Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 06, 1926, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE D fllü Y TIDINGS EDITORIAL
ESTABLISHED D i 1876
G. J. READ, Managing Editor
ASOLÀND DAILY TID IN G S
THE COUNCIL’S POLICY
In another part of todays paper will be found a
resolution unanimously adopted at last nights council
meeting. This resolution has more significance than
the usual nrusty, moldy Wlidreas’s and Therefore’s
that adorn customary resolutions that a legislative
body adopts.
• .
In this resolution unanimously, and regularly
paased seven men, all of them well known citizens,
all of ilsem enjoying the respect and confidence of
those with whom they conic in daily contact, all of
them hearing a reputation for honesty and integrity
that is al»ove reproach, solemly hind themselves to
do certain things regarding the future of Ashland, .
provided they receive the necessary consent from the
voters. And now lets see just what these men, pub­
licly declare they will do.
1
First—They go on record, as pledging themselves,
to build, a reservoir for the city of Ashland, and to
make needed improvements in the city distribution
system, at tlje lowest^i^ssible cost, and furthermore
that in the event bonds to the amount of $450,000 are
voted to only issue the amount necessary to do the
job right.
Second—They further pledge themselves,, to give
every possible site in Ashland creek, due considera-
-tion, and declare that they as tax payers of this city,
are just as anxious that the reservoir he economi­
cally and projierly located as the refit of the citizenry.
In the preamble to the resolution, it is set forth
that they have acted only upon the advice of compet­
ent engineers, and from the store of data at their
command. In other words, they have not advanced
one single pet theory of their own. They have not
relied upon their own general, knowledge of the situa­
tion to find a solution for the communities needs.
They have secured the best talent available in order
to get the facts* Having these facts they are ready .
to act In so doing they are but fulfilling the obli­
gation they-assumed when they took office*
~
We commend this resolution to the people of
Ashland. It deserves your most careful considera­
tion. We know from our eon tact with these men
that there never was aunore <cencientiohf} instrument
drawn. We know that the inspiration Sifek o ( it wM^
only that the people might know exactly what woultT
he done, to just what length the members as individ­
uals and as servants of the people, would go to serve
their city. It is a sincere statement, and deserves
your most careful consideration. Read it carefully.
ASHLAND SHOULD BE PROUD
“ If the Southern Oregon Normal school does
not make the substantial growth and success that
we have eVery reason to expect, it will not be the
fault of the people of Ashland.” Concluding his gen­
eral remarks while acting as chairman of the Cham­
ber of Commerce Forum Luncheon yesterday, Presi-
m w ic « . v u i p u t u e u i a t ins coinmana, or that any com­
munity con Id expect to have bestowed upon it, by
a man in his position, with the above statement.
His words, were more than the usual speakers
commendatory remarks regarding the city in which
he is in* They marked the realization of a commun­
ities ambition. Ashland people have done their duty,
they have demonstrated once again that when there
is a worthwhile job to be accomplished they can be
depended *npofi to do it* Th^ry have succeeded in
bringing home to the fa c u lty ,^ d Students at the
Normal school, the fact that Asif land wants to co­
operate in advancing in every goeflihle way, this
splendid educational institution. They have made
kmwn the fact in unmistakable terms, that when
the proposition is right, when those projects which
stand for the better things in life, come up for con­
sideration, there is a whole soulcd cooperative move­
ment that spells SUCCESS in capital letters. It has
been demonstrated in the past, President Churchill
gives concrete evidence of it, at present, and we know
that it will be ever so in the future.
I^hen the oyster gets a grain of sand under his
shell he works it into a pearl, and thus shows man­
kind the proper way to dispose of trouble.
•
-----------
-
OUT OUR WAY
The biggest thing in learning is to learn how to
College has started and many ar
toward learning the new fall dances
The gutter is a fine place to put plays written
by those whose minds are in the gutter.
T he young follow who studies aviation is the
who is bound to rise to the occasion.
PERKINS, News Editor
By W illiams
7 VO RE. VUAOWGTRAR Y i
MlSTüKJ X K iN S H O W \
VOH SOMETÓMBSI&NES '
WORRIED ABOUT
T u n SÓPPOAT M V ,
T H ie CURLY GrtJVi
ARGrlMlNT« A H O G 'S
A S I X ‘SHOOTER
gctt
FO H LAlGrS AM '
M A K E S ALL MEM
A A W S IfttC H O NIV TtNO
E Q U A L . -T H IS
AUTOMATIC O F J BOT— VJCA-L, M lS T u K
,
, M IM E KOLOS 1 f O K E E P 1ÍAEY FOH
L L A lG S PENNED U P
L
k E -IG H T SHOTS’^
B ^ O o T C H E R E } Æ
r B ah ; were
PUBUSH e I) BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO
UOOOOCH9H(HOHMHCH9HOH>fiHOHMHQHCHMHQi
Kiddies’ Evening
By MARY QRAHAM BONNER
. The F irtt Snow Man
"You niny all be as pleased as
you like with this thing or with'
,
__ _ _ _ _ _
M id the
-lrst Snow Man,
rtc «
“but I am ns de-
lighted
fetaR
creature could
C Ç PYR 1O M T
The
First Snow “ la 8Otuera ana
u
discoverers, and
Man.
a(|
"You see, I am outside a school
window, und you huve no Idea the
education thut comes right out of
the window to me. ,
“I t is considered very Wealthy
these days, and It is very healthy
to have windows open, so they
open the school window a bit and
the education comes right out to
me,
“I don’t have to go to school and
melt with the effect inside learning
would have on me.
“I stay here and keep cool and
learn just the came.
“You see, there are those discov­
erers who go off and see countries
for the first time, or they discover
wonders no one has discovered be­
fore.
“Then there are pioneers who are
the first to break through
IT- a
~ DeW
country and brave the hk'rd condi­
tions to push ahead.
“Abd there ure the early settlers
who come forth with their wives
and their families and settle them­
selves In a new country and de­
velop it and make it produce.
“Now, that is the way frfeel. Not
Jackson County News
perhaps as much as the really real
,,T h e restoration of the Routh- pioneers and settlets and discover­
.tteh Oregon Norm al school a t ers felti but in a slighter and lesser
Ashland is justified.
W ith an
“I am the first snow ma« of the
attendance of more than 280 atu- season. There hds not been enough
*«nts .the opening day of the first snow 'to make many snow men-
•They have lq»d tq watch out tor
regular school year every claim me as It .jias-really not been very
made by the sponsors and s,ip- cold. ‘
"Hut they have done their best
porters o f the b ill before the last
for me, and here I ant, ready to
session of the
legislature
has withstand a few warm days for
been proved. The result attain­ the sake of being the first snow
ed at the opening day more than man.
justifies thè claim of the most en­ i “I let them try to freeze mp nt
night, for I am the first snow man,
thusiastic supporters and is * a and I want to be strong and stand
m atter of pride to all Southern here by the school house and be­
come wise.
Oregon.,
"I have an old pall on my head.
The splendid ' enrollment the
I t Is not a wonderful pall, but it
opening day also emphasizes bet-q gives me a fine appeurance.
“I look like something out of the
ter than any pther one thing the
ordinary,
and the way a first snow
need for the reestablishment of a
•man should look.
normal school In Southern Or<j-
• “Later, when thers Is lots of snow,
gon. I t means the relieving of there are lots of snow men and
congested
conditions
at Mon­ snow forts and snow houses, and
mouth, heretofore the only nor­ there are all sorts of things made
out of snow.
mal training school In the stats.
“But you have a certain amount
It means more efficient work on of Importance when you are the
the part of both faculty mem­ first snow man.”
“Good,” said King Snow, ,“I am
bers and students. I t means that
glad to be able to give you the
honor—with the
Aimes’s hair showed traces of aid of the chil-
__
a perfect wave when she return­ d r e n in t h e
ed from her “ kidnaping”
trip. school.”
So the first
ry g -x -J n r y
Perhaps it was her harrow ing ex­ Snow Man stood
\ A TWrev
periences while a captive that o u t s i d e
the
\
m V \ \
put the curl there.— Grants Pas3 school, with a
pail upon his
Courier.
head,
feeling —Ay-yr«*“
very fine
and 1 QJPRHe/ L /
v e r y superior,
y I \7I
and quite Intel-
i J tet f | \
gAnd ns the
/
’ Y - jf t \
What Others Say |
AND
hundreds of thousands of Paris­
ians w ho inhabit apartment hous­
es,>ef one whole quarter of PaTio.
The species is small, Viclou*
and hard to catch. He la' so Uc- '
Wbdtfltyftii haY e’ all you need,
popular, in fact, that authorities
you have* enough.
who have investigated say that
he originated in America.
A small brain can store up
more jealousy and hate than a big
V IE N N A — Death reaps
its o ne..'
greatest harvest among human
beings at about one o’clock in
the morning, the municipal sta­
tistical bureau has found. O th­
er; periods during the day when
many deaths occur are the small
hobra of morning and hours of
late afterneon.
Noon and mid­
night show the lowest toll.
To successfully
conceal
the
truth, you must have an extensive
vocabulary.
The law of supply and demand
is the only problem prohibition
has to solve.
We think times are worse than
they used to be, when the fact Is
N E W Y O R K — " I ’m the cham­ they are only different.
pion woman boxer of the world,”
said Jeanna Lam arr, when ar­
Marriage founded upon R. G.
raigned in court for keeping no
Dun statistics and mathematics
muale on her terrier. “ I knock­
has bright prospects in it for the
ed out 25 women and five men
lawyers.
in Europe and came here to chal­
lenge all comers, but no one w ill
fight
me.”
Judge
Simpson
Hez
Heck says:
“ N othin’
promptly congratulated the a r­ makes a man spunk up quicker
resting patrolman on his bravery than g ittln ’ too much
advice
and suspended sentence.
from his w ife’s fam ily.”
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
ASHLAND
ASHUAND
10 Years Ag<
20 Years Ag<
A. H. Jones and son of the
Mrs. Don W hitney and little
son visited their husband and fa­ Ashland Iron Works has recently
ther in Hornbrook last week.
been on a hunting expedition in
the E lk Creek country.
Mrs. L. O. VanWegen was
fittest o f her sister, Mrs. Gall,
a couple of days last week.
_ _ __ __
Strange, but true—the fellow who owes you moot
bates yon worst.
fW. a
and FEATURE PAG
Mise Sarah Copeland returned
from a short visit w ith Dunsmuir
friends last Friday.
M r. and Mrs. Homer
Barron
have moved from their town resi­
Clarence Lane and wife an
dence to their rn n A a few miles
spending a few days visiting rela
south of Ashland and w ill “ rnst-
tlves nt H ilt, California.
Icate" .for the summer. The
children w ill coma to town for
school every day.
J. V. W right and fam ily, ac­
companied by Rev. Vallandlgham
and wife, enjoyed an anto trip
to Ray dam last Wednesday. Fish­
ing and a picnic were pleasant
features of the day.
days d a s h e d
|
i
W J
along, before the
3 ‘
real, real winter
ASHLAND
came, little Ma-
halia, who al- 1 ^ ,______ _ _ _ _
ways had ao The Early Set-
much
to
do,
..
und e n j o y e d
er* ’ I
everything that she did so much,
sighed and said:
, “Oh dear, the days used to walk
along. But now they Just run away
from me. Here It Is almost winter,
and Just the other day It was sum­
mer, It seemed.”
And the first Snow Man langhed
to himself to think of the days
really running away.
He knew better thftn that, even
M r. and Mrs. B utler W alker
though he was only a snow man
who have been in the valley visit­ and received his education through
ing relatives and purchasing sup­ the open window.
«5». l'5H. Western Knwi-paper Union.)
plies returned to their home at
Bly, K lam ath county, Saturday.
A bachelor is a man who Is so
30 Years Agi
raco^iuci
„ / V T ? w c s K f iT T n r jjs m S S n
f rl £_, ..hw owu a*®’ w^° carried a
Fifteen years ago half a mile In ­ t0« J ml oon’ 8n<1 “ popcorn ball.
land from the lake was an empty, "* HelJe, Lydia!” she cried. " It
a perfectly,
lovely
block that once had been a farm was
"Was
It?” cried
i/d lu circus!”
. " th an
pasture. Three fine old oaks sfSdd
Indifferent
voice
that
something
In
with tops together In the centbr ,ef
the block. The grass was still Ann he» Mue eyes denied. "Well, I had
and green and thick In the ancient .to take care of Uttle Patience I”
“H “1?
8hrtIla<1 tha little girl,
pasture exempt for narrow trails
old Lizzie would have done that
worn by children's feet. To the
Initiated each trail told Its own I think your father's mean not to
story. There was a hollow square give you the money.”
Lydia's red cheeks M M atttl ma
that formed the baseball dlnmoud.
There was a straight, short cut that
led to the U ttle cress-grown spring
There webe the parallel lines for
“Come-Come Pull Away,” and there
were numerous bald spots, the cen­
ter of little radiating trails where.
In the fall, each group of children
had Its cotgalicated roasting oven
In whjch potatoes and “weenies”
•were cooked.
On one August afternoon the pas­
ture seemed deserted. I t was cir­
cus day and the children of the
surrounding blocks had all by one
inetuod or another won admission
to the big tent on the hill east of
the town.
Yet not quite all the children.
For under one of the oak trees
was a baby carriage in which a
little girl of two lay fast asleep.
And far above her, perched lightly
but firmly in a swaying fork of the j
oak, was a long-legged girl of ,
twelve. She sat where she coul<j j
peer easily down on her small
sleeping sister, yet high enough to
be completely hidden from casual
view. She was a thin youngster,
. with short curling hair of
yellow. The curly hair did not hide
the fine square head, a noble head
for so small a girl, set well on the
little square shoulders. Her wyes
were blue and Mack lashed, her
nose nondescript, her mouth large,
her chin square and her little jaw
line long und pronounced.
She
wore a soiled sailor suit of blue
galatea. Caught In the crotch of
two opposite branches was a doll
almost as large as the sleeping
child below. It was a queer, old-
fashioned doll, with a huge china
head that displayed brilliant black
hair and eyes as blue as those of;
her little mistress. The doll wore!
a clumsily made sailor suit of blue ‘
calico, whlchz evidently had been
washed recently, hut not Ironed, i
It Is necessary to meet the doll I red balloon, suddenly kissed little
properly, for she was an intimate1 Patience, who wus the pet of all
and Important member of the lit-; the children In the neighborhood,
tie girl's family. H er name was' and put the string of her balloon
Florence Donibey.
into the dimpled hand. "I had the
A buttered red book lay In Flor- circus—you con have the balloon”
qnce Dombey’s lap. It was called, she said.
."W ith Clive In India.”
It was
LJ-dla Jerked tile string away
written by G. A. Henty and told of and held it out to the owner.
the marvelous and hairbreadth ad­
"We’re no clieerlty charities,
ventures of an ■ English lad in an Margery," she said. “I'll get Pa­
Indian campaign.
tience a balloon.”
Florence
Doniltey’s attention, . “You’re an awful liar and a cruel
however, was not on the book. It beast Lydia!” cried Margery. She
was riveted, hectically, on her mis­ snatched the string and tied it
tress, who, with her tongue caught about the baby’s wrist. "You know
between her lips, was deftly whit­ you can’t buy fier one and you
tling a cigar-box cover Into doll know she’ll cry herself sick for one,
furniture, of a scale ao tlny,.tkat now she’s seen wine, and I guess
even had Florence Dombey had'a I love her as much os yoq do.”
doll of her own, It could not bgve
Lydia looked from the cherub in
hoped to use the furniture.
the perambulator, crowing ecstatic­
The little furniture maker sud­ ally over the red bubble that tugged
denly closed the knife sharply. at her wrist, to the defiant Mar
"Darn lt l I ’ve cut myself again,” gery.
she said. She dropped the knife -
her hav® R«'Margery,”
she said reluctantly. “I ’ll make you
a doll’s, high chair.”
J
“All right," said Margery, non­
chalantly. "Face tag! So long!”
Lydia ran the perambulator alone
the board walk.
The street was
macadamized and bordered with
thrifty maple trees. Back of the
maple trees were frame houses, of
cheap and stupid construction. Be­
fore one of these Lydia paused. It
was a dingy brown honse, of the
type known aa “story and a h a lf”
Lydia opened the gate in the
Picket fence and tugged the peram­
bulator through and up to the
porch.
Catch
“There, bahy mine, shall Lydia
take you In for your supper?"
n s l' ,np?er’" cooed ,itl,a Patience,
lifting her arms.
Lydia lifted her to the porch with
selfish he even wants to keep all
The following students of the his troubles to himself.
normal were elected to repre­
sent their olass by having the
DAILY BIBLE PASSAGE
highest standing: A n n a Nelson,
Lincoln
Savage, Rosa Dodge,
“Every man according as he
Patla Klnm ,
Theresa
Bryant,- purposoth in hla hearth, so let
M r. and Mrs. Jacob Thomp­ Susie Homes, Gertie
gntton,
blip give: not grudgingly, or
son, who have been spending a W alker Reed, Mabel Reid, Effie
of necem lty: fbr God loveth a
season at their cottage a t the Arroltage. Th$ following w e rJ thc<rful giver.” II CorinthlAns
seashore sit Newport, returned elected outside by their standing'
Giving like serving should
home ’Frid ay night.
Their son, to he on the program: Orator, i
G. 8. Butler, who has been at John Harvey: poet, Minnie Mc-| be done unselfishly and for
the pure love of It.
Go tho
Newport for a fortnight, returned Closky; prophet, Clarence H. Cle­ lim it and smile.
with them.
ments.
(Continued Tomorrow^