I
THE DAILY TIDINGS EDITORIAL an d
C. J. READ,
ASH LA ND
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
W- H. PERKINS, NEWS EDITOR
MANAGING EDITOR
OUT OUR WAV
3y Williams
I S ? «¡W I f } W lR R tiP /
f
Presidential Vacations
I t is a good thing that the President is going
west for his summer vacation..
Vsually Presidents spend their summers infthe
East, evidently with the idea that they should be as
near as possible to the seat of government. There
is really no need of th a t A, President can be just
as much President in the Middle West or F a r West
or South as he can in Washington.
, \
Communication is easy, transportation is swift
and dependable. The executive can always know
what is going on in the world, no m atter where he
is. He can get to Washington, from the most re
mote corner of the United States, as quickly as early
Presidents could get there from their homes in ad
jacent states.
But it is well for a President to get away from
Washington on general principles, and stay away
as long as his conscience will let him. For W ash
ington is not America and its atmosphere, in the
long run, is not conductive to a good understanding
of America.
v
The chief executive, of all Americans, need most
to get around the country and rub elbows and ex
change opinions with citizens of many sections, in
their own environment. That gives him a better line
on the country.^ It is good, too, for the private
citizens themselves.
It does any section and, any citizen good to
see the head of this great nation—gives them a new
thrill of nationality—and they sbPuM »U have their
chance with the President, as he has his chance
with them. Spread presidential vacations around
the country, by all means.
NOT SO
FA © ff C ü RU^ ! \
WO u ’ r B PülAlMGr
HORSE. OuT
OF THE ©AODLE.
HAMO OM "IH HORM
0C.6T PAMör COÑSOV
. BMtR
6ORM — /
< \ nhot
in Teaching
i*
By making things and looking up points that
arise naturally and by following prqjectfj tp their
conclusion, the children are supjxised to develop
their mental powers and character bplter M«an by
studying textbooks or pursuing stated lines of study.
I ndoubtedly the project or “ activities m ethod’’
is very go«xi if it can be carried out under ideal con
ditions. Obviously it requires a teacher of unusual
ability and special gifts of leadership. It is better
adapted, too, to teaching children in small groups
than in the large groups that our growing popula
tion makes necessary in most of our cities.
Somehow, no doubt, the best features of thb new
sj^stem must be combined with the lx*st features of
class room work unless communities will cheerfully
spend the large sums of money that it would cost
to apply individualistic teaching to all our voung-
Tcxlay’s headline that you’ll never see: 1’nnlors
i Plate for Fund to Buy Sinclair Lewis Oold
Watch
BT JÖRN ™ > I N
$ 4 « r Le^a
'Æ /i .’Tt
Febrpaqr «. )Rfi7.
Buddy's M/s W»
tbs' Mrlinpassss
ftae foreppon w m »peat In an
hMw, Fred break« deàoénV À t Urnes thé w r id W t f l
argument about a ground hog that
S 9/ «leer, fite ed about Fred's head; the sky spun
was supposed to come out on that
like a top; the earth seemed to
rush up to moot him with sicken*
day. and Juat what the results
tog speed. . . . Down—d e w » -*
would be it he u w his shadow. If
super-human descent. . . .
that ground hog heard all that
Suddenly Fred's hand cleared.
They were oa the road. He had
was said about him, he would go
figured correctly. He was no more
In bis-hole and never come o a t
than two hundred /ards behind the
The afternoon passed by attaching
last fleeing b a m . He let Silver
the booster to the telephone Une
go again, and Mgkia they shot tor-
ward.
and listening to all the cross talk boit from a
He was seen! A vague, tumbling
in the valley— it was on every top hauled the B
shont came faintly hack to his ears,
ic one could think of. As the say
borne by the rushing wind. Thay
ing goes o f ’eavesdroppers, some
had seen him and were headed
of our faces had a healthy color tanse rigor were abreast the rear suddenly for some definite objeo
tlve. For the first time since ho
before it was disconnected. I
had eoma to filerra Fred Make tfto
wouldn't wonder if there wasn’t
limbered hip tong. Mne-bamded
some fine dishes of cold shoulder line «head. Fred remembered one gun and hegua to shoot He wee
served up In that town because of thing—overheard when the Scout oarefuL Very, very careful. Sil
ver"» stride lengthened, gteW lean
that rig 1 made.
Jerky. Ikudt revolver biased Into
HoroehMe road—I’ve marked the the beck <rt the first horseman, ua-
way!”
Fjed d,d not know Where the
H<b|ehlde road wan—he was a atone.
stranger In n strange country^—but
The maun tottered in his saddle,
‘T vs marked the way!" told him seemed about to fall off his hone,
much. A Scout hah marked the then straightened again and began
sod H would be Wain mark to' fin rapidly. Hto shots wsip
Mr. Bullln who owns the Shell
ing to the trained eye o f a desper
wont wild. But Fred per
station has recently installed n ate, intent wbodhman racing with sporadic,
sisted, kept stosing la. Only a lit
standard .oily supply pump.
ev il . , . He rode on. stiver tle while now—-be would he up to
Mr. and M n. Chas. Morris and was extending himself—at Inst them^flghtlng—for June. . . .
on his powerful lungs for a
Suddenly Fred began to taka no
daughter of Grants Pass spent calling
fan supply of stfeugth-glvtag air. tice of hie surroundings. The gang
the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Ha was snorting now. But his pace were headed, Jt seemed, for soma
R. R. Foster.
Mr. C. E. Clements of Wagner
preek sold a few of his purebred
white wyandott hens to Jay Ter
rill'last week, also setting eggs to
some Medford people.
Mr. R. C. Logan and family
moved Tuesday to the Anderson
Ranch. Mrs. Rush has taken ov
BROOKLYN, N. Y. — Be
er the Janitor work at the Ames
cause her daughter Agnes,
building, and moved to the rooms
20, refused to go to church,
vacated by the Logan family.
Mrs. Magdalena Schneider
Ben Webster and Mr. Ward will
had the girl arrested and
farm the Anderson Ranch the
pressed complaint agalpst her
pomlng year.
as a wayward minor. In de
B. F. Stone formerly of Ashland
fault of *600 ball she was
has rented the VsnScoy Orchard
taken to jail pending exam
near Medford.
Mr. Btone has
ination.
been living the past year at Yaki
ma, Wash.
SUPERIOR, Wls. — An In
Will Reed had the misfortune
novation in the strike line
|o painfully injure his right eye
was started by Superior
Saturday evening while pruning.
central high schpol students.
Mr. and Mrs. H. McIntyre and
They went to school peacd-
daughter- Rowepa of Grants Pass
• ah,y pnough, but when called
visited Sunday at the C. W. Long
sort o t . . . it was a railroad
upon to recite they main
home.
tunnsl) They had plenty of.lea-
tained an eloquent silence.
way; they were running strongly;
Joe and Frank Silvy and fam
yet far behind earns the hoarse
The discharge of a favorite
ily of Antelope spent the week
whtsqe of an express t r a i n .. . .
teacher provoked the strike.
end at R. C. Hill's.
They dashed into tbs darkness of
the tnnnql; Fred's hesitation bad
Ray Burnett and Donald Long
lost him some valuable time.
Were in Butte Falls visiting their
The various claimants of
The gang made good use of the
parents over Sunday.
breathing spell. The tunnel, which
the reward for the capture of
A. L. Howard who recently un
was short, led directly onto a high
Murray, W illos and Kelly,
bridge, spanning a narrow, but
derwent an operation at the S. P.
Oregon prison Inmates, have
deep river. They dashed across,
hospital In San Francisco return
agreed on a split of *1000
fluhg themselves from their horses,
ed home Thursday evening.
and followed the directions of
offered for the captured. Now
Mrs. W. Vogall had as callers,
Steve Burlingame, white-faced, des
that this momentous matter
perate, shlfty-eyed.
Friday,
her
daughter,
Mrs.
Geo.
has been disposed of we look
“There!” he bellowed, struggling
Briscoe of Ashland and Mrs. An
for a period of peace at Sa
with Jane, who was half-dead with
drews of Medford.
exhaustion—"the dynamite— cach
lem.— Baker Herald.
ed under the bridge) Powell 1 Use
Kenneth Pellett and family
preach
fn
his
eyas.
But
Fred
per
moved this week to the A. R. Bar sisted tai going slowly. It was a It I" Steve Burlingame somehow
had foreseen tragedy. The explo
URBANA. H t,— University
ron ranch above Ashland.
difficult trail—rocky, scattered, sive was la raadtosns h ad been
of qilppls students Just gl|de
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Estes have sttswn with Jagged rocks—difficult for weeks, It seemed.
Three moments—no more—and
through school. Hardware
move<l into their new home on for beast as well as man. Fred
picked his Way carefully. At the the fang drew hastily off w a safe
merchants have sent tele
the highway this week.
hack of hie mind, now sharp and distance, watching with narrow
graphic
orders for more
Mrs. Bernice Hlbbart of Okla. clear, rauthe old woodsmen’s law; eyes the scene of disaster. . . .
.
skates tp Chicago and St.
Fred's hesitation bad been Might
Is visiting here with her slsiter “Take your time, and examine
every clue in the trail; a moment's but enough to make the train creep
Louis as their stocks are ex
Mrs. A. Proctor.
delay may save you hoUra." Sev up da httn eonslderafety. Now, re-
hausted. “Merrily we roll
Glen Cleveland of New Port, eral times the trail was easy to allsing that even if there was an
along” has been proposed as
Wn., is visiting his sister Mrs. follow where it ran across earth ambush in the tunnel it would do
and leaves; in the rocks, It was the amhushers no good, since the
a new varsity song.
Lester Newbry.
* T W W
more diflcnlt Twice Fred stop train would’ be roaring at his
Mr. Luther Caldwell of Payette, ped Silver altogether and leaped horse's
test, ks headed Silver di
Ida., arrived last Friday to visit 08 to examine the signs more care rectly for the black, yawning mouth
fully.
his cousin, Mrs. Chas. Estes.
of the tunnel. Ducking slightly as
Finally, after what seemed to he went in. ha was not surprised to
Mrs. C. E. Borg will entertain him
an age, Fred saw the flying
no rsststaacs, and aud-
her Sunday school class of boys hoot-marks deeply lm pressed to a mast with
thq great locomotive bear-
with a party at her home.
clear trail of hard-packed earth.
wn, already In the tunnel he
Mr. L. C. Hip and Mr. Gus Now it was easier. He extended
811ver again. They shot forward.
Beck were business callers In Ash
« w -ie . & ¡ x i i
land Tuesday.
lug
country
vr«bd out like a panp-
Mrs. Clarence Mathes is con
ramte fikp before htto, Fred carfgbt
fined td» her home with the flu.
his first actual glimpse ot the quar
Mrs. Will Hanners of Portland, ry. Far, far below—It seemed
Milo X. Walker was In towg the Mrs. Herbert Pasley and Mrs. Com miles—he caught sight of three
forepart of the week frog, Dead Devore of Medford were dinner moving horsee. At that height
seemed to bn’ crawling. • The
Indian.
guests of Mrs. Frank Ckullenger they
kldflappere had nicked up another
Wednesday.
man
transit ind were now ra-
s S S S
SM*nh'’
irs
avalanche .
! Mftaf Öfters Sayj
Now that Josephine county
has received more t h a n
*600,000 from the federal
government as a tax refund,
we will expect a thousand
and one schemes for spend
ing It. The county court,
however, shows a wise dispo
sition to hold on to the mon
ey as long as possible.—
Grants Pass Courier.
A Connecticut bill pro
vides that every pedestrian
shall tie a red lantern to his
coat tall as a protection from
the motorist. Thsts all rlgh|.
too— but we do not desire a
personal red tall light tor
glp crazed drivers to aim at.
Our faith still lies In the
rocks and sage brush.—
Burns TImes-Herald.
Former foes of the Income
tax will fall behind Governor
Patterspp and pass the bill,
the editor of the Oregon Vot
er predicts. Just so they do
not fall behind when the tax
collector sends out his no
tices.— Bend Bulletin.
Premier Poincare said he
would save the franc, and he
gas made It look like 4 cents.
— La Grande Observer.
educational methods as described by Dr. Lois Moss-
man of Teachers’ College, Columbia University. The
idea is to teach through activities. “ There isn ’t any
other way to learn. Memorizing things and repeating
them by note isn’t learning,’’ says the udvocates of
work’’
1 *at ,Ct8 thc cbiWren P,an tfaeir o^n
Crater Lake
In Winter Tiipe
? y
A Brave Fight
It Mas a gallant fight which came to the ending
by death in the case of Young Albert Frick whose
friends and associates tried for four and a half
days to save his life by artificial respiration.
*
The young ipan was a victim of an unusual form
of paralysis, and twq hy |wo, in fifteen-minute re
lays, men from the plant in which he was employed
worked at the artificial reapiratipn by which the
doctors hoped to keep him alive'King enough for
nature to send jus own powers bfcck to their jobs.
The young man died, finally, but the labor was
not in vain. His last days were made sweet by the
preserving affection of his mates. These men have
the satisfaction of knowing th at they did their
best. And medical annals have record of life pro
longed by artificial breathing.
It is in this latter fact that the doctors see the
greatest value in the publicity given the case. Had
this been a case of drowning or other accident to a
young jierson in good health, undoubtedly the hand
made breathing would have saved his life. Innum
erable are the casos of apparently drowned persons
who have been saved by this method. One hour
may not be enough. Throe or four hours all of which
have been hopeless, have sometimes ended in success
PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
The sport writer who says
kicking is a totL grt, seems
pever to have^rouruT himself
among a crowd of customers
n a meat market.— Klamath
i*alls Herald.
I
The eyes see better
than the ears hear.
sermons
What religion needs most of
all Is a standard chassis.
Whep underwear is called lin
gerie, the price of It is doubled
When a kiss la tainted
monpy, the divine thrill
there.
What we call “confidence In
ourselves’’ Is very apt to be noth
ing but conceit.
Np vamp ever brought about a
man’s downfall without h 1 s
hearty co-operation.
Hez Heck says: “In my opinion
our greatest national mistake it
takln’ pills instid o' exercise.
When a baseball star com
mands the same salary as
President Coolidge, the ambi
tious Amerlcqn boy hesitates
between the White House
and the dugout.— Klamath
News.
TURNING T h E PA 0E 3 BACK
10 Years Ago
ASHLAND
20 Years Ago
Mr. and Mr». Elmer Ashcraft
and son. Lynn D., moved up from
Medford and are now occupying
the Chattln bungalow on Harga-
dlne street.
Prof. VanScoy of the state
Normal has a position for an ex
perienced teacher at a salary of
*66 a month for six months,
which must be filled at once.
ASHLAND
Mr^. Gen.
Tolmgn reached
HHQRJ TALKS BY
hn^te ffOto fier extended eastern
trip on Friday evening’s train,
THOUGHTFUL MOTHERS
Mrs, Q. H- Blount coming with
A California (Dong Beach)
Mptber speaks: “Only a toother
her fro«* Sen Frapcjaco.
who has passed through anxious
nights ot fear of oroup, hearing
is H. K. fo o t* and Miss Amy that hoarse, croupy cohgh con
arrived in Ashland last stantly. can appreciate our feeling
aafay. * all the way from ot grgtitude toward Foley's Honey
iwpoh- Maine, and will make and Tar Compound. It stopped
homp with the family of Junlor’s'dreadfnl cough the first
nephew, P. B. Whitney, the night he took it and It was a
claim agent.
grept reljef to w e film drop fnto
a quiet slw p .”
Good also for
A marriage license was grant
wfiooplng cough, measles cough
ed In Jacksonville last week to
Mrs. L. L. Walker left for Bell
A. 9- Rockfellow
returned and heavy wkeesy breathing. Said
Peter Lincoln Spencer and Miss ingham. Wash., yesterday to visit fro * the steamboat mines yester and re$o»tncndsd everywhere.
Irene Skeen of this city.
her father.
— No. *.
day.
’
W. B. Penniston has moved his
lapidary from the rooms at tfie
C. M. Rush has purchased the
rear of the ground Door of the interest of his partner, Ira Rwd-
Elk's Temple to quarters In the er, In the blacksmlthlng business.
room next to Lnmktn's real estate
office on East Main.
Miss Nellie Ewan has returned
home from Redlands, Cal.
Mrs. J. E. Barrett entertained a
few friends at her Factory street
home Tuesday afternoon In com
Mrs. A. B. Laraut and daughter
pliment to Mrs. Minnie Reeve of of .Eugene haPe been visiting In
Happy Camp. Cal.
» J ;.
Ashland with Mrs. Laraut’s niece,
Mrs. H. H. Gillette and family.
»
Tied took his time and examined
the lay-out of the country. There
was no telling i when he would
him dia
n ehort-cutP-Pred knew hie 8ffver,
te * his
and hq realised that what he was
• e*-” “*S**w*Zp WWW* HO • Kghtly,
IlKU L1X»
W
' M
X V Ä i f Ä
and drift almost lastly aerosa the
But flrtmr Was a tfae mountain
home; with the flestnees at a hiad
3 S .-Ü 5 S
altooet tmpuroaptlMe trtÜL H da- ovwr. WllVsn- picked hie utoy wNh
S Ë Â ï i S Â —
SFíiíBSWa
hwla of tka htoife. WRfiduf a mo
ment's hesitation Fred turnad Sil-'
, ÁTe ba conUauadl