,1 216 motor vehicle« in Oregon for thf> first elgat m<
I of 1926 amounted to $5,193,653. The gas tax: coli
■ from Oregon motorists for th e single month of July,
FubUahrd Every Kveaiu« K i.ept Honday by
totaled $346,694.40. In addition, each purchaser c
THE ASHLAND PRINTING GO,
automobile pays a federal tax of fiome 5 per cent <
purchase
price on the car.
i *
............
gdlto
B oit R. Greer ....1__ .—
ueee Manager
And so it goes throughout the 48 states of the i
George Madden Green ...
._ City Editor
T. R. Jackson . J " .............
’ —taxes, more taxes, special ta^es, licenses«, fees, eto
Telephone 89
O F F IC IA L CITY PAPER
public Can only guess at the aggregate amount it paj
HLAND
D A IL Y
T ID IN
U hland. Oregon Pootoffiee as Second Class M a il M atte
Subscription Price, Delivered in City
By Mall and R ural Routes
One Month
Three Months
Six Months ..
One Year
AND
DISPLAY
ADVERTISING
RATES
Single Insertion, per inch ....................................... - .......
Yearly Contracts
One Insertion a week ...........'....................- ................—
Two Insertions a week ............... ......................................
Daily Insertion
R«l<-s for Legal and M iscellaneous A dvertising
First Insertion, per 8 point line ....................——......----------
Each subsequent insertion. 8 point line ........—'................ —-
Card of Thanks .............................. -............... - .................—
Obituaries, per line ........................- ......— .............................
• WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
Love Ignores common sense,
while scandal Ignores facts.
An ounce of vanity takes up
more room than a pound of rea
son.
The
more
froedom you give
“All future events, where an admission charge la made or a
others, the more you have left
collection taken is Advertising."
for yourself.
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
try to mkka the oat at the plate “ *r, » fast man, a good fielder aad
he told 'Ooeltn, Rlee and McNeely, a Ana thrower. There la little to
«Ice «*W that the batter w aa'q choose from between these two
strong right field hitter and might player* but Rice certainly la a
knock the hall over bis bead If be great money player and should
game la too aloes.
ba steadier In the pinches.
“ We're got to take that chance"
Max Carey, veteran that ba la,
Harris skid. "W e’re* gambling atUI la one of the'fastest men la
cruel torture of separation!**
When her husband became the ggalnst that Jtm. If ho bite over baseball. Ha Is a brilliant flold-
second President o f' the United pour bead It would be long enough ar, a reliable bitter and* the tough-
States, her self-acquired educa to score that ran anyway and If ba eat man In baseball to gat on the
tion made her fit easily into her .hits In front of you you’re eloue baaea. Carey Is a «mart player
exacting Ufa as First Lady of enough for a quick play at the and la perhaps the keystone of the
Pirate offense and defense. He Is
the Land.
To thia cultivated, plate.”
mother la largely due ihe ex
Rice came in almost on top of a much more valuable player than
traordinary precocity ot
John Joe Harris, at first base, ahd young Bart McNeely, who will
Quincy Adams, who, at fourteen Harris moved toward the plater, 'play center for thp Senators.
years of age, became private The batter smacked a line drive
National League players said
secretary to Francis Dana, then , right lb front of Rice who made a that Barnhart, the Pittsburgh left
American Ambassador to Rus .beautlfpl throw to the plate and fielder was the most Improved
sia— his first stepping-stone to «aught the runner^ by three feet, player in the league this year.
the sixth Presidency
of
the
That play was polled not only He Is a terrific U tta r and his fleld-
United States.
pnce but fot/r times ‘ when the ing has improved vfiltly. H e Is
(Copyright. 1985, by Mpry Greer game was in the balance.
not a graceful field«* and be can’t
Conklin, (Syndicate) Great B rit i, it was pointed ont In yeater- come In M fast as some fielders,
ain rights reserved,
Reproduc (lays story that the Washington
Goos Ooalln, who will play left
tion forbidden.
infield was superior to that of the field for the Senators, also has
Pirates as an effective working Us fielding faults aad ho Isn’t]
OCTOBER T, I02B
Bad whiskey obtained illegally
HAVE ALL GOOD:—The young lions do lack, and suffer hunger;
The worst man we know about
but they that seek the Lord shall not want any good thing. Psalm probably does aB much harm as
good whiskey obtained legally. got married because he heard
PRAYER:—Our Bountiful God, we have confidence in Thee, for
a wife was cheaper than a Jan-
we have never seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging
Some folks will call you a
bread.
liar when you tell the truth,
There is not the slightest disposition on our pari io
minimize the debt France owes to us, the dollars and
cents debt, that is, that can be paid, and concerning
which just now there is so much speculation.
France owes the money and France wall pay, of
course.
But sometimes it is well to understand some point
of view other than our own and we are wondering if
the French mind today does not go back to those stirring
Colonial times when the “ ragged provincials” were fight
ing the trained regulars, “ the proud red coats,” and
when France stepped in, after a long series of set backs,
just ifi time to help us when help was needed most.
A rereading of the French participation in our War
of Independence furnishes plenty of material upon which
to wax sentimental in this day. No matter what the pur
pose back of it let us acknowledge that without France’s
assistance there would "have been no Yorktown and that
without the capturing or surrendering of Cornwallis there
would have been no peace on our own terms.
It would seem that the close relationship, traditional
as it is, between France and the United States would lead
us to some better conclusion to the present debt parley
than one of uncertainty and unfriendliness.
The story of the two nations’ sympathetic under
standing for each other was first related in the days of
our birth and it has been added to in the generations
since. We have done our share. What is there about it all
that prevents*a friendly solution of the debt!
Perhaps, we have here the familiar conclusion of all
debts. Debts make enemies. Debts break friendships of
a lifetime and smear relationships of the generations. No
matter. We should understand, in this instance, another’s
point of view.
THE TROUBLE AT WASHINGTON
In the memoirs of the late Vice President Marshall
mention is made, in rather an amusing vein, of the pork
barrel or the old way of appropriating moneys for pet
schemes.
Mr. Marshall refers to the common belief that if a
man steals enough he can go scot-free; that it is only the
moderate thief who ever gets into trouble. “ And as I
watched the appropriations during eight years in the
Senate of the United Slates I concluded that that cause
was utterly foolish which came asking less than half a
million dollars. Small items were scrutinized with a mic
roscope and large ones were taken as a matter of fa ct.”
And then he recalled three hours of discussion over
an item of $17.50 in an appropriation bill made to a Gov
ernment employe, who had been injured, and the utter
lack of protest over the following item of $250,000 “ to
investigate and eradicate -something that had already
been investigated, but not eradicated.
Mr. Marshall probably exaggerates, yet th ere’is
plenty enough evidence to justify the statement. Happily,
there has been some improvement in the making of appro
priations. The system is gradually being refined, hut
therein lies most of the trouble with the way our Govern
ment money is parcelled out. Politics, which isn’t parti
cularly interested in the small item that is not hacked by
votes, is vitally interested in the item that has the votes.
The sooner we get entirely a way from that system
the quicker will we Rave for the people the hundreds of
millions of dollars the politicians well know how to lop off
the tax bills.
PASS A LAW - MORS TAXES
Few of us bavc any idea of the separate taxes we pay
for city, connty and state government; license taxes of
j t a r in n s k in d » , c o r p o r ation taxoa, taxes on insuraneo, fees
and other charges which are nothing more nor less than
taxes.
The majority of all new law« {Missed (and there are
thousands), require additional sums for enforcement. As
an example of how a piece of legislation causes expense,
take the headlight law passed by the last Oregon logisla-
ture. Iturequires certain headlight adjustments for which
there in a minimum charge of 75 cents. As a matter of
fact, in order to comply with the law, the traffic depart
ment records show that the average cost for 1,000 cars was
$2.07, while numerous individual charges run as high as
$5, $6 or $8.
The net result of the law is that it immediately took
some $500,000 in fees (taxes from the automobile owners
o f Oregon and created a new permanent minimum ta v o f
75 cents on each owner for having his lights tested.
The total o f registration fees collected from the 202,- |
occasion warrants it.
Her Heck says:
gits awful thin on
less there is a wad
back It up."
« « » » a n n
The aborigines of Australia
eat moths, so would make fine
watchmen in overcoat factories.
"Aristocracy
the ribs un
The sun’s age Is put at about
o' money to five million years, but then it
goes to bed very early every
t t a a a
night.
Men can’t keep matehea any
better than women can keep
hairpins.
Great Mothers
Individually Barnhart, Carey pinches. Ooslln also has bad aer-
and Cuyler are superior to Oos-’ oral rnn-lns with Buck Harris,
lln, McNeely and1 rice, particularly manager of the club, and he may
by reason of thalr speed and hit- not be the heat of team players,
ting bat as a combination on the
The Washington outfield can
defense that Washington outfield play w ith more assurance and
does not suffer by comparison. It'ra n g e farther and wider on the
is not as briUlant as. the infield
but It hae don? Its part in win
ning two pennants.
The Pittsburgh outfield is the
fastest In baseball both on the
defense and on the offense.
1 Cuyler Is one of the coming
stars of the game. He Is a star
now but he should develop into
one of the great outfielders of all
Times.
He covers' his territory
well, he is a strong hitter and the
During the time that ahe be
came the mother of a daughter,
and three sons, Mtetress Adams
spun, wove, knitted stockings
for ker family, looked after
their little farm,
entertained
people of merit, and wrote let
ters. W hile her husband, John
Adame,
was
attending
the
Colonial Congress In Phlladel-i
phia during the American Revo-'
lutlou, her long evenings, brok-l
en only by the sound of th e ,
storm on the ocean or the en
emy’s artillery, were lonesome
and melancholy.
She had the
sole care of her little brood bat
Phone
OVERLAND
Shoe Stoop
Frait-Ola-Nnt
Sounds good, looks good, aad is good to the
last crumb. Contains fruit, nut oils, and nuts.
Not overburdened with fruit and nuta, but juat
enough to give it that rich, nutty flavor. Largo
loaves, 15c.
THE FRANKLIN BAKERY
When You
WE ARE WONDERING
Want Meats
Never give a man a hat for à
wedding present. A week or so
later It will be entirely too large.
W e Deliver
Liquor | is often considered ah'
ABIGAIL SMITH ADAMS
a substitute for love.
Mother of John Quincy Adams. (Copyright, 1926, NBA Service,
Sixth President of the United
Inc.)
States
By MARY GREER CONKLIN
Abigail Adams la the only
woman who ever attained the
distinction of being both wife
and mother e l a President of the
United States.
Nor was she
tired with this ambition at an
early age. She was quite along
in ' Hfe when she began syste
matically to educate
herself.
Every scintilla of aelf-culture
was eagerly absorbed. She put
to the test the tradition that
“people are the best encyclo-
pedias,” for much of her know
ledge waa acquired from the
society of learned folk and from
conversation with them.
8be
was a great reader and a vol
uminous letter writer. Her let
ters pulse with life and feeling
while the stilted
plays
and
poems of her professional friend,
Mercy Warren, are dust-worn
and live only In the reflected
glory of Abigail Adams.
Protect Your
Booths '
Combination aad the same holds1 the smartest player In baseball.
tgood with reference to the Put-] but he Is a bard k ltta r although
field. The reanoa Is found above.I he doesn’t always deliver In the!
We can’t have "good times”
DONATIONS
No donations to charities or otherwise will be made In advertls again until pie la reduced to
ing or job printing—our contributions will be in cash.
five cents the cut.
while others will watt until the
LONDON, 0«t.
P .)—
Undismayed by the fata of thp
Shenandoah,the British A ir Min
istry la rnahing through the work
of reconstructing tbs Zepplln
R-Sl and trial, flights will be
made with it early in October.
The R -8 I was badly damaged
last April when It was wrenched
from Its mooring mast and blown
out to sue In uu anoldent similar
Fourth Street
Meat Market
WHY
Ashland People Do N ot Lay in Their
WINTER SUPPLY OF FUEL EARLY
Dry Fuel May Be S c a m Thia Winter
COAL
WOOD
BLOX
CARSON-FOWLER LBR. CO
In the Heart of Town
05152712
Babcock’s Gift
Shoppe
N EW YORK, Oct. 7— (U. P .)—
During the Labor Day double-
header, when the Washington
Senator* were embalming the
hopes of the Philadelphia Athletes
the Washington outfield threw out
four runners at the plate and won
both games.
r i
Philadelphia critics roasted the
Athletio player for stupid
running but if they had known
the real reason they would have
marvelled at tl|e brains and the
daring of the Washington defense.
One of the umpires who work
ed In the game told the writer
what happened on the field and
he said it was the smartest and
boldest piece of work he had seen
in years of experience.
THE “MARKET-PLACE" OF
Hand
Engraved
Moradabad
Brassware
We invite your inspection
of our display.
Check Seal Electrical
Equipment Sold by
EXPERIENCE
Experience with many lines of business
and the trained financial judgment of years
are gathered here for your service and con
venience.
We invite you to make free use of the facil
ities which this bank has to offer you.
397 E. Main - Phone 167
Murphy Electric Go.
The Citizens Bank
of Ashland
»
Ashland, Oregon
Mr. Fruit Grower
If You Want More
And Better Fruit
For* Next Season
Investigate the Use of
Sulphate of Ammonia
276 to 282 per ton for delivery
now— Also a fresh supply of
the best and cheapest.
Bordeaux — Mixture
Is Creating the Possibility of Having Things
JUB ARNING how to save dollars is the foundation
of a possibility.
WHEN you save as much as you can;
At Price* That W ill Please You
W HEN yon educate yourself for greater thing«;
Ashland Fruit A Produce
Association
W HEN you keep track of the small things and
have a bank account to do it with, yon will ac
complish whatever yon set out to do.
USE our bank for that purpose.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
SUIT SALE
Ashland, Oregon.
For th en isn’t a man, whatever be his
p o o p , who isn'i proud to be s member
GOING FINE!
It’s Time to Think About Your
Christmas Portrait
Miller’s Toggery
“Hab-a-dash-!nn”
pa^TSSWAL PtiXNOSHir n something
* which most men cherish.
D f lR b lf lG S T U D IO
For Portraits That Please
Some n m indicate it by* pm —others
would prefer a watch eharm or ring.
Whichever is his choice, it will be
CHAS. A. WHITE
ENDERTS BLOÇK