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About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 3, 1921)
TWO ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS Ashland Daily Tidings EDITORIALS FEATURES Jl As! bland J^ublished Tidinos aaiauuaueu 1876 Every Evening Sunday I a thousand miles of a tourist hotel. I do not wish to be too severe on Mrs. Susan B. Smith, as I do not question her motives, but the prob abilities are th a t Mrs. Smith never originated th at article attributed to her; it carries the ear m ark of hav ing come from other quarters, and for a purpose. “The hand is th a t of Esau, but the voice is the voice of Jacob.” M. C. REED. Except T H E ASHLAND PRINTING CO. ILL BE P06-60NEP IF » ever T aw Awpopy's word - Aftour THE WEATHER AGAIN O FFIC IA L CITY AND COUNTY PA PER TELEPHONE 3 9 Su b scrip tion P rice D elivered in City: O n e month ............................... .$ T h r e e m o n t h s .............................. 3 ix m onths .................................. One year .................................... .65 1.95 3.75 7.50 Mai] and Rural R outes One month .................................. $ T h re e months .............................. S ix m onths .................................. One year .................................... .65 1.95 3.50 6.5f 0] ADVERTISING RATES Display A dvertising Let Friend ! morning and go grill and get special 60 cent n .G» OF)— S ingle insertion, each in c h ........... 30c YEARLY CONTRACTS D isplay A dvertising HillUiilil O ne tim e a w eek....................... 2714c' T w o times a week.......................25 ci E very other d a y ......................... 20 c{ Local Readers X ach line, each tim e .....................10c T o ru n every other dby for one m onth, each line, each tim e. . 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. To run every issue for one month > r more, %c the word each time. Legal Rate E irs t time, per 8-point lin e ......... 10c, E a c h subsequent time, per 8- point line .................................... 5c C ard of t h a n k s ............................... $1.00 O bituaries, the line ......................214c A □ T H E FR ANK LIN PRICE LIST Same prices— reasonable price— to all E ntered at the Ashland, Oregon Postoffice as Second-class Mail Mat ter. (Copyright) Soviet Russia Yields Scarcely 20 Per ' Cent of Former Foodstuffs * W hat C onstitutes A dvertising We make all quotations an JOB WORK frpm By LEO PASVOLSKY, in Weekly Review. In 1916 the grain producing territories of that portion of the former Russian empire which is now controlled by the soviets yielded about 1,100,000,000 poods (a pood is about 36 pounds) of wheat, rye, barley and oats over and above the amounts needed for local consumption in these territories. During the crop year 1920-21 the food supply agencies of the soviet government were able to procure from these territories only about 280,000,000 poods of grain, in many cases at the expense of the amounts needed for minimum local consumption. The tax in kind established for the current crop year in the place of the system of requisitions which existed last year calls for only 240,000,- 000 poods, yet Lenin has already stated that there is reason to believe that the actual amounts gathered will be “several tens of millions of poods under the original figure.” In other words, under the soviet regime Russia can scarcely yield 20 per cent of the amount of foodstuffs she yielded under the imperial regime, for distribution to the portions of the country which do not raise their own food supply and for exportation abroad. thing who has the opportunity, -tu t' According to statistics, Los An what has been a to u rist at some time or another. Mrs. Smith adm its h erself th a t she is one, having been already to four different tourist cen- ters, and is now a t the fifth. geles is the finest, cleanest, and the • best governed and most moral city of its size in America, and it is made up altogether of tourists, The most reckless, immoral, drunken, soulless ..o p ,h e z V n 8:™ rct,on° t7 a 7 d •» — “ ■> » '< - ~ srt SPECIAL SALE OF BOX CANDY AT CUT RATES w - W - 'WESTINGHOUSE E L E C T R IC E’,'W l IS3 Delicious! There may be little actual difference between the quality of food prepared in the kitchen and that cooked a t the table, but, somehow, the table-cooking tastes better. This is one of the reasons why so many people are inter ested in the ^estinghouse ,he, p ,iW schoois' a n i arm am ents, and there 1, v e ry ' * ' ¡ he d a ' ’ ’O“ ld se e d reason to believe that the com ' ”“ ’re 8trlk,11S ” t" nple ot ’ .J “ ‘I ‘eaCl,er ” “ petition will be off before the arm s |,roere88 Ca" be Clted ln ,bl8 x „ Í ? ‘ ‘he nel8hb° r- conterence finally adjourns nation than the m anner in which th e hbod' 1 ’ Poke to them of the value ______ oil industry has surm ounted obsta- ot good health and of knowing some- H i i n C,es iQ securing 3UPPliea and <Hs-ithing about the lungs, heart and ar- whs» oiP Hg x UnSe VOS trib u tin g its product in the most re- teries o í the body, when one old lady mñ ,7 " “ ‘" T ” neS mb,e 8M“ ° bs » ' our own laud, as - t a k i n g the ashes from her pipe 7« , X u ) »7 0P6" wel1 1,8 ,o re,sn countries. , ’ ¡‘b one hand! and pointing a bony Tf wn ait It,-ii 4 11 has been done entirely by pri- anc^ an accusing finger at me with I t w ill take hiia nA 3UC our th u ™bs vate initiative, in many cases under the other, said in a high-pitched O nl w ív íü T e, ” l a<’ er3b conditions and discourage-’ volce' " Dbb'1 you know enough to One way th at the people can help ment from our own government. : know th at “ ’s sinful and immoral in the re-opening of our copper ___ t for People to learn any thing a b o u t' m ines, and the employment of ten j th eir ‘innards.’ ” o f thousands of workmen, is by tak THE PEO PLE’xS FORUM. ♦ So at last we have learned how in g an interest in proG icts m anu sinful it -is to have a fine, beautiful factured from copper. healthful tourist hotel, managed e live in the heart of a copper- Editor Tidings: and controlled by men and women producing country, and - yet we ----- raan- . . Mrs- Susan B. Smith threatens to 'w h o would probably have sons and n re ut minus quantity of cop- leave the town if we spoil it by daughters of th eir own, and whose p e r articles, while the field for the m aking some badly needed improve- fitness for the place would be scru- use of copper is alm ost unlimited. ments in the way of building a hotel P io u s ly examined, As an illustration, w hat m aterial worthy of the town and its sur-! I wish to call especial attention to w ill m ake a b etter road sign than a roundings. Personally I am sorry Mrs- Sm ith’s article in which she .sheet of copper? to know about this, but in case she cusses tourists as being an immor- It would last forever and would finds it necessary to go with h er* a1’ loathesome, degraded, syphilitic r»ot have to be replaced every few little brood, I should like to recom-1 c^ass’ unfitted for decent people to Years as do the present painted m et mend Phoenix or some good location associate with. This is the only rea a l signs. Why not use our own in in the Siskiyou m ountains, as she son she has for her objection to m ak g en u ity and revive our lagging in- seems to be bent on isolation for the ing Ashland a to u rist center. This d o strie s instead of w aiting for Eu purpose of safety. is positively a slander and nothing ro p e or some bankrup t foreign The whole thing rem inds me of less th an a slander upon the finest, c o u n try to come to our rescue with the first school I ever tau g h t away best educated, most refined and cul » rd e rs? back in the m ountains of W est Vir- tu red people in America today, be The road sign is merely one of a ginia. It was the first year th a t the cause no one who am ounts to any- 267 4th St. \V, .................................................................. j The joy of meeting pays the 3> pangs of absence; <§>. thousand uses th a t can be cited for study of phisiology and hygiene was introduced into the public schools E lse who could bear it? <§> I copper. • of th a t state. I was only seventeen — Rowe. § «'fc* <8> -•>> $ §> '0 T he F orw ard March o f Oil years of age .and was anxious to make but lUCU, then, aa as UUW, now, 1 I X NCW methods llltJLllUUb U rtJL 111 lug Oil ll<l<€ — —— ~ a success, UUI New of L refining oil have If they left it to the suprem e mili- more than doubled the output of found out when you undertake to do tary commanders of the United gasoline from crude oil. som ething w orth while for a com- S ta te s and the allied arm ies of the eight months of 1921 , m u n itj, you will find somebody _ . gasoline produced in American re- ready to oppose you with all sorts w orld war, there would be no more . . . ., , , , nf „„ j „ w ars Thev are all verv earnestly flnenes e(^ualled in quantity 28 per of schemes and excuses and the more . , , . , . cent of the crude oil consumed, com- J^diculous and absurd th e ir reason- a n d strongly for peace. They know, . . . v»«« • Pared Wlth ooh’ 13 per cent in 1915. ing- the b etter it seems to suit them, b e tte r than civilians, the horrors of .. . I t i ,» , _ „ , .. , The gasoline m arket today prac- l “ e most common fake is to fall w a rfa re , and they are hum ane en- ... ,, . . . y .. ., , x x. tically determ ines the statu s of the back on the old appeal to m others « u g h to w ant to avert another .. . , . , . . •. 4.1 011 industry as a whole. Gasoline to Protect the morals of th eir chil- oloociy v isita tio n . . /i»«»» > « « T, .. .. ... is responsible for the recovery of the a re n > and this is why th a t article If the other m aritim e powers , . . „ < in r.o tho a- , x , . . od industry from its recent slump. rem inds me of my school experience, to rc e the I nited States to enter into „ . i T „ a race bunding nava, arm am ent, I r Í, ? ’ ' meaning ' h J ’’0" o ' <##d th e y will find this country a te „ CreaSed tOU'" tOlJ d u n “ S tbb I’a-st "™ , h ? bM bbdlM ’"><> Protested s r t i x ■ = t t ' ~ - e» “ r h t - . i be”x ; ED ‘'ili!lll:iIi;!II(iik!lllüí!U¡4lü¡iiltíl¡lt{|JU¡Ln«i¡¡. jinii.lliLllilllliillli! CONFECTIONARY F ratern al Orders and Societies N EW S. Wire sleep in the to the Hotel Ashland one of those fine breakfasts. 6ltf TR EFR EN ’S A dvertising for fratern al orders ®r societies charging a regular in iti a tio n fee and dues, no discount. Re lig io u s and benevolent orders will be charged the regular rate for all ad wertising when an admission or other charge is made. In order to allay "a m isunderstand in g among some as to what, consti tu te s news and what advertising, w e p rint this very simple rule, which Is used by newspapers to differenti- 1 a te between them : "ALL future ev en ts, where an admission charge | i s made or a collection is taken IS i ADVERTISING.” This applies to organizations at d societies of every ; k in d as well as to individuals. All reports of such activities after t h e y have occurred is news. All coming social or organization m eetings of societies where no m oney contribution is solicited, in iti- 1 a tio n charged, or collecton taken IS : --------------------------------------- ; Toaster Stove, which is almost a range in its abilities. It broils, it boils, it grills, it toasts. It is a t tractive in appearance, and it lasts for years and /years. It uses so little current that the cost of it is negligible. You never had such hot cakes as come from this Toaster Stove! Nor such fresh, crispy, grilled bacon!! Nor eggs that tasted quite so good!!! Nor anything!!!! Ask about the Westinghouse Toaster Stove at any of the following dealers: ol X Jordan Electric Co. Ashland, Oregon Fobes Supply Co. Wholesale Distributors Portland, Oregon OHM