Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 10, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    DflIbY TIDING
the ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS OUT 0U R WAY
..................... ........ » « .........
>
J K f A NOLO^
Ö M 3 U * BOCHW
M A *~ 3 \< T A NOAO PA’R
J N t tOUMO MOWG%T
1M R a m , i f t r y mari
D A M O / © A O 6 ~ -rw v ?
e -ra rttH * o ,
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O c to b e r
IP ,
JW T
, 8 WRIT M K D IT A T IO N — My meditation of him shall be sweet;
1
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^ rd - P ,a lm 104:*<-
P R A Y B R : “ Come, we th a t love the Lord, Aad le t our Joys
W
LETTEÛ JJM¡
L B ?
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By Rodney Dutcher
N B A Service W rite r
IN IÖ
LLAR
't R E M ’ y
$tS6 a o n ï’f ’ IM’ ÎUWK
. maro t s ï x l M as ; ,
k RAM
iw AUL.
y
Strict Quarantine Needed
’
The Daily Tidings has accepted the decision
of the city health board and the school board rela-
tiv.e to the infantile paralysis quarantine without
editorial comment, for we know these men and wo*
men have the best intersts of the oity and the
children at heart
However, the ruling which permitted the con­
tinuation of school while practically all other gath­
erings were banned or discouraged has alw ays seem­
ed to many, rather inadequate.
The discovery of a new case of this disease em­
phases the advisability of dosing schools a t once,
instituting a strict quarantine against all children
leaving their homes and in every other waÿ pos­
sible, guarding the children against coming in con­
tact with those of other households.
‘ It is impractical, really impossible, to prohibit
people from infected areas coming Into Ashland,
except on occasions of special public gatherings;
therefore, it is a natural consequence that people
who have been exposed in areas where they are
cases are coming to Ashland every day. The dang­
er o f exposure to our children can be minimised, ns
it is in every other community in southern Oregon,
by keeping children off the streets.
The regulation and supervision at the schools
has been excellent; but, as long as the schools are
continued open, the children will remain free to
come and go on the* streets which many laymen I d
this case, believe Increases the possibility of contact
with outsiders who may Have been exposed to cases
and who may bj visiting in our city.
For, as we stated in a provide „editorial, re­
gardless of the eost every preoaCthmary method o i
preventing the Spread of Infantile paralysis should
be tried—now, not after the disease has spread.
Withhold
While of course the grand jury investigation
of the «hooting of Ziumierlee by Officer Talent is sig-<
nificant and should be valued, it is far wi«er to
withhold judgment in this case until the case Is
probed in a court of justice.
As it stands now the ooroner’s jury exonerated
Officer Talent, while the grand jury held the evi­
dence submitted was such that it would be wiser to
make a more complete investigation, such as can only
be made in a court of justice.
The seriousness of this case—its influence not
only on the life of a young, conscientious officer,
but also the bearing it will have on future conduct
of officers and on law enforcement—demands that a
final decision be based on a more extensive showing
of evidence, which will develop in the court trial
later.
Telephone Courtesy
Did you ever, after hearing the pleasant, cour­
teous voice of the telephone girl, wonder at the
contrast after you had gotten your party on the
line! Probably the speaker on the other end of the
line had nothing but the friendliest feeling toward
you and no fault could be found with what he
actually ritoid—the trouble is that his voice comes
over the wire brusque ancT rasping: He doesn’t
know how to talk over the telephone like the tele­
phone girl does.
Too many j)eople seem to think of the tele*
phone line as a sort of long pipe, as it were, through
whieh they can yell the barest outlines of a con­
versation, hprriedly and withont regard to inflection
or poise. If they would just imagine, instead, that
the telephone instruments do not exist and that
their “ party” is sitting within easy earshot, tljey
would incorporate into their conversation the little
touches of feeling and friendliness that are char­
acteristic of ordinary conversation.
There is really no reason why a telephone con­
versation should not be practically as satisfactory
as a face to face one, hut until we all learn how to
use the telephone—or rather forget how not to
use it—it will continue to be a rather poor sub-
gtitute for personal oontact.
'
Michigan bootlegger got a life sentenee m a
“ habitual criminal.” He should have killed some-
bedy and he would have gotten off eaider.
VMW MQWERS O tT . GRAV
Moor brum mumck , ms
A 'C o rv allis wonton naked bar
husband what he thought of a
man who continually deceived his
w ife. "T h in k o f | i m f ” Replied
tbs' br nto,, “I ^ lln k he is a geni­
us.”— Corvallis Oaxette-TJmes.
Regardleeg of tj
there has been a al
shine M u rin « ì l i « ' 1
moonshine la w ith
B igia Recorder-
AND
fact
that
pge ot sun-
W hy not start early? And then
week; the you won’t h ere to run.
'•
always. —
■
— -..y- •
«. .
»
Sex doesn’t bdther people who
haven’t tim e to bather it.
h
The Chicago Jail Inmate whose
Men have one reaaoa for m ar­
pockets were picked of 15000
worth of diamond w ill find it d if­ rying, while woman have a dozen.
ficult to retain hie fa ith In the
In ten years the old fogy w ill
natural goodness of his fellow -
be the fellow who still sticks td
men.— Bend B ulletin.
automobiles.
.. >
I f some girls aavar
m arried,
the world would bo hotter off—
and if we were »elected' to Rick
out those who shouldn’t
m arry
we would pick them more because
of the me« they would m arry than
because of any shortcomings of
thety own.-—Cottage Grove Sen­
tinel.
"People who speak o f o u r
‘bootleg arietooracy’ don’t seem to
know there la such a word , as
'kakistocracy' •’— Bugene Regis­
ter. Tlfat is a good word. I t cornea
by way o f the Greek word, hakl-
atos, meaning the worst. You w ill
find it in some editions of W e b ­
ster’s International.— 8 a 1 e m
States man.
Thio Day hi
Futían«
Two things should always b<
kept in Sped order— your dlges
tion and your bank account.
By DOC R B ID
Twenty-three years ago today,
A urelia Herm es, Mexican light-,
weight sensation, halted t h e
championship aspirations of K id
Tracy of Montana, by knocking
him out In tho fifth round of a
scheduled 80 round a ffa ir at H e l­
ena, Mont.
Tracy, who had been coming
toward the front a t a rapid rate,
was being groomed ter titu la r
honors, but tho nflstake was made
in mntehlng him With the Mexi­
can star who is tb o u g h r to have
been the hardest h itting lig h t­
weight fighter qf nil time. Tracy
quit the game shortly a fter this
defeat.
Chear up! I f you swallow your
collar buttbn, a t least you know
whore it to.
Noah not only knew what kind
of wheatber was coming, but be
also bad the advantage of «et be-
Consider the tack and
l«g up in the air.
antomoblle tire and d o n !
around blowing yourself Up
Res Heck says: “ W hat used to
ha ehewn only on the clothes line
to naw «hewn on the street.”
I f wlyee only knew what sten­
ographers think of their hus­
bands they’d quR worrying.
An eastern doctor has proposed
a law against face-lifting. W og’t
Don’t m arry trombone playera,
the ladies faces fa ll when they girls; they always let things
hear that!
.
slid*.
W A S H IN G TO N — W hen ( A •
Hon. Dwight 'Morrow arrives in
Mexico as our new ambassador
the chief matters which w ill oc­
cupy his Interest w ill be:
1. The Mexican oil land laws.
| . The payment of interest on.
Mexican bonds held in thin coun­
try and abroad.
s
8. The Mexican
presidential
election. ' • -
.
\
A ll these problems are mere or
lees tied up w ith each other and
are of considerable interest |o the
people of the United States. x
The petroleum laws question,
whieh caused a nasty exehangs of
to te s and considerable ta lk of In-
terrsntieh less than a year ago,
has subsided to a
dlplontotlo
deadlock between the two govern­
ments which is still shot
w ith
possIbUltJos.-
I f t M Mexican supreme court
decides the laws are not constitu­
tional, the ISaue w ill be dead. B ut,
if It decides the other way and
the Callee government
seises
American property, it is still like­
ly that the arms embargo w ill be
lifted and (hat Mexico w illv by
design, ho. plunged into chaos.
The embargo remains this conn-
try ’s big club oyer Mexico.
The situation has been saved to
date by President Galles’ various
concessions and his failu rs to eon-
fiscste any oil lands. Unless he
commits some unexpected evert
a rt I t may be that, w ith Morrow
In Mexico City, the situation even­
tually w ill be solved by a rb itra ­
tion as recommended so
over­
whelmingly by the United States
Senate.
Incidentally, the big
reason
that this government feels it can’t
allow Mexico to tonforcq her oil
lend laws is that a precedent
would be eetaWiehed for northern
countries of South America where
we have huge oil stakes. By pro­
viding for the ««-year coaeee-
ilons. The dalles government
has demoastrated that It doesn’t
Intend to present bur eompanies
from getting nil the oil eat.
The reader may recall one or
two reports Within the last year
concerning the doubtful ability of
U d a p d shoulders
As soou as he sal
i ethers fcljpfed.
h this write
humanity, Pl
the mutiny
ie 'to u tin g laughs of the cob.
eg tea germ of an Idea to form
f ln P a o le n ’s maddened brain,
light So pteoHHe. At -Mast ,tt
¡ & * S K S S -K ’ ^ ? > ? 3
Sod otaadlng la (ho mtotot of
chaise« moo looked at them
Jr, yet with • tenseness teat
***
of rnstoao the
half a a w i dnnons rnaheddowp tbs
deck. H s » aad there the battle
broke away Into haad-te-bu< con­
flict« aa on« doughty man met a »
other.
The giant was tho spirit of the
attack. I f eoo-of tho ship’s ensw
got is bis war bo picked up tee
ubtortqpate pallor aad hurled tala
bodiirover the rail into the sea.
Almost erased with anxiety. Pa-
Men finally enoeeaded la sidestep­
ping tee melea W ith a shudder
he turned hie book oa the fighting
aad ruthless killing gbiag on about
deek and made hie Way to the ea>
Ma door where he had last seen
Monon.
I t was locked but be
wrmwfced it epea aad hto fine»
turned livid aa ho saw bar lying
helpless across tee couch with Syn­
nelet bending over looking toward
the deer aa if aeddealy disturbed
by tee commotion going o« outside.
c H arti
W ith a cry et ri
Mexico to make her aunual bond
tetereat paymegt, amounting td
neatly t i t , 000,000. -T h ^ e re­
ports ware not exaggerated.
there the baut« Uro*«
■nd-tetoend cen/UcU.
ilmal-llke features. In-
■ad a y « earns a tuddan « cry of Joy « be rase to her feet
:inated be listened at» and rushed into her lover! snap.
The joy of possession, the safety
Your Boy and T o w Qirl
and nearness of the on* he loved
te r than Ute Itself sersed to calm
A¿ t A u R D B AN. S c .. D.
blen aa nothing else could have
"Mburo to • way e l escape—you
done. Pausing long enough to hold
(Copyright John P. D illo Co.)
»«(dumber the crew two to one— Monee cMse to him—to press one
SJa ehlp<a n d ju ra t teek*tTthe"high Ion«. Uugertng h i« oa hso Ups,
he forced himself from her esa-
A u to m o b ile s a t C o lle g e
•ehs w beri all tee gold of commerce brace.
How many of my parent read­ « * bd years for the taking.*
" I must go and ana what to beet
Vyawbtagly, the gloat tnrtfed this for na to do. Thera to mutiny
ers let their eons have a car
thought over in hto mind while Pa­ aboard, but don’t (earl I w ill re­
while a t the University? Prince- blen went from one 8 > u to an­ turn. Lock yourself in until I «erne
tea University to striving to other, tefrlug to teem, urging them for you.*
Aa Pabiea cautiously let himself
eliminate the automobile from
s a t e a a ? .
college life. Many colleges have him, Pabiea rattled tee chain that out, Manoa bolted the.lock securely
behind hiss, then she pushed every­
either forbidden or restricted the. held him prisoner aad sold con- thing that she could move against
Ute of ears by under-graduates. tesoptsously,. "Have yew grown the doer that Syunelet had used
loud of these chain«—Or are they a few moasents before. There we«
Are thore two sides to the too strong for yea to brook.*
nothing etoe she could do, except
argument? I f you give your boy
w ait for Pablens return and pray
for his safety.
a pencil w ith whieh to w rite,
Why should h4 not have an auto­
tho Cabin he wga jnst M tim e te
m o b ile 'in which to ride? I f a
see Synnelet emerge from the deoi»
hoy cannot be,trusted * i t e a car
way. adjeteing. u d look furtively
about As he a u g h t sight of Fa­
can he he (rusted any better
bles he leohed bask, vainly seek,
w ithout a car? I f he wants to
lag u «Tense et escape; seeing
“boose it .” w ill be not "boose"
oar o r no c«r? Can you teach a Ung f o r t f B¡Sh M him hs
boy responsibility without giving te» «halas tegia to giva «ad
/W ltl^ a bennd FUblen was a fter
him responsibilttyX
gaaly h . shot forwarg haM
him. Synnelet paused long enough
On the other h u d , if a boy
*• • * »
P** fr«“ te« ndi,
teen as Pabiea «Tew near- he stop-
has a car isn’t he tempted to
» • * < « • • teement u d hnrled R
nellect hto studlaal Do»h’|
• * » Straight at hto
car give him more chance to get nalfi hto bag« hangs abov« hto
head, FUbten dodged and missel
all to ••«.
away from the college campus? fot
‘ WuSi Vahtaa argtog him oi
Doesn’t It offer more opportun­
ities "to run down the road a
theirs
8yiinel«t preferred th« shin’s rfc
few miles" to a roadhoOee? Isn’t
he more Hable te physical lid n ry
going fifty miles an honr from a
npwdtd atesr pausing until b
roadhouse than he to walking on
gained tee crow’s n e s t
» hl«eM»ound that caan<
a street, from a boose party at a
(ygtertrtly?
Then
again, how about the
bog who returns heme ever the
« d a m m e blada as he climbs
week-end and the distance bp-
K
' ssxmc
KSitS
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
ASHLAND
12 Years Ago
fossa
î ^
M r. and Mrs, Robert Peachey
«pent the week-end in the city.
They are located at- Ruch, where
M r. Peachey la teaching. Mrs.
Peachey was form erly Miss Gwen­
dolyn Scott and c a m e to Ashland
p rim arily to bid farewell to her
slater, Miss Ruth, who le ft Sun­
day for Dunsmuir.
R. J. Hollibangh ef
Ashland
has been transferred to Sisson to
relteve A. L . V a il aa ascend tel­
egrapher in the Staaton 8. P. of­
fices. M r. V a il and fam ily have
m efed to Cotnm.
B. H. Phippe returned
hokte
Monday from hto visit to
te«
home of hto.childhood in Went
V irginia where he «pent a few
weeks visiting his father and
other relative«.
*
D r. J. S. Herndon has returned
f y m Sacramento where he went
to attend his son, Gold win. who
was a« seriously Injured recengy
while in the railroad service «a
• trbtam aa.
8taniey Boatman is down fr<
Engineer Jim Dugose to con­ Portland on business and vialtl
fined to hto home is Dunsmuir hta folks |n Ashland and Medfoi
with Au attack of nnoumoaia, but
to on the road to recovery.
A. H. Jones and son of the Ash­
A. M Beaver of Ashland was a land Iro n W ork« have recently
visitor in Roaebur«
Thursday been on a hunting expedition into
the E lk creek coudlry.
District Attorney Jeffrey and
Mto« K at« Lumbergar the eo«rt
stenographer, were In the city
yesterday and took the stage for
Lakeview to ftten d the L ! p t *
cou q tyeo urt.
,
Mite
Eg«» Adams of Table
Rock arrived in the city Saturday
and w ill remain during the win­
ter aotobth« attending the Normal.
F t*» ** Slade, a well known
«tookman of Sprague river v»l-
tey came in last week to Ashland
on
a
v to it
te
re la tiv « «
su d
o ld
k ?,.
I
«s&ss
tweeu the college and his home
is suck that be oan make it
M stly in bto aatomoMle?
HrW
ebeut the boy working U s way
through eollege, takin g eare Of
furnaces or canvassing, or some '
htber means of partial self-sup­
port? For htas a ear would dome
in mighty b u d y . w onNtet it?
Imagine- a college ltean w rlp
lo w th e tg h tti
l a te /c K rtr’s
Watch For Our New Serial
“SHANGHAIED”
WKlch W ill Start R « t Week.
time friends In this vicinity.
t
I