7WmW? vt' ." ' T&irfm MEDFOltD MAIL TTitBTJSTE. MTOlftyttT). OTJTCGON, MONDAY, MAlvCUT 1, 19.15 A I yj- t v. c I' MIDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE - AN INDRPKNDKNT NEWRl'APKn 1PUH1-1SHKI) KVlCriT AFTKItNOON HXCHPT HUNDAV Y TIMS MKOKOIM) PRINTING CO. Offlco Mall Trlbunn llulldlnir. S5-S7-S9 Norm Kir Htreoti tolcphona 76, is ijomocrat o Time. Tim aicarora Mall, The Mcdfonl Trlliuna, Tlio Koutli- rn OrcRonlnn, Tlie Asiilnnd Tribune. Sf RXni80BIPTIOK ftATXI One year, by mnll,...... . 15.00 One month, by mail.... , ,(0 Per month, delivered by currier In Medfnrd, Phoenix, Jacksonville and Centrnl Point ,... . .to Mftturdny nnly, by mall, per year.- 3.00 Wcrltly, per year.-, 1.80 THE HIGH COST OP BREAD Official ruber ot the Cly of Medfofd Official rnper of Jnekion County. Entered an iccond-clnRS mntter At Medfnrd, Oregon, under tlio net of Mnrch f, 1870. Sworn Circulation for 1914, 55S. Full leased wlro Associated Press din-patches. ' - . z- 'I 1 Subscribers falling to receive papers promptly, phono Clrcu- lation Manager at 25011. JffWiSE Wm o says -"Ucele.w.porl lias at Inst thrown off its swnddlin clothes and has become a real American city. Jt is goinp to liavo a enrnivnt with euttersftil of poisonous confetti, hoodlum with feather dusters and all th' outrngva that go witli a metropolitan fiesta." LAUGHS Incomprehensible- "I don't understand why Matilda lias sued me, judge," protested the defendant in a recent broach-of- promiao suit. "I only did tho nsking. tyhilc alio did the promising. Judge s .Library. Tntno Romance "Did she mnrry well?" "No; it was a case of true love." 'Some malicious fanner must have Harvard Lampoon. sowed road.' "Well, if ho bumper crop."- Sotno Harvest thnnk-you-mnmis on this did, he's raised -Washington Post. you I Hut Xot tlio Coa Mrs. Hemmandhaw Have seen Quo VndisT Mrs. Shimmerpntc No, and don't think I enro to see such slangy plays. "Thcro isn't a word of slang in it." "That's odd; ever since tho children saw it the Inst timo it was hero they have been talking about Ursus throw ing tho bull.'' Voungstown Telegram. Poultry Fancier "Jimsy tells mo is going to ranrry a girl on tho stage. Ho has fallen in lovu with n broiler." "Jimsy always was chicken-heart ed. Knickerbocker Press. Special Talent "How came you to select that young fellow to write up j-our oil well cnlerprihcT" JUtuiiho ho hie such a gushing style." Pitlf-biuv Pot-l)ispiiteh. Naturally "TJiIr plant belongs to tho begonia family." "Ah! And you nro tuklng care of It while thoy aro away." Uoston Transcript.' lviHHliilly Stout LmIIck Short skirts, thoy declare, Are au fatt and correct; 13 tit ladies, bewnro Of that kiltie effect! Peoria Journal. Satisfied When I am at opera sitting, Tho kind thut they label as "grand," I'm only tho high places hitting; Uulf ot it I can't understand. I can't understand what they're say ing, TJioap nervqus, excitable folks, ot, calmly, tho scene I'm survoying; I J; now that I'm missing no Jokes. Kansas CltyJournal. No Chnnco Tom Did tho old man kick when you asked! him for his daughter? Jack No, I niado it a point to aBk him whun ho was up on tho step ladder hanging Christmas decora tlpns, Washington Post. Nettled Politician Congmtulato mo, my ilwir. I've won tho nomination. Wife (In surprise) Honestly? Politician Now what in thunder U you want tn bring up that point -rUiWrj Cwrjinjcle Telpgraph, 11" . 1 -- - t t I kaijn speculators nro nuvisinir tuo pcomo to eonso VX eating wheat, niul live on corn, so that all wheat in tho United States can be sold abroad at fancy figures and tho cost of living bo reduced at home. Sounds fine, but the wheat is all in the hands of specu lators. If the people ceased using it and cut off tho local demand, the prieo of wheat would drop and tho price of corn, also now in the hands of the speculators, would in crease with the demand, so tho cost of living would not be materially lessened. It is proposed in congress that potato products be utilized with wheat in the making of bread, as in Germany, in order to cheapen the cost of living. But there is no necessity of debasing the standard of bread with potato adulterants. The United States is not at war and no rea son exists for following the course of nations whose blood lust has led them to starvation.' The Volliner-Cunnnins bill now pending repeals the tax on mixed flour, under the plea of providing cheaper broad. As a matter of fact, it will raise the price of bread by en abling the marketing of au adulterated product at the price of the genuine article. Potato products bread, or corn starch bread, will be solely in the interest of the makers of potato products and corn starch, principally the glucose trust. Moreover, to open the door to adulteration in the 10,000 mills of the country will necessitate an army of gov ernment inspectors, and no amount of labelling is a reined v for adulteration. Dr. Harvey V. Wiley, the pure food expert, says regarding mixed Heur: Tho worst feature of the mixed flour process, however, is not In Its fraudulent character. Corn starch, whllo capablo ot furnishing heat and energy for tho hard-working man. may prove a positive Injury to the growing child. Tho whlto flour of commerce Is already denatured to tho last degreo. Fifteen pounds ot ld-nl human foods aro extracted from every bushel ground, and sold to tho dairy cow. Tho phosphorus nnd other mineral salts naturally present In tho wheat aro three-fourths elimi nated In the common process ot milling. To debase this already deterior ated product by the addition ot twenty por cent more of puro starch Is n crime against tho children of tho country. It will lead to Imperfect bony development, bad teeth, rickets and oven borl berl. Dr. "Wiley points out that instead of adulteration by means of starchy products, whole cornmeal, whole rye flour, unpolished and iineoated rice and whole oatmeal are wholesome and nutritious, palatable and wholesome and should be used extensively, under their own names, how ever. "When the Xew York bilkers' combine raised the price of bread from 5 to G cents a pound loaf. Mayor Mitchel and George "W. Perkins asked President "Wilson to declare an embargo on the exportation of wheat as a convenient way of passing the buck. "Without doing anything themselves to remedy matters, they would let llson do it. Hut an embargo on wheat would not remedy the high price of bread. It would merely keep the wheat rotting in our ele vators by keeping it from starving Europe, for we have plant' of wheat. How much bread is there in a bushel of wheat? "Wheat is worth about $1.00 a bushel on the farm, a 70 cents a bushel raise since the war. About 70 per cent of the wheat is made into flour, tho rest, bran, middlings, etc., isjili sold at a profit. Seven pounds of wheat makes nino pounds of bread. The forty-lour pounds ot Hour made from a bushel makes mty-seven pounds ot bread. The wheat in a bushel costs at 5 cents a loaf $2.85, at a pound to the loaf. At G cents to the loaf, at twelve ounces, to the loaf, the bread costs $4.5G for a bushel of wheat. The war added 70 cents to the cost of the wheat, the other $3 represents what the millers, middlemen and bakers have added. It doesn't cost any more to make wheat into bread than before the war broke out, but the war has furnished the excuse for a raise in price all along the line of middlemen between the farmer and the consumer. NEW DRUG ACT STOPPING SALE OF OPIUM IN EFFECT WASHINGTON, Mnrch I. Tho act of congress of prohibiting all persona from selling or giving away habit forming drugs without n physician's prescription or under direct Instruc tion of n physician, was In effect to day. Theso drugs Include opium, co calno, leaves of any compound, manu facture, salt derivative, or prepara tion madu from such drugs. Homo dies that cannot ho dtnponsed without a physicians' orders Include thosn containing mora than two grains of opium or mora than one-fourth of a grain of morphine, or one-eighth of heroin or one grain of codeine. Violators ot tho law aro subject to a flno of not more than two thous and dollars or imprisonment for flvn years, or both. A tax of one dollar a year Is fixed for nil who sell such drugs. Enforcement of tho law Is vested In the commissioner of inter nal revenue, for which $150,000 Is provided. Champions of tho measure contend It will greatly benefit the country nt largo and tho drug user tn particular, whllo other predict that It will work unlimited harm to drug habitues. GRAND PRIX PILOT CHEATS "T HE REAPER" IN BAD SMASH CHICAGO, March i. The thou sand dispensers of habit forming drugs had registered their names with tho collector of internal revenue here as required by the federal act which went Into effect today and wero supplied with licenses. f9' ImM UJiHiiiir ' " tat m j; JPKtBHBl fci vilW IIV Lou dandy, driving uu hdwuids Special niter he went into the bank ut a had eurvu in tho diiiud Prix nice bceiuiho of the slippery truck. Note the mingled look of fear, exhitiistiou and uliuot lugubrious umaxemeiit written on hi mud-Miiiucd fi'iitutt", it few MM'otid after he leaped from the cur in time to nviiid being pinned between uu iron mil nnd hw damaged machine. P 1ER SCHOOL Men Doit Know How to Make Love," Says Lillian Bell (Lilinn Bell's Chats With Engaged Girls.) I am about to give away tho secret of 10,000 (girls. I can do it in just one little sentence of eight words. Men do not know how to mnko love. Now hero is a queer thing, and I cull your attention to it, not because I cans n bit whether you agree with mc or not. Girls nil know thut what I have just said is true, yet few of them will ho bravo enough to admit it to any man. Nor to any other girl. Hut they will to ME. Why? To admit it to a man would be either to discourogo a possible mat inee or dinner. To admit it to any other girl would givo her the chance to rni-se her eye brows and say, "Huve you Hint bad luck? 1 haven't.' (Which would be a no.) ""' Hut to tell it to me is like the feel of the kimono after the front laces have been too tight. Girls don't mind telling me things. That's why I know so much about them, And that's why I know how men make love. Tho girls tell mo. No. Men seldom mnko good lovers and men never make perfect lovers. I never could understand why a nmn who plays a good gamo pf whint should not know how to make lovp. There are so many points in common. You can play n gume of whist so bsdly your partner will think loving ly of uuirdor, or you enn play it with a science which wouia innKO even "Hoyle" respect you. Now, I am not a good whist player. A&k anybody who over played with me and listen to what thoy say if you can. Uhey will tell you Hint I can tai;e any number o J? trjc;8 yet I nm not playing whist. I am just winning the game, that is all. If my pnrtnor says, "Let's beat 'em!' wo do. Hut it is liku saying to a cub driver, "You muko that train." Wc mnko the train nnd say nothing ubout taking off a wheel or two in the process. Now, you must not think mo either stupid or blundering. I play with magnificent effrontery, but somehow effrontery is not tho best qualifica tion for a whist plaver. I am too lucky at holding cards and I piny each ono to win. I am luvibli with trumps and often had them first hand round. I have no skill in delicate moves, in finesse, in subtlety. To tell the bru tal truth, I play rav own hand. Could any statement sound worse to a whist playcrf Yet my manner of playing whist is the way most men make love. What! You don't understand meT You sny you do know how? And you point to a perfectly satisfied sweet heart or even a contented wife to provo it? I never said vou couldn't ct mar ried. On the contrary, I stato it as my positive conviction that any man and any woman can marry. Nobody who wants to marry need ho discour aged. The process of marrying is the ens- jest thing in tho world. It's tho stayiug married that I am talking about tho staying married willingly joyfully glndly. And that's what I said in tho first place. Men don't know how to mnko love, They only know how to get mar ried. LILLIAN HELL. (Copyright, 1010, by tho Nowspupor Enterprise- flSfjopiuti0".) Probably ono of tho most widely read books by tho American public Is Edward Egglcaton'a Immortal story "Tho Hooslcr Schoolmaster," which has for a foundation one of deepest and most intensely human themes to bo found in tho entire field of literature. It Is the story ot a man who wears a iicckmo una uu nolghbor who objects to tho custom an ovorydoy story of plain people Invested with a deep human Intorest; Ralph Hartsook drifts Into Flat creek district and before ho leaves demonstrates that 'Tarnln " Is n keener edged tool than "llckln"'. Tho production of tho film version of this work Is thoroughly In kcoplng with tho greatness of tho subject. This great American classic Inter preted by national stars with Max Flgman, as tho Hooslcr Schoolmaster supported by Lollta Robertson, as Hannah Thompson, Is a superb pro duction, accurately staged and cos tumed In tho quaint costumes and set tings of tho period. "Tho Hooslcr Schoolmaster' In flvo reels of splon did photography will bo shown at tho Page Monday and Tuesday afternoons and evenings. Tho largo Wurlltzcr orchestra is now completely Installed and special Interest Is added by tho splendid musical programs nt this thoatcr every afternoon and evening. ROBBERS START FIRE 10 LOOT APARTMENTS LOS ANGELES. March 1. During a panic which followed tlio dlscoery of flro early today In n large apart ment house, robbers, equipped with pass keys, entered a number of apartments and stole several thous and dollars worth of Jewelry. I'ollco bellevo the flro was started by the robbers In ordor to glvo them tho opportunity to work unmolested. Donso smoke In the halls drovo n number of women on upper floors back Into their apartments whero they tied bed sheets together and slid down theso to safety. STEAMER DM IN BREST HARBOR 11HE8T, .March 1. Tho American Htwnier D.icln, formerly a Hamburg American liner, which wns raptured last wook by a Trench cruiser and brought Into this port, had been toned from the roadstead Into the Drest ninnl harbor. CHILDREN HATE PILLS, CALOMEL HI CASTOR OIL Look imrli nt your childhood days. Kuinombnr tho "dune" mother Insisted on- enntor oil, ciilomol. enthiirtlcn. How you hated thorn, how you fought against faking litem, With our children It's different. Mothers who cling to tho old form of physio simply don't ivnllro what thoy do, Tho children's revolt Is well founded. Their tender llttlo "In sides" nro Injured by them. If your child's stomach, liver anil bowels need clemming, give only de licious "California tlyrup of l-'lgs." Its action U piiHltlvo, bill Ken tin. Mil. lions or mothers keep this harmless "fruit laxntlvo" bandy; they know children lovo to take It; that It never fulls to clean the liver and bowels nnd HVM'iitou the stomach, and that n tenspoonful r.lvon today saves a nick child tomorrow. Ask jour driigKlst for a iO-ci-nt bottle of "California By nip of Figs," which ha full directions for hnbln, children of nil ages nnd for grown up plainly on each bottle. Ilewaro of counterfeits sold hero. See that It In iimdo by "California l'lg Hyrup roiupniii " Refuse any othor kind with contempt - Adv, A Good Resolution. To help build up Medford payrolls by smoking Governor Johnson or Mt. Pitt cigars. ' OUCH! LUMBAGO? DEWA NOT REFUSED ADMITTANCE TO CAR WASHINGTON, March l.-Sccrc-tary Hrynn received today from Ad miral Down, now in Chicago, a tele gram saying thorn wns no foundation for reports thut ho was subjected to nnnoyniico while leaving New York. A report published yesterday said tJie Japanese udmiral nt first was re- fused admittance to a private cur that took him from New York to Buf falo because railway employes believ ed tho car tfas reserved for "Ad miral Dewey John A. Perl UNDERTAKER Lady Assistant 28 H. IIAItTM'VrT Phones M. 17 anil 47-J3 Amhulnnro Service Deputy Coroner UNION FEED AND LIVERY STABLE PULL EQUIPPED LIVERY STABLE AMBULANCE SERVICE 112 South Riverside Phono 150 GAUNYAW & BOSTWICK Proprietor. Try .MiLstcntle. .See llmv Quickly Relievo It You Just rub MUSTEROLE In briskly, nnd usunlly tho pain Is gone a delicious, soothing comfort comes to tako Its plnco. MUSTEROLE Is a clean, whlto ointment, mndo with oil of mustard. Will not blister. Doctors nnd nurses use MURTER OLE and recommend It to their pa tients. Thoy will gladly toll you what ro Hot It gives from Hom Throat, Ilron cltls, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Congestion. Pleurisy, Rhoiimutlsm, Lumbngo, Palus and Aches of the Hack or Joints, Sprains, Soro Muscles. Hrtilses, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of tho ChesJ (It often prevents' Pneumonia), At your druggist's, In 2 fie nnd fi0c Jars, and n special largo hospital slzo for J 11.50. Ro suro you get tho gciiilno MUS TEROLE. Refuso Imitations get what you ask for. Tho Musterolo Company, Cleveland, Ohio. Adv, I r 1 1 LvJ JbTai I H JPHfH CHICHESTER S PILLS M i v9 AC U , r 1'IIU I U J .! tJU muiuAV I' in. Mll tl! Wm MilfcM. Y Tain lk.r. IUr r ?-r V I urn. !.' iii.i to-K-Trni lllAMIlSO IIUAMl I'll.!.. . a ,! IhM IMI.SlMl. AIMrt KtlUI S010 BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE THERE CAN DE NO DISEASE GERMS IN MEDFORD CREAMERY BUTTER IT IS PASTURIZED Come see It Made at 1 15 North Central Avenue A. A. MOODY, Pron. THE PAGE "BX"1 .. ., ,, , t, . March 1 and 2 Medford's Leatllna Theater. MAX FIGMAN In Great Photo Masterpiece THE HOOSIER SCHOOLMASTER Supported by Lolita Robertson and an All-Star Cast. This Great Production Will Bo Shown Only Monday and Tuesday Aftornoon 2 P. M. Evoning 7 o'clock No Advance in Admission Music by WURLITZER ORCHESTRA. Mr. M. H. Stoinmotz, Organist Admission 5-10-15c .a..a.aa.a..aaaAAAAAAAA A- . .. . . .. . - AAAAAAAA.kA.k4 IhkhKmKwimKwXmJWwvVV vvvv ? r t T T t t X $ t Y ? Y Y t Y t Y t 1 ATTRACTION EXTRAORDINARY! The Andrews Opera Co. i with a Cast of Metropolitan Singers in "MARTHA" Serio-Comic Opera in Five Acts Under the Auspices of MEDFORD-LODGE OF ELKS SPECIAL ORCHESTRA PRICE $1.00 PAGE THEATRE Monday, March 8th tyty&ty&Wty i i i , V r A U .li Jktt ..JL& MrffcJi. ;. '"". lltitJ ,.. I