asbland (F tedino « daily - - TRE DAILY TIDINGS EDITORIAL C. J. READ, ESTABLISHED IN 1876 A SH LA N D D A IL Y T ID IN -G S Rnlrrrd at rt»» Ashland. Oregon Poetoffice as Second Class M all M atter — -I---- — W. H. PERKINS, MANAGING EDITOR OUT OUR WAY and FEATURE PAGE - - PUBLISHED BY THE ÁSHLAND PRINTING'CO. NEWS EDITOR By Williams Crater Lake in the Winter Time * Building Permits BY JOHN HA I? IN ; Caretaker at C rater L ak e! Lodge .• Tfie other day we had an inspiration, \ve were going to gather the material and write a story to he published right after the first of the year on- the building that had been done in Ashland during the past year. We had noticed many new fionses go­ ing up as well as several additions and changes, which we knew had been made and we sort of fig­ ured out that it would make a mighty good story, if the home folks who have been drawing down the corners of their mouths over business conditions, knew just exactly how much Ashland had spent in building. We figured that the showing would be so good that those drooping corners would take an upward tilt, that some of the gloomy brothers might see a silver lining in their black cloud. Well we started out, •went to the city hall first, and there we made the rather startling dis­ covery that Ashland does not require a building permit before the erection of any type of building. You can build what ever you want to in this city, wherever you want to, and it is not necessary to go through the formality of making a public re­ cord of your activities along this line. This was a surprising discovery, with all of the building that has been going on here in the past there is not one single record of the amount or type. The Chamber of Commerce, has not been able to keep an accurate record. The lumber yards and the contractors all of course Jiave a record of what they have participated i n individually, but even the compilation of these will not show accur­ a te ly what has been done in this city during the past year. We understand that some time * ago there was a movement on foot to pass an ordinance requiring that a permit be secured, hut in the rush of other and more pressing business this detail in our city government became lost in the shuffle. The Tidings would most respectfully like to call this over sight to the attention of the city offic­ ials. W e should like to be placed on record as recommending that some f^eps he taken before another year rolls around to secure this data, as - W al l a s , t o TnnVo if m a n d a to ry tn weciire n p erm it before starting any building activity. We do not know of any instance wh(*re an ordinance of this kind would have worked a hardship upon any one in the past, ancfw e feel positive that it will not do so in the future. Now, as a new year is approaching, is a good time to start keeping such a record. • i In a recent rotogravure section of the _ Louisville Courier-Journal .appeared a beautiful picture of “ Crater Lake, California." For many years California has been taking our fancy fruits and se n d in g th em o u t u n d e r C a li­ fornia labels but we were hardly prepared for this ap­ propriation of our scenic wonders. Clatsop county should be warned and put Cannon Reach, ant) Coxcomb h ill under lock and key. « » « — ÍY -B E R T -tío S E s ! The smartest girl in school Is ne v e r th e pr e tti es t.—-—---- -— - A fresh shave and haircut make the clothes look old. How rarely a woman faints when nobody is near by to see her! (Grants Pass Courier) Relaxation For Health Dr. William Gilbert Anderson, director of the Yale gymnasium, is trying to educate his stqdents to sit quietly a moment or two each hour, perm itting every muscle to relax. If people were taught in their youth to do thnt, Dr. Anderson maintains, they would last longer and he much more efficient. Exercises to keep fit is the more commonplace advice. Both are good and both are necessary. In this hustling America both arc generally neglect­ ed, though exercise perhnps gets a little more a t­ tention than relaxation. Many a business man or woman who won’t spare an hour a day for energetic and healthful exercise won’t spend even 12 minutes a day re­ laxing. It is a short-sighted zeal for making every minute count th at in practice actually causes hours to be wasted through decreased health and effic­ iency. Dr. Anderson’s advice ought to be more widely uttered. Try his hourly moment of relaxing and see what it does to you. At first it will come very hard to persons accustomed to driving themselves tensely. Once the art is mastered, however, it will bring unexpected good results. Many a knotty problem or bad temper or business error will he solved or prevented by the fresh mental and spirit­ ual strength let in by that regular, brief period of rest and poise. An Old Mule The most venerable and estimable mule in 'America Js dead. If Old Jim of Mountain View, N. J., had his due, his race would bray a requiem drowning 20,000,000 automobile lioms. Jim was 40 years old, and for 36 of those years had trodden the tow-path of the Morris Canal, pulling heavily ladden barges. No one can say what millions of tons of freight lie has moved anil the p art he has played in the great industrial era which virtually began with his birth. W hat “ snooty” motor truck can show a record comparable to J im ’sT England has put a tax on betting. Such a coun­ try! W e’ll bet Americans wouldn’t stand for any­ thing like th a t ’<> Ml i Speaking of warm weather one local lady has picked narcissus blooms from her garden. In some instances . rones arc still tn bloom" and there are dozens of other kinds of flowerB still bloom­ ing. Tomorrow’s troubles may be sidestepped by doing things right today. The, la w 'is a game that is played from both ends, the middle being you. (Medford M all-Tribune) The principal, of the Eu­ gene high school seems to have been suffering from the delusion that he was running the school. The superintend­ ent of the Roseburg schools, form erly of H errin, 111., has resigned to assume the same Job at Marshfield. L E A V E N W O R T H , Kan. — D ines in his m all, dimes In his pockets and even dimes in his food have caused a LdffVenworth man, name withheld by postal authori­ tie s to call for help. A w riter In a Comic magazine, inspfintfirn found. ,wrote a story of a triangle between a king, his queen and an am­ bassador, I t closed with: “ If you want to know the moral of thia story, send 10 cents in cash to Box 137, Leaven­ worth, K an .” The lessee of box 137 had never heard of the story of the jokesmith. Others may not be smart, but they always know what t h e y would do if they were in your place. Hez Heck says,: “ I reckon no­ body has a harder time glttin’ in­ to heaven than a paper-hanger.” . ' DIJON, Frarfce — W hen a maiden of Meuilley went to the town ball to obtain a birth certificate and marriage license, she learned that on the rolls she was entered as a boy and liable to m ilitary service in the next class In­ corporated In . the Frsmch army. LOS A NGELES — A new form of piano technique has been Introduced by Henry Cowell, California composer. Cowell uses his elbow, fore­ arm and palm in striking the keys. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ASHLAND ASHLAND k ASHLAND 10 Years Ago 20 Years Ago 30 Years Ago M ike Wompck, prospector and mining man, well-known In Ash­ land, Is Jubilant over the passage ot a bill granting him $1000 as compensation for Injuries received while Working on the Cratflk Lake road. Ray Sayle Is busy as a cran­ berry merchant as local represent­ ative of the California - Oregon Power Co. He is putting in new oqulpment at the company’s local sub-statlctn, service Hues for fa r­ mers In the Dunn neighborhood, electrical equipment for the big betels at the B lair granite quarry, etc. Mayor Johnson states that on last Sunday he met Jim Rraden- berg, a boyhood friend, In Ash­ land, and the remarkable part of this meeting was that M r. Rraden- berg bad lived in this city for 35 years and this was the first time ho had visited his old home. ' Thos. Simpson report» that while at his home in the'northern part of the town, at dinner Tues­ day, a defer was seen to cross the Helman field from towards Bear Creek and the household and the neighbors were called together to see this unusual sight of a Wild W. S. Morton, who has been a deer w ithin the corporate limits resident of Modford tor a year or of town. two, has disposed of his property there, and this Week moved to Ashland with his family. County 8chool Supt. Gns New­ bury spent Tuesday and Wednes­ day In . Ashland visiting the M r. and Mrs. W illiam Storm schools tn his official capacity. came up from Oakland, Cal., to visit with their daughter, Mrs. P. S. Provost. Mrs. J. G. H u rt and Mrs. Jos. G riffin left Tuesday morning for Sumpter, Baker county, Oregon, summoned, there by news of the critical Illness of their mother. Mrs. E. K. Anderson left for San Francisco yesterday on busi­ Jtev. Rbbert Tweed arrived ness for ths Ashland * Woolen yesterday from his pastoral field MUla. The recent sharp advance In at Soda Springs, Idaho, to spend a wool' while encouraging to the three weffk’s vacation with his growers has its effect on the man­ ufacturers. fam ily In Ashland. Tuesday, November 2, 1020 Do you know where I j»m just now, by radio I mean? I am at the Live Stock fîhow, in Portland. TJianks K. G. W . I ’m having a great time. Good Intentions sometimes go wrong. .You remember that I told you that I was trying to get some of the bears to stay with me this winter. When I fixed the window I forgot to take down a swinging shutter that is on the inside. Last night the yearling cub started to investigate. He must have been about half way inside when the shutter dropped down on him. I didn’t see it but I heard the noise and saw the tracks and splinters this morning. The first tracks were like furrows of two small plows, where he gotJils start. It was oix feet to the next tracks, the next-tw elve, those were thé last that I could find. He must have had hla w ln a s.. Th« re­ mains of the shutter would not make fire wood. You know I have a confession to make. I have been calling one of my best friends a bum. He has been around Were a month and I didn’t know him. He pulled one of his old stunts that I taught' him two years ago and then I tumbled, I made him do it over and sure enough It was F ritz, the ’ brother'of Hans. Can you beat It, two years and he still remembers? W ell, from now on it w ill have to be young F ritz and old F ritz. Gee, th a t’s great Old F ritz is back! I have sickness In the family. The Nameless One has Indiges­ tion, he a t e a whole woodrat for dinner. I ’ll bet he feels like I did after I had eaten a welsh rabbit a , car tain fellow, made week. I am still working on the bat­ teries. Run the Kohlers today. Partly cloudy today, what little wind that was blowing came from the west. Temp. II. 56, L. 4 4, R. 1?, M. 50. Copyright, 192«, Warner Bros. Picture*, In*. ^TRACKED BY T H E POLICE,” atarrlnp Rln-TIn-TIn,. Is s Warner Bros, production of thia nov*l. : BYROPBIB • In Prance, a German war dog give» her life to eave Jimmy Ford. •fhO gratefully adopt» her puppy and name» if Rln-Tin-Tin. He »muggle» Rinty home after the war. Murtagh, a crooked politi­ cian, covet» Jimmy'» »weetheart. Ruth Allen. Jimmy'» father, a po­ lice lieutenant, i» myetefiouely murdered. Jimmy join» the Force to avenge Aim. Jimmy has an able ally in Rin-Tin-Tin, now full grown. Ruth, afraid Jimmy will be asiigned to a feared poit, beg» Murtagh'» influence to prevent thle- Murtagh double crone* her. Jim> my i» given the dangerou» beat; Murtagh tecretly v ititt the under­ world— CHAPTER B—Continued. To the right, to the left, up and down the dirty cobble-stoned street Murtagh had looked well and cau­ tiously before dodging Into the al­ leyway. Sure ’twould nevor do for The Murtagh to be seen scuttliqg Into back doors. A slight turn at the blind end— a niche where one might wait safe from prying, passing eyes on the street A code signal with the heavy point of his loaded cane on an innocuous grating—tap , . . tap . ; . tap . . . tap . . . tap, tap. Diminish hla size and put a tall on him, and you could not tell him from a rat—this slinky fellow who appeared as If by magic under the grating, and pushod it up obsequi­ ously, Murtagh stepped down . . . down . . . and down, at the end, in­ to the cellar of a warehouse, a vast room with a subterranean passage opening fro..: one end and running under the waterfront street and across to a secret gateway—or “comeonln”—entrance at the fac­ ing pier. Now there returned to Murtagh, as he stepped d o w * Into the evil cavern and the evlller clrcle'of his hcachmbn’s faces, all the swagger and confidence and greasy bluster CALIFORNIA 10 HAVE ’ RARE OH LIQUORS * ______ "Before noon-time there'll be more police dog." Clexfir Disguises Are Work­ ed out to Deliver Liquors Safely SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 17, — Bourbon whiskey from Glasgow, French Vermouth from Shanghai and Swedish punch from Barce­ lona will snuggle in California Christmas stockings this year. These and many other genuine products of the world's stills left their homelands as bonded liquor undisguised, landed on the Pa­ cific, coast as shingles and were delivered a t back doors as pickles. Rome journeyed around the world avoiding taxes, eluding coast guards— and mellowing for Amer­ ican palates. Much of the liquor that is to make Yule candles brlgther, al­ ready has been landed; more Is still coming in, despite a federal drive against the >10,000,000 rum ring” which is behind the illegal Importations. A federal grand Jury hepe has Indicted nearly a half hundred men and women for alleged con­ spiracy ¿o violate prohibition laws. Of this number only nine \ have surrendered and It has been admitted that most of the others have taken refuge In Canada where they are believed to be planning still more unique and ‘ D A IL Y B IB L E PASSAGE “And the Lord said Auto him ,- Now do ye Pharisee* make clean the outahle o f the cup and the plattee; but your Inward part is .f u ll of raven­ ing and w ickedness.” Luke 11:30. Jesus has no use for * the outside Bhow or grand stand play on the part of His fo l­ lowers; Ha looks on the heart of HIs followers. It Is a com­ paratively easy m atter to be a Pharisee and fool some of our neighbors and friends, but we do not feel Ood uor our­ selves. _ that bad earnod him the sobriquet of “Dan the Dude.” There was tills essential difference between the Murtagh ot the Ward clubrooms and tho Murtagh of the under­ world. In the former his overtone was unctuous; here It was steel hard. An 111-vlsaged and piratical group of huskies slouched forward to do homage. The Cabinet of Evil kow towing to its Prime Minister. The Executive Committee of the pre­ cious Hudson Busters. In the back­ ground tough face on tough face, rowdy body on rowdy body, massed like dumb serfs, watching, wor­ shipping. Murtagh the Powerful— the mystically powerful Medicine Maker. 'The One who arranged bails, who got them off with reprl mands. There was a great tension, a restlessness, a subdued excite­ ment amongst the Hudson Busters this morning. That fact communi­ cated Itself to the cunning Chief­ tain Instantaneously. He snarled at the foremost henchman—an ath­ letic, businesslike man. with the body of an Adonis and the face of a satyr, the Secretary of State, to outward appearanee, ot that Cabi­ net. “What the bell’s all the gloom about. Bottleneck?” He that was called “Bottleneck” spat wrathfully at a hole where an Inquisitive mouse had shown Its sleek head for an Instant, then rasped out of the corner of his twisted lips. In the “hard guy’s” characteristic way, to the man whose chief aide and lieutenant he wad; •’Ain’t you hear? General Order came up from the Commlsh him ­ self this A. M. for the bulls to set a deadline down here. All ourboyk has got to keep acrost Eleventh.” Murtagh's face was clouded, an­ gry- “When did yon hear of this? How Is It I didn’t get tipped off? Why did you wait till now to tell me. Instead of the minute yon heard It,, so that I could have tried to stop It?” “Stop, belli The Mayor himself couldn’t stop this Commlsh when he gets that thick mtek mind of his made up. And Captain O’Brien Is up In the air about us. too. it's war, Dan, war to the death be­ tween us and the bulls from this morning onl" The other Cabinet members nod- ’ ded savagely, and crowded close; the skulking lay member» began to move around from all quarters, forming a tense circle of which Dan was the Intelligent, guiding center and nerve force. AU ot a sudden Dan began to laugh: “Well, that’s a good one. I pick­ 'd out a swell day, when you boys .la in the best of humors, to get O'Biiec tq put young Ford- on thia beat—Ford and that sharp toothed mutt of his, R lnty!” Audible excitement and anger surged through the whole gang like an electric ripple: “Jimmy Ford and Rinty on thia beat! Say, that’s the guy what swore he was going to fasten his old man’s killin’ on us.” Hot exclamations from all sides. Word darts, jabs, rages. Murtagh exchanging significant grins with bis more trusted cabinet advisers and henchmen. These other dumbbells-—they did not knpw everything. Too much risk of squealers. Murtagh «napped directions like the good undorfleld general that ha. wasi "No more rum running for a few days. We’ve got to lay kinds low until the smoke blows away.. Meantime git out on the street abd rag young Ford. Cripple that mutt of hla. Hire, taxis and run him down. Anything. A little action now. But be careful to work un­ der cover. Beat I t ” Presently Murtagh and his chief aides were left alone. Half a dozen perhaps. Him that was named “Bottleneck" first of all. Then one “K iller Kid Twist,” so called from his unusual dexterity at strangling, people with a peculiar dislocating jerk that he had discovered by practicing on cats—and that left his human victims with character- Ist’c ally awry necks. Next, “Black Mike.” He was the gorilla of the gang. Beside him the next out­ standing member of the Inner cir­ cle was diminutive, puny; that was the “Squeeze Kid,” the one to whom -tectmrse Was had when the Job In hand required physical Jesuitry, and provided hut scant Kid could worm through the barred windows of moat banks. To this choice coterie Dan the Dude gritted with frank, cold re­ sentment and fear: ~I’m sure young Ford Is on to me, the same as his old man was. Understand this, now, you bozos. He’s got to be bumped off quick, seef Besides, the chance that he might get some­ thing on us—I’ve got personal rea­ sons.” Grim acqulesence all around; a meanful looking to “gats." Dan continued: "W alt an hour or so. Give the other fellows time to get him rat- •tied and npset, or to beat him up. Then you’d ought to bo able to plop him without making a mess or leaflbg traces. Tnere’d ’ be no doubt about It at a lM f.it wasn't tor that damned sharp nosed dog— ” “A dog at 100 feet ain’t such a hard target when me eyes are la good shape. Look—” Like a flash Black Mike whipped out his gun and shot the bead off a lBckless rat that had been prospecting along a plateau of shipping cases some fifty feet away. ’’You’re eyes seem to he fnno tlonlng real sweet," grinned Mur­ tagh. "Ain’t It the truth?" chimed In Bottleneck. “Well, lemme tell yon, chief. Before noontime there’ll he no more police dogs on the rolls of the great New York police depart­ ment, and one of the brightest young cope will be gone out, too. Mother and sweetie kin watch for little Jimmy till their eyes pop out today, for he ain’t gold’ home!” CHAPTER • Jimmy subconsciously felt tb *« the atmosphere about him was charged with suppressed uneasi­ ness, with evil pnrpoae, aa he' scoured the streets thto morning with Rinty faithfully pacing beside him. Streets bright -with sunshine despite their tawdrlneas, their careless, smelly Utter. Those men and women whs were going about their honest tm*In— looked st him with Interest, at the dog with admiration, but st both with a sort of Impersonal pitying Jimmy felt. One or two burly long­ shoremen flipped casual, friendly words at him. "Watch your P*s and Q’s down ■>' this neighborhood, young feQsK. The Busters Is rough on new eops.-1 ' Jimmy took prtde In this positive' element of danger. He glowed de­ fiantly under It as a healthy man might under a baleful sun. And' he ts’ked to Rinty constantly—the nervous, eager chatter of daredev- llish youth. “Look there, Rinty. Thersb a bunch of hard ones. Rinds look as though they’re waiting for ns. I wonder If they belong to the Bust- ers? Wish I knew all those rats by sight. Maybe ru taka a chance ' and order them outside ot the dead­ line anyhow. At Any rate, we ain’t going to walk ont of their way.” - (To be continued) daring methods of smuggling liq­ I Hood R lre r— High school ath- uor Into this country. lletlc field grading w ill cost >1,- READ TIDINGS CLAM ADS SM .