Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1926)
jASHLAHp DAIdLY TIDING .. ■flr ■*" j v gkl , »» «> I ;«» Telephon« 88 Hto twain««« grey until he be en»« somrihlag r i a »ggugt«. As Joka » . RoeHfriler wuuld teehee, he isn’t rich, bat I imagln« t o could drgw bi* cheek for two or three hundred then* L. : Parent-Teacher Notes r a n t Insertion, per 8 point line ....______ «■oh subsequent Insertion, I point line Card at Thanks ................— — ....._____ ___ Obituaries, per line . . . . . . DONATIONS No donations to charities or otherwise will he made in advertis ing or job printing — onr contributions will be in casta. WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING ‘.'Ali geàire events, where an admission charge Is mads or a leetkrg taken is Advertising.” ïio discount wilt be allowed Religions or Benevolent Orders. JA N U A R Y 91, 1090 t G IV E A L L. TO GOD— “And the angel of Jehovah called unto Mm out of heaven, and said, • • • Lay not thy hand upon the lad, •A» » f o r how f know that thou fearest God, seeing thou'hast not jrithheld Ih y sen • ♦ • from me." Gen. 1«:. 13-13. t " jP R A Y B U y i— Hqlp ns Lord to withhold nothing from Thee, T or Thou didst give Thine only begotten Son to us that we m ight live and sot die. J • - 5 ., S PERSUADE CONGRESS ON THIS BILL ( ; The strong position, that the members of the Oregon «ragreesional delegation* ate making to have the Jòhpspn- Lweberger hill for a minion* dollars forest fire fighting fund included in the national budget, should have the , ftirnest support of-Oregon “ interests” of every sort. The j farmers should be behind it, for it is df special interest » to fanners. The city dwellers, esp^ciplly those whose AND humble happiness depends upon the smooth operation of SMUstry in the congested district^ should be'for it. The managers of .large business connection? should' 15$‘for it. , ¿ T For the maintenance òf our forest crops is fuada- fftentaj fh thè interest p f all in Oregon and to all those o f . iis Americans out of Oregon who want Oregon preserved ' Mr a productive part of the Union or as an objective for A little friend to tourist«. AT* ' W » » menace than a big I * w Let no.ope think that tlfe fight being made at Wash ington is against the budget principle iq national admin-' ^tra 1 io-, iiregop,, hke «H oth^r »Mtorrtwuld respect and The only reliable a dealer to the merchant sella egge cheaply. By CHARLES P. STEWART NBA Service Writer . .. WASHINGTON—Just ¡for va riety I nominate W. P. Gaulke more of eg General Pershing’s successo/ the world needs to an enemy. gt the head of the Tteua-Arica clock that w ill say. coni mission. lose your job if, you Tho trouble with nearly every óèe this government sands to South America to a complete unfamiliarity with South Amer The road to ruin to necessar Sometimes the answer icans. Gaulke knows all shout ily wide because there is so "W hy girls leave home" to Bot thjò doés nòt mean a literal respect'for* the opin ion of tho director of the budget in accepting or omitting much traffic on It. * ‘ they can smoke a clgaret." SJJtne item from hie lis t .Nor does it mean that Congress should have no op- ¿¡¿rtunity to amend the budget bill as presented in com , A t it l e ' sever honored a man, Honesty may be the best pol mittee or on the floor. , j , but occasionally we find a man who honors a title. icy, but telling the truth Isn’t 3 The p u rp le of-the budget is not to hamper Con always exactly polite. gress. It is to inform and to Caution Congress. I t seems inevitable that any M The budget is an orderly arrangement of the demands man who builds up a future of the various departments of .government, and of the rtuet pall himself down doing (Yon hear a lot of talk about suggestions for expenditures as they interlace with the self-made men, but all men are Mutine operations of government. that. Modern fiction has this tr Udder the old system, or lack of system, every de recommend It: You need not partment intrigued, to get its own bills through Congress. read i t because you know be Experts think the old-fash members of Congress worked on them without any forehand Just what It contains. loned dance is coming back sense of proportion. The departments that had active Hes- Heck says: . "One sure but we don’t lobbyists or committees got their bills through first. Those sign of a bum jcigar Is when It that were not such good managers oame in late, and carries the name of a great Eithgr had their .bills rejected or setionslv cut, or their J man." Advertise In The Tidings proposals added injuriously to an already overburdened treasury. * ’ , That the director of the budget this time lias not seen the importance of having the appropriation made for protection of national forests does not show the bill W E lA fT O G o o o J X is wrong. It merely Bhows tliat the director is not ac-, G 06M S A K B Ä s ffBaraled with the facts, of national responsibility in these SWODOA^A SP B C T ? western areas. . BOUT SGUPTW 1 OUT OUR WAV 1XTRAVAGANT TAXES ** ’ - TBT' * • * Business men of AAron, Ohio, alarmed at rapid in crease of state, comity «nd-eity taxes, are seeking to form a national organization to oppose and call a halt on un- necessary State and municipal taxation. The move is baaed upon tin? fact that reduction in federal taxes is more than offset by “ increase« in spending of states, counties and cities.” Commenting on the srtuati the Los Angeles Times pays; “ Whil? the federal goyi pent is reducing taxes and cutting expenses the states and cities are piling up the oaaesamonta at an ungodly rate. Over $1.000,000,000 nrnra of tax-free securities will bo offered for investment d«MBg.l926Jfi « » U <rf floods of bonds already out. Snob b^neb^in thb tend draw materially from revenues of the gênergil gowéhünertf. All the states wore tarred with tho the WAy of the public improvements the luxuries of another day are the ‘necessities now. The p^pJaiurfe extravagant and the tax-eaters are leading the pdrade. The note of warning soundod from the White Hwuaa gaas unheard. The, example set by the federal gov- OTSoNnt to V « M to A « j » ates ghd cities.” develops. There are more iuillion- tßere Were at large in 1890.—Port t h a f t h e d ile d g o grave-diggers have struck, imen ideasc call a truce for a few Chicago Onr main interest in the chil dren who are near and dear to ns |s to give them a fair chance to the race of life—start them off on the right foot. That is what education really to. . But are we actually doing this job In the beet possible way? There ere different ideas on this subject. Here is one idee from Mr. Orrin E. Lester, for mer director of the Barings Di vision of the United States Treasury He' earn; "At pres ent. school students pete through ir educational system and out to the world to work prac tically without instruction or direction in hew to start life on a souhd economic basis ,er what the primary principles of finan cial success are. TO give the young people of this country an tatelllgsnt understanding of hew to manege their personal af fairs in an orderly way Is a responsibility that our educa tional system cannot evade. If the economic civilisation of this nation to to he done In tpe sehoob houses of the nation sad not on the soup hones.** Thera is no subject, either econorito or eectdl, that tr ans sands in Importance the question IteBM O L ^ M E P S vmRTUiS KULL 0 » D u HAWt GO ‘ *TRlP Î MAGrtRlE - MAMM M OO«UM K»M SA 'MAfttME COMVEMiUMCtG T* J O he A them o C t IhlCOMVRMtUMCA / TÎMG PRAlPlC. J d P t M t WA poor / j GCWOOMEPS m o t i 1 L CrtAGtM A F tlR j 2^1 A m e a t . > \J. I ' Picking a man for such a job on account of his quallflca- tlBds is unprecedented of course, still, it m ight ho 1 tried as an experiment. ‘ Ganlke’s from North Dakota originally. He was a farm boy. h i worked in a gambling house, irto was postmaster, eomewbere- or-other, out week, fin ally he gravitated Into the agricul tural machinery business. One 6f the Mg far» maehin- ery houses sent - him to Rumia, as a mechanic. Hto travels took him all over Europe and the By Williams people shall be used, the teach ing onr children hew to manage their personal affairs Is, from "the standpoint' of public wel fare, at least equal jo any sub ject that wo now* have In our course of study. This to the opinion of an experienced stu dent of economies. He does on to say: "It to the proper func tion and duty of education to give young people an apprecia tion of how to start their lives It to «toy to teseh thrift to children through the «so at the principles evolved by the Na tional Thrift Committee. They —’Hçi /to d r -àf ai, mhu Abating are aft simple. The Ideal upon w h ich th is endeavor to foanded on Cp)«i»bto slough, vwae found today,* i Police beltoye th e . man to .tap/,h /murder, victim, t The Thrift - Week, slogan, "For Sue- skqll w as/ tfufcturpd ; over / ’the tfess snd Happiness." Then left tem ple, p as’ithough - ho . had there are ten points .of pro gress through which thio success been: slugged. There were no and happiness m a y b e obtained. means /»of Identiflestien oa the body,, arid -lt'.wne^epûmstyd: that They s i s ’ ns - follows: the «à^^hqdAheesÇdMM»abeet 1. Work end eern. ten-days. 2 Make a budget. •y; '■ - ' I t o W 'V r I. Record expenditures. - 7 4^ Have a bank account. Z 8. Curvy life insurance. 4. Own your home. 7. Make a will. 1. Infest in safe securities. 8. Pay bills promptly. * 10. Share with others. Another point to repiember to ,that each day of National Thrift Week to one with a specific purpose. This fact to a great help1 beCatee each day i r pro ductive of a new thrift idea. The day« of the week are desig nated la the 1884 Official Schedule for - National Thrift Week. shew them what the primadry Practically every Coos county town has reduced its tax levy, The Natienel Thrift • Move Coquille having made 84.8 Per ment grew out of the oonrietgtn cent sad Lakeside 48.7 per cent of recognised leaders that the redactions. American people ought to be given some practical help In their efforts to master mousy matters. Some forty national organisations are cooperating In the good work. Because . of National Thrift Week,.the whole country to alive to though! on thrift throughout the »oath of January. - lfore end more each year this inter est to being made to extend through January into all of the other months. » ‘ The leaddbs of this movement realise that if thia work to to perpetuate it most be placed on tho most solid of founds- tions, and consequently the edu cators of onr land are looked to as one of the essential key stones. The old axiom that It to hard to teach oM doge new tricks is a true one. It to hard to tench thrift to the present generation, but children can kb » ■ ~ 4 i m ig i 1 g illlv ip iO B u l B tlv t-g o B B i c . • » » x •o tevgbt, th« itaevatiop tn c o » « . will ahuw . a Aistinut ad« vguee. Paeglé wbe «nftoret tré» aerkMÌs 4h >tolto . «hat storto^ wltto b gttople «Mgh gr « M rasiti» IM lAfgrtaaS« W stock« ter tto» rikit et tw «M* W. Ttotoq, ' QgBCoriHa, wrltoa "PutoV’s Honqy gad Th'r > wuaamtui ter «Muegg et «rito aag «b«gto.’’ |tetor,4 W«toy m»c US £THT ii I l i IF