* «222*1 - !■ . ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS a Editor h— ‘ m - w « David and Goliath • Except Sunday by , A m . -------- trip, a n ela i» frodi t different parta at tha country w ill meat l» m e Mggpf raflwhy e e tttt <ft- Ua aQd ' t l M ti<H$l ,ia ahctlàhs to Montreal. 'X ..... . M Nawa Bdttor W . H. Perkins q f f ic u l city paper Telephone SO One Month .... Three Months Six Mohths .. One Year ____ One Month — Three Months Six Months ... One Year ....... DISFLAi ADVERTISING Single insertion, per Inch ___________ Political. Display, per Inch _____ .................. One insertion a week _______ _________ _;..J Two insertions a week ....... ..... ..... ...................... Daily Insertion __________ ______ ___________ R»tea for Legal and Miscellaneous First Insertion, per 8 point line .................... .. Each subsequent insertion, 8 point line - . _ Card of T h an k s ________ ___________________ Obituaries, per line WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING •'All future eretits, where bn admission charge to made or a collection taken is Advertising." No discount w ill be allowed Religions or Bonnvolqnt Orders. Miss Dorothy Walker of Portage. Wls.. is Wisconsin's RrSt and only woman district attorney. She hold« office in Columbia county, and in her SOS cases has hod only two acquhatd DONATIONS | - .. -r No donations to charities or otberwtse.will be made In advertis ing or Job printing — our eentritntlons w ill be in caab. Baker— $l,b 00 pledged to develop Idaho Copper. Com pany properties, this year. FOB A MILK INSPECTOR Cities of Southern Oregon are to tie asked to aid in the maintenance of a milk inspector, who will keep a check on the milk sold by the dairies to the people of the Southern Oregon towns. Milk is one of the most necessary articles of food and yet there is practically no method of telling what kind of milk we are getting. We can’t look at it and decide that it has 10,000 or 500-000 bacteria in it. We can’t tell whether the bacteria in it is harmless or if the milk carries sofne contagious disease. There is oylv the one way to be sure and that is to secure a milk inspector. Of course it will cost money to keep an inspector om the job af all times bttt it is an expense that is more than justified. This morning, the figures compiled after a test on December 1, of last year, were shown and ac Many of the young men who cording to the data there were only three dairies that arc going to be married this showed clean milk. The rest were classified as dirt*r, spring know about it already. and very dlrtyi The bacteria count ran from 16,000 to Your luck could be worse. A f 460,000. There were several in the lower counts and still ter a Tullos (L a.) man dragged others that ran into the high counts. A jierson doesn’t goods out of his burning store want to drink milk that’ is full of dirt and may have a they were stolen. ,r high bacteria count. No person- howe,Y,er, e^n tc!l by look H u rry slowly. Chicago woman ing at the milk whether it will test low or high or whether running from cops was hit by a it has dirt in it or not. Users of milk would not hesitate taxi. in paying a few cents more per month for their milk if they knew tliat they knew that they were securing a pure Potatoes grow wild In Chile product, something they are not certain of at the pres Potato prices grow wild here. ent time. They may be drinking milk that runs 460,000 People w ill steal anything. St bacteria and is “ very dirty.’’ Tlie financing of the milk inspector would be paid by Louts man stole a ukulele. the city and the dairymen. The dairymen's end would Los Angeles man was arrested lie eared for by a small license fee, this sum to be matched for shooting at his landlord. by the city. Other cities in this part of the state would be doing the same thing- as an ordinance is being pre pared for adoption by all. We pay out huge sums for protection by military force. We ]>ay large amount for police and fire protection. These agencies might be need tólHNGTONí ed by each jiersou once a year. But every day we are all using milk. It is being fed to infants, whose ]»ower of Washington— On the question resistance to disease is small. It has become one of the whether Smith W. Brookhart of chief articles of food and yet we hesitate in providing Iowa should keep his seat In the protection so necessary. Epidemics have reeulted the United States Senate or give from the use of contaminated milk and there is certain It up to Daniel F. Steck— Steck ly, no assurance that such au epidemic will not result in won— some of the queerest votes were cast that the oldest hang some Southern Oregon city. er-on around the Capitol can re By all mcanR, Southern Oregon shonld have the milk member. inspector. The <;ost, distributed 'among the various cities, I t wasn’t that regular party will be small and the benefits great.—(1 rants Pass Courier, lines were shot completely fu ll ETTER.1 GRADE CROSSING ACCIDENTS / i • * Last year, autoists killed one and ran over five other Southern Pacific crossing flagmen; They crashed through .'{90 lowered crossing gates. Almost ns many nntoes ntn into the trains as were struck by the engines; some into the middle or even into the tailend of the trains. But grrade crossings were responsible for only 10 per cent of all aoto accidents. Fool-proof viaducts might eliminate »11 grade cross- la g accidents. But the records show such driving reck- foumess, that the remedy does not seem to lie in a suici- bwnBef« has t f w ewer h e w d evomvogs to preve nt rcck- drivers from killing themselves at railroad tracks, i 9 out of 10 do it some other way. T tr n ir n u G honors Member of the high school tw)«>ing team are desefv- the commendation of the entire community for bring- to Ashland fof the third time in four years the state mpionship in the annual typewrting contest. Ashland is known throughout tlie length and breadth Dragon tor her good sehools, and the ability display- by the fonr young women in the state typewriting lest at Corvalis last week is simply a substantiation of tlsnd’s churn. Becaawe of the splendid work of the Ashland type- tiag team, a silver loving sup has been brought to land, to remain here permanently among the trena il trophies of the ¡mblic School. of boles. That's became the rule rather than the t exception In the last two or three years. Brookhart’s a radical Repub lican. Senator Ashurt's a lib eral Democrat. It was natural for Ashurst to vote for Brook- h a rt In preference to the Demo c ra ts But conservative Stack. Senator Butler'a an ultra- conservative Republican. It was equally natural for him to vote for Steck. Bnt note— the uitra-conservn- tlvely, Republican senator Bing ham was for Brookhart. Still, extra conscientious. He vot ed. not the way he felt, but ns he ought. So be ddeen't count. Glancing on down the list We come to another Brookhart vote that certainly surprises an— the vote of tho dyed-in-the-Wool reg ular Republican Senator Cur tía, Sonate m ajority floor lead er. whom Rfbokhart's radicalism in the S8tb Congress- 'nearly drove Wild. Reed of Missouri voted for Brookhart, bnt Reed's a notor ious Democratic lasurgant and B rookhart win his kind of a senador, greardleas of his party K lam ath FaMa— C ity Bella R iv erside P ark to fcetttral Pacific sod Northern lines. OUT OUR W AY C H I C A G O , ( U P ) — Commit tees are busily canvassing tha city to make a success of the transformation of Chicago into the church center of the world on June 20 to 24. D uring that tim e more than 1,- 000,000 persons, ntambers or both the ctfergy and the fay field, w ill be here to attend thè Euch aristic Congress of the W orld. Every hotel In the' city w ill be taxed to its capacity. I t is ex pected these w ill take care of 260,000 of the delegates. Every room In the city available for renting purposes is being regis tered. A ll hotels and restaur- ants, as well as home owners, are being cautioned to have sufficient food on hand to care for thia im mense crowd. I t w ill be Chicago's biggest event since the World F air In 1896, and it is the chief' inter est o f the Roman Catholic world this year. Chicago w ill be able to handle the Immense crowd, backers of the unique convention said to day. W hile railroad facilities w ill be taxed, there are suffic ient carriers operating into the city to care for the delegates. "The local Klwanls club’s dele gate, Fred S. Engle of the Citi- Sens Bank, who w ill attend the 10th annual convention of Ki- wanis International in Montreal, Canada June win help to .The Canadian city's "Forum Broekhart'a hind of Republl- caalsm than they have with Trotsky's They east Brook- hart votes. labaL And. of an M aators, Reed Read of Pennsylvusla, how Smoot-— not only conservative ever T And his eoUeagae, Pep hut reactionary, to hta back per? Republicans. yes. bnt as bone. He plunked for Brook * l t . hno moro la common with hart when his name was called. designated to each delegate. On the card handed to the delegate w ill be the address, instructions on how to reach the lodging place, and the price of the room. Thia w ill prevent there being a m illing mob In the railroad sta tions, without rooms. W h ile Chicago proper is pre paring for the task of being host to a m illion, Mundeiien, III., Is watching a fevered bit of activ ity . . W orkmen there are preparing the grounds pf the St. M ary of the Lake ¿em inaty for the influx of delegates. Carpenters, cement woakers, bricklayers and land- nape gardeners are rushing im provements and promise the iut- monse project Will be ready by May 1. . The Im provem ent project there entaila a cost of $300,000. Included In the work are five arched bridge! across the lake; a new $100,000 boat house; ro ll ing; trim m ing and smoothing of the' grassy approaches and. com pletion of several tiers of stair ways leading dogn from the Ed ward Hines memorial chapel. The stairways w ill connect with the miles of winding paved roads which w ill be . the path of the great delegations when they attend the last mass of the con gress at the memorial chapel. Although plans ate Incomplete it is planned to have altars along the road's at which benediction will be given. wlll he used for the convention sessions. This big auditorium setts many thousands and w ill adequately handle the crowds. W ith the broadcaktlflg of the op ening night’s session, to be known as “A lt Klwanls N ight," local Kiwanians are hoping that in their meeting here (hey w ill be «Me to tone In on Montreal anil hear the program Just the same as the official dele- gito w ill do many miles away. A meeffing of alt KlWants clubs will be held In the Unifed States and Canada at the saine time as the opening hour sessfdn In Mon treat. This simultaneous occa sion w ilt be for the expression of the united Food win and friend ship existing between Canada and the United Staten lo r over a century- Some (0 special trains over ev ery railroad Hue la this country and the Dominion or Canada will " to o out ah o - i K Bv Williams BÀ9SÔ F v u - . Moni and Pop By Taylor If" 1 dÜESS Î ’O B ETTeS ^T art ^ ? xeePTiya an expense bümét i OXtt-N MAD WHEN 1 L 8 P T HOME AWt> 1 V v AATT TO MAX« IT REACH AS TAM : A S L CAN / ARft <S6TT,«<h > W MW TRAIN FARE OP HERE UiAS * 3 6 o - ¿alDBOW’S WAS HALF T hat much m a » ón <3 a . L T c TAL O F J ÖD MATILDA.N0U ARSA awd 9oA«e> h?ee anò NWBwuy bx F ewoito «. histwfss >- v » M A N - j r takes a ’U C k S c H S M e « T o < three Mosoras vacation J OUT O F $ 1 5 . 0 0 r , NEVER AvERA&e OVE rari'y Kiwanians to Montreal. Fa- rifle coasts specials w ill necessi tata days of traveling before they pull Into the eastern Gan nii Ian Mty. Amfitaementg are being made tor tha local delegate to *meet with other Kiwanians from this part of the country to make, the 4