Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, August 22, 1924, Page 2, Image 2

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    P u e Two
AötttAffft BAh.V lîb iifâl
MHMÌMM ì
A SH LA N D
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
throughout the city.
I ing of the latest styles by the twelve years ago in Portland. Sale
St. Helens — New Methodist
E ast Side feminine sex.
cf goods has been reported heavy, church will serve as community
A dancing rodeo! Tex Rickard
Division street is the Fifth ave- Buyers who purchase more than center. It has gymnasium, so-
who has promoted everything ! nue of this picturesque foreign : $500 w orth of goods will h a v e ' cial room, shower baths and
from a knitting contest to a Demo­ section, and the show windows are their railway fares refunded.-
| kitchen, it will cost 28,000.
crat National Convention, will ! as brightly electrified and as a r - 1
soon create the greatest dancing ' tistically decorated as those of
Corvallis — Work progresses
carnival in the world.
! its uptown sister avenue.
rapidly
on foundation for big ho­
Pend'.eton Woolen Mills won
The attem pt to find the best
And th e creatons — not called
tel
building.
OFFIOIAL CITY P A P E R ................................................................ T elephone 39
toe-tw inklers in the United States i th a t by Division street customers competitive contract to furnish 3,-
E ntered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffic e a s Second Class Mail M atter
Leading a double life may get you through just twice will penetrate into the sm allest i however — are every bit as chic. 000 blankets for new $4,000,000
as quick.
hamlet. W inners of local prize There is no good reason w-hy they Hotel Olympic at Seattle. The
Sub rlption P rice, D elivered in City
One M o n th ......
$ .45 i
dancing shoes will meet in State shouldn’t be, as the same m anu­ Oregon product was selected after
Three M onths
1-^5 •
Farmers Attention
hard test against best eastern
Six.M onths___
3.75 i
More can subtract their income from their expenses contests, and the State winners facturer sells to Division street a products.
There
are
those
who
will gathea together in Madison as to Fifth avenue.
O ne'Y ear........
Fly season will soon be on.
7-5* j easier than they can deduct their expenses from their
Square Garden here for the grand
By Mail and Rural Routes:
Get your Shoo Fly and E. Z.
You may fool milady of the still feel inclined to buy their
I .65 income.
One M onth__
Bos. fly spray for your cow’s
finale, with a $12,000 prize for East Sixties and Riverside Drive goods from abroad, even though
Three Months
1.95
___________________________
the best fly killer made. Gard­
the
home
products
are
proven
the
winner.
as to price and quality of gowns,
Six M onths__
3.50
en
Hose, and garden tools,
And there will be rulea, just but there is small chance to hood­ best. The elimination of freight
The Queen of Spain owns a beautiful typewriter of
One Year .....
6.50
fencing
and binder twine,
like baseball, m atrimony, or any wink the Division street belle. and time and other charges which
mowers and repairs always on
white
enamel
and
gold,
with
keys
of
ivory.
W
ouldn’t
the
DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES:
hand.
other national institution. Danc­ She is the one who helps produce make a needlessly high cost, gives
Single in sertion , per inch .................................................................. $ .30
iaverage stenographer like to tickle it?
ju st th a t much more money to he
ing
m
asters,
by
the
way,
are
try
­
the
garm
ents
in
some
loft
factory
Y early C ontracts:
divided between producers and
One insertion a w eek ............................................................................
.27%
ing to replace the “ Bootleggers’ during the day.
consumers.
It isn’t provincial­
Two insertion s a w eek .................................................. .......................
.25
Let us hope that this will prove an unusual deer Shake,” the “ Tiger Twaddle” and
D ally insertion ........................................... „ ..... .....................................
.20
season—that no human will be mistaken for a deer and the “ Camel C anter” with dances
The most popular book of the ism — it’s sense.
Rates for Legal and Miscellaneous Advertising
containing
less
figure
and
more
j
publishing
trade in New York has
mortally wounded or killed.
F irst insertion , per 8 point lin e ...................................................... $ .10
feet. Chief among the proposed ju st put out another edition. The
Each subsequent in sertion , 8 point lin e .........................................
.05
k « -» « ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
«
Card of T h a n k s ______________ . . . ___________________ _______
1.00
substitutions is the “ Raggedy new telephone directory gratifies
While
many
were
inclined
to
severelv
criticize
Gov-
Q bituaries, per lin e .................................................................................
.02%
*
—
A nn,” a foxtrot like a slow movie. the hum an craving for seeing
W HAT constitutes advertising
|erll0r Pierce for issuing a proclamation closing the open
As one professor explained the one’s name in print, with a new
All future event*, where an admission charge is made or a season to September 20, the executive was l ight. The pro- situation, in academic term s:
record of 800,000 names.
collection taken in Advertising.
“
If
a
kangaroo
got
on
a
mod­
tection of Oregon’s forests are paramount the hag limit
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders.
OGDEN, Utah, Aug. 21. — The
of two deer. Until the recent rain Oregon faced the great­ ern dance floor he’d feel like a
piker. People ain ’t taking danc­ Kaibab National Forest in south­
donations
No donations to charities or otherw ise will me made in advertis­ est fire hazard in history and steps looking to the pro­ ing lessons no more. They don’t ern Utah and northern Arizona
ing or .ob printing— our contributions will be in cash.
,
tection of Oregon’s forests are paramount tothe hag limit have to.”
, the la tte r part of this month will
condemnation.
be the scene of a conference of
AUGUST 22
The
twenty-six
miles
of
New
forest
service and game conser­
THEY THAT WAIT upon the Lord shall renew th eir strength;
Jersey
’s
famous
automobile
shor-
vation
officials
at which an effort
they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not
drivd is to be saved from the in­ will be made to solve the problem
be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint.— Isaiah 40:31.
UiS is a saying you often hear.
roads of the A tlantic Ocean by the of the 25,000 or more deer on
The wise man makes his own
erection
of
a
series
of
super-jet­
th
at
reservation.
This
is
accord­
A REMEDY IS SUGGESTED
:
chance. Open a savings account in
ties.
ing to announcem ent at forest
Widespread disappointment is being expressed by
this hank and help yourself.
Since t i c connection of the s e r'-’ce h e a d q u a r te r s here.
many citizens over the fact that Litliia park lias been
first jetty , m easuring 720 feet, at
The forest is only fifty miles
without lithia water for more than a week, and the fact
Monmouth Beach, N. J., six weeks square and it is estim ated the
♦
♦
that the fountain is drv has occasioned the invoking of
W ashington , Aug. 21. — “W hat the W orld W ants.” in ago, 500 feet of white sandy beach deer are increasing a t the rate of
which
the
needs
of
every
m
arket
have been added to the Campbell 8000 annually. The deer are pro­
much unfavorable eomment on the part of visitors who j
L n 'X n a X “ “
of the globe are made known to estate, on which the stru ctu re is tected at present and the Kaibab
are coming to the park from the four winds.
1 ican foreign business .th is year, m anufacturers and jobbers..
situated and it is expected th a t a te rrito ry has been practically
The condition is such that it requires immediate at- according to estim ates of the De­
Reports to W ashington indicate new beach will be built up for cleared of predatory anim als
Ashland, Oregon
th a t hundreds of business men in half a mile down the coast.
tention and the Tidings joins heartily in the suggestion Partment of Commerce,
which form erly preyed upon the
The
highest
approval
was
given
every
locality
“
listen
in
”
every
The jetty is modeled among the deer.
that the work of keeping the flow of water vanning con­
of the broadcasting of business Friday night to the trade infor­ design of th a t outside the Pana­
tinuously be transferred to the Park board. Citizens
statistics. More than 5,000 in­ m ation service.
District offices
PORTLAND, Aug. 21.— One of
take it that the department charged with the upkeep of quiries daily concerning foreign have special employes ready to ma Canal, with a forty-degree an­
gle and a mammoth line of rocks the most successful Buyers’ weeks
the flow and the fountain has not sufficient time to give business opportunities reach the rush fu rth er details on the pros-' on each side of a wooden core. It
in the history of Portland is to
to the work. The opinion is unanimous that aside from D epartm ent of Commerce, the ma- pective foreign buyers and refer- cost $120,000.
be brought to a close here this
supplying water for domestic and fire purposes that the ' jority of them as the result of the ances as to th eir credit ratings.
M illionaires’ Row, at Monmouth week-end with a big banquet F ri­
upkeep of Lithia fountain in the park is as important trade information service broad* “ Selling by radio” is expected Beach and Deal, has been endan­ day night a t the M ultnomah hotel
,,u ,in,.
„ m , ...1 ■ 1
• • ,
,
I cast by wireless, it was declared. to put American business men in
,
Y ™ d y " lth " hlcl1 “ «“ « P al employes are! A 8urvey dl8clo8ed that the a b etter position to capture world gered for years from the unpro­ and “ open house” Saturday
tected fury of the surf in stormy night.
1
* ' *
a r e IS no question but that mudi of Ash- average individual business result- m arkets than any other innova­ w eather.
More than 1,000 buyers have
land s popularity has been gained because of its lithia j ing from hints picked up from the tion in modern salesm anship
been here this week from over
water and the beautiful park bearing that name, and radi° service am ounts to $467 an- methods, according to the dep art­
T M E T H E A T E R BEAUTIFUL
W here do New- York girls and th e N orthw est and as far north
ment.
the fact that the fountain has been dry for the past te n inually’ running the aggregate
boys spoon? In moving picture as Alaska. Many of the buyers
Fiery—Passionate—Fantastic
days, and was dry on various former occasions during sales .to, a huge 8l‘m- exuc1ee<!in1g
th eatres, on buses, in hallways have not missed a single week
PRISCILLA DEAN in
and taxicabs. The old-fashioned since the idea was established
the early pait ot the season is reacting to the detrim ent' ance of trade.
courting
in
parlors
is
not
popu-
ot the city.
; Dr. Ju lias Klein, director of
■ lar due to the tissue-paper qual-
It the m atter of upkeep is transferred to the Citv Foreign and Domestic Commerce,
! ities of city apartm ent houses,
Park board arrangements will be made to give necessary declared th a t the radio had been A C hronicle o f Event« O ccuring j w herein a kiss sounds like an au ­
in W orld C enters of
attention to continuing the flow of lithia water at all and is of inestimable value in the
tomobile backfire.
P op u lation
promotion of business.
I can’t vote if I don’t register. Therefore, I pledge my-
(EstabUshed in 187«)
!se^
re8’ster and to make that registration good with
• my vote. ’ ’
P u b lished E very E v en in g E xcept Sunday, by
There is no doubt that the well-being of the nation
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
is dependent wholly upon enlightened, conscientious cit-
Bert r . Greer . ................................................................. E ditor ! izenship, and the recognition of the duty of registration
George Madden Green ..... ................................................. ..Business Manager and voting is tile first step to good citizenship.
PEIL’S CORNER
Give Me A
Chance
Radio Contributes Half
Billion to Business in
1924, Says Federal Board
T
:
The Citizens Bank of Ashland
\V
■.rwL.UtMC j r
Y/
NEWS LETTER
times, and any repairs demanded can be made with dis­
patch, saving and perpetuating Ashland’s reputation for
its {sparkling and invigorating water. Whenever the
flow of water is shut off from Lithia fountain during the
tourist season ai emergency is immediately created and
the condition dei rves to be dealt with as such.
Another mat ar brought to the attention of the Tid­
ings in connection with our lithia water is that of the
fountains at the Southern Pacific Depot. Although the
flow of soda and lithia water at that point is seldom
ever in te rfe re d with, tourists travelling on night trains
are compelled to find their way to the fountains through
the dark, or miss them entirely. A light placed at the.
fountains Mould obviate the necessity ot tourists making
many inquiries as to their location and give to strangers
a far better impression of the city.
SOCRATES AND THE HEMLOCK
Socrates was condemned to drink the hemlock be­
cause he made a nuisance of himself. He developed the
disconcerting habit of buttonholing the young men of
Athens on the streets and by adroit questioning made
them examine their stock of ideas.
What do you believe? Why do you believe? Can
your beliefs about yourself, the gods, the commonwealth,
your money, stand the test of a rigid cross-examination ?
These were the questions he asked and to which he de­
manded an answer. Summon your opinions before the
bar ot your reason and submit them to the analysis of
logic, of experience, of common sense.
Of course an old husv-body like that could not he
allowed to live. He was a heretic because he put an in­
terrogation point upon the popular religion. He was an
anarchist because he refused obeisance to the ancient tra­
ditions. He was a disturber of peace because he made
men think.
“ Men fear thought, as they fear nothing else on
earth—more than ruin, more even than death,” says Ber­
trand Russell.
Yet whatever provokes thought is good. W hatever
lulls one into a self-satisfied somnolence is bad.
“ In many cases business men
In spite of its sixtv-nine news­
NEW YORK, Aug. 22.— Women
‘listening in’ to the radio econ­
papers
p rinted in foreign lan-
omic news have heard of sales have entered alm ost every pro-
openings in countries as remote 1 fession, and now they have b e -! guages, th e Am ericanization of
come a useful addition to one ofj th ° E ast Side S°es on autom ati-
as A ustralia,” Dr. Klein said.
“ In one particular case an of­ New Y ork’s leading masculine in - ; caliy, thanks to the alert follow-
•
—
fice boy of a big Middle W estern dustries— rum -running.
The plebeian name for the pos­
bank tuned in a t night on a cry­
7
?
stal set and made notes of what ition they occupy is “ decoy” .
he heard concerning a prospective Dressed in the height of yachting
South American Government loan. I fashion, they recline in wicker
u n d
Next m orning he informed his chairs on the decks, of the vessels, i
Revenue officials recently dis- ■
employer of w hat he liad heard.
covered
the trick when they c a p -!
“ The bank president communi­
tured
a
ship unloading a ton o f '
cated with the St, Louis office of
the D epartm ent of Commerce by bootch which they had previous­
long-distance telephone. The in­ ly ignored, thinking it a pleasure
form ation obtained made it pos­ yacht.
sible for the bank to participate
The City of W hite Lights has
in the loan to its financial advan­
received a fiery splash of , color
tage.”
Every development of modern in the use of red flashlights in
science is being employed to keep the palms of traffic policemen at TWO-HORSE BRAND
American business men informed night.
of trade opportunities throughout
This new method of traffic di­
the world, according to depart­ rection is being experienced with
ment officials. This is regarded in congested areas. If it proves
as essential th a t business men successful it will be adopted
may succssfully meet the ever-
increasing foreign competition.
TH E C O P P E R R I V E T S
Sales, as a result of the radio
A N D T E S T E D D E N IM
inform ation service, are covering I
a wide range of commodities, in­
IN S U R E L O N G W E A R
cluding
practically
everything
m anufactured in this country from
NEW and USED
A SK YOUR DEALER
,• '• • ’ '/■I'--
-v-'. '
locomotives to neckties.. The de­
It
w
ould
be
w
lvisab
lo
to
get
partm ent declared th at radio is
A N E W C D t C IF TH EY
the quickest and most effective your h eater at one**.
P A IR
m anner of reaching the average
ALSO M A i
ASHLAND FU R N IT U R E
business man.
KOVERALLS
COMPANY
The economic radio service is
: MERCHANDISE «
0
4 N. Main
broadcast every Friday night from
the departm ent branch offices in
New York, Boston, Cleveland,
Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans,
San Francisco and other large
cities. It is prepared in W ashing­
ton and rushed to the auxiliary
offices by telegraph and mail.
WE HAVE INSTALLED A
A brief summary of foreign and
NEW MACHINE FOR
domestic conditions is followed by
EVERYBODY VOTE
Some magazines like Colliers and the Homeletic Re­
view, and some organizations, are making an earnest ef­
fort to stimulate interest in the exercise of suffrage.
According to some careful observers there is a grad
ual lessening of the sense of civic responsibility that
augurs ill for the republic.
Colliers states editorially:
In each national election since 1896 the proportion
of voters has dwindled. In 1896, 80 per cent of those quali­
fied to vote did vote; in 1900, 73 per cent; in 1908, 66 per
cent; in 1920, less than 50 per cent. Four years ago 54,-
421,832 Americans could have voted, but only 26,786,753
did so.
“ Such is the descending curve of American democ­
racy. Unscrupulous politicians get where they want by
herding their masses of unthinking voters to the polls.
Is n ’t it time more thinking voters were heard from?
“ Instead of being a parlor patriot, a rocking-chair
Paul Revere, let t ich American prove his righfrto citizen­
ship.”
The following pledge which each citizen makes to ;
himself and fulfills as a m atter of personal honor and I
self-respect is suggested:
“ I pledge myself to vote at the coming election. But
X
W ear in
HEATERS
FREE
jF' - 4 J *
The Vanity
Beauty Shop
25 N. Main Street
The Mills Building
Supported by
MAT MOORE
GUNS
and
AMMUNITION
W HEELS
Eight cars out of even- ten are out of line.
How About Your Car?
Let us examine your car wheels—i t ’s free.
Wheels must be in line to get the mileage that is
built into a tire.
Make Sure
Kruggle Bros. Tire Shop
“White Tiger”
A gripping drama of mystery—adventure and thrills—•
love—law and loot.
ALSO
Simpson’s
Hardware
“Going to Congress”
witii Will Rogers
What the World Is Doing
1 A s Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine
T ow er o f Revolving Floors
for Parking Automobiles
Mystery of Arctic Barrier Baffles
Radio Experts
Motor Cycle Is Cattle Cart
for Trips to Market
As a solution to the automobile
parking problem, an Ohio inventor
offers a circular steel garage “tower,”
consisting of a number of revolving
stories arranged one above the other
and each affording space for several
cars, which are to be raised to position
by an outside elevator. He estimates
that a structure of this type with
twenty floors, thirty-six feet in Hiam-
Since July, 1922, when the Maud,
Amundsen’s exploration ship, made its
dash northward, and became frozen in
the ice in latitude 78° north, longitude
165° west, the ship’s radio has been
sending out two messages a day. These
messages have been received by nearly
all stations in Europe, across the
North Pole, but they have not been
received in Alaska, the United States
or Canada.
MacMillan’s ship, the Bowdoin,
now frozen in at Refuge Harbor, lati­
tude 78.30 north, longitude 72.30 west,
has found that the only station with
which it can communicate regularly
is that of Jack Barnsley, station 9BP,
of Prince Rupert, B. C., and since
Sept. 7, 1923, all press stories from the
Bowdoin and all messages to and from
it have been handled through Barns­
ley. Other stations have heard WNP
(the Bowdoin) but all report very un­
satisfactory reception.
Why is this? That is the question
radio experts are asking.
What
mysterious, invisible barrier prevents
these messages from reaching this
country? Is it the influence of the
aurora borealis or the magnetic pole
that causes a “dead spot” surrounding
the pole on this hemisphere? These
questions the Aerial League of
America has set itself to solve, and
the co-operation of all radio amateurs
is invited in the tests. Prizes will be
offered by the league for the best re­
ports of experiments by amateurs.
The object of the research work is,
first, to ascertain the effect of daylight,
twilight, and darkness; ice, water,
snow, verdure, atmospheric conditions
and geological formations on radio.
Second, to ascertain and define the
location and strength of natural Hi«,
turbances and interferences acting
upon receiving stations all over the
world, under various conditions.
Third, to locate and map the “dead
areas” of the earth, and delve into the
causes of the mysterious barriers to
radio transmission. Fourth, to find
out whether radio signals travel
equally rapidly through earth, air, and
water.
To .haul live stock to market, at
farmer in England built a roomy crate
on the frame of a motor-cycle sidecar.
L IN IN G
U P
New Beauty Shop
The Vanity Beauty Shop
has opened under the
management of Mrs. Aud­
rey Trobee of San F ran ­
cisco, where every line of
Beauty Culture may be
obtained, including the
well-known H arper meth­
od of Scalp Treatment.
Winchester Store
eter, would hold two hundred automo­
biles and might provide additional
facilities for radio stations, an obser­
vation or amusement center, or pos­
sibly a landing place for aircraft or an
anchor post for dirigibles.
* *
Porous Bronze Bearings Help
Prolong Life of Auto
Absorbing oils and grease up to 25
per cent of its volume, a copper-tin
bronze automobile bearing recently
developed is expected to simplify the
problems of lubrication and to aid in
prolonging a car’s life. Under a test,
it was found of service in all ordinary
uses and in many cases satisfactory
for replacing ball and roller types.
Thousands of tiny pores give the metal
the qualities of a blotter or a wick. In
a demonstration, a kerosene lamp was
fitted with a bushing of this material,
instead of a cotton wick, and burned
is long as the liquid lasted.
The pen which is of strong wood, ac­
commodates a large animal and has
a compartment for egg boxes and
other produce. A gate at the rear
serves as an entrance and a halter tied
to the slats holds the animal steady-
while the machine is in motion.
Fruit Cutter Like Pliers Stamp«
Out Designs
Scalloped edges are placed on grape
fruit and orange halves for preparing
“fancy” salads and other dishes with
the aid of a pincer-shapeh device. It
has cutting blades shaped to stamp
out a design with the precision of a
die, and the leverage afforded by the
spring handles makes the task easy.
Fruit skins can be cut into basket
handles and other fancy patterns that
only a skilled person could achieve
with an ordinary knife. It is made
of durable metal, nickel plated, and
the blades are strongly riveted to the