THE D fllüY TIDINGS PUBLISHED BY THE ASHLAND PRINTING CO. O BM N , Managing Bdttor ÎSHLAND DAILY TIDINGS OUT OUR WAY FOL-ME *2 1 H o H -fc T S COX ' > / X don ’ t u n e BJ giruls i s TH' ENREA’ólN vrv FACE ’SB GiT&^eo R E D ~ A T 2H a »NT BUJSHIN'» / V a t s m a d n e sw ¿ V mee - ee — hok Ashland Will Remember! In sentencing them only to prison confinement, the .state has been generously, merciful to the D ’­ Autremonts. In cold blooded audacity, in deliberate intent, in shameless brutality, in absolute indiffer­ ence to the possible consequences upon hundreds of passengers imprisoned in the death trap tunnel, their deed stands unparalleled. And yet we anticipate that the ink upon the commitment. papers will hardly have dried before the sentimentalists will begin their subtle protest ugwinat this “ cruel and inhuman confinement” of “ mere boys” who suffer perhaps from some kind of abnormal mental complex, or the effects of unfavor­ able childhood environment. It is quite possible that the boys will be model prisoners for a time. They will write for the insti­ tutional magazine, and glorify themselves anew. Soon some social theorist will arise to espouse .their cause ^nd plead for a pardon. The public will forget the scene in the SiBkiyon tunnel and lose interest in the men who were responsible for it, and with the common human passion for doing a kindness that costs nothing, men and women will be persuaded to sign petitions, urging that the D ’Autremonts be set free. / In 'view of these possibilities, which amount rather to probabilities, we would suggest that a special committee of incorruptible citizens be now appointed who shall set themselves to remember the facts of the D ’Antremont case and have them ready to marshal against the insidious attack of the chronic sob sister sympathizers. It has cost a lot of time and money and effort to get the D ’Autremonts into the penitentiary. By all means, let us keep them there. We shall be fortunate indeed if these desperate . meh do not contrive a prison break, and a new slaughter of innocent men. They should be guarded with unrelaxing vigilance within the prison, and now and in years to come officials who may have the pardoning power should be advised that in the case of the D ’Autremonts, life imprisonment is to mean life imprisonment—nothing less. — P o r t l a n d Tele gram. Improve Winbum Way At various points along Winbum Way, yisitora to Lithia park congregate—at the Lithia fountain, the picnic grounds, tennis courts, for instance. Most of these visitors come to the park to escape the heat and dust and to enjoy the beauty of the mun^ipal playgrounds. Yet, part of Winbum Way remains unpaved, with the dust frequently becoming extremely annoy­ ing to the visitors to the park. While practically all of the main traveled streets in our city are paved, part of this street, which is used by probabfy as many motorists as any other street, with the excep­ tion of Main street, remains unimproved. It might be impractical to consider paving Winbum Way, but possibly the city could work out an oiling plan Which woulct allay the dust and make this thoroughfare more attractive. Circumstantial Evidence One result of the recent D ’Autremont trial and subsequent confession by the three boys is the re*/ moval of prejudice against circumstantial evidence which 'was so evident in the examination of the jurors in the trial. Circumstantial evidence is indirect, but when a community has an example where the.citcumstan- tial evidence and the details of a confession coin­ cide so generally, there should be less reluctance in the future to accept circumstantial evidence. As one of the attorneys stated, witnesses may lie, but circumstances do not. It appears that ho was right as far as the latter fact is concerned anyway. Everything but the brass band was at the Med­ ford station Thursday veiling to see D ’Autrenjonts off. When the show-down came they had a real ■end off after all. And now “ Abie’s Irish Bose” has gone clean er to Germany where she is known as “ Abraham M fria” which spoils the whole thing. There is one advantage to the Nevada divorce . A woman may be a June bride every June rolls round. By W illiam s ( BiUG ! k GOT FOUR- LAST N HOFW »PE WE. G E T T O of Satires and Epistles, was high­ ly praised by Voltaire? 7. W hat novel by Fielding Is said to be the forerunner of mod­ ern English fiction? 8. Wbat have the following in common: Edgar Wallace, E. Phil­ lips Oppenheim, Agatha Christie*?- 9. In what novel was Becky Sharpe a character? 10. For what is A. E. Hons- « a n famous? D R A W IN A BEAD ON & FLSitsl' BiROSf <£/' O O -lF T H lS hole w a s ^ ^ S IOWV A HEAM EH A N D Í *BMl8BI« g /g M b •ft ENGLISH LITER A TU R E I.W h o was the author ofjt>oth L ’Allegro and II Penserqso? i 8. From what work by Chris- ’ topher Marlowe Jg. Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice said to be derived? , 8. Complete the folfljwing titles of Shakespeare’s plays: “As Yon — “The Two Gentlemen— ,*’ “The Merry— .’’ 4. Who wrote the “Anatomy of Melancholy?” 6. Who waa the best known English diarist of the seventeenth century? 8. What English poet, author J The soviet government of RMMa has forbidden import­ ations of razor blades. If It was lawnmowers that Would ba news. ’ ! , ] , * Styles Have gotten so bad that future changes must surely he Improvements. 1 Wisdom consists of s e v e r a l things, bnt honesty is nine-tenths ' of the formula. Quarrels start over nothing and what they start over is what yon get out of them. Before China is recognized as civilised, she w ill haVe to put in A few golf conrees and haseball parks. ANSWERS 1. Edgar Allen Ppe. 2. The Spy. 8, W illiam (Julien Bryant. 4. John Greenleaf W hittier. ‘ 8. Petroleum V. Nasby, Arte­ mus Ward, Mark Twain. 8. History. 7. They are contemporary nov­ elists. 8. Booth Tarklngton, Octavus Roy Cohen, George Randolph Cheater. 8. Henry James. 10. Low Wallace. H et Heck says: "Men some­ times gits old without knownln’ It, bnt did you ever see a woman who did?’* , A woman '■gho has had eight husbands attributes her matrimonial success to her cooking ability. W e do not like to question her. Some day there’s going to be a tidal wave. 'Then some of those ladies on the beach are going to get wet. Baseball isn’t such a simple game after all. There is usually a catch In It. W ater’a good enough drink, if you take it in right spirit. The G. O. P. has put the soft pedal on gll third-term talk. Here’s a suggestion: Why not call it the non-stop presidential record. Eight golfers ont .of ten are married, according to the statisticians. Maybe that's what they mean when they talk about hasards. OBITUARY Andrew Dosier waa an old pio­ neer of Jackson county. Ha was porn In Missouri, October 5 ,1848 . Mr. Dosier waa the third child of a family of five children. When he waa quite young, hla parenta moved to Texas and aettled on Rad Rlvar, where the tpwn of Preston now stands. They re­ mained there about a year and then moved to what la known aa Cross Timber«. In tboae day the government'granted each aettler, who waa married, a auction of land; A ftar thay had lived on it two year» they diacovered It waa school land, and having no money to purchase It, had to leave their labors of two yeara and move to wbat is known aa the Elm Fork of Trinity River, In Cook county, Texaa. Thera .they took a section of land near'the present site at Cainsville. The Indiana ware very troublesome. They would come at night and crawl around the house, but paver put in an appearance during the day. They set fire to the prairie and burned some fencing and hay belonging to Mr. Doaler's father. . / Thera was no school near by, ao his mother taught him the alpha­ bet and how to spell. In the year of 1860 or 1861 the town of Oalnaville begap build­ ing. The first building w ai a log house and was used for a store. The next building was a dwelling house for the stare keeper. The ftret Court houaa waa a log build­ ing but later torn down ana made of lumber. In the fall of 181$ hla mother died. The cars« ta d hardships ware many. The boys worked as much ah possible. The schools ware too far away for them 'to attend, so their father hired a man to teach th e « but ha would let them learn nothing but spell­ ing. ’ The part of Texas ~ hi which they were living Was Very nn- healthy,Jhe declining health of his father, induced them to start for California in the year of 1868. They had an ox team and one Wagon. The first lap of their Journey was ended at Fort Bel­ knap, on the Brnsoe River. There they Joined a wagon train and started for the Golden State. They traveled the most southern route along the border of Mexico. They had little trouble with the In ­ dians, bnt nearly perished for want of water. A great number of their cattle died, and they stopped on the Colorado River four weeks to rest the remaining herd. The ■ first settlement they reached after arriving in Cali­ fornia was Lexington, fifteen miles south of Los Ahgeies. They had a relative here, so they lived with him and helped .dig potatoes. They had been so long on the way from Texas, it was now late in the tall, the rains were begin­ ning, so they moved into a house belonging to' another man, add worked for him during the wln- North Bend— Coos Bay Harbor newspaper erecting large new of­ fice building. Salem— New 998,080 Leslie Springfield— Wendling phone junior high school almost com­ line to be rebuilt with copper pleted. wires. Beaverton — New plumbing Harrisburg— Heavy hay crops shop and store opened here. assured this season. TURNING THtì PAGES BACK ASHLAND ASHLAND 12 Years Ago Attorney X. D. Briggs has re­ turned from Portland where he appeared for the Ashland firral- tnre men Indicted by the federal grand Jury. nil pleading guilty to their memberahlp In the asso­ O l i v e r Shipley and Charles ciation, though none were active Pepe have shipped SOS hogs to to IL tbs Lamkln place near Montague, where they w ill be grased on the Prof. Chalmers Strange, who stubble land.* has teen the principal of the Cot­ tage Grove parile schools for the A sunburned tench of boys part two years, returned to Ash­ consisting of Leith Abbott. Blqde land Friday. , Bonger, Merrll Throne and Bi- wood H r/b erg arrived T h u n d iy after a strenuous camping trip to A. McCallen, présidant of the Crater Lake, Klamath Falla, Lake First National t bank. came np Frlday trem 'berkeley, to attesA of tho Weeds and way prints. to bu «thêta mAttAte for awhllA W in Crowaon, nr add Mrs. W. Ceeety Jnds« O n a and bribe ware Sunday visltork la Ashland. Mrs. J. C. Poor Is visiting friends la Eugene. W hile enroute north she stopped o f In Rose­ burg for a visit with Mrs. H. P.‘ Hansen. A bastasse transection of some importance in t i e valley was eom- pjeted at Central Peint Saturday when the Central F rist ffonriag m ills changed hands. The gqr- elasss, bring W. I . Virgin of tbs Ashland «U le In partnership with W. L Vawter, the well known Brakernan J. 1 . B a p rit got his hand tenght ta coupling cars on the freight at Hornbrook Friday night, getting several fingers crashed as a result by which he 1« o f dnty for a short time. their m « Master Befdne. and little daughter > *a off for Moun- taindnie, Washington ronnty. on 1*91 9W * iub I lr* iil w H Irl tn*y go to apead the harvest season, Early in (he spring of 1867, they moved tq. Salinas Valley in Monterey county. A man by the name of Barden let them move on to a portion of hia farm and plant some garden, which they were very grateful to do. They remained here until the begin­ ning of the fall of tjie same year. Then their father bought a squat­ ter’s right to some land on what la known as Elk Creek Slough, in the same county, within five miles of Watsonville which la hi Santa Crus county. They made very lit­ tle Improvements, as there wasn’t «uch to do, or to do with, aa their father had given a yoke of oxen end a wagon for the land. In 1868-88 the «hildren want to scbobl, and when they , wefe not in school they hnnted, princi­ pally ducks, geese, and quatl|> whtfch they sold In Watsonville and also shipped some to San FrqnoMco. Th*y saved the te s ti­ er« gad sold them for seventy- five odnts a pounds, and mrife feather teds and e°ld them. An­ drew worked for a lady for fifty tents a day. And bis ..brother, George, turned its attention to raising onions. Ha raised several (pas every year and sold th e« for three cents a pound. In 1886. on March 14, Mr. Doslera father died. He had been sick only three days. He was well liked hy every one, and «any tears Fare shed whea l s left Tex­ as to come to California. After his father’s death. Andrew and MISS’ DOROTHY BEH), Editor Thursday. Jane »0. — Morley Circle of the Baptist church w ill have a social afternoon In Lithia Park at 8:80 p. m. Mrs. Hanry DeArmond and Mrs. V. O. N. Smith, hostesses. ‘ Friday, in ly 1— Pythian Sisters dance In the I. O. O. F . hall. Friday, July 1— The Foreign Mis­ sionary society of the M. B. chnrch w ill meet at the home of Mrs. a . H. Way, 488 North Main street. also,be worn with the semi-for­ mal summer frock. barge-brimmed straw h a t e trimmed with crown, ribbon or flat flowers sure chosen tp prefer­ ence to small straw shapes at present Small felt^ however, continue to W b worn with sports suits and frocks. Coolie coat* in gay colors in both cotton and silk materials are being worn upon the beach. They aVe also popular -for negligee ft JB tt GIFT To yon alone I give my dreams— As faint .‘as etchings on a vase of lade And gold, and tender as the rich­ est notes Of cellos softly played. They are dim, as are the moon- bashed hours. When silver lances pierce the 'night’s dull blue, And wietful as the night wind’s ions refraip. Yet audible to few. I give my dreams to yon— a trust. Unutterably dear they are to me, So lest You crush some fragile, helpless thing, # Oh, hold them tenderly. Lurllne Malard, ' •...Bay CIty Texas « n » Important Books R ev ie we d “The Pacer," by Viola Para­ dise. In the homely middle class story where a working girl m ar-‘ rise the manager of the pickle factory, one would not enepect the working out of the deadly tri­ angle, amid the. development of Judith, Jos. Gunner and the Gun­ ner baby. So far all goes well. The* comes in the lfterary sprout Russell who spouts , Proust and conducts the class in Ibsen which the young wife is invited to Join. ■The pickle factory denizens were revolving tn'new circlea with uni­ versity classes, Joining French classes.- As a young girl she felt the great change coming on when she was preparing to tall in love with the m anager.— "A trem en ­ dous power and impatience piling np, piling n|T it seemed hardly endurable." And there were more and more unendurable hours of agony as the acute angels of the triangle intensified and the stress of the sopls in­ volved became greater and a - the solution approaches. "Splendid Joy," by Marguerite Williams, la not so startling, but the author has contrived an en­ gaging love story, wherein a wo­ man of gnfious personality Is admired sad won by a man pos­ sessing an intolerant nature, never yielding in his pursuit of right and duty. The combina­ tion of .faith and love in the wo­ man carries their married ljfe courageously on, baffling- his ob- durateness. There are other characters who aronse interest, W ilfred Cavendish, Jim, his younger brother, and others In­ terwoven in the plot, making a rather entertaining story. « « « ABOUT SUMMER FASHIONS NBW YORK, June 80.— >— To the city dweller summer styles are not vastly different from win­ ter style«, since one cannot wear smart sports costumes and color­ ful accessories on efty streets and since the semi?dressy sil£, frock has become almost a uniform for town wear. Those eojonraln* in the country deek-ends find that unless they hate smart sports Clothes and accessories theyz are net properly dressed. Tha'spprta dresses of one or two-pleoetype, whether silk, Jer­ sey qr sweater and akirt type, Is the basis of one’s sports attire. Knitted coate la white or pastel colors, collared In clipped wool resembling fur, afe among the smartest Wraps fox country wear. W et. too. are Printed linen coats In Jacket o r fr itle n g th . Linen slippers; laced over the Fcrft finti* a bit wilt, «mart linen or silk aperta, frocks. They may (Continued On Page