ASH LAN D -D A IL Y For instanced tba Republicans Sieve la • frrotectlve tyrtrt. So | the Dyao«r*t». Tty(y may ysider.tta present tariff wall a tie toe Mgh but they Indorse U principle i, . .. . “I'm far absolutely free trade" bddleston told me the other T ID IN G S (Established'in lrfr«T Editor Madden Green Perkins Business Manager ....... Newa Editor You (fan Imagine how popu- tir such talkm ikeahltn With the “ Summing up,” Bays the committee In it s rep ort, protected 'hnterteti" aid Hhadie- fettered at th« Ashlaad, Oregon Poatoffice aa Second CI am Mail Matter Subscription Price, Delivered in W f “ the <taV labor metliod of jniblic construction injurious pton balls from Birmingham, a CI no Month 8 »85 big industrihl center, where they ly affects the taxpayer because it tèhds toward waste and ate strong. * Three Months ............. ........................ ——......L.—.— 1.95 fitx Months 8.75 inferior quality of work, cripples individualism and per One Year 7.50 sonal initiative, stifles ihdustry by putting government A lm o BRbADbAfarttko By M ill and Rural Routes v§Ett br ötttfcbhÄd rtttf in competition with business, demoralizes labor, builds One Month ... Three Months political .machines and gives the taxpayer no gUftrantefe Six Months ... The first successful directlorf of One Y ear.....- of either cost or time of .completion.” Abtion picture aceftba ky radio DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES • has been achieved by kamous Single Insertion, per inch FAUTORtÉS FOLLOW $JARKETS? frtayers-Lasky Corporation, Political, Display, per inch During the past quarter of a century, according to -The entire sea battle for, "Old One insertion a week tiie Department of Manufacture of the Chamber of Coih- Ironsides,” a photoplay which Two insertions a week merce of thè United States, there has been a marked Jgmes Criiae 1« directing, was _ Daily _w insertion __IVll/U .. ------ i j - l. ••• Rates for Legal and Miscellaneous Advertising change in thè relativè importance of the factories which plmed With the use of a small FJrst Insertion, per 8 point line ___________________ ___... radio broadcasting set through should determine the locatioh of industrial p lan ts., Each subsequent Insertion, 8 point line ___________ ___ which directions for the scenes are Card of Thanks .______ _______ _____ ____ Not long ago proximity to and availablity of raw feeing given. Obituaries, per line .......... ................................................ ......... materials and labor were probably the first consideratici. A fleet of twenty-«!^ sailing ves WHAT constitutes advertising Now the question is raised whether access to m arkets is sels took part. For many Of the “All future events, where an admission charge Is made hr a hot the determinating factor. In other words, is industry; shots for the picture the sailing collection taken Is Advertising.” ‘ t No discount will be allowed Religions or Benevolent Orders. which hitherto lias kept close to its sources of supply; vessels are several miles from the beginning to establish itself iti the btoxijnlty of its riiàfr- ■gotloa picture cameras. For the donations No donations to charities or otherwise will be made In advertis ket outlets! Or, are factoriés following the customer J taking of these scenes an espec ing or Job printing — our contributions will be In cash. ially constructed low wavfe lehgth The Department of Manufacture of the National broadcasting set was used: The di Chamber is how considering the question whether there rector issued his orders into the HOUSECLEANING FOR PROHIBITION microphone of the outfit and his The courts of Oregon recently have dealt with a has been a significant trend iri this direction. latructions ware immediately pick number of eases of prohibition enforcement agents and ed up by small receiving Sets on ex-agents who have been found guilty of violating .the each vessel. OFFICIAL CITY PAPER Telephone 89 prohibition law. Sweeping indictments returned a few days ago by the federal grand jury at Seattle included ft large number of public employes whose sworn duty was io uphold the law. Courts and juries elsewhere through out the country have found much similiar work to do. BY CHARLES t*. STEWART Those branches of public service particularly concerned Be careful with your wishing. NEA Servicd .Writer with enforcement of the laws against intoxicants ,might You very often get Just what you WASHINGTON, — From his seem to have been honeycombed by unfaithfulness and wish for others. looks I defy anybody to size up George Huddleston of Alabama From the general rush for the Out of such circumstances, of course, the persistent North Pole our guess is some man aa one of the scrappiest mem- and perennially hopeful wets tajte much comfort. As they from Florida is up there selling berg of the House of Representa tives. ¿ee it, and as it has been cited by their representatives in real estate. He’s short and light -— a the halls of congress, enforcement is made impossible by mere wisp of a little man. id The Bald Head Club of Amer the opportunity for graft and corruption; the law can ica held a convention in Bridge (manner he’s mildness itself. Ho not be effective because some of those employed to make port, Conn., and no doubt some has a wistful, appealing face. Ho resembles, more than anything, it effective have been found to he crooks, either by hair raizing ztorlez were told. an elderly bookkeeper who’s be choice or through yielding to irresistible tem ptation; con ginning to wear out and to worry In Spokane, Wash., a pawn nivance between law agents and law breakers has proved about his job. “Inoffensive” is to the satisfaction of those who are eager for such proof broker qhot somebody instead of the adjective which best fits him •omebody shooting a pawnbrok- th at the present enforcement system is a total loss, and — to judge from ills looks. . Well, don’t Judge by ’em — not that a more vigorous system would he only the more in his case. wasteful and ilseless. “American Fete Postponed,” a • • I t is unfortiinate th at the unfaithfulness of a few says a headline over newt from Should have given some color of plausibility to this line London. We often wish we could Huddleston's a survival of an .of reasoning. While it is undeniably true th at the unfaith postpone our feet. almost extinct species. He sur vives by virtue of the fight he ful have been few by comparison with the hundreds of Just to show how soarce marry thousands who are sworn to enforce all law, the instances ing men are, in Boston, a wo puts up. The exterminator« would kill him in a minute it of trust betrayed have been conspicuous in themselves, or man married the same man three they copld. but he won’t let ’em. times. hâve been made conspicuous by ready exaggeration. When they get In a muss with Suspicion thrives on such instances. To a generally him he comes out on top. law-abiding people ,there is nothing so contemptible as, Lett for Klamath F a l l s - He's an original Jeffersonian Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hodktnson official graft, nothing so reprehensible as official corrup and Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Ruseau, Democrat tion. Even the otherwise good citizeirw ho feels that he have been visiting Mr. Hodkln- It’s a commonplace that you must still have his drink, and who holds the bootlegger in all from Los Angeles, and who can’t <tell la Republican and a some sort of esteem for available services, is shocked, son’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Democrat apart any more. You horrified, Gut raged, to learn of the connivance of a feder H. Hodktnson, left for Klamath bet you can tell 'eon apart .from al, state or local agent, without which liis furtive transac Falls today to spend two weelts. George Huddleson. tions would not have been jmssihle. There Is a strange inconsistency in this that defies analysis, but It is so. Yet it is this good citizen, in the m ultitude of his numbers, that furnishes all the means of eorruptio.n of the public service. I t is his»money that is split with tliosh to whom he looks for honesty and efficiency in the enforcement of law. Tlie national prohibition establishment 'is compara LfleR 6üT IT tively young. In the earlier stages, and with employment MAKBS w q s LOOK- distributed at least to some extent as political patronage, ROSY it was inevitable that all sorts of persons would be enlist ed for the service. To the confirmed or the embryo grftft- frr it held out large inducements, and among all the others ilecessary to employ there were bound to l)e weaklings, susceptible to approach and ready to fall. Ruch eopdK fions could not be restricted to the federal service. Dis- lumest instincts, greed and weakness, obtaining hi miftor proportions among tbeiaw enforcement agencies of states, counties and cities, found opportunity for new and cor rupt exercise in dealing witli violators of the prohibition V. Basketball Thfow for Distance 6th Grade Girls: let — Rather Peffly — Haw- thorae. 3fid— LottisS Brommer—Junior 3rd— Leah - De Ha*» — Haw- thorne. . - • 6th ,Orad« Oírla: , ,v l i t — Alice Arant—Hawthorne events Inciti 2nd— Nancy Gill—Junior Hl. pO-Fhrd 4 n’P’ r X JJ, B ____ . tffcrj. Lettie— Haáthorne. ball thro* for dlstnofe, behfcat- 3rd— Roa Baton— Junior Ml. ball throw for dl«*»cc,, lo»6 4th O nde Girla: 1st— -An ¿Je Ihbell—Mawthorne. ball for girie and baseball for l i d — fethaél Kalium — Maw Tite winners wfere announced Ml 3M—ítt Ü . fcWeheoM — Haw follows: 4t* Grade Bovs: j , lit—biody näriin—junior Hi. 2nd— ban Driggs— Hawthorne. 3rd — Price Shafer — Haw thorne. 8th Grade Girls: let — Esther Peffly — Haw thorne. ., 2nd — HMen Leaser — Haw thorne. 3rd — Mary Powell — Junior l A — VÍMÍ o W Hoheil—Junior 8 i$ —ÌÌMitak Pike — Junior I., 3rd—Ralph Clark—Junior Hl. h Grade Bò^: let—Cari Habethiir — Junior I. 2nd— Sidney Weybright—Haw- orâe. ., ) 3rd— QÜm hivers—junior Ml. 6th Grade Girls: , . . • 1st — Dorothy Leslie — Junior tontgomery Hl. 2nd — Roa Raton — Junior 2nd—5?oyd ftariand- Junior Hi. Ha*» 3rd — Alice Arant 1». 3rd— foonald Wallace ALBANY, X. T., May 31— thorne. (UP)— Governor Smith has sign 4th Gradfe Girth: . ed a bill appropriating 67,482 to 1st — Annie Isbell Mary V. Fitzpatrick of Troy, the thorne.' .» 2nd— Mildred Sfrrthger— Haw . Toledo—Construction begins on amount of pension earned by her fireproof business Mock to cost late sister, Elizabeth, who taught thorne. ., . 140,666. school for 24 years. 3rd — Nellie Daley— Junior Hl. Running Hl.Jump KE j p M K k HOTELS ..... 6th Grade Boys: 1st — Wardlow Howell— Jun OF SWEDISH CASTLES ior Hl. GOTHENBURG. Sweden (UP) 2nd—Arthur Lahdrianlt — Junior — Ä nd , D ID N 'T —The rapid growth of American Hl. 3rd — Myrle Miller — Haw travel in Sweden has started a thorne. ., ¿ JÓ T ttù .fe v AMÖA <a«*ÆPtM-.VY - A O J'íR T B -i? ipovemeht to modernise some of 6th Grade Boys: ............. ................ TH C ‘POTW NKOlH&xe«. f û S«-« (F t OOOCfcl the best located empty cdstles M let:—Glen Myer—Junior Hi. F iN p THC p(SAt> 3 w r s Za.4M-O X t h in k , summer hotels. 3nd— Elgran Noble — Haw t p uT .H Ñ a lu ô H tu .0 â b t i i j The most specific proposal con thorne. r H o u ltá a o rÑ A o v e k Ti+tr s c ç bkri cerns the historic Leckoe Castle ' 3rd — Walter Sfchetderieter— on the shore of Lake Vänern in Hawthorne. TMO U t*» SÆ<5/*’ tO Western Sweden. It was once the 4th Grads Boys: ' f U «Ave T O ;;- A k t Z home of the country’s richest no-< let— George McCreckea— Ha*- bleman, Magnus Gabriel de la thqrae. Gardie ,and has 248 rooms. In 2nd— Jimmy Underwood—Jdn- 1681 the estate was confiscated ior Hi. by the government and the own 3rd— Price Shafer— Hawthorne. er died poor. 8th Grade Girls:........ .......... _ ...... let— Helen Leaser — Haw Slnoe that time the magnifle- lent building, which was slso a thorne. 2nd— Hasel Hudnell — Haw fortress, has stood vacant and about a hundred years ago the thorne. 3rd— Esther rich contents were knocked down at auction. A peasant is said to thorne. hate bought a rare gobelin tap Btt Crude ÖirA: 1st— Hasel wi inior Hl. estry for 16 cents and used it as 2nd— Roh Eaton— Junior Hl. a carpet. .. 3rd— Katherine Doyle — Haw- thore. 4th Gmdo OlrU: Home For Summer— j 1st— Lucia Bell^Holmee—yJun- Hiss Alice Walker Is in Ash land visiting her parents. Mr. and ior HL 2nd— Virginia Crandhll— Hh*- Mrsi. Butler Walker. 8he has been employed for some time in t borne. 3rd — Marg. Savercool — Salem and will spend the sum Hawthorne. mer here. IV. Baseball Thro* for Distance: 8th Grade Boys: Rosebnrg— Contracts let for 3 , ,lr i— Wardlow Howell— Junior important Jobs of street gradine Hl. , , • and paving. 2n<6—Sheldao| Pa<> — Junior Hl. 2nd— Seldsn P«*e—Jhnior HI. 3rd— Roscoe Steward—Janior TeacRer’s Pehsion Is Awarded Sister . m I m O U fete O kc E MAV<fe5 Me. MERMOUÔJ law. Housecleaning was early begun and l i a s made great irogre««. The detection, atTcst ttitd convÎbtlon <jf crooks it the public service is in no sense an indication that fed- cral enforcement is breaking down. Quite to the contrary, these incidents give evidence of strengthening pnr)>oso to enforce the law. ; The grafters are being routed out find punished, the weaklings are lieing retired, men of Cleaner records and greater dependability are being re- renited, and the whole enforcement work ir on forward knarefc. The one safe inferehce to he drawn from the in stances of corruption and conviction outside the federal jkorvice is. that the houseeleaning will he Very thorough, fend that general eo-operation in prohibition enforcement Will sbon become the rule, rather than the exception.— The Oregonian. Î FBBLIG SAVING ON PUBLIC WORRB Waste, inefficiency and high costs are attributed to le growing practice of constructing public work by day ibor f rather than ». g by system f » . the a - * contract * J- by • ‘ a si>ecial ’ • Ufe'R!bÉ% À tìfe MADE - M t ì t -T h e mevj cr ane bo s w Owing to aa strength'qt, the Ai cldc Coast to more dred men tor the summer train ing aeasod. afetlte fecMftlkg has been ’resumed in the Portland Recruiting District. Kallstmenta, including original ehllstmenU are now being made for various arms of the service at the Presidios of Monterey and San Francisco, Cal., Camp Lewis and Vancouver bar racks, Wash., Fotf Douglas, Utah and D. A- Russell, Wyoming and a few other fracas In the Nintli Corps Area. There has ago been placed upon this station for procurement, a small quota for Coast AHlllety/ Infantry. Medical Department end Quartermaster Corps for ,dhty in the Pbilippiqq Islands.. Men who enlist for this service will sail from San Francisco on the Army transport “Sotgme” scheduled to sail June 13, 19X6."