Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1921)
Saturday, November 2d, 1021 ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS TWO i Ashland Daily Tidings EDITORIALS Ashland n Tidings Established 1676 «’“»Wished Every Evening Sunday ] Puzzled 1 ! HILLSIDE PHILOSOPHY 1 r • Except T H E ASHLAND PR IN TIN G OO. FEATURES By M. C. REED I__ i O F F IC IA L CITY AND COUNTY PA PER When they run out of something to do in Georgia, they lynch a nig- i ger—Sah. I Considering the number of won- i derful things the Almighty has done i it is remarkable He is not more widely criticized Bryan is said to be all smile3, and the sunbeam of the peace con ference. Why shouldn’t he smile, not being a candidate he is not ex pecting to be defeated. If you know you are right, keep on going; if in doubt, take it easy. The doctors who recommended pleasant thoughts while eating nev er traveled much. They say the early bird catches the worm. Some birds couldn’t catch anything if they stayed up all night. Humility is the highest point pos- 1 sible for any human being to at- I tain. Life is a disappointment to the man who overestimates his value. There is a better chance for a man to become a good citizen who I will do something wrong, than there is for the fellow who never did any , wrong and never will do anything i at all. TELEPHONE 39 ecrfption Price Delivered in City: > month ............................... $ -65 e e m o n th s ........................... 1.95 months ............................... 3.75 i year ................................. 7.50 Mail and Rural Routes s month .................................. $' 65 lonths ........................... 1-95 8 k months .................................. On« < ** 3.50 year ................................. d.5l ADVERTISING RATES Display Advertising Shagie insertion, each inch.......... 30c YEARLY CONTRACTS Display Advertising time a week............................27 44c T w o times a week.......... . . . . . 2 5 c E very other day.............................. 20 c One Local Readers B aeh line, each tim e...................10c T o run every other dtey for one month, each line, each time. . 7c T o run every issue for one month o r more, each line, each tim e .. 5c Classified Column One cent the word each time. T o run every issue for one month w r more, 44 c the word each time. Legal Rate F ir s t time, per 8-point line. . . . .10c S a r h subsequent time, per 8- point line .................................... 5c Curd of th a n k s ..................... • .$100 Obituaries, the line .................-244c F ra tern a l Orders and S ocieties □ Advertising for fraternal orders str societies charging a regular initi a tio n fee and dues, no discount. Re- Kapous and benevolent orders will be «barged the regular rate for all ad •wertising when an admission or other «barge Is made. □ copyright» TAFFETA FROCKS ARE BEST FOR GIRL IN HER TEENS What Constitutes Advertising In order to allay a misunderstand- ic ? among some as to what consti p ates news and what advertising, print this very simple rule, which fe ased by newspapers to differently ve a le between them : “ALL future «vents, where an admission charge Ss made or a collection is taken IS ADVERTISING.” 'This applies to organizations arid societies of every b in d as well as to individuals. All reports of such activities after th e y have occurred is news. All coming social or organization meetings of societies where no ■ a m ? contribution is solicited, initi a tio n charged, or collecton taken Is W W S. We make all quotations on JOB WORK from BY DEPREDATIONS OF T H E FRANKLIN PRICE LIST S»me prices—reasonable price— to alt Entered at the Ashland, Oregon natoffice as Second-class Mail Mat- fnculcate golden ideals and hon- d principles into the young, an<J tere will be fewer recruits for the tabs of the vicious and the crlm- a A few minutes each day spent in r* n g good books will keep one in ’ tune with the best though .Of the ages. Fifteen minutes dally, ‘ judic iously applied, will contribute great l y toward making one cultured. China’s TiwAi RWi mayor acting as Eve. until he g o t! ers keep .close watch on visitors, but married to old wooly aphis Banta, of course cannot make a personal and then we had two of the old search of each reader. ladies agin us, but as luck would Readers sometimes cut pictures have it, as goes on in the movie from the fashion pages of magazin?s, j world, they got into a scrap over portraits of actors and actresses, o r ' buying a tractor and got a divorce. anything that strikes their fancy, If we could bring about other sepa even mutilating expensive books.. Am rations in Ashland, we could soon entire leaf was removed from" th e ' make Ashland a real garden of Eden New International encyclopedia. i and not half try. Books and magazines are damaged1 JOHN H. DILL. by rough, careless handling, pencil marks and notations. Some readers have a habit of marking passages which strike their fancy and of mak- j ing marginal references to some thing in the text. This is all verv well for a privately owned volume,; Miss Hicks says, but entirely wrong and inexcusable so far as public property is concerned. As an ex ample of this kind of marking, one reader marked “word misspelled” . near the word “dammed,” evidently thinking of a common cuss-word. A Library losses, due to books being more discerning reader wrote u n -1 damaged and stolen by readers, is on I derneath, “refers to stopping wa-1 the increase, according to Miss ter.” Blanche Hicks, librarian. It is some 1 “People should realize that the li times very difficult, Miss Hicks brary and its contents and surround states, to trace stolen books, because ing grounds are public property,” , they are taken out of the building says Miss Hicks. “These things do without a card, the process being not belong to the librarian and her akin to shoplifting. A large bound assistants, but to the people them volume of the Scientific American selves, who should therefore take magazine was missed, but later re the best possible care of them ” covered. During the war several whales In several of the city libraries the reading room is so arranged that were bombed from the air by the patrons in leaving the room must allied aircraft, under the supposi pass close to the desk of those in tion that they were German subma charge. Miss Hicks and her help- rines. . < China, as a commercial field, is very well worth cultivating. Even under very adverse conditions in » a t country—with political division an d turmoil—its gross foreign trade far the year 1920 was in excess of HE giri In her teens looks well In 1.1. 000,000,000. This showed enor anything, but frocks of talTeta m ous gain as compared with 1911, seem to suit her best of all. w hen its commerce total was $650,' There is a sort of demure gaiety about «««.000. The United States is doing this pretty fabric that accounts for the eery small commercial business with sprightliness in dresses made of it, China—amounting only to 8 4 per and perhaps that is why it is written cen t in 1920. This country’s imports into the history of every season’s in to China totaled nearly $74,000,- styles. The simple taffeta frock is a good investment when it is cleverly • M , and its exports from China made—a very adaptable and versatile w ere nearly $42,000,000. Great possession. 2 B rnain and Japan hold supremacy We must concede cleverness to the in trade with the ancient country. maker of the unpretentious, buf allur Strangely enough, their percentages ing, dress for a young girl as pictured •atre almost exactly the same—Great here. It has a plgjn straight under» skirt as a foundation and above this B ritain's 37.6 and Japan's 37.7 per a wide tunic with tucks bordering it, cent. finished at the edge with narrow, picot-' Commerce with China should be ed ribbon. ’The neck is cut out in a cam e more and more important, as deep square, revealing a vestee of lace. th a t country becomes pacified a n d ' Straps of velvet ribbon, ending in lit a s its people are inspired to produce tle buckles at each side, make of this in greater volume. As China’s sales vestee a brilliant feature, and the neck is finished with a pretty lace collar. o f its own productions increase, its A frock like this in black, or dark ab ility to buy the products of other coaniries should expand correspond ingly. The United States, by vigorous more of the people go to work. I have just been thinking and q u est of markets in China, should be a b le greatly to increase its trade wondering why it is that the prices of fruit and eggs don’t stay up like w ith that country. the prices of bread and meat. The packers claim that it is the retail « PUBLIC FORUM butchers that keep the prices of buy ing and selling so wide apart be tween the producers and the con Kda.or Tidings: sumers, and in ordbr to bring them W hen Tom Edison and Henry closer together, they are figuring Ffcrdt buy up all the navies and beat on putting in a string of retail Into plow shares and pruning shops. That seems like a case of k o o k s , I don’t see how we are going dog-eat-dog to me. Co wear them all out unless some I have just been thinking about T shades of color, is equal to d i ice for many occasions more or let».- formal, according to the accessories worn with it; it Is at home against many backgrounds. Another fabric that seems suited to youth is plain crepe de chine, and frocks made'of it have fine wearing qualities. It is a great favorite this season, especially in golden brown, which shade makes an effective back ground for colored embroideries and looks well with the fashionable higli colors as flame, henna, orange and certain tones of blue. Used in facings or linings for girdles and floating panels, they give the liveliness re quired. Another pretty color comblna tion for young girls is found In bright strong blue, embroidered in gray. R e d u c e d P r ic e OR THERMOS AND UNIVERSAL VACUUM BOTTLES P i n t s ............... $1.50 to $3.75 Q u a rts ............$2.50 to $6.00 LUNCH KITS $3.50 to $5.00 A n tic ip a te yoOr C h ristin a s n e ed s w h ile o n r sto c k is co m p lete. • B ros. Tha Start CHICHESTER S PILLS W TI1E DIAMOND BEANO. Ladleal A.k^ruurlAruttrlat for A - X a d lr a t A ik ^ u u r l» r u C h l - c h e a - t e r a l> ia m o o w u. lM U s in R e d »n J ( ¿ o ld m etallicS b o r a , sealed w ith B lu e R ibbon. T a ke bo o th e r H u e o f e o a r V M»raa»ln*. A .k f o . C I I I ^ ' i n i » - T E K 8 D I A M O N D IIIC A N II P I L L S , « ft years know a as B est,S afest. A lways R eliable SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE N e w A r r iv a ls Axminister and Brussell Rugs Linoleum and Congoleum Rugs IN ALL SIZES AND BEAUTIFUL PATTERNS W e a r e c o n s ta n tly re c e iv in g N E W G O O D S, a ll b o u g h t a t th e lo w e st m a r k e t p ric e a n d m a rk e d to sell a t th e v e ry lo w est p ric e p o ssib le. COFYKIOHT IY VKTBIN NEVSPAM» UNIOH how the Lord made the garden of Eden; how he run two or three riv ers through it in order to make it a sure go, and everything went lovely until Eve took charge and she pret ty soon spilled the beans Now if it took two or three rivers to make the garden of Eden a success, how can you expect to make Ashland a garden of Eden without building a reservoir and using the waters of Ashland creek. If it only took one Eve to spoil the original garden, how can we hope to succeed with two. In our case we only had the W e b e liev e in g e ttin g b a c k to n o rm a lc y a t th e v e ry e a r lie s t d a te . W h e n th e r e is a d e c lin e in th e p ric e o f a n y th in g we im m e d ia te ly m a r k d o w n th e p ric e on g o o d s in sto c k , a lw a y s k e e p in g in lin e w ith th e m a rk e t. A ll g o o d s m a rk e d in p la in fig u re s. “ WE SELL FOR LESS” F u n e r a l D ir e tto r e , f ir s t c la ss se rv ic e a n d m o d e ra te p ric e s. L a d y a s s is ta n t J. P. Dodge & Sons Reliable Bonsefurnishers / I