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

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    PIG E TWO
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
A SH LA N D D A IL Y T ID IN G S
ping ancl traveling public the best sendee at the lowest; barian s!” from other states. The,
now assisting his first rowing in ­
structor, Ed Leader, at Ya’.e
(E stab lish ed In 18761
l a t e s o f UllV COUUtiy ill the World.
I executlon was 9Uch a success from
There are several
experienced
-~ ------------------------ ■ • ------------------------------------ :
They have made this possible by strengthening! J ® ^"nretHcai^a^n
acc°.rdJ
coxswains
available,
but
none ot
P ublished E yery E v en in g E xcept Sunday by
; bridges Ulld tracks aild by purchasing stronger and heav-i it seems the state wiH°cii ing 68 to 1 the
a
G
rant’s
calibre
has
shown
up as
THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
ier equipment, so as to haul a larger tonnage with one method and fight any attem pts to
yet.
t e rt R. Greer .............. ..........._.......................................................
repeal the law.
Editor set of units.
■ »«orge Madden Green .................................................. Business Managet:
— _______________________ _________________ If the roads are required to run shorter trains it will
Bear Hunters Find
^,-Tt
< ’• ficial city paper ................................. ^..Telephone
39
inean
the
running
of
more
trains
to
haul
the
same
amount
Only a Porcupine
UNIVERSITY OF WASHING­
1 ntered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffice us Second' 1 ™ U Ä S Mail M atte;
of business, employ more men, purchase more locomotives,
T O N , Seattle, Feb. 16— “ The
SARANAC LAKE, N. Y., Feb.
Tall Men from the W est” lower­ 16 — A cattle buyer recently
i r e Month ........ $ gg congest their tracks with the additional trains and bring
ed their long slim shells onto the came into the ham let of Mountain
J urea Months —
.............................................................................
1.95 about a condition where tliev could not economically use
Months
* t i • ,*
* ' * * * iT
3 T3
w aters of Lake W ashington this View with teeth chattering and
v i e Year
......
! '
¿¿{¡ihe hoavy equipment they now have, a condition that
week and started the 1925 crew I a u l e of a big bear he had seen
ty
tK
a
B y Mail and R ural R outes
spells disaster to the roads and public alike. If this be
for the
University of in th e barn of an abandoned
* •© Mouth
.65
Father of ( W season
i or. done, rate- increases are inevitable.
’) -re e Months ______ L.......................................................................
ashington, two-year
Pough- farm .
fcx Months .........................................................*........
3.5«
The
fact
must
not
be
lost
sight
of
that
expense
im-
Physical ’ keepsie champion.
The local Daniel Boones imme-
u aa Year .......................... ............................
Coach Russell S. (R usty) Cal- diately unlimbered their artillery
' posed on a railroad is imposed on the people, for the roads
Culture low has a turnout th a t would and hastened to the barn, with
DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES
obtain operating revenue by charging for service.
8 CUNARA
C.r.gle Insertion, pe? inch ........................................................... $ .30
make a collegiate rowing m entor
M ACFAOO CM
Y early C ontracts
tu rn a pale shade of green. Sev-
• 27 H,
A PROBLEM IN CONSERVATION
o
sympt0“ a th a t accompany en veterans of th e 1924 national
I
.25 k
*" the
.20
Representatives of all oil interests, large and small, niation, m ucu^dlA ^an^T n-on^tbe C*iaD1Pi°nsk*P crew are in
R ates 3791206786668
for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising
throat and nose—
—all indicate a boat. Close to fifty supervarsity
First Insertion, per 8 point line ................................................. g .10 ¡are invited to attend a conference in Washington during tendency on the part of the system
Each subsequent insertion, 8 point line ...................- ............
.05 |February to discuss future plans and problems of the in- to free the blood from foreign, men are available and many of
them are but slightly inferior to
• ord of Thanks ......................... _ ........................................... .........
1.00
effete, poisonous elements. These
¡¡¡^jdustry.
vnitnaries, per line ........................................... ...... .....................
th
e regulars.
symptoms indicate an attem pt on
-----
Secretary
Work
says
that
the
oft
industry
mast
Then, too, Callow has a goodly
the
part
of
the
body
to
regulate
WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
itself
to
normal
health.
num
ber of graduated freshmen
largely
determine
its
own
future.
“
But,”
he
added,
“ All future events, where an admission charge is made or a
A cold can, as a rule, be remed­ oarsmen, and half a dozen junior-
collection taken is Advertising.
“ when its welfare is so closely linked with the industrial ied within a very short time if one
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders.
is willing to follow a fairly strict varsity stars. W hile it would be
prosperity of the whole, government and business might regimen.
The existence of a cold grossly beside the point to pre­
DONATIONS
No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis verv properly join forces in working out this problem in does not by any means indicate dict another W ashington victory
th a t you are suffering because of
•eg or Job printing— our contributions will be in cash.
prrictical conservation.”
indiscretions on your part, so far on the Hudison at thia time, there
Some of the most important points to be raised are: as exposure to the a ir is concerned. is at least reason for optimism.
THE WOLF ALSO shall dwell with the lamb, and the .leopard w j n . +1.«
__
It simply indicates th at the body
The two mo3t colorful husky'
c 11 facilities for finding Oil and tile pro­ is endeavoring to eliminate a cer­ oarsmen
shall lie down with the kid; and the calf and the young lion and the ' 1 . ” 1L m
there are A1 Ulbrickson,
fading to g eth er- and a little child shall lead them.— Isaiah 11:6.
duction of oil at. an unprecedented rate, how can the tain am ount of impurities th at j “The G reat
Dane,” and Dow Wal-!
have accumulated therein, and ex-
“ brakes”
be
put
on
the
“
bringing
in”
of
new
pGols
and
, ,
-
.
,
posure to the cold has stimulated j ling, W ashington strokes in 1924
LIVING TO DIE
unneeded production? What can be done in explorations the sympathetic nervous system and ’23 respectively. Last year
to devise some method
A man declared lugubriously the other day, “ It does­ without exploitation until market demands warrant new sufficiently
of throwing out ¿his accumulated Ulbrickson beat W alling out for
the ¡stroke oar, the la tte r taking
n ’t seem fair. About the time a fellow readies the point production? How can the government and the industry poison.
You have perhaps heard th at you No. 6. W alling is going out with
where he has got a line on things in this world he turns best cooperate to encourage the creation of drill-tested should “stuff a cold and starve a
vim these days and it looks like
up his toes and he is packed away. A person no more reserves to be opened only as needed through delayed pro­ fever.” But in many instances if anotlfer
W alling-Ulbrickson fight
you do adopt this regimen you will
than loams to live than he lias to die.”
duction? How can development be. slowed dtfwn on gov- have a fever to starve as the result. for the stroke position in th e '
A sensible method of treating colds W ashington shell is on.
Well, that is all right. That is eminently equitable, emment owned lands to meet only the actual demands? as
well as fevers, a t least in the
O ther veterans of the 1924
The only reason for living is to get ready for dying. The
beginning of a radical method of
shell
are H arrison Sanford, Hom­
treatment, is the “starving” pro­
only excuse for being on this sphere is to learn how to
OUR FUTURE HIGHWAYS
cess. In other words, you should er K earns, Max Lu ft, captain;
live somewhere else. And the only way to get to that
Highway experts, who have been studying our traf­ eliminate nourishment of all kinds, H arry J. Dutton and Hal Con­
least from one to four days, de­
somewhere else is to die.. It would be just as logical for fic problem, estimate that our present traffic will he at
pending upon the severity of the don.
the ^members of a graduating class to complain, “ Now doubfed in from five to ten years. If this is so, we must cold.
Callow ¡3 faced with the prop­
In order to prescribe the most osition of finding a new cox­
.¡list as we have got to where we can do this work they prepare no wto handle Ibis situation. The completeness effective
methods for curing this
kick
with which this problem is solved by each state .and each disease it would really be necessary swain for-' the crew to replace
t us out.”
of all to know something of Donald Grant, ’24 cox, who is
Certainly they turn them out. They would be wast­ community, will in no small degree measure the develop­ first
the nature of the severity of the
ing time to stay there longer. They are turned out to ment and prosperity of that state or community. - There is j attack.
A general vitality-building re­
make hse of the knowledge they have acquired. They are much talk and muck dispute as to where our highways gimen
should be adopted when be­
nmed out that they may work up into faculty things that are to be and as to how they are to be constructed, but the ginning the treatm ent of a cold.
If yott are fairly strong it is a
have been taught.
only answer to our traffic problem is -More Miles of Per- good plan to take long walks in
the open a ir and if you have more
The trouble with the man who made the observation manent Hard Surface* Roads.
than the average strength, a long
BVM"-iELfrTPiriTv
nt the ripening of this article is that he thinks this earthly
A famous English essayist once said, “ Of all inven-!0*» is preferable. Deep breaching
r ne Insertion a week ...... ...................................................,........
*l n o insertions a- week ..........................................
Daily Insertion
YoÄt?LE8*ATf
7 vusimc £PENDE nce '
life is the center and circumference of existence. He does- ions, the alphabet and printing press alone excepted,
n ’t realize that it is but a phase in a man’s career—but | those which abridge distance have done the most for mail
a grade, so to speak, in the school of infinite knowledge. I kind.”
There is a commonly quoted adage to the effect that the
Let us, therefore, now lay our plans for the develop­
good die young. If that is true there is a reason for it. ment of the future traffic arteries on which will flow the
Perhaps it is the same reason that particularly bright life blood of our great Nation.
children skip a grade now and then. They are ready to
move up.
vlcted of m urder it wa$ found th at
the »execution had, to be by gas.
It is the general rule that men grow better^s they
Sanford Dinsmore, State Food
grow older Accounts of shocking deeds of violence
and Drug Commissioner, was
usually show tlita they are not committed by men who
called into consultation, an<t hy­
are of middle age or beyond. It is the younger folks that
drocyanogen, a gas derived from
generally do these things.
/
hydrocyanic acid, was decidJed
upon The acid had been in use
Men who have readied middle age have as a rule
begun to know a little about living. They have begun CARSON CITY, Feb. 16— Le­ for several years as a spray for
it trees, and the gas had been
lo sense the way of living. They have begun to see that thal gassing will rem ain the fru
used to rid granaries of vermin.
There is something to i^ far and beyond the gaining of means of execution in Nevada.
Preparations were started im­
The death by this method is
a dollar and the making of a name.
m
ediately
on a death-cell, thq.
the most hum ane inflicted today
The first part of a man’s life is much given over to seems to be the contention of the building chosen being a ram-
experiences, sought or unsought—to making observations, m ajority of the Nevada State Ishakle affair in the prison yard.
consciously or unconsciously. He is getting a line Oil I Senators and Assemblymen. Ne- The interior was «covered with
things. The latter part of his life is more devoted to mak­ vada, pioneer in an untried meth plaster and th e window edges
ing use of these experiences, these observations to work­ od of imposing the age-old pefialtyi 9eale(^ w ith parafin
a “ tooth for a tooth,” executed
Nevada then snuffed out Gee
- , Ilf
1^
.
....
ing up into character and facility what he has learned. of
a Chinese tong slayer with the Jon s life, amid the cr'es of “ Bar-
And so .if he works fast and hard—very fast and very deadly hydrocyanic acid gas in
hard—and at the same time moves with a deliberate February of last year.
slowness, he will have learned to live by the- time he is Ever since other states have
watched with interest to see if
ready to die And that is as it is intended.
10
TO KILL SLAYERS
remeX“ '” 'bwÏÏK
diaphragmatically; th a t is, let thé
expansion begin in the region of
the abdomen. If not especially
strong then a steam or vapor , cab­
inet bath is a good remedy to
hurry the curative processes.
If
a vessel of boiling water is placed
under a chair and blankets are
thrown over the patient it furnish-
ea a very satisfactory steam bath.
C leaning U p. The M ess
Brown, during the absence of
his wife, was giving a stag party.
Bottles, dishes and cigar butts
were scattered about in profus­
ion. A t the height of the revelry
Brown was called to the door,
and came back with a telegram in
his hand.
“ Boys,” he cried In consterna­
tion, “ it’s from my wife. She’ll
be home in an hour. W hat’ll we
do.”
There was a moment of stun­
ned silence and then Smith jum p­
ed up.
.«» v
,
1 have it! he Shouted. “L et’s
u„__ *. ,
,
...
burn th e house dow n!”
the law calling for death by gas
would be repealed by the State
ENCOURAGE REFORESTATION
Legislature.
Discussing taxation of forest property, Mrs. Florence “Nevadia, so far as I know, has
intention of striking out the
II. Stone, accountant of the Southern Pine Association, in no
law th a t made thq world gasp
a recent address said:
last year,” said John I. Peterson,
“ Closely allied to taxation on mature forests is the State Senator. “Although cap­
question of taxation for reforestation. All over the Unit­ ital punishm ent in any form seems
ed States the individual states are recognizing the import­ horrible, it is necessary: and it
is my opinion th a t the lethal-gas
ance of encouraging reforestation and are passing laws execution
is the solution to the
exempting lands used for this purpose, limiting the as­ hum aneness of the problem .”
sessment for a period of years, offering optional induce­ Many other members of the
Senate are of the same opinion.
ments, rebates, etc.
They
denounce
electrocution,
“ If has been suggerted that the different states be
hanging and ishooting, and say
empowered to purchase cutover lands from individual th at if any bill intended to re­
owners and grow public forests. To just what extent this peal the lethal-gas law is intro­
/
. *
is practical only the future can determine. It is also pro­ duced in the State Législature SALKS » * /. T M B S THOSB OP A N T OTHXR BR A N D
posed that a portion of the severenee tax should be used they will fight it.
to make the purchase from the same industry that pays From the mediicatf profession,
which was represented by sever­
the tax.
al physicians at the execution last
“ If our cut-over lands had fire protection they would year, only one dissenting voice
reproduce the fofests merely through scientific cutting of Vas heard,
the mature forest. But in some states the method of tax­ o n e doctor charged th a t Gee
ation discourages even the leaving of seed trees, the Jon, the convicted alayer, had
died from “cold and exposure”
young growth being taked on an assessment in proportion and. not from inhalation of the
io its ratio to the mature forest, causing not only the cut­ deadly fumes. This was later <>
ting of even tree, but .the burning of the land so that pointed out to be erroneous by
nothing that has the slightest resemblance to a tree would W arden Denver S. Dickerson,
who called attention to th e three
We are peased to announce that
be left to be assessed.
electric heaters in the death-coil
we have just installed a new sec­
“ We believe this method is on the wane and legisla­ and said th a t the tem perature of
tion of SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES,
tors are realizing more and more that the power of tax the room was above 80 degrees
and that we are again in position
•
is the power to destroy literally when applied to reforest­ Fahrenheit.
Nevada’s lethal-gas means of
to extend to the public the conven­
ation.”
•
capital punishm ent had its birth
ience and safety offered by our
when an Assemblyman from Elko
modern vault equipped with com­
LEGISLATION OR SERVICE?
County read a novel in which one
plete Burglar Alarm Protection. •
State legislators shocld sit down hard on the attempts of the characters committed sui­
of railroad employees to çecure the passage of bills lim­ cide by the “ almond scen tel gas
Why assume the risk of leaving
The hook described how
iting and reducing the number of cars in a train, requir­ route.”
your
valuable papers subject to un­
painless th© death was; and a
ing the roads to provide the men with uniforms and stan­ bill to adopt this form of capital
necessary hazards. The cost of a
dard watches and requiring a pilot on light engines.
punishm ent was immediately in­
box is very moderate.»
Any one or all of these bills will run into big expense troduced! in the Legislature and
to the roads, at a time when the public is asking for re­ passed.
No certain gas was decided up­
duction in rates.
on, and no provision for its ad­
The railroads of the United States pay the highest m inistration were made. When
Ashland, Oregon
wages to their employees and afford the producing, ship- Gee Jon, the tongman, was con-
Labor saving
electric devices
have caused the
em ancipation of
the
American
housewife. She
celebrates ^.er independence by
finishing her housework in
tim e to enjoy some of the re ­
creation form erly monopolized
by th a t lord and m aster fellow
th a t folks seemed to think was
an institution. May we serve
you?
E lectrically at Your Service
A. LIVE W IRE
Letterheads, statements, t o
your order at ihe ridings Office.
We have a good Job printing de­
partm ent.
t(
Satisfaction
through more mileage and
better operation of the
motor, is the universal
opinion of everybody who
uses
GENERAL
G A S O L IN E
high hopes of bear skin rugs and
bear steaks. All they found was
an' extra large porcupine asleep
on a rafter.
Drive in and get your
tank filled—you can see
the difference.
Of Coarse
Uptown: “ T hat deaf and d u m t
couple who ju st got m arried, are
they m aking out O. K.”
Downtown: “ Sure. They’ve un­
speakably happy.”
W. & N. Service
Station
For Every
Occasion
whether weddings, births,
anniversaries, d e a t h s
parties, and all other
events wherein a remem­
brance is needed’
uSay It With
Flowers”
the universal token of re­
membrance and apprecia­
tion.
BOULEVARD and SHERMAN
Ladies of Ashland
and Community
please remember that we
are here to save you the
drudgery of baking at
home.
Our products are made of
finest materials we can
buy, and sold as reason­
able as SUPERIOR goods
can be sold.
Phone 118
HATCHER
“ The F lorist”
Franklin Bakery
Phone 199
1 0 7 0 B oulevard
Open on Sunday— We Deliver j
Brush
Special
any brush in the window during two days of Lithian
Shows, Feb. 16-17, Regularly priced 15c to 60c
Choice 15c
YALE PADLOCKS, SUITABLE FOB 14
DIFEFRENT PURPOSES
M urphy E lectric S hop
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES ^SERVILE
P hone Ô 2 C or . E. M ain «"O ak
SIMPSON’S
HARDWARE
Winchester Store
The Cook’s Best Friend—
CAIMNEI
THE WORLD'S GREATEST
B AKIN G POWDER
The Last Spoonful is
as good as the First
Safe Deposit Boxes
The Citizens Bank of Ashland
M our Back we use every known method for protection of
our depositors. W e have adopted the Protectu Check Sya*
tem for the benefit o f our depositors so that the amount
of their checks may be safeguarded against being “raised”
should they be lost, stolen, or fall into dishonest hand*
¿W e do
AVith the Protectu Check System, you can write your
check for a given amount and by a cutter attached to the
c ^ r y tfm q i
cover, you can then tear off the check at the desired
(Possible
amount [like a money order]. No check raiser can then
to Protects
your check for five to five hundred or ten to one
hundred dollars.
„ our
r
These new Protectu Cheeks will be supplied to our
customers with checking accounts. Nominal charge for
cover; checks free.
Depositors'
If you are considering opening a checking account, call
at our bank and see this improved aewice that we are
furnishing our patrons.
SPECIAL SIZE CHECK BOOKS FOR BUSINESS USB. EQUALLY
PRACTICAL FOR POCKET, DESK. A N D PAY ROLL USE?
The First National Bank
>1,