Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1917)
Medford Mail Tribune AN INDEPENDENT NEWSHAHEIl PUBLIHIIED EVKlit AFTKRNOON EXCEPT HUKOAT BY TUB MEDFORD PRINTING CO. Office Mall Trlbunn Building, J6-17-J8 North Fir Btrefet; telephone 76. BLASTING PROGRESS The Democratic Times, Tho Medford Mail, Tne Aieuroro rriDune, i ne noum rn OreKonlan, Thtt Ashland Tribune. G BOKO IS PUTNAM. Editor. NUBSCRXPTIOK KATESl One your, by mull.. .$6.00 Oiib month, bv mull X'or month, dellvri'd by carrier In MniJfard, AMliland, Phomilx, Tal ent. JackHOnvllle and Central Point .80 Saturday oniv. by mall. Dor vear i.vv Weekly, pur yeur 1.60 Offlrlnl paper of the City of Mpdrord Official papor of Jackson County. Entered as aecond-clasH matter Mdfird, Oregon, under the act of March 9, 19 1V, Bworn Circulation for 1916 2,491. Ml-J.UHKH OK TIIH ASSOCIATED Full T.rflHtvl "Win- Htv!pr, Th AftHO ciattd I'n-SH In -x-luHlv;iy mil it ltd 1 the ii B fur republication of all iicwh rriitfi u it or nut ft.htrwi cro i Jn tliln piiitcr, und also tho local iicivh !hi nil mien herein. All rltiiH or renuh Icatlmi of Kticiul dlBpatchcs hureln tin ulno ri'Hervcd. , DEFEATS U-BOATS ROTTERDAM, Netherlands, Aug. 10. (Correspondence of the Asso ciated J'ross.) ;A record convoy has Just reached Rollordum from Kng- lund, limnliorlllK 17 fillips. Tho es corting squadron was likewise prob ably an easy record for this route, comprising, an It did, 40 torpedo do slroyors. Tho Ilrltlsh convoy between Ilrlt aln and Holland In now a regular 1 Blltutlon, and Is doubtless typical of whnt taken placo on a far wldor and extending Bcala In tho entente ship ping world. Tho non-admittance of urmcd merchantmen to Dutch ports has made convoying essential on this route. Times of sailing are kept secrot. The boats collect somewhere In Urlt Ish waters, and Hailing orders reach them on short notice. The crossing frequently takes placo at night. Some of tho escorting destroyers go on ahead; olliorn rush along at groat speed on either flnnk of the mer chantmen, turning and twisting and making nil kinds of strange evolu tions calculated to ward off and en danger tho lurking tlorman subma rine. Three or four 'Dutch boats ai'o often Included In tho convoy, for tho crossing of tho North Sea alono, with no protection save that of a neutral flag, has' proved to be merely asking for destruction. Arrlvod on the Netherlands side, the escorting squadron slops short on tho border of Dutch waters, and the merchantmen go safely on Into their ports of destination, constantly passing close by tho Gorman cargo boats that have taken recently to trading with coal between Rotterdam and Scandinavian ports through the channel of Dutch territorial waters. Shortly aftorward a returning con voy, which hns been lying In tho new wntorway, omerges and, under the protection of tho warships, swiftly takes Its way wostward, heavily lad en with such products ns Dutch cheese, butter, eggs and meat. Of late the convey haB crossed and re crossed In this wny once a week, In cidentally conveying tho mull either way. The mall fro mlCnglnnd is al ways Tory considerable, Including lug something like lTi.nnO or 20,000 parcelB of food for llrltlsh prisoners of war In Oermnny. Occasionally n straggler falls virtim to a torpedo nnd mine victims used to bo heard of, hut tho convoy method on the whole appears to bo remarkably successful. A WET spring brought forth inane, jibes from oppon ents of irrigation in tin; valley. Jn spite of three years of fro) failures, they had learned nothing. We had the wet spring and the usual dry summer. Even the wet spring did not atone for the dry autumn and the deficiency in usual rainfall. One has but to look at the harvest to comprehend that. irrigation is essential to increased output for not one year in six does the mois ture come at the right Reason of the year. The dry sum mer is reflected in decreased yields for th.e ensuing year, as well as poor crops for the present year. There are exceptions which only prove the rule. A very few by the aid of unusually fine soil and persistent culti vation raised a good crop, but it is the average of all. the total output of the valley, that counts. ' '" '" Opponents of irrigation are governed by short-sighted, selfish policy. They would retard the progress of all und er the impression that they are benefiting themselves yet in the long run they are injuring themselves. We are all dependent upon the prosperity of the many, not the success of the few. There is no objector to irrigation who would not be benefited . by it in increased yield and increased value of property, and by the industries, payrolls and population that naturally follows. .1 Ins is a cooperative world ol: ours, and when the welfare of the many conflict with the selfishness of the few, the latter must give way. The majority must rule and the minority accept the decision with good grace. The welfare of the valley demands irrigation, it de mands the district plan of securing irrigation to water users, for privately owned water systems are unsatisfac tory to water users. It has been proved many times. A privately owned svstein is impossible and impractical, because entailing too great a cost per acre. The land owners should own their own water svstein and control it nnd this is only possible under the district plan. The pepole of the Talent district, comprising the south end of tho valley, have gone ahead, organized and voted bonds to secure the water, despite opposition of reaction aries, lite people or the Oolu JIill district, comprising the north end ot the valley, have done the same. Are the progressive people of the central and most fer tile section' to refuse to follow these examples north and south at the dictates ol. a lew large land owners avIioni policy is to block progress 'if CONSERVING LOCAL WHEAT L rOI'KXHAOKM, Aug. 31j The TacgUcho ltundscbau of llerlln gives a new version of the reason for Ihe retirement of the Polish council of slate, snylng that Instead of resign ing it wsh dissolved beenuse It ven tured to present an ultimatum to the (Jonnan government on military questions. Tho retirement of the council hns brought out the fact that nt'tho confidential cslon of the rolchstug main committee ou Mon day tho majority parll rl -matided tho establishment of a rI!y repre sentative nsicmliljr a:wl a r t-"nr"e ministry in Poland a '" hiti t.'i" Huntlsehau declare wonld l-.vl t't an immediate demand for the withdraw al of Germans from Poland. The Pan-German newspapers have begun a campaign for the abandon ment of the idea of a Polish king dom. Newspapers of all shades ol opinion ngren that there is little or friend hip for Germany among the Polish population. RESOLUTIONS declaring that Oregon grain should be milled within the state and only the flour export ed, and that every county should have its own agricultural agent to cooperate with the iariners in speeding up pro duction, ,; were adopted, .by the food product ion and conservation committee of the state council ol" defense at its first meeting 'field jn lrtl.iiu jhls wV(k j j The resolutions .express the ojju.iion, of the committee that the stock und dairying.indiisl ntis will .suffer severe ly if wheat is exported whole., .The outer .parts, jt was de clared, are needed f6r' feed. A comniitte was appointed by W. J ..Kerr, chairman,' trj cooperate with farmers to the end that sowing of winter Wheat and rve be largely in creased. 1 " ' ', V.' ' o The Mail Tribune has many t imes' commented upon the folly of shipping wheat out of the liogue l.Jivcr valley, to be imported later at a much' increased cost as flour and feed, when we had idle flour and grist mills-in the valley. We do not begin to raise enough wheat locally to supply local demands, but. most, of what we do raise is bought by speculators or outside mills to be shipped back laler with speculators' profits and railroad charges added. In addi tion, the millers' charges and profits are lost, to the valley. This item is but one of many instances whereby the val ley is unnecessarily impoverished and the balance of trade kept on the wrong side through lack of cooperation. It is up to our bankers, business men and fanners to get to gether and remedy this defect, for U'ogue lliver valley wheat should be milled within the county. 1'egin food conservation at home. CIHMSTIANIA, Am;. Ill Three (Icrnian spies have been convicted ut llcrgcn for supplying iul'onniilion to submarines regiirdiuK the sniliug lime ol' vessels which later were torpe doed, t'nplnin Lnvcn and (ll'ljeev Schwartz, (ierman citizens, and M. Tlioisen, a Norwegian, nil were gicn terms in Hie penitentiary. ,vcn was sentenced to five years, Schwartz lo four, end ThorM-n to ten Years im prisonment. Captain Linen nilmiltcd tbal lie oikcd under in-lrnelions from the Oeiiuan authorities. !( said tl.i'l Herman subjects were forced to obey such orders. Norwegian newspapers in con,, mentin on the trial cuuilntsi.ed (bat tlie country must take note of the fact that (lenn.'iu suhjcrK mut obey orders f'mm their own 'iiunlrv. T TO BE CANDIDATE XKW YOKK, An. 31.- Will'mm R. Hrnrst will not lu a oniididuto for ltmyor of New York lit tho eoniini: elect ion. His lU'cIinattnn to allow his name to iippear on tho ballot at the eoniini priinantis was tiled with the hoard of elections today, tho last day under the law lor taking tin action. Mr. Hearst had been desig nated by petition for the nomination on the Ih'inoiTatic ticket. NEW GREEK MINISTER ARRIVES IN AMERICA AN ATLANTIC .'OUT, An-. 31 (teore 1 ton who luw recently - been deinalel by Foreign Minister j Politic ut Atheiw n-i tireek minister to the I'nited States nrviwd today on a llrilii-h teuinliip. You Can Shake Loose from The Tortures of Rheumatism PEOPLE SHOES AT E PAItlS, Aug. 6 j (Correspondence otTlio Associated Press.) Before ad journment for summer vacation last week, parliament passed a law ou requisitioning which allows the gov ernment to requisition, or take, over at a fixed pike, any commodities necessary to qlvU life, just as it has always had power to requisitipn any thing for tho army. The new law. will allow several measures intended to alleviate the dearness of llviri'gito bo put into Im mediate effect, a all necessary pre liminaries have been arranged for weeks, in readiness for the moment that this law would give the authorl ties power to act. The first measuro will be to Inau gure "national footwear.'' This does not mean that everybody is to buy hoots will be available to the people and wear stale boots, but that gooi at a fair price. The price of boots and shoes has soared since the war to such a height that only well-to-do poople can buy them. The cost of footwear other than leather, even of wooden sabots, has of course greatly advanced, owing to the greater de mand from those who are now unable to buy leather hoots. "National footwear" will of course bo standardized'.' Tho ministry of commerce, in collaboration with tho army commissariat, will requisition the necessary leather and the hoots will he made fdr the civilians in ex actly tho Hume way ns they are al ready niado for the army. The prices will bo stamped on them so that no one need pay lnoro than tho official rate. Men's hoots will be sold at $5.(!0 at pro-war exchange, women's at $-1.80, boys' and girls' at $3.00 and chlldrens' at a price not yet fixed between $3 and $3.20. These prices allow a fair profit to the interme diary between maker nnd buyer. SHOWS BIG DEFICIT ZUUIf'II. Aug. The Austrian luultrot for 111 Hi-17, shows a deficit of II 1I;000,00() cu'owns compared to n deficit of 4i),niKI,()U0 crowns in the preceding year.' Two of-the largest items of expenditure are 1,701,000, 1)00 crowns for interest on war loans and l,(l."i0,0t)0,()00 crowns for the support of sohliers' families. Spec ial und diivet wnr expenditures are hoi iia-luded in liie budget. LESLIE -A. 1L in ERA AFTER WAR LONDON, Aug. 10. (Correspond ence of the Associated Press.) A vast sphere of work lies before the new British minister of reconstruc tion, .whoso office has just been add ed to' those Inc.ludfld in' the Drltish cabinet. Premier Lloyd George is firmly .convinced that the'foundatlon for the complex work of reconstruc tion after the war ought -to 'bo begun at once, even if It la at first -confined to matters of liicfulry and investiga tfon. "; The largest - question before the new ministry will be the question of carrying ' out the government's pledges to tho labor unions that their pre-war positions will be restored to them. ' Employers frequently have argued that tills will be impossible. I'nion leaders insist that the govern ment has glvon its pledge and must fulfill it. 1 . 'Discussing' this phase of post-war conditions. Professor L. T. llobhouse, head of tho department of sociology In London university and ono of the government's advisers on labor, said today: "The business of tho minister of reconstruction is to think out the best methods by which the half-formulated,, half-understood impulses of the masses of people can get themselves expressed in a reasonable manner. The first problem with which we shall he faced is, that of reconstruc Ing trades-union conditions. X say reconstructing advisedly, because if wo were to spealc of restoration there would he those who would say at onco that it Is Impossible in view of tho total change in conditions which tho war has brought about. "Hut this is a problem in which the good faith of the government is Involved. Nothing could be more def inite than the pledge to trade unlon ials that the alterations involved In dilution 6f labor and the suspension of 'customs of the trade' should hold only for the period of the wah If this pledge is not fulfilled it will be a fatal blow to the confidence of the pu,lliq Jnfty) good , faith ;p,f, govern ments. Ifi it is ffhown that It cannot be1 fulfilled Uecause 'cirt-umstances have altered, the answer must' be that wo can only vary a pledge with the consent of tho persons to whom the nlpilen wns made." ELL-AM S Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. ,25c at all druggists. TRACTOR S SMUUasS-' T nwmuiiiniii runs freely from its convenient sidespout package it docs not closSl1,eshev.kcr .mK4 Evml tho hot . s?tu'S5:rtS weather. IJulc xfSJ at me roruaim tins MIIUl.1V. Sunday Dinner, $1 YVtth Music The Portland a Gonrtrn of hctl leadership A f UVx.'.-'Mf'T n,3..-m-ipl Iiy uslnjt S. S. S. The germs of khcumatism are in the .blood, which Is laden with mil lions of the minute demons of pain, c.iuiing untold sutlrring and bringing its victim from vic,or and atrrngth to alum! hcltdrmnc.s. To get rc,l and I'cnuine relief from this disease, tlire disease grrmi tuu-t be com tdrtcly routed rut of the system through the blond. S. S. S. has been used for fifty years wiia uluUctory results in the treatment of Rheumatism. It acts directly upon the blood, which it promptly purities of all disease germs. It is a powerful antidote, and elimi nates from the blood all trace of rheumatic germs, building up and strengthening the run-down system. Write to-day to our medical di rector, who will give you valuable advice regarding the proper treat ment nf your own ose. Address Swift Specific Co, Dept. I -'Atlanta, Ga, ..... ... - j. J MSUITS NLDfOfy U koiacy TO ORDER $25.00 UP Also Cleaning, Pressing and AUtvint 178 r MAIM IIPSTMKO. JOHN A. PERL Idy Asistnt. ts WOl I'll II.IKTI.KTT. I'hnno M. 47 and 4T-J.a. Austomohlle Hearse Service, ambuiauca Sxriica. Curontr llcslned hy Hollin 11. White, designer of the famous White Moior Trucks. Mr. White has built tho CLUVKLANl) TltAC TOR to perform al of the many tasks requiring power on every farm. He has made it easy to operate, economical to run, easy to care for and absolutely de pendable in operation. 12 11. 1 ut the Draw liar , - 20 II. P. nt the Pulley High speed, heavy duty 4-cylln-der Hilda motor, 3 point spring susponsibn. Weight 27aO lbs., height 52 Inches, width ' 50 Inches, length 90 inches, clear ance 12 Inches, CU0 sq. Inches traction surface. Wo Carry Complete T.lno of Parts. sun.-, r. o. is. j'.rci.ii) omo McNEFF BR0THEHS Kstablisbed 1 Still (Northwest Distributors. Pittoek lllix k. Portland, Oregon Heferences Itradstreet's, Duns or Any Bank GIM CHUNG China Herb Store Herb cure for oaracne, noadache, catarrh, diphtheria, sore throat, lung trouble, kidney troublo, stom ach trouble, heart troublo, chills and fever, cramps, coughs, poor circula tion, carbuncles, tumors, caked breast, cures all kinds ot goiters. NO OPERATION. Medford. Oregon, Jan. IS, 1911 TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: This la to certify that I. the un designed, had very severe stomach trouble and had been bothered fot several years and last August was nol expected to live, and hearing of Olm Chung (whose Herb Sloie Is at 241 South Front streot in Medford) I de cided to get herbs for my stomach trouble, and I started to teellng bet tor as soon as I used them, and today am a well man and enn heartily rec ommend anyone afflicted as 1 was U see Olm Cluing aud try his Herbs. (Signed) W. R. JOHNSON, Witnesses: x M. A. Anderaon, Medford. S. 11. Holmes, Kagls Tolnt. Frank Lewis, K.iglo Point. Wm. Lewis, Eagle Point W. U Chlldroth, Kagle Point. C. E. Moore, Kagle Tolnt. J. V. Melntyre, Kagle Point. Oeo. P. Von der llellen. Eagle Point rbos. E. NlebuU. Kale Point. Eg V: 'Bmmk SCi. Con ask for VWs C' " WA ..y SNOW FLAKES ' , ' fZtWi "All right,. Mother! Snow flakes forr mine, every time!" Growing children lQye.thenCrisp saltiness of Snow Flakes. Tlveyiare gqqj for them, and you, too. j. ;-a Sold In three, sizes of packages, and fn bulk. PACIFIC COAST UISCI'IT CO. I'orllaiKl, Oiet;oil. CracSOTS imSSiTA . : . . t' . ' Wai'ner, AVni-fninn & fjoro John Ui-ownlee J. 10. Oliiistoad C. I'. Krlhs Marsh Dennett . H WB KBI-Ii 'KM , . Jones ('usli Cirocei'y Fonts (il'ocei'y Company Clms. h. Sehiefrell.i f. G. Ilibbnid Now-Is the Season fo : U'J w "'1t I t ti'tiL ir'e . ' ' " ; ' '" ; ( ......I- .'-.lo: it'l s ' We have a. good supply " of the . best at, all times iM AR-SH:i&- BENNETT Personal Attention V , Prompt Service Phono 1'52. E. Main St. . eninir o new uuiCM LAHIKS! We have included in our fall line, materials .uiU nlile Tor Suits, Coats and Skirts, (also shirtwaists), , i SUITS FROM $26.40 to $70.00, mmle to j'our measure. h COATS FROM $19.90 to $75.00. YAro ulso sell .goods by;lhe yurd, rniiilij' from .f 1.H5 to $12.75, exelit.-jve jxittcrns.; ij : "'' We will Kell you n suit Mimic In. your measure .and guarantee n fil, sell vou material hy Ihe yard, or itiike up jiiur.own material, we nre heP! to neeoinmodate, ami we g:uarantce the work to be flic best done in southern Oresion. " . ' ' ' ' ' I " '; ' l' GUS, The-vTaiior 40 NORTH FRONT ST. ' ' Labor Day Patriotic 'Concert For the Benefit of Our Boys of Company 7 GIVEN BY SOLDIERS' AUXILIARY AT. ., Page Theatre, Sept. 3; Fino, Musical Program ' ' Moving ricture3 Double Quartette of Co. C Futurists Dane Music by Howell's Orchestra. One Act Play Poors open at 7:'!0; moving jiictuivs liOgin at S o'clock p. in. Ailinissioii ."flc n.lc and U.. aLl orders a! ccplcd. Ail scats reserved. Advance sale of seats at I'age 10 a. in. Sat-Uidav. r1