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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1916)
MKDFORD TUATL TRTRUNE, MEDFORP, OREOOX. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER X H MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE AN INDKPKKPKNT NBWSHAPRK. rOBLIHUKI KV K IX Y AFTHUNOON JflXOEPT KUNHAT YY THJfl WklDlUltU 1'IUNTlNCi CO, Office Mall Tribune nuiltlin, 1C-27-S North Vir Htreot; tulephuna 76. Tha Iemwmtto Tlm-a, th Modford Mall, Th Mwdford Tribune, Tha Houth ro Orutfonlun, Tho Ashland Tribune OUOHOIO PUTNAM, Kditor. OBBCHrPTIOH HATE g I Ona ytr. by tmih ...9S.01) On m Vh, hy ma1) .19 Pr rrm-jth, (!'11vit'J by carrier In Med ford, I'ltofitlx, Jacksonville end Centra I Point .60 Ptturday only, by mall, pr yar S 00 Wekly, per year ...-.... 1.6P Official Panor of the City of Mndford Official Pa iter of Jackson County. Kn tared ns dccontl-clawH matter at fcfwdford, Ortitfon, under tlie act of Ma roll fiworn Circulation for 1916 H6I. Full laad wire Associated X'reee dla- paiciica. Democratic Ticket V - XATIOXAb Fdr President " ' WOODROW WILSON For Vlce-Prealdont . THOMAS H. MARSHALL. For ConirreMiiah-'- MARK V. WRATHEHFORD. STATE For Justice Supreme Court TURNER OLIVER. For Publlo Service Commissioner E. h. VAN" DRESAR. For Representatlva 8th District II. L. DE ARMOND. MARIAN B. TOWNK. For Joint Representative. J. K. HOWARD. OOl'NTY For District Attorney NEWTON W. BORDEN For County Clerk W. II. MILLER. For County Recorder J. 0. GERKIN'Q. For Sheriff RALPH 0. JENNINGS. For County Surveyor A. J. DROWN. For County Commissioner JOE HERMAN. For County School Superintendent ANNA JEFFREY. For County Assessor . CLINT O ALLETIN. For County Treasurer joiin o. Rir;a. ,i (Paid Adv.) EM-TEES On the other hand, soft con!, un like tin et;t:. can't he made hurd hy liollliiK It. . A rubhor cradle that stretches ns the Infant prows, hns heen Invented hy n Jersey Clly motorninn. KOI I I IE XT. Sleam heated room nnd meals. Roscommon (Mich.) Bugle. ... Cook Colored, nil around, wants steady Job. Cleveland tO. ) News. . . . VXSOI.VFD MYSTEHIKK. Old Nonh have n cuckoo cloi'k with two cuckoo birds In It ? ON 32 ARTICLES PAN FRANCISCO. Nov. ,1. Ad vances since last Friday In the prices of 32 Items of their slocks were enumerated today for retail procers of this city hy the Retail (iroeers' association. Matches, starch, French Mrdlncs and Saratoga chips are in cluded in the raise. The tendency to raise prices has reached slotk raisers, with the result, it is said, that sheep owners are holding off for $2 er head above the unusually hlh price offered hy the packers. Retail Broiers and small haters throughout the city were scheduled today to slea contracts, which will result in fUe and ten er nt leaves of bread, remaining available here In i fplte of the raise to sl and twelve cents authorired for Monday hy the Master Makers. SHACKLETON ARRIVES ON TRIP OF RESCUE NEW OKI.K.WS, I. a . Nov .V Sir Ernest Shrckelton, the .nut art ic t'V !1orr, arrived here r.-irly toda on the M earner Paris Mfna from Colon nnd departed aeveral hours Inter for San KranriM-o en hi nv to reut lh tt'ii memhera of Shackelton's parly on the !-t side uf tho antartir contlDviLt. A QUERY FOR WOMEN -T7'IIY should nnv woman vote for Utiftlws? Mr. Hughes does not. believe tliiit women should receive etiiiiil tjiiv for cotial work. He thinks men entitled to more money for the same sex. When Mr. Hughes was (instance of the public school e(iial work measure passed the legislature. He vetoed it giving the following reason: It Is proposed by legislative enactment to establish the proposition that (or the work of ft given position women shall receive equal pay with men It is fur this principle that tho supporters of tho bill contend, and not tor mere Increased pay. I cannot approve This measure was again signed hy a governor who women not Hughes. Mr. Hughes again showed by vetoing the teachers' retirement pension bill. .Mr. Jluglies, tlirougnout favored or in anv way assisted Until he received the presidential nomination, he was op posed to votes for women, and his wife and daughters Avere opposed to it. When the suffrage amendment was submitted to the vioters of New York, Mr. Hughes did not vote for it in fact, he has not voted since in citizenship. The l!)l(i platforms of the parties upon sullrage are practically identical. They read as lonows: Democratic Wc recommend tho of the country by the states upon the Republican Tho republican party, of the people, by the people, for the half the adult people of the country, to women, but recognize the right of Itself. If anything, the democratic platform is the stronger, as it recommends sullrage to bean favors the extension, matter. Neither indorse the national amendment. President Wilson was the first president to favor equal suffrage and the only one to vote for it. After Mr. Hughes had accepted the nomination he de clared hiinsell in favor of the national suffrage amend ment, knowing that as president he would be powerless to deliver the goods, as part of his program of becoming a 100 per cent candidate and shuffling off principles for votes. Why should any woman vote for Hughes t ELECT MISS TOWNE THH MAIL TinHUNT' is concerned with more impor tant issues this campaign than who will fill county offices. The selection is more a matter of pei-sonality thaii partisanship, and the best should be selected, regardless of party. It feels, however, that an exception to its policy should be made in one instance, the candidacy of Miss Marian I!. Towne of Phoenix for representative. Miss Towne was the first woman to lie elected to the legislature in Oregon, and as a legislator she reflected credit not only upon herself, .Jackson county and the state, but upon her sex. She openly fought graft", chicanery and jobbery, and vigorously supported welfare and moral measures. Her record shows that she always voted right. Those who think a legislator should become a spoke in a crooked political machine and spend time log-rolling in behalf of special interests, instead of the public good, should not vote for Miss Towne, for she will not lend her self to such tactics. Those who want the highest type of representation and an honest effort to better our laws and better conditions and reduce taxation, who desire a staunch champion of progress and of Jackson county and of all Oregon will cast their ballot for Miss Towne. Miss Towne lias unusual advantages. With a good edu cation, she combines business training, and as chief dep uty conntv clerk became familiar with public administra tion. She has a remarkable government, a quick perception o essentials, a wide prac tical knowledge of politics. Fortified by file experience of the past session, and an extended acquaintance with legislators, a knowledge gained at first hand of legislative methods, advantages none of her opponents enjoy, she has merited, and doubt less will receive, re-election by a record majority. E NKW YOKK. Nov. ,1, One thous and, ?iM h mill red and twenty iner- hant shins, with an abrogate gross ton nt.ee of flpiirovimately 3,:,.2S,5S4. hao been sunk hy helHperent na tions iUi r inn twonty-seveu months of war. ending November 1, according to figures compiled from cuMe dts patrhr.H and mail lvne published here today hy the Journal of Coin nierrv The losses during October ere larger th.in tor anv one of the pre ceding five month, accord inn to the statistics, amounting to 127 vessels of a total of 227.1 1 ton gro5. The October rate of destruction was con- Bell-ans Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackanc proves it. 2."cat all druggisU. work, .simply because of their governor of New York, at the teachers, the equal pay for of this bill. passed by the legislature and believed in a square deal foi his antagonism to teachers Ins purine career, never the cause of eoual suffrage 190!) showing him a slacker republican and democratic extension of the franchise to the women same terms as to men. reaffirming Its fnllh In government people, ns a measure of Justice to one rnvorn tile extension of the suffrage each state to settle this question for the states, while the repub recognizing that it is a slate grasp of the fundamentals of sldernhly In excess of the monthly average throughout the war period, and Ihitish shipping sustained osses nearly equal to those of Aujtust and September combined. -Norway lost the largest number of ships, ,'C, ac cording to the statistics, but their gross tonnage was only r:,n30. as compared with Great Britain's los of ll.'..it gross tonnage of SS vessels ' destro ed. A tablo showing the total shipping losse since the war began estimates those of the entente allies at about 7.'. per cent and those of neutrals nt 'nearly is per cent, with Teutonic I losses less than " per cent. The butchers of Vootozo. Africa, never rap up a rhinoceros hen a customer hu s one. FOR . micifrn ! Jr& CHAPPED HANDS Dtnnlt Eucalyptus Olntmtnt t an eaua tc Tuta 2SC Jaaa Soc JOHN A. PERL UNDERTAKER Iiy Assistant A 8. nAirrt.jrrT Ittnne M. 41a 47-J-9 AntomoMI Heart t-.rrlr. AmauUue Sarvle. Cernar i PIONEER WOP SPITE OF FAMILY In Jacksonville there i u remark able woman, n pioneer of the Hoguc River valley, in fnet the fourth while uirl to enter this section. She now has four great griimli'liilclren. He family is liirge, with three g-encru lions that will vole in Hie eoiniii; election. All of the members of that family will support Hughes with one exception. This great grandmother shinds tiloiii. in her support of the I'.iuse of Hoodrow Wilson. Her name is withheld nt her own request. "Wooilrow Wilson is a mnn of wonderful goodness, who has renlly done his best in Ihc handling- of the affairs of this nation," she stated yesterday afternoon." And this best I consider could not Imve been eiiunleil hv nny other man in public life in this eountry. And because of his record while at the helm of the ship of slate, I am conliileut that he will be re-elected. Criticism Foolish. 'The criticisms; made by the repub lican party lenders against his han dling of the Mexican situation I can characterize as nothing less than foolish, contentions thai have arisen from the despernle endeavors of the republicans for some peg on which to hang their campaign, really, some excuse for being-. Wil-on was n shin ing light in his handling of that (iies- tion. He had no excuse for plunging this nation into war, and he sought none. '.Mr. Wilson is n gentleman in ev r.v way. During nil the heat of Hie aiiipuign be has not once lost his head and resorted lo the tactics that have throughout the struggle char- leterized the republican party. "His handling of the threatened railroad strike was nothing- short of masterly. We people of Oregon would have really tasted hard times had not his action heen so swift and sure. And for his solution, bis fairness to both parties to the controversy, he will be rewarded with thousands of votes. As to Itimsevelt. 'As to Theodore Kousevelt, who is so earnestly espousing the cause of .Mr. Hughes, I can .give you my opin ion in very lev words, when I say that the only good thing of his pub lic record came when he put a dem ocratic president in office, for that, ill effect, is what lie did when he brought about n split in the ranks of the republican party. His actions nice have shown him to he a traitor to the progressive as well a- the re publican party. "If the golden special makes any votes it will be for Wilson, T!nr-c women are only lowering thenwlvcs in entering n sphere of Hilitics in which they have no place. Women may vote, but publicly entering the "Goodnight Corns ! i WaUseGets-ltll" 3 Drops in 2 Seconds. That's All MGETS-IT" Does the Eest, Kever Fail. "Really, I never could eco how aome tvw people uie the most di:!i cult and painful way they can rtnd to Ket rid of corns. Tnev'lf wrap thetr tora up with bandages into a package that nils their shoes lull or fcit and niuUua tor n 3 so painful they've got to walk aldcwava and wrinkle oo their facra. Or they use e.ilvcs thit eat richt Into the toe and m.ifc it raw and sor. or they'll use plasters that mako the corns bulge, or pick nnd (roiii at thir corns and ni.ske thetot'sMed. Kunnv. Isn't It? "v.KTS JT" is the simple, n tMlrrn wonder for corns. Just nut 3 drops on. It dries Instantly. No pain, fus or truuMo. The corn, calms or wart fcvwns and mejnfr. Millions ue nothing else." "LETS-IT" is old and recommend ed by drucrrtMs evervwhere. iSc a mottle, or sent on reo'tpt of price, tv E. 1-awrtne & Co.. Chicago, III. Sold in Medford and recommended as the world's bet corn remedy by lon K lUuvkiuy and Mcdfird Thar- TWO TRIPS DAILY BETWEEN MEDFORD and eagle POiNTjRepresentative II. U.rnlsh'i auto will learf Ka!e Point at it A. M. and I P. M dally, except Sundar; leave Medford A. M. and 5 P. M. Will call oi passenicera at hotels In Medfanl ano hotels and huslnesi houses tn Eaglf Point I'BONE S-XS OR COUWmi S, ., Nnv. :!. J. Km nk thinly, pniliihition rnntliihilc for president , mil Ira Ijimlritli, vire imsiilmtiitl riimlitlnte, ludnv tlrliver t'd 4-arly ninrniitj; mltli-o- i mi llic state house steps tn laeti ami women on their way W work. "Anierien t'l'tieiftil," ;t term ti'-ed by ( hiii le K. llnIie-, Ihuily snitl, "is only a phrase which any parrot can he tanlit to repeat." , Hold the repiihlii-aii ami umo eratie parlies, he said", know that 'Ameiiea elfieient" means "America sober.'' ''The way to make America effi cient to compete in the markets of the world alter llie war is to make America .-olier by ermlicalini.'- the al coholic drink evil,' said llaniy. 1 4T.oth the bi-,' parties know this. but they are afraid to proclaim it.'! Jlanly charged that Unfile was making tiio campaign solely "thej wrecker of nuolher man's fortunes," i The proliibition special will com-1 plele its Ohio campaign today. irena in the fa-him . thev have fol-j lowed is a blow -to their womanhood. a lowerimr til" womanly simulants." Real Mince Pie TWICE AS GOOD AND HALF THE COST OF BULK MINCE MEAT Try Racipaa on the Packaso Fruit Cake ' Puddings and Cookies At -mr . 12c lo 15c Grocer V per package "Like Mother Used to Make" None Such Mincemeat MERRELL-SOULE CO.. Sjrarare, B. Ralph G. Jennings DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE FOIS Sheriff I am a native, son of Jackson coun ty, born on the Applegate in 1 S SI. Am a farmer and stock raiser. I feel qualified to fill the office I am aspiring for and can give the tax payers an efficient and economical ad ministration. I am a taxpayer and w ill naturally w ork for their interests. I Paid Adv.) J. K. Howard DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE for Joint 9 J r .y ', -; Ll j!l ' IMlli WMHIIII TAXES MUST BE LOWERED 0'a.a AJv.)