Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, May 04, 1927, Page 2, Image 2

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    C. 3. READ, manaqinû
A SH LAN D
D A ÍL Y
earn a-nunoN-poantt’s
T ID IN G S
THE MAGIC GARDEN
KBtered a t the Ashlaad, Oregon F eetoffk* as Second Ctaoe Mott M atter.
__ -
---------------------- ------------------------------- ——■.
,—
Stratton-Porter, Me.
by the McCall Co.
a
Just Ashland
At flip. last Meeting of the Kiwanis club, the
suggestion was made to the Chamber of Com­
merce, that a public Forum l>e called, not for the
purpose of eating and being entertained hut to get
.down to bed rock, on local conditions and attempt
.to adopt some constructive program of develop­
ment that will bring new families and new money
into this city.
President Mills of the Chamber of Commerce,
accepted the suggestion and heartily approved of
the proposed plan, and no doubt will soon call such a
‘ session. The Tidings welcomes such a movement.
Ashland as it was pointed out by one of the speakers
at this meeting has three possible projects besides
numerous minor ones, any one of which would bring
delight to a city many times larger than ours. But
—we seem to be dormant, we sepin to bmsueh a self
satisfied community that we are not willing to go
through the struggle neeeessary to make a success
of some community (development work. — ———
True, a hotel has been built here, true that a
magnificent park has been established, and true also
is it that many other developments have been worked
out to the lasting credit of those who sponsored them,
and carried them through. Bat now is not the time
to stop, now is not the time to peacefully curl up
into a gentle doze and let nature take its course.
Now is the time however to start some activity, that
will bring additional business te this city. Now is
the time, for every businses man, and for every
citizen to bend their efforts towards the promotion
of some activity, th a t will mean additional pros­
perity to this, our home city.
— Personally the Tidings likes poultry as a project,
but we are very frank to gay^that we are willing
to forego any feeling we might have in the matter,
and join in on something else, provided the majority
of the people agree or what it- shall be, and will
forget personalities, petty factionalism, and that
type of thing that tears down rather than builds, and
-
.... J
Ashland can have just the type\of city that Is
wanted. I t Tests with the people that live within.
Tragedy o f th e Mississippi
The flood victims hourly increase in number.
They will continue to increase for days, ae in the
lower valley the Water has not yet reached its
height. Already 100,000 fellow-Americans need rescue
or aid after rescue. They need food and shelter,
clothing and medical care. Many of them Will-Estill
need aid after the subsidence of the flood, to make
a fresh start in life. The inundated land is measured
by thousands of square miles; the money loss is
beyond present power to estimate.
A calamity of unprecedented and appalling
gravity confronts the nation and the people individ­
ually with a double duty. They must cqqio to the
aid of the Red Cross and other agencies of relief
with prompt generosity upon > scale commensurate
with the disaster. The Red Cross asked at first fbr
$5,00,000, $500^00 of which was subscribed within
three hours. More than $5,000,000 will undoubtedly
!«• needed, and it will be provided. It is no time to
stint benevolence. There will never be ft Worthir
cause.
But while relief is the first thought, the study
of prevention should not lag far behind. By this
flood disaster the nation has received a challenge,
whieh it must accept, to attack the problems of flood
regulation upon a bigger scale than ever before.
Cost what it may, the repetition of such a calamity
must be made impossible. Surely the government
engineers are able to devise plans for preventive
works, from the mountain sources to the gulf, whieh
will tame the raging river. In carrying out such
plans, no matter how costly so that they are effective,
the states of the Atlantic seaboatd will be as ready
to coo|>erate, through federal aotion, as those of
the great valley itself. There has never been a
’Mississippi flood like the present one. We know
now what the river at its worst can do. It should not
have another chance. —New York World.
The reason they dismissed so many Prohibition
agents is because so many of them lost their sense of
amelL
Henry Ford jterformed a great service to hu­
manity when he finally dcvelo|>ed a ear whose horn
coni dbe heard above its rattle.
too laxy to read even the cheap li
jw too indolent to study the good
«
Probably Mussolini
should begin at home.
feels
that slisiinnaincnt
TBB BTORY BO FAR
Aataryllte. MM m /«rite to lev«
»te* Je*a Ootdo when she to • NS
tor ytri,
t*« two «hudrsa pre­
serve M m tow ttel they or* gratre
ap. Writs Jetta to stadpMg to
Italy AmoryDto vtette th en , end
mreapAtoto
retoAriW
toto«
change anorancet Of love. AmA
ryllto r e ts» « home ahead of John,
»So «rested tothlter srriSev Frier.
Later the to fort to ta l to etete hto
home whea «he teee to e paper (hat
her brother’» yacht ha« blown ap.
T h in k in g John wae aboard the
to e t te tea hte father, who te al-
•ta*l prostrated 9y the newt.
PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
reeentiy made a n ev w o r id l afr-
ptane eagStaSce record. "*
9. What change lp woman apt*
frage is proposed by ths gsvsm -
» e a t In England?
Currant Events
* $$«' Name giro presiding dftto-
ara la Oengrew, who are men-
1. What cabinet officer Is now
tiehed ha »Datable RegaMtSOU
in charge of Mississippi flood re­
presidential candidates. , '
lief?
Try 77i/s One
3. Name the seven states chief­
ly affected by the Mississippi
flood.
3. What famous French aviator
Is now in this country, planning
to make a non-stop flight to
Anawera to yesterday's questions
t 1. Florence Easton (Aelivid*),
'Lawrence Tlbbett (B adger), Ed­
ward Johnson (Aethelwold.)
- 8
Felix Msndetaeoha-Barth-
eldy, “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream” Ovsrtare.
3. Noted American band toader.
4. Frederick Stock.
5. Marlon Talley.
8, Gounod’s “Faust,” Bolar's
“Mefistotale,” Berltos’s “Damna­
tion of Faust.”
7. A p ie e e lu symphonic style
for .piano with orchestral accom­
paniment.
>8? Tschetkowsky.
.».M ich ael William Balfe.
'10. “Turaadot” by Puccini.
4. What three cities are now
the informal capitals of the three
'‘wings” of the Chinese Nation­
alist party?
6. What American flight recent­
ly returned to this country after a
tour over South Amerito T
Slowly John Formater Podded.
6. Name the President of Nie*
hragua recognized by tota coun­
try.
7. What prominent English vis­
itor was recently til in a Phila­
sleeping away dewn deep to the
delphia hospital?
ooM, clean water of the sea.*
"Oh, I can’t!" cried Amaryllis.
8. What two American flyers
”1 can't! I oaa't have Peter gone
like that! A M a t Ito» M u Gride
SUMMONS
?
the garden where we had Meh without » totidfa. wifltokt a word!
Oh.
the
heautflW,
heautifal
ladt
I
Suit
In
Equity
to
D»el»re
a
Deed
good times. I would come book • can’t have horrors happen to him!
him m I promised that day the APd Urn«» «h er hey< att tbaaw oth­ ^ to be a Mortgage and to Fore­
close the seam.
poH se m m a took ase away from him. er hoys, they’ve got motbere aad
IN
THH CIRCUIT CpUBT OF
fathers
and
etotene,
and
theyVe
got
J was going to some bask enly
oaoa. I waa trying to. fix a way sweethearts. There wae Billy Bar- T he state of ombgon , in
before I came so that, after that, say wtmaahe k“ w i S S g ^ i r t h S AND FOR JACM8ON COUNTY
BERNICE HOWARD, Plaintiff,
he coaid oome to me. Yea see, le never com ing again? It Wes like
d oin you?’’
that with nearly every one of them. ve. EARL 0. GADDIS, la the ca­
I tote” »rid John Ftoreater. 1 don’t know cm » eC those boys pacity ae Administrator with the
Whom some girl did not tare, J
“Aad mw yea will always hate don’t believe to y one of them w « Will Annexed of the estate of C. Thursday, May ID.— Elks Lodge
I. Howard an d s . T . Howard, de­
Pra. Now," she paused a lodg time
No. 944 will give a shirt waist
pad then she 'looked at him. *T
b a sed , RBV. JOHN K. HOWARD,
dance
In t|te Elk’s ballroom.
don’t know," ske said, "W it makes it! All thclv {Mends wW all (Huh SAMUEL THOMAS HOWARD,.
«.Domino
Provoat’s orchestra will
ack dtfferoaoe 8 you do hate am. S E ? s & T r „ 5 r ¿ s . “
Jr., ALICE R, LEE, HORACE D.
don't know that anything makes
p V»>.
■ .
any difference.
E verything is dto’t think 1 eda endure it, net any HOWARD, LGELLA FEROUSON, Thnreday, May S.— Trinity Guild
rntaed. It wasn’t any nee, not any
JEROME HOWARD, W IL L l/ W.
meets in the Parish House.
of thia, aor any Of anything. M
JORDAN, ANNIE WILDY LEE, Thursday, May B.— The Berean
»n't any use that every hoar at
CHARLES C. FEROUSON, (hus- I class of the Baptist church
every day I have loved him. It
bend of Luella Ferguson) L. G.
will meet at the home of Mrs.
Jordan, (husband of W illie W.
/V . O. N. Smith on Morton St.
Jordan) Alva Howard (w ife of Friday, May O. — Foreign Mis­
Rev. John K. Howard.) Defend-
sionary society of the Method­
ist Episcopal church will meet.
TO: ' BARB ^ O ^ D ÎH S ,
HaturdiQ, May 14.— Rogue River
IHN Kh HOWARD, SA
THOMAS HOWARD, Jr., ALICE
will meet at the home' of Mrs.
A, L U , HORACE D . HOWARD, --L, 8 . Williams, 690 B, Peaeb,
LUELLA .FERGUSON,. JEROME
Medford.
HOWARD. WILLIE
W. JOR­
DAN, ANNIE
WILDY
LEE,
C harles c . F erguson , hus­
band of Luella Ferguson, L. G.
JÔRDAN, husband of W illla W.
Jordan. ALVA HOWARD, wife of
Rev. John K. Howard, defend­
ants:
IN THE NAME OF THE
STATE OF OREGON, you and
each of you are hereby summoned
áf IBB Mto B ob » Bta boneh of Asifcvltte.
and required to answer the com­
plaint of the plaintiff in the above
len’t say use that I tried ad hard not t$ think. S m if y<m can’t Jnat entitled suft, which is now on file j
to ba a good girl and a alee girl, live for a Utile whfle. Yonr pet-
the hind of a girl that hto mother spective Is all twisted. No one with the clerk of court, at Jack-,
Wu. I wanted yon to love me. oonM Marne Pteter: They were all soaville, said Jackson county,
Wanted yon to fore me u well as glad to go. There was J u t one within ten daya from ’the date of
To keep butter always fresh,
John Guido. And* Bow yon will only thing In the world that worried
the service of thia summons upon
bate me."
John Gnldo »bout going. He v u
pat la clean cool place,
“For Heaven’s sake, don't 1" cried crazy to go. He had never been on ydn, if served within thé county
away from meat or vege­
Jehn Forrester, and he came a private yacht like that Ha had of Jackson, state of Oregon, hat
tables.— B,utter absorbs odor
oruhlng down on hto haem la Jerer h to a treat IU h that fa all ifbmrv»d upon yon by publication,
front of her and put his arms hto Ute with other yqgag men. AN
very readily.
aronnd her. Then both of them that worried him w w that he w u then within six weeks from the
began to cry. Amaryllis little afraid to leave the garden" tor fear date of the first publication of
shrill, eharp panting cries; John
thia summon«, and If you fall to
'It’s The Quality’
Forrester Seep, wrenching sake
appear and answer within the
that tore Up through MB body tod
shook him aad twisted him. They knew about him, «at the trfght ot time ae above specified, the plain­
clung together until they were the concart la Roma hs almost wm t tiff will apply to the conrt for the
exhausted.
After a . long time, crazy when h« hto ths r«d 111IM relief demanded In the said com­
^ a r y n » tried to M h handker­ from yon ahd the note, and ka«w plaint, namely, that (hat certain
L illiin tH E A M fcm
that yon had su n Mm aad ton«
chief ahd wipe up bar face.
"WlM yea ever," she u k ed , -will away on account ot hta ware aad deed executed by C. 1. Howard, a
you ever targfve am? w ill you left him without a word. That al­ widow, to Wiluatn An«!«, dated
ever sm ma again without hating most klllad khn. and It almost kitt­ May 8th, 1919, and recorded la
ed ma. After that ho Stayed,
volume 98 of Deeps, On page H>
“Don’t," «aid John Forrester. “It Heaven«! h»w he played I That
WMg’t your fasti. There w u noth- rieita sobbed and It laughed and It records of Jackson county, Ore­
Ihg In your heart for iny boy hut danced and It sang! Snch playing gon, be decreed to be In legal ef­
tare. I oswM hot hate you. No oae I never have heard la all thia world fect, a Mortgage given to secure
could h»to ye«. Ton m u t not even u Job» Gwtto played after he knew
think aneh a thing. Yea mm! not that yOn had be*» to Rom«, knew the payment df the sum of Oae
that yon h to fceatd Mm play *A»o- Thousand (31/000.00) D oll*»,
flrUla.’ "
and Interest, and that shch deed
Amery 11» lifted
her head.
"Straight acreu the street Old be foreclosed as a mortgage, and
TOO. about that time, ever nottae a the rights of either and all of tku
big car Steading by the day?"
defendants, he decreed to he sob*
sequent to d inferior to the rights
of the plaintiff thereunder, to the
extent of a Hen of One Thousand)
(31,000.00) Dollars with Interest
at ten per cent per annum front
curtain May 6th, 1919, and for One Hun­
□ went
Per. o* dred Fifty (9160.00) Dollars, at­
•nit. or torney’s fee, and the costa and
*mar- disbursements of this suit.
I «kw
By Order of the Honorable C,
M. Thomas, Judge of said court,
I gtos MW A e lovely giri
mad» and dated the 18th day of
April, 393T, this summons is i
«erred ap»n the defendant, other
than Bari C. Gaddis, by the pub­
lication thsreef, fov six successive
week«, and the defendants are re­
quired to appear and answer the
sam», within six weeks from tku
dat» of the fltst publication here­
of.
« I
Date ef first publication Is April
80, 1(17.
- BRIGGS A BRIGG«,
I
Attorney* for plaintiff I
Poatoffice
Address. Pioneer I
nioek, Ashland, Oregon.
|
children
predominate.
tltaU k
"A Woman In 8*11«,” by Hor- geatly written, with impartial
ase Anneals? Vaehell.
(Freder­ handling of English and Ameri­
ick A. Btekre A On., Maw Y»rk, tan difference«.— The Lariat.
N. Y.) Lacy d’Agnlar, the daugh­
ter of a distinguished English (toral Netahhers M e e t -
family, h i l am » ths bride at an
T ie Borili Neighbors held their
America!», a man to the West, a" regular meeting l l the M osm
lover of his native state, Cali­ hall Monday evening, May second/
fornia. The heart of the novel with a aptrnsdii attendance. Mm.
constitutes Lacy’s reoettons to B toltane! th, district deputy, from
seh Franeiseo society and the un­ Medford wan a guest at this » ea t­
conventional atmosphere of the ing.
Went. She dlseemblee her Victor­
-Mrs. Tyla Beck, oracle, presided
ian Ideas for her hashand’s sake at jhe uenal husmeas session, and
as she Mg been free from any at­ •everaT interesting, as well as Im­
tempt ea hid port te Americanize portant matters eeaeernfog the or­
her. She straggles between loy­ ganization were taken up and dis­
alty t* England and love for her eases«. A Juvenile lodge, which
husband when war is proclaimed. would be sponsored by the Royal
In her mind she harbor« the de^
eira to have the English la her (Please Turn To Page Three)
\ « to »
THE QUALITY STORE
r
A s h l a n d -M aw
i s
Good
B ü T T E H
S
DRAPERY FABRICS
e T b t Standard cf Exctlknce in
AMERICAN CRETONNE! AND DYED
DRAPERY FABRICS
Sunny gkieg grid the promise o f warm dttys ahead
bring to mind the needed changes to be made in the
living room, the dining room, the bedroom. Fresh
draperies all around—the hallway cughiona need
new covers— daughter*« room mugt have new slip- ’
covers and bed-soread. What more decorative, versa*1
tile, and altogether charming fabrics than Colonial
Cretonnes and Chintzes. There are sure to be amoog
them the patterns and colors that are suited to your
Individual requirements — all attractively priced.)
Yard, 25c to 89c
Tents for That Camping and Fishing
Trip
in all sizes, both wall and auto tents.
ARMY GOODS STORE
Biggest Little Store in Town. Open. UvflniTrgn.
LICENSE
f
»«««»s?
DON'T BE FOOLED
WITH
Cheap Paint
SBE NATIONAL ADVERTISING FOR
Sherwin-Williams Paint
We Carry a Complete Stock
LET OUR PAINTERS FIGURE WITH YOU,
Carson-Fowler Lumber Co.
**Ia The Heart to Town”
«