Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, November 03, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    I
DfilbY
GEORGE MADDEN GREEN, Managing Editor
DAILY TIDINGS
OUT OUR WAY
By W illiam s
From the FBG
«uneni
By Rodney Dutcher
NBA Berries W riter
RBDBMPTIPN:— God sent redemption anto hie people: he hath
commanded his covenant forever: holy and reverend Is his name.
Peelm |I l : f l .
„
_
PRAYBR: We thank Thee, Lord, that we are redeemed by the
precious blood of Christ.
Concerning Water Rates
Pre-etection promises should be a sacred trust
—a pledge of honor to be followed as closely as it
ia pOBgihln to adhere to i a ' the best interest of
constituent^.
'
Even though it may mean an increase in water
rates, The Tiding^ commends the action of the
budget committeemen in refusing to sanction the
authorization of issuanoe ,of bonds to meet interest
on water bonds—the refusal to sanction such action
based on a desire to adhere to pre-election promises
as closely as possible.
It was stated that in issuing the first $125,000
worth of bonds due to some error—the blame plac­
ed in no particular quarter—early maturing bonds
were purchased making the peak of taxation come
at a time which is embarassing to public finances.
But a' definite promise was made that the
money for repayment o f those bonds and interest
would not be made through taxation—The Tidings
and the voters were given. to understand the water
department would furnish sufficient revenue to meet
these obligations,
*
A second incnaBB—estimated at 80 per oent—
will not be popular—water ’ UBtrs have scarcely
become accustomed to the increase ih rates which
were made six months agd—the situation is an un­
pleasant one— an error osema to have been made and
promiBes and p itas gone haywire—but, "in refusing
to authorise revenue from taxation at a time when
taxation is high and property value« low, the budget
committee acted in keeping with public trust.
Here a r a a few of the thing« thio movie« won’t,
do in the future, according to an offer made before
a Federal Trade Commission conference by Louie
B. Mayer, representing the picture producers:
They will not disseminate profanity.
They will not portray nudity.
They will not ridicule the clergy.
z
They will not show traffic drugs.
They will not give offense to any nation, race
or creed.
They will not picture seduction.
They will not show arson, the use of firearms
or methods of smuggling.
They will not demonstrate the technique of
murder.
Nor is this all. Such things as theft, robbery,
safe-cracking, and dynamiting of trains, mines and
buildings will he portrayed with special care.
With a program such as'th is few people can
quibble. And it would he, probably, ungracious to
suggest that the pledge carries with it tacit ad­
mission that the ‘won’t«’ of the future have , been
common practice in the past. The important fact is
that the movie people are realizing that had
taste does not pay. They are beginning to clean
house from within. Which is much better than
cleaning house from without.—Dearborn Independ­
ent.
» ¿J.Q w itbai
-ytumw wff W
mw
John F. Fratick, president of
Pedestrians seem , to be increas­
these days by leaps and
paper advertising representatives, bounds.
Frallck and' Bate», Inc., News­ ing
’ Vamping seems to be a matter
of gall and shape.
Flannel pegieoata and people
•Without ear» are becoming scarce.
Clothes line» are moving pic­
tures, but these days'there isn’t
much to aee.
When a man retires from busi­
ness he automatically retires from
thinking.
The world expect« people to be
olrcumapect more then it expects
them to behave themselves.
Hex Heck says: "It may be pos­
sible, hut I never ylt seen any­
body git into serious trouble all
albna."
That a retailer who neglects
the opportanlty offered hint , it»
stock nationally advertised goods
is rather inconsistent.
If he were Just starting in busi­
ness what kind or goods would
he invest his capital in?
, Would it be in merchandise
that la unknown, that has no
standing In, his community, and
that has no names on the pack/
aga or containers, or would it
be in goods that are put out by
reliable manufacturers who have
enough confidence in them to give
them a . name1 and support them
with an advertising qunpaignf
The merchant addressed might
hesitate, but he knows there is
only one answer to his query.
Would hot a custoiper look
with suspicion on a merchant
when she entered his store and
found it stocked with unknown
merchandise instead of with the
products that she had corns to
know and believe in because of
the advertising that was back of
them?
Another point in favor of na­
tionally advertised lines for the
(Continued On Page Five)
The population of Chicago h«s
increased a million in the last
seven years, a Chicago statistic­
ian. figures. We wisj» he would
teip us what the increase might
have been if the machine gun nev­
er had been invented.
Mussolini
declares
against
speeches of all kinds. Mussolini’s
utterances
apparently
a r e
speeches to sad speeches.
Seme of the political candi
dates In Mexico dqn’t know wheth­
er they’re running for chief exe­
cutive or executor.
A Chicago Judge ruled a girl IP
years old past the spanking age.
That’» when tha smackiag age be­
gins, Judge.
One thing they forgot to ask,
of the average citiaen was hla
idea of what the new Ford in g o ­
ing toj^be like.
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
The optimist hopes for the best and enjoys it;
the pessimist fears the worst and usually realizes it.
Now that the telegraph strike
la a thing of the pust, the Pa­
cific Postal repeating office at
Ashland haa gotten down to a
permanent working basis again
and everything la lovely. Newt.
Harrlaan, from San Francisco, Is
manager and handles the first
trick. W. H. Mowat and Thosb
J. Fuaon are working their old,
tricks in the office. Roy Sateh-
well, who worked a trick in the
office here before the strike, was
given a good position in the Se­
attle office aad began work
yesterday. Operator J. Pierptow,
who has been working in Ash­
land temporarily, has been trahe-
The Merley Circle of the Bap-
ferred.
y st church held their monthly
meeting at the home ot Mra. 8.
E. Miller Wednesday , afternoon.
Mrs. B ills and Mra. Hardy as-
atattd Mrs. Miller la the enter-
tttolb r About twenty-five Indies
were present.
# 1
W
Mr. »nd Ifrs. R. O. Thom*»
of Turner, Marion county, arriv­
ed Saturday on a vlalt to thelf
daughters, Misses Ada and f a i l l e
Thoms*, of the Ashland Normal.
Mr. Thomas has been 8. P. agent
at T am er for many years as weQ
aa W. F? agent there, and also
served the people of Turner as
postmaster for nearly a quarter
of a century.
ship a carload of Ashland dried
fruit Best end expects to get It
o u t the . la e u e f the week. It win
consist chiefly of prunes and
peaihes, Mr.’Crowson having se;
cared the product ot Jas. Thera-
ton, W. B. Oolfon, Oeorgd Crew-
son. T h os. Frtohle aad others,
He proposes to send the ear to
Minneapolis, aad « ill co there
In person to look after the de-
livery and the sale ot the fruit,
Only a small percentage of the
electrical energy
that
flow»
-through the filament to a light
bulb, goes to tbs production ot
visible lig h t - The reat paMes
o t aa heat or raye that cnanbt
be aeen hy the eye. In aqma
bulbs, a» m»ck as ninety-four per
cent e f the current to nnuaed
too actual tight, leaving the unit
ohly sty per cent efficient so far
as illumination to concerned.
t
'Suddenly the fog wee pierced by
a flash of light which Anally pick­
ed out -the/deck of the schooner,
end in a few.moments Hurricane
saw that the little damage that had
been done could be repaired la half
a day when the fog lifted.
Limey, who had recovered some­
what, stsrgered forward, cursing
sad looking for the men that threw
the block.
“What tha ’ell" he muttered, and
beat down to look at Branson who
was still out, but showing signs of
coming to, and of being in a fiend­
ish temper when he did ae.
“Hurt muehr' «sorted Hunt-
CAH6.
(“ ’E ll be h’elright In a Mt, but
someone didn't ’art creak "Bn”
answered Limey.
Aa if to prove him correct, Bron­
son staggered to his feet, and
glanced around, wondering what
the schooner had been through.
"Had a collision, Brady’s dead”
laconically explained Haley "a
steamer bit us, they're coming
aboard now, we ain’t hurt much,
but I want to aee them." .
Prom the port aide of the schoon­
er same the creak of oars, and
soon a voice hailed from the side
(I
The hnge tteel prow crashed into the schooner.
enthusiasm as he turned to Polly.
The girl was rising to the occa­
sion. The topsails of the schooner
were drawing, aad Polly made the
Utile schooner reel aad dance so
that Brady conld not sight oa the
man below- Harricaas, forgetful
of the rest of the crew, returns
Brady’s Are. Once, twice, six.
eight times, then his.hammer fell
oa aa empty chamber.
Brady, up above him. sees that
thV Fun Is empty, aad leaning over
the spar laughs derisively as he
begins to clamber dews. Sudden­
ly he stops and throws up his
hands as if to wipe his wyes, the
schooner gave another craay roll
whldh pitched him halfway off the
spar, bat he hung on pointing
wildly. The crew, hidden behind
spars aad hatchway», emerged
from the shadows, careless now of
JEFFRIES vs . SHARKEY
By DOC REID
Twenty-sight years ago today,
Jas. J. JJeffries, heavyweight
chqmpion of the world and con­
queror of the famous Bob Flto-
simmons, successfully defended
his title against Tom Sharkey In
a historic battle of 25 rounds at
Coney Island, N. Y.
Jeffries was awarded th e- ref-
eries decision at the end ot the
fray which was one of the hard­
est fought contests seer
wit­
nessed in Gotham. Sharkey was
one of the most logical contend­
ers for. the heavyweight crown
and proved a moat formidable
oppohent , The match created
world wide interest and drew the
largest gate on record np to that
time. |
.
30 Years Ago
The Commercial Club banquet
to be held next Thursday even­
ing Is faat rounding into shape.
The tickets have heed printed
and may he had by seeing ana of
the committee, consisting of H-
O. Pnrucker, Frank Jordan and
D. D. Norris, or by phoning tke
secretary's office number «». Thia
to going to kb a big time and to
n banquet, not a luncheon. C. E.
Gates. Alex Nibley ax'd JX M.
Thomas - will discuss the sugar
beet proposition and Irrigation
tor the valley.
<
This Day In
Fistiana
' j
BtVOfSIB
Goeded by the pretence of Folly,
a little dancer whom the captein
hat brought /aboard so that the
work oat as imaginary debt to kirn,
the crew of the “Sea Sprite'* muti-
n I m . HprRoene Belep, the tkip-
per, hat a broken arm which he
opined in 4 fight with hi» mate,
Brady, toko i t the leader of the re­
bellion» crew. Polly overhear» the
erew'e plans end warn» the »kipper
< m that h eHr not taken bp tnrprite.
1 Polly tokei the wheel and together
‘ they wait for the crew to meh. The
j schooner is ploughing through a
; dense fop when suddenly out of the
• shadows comet a ruth of men.
Hurrieane't revolver barkt and the
, meh tfopt for the moment. ,
i P s s a ln tha waist of the schooher
beneath the shadow of tha’ mala
¡dps rail. tha crow were squatting
1 fa a whispering group. Haley had
Arad hat three time«, and two med'
'ware oarrying his bvUeta, and the
i third had whined very close to
Brady's ear. They had lost all de-
i sirs Io rush him. hut suddenly
Brad* thought of the plan that
Hurrlaane was dreading.
j "fay. hays, I’re got a plan, ypu
1 keep him ruessln’ while I climb oat
oa the gaff. He won't be able to
'get at me there, and if I don’t
I blow his fool brains out. by name
ain’t Br a d y.*’
■ —
j The «raw hailed the idea with
enthusiasm, and commenced a fur­
ther barrage of belaying pins, un­
der cover of which Brady crept to
;tha main shrouds and ran aloft
Polly caught the rattle of feet
,on the rigging, and Just as her
voice told Hurricane to look aloft
¡a stab of oraftge flame tore through
the fog, and the bullet thudded Into
I the deck near to his feet
1 '" n ,e----- dirty rat" spared Hur­
ricane, then his voice rang with
NOV. Srd, 1BOB.
Another Record
How all London ia agog over a clergyman's
agsertion that he has found a 17-year-old English
flapper who boasts she can drink* 40 cocktails he;
tween breakfast and breakfast, is related in this
morning’s press dispatches.
A remarkable feat, no doubt, even, for a flap­
per, but most remarkable is the fact that London
newspaper columns “ blazon her prowess.” Where
the daily cocktail average for seasoned flappers has
been from 12 to 15, this Mew stimulation will un­
doubtedly increase that to at least 25, and so the
anonymou» flapper will have made her contribution
to society.
How different from the precedent established by
the young girl who wins a tennis cup, a scholarship
or who goes ont to create a home. Happily the
latter are in the majority. Perhaps they get less
of, the ¡world’s recognition, but their, achievements
:ara monumental in themselves, and lasting.
The flapper who drinks 40 cocktails today will
be mighty lucky to be drinking water 40 years hence.
—Klgmath. News.
WASHINGTON — -»-The Fail-
Sinclair Jury, like most Juries, is
an ordinary Jury. It is note­
worthy that in
Washington,
where nearly everyone seems to
be working for the government,
no federal employes are among
th«f twelve. In faot. the defense
was Very careful to ask all pros­
pective Juror« not only whether
they ever had worked for the gov­
ernment, tint whether they had
aay relative« employed by the
government.
The non-goveranient employe
in Washington Is e peculiar indi­
vidual. taking him in the mass.
He has no particular Interest in
either local government or nn>
tlonal government, for he haa nt
part In them. Perhaps that . is
.why few of the Jurors ever paid
much attention to the newspapers
in general or the oil scandal
cases in particular.
The government employee gen­
erally reads hie or her newspaper,
even if it’s only the hometown
newspaper Sent on by the folks.
And in governments, especially in
the Navy and Interior Depart­
ments, there is much interest in
the Fsll-Deheuy-Sinolsir cases
whleh is not to be found among
ordinary citisens of the capital
Miss Bernice Heston and Mrs.
Annelln Bailey are on the Jury
partly because they wanted to be
on it. Jury duty for women ia op­
tional In the District of Columbia,
but these two were anxious to
give it a try- Aa they were being
examined they strained obviously
to make a good impression and
avoid saying anything that might
disqualify them.
."I think it will be a wonder­
ful experience," remarked Ber­
nice after she had been seated,
and Mrs. Bailey a g reed that she,
too, was thrilled.
Photographers had a hard time
getting a picture of the Jury.
First the court end the chief mar­
shal ruled that no such picture
could be taken on the courthouse
grounds.-Then the Jurors advised
that they must not be In each oth­
er’s company between sessions,
which meant that each one pro­
ceeded from the eourthouae and
across the grounds in different di­
rections. Worse still. It reined
for the first two or three > days
after the Jury was picked, making
It Impossible for the camera boys
to round up the Jurors and make
them stand still.
At a noon recess, one Juror—
who la trying a multimillionaire
In a case involving millions— eat-
plained carefully that be dbuldul
afford to wait tor a posed group
picture beeeuse he must get home
for lunch and couldn’t afford to
buy hla meal in a restaurant.
photoplay s to rrin »
i meant, ae through tha tog came
e muffled beat of an engine. A
g-horn towied from d m * by on
« port bow. a«d dimly through
e swirling tog oame the towering
- iq of the how ot a giant steam-
The clean «tmlght cut-
ater 9< the steamer same to the
o n treea ef the schooner, and
ifore the lookouts en the liner
mid see the. Bee, Sprite the huge
eet prow crashed against the bow
! (ha schooner, '
With a superhuman effort, Hur-
oane hsid tern the schooner from
jr course, so that instead of be­
ta broadside on, the liner had
ihok a glancing blow, had token
tray the bowsptft, and wrecked
ie top-masts.,
In spite ot that the Sea Sprite
<• driven onto her beam, ends,
a< tor a moment those aboard
taught that she waa going to\be
righted
strained
tore the
every
s giddy
>Uy that
K
of the Sea Sprits. Bronson threw
them a rope.
“I’m Hardy, mate of the Memphis
City, tor Frisco, tog-bora’s eat ot
order, aa* ot course we hpd to walk
aboard of yon. Hurt much, do you
need any helpT"
Hurricane naked the mate aboard,
and chatting amiably together they
went below. Ordinarily, a collision
of this type would have meant
much hbated discussion, hut in this
ease both parties were quite satis­
fied. To Hurricane, it was a gift
from the Gods and wall worth a
topmast, that had been shaky for.
soma time, and Hardy th r mate
bed been on deck of tke Mqmphls
City at the tlaue of the eoUlslon.
and was perfectly pleased to find
that there was going to belittle or
no damage to pay for. In any case
It was not to talk of damages that
Haley had asked the mats aboard.
He had decided that Polly had
caused enough trouble aboard the
Sea Sprite and (hat she was going
home before she could canes more.
Polly troubled Hurricane. There
were times whan he had to remind
hlmselt that she w«s aboard the
Sea Sprite to earn tha money that
she had ettfiem and there ware
times when he had caught himself
regretting that he had been so
harsh with her, and wondering It
she had really been to blame. Eash
time he crashed tha feeling down
and for a day or so was harsher
and more distant than ever. Hur­
ricane knew hla er»w, knew that
they were a rough crowd, but they
would never have gone to the ex­
tremes that they did, had It not
been tor tha presence of Polly.
That girl moan’t nothing but trou­
ble to him. She had wrecked hla
faith la human nature, and sow she
was answerable for the lives ot
Brady and Olsen. The fact that
ha had brought her aboard oc­
curred to him, but even that was
hemdault.
Ahyway ha was going to ba rid
of her, and if Hurricane Haley ever
Î M K S iï?
XTd be continued.)
-,