- - THE DAILY TIDINGS EDITORIAL an d PAGE - - -u— ». ESTABLISHED IN 1876 PUBLISHED C. J. READ, MANAGING BUTOR ASHLAND PRINTING CO. J Ai 4 jJ M y F i ■ h «..■ i" -?*- 4K S3S By Wiilfcw1^ Being S h o r ty Expt ted ASHLAND DAILY T U U f t g S Q U T O U R W A Y — sc o r g a » j f 1 - Napoleon And The League In a. recent book on “ Napoleon” by Emil Lud­ wig, considerable attention is devoted to quotations from that military despot on the futility war. Conniving for power- dreaming as Alexander drearn- tod and later the kaiser, the French dictitor-emperor professed his belief in the orderly settlement of dis­ putes among the nations and expressed his c o n a ­ tion that war only led to more wars. Possessed of a tremendous ego, he viewed himself as the great managing genius capable of making a united and peaceful Europe on a permanent basis. “ I could have done it in 20 years,” he ruminated in exile at S t Helena. His pausings recorded this remarkable statement: War is an anachronism. Sometimes victories will be won without cannot qr bayonets.” If Bonaparte were alive * today and safely in exile, it would be-interesting to hear his comment on the League of Nations now operating, not only »with almost the United support of Europe, but representing the rest of the world excepting Busftia, Turkey and the United States, with one or two other less important countries temporarily absent from the conference table. He would perhaps be as­ tonished at the discussion of problems involving the Occident and the orient and he would certainly be impressed with the settlement only a few days ago of the dispute between France and Germany over the policing and plebiscite plans in the Sarre basin. With a decade of brilliant victories in which he figured as the despot of Europe threatening con­ quest of the whole world, he saw the tragedy and f a i l l e of civilization ip hjs own brief careey. Even in his last campaigns and flushed With success when it seemed that ndne of |he armies of Europe could stop his legions, he cunningly suggested his aver­ sions to war and posed as a man of peace. Perhaps his own inevitable and a ffe c te d his philosophy or perhaps in the f e t r years of lovely exile he really had a prophetic glimpse of future centuries when victories would be won without war and peace would give opportunity for progress such as civilisation, has never experienced. ' ■ " T '" •*? — Subject * «v • •or * | -**• j*»-» « te» V . d. I ! Dollar Surplus Secretary A|ellon estimates that the treasury' surplus for the present fiscal year will exceed 500 million dollars. As the returns from the March 13 payment of the Income tax rolk in, the amazing wealth of the country is again revealed. Taxes from unguessed sources swell the total, and the next congress, as the last dhe, i8 going to find itself " faced with the problem of dispensing of undreamed of surpluses.‘ All this goes ?o show that the proudest boast of the Coolidge administration, that it has reduced taxes, is just the natural result of returning pros­ perity after the war, plus the return of the govern­ ment to something like normal expenditures. Th« surprising thing is that neither he nor his gifted secretary of the treasury have been willing to reduce taxes fast enough. They have clung to in­ come exactions and other charges that have been unjustifiably high. If tliVy were not too high, the tr e a s u r y Would not be embarrassed by huge excesses of cash. . College headg will now have to ooncerti them­ selves with taming the clam banquet, X 'J. M 14 r * T t y A * ' * , Looking through a Buenog Aires paper brings to mind some of us never really would gqt used to a country where the elearance sales of sti-aW hats ‘ grp hold in Maith. onto RTgATroN roxTZR S ‘T il E ted HAGIC GARDEN” f j m , jGeei S tra tto i-F o rte r, Inc. _____ ghted, 1926-27,» by the McCall Co. FRESNO, Cal., A pril- 11.— F. Published by courtesy of F ilm Booking Offices of America (F . O. B .) J. Palomares, manager o f the ag­ From the famous photoplay. “The Magic Garden.” ricu ltural lab or.to m an ot the San Joaquin Taller, believes that -y 'i shortage of ‘labor m ar develop I want to make toem remember W «TOBT 40 FAM during the p e a k o f the harvest sunny days aad laightor wad TuvW ^ f gr p IM e, ______ season In California. aad Italy. What I want to dw to her a w d S h B p X n w S te R e e s with to go bask to Italy- “ Indications are that the supply But Amaryllis wm practical. * Ms /otger. Peter it not pleated to of labor w ill be none too plenti “What are you going to do right • f t hur,«o she gees for a drtoe end ful at tha peak of the season/ d-kfeg’ «pot wker« the «top« now until your father ochhesf* ah« he said. "W s can not toy defln er cAoai S S lte lr a t this tlmb that there w ill goet the . «1 am going home and get my fwde • boy who tapper,“ answered the boy. “Theo be aa acute shortage 'of labor, the violin »«oaft/i bçatMfnUp. Be 1 am going to practice my muslo buFwe believe that It will* be neo . C o ba lonelp too, end when lesson." easary to plan ahead In order that “A ll right,« said Amaryllis. *TB w to«p Met «Apt «he 4« "Liitto labor t o aid In the harvest may he unpry Heart* hg «eon kas h«r go with you." whel«.«tory. obtained.“ John Guido looked at her with his big eyes hnd said: “Iaa’t your ' A plentiful supply o f rain dar­ *7 dasseat alt on her lap or father going to come from the club, ing the winter Is expected to re­ put my arma around, her neck or isn’t your mother going to come s u lt la bomber crops throughout or lay my head on her breast, aad after you»" ’ California A gricdltural districts. Amaryllis shook her bead. an oíd. paid narss takes pare of ’ ' ' ' ' v* " ' i t ' -f ; «No,“ the eald. “Father <" ma When I ’m sick, and a nurse come from the club more than once la the evening, sad a a month, and Mother doesn’t ever governess teaches ma, agd there to come a t all any more. Neither of no one to play with r>e and no them cares where I am; so U w ill be all right for me to go." place to go. and a house so big I ’m But John Outdo wae older and he afraid of it . and oh. Boy, what’s knew better than that. “But there your name! And if there isn’t any must be some one," he said. one to tore you today, will there “There’s got to be a nurse or a be some one to love you tomorrow?“ governess or some one.“ Amaryllto answered with perfect The boy laid down the violin and logic: “I ’m here aren't IT 1 got m t down or the embankment very away from them didn't I? It doeeR't deliberately. H « gathered Amar ■lake stay difference to them where tpllto up aad sat her on his lap. 1 am. or I couldn't be here, could He pnt one arm around her and be IT rm not their little glrL They » W * " her head op against his don't want to hold me on their .. the long, slender Angers laps They don't want to love my -tto other hand combed down hair. They don’t want to bower í -'/ í S-:-' «« through her shining hair again and with ma. I ’m going with you. John **aln; «to lips came dowa on the Guido. I want the kind of supper top df bar head and he kissed her xou eat, and I want to sit on year curls and kissed them. Then this lap some more and if I hadn’t given loose hand slid down her arm and away all the money 1 got, l*d give took one of her little hands and it all te you aad the purse, too, for • - held it close. more ktosee on my hair.« He said: “My name to John Outdo John Guido's arms tightened up g Nanking Hero MftafOtters Say N E W YO R K — Greenwich Village pointe w ith pride to the adoption ot the artist's smock by industries and pro­ fessions in-the-latest issue of “The New ?0Rt,” Bohemian magazine. " th ® expressed no regret th a t p r o s la c ‘pwr- sons are wearing sniocks throughout |h e nation, ex­ plaining that amocks are not ' The lees future more we fear I t we have — / To a jackAss, the most beautiful creature on earth is a Jenny. - 1 BOSTON— This city’s most Impudent burglar, “jim m ied hto’war tuto police hea<|«uar- ters and shattered the lock or a »tore room containing 30,000 gallons o f seized liq u o r before h e was fright­ ened away ^ome men w rite; other ta lk ; on rare occasions we one wpó thinks: S Y D N E Y , rf- S. W .— Speaking ot 'babies' Aus­ tra lia n birth recores show th a t an infant g irl, born in V ictoria in 1905 weighed only to,ur ounces, but now she is the mother of two lusty children. Another baby born in Auckland weighed only S I ounces and was weaned on a fountain pen W "' _ W e are not much interested in any tru th qpless we e«n see « good profit in lr. LOS A N G ELES— Vivian as docile a epw as* m ight be seen in a day’s stroll in the coun­ try, was brought into munici­ pal, court here Monday that a Miry m ight see certain marks da' bar poll. W hether her horns were removed during calfhopd has- something to do witty present litigation over the bovfne’a ownership. / , I t • ’ I — --------------------------------------,------- Orders are available for more daffodil bu^bs than there are In the ground |n only htoarre but vary useful. The earth, according to the calculation of a gov­ ernment physicist, weights approximately 5 eex- tillion 997 quintillion ions. Final checking may revise these figures slightly- say a few million tons: Then there will remain only one-ten thousandth part of possible error, hardly more than enough to make a fairly respectable moon ant of. The cost of carrying on this investigation repre­ sents one of the reasons why it requires three billions annually to defray the expenses of the federal gov­ ernment. The scientific value of the information is un^oqbted. Whatever degree of precision has been attained has brought the sum total of human knowledge just that much closer to the goaf of ac­ curacy. How it is to facilitate the functions of government, which has to do with the social rather than physical Ja^s, is not so evident, perhaps it will ultimately ba the means of finding another use for the marines. I f nothing else comes of it,* it may point the way. to another sphere of influence for the United States. ‘ ‘ -r «j5-T7i ’' - Mrs. D r. E.. Davis of Oakland, D. B. Casedy of L ittle phast«. C«il.. to a guest' fo Mrs. Wm . M. Cal., one o| the wert known pio­ Eastll< lick. The Doctor and Mrs. Mrs. E lla Cook spent last Week Dails neers of qtaklyon county. Was are well known in Ash w ith lira . Blaine K lnm in Med- n n m "h W M P < * V N W *»4 o|h®* latyd having lived here fo ti.- •’ ’* . i 'friends in Ashland tpi« week.•» „ bSr of years ago & Maxey returned Sat -Rue! H ildreth is In from the from Dunsmuir, where he epee. Mrs. BenJ. Eggleston returned laM ■ wees ’ w ith Fred Judy and Blue LodgewWlne. H» reports «to toddy froto a b(it|ntos trip ' U erpthlRg hoflhiRg In that section. wife? - • , í ¿- one of the first American A g e ­ ing. men wounded during the C h 1 n e s e lighting was Ray D. umley, of Ralston. la ., hero of J the evacuation of Nanking. HJumley, a sailor, kept firing :er he was wounded by attack- t Chinese, 'until Civilians under h|s car had made th e ir way to safety. Mrs. J. g . Davis, wife of the American consul at Nanking, gives him credit for saving her ltfe. • SUMMONS IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT OF T H E 8TA T E O F OREGON, FOR JACK&ON COUNTY. Suit in Equity to Quiet T itle REBECCA R E E D E R , widow Of T . T. R E E D E R , plaintiff. 9. vs. GEORGE J. RBARNS and M. A K EA R NS, S i r * w ife; VERA H IC K S R E A L . LeR O Y W. HICKR, and C L IF F O R D C. H IC K S, k®irs at law Of t l. 3. H IC K S and M. L. H IC K S, both deceased, Defendants. TO GEORGE J. K EA R N S and M. A. KEARNS, husband and w|fe, and LeROY Y- H IC K S, the above named defendants: IN THE NAM R OF TH E STA TE i O F OREGON, you and each of you are hereby summon­ ed and requited to appear and «Rawer the complaint of the p lain tiff on file in the above en t||led cause w ith th e *c le rk of caprt, at the courthouse In Jack­ sonville, Oregon, w ithin six weeks frpm the date o f the first publi- cgtlon of this summons, and yon a f t further notified that in case you fail to appear and answer w ithin the time s o . specified, that the plaintiff herein w ill ap­ ply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint, to- w |t: For a decree declaring plain­ tiff to be the owner in fee simple of the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of the north­ east quarter of section 14, in {Township 39 south of Range 1 east of the W illam ette Meridian In Jackson cdunty, Oregbn, and th«t yon and each of you be declared to have ho right, title, estate or interest whatever In said la n d 'o r any part thereof. k ■bis summons is s e r v e d upon ou by the publication 'thereof pursuant to an order of the Hon­ orable C. M. Thomas^ Circuit Judge, wfcRfc Qtfler Rga .wnrt® and dated March 39th, 1927. The da|e of the' first publica­ tion of th|e sumtnens is A pril 8th, 1927. ‘ . BRIGGS A BRIGGS. Attorneys for Plain tiff. Post office aWfrees: ’ *** Pioneer Block, Ashland, Oregon. 183— 6 Tues. «Oom« on, John Onido." Forrester and the reason 1 haven't suddenly and right then and there any one to love me today is because fell more kisses on her hair aad my father has gone away on a Jour­ Amaryllto nestled up against his ney. He paints the most beautiful breast and turned up her little soft, pictures in all the world. No one sweet tsee and pulled down bi* else can make the trees and the head and offered him her baby Itos water and the clouds and the sky i nst ead. John Gnido touched them come true on canvas as he can. But lighUy because he was afraid ot sometimes people want him to come anything so fine and so sweat, and and live with them for a while and in a voice that did not sonnd a bit paint things that they own in their like the voice he had been using forests or in their meadows or their he said: “You little darling! Yon mountain« and they don't want a little Hungry Heart darling! Where boy around, «o 1 have to stay at are your folks! Isn’t there a grand­ home and keep house and wait un mother, or an aunt, or a conslnT* til Father comes back. It- to awful­ Amaryllis shook ker head avd ~ ly lonely when I have to stay alone, because when Father to here we said: “No. Not any one at alL Not even Peter. I went to Peter walk together apd we fch together first, and he wouldn’t play with m s and we hunt together, and he tells wonderful storiek and we read great He turned his back and stood in books. We have a bully time when the window. That’s honest and tru s Father's here. But he has been Peter’s worse off than I am. Hu gone so long, and 1 don't know can't get along as well without be­ ing taken care of as I cam" when he 1» oom 1 ng back." AmaryUi« mood np and reached Then Amaryllto looked np at her hand and said: “Come on, John John Guido and asked: "Did tha Gnido.“ big Judge—r* But John Gnido stood stlU. J o b a ^ Guido shook his head " I think,” he said, “that wa must qnlekly. go back and find your car." Vary softly he said: "Not A long Then Amaryllto lifted her chin tt™® ago when 1 wa« oaly a little ^ the eye and fellow. J can remember a fe f yen take me times, in a soft dress like this of d and find my yours with oh, such big eyes ant * c k to tho«e such wavy black hair, high up on a i't love me and SS get away aongs to a world at people and ta k e : Father sat in a box and held me er to deep aad tight and we cried because It ‘ was aad nd i n Stay no beautiful, and all the other peo­ f t eat ______ me." ple cried with ns And sometimes ill and looked *bey stoed up and waved their hand­ hen fee asked}; kerchiefs and it was wonderful! itherP' A irs - Then> wh®n her «ongs were sung, we could slip through a door and thui city aad h®r room and she o n th r would hold ua In her > aims ’ and kiss tot «fralgkl in us nearly to death. l ean feel her Sometimes s now. Then, all at a sodden. ♦ wo or .Reeded her up in Heaves te i 0W to ,to * ' aad toer 'aad 1 had to give her un ¿¿life Dttle whlle, but we have her I plcturs and tome of the notes she t not so fa ll at made to her songs I can do on the I 1 *“ M“ ®mber w « ® r Father i U c k to h« ‘ ,1 tond. and I am going to learn to £uh 1 a U n < x ° p <» a big, I “ ® male the vioHh say 1 i ^ J ^ n s 11 she did. and I am going “ “ ak# , th® sund u|r and * * * • tliolr handkerchiefs aud have toars «Il running dowa u e ir »»tvs “ Atoaryllto lifted her head end « ‘A “ # M s s ; 8 J*1' < o rr The hoy smiled at her and said: “ ake thwa er^ t0 hurt their feelings I t to good for people to cry because thalr • f t full of happy taaris « your brother nd won't play lodked him d said: "That Peter toaty . Hto heart to a la s but ha as wall us I issn’t got as v s uvea even if I I a conld conld think think » than Peter r "Teu*ve ff somewhere » «MM eoffto •ri