TRE DAILY TIDINGS OÉOKOS PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO, en a A SH LA N D D A IL Y T ID IN G S 'f a o ó o -T ím e G r fs - r « o s a ? " fl-u s S JO - 6 » T B y a m ' fam iu Y I0W£M1I£S A M o F i6 S o W ft W r t s Orsa Fletaren tee. LO VE *” to « Warner M have a n v • L Ç F T —.H a u in ' - f ' l Á R f c -TH r e b H ats o f f ï October 11. 1W27 A N E W E A R T H — L et die sinners be consumed out Of the earth, pnd let the wicked be no more. Bless thou the Lord, O my soul. Praise ye the Lord. Psalm 104:38. P R A Y E R : Lord, we shall dedicate our Urea to the superb te s t of personally bringing souls to Thee. , w o w r S .^ É 'Y " T ÍM E passes -IH ' F v A G r e y - ' ¿ ¿ 4 Inspiration to Lawless! The Medford Tribune, following the indictment of Officer Talent, printed an editorial in which it stated this indictment was a needed wanting to the officers that they should not use their firearms— in other words, that they should be carried mainly as an ornament. The experience of the federal officers Saturday night when an alleged bootlegger met them on the front porch with a rifle and “ persuaded” them to leave the place, thus permitting the person whom they wanted to arrest, the opportunity to flee, plainly indicates that the refused to support Officer l'alent in the discharge of his duty and the barrage Of criticism which the Medford papers have hurled Mt him have acted as an inspiration and a stimula tion to those who might be violating the law to pick up a gun and politely tell the officers to leave them alone. A • ;\ - Yes, an inspiration and an encouragement to the lawless, as well as a warning to the officers, please! not B o r n Students Strike Gary,'Indiana, high sfchoCl students went? Un a strike because colored students were to be permit ted to attend the same school as the whites, Which of course is very wrong according to our best minds. But somehow out btjys and girls up North here, don’t reliah close*contact^with negroes any, better than the boys and girls in the south. Though they have been taught for many years how very Wrong the attitude of the Southerners toward the negro was, they dOrt’t seem to have been properly Impressed. • 1 As k matter of oommon sense too elose contact between the two races is good for neither — Whether U is in the North or the South and it is certain that with the continued increase t>f the black population in Northern states, ther# will be growing appreciation of the prohlem face?} by the folks below the Mason and Dixon line. By the way would you care about your girls and boys going to school with negro children? This is not necessarily a reflection upon the negro—it merely recognizes that he is a different race from the whites and proximity is instinctive ly distasteful. Martinez, California, a town of 8,000 population, has a fire loss record that leads not only the State of California, but perhaps tbe United States by a wide margin. In the year ended August 1, last, the total loss was but $165—less than three cents per capita. A record like this is wotth emulating and can be emulated. It proves .that fire loss ig not a natural evil, impossible to do away with, but an entirely unnecessary one that can be intelligently controlled to the point where it practically disappears. Today, what Martiuez has done is considered remarkable, and it should be. But it should not be long be fore every town and city in the country can show minimized fire losses. - Fire loss is almost wholly ’ caused by careless ness. Educate and interest (he public, and we will have more records like that of Martinez. Observe Fire Prevention week, October 9 to 15, and help to prevent fires which cost the state of Oregon twelve human lives, injured and maimed forty innocent jieople, some totally, and destroyed property valued at $6,716,893.27 during the year 1926. Ninety percent of these disastrous fires could have been prevented and these precious lives and property values saved through the exercise of eare. Fire Prevention week, October 9 to lfi. This Day In Fistiami hospital Is A place w h e ii A person's condition dsüáttaMe¿4s¿? , There isn’t shy wild west any htord, so Just where Is * yofiag man supposed to goT ' Sixty thousand miles of t h e 170,00* miles of federal planned roads have been completed this year. Maybe M r. Ford's Idea Is to be prepared to f ill up t h a t 110,000 miles Just *g quickly as they caa he built. • A Miss Crook is a prohibition agent working out of Chlcdgo. Now all the service needs is a M r. Hook. By DOC R E ID I Fourteen years ago today, Geo. Chip pf Scranton, Pa., and F rank To be happy you must glye u; X laus of Pittsburgh, Pa., two of all effort to be famous. America’s leading claimants of tbe middleweight championship, Men who succeed nearly alwaygi clashed In a scheduled six-round bout in Pittsburgh, Pa., which supply their oWn self-starter. ended in the middle of the last round, when Chip knocked his op ponent out. * K Bobbed hair absolutely cannot be worked up Into sentimental A t the time when Chip and poetry. Klaus vied for recognition as the title holder, there were several others after the same honor. By The news columns every day virtue of his decisive victory over reveal that the biggest fool hdsn’t Klaus, however, Chip forged to the front and Was generally con been bo'm yet. • P ; * •' sidered chsmrion of the class un t il defeated by .tlmniy Clsbby in the following year. Divorce to usually caused too many attractions outside home and too few Inside. Op* Idea of superfluous iuter- tainment Is a husband - calling Progress to going to have i contest. A wife-calling contest real problem wben the tim e comes m iglhit be a terrible f l o p te Invent something worse than but It Would be news. jats. Maybe one of reasons you don’t see women knitting these Hez Heck-says: “ The one dan day« Is becahse wool catches fire gerous thing (er a fool to fcpl ftoto th * tidiest spark. with is courage.” PabfeM 9TN0PB18 S S .-; o p e ^ r » M a f r t h w words died away into a a o a n ia ira Meada LesedCÌ, Peoàtèom orpAda, ‘who to eevteed Pp MdCear Cosai ÄowHr; Fatten saees her, bal eir- e«m«<aacu torce, t e r ta aarreador lu Revoir'. <K< ty/ote« Pablen, and they M d/ 4b gridavo pani ly that Fa- Mea te foretti le copiteli« a gestes RW cords. Revoir, la revenos, ¡*°Pable* calmed her while he a » I plained all that had happensd. MI must leart you again* «ear, la see If the convicts are really In oom» mpnd of the ship. You must be brave, because It t h .f hare done away with the eld crew they w «I turn pirates sad carry ns eut ta sea. I I I eaa And a boat wa caa manage to get It overboard and roach A m e rlc a -la a i h In sight now—remember It to Oar Only chant*—I can see ne ether way at r i i * flows a w if on ine convict •nip. M t i t thrown «U h thè con vitto: Fatten incitée /he oonvtels lo mating, and chases as ejlcer tele the rtggtog. * “? » —burry 6H À P+K R XXV—Continued ¥hd ship was yawing from-oort to starboard «ad back agata. It headed late the wind sad thdE ran before IL The great sails slatted from side to side with a force that threatened io bring all tbe rlggiag dowd og the keadd of (he lighters h«Mw- Ii was precarious footing for both tehee fnry and hatred for each other caused th e « to gIVa little thought to anything except their own private grudge. Manon could not belong to both of thenf! Bach man knew tbit end was determined that h * ftfuld be tbe one to claim ASHLAND l i Years Ago Dr. and Mrs. Julian P. Johnson have returned to Ashland a fter a stay of several months in Grants P a « . Dr. Johaaon'has takea of fices la the Commercial C l u b bnlldlng. They w ill reside la toe Rapp low « on Oak a tre «. nleto. arrived Hondaf from H aifa Moda. Thè latter w ill make a stay of an In Wm . Lindsay and Mrs. M arga ret Lindsay are in from Lllyglen to make final proof on t h e i r hcaweteads. W * W . Erb, C. B. Kingsbury and C. W . K lum , who all have botoesteads out there, w ilt submit ( M r pfoofs this week. i Miss yfcnhle hatoble, definite length wtth her aunt Ashland J. H Oroves. proprietor of Howard’s station on the Ashland in Klam ath Falla read, was down froili there Friday. Saunders Bros, ere furnishing the Soetoern Pacific Commissary wllh celery at tke Ashland supply station. gad e *t—I Ca^I°hope,* I t h e eonrlcts either nursing their wounds or cuddling thins. Juft so tong hd they forget ; about you. I will return soon, ^lanon stifled .a sob. Swiftly tbelr arms Went about each « h e *, their Uns ■ « —than she bravely sent Fablsu o ut He sauntered around the deck. 8lgns of the conflict w ire avert* whet*. Hie own disheveled appear- ante tailed to attract attention M lynnelet had the advantage and he walked aft. Neither the Cap anal times nude desperate' langes tain nor (he Governor were to be WBlefi with his s w o rl Each seen; they had been Imprisoned pr stain and thrown overboard. Those of the crew who In * net Joined the mutinying convicts had met death or been thrown bodily Into the hold. Foblsn’s ruse to escape from tin hold had bean more till useful than he anticipated, but tbe result wan appalling. The convicts ware in eomptote ehargs of tod ship and running wild. Mnnoa was in greet- He noticed that eight « a t test approaching. The shore Dae was faintly diecaruahla. To hto horror he distevered that they Were bakd» led away from toad! F ftm the I * « * B ,W * to*» lashed to the IdaviCs Suggested a Mesas of escape. ed. thd giant approached had put his great arm familiarly around P » I bleu'a shoulder “Wen. friend.” ha. « id . “Your I plan of escape workedl I ’ve swhto ped places with the old CoptflA i X p 1?«.!0 “ • * » http sweat dowp I In the hold and use him for aavt> gating later on." The giant was surprisingly verbose. L J W * ! ®n‘* ‘« « ™ P te d Fatten. I "What do you mean?" “Well you don’t tblak wC/e head- I lag for the penal colohy to be wrap- (Please Turn to Page 7) plhto e to o -« id maybe wg etontr but Wa got our women With *g and by A R T H U R D EA N , Sc:, D. (Copyright John F. D ille Co.) Strength, toward Fsblen's breast. The lubglng ef the ship 1*JO h wav* Caused aa abrupt check tor which ■dto j got the prettiest—welL “ Yours till there ain’t no such 8ynnelet Was unprepared. He while I took things over.“ W itt, a thing as ‘a question of stand 'uggMd desperately to regain hto grand swagger «he glaat w e u be. lance but hto feet to « their foot- low. ards,’ ” signs a boy in a letter in old and with a great cry of terror which be enclosed his underscor rablen waited antn he dlaap- e dangled perilously by hto hgads S hundred^ feet or more abeve the Aalmgl film actors, like human ed answers to the little test for leek. Like a huge human pendu kileg pbrfbrm eri, are covered by ideas relative to dancing, staying urn be swung by bla hands from I bearing the new Captain's plan playing, insurance policies td protect tbe but nights, saxaphode hide to side at each roll ef the shin. readlgg love stories, college edu producers In event of injuries or Piteously, 8ynnetot looked at Fto cation, and old fashioned ideas blen and Implored mqrey. Thia ddath. a. a ■- **■* < about sax. Everybody replied, was not «he glorious ending he had, When Edwin Carewe signed quickly!” , fathers, mothers, sons and daugh planned tor their ¿ombat, bnt la his i *4Jean’’ the femnus educated Col Im m ediately she appeared with desperation he forgot that JUSt a ters. I t was a helpful expression moment before be had tried to • gr« l Coat wrapped about her ««0 lie, for an important role In his of Opinion. plunge bis sword into Fables’a, • 2 ^ - hM P u ^ T o v » k e X r t i forthcoming screen opus,, “ kh- Tam r^ y -b u t M One father said, “ I paid fo* m * breast '' g,oW,'.’ he promptly had the cah- It was only a question of gee- home and am entttled to some Ine Insured for $60,000. > i " h a g ! Never.* PWbtoa ends new. Synnelefs .strength was — physical comfort. I f the sound fast waning. A Sudden pitch and tb o n ilt h|n ’ Bt ber tor* ’ of a sdxaphone to annoying to me hhe band lost Its grlp-to roll the the boy must refrain from play ether way and 8ynnelet with a guise, but there was no time for ing w ithin my hearing.” T h a t’ll gasping ery. plunged dotrn—down conversation or tovo making. Without another word they went right! v mto the boiling set MSo*. . Lfka n man stunned. Fablen elnng A girl wrttes, “ Isn’t it rather to the flimsy ladder. God had to make themselves laconaplcuoaa. foolish for parents to insist that taken upon Himself toe pualabmeat l ° 0,nf U th * ,tern davits they ‘their children do not dance. Ev he hql sought to mete oul Fsblen’s cvawled Into the Ufa boat. PWblon lips moved In silent ptaydr and hto kand over hand, erybody is dancing ana one is not thoughts again returned to Manon. *>0Bt k it the waves w ith In It unless one dances. Respec He mast go to her. H alf way down table people do It, so why should, ton ladder he panahd td look below. mo ropes, shot ths o sn In nimr« parents harbor the idea that th e if The eoavlcts were, victorious and •adrow ed tor the dlmaborw. the last ef battle hhd turned Into ^«Teeently * convict sailor —««o .children are not to dance They Ahorge W . Lynde started w ill anyhow, go why not teach morhing for San Francisco. thehi at feem*.” Some sense that. » L f f «"uTnwV'bSS. 5 ? » Ah d1<fpt slater replied, “ I Nev Unable to h it the M. F. Eggleston and W . D. er got say instruction in sex, but Floyd, who have spent the past tbe public library gave me the M d ith prospecting Oh th * SMM- dope. 'L o h g live thb ilbrary! My you mountains, retorned henM yoifltfdr staSdr to pCfteen a a * I ’ve gttrbday evening. Tfiey report a M en dishing out information to She weald pot discuss It I * Quickly he descended and vd*y successful trip and made sev h *n Mk» way through toe mad eral q u irts and placer locatlohs w ith mother. T b * kid is going scramble on deck. At last «he a ro u h i F ltli a traheh of girls that that promise well. reached toe cabin where he had left pre aot very nice, so I have hand her. Softly he knocked on the doer ed her th * right information.'* A ^ X J o J U y jm U e d h e r n a m a . The case of an odder sister who . IS BBd wlth * “ vttored. 'M iss Mabel Russell returned A lte r than her mother. *Thaha Oodl" Fablen took her In ^rohi Portland on Tuesday morn to hto arms She clung to him la A boy ahswero, “ I t a fellow ig terao^. aehblng ns If her heart ing. Mis» Pearl Russell w ill re- going to do things he does not ’* ° S S ? * n~ ,ny d,Br* 1 « » ■ •h t tadtft tg PtfrtMjhd durlwr t» * want hid <01 kS (trho are suppogrd thf kt toe borne of her slstgr, Mrs. to be kls b e« friends) to knew yea’- would never come boeh e nd ■V/H- Boyd and attend the high fnlflU* abent be had better quit doing » W « afraid—yon were gone so long. The women hare beta scream-i tdhooL them. That doesn’t mean he •i-m u rthst he piit on the Inquisition stand when he gets home. A boy Watch For Our Mew aeriti LOvi Broadsword, a former r*S- likes to be trnsted and tjie more IdMt or the Asbiaa^ grbcintt. to f o * trUrt them the better the ma lh from his kfam ath home on his jo rity of them turn out.” .A Sol- > BA tfto JndgA'a bench Indeed I C i I 30 Year» Ago M r. and MtS. Lander Gotes of Mrs. B. H. W a g M r speat Satur A u ta rh . IU ., were recOat visitors day and Sunday1 with her dhugb- at the home of Josegh PoleF'IO tor. Mrs. t W . M i l « ih Medford the city. M r. Gotes and M r. Fo ley are couslas. and would rather go adrift <m a raft than slay hare any longer." M a » on had control ef bereelf agate «sd was thoroughly aware of their pr*> TURNING THE PAGES BACK Mr«. Ì . K . Reader dad Note where one girl bride refuse« to return to School after the wedding, while in another city the board oif education will not permit a married high school girl to resume her school work. Naturally, there is no mention of the bridegroom’s sentiments In either case. It would make you sore, though, to ftnd when you went home for dinner that the tftueher had kept youy wife after school for whisper ing, wouldn’t rtf •C H IP vs. R LAUS W A S H IN G TO N — Dwight b o r row w ill find Mexico In the midst of e presidential campaign which w ill remind him pf the third term battle which would hare been seen in thia country had hie friend Calvin Coolidge chosen tb run tor re-election. The difference la that in Mexico a president, under the constitu tion, cannot even hare tiro succea- slre terms, let alone three. In tact tbe main Sutface togas df t i e Mexican campaign to whether a president, kfcvlhg Served one term should evet be re fle c te d id long as he lires. • The tjdestlbn at real import ance to to * United States, hower«- ®r, ig dot one Of re-election, bet of whether t&e utoxt president win bo strong enough sad * I » * enough to protect American Uree and property, meet Mexico’s fin ancial obligations and guide Mex ico toward the day when she Will he on*, of. our biggest export mar kets as a result Of Increased buy ing power. The candidates are form er President Alvaro Obregon g a d General Arnutfo Gomes. Obregon to the man whose force and di plomacy stopped the post - Dias series of resolutions and who put the government gn * comparative ly Pound basis before handing the reins to Celles. General Serrano, who was regarded as a presiden tial possibility, was lain in tbe uprising la Mexico City the oth er day. » Thè “no re-election” cry Is di- rfected at Obregon, principally by thh followers of Gomes. These point to the 1117 constitution which stlpnlkted that a president should never ( “huhea” ) be re- oiectbd. The Obregon folks d a y that this only mesht a president couldn’t succeed himself and that, snywhjr, the lis t Congress for- (nally Interpreted tbe law to per m it non-sucCesslve re - election. The answer of the opposition Is that Obregon's election might inean a return o f'th e old dhya of the Dias dictatorship, although Obregon Is a liberal. S “SHANGHAIED”