Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, October 16, 1926, Page 2, Image 2

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    DfllLiY
¡ y 4 he
S, ^ew s Éditer“ ’
A SH LA N D
D A IL Y
-
o—
■ •"«
; I
THE POULTRY INDUSTRY
A esterdav we received a communication from
the Petaluma, California Chamber of Commerce, in
respouse to a question we had asked them as to what
steps had been taken to make their community the
recognized poultry eenter of the west. Their reply
was characteristic of California.
“ Petaluma is a poultry center because we have
the climate, the soil, the water, and every natural
resource for making it what it iff.” He might have
added they were fortunate in having people with
sufficient vision, to forsee the great possibilities of
this industry, and henoe capitalize upon them.
Petaluma has nothing that Ashland does not
have, we have the soil, better many say, than that
of California, we have the climate, we have the
water, and above all we havo the people, who have
demonstrated in the past that they have vision suffi­
cient to take advantage of the natural opportunities.
We believe that a united interest in this great pro­
ject would bring untold weiytli to this community,
and it ’s only a question of time until this united ac­
tion will start gaining momentum, and- when it does,
Petaluma and other places where poultry now flour­
ishes, will have this community to contend with.
AS HE SEES OREGON
Oregon,-in the opinion of Sam B. Trissel, inter­
nationally known newspaper correspondent and for­
mer member of the American diplomatic corps, is the
premier state of the Union. Trissel, who spent several
hour« iu Ashland today the guest of his friend C. J.
Read, declared that if he should enter Oregon sound
asleep in the middle of the night, he’d know where
he Has. I ve had the good fortune to visit nearly
every part of the world,” he said, “ but I always
look forward to my trips ‘ through Oregon,”
“ There is something in the atmosphere of this state
that jiep« you up, that makes you want to live here.
The people who live in Oregon are the bigrarest
~
—
1
V-
<-
’ • --
BACH'
MEW !
Ö A C W 'I
0 M L ZI M
A ir !
MOSS |ô£>
'« s o o P F b u f c ?
>
h o ."1 h ’ B ull . 6 lid w o o o e \
F A tk rfe D . H E l R o T W E
SA W A 'J&OM WORVftW’
after t A' Q u r r fM whistle
SOME POO7
is s H u r t ? J
AMO HE COULD m V‘
>r R aay
graham bonner *
♦CHCWNS<MCHOHOM6NCHCH!HCH(MOHOHOHhdH(HMHOl
Moth or Polar
,
J
___ _
.G E T LO O SE.
t? $
¡"It does amuse me." said Mother
Polar, “as I watch the people shiver.
■ f l don't care about the people,
anyway.
1 .
"No, I don’t care about them in
the least
’
“But how It doss amuse me and
make me laugh when I see them
shiver with the cold.
, For they seem so weak and silly
to, me 1
" I have the seas« Co love the cold..
Aad the children are the same way.
‘I f I w ire wild, way up North
ndw, I would have some fine plahh.
“I would be thinking o f a time
a little later on when the children
would arrive, yes, when I t would
l»e time for the nice polar bsfcr ba­
bies to come.
“And when they gt>t a little big­
ger, b|ut whMe they were still ba-
M got ’em!” shouted Lydia, “l
get ’em off BUly Norton for a lead
o< pine. Christmas present for you,
daddy, from yours Truly, Lydia!“
She seised the baby’« hands and
, the two did a dance around Amos,
i shouting,
“Christmas
present!
h em s o f h«r Im- Christmas present!’* at the top of
pOverlshsA father, A m os Dudley, at ■ their lungs.
S !
“Well l W e ll!“ exclaimed Amoa.
s a u t f i G S r w ’a t o u ' S
in’t that One! I f Levine comes
t tomorrow wd can ask him to
la te po litics.
dinner, after all. Can’t we, Lizzie?”
CHAPTBR If— L rdle, P q tien es
“Ton L e t we can I" said Lizzie.
aad a oom paalon. K ent Moulton,
p layin g by the lak e, are accosted ’ “And look at this. I was going to
by an old squaw front the nearby keep it for a surprise. I made it
reservation. L ydia glvee bar food.
M arsery, sm all d au gh ter o f D avs by your wife’s recipe.”
She held an open Mason Jar un­
M arshall, th e to w n ’s hanker, joins
them. In th eir play M argery fa lls der Amos’ nose.
Into th e w ater, gh e la palled out,
“Mince meat I" he exclaimed.
unhurt b u t frigh ten ed , aad ta k e s
h o » « h r L ydia and K e n t Her fa ­ “Why, Lizzie, wliere’d you get the
ther ca lls oa Am os to complain, makings?"
b u rn in g L yd ia for th e mishap.
“Oh, a bft here and a bit there
for the last two months. Ain’t It
grind?** offering a smell to each
of the children, who sniffed ec­
statically.
When the baby was safely asleep,
APa 'a n e r an, tuts «nrpuinas Lydia appeared with two stockings
bles, I would take them along with
proved
to
be
one
of
the
high
spots
me In the Icy waters up North.
which she hang on chair backs by
“Ah, and they would enjoy it, of Lydia’s Ute. She had a Joyous the stove In the living room.
24th.
AU
the
morning
she
spent
In
too, the little dears.
T m patting them np to hold the
the woods on the Norton farm with
“They wouldn’t be like alUy chil­ her sled, cutting pine boughs. As candy," she explained to her father,
dren who come to the zoo all fon­ she trudged back through the farm­ suggestively.
He rose obediently and produced
dled np and who shy I
yard. Billy Norton called to h e r:
half a dozen oranges and a bag
“ •Oh, my fingers are so cold.’
“Oh, Lydia 1"
of candy.
- “ "Oh, my toes are so cold.’
ydla stopped her sled against a
“Oh, that’s gorgeous." cried
. “ ‘Oh, my nose Is so cold.’
t aad waited for Billy to cross
Lydia, whose spirits tonight were
“ *Oh, my ears are so cold.’ *
the farmyard. He was a large,
“You’re havtng a fine time abas­ awkward hoy several years older not to be quenched. She brought
ing people, aren’t yea?" asked Mr. than Lydia. ,H e seemed a very in the doll house.
“See, daddy," she said with the
Polar Bear.
homely sort of person to her, yet
’’Well," said Mother Foter, “when she liked his face. H e was as fair pride of the master builder. “I col­
one Is a polar b e a r. and knows as Kent was dark. Kent’s features ored it with walnut Juice. And I
enough to love Ahe loe and the wind were regular and clean-cut. Billy’s found the wall papgr In the attic."
Amos got down on his knees and
and the cold, aero, way-below-zero were rough hewn and Irregular,
weather, one can’t have much use and hlg. hair and lashes were examined the tiny rooms and the
cigar hox^durnlture. He chnckled
for people who shiver when it gets straight and blond.
delightedly.. “I swan,” he said, “If
cold.
W hat Lydia could not at this
“People are ao tame! We’re ao time appreciate was the fact that Patience doesn’t want it yon can
give i t to me r
wild!
Billy’s gray eyes were remarkable
"I'm going to let Lizzie put the
“Oh when w t are ffjee we will In the clarity and steadiness of
go for anyone I f we -get the their gaze, that his square Jaw and candy In the stockings,” mused
chance.
mobile month were foil of fine Lydia, “then I ’ll have that to look
“We’re wild here, too.
promise for his manhood and that forward to. I ’m going to bed right •
“We don’t make friends, but Just even at sixteen the framework of now, so morning will come sooner.”
Alone with the stockings, Into
now we’re pretty cheerful and his great body was mkgnlAeent.
pleasant, for It’s th« fine.w inter
He never had paid any attention which Lizzie put the candy and or-
weather."
.
* to Lydia before and she was bash­ anjgvs, Amos sat long, staring at
the base burner. Something of the
“The fine winter weather," re ­ ful toward the oldbr hoys'.
urgent Joy and beauty of the Eve
peated Mr. Polar Bear.
t»nclied him, for he finally rose and
“The glorious winter weather,
lost made for polar bears,” said W aite Springs teat night aad I ’ve
TWel|, I ’ve gbt two fine children,
Mother Polar, as she waved her got more than I can use."
head, “and the glorious winter
He leaned his gun against the anpihow.* Then he filled up the
weather which makes the foolish fence and began to separate two stove* for the night and went to
people, the tame, mild, quiet .people birds from the bnnch hanging over
shiver!
•
his shoulder.
CHAPTER
“Hew absurd of them to shiver. • Lydia began to breathe quickly, j
,“I wonder i f they know that the The Dudleys could not afford a spe­
Polar Bear has little. If any respect cial Christmas dinner.
t .
for them?”
“I —I don’t know how I could pay
“Well, I think they have an Idea yon. Bill—"
.
-
of It." aald Mr. Polar Bear.
“Who wants pay?" asked BUI, In­
“Good," said Mother Polar. “I am dignantly.
glad to hear that. Now and again
“I dasn’t take anything without
yon wlU find a polar bear who la paying for It," returned Lydia, her
more playful and friendly, but not eyes still
on the ducks.
“r _ I*d—
72
..........................
i. “Bug
thia one, not this one.”
rather have those than a ship.”
(© . 1»M, W ttt« ra Mawaaaper U nion.)
BtUy’s clear gaze wandered from
Lydia's thin little , face to hfer
patched mittens and back again.
“.Won’t your^father let you?" he
asked.
. .
D A IL Y B IB L E PASSAGE
“I won’t let myself," replied the
little girl.
“ For we brought nothing
"O hl” said Billy, his gray eves
into this world, and it la cpr-
tlan we can carry nothing okt."» deepening. "Well, let me have the
evergreens and you go back for
01. Timothy 0 :7 .
seme more. I t ’ll save me getting
ma hers.”
Someone said, pt the time
of Andrew Carnegies death, I With one thrust of her foot Lydia
shoved the fragrant pile of boughs
“Andrew Carnegie left »35,-
Into the snqw. She tied the brace
000,¿00, because he could net.
of duck to the sled and started back
take It with hjm.”
toward the wood, then paused and
looked back at Billy.
•Thank yon a hundred times,"
she called.
" It was a business deal. N o '
thafiks needed," he replied.
Lydia nodded and trudged off.
The boy stood for a moment look­
ing at the Mtfle figure, then he
A LBA N Y,, Oct.
16— (Upited started after her.
"Lydia I'll get that load of pines
News)— Qne person was killed
for you.”
and two others Injured Friday In
She tossed a vivid smile over her
an automobile .accident between shoulder. • “Yon will not. It's a
business deal."
Salem and Jefferson.
And BIII.v turned back reluctant­
Mrs. Emma Cole, 70, of Salem,
ly toward the ba t-n.
suffered a severe gash and prob­
In an hour Lydia was panting up
able fracture of the skull from the steps Into the kitchen. Lizzie's
which she died a few minutes af­ J«> was even more extreme than
ter.
" . Lydia’s. Rhe-thawod the-ducks out
and dressed then», after dinner,
with the two children standing so
close as at times seriously to Im­
pede progress.
“I ’m lucky," said Lydia. “There
Isn’t anybody luckier than I am or
has better things happen to ’em.
Won’t daddy be glad 1’’
’
. Amos »yas glad. plodding sadly
The public rally fo r,th e week home, he was greeted by three
day bible school, which was to glowing faces la the open door as
hare been held at the Methodist seon- as his foot sounded on the
porch. The base burner in the Uv- !
church last night, has been post­ fng-reom was clear and glowing.
poned until a week from tomor­ The Mnlng-toom wasTrSgrnnt with J
row n l^ it, at which time It Is pine. He was act allowed to take
off bis overcoat, but was towed to
expected* that a large gathering the kitchen, where the two birds,
w ill be present.
,
trussed and staffed for the baking, I
(Continued From Yesterday)
3
S T iC K lM
vj.f? WiLLl
m e w assvics.
I IVhaf O/hers Say
P O R T K V IL L B , Pa.,— The
hUlsIde grave prepared for
Joella McCarthy la empty
and the infant la kicking
gently in the hospital where
she waa born two weeks ago.
Joellq was ao sickly at birth
th«t her father bought a cem­
etery lot and had the grave
dug, but the baby recovered.
E L IZ A B E T H , N.
Esposito
When
Andrew
awoke Wednesday he was
the father of four children
and the stepfather of five
more. A few houra later his
total brood had increased to
12, his wife having <lven
birth to triplets.
PA R IS — In marked con­
trast to the flood of books
which come o ft the American
presses In autumn, only 11
ew volumes have been pub-
shed In France during the
past two months. =-«—•— ~—
i
M IL W A U K E E — Tke a 30
Pound Airedale, Is convalesc­
ing after being operated on
at the Columbia hospital by
D r. John L. Yates,
whose
surgical work previously had
been rqa/lned
to humans.
The surgeqa removed a large
tumor ffom the dogs stora-
A N D .?
A clean novel rarely runs Into
a second edition
Modesty does no advertising,
while immodesty does nothing
else.
An ounce of sympathy Is usu­
ally relished more than a pound
of truth.
Why should a woman resort to
logic when she can accomplish
so much more with tears?
Nothing maks us quite so s' re
at a man as the discovery that he
is smarter than we a re .'
Wives who run -the lawn-mow­
er and tend the furnace are not
prominent pharacters in modem
fiction.
Hez Jleck says:
thing I ever knew t
mother-in-law where
was plenty of flAttery
(Grants Pyss Courier)
It was somewhat' of a sur-
prise tp local people to f*nd
that a move had originated
in Medford to pay W
H.
Gore, “ father o l the O. &
C. tax refund b ill“ seine
>120,000 for his services at
Washington ‘ his spring. Not
that they don't think Mr.
-Gore entitled to somettlng
for he certainly has some­
thing more
than thanks
cotrtpg. He has worked for
a long tim e on the mutter.
The common .belief was that
M r. Gore was building po­
litical fences- looking to a
United
States .senator ship
and that the mere mention
of pay in cold cash would be
magnanimously
refused..
But w hat’s a senatorsk!p to
»120,000 in Oregon?
(H arrisburg B ulletin)
.That notorious sneak Or-
mlston of Los Angeles Is
making himself as hard to
catch as the De Autremont
outlaws. I f ever they do
catch him they should poke
him in a barrel— so he could
not bite and scratch— and
spank him with a red-hot
skillet until he can see stars
as big as Mt. Shasta.
TURNING the pages back
10 SjTeàrè Ago
>
*-
-rt-to — K |s sr vr t e e rr
caught im t A* . m a c h in e
'■ ASHLAND
day« ago. The price per plate ran about $50. A
multimillionaire Peruvian nmgnatc gave the ban­
quet to tw enty South Americans in liouor of Ecua*
dor’s minister to France.
Medieval meats, breads, pastes and pastries
were prepared from the famous recipes of Taillevent,
famous cook to old ChMr|g VII of France, who was
known a« somewhat of an epicure and gourmand.
One dainty phase of the feast was the serving
of the wine. According to old custom, the waiters
stuck their thumbs in the wine when serving.
,
The banquet room was covered with sweet-smell­
ing herbs into which the guests threw their gnawed
lames, a«d where the waiters dumped the general
food refuse. There were no forks, and the table was
laid with a votarnimms cloth nerving as napkins as
£ r INTIN¿ ,ÇQ,
OUR WAY
T ID IN G S O U T
Ite to re d a t th« Ashland, Oregon Poafofflce as Sceond G U f l M a il M a tte r
THE REDWOOD HIGHWAY »
Member« of the Redwood Empire Hotel and
Resort Keejiers Association of California, extended
their trip into Grants Pas«, where they held a
business meeting, and mingled with * members of
the Hotel Mens Association of Oregon. Oregon hotel
men attended one of the meetings sponsored by their
'California friends, and they were aghast at the co­
operative spirit expressed at this meeting? They
were surprised at the way the committee members
prepared their reports, and they were elated over
the manifestations of cooperation that was expressed
by the visitors.
• •
The Redwood Highway means something to the
hotel men, but it does not mean any more to them
than it does, every business institution that may be
Imsking in the sunlight of additional busiiiegs
through this highway. There was some concern felt
by Ashland representatives at .this meeting in that
there was a jiossibility that traffic might be diverted
over the Highway way to the detriment of this
section. California supporters attempted to point
out, that tourists could be routed up the highway
and come down the Pacific. Little consolation can
be derived from this however in that a good portion
of the tourists, from the east will find other roaefcf
back to their homes, from their southern destina­
tion. It behooves Ashland and other communities
who are not on the Redwood Highway, to look into
this matter. This meeting should bring a realiza­
tion to the communities that might be effected that
other districts want the tourist traffic and that they
are making an organized effort to secure it.
ASHLAND
The Aohland delegates who at­
tended the Christian Endeavor
state convention in Grants F hss
were: Madge Glover, Aida Heer
Procllla . Caknahan, LHIith
M.
H a ll. Nellie Pepcligÿ, Mario 8.
Cpldweil, Robert ' «vans, Mabel
E. Rusneil and
W. Hayes.
A five-course luncheon
ass
served at 16» Granite atree!
Tuesday evening with Miss Lu-
cHle Barber as hostess.
Flrn-
hdndred and music furnished nr.
hopr or so of entertainment after
the luncheon. Guests were the
Mtsaes» Clayre
Johnson, Nellie
Sdyder. Cherio Stqrkyy qnd Hie
Messrs Ray-McDaniel. sAude Mc-
Ged, Ke«neth McW illiams and
John Me Enders.
A Portland
bootlegger
who
went Jnto tke business on tbo
whblesaie plan cleaned up »1,32*
since rib s first o f. the year, and
was nasTly detected. The maxi­
mum fine Is »500. Broflt | 8 t v
Good business.
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
20 Years Ago
30 Years A go
Ceov Watson, Hie painter, who
has been at work on Medford’s
new school house, has completed
hts contract, and returned home
today.
Percy Rrtfwn, a young Englluh
man. recently from the old couu
try. la vlalting with hla frlenu
Wm. Taverner oi Ashland, am
may locate In thn, section.
Messrs E. D. Driggs. J. r .
Crowson. Isaac Moore and F. U
Calkins of Ashland and Attorney
W. E. Phipps of Medford, »re in
Jacksonville today on business
connected with the rfettlemenl o(
the Moore estate.
DT. Jt* 8. Parson, who aci
panted John 3. Hllshy to St
men to yosterday, will
cont
his Journey to San Francisco
seek a few days rest from
extensive practice.
J^dge T . J. Howell, who hai
been'at Salem since the opening
of the legislative season, return
od home today, having ooncludea
that there ¿Fax no ‘ immediate
prospect o f the house or sanlzlrg
and getting dowh to business.
Marco Polo, the T ID IN G S r«g-
nlar cosrespoedeut- will
now
w rits “ breeies ’ till the iftue helis
bloom. Misses Heve.nsr and Bur­
ton wrote the last two issues and
did tplendldly.
Si
C ,'* ...
V. Carter and Pr jf. B-
Clyd?’ Fgyue.
went up to Salem yes- Chrlemad. with
be lu evidence on the chaperone, are
Lake section cn
Archie aitd
Sidney Carb
out In K la
a fishing trii
i
A’KS 2
Salem Woman Is
Killed In Crash
P u b lic R ally for
School Postponed
aaO fanth nn tba.taUa.
, I
PEAD TIDINGS CLASS Apg