Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, June 13, 1927, Page 2, Image 2

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    THÉ DfllbY TI
0E 0R 8Ï
i famta i n » t
A9ÖLAND DAILY T ID IN G S
TttÉYDRÜM
ta / .
k A • * 3
Two Many Laws
“ Residents of Oregon,” says a news dispatch,
“ must wtach their step a little Mote closely from
now on if they would escape an argument with the
cm trtls,” Tettiarks the Portland Journal.
And the news story is descriptive of the situta-
tion; More than 80 new laws passed by the 'flVPgtth
legislature at the late session have already gone into
effect. That is 80 more laws that people have to
know and obey. Saturday 370 more new laws, also
passed by the recent session but without the em­
ergency clause, go into effect. Subtracting the laws
Which repealed old ones, something in the neighbor­
hood of 400 new statutes will go ofa the books for the
regulation of individuals and corporations.
At the legislative session before the last one,
morfe new laws were written, for people to know and
obey. At the session before that there were new
laws. New laws have come from every legislative
session that ever convened.
Meantime, city councils have been piling up the
regulations for people to know and obey, Ik) on ties
have been doing it. States have ben doing it. The
federal government has been doing it. They have all
been doing it for years past and undoubtedly they
will he doing it in the years to come.
• And groping along through life goes the poor
old citizen, trying to get along in the world and still
frying to know and obey all the laws that are turned
out for his regulation like sausages at a sausage fac­
tory.—Rosebuyg Newa-Review.
.
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aari iTgaril nr vnMAi
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Bdilol TttUUto:
bike 6t tlrt» rifetasta'res Which will
appear on the ballot at the spec­
ial state election to be held Jane
28, is Whtat ft ktaoWta as Critafcfr
Uhlt System Thia measure 1»
one that can't«» adopted by any
county when It desires to do so,
ah& IntbiVis a tkdlcal chaAfcb In
the management and manner of
ttaxdtlota or Hl di the school dis­
tricts outside of the first blAss
districts, which are automatically
exempted from the operation of
the law.
It la,not my purpose to dis­
cuss the merits of,. or objections
to, this law and its application to
Jackson county. I hare an opin­
ion, but some of my best friends
think differently; it is a proposi­
tion which has two sides. There
is one very serious thing, about it,
however, .the fact that the voters
of Ashland and Medford have the
same chance to vote on it as the
people /residing ’ in the oustlde
districts. This, it semes to me, is,
absolutely unfair, if the people
in these outside districts want the
County Unit system, then we have
no business voting it down; if they
don’t want it, we have no busi­
ness putting it over on them;
they are the ones to profit or suf­
fer from it; they are the ones to
pay the bills and get the rekllts.
The Spring Festival
GENERAL
The spring festival is over
dreams of those who had planned aud drilled and
worked for its presentation, and otoce a gain Ashinb d
has Shtowh a community spirit—ft willingness to es­
tablish in the town those-institutions of most worth.
The festival was a thing of exquisite beauty.
From an artistic standpoint it was never surpassed
in this city. It is oiie of those splendid programs
which create a love for the artistic and beautiful. It
was moot worthwhile.
But it did more than entertain. It did more than
please. It showed once again what splendid co-op­
eration and community spirit will do in making for
success. It showed the appreciation of the city of
Ashland for the work being done at the Southern
Oregon Normal school, and appreciation of the fact
that Ashland has before her the possibility of be­
coming one of the educational centers of the state.
Does “ absence make the heArt-gfoW fonder” as
says the old adage.
It may not do exactly that but it at least makes
jx>ssible joy of reunion.
Almntri Dhy for the old grads of the Southern
Oregon Normal school has passed and In the mem­
ories of the many who were present there are de­
lightful thoughts Stored away of the joys of that re­
union—happy thoughts, worthwhile thoughts.
So ofteh the pressing affairs of every-day life
crowd out the memory of school days—the happy as­
sociations, the pranks, the carefree life. Those happy
thoughts become uncertain memories.
But a reunion with old friends brings hack those
dreams, those carefree days, and adds to the store
of happy inridents of a lifetime. Partings are more
worthwhile when the joy of reunion can compensate
for the pain of separation.
The r nited States Supreme court decides that
to leave a fire near a national forest without to­
tally extinguishing it» is a criminal offense. Preserva­
tion of our great forests is a task of the government
which seems to he more fully awake to the import­
ance of its duty in this direction, all the time.
Offering to sponsor an auto pnrk-td-park tour
.this summer an automobile company is doing much
in the “ See America First” movement. Crater Lake
is included in the national park itinerary.
» s
■ -- — 1
To keep alive that spirit of comradeship and
youth and add to the store of pleasant meuiories,
nothing is more desirable than tire reunion of school
dny friends on an annual “ Aluinni Dav.0
The «irrti on the V. R. nun il plan which , tasses
over Ashland each morning, in « First class ndver-
tiring device for Uncle Sam’s great service.
■/
/
L . - W . Tb'i’^ o r e RpoWknit ukeir
Governot of’ NtaW Jersey?
2. Who wrote C uodldk? Candidi*
*> XX7 V
fc a savori Asta a i r p l a n e a e n iR iic r
i r » ' vv ir a i n o t e «
was lorn in Sicily ?
4. What ire the colors of thè fol­
lowing colleges: Illinois, Har­
vard, Notre Calne, Southern
California?
6. under what president was
James 9. Sherman Vice-Presi­
dent?
C. What la the money value of a
' Rhodes scholarship?
1. .What ruler defeated the Ro­
mans ip about «1 A. D.?
8. What la the asme of the pres­
ent Pope?
10. In printing parlance what is
commonly known aa a fttfckf’
TANSWERS TOMORROW)
Answers to Hatwrday's Questions
i. Great Britain, Ireland and Ice­
land.
1. No.
2. Denmark.
4. Great Britain.
5. Along the southeastern coast
of France and the northwest­
ern coast of Italy.
I . Roumanla.
7. Sweden, Finland and Russia.
8. France.
Tuesday, June 1 4 .— The Ma si«
Teachers association will meet
older than the flag of Germany
It b a national Mag
and belongs to the whole people,
not only collectively, but individ­
ually and every cltlsen feels that
it b hie flag, while the flags.of
many other countries are personal
flags.
Cordially,
(Mrs. Chas.) LOUISE V.18HAND,
'
National Chairman.
and Italy.
at the Lrithla park.
Tuesday, June 14»—W. C. T. U.
will hold their regular bnalnoea
meeting in the public library.
Wednesday, Jane IB, Presbyter-
ian Women’s Missionary society
will meet at the home of Mrs. Im portant Books Review ed—-
J. Poley on the corner of B and
"Laurel and Straw,” by James
Third streets at 1:10 p. m.
Saxon Childers. The principal
character in "Laurel and Straw’’
88 88 88
MAIM HTBKKT
is a product of an American Mid-
Western college, who wins a
Margaret B. Sángtter
a Rhodes scholarship and is pre­
it doesn’t b itte r «hens ft lies;
cipitated into the strangely un­
Ito vivid light may blind our eyes, familiar and thoroughly deligbt-
Or It may be a narrow way,
ful w^rld of Oxford. There he
That only kndtr» the fiesta of d*y feels called upon to readjust ideas
and ideals, to orient himaeif to
new invironment and standards.
It doesn’t mutter if it seems
A pathway bullded out of dreams, Ho faces the dangers of snobbish­
ness and Aaglo-mania. And there
Or if it is a sombre place
are two girls, each typical of a
Without a leavening of grace.
phase of modern youth and each
exerting a tremendous power over
the young man. But above all
else ‘‘Laurel and Straw” tella an
absorbing, story— a story that
holds one breathless from the first
page to the last — not with the
breathlessness o f melodrama but
Pày cash and ytttt Will get no
credit.
Many a man blows np by
leading too far from first base.
Reforms rammed down by
drastic legislation make hypo­
crites of ua all.
A tdrnado tore the frttnt
Off the barhbre kftfo At a Mls-
bdhtt city. Thfc drily ques­
tion we have ttt ask con­
cerns the continuance of the
barber 4 »having activities.
The value of a thing Is sel­
dom realised Utatil you urn in
danger of losing it.
The yonng folk certainly
are seen, it not heard, these
days, especially at the bath­
ing beaches.
The
Ten
Commandn-fmts
would be all right if we didn't
fttVi to Mtaft theta tali at tttafch.
Lindbergh’s feat advanced
aviation tremendously, all of
the dispatches tell ns, but
how many people are like the
Brooklyn man who wrote to
a newspaper urging that
Charley he prevailed upon to
quit flying Bbw and COUe on
home?
When a farmer wants to loai
he gries to the city, while the
city man thinks its great fun
to do bis lota fink oh the farm.
American soldiers ate brave in
battle,- aay the Australians. Some
Hes Heck say»: "Wien a Yankee doughboy Is Just the one
Lookouts within a few days will mun tain! got hotkita' inside his who could drive a pleasure launch
be dispatched to skyline posts in heafi, yhä etaris «ft ntfthfc’ out* across the Detroit river and get
the hills around Klamath.
there alive.
TURNING TUB PAGES BACK
ASHLAND
Mru. E. H. Watson of Buttd
Fall», who has been tiaitlng ta
Aahtand during the past Itro
wocka, returned home the flrat of
iaat Week. Mru. S. F. Thornton.
C. A. Patton and Sutler Helman
accompanied her dn her return to
Butte Falla and viklted over Tues­
day in tla t city.
Tuesday, Jane 14<-~Q. A. R. will
have a covered-dish luncheon at
I jj , m. in the Parish House.
Last meeting of the, year.
rather with that more Intense
interest which develops from a
struggle « a n s real ikdTftdp affd~
humpn. There is an underlying
principle strongly held through­
out the book which la well ex-
1 But— be its pavements white or pftikakd in a iscrap of conversation
between two American scholars at
brown,
Oxford: “And don’t forget thia,
1 Be it in village, city, town—<
The place of which we are a part old boy; Englishmen don't love us
Dwns Main Street as Ito pulsing any more than we love them—
and that's but little. But unless
heart.
the United States and England
tt a n
continue their pretense of politic­
Origin Of The Flag—
On June 14. 1777. the Stars al friendship— Good-night. And
and Stripes, by act of Congress, if the two countries ever separate
became the official flag of the —I mean separáte— God help this
United States. Previous to this, old World— And it’s np to inen
at different times on different like you and me to do away with
occasions, numerous flags (near­ all the petty nonsense. You can
ly 70) It is said, in number— bad trust ths ax-grinding politicians
at the heads of thf two countries
floated oyer the colonies.
On the date mentioned, June to keep alive the big animosities;
u . 1777, the committee reported i but We as individuals can do a
to Congress and the following .little to educate the two nations
resolution was passed: Resolved, to ignore the small irritating ex­
That the flag of the i t United ternáis.
The author Was a Rhodes schol­
States he 1« strip«,- alternate
rdd had White; That the Union ar at Oxford and knows whereof
be thirteen stars, White on a blue he speak».
fluid, representing k MW constel­
lation. At the Mn^e Of the adop-1
tlou of this resolution Washing- j
ton tabid; “We take the stars
MIM MURDOCK
from heaven, the red from Our
mother country, separating by J
axk k again
White stripes, thus showing that
We have separated from hef, and
the white stripes shall go down
tto posterity representing liberty.”
The first record we have of its!
being carried by the army in bat-
tle was September 11, 1777, at
RrandyWIne. It is Intaresting t<,
note that daring the War of tht
Revolution the number of states
Was I t, In the War of 1812, 16;
lb the Mexican War, 2 8; in the
Civil War, 85; in the Spanish-,
American War, 45; and in the
kfarld War, 48 stars. Perhaps
You do not know that the Amer-,
lean— The Stars and Stripes— Is
among the oldest of national ban­
ners. It is older than the present
Rritlsh Union Jack, bltaer tabh
the French tricolor, older than
the flag of Spain a id many fears
Ì0. Liverpool
1 0 Y ears A g o
M USS D Ö B O t Ö t f tE I D , 'Editor-
Ytars Ago
ChM. fc. Koelache knd fatally
arrived a feW days ago from Sno-
hdmtah and hgve already taken
tadhSekMon of Mr. K’a recedt pur­
chase. the Westervelt orchard in
the Southern part of the city. Mr
Koetache has hM t engaged in
the lumber hustneka in the north
but retire» tb engage fa the fruit
industry in Southern DMgon.
Olaf Lidström has sold hia In­
terest in thk Park Garage to B.
Mrs. Susie L. Allen has not keen
H. Morris, who recently returned able Ita be In her real eUtate of­
from Alaska after an absence of fice for the past Ytw days ota se­
covers! yearn. The new member couai of lilnesÿ.
of the firm la a brother of 8. R.
Mrs. O. D. Caldwell returned
today from a visit srfth friends at
Mr». Famer and Mtsa Cline, who Medford and Cetatral Point.
have been sojourning In California
with the D. R. Tallman family,
Blaine Klum, the artist and
have returned to Ashland and advertising man, spent several
have token a residence on Alllnon days In Ashland this week from
street.
Medford.
ABHLAÑD
3 0 Y ears A g o
Miks Lydia Owdha rtaturhed
frolli the Jhkephlne hounly exatn-
inutton Ita!« week. Mid» Owen»
. . i t a » York wefe both auccea»-
ful aphllrantR.
#
Mias Margtfet Charrier, of Gbld
Mill Is the ghMt of Mim lleta»
StaaNM.
Mr». H. B. Carter and lkm È.
V. tCkrtOr. left Mit «venihk on
the delayed aouth^otakM overland
for ttonetoh. Texaa.
Itadk« Frank Williams oí Ash<
tanta lift Tuesday qjrentag for
Portland on'* bMfttaaau trip and
may eootlaae bto joarney Into the
stata of Washington/the new pop­
ulist paradisa.
»
Girls Dance
Whether thia ft td M, U irò-
phektad, *’k y«at Mtholit a tata-
ritar,'’ it haa certainly Veen a year
without a spring. One Weék «I
really spring-like conditions and
an occasional sunny day were the
only Reminders of what March,
April aud May should ho liko,—
Coquille Dally Sentinel.
When they use tMs new wonder­
ful -French Process Face Powder
•ailed MBLLO-OLG-^-*eepa that
tagly shine »why. Women rave
riven Its superior purity and qua­
lity. Stays on lonftr—uMh look*,
like a peach—taNps «bmplexldhs
youthful—prevents Irikgo porss.'
Get a box of MBLLO-GLO Face
'
People who talk pH the time Powder todap.
Llth la Pharmacy -
never have much chance to think.
East Side Pharmacy
—Silverton Tribune.
Begifilng TwRtarrow
All This Week
And
SàFê
By Phtcmg
Yotfr Ordpr During Dèm-
T tanstratioD.
Electric