t*AGE tW O ÁSHLÁtf» DAILY T ftttfó á W ednesday, A p ril 5, Ashland a'(3£> T idings Established 1876 P ub lished Every Evening Except Sunday NEW LINGERIE A pril Showers TH E ASHLAND PRINTING CO. OFFICIAL CITY AND ¿OUNTY PA PE R j Clumsy, Starchy Cambrics Only Memories of the Past. TELEPHONE 39 E . J. BARRETT, E ditor Undergarments Have Grown Sheer— Matching to Shade Gown Is Latest W him. Subscription P rice D elivered in City: One month .................................. $ TLiee m o n t h s ..............................' Six months .................................. On« year .................................... .65 1.95 3.75 7.50 More of MEIH O R D LEGION OPENS H USBAND’S STORY WILL DOORS TO ALL WAR VETS. AMAZE ASHLAND At the meeting of the Medford! ---------- post of the American Legion held H0 says: “Adler-i-ka helped my Monday night, says the Medford M a i l ' fe . gas ° n the stomach and ~ y iweatora Mail sour atomach in TWENTY MIN. Tribune, it was decided to open the UTES. It works beyond greatest club- rooms and meetings to other expectations/’ Adler-i-ka acts on war veterans of the United States. I B0TH upper and lower bowel re- As one speaker said “ While the nJ ° ' ing ^oul m atter which poisoned American Legion u an organize,ion exclusriely for veterans of the world for chronic constipation. Guards war, there is a common tie and in- a Sainat appendicitis. Adler-i-ka re- terest between us and all other vet- ’,noves m atter you never thought was erans who gave their services to the y° UF ayst®m and which may have Lingerie of crepes de chine and georgettes has wiped the sisterhood Mail and R ural R outes 6 m e*. v u .e s 10 m e been p o iso n in g you fo r m o n th s of the red flannels off the map. For One month .................................. $ .65 ’ 4 oo article in feminine apparel has un country. It therefore seems fitting T. K. Bolton, Druggist. Three months .............................. 1.95 th at we should bring them into a s _____________ ____ dergone the rapid change in recent Six months .................................. 3.50 years us has tile undergarment. From close association with us as we pos- Brighten the corner where you One year ..................................... 6.5C clumsy, beruffed, starchy cambrics sibly can.’’ are. they have grown more sheer each sea ADVERTISING RATES D isplay A dvertising son until now one could easily hold a •lo g ie Insertion, each in ch ........... 30c week-end’s supply in the palm of one’s YEARLY CONTRACTS hand. In fact, one New York house . D isplay A dvertising which specializes in lingerie has a One tim e a w eek.............................. 27 %c tiny, patent leather suitcase about Two times a w eek.. . . ........................25 c eight Inches long called “le petit Wviny other d a y .................................20 c trousseau,” which holds a nightgown, Local R eaders undenest and a combination set for Each line, each tim e .................... 10c SATURDAY, APRIL 8lh the bride. Imagine a bride of a few To run every other dfey for one years back trying to crowd her nighty month, each line, each tim e. . 7c into i t ! To run every issue for one month At surprisingly low prices or more, each line, each t im e .. 5c Tlie rise of the crepe de chine and Classified Column georgette in the making of undergar Qne cent the word each time. ments has been interesting to watch. To run every issue for one month How shyly we put aside our white lin or more, %c the word each time. ens and nainsooks as we gently Legal Rate stepped into our first pink crepe de F irst time, per 8-point lin e ......... 10c chines! Pinks have given way to more Each subsequent time, per 8- vivid colors. Rather venturesome HAIRDRESSING PARLORS point line 5c colors of former days are now cast Card of t h a n k s ............................ $1.00 Room 1 U pstairs C itizens Rank Bldg. aside as passe. Obituaries, the line t ................... 2% c Matching underwear to the shades F rate rn a l Orders and Societies Advertising for fratern al orders of one’s gown is fashion’s latest whim (C opyrl.h or societies charging a regular initi and no shade can be too colorful for ation fee and dues, no discount. Re the lingerie of this season. Hose of ligious and benevolent orders will be nation, rem ain tied up in securities gray fade into bloomers and petticoats charged the regular rate for all ad of the same tone. For the navy blue vertlsing when an admission or other th a t are exem pt from taxation, and costumes there are lovely shades of to th at extent the burden of taxation charge Is made. lavenders and purples. of th e common people is increased. The envelope chemise seeems to W hat C onstitutes A dvertising W ILL OPEN APRIL 18th In order to allay a m isunderstand The other day the announcem ent was > ,„„ii .k . . . . have been discarded for the present By WM. G. H. FINCH inch wall at the end. Build conden- j and the chemise with bloomers or step- ing among some as to what co n sti made th at the City Bank of New We are arranging a Associate Member In stitu te Radio tutes news and what advertising, York had invested $57,000,000 In ser up in this fashion. Take the two in drawers is the favorite sort of we print this very simple rule, which government securities th a t were ex Engineers binding post machine screws and i lingerie for Just now. This comblna- F IS H E R M E N ’S C O N T E ST is used by newspapers to differenti (W ritten for International News m ount them in base as shown. Take i t,on ls extremely practical, for the empt from taxation. Multiply th at ate between them : “ ALL fu tu re a piece of mica sheeting and place i t ! chernise can be made long enough to Service.) and w i l l make award of a $10 Fly Rod to the one getting e -rents, where an admission charge transaction ^ty thousands all over % of an inch from either end. Now ' Uke the pIace of a pett,coat ”r short NEW YORK, April 6.— The action Is made or a collection is taken IS the country, and some idea may be the nicest string ot fish on the opening day. ADVERTISING.” This applies to gathered of th e am ount of money th at results from applying a current 1 take a piece of tip foil, passing ma j enough to be worn with the heavier For further particulars, apply at organizations and societies of every th at is isolated and rendered immune to two or more conducting surfaces, chine screw through the hole on the gowns and suits. And as all gowns are made on straight body-fitting lines, kind as well as to individuals. All reports of such activities after from bearing any part of the tax same being separated by a dielec’lc right. Now, take an o th er piece of these garments do away with all un (mica sheets, glass or paraffin pa- mica sheeting, placing It directly necessary waistbands. These chemises burden. they have occurred is news. All coming social or organization per) (see Fig. 1) is employed in over the preceding one. Then take a are all niade with the short empire Headquarters for Sporting Goods m eetings of societies where no many ways in radio circuits. Such I Piece of tinfoil and place it over the yokes with straps over the shoulders; NO LACK OF COURTESY money contribution is solicited, initi When General Joffre passed a device is called a condenser, and 1 machine screw on the left end and the straps are made of the same ruate- ation charged, or collecton taken IS , !t ., . . , . ,, . 1 rtal 89 the garment rather than of rib- through Ashland yesterday, a great!*8 sa ‘d to have a certain capacity o r . follow these operations until you | bon. They are made In gold and sll- NEW S. many people, and particularly the 30 many micro farads, depnding upon have used the seven sheets of tinfoil ver cloths to match the evening gown« Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, school children, were disappointed th e num ber and size of the conduci- and mica sheeting. You will see by as well as in the practical black. Postoffice as Second-class Mail Mat because no stop was made a t the ing surfaces and the dielectic sepa- this arrangem ent th a t yon have al- Most of the American made lingerie ter. Plaza and the general remained ratin g them. This may be of a fixed ternated the tinfoil strips each time. is made of crepe de chine, georgette j or radium silk. From Paris we have j seated in his machine and did not — ------------- - __ _________You will then have three strips of ^SuMMEßpLAYGROUNi) • the triple voile which closely resem rise to acknowledge the greetings. , tinfofil connected with the binding ERICAf n<s i bles chiffon, but has hotly enough to The French seldom lack courtesy, post on the left side and four on the give it wearing' qualities. Another ^ - C o M& vc T in C SvftPACtSp (TI h M m J -.\ft I and it was no lack of th a t quality (right, and will end by having a piece imported material is printed linen in which caused the omission. General ¡of mica on top of the last tinfoil colors, the printing being placed as a O i C lvctic ( m ic a j n t e t j J Joffre Is a sick man. He contracted strip. Now take the cover and drill border In a black silhouette design. — AT — j two holes to take binding post m a -' ----------------------- — a severe cold while in China, and it has clung persistently to him ever ■ chine screws, and assembly as shown A REGULAR “ PUSS IN BOOTS” since. The strain of his world tour in figure 3. Tighten up on the bind- WASHINGTON I had been telling upon him for some j ing posts so as to compress the tin- »BRITISH COLLIMI little time. He is not a young rn ^ i - •6HT, COOL DAYS I __J ; foil and mica sheeting, thereby in- RESTFUL 3LCEP EVERY HHffT. by any means, and his condition in l creasing the efficiency of the con- M ica sheet Portland was such as to necessitate I denser. J’ -C o IT A i CM the calling off of the big banquet a r F ull N orm al Course. Practice school for all grades SOLOMONITES M usic de ranged in his honor. Had he liZened partm ent very strong. Psychology, educational F IG . 3 nteasti! (Mitent s, Speed maniacs, to the num ber of to the advice of Sam Hill, who Is sociology, and school m anagem ent on dem and. 727 paid $1309 in fines in Portland conducting the tour, and M ajor U. S. during the las. month. Now take G rant, who accompanied tiiin, he F or inform al ion w rite the next m onth's bunch of violators would not have left the train at Med and give them jail sentences. March ford. When informed of the arran g e G. A. BRISCOE, Director tines would pay A pril’s board bill, ments th a t had been made, he insist j (May Be Regarded as Encour- and the effect would be more salu ed upon taking the trip through the tary. valley, despite the protests of those aging Signs o f Returning • • in charge of the tour, ra th e r than in or variable capacity, depending upon Prosperity. Merchants are warned to keep flict disappointm ent. the construction. If the elements their eyes peeled for a counterfeit are stationary, it will be of a fixed B E TT ER ROADS tw enty-dollar bill. The genuine a r capacity, and if they can be moved The disbursement of fifteen million Four or five years ago when the at will, it will be of a variable ca dollars, most of which will be paid out ticle has been so scarce of late, th a t lots of folks would be glad to get people of the state were floundering pacity. in Oregon and Washington during hold of even a counterfeit, if only around in the mire of the Oregon Count over the people of vour acquaintance who Since ours is a single circuit re 1922, is one of the encouraging signs of returning prosperity. The Union roads, says the G rants Pass Courier, to keep in mind what the real thing ceiver employing a crystal detector loks like. they were willing to pay almost any or rectifier, it will be of help to em Pacific System is to add largely to its are comfortably well off. Nine out of ten fol . equipment, to relay portions of its • * price to have b etter ones. Now th at ploy a condenser of small capacity track with rails of greater weight, to lowed the slow but sure method of spending Yes, times change. If George W ash a good tru n k highway has been pro across the telephone receivers which ballast anew its roadbed, to replace ington were alive today he would vided through the state and other will have the effect of taking the w0°den bridges with structures of less than they earned. have about as much chance of being sections have been supplied with bet- weak electric impulses which after stee1, and conBtruct a 8teel bridge elected president as J. P. Morgan. ter transportation facilities, there is being rectified by the detector are of bridge acr°8S the Columbia River be’ We help our patrons along the route that leads This is no reflection on W ashington. a huge bill to pay. The roads were an in term itten t direct current nature ^ X e T r o j e c ^ t o c o s ? » $1.500,000. But he was the w ealthiest and most not built gratis by the construction and storing them up in the conden-' not to Kasv Street, hut to Independence Avenue. aristocratic gentlem an in America a t | companies, but by the end of the ser. A fter same i 7 f Uu / c h a n g e ? h t! tOA<ro^r^i^,M 0,00(^ for *2*500 Special Easter Showing / / / / oi Millinery Wineland & Shepherd 3XT Q T T f i T t Fishing Season lor Trout How to Make a Radio Set NININGER & WARNER ASHLAND BRANCH Oregon Slate Normal Ashland, Oregon June 19 - July 28, 1922 BIG IMPROVEMENTS B Ï THE RAILROADS Independence Avenue-Not Easy Street the end of the 18th cenury, and Americans have long since aban doned the practice of choosing pres idents from this class.— Mall Trib une. • • “Ashland, the GaitewfyV of Ore gon.” Sounds good, doesn’t It? How do you think it would look if blazed in electric lights on an arch span ning the Southern Pacific tracks In the neighborhood of Eighth street, to read like this: year there will be a bill ot some $40.- discharges them in a more even man- irigerator cars at a cost of $8,760,000 000,000 which m ust be met. i n er in the telephone receivers, which was made Public several weeks ago. There is only one equitable means will have the effect of increasing the The refrlgerator cars ar0 for the Pa- of paying for the highways and th at signal audibility which is always de- C'fiC Frult ExPre38- one-half of which is owned by the U. P. System. is to have those who benefit, meet sirable. General Manager O’Brien of the Ore the cost. It is unquestionably th e ' This piece of apparatus is very gon-Washington Railroad & Naviga automobile owner who gets the (simple and easy to construct, but tion Company (W estern unit of the greatest am ount of good. Old Dobbin ‘ care m ust be taken to smooth out Union Pacific System) has just an- can plow his way through ruts and the tinfoil to avoid blisters and seei nounced tbe setting aside of $5,000,000 for improvements and additions on quagm ires with little damage, but, th a t all sheets of foil are uniform this unit of the System during 1922. the automobile m ust have good F ollow in g M aterials N eeded Most of these millions will be ex roads. There is a saving on tires and A condenser for Jtur purpose pended in Oregon and Washington. repairs which more than offsets any should have a capacity of about .002 The forest and the saw mills will “ASHLAND LITHIA SPR ING S” tax which the state might justly im micro farads and the following ma supply all of the lumber which will be pose. TH E GATEW AY OF OREGON” used in car construction and the army terials will be needed: And th a t's not stretching the truth. Owners of cars realize the fact of railroad workers will be enlarged 2 binding posts. until it will be of sufficient magnitude Ashland is the first large town on th a t the damage done the highways 1 hard rubber base, % of an inch to complete the work. The money the line of the Southern Pacific after comes through the weight of the car. crossing the California line. Not a and th a t a tax levied on the weight nick, g of an inch wide, 2 y2 inches paid for material and labor will be put l° ng- ! into general circulatiou. Service will doubt but what the railroad com is jusL Also the gasoline tax as a 1 hard rubber cover, 1-8 of an inch be increased, labor in demand and pany would consent to the erection of supplem ent to the license fee can not thick, 1 5-8 inches long, c of an inch busine39 conditions improved by the such a span, so it was built high en be questioned as a good gauge of wide. i millions to be spent by the great tranB- ough for trains to pass under. I t’s the am ount of use given the high- continental railroad. 7 sheets of tinfoil % inch wide.,' w orth more than a passing thought, u a y But the mam feature Is th a t 1 % inches ,ong (which can be pur- SH IPPIN G BOARD VFSSFI s t o anyway. the tax is paid for the privilege of chased from a florist). I BE NAMED FOR n w ( using the highway. Owners of auto-j 7 sheets of mica % of an in c h ‘ ‘ PRESIDENTS WASHINGTON. April 6.— All the Our representatives at W ashing- mobiles want good highways and will wide, 1 inch long. 002 inch thick. shipping board’s passenger vessels ton m ight do worse than to pass a pay any ju st tax when they are as To construct, drill four 5-32 inch except the George W ashington and law making it compulsory to tax sured th a t the money goes back in h° les in the hard rubber base as the America and the four shiDs in •very security issued, w hether It be poiky t . b T, X T l ^ 7 , S v l ^ I^ . r ';„h1 r [” ., n f l T , e 2 ' N° " takc the tin *i,e s ° “ th Amer" * “ rvi“ - ’ •'ii federal, state, county or municipal. .„ax ongni ,0 be gleet It when a small expenditure! io M T 8'“d ' 7 " ' ” l'° ' M ' '‘amed a “ er presi,lents «< the Vnlt-’ Billions of money th at ought to be in circulation in the industries of the yearly will keep it in renair binding post machine ed States, Chairm an Lasker has an- I e repair. ¡screws, allowing about 1-15 of an'nounced. The Citizens Bank Ashland, Oregon nî.apü ' tk -- This winsome outfit ig donned by a prominent “movie" star in her modi- fled Russian boots. The dress, her own creation, ie of tan jersey, with embroidered silk dots. Season's Top Coats. The wing or cape sleeve is featured in a good many of the season’s top coats. One smurt model, made of plaid wool material in a heavy weave, had sleeves cut to flare from shoulder to lower edge and much longer than the arm. These sleeves were seamed together on the under arm to wrist length and below this they fell away from the arm to f«»rm a decided cape. The coat was full length, belted and finished at the front with a Tuxedo revers. F lo u r has gone up—and is going higher. Friday and Saturday we will sell Hard Wheat Flour — Crown or White Mountain—at $ per 2 .2 5 Sack Good Potatoes Heavy W eave of Jersey, A feature of the silk jersey dresses now being worn Is that they are of much closer, heavier weave than for merly. There is lqss openwork decora tion, the requisite variety being ob tained by a change of stitch or by the application of^chaln stitch embroidery It pays to read the classified page. $ 2 .3 5 per 100 lbs. PLAZA MARKET H. A. STEARNS Cl N O R T H M A IN S T R E E T *