Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, April 20, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    I
\D DABUTI TXMMOe
A5ITLAND DAILY t id in g s !
of
Lost—One Good A;
Women Marches on the Capitol
...... ....... ...... Editor
Buiinesi ManagSi
....... New» Editor
lert R. O rçer..............
leorge Madden Green
y. H. Perkin» --------
r J K
Telephone 39
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V iK K I CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING '
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Collection taken Is Advertising.”
J
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
•
.
;
. . DONATIONS - s r . . '
; . ■ <
No donations to charities or otherwise will be made in advertls
or job printing — our contributions will be In cash.
Wooden claiming to represent 12,000,000 of their sex bombarded the Senate prohibition
committee a t 'W ashington to insist on retention of the prohibition law, with strict en­
forcement. This picture shows them on the capitol steps.
f
SPRING TONI08
|
In the good old days many persons thought they
a spring tonio. Mother made sassafras tea or pre­
pared a mixture of sulfur and molasses and the young­
sters were forced to take a dose whether they liked it or
lo t. Today we believe th at scarcity of green vgetables
Jas sotiethi^g Ip d tfw ip l t|i0 lo W q d vitality .at spring­
time.
' ’:
The best sp rin g ’tonic is good-tasting, refreshing and
him up, really sent the outlaw to
|ealth-giving vegetable^ and fruits. Vegetables arid fruits
hip death in a more direct sense
are important parts of' the diet. They supply iron, lime
than he was sent by the jury
aod other mineral elements that enrich «the- blood, nourish
which convicted him, the judge
hie tissues and. prQYl.de bone-building, joateriul. Vege­
who sentenced him or the board
which refused him mercy at the
tables and fruits are especially valuable because of their
last.
gich vitamin content.
,
BY CHARLES P. STEWART
The Connecticut proceedings at
'
Vitamiues are Jife:giving substance^ in ,tht food, with-
• NER Servioe Writer
least
were automatic — the us­
»jit which, no m atter how much food one eats, disorders of
ual thing, done in the usual way.
WASHINGTON
—
Probably
the
mtrition occur aqd protection against disease is lowered
hanging of Odrald Chapman was President Coolidge set a preced­
h r lost. Vitamiues are a means of keeping up the health no worse than any other execu­ ent, j erhaps In all legal history,
jif the individual. They are known as vitamiues -‘A ” , tion. Due, however, to Chapman’s granting a pardon which mdant
wide notoriety, newp accounts .of the noose.
and “ C ” , and each has a nutritional valae.
Spinach contains a lot of vitamin “ A ” and this vita? it were unusually horrible In grew- While the supreme court turn­
detail. Judging from un­ ed down Chapman’s contention
join aids in preventing and curing'rickets, m alnutrition some
official congressional comment that a pardon can be refused by
*«nd bad teeth. Cabbage, tom atoes/ spinach aftd benns Ihey’ve caused a decided revulsion Ithe raanAt Is offered to, some law­
«ontain a wealth of vitamin “ B ” ; this vitamin promote^ against capital punishment under yers In Congress do incline tq
grow th and improves the appetite, lettu ce and tomatoes any circumstances.
believe there may be merit in
i r e rich in vitamin “ C ” ; this vitamin nids in the pre­ Of course congressmen, as such, the argument that the so-called
no responsibility for state Chapman pardon wasn’t actually
vention and cure of scurvy. A child who gets all the have
laws, but they do, individually,
f ceded
i
Some mechanics think
v as gent to the garaga
the contents of its tool
moved.
Sympathy is best taken In very
small doses.
A bootlegger tells ns that
what's sauce for the goose Is easy
pickings for a'sm art duck.
Children aro a great handicap
a pardon at all — a pardon being when one wishes to be unhappy.
have influence in their, respective a remission of punishment, not
'states.
Its infliction.
*
It nevor rains but it stops.
Besides, the Chapman case. In
‘one way, was peculiarly linked
Nothing seems to surprise a rdal
up with the federal government.
The bandit enjoyed — or, rather,
fisherman more than catching a
fish.
by no means enjoyed — the dis­
tinction of being the only man
ever pardoned by the president of
the United States In order to be
TUCSON, Arlz., April 19. — (LP) l'
TO PLANT TREES
■A $200,000 desert sanatorium,! ESCONDITO, Cal., April 20.—
banged.
specialising In treatment of dis- (LP) — Approximately 250,000
ease by solar radiation, is to be mulberry trees — enough to plant
erected near here soon.
320 acres of land — are being
lanta penitentiary's claims on
A majority of the patients are set out here to support a silk
Chgpman and thus allowing the to be children, according to Dr. worm project organized by San
Connecticut authorities to string B. L. Wyatt, head of the proposed Francisco capitalists.
Desert Hospital
Will Be Erected'
OUT OUR WAY
Bv W illiams
GIFT MONEY SUSPECTED
*
Most foreign countries are <glad to get American
Jnonev on any pretext whatever. Not so Egypt. There is
onsiderable doubt expressed as to whether the Egyptian
;ovefnment will accept the $10,000,000 offered hv John
). Rockefeller Jr. for an archeological museum in Cairo.
•
The terms of Mr. Rockefeller’« ^ if t certainly do not
|=eem offensive, even to-dt country notoriously touchy ahd
fuj>er-dignified toward fbreigarni.' There is no attem pt to
nonopolize the relic business. in Egypt or dictate to the
Egyptian authorities. The donor proposes to have his
f e l t controlled for 30 years by ii jo in t board equally rep­
resenting Egypt, America, Ebgland jpnd France- after
Jvliich time Egypt is to gain full control.
;
But even this much renders.the Egyptian politicians
juspicious and hostile. They cannot understand why any
»remote
fcntsidcr fahvulU ¿V L.sy umvh m o u e y ju st to i»rom
ircheology and befriend an ancient ami poverty-atneien
country. They think there mtist be some kind of Ethiopian
n the woodpile. Bo they may refuse the offer or else
ledge itqibout with crippliDg conditions — as they have
rith all the outside archeological work there — until the
lo n o r recalls his gift.
There is*ijo accounting for what foreigners will do.
Mill« w b a V t# * * tDiqHticiHe! An Aitoorican university,
mly recently, refused some of Mr. Rockefeller’« philan-
hropie money for the.^ume reason« that seem to actuate
1». Egyj>tuuM<
•
Tu' R e a s o n
(
r f s no
USE B C H S Î
1 C A N 'T
G E T V T!
T U E R E 'S
Sûf-'STWlNOr
Ì
CO N T
i
Ki
verlotd
D on T
G iT i t IS ,
CAUSE. MUH
D o n ' t 6 A A S P
SOON ENOUGHÎ
Outbursts 01 Everett True
Idaho Is After
Football Coach
MOSCOW, Idaho, April 20, —
(IP) — No definite steps towards
the r,election of a new football
coach for the University of Idaho
have as yet been taken, but stu­
dents and - faculty members in­
terested In athletics are laying
plans for a wide search In an el-
fort (o obtain a competent direct
or for sporta.
CUT THIN OUT—IT IB WORTH
MONEY
'
Send this ad ahd ten cents to
Foley A Co., 2885 Sheffield Ave.t
Chicago. 111., writing your nam4
and address clearly. Yon Will rk,
ceive a ■ ten cent bottle e^
FOLHY’G l » N t Y
JLND TAR
COMPOUND fdr ' coughs, eolds
and hoarseness, also free sample
packages of FOLEY PILLB, a
diuretic stimulant for the k id ­
neys, an« FOLEY CATHARTf)
ABLETS tor Constipation and
illIous«ie<B.
These wonderful
remedies have helped millions
of people.
Try them !— Bold
qyfrywhere. . 4
No. g.
« reuorUy ia PaugOMi., Uuoie »Sam
g wíten he Was digging there. 1
magazine niieeoed nowadays, all an editor
a« to do is to jjet arrested.
\
1
care and deliberation, Mrs. Cool-
WESTERVILLE, Ohio, April his traceries ot government en-
Idge is rearranging the White 20— (U .P.)— From Westerville, foreemont, points to the next
House interior to conform to the the cradle of the so-called pro- great problem of the law against
aesthetic standards of modern hibltion movement, comes an ex- piracy.
palatial residences.
planation of the .difficulties en-
"The history of that effort to
The conglomeration ot furnl- countered In enforcement of the curb the ruthless tactics of the?e
ture, accumulated tbsough num- Volstead act.
Captan Kidds covers twenty five
erous regimes and marked with
Dr. Ernest 11. Cherrington. years of difficult and trying ef-
tiie individuality of many purch- general secretary of the World' forte at criminal hunting, before
users, has long been a source of League
Against
Alcoholism.! it was finally successful,’* the
concern to White House rest- thinks that "it Is not a strange I Anti-Saloon League
executive
dents. Last year a group of in- or new thing that the federal. declared.
terior decorators characterised government Is having difficulties!
"Then came enforcement cf
the arrangement of the White with enforcement of the federal' the slave trade laws," he cltod.
House as "hideous,, and recom- prohibition enactments.”
i “To enforce the edict forbidding
mended the sorappng of half ot
To explain, Dr. Cherrington,! importation of African slaves
the furniture.
cites the adoption by the citizen? < adopted after 1808, a number
Shortly, afterward Congress of Maine of their first constitu-j of stringent laws were enacted,
passed a resolution, probably in- tienal
prohibition
amendment? an£. & long, hard, .diplomatic
stlgated at the White House, which went into effect In 185S,‘ crusade on the part of govern-
allowing the President to accept and tracing
the
history
o r' ment officials especially with
furniture for the executive tpap- Maine's law enforcement prob-j European governments was ne-
slon. Although Mrs. Coolllge has lems, he asserts that the prob- j cessary to obtain adequate en-
not yet taken advantage h i this lems and difficulties encountered forcemeat.
privelege she Is expected to us Un enforcing the laws there and’, Another great problem
soon a s ' . definite plan can be ¡ also in Kansas were similarly / the government shortly after the
laid dlwn for refurnishing the met with by the government
I adminl8traton
of
Pre, ldent
H°" 8e’ „
K
, " In iact’” he « ’»‘U’-ed. “t ^ ! Grant, Cherrington asserted.
Every day in the meauwhlle first great federal enforcement | ,-It
be rememb€red/. h(,
some change le made in the ar- problem came in
what
w n s,sald
.<that thi8 undertaking
rangement of furniture and everf known as the ‘Whisky Rebellion’ I again, t lotterle8
,red gov.
often, some .cumbersome piece arising from the whisky trade s . ernmental efforts for an entiro
of furniture, incongrous with the refusal to submit to federal tax- j geBeration -
ensemble disappears into the atlon and their questioning of
White House basement.
the right of control by the. na-
The problems of the enforce-
Rumors that Mrs. Coolidge Donal government This ‘Whisky ment of the prohibition laws,”
will Issue a call for period furni- Rebellion’ was suppressed by the! be concludes, “a^p no greater
ture to furnish the White House federal government when it (fhe;, than the problems which have
have been denied. Mrs. Coolidge government) was only in sws<l- been faced repeatedly by the
has no desire ’ to completely dllng clothes."
government in the enforcement
renovate the Executive Mansion,
Dr. cherrington, continuin', o f laws."
It was said; she merely wishes
to rearrange the Interior so as
to make it more pleasing to the
eye. There is too much furniture
In the rooms now. It was ex­
plained. However, after the use­
e .V & f e T T e —
—
T e c c
less and ugly furnishings have
been relegated Mrs. Coolidge may
H o to
eve»
you
take advantage of the numerous
-T o - L o s e ALL TOUt<
offers of valuable furniture al­
ready made.
S
T H E R E 'S
A
KfeTCri T o »T,
Y
G F IT
anp
m ir e w k c - d out i n e
n o s r
C IK fe T H IS J — v e c s - t / f c e i —
T r itt,
TACK CST»
fxsst
O U T
1‘J;
o r
z u
tr
a n e
» n .