Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, April 26, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
I you ' »ad foi oVogdnS '
>
(ICtohHÿtifd f n is r o)
,• i ’
Published Kt N’y Krening Except Sunday by
THE
ASHLAND
PRINTING
Telephone I t
O F P i n t I, C IT Y PAPER
>
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?' *t«fc«Mly,
V
iPd./Ad. ; by feackaon*, Co. ^Friend«
CO,
..................... Editor
Business Manager
.....t. News Editor
t R. G re e r.......... ....
rge Madden Groen
H. Perkins ..........
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-x.
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baen secured? with derteta ob-
i t 'tí»:' Public
and L a nd« and Surreys Cosuulttee,
ty , if * .
Alfred Stroud and
* < he is o f . t o g ro eto t W
to
V
íte
n la Lee, o< !> » » -
qtty hU Stotk
'
M t, OMpornl«, are In AeMnnd to
a
“ « ¥ * • «» W» t o * ta a ¿pend d ’ week visiting, Mr. and
Senator's
and CBBe wgere the State stands to hfrg. ? a m d
Hedÿerg. * Mrs.
rt,w j
O€(*£ w P
I ». • Vit TO? MT
\ K
JV 4M
„•»
H» »#«*»•
>iS J
at the .tsblaed, Oregon Paetofficc as Second ('l*»s Mall Matter
Subscription Price, Delivered In City
One Month ....
Three Months
Six' Months ..
• M gala er lqse.so
much, «11 nerson- atnpud end Mr». Herbar» gre sie­
«1 prejudices should
be
put te»» a h.\
,
1
» a aside and the «ood ko the great-
One Year ____
By M all and R ural Routes
One Moatb ...
Three Months
Six Moattia ...
One Year .......
9 •
■ J f j a l * M i '
February 1, 1928.
# 5 2 !
D IS P LA Y
A D V E R T IS IN G
RATES
Single Insertion, per Inch ......................... ................. ....
Political, Display, per lach ................................................
Cne Insertion a week — ........................... ..............................
Two insertions a week __ ________ ______________________
Dally insertion .......... ............................ .......................................„
- Rate» for Legal and Miscellaneous Advertising
First insertion, per 8 point line ................................................
Each subsequent Insertion, 8 point line ..............................
Card of T h an k s .............................................................................. _
Obituaries, per line ....................t...............................________...
W H A T CONSTITUTES A D V E R T IS IN G
“A ll future events, where as admission charge is made e r a
collection taken Is Advertising.**
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
DONATIONS
~
No donations to charities or otherwise w ill be made la advertis­
ing or job printing — onr contributions wlU be in carb,
VMAKP A LL.
<R K SH T
*2
ta D umm
/ f-tuiiaerù
UN<3B a S s F ol ,U t
* i overeé
«JUNUWítAk
, «Oír YMF /
E D U C A T IO N A L M IX -U P
The trustees of au academy which inherited $4,-
500,000 from the late .James W. Ellsworth, father of the
jxilar explorer, are in a sad state of perplexity. They
don’t know what to do with all that money. They have
called an advisory council of many of the n atio n ’s fore­
most educational experts, and after discussing the whole
subject of Imys’ education »up and down and across, arc
more at sea than ever.
. It is a question of what should be the line of develop­
ment in the new academy. W hat kind of boys should be
accepted as students, and what should they be taught-
and by what metkqkl o f instruction! Shall the work he
theoretical or practical!
The firsl of these questions seems the hardest. Some
experts advocate a search for especially talented youths,
taking them at 10 or 12 and developing them for brilliancy
and efficiency. Others w ant the academy affiliated with
the public schools, the state university and other regular
educational institutions, accepting students of moral type
and ability and turning out a normal product. Othors
want <>p]>ortuuity given to "boys who are subnormal or
otherwise handicapped, to fit them for meeting thç
struggle for existence on equal term s with the rest. Oth­
ers want it simply a good boarding school‘for random
hoys, teaching them the things tlM ^güii^neeti to go to
college, along with a few frills and practical extrtfs.
All this is a pictuoe of current educational ideas in
the United States. Vast sums are s|>eut on education, and
on the whole the iustruction is probably good. Dut there
is no agreement alunit what the schools are to accom-.
plish, or how they shall go about it. The country has no
educational program.
W A N D D R IL L I N A L I B R A R Y
The University .of Illinois is one of the institutions of
higher learning requring four years of physical educa­
tion, including swimming. There are 2,500 young women
in that school today, enrolled in 12 different sports Slid
enjoying all the advantages of three gymnasiums, a labge
athletic field aud a fine swimming pool.
.
All of this has come alkiut in a short quarter-century.
Twenty-five years ago, says a news story from Urbana,
a dozen wumen students of the University dariugly in ­
dulged in wand drill in a corner of the library. While
engaged iu this grace and health - giving exercise fliey
were hundicap]>ed as much as possible by “ gym ” costume*
consisting of black serge waists with high collars and
long sleeves and black pleated skirts about three yards
around aud reaching below the ankles.
Perfectly ridiculous, of course! But the wand-drillers
were shockingly modern, and undoubtedly niuny heads
were shaken *m gloomy foreboding. W hat would those bold
young women come to!
ell. they came to n'o had end, though they helped
frtart something which probably brought the freer girl of
today a id which ¡* still going forward. The gloomy head-
shakers are over-|«ese*t* hut fear’of their prophecies is
growing less.
W E S T E R N R A IL R O A D S
AW » O H
ad m H u iM
BY
C H AR LES P. STE W A R T
N B A Servies W rite r
W A S H IN G TO N — The canniest
politician at the capital, If you
ask him whether his politics
are Democratic or Republican,
Will smile and answer:
“ 1’se a servant of the people,
Sir, just a servant of the peo­
ple. ”
»
f*
have that job right there.’ My'
politics is just to scatter
sun­
shine and be a servant of the
people, and I still got ray job,**
H arry was born at Washing­
ton’s home, Mt. Vernon, where
his father was a 'watchman for
many years.
Perhaps because of an am-
Presidents, leaders in Con­
gress and
other
distinguished munition shortage au election
personages have been his friends has been called off in Mexico
all hig life. He has a sweeping City.
fam iliarity with the personali­
ties and Incidents of two genera­
Galesburg, D I., g irl
won
tions of public life, and his mem­
championship.
Just
ory for acquaintances is as­ rifle
same, some brave
man
i
tounding.
-Th ».n tlier day ho called w ith­ n|atry her.
out hesitation the name of a;
man who returned after 17 years!
absence, and the man had been i
Thera's one nice thing,
merely a congressman’s secre-j for« a g irl goes swimming
tary.
can hide her clothe«
in
svlm m ing suit bag.
T h at’s llarrjr. doorkeeper and
messenger of 'the House way and
means
committee.
His
full
name is H arry Parker, although
few know anything but the H a r­
ry. Ever since W illiam McKinley
was chairman of the ways and
means committee, tor 38 years.
B un I ucmh V i s it o r -
H a rry has served the people as
The rising generation’s
Frank C. Bramwell, state super­
guardian of the committee door.
intendent of banks, of Salem, was problem 1» the coat of gas
Sunshine P olitics
a business visitor in Ashland to
“ Folks come here to work day.
who talk's a |ot about being R >
We don't need an army. Lei
publicans or Democrats/* says Picnicked at Sav.ige Rapid«—
our bootlegger« «ell the enemy
H arry, ' and he doesn’t mean ths
C lint Baughman and family,
elected members of Congress al­ George Baughman and family and
though be could, with reason. Mart Real and family, went to
Our big corn crop hurt«
"And* pretty soon
they
come 3avage Rapids for a picnic yes­
when the weather change«.
w alking by all dressed up and terday. They caught the lim it of
they tell somebody, • I USED to fish.
OUT OUR WAY
r
M A » 'O H
M A ! LO O vf
A -T 1 Ì4 E S E
P O R )< C H oV >S!
TUBS UstOMTGrlT
MICE..Kl &POWN1
LlUfc *40U COOVf
OMÎ SHOW ME.
VWOT I a » k Î T
0O1K1' RlGrt-Vf y
y-77—-k MA! 7
Bv W illiam s
J o s r R e <
st A
ArA
"O l l h o u r m e a d ' s 1 /WW'V
ÍU . G E T
BETTfep m A I VJE '
Dear » » »
i t la to« had that a man of
' Senator Stanfield’s accomplish­
ments and Standing ahanld meet'
with any opposition from any
Important source. « Is Washing­
ton record is one that any Sen­
ator. eovdd he proud of, either
an old Senator or a new Sen­
ator.
His Chairmanship of the Pnb-
i lie Lands and Surreys Commit­
tee. never before given to the
Northwest, In, as* you know, of
inestimable value to his consti­
tuency, and It w ill be as long
a time iu the future as It has
been In the past
before
It
alights op the shoulders of an­
other Oregon Senator.
His Membership of the F l-
nance Committee alone should
be -an unimpeachable endorse­
ment of Ms fitness to further
serve his State, for, I want to
say that Senators are not whim­
sically placed on this all-im port­
ant Committee merely op account
of the color of their hair or the
quality of their voices.
I t is
only on account of a real and a
completely demonstrated merit. '
Doubting Thomases should con­
sult the personnel of this Com­
mittee, past and present.
As I said, I wish the people
there - co a Id
appceciate
these
things and inventory them at
th e ir proper
valuations, w ith­
out petty prejudlose or biased
opinions.
%
81ncerely
yours,
(Signed) Fred W. Piper.
Washington, D. C.
March I t , 1924
My Dear 0 8 8
M»y I send you my best
wishes for success In yonr ef­
forts for Senator Stanfield
W hile I know almost nothing
of politics, i do know «omp-
thlng about housekeeping, and
I ’d think hard and long before
giving up a tried and true help­
er for an unknown quantity..
And no matter how fine a w in
may be ana how pinch we may
think of him personally,* he l«>
an unknown • quantity in
the
D im m e r a il R igw T!
J u s t pot -T h e
B aw im ' p o w d e r
1 A k J'LARD IM h er e
U R MOLAI t
LAW MEAO'S
OSBURN
BRUSHES
Wherp yoB ca n g e t i t o p 1 a m o m e n t’s n o tic e ;
th a t i s y o n r s a v in g s acco u n t.
•
M on ey d e p o s ite d in a s a v in g s acco u n t a t T h e
C itioons B a n k o f A sh la n d d r a w s in te r e s t s te a d ­
il y an d is r e a d y to resp o n d tp y o u r call w hen
you need i t
*
:
D o n o t th in k o f tr y in g to d o w ith o u t a s a v ­
in g s acco u n t, n o m a tte r h o w m a n y o th er in v e st-
m s o ts y o u m a y h a v e .
.
The Citizens Bank o f Ashland
A sh la n d , O regon
How Frigidaire Solve«
Your Home Refrigeratiti
Problems
P e o p le s E le c tr ic S to r e,
Medford, Oregon.
Please eend to me, without obligation, your folder,
“ Solving Your Refrigerator Problems.”
N am e
..................................................................
Address ...................................................
World1« Largest
Ashland to all Points South
Three schedules daily 0 :3 8 «. in. 2 :1 « p. m. « 0:00 p.
Stop over anywhere and aa oftqn aa you like.
r e i v y “ ' H it -, Hyj Sgpnu.
4KAT8— High b»fkixl reclining udaptahle three positions.
SAN FRANCISCO IN S E V E N T E E N HOURS
All Puposes
Simpson1«
Hardware
B e t t e r .
I FEEU.
Fl»s)E MOWH J
f b e t e a r e tim e s w h en y o u n e e d m o n ey in a
hurry. T h a i» i s on e p la c e a b o v e a il others^
Stage Line
f^ o o
CAM G E T O t)R OWM
QUICK-ACTION DOLLARS
T h e W in c h e ste r S te r e
The testare 9 t the Highway la Spring in all Its glory.
Get yonr ticket« from Pickwick Stage Agent
Tavern Cafe— MSV Bast M ain St. Phone M x
SPECIAL
AB This W eek
\ F O R M E , T CAM /
D O T H 'R E S T /
Valued at 20c
A 0T IV I
.Three great M ehtwi railroad systems, the Union
Pacific, the Southern Pacific and the ftanta Fe, are not
lKS«iug behind iti construction work, hut spending mil-
liotUi'Of dollars in maintaining and expanding their plants.
«1» Pirron Pncific tun? just announced a minioiwlol-
la r program of expansion a n d , improvement merely of
some of its terminal facilities, and ten million dollars an­
nounced for purcliaw* of new equipment.
These great railroads also announce that the Pacific
BREAD MENU
t>o n o t c a t tile sa m e k in d
o f b read a ll th e tim e —
c h a n g e fnopi p la in w h ite
to grah am , w h o le w h ea t,
n u t or o th e r v a r ie tie s.
Franklin
Bakery
tatWHUTY
Prohibition is still iu its infancy; th a t’s why some
tie still want their bottle.
The midnight oil ig now burning in the transmission
»ad of in the lamp.
f'ACfft-VERS G t TLT
A \ ; a c a m s e C u t * 3 o T
—
nem l R
Swenson & Feebler
D ö \.\ m