ASHLAND t Ú Í L t tW Í& til Hag© ASH LA N D D A IL Y T ID IN G S (E stab lish ed in 1 8 7 6 ) P u blished E very E ven in g E xcept Sunday by THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. S o c ie ty o’clock, celebrating Her ninetieth birthday, i t was a great surprise to Mrs. Payne, who enjoyed it very much. A fter a wonderful dinner Mrs. Payne told of h er experiences in crossing the plains as a bride in the early fifties when they were on the road with ox team, for six m onths and half from th eir east­ ern home to Oregon. A fter many wishes for health and happiness the guests wended th eir way homeward, hoping to retu rn again next year for a n ­ other celebration. Among those present were Mesdames J. R. Pittenger, Clif­ ford, C. E. P ra tt, G. H. Day, S. B. Tallman, Mallacoate, Van Fos- sen, J. A. Ruger, Moore, Hersey, CALENDAR OF EVENTS B ert R. Greer ......................................................................................... Editor Thursday, Oct. 23. Ladies Eiks George Madden Green ..................................................... Business Manager Club will m eet at the club rooms OFFICIAL CITY PAPER ................................................. .^T elephone 39 at 2:30. Election, of officers. E ntered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffice as Second C lass Mail M atter Saturday, Oct. 25. P. E. O. will Subscription Price, Delivered in City m e e t'a t the home of Mrs. Ada Ona Month ................................................. ........................................... $ .65 Shoudy. Three Months ................ „ ..................................................................... 1.95 Monday, Oct. 2?. Ashland Music Six Months ............................................................................................ 3.75 Study Club will meet. One Year ................................................................................................ 7.50 • * • B y Mail and R ural R outes One Month ............................................................................................ $ .6 5 1 Surprise N eighbor— Three Months ....................................................................................... 1.95 Monday afternoon, October 20, Six Months ...............~ ......................................................................... 3.50' the neighbors in the 400 block on One Year ................................................................................................ 6.50 North Main street surprised DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES G randm other Payne by appearing •Ingle insertion, per inch ........ ...... ......................... ................... $ .30 with a covered dish dinner a t six Y early Contracts One Insertion a week ............................................................................. 27% Two insertions a week ................................................................... .25 Belly insertion .................................. .............................................. .20 C harter No. 104 Reserve D istrict No. 12 R ates for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF F irst insertion, per 8 point line ................................................. $ .10 Bach subsequent insertion, 8 point line ................................. .05 Card of Thanks ................................................................................. 1.00 AT ASHLAND IN THE STATE OF OREGON Obituaries, per line ........................................................................ .02% AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS OCTOBER 10th, 1924 WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING “All fu tu re events, where an admission charge is made or a RESOURCES collection taken is Advertising. 1. Loans and discounts, including redis- No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders. counts shown in items 29 and 30, if any 16 k sm 2. O verdrafts secured and unsecured.......... 55.63 DONATIONS 3. U. S. governm ent securities owned, in­ No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis­ cluding those shown in item s 30 and ing or job printing— our contributions will be in cash. 35, if any .................................................... 15,000.00 »------------------------------------------—-— ------------------------ — 4. O ther bonds, w arrants and securities, in eluding foreign governm ent, state, m uni­ OCTOBER 22 cipal, corporation etc., including those THE CHRISTIAN’S MISSION:— Preach, saying,, The kingdom shown In Items 30 and 35, If any..............- 7,601.30 of heaven is at hand. Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freaiw give.— Mat­ 6. Banking house, $6,000.00; fu rn itu re and fix­ tures, $3,209.01 ............... • ................................ 9,209.01 thew 10:7, 8. 9. * (ab) Cash on hand in vault and due from banks, bankers and tru s t companies........ designated and approved reserve agents of this bank ............................................................ 50,992.42 DRUNKEN DRIVERS 10. Exchanges for clearing house and items The best wav w to deal with the drunken automobile on other banks in the same city or town as reporting bank ............................................ 587.08 driver, is not only to put him in jail, but to deny him the 11. Checks on banks outside city or town of right to drive a car for a long period after his release. reporting bank and other cash item s...... 531.05 THE STATE BANK OF ASHLAND The number of such drivers is large enough to constitute Total ...................................... 240,752.89 a grave menace to public safety. It ought to be an estab­ LIABILITIES ' lished policy, applicable without exception in such cases, 1G Capital stock paid in ................................... 25.000.00 17. Surplus fund .,................................. - ............. 5,000.00 that the menace must be removed from the highways. 18. (a) Undivided profits ..............-...... $9,984.10 The enforcement of such a policy might tend to make (b) Less cu rren t expenses, interest and taxes paid ............... 7,195.09 2,789.01 the prohibition laws better observed, and that certainly DEMAND IJEPOSIT8, other than banks, subject to reserve: would be a good thing. But the immediate and main ad­ 23. Individual deposits subject to check, in­ vantage would be the protection of the public. To insure cluding deposits due the State of Oregon, county, cities or other public funds ........ 105,117.90 the safety of life and limb, so far as this is humanly pos­ 24. Demand certificates of deposit outstanding 100.00 sible is the-first duty of organized government. 25. Cashier’s checks of this bank outstanding payable on demand .................................... 1,792.13 A few days ago, an aged man, walking across the Total of demand deposits, other than street in Portland, was run down by a car, filled with in­ bank deposits, subject to reserve items 23, 24, 25, 2 f. $107,010.03 toxicated people, who sped on after knocking the old man TIME AND SAVINGS DEPOSITS, sub­ to the ground. The old man died, and although the mo­ ject to reserve and payable on demand subject to notice: torists were pursued by a motorcycle policeman, they es­ 27. Time or certificates of deposit outstanding ... 12,616.74 caped. Such drivers as these are even worse murderers 28. Savings deposits, payable subject to notice ......-....................................................... 88,337.11 than the thug who holds you up in the streets, for with Total of tim e and savings deposits payable on demand or subject to the thug, you have a small chance of escape, while with notice, items 27 and 28, $100,953.85 a drunken driver, you have no chance what-so-ever. Total .............................................7.............. 240,752.89 Here in Ashland, we have no such prdblem. The drunken driver is practically never seen. Let’s keep STATE OF OREGON, County of Jackson ss. I, G. G. Eubanks, cashier of th e above named hank, do sol­ things the way they are, by stiff jaii sentences for viola­ emnly swear th a t the above statem ent is tru e to th e best of my tors, together with the loss of their drivers license. knowledge and belief. G. G. Eubanks. Cashier FILLING UP RURAL OREGON Settlement of 500 families in various parts of rural Oregon during September is a concrete result of the work of the Oregon de> lopment fund and of the Oregon State Chamber of Conm rce. The state has begun to cash in on the expenditures Hom the development fund of the Port­ land chamber for advertising and land settlement and on the labors of the seventy-four local chambers that com­ pose the state chamber in locating the new arrivals and giving them a good start. If each community had applied its money and effort to its own exclusive benefit, none of them could have ac­ complished as much for itself as their united effort through the state chamber has accomplished for all. By working 'unitedly for all of Oregon, they have made their combined energy and funds count for much. While reclamation of large tracts of land necessarily involves planting of large bodies of new settlers in single farming communities, scattering of small numbers of families among the population of old communities has de­ cided advantages. The newcomers learn and receive help from their neighbors, are quickly absorbed and become imbued with the spirit of the state. The state chamber can give information by which one section can be com­ pared with others for the purpose of deciding on a new home, and the local chamber can guide the stranger as to price and character of land and as to markets. The surest way of building up a large city is to fill up the state with people and to build up the smaller cities. There is a better filled reservoir for all to draw from, and with ordinary enterprise each can get his share of the increase. HERE’S OUR HOOCH Twenty-four hundred-cases of whiskey front New York have arrived in Liverpool. Two years ago it went to New York from London for “ medicinal purposes.” Until reshipped to England it lay in bond in New York, because bootleg whiskey could be bought at less 4cost than it would have cost to pay the duty and the purchase priee of the Loudon booze. Wherefrom, you leam that the cheaper smuggled whiskey has the business in the Gotham market. I t ’s a sad commentary on 1924 public honesty, and morals, isn’t it! Architects with a mania for built-in contrivances might toy for a while with the possibilities for built-in heat. The early bird gets the publicity, we hear a great deal about the first robin, but nothing about the last one. Borah, Patterson, A. A, Marske, Coder, W ilton, Yarborough, Miss Dayton and G randm other Payne. • • • L adies Aid M eets— The Ladies Aid Society of the Methodist Church held the busi­ ness and social m eeting at the home of Mrs. C. F. Tilton Wed­ nesday afternoon, October fif­ teenth. About twenty were pres­ ent. The annual election of of­ ficers were held at this meeting and the following were elected: President, Mrs. A. D, Jillson; Vice-President, Mrs. J. W. Mills; Secretary, Mrs. E. A. . Allen; T reasurer, Mrs. A. A. Marske. Re­ freshm ents of cake and coffee were served and a social time was enjoyed greatly by all. • • • E lk s Club E le cts— The Ladies Elks Club will hold th eir card party and annual elec­ tion of officers at th eir club rooms Thursday afternoon. The presi­ dent, Mrs. K ram er is: anxious th a t a large num ber of ladies be pres­ ent. The hostesses for the m eet­ ing are Mesdames Fred Homes and Ed T hornton.' • « • “W ho D o” Club M eets— KEEP VITAL GLANDS IN BALANCE SAYS PHYSICIAN Regain Health, Strength and Vigor by Restoring The Important Glands to Normal v Activity New Scientific Discovery, Glandogen, Provides Simple Method of Taking Glandular Treatment In an interesting interview, Dr. Samuel J. Staub, according to a recent dispatch, said th a t people suffering from th a t “ below p a r” feeling, accompanied by loss of ap­ petite, sleeplessness, l o s s of weight and so forth, can be set rig h t by having the balance of th eir glandular secretion restored. “ There is no reaction to the treatm en t,” asserted Dr. Staub. “ U nderstand this is not a m atter of u n natural stim ulation, but is simply a process of restoring a balance among the many ductless glands of the body which control the speed and extent of all our bodily processes.” PHYSICIANS AND SCIENTISTS OF INTERNATIONAL RE­ glandular treatm ent could be ta k ­ NOWN EXPLAIN FUNCTIONS en by mouth like any other medi­ cine, and th a t an operation is not OF GLANDS At a recent medical convention necessary. Dr. Serge Voronoff, an interna­ in Chicago, Dr. Roy Upham, Pres­ ident of the American In stitu te of tional authority on Organotlier- Homeopathy, stated th a t because aphy, has said: “ The brain, the of the intim ate connection of the nerves, the muscles, as well as the nervous system with the glands, liver, the kidneys and all other many sufferers from nervous dis- organs would be incapable of Ciders were receiving rem arkable i playing any useful p art w ithout benefits from glandular tre a t­ the aid of the glands. The func­ ment. He fu rth er stated th at this tio n in g 'o f our organs is no more cases should be sought, not in the than the activity of our glands, The “ Who Do’’ class of the Methodist church met at the home of Mrs. W arren Cook in Medford for an all day session Friday, Oct. 17. Twenty-two ladies from Ash­ land drove over to attend the meeting. The house was beau­ tifully decorated with autum n leaves and flowers and about 12:30 a delicious lunch was serv­ ed on the tastily arranged tables. Following the lunch hour a short business m eeting was held. A short program was given with Mrs. Madden playing several delightful selections on th e pia­ no. Mrs. S. J. Chaney also gave Irritation and Breaking Out several interesting readings from Often Healed Over Night, E dgar Guest. Mrs. H unt was in­ Says Skin Specialist itiated a t this m eeting into the club. At a late hour the group Any breaking out or skin irri­ adjourned. tation on face, neck or body is Those present were Mesdames overcome quickest by applying Morris Jones and Dew from Med­ M entho-Sulphur, says a noted skin ford, H unt, Marske, C arter, H e m -1 don, McCracken, Lennox. S. J. j sracialist. Because of its germ destroying properties, nothing Chan. ” , Tt. N. Chane*', ^r-Tzic-. : h rs ever been found to take the Hartley, Angwin, Ralph Billings, piece of this sulphur preparation Homer Billings, Vestal, Madden, th?.t instantly brings ease from D augherty, Thurlow. Haberly, i Brower and Misses Ada H artley, i the itching, burning and irrita ­ tion. Jennie McCruder, Elizabeth Len­ M entho-Sulphur heals eczema nox. right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth. It seldom fails to L etterheads, statem ents, t o relieve the torm ent or disfigure- your order a t the Tidings Office. INE L ment. A little ja r of Rowles M entho-Sulphur may be obtain­ ed at any drug store. It is used like cold cream. and when the bodily functioning is disturbed, the cause in most condition of the organ itself, but in the condition of the gland which controls it.” Dr. Arnold Lorand says in his bock, “Old Age D eferred,” in speaking of the glands: “ We m ust insist upon the reinforce­ ment of their functions, if chang­ ed by age or disease, by means of extracts obtained from the sim ilar organs of healthy young anim als.” GLANDULAR T R E A T M ENT (GLANDOGEN) CAN NOW BE TAKEN IN CONVENIENT TABLET FORM H undreds of men and women are now turning to glandular treatm ent to help regain lost strength, vigor, vitality and health Since Science has prepared a gland treatm ent in simple compact tab­ let form — Glandogen— it is a sim­ ple m atter to take glandular treatm ent, Glandogen is scienti­ fically prepared in two different forms, one for. men and one for women, from the vital glands of healthy young animals, combined with other efficacious ingredients. E ast Side Pharmacy will supply you. Mail orders accepted. F razier & S on Lebanon — More sidewalks and | We only ask $2.00 for GOOD street improvements this year potatoes than for five years past. Springfield— New w ater works 1 Try our special package coffee 45c pound reservoir completed ready for j Ju st received a car of Cherro- connecting with system. Mix feed at $ 4 5 ton Albany — Two blocks on East Second street to be graded and Cherro Calf Meal, 25 lb. bags $1.25 graveled. Mill Run, 80 lb. bags ....$1.65 For a smooth shave and quick service go to the Shell Barber Shop. Ladies and children get your hair bobbed and marcel led. W. A. SHELL, Prop. 532 A. St. Ashland, Orc Cherro Egg Builder, $ 3 .1 5 per 100 Stock Salt, 50 lbs................05c Dairy Salt, 50 lbs. ... Phone 214— ¡ « 3 E. Main St. but not tpo solid “Frye’s Delicious’^ Bacon is one of the very best foods for the family table— thoroughly sa tisfy in g , but’ n o t too “solid.” Doctors and food experts tell us that bacon is one of the most nour­ ishing dishes and the most jaded appe­ tite will find new zest in the delightful flavor that is the result of the special Frye curing process. hfy the good ones come through Bacon, broiled or fried, thé one breakfast dish that always starts the day right—and when' you make it Frye’s Delicious’’ Bacon you make assurance doubly sure. x . «• T \Jfie DeliciousVw/zy, This well - known label is your assur­ ance of u n if o r m quality It will be wortfi your while] to remember t h e | n a m e next time you buy Bacon or Ham. HETHER it’s golf or cig­ The popularity of Chesterfields arettes or anything else, is an outstanding example. For popularity is no stroke of luck. m onths now they have been N o cham pion ever h eld his drawing over 1000 smokers a day laurels except by making good. away from other cigarettes. N o cigarette ever held popular Surely this is proof o f their favor except by deserving it. quality and good taste. W must be deserved V Chesterfield CIGARETTES millions! Buy Hama and Bacon by tins Brand Nam» You’ll find them “Everything the Name Implie»** L iccett & M yers T obacco Co. $ 1 .0 0 F razier & S on Subscribed and sworn to before me this 20th day of October, 1924 G. F. BILLINGS, N otary Public. My commission expires Jan . 1, 1928 C orrect-A ttest: W. J. MOORE, F. J. SWENNING, J. H. FULLER. Directors A lecturer says the modern daughter does not tell mother a lot of things. It is probably ju st as well for mother’s peace of mind that she doesn’t. Denmark is going to abolish her army and Switzer­ land may soon do away with her navy. Hurrah for peace! ’ Wednesday, October 22, 101Ì4