nrrcnFOTvD MATL TRTRTJXTl, ArEPFOTJTV OttEfiOX. FttlHAY. MAY 21.
WEST S MAJORITY
PRIMARY TICKET
Ralph Jennings, unopposed (or
sheriff, received the highest vote cast
for any democratic candidate at the
recent primary eleotion, receiving'
721 .votes. A total of S34 votes were
cast for county Judge, Purdin's ma
jority being 87 over Borden. The
names of three republicans ' were
written in as democratic nominees,
due. to their energetic campaigning
and the lack of democratic candi
dates,' Perl for coroner, Rhoades tor
surveyor and Florey for county clerk.
Oswald West for U. S. senator re
ceived the highest majority on the
ticket, defeating King by 533 voles.
Pierce won over Starkweather by 215
votes- and Hornibrook defeated Mor
row by. 163 votes. D. 11. Lowe of
Ashland and Howard Hill were
named for representatives and W. LI
I Cobb of Douglas as joint representa:
tive.
Horace Pelton's name was written
In for county commissioner and Ben
Garnett's for county treasurer.
The official count follows:
Nutloiml Committeeman
Will H. Hornibrook 438
J. W. Morrow .'..275
V. S. Senator
Oswald West 60S
Will-S. King 132
Governor
Pierce 465
Starkweather 230
, Slnte Senator
Chas. T. Sweeney ...031'.
Kcpreseiitnlivo
D. M. Lowe 142
Howard Hill .' an
Joint Representative
W. t. Cobb 44
Mrs, Schleffelln 37
County Judgo
M. Purdin , 390
Newton Borden . 3 OS
F. Roy Davis 123
County Commissioner
Horace Pelton 129
Sheriff
Ralph Jennings , 721
County Clerk
Chauncey Florey 90
Horace Howard '. 79
County Treasurer (
Ben Garnett 98
Jllss Blakeley , 25
- County Surveyor
Frank Rhoades 14
- Coroner 11
John Perl 102
V. It McGowan 6 S
Fred Weeks 24
BRITISH MISSION ;
HEADED Bl PICE
AN' ATLANTIC POUT, liny 24.
Prince Arthur of Conniiujrht, foil of
the Duke of C'onniiit;ht mid Stratli -cum,
former ' governor general of
Cnnadn, and a cousin of King George,
arrived here today from !in Knglish
port as head of n llritili mission to
the United States,
The mission made Ihe voyage
aboard n British cruiser.
The prince and his parly were met
by Assistant Secretary of State Long,
Colonel E. JL House, General White,
head of the Hritish recruiting mission
in this country, ( live Ilailcy, Hritish
consul general, and other American
und British officials.
WASHINGTON', May 24. The
mission headed by Prince Arthur, the
stuto department nnnounced today,
is on the way to Japan. It will conic
to Washington to cull upon President
Wilson.
NEW YORK, May 24. More than
2,700,000 wounded and sick men
hav been returned to the fighting
front and 6 92.000 soldiers have been
discharged from the German army as
unfit for further service, according
to a report of the statement in the
reichstae by Surgeon General Schulze
as contained In the Berliner Tage-
blatt of April 24, a copy of which
hni heen received here.
Most of the cases of sickness In
the army were due to diseases of the
oreana of digestion, presumably as a
result of the quantity and quality of
the food.
EVAN WILLIAMS. NOTED
TENOR. DEAD AT AKRON
AKRON', Ohio, May 24 Evan H.
Williams, noted tenor, ilied this
morning at the city hospital after
QUEER ACCIDENT TO
CIRCUS PERFORMER!
Iff
V ' :y3
h -
RYE FLOUR WITH
ooAyr
This man for J5 years has been
performing hair raising stunts on an
aerial apparatus (id feet hii'li with
out nccidenl. The ironv of futc as
serted itself last l'Ylirmirv when Ihe
inti'i'p'ul aeriulist fell off a packing
case in his garage and broke an arm.
He is all right now and will be seen
twice daily in free acts next week
during the carnival for the Greater
.Medford club's patriotic fund. He is
known as 1'p-Iligh licno and this is
his third season with the Koley and
Ilurke combined shows. His act is so
hazardous that no insurance com
pany will accept him as a risk.
Two sacks of rye flour, manufac
tured at Portland and purchased at a
Central Point store, were found to
contain broken glass which gave
rise to tho story that the flour was
manufactured at Central Point. In
vestigation proved the job, If It was
a job, . was a very crude one, the
glass being evldontly from broken
electric light bulbs or lamp chimneys,
not pulverized, and was detected upon
opening the sacks and before use of
the flour. It may have accidentally
got Into the sacks.
' The flour was p'urchased by F.
Louslgnont and tho presence of
ground glass reported to the district
attorney, who In turn reported it to
the federal government and is await
ing developments. There were five
sacks of rye flour In the shipment
from the Portland mills. Two sacks,
wero opened, and had the glass. The
other threo have not been opened and
are held by the- district attorney,
pending instructions from the , de-
partment of justice, which has al
ready had an Investigator here.
To counteract the malicious ru
mors In circulation Mr. Louslgnont
has made the following affidavit,
showing that the Central Point mills,
which are not equipped for making
rye flour, and never have made any.
are in no ways Involved:
TO the Public:
I wish to correct the story and
malicious rumors that have been In
circulation Insofar as they concern
and cloud the'good name of the Cen
tral Point Flouring Mills and their
products. 1
In explanation will say that tho rye
flour in which I found glass was not
made or sold by the aforesaid mills,
but came from a largo mill in the
north.
Insofar as I know the honor and
integrity of the Central Point Mills
and tho quality and purity of their
products are beyond suspicion, and I
would not hesituto to recommend
them.
(Signed) F. LOI'SIGN'ONT.
Witness: II. II. .Ellsworth.
Witness: C. A. Chapman.
Constable. . .
NEW YORK, May 24. Colonel
Theodore Roosevelt .will leave here
tomorrow on a week's speech-making
tour In the middle west, under the
auspices of the National Security
league. Ho will speak in Ohio, Mich
igan, Wisconsin and Iowa, making
specific appeal to those who are still
apathetic toward the war. He said
he would lay particular emphasis on
these three points:
First, win the war and win It now.
Second, preparedness after the war,
including universal military trailing
and other thoro measures for ade
quate national defense. Third,
"America now and for all time, In
cluding the necessity for the active
Americanization propaganda, to
awaken a more rosponsivo citizen
ship.'.' Monday night be will speak In DeS
Moines, Tuesday night In Madison,
Wednesday in Milwaukee, and Memo
rial day evening In Detroit.
E
TO
AMERICAN FLIERS
TO DEFEND PARIS
PARIS, Thursday, May 23. An
American escadrllle, composed of
aviators chosen from among the best
American pilots, In the future wilt
help to defend Paris against enemy
air raids. Offer of this help was
made spontaneously b the chief of
the American aviation service and
nccepted by the Fronch government
! thru M. Dumensenll, minister of avl
'utioa. An official announcement says tho
American offer was madu after a Ger-
man air raid of some time ago. It
was proposed to organize an Amorl
'can oscadrlllo especially detailed to
defend the French capital. Final ar
! rangomentB were concluded today.
Ugly, Unsightly Pimples
Are Signals or Dad Blood
Walter II. Johnson, Jr., a Y. M. C.
A. war work secretary In France says
the only way to describe the Carman
devastation In Solssons Is thut hell
was lot loose.
Give Heed to the Warnintr.
Pimples on the face and other
parts of the body arc warnings from
Nature that your blood i3 sluggish
and impoverished. Sometimes they
foretell eczema, boils, blisters, scaly
eruptions and other skin disorders
that burn like flames of fire.
They mean that your blood nccdr.
S. S. S. to purify it and cleanse it of
these impure necumulations that can
cause unlimited trouble. This remedy
is tho greatest vegetable blood puri-
iier known, and contains no minerals
or chemicals to injure the most deli
cuto skin,
Go to your drugstore, and get a
bottle of S. S. S. today, and get rid
of those unsightly and disfiguring
pimples, nnd other skin irritations.
And it will cleunse your blood thor
oughly. If you wish special medical
advice, youvcan obtain it without,
charge by writing to Medical Direc
tor, 29 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta,
Georgia.
DUBLIN, May 24. Tho anti-conscription
fund which in less than a
month has grown to nearly 'JTJOIIU
000, bids fair to become one of the
most Important factors in the devel
opment of tho Internal political situa
tion. It Is tho largest fund ever
raised In Ireland for a political pur
pose and being In control of the
mansion house conference, that body
finds itself in a position of greater fi
nancial power than any political or
ganization in Ireland today.
Thus, tho conference! unless man
aged unscrupulously, would be able
to influence tremendously the action
of any nationalist politcnl organiza
tion. This opens many dangerous
poslbllltes to which the moderate
leaders in Dublin have devoted anx
ious attention recently. '
m Everyone who likes a
" snappy "cup of coffee
finds interest in a cup of
This modern beverage is
so convenient.so economical,
so labor saving and practical,
and withal so satisfying ,
i hat it is largely accepted as
coffees successor at family table.
The flavor is excellent
and "even" and there is no
complaint about "poor "coffee
when one uses P0S7W?
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"A great net of mercy drawn through
an ocean o unspeakable pain''
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What does it mean to you to know that your
American Red Cross : . , ,
Is supportinp; 50,000 French children. '
Sends supplies to 3,423 French military hospitals.
Provides 2,000 French hospitals with surgical dressings.
Is operating thirty canteens at the front line.
Is operating six other canteens at French railway junctions, serving 30,000
French soldiers a day. '
Operates a movable hospital in four units, accommodating 1,000 men.
Is operating a children's refuge in one part of the war zone; and in another
a medical center, and traveling dispensary, both capable of aocommodating more
than 2,000 children. .
Has opened a long chain of warehouses stocked with hospital supplies, food,
soldiers' comforts, tobacco, blankets, etc., all tho way from the seaboard to th'J.
G...:.. i-:..- -
nas warenouse capacity ror xuu.uuu ions.
Has 400 motor cars and operates 7 garages, making all repairs.
Had shipped 46 freight car loads of assorted supplies to Italy from Franco
within two weeks after it began operating in the former country.
Had a battery of motor ambulances at the Piave front four days after the
United States declared war on Austria. . i
Started a thousand different activities in Italy at the time that nation was in
its most critical condition. '
Has .established 5 hospitals in England and operates a workshop for hospital j
supplies employing 2,000 women.
And that 120,000 cases of supplies have been received at the Paris headquar- .1
ters of the American Red Cross from your various chapters scattered throughout the S
United States. ' v-J
What does all this mean to you ? And that is
but a fraction of the work your Red Cross has done
and is doing. It means that without this ceaseless,
heroic work of the American Red Cross we could
never win this war. , M
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Without your Red Cross quick, vital help to keep ,
Italy in the fight for Liberty would not have been si
possible. v ,
Without your Red Cross thousands of French
soldiers now gallantly fighting for you at the front
would have died of wounds, exposure and lack of food.
And great and wonderful as has been the work
of the American Red Cross in the past, still greater
and more wonderful must it be in the future for
now your boy is in the fight.
Your Red Cross cannot neglect France, England,
Italy, Serbia, Roumania and little Belgium. It must
give them all constantly increasing help, for the men
of these countries have been fighting our battles.
But now we must all redouble our efforts and
sacrifices for our Red Cross because a million mothers'
sons are going to carry the stars and stripes to the
greatest victory God has ever given to men fighting
for honor and liberty.
With the help of your Red Cross your boy will
win.
Every cent of every dollar received for the Red Cross War Fund goes for Wa
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Th Amrrlrnn II1 Cronn In tti lnrirfnt ftr.l nmut
fTlrMent oricatiUallon fur Ui relief of suffering; that the
World hen ever noen.
It ! made Ui alniont entirely of volunteer workers,
the higher executlvee lielrif nllhuut excrtlmi men ac
cutnme'l to iHrfie affair, who are In almost all ciihm
glvltif their eervlea without pay.
It In supported entirely by Ha membcmhlp feet and
by voluntary contribution!.
It In today brfixiiijc relief to auffrrlnir hunmntty,
both military and civil, in every War torn allied country.
It plinn tomorrow to help In the work of reHt ora
tion throughout (lie world.
It ftedri nnd elottire entire population
front rn!ntnliy.
It In there to help your aoldler boy in
nerd.
With tin thmisnndu of workers, Vm
Htorcn and emoolh running trmmporlatlo
It It HrrvlriR- fin A rnerlca't advuui: guar
hclplnir to win thn wur.
fonprr-x n til hnrlicH It.
f lYtiUhti'ht Wilnon hriidfl It
The. War Iiepiirt wful lUillfn Itl arentl
Y"ur Army, your Navy and your AMI
aatl'-iilly etiilorxn It.
Twenly-two million AmerVnna hnva Jt
Contributed to the Rod Cross
by
Jackson County Business Men's Association
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un illness of one week.