Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, May 04, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    .! ■CTìi'J 'tP
ro lD eb t S
DA!ILY • • ’ TIDJNpS
meats i||
Except huu«i»y by
Editor
Business Managet
News Edìtbr
Telephon? 39
YF1CIAL CITT PAP t i t
the .v b l« » l, O ndili i*wt««r< ss ScronCtTnsa Mail Matter
Subscription Price, DcUvored in City •
.
CAgffúo
« R r W by » « ff ™
iCH ¿oá<3g£
ElTj
Qut of c!tc?l*r pBnaJs
RATES
Î -J®
-®»
.
what constitutes advertising
DONATIONS
No donations ta charities or otherwise w il| be made In advertls-
g or job printing .— our contributions will he 1* cash.
AIR SUPREM ACY
*
A •
, I
• -
‘
Í
L
I X
U n ited
Í
By the m iddle of M ay, it ia p rem ised , th e
¡States’ wifi have the m ost extensive a ir service in th e
grorld. Its a ir m ail a lre ad y surpasses th a t of aity o th e r
Country. I t WiU goon* su rp ass tlm tjo f a n y o tk g r cppibina-
liou of countries.
. •
Few A m ericans realize w h a t h as been accom plished
¡n aviation, as a resu lt of governm ent pio n erin g . T h e
great tran sco n tin en tal a ir m ail line betw een N ew Y ork
^nd San F rancisco, o p erated by th e Postoffice Dejyftri-
thent, is a proved success a n d a fixture. AVith it a re b e­
ing connected a dozen b ig feeder lines- o p e ra td by p riv a te
♦nterprise, ru n n in g to New E n g lan d , th e S outh, S o u th w est
£nd N o rth w e st T h is b ra n c h in g system , fed in tu rn by
fciilroad mail tra in s, w ill p re tty well cover th e co u n try ,
and will continue grow ing u n til *its facilities nre av ailab le
in every section an d ev ery state.
X A lready th e e a st an d w est cousts arp only a d ay and
> h a lf a p a rt. T he n o rth e rn and southern tie rs of states
trill soon be only one d ay a p a rt. T he d istan ces w ill con­
tin u e shortening in th e m a tte r of time- as every p a r t of
th e country’ comes w ithin th e scope^ of th e gro w in g sys­
tem.
v
;
T his is the so rt of th in g th a t was visioned by im ag ­
in a tiv e m en whdh th e a irp la n e was in v e n te d —¿ n d e d l,
S IM S
SAYS
Wonder who it is makes all the
bets with* these . crosM-country
hikers you pick UP every spring?
Diamonds are so hard they will
scratch any known metal, and
jujt sipiply ,rpjn a bank ,hc-
account.
By taking a straw vote of the
proper people you could provo
almost anything almost beyond a
doubt.
Wisconsin beekeepers held a
BURNING PA P E R MONEY
convention.
We havb been
F ailin g iu every o th e r p lan to restore th e value of thinking of buying a bee.
5
4
WASHINGTON j TW ?
LETTE ï Ç T î S:
North American universities, and
these really come to a pretty fair
understanding of us. •
But. precious few North Ameri­
cans get farther into Latin Ameri­
ca than Havana, Panama and
Mexico, and we *aend no students
to the southern republics at all.
As for North Americans who
know Mexico, they're the worst
off of th ebunch, for they imag
Ine that the people farther down
|h e line are like Mexicans, which
they’re not a bit.
WASHINGTON— Pan - Ameri­
can Congresses of JournaJists.
like the one Washington has Just
been having, are good things. All
kinds of Pan-American blow-outs
which
induce
representative
North and Latin Americans to
visit back and forth are good
things.
China is a good deal better un­
derstood in this country than
most of Latin America. This-
isn't to say that China, cithef, H
at all well, understood here.
Latin America understands the
United States a little better than Local Postoffice W ill Receive
N ew T w o-pent Stamp
the pnited States -understands
by About May 15
Latin America, but not much.
Of course this is highly unde­
sirable. It means internatlona-
Uon bungling, which makes bad
work.
The reason Latin Americans
know more about iis than we
know about them is that a good
many of them, of the upper class,
have visited here a time or two
— generally not for long enough
to find much out, but at least
they have sort of an idea of the
way we look.
There’s also quite a sprinkling
of Latin American students In
th e fran c and save th e F rench governm ent from bank-
uptcy, some ingenious Frenchm en nre 'urging th a t h a lf
If you think we are living too
he o u tsta n d in g p a p e r m oney be burned.
# * fast get outand watch a brick­
T h a t, very likely- would m ake the rem aining p a p er layer on a government job-
ïr a n c s w o rth ab o u t tw ice a s m uch as they are now, if no
tn o re were p rin te d in th e m eantim e. B ut a financier jMiints
Logansport' <Jnd.) bridegroom
4»ut th a t it would also b rin g a new problem to face.
81 ia o ts * .to ' divorce - h is bride
T he present F ren ch debt, rn all its im m ensity, is now of 80. but wisdom doos come
liased on th is in flated , low -priced franc. I f tine p u rch asin g with Mge^-rsoptetlmei.
Mower of th e fra n c were doubled tom orrow , the am ount
,»f th e debt* would he ju s t the sam e, w ith only luilf the
inoney to pay i t w ith.
It would be the name w ith p riv a te debts. Loans of
1'licap inoney would h av e to lie p aid w ith d e a r money.
C red ito rs would gain. .^Debtors—includin g tax p ay ers —<
i£rtMTt)UMEKl, \T
COSfoMARW A T
X
Mould lose.
GATAERlMS
T i r S MATURE. FEF?
’
N atu rally a nation th a t objects so strenuously to p a y ­
Jf a ’ 'T b A S f (AAE.TER T ' tMT??oDUCe.
in g high taxes will n o t ceonjeuanco such a plan.
DlSTiMGuiSlHED UlSrt&RS. lliAEREFORe
TAKE, g r e a t P leasure , im m lf to D u o u '
G erm any and K uasia h a v e deflated th e ir currency-
TXIO S T P A ^G E R S WHO HAUE MEWEF?
lint th e preftpect of French, d eflation ia s till -far in th e
\
B E F O R E . U lS iT E O T H lS COMMUM i T /.
fu tu re.
GEWTULMEM, 'MEET A SU C E
Ol6' BA com vjho is NOT B u r k T,
I
STATING IT B R IST L Y
¿ M S i V a N o a B l s c u T vjho I S j
«
\
OoME. iU SID E .
It is a m istake to look RDpn com pulsory nutoniobile
insurance as a m eans of preventing accidents. On the
p a rt of. those who are indifferent to the rig h ts of others,
com pulsory autom obile insurance m ay tend to increaso
accidents, i t s
or
» u »*. j
•7
THb fuiMMun btdhsiirfluce is fan’indem nify' After h W :
I
OUT OUR WAY
|a m ev e?!
MW rah <
- v e n tin g
Iwn’ *i filsfti» 'Af dife
i n s u r a n c e ^ pfrnnged jfoy,
fe»
p a r t o f tlm iodv;idp»l
lessened
v en t suffering; o r iMstofce 1iL -.' .
F o r flffa.Tciirirtn. no -«¿aipii)*
th e ixipufafr o4*^w|*tiou, th at u*
it w ill reumd£Hw,bLti<»Uk .aiitxuii
I t w ill
n.'il l i a < | K .
) h -! s
a
»•
♦Ij-tiH
-Jf. OMdi, MiUJ, ftkf’.Umn
fopie fellow in it who has w orked long and h ard
igb fo r him to become unpopular.
i
^ASDIH PTQ N. D. C.. May / .
— 4U P)— A tense and dramatic
court' room scene was enacts din
the abgmbej of the United States
sedate today when Federal Judge
George W- English of Illinois. Im­
peached for "high crimes snd
misdemeanors,’* appeared beforo
the senate and denied very charge
tiled against him.
SEATTLE. May 4 — (V P )—
The neyt big sectional $>ye|op-
■ntpnt in this country y|H be jp
the Pacfffa Northwest,’ it Is pre­
dicted py T. W , Zimmerman, Bell­
ingham, secretary of thp Raçfffc
Northwest
. Estate* asaocia-
IJopi . jqrn.mpr^»» has just com­
pleted a surrey of business condi­
tions which took him op a topr
throughout the country-
“I f o u n d s keep interest ip
thl3 section everywhere'! rrenf,”
Zimmerman told
the United
Press. “I p . the east IL U .«hU0
generally bei teftd that (hero «fill
“AH future events, where an admission charge in made or g
llection taken is Advertising."
No discount will ba allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
v
CHARMÎSTPWW.
W.
Va..
May,. 5.-—A raed 1 deputies here
prepared to penetrate the momt-
jain fastnesses of Summers coun­
ty tp take by force if necessary a
|2-yeot>ot4 gljl wpow mother,
Mrs. g a ry Norveila BprTpll, as­
serts she is being held »s host-
* • > ' s f «OP dHK-
‘ T>s IHPa fM * R p a smith
purren, has iwen living with her
mountaineer gu atflaj» I# a rus-
Qiarges Dpflied
Ry Gmlty Í h Í8®
Northwest Due
For Rcvetftoment
.....................
Rates fpr Legal and Miscellaneous Advertlslhg
Irst insertion, per 8 poiht line .— '............. - ............... —-----
sch subsequent tnaertion, 8 point line
----------------
ird of T hanks...........................- ............. ...........................1.»«
hituaries, per line*
.............r ,
.»g1 » ,
X
B c ’ t > u
at 'either lower corners. Withjn
l ^ ’rtrcuiaf panels appears the
numeral " H kero»» the bottom
of the ’stamp are the words "two
cents4 wrlthin a horlsontal panel.
Ip either upper corner under tbs
word? ''•Sespiilcentenhial Exposi­
tion” appear the dates “ 1776*-
IS 1 8?" ‘ All «the lettering on the
stamp Is white-faced roman.
ine Month
rhtee Months
lix Months _
>ne T e a r -----
DISPLAY A D V m iH hPiü
I. per inch ............- —
•trine
carrent'l-o«j»t
stapip ò | Che rggulàr isso«. The
ien tr si design of M m stamp. I s tfcs
L iberty,^«11 w^lcfa s w i^ s from
the'tops qf, (our l i a t ornamental
«olum ttsth at raífa «n dà»'' tostar
¿wfaí. T h e w q r ^ / ’aeeqiMceiitsn-
0U1 R w ) osì U qii ''» bp » v a c c e » the
toi» of the stamp Ij» straight’white
% ■
-i
1
One d ay before p el£ alb , Mo.; a toWA of 500, held its an n u al election, five .women m ade
up a cam paign tic k e t and began going a f te r votes. N ext d ay they were elected, and
the to w n ’ll be ru n by women fo r th e n ext year, lucft to rig h t, the new officeholders are
Mrs. S. A- M allory, councilm an; M rs. S. J . H ull, c ity c lerk ; Mrs. J . W. McAdow, m ay­
o r;; M rs. J o h p P y jes, councilman, and^Mrs. C harles C linkenbear, councilm an.
Bv Williams
'A* '
<
a « a '
*
Child (i}&cdth
What la *the real wqrtb
pf ft chi)<f? Al the veyy icast
it ift well worth the easiest thing ■
a parent, through the us?-of good *
common sense, may help it to have
•••Good health! “Health is so
pecessary to alhthe duties, as well
as pleasure? of life, that the crime
of squandering it is equal to the
folly ” You want your child to
have a. fair chance (n life. You
wanbibtohave happinessh And
: whaps thf roadway to both?