T uesday, Novem ber 2 9 , 1921 ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS PAGE FTV» EAST AND WEST MEET AT CANADA’S PACIFIC PORTAL SPEAK AI GRANTS - W. Judson Oldfield, Walter A. Evans, C.'W. Hulet, and O P. Koeh­ ler, Ashland ministers, attended the Grants Pass meeting yesterday of the Rogue River Ministerial associa­ tion. Ten other preachers were present, and the Ashland delegation reports a very pleasant and profit­ able session. The subjects discussed were: Is the church making good? and The minister and his work. The first topic provoked warm discus­ sion among the ministers add lay­ men present. The visitors were (treated to a complimentary luncheon served by tbe Grants Pass chamber of con)-, merce and donated by Mr. Barton, i a mining man. The next meeting | is to he held in this city the last ‘ Monday in January. REFUTES THEORY DOG DIGS UP KIVAS Ancient Ceremonial Chambers Discovered in New Mexico. n ■ hi Iti They’re Wearing ’Em Long in Scotland Indian Tombs Throw Light on First Civilization on Continent—Pottery, Utensils and Handiwork Also Discovered. Zunia, N. M.—To a prairie dog and a Zuni Indian belongs the credit for discovery of two ancient kivas or cere­ A monial chambers of prehistoric Indian life in western New Mexico. Valuable relics were discovered which it is be­ lieved may throw additional light on earliest civilization in this country. The find was made while Frank W. Hodge, an archaeologist of New York, and a Zuni Indian were making exca­ vations at the old abandoned village , of -Havviku in southwestern McKinley county. The Indian noticed human bones in the loose dirt around the freshly dug habita^ of a prairie dog. » Pursuing the dog’s underground course with a shovel he came to the remain­ der of the. skeleton and then to a fine l piece of prehistoric masonry which led him into the kivas. Mr. Hodge draws the conclusion that ! the kivas were the work of Indians from the San Juan district of Colorado rather than of the Zuuis of this sec- j i tion. The masonry was welt preserved ’ and not at all like the careless work i of the Zunis. The structure was more like the ruins in the Aztec, Mesa Verde ' and Chaco canyon. Houses built on the kivas were ap­ parently the work of later peoples. Ten 1 burials that were unearthed, Mr. ' Hodge believes, were those of Zunis climbing chimneys, wreathing per­ of latter times. One kiva was seventeen j golas and filling vast gardens, to feet in diameter and its walls formed appreciate real rose beauty and an almost perfect circle, the deviation luxuriance. from the circle being not more than i Stanley Park with its great an inch. The other was about four feet cedars and three fine beaches is an smaller. «.cai puuuv playground. pmygrouna. The m e motor ideal public road that circles its shove line un- Mr. Hodge is working under the aus­ rolls a succession of exquisite pices of the Museum of the American views. Winding boulevards lined Indian Heye Foundation, New York. with rose-covered, palatial homas Ed Coffin of the same institution and cover Shaughnessy Heights, an ex­ eighteen Zuni Indians are assisting clusive residential section named in him in his fifth year of Investigation honor of Lord Shaughnessy, chair­ of the Havviku village, a place at one man of the Canadian Pacific Rail­ way, the construction of which time inhabited by the earliest Spanish linked two oceans and saved British conquistadores in the Sixteenth cen­ Columbia to Canada tury in their search for gold. The present year’s work has re- Sometimes the dentist can quiet his «ndnf ri, ^ hibitSi- ,,f ; wife’s law I utensils and crude handiwork of the I J * _ I early occupants of the dwellings, as i . , , . ., . ' wel1 as some seeds apparently in a A lazy man and a comfortable bed ' good 8tate of preservation are not easily divorced. Mr. Hodge’s camp ig eleyen mj,es — ! southwest of Zuni and fifty miles from Why do people who pick quarrels j Gallup on the Gallup-St. John’s high- always select such ugly ones? way. f ■ M l t-S oT C i. f Judging by the hotel registers of ! Vancouver, the whole wide world is 1 contributing to the tide of tourist | A?#?- travel which flows through that western Canadian port. One page of such a register recently had been ! signed by travelers from Manila (P. I.), London, Boston, Dallas, , New York City, Winnipeg, Shang- 1 hai, Washington, Yokohama and • Yonkers. /FofSZÄ X? j- The uninitiated who witness one 'fCfffC GKCY h q u h O ' of these daily influxes of tourists, jump to the conclusion thaf a con­ bustling crowds that throng the vention or exhibition must be on hotels and streets of this modern tapis. But they conclude wrongly. port. , The steady stream of travel has a Occidental The wise traveler has learned to tide controlled by the arrivals and arrange his schedule so that he may sailings of trans-Pacific and Aus­ have plenty of time to enjoy Van­ tralasian liners. Just after the ar­ couver and its environs. Excellent rival or before the departure of motor roads lead in all directions one of these ships, Vancouver pre­ and motoring is a year-round sents a truly cosmopolitan atmos­ pleasure for the climate, tempered phere. Strange tongues are heard by the warm Japan current, keeps on every hand and the not infre­ roses blooming until Christmas quent Oriental garb lends a dis­ time. One must see Vancouver’s tinctly romantic touch to the roses draping walls and gateways, By ABBE TH. MOREUX Director of the Observatory of Bougres (Written for the International News Service and the Petit Journal) PARIS, Nov. 2 9 —A recent state­ ment by the English astronomer Crommelin seems to have caused consideiable emotion in the public mind. The last eclipse of the moon, its various positions, we shall still | he believes, proves some of our the- be incapable of predicting for a long ories false. Our satellite, he says, time in advance what place the moon is disobeying the universal laws of will- occupy in the heavens. T he, gravitation, and if the phenomenon errors will be very small, but they 1 » continues, we shall be condemned exist, and the proof is the fact that some day to have the moon fall on at each eclipse of the sun we notice ou; heads. some small error of some seconds in The fears inspired by such a pro­ the time calculated and the time nouncement have caused many of actually observed. my friends to write and demand my ! z views. 600 NEW DRUG STORES A WOULD BE MARTYR In the first place I must reassure She: Dear do you really love ma OPENED IN NEW YORK tt^em. The problem is not new, be­ •a much as you say? IN PROHIBITION’S WAKE cause it was raised very clearly by He: Why sw eetheart I’d do any- thing In the world for you. Why I’d Halley (the discoverer of Halley’s even live in Mexico. (Continued from Page 1) comet) in 1693. At that time astron­ omy showed that the moon posess- bition law, and heavy fines were im­ ed a movement quite different from posed This did not serve to drive that of other celestial bodies in the the illegal sellers out of the busi­ sense that its movement was not ness, however, as their profits were uniform but accelerated. That was declared to be so enormous that learned by examining ancient eclip­ they willingly risked further heavy ses. In 2000 years the moon seemed fines in order to rake in the thous to ha\e advanced in space by about ands of dollars to be made in dis­ tw*o times its diameter, that is to pensing liquor. It was found thaf say, that it was far from occupying a man could buy liquor in these ■v.n. the position assigned it by the law stores without the formality of ob­ ISN’T IT SO? taining a prescription. formulated by Newtown. Lady Shopper: I wonder how Law s of M echanics prices are In this store? Elevator Boy: Going up! At first it seemed simple enough JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Lady Shopper: My, that’s all we that the acceleration would continue GOWDY IS COMMENDED ever hear! and that one day the moon really BY SECRETARY OP STATE woul ‘ fall upon the earth. But such (Continued from Page 1) a problem tempted» the genius of Laplace, and that skilled mathema­ whatever regarding jiis attitude to- GOING DOWN. tician proved in 1787 that the phe­ ward the public and the manner in r ? , nomenon explained itself easily by which he conducts his work. It is Giraffe — It’s the laws of celestial mechanics. tough t h a t ’ s ' pleasing to note that you, as an of­ what it is.. I e know that the earth describes ficer, are standing back of him, and start my break­ around the sun in the course of a I want to express to you my appre-: fast at eight, year, not a sircle, but an ellipse. La­ ciation of your co-operation in and it don’t reach my stom­ place demonstrated that this ellipse bringing about a- better condition as ach for an hour. does not alawys have the same form. relates to the operation of motor ve-l We can compare it to a hoop upon hides throughout the state which one exerts a lateral pressure, Very truly yours, anil which, in consequence, is flat­ SAM N. KOZER. tened a little. Secretary of State MICKIE SAYS At present this ellipse becomes year by year more circular, and in STOP*. TUiM«'. LlSSEVH 24.000 years it will be nearly cir­ GERMANY OPEN TO FAKE BEER KAAWHS TYV YAAU VIWO'LL PtGHT cular. After this it will tend to be­ AT TW DQOP O’ TU’ WAT FERWVa come elliptical again for more than Reichstag Overrules Bavarian Pro- test Against Adulteration OLE HOME T Ö W H -* AM' NET 40,000 years of Drink. WOMT TAKE HtS HOME TOUIM Solution O ffered a >2 Now, since the moon turns around Berlin, Germany.—German beer the earth, a_£ the same time being may hereafter be adulterated. The susceptible to the influence of the reichstag has overridden the Bavarian objections sun, ' one can conceive ----- readily j V VIIVVITC that LUrtl | ! deputies’ * - --- to --— altering e vuv the every change in the ^stance of our beer stamP law so as to allow the use globe from the sun would have i ts ! °f C°rn and rlce ln brewlng’ Speak ing for the Bavarian people’s party, effect upon the position of the moon Deputy Jaud said: In .other words, according to wheth­ “The practice of adulterating beer er we are nearer or further from must cease. Its purity must be pre­ the sun, our attraction on the moon served.” increases or decreases, and conse­ His protest met with only scatter­ quently the moon must increase or ing applause. diminish its speed of movement. At present, and since a long time, THE FOREHEAD. the moon has been increasing its A projecting forehead indicates self average speed. This increase, how­ will. ever. is insignificant, for in o!he hundred years the moon has hardly A round forehead indicates insensi­ advanced in its trajectory more than bility. ten miles. All this, we must admit, Is theo­ A square forehead ind'icntes high- retical and by no means absolutely mindednesss. exact When we have greatly im­ A small forehead Indicates ln- proved our tables on the moon and canaeitv to learn NEWSPAPER'. ARE NOD WHO OF A G O N ? And here’s the proof—charming Mary Glynne as Flora Campbell, heroine and daughter of Lachlan Campbell In Donald Crisp’s Para- mount picture, “The Bonnie Brier Bush.” Mr. Crisp both directs and plays the leading role and filmed the entire picture in Scotland. I n v e s tig a te Our Id ea l A r c o la H ot W ater H eating System for Sm all or L argo H ouses Our New L ine o f H eating Stoves A re N ow In Provost Bros. CARLOAD SH IPM ENT OF When his satanic majesty exhibits sympathy for piety it’s time to stand from under. Fencing Beware of the friendly chap who pats you on the back. The chances ^re he’s trying to jingle the coins in pocket. =u ueij tfot INK SHOCKING Bug Health Inspector—I 6hall havt to report this to the health board. The water in this well Is fearfully dirty. from E astern m ills ju st in. Con­ siderable drop in prkies on sam e. GOOD CEDAR POSTS New prices on implements and re­ pairs. . New and used sewing machines for sale or to rent........ Peil's Corner u^anenjanj^anianianjaniaru2nianianiaanEniani2nianjanjani3.Tianiariianjani2nianiaiTEnc3nianc Ferguson’s Bargain Store Retiring From Business STORE CLOSED Wednesday and Thursday A A A A A worth of DRY GOODS, Ladies’ $ £ i d j V v V e V V and Men’s Furnishings, Hos­ iery and Underwear, and many Kindred Lines wiil be sold. At Real Close Out Prices IT W IL L PA Y YOU To Wait For the Big Sale F or S ale P rices See th e B ig H and B ill a t Y ou r F ro n t D oor «g THEM A? SViegf up fCR U? I j , i ( It Is far more honorable to black shoes than it is to black characters. When a man repeats the smart say­ ings of his children he naturally ex­ pects you to understand that he is re­ sponsible. ; Ferguson