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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 22, 1918)
FXOTC FIVW FORTY-FOUR MEN will bo Bunt out cui.li duy to 25 per cent of the registrants. E UNITED STATES JEALOUSY LED BABY BIRDS ARE DEVELOPED MEDTORP MATL TTCTBTTXE, MEDFORD. OT7F.C10X, RATTTJftAY, JFXE 22, IMS Jackson county will send 44 mon to. Fort McDowell, Cal., to entrain during the flye day period beginning July 5, according to an order receiv ed Friday from Provost Marshal Gen eral Crowder. '.The men wlll-,be (el ected from olass 1' of' the'sc'.ectlve draft.- ... . The provisions of the president's direction of March 11 to. all local boards to passiby temporarily all men f actively engaged in the planting or cultivation of crops, does not apply to this call, and boards will not be re quired to select all numbers without regard to this direction. .Next week Is to be set aside by all local draft boards for the reclassifica tion ot all draft registrants, accord ing to b circular letter sent out today by Captain John E. Culllson; of the adjutant general's office, to all local and district exemption boards government appeal agents and legal advisory boards. 1 This Is in accordance with an ord er from the provost marshal general's office requesting that all draft boards re-examine the questlonalre ot their itying and set aside a week In June registrants for tso purpose of reclasj) in which to do this work. The district boards are instructed as follows: "It is vitally necessary that class 1 be recruited up to the maximum. Where there is any doubt resolve in favor oQ the government. Sentiment and sympathy, which have controlled In the past and resulted in' a too liberal application ot the classification rules cannot longer stand in the way of the government. Personal desires, comfort and con veniences of registrants uud tbolr rel atives and frlneds must be Ignored when they conflict .with, the Interest of.'.the naton." . : purlng the month of June, Orogon "'H have sent 200 Into 8ervlc ' CiJmp Lewis, 309 into training at Benson Polytechnic school and on July. 1, 140 men will enter training at i the Medical Art school at San Francisco. , , i (Beginning on June 23 and con tinuing for three 1 days thereafter! questionnaires of the second edition KANSAS CITY, June 22. While the police of several cities were searching tonight for the slayer or a woman whose partly clad body was found beside the Chicago, Burling ton & Quincy railroad tracks near Shelbina, Mo., last .Monday, J. K. Jackson, cashier of a local motion picture concern, was in the police station here making a written state ment, in which tbe police say be ad mitted having killed the woman, who was his wife.- In his statements, according to the police, Jackson said he killed her in the stateroom of a sleeping car on which they were passengers, bocause she would not promise to cease re ceiving the attentions of a sailor. Dis covering she was dead, he declared, he threw the body from the window and later threw out her clothing. ARE TO BE RETAINED PWQTO MtOf Mi't'fftw luHKMO w.tkiv- M' m y, . ST. PAUL, June 22. President J. M, Hanaford of the Northern Pacific, President W. P. Kenedy of the Great Northern, and tH. E. Xyrara of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail ways, have been chosen as federal managers of those reilroads, it was announced here today by Director General R. il. Aishton of (he north ern district of the railroad admlnis- i mule enters. Special meeting of Iho boards of j ,fhp ma(1 .in.(.wls (ll Wi,n ,. directors of these roads will be held le ontniIM.tl wilh md, ssisie! hv soon, and it is reported that Louis j t,e fl,nm,c 1Vom (he insi(1(l Tlll.v W. Hill of the Great Northern, How- j u,lve OI1,y- n I1HPPoW siit through ard Elliott of the Northern Pacific , whi(.h the ti1 oMlie femuits i)iU nulv and A. J. Burling of the Milwaukee !)e thrust to m.t.-Ve the food passed roads will be appointed temporary jn bv tj,e n)iP NEW YORK, June 22. Putting his wife in prison for six ur eight wvck-; until her biiby birds are well develop cd is tile c.ii'ious habit of one of the slningcst birds in existence tuduv the African Imrnhill, so called hc cause of its large, humv bill. The American Museum of Natural History bus ,fut put on exhibition a new group of these curious creatures lo illustrate this remarkable nesting habit. When the l'emale bornbill is ren-ly to lay her eggs she and her mate se lect a cavity of suitable side, ill tie trunk or large limb of a tree, lid to 120 feet aboe the ground, the next being either in the main stem itr nn the lower side of n hrnm-h nwav trmii neighboring boughs or vines, which makes il difficult of access to ene mies. Into this loftv retreat the IV- presidents. Raymond Miksche, who registered in Hreckenridge, Minn., received word today to report toomorrow at Hreck enridge, which being Impossible he reported lo tho local board and will secure a transfer. In feeding his family the male bornbill clings to the tree much woodpeckers do, using his tail, which has n curious hinge, as n support. The female slays in the queer ncsl from six to eight weeks, la Ihese close quarters the two, three or four while egus are laid and hutched ami the young cared for until they are nearly or quite Hedged. Then the mud barrier is broken down, and the mother apd her. oftY.prin set free. 1 hiring nil I heir imprisonment the lather has carried food to them, and the nuil her and wur emerge we! and fat, although the father is likely to he quite thin us a result of his unusual activities. The ahow group shows a mother and one ynmgr bird walled up inside their stranue net, with the father hird at the narrow opening in the mud wall, where be has just passed in food to bis family. This extraordinary precaution of i:i prisoning the female is necessary 'o protect the young, which are par ticularly helpless. They are born I1: ml, mid remain so until nfier the fcatherhs have heifun to appear two weeks or more after hirlh. I ) I Tho man who has -Ihls quality very UV t" ichloin. It every fulls in what he un- I ! derlakos il in a cjuullly that nuts Wh-W ILJi 1 '"' """"" of 1110 """" i I I llKHrill Mi'tnnillnu tn unuc n..,l nL lr . Il lll'TMl ri'Kiilar deposits to your credit Willi '2j!(' r" l 1110 .mcRson foiinly Imnk. Now ac- II l. II t I counts are Invited. 1 311'" A V. 4 i,cr eent interest paid on mvinKS Jl I t Nfj, accounts. . ' II '. E S TA bLI 3 H L U I OOO - - WASHINGTON. June 22.. Author- ily to train in this country and to furnish all necessary equipment to the troops on any other nation en- guged in the war on. Germany and Austria, would be given the war du- jpartmeut under nn amendment added to tho $12,ui0,oun.u0 army appro priation hill today by the senate mili tary committee. As originally proposed by Secre tary Haker tbe amendment provided only for the training and equipping of troops from the Latin-American republics, but the committee made Its application general, so that war oquipmcut and materials could be ' furnished i any nations riBhtius j Remember Friday, June 28th. National War Savings Da against the Teutonic powers, and also ' in order that it might not bo deemed j " ' ' . " i. . '.. . . i. . 11 .. an exnrcsspd invilutinn tn llin l.ntlu-i .... t American governments. No ountry Kavoml. j In discuKslng the mneudmeul today ; Secretary . Jiakor declared that no fed j definito plans looking to training 01 ; foreign troops in America had been taken up and that no particular coun- WASH IN'GTON, Juno 22. Tho senate agricultural committee today rejected an amendment to the $11, 000,000 emergency agricultural ap propriation bin, proposed by Senator Curtis of Kansas, authorizing the government to advance money to farmers for tho purpose of securing seed. The amendment was urged by members ot the Kansas agricultural society, who Bald 'that unless action of this kind was taken wheat pro duct ion In that and neigh boring states next year miht'be curtailed. try was had in mind when the amend ment was sent to congress. Tbe eight Central and South Amer ican nations which already have bro ken relations with Germany possess a potential reservoir of not less thau 2,750,000 men. This figure includes only the male population between J0 and 30 years and would be materially increased If tbe usual "military lim its' of from IS to -IT. were considered. Strength of Countries. In the opinion hero tirazil could probably ruiso an army of one million men, if aided by the United Stales in financing and equipping them. The other seven nations, Bolivia, Guate mala, Ecuador, lOruguay, Nicaragua, Honduras and Costa Rica, could fur nish more than a million 'additional men. CHICHESTER S PILLS T1IK DIAMOND IIHAMt. a fS '.-l-.l1.-.-(ir'lilun..1.1dT(riln.lVl JkJ In II. d HiiU Ould niH.tlllAv TF-v .-TV S 'Mi. MiLe.l wl.li IIIuo Rll.K,n, V- V 1 Vi-4 'I'nk'j tiu olhr. Hiit or jr.-nr v Used Car Bulletin One 1917 Ford Roadster One 1917 Ford Touring One Studebaker Six; Nearly ' New One Chalmers "Bug" That is a "Bug" -One Michigan 1 One Ames Truck Attachm't. Peirson NORTH RIVERSIDE Treichler UlAMohU 1EUAMI 1MI.I.M. f..f tnn.wilir.u 17tw1..r Ti, OOl-l TWT 4- . n 1 11T n ! TV lv fi rmioifct.suWAMKiM..; I kci-"i x liuajr, u uiio iiooii, xidnuucii will oaviIlKa UH. r SOLO bt ljRUOl.iSTS EVERVWIIERE I . . !f, r vwvvwwwwwwww mm w m m m m m w -4 . . ..; - - z AA t t f t t y t X fr ; T: ? ?; ? ? f T t- t ' Y t f . T T t t t I June 28, National War Savings Day BARTLE Best .Price rer loo Phone 64 GUY W. GONNE f T f t f T f Y i Y ? ? t ?f v y Y ...f, Y "t V : Remember June 28, National War Savings Day Help Those Who Fight for Cash 7 Y f t ? ?