PAGE TWO Ashland THE ASHLAND DAILY TUNINGS O* Tidings 1 “ “ Published Every Evening Except Sunday THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. Wednortaj. September 14, 195.1 the milk flow nor in the yield of butterfat. HAD TO DO MORE THAN PRAY Equal to Good Corn Silage Lone Beaver Found He Had Taken the Words of the Preacher Altogether Too Literally. ( Distribution of State Bonus To Veterans of World War tufy~ something more'was' wanted, and the literary craftsman of the Twelfth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth centuries wove his romances of chivalry to meet the needs of society. These romances violated every canon of literary art, but it was not as literature that he looked at them—rather as a gorgeous tapestry set in the framework of chiv­ alry. The influence these stories ex­ ercised on the qational life of Eng- 'and was prodigious, and of the three groups into which they fell—the mat­ ter of Britain and the matter of Rome the Great—the most popular belonged to the second. Dealing with the story of King Arthur and the Round Ta hie. Lord Ernie once said It was prob­ ably partly patriotism and partly re­ ligion which made Sir Thomas Mal­ lory choose this group of the medieval romances of chivalry. Partly, also, It was a true instinct of literary genius for tills was the one group which had In it the enduring elements of vitality. That group alone gave us the inward and spiritual meanings, the capacity for allegorical interpretation, the mys­ tical symbolisms which were living, lasting influences, because successive generations could appropriate them to their own needs and circumstances.— London Telegraph. ! When fed as described, the dried ■ pomace appeared to be equal, pound )UNTY OFFICIAI. CITY - AND As Lone Beaver sat in the mission •for pound of dry matter, to good PAPER house and Listened to the words of the ''corn silage as a succulent food for preacher, he had an inspiration. Only TELEPHONE 39 Ibis dairy cow. Owing to the prop­ by hard work had he been able to live. tabscriptiou Price Delivered in City EDITOR’S NOTE The Tidings Is for state financial ai(> to soldiers, Jne month • » • » • • • • » • • » • • • , > ,65 in receipt of complete data relative sailors and marines for educational erty which it possesses of absorbing He worked about the Hudson's Bay Three months ............................... 1.95 to the Oregon bonus act from the purposes, shall make a refund to 'large quantities of water and swell­ company’s post In summer and spent Six months .................................... 3.75 ing, it should never be fed dry, but the winter in the snow-drifted forest One y e a r ........................................ 7.60 World War Veterans State Aid com* the state of the amount so received should be allowed to soak in water on his trap lines. Mail «Ml Rural Route*. mission. Owing to the lengthy na­ before he shall be entitled to receive; for an hour or so before feeding, “Verily 1 say unto you,” said the One month .................................. 9 .66 ture of the articles they must by a loan or bonus under this act. |T h e pomace appears to be a pala- preacher in his sermon, "go to the Three months .............................. 1.95, Lord in prayer for what you want, and Be specific in stating amounts rentable feeding stuff. Six months .................................. 3.&0 necessity be run in installments One y e a r ....................................... 6.50 i which will be found every day In ceived, as your statements will be Caution is ndkised in feeding If you have faith it. will be given you,” Lone Berner went to his teepee and ADVERTISING RATES: tbe ! idlngs until a complete ex- checked with the records in the of­ dried apple pomace, as there Is a fell on his knees. “O Lord,” he prayed, fice of the Secretary of State. Display Advertising planatlon is made. possibility that the feeding of large “bring me a sack of flour, a side of LADIES Single insertion, each inch........... 30c J 23 and 24. Section 4. Qualifica­ Quantities, or of quantities contain­ bacon, one box of tea and one box of Have your suit or coat tailor- YEARLY CONTRACTS (Continued from yesterday) tions, Contnued.— Any person who ing excessive amounts of apple seeds sugar.” Display Advertising made. Come in and see the has received from another state a moght prove injurious. It appears to He waited until late afternoon In One time a w eek.....................27H e latest woolens and the new Two times a w eek.................... 26c ¡Instructions Referring to Questions bonus or gratuity equal in amount ‘be safe, however, to feed aB much vain. It occurred to him that as he models. Our prices are lower to that provided by this act, or any soaked pomace by weight (1 part had never seen the Lord, he perhaps Every other day......................... 20c to Answered in Form SAC-1 Local Readers. than ready-mades. Medford, bad asked too much of a stranger. person who received for such mili­ dried pomace to 3 parts water) as It Each line, each tim e.................... 10c i Numbers at the left hand side re- "O Lord,” he prayed again apologeti­ Grants Pass and Roseburg la­ Tu run every other day for x»r>« , fer t0 corresponding numbers of the tary or naval service extra compen­ would be to feed the same amount of cally, “bring me only half of what I dies are wearing our suits and sation equal to or exceeding the pomace fresh from the cider press. month, each line, each time . . . 7c! if .. . asked before.” coats— why uot you? To inn every issue for o ta month questions on the form. bonus provided* by this act, shall not Still nothing happened. Supper time or more, each line, each tim e. . . . 5c! 4. Actual residence in Oregon at be entitled to receive a bonus here­ ORREH — TAILORS came and Lone Beaver was hungry. Classified .<^°*Ilfnn.' i time of entering the service is a re- under; provided, however, that any One cent the word each time. ' . . m STOVE FIRST MADE IN 1855 “O Lord,” be cried desperately, To run every issue for one month er Qulrement ot the law. Temporary person, otherwise qualified, who re­ “bring me a plate of beans.” more, %c the word each time. or transient employment in another ceived from another state a bonus But Dr. Nsll Arnott, an Englishman, That seemed little enough to ask. Legal Rate: '.state at time of enlistment or regls- or gratuity less in amount to that Had the Germ of the Idea in the but not a bean came in answer. This Flrst Time, par 8 point line . . . . 10c tration will not prevent you from Year 1821. was too much for Lone Beaver, and provided by this act, and any per­ Each subsequent time, per 8 point he voiced his lost faith In angry words. obtaining the benefits of the act, l i n e ...............................................Cc son who received extra compensation Stoves are a comparatively recent “O Lord,” he said, “you are Just the Card of Thanks, >1.00. provided you maintained* a home in from any source, government or pri­ invention. True, stoves of some sort same as the Hudson’s Bay company. Obituaries, 2 H cents the line. Oregon for your family, returned to vate, for such military or naval ser­ were used by the ancients and even Hunt, trap, fish or no eat.”—Chicago Fraternal Orders and Societies. Advertising for fraternal orders your home to vote, or can establish vice less in amount than the bonus by the savage tribes which preceded Evening Post. TG BUSINESS WOMEN or societies charging a regular initl-| >our residence in other ways. If you hereby provided, shall be entitled to their civilization, but the first real ation fee and dues, np discount. Re- j were refused the bonus In the 9tate and receive the difference between modern “improvement In the produc­ i t is as essential for business women * to manage their finances well as llgious and benevolent orders will b e ,wjjere you enlisted, or were induct- the amount so received from another tion and agency of beat,*’ as be called FATHER OF MODERN NOVELIST charged the regular rate for all ad- , .. , . , for business men. Many salaried It, was made by Dr. Neil Arnott and vertiaing when an admission or other i ed> on tbe grounds of not being a state as a bonus or gratuity, or as women in Jackson county have first announced to a marveling England Minstrel, Centuries Ago, Held Audi­ charge is made. resident of that state, evidence to extra compensation, and the amount National saving accounts, and also Nov. 4, 1821, the Detroit News states. ences Very Much as Does the checking accounts for their monthly What Constitutes A d v e r t i s t e ^ ' that e" eCt WlU. be va,uable in estab' such person would be entitled to as How much stoves were in need of Writer of Today. bills. In order to allay a misunderstand- hshing your right to the bonus in a bonus under this act; provided, modernization in those days in proven ing among some an to what consti- Oregon. Affidavits in support of however, that the allowance of >60 by the fact thut when the German, The old tale tellers, the minstrels, We offer women depositors who tutes news and what advertising, your statements in answer to this paid by the federal government at Dr. C. William Sieraes, In 1850, des­ the palmers, the friars, the pedlers, wish to invest their funds to aa we print this very simple rule whicn quegtIon wln fap required vantage the same consultant service the time of discharge shall not be cribed his first “smokeless'* stoves, were the remote ancestors of the nov­ is used by newspapers to diffenn- 1 that we give men. atiate between them: ‘‘ALL future' Affidavits in support of your deemed a bonus or extra compensa- not only the scientific world but all elist of today. The minstrel supplied properly conducted households greeted a social need in his day. He was a eventa, where an admission charge statements in answer to this ques- tion within the meaning of this sec- him as a great Inventor. circulating library when, as yet, there is made or a collection is taken > tion will be required tion. The next steps forward were made was no circle of readers, and besides IS ADVERTISING.” This applies to g If your father was deceased at 41. Section 7. Bonus and Loan by T. Pridgin Teale in 1896 and from being the medieval novelist, he was organizations and societies of every kind as well as to individuals. time ot y °ur entry into the service. Optional.— Any person fully quali­ that day dates the stove as we know It the medieval publisher. As he drew All reports of such activities after i draw a line through the question and fied to receive either a loan or bon­ now. Ills bow across his viol or swept the A s h la n d , O re g o n they have occurred is news. write *.ye8- after -deceased.” If Rat prior to Teals’s inventions the strings of his harp, and prayed audi­ us hereunder shall have the option “Oldest '"‘o •» ' of electing to take either a cash bon­ world was made acquainted by the ence for some romance of chivalry, National centributlen is solicited, laftiaMon j service, fill out the name and ad- us or to receive a farm or home American, Hamilton, In 1874. with a the boastings and bickerings of the Bank in chargsd, or collection taken is NAW8.' dress and write “yes” after “de- loan, but no person shall be entitled system of compressed grass, straw and common hall were silenced, and the Jackson County’ other materials in such a manner that rude roar of the market place was ceased” and give date of death. 1. to both a cash bonus and a farm or they could be burnt without produc­ hushed. , We make all quotations on still living, fill out name and ad- home loan. ing masses of suffocating smoke. Ham­ JOB WORK By the end of the Eleventh cen- Ì dress and write “no” after “Ae- ilton’s invention was dedicated to 42. Indicate whether the security from ceased.” offered will be on “farm” or on localities where wood was scarce. It THE FRANKLIN PRICE LIST. 9. See remarks under (8) above, j ’’city” or “town” property by writ- never had much vague, hut presumably Same prices— Reasonable Price— 13. If possible, give precinct ing “yes” in the space after the ap- was deeply appreciated by the people to all. wham ho had to mind to devising his number before the name of the city,! propriate word. Increased vogue f o r patent. at the Ashland, Oregon, Entered town or county. 43. Section 22. May Make Ad- hand - knitted blouses Posto f fice as Second Class Mall 16. See question 18 in the appll- vances on Improvements.— The com­ Matter. Favortd by Nature. and dresses is the very cation. mission shall be provide by rule for Sacramento has the distinction of 17. See question 18 in the appli- making advances to borrowers for latest word from Paris, ♦ «> being the world's greatest distrib­ cation. improvements on real property to uting center for deciduous fruit, and ♦ 19. Name nearest blood relative meet payments for material and la- has the largest almond plant and the *» This narrow isthmus ’twlxt in the following order: Mother,' bor; provided, that such advances greatest fruit end vegetable cannery two boundless seas, I father, child, sister or brother, shall be so regulated that at the on the Pacific slope. The pear or­ <•> The Past, the Future— two ele or aunt, cousin. completion of such improvements the chards of the Sacrameto delta pro­ •> eternities.— Moore. 4 ; 22. Section 8. Persons Who Re- total amount loaned shall not ex- duce the greatest crop* In the world, ♦ the fruit being first to roach the mar­ celTe Educatlonal Aid to Make Re- ceod 75 per cent of the appraised kets each year. The delta district, M i- #< to be knit with i fund -Any person who has received valuation of the real property after which often Is compared with the the benefits under the act providing , the completion of the improvements. famed valley of the Nile, also yields Undo Sam, in being host to the thousands of tens of asparagus each delegates to the disarmament con­ year, as well as groat quantities of ference. will be a paragon of grac­ other vegetables, while it is known iousness and will be exteremly care­ throughout the nation for the variety and quality of its vegetable seeds. ful not to tread on >he toes of the Lands bordering the streams of the delegates. valley produce most of the nation’s Try the Sports Blouse above, using MINERVA Shetland Floss. Or the Child’s Dross hope. The eastern edge is prolific in Women have had the ballot for a —for which the ideal yarn is MINERVA Lustre Wool—-a “ m ix” of soft pure wool and the production of grapes and straw­ year, and there are no indications berries, while the receutly developed lustrous silk in delightful color combinations. that the country is ou the road to rice acreage has placed California sec­ Knitting directions for these models will be found in style columns of wreck and ruin. ond only to Louisiana as a producer this paper—this issue. of this cereal. Dried or “evaporated” apple pomace , andl after a like transition period at SOLD IN ASHLAND ONLY AT A ton of nourishing American as a succulent feed for dairy cows Is j the end of thirty days, the original Safety in Mid-Air. foodstuffs is more to be appreciated the subject of a preliminary report ration containing silage was resumed A foreign investigator has made a by starving Russia than a mountain from the bureaus of chemistry and, and continued for a third thirty-day special study of the possibilities of of mere sympathy. animal husbandry of the U nited' period. lightning stroke in mid-air and as a result of observation of nearly one States department o iagriculture,. ™. ... . . n„ . , ! The quantity fed— 36 pounds of hundred flights, in which the airships j goods The only sure antidote to the . based , on an experiment to determine! . , p .. . .. , . . . . , * wet pomace per day— was such that experienced some adventures with j poison of criminality is moral the feeding value of dried-apple pom-» , .. . .. , .1 the t£,taI dry matter in the pomace storms, he has come to the following 1 training and proper environment for ace, especially its suitability as food*, . .. . . p !_ ____'equalled the weight of dry matter in conclusions: There is no danger to ' the young. for cows in lactation. Preliminary *the silage replaced. The quantities be looked for if the machine la not in results are reported because of a the direct line of discharge, and if It Astoria-Newtonia Canning Co. in­ large number of inquiries on the bf grain and hay remained practical- does so happen there is little danger ly constant throughout the whole ex­ of fire resulting from the nature af stalling new closing bachine. Start­ ’subject. , periment. ed operations Sept. 1. and distribution of the canducting Pomace May Re Dried and Kept | While the data obtained are not metal portion. In 30 cases where the The text of the report follows. Sufficient to warrant the drawing of machines were struck directly, tl^e ' It appears that there is a belief, final and definite conclusions, the writer maintains that there were no * TIDINGS FASHION HINTS ♦ among dairymen, that the dried pro- indications are that no bad effects evil effects and in all cases where ma­ duct has a tendency to cut down the follow the reeding of dried-apple chines fell during a storm there was FOX SCARFS POPULAR milk flow, or even cause cows to go pomace. There was no decrease in no evidence of scorching of parts or melt in? of metal. .1 i— ^ —— - dry, although apple pomace fresh .’J * " » 1 from the cider press is generally rec- ■ 'ognized as being a good succulents 'feed for milk cows. To test the ¡"soundness of this belief a feeding: trial has been carried out by the dte- i partment. Only one cow was used in this test, and the total quantity of dried pomace fed was less than 400 pounds; therefore it must be We have as large depositors in this borne in mind that the results, while bank, men and women who "one* ’ indicative, can not be accepted as upon a tim e” opened their accounts 1 conclusive. with one lone dollar. In this feeding trial, the dried-ap­ ple pomace was fed wet and its feed­ Like the fairy tales, their thrift and ing value compared with that of corn industry are rapidly bringing them silage, since it is intended to be a to the stage of financial independents* “Succulent feed. The pomace was where they “live happily ever after.” prepared by adding to the dry ma­ terial three times its weight of wa- 1 ter several hours before feeding, th u s producing a feed similar In wa­ Mary had a little iamb, but that in the distant past. Now she lias a ter content to that of corn silage. For a period of thirty days the little fox—for everywhere that Fash­ ion goes the fox is sure to go. Fox cow received a balanced ration con­ Ashland, Oregon scarf# have proved theipselves the sisting of grain, hay and corn silage. most beloved o f furs, and they are uni­ T he silage was then replaced by the versally worn. There is a consider­ able range of color In them and a vary apple pomace for a similar length greut range of prices. In any case, of time, allowing a ten-day transi­ tion period for the change in diet. in* fur is soft, silky and becominc. è S E R V IC E 4 8 First National Bank New Fashions for Fall Minerva Yarns Dried Apple-Pomace For Dairy Cows Is Succulent Feed-Gives Good Results Big Dance a t th e “Once Upen A Time” Bungalow Every Wednesday Night The Citizens Bank Snyder’s Royal Jazz Orchestra Best Floor The Coolest Place in the Valley Biggest Crowds Best Music ♦