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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1910)
AtEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, ORECiON, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1910. Medford Mail Tiubune CMMttO Soricj; Thirty-ninth Tear; Dally, Fifth Year. nniMKxv DAxr.Tr xxcxrr Satur day BT TKX KSDrOKS, r&nrxxxs oo. A consolidation of the Medford Mall, Mtabllahed 1331; the Southern Oroson Ua. catabllnheil 180: the Democratic Times, eatnbllntied 1871: the Aahland Tribune, established 18d, and the Med Card Tribune, eetebllahed HQS. BOnQE PUTNAM, Editor and Manager Untered aa Bcccnd-olnx matter No Mnbw l. ltOS. at the rioatotftce at Medford. Oregon, under the act: of March 1, 137. Official Paper of . the City of Medford. A COMMUNITY OP INTEREST PROPOSITION. A T THE meeting of the As consider the Crater Lake SXTBSOBXPTIOH RATE St One year by mall , $3.00 One month by mall .SO Per month, delivered by carrier, in Medford, Aahland. Jaokaonrllle. Talent Phoenix, Central Faint, Qold Hill and WoodTllle .50 anday only by mall, per year.... 3.00 Tfeekly, one year.... l.oO rail XrtasnA Wire TJ<td rjrets la-paH&M. The Mall Tribune on male at the Kerry New Stand, Pn Franclaco. Portland Hotel Newa Stand, PortIand Bowman Newa Co, Portland, ur. W. a. Whttaey, Seattle. Wuh. Xetel Spokane Newa Stand, Spokane. rostac Bateat to lS.pago paper. IS to 2.pa.K paper So 8 to i-pre paper. Kftromber, 1309 1.T0O PMeeaber, ISO 1.911 Ksaary. lflO 1,915 Feteruary. 1110 1,1" March OttealattMt .. 2.100 X Z.IBB B 2.11 S 4 , S.32S 3.300 T 2,150 2,2 SO 3.230 IS 2,250 XI 2,150 IT 2.1S0 11 3.150 10 2,300 31 2.150 12..... 1,10 IS 2,300 24 3,150 15 2,230 27 2.300 IS 2.260 2.3BB, is..... a.isg 2.250 30 : 3.350 2,350 2,259 31 3.350 Tau.1 ; 10,850 Ltu deducUoas 1,350 Net total 83,300 ATaras-e net dally 2,201 xxiuross, esaeoir. Metropolis of Southern Oregon and ortliern California bad tasteat-grow Mr city in Oregon. PoDuSatlon. AsrlL 1119. 3300. Baaaer fruit dty of Or ton Ro cu e lrer apples woa sweepstakes prize and Me oi "Ayyle Staffs of tee "World" it National Apple Show. Spokane, 190. AesBe River . pears brought highest sriee In all markets of the world dur- tfig Ua past live years. IMc Oesmerelal Clab for paapUsta. "Who says thq supremo frfeadly to Medford? court is Anyhow, that Wasson canyon wa ter beats Bear creek. AldrIcli Is to retire bo Is Hale of Maine. One by one the old guard of stand-patters are sitting down. W Ashland Commercial club to o highway project the self- apparent fact was clearly brought out that Ashland will be a terminus and starting point for the proposed high way, and that through its becoming a tourist resort, that city will reap more benefit from the road and secure a larger share of money spending sightseers than Medford. The same holds good for every city in the Rogue River valley. The road cannot be constructed without benefit ing every town. They will all bo starting points for Crater Lake. Tourists cannot come into the valley without see ing every part of it. They cannot spend money in one section without every section reaping the benefit. The Crater Lake highway is a community of interest proposition. It will directly benefit every town in south ern Oregon and it will cement together the various local ities to work for the common good. Indirectly it will ben efit every city in the state. It is impossible to direct 50, 000 sightseers through the state annually without some portion catching the fancy of some of the tourists, leading to investment and settlement by the most desirable class of citizens. It is impossible for any one section of the state to bene fit much without other sections being benefited also to a greater or lesser degree. Civilisation has made every part of the country dependent upon the rest of the country. "We cannot begin to produce everything we consume, and we cannot begin to consume everything we produce. The exchange of our surplus for the surplus produced by other localities constitutes commerce, and the more of a surplus we can profitably produce, and the greater the surplus of others' production we can consume, the greater the-pros perity. HELPING THE HOUSEWIFE. PERRY RECEIVES GOLD AND BRONZE MEDALS Awards Were Mario at tho Alaska Yukon Exposition Medals and Diplomas Just Received. J. A. Perry received today a sold mednl for the best exhibit of Spits etilmrg and Nowtown apples undo nt tho Alaska-Yukon exposition nt Se attlo Inst yonr. Tins incdul wns awarded on tho apples sent by .Mr 1'erry, contribut ed from different orchards in tho vnlloy, somo of the fruit having boon purchased by Mr. Porry porsonnily. Tho modal was won from tho faot that now fruit was placed on exhibi tion each dny, comnienoing with tho crop of 1908, and winding up with that of 1000. During tho latter part of tho fair tho apples of tho two yonra wero on exhibition side by side, showiuj tho keeping quality of Rogue Hiver fruit Tho brotiEo medal cnino from nn individual exhibit made by Mr. Porry of a plate of ftno King apples, pick ed from .his orchard, just boforo tho eloso of tho oxiHisition and shown mora as an addition to the exhibit than in tho hope of winning a prize Hotel Arrivals. At tho Tent City Hotot O. U. Ho- gort. E. C. Warnor, Portland; E. W. Blackwood, Now York; Jamos J. Woodsldo, A. Brlttln, R. P. Palmer, Rosa Irwin and wife, II. O. Whltta ker and wife, B. Singer, II. Holnly, J. Clay, Miss Lute Vrohman, Miss Mao Rossmoro, Ben Hlllor, Sarah Holmes, O. Alton, Anita Storman, Gingerbread" company; M. W. How nrd Medford; Ella Crane, Wolly Holaton, K. Kavsno, Gingerbread Man; J. H. Shattuck, M. L. Nathan, San Francisco; 0. E. Tuckstroui, A. T. Tuckstrom, Seattle; John A. Ho- no& wife and two chlldron, Devils Lake; J. E. McCraken, San Francis co; Lloyd Wilson, C. Cheator Wat- ters, Medford; Georgo Coopor, Jack uonvllle; O. C. Simmons, Jackson M'CREDIES TEAM AT 1 HOME IN f IRST PLACE! "Como In; tho Water Is Flno," Say tho Ducklings Bleachers Lovo Beavers, But "Oh, You Clarice." Ashland the terminal of the Crater Lake highway? Sure, It will be, and bwH1 Central Point and Gold Hill j &s4l ether Rogue river towns. i That fountain by the Medford Na tional bank awaiting tho statue of Mike Hanley.to commemorate the water-system, can now have a has relief oCjthe supremo court as well as thost ot A. E. Reames and Judge Hanna. ISVhy should fifty thousand resi dents of southern Oregon lose recre ation and rovenue from tourist sports aaea to further fatten tho hog monop oiyBt the month)! the Rogue? .-.That Crater Lake Is a local affair and- that the rights ot a ranrher art paramount to those of a city, are pearls of wisdom dropped from the Sejemons of Oregon's supreme court -JProst has injured tho fruit crop from Ohio to Iowa. Snow has fallen laJKansas end Colorado. Thrown ' 1 , , , . ., , . . 7 ? in the riw wulia separated Dy an air space tnrougli wiiicn are run alternately tubs for the circulation of cold water and wires for electric currents. The man in the calorimeter is fed upon the diet to be analyzed. To measure the heat in the chamber determines the actual amount of energy giving nourishment there is in a particular food. Tests are made with a man at exercise and at rest. By analysis the constituents of the ash from the food i i ana tne energy supplied by it are learned. The gas or oream is analyzed and the quantity assimilated ascer tained. It is by experiment with various foods, and the same food variously prepared, that the calorimeter registers its most valuable information to the housewife. This infor mauon translated irom technical terms and reduced to plain English constitutes the meat cook book of the de partment, supplying tho information for conservation of kitchen resources. SMMidglng, much ot the crop Grand valley was savod. So far no dage has resulted from frost in tW Rogue and orchardlats nre pre- Prd'for it when it comes. w i.-. Lfe&ve this at home for the census bmlh: frlrst name. Initial and last name. SStato, territory or foreign country wkaro born. i;igQ at last birthday. Jf fprelgn born, give name of moth-, e(tonguo, the year of arriving Jnj United States, whether an alien, Tinner we urst papers nave oeenj -taicea out or whether fully natural-! Give state, territory or foreign country whore parents were born. Trade or profession, nature of busl MM or establishment where working Vhether an employer, worker or wwjeing on own account. fljfhetker out of work April IB, and number of weeks, If any, Kt;pt worn in 1909. "Out of work1 6m not mean vacations or strikes, J. A. Holley, Rldgefleld; F. M. Bra- ley, Oakland; Ernest Adams, Evans- ton; J. E. McCraken, George Cooper. San Francisco. SCHOOL DISTRICT nOND ELEC TION NOTICE The conservation of kitchen resources with the object of teaching the housewife what is best to eat, the best way to use it, and how to buy it, is the object of a meat cook book issued by the department of agriculture containing the results of exhaustive experiments with a queer device called the calorimeter. Economy in cooking is a neglected science with the average American housewife, as compared with her Eu- vine; w. Foitor and wifo, b, Fcitor. ropean cousin. American consuls abroad have commented upon the difference in the standards of living between the various nations. Although the American secures a-larger wage than the German, the latter is a better fed man. Americans put more into the kitchen, but the German takes more . out . of it, and the German housewife is pronounced unequalcd" as aconservator of kitchen re sources. The calorimeter is used to determine- the value of food and its relation to the health, growth and energy of the body. Pood consumption is studied by an analysis on tho theory that the human body is self-regulated, and that wliere as in the case of a furnace, all the fuel is converted into ash, gas and heat, in the body a part of the food fuel goes toward building up the tissues. All human energy is transformed into heat given off trom the body. Every movement causes a slight escape of heat. To measure the heat is to know the amount of energy expended. The apparatus used is as large as. a room and as delicate as a ship's chronometer. The subject is placed in a heat proof chamber, so as to remain unaffect ed by temperature changes from without. There are two Notlco Is horob given that a spe clal school mooting of district No. 49, of Jackson county, stato of Ore gon, to bo hold at the High School building In 'Medford, Oregon, In said district, on tho 20th day of April, A. D. 1910, there will bo submlttod to tho lgal voters of said district the question ot contracting a bonded debt of t50,000.00 for tho purpose of erect Ing an annex to tho Washington school, and Installing a hontlng plant therein, and for the oroctlor. of nn East Sido ward school building, the vote to be by ballot, upon which shall bo tho words "Bonds Yob" and the words "Bonds No." Polls to bo open nt 1 o'clock p. m. and remain opon until A o'clock n, m. By order of tie board of dlroctora of school district No. 49 cf Jackson county, stato cf Orogou. Dated this 6th day of April, 1910. ORI8 CRAWFORD, Clerk. Tho Uenvors open on their homo grounds today, going against Oak land, There should bo no doubt about McCrodlo having designs on tho pon nant, tor ho Is going after It with n vonguanco, Whon tho Ducks wore hero thoy performed like a winning aggregation and thoy played bang up baseball both at Los Angotos and Sacramento. So much so Mint tho Ducks wont homo In first placo, thanks to tho services ot tho Seals. SMcCredlo has won 11 out ot 17 games on tho road, which is n romark ablo record. Most uinnngors would bo satUtlod with a team that achiev ed juclt a feat, but mnnlfostly Mc Crodlo Is not, for ho has slgnod an other Jnfloldor. Ho has como to torms with St. Louis for llctltng, who has a flno record. Hotllng played with Kansas City last year and did such good work that St. Louis dratt ed Mm. In 1908 ho led tho Westorn association In stolon bases and at tho cloao ot tho season was plckod up by Comlskoy, who turned him over to Kansas City lator. Aside from being fast on tho bases, Portland's now lnfloldor can hit. Just whore McCrodlo will play him Is not indicated by tho dispatches. It may be that ho la wanted to tako Nctzol's placo at third. Notzol may not bo playing to suit McCrodlo, Until Casoy rounds to nealn tho now comor may bo placed on second. McCrodlo has nnotbor new lnfloldor by tho name ot Pocklnbnugh, whom ho got from Clovoland last week, but less Is known about him. Ho has also added a cou plo ot pitchers, Wright and Gregg, to his staff since bo loft 8an Francisco. Everything would lntldato that the Ducks will bo bard to beat whon thoy Mt homo this week. Thoy nro novor easy marks on tholr own Hold, but with all this now. talent at hand tho task will bo moat difficult. Haskina for ITesllh. Browning has startod oft Hko a young dlscovory for Dotrott. Jen nings sent Danng Long's 1909 star In against Clovolnnd Saturday and ho won his game In handy mnnnor. Flvo scattering blngles roprosontod tho number Lajolo's stlckors mado off Browning and Dotrolth won Its first gamo ot the sonoon In conscquonco. It would not bo surprising If Brown ing turned out a vory successful pitch or In tho American lersuo. After tho Philadelphia Athlotlca had finished tho sorlos uoro last fall they pronounced him tho hnrdest nut thoy lad to crack. Browning was finished throwor whon ho lott tho Soals. Ho know how to pitch. This may sound llko a platltudo, but It Is not. Only a small porcontcgo of tho pitchers who nro young in tho minor league roally know bow to pitch. Bosldos "having ovorythlng," Browning Molded his position to per fection. It .7.18 useless thoy assort to try to bunt him out of tho box. Ills career with Dotrolt ;his soason will bo kconly watched on this coast, You can write n want ad in two minutos which will work for you two days work offoctivoly and usually accomplish your quest or task or or rand. liut Jnabjllty to find employment, jlf. over 50 years, whether a survi vor of the Union or confederate army or navy. Wngle, married, widowed or divorc ed; . If married, whethor first, second or striffequent marrlago, and how many years or preeont marriage. hether able to speak English; whether able to read or write Eng lish or any other language, Whether white, black, mulatto, Chl Japanese or Indian. If owner of the house lived In, whether it is free or mortgaged. Whether blind in both eyes, or CHIEF BIGGY'S WIDOW ASKS FOR A PENSION SAN FItANCISCO, Cal, April 10. An endeavor on the part of the polico commissioners here to learn whether Chiof of Polico Bipgy was on departmental or privato business at the time bo was lost overboard from the police launch Patrol, threatens today to reopen an inquiry into tho circumstances nttonding his death. The matter camo before tho commissionora whon Mrs. Bieerv. widow of tho chiof, applied to them for a ponsion for herself and 12- year-old daughter, on tho ground that Biggy mot death whilo on active I duty, J SEATTLE TEACHERS TO HAVE 8ALARIES RAISED SEATTLE, Wash., April 19. Su penntendent of Schools Frank B. Cooper will today begin the propara tion of a now schedule of salaries for teachers in the Seattle public, schpols on the basis of an avorage 10 per cent increase. Tho increase was voted by the school board last night, following a fight made by tho teachers them selves thrdugh the newspapers. Su perintendent Cooper, who recontly returned from nn eastern trip, rec ommended the raise, saying that Se attle was not paying as much to her school teachers as other citlos of u like size. t Walk- Over Shoes Ride Less Walk More This fine weather makes walking a most enjoyable and healthful exercise. It's good for poor spirits, poor appetite, poor digestion and poor health generally. Try it, but try it in a pair of shoes that arc easy on tho feet. Try it in a pair of WALK OVER Shoes. $4,00, $4.50, $5,50. JOlof STARTS WEST THURSDAY Will Rost In Salt Lnk'o mid Los An noles Active Training Whon Ocean 'Bench Is Ronchcd, CHICAGO. April 19, .Jack Johnson will start tor tho Pacttlo coast Thurs day next, according to a stntnment today by Mnnngor Llttlo. Johnson will go to Salt Lako, whoro ho will stop for a dny. Ills next rest ing placo will bo Los Angotos, whoro ho will appear In an exhibition bout at n flstlo ontortnlnmont being ar ranged by Promoter Tom McCaroy of that city. Tho dnto ot Johnson's arrival In San Francisco has not boon yot sot. Llttlo stated that acttvo training would begin tho moment ho could got his flghtor into quartors at Ocean Beach. ONE TERM ENOUGH? WELL-PERHAPS NOT Tnft Mnkos Slntomcnt Thnt Foflr Yoafs Is Enouuh for Him, But Later Does Not Roltcrato Remark. Mbvo only to improve whioh ami, usually, bo done if you get some help from tho want ads. WASHINGTON, 11. C. April 10. President Tnft In not roltorntlng hla Saturday stntomont that one term In tho Whlto Ilotino Is ououuh for htm. As tho Whlto HotiRO interprets his ronmrks, thoy wuro not mado serious ly, but in fact moroly ns n Jesting re ply to n speech provloimly mado at tho banquet ot tho Psl Upitlon fra ternity, which tho president attended, Tnft was not oltintnutlng hlmaolt as n poinlblo candldnto for ro-oloo-tlon, Is tho general belief horo, He was nlmply Joking about tho amount of work attacbod to tho office nnd stating In a whimsical way that there In mioiinh work to do to look after tho first term to put considerations ot ro-olectlon out of hla mind, Haaklus for Health. Money Makers 1 1 NO. 52 $2150 7-room house on 9th street, closo in; largo barn; two lots 50x100 each. If you want atsnap horo it is and you will say so when you see it. $1070 cash, balance easy. fro. 53 $1200 Corner lot, 50x101; four-room house; woodshed; good well; close in; $G00 cash, bal anco $15 per month. NO. 54 4 Beautiful cornel's, all right close to busi ness contor; ideal locations for an apartment house, hotel or rooming houso; one of theso is closo to new S. P. depot. NO. 27 10 ACRES lunulas from town; 5 acres ; cleared; frco soil; all lays nice; on county road; price $1600, half cash, balance 7 per cent. NO. 305 ACRES Vj miles from Phoenix; good frco soil; all level; lots of wood; this week only for $750, half cash, balance easy. McARTHUR & ALEXANDER PHONE 3681 ROOM 3, P. O. BLOCK Excursion Ratesto the East DURING 1910 FROM ALL POINTS ON THE Southern Pacific (LINES IN OREGON) TO RATES Chicago , . $72.50 Council Bluffs L $60.00 Omaha $60.00 Kansas City ! $60.00 St. Joseph $60.00 St. Paul $60.00 St. Paul via Council Bluffs $63.9Q Minneapolis direct $60.00 Minneapolis, via Council Bluffs $63.90 Duluth, direct $66.90 Duluth, via Council fluffs $67.50 St. Louis $67.50 Tickets will bo on sale May 2d and 9th; Juno 2d, 17th and 24th; July 5th and 22d; August 3d; Soptombor 8th. Tho above rate apply from Portland only. From points south of Portland, add ONE WAY local rate to Port land, to make through rate via Portland. One way through California, add $15.00 to above rates. Ten days providod for tho going trip. Stop-overs within limits in either direc tion. Final return limit throe months from dato of sale, but not lator than Oc tobor 31st. Inquire of any S, P. Agent for comploto information, or WM. McMTJRRAY , General Passongor Agent, Portland, Oregon