PAGE TWO Monday, August 12, 1912, ASHliANU TIDINGS Ashland Tidings SEMI-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1876. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert R. Greer, - Editor and Owner W. H. GUIis, ... City Editor W. E. Barnes, . Business Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year $2.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months 50 , Payable in Advance. TELEPHONE 39 Advertising rates on . application. First-class Job printing facilities. Equipments second to none in the Interior. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postoffice as second-class mail mat ter. Atihiand, Ore., Monday, Aug. 12, '12 TOO BAD, MY SON. And now they are telling about a precious book that was lost at sea a copy of Omar Khayyam Illustrat ed by Vedder, and it took two years to bind it in elaborate tooled mo rocco, inlaid with, 1,500 gems and gold settings. This rare volume was bought by an American who wanted to prove the proposition that a fool and his money are soon parted. Over two thousand dollars was the price. But think of the intellectual giant who wants a book bound in gems, and set with gold. Why not buy his bologna sausage that way? Get a link of bologna sausage and take it to a goldsmith and have it set in richly carved bands of gold, and then procure a thousand price less gems and place them on the dear bologna. Of course it wouldn't add anything to the taste of the departed dog in skin it would not add to the seasoning or destroy the taste of gar lic which would still abound but think how much coin you could part with in decorating say a dozen de lightful sausages in this way.' Omar, on thin- paper, bound in a rag and stamped with a rubber type,, is just as much of an Intellectual treat as the priceless volume which had be come a depository of wealth that went to the bottom of the sea. But it is not only Omar decorated vul garly and wantonly. Milady often times imagines that her too, too solid flesh looks better disfigured with a small jewelry store, placed here and there, and so many of the so-called smart set imagine that a bank ac count adds to the brilliancy of the conversation. And so Omar had to be decorated. But the gems Inside the book outshone the gems outside. For our part we do not see why some fool with money to burn does not decorate the sidewalk with diamonds and rubies and try to bring about a picture of the New Jerusalem as it was pictured by the men who thought Mammon would allure its slaves to heaven. THE NEW EDUCATION". One of the glories of our country is that every child in it can get a good fundamental education without money and without price. Whether we send our children to the public or the parochial schools, all of us believe in education. We are not go ing to be a nation of illiterates. A nation in which every grown man and soon every grown woman is en titled to the vote, is also entitled to the education that will make literate votes. The trouble with our educational systems in the past has been that they have not taken into account the individual. All children were con sidered in the mass. Certain things were to ly studied and all were to study these alike. It is exactly as if we were to say that all children of a certain age were to wear the same sizes in hats, shoes and knickerbockers- or skirts, regardless of the height of the kid dies. Now just as children differ in inches and. pounds, so do they differ in mental capacities, powers and hob bies. The richest cities have begun to recognize this. Hence the new ed ucation. There are classes for those who are slow, and classes for those who are especially alert; classes for those who have capacities for three R'b and kindred subjects, and classes for those whose minds turn toward the manual and mechanical arts. The new education does not mean that the child shall be left to go his own gait, but it does mean that the teacher, the parents and the child himself shall find out and do what is best for the child. We are now quite of the conviction that the unfortunate "cocked hat" incident will not prevent the estab lishment of warm and lasting friend ly relations between the eminent pro fessor and the great Commoner. TARIFF PLUNDER. Managers of railroads talk about the injustice of the public attitude towards railroads. They say, for in stance, that railroads must pay more for material and labor but are not allowed to raise rates. But do they ever call attention to the fact that the "protective tariff" burdens them? Becaues of the "protective tariff," the steel trust and other iron and steel manufacturers can and do charge from $28 to $34 per ton for steel rails, which, according to the testimony of such expert manufac turers as Mr. Carnegie and Mr. Schwab, can be and are rolled at a cost of $12 per ton. Making a lib eral allowance for profits, etc., the railroads must therefore be paying from $10 to $16 per ton more for rails than they should or would pay but .for the tariff. In round figures the railroads of the United states buy .3,500,000 tons of rails per year, so that for rails alone they pay annually $45,000,000 more than they should. It is a con servative estimate that, taking into consideration the iron and steel pur chased by the railroads in the shape of cars, locomotives, wheels, axles, trucks, trimmings, bridges, struc tural material, etc., they are paying from $125,000,000 to $150,000,000 annually as a bonus to steel manufac turers. If it be asked why the railroads, which are not benefited by the tariff, put up with this extortion, here is the answer. Twenty-three directors of the United States Steel Corpora tion are in control or on the direc torates of 65 per cent of the railroad mileage in the United States. PROUD OLD HUMAN RACE. Scientists have figured it out that the valley of the Nile has remained in virtually its present condition for a million years, and. that Egyptian civilization is anywhere from 5,000 to 500,000 years old. Makes a fellow feel mighty small, doesn't it? Tom Reed was once asked what he thought of a certain southern mem ber of the house, who was constantly airing his views on every conceivable subject that came before that body. "Why, he's all right," said Tom in his nasal way. "The only trouble with him is that he misapprehends his relation to the solar universe." Isn't that true of all of us? Here we are a million years since civiliza tion overcame the savagery of the wilderness, and we haven't settled the tariff question yet, nor even the right and wrong of the hobble skirt. And the solution of the real prob lem the matter of making a world in which everybody shall have enough and nobody too much sometimes seems to be as distant as that day when the first sunrise shim mered on the murky waters of the Nile. We are little bats, beating our wings against the cage of the uni verse, bruising ourselves on the wall of things as they are, then passing away into forgetfulness with nothing much accomplisned. And we've been on the job some hundreds of thou sands of years, they say. THE ALTITUDE OF MEAT. Congressman William Kent of Cal ifornia, himself a large cattle raiser, offers no hope of decrease in the high cost of meats. He figures that it costs $20 more to produce a meat steer than it did ten to fifteen years ago, very largely owing to increased cost of feed. The once vast ranges have been taken up by individual farmers who raise the hay and corn that must be had to fatten steers. Whether Kent is wholly right or not, a lot of things indicate that the thrilling proposition for generations soon to come is going to be intensi fied product the scientific raising of much on a limited acreage. Agriculture seems to move as a stream. It abandons vast territory in the east to take up, exhaust and leave the middle west for the ranges and the Canadian northwest. Ilts methods and processes persisted in these regions would mean awful shortage or food supply. But fol lowing this stream of pioneers slowly but surely Is comming the fellow ed ucated to make three crops grow where one was reaped In disappoint ment before. And side by side with him Is coming the fellow who raises practically all that he consumes. The disappearance of the great cattle ranges and ranches is not wholly a calamity by a good deal. The big corn-fed steer will supplant the lit tle range fellow. Woodrow WilSon, was christened Thomas Woodrow Wilson. It was a mistake to drop the first name. Con sider with what unction democracy might refer to the great man as Tom Wilson, it would certainly sound as If the bearer of the name was one of us. FACTS ABOUT ELECTORS. Senator Borah of Idaho has been looking into the legal questions in volved in the selection of presiden tial electors. "Each state determines for itself the manner of selecting its presiden tial electors," said the senator, "and congress fixes the time for their elec tion. This being true, the state is responsible for the method of selec tion and for the qualifications of the electors. There is no way . to bind an elector to support any particular candidate. A republican elector can support a democrat in the electoral college if he desires to do so. . The national convention is a matter of form. Up to the time of Andrew Jackson the party convention had no part in presidential elections. Any body of men could put out a candi date. The legislature of Tennessee named Jackson for the presidency. Up to 1820, presidential electors were chosen by the state legislatures. In 1824 all states except six selected them by direct vote of the people. In 1828 electors were voted for di rectly in all states but Delaware and South Carolina. South Carolina con tinued to chose its electors by the legislature up to 1860. Since that time electors have been voted for di rect in all the states.'' THE BANK. The bank is a philanthropic insti tution which confers a favor imon society by borrowing people's money at 3 per cent and loaning it out at 7. The banker is a man who is paid a large salary for telling wabbly busi ness enterprises where the jumping off spot is located. Banks are built of marble and manganese steel, in order to prevent somebody who needs a little ready money from reaching in with a bottle of nitroglycerine and foundering himself with the cash on hand. In spite of this precaution, every once in a while some bank cashier is backed up against the add ing! machine and requested to trans late the time lock from the original Hebrew, while coarse men in pea jackets carry away everything in sight but the overdrafts. The banks have built up a flourishing and prof itable industry, pursued with cease less energy- by a certain class of citi zens, who go through a steel -vault like a bareback rider through a pa per hoop, and who evade the police by effecting a change of neckties. It occasionally happens that one of these gentry is trapped before some body can bail him out, after which he is photographed from all points of the compass, fed into a shower bath, measured for a new suit of striped clothes and taught how to dance the lock step. Banks are usu ally kept by cashiers who sometimes keep all of the visible assets until they get into Canada. A run pn a bank occurs whenever a cashier blos soms out in a new spring overcoat or donates $25 to the Y. M. C. A. A bank examiner is a merciless and prying individual, who irritates the board of directors by requiring of them to put up some collateral secur ity against their loans. Banks have prevented a great many people from going broke sooner than they in tended to, and therefore we should hold them in grateful esteem. CONSPIRACY CHANGED. California Fruit Dealers Said to Have Formed Combination. Washington, D. C. Open charges that California fruit dealers had con spired with other interests to shut out fruit importations to Atlantic ports Were made recently by Con gressman Harrison of New York in discussing the conference report on the agricultural appropriation bill in the house. The report eliminated the pro vision to limit the quarantine against the Mediterranean fly pest, so that it would apply only to the Atlantic coast. As the bill passed by the house it specifically exempted the Atlantic coast. Congressman Harrison maintained that the effect of the conference change would be to heighten . the tariff wall to the exclusive beneiit of California fruit interests. Congressmen Kent of California and Moore of Pennsylvania took issue with Harrison, denying that ' the amendment would have such effect. Despite Harrison's objections, the bill was reported unchanged, and now goes to President Taft for his signature. HEARING AUGUST 20. Disbanded MJlitia Will Present Case to Governor West. In order that ev.ery side may be given a full and complete hearing, Governor West has appointed Tues day, August 20, as the date for hear ing the accused officers' side of the recent trouble in the militia. As it stands at present, the three companies are disbanded and inquiry and court-martial are hanging over the five officers. If new and exten uating evidence should be adduced at Uiis hearing, however, it is possi ble that the disbandment order might be revoked. It is with the desire of giving the utmost opportunity to everyone to be heard that Governor West is appoint ing the day for a review of the af fair. Chehalis county, Washington, has such an excellent crop of potatoes coming on that residents feel sure of reasonably low prices. Captain E. W. Bixby, the Missis sippi river boatman who taught Mark Twain how to pilot a steam boat, is dead. REPORT SHOWS INCREASE. County Superintendent Present Some Interesting Figures. The following figures, taken from the annual reports of the county su perintendent for the paBt two years, show a substantial Increase in near ly every item vital to the schools of the county. The growth of senti ment in favor of advance in educa tion is evident from these figures. The statement of Superintendent Wells follows: School Year, 1010-11. School census (between 4 and 20 years) 6,969 Number pupils enrolled in school 5,645 Average number of pupils belonging in school... 4,735.5 Average daily attendance' 4,439.9 Per cent of attendance. . . 93.7 Number eighth grade grad uates 173 Number enrolled in high schools 624 Number organized district 95 Number school houses built io Number teachers employed , during year 211 Average salary male teach ers (monthly) $ 91.62 Average salary female teachers (monthly).... 61.17 Average salary city su perintendents (annual) 1,600.00 Average salary principals (monthly) 97.46 Average salary teachers in one-room schools 52.64 Average salary assistant teachers 70.02 Average , number of days taught 141.9 Number of school rooms in operation 193 Amount paid for teachers' salaries .$S5,966.53 School Year 1011-12. School census (between 4 and 20 years) 7,381 Number pupils enrolled in schools 5,742 Average number of pupils belonging in school... 5,026.2 Average daily attendance 4,775 Per cent of attendance. . . 95.02 Number of eighth grade graduates 260 Number enrolled in high schools v.. 636 Number organized districts 98 Number school houses built 4 Number teachers employed during year 231 Average salary male teach ers (monthly) $ 91.00 Average salary female teachers (monthly)... 63.56 Average salary city super- , intendents (annual).... 1,750.00 Average salary principals (monthly) 101.04 Average salary teachers in one-room schools 55.98 Average salary assistant teachers 74.36 Average number of days taught 140.4 Number of school rooms' in operation '227 Amount paid for teachers' salaries $103,383.17 Number of school visits made during the year by super visors and superintendent. . 406 Number of visits made to school officers in their homes 271 Number of miles traveled in performance of official du ties 7,176 J. PERCY WELLS. Scaje receipts at Tidings office. ffiisemmcF Oeannip Sale Many New Articles Placed On Sale For This Week You will save considerable by making purchases now lor lulure use. Hundreds of dollar's worth of stylish seasonable goods are being sold at a fraction of their regular price. WE QUOTE HERE A FEW ITEMS Dry Goods Department Embroideries and insertions, 12 , to 15c values, on sale at per yd. Wash fabrics, floral and figured A patterns, 15 to 20c values, at yd IvfC "Pillow clina ARyQCK -rnm-iloi value, on sale at Pequot sheets, size 81x90, value, at Ladies' white lawn waists, all new p styles, $1.25 to $2.00 values, at ijJ)C Ladies' muslin gowns, $1 on sale at The Store with a Rest Room M nun 1111 I PurcMountainWatcrlcc Reduced Prices on Ice FOR SEASON OF 1912 Save money by purchasing coupon books. Issued for 500, 1,000, 2,000 up to 5,000 pounds. . This is the cheapest way to buy your ice. Delivery every day except Sundays. ASHLAND ICE AND STORAGE CO. TELEPHONE 108 A .a m . . . 4 rTTTTTTTTT" HERBERT KNOX SMITH. United States Commieiioner of Corporations, Who Has Resigned. by ITuwcelL Governor Johnson of California says if petitions now in circulation to initiate a law abolishing capital pun ishment receive the required number of signatures, he will allow no more executions until after election. The right of Roosevelt delegates from Kansas to have places on the national ballot is to be decided by the supreme court of the United States in October. Infantile paralysis, has been fatal to 33 out of 173 children in Los An geles, and public playgrounds are be ing closed. Telephone your social items to Miss Hawley between 9 a. m. and 4 p. m.' each day. Call phone 39. The Tidings is for sale at W. M. Poley's Drug Store, 17 East Main St. SIB i -" ...iii m-.mn-- Men's last-long mesh union suits, special at 1 Kr 10c :. $1.25 98c aiiu pniK, value at, value, 75c Men's oxfords in tan and black, $3 50 values on sale at VAUPE L'S in mimiiiiiiiM Newly Furnished Rooms Centrally located. Well ventilated. Gas and electricity. Everything new, neat and clean. Keasonable prices. 340 E. MAIN STREET. Phone 129 2j Main St. C. II. GILLETTE Real Estate, Loans, Rentals, Conveyancing SEE ME BEFORE BUYING. Practical Shoe Repairing i Done promptly, with the best nia- Cor. Fourth and Main Street?. Signs and Banners MADE TO ORDER ON SHORT NOTICE Also House and Carriage Painting HUGHS & EMERY PHONE 86. Attention, Wood Consumers Sound dry red fir and yel low pine, 16-inch block body wood, delivered in your wood shed in orders for not less than 10 tiers to a place, at $2.25 per tier. E. J. MAIIAN Leave orders at office, 290 East Main St., or phone 1GS. Men's Furnishings 48c Men's Longley felt hats, all this rf0 50 - season's styles, $3 values at ... p Men's negligee shirts in stripe, figured and plain patterns, $1.25 up to $2.00 values all reduced 25c from regular price. Men's balbriggan underwear, colors flesh an sizes, regular $1 pit ' per suit f $2. 95 The Store with a Rest Room