Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970, August 27, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    »w
•M
«
PRIN TING CO
,77
SHLAND DAILY TIDINGS
w n
,
tffl- V »'. V ■ 4^ Wf Ik
OUT OUR WÁV
A ugu st 27. 1027
A F IN K CROP:— The righteous shall
tiee: he shall grow like a cedar la Lebanon
l a t h e house o f the Lord shall floariah la <
. . ^SW9TO1. . t
fl^ r p m e u t
> Motor«» Corpçmtiq*. <'- j ~
Realm M : U . 11.
licenses tejd lR f MrjfctMp age <>b-
UR KAT MAIL ROMCRY*
.
P R A T M R :— Lord, send eg o s us constan
e|rs ot Messing.
tatftPd from the Department at
Cornine ree. <f you want a pilot s
Think Like a Railroader
. Highway engineers meet and discuss the build­
ing of roadways.
They have one thought primarily. That is to
see that traffic may move.
r © m t fcrith iff signal systems, heavy road pa-
i m l l mgk and regulations, is held by authorities in
hands lie the duty of making highways safe
for travel. The engineer builds his road in order
that traffic may move—that traffic may move rapid­
ly, with awnninruni danger from curves. Horse and
buggy curves must lie replaced by those suited
for motor travel.
*»C '
»
,
.
sfrypcting metarcyc^e patrolmen, whose mere ap­
pearance will frequently slew motorists from a legal
35 to 25 an hour pace, are considered infinitely
important.
«
* u
But fast driving is one of the lesser menaces on
the highways today. There is the “ Safe” driver
who goes slowly but turns suddenly without sig­
nalling. Thep there are those thoughtless meander­
ing creatures who will signal for a left turn,
1? .¿ àjî
■ iL r w
He Served Us Well
“ My interest in and activity on behalf of the
Simthern Oregon Normal school and other Ash­
land affairs will continfie janabated.”
With* these votde J. H. fruiter, retiring secre­
tary of the Ashland ( ’hainb€*r of Commerce expressed.
the spirit of service which has characterised his
eight year tenure of office as secretary of Ashland’s
Civic organifiatiop, thé Chamber of Commerce.
Always alert, always willing to sacrifice^per-
sonal desires find interests to the demands of his
mfrsffinn, Mr. Puller ends his services as head of
the Chamber of this city with an enviable record of
progress and success-
As ithe hetod of the civic organization he lias
one things. He has had dreams of progress and
e has seen them realised. He hag been steadfast
hi purpose and loyal in service. There are Ashland
institutions which hfid their origin in the mind
«nd the services of John Fuller. They stand às a
Rionnmefifr to dhe service he has rendered this city.
.Whatever Mr. Fufler may do, whatever Kne
»f bnsitaess he may follow, we bespeak ~ for him
Success. Such loyalty and service as he has given
ihe city applied to private enterprise can bring only
what it has brought t a Ashland—the realization, of
dreams.
.
r
,
The Daily Tidings regrets the severance of Mr.
fruyer from active head of the Chamber, «but we
wish for him every success in whatever line of
endeavor he may follow.
He has served us well.
Î
A pleasant sounding auto horn ought to be
listed in the category of needed inventions we
think.
Ita inventor, along with finanei«! returns, would
reap a harvest of undying public gratitude. Manu-
factnrers developed the auto horn as a warning
signal. It seems to have degenerated into an un­
necessary and abused noise maker. Homebfxt^ need»
fnly to start a siren shrieking in a traffic jam to
bava all participants take up the chorus. The sole
àffifiMiiplishnient of the ramons chorus is to rattle
|he faulty. motorist more than evçr. That is just
fine obnoxious see of the motor horn. Instead of
making life eaamr for ( m pedestrian, it is jost one
BY~NOP818
it k e n e e ,wrft*j, ÖR p «apartment
here (0Ú R wHi «pn^you gÿpMfar
ttoa M anto,rifate with tofoim ox
ttan about .the examinations. ,.v ,M
Irte iCOUTfJC O f •cvCröI ffettaCw.
7 The first th in g to do, however, Howard how Paon flteeupO a lot of
> - t » ffafi teri * * to sort of a li­ trooMo and the piri « h a fate» bha
to te* i M . m r i r t - ,
hare a plane at your disposal, for
the examination taefadfcM prectfc-
ry vfolhto Identification marky ,
. J ^ a a a v te one In to nd o to entqr
oopuBerctei Dying which w tll take
him avey a state Use, that is, to
fir for pay— he muet be. IS yenjs
old and must have a license. He
m u a tp o a a m e n ta l te rt, physical
teat and practical flying
test.
T h ie ls because a l l planes engaged
In Interstate commerce must be
Uceqaed and flow s by licensed
pMota.
-The etaasee of pilot licenses, are
‘T r a n a ^ r i,;.’ for
carry passengers or freight where-
over they desire; “ Lim ited Com-
faefCiai,” far pilots carrying
tfikte curves—at 15 miles an hour—on » the wrong
side of the road- ( \
a , u u
■ There are scores of other violators of minor
traffic regulations. There are those who forget auto
courtesy. Reports of traffic officers show thdt
warnings predominate * in their duties—in other
words they are teachers—the public must be taught
that public safety depends upon the observation of
certain rules.
~
------------- -----------------
Motorie*» must be taught tb it the highway is
built for traffic and he must think accurately and
*
¿ieuteuoHf JfueAeute and hto ma­
rine«, wttA fifa Help o f PMMff Bow-
or4, m other e ssa» 1 er of Uto • *
ifad*." who.. work«. incognito, have
M artin Jensen who won the
$10,000 second prise In the aow
tragic Jipta vpoe has scarcely -the
“ we won” spirit jot young Lind­
bergh
He paid his navigator $25
for hlB services.
.1-
dropped rtpJU out of tigh t.
They 'covered the. thirty mile«
to Tallow Canyon la rooord time,
a n n for that clear ataatah.
w ord fit their achievement had
gope po ahead of them and the en­
tire town woe- gathered at the sta-
tfcm'as they drew In.
>
The poorly Ughtod station offered
little opportunity to distinguish
people hut Howard’s erect, military
term . v t i easily recognisable aa
ha aAtoared, the first to descend
from the car.
I.-
.A form rushed out from the small
mob crowding on the ptatfonR and
grabbed Mm fiercely by the arm.
“Where’s my daughter? She was
yp,
field; ’Tnduatria$” , tor non-poa-
senger carrying commercial pitots
and "P rivate or Student.’’
..The, requirements fo r a "trano;
pert pltot’r Heense afo the stlffast
of eeurse.
The transport pilot mast have
had 20.0 hours of solo flying. The
examination requires him to glide
tWHH t í ilt f t u d e ó
t foot fo
a epot on the ground w ithin 200
feet of a designated lin e ,a n íJ b >
must glide,’ w ith the option of us­
ing his motor when necessary, to
w ithin 100 feet of a m ark,
to
prove firs t that He can function
properly if Ms motor goes dead,
and second that he can land pro­
perly under normal conditions.
A t 800 foot he must make five
figure eights ever two marks 1600
feet apart and must perform such
emergency maneuvers as spirals,
sideslips and stalls to show that
he know how to get out of them.
To show Ms ability at landing
In strange fields, he m u stjff> a
triangulas or rectangular course
of at, least 100. miles w ithin a giv­
en tim e and make two landings
enroqte. .
Henry Judd Gray denle» the
reports th a t'h e has been spending
his tim e in the death oeH knit­
A pie eating contest staged far
ting. W hle hamounts to
th e
the pleasure of a group of newa-
height of deten&hg one's repte
tfby/Wae eaued o ff when the
tation.
Stick out yoor Jaw and some­
m unition” gave out. tn 16 m in­
body w ill soak It sure.
utes with 300 boys at work and
80 dosen plea gone, it was thought
The police commissioner o f De­
safety
first was a good policy.
W h ile many men are large, only
tro it prescribes music as a cure
a few of them are big.
Certainly. . eemmls-
Our Idea ot parents who have for crime.
a “ fam ily heart” is exemplified by sipner, It you eon enïy get them
work the Paris couple who with 20 to face It.
< children of their own
adopted
twin girls six days old.
The war in China has ifiterfer-
Riches som e«m e, curd
W e believe the <2 and 14 »year rad w ith ' p^oduoQen of fresea
troubles, but Invariably
old boys who have the “ thutoba eggs and dried .eggs, .it seems
blggar ones.
up”
means
of transpqrtatlox that even out of this war some­
learned so well are not getting thing good is coming.
much chance for a good start to
Sentetlona get op the fU s t page, thia world.
faMH-Asat Docks Reviewed—
whtle facta go back w ith the want
The eld-faoklooed winter went
“Open Coinfeseion To a Man
ado.
away when the ladies began to Ig­ Fropt a Wonsan,,” by M arie Corel­
Mies Leona Mareters, in charge
li, . W ho does, not know and love
of the music department at the nore It.
Marie Ççrelli? Here is what her
Nc-rpial school has been untiring
’ Tito man who r t a i t e «
publishers call her valedictory—
In her efforts In bringing out­
walks la' su'roff of' wlnn
“ A real personal message’.’— dis­
standing musicians to the school
cussing th? pvqriasttog problems
the jone who otarte
1
for concert work this summer.
cnljed human love, a subject ahe
Needless to aay her efforts are
has (tabbied iai aJway«. Here she
much appreciated by all In the,
le probing it to the bottom in a
school.
'
way that nearly every woman will
H » Heck says “ I ’d rather be
lik e and som e men w ill epdure.
tuet, mam In Be. iwacitai Center
As moot renders w lil adm it, and
is
up
to
the
Boas
to
“shine”
in
New
York
than saeaad mfin
the diamond tomorrow with
frequency based upon their own
City.
experienced, there are several
sides to the subject. M arie
has
ovidaaUy gone through It alt, thé
wqy she writes and her exper­
iences have not soured het. She
seems to think In terms of love
and handles it without gloves.
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
ASHLAND
"Under The Levee,” by E. E a rl
Sparling. T h era be land tales and
m * tales, and short stories
that
combine U m elements. Here is q
Leith Abbot«, MdrrHT Throne,
coUectlon of thirteen In the old
Mrs. W . O. Marks of Portlan«
Elwood Hedberg and Slade Song-
New Orleans atmosphere.
No
Is visiting la Ashland with her
suoh volume of quality has ap-
mother, Mrs. M, L. Stanley a a i
r the- geared ta -many a day. Edw ard
other relatives.
o t Dead Indian, vtsitlng Pelican
■pend Barl Sparling la a westerner,' g
feay and K > m a t> Falls.
They
Desd native of Arkapeas, who haa play-
wfc. ed a ll over Urn southwest, doing
cewepspqr work at F o rt W orth,
Mrs. E. M- Wagner spent Sat­
Dallas, A ip tln , Oklahoma City,
and at various fishing stream» urday and Sunday w i t h
her
arid grttlag a Uttta educafton-not
along the way. They are travel­ daughter, Mrs. T . W . Miles to
fop.fifoeb, àt Tulane Unlveraity,
ing by teak».
Msdford.
qqlbe f e P f M«»« Then be made Mg
lOTM(3S w riting home op Geand Iale off
iÿne, son of
the Louisiana epaat, where pirates
o^ Ashland,
foregathered.
Hia storlaa easily
F ran k Lowry haa resigned his
match,
if
not
ehrpoafi
tmfaadlp
position w ith the Ashland Mesfi
Hearn. Darla, Kipling, O. Henry,
etructor. sad more recently on company and contemplates going
sache! hod many not in bin clone. Hfa
Ashland realty oadmtor, now .‘a to Portland the first of the com-
where ,to ry m otto swiftly. H i b
a
resident o f Long Beach, Calif., ifig month.
IkMrea ’
■’» * « • ’1 « *
Ml
t * JT
ïi
wm
rqceatly admitted to prac­
records fa «hört story loro, but
tice taw in tk d U fa te of Cali-
a g w forgetting his erf- There la
lightning action. ' nnfatboatabfa
fars. Austin Barron, who w < f
operated qn at the new Southera,
tissent. H» haa ft a i l — The Ûarlgt.
OTOgon HbOgltal last week for
an aggravated ejtkck of appetaf
Soda fountains report a der
dicltls, Is reported Oq convales.
crtMOfa'ta, famteeaa w ith th e -fo il
In’ fempèrafurè.
’
Mrs. F. D. Wagner of this city
THE PAGES BACK
••«.»•rifa ol
~ ’
teed OP fo r him fa PhMptt heme
end the division superintendent
was the first to insist that Howard
should be at the bedside o f hat fol­
low ofltoer. Laura’s tender hands
arranged the sheets for the bed,
applied the bandages to Ms chest
nursed Mm through th a fe v e r
followed the rattling ride h a *
to Yellow Canyon.
The thought that affaire had been
brought hack pretty well to nor­
malcy was given cue rude contra­
diction when the knocker en the
Phelpe’ door was aounded at nine
o’clock a t night.
Stephen Phelps answered and re­
turned to summon Howard from
MacReady’s bedside.
“There’s a tall, good looking chap
downstairs askin’ for you," he In­
formed Howard.
Curious as to the identity of his
unknown caller Howard weak down­
stairs to face Sergeant B ill with
Sally on his arm. To Howard, who
knew Rlll'e history; the sight ot
Sally alone might have occasioned
comment. That surprise was as
nothing compared to the spruce,
slickened civilian figure that the
service toughened leatherneck pro-
seated.
‘‘Beggln’ your pardon, sir, we’d
be taking how Mr. Macfteady is,
air,* he inquired.
■ "Fine, BUI.” Howard volunteered.
“Doctor says be/m ght to get a good
&
tei , t
•>»*^•*•7
» _
’’Î was down there waiting for them.
on that train. W hat have yon dene night’s rest and then he’ll be com­
ing right around by morning.”
B ill stamihered, then giggled
voice answered
fooIisMy.
from directly behind Howard.
"Anything else, B illT ’ Howard
-R ’s OH right, father. I thought
under
the
alMumstaacee,
M
" I ought to Introduce to you, Mrs.
wouldn’t be- necessary tor me to
go on to W alla W a lla Yon see. B ill" he said, pushing forward the
Phil’s a major In the Intelligence indignant Solly. - “ You see ; Lem
Department and he’s been working Spoffard and m a fcfekned up the
Davis cottage by ourselves thia
against this gang all the- dme.”
It was neither U e time nor the afternoon. Mrs. Davis got two o<!
plane for profuse apologies; but her gong to trap Lem to the cellar
Howard felt.P h e lp s hands close but they didn’t know that I waa
around Ma odn'aad knew that to down there all the time waiting far
that moment everything waa for­ the drop on them- So » • brought
them back prisoners and then Sr-'I J
gotten.
"You’d better, father," Laura and I decided wo might aa well get a
warned, "because yon see—we’re married right off.”
(Bill’s unconventional method of
going,to:he married fast as soon
as h < yqpelms permission from courtship brought a roar from
the commanding officer.”
Howard, that quieted as he asked:
Howard grinned.
"Did yon get permission from
" T ia r a one o t the messages I headquarters?**
sent over the radio, after the fight . "No, sir.” B ill admitted. “You sec.
was all over," he explained.
seeing as we were bringing to throe
They had a hard time of It dodg­ dangerous outlaws wo thought per»
ing Question« from, the worked up haps they wouldn’t mind If t
townspeople; but the task of set­ brought to a wife too.*’
tling with the prisoners and re­
BUI looked around, hoping far
turning to normal duty was the encouragement.
first considerattoB.
Howard, as
"Anyway," he .concluded, "I waa
the ranking officer, took the thinking Mr. Macfteady might be
Initiative In , making decl«IohsM
able to fix It up tor me, now that
Yellow Canyon Was Inadequate I’ve done IL ”
for houahsg fare dosen dangerous
" I Imagine he’ll be able to,”
handlls who might attempt « break Howard answered solemnly, “any­
any moment th ei bad fully to - way I ’m expecting to be marrlad
covered from the lethal effects. He myself to a few days.**
'
detailed LloutonaAt ta r t e r , whose* , A t that moment Laura appeared
command oma scheduled to return behind him. She put an arm genUr
ever his akouldar,' b ef lips cares*-
vey the captive« W the fortress fag his cheeks. t,Than^ aa aka *
prison. A telegraphic communlca- deratood the scene before hprr aka
tkm aomsttanad thfa.ptaa aad ap­ welcomed Sally with outstretched
proved the ,gsadtog of the box car hands and drew her through thu
on thia additional ran.
doorway Into the house.
Howard, pending definite orders
Howard's extended hand w m be­
fore Sergeant BUI. The big loath*»-
to th eir^u arter?ta the abandoned neck’s face slowly parted Jn an
enigmatic smile aa ha took tlto grip
power honOA
'
, f a r t tooled the bqnd, Oi the bona
Macfteady htmoeff wda given tbs diet order between the two man.
T H U END. '
OF HIGHWAY
PO RTLAND, Aug. 1«.— f t » —
Completion .ot another big section
o t the;slereBns highway, between
Port l a t e . . Astoria- -an« Newport,
fonntag another lin k to the Roose­
velt. highway, w ill, be cejSebrafed
sewtotoker i r . .v • - t * < .
ThM deutfi hSfcflo» 1* open from
to ri' Clfiuviwfft rivfir - to Gardner
a$ the mouth of the Utnpqga river.
The north eecttnb fa opqri from
Astoria to the seouthof the Sliest
rWW. These remoing- a ?< mfle
gap to the Improved roefi from
Newport to Gardner, which will
require about- $4,000,00« to com­
plete. Thia gap Is bridged by a
passable dirt. rod|d, WtQi tbo com­
pletion of this last stfetch
the
highway w ill be opoij along the
entire coast of Oregon, connecting
with the Roosevelt highway frin g ­
ing the oo&st of California.
R H V iy A L A K R V K »;» A R R
,
,t BElfcG W E L L A T TE N D E D
• •
Splendid attendance and en­
thusiasm Is ntor.kfog the revival
services which arc.befog held at
|he i'ouc Fold Gospel Temple qp
the B o u leiafd under tbe auspices
of Miss M arjorie L. C a b l e ,
(cnewn as Ihe "g trl evangelist” of
the W d& i W ith deep
«focerity
Mis« Cable brings her message.