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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1917)
1 MEDFORD MXIC TRIBUNE MEDFORU. OREflOX. THURSDAY. .1UXK 14. 1917. l'AOM SEVEN FUG LOVALIY- ASKED OF ALL BY - ROOSEVELT Former President Censures Pacifists for Lack' of Preparedness and Makes Plea for Red Cross Every Patriotic 'Citizen Should Assist In Ministering to Wounded at Front. LIN'COLN, Neb., June 14. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt In a speech which he delivered here today at the cele bration of the semi-centennial of the statehood of Nebraska, criticized the national policy of the United States for failure to protest promptly against Gorman ruthlessness and brutality, deplored national failure to prepare f(i the war, pleaded for undivided loyalty to the American flag, de nounced the pacifists, and asked for generous support and for the use of the Red Cross In caring for American troops on European battlefields. "Wo permitted our national pol icy," he said, "to be swayed by the national devotions and national ant I pathies of men who exercised the rights of American citizens but show ed themselves traitors to America by the way in which they prostituted our citizenship to the interests of Ger many or to their hatred of England Censures Pacifists. "it would be impossible to over state the damage done to the moral fibre of our country by the profession al pacifist propaganda, the peace-at any-price propaganda. The profes sional pacifists during the first two and a half years of the war, have occupied precisely the position of the copperheads during the time of Abra ham Lincoln. i "From this time on let us insist on an absolute and undivided American ist in this land, untempered by any selftllegiance to the countries from which our ancestors may severally have sprung, and untainted by any unworthy national animosity towards any other country. Let us prepare ourselves spiritually, economically, and in all military and naval matters Including as a permanent policy the policy of universal military training and service so that never again shall we be utterly unready, as we now are to meet a great crisis. Finally, In the present war, a war for liberty and democracy against the ruthless mill taristic tyranny of the Prussianized Germany of the Hohenzollerns, let us as speedily as possible train our giant, but our soft and unready, strength, so that we may use our hardened might to bring the slaughter to a real and final end in the only way honor ably possible by securing for ourselves and our allies the peace of justice based on overwhelming victory." Appeal for lcl Cross, In his appeal for support for the Red Cross, Colonel Roosevelt said: "The most important things Is to sends-abroad at the earliest possible moment a great fighting army. Sec ond only to the army in the work of winning this war comes ou;r Red Cross. Indeed, the Importance of this work is so great that the president of the United States has set apart next week from June IS to 25 as a perl od for sacrifice and unselfish generos ity, a week in which the whole Amer lean people will be asked to Join in Taising funds to enable our Red Cross to perform Its vast and indispensable duties in this war.- "The president, has also commis sioned several of the ablest business men of the country as a war council of the Red Cross, to administer this service on behalf of a stricken world. This war council tells us that a fund of $100,000,000 must be raised at once lu order to meet even the most urgent needs. "Mere, Indeed, is a summons to ev ery American. It is an enormous sum of money; but what comfort can we takr in withholding that or any other sum of money if it is needed to re lieve the suffering of our own sons or the sons of our allies who are fight ing for all that makes life worth Hv ing. , Kvery Ono Should Oivo. "Into our Ro.1 Cross without stint should be poured a heartfelt offering of thanksgiving that we are permitted to Join in this great service to nil mankind. Our soldier and sailors will do their part without flinching we may rest assured of their courage and fidelity. The Red Cross offers to n who urn not allowed to fight, the opportunity for sacrifice and for help. "Wo little realize what Is before us Our sons and brothers will soon be going into battle. They will be three thousand miles from home, In a land already wasted by war, a land threat ened by famine, a land smitten by dls ease. They tell us that in many cases Intlav tha u-nlimtlt of SOlfllCrS iU France must be tied up with newspa pers for want of the necessary surgi cal bandages. When our own men are wounded as they sureyl will be In great numbers are we going toi allow them to suffer yet more be-' cause we fall to provide those things ' which can at least mitigate distress? Surely not! But we must do it in ad vance. If we wait it may be too late. Do it now! ') Care for Afflicted. "Our Red Cross must not only care for the shattered bodies of our wounded men ; It alone can become a foster parent to them in the trying conditions they are sure to face when they are convalescent from wounds or recovering from exhaustion. We shall soon have an army of a million sol diers. When they go to France they must have homes in which to rest and to be cared for and to recover. The generosity of our whole people must make it possible for our Red Cross to provide for them. "In no previous war have the inno cent non-combatants had to bear so terrible a share of its physical suffer ing. And It Is thru our Red Cross that we can show to the nations of the world how the great heart of the American people goes out to them in their distress. France proud, brave, blooding from ghastly wounds needs us sorely. Tuberculosis is raging tliruout her land. Fifteen hundred of her towns and villages have been razed to the ground by the calculated barbarity of the Invaders. Millions of her people are homeless and starving, bereft even of the barest covering for their bod les, of stoves, of utensils with which to cook or eat, of agricultural imple ments or animals indeed of the sim-j plest elements of civilization. And to: us alone can these people come tor help; we alone have the abundance. with which to supply their direst needs. . i To Aid Russia Also. 'To Russia, too, we must reach out enr helping hand. We little know what she has suffered and is suffer ing. Russia, long obedient to autoc racy, has not flinched In this conflict. Her people have had to struggle not only to free the world from autocracy but to make their own land a land of liberty. Russia needs all we can do to strengthen her courage and to make her feel that we are Indeed be hind her. Our armies can do little for her. Our Red Cross alone can take into Russia the message of hope, of help, of confidence which, she so ter ribly needs. The message must be practical. It must carry deeds and not merely words; and it should be tarried at once. Probably never be fore were so many people in distress and agony in Russia at this very hour. We can take no more vital step to ward winning this war than to put re newed heart and strength into Rus sia." Reported by Jackson County Ab stract Co., Sixth and Fir Sts. Marriage License. Harry L. Qualntance and Mae Mea dows. Circuit Court, J. ST. Fowler et al vs. W. A. Sharp et al. Affidavit. Order. Anlo Penwell vs. Ruby Johnson et al. Default. I Una S. Miller vs. W. II. Taylor et ux. Affidavit. Cost bill. Rogue River Valley Canal Company vs. Daisy Bodge. Demurrer. Probate Court. I. W. Thomas Estate. Petition to make deed. ItaaJ ICstiite Transfers, Ralph G. Jennings, sheriff to Abraham Slept, land In Sec. 16, T. 2 west 3000 P. Alden Wilson to J. V. iNel- son, land In Sec. 8, T. 37-1 west 10 J. P. Elsley et nx to City of Ashland, land In T. 3'J-l east 2000 II. G. Shearer et ux to C. F. Bowman, lot 11 and east half of block 12, Jackson ad dition, .Medford 10 William II. Johnson et ux to II. L. Howman, lot 8, block 1, Jackson addition, Medford 10 Mildred S. Clark et Ir to Thora Smith, guardian, lots land 2, Imperial addition, Medford.. R. P. Little et ux to C. P. Bow man, lot 13 and west half of lot 12, block 1, Jackson ad dition, Medford James Johnson et ux to Mamie C. Walton, land in Sec. 31, T. 37-2 west W. R. Bullock et ux to Alonzo D, Barrel let ux, land in See. 25, T. 37-2 west In Medford 10 in XOTICK. To Whom It May Concern; The partnership heretofore existing between C. B. Whlteman and James ft. W. Gregg, has been this day mil tually dissolved. All bills owing by the firm may lie presented to either White-man or Gregg. All bills due the firm may be paid to either Whlteman or Gregg. Medford, Oregon, June 12, 1917. C. E. WI11TKMAN. 73 J AS. R. W. G ft EGO. With Medford trade is Medford made COURT HOUSE REPORT PRESIDENT WILSON DEFINES ABA'S AIMS INWORLD WAP (Continued from Page One.) diers now carry (be Stnrs and Sfripes to Europe for tiie fist time in history are not new to American traditions because realization of Germany's war aims must eventually mean the undo ing of the whole world. He spoke in full as follows: Speech In Full. My Fellow Citizens: We met to celebrate King day because this flag which we honor and under which we serve is the emblem of onr unity, our power, our thought and purpose as a nation. It has no other charac ter than that which we give it from generation to generation. The choices are ours. It floats in majestic silence above the hosts thai execute those choices, vvheres in peace or in war. And yet, tho silent, it speaks to us speaks to us of the ;iast, of the men nnd women who went before us and of the records they wrote upon it. We eelehrnie the day of its birth; and from its birlh until now it has witnssed grout history, has floated on high the symbol of great events, of a srrcnt plan of life worked out by a irrcat people. We arc about fo carry it into bailie, to lift it where it will draw iiie fire of our enemies. W lire about to bid thousands, hundreds of thousands, it may he millions ol our men, the young-, the strong, the capable men of the nation, to go forth and die beneath it on the field of blood far away for what For some unaccustomed thing? For something ot winch it has never ought the fire before? American armies were never before sent across he sens. Why arc they sent now? For some new purpose, for which this great flag has never been carried be fore, or for some old, familiar heron- purposes for which it has seen men, its own men, die on every battle field upon which Americans have home arms since the revolution? Old Use for Flag. ' These are questions which must be answered. We arc Americans. We m our turn serve America and can serve her with no private purpose We must use her flag as she has al ways used it.- We rfre accountable at the bar of history and must pli ill utter frankness what purpose if we seek to serve. It is plain enough how we are forced into the war. The extraordi nary insults and aggressions of the imperial German government left us no self-resjiecting choice hut to take up arms in defense of our rights as a free jteopie and of our honor as a sovereign government. The military masters of Germany denied us the right to he neutral. They filled our unsuspecting communities with vi cious suies and conspirators and ought to corrupt the opinion of our people in their own behalf. When they found thai they could not do that, ilieir agents diligently spread sedition amongst us and sought to ilraw our own citizens from their al legiance and some of those agents were men connected wilh the olfieial mbassy of Ihe German government here in otrr own capital. They sought by violence to destroy our industries and arrested onr commerce. They tried to incite Mexico to take up arms against us and to draw Japan into hostile alliance wilh her and ihai not hv indirection hut hv direct sug- tion from the foreign office in Iterlin. They impudently denied us the use of the high seas and repeat edly executed their threat that they would send io their death any of our eople vho ventured to approach the coasts of Europe. And many of our own people were corrupted. Men be gan io look upon Iheir own neighbors with suspicion and Io wonder in iheir hot resentment and surprise whether there was any community m which hostile intrigue did nol lurk. What irrent nation in such circumstance, would not have taken up amis? illicit as we had desired peace, it was de nied us and not of our own eaoice. This tlag under which we serve would have been dishonored had we with held our hand. , 'ot. Enemies of People, Hut that is only part of the -fory. We know now as clearly as we knew before we were ourselves engaged that we are not the enemies of the German 'ople and that they are not our enemies. They did not origi nate or desire this hideous war.oi wish that we should he drawn inif it; and w an1 vnuuelv conscious that we are fighting their cause, as ihey will some day see il, as well as our own. They are themselvs in th grij of the sjuue sitiiste rpower that has now at lit-l stretched its ugly talon. out and drawn blood from us. Tin whole world is at war because the whole world is in the grip of that power and is trying out the great bat tle which shall deteruiiiie whether it is to be brought under its mastery or fling itself free. Begun by Military. The war was begun by the mili tary masters of Germany, who proved to be also the masters of Austria Hungury. These men have never re garded nations as peoples, men, wo men and children of like blood and frame as themselves, for whom gov ernments had theu life. They have regarded them 'merely as serviceable organizations, which they could bend or support to their own purpose. They have regarded the smaller states, iu particular, the people who coulu be overwhelmed by force, as iheir natu ral tools and instruments of domina tion. Their purpose has long been avowed. The statesmen of other na tions, to whom that -purpose was in credible, paid little attention; regard ed what German professors e-tiiomtd- ed in their classrooms and German writers set forth to the world as the goal of German policy as rather the dream of minds detached from prac tical affairs, as preposterous private conceptions of German destiny, than the actual plans of responsible rulers, - but the rulers of Germany themselves knew ail the while what concrete plans, what well advanced intrigues lay back i what the pro fessors and the writers were saying, and were glud to go forward unmo lested, filling the thrones of Huikau states with German prmees, putting German oficors at the service of Tur key to drill her armies and make interest with her government, devel- oping plans of sedition and rebellion in India and Egypt, setting their fires Persia. The demands made hv Austria upon Serbia were a mere sjn gie step in a plan which compassed Kurope and Asm, ftom Berlin to Bagdad. They hoped these demands might not arouse Knrope but they meant to press them whether they did or not, for thev thought themselve ready for the final issue of arms. teaching Into Asia, Their plan was Io throw a broad belt of German military power and poiiiieai control across the very ecu tor ot Europe and beyond the Med ilerraneas inio the heart of Asia and Austria was io he as much their tool as Servia, Bulgaria, Turkey or the preponderous states of the cast. Austria-Hungary was to become part of the centra! German empire, domi nated by the same forces and influ ences that had originally cemented the German states themselves. The dream had its heart at iierlin. ft could have had a heart nowhere else, It rejected the idea of solidarity of race entirely. The choice of peoples played no parti in it at all. It eon templuted binding together racial am political units which could he kept together only by force Czechs, Mag yars, Croats, Serbs, Roumanians, Turks, Armenians the proud slatei- f Bohemia and Hungary, the stout; little commonwealths of the Balkans, the indomitable Turks, the subtle peo-1 pies of the east. These peoples didj not wish to he united. Thev ardently! lesired to direct their own n f fairs,; would be satisfied only by undisputed: imlejiemlcnee. They could be kept! ipiict only by the presence or the con-; taut threat of armed men. They; would live under a common (lower only by sheer compulsion and await the day of revolution. But the Ger man military statesmen had reckoned with ail (hat and were ready Jo ical wilh it in their own way. Plan I Carried Out, And they have actually carried the greater part of that aninzmg plan into execution. Look how tilings itnnd. Austria is at their mercy. It has acted, not upon its own initiative, or upon the choice of its own people, but at Berlin's dictation ever since the wpr began. Its people now ie-! sire peace, hut cannot have it until; leave is granted from Berlin. The; so-eniled centra! powers are, in fact,; hut a single power. Serbia is at its mercy, should its hands be for a moment freed. Bulgaria has con futed to its will find Uouuiania is overrun, iiie 1 urkisu armies, vlueii Germans trained, are serving Ger many, certiiialy not themselves and Ihe guns of German warships lying the harbor of Constantinople re mind Turkish statesmen every day they have no choice but to take their orders from Iierlin. From Hamburg to ihe Persian gulf the net is spread. Why Pence. I ifcs.ii'ed. is it nt easy to understand the eagerness for eaee that has been manifested from Berlin ever since the snare was set and sprung f Peace, IHiu'e, ieitec, has been the talk of her foreign ofiee for now a year or more; not iieaee on her own initiative hut upon the initiative of the nations over which she now deems herself to hold the advantage. A little of the talk has been published hut noe-l of it has been private. Thru all sort- of channels it has come to me, and in all sorts of guises, but never with the terms disclosed which the German government would he willing to cept. That government Has oilier vitliuilile pawns In its hands he-.ot these 1 have mentioned. It still holds a valuable pint of France, tli'iogli with slowly relaxing grasp and 1 rae- tieuSiy the whole of Belgium, Its armies press close upon fuia and overrun Poland ni their will. It run out so miner; it dare not go hack, If wishes to close lis bargain hefore it is too late and it has little left io offer for the pound of flesh it will demand, Autocracy at StiUse. The military masters under wftom Germany is bleeding see very eleeriv to what point fate has brought llfetu. If thev fall back or are forced oaei; an inch, their power both abroad and at home will fall to pieces liki a iionse of cards. It is their power at home they are thinking about, more than their power abroad. It is that power which is trembling under their very feet ; and deep fear has entered their hearts. They have hut one chance to jioriietuuie their military power or even their controlling politi cal influence, lf they can secure iscaee now with the immense advan tages still in their hands which they have tip to this time apparently gained, they wil have justified them selves before the German people; they wilt have gained by force what they promised io gain hy it, an immense expansion of German power, an im mense enlargement of commercial op portunities. Their prestige will lie secure and with their prestige their; poiitiea! power. If ihey fail Iheir people will thrust them aside; a gov ernment accountable to tho people themselves will be set np in loruniny as it has been in England, m ihe 1'iiiied States, in France and in all the great countries of the modem time eveept Germany. y If they succeed, they are safe and Germany ur-d the world are un done: if thev fail. Germany is saved and tho world will lie id pence. If they succeed, America will fall within the menace. We and all Hie r.i of the world must remain armed, n. they will remain, and must make ready for ihe next step in their eg gression. I f tliey fail, the world may :imie for peace and Germany may he of the union. Intrigue for Peace, Ho you not now understand the new intrigue, the intrigue for jieaee and why the masters of Germany do not hesitate io use any agency that prom ises to effect their purposes, Hie de ceit of iiie nations? Their present particular aim is to derive all Ihose who tliruout the world stand for the rights of jieopies and the self-gov ernment of nations? ror they see what immense strength the forces of justice and liberalism are gather ing out of tins war. 1 hey are a- nloying liberals in iheir enterprise. They are using men, in Germany and without, as their spokesmen whom they have hitherto despised and op pressed, using them Jor their own destruction socialists, the lender of labor, the thinkers, thev have hither to sought to silence. Bet them once succeed and the men, now their tools, will he ground io powder beneath; the weight of the great military em-; pire they will have set lip; ihe revo-; fniionists in Hussia will be cut off; from all succor - or cooperation in; western I-'urope. and counter revoln-; lion fostered and supported; Germany herself will lose her chance of free dom; and all Europe will arm for the next, ihe final struggle. World-wide Kfforr. "The sinister intrigue is being no less actively conducted in litis coun try than in Russia and in every coun try, in Europe to which the agents ami dixies of ihe imperial German govern ment enn get access. That govern ment has many spokesmen here, in places high and low. They hjive learn ed discretion. They keep within ihe law. It is opinion they niter now, not sedition. They proclaim the liberal purposes of their matters; declare this a foreign war which ran touch i America wiih no danger to either her; lands or her institutions; set England; the center of the stage and talk; of iter ambition to assert economic ; dominion thnioiit the world ; appeoi to our ancient tradition of isoiaii m ill: the jiolicics of the nations; and ieefc to undermine the government with false professions of loyalty U its principles. Only One. 1iirc. But ihey will make no headway. The false hertav themselves aUo in every accent. It is'ouiy friends and partisans of ihe German government ivhom we have alcady identiiied who itter these thinly disguised disloyal ties, I'aets are patent io all ihe world and nowhere are they more plainly seen than in ihe 1'iiited Stales, where we an? accustomed to deal with fuels anil not with sophist rie-; and the great fact stands on! above nil tho rest that this is a people's war, a war for freedom mid justie and self gov eminent amongst nil the nations of the world, n war io make the svorld safe for the sopies who live upon it ;md !i:ce made it their own, the Ger GOAT MILK AT VXA&iHQ Cfii;Si7 wiscmaNN: ssat milk ta f.'i Tit-'C5!"rs i njrit Qt ' '"jr hmthhy in&tm wti, 3g WIDEMANN'Sf UMK, Ut(lffHit, yroWB JjS Igoat' milk! Kl- A i'rtfrt t cxrt rtUa fur ttwmivA g mans themselves included and fliii! with us rests the choice io break thru all these hviwcricies and patent cheats and musks of brute force and help set ihe world free, or else stand a-ide mid let it he dominated a long age thru hv sheer weight of iirais and the arbitrary choice of self consti tuted masters, by the nation r.'hie!i can maintain the biggest arasies and the most irresistible niniiimenls a power io which the world lias afford ed no parallel and in the fine of which iKiiiticisl freedom must wither and perish. "For ns there is lui one choice. We have made it. Woe lie to ihe ni:n or group of men thai seeks to slum! in our way in this day of high resolu tion when every prineijdo wo hold dearest is Jo he vindicated and made secure for Jlie salvation of Jlte na tions. We are ready Io plead a; the bar of history and our flag shall wear a new luslre. Once more we shall make good with our lives iind for Juiies the great faith io whhh we wet born and a new glory shall shine tu iiie face of our iieoitle, CHICHESTER S PILLS SffllBYORUGGlSTSeiOTMRE FOB SAWS OVBRTOCR FOR SAUi Ten head of ali-jiirpose horses. So reasonable effer refus ed. Henry iionson, Feed Corral, Medford. 1 ?5 FOll 8ALK Work team, wnizht 2. - 0 pounds. W. F. Owlngs, itogne Itlver. 13 FOB 8AMJ MlirtaSLIdSEOUS FOR SAMS Furniture; granho- phone, chairs, table, stoves, carpets, etc. S. tlrape Street, 7(5 FOR SAIJ3, Excelsior motorcycle is good condition, Jan. Plieno 382-U 74 FOR SALE Light Hve-nasscneer an- tomobiie, $200. Valley Fuel Com pany. 73 FOB SAUi ItEAIj KSTAXE FOB SAUi Farming land, fruit land, gioek ranches, tlmher land. from fit per acre np, en long tlttse, easy payments. Address Gold Ray HesHy Co. FOR 8Ai,i3 Forty-acre stock or dai ry ranch. So acres under irrigation. 10 acres wheat or corn land, fair uullilings, fino stream running thru place, mower, hay raise, plow, barrow and cultivator goes with place; price $2u0; $8o cash, bal ance time. Waiter Keixer, liox Si i, Medford, 73 !li-:fr WANTEil FKMAMS A.VTK13 - Competent woman for general housework. References re- quired. Phono mornings, 891-itl. 71 WANT8B Woman to eeek for small crew on grain ranch, llox 45, Mail Tribune. 74 HKI.P WASTKil 91AM5 WASTE ts Thinners: at Miravista or chard, itti or witliout board I'hone 687-J2. WANTED Hoys for years old and over. thinning. 13 72 $1,23 WIM, BEOiVES to each of several school boys who ap ply for work in delivering Tho Satur day Kveiijag Pout to customers. Only school boys clean, gentlemanly and ambitions need apply. The $1.25 is in addition to liberal cash profits and manv other advantages. Aply to C. A. IHiVoe, 41 X West Slain Street Medford, Oregon. WASTKH SITUATION'S WANTUH Position as chambermaid iu holol, or will iioip in kitchen Mrs, Nina IJaifiey, tlraets Pass. WANTEii Position. Ranch camp cook tmaiel, wants job. Murphy, Paiace Hotel, Room ; WASTKi MtSCKM,ASKt:8 or WAXTEO To rent furnished house for two mouths from July fir.-it Karl S. Tnmy, 210 ;arnett-Corey Hldg, WANTK1J Second-hand tent, preferred. Call 12x1 73 WAST Eli Ford car in goosi runtii- tion. Cheapifst price. Phone iH. WANTFJ To boy second-hand enitl valor. Foothills Orchard, Phone SH-J4. 73 WANTEU -Twenty Jo 3 feet of good second-hand hose, must he in good condition. Slate kind, condition and twice. Address 3l ears Siaii Tribune. i WAN'i'KO Mi) i-alloiis crude oil in barn-Is, Phone (iobi iiiil Si, t.'iiam jilln i,. R. Haneh. 72 WA.VTKi Vacuum cleaning. H. A. Wysong. Phone 2S2, Jaeksonyllle. Si WASTKis-Hrins as year eKK and Poultry, We pay cash, Medford Poultry and Kt;g Co. WANTED lioimes to mora. 4x-M, or 4sS-X. Phone Vtm HKXT H'ilMSIIKIl ROOMS. poll RENT- Kxrniitiird rooms, wilh or wltheni hoard, 1 13 South Kim; Street, Phono iSS-V. 7.1 Vim RBST M IHtast&AX K0U9 POR RENT Poll n try hotel. $10. Al so general merchandise business for sale; part evciiaege. Por par ticulars write Itsrton, Oak liar, Biekiyeu county, CaUfernia. 74 , ' 1 - - f ' - .1' " " It -f. at fA itvlTolaMtWr. Bsref jew V It- .V uiaMirto BK,t 1-ii.utVi.I AS- W FlltXlSHED APaHTJIBXTS FOR HENT -Furnished: Apt. tnmmsf rates. The Berben. Pheae 93S-H. POH KSST One eomptetrty furnish ed anartmnt at Botsl Holland. FOB MOIJSES FOR itK.VT Serai Bsvls bungalow on West iain Street, completely furnished, strictly modern, wits, sleeping porch and garage. Inquire Karl S. Tamy, Oarnett- Corey Bids. T-t FOR RENT Nicely furnished mod ern fi-reom house. Piano, aleeptng poseh and shade. Phone OR REST Modern fi-room tsoins sml garage. Toons 37S-W. FOR RBNT Six-reeis modern bus gaiow, east front, fine snade; range connected. Phone 4SS-X. yOR RENT Furnished and unfur nished houses. Employment Agea ct. Al. A. flailw. 1S Esust Main. LOST LOST Where Is KlUy If yoa ftesi a Utlla Mack and shits cat, please Inks It to IJeVoe's nd receive re ward, or phone 1 8-H. 72 !3ST Between Medford and Central PolnJ, pacSago containing brown and white eanvas belt. FJndsr jdease notify Mrs. Fred Hopkins, tiOST One spotted ImclcfrtUn pony. left eye out. Return to Ernest Jier rtnston, Medford, Oregon. 73 FOB EXCHASfiB VvH.t. TRAHB Oood residence, far- nishod, on paved street in Portland for ranch between Central Point Miil Ashland. AiMress F, I. Boyd, 212 West Main St, Siedford, Ore gon. 72 FOR TRADR 120 aeres ot land. hotnestead. iiida VsJiey. Ksmerawa County. Sevada, for automobile in AU condition. Apjdy Palace Hotei; W. C, Hose, Hoom 18. 72 MOSEY TO lOAS MOSEY TO IsOA N From IM8 to $S880 on hand to loan at 7 per cent, on Rood farm security. Earl Tamy, 210 Garnelt-Cnrey Bidg, tf MONEY TO IXJAN Money to loan on Medford property. Easy rsontn ly payments. See D. R. Wood. BUSINESS PIKECTOBT AeeouiiSrssit, E, M. WILSON Certified Pnblie Ac countant, room ill, M. F. & H, Bldg., Medford,- Oregon, . Anxto Supplier LATTER ATJTO SPRINO CO. W are operating the largest, oldesl and best equipped plant in the Pfc elfle northwest. Use onr sprfagi when others fall, Sold asder writ ten guarantee, 34 North Fifteenth St., Portland, Ore. AMarney PGKTER J. NEFF Attorney at !, rooms 8 and 3, Medford Nations! Dank Building. , A. S. RBAMES lawyer. Corey bldg. Collections COLLKCT IONS AN HKt'ORTS W collected some accounts 14 year eld. We know how to get the money. The Bullock Mercantile Agency. Inc., Booms 1, S, 3. Hs tins' Bldg., 218 K. Mate at UraJisls DR. T. T. Si! AW Dentist, Orer Baa. leis Ciottiins Store la rooms for sieriy occupied by Dr. Jones. Pbons SM-Y, Engineer and Contractor PBEO N. CUM MHSOa Engineer and contractor, 404 M. F. & H, Bid Surveys, estimates, Irrigation drain) age, orchard and land improvement. OaHvnKe JARBAOI3 Oct year premise cleaned op for the summer. Call en the city garbage wagons fo good service. Pbeae S74-L, t, V, Alien. Issirartian la 5fa!e HB11 ALTON HAiHll f Teacher si niano and harmony, Haight Mnali Studio, 401 UsmeH-Cerey aidg4 Phone 73. hnnrsncB EARL 8. TUMY General insures office, Plre. Automobile, Accident; Llabillly, Plata abuts. Contract and Surety Bonds. Excellent cor panics, good local service. No. 2 It Oarnett-Corey ISidg, - ; Physicians ami Surgeons OR. W. W, IfOWAKO Osteopathia physician. 33 Oarnett-Corey baii lm, Vimne ISO, - ' DR. 3, 3, EMMEK3 Piiysfeiae , surgeon. Prseiice limited ta eye, ear, nose and tnroat. Eyes tc!er tifirsliy tested end glasses sas piled. Oculist and Anrtst tot 8, S, R. R. Co. Offices M. F. 4 H, Co. bldg., oppostie P. O, Pbone S7. - Printers ami Paldisliera MKHKOHO PKiNTlNQ CO, ha the beat equipped prlntlnj? office Is Sonlbeni Oregon; Book bindicg, loose leaf ledgers, billing systems, etc, Portland price. S7 lisrifc Fir at , --JSZL. J , .J Trenster EAliS Tit A SHEER STORAOK CO. Office 42 North frost St. Pbont 818. Price rigs. Buiric imp. Mteed, ...a