"MTCPFOTIT) WATT, TRTBTJNTJ, MTCDFOTTD, OREC!QT, WEDXEfiDAY, "AUflTTST' 2, 1010 VimTi TOTTTC DEEDS NOT WORDS. vote-getting excitement of the campaign. BIEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. PUBLISHED EVKUV APTKKNUON HXCKIT HL'NIMT BY THE MKDPORD PUINTINO CO. Office Mail Tribune Building, 26-27-20 North Mr uti'twit; Utluplione 7u. Thfl Pfinoerntlc Tlrin-B, Urn Mcdfurd Mall, The Mcilfonl Trilmnf. The South ern On Koii Ian, The Asliluml Tribuna. GEORGIA PUTNAM, Edllgr. BtHRBCJlIPTIOIf B&TESl One yfir. by nmh ... $11.00 One month, by mail. - .CO tnr month, dcllvcjwul by. cnirltr In Mlffrl, IMiocnix, JuckHonvlilo ami Central Point KO Rat unlay only, by ma.li, pr year., 2.00 Weekly, pr yuur.. 1,60 Official Papor of the Otty of Meilfnrd, Official Paper f Jac-ltHoti County. Entered an hcooii'I-cJuhm mutt;r at Meilforil, Oregon, uudor Die act of March 4, my. Bworn Circulation for 191T. 24G6. Full luiiaoil wire AHSoclated Prua dls- ii is i in: . -"Toniiiiy, ciin rreuelior you Spell fur?' Thomas "Yes, sir. F-U-K.'' Teacher "That's rlRlil. Now cnn you tell nie what fur It ?" Thomas Yes sir. Kur Is um awful loni! way." In rontomplnlliiK what ho has dono for others, tho average man Is prone lo forKnt what tho others have dono Tor lilm. WHAT IS TIIH .H1! WOltTII? dlov. Anderson says thoso folks who go to tho jmlKO to Bet married because they think they can set the joh done cheaper are mistaken for ho nevor charges Tor weddings or funor ula, leaving It to tho fricndB of tho benefited to say how much they think the Joh is worth. Then ho furnishes a beautiful certificate as a present to tho couple married Tho Ashland (Neb.) Gazette. Two ladles who contended for pre cedence at tho court of tho Emperor Charles V., appealed to that monarch to decidu which olio was entitled to the honor. "Lot tho elder go first," said tho emperor. Ho was never troubled by such a dispute again. WHAT IT WAS YOHTir. "Miserly offered tho man who hnd Bavod his Ilfo half a dollar." "Dili tho man accept It?" "Yes, but he handed Mlsorly 20 cents change." Hooks are man's best friends; when they bore lilm he can shut them up without giving offenso. NOVIX HXTKHT.AIXMENT. Wo dipped 33S head of cattlo at Cieorgo Lucas' vat and Will Lucns fell into the vat. So wo all had a good time. Tho Paris (Ark.) Progress. . Tho slight of hand performor was doing wonderful stunts on the stage. Ho hnd handled curds with ease and dexterity. "Xow, will any one In the uudlonco lead inn a $10 gold piece?" he asked. And the pawn broker in the fourth row at onc0 re plied: "On v;it?" HUGHES TO BE IN MEDF0RD MORNING OF AUUST 17 NKW YOltK. Aug. 2. The (ter nary of the trip that Charles K. Hughes will make to the Pacific const was officially announced to day, as follows: Leave New Yor Saturday evening, August r,, spend Sunday at Niagara Kails; leave then- Monday, August 7, fur Detroit, where there will be two evening meetings, and then to Chicane, and the Dakolas. "Sunday, August 1:1, will be spent nt Spokane, Wash., and on Monday morning, Annual 11, an niituninMle trip will ho taken Into Idaho, where a muriiliur address will be made nt Couer D'Alene. An evening meet ing will he held a( Spokane, ulih the departure nt night for Taronia and Seattle. A day meeting will lie held on Tuesday, August 15, at Tacoiua and an evening meeting at Seattle. Wednesday. August 10, an evening meeting will lie held at Portland and In the early nior:iiug, Angus! 17, departure will he made tor San Fran cisco, where ail evening meeting will be In Id nil August IS. The tollow Ing day, Saturday, August ID, ttdjl be spent in Pan l'Vancisco and early that evening departure will bo made fur Ia'S Angules, arriving there eailv Sunday morning, August 20. The enilro day of Sundny will be spent at Los Angeles and an evening meet ing wlil bo held ill Los Angeles Monday, August 2 1. Meilfinil HouMVi-h Smok Tho Medford and Ml. Pitt Cigars. EM-TEES TJIK people "want deeds not words," said .Mr. .Ungues some time atro. We've lieen waitintr to hear what kind of deeds he has in mind. Does lie mean the kind of deeds takiiifr plaee around Verdun The other day the Mavarian division refused to deliver further attacks and it was ordered that every tenth man in the division lie shot, and this would have been done, had the Bavarian khitf not interfered. Before and around Verdun half a million men have been killed and maimed in the past, four months, and that is hut a small part of the irand total lost in the great J'luropean arena of deeds. About two years ago a young man and his wife, num bers of the Austrian royal family were murdered by a I'anatie. The Austrian government, made, demands upon Serbia. Serbia wanted to discuss these demands, claim ing they were unjust and unreasonable. But the Emper or of Austria wanted DKKDS NOT YVOBDS. The matter was taken up with his all v, the lOmperor of (lerinany and he too AVANTKD BKUUS NOT WORDS. Well (lod knows they have given the world deeds in stead of words in such horrible abundance as to make hu manity regret its existence. When thousands of men are laid lifeless in a single charge we have deeds. When troop-ships are toi-pedoed and a thousand young men are sent to the bottom, we note a noble deed. When airships drop shells that kill in nocent women and children we count a valiant deed. When the Armenians are slaughtered by the hundred thousands the multitude of heroic, deeds confuses our computation. Mr. Hughes taking his cue from the comic papers want ed to say that people are tired of the president's notes and watchful waiting. What is the alternative deeds he wants if it is not war? A hundred men have been killed in Mexico. Mr. Hughes would send an army down and probably ten thousand of our soldiers would be killed before it was ended. Would Mr. Hughes be in the front rank? Would he risk being shot' Would he give us deeds or words? Mr. Hughes would if called upon, probably make a speech presenting a flag to one of the regiments starting for the front, and that would be the end of his service, ex cept perhaps he might send a substitute. Mr. Hughes is of that class that looks upon soldiers and the class of men that such as he cajole into doing the fighting in time of war, as a different kind of animal, whose business is to kill and get killed whenever the elect of the land decide they should. Mr. Hearst wants deeds instead of words in Mexico. One can understand Mr. Hearst's attitude. He has mines and a half million acres, and would like to get more mines and land. But Mr. Hughes has no property in Mexico. It is a ruling principle of all aristocratic governments that whenever the artistoerats want to plunder another country, it is the duty of the common people to go to war for that purpose. I f Mr. Hearst were emperor of this coun try, undoubtedly he would send us all down there to fight till his ranch boundaries were extended from the Bio Bio Grande to the Panama canal. But with Mr. Hughes the case .should present a differ ent aspect. A candidate for president should not desire to plunge the people in a war simply because Mr. Hearst has other properly besides his Mexican investments, to wn: a large number ol newspapers and periodicals of general circulation among the voters of the United States. The people want deeds not, words. Therefore they will again elect Wood row Wilson, for his administration is re plete with more deeds than any administration of the past fifty years. And they are deeds of construction not deeds of destruction. HUGHES, THE Ity- llasll M. Manly. (Xoted Kcunoinlc and Political Kx- perl). WASHINGTON. July 31. What Is 1 the attitude of Charles 10. Hughes on tile great economic ami social ques tiiuis that determine the welfare of tile American nation and Hie liber ties of Hie citizens of America? Since his nomination Hughes has made a number of public statements, but except for a clear-cut endorse ment of a high protective tariff and ' sunie very indefinite statements re-j carding the dcslralilllty of general! welfare legislation, lie has confined himself to the veriiu exposition of his " Americani;.'..'' This question of his real attitude is tho one to which aliovo all others the American people should have an acciiite unbiased answer. Not only is tills the most Important campaign since tho days of l.inioln, hut there is an oven more important reason why, in the case of Hughes, the exact truth Is vital. Tho American people have, at the urgent insistence of Theodore Koosc vell, already chosen one president. William Howard Tail, from the federal bench and later overwhelm ingly repudiated him for his reac tionary subserviency to big business. They are now asked, again by Knose velt, to choose another president from the fedora! bench. The itues tiou must, Ibeiefore, tin asked--ls Hughes another Tuft? I'ortunaicly the answer to this qurstlii can he given, free from all Idas, hy an analysis of 11 utiles' record as a Justice ef tho I'nitcl Stale supreme court. This Is the lust possible test, for daring (lie six years since Hughes was appointed to the supreme court by Tall, nearly every E SPHINX OF POLITICS important economic and social iiios- Hon has had to ho considered, cither directly or Indirectly by this court. The accuracy and' validity of tills test Is upparcut from the case of Taft. If tile American people had analyzed Taft's decisions as a federal judge, exalting the rights or property al'ove human rights, instead of ac cepting the encomiums of Roosevelt upon Taft as tho greatest progres sive, thero can be Utile doubt that tbero would have been no Payne Aldrich tariff and no Unllinger scandal. In making tills analysis of Hughes' record on t lie supreme court, I have taken every case in which he de livered tho opinion of the court or dissented, all of the cases in which he concurred with the majority of the court against the dissenting opinion, nail the most important cases in which lie participated in the unani mous opinion of the court. Alto Ret he-, 219 cases are Involved, of which Hughes personally wrote either majority or minority opinions ill MS. In these rases his opinions on monopolies, labor, public utilities, railroad rates, public lands, and all the other big questions about which the'pcople have been In conflict with privilege, are clearly revealed. They are the true index to his views, and must tiver-rldo any statements of policy, which he may make In the ELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indige'stion. One package proves it 23c at all druggists. What do these decisions show? They show that During his entire six years on the supreme bench, Hughes dissented from the majority of tho court 29 times, out of tho HI 2 opinions handed down during that period. Thus, In 97 cases out of 100 ho stood on tho platform with the other Jus tices. In four cases he wrote his own dissenting opinion. In tho other hundreds of casos heelther went with the majority or concurred in tho dis sent of some other Justice. - In the cases In which he handed down the opinion of the majority of tho court, show him In a somewhat more progressive light. They show him as a firm supporter of pure food legislation, a strong supporter of federal regulation, a constant foe of monopoly control through price-rlz-ing, and a friend of state legisla tion In behalf of women and chil dren. On tho other hand, there are numerous cases, as I will show in detail in a later article, where he concurred with the majority of the court. You will he interesto' to know about the following: Wliere did Hughes stand In tho Danbury Hatters' case? Where did Hughes stand In the case of tho big western railroads against the set tlers? Where tlfd Hughes stand In the Standard Oil case? Whore did Hughes stand in the American To bacco Trust case? F NEW YORK,. Aug. 2. Charles E. Hughes spent part of his time today shopping in preparation for his west ern tour beginning Saturday and which includes a vacation outing at Estcs Park, Colorado. Cf.alrman Wilcox will go with the candidate as fur as Chicago, where he will con fer with Republican leaders and look over the situation in the middle west. Mr. Wilcox plans to devote much of his time at Chicago headquarters. Tomorrow Mr. Wilcox will leave for Washington and will he the guest of Representative McKlnley, after which attending a reception at which he will moot Republican leaders of tho liouse and senate. Plans nro indefinite " for Mr. Hughes' program after his return to New York, but it was indicated that lie might go over some of the Bnme ground ho will cover on his trip west of the Mississippi river. NKW YOltK, Aug. 2. Forty-one children died and 160 were stiicKen In the greater city during the last 24 hours in the epidemic of in fan tilo parnlysis. The seat of the plague shifted to Manhnttan borough today and there were more deaths and new cases reported in thai borough than at any previous time since the inception of the plague Jersey (Ity reported three more dentils and two cases reported from other nearby cities Indicated that the epidemic was far from being under control. This is the largest number of new cases reported in a single day in tho five boroughs. Since the epi domic beenn, there have been 4.2PS cases reported and 9:17 deaths. ISTS F CURE FOR TYPHUS IWHIS, A lie 2. A turn? for erup tive typhus, tlu ilisutM' which mailt1 . i it'll terrihlo ravages in St'thia, lta hren tliseovert'd lV Doeturs Nii'olle aiul lilaisot. The physicians tleserihed their tlis t'overy to the Aeailemy of Met'ticine 'It is a serum which thev imnnl after exhaustive experiments. So Jar lS serious eases have been treated by injections which were followed by raput recovery in ti nuniher ot pa tients. In miilition the injections of t'.iP scrum prevented complications so wvnnently in this di-ease and dueed the death rate from '2') to It per Pent, JOHN A. PERL UNDERTAKER Ijidjr AsKistnnt EH S. HAUTI.KTT Phone M, 47a nil 47-1-3 Automobllo Hearse Service, Ambulance Survlce. Coroner CORE F LONDON', Aiiir. 2. Tim German governnienf has sent it pledge lo Hol land nol to destroy or molest Dutch ships carrying foodstuffs to Kugliinil, ueeoriling' '. u (,'oncnlingcii dispatch to the Kxpress. J ins decision is Hie result ol' n visit lo Derlin of Cor nelius J. K. Van Aalst, president of tlie Overseas trust, iimi auollier Duleh commissioner. The Kxpress says Van Aalst pre sented tin ultimatum to the authori ties hi Heilin to the lollowini; of! net: 1'nloss Germany agrees not to in - terfero with Dutch ships hound for Knglnnd for cargo, Holland will close her eastern galcway to iinporls from America unci the colonies.'' The trip of the Dutch commission er was the result of representations by the entente! that Holland was ic- Veceivinjf lurrre Cpianlilies of food Muffs lor (lerinany. lb, Hand replied that trade wilh England was iniide dangerous by German submarines. 'Van Aalst, fearing reprisals by the entente, then undertook the trip to liorliii and after a series of confer ences obtained licrmnny s accept ance of Jiis demands. (Mr. and Mrs. John Whipple and a party or relatives from Tennessee, re- tunrned Tuesday night from a weok spent at Crater Lake. room m d crowded. ills i 1 "T is' W 3S 81 M j jT H .... ;1 1 a . " Wf' 0i v smoothness you 1 ll 1 Wm iW taste in every mf& Mm3 vet- Is 1 2 1 (0M 10oTins 5c MetaMlaed Bags 11 ic PASO, An?. 2. A Ihorou-h search of the territory between Fin lny and Kurt Hancock by I'niteil States regulars failed to disclose Mexican bandits. This informal am wiis contained in reports to (Icneiul Giore Jiell, dr. Troops-had been sent to the district early today upon receipt of advices that approximate ly 1;"0 bandits bud crossed the liio fliandc. lieporls of the presence of a larjjc party of bandits in the district, which u thorough search failed to verify, were received at military heatlo;u:tr tf.vj from Serireant Harry V. Smith, (' company, Kiihth Massachusetts in fantry, who was on outpost duty west of Fort, Haneoc!-', ami from passen gers aboard a Texas and Pacific train. TEN DOLLAR PENALTIES WASIIIXfiTOX, Am.'. 2. The treasury departmeir today notified internal revenue collectors to necept offers of ten dollars from corpora tions and five dollars from individ- tnils in compromise of penalties for delmipicnc'v in nialani; income tax re turns for Jill."). The order modifie another providing1 a $'-!(l penalty for individuals and corporations. THHE biggest room in the world & is room for improvement. But when Nature's best pipe tobacco has been naturally improved into VELVET, that shore gets some , impossible for any. pi--! prove on Nature's slow, sure way of perfectly maturing tobacco. VELVET is matured in Nature's way. l$. it tbsrt PRESTIGE ABROAD WASHINGTON', Aug. 2. Ira Nel son Jloriis, American ainliiissiidor to Sweden, conferred, with President Wil-on loday on conditions in (lie Scandinavian countries, lie said American prestige in Kurope Intel been greatly increased since (lie outbreak: of I lie present war. "I have been in u posiliou lo nolo public opinion in Scandinavian coun tries," said .Mr. Morris in a siatcmcnt later, "and from coii-lnnt intcrcoiirso and association willi tlie diplomats oC belligerent countries and other prom inent people. 1 feel that both in tlio Scandinavian countries and in the bel ligerent nations Ihe preside of tho I'nitecl States never was higher than today. Naturally, due to the conditions of war, there lias been some resent incut on the part of sonic belligerent coun tries, but II nlire feeling is most warm and friendly to the I'uilcil Slates and they appreciate this coun try as a sponsor of neutral condi tions. "They also appreciate the unselfish and world-wide manner in which ye have acted in the name of hiiuiaiiily whenever the ocea.-ion arose in which we could be of service." Mr. Morris plans to leave for Co penhagen Saturday with Mrs. Morris on the Norwegian-American steamer llerL'ensf jord. sag i ml E3B The two years that VELVET ages in wooden hogsheads gives mellow it