Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 10, 1925)
D D A IL Y T ID IN Natiqpa national at ajl. Forinstauce, at Thaniagiving time, $ Americans in London had ordered turkeys for tl Amerioan lnriid*y feqst. Then, on the death of dowager queen» Alexandra, these Americana felt tha would be a courtesy to cancel their dinners, and t sold the turkeys for what they could get. The birds w bought by Englishmen, and eaten by many who did thldk, because the queen hjid died, they should fo, their appetites. And the tayte for turkey, thus bro« about through the “ death of! a distinguished personal has produced a new market for turkeys for the com Christmas. ur friends von’» psora for Chrlst- • Let’s see new? what did we da with the money last tax-reduction saved us 1—Schenectady Gazette. — Never give the boy all the allowance you can afh Keep back some to bail him oat,—Baltimore Son. Ffirat insertion, per 8 point l i n e ------—...--------- —.---------------- ■dch subsequent insertion, 8 point line —...-------------------- Cdi-d a f Thanks Obituaries, per line ____ :.— .................. ...— .;— .— * 4* .01 * .* t% ’ Next month the banks should break all records, the one when everybody is going to begin saving.—Pa News. ' w H at ooxmttvtks advertising “A lt future ¿rests, where an admission charge la 'mads e r a collection taken ta Advertising.”, ! No discount « ill be allowed Religious o r Benevolent O f dafs ' DONATIONS • No donations to charities or otherwise « ill be made In advsrtis ink or Job printing — oar contributions «111 bo In cash._______ _ DECEMBER 10, 108S J D EA TH OR L IF E : — To be carnally minded la death; but to be spiritually minded is life Mad peace. Romans 8: 8. I Prayer:— Gracious God. w e know that Thou art a Spirit, able change ub from carnal to spiritual. Ws took to Thee in fatfh Thou change ns into the likeness of Thtba Own imago. How does a politician manage to stay in the mid of the road and keep an edr to the ground without accident?—Detroit News. ‘ . Parent - Teacher Maybe the magazines ofle finds in the dentist’s wa ing-room are put there to indicate bow long the denti been practising.—Arkansas Gazette.» ' a THX MES8AGB. i 'Pie first annual message of President Coolidge rince ijs popular election’ to hig high position is a document hat wll 1 increase the respect with whieh. be is Held. ♦ It will not add greatly to his stt&oo no ‘¡telling blows;” it does not influence any passions; and f does not greatly stimulate any emotious. ' :' • On the other B andit'Id'by no 'means a cold doou- uCnt. Whatever Cal via-CboKdfee may be as a man, he is A mym^agts negligible as a writer. H e s h o y s power ijid jncisiv^n.ugSj fpr the purposes he has in writing. | If the message is long, it is not effusive. It goes ibeciflcally to many points. It faces with clear courage Be irfufildiatl!'hOindrum questions of Government that Modern Swords of Damocles the President concedes to Congress a)id to the JSenate a number of fields about which there hhs been some dispute. Also he asserts for himself As President the domination ■ of some other fields that have been under di*enss|oa../-He proposes gome ogeewtive ah-' tlority to meet the coal strike. Haft Wtocfts tolnto: PdfiTt tf Congress to clean up the Muscle Shoals muddle. He sAeks to simplify tito p resent cogfu ^ d status Qf the ifaip- 5£fThe Presudent is jndd in his adhesion to his convic- tiftjs on the world court. Like every President before L jj B he has become a’ oontert to the need of reasonable (■¿Operation between nations to settle their disputes in* slsad of leaving these disputes to the accidents of dip- ldtfacy and the casual danger of bloody wgrft jr , On other question#, be is bold or not» as lie may think tfitoocasion reqqjres^ For instance; he Is specific but by nlttneans aggressive W;tbw vp^estion of prphthition. The spates, he says, should jftare their constitutional- obliga- i W of enforcement. 'Aid bn.civil service, on whioh the C$jftidge term has mgda'no particular advancement over tw&e of his prcdcyesspE&he suggests an extension of the tSwialities of thi.toorit system. f S*The document i^l^ng.-^Bnt.lt is worth reading, as a- t^fibook of cnrri)h|'Givsrameht. And it will he found e n r reading foe who are at all concerned with na? OUR WAV ¡Too bad that the question of the seating of Gerald ive aa a mojnber of the United State* Senate can not lecided purely on its legal merits. For it is purely a il problem. , ‘ I But tile $i|ly way to decide, under the constitution of ¡United Stated as to whom shall be seated in the Ren- [ is by a vote of the Soqate. »And the members of the Senate are w aved—have h through all the history ef the Senate—by the qnes* i as to whether the man to be seated will vote tlieif ; or not ’ > | It is a hopeful sift«, ltowever, that more and moret lagal qnestieiw involved are brought into these dis- lion«. Some day, it is iftssible, men will be seated in By Williams Portland almoat twenty years and was u7 member of the Shot oaaoctystton j»ye years Before Ifta . J. F . a m waa its presl- debt. <wls , i ■ i <<.'* '• - •*> fc’ Mra. Gabriel haa taken aa ac tive part in the musical world and was form erly a teacher of art. F o r two years she was a Campfire guardian and conduct- ed all city community sings and ceremonials w ith hundreds of girls participating. Aa a member ot the Irvington association she has served at various times as publicity, music and program chairman and two years ago was elected president, last year havlg bees unani mously re-elected. She Is the mother of four ehiltjren, one son at Oragoa A gricultural College, another eon who eaters U n iversity, ef Oregon next term,, a d augh ter 1a Grant high and a second daugh ter In. Irvington grade school. Mrs. Gabriel is oae ef tbk young er workers but 1s a woman of Yaet, a good executive and brings a « tilin g spirit and fresh enthaetesm Into tha worh. W ith the harmontona co-s*- eration ot the 18,0*0 workers In Oregon v e may look forward (o a still bigger field tkia earning •tar 01 Alistu», Tessa. I» « and went to ». He’s food of mv h m Ufa, and rmsern trvytas th e you«« peopw •* beg. bet en — It to better «o ride, than te walk.,. M . W . Ham aker, local Star dealer, re tu rn M teat night from Oakland, «h a re he attended a two-day convention -ef Star deal ers at . the Pacific const factory, along w ith 480 other deniers and representatives. Monte says th a t'th e 182« line of Star cars «sa displayed nt the-eo w veatlo a and th a t they are beasties. One of the new Star Sixes which he claimed would be a revelation, w ill »be oin ‘-display hers sometime In January,, ho said. Dnrtag the comvhntloa the Star officials gave Mente suite a aen'doff «h e n various stunts tha local dealer had need to advertise the Stars « e re brought to the attention .o f the dele- Funeral services ,w ill be held F riday afternoon from the Stocks Undertaking Parlors at 1:00 o’- eloch tor Mra. Rachel Ana Ken nedy who died at the Community Hospital TOeaday. Mrs. Kennedy was 84 years ot dge. 8be was born in Missouri. She bad bean a resident ot Ore gon for a number e f ydars, living in the Tollman Springs district. Interm ent w ill be ta the H ill Mr*. K*ilU*ay M rarwTwMI Dy fo u r children, R iley and Sam Kennedy of the Soda Spring dis trict, Mrs. Olive Bllderback* of Corvallis, Mrs. Nora De Sots of Richmond, C alif., and Mrs. Effie [.arson o f 8t. Helena Ore. A ’ LOCAL FI8HBBMBV . OPPOSE 0&AMT8 PASS E. F. A vert«.8tete EBtee war- den, met w ith the Isaac W alton league members la Grants Pass -Tuesday night, fallowing his con- ferenee wKh the Jackson County Sportsm ans Association 1a MOd- ford Tuesday afternoon. . j Aecefdtag to ¿he Grants Pass courier, moat of those who met A verill nt Grants Pass were 1a fa ro r of cloetag the Rogue River t0 fa b in g during the « In te r year around BELLVIEW To CONSTRUCT NEW CLUB HOUSE (Continued From Page One) M ark Trae. Mrd. Jesse N M , Mrs. Carl Gottache, Mrs. W . L. Moore, Mrs. Mary Homes Tucker, Mrs. Homer Barron and Mra. Edwin Dunn. Outbursts of Everett True 4M P O c t ano 4NO X Ô T -fe b l CH»CA<R o , L o s /d is e d u c a r? bAsfcl X O Ä .K — • s s v that " T i r » « ' e x j« < Î L S O 8 KHatRW © e q o n i N G - pm «, too M U C H o r A •B u R T J C N F O M T H « T O « » , 1CU, Five interested m others, from Ashland attended the eounty council meeting a t Central Point last Saturday afternoon and re ported S very good meeting. Monday, the oeuneil and High school circles met a t the library to finish thia years werk and plan for future activities to be gin ta Jdnnary. Mrs. K arl Wins was elected president of the Highs school; Mrs. F. W , ‘Hitch, eock, vice president; Mrs. W . C. H itd te U as secretary and treot- urer. Aa parents w ith pupils ih schools lets 'aH join and help these fine women who hnv* consented to give of their tlmh' to 'le a d ns to acdomyftah aome real worthwhile w o rk , W e w ifi <N0W U>O»< HBAH i MISTO R A Q Q tr— S C /L L HAMB I V ? I f it hippeus tlmt Nyc, as a member of the Senate^ Id vote in a “ radical” w$y, and if it happens that tlill al way is favored by -jt majority of the cittens of i Dakota, then he skotild be seated, the prejudiced y eonservai of the Senate to the cow- notwithsfez >n| if th3 appointment Qf Nye by the governor to tha icy in illegal» not provided for by the statutes, theg oald not he seated no matter how much he may ha >wad by citiseas of North Dakota. Our GovernmsBt* teea must ran smoothly. They muet repraaea4 it o f onr people. They must also preserve tha gf qf democracy. The j>eople of North Da- Md to “ reprcsetitation” only provided that i aa orderly way. ha a defeat of good government for the right eeatod In tbe wrong w a y , o r for the right mag * * right w lay to be unseated In the wrong) tJndbr the 'sane leadership of our retiring president, Kry. George J. Perkins, the > w erk of the state association has made steady gains until today Oregon is considered one o f the out standing states ta the nation. 1 w t * . F o r tin i * ■ * a c t r a t * made a splendid Bendar but has won a warm plane la the hearts of her co-workere and loaves tha chair w ith tha good w ill of every member la the «tote. Mrs; W . W . Gabriel, our new state president, has been doing parent-teacher work fo r It yearn Daring * two-year1 resi dence In Seattle she organised the F ran klin H igh aysoc iation and alee served .ha program and music ehalrman a t Madrena F iM E be the better parents for Jrnow- Ing some of the needs and prob lems of our school and the splendid work our teachers are doing which soma of us knew so little oL Co-operation Is onr motto. ‘ - ■ * . T X ? to *< Arrived Ik Ashland— Mra. Flora Snmnar, ot Draw, Oregon, arrivée in Ashland Tues 'Zh’A --s day night to vtaft har Wrothar, B. W . N e iffe r,-w h o is detained ta Ashland Bacante of tha critica; fllnaes o f his wife. ' " V /N T * < r r , i t ’5 N O T M ItN « X A T 'A L <- fs o A M 1J - W » R I M O , t» V r t p W T ^ T IQ N S AW f V m O |V D e A ^ E .t > cd - TH<a 3 < ,C T > 3 s P i^ e x u e o ^ T » a m il œ iaä . w e it e G H fM « - w e / p a c s i r* ? e x W T iM Ä is /d itm o r tj O t * W € N T l« Æ «5X-