ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS PAGE POUR COOS COUNTY F IR S T TO GET ; SOLDIERS FIGHT F IR E R O CK EFELLER IN ST IT U T E ' ’ AT ANGEL ISLAND CAMPj The Sweater'Girl Local and Personal W eek-E nd T r i p - Jack Brady made a flying trip home from Corvallis for the week- ■ end, returning to O. A. C., to resume his studies during the summer school. \ CRATER AND DIAMOND LAK ES. „.N eal Shinn, who recently gradu­ ated from the Northwest Dental col­ lege, is here visiting with his par­ ents for a few days. ------------------------------ J- Americas Youngest Woman Explorer Returns Charles L. Monroe, of Seattle,' left this morning for Los Angeles, after a five weeks’ course of mi'k diet at the Convalescent Home. He feels he has completely regained his health as well as adding 20 pounds to his weight. Occupy N ew H ouse— Mrs. Luman and daughters, recent ’ arrivals in Ashland from the east, | are now located in one of Ed But- > ler’s properties, which has just been finished. Mathilde McCormick, "the girl with a hundred sweaters”—at least that’s what one young miss called her when she saw this latest photo of John D’s niece who is soon to wed Max Oser, Swiss riding master. Miss McCormick, who; is much given to outdoor life, has appeared in sweaters in all of her recent pic­ tures. The Misses Myra and Beatrice Gunter, of Grants Pass, former Ash- Leave for Home land girls, are spending a few days Mr. and Mrs. Otis J. Elliott and son, Mr. Elliott’s sister, Mrs. Henry in Ashland visiting with friends. Went, left for their home at Baker, V isitors from Y reka— Or., today after spending several Among Ashland visitors yesterday days here visiting with Mrs. Elliott’s frojn Yreka, one party consisted of father, Mr. Sam Cavin, at his home, the Misses Edna and Alice Cheesbro. 726 Iowa street. Agnes Mulley, Grit Howard, Cecil Rouse and Percy Grisez with Percy Visiting Daughter— as chauffeur. And another party ; Mrs. J. M. Walker, of Los Angeles, made up of L. A. Pedersen and wife arrived in Ashland Saturday to spend and daughter Ingrid, Miss Velma a few weeks visiting with her daugh­ Hipes and J. B. Hibbard were also ter, Mrs. Bud Storm. here. All returned the same evening. H otel A shland G uests— The following parties are late ar­ rivals at the Hotel Ashland. Mr. and Mrs. I. Abraham, Roseburg; Robert Willner, J. D. Abrams, Har­ th e s p r u c e a n d s te e l old Karo, Mrs. M. K. Myers, Mrs. W. Keerner, W. A. Leith, Portland; H. D. Casey, Santa Monica, Calif.; Strongest, Lightest Ladders Made Mr. and Mrs. B. R. Meamber, Fort Shop W ork a Specialty Jones, Calif.; Mrs. R. Nesbit, Miss E . CLIP PAYNE Dell Snow, William Kornie, Thomp­ son, Nev.; Misses Murray and Lam­ bert, San Bernardino, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs." C. A. McAring, Tacoma, regon Wash.; H. D. Hayden, Miss I. Dlsh- ner, Oakland, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Patch, Mrs. George F. Hoag and c h ild re n B o ris »Oman,, Kenneth i?Trk, Mr. and Mrs, M. H. Cook, Mir. and Mrs. A. O. Nameson, \M r. and Mrs. P. J. Tylpr, Mr. and Mrs. Haug- land, M r.‘ and Mrs. C. North, San Fraqcfsccjj Harold V. Wygant, Sa­ lem, O r . M . Danan, Medford; Th. UNIVERSITY OREGON F. W„.Bushrfian, San Diego, Calif.; co^lpin«: C. G. Bemi^T Fresno, Calif.; Robert The college of Literature, Science C. Smith, Seattle; Mrs. C. W. Pel­ and the Art» with 22 department«. ham. Mrs L. E. Hall, J. W. Heare, . Cour d’Alene, Ida., and Mr. Stltson, The profeasional schools of Archi­ Kenf, Wash- tecture— Business Administration— Step Ladder Foracatalogua or an y inform ation Write T h t Registrar, U niO ariity o f Or*$on, Eugene, Oregon. THE T O t i ' R Brazil, o n ^ o f the world’s richest i countries in bftPding timber, has va- riet es which form structures more than a c e n tu ^ old, while others withstand action of water 50 years or more. 1 ------ XU_________ mt Hood River liark ets 100 carloads strawberries lb LAST DAY Over the Border — w ith— BETTY COMPSON —and— TOM MOORE A story of the Canadian Border Country, and an issue o . today, that is thrillingly real. See the moon shine on the wonderful re­ freshing snow and drink in the experiences of men in a blizzard. “ TRY, TRY AGAIN” —and— PATHE REVIEW A v a s t spectacle. Youve never seen anything' like it before. N O T IC E WATER USERS Do not have leaky faucets, toilets or fixtures on your preEii/es. (Have them repaired as soon as possible.) Do not allow water to run off your property into the streets^ gutters o r’alleys. Do w t run water at night between the hours of 10 P. M. and 5 A. M. Do not use open hose or open faucet where you are paying for 10,000 or 20,000 sq. ft. Use either spray nozzle or hose -* with -w nozzle not more than. 1-4 inch in diameter. Water must be turned off immediately upon the sounding of the fire alarm. Water users are cautioned as to the regulations against leaky faucets or fixtures of any kind and usless waste of water, as water leaking into the sewers is waste and does no one any good. Violations of the water ordinance, $1 to $20. WATER DEPARTMENT . E. R. Hosier, Supt. Tomorrow — Wednesday Thursday EVEKITHING TREE INTERESTING EDUCATIONAL hyf* .Jfcs ENTERTAINING FREE Demonrlralionr L ectu res. M ovies' RADIO C o n c e rts ■ ‘Foolish Wives’ Nail in Spine Twenty-One Year«. I L *-« •• m e- A nail was removed from a Cape Breton man at a Toronto hospital, that had been Imbedded in his spine for 21 years. It was necessary to re­ move three pieces of vertebrae to get the nail, rt is said that the patient who was hurt in a railway accident, is well on the way to recovery. AND S o n g P ic k e r WS Gertrude Emerson, Noted Editor, Visits Buried Cities in Asia r "Miss Marco Polo”—the title earned in the Orient by adventurous Gertrude Emerson, associate edito? of “Asia,” for her ind< fatigable ex­ plorations—is safe on American soil again, to the it finite relief of her friends. ' * For this intrepid small person, who is just five feet tall and only weighs ninety-six pounds, went all around the World during the last two. years, absolutely alone, on a still hunt for picture and story material for her magazine. N ew Y ork C ity .—Philip Korn- heiser, the prophet of Tin Pan Alley, whose job is to anticipate what the great American public wants in song and dance music. Mr. Kornheiser predicts for the spring styles a return to the tunes of the sunny soutli anti declares that songc like Georgia” and "Virginia Blues” having a certain languid quality, will appeal to summer dancers j WANTED— Reliable Wwogtan to do ; general housework, wedges $65.;’ Call at 16 Geneva avenue. Med-; ford, or phone Mrs. TtfuPtMfiKee, I ' ______________________________. Medford 471. .262-3, ! WANTED— Man with car to sell best j low priced cord tires made. $100; per week and expenses. Wolfe T ire ' Co.,' 3674 Canal, Benton Harbor, j Mich. 262-1* People Courteous Everywhere Wherever she went, people were solicitous for her safety, but she waved warnings aside and. blithely kept on with her exploring. She hunted tigers in Indo-China, and crocodiles in Ifedia; she traveled by elephant, camel, sampan, horse­ back, motor, aeroplane and ocean liner over so many thousands of miles that she lost count of them herself. She visit», d Angkor, a buried city of Cambodia, rediscovered by the French in 1910, where only one hundred persons had ever been since. She explored the famous bat caves of the Philippines and took dangerous motor trips across Indian country that was infested with fanatical insurgents. She was the only passenger on a cargo boat, going from Port Said to Constanti­ nople, which two months before had b e h e l d up by the Turks with re­ sultant large death rate. £ ‘‘But I wasn't scared,” she offers casually. “An Anjprican woman can go anywheft and she’^ doing it, too, if not in person ^ t least by way of pencil or pen. - FOR SALE— 40 acres wood land, cheap. Three miles from city. See owner, 896 Boulevard. 262-18* American Music Heard ’Round The World . “For instance, there was the zippy little waltz Three O’clock in the Morning* to which I danced Amer­ ican dances in Yokohoma, Paris, Bangkok and London. Dorothy Terris, an American girl, wrote the words to that, and now it’s an inter­ national tune, played not only by foreign dance orchestras, but by the natives themselves on their own pe­ culiar instruments. ‘The ship’s orchestra flayed it on my way over from London and when I got home, a phonograph in a near-by apartment greeted me with the familiar FOUND— A tatting outfit. Owner can .have.same by identifying and Paying for ad. 290 North Main. 262-1* “ ’It’s three o’clock in the morning, We’ve danced the whole night . through. And daylight will soon be dawn­ FOR SALE— Buick model C-25, in first class condition, cheap. See W. F. Darby, 290 North Main. 262-2* Just one more waltz with you.* “It was hard for me to realize that I was really at home again." FOR SALE— Apricots, at Frederick • Crossing, 8 to 12 cents per pound, or leave orders at Eagle Meat Market. Dykstra. 262 S* •---------------- WOOD— 16 in. oak in tjyo tier loads at $4 per tier, and 16 in. ptnft, two or more tiers, at $3.50 per tier. Place orders early this week as car will be unloaded by next Fi t day. A. G. Adams. Phfjte 460. 262-nt-w ■W O W ‘ ASHLAND INDUSTRIAL 0 Hi WANTED—Cherries, Royal Annes, Bings and Lamberts, 8 cents per pound. Rogue River Valley Can­ ning Co., Medford. 262-6* By and With Friday and Saturday JULY 14TH & 15TH — TWO DAYS — . t A m e r ic a ’s P r e m ie r TOO LATEJTO CLA3SIFY atAiOTUl — Also—■ An odd custom which brought the key and the Bible together was one that used to prevail in England up to within the latter quarter of the last century. It was called "Key and Bible,” and was used for the detec­ tion of thieves. A gey was placed over an open Bible at the words, “Whither thou goest, I will go" (Ruth 1:16) and the fingers of the person being held, so as to form a cross, the text was repeated. The names of suspected persons were then pro­ nounced in succession, and when the name of the thief was uttered, the key was supposed to jump and dance about. An instance of this method of thief-finding was brought before the magistrates at the borough petty ses­ sions at Ludlow as late as January, 1879. UwvQtsm «O The 47th Year Opens October 2,1922 \s Peculiar Old English Belief. R eturn H om e— Mr. and Mrs. Robert Goodyear, j who hav© been spending the past two weeks visiting friends and rela­ tives in Ashland, returned to their home in Berkeley, Calif., Saturday ! evening. BORAH WOULD GIV E SETTLERS 40 YEARS TO PAY FOR LAND WASHINGTON, July 10. — Set-* tiers on irrigation and reclamation . projects in the western states may have 40 years to make their pay­ ments to the government, under the terms of a bill introduced in the senate today by Senator Borah. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Storm, Mr. and ' Eugene_ L o ra n e road.being grad- Mrs. Winnie Crowson and Mrs. Myr- ' d and macadamized. tie Boslough, all of Ashland, accom- La Pine_ Crane Pralrie dam work panied Mr. and Mrs. Will Storm and LQ be rushed Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lee, of San Di- j I - I ( ego, on a trip to Crater Lake, Diam«- ond Lake and Butte Falls last week leaving Ashland Wednesday ana re­ turning Saturday about noon. They report a delightful trip and a fine time. The road to Crater Lake is fine, they say, while the road to Diamond lake is only fair. Dr. Fred J. Braendle, botanist of Washington, examining a 15-pound Mr. and Mrs. Will Storm and Mr eti’ble mushroom which lie found in Rock ( ’reek park. It is said to he the an^ Mrs. Fred Lee left today for largest mushroom ever discovered and is given the botanical name p dyporus their homes, intending to stop en­ glganteus. route in the Yosemite valley for a few days. V isitin g w ith P arents— Education—Graduate Study -Law— Medicine— Music—Physical Educa­ tion—Sociology. Larffest Mushroom Ever Discovered MARSHFIELD, Or., July 10.- SAN FRANCISCO, July 10.— Sev-,' The Coos county court has accepted the offer of the Rockefeller founda eral hundred United States soldiers tion, made by Dr. C. W. Covington, (lighting the flames with wet sacks, of $5500 yearly, as an aid to the ex- Prev®nted 6he destruction (by fire penditure of $10,000 annually in es- ^a3t Qisht of the military encamp- tablishlng a high class health service menf &nd government buildings on in Coos county, continuous from one Angel Island in San Francisco bay. The blaze, of undetermined origin, year’s end to another. : started in the high grass on Mount i Ida, and was visible for miles. ASH LAND PEO PLE VISIT Mrs. A. M. Puttick of Medford.' Is a gue3t at the Convaesccnt Home, j Y leitiug Friends— Monday, July 10. 1022 ing. P O WEIL, FA R MING E X P O S IT IO N VON STROHEIM The man you will love to hate, in a picture you are waiting to see. The world's costliest pro­ duction. it played for weeks in the cities to immense crowds at greatly advanced prices and satis­ fied everywhere. B u s in e s s C o u pe FOR B U S IN E S S MEN This car represents a new and important achievement in commercial transportation. For the first time in motor car history, business men are enabled to buy a closed car, the body of which is built throughout of steel. The advantages of this all-steel construction_reserv­ ed until now to open cars—are particularly marked in a coupe built to weather the wear and tear of hard commercial usage. Immediately you will be impressed with the beauty and lightness of this coupe. Time will convince you of its unusual stamina. The doors snap neatly shut. Body squeaks are elim inated. Dodge B rothers enamel is baked on the surface of the steel—a per­ manent lustrous finish, impervious to wear. The interior is roomy and thoughtfully equipped with every appointment necessary to the ow ner’s comfort and all-weather protection. Business houses th a t equip th e ir salesm en with motor cars have been quick to recognize in this coupe a very unusual investment. < ~ W - S GEO. L. TREICHLER MOTOR CO. 16-18 S. Front St. Medford, Oregon iPhone 304 'v *.