Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1927)
TH» WRATHBR ia a pptential pay roll for Oregon—Qenemlfy cloudy. Tem >*d*8 Leading per for Over Fifty Years d ASHLAND, OBKGON, (Ualted Presa Win Service) RSDAY, MAY 26, 1927 RNED CLAY WILL BE LARGE Poppy Sale Is Started K. In Ashland survey- of mj»r , normal school grounds, South of Resignations Trap Ranks and Among headers of Prohobition Force« Reach Retiring Commissioner?- Effective When D o r a n Takes Control. Jndgtt 0. M. Thomas Ad vances Date at Request of State Attorneys — D ’An- tremont Consul Asks tor further Postponement of Noted Case. WASHINGTON, May 28.—0 » —The first break in the prohlM- t tlon machine built up by Assist- j ant Secretary of the Treasury Lincoln C. Andrew« was expens ed to come «ooh when t ir e « « j six of his fleld lieu tenante resign tyt>m (he dry service. organisation, b u lltf p over , « two year period, today appear- < ed en m bling. While Andrews , Ijtofcght lo bold bis men In line , rngter the leadership of Dr. J. M. Doran, new prohibition commit- e ■loner. * | M. O. Dunning, chief dry co- , ordlnator Mr southeastern states, « haa reported to Andrew« that n hl« work to shout completed and « he desires to resume hto duties a collector of customs at Sevan- Others who will resign from the prohibition service within a short time proba’hly include J. D. Pennington, administrator at Pittsburgh; Cheater P. Mills, New York administrator: O. D. Jack- apn. Now Orleans administrator, and F. V. Wright, Texas admin istrator. These men came Into the ser vice at'A'ndrews* personal request and they are expected to leave bèfore the assistant secretary re- >r product«, inf town. Produetp tores- Mr. Braudlsch left Thursday CentraljFotnt. afternoon for Los Angeles where n county »9- he-will spend several days before idlseh, gSndHl returning to Ashland to supervise retary of tffe the, active installation of ma- Thursday Unto chlnery for the plant. it of the phuiÿ Hj July 1, D. E. Crossley. . ? president of the new company, r face hrtc* his wife and' doughter, Mr. and le, sllrf bloc)» ( Mrs. J. Felllx, A. T. Thompson, ng blocks, * and Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Jbnkens, ion and Witt Al1 °f Atascadero, California, Will available anff-, h'' locat«d |u this city. Mr. Brau- h to produce 1 flinch conies from Tujunga,' Call- row th of 5 * ; rornla. Mr Braudleehl Tha plant should be built and ¿everything in readiness for the j burning of the first kiln by the Is located oil middle of August, Mr. Braudlsch near the old said. The second trial of Hugh D’- Autremont, allege;. glskiyno tun nel mall train bandit, was set for Monday, June 9, by Judge C. M. Thpmag Wednesday after noon. He will be tried on an in- dtctment charging him with the murder of Coyle Johnson of Ash land, one of the four trainmen slain when the mall train holdup occurred October 11, 1223. Consul for D’Autremont filed an affidavit Wednesday in the circuit court setting forth that 8. Butler Sedan Over it was impossible for the de turn« in Oreen Spring Mothers of the Ashland Pioneer fense to go to trial in Jdne, ow* Mountains club boys will supervise the ing to cases pending In Lane and G. S. Butler and B. F. King"' monthly “roundup” of the four Multnomah c o u n t y courts in which Fred L. Smith of Eugene, of this city had a hicky escape! dubs this month, according to an chief consul for the defense, and from Injury Tuesday evening. nouncement made by W- P. Wal- Attorney .John A. Collier are ap-. when returning home from Klam-i ter«, Y. M. C. A. secretary, pearing. They have also secured ath falls in the Butler Star! Under the direction of Mrs, Ef- postponement of cqses set for sedan, the car overturned on the ’ fie K. Galbraith, mothers of the September, when they believed highway in the Green Springs hoys are arranging for a banquet the D’Autremont case would not mountains. Fortunately the Car to be held at the Junior high be tried until that date, t h e / overturned toward the mountain school Friday evening at 9:30 o’clock. side. stated. A punctured front tire, and Approximately 50 boys who be Thia affidavit may bring 'about a further postponment of the sudden application of the brakes long to clubs of the Christian, trial which was advanced at the caused the car to skid. Had th« Congregational, M. E. and Pres car overturned on the other aide byterian churches will attend. request of the state attorneys. of the road, it would have gone The boys hold a “roundup” each over a steep bluffff. month and the banquet Is planned The Klamath Falla stage pass by the mothers to show the boys ing *a few minutes after the ac- the respef^ the mothers have for the work df the clubs. ' righting the over turned car which, was hot slightly damaged* LUCKY ESCAPE Mothers to FROM INJUR’ Entertain “Pioneers' LINE-UP IS REJUVENATED i Ron C l o u t e r Will dip Oraterians in Sunday's Came Hoosier Hafford, idol of Med ford baseball fans In the past, a home-run clonter and fast fielder, to coming back to Oregon from Idaho and will 'rejuvenate the HI-Y ELECTS NEW OFFICERS with Grants Pass next Sunday. — Four straight defeats has just about overcome the Medford fans and team heads have launched a campaign to put the -Cratertonz In K to s^ h Mali.. Member« of the Ashland -HI T Grant« Paid arid the Ashland clnb elected Barney Miller-presi Boas. Judge Laadi« Narrowly Es With their regular lineup the dent of the club for the coining capes at Baseball Grand Ashland Boas are set for their year at a meeting of* that or ganisation held In Pioneer Hall stand Collapses Sunday game, off to Klamath last evening. « Falls tto get revenge on the team j I Other officers elected were: NORFOLK, Va., May >g. — there for the unmerciful wallop- Gas Moore, vice president; E ve» (LP) — Four people were killed •ng of I t to 7 which they suf ett McGee, secretary and Elliott and approximately 40 injured fered earlier In the season. MacCracken, treasurer. This meet when a cyclone struck this city The brand of baseball the Boas ing will be the last one to be and Portsmouth, Va., across the have demonstrated for the last held by the club this school year river, late Wednesday. two Sundays should successfully as many of the members will Eight of the injured are ex stop any onslaught the Klamath be out of the city daring the pected to die. aggregation might try to make. summer months. Judge Kenesaw Mountain Lan Eight members are in the 1927 dis, baseball czar, narrowly es graduating class. They are: Gor caped injury when the baseball don MacCracken, Kay Nell, Earl grandstand at Portsmouth collap Merahon, Donald Hinthorne, Wil sed In the storm. When this struc-’ fred Wagner, Lynn Neely, - Bill tnre gave way, Richard P. Mc Opening Session of General Bibby and Pussy Kanasto. Sever Williams, 40, was killed. Assembly Started al of these members gave short Today talks at the meeting last night, paying tribute to the Hi-Y club LOTH OF EGGH SAN FRANCISCO, May 29— (IP) and the work it is doing and BEND. May ¿1.—<LP>—Value —Despite efforts to'avoid a crash of eggs handled by the Central between modernists and funda told of the good it bad done for Oregon Poultry cooperative in the mentalists during the Presbyterian them. J a m e s Nutter, retiring past six months aggregates 825,- general assembly whléh convened president of the club, gave a 000, it was learned here today here today, an open controversy short talk and urged the mem bers to live up to the high Ideals from Verne Llvesay, president of appears probable. of the organisation. the 'Cooperative Board of Di Already ramblings of discord rectors. In the six qaonths per have been heard and these are iod 94,774 dozen eggs were hand expected to break Into open con led. ’ flict during discussion of the re Livesay was re-elected presi port made by a committee which dent of the board, at a recent investigated conditions at Prince meeting. Otljer members are J. ton Theological seminary, which Duekett, Sister*; Fred Shepard, has been thrown Into turmoil by OAKLAND, Cal., May 29. — Tumalo; John Steldl, Bend, and the modernist-fundamentalist is (LP) — O)d fashioned “school C. B. Gaylord, Prineville. sue. ma’rms” with long hair arid spec The cooperative was organised This report, prepared under the last year. supervision of Dr. W. O. Thomp tacles do not stand a chance son, moderator of the church. Is against their modern flipper sla VALVES TELL to he presentad Saturday and will ters with pretty faces. and bob That it.hays to advertise be discussed Tuesday. Its find bed hair, when It eomes to get consistently was evidenced ings already have been criticized ting jobs, Mrs. Oroville T. Bright when last night The Tidings In a pamphlet which declared that of Illinois, told delegates to the published an unsigned ad for the «ommittee findings consisted national congress of Parents and E. R. Isaac, well known local of “nUThtr’ and untrns state Teachers here. Dignified members of school merchant. ments.” . ~, There was an Immediate Dr. Thompson’s report pleads board are as • susceptible to fe response to . the .ad. for tolerance in handling the minine charms as other males, ”1 knew frdm the faines Princeton storm, but reconynend- she averred. The congress to attended hff offered it wAg you* pd,” was •d'th at no further Instructors be the theme of many com appointed for the ^present. *fhls educators and parents firom all ments Mr. Isaac heard con was taken as a rebake to Dr. J. over the United States. It will , cerning the unsigned ad. Greaham Machen, fundamentalist clsse Saturday1. Mr* Isaac believes in set leader, > and, if followed, would Big Land Deal OouisumaSed ting hto merchandise values keep Dr.. Machen from an im A real estate deal of much to the people and recognises portant chair of instruction at Importance in Klamath county the newspaper as the host the seminary. was consuntated Wednesday when medium for thia task. He adrisrttaes consistently and Hundreds of movie (oik, crav R. A , McLean of Los Angeles the interested comments on ing publicity, crowd the kelly purchased the Edgewood1 ranch the unsigned ad evldonped murder trial in Los Angelos. Po-. and tributary acreagq from Boh the fact that he to on the lice had better ho keeping an eye Coyne Mr a consideration of 8166,000. to the press agents after this. right ground. FOUR DIE; 40 ARE INJUR! PRESBYTERIANS ARE IN SESSION Pretty School Marins Wanted Cerature M ow normal.. Cooperating with the American JLegton and Legion Auxiliary In making the three day poppy sale a success, merchants today dis played flags In streets standards, in connection with the beginning of the sale. History of 1926- Gallant Hero Will Circle Six auxiliary members were Complete 27 Term of Sfchool and Paris and Then Flv to telling the crimson flowers on Pictures of Organisations, Bruseels in His Mono the street today, and everywhere Classes, Faculty, and Ath plane, to Visit With a the poppy of remembrance was to letic Leaden, round in King—Thousands at City he seen. •> , Book. Hall Reception. , The sale will continue Friday and Saturday. Similar sales are Printing of the seventeenth PARIS, May 26.—(LP)— Charles being conducted by Legion Auxil volume of “The Rogue.” annual Lindberg started today on an iaries In all sections of the coun- publication of the senior class of other crowded program— his last In Paris. Tomorrow he will crawl Into th«, cramped cabin of his transatlantic monoplane. “Spirit of St. Louis*' and circle Varis an0 wing northward to Brussels. Here he will visit his first klfig. Today's program started with a visit by Captain Lindbergh to n«w n,ooo.ooo "M»ioio Collides with Freighter Marshal Foch, commander In in Fog chief of the allied armies during the World War ;nd with Marshal BOSTON, May 29—(IP)— Al Joffre and wounded war veterans. Eight thousand persons pack though unable to use her power ed the city hall when Lindbergh following a collision with the arrived there this morning for a freighter Jacob Christensen In a heavy fog off Nantucket light reception. A hundred thousand Wednesday night, the new lined the avenue giving him a ¡7,000,000 liner Malolo was re great welcome and proclaiming ported out of danger In a mes him a hero. During the reception sage from William P. Roth, in the hall, thodsands shouted aboard the disabled liner at 8:35 hia name and cheered. last night. . Lindbergh told the throng that Roth, president of the Matson If he had thought crossing the Navigation company, owners of ocean could have ended his car the Malolo, witnessed as follows- eer as a flyer, he wohldn’t have started. OCEAN LINER IS WRECKED POPE PIUS DISAPPROV Moore Klamath Man Is Suicide Ashland high school to complete and the book wUl be placed in tho hands of the class members and high school pupils Friday. The 1917 publication, edited by Barney Miller, and printed t i the Ashland Tidings office, to from every standpoint one of* the finest publications ever put out by the «local school. “The Rftgue” contains a com plete history of the school ac tivities for the 1929-27 term. Compilation of the material In rhe book was made by member« of the staff. Including the editor and the following named assis tants; Jack Ntins, assistant edi tor; Billy Hulea, athletics; Lil lian Olsen, dramatics; Jean Stratton, Jokee; Mario Mitchel, music," Esther Spencer, Jack Nims and Horace Dunn, art; Harrietts Bevington, literary and Mary Galey, organisations. The business manager of the publication was James Briggs; Kay Nell, circulation manager and Adrienne Hasard, faculty advtor Pictures of the faculty mem bers, of the 92 members of the ROME. May 29—(LP)—-Beauty senior class, of Superintendent roatqsts In genera1« «ad the inter George A. Brleeoe aad, Baaja- ?:• .. «St- national beauty contest' at Gal jain£, -Forsythe, principal of the LOS ANGELES, May 26—(IP)— veston, Tex., in particular, drew ' high «ehool, of various orgaotaa- Despondent over ill health, Colleen Moore, film star, has quit a scathing denunciation from Pope Rober W. McClarey of Klamath pictures— temporarily, at least. Plus XI today. Falls, commuted suicide Wednes Through the official Vatican Rom e River Catches This executive Production on her present pic committee, juniors, day at the Nash Hotel at Med ture was stopped today following newspaper organ, the Observatore Year Reported Scarce; sophomores and freshmen, nil Nets Barred ford. by shooting himself through a rupture of the relations of her Romano, the pope took occasion make the book complete la ev the heart. The body was found husband, John McCormick, with to severely criticize the Galveston ery detail. MARSHFIELD, May 29— (L P)— by a chamber maid. A note First National Pictures. contest and all such movie pro Suitable records of various The commercial salmqri fishing found In the room Indicated he McCormick tendered his reslg- motion schemes. school activities, also make the season which opened In the Rogue became despondent when par natlon'ka west coast general man Girls drawn Into such schemes, book an interesting place of work. ■ alysis affected his legs and his ager for the company following said the official Vatican pro river In southern Curry county May 15, has as yet resulted In but money was gone. He was a lum an internal reorganization of the nouncement, enter a "life from berman, an expert mill hand and business management which was which they connot emerge except small catches and fishermen have grader, recommendations found said to Interfere with McCormick’s nt the price of bitter disappoint been handicapped In using their nets due to the unusual amount ment.” among his possessions showed. act. of debris In the stream brought down by the heavy spring freshet this year. In addition there is D o e s n 't S e e m T o L e t L o o s e not an abundant supply of salmon, the heaviest ruh having passed the flahlng grounds several days PORTLAND, May 2«.—(Spec before the season opened. The conditions this year are said to be ial)—Are the high echool sta- the poorest In the history of the dents of the fo«r northwest states ftalmoii flahlng Industry on the ■pending too much time and lower Rogne. money In extra curricula nativit ies T Is thara danger that' the! rapid growth of special organisa tions without proper supervision to lowering tha efficiency of achol-, aatlc work la t*e high schools? Do schools of education la oar colleges and universities -give Thirteen Provinces Out Off prospective high school teasfcara From Manila by Ter that will actually St th— (hr rific Winds their work? A thorough study af MANILLA, May 29— <LF>— A these and other proble— will he typhoon wrought destruction in made during the next school year Révérai provinces of Luson today. In the high schools of Oraoan, Extensive damage, especially to Washington, Idaho and Montana sugar cane, to'reported. Manila by committees representing the is virtually isolated and communi Northwest Association of Second cation with the 12 provinces to ary and Higher Schools. This decision was rsacMd nt a cut off. Ships are congested in meeting of th« executive eqmmlt- the harbor fearing to put out to tee held recently la Ssadtls. Tha sea. Oregon schools were rapreaqatad by Bupt. Gao. W. Hughs« «f Bateas, preside« ( of tha association. and B. F. Carleton of. Portland.' 1 SALMON NOT PLENTIFUL TEACHERS TO DO RESEARCH He ia - osïâ sm- AKIPIGKTOB TOONGOB ■AINT I f TYPHOON IS DESTRUCTIVE Negroes Will « . Sing May 31 The negro spirituals, sung by a quartette of dusky artists from tho Piney Woods negro school, at Piney Woods, Mississippi, will be enjoyed by Ashland folks Tuesday evening May 21. The during tho quartette will appear at tho Presbyterian church, the program to start at 8 o’clock. No admis sion will bo charged but an offering will bo taksn. The quar tette la making a tour to secure funds for the Piney Woods school, an undenominational Institution.