4 THE MEDFORD DAILY TR11UJNR MEIVEOKD, OWKOON. TUESDAY. (HTOUKK 1!)). Medford Daily Tribune Official Taper of the City of Mod ford. Published everv evetdim except Sunday. MED FORD PUBLISHING COMTA' George Putxam, Editor and Manager. Admitted as Second-Class Matter in the Postof f i e Medford, Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One year, by nmil $,"i.00One month by mail or carrier , .$0..r)0 The Tribmio is for snlo by Hotel Portland Xews Staml, Portland, Or.; Ferrv News St ami, San Francisco, Cnl. IS OXE MAX'S JUDGUEXT SUPElilOR TO THAT OF TWELVE? Another instance of Jackson county justice. Monday the "Walsworths, father and son. stood up for sentence in the circuit court at Jacksonville after being convicted of manslaughter. The jury that tried the father signed a written petition to the trial judge asking the extreme clemency of the court. The jury that tried the son made a like request. The pen alty fixed by the law is imprisonment from one to fifteen years. The defendants had each served eighteen months' imprisonment in the penitentiary for the same offense, after which a new trial was granted. The sentence im posed will make them serve sixteen and one-half years for a crime the jury found was manslaughter, punishable in the extreme by imprisonment for fifteen years. In many states the jury is empowered to fix the pen alty. In this state they cannot, and in this district it seems that their recommendation is of about as much force as a petition from the defendant himself. The jury, under the law. are exclusive judges of the facts that prove the guilt or innocence of a defendant, and while they cannot fix the penalty, their recommendation should not be spurned with such an evident showing of contempt. Is it possible that the man selected by ihc accident of politics to preside at trials is so superior to the average jury that the latter 's voice fall .on ears that not only heav not, but are resentful of recommendations of clemency, mercy and humanity? Is it possible that in such matte;-? the judgment of one man is superior to that of twelve ? "Upon what meat, hath this, our Caesar, fed That he hath grown so great?" AX AUTUMX SUXSET. Nature having produced the perfect day and a fall day in the Rogue River valley is the perfect day, a verit able "Bridal of earth and sky"' crowned her glory by creating a horizon-wide panorama of flaunting hues and fleeting forms the autumn sunet. Across the western sky in a riot of everchanging color flit a world of weird and grotesque ever-shifting shapes that chase each other in flying chaos ; copper and burn1 shed gold, the pink of the briar and the blue of the violet, pearly grey and flashing crimson, mingle in wild confusion. Painted with a haunting beauty in the sunset sky, we see now the flaring flames of an aerial forest fire; w the surging breakers of a sea of blood; now a fairy moun tain range, whose snowy summits shine with a pink after glow; now a maiden's face, whose blush of youth turns in a second to the ash of age, and loses luster as you gazej now this, now that form is sharply outlined and then fades into, some other one. Gradually the gold of the autumn sky melts into the purple shadows, the seething sea of colors fade 'is the breezes pass on frosty feet, and one by one the swinging lanterns of the night twinkle from the arched dome of the heavens, leaving "the world to darkness and o me." The myriad fleeting sights and gorgeously colored visions in the glow of the sinking sun, are limited only by the imagination of those who have eyes to see the b auty that nature spills with a lavish hand not only in the sk ies above, but on the earth beneath over a land "fair f.s the garden of the Lord " Of course there are those who cannot srje--tho.se of whom Joaquin Miller wrote: The gold that in the sun-light lies In bursting iieaps at dawn ; ' The silver spilling from the skies At night to walk upon ; ' , The diamonds gleaming in the dew, . He never raw, he never know, ' Some gold he had, dug from the mud, Some silver, crushed from stones, The gold was red with 'dead men's blood. The silver black with groans, And when lie died he moaned aloud: ' But God, they've put no pocket in my shroud. club mm PRIZES FOR BEST ARTICLES! PENDLETON I'OlfTI.AX!) t'HAMHKH OK COM MKlfi 'I'. IW.hi'ul. Or., Oct. '(!.- i'.m !'.:. ::..! dollars will lie given 'y the I', nlaud Commercial rluh in prizes lor tlio best newspaper iitul magazine articles on Portland, I In' Mate, or tlio Pacific northwest. Tin' offer holds good 1 n li ti jr the routing year and the one writing tlio host ar ticle will be rewarded with a chock lor $10110. Second best will get tf.'iOO, and a gradually diminishing scale of prices will reward SO writers. The contest is open to everyone. The conditions are that the articles must be printed in a newspaper or magazine of general circulation, printed anywhere outside of Ore gon and Washington. Marked copy of the publication must then be sent to the Portland Commercial club, where it will bo turned over to three judges named by the governor of Oregon. The articles may he printed between the dates of Xovembcr 1, 1010. and December 31. 1010. Almost any phase of the northwest may be used as subject matter of the articles. The length ami treatment is optional with the writer. The plan of the Commercial club is not to huve the northwest "boomed" in llie com mon meaning of the term so much as it is to have the people of tin coun try become more familiar with this portion of the I'nited State- and give expression to their views in such arti cles as will In- acceptable to papers iliroughtoui the cnlin ul'monl. The decision of the jinhje- will be absolutely impartial. There are nrizes fur SO writers mid the chanceful- winning are so many that entries in tin nti -t -liould li.. lm-je. That 'he publicity resultini; from the prize offer will he wide nnd that much good will be realized for the whole Pacific northwest is assured. Grain Rates Reduced. Reductions in grain rates of about l'J'2 per cent from the interior to tidewater will ;. info effect on the railroads of the Xorthwe-t on Novem ber 1 and will effect a very lame saving to the wheat growers of the Inland Empire. The redaction was irdered on the O. R. & X. lines by 'he Oregon railroad poinn'i--iou and on the Washington railroads by the commission of tli:it state. I n the nresent year's prop it is believed a saving of about ..100,000 will be real ized to growers by the lessened '"re'':h! rates. firenf prep:ir,-i lions nr.- being made for the annual It 1 River apple fair. October -JS. -J0 and 30. The display f prize fruit will be l!..g,r nnd bct '"r than ever ;imi M' a t tcdnnce on i ' r ' i- in be xceptioually liirg.. Sat unlay, Octo ber will be Portland day. The Portland Commercial club has been invited and citizens gcncrnllv from this city will view the Hood Rivet show in large numbers. Interest in 'he exhibit of fine apples ;it the fuir is wide. WOOLEN MILLS The Pendleton Woolen M ills a re ti I with ll:1 aimotiiirenieitt of lite reor ganization of the company, the building tup' -i i i m it 'i 1 1 of a new woolen mill by Clarence M. mid Koy T. Uisbeo. sons of t -Mayor ( '. !'. ' iisliop of Salem. The trade will soon be able to show I'mse famous Aulo I'olx s. Carriage Uobcs, Indian liobes and Condi Covers made of that fine eastern Oregon wool, said to be the finest robes made in the United States, ami they have a national reputation. TREES 84032 booked to date. Reliable stock at right prices. Everything in the nursery line. Vines, Plants, Flowering Shrubs. Once a customer, you will come again. N. S. BENNETT 1201 N. CENTRAL AVE. P. 0. BOX 823. PHONE 3221 Do You ECZEMA CURABLE? PROVEN I Contemplate Planting an Orchard ? If So Attorney at Moline, III.. Convinced by Oil of Wintergreen Compound There isnothing that wil convince a lawyer except evidence. Xow here is some rather startling evidence of a simple home cure for eczema which convinced one. lawyer, F. 0. Entrioken, attorney at Moline, Illinois. lie tells how oil of r.-iuler-green compound mixed with thymol and glycerine, as in D. T). 0. Pres cription cured him in thirty days nf teer thirty-two years of suffering. "For thirty-two years," writes At torney Entriken, "I was troubled with eczema, scabs all over my face, body and head. I could run n hair brush over my body nndthn floor would be covered with scale-; enough to fill a basket. I tried everything salves, internal medicine, X-ray, all without result." Just a month ago, I was induced to fry n. n. n. Prescription. The ilelt was relieved instantly; so I eon lintied. Tl is just n month now and I am completely cured. T have not n particle of itch and Ihe scales have dropped off. I pan only say again cure discovered. I am now starting all (he eczema suffers on the right (rack." Cure after cure has been brought to our attention and always that in stant relief from that awful itch. Medford Pharmacy. 2 r ' I For Chapped Skin. Chapped skin whether on the hands of face may be cured in one. night by applying Chamberlain's Salvo. It is also nneqtialed for sore nipples, burns nnd scalds. For side by Leon P. Nankins' Pharmacy. wbasfe-.;- m I Have a Full and Complete Stock of of all the Leading Commercial Varieties and you will Find it to your Interest to ;;et our Figures Before you buy. Home Grown Stock and Everything Guaranteed. Also i tall line ?if Bulbs Lawn Grass imd . '?er seeds ROGUE RIVER NURSERY C. F. COOK, Proprietor MEDFORD, OR. PHONE 583. OFFICE .IN ROGUE RIVER VALLEY DEPOT