I Höfc ÎWÔ AStttÄftß £Ái£t imi™» A s h la n d D a ilv T id in g S (E sta b lish ed in 1 8 7 6 ) ® Published Every Evening Except Sunday by THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO Bert R. Greer OFFICIAL CITY PAPER Editor Telephone 39 those nations will fare best that prudently*! -use their suitable xraste lands for growing conferous woods. This study shatters the! dream of those who rely on importing the timber we need when our own is gone. THE LEAKS S O C IE T Y MRS. GRACE E. ANDREWS, Editor Phone item s to her a t 345-R, between 10 A. M. and 2 P. M. and evenings. A W onderful Trip— num ber of h er girl and boy frienda in compliment to Miss Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postoffice as Effie Hazen who leaves Friday The postoffice department spends $430,- Second Class Mall Matter. of this week for her new home in 421.82 a year for twine. It is but a small Marshfield. item in the expenditures of the department, Subscription Price, Delivered in City The evening was spent most One Month ...................................................... $ .65 ! but to the average citizen it is a staggering happily in games, in music and Three Months ................................................. 1.95 sum. in dancing. Six Months ...................................................... 3.7 5 At a late hour most delicious Few people would think of twine in con One Year ........................................................... 7.50 refreshm ents were served. Those nection with the operation of the federal who enjoyed the delightful even By Mail and Rural Routes: post, and yet the government spends near ing w ith the honor guest, Miss One Month ...................................................... $ .65 ly half a million dollars each year for this Hazen, w ere: the Misses Row- Three Months ................................................. 1.95 one article alone. The United States is run ena W arner, Pearl G rantham J Six Months ........................................................ 3.50 on a tremendous scale. Alice R uger, Maxine Monger, One Year ....................................... 6.50 Genevieve Hensley, the Messrs. One of the great problems in our form G one to C olum bia City— ' DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES: B ert L afferty, Harold Broyler, of government lias been to eliminate waste Rev. and Mrs. C. B. Miller and Royal Single insertion, per inch ......................... . .......................30 Leach, Johnnie R uger and in the expenditure of public money. To the fam ily le ft Ashland for Colum W illiam Brown. Y early C ontracts: bia City, where Rev, Miller ap • • * One insertion a week .......................... $ .27% average government official public money pears on the program of the Two insertions a week .25 has a detached, abstract aspect. It flows in B ap tist £ta<te convention. The Friends from Sacramento-— Daily insertion ................ •20 in apparently unlimited quantities, and it fam ily will visit in Albany while The F. S. Engle and the F. G. R ates F o r Legal and Miscellaneous A dvertising J tile easiest tiling in the world to appro he is there. Rev. Miller will al McWilliams fam ilies are enjoy ing the visit this week of Mr. F irst insertion, per 8 point line ................. $ .10 Priate if, requisition it, Or spend it witll- so atten d the convention of the Jam es I. Parcel and his son Ros B. Y. R. U., next week, after Each subsequent insertion, 8 point l i n e ......... 05 Out a moment’s thought as to economy from Sacram ento, which he will re tu rn to Albany coe P arcel c a rd of Thanks ............................................. l.oo Two years ago General Charles G. Dawes for his family. California. They are guests in the F. G. Obituaries, per line .............................................. 02% then director general of the budget, startled They will then go to N ew port Engle home, and were dinner WHAT CONSTITUES ADVERTISING an august cabinet meeting by flourishing a Mrs. Miller will rem ain some guests a t Mr. and Mrs. F. “All fu ture events, where an admission charge is pair of brooms under the noses of the presi time, but Mr. Miller re tu rn s to McWilliams, F riday evening. made or a collection taken is A dvertising. dent and his advisers. One was of army and A shland a fte r a fo rtn ig h t’s visit They expect to go to C rater No discount will be allowed Religious or nie other of navy specifications. General a t the seaside. Lake Saturday. Benevolent orders. The Messrs. Parcel have been| Dawes demanded to know the difference G uests from K a n s a s - m aking a combined business and between the two Mr. and Mrs. J . B. Sanders, DONATIONS: pleasure through n o rth ern It was revealed that the army had a on th e Boulevard are enjoying C alifornia trip No donations to charities or otherw ise will be and took this oppor made in advertising, or job printing— our contribu surplus supply of brooms. The navy need the visit of K ansas friends, Mr. tu n ity to visit th eir friends and Mrs. Tom Duncan and th eir tions will be in cash. ed brooms, but refused to take those of and see some of th e scenic wonders son and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. the army, and ordered its own style in huge H arold Duncan of A ltoona, K an of southern Oregon. J CIA' 28. • « * lots. sas. Thursday evening— TIME NO OBJECT:— But, belowed, be not General Lord, successor to General The Duncans arrived last Sat-! ' Picnic T hursday evening Mrs. H unt s Ignorant of this one thing, th a t one day is with Dawes, recently discovered the prevalence urday, coaming via Yellowstone class of girls, of the Methodist the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand of soap and towel collectors in govern P ark . On Monday evening they Sunday school had a delightful were the inspiration for a large years as one day.— 2 Peter 3:8. ment departments. Figures on expenditures dinner party, given by Mr. and picnic in the P ark. submitted by several departments showed Mrs. Chester W alters of Tal Each one was to bring a p ar ticularly toothsome dish and the are boosting for Ashland. NO BRIEF FOR EITHER ent. combined resu lt was a w onder The dinner guests were Mes- tion was ordered. fully satisfying and delicious Five barrels of government soap were dames and Messrs. J . B. Sand supper, w ith lemonade as a cool The Tidings maintains the position that Thomas Duncan, H arold the family who makes a practice of buy found in the home of one employe, and ers, ing drink. Duncan, and Irvin Bateman. E ight young girls, the . Misses three in another. More than 200 soiled tow ing necessities of life from merchants of Thursday the Duncans, and other towns is making a mistake and aid els were discovered in the desks of a single Mrs. Sanders go to C rater Lake. R uth Fifield, C lara Huck, Eliza Lennox, Caroline Tilton, ing in the building of the other town at big government office. There are a num ber of trips beth M argaret Lucile P e r the expense of the home town and home Such waste or such petty thievery would planned and they will be th e mo ozzi, Mrs. Campbell, L arkin Deer and the institutions. Retail prices are regulated to not he tolerated in any private corporation tif for many functions during teacher Mrs. H unt, were the ir stay. an appreciable degree by the volume of in the country. The Ford Motor company, th e The p articipants In this happy even visitors are delighted with trade of the retail store. The more frequent for example, lias a lumber salvage plant, Ashland. M utual friends of the ing. • * • the turn-over o f stock the less the profits at which approximately 90,000,000 feet of party, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mur D. N. Davis Returns need he, consequently every dollar spent lumber, formerly wasted, is saved annual phy from Ohio, who are camping Mrs. Mrs. D. N. Davis and daught-l in the P ark accompanied the outside of home circles detracts from the ly. —Oregon Daily Journal. er Lucile of Green Spring Moun Duncans on th eir C rater Lake volume ot local merchants and aids in keep tain ranch retu rn ed Thursday trip. DESTROYERS OF NATURE ing retail prices at a higher level than from the east where they have; • * • been visiting relatives! and otherwise. There is no excuse for becoming Visits at Home— „ friends in a num ber of states an habitual out of town trader, and the- Of two forms of vandalism practiced by r. an rs. O. Stearns have | nciuding the old home state, Tidings holds no brief for the family that the so-called nature lovers, more prosaical been enjoying a few days’ visit Missouri, where Mrs. Davis was| persists in the practice. It is disloyalty to ly known as Sunday picnickers, it is easy w ith th e ir son Ernel E. Stearns born. prior to his leaving fo r Milwau one’s home town and community. Mrs. Davis says she can see to decide which is the more inexcusable. kee, Wisconsin. little change, since she was Greater still is the disloyalty of the retail One consists of taking away or damaging He left Tuesday of this week very last there th irty -th ree years ago, merchant who spends his money with in whatever chances to catch the vagrant to assum e the duties of his posi except the change in faces, some stitutions located outside of his town for fancy and the other of leaving behind tion w ith the Allis-Chalmers mfg. have come and others gone. products that can he secured at home. things that ought to be taken away or de company of Milwaukee. They rep o rt a fine trip but Mr. Stearns is a m echanical stroyed. One breaks down shrubs and the say they saw nothing in their There are in Ashland, retail firms that are engineer, g rad u atin g from O. A. limbs of trees and the other litters the travels to com pare to old Ash buying out of town products that can C. this year. He h as been em he obtained locally for the same or less landscape with the miscellaneous refuse ployed by the California-Orgeon land, eith er in scenery or cli money. The same merchants throw up their that every gladstone outing seems to leave Pow er company d u ring his vaca m ate. * • • hands in holy horror at the man or wom in its wake. The percentage who so mis tions and his w ork was very sat C. E. Meeting— isfactory and his advancem ent an who place their money in the coffers of conduct themselves out of the total who rapid. The Topic for the C hristian enjoy holiday privileges lias never been the out-of-town merchant. The same mer He will be w ith the M ilwaukee Endeavor m eeting Sunday night ascertained by a survey but it need not be at the P resbyterian church is a chants who charge their neighbors with dis firm two years a t least. m issionary one and is a subject « * • loyalty are even more disloyal, for they do large to be enormously annoying, and one of more than passing interest, that which they condemn others for doing. of its most distressing features is that it Goes to California— a t this time. There is in Ashland a good example of brings the whole fraternty into disrepute Mrs. Blackwood and little China will be discussed in neighbor M ildred of Phoenix, the retail merchant discriminating against with local residents who have no ohjec- spent Sunday w ith Miss Gertie m any phases and each one is ask Ashland firms and yet he expects the pat-!tlons to temperate trespass on their lands, H aan. ed to be prepared on this in te r ronage of Ashland people. No one denies ¡The “ KeeP sign is the direct conse Mrs. Blackwood left Thursday esting them e. ille right of that merchant to spend his quence of the bad manners of the Sunday for C alifornia to Join Mrs. T. J. Miss E dith Robison will lead. * * • Malmgren, who has been spend money when lie pleases and with whom he picnic hoS~Morning Oregonian, Students Return Home— ing some tim e at Berkeley. pleases, yet lie expects that which lie is not The Misses Minnie and Emma They will visit many places of THE SPIRIT OF CHARITY willing to give. He takes the attitude that A lberts and Melba B aker of interest before retu rn in g to loyalty is due his institution and that lie in G rants Pass left F riday a fte r Phoenix. noon for th e ir homes in G rants turn owes loyalty to none. * * • The group of forty neighbors who gath Pass. It is high time that the men and wom ered together on a sweltering July Sunday Slumber Party— en who have the future of Ashland at heart to erect and completely build a bam for W ednesday evening, Miss. Jul The young ladies have been take account of the policies of a few of their a comrade who had suffered loss by fire ia Morris entertained six young atten d in g norm al here and have irl friends, classm ates and enjoyed the work very much. local retail firms, and give to those firms would have ¡incurred the displeasure of g grad • • • u ates of ’23 A. H. S., at who are loyal to Ashland their undivided elders in the days of the puritan blue laws, a picnic supper a t K ingsbury Closing Picnic— patronage, leaving the disloyal retailer to ¡But the spirit that moves men to give up Springs and a slum ber p a rty at As a happy finale of the six a single recourse, that of getting his pa their day of rest to perform a real service h er pleasant country home in the weeks norm al ju st closed, a de lig h tfu l outing was given the trons from other towns in which he spends to a brother is now recognized as a tie that Upper Valley. Under Miss M orris’ escort and stu d en t body and faculty T h u rs his dollars. Mewing the question from a binds the community in closer fellowship laden w ith well-filled baskets day evening. community spirit, the disloyal retailer is; no matter what the day of the deed—Chico and a box of sweets, the friends Mr. H enry Enders, was named not entitled to the patronage of home peo-l Record. motored out to K ingsbury. There by th e Cham ber of Commerce they enjoyed the feast of good to arran g e for it. The Lithians pie, tor he is o f a class that retards the ----------------- — growth and prosperity of a town. He is | Some one asks: “ What is more beauti- things prepared fo r the occasion w ith th e ir accustomed energy The slum ber p arty was an emi and efficiency planned and no less a town-killer than those whom he.fnl than the red cheek of a snn-kissed nent success, in th a t, a s a t all b rought to a climax the arran g e condemns tor trading elsewhere. | peach!’’The answer is easy: The same kind successful slum ber parties, there m ents th a t made for its success. was a very great deal of fun l of a cheek on a smiling girl. Autos were provided to con TIMBER SHORTAGE EVIDENT and precious little sleep. vey the (perhaps 125 or more This was In th e n a tu re of a p articip an ts to the chosen scene Welcome, Cherrians; The City Is Yours. farew ell gathering, since, before A unique and exhaustive compilation of Lightning doesn’t strike twice in the fo r the picnic, Buckhorn Lodge ▼ery long th is group of friends * m a tte r of twelve or fourteen the forest resources of the world has been same place, principally because the second w ill he scattered. A11 are Nor miles up the Green Spring m oun completed by the Forest Service, United time the spot isn’t there. m al stu d en ts and many will ta in road. States Departinnt of Agriculture. This teach. The tw enty odd autos th a t con reveals, among other things, that so far One of the world’s permanent mysteries A fter a m ost satisfying break veyed th e Joyous crowd to the as our great structural and all-purpose is where the counterfeiter goes to change fa st such as the well-filled lar lodge le ft Ashland about four d er of a ranch home supplies, woods—the soft woods—are concerned, we a $1000.00 bill. o ’clock, arriving a t th eir destin Miss M orris brought h er guests must become self-sufficient or go without.j The dollar spent in some other fellow’s back to town in tim e for th eir atio n ip plenty of tim e for the bountiful lunch provided by the It all the available Siberian timber were town is-used in the purchase of a dear bar- school duties. Those enjoying Miss M orris’ L ithians. put at the undisputed call of the United gain. The wives of the Lithians. : th e Misses hospitality were States, the yearly export would hardly Orla W ilson, w ith a com m ittee composed of supply one-fourth of our annual timber Today there are neary as many dogs in Mildred Stephens, Dimple Slack, M rs. V. V. Mills, Mrs. Burdic, Mildred Beeson, needs. There is an immense reservoir of arms as there are babies. Mrs. Ellis and Mrs. K arl Nims, Ruth Purdy and Opal Hoxie. wrrs h gftd fo r the lunch, which hardwoods in the Tropics, which can be! --------------— • • • w as m ost satisfying, consisting used for limited and special purposes and Raspberries now batting for strawber Miss Hensley Entertains— Friday evening of last week o f welners, rolls, salads, cookies, secured at mahogany prices. But the strug ries. Miss Genevieve Hensley, chaper and lem onade, made w ith both gle for the world’s supply of soft woods oned by her mother Mrs. Hensley th e m ineral and common every will become more and more intense, and The bobbed hair fads decline to moult. and Mrs. Forbes entertained a •day water. From messages received by friends, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd uickey are having a w onderful irip, and enjoying every m inute of it. From Vancouver, B. C. they w rite th a t they were w ith Mr. and Mra. Dom Provost, Clyde Young, Miss K leinham m er and Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Coffman and son Bobby at the Vancouver ho tel. They did not state when they were retu rn in g . Saiurday, July . 28, löail charge of the games, which prov ed an enthusiastic feature of ¡he evening. Palm s, expertly read, and many am using stunts added in teresting touches. The ball game, played by the N orm al girls vs. the L ithians was the final note in fun. An especial bat, designed by Mr. Spencer, proved of great as sistance to the young ladies as long as they held a monopoly of the instrum ent. Mr. Briscoe um pired the game. The happy crowd returned about 8:30 p. m., a fte r one of the most delightful trips imagin able. The Lithians would like to ex press th eir appreciation to those who so kindly furnished cars and to all those who, by their courtesies, assisted in any way in m aking for the success of this closing affair for the Ashland Normal students. T H E JOY O F L IV IN G The joy of living comes from the ability to satisfy simple needs in a wholesome way. A well-managed home contributes more to the happiness of a community than two cars in the garage. Those who conduct their financial affairs in a systematic, orderly way through the use of this Institution know the joy of living in its very essence. We solicit your business. The First National Bank <an3 a n d O reads LAW forgotten And with a breach of it b e g i n s the most forceful photo - drama i a decade. Forgotten Law r c h e s tra W tfT O i FO R THE. S TR E E T R 4 R /3 D E Every (lay. Curtain 8:15. Seat Sale open 1 to 2:30 and 7 to 9 Prices 55c, 85c $1.10 Including 'fax American Red Cross Starts Campaign w ; to Diminish Water Tragedies in U. S. © In te rn a tio n a l N ew s R eel Miss Sophie Ruehl, 18, t Dubuque, la., who rvcentl, , hung up a record of »win* mlng 12 miles In the Mlssio» J sippi. She Is one of 8,000 ** women members of the Rod Cross Life-Saving Corps. Upper— The crack Jacksonville, Fla., Red Cross Life-Saving Corps which has many rescues to its credit. Center (ertanding) is Commodore / / , E. Longfellow, national field agent of the corps. Lower— Red Cross Life-Saving experts at Long Pond, Plymouth, Mass., giving instruction in modern methoaa of resuscitation of persons X’ T.nd) tion of those in charge of boys’ , „scued from the water. i y jT T H the swimming and boating »» season already starting up in some sections of the country, the .American Red Cross, through its Life-Saving Corps, is inaugurating an intensive campaign to lower the appalling loss of life in the United States through drowning. Statis tics it has compiled show that in 182!, 6.4S9 men, women and chil dren died in the waters of the United States through accidents, while during the last ten years the total of such deaths has reached al- mosi 60,000. The means by which the Red •“Toss will carry on its fight against water accidents will be extension .•» the Life-Saving instruction It provides through its own experts or fosters through community Life- Saving campaigns. Already 439 Red Cross Chapters in continental United States are providing Life- Saving instruction, and it is pur posed to greatly increase the num ber. In particular will the Red Cross strive to reach the children. Of the more than 27,000 certificated Life- Savers enrolled in the Red Cross Life-Saving Corps, 10,000 are Jun iors and a quota of 21,000 addition al Junior Life-Savers has been set. In addition to instruction pro vided through its Chapters, the Red Cross will conduct two large Life- Saving Institutes for the lnstruc- itber&j girls’ summer camps and ot These institutes will be held Id ah Long Pond, Plymouth, Mass., . & n<Jj and! Lake Geneva, Wis., not far from, Chicago. In a me ssage to the Chapter^ Judge John Barton Payne, CbadM man of the American Red Cross», says: “Too many preventable drowsy ings occur annually. The total o f 58,429 during the ten years ended) with 1921 is appalling. The Red; Cross is exercising one of Its chars, ter functions along lines of lntenah practicality In the campaign o f Life-Saving which It has tna«-« gurated, and I Invoke the heartyi aid of Chapter workers In carryy ing It to a successful conclusion-" !