Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1927)
i BS "ZI ' THE DAILY TIDINGS PRINTING CO 9JQK0Ï MâDDXH OWŒH, ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS OUT OUR WAY By Williams paw (Continued Prom rage One) A w ; m a , cant - i ? It was a pretty scene in Lithia Park last evening when at least 1000 men, women and chil dren gathered in the beautiful, natural amphi theater for the recreation night program. Ashland folks do appreciate Lithia Park. Attendance at the program last night was ample evidence that any attraction in the park is worth while, because it draws Ashland folks closer together in an appreciation of one of their greatest community assets—the park grounds. As the big throng, some standing, some seated on park benches, some seated on the ground, some in automobiles which were parked along the park drive united in singing “ Stars of tke Summer Night” and “ 01 Black Joe” and other sweet, famil iar, melodious old songs, there was a peacefullness, pa neighborliness, a spirit of real fellowship which seemed to exist—such as is seldom found in any community in this materialistic age. To cultivate this spirit is a worthwhile task fop any community. Where there is a spirit of fellow ship and cooperation in play there will be a similar feeling in business and in work and progress will’be the natural result A worthwhile movement has been started and we wpuld advocate and support a continuance of further recreational nights—when every' one can gather at the park, enjoy the music and the com munity sing. The opportunity these gatherings give Ashland folks to welcome to their midst the strangers in our city—the student body of more than 250 of the Southern Oregon Normal School, under whose spon sorship this( first program was presented is another major item of^ value to be derived from community gatherings. It was a splendid thing for Col. Charles Lind bergh to do—an act quite in keeping with the modesty and reserve which has characterised his every action since h^ came into public notice—when the other day he said he had “ had his day” and beyond extending a hearty welcome and sincere congratulations to the returning heroes of trans- Atlantic flying fame—he disappeared into the back ground. This is a characteristic which has endeared Lindbergh to the people of America and one reason that wherever he may go on hia itinerary through the States, spreading the gospel of his profession— aviation — he will be met with hearty welcome and greeted as a hero. i It is not only his courageous daring. It is his sportsmanship, his unselfishness, his c o n s t a n t thought of others, which makes him the real hero he is—the hero whom other youths may well try to emulate. OW Ashland Collection One of the most worthwhile movements started here recently is that of the collection of photographs of old Ashland with the idea of a future historical society organization. There has been a hearty response to the appeal for photographs to add to the collection, which ac cording to present plans will be placed in the Ashland City library until such time as an organi zation is effected to definitely take charge of the collection and preserve it. The pioneers of the county are passing. There are but few remaining here who crossed the plains and settled in Jackson county in the days of its early history.’ If the history and records are to be preserved the work must be done now—while there are collections of authentic photographs, and while there are pioneers who can tell of the early days here. Every contribution to the growing collection is a contribution toward the preservation of the pion eer history of Jackson county. A recent news dispatch carried the information that already 80 accredited factories were producing airplanes or airplane parts. And there seems to be no over-supply yet, but it makes ng wonder what the future may hold. A college president says it is hard to keep from being educated these days. And that is espec ially true if one happens to be good football timber. ---— A — _ camaflouged still was raided j n Nqw Jersey says • prow report. They probably were making camaflouged whiskey. gee MA — < G O S lA — . v V; RUto. president of 5» I Ashland organization, presided and after an explanation frojn I memhepi of the rteltlnx delega- I flop a . to their pnrpOM f| the ¡present tylg. be caHed upon J.-R. Vining, president of the stoty chamber oif coommerce who in the name of the state organization, we|oomed the visitor. M r. Vining M id OrW oh WM glad to welcome the California DQBOTHY REID; Editor. Phoîe 89 I representative, and ft» Mgnpwl- edge the progressiveness of tb« neighboring State. He emphasis? w and in the same shade as the organdy I ed that it' is necesM ryfor the en- Child Wejfhro Clinic « ill be may be utilised as skirt trim | t i r . Pacific coast to recognise held at the Civic clubhouse on ming, being applied in ruffles or Italic as ope great firm and to WinbUrn W ay. Mothers please band effect as a rule. | " o f I 9® Dta line pi unity of in phonei ‘ Hies Hicks ~ at the M- terest. The danger of feeling an brary for appoifftments. Some of the younger Misses antagonism between the various — P M t Noble who are letting their hair grp« I highway traversing the Pacific Grand’« dub « ill have a cov long again, part the hair in the I coast states should he ironed ont, ered dish luncheon in Lithia middle and softly comb it back as tjhe tonlrst will decide which park at 2:30 o’clock, toward the rear «hare the short highway he w ill take and ns there are sufficient tourists to Justify] leedajr, in ly Hff— Installation of ends are curled Into little ring officers of Hope Rebekah lets and held together by a rh in e - each highway. He paid the var Lodge No. 14. Postponed from ious communities should always I ■tone barette. Little bangs are Tuesday, fu ly I t to Tuesday, 1 paps «long a good ward for - the sometimes worn in front when July It. the hair has the center part and neighboring communities and that an effective coast loyalty ahonld is worn flat at the sides of the longing I be engendered. head. Thia rather qnalnt manner Carl Lemus, of Sacramento, Oh mine la a moon-drenched of hair-dressing looks very well I stated it was the Intention of the with the Period type of frock and garden,— unofficial committee to cgmpll- A ll covered with soft sequined is especially smart at evening I ment the California commission I snow time. It . to strictly a youthful I on the splendid work being done I But beneath there is a stirring style, however. in straightening the Pacific high And dreams that are of deep way .in the Sacramento canyffn— delight. Instead of the sweater and and also to suggest th at they skirt idea for sports wear, the speed np this work. H- H- Duaning, Marysville, I Bud and leaf and tiny tendril, , flapper seems to prefer the two- piece flannel frock w i t h o u t Are awaiting tha magic call, said there were two offices . in ; sleeves. W ith this, she may And the jurgp for light and living Grants Pass each boosting for a I choose to wear an accompanying la manifest in root and all. specific highway oat of that city,! jacket of harmonising color. The Instead of each boosting for both! velveteen Jacket to worn In many highways, and they hoped to be I Dainty daffodils are dreaming Of dancing while the breezes instances where' the^froek be able to straighten this out. “Pop” j neath to silk or flsnnal.jOhe-piece blow. Gates added later that Grants Pass persona-had routed* a party I And the tulips see quaint pic flannel dreas^P are also popular tures, i with the flapper. In dresses of of his friends. Congressman Lee — Ot nod ding far tall stately rows this type the bodice is long and straight-lined, thd skirt Joining Crater Lake via Gold HUI route, [but that he had rescued them Anxious violets ■ are creeping, onto'thgbogjoe with front pleats. By - tha aide of the garden wall. The breast pocket usually has an [ana brought them to Medford. embroidered » emblem sush,as a Mr. Dunning M id the California And the arbutus to nestling. tennis racket, <a ca%noe, airplane, Among the leaves that fell highway* war« now out of polb- wings, etc., «pen i t A narrow tics. last fall. string belt is worn about the Others made short speeches in Since these dresses welcoming the visitors, who latar And I long for flower and frag- waistline. | drove to Gtahfe P s m and thep to are sleeveless they are most com - ranee. Prospect «here they spent the And for love though It cause fortable for actual sportswear. night, enroute home via Klamath me pain. ! Falls, «here they «ore to InvM ti- Murmuring leaves in the zephyr, Washable silhr dresses of two- ¡qate the proposed Klamath Pella And the song of the lark, in piece type are also in demand Weed highway to connect The the rain. with the younger set. Usually Dalle» - California and Pacific Faith Banks Brown, the Jumper Is printed in horison- highways. One of the members Spokane, Wash. tal stripes with stripes repeated had previously stated that Calto at the hem of the skirt. fornia wonld pot undertake any | Important Books Reviewed— additional highways, bnt that the “Footsteps in the Night," hy M i Mikach Hostess— California districts affect'd be C. Fraser Simpson, to a book that Mrs. L. Mlksch was the gra tween Weed and San Francisco | w ill do more than countless elec cious hostess yesterday afternoon, bere about ready to form a spec ial highway district and construct tric fens and m jny Iced drinks Wednesday, July 20, when she to produce cold chills during the delightfully entertained the ladies the road with private fund'. summer heat. Ewe Martin to the of the Presbyterian Women’s The visitors from California gay young wife of an important Missionary society a her home on were as follows: D. V. Saeltspr, President Mc- official in the secret service. Her Fairview street. .Twelve members Cormack-Saeltser Co.,' Redding; j husband, Peter Martin, has a of the society spent a most inter Carl Lamas, P r e s e n t Caft La- bitter rival in the Home Office esting afternoon at the ,Mlksch mus 0o., Sacramegto; H. H. Dun whose own future depends on home. The usual business session was ning, President Dunning Bros., i his ability to discredit Peter. presi Marysvills; W . 0 . Lee, President Eve gets straage, unnatural let conducted, although the dent, Mr». 8. D. Taylor was un ters 8rom him. She finds her- Wm. O. Lee Co., ‘A uburnf flay Jones, State Senator. Murrysville; helf left alone la her enormous able to be present, and several O. G. Steele, Manager California | old house to' protect his pipers tmporant matters concerning the Oregon Power Co., Yreka; W. from a desperate gang of crim society were taken np and dis Boucher, Sacramento D i s t r i c t ; inals who shadow her every step cussed. Mrs. Nell Robertson was in Manager, California Development and watch her every move. While charge of the program* the topics Association, Sacramento; "Pop” she to creeping around dark Gates and Jack Thompson, of rooms, using her knowledge of being “a review of* the year’s Medford, were preseat. i the old house to ontwlt her work” and “Looking Forward.” enemies, Peter to facing a ter Bach member took active part in rible ordeal in headquarters of the entertainment, which was ■thoroughly enjoyed, by all pres-' the enemy group. ’> n « « - 1 CANT FORGET T4 a T OLP QUARltT. 1. What member of the late President Wilson’s cabinet is sug gested as a Democratic preslden- 2. W hat prominent New York song writer married a daughter of the president of the Postal Tele graph company? 3. Name a former aviation of ficer of the U. 8. army who made a strong attack on the army and lost his rank as a result? 4. W hat Illinois town has been frequently In the press as a cen ter of Kian and Anti-klan out breaks? 5. W hat Trans-Atlantic flyer »1- so flew over the North Pole? 6. W hat prominent American novelist refused an offer o t the Pulitzer Prise? 7. Name the .latest nation to be added to membership in the League ot Nations. 8. W hat European sovereign’s visit attracted most attention In the United States In 1828? 8. Name the famous Egyptian king whose tomb was discovered in 1825. 10. W hat Tennesse teacher was fcund guilty at a sensational trial for having taught evolution? ANSWERS Vaterland. Titanic. Mauretania. Leviathan. A delegation of women called -en President Coolidge to ask for rights. Doubtless the president didn’t refuse ’em. I f ' S Wdman hesitates, she won; if a man, he to lost. Every minute a sucker to born and every thirty seconds a graft er. The girls used to apply irons to shirt fronts. Now they u m them on the links. John D. Rockefeller was 88 the other day. Now If he can only A good employe to a certified find out when Chauncey Depew check, while a poor one is only and Jhomas Edison hold theirs. a promissory note. The apple crop forecast is ex So far the only movie stars to cellent. Maybe the doctors had escape Scandal are Rin-Tln-Tin be^fer put off their vacations Un and Tom Mix’s horSe. til plater. Any statement beginning “They Charles A. Lindbergh, the very say” should be subject to a dis Aap 4o take a girl tor a buggy count of 60 per cent before you ridp along _S country road some hear what it is. Sunday afternoon. Hex Heck says: “ When want to do the right thing, t lawyer points out that they’B law agin* it." 6. Lusitania. * 8. Présidant. 7. Cunard and White S t a r Lines. 8. Messageries Maritimes. 8. San Francisco and Seattle. 10. The U. S. Shipping Board. yon caty’t expect warm winter, can you? President Coolidge could make the country bone dry '1® thirty days 'if he wanted to, according to an eastern reformer. Guess he doesn’t care to. A man with a quick temper may he M id to bo'll at an un- unknown temperature. TURNING THE PAGES BACK ASHLAND ASHLAND 30 Years Ago Rilling Schuerman, Francis M iller and Domino Provoet left Tnesday on an extended camp ing end fishing trip In the Dead Indian country. They expect to he gone at 'least ten days. Miss Helen Meyers of this city was a guest of Medford friends the first of the week. A. N. Mullen, a recent automo bile arrival from Imperial valley, haa taken over the management of the shop departmgnt of the Ashland garage. Mtos Agnes Storey of this city and Miss Alice Uhlan of RoMbnrg returned Tnesday from a two weeks* visit at the San Francisco Exposition. Dale Sanders, who has been a C. Bt. Watson and family who member of the Tidings mechanic havf been camping aboy» Chgu- al force tor some months past, tauqna grove 'removed to their has resigned his position and left town house today. yesterday for Roseburg, where he will join his father Prof. Sanders and then go to Albany and enter school. Dr. 0. W . Barr {ias returned from the dental college sad can be found in the Odd Fellows be would be Karl Nlms, who has been spend building, where, ing his summer vacation at work piogsed to meet all his old pa ‘ , in the M wm ill at Shake, has re tients- turned home and expects to. leave for Chicago in a short time, where he will attend school this coming My. and Mrs. Fyed Wggner left year. for a camping trip 'to Klamath ypstdrdaX. Geo. W. Stevenson and family returned yesterday from a "trip by team down through thee valley as far as Grants Pass where Mr. 8tevenson has a piece of timber land which he had never seen be fore. TAHITI PEARL DIWS&S REPLACED BY MACHINES i — i« ii i 'i *5 WASHINGTON, July 21.— (LP) — T^e industrial age to overtak ing even the pearl divers of the T»hiti Society Islands of the South Seas. Starting this sum mer, diving machines are to be used in -the Tuamotus Archi- pelago. Heretofore only the n a t i v e divers wlthont special equipment ethqr tgan their splendid swim ming ability, have been allowed by the island government. It > m decided, however, that ex tremely deep diving without ma chines wiw unprofitable and de trimental to the diver’s health, according to commerce depart ment advices. Portland Heavy shipment mads of. ice e m p cones-to Aus tralia, and of new* paper to e * .fc - , - .^1 A gay camping party composed Rrastl. ’• of Fred Castor, Henry Gatov, North Rend — Cold storage John McCall, Jessie Wagner, Sn- plant add Empire fish cannery last evening for a day > on ting In ppea with 8^5,«»« new equip the Slekiyous aronqd Pilot Rock. ment. The author handles splendidly the terrifying sensations of fig ures moving and passing each ether Unseen, able to to(ich pa<4* other, hut never quite sure of the Identity, one «of the other. *^he sense of fear to as keen and as weird m one of those nlght- mares in which you are forever trying to lock doors that won’t lock, and open windows that wen’t open in order to escape some unseen horror which is fol lowing yon bnt a few steps be- (Pleas« Turn To Page Five) SPECIAL! Lithia Sjiring» ÇeaRty Parlor > I Georgia Young, Prop. ’ Moved? to 42 Third Street F ta p ttr FashftHM— NEW Y ork , By Vegdome Botel July 2 1 — (Lpi— Organdy frocks ot Period type In •ale pastel colors are being worn by some Of the younger glrle for gvsnlng ¿knees. Soft orchid, pink, yellow, -tttrfluotoe and Nile green ton«t"»>F those usually chosen where the frock- to of organdy. T^o bodi«« to eeml-fitted an£ of almoet normal ‘w a i s t heighth w>|)» thg qhlrt gathers on to this extending to the snklea. Taffeta Mrs. Y o g n g hue a cool, f 1 rooipy place and solicits all customers to drop in or to Phon« 328R I I