t*ace tw o Älofiduy, August 4, loíí-l ASHLAND DAILY T ID IN G S it would be far more logical to teach the danger of-tak-I resolution o f thanks ing ‘heat’.” passed by in stitu te (Established in 1876) Reform in women’s dress came about from the die-i , Published Every Evening Except Sunday by tales of fashion, not from appreciation of the hygienic J X "X -o n “ THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. ________________________________________________¡values of the new styles. And it is to be feared that men, League In stitute, now meeting in B ert r . G r e e r ................................................................ ' _________ ....Editor also, however cordially they may agree with the hvgien- Lithia P ark : Be it resolved th at this body, George Madden Green ....................................................Business Manager , jsts’ Opinions concerning masculine attire, will not make the Epworth League Institute of o ffic ia l city p a p e r ........................ ................ Telephone 39 the change ssuggested until the arbiters of fashion give Entered at the Ashland, Oregon Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter Subscription Price, Delivered in City w o rd J .«5 The greatest enemy of law and order is one dead-let- 1.95 i , 3.75 ter law. One Month Three Months ... Six M o n th s........... One Year .............. 7.5 9 | j By Mail and Rural Routes: 3 .65 Sophistication is just a slow and painful process of 1-96 getting fed up. 3.50 i One M o n th ........... Three Months ..... Six M onths........... One Year ........... DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES: Single Insertion, per inch ................ ...... ..... .............. ................ Yearly Contracts: One insertion a week ................ .................................................... Two insertions a week ................................................................... Dally Insertion ................................................................................. Rates for Legal and Miscellaneous Advertising First insertion, per 8 point line ................................................. Each subsequent Insertion, 8 point line.......... ,......................... Card of T h a n k s ---- _ ------------ -----------— ....... ......................... Obituaries, per line.......................................................................... _________ _____ 6.50 ! I .30 .27 H .25 .20 $ .10 .05 i.o o .02 % UHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING “ All future events, where an admission charge Is made or e collection taken in Advertising. No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders. DONATIONS No donations to charities or otherwise will me made In ad v ertis­ ing sr job printing—^our contributions will be in cash. ■ *-.■ , .... ■■■«*— , , »»— ■■■ .Ill, , , .... AUGUST 4 HE THAT BY USURY and unjust gain increaseth his sub­ stance, he shall gath er it for him th a t will pity the poor. A faith ­ ful man shall abound in blessings: but he th at m aketh haste to be rich shall not be innocent.— Proverbs 28:8, 20. After 11 P. M. the average husband is either in bed ¡or in bad. Our roads are long enough but there are a lot of them that are not wide enough. Those looking forward instead of what’s coming first. backward see the Southern D istrict of the Ore­ gon conference of the Methodist Church, expresses its appreciation of the cooperation of the Park j Board for th e use of the park ' with its facilities; the Lithians for the use ofo th eir pavilion; the Chamber of Commerce for ma­ terials furnished, Mr. Bert Greer for the use of his bungalow; the members of the local Methodist m"l M l I l> church for their loyal backing, financial and otherwise and the Ashland Daily Tidings for the publicity so courteously given, and others who have helped to make the Institute a success. Be it fu rth er resolved th a t a , vote of thanks be given by this, body to these people, and that a copy - of these resolutions be given the Ashland Daily Tidings. EDWIN JOHNSON, THOfi. D. YARNES. Average weight of Oregon w ool! fleeces is 9 pounds, more than a i pound better than average weight j for whole country, which was 7 I to 8 pounds in 1922. Along The Road Interesting Reminiscences By A Southern Oregon Pioneer E are all travelers along life’s road. Debt is the burden that Being a series of interesting articles dealing w ith early day- events and pioneer men and women who made history and bulldted for succeeding generations. (By C. B. WATSON) u/ck Safes of Your Surplus Articles Is the wood-shed cluttered up with equipment which has a value to somebody, hut is worthless to you? Is tiie store-room or attic filled with articles which are not in use? Make a quick disposal of these sur­ rides you. The savings account is plus articles by using a c lassified something for you to ride on. advertisement in C hapter Fifteen who the robber w a s, Pinto had slipped up and, scattering our Crater Lake; The Crippled Duck: packs, got hold of the provision OPEN-FACED MEN Newspaper paragraphers like to poke fun at adver­ A Swim that Almost Becomes sacks and shaking each in turn Short of Provisions; had picked up w hat he could of tisements announcing the loss of an ‘‘open-faced man’s Tragedy; Ashland, Oregon Pinto Gets into Camp and Des­ dried apple’s sugar and flour from watch.’’ Who and where is this open-faced man they the grass and dirt. We thought troys the Little We Had. impure? with Bobbie: But, truly the open-faced man is not a joke. May his j Wp Leave Camp W'ithout Break* “The best laid plans of mice and tribe increase! The countenance of the open-faced man, fast aml Find a Huckleberry- Gang men voices of women and children. It aft-a-glee” . is no mask, behind which is hidden deceit, trickery, j Patch. A Long Hungry Ride was luxury which, under the cir­ Huckleberries Found guile and all the things that go to make a man contemp-: Down the Mountain. cumstances most to be appreciat­ We caught the culprit and ed. table and despised by all who come in contact with him. ; throw ing him down whipped him Springs; Outing Party and with BW’itclies ’till he squealed The river here is a beautiful His character is open, frank, four-square. The open face Foley Food. stream , clear as crystal with the like a pig. This diversion, how­ is ail open book. < r» _ . * ever, did not allay the sensations bodies of myriads of fishes clear­ One may say also that the open face is a mirror, re­ The little lake beside which we of an empty stomach. The beau­ ly to be seen. The men had built ceiving and radiating light. The countenance of the camped is a crater lake of un­ ty of our camp was no longer a suspension foot bridge across open-faced man is cheering and illuminating when other known depth. It is almost cir­ visible. Our whole thought was, the river with long fir poles which cular and is surrounded w ith a when shall we get som ething to was a work of genious and engin­ men’s faces are shadowed by gloom and despair. margin of meadow land and that, oat? We packed up, mounted our eering skill. The open-faced man is no professional Sunny Jim. In tu rn , surrounded with m agni­ horses and headed down the We tarried an hour or so in The light in his countenance is the faith that is in his ficent larch and other trees pe­ m this friendly company and as the ountain. Occasionally we no­ heart and other ten find courage and strength in his culiar to the high altitudes. It ticed the smoke we had seen the sun was yet a couple of hours was a beautiful spot with the day before and speculated on the high concluded to go on down presence. The smile tin graces the open-faced man is not pro­ great snow banks two or three possibility of a dangerous forest the river to make our camp. We miles aboue us and in plain view. fire, a friendly camp or possibly were told th a t a lettler had ap­ fessional. It is there because there is a cheer}' heart. To the west was an opening propriated a tract of attractive Its possessor is optimistic, has faith in himself, his fel­ through thè trees and untold some adventurous herm it clearing land about two miles below and up a new home in the wilderness. lows and in eternity. thousands of acres of grand for­ A few miles down the steep trail had a stack or two of hay where Despite the with paragraphers, there are indeed est covered the rapidly declining we emerged from the tim ber and it was thought we would be able open-faced men. There are many of them, hut still not mountain-side. The situation and entered a space of several hundred to get feed for our horses. We view was one to arouse the poet’s acres of brush, high as the horses’ were also told th a t we would not enough. There are far too many of the double or two- muse, and strike much in the way of settle- faced individuals who masquerade under the guise of “ Around this lonely crater lake backs, in places higher than our ment the next day, so we purchas­ heads as we rode along. The men. Their word, like their countenance, is counterfeit. There lingered not a breeze to brush was loaded with large p u r­ ed enough from these kindly peo break, They deceive for a while, hut their time is brief. Soon ple berries. None of us knew pie to carry us over the next day. The m irror which its w aters they are discovered and made the subject of the scorn what they were, but looked good. and pursued our way. m ake.” We found the settler and learn­ We looked ahead where Oscar they deserve. The sun was a couple of hours ed that he had been here for sev­ Yes, God grant us more open-faced men! Scripture high and realizing the shortness Phillips rode th e bell-mare and eral years having nothing but a saw he was gathering them in gives honorable mention to the men of open face, for in of our commissary, I borrowed and m unching with gusto. Myer, packtrail connecting him with Corinthians, if the writer mistakes not, it is written: ‘‘We Myer’s W inchester rifle and tried Cardwell and I concluded to civilization until th e enterprising all with open face beholding as in a miror the glory of by luck at a duck th a t swam watch him awhile, and if they people of the valley had cut the j out on the lake. I broke seemed not to hurt him we would road to “ The Springs.” We got 1 the Lord, are transformed into the same image from quietly its wing and Carwell proposed try them and by and by we were w hat hay we wanted and a few glory to glory.” th a t he and I swim out and get gathering and eating with energy. vegetables he had produced. He it. I dem urred th a t Its broken W alrad thought they were huck­ was a bachelor and was waiting N orm an H. Davis, U nder-sec­ h e said, “a n d it should n o t he nec- ; aro u n d a tab le dealing w ith any wing would not interfere with its leberries but was not sure. We until he m ight have some neigh­ re ta ry of S tate d u rin g th e W ilson essary to say th a t Mr. W ilson w as questions relativ e to peace and HOW OTHER PEOPLE LIVE swimming. He continued his bors when he intended to get him a d m in istra tio n , h a s recently com ­ n o t— in fav o r of m ak in g any com - prosperity, w hich a re of such vital found them to be delicious and Domestic economy experiments that begin anywhere banter, however, and I finally con­ filled a wife. This we thought was con­ pleted service a s c h a irm a n of a m ltm en ts ever to use force in an j im portance to us. W e can not up on them. A hungry man, m ission of th e L eague of unknow n contingency. I th in k afford not to th ro w all th e w eight and land nowhere, which were almost an epidemic in the sented. Carwell was a b etter however, will not be wholy satis­ siderate. Such men form the com N ations w hich succeeded in th ro w ­ a t if th e U nited S tates w ere in I of o u r m oral influence tow ard strenuous Rooseveltian days, seem to be trying to make swimmer than I and the- w ater fied with berries, but they were back bone of a new country. We ing open to w orld traffic th e R iver th th e L eague th e re w ould n o t be any securing th e aim s for w hich « » was almost ice cold. A fter g o ­ camped with com fort and had hay N iem en. a n im p o rta n t w aterw ay of necessity to use force, b u t if oc- m t . red a n d fo u g h t th e war. an 1 certainly better than nothing. We a “ come back.” Tentative programs in the Middle West ing out a short distance I balked to sleep on, a luxury to us. We eastern E urope a n d a likely sub- casion should ever a rise it s h o u ld ,, those ain.’j can best b e secured l r and New England that developed some fantastic, if not and turned back. A dry pine log afterw ards learned th a t they were felt th a t we were now getting Ject of w ar fo r several years, of course, be le ft en tirely to Con- co-operating in th e m a in te n a n .« huckleferrles. I have become ludicrous, facts in connection with domestic budgets and lay on the shore and I proposed quiet w ithin calling distance of “ home” . BUown w ith Mr. D avis is A rth u r gress to d eterm in e w h e th e r o r not of rules of conduct am o n g nation-, fam iliar with this fru it since B ullard, e d ito r of "O u r W o rld” we should use it. B ut one of th e w hereby disputes m ay be settled t > we put it into the w ater as a . W hat a wonderful word is aa 1 noted w rite r on in te rn a tio n a l m ost re m a rk a b le developm ents of the orderly processes of negotii, individual experiences, have provoked competition in support. This we did; A1 tak in g ^ " 2 L h “ Ckle' aff/Jrs, who “ HOME” . It seemed th a t we had aff»„rA n h n acted onto/t a s Mr. D avis’ th e last tw o o r th re e y ears is th e lion, conciliation an d courts a t New York City. berries so large, luscious nor in the front end and I the back end been away years and now we had a ssista n t In th e p a in sta k in g in ­ realization, to w hich I have re- justice. An educational institution in that city will begin a where there was a fork in the such prodigal abundance as in this a road instead of the uncertain- vestigation conducted by th e com - ferred , th a t th e force of public “There Is every evidence t ’* t th e last on. patch which I have since learned opinion is m uch m ore effective vast m ajo rity of th e A .n e ^ x a series of experiments September 1, to discover ways and log. ties of a tra il through the wilder- Mi. Davis believes, according to th a n a n y o th e r force. T h a t is the people a re stro n g ly in favor c f o . • has become the mecca of annual ’ means to cut down the cost of living for the families of Of course the duck swam away berry hunting campers from the " T , ' W»*.«:r.eats be m ade oa his re tu rn pow er th e U nited S ta te s would J a w in g war. It does not ser a t# tv N-: a ’ York, th a t th e perm ission b rin g to G eneva. from us as we knew it would. be fully recognized as yet, ;. Ashland, August 1, 1924. men with “ average salaries” who are conceded to be the valley. p .'n -J from L ith u a n ia fo r the “ I do n o t for a m om ent b e lie v e , ever, th a t th e co venant o i «:.* The lake was about half a mile C. B. WATSON. greatest sufferers from high costs. Doivs :'a use M emel, th e p ort a t the th a t th is co u n try should try to ru n League, w hich h a s now becctu « n. A Camp And Provisions wide and we had reached about » t - i - n of th e N iem en. h a s a v e rted | th e w orld o r to in te rfe re in th e law for fifty-four n ations or' If the plan is to teach young women students how half way to its center when A1 As we reached lower altitudes K lam ath Falls— Frem ont Land * -*•*♦’» .> sn possible In te rn atio n a l in tern al affairs of th e nations of world, does outlaw w ar lo r a t h a st to “ scrimp” along on fixed sums of small figures, the was taken with cramps and the through this- wonderful forest we Co. of Minneapolis gets contract P’i.fi'.cl a id js typical of th e kind ; E urope o r elsew here, h u t I do be- nine m o n th s over a given coir.a» * 1«»j, th a t th e League, in Which lieve th a t o u r sta k e in th e world versy, until th e League has h- J three months’ experience probably will not be worth the situation looked critical. I .told were kept busy following the for cutting 300,000,000 ft. ripe V» r a r e l y favors m em bership by peace a n d progress is so great, to an o p p o rtu n ity to bring abo,:: » trail. It was very steep in places time required. The wives of small salaried men him to get on the log and I ’d tr y and had been over grown with tim ber on N orth Marsh unit of Siarc.s, can offer to t h e , say n o th in g of a n y m oral duty, conciliation. T he League m a / r « . th a t we can n o t afford to be absent prevent all wars, but it can, by tl.l» can show these young women more ways to make a dol­ to push It to the shore. He was brush and cluttered by fallen K lam ath Indian reservation. cm hot and Lave not been” , . w hen o th e r n a tio n s a re s ittin g ' p .. a n s. p:cv_;n a lot o f w ar< " excited and in pain and in his lar work overtime than they will find out for themselves efforts fell over the log and went glimpse of the smoke we had in a much longer time than three months. under, but came up alm ost at seen from the summit. The day Learning how other people live should have some once and after another effort got was w earing away and our hun­ on the log. I now let down to ger not appeased. Finally the social value if it is to be better than a waste of tinie. see if I could touch bottom. The smoke seemed close a t hand and fu rth er dowrn I went the colder it we could see th a t we were near­ got and when I reached the log ing the river. Our trail led us CLOTHING REFORM FOR MEN around some cliffs th a t hid the Various opinions will be found among the public as again I was shivering. I turned river from us. On passing these 1 log tow ard shore and after to the new styles in women’s dress—the shortening of the great effort landed. A1 was so cliffs, and w ithout any w arning; skirts, the decline in the use of stays, and other recent exhausted w ith the pain and ef­ we came into a camp where sev­ changes in feminine attire—hut there is one class of cit­ fort th a t it was some time before eral fam ilies; men, women and rom ping about or lol­ izens in whom there is unanimity of sentiment on the sub­ he could dress himself. We re­ children, ling in the shade. I have never ject. Hygienists, health workers approve of the new turned to camp and found a seen calico th a t looked so gorg- repast, it being deemed styles, saying they are sensible and conductive to the meager best to save the residue of break­ tously fine in my life. They were 2 LADIES OR LADY AND ESCORT WILL BE AD­ building up of sturdy physiques in women. fast. W hen taking an inventory as much surprised to see us com­ In this connection it is interesting to observe a de­ we found a little bunch of dried ing out of this tow ering w ilder­ MITTED ON ONE PAID 35c TICKET TONIGHT ONLY as we were to see them camp­ mand for reform ii men*8 clothing. Men dress too warmly apples, a very little sugar and ness ing on its border. A few words and too tightlly, i is held. Over heated rooms are res­ about a q u art of flour. These were sufficient to enlighten all carried in separate sacks. We ponsible for some M the ill-defined ailments observed in we twisted up the m outh’s of the hands. We were a t w hat now certain industries. The workers suffer from “ chronic sacks and foro b etter protection is known as “ Foley Springs” heat poisoning.” In order to combat this menace some piled our pack saddles and other which has grown to be a great summer resort. This was the first states have factory laws requiring that workshops shall equipment on top. year th a t wagons had been en- Provisions Low he well ventilated. The same principle, says a recent writ­ We went to bed w ith some ap­ abied to reach er on the subject, should be applied to men’s clothing. prehension J O of a long fast the next families to be taken there. They There should he ventilation in the attire as well as in the clay. We had no knowledge of were improving the conveniences building. The tight-fitting shoe, which not only keeps the distance to a place where and attractions of the spot and air away from the foot but may reform it; the garter we could replenish, nor in fact the burning of th eir refuse had caused th e smoke we had been which contricts the leg; the trousers, binding the knees were we sure about our trail. We watching. knew there was game in the for­ and hips; the belt which cramps the abdomen; the starch­ est We soon made our w ants known but we w"ere not hunters and ed collar around the neck—all thees should be reformed, had but o n e . gun. So it stood and were generously and prom pt­ it is contended. us in hand to guard our little ly supplied. Among other things they furnished us with m agnifi­ supply. As the Nation’s Health puts it; “ Man possesses enor­ cent tro u t ju s t taken from the Pinto Turns Robber mous powers of resisting cold; yet there seems to he a w ater. We forgot- our trib u la ­ the next m orning we were deep-rooted antagonism to working and living in a tem­ up E arly tions in th e enjoym ent of a ban­ and our first glance at our perature much below 68 degrees Fahrenheit. We are sacks disclosed the fact th a t we quet supplied by dainty hands, taught from childhood to be afraid of taking ‘cold’ hut had been robbed. It was plain garnished w ith the welcome The Citizens Bank of Ashland The Tidings Americans A id Eastern Europe to Settle Memel Problem, Old Incentive to War‘ r \ __ • !•- » Davis Credits Peace Victory to League L A D IE S FREE T O N IG H T Tent Theatre Beautiful Located Opposite Lithia Park The play is a new one and never named. Written by Billy Tripp, tlie comedian of the Kincaid Company. See this play and the springs, or name it. and if name is selected you zet Getting better every night. If you miss the Evelyn Kincaid show, you are missing a good one. Better come early tonight as ladies free will pack the big tent to the doors