f
PAGE TWO
THE • DAILY TIDINGS EDITORIAL an d
W. É . PERKINS,
C. J. READ, MANAGING EDITOR
A SH LA N D
D A IL Y
T ID IN G S Q U T
Giri Bank Robbers
Girls seem, to be bent on denlonstrating that
they can «fake good alt robbing banks. Possibly it is
true, as the protagonii#» of feminism iwsiflt, that «
girl can do anything that a hoy can do. Still the
experience of the South Dakota girl tends to con
firm the impression that there is something in the
feminine tem} »crament which is a serions handicap
to success in a bank robbing career. •
The South Dakota girl went at the job in a
methodical, business-like, bank-robbing manper. She
first made an estimate of the situation and then
adopted a plan «f action based on that estimate.
She found that tools would be necessary and de
cided to get them in a way that would not only pro
duce the tools but would give her a little prelim
inary experienoe. So she robbed a garage first.
Arriving at the bank, she cut the telephone wires
as afl good burglars do.
Everything seemed to work out according to
plan 'until she approached the final objective, that
is, the money. The enemy in the form of the vault
put up stubborn resistance. And she badn *t the in
genuity to cope with this unexpected emergency.
Never having robbed a bank we don’t knew just
what a man would haw done under the same cir-
cumstanoes. ‘ In general we think he would have
called up reserves or beat an orderly retreat Not
so this girl. She just went over and sat down on
the stairs and cried. And there the night watoh-
înun found her.
it wasn’t the impregnability of the bank vault
which proved her undoing. And it wasn’t the vigi
lance of the night watchman. It was the eternal
feminine. j
To thjp girl -and to all dthers^of like mind we
would wuggwrt that gold digging is much safer and
much more suited to the feminine style. Tears are
an asset in a -divorce oy breach o f promise su it In
bank robbing they are a total loss.
OUR WAV
Illese Wdwneit
Starting with a small coffee ¿hop 15 years ago
Mrs. Alice Alacdougall now own» a chain of coffee
«hops and tea rooms in New York. The lateet ad
dition to lier chain required the signing of a million
dollar lease and a trip to Spain to get ideas for de
coration. She «ays «he thinks “ it is terrible for a
woman to be in business.” *
She is quite right. It is terrible—terrible on
the humorist« wlro have kept going for agos on
joke« based on the theory that a woman hasn't a
butanes« hoad. In the presence of Mrs. Macdotigaff
and scores more like her the gag about the woman
who eonid not understand why «lie should l»e over
drawn at the bank, when she hadn’t used half her
checks, falls rather flat.
Beeasne »he had to got,, inoal« for her hu«hund.
an enslcrn wtjsnan wants a divorce. Mon are ho
oldfashroned.
...
♦
•
A woman »ay« she )ms limited and killed
practically oven’ kind of animal that bus inhahito<l
Vermont in 20 rears.
Wo don’t know whother
manslaughter charge« have I kwi preferred <»r not.
A roin»ing »liirt button may mean that a man*»
«ingle. If three or four are gone; he’» married.
I
By W illiam s
r OP em o P N ic e A / Ü G - U P R ^
MOwy-PoPPuH'U-i NOT S O
SPfcMK’ M U ST I / FAST B O 'S ’. m isS A cu aof
A N 'ow ef
B A T S0«B SHAfW - A c r la s t
3
s o vwe. m m
OWB V*AS ! -ffMES A
Q r f SOME.1NM / P B ltfc A fc O - DAW F tf?
ElAfc TB R
/
3Ofo M0«S.
fcR W A S
\C H R lS M U S t y
W
a p e c t o w e —-
< o ‘ COAL? V T h is n m RJ,
I
0‘
PR um E s !
ALLOW S A H ltfflW ! 7
I Mftaf Others Say j
Henry Ford has hbpes Of
doing away with egws, hogs
and chickens through the
manufacture of synthetic
foods. Same theory he works
on In building his cars?—
— Forest Grove News-Times?
GoArnor Patterson should
be complimented for vetoing
the bill for the Wilson river
toll road to be built at state
expense. The road could not
possibly pay bond Interest.
Toll roads are as much out of
date as hoop skirts. Oregon
wants none of them. The
state has already provided an
excellent road from Portland
to Tillamook and can easily
get along without another.
— Baker Herald.
The heod-^not the tongue— is
thttqpnt of truth.
Everything that turns out bad
doee somebody name good.
Somehow or other, salt always
finds its way t o g sore finger.
No country In history ever
built up a big army and kept out
of war.
The wrong condition of mind
brings more wrinkles than the
flight of Time itself.
, Story tellers are born, they
•ay. Then why le It that
mere practice develops such
excellent liars? — Corvallis
Gnsette-Tlmqp.
Greater than Faith, Hope
Charity is the rare virtue of
ting others alone.
The average
A
thinks all foreign r
are poor relations.
Grande Observer.
Hex Heok eayp: “Fer eight
years I’ve been wUtchta* to see If
sody pop produced any great poets
and I’m watchln* ylt.”
BROOKLYN — Because
George Dyer, negro Janitor
took too literally tke advant
age, the best time to leave a
crap game Is when yon "re
ahead, he was brought Into
court for disorderly conduct.
George explained te Magis
trate Hired Weld that the oth
er players had disagreed, al
most violently, with George’s
view of the situation and a
slight fracas had ensued. The
charge wae dismissed.
NEW YORK — Ito always
an accident when some one
geta intoxicated. Mayor Jim
mie Walker said in comment
ing on the cake of a city em
ploye who was drowned when
he fell off a municipal ferry
boat. The medical board had
’held that his dependents
were not entitled to the full
pension, because the man had
seemed “slightly intoxicated”
when he fell off the boat.
Mayor Walker disagreed and
the board of estimate concur
red.
NEW YORK — Guests at
the Ambassador's dinner to
be given March 18 by tha
American Women's Associa
tion in honor of the- foreign
diplomats in this country will
pay $205 a plate for their
repast. Five dollars is the
cost of the dinner and the
rest goes toward shares in
the association’s clubhouse to
be erected soon.
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
ASHLAND
Mrs. E. IV. Carter gave a lunch
Mrs. E. A. Woods and Mrs. F.t
G. Swodonburg wertt -to Medford eon -this afternoon in honor of
Mrs. W. G. Kvopke. Mr. and Mrs.
yesterday.
Kropke are* leaving
ABhlnnd
Heard nud Overheard— Neprt shortly, mnch to the regret of
Harrtoon. who recently bought their numerous friends.
Jnto an Ashland garage and has
had an opportanlty to listen to
boosts of many autotats of time
Hon. E. -L. Smith -and wife Ar
made over the Slaklyows, says:
“Queerly enough, most of ..them rived ta Ashland today from Hood
make better time coming hack River to visit their daughter, Mrs.
than going over. I ' think they Nelson and Cnmlly, vrtio recently
must mix alcohol with their gae- purchased (he Reeder orohard
near the Boulevard and came to
oliae.
this place to reside. Mr. Smith Is
Jack True Is working a big one of the leading horticulturists
crew of men Improving the Jack and public men of Oregon.
son county-, end of . the Green
Springs-Klamath Falls road.
Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Snyder
ited with Mr. and Mrs. High
Sunday.
3. W . Moi an returned Friday
from « trip to the found -country
whither h« went looking for a
linetneee opening, but came back
without finding anything that
nutted him Up there. Mr. Moran
has stored up some of the golden
ducats that he earned during his
long servlse with the railroad
company and 1s now going Into
business for h im self..
Mr. and Mrs. Cha«. Pierce of
Seattle cam« down last Thursday
for a stay of several weeks ta thia
section. Mr. Pierce w ent4 to
Han Francisco on a short bustnee«
trip-
Miss Tiffany visited with her
B. F. Lohr, the well known 8. folks In Ashland over the week
P. hrnkemnn, has gone on a visit end. She tenches school near
to Canada.
A Regular Scout
Crater Lake
In Winter Unie
0 0 M B O e T UWe. M Ê M 11
AW « A S s o t e T f a e o 1
oj¡Bssiasjsa2*í£
“Efficiency is the Ameri
can girls long suit,” says
an English observer. Well,
all we can say, after most
oaretul observation, she does
not weart it often; on the
PUBLISHED BT THE ASHLAND PRINTING 00.
H A H fie y SCi«SOR A
o o d rv *l '
J
Language
Advertising ciroulars for the new edition of
Webster’s dictionary promise that the new words
that have come into the language will be found with
in it, words like rotogravure, vitamin, fascista,
realtor, overhead, broadcast, that are in the ’lingo
of the day, and that reflect the new interests in life.
It is interesting to wtftch the English language
grow, to realize that it is a living thing. And those
who study it and use it most efficiently deny the
libel that there is greater beauty in any other speech.
They assert there is more power and vigor in Eng
lish speech, more capacity for accurate expression,
than in any other tongue.
The English language is constantly changing,
constantly taking on new forms, new meanings,
and including new expressions; but it is also old.
Just the other day an English philologist took
delight in pointing to many terms in modern com
mercial law that have come down to ws from the
Arabs and Phoenicians. One of the examples he
gave was the word “ bankrupt.” That is derived,
he said, from the ancient custom of smashing the
money-changer’s bench or table in full sight of the
public when he liad defaulted.
NEWS EDITO«
Prohibition
MtoHfcy, laauM B flt, «M 7.
Pour down and five to gol A«
usual I have been picking up the
loose ends today, and there are
Just as many of them this month
as last—4t seemed like a few
?
»4
more.
By the looks of my work report
this month, Mr.„Trice Is right
about a nine month’s vacation for
the caretaker. But then I can
plead “weather” as there has been
twenty-one days of storm; and
then I spent four days on the
road to town and hack, then
there Were five Sundays, so you
see It comes out just right.
This has been a month of
months tor fog and storm and
wind. Wow! Thirty miles per
hour has bean a gentle breese for
this month. The high wind ac
counts Tor there not being more
snow at the snow pole. The snow
has reached such a level that the
high wind sweeps It over the rtm.
I think that a hundred and fifty
Inches Is more nearly right than
one hundred and two fnches for
the depth of the snow. The drifts
on the side of the Lodge aTe about
35 feet deep. You can step out
of the third story windows onto
the snow. On th e north side the
drift is above the roof of the old
building and slopes steeply toward
the lake. It would make a flue
toboggan.slide.
The drifts on
both sides of the Lodge have in
creased In depth about ten feet
this month.
Work— Shoveled snow melted
hined.
WeatbeY— Day cloudy; wind
southeast; snowfall since lost ob
servation, 5.6 In.; precipitation,
1.08 in.; snow on ground, 121 In.;
Temp. H. 2», L. 1», R. 10, M. 24.
bloody historical times, and
» not to he wondered at that
thysical lay-out of the town
Irab and -nntaaglrtag.
•M e the town—the okfanffie,
m ane called the ovttytng dis-
—the eoontry w as wild, rough
eauttfuL Benches ware sent-
ney, and the Monroe ranch waa one
«•them . a ttssa M 'homestead rich
In tradition aad settled in the aarly
eighties by One-Oun Monroe, a
heavy-handed, honest pioneer. Its
oorrato, Its horses, Ms stables, Its
XUscweawsM s
Uveotock, Its range s g M pn is a t.
he bent forward
were as fine and hardy as Ito orig
the hunted mai
inal owner, who had made a last
Mm full in the
ing -repatotloa lor himself h r his
honest cousage aad hto anrtoMtag
hatred of crooked dealing, to which
the Wort of hie times wae particu
ward, snatching * revolver from larly versed. Me was a mlddle-
the table drawer, hut Fred was on
Me M t an Marching, atm etok. Graoe Pickens, aad Ms throe «kll-
downed Mm. He sands no move dren, Fred, Jnne aad ltttle Buddy,
to his own weapons. He weaM caml Tate In life. Whan Trad wae
not kill this beast, he thought, hut loot during the frtoco catastrophe,
beet him up terribly, gnd then al- haring been taken do the big city
his father oa « birthday visit.
I One-Gun turned Me love and
devotion to June, the daughter, and
reared her an be would have «eared
Ms son. Buddy was bora much
later, aad almost directly after his
Move.
birth the old man died of perma
Locked to
i other’s arms, nent Injuries received during the
S
they swayed
terrible ferocity
Toledo — Balderree and Rlt-
ner will log 60,000,000 feet for
Pacific Spruce Corporation.
MORE PROOF .
Chevrolet is meeting with
i n c r e a s i n g favor in ,
branches of the Hertz
Drive-ur-Self Corporation ’
all over the country, due 1
to their low cost of main
tenance and their depend
ability, oonpled W i t h i
smart appearance. This •
company having just ad
ded another fleet of Chev-,
rolets in Washington D .,
The
Automotive Shqp
Chevrolet Dealers
Threw menwntong pgf « 'town on fltotr -horaee
up and down the room, smashing
furniture, upsetting a dMh-eloeet.
. 1. >. SUU the watching man did
nothing hut watdh.
. . “Scar-
hand” wen flghtta« for Me life, ns
he thought, and wae determined
to kill Me strong sees I len t He
kicked
repeatedly,
snarling,
scratching, biting, but always he
received the -heaviest blows, the
wearing, thing rape, the tneaor-
able smashes o f « man -fighting to,
avenge a terrible memory. . . .
Then .aomdhow the tramp woe
Op on Me fedt, hie revolver In hit
bond. And atm the tts HI i I ^ man
opposite made no sign, MU merely
looked, and stlU Fred did not
touch his own guns. With a sob-
blag -eafh, ’'Scer-hanO” torched tor-
efi ranch, «-4
moue name,
and daughte
font,
Jnne woe
the range. 1
eyed aijd dor
a boy then
Her favorite
dingy overal
and a wide
’feminine clo
nuperlntende
of the
““ Mj « d <*
«<np>«7 woul
-¡hailing and
Pesslonately
ifi“ ®
duoked a split second before, and
leaned—only to .atop In horror,
«taring down nt the crumpled, hid-*
eons features Of Ike man be had
been -pummeltag « -moment before,
now slowly stiffening and distort-,
tag In death.
How had It happened? Fred did
not stop to think. The tramp’s
revolver was Otffl 4k Ms own hand,
Fred’s guns wore untouched In
their holsters. . . . The man op
posite Impassively rose and went
awny. Fred Bunted about fhe
room, pulled toe «hods down,
brushed his clothes «ad ,pnt on his
h at Stuffing the letter from Mrs.
Monroe into bis pocket, he quietly
opened the deer, slipped eat, and'
then paused nt the head o f the!
stairway. He could see the West
ern hat o f« man and « men’s cigar
dimly outlined now In the street
right outside the Anil door down
stairs. Then the silhouette -moved
sway. Quietly Fred strode down- town, nevertheless o
dealtaffe uh the wide,
etnbu» opened th e 'door, and was -a
bent-backed, husm
out ta the strudt
He was about to cross the busy
street when -the traffic signal went
up and the dlgn rend, STOP! Fred
wtaced tawawny, wtaktag Of the
dead mee— Own heedened whoa Ms
thoughts want beak to the huddled
little figure Of Ms mother lying in
death on the floor of the honse he'
bed befit for-Ber. . . . Ha walked
qulafcly away, e o t aettohsg that the
man who had watohed from the al-
ley-Wtadow wan now Mndtaa M*
S a is i
CHÀFTKR V
AN JUROR nr INK
the United flutes. The town Itsalt.
« huddle to? rough shacks wnd htmt-
tomffinr wtorss. » « E M
«
nh
shadows of ML Whltnsy, fifteen
thousand feet high, and king of all
American peaks. Sierra waa not