t • t ASHLAND ÜAILY TIDINGS Should Seek Better Advice -------------------------ia * « ) ---------------------------------------------------- -- T jK T Ï H a ^ ^ M K n iS W lto r Ben B. O re a r------- ------ --------------------- -- ■■■-......- - * t Uor W. H P e rh to a ---------------- ---- ------ *---------------------- - — ------------------------ «— - ■■ — -■ *----------------- r — ■ - ■ - t : r. G. 8. Newsom, county health officer. For the sake of tine innocent children of Klamath Falls, The Tidings is happy to learn that there is no typhoid fever prevalent in that city, and it sincerely re­ grets publication of the story in question. * The Tidings published the Klamath Falls dispatch in good faith as legitimate news from a nearby community. On the day the story was published The Tidings had np. reason to doubt the sincerity or truthfulness of its cor- respondent, and it does now doubt, the good iutent of the person from whom the dispatch came. . ,. But the Klamath county chamber of commerce ap- pears to he greatly exercised and professes to see in The Tidings news story a foul plot wherein Ashland is seek­ ing revenge because Klamath is going into the oil filling htaiton business at the junction of the two highways. According to well authenticated reports from Klam ath Falls, its chamber of commerce is going to “ demand” of The Tidings the name of the “ traitorous” (to Klamath Falls) individual who sent The Tidings the typhoid fever news dispatch. The Klamath county chamber of com­ merce might just as well save its time and posthge be­ cause this newspafier, lielievmg implicitly in tbo ethiea of its profession, is not going to divulge the identity of its source of information unless the particular person gives such consent. If a mistake has been made, The Tidings assumes full responsibility and takes this means of offering a frank and sincere correction. Inquiry, however, has developed that nearly a score of pupils at one of the Klamath Falls public schools were taken ill with some stomach com­ plaint as the remit of drinking milk which apparently was unfit for human consumption. At the time, so we have been informed, fear was expressed in Klamath Falls that it was typhoid fever, and the news story from Klam­ ath Falls which I ’lie Tidings published was sent to The Tidings while that suspicion still prevailed. Happily, a later diagnosis revealed the illness to be of no serious, consequence. The Tiding!« has qo ajxilogy to offer the Klamath county chamber of commerce. Instead, it would urge that organization in a brotherly and neighborly spirit to work with the city administration in getting proper sewage fa­ cilities in the Fairview district of Klamath Falls as speedily as )MM»*iblc in order to prevent any possibility of an epidemic of typhoid fever. It is a matter of record in Klamath Falls that the county- health officer has ex* pressed fear of such an epidemic this year unless a sani>; BY C H A R LE S P. S T E W A R T N BA Service W rite r W A S H IN G TO N — F o r the first real ctosenp I ever saw of Gover­ nor A lbert C. R itchie of Maryland ( I was speaking of him only yes­ terday. b at I didn’t quite finish) I was indebted to E d ito r H L. Mencken of tbe "American Mer­ cury« • ..... •'* ‘ ■ qitchle and Mancknn are fe l­ low Baltiiporoana. Mencken Is personally weU ac­ quainted w ith Ritchie, knows all about his record and has oodles Of Intim ate dope contenting him. W ell, Mencken spoke well of the M aryland chief executive. W hen H. L. Mencken aays a good word for somebody you can make up yonr mind ha must be something eetre-super. H a referred to the governor aa an aristocrat. Being an aristocrat h« said, givee a m *n something to live up ta. H e believes, he ad­ ded, that Ritchie trie» to do K. The writing of the college student« may be ba fied complimentary. Pal:.One to whom yon do thinks that you w ill not allow him to do to yon. - Nonchalance: Not to care-w hat happens so long as It does not happen to yon. Tipping over the salt or buying an expensive fishing rod are signs Joy. The sensation experienced of a fuss with your wife. by a poor man. on -learning of the death of a rich uncle. Successful men are too busy to think up any secreta of success. Love: Something thatr-by any other name wonld be as silly or We all know exactly what we as sweet, according to yoar own wonld do if we were someone viewpoint. alae. Hex Hack aays: “ A prude to a O f «ourse there was a worm in Women forgive more easily than woman who experiences the men­ this favorable estimate, or i t men. They get more chances to tal satisfaction w ithout tak ln ’ no wouldn't have been H L. Men- practice. risk.” Mom and Pop wetL chick , viSweN ar ® wo D iV K « £ N T IN YOUH DAY THAN THEY W 5SB IN MINE *■ J R EM EM B ER M Y / FIRST LOVE - 0 » HOW S W « T 1 FROM THE TIM E I 1RRST M ET J A HE0 THE WHOLE WORLD pA S U m c d CMAMmeo- xxl never A V . FORGET THE THRILL TU THEN HE C A M 8 - M * /« * L A * E dreams crum bled o f - t h e w h o le WORLD W E N T WRONGi. - TH A T O 'R L ’ S YiCULE W A Y S caused m e K m a n y UNHAPPY HOURS y \Ml 1 | IT M mp»n to do with, w r u ia t Into the emergency taxig h ill of 18X1 the agricultural. horticultural and live alpck schedule» than djd S t ­ a to r Stanfield, and Utona iwo- tactive schedules, coupled wJJUj, prompt QnanfiiftL W to tih ® » from the sources above mentioned. S«y- ad th ese baste industries from u tter collapse. * The ahepp, men n t Orogop par­ ticu larly ahpuld owe him. a. debt of gratitude. W e think it can be fa irly (claimed that the m ajor field t o r seeming ft». «fra aheap growers a protoaMoa dwty o f th ir­ ty-one cents per secured pound of w ool, the on ly a d eq u ate and scientific protection the wopi, grower ks«.svar hqd. Tbe principal industries of this state arq farming, fru it growing,, lumbering and Hr« stock rais­ ing. A ll our people either direct­ ly or Indirectly depend upon, these, resources for a livelihood. Sanfir tor Stapfield was born and reared an a ranch- Hip business career has boon connected almost en­ tirely w ith farming and. stock., raising. » tra in !? « expqqfcnce and a sympathetic understanding o f .w o h © s 9w»ph- ere, and he ubould look out that lie does not'but! into the china douet and nuiuah his wife’s best toa-set. ed, but the banker» and merchant» o f thia vast territo ry aa well. I t 1» now well known the* S«MU»r Stanfield »t th a t tim e played a leading p art la saeuitog the-vast sums* of money frap i the M* Me-[I anclal institutions of the east and from the federal «Dnatwment. n t iw aapi t y to keep t ip shapp and cattle producers and th e ir bank­ er» « H l» tillin g , iptp haiptian PSHWN MOM- HX-Wk-UETÔO AlOVLL - , EAPkAiH-« VlBLL - X w a s o v l y T en TEARS OLD WHEN i Wor&Pfi Largest T kat h a p p e n e d , ótíS-T T R Y IN G T o CONSOLE HIM» f 1 Drove astiai romito.. T n t rqgetahln, W gnarantepd 1 ler's Tablets From Ashland