Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, February 12, 1927, Image 1

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B A S K E T B A L L - S A L E M H t vs A S H L A N D H t - J U N IO R H I Q Y M 9.-OO
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local showers in east.
Ashland's Leading JV<
,
ii-Weakly Tiding! Tel
D ines» o f
h S ch ool
S crap
Anyone doubting the statement
that there Is a “ pay streak” in
Ashland Acres should ta lk to J.
A. Cook and take a stroll with
him oker his nine acre ranch 14-
¡cated in the Bellview district two
miles east of Ashland.
In the late war Mr. Cook was
Shot In the arm and head sad
along with these Injuries he w aai
:
JL
—
THE POULTRY INDUSTRY
is a potential pay roll for Ash­
land.
(United Press W ire Service)
R P A Y , F E B . 12, 1927
ONE OF IDE SALEM WINNER IN HERE ARE
D ’AUTREMONT HARO FOUGHT GAME PROVISIONS
BRO TH ERS IS
M’NARY FARM
UNDER ARREST
R ELIEF BILL
Handicap
T w o Pl
P u t»
--------------------------- ------------------------------------- \
r for Over F ifty Years
(United Neve Wire Servite)
te ti»e
—
T idings
ly
’
Generally fair in west portion,
VOL. L
R---------------------- -------------------------------------------------------.
NO. 139
CLEVER WORK M
OF SH ER IFF
i LANDS ELEVEN
BOOTLEGGERS
Bartletts and W inter Nellis the
best paying part of his orchard.
He gives his flock of 450 W hite
Leghorns the run of the orchard.
The chickens enjoy the shade
forded and they in turn add
the fertility of the soil.
W OFFIΠRS FORMER
10 TELL OF WORK
F oru m Lunqh N e x t T u esd a y
P rom ises to b e W e ll
• W orth W h ile •
NEWS
YS WILL TRY
OTHER HUGE
RAIL MERGER
Handicapped by their two star
What promises to be one of the
guards, Roy Abbott, And Wayne
most pleasing and instructive for­
This flock of chickens is a
H ill being out of the game on ac
um lunches of the winter season
large factor in the success of the
count of Illness, the Ashland
w ill be held at' the Lithia Springs
ranch, Mr. Cook’s records show­
high school basketball team last
also gassed. He figures that he ing that' they net him In the
hotel Tuesday noon when officers
F o u n d E n lis te d in th e A rm y night held the fast Salem High W o u l d E s ta b lis h F ed era l is only equal to a fraction of a | neighborhood Of two dollars per
of Battery B. coast artillery, with
V
en
tu
ra
C
a
liforn
ia
C
ou
n
ty
F orm er A p p lic a tio n
H as
five to a score, 22 to 37, when
man, so what Mr. Cook has dona, bird annually. He raises his own
U n d er th e N a m e o f
M ajor C. A. Malone, batallion
F a r m B o a rd o f T w e lv e
O fficial P o ses a s M ovie
B een M ade to In ter sta te
they met In the first of a two
an
able-bodied
man
should
commander, will give a compre­
J a m e s 0 . P rice
chicks. He feels, however, that
M em bers t o S u p e r v ise
D irecto r
Com m erce C om m ission
game series In the Junior High
able to duplicate.
ie might be money1 ahead In the
hensive talk and demonstration
gymnasium. Forced to play Gar­
ADMITS HIS IDENTITY nett and McGee, at guards, posi­ TO CONTROL SURPLUS M r. Cook was given a two ong run to buy his baby chicks S E N D S I N R U S H O R D E R on all phases of the Battery's P R O P O S E N E W P L A N
work.
year’s course at O. A. C. In poul­ from a grower who makes a spec­
Enlisted From Chicago In 1094', tions which they had never play­
try,
husbandry
and
horticulture.
The commercial value of the Chesapeake and Ohio WonM Be­
ialty
of
maintaining
a
heavy
pro­
W ill Provide for th e Orderly
Asks for Ijirg c Supply of Liquor
And Wae Hoon Detailed to
ed before. Coach Cripea hoopsters
When he purchased his nine acre ducing vigorous flock and who
battery
to Ashland will be stress­
Marketing of I> rm Products
to Hatlofy Demands of
come the Basic Linee for
Foreign Service
.
covered themselves with glory,
ranch, he found on It two acres hatches for the trade, on a large
ed. Figures will be cited to show
by Market Control
Movie Company
Billion Dollar Concern
and fa r exceeded all expectations
of orchard, pears, peaches and acale.
the amount of w « --
. . m etet!
M A N IL A , PI., F eb .'1 2 .— Hugh by the surprising effort they made
Battery do,.,«»«
W A SHING TO N, Feb. 1 2 . __ apples. By Judicious pruning,
One must have good stock to
D ’Autremont, accused of complic­ to ‘defeat the visitors. The guards
WASHINGTON. ' Feb. 12. —
VE N TU R A , Cal., Feb. 12.— money apt
cultivating and fertilization ha
T ra ien t and
(U
N
)
—
M
ajor
provisions
of
the
start
with
then
with
proper
care
ity In the dynamiting and robbing played their position# like veter­
(U
N )— The Van Swerlngen bro­
(U N )— Eleven honest bootleggers
has brought these trees to a
to keep out disease, and especlal- reposing safely behind the bars of other necessities. The total will thers of Cleveland, who started
of a Southern Pacific train In ans, and succeeded in holding the McNary-Hangen farm relief bill
place Ahere they return him a
be fa r greater than the average
y disease through soil contamlna-
Oregon 3 years ago, was held un­ sensational D uffy, conceded to be passed by the sénats late yester­
life as newsboys, began another
the Ventura county Jail, tonight person might suspect.
nice revenue of around 9900 an­
day.
der heavy guard here today pend­ the fastest forward in the state,
Attempt today to obtain the ap­
were blaming their plight on the
He finds the pears.
( Please Turn to Page 3)
The technical side of the bat­
1— Establishment -of a federal nually.
ing his departure for the United to a minimum of counters.
Hollywood movie colony's reputa­ tery work also will be given. The proval of the interstate commerce
farm board of 12 members, one
Stgtes.
commission to their gigantic rail- -
The two P arr brothers, A1 and
tion for an unquenchable thirst.
battery officers will demonstrate
from
each land bank district, to
D’Autremont was found serv­ Roy, playing forward and center,
road
merger plan, sometimes call­
For In the belief that they were Just how target practice Is car­
ing as a private in the army under did the most of the scoring for the carry out provisions of th e 'a c t.
catering to the parched throats of ried out and the various delicate ed the billion dollar merger.
9— Appointment of non-ealar-
the name of James G. Price. When locals, A1 being high man with a
The present application makea
Hollywood screen celebrities, the Instruments for range finding, de­
he was arrested by postoffice and total of nine points and Roy sec­ led advisory council for each' of
eleven men, answering an emer­ flection, plotting and other tech­ ‘he Cheaapeak and Ohio the basic
m ilitary authorities he was with ond with six. N utter, playing for the six basic agriculture com­
gency call, found themselves the nical work will be used -during line of the system, C: A O. Minor­
__ ..
HARRISBURG, 111., Feb. 12.
the 81st infantry In Los Banos. the first time hi a forward posi­ modities.
ity stockholders having fought
victims of the law.
this demostratlon.
2— Establishment of wheat, (U N )— Charlie Birger, the gang S u p er io r C ou rt D en ies R e­
His Identification la positive.
the
merger plan as being unfair
tion, put up some s tiff opposition
The coup, it developed, dated
This will be*the first time the
’ D’Autremont said that he en­ and In addition scored 4 paints. corn, cotton, rice, swine and to­ leader who is being held under
q u est fo r R em o v a l o f
back to a month ago when Sher­ battery officers have ever given a to their efforts. The plan alters
996,000 bond on murder charges,
listed la Chicago in April, 1924
R e stra in in g O rder
iff R. E. Clark, under the screen public demonstration to an Ash­ also some features of the treat­
The second game of the series bacco as basic agriculture com­
w ill remain In Franklin county
and was detailed to the foreign w ill be played tonight starting at modities.
alias o f “ Manager Fountain,” be­ land audience and It Is expected ment accorded to the minority In
service soon after. His detach­ nine o’clock, this hour being set
I — Creation of a revolving Jail a week or ten days before any
the settlements* the commission
LQg ANGELES,
Feb.
12.— gan laying a trap for liquor deal­
that a banner crowd will be pres­
ment arrived in the Islands early to allow business houses time for stabilization fund of 9250,000,- effort is made to gala his release, (U N )— Charlie Chaplin, screen ers who were overrunning the
having condemned the original
ent.
his attorneys said Friday.
000.
in 1925.
comedian, suffered one of h is 1 bounds In this, section of the
Ulan as lacking In such protection.
their usual Saturday night bnsi-
“W e want excitement and ill- first losses in the legal proceed­ country.
For three years postal Inspec­
5— Collection of a email equal­
This time the appljeation was
(Please Turn to Page 9)
tors have trailed the three broth­
isation fee during the course of feeling to die down,” they said, ings surrounding his millions,
made
in the naifte of the Chesa-
“ Manager Fountain”, directed
ers, following clues in various
piarketing to finance disposal of “and we shall make no attempt when a motion for vacation of a all the activities of the “screen
peak and Ohio railroad, which
to supply the bond until then.”
parts of the world.
»
surplus basic commodities.
proposes to acquire control of the
restraining order seenred by. coun­ company.” Signs were posted
Rewards totaling more than
4— Extension of fonr per cent
Erie and Pere Marquette roads.
sel for his "FTTe, L ita Grey Cbap- pointing out the route to loca­
JU N IO R H IG H W IN S
915.000 have been offered by the
The Nickel Plate and Hocking
loans for stabilizing agrtcultnre
lin, wae denied, in superior court tion where the scenes of “ Sands
The Ashland Junior H igh de­ here today.
government for the arrest and
Valley roads, mentioned in the
commodities not listed as basic.
of the Seas” were to be taken.
conviction of the alleged partici­
original
merger plana, were not
Chief arguments In favor of feated the Medford Junior basket­
The motion was brought by
It was quietly rumored about
of
R egim en t Included directly In the revised
pants in the crime of October 11,
the bill were made as follows: ball team . in a fast game last Fred Reeves, Chaplin’s general that the "Velasco Film Produc­ D e stin a tio n
1922.
W h ich S a ile d U n d er S e a l­ applications.
1— Allows producers of farm night In the Medford armory by a manager, seeking to usethe Chap­
cqmpany" planned to spend
Forty Six Arrewted Follow­ crops to influence their markets score of 19 to 17. This Is the set­ lin assets for business purposes, tions
ed O rders R e v e a led
Simultaneously the
commis­
no less than 2100.000 on the set.
a Feb. U^-Whea
ae
tadnstrlalT9* 4 ■ * * *
Co* ck H owell’s Lapndtng the outcome of Mrs.
ing Pitched Battle
sion is asked to approve 992,-
No
chance
for
a
real
movie
Hugh D’Autremont, captured fn
W ASHlNUTUN. Feb. J I . — 942,440 additional tasne o f- a and
proteges have won from t h e Chafilln’s divorce suit.
Over a Show
groups.
background wa soverlooked. Hol­
Manila, is returned to the United
2— Affords to all advantages neighboring Juvenile basketeers,
Reeves claimed that , his own lywood beach, each of here, was (U N )— A force of 1,299 marines O. common stock to take np out­
States he w ill (act two charges,
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Feb. I I . of orderly marketing through the the Medford boys winning one business was inconvenienced by
Is on the way to Shanghai the na­ standing bonds snd Improvement .*
the spot for the filming. Trench­
one of first degree murder and Forty-six Harvard students were
game, while the fourth of the ser­ the order which restrained use of es were dug along the waterfront vy department announced today. squlpment.
control of surplus.
the other a federal charge of arrested during a pitched battle
As an Intermediate step to­
«
for the picture was to be one ’of It is the fourth regiment, which
3— Secures a protected m arket ies will be played in Medford Chaplin’s assets.
mall robbery.
early today In the Harvard square for producers of such crops as soon. 1.
left San Diego, Cal., under sealed ward unification, the C. A O. asks
/
v
Judge Guerin ruled that in his warfare.
The three brothers were charg­ between about a 1000 undergrad­
orders some days ago aboard the authority to exercise "that degree
The boys who made up the lo­ opinion Reeves would benefit but
wheat, rice and corn of which
Today, with all plans complete-
ed with murder In Jackson coun­ uates and 36 policemen. One po­
U. S. S. Chaumont.
of administrative coptrol of oper­
hut a small portion enters world cal team were Rickman, C., Kea­ little by the liftin g of the order ed, a hurry call was sent to some
ty. following the dynamiting of a liceman and 7 students were tak­
At that time the navy refused ations of the Erie snd Pere M ar­
ton,
-F.,
Hitchcock,
F.;
W
inkle-
while other interested parties of the foremost liquor suspects In
trade.
train in which four were killed, en to hospitals. Those arrested
to say whether the troops would quette that is Inherent in control
would benefit materially.
4— Enables producers of wheat man, G., Radskey, G.
the vicinity.
and Hugh w ill probably be taken were taken to the police stations.
be sent to China, today the navy by stock ownership of each con­
Attorneys for Mrs. Chaplin,
animals
to
maintain
a
stable
The call pleaded “ movie dry­
there for trail.
said the troops were on the way stituent for the benefit of all the
The fight started when the level.
Charles Lindsey of the Green stated earlier In the day that ness.”
On Dec. 17, 1923, the Federal students at a midnight show
from Honolulu to Shanghai.
Springs
Mountain
was
a
visitor
carriers
within
the
proposed
they
were
preparing
to
ask
the
. 5— Promotes cooperative as­
Five machines and one truck,
Grand Jury at Portland indicted started throwing fru it, eggs and
In
this
city
yesterday
shopping
group and at the same time con­
court for an order to reinstate carrying eleven men and the
sociations.
the brothers for attempted train j vegetables at the actors and the
Oregon claims the lowest In­ sistent with the separate opera­
and lpoking after business af­ Mrs. Chaplin and the children in
robbery,
orchestra.
fant m ortality of any state In tion of an accounts by each of the
fairs.
(Please Turn to Page 6)
(Please Turn to Pape 6)
Chaplin’s Hollywood home.
the Union.
carriers.”
R
Gang Leader is
Under Heavy Bond
CHAPLIN LOSES IN
FIRST LEGAL TILT
SAN H
HARVARD STUDENTS
M TM H M E
MARINES
Illinois Recreates Old Town Where Lincoln’s Fame Was Born
SALEM, 111., Feb. 12.— Old Salem— the Salem of Abraham Lincoln’s early
hopes and dreams— is being rebuilt.
Building for building, the little town on the winding Sangamon river where
tragedy first met Lincoln and marked him for Its own, is being restored.
The old town site has been made Into a state park, and when all the work
of rebuilding is complete Salem will stand Just as It was whçn Lincoln left it,
every building and store, even every cowpath reproduced.
Old Salem will stand unique among the towns of the country— a monument
to a great man s past a little community of 1830 reincarnated after nearly 100
years.
Imposing establishments.
Ann Rutledge loved him.
They were seen together at the social functions
or the Illinois community. Word went around that they were engaged.
Drama Enters
But McNeil had a atory to tell, and he unfolded it to Ann. His name was not
McNeil nt nil. but John McNamar. His family was old and reqpectable in New
York, but his father had gone bankrupt.
Fired with the desire to restore the
family fortunes, the young man had come west to Salem.
Now things were improving. He had a little farm, and would go back and
bring the old folks to Salem. He would marry Ann upon his return.
Ann trusted him. though the wise folk of the village regarded his tale with
scorn.
Sho promised to wait.
McNamar left.
Week nfter week Ann waited, while sly rural humor and whispered conver­
sations bent upon her pride.
Week nfter week Bhe-went to the little postoffice. Abo Lincoln sorted the
Hers was never there.
~
W here Lincoln Kept Store
Many of the oM buildings still exist or already have been restored to their
original state. Members of the Old Salem-Lincoln League, working with pick and
shovel, have unearthed the foundations of many of the houses which fell away,
and these, too, are being built.
It was here that Lincoln ran a store with a man named Berry.
It was here that Lincoln's boat, struck a snag in the Sangamon river, the
accident changing the course of his life.
Here he ahw and loved and lost the beautiful Ann ' Rutledge, the inn-keepers
daughter.
.Here Lincoln worked in the store he partly owned, and here he earned the
name of “ Honest Abe.’*'
Here Lincoln walked three miles after a day of toil at the store, that he might
repay a customer who had -been the victim of a mistake in weight.
Here Lincoln became a surveyor and was appointed postmaster in 1833.
Here he bought a barrel of books from a covered wagon emigrant, and found
therein a treasured Blackstone which he studied by the firelight.
vaflinSaUm
Itaootn nefc
Lincoln's love, slow growing, became bolder,
Ardently hs pressed his
courtship. Steddlly Ann clung to her pledge.
But through their dally associations at the tavern where Lincoln roomed,
Ann's love for “ Honest Abe” grew. Her friends encouraged it. They cast fresh
doubts on the story of McNamar. Ann decided she would write to McNamar, and
ask him to free her from her pledge.
She wrote, but no word came back. She worried, waited, wondered.
She
wasted and fell' 111.
Longing to give herself to Lincoln, yet she was held by the firm bond of
that promise to her albsent lover.
His Political Start
Death Releases Her
Here Lincoln got his political start in life, running for the legislature and
belnd elected.
Here Lincoln whipped the Clary gang Into submission, and from Salem he
went as a captain in the Black Hawk war.
Here sorrow wrecked his heart, and a'.most destroyed one of the greatest
minds of the ages.
Lincoln came to Salem about 1931. His boat struclt a snag at a bend In the
Sangamon. As a result of the delay, It Is related, Lincoln saw Ann Rutledge and
decided to stay in Salem for a while.
Salem had been founded a few years
before by Ann’s father, Jamee, thé tavernkeeper, and a man named James Cameron.
Ann was a school girl in M ints Graham’s school when Lincoln first met her.
The young man took, up his Job In Berry’s store and soon won respect among the
townsfolk for his honesty.
Ann blossomed Into womanhood at I I .
Lincoln then was in his twenties.
He was an admirer, although a bashful, awkward young man.
v
Then a stranger came to town, a man who called himself John McNeil.
McNeil had charming manners and became popular at once with the girls of the
town.
He prospered- in business, too, his store becoming one of Salem’s most
Finally she lay back in the arms of delirium. Raving, she called for Lincoln.
Honest Abe came.
He sat alone Vith her at the bedside in the crude little
tavern. The world never heard the words they spoilt.
Agony mnrked Lincoln's face when Ann became unconscious a few days
later. Then a few days more and she died— on August 39, 1996.
Lincoln became a man walking In a dream.
His mind became dark.
He
avoided the old haunts of his friends In Salem and took long walks along the
winding Sangamon.
Two months after Ann's death, John McNamar returned with hie widowed
mother and two brothers. The story he had told was true. He had been delayed
by Illness. But, In the year that he was away, how much poignant tragedy his
absence had wrought!
»
Lincoln left Salem seven ysars after he came, and the decline of the little
town set in about the same time. Its day of trading prosperity was brief.
Now the old scene» are being restored— the Rutledge Inn, the Lincoln
Berry storo. the old cooper shop and the roads and paths where Lincoln
So Salem, after all, w ill continue to live— as a monnment to a great
ambitions and early life, and his first great sorrow.
turvayuA