Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 21, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    f
Z
M il O t t
A SH LA N D
D A IL Y
led, ha hMl
T ID IN G S
Great ¡gathers
of the World
(KatabUafced la 1ST«>
Vabl^lMd Kvery Evening Except feinday by
THE u ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
ANO
•V* » •
i
--------------------------
.................... Edito I
Buslneus Manege |
M ARTHA B ULLQpH, his mother,
.......... City Editor:
and ANNE B V I^ p C H , bis spnt.
•r. R. Jad-foa^.......... —.
Telephone 39
O F F IC IA L c m
PA l'B R
................ V
The two mothers Of th¿ Lato
~ |i
President Rooeevelt.
'to le red nt th e Anhlanrt, Oregon Puetofflee aa Second CTawt Mall Matte
The more honesty a man has,
EnberripUon P rice, D elivered in City
•X k M o n th .................................... .......................... ............. . : "
’
the leee he« puts It on exhibition. By MARY GREER CONKLIN
'three Months ................. ...... ....... -.......... .— ...... - ....................
—.- -O'------
When the Roosevelt family
six Months ........................ .................... -............................ .......
-’ 6(.
Every religion teaches some physician wrote in his case-hook
«»«e Year ..;........ »
........................... .— •— — ---------- ----------------
truths, hut no religion teaches “ Theodore RooaeTelt, a bright,
By Mail and Rural R outes
I .65
all.
precocious boy, aged twelve.“ he
One Month ........ ..................... - ................................. ...............
1.95
remarked to bin partner, “he
rh'-ee Months .............................- ................... ......................
3 .GO
Enjoy life while you have it. ought to make hla. mark but for
six Months ........... .-........ - .....................................................
6 .GO
«Mi».Year .......... ................... .............................. —.................
for when you die you can’t take the difficulty that be has a rich
it with yon.
father.’’
Amóne the many
DISPLAY A DVERTISING BATES
• -------»-------
3 .30
youth« born to wealth about
pifíele insertion, per inch
Any fool can buy advertising, 1868, Theodore Roosevelt gained
Yeariy Contracts
but nothing short of genius can the moat conspicpoua place In
C ze insertion a week .................................................................
' get it gratuitously.
the New World democracy. Hls
Tw o Insertions a week i........... .................... ............-.........................
-----—o—.—
twenty-fonr predecessors In the
Daily tnse^ ’t“ || for
and M iseellaneons Adverthtlag
Traffic cops and wives are presidency were oeuntry or vil­
First Insertion, per 8 point lin e ................................. ...................
about the only authorities the lage lad«; ho was the Drat city
Each subsequent insertion, 8 point line ......................................
average man reaped!» today.
boy to attain Uutt .goal. He did
Card of Thanks ..............—
.......-.............. .............................
— o-------
not need to toll In the wilder­
O bituaries, per l i n e .......... .............................. ......................... ..........
The most- popular way to get ness, lik e Washington In hls
W H IT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
rich la to take anything you see youth; he did not need to walk
.-A„ future events, where an admission charge la made or a
when no one la around to bear many miles to get a book to
collection taken is Advertising.”
witness
against you.
read, like Abraham*-Lineoln. Be­
No dlsccnnt will be allowed Religious or Ilenevolent Orders.
------- o-------
cause nine times out of ten ad­
Hex Heck says: “To be a fam- versity and privation have bepn
DONATIONS
~
4 Ml.
No donations to charities or otherwise w ill be mad* in advett a oils doctor, all you need do is ■ the making of the world’s fore­
1ng or Job printing—our contributions will he In < a«l>-
___ charge ten times more than your most men,
the
boyhood of
services is worth— and git it.” Theadore Roosevelt was beset
« t t t t g S R t t t t t t » »
with disadvantages such as few
OCTOBER 3 1 , 1038
TRUST H IM ALW AYS:—Commit thy way unto the Lord, trust
have overcome. As great a dis­
a” ° P R A Y E R ^-O m0o d % h o u art our strong salvation! We fear no
advantage, too, was hls ill health.
From early Infancy he had to
battle with asthma; but In this
Thou art our Light and our Deliverance.
—•—
battle he had the loving help of
gentle parents.
On the back
TROUBLE MAKERS STILL ACTIVE
porch of their Twentieth Street
Of course there will he mutual suspicious' arise on
home In New York City they fit­
l,oth side». It will ho the duty of the higher ,mn<U-r
ted ftp a gymnasium; and when
statesmui, of both Franco and Germany to figl't ngninnt
When a man rests on his the long sleepless nights came,
little Theodore’s mother or aunt
these suspicious nnd against le g ib le aggressions that laurels it crushes them.
took the invalid boy in her
will give substance to them.
In Anniston, Ala., a man arms while hls father drove with
For instance, just at this time, there is a story’ spread­
weighs 50,000 pounds. But It Is them in the free open air to find
ing in France that Germans, in order to heat the Dawes iron pipe, aud he does it every a place where the child could
agreement, are diverting its traffic from rail lines to day.
breath.
Martha Bulloch and her sis­
motor svstems. This may not lie true. If it is true, it
ter
Anne Bulloch were of a
It
is.
doubly
hard
to
-bear
your
thonld find its remedy in voluntary’ German action, betore
Their
cross when it Is caused by some notable Georgia family.
the Allies have any chance to raise the issue of as one
great
grandfather, , Archibald
friend double crossing yotr.
o f good faith between Germany and the other nations.
Bulloch, wsg tl
The Duwes agreement provides for certain definite
Great oaks from little acorns of tha state at the
appropriation of ra*i income foM lie use of the government grow, and their friends criticise American Rpvolutio.
in settling its war debts. I t Zs e m s it does not provide them for .not being other kinds ter» were gracious,
ern women, delightful coihpan
similarly for a diversion of motor profits. This would of trees.
ions beloved by ska^vbodv.< Mr.
permit Germany to divert to a less taxed routine its
All the optimists are not dead. Roosevdlt In his autobiography
traffic, as a means of escaping, for a time at least, carry- Someone stole 12 electric; fans in dscribes hls mother as entirely
“ unreconstructed” to the day of
• ig out the Dawes payments. The problem is much the St. Louis In October.
----------
' her death, and relates that to­
same as that involved in the depreciation of the mftrk.
l l the man who stole a dozen ' ward the close of the Civil War,
Germany about balanced the advantages and disadvan­ electric fans In St. Louis Is | though a very small boy, he grew
tages of the ii.:.-k. amo.ig her own people. But the grad­ caught he will be sent to th e ; to have a partial but alert under-
ual discounting of t ie mark was a means of repudiating cooler.-------------------------------------------- standing of the fact that the
family were not one In their
all the Gt .m..n debt expressed in terms of marks held
views about that conflict, his
by-foreign residents.
»
TIDINGS WANT AD& BELL father being a strong Lincoln
Similarly, there will doubtless appear among French ANYTHING.
republican; and once when he
v irn
v.
t
sJ— —
Dart E . O tti»
Ylaorge H idden Oreen ...
-MÒSES'-
A
>1
ft*-.
TO M
SIMS
SAYS
been wrong«4
by maternal discipline durlpg
the day, .bs.- attempted vengeance
a t evenln* «revet» by pleading
fervently (as kuceees
of -the
Union
arnMaa.
Hie
nu#k»*r.
blessed witb a strong sense of
humor, waa amused and dig net
punish bins.« She warned ' him,
however, bat to repeat the of­
fense under penalty of his fath­
er's being. Informed.
Martha
Bulloch prayed w ith bar chil­
dren In the evening; morning
nrayera Were with their father.
“I - epeak-for-you-spd-tile-cubby-
hole-too,’’ cried the children in
unison each morning -as their
father came down the stairs. The
place between father and the
arm of the sofa they called tbe
' ‘cabby-hole’’; and the child that
got that seat while the Bible
wee being read was retarded as
specially favored. “
These fortunate children had
a second mother, their Aunt
Anne, who wes as devoted to
them aa was their own mother.
They were equally devoted to
her In return.
Although the
Roosevelt family bed a gover­
ness, hls adoring Aunt Anne
taught
the Invalid
Theodore
regularly:
He was too nervous
and exoitable to be trusted to
strangers.
She entertained the
children for hours with tales of
life on the Georgia plantations;
Of hunting, fox, deer, possum
and wlld-cat; of the long tailed
driving and riding horses, and
qf the queer goings-on in the
negro quarters.
She knew ' all
the
“ Br'er
Ra,bblt”
stories.
Theodore’s unde, Robert Roose­
velt, took them down from her
dictation and had them publish­
ed in Harper's Magazine, where
they fell flat years before s
genius roes In “ Uncle Remus'*
REAL OXFORDS
t
That Give
REAL
SERVICE
OVERLAND
Shoe Shop
who a 0 e tbe «tories immortal.
W ith ’what le rin t discretion
hie mother’ anf sent encouraged
the prococloas child In a be^t
that 1st or made him one of
the flsmons aatur^Msts of tho
world!
He tells ns about the
first d»y he started on h lj
career as sopllglet. In the mar
ket hp saw 'a dead seal laid out
on a elab. Hls previous know­
ledge of seals was from Mayne
Reed’s books of adventure. The
child haunted the market day
after day, measuring that seal
and writing a natural history
of hls own. * He had vague as­
pirations of poseesaitiK tbs dead
seal, and finally did get the
seal’s skull with which he and
hla cousins promptly started
what they ambitiously called
“The Roosevelt Museum of Nat­
ural H ls to jf.”
The children's
collections were at first kept in
Theodore’s room until open re­
bellion of the housemaid led hla
mother to move the collection
decisively but lovingly to a book
case In the buck hall upstairs;
for hls father, mother and auntj
encouraged him warmly in hls
soologlcal aspirations, as they
did la everything which would
Interest and develop him.
\ ’
When one Contemplates hls
seal’s skull and child’s natural
history one understands the first
occupation to which Theodore
Roosevelt was attracted after
he retired from the presidency
when within two weeks he was
on his way to Africa to collect
specimens for the Smithsonian
Institute and gather material for
New Edi son
aph
PhonogTap
the only one
that will play
all makes of
Records without
injury to tho
record
Palmer Piano
House
b t l famous book “African Gañid, principal
Trails.** When one contemplates Is to formulate dsflnlt^ plans
tha picture of Utils Theodors for devplopmsM
«ater
Roosevelt in the “cubby-hole” sourl river ap a
listening to the Bible, -one under- transportation.
Secretary of Commeree Her­
stands why be had a more per-
bert
Hocvdr ls scheduled for
-eonal acquaintance with Ananias
than forty-flvb out of every fifty tbe principal address which will
editors in the United 8Utes when deal with the benefits and meth­
President
Roosevelt
launched ods of freight shipments on
hie famous "Ananias Club” start­ water routes.
Menirfactnresa. hklppsrs and
ing with himself as the first
representatives of . faympre’ or­
lying member seeking reform.
(Copyright, 1125, by Mery Oreer ganizations who would ba di­
Conklin. (Syndicate) Great Brit­ rectly benefltted by extensive
ain rights reserved.
Reproduc­ navigation of Ute Missouri river
tion forbidden.
, \ are here to attend the meeting.
»
"Yes, Somewhere, Saasebody!’*
from
tbe day you're horn on
HOOVER TO ADDRESS
MISSOURI MEETING through life— this one1 thing,
‘Somewhere
somebody
wants
your photographic portrait!”—
KANSAS C ITY, Mo., Oct. 29—
Studio Ashland. Expert Service.
(U. P .)— Sepres of representa­
•9 -tl
tives from Middle West States
gathered here today, for a round
table conference oh problems
READ THE TIDING!».
of river transportation.
The
Women Be Wise
Keep
A
Bank
Account
MANY WOMEN keep too much money in their
homes «abject to theft.
BESIDES, nearly every day you read of lost or
stolen purses containing large amounts of money.
ALL of this can be prevented by having a checking
acoonnt with this bank.
EACH CHEOfr SHOWS:
—-The Date
—The Amount
—Whom Paid To
YOU will have a receipt and a record showing all
of your transactions.
YOU will appreciate more than once having such
an easy system for the things that yonr money goes
for.
FIRST N A TIO N A I
BANK
Ashland, Oregon
.and even among British-statesmen, advisors who will be
overly suspicious of German good faith.
The common sense of all these leaders should he con­
centrated on assuring to each other the maintenance -of
the high level of peace expectancy on which the Locarno
agreements are founded.
GREECE OPENS TREE PORT
News writers note as “ astute” the voluntarjjaction
of the Greek government in creating a free ¿t>ne at
Saloniki. This is a step by which the other Balkan states
will be afforded a chance to get in goods, through the
Aegean,.even though they do not have seaixirts. Bulgaria
and Serbia and Rumania have no easy access to the east
em part of the Mediterranean. This will give them a
contact, and it will not hurt Greece. S o Greece can afford
to lx* generous and will probably profit^
It is very likely that,.even without any such super
state in Europe as some observers in this country seem
to dread, for Europe, there will grow up a more direct
recognition of the useful interdependency of the parts of
Euro|>e. If Greece, which has, notably, not been any less
selfish than other governments, can see an advantage in
offering something to Serbia and Bulgarin for nothing,
it is possible that other nations may become more far­
sighted than they have been.
- ó
New Barber S |op
4'
Opens
« .it
in the Ashland Hotel Bldg.
Hundreds Have Bought
CLAUDE A. SAUNDERS
New Hundreds are say­
ing (tl W a n t That Star! I f f
Three Chairs
KNOWLEDGE OP PUBLIC WORTH»
President Coolidge, who knows well the value of
money, and is not afraid to apply that knowledge to the
public service, is going to open up a regulation “ White
House Season” wxm, with the cooperation and consent
o f his wife. There will be a social secretary and every­
thing.
'
President Coolidge is quite indifferent to “ society”
in the common sence. But he knows that men, and women,
who know each other, are very apt to be of the most use
to each other. Aud so men and women in Washington
whose knowledge of each other is to be of service to each
other, will he given a better chance io come in contact
through M'hite l i o n * functions.
HOLIDAY GOODS NOW
ARRIVING
COME IN AND LOOK THEM OVER
D A R L IN G ST U D IO
Lithia Springs Hotel Building
ROOFING
7 ..
O N every side you find enthusiasm N o stopping the wide-spread recog-
for Star—the big, hearty praise of nition of Star value—every day the
Star owners, or the excited antici- Star Million Dollar Motor verifies
pation of those hundreds about to the owners’ good judg-namr hy turn-
buy Stars. “I want that Starf is a ing in hundreds and hundreds of
statement you hear more and more! miles of faultless perfnrmy wr» That’s
V alu e—real practical, ex clu siv e ^hy every Star owner will tell you,
value features—stands back of this “You can’t go wrong on the power-
great wave of Star Car popularity, kil Star!”
Star has fought its way to the top on
r r f f
unusual merits N ow Star reaps the O p p o r t u n i t y ^ y o u p a y o n ly a s
deserved approval of motorists who muck as you desire under the gen-
know what to look for—owners who erous, history-making terms of the
now
buy
ivith*previous
experience S t a y
nnw h
nv A
z irh ------ ------------------------
C e rtific a te S a ve a n d
to.guidte and to in fln a n r o
EamPiM
a.
‘ • '■
Vi
u 1
r
All New Equipment — Your Patronage Solicited
VOLSTEAD ACT REAPPIRMED
The supreme court of the United States, after five
years of operation, has again affirmed the constitional-
ity of the Volstead act.
This surely ought to l»e sufficient, on this point.
The Volstead act now, if it is to be attacked at all,
should lie an issue in Congress, not in the courts.
The Volstead act iR a measure for carrying out prac­
tically the principle of the eighteenth amendment. It
can honestly lx? amended only in the light of expressing
the purpose of the eighteenth amendment
The eighteenth amendment puts a ban on the bever­
age use of liquors that “ intoxicate.” Any pnr|X)se to
change the terms of the Volstead act, must be consistent
on that one point.
Ko far there has lieen no attack on the Volstead act
ex cept by th ose who want to have legaliae d sale of li
quors that do intoxicate.
The Volstead act ahould he sustained, nnd if anything
Strengthened, not weakened.
*
.-I
i
ROOFING
Let us Figure With You on Yonr
BUILT-UP ROOF
— n
With a
-
Johns-Manville Guarantee
•
'
■ c •
We have n splendid proposition to offer you. HnVO
jnRt ordered a car of roofing, shipped direct from
the factory.
*
•
CARSON-FOWLER LBR. GO,
I d tlie Heart of T ow n'
A t the New Reduced Prices
Hamaker Motor Co.
Dealer
Ashland, Oregon
z