CHANEY, JENNIN SPECIAL f9fa A shland D aily T idings The Tidings Has Been Ashland's Leading Newspaper For Nearly Fifty Years I International News W ire Service» VOL. XLVIII. Successor te the Semi-Weekly Tidings, Volume 43. Returned to Office Poor Showing Made by La Follette Surprises Experts Who Predicted Wisconsin Senator Would Carry on Hot Fight in Many Sections. Davis Running Poor Second, While La Follette Has But Three Votes. Democratic Sheriff Candi date Leads McMahon Throughout County M ’NARY, KAY, NOTER ELECTED TO OFFICES IN S I A M OREGON EAV1EST VOTE IN IS CAST BV PEOPLE R est o f R epublican Ticket Certain . to be E lected , A ccording to Early M orning R eturns H eavy V ote and Long R allot De­ lays C ounting of V otes in C ity, Most Boards S till at W ork Stale, with her 45 Electoral College votes, J. H. Hardy is the most favor­ ed candidate for a council 3eat, Coolidge piled up a majority of over eight running well ahead of his field in every precinct. Detrict and hundred thousand votes. In Ohio, Cool­ Wiley were running well in most of the and their elec­ idge’s majority, it is predicted, will run be­ tion is precincts practically assured. The tween four and five hundred thousand. other leading candidates, Burdie, Peters and W right have com fort­ Pennsylvania, with t h e second largest able leads, and unless an unfor- number of Electoral College votes in the seen landslide in favor of one of (Continud on page F o u r) Union, gave the President a majority var­ iously estimated at from between six and "MA” WINS seven hundred thousand. Invading the strongholds of Senator La Follette, Progressive ‘andldate, who was expected to :ut into his vote in many of the diddle W estern States, Coolidge ■arried every state, with the xception of Wisconsin. Iowa, with 1er Senator B rookhart, staunch tupporter of La Follette, Minne­ sota, North and South Dakota. Washington, Wyoming and Ne­ Ole«» Rill D«*feate«l, Incom e Tax braska, all of which were predict­ Has Been R epealed, Com ­ ed before the election to be cer­ pensation Act D efeated tain La Follette states, swung PORTLAND, Nov. 5.— Scatter­ nto line for Coolidge so*i after ing returns, most of them incom­ the ballot counting started, and plete, this morning indicated th at •emained in the Coolidge column hroughout the process, giving the Senator McNary had been re tu rn ­ President a larger m ajority with ed to office with a comfortable In 482 complete and he retu rn of almost every pre- m ajority. incomplete precincts in Oregon, Inct. Even Montana, home state McNary was given 33,472 votes, >f Senator W heeler, running mate if La Follette, was swept Into the Miller 12,357, Coulter 3153 and Poolidge column under {in aval­ Robinson 343, From all indications, Kay has anche of Republican votes. La defeated Myers for the State Pollette’s only Electorial College treasureship, while Secretary of irotes will be cast by the members State Kozer ha3 been returned to from his home state. Wisonsln. The Democratic candidates, office. The bill prohibiting the sale Davis and Bryan, as was gener­ of oleom argarine has apparently ally expected, carried the Solid been defeated. The compulsory South, Alabama, A rkansas, Flor- da, Georgia. Kentucky, Louisiana, compensation act has been defeat­ Maryland, Mississippi, N orth and ed and the income tax law has South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas been repealed. These measures have a big m ajority in all returns and Virginia. already in, and it Is expected the In W est Virginia, the home state of Davis, the contest has m ajorities will be swelled con­ been the closest probably of any siderably by later returns. state In the Union, and the re­ sults will not definitely be known • Corvallis — W ork begun on until many of the outlying pre- new $10,000 horse barn at ag ri­ ;Incts, which have not yet re- cultural college, to replace one j destroyed by lightning fire in (Continued on Page Four) ’ September. CARRIED ALL ASHLAND COUNTED W ith the vote in the city of Ashland approximately two thirds counted at six- thirty this morning, indica­ NEW YORK, Nov 5—Sweeping his tions pointed to a victory opponents off their feet, with an avalanche for 0. II. Johnson over C. H. •• • of popular votes, which piled up a major­ Pierce in the mavoralitv race, with R. L. Burdie, Jr., ity second only to t hat obtained by the late R. E. Detrick, J. H. Hardy, President Harding in the election of 1920, S. A. Peters, Sr., Thornton S. Wiley and W. M. Wright President Coolidge was returned to office being the favored candidates for the seats in the eitv coun­ yesterdav by the people of America with a total of Electorial College votes estimated cil.Johnson, although led by at from 345 to 420. Piece» in a number of pre­ Carrying New York State, Ohio, Penn­ cincts, gained a large ma­ jority of the votes in the sylvania, Massachusetts, Illinois, everv several precincts which he pivotal state, the President early piled up did carry, and the advantage thus gained gave him a little a lead which assured him of his re-election. lead over his opponent. This By ten-thirty p. m. last night, the Brook­ face is so close that the ex­ act result will not be known lyn Eagle, one of the strongest Democratic until a tinal cheek has .been newspapers in New York State, coneeeded made ot the votes, hut from all indications at present, the election of the President. In New York Johnson has been elected. NO. 56 I l LEAD FOR Narrow Margin of Votes Separates Candidates Throughout City VOTES 2-3’s EDITION ASHLAND, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 5 1924 JOHNSON LEADS FIERCE IN RACE FOR THE MAYOR ^ h L Fair Weather Brings Out Voters in Presidential Ballot. Many Civic Problems Balloted Upon Tend to Induce Voters to Visit Polls. High Percentage Reported The sherfif’s race is the From Every Section of Country. closest one in the county contests. W ith incomplete returns received from local NEW YORK. Nov.5—With 014 Sol precincts and from scatter­ ing precincts throughout doing his best throughout the country to the c o u n t y, indications persuade the voters to visit the polls, the pointed to the election of Ralph Jennings, the Demo­ people of America yesterday marched to cratic candidate, over his their balloting places and east the largest ¡Republican opponent, J. J. ballot total ever known. McMahon. Jennings was given a fair Thirtv-five millions of voters, a eon- lead in Ashland, according leaders to the incomplete returns serva^ ve estimate by p a r t y ! early this morning. throughout t h e country, joined in the W ith the exception of this fpiadrenuial march to the polls. This figure contest would go into office with good leads, especially establishes a nev; record, not only for the Hartzell, who is running far United Slates, but for the world, surpass­ ahead of Ulrich, his Demo­ ing the total of twenty millions, who east cratic opponent. Chaney, Republican, was theii ballot in the Presidential election in H also running far haead of 1920. With a hot race on for the governor­ ship of New York, as well as being the CALVIN COOLIDGE scene of the greatest effort on the part of President Calvin Coolidge, who yesterday was major ¡»arty leaders, it is reported that a cd to serve as President of the United States for years, by a m ajority second onlv to that received by Pres r1 that Mrs- Su;anne Carter percentage far exceeding that of the 1920 ident Harding at the 1920 p re sid e n t^ election. ' ' I " ^ T V ^ r 'l n " election east their ballots yesterday. Ap­ _ t . ______ i impendent. • • , 1 The fact th at many of the pre­ proximately sixty-five per cent of the f e c t s in Ashland and Medford had Charles G. Dawes, who was elected ♦»"»'«»J their count when eligible voter» took advantage of their this was w ritten made a forecast franchise, and east ballots for their favor- on other contests very meagre. to serve as Vice-President under ite candidates. Coolidge for the coming term. Dawes Texas, another state with a terrific has held no other elective political light on for the governorship, was the office during his career, but is a well i nrm r fCen.C ° f another heavy turnout, with near- known hanker and expert on economic' * L rtflb t V Slxty Per cent of te voters visiting the affairs. polls throughout the day. fi Borden, Democratic candidate for district attorney. Early re­ tu rn s also pointed to the election of H. W. Conger, the regular Re­ publican candidate for corner, who was opesed by Mrs. Nellie Perl, elect- j independent, fo iirl A message from Medford stat- WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. — Dedication of Armistice Day, No­ vember 11, to the establishm ent of Perm am ent peace and the out­ lawry of war, is suggested by President Coolidge, in a letter addresesd to Jam es A. Drain, n a ­ tional commander of the Ameri­ can Legion. “ Growth of sentim ent for the outlaw ry of war from this e arth .” Mr. Coolidge said, “ has been an j impressive fact of recent times. Men and women everywhere have 100,000 Is Majority Given Tammany Votes Put Gover­ been giving their best thought to First Woman Governor nor in Lead, After Roos­ i bring this end into full realiza­ in the Country tion. evelt'Carries Outside “ The inclusion of Armistice Day in the list of dates commem­ AUSTIN, Texas, Nov. o - ( new YORK, Nov. 5— orating W ith a majority which it is P ii;ng np in lead ¡n the out. * great events in our na­ tional history,” the U tte r said. believed will easily reach the |ving sections of New y ork ..marked a significant change in 100,000 mark before all the s ta te of more than 15,000 our world relations, Prior to tha' The Solid South, excepting In a I few instances where local politics was the prime issue of the day, was behind the rest of the coun- , try in popular voting. These i 3tates which form this district. always Democratic, failed to show a great deal of interest in the election, since it was known in advance that nothing could p re- I vent a Davis landslide in the HERRIN, 111., Nov 4— Glenn Southern districts. Young, leader of the W illiamson M assachusetts. Pennsylvania county Ku Klux Kian today and other Atlantic Seaboard clashed with a special deputy Un- states, although usually Repuhli- ited States Marshal Jeffrey at one can, turned out in immense num- of the polls here. I bers for the balloting, most of Young, according to the reports these states reported the g reat- of the clash, ordered Jeffrey away est percentage of votes ever re- from the polling place, but Jef- corded. frey refused to move. Young Ohio, one of the pivotal states threatened violence to the entire with her 24 Electorial College ballots have been counted, ' votes Theodore Roosevelt f,r8t armi8tice day- whlch Ameri city unless Jeffrey got out of votes, ranked high in the list of Miriam Ferguson, affection- j r o n i c k l v to s f nfi v « n ’ ,c a greeted with such en th »siasm. but the m arshall refused to states with one of the greatest atelv known as “ M a” t o \ *’ qu ! ’ iO8t his advan- our historic anniversaries had all town, move, stating to bystanders th a t turnouts in the history of the i vy tage, and was snowed under been of exclusively national char- he had been stationed at the poll- State. A hot fight was fought in thousands of voters through- avalanche of Democratic acter- They recalled events o p I ing place in order to cope with any this state, since Ohio has never out Texas, was yesterday ballots when the votes of supreme im portance in our n a -’ ’1 ioting which might take place, shown a preference for any party. elected governor of Texas, \ York t»i°,n 9 between life' but th of at cm life 11 va’no The situation crested by Jef- but has many times helped swing 1 orK Citv V ll\ and anu Greater trreatei nnks and the Above, Mrs. Miriam Ferguson, the firet worn™ governor to New York were tabulated, activities ot the outside world. frey’s refusal to obey Young’s the election. wife of an impeached governor ever Hold office Throughout the Middle West. in the ¡t is estimated by several1 “ W hen, by common consent, command is very tense. A large of Texas, who was yesterday elect­ country 'N e w Y o r k T in n ers flin t f n v Armistice Day was added to our number of gangsters are said to the party leaders pronounced the ed to fill the office form erly held Mrs. Ferguson, wife, of a ernor A, Sm ith’s m aiorhv1 cale,ldar 01 memor‘al "at“ ' P°",r'°v ‘"“T " T “ ? vo,e ,he n,m" «aLlstacorv .In« by her husband. Her e lec tio n 1 o-ovem nr w a s riin n in v fo rir 1 t “ i a j o r - , t° ° k »a Place as the one In whose p0n3c 10 » “ “ " S s C ilt Machine n , 1900 campaign. This section, came in spite of the opposition of g o v e r n o r , w a s i u n itin g i u i | for re-election Will be near celebration we will always be e uns have been mounted on the expected to be the stamping the Ku Klux Kian, and of d is -t tile office ftom w h i c h (Jjg 125,000 mark. i drawn closer to other peoples who city ba^ by a t ro°p of m ilitia, In ground of La Follette, proved to gruntled Democrats, who believ­ iter husband was removed, ' case severe rioting breaks out. be the one in which much of the The Empire State, voting stand for liberal institutions. ed a woman had no rig h t to of­ More troops are said to be on fice. (Continud on page Four) There is wisdom In reading ads i their way here. (Continud on page Feur) (Continud on page Four) 'MA' FERGUSON GOV. AL SMITH CARRIES TEXAS RE ELECTED B Y BY BIG MARGIN HUGE MAJORITY T1”1' E