A 8HLAND climate, without the aid I * * of medicine, cures nine cases out of ten of asthma. proven fa c t This is a | A shland D aily T idings (International News Wire Service) VOLUME 3 (Successor to the Semi-Weekly Tidings, Voi. 43) MALARIA germs eauflot currire *** three months in the rich esene at Ashland. ter helps. ASHLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25/1922 The pure domestic wa* No. 122 INSURGENCY THREATENS FARM CONFIAR 1 SEES OXLY TWO MORE BATTLES FOR DEM PSEY WELL ATTENDED P R E SID E N T CAM PBELL, UNIVER- SITY OF OREGON, DELIVERS F IN E A D D R ESS ON THE MAK- «ING O F A GREAT STATE. W ell Prepared Menu A rranged and Supervised by H om e E conom ics T eachers, Served by High School G irls; F in e M usical Program . The annual banquet of the Cham­ ber of Commerce held last n ig h t’ in th e Armory was well attended, there being 175 people seated at the ta ­ bles. The menu was made up almost entirely of Oregon products, there being only four articles on the menu from out of the state. It was plan­ ned and supervised b y ' the three teachers of home economics in the local schools and was served by 18 pupils who are studying this sub­ ject, the cooking being done by some of the best cooks in Ashland. The tables and building were very beau­ tifully decorated and arranged by Mrs. E lh art and Mrs. Oader. The program of the evening was opened by the high school band giv­ ing two selections. The invocation was delivered by Rev. W. J. Oldfield followed by a community song and introductory rem arks by Henry G. Enders Jr. At this point Carl Love­ land sang with his usual charm, “ Have You Forgetten Me” and “ W hen Shall We Meet Again.” The guests of the evenings were thein in­ troduced, among whom were Thom­ as D. Petch and Nelson D. Bohal. who are connected with the Oregon Gas and Electric company at Med­ ford; F. S. C arter, Gold Hill; John Eubanks, Portland; Mrs. R. C. Kin- leystde, Medford; County Commis- e sioners Victor Bursell and Jam es Owens and th eir wives; W. P. Moore. Monterey, Calif.; A. B. Adamson of the Talent State bank; Ralph F. Koozer, T alent; F. G. Lewis, travel­ ing agent of the Southern Pacific, E ugene; A. B. Cornell, representing th e G rants Pass Cham ber of Com­ m erce; and Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Lin­ das, Mr. Lindas being the represent­ ative of the Cham ber of Commerce of Medford. Leonard P e ttit then gave two violin solos, “ By the Wa­ ters of M innetonka,” and “ A Vien­ nese Melody,’ to the great enjoy­ m ent of all present. A num ber of the visitors were called on for short talks, as were £ few of our local prom inent citizens, all responding with a good word for Ashland and the Rogue River val­ ley. Mrs. H. T. Elmore then gave two vocal num bers in her usual pleasing m anner. * P. L. Campbell, president of the "University of Oregon was then in­ troduced and gave an address, tak ­ ing as his subject “The Making of a G reat S tate.” President Campbell, w hile prim arily Interested in the BChools of the state, dwelt at length on the rapidity with which the state - is going forw ard and making gains unrealized to the citizens of this great commonwealth. The great tim ber and m ineral resources, to­ gether with the uncom parable w ater power of the state, came in for their share of attention, and figures up In the billions were given in regard ^ to valuations and am ounts. The statem ent was made th a t the Rogue R iver valley was the most prosper­ ous ag riculture district in the coun­ try. The pioneers of Oregon. President Campbell rem arked, were both brave and strong. Only th a t class of peo­ ple could have stood the hardships endured in crossing the plains, and as a result we have the best people, physically and m orally to be found anyw here. The educations system of the state stands third in the Unit­ ed States, being surpassed only by Iowa adn Idaho. The “ m aking of "'m en ” was given as the greatest bus­ iness of the state, and from the in­ crease in the enrollm ent in the state schools it would appear th a t Oregon Is well under way, but we m ust lend (C M tlan ed op Page Fou r) LOS ANGELES, Calif.,. Jan. 25— T hat the report Jack Dempsey will retire from the ring shortly, but not until he has had at least two more bouts, w'as the statem ent made here by Teddy Hayes, secretary and pal of the champion, who is here ahead of the show that is starrin g the big fellow. “ Dempsey won’t be in the ring many months more, but he probably will box Bill Brennan again and take on Tom Gibbons before he quits the game for good,” says Hayes. “As plans are now lined up, C ar­ pentier is slated to box Gibbons in March, and should Gibbons win. Jack probably will take him on next sum ­ mer. It looks now as if RickaTd would stage the Gibbons-Dempsey scrap before his year’s lease expires on Boyle’s thirty acres over in Je r­ sey City. j FRENCH G IRLS’ CHARGES FORM ER SOLDIERS FOUND TO MAKE BEST STUDENTS UNTRUE, SAYS CAPTAIN (Inlernation News Service) WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 25.— WASHINGTON, Jan. 25.— W orld Charges th a t French women and war veterans make the best stu ­ girls tried to procure hangings of dents, according to scholastic rec­ American soldiers in France by m ak­ ords announced here by the United ing false charges against them, were States V eterans’ bureau. Soldiers who returned to their made by John Laffity of New York, _________ i universities a fte r serving in the form erly an overseas captain. ¡world war scored higher scholastic! “ In one instance I had five men i COLUMBUS, Ohio., Jan. 25.— “No BEGINNING FEB. 1 OPPORTUN- grades, tbe records showed , tban League of Nations or any other arrested on complaint of a girl 16 1T1 WILL BE G I\ EN WORKERS their classm ates who enrolled since treaty ever will end the w ar,” d e -[years ° ^ ' found i^iat Sirl TO lil Y CAPITAL STOCK IN the war. The records also showed STRONG PROGRESSIVE GROUP d a re d Issac F. Marcosson, w ar cor­ was a common character about the COMPANY ON EASY TERM S. j th a t the form er soldier was more IN SIST » l u A ' f A a ^ M U L l AC- respondent and widely-known w riter, camps and doctors reported her I earnest in his study and more anx- i CEt T PROGRAM TitOLGHT TO charges to be u n tru e ,” said Laffity. addressing a local audience. May B ecom e P art Owners A s W ell joug to iearn BE FARM ERS’ ONLY HOPE. “ There will be w ar on earth as A s E m ployes by S ettin g A side Records sent to the bureau from long as there are human beings M onthly Sm all P art o f T heir P ay the University of Minnesota showed ‘The F arm ers o f th e N ation Are here, although everyone who w itnes­ As Investm ent, Says P resident. the veterans led both fraternity and and W ill Be Squarely Behind th e sed the last war Is convinced th a t non-fraternity men. Similar re­ it is only legalized m urder,” Mr. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 26.— Em ­ ports were also received from the Le- j Bloc and Its M em bers,” Says How- Marcosson continued. ployes of the Southern Pacific com­ land Stanford University of Califor-: a id , P resid en t o f Farm Buronu. “ The next war will be one of chem­ pany and of priprietary companies nla, and the University of Wisconsin, i WASHINGTON. D. C„ Jan. 2 5.— istry and aviation. The United whose lines form a p art of the Underground dissension in the na­ States needs a chemical w arfare ser­ Southern Pacific transportation sys-i NtK - tional agricultural conference, due tern, beginning February 1, will be! vice. to charges that the gathering is com­ "The principal business In Europe given the opportunity to buy shares posed of “ hand picked” delegates, is hate. All the high purposes of the of the capital stock of the company wuo favor “cut and dried” adm inis­ war are forgotten, and the rew ard on easy term s, according to a state­ tration policies, threaten fireworks of the four years of w ar Is disil­ ment issued by William Sproule, S R s æ S W s Y before the conference ends. lusion. Every nation hates every president of the company, to the 3¡M f » 4 " ' S Criticism of the conference was other. It was the greatest dram a of! employes Monday, January 23. 07237980 voiced openly today. The so-called history, and the tragedy of it is not The plan provides th a t on a^iplica- “progressive group,” au organized i tion of the employe the company only th a t its moral purpose is for­ farm paper bloc, charged th at the will buy the stock in the open m ar­ gotten, but th at the men who fought conference was called prim arily to it are forgotten. ket, deducting the purchase cost in adm inister a rebuke to the congres­ “ The world in transition is a I am told th a t the strong point small am ounts from their monthly WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 25.— sional bloc. WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 25.— world of chaos. Of all the evils, made by President Campbell at pay. The details of the plan are Despite the renewed opposition of Having traveled from Siberia to the self-determ ination is the greatest. the business m an’s banquet last given in the following statem ent is­ Secretary of the Treasury Mellon to i Insurgency threatens unless the assembly goes on record em phatic­ outlying islands of the Pacific, and It should have been called self- ex­ night was th at the best way to re­ sued to the employes: the soldiers’ bonus, it was agreed at! in favor of what the “progres- “ Beginning February 1, 1922, em- a joint meeting of the republican, ally ... agreed upon all the disputed points, term ination. All the trouble in E u r­ duce already high taxes is to keep ope is due to one thing— failure of going and increase taxable wealth ployes are offered opportunity to tgeer, committee of the s e n a te ’ 81™ ^ l i e ^ s is the only pro­ the arm am ent conference came back the Treaty of Versailes. It was buy shares of the capital stock o f land house> to push ahead th meeting of Members of the American delega­ ope without prosperity in Germany, Farm ’ ~ ers Union. " come to build more buildings. A -stock under this purely voluntary actlon on the bonus lg to be p,a n .| the “ National tion said th at the two delegations and there can be no prosperity in J. R. Howard, president of the town standing still is a poor plan. Employe purchasers or their ned. It is expected that an over-, were very close together and th a t the United States w ithout prosperity Farm Bureau federation, place to get money to pay taxes, estates are protected against loss in .w helm ing m a jo rity 'o f the house re- American . an agreem ent could be expected at in Europe.” the following statem ent re­ either high or low. To keep go­ event of death or perm anent dis- I publlcans wlll swing behlnd the re. 1S8U«d any moment. garding the agricultural bloc: ing is the only solution to such a ¡ability, or in case of leaving the, publican plan. “The farm ers of the nation are WASHINGTON, D. C„ Jan. 25.— service of the company, voluntarily j ______ problem. and will continue to be squarely be- or otherwise. The shipping board of the em er­ I recommend President Camp­ ! hind the bloc and its members. Con- The company has no stock in Its j gency fleet corporation announced bell’s point to the bonus commit­ I gress has seldom given serious con­ today a reduction of 15 per cent in tee of the Chamber of Commerce. ! treasury. All of its stock is in the sideration to the needs of agricul- hands of the public— about 54,000 the wages of all deck officers and HAZ KIK. ¡ture. For 14 years we advocated crews of all its vessels. i packer control legislation, and al- ---------------- I most as long, government supervl- WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 25.— A big gold and silver strike has ■ sion of grain exchanges, but with- The shooting down of a negro sol­ been made on the Lost Trail group ou^ ava^- The agricultural bloc en- dier by a negro officer because the th re emiles northeast of Mount jacted both.’’ enlisted man was sick and could not Lookout in Baker county, near the work, was the charge made by Hen­ i summit, according to yesterday’s CANNIBALISM IN ry Gentry, a negro, testifying before FAM INE AREAS OF i Oregonian. A the senate committee investigating RUSSIA CROPS UP , This property was discovered last Senator W atson’s charges of mls- ! September by George Jennings and I tre a ’ment of American soldiers in his father, P. J. Jennings, an old-: LONDON, Jan. 25.— Reval dis- France. time m iner and prospector, but the patches quote a dispatch to the Rus- news was just disclosed recently. De­ sian newspaper Prevada, at Moscow, w NEW YORK, Jan. 25.— “ Sixty-’ velopment work has been carried on as saying th at two women were a r­ four cases of influenza have been re quite extensively for the last four rested at Sam ara charged with eat­ ported in the last two days,” said i months. There are five claims lo- ing the flesh of two children. Dr. Copeland, city health commis­ •« j The partly consumed bodies of the i cated. A shaft has been sunk 4 0 sioner. All the incoming ships are feet deep on number one claim, the children were discovered, leading to closely watched by health depart­ ledge being seven feet wide, four revelations of crimes and cannibal- tSSKi ment inspectors for possible cases of feet of which is clean ore th at as- ism which has been increasing at an w “ flu.” The increasing cases of in­ says from eight ounces to 140 ounces alarm ing rate In the famine areas - f a fluenza may be due, in part, to im­ of Russia. in silver and average $10 in gold. portations from Europe. A tunnel has been started on I num ber two claim. SPRAY M ATERIAL CALCULATED SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 2 5 .— I The Surprise and J. D. claims are W eather bureau officials ordered ’located on a cross vein, a shaft hav- In figuring the amount of spray *'<. W ;- ¿Z storm w arnings to be displayed at ing been sunk down on this ledge m aterials needed, says a bulletin all stations from Cape Mendocino i 65 feet, with ore all the way. Some from the Oregon A gricultural col- north to Cape F lattery of a storm of of this ore runs as high as $200 a lege, allow 200 gallons of dilute considerable energy approaching the ton in gold. The croppings of this spray m ixture for each acre of trees north Pacific coast tonight. mine were found in 1860 by miners nine to twelve years old. The av- stam pedlng for the rich placers in erage dilution of w inter strength iis tu ä e A á a -m S e s ta te sK e K a s P o i? O r p K a z v a ^ e . ST. LOUIS, Mo., Jan. 25.— Auto­ i the Green Horn m ountains. In la te r . lim e-sulfur is 12 to 100, hence to mobile bandits for the second time Maude Adam s P resen ts H er 3 00- more than two years ago to spend a ' time at the estate, which was known years many searches were made to find out the gallons of stock solu- Acre Izong Island H om e to in a few months held up the Pine few days in retreat. She found th e r e 1 as “ Sandy G irth” and studied there find it, but all failed, for the rain tion needed, multiply the num ber of Lawn bank, on the outskirts of the K iddies and Charity the quiet which she needed, and for many of the parts in which she later ; and snow had washed down the de- acres by 24 to get an approximate city, shortly after the institution op­ the last two years it has been her appeared. bris of the m ountains and had cov-. esÄmate. For the delayed dorm ant ened its doors this morning, and (International News Service) home during her infrequent visits to The estate is valued at $130,000 ered the ledge. [spray, multiply by seven. About four NEW YORK, Jan. 25.— Maude New York. escaped in an autom obile with and will be used for poor and de- The discovery of the Lost Trail pounds of arsenate of lead per acre about $2500. Adams, whom thousands learned to There are two buildings on the pendent children. mine was considered by mining men are needed, and one should figure love as Peter Pan, has presented her property, but it is planned to e re c t! The order is very popular among as one of the best that has been on making four applications a year WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 25.— ' 300-acre estate at Lake Ronkonko­ a large building more suitable to Catholic women. The nuns are most- found in 40 years. Thus, m ultiplying the acres by 16 Charging th a t France and other Eu­ ma, L. I., to the Roman Catholic their purposes among the rolling ly French and are women of culture will give a good estim ate. ropean giations were seeking the Sisterhood of Our Lady of the Cen­ hills and scrub oaks on the shore of and education. Teaching is a part A. P. Arm strong, s u p e r i n t e n d e n t ----------------------- — economic and political destruction acle. In making the gift, Miss Ad­ the lake. It Is one of the most pic­ of th eir work. but. most of their of schools of Mutnomah county, Yisithig in Town__ of Germany, Senator Borah of Idaho ams is showing her gratitude for the turesque places on Long Island and efforts are iti providing a place of died at his home in Portland a few Mrs. Boyd Tucker, who lives declared in the senate today, in op­ com fort and peace she found in has long been the resort of m otorists retirem ent for religious devotion days ago. Mr. A rmstrong is well about six miles east of town, has posing the foreign debt funding bill, their convent in New York City, af­ who drove many miles to spend a and rest and ln serving those who remembered by the people of Jack- been spending a few days visiting th at the rehabilitation of Europe or ter a nervous breakdown three years short time on the lake shore. Her are unhappy and need to spend a j son county, as he taught school in with her cousins, Mrs. J. N. Dennis the liquidation of Europe’s, indebted­ ago, which caused her retirem ent gift to the sisterhood Is uncondi­ time in seclusion. Although most various sections of the county, and and Mrs. J. L. Osker. ness to the United States would be from the stage. tional, and they will not take pos­ of their work Is among Catholics, his parents were pioneers of the highly im probable so long as the Though not a Catholic, Miss Ad­ session of it until the spring. it is not unusual for a P ro testant to * Rogue River valley, having lived for Electric waffle iron factory start« Versailles treaty rem ains in effect. ams had gone to th e convent a little Miss Adams spent much of her enter one of th eir retreats. years in Jacksonvile. ed ln Portland. H az Ksk SHANTUNG AGAIN FAILS 10 DELAY GOLD STRIKE Peter Pan of Stage Repays Nuns* Kindness by Gift of.Estate to House Poor Orphans 1 Br B