Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, August 23, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    MOVPAY.
ASH LAN D
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
(fot«i.bHk«TârîS7ê)
«har «ntif^Mr
ed manuaript 1
Tbe General Can’t
•rapar*
During the evening Ice
with M r. and Mn. « H u rt were«
Mjr. SM4 Mrs. F. O< Heutee, M r.
and Mrs, A . M. 4 f * . Mis* K atber-
.in« Vincent and Mlaa M arian Ady
cream «« the m r a a ae&«oi faculty. •*
(U n ie g nro e— fn l
4 AaoÇhar of tbe ceoeeaefel baby
clinic* held In Ashland occurred
Thursday, A n « « « 1>, at 8:88 p.
Bert R. Oreer _
W. H. Perkins
OFFICIAL CITY P A P I*
Telephone 88
♦ A OMtume Dance,” pet on by
'e ig h t stujents, Sdha W >dly, Clara
; Wiggly, Irene Hughey, Worms
> Header, U l a BaTttbe, Terecla la n -
1 dine, puona H a r i n g 'nag Marie
Pfeetott. With Miss Strange at the
piano, was a delightful number.
The pretty girl#, in old world cos-
[ tames m ad* a pleaethg picture he
they carried out ee effectively the
flgurSe o f the dance. They, too,
w a r* recalled by hearty applause.
Both m inuet and dance were uV-
def the direction of Mia* Hales,
physical director a t the Normal.
W ith Mlae Maraters at the piano
the neat number, a -re c u ity
Bong” , proved a popular number.
O riginal words, u aigu* in Its pre­
sentation, w ith » rollicking mel­
ody, the singers Were recalled
again and again— tbe hits bring­
ing hearty« appreciative applause
at the Ashland, Oregon Post office as Second Class Mail
aubecrtptlon Price, Delivered In City
Que Month
Three Months
Six Mouths ..
One Year ____
By Mall and Rural Routes
One Month ...
Three Months
Six Months
Oae Year —
DISPLAY ADVERTISING RATES
8ingle insertion, per Inch______________ _____
Political, Displsy, per inch ....................................
Yearly Contracts
Ona Insertion a week ____;........... ...... ...............'_______
Two insertions a week a __________________ ____ ______ _______
Dally insertion
................ ..__ ....____________ 1__
Rates for Legal and Miscellaneous Advert
Rlrst Insertion, per 8 point l i n e ___ ____ ___________
Each subsequent Insertion, 8 point line __ _______
Card .of Thanks ...-------------- ----- ------ 2 .......... ...... .,......
OMtuaries, per line ------ ------------------- .......-------- -
WHAT CONSTITUTES ADVERTISING
“All future events, where an admission charge Is made or a
collection taken Is Advertising.”
•
No discount will be allowed Religious or Benevolent Orders.
THE PRESCHOOL CHILD
Our poor health habits and our bodily defects in youth
and early manhood date very largely from before we went
to school, if our efforts for the children’s happiness and
health is to lie practicable, our best het is to help them
control it. The time to help them best is before they are
ot school age. Before the school physician or the school
nurse has ever examined them is the time to establish
their health habits and to see that their bodily defects
ore corrected or removed. The children’s chances to grow
up healthy will he bad if we, their uncles and aunts and
brothers and sisters and friends don’t assist the parents
in helping each small child. We must help them form
fun as anyone. .
good habits, habits of happy countenance, of putting
Promptly at eight o’clock, the
through what they begin, of playing in the open, of sleep­
program opened. Mlae 'Churchill
appeared la a double number,
ing regularly and long each night, resting everyday, and
“The
Lily and the Reee,” by Pol­
eating without rebellion the simple diet, of childhood.
lock, and “I Heard You-Sjnglng,”
We must help preserve them from the so-called children’s
Coates, with Miss Leona Marsters
diseases. We must work to abolish th e' bodily defects
at the piano.
‘
which now so appallingly sap their health when very
Those assembled appreciated
young. At least three-quarters of the preschool cildren
the privilege of hearing Mise
have neglected and defective teeth.
They have teeth
Churchill in these beautiful solos
whose early decay, probably resulting from had diet, al-
and evidenced that appreciation
ready require repair.
in no uncertain fashion, \ -
Lights -were now tnrned low,
In Oregon, one-quarter of these children have had
apd
from a side entrance came
teeth and nothing more. But very many have had teeth
two
girl
students, the Misses
Mrs. Grace E. Andrews, Editor
plus something else. They are malnourished or their
Terecla Sandine and Lola Bartshe
: r .i " uri
; ¿a
tonsils and adenoids are diseased, and a few of them have '— ■
Aug. 84»— W. C. T. ’ll. members of tho .student body and in qalnt old time costumes who
lung or heart disease. This doesn’t mean th at tooth de­ Tuch'iay,
meets at home of Mrs» Lulu How- faculty of Southern Oregon Nor­ danced a minuet in graceful
stately measure- their progress
cay causes all these troubles, any more than it proves
ard, 41 Gresham St.
mal School were assembled in the
that dieseased tonsils, for instance, cause teeth decay, hut Wednesday, Aug. 20. — Normal auditorium of the building, Fri­ marked by the spot light thrown
Assembly in charge Music Di­ day evening for what was happily by practical hand. Insistent de­
this much has been proved. These young children’s de­
mand brought the pretty perform­
rector,
Miss Marsters. „
termed the "First Student Mixer"
cayed teetli should always l»e repaired to prevent further
ers to acknowledge the plaudits
Thursday, Aug. »«.— Band Con­ ot the year.
decay and infection. The m atter of tonsils is even more
of the audience.
cert. Park, 8:00 p. m.
important. SwoVen otisik need medical attention. If Friday, Aug. 27.— Chupel Ser­ No pains had been spared in An "Elongated Quartette" next
the tonsils sjieeialist recommends their removal, d'on’t
vices at Normal Assembly in preparation for the event. A com­ appeared, who gravely announced
vharge
ot one of the Ashland mittee had been appointed to ar­ on the program that they carried
delay. They should be promptly removed, for diseased
range for program and entertain­ with them twenty-four and one-
Ministers.
tonsils irtay lead to ear infection and deafness, to a very
This committee whose half feet of perfectly good music,
Monday, Aug. 80.— Progressive ment.
dangerous ear disease, mastoiditis, and in mnny cases
Dinner by Westminster Guild. chairman was Mrs. Eva Pennock, which they sang— every hit of it.
rheumatism and heart disease.
Starts from the Presbyterian cf Marshfield, had looked after And well sung, too. While the ti­
W ith teeth and tonsils attended o, habits o f good hy­
church at 6:30 p. ni. for mem­ everything, to the smallest detail, tles and subject matter did. pot
Insuring an evening of unalloyed always match, the rendition over­
giene established, young children aré vastly less endanger­ bers and friends.
delight
for all present.
came any such little discrepancy
»
»
a
ed. But do not think that all the danger is past; and that
x
The faculty members had en­ and a perfect willingness to re­
chi Wren need no further protection. Children*» diseases Normal N ote»—
tered Into the affair whole heart­ spond to. encore was a characteris­
are serious tilings. All may leave grave after effects, and First Student Mixer Held at
i l y taking part on the program, tic' of this quartette, which cer­
dough, scarlet fever, diphtheria; these children’s diseases Souther* Oregon Normal School— assisting in entertainment and tainly scored a hit. Called back
Approximately two ’ hundred without doubt having as much
are serious tilings. All may leave grave ater effects, and
again and again they cheerfully
diphtheria especially is a dangerous menace to their lives.
What must we do to protect them? Young children must,
of course, be kept away from people who have these dis­
eases.
Protect them from children’s diseases. Help them
C A M ^O SE FF
>
establish solid habits of good hygiene. That is tlie way
B O S ! DO AM K E E P
to put them ou the road toward a lifetime of lietter health,
M E IM O t S H S H R E ‘
health that they can use to some punióse in living.
O H p A P P v /f
P A P P M ! ’ ‘S U P P E u f c E ! A n E w ER
ME. Q O tCK — O o
VSIE'S G O T
DYING SPEECH ROCKS SOVIET
H IT T A K E . A F T E R
A HEVJ
In theory, the Soviet government is the irreducible
\ H IT S M / W S ? y
COLT!
minimum of directness between the need and the exeontion
of laws.
But Felix Dzerzhinsky, past chairman of the supreme
economic council, recently excoriated the Communist
party in a three-hour speech, that brought on heart failure
which caused his death. The failure of his pet theory so
preyed upon him that c died iu trying to make his theory
work.
He said that he was horrified at the lack of efficiency
and system, and the red, the favoritism, the politics that
honeycombed tlie whole structure. He attacked with fury
the minority rule over the majority, one of the last pas­
sages of his impassioned address being a denunciation of
Trotsky.
OUTPOUR WAY
By Williams
Space was cleared and the
guests formed for a grand mgyeh,
played by Miss M aretef*. A t Its
conclusion, the
V irg in ia Rest
claimed them. A rollicking gam*
in which peanuts played a part,
occasioned much m erriment and
considerable activity eu the part
As is usual, it was a fa ll eltale,
all the children present that could
b * taken care of daring the after­
noon.
D r. V. 8. Qearey, Mias Beard,
and Mine Koppes were here fpr the
exam! untie ns and consultation.
MM
Bertha Den ten, school
purge of Ashland, wrote the his-
torteu a t this meeting.
A number were brought to the
IndespentaUe
F or the "Snack” or the F u ll Meat*
BREAD
a r Bd e ^ a , » ^ ! af ^ d? u ti f r ’ ,e,,y ’ W *0* betwesa meats—
• aupeua npon rood bread as an ia fied ie n t.
GIVE THB KIDDIES
Franklin’s Superior Bread
o
Ac Often As They W ant It.
FRANKLIN
BAKERY
WRITE EAST ABOUT
Ashland’s
Famous -
Foothill
Products
PACKED AMD SHIPPED BY
Ashland Fruit & Produce Association
The consistent support and use of these products,
provides additional employment here, a larger and
better market for our produce and win assist in firm­
ly establishing here another industry of importance.
FIRST
NATIONAL
To be sure, it came up at the Bridge Club; hut for
that m atter hadn’t it been spoken of behind teacups for
nearty a year—ever since the Lees had settled In the old
Farnuiu estate on Westwood Road? How could any mor­
tal woman, Cythia Lee included, come home from shop­
ping, lodking as fresh as though she were walking in from
a swim?
»
; '.
•
*
*•*"» •
. ■
(Cynthia’a house guest confided the auswer. “ She
Las an easy time shopping, became she knows just Where
»lie’s going before she sets out.
“ f ir s t, she reads the advertisements, cutting out and
arranging the ones that show the things she wants. Then
ehe swings around the circle and comes home. . . . T h at’s
nil there is to i t.”
If you want to come home from shopping looking as
fresh ss Cynthia Lee, read the advertisements daily. : 1
They are
much better than buying at random
O O M E ."fa»Ù G rS D O T L O O K
B A P - A ä 1 R E S ' S»ÓUÑt>.
A<=>
BANK
AgjHLANP, QMIOON
Study the advertisements.
PRODUCTION MUST DETERMINE WAGES
Every employer wants to sec and contribute to good
working conditions aqjl proper wages. Propor wages have
n defined not as “ living” wages or even “ saving”
|es, hut as producing wages« - •
---- -— 2—
The arnoupt any employer can pay out in wages, de-
da entirely u ponjlie amount labor produces. The foun-
on principle of wage payment is, that no employer
pay more tor work than the total added value such
"A n Old Sweetheart of Mine.”
a musical reading was pleasingly
given by Mias Sylvia Greenleaf,
of Medford. She was accompan­
ied by Mlsd Sara Mosier o f Baker
sounty. In response. Miss Green­
leaf read,-“So Was I."
A “Song Specialty' put on by
C. L. Weaver and I. V. Kane, In
which the coatnmes.aad manner­
isms of tbe performers who rep­
resented two Jewish singer* were
most effective, brought down the
house.
A trick vioHn, and a lively ac­
companist w ith jo lly songs, and a
closing selection In more serious
vein marked this number, which
closed the more formal p ro g ra m .'
The students were now divided
according to the Norm al colon ef
sand and Vermillion, onp of which
had been planed eu each guest as
he entered.
f a d t n n * payty recently.
Ogaerf » «re la g <Or eight at
the dalatly appointed table with
frkgrant pink roses used In an ef­
fective centerpiece.
Music, w ith the pleasant visit
Of good friends, spud the hours,
until re fa o u at goeg lig h ts were
spoke*.
Those who eajeyed the evening
'