Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, January 12, 1926, Image 1

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T idings
malasia germs
Cannot survive three months in
the r ift oaone at As&aad. Pure
domestio water helps.
The Tidings Has Been 'Ashland's
Newspaper For Nearly Fifty Years
ASHLAND CLIMATE
Without the use of medicine eures
nine oases out of ten of
This is a proven fact
Wire Service)
ASHLAND, OREGON,/TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1926
Mère Man
Scores Hit in
Fashion Show
Although announced a few days
ago that the hearing of testimony
in the case of the Ashland Baptist
church vs- the First Baptist
Church of Ashland, Inc., would
start this week, It was learned
this morning that It will prob­
ably be Monday of next week be­
fore the case Is reached on the
court calendar.
The local church case was the
second on the court calendar for
the present session of the cir­
cuit court, preceded only by the
Millionaire Mine case. ' It was
thought that the latter case would
be disposed of In a very short
time, and the local case reached.
It was learned yesterday, how­
ever, according to B. D. Briggs,
member of the law firm of Briggs
and Brigg* of this city, attorneys
for the plaintiffs In the church
action, that it will take at least
aU of this week In which to com­
plete the mine case.
Both side* of the ^ a l church
controversy have been ready for
some time for the hearing, Brigg*
stated. It is not known however,
how long the hearing of the tes­
timony will take, Briggs 'declar­
ing that the length of the trial
would depend upon the i rulings
of the court in connection with
certain testimony which well bo
W. J. Mooye of this city an l
Newberry and Newberry of Med­
ford are attorneys for the defend,
ents.
The case grew out of the reviv­
al services held at the local Bap­
tist church several years ago by
Rev. Price. The membership of
the church has been split on the
Four '(Square Gospel teacHlnv«
which were adopted by Rev. u.
C. Miller and a part of his congre­
gation. The remainder of the
congregation refused to accept
the teachings promulgated by
Price, and are now' suing to ob­
tain title to the church property
on Hargadlne street and other
property on Oak street. Oppon­
ents of the Four Square Gospel
teachings are now In possession
of the church property.
ANOTHER TREMBLOR
HITS SANTA BARBARA
SANTA BARBARA, Jan. 12—
(LP)—A light earthquake shock
was felt here at 2:32 a. m. It «res
a,mild tremor, lasting only three
seconds.
"Aha, Watsqp! there’s scandal
here.”
"What Is It Sherlock 7”
. ’
"The bootlegging preacher, my
dear Watson.
The man who
starts you on his way with a
drink of ihoonshlne.”
"You’re wrong, Sherlock, he
Isn’t a bootlegging preacher, tor
he himself reported to the police
the presence of the still in his
beck yard. No self respecting
bootlegger or moonshiner would
do thet.”
,
Such was the conversation be­
tween Chief of Police McNabb and
one of kls staff yesterday after­
noon, following the discovery of
a still in a woodshed on the
Boulevard. The home was that
of Rev. V. K. Allison, pastor of
the Church 'of Ch/lat.
Allison moved into the housg
only yesterday morning.'Starting
o n a n exploring expedition
through the woodshed, he found
The Wreck of the C
»
BERLIN, Jan. 12. —
22 Male mannequin* are the
It latent thing in the Berlin
22 ■' wofld ot fashion. At ene
tt ;>f the’ k U f known cab-
22'! aaAs,' a ndmber ot aim
tt and vaudeville' artist* are
tt displaying
up-to-(date
tt creation* in z dress suit*,
tt dinner Jacket*, morning
tt coat*, lounge suit* and
tt topcoat*, including all
tt other essential accessories
tt like top hats, debries,
tt scarfB, shoes aftd fancy
It handkerchief*. Judging by
tt the applause these ex-
22 hibtts have - evoked, this
tt method of displaying what
tt is new in men’s fashions
tt has met with popular ap-
22 proval.
Dream of Pacifists for Past
. Half Century to.
’ Come True
Envoy Instructed to Oppote
New Mexican Land
Law
UNDER LEAGUE
JOIN
Court at Hague to lx- Tri
for KnfOrcement anil Ini
preterirti for all Time
Mexico War Office Hays Eight
Bandits of Train Robbing
Gang, Killed
WITH
AMERICA
By HENRY WOOD
LONDON, Jan. 12—(LP)—Great
United Press Staff Correspondent
Britain has instructed her envoy
GENEVA, Jon. 12.— (LP>~
at Mexico city to make represent­
Codification of International La«?,
ations against the new Mexican
one o’f the* dream* of pacific
oil and land laws, insofar a* they
and International statosnien for
affect foreigners, It was learned
this morning.
‘
the past half century, became a
step nearer when a commission
The instructions sent the envoy
When the fifth section of the Twentieth Century Liinl ;ed, crack flyer of the New of experts met hero today under
call for a protest similar to the
American note, which was sent to
York Central, was being backed out of the Chicago d ¡pot yards the inbound sixth the auspices of the League, of
Nations
for
the
furtherance
of
the
Mexican state department yes­
>
it.
Three
persons
were
in-
section, traveling at a high rate of speed, crashed im
Patrolman O. B. Flaherty .of
that
task.
terday,
Britain,like America has
jured, one probably fatally, and scores of passengers i pre shaken up. Debris was
Kansas City, Mo., went into the
The immediate program of tho
vast oil land interests In Mexloo.
scattered over four tracks. At the right of this pictu e can be seen the engine of commission, which Is under th4 Argyle State bank, and stopped
three bandits who had taken
the sixth section jammed into the rear Piillman of J le fifth section.
presidency of Monsieur Hammar­ $20,000 and locked the clerks in
MEXICO. Jan. 12 — (IP)—Eight
skjöld, governor of Upsala, the vault. One of the bandits of the rebel band, which held up
1 Sweden, Is to prepare a fist of shot at him and the bullet pierc­ the Guadalajara-Mexico City ex­
| those international questions and ed his cap just above the badge, press at Negert station yesterd«»
, subjects that have already reached parting his hair but leaving him burning the Pullman cars and
I a stage where It is possible to In- unharmed. The hole In the cap killing several passengers, have
' corporoate them into an Interna­ can be see In the picture.
been killed by federal forces,
O. A. 0. Instructor Will be
tional
treaty.
under General Torres, the war
Featured on
office
announced thle morning.
This
treaty
would
then
become
Program
, at once a codified International
Part of the loot which the
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. JB
' law on the subject, with the
bandits took from the Mexican
Instructors at the Oregon Ag­
l i — The practice of , 21
League’s Permanent Court of In­
passengers has been recovered.
ricultural College will appear here
broadcasting church eer- It
Apparently eleven dead la the
ternational Justice at the Hague
under the auspices of the Ash­
vices was attacked from- tt
as the permanent tribunal for *♦-
total of the death toll In the
land chamber of commerce, at the
the pulpit of the Calvary tt
holdup.
Presbyterian charch Sun- tt All Officers of Company Interpretation and enforcement.
forum luncheon to be held on Aged Map Sustains Fracture
Again in Office. Taylor
day by Dr. Cortland tt
The holdup was one of the most
January 36, It was announced
of Hip When He Slips
Since the creation of the court
is Manager
Myers, former head of the tt
daring In the history of Mexico.
on Frosty Walk
at thé Hague, the task of the
this morning by officials of the
Tremont Temple of Boa- tt
chamber.
It was staged by fifteen men. who
progressive codlficalotn of Inter­
The entire set of officers who
Slipping on the frosty walk at
ton.
tt
traveled In disguise aboard the
national law, which the League
The forum will be given espec­
‘‘You can’t
worship tt guided the destinies of the Ash­ has now undertaken,, constitutes
express.
ially for the farmers of this sect­ his home, corner of Fpnrth and
God by listening to the -tt land Preserving company during perhaps the League’s second most Instructions Given for En
ion, In aa effort to interest them East M a in streets. Chart«*
r a d 1 a,*’ declared Dr. tt the past year, were reelected to Important step fop. establishing
Ul
JTftlflillA,
lAfi grnw. Haight, 87, father of Mrs. C. J.
tnn çe of Beginning
Myers. “God ska ' n o f T f » their offices kt th e «mut*» « « s t­ «ffd international feral and Jud-
OUT-OF-STATE
Tng o f snSafrtrtifts.
ing of the stockholders of the
worshiped
In
any
form
of
tt
INCREASING ]
a
serotus
fracture
of
the
hip
Sun­
clal system for the peaceful
The loading
Instructor*
In
entertainment or In pic- tt organization, held last night. settlement of 'disputes.
poultry raising and small fruit day morning. Because of his ad-
Those who will remain in office
Registrations at the out of
The work of the commission
culture at the college wll appear vdneed years, the fracture Is tt ture shows.
for another year are: Dr. F. G.
state registration bureau here so
considered
very
sertons,
bat
this
on the program. R. G. Fowler,
Swedenburg, president, C. W. which met here today, will In no
far this month total almost seven
county clnb leader, is in charge morning Mr. Haight was resting
Banta, secretary and E. E. Phipps way conflict with the work of the
tim
es. as many this season as >
of the arranging of the program. eafeily. and his physicians believe
and Thornton Wiley, directors. commission of American Jurists
compared
to January 1926, ae-
,
Grants Pass will unite with the he will recover.
S. D. Taylor was again chosen that will meet in Rio de Janiero
cordlng to Mrs. J. H. Puller,
According
to
C.
J.
Baughman,
Ashland chamber In conducting
as manager of the company.
( later In the yeyr under the aus­
registrar.
the forum next Tuesday, at Which fire, chief, son-in-law of the In­
Manager Taylor’s annual re­ pices of the Pan-American Union,
So far this month, 99 out of
time the scenic attractions of jured man, Mr. Haight, who re­
port showed that the condition for the codification of Interna- 1
state
cars have been registered
Southern Oregon, and the beet sides with the Baughman famllv.
of the plant and other proper­ tional Law as regards the Ainerl- 1
here
while
during January 192»,
methods for advertising them, has been In the habit of taking an
1
ties of the company Were in a can continent.
but fourten cars were registered
early
morning
walk
every
morn­
will be discussed. Medford and
very satisfactory condition. The
The commission which met here
during the same period.
report Indicated that the assets today. Is composed of interna- 1
Klamath Fall* will have represent ing. Sunday morning he left the
house
by
the
back
door,
but
had
of the company have been in­ tional legal experts, representing 1
stives here, It was stated today,
creased
considerably during the not only the principal nations of '
and It Is planned to make the taken but a few steps from the
Jackson, Principal past yedr,
TELLER NEW MEMBER
and the 24,500 has the world, but all of the world’s
meeting an all afternoon seesion, door when he slipped and fell.
F. High School,
OF SHIPPING BOARD
been spent on permanent Im­ leading legal and jurldlclal sys- 1
with the chamber delegates meet­ He arose again, walked into the
program Here
provements to^, the plant, thus terns.
ing Immediately after the Forum. house and continued to move
WASHINGTON. Jan. 12. —(IF)
about, complaining however of a
The commission will have be- '
Higher social education will enabling the Bagley Canning
—
President Coolidge today non!-'
severe pain In his leg.
make /h e greatest contribution company, lessees, to more than for It reports from all the lead,
Inatcd
Phillip Teller, Californlahi
A few minutes later he was to society, according to Paul T. double the 1924 pack.
lng international law acadamies, '
RUSSIA WILL JOIN
to succeed Commissioner Meyer
forced to return to his bed, and Jackson, principal of Uie Klanu
A comparative statement, pre­ societies and associations, which , 1
ARMS CONFERENCE a physician called. An X-Ray dis­
LIssner, resigned, as a member
ath Falls high school, who was pared by Taylor, showed • that were asked for at the committee’s 1
ot the United States Shipping
in
1923,
221,000
was
expended
closed
a
fracture
of
the
hip
last session, as to various sub­
BERLIN, Jan. 12.— (IP)— The
the main speaker at the cham­
(Continued on Page Four)
Board.
•"
Soviet government today decided joint.
ber of commerce Forum lunch­ for labor and produce, in 1924, jects which are ripe for codifi­
239.000
arfd
In
1925,
288.000,
Members of Mr/ Haight’s fam­ eon Tuesday.
cation Into lnternatolnal law. Re­
definitely to participate in the
nearly doubling each successive
preliminary disarmament con­ ily, residing In California, arrived
Biological selection and gov­
ports to date have been received '
year. Taylor explained that the
ference at Geneva, providing here last night
ernment Interference are two expenditures for labor and pro­ from the American Institute of
settlement of the Russo-Swiss re­
other agencies which might be duce were approximately one International Law, The American ,
lations are achieved In the mean­
used for the betterment of so­ half the Income from the pack, Society of International Law,
time.
ciety, Mr. Jackson stated. The and that this year the pack was the International Maritime Com­
first is a matter of the future, valued at about 2160,000.
mittee, The Institute of Interna­
while the second is objection­
R. E. Kozer, manager of the tional Law, the Institute Ibérique
able, for liberty-loving Americans Bagley Canning company, ex­ de droit Comparée. The Interna-
want as little government Inter­ pressed himself “hs well satisfied and the International Legal
campaign carried on during re­
ference with their liberty as Is with general conditions, although tional Lew Association, the So- |
cent years.
"It Is safer to travel than stay possible, he explained.
he declared that he was greatly clete de Legislation Comparée
Reports Indicated that moat of
,
Jackson urged the necessity of disappointed because growers did Union.
at home" said R. J. Clancy,
the
fires were caused by defect­
Under the system which b«» ]
assistant to the general manager responsibility, to society and ad­ not show more interest in the
ive
or
Overheated flues. Approxi­
of the Southern Pacific company vocated thia syatem rather than growing of berries, declaring been adopted by the League of 1
mately 16 per cent were classlfl**
in announcing today that the Individualism. Every person owes that the cannery needbd large Nations for the gradual develon- «
as of an undetermined origin..
an old still. It was quite a shock’ Pacific linee of the company are it to himself and to society to quantities of lorries to round
Fire losse In each county dar­
to the man of the gospel, who Is entering their seventh consecu­ accept thei reaponslbilitles of out the pack.
(Continued On Page Four)
ing 1926 follow:
known her aa one of Mr. Vol­ tive year without fatality to a social Intercourse and Jackson
Kooser also reported that new
stead'* strongest admirers and passenger In a steam train ac­ commended the efforts of the markets had been opened up dur­
Baker, 216,650; Benton, 2149.-
supporters. ,
cident. Since November 30, 1919 chamber of commerce and other ing the past year, and that the
»78; Clackamas, 2116,376; Clat-
Rev. Altlsun at once notified more than 200 million passengers soctsi onptanmtnnnr wmen h r
1
toss, 28171.26, was In Tillamook sop, f ï IV, fié. VI;
son were very good.
the poll«» of his- find, end within have been carried safely nearly described as educational.
Cooe, 211!
county. Hood River county had 260,000;
It was not decided whether
Mr. Jackson brought the greet­
a few minutes, another still had nine billion passenger miles over
the second heaviest loss, 2380,- Crook. 21T.2OO; Curry,
been added to the long list of these lines. This is equivalent ings of the Klamath Falls coun­ further additions will be made
050. Marlon county, with the Deschutes, 219,310:
confiscated "cans” held by the to carrying more than twice the ty chamber of commerce and to the plant at once, but It was
second largest population in the 226,888.86; Gilliam, 2*!
total population of the United stated lie was glad that such a shown that the plant was oper­
local Officers.
ttate,
had fire losses totaling Harney, 217,700; Hoo
I. D. McCoy of Portland, ar­
States a distance of forty miles.
ated to capacity during the past
2280,060; Jackson, 2«
It is believed the man who op­ It establishes a factor of safety warm feeling of friendship exist­ season, and that it will be Im­ rested yesterday afternoon by 2261.028.
J
erated the Mill has crossed the Indicating that one may travel ed between the two cities. He possible to increase the output State Traffic Officer O. D.
For December, 1926, the'fire Jefferson, 27.600;
River Styx, for the “can” was the equivalent distance of 886,- said his community welcomed the this year unless an enlargement Hayes, was yesterday afternoon looses In Oregon outside of Port­ 213.300; KlansMth 2
eenatrneted of an old lard pall, 000 times around the world with­ establishment Of the Southern to made.
fined 216 when he ptead guilty land. aggregated 2174.303. There Lake, 234.000; Lane.
Lincoln. 224,166; Linn,
sdme lead tubing, and a tea out danger of lees of life In a Oregon normal here and that tt
It 1s possible that a third to the charge before Justice’ of were 48 fires, thrde of which
would be very beneficial to their
Malheur,
213.7641; Marta
kettle, making It abont as condu­ steam train accident.
were
classified
.
as
incendiary.
unit will he added before the the Peace L.-A. Roberts here.
section.
038;
Morrow,
|7 0 ; Me
cive to life as a strychnine cock­
The
most
disastrous
fire
during
McCoy
was
chargd
with
driv­
O . W. Dunn reported relative opening ot the nejt canning sea­ ing through Talent at more than the month was at Corvallis, 2621.613.41;
Folk,
tail. It was a very small outfit, In­
to the rssolntion on whether son, la order, that still more 30 miles per hour, and admitted where Science hall at the Oregon Sherman, 238.100; T
tended the police declare, to
the manufacturer or prodiicèr fruit may be bandied through that he was traveling at the rate Agricultural college burned with 22173.66; Umatilla.
matoufacture (ftquqf for family
the plant.
should have the legal right to
use.
i Unton, 263,626; Wallet
of 36 miles per hour when he a loss of 276,000.
Oregon and Washington
control the resale price of bis
600; WaeCtJ. 216.616; 1
The
decrease
in
fire
losees
dur­
went
through
the
town.
Judge
' Medford — Rogue fttver Val­
Aa for Rev. Allison, Chief of
—Fair. Not much change
article. A national referendum to
ing 1026 when compared with ton, 266.728; Wheeler,
Roberts
assessed
him
one
dollar
ley
raised
27,000,000
worth
of
In temperature. Moderate
Police McNabb stated, "yon may
being t^ken on this subject and
produce In 1925, 22.000,000 go­ per mile for each mile In excess prevtoutt years was attributed by Yamhill. 242.868 total
easterly winds along the
say that we released Rev. Allison
Dr. Moore to the Mra prevention 164.97.
of the legal 20.
ing
to wage workers.
coast.
because of Insufficient evidence,"
Says God Cati’t
Be Worshipped
Over Radio’
Safer to Travel
Than Stay Home
Says S. P. Head
Moves Too Fast
Through Talent,
Pays $1 Per Mile
THÈ WEATHER