PAGE fW ö ASHLAND DAILY TÎDÎXG8 Saturday, November 15, 1024 ■an when first visited were evidently in the process of de- ! A S H L A N D D A IL Y T I D I N G S the cash value op an education (Established in 187«) Prof. Everett Lord, dean of the Boston University / ; generation. The Umpquas were not peculiar for their dress. In j College of Business Administration, after a long and tlior- P ublished E very E ven in g E xcept Sunday by ! ougli investigation; places a money value of $33,000 ori fact tl^e men were not clothed at all except in cold, THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. 1 a high school education, and a value of $72,000 on a college stormy weather when they wrapped themselvs in skins B ert R. Greer ............................... ............. ?........ ............... .................. Editqr. of such animals as their energy enabled them to capture. George Madden Green ................................................ ..... Business Manager education. Mr. Lord arrives at this conclusion by comparing the The women wore a kind of skirt made from the fiber of OFFICIAL CITV PAPER ........................ -............................ Telephone 39 CHICAGO, Nov. 14. — Not! E ntered at th e A shland, Oregon P ostoffice as Second C lass Mail M atter average earnings of uneducated men from the age of 14 cedar and other bark that answered their purpose, which more than a casual glance or so they supported with a thong around the waist allowing until the have reached the age of-60 rears, but deducting S u b scription. P rice, D elivered in City it to hang about the hips and down to the knees. Some at a few of the representative One Month ......._.............................. .................................................... $ .65 the four years of time given to the high school course. teams is required to assure one­ 1.95 Three Months ......... .............................................................................. 3.75 The high school man earns $33,000 more than the aver­ times in cold weather they wore the skin of the sea otter self th a t the Middle West fairly Sis Months ............................................................................................ 7.50 One Year ................................... ....................................... ..................... age uneducated man, and this is credited as the cash value* or other animals. They lived chiefly on fish and other bristles with prospects for the By Midi and R ural R outes One Month ........................................................... ’...................... ......... $ .65 of the high -school education. The college or technically ’sea-food that chance threw in their way and such ani-, All-American football team of 1.95 Three Months .............. *......................................................................... mais as they were able to snare. The Siuslaw, Umpqua 1924. In fact, it is well with-! 3.50 trained man goes not generally to work until 22 years of S'x Months and Coos rivers were at seasons of the year frequented in the bounds of possibility that u a a Year .................................... ................................................................. 6.59! age, but by the time he has reached 60 years of age he lias the secton in question will out- ¡earned $72,000 more than the high school graduate. Mr. by grat swarms of salmon which they contrived by var­ draw the East in the num ber of a newspaper heading—hack DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES Single insertion, per inoh ........................................... ............. ? 30 ¡Lord contends this figure represents the cash value of a ious methods to capture. These were prepared by dry­ men selected for the first ^eleven of it is the old story of a Y early C ontracts ing and smoking and were eaten raw, or mixed with — a state of affairs th a t would woman’s love for finery and Gae insertion a week ................................................................... .27% college education. a polite, well modulated i « o insertions a week ................................................................... .25 This is the first practical effort to definitely fix a berries and dried roots and ground into flour, from which provoked pretty things. laugh twenty, years ago. Dally insertion ................................................................................. -20 a kind of bread was baked. Sometimes salmon and sal­ R ates for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising cash valuation on education, and it will no doubt be sub­ You had to be a Heston, a Many a maid yields to tem ptation mon trout were boiled on hot coals hereinbefore des­ Schultz f i r s t insertion, per 8 point line ........................................... - $ 10 jected to many criticisms. But the basic facts t§ll their or an Eckersail to break and steals w hat she cannot afford Fsch subsequent insertion, 8 point line ......-............ ............. -65 cribed, or were broiled on hot coals, or held before the through the wall of Eastern in­ The maid in your home is human Card of Thanks ................................................................................ 100 own story and will be difficult to materially disapprove. — she, too, may fall. V »ituaries, per line .......................... -................. .......................... -02% It also offers a serious thought to parents who permit fire on sharp sticks until cooked. In the case of broiling credulity in those days. C ontrast those conditions with You Are the Loser W HAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING boys to leave school to go to work, for the records show the fish were filled with sharp slivers of wood to make those th a t prevail today. For “ All future events, where an admission chargeais made or a that less than half of thq grammar grade students enter the flesh hold together while being cooked. c« tiection taken is Advertising. one thing, it is not at all impos­ You caunot lock up your valu­ ables, but you can protect your­ «Before the coming of the whites, war was made on the No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders. high school, and only «bout 17 of every 100 who do enter sible th at an •All-W estern back- self from less if they are stolen. Umpquas by the Shasta Indians and other tribes from the field will be selected. Harold DONATIONS complete the four year course. , " No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis interior; and what little pwore ro strength they bad be­ Grange, of Illinois, is certain of B urglary Insurance issued by the log or job printing— our contributions will be in cash. He H artford Accident and Indemnity gan to wane. Tn 18a0 the Kliekitats, a strong roving tribe one halfback position. Company will pay for such loss. couldn't be kept off the team with Our janitor is a loyal soul. He says: “ Boss, us Nor- ¡from beyond the Columbia, passed through the Wiliam-! WARNING TO MOTORISTS T his A gency S ells Insurance * 'ette valley conquering other tribes on the way and en-! a Federal injunction. dies sho’ is gwine stick to one ’nother.” and G ives Service Nor will it be an easy cincli. Several automobile accidents have occurred on the tered the Umpqua and subjected the tribes to defeat. as the fellow said, to select an Billings Agency Pacific Highway over the Siskiyou mountains during the They occupied a portion of the Umpqua country and he- eleven th a t does not include Few men do anything dangerously radical after they 1883 last cold spell and each of these accidents carries a warn- cafhe the dominant tribe north of the Rogue river valley. Crowley, of Notre Dame. On Real E state Estab. & Real Insurance reach the point where they can have* a clean shirt every inii to motorists which it would he wise to heed. The Kliekitats were recognized as skillful both in trade what he has shown to date Crow­ 41 E. Main St. Phone 211 c lay. ley rates the honor almost as logi­ When the snow melts along the highway and the and war, and tendered their assistance to the whites in cally as does Grange. > ater later freezes on the paved road, fast and reckless the wars that ensued. Sometimes the whites availed For quarterback it is generally- “ I don’t think it’s loaded,” is poor English. The themSelves of such assistance, and at other times it was; agreed < riving on the ice-covered highway is practically certain th a t Stuhldreher, of Notre WARMTH 1 > result in disaster, for it is almost impossible to control last three words are superfluouk.- declined. In 1851 sixty Klickitat warriors well mounted? Dame, is the ranking candidate.! : n automobile going up or coming down a hill on all icy’ and armed, offered their assistance to the whites in the! Certainly there is no man in sight iii that cold corner or spot 1 ighwav. The hardy pioneers suffered in cold, weather, but not war against the Rogue Rivers, but their presence was not at the moment to say him nay. in home or office is assur­ His nom ination would leave one While most of the accidents have come to tourists, : in order to show their ankles, desired. Similar to these were the Des Chutes, a small; backfield post open and for that ed if yon have one of our rh o are not 'used to mountain-road driving in winter, but active tribe who, under their Chief, Sem-tes-tis, made the Middle West, and th a t part Universal Electric heat­ An old timer can remember when none but the most l lose who know the dangers of such driving should not expeditions from their homes east of the Cascades, trad­ thereof seen by the w riter, can ers, price ranging from daring hostess would invite a grass widow. 1 ecome careless. ing and fighting other Indians as far south as Yreka, summon Baker, of N orthw estern; $5.50 up. We have a Steffen of Michigan; Leyden and Take your time as you drive over the ice-covered or (where in 1854 they joined the whites in a war against the Don Miller, of Notre Dame; H. dandy assortment of these. iiippery paving. You will arrive a minute or two later; Shastas. Descendants of the Kliekitats are said to be Thomas, of Chicago; K a w , of Pioneering in Southern Oregon Universal Washing 1 ut if this precaution is taken, you will get there just the found occasionally in the Uni] qua country where they be­ Ohio State; Hall, of Illinois and by C. B. Watson Machines tame and it will not he necessary to call the ambulance Parkin, of Iowa. came quiet law-abiding people. and Vacuum Sweepers And these men would be only a; « r hearse. (Continued from November 13) Willing says; “ As regards the origin of these tribes, few among many. Butler, N ebras -i are conveniences which “ The Indian women ingeniously plaited grass, tule only conjecture, is at hand. Not enough is known on that ka, Minnesota. Wisconsin, M ar-1 every housewife should or fine willow roots into mats, baskets, etc. The bas­ topic to form the foundation of a respectable hypothesis, quette, Kansas and Missouri are* have. CONGRESS ITS OWN BOSS few of the team s east of! A current cartoon represents Congress as a bad boy, kets constructed for cooking purposes, would retain although the common origin of all North American tribes’ some the Rockies which will have a! cowering before the President, in whose hands there is a water and were even used as kettles for boiling in. Stones has been taken for granted. From facts that have come backfield candidate or two. The Ashland i addle, standing for the eighteen million majority vote heated vgry hot, were thrown into the vessel, bringing the under his notice, .fudge Roshorough, formerly Indian In the event th a t an All-West-1 Electric Shop received by Mr. Coolidge in the recent election. The in- water to a boiling heat. Canoes were made from the Agent for Northern California, is of the opinion that there ern backfield is named this sec­ 240 East Main St. »cription wants to know whether it will not now be easier trunk of a tree, hallowed out and shaped• by means of have been tlii^ee lines of aboriginal migration southward tion of the country would be cer­ fire. Pine, fir and cottonwood were favorite species for! through Southern Oregon and Northern Califor ma; tain to out score the East in the 3 or the President to have bis way with Congress. first team choices. There would This i# an offhand way to view the election, and one that purpose. The ends of the canoe were usually blunt namely, one by the coast, dispersing toward the interi ior: be only seven positions left open that will doubtless he taken by certain supporters of Mr. and that of the I^ogue River Indians were flat-bottom­ secondly, that along the Willamette valley, crossing the and the East would have to bat-! < 'oolidge. But we doubt if it will he the one taken by the ed. The tree having been felled by burning, or being Calippoia mountains and the Umpqua and Rogue rivers, tie with the W est, the Coast and USED C AR found as a wind-fall was burned of to the required length Shasta and Scoots valleys; the other wave coming up the the South for the rem aining i people of the United States. 1 herefore its chances1 are ! BARGAINS We, the people of the United States, scattered from and hollowed out by the same agency. Pitch was spread Des Chutes river and peopling the vicinity of the lakes. places. quite plausible for making its Maine to Oregon, know in our several ways why we decid- on the portion to he burned awya, and a piece of fresh As an evidence of the second movement it is known that! poorest showing since the All- • d for Coolidge as against either Davis or wLa xFol lette.. bark served to prevent, the flames from spreading too all the tribes inhabiting the region referred to, spoke the Amercan vogue began. Two Dodge Tourings We know that we wanted Coolidge—and not either of his far. These canoes were propelled by paddles. Such con­ same language and confederated against their neighbors, As a m atter of fact the' Middle 1922 Maxwell Touring « pponents. We wanted him to the proportions of eighteen structions of course lacked fcfce requisite lightness and particularly the Pitt river Indians,who arrested their West is by no means light on Ford Coupe grace of the birch-baik canoes of the far eastern Indians. course in the south. The traditions of the Shastas show logical choices for the forward Reo Truck io eight to four. • It has a half dozen or Canoes, Xvomen, weapons of war and the chase, and they had driven a tribe out of their habitations and occu­ positions. But we made no such decision as between the Presi­ more ends of quality in Rokusek Chevrolet Sedan the skins of animals formed the most valuable property pied them themselves. The Klamaths have been known &nd Kassel, of Illinois; Collins dent and Congress. Chevrolet Coupe And the people who went to the defense of the sup- of these savages, and were articles of barter and trade. among themselves and neighboring tribes by various and Crowe, of Notre Dame; Otte o—o—o—o Jerne court, as against the blatant attacks of the Wiscon­ In the interior Indian ponies also formed an important names, all, apparently derived from the same name hut and Romey, of Iowa, and Wilson of Ohio State, among others. Bach property. Wealth was estimated in strings of shell pronounced and spelled differently. To repeat these var­ sin senator, are not going to he hoodwinked into regis­ of Notre Dame; Henderson, of tering their honest intentions toward the presidency as a money like the wampum of eastern aborigines. This ious names would he confusing and serve no purpose of Chicago, and Hancock, of Iowa, Instant Service on Ray- money was known as alli-as-cliick and chick-a-mun. This understanding; this is also true of the Rogue River In­ are excellent tackles. Pondelik, of bestos Brake Lining verdict in favor of a rubber stamp Congress. circulating medium was a small white shell, hollow and dians. We will, therefore he content to designate them by Chicago; Fleckenstein, of Iowa; The question is much more serious than one of the valued at, from five to twenty dollars. White deer skins their well known appellation of Klamaths aipl Rogue Weibel, of Notre Dame, and Drey­ j dative dignity of the White House and the Capitol. er, of Ohio State, are the leading Automotive Shop It does not relate to the personality of the President and the scalps of the red headed wood-pecker seem to Rivers. guards. have been articles of high value, possessing fictitious C hevrolet and Dodge (To be Continued) at all. y will be a m ans’ work to dis­ Hales and Service place W alsh, of Notre Dame, at It is the question of the dignity, the functioning and worth dpending on the dictates of fashion. These ar­ C hristian Endeavor at 4 p. m centre, although the East has a the responsibility of Congress as the greatest national ticles were tjie insignia of wealth and were sought after C hristian Endeavor at 6:30. Even real contender in Lovejoy, of by the Indians, as seal-skin garments and diamonds are legislature in the world. * ing service at 7:30; subject “ The Yale. affected by the higher classes of white society. “ Wives,: Life T hat Knows No R egrets.’’ , But w hether these men are the Shall the Congress of the United States express, also, as they had to be purchased, were a sign of wealth Prayer meeting every W ednesday, whole cream pitcher or ju st a Through its deliberations and votes, the purpose of the and the owner of many was thereby distinguished above Have Yoflr evening at 7:30. The subject for touch of the sweetening rem ains j eople of the United States in the making of laws? next week is “ Friendship with bis fellows.” To be a chief among the Rogue Rivers or to be seen. They merely are a Or shall it be subject to the personal judgment, or Klamath presupposed the possession of wealth. Power Jesus Through Obedience to His! few th a t came under the w riter’s BATTERY • ven whim, of some one man, no matter bow well advised was not hereditary and the /chief that became too old to M ethodist E piscopal Church Commands.” ; John 15:14.15. The observation; yet their class is suf­ public is cordially invited to all ; ficient to counterbalance anything S. J. Chaney, M inister re may be, or how mild or considerate a “ boss” he may govern was summarily disposed of. La Lake the peace­ Overhauled these services in the Congrega­ the entire East may care to men­ Thè Sunday School will meet be, as President Coolidge unquestionably would be? able old chief of the Klamaths, was compelled in his tion. Classes are provided for tio n al church. for winter use . It may We don’t think the people of the United States have later years to give place to a younger man. Each village a all t 9:45. ages and all are welcome. save the purchase of a T rinity E piscopal Church ; ny such attitude toward Congress. If they have any and heart man who might be styled chief; who held his “The Fragrance of the H eights’’ new battery later. yuarrel with Congress, it is that that body does not act 1 tower in some way subordinate to the main tribal chiefs, is Ahe subject for the pastor’s Vicar the Rev. P. K. Hammond Holy Communion at 8 a. m. directly enough, vigorously enough. It should have a but whose actions in most of ways were not regulated by sermon a t the m orning church Church School a t 9:45. Morning “ Why Do I Need to Be a E X ID E policy. It should express that policy in legislation. If it the head chief. It will appear that these savage tribes service. C hristian?” is the topic’ fö r“ thö! Servlce and sermon a t U - must have differences with the President, have them! Buy At Home Evening service and sermon at Batteries had their political tribulations, as their rivals and con- Epw orth League m eeting a t 6:15 ! I 7*30 The fact is, that, in the recent session of Congress, querers had. Frequently from a multiplicity of candi­ Sunday evening. The evening Everyone cordially welcome. for every make of ear. the public opinion of the United States was much more dates for the chiefship two were chosen, who together church service will be evangelistic Our Merchants ith a message by the pastor and with Congress than with the President. Whether the ex- administered the affairs of the tribe, the divided auth­ w Presbyterian Church special music by th e Interm ediate (have what you want Presbyterian Sunday Murphy Elec. Co. i ervice men of the United States should receive a bonus or ority appearing to be consistant with peace and friendli­ „Departm ent of the Sunday The school convenes at 9:45 prom pt­ (handle quality merchan­ not, undoubtedly the members of Congress bad a mandate ness. One of the two was usually styled Peace Chief School. All are cordially invited ly. Morning W orship at 11:00. Our Phone 82 dise from their constituents to give them the bonus. Whether and the other War Chief. Such division of authority is to all the meetings at the Metho­ 1 The Junior C. E. Meeting at 4:00 Main - P laza Ashland Ihe taxation theories of Secretary Mellon were right or illustrated in the Rogue River chiefs, “ Sam and Joe.” dist church. P. M. Senior C. E. a t 6:30. W est­ (charge right prices m inister Guild a t 6:3