- TRE tW U Y W IN G S BDITPRIflh a n d F
ESTABLISHED IN 1876
ASH LA ND
D A IL Y
C. J. READ,
T I P I N G S iQ Q T
ntrrcd a t the Ashland, Oregon Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter.
“Simplified Practice"
A primer of “ Simplified Practice” has redently
been issued by the U. S. Department of Commerce,
to help business men avoid an enormous amount of
loss and duplication of effort and money.
A workman who was employed in a somewliat
Unsuccessful factory, once said that what that con
cent needed was to eliminate lost motion. He could
sec benches and machines and tools unhandily ar
ranged, and he felt that the workpeople were wast
ing a great deal of time through inconveniences
under which they were laboring.^
4
»'
On6 fonn of lost motion, is the getting out of
too many sizes anti patterns, of things. If a concern
is producing 100 varieties of a certain article, in
different sizes and patterns and styles, where 50 or
25 or 10 would really satisfy the public, then there
is lost motion in its methods.
The indusft-ies of the country are saving many
millions of dollars through the simplifications that
. have been introduced during the recent years,
through the work of the department of commerce
and various engineering organizations. It is estimat-
'* ed that such better methods have saved $200,000,000
in the lumber industry alone.
This movement has not attempted to interfere
in such fields of business as millinery, a rt goods,
women’s clothing, etc., where the element of individ*
ual creativeness and originality enters in. But there
is a vast field in the production of useful articles,
for reduction of the ntunber of patterns. When
1000 pieces of one article are produced, in place of
500 each of two articles, theVe is a saving of time
and equipment that will benefit the employer, the
employe, and the public. The business men of
Oregon will do well to study this primer of sim
plified practice, and see if they can apply its prin
ciples tb their processes.
w Cruiser Construction
President Coolidge and Congress held opposite
points of view on the question of constructing of
cruisers. Congress feels that this country is highly
deficient in this necessary fonn of defense, as com-'
paired with the leading naval powers.
While the president aj>parently feels* that the
United States occupies a very safe position between
two great oceans, and th at the only way for the
human rcae to abolish the crushing burden of war
and annam ent, is to discourage production of war
making material. The country must form its own
opinion for itself.
Education for the Masses
Six hundred and thirty communities are to be
touched by an educational scheme planned by the
National Community foundation, for bringing edu
cational, dramatic, and musical advantages to the
masses of the people. Correspondence schools and
university extension plans will follow.
Such a plan ought to do a wonderful amount of
good, and make self improvement interesting to many
]>eople who thought their education was finished
when they quit school. The American system of
democracy was built on the theory that our country
is inhabited by thinking people, hut during recent
times some have had doubts on this point.
W. H. PERKINS,
MANAGING EDITOR
OUR WAY
new s editor
By Williams
Z R U l N E O n ’i
' RO> N E D H '
Á New York hoy says he started on a career
of crime because the„socks he. got for Christmas
didn’t fit. They s ta r te d him on the wrong foot,
mavbe.
A woman* iii Philadelphia was convicted t f
election fraud. .Just as George Bernard Shaw says,
women certainly are picking up politically.
A man on the same job in France for 70 years
was awarded fotir medals. If he perseveres he may
get a raise yet.
PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
Cr^er Lake
Ip Winter Timp
BY JOHN MABIN
Sfrrptakar at Crater Lajee
Lodge
Q M -O M -so c H
Thursday, January 27, 1027
ST. LOUIS — A. B. Carter
thought he had the perfect
hiding place for his money—
a secret compartment in his
wooden leg. But a pickpock
et found his hiding place to
day and escaped with $185.
Conductors tell us where to get
off, and so do wives.
BUDA P E ST — Rejuvena
tions are an Issue in the
courts as the rehult of action
by a Hungarain life Insur
ance company In refusing to
pay an annuity to an aged
policy holder who recently
underwent such an operation.
The policy guaranteed .the
aged business man an Income
for the rest of his life. The-
operatlon, which is estimated
to prolong his life by ten
years, upset the calculations
of the company and stopped
payments.
RACINE, Wis., — Convict
ed of stealing $15 from
a scrubwoman, Leo Chaffee
was sentenced to spend every
night of the nest six months
in jail. He will be released
each morning to work.
CHICAGO — Mrs. John
Wstworth’s pet cheetahs may
rlayfully reduce a North
Shore resident’s trousers to
shreds and get away with it."
But they can’t roam Chicago
streets if a city council reso
lution introduced by Aider-
man John Coughlin goes
through.
Gossip: The lowest form of hu
man activity.
Diplomat: A wife who laughs at
her husband’s jokes.
Compensation: Where t h e
scenery Is great, bo are hotel
rates.
\v.oman: A creature thpt many
men run away with and then run
away from.
Mouth: Something that reveals
a horse’f age, a man’s intelli
gence and a woman’s secrets.
Honesty: A virtue that Is easy
to practice where everything is
kept under lock and key.
Hex Heck says: “The public
rcems to know what it don’t want,*
but what it) does want I don’t sup
pose even E. Parkes Cadman
could tell us.’’_______
S e v e n t e e n universities
have banned students' auto
mobiles as detrimental to
morals. After the students
had been driving half the
night, it seems they couldn’t
be driven to work— When
some of the boys ended their
university careers the auto
mobile was the only engl-
t^eerlng they knew.
A fellow who had tried ail
evening to find a girl who’d -
ride in a flivver wouldn’t be
interested in any more exper
iments the next day. The stu
dent whose car had four
punctures and a leak in the
gas tank refused to be both
ered with economics— The
young man with the Rolls-
Royce couldn’t get worked
up over socialogy when he
spent all his time declining-
invitations from people to
ride in hi« car.
What are you giving up for
Lent?
Just look what Mr.
Doheny parted with.
EDWARDSON. Ill — For
five and a half years Belva
Ashcraft never came late,
nor was she ever absent from
school, ‘i A second in the
Beardstown high school, her
record was broken Thursday
by scarlet fever.
Real Problems Missed
4. S titt Wilson, former mayor of Berkeley,
California, is making a speaking tour of American
colleges, and he ’reports that he handed one stu
dent a newspaper featuring the lxx*any> conference
effort to promote world peace, hut the student read
the sports pages and handed it hack.
No one could blame a live boy for reading about
these interesting sports. But if he is not interested
in great movements like that to promote World peace,
his education does not seem to have gone much
under his skin, and evidently he had not got enough
of it to h u rt him any or affect him much.
r?
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
10 Years Ago
20 Years Ago
Wednesday after school a num
ber of Freda Mashburn’s friends
gather'd at her home on Pine
Street to help her celebrate her
birthday
anniversary.
Those
present were: > Dorothy Frulan,
Hazel Erickson. Helen hnd Louise
Harrell, Gladys Hastings, Bernice
Crowson, Mildred Culy, Dorothy
Howard,
Myra West, Alnesa
Sparks. Avis McGee, Freda, Ethel
and Lucretia Mashburn.
J. H. Will has sold his shoe
shop, corner of Main and Granite
streets, to K. M. Ditnmick, a re
cent arrival here whonl he highly
recommends. Mr. Will will take
a respite from Indoor work for
.
ASHLAND
30 Years Ago
Mrs. Kate Howell of this city
has recently received a new and
greatly Improved loom for weav
ing the evpr popular rag carpets.
It came dll the way from Daven
port, Iowa, and Is said to be the
awhile.
only one In this end of Oregon
with the modern Improvements,
and bealdes the regulation width
W. A. Wilshire has returned, «arpets weaves rugs of extra
from Portland where he was widths.
called by the death of his aged
mother, Mrs. G. W. Wilshire, for
Mr. and Mrs. Gaorge Mathes en merly of Ashland.
Charley and W illie Holmes,
tertained at dinner yesterday for
soils of W. O. Holmes ot'Ashl»*»^.
their 21st wedding anniversary.
rtarted for Boston. Mass:, on Sat
Those invited were Mr. .and. Mr*-| Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Aitkin re urday, where they will stay with
J. W*. Mills, Miss Jessie Mills. Mrs. turned home to Medford last eve relatives and attend school.
’William
Mathes, Miss Jessie ning. Their little qpn Mingus re
Mathes. Mr. and Mrs. Harry maining to Vhlt with his grand
Mathes, Miss Mary Mathes and mother. Mrs. L. Mingus in Ash
M'ke Parker is out again after
Mrs. A. G. McCarthy.
land' for awhile.
recent- serious illness.
Í
Today has been a. $ood day to
stay Inside. The wind has In
creased in velocity until it is cut
ting dttches in the snow and
changing the snow from one drift
tb the other; moving it always to
ward the rim. The drifts at the
edge of the rim are solid and as
smooth as ice, hut let the wind
once get a start at the bank of
snow and it soon cuts a ditch al
most to the ground. It is any
thing but pleasant to face. The
flying crust cuts the face and
hands like a knife.
•’Chuck” and “Andy” took a
whirl at the hill today. When
they came back I looked for snow
down the back of their necks. I
didn’t find any so they must have
made the hill standing up.
I loaded ‘ up all the cameras,
three, this morning, expecting
some sunshine. The trees have a
load of ice, and the Lodge is
whitewashed, windows and all.
In days like this If yon are not
ready when Liao smiles yon are
apt to lose the chance of a pic
ture, for without warning the sky
clears, the tog Is wafted away as
if by magic, and everything is a
sparkle. In thirty minutes It may
be Btorming as hard as ever and
continue to do so lo r two or three
days more.
Tbo wind is playtng me mean-
tricks— It has taken all the snow
that has fallen the last two days
and has blown it oyer the rim. So
while I have had to register
snowfall, the snow at the snow-
pole has fallen five Inches.
Work— None.
Weather— Day cloudy j wind
south; snowfall since last observa
tion, 4.5 In.; precipitation 0.67
In.; snow on ground 103 In.;
Temp. H. 26, L. 19, R. 7, M. 22.5.
NOTICE O f FINAL ACCOUNT
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned, as Administrator of
the Estate of Charles D. Rifner,
deceased, has filed in the County
Court of Jackson jCounly, Slat#
of Oregon, his Final Account as
such Administrator of said Es-
tule and that Monday, »he 11th
day of April, 1927, at tjit hour of
?0 o’clock a. m., and at tne Court
House In Jacksonville, Oregon,
has been fixed by the Court ps
ike time and place for heartrg
objections to said Account, and
the settlement thereof.
Date of
first publication,
March 12, 1927.
Paul Uuiley, Admin!/rator of
(he Estate cl Charles D Rifner,
Dpcfiased.
164-4-Sat.
NOTICE OF FINAL
SETTLEMENT
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has been appointed
executor of the estate of Amzt
Wheeler Thomas, deceased, by the
County Court of Jackson County,
Oregon, and that he has Qualified
as such.
All persons having
claims against said estate are no
tified to present the same to
said executor at the law office of
W. J. Moore in Ashland, Oregon,
with proper vouchers and duly
verified, within sfx months of
the first publication of this . no
tice, which Is February 26, 1927.
ALBERT W.THOMAS,
Executor.
lll- 4 - S a t .
HELPS A PAINFUL ACHING
•
BACK
Lumbago and a stiff, aching
A Regular Scout
THMRTQRT TBVB TAR.
imnertonofet Tred
o / • Aterro
' ton hat coined
W. öfter
Ik. “Monroe” l i
’Blake'«
Wiled pecwNorly, and Fred I* Xust-
ed >g Ike pegoe. Me meet* Ike At-
err» Bov Scoot (reop, 4» «kick
Muddy Monroe <e a Seoul. At Ike
rauek, Fred, eul /or vengeance, 4«
weakened by -the eterlinp ckaracter
of Mre. Monroe and June, her
T ro * lltH
fonroe,
—
, »ltd V « .
to airi. Monroe.
note oddretted
CHAPTER X—Continued
I am not poor son. I cannot
wish I could
ton—It was
through Mu nty mother die«.
Ik a y ep “
’t tl
the hnart to face you,
tor he. too, la dead. You’ll ner-
« see a * again. Please for
”
give an«
an forget me.
FRED BLAKE.
Ha toi
of paper
an« than »too«
up. Once more
peered gloomily
out of
w an« saw the
light o f dawn coming up with
ever the mean
taina.
ing his belt firmly
Into place,
.ping his holster
defiantly, futlkty—h* took hie hat
hum Its peg behind the bedroom
door and crept cautiously out of
the room.
This time there was no one to
Intercept him aa he shut his door
and approached the dosed door of
Mrs. Monroe’s
onroe’a bedroom. Listen!:
Listening
close; )Iy. he heard the* faint
regul lar
it n
breathing <
of Mrs. Monroe and Jus
June,
who were sleeping together, and
then, with a widly beating heart
and a groat lamp in .his throat he
slipped the note he had written
underneath tfca door and dashed
carafe IJy,
ware,"
maybe if
F. M. Carter of this city, who
recently returned from a trip to
San Francisco. Cfil., left the last
of the week for Portland, Ore.,
where he will look after busi
ness.
ft»
Utterly awake and now anxious
to sea Fred, Buddy crovt out of
his room, past km mother's and
sister's bedroom, and cams to
Fred’s door.
Must ha qnlet—
mustn’t wake Mother or Junta.. .
Accordingly be scratched cat-like
on the door, and waited. No an
swer. Mast be sleepln*.. . . Softly
he< called, "Fred I Fre$l* and
whited. Still no answer. Gosh,
fer a feller could ride a horse Ilka
Fred aould be was a s awful heavy
sleeper!
Baddy was undecided whether to
go hack to bad or go Into Fred’s
room. Finally, bis desire for oom-
pantonshlp orerwelgbtog hla desire
tor fleep, he cautiously opened the
door and crept In. The room was
still In warm semi-darkness, sad
Buddy groped about tor the bed.
Finally, his band fell upon the
ooveflet, and ba sighed with relief.
Beading over, he said, “FredI*
loudly, and made as If to shake his
brother by the shoulder. His band
f«lt nothing bnt a soft and cer
tainly untouched cushion I
Gasping, Buddy dropped hack.
Hie first thought was that Fred
was playing a trick, but a good
look around convinced him that be
was wrong. Then ha thought,
“Maybe Fred cojidn’t sleep either
an* got dressed an’ went oat fer an
early rids.** That thought con
soled him tor a moment, but some
thing told him that thia was not so.
He began to grow afraid. »Ho
looked quickly around, bis back to
the bed. fighting his fear, and when
he thought of hie Scout training hie
back stiffened and he held his head
high. He slowly backed-out of the
room aa If there ware'
Finally ks mumbled, "W K erft Fred Iki» moniin*, mofXerf"
desperately down the hall-stairs ont enemy glaring at him through the
of the house.
humid darkness. He closed the
In the early light he was white door tight and scampered back to
hut determined. At last he had h!s own room. As he got Into bed
made his derision.
and restlessly tossed about he
Going softly so as not to awaken thought “Mustn’t tell Mother or
Conner or the early-rising cow sla. Maybe Fred’s jest gone tor a
boys and ranch-hands, he stepped ride. May Fred’s Jest . . .•
Into the stable. With a low, eager, Mumbling thia admonition to him
unutterably happy snort Silver self, he fell asleep.
greeted him and strained at his
At breakfast he noticed that both
stallbalter. It was with a sigh of hie mother and his sister were un
pure relief that Fred released him usually silent and depressed. Bud
and leaned dose to the great white dy himself was In agony. What
head of hla horse.
had happened to Fred? Where was
“Silver,** he said In a low voles, he? Why didn’t they say some
"we were on th e w rong track. We thing? Didn’t they know, either?
can’t be murderers. Silver, an* we
Finally, bunting with the ques
can’t ha crooks. We gotta be men, tion, he mumbled, hiding hie
you an’ L Savvy?“
anxiety, “Wherp’a Fred this morn-
Sliver nibbed hla nose reaasur- to’. Mother?“ Mro. Monroe raised
togly over Fred’s (ace.
troubled eyee to hla.
"Tve been neglecting you some
“Why, eoonle, I don’t know," she
the last couple of days, old scout,“ said. “Isn’t he to hie room?" She
said Fred. “From now on we’re appeared genuinely surprised. June
stickers. An’ we’ll stick together. looked up quickly, her face pale.
Ready tuh travel, Silver? Far?"
’•Isnl he to Us room. Buddy?"
Sjlver, for answer, bobbed his she asked, her fingers trembling
head emphatically, then stepped on her spoon.
high and nervously as Fred slowly
Buddy tried to appear unoon-
led him from the stable. Care
there,
fully avoiding the quarters of the Mother." he said.
’ I looked.
help, Fred led Stiver Out the main MueU gone tor an early ride. Guess
gate, without one backward look he’ll be back soon. Thought yuh
at the ranch-house. Then, leaping
m ’ that’s why I asked." he
soberly Into the saddle, he touched finished casnaUy. Both women ap
Silver and the horse bounded for peared groatly upset.
ward like a shot running free sad
Buddy continued hastily. "Tuh
joyously toward the mountains.
h o v , Mother, the Sooute o’ the
The Monroe lands slipped by- Troop ’re climbin' Mt. Whitney this
were gone. Fred did not look *°or?1,n —didn't I tell yuh yeeter-
hack. He was afrpld to.
.1H have tuh he gofe’ soon."
Anything to take their minds off
Fred. Maybe something had hap
CHAPTCR XI
pened to him—he had been so
ON TO MT. WHITNEY I
Fwtefday. . .. .
Buddy Monroe spent a restless
Is that so, Buddy?" asked hie
night In the excitement of the mother, mechanically. “Be a good
day’s events, what with showing llttlo niAn And don’t
* nny
his new brother the grounds and yonf"M' 8cout‘niai,ter going with
the ranch in thé morning, and dis
playing equipment and pets, and
oom -
well-fed rsngaenlmals, and then
T * «P*. «1' beat oto Soont-
with the dramatio Incident of the
I W» hav
defeat of tne Burlingame olaa,
> í - Rara he’s
he
S
S
k
^
h
u
^
-
Buddy had almost forgotten that <
him, ■
groat evaat faced him on the mor-
-r ife.
to # . Fpjr at
the morning and than Mt hie tongue,
a Scout rider
ihad off in a meant to mention Fred.
ukfed of ddttt to
next ranch,
Jnae said aothtog. FtoiaUng her
leaving with--hla htotharttcoot
wdtooot the coffee, eha hastily excused herself
outs, Troop •» « »»n upetalru Buddy watched
back suggest at once the need of
a good diuretic to stimulate jtid-
ney secretions and rid the system
of troublesome poisons that cause
the distressing aches. Mrs. Black
of Petersburg, Va., says: “Be
fore I took Foley Pills diuretic,
I could not stoop over nor raise
up without great pain. Now
since taking them I have none.”
Ask for Foley Pills diuretic. A
her
prompt Improvement will amply general mnetfir with mouu
repay you. Satisfaction guaran uttasktag equipment Into the town
“
teed.— Sold everywhere. — No. 3.
Left fey Portland—
to
toll him
BnMZ
,ñí
June
’5SSta M
was the day.
fore Buddy had spent
*****
s ig h t Gee! It wua groat to ha Buddy S t
a Boy Soout! OUmbin* that groat town on
dro
S'AÆÏ.ÏÏ « . S f “ *'1
Jha
Aàtkdpattng
i
tth
"" " f
muab-daulred
ïb-eirth* t X
’J « Boouto had a lo a t