Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, December 11, 1925, Page 2, Image 2

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    NO DAILY TIDINGS
in g-
Bditor
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p n U n cM la ogly
»or« vujgar than th® otUar.
T h > .IW IK t»»< IV ® « * . not F
»vrud
w ith it» C on fessed ly, th e u se o f th e n a m e in iie v e r a l
retexted , W
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u n
n d
d er
er fhjpe
fttype p
pretepppe.
VTQI
o f all, it m a y be a w a ste o f th e p sy c h o lo g y o f a d v q f t
/ *
y ip 1
suss; n
(a mm Me pssHtweW wi
. .
«to»t*
I t i s n ’t fa ir to s a y th a t th e h e a d s o f pur m itftn
system la c k exp erien ce in fly in g . T h ey seem to b e I p
th e air n e a r ly pH th e tim e — T a co m a L edgp r. ,
OPBHRPW
£
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~
Haw
Time
ÜÉSS ouoh T
T Ö k f c tP H M
ÖU5V TÖR
j
•
ElftPLAY ADVERTISING
fin a le (aeortton, per Inch ...........................
- • «
Yearly Contracts
One inaertlon a week ........ - ....... ....... ..........
Two insertions a week ..................- ................
Bally laeertion - ........... ?........................w .......
Rates for Legal and MiseeUaneo me Advertising
Blipt insertion, par I point line ......- ...........
Mach subsequent insertion, 8 point line ..
Oard of Thanks
dbituariea, per line ......... ...............................
the beck, and tabiy high In front, »o
With touch that shall be delicate r«ig»r
hot
aonte»pttble
to UM Pewe» Meklacee shew up to
« a » . Maio
'
ph»»»» mala frifiiulfi with one's better advantage if they are worn
with . the ornament in the back
rather than » the front, after the
manner ot thia sketch., Pearl seek-
AVOLE
WHAT OOHfinTVTES ADVERTISING
{
“All future events, where an admission charge is made or a
dullection taken Is Advertising.”
No diseeant will be -allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
ATHENS, Dee. 11— CU. p.)
— Sofia- reports today declared
that numerous arrests and im­
personations had been made in
the new Agrarian-Communist at­
tempt to overthrow the govern­
ment there.
It was claimed
that agents who recently arrived
from Moscow, had financed and
instigated the attem pt
DONATIONS
,
No donations to charities or othsrwiM will be made in advertls*
» g er Jeb printing
our contributions will be In cash.
_________
DECEMBER 11. JOES
{
HEAR THE WORLD: O earth, earth, earth, head the word of
Hie Lord. Jeremiah 88.SB.
1 PRAYER: — Our Father, give us-the hearing ear and the Jin-'
qeretanding heart that we may daily know and do Thy holy Will.
f
■
“ The cou n try cltupph ¡6 g o n e ” d eclares a fip ssin iisti©
(jlergym an w h o has go tten to the ears o f, th e n e w s reports.
I
A n d p erh ap s it has,'but' su rely tlie ch an ge izs not onte
AhertJw I s The TMiag.
No shall I see her. if we » M t
,<
In Heaven."
Louise Chandler was born m
Profret, Connecticut whence her
first poetry was published, when
she was-eighteen years old Just
before she entered Mrs, Wil­
lard's Seminary in Troy, New
York. Her fellow ytudeqt» wer>.
very prond of her, and were not
surprised to learn wtthtg a year
fliat is due to a n y le sse n in g o f th e re lig io u s lif e o f th e
fe o p le . I t is d u e so lely to a differen ce in so cia l life .
i
J
F o r th e k in d o f a co u n try church th a t th is sp e a k e r j
^ad in m ind w as a p la c e th a t ufas th e “ a l l ” to th e p eo p le j
gpinetijnes regretted .
X
On th e con trary, th ere is m uch e v id en ce to sh ow th a t
file r e lig io u s e ffe c tiv e n e ss o f ipresdnt s o c ie ty is m uch
*«
ANO
No one la ever defeated until
he acknowledges it.
enough to get used to ‘it.
The noise made In eating soup
Is aa sweet to the ear as the
A p a rt o f th e reason for th is is to be fo u n d in the tante to to the palate.
g r e a te r in stitu tio n a l dem an d s on th e ehnrch. P eo p le, able
One lyho spends money before
f i tr a v e l g re a te r d ista n c e s in m otor ca rs, p r e fe r to g e t to
ha gets it to aqt considered
fir o n g e r in stitu tio n s. T h e sm all ch u rch is d isap p earin g,
f i s t a s is th e sm all sch ool, becau se the la rg er and b etter
• p p o r t e d church can offer b ette r p reach in g, b etter in sti-
M io n a l a c tiv ity , bettor o p p o r tu n ity !jfor sp ir itu a l coin-
A n io n s h ip than th e sm all church. T h is is an a g e o f m ore
f iv e r e dem an d s o n ,th e ch a r a c te r o f com p anion sh ip. A nd
A c church is slia riq g in th is g ro w th .
B
K
, » » ..Q -..
*
¡« No better way exists for putr
Ujyi^JiL.aparu. time th«U
ntateg your- owa N^Mngs audeore
iTctlng the»-
I «MN MUM (a a fllu e n e iM re u fc *
LOUIMA HEEBOCA CLARK
Ab ater th an e v e r yb efore.
q g io u s a c tiv ity g e t m uch m ore o u t o f thia lif e than for-
Success In marriage
comes
srly. C h urches are to d a y a g g r e ss iv e sooial a g en cies as
only
to
folks
who
hang
on
long
y e r before. T h e y p erh a p s m a y n o t h a v e a s v iv id a hold
th e fea rs o f p eop le a s form erly, b u t th e y h a v e a great*
c la im on th e in te llig e n c e s and th e a ffe c tio n s.
mate was te marry Mr. William
Upham Moulton, a writer him­
self, a man of culture and per­
sonal attraction, editor of a
Boston magastne “Tha True
Flag," to which Miss Chandler
a good rteK by tha average bank.
DoS’t blame a man for swear­
ing. It only shows he to still
T h o se w h o are e n g a g e d .in re- human.
i
(
1XD GKANOX 8IL L 8 HIM8ILT
T h e p ap ers h a v e been sp o tted w ith sto r ie s la te ly of
y e m on ey R ed flra n g d is m ak in g. N o t o n ly is ho p la y in g
fi\» fe ssio n a l fo o tb a ll, but he ¡ » g e t t in g p aid for the use of
HEg n am e iri.-advertising. H e doe» n o t sm ok e, but he in-
idjkrses sm ok ables. H e w ea rs h a t s and ties, a t lea st he
a p p r o v e s o f them . P e r h a p s ho oh ew s gum.' A n y h o w h e is
if ie g e d to b e d o in g th in g s ju st as innocuous, “ fo r a eoh-
fiU er a tio n .”
♦
•
AU p f w h id v v e r y m ild and g e n tle m a n ly sa le o f o n e ’s
A r so i^ a lity n eed eall fo r no rebuke and in th is d a y and
A e liR idly a n otice, e x c e p t for th is. .
ft O k w hat Value is a d v e r tis in g Hint in ob ta in ed in , th is n
■fcrt o f w a y !
"
W h en It js announced to a h u n dred m illio n readers
B e d G ran ge h as »old h im se lf on tlie a lle g a tio n th at he
w ear» a certa in brand o f shoe, d o e s th is enhan ce the sale
vfdue o f th ese shooftf
J».
j
I I t m u st do it for a tim e, b u t is it w orth the in vest-
n b n t ! D ons th e e a st o f th is so rt o f a d v e r tisin g }>ayf
J O f cofrtso i t h as been Indulged in for m any years. It
h jp th a t d e fen se , o f w « grow n m ethods.
It h a p p en s t l g t th ere is in th e lis t of P r e sid e n ts o f j
Much money ereates many de-
ree;
little
hioney
supplies
By MARY GREER CONKLIN*
less you know about a
The
famous
daughter
el
the more apt-you ara. to Louisa Rebecca Clark to oge
Of tha »oat striXiug of , America»
authors for the fact that from
her early • girlhood her genlnb,
To g » the good will of a her eulture and h«r Mrsonal
neighbor, compliment him on charm won reedgnltlon in the
the color he has painted his moat brilliant circlet. This bal­
house.
ance of the frits of »tad , heart
and person was the natural out-
com» of a worthy ancestry. The
, Het Heck soys: "When a man Chandlers llv»M originally In
loses his head over a woman, Hampshire, England where 1«
ba glnerally loses his money at the sixteenth’ century, arms ware
granted to th e » ; and Lucius L.
the same rate.”
T U ' QAhlK 1«
firiSJlM* A - T Î 4 O O S A K l \
I O O LU JH R e c a r o -C T A ' PUSSOW
T i t s -lH W A W ffcD TMB.T R O B 0 E R 7 -
B F - f f Æ S K»aJ F w u D ÌM -M O v M.T h i ^
M E F t L t T T U H O* H O UR »4 W A S
\ foomo ow I K ’ flo o r i n T h Q am k
*
Mother of LOUISE CHANDLER
MOULTON, Pesi, author' of
“Bed Time Stories.”
— M Jgfrl- 1
M E88€.^L>-
— - T T - l b «1------ "sCO ULD EXPLAIN--
By Williams
VM M S orb S N tR lF F t
A COUPLE O 'T iv flC W S
CARR i BP M E OOteibJ
-TO
®AW K O N A
S T H tX H B R A N WHILE
I W A S A V JR A S S U N '
iNfTM THtM .’f t Q FELLER*
-ru er
M W
A FELL O O f O F M *
KilftHT S H IR T POCKET.
T h CTS
OMU4 OMAN X
inga It was the good foçtnae
of thia gtttod woman to be
sheltered through Ufe fr o » asa-
terial anxieties which made it
easy for her to advance rapidly
In her art.
Mrs. Meultou es­
tablished a salon in Boaton, and
during the many eoaservative
years qf her professional life met
and knew intimately perhaps
more celebrated Americans and
Europeans of her time thaa-any
other American writer.
Whit-
tier,, the Quaker poet, wrote to
her:’ "J am greatly disappointed
In not meeting the benediction
of thy fa n whoa I called last
Leave It to the collegium io think of
month; but I shall seek It again
Something new! At the University
e f Oregon. Eugene, Ore.’ the girls
sometime. How much I thank
ere wearing sweaters with gny Ecenrt
thee for thy kind note.
It j
painted en the lack. Jhts co-ed
reaches me at a time when its '
maintains that the scene on the lack
generous appreciation to very i
ef hers represents the spirit- of the
campus.
welcome aud grateful. Believe I
me very truly
thy
friend.”
Among her Intimates were James .
Russell Lowell, Horace Greeley. I
Oliver Wendell Heiress, Ralph
Waldo
Emerson,
Longfellow,
Edmund Clarence Stedman, Julia
€3H Z I S ' W A T 5
Ward Howe and every person
£
W HAT •
NC? P « O < 5 > C 5 ^
in her country who had wetided Ï 3
or w m wielding a pad.
The
<5CSCP H /J v s * Y<JV
FLACW t o
4 'MO
lew obscqre a person the more,
G .O T T O
3A V
attention ahe paid him if lit
a ÔOUT
IT T
 N O P ê B P t t e R M .J V T '
had ta lea t
Browning Vf«l»
te bay; "Thank 'y»u* f w j w r
ÖANPY •
t e
poems. I close thd book when
needs f must, with music in 11
my sm s and ftowers before m y
eyes and not. without thoughts
across my brain.
Pray oou*:.
tlnae your “fltghta" and bo
»Murod of tba sympathetic ob-
aarvatfo» of Robert Browhiug.”
•he knew la England Walter
Biter,
Baran Janos, anongs
MMre, 8winburnn,* Mra. Httm- ,
ttely »n the nicrctenre ot thnt f
, J» ber late lite Lento» Uhnn-
41» M R it » * mwtera4 «te MMT
«W Mglt Mtcrature aag
in
M.ritoa a»< «rfhW
-* m » •»
cgfiM a» Jtght tepicc a «
«torte« U b i aito fignugar4
rito
’W
Oocnal .<» , Qoo\
A - U n ite d
S t a t e s # m a n w h o is k n ow n only to sch ool boys, 1
afid tp Jthosa w h o /e m e in lm r th e pttvertineiim iits o f a eignr? ’
f t b a ia a n -in sta A e e 'w h o r e th* ad v ertisem en t rea lly lia s
“ B td to ftu n e .
■T P r a e ^ e n ts whtwe n am es h ave been u s e d !
fu r n ish e d th e biU board tha» bus carried
d.
.
*’ u sed in a b an d red ad vertisem en t»,
ral A r th u r ” used in an ad 1« m ean-
“ Red G ran ge” carry
-
¿(at yuto WB> th a rc b y medua o feh »m e,
M<e M M » ♦ a / » ’ • » M a ^ FVFb®*® to,
Jy revealing ««fh ®b®> to rates klmaaN, blh
her father’s^ ®to> ® hid < a to apirlt, to the
MMrtly dignity combined w ith : M U » « standard g o M ik te ./W
het »Other» refinement and op- wW »ot only he too hoar to
•Whig MBM M the »menttton PttrW ‘ totote M d abadew». het
of Ufe. In after yeajs the poet M * W to «*»»» ®f »er#et«al
pictured, in one of her eonneM, E®®4 «Misty, »lace he will be
her beloved »other:,
»town with himeeU. It ia ae-
"Hew shall I here her plaeld pic- MntleHy vulgar to ««to»— to ran.
tore paint
»ftto «•*•» totote— « to »®t • M r W e new gown» Me vat Very low in
By Mail Mid Rural Routes
« f the tim e. I t w a s th e v illa g e m e e tin g h ou se. T ru e, it
Was a r e lig io u s in stitu tio n , but its fu n ctio n w a s m uch
ifid e r 4 h a a 'th e ohw oh name in d ica tes. -It em b rh o eiP a ll
m e social a c tiv itie s o f th e p eop le an d o f th e tim es. P er-
fitp s it d id e n g r o s ^ a lh tg e share o f th e p o p u la tio n , a n d !
f i g v a lu e in 1 his respci-t sin,uhl n o t fee » ih in w a e d . T h e
f iily oth er pl&ce of; rfgp rt w a s som e v illa g e inn, o f ebn-
fid e r a b le lo ca l d isre p u te . ' One e ith e r w e n t to th e one
laee or th e oth er,’
som e o f (»ourse su r r e p titio u sly
tent to both.
I n to th e 'p r sse n t
tore h a v e grow n c o n d itio n s jn
Mpfry lW ïd fù V k p tM t o w
li g o in g nor tlie ta v ern haunt-
are n e ith e r
tg p op u lation . T h a t th e y are n e ith e r d o es riot m egn th a t
icy are a n y d ifferen t f r o m th e p o p u la tio n th a t fo rm erly
S e n t to church o r ta v er n , b u t th a t th e y find th e ir social
■ itu r e e e x p r e sse d in oth er w a y s. H o m es, an d th e a te r s,
g u l p la y g r o u n d s ,. m id lo d g e s an d o th er c iv ic so c ie tie s,
fifo r d o p p o r tu n itie s fo r m en and w om en t o g e t to g eth e r
|jta t a id n ot e x is t in th e m ore p r im itiv e s o c ie ty th a t is
X
tftohaaan- of than t o y •|t«r>M to i* tM ‘Mto
• a Postdffice as Second Class Mall Matter
Prit», Delivered In City
-
x
•Mr to Mi W «MM»r « * « * « • »•">*
f 5 m fro» ««
0 Mt bel<JB< th-r'’
Telephone 89
FXWXBAND BKTTgR OHUROHEB
-
«Étto».
to fiftn "
' OsreelvM a to
Ohr
a to ’ “I to Oananl ot
d t o r » ” la »Mah tote I W
“Th«
moment g stsqns 4wtre tor eo-
cl«l tovanccanut teine» qn n
»to* w w es*« H « * « ■ • # » to
to fin a la » tto very toantotioa
to character and graat »hall bo
R |Y w UF v XL tre