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About Medford daily tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1906-1909 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1908)
1 THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OR., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1908. h REDUCTIONS r PHROUGIIOUT THE 5TORE. ALL ODD jOTS ALL REM NANTS AT PRICES TO JNSURE A SPEEDY i SALE. VAN DYKE'S Loom End Sale A WHIRLWIND OF VIGOROUS A1" A LUES Muslin Undergar ments Reduced $1.50 and $2 Nightgowns at 9S 6'oe and 75c Corset Covers at 49 75e Cambric Drawers.49 $2.50 and $3 White Muslin Shirts .$1.98 Hotter grades of Nainsook Gowns and Shirts reduced REMNANTS HALF PRICE ginghams, Percales, Lawns and Plaid , Suitings O.N U-11ALF EMBROIDERY Neat lot of Embroidery up to 20 yd. Edgings and Insertions .9 RIBBONS No. 5, 7, 9, 12 7 Fancv Ribbon, Nos. 16, 22, 40. . 12l.? F'cy Ribbon, Nos. 60, 80, reduced.l5 HDKFS. All linen 5 Hemstitched cotton 2,$ 35c and 25c Embroidered Hdkfs.,14 FURS, SCARFS, BOAS, Capes, all reduced, value ONE-HALF PILLOW TOPS Regular 25c, 50c and 75c val., stamped and tinted 19 WOOL WAISTS Every Wool Waist up to $7.50 values must close at, each $1.75 UNDERWEAR 10 dozen Ladies' regular 50c Fleeced Vests and Drawers 29 TAFFETA, ALL COLORS !4-in. width, $1.25 values 98p 6-in. width, $1.50 value $1-29 HANDKERCHIEFS Mussed Embroidery and Linen Hand kerchiefs, values 20c to 50 ea. . . 14 SHIRTS Men's Neglige and Plaited Bosom Shirts, $1.25 and $1.50 values. ,98f MEN'S COTTON UNDERWEAR Fleeced and Ribbed Underwear, 50c, and 75c garments . . .40 LAWNS 0c to 35c Lawns in remnants of con venient lengths all V2 PRICE. VAN DYKE'S PILLOW SLIPS In first quality Muslin, size 45 x 36 inches 19 AT IS THE RM IN DANCING? w. 0. Router's Able Sermon on I feet, Delivered to Congregation Sunday Why Preachers De- ice Amusement As An Evil. h 't it strnnge," says one, "that ors should denounce dancing the bible mys that David, who man after God 's own heart, H, and w? read in a certain psalm, hast turned my mourning into it is true that David danced, and iks of dancing in the psalms; but juice of David was not the pro fits dunce of our times. It was Jul leap, while exulting in God; tt the whirling embrace of the op i sex, which is calculated to ex infill passions. v o not hesitate to denounce the tn dance for three reasons: ' Harm in Dancing. St It is injurious to the body. J'iolent exercise of dancing has a ticy to put the body into an ab fcl condition, dangerous to health, foundation of many a disease has llaid in the ballroom and many a lady, because of this species of fpment, lias gone to a premature ji. Moreover, the atmosphere of r! ballrooms is calculated to invite (Be. lie years ago a dancing party was j near Avoca, Ala. The partici t became much heated and ex ited by dancing all of a night. In Condition they started home. The Wier changed, producing alarming rts on their excited systems. Of t) who enagged in the dance, two dthe next morning, seven died a lit thter and all suffered more or less. SV" a young lady has gone to an un tiy grave because of the fascina tinf the dance. Injurious to the Mind, tond It is injurious to the mind.; Tl'xcitement of the dance is not con-1 . dire to the healthiest condition of tlurain. Again, "some young people bmie so infatuated with the dance ! as unfit them for study." Many an! edator stands ready to indorse what I y. With some young people the fojiess for the dance is such that bus become dull and study insipid. lird Tt is injurious to the soul. II; man a soul? lias lie an immortal nare? Then the supreme dictates of priical wisdom is to abstain from th1 amusements which jeopardize his etmal interest. j Apt to Injure Body. Je shottvil a moment ago that danc iti(is apt to injure the body and the mill. If that be true, it must be in jiinis to the soul, fr whatever injures I mi- mid mind is wrong, arid all wrong injres the fouI. For just as the phys-, ira tmophfre of the ballroom i. fre-i ipxitly injurious t the physical man, i so the moral ittiim-pherc f the ball- rooii is npt to be injurious to the pir- j itu:l man. For .int a- certain a the I bo.ry is influenced by it physical sur- roiii.ll.njn, ho certain is the s.mt infill : encd hy j(H moral surrounding. I A datlfo 14 recorded ill the 11th (h:ij ' ter of Mfitthew. That dame w:ii one of the links in the chain of ev nt that. led (o tin death of .! 1:11 the ItiiptNt. How many u.mn-e- siitre that day hrift oniid rj nnh a nini-i'T! How ni j !"tii4 h.i. & ... .,wn to eternal nig(-r, through lh- I allrontu! The nhif of police of New York city said s-.m; yeirs ago that threc-foirtus of the rumco women of that city wie ruined by I he dance. Professor La Fl...ri- j:ys lii. same thing of the foOO abinduiod wt men of Los Angeles, And Uishop Su;'u: :ng of New York has Mid: "The confessional reveals the fact that nine-tent lis of those who fall, fail through the dance. What Gail Hamilton Says. Gail Hamilton says: "The thing in its very nature is unclean, and rauno'. lie washed." And another writer says: ' ' The dancing hall is the nursery of the divorce court, the training ship of prostitution and the graduating school of infamy." Look again at that dance in the 1-lth chapter of Matthew. That dance in Herod's palace wad attended by revelry, adultery, revenge and murder. Thou sands of times since Herod's day that scene in his palace has been re-enacted. Sin breeds sin. What was true in the first is true in the 20th century. Nine times out of ten the dance is attended by sinful concomitants. Sometimes it is asked: "What harm is there in dancingf' A certain man has used the following striking illus tration: "There is no harm in eating cheese, but when that cheese is fastened to a steel trap it is terrible risky for the rat to nibble at it." When the pleasure of dancing is fastened to the steel trap of temptation, better let it alone. Harmful at All Times. The Catholic and Episcopal churches forbid dancing and some other amuse ments during Lent.. If it is wise to ab stain from these amusements during a period of 40 days, we think it is wise to abstain from them every day of the "When Morcon was burning, there was a party dancing in the place right over a gunpowder magazine. They did not know the flame was approaching, so the leader of the festivity ahonted: "One dance more!" and the voice was taken up through the palace, and the cry was "One dance more!" and the music played and the feet bounded and the laughter rang out; but suddenly through the fire and the smoke and the thunder of the explosion, eternity broke. Alas! that some will dance on their sins and their frivolities until in an hour that they think not, they are called to stand before the great judge. " Knter not into the path of the wicked, and go not in the way of evil men. ' ' "Avoid it, pass not by it, turn from it, and pas away." Prov. i v : 1 4 1 .". W. ( RKFTKIi. LIST OF JUDGES AND CLERKS OF ELECTION East Ashland Judges: H. T. Hitch ell, Charles Stennett, 8. A. Parker; clerks: D. D. Good, Fred H. Neil, Colo nel White. West Ashland Judges: W. A. Pat rick. hv Shoudy, E. E. Phipps. Clerks: c. II. G Mette, A. P. Kerremans, O. C. ; Tiffany. i South Ashland Judges II. I. Pohl-: 'Mid, George Hargardine, D. P. Greni-j grr. Clerks: Ray Satchwell, II. B. Car ter, K. A. Hildreth. j Antioeh Judges: George Stacev, W, ( Kcott, James O. Talent. Clerks: J. A. Martin, Theo. A. Glass, Clarence Case. AnMl.-xato Judges: II. D. Kubli, L. Woolriflge, O. E. Rose. Clerks: A. L. Kromling, Herbert Emore, George Hoff man. Barron Judges: A. L. Grubb, A. B. Chapman, Ed Barron. Clerks: Archie Kincaid, George W. Owens, C. C. Wal ker. Big Butte Judges: ,T. M. Allen, P. M. Manning, C. A. Edmoudson. Clerks: E. N. Watson, E. A. Hildreth, Edwnrd S. Kerby. Climax Judges: Mat hew 8. Thomp son, William H. I To I man, Joseph L. Wylnnd. Clerks: P. W. Centers, An drew Grissom, Nimrod N. Charley. Central Point Judges James W. Myers, Ben Beall, J. W. Morclnnd. Clerks: John W. Jacobs, Con. Leever, William J. Freeman. Eagle Point Judges: S. A. Carlton. Thomas Nichols, Royal Brown. Clerks: S. B. Holmes, Claude Wnrmsley, Wil liam TJlrich. Flounce Rock Judges: Nelson Nye, S. S. Aiken, R. U. Lewis. Clerks: W. A. Higinbotham, Erwin McCall, Mc Donald Perdue. i Foots Creek Judges: G. W. Lance, Ed Woodcock. J. W. Short. Clerks: G. W. Mathes, T. J. Cook, Charles E. Duf ficld. Gold Hill Judges: J. B. R. Morelook, W. It. Stickel, W. L. McCabe. Clerks: L. C. Applegate, Henry B. Reed, A. p. Freel. Lake Creek Judges: II. A. Meyer. Mike Sidley, Lein Charley. Clerks: J. W. Kinneyi G. H. Frey. W. G. Messal. South Jacksonville Judges: Charles Prim, Mark Taylor, Km it Britt. Clerks: Lewis Ulrich, Herbert Ilanua, Jesse Ap-, plegate. North Jacksonville Judges: T. T. Shaw, 'hris Kinney, Frank By bee. Clerks: S. P. I)e Itoboam, F. M. Round tree, M. S. Mineur. South Medford Judges: A. C. Hub bard, L. B. Warner, J. W. Cox. Clerks: John II. Butler. Joseph C. Brown. W. Entrop. North Medford Judges: J. A. Perry, W. T. York, P. A. Maryreiter. Clerks: W. P. Isaacs, S. V. Davis, E. A. Hicks. Mound Judges: "W. H. Norcross, D. W. Beebe, Joliu Bigham. Clerks: H. W. Head, E. E. Hall, W. L. Curtis. Meadows Judges: P. X. Musty, J. B. Welch, Joseph Mayfield. Clerks: H. H. Mitchell, John Turrill, E. C. Welch. Phoenix .Tudges: L. A. Rose, Dan Anderton, Arthur Furry. Clerks: D. Lehners, Ed Anderson, C. A. Wolruff. Rock Point udges: P. W. Blackert, C. M. Purcel, Robert M. Cook. Clerks: If. L. Cooft, Thomas Dungey, W. H. Newton. Roxy Judges: T. B. Ellison, George Garrett, L. A. Pruett. Clerks: James M. Cantran, J. N. Hockcrsmith, James S. lJoardtnaii. Sam's Valley Judges: 8. M. Nealon, Samuel Ensley, Thomas Pankey. Clerks: W. W. Eddington, Ed Shipley, W. A. Tresham. Sterling Judges: C. C. Pursel, Wil liam Jennings, A. B. Saltmarsh. Clerks: Andrew Cantrall, A. Gilson, A. S. Kteinhnmmer. Trail .fudges: A. A. Hall, Dave Penco, Arthur Holden. Clerks: Ed Briscoe, Shannon Oliver, J. W. Bcrrinn. Talent Judges: E. E. Foss, H. H. Goddard, James Gnrvin. Clerks: Km mett Beeson, Andrew Weidner, Grant Davis. Union Judges: Miles Cantrall, "W. W. Cameron, P; Kleinhnmmer. Clerks: A. D. Beardsley, Floyd Pearee, Mathew Hay. Watkins Judges: John Haskins, P. J. Sullivan, A. 1). McKee. Clerks: M. A. Watkins, 1(. Phillips, David Dorn. Willow Springs Judges: R. F. Dean, Robert Ashworth, L. E. Van Vleit. Clerks: J. B. Hill, Charles Owens, Geo. Beers. Wimer Judges: S. H. Mooro, J. H. Messier, E.- F. Olseu. Clerks: J..?B. Hills, Charles Owens, Geo. Beers. Wnodville Judges: J. Whipple, G. W. Wilcox, Henry Laws. Clerks: ,W. V. ones, Fred Minthorn, Albert L. Smith. ATTEMPT TO BLOW UP TOBACCO FACTORY NASHVILLE, Jan. 22. An attempt was made today to dynanuto and burn the Haycs Sory Rugis tobneco factory ' at ( larksville, Teun. GuardB killed two negroes nnd wounded another. In vesication showed the door of the fac tory to be saturated with coal oit and four st icks of dynamlto wore placed against it. Sufficient dynamite was found on the bodies of the negroes to wreck tho building. The third nCgru escaped. Deviled Ham and Relishes I was at a party the other nilit and a lot of young irls were guying an old bachelor ami asking him why he'd never married, etc. He sprang those uld gags about "marrying in haste and repent ing in South bakota, " and there being "jiHt as good fish in the urn as have eer been raiiL'ht." when one of the L'irM ( remarked: "lid it ever oenir to you that tlx- bait miglit get stale wh'Ie you were angling ror iiieui : In angling f'-r cotoiiiers we never allow the bait to get -tale around this -.hop. Wo get ja in '.v g hy most every express thesi? . The Ix.ss beli.-vex in keeping the nfoek ri-ht up to tie- minute, so that if you read in any of the magazine lhr home journal of a new food product or p li-h of any hi nd you can erne right to flii- store and the arti.le f..r x-,,nr,.t W in ,r,t it) :i Li'- lot ,f I'll. j!) rl' rwcn.l t'ainoiiH te il d Ham arid Sardines, We are he;il.,nart. rs f..r P li-h.-. They , ,-r ii.lv do h. In von out g I and pb-ntv if vmir appetiti in a little ba. !'vaid. MILLER & EWBANK Begin the New Year IN THE RIGHT WAY By Building A good start moans much to you. Get off on the right foot and keep going. Don't continue to throw money away by paying rent, when you can own your own home. How much did you pay out for rent during 1907? Stop and figure it out. What have you got to show for it? Xothing hut a bunch of receipts. Suppose you had put this money into building a home and Inlying a lot? You'd have something to show for your coin, wouldn't you? The same tiling holds true in the coming year. Are you going to waste your niazunia all year, and have lfl08 net you noth ing but a living? Ask your wife about it, and see what she says. Building is going to be cheaper this year than ever. You can buy practically at your own terms. We sell all kinds of lumber everything needed in any kind of a house from a small cabin to a palatial mansion. We also sell lioolh-Kellv lumber. Iowa Box and Lumber Co. o o o o o O o o o o o o o