Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, January 20, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    t T t *”
Wednesday,
ASHLAND DAILY TTODiaa
FAO» THRKB
being in Jacksonville.
Funeral
arrangements have
not yet been completed but
Jt is expected that services will
be held
on Sunday.
Judge
Gardner was prominent in fra­
ternal circles and the funeral
(Colntiouea from pace 1.)
will probably be under Masonic
< •,fair oi* Impartial trial; that auspices.
f t 'la difficult to secure au out­
side Judge at a time convenient
to a local Judge, and that it is
also expensive, and that in re­
mote sections of the state, a
free use of such claims would
be destructive to the orderly
(Continued From Page One)
and efficient procedure of court
affairs, and because
of ■ the ing the permanent lmprqvementa
delay caused, would deny Jus­ from this fund, It shows the
Park is almost self supporting,
tice to many.
It wfs the belief among some costing the city slightly more
of the attorneys that thia mat­ than >500 per year to operate.
ter would be presented to the
A total of >17,372.27 was
Supreme Court to determine the handled by the Board this year,
constitutionality of the legisla­ and there remains a balance in
tive act upon which the affida- the bank ,to the credit of the
• vit was founded, which has here, Board, a total of >2,090.68.
tofore been dodged by the Su­
preme Court
Sweeney Plea
of Prejudice is
Overruled
Over 25,000
Tourists Camp in
Park Here ’
Plans
For »
. .
Tourist Travel
Formulated
Death Calls *
G. A. Gardner,
Former Judge
(Continued From
(Continued ffom page One)
Page One)
he had served as county Judge
and was recognized as one of
the foremost good roads archl
tects in office In Oregon. Prior
to his service as county judge
he served for several terms as
county clerk of Jackson county.
Judge Gardner was a native
Oregonian, and was in the very
prime of life having only re­
cently reached his 43rd birth­
day. Surviving him are his wife
and daughter, the family horn»
answer to the question as to
whether municipal auto camps
should compete with privately
owned camp grounds to the ex­
tent of building cottages, stated
that in some k^alitles, such as
Ashland, the conditions justified
municipal camp grounds.
Herbert
Cuthbert,
of
the
Portland chamber of commerce
publicity department, spoke on
the value of tourists, saying that
the real value was not the
money they left'in a community,
but the fact that so many ’ of
them became permanent citi­
zens. helping to build up the
community. * He told of the
great value of community ad­
vertising, saying that it was as
essential as it was 'tor private
business to advertise, and, that
unless communities did advertise
the tourists would forget them,
Just as people forget a non­
advertising store.
Citing the fact that California
communities would •have ap­
proximately two millions of dol­
lars which they will spend on
advertising this summer and
that 15 per cent of the space
which they w ill buy must be
used for the Pacific Northwest
as a whole, he said this per
cent, or about >300,000, would
be more than the Pacific North­
west communities would spend
as a whole.
This was termed
an outstanding point of gener­
osity and unselfishness, but that
California realised that if the
coast grew, California would get
its part of the Increase.
He urged community adver­
tising for Southern Oregon, pre-
‘dtctlng that it would more than
double the population of this
district. Vining added that the
Pacific coast should
not
be
boastful and should not de­
preciate other sections, as every
newcomer resents hearing crit­
icism of his former home.
L. E. Smith, who is here in
the interests of the new golf
links which J. L. Ketch is ar­
ranging, told of the attraction
which A soli course holds for
the tourists.
Mrs. Baxter, of
Klamath Falls, said that at pres­
ent only about 50 per eent of
the tourists stop in Southern
Oregon and that efforts should
be made to perfcuade the other
half to linger here. She recom-
mended that each section al­
ways lend a helping hand to
other sections.
Details of a group advertising
scheme, for Southern Oregon,
were given by W. H. Crawford,
of the California Oregon Power
company.
This plan was ap­
proved by Cuthbert, who advise»
that the farm magazinea be used,
tying In with the national ad­
vertising
schemes
of
other
agencies.
Miller suggested that the ho­
tels install racks, where in­
formation concerning points -of
interest in Southern Oregon,
might be on display.
J. H. Fuller, George Dunn
and B- T. Staples, were ap­
pointed a resolutions committee,
to draw up and pass resolutions
for the body, condemning the
indiscriminate picking of wild
flowers along the highways, and
the - lowering of the fishing
limit.
Price Claims
Tourists Stay
But Few Days
Most oils lubricate well when they are
first put in your crank-case,but we made
Parabase to take care o f those last few
titles when a ll the damage is done by
faulty lubrication—the miles when you
say to yourself, "I'll let her go another
hundred before I put oil in again.”
advertising, as they have the sums
of money which can do it in a
big printable way.
The small
way #e have to do It is lost, but
we should do our extensive ad­
vertising within a few hundred
miles of home after the visitor
has already been directed in our
direction by the large advertisers.
“In summing up wnat is most
important, first clean house and
dress up your show windows.
More sales are made from attrac­
tive show windows and good hon­
est a d v e rtin g than any thing
else. Always be willing to tell
the visitor^ what we have beyond.
Encourage him to see 'all we
have. You can never tell a per­
son by the car they drive, so do
all you can for everybody. Add
all that la necessary for his com­
fort and pleasure, iuch as hotels
and golf.
“If the other fellow Is getting
more than you are in the way
of travel, don’t blame him, some­
thing is wrong with you.
Get
busy and learn their wants.
“In closing let me add. Don*t
or the railroads do the national
knock your neighbor, boost him canyon, was accepted.
and the advantages he has to
A protest was made on t
offer."
dition of the incinerator at the
box factory, by residents of that
POOL HALLB QukwnONED
section. The matter was inferred
AT OOONOIL MEET to F in Chief Baughman.
(Continued from Page One)
A. C. Nlnlnger was gsanted a
license for his hall, without de­
bate.
The offer o f . Mrs, Edna A.
Bradbury to accept >100 for ber
10 acre tract in Ashland Greek
Books For The Kiddies
- '
by
-
Johnny Gruelle
Darling Studio & Ait Store
L itliia Springs Hotel Bldg.
i» » 4 « » e > e s s e e 'e e e e e < e » e e e e e » e e e > » e e e » » e » e e s s s s s i
.
t
(Continued frpm Page One)
----- -
1
Southern Oregon that are nation­
ally known and have no equal.
“No business house in a city
would advertise that they were at
the end of the main street, No
one goes to the end of the street
only to turn back and see the
same sights they have Just seen.
There are only two places in
North America that can afford to
advertise that they are at the
end of the highway system, and
they are Canada and Mexico. They
have something to offer the visitor
that none of us here in the U niljd
Iti the end o f the runthatemmts
It’s the crew that finishes strong
that wins the race. And it’s the
lubricant that takes you safely
through the last few miles that
saves your motor.
States can offer without breaking
the law. •
“No use 'to try to make the
tourist stay with you for a week
or so, because times have changed
and each one of them have set
out to go so far or see certain
places in a given time and I can
assure you that they are going to
do about what they Jiave set out
to do. They will stop now and
then for a day if you have some­
thing very attractive in the way
of a good fishing stream, or a
good golf course. No city has a
right to expect to be termed a
tourist center unless they have a
good, golf course.
This great
game has, taken the American
people, and a great percentage of
travelers carry a full set of golf
clubs. A golf course is looked
upon as a service for the traveler
as much as a good hotel.
“It Is of no value for cities such
as we have here in Southern Ore­
gon to try and reach out all over
the country with advertising. Let
the larger centers on the coaBt,
Parabase stands up in your motor un­
der the stress and heat. It does nqt
quickly break down and lose its lubri­
cating qualities. Here is insurance that
at the end o f the run your motor w ill
be as sound, so far as the lubrication
of its moving parts is concerned, as it
was when you started.
Drain youf crank-case now. Tell your
garage or service station man to fill up
with Parabase. N otice th e immediate
difference in your car’s performance—
and know that at the ”end o f the run”
it will be as perfect.
■ .
A GENERAL MOTOR OIL
yOwn)Your Own|JHome][Day||
We, who have planned and built, financed temporarily,
and seen safely through its completion, the homes
of Ashland which are to remain symbols of your
Thrift, feel no less a sense of gratitude than of
service.
w
Homes are the life blood of the Nation. They represent
a tangible, .visible asset, shared in, not only by
those who live therein beneath their hospitable
roofs, but by America as a whole. They are mile­
stones of wonderful progress.
Emerson says th at no man begins to live until he begins
to live in a home of his own. By Thrift, these edi­
fices-are built. Each, in its own way, is a symbol
of self-sacrifice and of saving.
“Own Your Own Home,” is a spiritual phrase. It is
good citizenship in the making. It is the cradle of
the men and women of tomorrow. •
If you do not now own a home of your own, plan at once
in th at direction. There is no wiser plan. Destiny .
' becomes a sort of M aster-architect
4
&
SIGNED:
'
v
*•
•
CARSON-FOWLER LBR. CO.
' SWENSON-PEEBLER FURNITURE CO.
JORDAN SASH & CABINET WORKS
H. C. HIGH, CONTRACTOR
,
A. L. LAMB, CONTRACTOR
J. O. RIGG PA IN T STORE
AkA
SOLD ONLY THROUGH AUTHORIZED INDEPENDENT DBALERS
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