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About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1924)
ÁSHLAND BAILIE TIDING^ ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS ; ç0U| tain direct contraventions of A o -U A aiU8 misrepresentation. Wednesday, November 10, 10*2-1 R utland, Vt., fourteenth; Corval- Eckersley said. I formerly done by men, which it ian? were averse to the Moscow lis, Ore., fifteenth; State College,! “ The Standard set th a t you has been found th a t the women methods and ideals They fail Pa., Sixteenth; Groton, M ass, J will find in any American house do more efficiently. in their attem pt to overthrow (Establish in is 6_____ , __________ The child labor amendment as adopted by congress seventeenth, Joplin, Mo., eigh- will have six valves (tubes), and Much of th e work done by th e; ed the high command of the organi- P ublished E very E ven in g Except Sunday by ¡and now before the states for ratification provides the teenth; and College Park, Md., the owner will seldom listen to women duriug the war was ; zation. although they succeeded in tw entieth. : his local station unless there is heavier work than employers deem m urdering the Macedonian chief, THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. following and it only: Champion hens were shown up som ething especially interesting j editable perm anent employment Aiexandroff. “ Section 1. The Congress shall have power to limit, i in this fashion: Rhode Island from there. Such a man, in New for women and, although women Tudor Mart ft Greer ___ ........__ _____ .............-..... .______________ Editor Forty members of the organi- George Madden Green .................................................... Business^Manager regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under Red laid 324 eggs; W hite Leg- York, for instance, is more in -'em ployes were acknowledged ef- zation. all believed to have had OFFICIAL CITY PA PER ............................................ .... Tei ! P.h.°«e « 39 eighteen years of age. horn laid 290 egg3; W hite Rock terested in searching round t h e ' ficient and capable, they were dis- connections with Moscow, were Bered a t th e A shland, Oregon P o sto ffice as Second C lass Mail M atter “ Section 2. The, power of the several States is un laid 281 eggs; Barred Rock laid continent, to Cuba, Los Angeles, placed by men when the men re- immediately executed. General or anywhere else that* turned to the industrial world Protogueroff took up the duties Subscription P rice, D elivered in City impaired by this article, except that the operation 269 eggs; W hite W yandotte laid; Pittsburgh, $ .65) has. to him, the advantage of dis from the firing line. One Month ... ! Of his fallen chief and proved 252 eggs. The best previous re 1.95 of state laws shall be suspended to the extent neces Three Months In the case of occupations which ' equal to the occasion. He also cord for a single hen was set in tance. 3.75 S i l Months ... sary to give effect to legislation enacted by the Con 1918, when a W hite W yandotte Eckersley also commented on require skill rath er than brawn, had been m arked for death. 7.50 Otte Year ....... the poorness of the American ra- however, the answer has been --------------------------- By Mail and R ural R outes laid 308 eggs. gress.” $ .65 O ne Month ... dio program s, declaring th a t he ¡quite different. W here patience Letterheads, statem ents. to Thus the amendment does not prohibit child labor. 1.95 T hree Months found they were not nearly so a nd dexterity of fingers are a fac- your or<j eT a t’ th e'T id in g s Office, 3.50 It does not regulate child labor. It simply authorizes}!| 0 S il Months ... good as those broadcast by the tor, women w orkers have been We have a good j ob p r| n ting de- 6.50 On ; Year ....... congress to’ do these things. There is exactly the same U 0 British Broadcasting Company. lie adm itted to be superior to men t partm ent tf DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES and are still employed in jobs _ _ _ ______________ also declared th a t the most ex reason for making child labor a subject for federal legis Single insertion, per inch ............................................................. $ .30 pensive program s sent out in the which were closed to ttyem prior lation that there was in the case of prohibition. There Yearly C ontracts Have your suit cleaned and United States did not cost any to the war. .27% On. insertion a week ................................................................... pressed this week and avoid the was a small minority of the states which would not legis- .25 thing like those produced by the Two insertions a week ................................................................... Holiday rush. Paulseruds. 66-tf .20 i late for prohibition, although a heavy majority sentiment D a lly in s e rtio n .................................. -......-.................................. •—...... british Broadcasting Company. R ates for L egal and M iscellaneous A dvertising ---------- Eckersley expressed himself as I in the nation demanded it. There are in a small minority F irst insertion, per 8 point line ................................................. ? .10 LONDON, Nov. 19. — The; extremely pessimistic so far as fu -| .05 of the states, powerfully financed and politically entrench B a th subsequent insertion, 8 point line ................................. 1.00 United States cannot teach B ritain I tu re long-distance reception is <Catd of Thanks .................................................-.............................. ed interests which are profiting from the exploitation of .02% anything about radio, in the opin- concerned. It was no use saying Q M tuaries. per line ........................................... - ........................ child labor. Some of these are employers of child labor, ion of Captain A. E. Eckersley, th a t people in B ritain would WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING “ All future events, where- an admission charge is made or a others of them employ adult labor which they fear would chief engineer of the British shortly be able to listen-in to SOFIA, Nov. 19. — Macedonia ction taken is A dvertising. President Coolidge, he said. command higher pay in the absence of the competition of Broadcasting Company. No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent orders. Eckersley recently paid a visit “ We are not losing hope,” how the Alsace-Lorraine of the Bal child labor. Those interests are strong enough in those to the United States to exchange ever,” Eckersley concluded. “ We kans and the starting point of DONATIONS No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertis- states to prevent state legislation for the protection of views and study broadcasting con are going to continue to experi many recent Balkan political con ggg or Job printing— our contributions will be in c a s h . _____ childhood from their rapaciousness. They can only be ditions, during which he broad m ent in order to see w hat im flicts, has successfully passed —of— through another crisis in the casted from several radio stations. provem ents can be m ade.” reached through federal legislation. One of these states NOVEMBER 10 * He was very enthusiastic over eradication of Bolshevist influence ALL DESCRIPTIONS - THE GOODNESS OF GOD:— Oh th at men would praise the is Massachusetts, where the amendment has failed of He made the above rem ark in an his reception in the United States! in her affairs which was calculat- interview on his re tu rn to E ng Vord for His goodness, and for His wonderful works to the children indorsement by an advisory referendum of the voters, and said he had been treated with j ed to stir up unrest in all B al land,. teg men.— Psalm 107: 21. kan countries. Next January the Oregon legislature will be called The reason is, according to I great cordiality.” PRA Y ER-— O God, there is none like 8hee in the heavens Get yours now while our above, or in the earth beneath, for Thy mercy endureth forever. Bolshevist influence was be Eckersley, th a t the United S t a t e s _________ upon to ratify ór reject the federal child labor amend stock is complete hind the attem pted coup d ’etat in is catering to the radiò public! ment. I t is scarcely thinkable that the verdict here will ir . Bulgaria last September, it is ■ BOOST from the point of view of mak-; •j he other than affirmative. believed Failing, it is alleged the ing radio broadcasting an elec- ! Recently, The Tidings carried a new item from P o r t - __________________ Bolshevist agents turned their a t - , trical hobby and not an artistic land, having reference to alleged tampering with the I CARBON MONOXIDE tentions to the Macedonian O r-' enjoym ent. straw vote ballots sent out by the Literary Digest1’™ «»! Dangerous indifference to carbon monoxide poison- “Americans are working on en ganization, one of the most pow -' ---------- erful influences in C entral and the recent presidential election, stating that post oflicc ,in„ ¡n private gavage8 still exists Evidence is revealed tirely different lines from those inspectors had been assigned to the task ot running down j ordisastroU8 resulu sJlouId engin(j antomoh;|e of the B ritish Broadcasting Com HORNELL, N. Y., Nov. 19.— Eastern Europe. Their success in the Macedon- pany,” he declared to B ritish ra The exodus of women from indus- anv malefactions with relation to tampering in • b be e s started t a r t e d a and n d left le f t in ____ . _ else try is on. i^n Organization was only partial, in nrurroti/vr» operation -nrlvllr. while the driver goes dio fans. throughout the country. A survey show'ed here today for a m ajority of the Macedon- where. A concentration of two per cent may easily be “ They are concentrating on the In connection with this news item it is interesting to built up in a short time, and, on his return, but a minute unique, while we are striving to th at, with few exceptions, the wo make our program s more and men who were recruited during note that the postoffice department after receiving « ^ o r two would be required to asphyxiate Weaker con- phyxiate him. him. Weaker eon- more perfect and artistic. the W orld W ar period to re p la ce ' \ nports of the inspectors in the investigation, announcedcentrations ick, iender ; he]D|eRs. «.„„„i,. person helpless, though not “ The man in America who con men in shops and factories have officially on November 9, that there were very few cases necessari| inimcdiate, unconscious, and finally prove siders he is getting the best ser surrendered their positions to e m -, <• of infractions of the regulations found among the bun- fatal vice is the naan who finds he can ployes of the sterner sex. In a few instances, however, i in glass globe with sea weed, pebbles and plants deeds of thousands of postal employees and that these There js n(J du listen to the most distant stations women have been retained in work i Therefore, thousands of sets are ' otfenders had been duly disciplined Hie department re- run ¡n a c]osed ; g . produced with intense sensitivity,’’ port adds: “ The of fences were pretty eye»lyd.stnbuted shou!d b(J openedPprevioJ to the engine and tf it fact. Even’ one of them s » TARGET OF JEERS OF BRITISH EXPERT OF REOS FAILURE Thanksgiving Roasters E Simpson’s . Hardware Winchester Store TW O GOLD F IS H t among the partisans of at least four of the candidates for the presidency.” The postal service is ever keenly jealous of its rep- 1, iation for integrity in all departments, and also prides i:self upon the fact that it is as nearly free from the lesser errors that permeate every human agency as the exigen- ( ies of its work make possible. So the next time you get rn improperly directed letter, marked “ opened by mis take,” by some other person of the same or with a simi lar name, instead of criticising the mail service, why not 1 oost for a better and more complete addressing of all mail matter and do everybody a good turn? I ! < < » > is necessary to run it for any length of time, as in making repairs or adjustments, the ear should he run in the open, as even very weak concentration of this will cause head ache and discomfort. Carbon monoxide is very insidious in its action, and the victim will suddenly collapse and be entirely help less, although conscious for a time of his condition, vet unabe to make an escape and give an alarm. This state rapidly develops into unconsciousness and death. W INING X/ TI-IE THEATER PtAUTIFUL Today and Tomorrow Seed rye and seed vetch Seed oats and seed barley All kinds of mill feed, hay and grain; groceries, pea nuts and pop corn. Famous last words, “ I wonder winch way lie is go ing to turn.” Come in and sec us. We can supply you at right prices. INDIGNITIES HEAPED ON CANADIAN ATTORNEY If a man has that sneaking look, you don’t know All western Canada is aroused over the treatment in whether lie has bought a quart or contributed to a cam » an Francisco by prohibition enforcement officers of Fred paign fund. 1*. Anderson, Vancouver attorney and one of the most prominent members of the British Columbia bar. If a filling station attendant can go a year without And they have every justification for righteous in- icing robbed, lie should be in big demand as a bank pres- «agnation and outraged protest. ident. Had an American of equal prominence been subjected io similar indignity in Canada, patriotic American^ would lliere will he need for expert investment advisors J.ave been furious. as long as the average man is impressed with the color of Had a missionary » in some “ heathen” countrv * been the stock. forced to undergo like treatment, Washington today would be being bombarded wtih demands that a battle- > hip be rushed to the scene and marines landed to compel bis forcible release. Anderson went to San Francisco last week to rep- 3 esent the Mexican Shipping Company, owners of the Ouardra, an alleged rum runner now’ in custody of the WASHINGTON, Nov. 19— A federal authorities. call for the tw entieth annual con There is not an iota of evidence to show that he was vention of the National Rivers STORRS, Conn , Nov. 19. __I and H arbors Congress, to be held } ersonally interested in the vessel or in its cargo. here December 10-11, was issued W hite Leghorns from North ■ lie was sent there solely to see that the legal rights today by John H. Smith, presi Branch,. N. J., won the thirteenth! of the owners were safe guarded; that if their property dent of the organization. The annual international egg-laying were to be confiscated, it should only be after the pro- governors of the various states; contest at Connecticut A gricul mayors and presidents of com tu ral College here by furnishing isions of the law had been complied with. mercial, industrial and w aterway 2,531 eggs in the past fifty-two But for that crime, his apartments w’ere broken into associations were asked to appoint weeks, getting an average of over at an early morning hour, his personal papers searched accredited delegates to the con 253 eggs fro each pulet in the pen of ten birds and creating a •tud seized without a search w’arrant, and he himself vention. Among the im portant s u b je c ts 'new recor^- Back in 1918 a pen) arrested. to be discussed, some form ally I irom Oregon A gricultural College This arrest is a threat that any attorney who law- some inform ally, some both ways? laid 2,352 egg3 in fifty-tw ° weeks. 1 ully undertakes the defense of persons accused of violat are the following: A gricultural setting a record ju s t beaten. ing the Volstead Act not only thereby renders himself Relief Through Development of The one foreign entry this year < pen to suspicion of all the camp followers of that act Inland .W aterw ays; Free Ports — O ntario A gricultural College, Guelph, O ntario — finished nine and invites all the verbal abuse such can heap upon him, ( o r F r e e Zones); F u rth er teenth on the list, itsi barred rocks but actually must risk the disgrace of arrest and the Strengthening of the Long-and- laying 2,007 eggs. Purdue Uni Short-H aul Clause of the In ter menace of violence as well. versity hens were tw elfth in fin state Commerce act; a Navigable T A IK O F M M S A I CAPITAL MEET A M E 253 EGGS THE BATTLE OVER CHILD LABOR. A two-fold nation-wide campaign is being waged t gainst ratification of the federal child-labor amend ment to the federal constitution. One group opposing the Amendment is.composed of.those who believe that regu lation of child labor should he left to the- states. With I hem we differ but we find no ground, in view of their opinion, for criticism of their course. The other group— 1 y far the more powerful and formidable one—is com- ] osed of interests which in a few states are piling up fi nancial profits from the exploitation of the labor of help less childhood. This is a campaign of misrepresentation .••jid dishonest pretense. The misrepresentation lies in the arguments being broadcast over the nation for the defeat of the amendment The dishonesty lies in concealment of the true autlior- f hip of those arguments. A leaflet now going the rounds i l the mails bears the uncertain imprint of the “ National committee for the rejection of the twentieth amend- l.en t.” It hears no signatures or names. The campaign which it represents is, of course, being financed by those: who profit by child labor. Apparently they are spend ing heavily. The leaflet sets out twenty purported reas- ens for rejection of the amendment. Many of them eon iuu- F razier & S on F R F razier & S on P h on e 1Î14— 3 5 8 E. Main St. FREE E with purchase of one tube NVDFNTA TOOTH PASTE at regular price, 50c THURS., F ri ., and SAT. A few fancy fish for sale Toilet Goods— Drug Sundries ELH ART’S Books and Stationery TO RESTORE TOKYO'S GREAT CHURCH RUDOLPH ENTINO ’Monsieur Beaucaire' W L -. BEBE DANIELS, Lois W ilson Ooris Kenyon, Lowcl) Sherman A magnificent, colossal production of Booth Tark- ington’s famous story of royal love and intrigue. Coming Monday Orpheum Jr. Vaudeville ishing. O ther owners of birds in the leading tw enty exhibitors were: Attleboro, Mass., second; Suffield, Conn., th ird ; O rongo,* Main F loor 75c Balcony 50c C ircle— Tokyo Tabernacle Mo.; fo u rth ; W aldoro, Me., fifth; L »ft—k S h in to Prisât in fu ll vestm en ts F ranklin, Mass., si$th; Hameden. Seats Now Conn., seventh; Dover, Mass., SHINTO priest, with twenty- that section of Tokyo for many Selling four non-Christian young men months, and down to the time of Dr. eighth; Grand Rapids, Mich., Axling’s return to America this year, of the neighborhood trooping after n in th E n f ie ld , Mass., ten th ; Wap- the improvised hospital had treated him, appeared at the Tokyo Taber- 22,042 patients. ping, Conn., eleventh; Pleasant i nacle when earthquake and fire had Valley, N. Y., th irteen th ; W est When the slender stock of funds left twenty-seven square miles of the Japanese capital a smoking ruin. The available for the work ran out, a priest announced that he had brought messenger appeared with a gift of yen from the treasury of the Im ! the young men there to clear the 800 perial family and with that money as Tabernacle of debris. The building, a nest-egg the Tabernacle staff began the largest Christian house of wor to partition the building into tiny ship in the Orient, had been gutted by booths so as to accommodate fifty- fire, but the walls stood firm and Dr. two families at a time. In this way William Axling, Baptist missionary, the Tabernacle has sheltered, fed and From Ashland was toiling to place it In condition clothed 175 refugee families until they Daily to Portland............................... 7:00 A. M- to be of service to the suffering popu could get a new start. lation. For two whole months this Dr. Axling and Dr. Charles B. Daily to E u g e n e ............................... 12 00 Noon Shinto priest reported every morn Tenny of the American Baptist For Daily to Roseburg..................: ........... 4:15 P.M. ing and gave free-will service under eign Mission Society’s staff in Japan Dr. Axling’s leadership. The Shinto are spending some time In the United shrine at which the priest officiates States for the purpose of arranging 12:00 noon and 4:15 p. in. Stages connects is just across the way from the Tab to rebuild the Tabernacle and other to Portland following morning. ernacle. Another non-Christian neigh buildings for the mission which were Clatsop county cranberry crop bor, a Japanese physician, also vol destroyed or damaged by the earth We take passengers for all way points; for fu rth er U 17,644 bushels’ worth *80’000- unteered his services. With his help quake. The Japanese disaster brought Inform ation and tickets call Hotel Ashland office phone a free dispensary was opened and ths the heaviest financial loss that the so 47 gallery of the church auditorium was ciety has suffered in its existence of Astor,a — City budget calls for turned into an emergency hospital more than a century. In the Mabie PARE ASHLAND-PORTLAND $8.20 with thirty beds. An operating roopa Memorial School at Yokohama, the *396,383’ *135’038 {rom operat- jng expenses. WM built, the pnly «¡g fa only Christian school for boys in that Connection Between the Great Lakes and Tidew ater; P o rt Dif ferentials; Through-R oute and Joint-R ate A rrangem ents Be tween Railways and W aterways. O ther subjects in d u d e th e two paragraphs in the pending Riv ers and H arbors bills before Con gress, one calling for the comple tion of all w aterw ay projects w ithin five years, the other pro posing the developm ent of rivers for power as well as navigation. President Small called a tte n tion to the fact th a t the first w aterway appropriation made by Congress was $30,000, which was voted on April 6, 1802, for which the improvement of the Delaware River. The total am ount appro priated up to June 30, 1924, is $1,^49,681,795. F R E E A Travel By Motor Stage Safely, Swiftly and Comfortably R ig h t-O r . W illia m Axling prefecture, more than $215,- had been invested and the de struction was so complete that out of the entire plant and equipment only four typewriters were saved. It has been determined to rebuild the school in Yokohama and on the old site, which is the most central and commanding in the city. To restore the school, repair the Tokyo Taber nacle and replace smaller churches and mission residences that were de stroyed, will require over $500,000. Evidences of the friendly feeling inspired by the missionaries have con tinued to develop. The Japanese Gov ernment gave Dr. Axling's organisa tion relief supplies valued at $15,000. Individuals and Japanese associations gave $5,000 and Government depart ments $1,000. Twenty Japanese of high standing headed by Prince Tokn- gawa, president of the House of Peers, gave $15,000 and the refugees themselves contributed $1,000. Ths City of Tokyo has asked the Taber nacle to open a branch In a section of the city where working people pre dominate and has given the lumber, money for building and a six monthsr budget for "»■»»»♦"g this hr