Ettnuœra GEORGE MADDEN GREEN, ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS OWÎ I t s i W H ttf A 1 G o w è s t sommé .1 F ella v x x r r •e fU M 0 v € m a n h C i O v w t e r W HERE. TÜBR*& o h T ö APOUUO J ROOM FOR E M ♦ L h lE R t. I SOU p lM H E A D S ) 3 S Ù HA h a / VWrtH T R lR O ÖO1MT O S O U R LEJ&€> T U R N E D under fer feet J J P OONrr BELONC t / / > ^ m c o n j e s t e d O ■ f m By E. O. Harlan About the only modern institution that -Ben Franklin did not start is Father and Son Week. However, Ben had the idea and did some effective WQrk which might be illuminating to many folks • today. - • - 5?r instance, when Ben’s son became old enough to think about chooding his life’s work the father and son went on a tour of the bosuftft firms of A t ettlT place Ben introduced his son and the boy asked about the conditions of ap­ prenticeship, the jonrneyjnan’8 wages, the oppor­ tunities for advancement qnd profit and other facts that appeared important tojtim . 'Then Ben would supplement this information with his acquaintance with «he craft It «paid be interesting tp know how many fathom taM tpetr spas aa Bon did end assist them in getting all the facts about the different professions, businesses and trades so they might intelligently select some work which w wko visited Ute eolerfy to h u home. At the dinner.tehle Ben And the visitor would fall into violent dribptu OU the leoi**»# quesfc- -ibns of the «jl'tiMi stamp tax, the «hip, ping restrictions and'the mhgioua laws. In this manner his son became familiar with both sides of the troublesome questions and acquired a fund of first-hand information. ,;4 l would be inteooatiug to know today how many folks bring the distinguish­ ed people, who visit our city to their homes, as Ben did, so their sens might be informed on the issues of the hqnr. For the observance of Father and Sou Week we can offer lie better suggestion than the re-read- ing of Franklin’s Autobiography by our fathers and sons. His life reads like a romance of old. It la altogether natural that We see the young man going to his little shop in the enthariaat should develop feto evening and placing a lamp in the window so the folks would know he was industrious and that hours Cfeowth meant nothing to him. We can see the group of young men in the back office organising the debat­ ing ebb which was to give to the nation some of its ablest leaden later on. We dan see him drawing up • a budget to guide his expenditures of both time and money. We can see him taking a paragraph from the latest London paper mad rewriting it iw h i, own .o r d . Often improving on Ute origin," We can see lum analysing his habits and setting aside every day of the week' to correct some evil habit such as procrastination, outbursts of temper, selfishness and use of profanity. The purpose of Father and Son W eek is to focus attention to a responsibility which if ably met wilt largely solve the problems which center about the youth of the country. z , An American DeUeacy The approach of the annual Thanksgiving fes­ tival invites consideration of the cranberry. Moat of ua like its cordial and appealing invitation. It no longer finds honor alone in the hlaak New Hug, land terrain. We have learned |o know, appreciate and love it. It no logger is a luxury, but a friend fruit It is not costly. It looks well contrasted with the white meat of the T hanksgiving dumag. In a pie a cranberry still is a cranberry, bdt with a mysterious new flavor. It is said that it serves annually to go into more than a billion pi««. * a .' . It is, also, a wholespme fru it There« ia a fine hittareweet in it) it drink« up M detectable qualities from the dampness of wide-reaching, rolling swam,>s. Perhaps it enfolds something -of the mystsgy aud fragrance of these ooay lands. It is as tart as the repartee of feminine intelligence, as sweet a« the touch of feminine lips; it holds the fire of the rubyti heart and fnrnialies a striking pigmeat for nenonal decorative use by the babv. if rmi uru i. cS. i * 7 **’ *WOkPd dowB w her. h * Mr. « lw like , t h a t T o W BULL < p F ia IN O O tf £ e.?"8 t t o h* ro,tln< there abaci J ns If satisfied at last He ran Ma I ant ini her hair, e hissed bar s aa«*rs S through K i s I watch. rY. where they would both And fee fan a i th.oy h * l'”«Uc I There mfe uo mictakiog fee a»-|»t Um I •RMlherlat bar with « w s e . Dr. Cartllo re-entered thd room I i * * “01 u pilot for the years ago today, BUI Hooper, toanu-Atlantic flyer, Ruth Bide»., heavyweight ehamplon o f Eng­ turning th e pages back ASHLAND r Rpy Good la hobbling around E. T. Staples waa a Jackson­ {wife a badly sprained ankle aui- ville visitor Saturday. tofeed by getting hla foot caught 'fe. fee wheal of a dray. H. Crouch, the essuyer a n d mining engineer, went over to gSSL. E. C. Hollibaugh arrived Jacksonville yesferdiy. I Wednesday from Sisson and I spend two weeks as the guebt Eugene Holmes, of the 8. P. relatives and friends In thia •agías service, recently paid a via* It to hie father W. A. Holmes, who Is now located near Stocks ton In the service of the Sants Fe R. R. Company. For This land, was dethroned by Tom Owaa, who was crowned' ruler of the Satie firmament when Hooper went down to defeat at 1 the end of IS rounds of desper­ ate fighting near London. Aside from the fact tha^ he dislocated hi« shoulder early in fee tight, which waa somewhat of a/ handicap. Hooper’s defeat was attributed chiefly to dlssapa- tton and his- loosd style of liv­ ing The battle lasted (wo hours and a half duriag which time Hooper aad Owen foagh furi­ ously from boll to tied The old theory that fe . the spring a young man’s fancy light-' ly tarns to thoughts of love is up­ set by events. Thera have bean more Cases of adventures arising from the affections since fee cold weather set In, than during the t The 1 » « | oantaaaryoelebratfon rest of the year. *' . J - ’ '• Waa la sbrsadlng; the celebration df-fee oomfeg of thg missionaries to Salam, and fee construction of the first resWance hare, and the James Sayle aad bis mother founding of the “Inatltata” out of started on Tuesday evening for a. which Willamette university ■lx week'« trip to Nebraska City, trow. The wide world will know Nahraska. They ware tlcketod ot Salem as s historic spot In civ­ over the Oregon 8hort Una by C. ilisation's adtanes a« this ides to h « dsflntta form — Salem Mr. G. R. Ovarmire «pant a few F Hasty. days In Ashland last week where hla wife had been visiting her father, the Rev. H. J. Van Foasan .Mr. F. D. Wagner, editor Chauncey M. Depew hae the and family. , first «l«h he ever earned and It the Tidings, spent Wednesday has grows to ba earning Jacksonville. glu to for him fe «« years depos­ The recent heavy stormy have ited In a saving account. Almost mads the country roads nousuaL enough to buy a alngle «fegrids, ly “bad" but travelers by team seat fe fee li» th row at ri h e report that the vary worst stretch Dampsey-Tunasy fight, it pays from* fee north, is found within to ba thrifty.—Buna« Tiateo-Hsr- the city limits on N. Mala street. ■W. , I /