Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1927)
m * jknd printing co . OKOKSI tuffi»] ESTABLISHED IN 1876 ASHLAND D A ILY T ID IN G S OUT OUR WAY I SAT-V ö T ÓO o TT \ io 6» wûim K ’ \/E M *4OÜ K e M Í EFFEM B O U R S E U jF .HEAR »o? m it alu o is m o ïse k HOW CAM HE IMCHOŸJ D o rf? '• . ¿ By W illiam s e U ? O K , SNHbtf/TiWS VWHV , \ he ' s iMJonM’ r f - c u x h e cau T i H E A R v T ~ f c e r iW T R A T - I OU1A HK €*/€>TEM LMTHOUT HAMlM* T I EAR r T • , A TS WHERE M O S T O’ ‘ 4* SOJGriM W e K A R O e H o o u > yc. D o m e , / a m ' so m e > s^lM A B HLER s h o p . October IS , 1P97 ( / , 1 w GOD IS GOOD— Praise ye the Lord, O give thanks unto the Lord; for he is good: for his mercy endureth forever. Psalm 106:1. P R A Y E R : O Lord, Thon a rt goqd; Thy gentleness hath made me g re a t Oregon’s First Million ‘G t’s the first million that’s the hardest” According to a reasonable and conservative estimate of Secretary of State Kozer, Oregon has already passed the million mark in population or is at least gratifyingly near that statistical goal. , This conclusion is reached after careful study and analysis of the school population and its i l lation to the total over a period of years. If the ratio of a little over 32 per cent, the average from 1910 to 1920, still holds true, the 1926 school census of 256,884 should imply a total population of 997,- 098 for the state. There is always something intellectually and emotionally satisfying in round numbers. The very word “ million” has a particularly happy ring of solid achievement and assured success. As ap plied to Oregon’s population, it becomes a substan tial capital, a foundation to build on, a place of leverage like that platform from which Archi medes purposed to move the world. One good mil lion of clean-cut, high-class American citizens of the best stock in the world. Now that we have so far arrived, we may con fess that we hav4 been a little slow about it. There may be some difference of opinion as to the factors which have tended to retard Oregon’s development, but all must agree that Oregon has never suffered; from lack of natural resources or commercial op- The greatest lack has been and is still, in spite of our probable million, people—just people to bring into use, the state’s natural wealth, to develop and increase it and to. spend it to create a livelier in terchange of interior and foreign commerce. Perhaps the main reason that «Oregon has been slow in advertising its attractiveness has been that Oregonians themselvm have been too self-satisfied and content. They were so «sure that Oregon’s mousetrap was flawless that they relied on the assurance attributed to Emerson that the world w ouldbeat its own path to this Western door. Emerson was a great man, but he knew little about modern advertising methods as airplane or radio. No matter how excellent an article may be today, it will never get among the best sellers by hiding in the woods. It is now up to Oregon’s million to invite, en- oourage and helpfully welcome more people, more capital, more factories, more payrolls. Nothing suc ceeds like success. One good million deserves an other, and Oregon has plenty of room for both— and the* some. Let’s get odr second million in a hurry,—Port land Telegram. Stop To Think Thomas H. Deming, editor of the Warren, Ohio Tribune-Chronicle, says: ♦ “ That stopping to think is about the best and safest thing yon can do. Did you ever stoy to think that our failure to do so has perhaps caused more trouble and woe than anything else in the world! Our ability to think was given to us for a purpose. Like any other Organ it must be used if it is to live. Ignore it, don’t use it and your ability to stop and think will cease to function. “ How many pseeders would now be living if they had only exercises this attribute? . “ The ability or habit or whatever you desire to call it, of stopping to think before going forward is the break or safety valve upon human actions. “ How many heart breaks, how much woe, how much trouble the world would escape if Gossips stopped to think before spreading about their poisong “ How much better off most of us would be i f we stopped to think W ore spending foolishly money we have worked for. » “ Too many of us are prone to rush in where wiser men reflect, top and think. A little reflect ion may show you the mistake in the coarse you con template. “ Stop and think. You will find it great char- acted discipline.” Vnderwood being ont of tbe presidenUal tace thig yenr the 24 gentlemen from Alabama muet Infini a uew nong. « j m m a | | AND A men’s h at than his brow. to often hlgheg ' J? I ’ Brewing used to be an art- but now It bas become a crime. Bad experience la prebably worth more to us than good ex perience. I t ’s the law of gravitation keeps the garter-makers in ineas. This Day h i . Fistiami “ Mud guards for women,*' are said to be the Jätest styl ln New York. A'nd that, bretbre i, Is what spats wer« for both 1 Bies B Y DOG R E ID In England, u n til Aster :ans somehow got the notice t 1 s t Seventeen years ago t o d a y they were badges o fa rla to c icy. m arked the tragic death of one of the most picturesque charact — Eugene Register. ers that ever donned a poxing «h --------- : glove, When W e lle r A. Dipley shot A German princess of <1 latto and killed Stanley Ketchel, m id m arry a man of 2 f. I t muBt b a1 dleweight champion of tha world casa o f real love, for the t Ite at (fttnway, Mo. Dipley alleged of a German princess is iot the champion had made Improper worth a wagen load of pa er advances toward his wife, - marks.— Corvallis Gazette-Tim sa. T h e champion was botn at Grand Rapids, Mich., Sept. Iff 1887, and christened Stanislaus October Is bringing its rej u- lar Influx of a n g l e r s to 1 tie Kleeal. He was of polish descent Rogue. The Rogue w ith its w< n- and assumed the name of qnsfi| derful steelhead fishing is a r< al asset to Grants'Pass and a ll of You don’t get the reel th rill of southern Oregon.— Grants Pass happiness un til you share it w ith Courier. others. Now they propose to straigh- Now, then, If Mellon could only tefl tha Mississippi river. We do fo r th efleshy women what he always thought there were an has done fo r the national debt. awful lot of s’s in it.— Oregon City Snterprlse. Hex Heck says: “ I calculate at least 99 per cent of what they The vacation often begins when call ’artistic temperament* con you get back from the hectic sist o’ laziness.” life at the summer resort.— S11-. verton Tribune. W e have a constitutional right to the pursuit ot happiness, hut W h at “society owes” to you no assurance that we shall ever catch up w ith It.— St. Helens Is the Interest on the capital >>u Invest in it.— Multnomah Hera d. Mist. / W ith harvesting hardly began in W allow a county when the rainy season sat in, that' countj reports the worst damage to crops In many years, w ith much grain spoiled.-— Union Republi can. ASHLAND 20 Years Ago $lskiyou News: Miss Eva Ed gar ta now a permanent fixture at Mount Shasta hospital. In com ing to Yreka she bought h round trip ticket from Ashland to Mon tague, thinking her situation was only a temporary positlpn, but Dr- H all states that she has decided to remain on the Job. C. W . DeCarfow, tha S h a postmaster and rancher, wae Ashland thia week. f A. C. Dtxon, wife and children, le ft Tuesday on their retur*i to th e ir heme at Eugene. Mrs. M . J. Coolidge departed on today’s southbound tralp io r Sacramento, Cal., to spend the w inter there. D. L. M in kler, C. A. W ining and Guert McCall went out to Hunt*« In- Dead Indian Saturday after b it game, i Jitneys ea the Ashland - Med ford highway are getting to be Fred Oeddard, eon of H. H. more numerous than doga la aa Goddard, of Talent precinct, has Indian village. become a student at the Morse- P ra tt Institu te, at W hitewater, C. H. Glllbtte. deputy supreme J. C. D uaa, 8. P. brakeman. Wisconsin, where ho w ill pursue commander, K . O. T. M-. went and wife, returned yesterday from a course of study. le w s to Gold H U I Butarday eve-, a' visit w ith Mrs. Dnnh’s mother nlng on official business- in tke east- Travelthg men that, come to Ashland rem ark that we have a very a retty towp. Yes, we have a p m t y town, and by the anm- ber of tru *a ll» 8 men that come hers regularly we know fhal we must h are a business town. / P. A- Nelson, the S. P. train: than form erly of this city, who bow has a run between Sacramen to and Dunsmuir, w ith his home In the California capital city, made a flying * trip to Ashland, this week Kneeling his old friends here. # MBA fan»«« Writqr W A S H IN G TO N — Aft««' bussing around (o r seievai days »0 discov er t)i« re a l meaning of tbe ap pointm ent of Dw ight M orrow as n b u u 4 o r to Mexico, your, cor respondent is able to rep ort that: 1— The appointment. signifies a new method o( dealing w ith Mex ico which aims to supplant con servative bungling w ttb conserve- tire intelligence. 8— The appointment is deplor ed by one group In the Depart ment of State and by tboee Am er ican o il interests wbicb h a r e worked behind the scenes to fo ment trouble between the t w o govern meats. 3— The appointment is g ratify ing to the government of Mexico. Although there are few things to be said against. President Cool idge’s choice, it should be under stood that the denials th a t the United States and the Morgan banking firm are sending a Joint repreeeatatlve to Mexioo may be •wallowed In a •aline solution. There may be load yelpa and whoops la the next Congress over this phase o f the m atter. The Morgan firm ’s chief in ter est in Mexico lies in the fact that it Is the collection agent for more than h alf a billion dollars in Mexican bonds held in this coun try and abroad. Under the Pani- Lam ont agreement,', Mexico Is BftXing nearly 016.000,000 a yes* in interest and it presumably w ill ba p art of M orrow ’s job to sea that this interest keeps coming. Ha also w ill be Interested In lay ing any possible groundwork for Mexico’s eventual payment of tke enormous principal. In attempting to analyse our Mexican policy, past and present. It must ha remembered that there are two great classes of foreign Investment in Mexicq— the finan cial and industrial. T h eir In ter ests do not alwey run parallel. -p F lrs t, there are the owners of oll«wells, mines, lumber and land. I l Is t o t necessarily to the advant age A these Investors to operate in a strong, prosperous Mexioo. Beeond. there is the sort o f In- feraat in Mexico which Morrow represents. There is Mexico’s public debt, something mbre than ’88flfl.O60.OOO, owed to foreign in- "Bibows” Crawley, former pugi list and many times hostage of tbs state on divers charges, stood at his bar watching with pleased coun tenance the arrival of his patrons. The babbling bar was already packed with the men from the docldsldsa, niggers, Lascars, whits toughs end yetlou; man. The ton cant seats wars already filling. and husky waiters stood near tbs tables, with solicitous smiles. The River* side was little more than a cava ot harmony, but I t bubbled with life Crdudey^was a large man with well filled belt, he Joked. "Bet I guess that It was worth while. eh? There’» a lot of money there, an’ I ’ve got more in my pocket Tomorrow It’s going to a baa*, aad perfume soma flay be able to qalt the sea and live a de- asst life," *1 hops you can. son, hot If you’re oboe a sailor you lout ckn't live without the sea sad the old pale that yea need to know. We got lots here that talk as you do, hut they never leave the sea, they nev er will.” Cribblns remembered the h ouie w hen he had longed for the roll of a deck beneath his feet W ith Mood stirred by his few drinks, Hurricane Haley wanted store m s sad action than "The Sh y could give. . . "Where asm a fsttow have a good tlm i ih this darned town? Anyone would think that you were dead men around here.** "W hy don’t you try tha Mission across the street«** laughed Crib* bins. *T m la no mood for religion to* rn ley K etchel upon his advent the realm of padded glovee. Ketchel gained fame as one ot the greatest middleweight fig h t ers of a ll titoe, by virtue of victor ies over practically all of the best men in the game during his day, and his hectic ring battles with B illy Papke, the “ T w in " Sulli vans. Joe Thomas, Hugo K elly and others are still fresh la the memory o f old timers. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ASHLAND ¡to John Kagg, wife a a d *o n s ' of Shasta valley, CaJ., visited the ramtly ot Judge T J. Howell of Ashland over Bunday. Mr. Kegg owns oh® of the largest hay farms in Shasta valley. florid features and a mop of beer red hair. He had reasons for ng in high spirits. Business was good not only at tbs Riverside, hut thope nefarious anglas that a far-seeing saloon keeper can taka advantage of bad bean vary plenti ful of lato. His greatest acquisi tion, thsubest stroke In his career, had been when*be managed to ge' bold of Polly, the Prisco B ra t She had provéa a great drawing sard. She was Just what the man wmttod- Sha seemed to Just breathe "the Joy of Mvlug. ’ Polly danced because she loved to finoee. She needed no urging, her legs Just couldn't keep still, sad when she danced It was the kind of stuff they knew. She was horn on the Frisco docks, sad its denlsens loved her. W ith her wide, odd laugh, her symmetrical lege and the liquid fire that seemed to run under her skin Polly, the Fris co Brat, was a t present queen of the waterfront No one knew an awful lot about her antecedents. People do not pry Into one another’s affairs la the « 1 she loved to done«. (Please turn to page fir e ) by A R T H U R D EA N , Sc., D. (Copyright John F. D ille Co.) PERFECTLY AWFUL I f hindsight is bad business foresight always good! is “ Do you ever run out ot ideas?" asked a correspondent. *1 should think you would.” Undoubtedly intending to ha sympathetic the questionlag lady has frightened me. Today I have too much foresight. H ere 1 was w riting away a t the rate oF eight hundred wordA a day six days In tha week and three hundred and twelve times a year, each day giving, mors or less, a new Idea, only to be stop ped by, “ Do you-ever get out of ideas?" Three hundred and twelve Ideas a year and doing this for the next th irty years makes »860 ideas. Great Scott! Are there that <nany ideas about boys, girls, dads and mothers? "Nine thousand, three hundred sixty ideas in the n e x t ' th irty years stated In eight hundred words means 7,488,000 or t h e equivalent of one hundred and fifty books of fifty thousand words each. Using up three pen cils a day, including those chewed up by Marco Polo and his off spring and borrowed by “tost a m inute’* fflepds, I shall have to beg, borrow or steal 88,080 pen cils. . * < y '.- ■ -4.' J. A t tha rate letters come to my desk and You Anow t like to re ceive these letters— I shall In the next 80 y e a n receive 8,888.800 letters.. I f each one-contains on tha average of three questions uad tw e new ideas I shad have 8,888,080 questions which I muet answer and 8,770,780 ideas which I must use. I t each o f t h ese Idea« Is lim ited in its expression to fo r ty-five words I must’ read 88»,- (Please ih ra to pago five) age two Aomen were fighting. “A kali of a nerve you’ve got, ling my itpetlek. after the dirty 1eks tout you’ve been playing, rase people ain’t got ao shame." “8hat up yer Utile tramp. You ight to ask the privilege before sr speak to a ja d x . Tar flirty llt- streets around the dock«. Fat Mrs. Kenny, who claimed that she had known Polly as a baby and gained much free gin by doing so, said that even aa a kid Polly had loved to dance. She had danced In the streets of Frisco to the accompani ment of hand organs, mouth organs, whistling, anything that savored ot music. 8hs also said that the only semblance of a guardian that Polly bad ever had. was a mother she adopted and who quickly turned into gin the few odd pennies that the girl brought home.. Her father they knew. I t was easy to keep tabs on him, for the greatest part of his time was epeat In studying prison conditions as a guest ot the State. About her mother nothing was said, hut It la not unusual to have no-mother In the dockside ot Frisco. Polly herself seamed to remember one who died when she was a child, and the trip to the cemetery was tha only time that she remembered laavtog the streets where she bed been born. Entirely dependent on herself, she danced for a livelihood, drifting from place to plaoe, Just a floor lit tle wastrel at fl rst. Now dancing at Wing Fungs fo r a group of paaty CWnlw, new at London Gene’s, where the Lasoars congregated, afie at last attracted the attention ot bar own kind and came back to the alleys around her home to he a character,* maker la acquaintance and In the ways of tha*world. Of morals she had none; she was • Wtarulda, A Uttia fiat shot op. aa two eyes and after {he filth and alleys and the yellow men Crawley’s Was a suet of Paradiae. She was very proud of her advancement, for here She affeeted a style all her own In drees, using as model* the'vari ety aetreenes whom .she saw in eld magaslnes, but her legs were Heaven-sent. Ged gave them to her. « When Crawley tried out PoUy ha knew that he was Inviting trouble ,f * I * 4 aueeeee. for there was Blonde Bessie, who had held down headline honors slpce the epeaing d»y. Re knew her Jeal ousy, het- savage temper, but be also knew that She waa becoming fat aud-laxy and that »he Wae no longer a aw gaet Hie patrons frightened attendant pleaded hatted youth, life, vitality. Bome- thlng to rouse them from their tor por, something to eend them back be fled for help. / to their lodging houaea aafl toae- frients with reawakened emotions He amen pretentious than the and ambitions. And as Crawley sat loons and dockside drinking ge.WBtohlag the erewd poeriag toes. The Riverside offered en- tolament to Its patrons. It was very prosperous establishment. (To be continued). • Ä S R fÄ Ä iS Ä S