THE DfllüŸ
C J. REAS, MANAMNO
ASH LA ND
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S
William Feather, writing in Nation’s Business
magazine, takes issue with those' who scorn onr
modern civilization and yean» for a return of the
good old days of onr greatgrandfathers. He says:
I am working in the loving room of fny home,
pounding a portable typewriter. I look around and
this is what I see:
Light provided by a lamp in which burned two
incandescent bulbs.
In an adjoining room a telephone from which
I can talk to smy city on this North .American con
tinent.
* Oh the wall is a thermostat which rcguhttes the
flow of gas in my furnace, and keeps the room at
an even temperature of 70 degrees.
A music cabinet containing Records of the finest
aria« from the best operas, trad selections by the
greatest musicians in the world. •
For a few cents a. day J have dellv
home the news from the four corners Of
world.
This news as printed in the daily paper is
for me in the weeklies and mouthhes, al
are delivered to my very door by the postman
The floors of my home are cleaned with a sue
tion sweeper, while the clothes ate ptti through an
electric washer and ironed in an electrically driven
washer.
My children attend a school where they are
given a better education than the sone o f kings could
command a century ago.
I go to work in an automobile, and I travel a
distance in three-quarters of an hour which would
have been an all-day trip for my father, a generation
I enjoy all these things, and yet I am just an
ordinary citizen with an ordinary income, living
in an ordinary way. Tens of thousands have just as
much as I—and more.
—
Mississippi Valley Reconstruction
▼alley will find « » if hardships¡partly atoned in the
reconstruction that will come. This ha» always been
the cage in similar misfortunes. Instead of the voice
of one city or one community, it will be the reassur
ance of a great, fertile territory destined to continue
its agricultural prosperity.
The government of the United States lias no
greater burden jn the coming years than to combine
its finaociat resources and engineering skill to pre
vent floods, which carry in their wake fftUrine and
destruction. The plea of the people in the delta
country win be joined by those in the valleys of the
Colorado, Ohio, Missouri, Arkansas, and wherever
.floods occur as potential menace to life and prop
erty.
The “ bright side of disaster” is rehabilitation
on a sounder basis than before. The first mark of
progress is protection from the elements, and safety
measures thru mechanical and artificial means. After
that can come the uninterrupted flow of commerce,
education, the arts, social progress and a higher
civilization. Until then the people in flood districts
are at the mercy of uncontrolled waters.
What w© need worse than laws to prohibit men
from carrying guns is education to make our young
sters never need to. The same holds for accusations
against the press for printing crime news: What We
need is less crime news to print. Likewise with
divoree: not harder-methods of getting it, but fewer
reasons for wanting it. You can go on down the
line of human aspirations with the same Reasoning.
Education deals with cause; legislation copes with
effect. Education is preventive, and cheap at any
price; legislation is corrective, and expensive any
This is a free country, btff If ton refuse to ans
wer a question asked you by the United States Sen
ators they charge you with contertpi; and if jmi ask
a Senator for something' he looks ujwà you with
Contempt.
Communism, a*g a theory the sharing of equftl
portions by all, is blamed for most of fhe world’s
ievolntions; but strangely, the lack of it causes most
of • fhe divorce«, z -.
In a few years, unbreakable glass will lie in
universal wse—“ Scientific item. Tlii» will lie very
hard on fhe movie ham who lias always snap|»cd the
stem of the gine glass to indicate restrained ire.
-
■■■■■ I'
1 1
■ ■■« ■
New Brnnswick proj»oses to make the buAcr of
KqWOf equally gnilty with the seller. Isn’t it enough
of a l*ittrtty to have to pay for or drink itf
If they don’t make the coal mines wrfer soon
there won’t l>e any mnters left to strike.
y Williams
M A .Ä H f
'
H< i> r t
HtS BRWKW'MT
Modern Luxuries
1
PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
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« H B GAMY*.
P ee P ul IS
M «N ThBR
g l u t s M A />
Tuesday, M ay « ^ -W o m e n ’s Civic
irnproVeijmfit club meets la the
clu b h o u se on W lnbnrn W ay.
TWeritoy, » tty ».-—Alpha Chap
ter No. 1, O. E. S- meets in the
Masonic hall.
Wednesday, Way
¿Auxiliary to
the t r in it y Ootid meets in the
Parikh House.
Wednesday, M ay 4.— W . B.
A.
meets to the I. 0 . O. f . H all.
Social meeting and everyone
please come prepared to give a
■tunt.
. . „
Thursday, »fay 8.—-Trin ity Guild
meets in the Pariah House.
Saturday, »fay T.— Rogue River
Valley College Women's club
w ill meet at the home of Mrs.
L . E. W illiam s, 620 8. Peach.
Medford.
•
W bW
M O tW tÔ é - O t f
! Hihat Omets Say j
Isn't it 0</d?
The views of the sociolo
gist who contends that ' a
scolding w ill not be indorsed
by those of the spanking age.
------Coos^Connty Aanrican. -
Ole Buck says It mast be
hard for the m odern m o th er__
to smoke* a cigarette and put
S A P .......................................................
freah overalls on the baby at
Easy payments appeal moat to
one and the same tlme^— St.
"edsf" pâbpie. - ‘
Helens Mist.
That old saying "hiding be
hind a woman’s Skirts" is
■trtctly out of diate. I t Is no
longer possible. — UralTowa
Sun. ’ .
Another sterling Instance
of inverse ratio Is the sense
seme men put into their busi
ness and love letters.— V er-
■ona Eagle.
From hid pictures, John D.
Rockefeller seems to have the
longest face is America. And
from his account books, the
longest head. — La Grande
Observer.
fittT '‘Ño'*’ at the «fart Und yUtí
w ill savé many
i
PARIS — N ätnrally Papa
Divani is delighted to have
such a charnflag daughter of
great Income as Poka Negri.
her
marrias» with his eon, Sorgo.
As Serge's brother explained,
after kissing both Serge and
Fola at the station, papa
Couldn’t come because be had
< horrid Cold.
W hat yori think of yoftr neigh?
bor is probably What he thinks Of
you.
'
Give me the static, and you can
bave the Ja».
Etiquette might tell ns how to
handle an ftchlng back when in
polite society.
PO R T L A N D . Maine — Don
▼olateadact?
Lord is a chip o ff the old
block. H a rry Lord was star
In choosing a eity In which to
third baseman for the W hite
hold a convention, the golf oppor
and Red Sex. Don pitches for
tunity it the paramount ISsue.
South Portland high. In o l
der to aee him play, Mr».
Lord was excused from Jury du
Has Hue» sàys: "The hardest
ty by Justice Chapman, who
thing to make a success of is be
once pitched for BOWdofn
in ’ a prohibition officer in Chi
college.
cago.
«
P R IN C ETO N , N. J, — The
D aily Prineetoaiaa,
college
newspaper, has found K nces-
sary to explain editorially
that an article In its columns
oa A p ril 1 stating that **Netti
Green had given f i d , 000/100
to make Princeton co-educa-
tlonaJ, was an A p ril fool Joke.
The factulty received the ex
planation a fter a southerner
had changed hie mind about
sanding his son to Princeton
and other college papers com
mented seriously.
N E W Y O R K — Spring
styles tor the metropolitan
burglar Include
flshpolee.
Henry
B ulkin,
awakened
flam a sound Heap, saw Ms
Housers suddenly leave hls
chaff and m t w e ttfow gh
fhe transom of his room.
Rodfee later captured Charles
Brie*, »6, and Robert FTydn,
'dP, Tftd fisbertsen coufeeseH
to bating committed many
burglaries with a long M tt
pole equipped With a hook.
TURNING TUB PAGES BACK
ASHLAND
10 Years Ago
Firem an A. O. Selsby of Duns
m uir, Who is associated with En
gineer BJ11 Nelson In a run out of
Ashland* has moved With hls fam
ily Into furnished apartments on
Mfes Maple Payne, winner of
C. H. Thomas, until recently as
the Tidings’ trip to the exposition eistani cashier of tfte Bank Ut
contest, w ill leave this week for Ashland, now has a good clerical
nan Francisco. H e r aunt, Mies positfo» tn the general officers ef
K athryn W ells of K lam ath Fells, (b« Fortland Railway Company. »
Will accompany her.
stepped back to really got the
took of Mm and the feel of bfm.
- r u tall the w w ld ho is top.
said Peter. “But, Amaryl-
n o tc h !"
• ^ = *« *= ? *
-All the sky turned a silver grey.
Then a lig h t appeared, a n d a n
other, u n til the whole heavdn
shone.
W ith the stars a y there, I didn’t
feel eo alone.
— Viola Jennings,
. ,
Portland, Ofe.
♦ <
Im p ortan t B o o k s R eview ed —
"The Peach’s. Progress," by
May -Bdglhgtoh. (Fenn Publish
ing Company, PhUadUlpfcto. J a
beautiful gfrl, not too large and
not too small, bat very beautiful.
battMng in the regulation flap
per way In a fam ily of plain,
common people, forms an ideal
centerpiece, on board an ocean
liner, fdr thoughtless, careless,
chasing commercial travelers to
g it t e r like abont an em pty,ekhdf
boi. The author has drawn a
ptefe of rare and fanocent fragile
bend-painted porcelain of the
f e m i n i n e species, contrasting
American preciosity and staid old
■ n rttr English sochil degeneracy
Which, of course, Is only the
dregs o l the over seas social
structure. The heroine Is a lov
able and Irresponsible chit. The
Peach, is a small-fown feminin
ity With dreams and suddenly
ZndS herself heiress to »10,600
in easy reach. She calmly in
forms her horrified fam ily of her
Intention to go abroad alone.
She sets otat to take London.
Thg Reach's amusing experiences
on board ship and her luxurious
Znd swift progress thrdugh her
small fortune make delightful
reading.— The Lariat.
‘ M l PM ft pa« «m efhlnp to
«3 wfth feat asgstartoas eabZegto»”
h aome girl he's waiting * 7 WltK ,^et7 ,n tt «toto» to gather
t he can’t aee anV o tte r i
“J ’’f “ » do« « “ «» tor » «vat trial
M WU1 SU M to UA about 1,
1« a thing so high, ao holy,
(a . £ « ¿ m u ”
wonderful He *®
to m W
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and «pending every eèuf of f t # J .
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to
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,,tfle ih °p® ° * w « *
S T SS
w
W S
ve ÎÎE „
e f- * J r ®to toki would be
tne mont suitable dress in which tv
On T S S ,? 9. ? * ’ "‘ ï of ®tolTlnK •ton««
>a. A^tde
roa/ ln* brook and into
your vtfctt. go Straight
m and take that picture
M t I t to tua bottom of
to the magic garden.
She bed pat
ltoMt—
20 Yeats Ago
C rit and Chester ToimaU cto
down from the Avon m tiltory
school near Seattle fo spend (he
sumlner vacation with relativee
end friends In this vicinity.
•nwn r asked Peter.
■ haa pamid by,-— f ____
p e has forgotten and left hfs
=
-about hte opposition to
dottar.
W hat would the hum« Hat do If
there were no Ford cars and no
viata avenue. -
L IF E A N D T H E STAMH
IA burst of flame as the sun arises
from a bed of mist,
Touching the mountain peak and
, - leaving it w ith a kiss.
A bird's nest on a lim b high up
in a tree,
A butterfly w ith gauzy wings
flutters gracefully about—
A barefoot, boy, in t a t t e r e d
clothes,
W hat cares he for rugs and pity
brook Is close by?
A fragrance Alls, the atr from
blossoms nodding near.
And softly, a summer lullaby, fho
b e » . drone, . . . . . . . ------ . .
Clouds of pearly white and misty
grey
F loat across the heavens, dusky
shadows around me.
Over there in the west an artist
Tke begun child rex, who h ale
beeU staying w ith tholr grandpar-
enta, Hr. and Mrs. B. F. jfeeser,
left for ftyn Jose, Cef.j yesterday
to jeto their ttotkeb, Mfs. F. L.
CaApP.
• **
i Mrs, Joe
Poor, wife of the 8. P.
locoAvttve OUgtoeer, csrAo crier to
A shUtod. Tuesday evening. M r.
Poof (s now rrfUofng fnto Ashland
and fftey may to»« Up their rM t-
d e n to kere sftortfy.
The "Go Getters,* the young
Peoples Bible class of the F irst
Baptist charoh, held a delightful
“ ▼oenfe’’ roast aUd six o'clock
dinner F rid ay eveuing. A pril
twenty ninth. In the L lt tla p a ri.
There were twenty-five present
and they Wished that the bal
ance of the class could hard
beeta w ith them to partake to
tfcetr JvtWty
Over « huge ontdoor fife fftey
roasted We on Ms and made Codes,
Which w ith barn, Sweet pKkloi
and marshmonows. satisfied the
IPn»r n ttit .Then the group sutfg
popular sotgs, told fortunes,
H r . and Mrs. 8hoe make r 6f
The Mieses Elsie and Pearl
Fergus Falls, Minn., ate among Roper, ot tkl« place, arrived MW played Jokes and- had fasbUh
Orowaon returned recently from
tb« new residents of Ashland, hav wc«* treA fidtwUiftU. WR» fits ot fun
their vlalt with th e ir slater, Bessie,
The party assembled at llve-
ing C«ae here recently from San fam zy, fiavtog tnriefed iti
(He
and ether relatives at The Dalles.
t&irty
und broke up af suiUu
J«ee.
P. f»., Id time for any other
8. MltChefl, p ro alaan t local
Zenas A. Moody returned feat meetings Of (he efetring. This is
■J. H. L iv i agrión bas gone to
cattleman, spent Thursday In
the second d toner the **ûo ôet-
Atoady ftr M a itta fpr a ttme wttfi Tuesday from a fitmtoern trip to
Medford tranaactlag business.
Portland.
(Please Turn To Page Three)
re la tiv » .
run dome back to
(bat H a ly ttln g v u
a S T ÏÎe  ." ^
Hw «yes wer« eo very