Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1927)
THE DflIhY ESTABLISHED IN 3,876 ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS WAY TZZZZZEZZ r *1 \NU2 3 t S S C O M IM \ < S E E IF. W u D F E L L ' VM A S E v N E R E R S Q ttP M ! A H U L L H O U R 3 v 8 5 G tlT K l A LO AF A © R 6 A O A T T H \<OR we R I OCTOBKR 1», i» 2 7 CRY:— Be merciful unto me, O Lord, for I cry Psalm' 8«:S . Our Father God, stir up Thy strength and come V s M u le H A P P O *C T r» V A 9 V -H - A Wide Gulf Being Bridged W V Z M J ji-'' Advertise Yourself P. L. Jackson, publisher of the Portland (Ore- f gon) Journal,. says: That it is a smart newspaper that knows how to advertise itself. For many years newspapers Were content to preach the gospel of “ It pays to advertise” to clients and prospective clients alone. t Then, all of a sudden, they decided to practice ‘ * what the> preached. Newspapers began to adver tise themselves in their own advertising columns and in other media. - Strange as it may seem, newspapers, supposed specialists in newspaper advertising, were turning out the poorest and most unconvincing copy that . appeared in the newspaper. Their vocabulary 'seemed to be limited to the adjectives “ first,” 1“ greatest” , “ largest” , and “ most” . Many newspapers would find some way to juggle * lineage or circulation figures so -that they were “ first” ,in a particular classification or field. The usual procedure was to pounce upon those figures and ballyhoo them to death. Today, after some bitter years of experiment, , newspaper .promotion is, as it should be, represen tative of the best copy appearing in the newspaper. « / , Campaigns are planned in advance on \oun.d business-building policies. The ideAls of each ad, the copy and layout are made with a vipw to future . betterment. Of course, past achievement is still heralded in large space but the galaxy o( superla tives- so prominent in former days is discreetly omitted. . . I ** There is still room for improvemeit in the field ,»» of newspaper promotion, but afl it is one of the newer branches of advertising there is still hope. The first day’s work in the Budget .campaign tied more than $1,700 for Y, M. C. A. activities 'M ilit o .■ p fV A O lT Scissored Sentiment | r «» Soon wfell probably s^e again the familiar miracle of Henry Ford selling millions of autqm«^ ■ il biles for less than -it costs to malqe é» ■’< them and cleaning up a profit df Jlû.0,000 « year.— Eugene regis ter- '• -X {. ^Ivg Btarr of the navy has a great recibrd for efficiency. He has made 105 parachuta Jumps Good fortune usually picks out and never once failed to reach t^e people who lack good sense. ground.— St. Helena Mist. "Standing water stinks,” which IS true also of moving polecats. ♦ Some of the' reformers contend FOR k n o w h i, .p r ic e . that -the modern dance Is t o o Next to a gtfod 5-cent cigar, the much like the twisting and writh biggest need is for a good Bott ing of the savage. The differ drlpk. ence is that the savage knows enough to get in before daylight. Any theory that can’t be. work — North Powder News.« ed up into a fact might «a well be Juakqd. Now that tbe European savants The ten-gallon hat will hardly declare aomd animals think ,lt attain tbe popularity of the one- would be amusing to know your dog’s opinion o& yon— sometimes. pint battle. . , — Hubbard Enterprise. Het Heck aays: "If ws could put a man in Jail for bein’ ar-dam The boy who -one« offered te Tool, they wouldn’t be so many “hold your horse for a dime,” auto accidents.”. now honks violently for the Cad illac to get out of the way of his Aerial pSesengen servie« is to iijtle red-striped flivver. — St. 1W talflated oe tb«i Pacific coast Helens SefltineK • «B* > • eto i o hefere tbe yeerria endéd» Witk large planes connecting ali im When the company divides, the portant cltles .of the "est, thla pgrt of th e United S û tes again men-generally talk about their 4em cjwu»tto' tu im tia tiv r -> gpif.and the-women their hair__ Silverton Tribune. Gkants Pass Courier. « • XSmüMD P roL G. A . Briscoe journeyed O. B ., Allen left Saturday night Agaïe lOst WOd^esdapSvhero for a trip to Klamath Falla. » addressed the newly organised C. L. Reames and John F. Miller of Jacksonville came Up from the county seat, Saturday wRh U nde Billy Robtnson, the .H r. and Mrs. C. Johnoon wore Well known pioneer who la in visitors from Dunsnjslr l a s t feeble health, and located him at whet. Mr. Johnoon Is a shoema the Southern Oregon f Hospital ker and formerly operated In Aah- both tor treatment for^pwhlle. Fred Vannatta, » (ah land boy. arrived traba > NevaM . »h era he fapát ppaltlen la Wells Fargo (ice. Mrs. Vannotte him K rta lg h t and ffoa Judge C. W. Watooa v isito r to Medford Thur a response was gratifying and is a tribute Ashland people pay to the splendid work m being done by this organizatkfflH-a truly ictive work—a work which builds dharacter Voy during his formative years. will soon be over the top in true eoopera^ Wm. Byhee, a w ill knoWn’ pio neer nod lead hoMer of the low er vaNey, woe aa Ashland visiter Friday. Íkví'lfí’ií' jp j Y ■ « i ’*'*’1 i tj , . jn rrfem « Hairy, «Mppar qf (M •eaKnp «aheoner "Sea Sprite," to trylnp to ¿*d «» FrUcfl^iomriWnp to maba «p for Me peart among Ute to« floet. B e oomet to Orawte^o RivertiSe, and /alto hard far A a Itttto Saucer there. B it mate joint Mm there, end e a M b e U t t drfoh off era.to match hit tkipper tor the girl. The crows compel» Balog to So to, but he catohet Brady cheat ing, and knock« Mm «town. Brudp tlinke away, end Hnrrtoan« m««to Polly and to immediately captured. Somehow both of them teem to feel that they are meeting lomethtng j u i t e new and etrange. A m - i h ’ ROGER m u m l Y o L O O v W ■R TH' Ot WE. T H IS P o cK iT )OV< IS A L L s WASHINGTON— Alvaro Obre gon. one of the big men In the present Mexican, crisis, and prob ably Mexico’s next président, has only ode arm. How he lost the other arm is a good «tory. Ohregon was fighting for con trol of Mexico with the notorious ME FOUUO f bandit. Villa. At a time, when ■ 1 IT T O O . operations centered at Celaya, c d north o f , Mexico City, the situa » -, ■ ‘g tion waq more or less precarious. “What also could t d o r ahO K It was at Celaya that Obregon's asked, “aa* I certainly can’t cook.” arm was blown off by a bomb.. An Her wistful smile as she said • te eye-witness, recalling the inci that, swept away the last of the 1 • . *d • * dent, says that the bomb tore Ob- many barriers that were between - 3 them, and Hurricane began to poor regon’s uniform to rags and cov out -his thoughts to, one who he « ered his body with wounds. It guessed wee as lonely as he. “Gee, kid. I’ll bet you’d go wild was fe&red that the commanding f ^ r r error some of the things I’ve aeon." general would die. % u Hurrieana leant-over and took her In the morning, Obregon’s of hand; Polly smiled at him and let it ficers cam e'to thejr leader and stay. “I’ll never forget the .time I to|d him that his soldiers -were saw the sun setting over a volcano disheartened and in bad mental In Hawaii. It was glorious, the na- to worship there, and as condition for fight. Rumors had I ttreaused stood watching all those misty spread that he. wad dead. colors swirling about and changing * Obregon, the arm, q p w o n iy a tike the colors on a bird’s wing, I. raw stump. went put* and mounted guess that 1 worshipped too.“ "Oh. hdw 1 would.“ softly his horse and led a revltaGxed breathed the girt. army ti> a victory which turned “1 love those Islands, Folly. Fel the tide of thé wà/. ' lows have told me that ‘y ea n there make yog forget all else. Perhaps ft ft ft 'believe them, b u t-to me. they If the State Department had Its 1 seemed like the last things that way, federal troops W6bld| l be Ood mode Yon know, after ha had chasing Assistant Secretary of the done an the rest They’re ao gpr- Treasury Seymour Lowman into tact, everything is so Complete, and the mountains Just as Mexican troops are charing the rebels be low the Rio Grande. Assuming that Lofimsn ts al lowed to retain his Job a f e w more m onths,'ha will have every official in Washington.roaring for his gore— Just because Lowman tell« the truth a« ha-sees it. Just when it was supposed that Lowman had been effectively gag 'erhaps one reasoa why more ged after his frank blurtiags ,on ticia n s don’t throw their hata the subject of prohibition, which i the ring, is that* they hike he Is nominally supposed to en- talk throhgh tM ta . and: »erupted > a . newi jllrectfon, thlB time threatening to feuavup A ybung man played the saxo a delicate International situation phone for 18 hours, setting g rec for the Department df 'Bate. An ord. The very man to send to ex r em ely im portan t situ a tio n , too. The S o n t p! It S & I g tf EPS« MeMee to keep the peace I , .) j , V man uttered a few terrible .words 3 tending to confirm what many persons regard as obvious Tacts never make s bridge bates to return a but which the administration had been denying, - f i t The StatÀ'Department’ had t*.— -■ perspired freely In-attempts to All a man needs these days to show In its notes to France on tbe new French ta r iffs that recipro be Able to make a living at sell city had »over been a part of thia ing gasoline ts a little target prac country’s policy and that We nev tice. • e r bargained over the tariff to the point where we would lower or false ours when some othér na Women follow the decroe of tion did as much for us. Fashion even though the heavens Lowman announced formally fall, aocordlitg to a newspaper the raising of the tariff on cer headline. Aye, and if the skirts tain* minor articles of import from go upt France and then undertook to ex plain that this was becausd France had, raised her tariffs. He said : president Coolidge got a new "The American policy is one of happy aa that girt. She didn't pair of glasses. Probably to rood reciprocity. ' That’s onr policy. dance. Just like yon, kid. She kind the’ suggestions of those who ir e They go up, we go up; they go of floated. As liFht and airy ae tha i. wind Ikat rustled th the paUs traea, witling to advise the odmhristra- down, we go down.” as graceful «s tha ttoy waves that tiok what to do with that four name lapptng up on the beaoh. And ft ft ft bow that boy watched her. He must bllflpn vurplus.. Insofar as the tariff law con have loved her h lot, and when the cerning the commodities ln q u e s- tion was concerned, Mr. Lowman w ive. I was drank. I nsnaBy was In thoae days, but somehow that (Please Turn to Page 7) sobered me, an* I felt kinds as if I’d 0—m wttt/»htng eomathlpg I shouldn’t have seen. Barns as I did when I watohad yon. Folly." “Oh, Hell, anyone ana watch, me danca." aad there was blftaraeoa In the gWo- voiee. **Fvot danced for niggers, chinks—don’t see wky anyone should fsal.fhat way about OC?. 19th. l o s s “Don’t «ay that, BoHy.” Hurri FLYNN to*LANGFORD Crtt Tolman and W." H. cane harried to comfort her. “I itVraturMd framr their last By DOC REID guess that It dbn’t matter what Four years ago today two fa you’ve done, long as ybn want to do hunt on TueMtoy afternoon, caught a good xsisod brown mous ring Idols ofia couple of de tha thing yaaVe doing wtfo yer an the T*«t «Me of Grlsily cades ago met in the ring in Mex Whole heart I t e l you, Polly, you hut eame In without th«lr ico In the Jast ring battle engag dance Ik e «he did, an’ I wonder, Md. do yer think that yorM ever ed In by either, when Sam Lang dance for m et Just tor afo, yur ford, the famed "Boston Tar Ba by," knocked ont Jim Flynn, th e “Pueblo Fireman," in t h r e e raturned to rounds. The fight apparently was for ¡nothing more than to deter mine Which of the two had gone back the fart hate, While both of th e men b a t mere ehaddws of their once gfeat and W. $ v Kropks eelves and netthef displaying afly y for p' deer hunt bf tlfo'dashing qualities of former day* L a u ford was probably the ' most p itlfil object of the two eVj j ea tkongh he efoerged victorious. The letter’s vision had began t i * '' a id Wallace fail Wm -several months prior td been prospeet- this affair and It Was with d if h | >, cnlty thah he coatd see to loeat* i hta opponent before him. Shortly* afterward/he went totally blttfa. Marry m s, and go .en d ts s thee, placws that yon ought to know!" For toe first time in her life Pony flashed, and as the crimson mount ed over her throat and toes, H u n t cane thought her lovely. “It ain’t fair to Ud Uka Ont," she hurst out. "I’d give my soul to ba really hsjvpv and to do aa I wanted. Maybe for someone I loved. But I guoss I Just got to daaee.** Crawley was watching from a point of vantage, and when a watt* or informed hha that the man with Polly was not drinking ho frowned. No progress was being made The hour was growing lato and ha could not lot .him get away with that money. If the damn Cool would not get drunk—there was always tho room upstairs. He . motioned to Blonde Bsosto, who woe 'drinking with two tipsy Lancar* add then told bbr to Join Polly. i TURNING THE PAGES BACK sppat tha day visiting fri ¿ bybopsis 4 ü TH» m H • ï v j XÎ While politicians And economists and business cusg)on of common prooiems. w ane « - is uiuuy m m imlitical action on farm relief has not been men tioned at iinv of these meetings, certain it is that the city women have jQurneyed to the country and- the farm women who have corao to- town for these affairs have developed a mutual understanding which promises an amicable adjustment of joint or individual difficulties. . . - One city club invited eleven .groups of rural' women for an evening’s entertainment, 150 woilien coming over well nigh impassable roads to hear the reading of a play with rural setting. Over the refreshment tables there were discussions as. the rdBult of which one woman present said thafc it I seemed that they had experienced another step'tce, , ward tbe fulfillment of their “ desires ‘to strive to' touch ahd to know the great teoinmon woman’s heart of us all.” ’? . . . . . : ' 5 The women of another prairie section have been entertained in the neighboring city and have them selves sponsored a cqmpaunity meeting attended by ninety women from near-by places. And another club furnishes a story of eight town women who drove through a heavy snow storm to givfi a play in a community house for a group of ^arm women who have »o club of. their., own, i that women are It is in simple ways litae' bridging what once seemed; a wide gulf between those of their ow nsex who live on farms and those w ho’live in towns, and no one can doubt that both groups are benefitting by the exchange of ideas and opinions.—-Christian Science Monitor. « From the FBO photoplay starring -■j asmxiro 30 Years Ago This Day In . Fistiana -"T »JRI and in any orne they squandered ttqtV money somewhere before they started a endse, gad why hot at the Rtvsrsldef Ona place wws as good aa another to leave It la. ’ M woe perfectly safe, lor tha vie- tim invariably remembered little when he woke up with aching head and empty pockets. Fatly knew aU this, also the trioka employed. ’ la her short stay at the Rlrorride She Md played a part la several sn«b episodes, and had R been one s t SÄJTSd’S if Ä y i s h o u ld e r s____________ Rut ih la man wna clean. He aometbing different He reprei ed something fine and noble, breath of fresh air that had 1 euddqnly fanned into her drab N o-d h e coulda’t do K. FWly