my W Published »very Evening Except tawday by TeaHy Contrasts -• v/Do insertion s btbv B e Jfid i t or Two llsertions a week •»••• -••» • »es*ee*«»ss>e»e*»««»e ••••••«•> R. Greer ......__ .........Business Manager Dally insertion arge Madden Green ...... ........... '............ City Editor R. Jackson — ---- ------- ,o r. **9tal “ d Miscellaneous Advertising f ir s t insertion, per « pelnt line Telephone 19 Each subsequent Insertion, 8 point Hne •••••»• F F IC IA L C IT Y PAPER ••••«•a Card of T h a n t s .............. . Ratcred at the Ashland, Oregon Post off Ice as Second Class Mall Matter Obituaries, per line ..... (By Mary Greer Conklin.) i No house Is a reel , home until the mortgage Is lifted. Subscription Price, Delivered la City ne Month Months ..................w..............................................«^.. ? hree Months ..... ........ ............. ............................................... . . . . . . i . . *x 2 .16 1. • I 9.76 By Mail and Rural Routes One Month ........................................................................................ . I hree Months . » . . « • • ■ 1 - ......O " W H A T CONSTITUTES A DVERTISING A ll future events, «here an admission charge is mads or * Erlpndji floe’t wait w be asked for favors: they anticipate collection taken is Advertising." No discount w ill be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders. thorn. 9 .95 5 9*50 Iv Months • , 9 DONATIONS No donations to charities or otherwise w ill be made in advertis­ ing or Job printing — our contributions «111 be la eash Poverty and old MM a rt n great aid In keeping good resolu­ tions. ' o ■ ■ ■»■• 1 ! AN : ERA OF GREAT PROGRESS i i been recorded. Five years ago, Ashland was physically equipped with every g ift ever bestowed Upon a city by a Divine Province. Ashland had everything that makes up a wonderful­ ly prosperous city. And Ashland was on the main route of travel from the North and South. Five years ago, the people of Ashland really awoke to the possibilities of their city, and began the real work of exploiting these possibilities. Of course, there had been many in the past who had realized Ashland's possibilitis, and had done everything in their power to exploit them, but the people of Ashland, the mass which gives momentum to every great project, had not awakened, and the efforts of these few pioneers had been ____ in vain. . Today, Ashland stands behind a ’five year period of advancement. Today we look back at the wonderful steps that have been taken by every establishment in the city. Our new hotel, long the dream of the city, is an actuality, and everything that goes with the Construction of such a building is ours. And the .hotel is really ours in every sense of the huord. Every dollar expended on its construction came from Ashland people. Every direc­ tion made on its construction, igas made by Ashland men. Our park has been developed in the past five years as it had never before been de- oped. Under the supervision of a wonderfully efficient Park Board, it has gone ahead, lizing to the fullest all of its natural advantages. Throughout Ashland, there has been a general advancement in business. New 1 ■ s a 1'’ 1 ■ II .3 ■ -..12?,' Oh SW/Vt x J llZW/sewR VM'USZtdSA’lWT/MWl’xJ T * * * * * * * * * * ¿ .* .* * ± 2 .* .* * ,* . / - This city, long known as an educational center, has advanced enormouslly in that during the, past five yegx&Mobably showing greater advancement inVhat line than wr any other. First, the reestablishment of the Southern Oregon Normal School here was au­ thorized by the legislature, giving back to Ashland that which was taken years ago as the ¿result of a bitter political fight. Now, Ashland again takes her place among the cities of ¿the state harboring a state institution of learning. • New grade schools have been provided. Living up to their record of never hav­ in g defeated a bond issue for the providing o f schoolbuildings, the people of Ashland, by ¡an overwhelming vote, agreed to assume a greater burden, in order that the youth of the ★ city might have better educational facilities. In every line of development, there has been a steady ascendancy. There has been tno boom, for Ashland's growth and progress has been, substantial, minus all that is dis­ agreeable which usually accompanies a period of boom, and the resultant pricking of the ¿bubble. t The merchants of Ashland have come to realize the value of The Tidings to the jcity during the past five years, and a closer contact has ben established between the peo­ p le of Ashland and The Tidings. • z \ *• « : Looking into the future, The Tidings management perceived an even greater ad­ vancem ent to come in the next few years. A nd The Tidings has been prepared to meet '.this advancement, through new equipment which has been installed. Equipment which 'will put The Tidings in the class of the finest small newspaper plants in the state has 'been installed, and is now in operation. Today, the merchants of Ashland, the people of Ashland and The Tidings look '¡back over a period of advancement, but ahead they see a period of greater advancment. In order to celebrate the advancement which has been made, and the progress yet ------ join * ' together, thankful that they are fortun­ . ¿before them, the people of Ashland - today a te enough to 'live in Ashlland, and confident of the future of theii their city. ABATE LIFE'S MISERY , 1 M r GQder, On discovering an old haircloth tra n k fa ll o f (ami­ ty letters, wsllsd lik e a lost sogj over t|t« squandered Pest that becomes so previous to all of as as ws advance ta years. " I hardly knew of a happier, rich­ er present life than m ine." he said, "richer la affection gad in activity, an d yet the past in so dreadfully dear to' me; not only my own past but th a t of those 1 have loved. Some o f the letters from my lovely mother and my f a ith fu l. aunt M aria war« w rit­ ten before I van horn. 1 cannot bear to th in k th a t their« lives in those youthful days— the'lr in­ L iberty is mors highly esteem­ ed when « < fig h t for it than after we get ft. i ' < 0 ....... Nothing is gaits so dangerous to fool w ith as money If yon are not used to i t terests, th e ir associations— —....» T — should all he blotted ont of ex­ Common sense should he need istence. I wish I could build a early in any transaction to get work of a rt to enshrine their the best results on* of it. souls; impossible, impossible. W h a t a curious passion It Is,—- Hes Hack says: “Just whan the passion for life — that those a feller begins to git wise, ws love should exist in the mem­ a widder comas along and np- ories of men. Ah, how fortunate sets everything.*' they who have been great that to be mothers, tbs fathers, the mere relative of (hem Was it­ self a sort of greatness, an im ­ perishable hold upon im m ortal­ ity! In reading these letters I seem to hear a cry that beseech­ es me to save these gentle souls from oblivion. A ll I can do is to tall something about them. These About the first real sign of win­ Individuals were not to r. fame; ter is when you start wondering nor have I the a rt to make them why in the world you cussed cum­ leap to life In strangers hearts." mer. He tells ns that his mothor asked him to read to her the The black aheep of the fam ily 121st Psalm " I w ill lif t up mine la usually made the goat for every­ eyes unto the hill«, from whence thing. cometh my help," on the night they learned that hia father had Women have more troubles been sacrificed in the C ivil W ar; than men. A man’s »friends never that years later she again asked criticise him for growing old. him to read this Psalm when her own life was slowly ebbing; As a man thinks so to he, if and when she was gone be re­ be can persuade his w ife to agree cords the singular experience w ith him. that one of his age should have fe lt an orphaned state— «"as if Another advantage a man has the roo£. of the house I was in is when he goes visiting he usu­ had been lilted away, and I was ally hopes they are at home. ont in the night under the sky." And o f his aunt ha says: *1 Trouble w ith mixing business dived Into Aunt M aria’s papers and pleasure Is yon are So liable for an hour or two. The 'dear, to ra in both of them. faith fu l soul! Among her most sacred treasures was a lock of Our last criticism of those one- my own hair at three years and piece bathing salts is they don’t one month old. I came upon ops make good w inter underwear. letter w ritten when I was five years old to my mother in Flush­ The things yon think you gat ing. In it were two references for nothing cost more than those to me that made me cry there yon thin k you pay lo r. alone in the attic, for It brought hack the passion of her wonder­ This is the month in which to fu l llfe-lbng love for the little begin some bad habits to swear child I always was to her. She off on New Tsars. says she Is almost wild to see »A #4 * * * • * . who A unt S J n J m X knows-tay » •( eu In proportion to its popui tion, hns us enUruly ouJriawed In making, practical everyday nae of the slrplaae. • s c The reason for this prohgbly I lave him so mseh that it hurts. la that the South ARpngung NW t to betas w ith r o t , having need the plane mere than; Wd him w ith mo- is my aweeteot •s rth jy solace." Do you wonder that I ta e k e daw g, remembering h o « dn her dying bad, move thaw forty years afterw ard, she clasp- bar arms round me w ith the same intense affection T i t was somethiag to know that bar lore returned la childhood w ith a sort of fu ry of devotion, and all through life w ith an nafaW ng flam e that comforted her to the last. Indeed,' I had two mothers, both of whom I loved dearly; each in a different way, for they were d ifferent." Thus loved and understood by two noble women, Richard W at­ son Glider became one of the most in flu en tial Americans of his tim e— renowned as Editor of the Century Magasine, and a lyrical peat whpm Great B ritain, as wall aa hia own country, re­ ceived w ith appreciation and praise. Copyright, v 1925, by Mary Greer Conklin, (Syndicate) Great B ritain rights reserved, Reproduction forbidden. BY CHARLES P . STEWART NBA Service Writer W A S H IN G TO N — When Police man Michael J. Dowd tried to arrest W a lte r W hite recently for highway robbery, W h ite reached for a gun and Dowd, b asin g him to the draw, shot him. I t was a bad wound and W hite at the emergency hospital, sank rapidly. F in ally the doctors an­ nounced his only chance lay in a blood transfusion. But who was going te give his blood to save the very questionably valuable Bfp of a murderous stlckup man? W hy, Policeman Michael J. Dewd of all people. W hen| he heard what the doctors «anted he of fered himself immediately. W ell, W hite was so far gone that he died before the opera­ tion could be performed, but doesn't the incident throw a cur- ions light on ths way that cop­ per looks at things 1 de. Except ia a few long-settled districts, railroads are few en the gtlnent. Ranches, or very largw-^-mang thousugdref saves. Highways are b g f—|a wet weather almost im­ passible. .Throughout a whole winter, maybe) a rich landowner, living in state ia the midst of hie not sg very little principality, can't get Into t h | . nearest town , even on horseback except «X the eoct of several days of the worst imaginable riding. Bnt he cau Jump In bis plana and do it in a few minutes. Consequently, with the coun­ try aristocracy, planes are com­ ing to' be regarded as rather more indispensable than mobiles. • • • auto­ You need maps of northern A frica and southwestern Asta to understand fully why official Washington feels so little dis­ posed to grant debt concessions to the Freneh while they stick to their prernnt Imperialistic policy in these two parts of the world. I f ever a country monkeyed with a b u n saw, as government beads here see It, France is doing it now in* the R iff and Syria, and, still more unfortun­ ately, not to her own danger alone, but to others* danger, too. W hy help her finauciaUy to increase the risk? W hy not, rather, make it as hard aa pos­ sible for her to keep It np? • • • By your map, you’ll see thaj extreme northwest Africa, except for the internationalised sone of Tangier, belongs to Spain. This ta the R iff country, where the tribesmen are in arms against the Spanish and French. The fighting stops over into French Morocco. _ To the eastward are Algeria and Tunis. French territo iy. They're quiet now hat it ’s a precarious quietness. The na­ tives resent Freneh rule. To the eastward again ta T ripoli, chronically ta rebellion against the Italians. Once more to the eastward ta Egypt, on the ragged edge of aa uprising against British semi- control. Beyond Egypt, Syria, now at W e’re not apt to think of the war with France-^-a little war South American countries as ahead of ns in any line of hu­ but a wicked one. man endeavor. Yet here’s D r. P This whole stretch of coast P. Bauer from Colombia to dis­ is Mohammedan and hostile to cuss w ith the Postoffice Depart­ the Christian powers a t heat. ment for the establishment of an airm ail service - between Key Moslem leaders at Damascus are reported trying to raise a gen­ eral "Jehad," or holy war, at thia time. I t Isn’t d ifficu lt to Imagine— an outbreak extending the en­ tire length of the southern Mediterranean shore. • • • THE ALL-WESTERN TEAM tooK^'tikt s FIRST : Horrible, and yet heartsearching, are the details of the life of the 34 years old V*child-woman” for the death of whom the aged father is under trial for murder. : „ r M p o w ’Mi solution of the questions regarding the death of this victim of fate •pould possibly equal the agony o f the 84 years of life, inrolved in his story.-------------- ““— Why disease came, why it remained as a curse, what could have been done by public mitation to avert it or by medical art to relieve it, are questions that should get much ire attention than the sensational problem of whether the father, after 34 years of rsing, in terror of his own death and helpless fate of the child, should have put an end it. The one is a lurid question of a day or week. Tne other is a problem of the happi- — of thousands of families in every land. A ny possible investigation, any possible inquiry and research, any possible an- of the living process of quinea pigs or other forms of life, are worth while, if we can i how to prevent diseases which may result in this sort of living death. The possible success in dealing with spotted fever has been written on. This is of a most terrible kind, not much known because so fa r it has been confined to area in the United States. Possibly the adequate treatment m ay be found fo r it before the time when the organisms that carry it have spread tneir habitat into other, parts of the world. ♦ a Went fo r Re, gar •omatimee.) AM • M of a long lottos rg tg Mr. Rttdor o»d p d a kiss to my own i, my dear slater, that kor. I fe a rrjo my> egrigir Single Insertion? p e T ^ c h TBS ASHLAND PWNTINO 00. ■ child sweet age of> A w >1 4L db» a»» .«Rew« The Nicholas Longworths* home promises to be the social center of Washington this coming winter. The Longworths* en­ tertainments have long been fa­ mous. They’re not ostentatious, but they have the touch, pre­ eminently, of "quality”— the sort of thing that can’t be come by except naturally. • • • One of Washington's social weakness is that invitations aru sent ont mostly on an official, basis. Questa are guests, Jn the main, not because they hare charm, accomplishments to their credit, personality, brains, somo- thlng to contribute to an oc­ casion’s Interest and vivacity— but because they’re "somebody" in the Congressional directory. But M rs Longworth won’t bo bored, hg d u l l p eo p le. G»« ta asked to her ' house on account of worthwhile - characteristics. H er parties scintillate, Invariably. The country’s > real stale am on, Its scientists, lta flrst-class men of letter«, its big business men who know something besides business, those who here achiev­ ed or bid fa ir to do eo— this ta the group the U te Colonel Roosevelt’s daughter gathers about her. Nicholas Longworth Isn’t over­ shadowed by his b rillian t wife. B rillian t himself, the* pair are perfectly complementary, O f­ ficially. a congressman to no great figure in Washington, but Congressman Longworth always has been, by virtue of his gen­ uine ability, nimble w it and at­ tractive perscnality. - *