DfllhY TIDINGS
PRINTING CO,
'ÀELISHED IN 1876
ASHL
D ilt T
T
WAY
r F A R lp H \ I
/O D V A N C e a f
PlSAAS. •'
I
O h BCTVOU ’
K*w CfcQft OH
STRfXlNO CONTRASTS:— My day* are like a shadow that
dxdlaeCh; sad I a n withered like grass. But Thoa, O Lord, shalt
e T u T t o r e v e r ¿ S i n M S : « , IX.
„
P R A Y E R : May we live la Thee, O Lord, so that we also may
endure^fonsrer.
HU COAU PrtX
, FBR O W E -J
\C 6 W T O 4 I
M m o * Xd
Whoa« Ml
tier «rond
K a v jr, rii
I prophesied, your hub-
Every man owes something more than taxes to
the community in which he lives.
The more he has been favored mentally and
materially by fortune, the more he owes to hid com
munity. In discharge of that debt he is under obli
gation to do for the community something for which
he is paid materially—but he will receive intangible
compensation. The obligation we owe our commun
ity ia not a onee-in-a-while obligation, but a con
tinual one, one which .should he limited only by
abilities and opportunities.
A true sense of civic responsibility springs from
recognition of th is great obligation. Individual re
sponse to it produces the civic leadership that as
sures continuous, well balanced community develop
ments—a development which provides for spiritual
and social needs as well as for the physical and
needs of the community.
To those of constructive vision we owe the
building together and building up of a community
—from the group who recognize and accept com
munity responsibility we may draw our inspiration
for taking our share of civic responsibility and
community • service.
Our own Chamber of Commerce is launching
an outlined, defini to campaign,. with a goal of a
prosperous, well-welded community as the goal.
We must not shirk our task.
Use Home Products
Today thore was a slip handed to the Courier,
it was short and to the point for it said, “ Grants
Pass consumers will he loyal to heme interests by in
sisting that their grocer supplies Oregon grown
products when quality and price are equal to those
of outside products.”
That one sentence has a lot of food for thought
for the people of the city and oountry. A person may
feel that his imvehasea do not amount to a great
deal but a hundred or a thousand such purchases
do mean a lot because these form the balk of the
buying power of the community.
•
We are decidedly unfair to home production if
wo fail to specify that we want produce grown, or
articles made hi Josephine eounty, the Bogue Valley
or Oregon. Our first duty ia to our owu growers
and manufacturers.
This goes for every line of production. The
grower spends the money he makes in the city or
country—or should spend it here if he makes his
money in tho locality. The same with the man
who manufactares something. He spends his money
for local labor, who in turn spend their money lrnre.
It i s ' impossible to look at the matter in any dif-
Statistics are said to r I iow that $560,000,(XX)
fire loss was suffered in United States last year
or something like $5 for each individual iu the coun
try.
At this rate Ashland was entitled, as it
were, to a $30,000 loss, which we did not get by a
long ways. Guess someone else must be receiving
meat ef our part of thia great destruction of prop
erty, Hit we wiH not quarrel about i t
Statistics, particularly when based upon esti
mates, are apt to say seme peculiar things. There
may he conimunitire whose loss from fire will aver
age $5 jmjt head over a period of years but they are
certainly not cotamon in this section. Possibly im
mense losses from forest fires account for this
seemingly preposterous total.
Our losses are plenty high enough br are our
iaeuremee fates and efforts to do away with fire risks
are well worth while.
The chief constable of one of the British eitioR
h$s eXpresned the opinion that “i f a {»edegtrian
ware as careful an the average motorist, many of
whom drive fart, > bat safely, there would be fewer
aceidents. Walking to the common danger seems
to be more prevalent than driving to the com
mon danger.”
friends are hoping that Borah
w ill support th e ir n a n . Insofar
as they are eonoerned,
Hoover
aad Borah weuM make a great
national
ticket.
Borah
might
conceivably consent to such
an
- arrangement, despite bis refusal
to run w ith Coolidge in 1914, but
there may be even more- implies-
tlons.
Seppeee the Hoover strength
at the convention, when it be
comes apparent that Hoover can’t
win in the face of eastern and ag
rarian opposition, turns to Bor
ah? The present dope is that
neither Hoover ner Borah can
win the nomination, hut if such
a development should come It
would bring Borah mush nearer
to the nomination than he hue ev
er been before.
No close pepsonal
friendship
exists between Hoover aad Borah
such as ie found between Lowden
end Dawes, hat la some respects
thslr Interests are the «ame.
Hoover has a passionate desire
to be president and thinks be has
a chance. Borah would like to be
president, too. but he bus uo illu
sion* which allow him to thin k
that he oan get the nomination
under the party’s present set-up.
On the other hand, there a r e
those who th in k th a t Hoover Is In
much the same beat as Borah—
The Aabjagd Ar«* W o rk * »re that t i e party's Isadora sad con
crowded w ith orders and are turn trolling influences won’t le t him
ing otto ah immense amount of bars it because he Is too honest
.work.
what yon mean,
underetand at afl.
The fickle King
that curiosity waa
la a « r a n toe I
to before.
nairowtag eyes that pllttered
itasi.'■ -
to a command.” «he Doe an-
A q ^ a u t o jm sggia» «uaatioa
gufilgi
too dapra oanndaad M a n c a r
n ’a va las was fu ll tot aappvera-
and smiled
saM quietly to i i T f i h n *
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
29 Yean Ago
W a lte r and Dorothy Jonas aad ?Judge W m . 8 . Crow ell of Mad
Neva Oeayhart have returned toad m i in Ashland Saturday.
from the fa ir a fter a couple Vof
nrrn :
•>
Hoover as a man w ith some “ M or
al fib er.” . Ia Ms heart be is
rather contemptuous of the reac
tionary candidates for the nom
ination enok M Hughed » n g
Dawes. Ha is odovinced that the
big bops o f the party have determ-
lned Io block Hdovar’s campaign
for delegates by putting
np
Hughes to beat him in the east.
In other words, the same crowd
which has kept him from the
nomination Is out to knife Hoov
er. Borah has never played ball
with the politicians.
and views,
payment for
Out o f this bond of sympathy
at Mbs. H en
may grow a feeling on the part of
both men that they w ill each be
stronger if they unite against the
The Misses Belle and Sadie
influences which are opposed to
Anderten were passengers tor
them both.
Portland this morning.
Ucentloas erra ro
• “”*
* * 1 *°
"Yon ware the young girl,** inter,
ted theK in g , then waited to sea
it effect the announcement
a
tion. "W hat a dreadful thing for ns
to have d o n e r
“We.
to waa
beautiful — it
luqulred in
Ashland Butte wears the latest
Mr. aad Mrs. T; B. MlMa leave
F rank B. Sanger w ill leave to
morrow for San Francisco, where the firet of the week fo r at. Saha, hi fa ll decoration, a magnificent
make mantle of snow, a fte r the storms
he w ill spend tow weeks at the ex Oregon, whaae they wlH
ef the past few days.
their future heats.
position.
Mrs. H . F . Dorris, who spegt
last w inter in Ashland aad mads
many friends during bar
stag, ’ Dunsmuir News: Mrs, Master«
w ill return to spend the coming and three children w ill leave for
Ashland, where she has accepted
winter in the oRy.
employment in the Sanitarium.
Kate Masters w ill eater thé Com
Now that motorcycles and au mercial college sod prepare her-
tomobiles may be le ft on t h e
lighted streets with head and tall
lam p * dark, Ute greater number
of violation* which
neepasitate
M arriage license has been issu
tagging, are cars le ft facing the
wrong wap and lack of license ed by the clerk to Edward Boud-
number«.
rean and Edna Herifordi
Grand Dodge W ill Meet—
Reparsed Mo m e
The grand lodge of K nights’of
Charles Rush of this city re
Pythias for the grand domain of turned yestesday from a bunting
Oregon w ill meet ia annual ses trip , and brought home a
fine
sion at The Dalles ©a October 11
for the third time in its history.
• Ix jft Foe Pasadraa
H ara ld Hanson of Medford
Announce Birth—
Miss M arjorie Payne l e f t visiting In Ashland for .a f
* M r. aad Mrs. Howard Hleka of
Thursday fo r Pasadena. Cali days with friend«
Yreka. C alif., announce the birth
fornia, where she to a student at
of a daughter Monday, Sept. 26.
the Southern C alifornia B i b l e
M r. Hleka Is the son o f Mrs. E.
school. Mies Payne to a daughter
M p e Betella H»»a. who has
Hicks, who resides on N orth M ain
of M r. and M * . Cj T. Pupae at keen visiting. w |th her mother
street.
thto guy.
. .
aad lather Is Portland for the
past law days, arrived hare Sun-
A rrlved la *-*ila a <
Mies Elisabeth More« of Bu-
The public health service at
gene, Orégon, arrived la Ashland
Washington, D. C., any« there
Friday to eater the Boatktm Ore-
ahau tt be a sharp redaction in
nan Normal * Mita Meree eÿeai
thfi number of (¿Cap tile parai y si*
the week end at the heme o f .Mr.
casea as » sob an cold weather eels
aad Mrs. H enry C. Oaley fin Bher-
■»«ato jUtoEe burps« In tfie
Ikaa Wf Commence buUdlna
t o ^ Ia a a .
L e ft F o r Bageoe—
Vernon MnGee. «on x
Mra. J. H. MdOee ok VI ta «treat.
le ft Saturday for Sugei , where
atven tty
he Is a student at the
o f Oregon.
1
^totMffm IfaedkhM»' * ’
There were 587-: arrests f o r
drunkenness in Washington, D.
C., in the last fiscal year. Maybe
that’s why
Secretary
Lowman
th in ks prohibition ia so hard to
onforce in New Y ork state.
b y| the Southern Pacific comgNMW
at'Xlemsth Falla, spent «to week
end I» Afihlgnd vipiting his wife,
daughter end parente. Mr. aad
M to , WUltom
on H igh «treet.
tt. W.
v isitin g h e r
and Mm. H. H. q i u
x monument Jp to be erected
Keaeaoy, Me., haaprlng Je»*e
Jamae. A Mtjffe fund to b lip
tolcng the work should be talfen
MP among Ml® t®Klc»b drfver*,’
n;
.. •
T IU -
1D 18
nothing on c«
fore, and he
gaalng at
miration.
j
fV a ra
L ld j
Xaa
III
____ '
r lS U o M
te v
■
,,
,
e -4 ad».«un I weald remetohar
-ih .
• z ,,
AM .
w ill Ba Aaetoted—
C. R. Bowman, fo u g ir owner
o f the Chiloquin Marcanglla com
pany la Chiloquin. K lam ath eoso- t e w * tenattoh t i th e ! southern
< /, who loot week took poaeesaidn orapen Normal fchoipl th l* year,
o f tka H ills Cash 4 eaery «raeery aqteod x a * h l * « d Saturday fro m
store X -h e h la n d , w U l be satiated
In eoadactlng the buelnera by h i*
«rife.
home on the Boulevard.
"Monoeigneur prefers a
quiet
gome,” he «aid to Mason, and offer-
tor Eto arm» l a t h er swap ta a re-
You don’t have to have an fir-
cheetra Just to make a few over
tures.
4
itfaad teepntl/t to apend a '
W H I Attend Xçrnv I —
Mia* Betty Sloraon of Eugene.
Oregon, has arrived ia the d ig to
attend the Southern Oregon Nor
m al school tor tho ensuing year.
i«a she In*
unconecloue
A rips cid age to nothing to
brag a p o u t Just consider t h e
to M grtorie G illette, who ha* i- ■ ■
werklfcg X Ban Franeisco
1» p«gt tw o years, arrived
(
1» Mutomtme, omitting names, Ha
had previously explained to Fatten
that a oertaln masked gentleman—
Fabien underetood who he was— de
sired to engage in a game of parks
Manon meoeeded 4a tnaWng a with him. For two reasons Fabien
«fdery te/ore Ma Etap ee«M «tap eagerly accepted the challenge.
First, it wao^i put a« end to the
King’s ’W ®ld «Hl»»**» conver
sation with Manon.
Second, it
Manon was like a child who dread-
*4 going on a dtoagreqable errand
reputed to be a worthy opponent.
h M b ee. invited derl-
The fact that the beet card play
F a ttr a mailed. “H p re to jw w er ta Parle turned out to be Mar
w ith Fatten’« sanction Manon non*» eeeort supplied an additional
lntaraat tor the fclag. To play a
accepted the Due de Richelieu’s man tor Che sake of matching card
arm and they appeoached Ute wits was diverting, but to play a
niton pretended lstoreet to his
companion’s eeaveveatfon, but out c* u g n spert sad made a game
of the corner or his eye he did not worth the power of concentration.
The JBug had decided that he
lose one point In the little scene wanted Manon—-he had also made
between hie beloved Manon aad the
up Mto mted to play cards with Dee
■lag. Her the Aret time la Ms Uto Ocleu«. The twn deeiraa fitted h>
Fatten expariancad the pangs of gather very well. W ithout further
ado he seated himself at a email
The Comte made aa embarrassed oard table aad signified M r desire
retreat a» ha would not he torced tor Fabien to take the other chair.
to meet Manon—he wanted to popt-
The two men eyed each other
speculatively. It was the King's
apd
Thirty , these Man ago u
* *
mlddfew<
01 champion of the «,„1,1 and
* ¡qoeror of the faipou* Nanni
Per Used
*4
hle i « « » ^
'M • M tt ' i t t i t e n e t , PSA” IWtor-
rtod tSe Klo«» "He. I m act
5
a ffa ir at New Orleans, La.
<mf ? r. *****
tetd protect hto
WWW XMW.
At «ha eatt tabla «ha two ptoyem
continued to measure the unes P t LH
Üw of the game and each other,
rr eh e c o n tin u a l); ,
tl) a Beaaat
y
te a « ra s e s w eight champiea e« AugttaUt
I t g * ttofi fiteffl' ¡knocking the latter eat S t
UM driving
comer from which
4 was
Creadon wa« famed .tor h 1 a
ring ab ility aad Was heralded as
the future wprld’a champloh. H e
was concede a chance to dethrone
hto lim eu e countryman and the
a ffttr attracted the attention of
fight fc ilo w e rr Id en parts of thé
world.
a
/