Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 19, 1927)
PRINTING CQ L • -, ___ / 1 ■ * 1 By W illiam s WAY /H Ç L O l4 E U N E A w erft ’, ÏM 3j$S M1MOA PLAMitj'vjffU <© ECO UP W I U ^ ~ MA-UH- mai * H im « rtö p p rf ! M M A v A M S i B K sr WS« T w a LORD:— Blag unto the Lord with the harp harp, and the voice of a psalm. With trumpets and soun make n Joyffll poise before the Lord, the King. Psalm W A S H J N O T O lW lu » ,,,» « « ■ rflnt ran to^ $ * A Governor A1 Bmlfti WiH net seek the Demo cratic presidential nomination probably are inspired by hope-' Tb® truth seems to be that with William G. McAdoo pushpd pretty well oat of the picture, many Democrat»—especially In the south— (eel that their breth-* ren who hare supported Smith should also eliminate the gov ernor in the Interest of p d r t y harmony. What happened was that the southern Democrats, realising that no good would come out of a repetition of Madison Square Garden -mess of 1*24, decided that the party nfust start with a clean slate, so that chances ef a successful campaign would nbt be ruined by bitter warfare over prohibition or religion. They practically disowned Mc Adoo as the candidate of "the “dry, Protestant south," no doubt much to McAdoo’s disgust, but it does not appear that they ob tained any promise from the Smith folks to do ad much on th s fr a lfls .o f G e fence. SmfG H«p Largest Followta« The trouble was that t h e <W «t W * the McAdo° Strength was anlisted in behalf ed.n .eaitaSi.d^hPe the bulk of the Waith strength ..w as attracted I more, by a . personality. Thus, ' m ' c 5 ‘r - y Mice e -fe -w /u f*» A H O S A V iM G r J $ u c e September I t , 1MT N E U E R H fc A R D 'iftA calueo S Ä e^ F O R B . C oM C ’ r c n r L sumeebe ” am things , \ W H IL E . l ’M P H O N IN G ’ EHE. Ò M H Ö Ü 1ÍUL < H E R E ‘S W E E T ie,» - s - -S -M H ü p she .’4® 'iW R o * y Safeguarding mii'ivw ' ' a physician examine the child before he starts to school, by having defects thus discovered and cured and by giving full cooperatoin to the teacher, the school doctor and the school 'nurse. Sometimes parents are opposed to modern methods of helping children on the ground that they are “ new-fangled,” that they were not in use when they ihemselves were children and that they are a nuisance. Such parents should look around, .and see that the world really does move. They did not know of radio or aeroplanes when they were children and they should consider that juBt-as progress occurred in mechanical arts, such progress has also been made in methodfl of safeguarding health and earing fôr children, ■ • • • Teeth should be in good condition, diseased ton sils and. adenoids should be treated .or removed, vaccination against smallpox, immunization against diptheria are some of the more common preventa tive . and corrective treatments advised. Parents should give consideration to the no* trition and poature of the child ., . . : All this should be done as the sqhsre thing in giving the boy or girl a fair chance. Parents should realize that much of thé in struction in modern schools deals, with heojth. The teacher is endeavoring to create health habits in her chargee. Home cooperation in this work is necessary and important and parents should do their best to aid teachers efforts along these lines. Not “Sleepless Regulator' Glenn Frank, President of the University of Wisconsin and formerly editor of the “ Century,” says in a recent syndicate articles “ The eolation of the problem of big business does net lie with the sleepless regulator, but with the statesmanlike ad ministrator who can see the possibility of using bigness so that wages may be increased, hours shortened, prices lowered and total profits increased by virtue of the magnitude of operation?’ ' There is no better example of this sound busi-' ^philosophy than the modern railroad system. An observer of the American lines cannot fail to be im fWtiflic d by their continued remarkable .growth and expansion- In the newspapers of every hamlet, village and city, notice follows notice that some great road is building new stations, tracts, and opening up new territories. Ten years -ago the ordinary, un imaginative business man. wotld have considered their scope as large as could “be expected. But not the “ statesmanlike administrators” of the railroads. Progress, the unceasing drive forward, seems in culcated in« them. / Probably few persons realize that the first real railroad ia the United States wae bailt in 1830, a line of a few miles in the st$te of Maryland. The modern fa s t OgmiortaMe trains have all come into being in lew (ban a hundreds years. A, citizen of the begidhlng of the nineteenth century would have laughed had anyone told him tiiat his grandchildren wouNI be able to cross the entire continent, from any p oin t within fivi days. Bnt tire ridlroaaA would have had t|»e last laiigh. , , whether or nj now lie ie worl ' J ? ' 7 ? t •ibere is one. religion ' whloh should Interest all of us, a a d that is the religion on which «11 creeds are . based — the golden rule.— Hubbard Batarprise. You remember when a . Mosqultpes s never come alone. The first step in cutting down expenses la to ent down desires. grMt plants. Now a 1*47 bricklayer would laugh N that. — Forest Grove News-Times. r’ Thin is a queer world. It’s not so long since sister bitterly com plained because she bad nothing to wear.— McMinnville Telephone-. Register. Give me the man who forgets, and you can have the man who Dawes is not a candidate tor remembers. president, Borah is not a candi date, and it Is gradually settling down to a contest'between Hoov We sire snpposed to give thanks er and Lowden.— Woodburn Ins t ./ daily, but It is often difficult to dependent. decide what for. Legs have where evpa necks comM The objectionable thing about reckless motorists is that t h e G A p o in t d-time rvbber- bones they break are not alway in ¿ iaora or 1er their own heada.-^-Klamath News. This aviation business .is get 1 ting on a fellow's nerves. Moat of k n o b tell« m e that th e le ss sm a ck the fliers are coming down, but there la ia a ktaa, the better ■ it no one seems to know where. — Roseburg News-Review. H ei Heck says: 'U- F Idder fÚRNÍÑG ABBtADB 12 Years Ago i .was deserted save tor P® Tbs last rays from tbs MO IS streamed W through- tbs mined g la « window* «ad a B I • . m an u factu rer established a min imum wage ot IS a day for ifts BACK fl«aor*l » a s « I t of the change In the Democratic lineup id that while a majority of the parfy » a y fretife «ohfoone other lb«? .Sm ith, the governor. eau coipmand a m teh la tter bloc of r delegated at th* n e ^ , «Saventlon 5 than any other candidate It Will! he nfuch move difficult for the hope dry and anti-Smith people to organise behind any one 's candidate the* if they had all de- d chjai l a «tie* With, Mofldoo. Un it donbdadly the;* * h l be many aspirants tor th a . McAdoo man- U*. ranging all the way f .1 o m Senator Carter Glass Senator J. ® Tgotoas Hetllh. 4 Two-Thirds Rule in Way. Ib a half-dos«n representative southern ^ a tss J h a plan n o * is k to elect ttfb * tructed delegates. Several delaigdftions ¿ray vote for it favorite sons on tha first two or ’ three ballots, bnt they will be atl set to hop on ¡the f i p t bandwagon that in sp ires their en- S thnslaa«»-. .The Smith leaders if see m this cltuetJon a chance to* a pick np a healthy gssprtment of , delegates from southern stated, flht this factor teemd -likely te be negligible. S«ch delegates w^ll d bs. uninstructed, but precautions m are being taken to see that they I® Are also di*y. < . If 1| ware not for the tw o _ thirds rule. Smith might well hope to crash over to victory in the early, balloting. But the two- thirds rule will surely be main tained and It seems likely that K , !U will* throttle Smith's ambitions. probably Dswsa. Perhaps Hoover. alluring/ her The words were like a lash serosa Fabian's face and he retali ated by demanding harshly: “What «bout your lover—the man who ! hMvy ineettse and «ba deep ■a of the great auditorium, bis way. out Fablen paused the image of Mary Magdalen. kemttftoT toflitfrea mid« a r W1 across hfs serene face, « she reminded him of Man- nd w ta shouldn't she? Mary ta i «hd Men foralvsn by It greator than he! Fablen kM eyee tn aw effort to blot th tha Image and the thought racing down the corridor hs M a silhouettfl,. in . tha »0 ahd as ho drew nearer, breesmo wttMa «he radiance lndow., Fabian stood «a sgill baftrto4.had «topped b is pra- OH AFrtRJtiV Possibly Hughs«. That’s a.tabloid lineup repre- Mrs. W. H ; Sllsby apd daugh Mlss Lucia H«H, daughter of ter, Miss Rsthsr, arrived homd 8 I . Huff qf this city, left last ihuradey fer Mira« c e e k , fdebo. Friday fr o * their visit at Wedder« whefc flbe is sod* to M «mrrted. bura, Curry eeutof, wbere werfl gusats o€ Airs- Geo. Kerr (pefl Mary Sflflby) ghd hqshan^ Tbey came hetoe via the steamer Mrs. Mary b eta of Orants Fees to dad FranelscfflA visited friends in the city t h e last of the week. Mrs. Dean was entertained by the Nett Mid Mur phy families. daughter 1« teeotoa. He spent twe weeks with a son. J T. Blev- In«, at Grants Pass, while on the way home. The relay waathsr In J X Ä S S Ä S tke north did not agree with Mr. after a visit with their parents at Blevins and hs suffered from rhetimatlsm. Ktna Mills,* Cel. « political wglsenhelmers aa they p. etasider the ttrangfc situation In A-’ f i t Republican party which has G develop«« shies President Cool- £ f d g s t b r e * t i « little rad apple e out ta G t ‘awn and the boys in 'a qttandary whether to scram ble for It or N hold off lest it he lid ceatad.w tfh parts green. A reception was teadflfo Rev. Hr. Mgmlnger, at th church, flalurday evening ratttrn from conference, as pastor fpr a soth sr year. Short speeches o f welcome appropriate to the oe- catfcm ware mads by profnitteht membern and friends of the pas tor "and p a ep lv *Pd » ««neral itoOd tfme trai tod on the occa- J . 8. Howflrd. the kurveyor, who hac heen ecpertICg en the tarveys afonpfl Orleely Peek, Yetnrntng to Ashland Saturday, left for Klato- atk-'eo«nty this ttorntaft. Where he will examine some recent snr- „ y s made near Tula lake. cated her expensive attire with a gesture ot dttgdm. “I am ao longer with him.“ she replied hopefully, then continued: *1 hated him and left his house as soon as I could manage to escape- - t have not even seen him for months." “Then who era you with now. to give you all these things!“ Fablen Wae still oontemptuons aa ba indi cated her Jewels. “Fabtflnr Hamm wan hurt and shocked. “Ho one« yon should know that The Comte had given them .io ma, s o l took them away.* When shb saw tha effect, ot her horde she added regretfully. “I am sorry, Fablen, but I shall always love jewels and beautiful clothes.“ Fablen realised the utter help- leeenees ot the situation. She was not to blame after alL Neither wae it wrong tor a women to crave pret- ty things. He found himself regret ting that ha had nqt been the one to lavish luxuries upon hsrl “Fablen, why should we oe un happy all the rest of our lives? Wo know that we werp made only for each other and it you. refuse me ( shall die-and you will never know a moment's peace.“ Manta was pleading for Fabien’s love, to fler the only worth while thing ip the WWW. ”Leave-»-I never want to see you again!” bs «aid sternly. , “Ton don’t meaA that. You couldn’t! Ton are being cruel io youneH and to me. I know you love me or f never would have come bare to save- «a both from everlasting misery. .Fabian!” with a, little mehn Manon mung to ru- blen, pleading wtth her body as she had pleaded with her voice and heart Bnt when she felt no r » Spoil*« nbe flank helplessly to lb» ground an* leaned against his knees. She «rented eless and reaching n« grasped, his arm with both hands tad stroked It lovingly. “PtasSM . . ( Osar . . she Fablen reja^ed. He ster suftcient courage lyes, but be knew she ie toit her brasencsi led hands i forced t «t his sides hs raised ayef. i, Maaon a * and ua- ahe had sot won him J1 la ¿.crumplod hasp He? n o s was almost 1 sa «he crted.pittous. ?l sentlpg a podseusns ef the best » . K- B<yM»ger. « young maa whd has been a resident of Ash land for. two or three ypars, left Saturday to «¿y a visit to his old have been working s toino about home in Kansia, afte» aa absence of' nearly (eu 3f«ars. He 'expects to fòur flfìied tr o « Ashland. return next Spring. a holy and righteous anger against this woman whose touch made him foaget his duly and think qnly of the world, th« flesh sad her! Maaon remained motionless dur- in* his condemnation, but she sobbed in agoar .whap he turned away and went Out Into the garden, like a Saint madly lighting the devil. Maaon gathered up her cloak and followed. “1 cannot blame rom" she said simply, her eyes soft with love and adoration. “All yon sap pf m s is probably true—but 1 love seitf toe away, what will beoome ot tttahto to HMlst eueh * truly tasaiaflni appeal tor flrotoetton Fa- blcn looked slowhr upon her to «he bowed there at his fe e t With a start there earns to him t>e ra- sfltoblanea jtottreeipjber Magdalen. His expression softened ik of ado- upturned by force o t clreWtoto has since built up nc political following. Thflt’s where Dewi and Hughes come In. , H u ghes S trong fn New York the people as do Hoover and Atuthto would -have* the back- Dawes, He W0UI4 be^vulnerable Iflfl R powerful lnter«eto—b en l- because o t his recent law cennec- Idg and all, for Instance, ut be rides not hold the imagination of (Continued On Page Five)