Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, November 29, 1921, Page 2, Image 2

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    f*AGE TWO
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
A shland Daily T idings
EDITORIALS
Ashland
Tidings
Established 1876
P u b lish e d Every Evening
Sunday
Tuesday, November 21 r 1021
Buckwheat Cakes
Except
FEATURES
“What’s in a Name?
By MILDRED MARSHALL
T H E ASHLAND PR IN TIN G CO.
Fact» about your name; (»history: tnean-
tng; wnence It w a s derived; significance;
your lucky day end lucky jewel.
O F F IC IA L CITY AND COUNTY
PA PER
■ÇELEPHON& 39
GLAD Y S.
scription P rice D elivered in City:
O n e month
................ $ .65
T h r e e m o n t h s .............................. 1.95
f ilx m onths .................................. 3.75
T
O ne year .................................... 7.50
Siad and R ural Routes
O n e m onth ............................... -. $ .65
T h r e e m onths .............................. . 1.95
S ix m onths
.................... ..
3.50 |
O na year
.................................. 6.5€;
ADVERTISING RATES
D isplay A dvertising
S ingle insertion, each inch. . .
'
.30c
YEARLY CONTRACTS
Display A dvertising
O ne tim e a w e e k .......................27 % c'
T w o times a week....................... 25 ci
E v e ry -o th e r d a y .« ............................ 20_ c;
Local R eaders
E a c h line, each tim e .................... 10c J
T o ru n every other day for one
m onth, each line, each tim e. . ic
T o run every issue for one month
o r more, each line, each tim e. . 5c
Classified Column
O ne cent the word each time.
T o run every issue for one month
w m ore, %c the word each time.
Legal Rato
E ir s t time, per 8-point lin e ........... 10c
E a c h subsequent time, per 8-
polnt line . . ...........................
5c
C a r d of t h a n k s .............................$1.00
O b itu a rie s, the line
................ 2 ^ c
F r a ter n a l Orders and S ocieties
A dvertising for fratern al
orders ‘
O r societies charging a regular in iti- ;
Mt ion fee and dues, no discount. "Re­
lig io u s and benevolent orders will b e '
«charged the regular rate for all ad
w ertising when an admission or other S
c h arg e is made.
W hat C onstitutes Advertising
In order to allay a m isunderstand- i
tug am ong some as to w hat cqnsti-i
ta le s news and what advertising, ’
w?e p rin t this very simple rule, which
I s u sed by newspapers to differenti­
a te between th e m : “ ALL future
»vents, where an admission charge
I*, made or a collection is taken IS
ADVERTISING.” This applies to
o rg an izatio n s ar d societies of every
k in d as well as to individuals.
Ail reports of such activities after •
t h e y have occurred is news.
All coming social or organization
m e etin g s of societies where no i
m o n ey contributiou is solicited/ in iti­
a t io n charged, or collecton taken JS (
VIEWS.
CHIC TAILORED FROCKS
VIE WITH COSTUME SUITS
How Difficult It Is to Keep Vanity
Under Harness of the Intellect”
By BRIG. GEN. C. G. DAWES, in “Journal of the Great W ar.”
Ote change® his mind as information change;,
provided that information alters the foundation of
correlated facts upon which opinion must always he
huilded. But we must be guided by facts.
x
takes more than reason to beud national pride.
$$
Necessity must also exist.
N ow that the pressure of emergency is over I
have to spur myself to work. I believe I am naturally
*
inclined to indolence when off a red hot stove. The
«ZF
merel-v sPecfltcular in life will never lack description.
The history of tills war will be written around
achievement—not shoulder straps.
Emergency is after all the greatest co-ordinator.
My experience in working for co-ordination teaches me that the co­
ordinator must himself co-ordinate his mental activities with others.
Distrust of each others’ intentions is fatal to quick action in time of
emergency.
How majestic is naturalness. I have never met a m a il whom I really-
considered a great man who w-as not always natural and simple. Affec­
tation is inevitably the mark of one not sure of himself.
It never occurs to me now to look for dirt. I am so anxious to get
something to eat. I am writing this right here for the benefit of middle-
aged business men. The joys of youth are still within o.ur .reach if we
only give over physical and mental indolence.
Humbleness and naturalness -are the great protection against
ignorance.
The anti-climax which the inexperienced and over-vain bring upon
themselves by encouraging newspaper self-exploitation upon assuming
important duties is one of the chief causes of a subsequent failure. The
censor happily protected the A. E. F. from much of this sort of thing,
but many in the United States were destroyed, or destroyed their own
usefulness them selves, by it.
In proportion as men are right-minded and intelligent, ceremony is
unessential in their relations.
Inexperience and ignorance in its association with experience and
knowledge will alw-ays profit by humbleness of opinion.
How difficult it is to keep vanity under the harness of the intellect.
Somehow it is not so inspiring to work at saving money for one’s
government as to work at helping to save its life.
Clementel, French minister of commerce, inexpressibly horrified me
by kissing me on both cheeks W ore a large audience. As we sat at the
table together, I told Hoover our old friends in Cedar Rapids, la., and
Marietta, 0., who know us better, would never have made the mistake
either of making us so prominent or of kissing us.
We lunched in a house owned by Ogden Mills which was formerly
the palace of Marshal Lannes. As I looked around me I said, “John
(General Pershing), when I contrast these barren surroundings with
the luxuriousness of our early life in Lincoln, Neb., it does seem that a
good man has no real chance in the world.” To which John meditatively
replied: “Don’t it beat h—I!”
'•'
W e m ake all quotations on
JO » WORK
fr.om
T H E FRANKLIN PRICE LIST
Sam e prices— reasonable price—
to all
.. E n tere d a t the Ashland, Oregon,
P ostoffice as Second-class Mail Mat­
t e r . _______________ _ _ _ _ _ _
m ' ....................... -u----- ~
* *' *:*>•* -A
♦
Ko jealousy their dawa of
♦
love o’ercast,
♦
N or b la sted were th e ir wed-
«6»
ded daya with strife;,
♦ E ach season looked delight-
ful as it past,
To th e ^ond huslj'.nd and
the faithful wife.
— Beattie.
m
HOUGH popular In the chorus
and frequently in use as the her­
oine of popular fiction, where
Gladys de Montmorency* was consid­
ered the height of feminine elegance.
Gladys comes from a dignified old Ro­
man family, the Claudian gens. The
Claudii gained much fame in early
Rome and figure In most of the trage­
dies of the city, and the Emperor
Claudius, through his conquests in
Britain, spread his name throughout
Europe.
The first feminine Claudia, was the
daughter of a British prince who sent
her greetings to St. Timothy in St.
Paul’s epistle. The masculine form,
Cladus, or Gladus, as it was sometimes
spelled, became popular in England
and was taken over by the Welsh, who
are responsible for the feminine
Gladys.
Gladys came to be considered the
equivalent for Claudia and as such was
reverenced, but her name never
aehievedjlie popularity of Its equiva­
lent because of Its harsh souud.
Though recognized as Gladys it was
more often given in baptism as Clau­
dia, or Claudie, as the French call it.
France rejected Gladys completely,
preferring the softer Claudine, and
Claudie, while Italy and Spain chose
Claudia, leaving Gladys complete­
ly to -English use, whence It was
brought to America and allowed to
flourish unmolested and non-confused
by Claudia.
Agate Is the talismnnic gem assigned
to Gladys. It is said to avert peril
from its wearer, to give her courage
and a large degree of charm.
One old legend contends that her every
wish will come true when she wears
this gem. Tuesday Is her lucky day
and 7 her lucky number.
,s' "*>
M arshal Foch. figuratively,
k issin g Miss Columbia on both
cheeks, and Miss C. is giving him a
reso u n d in g smack on the lips tin
th e good old A m erican way th a t
B ills have.
T h e re are a few public men who, j
d e l nA ng themselves into thinking
t h a t the presidential bee was buzz­
iTIlEET dresses, including coat
in g in th eir direction, have been
dresses, are setting a pace In
ru d e ly awakened by a stinging re ­
originality and “chic” that chal­
b u k e from the people.
lenges eveu the costume suit to keep
up with it. They have become indis­
W ashington correspondents a re
pensable and designers find it possible
beginning to conjecture as to who to be more original in these tailored
is th e au th o r of th€t_naval holiday frocks than in suits—for tins season
proposal put before the arm s con­ there Is a great diversity In them.
feren ce by Secretary Hughes. "Was They- range in style all the way from
I t Mr. Hughes? Was it President those as plain as the severest tailored
suits to those that are more fanciful
H a rd in g ? Or was it the joint work than formal suits.
o f th e four American delegates?
The graceful model shown here,
T h is m ay become a question as 1
with redingote effect In bodice and
w o n t as th a t interm inable contro- tunic, opens at the front displaying
▼ersial argum ent as to w hether or ¡ a dark vestee. Revers on the bodice
not
Bacon
w’rote
Shakespeare’s are bound with braid and the collar
has an inlay «at the back of white
■work?.
broadcloth striped with flat silk braid.
B oth English and French are of­ A panel of the broadcloth is let In at
fic ia l languages in the arm s con­ each side of the «tunic and covered
ference. But Secretary Hughes, in with bands of braid and this same
decorative feature makes a finish for
h is naval holiday proposal, spoke the cuffs. Another beautiful street
•o m eth ln g th a t men, women and dress is madfc of duvetyn in dark blue
ch ild ren of every tongue can under­ with rolling collar, vestee and girdle
in beige satin. The skirt is scalloped
s ta n d and appreciate.
___________ 4
at the bottom and vertical bands of
Persian lamb above the scallops ex­
♦
TH E PEO PLE’S FORUM.
♦ «> €> «> <£> <•> <3> <$> <%
> &$> <$> <g> & <$> <s> debt. It is so generous of them to
ju st w ant credit. I know how it is
«R C H A R D IST DILL
to always be getting credit and the
QUERIES “CREDIT”
other fellow get the money. I h are
DUE TO COUNCIL been getting so much credit and the
------- — ¿
other fellow getting the money, th a t
ASHLAND, Or.. Nor. 8®.-—E ditor my w ardrobe a in ’t ju st w hat it
vff T idings: I notte® in your paper l ooght to be.
I got up th e other
Mrtiere the city ■ council wants credit ‘tedrBing at 5 o’clock, because I have
7®Br paying $20,000* on odt paving on ty h eeh receiving credit Instead of
ÄL - J a j
tend to the hip line. The same fur
makes a little cape-collar at the back
and appears In a band on the flaring
sjeeves. This dress is smartly fin­
ished with a girdle of wide satin rib­
bon with a big rosette at the side mak­
ing a telling touch on it.
The costume suit which dares to
rival such unusual dresses must re­
veal some clever details In its make­
up. The popular model pictured un­
dertakes to meet this requirement in
its long coat, split nt the sides with
turned back revers. Six large flat but­
tons emphasize the novelty of the
revers and divide attention with the
handsome embroidery at the bottom
of the coat and narrow panels of it on
the back. The plain sleeves are con­
spicuous by being close-fitting and
long In a season when sleeves do all
sorts of surprising things, and the col­ fective iu eradicating debts as m in­
lar of fur follows the lead of the ny balls are in destroying armies.
sleeves Iby sticking to conventional
If I had known of the council's
lines.
generosity I would not have been in
any rush. I w ant to put “exes” on
everything th a t I have said about
any of them. I wonder how much
COPYRIGHT «Y VESTttW NEV5 PAPER UNI O K
of this $243,000 Mr. Banta paid.
I am sorry th a t I ever took any ex­
cash, and lit up all my hen houses ception to his calling me a liar. A
and pu t every hen on the job to man carrying such a burden as this
work early, so as to meet the last for the dear old people is liable to
paym ent on my 500 fe e t of pave­ call another most any old thing. I
m ent on N orth Main. P retty soon feel like going right down and shoot­
th a t bunch of hens had staoked up ing a fellow th a t «1 heard talking
a pile of eggs th a t looked something about the council th e o th er day. He
like a collection of minny balls th a t said th a t if we had a real council­
you see heaped up in a decayed b at­ man to put w ith w hat we already
tle field, and eggs are ju s t as ef- have, th a t we would have a mU-
i.W’
fid
so rt q y tja i.
Ail
..on';’
cootf vnp >3 •»i’fcvsj
lion. A bystander asked, “ How is
th a t? ” He answ ered: “ If you put
one in front of six zeros, would it
not m a k e, a million. J u s t th in k
w hat it would mean if we had a
million councilmen as generous as
our own dear ones have been in
paying off the paving Why, they
would build a reservoir up Ashland
creek th a t would irrigate the whole
valley.
JOHN H. DILL.
(C opyright.)
The KiTcnm
C opyright. 1921. W estern N ew spaper U nion
Sim plicity an d g re a tn e ss a re syno­
nym s. Only th e tru ly g re a t a re g re a t
enough to be sim ple. T ru e g re a in e ss
co n sists in being a good neighbor to
th e fam ily n ex t door.—T hom as D reier.
T IM E L Y S U G G E S T IO N S .
Cut a slice of salt pork into dice
and brown in a deep kettle. Add three
medium-sized
potatoes
u iu l o n e o n io n , p u t ili to u g h
the meat grinder. Add
suit and p e p p e r , and
d r e d g e with flour; cover
with Hoiliiiar water and
the vege-
HIP
H tables are well cooked.
Add one and o n e - h a l f
pints of hot milk, a small piece of
butter and serve with toasted crackers.
Beet Relish.—Take one quart of
cabbage and one quart of beets finely
chopped, add two cupfuls of sugar, one
tablespoonful of salt, oue-lialf tea-
spoonful cayeuuc, one teaspoonful of
white pepper, one cupful of fresh
gruted horseradish; mix with enough
vinegar to make of the right consist­
ency and can cold.
White Grape Preserves. — Squeeze
out the pulp from white grapes, and
cook In a double boiler until soft
enough to separate the seeds easily
by pressing the fruit through a col­
ander. Add the skins to the seedless
pulp, measure the mixture, allow u
cup and one-half of sugar to twery two
cupfuls of grapes, and cook the mix­
ture for fifteen minutes. Can and seal.
Orange Jelly.—This is a most con­
venient sweet to have on hand for
many occasions. Remove the rind from
one large orange and cut the rind into
thin slices. Cut th i orange into slices,
add the juice of half a lemon and cut
ihe rind into thin strips; do the same
with one-quarter of a grapefruit. Cover
with cold water Vmd let stand over­
night. In the morning turn into a
granite pan and simmer for an hour
or more until the rinds ure tender
enough to be pierced with a straw.
Drain in a Jelly bag without squeez­
ing. More water may be needed to be
added during the cooking. Measure
the juice with an equal amount of
sugar and cook until the juice forms
thick drops on the edge of the spoon.
Pour Into glasses and when cool cover
with «paratfin.
Raisin Sandwiches.—Put through the
meat chopper alternately a few raisins
and a few pecans»or walnut meats un­
til a cupful of each is used. Add a
dash of salt and blend with enough
whipped cream to make a mixture to
spread. Raisins are better If steamed
before using.
The Kansas inventor of
The discovery of iron ore In t h e ; grading machine in which
Dutch E ast Indian island of Cele­ rim med wheel revolving on
bes estim ated a t hundreds of thous­ cal axis replaces the usual
ands of tons has led to a plan to elaim s it is m ore rapid an d
harness m ountain stream s to obtain * less power than the older
it with hydroelectric /power.
machine
•n
a road­
a steel
a verti­
scraper,
requires
type of