Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, December 27, 1923, Page 2, Image 2

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    h A GE TWO
A shland
ASH LA N D
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
•
(E stablished in 1870)
Published Every Evening E x ten t Sumí ay by
THE
A SH LA N D
P R IN T IN G
B ert R. Greer .....
CO.
____
.______
Editor
- FICIAL CITY PA PER ......................................
red u t the A shland, Oregon, Postoffice
Mail M atter
Telephone 32
as Second Class
•
Subscription Price, Delivered in City
o n e Mouth ..............;...... .„..'.7..........'............... ........ ......................... 5 .65
Three Months .................... ......................................... •.......................
1.95
Six M o n th s................................................ ..............................................
3.75
One Year ................................................. J .............................................
7.59
By Mail and R ural Routes:
One i oi th ................................................................. ............................. j gc
Three Months .............................. ........................................................
j 95
Six Months
...—..................... ...-.—............—.........— .— ....—....
3.50
O nj Year
D ISI?
single insertion, per in
One insertion a w ’X ..
Two insertions a week
Daily insertion .............
- !»YERTISING RATES:
.30
n ly C ontracts:
R ates L'or Le,’,al and M iscellaneous A dvertising
First insertion, pc? 8 point line
...............................................
r'
subsequent lusertiou, 8 point line ................................ ”
Tnauks ................... .....................................................
Obt’uai s, per line ................................
dàïl ^ tidings
Thursday, December 27, l9ild
il»
d muck given to gilt and
GRAVEDIGGER PREPA RES
RAILWAY J l N c n n v VAI.IJ»
it-V
m of ladies of the chorus
AMPLE PLOT FOR SELF
BEFORE MEXICAN REB1
Li1
> ;ei s were to be bad in those
LONDON, Dec. 27. — John
EL PASO, Dec. 26.— Vurecu
was made of their immola­
Evans, a G lam organshire grave- do, an im portant railway Jui
ti».' ih t imagine.a beauty of
—-------
digger, although still hale and lion, lias been captured by Hut
on the canned crustacean of
by the
Sage Tea
and Sulphur Turns hearty, is preparing a commodious istas, of Estrada, in command
tins (i
is lese’majeste.
Gray, Laded Hair Dark
and well-appointed grave for him- the G uadalajara region, accord!
Father o f
ami Glossy
self in the burial ground in which to a bulletin from Delahuei
(
ID
n I 1 >t given to romancing, j
Physical Almost everyone knows th a t he bas worked most of his life, headquarters. The bulletin in
tim e
m n ndescript receptacle was
Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly
site wa,: presented to him by j cates that Estrada is conduct!
Culture j j compounded,
cd liilprionsiy np and
■ n rack alleys to the im- BERNAR.R.
brings back the n a t- jellents» a»d other interests have an offensive against the man 1
nt peril of its foaming < ' : i 0' malt cheer, but tha* M A C FA D D EN
ural color and lustre to the hair also presented him with a stone on the national railway south
only a p a th e tn in su rg ei
streaked —
or »•«/.
gray. slab to cover it.
Aguascalientes.
gainst the encroachmenis
i when
— faded,
---- - ---------
OW we are come to th e Lures. ï t is alread^ scientifically Aears ago the only way to Set tb *s Evans declares he has no inten-
- -
sVstc n iit’iC r J ’iifa ria n h
1
f
e
d
.
canned
light,
c
a
n
n
e
d
y
|
m
ixture
w
a
,
to
m
ake
..
a
t
home,
Hon
of
dying
>f cans—we live on cam
THREE MORE ARE DEAD
’
.
I have personally secured benefits ;" h ie h is mussy and troublesome.
-portation, canned draw ». canned music. I he curious It different times in my own life that I Nowadays we simply ask a t any ■-MORE THAN 1,400 RADIO
IN AI TO ACCIDEN
archaeoh >s
iter centuries may read the answer to '°jdd not be measured in money 1 drug store for “ W yeth’s Sage and
SETS IN .MEXICO CITY
Since receipt of the I. N. 8.
O lli- l ’i d a
111 the strata of our can dumps.—The N ation’s • John D. Rockefeller, the richest i Sulphur Compound.” You will get
/n a n in
the world, advertised nearly ¡a large bottle of this old-time
MEXICO CITY
Dec
2 7 __ r>ort X ^a^rday giving an
Business.
Ho
Health
Hints
i ^loHa^-s^for5 a^new*1 stomadi^ a imnever
'
A Texan, olïercl a P!, ¡„(ment as minister to Mexico, ¡ K l o ^ t i m e ’S l a Î ’Æ S
has declined, \\ lien it come h» the efficacy of diplomatic were frequently circulated of his in­
terest in outdoor life, golf, etc., and
immuni t v , k t
iron "* lissouri.
now, at his greatly advanced age, it
$
l.oo
.02 %
WHAT COs >riT l'T E S ADVERTISING
“ AU n itu re events, where an admission charge is made or a
-tion taken is Advertising.
o discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders.
is reported that he lives exclusively
ai milk ; that he is maintaining his
life at his present great age because
( 'leveie.iKi b r e a A a s L the “ information” that the city
will he kept fret of bool ledgers during the convention i0^ 18 slT,p,e..diet-
, •
-,
, ,
• « ,-««L • t
llie milk dieL properly prepared
next .111 e. I Lvt Rlllri must have its little joke.
for and properly used, is capable of
impr0Ved by the addition 1 There are over 14,000 ra d io s' in count of the deaths occuring fn
of other lgredients, at very little i.this city at the present time, while I a u t°n>obile, suicides and mi
cost. Everybody uses this prepar- at the offices of the Mexican R e -' sh!ne over Chrstm as, a supp
ation now, because no one can gional Confederation of Labor a montary rt>POI't from New Y<
possibly tell th a t you darkened huge radio-telephone is being in­ records ib n ,. deaths at Los An;
your hair, as it does it so n a tu r­ stalled for the purpose of receiv­ les and one at Minneapolis ai
ally and evenly: You dampen a ing and transm itting lectures, result of automobile accidenti
sponge or soft brush with it and I concerts, etc
draw’ this through your hair, t a k - ,
Let us fill your4)all with Swil
ing one small strand at a time;
K onm an’s salft rising bread, Silver Leaf lard— costs less tbi
by m orning the gray hair disap­
1 lb. loaf 10c, 1% lb loaf 15c. i shortening, goes fa rth e r and
pears, and after another applica- j
Bon Ton.
84-tf , more nutritibus. Detricks.
94
tion or two, your hair becom es!
beautifully dark, thick and glossy
and you look years younger.
No 68
»ringing about miraculous changes in
the physical organism. -
P i yen wes a recent caller at the White House, hut
There are times in the life of every
human
unit when the milk diet can
:»rcss tii »tehes failed io mention whether he found it in be of extraordinary
DONATIONS
value.
No.rtci «dons to charities or otherw ise will be made in advertis­ such I n I condition as it was reported to he.
It wiil undoubtedly give you more
life while you live and it may add
ing. or job printing— our contributions will be in cash.
many years to your life. It may ac­
tually save your life in a crisis when
IJmde ' n ’s , ¡vitéis are basv on the holiday lid.
DECEMBER 27
a simple, invaluable food can be used i University Student Here—
j advantageously. <
H ubert Prescott is home from
Hl MBLE YOURSELVES:— H ipnble yorrselves therefore under
' Indeed, the food value of milk can the U niversity of Oregon, where '
the m ighty hand of God, th a t he may exalt you in due time: Casting
'» * s",d e „ t. « • »»<
<«»,
all your care upon him; for lie careth for you.— 1 Peter 5:6,7.
that a quart of milk equals in food , er re tu ra d lately from Marshfield
value three-quarters of a pound of where they were called suddenly
BLANK BOOKS—CANVAS - KERATOL AND
beefsteak, two pints of oysters, eight by the catastrophe of the C. A.
LEATHER BINDINGS
HOM E IN ST IN C T STRONG AS E V E R
two pounds of chicken, three- Smith.
fifths
of
a
pound
of
pork
chops,
or
Few men and fewer women begin life without the,
M ell Assorted Stock of I. P. Memos - Price Books
three pounds of fresh codfish.
ambition to own a home of their own. A place which in
Ring Binders - \\ ith Assorted Fillers and Indexes
When one is securing, then, from
Orres cleans clothes clean.
four
to
six
quarts
of
milk
daily
(the
mind at h'tibt is to he almost sacred. A castle protected
Inks - Pastes - Baskets - Trays - Etc. - Etc.
Phone 64.
89-tf
usual amount taken on the full milk
by the law ot the land safe from intrusion. Where th e ’
i diet) one can see that the body is
I securing a large amount of most
family is to he reared; to he adorned and beautified during!
valuable and wholesome nourishment.
the vigorous years of life and then truly a haven of refuge
Owing to the selective action of the
cells of the body and because every
in the declining years.
necessary element is furnished to
Men and women are the same today as ever. Instincts
normalize functional processes and
make it unnecessary and practically
are the same. Inherent qualities are not controlled hv
J’ScRRiALfi*
impossible for the cells to take up an
changed conditions. Modern life may suggest subterfuges
j excess of a certain element, all of any
FEV’Evd V I
Finishing
1
particular
element
that
is
supplied
Matinee—10c -
of a home, may make the realization of the desire for a
it
| above the absolute demands of the
To-Dav
J human economy for wear and tear,
5P
home dilticult, hut thcugh the subterfuge triumph and
THE THEATER BEAJT'FUI.
Evening—10c
J maintaining and increasing weight^
the desire fail, the instinct though stilled is as strong as
and repair work is expelled from the
R E X B E A C H ’S
ever.
body through normal eliminative
i channels.
There are those who regreat that the modern idea
This is decidedly opposite to the
action of the system when given the
suggests placing the home secondary in importance in life.
usual conventional diet. Jn such a
Friday and Saturday
M h\ a c.tstle, when theatres, dances, card parties and
diet the system is not supplied with
»
•
every requisite element, but rereiiltes
aiuuLj.
amusemenis in public places must he attended every night
some far in excess, with few correc-
in the week? Too many consider the home with fondly
ADOLPH TL’KOR
/
)
PRÏSÏ.’. .
i tive, normalizing elements. The final
result
is
an
exhaustion
of
certain
prayers, family gatherings, and a place which is consider-
functions and a deposition c t toxic
ed habitable several evenings during the week, one which
‘l’
elements in certain tissues.
Limited space does not permit of
is presided over l»y some old foggv. The pend
pen i lum ’ ; s i S
extended
instruction here, on how to
swung forward and will swing back. There w ill come the
Ù735
go on a milk diet so I will have to
deal with this in another article.
time when the home owning and home loving instinct will
T-Y-P-E-W-R-I -T-E-R-S
A
VICTOR ADDING MACHINES - FIL­
ING CABINETS AND DEVICES
F F. V. In
The Ziegfeld Follies
We Specialize In Office Supplies
Daily Fashion Hint
ELHARTS
THE SPOILERS 6?
prevail and the home he reinstated.
NEVADA ROY INJURED
BY CHRISTMAS TREE
TO T H E P R O SP C E T IV E H O M E SE E K E R
Ashland is one of the few towns of five thousand or
more population in the country that celebrated Christmas! U
without a single arrest being reported by the police de-’
take thoíc lips 4 W A Y ”
partment. Although not in keeping with the spirit of the
occasion, Christmas is a time selected by many as a period
for drinking and other hilarious practices. Immediately
Wi
AY
following ( hristmas news agencies herald the reports of
deaths resulting here and therefrom drinking and carous-!
ing. Police court dockets are filled with complaints charg­
ing numerous defendants with being drunk and disorderly.! 2
In fact the police usually make their biggest hauls at
©-ZÁ3
Christmas time.
The record in Ashland reflects a condition in the so­
Tak«, cb I ate fye# lip a- way, a.-way; L p s W nw#rmMn a , YorA they s^yj
cial and home life of the city that is gratifying. It por­
trays law abiding tendencies on the part of Ashland peo­
^ S o u th ern
A r i s t o c r a t nec Lions, real or fancied, so they
ple and reveals temperate habits
can’t imagine why Mr. Johns
To call attention to the fact that Christmas, carrying' Shatters Fam ily T ra­
keeps his noble secret dark.
ditions by T aking
its age-old traditions and lessons, was not besmirched with!
“I t’s because your family
to
Stage
doesn’t
count after you get out
intoxication and rowdyism is not a reflection on other
rustling for yourself,” the singer
towms hut reveals a ’ local Advantage that should appeal
York City.—An F. F. V. l1iT?te?tcd’. rsaI1-y embarrassed.
strongly to the prospective honieseeker who is desirious of -
My job is so fascinating th at it
he never even told his
gives
roe no time to think about
securing a location where his hoys and girls can he reared
•s--agent about it!
■things
like ancestors th a t are all
.‘ r e ’ s why Broadway simply
under influences that are healthful and clean.
in the past.
'
» t
stand Brooke Johns,
dunte *?f Georgetown Univer-
GASSED IN FRA N CE
\ S!/'. soloist in the Ziegfeld
in the Sunday Journal appeared the storv of an Ore­ Iocs tk:e year. It came out by
:’fi other day th at the
gon boy who was gassed in France. Weakened and with j
y'io.: !e;Y’ng, modest young fel-
days interrupted with sickness, he took up the fight for o»v,
-2 a gort of matinee idol
the existence not only of himself but a wife and four child­ ; rr,Hhd't- vn, comes of the bluest
' i'.Y’n::'. blood and numbers gov
ren.
I cnuvM »enators, archbishops and
The voluntary breaking up of a home is tragedy. .. .
cf aristocrats among his
“Look at my hit song, ‘Take
Those Lips Away.’ I ’ve .been
looking for several years for a
song iaea like that. A sort of
superlative degree of all the sen­
timental syncopation of the past
It is by my friends, Joe Mc­
Carthy and H arry Tierney, and
i ¡a having the time of my life
’»utting it over.
“It's what you really a . e th a t
co ants in this kind of an activity
My-ancestors can't help, so wh
□other to lug them out before U
publicl”
The divorce courts are full of such mischance. But this
hoy’s home has been breaking up, with everv fibre of rc-
yi<’?s who adorn Mr Zieg
sistenee in him set against it. Think how you would feel fe<’5 "'•'"¡•iction have always
a
ily
under similar circumstances, and you will understand.
1
"{lheir famii con
One by one the children have been transferred to the
care of others. Now only one is left, and the mothei. a !
Ritzville, W ash., will have charge
i of the work, with offices in Grqnts
few days ago he was told he should go to a hospital for !
tieatm ent. I nele Sam would provide the hospital care.!
m ir
i k ’ir
Biit his answer was no. While he was gone, what would
happen to the remnant of his home?
He is one ot the ex-serviee men who during the Christ Chica«0 Uami Company vvhi r u ­ J □ □ □ £
inas season has been waiting for work. Heavy labor and
dcrtak(* Development ami
protracted effort are beyond his strength. He Inis'
'
Uoionizuth n scheme
glad for odd jobs and temporary work, hoping that some­
GRANTS PASS, Dec. 2 6— A
thing permanent would come and open the door to the re ,.$500,000
developm ent and colon-
esthlishment of his home.
i ization program m e will be under-
A Repair Job
About* war there is nothing merciful. It takes
_____ fine,
_
ta!ien im m ediately after the first
In Time
hopeful, confident young meir, and it sends them back <)f the y,ar by the Cbicago Land
company, in which some 2100
weakened and broken l»y whund or insidious disease.
Always s a v e s nine,
But there can be mercy and sympathy when the boys acres of land w ithin the G rants
sometimes dollars and
Pass irrigation d istrict will be
return home.—Oregon Daily Journal.
sue etimes lives.
cleared, kveled and . planted to
T H E CANNED AGE
clover or alfalfa, farm buildings
erected and the tra c ts sold on a
long-time paym ent plan. Offices
are to be established in all of th e '
w estern cities and in small middle
w estern town j in an effort To in­
terest prospective settlers in the
biom the maritime provinces of Canada lobster cr6i
ners report a successful season. So we are assured Hiafc
lobsters aie still offered for sale. But the oldtime lobster
palace has been pushed out of undisputed favor by.the
newer blandishments of cabaret, tea room, and roof gard- dihtric?
W ork has iilready started on the
en.
project, following its in ’'” sement
Who reinenih?rS restaurants with aquariums in l i . c by c . M. Leonard of Cb.cago, he,,t
windows and sea food displayed m native state? These of the company, j . w . Hucaa of
1 %
, t T
n r>Aoo
,R ... S \ ALLEY, Nev., Dec. 27
-Little Raymond Berry, son of
William Berry of the Hills F lat
section, spent Christm as Day in
bed and in a semi-conscious con-
dition, all because the Christm as
tree from which he expected so
much pleasure fell upon him.
| The accident happened in the
hills near heer, where the elder
Berry and his son had gone to
procure a family Christm as tree.
The tree fell in an unexpected d ir­
ection and young Raymond was
caught.
According to physicians, the
condition of th e lad is still esr-
ious.
is the lining which puts the
1 j ' to reckless speed, or
out of reach of oy-
proaching danger.
Get It Here
AUTOMOTIVE
Shop
Cor Main and Pioneer
O N E-PIE C E COAT FROCK
I Fashioned in the most delightful
i Paris mode is this coat-frock of olack
¿harmcen, trimmed with narrow bands
of kolinsky. The front is trimmed with
two tiers of self-material, and the
fastening is in the ultra-smart diagonal
line. Tne single rever and collar are
cut *n one- The simplicity of this
»propri
model also niake8. it appropriate
for
development in velvet. Medium size
reqhires
yards 54-inch material, and
4%, yards narrow fur banding.
Pictorial Review Dress No. 1735.
Sizes, 34 to 44 inches bust. Price, 45
cents.
A l k n Dwan
Production
10c
35c
A sterling drama of tangled lives. Of a husband
who lulls into the merciless net of «mother woman.
Ot a wife who adopts the other woman’s weapons
in her winning fight for happiness. I t’s a big, ex­
pensive, glittering production of the enormous stage
hit.
luarium Gives Life and Color to Winter Windows
Classified ads bring results.
j it ,
“ 3 !
WINTER COUGHS AND COLDS
W ith the changeable w eather
which we have at this season of
the year coughs and colds are very
prevalent. Be prepared for them.
' Have a bottle of FOLEY’S HON­
EY AND TAR COMPOUND handy,
! and with the first sign of a cough
! or cold take a dose and prevent a
serious ailm ent. FOLEY’S HON­
EY AND TAR COMPOUND has
been the standard fam ily cough
remedy for over 35 years, bring­
ing prom pt relief and when once
used you will never be w ithout it.
Sold Everywhere.
ll'Jl
1 fS S " !
L
l
jjjl1 j j l
Ÿ////S
"t •
.F I G . 1
■PLATE
G LASS
PUTTY
9
0
SHEET
Z IN C
X
V IN IN G T H E A T R E
Matinee and Evening
T hursday, J a n u a ry 3
¡STETSON'S!
The ■ ;
B ig
“Tom4’
Show
From
The
Eastern
Coast
1» yen need Brake Lining
RA Y BESTO S
NITA NALDI
LEW CODY
CONRAD NAGEL
BAND AND ORCHESTRA
SCHOOLED
ACTORS
A CTRESSES
STREET PARADE
D PiPC Q Matince 25c - 5Oc
I I t l u L U Evening 50c - 85c
and $1.10
©
ITH winter closing in
• and shifting the so­
cial emphasis from
outdoor to indoor
life, the aquarium
) »nds a welcome note of anima*
Jon to the living room. And
the place for It is the window—
the natural focal point on gray and
hlustry days.
Finding an aquarium that snug­
ly fits a particular window sill Is
always difficult, for windows vary
widely in size. Such aquariums
are usually built to order. Any­
one handy with tools will find it
easy to make one for himself.
The first step is to measure the
window sill and decide what por­
tion of its area the aquarium Is
to occupy. In the case of the ordi­
nary “deep” window, the space will
measure about eight by thirty
inches. Having determined ac­
curately the size, construct a base
for the aquarium from a seven-
eighths-lnch piece of clear white
pine. Since It is to be a visible
part of a piece of living room fur­
niture, the edges should be care­
fully finished with a smoothing
plane, and then sandpapered.
0
FIG. 2
aquarium’s four plate glass walls.
The moulding shown in cross sec­
tion in Figure 2 may be had fin­
ished for use in a seven-sixteenths-
inch size. The corners where the
four sections of moulding Join
should be mitred as shown in
Figure 1.
At this point the aquarium base
and moulding should be given sev­
eral coats of paint or color var­
nish selected in harmony with the
woodwork or furniture of the room.
Before securing the plate glass
sides, obtain from a tinsmith four
strips of sheet copper, each of
which should be one and one-half
inches in width and a trifle less
than six inches In length. They
are bent to form angles to bind the
plate glass Joints as shown in Fig­
ures 1 and 8, and their bases fit
Inside the mitred joints of the
Next secure the moulding that moulding.
will edge the four sides of the With the aquarium base and cop-
base, and hold In alignment the
to
FIG. 3
any store or glazier handling
glass, and have four plates cut W
fit snugly inside the copper angles
The glazier Bhould also fierce the
upper corners of the glass sld«.
and the copper angles as shown la,
Figure 3 for the accommodatlea
of small copper bolts In the
assembly. The length of the plate
glass Bides will, of course, be deter*
mined by the inside m easn
of the moulding on the base. Tl
width, however, which will b e __
height of the finished aquartna^,
should be about six Inches.
After assembling the sides
base, securing the copper an____
with small copper bolts, the floor-
of the aquarium should be nomralj
with a sheet of sine or well
tin. When the edges of the aqaai
rium floor and the Jointed
glass sides have been
puttied, the aquarium Is rs
the native element of Ita ]
tlve flaay Inhabitants.
final
palaladj
/