THE DAILY TIDINGS
ESTABLISHED IN 1876
ASH LA ND
D A IL Y
C. J. READ,
T ID IN G S
H A t - r - X M l,
"TÍMflLt XMB 6C
R O M P H O M -r
lU a n a H T M O R «
A nh IM
ing competition and still bring to himself a fair
profit with which, to pay his overhead expenses*
support his family, and carry .out his other duties
as a good citizen; and to deny him these things is to
render him unfit to give the service that you de
mand.
The merchant is an established institution; he
is no “ middle-man” in the true sense of the word;
for he stands directly at the consuming end, which
is closest to the people; he is your friend.
Diplomatic Difficulties
y Williams
OUT OUR WAY
What is a Merchant
A merchant is a man who operates more than
a store: he maintains an institution.
The merchant is the man who brings for local
selection the products of the world; and without
the local store in some form you would not be able
to conveniently buy the hundred and one things
.that civilization regards as necessities, nor the covet
ed things that become the reliazations of the more
or less well-to-do.
The merchant is the man who carries on credit
those who must have time, and those who want time
as a matter of their own paying convenience; and
in either case the merchant pays you interest on
his own money.
The merchant is the man who not only must
make service and variety of merchandise his in
side rules of success, but who must reach out and
find his customers thru the recognized avenues of
good business practice; he must find you if his busi
ness is to reach above the mere transient trade. ■
The merchant is the man who pays taxes to
maintain local government and law and order; who
contributes to worthy charities and civic interests,
generally without whimper or complaint; you can
always find him approachable; and in the process he
exists and lets live.
The merchant Tfi* the man whom the heme
newspaper boosts without ceasing, and guards with
jealous eye all encroachments against local pros
perity; this without condition of advertising patron
age: for the local newspaper conf onus as a matter of
course to the recognized principles of protection to
home industry as the foundation of sectional and
even national advancement.
>
The merchant is the man who must resolve
questions of quality, service, price and error against
himself: for thru hundreds of years of merchandis
ing the public insists upon the proposition that the
•ASHLAND PRINTING CO.
MANAGING
H e PuT5
u p H ie •
‘n o t f e e .
V A ca MY
e te 'lM .
Others
&V > -
sock absorbers
Say
Many towns that think the
children do not need any
woald
better erect e few a l f e hos
pitals to take care of them
after they are run over b y
automobiles.— Amity Stand
ard.
AND
Contentment In one room beata
dlecontentment In a castle.
This is the cyclone season
in .the middle west. Thank
heaven for the Pacific const.
—Coquille Valley Sentinel.
We are always learning
something new. There Is the
fagt, for example, duly but
tressed by published pictures,
that there Is a Mrs. Musso
lini. She Is plump, and In all
probability
she chuckles
knowingly, when people speak
of 11 Dues as “the dictator.’’
— Eugene Register.
With respect to the internal troubles of other
nations, English speaking peoples are sitting in
reserved seats.* American, Canada, Great Britain,
and a part of Europe are -favored with what they
/suppose and have a right to believe is a super group
mentality, greater aggregate wealth and a higher
Considering the cost of
civilization; but subject, of coarse, to the inher
engagement and
wedding
ent right of every other group of nationals to make
rlnga
nowadays,
you’d
think
the same or similar claims.
men would
stay married
We could no more prove our mental superiority
longer than they do.— Baker
with an international or world verdict than could
Democrat
the Asiatica, because we hardly hold the balance
of population. We oanzonly render our own verdict
We are acquainted with a
of self-satisfaction. And so long as this belief re
few people In Harney coua-
mains an unchallenged conviction, we are likely to
ty who would make good
, remain at peace with the rest of the world. When,
whale hunters. They are al
w ays. throwing the harpoon
however* opposing forces raise the issue of inter
Into somebody— Crane Antr-
national differences or racial distinctions—when ou4
set of people get too “ cocky” — there is always
some other power ready and willing to knock the
proverbial chip off of the conventional shoulder.
Squeeze misunderstanding, hatred, fear, jeal
ousy and financial aims out of international “ dip
lomacy” and there is little left of real substance.
But what Western civilization wants to do, and is
ASHLAND
trying to do, is to adjust conditions *to a point where
10 Years Ago
all iteopfc shall have an equal chance to advance
and work out their problems in the light' of their.
own needs and capabilities. This requires totally
•Medford-Tribune— Aaron Maier
different points of view and entirely different ’
of the Ashland district was in
methods of action. In the meantime the protection
this city today, relating that be
of nationals in foreign lands, while incidental, is came down the valley “with**
none the less imjtortant: it will and must go on; but
his cutter add bells. It may be
said that 'Hie was there with
alwuys in the desire for protection and never in the
the boils”, all right, but tbe
spirit of aggression. Such a policy can never fail:
Cuttlr
to which he referred was
'failure can lie only in the means and methods of
In his peeket-pertly.
pursuing i t
Intelligent women rarely es
cape the tragedy of marrying
fools.
Fashion is more a matter of
what to leave off than what to
put on.
If a book seems dull, It is per
haps because the reader is dull,
too.
It is easy to be poor and hon
est, but to be rich and honest is
a rare distinction.
Yon can go nowhere just as
easily today in a fast automobile
as you used to go with a slow
horse and buggy.
Hex Hock says: “The best
vice I kin give today Is to
all the mileage you kin out
your Intelligence.’*
NHW YORK— A Jury be
lieved a mother’s testimony
in a. divorce action,’ rather
than th a i eF e'w B e aitd the
wife’s throe siaters. Thewtte
found PhlUp Berlin, wealthy
real estate man, In a bed
room with a strange bru-
hette. The mother declared
they had not.
NEW YORK — William
Alexander, 31, selected the
shadows of the Workhouse on
Welfare Island for the scene
of his holdup. He attacked
his victim with b r a s s
knuckles and took |S66, fol
lowing his capture and ar-
raginment police are of the
opinion Alexander will make
a visit to Welfare Island.
PHILADELPHIA — Ed
ward Hargravea, 18, filled an
XI page notebook with writ
ing while he waa dying from
Illuminating gaa. After turn-
lag oe^he gas to kill him so It
Hgrgravfee
wrote to his
mother, his sweetheart and
other relatives In the note
book.
- Medford— New >60,00b Presby
terian Church la dedicated for
service.
.
TURNING THE PAGES BACK
It is charged that we are paying more attention
to our hogs than to our children; but you seldom
hear of a bog getting pills stuffed down him bofore
meal«, his spinal col uni cracked, hie tonsils jerked,
needles stuck in him, his adenoids removed, a Turk
ish bath* and then hold that he’s suffering with an
enlarged dnzebmtrionubigxcidebutnz: yon simply
turn the omnivorous mammal loose In the mud and
he grows fatter day by day In every way.
Crater Lake
In Winter Time
VC MAG/C GARDEN”
»pyrlghtod, 1911. G w m B tratton-Portor,lac.
Copyrighted, l U M ? , l f r t k * McCall Go.
Wednesday, March S t, IpgT
I was over on tb« Watohmap
today— didn’t go clear to the top
because of the wind np there.
The sk> was. overcast ,1a the
northwest and the wind was
growing stronger every minute.
As I watched I saw i t ’pick up
cruets of frosen snow and send
It spinning over the rim. Now a
wind that will atrip the crust
off the anew Isn’t very plqasant.
I didn’t have my coat and I
happened to think that my life
Insurance had lapsed, so I con
tented myself with .the view .ob
tained from a high shoulder of
AA
-T h e
«IMI snUTTOX-FOMBCS
Mf. and Mrs. A. H. Loslor of
Grants Paas, whi have boon
visiting their daughter, Mrs. W.
E. Boyd, for the past week, left
Wednesday for Medford.
O. W. Scott returned yesterday
front a buslams trip beck to his
former home in Muskogee, Okie.
He hae disposed of his North
Main street residence In Ashland
sad expects to move to Portland
lh the near fatere.
ASHLAND
30 Yeats Ago
Miss Ina Hunt returned from
Attorney C. B. Watson went to
Oakland, Ore., today.
Jacksonville Friday evening, hav
ing been retained by the county
IX C. Agler of this city, grand court to assist. the district at
commander of the Knights Temp torney la defending the road sup
lar. has returned from an in ervisors’ suits.
)
spection trip.to the Cammander-
lea of Eastern Oregon at La
Orande, Pendleton and Baker
City.
Normal Notes — Jerome Fita-
gergjd was chosen by the senior
clam to dedicate the clam arch.
Geo. Parish left for his homq,
They made a wise selection.
in Ellensburg. Wash., today after
having spent the week in Ash
land with Edgar Edglngton.
Normal Notes —. From the
Commercial
graduating
clam
Mrs. L. ■ W. Crocker, accom MefW Havener, Nellie Dickey and
panied by her mother-in-law, left May Sutton were selected to rep-
yesterday for Roseburg to make resett tthslr clam at commsncs-
her home. Mrs. Crocker 8r."wlll meut. They were chosen accord
go on to her home In Michigan. ing to their dam standing.
which they had taken possession
— anyway they followed me for
almost a mile scolding me for
something that I had done. I
think that all the scolding wo
men are turned Into “Clark
scrow,’’ for they have many
characteristics of the gentler sex.
One of the many things of in
terest I noticed on the trip was
the way in which the snow was
drifted, on the road. I have
ridden and driven over the rim
road every hour of the twenty-
four, In the years .that I have
been In the park, and today I
could, not felloyr the read—every
“Ow»tls flavfcmr at Thy knee
A BMto child Ieohs a» to Thee
Keep me safely through star-shine
Make a lovlpg heart of mine—”
sad then waked reproachfully at
her tether, he said very gently.
"John Gehle aaya to tall yen that
the rest of it
.
drifts and deep snow. Few,* If
any of yon, wULlZBveL. l t . next
season?' s
Worked— Climbed the Watch
man— almost; took pictures.
We«thes—-Day partly elondy;
wind west; snowfall since last
observation, 0.00 la.; precipita
tion, 0.00 In,; snow on ground,
316 la.; Temp. H. 43, L. S3, R.
10, M. 37.
Thursday, March M , 1PZT
ç From log ol 1133: anew at
pole, 13 ft. 4 la. and on AprU
16 I recorded an even I I feet.
I wonder if there la six more
feet of snow to come. I don't
know about you, hat I bava
had anoegh for one winter. Then
I would like to see some once
In a while, even no# I find my
self looking dawn the road, or
that part of the snowqcape where
I think the road ought to bo— I
am not at all sure If it is where
I think it la— and wishing that
I could hear a car purring np
the grade. I wouldn’t care, what
kind of a car It waa, Just any
old car—a Ford would help some.
I looked around the Lodge to
day to t Bluebird, but he must
have beau houpe hunting, and the
Knights were not al-onnd. There
are re »son foi that, I fed them
yesterday nod they stored enough
sway to do them for several
days, i have been watching for
the ffcgt chipmunk. It. la time for
them to be getting ont of bed.'
And the bears, wall every morn
ing I go look for tracks under
the storeroom window. Failing to
find any, I hopefelly look to
ward tke glistening aides of Gar
field for the tiny distant dots that
toll of a winding trail of a hun
gry friend hi search of food.
Work— Ran power plant, paint
ed beds.
Weathei—Day partly cloudy;
wind west; snowfall since last
observation, trace; • precipitation,
0.12 In. ; snow on ground, 331
in.; Temp. H. 37. L. 17, R. 30,
• Friday, March ZB, 1ZZT »
I was dewn B ways Inside the
rim ,today looking to see how
badly the snow had drifted over
the trail to the water.
There
must he a trail under the snow
somewhere, but I couldn’t find
a trace of It. ’fhe snow has set
tled very little down there and
under the crust It Is quite soft.
There are aerety some great
drifts under the cliff of Oar-
field. Some of them mus^ he
sixty feet deep. Entire cliffs are
a good-enough looking feUOw. Bo
ho Just smiled at her and Amaryl
lis knew that he sMstsfond-
As oooa es she had dismissed
the policemen Amaryllia toned to
her tether. “Where’s Peter r she