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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1918)
MEDFOKD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORKMOX, FRIDAY. AUGUST HO, 191 ft PAGE THREE IS SELECTED FOR JACKSON SCHOOL The new principal of the Jackson school will be Miss Alta X. Johnson of Lake Odessa, Mich., who 1b a graduate of Ypsllanti college, Mich., and conies highly recommended. Superintendent Davenport last night received her telegram of acceptance of the position. Mr. Davenport Is now beginning to eoo daylight in his preparations for the opening of the schools, Sept. lOtll. All vacancies In the teachers staff except two have now been filled, and one of these Is In the high school faculty. Next week Superintendent Davenport will make public the list of teachers and their assignments, and announce the study courses. The vacancy in the high school faculty to be filled is that of Melvin Ellestad, manual training and. mili tary Instructor who served three months in that capacity last year, and who recently resigned -because lie Is suro to be called into military service. Mr. Ellcstail- whose home Is near Central Point, Is an O. A. C. graduate and took a four weeks course of instruction at an officers training school camp at San Fran cisco. At this late day Superintendent Davenport will have difficult work In trying to find a man 'to replace him as manual training teacher, but has lines out in hope of landing a good instructor before school opens. De spite Mr. Ellestad's absence arrange ments may be mado for limited mili tary instruction and drill in the high -school.' Ralph Cowxill, engineer of the Jtojrue llivcr Cann!! compan,.', and K. C. llillnrd, engineer for the. Tal ent irrigation project left last night for Portland to take the physical and mental examinations tor entrance into the engineering corp-i of Hhe nnny. Olcn Arnspigcr, city engineer, leaves fur Portland tonight fur the same purpose. Hurry Stocckninn. the civil engineer expects liis orders to take the same examination with in Hie ttxl dnv or two. After they have passed the exam ination they expe-t to be ordered within the next two weeks to take n course of fourteen weeks' trniningnt Camp Humphrey, Va. Knginccring corps candidates are commissioned ticcording to age, those from ll'J to lid years old being given first lieutenan cies, and I hose between DO and '12 years being made captains. Arnspig cr will he made a first lieutenant as lie is only .'14 years old, while the others who arc over 'Mi, will bo com missioned captains. Mr. Arw-pigor will not resign his position as city engineer and water works superintendent until after he has passed the examinations, received his commission and been ordered into service. WAR OR NO WAR. WE MUST HAVE CORSETS! LONDON', Aug. liecaiisc only by seeing that they have corsets can maximum olTi'Money he obtained from women munitions workers, the minis try of luiinilions has released l,."iOO tons of steel for making corset stnys. WITHIN MILE OF PERONNE, (Continued r-rotn rage One.) ISSUE0FS1.500, LI (Continued from page one.) engineers ill the country ns to the cost of the project, 'flic cost of the project, ullowing n very wide margin of safety, n sale of bonds ns low us is allowed by law ami interest on the bonds for one year amounts to $75.(10 per acre. A bond issue such us is proposed on the basis of being fiually redeemed at the end of -10 years will amount to a payment of about $ per acre per year. This will include the repayment of the bonds and interests upon them, figures obtained from other districts lead us to believe that an lipkecn and operating- cost of one dollar per acre will be sufficient for all expenses. It would certainly seem that a total cost of $(i per acre per year, such an additional amount of produce could be raised and sold as to cover the cost ninny times over. However this is a purely business matter and can he better figured out by each land owner for himself. Summary Diversion works in llig Hutte Creek .". $ 10,010 The issuance of the bonds will be the third step in securing water for the district. First the district was voted; second the investigation was curried out. Now the bonds must be voted and then final and complete plans and sceifieiitions must be sub mitted and passed upon b" the state engineer. Then the security of the bonds which includes the whole ques tion of water rights, land g ullies and feasibility must be passed upon by the state commission consisting of Ihe engineer, the attorney general and the chief bank inspector. Thus before the bonds eaii be issued there must be two more rigid examinations of the whole project. Nothing further can be done until the bonds are authorized ami we expect the voters to give the whole matter their cnreful considera tion and to vote ill favor of going ahead." The preliminary estimates of the engineers follow : Canal from Hig Hutte Creek to Utllo Hutte Little Unite creek crossing : Canal from Little Hutte Creek to Hear creek West side canal '. ' r Water rights, hind, etc., nt Hig Hutte creek und right of way to Little Hutte creek Hear creek water rights and existing' works Legal expenses, acquiring- right of way and water Distribution system Additional "i per cent engineering an 1 administration tingencics 4!)1.-JS)J 121,-lHO :i2i,ti:i7 oiMin L2..r)00 50,000 12,500 1,058,8 11 con- ... Bonds at 0.!I0 Interest for lirst year . Surplus . 179,808 $1,2.18,712 "j.S-lli s?l,2.',.Vi8 124,150 ... 100.0IMI :iO,H8 . $1 ,500,000 Houds will be issued to onlv such amount as actually is needed to com plete the project. Surplus bonds willbo retired and Ihe cost per acre he re duced accordingly. .... Submitted by , J. K. PIATT, Ucsident. District Engineer. Submitted by V. C.l lAiMMATT, Consulting Engineer. nru holding the road iu Hapaume as far us 'a point opposite Combles. North of hen the advance of the British made the enemy retire ngnin. Hritish patrols are astride the road nnd are moving soulhwurd. Hapaume seems to have been enp turcd without much resi-tiniec by New Zealand troops who were assisted by pressure from Ihe Knglish on the south. The toun was entered from the northeast. There was only brief street lighting nnd then the Hermans who bad been left behind surrendered. Fires indicating the withdrawal of the Germans on Ihe northern end of the Hritsib front and e-pci-iull.v in the Lys salient arc burning. Many explosions have been observed be hind the enemy lines. Advance tfWIO k arris ' LONDON, Aug. :i0. Hritish foP'es east of Arras resumed their advance this morning and at an early hour had penetrated another 2,000 yards on a front of seven miles between Bulleeourt and the Scarpe, ueeordini to advice- received here. The Hritish forces have reached within a mile of the Dro -mirt-ijneaiil switch line nnd have captured Iff in 'mrl. MADRID, Aug. HO. (By the As sociated Press.) The cubinet coun cil will meet at 5 o'clock this after noon. According toolhcial explana tion, the meeting will he held to dis cuss economic problems and the bud get but it is lhe gcncrul belief that other important questions will he brought forward. Public opimou displays symptoms of considerable excitement over the international situation liud many con ferences are being held by leading politicians. Count Romanes, minister of justice, speaking to newspapermen today, de clared there was no occasion for alarm. Other ministers arc making! great efforts to trnnqiiulizc the pop ulace. Some of them declare that, parliament will-meet shortly to deal with current questions, while Count Romanes is taking steps to modify or even suppress the censorship which now is regarded as severe. SIEEL WORKERS OF Cin.N'KVA, Aug. 30. Serious strikes Involving 200,000 workmen have brokon out at Uochum In West phalia, according to dispatches today from Munich. Three thousand strik ers have fbeen sent to the front and S000 deported from the region under escort. Troops are guarding the town, it is said, as riots are feared. ' Hoc-hum is a great seat of the Prussian steel and iroa industry and extensive coul mlnos. It is 2G miles northeast of Dusseldorf and bad a population before the war of about 70,000. Diplomatic relations between Spain and Germany have been strained for the last few weeks over the sinking of Spanish ships by German subma rines. COURT HOUSE REPORT Reported by Jackson County Ab stract Co., Blzth and Central At. Poll l'rolinto Court Kstnto of Dlodrlch Lchncr.i tlon for letters. Estnto of Eliza Cochran. Gth soml annual report. PKNSACOI.A, Flu., Aug. 110. Two naval aviators were killed and a third sustained minor injuries when their machine made a nose dive into the bay here last night. The dead are James Lloyd Churchill, Syracuse. N. Y., and Dewitt Gilford Wilcox, New ton Center, Mass. Ileal Kstnto Transfers Nannlo Ilarr and W. 11. Harr to Y. J. lialloy. Lot in Ilarr's Add 10.00 O. II. P. Vorols to F. J. Hal ley. l,ots 9, 10, 11, 12, blk. 48, original Town of Medford MOO. 0(1 Xotico All barber shops will close Scptem her 2nd, Labor day. 1117' Lift Off Corns! "Freezone" is Magic! Lift any Com or Callus right off with fingers ino paini LI OE DEFENSE 1SPENETRATED (Continued From Page one.) Hum nnd Tergnier. Tho Hritish now are within a mile of i-cronnc nnd the French are fivo miles west of Ham. The important railway Junc tion of Tergnier is not threatened very seriously but French crossing of tho Ailetto bodes III. Heavy Fighting; in Progress North of Solssons tho (Jormuus have thrown in fresh troops to stop the advunco of the French and Amer icans toward the heights dominating the Chemin Dcs Dames, allied posses sion of which would compel tho on emy to withdraw from the Voslc. The allies have tho more favorable posi tions and have but one more plateau to overcome to reach their objective. As the full of Hove compelled the Hermans to retire to the line south of Peronno, the vapturo of Hapaume by the British made it necessary for tho enem; to retreat north of tho Soinme. Wihoro the enemy will make a Bland here is probtomulical, -but his host line would seem to he that of the canal Du Xord, which runs northoust from Peronne. Tho' canal curves east five miles east of Bapaumo and crosses the old Illmlcnburg line near Ilavrlncourt, seven miles east of Ha paume. The canal Du Nord extends ncross the Picardy battlefield in a general north and south direction and the fact that the Germans are offering stout resistance to the French south of Peronne, where the canal parallels tho Sonnne, would indicate the prob ability that they may atteaipt to stand on the lino of the canal. The tiermans ure contesting bitterly tho possession of heights north and east of Noyou. TJia French are on the southern slopos of Mount St. Simeon, ail important height east of Noyon. - To Outflank Fiicmy General Mangin's movo in crossing the Ailetto nnd the Kranco-Amerlcan j progress north of the Aisne may be the beginning of a movo to outflank the heights east of Noyon nnd north of tho Olso by a drive toward Terg nier. Thero hns been no further Infantry fighting ulung tho Vesle, nllho tho American artillery Is shelling the on omy positions heavily. The German claim of tho capturo of 250 Amer icans at Hazoches und Fismette Wed nesday Is denied. ' Since the 'beginning of tho offen sive in Picardy, French troops' have mado tho greatest advance. From Custel, on the Avro, to Hothencourt. on the Sommo, the French have mov ed forward almost twenty-five milos. The llindeuliurg line is at St. Quen tlu. fifteen miles due cast. St. Quen tln is 4 70 miles from Berlin nnd 102 miles west of Coblenz, on the Rhine. American troops east of Luneville are nearest of the allied forces to Berlin, which Is 4 00 milos north northeast, as the crow flies. In soiith- orn Alsace the Americans are olgh teen miles from the lthluo. On tho Ussurt front north of Vladi vostok, allied troops have repulsed an enemy attack and have begun an advance northward. South of Chita in east central Siberia, antl-Uolshevik forces are moving northward along tho Siberian railway. LONDON", Aug. :10. "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet " but not by a Gcniian name. So the Knglish people are cliangin: the names of roses which have been known as "Friederichsriih," "Otto Von Bismarck,'' "Kniserin Augusta I Victoria,' "Yeilchenblnu," etc. Ml aste or economy on washday ? Boiling water that wastes precious fuel and wears out clothes before their time V ' or , Fels-Naptha that cleans thoroughly in water of any comfortable temperature saving both fuel and clothes The Feh-Naplha wan is Ihe eco nomical way. I n I aft mamrr j Drop ft little Freezone on an irtiin corn, inatsnilv lint corn step' hurt ing, then yon lift it right nut. It doesn't hurt one bit. Yc. nm?u '. W'liv wait? Ymir iliut;;i"t fr-IU n tiny bottle of Precr.one for a few cmtft, uuVI-iit' to rid your feet of every haul corn, ofl corn, or corn between the loci, and ralliisM, without nop-ncM ,.r iriiiaiioa. Try It! No humbug! THE TRUTH ABOUT CANDY One Man Tali es His Sug'ar in His Fruit or Coffee Another Man Takes His in the iShape of Candy The human body needs constant find. lust as coal Is fuel for a furnace, sugar, which supplies carbohy drates. Is bodily fuel. Plain, raw granulated sugar Is not an altractlve way to (ako it, so peopio generally tako sugar in was to suit tht-lr individual ta:;te. One man lakes his sugar in co'feo or on fruit. Auother likes a cake of chocolate, for cxainplu. The cake or chocolate, railed candy, consists or covoa, sugar, nnd milk, properly blended. Is it right to nay that tins man who tukcH his sugar In IiIh coffee In on the right road, while the mini who lakes his In tho form or a piece of milk chocolate is wasl efiil and enjoying a non-cwsenllal luxury? ; Ono small boy takes several lumps of sugar In his cofrec or his portion of sugar on his mush. Another lit t In follow takos his thru his favorite piece of chocolate or a piece of stick candy. Is tho hitter less patriotic than the former? Wo 'believe not. Tho soldier in the camp tukes his n-aka of milk chocolate out with him und It sustains him. The soldier up In tho front line trench enjoys its nourishment and It makes li I ill "fight llko tho devil," as General Waller or tlm Marines said. Yet the candy Industry, the thirty-eighth largest Industry In tho I'nltod Stntos, an Industry supplying a recognized and tremendous ly vital food product, Is now threatened Willi practical annihilation because many people, have not learned the facts. Many people still feci that candy has no rood value, that It is a non-esxenllal luxury whhh uses up uiayho a rpiurter to u half of the sugar In this country, and that by wiping out candy the sugar prob lem Is solved. Hut that Is not so. On the contrary, only S per cent of the normal consumption of sugar (now cut to 4 per cent) goes into making this firmly established food product. Take one cent's worth of sugar. Put It In a little ill. That's tho amount of sugar used per capita weekly In randy making. The saving of that tiny mite In the homo will keep tho candy Industry alive and enable It to supply men and women and children at home tinil the men at the front with nourishing, wholesome body fuel. Put a pound of chocolate creams to the tost, for Instance. Fat a o I- mxiusuo, -a,,, r. uo punod s"u wl" 'ny ""ll"rH ,;rav0 It.' In normal limes the randy Industry n- only H per rent of I be Mlgnr nseiler cuplla III till country. Might now- lh! amount lias been cut Mpiarely In two. The Candy Manufacturers of Oregon; i There is No Economy m Cheap Coffees Don't figure your coffee cost by the pound, but by the cup. If M.J.B. Coffee costs you more per pound than the coffee you are u::r.f;, we can guarantee M.J.B. Ccf fee vill coct you less per cup. You czn make more cups of good coffea with M.J.B. than with -uiy other coffee. M.J.B. curpasses all other cof fees in fragrance, flavor and prjjgaal ifill M.J.B. curpasses all other cof gjja fees in fragrance, flavor and Remember our Guarantee TAN LAC The celobratod stomach and systom purlflor which has been accom plishing remarkable rosults n ,tho 'United States and Canada, will now be sold In Medford. Hem irkablo sales record of nine million bottles phenomenal and unpro odenled. West Side Pharmacy The. 5fejW Siorr 50 tractors entered big demonstration;; On tho Cotton, Ijacjig ami I'hucult Hunches. PORTLAND. OREGON September 5, 6. 7, 1918 Reached by (ireshnm Electric Hallway. Paved Auto road to the grounds. Estimated attendance Fifty to Sixty Thousand. ( a A CARLOAD OR A CARTLOAD Pine and Fir Lumber, BOX SHOOKS Pear, Peach and Apple 1 Some Bargains Talent Box and Lumber Co. Phones 364-R and 7-F-2 Ashland, Ore. GATE SATIRES COST ONH-IIAIJC AS MUCH And wear twice as long as the average Fabric Tire. Guaranteed 3,500 miles. 1'UNCTI UH WOOF Our Sorvlce Station is now equipped with tho latest mechanical Tire Chnngor, Up-to-l)ato Vulcanising Iio,ulpmont, Curtis Air Frea From Oil. Try our Tire Sorvlce It's Different. F. R. Roberts 1 32 S. Riverside rjoOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO DENNEY & CO. FRUIT MARKETING AGENTS Specializing in the dis tribution of Northwest ern boxed fruits. M. E. ROOT, Representative Warehouse on S. 1'. Traek. Bloek South of Main St. MKDF0RD, PHONE 294 Main Office Chicago,' III. . Western Office Payette, Idaho F. H. Hogue, Western Manager. exxxxooooocoooocooo