Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (March 15, 1927)
9 e * Of those?" .»• "No— just a two-cent stamp.” ' "W hat about a special delivery stamp?” Insisted the postmaster. "Best way to send a letter. I t ’ll <et there sooner. Only ten cents.” "I*re told you 1 wanted a two- cent etam p!" declared the custom er. "Jknd that’s all 1 want. Do yon understand?" "W hat about some post cards?" asked the unperturbed postmast er. But the customer, having seised hla two-oent stamp, hur ried angrily out. "W h at In the world wore you doing?" demanded the stranger. "W hy were you trying to sell that man everything In the place?** ' "Oh, he’s our barber,’* replied the postmaster. " I was Just giv ing him a dose of his own medi cine.” ' . Sherlock Holmes Said There Could Be No “Perfect Crime,"But Killed — Contributed. HELLO BILL! HOW S YOUR WARDROBE TOR TOMORROW NIGHT? contact with prac- MAKE5 V ’C/IRS' tieftlly every standard make of automobile fur. ‘ nishes us with an ex- p e rt n r k i u g know- ledge th a t is yours to command. D r. Leemi« r J . B ic e « 9 pm. he ¿ave his wife <100, and then laft thé house for g 45 nùnuic^ valli ' will give you a free brake adjustment •for one week, starting March 16. Loomis, hah ware ’ o r ia ro á to r e lo u e ' him. when, th ey aA- tnikfcexL th ey h a i no e v id e n c e D E T R O IT . Mich., Mar. 15 — Tho "perfect crime’’— The crime Sherlock Holmes us ed to say never could be com m itted— Did It become a reality hrfre when Mrs. Grace Loomis, beauti ful and socially prominent, was beaten to death In her handRome suburban home, a scant block from a police station? Sherlock Holmes, master mind at solving crimes done In fiction, contended a murderer could not fail to leave some clew that u lti mately would lead to his arrest. Right, Maybe, But— Perhapes Holmes was right. But— * » D etroit’s "homicide squad,” as capable as any In America, has worked day and night on the mys tery of the clubbing of Mrs. Loomis a few weeks ago. Their net progress toward solv ing the death riddle Is— Exactly none. They are bewildered. Mrs. Loomis was tne wife of Dr. Frank R. Loomis, respected Detroit physician. They were in T Mr». C re c e Loomis their early thirties, parents of two children, apparently living very happily in their brick home 09 Marlowe Ave., In a suburban dis t r ic t. • basement, was not locked. There was milch mud outside. Anyone entering through that door would haye had very muddy feet. There were aot footprints in the mud, on the cellar stairs or on the clean linoleum of the kitchen to which the stairs led. » « Thç Tragedy Tuesday evening, February 22, Mrs. Loomis sat in the suq par lor of her home. The lights ware on and the shades wdre aot drawn. At about 2:30 o’clock, Dr. Loomis came home from his .office. H alf an hour later— the narra tive Is the husband’s from hers on— Dr. Loomis gave hie. wife 1100 for Various household ex penses, ahd then left the house to tqke a walk. At 9:45 o’clock he returned, let himself In w ith his key — and found his w ife lying dead oh the sun room floor. She had been clubbed to death. There were rigns in the sun room of a te rrif ié struggle. * One Entrance Unlocked Front and back doors were locked. Every window was lo c k -1 ed. A side door, leading to the This statue of Lincoln was presea|ed lo th« C l|y ,ot, Afhland ' by Mr? Butler in memory of Its step-father, Jacob Thomason, a pioneer of 1247, who first set tled in the W illam ette valley. The statue Is cut from Csr- I rara marble and' Is '.the work of I Hollywood Film Actress is Killed In Auto Smashup The Journalism class of tlie Southern Oregon Normal sehool recently, were discussing an as signment and the question enme up as to whether the statuo In L ith la Park was Lincoln or of an earlier Ashland pioneer. T. 8. HOLLYW OOD, Cal., M a r.J B .— Earfton, Normal school student and member of the Journalism (U N )— Injuries suffered in aa class, In an Interview, Mr. »and automobile crash Sunday caused Mrs. G. 8. Butler, doner of the tho death hère Monday of Helen i Noward, motion picture actress. statuo and secured some inter Loretta Bush and W illiam De esting facts f concerning this splendid addition to* the par*. marest, both ot the screen colony, A e interview a# prepared by ★ ere recovering fro m , Injuries snitoined In the enme accident. the Normal ktudeht Is as fol The three were enroute to a W ar lows; ner Brothers location, near River The rumor that the statue In side when, their machine oolllded Lithla park is not the statue o? with ataotker. ( Lincoln Is unfounded. "W hy, aqyonc could tell It is Lincoln," e x c lili’ieJ both Mr. and Mrs. G. Redmond — Fred AtMnson 8. Butler at their beautiful home completes construction of ware qt 4 1 Granite street, in an in house and lumber storage yard, cornar 4th and B streets. terview Saturday, ’ ' C. K. WILLIAMS, Prop. 1 *1 gave his wife has not been found. But two diamond rings on her hand were aot touched« No trace of the club with which she was killed has been found. Dr. Loomis has offered 11000 reward for the slayer’s arrest. Probing the doctor’s past, de tectives learned he was born in Brooklyn, Mich., on a farm ; stud ied medicine; entered a New York hospital as interns; met Grace said. They asked why he had blood Burns, a nurse and married her. stains on his overcoat, his gloves Ideally Mated and his hat. He replied that these In Detroit, Dr. Loomis had came when he stooped to pick np prosperous practice. his w ife’s body. Friends* said the physician and ■ They asked him why there were his. wife we^e Ideally mated, fond no bloodstains on the telephons of each other, of their home, of receiver. He replied that he had their -two children. removed his glove when he tried The children have not been to use the instrument. told of the "perfect crime." They Dr. Loomis was released after play together happily at the home there had been widespread expres of Dr. Lommia* mother, hoping sions of indignation over his a r their own mother soon w ill re rest. Friends signed petitions ex turn. pressing complete confidence In But she w ill not— for she was him. the victim of what may prove to There the case stands. have been the "perfect crime" at T h e |ld 0 Dr. Loomis says he last. I single detail of his story. They asked him Where he went on his three-qusrters-of-an-hour , Walk, and how fast he walkqd. He told them. A policeman took the same walk, at the same pace— and found it took Just 45 minutes. ^Telephone company ■/ records show that Dr. Loomis’ phone was listed as out of order from 9:01 to 9:50 o'clock, as Loomis had Ip S OWN M E D IC IN E The population of the town was doubled Sunday and every aspect The customer wanted a two- tof She old boom days Is coming. e w t stemp. Strange ta le * of wealthy finds are ’ ’Envelope to go with it? " ask told and surveyors are busy stak e d the postmaster. ing out proper lines. "No, Just s stamp." “ W e have some nice eight-cent stamp».” the postmaster went on. TONAPAH, Nev., Mar. 14.— " P re tty color. Good mucilage on The yellow or gold fever, an af- , the back. Stick well. W ant one fllc y p n .o f the Old W»st, waa In A grip today *< treasure hunters Streamed through th é picturesque canyon and across the long, dry lake beds to Weepas. LOS ANGELES, M ar. 16.— Rowen, A second strike has been made ( U N ) — Mrs. M argaret and Ed McKelvey, <3 year • old "doom prophetess .god. two of her k. " ' and desert character, la the center ’ of associates,'were held to answer attention as he displays a large charges of conspiracy to murder quarts boulder flecked with nug D r. Bert Fullm er, leader o f ' the A paint and varnish for gets and said to assay 27500 Seventh Day Adventists, ■ a t the per ton. The place of the find was conclusion of th e ir preliminary every need unrévealed, however. hearing. -iuMdStT Antonio F rilli. of Florence, Italy Australian Employs Novel whose work was exhibited in the Italian xpavUien im it Method of Saving Life ace of Manufactures a t the Pan in Crisis ama Pacific - International expo SYDNEY. N. S. W .. Mar. 16.— sition at San Francisco, in 1916. (U N )— Lively steps of ¿he Char It was there .that M r. and Mrs. leston, danced by Painter Kent Butler selected the statue. Mr. when he was• attacked by armed Butler expected to secure the aboriginals on Epi island, saved statue that was exhibited, hat It Kent from probable death at the was sold to a man who waa con hands of the cannibalistic savag nected frith the San Franc'»co' Chronicle, and Mr. Butler was es. Kent, • an Australian compose?, supplied with an exact copy, was on a walking tour in the New which was c u t-in Ita ly express Hebrides group, still inhabited by ly for him. • . head hunters, when the savages, Mr. and Mrs. B utler ware for brandishing weapons, swarmed quite a while undecided as to about him. z which piece of statuary to select To distract their attention from Signor F r illfa wonderful Kent swung into the Charleston. display. They for I time favor Soon the natives caught the in ed s statue of Washington, but fection of the dance and 'w ere it did not quite come np to their swaying and shuffling along with ideal of what Washington should the composed. When the dance be like. The statue of Lincoln wfts ended the natives lavished seemed perfect. In every detail, "Kent with presents and escorted and It waa finally chosen from a him In safety to tho coast. number g f magnifleient rivals. The statue 4s six feet, olght Inches in height« Standing on its granite base, the great soul of Lincoln appears«to look out from, tho beautiful, sad face and wonder, in his quiet way, at the hurrying people who daily pass '< him by, unseeing, unthinking, Normal S t u d e n t Gathers uncaring. Some Interesting F acti on Memorial • < .Litliia Springs Machine Shop P X C I lc NATURALLY One a t N ight— Next Day Bright! A Genuine Treat ORDERLIES are an easy relief for con stipation. A neyer falling laxative, gentle in action and absolute ly sure. Never necessary to Increase the -dose. They work naturally and form no habit. Safe for children aa well as adults. Three Hlaes 2ffc— BOc— »1.00 a McNair Bros. Another Strike is Reported as Made at Weepas Fuller Paints Insurance Service Well Directed Varnishes *B a e t P a in t— Beet W orkm en . Your insurance policies should cover your risks and your hazards ju st as a well directed arrow covers the bull’s eye. Phon» 172 b et’s Thank the ^Normal Sehool Again Ashland has to thank the student body of our State Normal School for bringing to Ashland anothen aggregation of music - lovers — this time the faculty Quartet of the University of Oregon. »• . Surely this entertainment, which is to be given this evening, deserves universal support, not only because of the promised excellence of the program to be given and as encouragement to the Normal School to continue to “ put on” similar programa but also that our visitors may realise ilr full measure the warmth of Ashland’s weloome. F irst N ational B ank ASHLAND fjSgn OREGON Breakfasts 'stand by you VEGETABLE H ASH L p in t chopped cooked potato \ p 1 n t m ix e d cooked vege- tables ' * cup white sauce cup dia zo la Tomato or chopped egg sauce IIE mixed vegetables may be any kind, as cooked carrots, turnips, cabbage, beets, peas, chopped string beans,lima lieans, stewed com,onions, etc. If cooked onion is not among the vegetables, a little raw, minced onion should, be added. Combine the in gredients. H eat, the Mazoja in a medium-sized frying pan, pack in the hash an inch deep and fry until browned. T 7V/T ANY jokes have been coined Women Are Held In Murder Case :-J. 0 . RIGG The Best Way o f reparing D elicious Vegetable Hash If your insurance is in the hands of this agency of the H artford Fire In surance Company, y o u may know th at in case of loss, your policies will “ hit tho spot.” JL ’ A. about bash — but in the case of Mrs. Allen’3 hash (see recipe above) the joke is on the person who doesn't try it. You will also get an idea why M odern H ou sew ives prefel* M azola for fryin g — because foods fried in it'are greaseless when ready to serve;— because Mazola is an absolutely pure vege table oil, pressed from the hearts of fully-ripened corn kernels. Once you try Mazola for fry ing you will never go back to the old fashioned way of frying with animal fats. M ail Th u Coupon Today Billings Agency R eal* E s ta te A h e a l Inaurane Betab. 1222 a t «1 B. Malta St. Phon« p i t , H E business world ba* learned that almost 70% of the day’s important w o rk fall» Into the four short morning hour» before luncheon. Thu» correct breakfast eating, as essential to good work, is being urged on employees in such famous institution« as General Electric Co., James McCreery*» and many others. To heap up with Your Job, you m ust he at your best mornings. Thus Quaker Oats—providing an excellent food balance o f protein, carbohy drate«, vitamihe “B” and laXUSive bulk, has become the diet etic ngge of the world. Thousands, on expert advice, are making “Quaker’’ now their dsfly breakfast. No other cereal grown compare» In food balance. N o other is quite sb' appetite enticing. DeGciously altrac- T IOS * SAFE DEPOSn Quaker Oats calumet XHB WORLD'S GREATEST “—contain« two leavening units— one begins to work when the dough it mixed, the other wait» for the heat of the oven« then both units w o rk together. Gives you doable protection egafaut M » '