Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1927)
»■ /J ■ ’•* *•* s w i g»« «w e» WP -»!»■**' DAILY TIDINGS ED GEORGE MADDEN GREEN, Mi PRINTING CO. OUR WAY M ill I I / OM»X CA iu T o o \ ---------/ i t a - T . I ’ m '5ÓO nervis AJ R tû H T X /^ MIMBR v CIM.OAHCE 1 t U AM' F ALV VMWBU X OO A O m , •< ’ s v - t t P AM* a lle r s T oo -fi R tq « FBR g IT A B O O t • ’¿ M L * A ’T ’luRM HAVE, flÎÎT j! h il\ alut * ’ LAV/ WIGHT AFORE S C A tR r OVER FEAR ILL a \ s NA v E PERM ANW wr Usi M V P A M 'f ô « / • m a s t OAM Cr i S -v DOÓ& Artistry ih Next Year’s Models New colors and finishes for American motor cars are being forecast by specialists. Imitation skins, it is .said, are to figure prominently in the decorations. Though bizarre effects have been con fined largely to “ sport models” there appear to be prospects of an effort to popularize more flashy machines than have been hitherto generally adopted as “ the family car.” Though body colors have Men confined for the m o s t’part to a com paratively few shades of a conservative character, proposed departures may result in the presentation of such vivid tints as bright yellow, pink and red. If* there is a general demand for the more spectacular effects there is no* doubt that automobile manufacturers will bf quite ready to meet i t Reporte indicate that some of the manufactur ers are planning to depart from the practice of using mohair off some similar product in the upholstery of next year’s models. Imitation skins are said to make a strong appeal not only because of their durability but atoo the opportunities for striking and artistie effects which, their use would provide. The elephant the alligator, the ostrich and sundry other creatures are said to provide in their hides the artistie designs which-will reappear In the imitation leather« soon to furnish a picturesque and pleasing interior for many a next year’s model.—Christian z With tw© decisive victories to their credit and a record of saver having had the enemy oroas their goal line, the Sons-of the Southern Oregon Normal school have established a precedent which will plaee the school to the front in the field of athletics, evdn as it has forged to the front in scholastic standards and standing? Much credit is undoubtedly due to the bland, bland coach, Mao McNeal, who has endeared him- srif ti> the beys, and has been able to take praotieal- ly raw material and make it into a pound machine whieh heats through the lines, and works aa a cunt, town pci ▼iM«ry. The Norina! team will put Ashland to the fore in the way of publicity surrounding athletic ac tivities and it is up to Ashland to get behind the team and make their game here a paying proposi tion rather than g loss. Let ub .boost the Sons, Every day sees an addition to the big display of product« in the Chamber . of Commerce display. Already the display fins become too largo for the tables originally provided tM shelf «pace ih a large wall cabinet ia being utilbed. • •. » , - H i s fc m <* pleading to nrte. 4 Much of thin produce U brought by farmers from the AaUrnii tra^e territory. T his display dgrvel A fWO-fdtd purpose. It creates among farmers a spirit of competition and Ihterest in what the other fellow ia producing. It is in a conspiciona position, seen and com mented apon by hundreds of tourists who pass through the city and register their cam at the local office, . ’ < * * Bucetit <■ h an gen in irave lengths have confused some radio owner* until thoy hardly know which way to tu r n . ' ----- . • Almee Semple McPherson. ' evangelist of the seaabbre and desert seeks fertile fields for labors. She drill coudurt a three day campaign in Klamath Falls. " - « Coat of protection ia high, aocording to boot-- leggen testifying before a court in the Tacoma booce case, which is not news at all to the ultimate eooaumer— at least ultimata coat ia high. “ Legs must be swung from tips hi pa,” days a moat infotmative headline, used over a news report on a beauty expert’s talk. Any one at all familiar with le ft und their general characteristics and idioayncrasigf will wonder from what other part o f the anatomy they might be swung. -/ < . . TO O K BOY A N D T O U R O lit i) Scissored Sentirne«! A R T H U R D B AN , 8c.; D. < (Copyright John F . D ille Co.) Noted? blAmss a Occasionally We come ac hoy who succeeds la spite The radio ia a blessing. I t pre sented to our keenly-appreclatlve ear the other night a ll the dulcet B a t C to They F o rg o « beauty o f that enchanting and In I lik e the following, but I mnet spiring melody: T m G o n n a confess that in- some communities Dance W ith t ie Guy . T h a t Brbag it is hard to forget you are a Me” .— Forest,G rove Newe-Tltoes. toachpr— you may he willing- to, « f t tt'tot k A rtffo gtettae commun T h at’s not a bad idea a Deavef ity to forget it. 1 oannot imagine, m tn has, to put a ben. on your tor example, that in Jefferson oplns instead of an eagle. Coins ville, Indiana, pupils are allowed make fin e nest eggs. — Baker to forget th#r are Pupito, or th a t Democrat. teachers are able to forget they are teachers. The only people al Germany u building a new pub lowed to forget anything there arm lic school to be made entirely of the parents. And they are allow glass. T h a t’s a fine Idea. I t wlU ed to forget thqy ate parents give the kids a chance to see the while serving as automatons to a circus parade w ithout missing school board. school.—-Corvallis Gasette-Ttmes. You may remember a -Whffe Mrs. Grayson has decided to age 1 commented on the fact that trans - A tlantic a HtflB girt of nine was kept out postpone her of school for months by this In flig h t u n til spring. She probably diana board because she W 6 r e reasons that she wants to live un knickers to schoolf I t this small til a fter Christmas, anyway.— Eu town Will deny legs to a child of gene Register. . nine, what does it expect to do w ith girts of twenty? But I wander. Here is a poem to a' teacher: Comforts, pleasures, a c a r’or tWo, Yes, my dear, they were meant for you; And President Coolidge, when T h in k ftot such are of low digres he heard that Ruth Elder W a a sion safer fiftor her flying venture out Simply because of your profession over ttte Atlantic, said: “T h a t’s Forget you are a Teacherf 1 fine.” i » * t he the talkative one? -r-NOrth PoWder New*. (Continued On Page Five) TURNING THE PAGES BACK ABffiAJ® 12 Yean Age 20 Yean Ago W A S H IN G TO N — A clipping from • western newspaper toUe tee. etqry a t * prominent senator who recently made a speech la a hostile coaaty aeat. The occasion apparyatly wgs > (rest and ac cording to thia newspaper’» report the senator was accosted by the sheriff on the street and In the presence of natterons witnesses heard himself called a UAr, a erook and o th te J d d names. The senator started for the sheriff aad the sheriff threatened to kick his head off? I t wae aU very nndlgnl- f ie d a ld hum iliating afcd the sen a to r retreated. '/ The btdry would indicate, If tree, that tome senators w h o figure rather im portantly down h er* aren’t always Sdçh-a-tbüch at h e«h . I t may ba an untrue vefi- sioa, however, so we won't' men tion the senator's heme. This particular paper is a weekly aad violently inim ical to the sena tor. , ~ The administration's proposal to retain the antemobile aad oth er so-ealled “ aulSAnoS taxes” may not be unite so tte rlM e as some persons would have' da believe. "Nuisance taxes” ae applied to automobiles and admissions seems rath er A misnomer. “A ll taxes are aalsaness,” fiatd a form er secretary of t h e treasury. “ I think H's both mere of a nuisance and more unjust to ta x the necessities of life and let the luxuries such as automobiles and w ls e flg h t tickets go free. I t is better to tax an automobile owner for hW joy rides th a n a man who cad’t afford a car for his bread and his.clothes. W e do not atom to realtfe that the cor poration taxes OU. the big fellow are always passed right' down to the Mut uWmato consumer.” Senator sm ith W lkhnatl Brook- h a rt’» latest blast against railroad rates is w o rth y ‘of attention be cause it seems to set railroad val uations at a lower figure than anyone elsU has proposed to date. The railroads want them valu ed a t the cost of reproduction th » — oontested Interstate Commerce Commission decision has used the original investment cost plus cer tain extras, the late Senator La- Foliette, Commissioner J. B. Mast- men and Justices Braudels and Holmes have favored the prudent investment yardstick and n o w contes B fo o th art, insisting th a t a railroad i t Worth no more than the m afket value of its stocks add bends. Brookhart points out th a t whan the Interstate Commerce Commis sion fixed s (tentative value of nineteen billion dollars oh t h e railvokds, the stock and h o n ft ^nafket value was only twelve bil lion dollars. The trouble w ith Brookhart’« theory, as With most dthers, IS thht i t can’t always he depended on to w e ft to r the mah Who demands a low valuation1— t » r mote than the rail roads’ reproduction cost theory Will Wotk to the advantage 'Of the railroads If prices evsr drop to form er feWM. The la te W . t . Bryffh, fo r instance, started This Day In Fistiana The leisurely life aad prosperity of the Vasques family waa suddenly mrootod an appareaUr tatto* S ü d a y ta oa JenuaryTlteik slob Indian*, a tow belonging», a uaiiaroi or ■etuers, many proviMionB aad ninety /bead of cattle. They wura inteflt upon reaching the ¿hone of Monterey Bay and erect- nodestly draining -Yow are fight, my Son.” his other agreed, "and eveh now the ions are Industriously gathering more grapes for this year's sup ply.” They looked through the great arched doerway off in the distance to where their extensive vineyards Were being stripped of the season's § “W ith youf permission, my Moth er, 1 will go out and s m how the work to progressing.” Tbs beautiful Spanish head note ded la asaent ••Remember to re turn tn time to welcome out gnestsl” The elder Vasques bowed tow hte fore his Mother and sauntered out through the archway.. TBs hacienda doors were already of Enrique opened wide to receive a host of friends invited In for an afternoon aad evening fiesta. Exquisite Span ish ehawis aad elaborate throws had been strewn across chairs to protect the ladles* silken gown* For a whole week the servant* had been preparing rare and delicious gloriam delicacies. The specious bubbling fountain to the courtyard was idled with sparking water—waiting to r » fleet the gayety and chance flirt» tions that would be mirrored In its depth* when romantic night set tled down. Even the plumed cock atoo, swinging m tts ring, was puff ing out its feathers In best holiday ■ rttu a to rtta a fe iy no»« t f these ■eparations dr possible pleasures era destined to be enjoyed. Disloyalty. Disaster, Tragedy aad Bath wara to ba the VaaaiMM'a ily Visitors and A t e waa sending em ea long before the appointed The setting ran added Its warm) blessing aad then disappeared oa its trip around the world. But i t eould set lake away the glory ra toe importance of the dap. T & Urn tory e f California had become a vital p art ot the history of eivtlis» E. F . W a lle t baa sold tke re- MaMtog 85 acres e f kto home stead ia tke v a lle y to W ilk ie - g o v . la th , ip o e , . / i • K son at the rate of >50 per acre. I • l h w is vs. W a r d ■ataR, who k The purchaser intends to seed the Twenty-one years ago today, middleweight land to alto lta and use I t tor feed H arry Lewis, New Y o rk Hebrew giving nlglfc. ing stock* ’ ♦ '\p welterweight, star, and M ike W ard Capadian champion tn that claw , M r. bad Mrs. J. H a rt of Shako met iff a scheduled 10-ronnd a f were in Ashlknd during the past fa ir at Grand Rapids, M R » ., that J. A. Gross of toe Depot Hetel. Robert G arrett, valley pioneer Week and left for borne Friday. *" terminated disadterouely for the has arranged a most elaborate aad e a d e f AdhtosfiTe most fte menu for Thanksgiving dinner at Canadian when he wee knocked his famous dialog room at 8 out in the fflutb round- W ard never regained conscious e 'c ie o k la tke afternoo*. . ness aad died the following day, an a result ad concussion of the Miss Lora OoHoh, » h o has jest brain caused by striking his head (hushed a term of setpiot kt F o rt ad to eajoytSg b M r steed oa the floor of the ring when Klam ath, returned to too city for k n o ck ed d ow n . boom at present. New th« Winter a tow days slbcs. W a rd ’s home was IS Sarnia, I* are apringing dp to «rdy as to make toe most Ontario, aad he was one ef the ifto' calam ity Mbwler be« most b rilliaet championship prate tke adroM of good times. ports <a his division. He? h a d met aad defeated such sterling battlers as Adam Ryaa, Otto 8ie- F rank Galloway has rented hts ranch on Rogna rlOer and, re mov lo ff, Buddy Ryaa. W illie Fttsger- A certain percentage of the al- ed With bla (am ity to Central W a lte r E. Conner started yas- ald add Gas qerdner «ad snw eobot sotted and confiscated by Fotot. M F Galloway contemplates rday fo r a dear .hunt oa Grlssly looked upon as the coming Cham* IM 'fe d d td l proliIblfion forces is a trip to Alaska la tha Spring. being turned to tke United States CHAPTER It / * The Gold Rush man galloped madly along ag roadway aad into the rbakneck speed, his voice to toad excited sbouta Matter n h u pony's feet, tor Vraqaea stopped oh M t ttolhdto1 Meatfly head’ aad younger eon. Don jR c h o o a table , poetai service, “to be used,” It Is I said, “oblefly ds on aittl-freoM In postai nutomòbOe trucks.” It 'is sgidl— Baras Ylmes-IJorald