iftbLÀSii» A s h la n d D a ily T id in g s BELIEVE C'Jîi rBEêlD EÎîïS dà HA ’hhifeUM Wednesday, Ang-uit i, iMM ist&ndh is not- k n sw a by alar, la football.. LONG ROWBOAT TR IP IS Nev> Orleans in a afattaen-foo* anyone here? Mann waa a ¡Rdf halfback nt BfefNG TAKEN BY DOCTOR rowboat. The boat is equipped Prim , accdrdihg td SateS; in» Springfield Y. M. C. A. years ago. Ti e sudden turn for the worse in Presi- Published Every Evening Ext cp; Sunday by t 7" . . ~ wh h a& out-board m otor and a duced him to invest his entire He will coach basketball, a»d al­ •ei t Harding’s condition calls attention PER L, Ind., Aug. 1.— Dr. J. . _ savings in a w orthless company so have charge of the baseball „ THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO , ,, i camping outfit. The trip will be once more to the necessity of in some way , , in 1896. Since th a t time, Bates squad next spring, in addition to i B. Shoemaker, his son Vernon, „ , made in leisurely stages down Bert R. Greer ............................... Editor relieving the burden which the President said, this loss has been a “ jin x ” his other activities. | E. Clem and Dwight Howard are the • — - - Ohio and Mississip­ W abash, INDIANAPOLIS^ Aug., i> —As­ to him in six business ventures. of the United States is forced to carry. ’ on their way from this city to OFFICIAL CITYPAPER Tefephone 39 pi rivers. sisted by th e American iLegion, This burden crushed President Wilson. and by large Industrial establish­ “ I ’ll find him if it takes me the RIDING M ASTER SETS E ntered a t the Ashland, Oregon, Postoffice as And while everyone hopes and there is ments. the United States V eter­ rest of my life,” Bates declared. INSPIR ING EXAM PLE STATEMENT Second Class Mail M atter. reason to believe, President Harding will ans* B ureau Has been able to MANN V E R SA TIL E PARIS, Aug., 1.— The exam- of the F irst National Bank of Ashland, County of Jackson, State alm ost all of the 19,401 Subscription Price, D elivered iu City- rally from the present collapse without place IN SPORT REALM i pie of Major Max Oser, Swiss of Oregon, showing the am ount standing to the credit of every de­ p e n reh ab ilitated htw een Ju ly One Month ...................................................... J .65 serious results accruing, it is certain that 1, 19233 and Ju n e l, 1923, ac­ riding school m aster, who m ar­ positor July 1, 1923, who lias not made a deposit, or who has not Three Months ................................................. 1.95 INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Aug., 1. ried an American m illionairess, w ithdrawn any part of his deposit (Commercial deposits), principal if his health is to be retained, he will cording to Inform ation received Six Months ...................................................... 3.75 or interest, for a period of more than seven (7) years Immediately have to maintain a less strenuous pace by legion national headquarters — You know Les Mann, outfield­ inspires French schoolboys. One Year .......................................................... 7.50 prior to said date, with the name, last known place of residence or In a recent questionnaire con­ in Indianapolis. Corporations er of the St. Louis Cardinals who for the remainder of his term. By Mail and R ural Routes: are adding veterans trained by sticks around in the m ajors be­ ducted by the principal of a P a r­ postoffice address of such depositor, and the fact of his death, isf It was on a tour of the country that the One M onth ........................................................... $ .65 Bureau to th eir lists of em ­ cause, w hether or not h e’s h it­ is gram m ar school several of known. President Wilson collapsed and with the ployees, D irector Hines has an ­ Three Months ................................................. 1.95 the boys declared they are going Residence or Dead, if fact Amount collapse of President Harding due to the nounced. The Bethlehem Steel ting, throw ing or ketchin’ base­ to be grooms when they grow up. Name of Depositor Six Months ........................................................ 3.50 Postoffice Address balls at par, he’s way above par is known One Year .......................................................... 6.50 same cause, it would seem advisable in company recently asked for 200 on pep and fight? Chas. S. Cunningham, Ashland. Oregon ship w orkers from among the re­ R ainier— 75,000-foot daily ca­ Jas. M. Derricks, Ashland, Oregon the future to abandon Presidential swings Les now has another job. DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES:” habilitated men. around the circle entirely, and allow the Last year, when he was through pacity sawmill to go in on 220- Samuel M. Dorrence, Ashland, Oregon Single insertion, per inch ...................................30 Lemuel Bolles, legion national tract recently purcased by L. W. Moore, Ashland Oregon. Dead President to remain quietly in Wshington a d ju ta n t, recently has offered for the sum m er at his regular acre Yearly C ontracts: Jacobson-Reid lum ber company. M argaret Gordon, Ashland, Oregon j 71 One insertion a week ................................... $ .27% and take trips only for rest and relaxation the aid of employment bureaus job of w orking for Branch Rick­ Leonard Wiles, Co., Medford, Oregon gg ey, Mann w ent to Indiana Uni­ Tw o insertions a week .......................................25 Of course the trouble goes back to the m aintained by legion posts in all j versity Mrs. N. H. Morrison, Ashland, Oregon ................. 2.0i as basketball coach. He Dally insertion ......................................................... 20 sections In finding jobs for Vet fundamental system of our government. ers* Frank Owen, Ashland, Oregon 3 ILIOUSNESS made good, tu rn in g out a strong B ureau trainees. sick headache, sour stom ach, C. Oliver Shipley, Ashland, Oregon, ......... g 3) R ates F o r R egal and M iscellaneous A d vertisin g Tnstead of having two governmental heads, five w ith green m aterial, when constipation, ea sily avoided. everybody was asking: “ W hat F irst insertion, per 8 point line ................. $ .10 as in England and France, a nominal lead­ “JINXED,” STARTS HUNT An active liver withoat calomel. STATE OF OREGON, County of Jackson, — ss. does he know about basketball?” Each subsequent insertion, 8 point l i n e ......... 05 er, and an actual leader, the latter retiring FOR ALLEGED SWINDLER C H A M B E R L A IN S I, J. W. McCoy, being first duly sworn, depose and say upoi Im pressed w ith th e ballplay­ Card of Thanks ............................................. 1.00 j whenever his program is not sustained, oath, that 1 am the Cashier, of the F irst National Bank of Ashland TABLETS e r’s ideas on athletics, Indiana O bituaries, per line ..............................................02 % Never sicken or gripe—only 25c county of Jackson, State of Oregon; th a t the foregoing statem ent h we have only one executive head, who is WASHINGTON,' Mo.. Aug. 1.— has engaged Mann as assistant a full, true, correct and complete statem ent, showing the name, las WHAT CONSTITUES ADVERTISING* blamed for everything, must be respon If such a person as Louis Prim athletic director to Zora Cleven­ known residence or postoffice address, fact of death, if known. an< “All future events, where an admission charge is sible for everything, and must stick out his is anywhere about he had b etter ger, an Indiana graduate who is make him self scarce when one the am ount to the credit of each depositor as required by the pro retu rn in g to this state after ser­ made or a collection taken is Advertising. full term, whether he has the support of Grover Bates comes Into sight. vice as director of athletics in No discount will be allowed Religious or For sunburn, bites, soreness, visions of Sections 101C0-10163, inclusive, Oregon Laws. the people or not. Bates arrived here in quest of poison ivy or summer colds Benevolent orders. Tennessee, K ansas and Missouri J. W. McCOY Subscribed and sworn to before me this 12th. day of July, A. D. 1923 As a result the President of the United Prim , adding tersely th a t when the universities. He will report this | States has more power and therefore more m eeting occurs he intends to put fall and act also as assistant to | DONATIONS: (Seal) G. H. \\ ENNER, Notary Public for Oregon W V a P O R U □ No donations to charities or otherw ise will be responsibility than any national ruler in an end to the la tte r's earth ly ex- Head Coach Ingram , form er Navy 268-4-Tuesday. O u e r 1 7 M illion J a r» U tc d Y ea rly My commission expires, Aug. 3, 1925 made in advertising, or job printing— our contribu­ the world. To distribute this responsibil­ tions will be in cash. (E stab lish ed in 1 876) 'ACATION V IC K S ity and divide this power would not only provide a better democratic administra­ AUGUST 1 tion of national affairs, but would go far WITH ALL YOUR H EA RT:— And ye shall seek toward eliminating such a situation as the me and find me when ye shall search for me with country faces today and as it faced toward the close of the Wilson administration. all your heart.— Jerem iah 29:13. Something at least must be done. This government cant expect to go on without YOUR HABITS some change, when the present procedure How many of your actions are “ thought, lenders a call to the Presidency equivalent out ’ ’ in advance ? How many are mechani-1 to a call to invalidism or death. cal, without thought—the result of habit? —Medford Mail Tribune. Did it ever occur to you, why you al­ ways sit at the same place during meals PRESIDENT HARDING’S ILLNESS instead of moving to a chair at another Press reports, carrying the news of the serious illness of President Harding, again side of the table? Habit. Do you realize that you are in the habit calls to mind the tax America imposes of traveling certain established routes on her presidents. As a nation, America through the streets to get to the bank, expects and demands more of the presi­ grocery store, place of business and so on, dent than any other nation on earth de­ although there might be a short-cut route. mands of its head. Not only do we demand much in an official way, but we require if you paused to figure it out? The older we get, the more we become, much in a social and political way, and in creatures of habit, like mechanical dolls, | both we are unreasonable, extremely so Unconsciously we attempt, day after day in the latter. When President Harding’s train arriv­ to get the same seat in the street car. We don’t always get it, but on the average ed in Ashland Saturday and the chief ex­ there’s one certain seat where we’re most ecutive failed to appear on the rear plat­ form disappointment marked the faces of apt to be found. Men, in putting on your trousers in the the hundreds who had gathered to see and morning, which leg goes first—right or hear him. And when the first speaker an­ left? Why not the other? How about nounced the inability of the executive to appear because of illness many in the shoes? Here’s an interesting experiment you can crowd changed from disappointment to a perform. Take a door that is used often. feeling that bordered on resentment. Many Reserve this door so that the hinges will charged that the President was able to be where the knob formerly was. Then appear but simply refused to do so for watch. You’ll find people coming up and, some selfish reason. The writer heard though looking straight at the familiar many such charges, but late reports as to door, they’ll reach for the side where the 1 larding’s condition , prove the fallacy of the belief that existed locally. knob used to be. Habit again? Each of us has his own Like many other of the nation’s chief particular way of opening mail. One per­ executives, Harding has been giving too son tears off a comer of the envelope and | much of his strength to meet the demands inserts a finger. Another tears off the officially, politically, and socially. It is whole end. Still another slits the flap with not improbable that his life will be the a pencil, or hunts the scissors. All done price. On S street, in Washington, is a mechanically, including the habit of hold­ white haired, palsied man, in whose face ing envelopes to the light before opening. are carved deep lines of worry, and whose This comes from a subconscious hope health is broken beyond recovery. That man is Woodrow Wilson, who gave his that there’s money inside. There’s no way of figuring it out exact­ strength, his health, and all but his life ly, but at least half of our actions must to the demands of America and of the be machanicallv performed, without think­ world. 'l et many are ungrateful for the ing, the result of habit. Life is largely rou­ service rendered by Woodrow Wilson as piesident of the I nited States during the tine, and routine develops habits. Are you a slave to habit. It is the worst most critical period of the worlds history. form of slavery, for by it a man enslaves Many are ungrateful to President Harding, himself, especially his thought and poten­ whose life is perhaps in the balance. tial powers of originality. And the habit of The fate met by many of our presidents automatism— unthinking, involuntary ac­ calls to mind that Americans are decided­ tion—can be as injurious to our careers as ly ungrateful to them. We demand more the vicious habits such as drugs and of many of our presidents than it is hu­ manly possible for tliem to give, yet con- liquor. “ Getting in a ru t” is usually due to be­ demn them because they do not give more.' coming the victim of habit. Here’s where AGAINST INFLATION system and efficiency short-circuit them­ selves. For habit destrovs iniative. One of the most reassuring features fn MAKING CRIMINALS the prosperity movement that in recent months lias been registering marked ad­ The record bears out Mr. Wade H. Ellis, vance in every section of the country is the of the American Bar Association commit­ caution of the public in dealing with im­ tee recently returned from a study of Eu- proved conditions. There are nowhere opean courts and their procedure, in his symptoms of “ boom” or inflation. Capital contention that “ slow and ineffective ad­ is carefully avoiding overreaching credit ministration of criminal law (in this coun­ and other elements are showing no infla­ try) not only tends to protect criminals, tion tendencies. but to create them.” It is notorious that The nation learned its lesson in the de­ long delays too often work to improper ad­ pression under which the Harding admin­ vantages of criminals and impede justice. istration found it struggling,and is mani­ Promptness is essential to administra­ festly resolved to take the improvement tion of criminal law if it is to function, as effected under Republican control in a it was designed, for the protection of so­ manner that will assure continuance «nd ciety. Knowledge that its penalties are increase.—Exchange. subject to long delays robs it of much of its deterrent effect and prompt the crim­ Medford is becoming noted because of inally inclined to take a chance that they the office seeking proclivities of its peo­ Would not take if justice were swift. ple. ✓ Follow the three important steps in securing perfected lubrica­ tion. They will lead you to the longer car life that authorities estimate for properly lubricated engines. I Clean the crank case th o ro u g h ly every • 500 to 1,000 m iles and w hen changing from one bran d of m otor oil to another. Q F lu sh th e crank case only w ith fresh lub- • rica tin g oil — never w ith kerosene or so- called “flushing oils. O , L u b ricate w ith co rrect grade of Cycol —• • the p erfected m otor oil, as show n on the Cycol R ecom m endation C hart. Cycol is perfected by the new Hexeon process, used only by us. This process makes Cycol free from destructive “sulpho” com­ pounds the impurities which lessen the resistance of motor oils to the decomposing effect of engine heat. Thus Cycol does not break down or thin out rapidly under high operating temper­ atures. It maintains the essential lubricating film between mov­ ing parts. It helps to extend the life of your car and saves money on engine repairs. A S S O C IA T E D O IL CO M PA N Y Executive Offices, 79 N ew Montgomery St., San Francisco Perfected Motor O il- free from destructive “ sulpho” compounds 'Perfected lubrication adds one-third and more to your engine's lift* A u th e n tic records show th e average life of all cars and fm eVy to be five and th ree -te n th s years. A u th o rities estim ate that th is life can be extended to seven years, and m ore, by b e tte r lubrication. T h is indicates th e v ital im portance o f lu b ricatio n as.sh o w n on th e above chart. No m a tter how good y o u r ear i t is su b ject to th is in fallib le law o f averages.