Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, February 06, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    I
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
PVGK TWO
Friday, February 6, 1925
M S*
üSSüS
ASHLAND
D A IL Y
O F M ARY
(B y IsabeK e W ilk ie )
T ID IN G S
(Established in 1870)
P ublished Every E ven in g E xcept Sunday by
THE ASHLAND PRINTING GO.
I 'e f t R. G re e r .................... ................................- ...................................... ....E d ito r
U eorge M adden G reen .......................................................... B u sin e ss M an ag er
("j-’F IC IA L CITY P A P E R .............. .................................. ......... T e lep h o n e 39
K niered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffice as Second C lass M ail M atter
Subscription P rice, D elivered in City
< ne Month __.*......................................................................................
$ -65
This is Ashlands
Place To Find
W hat It W ants
To E at Sunday
H e r eyes have th a t b rav e lig h t
T h a t sm iles
B etw een th e sh o w e rs of A p ril;
9 he gleam
T h a t b re a k s th ru cloud-floes
D riftin g p a s t th e s u n ;
W indow s a t n ig h t,
B lin d s d ra w n ,
R e m in d m e of h e r eyes
W hen th e in n e r glow
E sc a p es th e ed g e of c u rta in s .
— F ro m t h e L a ria t.
*t u re a M onths ................................................................................................
1.85
t l M onths ............. ........................................................................................
3.75
C u e Y e a r ................................. _ ........................................................ .............
7.50;
B y Mail and R ural Route»
o r.« M o n th .......... ............ ...................................................... — ..................
$ • 65 T o R e tu rn —
*i a re a M onths ____________ ________ _______;s ..~ .........................................•
1 .9 5 1 p g W a tso n w ho h a s been re-
r 6 .x * , M
V onths
s«r“ ° ............................................. .......................................................
fi’lft sid in g in M edford fo r th e p a st
.........................................................................................
....................................— J few m o n th s w as a b u sin e ss v isito r
DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES
in th e city y e ste rd a y . M r. W a tso n
8 .30
e u .f l« In se rtio n , pe? Inch ...............................................................
s ta te s th a t he imiiends to r e tu r n
Y early Contracts
to th is city so m e tim e n e x t w eek
O ne in se rtio n a w eek ....................... ............... 1-------------------------
to re s id e h e re .
H is d a u g h te r,
i wo insertion s a w eek ..........................................................................
D aily in s e rtio n ......................... ............................................................
W in ifre d W a tso n , w ill acco m p an y
R ates for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising
him .
F irs t in se rtio n , p e r 8 p o in t lin e ...................................................... ? .10
.05
E ach s u b s e q u e n t In se rtio n , 8 p o in t lin e .................... - .............
1.00
L etterh o acis.
s ta te m e n ts .
t c j
» erd^of T hanks ........_....................................- ........................ ..............
.0 2 % your o rd e r a t th e T id in g s Office. !
uoltuaries, per lino .....................- ................................................
W H A T C O N ST IT U T E S A D V E R T ISIN G
“ A ll f u tu r e e v e n ts, w h e re a n a d m issio n c h a rg e is m ad e or
co llection ta k e n is A d v e rtisin g .
Ne d isc o u n t w ill be allo w e d R e lig io u s o r B e n e v o len t o rd e rs.
M a rke t Basket
session of th e c o u n cil ' T u esd ay
n ig h t w as m ild a n d bu sin esslik e.
On m o tio n th e council re je c te d aJl
O LY M PIA , W a sh ., F eb . 5— A of th e m a y o r’s a p p o in tm e n ts to!
la s t m in u te c o m p ro m ise betw een city p o sitio n s e x cep t tw o. w hich
th e w arn in g e le m e n ts in th e c ity th e y c o n firm e d . T h e m ay o r a n ­
w ould
m ak e
g o v e rn m e n t w as e ffe c te d a n d th e n o unced th a t he
ROW IN COUNCIL AT
OLYMPIA PATCHED UP
“Q u a lity w i l l never
be s a c r ific e d to
m e e t a p r ic e ”
W e h a v e a good jo b p rin tin g d e ­
p a rtm e n t.
tf
P resident r
C olum bia Tire Corporation
Special on D ishes
42-Piece Sets
$6.95
T H E A SH LA N D F U R N IT U R E
COM PANY
8 3 N. M ain
"
THE
SA TU R D A Y ’S
MEATS
• —FOR—
D inner
a dozen
L E T ’S HAVE DRY CONGRESS
Make Congress dry for a week, and see what would
happen, is a wet challenge. It should he accepted with
alacrity by the Drys.
They should be even more eager than the Wets to
have Congress dry every week.
If nothing stands between this country and wetness
but the hypocrisy of Congress, then by all means let us
he wet.
It our determination to have this country free from
the industrial and social*and political effects of intoxica-
ion is so feeble that it cannot stand the test of making
the members of Congress obey the spirit as well as the
letter of the law, by all means let us return to the legal­
ized booze system.
Of course the falsity of the wet argument about Con­
gress is very evident.
This argument is that the members of Congress are a
set of hypocrites, who think to catch a few dry votes by
voting dry laws, and to eater to their own wet instincts
as well as the noted indifference of the wets to law, by
being themselves wet and winking at the violations of
law by their wet fellow citizens.
There is a modicum of truth in this. There are some
members of Congress who are personally wet, and vote
dry hypocritically. But it is also true that there are some
members of Congress, like some citizens, who vote dry sin-
cerely, even though they are loose moraled enough and
weak enough in character to continue* to take a nip when
they have a chance.
But there is also a sufficient number of members of
Congress who know the national value of prohibition to
vote for it and vote sincerely.
The number of Congressmen who “ booze,” like the
number of citizens, is grossly exaggerated.
By all means, le t’s have a dry Congress.
The Dry leaders, all over the United States would
hail a campaign to that end.
There’s small choice. If you lick a small man you’re
a brute, if you don’t you’re a coward.
Leedom’s Tire House
An attractive complexion
is the sign of good health.
Eat fo o d s m ade w ith
variation
T hat w ill d eligh t th e en tire
fa m ily .
If
jlou havh unex­
pected com pany, rem em ber to
order a pie from
4
F ra n k lin B akery
C A iV M tr
THE WORLD'S G R E A T E S T ’
BAKING P O W D IH
m oes
P h o n e 199
Once a housewife
gives
FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR
a trial, she will never be
content with any other.
Due to the great care we
take in selecting the wheats
and our scientific milling,
S/i
IlovR
fe s
Makers of the famous
SALLY ANN BREAD
Eagle Market
any
5EATTI.
L ithia B akery
FOR SUGGESTIONS
never
ELECTRIC HOUSE HEATING
Electric house heating will soon become general and
it is more a question of how soon there will be sufficient
electric power generated to heat the houses of the land,
than absence of demand.
Leading the world, this nation is approaching the
time when it will no longer he heated by the time-con­
suming coal-burning furnaces or old-fashioned wood-
burners generally used.
W irt S. Scott, manager of the industrial heating de­
partm ent of the Westinghouse Company, reports great
progress in solving the problems of heating houses by
electricity in a practical manner.
“ When that time comes, the days of struggling with
the furnace will he over, and the householder wlil not need
to give his heating system a single thought,” says Mr.
Scott referring to latest inventions.
A reliable authority says there is already 1,250,000
kilowatts of electrical heating apparatus employed by
American industries, from bakeries to glue factories and
enameling automobile bodies.
ROLLS and BUNS
15 CENTS
PHONE US
TIRES and TUBES
P E IL ’S CO RN ER
SPECIAL
Y our Sunday
DONATIONS
ANOTHER CHAPTER IN A ROMANTIC ANNAL
A recent Brussels dispatch told of the death of Henri
Geeraets, a lockkeeper at Nieuport, and also of the state
funeral accorded him.
According to the dispatch, it was because he opened
the sluice gates in November, 1914, the advance of the
Hermans to Calais was checked, the port remained in
French hands, and the Belgian army retained a little
strip of its native land from which, with the aid of its
allies, to continue* the battle for the liberation of the
country.
So is another added to those romantic chapters in
the history of the Low Countries—Belgium and The
Netherlands—where the sea has come to the rescue when
human defense has failed.
Thus, in the sixteenth century, after the patriot lead­
er, William of Orange, had suffered defeat after defeat at
the hands of the Duke of Alba, and it seemed the cause
of the Spanish invader would triumph, it was the cutting
of the dikes that saved Alkmaar and gave the patriots
breathing space to recollect their forces.
More famous still was the forced lifting of th£ seige
of Leyden, when the land around it was inundated, per­
mitting W illiam’s fleet to reach the,city and put the in­
vaders to route.
n o m in a tio n s fd r th e v a c a n t posi­
t o n s a t an a d jo u rn e d m ee tin g
M onday n ig h t urtli it is lik e ly t h a t
th ey w ill a ll be fconflrm ed.
All
b ills fo r th e p a st m o n th w ere a l­
low ed, so th a t th e fu n c tio n s of
•g o v ern m en t a re goeng
on
as
usu al.
CH O ICEST
N o d o n a tio n s to c h a ritie s o r o th e rw ise w ill be m ad e in a d v e rtis
•og o r jo b p rin tin g — o u r c o n trib u tio n s w ill be in cash.
N ow is th e tim e to b u y sp ra y
p
u
m p s, plo w s am i
h a rro w s ,
-
d r ills a n d a ll k in d s o f fa rm 1
A N E W COM M ANDM ENT I give u n to you. T h a t ye love one i
im p le m e n ts. F e n c in g in e v e ry ■
m o th e r as I h av e loved y o u ; t h a t ye a lso love one a n o th e r. By th is !
sty
le . H a rn e ss , c o lla rs , sn a p s, !
sh a ll a ll m en know t h a t ye v e m y deciples, if ye h a v e love one to
a
n
d
p a d s. New a n d u se d Sew ­
a n o th e r.— J o h n 1 3 :3 4 , 35.
1
/
in g M ach in es. A u to R obes, e tc .
C O L U M B IA T I R E C O R P O R A T I O N , P O R T L A N D , O R E G O N
A Feature Page
For Telling the
Cooks About the
Good Eatables
FISHER'S BLEND FLOUR
is always u n i f o r m
quality»
asgoodfon
cakes
pastry
as for
bread
•for
every
purpose
in
/
»«/« times
those op ant
F R A Z IE R and SON
I know that there are a lot of folks who do not know what feed is
costing today, so I will give you the wholesale price today and what
our retail price is:
Our Price
Wholesale
Rolled Barley, 80 lb. sack ..................................... $2.40
$2.32
Rolled Oats, GO lbs.................................................... $1.85
$1.77
Whole Oats, 100 lbs........................... .....................$2.80
$3.00
Mill Run, 80 lbs........................... ............................$2.00
$2.08
Bran, 70 lbs................................................................ $1.75
$1.82
Cracked Corn, 10p lbs................................................ $3.50
$3.60
Whole Corn, 100 lbs....................................................$3.50
$3.50
.Wheat, 100 lbs......................................... .. J ............$3.75
. $3.95
Egg Builder, 100 lbs.............................. ..................$3^5
$3.45
Scratch Feed, 100 lbs................................................ $3.60
$3.90
20T H CEN TU RY STORES A RE D E PEN D A B LE
Giving 16 ounces in every pound—100 cents of value for each dollar expended.
HERE QUALITY IS COUPLED W ITH ECONOMY
Saturday and Monday, February 7th and 9th, E xtra Ordinary Values ar§ Given
H oney, P u re , P in t Jar.3 29c
Q u a rt ja r s .......................... 55c
R a isin s T h o m p so n s S eedless
3 lbs. '.................................... 32c
Bon A m i, C ake ............. 10c
P o w d er, 2 fo r ............... 25c
Royal Garden—Ceylon and India Tea—the W orld’s best 1-2 lb. pkg. 38c—1 lb. 73c
S h rim p , new est pack
2 tin s ..................................35c
R olled O ats
4 p o u n d s .............................23c
C u rv e C u t M acaroni
4 p o u n d s ............................ gfh-
Economy Matches—Large full boxes, noiseless, reg. 5c. Extra special,’6 boxes 25c
Your 1925 License
L a rd — P u re
3 p o u n d s .........•-..................05c
F u ll C ream C heese
2 p o u n d s .............................55c
N o rw egian S a rd in e s
2 fo r ...................................... 35c
Adirondack syrup, from New York—cane and maple, pts. 33c; qts. 55c; 1-2 gal. 99c
Crystal White Soap
C a lu m e t b a k in g p o w d er, lb.
tin s 27c— 2 1-2 lb. tin s 59c
if You Buy Your Car at
The Park Garage
♦
6 bars 25c ................................. 12 for 49c
D evilled M eat
5 tin s ..................................23c
W esson or M azóla Oil
Q u a rt tin s ................ r-— 49c
Sliced Pineapple, -standard quality—latest pack—Large No. 2 1-2 tins at i for 55c
Vim Flour—excellent for bread or buns—49 lb. sack .....................................$2.49
L a y e r R a isin s
14c— 3 fo r .......................... 40c
9 lb.
C o rn m ea l
sack ...........
43c
C a rn a tio n M ilk, T all cans
each
................................... »e
•
Between Feb. 5 and 20
20th CENTURY COFFEE—the finest of the coffees—Pound 48c—3 pounds $1.42
REALLY NO BETTER PLACES TO BUY GROCERIES IN ALL THE GREAT
NORTHWEST THAN AT
44 Stores
A
SALE
EVERY DAY
20lhCenturyGrocery
44 Stores
ARE LOCATED AT
ASHLAND
374 E. Main St.
MEDFORD
37 N. Central Ave.
GRANTS PASS
509 G. St.