Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, December 02, 1921, Image 6

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    ASHLAND DAILY' TIDINGS
M L L t.
OINCIDENTLY with the failure to
reach an agreement for a miners’
wage scale to supplant the na­
tional agreement, which expires next
March, two far-reaching bills con­
cerning the coal industry were Intro­
duced in the senate by Senator Ken­
yon of Iowa, chairman of the commit­
tee on education and labor, which has
been investigating conditions in West
Virginia. The failure was announced
after a four-hour discussion at the
White House, nt which were present
the President, Secretaries Hoover and
The President also is authorized
Davis and President Lewis and other under such circumstances to deal in
officials of the United Mine Workers coal and to control Its production and
of America.
distribution. *rhe President may go
One of the Kenyon measures im­ so far as to take over the operation
poses heavy penalties for profiteering of coal mines.
In coal. The other is a revision of
The companion bill provides a pen­
the original Calder bill, giving broad alty of not less than $100 nor more
posters to the President, the federal than $10,000 for the first offense of a
trade commission, the geological sur­ coal operator or dealer convicted of
vey and the interstate commerce com­ violation of the law, and for each suc­
mission.
ceeding offense a fine of not less than
The Calder bill, as revised by Mr. $1,000 and imprisonment for not less
Kenyon, provides that whenever the than 90 days nor more than five years.
federal trade commission shall deter­
In defining what shall be considered
mine that an emergency exists “which profiteering, the bill specifies margins
seems likely to produce a shortage or of profit for coal operators and dealers
bring about unusual, unwarranted or ranging from 10 to 40 cents per ton,
unreasonable coal prices and be detri­ according to the amount of business
mental to the public health,” the Pres­ dene. Margins are provided not only
ident shall be empowered to fix maxi­ for individual sales, but also In the
mum coal prices- and dealers’ commis­ case of aggregate sales covering a
sions and margins.
year’s period.
e
Real Rest Depends Largely Upon
the Depth o f Your Sleep
A warning to “light” or “poor” sleepers
The deeper and sounder you sleep the better
you feel. Five hours sound refreshing sleep does
you more actual good than ten hours restless,
disturbed sleep.
This is because the final conversion of food
into vital tissue and nerve cells goes on more
rapidly when the physical and mental forces are
at rest.
You can’t get sound, refreshing sleep if your
nerves are agitated with tea or coffee. Both these
drinks contain caffeine, which is sometimes very
irritating to the brain and nervous system.
If you want to know the joy, vigor and
stamina that comes to the person who gets sound,
healthful sleep, why not stop taking tea or coffee
for a while, and drink delicious, invigorating
Postum instead.
Thousands of people everywhere have found
that this was the only thing they needed in order
to bring about these very happy results.
Order Postum from your grocer today.
-Drink this delightful cereal beverage of coffee-like
flavor, for a week. Perhaps, like thousands of
others, you’ll never be willing to go back to tea
or coffee.
Postum comes in two forms: Instant Postum (in tins)
made instintly in the cup by the addition of boiling water.*
Postum Cereal (in packages of larger bulk, for those who
prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared)
made by boiling for 20 minutes.
Postum for Health
“There’s a Reason”
COMPLETE KITCHEN
OUTFITS
you can obtain at this store—
everything the model cook or
housekeeper conld d ea l« In
pots, pans and preserving ket­
tles. A little journey through
our establishment will give you
many suggestions as to things
you should have.
SIM PSON’S
H AR D W AR E
^èilQjììdQ
Fi ¡day, Decent b« r 2, I »21
WALLtNÜERG
Alaskan Tribes, Once Active, Fast
Passing Away.
A NUTRITIOUS FOOD
is baked beans, when properly
cooked and caifned as ours are.
Many Hundreds of Them May Never
Survive the Winter— Fishing Fails,
Furs Are Cheap and Natives
Gamble Proceeds.
You will surely like the taste
of our beans, as well as appre­
Seattle, Wash.—The native Indians
of Alaska are doomed. Many hundreds
of them may never survive the winter
just setting in along the islands of the
Aleutian group and Bering sea. The
fishing season was a failure, furs are
very cheap and the natives gambled
away what they did receive.
Once there was a time, many years
ago, when the natives of Alaska were
alone in the wilds of the north. They
depended upon the fruits of the chase
for sustenance and nature gave freely.
Kingly moose, lithe, agile caribou,
the great grizzly of the mountain
slopes, black bear of the lowlunds,
fox, wolf, mink, otter and beaver, sal­
mon and trout, all these fell to tlieir
lot, providing food and clothes. They
lived happy, healthful lives.
But now ‘all is changed. The native
Mile, tngegerd Wallenberg, daugh­
is an object to be pitied. Tlieir evolu­
ter
of the minister from Sweden, who
tion has been slow but sure. The ad­
vent of the white man brought a curse has arrived In Washington from Eu­
to the untutored man of the forests, rope.
for the first traders taught them
gambling, drink and the purchasing
power of money. They were urged to
barter their furs, fish and personal
belongings for pieces of silver and cheap
trinkets.
The natives are migratory and little
preparation is made for winter, as it
was formerly the custom to follow the
caribou up and down the rivers.
Firearms have aided to reduce the
number of wild animals once used for
food and clothes. Besides, wild game is
no longer tasteful. Canned meats,
fruits, coffee, tea and sugar, candy and
flour are now’ demanded by the rem­
SELF-MADE MAN
nant of tribes remaining. Disease and
that fa t fellow Juat cornlnp
malnutrition are hurrying them to ex­
tinction.
De Tubb who brags con-
about being a aelf-made
Missions and government schools in
scattered regions have attempted a
He looks more like
rescue of small groups of natives and
a
construction con>
have fairly succeeded. The reindeer
stations have delivered other groups;
but the majority of the Alaskan
aborigines is rapidly decreasing.
During the last ten years, according
to the late census, more than 3,000
deaths were offset by 570 births.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
KIRBY & ELLIOTT
Phone 188
395 E ast Mahj
Serve with slices of bacon and
pork, and tom ato or chili sauce
153 EAST MAIN ST.
PHONE 5 9
r ,.
QUALITY
GROCERY
CENERAL DELIVERY SYSTEMSERV 1CE
GOLDEN ROD SPECIALS
10 lbs. R olled O ats . ..............................
10 lb. sack Steel Cut O ats
.................................
Bulk Oats, 17 lb s................. ’ ’ .............
10 lb. sack Pan Cake F lo u r . . . . . . . . . . . ’ ‘ *
10 lb. sack F arina ...........................................
W hite or Y ellow C om Meal, i o lb sack *. è .
SOAPS
Fairy’ Soap, n o w ............................................................ 5 an
Palm O live or Cream O i l .............................................. f<)
Ivory Soap F lak es, 4 packages for
..................
S w ift’s W hite Soap, 25 bars f o r .............
Lennox Soap, 2 5 bars f o r .......................**..** i
i /.
Coffee—20c per lb
Cocoa—15c per lb
Liberty B ell Syrup, g a l............ « 1 .3 0
H alf gal.
Full Line of Fresh and Cured Meats
THE PLAZA MARKET
H. A. STEARNS
61 NORTH MAIN STREET
W ith acknowledgments to K . C. B,
Federal Bureau Perfects W ire to
produce Sounds for Medical
Clinics.
Washington.—Perfection of a de­
vice which will record the sound of
a human breath or a heart beat on a
steel wire, from which they can be
accurately reproduced at any time,
is announced by the bureau of stand­
ards.
The work was undertaken at the
request of the army medical service,
which explained that permanent rec­
ords of unusual conditions of heart
and lungs were desired for clinical in­
struction.
The device comprises use of an or­
dinary telephone transm itter and a
stethoscope, it Is explained, the cur­
rent generated by the heat of the
heart “amplified and connected with a
steel wire telegraphone, which has the
different sounds impressed upon its
spool of wire in the form of varying
degrees of magnetization.”
AWAY BACK In.
• • •
“THEM GOOD old day a.”
• » •
THE STORY goes.
• • •
THAT AN elderly female.
• • •
WHO WAS violently.
• • •
OPPOSED TO the hootch.
• • •
ENTERED A street-car.
• • •
IN WHICH there s a t
• • •
A MAN evidently ossified.
• • •
SHE CALLED the conductor.
• • •
AND CRIED Indignantly.
« • •
“DO YOU allow.
• • •
DRUNKARDS IN this car?”
PLANES TO FIND “ LOST'
AND HE replied.
• • •
“JUST MOVE over, ma’am.
• • •
NEXT TO that other one.
• • •
AND NOBODY.
Shoals of Herring Missing in No
Sea; May Be Due to Explosions
in Mine Fields.
Washington.—Seaplanes are being
used as a last measure in an attempt
to find fish off the east coast of Eng­
land, the department of commerce is
advised In a report from Trade Com­
missioner Butler at London.
Absence of the usual shoals of her­
ring in the North sea, the report said,
has caused much alarm in fishing
towns along the coast, and many and
diverse measures are being employed
to find, the fish which furnish the pop­
ulations of the town a livelihood.
Two reasons have been advanced for
the disappearance of the herring, the
report notes. One is that explosions
In the mine fields in those waters de­
stroyed much of the spawn, and the
other that the abnormally warm weath­
er of last winter and last summer kept
the herring close to the sea’s bottom.
WILL EVER notice you.”
• • •
NOW I suppose.
• • •
THERE ARE cigarettes.
• • • •
THAT KINDA g e t
• • •
LOST IN the shuffle.
• • »
AND NOBODY gives 'em.
• * •
ANY SPECIAL notice.
« • •
BUT NOT my brand.
• • •
NO, SIR.
• • •
FOR TASTE and aroma.
• • •
YOU CAN’T beat ’em.
• • »
AND THEY’RE mild—yes.
• • •
AND YOU’LL never.
• • •
MISTAKE THEM.
• • •
BECAUSE THE “Satisfy-blend
• • •
CAN’T BE copied.
Congressman's Son, Wrecked in Boat,
W ill Stick to Airplanes
Hereafter.
and every cut of meat we sell will be from
PRIME BEEF—Tender, juicy and delicious
wholesomenesr.
DEVICE RECORDS HEART BEAT
TOO RISKY FOR ‘TRAMP FLYER
We have purchased the
ciate . their
Washington.—Merrill K. Riddick,
son of Representative Riddick of Mon­
tana, known as the “tramp aviator
of America,” to please his father gave
up flying in his dilapidated machine.
Then he decided to go to Alaska on
a trapping expedition. He went to
Seattle, bought a boat and set out for
(he happy hunting grounds.
His father had a letter from him
saying that his boat was wrecked and
he had to swim for his life. Here­
after he will live up to the slo^TITof
“safety first” and do all of his travel­
ing by airplane.
“ Booze” Causes Blindness; Man Sues.
Portland, Ore.—H. Thurber became
blind from drinking “moonshine.” He
is suing for $3,000 from George
Yrotrka, who, he said, sold him the
liquoz.
L ig g it t & M yers T
obacco
C o .
ET’S
make
this
perfectly
clear.
Chesterfield ciga­
L J rettes
“Satisfy,” because they
contain exceptionally fine Turk­
ish tobaccos, blended with Bur­
ley and other high-grade Do­
mestic tobaccos. They’re like no
other cigarettes, because that
blend can’t be copied. Chester­
fields do what no others can—
and no cigarette could do more.