TRE D fllüY TIDINGS EDlTORIflh an d FEATURE PAGE W. H. PERKINS, N««s Editor 0. J. READ, Managing Editoç ASH LA ND D A IL Y T ID IN G S OUT OUR WAY By W illiams PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND «PRINTING 00, LYDIA of the pines Kiddies’ What Price Education? • Football looms large in the interest of the na­ tion. It is associated almost wholly with 6ur in­ stitutions of learning and is conceded the leader of sports, both in college and high school. This leads to a speculation as ¿0 the relative position of the country’s sports and its education. Education ig the very life of the nation—sports its pastime, s The former, like our water and air, is taken for granted and almost considered routine; the latter is dramatic,»impulsive and full of motion. We are not belittling the value of sports in the life of people. We recognize their unifying influ­ ence in our institutions. It is a healthful sigp when our citizens grow in their love for outdoor play. There is a tendency,however, to indulge in these exercises and sports purely by proxy. It is a fact that the nation’s expenditure for spectacular sports makes the outlay for education look insignificant. We have recently completed the World Baseball Series which approached a million and a quarter gate receipts; our last big prize fight, two million dollars. This latter figure is but a fraction of the cost of the fight when the other expenses of the fans are estimated. The American public paid this price for a two-man combat that pasted a total of thirtynine minutes, and yet in this country we spend but a billion and a half dollars yearly to train twenty-three million boys and girls for a fight that last an average of approximately thirty-nine years. relative value. A middle western metropolitan news­ paper sold 50,000 more copies the morning after the Dempsey-Tunney fight than it did the morning after the election November 2nd. Sport news is, therefore, looked upon as a matter of great import­ ance by the newspapers, and, based upon public de­ mand, naturally so. As a specialized subject* it increasingly outranks the space of any other de­ partment in the day’s news. When the Corbett- Sullivan fight took place in 1892 a newspaper not overly devoted to sports printed more than seven columns about it during the two weeks immediately preceding the contest In 1923, for a like period pre­ vious to the Dempsey-Firpo battle, the same paper used thirty-eight columns. In the Dempsey-Tunney fight this year, the same paper used ninety columns. No process of thinking oan lead us to oondude that education has gained a corresponding em* phasis. Nor will it, until we have a shiftnig of de­ mand on the part of the pubUo. We believe ip the manly ,art of self-defense, Onr conception of the greatest self-defense, either for the individual or the nation, ig education. It costs less and gives mors. C. F. Kettering, vice president of the General Motors company, is a many sided' man, and every side ig brilliant Not the least brilliant is his rhetoric ability. “ Do not introduce the dangerous mental state of completeness into your organizations,” he 'told industrial executives of Detroit, meeting to observe National Management Week. “ Let your men keep open to change—steady, regular development.” Herbert Hoover Is sponsor for National Man­ agement Week. He thought there,were too many types of the same article; too many types of bricks, of various kinds of machinery, of automobile tires; that this duplication ran all through industry caus* ing needless ex cu se and waste of labor and ma­ terial. He wanted standardization and his efforts to achieve -it have met with much success. On this point, Mr. Kettering said: “ I do. not want you to Understand that I am opposed to standardization—I know all that it has done—but do not lock the front door.” Wliat Mr. Kettering was warning against was- such thorough standardization that progress would automatically stop. New devices would he taboo. There is a good moral in that thought, “ Do not induce the mental state of completeness in your consciousness,” it might be paraphrased. Be open to new ideas and new impressions. A New York }x>lieeinan caught a woodcock. That is not the only rare bird ever eaught in New York, however. , Our sympathy goes out today to the l>oy who played hookey from school only to find out later it was Haturday. Yale has just found out how to make metal foils less than a millionth of an inch thick. How­ ever, this trick has been done with ham for years. I 6 ItA U M A and UO O »< toy« sad Warren , «sited for both books and toys, too. T h e» b sth letter and Uttla Betty couldn’t write any let­ ter at all, but with Bill Teeter WMto wrexe > a Lester Letter. two fine b r o t h e r s It 4 U n t m a t t wM er too young to writ«, The two brothers told Banta Oaus what Betty wanted. Little Dolly asked Banta for pre* ants. tee. Thia wue what she wrote ta Ban­ ta: • “Dear Santa: to* - W “I hope you’re having a good time making toyg and aren’t getting toe W tired. .. ( 1 ft. 1 “I l l ten ye« what I’d Uke to have, Santa. l’T TÄ kB S'A -tUlRPt. TÖ CATCH A T -U E F What Others Say j Mayor Baker of Portla’.rf has Issued an order that no more secret meeting« shall be held by public committee« and oommlaalones In that city.. He takes the attitude that the public has a right to know the public business. The policy 1« one that other communities could a d o p t w ith credit and profit.— • Astoria Budget. The Astoria Budget has discovered that scales may be used not only for weigh­ ing fish, but for telling 1*3 age. But what Is really needed te a kind of scales that w ill do the same thing fo r eggs.— Cervallls Gazette- Times. (COrvallis Gaxette-Times) Swearing Is a poor aubstl- tute for a vocabulary, but beats "perfectly darling.” (B aker H erald) In a dispatch from Wash­ ington, both McNary and B telver are listed as being opposed to seating Vare and 8mlth, the senators-elect who scandalised the country w ith vast slush fund ex­ penses in the primaries. The report on our senators may not be tFue. but it ought to AND Service paid for in advance Is rarely satisfactory. Easy money and hard work do not grow on the same bush. Quite often a girl thinks she is in love when she is only jeal­ ous. Umbrellas, r.s much as Liberty, have to be paid for by eternal vig­ ilance. Using other people's brains Is just as good a way to get rich as using your own. When people won't associate n t h us, hbw we do enjoy all the scandal we hear X43ut them! Hez worst comes as the Heck says: "Takin’ and makin’ the best o as close to common si average man kin get.” N E W YO R K . Nov. 14. — Mre. Mahelle K idd denies she is 46 y e a n old and weighs 180 pounds. H er husband ao declared -In answering her suit fo r separation, and the indignant wife rushed ¡Into court w ith an affidavit. “ I only weigh 180,’* she protested, "and I ’m well, not 4ft.’* LOS A NGELES — Charged tor the second tim e w ith pos­ sessing seven gallons of Illic ­ it liquor, Mamie Baldwin de­ clared in court here, that she used it for bathing, prescrib­ ed by .her doctor. She was or­ dered to pay a flue of 1760, although officers supported her alibi by testifying that they found the hooch la a bathtub. KANSAS C IT Y , Mo., — James Handy, 63, a deaf mute, obtained a ^divorce from bis wife, Mrs. Johanna Handy, also a deaf mute on the grounds that tha cursed and nagged him through the sign language. Tyro deaf mutes corroberated Handy’s testimony. KANSAS C IT Y , Mo.,— W . B, Roy, 43, fe ll Into a bath­ tub of water and drowned be­ cause parlysls had made his arms practically useless. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ' ASHLAND 10 Years Ago ASHLAND ASHLAND 20 Years Ago . in d so,” Lydia’s voice trembled, but she went on bravely, T m try­ ing to understand—trying te see bow I can make some thing good Softs out of his poor lost life. Somehow I feel as If that were my Job. And—and the Idea helps me. Oh, my dear John Levine!" The two young people aat star­ ing at the distant hllta. “Don’t you see," Lydia buret out, “that I ’ve got to do something, he something, to make all the loss and trouble of my life worth w h ite r *1 understand," answered Billy. Early In September, John Le­ vine’s win was found. He had left hla entire property, unconditionally, to Lydia. Amoe, a t first, was frantic with delight. Lydia was appalled “All my life.“ she half sobbed to her father, T v e been fighting to get sway from Indian lands. And Mr. L evin e k new how I fe lt Oh, how could he do thia to me!” “Don’t talk like a foot Lydia I" got to take teat land." "' - , Lyd*i * * " ttb her tWn haild. etaaped hetero her en the table, her d eer eyes fastened on her father's face. Amos loked down at hl« dangh- tar tritoly. “Can’t you see what a fool yon anal" he shouted. “The land can never ge back to the In­ diana. John took good care of that If yon don't take i t some- boi l . * ,! e wm> Can’t you seel" i d? ,.“ LytWcx * * » " ■ » * »"* thia, dad.” she «aid. “But this la all I w ant » ’«what I ’ve wanted fer yean, thia little Mt of land. And yon haven’t any Idea what that feeling la." , L,ka, • fleeh Lydia aaw again long aisles of pines, smelled again the odor of the needles, heard again the murmuring can of the wind. “Good Godl" cried a »we. toeslns hla pipe on the table, “poverty's hounded me all my life-poverty and death. The only two people who eared about me, Patience and Levlne’ro gone. Tat here’s the chance for me to be Independent. Here’s a chance for me to make np for the failure I ’ve made of life. A man with a little piece of prop­ erty like this and a little hank ac­ count Is somebody In the commu­ nity. What do I care how I get It, as loaTa I can hold tt? What's a lot of dirty Indiana to stand be­ tween me and my future? But what do you c a r e r “Oh daddy I Oh daddy! How can yon talk ao to met“ groaned Lydia. She put her hands over her eyes for a moment, swallowed a sob and then started for the outer door. She caught her coat from the nail and closed the door behind her. An Irresistible Impulse had car­ ried her from the hodse. She wanted to see Billy. I t w m still early and a lantern flickered In the Norton barnyard. Bbe ran across to the shed door. B lllu r a s whis­ tling to himself as be Ixftkn to bed down the cattle for the night Lydlalooked nt him eagerly In the dim light. How Mg and strong he was I "Billy!" she said, aoftly. The young man dropped his pitchfork and came toward her. “What’s the matter, Lydia 1” he ex­ claimed. “Dad and Tve been having an awful quarrel.“ “About the land?" asked BlUy “I ’d like to have a little plant roared Amos. growing la a pot and than I'd Ilka “But don’t you nee how I feeir* to have two tittle Mue vases like cried Lydia. "“Don't yon see that the ease I aaw up street Maybe you have some Uke them la your all John Levine’s lands up there are haunted by death—his own— toy «hop. . “They are Moe and not very big, and all the starved Indiana? Oh, but I think flowers would look why did he do this to u m I I won't have i t I tell yon I Td rather be pretty In them. poverty stricken all my life." “Then I ’d Uke a big doll If Iconld “Well, don’t worry too much have One, Santa. I ’d love to have a about that," said Kent. “Dave Mg doll. ‘T v e been doing so well ta my Marshall thinks there won’t be spell lug lately, Santa. My Daddy anything left after the estate Is says yon will be pleased ta bear settled, but the Indian lands." that. But In thia letter my Daddy 1 “Oh, Kent, you aren’t having Is helping me, ao there will not be anything to do with Dave Marshall, any mistakes at all, for My Daddy are you?” exclaimed Lydia. ftg M u b —_______. L "... ■■ “Kent flushed a little. “Well, his never makes a mistake la spelling. advice can’t hurt me. I f it’s bad, “O f course, if he did, yen would know. I wouldn’t know. But you I don’t have to take IL Ton ought would add I know you will see that te go out and see his farm, Lydia. be Jest can’t make a mistake la They're getting the house a lt fitted with modern convenleacea bangs* spelling. •1 don’t like arithmetic so well, going to make a model stock farm.'*’ “Bought with money earned by but maybe I will like It better. I the Last Chance I" said Lydia. hope so. , Kent looked at her qulzxlcslly. •The Mue vases are the color of the sky when It’s blue.' Sometimes "A New England Conscience must the sky Isn’t Mas, but the vases are be Something awful to owa, eh, the color of the aky when It’s that L y d r Lydia chuckled. “It’s pretty liable to go over and aay things to beautiful shade of blue—you know bad,” the admitted, then ahe went your father and K en t r l l t e l l ’em the shade I mean. “I hope you won’t get too tired, on soberly, "bat I won’t take these both, some time, what I think of Santa. their bullying you this way.” T f you give me a big doll, Tm go­ A vague, warm sense of comfort ing to name her Natalie. I think Kent cheerfully. and protection was stilling Lydia’s “Site’ll keep them," said Amoe, that’s a vary pretty name. trembling. She rose and looked up shortly, "or Lydia and n i have our Into his face gratefully. “I don’t “Tour loving friend, first real row." “DOLLT." see why you're so good to ms," she Lydia looted at Kent thought­ said. Then Worthy wrote Santa a let­ fully. Since the day under the wil­ ter and this la what he said: “Do you want me to tell y o u r lows, he had not made love to her, began the young man eagerly. “Dear Banta: ‘Tm geing this afternoon up Slip­ yet she hnd the fe elin g thnt Kent “N oI No!” Lydia began to move pery H ilt to get a tree. We’ll put was devoted to h«r and she won­ hastily toward the door. “Don’t dered sometimes why he liked to the pop corn and the decoration« on come home with me, Billy, n i Just I t ao yon'U not have te bother spend as much time with Margery run back alone.” as with herself. Then she gave about th a t Billy's face la the lantern light "We’U Just look for the presents herself a mental shake. "Til obey to­ T m going to tell you right now, was Inscrutable. you’ll give. I know ye« will pick that until I have to I ’m not going night Lydia,” he said, “but the out just the things we w ant “We’ve all written you so many to worry. Tm going to try to be time's coming, when I won’t” and he picked np the pitchfork he had letters I don’t want to aay the same happy In my senior year." dropped. things over too r - - -------- With the sense of comfort and many times or _ protection sustaining her, Lydia you may get us went homeward under the winter Cap and Gown stars. Kent’s, antoaobile was HE fifteen dollars, after all, standing before the gate and “But we’ll get - \* y \ were disposed of In a highly Lydia's heart sank. I t was the a nlco tree. . satisfactory manner. They paid first time In her life she ever had “Really, San- -if I \ for Lydia’s cap and gown. Per­ been sorry >t the thought of seeing ta, there Is no < V -J r 1^— d haps there were other members of Kent. place Just Uke \ y f f \ the class to whom their senior In­ He was sitting before the base Slippery H i l l V7 IJ I signia meant as much as they did tor a tree. / / A I te Lydia, but that Is to be doubted. burner with her rather and Jumped > to help her take her coat off. “They l a v s i In a' way, Lydia’s conscience e greeted her soberly. — a O H ft ft 1 W O (l( lP r i« l smote her. She knew that her “Your father’s been telling me np there. They Vf \ father was worrying over her atti­ about your discussion, Lyd,” he always last so M l tude on her Inheritance, but she said. “You can't mean to stick by long and don’t 1 1 tontlnued te avoid the Issue with your decision!" drop right away. L4 him while the «state was being Lydia aat down wearily. “Oh, “I must get „ E ■settled. Lydia was doing heavy Kent don’t you begin at me, too." s t a r t e d new, work In college. She actually had “Now look here, Lydia,” began Banta, b « I Just . (•tered all the classes In dairying K en t "let’s begin at the beginning wanted to let *-¡J ’* ■ •‘ ¡F possible, while carrying her other and sift this thing o u t” and once you know «bout Couldn’t W rite college work. And she enjoyed the more he began his arguments on the tree which we’re going to get. new work amazingly. the Indian question. “Tour affectionate friend, Early In December, the settle­ “Don’t you see?” he ended finally. “W O RTHY.* **T OO hrtxnr to . replied . ^ .1 8 ^ 1 ment of the Levine estate was com­ “I B see how you fool feel, «aa yes,” And thou at the end of tho lto> pleted. John’s method of “shoe- Lydia. "But Just because you can tor he wrote this: stringing** his property was dlsae- list what you call average Ameri­ "Postscript.—I got the tree. M’s trous as far as the size of Lydia’s can business deals that are heritage went As nearly as she crooked, you aren’t Justified In be­ could understand, one portion of ing crooked, are you?” e estate was used to pay up the Kent threw out his hand help­ debtedness of another portion, lessly, and for a moment there was until all that was loft was the silence In the rdom, then he said, cottage, with a mortgage on i t and “Well, after all, there's nothing three hundred and twenty acres of so selfish as yeur Puritans. Of land on the reservation. course, every on« hut yourselves is The throe hundred and twenty wrong. And, of course. It doesn’t acres on the reservation was under occur to yeu to sacrifice your own a cloud. Part of it was land he had scruples to • do a thing that would gotten from Charlie’s sister. All of mean so much to your father.” It he had obtained from alleged full Lydia looked at Kent quickly. daily bible passage Moods, Tills was a new angle. He would “Oh, daddy I" cried Lydia, “we have followed this opening at once "I know thy works, that can’t take it l Don’t you see ws had^not Amoe spoken for the first thou art neither cold nor hot: can’t r I would that thou wert coM (Continued Tomorrow) “I can't understand why you act Or hot. Ho then because the« so like a fool,” began Amos, queru­ art hdtewaate, and neither lously. “And I can’t see why you cold or hot, I will spue thee set your Judgment up as better out of my mouth.” Rev. 8:1ft. Salem -—. n -s to ry First Na­ than mine. I swan—even your mother never did that, except on tional Bank building wlnobosll Ood needs men who are on borrowing money. We won’t keep tional Bank building Bank build­ fire for His cause, there Is no the land. We’U sell It and have ing wUI seen be ready for use. place la HI« program for the the money to dear up the mort­ half hearted or lukewarm. We gage on the cottage.” n e took a need to pray that Ood will turn up find down the room. “I set ue ea Are fe r Hie King, can’t see what's happened to chil­ Salem J— Souther dren nowadays. In my dsy we A. builds mile of obeyed. Lydia, Pm not going to «lacuaa thia aav louvee. Yna'va track. T S a M r. and Mrs. H. G. Roberts and ton Lee of the 461 ranch and Mr. and Mrs. E. B. ,O«H of Bellview, were Sunday visitors ot their mother, Mrs. E. J. Roberts and sister, Mrs. L. O. VaHWegen. Emmett Beeson, the Talent fa r­ mer, dairy man and orchardiat, was an Ashland visitor Saturday. He has twenty or .thirty acres of young orchard coming oq that Is said to be among the most Ising In the valley. W . J. Carter, Superintendent and P. G.' Butler principal of the Indian Agency school, came to Ashland Monday and returned yesterday. They were accompea­ led by Mrs. G. R. Gallant and her daughter, Maud, who w ill spend a few weeks at the Agency. ' Kenneth M cW illiams is employ­ ed w ith a geverament reclamation Mre. Mollie Stanley a n d service survey crow In Klamath county. George Ioenkewer is a daughter Bernie of Ashland w en •' Fred Hansen le ft tor his home visiting la Jacksonville this week, fellow surveyor. * In Napa, C«l., yesterday, going hr the guests of Mrs. Stanley’s broth­ private conveyance. I t is Mr. er, Mr. John Rose. Hansen's wish to , dispose of his ly reported from the ooeaty m at were the transfer! of land In Ash­ land from O. C. McAllister to Tom Bushong, A. B. Reives to W alter Frulan, J. R. Tozer to C. A. Ellason. One of the biggest oeals of the past week was the sale of farm lands from J. J. Browp to W illiam W latt at 9S1,- •0 6 . Idapa property and ceme to Aah» land to m ate his home. Oeo. W. Barron has returned from his trip to Southern Cali­ fornia. He paid a visit to the Im ­ perial Valley region at the CaH- fornia-Artzona- Mexico boundary line, and purchased a fine J iff acre irrigated farm there, which he placed Geo. W . Haward, for­ merly o( Ashland, In charge of. / *• There was quite a heglra of Ashland people to Geleettne on ■aturday. among whom were Mrs. P. Duns. Mrs. W . H. Ledgerwood, Mrs. Fields. Mrs. D. U Rice. Mrs. U George-and Mrs. Strong. t