OÀofe twö A shland daily tidings W ednesday, November 12, 1924 ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS is nol what the American would natuiaily-understand by j ere. A portion of their food during a great part of the (E stab lish ed I s 1 8 7 6 ) such a statement m no ease has the saloon been voted: year was the wild game of the forest, and this tliev " “ “ A* has be8n caught with considerable'adroitness. " The Pobltehed Hrery Krening Except Monday by voted a continued oblivion. Most Canadian elections have e x, loo huge and powerful to be taken by bows and ar­ A ¿HLAND PRINTING CO. lf>tt » Q - • —--------------------------------------------- turned on the question of the method by which liquors rows, was sometimes snared; and the same fate befell the tM »rg. Madden Qrera’Z ^ b,e ed , . the government and the degree of - k - ,handA i - x n , , ~ - deer and antlope. The hear was bevond the power of the •F F IC IA L CITY PA PE R ____ _______ ____ __________ __ T elephone 21 tt j a ■ « • bocame pT ® ssed of “ ,e white 1 Ashland, Oregon Postoffiee as Second Class Mall Matter a &e ' l l a f l O n ta r io ‘ gone wet,” it would merely have guns, when they became good hear hunters; particularly meant that its citizens desired some other method than black bear. The grizzly and the cinnamon hear were gen­ Subscription Pria», Delivered ln CM» One M o n th ____ __ .. $ ,«i¡that now followed by the Ontario temperance act. The erally given a wide berth, by the Indian.” I h r e . M o n th ........................... _ ..... .......... L . l ” „ . Z _______ " J-’J I saloon is as dead in “ dry” Canadian provinces as it has • i i M on th . _________ _______ ______ _____ About the lakes and along the streams where salmon One Year ~ --•-----n— !-1__ - T.88Î been at any time since prohibition, but the Ontario elec- made their annual appearance, the Indians found their By Mail and Rural Rentes 8 .«»;tion \ndæates that a deeper “ dry” sentiment obtains in most profitable and congenial sport. This was particu­ Month ........ ...... _.... —........................... Three Month. _ 1.16 a majority of the people there. &LX Month« larly true among the Umpqua, Rogue and Klamath rivers 8.80 - 8.10 where the salmon and steelheads entered on their annual ------- ----*---------—------------------------------------- Ever notice how passengers riding as guests get the DISPLAY ADVERTISING RA run to their spawning giounds. At such season their fish­ Hr fie tesarti»*, per inch ............... 8 88 worst in an auto wreck? , ing was a regular revel. The writer has seen hundreds * » ’ fMertlon • week Yearly Con ___________ _________________ Evil will only work us long as people su p p o rf'it By believing in it. Cease believing. in evil, cease thinking of it and th at is the end of it. “ Human birth is an illusion death is an illusion. All this will stop in a short time, and we will wake up, or apparently wake up. Perfect beings in a perfect world, governed by a perfect spirit, which y Love." Most of the adherents of the society, The P ractitioner adm it­ ted, are of the female sex. CHICAGO, Nov. 11, The shortage in the apply of farm labor th at has existed since early Spring has been checked, and the ratio of the supply to the demand averages 99.7 per cent, or practi­ cally normal, according to a Chi­ cago A gricultural Foundation re­ port, based on figures prepared by the United States D ep artm en t' of A griculture. A labor shortage exists in the ' N orth A t’antic States, where the Apply over throat and chest demand is 88.4 per cent normal 1 —cover with hot flannel cloth. while the supply is only 79.1 per cent. This is due, according to the report, to the em igration of / 7 MtUn. zi Ja rs U sed Yearly negro labor to the northern in­ dustrial centers. The most serious surplus of First P r i« farm labor is found in the W est- ProTO *0-1 b n , ,o those who have had know The f ir s t’rule calls for faitliful- PEEL’S CORNER We have a good Job printing de­ e north held good; so that they were m many res- ,edge of the way things were car- ness to the soldier’s c o u n try **the < pal bands of San Francisco do not know what their partm ent. pects superior to those in the interior. r,ed out in the G reat war, it is to second for respect for all o f f i c e ) ublio wants? and for obedience to all orders; “ The Klamaths formerly were tall, well made and E1|lott , the third orders protection for muscular, with complexions varying from black to light -and, re U the civilian population; the fourth HEARST TELLS IT crown, according to their proximity to large bodies of »' Shanghai walk out to th e bat- An agile thinking man can get all sorts of satisfac­ water, iheir faces were large, oval and heavily moulded tlef,0-ds in the afternoon and re- urges the soldier to be brave in T Y P E W R IT E R action, and the fifth to be proud tion out of a result, if he can find, amid the complications with slightly prominent, cheek bones; nose well set a n d |turn t0 their clubs at night t0 of his own army. B A R G A IN S Liat led up to it, one point that agrees with his own ideas. eyes keen ad bright. The women were short and some- iha/ih^CMn“ ^ “S So William Randolph Hcarst finds satisfaction in the suc­ • imes quite handsome, even in a Caucasian sense.” Pow- ahoot iron, th e hip and have no FOR NEXT WEEK ONLY There la wisdom in reading ads Rebuilt Underwood ................................. « kk aa cess of Coolidge, because it involved the defeat of John ers, m the Overland Monthly, wrote of the Klamaths: 8eem,ng intention of trying to ] avis. Rebuilt Remington ....................................... 50 00 ‘their stature is a trifle less than Americans; they have k,n anyone- And why was tho defeat of Davis satisfactory? Bo- well sized bodies strong and well knit ” W e m io -h t n n n - Shanghai residents can h ear the Almost New Remington ........................... 60 00 to nnoto zx+Lre ’ x. C0IL firing if the wind is in the right Corona Portable ............................... 35 00 c .use Davis was a supporter of the League of Nations, tiRHP tiaue to quote from othei writers, some of whom it seems direction and the rain has been it is alleged, and because Hearst is an opponent. 01iver...................................25.00 to me greatly exaggerate their physical qualities. 8hut off. The Chinese are duty No wonder the League of Nations is weak, if it gets wailing says: “ As for clothing, the men of the Klain-P*’und to feeeP thG,r fingers off WE RENT TYPEWRITERS -J o stronger support in the United States than that given ath family anciently wore only a belt, sometimes a breech- theIr trlgSers when U ls ra,nlnfr Andirons ly John W. Davis. Poor league! But whatever it did, it clout, and the women an apron or skirt of deer skin a as an excuse for Hearst. Toilet Goods— Books and ^raided grass. In colder weather they threw over their AND Drug Sundries Stationery . So he finds that it was not Divine Providence that shoulders a cloak or robe of martin or rabbit skins sewn decided the election, even though Calvin Coolidge thus together deer skin, or among the coast tribes sea-otter Fire Screens gives the credit/ or seal-skin. They tattooed themselves, the men on the CALIFORNIA It was the league that defeated Davis, chest and arms, the women on the faces in three blue lines Otherwise, we presume, he would have gotten the extending perpendicularly from the center and corners of OREGON WWER A Few Minutes Work eighteen million votes, instead of La Follette. the mouth to the chin. In some few localities, more espec­ ^COMPANY WITH ially near the lakes themen painted themselves in various Simpson’s ONTARIO IS DRY colors and grotesque patterns. Hardware Ontario voted strongly “ dry” after the most coufi- ,u " T^ L i r . houses were designs common to manyl < out claims of the wets” that the province was tired of tribes. Their winter dwellings, varying with the locality Lmperance. Aside from this reversal of prophecy, the were principally of forms conical and square. Those of the Winchester Store ask any < .ection was notable for the sharp difference in attitude former shape prevailed most widely and were thus built member ___ exo our and the rugs and car­ between city and country; the cities for the most part A circular hole, from two to five feet deep and of var­ izatíon pets are clean. Do I eavily “ wet” while the country districts were consist­ iable width, was dug. Round this pit or cellar stout poles not continue the old ently “ dry.” No one has yet appeared to hazard the ex- were driven into the ground, which, being drawn together back-breaking earjiet f. lanation that the difference is due to the greater ignor- at the top, formed the rafters of the building. A hovering cleaning m e th o d s s:ice or viciousness of the country districts. There may of earth several inches deep was placed over the rafters when such a small in­ 1 e an occasional charge of greater “ narrowness” in the a hole was left at the top to serve both door and chimney vestment in a Beevac country districts, i ut not a greater stupidity or moral in­ to which rude ladders composed of notched poles gave A special on flour for a few days will m a k e carpet difference. The vote would indicate that moral indiffer­ access. Some houses were built of heavy timbers forming Good Soft Wheat Flour, 49 lb. bag $1.95 and $2.00 cleaning a pleasure. ence, or active approval of liquor, is more to be found in a beehive shaped structure. The temporär}’ summer • Good clean seed oats, per cw t....................................................$ 8 .1 0 Good clean seed barley, per cw t............................................... 8 2 .7 5 the cities. here life is lived artificially, where amuse- houses of these tribes were square, conical or eohoidal in Good clean seerl rye, per cw t.................. K................................$ 3 .5 0 n ents are hectic and unwholesome, where interested pro- shape, by driving light poles perpendicularly into the Good elean seed vetch per cwt............................................... $5.00 Cherro E g g Mash, per cw t............................................................. $ 3 .1 5 j tganda circulates most freely, where the public mind is ground and laying others across them, or by drawing the $5.00 Down O yster S h ell, per cw t ................................................................ a _$1.5O a idled by the superficialities of newspaper dogmatism, upper ends together at the top. Huts having the shape and weekly payments O il M eal, per cwt,....................................... ...................................... $ 4 .5 0 Coeoanut M eal, per cw t...................................................................$ 2 .5 0 there the liquor interests are likely to find their chief of an inverted bowl were built by driving both e^ds of F a ttin g Mash, per cwt. ........................ ................................ $ 2 .5 0 F.ipport, but not in the wholesome and where people have the poles into the ground. These frames, however shaped Ground a lfa lfa , w ith m olasses ................................................$ 1 .2 5 We are not asking for all of your trade, but ju st enough Lme to think their own thoughts. were covered with neatly woven tule matting, or with th a t we can stay in Ashland and help to make it a much United States readers of Canadian prohibition pleb­ bushes and ferns. The ground beneath was’ sometimes better place to live. iscites are sometimes misled in their judgment. In Can- scooped out and thrown up in a low embankment. FRAZIER and SON tvlian elections which have “ gone wet” the significance Bring in your window sash—we do the glazing free P h on e 2 1 4 “ The men of the tribes were usually practical hunt- 3 5 3 E. Main Street We fnwrtlon» a week ............................ ....... ............ •3T% .21 .2# $3500IN CASH B f f l AND DEATH CHINA'S CIVIL WAR IS OPERA BOOFFEf °' lnconïen,e°ce and The £ L B A R T ’S 7.14^ A Beevac Vacuum Cleaner Frazier & Son Swenson-Peebler Furniture Company /