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

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    paóü m
Ashland
Tidings
Established 1876
Every Evening Except
Sunday
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
Published
OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY
PAPER
TELEPHONE 39
E ntered at the Ashland. Oregon
Postoffice as Second-class Mail Mat­
ter.
f JuMMEß P layground i
of A merica
» ALLONS
Photographers seldom take people
d .heir face value.
* *
Some people are two-faced, and
others have only a double chin.
• «
The accused takes it as hope th at
he will not when the jury in a m ur­
der case is hung.
• «
Japan now wants equality in the
air, and who will deny her all the
air she can use?
•
« «
This b etter highways movement
still has a great many prospective
contorts in men who need to mend
th eir ways.
• •
Perhaps a new silver dollar coin­
age was undertaken at this tim e to
provide ballast for empty hip pock­
ets.
« «
“ Arbuckle Jury F ar From F u ll”—
headline. In which it differs from
the pajam a party which it is a se­
quel to.
• *
Since Prohibition Commissioner
Haynes adm its the two years of pro­
hibition have been a success, the
prosecution will not call the boot­
leggers to exhibit their rolls.
« »
The man next door's question on
reading “ Princess Mary to Wed in
Silver Gown” is easily answered.
The bride never sits down during the
wedding ceremony.
• •
This is national thrift week, and
each of us should try to lay aside
out of this week’s pay at least $300
or $400. The rest may be squan­
dered in riotious living.
• «
When it is considered that she is
unable to hear China a t home, it
m ust be adm itted th a t Japan is giv­
ing a pretty good im itation of listen­
ing to her story at W ashington.
• •
The old-fashioned waltz is to come
back. This will show up some who
were concealing th e ir age by repre­
senting th at they didn't dance the
new steps simply because they did­
n ’t like them.
MM
MMM
w a á i
55
more erratic, Captain Roald Amund­
sen, the Arctic explorer, put a severe
test ou popular im agination In ask­
ing us to think th a t the w eather Minnesota Educator Prepares
may be plotted out for a year ahead.
Textbook for Public Schools.
But he does not ask us to believe
it until he has made the experiment.
He simply says that he will take with Postmaster General Give* Approval to
him to the F a r North instrum ents
Undertaking—Hopes to Lessen Mis­
needed for the study of the upper air
takes Now Costing Millions
in the polar regions with a view to
of Dollars.
testing the theory advanced by Prof.
Bjerknes of the University of Chris­
Minneapolis, Minn.—A manual text­
tiania, Norway, th a t the w eather book, dealing with the operation of the
conditions at the pole govern the entire Post Office department and
w eather of the rest of the globe. methods of utilizing the gigantic postal
Time was when Calgary figured as system, Is being prepared by a com-
mitte^ here, for introduction in the
our w eather factory and later Medi­ ! grade schools of this state, with the
cine Hat. Why not go to the head- I hope of ultimately establishing this
quarters, the pole itself? So Amund- book in every public educational lasti­
sen is going, with the hope of getting j tutlon In the United States,
such a line on polar w eather “ tern-
It Is hoped to Instruct children while
eram ents” as will enable scientists they are young how to use the post
he Carnegie Institution, to whom office- in an effort to lessen the mis'
the govern-
. fi . n 11 rej ort, to plot out a tableful takes . which are costing
„
ment millions of dollars.
o. w eather curves a year or more in
PhHip E <*rlson
th,s d ty pre9.
advance.
Idem of the Minnesota Educational ns-
Yet, even if it proves possible, sodatkin, is head of the committee
will It be welcomed? It might be which is drawing up the textbook. Ap-
economical to know in spring or proval of the undertaking has been
summer how much coal you would £ 'ven hy Postmaster General V ill
need next w inter and make such Rays’ wbo’ a ^tGr the manual is com-
pleted, will give his and the depart­
other preparation as would suggest ment’s authorization to use the book
themselves if you knew for sure the in the public schools, according to
w inter was going to be balmy or gla­ Postmaster E. Purdy of Minneapolis,
cial. It would be a great aid in fix­ president of the National Association
ing picnic dates and selecting vaca­ of Postmasters.
The National Association of Post­
tion periods, but suppose everybody
masters
Is pledged to the move, the
wanted to be off a t the same haly-
head
of
the
organization announced.
con time? Then how would It feel
Mr. Carlson announced that not
io miss the glorious uncertainty of
enough attention was given to the
peeping out in the morning to see postal subject at educational meetings,
“what kind of a day it is,” since you and he announced that at the next an­
would know months ahead w hether nual convention of the organization
it would be “ fair and w arm er,” this subject would hold an important
“ partly cloudy,” or “ rain or snow” ? place.
“Lack of knowledge of how to use
the post office property Is costing the
government millions of dollars,” said
Mr. Purdy.
“The Instruction which
this book proposes to give will obviate,
to a great degree, many of the im­
properly made out money orders, regis­
tered mall losses, improperly addressed
LYLE ALLEN WILLARD
832 Stilwell Avenue, Frem ont, Ohio letters and packages, destruction of
Bronze medal— W illard aged 17, merchandise by faulty packing and
student, attem pted to save Clarence the like.”
Completion of the textbook probably
Henry from drowning, P ort Clinton,
will be after the first of the year.
Ohio, July 4, 1921. W illard swam
about 600 feet to Henry and reached
GIRL WINS UNUSUAL BET
shortly after Hawk did. W illard a t­
tempted to swim with Henry, but
Henry slipped through his grasp.
W illard supported Hawk a moment
until another young man reached
them. W illard then left Hawk and
went to help his own father. He
held to his father several m inutes
until a boat picked them up. (See
cases of Clarance Henry and Howard
E. Hawk.)
EMERY J. MEINKE
102S W hite Avenue, Frem on, Ohio
Bronze medal— Meinke, aged 26,
salesman, attem pted to save H. E.
Hawk from drowning, P ort Clinton,
Ohio, Jauly 4. 1921. Meinke swam
almost 600 feet to Hawk and reached
him as he was being supported by
W illard. Hawk first grasped IVJein-
Jte’s wrist and then his clothing and
Meinke tried to swim with him to
the submersed bar. He could make
no progress, and Hawk lost his hold,
sank and was drowned. Meinke, un­
able to more than keep himself at
the surface, was soon grasped by a
man In a boat and taken to shore In
an unconscious condition. He was
revived.
(See cases of Clarence
Henry, Howard E. Hawk and Lyle
Allen W illard.)
A MESSAGE
FOR WIVES
Ashland Laundry Co.
PHONE 16S
It is believed th a t th e missing are
entombed in the mine.
Cliff Payne makes shelves.
flafutday, February *, ioga
1 .n .-
TEACH USE OF MAILS
Miss Velma Tilden of San Francisco
Is shown winning her bet from Mrs.
Robert MarskJ’ by making a trip on
the w,ng of the Dutch w,ndmil,\ at
Golden Gate park without sending Viut
an “S. O. S.” She made 25 trips in
succession, winning a box of candy
for each trip around—waving her hand
BRIDGE CLUB IS REVIVED
to show absence of fear each time she
Form ers M em bers G uests a t D inner rose to the top. The mill is the big­
gest In the world, measuring 150 feet
Party at M attern H om e
from wing-tip to wing-tip, and cost
Mrs. T. H. Simpson and Mrs. H er­ $150,000 to build. It pumps water for
man M attern gave a dinner party Golden Gate park.
whose husbands remain young Wednesday evening a t the home of
Mrs. M attern on H argadine street
BEES AT HOME IN PUMPKIN
—Has it ever occurred to you to
the members of a bridge club th a t
that your husband l o o k s existed before the war. Dinner was Give Trouble to Housewife in
New
younger than you because he served a t 6:30 o’clock, and the table
Jersey Who Wants to
Make Pies.
takes things easier?
was hardly able to stand under the
load of good things to eat.
Like as not he does very lit­ The color scheme for the occa­ Caldwell, N. J.—Being a building
Ted Farrand has time to
tle that he can hire done—he sion was yellow and white, thpre be­ Inspector,
revel In a truck garden. Ted raised
doesn’t scrub his own office, or ing an abundance of yellow daffo­ a heap of pumpkins tints year and
dils on the table. The guests of the after the first frost went out to the
sweep and scour.
evening were the form er members patch and brought a 60-pounder into
I t ’s pretty certain that he of the club and their husbands. Af­ his kitchen.
“There’s a little hole in this one.
doesn’t spend one day out of ter justice had been meted out to Mary," he said to his wife. “I’m
the dinner, all retired to the bridge
seven bending over a steaming tables and an enjoyable evening was afraid It won’t keep In the cellar.
Better make some pies.”
wash-tub.
spent. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. W agner
It was several hours before Mrs.
made the high scores of the evening, Farrand got around to It and by that
These are the aging tasks while E. V. C arter and Mrs. F. D. time the big golden bulb had got al,
which cause so many women to W agner carried off the small scores. warmed up to the temperature of the
kitchen. She took a big knife and
grow old before their husbands
bisected
the pumpkin. Out swarmed
NINE DEAD, 20
do.
bees, bees and more bees. They flew
ENTOMBED IN
all over the kitchen and all over Mrs.
And the most aging of all is
PENN. COAL MINE Farrand, who fled out of tlife house
the family washing. Let us re­ BROWNSVILLE, Penn., Feb. 2.— with the bees in pursuit. The cold
outdoor air numbed the Insects and
lieve you of this burden; let Between forty and fifty m iners are Mrs.
Farrand outdistanced them, but
ns give you more time for rest missing and are believed to be en­ she bears enough marks of their
tombed as the result of an explosion stings to prove to the neighbors the
and recreation.
in the coal mine a t Gates, Penn. Five truth of the story.
Send us your washing thi is bodies have been recovered.
Trie« Out Rifle; Kills Son.
week and see how much young­ Rescuers are working frantically
to dig through the mass of debris
Regina, Canada.—Testing a new
er you feel when Monday night and reach the entombed men.
rifle, Howard Mortensen of Gull Lake
comes. Just phone and our rep­ The exact num ber is unknown.
shot and killed his ten-year-old son.
resentative will call.
A later wire places the num ber of The little fellow was In a closet and
the father, not knowing he wasjthere.
dead as 18 and the num ber miss­
fired
at a knot In the closet door.
ing, eight.
WEATHER A YEAR AHEAD
Considering th at the government
w°a her bureau very often has dlffi-
■t
n fittitg !ts forecasts to the
we ther 12 hours ahead and th a t its
weekly long-range guesses are even
AsáUSffi BAftî ftfJiàôS
TME
LOCAL RESIDENTS
WILL GET RURAL
CARRIER JOBS
cabinet
WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 3.—
The principle of the local resident
for the local job is fu rth er carried
out by a ruling of the civil service
commission today.
H ereafter, the
commission states, only persons who
have their residence within the de­
livery of the office in which the va­
cancy exists, will be certified for ru r­
al carrier appointm ent. Heretofore
certification has been made of ell-
gibles residing within the delivery of
any oifibe in the entire county in
which the vacancy office Is situated.
The new procedure places applicants
for rural carrier appointm ents on
the same basis as applicants for post­
m aster appointm ents, so far as the
m atter of residence is concerned.
The civil service commission states
th at this change has been made af­
te r due consideration and meets with
the approval of the pest oftice de­
partm ent.
K itchen
C o p y r ig h t. 1921. W e s te r n N e w s p a p e r L n : . n
©, 1)21, by McClure N ew sp ap er S yndicate
When Joe announced his intention
of marrying Constance his family had
warned him that he would have trou­
ble with a wife who was as spoiled
and selfish as Connie. But Joe, feel­
ing that she loved him enough «to
overcome her selfishness for his sake,
had paid no attention to the warning.
Now, after six months of married
life, the family’s prophecy seemed
about to be fulfilled. Connie was be­
ginning to assume a martyred attitude
and a habit of unmercifully nagging
him at every opportunity.
On this particular evening Connie
chose to be especially nasty.
“Business as usual, I suppose?” she
inquired, sweetly sarcastic, when he
came in late to supper.
Receiving no reply, and seeming de­
termined to provoke him, she tried
again.
“Do you know,” she asked, coolly
and deliberately, “sometimes I wonder
If it Is all business!”
Instead of hanging up his hat he
replaced It on his head and gave vent
to his temper.
"I am going out to a restau ran t!
Perhaps some day when it’s too late
you’ll come to your senses! I’ve had
enough!” Slamming the door angrily
after him, he left the house.
Connie was so surprised that she
forgot the half-framed retort that was
on her lips. Joe had never spoken
like this to her before. She began
to feel uneasy and wondered where he
had gone. After two or three hours
of trying to amuse herself she went
into the bedroom and addressed her­
self in the mirror.
“I don’t care!” she said aloud. “I
don’t c are ! I’ll show him. I don’t
care if he never comes back I” And
just to prove that she didn’t, she threw
herself down on the bed and cried her­
self to sleep.
•
• * * »
* •
When she awoke It was 11 o’clock.
How could she have slept so long?
And where was Joe? She wondered
if he really had left her, and began to
feel shaky. She decided to go to the
drug store for a drink.
While sipping a chocolate milk the
conversation of two men at the cigar
counter came to her ears.
“AVhere—at Geb & Simmonds?”
“Yes, today—shortage of $10,000."
“Funny inlx-up, anyone suspected?"
“No, not y e t; but nobody handles
the money except old man Geb him­
self, and that young fellow Joe.”
Connie waited to hear no more. Set­
ting down her glass with a thump that
startled the sleepy drug clerk, she fled
from the store.
Ten thousand dollars! So that Is
what her Incessant nagging had made
him do.
As soon as she entered the house the
telephone rang. With her heart In her
throat she answered It.
“No, he isn’t here, Mr. Geb. . . .
Yes, I’ll tell him to call you as soon
as he comes in. . . . No message?
. . Yes. Good-by.” She hoped
her voice had sounded natural.
So they were after him already.
The sound of quiet footsteps on the
stairway sent chills up and down her
spine. They had come already! What
should she do? With a show of cour­
age that she did not feel she went to
the door and threw it open. Her hus­
band stood facing her.
He looked very tired, and the hair
about his temples was damp with per­
spiration. Connie knew she had no
time to waste.
“Oh, Joe,” she began breathlessly,
“can you ever forgive me? It’s all my
fa u lt! Give It back! Don’t let them
arrest you!"
“For heaven’s sake, what’s the mat­
ter with you?” demanded the thor­
oughly bewildered Joe, fearing for his
wife’s sanity.
The insistent jangling of the tele­
phone interrupted before she could
answer. Joe went Into the dark hall
to answer it, barking his shins on the
umbrella stand as he went. Connie
listened in amazement.
From the
sheltering darkness of the hall came
her husband’s voice—firm, confident,
even laughing!
“Yes, I was going to call you, Mr.
Geb, but I was afraid it was too late.
. . . Yes, I found the error. . . .
Nothing missing at all. . . . The
joke’s on us. . . .
A fly-speck that
looked like a decimal point threw a
whole column of figures out of bal­
ance. . . . Tonight at the office.
. . . Oh, th at’s all right; you’re wel­
come. . . . Good-by.”
He hung up the receiver.
Then, all of a heap, a very penitent
Connie tlung herself at him, sobbing
out her story, begging his forgiveness
and almost choking him with the
strangle-hold of her arms about his
neck.
“You poor little chum p!’’ Joe said
teasingly between kisses.
He was
only too thankful that the miracle had
happened at last.
“Oh, Joe, I will be good,” she prom­
ised tearfully.
And thereafter she kept her prom­
ise, for the lesson of the night had
cured her, once and for all.
Edible« From th« Amazon.
The Mulford biological expedition
Is already accomplishing good work
In the Amazon basin, and has made
one- important shipment of botanical
specimens, among them three edible
frluts, the peplno, the tumbo, and the
achocta, and a turnip-like root, rha-
cache, of delicious flavor.—Scientific
American.
Dew Drop Inn— for lonche«.
" I f I knew th a t a w ord of mine.
A w ord not kind an d tru e,
M ight leave Ita tra c e on a loved one’»
face.
I ’d n ev er speak h a rsh ly , would you?
I f I knew th a t the lig h t of a smile
M ight linger the whole d ay th ro u g h ,
And brig h ten som e h e a rt w ith a
h eavier p a rt,
I w ouldn’t w ithhold it, would you?
FOR DINNER TODAY.
True economy means wise distinc­
tion between essentials and non-essen­
tials. This applies to the
economy of strength as
well as materials. Fruit
and vegetables are essen­
tial to good health; eggs
are essential as meat
substitutes and not an
extravagance when mod
erate in price. Cream is
an easily digested f a t ;
milk is an absolute necessity.
A meal which does not meet the
needs of the body is not an economical­
ly prepared meal, although if the day’s
meals are balanced the result Is the
same.
Hamburg Steak.—Do not buy the
chopped meat but get a piece of round
steak, put it up with some suet or
pork through the meat chopper, season
with onion, salt, pepper, a bit of clove
and form into flat cakes. Broil or pan
broil and serve with a brown sauce.
Baked potatoes with boiled cream on­
ions will be good vegetables to serve
with this dinner. •
Chicken With Corn.—Scrub and
clean a fowl well by using a handful of
soda In the w ater; cut up as for frying,
i roll in seasoned flour and brown In a
! little hot fat. Lay the pieces in a
I baking dish and cover with milk, sim
mer slowly for two hours or longer,
depending upon the age of the fowl.
Season well when half cooked and
add a cupful of coni or more. The
fresh corn, cut from the cob. Is best,
but canned will do. Serve the chicken
with corn and gravy poured around It.
Stuffed Onions.—Parboil large-sized
onions, take out the centers, leaving a
cavity to hold the filling. Chop the
onion, which was taken from the cen­
ter, mix with cold sausage meat or
bacon and bread crumbs with season­
ings.' Fill the centers, pour around
add good beef broth or add water and
butter. Bake until the onions are ten
der, basting occasionally. Cover witli
a spoonful of buttered crumbs and
brown just before serving.
BLOW
? yourself for
? some new and________
? Beautiful Wall Paper
? I t 'ivon't be a bad blow
------ SEE
ME T O D A Y -------
9 Swenson & McRae Co.
9
East Main Street
W. A. SHELL
’4
B A R llE R
C hildren’s W ork A
Specialty
25’ O
Safety blades resharpened
like new. Single bit, 30c
doz. Dobule bit, 60c doe,
G. Wesley Stafford, Psychologist
w ill g iv e
A SERIES OF LECTURES
— on —
Constructive Psychology
Nothing seuationnl. .lust clear, interesting, ami common
sense talks on Health, Prosperity ami Success
8 o’clock P. M.—February 4 to 10—Also three afternoons
Feb. 4—8:00 p. m. ‘‘W hat Is Constructive Psychology”
Feb. 5—2:45 p. m. “ Speaking With A uthority”
Feb. 5—8:00 p. m. “ The Standards of Lite”
Club H ouse Closed—-
New Thought Temple
The last of the enjoyable dances
at the Kingsbury Springs club house
was held Saturday night, January
21. A. D. Helms, the m anager, de­
cided to close the hall indefinitely on
account of the cold weather.
On the Boulevard
All Are Welcome
We Specialize on Magazines
OFFERING YOU MANY ATTRACTIVE CLUB RATES
See Our Complete Stock of Valentines
ON DISPLAY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY THIS WEEK
The Corner Book Store
IVAN H. CORNER, Prop.
“ %1
SERVICE
234 E. Main St.
MEDFORD, OREGON
SU N D A Y
HERE’S THE BIG
EVENT!
M ONDAY
Popular Saturday Evening Post Story
l)iek Barthehness, now a
star in his own light, head­
ing his own company, makes
his first picture.
Tol’able David
And what a picture—an
epic of mountain mothers
and mountain men!
RICHARD
BARTHEEMESS
And of a boy who leaps to
manhood in life’s greatest
test!
One of the Three Biggest
Dramas of the Year—and
That’s the Plain, Unvarn­
ished Truth!
Starring
100 PER CENT
ENTERTAINMENT
100 PER CENT
ENTERTAINMENT
Truth in every word of this—‘‘Tol’able David” is
one of the three finest dramas of the year
Your Last Chance Tonight to see
RALPH CONNER’S STORY
"(ameron ot the Royal Mounted”
Go Tonight
Also
BIG COMEDY