Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1927)
,w- DAILY OSOSOS hadd : BUSHED IN 1876 SHLAND daily tidings OUT OUR WAY 7 MW G A O PS \NHO OPENED’ 'U P ANOTHER p— P H O N E SO— Between 6 and 7 P . >1. A Copy W lU Be Delivered Im m ediately < ío m 6 -7 ANWTH i m \ s e w vahóos V W A N T FRO M l TA cw ni ? • ! )) G ot T ’GO ON J WERW iM P bT N T A B usiness . A OCTOBER 2I a 1 GOD RE’ ^ONDS:— For Tljpu Lord, forgive;- and lenteous In mercy unto Thee. ’ Psalm 86:«. .- P R A Y E R : Turn us again, O God shine, and we shall be saved. Have They Tasted Powells? Never was that nectar brewed for the gods on Olympus more palatable or more delicious than American sweet cider. When the glow _of the year logins to fade,'and Autumn stalks throfcgh.'.gold- ' shot woods and meadow mists to keep a tryst with- • .Winter, there comes a time when it pausgp, as if regretful of the chilly pact. It is tlien that the farmer gathers his apple crop. Part lie may stqre in the cellar against a cool night. Northern spies will mellow with age. Russets he will btiry in à pit near the woodshed. The windfalls of the hotter grades he will gather and saejf for cider. Then some morning, when the frost has whitened, every blade of • grass and the hardy sparrows gather about the top rail near the straw stack, he will harness the team and'hie away to the mill with his precious load of windfalls. . There he will await his turn among others on similar bent. Stone flagons will he JNtos-L ed around filled with the rich amber fluid that now i , rushes from the presses. Tiny fruit flies will liayer over the discarded pulp. A sweet, delicious odor assails thfc nostrils as the juicy fruit rolls into the chopper. At night barrels loaded with precious , , juice replace the sacked apples as the farmer starts f ’ homeward. He breathes deeply, of the free air o f , the country. From the top of an elevation the 4ow- ' »ridged^ hills fall away like the ebbing swells of a mighty sea. A silvery creek winds between the , hills into the quiet valley, From afar is heard the low of a cow. Over all the splendor, blending rtéP vividness to enchanting harmoiiy, is drawn a dim’ and indefinable veil of gauzy haze. Thé late Oc tober night descends as a wheeling flight of black-, birds dots the pale, high-arched sky. The scent of smouldering bonfires drifts across the road. It is good to be alive and in the country!—Dearborn Independent. Advertising Thb pbktotfiqet department has decided t» curtail m all o r d e r houvds from 'skipping unsolicited merchandise, to their e ffo rt to foist undesirable goods on t h e public. W e like the eelectloh <and use of th a t word— “ c u rta il.’' — W allow a Esn, „ F la tte ry shouldn’t be squirted but sprayed. Nobody ever lost an argument by keeping his mo«ph qhut. W e don’t Waste any pity people who are better off we ace. ’ _ N O N T G i T i T . HB. u IN A P ic k ' l l . U B M G B ÍW W A R T ^ 4TH G-. ' - ■ K T N O rsiB > - . J to herself, T Boley, »Mayer o f the thereat. 1 aeoltop aehoonar "ffeo flprtt«,* r«. heli-t aha : lento <o Frteco o/l«r a Iona o M Felt th a t horg erelm ta tA e Xrctic. He to- to undo th tend» to « o k a (he town pay /o r hto day- AardaMp« and /orpqf to« ««a to o UpoUtra •er/rirtap o/ plearere. Folly, toe hoot agate. H f « r donecy /roe» the Atoorrfda, too fanxmi win« Me heart and aiakee him /o » tag to hhi yet »to vawt, ana at the toon tia n whale arm •ha /alto to love mtth, him. Craw- oiflc. Jay. tha owner o/ tha Aioaraida. PoUy wo withet to pat Hurricane*« money, nothing. 1 to he telle Potty "that Aarrioane to |n his aw nntriM to her m that th e w lU help Hurricane <» Polly he i heart-hrohan. ’lot. He hi < ' 1 „ would do 1 PoUy kept ««let, but bar aoba of Beared ■topped, and when an hour, later, bluff. He i • * * • . * » * « • » Hurricane the nsnal cheers, she was the same ■mlllng kid of old. m2 u 3 1 « Hurricane was la hie old place. S us* He bad only just arrived tor be had come direot from toe Salvation “ hta Army Mission House, where he bad - onl7 * arranged for tomorrow. Somehow Vrom Ume he was nervous now, He wondered compllmen how he was going to ton Folly, and Mnd * 1”k how she would take I t ■a* Folly «’oily. noticed hie nervousness, trying to i And to her It put the epel of truth poetlve vie on Bessie's story.. He weft only like delivering toe re st bar, end si When too \dehce was over she, AMO did h came, to him as she always did, and Then to <P hid« the ache In her heart, wee that he wi merrier, and pretUeA then Hurri- rested sob cane had ever seen her before. rose, and ■ Crawley was watching tonight, lively, and .before either could do mom •'Sorry, ing shot d o t s in accordance with the law of M axim ilian, 1 a t e | L ittle Robert Reed, who would not put tobacco to his mou^h, may be the fath er of the modern cig arette holder.— K lam ath Newo. Things m ight be worse fo r the picnicker. Suppose a mosquito barhed like a dog w ith the pther little annoyances he provides.— St. Helens Sentinel. Men may not raise th e ir hats to A *m dn’« honesty is sometí rteé ladies like they used to, but they mote a m atter of interest than are stUl polite enough to give them rwo-thi<Js o f.th e highway. The question natu rally follows whether men Were always polite -Q ur own quarrels get a resting to ih e ladles fro m fea r— B 1 u e spell while we listen to the quar Mountain Eagle. rels of our neighbors. I f the*dry democrats are doing nothing It means, assuredly an lnddpendent party composed of dry democrats.— W oodburn Inde pendent. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ASHLAND WASHINGTON-^- Most Inform * 1 ' ’ W hy ghould science go to such -Ygu have got to |a v o brains to trouble in searching abont fo r an be am art, but-doek -sometimes" accurate lie detector. Any w ife brtnga fame. w ill do.— Lake County Exam iner. Hex Heck aqy«: d,o n’.t knoW o‘ nothin’ needs more watch- in* than 'a* deputation fer bein’ conzlstcntly hogest.’’ t By Rodney Dutcher N B A Service Writer ed persons In W ashington expect s i& s -L r r .M B , ed th a t there would b« an armed revolt in Mexico, but few thought It would develop so early. Presi in dent "CaUes had so often and so Insistently promised that he would keep his hands off the pres idential campaign and allow a .free election that the general be lie f waa that m ilita ry ' activities would be postponed un til after Generals Cerrano end Qomez saw how the election resulted. Serrano and Gomez, however, apparently shared the general be lie f that Alvaro Obregon would be elected. W hether they had any hope of fa ir dnd free flec tio n s la d iffic u lt-to decide from this dis tance, b u t' It is likely \h a t they would have be«n Justified in such hope because O bregoiute such a popular hero la Mexico t h y t atrangarm ipethods were n o t needed to elect h im . , Friends of Mexico in this coun try were anxious to see the revolt put down and have supported the drastic tactics of Calles in execut ing many rebel leaders. I f It should be proved th a t Callee de liberately provoked 8errano and Gomez into Insurrection^ their opinion doubtless would change, but It appears that Calles merely proved Ela atrdBgth and foresight and beat his enemies “to t h e d raw .'” I f Calles had been cap tured be Undoubtedly would have D YO U R G IR L been treated the same way. AlthQugh It is true t h a t , t h e A R T H U R D B A S , Sc., D. Mexican people are not yqt well ¡ ; < Copyright John F . DlUe Co.) along the road toward w h a t Is known as civilization and that rebels are,beidg killed o f t qulcker IF F A T H E R O N L Y K N E W ’T am fifteen years old and my than they would be In this coun her w ill nbt allow me to go try— perhaps, there Is every Jus-' th boys,” 30 writes a pretty tlncation in Mexican lajv for the numerous regent^ executions. The victims presumably are be • * ** * *v F t l * W. J. Hofmann, advertising director of the Portland, Oregon Oregonian, says: “ Did yon ever stop to think that the wonder ful prosperity of the American people is largely due to newspaper advertising? Everybody who thinks about it agrees that we are so prosperous and that the common folks have so many pleasures and live so well, simply be cause our manufacturers are able .to sell a lot of merchandise which in turn creates *ability to pay high we “f-s. All tuese could no| happen without newspaper advertising. Newspaper advertising has been the biggest single factor in teaching the American people to want and buy good things for the home, good clothes, good food, and automobiles, and to pa tronize the theatres, and all the other present forms of entertainment If the great mass of common people knew just how much they owe to newspaper advertising they would have a new respect for it.” ' Oepyriobtod tar > 9 0 Ftatnree Ow® From th * PBO photoplay starring Ralph leee : SHQOLp G üín ’ \| BUSINESS 1 ASHtAND 1862, which provided that anyone should be sbot who was taken, arms In hand, against toe consti tuted governtaent. Em peror M axim ilian himself had thia law passed to enable him tb deal w ith his Mexican -enemies and he enforced it against many 'Of the leaderd’ ln the w arring fac tion led by the Mexican patriot, Benito Jnares» Then, when M axim ilian himself was captured, Juarez, who had been president and whp claimed Maxim iHtan’s reign was Illegal, invoked the law against the em peror, and M axim ilian died before a firin g squad because he h a d taken “arms in band against the cohstltlited government.“ P o rfirio Diaz,'* during his long dictatorship, oarrled out the law with gusto. No one knows how many hundreds or thousands of leaders and soldiers' were shot down by his firin g squads because there, were no real newspaper cor respondents to those days a n d Dtaz, Who had invited'foreign in terests to come into Mexico and ta k e everything In sight w ith his guarantee of m ilita ry protection, always maintained a strict cen sorship. ' JWhen Madero waa elected pres ident a fter the reyolutlpn he was asked to entoroe the law to the extent,of k illin g o ff a certain feiC of the reactionary leaders so thqt lng to protest A cruel kick sa tha lags from Crawley made her alt down, and to pravanthar «peaking to him. Blonde Beetle- took bim by the e o n and begged In maudlin faahton. that he should not dssOrt them before they drank to his voyage ir. Hurricane consented, and seated himself again. Crawley got Oat a fresh battle and aa ha was doing th a t hla wink to Bessie neat that lady to a cupboard behind Hnrri- oane. from which she took a A u d i white powder. PoUy was watching all this out of the corner at her eye. as she talked with Hnrrioatoe,: who was leaning over to her talk* tag softly. — ' “PoUy dear," he whispered, “let's get out of hern. Pre got so onnoh to toll you, dearest“ - PoUy Just smiled nt him, her heart was too full to think Round: and round in her head were' ■wirttog all the douhts.aad faun' of tha day. H urrirane straightened up, butt by. thia time, the powder was In hie glass and when the liquor war added there waa no.difference be- tween hla drinks and the others. Again PoUy showed signs at weak*' (Please T u ra to Page 7) A bootlegger who fell under arrest the other day was found to have equipi>ed his automobile with a. supply of large-headed tacks. If pursued by The sleuths of the prohibition enforcement department it wag evidently his plan to scatter the tacks and make his escape while the pursuers repaired their manifold punctures. Reports of a bank robbery at Aurora, Neb., show thia method of throwing the “ hounds” off the scent in actual operation. The retreating robtien with a supply of tacks stopped their pursuers as effectively ha if they had dropped a mountain in their path. The discovery of the tack as an outlaw m eans of aefeose tips the scales the outlaw way as against the armament'which the other party to this merry war has been able to contrive. It is up to the police to invent a taCk-proof tire. And meanwhile, what of the hundred million rest of uk who ride on these a«|O|r..inf«atari roads? Must we build a >q>ecial set of M b for tack-sowing outlaw s and their pursuers to O. M. Grainger and Ed Sutton M r. and Mrs. A. C. Dixon and O. 8. B utler, E. D. Briggs and returned from Coffee creek on children arrived last night from G, W . T refren motqyed to ,Jack- i - sonville .Saturday morning add Eugene. Mrs. Dixon, who is the F ru ity . of Mrs. O. W A n ter for a attended te legal business. M r. guest i B utler stated that although Ash few days, w ill visit her father, land experienced a cle^r, sunny- the Hon. J. S. H errin , and rela day. a cold fog-made being out of tives and friends at the old home (looya very ui»ple*»*nt to the low here, while M r. Dixon Join« the Klam ath er valley. K J l ducking exposition at • , • . ----------- *■ , ! for a fortnight. Ar. and áéa. W . E. W im er and This Day In . Fistioiia «laughter, I.nura. returned last evening Irósa £ «n Francisco and. th e e x p o s ltlo i.i ------------ M r. and Mrs. R . Beswlck and daughters, Mias Sarah and fit»*« l i t t l e Pope, toft Saturday evening, fo r' San Franolsco. a fte r which tlm y w ill continue their Journey u t southern -Canforata, where they WlU make a visit of ladefln- L . B. Chaee baa bean, looking after.his mining interests In Jack- eonvIUe dtetrict the past weak. 'the commercial I: -