PAGE POUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE MEDFORD, OREGON. TITURSDAY. MAY 24. 1917
Medford Mail Tribune
AN INDEI'E.NI KNT KKWSI'APEK
PUBLISHED EVEKY AFTEUNOON
EXCEPT .SUNDAY III' THE
MEDFORD PKINT1.NO CO.
Office Mall Tribune BulMlwr, 25-J7-29
North Ktr street; telephone 75.
The Democratic Times. The Medford
Mall. The Medford Tribune. The South
ern Oregonian. The Ashland Tribune.
OEOKOE PUTNAM. Editor.
BUBSCRXPTXOZf UTIII
One year, by mall
One month, by mall..
.15.00
6U
Per month. de!!v-rd by carrier In
ftieurord. Asmaml, noenix. tal
ent, Jacksonville and Central
Point .SO
Saturday only, by mall, per year 2.00
Weekly, per year 1.60
FRUIT A STAPLE FOOD PRODUCT.
Official paper ot the City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackson County.
Entered as second-class matter at
Medford, Oregon, under the act of March
S, 187 9.
Sworn Circulation for 191$ 2,491.
Full leased wire Associated Press dispatches.
EM-TEES
DID YOU KNOW
A pound used to be IB ounces, but
a dozen can't lie juried.
Themodcrn steam rollers have it
all over the old-fusliioncd flat ones.
Massaging
it soft. .
hard coal won't make
After four years of heated debate
between members of the Fizzbla
Scientific licsenrch society it was
compromised Hint the millepora is
the typical genus of the amily mill
porida. A contrivance has been perfected
by a Jersey man for determining the
horizon line on a hnrd boiled epp.
It is thot by experts Hint this inven
tion ends the doubt of loentinff the
horizon line on n hnrd boiled egg.
Reports como Hint very few calls
nre made for one-toothed combs or
three-sided napkins.
REYNOLDS BACK FROM
NAVAL ENLISTMENT
Earl O. Reynolds returned yester
day afternoon from Dremerton where
he enlisted April 18th as a mechanic
In the naval reserve. Mr. Uoynolds
received a discharge whon ho refused
to enlist In the service which would
compel him to serve In the navy In
any part of the world.
"I did not expect to enter the active
servico abroad" said Mr. Reynolds,
"when I enlisted, although If I had
been a single mnn I would have had
no objection. Upon my refusal I was
given a dlscharKO and received no pay
after the first of May. Several othor
boya were In a similar position. I did
mechanical work on board the Mar
blehead whllo there, and had no com
plaint either of my treatment or pay,
although I thought I should have re
ceived pay after tho first of tho
month. I published an affidavit
showing the conditions but It did no
good."
G. E. Purdln, who enlisted as a
blacksmith entered tho active service
and Is now on the Marlilohead which
)s en route to tho Atlantic coast. Jack
Schrick, former telegraph operator on
the Melford Sun, was transferred to
Astoria, and several other Oregon
boys wore discharged and aro on their
way home.
THE Fruit Growers Agency, representing the fmit
growei's of the northwest, affiliated with the Federal
Bureauof Markets of the Department of Agriculture, has,
sent out the following telegram to representatives in con
gress: "Fruit Growers Agency representing fruit Interests of Washington,
Oregon, Idaho, Montana urge our congressional representatives to confer
and make united effort wit! representatives from other fruit sections to
have government classify fresh fruit as food so as to secure transportation
preference and save our farm laborers from conscription. Without such
action our fruit industry is doomed. Letter follows. (Signed) J. B. Adams,
President."
The situation is pronounced critical, because of th . is
sues raised by the entrance of the United States into the
war as a belligerant. All shipments are to be classified,
and only essential products handled. Labor will be di
verted to the essential industries and transportation pro
vided for the necessaries only.
Under the emergencies occasioned by the war and the
food dictatorship, the classification of fresh fmit becomes
a matter of vital interest to the northwest. If fresh fruit,
apples, pears, peaches, etc., should be classified as a lux
ury, all the processes of production, shipping and market
ing would be injuriously affected. Orchard labor would
be subject to military conscription and fruit cars diverted
to commodities classified as necessities. Markets would
be curtailed and restricted to immediate vicinity. In
short, such a classification would spell ruin for the fruit
districts of the northwest so distant from their markets.
On the other hand, if fresh fruit is classified as an es
sential food product, as it ought to be, the advantage would
be correspondingly as great to the orchardists. It could
be given a place in the dietary of the military and market
ing and shipping facilities be assured.
To secure such a classification, every fruit grower in
the northwest is asked to write at once to senators and
representatives in congress to urge vigorous action to in
duce the federal authorities to classify fresh fruit as food.
TEAM PLAY NEED OF HOUR.
MEN ENDORSED FOR
MEDFORD SCHOOL BOARD
At a meeting ol a, committee, com
posed of the flvo Parent-Teachers
circles, Greater Medford club, Wed
nesday Study club and College Wom
en's club, Wednesday evening, the
candidacy of John C. Mann and Or.
E. G. Rlddell for membership on the
school board of directors was unan
imously endorsed.
Tho school hoard election will be
held at the high school building June
IS and, according to tho new law
passed by the last legislature, nil
legal voters, both men and women,
regardless of property qualification,
are ellslMe to vote.
This election oucht to be of vital
interest to parents of children in our
public schools and It is hoped that
this Interest will Iw manifested by a
large vole.
MILLIONAIRE HOBO HAS
ARRIVED AT STOCKHOLM
STOCKHOLM, May 'J (. ,T.ime
Kades How, n mcnilier of the Inter
national JtrothcrlmiKl Welfare n
Miriution, known in the 1'nilcd Slates
us the ''Hubos' union," 1ms turned
in Stockholm.
Jnmes Kad- How, sometime caMcd
the "millionaire hobo,"' hails from St.
Louis. .
CITY OF PHILADELPHIA
TO BUY LIBERTY BONDS
PHII.ADKM'IIIA. May 21. The
city of Philadelphia will but Liberty
Loan bonds to the value of l,nin.nnii.
This action was decided tipon today
at a meeting of the city's sinkinc
THE present war is not a war waged only between
armies and navies but between nations. Indeed
this war has now assumed the aspects of a struggle
between those nations on the one side who believe in
divine rights of ridel's and those on the other who believe
in the rights of the people between autocracy and de
mocracy. It is not only the army and navy that must be put in
shape but the entire nation. The co-ordination and mo
bilization of resources and industries for efficiency is just
as important lis the preparation ot an armed torce.
President "Wilson puts this idea into a few words in
his proclamation naming June 5 as registration day for
selective service:
"It Is not an army that wo must shape and train for war; it Is a nation.
To this end o r people must 'draw close In one compact front against a
common foe. Rut this cannot be If each pursues a private purpose."
"The whole nation must be a team In which each man shall play the
part for which ho Is best fitted. It Is a new thing In our history and a
landmark In our progress."
In oilier words all Americans must co-operate to make
the nation a unit against the common cnemv. Private
purposes must be discarded and not permitted to conflict
with the public purposes which make for effectiveness in
war.
Team play is what is needed and team play is what
must be had. Team play, however, is lacking ii congress,
where the leaders, republicans as well as democrats, are
pulling against each other and against the administration
and are not leading at all but oiuibbling, hesitating and
haggling under the Mnns and Kitchins, the ytones and
La I'ollcttes.
The majority of congress, as of the nation, are solidly
back of the president for a united nation and the sooner
it supplants present leaders, the sooner will America pre
sent the world an example ot team play that will discount
the hoastetl eltlciencv ot autoeracv.
A ' 1
ALOTTWUOUS
Chain of .
Boili Poinls
A
t rlium Poii'ig rbirits
tr QircX 6 smocln
aco.'Vt'ation
iot oay starling
Gasoline
Bim, in itrftiVit-ditiTlrd (atolme th
boiling point i faJujlly nw in a commuou
irtbrohrn chain, iirit ttty ttirtmg. qimk
4nl tnwolh (tltatien, powci And milttgc.
Botli- pointi lonf rtvnl gaio'tnt qual.ty.
At xht U. S Bureau ol Stamlaidt ttmt,
iaity tr!! you nothing No mi 1ur. Now.
frt cleverly concocted and no ma net what
itt iivity, can contain the correct, unbt oatn
enei ol boiling points.
Kf1 Crown ii guaranteed to be itnitht
rfiHi'ilpil refinery Ktoltne, the botbtf pomft
ol huh form a conttnuoui tbiirv kniCrun
ia net l mil luxe.
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
"TM GatoAnft of QviLty"
J LilCilT 'STRIKE
mSfM '
I WSP if IT'S toasted The Burleyto'oacco in this delicious 1
I lay. ..""i"" '0 new Lucky Strike cigarette is toasted. . I
' And yu know '10W toastin2 does add avof Close 9
5 yureyes an( '"k one crisP; krown sce hot, buttered I
S&SSf toast. Flavor is the word, isn't it ? I
3 This new application of an old idea has given you a new
L -3 " cigarette. You smokers have certainly been wanting a ready-
E made Burley cigarette. At first it couldn't be made; flavor
g " didn't hold. But five years' study brought us to the toasting
, principle, by which we are able to hold the Burley flavor.
p , So now, try Lucky Strike, the real Burley cigarette; the I
F - tobacco it's toasted. And the flavor you'll certainly I 1
l love it!
1 The real Burley lW
"fcw i" rZJr'Jk'J "toyc-A how tlus tobacco
I ci;iFV it toartcd-otmany store
Guaranteed ""J
JjpiLr I N C R P O R T E D "" jgFQ
tLUCKt Copyricbt byTho American Tcfcacco Cotnpaay. fac 1517, j. 7i1b iMifyyii i, mi ail LUCKY
'ft, - - ' -i.-.riir--T-TOT","r,OT .iv.-a;rr-gmaMirt--pp:y..iij;Saacy
FRED ALTON HAIGHT
TEACHER OF PIANO
Special Summer Term June 1 to Aug. 21.
HAIGHT MUSIC STUDIO
401 Garnett-Corey Building
KIKiAlt WIGHT
JKUKI.KR
Watch repairing my specialty. Ar
tistic engraving. Prompt service, per
sonal attention. No. 17 North Cen
tral Avenue, Medford, Oregon. Phone
S61-R.
AT THE OLD STAND
I have returned to Medford and will be found at
the old stand on South Kiverside, where I will con
tinue to do expert horseshoeing and all kinds of
blacksmithing.
Tom Merriman, Proprietor
Stop at The
NEW HOUSTON HOTEL
Hth and Everett Streets, Portland,
Orciron. Xew niamv-enient. Phones
and elevator. Kates 50c, 75e, 1.00
and $1.50 per day.
JOHN A. PERL
UDLRTAKtS:
Lady Assistant.
2 SOl'Tlt KAIITI.KTT.
Phono M. 47 nnd 47-J-2.
Austomoblle Hearse Service.
Ambulance Service Cnrnner
WESTON'S
Camera Shop
20S East Main Street,
Medford
The Only Exclusive
Commercial Photographer
. in Southern Oregon.
Vega fives Made any time or
place by appointment.
Phone 147-J.
We'll do the rest.
U. D. WESTON. Prop
Medford's
Big Patriotic Carnival
June 5 to 9, Inclusive
FOLEY & BURK
Combined Carnival Company
The Largest and Best Equipped Company
in the West Today.
SNOOKUMS, the Perfect Boy
Shows Include Foley & Burk's Famous Dog & Pony
Circus, Monkeyyille, Loretta, the Borneo Family,
Siamese Twin Girls, Circus Side Show. Newleyweds
& Snookums, Submarine U-2, Eli Ferris Wheel,
Merry Go Round, and Many Other Shows of Sterling
Quality. ,
4
Good reasons whV
your ticket should read
Union Pacific System:
Automatic Safety Signals
Trotccting every foot of the way to Chicago.
1140 Miles of Double-Track
Highest tyrs: of rai JbcJ eon-tructioru
Top'Notch Trains
Through Sleeping-Cars and Din(
to Chicago, Omaha, Kansas City, Dcnv
Columbia River Route East
Parallels America's Greatest Highway
through the 1 imous gorge, between road and river.
UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM
JOINS WEST AND EAST WITH A BOULtVARD Or STEEL
PORTLAND CITY OFFICE. Third at Washinctoti