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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1913)
PAGE TWO ASHLAND TIDINGS 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 12.00 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. Ashland, Ore., Thursday, Jan. J (I, 'lit DID PARCEL. POST MAKE GOOD? IT DID RIGHT AT THE JUMP! Parcel Post has made good! Great public service reforms usu ally require time for usage to oil the wheels of their machinery. But parcel post, made good the first day! The first real test between the new government experiment and the old established express companies ' was made out of Chicago the very first day of parcel post. A parcel mailed at a Chicago parcel window by a person unknown to the officials was delivered in Milwaukee eight hours and forty minutes later. A package sent by express at the same moment as a test had not been heard from twenty-four hours after being sent. The package sent by post cost the sender 10 cents. The express package cost 25 cents. There you are, speed, economy, ef ficiency for the new parcel post, de spite eleventh-hour express rate re ductions and boasted organization on the part of the express companies. You remember what- the express companies 6aid about the parcel post proposal? They declared it was a fine theory, but it wouldn't hold in practice. They admitted that in the course of yearst there might be built up as efficient an organization as they had. But it would take years -and it would be expensive. Further more, the rates charged for parcel post were ridiculous. The Chicago Tribune sent twenty packages by post find twenty, by ex press to the same persons living in all the parcel post zones. Compaii-1 son was made of rates, quickness of delivery, of the condition of the! package on receipt. The parcel post package to Milwaukee was sent at 12:01 a. m. It was received in per fect condition at 8:41 a. m. The package went in (lie regular course It was delivered with other packages as part of a load." There was no thought of trying to make the parcel post beat the express. It was simply a test of the efficiency of the new service and the service proved itself efficient in spite of the fact that it was new, that no one connected with it was familiar with its workings and that time was naturally lost in sending and receiving. Returns from the other packages heaped up the victory. Buffalo re ported Us package delivered in less than a day; also hours before the express packages. The arrivals at points more distant were uniformly ahead of the express and the rate, with one exception, was lower than the express rate. Here's a theory rolling up its sleeves and becoming practical on the jump. IXKHi FOB BRIGHT SIDE. Oregonian: Perhaps the hest re solve we can make for the new year is to look at the blight side, no mat ter what happens. There is a posi tive power in cheerfulness. Gloom not only hinders the mind and body from working, but it opens the door to disease.. Every moment spent in regret lessens the capacity for hap piness and reacts permanently upon a person's efficiency. It has been said by a philosopher that repent ance is a sin. , He may have gone a little too far with his theory. It is certainly a sin .,to do deeds that bring repentance, but a little mourn ing for our transgressions now and then cannot be displeasing to the Almighty. However that maybe we shall agree that no time is worse wasted than hours spent in vain broodings over the past. The whole- some mental atltude is one of bright confidence in the. future. We ought to trust the power that rules the world deeply enough to believe that the evils we have experienced can never happen again. If they do It will be our own fault, not the will of the Almighty. The evils that run riot In the world, the social ills of the time, are not fixed upon us by omnipotent decree, but by our in dolence and want of courage to at tack them. FRISKY DANCES. At the outset of this winter season it was confidently announced by congresses of dancing masters and other potentates of waxen floors, that there would Le no more turkey trots, bunny hugs and chicken flips. The flight of these terpsichorean birds of passage was confidetially an nounced. The longed for return to days of stately and graceful dancing was predicted. The dancing masters, however, are not the masters of dancing. .These creatures of pumps and glides are eminently discreet persons, almost invariably there are conservators of manners, morals and the established socf.nl order. It were wl'1 indeed i? the young folks would foot it ac cording to their wise advice. The reports of elite social func tions from the great urban centers give the Impression that flipping and trotting Is by no means on the wane and that the rag time of the bands is fully matched by the rag steps of these new dance eccentrici ties. To the dancing master dancing should express grace, poetic motion. These qualities he finds embodied in contemplative romance of the waltz glide, or the sweeping curves of the lancers. When you interrupt the lofty and gracious dignity of his steps by rough house, it is as if some player walked on the stage when a grand symphony or orchestra was performing Beethovenr and blew a series of discordant notes on a fish horn. But young blool will dance what it wills, and not all the dancing mas ters in the world may say it nay. There is fire in those stamping heels that laughs at twinkling prettiness, j and demands an outlet for surplus vitality. Nevertheless, symmetrical and graceful motion is as enticing as ever and it appeals to more people than some of the young sprouts think. These graces are not found in the latest output from the dance halls. Our grandmothers knew more about it than the grandchildren. Sweet sixteen may look very pic turesque playing leapfrog on the dance floor. But fat, fair and forty cavorting thereat hi a sight for gods and men. WRECK PREVENTIVE. Railroad officials are being held responsible for recent wrecks in which lives were lost. At Bridge port, Conn., Vice-President Henry J. Horn, General Manager B. R. Pol lick and Superintendent C. N. Wood ward of the New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad were arrested on bench warrants, charging them with manslaughter. They were charged with negligence in connec tion with the Wostport wreck in which a number of lives were lost. A dispatch from Indianapolis states that a number of the officials of the C. H. & D. road were indicted for manslaughter as a result of the wreck at Irvlngton in which sixteen lives were lost. The Indictment of officials is most likely to cause greater effort on the part of rail roads to reduce accidents to the min imum. BatliinK in Vienna. Wide World Magazine: The Vien nese, although living almost in the center of Europe, hundreds of miles away from any seaside bathing re sort, are yet, owing to the enterprise of the municipality of Vienna, able to indulge in bathing on a much more extensive scale than the people of auy European seaside resort, with the possible exception of Ostend in the height of the sumim? season. Some four or five years ago the authorities of Vienna realized the great benefit that bathing on whole sale lines, so to speak, would be to the inhabitants of the clt during the summer months. With this end in view they acquired a picturesque tree-clad island bordered with fine stretches of sand, in what is known as the Old Danube. Here, in the course of a few months, arrange ments were made for providing not only' a splendid bathing place for hosts of Viennese of all classes who were unable through lack of time or means to take the long journey nec essary to reach the nearest continen tal beach, but also a very interesting experiment in municipal policy, which up to the present has more than satisfied its originators. Year by year, since its first insti tution some four years ago, the Strandbad, to giva this unique insti tution its proper name, had increased In popularity,' and now, on every reasonably fine afternoon through out the summer months from June until late in September, one sees crowds of people wending their way to the floating bridge ferry by which the long sandy island on which the Strandbad is situated is reached. Wide World Magazine. The Ozarks now furnish most of the cedar used in lead pencils. 1 The Home Circle i H Thoughts from the Editorial Pen Don't scold your wife. If you must scold somebody, scold us. Hold on to the troubles you have, for when they go there may come worse ones. Have you received a good turn? Forget it not. Have you done one? Remember it not. Never whip a balky horse. Sell talra if vo'i cm't m h'n .nnrl ! the other fellow match his temper against that of the horse. Fashion has been defined as a pe culiar influence which makes a woman drape herself in a horse blanket and think she looks stun ning. We shall not have our grandmoth ers with us long, and may not the thought impel us to cheer her and make her as happy as we can, while the opportunity i3 given us? The best society for the suppres sion of pernicious literature is the family. The best legislation that can be passed for the prevention of the sale of vile literature can be passed by the father and mother. Daily teaching to love and study good and useful things will hring the boys and girls to detest the opposite. What is needed in the training of the tots is more pf.tience while their minds are developing. Let them see gentleness and by and by they will adopt it. Let us act ourselves a lit tle more as we wish them to. Ex ample with children weighs more than advice. This holds good all along the road, from infancy to ma turity. With wine on the sideboard, progressive euchre in the parlor, sen sational, trashy literature on the ta ble and cigars on the mantle, we need not be surprised when the crop of drunkads or gamblers, of diseased hearts and wishy-washy minds conies in. The seed has been planted, the crop must grow. Not all may fall to the lowest depths perhaps, but who can saw which will be saved? It is not the will of the Creator that one of these little ones should perish; and woe is in store for him who places occasions to fall in their way. Don't work too hard. God meant us to work every day until we are weary, but not until we are so weary that a night's rest cannot revive and restore us to . strength and vigor again. When you rise morning after morning with weary limbs and heavy heart, you may know that you are breaking the laws of health and that your punishment is and will be heavy. You must let go somewhere The world, your friends and family have no right to demand from you more than you can do, and if you are a wise woman you will not give all the strength and warmth and beauty of your life to labor and have only the dregs left for love. Keep enough strength, take enough rest to preserve a cneeriui neart and a bright face, when the family gather about the fireside after the day's work is done. Do one thing at a time. Don't hurry, don't worry. Face the issue of life fairly and squarely; do your share of the work, that is, what you can do without in juring yourself, and put the rest res olutely behind you. Take some re laxation. Every human being needs recreation and amusement of some sort. Get it from books or people with new and helpful thoughts, that will keep your ideas bright and your heart cheerful. Mother. To the young ladies who weekly road this column we are moved by the good spirit to write a few words concerning their duties to their mothers. It may you have noticed a careworn look upon her face late ly. Of course it has not been brought there by any act of yours; still it is your duty to chase it away. Would it not be a happy surprise to her If you should occasionally bid her sit down and rest while you performed the arduous duties in hand? And how a tender kiss on her mouth will cause her dear face to brighten. Anyway you owe her a kiss or two. Away back, when you were a little bit of a girl, she kis'sed you when no one else was tempted by four fever-tainted breath and swollen face. You were -not so at tractive then as you are how. And through those years of childish sun shine and shadow she was always ready to kiss your little, dirty, chub by hands whenever they were injured in the first skirmishes with the rough old world. And then the midnight kiss with which she routed so many bad dreams as she leaned above your restless pillow, have all been on in terest these long, long years. Of course she is not so pretty and kissable as' you are; but if you had done your share of the work during the last ten years, the contrast would not be bo marked. Her face has more wrinkles than yours, and yet if you were sick that face would appear far more beautiful than an angel's as It hovered over you watching every opportunity to minister to your comfort, and every one of these wrinkles seem to be bright wavelets of sunshine chasing each other over the dear face. She will leave you one of these days. These burdens, if not lifted from her shoulders, will break her ''own. Thftif ;-"-'. V.svi h"v" trr have done so many necessary things for you will be crossed upon her life less breast. Those neglected lips that gave you your first baby kiss will be forever closed, and those sad, tired eyes will have opened on eternity, and then you will appreciate your mother; but it will be too late. GOLD AND SILVER MINED, 1012. Smallest Production of Gold in Past Five lears. The gold-mining Industry of the United States was generally normal in 1912, according to H. D. McCas- key of the U. S. Geological Survey, but early figures indicate the small est production since 1907, when the output was $90,435,700. In 1908 the output increased to $94,560,000, in 1909 to $99,673,400, in 1910 it dropped to $96,269,100, in 1911 it j increased slightly to $96,890,000,1 but in 1912 it decreased to $91,685,- 168, according to preliminary esti mates of the Bureau of the Mint and Geological Survey. The decrease is to be ascribed mainly to Nevada, where there was a falling off of about $4,500,000, chiefly from Gol.lfield and to a smaller degree from National and Seven Troughs. The great Goldfield mines produced more ore than in 1911, but the average grade treated was considerably lower; the mill at National was burned in September, and production was delayed at Seven Troughs by a cloudburst in July. On the other hand, the Manhattan, Round Mountain and Fairview dis tricts somewhat increased their yields. A decrease of $300,000 to $400,000 is also indicated for Colo rado, where, althougM there was an increased production from Cripple Creek of about $500,000, owing partly to successful drainage by the Roosevelt tunnel, and an increase in gold output also from Gilpin county, there was an estimated decrease in production of about $1,000,000 from the San Juan region, including the counties of Dolores, La Plata, San Juan, San Miguel and Ouray.. The' bulk of the decrease, however, was from the Camp Biid mine, in Ouray county, as the output of San Juan and Dolores counties increased. In Utah and Washington decreases of gold, output of $100,000 to $200,000 are indicated. In Montana there was probably a smaller decrease. The production of gold was normal in Alaska, Arizona, Idaho and New Mexico, and there was a somewhat increased output in California and Oregon. The year 1912 was most prosperous in South Dakota, where the output increased about $400,000 and was the largest in the history of the state. The great Homestake mines, as usual, made the bulk of the output. The hydroelectric plant of the company owning these mines, which has been under construction for several years, was completed and in operation in 1912. California .retains first place in gold output, regained from Colorado in 1911. Gold dredging continued generally active in 1912, especially in Califor nia and Alaska, where increased dredging capacity was added. The output from 120 dredges in 10 states (including Alaskt.) in 1911 was $10,311,'589. In the Geological Survey's report on gold and silver in 1911 it was shown that of the total gold produc tion 24 per cent was derived from placers, dredging alone producing 10.9 per cent; 53.8 per cent was from gold and silver mills (23.9 per cent by amalgamation, 26.1 per cent by cyanidation, and 3.8 per cent by i chlorination), and 22 per cent from smelting. These ' proportions will probably not greatly change for 1912, except that dredging may be expect ed to Increase somewhat and the out put from chlorination fill continue to decline. A decline in prospecting has been noted in several of the western states and in 1911 and 1912 there was no notable discovery of new ore bodies or deposits that seem likely to promise immediate material in creases in the domestic gold output. The largest producers are operating at probably near their maximum ca pacity, and though steady output from them is assured, in some places, as at Goldfield, the grade of ore has Otto Special Off eit the Ashland Tidings and LaFollette's Weekly Magazine BOTH A FULL YEAR FOR ONLY Yon can read everv week what Senator Robert M. La Follette. tiie leaner champion or tue ieo,:.e s rwiiU. the leader of tun no gressive Republicans, thinks and says for ONLY 50 CENTS MORE THAN THE PRICE OF THE TIDINGS ALONE A stirring and momentous campaign is opening. You will want to be posted. You will want the record of your congressman. Does he represent YOU? You will want information about the great issues that you and friends are talking about. Senator La Follette knows what is going on at Washington. He Is on the ground; be hind the scenes. He tells you all about it in LA FOLLETTE'S WEEKLY MAGAZINE. Sixteen pages of crisp editorials and Interesting special arti cles each week. LaFollette's One Year, $K00) Our Offer: The Tidings One Year, $2.00) $2.50 To new or old subscribers who pay in advance. Address all orders to the Tidings. begun to decline. New development and discovery of gold deposits will i in all likelihood not much more than j offset such decline in grade, or the exhaustion of older mines. From i present knowledge there is no great prospect of an increase in gold pro duction of the United States in 1913. j According to estimates made fori the survey by the Bureau of Foreign j and Domestic Commerce, the imports in 1912 comprised gold valued at $61,400,000. The gold exported in' 1912 was valued at $48,600,000.1 The excess of imports over exports i was about $12,800,000, against $20. 262,110 in 1911 and $447,696 in 1910. This is a marked change from the condition in 1909, when the ex cess of exports over imports was $88,793,855. The gold Imported in 1912 was mainly in the form of ore and bul lion, and a large amount came from Mexico, with Canada a c.Iose second. England, France, and Central and South American countries supplied the bulk-of the remainder. The ex ports consisted of refined bullion and coin. The largest amounts went to France, South America, Canada and Japan, and smaller shipments were sent to the West Indies and other North American countries. P. DODGE & SONS o House Fnrnishprc uepuiy county coroner CALIFORNIA The Sunshine and Flowers Reached LOW ROUND oL;. y I sunset m (A kMOCN SHASTA I I " nou ns , I From A MIAN Y CORVALL1S McMINNVILLE EUGENE PORTLAND OREGON CITY WOODHURN .SALEM and from other Main Line and Branch Line Points to Los Angeles, Colton, Pasadena, Riverside, San Barnadino and other California points, with stop-overs in either direc tion and long return limit. THROUGH TRAIN SERVICE DAILY v SAN FRANCISCO EXPRESS: With Observation Car, Pullman Standard and Tourist Sleeping Car and all-steel high-back seat Day Coaches and Dining Car. CALIFORNIA EXPRESS: With Standard Tourist and Sleeping Cars, all-steel high-back seat Day Coaches and Dining Car. All trains connect at San Francisco with through Eastern trains via Ogden or south through Los Angeles and the Sunset Route. For fares, sleeping car accommodations, tickets, or literature on California, call on nearest agent, or write JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, Portland, Oregon. I ORDER APPOINTING DAY FINAL SETTLEMENT. FOR In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Jack son. In the matter of the estate of Chris topher C. Scott, deceased. Order appointing day for final set tlement, etc. John A. Harvey, the administra tor of the estate of Christopher C. Scott, deceased, having rendered and presented for settlement, and filed in this Court, his final account of hU administration of caid estate. It Is ordered. That Friday,, the 31st day of January, A. D. 1913, being a day of a subsequent term of said Court, to-wit: of the January term thereof, A. D. 1913, at 10 o'clock a. m. of said day, be and the said i hereby appointed for the settlement: of said account; rnd that notice of said settlement bo published in the Ashland Tidings, a newspaper pub lished in Ashland, Oregon, as often as once a week for four successive weeks prior to said day of settle ment. Done at Jacksonville, viregon, thU 18th day of DecemDer, A. D. 1912. J. R. NEIL, County Judge. First publication, December 26. AND Undertakers Lady Assistant X Land of by the TRIP FARES ROSERURG GRANTS PASS MEDFORD ASHLAND