Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, January 04, 1922, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    À M HL ANTI ÖAUt TÍB1ÑÜ8
n I U O
ridings
E sta b lish e d 1876
Every E vening
Except
Sunday
,
THE ASHLAND PRINTING GO,
u b llsh ed
OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY
PAPER
B rilliant Accessories A dd
Lustre to the Evening Costume
t e l e ph o n e 39
By H. D. W ILLIA R
Entered at the Ashland, Oregon,
Postoffice as Second-class Mall Mat­
ter.
______________
c S ummeb P layground -
of / merica
* I
Worn Out Roads
Are Made New
With Sheet
Asphalt
‘
' — «
Order on cost block “ D” Railroad addition to Ash­
land, $7000.
Mary J. L. Dayton et vir to D. R.
B usiness M en's A d ju stm e n t Co.
of SE% of NE%,,
vs. E L. M ann.
S a tisfa c tio n ol Eaton et ux,
ju d g m e n t.
sec. 4, twp. 37 S., R 3 W., $800.
Amelia Messner Smith to Henry
P ro b a te C o u rt
Smith et al, land in sec. 16, twp.
E s ta te F re d H. Cook.
P e titio n
36 S., R. 3 W„ $1.
a n d o rd er.
Rosella M. York et vir to Willis
Estate Rosie Rusow. Older.
R.
Munger, land in d. 1. c. 45, twp.
Estate Albert Borde. Bond.
39
S., R. 1 E., $1.
E state Fred H. Cook. Petition.
F C. Stevens et ux to W. R. H art­
E s ta te Jo se p h in e H ouston.
S up­
man et ux, lot 8, block “ D,” Rail­
p le m e n ta ry re p o rt; o rd e r.
road addition to Ashland, $100.
Ile a l E s a te T ra n s fe rs
Samuel F. S tarr to J. E. Wild et
G eorge F. C lau ssin g e t ux to Rosa ux, W ^ of NW*4, sec. 2, twp. 39.
I B. W ille tt, p a rt d. 1. c. 41, tw p 38
S. , R. 3 E., $10.
Oregon Lumber Co.
bill.
A ssista n t Chief E ngineer, Maryland
S ta te R oads C om m ission
M aryland ha8 adopted the policy ot
resu rfa cin g w ith sh ee t asp h alt its
w orn -ou t m acad am roads, a s soon aa
th ey reach th e point w here they can
n ot. a s su ch , co n tin u e to render per­
fe c t road service, and lik ew ise to
tr e a t co n crete roads a s they becom e
w orn o u t or approach th e s ta te of
•‘fa tig u e .”
i s . , II. 1 W „ $10.
T here are a t presen t, in th e sta te
W illiam N ik o lau s e t ux to J. E.
road sy stem , 918 m iles of w ater-bou n d
m acad am and 398 m ile s of con crete I C lelan d , p a rt block 4, Im p erial a d ­
h ig h w a y , all bein g a s p erfectly m ain­
d itio n to M edford, $10.
ta in ed a s is p ossible. T here h as been
little or no n ew m acadam con stru ction
B A K B B R
W illiam J. F re em a n e t ux to C h a r­
for a num ber of y ears, th e greater
ley
M
atthew
S
ullivan,
land
in
sec.
portion o f th e m ore recen t work be­
C hildren’s W ork A
21, tw p. 35 S., It. 4 W ., $10.
in g co n crete, but th e q u estion arises,
“W h a t sh all be done w ith our old
Specialty
G eorge F. C laussing et al to W H.
roads?"
S u m m e rs e t ux, p a rt d. 1. c. 41, tw p.
No “ P erm an en t" H ighw ay
Safety blades resharpened
T h ere h as been no h ig h w a y designed
38. S., 11. 1 W ., $10.
like new. Single bit, 30c
to d a te th a t is “perm anent," in the
J o se p h in e Poley to F. C. S tevens
sen se th a t th e public Interprets the
doz. Dobule bit, 60c dox.
word— th e b est th a t can be hoped for
e t ux, N 1/^ lo ts 27 and 28 a n d 29,
Is to build our roads a s perm anently
a s w e know how , m aintain them as
w ell and a s lo n g a s th ey can g ive true
road serv ice, and th en d ev ise som e
sch em e th a t w ill, w ith o u t lo sin g any
of th e origin al in v estm en t, put thebe
roads b ack in to a s good or b etter con ­
d ition th an th ey w ere originally.
It ap pears th a t sh ee t a sp h alt laid
on th e old roadw ay, w h eth er m acadam
or co n crete, is th e one and logical so lu ­
tion to th is problem .
E x cellen t r e ­
su lts h a v e b een ob tain ed on th is type
of reco n stru ctio n by first building a
tw o -fo o t cobble or o n e-fo o t con crete
sh ould er w ith a th ree-in ch lip along
each sid e of th e old road m etal, then
I
la y in g thereon a sh eet asp h alt m ix ­
C oncentrated T ab lets Easy and
tu re c o n sistin g o f one and on e-h a lf-
inch binder and one and o n e-h a lf-in c h
E conom ical to Take—R esu lts
topping.
T h e gen eral m ethod of p utting an
Q uick.
a sp h a ltic w ea rin g su rfa ce on w orn-out
co n crete h ig h w a y s is m uch the sam e
a s resu rfa cin g old m acadam .
Very
good resu lts are being obtained in
Every man or woman who has heard of the
M aryland on th is form of recon stru c­
wondrous health and beauty-making power of
tion, and d esp ite the fa ct that part o i
the vitamines in yeast, fresh vegetables and
th e co n crete on w hich the asphalt 1»
other raw foods will be glad to know oi tha
laid la ab solu tely sm ooth and on grade*
amazing results being obtained from tha highly
concentrated yeast—-Mastlu's V IT A M O N tab­
up to 6 per cen t., th ere has been a s yet
lets. These supply a proper doee of all three
no
appreciable
m ovem en t
of the
vitamines (A, B, and C) and are now used by
binder on th e b a se
thousands who appreciate their eoenouiy, oon-
venionce and quick résulta. Mastin'« V IT A ­
A CRAFTY DEAN
M O N mixes with your food, helps it to
T h e dean at one g irls college ha
and proviejs the health-giving, streugth-l
solved the problem of m ale visitors
nourishment that your body must have to
" h en a girl r e g is te r s a t th e college
firm tissue, strong nerves, rich blood and a
th e d ea n w r ite s her p a r e n ts or gu aru
keen, active brain. They will not cause gas or
lan a sk in g for a ¡1st of th e m a le rela
upset the stomach, but, on the contrary, are a
tlv e s th ey w ish in h a v e v isit th e gtr,
great aid in overcoming indigestion or chronic
to g e th e r w ith a o rief ties, rtp'inn
>
constipation. Pimples, Loda and skin eruptions
th em .
T h e bnv >vh..
to
•
seem to vanish as if by magic, leaving the
th is c e n so r s h ip h a s •••
» > r-
■ ■
complexion dear and glowing with health. Ba
C l e e o r — h e m u s t i,
G e t T h a t F ir m F le s h ,
sure to remember the name— Mas tin's V I-T A -
“ P ep ” a n d H e a lth y G lo w
M O N . Do not accept imitations or subsdfeitsa.
o f Y o u t h — T a k e M a a t in 'a
You can get Mas tin's V IT A M O N Tablets at all
Y e a a t V IT A M O N T a b le t .,
good druggists.
W. A. SHELL
’ OREGON’
WASHINGTON ft
CZr\aBRrnSH couur
4IGHT. COOL DAYS1-- I
IA RESTFUL SLEEP EVERY NIGHT.
<$> Man is a child of sorrow, and <$>
<s>
this world
<$>
<s> In which we breathe, hath <§>
<$> cares enough to plague us.
<s>
<§>
— Cumberland.
<$•
If it be necessary to subsidize
American shipping in order to build
up a great m erchant navy, then in­
stitu te the subsidies. This country
should have a m erchant m arine the
peer of any on the globe.
Three-fourths of all worry In the
life of the average person is ground­
less and three-fourths of the other
one-fourth could be elim inated by
taking a philosophic view of life and
its cares.
Deposit liberally in the Bank of
Good Will and you will draw gen­
erous interest and heavy dividends
of happiness and satisfaction.
The wife may be the better halt
and the husband the bitter half of
the m atrim onial alliance— and in a
few cases, vice versa.
New Year P rom ising
FOR "ThE
B obbeb -
_ . HAIRED
debutante ;
PNCH ANTING impressions are
given by the debutantes o f
this season, due to the wide va­
riety and diversity of head­
dresses. No dance or reception
is quite complete if lacking in
this indispensable fancy. And it
is not at all important to stress
on materials, for more often than
not an ingenious twist o f a ribbon
tarns the trick.
•
Study o f the old masters, of
Greek, Roman and Egyptian
President H arding and members
of his cabinet are much encouraged
by the reports reaching them ol
prospects for business and industry r v r r g g B B
during the New Year. A reliable nem ouvihe, N. C., the last battle
news report from W ashington says th a: any of Sherm an’s men were in,
th at the president and his constitu­ a short time before Lee surrendered
tional advisers from different sour­ to G rant, practically closing th e civil
ces have “ received encouragem ent to war.
believe th at the year 1922 would be
Brother Bernard, the evangelist,
more prosperous and norm al than who held revival services in the
any since the signing of the arm is­ Methodist church last spring in Ash­
tice.”
land, came down on the train with
The departm ent of commerce, us from W ashington, and we had
with H erbert C. Hoover a t its head, quite a visit with him a t the depot
has collected reports on domestic, in Sacramento. He was on his way
commercial and industrial conditions to Los Angeles where his wife, who
which indicate “a sounder bottom is in poor health, had preceded him.
and a healthier atm osphere.” Un­
At Sacram ento we took the 4 p.
employment shows decrease. Many m train for Lodi, 35 miles away, a
new projects are being developed, good town 12 miles from Stockton,
and there is bright prospect for con­ Lodi claims 4000 people and is sit­
struction early in the spring. The uated in the most fertile section of
railroad situation is much improved. the state and has an unusual num ­
These are concrete, actual devel­ ber of fine business blocks and
opments, in the economic life of the churches for a town of its size. We
nation. They are not exaggerated were there over the Sabbath and had
boostings nor do they come from in­ the privilege of hearing the evangel­
flated over-optimism. Hence they ist, Mrs. M cPherson, preach in the
may be accepted as an accurate fore­ Congregational church. The church
shadowing of economic betterm ent, was filled to its utm ost capacity,
reasonably to be expected during said to be one thousand persons.
the year 1922.
At the beginning of the service,
the pastor took 24 new members in
College Boy for Sale
the church membership. A fterw ards
A student in Illinois university Mrs. McPherson preached a very im­
has offered to sell himself for one pressive sermon on the work of the
year for $1200 to any one who will holy spirit. There were about fifty
advance him the money to complete went forward to the a lta r for prayer.
his college course.! He has stated H er talk was very impressive and I
th at he will pledge his services for am sure anyone hearing her will
any purpose th a t may be required, feel th a t she is a gifted woman. She
and try to do anything asked by his was only there for the day, holding
purchaser. E ither the young man th ree services, morning, afternoon
phrases his idea poorly or he is fol­ and evening. Some m inisters and
lowing a style of hysterical advertis­ others were there from Sacramento
ing which has been all too common and other distant points. The church
of late.
plans to have her come a little later
and hold a series of meetings. We
heard some adverse criticism, but
they all came from those who had
never seen nor heard her, and I am
The Public Forum column Is a «antident she made a favorable Im­
medium tor th e eapreMdons of
pression on all who heard her.
Tidings readers. Articles submit­
We left Lodi on th e 20th and
ted for publication must not ex­
ceed 400 words. Views exrpessed found the late rains had w atered the
under this head are not to be con­ desert until the plains were covered
fused with the editorial opinion of in many places with sheets of wa­
the newspaper, the Tidings being
willing to allow presentation of ter. And I said in my h eart God is
both sides of any question except rem em bering us w ith the early and
politics and religion.
the late rains th a t will make the
desert blossom as the rose. The rains
have done quite a little damage in
Sawtelle, Calif., Dec. 22, 1921.
places, b u t th ere is no doubt th a t It
E ditor Tidings:
Mrs. Glenn and I left Ashland on is bu t a trifle compared to the good
the 13th, boarded the train at 11:45 the rains will do. It rained consid­
p. m., and soon were bunked for the erably last n ig h t and this morning.
rem ainder of the night. I think the But now, a t 4 p. m , It has cleared
train crew knew they had some pre­ until th ere la scarce a cloud to be
cious freight aboard, for they ran seen.
I will close here with kind greet­
very slow and careful. So th a t the
next m orning a t sunrise we had only ings to all who may read these lines.
D. L. GLENN.
reached Redding. We found quite a
congenial crowd aboard, so th a t the
tim e passed very pleasantly. I met I. O. O. F. Installation—
two old comrades, one coming here
The installation of officers of Ash­
to the soldiers’ home, and one going land lodge No. 45 will be held Thurs­
to Long Beach for the w inter. He day, January 5, 1922, at 7:30 p. m.
gave us quite an interesting account All Odd Fellows urged to be pres­
of the p art he took in the fight at e n t— L. A. Roberta, secretary.
.
.
J
Public Forum
A
Skin Clear and Flesh
Firm With Yeast
Vitamon
friezes may prove profitable, for
andonbtedly most of the present
Hay designs originated in them.
T» if» for example, the neo-clas­
sicism o f the First Empire, as re­
flected in the upper sketch. This
is simply made of green lacquered
leaves, suggestive of a laurel
wreath, and embroidered with
rhinestones. To wear this suc­
cessfully, the hair should be tight­
ly drawn from the forehead, and
loosely knotted on top.
Then, too, there are exquisite
garlands o f flowers that may be ef­
fectively woven in and out of the
hair, or daintily placed about the
forehead. The best time for these
is when it is possible to weave
long garlands of flowers into the
costume itself. Headdresses of
thin sort naturally call into being
more elaborate waves, as illustrat­
ed by Agnes Ayres, starring in the
Paramount picture, “The Lone
T hat Had No Turning,” by Sir
Gilbert Parker. If simplicity is
more desired, two pin-wheel hair­
pins of je t may be more p refer­
able.
F o r the bobbed-haired girl an
adorable arrangem ent may be
fashioned from pearls. These are
made into long stream ers, which
fall almost to the waist from a
fillet of tiny mauve pink roses,
m eeting in the center in a large,
old-fashioned pearl ornament.
Bracelets monopolize almost as
im portant a place as the head­
dresses, and many beautiful de­
signs have been the result. F o r
instance, one of the novelties is
found in beautifully cut black
beads, hung on a chain of plati­
num, and completed with two very
large beads a t the end. A nother
fancy, equally attractive, is the
jade bracelet with rhinestone or
diamond clasp.
United States Valuation
Would Correct Tariff Evil:
—Judge De Vr ù i
Need for Change in Appraisals
Shown by Judge of Cus­
toms Appeals Court.
“ America's m arkets betng the best.
Its prices the highest and Its money
a t par. this country has become the
goal of all regenerating trade,” Judge
Marion De Vries, of the United States
Court o f Customs Appeals, says in a
statement Just iannert in favor of the
new Pordney T a riff BUL
"National seif preservation, in that
status, p rim arily demands, plenary
defense of oar markets against being
made the dumping grounds of the
world’s products of cheap labor and
production, augmented by extreme
•currency depreciation.
"One needs to travel but little to be
tau g h t the distress and dire needs of
o u r manufacturers, producers and
laborers by the vacant shops, the
smokeless stacks, and hopeless faces
o f our workmen, where before were
¡the bum of activity and the smile of
«contentment.
! "W hy? W e turn to the morning
paper. Every day is printed there the
reason ‘w hy.’ W e read In one column,
for example, that a cut of 20 per cent
been made in agricultural im ple-
me ents, in another that four and one-
h off
a million of our laborers are out of
employment, while In another column
you read an official report to the D e­
partm ent of Commerce th a t th - great
K rupp plants of Germany, the pre-w ar
output of and workmen In which con­
tributed more to the world calam ity
and human suffering than any like
institution in history, now employes
99,000 men as against 81,000 men
prior to the w ar; th a t they are con­
tented and reasonably paid; th a t the
dally output of agricultural and v a r­
ied products of th a t institution are
than In history.
,
Others Erect Barrier«
, “Upon every hand w e find In our
land that to-day our goods are being
driven from our markets, our facto r­
ies closed, our farm s Impoverished
and our laborers throw n Into Idleness
by the cheap productions o f foreign
countries which are hourly being
dumped into this country.
Three
years ago the w a r cloeed.
Almost
every great commercial nation of the
world save the U nited States has put
up the ta riff barriers against this
deluge of cheap foreign goods. Octo­
ber 1st free trade England raised her
duties 33% per cent on six thousand
articles. Previously she provided spe­
cial duty against German goods of
60 per cent, and a depreciated curren­
c y provision of 76 per cent.
•Italy long since enacted a currency
depreciation measure of 67% per cent.
Prance had put up her harriers more
than 60 per cent, and Canada long
since followed these examples.
We
alone are the tard y nation.
“T h e question now w hether the im ­
port duties levied by the United States
shall be calculated upon foreign or
American valuation basis is perhaps
the most im portant Import ta riff issue
seriously considered by the Congress
since 1833.
T h e existing foreign valuation sys­
tem is w ithout doubt the weakest
ever enacted. Thereunder, ordinarily
to introduce foreign merchandise into
the commerce of the United States, in
competition w ith American produc­
tions, no single oath by the foreigner
is required as to th e ir value, or is
otherwise made necessary.
“Indeed, no oath whatsoever Is re ­
quired save upon the declaration ac­
companying entry a t the custom
boose, which la the presently adopted
1« w ithout force or effect. In
COURT NEWS
’W ^ A S T IN S ^ -
M arriage Licenses
VITAM ON
Are Positively Guaranteed
to Put On Firm Fleah,
Clear the Skin and Increase
Energy When Taken With
Every Meal or Money Back
O tto A lb e it W ecklein anil L illian
L. G roves.
Owen W illiam Reid a n d D orothy
T ucker
THt ORIGINAL
ANO
C ircuit Court
I. L. Snider vs. R. D. Hines et al.
Petition and order.
isntM&STlMBiintVIT&MON
&
GENUINE
YEAST
VITAMINE
TABLET
S im m o n d s Mt'g. Co. vs. S o u th ern
/
Judge Marion De Vries, of the
United States Court of Cus­
toms Appeals.
other words as said by Henry Clay it
1833, ‘the Interested foreign exportei
and not our Government, in practice
fixes the valuation of Imported goodi
Into the United States for dutiable
purposes, w ithout the requirement ol
any oath, under the inducement ol
great commercial gain to undervalue,
and beyond the process of any trib u ­
nal for punishment.*
“Moat im portant to bear in mind
in th is ' discussion is th a t neither the
‘invoice’ value nor the 'export' value
of the Imported article is made the
basis of calculation of our duties but
the wholesale m arket value for home
consumption in the country of expor­
tation.
Information Lacking
“I t is absolutely impossible under
the existing law to gain accurate in ­
form ation as to foreign home m a rk 't
values.
Under our existing system ,
every appraiser throughout the United
States is presumed every morning
th a t he goes to his office to have
knowledge of the m arket value of
every
imported
article
in
every
country of the United States export­
ing hereto.
“No appraising officer in the United
States is supplied by any efficient
means of acquiring or of being sup­
plied w ith this information. He has
before him invoices only which in d i­
cate, if anything, export value alone
in the country of exportation. This
throws but little if any light upon
w hat he is required to know, to w it,
home m arket value In the country of
exportation,
“ I t is oqe of the remarkable things
of our customs system that this ano­
malous situation has been kept in the
law for more than 130 years. H • •/
much easier it would be for a p p ra .
ing officers to inform themselv.-
to be informed of the value in T. •
United States rather than the I t
r
more values throughout the woiiy.
The existing system presupposes su­
perhuman appraisers.”
“Thank You”
This acknowledgment of a courtesy or service
is somehow the satisfactory end of a transaction.
Both parties are pleased and the relations of the
moment, however unimportant, are more hap­
pily closed.
There is no occasion when an effort made for
the comfort or convenience of others is not
worth a ‘ thank you.’
In the daily routine of telephone operations,
where the saving of time is the great considera­
tion, the opportunity of expressing an apprecia­
tion of a service rendered seldom arises.
But remember that the telephone operator is
human. Courtesy to her means more cheerful­
ness in her work. It will be reflected in your
own self-satisfaction.
The Pacific Telephone
And Telegraph Company