PUBLISHED BY, THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
O M I BTRATTON Ï^Û&ïfcfc’fi
4A 4 « » e tte * * » !«»>«♦* *■
ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
Crater Lâk»
In .Winter Time
JHÈ MACIC GARDÉIT
Copyrighted, Ï927; Gané Stratton-Porter, Ätot
C op/ilghtsd, 1IM -Ï7 , bp the McCall Cô.
Published by courtesy òt r a m booking Offices o í Amerita
U
.
VMM tffe famous pbefttelay, T h e Magic Garden.
FfN»*4 I
FiM i.*«vr
As usual, the ihevitabfe hfce happened. Their
business rakk4 by the atttotaobile mid the motor
bus, the railroads have resorted to a Pullman coach
which Is not, As M&tk Twain Baid, designed merely
to see what people can endure.
The hew Pullmans bftV|: Private bedrooms,
with Peal fonrlegged, tftahWvngth beds, hot and cold
water, fan, chalb, Full-length ihiPPor, shoe box and
reading lamp at the head of the bedi In these airy,
roomy quarters tl)£ traveler is te be transported
4AUDL«. 06
* ai * to bue«~>aa*a s v cebb1 * » i
^déuh. '-intere
a^a wiuiuj
4 r uaraA
da En
a 11 Aaaaa
■ A* Hume.
1< L-i. ■ > i
tit ivro ftA
tut*
witn
uib vviiiivlto ■ ul
u l
It has been coming. First, the washrooms in Pull
mans began to increase in aize. Almost overnight
these wtahiMmts which had bteen tight little holes,
i t whfch the humor of a otte-tittfe swVut-haturtd
people had soured, assumed the attractiveness of
Roman baths.
But the bed Was the thing. Attettfeans weht to
Europe, where the traveler has a private compart
ment, and then came back to the old dormitory for
men, women and children which we rail a sleeping
car. keeping? It has been a place for snoring, fdr
walking upon one another’s feet, for freezing and
roasting, and for trying to dress while standing on
your head.
.. However, competition has fixed that. Now to
A common idea was formerly that all an editor
needed to get up his newspaper, was an armful
of exchanges, and some good sticky mucilage and a
sharp paif of acissoift.
newspaper w<
has changed. The newspaper of t o
icipally of two types of stuff: News
and features for which it pays someone outside its
office, and the record of its home toWn activities
which it prepares itself with an incalculable amount
of labor. The Vjhg.of the e<üteg,who wbro but his
trouser seats in the snivel Chair has passed, while
the modéra one is a kind hf melting-pot in which
the thought and Activity of his community is con
verted in which the thought and activity of his coin-
verted into printed forin.
i
Home ToWri Thoughts
The people who claim to be patriotic, but who
keep that portion of the coúptly Which they occupy
as a home in a disorderly way, ate not contributing
much to the making of a finer country.
The way to make A town grow is to make it
so attractive and full of advantages that people, want
to live there.
A growing business Usually advertises when
trade 1* good, because new business can be at-
tracted so easily then, and it advertises When tiVde
isA’t good, as that Is the tíme when it needs stimft.
latlon.
The complaint is sometimes made that news*
papers print too much small persondl goedtfi. tf so,
the fault is partly that the people who <to sue)}
writing have as yet obtained only a partial ifidU Of
what newspaper work is.
The Tidings has always trained Its Writer« !» sGO
the larger things of the community. The modir^rital
thing in a community is the work of its
tions and its business. These activities shouW he |
fully reported, and the members .perform a pnblle
service when they help the newspapers cover these
events. But it often happens thftt Wteh members tJo
hot realize what Ifttereating things they are doififc
all the time, so that they baa glYU an intelligent
account of them to the newspaper reporter.
Making Our Mouths Water
this spring. When will it end» Answer: it will
taever Grid. oil can no more stop fashion in motor
cars tlHui you Can d s aftay with chftftgcs in Wftfip-
ing appfcrel Styles may tepefct, bftt "newness” ftftd
W hat automobiles need
than anything else
fender* that will
»it ctèinpllng and
>k into place_ as
ever, r Igy Orando
1«W
L d H fcó N ,
Góta».—
¡siamese Twin cnirKens were
hutched kt thè pòuttìry lafm
ówttéè b f Christophet ‘C hi
ton. • fh e eMbVefis, W^)té
Ì>ghÒrfi»Are >Th*d togeth
er at the, ci<p, and food AAt-
Late hottrs ato, Aè k teattef ót
èn by étto prut Idèe ttourteh-
méui to t thb òthAh Doth
fact, very early ones.
hre'Spry htkd hM l’hy Ih Apfte
Of their fto itts h bond,
r
Men are like bottles: It isn’t
'XTXJWLku., Neb. -d- tare.
th* tAftri that ttbimti, hdt the coni
Chloe Cauftetd; i t , have up
tents.
thè prospect ot toaridage to
m » u n e t p. a . tmnw ;
an English man, who waa em-
People' living d ose to church
tployed*!c the..Indian service
somehow manage to be, late at the '
kt Satttee, Nteb. Now she is
service.
suing hie datate. He left an
estate Of >150,000, a n d
willed het 85,00b, fob 842,-
Baring gréefl co ri hhe A tend
000, claiming Gordon màdie
ency to spoil atty ihan’s lech
an agreement With her to
rilqae 1« kissing
givA her a substantial sttih
for foregoing rtAkrftge.
Gold weather has made
trout fishing poor so far this
eeasoh. , It is estimated that
bopeidhring cost of outfits,
licenses and other incidental
'eitptoahe. each fish taken so
far in Lane coudty has cost
abOAt 88.50.— Eugene Guard.
The next big th ing for the
front page perusers will be
the DeAutremoht- trial. After
three an£ a half years of
ballyhoo thia ease should
command a real army of
readers.— Roseburg News Re-
vlen.
to
The ttiAt* Idea in seeking a
fice seetais to be a deAlre té drA
a sAlary WithoAt working idi it.
A divorce court judge re
marks that men should learn
to handle their wivAs with
cloves. All right, Judge.
“We never had a pair of box
ing gloves in oar life— but
fctore goes.— Arlington Bullet-
W lth woitaeh wAarlhg sb few
Mrifcente, ft Is ^difficult fdr * hAA-
band to understand why «hé still
usée BO mhh> books In thè Aloset.'
P a tllA —h ig h pricw tor
U tlo t tiAtfn cP.thftg hi*
driving-Ft eftxhfaatt td rbaGp-
to-Wtrar shops.
In PhtGh
Style Mecca of the World»
ready-to-wear clothing Mrt
been worn t o t ittÙé, . htoh
by clerks A id
estreats.
Ehsce last sAmmer
prtetts
Seated and Are etili fljtot
high for balloted clbthlAg.
Vale—Construction Arili begin
May 1 at Harper, on federiti rec-
,Wkldai »naani
>t
THE PA
kSflUffb
A r td tJ L ftn
¿Otean Àgo
Robert S. Attua, foriaerly of
this city, havfhg completed h
« « u n e la thé BL Lottie School &
PharuuMT. returned to : AehlaMl
tost Friday and hafe accepted h
qacUten. in McNair Bros, dr*«
Mr. * » l Mt*. A. M. Beaver)
Mrs. Mary Herndon and eon, Rob
ert, Mrs. A. Beaver aad Merejllth
Beaver constituted n party which
left oa Saturday for Springfield;
w h ich . is the hoaie *C Mre. Herui
don add fftrfc A. BtSver. ThA
Miss Edith King went down tt>
Medford
last Friday to see hbk
W. H. Leeds continued on his
parents,
before
their departure firi
Journey to San Francisco today.
8an Francisco.
x;
tout "month water" to see nearly ftvbfy dfty gome
Mrs. J. N. Nesblt is in Portland
attending the Laundrfmen’s cob *
ve nt Ion as a representative frort
But it makes us ambitious to owh one next rear.
mérly of AsMaM U ní lÁ
the local laundry.
Seattle. havA removed td
varsity
Park, near P o
We learn that • university man has worked his
where they ffltt,nqw reside.
through college by caring-for a baby.
Groat Howard , Hicka. employed . by thA
CalltontokOAÁGM U g h i « N PoWi
bets of them have flunked their examinations ., er caro***? ut Fari creek. *«* ft
J. H. McBride returned
visitor la thia city yaaterday.
Portland today.
hew quiA ftlid tftfh ott a Cftr that We deift own.
shland, went through this
W M W on h etfch y to fettfa
iâsoo jritk the relief coto-
mlttee frow
Sunday, March ST, îéfrr.
. Yes,. It sn ow ed la st night.
It
y a s very guiet aboat^It, vary iittia
wind, and what did blow came In
g u sts,J a r i enough to rattle, the
wladows a hit. in the night
awakened by a bumping noise
that sounded like the room had
eavN in. This morning I banted*
through the building to see what
had Happens^, and found one ef
the beds that I had been painting'
had falleh off the drying rack. I
swore u n til I found out that' the
enamel was dry enough that it
' d id n ’t mar, and then I rem em ber
ed that it was Sunday and that it
was bad luck, or something, to
swear en that day.
^ 1 think that I h a v e told you-
eften that I have been here four
winters. And many times you
have asked, "Don’t you grow tired
of the la k e t” My. .answers are
somewhat evasive. I am Messed
with a forgetful mind, it only re
tains the unusual. Today I .gMh
something unusual, a reflection of
a storm,
The clouds were hanging low
and anew w as falling. There were
clouds of mist drifting lastly
. aefoes the water, alm o st touching
it, and some of these had the
fringe of fa ll enow. frnierheath ,
was the reflection, thé two ehemed i
to m eet.. You could not tell where
ene began and the other ended,
•bien again all eolor was abseht,
not a trace of blue in all the wk-
ter, even- the targuolee had left
the edges. It was a wonderful
Study J n black ‘ and -w h ite . I
wished that there had been soipe-
whs could have put if oh pa
per, but then you Would jm Ve said
it wasn’t true. -
... , .
Work— Painted lamps.
\ "I ’
Weather — Day cloudy; wind
northwest; snowfall since last
observation. 3.5 in.; precipitation
.ST la.; snow on ground, 223 In.;
Temp, i t 30, la 32 ( »• 8, M 2«
Monday, March 3», iftS7.
This afternoon the Nameless,
One and i went on ah inspection
tour of the building to see if any
water was coming through the
roof from the melting enow. When
I got t f the third floor I Missed
Nameless. I went through the top
floors and came back to thtt third
floor of the old building, and
'tAAre I found him yowling Id beat
thA band. When he saw tott he
started toward the other «fad of
the hall looking bgck noir and
then to sed if I was coming. When
he get to toe door that leads to
toe attic eveg the dining room
wing be wafted till I caught up,
and tMAtt to toll me that home-
thMt *»a W+ong. When I »llow =
ttd him through the door he Seem
ed to be pledtod. It Pah dark in
there sp I Weht AAW btoftght a
lantern. While 1 V a l gone he
stayed by thk dtodr. In the attic
ts .a ’beu «sad* out of sheet iron
that was once «sed to store bed
ding tv, had it Pa* this Nameless
wanted me to eel for he jhmped
up oa a board that wag lying
xhcroek one cornir. 1 looked Inside
and saw tWO Woodrats, they were
alm o* t t Mfc *A Ñ ám ele*.
I
shoved him in the box to se* what
w oild happeh. He had hardly
hft the tottoto OÍ that bok until
both of those reté hAd him. Talk
about A b attll toyat. boy! There
Wk* Até going Oh 1A sheet iron
ring.
hoM* or blbws bar-
tod. Nttfaeleito stood it for About
a «rtntaW— it teemed an M ur—
th*e M hMft M t. «I» tall was
as i t t tA #M r A m and Avery
hate Paa turtod th* wrong way.
Ther* IttlH khy uto for me tk-ylng
to tell yott what he said About
those rata for. the printer Vould
not print it, hut I can tell you,
and I think that It will g * by,
thtt ÑAtterwe was «mato mdft c a t .«
After Ms had *ed(ed to w n a hit he
w iilto AU U heth kim o n e said
th tt ft Wtt tort *1 my Job atfw ay.
th«t he t o e heppoted to kid mice
only. Well, I d ld k V k n # if
AeturyUU Is nose keeping house /or her /other and brother.
when nobody in all the bouse could
tod Amaryllis, if they had gone to
the little garden beside the roaring
brook, they would have found her
ofl this mkrtle door AU £ A soft
♦hito dresA-4lala and simple, not
touch Of a dresa, chiffons that lift-
tteiigiookly A m aryllis tried to
think for her father and for Peter.
She tried to take the place that her
mother should have filled, When
she had done everything uto could
of moonlight. They would have
found Amaryllis with her yelloP
ban- unbound and her bine eyeh
either oh the lilies or the etars. Nh
one could have watched her ton*
without knowing that what she w S
dancing as she tiptoed hhd whirled
and floated over that marble floor
was Just Amaryllis, Amaryllis to
the black-eyed hoy had played It
Once Paul Minton got started at
being the kind of father that ev-
ery man P u Intended to he, he
resorted to no halfway measures.
So, because there was this great
love In her heart, to great that it
swayed the heart of her father, let-
ters were written across the nek
telling bOP. land ttdttes Pere la-
creasing and when A confidential
Ment matte > report to Paul MIA-
tott as to now John Forrester and
his eon weAe making ends meet m
Rome, whenever there seemed to
be a atringeucy. whenever tho lee-
apartment la a warmer, sunnier
ptede became Accessary, mysteri
ously e«Pe rich man away in thA
WttAt p*M h hAttttome price for a
picture or a naw tenant In the llttlA
‘hones on the Mg telaad offered a
!U 3 S
fiooaa. ft h a t » s u f i
b ft had eoßly Unted
I U m earns furnishing*
IM to t think of am
s to Ine Utile bone«,
ed into the library
table M thA ttoet
.wrfeà
he reoognlaed that
laughed aa he pul
Ìt°tote àm e.^ m a-
I: “Father, it’s a lot
jbtt think you can
months f“
rea, he thought kA
k eaid: “You know
time Peter went to
ad some of his lew
. m h e ef them id
te a s of them 1*
S U ’, a « Afra. C. Mfiier went
down to Jacksonville Friday on
S til? « AT® ks'sacysM ril