Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, April 22, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAIbY TI
PUBLISHED BT THE 'ASHLAND PRINTING XXX
<3, J. READ,
A SH LA N D
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
If you would ask the officials who dispense
public charity in almost any city, what is the prin­
cipal oauae why people get into financial straits,
it seems likely that they would name siakness and
accidahta. It to happening over and over again
that some family is just barely able to rub along
when things go all right Then if someone is sick
or gets hurt, or must have an operation, the -costs
of this misfortune often submerge them, and they
find it Impossible for a long time to got their heads
above water again.
When unsanitary conditions exist, and when
serious contagious diseases are prevalent and when
accidents are frequent, then many families get into
financial difficulties. —— -J .
There are many families who find themselves
in a hhd financial hole, who bitterly regrej the ex­
travagance with which' they used money when things
were going well, and they had all that they wanted.
The money that went for foolish purposes then,
would tide them over their troubles now if they
only had i t People who are well and strong and
have regular jobs, make a serious mistake if they
do not regularly set aside something as a reserve
against misfortune.
Any community saves its people a great deal of
distress, and it avoids interruption of work for its
industries, if it to strict to its sanitary m e asures,
and abolishes conditions dangerous to health. But
no' amount o f assistance from outside can keep peo­
ple well, if they keep on doing reckless and ignorant
things,
■ If they waste their strength on dissipating vices,
i f they do not know how to live and cook and oat
properly, if they fai^ to obey the plain simple rules
of health- they are found to fall sink some day.
Then if they have no reserve ahead, the hitter
Our Paper ;§ W ply
ft is ranaufced by college voc»tw»al director*,,
that the majority of employers give girl* jobs
baeaese they are good to look at, rather than bp*
BBBrethey can do good work.
•
That May srem rather discouraging to the girl
who has no special beanty. But the one who did
gapfi work would be »ore apt to win promotion.
The employer who hires a girl because she is a good
lookqr, would be likely to get sick and tired of her
if shd depends upon her face rather than her achieve-
' '
k weak character usually has a wee character.
generally, go to better men,
Gnter Lake
In Winter Time
KlfcU.*A«f
/R M D -ite r o t f w i
f p w a .l’ffÄMC rT 1
F tR M M U.HAVG.
OMÌ
C a n t a t o a t Orator Lake
L o d i.
tMNbftt UA
/W orTrCt
. « y w w ia
sp ate«« that the
I t has been to w in g today to
t o t . t k * hand, The water t o
boon running o ff t o
roof la
streams. Tho g u tte r, la t o val­
le y , m o * to be free from lee. The
dormers here* been unloading all
Ä fiS L S J S Ä » *
ju a s £ 2 6
i
What Others Sayj
I Isn't It Odd?
« M i t e srem .m , r e * < ^
t Iale$ "He doesn’t
taxes, reapovibHitr or
nvlce.”— Medfortk Mail
P o s n C te t o
i
*
p at
8,000,000
pianos In this
country ont of tune.------- Mc­
M innville News-Reporter.
Portland Is going to have
concrete wharves. Another
«are o t «realty to animals in
starving the w harf rats— Ore­
gon C ity Banner-Courier.
re
’
o-
**
A boek that contains So U1
hood makes dull reading.
W s Wahl to be loved, and white
our want is fulfilled we are bordd,
An Immoral man Is bad enoui
but hatred goes,deep beneath t
1 often wonder, I f a glutton g
Into heaven, how be w ill mam
to enjoy his time-
H istory tells us that
Soc-
retes died from drinking the
poisoned hemlock.
Which
t o y Indicate t o t they had
bootleggers even In ancient
A m ajority of votos Isn’t neci
sary, it seem s, if thé candidate 1
the sanat» haa a m ajority o f di
late.
Athens —The Calls Optimist.
OWls w ill wear allk stock­
ings rather th a n ,e at, Mrs.
H enry Mosgowits told the As­
sociation to Promote Proper
Mossing for Blrte, at New
York, but eat they must If
t o y are to continue to earn
money to hay silk stockings.
A ad if they expect to be able
to f ill theta.— Banks Herald.
Has Heck Says: "Nobody stl<
to the census figgere . when
tells visitors about the populate
O’ hft hb»« town.”
Sugar
German
Wo may
sawmill
News.
is being made by a
out of sawdust. Soon
expect to Cat ttp tb e
wasfe.— Sprfagfteld
TURNING T«E RAG
ASHLAND
20 Years Ago
10 Years Ago
Installing a new 1,400-pound trip
katem er which arrived Saturday.
This im portant addition gires him
r
rousing two sleeping families
Which Were In danger o f suf­
focation by chai g*s. Detect­
ing the odor, Tommie made
the roundb e f t o bedrooms
In which some ot the bleepers
w e n already
nueonsctod»
and aroused the others by his
howtlbg* la rtef he was found
dead on a kitchen table.
Weather-— Day partly cloud!;
wind southwest; snowfall . since
last observation’ 0.00 In.': h to lh -
Itation, 0.00 In .; snow on ground
228 la .; Temp. H . 87. L. SO, R.
W alker,
-.
three
Ito .
BACK
didn't ever teach d m prayote. They
only tucked me In !”
Paul Minton thought away baek
In his memory aad conjured np a
vision of a mother who had taught
him to kneel down each night aad
told his hands, and what was it ha
had satdf Hb couM net remember
h thing except “I f I sboOM die ha-
fore I wake," and looking down a t
the sunshine aad fore leaves aad
bine sky that Was Amaryllis he
could not toll her to say that. He
never IriSUl Ms life had felt quite
so helpless, quite so small, quite
so disgusted with life as be had
lived it. Bo he easae to confession.
"Amaryllis," he said, "1 haven't
you."
i and the flaming red lily that
Amaryllis
her Illy, back to tho dytog»-
c boy whose touch Waft to promptly.
asauxn
90 Yean Ago
a
Thba she looked ap at Bto police­
man. Sha discovered something.
Tha policeman Was pushing her.
The hands that had been holding
her, the lap on which she sat,
evety M t ot that poheomaa’a body
* * . T?ry
»«r
t W *****
W o rk— Climbed Garfield.
W ea to f— Day olear; w i n d
west- snow fall since last o b se r v a ­
, Mrs. ft. f t ftedwlne returned to
Sacramento the last ot t o waok. .
B utler
Tuesday, March A
' ft«. IS hère! Bread new re ft a w
everything. He seemed to think
t o t the snow was pretty deep,
S C L P H U ft
W K l , R y.,
and th a t it v a s hard to find his
Eugene C lark, Who Ctelmed
autattM- hosre h e t ks he had a
the dlstttietloa bf h a h * the
m tln tim e before t o M te. arrived
only Kentucky negro whose
he would look around a h it before
skin crer reread ,wbR», is ’ deciding on a house. I ’ll have to
dead here. The pigment In
le ak areaad fo r aassa fa ra ttu re
C la rk ', skin began fading
for M r. Bluebird, as t o lin t and
several'jtedrs ago and at the
straws are all coteted np w ith
time o f his death he was as
snow. He usually "Starts to move
w hite as an Englishman.
M" In a t o . day» Utter ha a r ­
rê te .
B a t fhlks, th a t little
handle of feathers looked good
P A W S -a . The tehtalctphl
to teb as ha »erched ott the top
g o m m e n t d t Phrte an­
Ot a brokea saag and teoteed try -
nounces it Is considering the
teg to say "hello.” W hoa I first
appointment of squad o f po-
saw him he was coming toward
UeeVomen charged With en­
ate, aad dh yog know that I am
forcing censorship aad guard­
ra te aaoagh ta th in k that hb was
ing the public morals.
tom iag la meat ma.
. 'Than t s S * M r. and Mrs.
Icaight flying areund together to­
day, t o tire t time in many Weeks,
L O N D O N — ‘Tteheteg, Limit*
i t I read t o signs correctly, the
ed," Is the m io o f h iteW
baM ei are aid enough to be left
corporation which he« been
alone.
formed In London to promote
go, the reign o f Skell Is ended,
and afford facilities fo r the
t h y people ot Liao are returning
study of dancing'.
to gaywas. Yes, BkeU w ill m a le
resay vtsfts; h l, hordes w ill come
howling over t o hills, .but their
stays w ill he shorter, the damage
less w ith each visit .u n til the
smile a t Liao banishes them
from Qaywas.
The mevte tree» wee up on Gar­
t
field today, add t o y had an excit-
lag time. The MftaCtlon wasn’t
at the bast, b a t t o a ir was clear
aad good pleturos ean be expect-
tion, ».»0 la .: precipitation, 0.00
In.; snow on ground, 888 in.;
Mrs. Goo. B. Landers and child- Temp. H. 4«. L. f i , R. 22. M .
M, N. Lad«, who to r alad ysi
Mas Osan night Watehtaan in tl
city, has renguea ana taken
position as machins oiler In a t
factory at lodb. Cal. *
Mrs.
7
afterneon.
Just bow tim b er,
eouM stand t o weight ef the
« t o * t o t came o ff them le more
t o n I can understand. There
must bare t o n two or three to n ,
of ice on t o roof of each dormer,
but I f t o
Weather continues
warm t o y w ill finish unloading
tomorrow. H ew some of the third
■tory window , escaped with whole
panes of glass le a mystery. The
■now was pressing against
the
glass to «tart, then to hare these
great block, of «now and Ice come
sliding o ft and pack It that much
more— well It looks* to me as If
h alf o f the window , on the north
side of thé building ought to be
lying on t o Door, broken In a
thousand pieces. There Isn’t a
thing that I can see to do u n til
the snow quits sliding, lo r If I
dig out away from t o windows,
unless I . more h a lf of the snow
on the north ai^e, the glass w ill
he la greater danger than they
a r e n o w .------------ - . ’__X ___ _i
As ta r as I could see the build­
ing has come through the w inter
without a ecratch. There w ill be
broken window
ledges
end
things like
that.
To dig the
■now away Is a waste of tim e for
t o wind would Just f ill them up
agate. Ta watt gad watch Is abont
ell th a t can he done rig h t now.
Mrs. M. B. Orato loft testen
Tor n visit to Baker cry
It, L C ase,' the undertake»,
A shop equipment second to none We«t ta Yreka today on bustnepf
In t o valley.
th e Jtnde them
n t to lo w , to *
f a the yards»
fee the firtt
when the botfe
tnforme her pea-
<ed. Bar father
Work-r-Palnted hedi.______:__
t o » to ¿ro­
nn
“ THE MAGIC GARDEN”
BY JDHN MABtN
1 A*HK> * * * * * * *
t t o tesa « said to
Wasteful cutting of soft wood trees, neglect in
planting new forests to take the place of the old
ones, and forest fires, have depleted our supply of
raw material for paper. The American people have
been very improvident in the way they have looked „
out for themselves on this need. They should have
planted vast forests many years ago to provide
continuous paper supplies* but they failed to do go.
The people are now using over 160 pounds of
paper per capita annually, and new uses for it are
being discovered right along. Not many pulp mills
in the eastern and middle western states have bet­
ter than a 10 years supply of pulp wood, according
to an article in “ The Paper Industry.” .This writer
remarks that of the 3,000,000 odd tone of news print
now consumed by the American press, probably
three fifths comes from Canada and various foreign
countries. He seems to think that in a few years,
Canada may place ampe form of embargo on the
exportation of pulp Wood.
At present, the annual waste from lumber
amounts to at least 8,000,000 oords, and of this '
about 2,000,000 cords is left in the woods- while a
considerable part of the rest is burned.
The American people ought to devise measures
for adequate replanting of forests, and they should
take further steps to stop waste of this valuable
material and to prevent forest fires. Paper is one
of the moat essential elements of civilisation, and
if it should benome so high in price that people
could not afford many newspapers, magazines, and
books, they would take a long step backward.
Our coarse one would imagine that when onr '
pulp supply gives out, arrangement could be made
with Canada and various countries for use of their
resources. But our paper stock is likely to. cost us
B good deal more than it should because of oUr
failure to protect our own supply and to stop its
waste.
By Williams
OUT OUR W AY
Sickness and Poverty
Û ÏÏ Ï gTÄATTON-MMMt»
The Janlor H igh schaol
base-
«sub she ntoar h aters bad
hall team of Ashland w yi meet the H e. said: "Y ob . d a rlin g /]
th a t -But 1 am going to i
Meatord faater High taste here Judge
Who made -that decisi
< fir. J..Schm idt, t o
architect
and b u llia», haa prepared plans
for a handsome new farm repi-
dence. to he b allt for Geo. Oweh
at t o farm twb miles south of'
Saturday afternoon la t o
high
schoal diamond- The gates w ill
■tart a t two o ’clock and aa the
A t t e n d teste 1» ¿till bteartH s u re­
ds» a deteal kamted »at
them
by t o same aggregktlon, It Is ex­
pected that Saturday’s game * w ill
bs a fast one.
U
should go; to suddSi
both hands toward
and said: "Ah right
are really sure that
now, I ’ll sit on yoar
The transfer was »
th a n was as wild
about K, it was a t las
ils lap, In hW arete, whore ho
I stroke her silky hair and And
lor hlmsoU the wonder of dlta-
haada a id taper Ungers aad
>by teat that « te a badly >
tched from their three daps of
dug bore.
i
«tore are rear a m r e r ha
d, -
(To bo continued)
.’ ll- .- li