p iö i r r v i A shland daily tídinos LOCAL AND PERSONAL C hanges K om iini; House— B ert B a rn e tt, b e tte r k n o w n a b o u t to w n as “ S h o rty ,” h a s c h a n g ed h is ro o m in g h o u se fro m L incoln s tr e e t to th e V endom e h o tel. O a tm e a l C ookie»— No b e tte - m ade. E v e ry th in g fo r picnic lu n ch es. D ainty a n d to o th ­ som e. H om e B ak ery , 69 N. M ain. 242-2 M rs. A lice F in n e ll, of L y n d en , W h atco m c o u n ty , W ash ., w ould lik e to c o rre sp o n d w ith p erso n o r p e r ­ sons re la tiv e to co n d itio n s, c lim a te a n d th e g e n e ra l a d v is a b ility o f a w idow a n d d a u g h te r m a k in g th e ir ho m e in A sh lan d , O regon. 241-4* Picnk-kers from M edford— Dr. a n d M rs. E m m o n s a n d a p a rty of M edford people sp e n t y e ste rd a y ev e n in g p ic n ic k in g in th e p a rk . J u s t th e la rg e s t a n d hfest m ilk sh a k e , a t th e C andy C u p b o ard . 2 4 1 tf P o rtla n d — May b u ild in g perm tits $3 ,2 0 6 ,1 1 0 , do u b le May, 1921. G et »LEED O M ’S F o rd Day p rices on MASON CORDS. T h e y ’ll knock you stiff. A t L e e d o m ’s T ire H os­ p ita l. 2 4 1 tf Spends Day F ishing— C. C. D arlin g sp e n t y e ste rd a y on N eil cre e k e n jo y in g h im se lf w ith hook an d line. Special th is w eek a t E n d e rs C on­ fec tio n e ry , fre sh m a rsh m a llo w s, 46 c e n ts a pound. 242-3 * D on’t fail to ask fo r F o rd coupons fro m D etrick . H e sells fo r less. r Ja c k F u lto n , who is p ro m isin g th e EUGENE, June 15. — W a lte r fans of E u g en e a real W restling show B arn es m id d lew e ig h t w re s tle r from w ith “ real w re s tle rs .” N e b ra sk a , a,, rived in tow n to d ay , _____ __________ - a n d is a lre a d y in tra in in g fo r his A sto ria — O il-bearing Sa n d 8 s tru c k m atc h w ith R a lp h - H an d . C o tta g e in well n e a r here. By G E O R G E E. R O B E R T S U'rom the M onthly Bulletin for June Issued by The. i.'atLor.al City Bank of licv7 V c:’..) T he general business situation has Continued tavorable from m onth to m onth until confidence is now well established th q | the w orst of the in- ev^ b eJ ’° ! ti ^ 5 _ ^ / 5 A s,° n ° \ en The m ost potent factor in the re- vival has been the exhaustion of stocks, the w earing out of things in nse, bringing consum ers to the ne- cessity of . . com . ing into the * m arkets j f to supply their own w ants and of selling w hat they m ight have to pro- vide the m eans ot purchase. T h e pressure of reciprocal w ants gradu- ally brings all branches of ind u stry to the readjustm ents th at have to be made. In the case of foodstuffs and the leading raw m aterials of industry there are no large supplies being . carried over, unless we except corn, which does not enter readily into consum ption until it has been con- verted into m eat T he g ram s chief- ly used for bread are closely used up. the w orld depending upon full crops each year. In the chief m ate- rials of clothing, wool and cotton the carry-over tlip r .ir r v - n v e r w which h ic h has h a s e existed x is te d since the w ar has been reduced in an im portant degree during the past year. These conditions give an as- surance of stability in the principal agricultural staple» which has n o t been felt since the Fall of 1920. P rosperity is the fruit of a state of ordered, balanced and reciprocal industry, in which everybody works at rendering some service to others and gets his pay in (he services which they render to him. A lthough an appalling ignorance of m utual in- terests is constantly displayed, nevertheless people are bound to strive unceasingly to im prove their relations w ith each other. T h e state of ease that has devel- oped in the m oney m arket, as evi- denced by the liquidation of the Federal Reserve banks, the ready absorption of investm ent securities, and the rise of the bond and stock m arkets, is a condition favorable to business expansion. It does not fol- low, however, because a substantial revival from the extrem e state of com plished, either in our interna- striking llhistration of the weak:. .» tional or our dom estic relations, depression has taken place, that v - T he c C u tto o k . shall have uninterrupted or ra^.d T he o u tjook fo r tbe rrops ¡s ex_ recovery to full activity in all lines. cellent. T he season was backw ard A readjustm ent of industrial rela- on account of wet w eath er; but the tions is under way an • has produced c are grow ing in the ground jn the im provem ent in sight, but com od sh and w hh am ple mois- P ’ete readjustm ent has not been se­ tu re to fve h fi p , ol the highly organize. organized m odern :n- w arm w eather comes. T he single dustrial system , in which produ. i exceptjon is the Co tto n crop, which ,s carried on by groups of p> . had a start and ¡g t^ reatPned exchanging products and ser b the bo„ A pprehension is It is an effective system wh- fe,t of a short ‘ *d h { are w orking harm oniously. U.v re flects it x benefited bv it. but the -y-te.n T he improvement is not confined to dependent upon good faith, this count Foreign trade is better, p a l i n g and a broad view of m utual The South American countries w hifh interests. T he work of the coal duce y m atefials and food. m iner or railroad em ployee is no £ ff are findi b , m o re e s s e n tia lto th e w e lta re o fs o - w ork; off * ,„ s stork$ o ciety than the w ork of the farm er m ercha* dise w hich bave enibar_ .o r the w orker in m any other ¡nous- rassed |h beginni t b tries, but the opportunity to c o n ­ again substantial *aRlou*ts. Coili bme >s more tavorable. and the ditions in Asia are iraprovillg T h e chances ot success for a conibwn- forej excha stkro n g er, t.on are better which m eans # n(or& favQrab,e 1 he action of the m iners and r.ii!- ditjon f f j b j , j road em ployees in form ing an al- . ket . b jr hance m ust be accepted as leaning ’ a purpose to exercise their control R ailroad R ates and the L abor over the m ines and the railw ays, Situation. and is a th re a t of a rb itra ry pow er, T he In te rsta te Com m erce Coni- inonnsistent with the mutual cbi:- mission has ordered a ten per cent, gations upon which societv re»,« reduction in freight rates and th e This, of course, is not saving th?x Railroad Labor Board has ordered th e m iners and railroad m en : r? a reduction of w ages for one class exceptionally bad lot; we know of railroad em ployees at about the are not; as individuals th e . w evi t same rate. O th er wage reductions he as kind, considerate and help1»'• are expected to follow. These o r-, as the average of o th er people, ders go well together and are in bar- as with m ost people, they have sueu mony w ith the general trend of t h e t a bias for the interests of the e r'i’ic. last year and a half. o r class that they do not see the i m - There are no signs of a settlement ialam ental rights that underiv of the coal strike which has run tw o -o th e rs and which m ust be re s p c i’e j m onths. P roduction of b itu m in o u si-f orderly society is to end’»» > from non-union m ines is now about W hen a relatively small \.r< ». one-half the norm al requirem ents., claim s, by reason of its relatin’--, '•> T h e situation is becom ing critical in the industrial organization ♦’,« the case of anthracite as there is ¡rig h t to put the lives or w ells’ - little surplus mine capacity from the population in jeopardy it asp s which to make up the loss of p r o - 't o an exercise of pow er that in H«- duction. long run society will not tolexr e. W ith the coal m iners on a strike W hen rights and in terests come i. and the railroad em ployees voting conflict all parties are bound »«» upon one, the situation affords a have a voice in the settlem ents CHIC FOR THE LITTLE GIRL A lthough ta lle r th an au ordinary for horse, weighing m ore than half a ton, and adorned with w idespreadlng a n t­ lers, the bull moose sta lk s w ith ghost­ Bend h as ad d e d new c h a rc o a l ly silence through the. thickest forests, ' w here mau can scarcely move w ithout ' p la n t. being betrayed by th e loud crackling of dry twigs. T ry th e w et w ash a n d ro u g h dry. In sum m er the moose loves low-lying, 76 A lida. P h o n e 180. swam py forests, in te rsp re ad w ith shal­ low lakes and sluggish stream s. In C oquille— S o u th e rn P adific com ­ such places it often w ades up to its neck in a lake to feed on succulent : pany to reb u ild p re se n t depot w ater plants, and when reaching to P h o n e 2 7 4 -J fo r Yeo. 2 1 6 tf the bottom becomes entirely sub- . m erged. These visits to th e w a te r a re ■ som etim es by day, but usually by night, ! New M essenger Boy— , it • , , ’ especially during the season when the e e se rn m on h a s a g a in , c a iVes a re young and th e horns of the ch a n g ed m essen g er boys, h a v in g bulls a re but purtly grown, ta k e n on M arcus W oods in th e p lace i L ate in the autum n, with full-grown of Roy McCoy, who h as been h o ld in g antlers, the bulls w ander through the dow n th e job fo r th e p a st few fo rests looking fo r th e ir m ates, a t tim es u tterin g far-reaching cries? w eeks. and calls of defiance to th eir ri­ and occasionally clashing D raw th e lucky n u m b e r a t P a u l- vals, th eir horns against the saplings in s e ru d ’s a n d w in a new s u it of the exuberance of m asterful vigor, clo th es. 2 3 7 tf i O ther bulls a t tim es accept the — i challenge, and h asten to m eet the L a d ie s' h a ts a t g re a tly red u c e d rival for a b a ttle royal. At th is sea- prices. Mrs. R. P o tte r, 30 Second Son tbe ca,I th e cow moose also 242-1* brings the nearest bulls quickly to h er s tre e t. side. H u n ters tak e adv an tag e of this, and by im itating th e call through a S pecial a t E n d e rs C o n fectio n ery , I m p e r ia l’ m a r s h m â ïio w s ^ ïe V e n u a bHng * * m° 8t ** nperial m a rsh m a llo w s,. 46 c e n ts a ’ ° gresslve bulls down. pound. R e g u la r price 60 cen ts. 242-3 called SHIPS THAT FATTEN SAILORS Ia*aves for K ansas— O. F. C arson an d R A L P H HANDS TO W R E S T L E G rove flash, a t th e a rm o ry F rid a y W A L T E R BA R N ES IN EU G E N E n ig h t, J u n e 23, u n d e r th e p rom otion C u r r e n t B usiness C o n d itio n s N ew R oof on T elephone Office— A new ro o f is b e in g p u t on th e b u ild in g occupied by th e local tele- BULL JAOOSE MOVES QUIETLY p h o n e exchange, a n d th e e m p lo y e s ! ------------ hope, th a t w hen co m p leted , th e y m a y ' N atura Aida F o re ,t M<>n>rch *• Evade Enem ies— H un ters 8om etim ee p a in t up a g a in w ith o u t fe a r of it be- Take U nfair A dvantage^ in g ru in e d by th e firs t ra in . E u g e n e — Bids being new $70,000 h o sp ita l. Thursday, Juno 15, l6 ¿ á Products of India. The principal ag ric u ltu ra l product* □f India Include w heat, rice, oil seeds, cotton, ju te , sugar, tobacco and tea. In B ritish India (in 1919-1920), 255,- 000,000 acres had crops grow ing on them, about 31 per cent being rice cro p s; 9 per cent w h e a t; 38 per cent other pulse and food g ra in s ; 7 per cent cotton. Jute and o th er fibers, and 5 per cent oil seeds. J u te cultivation has been very profitable. T he m ineral products, besides m ica, rubles and jade, Include salt, th e production of which Is about 1,891,000 tons. In 1919 the o utput of coal in India w as 22,628,- !XM) tons, nine-tenths of It coming from Bengal, O rissa and B llia r; crude pe­ troleum (chiefly from B urm a), 306,000,- 000 g a llo n s; m anganese ore, about 538,000 to n s ; saltp eter, 18,000 to n s ; w olfram , 3.577 to n s; m onazite, 2,024 tons, and gold, which is nearly all from Mysore, about 507,000 ounces. King’*, C ar Now a Hack. The king of the B elgians’ autom o­ bile, In which King A lbert toured the- b a ttle fro n t during th e w ar, is now doing duty m s a m otor hack at» th e railw ay statio n In B altim ore, says the W ashington S tar. It h as u costly li­ m ousine body on a long wheelbase, and the Interior, from the velvet cov­ ering on the floor to th e dom e in th e roof, is finished in m ahogany and oak Inlaid. T he se ats a re fashioned m ore like costly fu rn itu re th an like th e usual autom obile seat, and a re cov­ ered w ith heavy gray whipcord m a­ terial. T he royal colors th a t once deco­ ra te d these coverings have been re­ S triking even for th e “ littleet girl** moved. 1« a frock of w hite organdie, worn w ith a large black m ilan h at w ith long E u g e n e — $16,000 tw o -sto ry a p a r t ­ •tream ere— a com bination th a t ia al­ m e n t h o u se to go up. w ays good. W allo w a— U nion h ig h school to R o se b u rg — O regon - C a lifo rn ia be e re c te d here. j P o w er co m pany to b u ild lin e th ro u g h Tw o B end sa w m ills s h ip p in g 800 D ixonvill*. c a rlo a d s pq r m o n th . —— --------- — 1 Miss E u g e n ia ! Mode¿ n. * 7 ^ . ° * * ®lamed for Added W eight T aken On C arson left last n ig h t fo r a trip to by th e Seamen. K a n sa s, w h e re th ey w ill v isit fo r som e tim e. W h ile in K a n sa s, M r. Shipping ex p erts continue to argue C arson will a tte n d th e in te r n a t io n a l , regarding th e advantages of oil fuel S u n d ay school co n vention w hich w ill over eoaI- At p resent th e question be held a t K a n sa s CUy. ,s “« ‘«pylog the a tte n tio n of m edical men. T ry o u r fre sh w ra p p e d k isses, a t T he adverse oil fuel upon ; E n d e rs ICnnjfectionerfr. 3J5 fcents, a 8UrfH