PAOE SIX MTTCDFORT) MAIL TRTBTTWR. M"TCPFOTlD. OREGON.. WEDNESDAY.- AUGUST 7, 1018 CAMP FREMONT Twelve more Jackson county drafted lio Intt today for Camp Fre mont, Calif., to bCKln their military Bervlce, eleven of whom departed this mornlnR on a npeclul military train from .Medford, and one from JOureka, Cullf. Those leaving Bed ford were Hert L. Mtickniastor, Iru . Kinder, JnineB II. Phlpps, Hardwoll S. Smith, Floyd B. McKoe, Fred A. Taylor, Arthur R. Xordwick, C. A. Avery, Peter Bruno and Geo. W. Morn of Gold Hill, and William It. licKee of Unite Falls, while Cecil A. llrown who has been working in the shipyards at F.ureku for some time Ik tlio member of tho contlnKent who departed from that city. Relatives and friends of tho hoys woro at the depot to hid them fnro woll, and as the special train which ivas loaded with OroBon drafted men from towns nil tho way between Portland and Mcdrord, pulled out tho )ome hoys, aided by their comrades 0:1 board, were slven cheer nfter clieer. The Jackson county men sprung new one in car labeling when Just beforo the train departed they wrote in largo chalk lotters on their car: "This car contnlns Dutch Cleanser." lOPtf'S MARKETS Livestock PORTLAND, Aug. 7 Cattle steady; rccolpts 350. Steers, prime I11.7512.75; good to choice $10.75 $11.75; medium to good, t tl . 5 0 ff 10; fair to medium J8.50 ft; 9.50; common to fulr JS.r.O (T 8.50; cows and heifers, choice,' $S8. 50; mo (Uuin to good $(17.50; fair to me dium $56; canners $ 3 (ri) 5 ; bulls r..507.50; calves S.504f 11.50; Btocners and feeders Jfi(i 8. Hogs Bteady, receipts 500. Prlmo tallied $18.85 19.15; medium mix ed $18.B5'18.85; rough heavies JJ7.3r 17.85; prime mixed $18.65 (f 18.85; pigs $16,500 17; bulk of Bales $18.85 19. Sheep steady; receipts 200; East of mountains Ininbs Jill ji 11: valley lambs $12.50 13; yearlings $9.50 lfl; wethers $8.50 9.50; owes $6 (S 8. PAVED AT ONCE At a meeting of the highway com mission Tuesday it was decided that the state would proceed ut once to complete the Ashlaiyl hill work and to uso concreto for the hard suifuce. This will be welcomed news by everybody In'JaokHon county. When R. A. Iloolh and S. llenson, members of tho commission wero here recently they promised to find some way to secure funds to complete this work, altho the bond Issue permitted by the government had already been provid ed for, and have made good their promise. It will take from $10, OHO to $20, 000 to completo.tbe road. The commission also awarded con tracts to tho county court of Union county for grading the Elgin-Mlnam toad and the Unlon-Tolocasset soc- tlon of tho old Oregon Trail. lloth roads nro post road projects und are to be constructed in coopera tion with the federal government. Tho commission instructed tho stato highway engineer to make a survey of a proposed road in Crook county up Crooked river for which the county has bonded itself In the Bum of $95,000. Owing to tho growing complaint regarding the absence of sign boards at cross roads, tho highway commis sion decided to ask tho uttorney gen eral for un opinion as to what steps can bo taken to enforce the law re quiring county courts to mark roads If It is found that there Is no method of enforcement now legislation will be sought. The secretary of the commission was Instructed to notify all county courts that the speea laws of the stato should be enforced. To clear un some right of way disputes In 'Union county the commission docld ed to request the attorney general to proceed with condemnation suits. lluttco mid Kggs PORTLAND, Aug. 7 Duller firm. City creumory prints 511c; cartons 53; buying prices butter fat, Portland, Gfic; cube extras, 4S49c; soconds 45o; duiry, 35c. COOS Sellfni,' prmt. case count, 4'le. Buying price, ):!; Hcllinu price, tnrndlcd, 47c; selected candied in cur tons, .!)(nrlle. J'Ol'l.TKY -liens, 'J'JS'JIc; broil er, 2.128n: old roosters Kic; turkeys 2H(!vMe; g-Jn. 22u; ducks, ymint,', :it):i:ic. I'orlinnd Crura WHEAT New crop, $2:20; linrley. feed, iflill; brewing, $112; nuts, .ffifMIII liiil, corn, No. II, yellow, .fliN.'iO bid. MIIXSTUrTS Hrnn, 11 ; nhorls, $Xl; middlings, J.'Ifl.OOfifM.rill. HAY Ituving price, timothy, ifn.1 ?!M; alfalfa. 2; grain, 27.50. 150 U-BOATS DESTROYED. , Continued ttoo rags Ons.) WOMAN SEEKS TO PUT HER BABY IN MOURNING Sheriff Ralph Jenniniis will soon resign his office to enter upon mili tary service. He returned this mor ning from Corvallis where he went to tuke the examination for entrance into an officers training camp, at the conclusion of which Adjutunt H. P. McClaln. the United States army offi cer stationed at the O. A. C. to pass upon the physical, mental and gen- oral ability of applicants for officers 'commissions passed him with an ex ceptionally high rating for entrance to the Infantry officers training school nt Cump Pike, Arkansas. Sheriff Jennings announced today that ho will he called to enter the school sometime between now and September 1, and that until then ho would not resign his office as sheriff. The county court will then appoint a man to fill out his term which ex pires next Jnnuary. It Is also probable that Mr. Jen nings will not resign from the demo cratic ticket as a candidate for re election until he receives his call, nor from hla membership on the county draft board until then. The county 'democratic county central committee -will name a man to take Jennings' pluce on the ticket, and Governor Wlthycombe will name his successor on the draft board. Sheriff Jennings, who Is 3? years old, has for a long time had the Idea In mind of going to war. Ho says that his desire to serve his country at the front Increased Btrongly after seeing each group of soldiers or drafted men depart from Medford until he could no longer resist the patriotic lure. While the fnmlly plans have not been completed yet for the future It Is probable t hat Mrs.. Jennings and their two sons, Paul and Louis, aged 17 and 15, will operate the Jennings ranch In the Applogute district while he Is at war. THICK OF FIGHT Relatives of Jackson county boys in tho 65th artillery are watching the war news from the front with much eagerness these days as there Is a strong probability that the 65th is engaged in the great battles. A number of letters 'received In the city In the past two or three weeks told thut the 65th was all ready for duty 1n the front line and about to be sent there. Today another mall from France arrived In the city bringing more letters 'indicating that ttie hoys have been and probably are still in the fighting. Mayor und Mrs. Gales received a letter from Sergeant George Gates, written Juno 28th, this morning, in which he made the simple statement, "We've been at the front for awhile.'' The letter was unusually mutilated by tho censor who cut away three and one-half pages of it. George wrote that two of his Medfprd com rades wlille out on the' march, col lapsed from heat attacks. Sergeant Ben Plymale wrote on June 20 to Samuel T. Richardson in a letter the latter received over two weeks ago that the 6 5th was already to go to the trenches, having been Is sued their steel helmets, gas masks and other equipment. He stated that he and fgur other sergeants had Just returned from attending a special school in higher mathematics. Hence it is probable that the Jackson coun ty boys of the 65th have been manip ulating guns against the Huns In the recent battles. Sergeant Plymale and Sergeant Carl Ringer of Eagle Point, are the only Jackson county boys in company C of tho 65th. AT CAMP LEWIS KOXI)ONT, Anjr. 7. Kxtrnvnpnnt mourning hits not yt been ubunrinmMl. A woman who lunl lost her husband rucently .usked a Loiulnii ilruprr Cor n cri'im hood und robo for her baby, whom she wanted to put in mourning. The NhonkeeiH'r refused her order. Knuhmd lias declared ostrich feathers a luxury. Wc expeet that some day our own government wilt call a luxury the new style veil that is thin over the upper part of tho face but no thick at the botton Hint it makes a woman look as though she had a beard. A Message to You from the united the interference of ( ifi-nuiiiy Willi tlii'in and were mure and lunrt' becking allied help. "Wc will nut licMtutc to give it In them wherever it is possible," lie mld d. .Mr. Lloyd Henrge praised tin work f the Amcricmis in the fighting in j'liini'e, speaking of the "trained (skill" thev hud displayed mid the "skilled knowledge in the niiinngciucnl of men under trying condition" of which llicir officers hud given evi dence. t'eclio-Sloviiks Alluding In llie Oeelin-Slmiiks, the premier epliiiucd tltul their tuilv desire was to ipiit liussia and help the ullies on the western front. The Vnlslicviki government, however, hud resented the utleiiipt of the allies ti jissist them to get ftwuv. Thcrcl'nre Hie Itnlshcviki hud only tlicmsclves to Maine tor the Czer lio-Sloviik liostil ily. The premier wanted this iiuiile clear, he said, because there had been criticism of rresidcut Wilson's decis ion to join llie allies in the Yhnlivo hlok movement. .Mr. I.loyd (iconic declared himself n heliever in u Iciiuuc of nations, hut Kllid its success depended upon the condition- in winch it vwts set up. lie contended it was useless to negotiate C!ice "nilh the (lenmin Mvord clunk ing on I he council table." Oeorge .Sylvester Wreck lias con feSMCil lie received tuniiey from the 11.... ................ ... I ll' L..I.I.. .1... 4 K"" ' ' " " ' i.mi nn..n in.- . Xvny thut government swindled itself ' 4i t overy opportunity. On the Most Important Subject in All the World TWF.NTY-ODI) AMERICAN" WOMEN have formed the Republic of I.ovo and Devotion. They uro hound together more closely by a common tie than any women have ever beforo been bound In prehistoric times. In pagan times or in the days of modern civilization. They lire held together In a common cause by the ties of I.ovo null Loyalty. And they worship their men. Mothers havo pledged their hearts und souls Sweethearts are held by tho passions of youthful affection Sisters ure held by the ties of blood. And even the old men glvo this Indescribable Republic the ap proving recognition of reverence. There is a new flag afloat In tho world today. It Is not tho ring of our country that brings millions to their feet with nn emotional clutch In their throats. It is not tho flag of the Red Cross tho badge of the Armies of .Mercy that floats over Hie fields of pain. It is an insignia and emblem of the heart: The new honor decoration of the American home: The pennant of millions of dooi wnys and windows that betokens to Immunity thut "This house has given a son or a husband, tuts house has given a M AN. to the world-wide league of hiimnnlty." The Hag of a single star THE SERVICE STAR of the warm-blooded, nation-loving mil lions who have made this the greatest country tho world has ever known. , The star of the negro cabin In Alabama, where a bluck boy has gone from the Cotton Hell. The star of n Columbia River salmon fisherman. The star of a waller In a Chinese rcsiauiant in New York'B suu merged clvlllration, ' Tho star of the millionaire or the millionaire's son running cPkiws with the son of bis mother's laundress. The boner token of a Great Lakes deck-hand nnd nn Oregon fruit-packer. One hundred million people are today thinking of these assorted products of our American clvlll.ullon who are being re-mado in llie crucible of war. We are showing today and tomorrow IN" THIS THEATRE a motion picture that will reach tho heart of every man, woman and child In Medford. This picture Is a drama of Hie American homo and of mothers', daughters' and lovers' hearts. Not one scene of it is laid in Europe. Not one scene reveals a battle, or preparation for battle. There are no spies, nn slrugsles, no tense unhappy moments to bring grief or p.iln to the woman hood of the nation. llul time Is A WONi:RITI. STORY and all the way through It you see A WONIiERFI I. GIRL, who, through the power that God puts Into the souls of women, sends away A WO.NPKKr'll. HOY to ninko this A WONIIERR'L WORLD TO LIVE IN. Whether you are hard or soft of heart, whether you think you wish to or not, THERE IS NOTHING IN THE WORLD THAT CAN KEEP YOI' I'UOM COMING TODAY TO THE RIALTO THKATIIK to seo Madge Kennedy In "THE SERVICE STAR." CAMP LEWIS, Tacoma. Aug. 7. A general court martial, the first for the 13th division, convened here to day. Tho highest officer of the court Is a captain which shows the dearth of higher officers in camp. Officers higher than the rank of captain are so scarce now that one rarely meets a major or colonel thruout the can tonment; with the arrival today or tomorrow of Brigadier General Cor nelius Vanderbllti other officers to build up the organization of the 13th division are expected to arrive rapid ly. It was Intimated that many of the officers or the now division will be those who have seen service In France. They are to be sent here (o train the men in the same manner troops are trained abroad. Many nurses for army duty now being enrolled in western states will be sent to Camp Lewis for training and trial before being sent abroad, It was said at the base hospital today. These nurses will come here to prove their fitness for duty overseas and to gain a knowledge of military nursing before being sent abroad for the more arduous work there. It was Bald, however, that tho period of pre liminary training here probably would not be long because of the need of hundreds of additional nurses with tho American forces In view of the severe fighting now going on and the greatly Increased number of cas ualties. ' bassadur (o Russia, returned here today from the Murmansk region and "Will remain at KandalaBka pending developments. The allied diplomatic corps expects to move to Archangel shortly. KANDALASKA, Monday, Aug. 5. (By the Associated Press). Volun teer detachments of white guards are aiding allied units In pursuing the Bolshevik southward from Archan gel. Tho new Archangel government has arrested most of the Bolshevik leaders who had not fled. The Bol shevik commissioner of war, Zeenk vlch was killed altho the victory was virtually bloodless. Xtew fiovernment Ready KANDALASKA, Russian Lapland, Monday, Aug. 5. (By the Associat ed Press.) The new government of 'Archangel Is prepared to assume re lations, diplomatic, financial and in dustrial, with foreign nations for the "region of the north." The heads of this government, which Includes representatives of Blx 'of the Russian northern provinces, are members of the group which pro claims Itself to be working for the restoration of real democracy In Russia. LONDON", Aug. 7. A dispatch to the Daily iMail from The Hague today Includes an editorial by the Dussel dorf Nachrichten which says that no body looking Into the future can see an end to the war. The Vorwaerts of Berlin, says that events at last have shattered the Illu sion, created by Inspired optimism that Germany Is Invincible. It says: "The German people at last realize the colossal gravity of the situation. Let us have courage to admit that as long as the war is not ended it Is not won nnd can be lost." IXXX00O0O00O0O00O0OO0OX)000O0OXCO00CXXXXXXO00OOOC3O00( TODAY and H THURSDAY GRAVES TO LEAD YANKEES. (Continued from page one.) Aug. 6. (By the Associated Press), David 'R. Francis, tho American am- in Vivian Martin i The Trouble Buster You'll be delighted with this real play of romance, pluck and thrills. Vivian Martin's captivating charm dominates every phase of a powerful plot laid In the streets of a great city. On Uio Sumo Hill G harlie Chaplin in By the Sea Regular Admission. Friday and Saturday Fatty Arlmcklo in Out West; Wulliiro I teed In Firefly of France. OOOOOOOOOOOOCX)OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC t t t t t t T t ? f 4 f t t T t t t T r r y ? ? ? ? t f ? ? ? ? f f t t ? ? y y y y y y t y y y y y y T y y y y y y y MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED BREAKFAST SETS 2G Women's Gingham Breakfast Sots made of 'splendid material, fast colors, Rood shades, cheap at $4.00. $910 August Clean Up Sale $.19 v v " r v v " v v v ' " ' MAIL OR EXPRESS PREPAID ThelAoran's Store 14-22 X. CENTUAl, ' MEDFOKI), OREGON "WIRTHMOR" WAISTS 100 new styles in this wonderful "Waist, just In by express. This waist will bo advanced very soon to $1.50. Buy now at Talcum . Powder :10 Colgate's Soap ...10 All Silk Hair Ribbon yard 15i l!h CLEARANCE Art Enib. Goods ...10& ServiceFlags each 50 Children's Black Hose, pair 15 All Spring' and Summer Silks on Sale $1.00 PONGEE 69c r(X) yards fine Imported Japanese Pongee Silk, 34 69c inches wide. Cheap at $1.00. This sale.. $2.75 FOULARDS $2.19 40 in.-h. all Silk Foulards, beautiful patterns, ("heap $2.19 at $2.7."). For Ibis sale, vard $2.00 FOULARDS $1.30 Fancy Figured Foulards, all silk, for dresses, good colors. Regular price, $2.00. ' For this ff-l QQ sale, yard $l.d7 $1.25 PONGEE 98c "00 yards new Jap Pon gee Silk. Heavy quality. Cheap at $1.2."). AO For this sale, yard...w0' $2.25 FANCY SILK $1.59 The balance of our fancy stripes and plaid Silks, sold up to $2.25. fff CQ For this sale. vd..vlJw $2.C0 GINGHAMS $1.75 This newest of all Silks for waists and dresses, beautiful patterns. G'heap at $2.00. For this tfl 1Z sale, yard 91.lt) $2.00 TUB SILK $1.48 Beautiful new satin striped Tub Silks, for men's shirts. $2 &A 0 grade, now, yard.. vi 0 $2.25 PONGEE $1.98 Colored Pongee Silk, 34 inches wide, fine quality, Cheap at $2.2.). For this big sale, vard , August Clean-up of Ready-to-Wear WHITE SKIRTS $3.50 White Skirts $2.69 $.".00 White Skirts $3.98 t.00 White Skirts $1.98 $S.OO White Skirts $5.98 SPECIAL 10 while and colored Cor duroy Skirts, cheap to- dav at $7.00. This sale.... 10 fancy striped and fig ured Wash Skirts. $3.00 values, now 2.") PER CENT OFF OX SUITS $."0 Siirinsr Suits $37-50 $ 10 Spring Suits $30.00 $30 Spring Suits $22.50 25 PER CENT OFF ON SILK COATS " $20 Silk Coats....$15.00 $30 Silk Coats....$22.50 $40 Silk Coats... $30.00 20 PER CENT OFF ON DRESSES 20 Silk Dresses $16.00 2." Silk Dresses 820.00 $30 Silk Dresses $24.00 WAISTS 10 beautiful new Crepe and Georgette Waists, good colors, up to $6.50 Si!: $1.98 10 new Georgette Crepe and Crepe de Chene AVaists, up to $8 values, now MIDDIES The balance of our new Middies to be noised out at 10 PER CENT OFF CHILDREN'S DRESSES 25 good gingham Dresses, sizes 4 to 12, years, fast colors. Up to $1 JOp values, each..;.. AVoinen's Koveralls, made of khaki, good grade, now.. Boys Hats and fl Caps, special UwC Boys Wash Suits. Q0 Special, each iOL Balance of our Women's Summer Dresses 25 PER CENT OFF MANN'S-The Best Goods for the Price, No Matter What the Price-M ANN'S r t t f t t t f t t t T y t t t y y t y y y t y t y y y t y ? ? t y y t t ? y y f y y t t y f t t t f t t y y