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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (May 5, 1913)
rAGE TWO ASHLAND TIDINGS Monday, May B. IBIS. Ashland Tidings SEMMYEEKLT. ESTABLISHED 1876. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert R. Greer, Editor and Owner B. V. Talcott, ... City Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Tear $2.00 BIx 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. -r .Ashland, Ore., Monthly, May 3, 1913 FRENZIED FOOLISHNESS. "Two souls with but one single thought, two hearts that beat as one," Is very pretty sentiment, although quite overdone. B. Bryan and C. Clark have signed a protocol of peace, -Help! Murder! Fire!" and "Zounds, sadzooks!" and like wisely "Police!" They've signed a "love pact" 'twixt themselves that naught but death can part. And their past differences, now, leave nothing but their smart; At least, so one would judge who read3 the public prints, But, privately, "between us girls," by way of helpful hints, Their two souls have one single thought, and both their hearts are bent On burying the hatchet, but with murderous intent. "I hope he chokes," thought Speaker Clark, as Bryan shook his fin; "I wonder where 'twill hurt him most to sink my dagger in?" Bryan murmured, as he bid the Speaker to the feast, A-glaring all the time at Champ just like an untamed beast, "I'll ne'er forget the wrong you did to me at Baltimore, Although from this time on, dear Bill, you only I'll adore." But Beauchamp had his fingers crossed when at Bill he did swing; He had his stinger out a mile and stung Bill one good sting. But now that Bill's a diplomat and has to lie a heap. He never batted one eyelash or gave one single pee'p, Although he was just hopping mad and filled with fight and bile, Bill Bryan grasped the Speaker's hand and beamed a welcome smile. I did not mean one thing I said about you, Champ, old top." He placed the accent on the "mean" and then he had to stop To get his breaih and dodge a blow that Champ aimed at his Jaw The only thing that stopped the row was their respect for law. And so they kissed and made it up, did Bryan and Champ Clark; They've laid aside their bowie knives, like Bourne and Selling have, And all their idle moment i now are spent in spreading salve. The world Is surely growing better, such sights are good to see; I think I'll urge a protocol 'tween old George Put and me. SLOW MIRDER BY DRUGS. Among the poor in the crowded eiMes, where the stress of life is cruel, the sale of "dope" is not only large, but' ominously increasing. There are no exact figures. The Business has not been regulated enough to produce figures. But in every group of the down-and-outers, of the pathetic driftwood cast up on the tide-washed short of life, you can see pitiful examples of the wreckage caused by opium and co caine. Because you yourself have been strong enough, or happy enough, not to be tempted to buy deceptive pleasure at the expense of health and hope, don't be harsh in judging these poor wrecks, whose rebound from mi aery has led to ruin. They have fallen victims to tempt ations which you may have done very little to remove. Unless you have done your best to help them in their weakness and to check the greed -which lores them on, it isn't in your right to hurl reproaches. Get busy and help find out what yonr state laws are on the subject, and if they aren't strong enough, or If the dopers are dodging its en forcement, do something. One plan proposed to check the dishonest sale of habit-forming drugs is to require all dealers in them to take out internal revenue licenses. That would enable any state to learn who the dealers are and to adopt further regulation if it is so wished. NEVER TOO OLD TO LEARN. Couldn't we all get something from the example of Rev. David J. Higgins, the Methodist minister, who, at the age of 9 J years, has just en tered a Minnesota college? No doubt in this good, old domi nie'? case the motive which sent him to school wasn't quite the same as that which chiefly prompts younger folks. He doesn't pursue knowledge for payroll reasons. His days of money worry are over. He is going to college wholly as one who wants 6tudy for study's sake. Most of us are differently situated. We have to plan to buy our school ing so as to get the best economic return. The dollar spent must bring at least a dollar back; if more, all the better. But there is many a good chap work ing in mills or on farms who could, in later life, find and profitably use the means to do a little more school ing if he weren't possessed of the notion that he's too old; if he were n't secretly (afraid that somebody would make fun of so mature a schoolboy as he. Nonsense! One is never too old to learn. The mistake we all make is in not insisting upon learning more than we do; in not, for in stance, using more fully than we do a machinery right at hand. In most places the public school plants aren't worked half enough. At night they're idle. Also Satur days. Likewise Sundays. If we wanted to have schooling for the older folk we could easily do it with out stinting the youngsters. Many places are doing it. At last report, abont 300. We don't mean places with just the common run of night schools, but with varied pro grams for men and women; regular social centers. That's a kind of schooling that growriups can go to without feeling the least bit schoolboyish. It's a kind that can be made fully as enter taining as instructive. More even than that it nurtures a feeling of democracy, of brotherhood, of hu man interest, that's hard to find any where else, because elsewhere grown folks run pretty much to cliques; whereas in a social center, as in the common school, those who go are all on one level. Not every adult would care, with Parson Higgins, to go to college if he had the means and the time or, in deed, the preparation. But it would be fine if all who really want to keep on learning would, each in his neighborhood, make the move to do so In something of the spirit of our Minnesota brother. THE MAIDEN TRIBUTE TO MOD ERN CARELESSNESS. On a recent Saturday night, as the parade went up and down a busy street of a certain city, count was kept of 100 young girls hovering around that fascinating and also that dangerous age, "sweet sixteen." How many of them, do you sup pose, had their cheeks bedaubed with paint or powder? How many seemed on the way to trouble? Exactly forty-two! Nor were they, so far as casual scrutiny could determine, the kind, the pathetic, pitiable kind, known as "painted ladies." They seemed to be good girls, most likely from clean homes; at least not from homes where vice is cherished. At worst they were only fluttery, foolish, frivolous girls; moths attracted by the glare of the white lights. But Weren't they taking long chances? And weren't their parents? For that matter, wasn't society, which, knowing the natural craving of the young for fellowship, for recreation, nevertheless left to chance whether these and similar gay promenaders should find wholesome amusement or be enticed Into mischief? You didn't have to travel far up or down that busy bireet to find plenty of places into which you wouldn't want to have a daughter of yours inveigled. Vulgar picture shows, dance halls run for profit, and "ladies' en trances" abounded. And guardian angels, if equally numerous, certain ly weren't visible. Yet the town isn't a bad town. It's just typical. You could see the same conditions In almost any city between the oceans. These poor, little seekers after companionship and mild, flirtatious excitement, their brains no doubt muddled by "romance" and melo drama, had bedizened themselves with the artifice of cosmetics to at tract notice and perhaps lure the fancy of a hoped-for prince charm ing. What were their mothers thinking about? What are we all thinking about, that we calmly allow such a hazard of needless sacrifice? What are we doing to provide places in which girls like these may commingle with other young folks and have a good time safely? HARD TIMES. There are hard times and hard tmAa TKaka oka -htnl. hard because of crop failure, de structive flood or devastating storms. Hard times of this description' are usually local or are confined to com paratively small areas. Another and more common sort of hard times is an era of business depression. This is largely, if not in the start, entire ly psychological. It is often the re action from a state of unhealthy speculative activity. Legitimate bus iness activity cannot be unhealthy. It is only when the greed for sudden and easily earned or unearned wealth seizes upon a community or a coun try that the activity becomes un healthy. It then becomes a fever which pervades every part of the so cial fabric. The business man gets dissatisfied with the results of legiti mate growth and plunges into specu lation. The manufacturer is not sat isfied with his usual profits and boosts the prices of his products. The laboring man becomes dissatis fied and envious and strikes and agi tations ensue. The entire body poli tic becomes wrought up way above concert pitch. Everybody is out painting the town red. But oh, the next day! "It is no time for mirth and laughter, the cold gray dawn of the morning after." The business man who speculated finds bis products unsold on his hands or his operatives striking and perhaps rioting and destroying his property. The laboring man wakes up from his dream of making him self the equal of the millionaire in property as well as in opportunity and finds himself in the bread line and no job in sight. It Is then that there is need of a clear head and a courageous heart to bring things back into their nor mal relations with each other. Hard times wiii come just as long as men permit themselves to so far surrender to the desire for gain as to permit it to cloud their better judgment and to lead them into un wise and unsafe , speculation. The reaction is sure to come, So Bure as the pendulum swings to one ex treme it will swing back to the oth er. The only preventive of hard times is to curb speculation before it reaches that stage which compels dangerous reaction. When hard times are upon us, however, the impulse is to go as far in the other direction as we went to ward speculation. Then a clear head Is required to separte the true values from the fictitious; to tell what to buy and then to have the calm confi dence In the return of reason to the people which permits one to go for ward in the face of apparently ad verse conditions. The foundations of many large fortunes have been laid in hard times. Men with sufficient foresight and courage have tackled problems and investments which seemed hope less and foolish and ridden Into suc cess on the crest of the wave of re turning confidence. A man whom the writer knew when a boy, and who had arisen from being a stage driver to possess ing about half a million in a coun try town in the then west, told him once that he had made most of his money by buying when everyone else wanted to sell and selling when everyone else wanted to buy. In other words, he took advantage of the proneness of others to go in droves in the matter of investment, both in real and personal property. The man who has a clear head, a firm confidence, based on knowledge, in the commodity he intends invest ing in, and a reasonable amount of capital can often make more money by buying In hard times than In any other way. Selling Butter by Parcels PoRt. A New York state woman contrib utes the following to the current is sue of Farm and Fireside: "My friends in New Jersey, 20 miles from New York city, were pay ing 42 cents per pound for ordinary grade butter. I sent four pounds of butter from my postoffice (Clark- son, Monroe county, New York) on Tuesday afternoon and It reached my friends early Thursday morning. My grocer pays me 28 cents a pound. I charged them 32 cents, and they paid the parcel nostaee. which was 27 cents. "I packed the butter in a new five cent light-weight bread tin lined throughout with oiled paper. We both call it a good bargain. I make cents a pound on my butter, and they get better butter for 39 cents a pound." The copper production of the Ashlo mines, Japan, in 1912. was about 20,000 tons. A large increase in production is expected from these mines in 1913. A process for coloring light-hued pineapples by injecting cane sugar syrup into them has been patented by a Honolulu man. i Odds & Ends I i Picked Up by the Reporter. X T "I am fully convinced that you' have not the criminal instinct that the desire for pecuniary gain was ; back of your downfall." These were ' the words used by a California judge : in sentencing a defaulting banker. ! Is not the "desire for pecuniary gain" at the expense of others a' criminal instinct as much as any! other form? It is the mainspring of nearly every impulse to robbery, bur glary, gambling, white slavery, and ! even of many murders. The desire for pecuniary gain is laudable if properly directed, but too often it is the mainspring of crime and has caused more crime than all other things. Chief Slover of Portland will en list a body of boy police to assist in controlling the juvenile situation in that city. The writer has seen the scheme tried on Hallowe'en In the middle west and with excellent re sults. Few boys will play false if trusted with authority. Some time ago the council consid ered the matter of the disgraceful condition of the old brick building at the corner of Fourth an A streets, but refrained from action when in formed that the owner wa expected from Roseburg about the first of April to make repairs. H9 has not appeared yet, and as every tourist who gets off the train Bees the wreck it would seem good policy to insist that at least it be put in good condi tion outwardly. The Tidings reporter was shown a remarkably interesting picture, or rather several remarkably interesting pictures, at the home of Uev. B. C. Tabor at 459 Morton street. They were nothing less than reflections of the landscape; in the plate glass doors of the cottage. The double reflec tion, the doors being at right angles to one another on the porch, gave a clearness of detail and a vividness of color which made the pictures works of art. Mr. Tabor delights to show these pictures to anyone who cares to see them. They are at their best in bright weather. A thorough examination of the city a few days ago found many less houses vacant than a few months ago. This is especially true of the better -class of houses, there being some shacks vacant which a self-respecting dog would not occupy if he could crawl under a sidewalk to sleep. There is not, with the excep tion of one or two bungalows which are held for sale and not for rent, and a couple of others which the owners will occupy in the near fu ture, a single house of the bungalow style in the city unoccupied. The Eugene Guard in sneaking of a recently established "baby garden" where children can be cared for dur ing the absence of the parents, says: "Father at his club, mother at her club, and now babies will have their club. What will become of the home?" It will be as is now often said to be the case, "a good place to stay away from." "Printer reports , $40,000 saving" is the heading in a Sacramento pa per. It took the writer's breath away till he saw that it was a public official's report. How any private printer could save $40,000 was a mystery. The recall of Police Judge Weller of San Francisco for leniency in a white slaver case has proved again that women are a power for right when they have the ballot. For months the Pacific coast press has been flooded with charges that the California penitentiary was a dis grace and that convicts were being abused. An investigation by the leg islature shows the reports to have been unfounded. When will people learn that nearly all criminals will lie, especially for revenge or in hope of benefit? An example of like attacks on pub lic officials appears in a communi cation in Tuesday's Portland Even ing Telegram. It starts in "Last week, I am told, this occurred in our city." The article is signed "One Who Knows." If he wa3 told, did he "know" of the truth? A reporter who takes that ground will find him self mistaken a majority of times. Not that his informers deliberately misstate, but they are prejudiced or are themselves misinformed. Several real estate deals in the past two weeks, have been knocked in the head by parties who have gone to prospective purchasers and told them they were being cheated. These Parents, No matter what heirtage you leave, your cliild will home day be dependent on SELF. If left with a fortune already earned, the habits formed in early years will determine how wisely that fortune will be spent or used. The best object lesson your child can have in the care of money and Its earning power Is a savings account at this bank. A dollar will start it. We pay four per cent interest on sav ings. m Granite City ASHLAND, people doubtless believe they are do ing right, but is it doing as they would be done by? They would not want someone else, to interfere in their business. With the actual commencement of work upon the Keen creek irrigation project, which is promised for early in June, there ought to be a decided Improvement in business conditions li. the upper part of the Rogue River Valley. That the water will more than pay for itself upon the land is the opinion of everyone who has lived in an irrigated country, and they are the ones who ought to know. The knockers in Ashland remind one of the story of the frog3' legs. A man came to a dealer and atked if he would buy frogs' Jegs. "Yes, how many can you furnish?" was the an swer. "About a million," was the repuly. A week later the hunter re THIS is of interest to every woman who wants to look her best, to have a. fashionable figure, to be healthy and comfortable though stylish; and That Meaus-Every Woman! Nemo Corsets have no direct competition. They are in a class alone. They do things fo r you that no other corsets can do. This year's models are better than ever and they're here. You must see them. In our Corset Department ALL THIS WEEK $3.50, $4.00 TOM CORSETS $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 Krassier "Waists 50 cents and $1.00 Over jXdPdDdD Pairs 0xfords,Pnmps&Slippers For you to select your Summer footwear from. In White Nubuck, satin and canvas. In Black Satin, patent, kid, suede and velvet. In Brown Suede and velvet. Price Range : $2.00 to $4.00 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY Vaupel Attention! rz Savings Bank OREGON. turned with a dozen frogs' legs. When asked why he had not more he replpied, "I thought by the nolso they made that there were millions of them." Tha's the way with the" knockers. They make too much noise in proportion to their number. Ruminations. Lots of people are hunting for trouble for others. A promise is like wine, it improve by being kept. There are songs without words, but never quarrels without words. The man who goes all the gaits will become unhinged after a time. Job may have been pestered with boils, but never with bills. The ill wind that blows nobody good must be the breath of scandaL It is well to bridle the tongue when traveling in double harness. There is more credit in working, for one dollar than in dreaming of a million. IHhau 1 EVENT and $5.00 9