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
OFFICIAL
CITY AND COUNTY
PAPER
TELEPHONE 39
Subscription Price Delivered in City
G d # month • • • • • • • « . . . • • • • • $ .65
Three m onths .............................. 1.95
Six m onths .................................. 3.75
One y e a r ........................
7.50
Mail and R ural Routes.
One m outh .................................. 8 .65
Three months .............................. 1.95
Six months .................................. 3.60
One year ....................................... 6.50
ADVERTISING RATES:
Display Advertising
Single insertion, each in c h ........... 3 Or
YEARLY CONTRACTS
Display A dvertising
One time a w eek.....................27 %c
Two tim es a w eek.....................26c
Every other d a y ........................ 20c
An Unfortunate Mistake.
A Dublin magistrate asked a prison­
er to explain why he was found lying
in the gutter.
“Shura, yer honor.” answered the In­
ebriate. ”1 just happened to walk be-
^ u n e two lamp posts an Inned against
______ •.
_____ ______
ZP=
—s-S
ASK YOUR
NEW
GROCER
MANAGEMENT
-----J
Wholesale and Retail
R. H. LOLL W OOD, Prop.
-
F irst Time, per 8 point line . . . . 10c
Each subsequent time, per 8 point
l i n e ...............................................Cc
Card of Thanks, $1.00.
Obituaries, 2 % centB the line.
Fraternal Orders and Societies.
Advertising for fratern al orders
or societies charging a regular initi­
ation fee and dues, no discount. Re­
ligious and benevolent orders will be
charged the regular rate for all ad­
vertising when an admission or other dance hall orchestra. The man
charge Is made.
power of those musical organiza­
What Constitutes Advertising!
tions will have to be increased th a t
In order to allay a m isunderstand­ the loss of noise will not be noticed.
ing among some as to w hat consti­
tutes news and what advertising,
we print this very simple rule whicn
I
Is used by newspapers to differin-
Two single showings of ore from
atlate between them : "ALL future
t
the
old Norliug mine group, situ-
events, where an admission charge
i ated about four miles west of
is made or a collection is taken
IS ADVERTISING.” This applies to
Jacksonville, brought an assay of
organizations and societies of every
$339.86 in gold and silver, accord­
kiud as well as to individuals.
ing to certified assay reports on one
All reports of such activities after
itind $221.90 in gold and silver in
they have occurred is news.
The funeral of Mrs. F. W. Chan-
All coming social or organization
another.
meetings of societies where no money in, who passed away W ednesday
The reports were received from
contribution is solicited, initiation evening at 8;30 o’clock a t her resi­ the assay office yesterday by P. X.
charged, or collection taken is NEWS. dence at 150 F irst street, was held
Johnson, m anager of th e company,
from the Dodge U ndertaking P a r­ who immediately began speeding
We make all quotations on
lors at 10 o’clock Friday morning. i plans for the opening up of other
J OH WORK
Mrs. Chapin’s death came very veins and the erection of buildings.
from
suddenly a fte r only a few days ill­
THE FRANKLIN PRICE LIST.
According to M anager Johnson
Same prices— Reasonable Price— ness. Mrs. Chapin was the last of th e company will begin m aking
the pioneer family of H annah A nder­ general shipm ents of ore w ithin a
to all.
son, who crossed the plains by ox
Entered at the Ashland. Oregon, team bringing her family from Iowa sh o rt period. The finds were made
w ithin th ree feet of grass roots.
Poatoffice as Second Class MaB
in the early ’50’s.
Matter.
Nancy Anderson was born in Clay
UP TO DATE
City, Ind., Sept. 5th, 1840, and in
BEAU
1867 was m arried on the old Ander­
Ma—there la
son homestead near what is now
one thing about
Edith’s
young
Talent, to F. W. Chapin, a pioneer
By KENNETH SULLIVAN
man, dear, you
teacher of N orthern California.
don’t have to get
The g reater part of th eir m arried
up every night
life was spent in th a t state, they hav­
to send him off.
Pa—No; thank
A polar bear killed by members ing moved to Ashland from Sacra­
heaven one of
mento
about
8
years
ago.
Her
hus­
of a recent Amundsen exploring ex­
our girls has
pedition was found upon examina­ band preceded her to his last rest­
picked out a
tion to contain a Norwegian news­ ing place a little more than, a year
self starter.
paper in its stomach. There is no ago. She was a sister of the late
doubt but th a t the newspaper pub­ E. K. Anderson and Mary E. McCall.
lishers keenly regret the passing of
an old and ¡prominent subscriber.
It the news was garbled, Bruin did
it.
Sudden Death of
Ashland Pioneer
Is Sudden Shock
Norling Mine
! Gold Ore Makes
l
Rich Showing
Owlish titbits
Gold Hill Mines
To Reopen Under
A dispatch from New York chron­
New Organization
icles the "reign of te rrp r” caused
Jazz togs have passed. Chicago
haberdashers have decreed th at
rainbow silk shirts, socks with an
optical kick and long-priced, eye-
blinding cravats have gone into the
obsolete past with nothing but
slashed prices on old stocks to m ark
their passing. The shirts may be
made into handkerchiefs and the
sox given to the suffering— let us
say foreigners— but thin k of the
>eM* kaown as Eest. Sifcst, A1 wa;-$ Rt! _ i<
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
Lithia Bakery
L egal R ate:
Some place In the moonshine dis
tricts of Tennessee workmen have
unearthed a petrified giant six feet
four Inches, north to south, w ear­
ing a chain about the neck and two
four-inch horns on its head. It is
conceded th a t the giant was buried
before
national
prohibition— and
yet, the modern "hooch” is rem ark­
able.
W
UNDER
I xmh I R eaders.
Klam ath Falls business m en at
the Cham ber of Commerce luncheon
Thursday uoon sounded the keynote
of co-operation among , Southern
Oregon cities. The spirit is com­
mendable.
Southern Oregon has
not reached the apex, the final end
of development.
No m atter how
much has been accomplished it is
only starting, guaging its progress
by the future. Southern Oregon has
a great deal to live for. Southern
Oregon boosters is not an idle term.
T n E IH A a iO M B ::TL A N n.
Cbt-cbce-tOT» b iH a rzo 'id B r a r d Z /w A
P i l l s in R e d «ad fcioid m e ta liic A r ?
bo»«,, sealed w tb 6tne Rihbca.
I
b o e lfc e r. B u y o f r o a r V
tr==-
—
Each line, each tim e .................... 10c
To run every other day for on*
month, each line, each tim e . . . 7c
To ran every iBsue for on« month
or more, each line, each t im e .. . . 5c
Classified Column.
One cent the word each time.
To run every issue for one month or
more, %c the word each time.
by a few small boys and a dancing
skeleton parading the streets, en­
tering cafes, frightening bull dogs,
strong men and children alike. It
may be presumed th a t every one
of the terrorized citizens thought
th a t the family skeleton had picked
the closet lock. LU’ ol* Noo Yawk
is having a strenuous time these
sum m er dog days.
Ashland has a shady auto cainp
ground, as tourists testify, but it
is all open and above board.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
GOLD HILL, Or., Aug. 13.— The
National Manganese Ore company,
an Indianapolis, Ind., incorporation
with headquarters a t Gold Hill, Or.,
has been organized to reopen and
operate the Centennial placer mines,
three miles south of Gold Hill.
The new owners have received a
large shipm ent of equipm ent and
are erecting a large capacity drag I
line type dredge driven by electric !
power on these diggings, which will!
operate throughout the entire year. •
This mine has been idle since
1906 and was last operated by the
recent owners, the Electric Dredge
company, an Indianapolis. Ind.,
concern, but during th e early days
of the w ar the extensive electric
equipm ent was dism antled
and
shipped from Gold Hill to the war
industry centers. As an early-dav
placer diggings, this property pro­
duced great wealth in virgin gold in
the shallow grounds which were ex­
hausted, and the ¡present ground,
which is ju st as rich, consists of
banks from 20 to 40 feet in depth
of heavy clay and sedim ents to bed­
rock.
Puzzled Expert.
As two friends were conversing an
old college professor passed them in j
the street.
“The professor is a wonderful man,”
one of them remarked. “He’s a great
mathematician and boasts that be can
figure out any problem.”
•‘Not any more.” returned his friend. I
‘‘The landlord boosted his rent and
has him sitting up nights trying to
solve the housing problem.”—Toledo
Blade.
Considered a Freak.
The Tampa Tribune says that a girl j
must choose between dressing sensibly
and attracting attention. In s&me cir­
cles, brother, it’s the girl who dresses
sensibly who attracts the most atten­
tion.—Boston Transcript.
THE TRIPLE SHAVING MIRROR
Bug-t-Help, wow I
again.
I’ve got ’em
MUSEUM
GETS
RARE
RUGS
Once Used to Wrap Around Pillars in
the Orient, They Are Now
in Philadelphia.
Six Mongol pillar rugs, recently pur­
chased by the Pennsylvania museum,
have been hung in the Memorial hail,
Fairmount park, in the north corridor;
one pair at the entrance to the Wll-
stach gallery, one pair at the entrance
to the Silver room and the third pair
at the entrance of the section devoted
to musical instruments. These rugs
were once bound about the wooden
pillars of Mongol lamaseries or
temples, and in several of the mu­
seum examples the woolen lashings
which bound them are still there. Pos­
sibly textile decoration for pillars fol­
lowed carving, which would account
for persistence of design, as these rugs
could have been intended for no other
purpose. In one pair, a t least, the de­
sign becomes meaningless when spread
Hat, for the dragons which coil about
the pillar appear cut off In three sep­
arate pieces, which meet exactly when
the edges are joined.
The Chinese Huen Tsang, traveling
to India in the first half of the
Seventh century, says that the pavi­
lions of the monastery of Nelunda
were upborne by pillars ornamented
with dragons. The burial chambers of
the kings, with their antechambers,
have been uncovered from the mounds
o f earth which
were heaped about
them, and on the stone walls are fresco
paintiugs. The doorway from the outer
to the inner chamber of one of these
royal tombs is flanked on either side
by an octagonal column on which are
painted colled dragons, no doubt in
reminiscence of earlier carved up­
rights. The next step, for particularly
nomad people, whs to render the same
design for a similar purpose In textile
fabric to be lashed to the post.—Phila­
delphia Record.
Espee to Establish
New Freight Rate
By Ogden, Utah
The value of the Ashland band
as an advertising asset to the city
when the concert given in Lithia
park W ednesday evening acted as
the introductory event th a t brought
Ashland residents and auto tourists
stopping a t the camp ground to­
gether iD m utual friendship.
The concert, given under the di­
rection of L. L. Leedom, was the
first to be given this year and is
expected to be a weekly affair. All
num bers of the program were well
played and enjoyed by a large audi­
ence. It was said by several who
attended th e concert th a t weekly
program s will serve as an e n ter­
tainm ent feature for tourists camp­
ed a t the park, adding one more
point in the city’s favor as a to u r­
ist center and sum m er cam per’s
playground.
A nother concert will
be given next W ednesday night.
The following inform ation re­
garding shipping routes to eastern
points, in effect Septem ber 10, has
beeu given out by M. A. Callaghan,
local agent for th e Southern Paci-
Young T im -
seed—Thia term
I’m going to un-
d e r t a k e the
study of Latin
and Greek.
Old Hardfax—-
I reckon them
dead language*
deee need an
dertaker.
THAT
R E-
PROACHFUL
LOOK.
W hat a pathet­
ic face that young
fellow haa! H is
eyes seem
r
proachful.
Yes. H e pulls
In more tips than
all the other wait­
ers combined.
EXPLAINED.
I hear S m i t h
and his wife have
gone b a c k to­
gether.
Yes, she found
he had a bank ac­
count she never
k n e w anythin*
about.
Canvas
Shoes
Suitable
for
Hunting
and
Fishing
We carry several kinds. Made
with Rubber, Composition or
leather soles.
MILK BREAD
THE KEY
SATISFIES
TO HEALTH
-
-----J
Enjoy an invigorating plunge in Clean,
Clear, Fresh Sulphur W ater kept a t 78
degrees tem p eratu re
W a te r C hanged E very
Four D ays
The critical public are invited to investi­
gate the presen t sa n ita ry conditions u n ­
der the new m anagem ent
Ashland Nalalorium
S izes O ne G allo n to T w e n ty
Largest Pool in Ashland
E g g s A re C h e ap N ow .
W a te r g ia s s Y o u r W in te r
S u p p ly ,
Provost Bros.
Pennsylvania Vacuum
Cup Tires
FLAMING
FOREST
B y J a n ie s O liv e r C u rw o o d
The third and best of Mr.
Curwood’s epics of t h e
Three Rivers Country.
With Free
-Tube-
SA LE DATE
AUGUST T EN TH
P ric e — $2.00
M cN air Bros.
The
ABOUT TIME
BRAN BREAD
Jars with Lids
A FEW CHORDS
FROM CHOPIN.
Yes, mum, I
was once quite a
musician, an’ I
guess I ain’t for­
got all about it
yet.
Indeed! Well,
you can take the
axe and chop a
few cords out of
that woodpile.
— 'Ì
OUR
x55i
Busy Corner Motor Co.
C o rn e r H ig h w a y a n d M a in S tre e ts
a <■
.
* Sfar
M ED FO R D , OREGON
JTiMIïif.¡Allât
Spring Painting
We sold enough paint this spring to paint one out of every eight houses in Ash­
land.
This enormous turn over of our stock insures the purchaser of the latest price
and that the material has not stood on our shelving for any length of lim e .
We have been the exclusive paint dealers of the town for twelve years and estab­
lished our reputation on service and o*ur willingness to estimate and give advice on
any work.
We are specialists in paint and its uses and our experience is at your command.
U se it.
Dickerson & Son
*
I
THE Paint Store