iif f ' W . ' ' lh 1 fc 'O . A l StSGE (FOUR SLEDFOIITJ MATH TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OTtTCflON', SAMTTtDA'Y, 'OaTOTmi 2-f, 101-f W v v - f P Vli H, I'll v r ; M I,, j i i. I I?. m ! .a i ,i i i f Ji f . H hi f 4 r lft ;i: W i& T , MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE AN INDHPKNDKNT NEWSPAPER rtTBMRUKD RVKItT AFTE11NOON KXClilT SUNDAT BT Tin MBDPOnu PRINTING CO. Office Mali Tribune Dulldlnc, ZS-17-I IferUt Fir atreeti telephone 11. The TJemocrntlo Ttmea, The Medford 11, The Medford Tribune, The South era Oregofitaa. The Aehland Tribune. vasomzmoM autxas One yew, by wall 16.00 One month, by mall -,,,. .10 Per month, delivered by carrier In Medford. Jacksonville and Cen tral Point ,.,. Saturday only, by mall, per year Weekly, per year.,, - .SO J.00 1.80 Official Paper of the City of Medford. Official Paper of Jackson County. ntered aa fcond-cloee matter at Hedford. Oregon, under' the act of March I, 117. With Medfortt Stop-Ora FRANCE HOLDING AS PARIS, Oct. 24. The American embassy, under its obligations to rep resent flormnn nnd Auslrinn inter ests in France, is looking after about 80,000 persons who are detained as alien enemies in eleven localities in Prance. These wcro Germans and Austrinns living in the country t the outbreak of the vtlr. ' TheWFiynch government provided seeiajtrajns . ... . . . " going to neuirni irontiors lor two days after hostilities had begun, and nil those remaining within France nf ter thoo days were obliged to report themselves to the police and go to those towns in France to which they wcro assigned. The state department nt Washing ton has nttnehed II. lVrcivnl Dodge, formerly minister to Panama, to the embassy here as special agent to have charge of German and Austrian af fairs. The- third floor of the em bassy office building is taken entire ly for this work and a considerable staff of secretaries and interpreters are at work. The reason that Franco holds 80, 000 civilians as prisoners of war np IK'ars to bo as hostages for the projwr treatment of French citizens who are similarly held in Germany and Austria, nnd to have in hnnd n means of reprisal sho'tdd there be any ill-treatment of French soldiers cap tured by Germnn or Austrian nnnles. RELIEF WORK IN TEXAS FLOOD REGION SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Oct. 24. Relief work among destitute suffer ers from yesterday's flood along San Pedro and AInzan creeks, in which eleven persons were drowned and two thousand made homeless, was well under way. Nearly two hundred houses were Kwept nwny nnd tho property loss wns estimated at between $150,000 mid .$200,000. The flood wns con fined to tho lowlands where the poor er clnsscs lived. Several persons were still missing today and it was feared tho death list might be In creased. GREAT EXPLOSION I ROTTERDAM, via London, Oct. 24, 0:15 a. in. According to a report from Flushing, published in the 'Nieuvvo G'ournnt, u tremendous ex plosion was heard nt 7:110 Friday night on tho Jlelginn coast, followed by another nt 8. Tho const guards think that tho pier at Zcobrugo was blown up. It is reported hero that the Ger wans aro preparing to leave Antwerp and that tho Germnn olfieers' wives ,hvo been ordered to leavo Brussels within forty-eight hours. k bom" i victoria of spain ..'MADJUD, Oct. 21, via Pails, 4 p. M, 'A win wan born (tils morning U Qhm Vjdoilu of tfiwiu, The won mr 1Hhy U (lit) (iupcii' frixili child, Mw.uiWtf Mm I hit) fculi 14 lid Iwo 80.000 GERMANS WAR HOSTAGES A FITTING EMBLEM A S a mark of special imperial gratitude, Kaiser AYilholm lias graciously granted to wear the skull and erossbones. As the press reports put it: Dorlln (via Tlio Hague and London), Oct. 21. Kmnoror William linn conferred on tlio pioneer compauy of a Lorraine battalion tint right to wear tlio skull and erossbones on tlio cap which heretofore hits been n dis tinction monopolized by tlio famous DuutIk DeatliV Mend llURsnrx. The action of tlio emperor was taken at the Instance of the crown prince, who reported the valor of the pioneers in bulldlnR bridges and constructing earthworks under particularly dangerous circumstances, Iii other words, the right to wear the ancient and awe some emblem o death has been transformed into a great honor by our mediaeval twentieth century royalty. To go into battle decorated like bottles of poison is a special distinction doubtless inspired by God. To chase si round like a black flag of the pirates of the sea is almost divine honor. Yet what emblem could be more fitting for the civil zicd occupation of these modern dealers in death? What label is more appropriate for wholesale and sanguinary murderers? "What insignia better fits the destroyers of cities and ravishers of the countryside? How much more entitled the modern soldier is to wear the skull and erossbones than ever pirate that roamed the main! "What tame sport to loot a rich merchantman at sea and make the crew walk the plank compared to mining the water and sending innocent thousands to death with out warning! Or to hurl death from under the sea or high up in the air to unsuspecting thousands! How cheap to burn a looted vessel compared to burning a looted city like storied Louvain! What poor sport to sink a Jadeii life boat compared to smashing the cathedral of tfheimsl Attilla the Hun had nothing on the modern soldier as a destroyer. 'The skull and erossbones is a most fitting decoration for the modern warrior but it should not be confined to a few regiments or a single nation. It should be the uni versal decoration for the blood-stained soldiers of the armies of Europe, for every one of them is a representa tive of death in many awful forms and each earns the proud right to this royal emblem. But as long as tlio kaiser has monopolized it, he should at least confer the privilege of wearing it upon every soldier who has helped to uusoiaie uiceuing xseigium. As a matter of justice, the jeweled and tinselled crowns of the mouarchs of Europe should be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for the benefit of the widows they have made, and each ruler forced to wear for a crown a human skull. Those who have won special merit for un usual atrocities, like tiie burning of Louvain, should be elevated to the nobility and decorated with erossbones. cause of man taxes A STATEMENT issued by opolized the republican arc working in harmony with izations to make the republican partv. nurcrcd of Uooso velt and the progressives, the tory party ol tiie nation, says that state taxes are high because Oregon has democratic officials. Oregon has only one democratic state official the gov ernor. Taxes arc high in spite of the governor and not because of him. Expenditures are made by the legisla ture, not by the governor. The legislature is overwhelm ingly republican. The other control, which expends the money appropriated by the leg islature, are republican. The laws forbid any expendi tures by state otticials in excess of the appropriations. Therefore the legislature is solely responsible for high taxes. These legislative appropriations were made over the governor's protest. They were passed over his veto. He did what he could to hold down expenses and saved over $G00,000 at the first session by vetoes, but the standpat machine was too strong for him at the last session and passed the bills over his veto, though he saved several hun dred thousand dollars by vetoes. The high taxes are neces sitated to raise the money to pay these legislative appro priations. The discord and jangle between the governor's office and the legislature was due solely to the governor's ef forts to cut down expenses and to prevent measures in behalf of special interests from becoming laws. Had it not been for the fight waged by Governor West against legis lative extravagance, taxation would be much higher. Dr. Withycombe stands Dlcdcred to a nroorani nf imv. mony with the legislature. There will be no fight of the executive aerfliilKr. tlin bin nrmrvmvmfSnv. hilla rni.,.. ...:n be no gubernatorial onnosition to cornnrnf.inn nrui onnini interest measures. There will be no vigorous defender of the people's cause to stand between the people and tho in terests, to interlere with the punuiuui win uu vu " ." ""v.;"? U1 U1U wegonian, it will be "war to the kniie and knife to the hilt," upon the Oregon system. And the. taxpayer w ill pay for legislative extravagance by increased taxation for a "harmony program." A Dying (Hy J. Lawrence Hill.) A stupendous effort has been mado by tho Spenccrian philosophy through Lord Uncon's method, added by tho discoveries and deductions of inves ligalorri Iil;o Ilueckel and Darwin, to eliminate from human thought every thing derived from consciousness or innate prepossession and limit iiosi (he conclusions to those thing that can be demonstrated and explained ju terms of mutter ad forco, A school of philosophy, most prominently jep. WH'iilwl, perhaps, by Kir William Hamilton, 1ms been dlHmiused with contempt; and science huw been un counted the Nolo worthy guide in ho realms of (lieorelhwl uu cll iu of jtmdk'Ml liHotvltiljftr, Lorraine soldiers the right standpatters who have nioii- party local organization and the state and national organ true party of reaction, the two members of the board of reactionary program. gumu. .narmony win re urn Planet Ah to the credibility of n belief in mi inhabited world as opposed to ono in which life exists upon only ono in-1 ignuicnni'iiinct nut of unnumbered millions, science would doubtless ask that itn evidence nlono bo consid ered, lint tho mind of man is not ho constituted, ,,or has his habit been so ordered. Tho coneention of nvoln. tion, for example, is an old as Greek !or.v and philosophy. Tim graded steps of creation, which sclencii has with iii'jiiila pains uncovered, wcue net fnrlli in Cliulileun legends long before they took furni In which limy Mwwar In tho book of (Jcnu. Tio liMory of Inimuu thought iuh hum Hint of llm peor u,h ,,oi (Jj ,fori lliu pliyloM hud lu-owd HWU Assuredly wo onn never get much higher iu authority than tho judgment which sth in tho enlightened huiniui soul. All that wo see may bo but un truhtworlliy ninnifestations f a uni verse whose real liniuie may never be known to u, u lleibeit Spencer sug gvsls or but a "divniu within a dreiun," as Poe, with ouual milhority of gi'iiliw has sung; bill theie it no proving thN, so that to all intents and purposes enlightened human con it'ioiwm4 is the court of last resort. We mtiv itaeh wrong eonclusions, but some conclusions or other we ennuoh avoid, and iu spilo of the impiessive demonstiiitions of the new nsyehol jgy pointing to the mnleiial slrue- luro of the soul no conclusion ot the mind more- firmly persists Jo this day than the conviction that the universe is directed by some omnipotent will, just, orderly and beneficent, and that in the scheme of things the human soul occupies some place of honor as it holds in the oruiuiic life of our planet. The pervasiveness of tho Christian religion, even among biol ogists, chemists and astronomers, is an answer to materialism that can not be set aside. In the democracy of the intelleeflial life one cannot rule he multitude. The ruling of the di rectorate is lh" lawv Whether mankind hejiives that there are otherworlds than this, therefore, is tpiilo as much a matter of inherent probability as it in of vi dence brought by the telcsconc. They who hold that man is nothing more in the cosmic scheme than the ephenner idae of an hour's life are hopelessly overruled by the conviction which man holds, stubborn! ', against all comers of materialistic Hcioncei that ho is part and parcel of tho divine, and eternal from which ho springs and to which he is destined to re turn. Tho chance that the iuhahita bility of the other worlds has for nc ceptauco depends ipiite as much on how- that habitable stato comports with man's view of his relation to the universe, largely n priori, as it de pends on tho photograph of Mars. Continued thought on this njicstion bv idculi.sts, psychologists as well as as tronomers, undoubtedly tends townrd the conviction that our solar system at least is in Minte way vitally con nected with the cosmic plan concern ing us. It will be impossible for man kind to believe long in tho fact that the history of our other planets has mi important bearing on our own problems nnd nn instructive lesson concerning our own destiny, without n nuickly Kucoetfding conviction that whatever that significance and lesson is it will be revealed to us. Ihc mind instinctively shrinks from the thought that knowledge of tho solar system's development hns been uncovered to us nt to n certain interesting and pregnant point, only to have tho veil dropped over the rest of tho way iu baffling and futilo mystery. This eager hopo nnd fond desire is supported by n "part of tho astron omic world, nhly represented by Mr. Percivnl Ixnvell in hi recent articles in tho Atlantic Monthly, and by a powerful argument from analogy. We arc apparently justified in supposing that like causes will produco liko ef fects uniformly throughout tho solar system. Throughout tho eight or ten members of that system wo sco n uni form process going on, from tho cha otic original stato now prevailing on Uranus nnd Neptune, through all stages of youth, maturity and old ago, till wo como to tho dead globes of Moreury and Venus, whoso utmos phere nnd moisture long havo van ished, whoso rotury motion has at length ceased, whoso helpless, inert mnss presents always tho sniuo life less, unproductive face to tho sun. All the matter that comes to the surface of our globe from the depths of spneo through which wo fly con sists of tho Bumc constituent elements of which our planet is composed. All the fires that burn in tho sun arc identified by tho spcolroscopo jib ma terials in combustion exactly such as wo havo hero. Tho laws of gravita tion, gases, liquids, solids, tides, at mospheres and momentum operate tho snmo hero as out in spaco as far as wo can o.bservo their effects. Therefore, wo concludo that u planet occupying tho saino stage nn our own in development from vapor to a fro zen and lifeless hall, would show tho same stato of organic and inorganic liro as ours. Tins stato ot develop ment applies to hut ono planet iu our system Murs nnd on Mars tho stage of development is , somewhat farther advanced than that of our own. Tho inhabitants of Mars, if finch' inhabitants there aro, and many as tronomers of highest authority affirm tlioro nro, have reached a stage to ward which this planet is' slowly but surely tending, where tho means of sustenance nro growing, nearer and nearer to the point of exhaustion, when soon all that lives and breathes mi its steadily drying surfacn and its steadily failing atmosphere must lie down and breathe its lust breath iiid John A. Perl UNDERTAKE Ltd tlilKMt m , wiMum AlMkAMf AffVAflft lift its Inst despairing cry to tho un answering depths of space. Is it nnv wonder that scientist and dreamer alike turn with eager giRc to that dy iug star mid long for hIiuo menus of transmitting intelligence through the Inteiveiiing elher, if happily wo uny gather some lesson of solaeu or wis dom from its longer experience, some seoiols U has wrung from the sur rounding universe, before Its knowl edge nnd its dreams, its joys mid is sorrows perish beyond tho possihil'tv of coiumuiiicutinu to us or to olherf SWISS SENTENCE (IKNKVA. via Paris, Oct. 24, 12: 10 a. in. Threo German spied, having headquarters In Geneva, wero sent onceil by tho third military tribunal hero Friday. The three aro Lieuten ant Colonel Otto IMrlch, ot Merlin: Dr. Wohlaudor and Herr Kohr, n chemist. Thoy wero charged with plotting ngalnitt lliiKlnml and Franco and thereby violating SuIhs neutral ity. Colonel IMrlch wa not present, having gone Into hldliiK, prcHunuihlv nomewhoro In Switzerland, lto was sentenced In default to seivo two years In prlnon ami pay a lino of 1'200 ($1000.) Dr. Wnhlnudcr must servo threo months and p:i a flno of 40 and Utirr Kohr imitU remain In prison two months and pay a flue of 20. All threo wero sontenecit to expulsion from Switzerland for life after serving their sentences. RUSH GERMANS TO THE FRENCH BOUNDARY LINE LONDON. Oct. 24, 15:30 n. in. A dlspntch to tho Dally Kxprcsn from tho Ilnguo says a report received thcro from Antwerp Is to tho effect that tho Germans nro ovncuatlng the Uclglan city. Thu dispatch adds that tho Ger man garrison left Friday In response to moat urgent orders. "I'rnrllcally all the German force havo evacuated Antwerp and inarch ed south, apparently (o tnko part in the ronrllrt," thn Dally Clironlclo says. Medford Creamery Butter Fresh from the churn daily. Choice Quality Use no other. Keep your dollars at home. WESTON'S CAMERA SHOP 208 East Main Street Medford The Only Exclusive Commercial Photographers in Southern Oregon Negatives Mado any time or place by appointment Phono 147-J We'll do tho rest . E. D. WESTON, Prop. GUARD Your children's health by feeding milk from Innpocted cow that liu been pro-cooled and orlated with modern uppllauce nnd loalod In turlllzed bottlw. tfAST'JUDte DAIRY Motklug p4 (AtttHNiooM JMJwy, lJ& 4J.JJ. GERMAN PIE ill 11 Vvlilllllll ' llllll AUANS CLAIM I LONDON, Oct. 21, 1:25 n, in, Tho oftlrlti) Austrian statement given out Friday In contained In n dispatch ftoin Vienna by way of Amsterdam to ltcutors Telegram company, it says: "While yesterday In tho bnttlo south of 1'rxoniHVI our heavy artil lery had been severely effectlvo so vero flghtliiK dovoloped on tho banks of tho Lower Han whom at several points wo allowed tho enemy to cron tho river, Thuso llutmlnn forces havo now been sovoroly attacked by our troops, nnd. pressed against tho river. At .arzecn wo captured over a thousand UuhMuiih, , "Ports of our troops suddonly np. peared before Ivnngorod and bent two Russian divisions. Wo rap- Be Weatherwise Whtn you woik In lU uin Hear ilia FISH BRAND REFLEX SLICKER Wilrtnroot tltrouali nil llitougli. Cnnot iokupwkrml g- Krv. Out Mlolnltrx l'.Jitt Dim wilrt bom running in vrlirto ilia fionli otcfUp end button. The bril wet wcullier coet your tnoury cn buy, S3.00 EVERYWHERE dWERs sansf ACt.i cauium 11 A. J. TOWER CO. iliillW IIOSTON IT Theatre I'UIDAV AND N.VTl'lUi.W Mnlliiio nnd livening MILLION DOLL.IK .MVSTLIIV Kpliodo No. 12 "KliiRlv'n Troasuro llox." THE RELIC Two reel Ilronclio feature. Mt'TtfAL WIIICKLY WAU NKWH lAlll'.L'S STIlANni: I'ltKIIICAAlCNT KoyHtono comedy 10c ALWAYS 10c MORE ORE RUSSIANS mm ctxStv m Page TheaterSSK Engagement Extraordinary America's Foremost Actor NAT. C. GOODWIN Supported by MARGARET MORELAND t In the Great New York and London Success "NEVER SAY DIE" Jn tho cant: DciiiiIh Cletigh, Iador Marcil, Stanley lIuiriHoii, niadys WIIhoii, Chailolto Laiubeit, Luho Vroliiiian nnd olhoiu Seat Sale opens Theater Ilox Office, 1'Yldny, Oct. 20, 10 n. in. PHICKH:. sM.r.O, $M, Km and fiOo BI'I'X'IAL NOTKJK Tho inaiing out doim not heflltulo to Hlulo that Mr, (loodwln In tho iiiohI iiromiiieul ntur boohed at DiIr theater bIiico Kh opening; that tho company Buppoitiug him in fii-nt iiIiihh mid "Nover Ray Dio" ono ofjlm IiohI pluyii ovor produced hy Mr. Oood win, Jl gives htm every opportunity to dlwphty hii great ability, and it Iw Huliloin that u oily of thin hI.o Ik no foituiiato iih In ncciiio tho engagement of nimiIi u prominent utur mid ntrong uompaiiy in u pro. diiclioii which hurt iiuwlo n pheiioiniviul hiiccchh Iii London ami all of (ho InrgcHt (titJnu of thu United HIiiIch. THIS IB NOT A MOVING PICTURE tuied HO 00 prlnouoriti ono ntandnrd and in innehlno guim, "Heluruliig from a imreeiinful ac tion on tho lltver Sayo our monitor Toiiiex Mtruclw'u initio nnd mink. Tlilr I y-threo men aro inlMnlug but thu otherM wero jutvetl. STAR Theatre Friday ami Saturday On Lonesome Mountain Two Part I. "bin The Counterfeiter's Danghter ltlograph Drama Hearst-Selig Weekly Latent Current Kvctits Buxom County Lass (Ninth ot Wood D. Wcdd'n Kent I tnentitl Kxperleuceii,) A flood Comedy IOC ADMISSION 10c PAGEIheaire SATURDAY .Mulliito ''rl. Cvinliitf 7KIO "Lord Chumley" Kpetlal Keattiro ' A Ktaw .t llrluiiKcr Mar feature Iu four pnrtK A tuoxl realUtlc driuua, deplitltiK homo and army life In Ktig Iu ml. with lilt of comedy and rhow thn bmuo life of tho KngtUh nobil ity, featuring "l.lllhtu (lUh' ami un nlbxtur cant. KiIIkoii "Making a Convert" A druina of uituittinl Intereiit and eduratlonnl vnltiu, wblcli" rontnliu a lewion to Imptilnlvo people, Vltngraph "Buddy's Downfall" Cobiedy With tho Iokm of bin trouitcrx, ho inukcM n bad Imprciuilon. When he recoverH thorn, bo nallleH forth ami hid rovongu U aweet. Paul Kelly Iu tho title role. ADMISSION letter I'liMtr, l.-e; Ibtlrduy, Klc. (,'omlng Hutidny "The Fortune Hunter" TV " Lf. I