Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1913)
Thursday. TYbmary 13; fnr;r. FACE TWO ASHLAXP TIDINGS Ashland Tidings SEMMVEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1876. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert H. Greer, - Editor and Owner B. W. Talcott, - - City Editor SCBSCKIPTIOX 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 matter. Ashland, Ore., Thursday, Feb. 13, '13 WA It. "How long, oh Lord, how long" must be regaled with stories of butchery and blood? When, perchance, there is no real war, the sensational press flaunts in our faces the "yellow peril," or the danger of England's position in the Panama canal controversy. That gaunt, red-haired Sherman before Vicksburg wrote "War is hell." He knew. Any man who has ever car ried a musket or lieard the thunder of the guns feels the thrill of the soldier, but he knows, too, it is the primeval man's lust to destroy. The bugle call and the long roll are only the songs of the sirene, the cam pire's charm. Wa" takes the best we have. The weakling cannot go, the selfish and cowardly will not. Just now a few miserable sand dunes of the Sahara are the prize for which Italy and Turkey are striving to determine which is the most adept in the pastime of mur der. The blue-eyed Saxon claims the most advanced civilization and, at the same time, the greatest prowess in shedding the blood of his fellow man. A wave of the hand of these so-called civilized nations would stop the useless carnage. L'Envoi "How long, oh Lord, how long?" THE DRUMMER AXI) HIS TIPS. G. A. Lorenson. a Chicago sales man, retiring from business the past week, made public his expense ac counts, showing $18,000 paid in tips in 20 years. His average was $75 per month. If you don't pay tips, said Mr. Lorenson, you are black listed. As salesmen's expenses are paid by the house directly or indirectly, the cost of all the unwilling service one meets on the road is added to the price of the goods. The drummer U: a natural prey. The tourist may give up more liber ally, but he is occasional and inter mittent. Moreover, having a certain amount of free time to himself, he is often inclined to give battle against the Hessians, and either tip or not at all or at a low rate. The drummer, on the other hand, carries impedimenta. As the soul of an army lies in its commissary wag ons, so the soul of the drummer is in his trunks. Many a time he would like to seize a baggage truck and trundle the plaguey things himself. But he can't, as there is another day coming, and the same battle must be fought over again on the tipster's own dunghill. You can't war against all the transportation underworld, if you must travel over and over again the same road. Perhaps this is one of the reasons why only a certain type of man makes success as a drummer. Just as he must be able to sleep doubled ! up on a wooden bench at a junction station, he must be able to be con tinuously milked and keep on smil ing. And the man with too keen a sense of justice couldn't do it. The THE SILENCE OF WOODROW. Beyond any doubting or question ing, the president-elect is a bimet allism For is it not written that "Silence is golden, speech is silver"? And has it not been made perfectly clear that, in the very selfsame pio raent that Mr. Wilson makes speech upoa topics divers and sundry, he maintains silence deep as death upon such topics as the appointments of cabinet officers? And beyond any doubting or ques tioning, bimetallism of this particu lar form isn't the least bit popular with the democratic captains, colonels and generals. They fiankly prefer, at least for the moment, sil ver speech to golden silence. They want to know the length, breadth, thickness, substance, weight, aspect, character, views and previous condi tion of freedom or servitude of the Wilson cabinet-to-be. They want to know whether it is to be progressive or reactionary, or x subtle balancing of the two. They want to know if there is anything in the rumors, or the suspicions, that a black-hearted republican has been invited to sit in the executive counsel. They want to know whether the selections are being made according to merits or in keeping w'th the time-honored policy of paying rewards. In short, the officers of the party want to know the complexion of the Wilson cabinet and they want to know in a hurry. The things that "float upon the wings of silence" are disturbing to the spirit of partisan patriotism. Some of them are enough to sicken the soul. Unless the president-elect speaks within a few hours we fear 1 The Home Circle energy needed for battling with the that he'll have the death of many an doubts of his customers would be , impatient and exasperated comrade frittered away and diverted. ' upon his conscience. From the viewpoint of the em-J . ploye, he can do no differently. He j TALKS OX ADVERTISING TO TID- is crowaea uetween me low wage on the one hand and the open palm on the other. And stiil the public keeps on tipping. IXGS READERS. (By Kalph Kaye.) BOOST IT. SOME QUEER LAW. ' Real estate is a commodity. Like ! other commodities, it has a known lvalue and use. Therefore it shoulJ Of those who are finding flaws in i appeal to nearly all classes. Again, the parcel post system, it might be like some commodities, certain real asked if they know of any institu tion, of any enterprise, of any under taking great or small, which started off with every cog and cam and I just this distinction that you should estate appeals to certain classes of people. Price, location, buildings, restrictions, etc., cause this. It is A Kansas City Judge has cited the owner of the Kansas City Star for contempt because the paper saw fit to criticise a decision in a divorce case. According to the news story, the judge refused to dismiss an ac tion brought by a wife for divorce until the husband had paid her three attorneys $00 each, although it was admitted that tho woman had no grounds for divorce. In another case that same judge decided that the husband must pay his wife's at torney fees before she could collect any alimony. The decision of the court may be good law, but it is poor logic. To one outside the pale of this court it looks as if the judge might be engaged in a better busi ness than keeping married people apatt when they want to patch up their differences and live- together again. It looks hardly fair to force a husband to pay his wife's attor neys for bringing suit for divorce against him when he was in no man ner to blame for the separation. To say that a lawyer is entitled to a fee before a wife and mother secures alimony for the support of herself and family is not in accordance with the theory of Blackstone. wheel and piston working smoothly? If so, they are in possession of knowledge they should lose no time In disseminating. There are too few base your real estate advertising on. This necessitates a thorough study of the land to be sold; i. e., take, for instance, its location. Is it too far perfect things in this world of men I out for comfortable daily city trips? and it is important that they be What appeal does the outlook nake? made known to the end that their What class is the trend of building UNCLE SAM, GAMEKEEPER. Without one dissenting vote the United States senate has passed a bill providing for the protection of migratory game and insect-eating birds. The bill places all wild geese, wild swans, brant, wild duck, snipe, plover, woodcock, rail, doves and other birds which, in their northern and southern migrations, pass be yond the. borders of any one state under government charge. State laws have practically failed to prevent the slaughter of harmless birds. No one state in the union has been able to enforce its game laws rigidly. Each year the butchery keeps up and each year millions of dollars are lost to " agriculture through the devastations of insects which the birds, had they but been protected, would have destroyed. This lamentable failure calls for fed eral intervention. Tho senate real ized it thoroughly. The sooner the government makes a case against a few pot-hunters and against those creatures who shoot . birds out of the mere vicious love of killing things, the tooner that awful waste of growing grain will be stopped. example stimulate the striving for; the ideal. There have been few instances in j whi 'h persons in the public service i have tried so hard to put an institu tion upon its feet as the postal em ployes have tried with the parcel post. They might have left the whole thing for time and chance to work out, as we have seen the mili tary authorities deal with our last two wars. But they didn't. They studied the parcel post laws thor oughly. They framed their system in keeping with the law. They or ganized the postal service to care for it, to prepaare or it, to look for ward eagerly to the making as suc cessful a business of it as they knew how. Instead of fault-finding, they should receive praise. Instead of the picking of flaws, the pointing out of trivial shortcomings, sneering and condemning, there should bo hearty congratulations. Unthinkingly you may have let yourself be classed in this parcel post affair with those who habitual ly find fault with everything. Don't do it. The cane calls for boosting, not for nagging. progress. You should follow this line of thought in its advantages, price and terms, building restric tions and right down the line, pick ing out the possibilities and recon Btructing them along known human lines. Thoughts from the Editorial Pen sug8Knssns:s:;;i:;:8;:i;;:s Lent. The observance of Lent is not tak en very seriously today by any great number of people. This is not an age of self-denial. The entire phi losophy of mortifying the flesh is looked upon as monkish and medie val. With modern men, business gives little time for meditation. If they did sit down to think about their sins, their minds would soon wan der, off into the price of goods or the position of the stock market. The thoughtful observance of Lent seems to be largely confined to the women, though those that need it most are the least apt to slacken the pace and try to find toward what quarter of the spiritual horizon they are drifting. The old-time Lent was no doubt too introspective. It is much less valuable to sit down and think about your sins than to get out and try to bring a little sunshine into other peo ple's lives. The fact that comparatively few people give- much attention to the Lenten custom is one of the signs of the over-speeding of the age. Life was meant to have its room for thought as well as for action. De nying yourself this or that article of food. or drink may or may not be useful according to your bringing up and temperament. The quiet hour when a man drops the dust and scramble of the race to open his heart to the voice of the spirit is never without cleansing and sanative effect. How different the world looks in the calm of the silent hour, where life's competitions seem distant, than it does when you get out with your ledgers and your sales accounts and your machinery and fill the mind with the lust of getting and having. As the poet said: "The world is too much with us, late and soon. Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers." 1 THE MOST POPULAR TRADE- 1 MARK IN THE WORLD IS IT YOURS? You money. will never set That's true. ahead in this world unless you save If you can't save much, save a little. Deposit your savings with us and watch them grow. In just a little while you will have a good, substantial bank account. One dollar will open a Savings Account. We'll pay four per cent interest on your money, too. Don't wait until tomorrow or next week start the account today. Granite City Savings BanR : ' ASHLAND, OREGON. a painter of merchant. But is is a suggestion that there will be much improvement made in some of the business fronts in this city by the use of a little paint. The outlay would be slight. One coat would likely suffice and a day would be enough to do the work. Along some of the principal streets there are several buildings needing treatment of this sort some of them fine, substantial structures, so it is a pity to detract from their natural beauty when such a small outlay would make them attractive. Besides, it is economy for the own ers. And then nothing adds more to the general aspect of the store or office than a nice clean bright front. The stranger notes this sooner than anything else. It impresses him and he goes away to tell that our city is one of the pretty places of southern Oregon if he sees the paint. SPECIAL NOTICE. the life COMMOX-SEXSK AMERICAN WOMEN. New York's 26,000 manufactories yearly turn out pioduct valued at $2,000,000,000. Fortunately none of our home suf fragettes feel tha: they can demon strate their fitness to vote by going down to the public buildings or bus iness district and heaving a rock through some cost'y square of plate glass. If Mrs. John Bull had any sense of humor she would perceive that side of it. One of the most essential qualifications for the voting act Is a respect for law and a willingness to abide by it. When a suffragette breaks a window she says in es sence, "I am not fit for the thing I want." In spite of the close ties of blood, kindred and education between Eng land and the United States, no hint of that spirit has been found on this side of the water. From Josh Billings, and from long before him, down to George Ade, a stream of genial satire has run through the life of the American people. Who can tell how much hysteria has been removed from our society and politics by the national sense of humor? lublic Safe on S. P. Trains. "Not a single passenger on Southern Pacific has lost his through collision or derailment for more than four years," said W. R. Scoit, general manager of the South ern Pacific, in commenting on the efforts of the railroads to protect their passengers from accidents. "Our last fatalities were , in the collision at Webster and First streets, Oakland, in 1908, when a main line train crashed into a sub urban train. Since then the only perrons killed or injured by our trains have been trespassers. The Southern Pacific has thrown every possible safeguard around its passengers. The report of the Inter state Commerce Commission last year showed that the Southern Pacific system had a greater automatic block signal mileage than any other rail road in the United States. "Here are some interesting sta tistics which shoulJ convince almost anyone that a passenger on a South ern Pacific train is safer than a man walking along the street: During the last four years 157,000,000 pas sengers were safely carried to their destinations on the Southern Pacific lines, traveling an average distance of 42 miles, or a total of 6,594,000, 000 miles, or 265.000 times around the world." About $12,000,000 worth of or anges are imported by England. Oregon Man in Illinois. The Harvard (111.) Independent of recent date contains the following: "Dr. V. It. Goddard of Chicago has purchased the practice of Dr. F. C. Hill, the osteopath. The latter sold out on account of ill health and has gone to Chicago to be treated. Dr. Goddard is a graduate of Chicago College of Osteopathy and has lfad several years of practice in Chicago. Dr. Goddard, wife and little son have moved into the John Carroll house, vacated by Dr. Hil! and his mother." Dr. Goddard is a son of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Goddard of Talent, and was a student in the Southern Ore gon Normal in Ashland a few years ! ago. Name the Farms. The movement agitated for some time by the leading farm journals of the country and more recently taken up by some of the women of Oregon for the naming of farm homes is a furtho" step in agricul tural progress. Instead of being de scribed as a tract of land in section No. blank, township No. blank, a farm ought to have a definite title, some significant and appropriate name that would iix its identity in the mind of friends and strangers. If John Smith, instead of having people refer to hin farm as "John Smith's place," hari an entrance gate, above which, clearly legible, was painted the farm name, say, for in stance, $ Q Q 't 'i CLOVERNOOK FARM $ John Smith, Owner $$ S S 'i 4 the name would be a valuable asset to John Smith and to future owners of the place as well as an incentive to the pride of the owner in his place and its products. If, in addition, John Smith had a stencil with the name of his farm to stamp every box, every bag, every bushel of farm products, every doz en of eggs that went from the farm to the wholesale or retail purchaser; if every pound of golden butter was stamped with a mould printed with the name, customers would soon identify John Smith and his farm with "Clovernook" products and. providing the standard or quality was maintained, John Smith would have little trouble m finding a mar ket. More than that, if John Smith ever wanted to sell "Clovernook" and had made the name mean what a farm name should mean, it would add value to the place that would mean an extra price in the sale. John Smith would have a farm name that stood as a synonym for quality and the name would have a marketable value which John Smith could turn into cash just as one can sell the goodwill of a reputable firm for ex tra cash value. Every ranch ' in Oregon should have a name, and provision should be made by which it would be re quired that the name be registered with the recorder of deeds and made a permanent and tangible asset. It would increase the owner's pride in his place. It would help make the identity of the farm clear in the public mind, and U would bring the farmer and the buyer of farm prod ucts into closer touch. We name everything else; why not dignify the ranch by according it a name all its own, instead of numbered designa tion in such a section, on such and such a rural route? All matter for the Tidings should be directed to the aKr, rather than to any person connected therewith. When directed to a person it is apt to Ie sent to the boine address, thus delaying its insertion. i SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Tidings one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine is $1.50 per year. Ready lor Work! The value of fire protection de pends largely upon the readiness of the fireman to respond to any call and his willingness to face any dan ger The value of fire insurance de pends largely upon the readinesi of the company in which you are, in sured to respond immediately to your loss and its ability to meet any ions which may come to it. That's the kind we have always ready for work. They pay promptly every honest loss, big or little. Let us write your insurance and we'l give you the kind that WORKS ALL THE TIME. BILLINGS AGENCY ESTAB. 1883 11 E. Main St. Phone 211-J. t FOLEY KIDNEVL I. i. McXair, East Side Pharmacy. .. . m ttttttttttttttttttttti THE PORTLAND HOTEL Sixth, Seventh, Morrison and Yamhill Strectg PORTLAND, OREGON l The most central location in the city, and nearest to the leading theaters and retail shops. You are assured of a most cordial welcome hen;. Every convenience is provided for our guests. f The Grill and Dining Room are famed for their excel lence and for prompt, courteous service. Motors meet all incoming trains. Rates are moderate; European plan, $1.50 per day upward. G. J. Kaufman, Manager 4.44--li'ii'M-4--I"li.i.l.4i.t.JtMt..t,,i till ItH 1 1 1' Thirty-three years is the average length of a generation. Phone No. 39 when in need of job printing. Work and prices are right. A Little Paint Covers a Multitude of Sins. This is not an advertisement for o P,!l BehindItheCounter T Proper display is absolutely essential In making sales. Even a good salesman can not get the results in a dark corner that he can in a well lighted department. People want to see the goods and see them in the light. Don't use an illuminant that gives wrong color values if you want to .hold your trade. Custom goes to the store that gains confidence by using the right Ight electric light. , Ashland Electric Pou errand Light Company.