4 rACK TWO AKITLAXT) TTDIXGB. Monday, March 1, 1915 Ashland Tidings BEMI-WEEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1870. Issned Mondays and Thursdays Official Cily and Cooniy Paper tWsrt It. Greer, - Editor and Owner Lynn Mow at, News Reporter 81IISCIUITION' RATES. One Tear 2.00 Blx Months 1.00 Three Months 60 Payable in Advance. TELEPHONE 39, Advp-tlslng rates on application. Flrst-clbss job printing facilities. Equipments second to none in the Interior. No subscriptions for less than three months. All subscriptions dropped at expiration unless renewal is received. In ordering changes of the paper always give the old street address or postofflce as well as the new. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon, Postofflce as second-class mall mat tor. Ashland, Ore., Monday, March 1, '15 PREMIUM STAMIfi OUTLAWED. A number of new families have been added to Ashland's population during the past two or three weeks. Already the good effects of the springs project are noticeable. Some of them have already purchased prop erty. Many more will tome Jurlng the next few months. Everybody has confidence In the outcome of the en terprise. There should not be found a doubting Thomas In Ashland. The Oregon legislature passed at least one wise measure this session in enacting a bill placing a prohibitive tax on the premium stamp industry. The lower house was divided, but the senate passed it unanimously. Few grafts are greater or more at tractive. Men claiming to know have stated that but thirty per cent of premium stamps are ever presented for redemption. The merchant pays three per cent on his gross sales the consumer ultimately pays the cost and but thirty per cent comes back to the community in premiums. The trick in the game is that each stamp company assumes to take in but one competitor, but In fact eventually there are about as many different stamp companies as there are compet itors In the town, resulting finally In evening up the competitive benefits with a direct loss of three per cent to all merchants. And not infrequent ly all the different colored stamps are exploited by the same men under dif ferent names. The doctrine of trade at home Is a good and safe one both for the merchant and the customer. Persons who run into strangs lands to make their Investments usually get bit, finally returning to their own land wiser and poorer. The stamp evil had reached such proportions that it required legislative action to protect the people from their own folly. There are few vacant houses In Ashland now. Iiefore four months we will need many more. There should be building activity at once. Owners having vacant lots well lo cated should erect neat cottages on them and furnish them neatly. There will be a demand this summer for many more that can be secured. That means good rent for the right kind of cottages. Four, five and six room cottages will be In demand. Mr. Property Owner, that old shack of a house won't rent. The people coming to Ashland this summer are coming for recreation, comfort and health. They want comfortable and respectable quarters. Overhaul it, repaint and modernize it and the springs project will furnish you a profitable tenant, but It will not at tract the cIukb who will pay rent for a barn to live In. Paint and lumber is needed to modernize a lot of Ash land shacks that will otherwise stand vacant when hundreds are crying for houses. Boost and the world boosts wtih you; knock and you go alone. If you cannot find a good word for Ash land during the coming spring and summer keep still. Hundreds of strangers will be in Ashland and the number who stay will depend largely upon the spirit shown by our own people. Strangers have most confi dence In communities that have confi dence In themselves. Ashland real estate Is now the best investment that can be made. As a rule tbe prices are not too high. Some ranch values may be considered excessive, but city property Is not out of the way. Have confidence in the future of Ashland and let everybody know you have con fidence and things will move along so rapidly you will have to hurry to keep abreast. If, every time you feel like knocking you will kill it with a boost, in three months Ashland will be the llvelieKf little city on the map. Do your part. You owe It to yourself and to the community. With dirt flying on the' springs project, brick and mortar piling high on a new hotel and marble slabs be ing placed In one of the most modern water-cure sanatoriums in America, all of which will bo before the sum mer Is past, the music of the hammer and saw will stifle the most persistent pessimistic note. Not only that, these Improvements, will Invite oth ers. The very necessity of the case demands a number of furnished cot tages, for there will be many to oc cupy them at good rent. It all helps to drown knocking. Every community has its certain number of citizens who cannot see at all Into the future. They believe In no new enterprise, Thpy ftr wedded to the past and the now, Ashland has a few of such. Because last year was a had one they know this one will' be worse. Somo of them wllj mlngio in the activity and yet not believe It exists. As a rule they are ne'er-do-wells. Iiefore they get the spirit the big opportunities have been gobbled up by more hopeful and cour ageous persons. They they kick be cause others saw and took advantage of it, while they, did not. Do not be one of those. Get In the bandwagon. She Is going some. Ashland Is especially fortunate in her woman's clubs. No city can boast of more effective organizations or women more alert to the necessities of the community. This year the or ganizations are proving especially ef fective and this summer will see Ash land clothed in more uniformly beau tiful garments than she has before worn. Now the Commercial Club proposes to add women to Its mem bership. That Is fine. The women are full of good ideas and they are possessed of that indomitable spirit that brooks not failure. Everything the women have undertaken in Ash land the past four years has been a decided success. They put fore thought and energy enough behind It to make It so. The coming year is big with possibilities. Energy, co operation ana earnest tnougnt are needed. The women will supply It The year 1915 will be especially active in real estate. The springs de velopment with the building of a fine new tourist hotel and water-cure san- Itflrl'.ini will supply the stimulus need ed for an active market, Before the work has far progressed the benefi cent effect will be felt and those of naturally pessimistic turn will get confidence and there will be no fur ther knocking. In the fall, when strangers are coming, many win "take a flier" In Ashland real estate, for It will be livelier than any other city on. the coast. ma People's Forum Vindicating Cack. We are Inclined to believe that tbe Tales of the Tub" appearing in a late issue of the Tidings should be attrib uted to some author other than Cack Patterson, and herewith we desire to submit to the public eye our reasons for so thinking. The tale itself deals with a highly improbable though not impossible phenomenon, but because of the ele ment or improbability one feels in clined to demand proofs. We have always sincerely believed Ashland to be Inhabited by sane people, and therefore the proof must be very strong Indeed to convince us that a sane person would allow his bathtub to sail along Main street, unescorted by any attendant, for a Sunday's air ing. Now, as we all know, Cack is an in mate of the "bug house," which means that if he had related such a tall story he would have been able to "limp across" with the proofs of Its veracity. The fact that the "sailing tub" could not be found "makes it bad" for the investigating commit tee which attempts to attribute the fable to Cack. Should anyone under take to dispute our theory, the only evidence acceptable from them as conclusive will be the production of the bathtub and the owner, who, as the tale goes, so luckily recovered his property, and should this actually come to pass, we will immediately re taliate by having this same property holder examined with the view of es tablishing in the minds of his fellow citizens the conviction of his mad ness. As a final and most convincing proof that Cack is not the originator of the fable, ve wish to call attention to the fact that he was not "on his way to a downtown smoke shop," for it has not been many days since he solemnly and faithfully pledged him self to desert the standard of those who indulge in the use of the weed, and to abstain from smoking forever more. ANONYMOUS. A JuHt Comparison. Editor Tidings: These sunny days in mid-February remind us of the days in the same month that we have experienced In our native New York state, where the snow lay heavily on the ground and the icy wind howled and piled the snow in great drifts, and penetrated every noolc and cor ner, where heating stoves and fur naces must be stoked to capacity to keep buildings comfortable, where snow shovels are a part of the equip ment of every household and where city ordinances provide that they shall be used to clear streets and sidewalks, otherwise the streets would be almost impassable. Such are the conditions there now, accord ing to letters of recent date received by the writer of this. And then, dur ing the "heated term" in summer, while we In Ashland are resting com fortably under blankets at night, the people there are restless from the midnight heat and, like the "lost spir its, seeking reBt and finding none," and about as weary In the morning as they are at night. We are led to these thoughts by hearing some of the old natives of Ashland complain of the severity of the climate here and who know so little of what a real winter la, or how fortunate they are that tehir lot is cast right here In Ashland. A. B. SCOFIELD. . SUMNER PARKER, violinist and teacher, 59 Sixth street. 72-lmo. MAKE THE BEST COUGH REMEDY AT HOME Cheaper Than You Can Buy When yon have a severe, stubborn cough or cold, you want the best possible medicine you can get, therefore, why not buy one which is guaranteed will be found the most satisfactory remedy ever used by you, and Ret your money refunded by the druggist of this city named below, whom you know to be re sponsible, la ense it should not prove io, Instead of buying ono purelyou the ex aggerated claims of its manufacturer or on the strength of testimonials from others and run the chance of getting something worthless and wasting your money? In buying Schiffmann's Con centrated Expectorant, besides securing nn absolute guarantee of its efficiency Irora these druggists, you also get about eight time as much excellent cough medicine aa you would in buying most may of the old-fashioned, rcudy-mado Jklnds, because 50 cents worth makes a whole pint when mixed at homo with Imply one pint of sugar and one-half pint of water. This remedy positively does not contain chloroform, opium, morphine or any other narcotic and Is unlike any other cough medicine. It Is pleasant to take and children are fond of It. This druggist will refund the money to any person who finds this remedy does not give perfect satisfac tion, or if it la not found the very best ever used for coughs, colds, bron chilis', croup, whooping cough or hoarseness. You will be the solo judge, and under this positive guar antee absolutely no risk is run In buying this remedy. Druggists everywhere are authorized t sell it under the same Guarantee. If your druggist will nt keep it for you, order direct ol R. J. SchifTmann, St. Paul, Minn. Guaranteed here by McNair Bros., Druggists :innmimmnmwwunn The Home Circle Thought from the Editorial Pen I MMIIHMtlHMMMMHI The Oldest National Bank In Jackson County Appreciation. The Youth's Companion makes an earnest plea for an "appreciation league," and the idea is most wor thy. Probably you have complained to the floorwalker or department super- Intendent when a salesgirl has been ' X inattentive or discourteous. Have you ever gone to the floorwalker or department superintendent to say a word for the salesgirl who was ex ceptionally attentive and anxious to please? Very likely you have written to the general manager of the electric road when a conductor rang the bell too soon or did not notice your signal to stop.. Have you ever written to tell him about the conductor who Is al ways courteous and obliging? If you think one act necessary at times, is not tbe other fair and gen erous? Are kindness and courtesy always to be taken for granted In small business relations among strangers, or are you readier to find fault with than to express apprecia tion? A man in an Ohio city has founded what he calls an "appreciation league." Its members agree to "re port" employes who are considerate and courteous, to emphasize the ami able things that people do, to watch more keenly for virtues than for weaknesses and faults. The league Is an Informal organization; you can become a member by beginning at once to practice Its principles. A simple idea? Yes, but if it could spread from ocean to ocean, what a wave of kindliness and cour tesy would sweep over the land! ! Member Federal Reserve System Our Mothers. In the Pictorial Review, Dr. O. S. Marden has an article on "Mothers." He says In part, speaking of the rev erence that ought to be paid, you owe it to your mother To lift all the burdens you can from shoulders that have grown stooped in waiting and working for you. To seek her comfort and pleasure in all things before your own. Never to intimate by word or deed that your world and hers are differ ent or that you feel in ay way su perior to her. To manifest an Interest In what ever interests or amuses her. To make her a partaker, as far as your different ages will permit,' in all your pleasures and recreations. To remember that her life is mo notonous compared with yours, and to take her to some suitable place of amusement, or for a trip to the coun try, or to the city If your home is In the country, as frequently as possible. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Capital and JSurptuu $120,000.00 DEPOSITORY OF City of Ashland County of Jackson State of Oregon United States of America t: To Introdueo nil your young friends to her and enlist her sympa thies In youthful hopes, projects und plans, so that she may carry youth Into old age. To defer to her opinions and treat them with respect, even if they seem antiquated to you In all tho smart up-to-dateness of your college educa tion. To talk to her about your work, your studies, your friends, your amusements, the books you read, the places you visit, for everything that concerns you is of Interest to her. To treat her with the unvarying courtesy and deference you accord to those who are above you in rank or position. To bear patiently with all her pe culiarities or infirmities of temper or disposition, which may be the result of a life of care and toil. Not to shock or pain her by mak ing fun of her religious prejudices If they happen to be at variance with yours, or If they seem narrow to your advanced views. To study her tastes and habits, her likes and dislikes, and cater to them as far as possible in an unobtrusive way. To remember that she is still a girl at heart so far as delicate little at tentions are concerned. To give her flowers during her lifetime and not to wait to heap them on her casket. To make her frequent, simple pres ents, and to be sure that tbe are ap propriate and tasteful. To write to her and visit her. To do your best to keep her youthful In appearance as well as la. spirit, by helping her to take painsr with her dress and the little' acces sories and details of her toilet. If she is no longer able to take her duties, do not let her feel that she Is superannuated or has lost any of her Importance as the central factor In the family, 4 Not to forget to show your appre ciation of all her years of self-sacrifice. To give her credit for a large part of your success. To be generous in keeping her supplied with money, so that she will not 'have to ask for It, or feel like a mendicant seeking your bounty. You have something you do not need. Somebody else needs it and has what you want. Twenty-five cents puts your proposition before two thousand people through the "For Trade" column of the Tidings. Phone Job orders to tho Tidings. Arrow COLLARS Fit, Durability, Style and Comfort every requisite the collar wearer seeks is found in the highest degree of excellence in Arrow Collars Lis more 2j in. CLrjETT, PEABODY tt CO.. Inc. "N 2 fr 25C Huron 2 in. Mkm or Aow Shiiiti TROY, N. Y. Staple and Fancy Dry Goods Sorosis Shoes VAUPEL'S &e QUALITY STORE Butterick Patterns GENTS FURNISHINGS Shoes Itcduce High Cost of Living. Editor Tidings: Many an old fence about town, once standing strong and straight on the picket line, guarding the lawn or garden from depredations of the unrestrained bossy-cow of former days, has long since become a most unsightly object weather-beaten and dilapidated. Equally unsightly are the old barns and other outbuildings many of them unused and unrepaired for years. Yet the fuel bill makes us groan, and lack of employment causes many a sigh, while these old buildings and fences stand offering employment for Idle hands, and a means of reducing the high cost of living if we will but reduce them to fuel for the kitchen range. Let's do it! And a fruit tree will wave beautiful green branches where the old barn marred the view, and where the old fence stood will flour ish a rose hedge. (Or, If you like, make It a hedge of Oregon grape beautiful every day of the year.) If the old fence or shed' must stand, a very little labor In planting vines will soon transform ugliness Into beauty. ' Dy simply cleaning up and keeping premises clean, we may do much in the way of beautifying. N. E. We Give 1 Cash Coupons With Every Cash Purchase Nepo - Corset Special. - One , lot of Nemo corsets, consisting of discontinued numbers and slightly hurt corsets, regular $3.50 to $5.00 values Standard legal blank forms of every kind may be procured at the Tidings office In any quantity. DST Special While They Last The Nemo corset is one of tho best and most reliable corsets on the market today, and the wearing , of one will convince you. VAUPEL'S V)Q Best in Quality X5he Lowest in Price