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About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1922)
Coal Prices A t Mines Now Only One-Half What They Were In 1920, A Non-Strike Year; Hoover Hopes To Better Miners' Condition LOCAL AND PERSONAL • Sisklyon Chapter No. 21 i R. A« M* __ M asonic H all, Ashland« Notice of Meeting. S tated convocation. T hursday ev ening, Novem ber 16. Im p o rta n t bu si ness. ’ Come. V. V. MILLS. H. I’. ; W. H. DAY, Secretary. Wednesday, November 15, 1022 ASHLAND DAILY THHHGS PAGB FOUB Suiting Place to Porter. Sir Richard Moon, (lie Eng'ish rail way magnate, is said to have been very precise in small m atters. It is told of him that when traveling up to town one daj by his ilne lie noticed that the [Muter at Ealing shouted “Healing" and the porter at Hammer smith “Animersmith," and that the first thing he did on reaching Ids of flee was to give instructions that the two men should change places forth with. I In S tock Duplicating Sales Books TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY Visitor from K ansas City— L. E. Poley, freig h t tra ffic agent for the N ashville C hattanooga and St. Louis railw ay, a t K ansas City, Mo., was a visitor in the city today. Mr. Poley stopped over in A shland to visit w ith th e W. M,. Poley fam ily and his a u n t, Mrs. L. F. R eeder, whom he has not seen for 25 years. He is delighted w ith A shland, and his relativ es here a re endeavoring to m ake his stay such a pleasant one th a t he will w ant to re tu rn for a n o th e r visit in the n ear fu tu re. LOST— Tuesday afternoon, beaded purse. F in d e r re tu rn to Tidings office. R ew ard. 63-2 GOOD SLAB WOOD delivered from car Thursday and Friday r.t $6.55 per cord. Adams. Phone 160. 64-1 W ITH CARBON FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE— Desir- ble touse :n N orth Bend, Dr., 6 room s and basem ent, close in, Sot 60x100 feet. Also ihoe ihop foing over $200 per m onth cash busi ness. I w ant sm all property or ucieage ;n or near Ashland. C. H. Jerom e, owner, N orth Bend, Or. Two Books .......................................... Per D o z e n ........................................................... , . • $1-25 Two Dozen ............................................................. $2 25 GARDEN PLOW ING— Or any heavy- team w ork. Phone 9-F-12 or in q u ire a t K eene's, first house east Norm al building. G3tf Dance Jackson H ot Springs S a tu r day night. E verybody’s going. 63-4 Id eal G rocery Changes H ands— C. W. Nims and J. P. H ollm eyer have purchased the stock in the Ideal grocery form erly owned by F red T. W ilson and W. G. C urry, and took th e ir places behind the counter th is m orning. The grocery will con tinue business along th e sam e lines and will hold th e sam e nam e as heretofore. Mr. H ollm eyer is a fo r m er Chicago m an, b u t has had con sid erab le experience in th e business before com ing to A shland, w hile Mr. Nim s needs no in tro d u ctio n in the city. Mr. D ougherty, w ho h as been connected w ith th e business w ith Mr. W ilson and Mr. C urry, still holds his in te re st in the place and will be seen ab o u t as usual. One H u n d r e d ...........................................................$8.00 FOR SALE— Dry lau re l wood, plenty big chunks for h e a te r. 12 inch tie r $4.50; also 12 inch body fir $3.75; 12 inch second grow th fir $3.25. Delivered. 1224 Iowa St. 63-2* Around th e lives of the men who toil underground to produce Am eri ca’s coat supply disputes have wag ed for years, and th e public hg.s paid the cost oi the argum ents. This year H erbert Hoover, Sec re ta ry ot Commerce, has headed conferences and voluntary cam paigns of various kinds which have held the -»rice ot coal at the mines to one-hal ot th at which it reached in 1920. r aen there was no strike. T rade groups, on Mr. Hoover’s ad vice bought heavily before the strike, piling up the largest reserve Good reliab le d e n tistry a t re a s o n -! able prices. Dr. H enry B. P u rl, B eaver Bldg. 44tf Leaving for Id ah o — Mr. and Mrs. F red Doan and fam School Budget Carries— ily a re leaving th is evening for Boise, At th e school election, which was Idaho. They expect to be gene from held Tuesday, 90 persons cast votes, A shland for tw o weeks. 71 of which w ere in favor of allow — ing th e am ount asked for, w hile 19 A ssociation P ack in g Apples— votes w ere cast a g ain st it. The vote The A shland F ru it and Produce stood 70 to 19 in favor of exceeding association is busily engaged packing th e lim it of 6 p er cent. apples, about 250 boxes being put on record, and have contented them selves w ith day-to-day supplies since the strike ended, giving the re newed production a chance to catch up w ith demand. O perators were organized in voluntary price restrain t agreem ents and legislation secured perm itting th e scotching of profiteers. In order to prevent th e endless recurrence of such crises as the one from which the country is now em erging President H arding has appointed a commission, in accord ance with recom m endations of Mr. Hoover and a bill by Senator Borah, to get coal facts and work out a perm anent solution. Mr. Hoover, whose profession is mining, believes th a t better condi tions for m iners and lower prices for the public can both be achieved by abolition of in term itten t employ ment. The contrast between prices d u r ing th is year of scant production, when coal a t the mine has reached less th an half the price level of 1920, a year of no shortage, shows th a t it pays for agencies represent ing the public to concern -.hem- selves w ith the cost ot aecessities. FO R SALE— W in ter apples a t $1 per box. Bring your boxes. W. L. Moore, Belleview-. 63-6 ' ALDRICH MENTIONED Campaign Terrors. . FO R P IE R C E SECRETARY There was a wild and frenzied scat- term ent. Men, white-fared and sta r SALEM, Nov. 15.— E. B. A ldrich, ing-eyed, lied ns if pursued by a pes tilence. They dropped whatever they e d ito r of th e E a st O regonian of P en had in hand and stood not upon the dleton, is m entioned in political c ir order of their going, hut departed like cles as the possible selection by Gov- frightened roebucks, .hitting only the i ernor-elect Pierce as priv ate secre high places as they went. tary when Mr. Pierce assum es the j “Why are the people fleeing?” we I duties of governor in Jan u ary . asked. up daily by the seven packers. O n e ' “A candidate who calls himself ‘the No. 1 N etted Gem potatoes for m an is kept busy tak in g th e filled friend of the people’ has just come to w inter, $1.90 per 100 lbs. Plaza boxes away from th e packers and town,” replied an innocent bystander Ancient Gypsy Superstition. M arket, 61 N. Main. 57-1 mo n ailing them up w hile a n o th e r is! who had no vote.—Kansas City Star. If you stand on a stone that cannot be moved and make a wish you will get j devoting his tim e to b ringing em pty I P la n n in g o r Seeing Gam e— it, according to an old gypsy supersti- ; Seeking History of Tibet. boxes, apples for th e packers, pack- j Gene N arrag an . in su ran ce a g e n t,1 The “Forbidden City” is to be visited tion. ¡ng paper and o th e r th in g s th a t the is planning on driving to Corvallis i by a British mission In the hope of packers need. obtaining real information on the his F rid ay n ig h t in o rd er to be on hand ( ______ tory of Tibet. Every member of the for the U niversity of Oregon-O. A. C. R e tu rn fror^, P o rtla n d — party is a British Buddhist, and they football gam e S aturday. T h e THEATER BEAVTlfUL Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Van N atta, believe through religious affiliation Mrs. Jen n ie G ilbert and A. Johnson they can obtain what other travelers TODAY, TOMORROW, D etrlck sells b u tte r fo r less. a rriv ed hom e th is m orning from ami explorers have sought In vain. Foreigners wlio have entered the “For B e tte r be safe th an sorry. See P o rtla n d and o th e r cities in the bidden City” are far and few between, B eaver R ealty Co. about y our in su r n o rth e rn p a rt of th e state. and no one heretofore lias been a f auce. P hone 68. 2S7ti ■ forded the opportunity to study the R e tu rn s to A shland— religion, literature and history of this W ill Go to C orvallis— Mrs. George T ucker, d a u g h te r of sealed country. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. W inne expect Mr. and Mrs. B ert R. G reer, retu rn ed A Tired Business Man. to spend th e w eek-end in Corvallis, to the city today from Eugene. This . "V.'liat is the exact age of Mr. Grab- w here they will see th e ir son, Ber- ] is h er first visit hom e since her m a r coin?" ton W inne, play in th e a n n u a l O. A.t riag e in R oseburg several w-eeks ago. “ It’s rather uncertain.’’ C.-Oregon football gam e S aturday “Eh?” afternoon. S. P. O fficials V isit— “In the evening at a jazz resort Com m ended for ad v en tu re ro E. L. K ing, su p e rin te n d e n t of the lie seems to be not a day more than A shland G ranite M onum ents, fin m ance and appeal to the m illions P o rtla n d division of th e S outhern forty, hut when he gets down to the ished to o rder. S. P en n isto u , phon t office in the morning with his grouch Pacific, was a visito r in th e city for w'ho have read the book— and the 444-Y. 46— 26 a sh o rt tim e today, looking over the j hllting on all six cylinders, you'd think he was at least seventy, and not in com pany’s rig h t of way. F ra n k L. m illions m ore who will sit en good health at th at.”—Birmingbaui Highway C om m ittee C onfers— M iller, public service com m issioner Ag- Herald. Local m em bers of a com m ittee to and M ark L. M ontgom ery, ag en t for th ra lle d by its screen splendor. stim u la te th e A shland-K lam ath F alls the Southern Pacific a t M edford a c - ! highw ay journeyed to Ja c k so n v ille 1 Dunyan Book Brings Big Price. com panied him to A shland. Mr. : The appealingly beau tifu l The first edition copy of Bunyan’s th is m orning to confer w ith the ' K ing left by tra in , and th e o th er “Pilgram ’s Progress,” printed in 1678, county court and the budget com MADGE BELLAMY two m en drove back to M edford th is has been sold at auction in London for m ittee, relativ e to m aking a levy afternoon. more than $10,000. — as— for th e com pletion of the highw ay! in Jackson county. The m a tte r is “ LORNA DOONE” being tak e n under advisem ent, and no d efin ite action tak e n a t this tim e. — Also— Those who m ade th e trip w ere M ayor The tim e w hen loved ones send each o th e r tokens of C. B. L am kin J. H. F u lle r, secre Aesop’s Fables and Topics frien d sh ip a n d it g ard. ta ry of th e cham ber of com m erce. of the Day P h o to g ra p h s cost less th a n n»ary g ifts a n d a re m ore a c T. H. Sim pson. J. W. McCov, G. H ceptable th a n m ost. B illings and A. C. N ininger. “Lorna Doone” ASHLAND TIDINGS - if iS î S t ualitys Greatest Victory ! NEW SEDAN „ r r r r p— I a » / X » \ \ X/' ’.«> •>>{ i * N A /, 3 w « X- '¿ .¿ i3 8 ; k t e 2À / ' - J / -■ isher Body Metal Covered—Six Cyl- nder M o to r-F iv e Passenger Size O W EST in price of any Six proof, rattleproof, durable—on j Sedan ever built, this new th e sta n d a rd C leveland Six Cleveland model stands today, chassis—w ith a w onderful six th e w o r ld ’s m o st am azing cylinder overhead val ve motor. achievement inclosed carvalue. Beautifully finished and up Here is a genuine, all metal holstered in rich p lu sh —w ith covered closed c a r —w eather generous comfortable cushions. t A Real Sedan W ithout a Compromise See This W onder Car Now! CDerry X m as DARLING STUDIO 25c Regular Admission E. G. HIGH CLEVELAND A U T O M O B I LE CO M PA N Y C LEVE LAND Sweet Cider, made fresh every day, two gallons 75c, one gallon 40c delivered. Phone 9 - F -ll. fS F o o tb a ll Team L eaves T h u rsd ay — M embers of th e football team and C»ach W alter H ughes will leave T h u rsd ay for R oseburg, w h e re [ th ey will m eet th e Um pqua valley grid iro n a rtis ts th e follow ing day. As the local eleven has tw ice d e fe a t ed G ran ts Pass, th e second tim e by a score of 91 to 7, and R oseburg m anaged to nose out a tw o touch down victory over G ran ts P ass, se vere opposition is not expected. The gam e is being played on F rid ay in o rd er to p erm it th e coach and sev e ra l of the players to m ake th e trip to C orvallis to w itness th e g reat state classic betw een the U niversity j of O regon and the Oregon A gricul-, tn r a l college, staged d u rin g th e O A C. Hom ecom ing, which will be an eveut of the week-end. Cliff Payne m akes fire screens, Dance Jackson Hot Springs Satur day night. Everybody's going. 63-4 g 25% R eduction on Entire Stock oi Late Design a T hursday, Friday, S aturday CASH ONLY DICKERSON & SON 78-80 N. MAIN ST. s-