Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 28, 1910, Image 4

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    TSHSBjLyRiliTTIjKCBrTSAujunTSr vtymvivF
Hedford Mail Tribune)
Complete Series: Thirty-ninth etvr,
Dally, Fifth Year.
AW IKDErHNDBNT RBWSPAFER
mUBXED DAII.T XXOSFT SATUB-
BAY BY THE MBDrOBS
PRZHTXNQ CO.
A consolidation of tho Medford Mall,
MUbllshcd 1889: the Southern Oro-
fonlan, cstnbllnhpd 190J; tho Democratic
teacn. established 1872: tho Aehland
tribune, established 1896, and tho Mod
ford Tribune, established 1908.
KOnOB PUTNAM, Editor and Manage
Entered n second-class matter No-
ttab 1. 1909. at the post-office at
M4ford, Oregon, under tho act or
March S, 1879.
Official Paper of the City of Medford
SUHSORXPTIOX BATES.
One year by mall.
15.00
flu month hv mall. ........
,6U
Fw month, delivered by carrier. In
Talent, I'noenix.cenirai roini,
Oold 11111 and woodvllle E0
anday only, my mall, per year. . . . 2.00
Weekly, per year 1.50
ru
leased Wire United Fresa DU
patcbes. The Mall Tribune Is on sale at tho
JTwrry News Stand. Son Francisco.
Portland Hotel Nows Stand, Portland.
Bowman News Co., Portland. Ore.
W. O. Whitney, Seattle, Wash.
Hotel Spokane Nows Stand, Spokane.
Postagw Bates.
I to 12-pago paper
II to 34-page paper...
4 to 16-pace paper
BWOBB OrSCXTULTlOH.
Average Dally for
KoTember. 1909
1.700
December. 1909 1,84!
jasuary. isio i,:
February . 1910 2,122
March. 1910 2.203
April, 1910 , , 2,301
Jane, 1910 2,450
JU3TE OnCDXAXIO
1.,
2.500
16.
2,525
2,525
2,675
2,525
2.625
2,525
2,625
2,525
2,675
2,52a
2,525
2,S2:
2,625
2,500
2,600
2,550
2,500
2.500-
2,625
2.525
2,626
3,575
2.525
2,625
2,525
19
o. . . . .
21
2
tea
Jt
24.,
26.,
27.,
28.,
29..
30.,
Total for month 85,700
Leas deductions 650
65,050
Average net dally. 2,502.
TATK OF OREGON, County of Jack
son, ss :
On this 1st day of July, 1910, per
sonally appeared before me, O. Put
Bam, manager of the .Medford Mall Tri.
ksse, -who, upon oath, acknowledged that
ska above figures are true an? correct.
(Seal) H. N. TO KEY,
Notary Public for Jregon.
XEsroBs, osxooir.
Metropolis of Southern Oregon and
Worth ern California and fastest-crow-kag
city In Oregon.
Population. 1910, 9.000.
Bank
deposits. 22.7S0.O00-
Banner fruit city of Oregon Roeue
Blyer apples won sweepstakes prlxe and
"Apple Blags of tie World"
at National Applo Show. Spokane. 1909
BMue River pears brought highest
mtiKvm ui uii marxeis oi ua worm dur
lag the past five years.
Write Commercial Club, cnelmilrr C
at for postage on finest community
. uvb ow written.
A SUMMER ARGUMENT.
She wants to go unto the shore.
And pack her trunk
With, gowns no one has seen before
And. all such junk.
But I would seek some far-off place
Where I'm unknown
And let my whiskers deck my face,
And be alone.
ghe sighs for parties and for teas;
They are her wish.
Z. merely want to take my ease.
And loaf and fish.
She wants to lead a life that's grand,
In silken skirts,
L want to wear old trousers and
My outing shirt.
Detroit Free Press
Reno's divorce mills have resumed.
Joy riders often have sad finishes.
Occasionally we meet a man who Is
io honest that ho attracts attention.
It's a pity wo can't repair the dam
age as easily as we can make a break.
Now the horseshoers want a na
tion board of registration.
It 1b extremely hot in. Kansas es
pecially In the vicinity of Senator
Bristow.
A crazy person thinks everyone else
Is Insane, and lovel s blind because
It imagines everybody else is.
Olfford Pinchot Is going to stump
to elect Mr. Johnson governor of
California not Jack, but Hiram.
Tho good may die young, but have
you ever noticed how long a worth
less roan manages to hang on?
ED cmfwyetaol coeeta
If you ore the first to discover your
own mistakes you may hide them.
This is the timo of year when sci
entists use up good white paper tell
ing ub how to sleep out of doors.
They nro going to raise tho price
of smoking tobacco, but corn silk and
alfalfa Is quoted at the samo old
rates.
It'n eaiy for a man to do things
If given a chance, but the world ap
plauds the man who makes his own
ohance.
Tho Colored Head and Second
Walters' association closed its con
vention la Detroit, witb a vote of
thanks to Mr. Jeffrie.
THE FRUIT OF
BEAUTIES of the convention system were shown at
the Ohio republican convention. "On the third bal
lot," Boss Cox threw the Hamilton county delegation's
9.1 votes to Harding," state the dispatches. Ho also vot
ed the 91 votes for other candidates and for the anti
Roosevelt platform.
Boss Cox, like the lilies, neither toils nor spins, but,
unlike tho lilies, he is not beautiful. He is n type of the
parasite produced by the political convention, who has
grown wealthy without- labor, through dictation of politics
by means of what in Oregon is called the " assembly.'
Hamilton count)' contains Cincinnati with a population
of 500,000. Boss 'Cox names and elects the city, county
and state officials. He chooses the delegates, and votes
them as he pleases, as he did in the Ohio convention.
How much voice did the 500,000 people of Hamilton
county have in the naming of the gubernatorial candi
date1? How much voice did they have in the adoption of
the stand-pat platform? None at all.
How much voice do the people have in any convention
ridden state in the nomination of any of the men they vote
for in either party? None at all.
It is a humiliating spectacle when one man, uncultur
ed and illiterate, who holds no office, who has no sanction
from the people, absolutely rules a half million people,
controls both parties, and makes - - xs of the electorate.
Yet that is what ha-nnens in every state where the con
vention system rules.
Do the people of Oregon want to restore these condi
tions? If they do, they want to vote for candidates pledg
ed against Statement One and the direct primary. If the
people want to continue to name and elect their own can
didates, they want to defend every attack made upon di
rect legislation and vote only for those candidates pledg
ed to Statement One and the direct primary.
COUNTRY EDITOR COMING INTO HIS OWN.
THE country editor is slowing coming into his own.
Tho Info .Tnlm .Tnlmcrm nf AfimiPsnTJi w.ns nnn nf
them. The present -republican nominee for governor of
Ohio is another. In Oregon, we have Colonel E. Hofer,
still another, as a formidable candidate for governor.
There is no reason why the live country editor should
not share in the honors bestowed by the people. Much
of the progress of the community is due to his untiring
efforts, usually efforts made without a thought of recom
pense, and often unappreciated by the recipients.
No country editor ever grows wealthy. If he makes
a good living he does better than the average. His busi
ness is not such that he can make much money. It is al
ways a struggle to make both ends meet and keep his rec
ord untarnished. If he makes any money, it goes into
bettering his product. Like the artist, he follows the occu
pation because he loves it not for financial gain, for one
tenth the brains and energy make many a man, whose
chief asset is the accumulative instinct, wealthy.
Country editors usually have no political aspirations.
They understand vanity fair too well to sigh for gilded
baubles. But when office is bestowed upon them, they are
equal to the occasion.
THE NEW WATER SYSTEM.
"1X7" ITH the installation of the Little Butte gravity wa-
ter system Medford is now in the race of prog
ress, minus her greatest handicap.
JTrorn the swaddling days of the village Med
has carried this awful handicap. River towns have
scoffed at Medford as the veritable Sahara of southern
Oregon. With no other supply than the polluted waters
of Bear creek, which during the month of August has
formed a habit of going as dry as Kansas elections, the
infant city fell a victim to every epidemic that municipal
flesh is heir to, until the magnificent enterprise of her
citizens stepped into the breach like a mighty Aaron and
smote the rugged snow-covered sides of Mt. McLaughlin
with a half-million-dollar rod and caus6d a stream of pure
water to gush forth sufficient for a city of 30,000.
The public spirit that overcomes such obstacles cannot
be denied; it will found a metropolis in spite of every
adversity, and now watch the speedometer of Medford 's
progress click off the milestones of growth.
BARTLETTS1NWESTERN
NEW YORK DO WELL
NEW YORK, July 28. Tho yield
of Bartlett pears In westorn Now
York will bo a surprise to many who
have heard cci siderable talk about
a short crop. There nro fully twice
aa many Bartletts In this section be
tween Buffalo and Rochester, than
thoro was a yoar ago. Tho fruit is
developing nlcoly, but thero Is a
little, scale showing and a groat deal
of tho fruit Is f.'fected with "psylla,"
a disease which devolopes a cloudy
smoke Bpot on tho pear. Many poar
orchards ,.ro clean and the old trees
are bearing a great deal bettor than
THE SYSTEM.
the young ones. In some orchards
I the young pear trees do not bear at
all, but alioct every place tho old
, trees have a good crop.
I As In the cato with tho apple crop
i
tho northern section of tho counties
havo tho best showing In pears, It
all remains with how "psylla" de
velops on tho crop,
Tho pears now are growing along
In fine shape and It looks as though
thero would bo about CD per cent of
what might bo considered a full crop
In sizing up tho orchards and about
40 per cent of that amount of fruit
Is clean. T'toee who romombor tho
poar yield in western Now York last
yoar can figure on having twice as
much fruit this yoar than they hud
thou.
fiaaldns for Health.
south i:nx oui :oox
Why, Southern Oregon a tho place
Where big rod apples fvavr,
Whuro many U lugs Are wonderful,
Tho place you our.ht to know.
To East, to North, to sunny South,
A welcome wo extend,
And any time you wish our help,
Right royally we'll loud.
Our time ami our assistance, guided
And people filled with mirth,
To show the finest country Unit
Was over shown on earth.
Recourcoa, yet undreamed of, lie
Within ttU inyfltlc land,
While countless gulden treasures,
which,
Abound on either hand.
Are proor beyond doubt's shadow,,
great,
Results awaits the mau,
Who Is tho right material
Aud ovor 8j.y8 I CAN,
Deep bods of coal and granite gray
Exhnustless In their alio,
With many precious minerals,
That people ever prize.
Are here In Southern Oregon,
And freely we confess,
That lu this part of mother enrth,
We truly do possess.
Pure carbon dear to woman's heart.
It Humboldt tells us right,
Our own Sahara holds tho gem,
That sparkles In tho night.
Vast forests In the distance stand,
UuBcratchcd in virgin wealth,
And here an awful grandour gleams,
As wrought by magic stealth.
Tho lake on Mount Mazaiun, down
Two thousand feet or moro,
Within tho Cascade bosom, where
It casts strange shadows o're.
A surface clear as crystal calm,
And silent as tho grave,
Excoptlng whoro the finny tribes
Now sport In rainbow waves.
"Eternal questlon(T)" Ah! Oh yes,
Rut not a Gibson head,
Eternal question hero are, " How
Much largor will tho rod
"And yellow apples grow? What's
that,
She files with her own wings?
She will not fold her pinions 'till
A perch on neplus brings
"The goal of aspiration which
Which Inspires her noblo breast?
How long eye she will proudly soar
Tho Nation's guide and crest."
Sho'e now a lnni whoro roses twine
In fragrance puro and sweet,
A land whore natives wealth com
bined Makes life a Joy complete.
In this Rogue River valley, or
Tho valley of tho Rogue,
Io whore you will bo theated "whlto"
It is our only vogue. '
You may havo thought us savage,
Florce, cruel, wild or worse,
You may have Bald an out-law band,
And Uncle SamuTs curse.
But when you've tasted of tho Joy,
And feel vou'ro doubly blessed.
Then quickly from your mind will
fadd
"Tho Wild rnd Wooly West."
Dear Uncle Sam's our uncle If
We're not the Yankees blue,
And when ho needs defending he
Will find us Just as true
For In this vale of paradise,
Unfurled 'neath sunny cllmos,
Tho Stars and Stripes moan what
they eay,
And mean It for all time.
Wo'ro striving hard to reach tho way
Our older brothers trod,
And even hero tho mountains rlso
Symbolical of God.
Our Medford stnnds upon the rock,
Of Wisdom, Lovo and Right.
Then why not anchor hero, my frlond,
And glory lu Its light.
AL.MIUA WILSON
PINCHOT TO FISH FOR
TUNA OFF CATALINA
AVALON. Calalimi Island, July
28. Former Chiof Forester Gifford
Pinchot and his ptirty will arrive for
n try at the leaping Uinn about Sep
tember 1, not-online to u letter re
ceived todny by "Mexican Joe," n
boatman, who bus boen Pinchot's
guide for u score of previous ocean
trips.
The letter stated Unit two frionds
would accompany Pinchot, perhaps
three. It is known here that Pin
chot MuiiH I" 1'imIi with former Gov
ernor George ('. Purdoo mid Pro
feBKor Churl- F. Holder of Pnwi-
denu. Tito identity of the possible
fourth member of tho pnrty is cann
ing somo speculation here. It is
known that Holder and Pinchot in
vited Colonel Itoosevelt to be one of
the party several weeks ugo.
WILSLIN
0
Larflo Audience at Tabernacle En
Joys Points Matlo hy Debaters
Wilson Defends the German Beer
Garden,
Hofer Speaks for the Salem Plan
of Open Saloon Fronts and Strict
Rcnulatlon, Wilson for Prohibition
of Manufacture.
The joint debate at the taberuaele
hist night between How Clarence
True Wilson of Portland uml Colonel
E. Hofer of Sulom on the proposed
constitutional amendment drew u
very largo nudienue. lloth sides of
the question were presented in a
fearless mid inipusslonuto manner
that left no room for doubt us to
the earnestness and conviction of tho
speakers. Tho Rev. Wilson opened
the debato and the speakers alter
nated with n half hour each for two
hours and held the entire audiuuee
to the finish. Hon. H. F. Mulkey
noted as chniimmi and held tho
watch as timekeeper.
Dr. Wilson's argument was triut
ly on prohibition lines. He was put
on tho defense when Colonel Hofer
asked him why the same organiza
tion which proposed the local option
Inw n few years ago were now try
ing to overthrow their own work by
substituting statewide prohibition.
Dr. Wilson stated that local option
was only the entering wedgo for
statewide prohibition. Ho denounc
ed the Neddy bill as infamous, mid
charged the wholesale Honor dealers
and brewers of Portland with de
bauching tho moral sentiment of the
whole state by shipping liiiors into
the dry counties mid accused the li
quor interests of being responsible
for gambling and moral vice and with
thu extension uf bootlegging and
illicit jnle which had becomo very
common and could not be suppressed
unless the manufacture ami sale was
stopped, ns proposed by the consti
tutional amendment.
Colonel Hofer Cites Iowa.
Colonel Hofer stated that he was
born and rnucd in the state of Iowa
and had lived through n ten-year
struggle to establish constitutional
prohibition in thnt state, and did
not want to see prohibition repeated
in Oregon. The sumo law was pro
posed here And a state constabulary,
with power to enter private resi
dences and nny place of business and
search, seize and destroy liquors
wherever found, and confiscate
property and involve the state in
costly litigation. Tho struggle bv
DIRIGIBLES ARE
STILL IN FAVOR
General Leonard Wood, Head of the
Army, Will Not Forsake Balloon
for HcavJer-Than-AIr Machines
for Use in Warfare.
WASHINGTON, July 28. A now
head of tho army, Gonoral Leonard
Wood, will not forsako tho old dlrl
Ighlo baloon as a military alrcroft
In favor than the honvlor-than-alr-machluo.
According to tho Gonorai, hoavlor-than-alr-machlnos
havo proven tholr
practicability for many purposes, but
oven tho recont bomb throwing tosta
at Atlantic City and Now York hnvo
failed to convinco him that thoy aro
as yet sufflcontly perfected to moot
tho requirements of wnr. Tho chlof
objection raised by Qonoral Wood to
this typo of air craft Is tholr dopon
doncy upon favorablo woathor to fly
whereas tho dlrlgihlo gas macl lnos
havo already boon suajcBoful undor
tho most advorsod utmnsphorlo con
ditions. "Tho dirigibles already havo prov
on that t'loy aro useful In military
manouvors," said WoodB. "As Bcout
ships, dlrlglblos havo nailed during
tnanouvers ovor ground t'jat would
bo in war tho camp of tho enemy and
englnoors In them havo demonstrated
tholr ability tp mako nccurato maps
of hostile forces, tholr distribution
and tho oxtont of locations of tholr
fortifications,"
Tho now Chlof of tho Staff Is a.
firm bollovor In tho agitation of tho
quoHtlon of u baloon division to tho
United States army and thinks that
the relnforcomonts of tho nrmy In
tho flold with such nn equlpmont
would groatly aid to Its fighting efficiency.
HOFER DEBATE
WET AND DRV QUESTION
the prohibitionists had ended in full
uiv in Iowa, where every oily today
hud licensed saloons muter strict
regulation, to thu number of .UltIO,
The fight for a constitutional
iwueiidiueiit wn it theoretical Invas
ion of the good order and law-abiding
conditions Hint prevailed under
license mid regulation In the cities
mid local option for the residence
districts iintl country precincts. To
extend "dry" sentiment over "wet"
territory meant strife mid disorder,
lawlessness mid bootlegging, discord
in communities, had feelings between
business men mid neighbors, mid in
the end compromise mid surrender,
just as it hud taken place in the
statu of Iowa.
Defends Deer Garden,
Dr. Wilson, as chairman of the
"dry" campaign committee, defended
the German beer garden mid the so
cial drinking customs of the German
people. He also defended the pri
vate rmht to drink mid the use of
alcoholic liquors us medicine in cum)
of sickness. Colonel Hofer ridiculed
thoso ooncossions ns being inconsis
tent mid insincere. He asked how
these rights could ho given the peo
ple when the manutacturo and stile
was to be prohibited 1 Dr. WiImiii
would t;ive thu people a beer garden
without any beer, the private right
to drink without the privilege of ex
ercising that tight, unless they be
came lawbreakers.
Colonel Hofer attacked the clausu
of the prohibition amendment which
permits manufautiire mid salu for
medicinal purposed as being in the
interest of the druggists mid the
medical trust. He showed by sta
tistics that Maine, Kansas, North
Dakota and other prohibition states
had more government liquor licenses
lor capita than states under local
oiitiou mid regulation. He showed
that there were twice as mnnv di
vorces in prohibition states as in
states where the traffic was regulat
ed. He claimed that tho city of Tho
Dalles, contrasted with Pendleton
aud other dry cities in Kustorn Ore
gon, had made most progress mid
was most prosperous and that Snlem
and Medford were the most prosper
ous cities in Western Oregon and
that their prosperity was not injured
by having regulation of saloons. He
defended the Salem system of a lim-
!i.I 1 .. it -
lieu iiuiuoer ol smoous Willi open
glass fronts, with no gambling de
vices or Illinois permitted, as the
modol mid well-regulated city of Or
egon. At the conclusion of the debate a
collection was taken to cover ex
pense of lighting the tabernacle.
The speakers left for Ashland,
where the series of debates over the
constitutional amendment will lie
closed tonight.
As to hcnvlor-than-alr machine ho
said:
"Tho trouble of thoso from n mili
tary standpoint Is thnt clrcuniHtaiices
havo to ho well nigh Ideal for dart
ing and lighting, and oven thon thoy
nro qulto dependant upon favorablo
woathor. Tho dirigible will stand
much harder usage."
Medford, Oregen: This certifies
that wo havo sold Hull's Toxiis Won
dor for tho ouro of all kidnoy, blnd
dor and rheumatic troubles for ton
years, and havo novor had a com
plaint. It gives quick and pormnnout
relief. Sixty days' treatment in each
hottln. M-dfnrd Phnrtnnnv tf
NOTICE 10
HKUEAFTKIt Ahh TIIK THAT
POItTION OK TUB CITV LYING
WK8T OF 11I3AII CIIEKK AND
SOUTH OP MAIN BTItUKTS WILL
IIIIHGATK LAWNS AND GAIIDI3NH
IIKTWKKN a A. M. AND 7 A. M.
ANI HKTWUKN 7:() P. M. AND
0:J10 P. M., AND AT NO OTIIKU
TIME, ALL THAT POHTION OF
TIIK CITY LYING EAST OF IIEAH
CHEEK AND NOIITII OP MAIN
HTItEET WILL HtlliaATE LAWNS
AND GAHDENS IHOTWEEN THE
HOUHS OP 7 A. M. AND O A. M.
AND IJETWEEN 8:00 P. M. AND
7: BO P. M AND AT NO OTHEIl
TIME.
ALL WATEK USEHS AHE KAUN
ESTLY HEQUE8TED TO CO-OPE-HATE
WITH THE CITY AUTHORI
TIES IN MEETINO THE PRESENT
SITUATION TO THU KND THAT
ALL MAY SECURE THE WATER
THEY NEED.
iY ORDERS OP TIIK CITY
COUNCIL.
W. II. CANON
Mayor,
WATER USERS
CALL GARFIELD
QUITTER
OHO
liisiiriionts Dlnmo Former Secretary
for Defeat Forakor Has "Come
Back" and Burton Is Doomed
Outlook Brliiht for Democrats.
COIiUMMUS, 0 July 28.--Tills is
the day of the imlitieal grouch In
Ohio. Following tho Itepiibliciiu
stnto convention yesterday, insurg
ents today are accusing Juiuou II.
Garfiuld, looked upon as the pro
gressive leader of thu state, of
"quitting."
The nomination of Warren Maid
ing for Governor is regarded as mi
indication of tho renppoarnnoo of
Former Senator Joseph II. Forakor
into politics, mid this menus, un
cording to tho wise ones, the down
full of Senator lliirtou mid the
Northern Ohio Itepublican leaders.
Incioen a, the disgruntled He
publicans of whom there seem to be
mi abundance in nil parts of thu
state are predicting the slaughter
of the party at the, polls this fall
mid u clean sweep for thu Demo
crats, President Tuft is reported greatly
pIoiimkI with the work of the con
vention. ItOOMOVOlt DllXilltUflcil.
Popular rumor heru says that
Theodore Itoosevelt, who openly ex
pressed the wish that a progressive
platform bo adopted, does not like
either the candidates or thu plat
form.
All in nil, the Republican leaders
today seemed to bo engaged m u
game of cross-purpoHos,
Harding, who has been a consist
ent stund-patlor, is one of the
strongest supporters of Fo raker and
has long been one of his close
friends. Harding wub at first re
garded as the Po raker candidate mid
it was believed that he stood the
least cliauco of the three regular
candidates for the nomination. That
he received enough votes to win is
believed by politicians to indicate
that Foraker has "come linuk." Fur
ther, it is hinted that it may pro
sago an nllianco between Foraker
uml Cox, which is strong enough to
control the pnrtv in the Mute.
' IiiMirgciits Ultimo Garfield.
Foraker's chief opixjnents come'
from the northern cud nf the state,
where Senator Morton is regarded as
thu Icador of the regulars. The
nomination of Harding, therefore, is
considered mi indication that war
between Murton mid Foraker may
limit; out mid (hut the northern
lenders will get the worst of the en
counter. The insurgents are perhaps the
most disnnpooiutcd of the factious
developed by the convention. They
are openly saying today thnt if Gar
field had not quit ho had an excel
lent chance of winning the nomina
tion and thnt if ho hud carried thu
platform fight to the floor of thu
convention the regulars would havo
been routed and the insurgents
would have swept tho convention.
BARCELONA WORKMEN
PREPARE DEMONSTRATION
MAUCKLONA, via Figuorus, July
28. The iudustriul population of
llurcelonu is preparing u demonstra
tion tomorrow in conjunction with
the invasion of 120,000 Spanish ex
iled who will demand of the govern
ment general amnesty for partici
pants in the riots hero last summer.
Tho energy with which such demon
strations nro curried on leaves no
doubt but thnt it will bo a dangoroua
affair. Large quantities of bombs,
arms mid ammunition are said to bu
concealed in readiness for uso fol
lowing thu general striko.
Sonor Claromont, at tho bond of
the exiles, is reported to have noti
fied Captain General Weylur that
unless thu government decrees a
general amnesty he will march, with
his followers, upon Barcelona. Gen
eral Weyler said that ho did not
think the exiles would dare to iros;
the border or that tho strikers would
reco nl to violence, Ho has ttikou
every military precaution, however,
to prevent mi outbreak,
CARD OP THANKS.
Wo wish to oxpross our heartfelt
thanks to tho Knights of Pythias and
to tho Pythian Slstors, to tho friends
and neighbors, and to all who gavo
so frcoly of tholr sympathy unci help
In our torrlblo horoavomont, tho death
of a holovod wlfo and daughter, Wo
wish also to thank all for tho boau
tlful flnwora sont,
THEODORE; 10. UKAULIBU,
MRS. ROSE IUOI3.
Married,
iXmUM-GUNEN -- At tho court
house hi Jacksonville, July 27, 1010,
by J, It. Noil, county judgo, Thomas
Coram mid Anna Green,
Itt.tQtMii