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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1916)
limVQRD. MAIIJ TiaiSUNlV .MDTOlil OCTOBER 21, 1016 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE AN INPTCPENHRNT NEWRPAPRR. PDBLISHI3!) EVKKT AKTKRNOON EXCBPT BUN DAT BV THE MKUrORU WtiNTINQ CO. Office Mall Tribune Ilulldfnff, M-17-2H North Fir atreot; telephone 75. The Democratic T1mp, th Hf-dford Mall, The Mnrifortl Tribune, The South ern Ortffonlan, The Ashland Trtbuu. QBORGIS PUTNAM, Editor, UnSOBtPTXOS RATT.il One jtr. by mah 16.00 One mi lh, by mall .10 Per moth, dcllvi-rvd by carrier In Medfurd. Phoenix, Jacksonville and Central Point - .80 Unturday only, by mall, per year. 100 Weekly, pur year 1.80 Official Paper of the City of Modford. Official Puper of JackHon County. Kntercd nn st:cori(l-ciii.s me Iter at tffedford, Oregon, under the act of March I. 87. Bworn Clroulntlon for 1016 8461. Full leased wire Associated Press dispatches. EM-TEES MOllKltX FAlltY STOItV. "Will you marry me, my pretty maid?" "What's your salary sir?" she mild. "$1S ler, my pretty maid." "Nix, nothing doing, sir!" she said. . . . On account of the vast amount ot lea biscuits boliiK consumed, ten InorchnntB have decided to ralHO the price ot lea. . Tho price of hay has gone up owing to tho In rue iiuantlties or It lined In makiiiK the continues for the Hula J i ii la dance crane. FAM.K. Onco upon a tlmo a young man hetook hlniHelf Into ye restaurant shoppo and ordered- a dish of ye oyster Bte'( and It had somo oysters rXSOI.VKI MVKTKH1KS. " : Since there were only two worms on '.Noah's Ark, what did he feed the robins.? '" Whc for 20 V his slio.l. woke mil -tHL nip Van Winkle slumliored ars, how was It the soles of i were worn out when he MOM 10 1XSIDU KTIW. Whon writing b. novel, always he sure to have a clumsy heroine. Have her trip lightly Into tho room and fall In her lover's arms. ' VODENA, Greece, Oct. 21. Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia litis deco rated personally Mrs. Charles l'arnnm of New York with the order ot St. Sava for her services In Serbian relief vork. Mrs. Karnain was tho first woman Of any nationality to enter re conquered Serbian territory. She ac companied the crown prince whun the HerhiauK crossed the t'crna river above Dohrovenl and stormed the Bulgar ian stronghold of llroil. NEW YOItK, Oct. 21. Mrs. Chas. Viirnatn, It was said here today, by Miss Kannle Hastings, secretary of the Serbian relief committee returned to Serbia last .Inly after making a tour of this country in behalf of Ser bian relief, raising $:!0,uu0 in three months for new hospital units. Prior to that. Miss Hastings said, she nursed In Serbia through the first and second Itnlkiiu wars and through tiie typhus epidemic of the present war. Mrs. Karnam Is expected to return here this winter to conduct another lecture, tour for Serbian relief. SPRAY COMPANY HAS LANT UNDER CONSTRUCTION The California Hex Spray company Is re-establishing Its huslness In the Itogite Itiver valley, by the erection of a new plant a iiiinrter of a mile north of the city limits, near the Srhell company warehouse. The con crete foundations have been laid, and the work of erecting the wooden superstructlure will begin at once The plant will have n capacity of "on barcrls per week, twice that of the Phoenix plant which wa desiroxcd by fire over a year ago. The plant will be managed by S. II. lleetein, anil will employ eight or ten men at first, increasing as the d mwnd grows. The factory will ho ready for operation by the middle of I lecember. The plant will add another payroll, though s'liall at first, to the Indus tries of the city, and Is a welcome (tddlliou. TEDDY'S INSINCERITY COLONEL ROOSEVELT, in denouncing tho eight-hour day law i'or trainmen, said that the justice of the railroad brotherhood's demands had not been sufficiently investigated, and renuilked: "Klght hourB may be the outside Unit of proper work time In Mr. Ford's factory, where the man is all the time working at just one thing, Intensively and without vacation: but eight hourB that includes doing nothing but sit around, and also change of occupation, may not tie long enough." Iii 1 900, in his annual message to congress, under the heading, "Railroad Employes' Hours and the Eight-Hour Law," President Koosevelt said: "I call your nttentlon to the need of passing the bill limiting the num ber of hours of employment of rullroad employees. The measure 1b a very moderate one, and 1 can conceive of no serious objection to It. Indeed, bo far as it lies In our power, it should he our. aim Bleadlly to reduce the number ot hours of labor, with as a coal the general introduction of the eight-bour day." Tn 1907, President Roosevelt in his message to Congress of December 3, said: "The general Introduction of the eight-hour day should bo' the goal towards which we should steadily tend." Jn 1900 the eighty-hour day for railroad men was ap proved, liresumablv after. due investigation, by Roosevelt as desirable. In 191G the eight-hour day for trainmen is pronounced impractical and condemned bv Roosevelt. Though ten years had elapsed since he investigated the subject and gave it his approval, it "has not been sufficiently investigated." Koosevelt s hypocricv and carping criticism on tiie eight-hour bill is on a par with his venomous attacks upon every action of the president, and pure demagoguery. Jn his Wilkes-Havre speedy Koosevelt compared Pres ident Wilson and congress to a lot of cattle thieves, because they passed the eight-hour law. He is the verbal ruffian and strong-arm thug of the Hughes campaign whose main business is to throw vitriol and assassinate character. MEXICO AND IRELAND IN dealing with Mexico,' President vv nson has held steadily in view the ideal that one country has no right to interfere in the internal affairs of another. He has be lieved that Mexico would no more tolerate our tutelage in that matter than the north would have allowed England to intervene on behalf ot the south in our civil war. Put another thing has guided the president in his pol icy towards Mexico, lie lias been seeking the greatest; good for the greatest number. 1 That unhappy country iias 1(,IM),0K) people, and the bulk of the land is held by (iO,000 owners, some of them Americans, and almost, all holders ot titles procured by illegal grants from tyrants like Diaz. The Mexican neon never Will be peaceful, contented and happy until he is restored to the land as owner. He has the same passion lor earth as the Irish peasant. Ihe problem is to do awav with absentee ownership and restore the soil to the 15,940,000. To attack this policy is to assume the, saine attitude as did and do the Tory English, who believe in absentee land lordism in Ireland. It is to say that the Mexican peon as did the Irish peasant before the newer dispensation should continue to lie a servant on the laud, or a inere ten ant on siii'ference, rather thali a free, upstanding owner of the plot he tills. And just as there were I ones in England ready to shed the blood of the common people of England who served in the British army, to hold on to their thousands hf acres in Ireland, so there are Tories in this country perfectly will ing to allow the blood of American soldiers to be spilled, if only they may hold on to their ill-gotten ranches and estates. The Tories in England fought Parnell and Redhioiid. The Tories in this country fight AVoodrow Wilson. MEANS WHAT HE SAYS Ml!. HUGHES again explains what he would have doiie if he had been president on the day the Lusitania was sunk. He reiterates that he would have done nothing about II, for the very simple reason that if he had been president the Lusitania would not have been sunk. Why not? Hecause Hughes was president. That's what he said at Louisville and reiterated at Yoiiiigstown. as follows: "Now rises the secretary of the treasury to complain that this was not a statement of w hat I would have done had tlte sinking occurred. It ap parently seems impossible to tills administration that one can mean what lie says. This Is Its difficulty. With it, a threat or action does not seom to moan anything tint words. My position is somewhat different. 1 mean what 1 say and because tills would hnve been well known and wo should already have had a reputation for firm and correct policies, I repeat that the Lusitania would not have been sun);." And there it is a fine example of judicial utterance,- sonorous and sounding, and simple, too. Every one can now understand just what Mr. Hughes would have done if the Lusitania had been sunk wlien he was president. Charles Evasion Hughes "means what he says." but says nothing of what he means, lie took gootl care not to answer I lie iiesion asked ami expects the people to turn over the control of the government to him, without his deigning to explain his attitude upon important issues. All we know from Mr. Hughes is that Wilson's peace policy is wroinr and should be undone. At Last! Instant Rcliof for that Awful Bunion ''."'.T Why enminoe t'- stiiTcr fir nr.-nv, tnrtura and discomfort of that awtul bun ton wVn lnr tt lnnnt Rfhrf (tunrunu-ej and. you tluti'i have to pay one cent Utii?t )tu si t absolute buitiiiUcliou. $t Bunion osnfori 99 Guaranteed to GIvo Instant Relief Cr! over OV mi ;v.l w :nm lA--t rortf 15 yenr of continual gnrcpti. MtTlont whn have t f i c- ' r-tf. ri.tte. ftiiliftiMiivlMii tm R'l'ff i ft i-ttejp i eutedtrs without waw tlmllr If I tip mil i" i 'J l . .Mil--' . 1h:ji mi C'Viifiirt" t'ie only ktm n Bunion cm". Don't f tv up iloit't Urn tli M H i m-n fir i-v uraV -MkrVt ":v yo't ve trfM pvrry thing ttni!r lh mn-jo I' t. th rintriSHt rt it-,1 cft b-'i ot "Hunton C mf. rt"-try two r'ritrM- and if t on ft not rln,! rnu-f rMi-t. ri"oni rnH:: !r ;tm! , "!1 vtmc monry tvvk. know n hit ' DuMuii Cuii-.tuit have -r th know what they can Ho'tor you. l,l:tN 11. HASIUNS, utl Kiist Main S tiwt. E POHTf,AXD, Or., Oci. 21. William Hanlev of Bums, Or., progressive nominee for United States senator iii 1914, is visiting Portland and predicts that President Wilson will turn' east ern mul central Oregon in the coming election. Spenkinif of ilic issues, Mr. rinnlev snid: Wilson a Real President. "Woodrow Wilson has been n real, not a political; president a man so thoroughly educated that he instinc tively foresees the great problems of the country and takes steps to meet them. From long years of e.eri eneo I know exactly what the fanners are up against in their efforts to make frood. The nttempt to apply the rules of commercial credit to them short time loans with high rates nf interest; with the exception that the farmer paid more interest than mer cantile concerns was nn absurdity to begin with. I'msnealivy ItoiMudx Upon Hie Soil. "Everything begins and ends with the soil, the country's prosperity is in the last analysis entirely deiendcnl upon It, and the basis of credit should always have been the farmer's needs. This is n fundamental truth, and one would think thut something would have been done about it long ago. Hut no; it retnaiuud for Woodrow Wilson, the, far-seeing stutosmnnj to recog- hir.e that our credit system was fun damentally wrohjr and to set about hanging it. ' "1 do not blame anyone in particu lar for tiie injustice done our agricul tural population -nnd indirectly the entire nation rbut 1 do land President Wilson and intensely admire him for recognizing tho vital nature of Ibis problem. Tho Head of the Herd. "To mv mind It is the duty of gov ernment, tii use ft stock phrase, to put itself at the bend of the herd, nnd this is exactly wlinl President Wilson has done. "And notv ns to his criliee. There nre two kinds of people those who do things and the mouth-workers. Mr. Wilson belongs to the former, while Mr. Hughe's is a mouth-worker. The man of action is always too busy to do much talking, letting results do tho talking for him, while the mouth worker we have always with us. You run across the type n great deal in small country towns, Thev sit around 'and say how things ought to be done, but the great point is that they never do anything. "To my mind, it is almost insanity for the American people to even think of supplanting Mr. Wilson a man who has made good with emphasis with n judge who quit the supreme court to enter politics. WluH WIlRon Has Done. "Why, Wilson has caused to be en acted into law the best ideas of nil three great political parties, while prior to his time they were mere sub jects of conversation and nothing was really done lo put them into practice. The issue in this campaign is not one of party; it is Wilson, and Wilson only. He is not any more of a demo crat than he is anything else, lie is ah American nnd ti statesman, a won derful statesman. "Just let your mind run down the list of what he has accomplished, from the federal reserve law to the rural credits law, and any clear nnd honest-thinking man must be convinc ed that he is a mail of wonderful in telligence and remarkable foresight working wholc-liearlcdlv for the best interests of the American nation." Where tlie Money Has (.one. Heverting lo a discussion of the rural credits legislation, Mr. llanley declared that it fairly "made his blood boil to see how easy it was to get mil lions to erect large buildings in the city, while millions of acres in the eoutitry, on Which hundreds of thou sands of happy homes could be made and on which they should be made for the future welfaro of this republic, were going to witste. "It takes the soil, the fact that one is producing something and bus something in view, tb produce the kind of .character that is necessary lo the nation," he declared. "As it is now, we nre becoming a nation of Tho Ttggufutar Co SOlJgmarJaiiia, Mother's Wish Is that eli .may go through the trying ordeal of motherhood with aa little pain aa possible this can be a reality when "Mother's Friend"; das been used regularly preceding confinement. Oct "Motfter'a Friend" at your druggist. ffallcdjrerio Sxpvctanl faihvrr city wagewoHters whose spirit R crushed out nud who no tuiugs i inntically. President Wilson saw this and. seeing it, acted." I'the week beginning Sunday, Issued by 'the weather uureau louay are: "Generally fair with temperature Itoear seasonal normal. There la some probability of local rains on the north coast by the middle of the week." WEATHER FOR WEEK WASHINGTON, Oct. El. Weather predictions In the Pacific states for Bell-ans Absolutely Removes indigestion. Onepackage proves it 25c at all druggists. Chilblains Dentils Euealyptuc Ointment tSl JOHN A. PERL UNDERTAKES, ljifiy Assistant BH 8. IIAKTIjKTT , Phone M. 4"m nil 47-3-9 Automobile Hearse Service. Ambillanea SarvlcJ f-nmniw. ft EDISON J Java : r t$m 'IV to celebrate THROW OUT the old Carbon Lamps that run your meter 3 times as fast. Buy Edison Mazda Lamps Today PAUL'S ELECTRIC STORE -i.. Medford, Oregon. t k t T i 2 f t t t t ? X X 1 T t t H li AJ WE WILL CELEBRATE Edison Day, Oct. 21st And Extend this Unusual Offer to Oct. 31 BY APPLYING A CREDIT OF ONE DOLLAR On every house-wiring contract we secure on or before THAT DATE. Take advantage of our house-wiring campaign now and HAVE ONE YEAR TO PAY. As Edison made it possible 35 years ago to use Electricity for incandescent lighting, so we today are making it con venient for you to light your home electrically and have ONE YEAR to pay for the wiring. Phone 168 now and ask our solicitor to call and explain our plan of ONE YEAR TO PAY Sign your contract now and save the dollar. California -Oregon Power Company 216 West Main Street Phone 168 MEDFORD, OREGON x V J T fj ? J t i i Y t t X i