Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, March 03, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    V m M W lM N N VR W I
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A a p LAWp DAILY nrororotaW
tiDXNG
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BÈtta*todto*wttnro«wroroft|bX""^a«rotatotarow»«ata“
Fairies?—Of Course
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PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PBINTING CO.
NEWS MOTOR
’
•
BÍ JOBNHAR i N
Caretaker at Crater L a*
J
POO«
mm
» f & fn/aUHr *
M L roteine fro*» a«
ID E A S I
7
J b are afton spates« < MNlLj
and Liao as thongh they ware In
Uerasa h«re a t tha r ift. The f*c t
a that tk<r w < a t i e saunwsiB m
tha legend of the lake Us toM by
tin Klam ath tadlaap.
arms
moronUMhM *i«sps y
irhaps
me the spirit of kindness,
the world is to blame. But who
epuld have a h o m e a s beautiful
as he, and not reflect a part of hts
¿Jfò W 'U -iA ’M »
« « « > ♦ « « wewo to » S i so wow.
bfi'f tf Odd?
rajuKOuevrov. n .
Money «oes « long
you are chasing K.
The. (aoat hdvaatageoue time to
*0 a tael M whea you are yoWhg.
l a k lave a ffa ir, a man 4tovaf-
snakes a bigger fool .of hlm -
tabty
stosr. The to o l gat Its name
because It bed psawlded what
CM members said is a m lllo n
dollars Worth of sport.. Five
yper fishing rights w ill > be > 1
auction In April tor -
mohs than 151,250, the uptet
price. The rights In 1822»
brought IK A 1 B -
Wealthy*
Ctonpftaga -are expected ta
M4 aoatoOt to« Americans'
this year.
•
'
BOLLEAJR, F ia .— Lots ot
husky
ntato dM M rs
w h e p a a th re a k a hundred
should^ throw awgy »their
clubs upon - learning about
this.’- Mrs. TWleb t. Fox of
Hs8 Hack says: “dive me the
taker who loses witoout *o U r-
achla* and who wins without
C H IC A Q O — Chlef ftagta-
ad Oshkosk, wkaee g r a t t a t o *
W1A, Will addreàs tha meet-
tag off «he grand couScti Oro
« ( Aaaarteau IhCUtas W M A
wiH he hald la s a
office
Student Caw Are
Banned at Princeton
■
Man sutopotod 0<
pickpocket Was a tn
found carrftag
V has w lll WH.
t
Bake R ato, to ttin g his
•yelsshss tataro Hollywood
movie cam eras, says he pra­
ters blonds. Wp tkooMhl It
ansMCytog megal in a golf
teuraam<tat wit h’ t o 81.
■was * o * d s -^ lk * 'H * k « t a t o * -
tta g a too u ato * to r
won
MOSCOW — Colonel Peter
K o tlo ft, explorer, Is back tr o to
Tibet with a story of tretatag
a h lto w s SOS o f «toraardlu-
ary Intelligence so well that ,
.ho baeaibe a mmnber of the I
saatolttaa. . Slmlsna outnum-
har tee« la the country. The
• a * t o rer ksund a aaetad 1s-
laaff tha
Inhabitants
of
which were Buddhist monks
wllfc large hairy bodies and
anpnpous
shaggy
heads.
Thar ro® in terror wheq the
Russians approached.
4'-i
to M m tha rule of Qto grasses, the
Rowers, t*n tnses and VJM s f l-
mals, and hla smile Is the golden
sunehtae.
J
?
Bkell, well I ’ll leave It to yoa!
I f the name dbeent# sound un­
pleasant and. cruel. {to I have giv­
en him the cold MM-»
M
and snow; the dark'storm clouds
are hts threatening frdwn. «His
original home won the Klam ath
M a r * . and he was never content
with It but ever cast lehgtng eyes
t o d a y was^ the realm of Liao. In
time lie oveswanta the visible ie rw
of Lflao a tft destroyed lb
Bgt
what power ewn destroy the spirit
o f ttoe beautiful T
Aa Shell was able to regain his
vleihta dam, Ilftftp a tarn a to Ws
M od and people 1« days o f stress
wttb «to chawing Sadie . o f the
sun. Who ksoWs bat this Is the
spry thing ttot angers this fleapot
of winter, and causes him to howl
aadruud a w l tho r il r m coluds
aadog heroes the .sky. W h y not
W-M-L '
the
fbiladelpMa. 65,
ftaty «t a diatahr party altasat
•very night. ,
* H « bolds his fork as
toough he wers Intending to
bant, and tries everything
that comes over too piste.
T h *b dashes home before thé
battles start flttkfiMtott *•
tot« to have m OMtaff Mtar
bino says he likes Monda in
bluw. But he sras gentlesaps
s t o lt o t t M d that “ a b K h -
-efito ta « ptak d re ta ’sin’t at
aft M M ta la m p .*
TURNING THE PAGgS BACK
An Indian named Naqui, who can write 400
letters tm a fttam of rice, iff coming to America. ,We
wonder where lie’ll park hia oar.
Fraley wwf in to rehew
rtotton the other dag and
dishwiaaher, v
t
about He patted the nose of Ma
nt horse consolingly, and BUvw
bled at his master's shirt, coaft
dent oC his own Importance la Ms
tod’s eyes. Again ha nttdgufi Ere«,
and the« ' —«Bred his head almost
«
WTO * IsuBhed hollowly. "What
d’ yuh want, Silver, old scout I
Luka snatched up the esrtlflcate, What’s the matterT" Silver blink
td the signature hastily and stow- ed his eyes and shook Ms heat
It In Ma pocket Steve and Bow- snghtln than nibbled playfully S>
Freds shirt a *tln .
’’Trytn’ to
chee r dm np, SOverf" The boras
bobbed .h is head emphatically.
"Know somethin* is'wrong, dout
ynfrr W s U it ought to h e r A n *
■ \
turns, bounded Into the room war- be sombrely looked oVer the clip
to r sr yellow slip of paper.
piag ta hla head again. K read:
^ M o th e r ! " sbe shouted, all out et
breath— “It's
telegram—frees POLICE SCCKINO UNKNOW N
Fred!" She threw her arms abost
DOW SOy FOR M A T H CLUS
Mrs. Mem*oe*s deck aad fairly
U h r ^ ^ h e ,telegram under her
Mrs. Monroe grew deathly pale
and awayed a little under toe
strong btwwn arm a t her daughter.
stammered faintly. "Let me see!”
Sbe took.sp the little yellow slip
and ratal it, her eyes brimming with
tears. >as Itos white:
MRS. «RACE M ONR0E.
■ SIERRA, OALc
AM UBAYINfc TODAY.
CAN
H A R D LY WATT TO SEE YOU.
Y O U * SON FRED.
She stood staying at the little
slip, her brain trying to gsasp the
ytontfloaoce at the message. Pow-
a ls t o v e a a iL n k s stood In a little
gtaup, watching curtously, smiles
oa their faces. Then Mrs. Monroe
taxB M toU hA « t o
« Id :
•'MT from my sen, gentlemen
We’ve finally found him—aad he'll
toon bo here to manage ..our a *
fairs.“ - 8he turned to lu n n .aib
wau dsnclng about the rponi WMk
Joy. and kissed her fondly.' .
,
Lake Burlingame said suavely?
“But the paper yuh Just signed
puts all yore affairs In my hands,
Wlddur." He took out tos certifi­
cate and spread It «pea to Indicate
a
Seven New Members ’
Join Hl-Y Club
y
>•
* • J
«eran aew maatosrs wore Ini­
tiated tato the feUowAtp of U s
Ashland H i-Y c ía * a t th e ir regu-
a s s r - s n
ASHLAND
S t Louis, Sept 21.— Police
today are seeking an unidenti­
fied eawhoy who, they think,
might explain the mysterious
death et “Scar-Hand" Monroe,
or Stevens, underworld charac­
ter, found shot to death la a
local rooming-house. A terrific
fight had taken place before
the shaettag. according to the
pollen
t h e authorities are
p nis lsi W a r the fact tost Mon-
rds’s life w « staled by a bullet
fro m . a revolver la his own
hand. A murder charge, It Is
said, Stay be filed against the
mlssteg, oewboy whan he Is
« «
•pass whars Mrs. Mon-
____ _ ted her nam* «hero wu
sew «Mr a Man; itotottagulAable
smudge of lak. Ola Luksk fountain
pan bad lsaked once too often.
White, hot alert, tha banker said:
“Wall, wto! tontap » r fountain
p «s a i r * so good as she used ta
be, ehf” He.chuckled forcedly.
Y. M. C. A. h ss**n »N *rs lta t eve­
ning. Those ifixiato k w e re * Roy
A bbott,. E a ti Mershon, L y n n
Nealy, Ltayd Darvtoe, D ick le y ,
fins Maaro, an«- M a rtin z Frost.
F e a r now ssaasbai's were voted to­
te membership la J **,c lu b : Gor­
' A. C. Oieagerwnd A. F .T e t e c ' O. R. Baektaep. Whs 1
don MacCracxtn, Max Hawks,
son o f this city hade pmrhase« ufctows of. ftto N tat tanch In
>obn R oger ta t* Everett McGee.
the Bsrgept * ^nntap V w \ eng, Rap* |M ttan apuVtry, has
IM s e w M be tafctktod at 4 later
store at Talent amd wW continue« byeadtag
P « t week t n 1
data. A committee to boost for
the bualaami w ith aa increaaU fanotag aad lasprovtog his
the coming
Medford - Ashlanfl
stoek.
\
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party la the Heilman addltlo
basketball games consisting of the
following: Fred Kntser,
Dick
Joy and Seldon Burton, Was ap-
fe to Vdfiblir «kat H. «. W j
pptnted by tha president Tbs
ere has taken to nnbther piece o f
Southern Oregon District O ile r
Nfttn Street <rsal**S It s proper»
gars' Conference Which w ill be
held In Ashland |b ft> ra n k end of.
purchased tTOm G- High )>J M,
/ . Goodheart tad.deeded by the.
Apftl 8-88-10, came *P for disens-
*lo n a n d a committed p f three to
latter to the Episcopal church. J
A. F. H unt moved out to his work out details of the entertain-
Dead Indina roach last-week. Tbs
over, DpTO Jadían mpnntaln aatjoa. w ill b« appointed a t n e tt,
‘ ,
president C, g * Ragne of tfte
Is
t
a
very
ctadlttott.'
t
wank*«
meeting.
\
*
1
tv
ftA
ttgU Normal expects to b o lli np^
o n d h h Boulevard acreage which
he recently purchased near the
O . ft. 'm u ta r ts a m to t
county oa mining business.
, «AflfiEÄND
20 Y ean Ago
. W eanar and tam ily have
n m Manta sttaet to the
wsidsaea’« a Brock # v e .
■
N E W YO RK . M a rc h ,2.— (U N )
—.The snappy little roadster that
ranks next to the fu r coat In the
affections of the prom girls, to
fast being eliminated.
>
“The student*’ automobile bps
become almost a bugaboo to eno-
cutlves and faculties of the lead­
in g cottages and universities, says
the American Motorist, which bias
Inst announced result* of a gnoa-
UonnalCe sent to leading school«
throughout the country»' "The.
saawern Indicate at "sunrsfhelm-
Ing aversion” toward student au­
tomobiles.’’
Answering tha . geeaMonnaira,
educators charged the motor car
with being a time waster and a
tosnpee to life and morals. Even
some students and thalr parents
are opposed to the automobile en
the campus.
c
fifiüIsAND
mdgsd With ink. "My I Whdt a
* y a a n r aha enatahned. “I ’m
rry, Wlddor," said Lake anxious-
“Harsi Dry ft on my haaTcsr-
Sri" “W
ta th s r,“ answered
keeps t*e flakes of snow from
fa llin g and tempers tha ehlRtog
biaat, fa r the sun has a way of
breaking through whan the elands
are the darkest?
W o rk — Wsrfced ad lamps. .-
W s a A e d -d M y dftady;
wind
dOtaftweat, snowfall since last ob-
ewvutiSfc. 0.8 in .; precipitation
•ft* la.; ■now on ground 86.«
to.; Tedip. H . 42. L. 2», ft. 12,
ft--- •
it*ds p o ta i to «to* romn
wealthy Americans consider-,,
ably snore Phan waoal tO ttah
C*r salmea to a ssiMlea dol-
r
C.'
be
H e 'd a
♦
. A - -,
fi "3»« 0*0
fiO % Mfci IMAPGCY
S ack q ’ -T h
Professional Salarios
million by 1928.
- t ' V
»-
P R lY Ä tfe A
P im K V ! D» om ' I G i v e
M C0UM AN O
birth-control would nt
, nsoM room for t M
PtofiicieBt Angell of Ykle says salaries of cblldge,
prafatooik lure rKuralmig and far from attractiy« to
mem of character and intelligence. Those are not
unfamiliar words. We seem to have hoard them be­
fore rather frequently. From which w e gather that
the professor i« a tittle dissatisfied with his wages.
Still the scholar pings on doing the best he cao
on the stipend provided by the trustees or the regents
and atteriag only now and then a mild and dignified
protest over the disparity between hit income and
his needs. Now aad then, if hi* leaning toward the*
world and the flesh is greater than his love for
pure leaning, he breaks away nad gone ip foa aaoney
making. But not often.
In spite of what is being said about the inad­
equacy of professorial aalanea, the scholar, we be­
lieve, is less ooDeeTmed over the financial «moiaments
of bin profession than the miimhnrj of nlmoat any
other calling. The astronomer would rather discover
a new star than a gold mine and the geologist may
prise a rare fossil above the legacy from a rich
uncle. Nevertheless the scholar, as the saying is,
has to live. Sanskrit roots cannot ha made to
substitute for meat and potatoes. Identification, of
a new line in the fpectram may be good for a thrill
but it takes dollars to hay «hoes for tha baby. And
profeasors have babies too.
i
Tha irreducible minimum of the profefiaor’s salary
should be a t » point which takes into consideration
not only tha daily satisfaction of his material needo
but also the satisfaction rf his passion for scholar­
ship. To be adequate it must not only leave him
free from worry over whether jae can meet the tradea-
meib’o bills the first of the month but it should per­
mit him • liberal indulgence in those cultured pur-
salta towkrt which he is attracted. And pariaoularly
it ohoaM be sufficient to save him from the feeling
among mifi of the worid that his is an inferior
‘ *•
•
OUR WAY
< M A 'A ^
An fiogtishman hfcy been lecturing in this coun­
try about fairies, and even showing photographs of
them which the fairies allowed some child play­
mates of theirs to take. Mr. Gardner sayg he be­
lieves in fairies, gnomes, elves, undines and other
being« that children know all about, but. whom in
later yeans they deny*. And Mr. Gardner is certain­
ly right.
Of eanne there an* fairies. “Shy gifted men and
women” know (ham wall, says M>. Gardner. The
shy, gifted poet, Francis Thompson, was acquaint­
ed with then. "Turn bat a stone, and start a
wing!” he wrote. Some day he was talking about
angels, but angels don't hide ander atones; fairies
do.
To see fairies, one has to believe in them. There
is nothing strange in that For years and years,
nohody believed in America. Then came Columbua,
who not only believed in it,'ta t proved that it ex­
isted. Today everybody‘believes in America. Some
day everyone will believe in fairies, top. One doesn’t
have to net things to believe in them. .Who ever
ever saw the equator! Who ever took a picture of
it! Isn’t it «bsnvd te believe in the equator, which
has never been photographed, and to disbelieve in
fairies whose pictures have, been taken.
The great harrier between people and fairies
is arithmetic. Arithmetic is cold, dead, logical. As
soon as a child becomes confident that two and two
make fewr, the fairies begin to withdraw from him;
he is no longer to be trusted fully. Shades of the
prison-house have begun to dose upon that riifld;
and l y the time that he has assured himself, and* ¿a
proud of the fact, that one-half multiplied by one-
third is eae-tewenth <er whatever*it it), the fhiriaa
flee from that worldly wiseacre. Thereafter he is
nothing but a clerk, qnd he goes from had te worn,*
sometimes descending to the grade of senator and
talking about nd valorem and specific dfitfee and
other things which make fairies and ether aaariM»,
beings sick. No undine will have anything i a da
with a poison who ea|ls wator it4wo-Gk-: -v- • y.
Every newspaper worker beiievf* in foigiM»
even though he may never have aeon one. A typo­
graphical error is always the work of a fairy,.{¿fee
compositor swears he set the lino correctly, and the
proofreader declares the mistake wasn’t them whoa
he read i t So it must be a fairy whs "hanged tha
'
•
W. H. PERKINS,
I C. X R E A D , MANAGING EDITOR
.
w L J-f •* * / J .
-ttfiHMflft* ’ *
RgTÁRT.TKHtín IN 1876
*
y ■
3 0 YegrsAfO
» stepped forward 'ana,’
r head, aatd: “No, she
Burlingame. I won’t let
didn’t ask me about I t
see that fortunately- no
la bean dene. But It
i been. W i l l wait until
M homa He’ll handle
gsrly .carrviagnstoam lng coek-pot
m M l toethTjrtad looked at him in (
astonMhmtot, Silver deposited th a !
pot carataky ta Ms mastorb feta-
and wMh flte atroost nonchalance ;
retnned to his own dinner.
Fred looksd at the pot again, f t !
was fu ll to thi brim with savory,
•teaming basal. H a laaghed. out-
tig h t
,
"Whew on earth did yah gat
th a t yah wlsardf” he shotted. *T
Chink the service Is terrib le-.
where1* the table-clotkr
RUrev, leeVpd annoyed, but left
off his grom-tenpplag and thnndar-
«he bowed ungrsdonsiy.
e aye sf his son
w Was Standing
fluffy t a n e e ra a rn a * sya-
I all with venom, he stalk-
followsd by hla’ two cro-
3
» m e s -mOved le-gofly * Httla too tat, Gorge oi
cry could be wfifti yta «ft I t t * r Still ■ law
“Yak dsagtal h r f Ä plA sd ap tha pta . tard i
gadgattl Ynhj Ä fivas aad geUowed Silver’« eat
nothing, but
J^Uvsr led his master througl
oo aad glow- «mmp ot Sansa undergrowth; up