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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1914)
Thursday, Attgt IS, 1914 ASHLAND TIDINGS TMttt TWO Ashland Tidings SEMI-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 187. Issaed Mondays and Thnrsdays Bert R. Greer, Editor and Owner Cfaaa. P. Greer, Mgr. and City Editor SUBSCRIPTION' BATES. 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. Equipments second to none in the Interior. No subscriptions for less than tbret months. All subscriptions dropped at expiration unless renewal is received. In ordering changes of the paper always give the old street address or postoffice as well as the new. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postoffice as second-class mail mat tar u Ashland, Ore., Thursday, Aug. 13, '14 SAFETY IX THE STREETS. HOW ABOUT SPO PEE'S LOST LIFE? Spo Pee, the Indian, was impris oned for 34 years. He was pardoned as an act of grace, by the president of the United States. But what shall we do about this man's lost life? For as a matter of fact we put Spo Pee into prison and then forgot him. He was really im prisoned because he was poor and friendless. Had a man of standing and influence killed a man belonging to a poor and outcast race or class under the same circumstances he would not have been convicted, and if convicted he would have been par doned long ago as Charles W. Morse was pardoned. What right have we to put people in prison and forget them? A South Dakota town marshal a few years ago put a drunken tramp into a town caboose, locke dthe door and forgot all about him. There came a blizzard, the poor fellow was frozen I believe be lost his feet and hands, and was so weakened that he died. Even though the man was an out cast, the people were shocked at the cruel neglect with its tragic conse quences. When we forget a man for ever, when we allow him to spend all the remainder of his life in the spir itual cold and darkness of the living death of a prison, there is no public outcry, because nobody knows. How many Spo Pees are there in our prisons? Ought there not to be some agency for seeking tbem out and doing them Justice? Spo Pee may have been guilty, but men are frequently liberated from our prisons because it has been discov ered they are Innocent of the crimes for which they have been convicted. They are then "pardoned." Pardoned for what? Rather ought the govern ment which has wronged them seek pardon of the wronged. But we do nothing for such victims of our in stitutions save to liberate them into a world for the battles of which they are unfitted. We turn out these poor frozen souls, robbed of hands and feet, withour kind permission to work. Satan must bow his head in humil ity when he notes how superior in cruelty to his deviltry are the naked stupidities of man. In really civilized nations such men are remunerated, so far as remunera tion can be given, for the wrongs done them; but In our unfair land we The Home Circle Thoughts from the Editorial Pen In spite of all that is said about careful driving of automobiles, every few days one reads of children, and sometimes older people, who are run over in the streets. In large cities heavy truck wagons are also a cause of much fatal injury. Various agencies are at work to compel drivers to maintain due vigi lance. But laws and regulations are difficult to enforce. There are all kinds of human tyes at the steering wheel. Officers of the law do not always want to see too much. Tht street is not the safe place it used to be. Before motors became numerous the public highway was a kind of a common playground. Driv ers of horses waited tolerantly while the kldlets reluctantly suspended their baseball game. The hoofs of an approaching horse gave warning long before a carriage was near. Now the motor slips up from behind with swift and deadly speed. While you are looking to the right the machine has dodged out from some side street on the left. Every child ought to be carefully warned of the dangers of the street. On streets where there is any consid erable traffic he should never cross without looking both ways'. Many accidents could be saved If people were not in such a hurry. Some persons seem to dislike to show I "pardon" an innocent man for the , reasonable caution. It takes but a wrongs we have done him, and make To Boom Your Town. Talk about it. Write about it. Elect good men to office. Be friendly to everybody. Keep your sidewalks in good repair. If a poor man starts a project, help him. If a rich man starts a project, en courage him. Sell all you can and buy all you can at home. Don't talk the town down to strangers. If you are rich, invest in some thing; employ somebody. If a project to improve the town conies up, don't hoot investigate. Don't let your personal antipathies get away with your business Judg ment. Follow the men who have the vim and energy to go ahead and "saw wood." Be courteous to strangers who come among you so they will go away with good impressions. If you don't like your town well enough to speak well of it, get out of it and make room for better men. Always cheer on the man who goes or improvements. Your portion of the cost will be nothing but that which is right. Do not kick at any proposed im provements because they are not at your door, or for fear that your tax will be raised fifty cents. Don't be afraid to stick your hand down in your pocket for money to help a public enterprise. You owe something to the community for being so kind as to patronize you. Don't! Don't!! Don't!!! For heaven's sake don't think your ideas are the only correct ones as to what Improvements are needed and how they should be obtained. We heard an old man say once that his name was written down on every paper that came around with the word "temper ance" on It. Let your name be writ ten donw to every paper that has "Improvement" on it. few seconds for a motor to pass, while a broken leg would mean a month on your back. The manenr in which some motor ists expect every one to make way for them is Irritating. Still human nature is at it is. One must adapt oneself to modern conditions. It the pedestrian gets too wrathy over the arrogance of his automobil Ing friends he may very reasonably reflect that It Is much easier for him to stop than it is to bring a heavy machine to a standstill. That, how ever, does not excuse the motorists, who should never run at a speed which he cannot check in time to pre vent injury. THE VALUE OF SOLITUDE. him no amends. We should reinstate the case in court and allow the tribunal which condemned him to record the fact of its shame, in lieu of him. We should then pay him for his lost time, and if he has been unfitted for labor by our Injustice, we should pension him. In short, we should try to do him Justice. If we try, we may get some good out of the case of poor old Spo Pee, PRESIDENT HADLKY'S "SOCIAL OSTRACISM." "The average American does not," says George Brandea, the Danish critic, "seem to have the slightest idea of how necessary solitude is to the formation of an opinion." Haven't you, as you've talked with farmers, been Impressed with the "sotness" of their opinions? There are stubborn city men, of course; but the mixincHs of life in a city tends to a certain versatility in thinking you might almost say tends to substitute Impressions and tniotions for thinking. The farmer, on the other hand, working for the most part alone and quietly, hag ample time to assemble and digest his thoughts and to ar range them into a definite philoso phy. Hence what sometimes seems like stubbornness In him. Is, Indeed, mere ly the confidence with which he holds to an opinion upon whleh he has done a careful and, so far as he was able, a thorough job of thinking. The great works of literature have mostly been written in the country. For that matter, most of the world's big men have been country born. In the arms of nature and amidst her silences they have wreBtled with life's problems and wrought out guiding ideals and visions. Much as we regret to have to ad roit It, we guess Brandea Is right Since July 1 money orders may be cashed at any office regardless of what office drawn on, but must be presented within thlr'y days. A con templated change is In a new tele phone postal card, which has your telephone number on and the post master calls you up and tells you of the contents and it is then delivered in the regular way. It is an entering wedge for the postal telegraph. The Claflin failure opened the eyes of a lot of country banks that had been In the habit of buying "com merclal paper" Instead of lending the money locally, on the theory that they wanted liquid assets. The thir ty-five million of notes of Claflin were altogether too liquid. President Hadley of Yale went to Denver In the winter of 1900 and made a speech on trusts in which he put forward the remedy of social os tracism. "Where it is shown that a man is engaged in an unworthy en terprise the people should have the courage to refuse him social recogni tion. I believe the time will come when they will do so." The time came for Dr. Iladley him self to apply his sovereign remedy when he entered the New Haven di rectory and a little later learned offi cially that the railroad had been plundered of many millions of dol lars, to the cost of the university among other stockholders, In one of the most obvious and aggravated vio lations of the anti-trust law ever recorded. It was a rare chance. Most of the responsible persons In that unworthy enterprise were still sitting In the same board. The physician with his new remedy and a bad case of the disease to be cured were brought to gether at last. We had seemed to see him getting busy. He strikes the names of these respectable directors from his list of acquaintances. He refuses his hand as William Rockefel ler comes in. He turns his back' when Charles F. Brooker enters. He os tentatlously leaves the room and slams the door as the other offending trust-builders troop In, and tbey all shrivel up and proceed to works meet for repentance. Does he and do they? Alas; like many another discoverer of great cures. Dr. Hadley himself fell a vie tlm to the disease and we see him in the front rank of the movement to break up a peaceful dissolution of this trust and resist a government prosecution. Social ostracism may exist in New Haven, but the great New Haven trust evidently has no part In its deadly work. Why is It, it is often asked, that people in small towns can find no beter business than prying into other people's business and then exaggerat ing the truth in regard to the same? People who pretend to be Christians, who attend church regularly, who In the sight of their neighbors are gen erous and charitable, yet who, with out the slightest provocation, pick up some little mistake, or more, often, at nothing, will so scandalize one as to ruin his or her reputation for life. No, the deadest man on earth is not numbered In Father Time's har vest. You cannot find his tombstone in the cemetery, neither does a mossy mound hark his lowly bed. His last resting place was on a cracker box in the grovery, and there he will re main dead to everything good, dead to all activity, dead to friendship and dead to his home ties until Gabirel shall awaken him to a more active life in a future world. " Royalty Hakes ' Strange Bedfellows Unless he has been removed quiet ly from his position in the last few days, a German prince will rule the fleets of England sent against the German navy. And an English prince, who went to school at Eton, on whose play fields Wellington said English bat tles were won, will lead a German army against his English kin. And in the palace of Peterhof, a German princess wearing a Russian crown may live to hear the guns of an army led by her own brother thundering under her windows. During the last century the nations of Europe have exchanged many princes and princesses In matrimony to cement offensive and defensive al liances. Now the whole fabric of se curity built on the sacrifice of royal hearts has tumbled down. In Lon don, Berlin, Vienna and St. Peters burg are scores of royal applicants dividing between the land of their birth and the land of their adoption their prayers to the god of battles. In the great and stunning shock of the war all little shocks are merged and lost. This revelation of the flim- siness of matrimonial bonds between the reigning houses of great nations Is only a little shock. But in England the situation provoked is the most curious. Prince Louis of Battenberg is a full admiral of the British navy and first sea lord of the admiralty, one of the little group of men in whose hands repose the conduct and destiny of England's fleets in war. And Prince Louis is a German born and German bred. His wife is German also, sister of the Grand Duke of Hesse, who holds a command as gen eral in the Germany army and would lead German troops against his sis ter's England. And still more curiously entan gling, Prince Louis of Battenberg, England's first sea lord, Is a brother-in-law of Prince Henry of Prussia, the ranking officer of the German navy, and the man who naturally would lead it into battle against the English. The Duchess of Connaught and the Duchess of Albany, daughter-in-law of the late Queen Victoria and sisters of King Edward, are German prln cesses, German born and German bred. And Prince Christian of Schleswig Holstein, son-in-law of Queen Victoria, and now a natural ized Englishman and an English gen eral, who may lead an army corps into Belgium, was a German until he married an English princess. In Germany the widowed Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, who makes her headquarters at Coburg, is Russian through and through. She Is the only daughter of Czar Alexan der II, while the similarly widowed Grand Duchess Anastasla of Mecklen burg-Schwerln, mother of the Ger man crown prince, Is a daughter of the late Grand Duke Michael Michael aivitch of Russia. The reigning duke of Saxe-Coburg Gotha, sovereign of one of the Ger man Independent states forming a part of the German empire, is a gen eral of the German army. Yet he passed the first sixteen years of his life as a prince of the reigning house of England, at the court of his grand mother, Queen Victoria, and was a mm M I The Oldest National Bank in Jackson County 1 ! Member Federal Reserve System FIRST NATIONAL BANK Capital and Surplus $120,000.00 DEPOSITORY OF City of Ashland County of Jackson State of Oregon United States of America -- j. .i-t..t- J. a a .1. j. J, J, A J. J. A A A A A A A A A M "rTr TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTnlTTTTTTl' schoolboy at Eton when summoned . In Russia. That they will meet with to a German throne. I popular disfavor (some of them al- Emperor William himself and his ready are not any too popular) is not brother, Prince Henry, are the sons of an English mother, the eldest sis- improbable. The German treatment of the late ter of Edward VII, and are both in . Empress Frederick during the Fran line of succession to the English Co-German war Indicates what possi- crown. Yet today the kaiser Is lead- ililvlmnv hannon At thft tlmA tho Hom ing his German armies and his broth- , preg8 Frederick, a daughter of the er Henry the German fleets against )ate Q,leen Victoria, was crown prln their mother's closest kin and kind. I rpR, nf fiormnnv Entrland was a uph. In Russia the situation in which tral power during that conflict, but royalty finds itself is no less curious. waa BUHected by the Germans of bud- The Empress Alexandra of Russia and j piying arms to the French and in ". " wmuweu uimiu Lui;ii-,Bynil,atnjZlng with them. Bismarck ess Sergius, are sisters of the sover-i ordprfi(, that no military or state se- eign Grand Duke of Hesse, who holds !cret should bo communicated to the a command as general in the Gerraan,,rown nrince. the heir of hla klne an army and who, as such, has taken up commander of one of the principal arms against his brother-in-law, the armies in the field, for fear that he Grand Duchess Victoria, wife of the! hia con8ort at Berlin, who would cer- Grand Duke Cyril, who is second in tainlVi BO Bismarck alleges, Impart line oi succession to tho throne ofjthe information to her mother and Peter the Great, is a daughter of the I her eIdest brother In England, late sovereign of the German duchies ! throueh whom It would reach the fl 1 m t . t 1 ui caxe-ouurg ana uoma, wnue French. San Francisco Examiner. Grand Duke Cyril's mother, the wid owed Grand Duchess Vladimir, is by birth a princess of the German reign ing family of Mecklenburg-Schwerln and was so thoroughly identified with the land of her birth that the late Emperor Alexander HI used to Insist that she was the principal agent of Bismarck In Russia. It Is not difficult to see how pain ful will be the suspense of these princes and princesses during the war, particularly the German ladies The Commercial Club is desirous of obtaining good specimens of grains and grasses for exhibit purposes. Will those who have such kindly leave at the Commercial Club rooms? tf There Is never any lack of fuel la Mexico. If people can't find anythins else to burn, they can always get out and tear up some ties from the rail roads built by Americans. Good Work Done Promptly N.&M. Home Laundry AT THE Hough Dry at Reasonable Prices. New Machinery. J. N. NISBET, Mgr. Office and Laundry 31 Water St. TELEPHONE 165 Now Is Your Time Every wage-earner should strive to own a home. Buying a home is not speculation, it's thrift. It's something that you need, something In which every man should take a pride. You can get good values now and easy terms. Act wisely and buy when the owner wants to esll. Here are a few of them: Two good places of about 1 acre each, with good improvements and good location; either one for $2,000. House and 1 acre, within 5 minutes' walk of poBtoffice. $1,250. First-class vacant lots from $300 up. Five-room house with good lot. 4 blocks from East School, above Boulevard. 1,300. Seven-room house, 2 blocks from West School, large lot. $1,600. Five-room modern bungalow, closer in, nicely situated. $2,000. Billing REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. Phone newt Hems to the Tidings We happened into a home the other night, and over the parlor door saw the legend worked In letters of red, 'What Is Home Without a Mother?" Across the room was another brief "God Bless Our Home." Now what's the matter with "God Bless Our Dad"? He gets up early, lights the fire, boils an egg and wipes the dew off the lawn with his boots white many a mother is sleeping. He makes the weekly hand-out to the butcher, the milkman and the baker, and his little pile Is badly diminished before he has been home an hour. Phone Job orders to the Tidings. THE STAPLES REALTY AND AUTO AGENCY Iteap Laii and G laii Young men, and often young wom en, as well as older persons, perform acts which become legitimate items for publication and then rush to the newspaper office and beg the editor not to notice their escapades. The next day they condemn the same pa per for not having published another party doing the same thing they were guilty of, forgetting apparently their late visit to the printing office. "Is your father rich?" someone asked a five-year-old girl and tho lit tle one replied confidentially: "Why, of course! He's got me." And she was right, too, for Ihe father- of a sweet, loving, helpful little daughter Is richer than some millionaires whose money cannot buy them the love of a single heart. 200 a. stock ranch, water and alfalfa 110 a. Large wheat ranch $ 30 a. 800 a. partly improved 25 a. 120 a. Improved, close to town 100 a. Lots ol other properties at fair prices and easy terms 17 a. high grade alfalfa home . $9,000 16 a. 6-yr-old gilt-edge orchard ' 6,400 80 a. alfalfa home ranch .12,500 20 a. bottom land on Bear creek 200 a. Automobile Insurance On all makes of cars against loss by fire from any cause in the old Boston Insurance Co., the first company to write insurance on automobiles. Stanley Steamer Agency The car that planes. The car that excels in all points. Get a demonstration and tell us your opinion. Hotel for Rent Furnished House tor Rent Ashland. Oregon u Hotel Ashland Bldg.