Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 10, 1910, FIRST SECTION, Page 3, Image 3

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    MIJJD'FOIID MAIL TRIBUOT, MEDFORD, OHMON, SUNDAY, JULY 10, 1910.
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JUDGE HANNA IS
LYING VERY IEL
IN JACKSONVILLE
A(icil Jurist Stiff crtnii Sovcro Illness
mid Out Small Hopn Is Hold Out
(or His nccovory Has Been
Prominent In Oroiion (or Years.
II
JikIko H. IC, llunnii, for over .10
youin ono of tl'o proml.iunt flKuron
In IukmI clrclou In iioiitliurn Oregon,
lnivIiiK for IK yearn or that tlino Hat
upon tlio circuit bunch, In lylnjj very
111 ul IiIh homo In Juulcuon Mllo.
Tlio phywl l:.iiH huvo no fur boon
nnublo to rollovo I.Ik trouble, which Ih
of tho Htoimio'i, or rathor a foimral
breakdown, ami hut llttlu hopn hi hold
out for bin rocovory.
JudKo Ilitniin Ih nonrly 80 yearn of
iko and hmi noun Identified with
Huuthorn OroKon alnco boyhood.
Furniture Values
"For over 20 yours wo have earnestly catered to Hid needs of the community
in which wo did business und our host of satisfied customers is proof of our suc
cess. ,
AS TO "REAL VALUES, we will simply state that our stock is made up
of the best grades of Furniture and house furnishings and a trip to this store
will prove that this should bo your trading place.
A WELCOME AWAITS YOU AT THE
Medford Furniture Co.
t ttH
COMMUNICATIONS.
.
H H HH
Yoh, I iiKrucil to tul I you Hoinethiiij;
moru concerniiiK tlio proportion of
iiutieiiiilir.ini: our liontloil indebted
iicHH. Surely wo mimt nroiiHo oiir
huIvuh from our proHont comatose
condition and turn thiiiKfl upside
down and look at tlio rii:ht Hide for
a while. Wo have for ho Ioiik I'vii
drunken on hyperbolical deliinioiiH
that wo really do not know where
wo aro drifting. When wo awaken
enoimli to realize tliu fact that wo
tlio people aro the government ami
tliOMi wiiom wo honor with our votcn
aro our iikciUm. To illiiHtrato moru
fully, thuy hltould ronlire tho fact
that they aro tho hiiiiio to us iim an
niton t who in employed by tho Singer
Sewing Machinu Company or for the
Standard Oil Company. To Iik
Iiiwh and trammel Ihihiiiokh for the
benefit of all the puople. Or, jwr-
luiPh it would be more nearly ex
plained by (pioting a'paragraph of
Mayor Urand Whitlock'a of Toledo,
Ohio, in IiIh reply to tho prenehor'H
enmiuiiiiieatloii. Mayor Wliitloek
Hiiid "I am not the beadle of a Now
England villugu in tho year 1(11)2,
but the mayor of a modern American
city in tha year 111 10, elected not to
govern tho people but to roprcHent
them; not to boar rule-over them,
but to carry their will into effect."
Hut today it in not looked at in
that way. Tlioy, whom wo honor
with our votoH claim to lie our
Iiohhch and wo their earn. Our
uoiigroHRinen Hay wo iuiihI pay them
at leant 21) jwr day and lift centH
pur mile, and full time to and from
their place of biiHincHH, that wo miiKt
pav ournelvcH $1.50 pur day, 5 centu
per milo and no wngaH going to the
plueo wanted and returning.
Then and not till then will we re
ceive that whioli 5h oura to give and
receive.
Hut hold on thorol Ik it, not a fact
that a largo Mirtion of our national
iudcbtednoHH IniH boon nationalized?
Yen. What has through chienncry
by IIiobo wo have honored with our
votcn beeomo a nationalized debt.
Say. wan it not always a national
debt? Or, rather, a war debt? No,
not neecHHiirilv Wo never owed
a cent of war debt. 1 should like to
know if it was not a war debt, what
wan the nature of the debt. Tor we
have been paying interest for Ioiiiih
thcho many years on what the xliti
eal rabble Iiiih taught uh to beliee
wiik nn honest war debt. Well, I
will tell you in whorl, I may in the
near future tell you more fully; it
wiik and in tho bankers' bonded debt.
Thai debt has not only been nation
alized, but Iiiih gono much further.
We. the American Government (the
people) havo been paying them (the
liankerH) double interest on the na
tion's indebtedness. No, it was not
a war debt.
I think that 1 grasp your idea of
nationalizing a county or state bond,
that ih, you would have the county
ihMie bonds to tho amount of money
needed in tho way of making good
roads, or for exixirliug water from
th" mountains to tho valley, building
bridges, good rouds, etc., etc. Send
thoo bonds to our agent, the comp
troller of tho currency at Washing
ton, I). ( have him issue bills in lieu
of thoKo bonds. You guesKcd right
thih time, so puss up to the head of
voiir class.
You tell me that part of our bonded
indebtedness has not only been na
tionalized, but it has been more than
nationalized. Hollo, there, I). H., will
vou tell bow that is? I mnv in the
near future tell you how that jk
done. Why not have all our bonded
indebtedness nationalized and tiit
paying interest?
Kor two rcnsetiH: First, it is that
most of the small robbers, humor
ously called grafters or business men,
and nearly all tho wage workers
thoughtlessly vote blindly. Their
voting is something like the little
birds taking their food they shut
their eyes, open their mouths, swal
low that which is put in their mouth.
So, too, the voters shut their eyes,
reach their hand, vote the same tick
et their master hands them. Sec
ond, it would do away with the mill
ionaires and also with the paupers,
so wo must continue to pay double
interest until the workers of the
world awake from their comatose
or lethargic state, shake the non
producers off their back, dcclnre
they nro tired of working and voting
to produce millionaires of the idle
class and paupers of the working
class. Then and not till then will
they quit voting tho rich nto power,
but instead will do as they have done
in Milwaukee vote themselves into
power. Then they can have home
for themselves and thoir families.
I). H. REAMES.
A GOOD CUSTOMER
will buy more goods than a warm one will in hot weather.
A cool customer will buy with less palaver.
He or she will be better natured, less cranky and
easier to sell to; and you know it.
Moreover, you yourself, and your employes, will be
in a better selling mood if your store is cool and pleasant
than if it is sticky and suffocating and savors of a boiler
room in its stiflingness.
The Electric Fan is a blessing and a cheer which -you
can ill afford to ignore.
Life in the dog days is a question of degrees.
Make your place of business habitable and inviting to
the people, and the trend of trade will be in your direction.
It stands to reason it's logical it's apparent.
Why not invest a little money in trade-winning cool
ness? Electric Eans will create a tempting and delightful
breeze, and in every breeze there'll be dollars for you.
May our representative call and take it up with you?
Don't wait until it's 90 in the shade. Phone us today.
Rogue River
Electric Comp'y
P. S. How about that Electric Sign you've been think
ing about?
All Close In Property
10 Acres Pears and Apples
Only a Short Distance Out and a Splendid
Buy at Only $350 an Acre.
i
60 Acres, Fine Building Site
II and Improvements. Call and Get Prices
and Terms.
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5 Acres Berries & Orchard
Fine Fruit Land. Will Make Prices and
Terms to Suit the Purchaser.
18 Acres Short Distance $outh
This is the Place the Wise Investor
Should See at $3000.00
20 Acres of Fine Pears and Apples, Planted in Spring of 1910 at $300.00 an Acre.
CITY LOTS $250.00 $300.00 and $4.00.00; TERMS
THESE LOTS ARE WELL LOCATED FOR HOMES AND PRICED RIGHT FOR INVESTMENT.
H. C. MALTBY
Room 7 Post Office Block
Phone Main 3132
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