Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1925)
I You C«Q mak« out a qpe ItyT and against the tariff. It’s dwppatvttilt tyftt .Ftaql- CopUdge «IpaQUr M% <?«Wes down the goveraipaqtal poraoa- nel; also that there are more names on the govorament pay roll now than when he started. D AILY > T W tN Q 8 Efficient loet hie balance and apllletf !ft«W «U «T« •»$. « »W «t*»dlpg st bottom gt the ladder w the wytp M«te. j|»$ ft «lffereM putt ft f t » ftTft m la rarely We werk harder te fill pocket* , than we do-to tut No business supplies less chance for acquiring fame than Undertaking. * ; Some .people never behgvo themselves until poor health yuhdues their Impure desires. DONATIONS harittaa or otherwise wlU he mad« ear centMbutloag will by hi cash- S S T m T S Ä r tte tii* " “ • d,n‘aatoB çharn to ma<la ®r a When a currant of common ense comas along, most folk* ire wearing rubber hoots and itandlng on glass. Hes Heck say«: “The »pre nee yon* monkey with the love me, the leka substance you id In It.” OLYMPIA. Dec. «0 - <U.P>- The adjournment of the. Wash ington legislature by the end el the week was freely predieted at the capital today. The Senate la expected to go otnl la expected to go Into caucus thia afternoon to consider the'date of edjournmnt for the extraordinary seeeton. The House today, pased tour minor bills oyer Hartley’s veto. They are ; a blU prpvldingfor the pensioning of employes of mutus savlfgs hanks; a bill providing th*t the employes of railroad con tractor« he placed under state Industrial Insurance provisions; a hill providing tor a state flag with » fftooa hese and gold or yellow fringes, »ad » • hill, returning an escheated es tate U/Lottie pronkhlta af Yak- W ft * X «rated «atea are now in use tell off e wait AUTOMATIC ÚATBS LINCOLN. Bas-—Blestrlcsllr .......... »«•♦»»<♦« »« m m »■«»>» »»»»*•♦■» tl{bm. Let ns hear the coucluslon of the whole matter: Fear God, and^ keep hU ^commandments: tor this lathe whole duty Of man. WASHINGTON — A Vlplsut ildemlo of annual report« has PRAYER:— Dear Lord. Thou hast said, "Suffar little children tq, come onto o»« Md forbid then» not, for of such is the klu«- eh raging to Washington tor 4om e f Hearse.’’ Wek« u» *11 TMne own tittle children, *qd e last week or two. then It shall be our Joy to do Thy will dally. There always Is sueh an out sole Just before and after the »«ember gatherings of Congress BBITISH DECADENCE but this year It has bwn rather j . “ Gloomy Dean” Inge of St, Paul’s in London in Worse than usual, probably/be Ids Christmas sermon denounces the current British cause there’s more government. Besides the president (who decadence in the following language: fa lls , his renoVt a m essa g e) and “ Our chief faults arc political and clerical clap fU the cabinet member^ sub trap, contented ignorance and intellectual insincerity3 ’ ordinate official« too numerous • Which for an all ’round sweep is pretty sweeping. )o mention *(ps well as too num Yet it has a curious resemblance to another swipe erous tor any good use) have by a London correspondent of a Berlin paper, presutti- stories to tell concerning their WINTER SCHEDULE over a®*« fb rw ffb Stages Daily To Portland, fts ftM J & la n d nt 7:00 A. M. « 10:50 < . M . I peasant one day trip. nwi Aiuwerwtteaa. saso Direct Oeanactlons at Roseburg for Ooes Bay Points v - It pays to l>e honest- It pays even more than it c^pta.—Colnmbiu Record. . ------------ ----------- - ■ fTliat Rhinelander suit ought to be scut to the cleaner.—Virginian-Pilot. We are not very unjiopular in Liberia, that coun- owing us only $9^000.—Brooklyn Eagle. • . v ■ ■ ■■ Tax-reduction at this time will be an eye-opdner i lot of people who think there is no Santa Claus.— roit News.« Chock Baal Electrical Bauipment Sold .hy « txavsi sv moto » grata Clearance W inter Coats The fabrics, furs, linings and fashioning of these beautiful coats are so unusually lovely—that it is a little short of astound ing to see them priced so low. loot CARD OF THANKS We wish to express our deep- it gratitude to our friends tor 20 to 50 PER CENT OFF ON FRAME D PICTURES the many kindnesses and loving lympathy, also tor the lovely (lowers given during the illness md death of our dear daughter, G. W. Benedict A daughter, May Mrs. W. A. Cooper « Family. E. W. Rsdlfer A Family. ¿bîy s GéHDAü, who declares" that the British are’ go- ittg to the eternal bowwows because of their super , You can prove anything by ficial imitation of Americans. these reports — absolutely any • The British, he declares, are yielding Jo American thing. r, You can prove, that, for quan iqtellectual shallowness, without having any capability tity and quality, nothing ever <ff adopting American initiative. For the last, he says, ualad the prosperity that this ( . > ..r f t |e British are top, lazy, entry literally is wallqwlag In- For all of which, doubtless, the Britisher will be ‘ you can prove that It’« a fic titious prosperity, which covers 1 of his own proverbial indifference to foreign criti- «sm. Otherwise his bars wohld burn. As for the dean, (he country only tpottlly, at th»t. lie British are quite used to him and pay no attention You cun prove by Secretary Jardine’« report that the farm- whatever. era ave better off than «they’ve Z Is there a British decadence? So many have held, hehh kinee |S |0 . Yon can •»- fflr many years. It was the talk before the Great War. tabJtah conclusively, by ceaau« EiAilAtiPH t . w th « o n u m b er o f w .w .« w » ^ -w . th M a W aa^ The war seemed to contradict it. American farm« la dwindling rap - Usually people have* talked as though decadence idly, dge mainly to hard luck traveled along with the birthrate, whether as cause yith the* boll weevil, drought and oj effect, no one knows. France is called decadent. unsatlafuctory economic condi Why? Because her population is falling off. Barely tion». You can prove that taxes are does anyone think of Germany as decadent. Germany keeps right on producing children in spite of over and are not being reduced. You can prove that lightening population. the tax load on the rich bene- Bat there is no let down of the birthrate in Great |tq the poor and you can prove Britain. (hat It Just makes the poor’s load Z British decadence is, rather, ascribed purely to her that much heavier. You can prove that American» industrial insecurity- t gra making more money than . For the British, unlike the French, have no direct they ever made before and ypu incentive to cutting down of population, even if over ean prove that what the/ make ’ populated. The vast majority of the Germans live off Woa’t buy as much aa their for- profits of enterprise, rather than from wages. And they Vuar and smaller incomes. keep on bringing children into the world. The French live from profits, rather than from wages. Being near the overpopulation point, they stop producing children. The British do not earn profits, but wages. A very heavy percentage of the British population works in factories, in transportation, or in trade. They either get wages, or they do not. This is not an economic condition that checks the birth rate. And yet it can produce a situation in which national starvation can efime at any time. Great Britain has unconsciously -become a social istic nation, in its redistribution of wealth by taxation. It is feeding its coal miners diroctly out of the nation al treasury. And in* addition, its unemployment dales’ has created a national poverty. From this mire of un economic development, the national leaders are show-’ ing no aptitude for escape. The German paper says that the British are too lizy to profit by American initiative. Do not let us «feow too great elation at the compliment. • # What would wo do, if we were faced with the British problem! Would we solve it? E E. R. ISAAC & CO. STYLE WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE . HO W & tytw Ptwfti They met I» Ute hôpital. Wo «tammat will he allowed Religion« pr Benevolent Orders. In llo tlu . Lode, nt depth. W a bicycle and the other Stodto fir Art Store thia Springs Hotel Bldg. b«.»h t M t t» I « M > ««»»M W W K Reduced One-Third ’ • ■ *,“* * *• '. ' ‘ •* * Developed of Satin Crepe, .Georgette Crepe Faille/Charmeen and Flannel. Winfer PRICES THATfWJLL SAVE YOU MONEY ON EVERY PURCHASE. Child’s 2-Piece Garments 35c to 50c Child’s Unions 96c Women’s Cotton Unions 11.00 JSd, V. Price & Co. Women’s Wool Mixed Unions $2.50 x Tailor Made Clothes Women’s Fleece Shirts 96c Women’s Fleece Lined Tights 95c Mercerized $2.98 All weights of garments carried in the various grades to meet your requirements. BUY YOUR UNDERWEAR AT 1 • filler’s Toggery “Hah-a-dash-Inn” World’» Largest From Ashland To Weed ...’................... To Redding......,............ To Sacramento ...;---- TV San Fsanctaeo ...... Round Trip y Your New Ford Now! To Lo» Angele« .......... Round Trip BUY A NEW FORp NOW BEFORE BUYING A NEW LICENSE. YOU WILL SUBE WANT ON? OF THESE NEW MODELS THIS SPRING. Dave a Savings Account, too CABS You can not h elp h u | hvy these used cars at the prices we are offering them. We have for .sal© Fords, Chevrojets, Stars, Stevens, Nash and Cleveland. Claycomb M otor Co, Uneal«« ¿ E 3 8 S FwSex No matter how many other investments you may have you cannot afford to be without a saving account too. A savings account in a strong bank is one of the beat of all investments, ft is tho best plan ever devised for b u i l d i n g small a m o u n t s into large a » 0 R ft, ‘f ;8tart a savings noooaui gt thia hanh toiday. -T. ftaffeA-. bens Bank of Ashland AM»*, OregoR