Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, May 06, 1922, Page 2, Image 2

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    P àgé 'îtt'ü
Ashland
AffiLÂffà bÁTLí TÍDlAuS
Saturday, May 6, l t r j i ^
¡■MB»
shoes, filthy bones, pieces of rtaüs-
train which arrives in that city at also being considerably shortened.
T«« Much Latitude.
eating cloth, and numerous other
Established 1876
7 p. m.
“Here'«
a
funny
item,’’
said
Mrs.
As soon as the Ashland-Klamath
PabUsbed Every Evening Except things equally delightful to handle
Johnson,
in
the
mldet
of
her
reading.
Charles B. Howard makes this Falls star route service goes into
or behold. But the dog liked that
Sunday*
"A professor says folk« ort to »pend schedule conscientiously, Sundays
THE ASHLAND PRINTING GO.
sort of thing.
at least an hour at the dinner .table.” and holidays included. On account effect, the closed pouch letter mail
There are folks with the same sort
from the Ashland post office to Port­
“An heor?” exclaimed Gap Johnsqd
officia B city and c 6 unty
of Instinct. They delight in gather­
•f Rumpo« Ridge, Ark. “Great gun« of the new state highway over the land on train 16 /will be discon­
PAPER
TELEPHONE 39
ing up whatever is rotten, whatever
of Iron! What in torment would our Green Springs mountain, and the tinued. It behooves Ashland pa­
14 children be eating after the first 20 additional work on the state high­ trons to keep this in mind closely
is soiled, whatever is repulsive and
E. J. BARRETT, Editor
minutes, unless they att up the table way east of Pinehurst, which will be and get their mail in the post office
____________________________ peddle It at their neoghbor’s door-
and
then began on each other?”—Kan­ completed about July 1, the road in time for train 54, as otherwise
s-ubacriptiou Price Delivered in City: step. Their couversat on Is an end-
sas City Star.
will afford rapid travel and the sea­ it will not leave Ashland until train
One month ............................... $ .65 j less flow of criticism and advertis
son
for traveling over the mountain 12 the next morning. The closing
For Thawing Motor Engine«.
?»°hD th a ........................... 1 ling of flaws and defects. When a
Prof.
Charles
A.
Robb
of
the
Univer­
to Klamath Falls will be lengthened hour for mail for train 54 is 3’X.‘.
Ona year ................................. 7.50 man “as a dozen Mood points and
sity of Alberta, It Is announced, has considerably, the time for the trip p. m.
Mail and Rural Routes
; one bad one they see the bad one
discovered an ether mixture which
—
.2 .
. .
I
m- I.l 1 1 «
One mouth ...................-...........$ .65 through a magnifying lass. We all
solves the problem of starting motor
Three months ........................... 1-95 despise a woman busybody who ped-
engines in Intensely cold weather.
hix m o n th s .............................. 3-50jd le s repulaiveness. But the old he
Opportunity for a final test of the
One year
• • •• •
d.5(
preparation came during a recent cold
i hen who is a gossip of the kind that
ADVERTISING RATES
spell when the mercury fell far below
j knows only to find the bad and de
Display A dvertising
/
zero, A Llberty-12 motor of 400 horse
Sin :e insertion, each inch...........30c caying Is the worst old hen of all.
power
was
left
outdoors
all
night
and
Try it for a week; keep your
YEARLY CONTRACTS
was Immovably frozeu by morning.
Display Advertising
mouth shut unless you can say
The actual time taken to start the en­
One time a week........ ............27%c something nice and commendable
gine with the new mixture was seven
Two time? a week.................... 25 c about people. Unless you are an ut-
minutes. When the experiments were
Evejy other day........ 20 c
terly
petrified
fool
you
can
begun
last year, it took an hour and a
find
Local R eaders
half to start the same engine with the
Each line, each tim e...................10c something perfectly lovely in the
mercury only five degrees below.
worst man you know.
To run every other dUy for one
il mth. each line, each tim e .. 7c
This new ru d d er Is cupable of stopping a boat w ithin its own length and
To run- every issue for one month
D odge B rothers
Shah BelltvM In Mascot«.
when set in a certain position can practically spin a boat in a circle. The
NAILING A LIE
or more, each line, each tim e .. 5c
MOTOR. CAR
Probably
no
monarch
is
a
more
firm
Classified Column
The regularity with which mis photograph shows rudder in closed position to make a quick stop.
believer In the power of the mascot
One cent - the
each
time.
— - word
f
i -----------
representations regarding the en-
than
the young shah of Persia. He has
To run every issue for one m onth;. .. „
. , .. . - , ,
“After what seemed an intermin­ nearly 200 mascots, most of them heir­
or more. fcc the word each time.
b e r n e n t of the traffic laws in Ash- ing. One thing is certain. The dam-
land are being nade by Pacific aging statements will travel a great able wait> the patrol QOted varioug looms, which have played some part
Legal Rate
faster than will any denial ofl„„„„
.
.
,
First time, per 8-point line........ 10c coa3t newspapers, is getting to be deal
. . . inaccuracy.
gangs
of men at work. They * were In the history of his predecessors.
the
,
Chief among these is s cube of amber
Each subsequent time, per 8-
decidedly monotonous. The Med
_________________
combating that most terrifying, which, according to eastern lore, fell
pcint line ............................... A 6c
most ungovernable and dangerous from heaven In Mahomet’s time. It is
Card of th a n k s ......................... >1.00 ford Mail-Tribune never fails to
Obituaries, the line ................... 2%c take a crack at Ashland whenever
ot fall rebellious elements— the for- supposed to ward off danger, and the
Fraternal Orders and Societies
opportunity presents gtself, appar <$>
FOREST FABLES
<g> est fire. For a day and night and shah usually wears it round his neck.
Advertising for fraternal orders ently indifferent as to whether the
another day the battle waged.
or societies charging a regular initi­ statements to which that newspaper
---------
Grimy
men, black as the charred RAILWAY MAIL OFFICIALS
ation fee and dues, no discount Re­
CONFER WITH POSTMASTER
trunks around them, worn to the
ligious and benevolent orders wUl "be , gives currency, are based on facts Burning Homes
W.
C. Vandervoort, superinten­
charged the regular rate for an ad or otherwise. A day or two since it
“On the third day of last August last stages of exhaustion, fought on
dent
of
the railway mall service for
vertlslng when an admission or other printed an interview with an auto a man set fire to more than a score —cutting away underbrush, dyna-
charge is made.
dealer.named Myers, in which thé of homes. Every home was entirely miting logs and trees, beating out the northwest states and Alaska, and
latter told of his experience in trav­ consumed and there was no insur­ the slinking fringes of advancing Chief Clerk Albert S. Rand, of Port­
W hat C onstitutes A dvertising
In order to allay a misunderstand­ eling through California without ance. The man went on his way, if ground fire, shouting onej to an- land, were in Ashland Thursday,
ing among some as to what consti­ his dealer’s license, and. how, every­ not rejoicing, at least without visible other pltove the crackling inferno discussing railway mail service mat­
tutes news and what advertising,
ters with Postmaster E. J. Kaiser.
we print this very simple rule, which where, he was cautioned to watch evidence of regret. He had no fear of heat and smoke, panting like
The
summer service on the Ashland-
is used by newspapers to differenti­ out for Ashland. He asserted that of punishment because the homes limited animals around the water
Klamath
Falls star route will begin
ate between them: “ALL futiife the traffic officers let him go he had destroyed were not yet built; barrels where they slaked their
events, where an admission charge through the state unmolested, when they were still in the tree trunks j thirst with the lukfw aim liquid, Wednesday, May 10, according to
is made or a collection is taken IS
the plans and the schedule as
ADVERTISING.” This applies to he made the explanation that he had awaiting the magic wand of industry but gaining, almost imperceptibly at agreed upon will leave Ashland at
organizations and societies of every forgotten his dealer’s license and to give them habitable form. But first, yet gradually with greater cer-
kind as well as to Individuals.
had left it at home. He told, too, economically these homes were de- ainty as the weary hours dragged 9:45 a. m. and arrive nt Klamath
All reports of such activities after that he was careful as soon as he stroyed as surely as though the on. And amid the confusion and Falls at 3 p. m. Leaving Klamath
they have occurred Is news.
Falls the schedule will be 7:50 a. m.
All coming social or organization approached Ashland to sent to Med­ trees had been made into lumber, j crash of falling timber the ranger and arriving in Ashland at 1 o’clock
meetings of societies where no ford for it. so that when he drove and the lumber into structures, and his foreman generated the bat-
p. m. This service is especially val­
money contribution is solicited, initi­ through here he would not be held and this is the way it happened:
| tie.
ation charged, or collecton taken IS up.
It was the vacation season, and
“Several days later a wide, bar- uable to Klamath Falls residents
NEWS.
Had the editor, who handled that an automobile carrying a party ofjren scar lay upon the mountainside, and business men as it affords them
16-18 S. FIR
MEDFORD, ORE
PHONE 304
Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, interview, used just ordinary blue tourists stopped on a road th a t, still smouldering in places where the an opportunity to get their mail on
Sedan $1665. Coupe $1490. Touring Car $1075. Roadster $1025.
Fostoffice as Second-class Mall Mat­ pencil sense, he would have discov­ wound through a magnificient stand black splinters of the charred train 54 each evening, which lands
Panel Business Car $1165.
Screen Business Car $1040
ter.
ered the animus at once in the fact of Douglas fir, in western Washing-j stumps pointed like accusing fing- in Portland early the next morning.
Chassis No. 1 and 3, $890
that no Oregon dealer’s license is ton. The travelers sat in rapturous ers, and still sent out masses of yel- It also delivers first class mail and
r^UMME »P laygrouf
recognized in the state of California admiration of the quiet forest scene lowish white smoke. The scar cov- daily newspapers before the business
any more than a California dealer’s and rhapsodized over the great ered hundreds of acres and it would day closes, much in advance of the
license is recognized in Oregon. The trees that columned their majestic continue to smoulder and smoke for
statement that Myers had buncoed beauty as far as the eye could see. weeks, white ail about in the ad-
his way through California with the One of the men of the party lit a jacent woods were fire guards con-
cock-and-bull story that he had left contemplative cigarette Jand tossed ' stantly vigilant to see that the en
his dealer’s license in Medford, the match to the side of the road, emy did not creep out and strike
; again.
stamps the whole story as a fabrica­ and the auto passed on.
“Half an hour later an aeroplane
“And far away the automobile
tion. If there is any particular class
of citizens who should be careful in patrol flying high above the moun­ tourists journeyed carefree and ut
obeying the traffic laws it is an au­ tain range saw yellowish smoke bal­ terly unconcerned. At a sawmill
tomobile dealer. In the case of My­ looning over the tree tops. He they stopped for a few minutes to
ers he thought^it a splendid oppor­ moved his control and turned in watch the logs in slow procession
tunity to get back at Ashland, for that direction. Upon the chart in from the pond to the band safvs
SOLOMONITES
the reason that he had once been the machine before him he located ‘What a shame!’ exclaimed the man
held up here for driving his machine the fire approximately, then re- with the cigarette, in a burst of sen-
through the streets at a rate1 turned quickly to a mountain fire timental revolt, "What a shame to
When you hear an actress say-
cut down these beautiful trees!”
ing, after getting her di- <$> far and away beyond the pale of any station ten miles away.
law in the country. It is easy to un-
vorce.
•$> That she has an inclination to <•> derstand the animus of Myers, but
M ake O regon S afe for the REPUBLICAN PARTY
■$>
pursue a single course,
<$> not quite so easy to account for the
<♦> Don’t decide that it’s a pity <$> Mail-Tribune permitting Itself to be
That a lady who’s so pretty <8> used to serve the ulterior purposes
• Should be left to face condi- <?> of the disgruntled Myers.
♦
tiens unprotected a n d <$> Another case Illustrating the
<s>
alone.
recklessness with which defamatory
<s¡> For her troth, no doubt, is <$> stories are circulated with reference
fourteen are not complete and cannot be submitted for con­
< î »
plighted
<$> to Ashland is that of the Courier-
sideration unless they are put into legal form.
io another who’s delighted <§> Free Press of Redding, which recent­
To possess the chance to make <s> ly printed a gross misstatement
♦
her temporarily his own.
<$> with regard to the traffic laws as
The legal description must be given.
enforced here, in which It was stat­
« *
ed that J. T. Haviland, local district
The option must be acknowledged before a notary public.
Woik wins when wishing loses; manager of the California State Au­
the worker wins confidence, the tomobile association, and H. William
wisher forfeits even respect.
Nolle, another (association official,
Each option must be signed and acknowledged by both
• *
were arrested here while traveling
husband and wife.
Luck plays with cards and dice, at a rate not exceeding ten miles an
fate plays with laws, pluck uses hour. This is so grossly inaccurate
reason, law and order; thus pluck as to almost make it ridiculous. The
As much care should be taken in filling out the option as
gets there with the least hazard.
state law fixes a speed limit through
• •
would he used in filling out a deed.
towns at 20 mites an hour and also
Dawning is the day when all fixes the speed limit in passing
printers are realizing that they owe schools at 12 miles an hour. It is
Please comply with these requirements, as the options must
no more to the public than the pub­ unfortunate for the. tourists, and not
lic owes to them. Pro Bono Pub­ less so for Ashland, that two of its
be in legal form as required by the investors, I have no
lico has had his day.
schools
are
on
the
Pacific
highway.
• •
Tidings
New Rudder That Works Wonders
O ver
7 0 0 ,0 0 0
ow ners
GEO. L. TREICHLER MOTOR CO.
RE-ELECT
Out of Thirty - Eight
Options Filed To Date
RALPH L
WILLIAMS
republican
NATIONAL
COMMITTEEMAN
KEEP THE WEST IN POWER
Springfield business college Her
reived this irom an Iowan: “Please
let me kno mutch it would coste for
you to tern me typeriting. I all­
ready kno how to spel gude.”
There were 11 contests in the re­
cent democratic and republican pri­
maries for the election of wet or
dry congressmen. Ten of these con­
tests were won by the drys. It is
expected that Illinois will send to
the next congress 19 dry congress­
men and 8 wet. In Chicago candi­
dates endorsed by dry leaders won
82 per cent of the nominations in
the primaries on April 11.
THE GOSSIP
Friend ot mine had a little dog
that lorqd rtilj'iish,. Every night
doggie went forth to hunt for the
tilings he liked. Next morning on
the doorstep was found a rare as
aortment, such as dead cats, old
In th e City lim its th e 20-m ile-an-
feour law in enforced, and large
sliena are posted at th e city lim it«,
uniuiuneing that fact. School warn­
in gs are posted a block aw ay on e ith ­
er tdde o f the schools. O fficers are
station ed at th ese tw o latter points
to see that the law is observed be­
tween w liat is design ated as “school
hours"— that is, bet w en 8 a. m. and
•> p. 111. At all other hours th e 20-
niile-an-hour law is in e ffect.
The Only Westerner Ever Eleeted Vice-Chairman of the Republican Na­
tional Committee
The Republican National Commitee consists of one member from
each state in the Union, and is the political organization of the party.
In June. 1921, at the Committee’s first meeting after the inaugura­
tion of President Warren G. Harding, every state cast its vote for Ralph
E. Williams, of Oregon for vice-chairman of the Committee, recognizing
by their unanimous vote his fitness and ability as a leader to fill this
responsible position.
A vote for Ralph E. Williams for Republican National Committee­
man will confirm the action of the forty-eight states in electing him vice
chairman of the Republican National Committee, a position never before
held by a Western man.
Ralph E. Williams bf Oregon, as vice-chairman of the Republican
National Committee, is directly in line to become National Chairman,
the highest position attainable in the Republican organization
A National Committeeman on the National Committee does not
make or execute the laws, but carries out the policies- and platform of
the party adopted by the delegates at each previous National Convention.
Mr. Williams is senior member of the National’ Committee. Senior­
it? in this committee gives one the same power as seniority in the United
These are the facts, these associa­
tion officers to the contrary notwith­
standing. The pernicious effects of
these misrepresentations can be
readily estimated, when it is real­
ized that when statements of this
character find their way into the
columns of a reputable newspaper,
they are reprinted in other papers.
In this instance, the article referred States Senate.
to was reproduced in the current is-
su<? of the Siskiyou News, published
at Yreka, and how often this will be
repeated, there ¡6 no means of tell- < Paid adv. by Committee of Republ icans, C. L. Starr, Sec’y, 617 Board
• of Trade Bldg., Portland, Ore.)
VOTE TO K E E P HIM THERE
authority whatever to change their plan .1 ny way.
Those who know they have filed their option not made out
as above, will call and get them for correction, or they will
not be submitted.
BERT R. QREER