g - MEDFORD bALLY MlLBUN&i, MEDFORD, OUKfiOXTUESDAY, X 0 V EM BER31J08. Medford Daily Triburt A Live Papeh in a Live Town. i Published every evening except Wuuday. i V -i, !M E DP O R D P U M h I S H I N (! CO M P h. Y : I Georoe Putnam, lOditor and Manager eifizcn .'as 'Mr. Howard, what will happen to the rest of us it we all nave to. drink it ? Admitted as Second-Class Matter in the Postoffice at , Medford, Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION KATES. Oat month, by mail or carrier. .. .0.50 One year, by mail.:. f - ' . 1 ...s.oo y h "i BRYAN'S PLACE IX HISTORY. . '.' Bv tlie time this is read the people of America will have decided who will lie the next president. - The election means more to Ta ft t lian to "Bryan. Willioiit success Tuft will not bereiucmhcrcd in history, while Bryan's 1 dace is assured. Twice defeated by Mlliam McK'mley, he lian influenced Hie nation far more and has a higher niche in the temple of fame than his victorious compel it or. ' . , M 15'ryau will live as one of the most remarkable, perhaps (he niost remarkable men of this age. Poor and unaided, wlu'le vet a young man he snatched the leadership of a natignai party by the genius of his personality and,'despite defeat,;1 lie has maintained this leadership, without power of office or wealth, occupying a place in the hearts of his countrymen that no has ever before filled at home be loved, abroad acknowledged the greatest American. j1' Speaking of Bryan, one Wiljiam Allen White; a parti san republican, who is not at all in sympathy with Ihe (oinmoner, writes in Collier's as follows: 1 ;"ln the years that have passed since that day of tri umph, twelve years ago in Chicago, the face of the young man has grown more rugged. The hair has worn from his forehead. Lines of care have marked his kindly face. Maturity has stamped him indelibly. Hut his skin still is clear, and seems to reflect in some occult way an honest soul ; his mouth is the mouth of a t rut li ful man. 1 lis coun tenance is not scarred with the corroding knowledge that he has betrayed his faith, lie is untainted and unspoiled, "i;d his illusions still keep him gc'ntle and patient and brave. " Tn a dozen years he has lived to see his protest against the iiieipiities of the distribution of the wealth of the peo ple? become eminently respectable. I n another dozen years, wh'n hi; is still a hale young man of ((, he may see many demands of this Denver platform enacted into the law of his land. Moses gave the law, but he did not enter the promised laud. And Mr. Hryan, the unchanged Mr. Bryan of '!)(, is none the less a real force in American affairs, no matter how the election may tjirn out. For he has been one of .-the instruments used by Providence in bringing the people out of the wilderness of crass materialism into a wider, fairer view of life, as reflected in the laws and cus toms of the people. He lias done what h uld, and has done it always with an honest heart and a directness of purpose that may never be counterfeited by charlatans. And whatever material rewards may pass him, his place in the hislorv of these t imes ma v not be gainsaid." HAMILTON'S ELIXIR OF LIFE. ''City and domestic fountains will reallv become the founts of perpetual youth: the babies will reach out their tiny hands for it.; the children will cry for it ; the young man and maiden will make the welkin ring for, joy in their exuberance, from these health-giving libations the aged will again wear the flush of health on their hitherto faded cheeks; the landscape will be transformed into a veritable garden of Kden ; Medford will become the commercial metropolis, the hive of industry, the seat of learning, the conservatory of music and the home of the arts." No. gentle Header, this is not a Castoria ad, nor a syrup of figs ad, nor a Dr. Williams' pink pills for pale people ad. though it reads very much like every one of them. Nor is it descriptive of the universal benefits conferred on suffering humanity by Dr. liodiac's celebrated elixir for lost manhood, or that restorer of lost youth, Dr. Hun kuin's brilliant buttons, or that universal radiator of erad ication, Dr. Sparkler's electric cinch. II might be illus trative of the wonderful effects of l.ydia I'inkliam's vege table compound or wine of eardui, or Mother Winslow's soothing 'syrup or baby's friend; but it isn't. This magic panacea, so litteringly described that it makes you long to take a golden globule, that combines in one marvelous, magic, mysterious concoction all the virtues of all the nostrums this wonder working miracle, is Dr. Hamilton's celebrated l-'ish lake ditch water, guaranteed to grow hair upon a bald head, make the lame walk, the blind see. the deaf hear ami age turn to youth. The testi monial is from the facile pen of.l. S. Howard and is proof enough of the effects it acts directly on the brain. Hear ing it. Police de Leon rolls heavily in his grave, knowing that he sought in vain the swamps of Florida for the foun tain of perpetual youth, when he should have meandered among the tides of Fish lake. The saints whose shrines have performed miracles of healing, will now ipiit business- what's the use? .Wasson springs' watershed had a strange effect upon Editor Bliton. It made a wheelbarrow look like a pile of lumber, and the next day the pile of lumber turned out to be a wheelbarrow. Hamilton's elixir of life has a still stranger effect upon Mr. Howard. It has turned on his spigot of poetry and a fountain of hyperbole splutters forth, li it has this effect 141011 such a sober, reliable ' ' THE Till 111 'XE Til EX AXJJ XO IF." , 'The Mail .quotes the Tribune's article of September 10-descriptive of a visit to Wasson canyon and the north fork of Little Butte, which contrasted the two proposi tions in favor of the latter as an authoritative settlement of the water problem. It was, between the two propositions, which were the only ones considered in the article. 1 'Between Wasson canyon, with its inefficient supply and Little Butte, no one with horse sense would have chosen Wasson canyon. Yet the Mail, and the majority of the water committee, tried for months to force Wasson canyon upon the city. The Mail pronounced for Wasson canyon in spile of all objections, over the Fish lake proposition, and diil not switch until the Wasson canyon proposition Was withdrawn. . The Tribune has never advocated Little Butte water oyer that of Little Applegate, Big Butte or Rogue river. It championed Little Butte only in comparison with Was son canyon, it has printed the arguments for all the water propositions. . The party that visited Wasson canyon last Septem ber did not go further up the Little Butte than Hartley's ford. "Consequently whatever remarks were made result ant from that trip were made in ignorance of the condi tions at Fish lake which is a shallow pond, flooding meadows and forest, full of submerged and dead trees, brush and titles, and the water from which, in summer time, must be filtered to be pure. Such at least is the opinion of Dr. E. B. Pickel, member of the state board of health. As the water from either Hogue river or Fish lake will have to he filtered, it is up to the people to say upon Thurs ' ty which system they prefer, and that one should be the one which will niea-n the most for the growth and develop ment of thecitv and count rv. 'r Mr. Hamilton does not deny that the Fishcake Water company has given an option on its holdings, neither does he deny that the company-has been trying to sell out for years.. St. Mary's Academy. A boarding and Jay school, Urgu, ,'ominoilious and modern in its equii- iUfllU. ' Departments of instruction: Primary, Urnramar, commercial academic, music ind art. Tlie course proper to each is ....Mined in tl.e "course of study of the Hiools of tlie Sisters of the Holy Nairn '. . . , . ..-A .;U t.o f..r. 1 if .leaus ana wury, "v nrded on application to any addrees. Tlie commercial department will op. n Monday, November 2, and comprih. diorthaud, typewriting, office method! and practical bookkeeping, modern bin inpitN Buallin? and writing. For particular!, apply to Sinter Su perior, 208 RESOLUTION. Be It Resolved, by the City Council of the City of Medford,, the Mayor ap proving, that special election! be and they are hereby ordered to be held in mid city on the Sth day of November, 1908, and the 7th day of November, 1908, between the hour! of 8 o'clock a. ra. and 6 o'clock p. m. of each of said dayi, for the purpose of submitting certain proposition! for furnishing the city with water to the qualified elect ors of said city, as provided in the res olution thii day adopted by the City Council submitting ia'. propositions. The following are hjreby designated as the polling places and judgos and clerks of said election: First Ward Polling place Room 3, second floor, Hutchinson & Lumsden building on 7th street. Judge, George A. Jackson; judge and cleric, F. M. Jordan; judge and clerk, J. W. Ling. Second Ward Polling place, Emerick building, on d'Anjou street. Judge, V. J. Emerick; judge and clerk, H. H. Har vey; judge and elerk, William Ulrich, Third Ward Polling place, City Hall. Judge, 0. L. Schermerhorn; judge and clerk, F. M. Stewart; judge and clerk, J. L. Domuns. The foregoing resolution was adopted by the City Council October 10, 1908, Trowbridge voting aye, Merrick aye, Wortman aye, Eifert absent, Hafer aye, Olwell aye. Approved October 16, 1908. BEN J. J. TROWBRIDGE, Attest: Acting Mayor. BKNJ. J. COLLINS, Recorder. Medford Tribute, SSe per month. LET US RETURN THANKS I ly hope nnd desire. The things of theiB I body lire good; Ihe things of tho mind jS lure belter, but best of n 1 1 the things S 'of the soul, for in the nation, ns in the S . individual, in Ihe long run it is chnr-jS ueter Unit, counts. . '3 "Let us, therefore, ns n people, set 5 our fores resolutely nguinst evil, nnd g -Willi I. mud charity, with friendliness j S and good will toward all men, but with !S unflini-hing determination to smite ' E down wrong, strive with all the strength ;S iiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiEtiiiiiinia ! S You can j find it at Hussey's j Cash Store ! PrPSiflPnt fifllK Oil PpflnlP '" K've" us for righteousness in ;S . . v.- ""r-" pi mhlie and in privatPTife. to Set Their Faces a-!earninosofu s steel iiXUfcJJD EXPECTATIONS iliiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiMimiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiil gainst Evil XKW YORK, Nov. a. The United Slates Steel report for tho quarter end ing Sept ember 30, which has been await ed with deep interest beenuse of its .1... I : - ......... WASIIlN'OTOV. Vov .1T1,.. I " I" " "us.uess m,a,,on, 1 i proved more favorable than expeeted. di nt Inm issued the annual Tliauksgiv-j The net earnings for the quarter worn dig proclamation setting apart. Thurs- tu;,10B,274. The best estimntes in Wnll lay, November 2(1. in "a da yof tlianlis-J street were between $23,000,001) nnd giving and prayer. " j $20,000,000, The earnings for the Juno "Venr.by year," declarer. Ihe proe-1 l"rter were' t20,ili.7.i!, nnd for the Inanition. I'this nation grows in ' Mnreli quarter only 18,220,00.). This strength and worldly power. During tho '"bows that business has gradually im eenlnry an. I a quarter that han elapsed proved, but there is some disnppoint- sin uir entry into the circle of in-' nient over the volume of unfilled or- dependeut peoples we have grown nnd ' ''''ra 011 hand, whirh were only 3,421,977 prospered i aterinl things to a (le- tons, ns compared with 3,313,870 tons gree never known before uml not now "" 'no 30 and 3,7(15.343 tons on March known in any other country. The 13 '" '''"r the quarter ended September colonies which straggled along (he sen- ' '!'"7. Ihe unfilled orders on hand coast of Hie Atlantic ami were lieiiimud ''" (i,l2."i.0IIS tons, in hut a le winiles west of tidewater' The earnings of the September qiinr- by the Indian haunt-d wilderness have ,,,r y " lis were: July, $V,SH,G30; I n transformed into the mightiest re- ' August. $1,1. "2.31 1 ; September, $!),3.'i4,- public which the world has ever seen. 41"- 1 '"' net earnings were $21,310, Its domains stretch across the conitnent Electricity Is Always Ready You need only to close the switch snd thd motor starts It needs no more Atten tion till you stop It Auk ub ubout General Electric Mo tors, You cun use them. ROGUE RIVER ELECTRIC CO. Successors to Condor Wa ter & Power Co. Office ao6 West 7th street, opp. the big electric sign from ot.i' to ihe other of tho rontost ocoaiis inul it exorcises dominion alike in tho A ret i and t lie tropic realms. The yrowth in wealth and popuhii it luix snrpassM even the growth in tor 1 Ittirv. Now h-'ie else in tho world is the average of individual comfort Hud material wrllhriiig ;ih high an in our 1'oitmiiito ;uul. "Vr the very reaxou that in mate rial wt'llln'ihtf wo have tliun abounded, wo owe lo the Almighty to show eo,ual pi-ogres in iiioihI mid spiritual things. With n iiiitioii. nt wi;h the indiivdunl wlni make up n nation, material well t'outg in mi indispennalile foundation. I tin t he foundation avail nothing by itself. That life is wasted and worse ill nil wasted whirh is spent in piling he;ip on loap. tlios:' things which min '4ter merely to the pleasure of the body 1 nd to the power that rests only on wealth. I poll material Weltbeing as a foun dation must io ruined the structure of lh- lofty life of the spirit, if this mi tion is properly to fulfill its great mis dun and accomplish all we so itrdeitt- !i 2 -4. n .i. . 17 nnd the surplus for the aunrter ' L-li I I UUl rrUUdlY The total surplus is now : 111 VMM it was $109,814, .".!. vj.n-j.'i. lUK.imo.T'- (US. The net earnings for the niue months wero (i."i,(iul,o:Ul, as eompraed with $l2S,tno,4S2 in the snmo period Inst year, nnd the amount Hnnlicable to div idends, $:U.S!.I,7; as ennumred with ! 160 aorea within one and one half mi lea With Me Good house, 6 rooms $1700 uood house, S rooms $1500 Good house. 4 rooms $750 $SiM.:i2.iG:t. The usual dividends were declared. FIRE DESTROYS PLANT OF ST. JOE LUMBERMEN COJ-UMl rVALKNK. Tdaho, Nov. 3. Tire which destroyed the plant of the St. Joe Lumber company at St. Joe, Idaho, wr.s still burning at an early i our this morning, but was under con trol. The V.1:, re started late last night from an unknown cause nnd soon was burn ing lercety. It already has eaten up several 1'ies of lumber and has thrown men ..ut of employment. The mill, aftr a spell of idleness, resumed oper ations onty a few days ago. It was estimated that the lot will be $100,-Out. railroad station, all in cultivation; fair improvements; 6 acres in trees; easy terms. 720 acres $45 per acre; 450 In culti vation; all good land; good improve ments; one-third down, balance 1 to 10 years at 6 per cent; good invest ment Wanted A loan of $4000; security, in eide business property. J. C. Rogers. Office, Hotel Nash, D street entrance. 0mml A THOROUGHBRED n man alwnyn looks lik when he has lm,l his garment! fitted an.l made in the riiiiisite itvle that ia alirava given thom by Kreur.er. If veil dan't look i like a man of fashion and taste it is ! I tieeaiiM your tailor is at fault, and you j ran nlways be sure of appearing like one if your suit or overcoat is made by raptaraaj KVKTU.ni- FN V H 1I BI I HvP A I.MS ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS Dwarf KBlir I'lll'l S, tnrf M AT) I S QUAINT JAPANESE SPECIALTIES Wn.ruSl AtllliiultlM-l n, . . (1--..V NEW STOOKJUSt ARRIVED J. A. KREUZBR & CO. IMPORTERS AKD TAJXOBS. PALM BOIUKNO, MEDFO&D, ORB. ' mil itmt toll mad wttxwnt n4 cvnfcrm r XKW CA 1 UMW K o rUniliVApt. homo. Statu Km r n OUR MENU AND SERVICE are ai perfect ai can be. At tuil res taurant you can get anything yon Want to eat from a "little snack" to.au elaborate dinner. And if you can find any fault with the way we cook and serve it you will be the first to do 10. People tell u! our meals are nothing lea atlian physical and mental .feaati. Come and see if they are right. NASH Q2lhE aSGYoii Do i ipIS Not Sees rfeite- Mnnij rmmm UkmOlW- 111(111 V ' sigus of this character about Medford. We ' always fiud a desiraWe tenaut before a good building has been "to let" more than 24 hours, and land owners know we can always find a purchaser if a reasonable valuation is put on property. Consequently Medford does not impress th honaeseeker as being "under the hammer." This is as it should be. This is the season of the year when home seekers want winter accommodations. Use business judgment ; get free rent and make a winning by purchasing one of these beauti ful cottages of the Rogue River Land Company EXHIBIT BUILDING, MEDFORD State Depositary. ' CAPITA!. AND SURPLUS 1116,000.00 THE MERCHANT KNOWS that it is so convenient, such a safe 'guard nnd saving of time to pay bis accounts by check that he would not be without this satisfactory means of set tlement. The Jackson County Bank respectful ly invite! the checking acocunts of mer chants, manufacturers, firms, corpora tions, societios and individuals, assur ing safety and good service. Safe deposit boles to rent, $4 per year and of. t,' .j Finest equipmont in southern Oregon. W. I. VAWTER. President O. B. LINDLEr, Caihier MEDFORD SASH & DOOR COMPANY PHONE 2291. Window Pramea, Oak Veneered Doors, with Bevel Plate, carried in stock cheap. Office Fixtures and all kinds of Planing Mill Work, including Turned Work and Fancy Grills. F STREET, BETWEEN SIXTH AND S EVENTH STREETS. J. E. ENYART.Presid ent. .1. A. PERRY, Vice-President. JOHN 8. ORTH, Cashier. W. B. JACKSON, Ass t Cuhier. The Medford National Bank MEDFORD, PR. CAPITAL $50,000 SURPLUS.. 10,000 Safety Boxes to Rent. A General Banking Business Transacted. We Solicit Your Patronage PERKINS & JANNEY ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS Plans, Specifications, Superintendence. Surveying in all its branches. Rooms 28-29, Jackson County Bank Building. When You Are Hunting for the best tailering establishment, you will not burn your money if yon patronize ns. The time is aew here when you should think about your fall suit. We are anxious that you should see onr display of fall fabrics. Hake your selections now. We will fill your order with pleasure. Stoaem cleaning. French dry clean ing and pressing neatly done. Spokane. W tic W. W. EIFERT CITY TAILOR MEDFORD OUR TELEGRAPH XEWS IS RECEIVED BY TELEGRAPH OPERATOR IN OUR OFFICE