Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1926)
■< ASÉLAN D D A IL Y T ID IN G S iff, Ir»--* Y'w B BH^a rlcultural college »ummer marión. **¿JRta youth who woald M M h 1 1 VB«B II difficulty ■UT "W» » basketball player m u * ap«>4 AAhCf AqTSXfc? G as umper w é iz lv iK .» A tte i v e W » fi WlÀfcC ft?nu AIOMÓ, apHbud öBoßöe? c a m < W M C * i •So S asbmbn T U » f 7 I U W M 5& p T he 0 t f W (W W T ì 6 y f I IUASR I DISPLAY Single laaartiou, per inch Political, Display, per ineh Card of Thanks —T- Obituaries, per line M g |4 ' .... . W H A T OONSTITCTKS A D VER TIS IN G “A ll future events, where ea admission charge collection taken is Advertising.” Mo discount w ill be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders. *4'»' '9 ■ .VW ■ DONATIONS Mo donations to charities or otherwise w ill be made in lag ar job printing — our contributions w ill be la cash. TUB SILVIK LWIMO Every once in a while we hear some down-at-the- inoutii crepe hanger moan that the opening of the Natron cut- off from Eugene via Klamath Falls would be a death blow to Ashland;. that it would take a big payroll from, this city and business as a consequence would go to the bow wows. This sort of talk is plain foolishness, The operiiug'of the Natron cut-off will not be felt here. It may tokp a few railroad men away from Ashland, but just a few. The shops will remain here and business will continue as usual. If these saijie crepe hangers would look for the silver lining onee in a while it would do them as well.as the city a lot of good. The coming of the nobual school» is a civic investment .which-will continue to pay big annual get anywhere simply hecaufte they CHICKEN Mites will suck their bfoot^apd gradually kill them. The one sure way to rid the coops of these pests is tp apply the genuine . Thig spmay applied to the roosts will penetrate all cracks and crevices and reach the mites at close- quarters and effectually stop their proportion. Ba fifitififled w ith nothing hut the gennlne Aveoarius OarbeiiaMm ASHLAND LUMBER COMPANY walked (r e p Lpka Taho« to Tone- SOME radical evolves into a conservative when he takes Bgb flesh to handicap I i * m as a fast ruuner. C O R VA LLIS, Ora., July I f . - , (UR — Basketball Is a more d lf- flpnlt sport then football to mas- toy. fa d g ym n astic 1« thy numi dlfftanlt of a ll college sports, ac cording to M ajo r Jota» t . Griffito, 38< Oak S t Across K. B. Tracks TJvery where on all side of us wo see signs of pros BY O M A R M to F< BTKgbART r N EA Service W rite r , An ounce of argument is worth perity. The tourist travel is increasing year by yepr and a poke In the eye, W A SHING TO N — I f President will continue to increase during the succeeding summers. £oolldge, up In, |hp AAlr|o|i4adk»t, The poultry industry is on the increase and can be made ularlty broads contempt. Is aa thoroughly'ppeved w ith Sen into an important and thriving industry. ator A lbert B. Cummipa and C, Ashland has everything in its favor, It lias climate, Rascon* SJetnp aa tola, frldnjlg here As a man tblnketh sq is he in In WasklngtQii are, then we! must' it has beauty, it has good schools "and good churches.' b Bnt equally as iinportant as rtM b t gu, Ashland has a a -v e ry fretful president. Notblhg’p » o ra p a in fu l, than Coalldge-ites distinctly did. nut ^people who consider pleasure a enterprising merchants. The retail stores of Ashland want 19X8 presMeptial talk to duty. would do credit to a city many times the si^e of this, both start at present. > in appearance and in the quality of merchandise to be W ith the corn belt* In sprit «a Followers don’t ayan y< obtained. ferment p( discontent aa »is today fhj. Bank robbers have * Instead of seeking to bang crepe over the city ’s frpiit a great de^l d i . natj-adlninistra- them. tlon convdraAttoni is bbhnd.tp.be door, it behooves each and every citizen to become n reaj mixed iu to jto y A tu s s lv u Ashland booster. If you believe in your town and your feldactea.i *rn e Coolidge1 ¿¿me ob Others are such bom drivers. people and your merchants» you are going to get other viously Is to lie low for 'awhile’ The fellow who funs Is no cow people to believing in them, and almost before you know aad hjope for better times for the Wd I t ha ckooses the right dlrec , 1} * ’ ., it you are going to find that everybody is prosperous and farmers. , AUTOMOBILE A u d tb rt thing: iciig aa ev Uon; happy. Patronize vonr hoqte merchants, not only as a erybody continued to assume that matter of eivic pride bnt as a matter of simple justice, President Coolidge expected a re- Budlong Divorce BARGAINS The merchant is helping in the beautification of the city; pomlitatlon, It was impossible for 14» is helping to keep the public schools up to their pres any rival aspirant in bis own par^ . , Litigation Ends 1923 Chev. Towing, 2230 * ent standard; he is supporting the churches; lie is playing« ty ta announce blnmelf. They started f t 1924 Ohov. Touring, I2W his part in civic life, and he is entitled to a fifty-fiftv Now Cihnmlns and Siemp have break. set the presidential pot a-bolllng, 1922 Ford Tónta«, IMP Ever)’ town has its crepe hanger and Ashland, ap- notwithstanding all the W h lU jiarently is no exception. But bis feeble voice can be House “spokesman*«“ capacity for The stilled if a little more of the live-and-letdive spirit pre- keeping hia month shot. vails. Great cities have been and can be founded on Gumnains, to be sure, has r« b Automotive Shop vision. If we wifl all just vision Ashland as the best u d ia trt bis prediction that Preel- ‘ Chevrolet Dealen deot Coolidge w ill not care to b j little town in the state and then back up thia vision by renominated two yeans hence, but home-town loyalty, and that means patronizing the home nobodjr pays any atteatloB to his We Snub W tth Ckbriel merchant, you will find, almost before you realize it, that repudiation. The o(»osltion party hotel last evening. Snubbflrz . . . . , , Howard Rose made a business business in getting better; that people are more content management goea right ahead wltb ita .comment on w hat th e trip to HUt today. ' ed, and everyliody is progperous and happy. Iowa aenator id auppoaed to have A DOBMITOBY BADLY NBBDBD A women’s dormitory is a vital necessity at the new Southern Oregon state normal school, and the time is now at hand when the citizens of Ashland and all of Southern Oregon must liegip laying their plans for a proper j.re- sentatiou of the vase at the forthcoming session of the state legislature. 'Two years ago Ashland was content with asking for the normal school alone. It meant a hard fight and team work to get it, and it might have lessened the chances for a tvictory had an effort been made at that time to get a dormitory.appropriation. A local stage «-oiupaiiy is now operating a Ims line from the business district to the normal] school on regular schedule, making several trip« a <lay at hours suited to the needs of the students. This bus line cannot hope to pay even expenses, but its management is to be com manded for the civic loyalty shown in providing this tr*q«portatiou for students and faculty members. If the people of Southern Oregon will start right now tp la y Uicir plans there is no question but that the next legislature will provide the necessary fnnds for the dor- nkitory. It is no light matter by uny means. It is a vital neaeaaity if the new normal is to grow and expaud as it has every right to day. te recall, other recent and Ipag ar tripa he has taken. Mean while Ms friends marvel a t his stamina, s f they hare has* m er- yelllng since I M S whan the ’ walking adarinri." e r a t t h a t Wme more properly Read Adm iral Charles Fremont Pond, reached the age lim it in U n de 8am’s nary and waa retired. R etirem ent was Just a hit of • a r y routine te A dm iral Pond, and he declined to "stay put.’* Ria toisnda w ill testify that he has covered considerable territo ry on «cot. aa many miles. possibly. as Would favorably comeare with the distances h e covered shear« battleships.' A dm iral Pond, who served on- dor lam peen in Cuba and spent i t roans of M s Ufe as a n iv a l o f fleer, tramped back into Berkeley recently after « walking trip to the Kern end K ing riv er canyons In the most precipitous " g 4— of the hiffh « tr io s . A year o r he * » • the veteran naval officer » o re tim e to (ta ls lte football aspirant. M ajor G riffith W » • « I W « that K takas l « l Aorta to tofto • ‘» • M 1* 11 plarov aa coxirtred with 14fi ta~ tr»|p » foothaU p l a w . B ta « < - urea indfoato that gymnastics tope everything at«*, requiring ga aste- ace of 141 hours of training. TRs Ig u m a war» heart t e a mass of date t o m the “Big Ten" eeptasawsa o f which M aier G rif fith is Commissioner. , Figures for other H u rt of sport were: track and field, I 4 IJ base ball, l» 4 ; fencing. t M j wrestling, M S ; tennis S I and fiolf W . said, Jast as if he really had said tt. Besides, there la a siwpioion In Coolidge circles In Washington that he did say It. . Tbe suggestion by Siemp— the president’s own. former p rlv a ti seefetary— of the availability at Speaker Nicholas Longworth was even worse. The Coolidge folk aro almost admittedly very much afraid of Li agworth, not ho muck on his own its on his wife's acoount. I felt so tired, sluggish and worn- out. all the time that f Just didn’t seem to havp spy I l k about ma, Aftor Tafctaff I t a r Bot ties 8h« W n Like Differ ent Person, Buy» Seattle Woman. anti housework wda such • burdaa to tad « k r t’i r t n r t r la d to force my»elf to do It. ‘ “ You jnst dea’t know h iw t h„nkful I u t I m l K Ainak for the good of this m rtletae Jnst seenprt to go over SR mg ayktemi and "epic* taking (oar kottloa 1 .Im p ly «not Ukft a different per se«. I last iwltah evert meal now, a w aervee are hate, and nigkto my sloop to sopari t e d ro- *'Y m , Indeed, K arnak is the beat medicine 1 ever saw In my Ufa aad 1 Just rocemotenid it to everybody,’’ declares Mrs. Mary Raaated, of S U 6 I U h Avo., W 4 fieattle. Wash- .< “Several years’ a«« a severe at tack of the Uu le ft me io such a CHICAOO, P L , July 2A — (U P ) lacrlbly rundown, weakened ce«- anything of the past now, and I No i>ook» were kept by the Frank «Jtion that It seemed I ’d never have to mack atrength and en- Smith eampalgn committee to the recent Illinois senatorial race, aoutues Mrs. Maaxtad. “I had wUk «Oto- l ' M l ra«. arc o rfitn g to tpe testimony ha- no pppeUte. nothing taatod right, sure ptfts new li(p In fore the senate Investigating com and I never enjeyed “ “ " t a*y- b u lite you « » to fiopd-1 mittee ypoterday by Allan Moor«, toiag. most before yea t e t e r “ I was so asrvoas Msat the can't aay half «teOSli camprtfln manager for Smilk- Smith earlier revealed that the lepst little thing woald gat on my campalga coat f t k |,9 « A and that nerves, aad nights I couldn't S sm nal'lasall. public u tility mag- naa, west his “ aagal.“ Magnate Financed , 'Semite Campaign There’s real art in coloring a meerschaui CoNNOMUW o f the fine art o f meerschaum coloring stiU Mick ho the «low-but-sure way o f “smoking” the color i n . , , And this method is m o st satisfactory bo long as you use tobacco that fiknidy and cool, so that the color comes ^ lig a n d evenly. Now, because this is the very thing that has made Granger Bough Cut nationally famous, men experienced in the art Suggest Granger fo i meerschaunWl Its large flakes burn coot. It colors the pipe delicately,-evenly, perfectly.- W hether you’re cokwtng a meerschaum, break- . in g in a h r ie r , or caking a corn-cob, Granger is the same cool, fragrant, mellow smoldng. You may h a w a hundred pipes, yet you need but one tobacco.. . floe Cuanger is an all-pipe tobacco. Phone 20