TAGK TWO ASHLAND TIDINGS Thnraday. October 2t, 1812. Ashland Tidings SEMI-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1876. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert R. Greer, Editor and Owner B. W. Talcott, ... City Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year J2.00 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 i Interior. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postoffice as second-class mall mat ter. . Ashland, Ore., Tharsclny, Oct. Si, 12 AMERICA GETTING AVELL. Man has been called the sick ani mal. An ordinary Bengal tiger or self-respecting armadillo does not overeat, or smoke or drink to excess, or stay up all night and awaken next morning with a bad taste in the mouth. Civilized man is especially likely to be Bick, for the things that im prove life also make us ill through their abuse. America has a tremendous sick list. A report on national vitality shows 3,000,000 people actually sick, at all times. Our sickness costs us $1,500,000,000 a year about twice the revenue of the government. This estmiate does not include the incal culable loss of efficiency of people who are just tired, fagged, below par. As a sick nation we have done fair ly well. We could double, treble, quadruple our work if we wiped out sickness. It is no idle dream. It can be done. In fact, it is being done. One of the greatest reforms now on in this country is to "get well.'1 We have obliterated yellow fever and scurvy and almost ended small pox. In another generation any city that has a typhoid epidemic will be held up to public scorn. Today there are 500,000 people continually sick from tuberculosis, an easily prevent able disease; in another generation tuberculosis should be rare. There are 3,000,000 cases of malaria every year; vigorous war on mosquitoes will make it unknown. We are entered upon a new health era. National, state and municipal boards of hygiene, better sanitary laws, bureaus of medical inspection, institutes for medical research, im proved hospitals and sanitaria and better trained doctors and nurses are rapidly improving general health. The people, learning right living, are doing still more. We no longer believe religiously in bad-tasting ,.' drugs, but are finding that pure air, pure water,, pure food and war on ' flies, mosquitoes and rats are half the battle, and freedom from worry and anger the other half. , We are wisely spending much thought on the conservation of our natural resources; we are just as wisely devoting thought and effort to conserving our vital resources. By lengthening and strengthening our lives we can create a new and higher and eminently more efficient civilization in this sick old world. FATHERS WILL BE FATHERS. A Kansas man complains that since his daughter has taken music lessons, at h's expense, she insists upon playing only classical stuff. When he conies home tired and asks for a little tune he gets nothing but musical gymnastics. The whole feminine part o the community, he thinks, is in a con spiracy to uplift him, and he doesn't want to be uplifted. It is just like father to make a complaint like that. Father, never did take kindly to culture. He sits disconsolate in the draughty kitchen, while daughter's Browning Circle meets in the front room. It is mother'B idea entirely that he puton an uncomfortable collar in the evening and hear a missionary lecture on Borneo. Father's taste for music stops short at Suwanee Klver, and he knows al most nothing about the minor poets and the pre-Uaphaelites. His art ideas are derived from the illustrated Sunday supplement. He will not sit in a Louis XIV. chair. He cares not a whit for the pottery of the ancient Chaldeans. Shirt sleeves and carpet slippers are his conception of correct evening dress for gentlemen. There is little hope that anything permanent can ever be done for fath er. When the millennium comes he will still be found reading his news paper, smoking up the window cur tains, impeding the advance of cul ture and paying the bills. i WHAT ROOSEVELT DID AS PRESIDENT. What did Roosevelt do as presi dent? Every day we are requested to print something of his record of achievements. Roosevelt accom plished more real constructive work as president than any other man who ever was put in the White House. But bis great work was his leader ship of the nation to new moral standards in business and in public life. Some of the more notable ach'eve ments of . President Roosevelt in op position to the combined forces of big crooked business and crooked politics are: Dolliver-Hepburn railroad act. Extension of forest reserve. Improvement of waterways and reservation of waterpower sites. Employer's liability act. Safety appliance act. Regulation of railroad employes' hours of labor. Establishment of bureau of cor porations. Pure food and drugs act. Federal meat inspection. Settlement of the coal strike of 1902. The government upheld in North ern Securities decision. Conviction of postoffice grafters and public land thieves. Directed investigation of the sugar trust customs frauds, and the re sultant prosecutions. Suits begun against the Standard Oil and Tobacco companies and oth er corporations for violation of the Sherman anti-trust act. Corporations forbidden to contrib ute to political campaign funds. Inauguration of movement for conservation of natural resuorces. Inauguration of movement for im provement of conditions of country life. The Panama policy and action which made possible the most colos sal work of all time. During his term in the White House President Roosevelt was the most conspicuous friend of peace in the civilized world, and won the No bel peace prize. Among his achieve ments in that line were: Second intervention in Cuba to es tablish peace. Alaska boundary dispute settled. China saved from partition and policy of open door established. Twenty-four treaties of general arbitration negotiated. Negotiations opened by which Rus so-Japanese war was ended. Avoidance of bad feeling with Japan over evtension policy. Among the policies urged by Pres ident Roosevelt, to whose leadership the public sentiment in these mat ters is largely due, are: Reform of the banking and cur rency system. Inheritance tax. Income tax. Passage of a new employers' lia bility act to meet objections raised by the supreme court. Postal" savings banks. Parcels post. Revision of the Sherman anti-trust act. Legislation to prevent overcapital ization, stock watering, etc., of com mon carriers. Legislation compelling incorpora tion under federal laws of corpora tions engaged in interstate com merce. It is always wise to work and vote in the interest of your home town. After having given the matter care ful consideration the Tidings believes it is of importance to Ashland to have A. W. Silsby of Ashland and G. A. Morse of Talent as representa tives in the legislature from Jackson county. It appears that every other candidate for the legislature lives at Med ford. There has been ample evi dence that the gang at Medford in sist that Ashland be discriminated against in every Instance where it is possible that the Medford bunch can dictate official action. There will arise many Issues in the legislature affecting the interests of this section and other sections of the county out side of Medford. Ashland is looking for a square deal. The way to get that is to look out for yourself. Mr. Silsby and Mr. Morse are capable men. While they are not the nomi nees of the progressive party, they are both progressives, and are as good and capable men as are now be fore the people as legislative candi dates. One of the reasons the Tid ings will advocate their election is because they are geographically lo cated bo that they will escape the domination of the Medford bunch. Professor Wilson is a nice man. Theory has its place, but without the practical man of affairs to test out the ideas of the theorists, we would never get anywhere. Government Is a practical thing. While we need the professors, it is mighty danger ous to give thera the helm of the ship when they have never sailed the seas. THE MAN ROOSEVELT. Talk about courage! Is there any other man, anywhere, who could go on unconcernedly and unafraid, make an hour's speech with an assas sin's bullet in his body and the blood soaking his clothing, then go smiling to the operating table, joking the doctors on the way? Every time Theodore Roosevelt is confronted with an emergency he rings true. He can't be bullied, browbeaten or ca joled. Sometimes he is fooled, but he makes it a sorry day for the man 'who fooled him when he finds It out. His moral courage is as reso lute as his physical courage. SEES THE DISASTER. "If the tariff plank of the demo crats is not telling the truth (reply to Governor Wilson), of course I need not discuss it with them. If it is telling the truth, and shoulJ be put into effect, it would plunge this country into a period of commercial disasters such as we have not seen in a lifetime." Colonel Roosevelt at Minnesota State Fair. It is time the taxpayers of Jackson county should be thoroughly awak ened to.the realization that the issues in the present fight for county judge are the same as in the primaries last April. The honest taxpayers won a glorious victory in the primaries over the solid opposition of a bunch of "progressives" living at Medford un der whose tutelage Jackson county wasted some hundreds of thousands of dollars. These same "progres sives" have been busy since the pri maries and thousands of dollars of the tax moneys have been squan dered since then. The same bunch that fought Dunn in the primaries are still fighting him. Why? Be cause they know that when George Dunn is elected" exploitation will cease in Jackson county as far as the business of the people is con cerned. RERORT CARSHORTAGE Southern Pacific Company ReMrts That Demand for Cars Has Been Very 'Heavy. San Francisco, Oct. 22. Evidence of the prosperity of the western states is furnished by figures made known by the Southern Pacific Com pany as to the number of freight cars loaded this season. The average loading on the lines of this company in California is greater by 6,2)0 cars per month over the same period last year, or about 200 cars per day. Railroads have been heavily pressed for rolling 6tock because of this sudden demand for service. Only the hearty co-operation on the part of the shippers has made it pos sible to keep all the traffic moving. The large fruit firms have instructed their agents not to delay or divert shipments unnecessarily and have Is sued circulars to this effect, for the principal' difficulty has arisen from movements in the eastern states. The Pacific Fruit Express, accord ing to an announcement made by President Sproule of the Southern Pacific Company, has ordered 2,000 more refrigerator cars of the latest design. This number, together with the lot of 1,000 only recently or dered, will bring up this l'ne's total equipment to 13,100 cars, represent ing an investment of over $20,000 -000, all to be available on July 1 of next year, in time for the 1913 fruit movement. The new cars are designed espec ially for the fruit packages peculiar to California and the west and will load easily and economically. They will be fitted with Bohn collapsible tanks and a modern system of heat insulation. . FURNISH EMPLOYES' BONDS. Southern Pacific Will Hereafter Pay i Premiums on Them. San Francisco, Oct. 23. Begin ning with January 1 of next year, the Harriman lines will assume all bond premiums of employes in their service, according to an announce ment made at the offices of the Southern Pacific Company here to day. In the past it has been the custom to require all men handling money to put up a security bond, and the premium on ft has been paid by the employe himself. After the first of the year this expense will be borne by the railroad company. On the Pacific system of the South ern Pacific, alone, there are about 45,000 employes, and the new ar rangement, it is said, will involve a heavy expenditure annually. This action is in line with the wel fare campaign which the Southern Pacific and its allied lines are carry ing on to better the conditions under which Its employes are working. The Tidings for artistic printing. The Home Circle Thoughts from the Editorial Pen Many a man who thinks he is a good citizen paints his house in such a manner it seems to fit all the other houses In the neighborhood. It Is rather difficult to keep from thinking and talking politics these days. All the same, the average man, and most men are average, like some respite now and then. At this season, while you are haul ing the crop to market, is a good time for you to reflect on the ad vantages of good roads, and how much time and money are lost by Ipoor ones. ,. Here's a problem for the school children: A farmer owned a hog and wanted to weigh It. The man's weight was 100 pounds, while his wife weighed 135. They put a board across the fence so that when they sat upon it, it exactly balanced. They then changed places, his wife taking the pig in her lap, just balancing the board again. . What is the weight of the porker? The reports of bumper crops all over the country are rather tiresome reading.- It seems that someone might speak a word of praise for the farmer for raising such crops now af ter the scoring they received for raising such poor ones the past few seasons, or will some professor pat h mself on the back and say, "I did it with my little speeches"? The child deprived of pets misses much. To love a dog, a cat, or a bird or any live thing has a humanizing influence on the character. The care of a pet teaches a child to be re sponsible for something. The love of a pet brings out the tender feel ings of the heart, makes the child less inclined to cruelty, more thoughtful, of quicker sympathy. A pet gives him something to enjoy at home and so makes home life richer. It Is one means of keeping him from undesirable companions. A correspondent asks if a man can ride a wheel and be a Christian? It all depends. While smoothly spin ning along a faultless road with the refreshing breezes toying with the tumbled hair, the thoughts may be of a very pious nature; but should he strike an obstruction and plow a fur row in the road with his nose and leave a portion of his cuticle cling ing to the face of nature, his Chris tianity would have to be remarkably deep-rooted to enable him to get up smiling and singing the praises of heaven. Most merchants realize the value of attractive, original window dis plays In connection with their, seas onable trade. The store window is at all times one of the most valuable store adjuncts and trade-getters that the merchant can make use of. At tractive window displays always draw the attention of the shopper, and if, besides being attractive, It contains any suggestions, It Is bound to sell the goods. If the merchant or any of his clerks who have more talent along this line will devote a little earnest thought and time to getting up a series of attractive, sug gestive and original displays, he will rind that it will tend to materially increase his results. A Thought for Mother. Yes, the summer is past and moth er failed to get her vacation. And now. comes the fall sewing, the win ter garments to be chosen, perhaps made; the housecleaning with all of Its attendant horrors, the picking of autumn dainties, which will give zest to manjt a winter feast, and the gen eral management of the whole do mestic machinery, so that no little part will become clogged or its squeaking disturb the harmony of the home. As summer, has brought mother no vacation, 'no change of scenes, what wonder then if 'her face is pale, her step a little slower, her smile no less sweet but less frequent than of old? Every one is sorry for mother's disappointments, but all take it as a matter of course as she never complains. So. the domestic mill goes grinding on until one day there is all confusion in the house hold; the machinery is all awry, for the hand that guided it haa lost its cunning and dropped nerveless by her side. Mother haa borne her bur den too long, It becomes too heavy i and she is crushed beneath it. Isn't this a true picture we have sketched for you? Isn't mother too often left out? Girls, you know it is so, and the conscious blush rises to your cheeks and you hang your heads and are ashamed of your own selfishness. We write this that you may be more thoughtful of mother. You will IHHHMMII I , VT ) 7 ' Ox ' mifjMgBfMxm j John W. Campbell ROSEBURG, OREGON Progressive Candidate for T Contesting for the seat now d ifi iIiiIiiTiiTi ilnT..t.lf.lTllti t. ....., t,. .t..t..,..t , t t I t t , j I i t . . T rTT f TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTtTTTTTT lit , I i I I I I I I rTTTT never regret any sacrifice you have made to lighten her burdens and bring into her life all the sweetness possible. Socialist Libelers Indicted. Portland, Ore.' Eight members of the socialist party, who were recently indicted by a Portland grand jury charged with issuing a circular de faming Theodore Roosevelt, Nicho las Longworth and the Roman Cath olics, announced recently that they would have subpoenas issued for Roosevelt, Longworth and Cardinal Gibbons, and force them to prove that the allegations contained in the circular were untrue. The men were arraigned In court and took the statutory t'me to plead. Immediately after entering a plea subpoenaes for the above mentioned notables will be issued and forward ed to the homes of the respective men for execution. It is not believed any of the men involved will come to Portland, but on the contrary will appear through affidavits sworn to before notary publics. Nearly every Shetland household has attached to it a flock of tame gulls. H"M"H"1' H I I I i l l PureMounfainWaterlce Do Not Throw Your Apples Away on a glutted market. 'Put them in cold storage for better prices. Your potatoes will not sprout or grow soft in cold storage. Get our prices, which are as low as in the east. I WOOD AND COAL We have a limited amount of dry wood for sale, and the best f Washington state coal for the lowest possible price for cash. f ASHLAND ICE AND STORAGE CO. TELEPHONE 103 t Before you buy that healer, call and inspect our stock, now on display ALL SIZES ALL PRICES PfOVOS. tH)" H Congress, First District $ occupied by W. C. Ilawley. Germany is manufacturing safety razors and has even begun exporting them to the United States. IF YOU ARE A PROGRESSIVE and do not like , HAWLEY'S STAND-PAT RECORD, vote for JOHN W. CAMPBELL For Congress from the First District. Hawley's record shows him to be a stand-patter of the stand-patters. Every move he has made since he has been in congress was in com plete harmony with the Cannon-Ald-rich program. You cannot hope to get your government back into the hands of the people if you vote for stand-pat congressmen. John W. Campbell is thoroughly progressive and will stand solidly In congress for progressive legislation. He is pro gressive rather than partisan, and is pledged to support progressive legis lation whether it is put forward by a republican or a democratic admin istration. He stands for anti-trust legislation and revision of the tarlfr downward. (This is NOT a paid advertisement.) 1 1 j H Wrfr H 1"M- "M 1 IIP 1 towes l