Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, November 13, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    1
TID IN G S
PACK TW O
ASHLAND DAILY TID IN G S
(BstahUsbrd la lir e
PwbUsbed Every Evening Except Sunday by
TBS
ASHLAND
PRINTING
00
----------------- Editor.
B u sin ess M anager
.......... City E d itor
B ert R. G r e e r __ ... .. .. .
G eorge Madden d ree n
T. R. Jackson
Telephone S I
OFFICIAL CITY P A P E R
CITY STS., C R ITIR IO N SO B P A V I D H IG H W A Y S
Climatic changes are one of most im portant causes
Subscription Price, Delivered in City
One Month-
* ' , * * . _, of failure of synie types of payement. ¡Hot weather causes
expansion and cold weather causes contraction. A pave­
Six M onths
ment be able to withstand wide variations in tem perature
On» Y ear ...
B y Mull and R ural R ou tes
in order to be durable.
due to elasticity of
Asphaltic concrete
tiie asphalt binder, are able within themselves to care for
expansion and contraction due to heat or cold, without
D IS P L A Y A D V E R T IS IN G
R ATES
any damage to the pavement while carrying the heaviest
S in gle Insertion, per Inch ___- ___ ,........................._ ........
traffic. With so-called rigid pavements expansion caused
One Insertion a w eek
by boat tends to result ip buckling or cracking of the
Two in sertion s a w eek
pavement.
>
.
D ally insertion ~ ..........
Results of investigations conducted this year by New
Rates for Legal and M iscellaneous Advertising
F irst Insertion, per 8 point lin e ........................... ....... .............. .
York State Bureau of Municipal Information a t Albany
Each su bsequ en t Insertion, 8 p oint lin e __ ............................
relative
to experience of various cities with construction
Card of T hanks ........................................................______ __________
O bituaries, per lin e ............. ...................... ;.........,..,.„ ^ 4 ..^ ............
and maintenance of street pavements show th at out of 92
leading municipalities reporting, 44 use only asphaltic
W H AT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
* “A ll fu tu re ev en ts, w here .an ad m ission ch arge la m ade o r a 8 use asphaltic and brick, 9 use asphaltic types and stone
collection taken is A d v ertisin g ,’’
" '
j
No d iscount w ill be allow ed R elig io u s or B en ev o len t Orders. block with asphalt filler, and 8 use asphaltic types and
Entered st
. .—
the Ashland, Oregon I’ostofflce as Second Class Mail Matter
DONATIONS
No donations td ch a rities or oth erw ise w ip be m ade Ja advcrtls
ing or job printing — ou r con trib u tion s w ill be in cash.
• NOVEM BER IS , I » 2 3
SAFE STEPS: — T he step s o f a good m an are ordered by the
Lord: and he d eligh tatli in h is w ay. Paaltn 8 7 :2 8 .
,
PR AY ER: '.— O God, Thou on ly art good. Do Thou en a b le Un
to I(ve 9 y fa ith , and then Thy good n ess w ill extend to us, and euY
way be Thy way.
T IS SLAVONIAN
ulu t doegintf’aSChorjzc The usof I f
brief news article in Tho Tidings of
tanse it refers to the “ Slavonian”
the correct name is “ All-Slavonic
,
S o ciety /’ F or which inaccuracy
» e d u ly ¡tjpoii J'z’c.
'
,
But this writer apparently bases his indignation on
the use of the word “ Slavonian,” instead of “ Slavonic”
rather than on any inaccuracy of title. He spysi
“ The word* Slavonian means nothing. ‘ I t is true
that such a word has been created in tho pioneering days
of *49, when .a group of Jugo-Slav sailors deserted *fKeir
sailing ship in the port of San Francisco. The wdfd Vas
never inserted in any of the Serbo-Qroat or English dic­
tionaries. Literature does not know of any Such raco
or ¿nation as “ Slavonians.”
(
,
' The wrjter, rn his hurry to object t<i a wop) tliat lie
does not like, goes rather too far. Both the d e b a te r ’s
and the Standard dictionaries use the word “ Slavonian.”
So does the Century dictionary. True, the word is soine-
wliat loosely used. But so is Slavonic... And neither one
can exactly cover the members Of those south European
ra<*ial groups that support this society, or who are locally
referred’ to as “ Slavonians.” A more nearly accurate
term would, jierliaps, be Jugo-Slavians, hut the word has
not yet |x»en coined, ttxpur knowledge. It is hereby offer
ed, tree, to those who care to •use it.
In fact, the southern SlavB, in Europe, in their vague'
endeavor to form a national group under one adminis­
tration, are finding more differences than those merely
of governmental policy. T^ere are difficulties of religious,
consciousness, cultural variations, and even the m atter.of
name is no trifliti# unp&nmfent to national fraternity.
hiR IHM !
I’, rtlànd tch.cn t cenerete.
Great Mothers
of the World
JOHANNA ROBINA PATZ
Mother o t Richard rW agner
t*n m onths the w ife o f L u dw ig
C hristian Geyer, her husb and ’s
b est friend . She w as an a m iab le
w om an o f m arked m en ta lity , a
good m other and th rifty h o u se ­
keeper, and sh e Inspired a deep
a ffectio n in a sin g u la rly loving'
man.
A sid e from
a ll
other
ftoons w hich sh e gave th e sev en
children o f her first husband,
th e g reatest w a s th e good for­
tune o f th is m ost rem arkable
step -father. F o r th e stead y pro­
g ress o f such an astoun ding
g en iu s as R ichard, n oth in g cou ld
have been m ore propitious than
th e gu id a n ce of L u dw ig G eyer,
gn actor w ho had taken up p a in t­
in g. It g a v e t f e lad. n o t on ly a
practical
k n o w led g e
Of
th e
theatre but a lo v in g com panion
fturpoees, constantly encouraging
A im to do hie beet. ' The «nig
tragedy eonneeted with the Wag­
ner-G eyer h ou seh old was the faef
that Ludwig Geyer did not live
long enough to know the tru a
greatness of the precocious child
he bad fostered and befriended.
Long a fte r th e d eath o f both,
p a ren ts R ichard on rea d in g som e
fa m ily letters, ack n ow led ged h is
d eb t In a le tter to C aellie, b is
fttep-slster;
“T he co n ten ts Of
th ese le tter s h a s 'n o t o n ly m oved
B e , but v er ily sh ak en m e to
No. jn a n ovsr yet loved
the d ep th s.
T he ex am p le o f
com plete se lf-sa c rific e for a noble woman and understood her
the aamo time.
purpose In private lif e h a s hard-
Jy e i e r presontad itse lf so c le a r -1
Men should bö~ fu n g is i n ó i
ly as In th is case . . . esp ecia lly
by w hat th ey do, hut by bow
the delicate*, fifte. and highly
w ell th ey do it.
cultured ton e o f ’ these letters
arou ses m e.”
P overty, am ong oth er things,
D espite th e vast, am ount of
d etractin g litera tu re ab ou t SHchi- seems to discourage the liberal
pse of soap and watar.
ar<l W agner, Joh n H. Rnnelnjnn,
h is best biographer, say* o f him :
Men are apt to overlook the
"Outside h is m usician ship th e
absence of physical beauty if
man had in terests in ev ery th in g
the woman.has a permanent in­
hum an— in p aintin g, sculpture,,
come.
>
dram a, p oetry and prose.
He
absorbed all th e cu ltu re of a ll
A w om an’s h ig h e st am bition
th e centu ries.
T he Greek aud
is
to buy th in g s in sto res w here
Latin p oets w ere "as fam iliar to
p rices are ten tim e s m ore than
ftlm a s w ere th e E n g lish . H ardly
th e th in g s are w orth,
a great book had been w ritten
Which he did n ot know fa m ilia r­
H es H eck sa y s: “ W hen a m an
ly. T here is not a grea t plcturo
g its elected to th e Sch ool Board,
or a p iece of sculp ture in E urope
h is n ext th o u g h t Is th e Govern­
h e did not know . A ll cam e as
o r ’s ch a ir.”
grist to h is m ill.
I end th is
book by Joyfully h a ilin g him as
one of th e h a lf doxen g rea test
m inds th e a g e s h ave produced—
th e equal o f S h ak esp eare, H an­
d el,
Mozart,
B eeth oven
and
M ic h a e l'A n g e lo ; a m an It Is an
honor to h a v e Ttno'wn and it la
a' d isgrace to have ’SCorned— the
one man born into the' la st een-
B y C H A R LB8 P . STEW A R T
tury th a t one can ab solu tely,
N B A Service W riter
w ith o u t reservation , p raise.”
W ASHINGTON — A s en th u si­
(C opyright, 1 9 2 6 , by Mary Greer a stica lly as if the w eather bureau
Cbnklin, (S y n d ica te) Great B rlt- hadn’t rep eated ly pooh-podhed
ain R igh ts reserved .
Reproduce
their
effo rts,
th e
lon g-range
tk>n fo rb id d en .). .
sch ool o f w eather prophet* k eep s
Uy MARY G R EE R CONKLIN
W hen ' R ichard W agner ' Was
bom N apoleon w as w agin g h is
last despbrate fig h t again st th e
com bined forces o f reactionary
Europe.
R ich ard ’s m other saw
th e dreaded conqueror run for
h is life, h a tless, p ast h er w in ­
dow; saw her huebqnd buried a
victim o f th e black death in
D echu tes
the form of typhus exactly six
w
ho
directed
Vhe
boy
o
f
in
-
m onths after th e birth of R ich a rd ;
and saw h erself w ithin an oth er a rticu la te Ideas and Inchoate valuation
C ounty lan d s
cen t sin ce 1924
ng Out Another One
to determine w h *1 the earthly
tempergture w ill be later.
,*
? ♦ '
The long-ran|e prqphete’ d lifP
cutty hitherto has been the lech
oi ft ■uifielent number of pointe
of raatnge whence to hoop tab
<jp eoler Often*«. They hare a
station north of the equator, in
Arl»ona, and one south of It, in
Chile, but. they need a third in
the eastern hemisphere, only un-
t il Just now, they haven’t had
enough money to establish and
maintain it.
A t last, however,
they’ve converted the National
Geographic Soeiety, which agrees
tp equip the desired additional
station and'hee> it running for
Abseaoe is Hable to m»k s
the .heart grow fonder of more
absence.
Id eals are lik e shoe*.
You
w ear them ou t, but Just th e sam e
they are a n ecessity.
L iving in th e pa<
fu tu re isn ’t m uch fun,
present.
It is both
combined,
four years a t least. B y that tim e
th e prophet* are con fid en t th e y ’ll
Try givin g le ss th o u g h t to
have found th eir ow n financial w hat people think o f you und
leg s and w ill need no m ore help m ore to w hat you th in k of them .
T h is Is th e station Dr. Abbot
Intends to find a location for.
The m ain con sid eration are very
pure air, few cloud s and lots
o f sunshin*. The doctor th in k s
m aybe South A frica w ill do. If.
on Investigation , it d oesn ’t su it
him . h e ’ll go on to B aluchistan,
in extrem e, n orthw estern India,
w here h e ’s assured con d itions are
id ea l for th e w ork ha’s so m uch
interested in.
Choose your en em ies w ith as
much care a s you u se in ch oosin g
friends,
L ife Isn’t ju st on e darn th in e
a fte r another. It la ju st ab out a
m illion darn th in gs after a m il­
lion others.
FRENCH TROOPS OUT
o r JUNCTION POINT
JERUSALEM , N ov. 12— (U .
P .) — U nconfirm ed Arab reports
today asserted that the French
forces have been w ithdraw n from
W ILLISTON, N. D., Nov. 13 — D eraa, the border railw ay Junc­
(U . P .) — A fed eral irrigation tion. south o f D am ascus, and
p ro jec t1 g oes under th e ham m er that British troops had succeeded
here tdday,
them there.
-T b e jp la n t, estab lish ed ia 1991
to irrigate th is section and sup MAN SHOT BY SON IS
p ly electric eurrehUTor the t o w s CLAIMED N E A R DEATH
o f W illiston, lx operated aa a
pow er p lant th is year under a
ALBANY, Ore., N ov. 12— ( 0 .
sp ec ia l appropriation co n g ress P. )— Joe S ch w in d t. sh o t last
granted last spring. D ecision of
con g ress n ot to appropriate any taken a turn for the w orse, and
m ore fun ds for th e irrigation p hysician s believe in fection may
»feature cu rtailed th e sugar beet have s e t in. If h e d ies, the son
crop here la st year.
faces a m urder charge.
W illiston m ed are said to be
John sh ot h is fath er when
prepared to bid in the projAsrty th e father w as b eatin g Joe, Jr.,
p lu g g in g aw ay a t th e job o f find ­
in g o u t w hat th e w eath er's goin g In order th a t th e tow n m ay not and threaten ed to break th e la t­
ter's arm , a u th o ritie s learned.
to be lik e tw o or th ree year» he d eprived o f electric current.
in advance o f its arrival w ith ue.
P ortland— W bod Organ Co.
M cM innville—
W alnut
A s­
D irector C harles G. A bbot o f the
Smithsonian Institution's astro- so c ia tio n em ploy* 19 persons in m aking record for b uildin g fin e
p ip e, organs.
p hysical observatory has ju st le ft d ryin g and preparing w aln uts.
St. H elen s— W ork b egin s
St. H elen s — S team ers take
for A frica and Aaia to ch oose n
on
Oray-Voaxlo
B u ild in g, to cost
4
,6
0
0
,0
0
0
feet
lu
m
b
er
for
ex­
site fo r a new sta tio n w here the
* 1 6 ,0 0 0 .
su n ’s h ea t w ill he easurad dally. port In one w eek . '
AL PROJECT
LD A T AUCTION
OUT OUR WAY
VSJE I bc T A T F iQ S f T h \ . S m O h W
By Williams
1
H A D SH O T H lS S É V F - 0 Ü T K W A S
H I T w n H A 3 0 - 3 0 R iR JE B U L L lT ,
P lU Ö U C H A R U E AM A S H O R T E R
M AW VJAS S t t K l U G H flK l' OOT o H
T H E T U E 1 6 H 0 O R H O O O - A ta ’-fH
<
I s h e r if f ' s out with a P osse /
r k A f TQH 6 .M HOUJv
P lN Ö M CHARLIE. - '
A - A - A - AMO A
S H O O T tR M A U ’ ?
OJMS a - A - A -
IS TH A T S O ?
^A M O A SHORTER
T O
kziakj ; • ? y
.D A N G ER O U S COMELJUBAtrOY
A eertain human sort of “ lienor” is appealed to by
Colonel Green of San Francisco, prohibition enforcement
officer for California, in declaring for Armistice Day,
He called off his detectives, to give them a well earned
holjday, and usked bootleggers to observe the day equally,
presumably on their by no means triftyng profits.
Much the same sort of honor develops among soldiers
on.the firing line, who may exchange cigarettes or “ eat­
ing tobacco’’ at eerain hours of the day and proceed to
slay each other ut others. In the mediaeval world, when
smuggling was«hardly a sin, and if a sin, by no means
petty, there were all sorts of extra-legal hut very man-
to-man relationships established between the royal offic­
ers and the coast runners. And that oarly monarch who
proclaimed a “ Truce of God” for certain days' of the
week relied upon {»opular acceptance of warfare as a busi­
ness that could he .taken up b e laid aside aocordiug to the
conveniences of the time.
• ’*
This sort of easy going adjustment of controversy,
however, is inconsistent with the very nature of con­
troversy, and can’not last long. Banditry or smuggling,
intermittent warfare of any sort is loo destructive of the
purposes of law, to continue. W ar lias come near to he-
ing outlawed ttoMrii -h the world by making it so deadly
that it can n o f t t ’ ^nlrifed.' N(M»ie T as’ bcedme subject
to worldwide--ni 'jifini because it liaa become so deadly
that human ‘-o '* ' chn hot work with it. The sort of
honor th ■ ”
* Vnamles to fraternalize on occasions
sounds •
/J«*s not work. I t corrupts police
force .
' /
.emuientft.
- TO THE RESCUE
Tlie iiniiisb ?fc/ an4 homes of tiie nation arc rapidly
turning to nnuittfa'-rared gaa for fuel and heating« in­
stead of coal, m*EUrdin*Ua official announce incuts by the
American O hs Association dC its recent convention.
In a message to the convention, Presideut Coolidge
declared th at th<‘ Suture of th« gas industry dejK'Uilcd
upon the exfoft to whieh it devoted itself to paU io ser*
m « A m
V1OC.
■ 1 jjf
' ’ ,
v ’ t
* •*"
•
*
1 ■
“* ’
* | 1
*
-..? * v ,
' I t was announced that every industry where heat
treating is part of the manufacturing process is represent*
cd in a large group which has relinquished coal and
' I
R v T flb u l At"
I »MAÖINt IT M U S T K
AWFULLY iMTERESrwe
TO WORK IN A « e >
f
.OFFICE LUCE Y O U R S /
oh r r ö iT s v a iY .
MoaJbNous eesiDES
A FELLOW NBU6R I
6 b T s anywhere J
VBRKIWÔ H9R
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