Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1926)
* T -* THE 'DfllüY TIDINGS ESTABLISHED IN 1876 A SH LAN D D A IL Y 0. J. BEAD, Managing Editor T ID IN G S OUT OUR WAY Z -rU tA ta \ ' a Ashland is now in the grip of an epidemic of dog jioisening. Whether it be malicious or acci dental is not known, but this fact, is known that during the last few weeks at least seven dogs have paid the penalty for eating that which some one has either carlessly or purposely scattered around. , Now there may be times when a* dog will wear out its welcome, when through its ignorance of con vention will conubit crimes that would for the mo ment seem to justify the direst punishment pos sible #to bestow upon his poor and unsuspecting self. 1 here are better ways, when such, time comes, to correct this condition, than to slyly, like a thief in the night,-set out a little fish or meat, well satur ated witli poison. There are the duly constituted authorities, who are willing and anxious to correct such a condition. Then there is the owner of the dog, that may be appealed to. Either remedy should work and if one or the other should fail, we can think of nothing that a dog could do, unless of course he hit a defenseless child or attacked a non trespasaor, that Would justify such an overt act, as dilihertly placing a bit of poison out and then gleefully setting back and watching for the lirst dog that came along to grab it. W’ q wouldn’t want to go on a hunting or canape ing trip with a person who would resort to such tactics. We would be a little bit afraid that when our back was turned they might take a pot shot at us, just te~ aee ua suffer if -their aim was good. We believe that if it were possible to secure an X-ray photograph of the heart of any person guilty of maliciously poisening an unoffending dog, the photograph would just show one black splotch, for we have been told by X-ray men, that stone or metal always takes that appearance in a photo- The Grandstand emt,A OWE X HEA«O AT Looeel LETS «CK W0*N-— OH A Basketball jjeen iiieu are luigging a rare ojijwiriuntly to geenro some excellent exercise, aa well as amusement, bv not organizing a local faawketball league couipriged of teams from tbe rariooa businew house«. In talking thia matter over with some of the local sports enthusiasts H was found that there are numerous ex-high school players a«sociated with business institutions who it was thought would bo willing to take an active interest in getting the matter started. Then there is the High school and Normal school faculty, wbene men have had more or less experience in college basketball. Taken as By W illiams /R A flM fS S 8 \j H A S A /I V i f "TAv<eí» ] A < ife u . « M Ì L lK l 1 F W Î H O M -H O H , asa ee du a [H A A H / N O . «AM ES. \ ( O i l W HlStifcREo' < W A R -H A H , r b ’ s PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING 0 0 . «asse «** o**v i»ppri ra LYDIA of the Pines 10» to know why M t I Just try ma, U « « i Try »or* “M Uke to try yog, deer, M - Wait, Kent, w ait! L A F F -fT MORfc H E lfe k L S A k í IH LOW úHcR I 5 H ü f G rtrr / S e lb L O A F ) / a Let me h ire KV playtime, Kant Pre oarer had a real ooe, yon ktow, tai Bow. Let F 0 « *U B -e u T < 4 * M O R & -fe S M U lH v f -T h e m C H ff fA Q Q U A V 0 0 A y /J H IN A r p R lO M C < ftC R tP M ! 7 vw evx « T :ed bis head dlseootent- ilnk It would be better llngnrtagly, then ently turned L j& 7 toIf*«adtoo5hkJK reared the college bore Am Joining happily enough lg the week betore the «ret college I t __ ’ V // t , What Others Say | (Eugene Register) A new Jersey eoandlman told a teacher that the school staff would teach the child ren more i f the members dis carded rolled hose arid short skirts. W ell, some radical measure I)» necessary to Im prove teaching methods. (Gold HUI News) Now that the election I over what are you going t gat the wife for Christmas? the initiative, has on its membership rolls some of the most substantial men in the community. They have demonstrated by their action in assessing themselves five dollars apiece and agreeing to donate one days time, that they are willing to do as much or more than will be asked of other individ uals. We believe when such -an organization, as the Litliians, express the whole hearted desire to accomplish soitaething for which the majority of the community will benefit, then any personal feel ings should be buried and we should get in and cooperate with them, to the fullest extent It ean be Mid to the everlasting credit of the hardware men, that they have contributed all of the nails necessary for the project and. the school board have said they would bea ra portion of the expense. Now if the other organizations respond, the financial pact of it will lie over, and whether they do or not "e will be willing to bet several times the amount of our contribution to the affair against an outlawed hickey that those who are fortunate enough to be able to attend the Thangs- giving day game will be sitting in that new grand stand, for the Litliians have said that the grand stand would be built, anil that it would be com pleted by that time. W. H. PERKINS, Neva Editor (Grants Paw Courier) Mussolini holds seven port folios out of IS lu the Ita l ian cabinet. Thia gives the dictator a good majority when the roll Is called. And I t ’s pretty safe to say that the other six won’t oppose the "serea-in-one" govern ment that the fascist leader has established. Italy may have a king, but the world doesn’t know IL * AND Two Mexican Indians ran £2 miles In » hours and 37 minutas. The polios blame a book agent. Kindness Is wasted when rub bed In. The best time to do a thing is before the law makes you. A French scientist sriys m an’s supremacy may give Way before the lowly Insect There are times when you can’t tell them apart. I f you don’t do • something, sooner or later you w ill do some body. A human tooth a m illion years old has been found in Montana. But then It may hare bean only a plano key. ... Today’s object- lesson: the ambition of cider which la al ways w illing to work. you will find ten who are merely clever. W e are glad to reveal that, owing to the advent of the bob, the old gray hfclr This much Is sure: The num ain ’t what It lined to be. ber of divorces can never exceed For every woman who is smart, the number of marriages. Who remembers when the (B aker Democrat)' Japanese foreign policy is said to be “turning toward Aala.” There’s nothing in the Monroe doctrine against Asia for Asiatics. The man or woman without something useful to do will get Into a mesa of'some sort without fall. (Central Oregon Prasa) A fter we read the books w® shouldn’t read, there’s no time left for the onee we should read. Hez Heck says: “It you try to kiss a woman, she may be. shock ed. but If you don’t try she will be disappointed.** citizens used to hol'd ratifica tion meetings for elected congressmen! , Headlines you never see: “ IT WAS A L L M Y F A U L T ,” B A Y S W O M A N D R IV E R A F T E R CRASH. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ASHLAND ASHLAND 10 Years Ago 30 Yeare Ago Dr. F. A. H all has engaged Dr. Harry Pellett has a fine new C. E- Donnelly, the efficient A. C. Caldwell to nselat him la automobile touring and Is doing a manager of the Western Uniqn ot- his office during the next month. livery business with it In Ashland. floe In Ashland, toft for San Fran cisco yesterday, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Lamhkta re Mra, Donnelly, to spend a month In tha Bay e lty 'a n d Vicinity, his turned last Wednesday from their Pierre Provoet, who was severe ranch near Montague and report ly kicked by the family horse re- old home. This la^Mr. Donnelly’s the outlook bright for a Mae oentiy and suffered a broken col fire« vacation Io throe years and wheat crop this year. lar base, has so far recovered ho has certainly agreed IL O. G. from his painful In J tries as to be Eubank«, night operator, w ill be Mrs, Elate CharvbaMa aad Mra. out again and receive the con In charge of the office and Chas.* I W illiam Patterson left an Satur gratulations of his frleads ovw- A. H arris w ill do alght duty. day for Portland, wkara the la tte r bis escape from more serious In w ill attehd the Grand Chapter of juries In the accident. the Eaetore Star as a delegate Mr. 8. O. Shattuck Who has from tha Alpha Chapter of Ash mored to Ashland from Port K la land. Mra. Patterson w ill visit Loator Barclay, a sou of Mrs. math w ith his fam ily, to take ad- her daughter« Margaret aad Mrs. C. B. Austin of this city, who left vaatago of school taeulties, was Hohtey. t Ashland as a Jad ten ysars ago a ptegsaat « tite r at the Tidings of and who has spent the Intervening fice yoteerduy. M r. Shattuck Miss Agnes Storey returned to years In vartoos sections af the purchased Bfoperty 1a the western her homo In Ashland Friday after United 8tates. dropped io from the pate of «own some months ago. several day»’ visit With Mtas Em south. Friday, to pay a visit to aatl axpOCta to make hie home ma Uetaad aad Mrs. Kttehen ln his mother.. Ho to now located here white retaining stock later- Roaeburg: . In San Francisco. rste near Fort Klamath. het ooe t y appeared la her stnt- ment. And thia, of coarse, waa with reference to clothes! that per- ennlal haunting problem of Lydia’s, , which only a woman who has been . motherless and poverty-stricken can i rally appreciate The latter part , of February, the great college so cial erent of the year was to come, ; the Junior prom. Ig d te M t sure that either Kent or Billy would ask her to <o and for thia the organdie would not do. And tor this rhe must have a party coat Lydia knew that tf aha took the matter up with Amos be would go out and borrow money for her. She shuddered at the thonght of this. Then she heard of the “College Money-Making Bnreaa." She dis covered that there were girls who were earning their way through col lege and that the bureau was one of the quiet ways used by the uni Kent had « n o s e d that ha would versity to help them. hare some trouble in fining Lydia's There was the mending depart card for har, but to his surprise, he ment for example. Here were found that In her timid way, Lydia brought every week by the well-to- “ Thafg such a nice shade for a was something of a personage do stidm ts piles of mending of pig, especially tor a pig to hcM among the older college boys and every variety from heeUrea socks the younger professors. and lev«. » " khdstpeklnga, to threadbare under It was altogether an Intoxicating wear and frayed coin and cotlara. I “We here pigs In the pig pen, but Sente, they awfully dirtr evening and at Its end Lydto paQed There were made into packages “And their mother never seems °? her late wisteria overcoat and and farmed oat to the money-need clambered into Raufs little h u to ing girls. to cere. , J5" * / *? January, Lydia eneaked “Now, I wouldn’t let my pig gte I dirty. That Is, I f yon hmppen to into the little room and out again give me a pig. with a neat bat heavy handle. She got home with It and smuggled It “I'd keep my pig so nice and Into her room without old Lizzie’s dean. If y pig would go to bed seeing I t Socks wristbands and with ma at night aad Steep hetwetn torn lace—there was fifty cents’ nice, clean sheets. worth of mending la the package! ! “Aad I'd never let my pig go Lydia calculated that If ska did a down cellar or get in the coal bln. « * < * • • • • ?W>t for thirty nights, " I wouldn’t let my pig go eat la she would have enough money to tbe-woodahed. Boaetimes.1 go eat boy tbe making of a party dress there, but I can week my hendtand aad cloak. my pig couldn’t ba washed so easily. .The necessity for secrecy was “I'd like some writing paper, what made the task arduous. Lydia Santa. I f yon can’t .give me the finished her studying os hurriedly pig and tbe writing paper, doo’t as possible each sight and wont off bother about tbe writing paper. to oar room. I t was bitter cold In “That would only be to answer Instated Lydia- the room when the' door was dosed, and thank for presents. I can ore B>y «wight, and bat A e hung a dust dofh ever the my pad Jute as well. keyhole a shawl orer the window **I’d comb Ilk® for boom hard c u d v m A a I I new my hair and a book shade, wrapped herself in a qaUt S X " » , * ¿ 5 and unwrapped the bundle. By two and a chocolate Sente Ctoua. Of o clock she had finished and, shlv- course, it wouldn’t look so very ropo retrod and see her!“ •Why afcealdnt I come to see wlth ,chte« *re®, crept muck tihe ye« or F4 not w a it to yre. Lydto r attend K swl with a IO l O eat It op. , new note la his voice. Within a weak she was going “But, Banta, Td no lore to hare about her dally work with hollow a little pink pig. I f Its eyas were pink It would be nice, pinker eyes hot Margery’s always been the «yea aad without the usual glow main attraction with yon.” » her cheeks bat she hung su with than Its body, is what 1 moan. •Haa M el Been» to aw I re- determination worthy of a better "171 talk to y«fa again, Santa, but that Is all for tonight Good night reU a time when I couldn’t » d u re cauaa. dear Santa Clans, My love to the the sight of her. And when you - The third week she took cold, an were the beet pel I had. Thar« almost unheard-of proceeding tor reindeer.“ « to Lydia, a real pal. Lydia, and In retie of aQ etd Lte- Every night until Christmas Maggie called up the chimney to A fellow can flirt round with the teee decocttooa she coaid not Santa Clans, and every time she rest of 'em, but you’re the one to throw It off. At the end of the toW forward to spending a lifetime fourth week she carried back her spoke of the pink pig. with I Tomorrows 8unday. Let's late bundle, and with fifteen dol She knew Just what she wanted, lars la her pocketbook, abe hoarded for she had seen the most lovable the street car for homa. She waa pink pigs, and if she owned one she tremblfag with fhtigue aad frver. i would tore it mere than any other When she reached the cottage, toy. she stretched out » the eeugh he- And when Christmas came and Mad tkw-eid bare haroer with Mr all the presents were open Maggie hard cough and the toreteeh taste did not find her plfik pig. flhe had In her mouth. She was half aeleep. beautiful presents, but there was h>1f Jn a stupor when Billy came la. no pink pig. end though she knew t y d r M “ *•«• abe should not feel sad when she “Sreha,*’ whispered Lydia, “baah- had so much elee, she dM feel Jute e *»• «{ *>cks. aren’t there, B llly r little sad. Billy picked up her hand and felt Theo suddenly she » le d a pink her pulse, pulled the Shrwt up orer pig right on the top o f the Christ- i her chest, put his cheek dowa mas tree. Ah, Santa had not tor- : agtente her torehead tor a moment felt sure, as ha had put It there on tbe top of the tree for her to dis cover and to enjoy more than she L I b M teas getting sapp would hare I f she bad seen It Bret The next thing that I of all. she waa la her own bed I t J»is a perfect pink pig. Qalte Fulton -was taking the cl the »weeteg«- pig that ever wag motneter from her moutl very much ’ confused. SZTZS " I am rractited w ith Christ: aevortheleoB I live; yfet not I, bwt Christ Itveth la me: aad the life which I bo w lir e la the flesh I Mvo by the faith O f A c H on o f (ted, who loved me,, and gave hhuoelf fo r me. (tel. Sjiao.» T«*» same Jesus continues h*8 bretlSc wtatstry of tavt- goratlon. The lif t He Imparts is one of vitality and vigor for the recuperation of all who treat Him. (Continued Tomorrow) A Missouri woman sent |2 as payment and Interest for •■M rtoloa 30 years ' ago. Maybe .she mods ■»■"»♦Hug on them In the recent market rise. »