ft linn ii inn mi iiiiiii 11 inimini i m I ' mmm Thnrsday, January 13, lQlg ASHLAND TTTHXGS PAOK TWO MIIHII f Ashland Tidings The Oldest National Bank in Jackson County Member Federal Reserve System Hy THE ASH LAM) PRINTING 00. (Incorporated.) SEMMVKEKLY. ESTABLISHED 1876. Bert It. Groer, Editor nml Manager Iran Mowat, - . News RoKrtcr pi im'.'- niJ.r. ilnf Issued Mondays and Thursdays FIRST NATIONAL BANK Capital and Surplus $120,000.00 Oiliclal City and County Paper SUBSCRIPTION RATES. S One Year 2.00 Blx Months 100 DEPOSITORY OF Throe Months BO I. ; ' 4 ' I 5 City of Ashland County of Jackson State of Oregon I PnyaMo in Advance. OX ii L V. J United States of America TELEPHONE 39 - f;M Iff :i -su Advertising rates on application nrst-class Job printing facilities. Equipments second to none In the Interior. No subscriptions for less than three months. All subscriptions dropped at expiration unle3s rpnewal is received In ordering changes of the piper always give the old street address or postoffico as well as the new. Entered at the Ashland, Oregon. Postofflce as second-class mall mat ter. JUMnml, Ore., Thursday, Jan. 1.3, 'lfl LAND GRANT TAXES MIST BE PAN) In a decision rendered recently, Circuit Judge J. V. Hamilton, In the case of Douglas county vs. the South ern Oregon company, involving taxes due the county from that company, held that the tax is "a Hen against the land a definite charge not against the individual owner, but against the land itself." The Southern Oregon company owns the Coos Bay wagon road grant made by the United States in 1869 Practically the same conditions gov ern as In the Oregon & California land grant, owned by the Southern Pacific. When the litigation was begun to cancel the land grants for failure to comply with, original conditions, the Southern Oregon comoany stopped paying taxes upon' the grant, as the Southern Pacific did later. The suit was brought to determine the valid ity of the tax liens Issued against the property. The company maintained that the federal 'Court decision entitled it to an Interest of $2. SO an acre in the land, and that as much of the land was assessed at a greater sum, the assessment was void. The court hold that the assessor was bound to asses the property at Its real value against the holders of the legal title, and that if the land had been assessed at too high a valuation the remedy lay in an appeal to the board of equalte atlon. Over-valuation s a mere lr regularity which does not render the assessment void. The decision will undoubtedly be carried to higher courts, but there is little doubt, in view of previous de cisions, but that it will be confirmed, and that both the Southern Oregon company and the Southern Pacific company will have to pay the delin quent taxes or lose all equity In the land. Some 1170.000 is due Jackson county from the 440,000 acres In the Oregon and California land grant, and this and subsequent delinquen cies will eventually have to be paid to secure title to the land, for the land itself Is liable, not the person happening to own It. r k A' ? 1 r J J i V, '' p , .(. ., I U i3 Mai-y Pickford in "Esmcraldu" at Vbiing Thentre Tuesday nif;lit, January 18, 1010. EXCISES THE MAKESHIFTS THOSE WHO FAIL IN LIFE. OF GOOD WORDS FOR OUR AUTO CAMP Following is an excerpt from a letter received by Beaver Realty company, under date of January 1, 1916, from Mrs. Dora D. Humbert, of Minnesota: "Please tell the gentleman who planned and executed the sdheme of the park, that Ashland gave us the most converlent and comfort able camping place that we found on the entire trip of more than 9, 000 miles, and while our bodies rested, our souls feasted on the na tural beauty of the Bpot, and the ar tistic touches added by some beauty loving mind. "We most heartily thank whoever pave the time and thought for our comfort and assure him that the effort was appreciated, not only by bb, but by every overlander who Islted the park, for we heard of Ashland and auto camp grounds all along the way. "We arrived home in October af ter a trip of over five months; and today the snow is flying in white beets past the window as I write, but it doea not trouble me for the ye of my inner self are looking Into the clear waters of Ashland creek and I see the sunlight flitting through the trees above it- I love your Oregon, most sincerely!" j Excuses fill no pay envelopes. The salesman who brings in ex cuses instead of orders keeps no wheels turning. The engine driver who has ex cuses to offer for bringing in his train late day after day and week after week is not the man the rail road wants. 'The renting agent who can attract no tenants, but can furnish fine ex cuses for his failure, Is not the per son the landlord cares to keep in bis employment. The world wants results, not ex cuses. No man can hit the bullseye every time. No man can make a sale to every prospective customer. No man can achieve the superhu man. Indeed, it has been sagely said that the man who never made a mistake never made anything else. But the best workers in any field are those who offer the fewest ex cuses. You will notice that the fellow who is not making good nearly alway blames someone else. Often he is too conceited and self satisfied to look for the cause in him self, in his own shortcomings, in his own lack of energy and ability. If he can find nobody or nothing else to blame he will complacently attribute his failures to "bad luck.' Search diligently enough and you can usually find a reason for "bad luck." "Bad luck," most times, is nothing but a convenient excuse for lack of energy, lack of persistency, lack of diligent thinking and planning and striving and st.Ick-to-it-iveness. 'Bad luck" and laziness, indiffer ence, shiiuessness ana snaiiownese are near relatives, it not always brothers. "Good luck," you must have no ticed, however, commonly goes hand in hand with hard work, with inde fatigable plodding, with unremitting application, with clear-headed think' lng with, in short, deservedness. If those who use their brains in coining glib excuses would use them in overcoming the need for excuses, they would fare better in the end. Abject failure and an ideal excuse are less desirable than partial success and the poorest of excuses. If you are a ready weaver of ex cuses which implicate others, stop tight now and do a little se'.f-an- alysls. Turn your searchlight Inward. Do some keen, unsparing Intro spection. Apply an x-ray to yourself. Try to find weak spots In your own makeup Instead of having eyes to see them only in others. Don't fill yourself with delusions that you are really a much smarter follow than the world imagines. Don't drug yourself with self-pity and self-laudation. B. C. Forbes in the S. P. Bulletin. WHY YOU ARE NERVOUS The nervoui system is the alarm system of the human body. In perfect health we hardly realize that we have a network of nerves, but when health is ebbing, when strength is declin ing, the same nervous system gives the alarm in headaches, tiredness, dreamful sleep, irritability and unless corrected, leads straight to breakdown. To correct nervousness, Scott's Emul sion is exactly what you should take; its rich nutriment gets into the blood and rich blood feeds the tiny nerve-cells while the whole system respond to it refresh- Coffee You may know much or little about coffee; but you know what you like. You like a clear cup of coffee with a rich, smooth flavor; and no suspicion of bitterish chaff. To give you this, Schil ling's Best is evenly ground, the objectionable chaff is taken-out and the coffee is packed into air tight'tins. It is ready for use when you buy it. Moneyback, of course. ' ' Schilling's Best &fe People's Forum POCKETBOOK ARGUMENT. first To produce s work of art you must I fa, n j, tret from alcohol, st master tbe art of work. '. (aiwree,iiooBiaeid,ir.j. Aside from town loyalty, why should a person trade with his home merchant? Home pride and town lowalty is not 60 strong as pocket- book argument. Many Ashland mer chants tell the writer that their prices, quality considered, are better than people are paying when they send away. If this is true, and you let the trade know it, .they are pock etbook chumps, nothing less, if they persist In sending away for supplies. But and there's the rub the aver age Ashland merchant does not let the people know. It is one thing to advertise and another thing to pro duce advertising with pulling power. Every merchant, to be successful, should spend as much each month for advertising as he does for rent. Then he should give the matter he puts In his advertisement as mulch thought as he gives both to buying right and selling at a profit. Adver tisements are effective salesmen. Just how effective depends upon what Is offered for sale and how it is offered. The Ashland Tidings is today go ing into 90 per cent of the Ashland homes. How could a Tidings adver tisement carry a:i attractive offer that had no drawing power? Be a merchant. Compete like a success ful business man. Couple your mer chandising Intelligently to -your ad vertising and have no fear that your customer will send away for goods they should buy of you. Buyers go where they think they do the best. Why not you convince them that you have the best to offer? If you can not compete you are out of the run ning. If you can compette and the people do not know that you can still you are out of the running. If you do compete and let the people know It, you are bound to win. That the philosophy of advertising. More fortunes have been made through proper advertising than from all the gold mines of the world. The Tidings is a good medium in which to try it. The British government has asked Portland mills for bids on 12,000,000 feet of lumber. TOO MUCH I SIX Editor Tidings: As I toast "my feet by an anthra cite fire while the blizzard rages without, my mind is lifted and my heart is stirred by the message Rev, Calkins gave me this forenoon. Why should I not say that God sent it thru an inspired son? It was no miracle, only a true message from the source of all truth as all truths come and must come, thru natural agencies working thru na tural laws, laws that never have changed or ever can. I will not say that none of the human thru which it came did not stick to it Just enough bran to make it good whole wheat flour. I think there was no chaff. We rarely get it without chaff. I cannot give you Mr. Calkin's grist, but I am inspired by it to try to em phasize a truth to which many are calling attention the unbearable burden of donomlnationallsm that is crushing the life out of Christian churches. Each church, should be a central organization for united uplift work in its locality. Two churches should not exist where one can do the work. That work should not be the spread ing of some special "ism" or "dozy", but the helping of homes and schools in building up Christian character. I think the Jews (good people) admit that Christian character is good character. Therefore they, if they are few, should not burden themselves with a synagogue and a rabbi until they are numerous enough to fill the synagogue and wealthy enough to jpay the rabbi a decent salary. Much less excuse is there for Methodists, Baptists or Presbyterians when they split apart, putting the burden of maintenance upon a few, often struggling to 'get outside aid to maintain separate weak organizations. They cannot help their own poor, much less can htey help outside poor. They cannot hlp let the light into "darkest Af- frica". They cannot unite in start ing a "community house" with a li brary, and the modern appliances for amusing, educating, and benefitting the community. They can do nothing but keep the breath of life going in their separate little weak church organization. This church fault Is so general at least among Protestant denomina tions, that I think I may liken it to a farmer with thousands of acres of fertile wheat land. Ho might plow and sow it all (yes, all and raise a tremendous crop with a few steam plows, modern harrows, and wheat drills, but no, he uses oxen, or horse teams (In many places one horse) and buys special machine to spread "ism" fertilizer. He cultivates comparatively few acres poorly, getting little crop, while much of his land runs to weeks. At beautiful Ashland in the fertile Rogue river valley, Oregon, I was told that sixteen different church or ganizations divide the efforts of a population of 6,500 (about the popu lation of Hilo outside the planta tions). They have no Y. M. C. A., no community house. How could they support them? It is, however, a proof that without a saloon (they have none) a town of that size can give a semblance of life to sixteen church organizations. I doubt if there is much Christian love between the sects, or-much co operation. At Jerusalem Turkish soldiers guard the sacred places to prevent Christian pilgrims from fighting each other; not pilgrims from America, I believe, tho there is here too much denominational ani mosity and too little Christian love. From the age of three till thirty at Grafton, Ohio, I attended a Congre gational church, tho that was not of my "Ism". I was sorry when a Meth odist church was built near it for there was scanty support for one. The, Congregational church is now dead. I hope it will stay dead, for the Methodist minister Is a good, capable man and if all denominations there will help him he will do great good. In the Outlook of December 22, is a report of President Wilson's "strong appeal" at the "Church and Country Life Conference" at Colum bus, Ohio. He said: "You have got to save society In this world, not In tlys next - It is a Job we have got to undertake immediately and work out all the time, and It is the business of the church." A sur vey of Ohio found (I quote) "that one of every nine country churches had been abandoned; only one-thord are Increasing in membership, and two-thirds have either ceased grow ing or are dying; 83 per cent have less that 100 members, 21 per cent have less than 25; only 6 per cent have individual preachers; a large pp' portion of preachers receive about the same pay as day laborers. Less than 40 per cent of the rural popu lation are church members. The evil growing out of a narrow sectarian Ism, "denominational bullies", ab sentee pastors, and farm tenantry were debated " "Organized at tempts will be made to have rural churches form community federa tions in order to attack aggressively the problems of better roads, better farming, agricultural college exten sion courses, temperance, public health, community planning and beautifying, promotion of coopera tion among farmers for buying, sell- ing, and producing, and social and I recreation centers." Ohio churches are seeking to apply the teachlnga of Jesus social service, uplifting helpfulness to mankind. H. E. KELSEY, Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 26, 1915. Cold weather consumes wood. Wood costs money. Money is scarce. You can save by phoning your wood orders to 420-J. 64-tf Not a property In Ashland but that can be sold by Tidings "For Sale" ads in less time and at less cost than through tbe regular agent channels. luterurlmn Autocar Company. Between Ashland, Talent, Phoenix and Medford car leaves Ashland northbound daily except Sunday at 9:00 a. m., 12:50 p. m., 2:30 p. m, 3:30 p. m., 4:45 p. m. and 6:15 p. m. Sundays leaves Ash land at 9:00 a. ni., 1:00 p. m 5:00 p. m. and 10:30 p. m. Leave Medford for Ashland dally ex cept Sunday at 8:00 a. m., 11:60 a. m., 1:15 p. m., 2:30 p. m., 3:45 p. m. and 5:15 p. m. Also on Sat urdays at 11:15 p. m. On Sundays leave Medford at 10:00 a. m., 4:00 p. m. and 9:30 p. m. Our cars are kept warm in cold weather. A Well Known Woman Speaks. In Every Town In Oregon Neighbor Say the Same. 1 Portland, Oregon. "! have used ir. nerce'8 fa vorite Prescription for my nerves and a general break -down and after nsing only three bottles I was completely cured. I also nsed Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for the blood and it proved .V.J WCllClilUI. "I can henitilv P. " J .vw(hiuu vvmji ierce'8 medicines." Mes. J, B. IIaugh, W3 Deacnra Ave. The mighty restorative power of Dr. Piprce'a rAvnrita Pm.,.,:.. . jm . . .voviiituuu ecru, i y causes all womanly troubles to disap- j.ar compels me organs to properly nerform thnir nnlnral r,.nni:n.. rects displacements, overcomes irregu- .a.mco, icmuvea pain ana misery at Mffam 4 1 w-.n n .1 I ' 1 I - ... .who aim urings DBCK neaitD and strength to nervous, irritable and exhausted women. It is a wonderful prescription, pre pared only from nature's roots and herbs, with no alcohol to falsely stim nlate and no narcotics to wreck the nerves. It banishes pain, headache,' backache, low spirits, hot flashes.1 dragging-down sensation, worry and sleeplessness surely and without loss of time. Why should any woman continue to worry, to lead a miserable existence.! when certain help is at hand ? ' What Doctor Pierce's Favorite Pre nP'i011 .hafl done ,or thousands it Will do fnr vnn Tt. - I , r . v." uu" secret remedy for its ingredients are printed on wrapper. Get it this very day from any medicine dealer in either liquid or tablet form,' V An Optimist , A man who owns a Fish Brand Reflex Slicker $3.00 when Old Prob says rain. Waterproof, absolutely Protector Hat, 75 confal Satisfaction Guaranteed J Send for catalog '13t A. J. TOWER CO. .' BOSTON ore Limited Trains OGDEN ROUTE San Francisco - Chicago than any other transcontinental route From points in Western and Southern Oregon'the logical way to go East is via San Francisco or Sacramento and Ogden. The time is fast, the connections good for all eastern cities. Dining cars, observation cors, standard and tourist sleeping cars. Equipment to fit the purse of every traveler. Overland Limited Train de Luxe Pacific Limited. San Francisco Limited Atlantic Express Our local agent will be pleased to answer any questions Southern Pacific Union Pacific John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon y