Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 4, 1921)
f ass?, SHLAND climate without the aid of Medicine, cure* nine cases ont of ten of Asthma. This Is a proven fact. >1 ILARIA Germ, cannot survive 4 ■ three months in the rich oaone at Ashland. The pare domestic water helps. International News Wire Service VOLUME 3 (Successor to the Semi-Weekly Tidings, Voi. 43) ASHLAND, OREGON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4.1921 NO. 28 LABOR RANKS DEPLETED: CRISIS FACED Grazing Edict For Modoc Reserve is Expected-K. Falls Henry Ford Wins Decision H S B $2,000,000 Legal Tilt KLAMATH FALLS. Or., Oct. 4— ! Decision as to w hether sheepmen will j be adm itted to grazing privileges on the Modoc reserve is expected to re- ---------------- suit from investigation made last week by J. W. Nelson, national chief MR. AND MRS. HOWARD ROHE RE-; of grazing for the forest service. Mr. TURN FROM SALEM AFTER “DO-1 Nelson 8 decision >» expected by the middle of October. 1N<» THE FAIR” ; FORMER Conference between the federal of- * fleer and members of the K lam ath LOCAL MAN HAS PRIZE HOG. Wool Growers’ association will be held here early in October for full! After “ doing the fair” and v is itin g . tu ^®i°n ° t the grazing question, according to J. H. Carnahan s p c t p - friends in Portland f e d other north-j tary of the woo, grower8 ern points in the state, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rose have returned from an MEDFORD, Or., Oct. 4 — Medford extended auto touring trip. desires to have a m embership in th e While attending the state fair a t' consolidated cham ber of commerce Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Rose met Lloyd of southern Oregon and will send H arris, a form er Ashland residteut Benj. C. Sheldon, H. L. W alther, V. and brother of Carl and Ralph Har>1 H. Vawter, O. O. A ien aen er ant, rig, employes of the Southern P a John C. Mann to the meeting at Ash land at the tim e when this organiza cific company. Mr. H arris was the tion is to be perfected, which will be proud owner of two hogs on exhibl- { I have noticed th a t everybody during this month. lion that were carrying everything is interested in the big things a ---------------- It is now up to K lam ath, Ashland j before them in the way of medals town does, but there are a th o u WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 4.— and G rants Pass to take sim ilar ac- and ribbons. Mr. H arris is now sand and one little ones th a t ¿Le of 7 h 7 The ’,oPulation of the state of Ore- 7 “ ’ “ S S° ° n &S th ree ° f the f° Ur everybody overlooks th a t make a farm ing near Salem. ------ une oi m e . _ l cham bers of southern Oreeon siir-l hogs weighed 825 pounds and, Mr j gon’ announced by the bureau of the nIfy their intentioD to partic * i big difference in the looks of a town. If I was boss of this town Rose says, was ‘chewing up nine- census, is 85.1 per cent native white the call for the Ashland meeting w il? I would take about a d o llar’s teen ribbons that decorated the side ¡and 13 per cent foreign-born white. b«j sent out w orth of sand and cement and ° f vhtiS ,’en•” ! 1910 the Percentage of foreign- The object of the C. C. C. is to co- give it to my street departm ent h«httr 7 a \eS \ hat AShlaDd eX* ib°™ WhitC WaS 16 8 * ¡ordinate the efforts W the commu- to fix up th e bum spots in the hihits were the btg bets that helped: The toreign-born white population nities toward advancing the welfar^ curbings around town. We home Jackson county win first place among which was 103,001 in 1910, de- of southern Oregon as a whole The folks are so used to looking a t the exhibits in a walkaway. The! creased to 102.151 in 1920, a do- tentative program Includes road im- them th a t we do not notice them, apple pear and peach exhibits of Al- crease of .8 per cent. The native provement, tourist development and bert Johnson, orchardlst. 601 Wal- white population in the same period the settlem ent of the irrigated agri . but the stran g er takes the meas ure of a town by the little things n u t street, won the highest prizes of- (“ creased from 552.0S9 to 666,995 'c u ltu ra l lands feretl at the fair. . j or 20.8 per cent. ' ' ! W ithin the next five years a t the th a t he sees kept up or neglected. It is the sum total of the little Howard has a long tale to tell! Less than tw o-thirds (64.7 per present rate of increase of ’ tourist concerning his travels. He sp e n t:c e n t) of the white people in the state travel, th a t crop will be worth 1 2 ? things th a t makes for the beauty of a place. considerable tune on the C olum bia, a >e native American born of native 000.000 to southern Oregon and river watching the fishermen, noted, Parents, the total native white of therefore every attention to its de HAZ KIK. Mr. Rose said, tor the “ hard ta c k ” ; native parentage being 4 9 7 .7 2 6 ,velopment is considered most in ? appetites and their ability to land while the foreign eleirtent is repre- portant. the “ big uns” of the salmon run sented by 102,151 foreign-born —______________ ___ th a t eventually reaches the consum- whites. 95,827 native whites who I^VITB NETHERLANDS, e r ’s table in canned form. had foreign-born parents, and 33,- PORTUGAL, BELGIUM ' ----------- 442 wbo had one parent foreign DISARM CONFERENCE born, the other being native. ' — —— The to tal population includes also WASHINGTON, D C., Oct. 4.— -’.144 negroes, 4,590 Indians, 3.090 K was decided here today to send Chinese, 4.151 Japanese. 142 Fili- invitations at once to B elgium ,1 i P os, 5 c Hawaiians. ir ■, ' 90 Hindus --------■” aud ----------------------------------- W ith the a Girls’ membership of tw enty-four .R etherlands and Portugal to p a rtie l-! | girls, Glee club was organ- ORE. STATE FAIR H a z IÇik DELEGATES C. OF C. IN ALLEGED PATENT NATIVE BORN OF W E RACE ON E —— Inadequate pressure in the Med ford w ater mains is handicapping the efforts of the fire departm ent of th at city in extinguishing a fire that broke out in the Barnum apartm ents at Medford, according to word re- - ceived here this afternoon. It is said th a t the apartm ent house, the finest LUMBERS H IP LOSS EsTIMATEl of its kind in Medford, is doomed to BETWEEN MILLION AND MIL ' complete destruction. Firem en, un able to play an adequate stream ofi HON AND A HALE; LOSS SUH w ater on the blazing structure, were TAI NED SINCE FTRHT OF YEAR waging an uneven battle at a late hour this afternoon. WASHINGTAN, D, C., Oct. 4 . - i Hard hit by an industrial depression the American Federation or Labor taces w hat la declared to be tint worst crisis In its history. The labor organization which has gloried in its supremacy over the labor movement of the entire world hhs suffered enormous loss of mem bership, it was learned from labor delegates. According to reliable sources of inform ation, the American Federa tion of Labor has lost between 1,- 000,000 and 1,500,000 members since the first of thia year. CHICAGO, 111., Oct. 4.— A de cision which will mean a saving of approxim ately $2,000,000 to Henry Ford was handed down by Judges Baker, Evans and Page in the United States circuit court of appeals today. The decision reversed the ruling of Judge Anderson a t Indianapolis.' aw arding damages of alm ost $2.000,- 000 to the K. W. Ignition company The southern Oregon term of the for the illegal infringem ent of pat ents belonging to the ignition com United States court convened in the pany. federal building at 10 o’clock this morning with Federal Judge C. E. Wolverton on the bench. Fifteencases MINE WORKERS CONDEMN are on the docket ‘for trial, includ KU KLUX KLAN; FORBID EDUCATORS WILL ing a number front the K lam ath, MINERS FROM JOINING ATTEND SESSIONS OF reservation, which means that the COUNTY INSTITUTE usual number of Indians hhve added; IND1ANAPLIOS, Ind., Oct. 4. fall Any member Mine their uicturesqueness to the ---------- of the United VUUDU miue — ---- , W. M. Smith, assistant state suuer- W orkers of America who joins the 8Canery Medford during the co u rt¡in teu d en t of schools will be one of __ . . . . from term. term. w.. in ..„ Kian, will be expelled Ku Klux the speakers at the Jackson countv T he federal court attaches arrived the union under th e term s of the teachers' institute, according io ad am endm ent to the constitution of the •ve8terd'ay afternoon and this morn- vices yesterday from Salem. He will union- adopted at the convention of hlg froiu Portla,ld Front the pres- visit the institutes at Canyon City ent outlook the term will last two ¡Burns. Lakeview, K lam ath Fails the workers being held here. weeks, in tte d States D istrict Attor-; Medford and G rants Pass and wiP EDWARD E. BRODIE, OREGON 7 Humpheys and Deputy be accompanied bv Karl K ilpatrick’ EDITOR. NOMINATED MIN nited States D,strict Attorney of the I diversity of Oregon E D ISTER TO SIAM BY HARDING ; Ihom as Maguire will conduct the. Ressier. of the Oregon A griculture prosecutions .n the cases in which | college, and .1. B. V Butler of the WASHINGTON. D. C., Oct. 4.— lhe government is plaintiff. E. M. j State Normal school President H arding today sent the! Mortou- deputy United States court senate the nomination of Edw ard E. clerk , will act a s clerk a t th e session. , S o u th e rn O regon will have th e Brodie. Oregon City, Or., president of the National Editorial association, pleasure of seeing the new United to be United States m inister to Siam. States m arshal for the Oregon d is -' trict. Major Clarence R. Hotchkiss, SIZE OF FAMILIES IN overseas veteran, who was sworn into last Saturday, succeeding UNITED STATES DECREASING office George F. Alexander, for the first j . . ° X l nS jPate in the international disarm a- ized yesterday afternoon at th e high Anu .....**» along with him cum« comes --- , WASHINGTON. D. C.. Oct. 3.— time. — ............. -•«.« mw KLAMATH FALLS, Or , Oct. 4.__ i e ery county of the state e x - |ment conference to be held in Wash- school under the faculty supervision The size of families in the United " ’d able and courteous frie n d ., Livestock entrms the Klamatl entries tor for the Klam ath ;cept four the percentage of foreign-' ington November 11, all other inter- ot Miss Leona M arsters, musical di- States is steadily decreasing, the bu- ,ohn D Mann, who has been chief county fair, to he held October 5 i are the i born white has decreased, and in 17 ested powers having agree<J to the Tonight and tomorrow r6Ct° r °* the Ashland schools. Work reau of statistics announced today United States marshal during and 7. are coming in rapidly. Th. nights. X of tbe 36 counties there was also a inclusion of the named countries. if X — a the l. num ber of foreign- - - p articip atio n " "o f' 7 h e* 7 h reeI classical musical ^ a n t e P° P,' 1ar and The »verage num ber in the family i n . ^ ^ ' ‘dcr'-s term and who will be fair board has erected an additiona decrease in The There is a bunch of local actors born whites. countries will be limited to d i s c ^ The , 1920 was 4.3, while in 19!0 the aver- ¡-tam ed in office a month yet to shed. 32x80 feet, to accommodat, and actorines who are im patiently to discus-1 The following oft.cers were elect- age was 4.5, and in 1900. 4.7. Rif break in the new m arshal and his late entries. The percentage of •foreign-born sions relating to the settlem ent of aw aitipg the curtain call th a t will etl a t th e m eeting: H arriet Huger. 1890 the average was 4.9. 1880, 5. ‘leputies with the red tape of th a t There will be about seventy en reveal “ Purple F lashes” to the pub- white in Jackson county has <de- the Pacific and far eastern prob- president; Minnie ________ Edwards, vice i the bureau figures stated. offite. Assisting Mann will he Ev- tries. most of them purebred. In the li«. creased from 12.7 per cent in 1910 lenis. The restriction was made be- president, 4nd Georganna Clift, sec -------------------------- - erett T. Stretcher, one of M arshal, dairy _ division ........... W. ............... cause none of the countries have , rotary. H. H ........... awkins’ herd We can't say any more about the to 8.2 in 1920, Albany— Southern Pacific rail- H otchkiss’ new deputies, who, it i s , eight is headed by King Korndyk One-fourth Under 15 armies or navies of sufficient size production than has been said in the Organization of the Boys’ Glee road pays Linn county $40,747.32 understood, will succeed Mann as Pontiac J r , grandson of King of th Of the people in Oregon, 27 2 per : an d im portance to w arrant their in- big Elks special edition which was club is expected w ithin the next few for last half of year’s taxes on prop- chief deputy. Pontiacs, one of the greatest Hoi o e r more than one-fourth, distributed over vuv the uxowivi district r n Fridays ------- -— a a y , cent, . — i are i elusion in the arm am ent discussions. days The exact num ber of cases corn- except th a t w hat the paper said about eith er in ,a nts or children under 15 stein sires in America. p n g up at this term for tria l and Sheep growers have taken slight the local actors, Enders, F rid e g e r,! years oi age: 8 Per cent are young w hat they are will not be known interest in previous fairs, but thh Finneran. Farlow, et al., is n o t! Pe° Ple 15 to 19 years old: 40.2 per until the federal court party arrives year there are thirty pens of regis stretching the tru th one bit. Mr. | C6nt’ about tw o-fifths are men and in the city. tered ram s and ewes, including sev McNaugbtau. the director, has made women in the prime of life, being Following is the panel of ju ro rs: eral imported New Zealand Corrie some “ finds” th a t will surprise the fr° m 20 to 44 y®ars O,<L while 24 I j j Halleck Ball, W aldo; George Bur- dales. The list of hogs and horses audience with their ability and tai- PCT Cent’ being 45 years of age and don, G rants Pass; H. J. Boyd, Ash also indicates increased interest of ent. To see them in action you, ° Ver’ are wel1 a,ODg *“ middle lifts 1 land; W alter Brooks. W illiam s; Milo breeders in raising the standard oi von were WPrp u’otoh they have not reached old age. would really believe you watch ¡Conley. Brownsboro; T. P. Criteser, their stock. The urban population, as com- 1 iug a George Al. Cohan show in re i Leland; T. N. Crow, Galice; Ed hearsal. shows j pared with the ru ral, » W .«vz « SOme ^VFtXiC Dailey, Kirby; S. E Davidson, W il GERMANY TO ENLARGE We are not going to say a thing ratb er striking differences in age, liams; Jam es N. Dean, Galice; P. A. about the girls, except to tell y o u ? h? perc®n ta se 20 to 44 years of age COMMERCIAL RELATIONS ' Genault. G rants Pass; George E. you will be some proud of those girls being 43 9 for the urban population Duncan, Kerby; J. B. Eldon, Paisley. BERLIN, Oct. 4.— The German cab when you bear them and when you 3S f omPared with 36.5 for the rural, C. L. Ellis. Leland; E. V. Foster’ inet has ratified the so-called Weis- see them. while the percentage under 15 years I Medford: W. L. Foreman, CentrtU boden agreem ent for the enlarge 1 hen there s a real orchestra, spe- ot' age 23.7 in the urban popula- Point; H. S. Gleim, T alent; A. J. m ent of commercial relations be cial costuming, beautiful scenery tion, as against 30.7 in the ru ral Green. G rants Pass; Robert Gim- tween Germany and France. This and everything to make the show Two-thirds of Voting Age mett, H illand; Phillip Helmer, agreem ent was negotiated indepen bigger a n d better than anything else Almost two-thirds of the popula 'G ran ts Pass; John H erm an, Selma; dently of other allied agreem ents. in its line. tion. 62.2 per cent, are old enough to David Johns. W illiams; W. A. Jones. The show is for two nights. Get vote, being 21 or more, and in this Provolt; John Lawless, G rants Pass; LONDON, Oct. 4. — An arm y o yonr tickets now. * class the men outnum ber the women X V ,7• Loomis’ A sblaad; Fred Luy, I dem onstrating unemployed mei in the ratio of 120 to 100. The H ET.1 W HÄT5 rTfclL IT TO THEj e oa> T. J. Mackin, Leland; H. H .! clashed with London police todhy ii IK A G l'E NOT TO males of m ilitary age, 18 to 44. con JUObE TU£$t>AVf j c ung. W onder; G. T. McCormick, t a serious encounter in Trafalgai ywR HURM stitu te 43 per cent of th e male popu CHANGE STAND ON - ------------- - pupu- MORN IN 6 ugo, C. R. Moore, Lake Creek; J. j square this afternoon. Several p<v MONROB DOt^TRINE lation and 22.8 per cent of th e total . . . luiphy, A shland: T. O. Naucke, licemen and members of the mol ----------- Population. Kerby; Joseph X. Nelson, G rants were injured when p art of the 10,000 GENEVA, Oct. 4.— The League of There are 99,562 children 7 to 13 / ¡Pass; Horace Nicholson, Medford; dem onstrators, who had previously Nations assembly today adopted a years of age in the state, and of this j George Owens, W ellon; E. E. Phipps. report of the am endm ents commit- na,nber ®4,312, or 94.7 per cent, been scattered, rushed the police, I Ashland: C. Frank Rhodes, Medford; who charged on the crowd with their tee. which recommended th a t no '<ere reP°rted as attending school, Boyd Robison, Ashland; John R. batons. c hange be made in article 21 of the In 1910 tbe Percentage attending ¡Robinson. Talent; William H. Sim covenant dealing with the Monroe s®*00’ waa 90.3, thus indicating an mons, G rants Pass; H. C. Stock. itoctrine. improvement as regards school at- WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct 4 — Ashland; Jam es Taylor. .B lv; E. S. The total claim s made by the rail The assembly postponed action on tendance between 1910 and 1920. Of Terwilliger, M errill; J. M. Tipton, roads against the governm ent as a article 10 and upon A rgentine’s pro- ,t he children 14 and 15 years of age j Olene; William Ulrich, Medford; posal th a t all recognized nations b e |in 192° ’ 90. 6 Per eent were attend- result of the federal operation of the i e T K l l hi i h T ’ . lMerri,1; J' P ' ° ^ - i railro,Ui8 dttrin* ‘he war will prob adm itted to the League of Nations inR 8cbo°l and of those 16 and 17 pi 7 tb F S aggregate $1,087.000,000, Di u n til 1922. 77— "7--------------------------------------- . 'C ontinued on Page 4) —J (Cowrlgtri) G . ? 8ldz y; aD *x*8ervice man, rector General of Railroads Davis re will be bailiff for the federal court, ported to President Harding today Girls’ Glee Club Af High Schooll Elects Officers Eiks to Present "Purple Flashes” Tonight 1st Time The End of a Perfect Day - » KJ 77 d Klamath County Fair Opens Oct. 5; Many Entries