Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 24, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    AWUWt hitti
H LAND
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
lliM W ned Every Evening E scept Snndny
THE
ASHLAND
PRINTING
.......................Edito
Mt R. Creer
..........
n^rge Madden Green ...
. R.‘ Jackson
........
FFICIAL CITY PAPER
•'-.-.tcred at the
I
Business Manage
..... .. City Edito
...... Telephone 3
Ashland, Oregon Fostottl«-* as
ttabarriptioa Price, Ik-llvcr.-.
ne Monti} .
hree Mont
l< Months
ne Year .
Mail und Rural Routes
«'tie Month ----
i I've Months
>x Months -
S ingle insertion, per inch .........
Yearl]
i irst insertion, per 8 point line
AND
ard of Thanks ..
bltuaries, per line
WHAT CONSTITUTES
ADVERTIHING
DONATIONS
No donations to charities or otherwise
or job printing—our contributions will
OCTOBER 24, Jl«5
THINK OF THE HARVEST;—Whatsoe
«ball he also reap. Galatians 6:7.
PRAYER: — Dear Ixrrd, we thank tin
-i e sow seed that assures us a good harvest.
1 ’iinton Baughman,
i iiief, Fire Department,
Ashland, Ore.,
How much easier it is to point
error
truth!
The distinguishing feature of
modern society Is too much pow­
der and too little frock.
The only time this country
gets a chance to go ahead Is
when Congress is not in session.
A man’s confidence in human
nature will last longer if he ex­
ercises great eare In placing It
Well, the building permit ordinance, got over nt last,
No theory is more defective
ost forgotten, the matter would probably have been than the proposition that the
owwl f<»r H tim e at least, if you had not reminded the husband is head of the falWIy.
Nearly every woman is smart
enough to see through a man,
but sbe shows stupidity when
she lets him know it.
What big
Hez Heck says
fish you kin see when you ain't
,vns eonvmceti long ago
iv
got a pole with you!”
With every new building going up in the city, no 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8
matter Whether it is within the fire limits or not, under
•otug a strict inspection, n.uth of the fire loss of the
city will l>e done away with.
I also lio,>e the council gives you the additional help
-.-ou need in your department, in order that you may
carry out your plan of a house to house inspection, Clint,
-’or I believe it is a very good idea. Such an inspection
Most of us are mad at the
would do away with two thirds of the fires, which now
world Just because there aren't
may be attributed to carelessness.
enough first prizes for all of
Yours truly,
Auntie Ashlnnd.
TQM.
sm s
SAYS
Big tobacco warehouse col­
lapsed In Danville. Va.. the to­
bacco not being strong enough
to hold It up.
city are to he congratulated ii|M»n obtaining your consent
io fill the unexpired term of Mr. Detrick, who resigned a
lew weeks ago. I do not believe a better selection could
have been jiossihle, and Mayor Johnson has shown much
wisdom in obtaining you.
For years you have been known as a public spirited
• •itizen of Ashland, a man who has always had the good of
7 he city close to his heart. Now, you are to have an op­
portunity to bring to the front some of your views on
ihe betterment of the city, and I am positive you will
have some good ones.
Mr. Detrick was a jiowerful member of the council,
nnd it required a forceful man to succeed him and to
carry on his work. I believe you are just that man, and
/a lly capable of carrying out everything Mr. Detrick
had under way, in addition to bringing your own idens
into action.
Sincerely yours,
, Auntie Ashlund.
Directors, Chamber of Commerce,
.Lshland, Oregon,
Dear Boys:
I believe yon fellows are making a big mistake by
deciding not to hold the Winter Fair here again thfA
r«ason, for you are takng from Ashland her last annual
event which brings |ieople into the city. From now on, it
Js just the everyday attractions which will bring the j»eo-
yde in.
First, the annual Roundup was Hit out, but we still
had other events. Finally this year it wan decided to do
away with the Fourth of July celebration. Although many
were not in favor of this move, they kept silent, and ns
a result their businesses suffered a resultnnt silencing of
the cash registers. But we still had with us the Winter
Fair.
Now, that is done away with, leaving us absolutely
------------------------- ------------------------------------- -j
It is my I iojhj , and the hope of many others interest­
ed in Aahland, that you will reconsider your action.
Yours trulv,
Auntie Ashland.
lr. Carl J. Brommer,
[anager, Fruit and Produce A sh ' d
shland. Ore.,
The cooperation offered by yon and vour organiza-
n and other organizations in Ashland should do much
build up the poultry industry in this section. If only
ne aqtion can lie obtained from the farmers themaelves
1 hr.pjicn to know the Petaluma country fairly well,
ihg lived in that vicinity for several years. The peo-
tliqrp Arc no more intelligent, have no more industry
no wo«« natural advantages than we enjoy here, yet
■oixamapus ■
ASHLAND
flower SHOP
Great Mothers
8 polut line
••All future events^ where an admission charge is made or a
oiler-tlon taken Is Advertising.''
_
No disc, unt will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
v u at his hack, but ba aavar | to sacrifica
usad it. Persuasion and adnaa- j bava occupt«
tlon were always J»la method, the fsn*odota
How a ma^ could do the things tlculaily
d<
that Or. Gorgas did and not start Hanrji^ Clay
an insurrectlpit waa. a marrar, statesman ir i
We have just received a
it was in Itself a tributa to the in the attract
large shipment of tha
tact and geniality which vfars known. Ona
leading varieties. October
perhaps his most useful traits, door whan
and
'November are
, -
The circumstance that his name In for n call,
was Oorgas somewhat helped; dark and An
Bert-Mouths to Plant
the natirea detected Spanish when the v
qualities in bis manner.
Hfc* put Ms arm' r
mildness, his consideration, his her. Greatly1
Our stock/ of perenaials is
gentleness his willingness «1- to the drawfi
complete.
ways to smooth the path to a Calhoun waa
difficult V undertaking ware an paper. “Ok,
inheritance from his remote an- by the great
cestors. At any rate the Span- claimed.
iards looked upon Oeneral Gor­
Of aach finely brad fiber was
ges as one of themaelves. He the mother of the man whose
F 1 », • ~ “
» r ‘
.
Auntie Ashland.
was resilient to every human be­ tact and gentleness, quite as
Lithia Springs Hotel
ing, a man to whom human asso­ much ns his intellect, were re­
ciation was the greatest joy in sponsible tor an extrema of ac­
Building
ALICS JO Y C i IN*TNI
life. He accomplished his ends complishment honored by Orest
LITTLE FRENCH Gl WZ
PHONE 120
by persuasion, by good humor, Britain when tha British carried
A PARAMOUNT PtCTVTC
and by a never dying patience. him ‘under military escort to St.
AT THE VINING THEATRE
Any other means might easily Paul's, after hts great Ufa's work
was done. where Ms remains, be­ BUNDAY OXLY.
have engendered hostility.
' And where did this extra­ fore being brought to Arlington,
ordinary gentle and able man wrapped in the stars and stripes,
AMELIA GAYLE
Shovlln
Hlxen company
get hia temperament and his lay In state with' Nelson and
Mother of Major Oeneral Gorgas.
■P« accent but from his extra­ Wellington and all tha mighty
ordinary gentle and able mother, host of England's heroes— tha
By MARY GREER CONKLIN Amelia Gqyle of the silvery highest honor that Britain could
One day General M. Weavor voice? She was the daughter of pay a distinguished American.
was walking down Connecticut a governor of Alabama from (Copyright, 1926, by Mary Oreer
Avenue In Washington D. C.. 1231 to 1836 and. afterwards a Conklin, (syndicate), Orest Brit­
with his little granddaughter. member of Congress. As a glr! ain rights reserved. Reprodnc-
They met General Gorgas. then ska ha<Tearned credit as hostess tlon forbidden.)
at the height of his -fame.. “Per- of her father’s house in Wash­
sls,” Bald the general to the ington. Burton Jesse Hendrick, TUGBOAT
little girl, “this is General Gor­ in his entrancing biography of
SEATTLE, Oct 28— (U. P . ) _
gas, one of our great men.” “No Oeneral Oorgaa says of her:
Are Here. Plant Now.
my child," said General Gorgas. “Blight In frame, graceful and The heroic action of J. L De
Long,
master
of
the
tugboat
Golden
Spur Daffodils,
quiet,
she
had
yet
a
commanding
in his soft accents, "not a great
man; merely one who is trying presence— the kind that In­ Chema, early today saved the Hyacinths and Tulips in
to follow In the footsteps of a stinctively though unobtrusively life of Miss Ellen Johnson, 21,
all shades and varieties.
great man—Walter Reed." Ur. becomes the eehter of things on after the girl had slipped over­
Oorgas’s great triumph wsb the entering a room. From a tech­ board from th^ deck of the tug
Paper W hite ¡Narcissus,
practical application of the dis­ nical standpoint Amelia waa not Kathadlu, at a pier here.
China Lillies
coveries of Dr. Walter Reed and beautiful, but her abundance of
his cc-laborers. The knowledge jet-black hair, her great deep
Seeds of All Kinds
of the scientific facts concerning brown eyes, and her extremely
the cause of yellow fever would mobile features had a sympathet­
have beeh of no value to the ic and impelling quality that
world without the working of harmonized well with her deli­
General Gorgas’s practical mind. cate and musical voice. The ee>
When Doctors Reed and Carter kential element in her qharm was
maintained that yellow fever was that Amelia never ruffled any­
Dyeing Works
transmitted by the Stegmyia one; tact is the quality which
35FirrtSL
mosquito, General Gorgas re­ all her intimates chiefly em­
phasised.
She
was
one
of
those
plied.
“Very well, we shall
then annihilate the Stegmyia •women born to rule, but to rule
mosquito
The world smiled. through gentleness of manner
How accomplish such a feat? and Intention. Her mind posses­
How kill mosquitoes in such sed the quality of boundless pa­
swarms in the tropics? But now. tience and persistence— persis­
the world knows how this quiet tence of the kind that never Ir­
Let us Figure W ith You on Your
man stamped out the Stegmyia ritates and never causes pain,
mosquitoes and with them yel­ but, almost as unconsciously to
low fever,— first In Havanna and Itself as to others, pursues the ap­
W ith a ’ .'
then In Panama, making possible pointed course."
Amelia and her father lived
the building of the great canal.
M. Le Blanc said to M. De Los- for everal years In the same
sepa, “if you try to build this -house in Washington with Mr.
Wo have a splendid proposition to offer you. Have
canal there will not be enough John C. Calhoun. He was then
trees in the Isthmus to make nearing seventy, Amelia . was
jhst ordered n car of roofing, shipped direct from
crosses for the graves of your twenty; yet the two became fast
Others as Low as $1.00
laborers.”
So matters stood friends and inseparable compan­
when the Americans took over ions. She never wearied relating
from the French the finishing how Mr. Calhoun, one evening
of the canal.
Such was the when ' they passed the White
monster yellow fever whose de­ House, -pointed his long bony
In the Heart of Town
struction became the chief duty finger at the structure and said;
“Amelia, if I had been willing
of General Gorgas.
The brigand Stegmyia m<w-
nultoe« multiplied only In ar­
tificial water receptacles In and
about houses; never In natural^
pools of water In the ground.;
How Invade the houses of Cen-'
tral American Spaniards; how
convince them— especially since i
the natives were Immune frontJ
Yellow fever which attacked only
the foreigners In their midst?
General Gorgas had the power
of commanding, of Imposing
339 E. Main Street
fines,
of Imprisoning.
The
whole United States Government
they have built up the greatest poultry1 adetica in the
world. And they did it largely through the cooperation
and aid given them by organizations such as yours. * j
In the beginping, the interesting of the farmers in
the poultry industry-was just as difficult as it isjtere.
They did not know the husinoss, and were'loath to jhave
the lines they were following. However, much urging on
the part of industrial houses, banks and other concerns
in the city, finally got them into the poultry game. They
prospered and made money, and more men entered the
business. From that time on, it was simply a matter of
furnishing laud for the poultrymen, and the Success of-
tlie idea was assured. •
W e can do the same thing here, and the encourage­
ment you are giving those who would'enter the poultry
game is good to see. Keep it iw Carl.
• «ne Year __
v'ne Insertion a week ...........
•i wo insertions a week .......... •
j aily insertion ............................ Miscellaneous A d ve rtisin g
Rates for Legal and
«MH«
Women wear smart clothes.
Fall hats are smart, Takes a
smart man to make enough
money to buy one.
In looking Into this airplane
trouble in Washington It Btrikeg
us they looked down Instead
of up.
Trouble with being a rich man
Is when the phone rings yon
think your son has been jailed
for speeding.
Germany, they are using
as a substitute for Jet.
who wants a substitute for
We want one for coal.
of the World
HOLLAND
Draperies and
ROOFING
ROOFING
BUILT-UP ROOF
Johns-Manville Guarantee
McNAIR
BROS.
CARSON-FOWLER LBR. GO.
re That Will
Please
Industries
gee’s Shoe Shop
Grow and improvements follow only when the yol
lime of business shows an increase.
A Bigger Job Than She Anticipated
Your Printing
Will help The Tidings Print Shop to grow and im­
prove, thus enabling us to give Ashland printing
purchasers better service.
No Matter What
Printing You Need
The Tidings will be glad to have the opportunity
to show that its shop can handle it, satisfactorily.
5HWX.
& SEPAíZÁfe OH'
v
“Buy it in Ashland”
Is a mighty good motto, whether it is groceries,
doll »»ng printing -or what not,
—— *------ — —
Our represenative will be glad to call
assist in laying out your printing.
Tidings Print Shop
A
’
r,
Phone 39
Ashland
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j