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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1914)
PAGE TWO ASttLAXIV TIDIXG8 Thursday, April 16. ioa Ashland Tidings 8EM-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1878. Issued Mondays and Thursdays Bert It. Greer, - Kditor nnd Owner B. W. Talcott, ... City Editor SUBSCRIPTION KATKS One Year $2.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months 50 Payable in Advance. TELEPHONE 39 Advertising rates on application. First-class job printing facilities. Bqulpments Becond to none in the interior. Entered at the- Ashland, Oregon, fostomee 89 second-class mail mat ter. Ashland, Ore., Thursday, Apr. 1, 'I I THINK IT OVER. How much money will it take to work out the mineral springs propo sition? That cannot be known until the estimates come from the en gineers. However, we should be thinking about the matter. A large Tart of the expense necessary will be in arranging attractive settings for the springs at the depot and in the park. Upon that depends as much the success of the enterprise as upon the merit of our waters. The ques tion now is: How much will we esti mate for the advertising fountains at the depot; how much for each par ticular fountain in the park, and how much money should be spent in im proving the park to make it attrac tiTe enough lor the successful ter- nination of the enterprise? The Tid ings would vote against the bonds quicker if the amount proposed was too small than if it was too large. It is possible to spend a large sum of onoy bringing the springs to town and then absolutely ruin results by lrarying them after we get them here. That must not be done. The com mittee is laying the plan on such a ecale as the investigation of other -watering resorts proves it should be hiid to get the best results. The Tidings editor would rather lay the hing out on a comprehensive enough plan to make the venture a success and have the bonds voted down than to lay it out on so measly a plan as to result in spending a large sum of Money in piping the waters down, and have the bonds voted, and the money worse than wasted because the sum would not be sufficient to carry it out as It must bo carried out to be successful. The Tidings editor, while at the head of the committee laying the plans, has exactly the same Interest in the matter that every oth er citizen has; that and no more; he Ja a citizen and taxpayer and a busi ness man. If the project is carried out on a bond issue his property will bear its share of the burden. If it is planned so It will be successful his business will be immensely stimulat ed, his property will rise in value, nd, if ho wants to sell it, buyers will bo at hand to buy; at the same time others will be attracted here who will spend money building ho tels, furnished cottages, apartment houses, rooming houses, every avail able room for rent in town will bo occupied at a fair rent, and this new wealth will help pay the taxes. Strangers will bo hero in great num bers when the peaches, berries and cherries are ripe and on the market;' instead of us having to ship our fruits away to an expensive and un certain market there will be a brisk and good home market for them; that will help everybody; at the same time fresh vegetables will be here Just as they are every year, and instead of the garden grower being unable to sell his basket of truck, as lias been in the past, there will be enough mangers In town to eat It all at a rood price, and more, for there will ood Work Done Promptly AT THE . Rough Dry at Reasonable J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office- and Laundry 31 Water St. TELEPHONE 165 TFUTURE iroF YOUR 1 BUSINESS m HANGS need to be twenty times as much raised here to supply the local de mand as there is now produced. If this thing is a success it- will help every citizen in and around Ashland, and it must be done right. If the things should cost $300,000 it would add about $32 PER YEAR to the present taxes paid on the Tidings and the Greer home. If it Is carried out successfully the Tidings is ready now to enter into a contract to pay $32 PER MONTH for the next twenty five years. But it will not cost near that much to do It right. We want to begin at once to study this thing and come to see the importance of doing it as it should be done to make the venture a success. Think this over. MERELY A PERSONAL RACE. The people of the United States seem to have been misled as to the issues the people of Alabama were to determine in the senatorial primary. The eyes of the prohibitionists of the world were fixed ou Hobson, as the hope of the white ribbon if not of the white race. Hobson-, went about from one end of the state to the other, on a motorcycle, telling the people what an awful man Oscar Un derwood was, how he was one of the tools of Ryan and predatory Interests and also a tool of the whiskey ring. But Underwood had been in congress for many years nnd the people were fairly familiar with his record. He had won the reputation on both sides of the chamber of being an honest, able, courageous member. This, rec ord had made him the leader of the democrats, when the political wheel of fortune gave them control of the house. The Alabamans by about 30,000 majority put their seal of ap proval on Underwood's career and decided to Bend him to the senate, which now has a smaller percentage of able men than it has had in many years. At noon the day after the primary, Hobson sent the following message to Underwood: "Accept my congratula tions upon your nomination. As the democratic nominee you can count on my loyal support In the general elec tion." What does this message mean? The message merely confirms the impression millions of Americans had formed of Hobson. He merely want ed to be senator from Alabama and concluded that the best method to further that ambition was to espouse the cause of national prohibtiou and assail his opponent as the tool of the whiskey ring. His message of con gratulations, if it means anything at all, means that his charges against Underwood were not sincerely made. It means that in order to further his ambitions ho raised a false issue against an honorablo opponent and that he hoodwinked the prohibition forces, including the W. C. T. U., into contributing to his campaign fund and lending him other support. His message means that it was merely a political footrace and as a "good sport" he must pretend that there are no "sore spots." Underwood should not do bis unfair opponent the cour tesy of replying to his message of congratulations. Notlilug So (jchm! for a Cough or Cold. When you have a cold you want the best medicine obtainable so as to get rid of it with the least possible delay. There are many who consider Chamberlain's Cough Remedy unsur passed. Mrs. J. Boroff, Ellda, Ohio, says: "Ever since my daughter Ruth was cured of a severe cold and cough by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy two years ago, I have felt kindly disposed toward the manufacturers of that preparation. I know of nothing so quick to relieve a cough or cure a cold." For sa'e by all dealers. Phone news Items to the Tidings. N.&M. Home Laundry Prict. New Machinery. Are YoulTakmg the Risk? Can you afford fo lose Your Business House or Home? A good fire policy protects credit and nay be the financial sonl of yonr business. A few dollars invested loday may save yon a thousand tonight. Write, phone or call on Billings Agency Real Esfate and Insurance Phone 211 41 E. Mala People's Fonim The Stranger in Ashland. I want to write a few lines about Ashland. We are not entire strang ers, having lived here .before, and longing' to get back after we had left. I had been told this time that the Ashland people do not welcome strangers, and I found this to be true. Walking up one of your beautiful streets one morning, I noticed a wom an fixing her yard. She knew my name and where I resided, and one of her remarks was tnis: "You need not think Ashland peo ple are running around after strang ers." My heart was sick after hearing her pour into my ears several un kind speeches, and I went home a more saddened woman. Four years a.o, while staying in Medford, in the same house where a couple had a very sick child, 1 had a chance to do something for the strangers. They looked to mo to save their loved one if possible, and I nursed him night and day for three weeks and he lived. The people then said, "Are you related to those peo ple?" I said, "No; I am a Christian and doing what I can for strangers who have no one ,to look to." The same family came to Ashland, where we had come before them. They had some goods to ship by freight to Cali fornia and the worthless husband had gone ahead of the wife and child. I told the freight agent I would stand good for the boxes, and the Ashland people thought I had run too great a risk, but I was willing to do it. Word came back from Willows that the goods bad been paid for and removed from the depot. One lady remarked, "Let's get her in the Sunshine Club." Ashland people, open your hearts to the strangers in your midst. Do I not pass them as though they were afflicted with leprosy. "Jesus bids us shine, First of all for Him; Well He knows and sees it When our light Is dim." "He look3 down from Heaveu To see us shine, You in your small corner And I in mine." A STRANGER. The Ant and the Aphis. Editor Tidings: As there seems to be a good deal of scepticism among fruit growers with regard to the part played by certain species of ants in the economy of aphis life, the ants collecting the aphis eggs from the trees in the fall, storing them in their nests and distributing the hatch ing young ones over the erees In the spring. I would like to add to my article in the Tidings last year, draw ing attention to this fact, by saying that I have conclusive evidence from experiments and observations that in this relationship we have the key to a simple means of suppression of the black aphis of the cherry and peach and the apple aphis. Io do not in clude the woolly aphis or the green aphis as I have had no experience with either of these, but it is very probable the green aphis might be Included. The ants appear to do the work of clearing the trees of the eggs so thoroughly as not to leave a single egg on the trees. If this is really so, as it almost certainly is where the ans are sufficiently numerous, it fol lows that by allowing free access to the tree in the fall and preventing the ants going up .in the spring, we shall have done with most of our aphis troubles. It is necessary, how ever, to keep an eye on the weeds, for I find there are certain weeds on which the aphis thrives, and if this be permitted the trees will become liable to secondary infection by the winged aphis. Our dry climate Is 111 suited to the needs of the aphides, which thrive best In a moist atmosphere, and were it not for the fostering care given them by the ants I do not think they would figure as pests at all in this valley. W. TAVERNER. ASHLAND DRUGGIST DESERVES PRAISE T. K. Rolton, druggist, deserves praise from Ashland people for Intro ducing here the simple buckthorn bark and glycerine mixture, known as Adler-l-ka. This simple Gorman remedy first became famous by cur ing appendicitis, and It has now been discovered that A SINGLE DOSE re moves sour stomach, gas on the stom ach and constipation INSTANTLY 1 Egg eaters today are warned to find out whether their Easter focd came from China. There Is no use in making Easter a Chinese holiday. rsminiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiuunga The Home Circle Thoughts from the Editorial Pen There is absolutely no redeeming feature in gossip. Even true, we do not desire to know disagreeable things about any of our neighbors. Nothing is more demoralizing to a man than to lose faith iu his fellows. The man of faith and honor is not apt to be suspicious of others, and does not willingly believe evil. The lover of scandal and immortality and the believer in it, alike deficient in honor and morality, are the bane of well organized society. If all gossips could be quietly killed some morning the next generation of men and wom en would be happier. A case of hy drophobia now and then starts the cry of "muzzle the dogs!" Death on the highways! There is death and mystery in the highways and byways and the homes from the poisoned tongues of the gossips. Let the voices go up, "muzzle the gossips." Teach the children that gossiping is disohnorable and that faith in the honor and virtue of mankind will build up society and add to the sum 'of human happiness." Every true parent is desirous to contribute what will add to his child's happiness, and in a large majority of cases imagines it must be houses and lands, herds and flocks, or a solid bank account. But how often this proves a transitory happiness, serv ing the possessor only a day, and then leaving him stranded on the beach, helpless and hopeless. How much better to bequeath him a well developed mind, thoroughly instruct ed in good business principles, lan guage and science, which will enable him to successfully shift for himself, and a possession that will be his for ever. Our schools offer this valued legacy to your boy or girl and you had better arrange at once to send them the coming year, though you may not leave them a single square inch of territory or a single penny In their pocket. The knowledge that they may acquire here will serve tbom ! a far better purpose than either. If a man were to give another an orange, he would just simply say, "I give you this orange;" but when the transaction is entrusted to the hands of a lawyer to put in writing, he adopts this form: "I hereby give and convey to you, all and singular, my estate and interest, right, title, claim and advantages of and in said orange, together with all of its rind, skin, juice, pulp and pips, and all right and advantages therein, with full power to bite, cut, suck, and otherwise eat the same, or give the same away, as fully as I, the said A. B., am now entitled to bite, cut, suck or otherwise eat the same or ange, or give the same away with or without the rind, skin, juice, pulp, or pips, anything hereinbefore or hereinafter, or in any other deed or deeds, instrument or instruments of what nature or kind soever to the contrary in any wise, notwithstand ing." Back of the happiness of the sea son at Easter lies the hope of the soul, the augmenting certainty wih which man answers this question. It is one of the oldest of all qu9s:toiis. THE STAPLES ; i Watch this space for an important announcement next week 80-acro ranch producing from two to three thou sand dollars per year, beautiful location. 111,000. 800 acres under plow near Condon, Oregon, $40 per acre, on terms, or will take some clear prop erty In exchange. A 30-ncre alfalfa ranch, fine homo. $14,000. Hotel Ashland Bldg. MnimtiniiniiiiiimiiiiiiiHnminimiiiHM Capital and Surplus, $120,090.00 First National Bank Oldest National Bank in Jackson County Depository of the United States, State of Oregon, Coun ty of Jackson and City of Ashland. In the morning glow of time, hv the fields of Egypt and the plains of Chaldea, men sought to solve the mystery. The Indian talked of hunt ing grounds, and the man of business in Chicago and Loudon drops his pa pers on his desk and finds himself wondering whether he will have any part or knowledge in the life that will go on when he is gone. One pile of garbage left undis turbed a few hours in the summe. time will be a roosting place for flies that can carry disease germs into scores of homes. A few disease germs propertly placed by a dirty fly can cause illness which nets the doc tor, the hospital and possibly the un dertaker a big sum. And a few cents expended in the first place would Is a fit lLJ Baking and Cooking m this Climate Climatic conditions "are very importantlrTcooking and baking; what applies to the high altitude of the East is not adaptable to the sea level of this section. That is why successful Eastern formulae are often failures here. The Fairies Cook. Book, just issued by the Fisher Flouring. Mills Company, manufacturers of Fisher's Blend Flour the perfect AH-Purpose Flout, made of choicest EaAern hard wheat and choice A Weflern soft wheat, wa prepared with this fa3 in mind. Mrs. Isabella. Swzy, recognised Authority on the art of cookery, prepared and tested e'bery one of its 1S6 recipes. For successful bak. ing in this climate the Fairies Cook Book has no equal. We will mail you the book if you fill out and send us coupon below, together with Ten Cents (cash or tamps.) FISHER FLOURING MILLS CO. 817 White Building. SEATTLE. WASH. S Herewith filled out Coupon and Ten Cents lor which mail me Fairie Cook Book. Nam. 30 Cty. REALTY AND ' I Large and Small Tracts lo have prevented the infection. Insan itation is expensive, all right; bur. sometimes a lot of people fail to real ize it even when the argument is so conclusive. If you can think of anything that can bo done to beautify or build up your town, go do it. Keep your cap ital at home; patronize home indus tries; help your merchants so they can sell cheaper; always get your work done at home if possible; sub scribe to and pay for your home pa pers; don't steal or borrow the read ing of them. If you follow these di rections and your town does not im prove it is not your fault. Try it. The Tidings is for sate at W. M. Poley's Drug Store, 17 East Main St. sQol(nook compendium of the fines! recipes for -SlreeL. State- AUTO AGENCY ft 60;lVnCVin,e '"Wovements, in Missouri, to $30,000 d Dd t0Wn prPerty t0 va,u 75-acrc improved Irrigated aitaira ranch well situ ated In Idaho. Value $10,000. Clear W l same vauLT' mercanti,e 8tck Suit Ashland. Oregon