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

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    ND
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
------------------------- f g s i f c ït a h . ta Í í t 7 é y -------------
Except Sunday l>jr
THE ASHLAND
PRINTING
00.
Bart R. Oroer .........
.. _____
----------------—
. — Editor
Gaorre Madden Groan ..................... ........................... Business Manager
W. H. Parkins *
..... ........... ........ News Editor
o f f ic ia l c it y PAPBR ...... .......... —------ -------------- ... Tolspkoaa 88
Blue anti Gray Chambray
■
DUPLAY
Binde Insertion, per Inc
Political, Display, per In
Inc c h -----„...'__
Yearly Coat
One insertion a week
Taro Insertions a week __
Dally Insertion
_______
Rirat faisertloa. per 8 point line
Back subsequent insertion, 8 point line
Card of T hanks____ ;_____________ „___
Obituaries, per line
220 Weight Continous High Back, & pair
WHAT
ADVBRTISDiO
All tatare events, where an admission charge is made or a
tion takein is Adrertiaing.**
Io d issert t-w g l be S oared Religious or Benevolent Orders.
Golden Rule Store
ElKs Building
invaluable work on the Dawes Committee' which formu­
lated the plan for working out Eurojxs’g financial tangles.
^ r;jL °P nK seems to be, first, an , intensely human,
rgetif) dud patrfotic American citizen of the'type that'
iks ahd'acts instead of talking about himself; second,
beds chairman of the Board of the General Electric Com-
pAiy; third, he is a Iieroocrat. His mind works primarily
under the first classification, for he realizes that without
sound government — state, national and international —
neither private industries nor political parties or business
equid exist.
In addressing the National Electric Light Associa­
tion at Atlantic City, on the subject of public ownership
and operation of industry, as opposed to private manage­
ment, Mr Young spoifc with strong feeling. It was his
convibtion that the exjierienee of the last 25 years, has
shown conclusively that efficiency and economy of opera­
tion are best obtained under private ownership. He said: 1
* ‘I have had the opportunity during the last few yeans j
to observe the operation of publicly owned enterprises in ,
m^st of the principal countries of the work). * *,* The (
l ost of the publicly owiied* enterprise's are comparable 1
o < v to th e’worst of the privately owned concerns. I n i'
many cases, no one but the government would dare, to
give such inadequate and inefficient service as I have
seen ”
Commenting on agitation, which has been carried on
to force state and federal governments into-the develop­
ment of hydroelectric power on rivers, involving inter­
national boundaries or the rights of several states^ Mr.
Young said:
' ‘‘This question has been clouded by old animosities.
Private ownership people feel thut if the government has
anything tp do with the development of power in these
compoaite'situations, it will lie merely the starting porn•;
from which the advocates of public ownership will ad­
vance their ofierations.
“ May I not call for a broader view in the public in­
terest from representatives of both the utilities and the
public! jt.Cau we not find a way by which the sovereign
low ers of the states may be recognized in tbe location,
construction- and ownership of these tremendous struct­
ure« ip great risers supplying governmental services as
well as power! The practical engineering problem, * • •
is ’iiot difficult once we. remove from the question the
heated Controversies, the prejudices and the suspicions of
an earlier day.”
.
In concluding his address, Mr. Young said that no
industry had made sneli rapid advances or rendered more
useful service since the great war, then the electric pow­
er companies; that their development is reflected ill wages
and living conditions in our country, sujierior to any else­
where in the world. In conclusion, he said:
‘‘I beg of you not to hold back or, by opposition,
direct or indirect, prevent such development us still re­
mains on the vast rivers to whirh 1 referred. Make ’it
your business not to oppose, but to find some Constructive
way, guided as y<ni will be and os you must be, by the
great human interest which you fuiidainontally serve.”
i
trust, of all private donations and
endowments, to aid It In lta “war­
fare against disease.’* .
J
Large Appropriation
OUT OUR WAY
WORLD’S MODEL FIRS RESISTIVE BUILDING
Eire prevention in rapidly becoming a national bobby,
and once this nation awake« to the-advantage« to lie de­
rived by reducing it« miiuuu J fire loss, it Mill enter upon
the fire prevention work a« enthusiarttieally a« it doe«
upon ajl undertaking«.
Anyone interested in fire re«i«tive building coustriict-
ion can «ee tbe latest achievement« ah tug tlii« line in the
new building of tfie National Board of Fire I’nderwriters,
iu New York. It is-undoubtedly tin* nui«t neariv itttle«-
tfuctible office building from tbe standpoint of fire that
ba« ever been built, but it uoutaiua nothing that could
not be incon»oratcd in any new office building
The National Board would undoubtedly bo very glad
to give prospective builder« any deaired infonnution about
thia remarkable structure, for it «tand« as an object les­
son a« to the possibilities of reducing our annual fire
’ á -faj 1 »
r-
7
1 *
;'
“This health institute,’ explains
Senator Ransdell, “would not jlo
any undergraduate work,
Its
students would be Selected by thg
If your ears, are frozen, rub
surgeon general on account of
special qualifications from among ,hem with snow befdre going Into
young, men who have, completed! t warm room or near a tire.
their acaddmic studies.'
One vacation postcard you’ll
“It should graduate every year
at least 100 well-equipped scien­ (ever see is from Coolidge to
tists and enlist them under the Congress saying, “Wlsfi you were
government for six years after iere.” -
graduation in p systematic! effort
tq-ageerfein th$ ¿aufe/prevention i Prince o f Wales is writing
and cu'ie qf disease, ana make poetry. It’s a symptom of matri­
their findings known to all the mony.
world.” %
; A fine menu Tor. lunch on a
• .
Co-ordinate Efforts'
wann day is nine glasses of iced
The senator seeks provision al­ tea.
so for at least 50 fellqwshlps In
the Institute, at moderate salar­
ies— “say 85000 a year, so as to qd to the production of wealth in
give them opportunity for thor­ the industry. '
ough investigation.*’
“The problems of the body are
Co-ordination of scientific ef­ too complicated to be solved by
fort, In particular, Is what Sen­ any one class of scientists. Pre­
ator Ransdell seeks.
eminently chemical in their na­
Tor Instance, “Several centuries ture, the chemist alone is imper­
ago,’’ he says, “the chemtpt and fectly equipped to carry them to
the physician cooperated closely complete and successful solution.
for the alleviation of suffering. He must Join hands with the
But chemistry drifted away from physiologist, the pharmacologist-,
medicine. The physicians looked the pathologist, the experimental
more and more to other means to biologist, the immunologist and
effect his ends. The chemist turn- the physician.
Bv Williams
*****
'lju j
' .
*
v, 3Hwl
1
yj
Î
P*«’* ' t
r
•eakin’ in a buckin’ briar?
T ime was when breakin’ in a pipe was bad
business. A man might corral a beautiful pipe,
a perfect thoroughbred, yet at best it took weeks
of wranglin’ to get it going smoqthly.
'
.
But today, there’s a swift and sure pipe-pacifier
for any rough-going, rip-snorting old briar. It
breaks ’em in in short order. It is G ranger
Rough Cut!
,
,
For the same mild mellowness that has made
Grariger so famous as a tobacco for old and
tried pipes naturally fits it for thi$ breakin’ in
business. It takes the raw edge off a new briar
. . . mellows it and keeps it mellow!
Granger is the only tobacco mellowed by the
old “Wellman Secret.” It owns exclusive rights
to this famous recipe. That’s why no other
tobacco can match Granger for cool, fragrant
mellowness!
Ttw hatf-pound vsfcjum
Un 1« forty-five cen o ,
<W foU-poaoh pactas.
¿X.RVW.IL
« ’M
t •7 Í /1 I . .
V >
W EN T AFORE TU’ J A ± 2 A G E
,
F l .A k /' , N '^ o 3 i W A N 'S U C rt,
A lN T , MISSED SO V ERV MUCH.
*>.f A»**?>• ’ * r J Í % >
»
I
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