Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, January 16, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
I‘ \GR TWO
A SH LA N D D A IL Y T ID IN G S
(Established in 1876)
endangered, the judge on the bench and the jury joined lil|Kiniy||| J C KTED
in extenuating pleas for the release of the fire-bugs.
IVlllUlVlILLO iXLEr
_____________________ _______________ —------------ It is stated upon high authority by one of the most
Published Every Evening Except Sunday by
¡prominent officials in this western state that 50 per cent
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO
._____ of the fires ]ast year were incendiary’ and that the prop-
r . G
reer .......................................... Editor; erty consumed in flame and smoke, thereby, totaled $5,-
Unorge Madden Green ..................................................... Business Manager qqq .Q qq
( SFICIAL CITY PA PER ......................................... ,...........Telephone 39
lu the measure of criminality,' deliberate incendiar
FREEPORT, 111., Jan. 15. —
y.xiered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffice as Second Class Mail M atter
ism ranks with criminal assault, kidnapping and murder. W indmills are keeping m iners and
Subscription P ries, D elivered in City
In addition td causing loss of life to citizens and fire goldfish alive — the form er by
____ ...................................
_____________
.65
» » •* Month
-.......................................................
w ater from mines and
fighters, firebug criminals generally aim to seepre funds pumping
‘j uree Months ......................... - .............................................- ............
the la tte r by keeping ponds on
3.75
t t Months .........................................................................................
with
which
to
carry
on
further
operations.
7.£>0
goldfish
farm s supplied with suffi­
Cue Year ............................................................................ - ...............
As a matter of record, men, women and children con­ cient fresh water.
B y Mail and R ural R ou tes
5 .65
»¡r.a Month .........................................................................................
This is the statem ent of George
1.95 stantly lose their lives in blazes lighted by fire-hugs. The
'i i i e e Months ....................................................................................
fc x Months ........ :............................................................................ .
J.50 men in this case confessed to the crime of arson, tc E. Steenrod, president of a local
windmill m anufacturing concern,
OUJ Year ................................................................................................
6 60 touching a match to oil-soaked materials.
discussing the varied uses to
DISPLA Y ADVERTISING RATES
Liberating
fire-bugs
imperils
lives
and
financial
in­
which the product is being put.
t j .g l e insertion, pe? inch ............................................................ * 30
terests
of
property
owners,
whose
insurance
rates
are
Mr. Steenrod, however, says the
Yearly C ontracts
.27%
original use of supplying water
<’ne insertion a week ...................................................................
higher on account of leniency to confessed criminals.
.25
•j* o insertions a week .................................................................-
livestock on farm s continues
.20
Such a phony sentence as ordering two confessed for
Daily insertion ..................................................................... -----.....
to
be
most popular.
R ates for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising
ci
iminals
to
the
penitentiary
for
eight
years
each
and
im­
.10
Mines
which save the expense
n r s t insertion, per 8 point line ................................................. $
.05
mediately paroling them brings our courts into marked of purchasing, or m anufacturing
I- oeh subsequent insertion, 8 point line .................. - ............
1 .00
disrespect.
t <*rd of Thanks ......................................-................................ - ——
power for operation of pumps by
.02%
MINERS ALIVE
11 tatuarles, per line
W HAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
“ AU future events, where an admission charge is made or a
C» nection taken is Advertising.
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders.
DONATIONS
No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis
«ca or Job printing— our contributions will be in cash.
_____
LABOUR NOT TO BE RISH; cease from thine own wisdom.
For riches certainly make themselves wings; they fly away. Pro­
verbs 23:4, 5.
EXPANSION
AN UNSOUND STATE POLICY
A ou have a little grocery store, with a growing trade
built up on service and good will. The state sets up a tent
on the next lot, taxes you to raise its capital,’* puts in a
stock ot goods and tells you you are out of business.
1 he state raises your taxes, hires an untaxed person
with your tax money, forcibly takes over your customers
to charge any capricious price, and throws’you out into
the street.
1 et it is in effect the theory of a proposed constitu­
tional amendment to establish non-competitive industrial
accident insurance in the state of Oregon and it will he
voted on this fall. It puts the man who competes with the
state out ot business and it taxes both worker and em­
ployer, arbitrarily, to run the insurance jobs that,neither
may want to support. It makes an appointive commission
superior to the legislature, or the courts, with no appeal
from its arbitrary decisions. It has confiscatory and des­
troying power against both employer and employe, in de­
claring hazards, fixing rates of pay, fixing compensation.
If the theory is good in insurance, it is good in hank­
ing, baking, butter-making, in every industry that man
can devise. It substitutes paternalism for all private
ownership or control. .
Oregon has a good workmen’s compensation law. Is
it right to make such a measure a state monopoly to the
exclusion of private? enterprise?
. Friday, January 16, 1925
»UM — I
a ~
BHS
This is Ash lands
Place To Find
What It Wants
To Eat Sunday
A Feature Page
For Telling the
Cooks About the
Good Eatables
M arket Basket
Holland scene exhibited in this
country.
E ither o t steel or of
wood, the mills have many more
blades and are of a third the di­
am eter of the big wind wheels
seen in Holland. Maple wood soak­
ed in oil furnishes an ever-lubri­
cated bearing surface in bushings
for th e mills, m aking frequent
oiling, as when m etal is used for
supporting the power shafts, un­
necessary.
the point where it seems to ad­
vocate a new rapprochm ent with
Bulgaria.
Sally Ann
A ppointed M echanical Editor—
Word has been received here
th at W illis B artlett of thiB city.
Junior in-C ivil Engineering, h a s 1,
been appointed mechanical en­
gineering editor of the Oregon
State Technical Record, an engin­
eering publication.
THE
INCOMPARABLE
BREAD
Lithia Bakery
Tidings W ant Ads ar« go-getters
IÜ FORM ENTENTE
use of windmills are finding them
SOFIA, Jan. 16. — Re-estab­
very satisfactory.
The feature lishm ent of the Serbian-Bulgaria
th a t appeals especially to the entente is being bruited.
mine owner in these days of hit-
Voy M arinkovith, ex-Foreign
and-miss operation is th a t a wind­ M inister of Serbia has recently
mill will operate and keep the visited B ulgaria and been receiv­
pits free of w ater w ithout the ex­ ed by the Government and given
pense of keeping pumpers and, royal honors.
perhaps, engineers and firemen
This is. the first official visit
on duty.
any Serbian dignitary has made
At Thornton, Iowa, is a field of to B ulgaria in twelve years, and'
windmills, seemingly
growing during this period these two Rul-1
from a series of ponds covering kan countries have been bitter
many acres. In these ponds many enemie8
varieties of goldfish are produced
Stam boulinsky attem pted to
and the windmills supply the bring about a reconciliation be­
water.
tween Bulgaria and Serbia three
Lands reclaimed by dyking are
,
. j ,„ »< years ago, but his dram atic and
kept tree ot w ater by w indm ill.
d ,.a t„ b
an e „d
and the air is even called upon to to his efforts for rapprochem ent.
m anufacture electricity.
Many
The present Tsankoff Govern­
m anufacturers,
including
Mr. ment was, at its inception, treat-!
Steenrod, put out plants which op­ ed with some aloofness by th e '
erate on' airpow er. They are p ar­ Serbs, who accused the B ulgar­
ticularly adapted for individual ians of abetting the Macedonians
lighting and power service.
in their activities.
A fter the
The modern windmill in favor
death of the Macedonian leader,
in America is far from resembling Alexandrov, by assassination, the
the type th a t adorns almost every Serbians became more friendly.
The offer to the federal government of a free i0-acre
site on the University of Oregon school of medicine cam­
pus for a United States veterans’ hospital is an offer of
significance. In authorizing the move at their meeting
cesterday the University board of regnets must have had
certain definite things in mind. The tract is part ot the
,'•8 acres given to the University bv the widow and son of
C. S. Jackson of Portland.
That increasingly greater scientific benefits could be
reaped the state if congress should decide to locate the
Veterans’ Bureau hospital in this site will he apparent.
It would mean further concentration of medical interests.
It would mean that other institutions of a kindred nature
Tsankoff’s iron-handod attem pt to
might spring up with such a precedent for stimulus. It
crush
all illegal movements w ithin
would afford another of the much desired contacts with
the country have attracted a tte n ­
other states.
tion in Serbian political quarters,
In a comparatively isolated position geographically
i and especially have the Serbians
as both science and art go, the state can hope for a great
applauded the anti-com m unlstic
Down
South
we
make
hay
while
the
sun
shines,
and
policy
of the Tsankoff Govern­
deal in such undertakings, which are, of course, made pos­
corn
lieker
while
the
moon
shines.
ment.
sible by such donors as the Jacksons, and Dr. Noble Wiley
The press of both nations is dis­
Jones. For in the bequeathing of property, which bene­
cussing
the probability of com­
“ Darling will you be my wife? “ Oh yes—for a little
fits institutions, and the establishing of scholarships, while.”
bining action to check bolshevism
M entho-Sulphur,
a pleasant
in the Balkans, and even the
which increase individual effectiveness, the state will
cream, will soothe and heal skin ‘
Serbian press has now reached
materially profit both by a more efficient group of author­
One of the most useless things in the world is the th a t is irritated or broken o u t'
ities on health and hygienic matters, and by a more in­ speed limit.
with eczema; th a t is covered with
ugly rash or pimples, or is rough NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT
formed citizenship.
or dry. Nothing subdues fiery
Notice is hereby given th a t the
The tremendous lack of specific scientific knowledge,
skin eruptions so quickly, says a undersigned, R. Medora Shep­
1924 has been a hard
Hard
year
on
the
poor
old
maids.
particularly in the natural sciences, has proved an im­
herd, Executrix of th e last Will
Only 3 per cent ot their leap vear proposals were accepted. noted skin sPecialist
petus for more extensive and comprehensive research
r
The moment this sulphur pre­ and Testam ent of C. E. Shep­
paration is applied the itching herd, deceased, has filed with the
throughout the state, and the west should not be left be­ You are welcome to compare i SLEMp SECRETARY
stops and after two or three ap­ County Clerk of Jackson Coun­
hind. Work such as that of Loeb and others in the bio­ my Automobile rates w ith any
TO
PRESIDENT,
QUITS
plications, the eczema is gone and ty, Oregon, her final report in
logical field is an inspiration. What is lacking are the other rates in Jackson or Jose­
the skin is delightfully clear and said Estate, and th a t the County
phine Counties; you can be the
WASHINGTON, Jan. 15— C smooth. Sulphur is so precious as
actual facilities and capital for such investigations.
Judge. Phone 21. Yeo, of course. Bascom Slemp, personal secre­ H a skin remedy because it destroys Court of Jackson County, Ore­
Wth the growth of hospitals and special opportuni-
gon, has fixed the 7th day of
tary
to
President
Coolidge
will
i
parasites
th
a
t
cause
the
burn
lies for research, men of broader knowledge and greater Newport — Street and sewer
February, 1925, at 10 o’clock A.
retire on March 4, to tak e up ac-l ing, itching or disfigurem ent,
skill are more and more employed in the ordinary course improvements will cost near tive law practice in New York. J M enjho-Sulphur always heals M., as the time, and the County
Court Room of the C ourt House
of events. And the advantage of this is not alone in ad­ $100,000 when finished.
He will be succeeded by R ep re-1 eczema rig h t up.
of Jackson County, Oregon, as
sentative Sanders, Republican of!
a small ja r of Rowles Mentho- the place for the hearing of ob­
ding one .specialist, hut providing contact between spec­
ialists.
L etterheaas,
statem ents, t o Indiana, it was announced offi-i Sulphur may be had at any good jections, if any there be, tcf the
approval and acceptance of the
And beyond the state’s larger knowledge in this field, your order at the Tidings Office. cially a t the W hite House today. drug store.
final Report.
with its research into the causes and methods of prevent­
Dated this 30th day of De­
ing diseases and providing-remedies for them, lies great­
cember, 1924.
er health for its citizens, and consequently greater pros­
R. MEDORA SHEPHERD,
perity and happiness. By a policy of conservation the
Executrix of the last Will
and Testam ent of C. F.
state can be spared the expense, too, of caring for wasted
Shepherd,
Deceased.
man-power.
FIERY,
one bin
“Let’s Have a
rU
Party’
Whether your taste calls
If you are planning a
party or entertainment,
why worry with the prep­
aration of cakes, pastry
and bread, when you can
get
Chicken
for
1
Rabbit
Lamb Roast
Beef Roast
FRANKLIN’S
SUPERIOR
BAKERY
PRODUCTS
or any other kind of meat,
we can supply you the
best.
The
Franklin Bakery
Phone 199
Eagle Market
Frazter & Son
We will sell them to you at the old prices for a
few days longer.
Clierro Flour, 49 lbs.......................................... $2.75
Pickett Flour, 49 lbs.....................
$2.75
Perfection Flour, 49 lbs................................... $2.35
Wheat, per cwt.......................................... '....$ 3 .1 5
Scratch, per cwt.............................................. .‘.$3.50
Mix Dairy Feed, 75 llj. sack ........................... $1.75
Egg Builder, 100 lb. sack ................................ $3.15
Middlings, 90 lbs............................ , ............
#2.75
Ground Wheat, 100 lb. sack ...........
$2.90
The best of alfalfa hay, per ton ................ $24.00
Mix grain and alfalfa hay, per ton ............ $24.00
Phone 214
353 E. Main St.
O R A N G E S
Sweeter and better than ever, 10 qt. pall ......... 75c
BUY
NOW !
Pettite Prunes, 4 lbs............................ .25c
Fresh bbl. of K r a u t ,___ ___15c quart, 50c gallon
PLAZA MARKET
Gl N. Main
II. A. Steams
’ WHAT A PRICE TO PAY
What would happen to the taxpayer if the state were
asked to spend the incredible millions that have been
spent in private on exploration, in mineral prospecting
or in developing industrial enterprises? The taxpayer
would revolt.
Yet these explorations are made by private enter­
prise and alter that, the business has to be developed by
painstaking efficiency that is the only safeguard against
bankruptcy and which is foreign to the whole spirit of
officialdom.
The incessant clamour for lower taxes would not be
made it the people believed they were getting value re­
ceived for all public moneys expended.
History indicates that wastefulness in governmental
affairs increases in geometrical progression with every
increase in revenue. Every’ expansion of federal activities
and payrolls means decreased efficiency.
Everybody but organized railroad labor felt the
strangle hold of the iron hand of officialism during the
inglorious federal railroad regime. Government opera­
tion brought higher costs, poorer service, and utter, ad­
amantine inelasticity to meet the national shipping needs.
To double, or quadruple, or to increase by ten times
the official payroll, means to build up a political official­
ism that has the public by the throat—whether in oil,
jnines, railroads, insurance, utilities or in anything that
the state plight do.
It workers could he enlisted or drafted into an indus­
trial army at $30 a month, and made to serve or go to
prison or be shot at sunrise, industry might be completely
lederalized at a profit. But what a price to pay in free­
dom and in the killing of individual initiative and am­
bition.
ENCOURAGING INCENDIARISM
In a western state two convicted and confessed fire­
bugs have just been released on parole without seeing a
day in prison, after receiving a sentence of 8 years each.
They were the owners and managers of a restaurant
and conspired to commit a gross fraud on their creditors
‘.nd the insurance companies and the sentence of the iud«*e
and jury was not too severe.
In the easy-going way in which justice is being ad­
ministered, where the property and lives of others were
fo r cakes
andyastry
asforbwaij
For upwards of twelve years
thousands of P a c i f i c Coast
housewives have done all of
their baking with FISHER’S
BLEND FLOUR.
t
*
From one bin has come this
every-purpose flour from which
they have made their bread,
their rolls, their biscuits, their
pies, their plain cakes, as well as
their fine, light, fluffy, fancy
cakes.
W
H
A
T
’
LL
I
DO?
is the question thousands are asking themselves every day, who failed to lay aside
a little in their best earning davs.
. THE 20TH CENTURY METHODS
establish habits of saving that if followed through, are bound to result in a good
and independent living.
Special Savings for Saturday and Monday, Jan. 17 & 19,1925
Fancv Blue Rosé Rice
3 lbs.
.28c
Matches, Best 5c
Brands, G boxes . 25c
Mazóla
Pints 25c—Quarts 49c
Adrondack Syrup—Cane and Maple, that good Maple Flavor—Pint 33c—Quart 55c
Crystal White Soap
10 bars
..................43c
Carnation Milk, Tall
Cans ........................ 9c
OLYMPIC PANCAKE FLOUR, Large Package
Lux
small size ............. 10c
Prunes, large and juicy
3 lbs......................... 28c
OLYMPIC INSTANT OATS,
Jello
anv f la v o r ............. 10c
.. ,25c
Laver Raisins
15c
No. 10 sack .. . .75c
Sea Foam, large
package ................. 23c
Freshly Milled, No. 10 sack ........................... 55c
Small White Beans
3 lbs......................... 28c
Tea, fancy ■Ceylon
India (hulk) lb. ..55c
Vim, Best Patent, Extra Special Patent F^lour—Sat. and Mon. only, 49 lb. sk $2.33
Raisins, Thompson
Seedless, 3 lbs......... 32c
Comb Honey, full white
sections, each . . . .25c
Good Cocoa, bulk
2 lb. pkg. ............. 15c
20TH CENTURY COFFEE—The flavor that excells—Roasted in our own plant
the day before you get i t ..............................................pound 45c— 3 pounds $1.32
Oranges, fine and
Bananas
Florida Grapefruit
lb.
sweet, 2 doz............ 55c
10c
large heavy fruit . .10c
DON’T FORGET—TUESDAY, JAN. 20th IS THE LAST DAY OF OUR BIG
CANNED GOODS SALE
THERE REALLY ARE NO BETTER P LACES TO TRADE THAN AT THE
44 Stores
ÎO^CcnluryGroccry
44 Stores
YOUR NEAREST STORES ARE LOCATED AT
ASHLAND
MEDFORD
GRANTS PASS
374 E. Main St.
37 N. Central Ave.
509 G. St.