Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1927)
and jawWß LAND PA Ä T T i ■ - K M C O w . ÍÍM inanities re v^ M d ^em eA 'aiJ-rato - in» sfctelights ob methods and re- ahlto e ftfc e Jsatle» Department*» atttaset* <0 rM tt something 0 " I J piifrlMlX'exBi>»0 f c * * « « o* tke prpjjMuppce p l persci]« concerned. * < W J«r X inveatl- «»*•» pie FaU-SIpclair tria l ftos- co, Uje government reveal« that a £u rp » man shadowed and 'report ed on' aiUMsiatant attorney goner- al of the United State« While hie comrade« were trying to establish contact w ith Jgrors. I t is charged that one of F a ll’s counsel used an other department official to in- vestigate this assistant attorney general! . < The qbeslon continues to be asked why as atony as IB men work trusted w ith the very deli k>N USlfeU ■*— i C O tB -C x X ä £ H R ^9 • ivsns, are the f men. Psalm □OOR PBDDUM IT f MOU‘0 ÖB1* arc o f thi ■v . <■ P R A Y S R : O t o r i , help as to grove that we »re trustworthy. L S . M O 'M O A « V b V T lM M Service Appreciated During the broadcasting of the Ashland-Med ford game on Armistice day, .the .announcer request-' ed the listeners to let the station know whether the service, which was sponsored by the Medford cham ber of Commerce, was appreciated and if a similar service was desired in case of future football games grid other events. 0 f course, Southern Oregon radio fans appre ciated this service and will be glad to have KMED broadcast future events of general interest There are always many who, either by choice or cirenm- i, Remain at fexfepe, apd The Dally Tidings i t r expresses the sentiment of these listeners it tiMpfa KMffD and the Medford chamber df oqmmgrbe fqr this air service apd. any similar broadcasting in the future. Incidentally, The Daily Tidings feels that the progressive iptereata of our neigbljoriag cjty which m ade KjflBP possible should be c o n g ratu lated , fo r the station has already amply justified its operation in the eyes of the radio fans. In the advertising of Southern Oregon, KMED »■, «°d ijfoi|d remain a useful factor. v B W H T MOTHERB» G t E Y GRAT. » m sv sm s s m m ^ p m ^ ^ W A S H IN G TO N — The plow - np Of the F*U -S laclair tria l turned thp spot-light on more peculiar situations and circumstances than any incident in Washington since thé Teapot Dome Dohefty and Daugherty scandals were first uh- covereA F o r instance, it brought that most astonishiag person, W illiam J. Burns, back into the stocks of notoriety. Only one brief sequence of events i« needed te show that B um s’ career has keen Without cate lob or ja r» shadowing, w ith parallel. Ia IB IS , it wap revealed that apparent disregard of the possi b ility “thiat o n t o r more* might Burns had been involved la the hpll] the beans. It seems obvious picking of a Jury which convicted th a t- i f anybm Was trying to a man named Jones. Io pardoning Jones, President T aft accepted the tamper w ith . the Jury, such a indicate either conclusions of Attorney W icker- method would sheer desperation or indifference sham about Bumps’ activities and referred to them as ’-the most as to whether or not a m istrial barefseed and unfair' use of a ll1 W r M h e f r M . t:. ■ Yonr correspondent talked for the * machiner y ■ ' for drawing » H enry Mason Jury" which he had ever encoun h alf an hour, Day, n o ^ under »25.000 bond as tered. Yet. when H arding became an alleged fixer, before he went président and Daugherty was before the grand Jury. Day is a named attorney general, Buras ta ll, almost swarthy, apparently powerful sgd sartorially immacu was put la an extremely Import late man of the world, not cul ant position of trudt as bead of the Investigation bureau of the tured* hut snare. He seemed a l te rn a te ^ steely or penetrating Department o f Justice. , and boyishly naive. One felt that Now we harp Hums, again a private detective, involved as an onb would rather have Da> as a friend than an enemy. His offic employer of men whom the gov ia l’ tftle is vice-president of the ernment charges yens ased in a plot to Influence the Fail-S inclair Sinclair Exploration Co., an or ganisation of- Sinclair geologists. Jurors. Barns never was a respecter of Day is not a geologist; he is much persons. The attempts o f h i s bureau to "get something op" sea- NptUPg Illustrates better the firm bape on in surance titan statistics. Here are some compiled by Dra. Lawrence 0 . Sykes and William B. Smith: Fifty of the nation’a. leading life insurance com- paniee, weverihg policyholdere to the extent of $7%23ft68p,27?? .place no restriction against par- ticipSUOtt IQ BVIStlOM. Fatalities qn the transcontinental air-mail route, on which planes operate in all kind» of weather, decreased from three deaths in every 300,000 miles of flying in 1W9 to two deaths in each 2,250,000 miles in 1926. Leading accident insurance companies within the p a a tsix days* have included clauses in their contracts coveting losses caused ‘by any hazard of aviation?' The condition is made, in line with the recommendations of aviation authorities, that responsibilities are assumed only when ‘the insured is riding as a passenger in a licensed airplane, operated by a licensed pilot, upon a regular paa- jenger route between established airports.’ Aviation has developed, chiefly under the im petus of private capital, tq 'a point where it now serves millions of people in this country, Dra. Sykes and Smith declare. The mail airways alone, On September 1, of this year, were serving 65,677,209 people. Evidence of the tremendous progress made by aviation is found in the establishment of new air ports. By the end ef this year approximately one thousand airports and intermediate fields will be in e x is te n c e in all parts of thq United States. More than fifty airports have been recently completed while twice that number of cities haye set aside funds or have begun plans tor modern terminals. Dearborn Independent. Delegation House Ways i »ingle Messednetii in income taxes for th o se , — th ey say it costa more for a single perron to live than it does a m arried one. Of course ¡it may be worth more but that is outside the question. * It seems to ns* the queqjiqn ftt issue is whether being single is a luxury or a necessity. L ittle debts become big the tim e comes te pay th*m. How uninteresting these short skirts would Mars peen to Adam! Masóle » excitement stimulates the brain y the body. greatly well aa . I f we had more facts about the hereafter, there Would be fewer creeds. ‘ 1 ' W hen giving reasons for want- ff a divorce, the real reason is ldom mentioned. Many an attorney, like Ralph B. Bennett, general man» ager of the Bingham (N . Y .) city, knows no J a *. Press & ten d er, says; Luxuries are almost prohibitive T h at individualised advertising here, but in Russia you can get a iq on« of .(the moat effective founts divorce fo r twenty cents.*' • of selling. Aa I passed a hardware store The scare of w ar hgve healed recently, a large lithographed bat it looks as though politicians p icture'in the window caught my never w ill forget the sources of eye. I t was a picture of a West revenue discovered. ern cowboy looking down the bexrel of a six-shooter that was Chicago has been fighting for pointed my way. Somehow I home rule in the Illinois legisla Wouldn’t get out of range of that ture. Maybe th a t’s ' why BUI gun. ‘No m atter which way I Thompson la so h ot 'a fte r K ing ' ■ moved the coyboy’a eyes and the George. muscle of the six-shooter follow- ms. I t was a though I had A Chicago woman shot her hue- been picked oat of the crowd as hand because ho refused to eat a target tor the message under a fter she had cooked a big meal. the picture. The womep are getting so they | t was a sample of mighty have a reason for everything, even good advertising. Why? Because shooting a husband. It singled me out and brought lte message directly to w e, Also It For a first rate living proof did the name thlag to every other person who looked at that card. that thjs afflicted world shields at I t brought home forcibly the least one d»rn 'fool outside the * ,0<>k a t W il fact ’ that the beet kind of ad crasy bouse, vertisement is one that seems liam Hále Thompson, mayor of as though it were intended es Chicago. Between Its gunjpen and pecially for each person who Its mayor Chicago is between the devil and the «Jeep sea.— Forest (Continued On Page F ive) Grove News-Times. iep a man, ap auto, and a train contested the -qrffy the other day, no traffic cop was nced- avestifata. The man xmj tpto Ju«t lost t^e Since the floods in the South and in New Eng land those two sections are probablv nearer akin than they have exqr beep aihee |8fu. £k>metuneff it takes misfortunes to bring an understanding. And here we thought Vermont, with that fam- “ doeJf ohooae’i statement, was about through is <r.r x JT ç t ■ A tframa of ' ' » fifi .1/». Me/o- Batbary Coast. Gems of to- ip $ siting, g Beck sayas “ I nevar flg- of mysterious ah ^a makin* a dicker w ith a Jist a fte r he com es bark fatal Sax Francisco payin' taxes.." -the Faris of Umer- TURNING THE PAGES BAÇK leal Cbinaiowa, the home of sinster in trigue and hidden 3Q Years Ago dangersl This is a Eagle Point Notes—jHqn. C. Norm al Notea— Miss O r a e e M r. and Mra. F. C. Smith a rrlv- after Nye passed through the Point a •d la Ashland tost Tuesday eve Smith is again in school gtgrr tbbf ir lll ho|<l few days ago on his return home ning from Broken. Bow, Neb. several months vacation. * from Ashland where he had been They made the lo u t trip to the from to see hie'‘old friends and shake your M erest «oast ovorlad? by automobile and »am« by way of San Francisco, Norm ai Note*— Mies Gertrude H r«*« w ith the ploneera of I I <>. of whore they visited the exposition. D eirleln and Robert W iley the first ebapf«r> They w ill spend the w in ter In Medford and E arl Fraley of Ash Mayflo ed by b »es th a t trac» to t h e r are not well oonslder- ikg as security for a loan. .Ashland sad may locate pernup- land entered school last week. Ruth Elder has said she is not yet ready to settle down to domesticity which her husband wants her to do. Well, that is just exactly what we thought. atord who ¿ought to' expose cor ruption In the In terio r and Jus tice Department should be recall ed. Investigation of ’ Department Mrs. Á. Bentley hue 'gone to Mrs. Farm er and Mias Cline, Drain, Ore,, for a visit. who have been sojourning in Catttorato w ith the D. R. TaU- isaa fam ily, h lT ® returned to i-Mayot 6 . d. Batter Is oon- Eing from an attack of acute ;e«Uoa w ith which he was sn»r s tr^ ka a Thursday s v ^ gbà>of C alifornia to expectation!. Miss Jeesje Rose has rsturaed from the city after finishing teaching a 7-mopth> term at the Bound Lake school dtotrlot, H 1* » ' nth county. C- M c F *rl» M tatt rscsaUr fi. RMppe has purchased D. Mrs. Ey A 8m lth returned last ton Francisco where he wtU P. Provost's 200 acre wood ranch Monday fro m -h e r eastern trlfc his daughter. Mrs. A . J. K « h . Just west of Ashlsad and has ghe was acoompaple4 t p M e f and take la the sights of the started operations upon I t w ith a grandniece. Miss W alters, w *h S A I I One gathers th a t Day Ts com mander-in-chief Sinclair’s for eign forces?-» fixer, as it were, who has mixed w ith cabinet mem bers in various parts of the world ßo? to’ hss represented a ^ l r In th e latterS s bids tor W l t y r - tea<* J» o« F o r »potaaoe. Sln" Pfcür Ulm ln Russia ln J02S til a f» < >ay« ngo, Ç »y,w as |?et- t« rvknown io Europe and Asia than in the Cnted States. He ts devoted to Sinclair. W e agree that Navy day should be more generally observed hut ws w ill object If some enthusias tic *patrjot suggest ''navy beans as the proper dish to celebrate the occasion. — Bandon JNestern W orld. - ' * , r \ • Of coarse "Valencia" becomes very tiresome, but the good old eongfe now being compiled in large books were also nuisances In their time.— Madras Pioneer. Bend w ill not e a t'a ll the ta r- key* raised there this year. Grow ers w ill ship out a 60-ton sarplas. — Athena Press. B y 'D O C R E ID • Ten j^ sra ago today. M i k e O’Dowd reached the realm of recognition as one of the moBt worthy of the numerous claim ants of the middleweight title, by defeating A1 McCoy by a‘ knock out in the sixth round of a sched uled 1 5 -ro u M a ffa ir at New Y ork city. . By virtue of hla victory, O’Dowd was proclaimed the middleweight title holder b y the m ajo rity* of sport writers and fight critics a l though Jimmy Clsbby, Eddie Mc- Goorty, Oeo. Chip, Jack pillon , M ika Gibbons and Young Ahern still laid claim to titu la r honors.