Thursday,, May f.i, muj ASHLAJfD TIDINGS f AGE TWO Ashland Tidings SEMI-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1870. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert R. Greer, Editor and Owner B. W. Talcott, - - - City Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year 12.00 Blx Moatbs 100 Three Months .60 Payable in Advance. TELEPHONE 39 Advertising rates on application. Pirst-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, May 13, '13 TIHT BOY OP YOURS. IF JAPAN FOUGHT US. TO SUBSCRIBERS. The first of June is near at hand, the date set for checking off all de linquent subscribers. On running through our list we find a number of subscribers who are delinquent. We do not want them to miss an issue of the paper, and we hope that all subscribers will respond to the no tices now being sent out. Please pay this month and do not miss an issue. LICENSED NEWSPAPER MEN. Some of the people who are worry ing about the drubbing the little brown men are going to give Uncle Sam might feel different would they make a study of the hard times now prevailing in Japan. After the war with Russia the conse- Japanese government set out to cre- pretty ate economic Independence, partly much his own way; of, course, the through a protective tariff and ship easiest way. He became not exactly subsidies, but more particularly by a fallen boy, as we use the adjective direct government aid to manufaa upon a girl, but a boy with his bet- turing. Companies with capital ag ter nature curdled a lad inclined to gregating hundreds of millions guar be blase cynical anteed the interest payment on many An incident revealed to father the of these. lad's drift and dad forthwith sat up, For the time being this created a realized he'd been neglectful; that the fictitious appearance' of prosperity. The American Magazine has an appealing article entitled "What My Boy Knows" the confession of a father. Father was a city man, respecta ble, well meaning, comfortably fixed but busy; and mother was pious, gen erous, over-indulgent. .The auence was that son went I Odds & Endsl I X Picked Up by the Reporter. tlHItH HHHM 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 fault was as much his as the boy's, and took steps to reclaim the young ster before the damage had become irreparable. We don't recommend or quite ap preciate this father's remedy. He held the city in part responsible; ar- Within the past year, however, it is seen that a nation, like an individual, can't lift itself by its own-boosstraps, The growth of manufacturing towns had led to the depletion of the agri cultural districts. There are great sections where there are abandoned gued that it puts too many pitfalls in farms like those on the wornout hills the way of its boys; that its artifi- of New England. The result has cialities, its commercialized strivings been a distressing advance in the cost for forced pleasures, its stress and its of rice, and half rations among the froth were more than a normal lad poor. could withstand. Therefore, he The condition of the Japanese nacked the family into a train and farmer has become pathetic. In bad migrated to the country. Back to years his rice field brings hin in $24 the farm. per acre, which it cost $36 . to pro Country life of the right kind is duce. Even in exceptionally good fine. But how about fathers who years he does not clear more than A bill requiring newspaper men to pass an editorial examination board before they can be allowed to prac tice their profession is being pushed bv Lieutenant Governor O'Hara of Illinois. The alleged purpose is to protect the reputable men in the business. Newspaper men would welcome anything that elevated the dignity of newspaperdom. But an examination system seems practically impossible. First, the politicians would try to control such an examining board. They would want "journalists" who would be "good" and "stand without hitching." Men who had ideas of their own on politics might find it hard to pass the tests. Assuming that such a board was kept out of politics and placed in the hands of really capable newspaper men, one difficulty would be with a class of people who devote only part of their time to newspaper work. Take our old friends in the rusty black bombazine gown, who with in finite toil over the sitting room lamp sends in her weekly grist of items from North Jay. She gives satisfac tion to a host of boys who have moved away from the old hearth stones. Must the dear old lady pass a four years' apprentice before she can write "items" for the paper, or be subject to a fine of $20 to $100 or imprisonment? A man who has the newspaper sense can do better work in a fort night than the other kind in years. No apprenticeship or examination board can alter this fact. Probably there are only two ways to "elevate" the newspaper profes sion. The first Is to persuade the public to stop buying yellow and fak- j ing newspapers. The second is to persuade editors and publishers that they hurt their business when they are careless In the selection of re porters. The public Judges the char acter of the newspaper by the ap pearance, the good judgment, the ac curacy, and the manners of the re porters whom it meets. Reporting Is dignified, honorable work, but the .curbstone Hessians that some of the big city papers send around the coun try discredit the whole business. can't seize their tempted sons and run away from the naughty town? For one who can flee a thousand must stay. What about the millions of anchored sires? You can do this with your boy in the city: You can play ball with him; you can take walks with him; you can enter as a chum into the intimacies of his boyish life be a good fellow, in short. , , You can set him an example of clean living. . , , ' You can take enough time from dollar-chasing to introduce him to g od books, to plays that don't fill him with vicious suggestion, to the continually enriching better aspects of the modern city. You don't have to lecture or scold or mollycoddle him to make a man of him. In fact, that's a way to lose him. Just be a big brother to him. Make it part of your job to father him, instead of letting him run wild. In this child of your loins you can renew and relieve your own boyhood, and lead him along the better way. A lad thus sired will be a pretty safe risk In either, city or country. $1.50 per acre. Eighty-five per cent of the farms are mortgaged. The income of the Japanese people averages about $2? per capita, Their taxes take $4.40 out of this $23. They are not in very good shape to invest in the costly play things of war! It will take the Japs a generation to carry off the burdens of the Russian war and to adjust themselves to the costly scale of liV' ing of modern civilization. Von Moltke once , said, that he knew 1,000 ways to get a German army into England, but not one to get it out. How much more true this would be in case of a Japanese attack on this country. There will he a continued unrest among the college undergraduates until proficiency at baseball is given the credit marks it should have on the examination papers. If The Grants Pass Masons who visit ed Ashland Friday afternoon were strong in their commendation of the beauty of this city and expressed their appreciation of the ride around the city given them by local auto-mobilists. It is just as useless to try and fix up a dirt street orice a year and ex pect it to keep in good shape as to try and clean out a garden in the spring and expect it to keep clean all 1 summer. Eternal vigilance Is the price of good roads. The board of directors of a school district in Douglas county ordered warrants for school money drawn di rectly . to the pupils. A tax-payer complained to the attorney general, who ruled that it was illegal. The board were held to violate their oath of office in so doing. The action dt the California legis lature in appropriating money to pay salaries to convicts in the peniten tiary is arousing the wrath of a great many of the inhabitants of that state who are so unfortunate as to be out side the pen and not have both jobs and wages guaranteed by the state. THE PORTLAND HOTEL Sixth, Seventh, Morrison and Yamhill Street PORTLANDrOREGON The most central location in the city, and nearest to the leading theaters and retail shops. You are assured of a most cordial welcome here. Every. convenience is provided for our gueBts. , 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 others praised without resenting it, how much better we would all be. The automobilists of Ashland are complaining of the number of pieces of boards containing nails which are to be found on the streets of the city menacing tires and horses' feet. It has been suggested that a thorough use of the street sweeper on the paved streets would obviate the trouble. The city dads and Street Commis sioner Fraley are doing excellent work in the way . of grading the streets this spring. One thing which appears to have been neglected in the past has been the keeping the dirt streets in repair. A stitch in time saves nine, even more surely in street work than in other lines. Oftentimes a newspaper Is criti cised for having said something good of some man which displeased some one else. The writer's old boss used to say: "If a man kicks on some thing discreditable you have said about him or his friends give him a respectful hearing, and if there has been a wrong done, right it. But if a man kicks because you have said something good about someone else, tell him to go straight up or down. He is too jealous and small to de serve notice." The diplomats at Washington may not like the Bryan grape-juice din ners, but perhaps their wives will be pleased to have them come home at more reasonable hours. OLD LOCATION VS. ENTERPRISE. CONTROLLING RIVERS. In the days before 'modern adver tising, business success was the work of a lifetime. A merchant had to squat in his location, and fQXyears he never got any trade but the drift ers. Staid and conservative people traded where they used to trade. It never occurred to them that anyone else could have anything worth at tention. Today the currents of business can be easily diverted. In any live town there are new men who have ac quired a handsome good will by a year's intelligent and persistent advertising. The public does not ask today, "What kind of goods did your father sell?" or "What kind of goods did you sell ten years ago?" It asks, "What kind of goods are you selling today?" It appreciates the great value of an old location and an hon orable record, But these factors do not count unless they are united with wide-awake enterprise. And no man gives any evidence that he has en- At last accounts the wlr&ws of The Hague peace palace were all boarded up, but the caretaker goes In once a year to see that no one steals the furniture. . One has the feeling that the new English ambassador, Sir Cecil Spring Rice, rather enjoys writing a good fat name, and wouldn't object to autograph albums. The only trouble with those Futur 1st painters is that you can't always tell their pictures from the board on which they mix their paints. Wanted, foot stoves and hot bricks for Wall street's cold feet! A New Hybrid in the Bird World, In the current issue of Farm and Fireside the editor of that publica tion reports, the case of the recent crossing of a guinea fowl and an ordinary chicken. The editor owns the trio Papa Leghorn, Mamma Pearl Gunea and Offspring What-is- It. In regard to the hybrid the ed itor says In part: "We are going to keep this happy The city officials have been doing good work on the dirt streets this spring in the way of grading. Wimer street is a fine example of the work. This should be followed up by a con sistent use of the plit-log"or wing drag as. it is called. If this were done whenever needed throughout the fall and winter it would save much money. Quite a bunch of Hawkeyes were in evidence at the Masonic gathering Friday evening. There were ten or more former residents of Iowa in at tendance. It is remarkable, in a gathering of that kind, or in travel ing, how many people one meets whom they have known elsewhere, or who know frfends of theirs. This United States is not a very big place, after all, and you never know when you are going to meet someone you have known heretofore, perhaps thousands of miles away. We are all too prone to try to climb up-liy pulling someone else down. We are too apt to feel that a good word for some other man is a slap at us. In how many such cases It is a question of "a guilty conscience needs no accuser," must be left to the individual consciousness. If we could all bring ourselves to hear There are two views of everything Many people believe the future of the country is dependent upon legisla tion. Jim Hill, of railroad fame, says that if congress would adjourn for ten years the country would pros per as never before. The old school doctors say that unless they are en trusted with the management of the sanitation of the country we will all seek premature graves. The homeo pathists, the osteopaths, the chiro practics and the Christian Scientists believe that freedom to choose me dicinal and sanitary methods is guar anteed by the constitution and a part of the inalienable right of "life, lib erty and the pursuit of happiness." A Nut for Ashland High School Base ball Admirers to Crack. (By Henry G. Gilmore.) Last year our high school baseball players very gracefully but none tho less energetically carried, everything before them in the Rogue River Val ley and the coasts thereof, in the high school contests, and present ap pearances would indicate a similar triumph for the season of 1913. If it be true as the Duke of Wel lington declared it to be that the real battle of Waterloo was fought on the cricket grounds of England, what cannot be deduced, as a nation al asset, in the development and effi ciency of brain and brawn as regis tered on and around the thousand and one diamonds to be found in tho country from Dan (Boston) evea unto Beersheba (our athletically live ly Ashland of Roguish proclivities)? While our Goliaths are battling for fame and glory here and there, along the line of the Southern Pacific rail road, why can't our stay-at-homes, la the persons of prospective graduates of both persuasions of the Ashland high school, unravel the mysterious entanglements bound up in the fol lowing baseball situation? It will be found a refreshing exercise for all who desire to do a little sound think ing on' their own account.' This is the nut that invites the cracking:' "If Jack Brown of Medford and Bill Smith of Ashland face each other 112 times and Bill Smith pitches 4 1C balls out of which there are 86 strikes and 77 fouls and 97 passes, and the number of passes is one third of the hits, how many hits did Jack Brown lam out?" Teacher Hands up, plplls of the Ashland high school. But please re frain from answering all at once! SUNSET MAGAZINE and Ashland Xldlngs one year $2.75 to old or new subscribers. Regular price of Sunset Magazine la $1.50 per year. family together, and see if we can terprise. enough to protect his cus- carry the experlment further. The tomers' interest, unless he keeps the voluntary matinir of these birds un- JOT MAKESHR ry"OLD THINGS HEW HyUJ It is easy enough to talk about controlling the great rivers of this country. In times of flood it seems as if something might be done to avert a recurrence. No doubt a sys tematic effort will soon be made to fence in the Mississippi, but that wll be a Job for the lrrepressable Yan kee. The Panama canal was a pud- din beside taming the Father of Wa ters. When that old river goes on a rampage it spills 2,300,000 gallons of water per second. Do you under etand what that means? It Is twelve times stronger than Niagara. It would cover a section of land a foot deep in twelve seconds. Some water! It would cover the state of Massachu setts a foot deep In 26 hours. Well to control such a volume will keep the engineers guessing for a time but we are not here to say that they cannot. We live In the'twentleth century, and It Is not stylish to say anything cannot be accomplished. Besides, it is not good sense to say such a thing, In the light of what we have already witnessed in inven tion and Improvement. They may beat the Mississippi to it, yet. Hope so. public constantly informed of what he is doing. TREAT ALL ALIKE. We trust the Associated Press dis patches from Washington do Presi dent Wilson an injustice by the state ment that he has intimated he is willing to sign the sundry civil bill carrying a clause for $300,000 for the enforcement of the Sherman law and providing it shall not be used against the farmers' co-operative organizations or labor unions. der ordinary farm conditions is very remarkable. We rather expect to hatch more hybrids this summer, but the really interesting phase of the affair will come when the test of the offspring-as to fertility is made. We cannot say as yet whether it is a male or a female, but we rather In cline to the belief that It is a hen. It slightly resembles a female hen- hawk. Its voice Is about midway be tween the characteristic notes made by a hen and a gunlea fowl and its manner and style of carriage are sufficiently in contrast to the corre sponding qualities of Papa Brown We believe this country has reached the point where the enforcement of I Leghorn to be considered feminine. law ought to fall on all alike. It is "If so, will it lay? If it lays, will the rankest sort of cowardice to pro- It follow the law of fecundity of The United States imported 000,000 pounds and exported 000,000 of tinplate in 1911. 95,- 70, vide for the enforcement of the Sher man law and then specify that cer tain classes are not to be prosecuted. We cannot understand how any mem ber of congress should vote for such which Dr. Raymond Pearl tells us, and lay according to the rule pre vailing In its father's family, or will it confine itself to 50 or 60 eggs a summer, as does its mother's people? a bill. We certainly do, not believe Will Its eggs be fertile, or will they that any member of congress who refuse to hatch as do those of most does vote for such a bill with his eyes open Is worthy of the support of his homefolks. We believe thor oughly in farmers' co-operative or ganization and just as thoroughly in organized labor, but if either of these institutions are in violation of the anti-trust law they ought to be prosecuted or the law repealed. hybrids? The Indian jungle fowl is a much closer relative to the com mon chicken than is the guinea, and readily crosses with the domestic fowl, but the hybrids are usually in fertile,, like the mule." Ashland Tidings and Weekly Ore- gonian one year, $2.50, Among the Best Critics Wallpaper-making is recognized as one of the fine arts. The best decorative artists in the world nave not scorned to give their services to this form of embel lishment. Our Selection of Wall Papers Has been made from the factories of best reputation. We are prepared to sell from this stock at moderate prices. Everything in Paints, Enamels, Var nishes, etc., to decorate the home. We are practical men in our line and will be glad to advise with you regard ing your work, Only the best men em ployed and work guaranteed. Take any old chair in the house, even though it looks like a wreck of its former self, and give it a coat of Jap-a-lac You will say, "I never thought that old chair could look so fine." Jap-a-lac makes old things new. 3 Jul It comes in Oak, Dark Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Cherry, Malachite Green, Ox Blood Red, Blue, Enamel Green (Pale), Enamel Green (Dark), Enamel Red, Enamel Pink, Enamel Blue (Pale), Apple Green Enamel, Brilliant Black, Dead Black, Natural (clear varnish), Gloss White, Flat White, Ground, Gold and Aluminum. All sizes from 10 cents to 10 gallons Wm. O. 'Dic.kersori Cor. Main and Granite Streets, Ashland. e i