DiNNCR H< ?#•*> t « » r M flü A M # HAMgNT VEEN O’J T TOTHC « t o e s o t r ONCE THE FACT MONTH »7 IT AMO rro e s - BE AN E9SMÜOT HEY CHICK S U ITO R 'S NOT®— The ioltoR- la ff-4 O 't$ e 4 te a t-e < -.a -w e 4 « a •< Intefvtewa with University pro- feasors. The subject question In each ease wan “W hat books would you choose it you were bave always wanted tim e to to be shipwrecked on a desert study them more thoroughly.- I Island w ith okly tin e to seleet twelve volumes from a comfjote library?” ’->• ‘‘Then I would want the ‘Ox­ UNJVWRSITY QP ORRQGN, ford Book- of Verse,’ probably Eugene, ore. Dec. 2— (Special) — the greatest oollectlon of En­ Professor W . P. O. Thacher, glish poetry." lover oif. fiction, teacher of Mo­ Professor Thacher made It tion, w riter of fiction, would not clear thgt many of his selections select a single volume o f mod­ were mado fo r the sole purpose ern fiction if. ho w ort shipwreck­ that ho would have pleaty of ed w ith only time to select tim e to read books which .he twelve volumes from a com­ haa ,’always wanted: to read plete library with which to oc­ thoronlhly. cupy the. Tetoaro a o n e n t f of “ I ’d ' eelect Boswell's *** U te of hla llfo, . < '¡F-V t Jenoaa” M il the reaaofc that I Nor would ba choose a»n- have never read It, bnt I know gether hooka which he haa al­ th a t there Is a wealth of know ­ I should take the ready read. Rather he woald ledge la it. take that « m e to pour over a list works of V o ltaire for the tame - \ ‘ III« ! of books which In his busy Ufa reason." A fter a lit t le cogitation, W o - as a professor of journalism Tn the University of Oregon he has fsaaor Thacher brought bis swiv­ el chair upright w ith a jo lt and never had time to road. a light came Into his eyes out at “I would select hooks, which I could read again and again.” mlet Of . book dreams. "P u t It down at the end that said the protestor, seemingly en­ joying the Imaginative setting of I should* lik e a book of blank being shipwrecked. “There *e pages, which I should want to no work of fiction which I could fill myself,” he said, before he .read more than twice, a fact named the remaining volumes. The books of Rabelais, the which wonld* bar fl^ lo n com­ great humorist, would be next pletely.“ There, was not a moment’s on the list, because they have a rare quality which drew from age to age. The censored book “Ulyasptf' by .Jam«« Joyce wonld be found on M r. Thacber’e shelf. “ UlyseeS” la a work of extreme modernism In which every feel­ ing. precept and thought of a . “The greatest novel ever w rit­ ten— t o Wg to time as big as the Why take chances with harried selections at the la st minute, when you can reserve appropriate gifts here which you S * f YOON& M A N -ru e * . WAITING J To se c / been mcmi d o ' ioo expect * TO PAY Mff BACK WHEN YOU DON’T HAVE A C ENT saved u p - I TELL Y o u YOUWfi M A N — NOW WATT A MMSre POP KNOW IT WAS WR0N6 Of S»6N YOUR NAME TDTROI CHECK« AT TUE CLUB - I know rr amountc ^ ^ - TO SUCH A L A W S lflÄ > sum — t . ml «d* YBS I,i", M W sHD V1 world— - W ar and Peace’ by Tol­ stoi wonld certatniy go into that library. And then the poems g>f W a lt W hitm an, the most original and' natural voice America haa produced. for the Annual three days CSHMer •nee, known throughout Klwanls International as the “ Internation­ al Council.” at the Drake H otel on December 8-4-#. The aeanm- blag« w ill include a ll In tern atio n al officers, trustees, and official« of the twenty-nine Kiwsafs dis­ tricts on the North American ¿contimat. The Council la ,t o he preceded by a regular meeting' of the flnance committee and later- national Board of Trustees oil De cember 2 International officials to at tend the convention are. John H. Moss, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, president; V ictor M. Johnson. Rockford, Illinois, Immedlkte Past President; James P. Neal, CHICAGO, 111., Dec. 2. A W a lla W a ll* . Washington, und gathering of two Hundred and fifty K lw a a lr from the United J. W a lter C. Taylor, Montreal, vice-presidents; and* States and Canada w ill meet hers Canada, Nov; ■ ’NAIT A MINUTE - I' ll P*cy you B ack we ÜC d uc id ed T o TAKE the DECEMBER INSTALLMENT A© A . A ll R iöht - come A cross wnh T he T he m o ney in four .WT h LY INSTALLMENTS C hristmas p resen t , them i yiont o v e you anything "DECEMBER PJ6TALLMENTT f NOM» - / UNTIL JANUARY Mitchell, f'“* B ■ - ■ ■ l/i i V t \V\ W illiam have 1 tng^with International Secretary, (-ARBffY The sessions w ill be opened on Thursday morning, December 8, at 10 o'clock with a general as­ sembly, when-Lewis Mitchell w ill W A 8 H IN Q T o tf Dec. make the opening address. The key-note speech will be made by International President, John H . Moes, and w ill be followed w ith an address “The Ideals and Ob­ vices of worship at Army poets jects of Klwanls’* by George H. d u rln f the fiscal year 1928 than Ross, of Toronto, a past president did during a similar period in of the International organisation. 1924, according to the annual report of Colonel John T. Axton! Oregon Is to have #1,284,105 chief o f Chaplains, submitted federal road fund for 1926, b«' to Secretary of W ar Davis today. “ By the law of average»,’’ ■Ides forent fund of #168,892. C The total federal fund to date Axton taya, "every member of. the m ilitary personnel attended is #7.788,494. sideration f church ou an Army post thirteen times during the year and thia report does not take Into con­ sideration officers and men who regularly attend civilian places of worship near their posts.” The compiled statistics show 18,341 services conducted with a total attendance of 1,884,(^27. which la • 880,664 la excess of t h i attend in 1924. Axton a ttr i­ butes the Increase to the deep personal concern of officers, and particularly Commanding off! cers, have shown In safeguarding the moral and spiritual life of the members of their garrisons H eavy, H e a v y - ’ w ha+ hangs overhead alw ays fisllS on th e > bought after careful con­ ) i Henry Q. Hetnx, A tlanta, Georgia, treasurer. Trustees are: Ralph H. Amerman, Scranton, Pa., Ray­ mond B. Crossman, Omaha. Neb., Charles W . Gold, Greensboro, N. C„ Micheál A. Gorman, Saginaw, Mich., W illiam C. Green, Fargo, N. D., A< Heber W inder, River­ side. Cal., Thomas B. Bsbb, W o r. Chester, Mass., O. Samaoi Cum­ mings Clearwater, F ’a., Lewie Mitchell. Buffalo, N. T ., D r. Bur­ ton D. Myers, Bloomington, In as well as rearranged its printing shop for greater efficiency. because of its usefulness. Lithia Spring! Pharmacy Proscription Drug(#»t L ith ia Spring« Hotel Bull The Tilings printing shop has just added to its ma­ terial a wide choice of new type designs. A gift that'suggests itself Phone 1W' Printing Service a who arc clever at undertake to make tea coay of looped th for the dock’« bill US for Its eye«. n ¿Period Design, Ä jp I t took more diplomacy than a rag man with a “ spring scale” to wring these out of the manufacturer at a price that per­ mits us to hand ’em out like souvenirs at a society banquet. Our personal guarantee for perfect satisfaction goes with every Jar»- Sçùers Deal M ways 9/iovs ih» Saving" Â Grab Bag “ d a Chance on a Diamond Ring Whatever Printing You May Need GAN BE HANDLED SATISFACTORILY,- with everf $5.00 purchase from now unitl Xmas. Call for a ticket QUICKLY AND REASONABLY AT A “Prodigal” Do Returns An extravagant dollar—a dollar that has been wasted—never Returns. But a thrifty dollar d ep M W in a sav­ ings account in the Citixens Bank of Ash­ land will return with interest added. rtBi Printing Shop Ashland, Oregon Phone 39 — The Tidings Representative Will Call . Open a savings account here today. The Citizens Bank Ashland, Ora #1.00 worth In any . GRAB PACKAGE Soma grabs contain #8.40 and # # -•• Worth ring for Diamond Bing will hr held Xmas Eve at 7&0. DON’T rOROXT T H I “See first if it can he bought in Ashland” JTAMJA ä SATURDAY Chas. fl. CXlhite Enders Block, Ashland