Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 24, 1927, Page 5, Image 5

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    ASHLAND D A IL Y 'T ID IN S S O U T
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OCTOBKR 84, 1027
A SU R E PR O P H E C Y :-—A ll nations whom Thon hast made
shall come and worship before Thee, O Lora; and shall glorify
Thy name. -For Thou are great, and doest wondrous things:
Thon a rt God alone. Psalm 8 6 :» , 10.
PRAYER:
Our FalEer, in heaven, may ^Thy Kingdom Come.
WAY
«7^M
A X , \
/ c ' M e o e ' m
\
Ö IM M L A ' ,
H A M O ! S um P m
3 »S S C R A C tfE Q .
t f S A BlGCÆ R .
J O B 'M »X T K O T t
SBWIM’ u P A - j
f o o t b a l l om /
TherTidings
Madame »Srhwinimer, originator of the Ford
Skip plan to end the World War, has been rgfpsed
American citizenship as the result of her answer
to questions put by a federal judge. Questioned as
to whether she would kill an enemy in United States
in time of war if by so doing she could save the
life of an American soldier, she replied p “ I WQnld
not kill a man even if lie tried to kill me.”
.While Rt first ^ance this may seem like rather
a flimaey pretext for denying citizenship to any­
body and particularly to an elderly woman, there
is no question hut what citizens of this trend of
blind are undesirable. A citizen who .will not fight
for his country in time of need, is certainly not de­
serving of the blessings obtained by others who
have fought apd died for them.
wtuu/iT-i nnw w in £» 4-1 •Ph-r to
• nniw
There S is '*«* no creed dr belief w
which
can justify a
<nan in refusing to take up arms ih the protection of
the weak and helpless members of his ooantry.
He may refuse to kill to save his own life, but fail-
u re'to .protect this_country from- enemies merely
means that instead of slaying tjie enemy be prac­
tically slays his fellow countrymen and their wives
and children.
•
/ - .
A, person can. murder by refusing fo aid those in
danger of death as well as by actually, bringing
about death.
’
To «be consistent a creed which forbids taking
human life should also require protection of hu­
man lite.
,
;. j-
>'. .
U *
m
{ « Nearly 13,000 Japanese ^children are hugging
American, dolls as the result of the 1927 ‘‘good-will
project” . of the Committee on World Friendship
Among Children, and now the organization- is
launching its 1928 plan for friendship school hags,
to be distributed to the children flf Mexico <oii
Mexican Independence Hay, Sept. 16, 1928.
The committee believes thàt several thousand
Mexican hoys anQ girls carrying school bags adorn-
edorned with pictures of the flags of the United
States and Mexico will become messengers for peace
in the y ea n to come, and it is thereforqplanning to
have the bags made and to have mandfactured a
careful choice of articles t o be plaoed inside each
bag, to help and interest the children in their school
work.
t
The Mexican .Vice-Minister of Education has
approved the project and will supervise the dis­
tribution of the bags among the £,25<J,000 ptipilb in
15,000 schools of Mexico.
The project is expected to aocoiqpliah a two­
fold purpose. On the one hand, it is believed that
a message of friendliness at this time tropi the
•children of the United States to the children of
Mexico »will be a valuable indication of the attitude,
of this country toward its neighbor to the south.'
And on the other hand, it is thought that the
United States children who raise funds and pack
the bags will at the same time learn something
about the history, manners and customs of a near­
l y nation.
«
'
Apparently we have forgotten a few of the
erstwhile simple tilings in life. A bàckward look
jrill reveal them as the big things. Get the habit of
happiness. Utilize your enthusiasm« The world is
btmgry for faith. The young man is the future in­
carnate. Let évery failure teach you the game.
Public confidence is the young man’s best asset.
Offf down to earth;*¿hat is where the people live.
The world is not down on you; it is just busy,
that is all. A man who won’t get up when he is
knocked down i» of no use. These are. all workable
'«nblenu.
,
■
•
A broadcaster was arrested the other night while
’'angagad in broadcasting from Toledo. No, he wasn't
broadcasting a jazz program — he was a federal
officer charged with accepting a bribe.
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* '
a .
Judging from the number of filling stationsJn
IlmHriiUaii and proposed there must be some one
¡tffadng some where—and there're not walking cither.
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L E T T E R
SEMJtKhS-A
\ N H A T ~ Qfcb
MW N EW ,
ELECTRIC
MACA im E f é
1
1 " ‘ ll
- -I
a
Friendly bolls
i '
Ew *
mm»»
vmh a t
Unworthy Citizens
a
ASHLAND
PTTBT.TRTtED
ABUSHED EN 1876
YOU SYKB STOP
TO THINK .
By Rodney Dutcher
NPA Service Writer
In the course of a visit o f a
V irtu e Is greatly aided by popi; couple -pf days lu Pbeenlx, A ri-
Bon», I was shown .about the town
health.
and th e adjacent country by J.,
Gossip Is like the flu -it takes W . Spear, editor of The Arlxona
Republican, and It was made
easy and lt spread» easy too.
clear to me why one hears
<o
Don’t argue over, politics— let much of Phoenix fn whatever
every m ail fight hie dog his own part of the country he may ha.
The*pountTy roads about Phoe-
nix are paved w ith cement con-
I lik e te listen; for lb tU K 'fe y crete, 4 7 6 .miles of them, converg-,
tngj upon the city. The broad
I learn so. many things that are
acre« In a county of which Phae-
'not to.
nix. Is the county seat, a« w ell as
the capital of the state, la as large
The best why to get tfke respect
a» some ¿ astern states. I t
la
of ‘the people Is not to ask foi\ it,
supplied w ith irrigation from th»,
but to take it.
; , / ; i
Roosevelt pr'oject, the firs t, as
w e lf as the largest of the works
Any young man tries harder to installed by the United., Statue
get ahead to u the highway than to Reclamation service. Every acre
of the lands under this project as,
get ahead on his Job.
well as those of smaller and ad-
jacent projects, ie highly prodnc-
H e t H eck says
thr«. This, I found..was the ha»fc-
t o n g it ground- o f Phoenix, an easy ex-^
planatlon of the prosperity visible
on every hand.
In our hurried tour oJRhe tewa
building everywhere was going oh
LeTs hope the powers rio n ’t try feverishly.
Hundred»
tq p a rtitio n Turkey. T ie y b«Ve dences and
apartn
not yet used up thei? other rea­ wete under construe
sons for hating one another.;—
Corvallis Gazette-Times.?
»j
TURNING THE
Constitution!
.• .
The bolshevik! are corrupting
the A laska* Indians. The A m eri­
can people have' been' asleep,
The Indians of-Alaaka who, in­
cidentally, are o u r fellow clU-
sens,<«re commonly supposed to I
be mere'savages. They’re
not
supposed to have any ideas except
some concerning the possibilities
of earning- an existence in their
fishing boats in th e taoe ot tr e ­
mendous Inroads by the, M r can­
ning cempasies. .
i, • i
. B ât the critters are double-
crossing us.' They're going so fa r
as to kid some o T d nr most rever­
ed political leaders and institu­
tions amf to insinuate that there
Is something funny about o u r
modern social customs fend ad­
vanced habits of life. Savages are
n A supposed to know anything
about our domestic polities or
how civilised perçons live, so it is
perfectly obvious that nothing but
insidious red propaganda c'oufd
inspire such subversive attacks.
Evidence that the "savages"
pre sticking their tongues.oùt at
us comes in recent Issues of the
Alaskan and the Alaska Fishèr-
¿T.Q.'MU- í M mj «»
man. respectively, i * weekly and
O I0 2 7 OV Mt« «W V W X INQ
a monthly published at Peters-
burg and Ketohfkan, Alaska, by
Indiana and prim arily for Indiana.
Look at this editorial from , the
Alaska^ which actually hints that
¡these‘la bunk la'A m erican poli­
tics:
“ The Hearqt papers fo r Septem­
ber 1st announce that H erbert
Hoover w ill oppose the Laaguq of
The women have taken over the Nations If he rpna for President.
aviaiion business, w ith all t h e Good for H erbert! W e expected
that H erbert would open upon the
in the cellars.
’rddat In America, the Soviets in
J ^ llU P e ^ b e women
sviatqrs Russia, the Tu rks in Armenia or
lt the Boxers tn Chipa but the
re. successful because they can
League of Nations w ill answer his
- ik< 6n more different airs than ; purpose Just as weH as any of
’
them. I t ’s a good campaign issue
andf w ill strike a popular chord
' and the poor deq^epit old League
1
w ill not strike back a t Herbert.
1
1
"The Borahs, the Reeds, the^
1
H iram Johnson and a ll t h o s e
, statesmen who ateanjted t h e
League In the days of his strength
3
' and vigor w ill observe w ith great
J
Interest thl» brand new'champion
f
as
buckles In his arm or to
combat the League. W iy i H er-
' bert in the field to oppose all en-
1
1 tangling alliances with European
'
' powers the selection of tlfe Ra-
1
' publican ticket for 1881 w ill be'
‘
the easiets thing in the world. -
‘
"Hoover and Thompson, why
■
not? W ith Herbert pounding th e
1
League-and B ig -B ill jumping oh
K in g George and the w h o l e
Bncklnghom Palace o u tfit, how
cc-uld domestic issues be intruded
■
into tw ith a campaign? Thia great
!
: oajMdn w ill, not stand for any ln~
’
; terfereice with our external af-
1
' f a i r i ^ y t^e League, neither w ill
» » f j j f s nffnute tolerate the dom-
In a t io n 'V 6 o o rio the<; Third in
1 our Internal policies?
Sit
F
11
11
s
ha
BACK
A S ffliffl)
Bert Spencer, the W ells Fargo
ssenger, has been transferred
3 « tha ran between Ashland
d San fVaâéiM o te thgkblw sen
ino^tad the Bay Cit>y.
-
H . P. and H srisy Holmes ars
among the returning Ashlanders
.who p ro claim tha Panama exposi­
tion to be " g r e jt." Thfly return­
ed Saaday.
'
Florenoe Rdqfcson h»a aecep
a p o s l t M ‘ * è -* t '’n°KrM *»« ' I
bcokkeepur a» the H gnlUrii
U ntil redsatiy rile 'was empio;
at CrowWm’s confectionery.
tained th e ir - gentlemen
friends
from the State Norm al and the
High School, on Saturday gjght
at the home o f M r. and M r*, aha.
Barret on north M ain styaeL Mu-,
ejc, stunts and readings, wore
O. T. Brown- and fa m M w ill re­
principal features. .Pr<Hk Batten
move to thhlr. ranch 'in ‘"Klamath
made i great hit' in his dto*^ fhlk
county, near Plevna w ith in a few
Iftg.
Substantial
refreshment«
days. Mr. Brown has been rent­
arera Served. M r. and M ra.‘B arrett
ing t | e place, Mr several years,
w ith yery unsatisfactory results.
Hi« son-in-lpY* k a rry W ithrow ,
will run th e fg rm in Aghtand pre­
cinct. at
Sis­
kiyou aad CMeadf roads.
»
Ajâhiaâd High School Motto —
tea Nadle Briggs and Mias Jose-
ffiff Baber Ora With us a^ata af-
u n 't Ù
M
i t i S
m r o p o io
JSTwrtoMM Haley, oktfpor oi ñ o
ochoonor “Boa Borito," io back <*
Frisco e /ta r1« hordxrulsc Ho adotto
and tono K M»« tette Potto, ñ o o to r
nfined to
This Day In
.Fistianà
contendere fo r tne< title, rougnt
tbajr meraofgble 88-round draw
a t Nsrw <#ls(aaa.’
'• -.|V
Tbs hoys sealed at U S pounds
at tha ringside and fought w ith
Skintight gloves. lBVpr^grilt had
just recently le s t »'..MeWon
to
Oed. " k id ” Lari<ne, t | e
cham­
pion, andtpo» « W ri* ff & ff*,n *
return mafc.hi white ie lg la r had
nrjffatch. .if
sncces»ful ln hl»
w ith Evar-
hardt. The affi
lerafore cru-
position.
s*
a S
! » ^ M IIU*
Mte-BataUioB Amur glri
V to Ma latortot a U ahaa
pm» vmlked aarogato hhn,
i Bar tAnibourlM M<1 sbi U-
OS ip u » a Iittiä, a lr r te e
to M ,t k o ffany ro» Haley. Thoy
dope hio drink and hio money io
token .away /roa» »te», a n i ho Mm»
ohlf io taken io on old cottar where
he b left (0 drown. Howovor, the
ohoak of tkooold water »rings Mat
o f » sako laavu ma alone."
L “I’U never glve a »omaa
»at of minä. Danin yöni
H e had |a a n dreaming of angala g poon,.
and devtla. Of angels vrtth wide. J“ ™ “
odd smiles, and clouds a t unruly
hair, who wouldn’t help him. hut
grinned as the devjls heat his head
with a bludgeon. Then they started
do push him aver the side e t hie
boat Into the aaat W ater was a ll
around him but somehow his arms
wouldn't- move, and he knew that
It was the angels who had soma
kind of a spell over him.
“Damn them, ba wasn't going to
««nra,"
And cursing all angola Who
looked
like
P«Oy,
Hurricane
groaned, and opened his eyes. Hie
, strength returning In the crisis, -he
fought, swam aad struggled to the
steps leading from the cellar.; A t
the top ho found a heavy door
which was closed. W ith bi« last re-
xnalnlng strength. Haley opened
the door and collapsed In the warm
sunlight that earns flooding intb
the mnrky hole. '
A
An hour or ao later a policeman
found hlfh. and taking him to the
hospital, they found that the wound
on his head was merely'cuperfleial.
, and ao the time passed the efforts
ot the drag began to wear away,
No. questions were asked in the hos-
ptfal, and ba volunteered no i^ f or-
«d,. then
the n«xt
•
*2 " • tte
Z*
r /.ir
p nii«-. »■
n n w le v
. .» s ,in,
that bad-
(,«
for Crawl
nt th^
» g «/ ,
atw, gfc
r^s
<R
looking i
w se
B
reached
—
He aw
without i
cane tore
tables til
Polly can
maybe of
rlcane, a
little sett
Harriet
ones did
»he dan<
otoer hw
T M “Sea Sprite“ noao hoioUng
mattao. A seaman la the streets
of Frisco with a scalp wognd was
nothing for anyone to get excited
«-hrtlit.
e ' *- 1
'
During the day the “Sea Sprite"
was prepared for aoa, and a busy
lU fle tag nosed her oat into the
stream. The crowd of loangere
Watchln« the btulness, wondered
vaguely why she was not sailing,
for when she was safely ont la the
stream, the Mg mud-hook splashed
Into the water, and tbs ’’Sea Sprite"
swung lasfly at anchor.
H«rricana came adborh aad went
op to the Ship, yrhare he wanted
to say goodby to GriMMaa, and ask
a question or two. The regular*
grouped around the bar were
amasad at him. The happy-go-lucky
sailor ot a day or two ago was gone,
“W e doubt If our aspiring (oaring in its ptoea a man who
statesmen can-be trusted to smash anaried at the world, aad licked Ma
Ups as if in anticipated revenge.
George Rex and the League w ith H e was eart. oven surly, sad to the
such vigor as the American peo­ questions ot those who thought
ple demand, but pre are confidant CbemMlves Ma friends he graorlad
that “ H erb” and " B ill” wottld de­ oniatolliglhls iBflMes.
liver the goods. Again we say the
Republican
ticket
should
be
'
And today it can be justly said that it is a smart
tevam n er that knows hour to advertise itself.
Ü
W A SHING TO N — H elp! Help!
¿Call out the Minute Mea-'cf the
i 1
By
EDSON R. W A IT E
Shawnee, Oklahoma
n ^ M
Then his the
swallowed hl
scowled at O
that worthy's
»he did not worry about changing,
and merely threw a little ¿oak
over her costume. She oftoa did
thia aaywny for lt gavq her a thriU
to see other girts eyeing her envi­
ously.
As she turned a dork corner,
whan only a few hundreds ad teat
from home, a hand reached out and
she could scream a head was Over
bar . mouth. She bit, Uahad and