(Vf? "WVKWfvr tjw iffi wrq-f-imiiqp H.'," H T) NrF.DFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, ALEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, .-JUNTO 22, 1910. ri w iJI f- I J' Br ' fc 1 If 1 fe t. tA 5 s. t w Mbdford Mail Tribune Compltto Rerlcit: Thirty-ninth Wnr; Dnlly, Fifth Year. tiX.I8X8D DAIJVT EXCEPT SA.TOR- SAT BT THE MSSTORD UNIFORM THE FOLIOE. A cm.notliUllon of the Mcilfortl Mull. t.itilla)ipil 1SN. tint Southern Or- fOnlBti, pRtnlillKlirct JS02. llin Doinocmllo 1 Hints. vMabllnliFd 1st:, tno AKiuawi Tribune ('Ubllalictl IS96. and the Meit f ird Tribune, putubllshed 11108. UKOHOK PUTNAM, Kdltor nnd Mmviuvr Bntered aa second-class mutter No ranber 1, 180J, at the postofflco at Medford, Oregon, under the act of March I, 1179. Official Paper of tho City of Mcdford nrasosxrTzoK rates. One year by mall IS 00 t a In lie. Point. Oaa month by mail Per month, delivered by carrier. In Hertford. Ashland, Jacksonville, .60 Phoenix. Central till and Woodvtllo.., unday only, by mall, per year. weeKiy, per year Talent. Oold HI .50 2.00 1.60 nU X.tased Wlr United patch. Praia Sla- The Mall Tribune Is on sale at the Ferry Nowa Stand. San Francisco. Portland Hotel News Stand, Portland. Bowman mows uo., I'oruana. ur. W. O. Whitney, Seattle. Wash. Hotel Spokane News Stand, Spokano. rostaff Xata. I to ll-pago paper.... lc II to S4-page paper... "c 14 to 88-pairo paper Sc iwosxr czaamATzosr. Average Dally for November. 1909 1,700 December, 1909 1,841 January, 1910 1,925 February. 1910 !.1 afarch, 1910 ,................... 2,203 April. 1910 ,....., 2,301 MAT CZBOZmATZOir. 17 18 2550 . , A99V 1 2400 S 2350 I 2360 4 2400 I 2400 2400 I 2400 2400 19 2425 11 2425 II 2500 II A. ...2550 II 1300 If 2S50 Total 65,100 Lea deduction and special edition 1.400 19 2550 20 2550 22 25S0 23 2550 24 2500 25 2500 28 2500 27 2500 29 2650 30 2500 31 2600 63,700 Average net dally, 2150. STATE OF OREGON. County of Jack son, aa: On ttfla 1st day of May, 1910, per sonally appeared before me, Q. Put num. manairer of the Mcdford Mall Trl imne. who, upon oath, acknowledged that the above figures are true and correct. (Seal) H. N. YOCKES-. Notary Public for Oregon. TVif 13DK0R1)S polieotiion should bo uuifonuod. By uu ' ifonuod it is not numut than any old blue suit with any old kind of a hat, hut a regulation suit with brass but tons and a' that, together with a helmet and the other little things whieh make known a policeman as fat as the eve ean distinguish form. Mcdford is taking on metropolitan airs rapidly. A stranger remarks on this point often on his arrival. But let one meet ouc of tho membors of tho police force and ho is suddenlv disillusioned. A vision of vc little countrv crossroads village flashes across his mind. Med ford is continually filled with strangers who nat urally seek information. Instinct bids them turn to a po liceman, but none can bo found you try and pick one of the force out of a crowd and see how far you got. By all means let tho police force bo uniformed. Let Mcdford cease to boast of her metropolitan airs until it is done. f COMMUNICATIONS. -f f PERSISTENCY IN ADVERTISING. KEsroao, oBsaoir. MetrODOlls of Southern Oretran and Northern California and fastest-grow ing city In Oregon. I'opuia PoDulatlon. 1910. 9.000. Bank deposits. 32.760.000. Banner fruit city of Oregon Rogue River apples won sweepstakes prize and title of "Apple JClags ot the World" at National Apple Show, Spokane. 1909 Rogue River pears brought highest slices In all markets of the world dur ing the past five years. Write Commercial Club, enclosing C eenta. for postage on finest community pamphlet ever written. It muy be that Manhattan sky scrapers will Lave to put in screens against those Jersey airships. By dissolving tho Wright injunc tion the court justified again the use of the expression "as free as the air." The colonel helped the stokers n little recently. The colonel himself needs no stoking. He is always un dcr a full head of steam. The now science of the air is pro ceeding at a fast gait, but is not u congressional bill for carrying the Wails in aeroplanes a little ahead of events? Tho six-year-old boy who rode horseback from Oklahoma wants to be a Now York hotel clerk. Thus does the pinnacle of earthly glory and splendor lure simple and rustic youth to high endeavor. The Montclair citizen who is con tending for the right to celebrate- the Fourth noisily in a town which has ordained that it shall bo noiseless shows that tho spirit of Independ ence day is not extinct. Natchez, with a treasury deficit due to tho expense incurred in enter taining President Taft, has the sat isfaction of knowing that it went broke in tho good cause of maintain ing southern traditions of hospital ity. THE BOOK OF YEARS. In sleep I turned tho volumo of my years; Tho leaves were many, rough and soiled and marred, And hero nnd thoro a lino was blurred and scarred, Where- to erase it I had tried with tears. No page was porfect, but through all thoro ran Fair lines and many spaces white and clear; Ah, small thoy were, tho blotted linos too near, But each showed whore n thought began. higher OOOKS could be written about the power of persisloit cy in advertising. It is a subject of which the advertising enthusiast never grows weary. The other day an advertising man was talking to a well known merchant. Naturally the conversation drifted to business-getting methods. This reminded the wholesaler of some follow-up let ters he had received from an eastern manufacturer. He showed them to the advertising man, saying: "What do you think of them?" The advertising man read them over and vouchsafed the opinion that they were pretty good. "Pretty good! "Well, I guess they arc!" replied the wholesaler. ' 'If you want to know just how they are I will tell you. "Those people have been sending me letters now for several months. I didn't pay much attention to them at first, but finally I became interested in them. I certainly admired their persistency. In fact, I admired it so much that the other day I sat down and sent them an order for a large amount of goods." Mighty strong argument on the persuasive force of sticktoitiveness, isn't it? A striking illustration for the man who expects to build up a business on a one-time ad vertisement. The merchant who stays with the advertising day after day and year after year is the one who wins the prizo mon ey. It isn't necessary that he write follow-up letters, but it's essential that he make use of the columns of the daily newspaper. The late Mark Twain's story of the spider is apropos at tins point. Twain was a newspaper man during several years of his life and was a strong believer in advertising. While addressing an association of advertisement writers one day, he said: ' 'It pays to advertise. "When I was editing the Virginia City Enterprise, writing copy one day and mining the next, I tried to force this truth in many ways. "A superstitious subscriber one day wrote and said he had found a spider on his paper; was this good or bad luck? 1 replied to huu in our answers-to-correspondents' column as follews: i tt tm,l a,, K.. :i,.. mi. . . t -i viu. Kjuuaunuuj. iue iincung 01 a spicier in your copy of the Enterprise was neither good luck nor bad. The spider was merely looking over the pages to find out what merchant was not advertising, so it could spin its web across the door and lead a free and undisturbed existence forever after.' " It is wonderful, when -you stop to think of it, that you ean talk to every thinking man and woman in your city every day. You can do this very thing. It is made possible through the daily newspaper, a modern institution that for greatness ranks with the telephone, tho telegraph and the electric railway. You can't expee'e a salesman to solicit business from more than a few d.ozen people a day at best, and yet, through newspapers and magazines, you can solicit trade from millions of .'people in the same length of time, if you so choose. Every intelligent American will sooner or later make a study of advertising, because every man who would suc ceed must know about advertising. It is the most power ful force of moriern business. Its field, has only been pros pected. Its possibilities are unlimited. C. Pollnrd, tho greatest traveling willow worker In tho United Status, was refused n glass ot boor at No. ai south Front street and at M. & U. Co. saloon on account ot being col ored. The pnloon looked llko It was worth about 3Ge, but yot It wnu too flno for a nocro to tako a drink, nnd on tho same- morning I was roftiBcd service In tho llttlo restaurant noxt door, In about tho catno shape. I hnvo boon travollnu for two yearn and 1 have never been rofused In such a placo as that koloro. I have boon In tlio stato of Washington, wlro tho pecplo aro civilized, and oiio man's icouoy Is Just aa good as another one, so now I pick out a good uatno for Ft out street Hebo nvo nuo). I do think that It Is a alintno that thoro nro but threo onloons In town where a negro can got a drink. Nobody but fools could stay horo, nnd they but a short tlmo. So tho snmo night I canto out tho saloon door nnd asked n policeman what ho thought about It. DM ho think tho law allowed a man who had a public p'.nco to refuse to nervo anyone as long as ho acted tho gontloiuan with out bavins up a sign "No colored trado solicited"? Ho said no, ho had to hnvo up this sign. So I think tho peoplu of Mcdford need moro knowl edg ot tho law. 1 will probably havo tho matter investigated yot. I havo got to meet my brother In San Fran cisco on July 4, and may call back at Mcdford on a later dnto and see what kind ot law thoy nro having here. I Just want to show thorn that nil negroes are not fiolo. O. POLLARD. MINNESOTA REPUBLICANS BACK UP TAFI Delegates Refuse to Pass Resolu tions Denouncing Payne-Aldrich Tariff Bill Roosevelt Policies Arc Also Turned Down. ST. PAUL, Minn., Juno 22. Taft Republicans nro today deriving much satisfaction from tho refusal of the delegates to tho Republican state convention to pass resolutions de nouucini: the Pnyno-Aldrich tariff as a repudiation pf Republican platform pledges and commending tho action of tho MinncHota representatives and senators who voted ugaiust that measure. The resolutions which wcro defeat ed by u largo majority also contain ed n clause proclaiming unalterable support of tho "policies promulgat ed by Theodore Roosevelt." The progressives in tho conven tion, however, secured easily tho passage of resolutions commending tho pursuit of conservation as out lined by Roosevelt. SLEEPS FOR FIRST TIE IN Ml YEARS Howover, Ho Falls to Wako Up Suffers Torments for Years nt Not1 Boinn Able to Closo His Eyes and Rost. HARMON GIVEN NOMINATION.!) (Crtutinund from page 1.) 1IACKKTT8TOWN, N. J., Juno 22. Alonro Wire, oiico chief of police, tell nslcc( two liightu ago for the first time in 20 years. Today ho In dead, not having rctimiud to con sciousness since his eyes closed. The cud oaino last uveuiug, appar ently from an affection of tho lungs ami the bronchial tubus. Up to the time ho became ill, about three weeks ago, Wire was in perfect health. Thirty years ago Wire was em ployed as a futm hand and one day was struck by a stroke of lightning. He soon became deaf. Ho wont to many ear specialists, but none ol them could relieve his deafness, So ho resigned himself to his fate and learned tho deaf and dumb alphabet By tho time lie reached tho letter his deafness had disappeared, and his hearing has been porfect since. Then the insomnia began. Year af ter year it increased, and for ten yearn Wire suffered torments from being unable to sleep. Hut, strange ly, his health remained unimpaired. His sleeping hours gtew shorter and shorter, and again lie consulted many specialists. Almost every phy sician had a different theory about what the electric stroke had done to his system, but none could suggest a cure. Finally Wire learned to do without any sleep. To rest his body hu would lie for soveral hours on n couch, but his oyes always remained wide open and Ifis brain apparently always was active, lie frankly told his friends ol his affliction and several pliysi eians who doubted his word put huu to extreme tests. Those tests, how- over, novor served to make the man sleep. Iwo nights ago, just boforo his eyes closed for tho last' time, ho call ed his wifo to his side. "Tho Lord bo praised," ho whispered, "I'm go ing to sleep at last. f t ttltiHH COLUMBIA PARK t BOYS HERE TONIGHT -r"r-f -f-r4 -f MANY RIFLES FOR Tho Columbia Park Hoys, forty strong, arrived in town thiB morning. head by Major Peixotto, to whose efforts tho club owes its existence. This afternoon tho boys aro playing baseball with our fast Mcdford tenm and tonight thoy nppoar at tho Mod ford theater in a program of artis tic musical selections varied with athlotio and vandevillo numbers. Tho boys hnvo beon gelling splendid no tices everywhere thoy nppoar and will no doubt bo greeted by tho us ual Mcdford big house IfnflkinB for ITonlth. GALVESTON, Tex. 22. Ton thou sand rlfloa and plenty of ammunition havo beon secretly takoa luto Mexico and distributed among tho revolution ists during tho past yoar, according to a special dispatch received hero todr.y from Hormonlllo, Mexico, Most of tho guns hovo been shipped Into Sonora and Chlhuachua. Thoy wcro sent In small consignments. Tho dispatch cays that most of tho guns solzed by tho govornmont offi cials last week woro old onog and that tho now rifles smuggled in dur ing tho past yo:ir aro otlll In tho pos session of tho nntl-DIaz mon, It Is further assorted that tho alarm caused tho govornmont at Cananea was only a ruso and that Instead ot that pluco being tho hoadtiuarters of revolutionaries, thoy. aro scattorod all over Moxico. For Sale 10 acres, out, $700. Homesteads, 'call room 207. CJoao-in proporty, income- $08 per month; $1500 if tnkon nt onco. Lots on West Main, n bargain. Lota Went Walnut Park addition. Oak tioi wood, well seasoned. Restaurant for nuick sale, $275. Rooming houso nnd rostnuraut at in voice Hotel with 10 rooms, a fine buy. Two acres, closo in, $050. Bearing orchard trncts at $100 por ucro. 34 acres under ditch, closo ins $0,800 100 acres, closo in, fino dniry and stock ranch, ousy terms. Solent in the couttol litu milking is a power thai numl ho ovoilluown with out dolnv. "Tluno cannot ho relief while the interests piofiliug tlnoiigh-tlio liuiff InwH nro allowed to friiiuo them, as thus far lliev hnc done, II hui lieeli shown strongly that tlieq control the Rcpuhllcaii party. "Insurgency is a mere protest Tim cgulnrH scoff nt it. Tlui oiity agency by which it imii no uisiouguu ia,uu lidiiiuoralli) paily. (hind government means llm snmo ipi Washington as it (loos in Columbus. If. the dlsoiiHstoii which tlio Niiilo campaign Involves shall hulp voters lo elcuilc piihliu service nt both capitals I shall on doubly glad to have had putt in It." Tho "bargain hunter" who studied tho nds Is also a bargain finder! HnsklnH f..f II i.lth MICHELIN Tires MiehtUn was the first to manufacture pneumatic automobile tires and now produces more than sotfo of all the tires made in the world. 114 v VfaDt In Stock by VALLEY AUTO COMPANY MEDF0RD, OR. Isis Theatre -- ---- eOMING s -- --- -- ---- ' Mtitche II Dueo Wednesday Ni&ht Singing & Musical Sketches t TJIRER REELS Oh' SELECT PICTURES 1 THE CLOSED DOOR a drama. 2 THE REJUVENATION OF FATHER a comedy. 3 TOURING THE CANARY ISLES Pictur osquo. 4 MEPHISTO AT A MASQUERADE Comedy ----"-------"- - Illustrated Song "Night and Day" by Miss Kennody. , Good Music. Clean, Cool and Comfortable - - For Sale - - " -------- --4 428 ACRES "Rogue River bottom land, suitable for fruit aud general fanning purposes. 300 ACRES Alfalfa land, covered with irrigation ditch and perpetual water right, lias coal outcrop ping. At a bargain on long time, easy payments. Gold Ray Realty Comp'y. 209 WEST MAIN ST. pages Unknowingly, I traced these iutorlincd. I thought them but Jooso leaves soon torn nnd lost; I know not thon tho tears whieh thoy should cost When in tho western sky my sun 'declined. Could I but write them now, how fair they all should look When tho Groat Angel oomos to closo and seal my book, xxuiene J, jjowuicr j PRIZE OFFEREfJ FOR JONATHANS AT SPOKANE N. S. Bennett . of tho Eden Vnliov Nursory, has ho g tin n special nrize of $20 worth o. i nursory stock at tho third nnnuaf r exhibition of tho Na tional Apple- 3how at Spokano, for tho best box of "Jonathan ntmles grown in Oregon." This is a "state wide" compv litioi i und should stimu late compel ition among those grow ers who hftvo Jon athnns in thoir or chards, Mr. Beunott hni i roeoived tho fol lowing roply to h is offer from the management of tin 3 show; . o, uenuett,. Eden Valloy Nurs ery Co., Mcdford, Or. Dear Sir: Wo note your offor of n upecial prizo of $20 worth of nursory stock for tho best box of Jonathans grown in Oregon. This will bo a satisfac tory irpze and wo shall lake pleasure in making tho announcement. I be lieve your offer will stimulate com petition' and it is certainly a gener ous donation on your part, "Yours yory truly. "NATIONAL APPLK SHOW (INC.) "I3y Hon II. nieo." Tho ad that tho othor nowspapor roador moroly glanced at may bo the ono you're looking for. SAYS HE KILLED JOHNSON. (Continuod from Paso 1.) aro to bo given any oredonce. Tito detectives admit that thoy aro baffled concerning tho whereabouts of Johnson's monoy, although they doclnre that they aro sure that he hnd moro than $1000, liert Kersh, htiubaud of the woman imdor arrost hero with Webb, is ex pected to urrivo today from Soattlo to claim possession of his 7-year-old son, William, I Uaokins for Hoalth. WANTED. Girls for gouornl housework. Machinist. Second cook. Log drivers. Mon, $2.50 por day, and board $1J0 25 wood choppors, $1,50 cord. Girls for gonoral housowork, $5 to $7 por wook. Itailroad mon, $2.25, Man to cut tior wood, $1 tier. Woman to cook on ranch. E. F. A. BITTNER Mcdford Employment Bureau, Business ohnucos, real estate, all kinds of help furnished. Room 207 Taylor & Phlpps Blthj. Phono 4141 Mniu. '""MIMBBl We Fix It "Our machino responsibility does not end with tho lnnohino'H sale. Anything wrong wo fix II. If anything breaks wo fix if. Anything woiu'h out wo fix it. If it's your faultwo fix it. If il'ri tho iimchiiiu'H fault wo fix it. If H'h our fault wo fix it. No unit lor wIiiiI'h the mailer wo fix it, Call Main 1711. C. S. LUPT0N, M(r. Lawton Bulltllnn. Motlfortl, Or. - -- kJV iT