Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, September 28, 1922, Page 2, Image 2

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    AAHLAND DAILY TADINGS
CAGlfc TWO
Ashland
Tidings
SAYS CHRIST SAVED HIM
HOTEL PERSONAL
MAY IDENTIFY
BROTHER-IN-LAW
Established 1876
Published Every Evening Except
Sunday
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
OFFICIAL CITY AND COUNTY
PAPER
TELEPHONE 39
C. K. LOGAN, E ditor
zBY&BERT-M
A hotel personal in a P o rtla n d pa­
per may be responsible for th e un lt-
<•'
S m art m en are slow about <$> ing of fam ily ties severed several
♦ giving advice.
<$> >ears ago.
«wbscriptioB Price D elivered in City: {
Mrs. L. B. M inard, of th is city.
One n& nth ....................................$ -65
People you do th e m ost for <♦> noticed the item tellin g of the ar-
Three m o n t h s ............................... 1-95
Will eventually “ do” you.
<£ rival of Mr. and Mrs. F red M inard.
31x months .................................... 3.75
One year ...................................... «-59 <e>
----------
of M arshfield, a t a P o rtla n d hotel
Mail and R ural R outes
♦
No one hears th e word <$> F red M inard, it is the belief of Mrs
One m onth ....................................$ 65
‘ d am n ” so often as the tele- <?> M inard, is th e b ro th e r of h e r hus-
T hree m onths ............................... 1 9 5
phone girl.
band, now deceased, and from whom
Six months .................................... 3.50
One year ...................................... 6.5« ♦
----------
she has had no word for a g rea t
I
ADVERTISING RA TE8
♦
Some men acquire fam e by
m any years.
D isplay A d vertisin g
❖ everlastingly discovering th in g s
Several y ears ago F red M inard
tin g le Insertion, each in c h ............ 30c
•
th
a
t
a
re
not
so.
left
for Mexico, la te r re tu rn in g to
YEARLY CONTRACTS
D isplay A d vertisin g
New Mexico, w here all traces of him
One tim e a w «»k................................27 %c
•t>
W hen you
d istrib u te your ^ vanished. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Min-
Two tim es a w ^ k ............................... 25 c <?> confidence around too freely, <s> ard la te r mOved to Canada, return-
XJvery o th er d a y .................................. 20 c
you not only weaken it, h u t <S>, ¡n g t0 t jje U nited S tates a few years
Iiocul Readers
“^ . ago. All a tte m p ts
to locate the
Bach line, each tim e ..................... 10c <S> lose it, too.
To ru n every o th er «Jay for one
* b ro th e r m et w ith failu re , as when
m onth , each line, each tim e . . 7c <S> Too m uch perfum e on a girl •• jje ciosed o u t his business a ffa irs he
To run- every issue fo r one m onth
leads to the suspicion th a t she <3>,left no fo rw ard in g address. Though
m ore, each line, each t i m e . . 5c
is giving absent tre a tm e n t to
having no reasons, Mrs. M inard has
C lassified Colum n
<$>
<?> the bath-tub.
One cent th e w ord each tim e.
believed her brother-in-law dead,
To ru n every issue for one m onth <S>
----------
th in k in g it probable th a t he had en­
jt m ore, % c the w ord each tim e.
<$> HEZ HECK SAYS:
<8> listed d u rin g th e w orld w ar.
L«egal Rate
<$>
<?>
“ No one succeeded yit
She has w ritte n to F red M inard
F irst tim e, per 8-pclnt lin e ..........10c
<
$
•
in
goin’
clear
th
ro
u
g
h
life
♦
Each subsequent tim e, per 8-
a t M arshfield, hoping to establish
polnt line ...................................... 5c <♦> h ittin ’ on h ig h .”
; his iden tity , and tellin g him of the
Card of t h a n k s .............................. $1.00
death of his b ro th e r.
O bituaries, the l i n e ......................2 ’/fee
Fra-xsrnal Orders and Societies
A dvertising for fra te rn a l orders honest. They give the firs t prize to j
o r societies ch arg in g a re g u la r in iti­ Jack so n county, and not M edford
ation fee an d dues, no discount. R e
llgious and benevolent o rd ers will be
“ Coffee W eak in T u rk e y ” h erald s;
charged th e re g u la r ra te for all ad a m ark et rep o rt. Those poor m or­
v ertising w hen an adm ission or other
tals who a re forced to look to re s­
charge is m ade.
ta u ra n ts for sustenance, know it is
U'hut C on stitu tes A d vertisin g
not necessary to trav el th a t fa r to
In o rd er to allay a m isu n d e rsta n d ­
SALEM, Or., Sept. 28.— Y esterday
ing am ong som e as to w hat consti­ find the beverage in a sim ilar con­ was Salem ’s day a t th e a n n u al sta te
tu tes news and w hat ad v ertisin g , dition.
fair, and th e cap ital city m ade the
we p rin t th is very sim ple rule, which
is u sed by new spapers to d iffe re n ti­
It appears th a t th e E uropean sit- m osf of it in spite of the ra in , w ith
ate betw een th em : “ ALL fu tu re uation is som ew hat of a d u p licate of o,lly an occasional glim pse of sun-
events, w here an adm ission charge
is m ade or a collection is tak en IS T hanksgiving, when th e T urk gets shine giving prom ise of m ore favor-
able w eath er for th e rem ain d er of
ADVERTISING.”
T his applies to into Greece.
the week.
îrganizations and societies of every
kind as well as to individuals.
Business houses and professional
AH rep o rts of such activities a fter CARELESS H IN T E R IS FIX ED
offices generally th ro u g h o u t th e city
they have occurred is news.
AND COMMITTED TO JAIL cjosed a j noon in ord er th a t none
All com ing social or organization
should be denied an o p p ortunity of
m eetings of societies where no
KLAMATH FALLS, Sept. 28.
( view ing the g re a te st collection of
money co n trib u tio n is solicited, in iti­
ation charged, or collecton tak en IS fine of $500 and four m onths in jail a g ric u ltu ra l and livestock exhibits
NEWS.
was th e penalty im posed in th e jus-1 ever assem bled a t a sta te fa ir west
tice court on J. H arry Hesse, 20,! of
M ississippi river.
Many of
FIRE PREVENTION
charged w ith h u n tin g a fte r sundow n. Uie st a te em ployes also took a naif
Many s ta rtlin g facts a re given by
Hesse shot and killed his com panion, jjOiid ay off to do the fair.
G overnor Olcott in his official pro
Em erson f is h , n ear the K esterson
Jackson county carried off first
clam ation d esignating the period L um ber com pany camp in the licin - Donora jn th e statew ide com petition
from O ctober 7 to 14 as F ire P r e ­ ity of D orris, Sunday n ig h t, in the ¡n t jj6 a g ric u ltu ra l pavilion a t th e
vention W eek.
A ccording to the d ark n ess m istaking him for a deer. s ta te fa ir th is year w ith a to ta , of
docum ent issued, th e n atio n al de­
F ish was 4 8 paces d ista n t when
points out of a possible 1100
stru c tio n of l :fe and property has Hesse fired the fatal shot, according pOjntg( according to announcem ent
been m ounting year by year, until io M arion Barnes, deputy gam e
j u d ges Tuesday night.
th e enorm ous sum of $485,000,000 w arden.
Jackson co u n ty ’s high score was
is lost annually. In addition to the
At the c o ro n e rs inquest, the ver- m ade on a com bination of the excel
destru ctio n of 48 lives
daily,
tm s is
i i
v n r r M t o i d ,Ct Was th a t Fi8h mGt 1163111
1)1 lence of her products w ith th e gen-
a wiping ou^ Of
re8° "
„ t m eans of a gunshot w ound.” and e ra , rep re sen ta tiv e c h a ra c te r of the
the extent of $1,370.000 e \e i. 2 (h a t Hesse was “ guilty of negli- exjjjb jtg
h o u rs.
.
i rin v i enC6'
W h eth er o th er charges will
p o i^ county was aw arded second
Losses from fire m Oregon d u r g be Prefe rre d a Sain st Hesse was not place, w ith a score of 984. Tllla-
the f ve > f *ar in i ’lot 6 , 1 »
m ade public.
mook county th ird , w ith a score of
1920 totaled $10.395 28b. 111 add
Hesse pled guilty to the charge of 96?> and Benton fourth) w ith 943
tlon to these figures th ere h a\ oc night shooting and said he w ould
___________________
cu rred a s ta rtlin g n um ber o fire 1- no4 re ta in an atto rn ey .
th ro u g h o u t the s ta te th is p a s t s e a - ■
____________________
j O ur m odern equipm ent enables ua
Several tow ns have suffered!
son.
W anted, wom en to w ork in fru it to clean and dye any article. Ash-
from d ev astatin g co nflagrations. As- a t T a je n t cannery. F o r p a rtic u la rs ,' land C leaning an d Dyeing W orks,
to ria, a sh o rt tim e ago, was the pho„ e 364-J1.
ltf
Phone 63.
22tf
scene of a blaze th a t destroyed a I -------—— ----- .
■ • ------------------- .
. j --------------- ;------------------
. . . -
»
saw m ill at an estim ated loss of one
m illion of dollars.
In o rd er th a t fu tu re occurances
such as these may not be visited up­
on the sta te , and in accordance to ai
natio n al policy, the governor has j
E n tered a t th e , A shland, Oregon
Postoffice as Second-class Mail Ma;
ter.
Of
HSPPY COUlbinStiOn
Of Displays Gives
Award To Jackson
issued the follow ing:
“ I. Ben W. O lcott, governor of th e I
s ta te of Oregon, by th e a u th o rity in i
me vested, do designate and p ro -|
claim th e p er'od from O ctober 7 to
14 1922, as E ire P rev en tio n W eek,
and I earn estly req u est th a t th e pro­
per city d ep artm en ts, co-operatron
w ith cham bers of com m erce andj
o th er civic o rganizations, shall a r-|
ran g e in te restin g and ed u catio n al;
exercises, th a t will im press th e im ­
p o rtance of th e occasion upon th ej
public m ind. I hope th a t every resi-j
dent of the s ta te will actively t a k e !
p a rt in the observance and th a t th e y ,
will rem ove rubbish and litte r and
o th er h azard s ab o u t th e ir hom es and ,
places of business; th a t they will]
in a u g u ra te th e personal h a b it of
carefulness. I ask th a t o u r c h u rc h e s 1
by m eans of serm ons and a d d re s s e s.’
and th e new spapers, by ed ito rial
m ention, shall help to spread th e
doctrine of carefu ln ess; th a t ourj
schools sh a ll adopt system atic i n - 1
stru c tio n in fire prevention to the!
end th a t our s ta te m ay be m ade a
safer nad b e tte r place in w hich to i
live.
“ Only by aro u sin g th e public to
the appalling situ a tio n created by
ou r excessive fire w aste can the evil
be co rrected .”
M edford alm ost has th e question j
of th e county fair settled at l a s t .:
Alm ost. W hile in P o rtla n d . S. S
S m ith, new spaper m an of M edford,
s ta te s th a t “The M edford and south- 1
e rn Oregon fair, recently held, was \
so good th a t only th e sta te fa ir will ,
have a chance to su rp ass It.” The
s ta te fair people a re a little m ore
Public appreciation of tne very
unusual value of the good Max­
well has crystallized into a con­
stantly growing demand. In all
sections its reliable performance
has solidified the confidence first
won by its pronounced beauty.
Sedan • - - 31335
Touring Car -
885
Coupe - - - 31235
Roadster • -
885
Price* f o. k D etroit. Revenue to* to be atU e4
A. W. WALKER AUTO COMPANY
Phone 18—Medford, Ore.
Qfte Good
MAXWELL
L ' “
Thursday, Septonber 28, 1922
CRESCENT CITY HIGHW AY
A
W ORK TO START SOON
Slightly over 18 m iles of t i e
G rants Pass-C rescent City highw ay
will be put u n d er co nstruction th is
’ fall, bids having been asked for 12.8
! m iles betw een P a tric k creek and Ad-
;am s statio n , and 5.4 m iles betw een
l W aldo and th e s ta te line.
! The bids will be opened in P o rt- i
land O ctober 10 a t 10 o’clock, and
it is expected th a t th e successful
bidder will be on th e job w ithin a
week or ten days.
V E R Y good suit
“Tailored to Meas­
ure by B o m ” will cost
you no more than the
price asked for clothes
of doubtful merit.
The values we are
offering at $30 and
$35 are especially at*
tra ctive — yo u h ave
never b o u g h t better
clothes for the money
— dependable all wool
cloths in new patterns,
tailored p recisely as
you order.
DOUBLE THE BEAUTY and
LUSTRE OF YOUR HAIR
You can do It ea iily ! Use SEPOL—the
marvelous Sheep Dip Tonic Shampoo—it
encourages the growth, of heavy, luxuriant,
glossy hair—frees the scalp from dandruff
—Delightful to use— leaves a dainty frag­
rance.
For exoessive oil, lifeless hair,
dandruff, falling hair and itching scalp—
it has no equal!
At all good drug stores—
Adv.
Dr. Suinuel G. Benson, who Is now
at the Y. M. C. A. In Brussels for the
purpose of holding a votive healing
mission, and Is organizing a world
movement for the healing of sickness |
by prayer. He Is the author of a war
book entitled “Back From Hell,’’ the
result of his experiences as n relief
worker In Belgium. Having resigned
his parish in the United States, Doc­
tor Benson went to Belgium as a relief
worker in 1915. He was seized by the
Germans because of his assistance to
Belgian refugees. On E aster Wed­
nesday, 1915, at 11:15 a. m., he was
to be ahot in the Place Royale as a
spy; but as the German officer was
starting to blindfold his eyes. Christ—
Doctor Benson says—suddenly stood
between them, miraculously saving his
life. He was expelled from the coun­
try by the Germans before sundown.
M oney back if you
are not entirely satis*
fied w ith the com ­
pleted garments.
W. A. SHELL
BARBER
Safety blades resharpened
like new. Single bit, 30c
doz. Dobule bit, 60c doz
P A U L S E R U D ’S
Ohlldreo’e Work A
Specialty
JACK HOLT AT THE VINING
Born in F a rq u h a r county, V ir­
ginia, the son of an Episcopal rector.
His m o th er was a g rea t g reat g ran d ­
d a u g h te r of Jo h n M arshall, first
chief ju stice of the U nited States.
Studied in a m ilitary academ y, then
traveled extensively.
E n tered mo­
tion pictu res in 1916, and has ap­
peared in num erous P a ram o u n t pro­
ductions. His recent s ta r successes
a re "T he Call of th e N o rth ” and
“ N orth of the Rio G ran d e,” in the
la tte r of which he co-starred w ith
Bebe D aniels.
“ The Man U ncon­
q u e ra b le ” is his second s ta rrin g pic­
tu re , which begins a th re e days run
a t th e V ining tom orrow .
Life Partners
'H E union of Nature, Science and the Farmer is a part­
nership for life.
In the golden sheaves of living wheat, and in the wav­
ing, shimmering fields of barley—Nature stores the vital
elements of human power and energy which Science con­
verts into Grape-Nuts—the famous body-building food.
Grape-Nuts with milk or cream is a complete food, which
contains all the nutrition (including the mineral elements)
required for making rich, red blood, and for building sturdy
body tissue, sound bone structure and strong, healthy
nerve cells.
The 20-hour baking process makes Grape-Nuts easy to
digest and develops that delicious, sweet flavor and crisp­
ness that has made this food a favorite the world over.
Do Y o u F eel Tired
A fter E a tin g?
A tired, nervous feeling m ay be a
sign of poisons in your system which
prevent p roper digestion. Food tu rn s
in to m ore poison and gas, m aking
you nervous and weak. Simple buck­
tho rn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed
in A dlerika, expels poisons and gas
from BOTH upper and lower bowel.
Rem oves old m a tte r you never
th o u g h t was in your system , which
poisoned stom ach and m ade you
tired and nervous. A dlerika is EX ­
CELLENT to guard a g a in st ap p en ­
dicitis. T. K. Bolton, D ruggist. 3
<t
There? s a Reason’
for GrapeNuts
Sold by grocers everywhere!
Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
Changes in Business Policy
Many and far-reaching changes are
today taking place in the policies
upon which business is conducted.
Most of the policies that have been in
force for the past twenty-five years
were based on the cardinal fact of a
steadily rising market. Fluctuations
were accepted as incidental and tem
porary; but the assurance of a gen­
eral average tendency upward was
the basis of every attitude that be­
came formulated into a policy.
Recent changes in business policy
—changes coming about with the past
year or more—are based on the final
acceptance of the fact that we have
entered a period of a non-rising—in
all liklihood a falling—market. So
long as it was possible to assume that
the new price levels represented but
a temporary depression the old poli­
cies were bravely and tenaciously
adhered to; but when it became clear
that in all human probability the
market would continue downward,
then an adjustment of basic policies
became imperative.
Chief among the policies that have
necessarily been changed are those
that relate to the creation of Demand.
Under the old policies, a certain
Demand was inevitable, and came to
be accepted as a matter of course. I t
was the cardinal policy of almost
every producer and distributor to at­
tempt to capture a generous share of
the existing Demand. Not a great
deal of thought was given to creating
Demand itself.
But now that the great Demand
has relaxed until there is not enough
to give everybody a liberal share, it
has brought business to the impera­
tive consideration of two things: One
is how to get a full share of the De­
mand hv taking it away from others
by force of competition The other is
to create more Demand, so there
will be enough for all.
The great and imperative necessity
of stimulating and creating Demand
for the products of industry has at
last given Advertising a position of
importance in business policies far in
•excess of anv that it has ever known.