Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, April 11, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    MONDAY, April 11. i W t .
DAILY HDIWCMl
- - THE DAILY TIDINGS EDITORIAL and, FEATURE PAGE -
C. J. READ,
ESTABLISH ED IN 1876
Ratered ad the Ashland,
, Postofflee as Second Claes MaU M atter.
ft
Ti-UMK IME NöiriiUGr
ELSE -To oo BuT '
_ ■ m m
A few days ago the papers announced the death
of that great- good man so widely known all over
the United States—Col. George W. Bain of Lexing­
ton, Ky., aged 86. Few men ever addressed so many
persons or in as many places, or had more real
friends than he. People never got tired of ¡teeing
and hearing him. He was at the Ashland Chautau­
qua three times—1910, 1913 and 1915, each time de­
livering two or three lectures. The last time he
was here he was taken violently sick, and all of his
fecture dates on the Coast had to be cancelled.
He went direct from here to one oY the big
Chautauquas in Ohio and delivered the last lecture
on the program. And although two of the greatest
lecturers of the American Platform had spoken
there a few days before, the people eaid Col. Bain’s
was the finest one of all!
Me wrote more than once that of^all the num­
erous places he had lectured that there was no place
that he would rather speak than in Ashland, Ore­
gon. He liked the place and its people. Traveling
in the cars—three thousand miles from Ashland—
a stronger, talking with him inquired about the
Pacific* Coast and wag told that Ashland, Oregon
was the finest little city he had ever visited. Mr.
<*Stranger” came to Ashland to see if the report
was true,— found it was, and invested many thous­
and dollare here, and did very many things which
have been of very great importance to all of its
dwellers- and also the surrounding country. Only
a few -weeks ago the Colonel wrote a fine letter to
one of his Ashland friends.
CoL Bain’s influences as a lecturer and as a
Christian gentleman, will remain for many, many
years to come.—Contributed.
Automobile Regulation
The problem of regulation of automobile driv-
ing become» more difficult each yeaT, as the number
of drivers increases. The laws and the enforcement
have been tightened up a good deal, efforts are made
all the time to educate people to show proper care.
And yet the number of accidents is something enor­
mous, and may increase still further.
The fundamental trouble in the majority of the
accidents, is that the drivers were going too fast, If
they had had their cars under better control, they
could have stopped when that car dodged out
from a side street," or a child ran out in'front of tho
car, or the pedestrian tried to cross in the wrong
place.
A great number of drivers consider only their
intense love for going fast. They are driving for
pleasure, they are thrilled by the rapid motion. And
if they are on some errand of business- they are so
impatient to get to their destination that they must
hurry along at a rate of speed so high as to con­
stitute a peril.
But while such rapid speeds may not be any
great hazard in the open country, they get many
drivers in a dangerous habit. *If one is running
40 or 50 miles an hour, and on coming to a town
he slows down to 25 miles, he may think he is pro­
ceeding at a very cautious pace. But even at 25
miles an hour, his car has a lot of momentum. If
someone dodges out from an unexpected spot, it will
take him quite a number*of yards to jwue to a Stop
and a collision may result, or a jiedestryin or child
be run over.
People must be argued and reasoned with over
and over again, they need to lose their driving
licenses in many cases, until they thoroughly learn
to use judgment about speed, and adopt their rate
of motion to the conditions through which they arc
passing in our cities here in Oregon.
The failure of millions of the American people
to vote is an unfortunate modern development.
How can. we w ake these people up, and induce them
to take their part in making a better country?
It would help young people from the habit of
taking an interest in public affairs, if they had*to
make a study of important public questions in their
schools. At present for instance, if school pupils had"
to inform themselves on the relations of this country
with Mexico and China- the labor questions of the
I »resent day, efforts of the fanners to improve their
economic condition, etc.,, they would be more likely
to read about such questions later on, and thus be­
come interested enough to take part in governing
the country.
. .
-
------------------------ --------
V.
(Isn’t somebody introduce the Slow Clubs to
(liin a f
leuh*
a m o t ía e r
’ M O TH ER IN I f t l S VJkAOLE
k1 0 W N ' A 6 B lG r AM
EAST M ARK A S
\X AM . f .
W f'
I
t o
___
ßy W illiams
_ __
the forum
While In San Francisco my
dankhter, Mrs. Earl Fraley, and I
visited the Stanford University
Hospital where Mrs. Ralph Bill­
ings has been a patient for nearly
three weeks. She is doing well.
Mr. Billings is with her and
hopes to bring her (kom e for
Easter. We had a little chat with
Lucille Perozsf, who is a student,
nurse at that institution. She is
looking well and seems much
pleased with her work. Mrs. Mary
Neville, Vernie and Lee^met us
at the hospital and took us for a
ride in Lee’s new sedan, which, he
says, Is to be a honeymoon car in
June, when he expects to bring
his bride, to Ashland.
Among
other ex-rqpidents who have pur­
chased new cars In which they ex­
pect to visit us are Mr. and Mrs.
Billy Bell ef Alameda. Mra. Bell
Is the eldest daughter of our hon­
orable ex-mayor, O. H. Johnson.
Mrs. Amos Reimers, little son and
mother, Mrs. Gantard, are looking
forward to a summer vacation
here. 'Earl Fraley and family, as
usual, will spend the summer here
bringing, with them a "native
daughter,” their new baby, Janet.
Their other three children were
born in Ashland. Mr. and Mri.
n
•
Sydney-Jlazelton, of .Sacramento,
'-----O 1 M T BY HKA ICRMCC M ¿ ?
have adoptbd an infant daughter,
or • aa» — ra s
Barbara Jean, and expect to bring
«-•-* » » > ♦ > ♦ > > < n » » » n >»-♦ her home this summer.
I was so well pleased to see how
people love our little Lithia City
in the hills, and hold to the hope
that some time, when their for­
The downfall of-any man
tunes are made, they will come
is a matter much ,.to be re­
back to live.
gretted. Much more of a min­
I have had a beautiful trip. O,
ister. If any man ahows an
it is lovely to live in the Spring
inclination to redeem • hlmr
time, when the earth puts on her
self, how much better to ex­
new garment of green, the flowers
tend a helping hand than to
are blooming in the wild wood,
join in the hue and cry of
and the birds are offering np their
exultation over his mani­
songs of praise, and the brooks
festation of weakness. But
are* rushing merrily along to
if any man who has fallen
“Join the brimming river.”
shows no spirit of contrition,
In the Spring a fuller crimson
his punishment should be
comes upon the robin’s breast.
swift and severe. To pamper
In the Spring the wanton lapwing
Is to spoil— Wallowa Bun.
gets himself another crest.
In the Spring a llvller Iris changes
A spirited team of horses
on the burnished dove,
hitched to a light buggy was
In the Spring a young man’s fancy
seen on the streets ot Baker a
lightly turns to thoughts of
few days ago. It really ap­
love.
peared to be a smuch of a
“Consider the lilies of the field,
novelty as was the automo­
how they grow; they toll not
neither do they spin, yet I say un­
bile on the same
street
twenty-odd years ago.— The
to you that Solomon in all his
glory was not arrayed like one of
Baker County Record.
these. But if God so clothes the
grass of the field, which today Is
Nothing la certain except
and tomorrow Is cast Into the
that it won’t happen as the
oven, will He not much more
experts predict. — Southern
clothe you, O, ye of little faith?”
Coos County American.
At this beautiful Eastertide,
when all nature is quickened into
Some folks are such a suc­
new life, we turn away from the
cess at grouphing that they
tomb and behold with great joy,
are dubbed “profothid think­
the Risen, Living Christ, who
ers.” — Roseburg News - Re­
came that we might have life and
view.
______ ' ' -
have it more abundantly.
,
MRS. BARBER.
We are beginning to lose
faith In doctors. They must^
know pedestrians are kill­
ed at the rate of one every
M an y F ad s A re N o w
three hours. Still they pre­
scribe walking. — Burns
F o u n d in H o lly w o o d
Times-Herald.
j
A
NEW YORK — Maurlne
Watkins, former
Chicago
newspaper woman and au­
thor of the play "Chicago,”
portraying the procedure ot
Chicago courts, has received
and offer from Mayor Elect
William Hale Thompson of
the Windy City to act aa pub­
licity agent of his adminis­
tration.
AND
There are no statutes of limi­
tation In the law» of Nature.
----------
I
Everything has been done for
NEW HAVEN, Conn.— The
life except to make It less ex­
"debtors’ prison” of colonial
days will be revived here for
pensive.
the Jailing of all .personal ■'
tax delinquents who do not
hold property. Tax Collector
The closest imitation of a “soûl
Sanford warned that war-
klaa” la the action of a vacuum
rents will be Issued If taxes
cleaner.
are not paid In ten days
SCHENECTADY, N. Y.,—-
Five minutes elapsed between
the conclusion
ot four
speeches
broadcast
front
WGY here to Hobart, Tas­
mania, and receipt of word
that they had been heard per­
fectly 11,000 miles away on
the other side of the world.
The speeches were heard
by Australians ylsitiag In the
United States.
My Idea of bravery Is a flivver
trying to knock the Bpots out of
a locomotive.
When you are broke, the temp­
tations to speculate 1ft Wall Street
are easily controlled.
Some men who know how to
hold their tongues get In worse
troubles by not knowing how to
hold their pens.
HARTFORD, Conn.— Peo­
ple in Connecticut must have
clean hands, the senate de­
cided In pausing a bill re­
quiring all hotels, restaurants
akd other public places to
enclose towels in wooden
cases that will, automatically
turn the soiled linen out of
reach.
Hez Heck Bays “If you steal, you
are a!thlef, but If you kind cheat
insidelthe law you are a "liromln-
ent citizen.”
TURNING THE PAGES BAGK
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
10 Years Ago
20 Years Ago
30 Years Ago
----------
A
Mrs. Dr. Parson and Mrs. J. R.
Mr
and
Mrs.
W.
R.
Pearson
who
John Enders will return’ the last
Norris
took Thursday evening’s
of this week from a few days have been Visiting in Portland for
train for Grants Pass to visit with
two
months
past,-returned
to
Ash­
stay In northern California.
their sister, Mrs. Geo. Calhoun.
land today.
a visitor
(k
What Others Say
Isn’t It Odd?
Glen Smith was
Medford recently.
__•
Articles'" of timely interest«
are welcomed under this head.
Communclatlons mast bear tho
signature of tho author.
CriTA s e e T ri' LCrtSA TriiMGS
M,OMV< MAMMIWGS MA DOES
PER
1 SEEM
H E R BLOVMlM' SOAP BOBBLES
F E R H IM WILE H E B O S T tO
E M WirtW A BEAM SHOOTER-
A T S A KlHD A SV76LLMA HE*S
GOV— ajT -o i4 _x^ 0u R E A PORTY /
G OO D SCOuT TOO M A -----
T would m ' -T rade ' im .
1
„ .
n
^TUES A lM f* V4EK ? , V A „
C o m e oovmkj w e r e
,
AMO ^rr o h B o a r d s j
FOR S O U ? 1ÁERE
CoL Geo. W .'Bain
PU B L ISH E D B Y TH E A SH L A N D PR IN T IN G CO.
MANAGING EDITOR
ASHLAND DAILY T ID IN G S O U T OUR WAY
in
-
HOLLYWOOD, —
Lopsided
fads have the day this spring. Ev­
erything from hem lines to hat
brims are uneven in Hollywood.
Claire Windsor wears a strik­
ing felt sport hat with a brim that
is an inch wide on the left side
and six inches wide on the right.
Norma Shearer sponsors the un­
even hem line for both street and
evening wear. All variety of hem
lines are being worn. Some are
mubh shorter in the front than
the back, while others are long on
one side and short on the other.
The vogue for combing the hair
off one ear and over the other
sttll is popular hi Hollywood and
thia contributes to the general lop­
sided effect.
Eleanor Boardman sponsors the
uneven neck line for evening,
wearing a gown of white satin
with a broad band of ostrich fea­
thers covering one shoulder.
Dorothy Sebastaln
wears a
street frock that has only onq
sleeve.
Mrs. Janies J. McNair is visit­
Max Pracht departed for Port­
ing in Ashland at the homo of her
land yesterday, and from there
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D.
Briggs.
She and Mr. McNair goes eastward. *
Andrew McGee, who was called have just returned from Versail­
over from Gazelle, Cal., recently les, Mo.
'
Mrs. C. Nell went to Woodville
on account of the eerlousnss of
last Thursday evening on a visit
hta'sister. Mies Myrtle, returned
to friends.
Lee Canfield, for several yeare
dan to take up fails duties en a
ranch near.the California village. n well known barber of Ashland
ha« sold tho Oregon Hotel barber
G. W. Smith returned Friday
shop to H. G. Parkor, lately to from a trip to Douglas county
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Payne are Klatoath Falls..
contemplating a return to Okla­
homa. where they have extensive
Marehfleld — Work to be re­
Mro- C. K. Klum a»d little eon
.Chas. Blnnd has Just returned
Interests. They recently leased
semeli
on ereetion of nine-story
th ell property on Iowa street to from a month’s stays at Harris­ accompanied Mr. Klem tor Jack­
hotel.
sonville
Friday
evening.
¡W. L. Parish.
burg.
\
„
GENE o STRATTON-PORTER'S
iÄ A U V ii-r v iv ix iÄ o
v r x ïn jc i
JWAG/C "GARDEN”
Copyrighted, 1927, Gene Stratton-Porter, Inc.
^Copyrighted, 1926-27, by the McCall Co.
Published by courtesy of Film Booking Offices of America (F. 0 . B.)
From the famous photoplay. "The Magic Garden."
rpa arena bo ria
AmaryDto H M on to a lonely Hi-
Ito girt who to to/t enrirwly In the
core • / servant«. ffhe hat no
friends «pho are her op«, and she to
lonely for companionship. She post
to ealt on her brother Peter, bnt he
to toorw than eke to, to tho tolls
tho ohaoffsor to drive oat la Ike
eoantry, They find a lovely spot
and AaMradto pete oat and sits
«pith her /eel In a brook—eke to
happp for ones. Ske hoars mono
Amaryllto knew about monte.
She fead seen psspls play pianos
and harps and violins. She had
heard bauds and orchestras. She
knew about the Instruments that
you Mew I d one end and won­
derful tones came ont , of the
other. Her governess played tones
on the piano for her to dance
to. She knew what this mnalc
awning toward her. was. Times
when her mother hag bean baring
a party, men or sometimes women,
had played on violins standing be­
side the grand piano in the music
zoom. She knew a violin, but ehe
had never heard a violin played
the way this one was being played.
This violin played like sunshine
and flowers In bloom. Sometimes
it stayed in the same place quits
a while. When a bird np on a
branch very carefully said: “Pee-
a-weel Pse-wweel" right over after
U the violin said the same thing.
Whan a lamb across the meadow
said: “Maa-a-a-ahP the violin said
“Mas-a-a-ahl” too. That was a
Joke—making a violin talk like- a
bird and bash like a sheep.
Amaryllis stepped from the shoal
and started np the stream to find
the violin that sounded like magic.
It was rather rough going. Some
of the atones that looked so per­
fectly nice to step on were not
Hwik atandlns tharo la • paua^
when the birds had forcotton and
the eheep were quiet, the boy began
to play his own music. But Ama-
ryllls did not like what he played
then, because the notes he made
were the thoughts that were In her
brain spoken on a violin, when
w on t of all she wanted to sit oa
somebody's lap and lean her head
on somebody's breast. Amaryllis
had gotten to the place where she
did not ears the least little bit
whose Up she sat on, or whose
breast pillowed her, Just so It was
someone that wanted a little girl,
some one who loved all little chil­
dren. So when the notes grew eo
lonesome and so hungry that )hsy
told Amaryllis that this boy wanted
to sit oh some one's lap and pot his
arms sronnd some one’s neck and
U ss some one with those soft red
lips of his, Amaryllis started brave­
ly through a rather deep place right
up Roaring Brook toward the boy.
When he heard her and locked
-down at her and took the violin
from beneath his chin and smiled
at her. Amaryllis walked up to him
and held up her hand. In a rough
little voice, because oF the hard spot
In her throat, she said to the boy:
"Aren't* yon got any one to love yea,
eithert" -
The boy looked down at her and
said: "Not today."
Amaryllis looked np at him and
said: “Then I’m worse off than you.
'cause I haven’t any one any day?
Amaryllis was very wild-rose
pink, and sky-blue and sun-gold, and
she'd had splendid luek about not
falling into the water on account of
experience with Castile soap. Her
lacy skirts and rnffly dress were
billowed ont sronnd her. There
was not a head of goldenrod in the
swamp, nor any gold flower any­
where, that was one halt so lovely
as her head. The boy shlfted^the
voilln and the bow to one hand and
took Amaryllis’ offered hand and
"Haven't poo onpono to love poo, ettherP*
nice at alL Something stlppery
was on the tope of them that tried
to throw her down, but soap had
been good practice. She never fell
once. The pebbly places were the
safest, but there were not always
pebbly places to step on, and
sometimes she Just had to step on
the slippery rocks to get ahead.
The bushes and shrubs were com­
ing more thickly willows end el­
Aera and button bashes and all
of things that Amaryllis
had seen before, not to be
right np tothem add to touch them
with her fingers. But because ehe
waa going up-stream and the violin
was coming down-stream, it waa
not eo very long before she found
held It very carefully and led her
over to the bank. He looked at
her from her dimpled pink feet to
her dainty little hands and her
delicate faca He looked at the
fineness of her exquisite clothes and'
he asked: “What’s your name?”
Amaryllis looked at him and re­
membered a fairy story she had
heard one time. She remembered -
something else. She remembered
that if she said: “My same is
Amaryllis Minton,“ when the chauf-1
fear woke np and found ont that
she had run away, some one might
pat It in the papers the way the
bntkw had said it waa in the papers
about her father end mother when
the Judge with the big knife had di­
vided np her family.
So Amaryllis took refuge In the
Amaryllto* month fell open and
her eyes grew ver^ wide because fairy story. She realised that she
when she found the violin she found was being very bad. She bad not
something else she had not reck­ kept her word about staying on the
oned on. She had thought maybe rock That was hardly fair to tho
It was a magic violin that was float­ chauffeur. And now thia nice boy,
ing through the air and playing the very beautlfuUest boy she ever
tones all by Itself the way the had seen to all her life, was asking
water sang tones and the birds her a qtfbstlon and ehe was not go­
sang glad notos, and the flowers ing to answer It true, because there
made llttlea waves of color-muslo. was the fairy tale, and the fairy
So when Amaryllis got her first tale waa the thing that was true.
sight ot the violin, her month fell So when the boy asked: "What's
open the widest It ever bad and yonr name?” Amaryllis answered
her eyes grew the biggest and what the boy might have thought
roundest they had ever been, be­
promptly because Amaryllis
cause the violin was right out In had practiced thinking so much she
the middle of the brook and that could think very quickly indeed for
violin was in the hands ot » b o y . five yeare old. What she answered
ss: “Little Hungry Heart”
and the boy had a head aa blaek
ae the blackest wing on the black­ The boy with the soft blaek eyes
est blackbird that ^ame down to and the silky black hair many,
the brook to bathe and drink. He many tunes longer than Peter's
had eyes big and round and wide hair, opened hla month and his eyes
open ami almost as black as his Wider still and stared at her, and
hair, while his cheeks were e sett, as if he could not at all believe
creamy color and there were what he had heard, he repeated:!
apleehes ef red In them. His month "Little Hungry Heart?“
waa rad and his teetE were even
Then softly and gently he ran a
and white. He was tallmnd slender. hand down her chubby little legs
He prast have been three or four and took the sole of her dimpled
yaflm older than Peter. He wore foot to one of his hands and so
a gray shirt and grey Unen trous­ dazedly and so tenderly he studied
ers railed up above his knees and her.
held with a belt at his w aist His
“Little Hungry Heart?" he re­
feet'wera bare end he waa standing peated as It he could not believe
la tha water.
what be had heard any way at alL
B e waa looking up at the sky and
8o Amaryllis resolved that she
all araund him, and every note that would make a clean breast of It,
a bird sang, and every “Moo-e" that evep If she did not know exactly
■ evw called, and ovary “Baa-
what a clean breast was. She de­
«*>at a sheep made, he repeated on cided to tell troe. So she said:
violin. Sometimes he would “The ttg Judge took a big knife and
down at the brook and make ent our family right spang in two.
violin langh and chuckle and Peter belongs to Father and Father
down a steep piece and whirl Uvea at the clnb, so PeteFs stand­
ortt Into a shallow pool and chuckle
ing at Ike window so lonesome he
between stones end waztie over doesn't care It he dies. And I’m
pehhlen It wee the tuxmlert thing. right hers and Mother’s away off
g
a to all the stacks ot plétora
AanarylUs wae dead tired «C.
z
like ma adaU.
____ __ _
(To ha oonttonedl