Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 10, 1927)
THE DfllhY TIDINGS ! â Î1,1!.!!ÏL.T T I D I N G S iO U T O U R i» Dutcher I Hie vuAW t KhMMENWeW ri WASHINGTON—The Afelomat ta ffn fo e tt goad; toe. v J \ MO\N 'U W W h ile The Widening H ie coming winter should see tbe completion of tbe widening of the highway to the Oregon Caves. Last spring considerable work was done and many curves were widened and eliminated. There still remain jnany places along the highway where a little work would bring great results. Tourists visiting the Caves traverse a fine wide rode as they pass over the Redwood highway to the junction o f the Caves highway. This also is wide and smooth and when the narrow road for the asoeat to the Caves is reached, many drivers turn back. Many never even consider the trip to the Caves because they hear reports that the road is narrow and dangrous. Thtte have been no fatal accidents on the Caves highway. People drive carefully and do not take the chances they would on a wide road. Neverthe less it is holding back a large amount of tourist traffic which otherwise would go to the Caves. Tbe Oregon Caves has become one of the major scenic resorts of Oregon. This season probably 20,000 will have gone through the caverns by the time the Caves are closed. Many others have driven to the Caves for the beautiful ride. As a major attraction, it should have a highway to it which will he a two-way road at all points. Oregon is advertising her scenic resources, of which the Oregon Caves is Okie of the most im portant attractions. It is necessary that it be made as accessible as possible fbr all persohs who may desire to visit the resort.—^Grants Pass Courier. Perhaps the most ichaPacteristic feature of modern American life is the mad scramble for no toriety—to get into tlie newspapers and be talked about hy the puWfe. No sacrifice is too much, even «»to Mie itself hy same people to achieve this object. Anything from committing murder to sitting on top of a flag pole for days without end has been tried with varying success. Often them no toriety seekers plan to cash in by way of the movies or vaudeville or in more dignified individuals upon the lecture or chautauqua platforms. Others seem to be satisfied merely to he tbe object of public curiosity and it is only another form of the in satiable hunger for new thrills which seems to be the outgrowth of modem existence. It may be that life is too easy nowadays and individuals of a certain type are driven to despera tion to escape its boredom. Their parents aad grandparents were too busy providing themselves with the hare necessities of life to indulge in thrills, bat many folks now mast have frequent thrills to mix with their idle hoars. Sometimes it seems that what thia country needs most is something worth while to occupy the leisure hours of its people. It is these hours which should lie the most eujoyaM« that ate often the cause of most of our troubles. • «• . < Crops are good; the minus art active, and even the lumber trade seems to have improved a little. Prospect» for the immediate fu ture are bright in Baker coaaty. — B ik e r H erald. Aa'eooa at we get this year’s pennant moss and world series W hen the driver is sate, so is settled, we w ill have to begin the road. ♦ worrying about where the next republican national eenvention Most of the patient men I eVer will be held.— Jefferson Review. knew Were simply lazy. When Jrou show your passions, your e n e m ie s know Just where te soak yon. An hour’s toothache is longer than a two weeks’ fishing trip. L ife is precarious enough, as newspaper headlines Indicate, but there were ho n sw q p a p ers to te li of its frhquent and sudden ex tinction tn the stone age. — Weston Leader. Belgium and ‘Germany^are go ing to have a Joint commission to Investigate war-time sniping., Hex Heck says: "Good nature W ho said American civilisation finds its hardest Job when in was not spreading? — Eugene close contact with halitosis." Guard. government em- | Its etnhaames and legations abroad and Congress plans what to do With 660,000,00«,000 appro priated fo r new government bnlldings here, foreign nations are holding up their end by enlarging their diplomatic missions in t h e capital or moving In to new and bigger Quarters. Great B ritain long since an nounced.that she would bund a grand new mlUloa-doilar embassy ca Massachusetts avenue and sent an architect over here to draw up the plana. Construction w ill start almost any tim e now. In getting out on Massachu- setts avenue, the British lio n has defied Washington’s principal so cial Moneas, Mrs. John B. Hen derson. Mrs. Henderson b u ilt a number ot prospective embassies or acquired sites for them out on sixteenth street— ju st above her famous castle— and the B ritish decision to go elsewhere was re garded as rather a blow to her program. Ñaverthleas, the Spanish gov- crnmant recently bought the fa mous Sixteenth street residence which Mrs. Henderson built fo r the vicepresident and w ill add an extension te It fo r a chancery. Just in the rear of the new Span ish embassy, on Fifteenth street, lies a huge English Gothic palace built hy ,M ra. Henderson and Just purchased by the Egyptian government tor Its legation. Others en M m . Henderson’s embassy row are the French, Mexican, Pottoh, Ita lia n sad L ith The bulging hip* is a feature uanian. ‘ ef the neweet Styles for women, The Italians, heeding the need haya * haff t a s i / Fattowtog the for expansion, are building an men’s post-Volstowd example? extension to their embassy which w ill give them larger quarters tor Fterfome ta rirtd he chosen to rifflees. ' • match one’s personhlfiy, accord France, too, is planning a small ing to a F ifth Avenue note. We office building alongside Its em M e Wofiderlng w hat bind Lon bassy on Sixteenth street a t the Chaney sbonM wear. lower end of Embassy How. Next month the 'Csecho-SIovah mission w ill move out of Its Quar L ac * 9 t «raised a cto n 1a tbe ters on lower Sixteenth Street to stage’s chief fou lt; says a erttie. Sheridan Ctrcle, where ft w ffl be W ith rwvaee arowdteg the play a neighbor of the Swedish a n d houses, -an actor would ha lost ta Rumanian mieisons, the other dip ttw theatre newsslars. lomatic buildings on the circle. The Cseehs decided to move be cause M inister Edeaok Fierlinger, A New Y ork Justice rules a in bis present quarters can ptoee man may he Inoffensively drunk. only IS guests eround Me table— Probably th a t’s when he’s good room is that scares. And the min and drunk. ister's kitchen te no famous for Its Bohemian meWspeluen t h a t . An artists’ club in Russia has i eats are very much in demand. Meanwhile, the German em been fined 1600 for permitting tha fox tre t te he dqaeed n t a bassy 1s considering the possibil ity of using its large property I public entertainment. Russia Holdings on 8 Street fo r the hob- certainly seems to be enjoying its nek TreedOm under the’ soviet. A woman w ill xwspHrspnt a Rcmemher that long-gone day when you slipped up into the weknan frldnd on tbe new gar« hay mow te reed the latest Nick j munts she is wearing. But when C arter th rille r? And Dad uqeaned: 1 • man sens a asaa friaad wear “W hat on earth la the younger in g a n e k outfit he asks him generation romlag t o / ’— FoTeet where the fire was— Crake Amer- Grove Mewe-Tfmee. erjrtag. M arla could apt wnflsrstsod why parting from Fablea would bring forth a single tear. She hated hbn aad «artdsd to “«a things up” co that when be ea rns bask aha conld "watch him squinn” at the Moe story She Was going to make tarn happiness with Manon curtailed personal expenses extent of depriving himself Mlttee ee that he could hay i for her locket. He planned should he a first week annt- ' present and felt as rich as when dm frail silver noet ic ssdely atored array tn hie though It is unlikely that AWbts- , sudor Maltzan w ill saune befare •n e th e r year qr two. i ........ » a ^»wuusMUtoue S. This Day b Fistiana WYWZAMH vs. E R T L K TURNING TH E PAGES «Y Ten Million Links Nearly ten million words a week are now knit ting the two rides of the Atlantic together. That’s really significant. ✓ About four hundred million amiable words were exchange with Europe tliis lari year—business, per- Honal messages, news. The latest cables are of a sew alloy and much faster than tlie old owe«. Wire- lea« in being tuned up to higher speed«. Hhority, expert« «ay, long meaaagea will be ‘photographed’ across the ocean, just a« halftones arc now trana- initted. All these thing« mean cfcoapet* communication, an increase in our knowledge of one another and a consequent decrease in- sectionalism. The American North doesn’t quarrel with the Houth, or the East with the West, since the motor oar ha« shuffled u« up and made out the distance« we learned in out geog raphy classes to be gross exaggerations. No doubt wars have been waged for trade; but commercial relations are much more likely to pre vent ware. And the war fever cools when you know your man. The exchange of ten million amiable words a week reduces war risk.—Dearborn Indc|>cndcnt. thia 26 Yean Age ' ’ I Miai MEttle .Tso affi ta m a again a fter e pleasant asewth -wpant a t the seaside t a • Nye.MSrpff». i ■ f t o October. W, ¡A o ld h re r repre- M i « L o rfaln e Fennel scarne in M n . abb-ley Eeaa twtartfod Tuesday evening from Efite F ra n cisco whore she spent three J— ---as— . - a rrk J C tn u z s a <71 Ffom W f fta H R U n f l F r m v artM t of > • eeh,taut«« l t t bushels ewntiwued te rule as - IzlfoM p f hfc« t r uriA À sh i m i m ills bantams. Igqn ita ti which It is P L A N WBW O FP IO H the largest fou r horse I1 A modem ticket office, equip rain evsf brooght to ped along «sotroptelitan lines is here. to bo opened hy the 8ontheTn Pacific in k is m e th Falls, ffp- i proxlmatoly te& w ri Js' to ba fe - Captain | ponded In ramodelte< a • bnilB* ( lag which has beta lashed for the purpose. M arita “Come I have left H ifi W in d -, Hay Saturday to s te n the of a t W in d vIR e’ where he is in i Mrs. Ehae, maid r i k r i r i lay after a iewporE > M r. aad Mrs. J. H. Hldley «* Pasadena. California avo Ing aererai days la Ashland to ta le« over A e city with a s t a r to locating bore. .Twelve years ago today. E ld W illiam s, bantamweight cham pion of the world, asd Johnny E rtle of fit. P au l, M lhn., engag ed la a scheduled ten routed too deetotoa affair (that terminated in somewhat of a fiasco, When ia the fifth round, S rtle Was given the decision on a foul which according to the refohee carried the «tie wlih>t, _. At any rate B rtla claimed It, but upon w rite « and Jifiht-aritics I t aR sections Pf the country raised sack te protest over file affair that he Was o«ver reedg- nlspd w a champion and W illiam s remain w it* M r. aad Mrs. Jlx d h rtn t fee kfeodl year. aw leading terpolrtiorran the coast metropolis. DOC R E ID tri blynn-Jonei? a price era "and fo r a long fntnoat chem- period was the recognised head the vnaeonver of the T tM e there. Five years T h irty y rirs ago b« undertook the same work ke»seinng sys-Jn esnaftr mid war head of the VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 10. ntlan d out of druggists’ association In Canada.