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

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    A SH LAN D
D A IL Y T ID IN G S
wa ^ h iir W
4,mi f Ph
.
— Twenty-one new plot bollom
■ ¿ •U n a a w i ll
e l» » «
wwg
'**wNgr
the civil airway»'by the Weather
xAitaii»«Rtear
Barssu to ato sfc aaatoattoa. to
is announced by tbe Bureau.
tt o f t a llo o n a ^ U fa» sea t «9
a lo « f t*e air rojitog |e gfreW wr'-
atw deadiUon» d f th e oft rartouto
and gw vtoe weather feseeatoa to
* M »» airplane pito« W
Hww
th e r e a lto r conMtfefs » y e r h t o
rqute four to elx hour »in ad-1
Month.
A-
p
FAMOUS OOHPOtoW
Er
INUIATHP INDIAN
SANTA FB. N. M., Au«. 4 —
(UP)^-CSarle» W sketyett Cad-
man. composer of music baaed on
Jqdlan metodtea, will become oue
of the people be baa Ion« studied 1
and loved, when «» 1» initiatod
into tbe Hopt Indian tribe at the
8anta Fiesta begtoatag bore to-
day.
, Cadman, who gained popular­
ity with hie son«, “th e Land ol
the Bky Blue Water.“ and was
recocoisto as a writer of Indian
operas when hla “Bhanewis“ w «e|
produced at the Metropolitan in i
New York, hoe spent the tost fif­
teen years in New Mexico, Cato-1
redo, and California, studying I t-,
dinn music a t first hand-
.
» » play
« n a ie Insertion, par inch
Political, Display, per inch
Two insertions a w e e k .......—"'"'L
-
Daily insertion ..........................................._ ........ ”
‘ .
Nates tor Legal aad Miscetlaaeoas AdMetOdfa*
Rlrst insertion, per 8 point U n e ....................
«tosmgag
s s
• ;* “
Oblia.Hn. p.r 11.« — ..... .............. ~
«.,1
~
'•« *
30
~
.«
.tlw
WHAT OONStli-uT«» ADVERTISING
H
events, where an admissibn charge is made or a
collection taken Is Advertising.“
9
'
j_ Ma dleoesnt will he allowed Religious 0» Benevolent Orders,
k
DONATIONS
or
ohAritle» <w otherwise will be made in odvertto-
lag or job printing — our contributions will be in cash. W.**’WM*
GETTINO TOGÊTHEB
When people “ get together” and exchange
ideas they find n«w ways for doing things
which t h e y could not hope to accom plish
individually. Possibly we ,egn help you.
LET’S GET TOGETHER
Tbs Otisens Bank of AaUaud
♦♦A. a».« »>»«»»««
NON-COLLEGE GIVERS TO EDUCATION
«, Alumni don’t contribute most of the monvy to their
ovn college eudowment eawpaigiis. Mfcr? than half ,of it
comes from friend« of the colleges, not the graduates
themselves, A survey of sixty-eight reevin' campaigns Jbv
a firm of drive managers showed this;to.be atfaotJTW p
Why is ¡t that^ueeessful taen, who did not gfet their
education at college, give more freely than those whhUfd
- --
P O IT U a n i d
wall paper in his home, says thdt it.is. because eolfcra
men don’t make money anyhow.
Aet, maybe that is root the whole answer. Do those
who feel the lack of education have more faitli in it than
(hose who have an “ A. B„” or " K S.,”|and are in a sense
diw 1 iusioned 1 Oi, is it because the one who wanted to go,
and couldn’t is tryfagto fix things so that some other
lad, similarly situated, may nqjfkroow the same loss!
The university today does not make a plea for charity
when it starts, to raise money. Sentiment accounts for
many of the gifts of alumpi, but thia is lacking in the
case of the non-college givers. What, thejn, is the reason
tha« the hulk of the returns come from this latter class»
I k it that they, accustomed to receiving what they nay
for, take this means bf contributing to humanity gener
ally, with the certain knowledge that thq returns will be
forthcoming to< later generations?
The returns are not directly measurable, but they
are coming, with compound interest added. It'is a case
of dealing in futures in a literal -sense.
THE HIGH GOST O f SHOOTING ' •
R estful Puliam o quarters assure a
night’s restful sleep; grrival in dm «
for business next morning.
‘ “Stop slandering on» young
people,” say» » London profeasor.
Wall, yon make them atop sland­
ering us.
Wild women of Africa have
long hair and go without clothes,
while pur’s have short hair.
.
I f o • 4 i’ • -1 ’
W . .
ettfor No» J 4 1 * N o. 16. The former
puts you io Portland at 7:15 next
morning, the latter at 8150 a.lh.
ritma A*
tjleveland school 1» to teach
wonpn how to’ vote. Can’t be
done. Been trying to tpneh wompn
for years.
Oct, 31,
$ itw î1 a y
Pullman NP>
sod either a t gxx>
(N b . 53) a t «me
y s tjr jo p jp u
S-e /modal dtywf ll.SM Bopotolsa
After leaving a npeakpagy you
usually boiler loud.
Accidental Shot
Vigitor
f
Representative Martini Madden, writing In Nation«*
Business Magazine, says that while the opngressioupl in­
quiry is a useful and legitimate meanfe of bringing bht in­
formation upon which to. base legislation,! like all other
good'and useful things, it can be and is abused. Thia
abuse, he writes, goes to the point of wasting public money
and public time.
f'
r ’’ i .
’•
He cites the case pf ooal as one ffbbject, which has
been dealt with lavishly by congressional, tonunittees.
From 1913 t o 1923, he points oat, mine committees of
the Senate aad eight committees of the Hoqse held hear-
mgs on eoal. As afresult he1 .says more than 11,000 printed
pages, five or six millions of worils, were printed.
In addition to the money expended for printing, ho
writes, there is anotlier side That must be reckoned with.
Congressional inquiries are time-eaters. A hearing calls
busy men from all over the United States; sometimes It
calls them back the nett year- to go over much the same
ground.
’ - *’• • > .
“ Mauy thousands of dollars,” he adds,.“ have been
spent on the«« ’speoial hearings,’ much prqperlv,' but biuch
on duplicated testimony, / have cited coal. That’s only
one instance. Think of agriculture, Muscle Hhoals, the
Shipping Board, postal rates and salaries, the proposed
Department of Education l»iU, radio. Prohibition is new i
on the list hut perhaps we shall yet add it to our collection
of hardy annuals, good for at least oue crop of words
to a seesion.”
OfcRAN. N. Y.,*A«g, 4.
(V)- ,
— A ruety Old rifle la the home
of N, D. Bartley wiw accidentally
discharged by two youngster»
who found it in an attie, and the
bullet w eal straight downward,
lodjrlog In the left side of Robert
Dea», a visitor, vewdtoS OB a
loungy in tbe »oenf heleur.
■
— ■ I < >,i.(R <1 i i <, ■
sacrifice of tbe oraaaieatal in the
OUT OUR WAV
t\<
By Williams
asÉ l
the N o rth w e rt, « « « c f e
«far g re a t« « * H a n d
t im b e r ,
the heart o f the «po -tu na»', pandit»,
*>'*>■
G. N. Kramer, Ticket Agpnt—Phone 43
«Armato« »
The utmost in a motor fuel
usually comes from a maker
that knows how to produce i t
“Union Oil of C alifornia”
has had an experience of more
FOR A V*iM0Ufcr\
VAJfctK -lb GET SOO-1Q CUTI X
-iid t GRA^S~AL\N/AN$( U jo
*flR tO Oto SQMCItMMtìfl WOMM
A U W BO O <*M O CAM-Sd«OMM
2 0 0 POOMpe AROOM0 U K t
’IW a T CAN c o r G R A S S I
COME QH MISTER SAMPSOW'
/•
1
M ^GOSR M A /
QQbff lAAKt A
mqam ïîm OOTA
ME UlKE "ÎîdlSl
•
r ^,.,/ï '
K
U n io n
non^etw^tth
pow er
‘THE INTERNATIONAL SPIRIT”
“ I f democracies are |o. survive and, especially, Hro
to lie effective in international relations, ’* says Henry M.
Robinson, uunber. of Ui? Dawes Reparation Comudsrion
«end President of the First National ¡lank of Los Angelos,
“ it will Jie because not only the leaders hnt the people
themsh-es have a background of knowledge and appie-
ciation of decency, property and justice in their rela­
tions with foreign people, just as we have in this coupir)’
in our relntlous betwb u states and between, individuals.
- “ In Ute beginning ef our republic Ute state quarrel«
were fierce and long, and ocwtsionally we have resoinve«
of them now, but they have been reduced to a pofilt where
ordinary fairneto and justice carry today. The same thing
» possible internationally, if we can come to understand
the prahh-ms of competitive nation», and this can only
he done if tlie peupb generally can come to know the eoft-
dititms, Mt least, of the people in that part of thè World,
with whotnSre come in most direct contact”
.
tt> t
M m £ w o v id tt« « n < i always
to W estern motorists, the
w h ich supplies fu ll
l piston» tb r o u g h w l tb ei^
etittee rtreie
motorists are no
>inctM and p a y h
e x c e tto fu a ù 4 > n
costo n o -m o re tta
¡janon w
ct Union
other high grade fueb.
r# Afotet Oii tpDd mgr »
Gasolina because thii
^tixes u f o * W the «■*
UEROE.S ARB MADB -N O T BORW