Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, September 10, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    A SH L A N D D A IL Y T ID IN G S
(BmebUeM ta 1«TS)
THE ASHLAND pl
IG 0 0 .
_______ c .... Bdltor
Business Manager
......... ....City Édltur
Jh-rt R. ’re«« .
George X-!»<Jden
T -ta Jæksoa ..
___ Telephone »
I Otata Mell Matter
vFFICI?L CITY PAPBR w -------------r ----
i ered at the Ashland, Oregon Feetotflce M I
ta City
»
a' lta n th
— ------
> ,¡ee Mjnths «,—
p't Möntfaa "____
O..e Year ____
By Mali and Rand Roetes
JBe- Mor'h
fhice hkndba*
(.ttg Mo’ ¡hr .
One Yeai ______
DISPLAY’ ADVKRTIH1NG RATES
Single inacrllon, per Inch ___ __ .’._____ — ______ ___—
Yearly Contracts
One Insertion a w e e k __ ________ _____________________
rwo Insertions a week _.
Dally insertion ----- ------ ’7—
Koloa tor Legal and MleeeUaneoee Advertising
fir s t Insertion, per 8 point line ___.___________________ .
Kach subsequent insertion, 8 point li n e _______.OS
Card of Thanks ....... ..................... ........ ......................................
Obituaries, per l i n e __ ,_____________ _________ _______ _
9
8 .10
1.00
.08%
lass aau u w
A GOOD EXAMPLE
The Washington fire guards were arrested for smok­
ing and for leaving campfires burning in the forest they
were “ protecting.” An Oregon man was fined $100 for
refusing to help put out a fire he had started, saying that
lie had lived there for 47 years and he “ knew all about
fires.”
The Northwest has just gone through a bad fire sea­
son; it would have been, worse if extraordinary precau­
tions had not been taken. It will take a lifetime to put
many burned - over areas back to, the condition they were
in last spring. A law that punishes the careless, defiant
or criminal user of ourforests, is a good law that needs
rigid enforcement.
CAPITAL AND LABOR — WHICH IS WHICH?
WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
The Brotherhood Investment Company, is repotted to
“All future erents, where an admission Charge is made or a
collection taken is Advertising.”
liavC purchased 27,000 acres on the Gulf of Mexico, near
No d>cou&t will be allowed Religions or Benevolent orders.
Sarasota, Florida. It is a subsidiary of the Brotherhood
DONATIONS
■'----■■■
-----
of Locomotive Engineers, oldest, richest^ most conserva­
-No donations to charities or otherwise will he made la advertie- tive, most progressive labor organization in the United
¿Ag or job printing—^our contributions will bo la cash.
States. The Brotherhood has banks, coal mines, and other
SEPTEMBER IO, lOSBS
stable, sterling investments.
,
ALL IS WELL: — Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in
------------------ , ,
- ,
GOn believe also in me. In my Fathers bouse are many mansions:
Pirate«, in faet, wouldn't trade
if It were not bo . I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for
jou. John 14:1-2.
him now tor the three players
' PRAYER: — Lord, Increase our faith and then we will cast
they sent to the Cabs..
all our care on thee, for thou carest for ua.
As tor the latter, figure what
might have happened- with Meu­
sel and Barnhart in their out­
-
CLIMAX TO IOWA LIQUOR RECORD
field. They are juat a bad ball
club,
true enough, but’ perhaps
The united order of bootleggers of the United States-,
their
worst feature la that
doubtless is not responsible for the death of the Benton
M O S C O W— Fewer theatres, they are quite without a punch
county, Iowa, Wr. C. T. U. president. The crime was the lower prices, and a regular box- in their outfield.
act of some individual, resentful against the interference office bourgeois system of ticket-
And, if any club needs the
o f this woman with his j>ersonal liberty to violate the selling are depended upon to kick there, the Cuba «re It.
eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act and to live improve the finances of the They are playing 77 games this
off the profits of muddling the brains and bodies of fel­ Russian stage in the season open year on one of the smallest
fields in the major leagues, yet
today.
low citizens.
The books of the state stages they have lined up a team that
But it* is very possible that this woman’s death will showed a deficit ot 8800,000 can hardly hit them beyond'*t
pitcher, with a few notable ex­
inspire a crusade against the operations of this sort of for the season 1924-’85.
Some of their out­
All the theatres charged very ceptions.
miscreant. Just as other crusades have resulted from in­
fielders, notably Heathcote, are
high
prices—about
one-half
again
cidental crimes of petty offenders, so this crime shows
more than the New York aver­
vividly that bootlegging ns a system is ruthless and when age. An ordinarily good s or­
STATEMENT
necessary to its own ends is restrained by no normal hu­ chestra seat cost 13 or 84. Trado
man instincts.
union members received a re­ of the Citizens Bank of Ashland
of Ashland, Cdunty of Jackson,
Iowa is no novice in acquaintance with the effects of duced rate.
^lany trade union members State of Oregon, showing the
hard liquor. She has dealt in almost every sort of way
abused the privilege, and the amount standing to the credit ol
w ith the purveyors of spirits. The first Iowa towns were lobbies were full Just before cur­ every depositor July 1, 1825,
river points, and thè Mississippi and Missouri rivers were tain time, with scalpers selling who has not made a deposit, or
avenues for ehanu-ters who could not Jive without whiskey trade union tickets at a rouble who has not withdrawn any
part of his deposit (Savings de­
nnd did not. The growing proportion of homes, in the days or two under box office prices posits), principal and interest,
to such “outsiders” as foreigners
immediately before the Civil W ar, caused a widespread and Nepmen. No one except for a period of more than twelve
resentment against the lawlessness that lived on hard “boobs” bought at the box- (12) years Immediately prior to
said date, with the name, last
drink. Kansas was the first Western state to “ go pro­ office.
known place of residence
The
cream
of
Western
Euro­
hibition,” and Iowa was the second. Then Iowa has the
postofflce address of such de-
unpleasant distinction to devise the first legalized “ evas­ pean musicians will appear on positor, and the fact of his
Moscow and Leningrad concert
ion ” o f its own law. The legislature, unable to abolish stages this Winter. Frits Kreis- death, if known.
Gordon Abbott, No. 118, Un­
prohibition from the state constitution, passed a law per­ ler, Vasa Prihoda, Jascha Hel-
known,
83.98.
m itting communities to systematically “ mulct” offend­ fets are some of the violinists
* Jimmy Cliff, No. 149, Un-
who
are
engaged.
Otto
Klem­
ers. Those who deprecate violations of the law now, need
perer, Battlstlni, Egon Petrie, known, 88.22.
not imagine that lawbreaking in high places is anything the Japanese director* Yamada,
Doris May Wilcox, No. 252.
new. Iowa, which is sometimes thought to be one of the Jules Marchet are a few whose Toledo, Oregon. 81-60.
Herbert M. Dunlap, No. 27Î,
m ost puritanical of states, about 1888 permitted its legis­ names will star the Russian bill­
Unknown,
82.16.
boards
dnrlng
the
season.
lature to formally provide for violations of law through
Hasel*W. Hulse, No. 286, Un-
But
it
is
unlikely
that
the
the operation of law. Tlie so-called “ mulct law ” was mor­
king of Russia’s native sons, known, 810.16.
ally a'repudiation of law. It was financially a system of Chaliapin, will be seen again In Stanley R. Jordon, No. 318,
“ high license.”
his native land. At least not Unknown, 81.52.
J. M. Wright, No. 609, Un-
Those were the days when all over the United States this year, in spite of the often
known, 82.16.-
reiterated
declaration
here
that
those who opposed extreme prohibition and yet who ad­
E. E. Thompson, No. 644, Un­
mitted the vicious effect of unrestrained sales of liquor "Chaliapin V lll come to Mos­ known, 81-66.
cow next season.”
urged “ high license” as the cure. A part of-the high li­
Emma Luttrell, No. 590, Un­
known, 817.08.
cense propaganda was the calling of hard names. Liquor
8TATE OR. OREGON,
sold in “ grog shops” was supposed to be morally debas*
COUNTY OF JACKSON, ss.
ing. Liquor sold in saloons that could afford to pay the
I, V. O. N. Smith, being first
$1,000 a month fee, or whatever might be charged, was
duly sworn, depose and say upon
oath that I am the cashier of the
supposed to be pure and healthful.
Citlsens Bank ot Ashland, County
As might have been exjiected, the system of h ig h .li­
of Jackson, State ot Oregon;
cense merely promoted skill in finding new and cheaper
that the foregoing statement Is
ways to make liquor than the usual method of distillation.
a full, true, correct and coin1-
I ’otuto /tlcohol and various combination« with burnt rfu- NEW YORK— It is passing plete statement, showing the
odd what a difference a few, namq, last known residence or
gar and pepper were devised .to defeat the taste of even short
months will make.
postotfice address, fact of dea'h,
the most discerning toilers. High license ran its course.
Back In February, John Mi- if known, and the amount to the
A part of that course was to tear the mask off of the mulct­ Graw was trying to trade Emil credit ot each depositor as re­
Meusel to the Chicago Cuba for quired by the provislorts of
ing law of Iowa.
a
catcher. Today, he wouldn't Sections 16160-10163, inclusive,
The W. C. T. U. in Iowa has had many earnest and
exchange Meusel for half of the Oregon Laws.
effective leaders. The death of Mrs. C. B. Cook by the Chicago ball club. The young
O. N. Smith.
,
hand of an assassin adds a martyrdom to the record of man hae kept the Olanta In the .
Subscribed and sworn to be­
service. The Iowa bootlegger has scòrcd one, against? race with hie'hitting and “Hack” fore me this 16th day of July,
Wilson, his Intended successor, A. D. 1985.
himself.
'.
,
Is languishing In Toledo.
B. A. PETERS,-Jr.,
Another off-season proposition
Notary Public for Oregon.
at which the Cubs looked down
My commission expires Novem­
THE JORDAN PLAN
the nostrils was Pittsburgh's ber 16, 1921.
“ As the history of the future shall lx* written in the proffer of Clyde Barnhart. The
'
3-4 Thurs.
schools of today, it is vital that the teacher lny in the Cnba could have had him In
minds of children the foundation of a sane and whdlesome that famous mid-winter trade I
but voted for Maranvllle, Grim in
backgnaqid from which to develop international amity and Cooper.
and intelligent abhorrence of war.”
Barnhart was an Infielder then.
In the above statement, Dr. David -Starr Jordan ex He is a free-hitting outfielder
presses a profound tTuth and adds a prefix to a great now. For tome months, he led
the National League In hitting
plan of international jicaee. *
■
nnd
though,
tritlinaitely.
he
S H IP H I S
MENACE STAGE
MCGRAW »
TEAM WHEN HE
KEPT MEUSEL
The plan of Education for Peace looks courageously
toward the ultimate abolitatiou of international war as a
legitim ate sequence of disagreements between nations or
between individuals of different countries. Its central
purpose is the mobilization of teachers^in all lands, most
immediately in America, in order that their combined in-
fluence and that of their pupils may be thrown solidly on
le.o f peace.
A fter Yeoeiving the Raphael Herman $25,000 award.
Dr. Jordan’s plan of education to develop International
Justice and Friendship was adopted by the world Federa-
f Education Associations at its meeting at Edin-
Scotland, last month. The plan received hearty
by the attending delegates from moat of the
Europe and North and South America,
and forty unofficial delegates attended
bob
i exavny ueuu
nave rest uiuw aa sy ia«e.
from the United StAtes.
, '
"The man ln-?th*-st»e
thap; kind, either.
The coordination of education forces throughout the A ball-hawk won’t do much England \ does no» un
world,, stabilizing as far as possible by teaching, the trend flying in a cage.
thing about the I
and there I* only oh* way to
of the future toward peace and international understand
tench him— that Is, by advertise­
ing along the lines of the Jordan Plan will without ques
ment.
>
tion go* a long ways toward that mental and moral dis­
"The man in the ztreet in
armament which must precede and aecompany military
America understands a great
disarmament, and also bring about a better understanding
deal »bou( the stock market.
among men.
WalJ Street ha* taken good care
School
""“mped “w’th thT'rtaT'ot thZ
Pirates, he still is hitting
enough to hold his place
« great offensive hall elnb.
'
Shoe Repairing
Quick* Service
Agep Shoe Shop
T ext
'
'
.
J
s
SIIMES HEEES
F« POVKIY OF
MEN IN E H
FERNS
v
of all kinds and sizes
We h * v r a « « o * job printing «*-
»>» .
■ *
. See Them At
The Lotus Rooms
In ItsGrip
The Billings Agency
H IT "
Warmth
Inrftant
Have Your
Your Protection Against
Raw, Cold, Poggy Days
HEADLIGHTS TESTED
at
Don’t let your l&m e become dangerously cold and damp thia fall and
winter. Instead of lighting your furnace too soon, uae the (unlike
warmth o f W ebbech Heaters whenever and wherever you need it.
Auto Electric Shop
Next to 20th Century
Grocery
GAS HEATERS
"T h t U o tt H ta t fo r the L eatt M oney"
FULL EQUIPMENT
I
and •
OFFICIAL TESTER
U w Ir . to the quklwM . dcMWM. moM dcpcnd.bto auxlltorr b n tin e wrvto* N o canvtae
o f fuel, no amoke or u h e t. Juat aofid comfort the moment you llsin the am.
A wonder^il Stale e e M - M m adds untold coneenlence; a copper raftoctoc and other
W e lafao c h im nw m aaaute sreatcat hm t on the boat m o a n o f sw. Coma In to our
atom today and tea oar lino o f Waltbach Hcatera.
Sonthern Oregon Gas Co.
GAS
HRAT
GAS
HRAT
GAS
HEAT
GAS
E L E C T R lr f R A N G E
a j»
O ld c h a in life
-5vr.2==cx=
i,-
*
. NEW/
FURNITURE of aD sorts
made bright and inviting
ih new and up -to-date
‘‘clothes’’ by a little play-
work with Decoret Enam­
els and Varnish Stains and
FuUerwear Varnish I It’s
easy to renew your furni-
t u a or refiniah it in the
present day vogue.
isn’t the only reason
why housewives take such a
natural pride in their electric
•J ranges.
conomy
E
Also, ask for book]et,wThe
Art of Decorating with
Decoret” It’s free and is
full of ideas on finishing
and refinishmg furniture
and ornaments.
W ES
:■ ' I t ’s one of the practicsd reasons, of course
,1 — like the quick, clean, electrical heat, the
freedom from fuel and ashes, the better
*
roasts and baking.
x
• ‘ Z But after all, these might be a man’s rea­
ds home with an elec-
'■ -X sons for equipping his
range. Woman’« reasons go deeper, • i f
rery woman
thinks
women thin
you wish to see what every
efficient
electrical
o f clean, convenient,
i OKOON J
appliances throughout the home, notice
00M M NYÍ
the pride with which she says, MM Y elec­
tric range.”
»full heeef Fallar
iseAVwehtaseta
J. 0. Bigg
SÄ
" IfoMIta'tta^ttaltaa
bros .
1
ASHLAND
FLOWER SHOP
AT
M c N air
BEAUT t i l l
to educate him. Of course there
la this point—advertising aavours
LONDON — While American* ot trade; and trade to some
PERMANENT GUESTS
amass wealth by playing Wall minds In England is not gen
Street, Englishmen are pauper­
DESIRED FOR THE
ized by playing the horse*, go-
WINTER
cording to Viscount C as tier o*s4.
AT
“In England the man in the
Street with a desire to gamble,
Li thia Springs Hotel
backs horse*; In America he
--;'
Building
‘plays' the stock market,” /said
Breakfast Served if
Viscount Castlerosse.
“A* the
Wanted
speculative Interest i s ' strong in
FREE DELIVERY
Phone397-L*
the human race, the- backer of
horse* in England and the mar­
217 N. Main
ket gambler in America are
many, and accordingly impor­
tant.
"Undoubtedly the American
WWW . -O F
has the better of IL It- is easy
to reel off a string of names of
men who have been rubied on
the turf, but it is impossible
to mention even one man who
has made and kept big money Yls no disgrace to get a little
over a period of years by backing lS>*der oh your shoulder.
W e w ill clean it off before the
horses.”
meat for damassa Assurda 1
Procedure of the English stock suit looks older.
« f $10,000 to $tSXW0 for J
Clean A Dye.
exchange is. obsolete, Viscount
. '
,
V
Castlerqese declares, and la ?o Nothing-makes a person feel bet­
«guourMw nreme,
complicated that the man in ter than Being well pressed. Let
the street is discouraged from us keep you that way.
W ttn O U K M l
investing.
‘ j B T N A -A U T O L IA B ILIT Y POLICY?
“The . costs ot commission*
Ashland
Gleaning
and
Let ua protect you n o ir.
ere ruinous. There Is first the
Dyeing Works
broker's commissions; then the
Jobbers' tuipi, and on top of
35 First S t
that the stamp tax.
"This is killing the goose that
Beal Batate A Real lueuraaee
<1 « . Mata a t
Phone S II
lay* the golden egg.
"The man who buys fifty
shares in a fairly active stock,
“B IT
"BIS"
has to pay three times as much
for the transaction In Londdh
as he would in New York.
“The London Stock Exchange
neither advertises as a corporate
body nor does it allow Its mem­
bers to advertise independently.
"This Is astounding!
"The Stock Exchange _ must
*
Books
roadoa the London Stoek Ita-
change markets, and" that Is
by attracting the vast Bngllsh
public, and until that happens
the American will eCore by buy­
ing stocks and the Englishman
lose by backing horses."
IN I
' Thorejs now an electric range in
one oat of every seven Mooses on the
COPCO system.
Select one for your home from the mod-
c h o n^dispfay at your near mt dm ler’s.
1
- 339 E. Main Street
THE CALIFORNIA ORBGON PÇWBR COMPANY
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' a
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