Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (March 9, 1927)
FAGS TBhSW ASHLAND DAILY «M K G D -r-*- gr n » n.i ELKS NAMM OFFICERS ~ At the regular meeting of the THE RAIL SPUTTER ■ J' O V R CIBCVfl The training school is going to have a circus on March 19. at the Normal. There > 0 1 he a parade down town and the performance M ill he given In the afternoon and evening, Like all circuses, we are going to have an animal show. W e hope every ope will come and have a gpod time. 4thA Dear Friend, ■ My name is Hasel Davis, go to the Lincoln School. ' I t Is training school for the southern Oregon Normal students. A few days ago we had. a very bad storm in Ashland. • fhe trains could not go north or south. A town named Medford, ne6r Ash land, was flooded« Do you have severe storms? I should enjoy hearing about Oshkosh. ( Sincerely yours, Hasel Davis. i were elected: ■>"< ing ¿salted Ruler, W m . M, Briggs; W e are testing, fata today. We are w riting about these things and Esteemed Leading Knight, Clyde fo u n t; Loyal Knight Earl J. Bur putting them in ouy booklet. It is CALENDAR OF EVENTS nett; ‘Lecturing Knight, Emmett tots of fun. W e a ll enjoy it. *7 Thursday, M ar. 10.— Lady Elk's O. Gillings: Secretary, J. Edv.- Mildred -Urban .«A Card club msets in the club-; Thornton: Treasurer, P. provost; rooms. Mrs. H. K. Tomlinson The children of the Lincoln Trustee, D. H. Jackson; Outer and Mrs. O. H . Tsulssnid, School are making posters for the Guard, E. B. M iller; Representa dreys. When they are made ws tive to the Grand Lodge. James Friday. M ar. 11— Washington P. are going to put them down town W. Bowers and alternate, Fred C. T. A. will fiv e a program In the Washington school. > ' to attract the peoples attention. Homes. The posters are going to he very 4 M . M ar. 11/— Berean C la n of nice end attractive. -th e Christian church w ill meat * Phoebe Roach. at the James Putman home on Holly street. Miss Bork’s room has received Friday, Mar. 11— Lincoln P. T. a num b«1 of letters frpta other A . w ill meet in the school towns and states, p ie r » are mady building at 3 p. m. interesting things in them. Saturday, M ar. IB.— College Club Clarice Crowson, 4A w ill meet a t the home of M in Has Spent Three Tears in Marie Myers, Medford, Oregon. Jail Rather Than Snp- Oh Boy! the circus is cemlhg, Monday, M ar. 14— A rt Club meets v port Former W ife March 1», 1927. Don’t m iss-It. In tbs Parish House. Mrs. J. Paradé in morning, afternoon and A. Huger and Mrs. Frank Nel W IL L O W S , Cal., March 9.— night performances. Be sure and ( U P )— Samuel W . Reid, . Cali son, hostesses. come to the normal auditorium. fornia’s “alimony m artyr'’ 'who is Friday, M ar. 18.— Modern Wood Side shows, dog shows and lota of serving a life sentence in Jail men and Royal Neighbors w ill fun. So be sure and come,, and rather than pay alimony to his have a public box social In thé' don’t m iss'It. * Moose hall. divorced wife, has started the Rex W ertz, 8A » a » third year of his confinement. " W MiM" » I S IMU I B Dear Friend, • My name is Margaret Real. I go to the Lincoln School. I t Is the training school for the Normal students. I am ten years old. W e have had bad rains, which caused many slides. Medford, a town near us, was flooded. We hate mountains all around us, which havp4een covered with fnow most of the winter. « I should like to hear from you. Sincerely yours, WATCH FOR THE BIG CIRCUS The boys and girls of the Lin coln School sro going to give a circus on March 19. 1927, at the normal school.. There w ill be a parade through the town, with clowns, and boys on a truck doing tumbling stunts. The beys have formed a band and are having nand practice once a week. The admission «barge w ill be 28 and 18 cents each. W o want the mon Margaret Real. ey to build a play shed. Please W e are making a good health watch tor our story next week and we w ill tell you more about our chart. circus. On It the vegetable men are Alvin Jolo having a race.-- f L f t W lH t , , W e are also making vegetable Miss Dork has a new hyacinth. riddles. It is very fragrant. Miss Bork re Can yon gness this* one? ceived It some time last week. I grow on top of the ground. Merle Wells, 8A My roots are tiny and white. My tops are white and green. W hat CAPTAIN MILK'S CASTLB am I? * The contest which is on to see Elm er Harrington which side w ill color their half of the castle first is progressing nice THE CIRCUS POSTER« The children are makiDg circus ly. The score la s s "illowst Side posters for the circus. It is sp- No. One. 35 Side No. Two. 22. The Six A class of the Lincoln Ing to be in the normal auditor School received a letter-» from ium, March 1», 1927. Laura Myers of W h ittio r, Cal. It Harvey Gearhart, «A was a very interesting le t'tr for It' told shout their school life. We ex flV K S pect to answer the tetter. In citdgs the teacher Is having George Frances Smith the boys piftc up things tats week, and the girls the next week. The SCHOOL GROUNDS hoys are improving the grounds In our ^civics class we chose very nicely. ' i - captains and they chose people to Hasel Moore. <A help them in cleaning up the- school grounds. We are testiug foods for vita W e thought that Jt was o s r du mines, proteins, etarchv a id fats. ty to clean up the grounds because we are thp highest, rpotn in th f Lincoln school.? ' - 9» 4. Malcolm-.Meyer, 6Á THE CIRCUS The boys Aid girls1 of Lincoln School a m going to have a cir cus, March 19, 1927. The money that Is mads w ill bs spent for the play shed. The girls are going to give a Gollywabble dance and a plantation scene. They are go ing to have the camel walk and the elephant walk and a great, many other things. There w ill he side shows snd dog shows. rt will be held is Normal school su- dltorinm. K arl Moore, 6A Overnight to circus Portland Comfortable Pullman ac com m odations M sure a night’s restful sleep; arrival in tim e for business next morning. Reserve space on either No. 54 or No. 16. The form er puts you in Portland at 7:15 next morning, the lat-. - terat&50a.m. , Returning, similar com fortable Pullman service leaving Portland either at SkOOpjm. (No.l3)or(No.53) at 1.00 ajm—sleepers ready at930p.m . Save 10% to 30%—- buy . . ■ , ■ roundtrip week-end fare. Sold FrL, Sat. or Sun. Limit Tuesday, •18.99 roundtrip llday-fee foe day. *-• -« isay Southern paci£i<^g G. N. Kramer,-Loci ' Fhoae 48 T -'fe TO RECEIVE INSTRUCTION L. I. Moore, shop foreman, and 810-70 v , _____ A D V E R T IS IN G The children of the <A grade are making posters for the eirhus they are giving. There are bright colored animals, ladles and clown« upon large pieces of wall paper. They have their letters for print ing and all think that the posters w ill be huge successes. » , Rachel Forsythe, IA * » F osters H u rrah ! A circus is coming. You'll see. The sixth A grads In Miss Mooney’s .art class Is mak ing posters for the circus. They are of different shapes and sises. Ws are going to put them In store windows to advertise it. Alice Arant, 8A . roundtrip ticket». a large prettily sppétnted tabla. Poley w ill have charge of the mu F. M. Furry, in charge of the painting department of the Cls*y- comb Motor co., le ft for Portland Saturday Mar. 6, on an Instruction trip. „ M r. Moon w jtl work in the Ford Motor eo. shop receiving instruc tions as to the best and hswsst methods of doing Ford wo^fc. Hr. F u rry w ill race!vs instructions in painting oars with the ate» P tfox- vltn Finish, all work' being done with s spray gun. The Clatycomb Motor ebJnpaAy has -Installed an up-to-date paint ’■•hop aWd Will he ready fo do flrht class worl^ w jthln a abort time, as their men w ill Be thoroughly schooled along this line. Reid attracted nationwide at- tentlon In 1925, when he declared he would go to ja il before he would obey the injunction of Su perior Judge C. F. P u rk itt of Glenn county, to pay alimony to ward the support of bis former wife, who, he insists, has now re married her. first husband. .“ I t Isn’t fa ir,” he declared. “ I f he wants her he can support her. I 'll not pay a cent toward her sup p o rt-if I Me In ja il until I die.” Reid let his hair and beard grow long as a m ark of resent ment at the court’s action. A fter 18 mouths of imprisonment he was taken from the ja il for a sanity teat. A commission of alienists pronounced him per fectly sane. A t that time he per mitted his hair to be cut, and hts beard shaved. » A fter the examination. Judge P u rk itt again ordered him to Jail, and Reid began to let his hair and beard grow again. “ I am a victim of Injustice and personal spite,” said, Reid. “ I am perfectly w illing to pay for the support of our 3-year-old child, if «he is put in the proper kind of a home. But no money for my ex-wife. Maybe my conduct seems peculiar, but it's the course I havh; chosen: and the course » I propose to stick to.” Sheriff Roy Heard says the “ m artyr” .is a model prisoner Reid Is a veteran of the W orld W ar, serving 8 months In France with the A. E. F ., and receiving in honorable discharge In , San Francisco. , M f f i S I K EFFORT TO SAVE BABE'S UFE ' EUGENE, March 9.— (U N )— The efforts of three persons to call beck to life Earl Lloyd John son, Eugede, after the child had fallen into the W illam ette, river near here and had sunk for the third time Sunday, it was reveal ed here by the rescuers. Slipping on a rock the lad fell Into the river and was swept away by1 the current. L. L. Sim mons, Eugene automobile dealer, leaped in after him, unable to reach the boy, swam back to the shore and ran down stream tak ing him out, unconscious, at a shallow. P. N. Laird, a farm er, took the child from Simmon’s arms, rush ed to the Pacific highway near by, hailed an automobile and the un conscious boy was taken to Springfield. Tkere D r. W . C. Rebban, after 45 tplnutee of rap Id work, succeeded in resusciatal- ing him. BONDAGE W hy did I walk when a sickle moon Jeweled the purpling sky, And a slim tree on the shadowed h ill Was no more lone than I? . • When the amber pool was fringed w ith stars That danced to the singing breeze? For Beauty wills I shall always hear The searing flames of these. B LAN C H E LOGAN O’N E A .L « 23 « - » . -. . ’ — * Mise Harriet Carlton Honored in -pink and white with dainty pink nut cups, 'clever, original place cards sad a centerpiece of heantlfnlly arranged carnations of the corresponding colors. T h e guest list Included: Naomi Leèdom, Jessie Chisholm, Cleo Shsrard. M arjory Baughman, Edita Dhnford, Thelma Hubbard, Leah DeHass. Frances White, Sylvia Provost and Artis and Lov- ette DsArmond. Carson-Fowler Lumber Co. GONE! Senior High School P. T. A. Will Meet— The Senior high school P. T. A. w ill hold their regular meeting in the school building Thursday, March 10 at 3:30. ....... * ----- With Birthday Party— A delightful and instructive Mrs. H arry Carlton was thé program has been arranged dur gracious hostess at a delightful in g which Mrs. Csdsow will give party, which was given at her a talk on “ the movies,” Miss Eva home on Union street, Saturday afternoon, March fifth , honoring the birthday anniversary of her daughter. Miss H arriet Carlton. to keep that ugly shine away A . Jolly time , was spent In lis with this New Wonderful special tening to the radio and playing French Process Face Powder— called MELLO-GLO! Prevents games, for which prizes were won large pores — stays on so long by the following girls: Thelma — very pure and fine — gives Hubbard, Edna Danford, M arjory skin .a peachy look. Keep your complexion young and attractive Baughman and Naomi Leedom. Late In the day the hostess with MELLO-GLO. Get this mar new face powder today.— served delicious refreshments ,ut velous Li thia Springs Pharmacy. > t ' : , ■ . How Girls Love meeting will be decided upon. The charter membership list will be held open until that time and it Is hoped th^t all teachers, who are interested in the'advance- ment of their profession, snd the promotion of music as an art, w ill be In attendance. A carload of red cedar, all heart seven foot fenceposts jusf received, w ill sell for 36c each as long as they last. A ll kind ofr fencing. — Plows from 310.00 up. Imple ments of every description. W hite Sewing Machines and everything that farmers need. ___ at Peil’s Comer Opportunities That Can Never Return Vou had available funds at different times that you meant to invest but never did! They would have provided an in come for you NOW, when you need i t Those who are young should think of the future now and ACT before it is too late! The Citizens Bank Ashland, Oregon ‘ Vault E ntom bm ent /ncontpimifa&r fhe BETTER WAYS N o matter where the/teefcfe~ffag fapeompttabiy better ways—cretnatioti or r tu k ttMomhtntnc at the Portland Crematorium M B Mausoleum art available. » “ The Winchester Store” .-w Celotex and Shumacher Board Decorative Hardware 23 23 tt Johns Mansville .Asbestos Roofing PRESTO-LAC Simpson’s address. WHY NOT USE— . • " I . for sale at J. Albert. Mrs. J. A. Imogene Wallace, Rawles Moore, H attie White, Mrs. Harold Atkins, Ida E. Wood, Mr. and M Gore, Mr. Carl Loveland Leona Marsters. by M r. and Mrs. Carleton Janes and Miss Alice Holmfyach and tea W. R. C. Holds Regular was served. Mrs. Janes poured w ith Miss Beulah Fore and Miss Meettag— \ The W . R. C. of Burnside Relief Margaret Duhbs assisting her. Corps No. -24, held their regular Those present were: Mrs. J. R. meeting in the I. O. O. F. hall Robertson, Noel L. Erskine, Lo Powers— Bray Mountain Dudo Saturday, March fifth. lita B. Piersoi|. Mr. and Mrs. W. mine claims to have 100 tona* During the business session Mrs. Mary Prescott was elected. C. Janes, Esther Church, Mr. ore on the dump, worth 8400 a Junior vice president snd Mrs. and Mrs. George Andrews, Mrs. ton. Erickson was Initiated into (he » » » organisation. x Auxiliary to American Legion It was announced thkt the next Interesting Meeting— social would be held on Monday, The Auxiliary to the American March fourteenth at the home of 'Legion Pest No. 14, held their Mrs. Hattie Boyd at 317, North Every day in 1926' some 3.59 dwellings eanght firp regular semi-monthly meeting In Main street. with some consequent I qss to the owner. Fire resist the Pioneer hall on Winhurn Way « 22 22 Monday evening, March fifth. Al Ashland sad Medford Music ant construction is not expensive, so where is the though the weather was quite Teachers Mee t- ■■ economy of flimsy building? . - stormy, there was a good attend Art informal meeting of the ance. Ashland and Medford 1 music A very interesting business teachers was held Sunday after session was conducted at which noon, March sixth, at the home of • • ,* ’ * , the president. Mrs. John Enders, Mrs. E. E. Gore at 118 Geneva presided in her usual capable avenue, Medford, tor the purpose manner. I t was unanimously de of organising a local chapter of cided to hare Jointly a cooked the State Music Teacher’s Associa also let us tell you about food and an apron sale sometime tion. in the latter part of this month. A fter a general discussion with The ladles have purchased a large Mr. Janes presiding, the constitu supply of dishes snd silverware tion of the Portland chapter, with which w ill be used to equip the certain necessary alterations, was Pioneer ball. adopted and the following officers The next meeting, according to elected. the usual schedule, will be held on President, Miss Leons Mars- the evening of Monday. March 21 ters; vise-president, Carl H. Love “In The Heart of Town” and as has been previously plan land; secretary, Mrs. E. E. Gore; ned w ill be a strictly social one. treasurer, Mrs. Carleton Janes; I t Is especially requested that all auditors, Mrs. George Andrews members will be able to attend and Mrs. J. A. McCorkle. this gathering as there are a num The next meeting will b» held ber of garments to be made for Sunday, April third at Mrs. Gores the men In Hospital 77 at Port residence, at which time a .perm land. anent meeting place and time of A ny reputable fuaenl _ _ to ail dateda. -Enamel Following hne business meeting The color schema was carried out sic and Dr. Norvell will give an a musical program was presented Miss Aahlgnd Elk's Saturday evening, March 8, the annual election of officers was held and the follow (Published by the pupils of Liocoln public school) 4 WEDNESDAY, Muvrh 8, 1M7. 4 /brflowd CREMATORIUM <sa7MousoIeuttU_- PORTLAND ORBOON QatRäfton<-'ikiuttSMtomtoiwnt fU C K Y S T R IK E S are sm ooth and m el lo w —th e finest cigarettes you ever smoked. T h ey are kind to your throat. 4 / , W h y ? A ll because th ey are made o f th e finest T urkish and dom estic tobaccos, properly aged and blended w ith great skill, a n d there is an extra process in treatin g the tobacco. “I t ’s toasted” Your Throat Protection