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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 24, 1919)
r. vum four L - - ! MfilWOtlD Witt) WTKUm. MTCDFORTV OTlTCrtONV MONDAY, FETTRTT-ARV 21, 1010 MEDFORD MAlU TRIBUNE : AN 1NOKPKNKKNT NKWSPAl'KIt lOJUUHIIKM KVKItV AKTKHNOON KXCIOI'T KUNDAV HV TUfcS . AlKli'VnU PK1NTINQ CO. Offlor, Mnll Tribune BulMtn, 25-27-29 North Kir streot. Viiono 76, A conRolidrtllon of ' the Democratic Ttiiion. Tho Mmlford Mall. Tho Mcdfnnl J'rihuno, tho Bouihern OrcKOrttan, The AhIiIuihI 'Tribune. Tho M nl font Sunday Pun n furntflhcd HiibHiTrlbrra tic si ring a seven-day daily iiiiunpuiwr, , GKORGK PUTNAM, Kdltor. SUBSCRIPTION TEBMSl .. UY MAIL IN ADVANCE: Dully, with Sunday Sun, yrnn.-.$fl o0 Dully, with Kumlny Sun, month..- -fift Dully, without Kuudny Sun, ywir.. 6,00 Dully, without Sunday Sun, month .f0 Weekly Mall Tribune, on your l.f0 Kundny Sun, ono yoar 1-fi BY CAimilCK In Mcdford. Ashland. Jneltftonville, Central 1'olnt, Phoenix: Dully, with Sunday Sun, year $7.50 Dully, with Kutu.uy ami, tnunth.... ,m Daily, without Sundny Sun, yea r- 6.00 Dully, without Sunday Sun, month .60 Official paper of tho City of Med ford. vjincHU paper ot jncKson vumy Kntered as Beeond-elnss matter at Med ford, Oregon, under tho net of March ft, IMiJ. Bitm riftllv &.vmir r.lrcnlatinn for six months endlnff Deo. 31, 1518 M KM 13 ICR OK TI1K ASSOCIATED . PRKSS. Vull Loused "Wire Sorvlce. The Asso ciated Press Is exclusively entitled to l ho nse for repuhl lea t Inn of all news dlftimtchcft credited to It or not other wise credited In this paper, and also the local news published iiereln. All rights nf republication of special dispatches herein or ttlso reserved. EM-TEES THE LAST SOLDIER (Hv Karl Broesor. iu A'orwaorts. No vember. l!)18. Translated bv Ed mund von llarh.) , Over cadaverous mountins of time . The last soldier is uantinj on his Aemal climb. From the Mountain of Skulls, higher than earthly peaks. Ho looks, and he calls, and he seeks : "Ilero on the summit of Arve I stand. Spvmc for men. real men in the land: lint onlv soldiers, dead soldiers, I see. Arc the men all gone Can this really bef - Show yourself, brother.''white. black, or tan, ,. - That I mnv see main the face of a . ' living man." Throueh the chasms of heaven wild flames roar. And the searcher, filled with vearn- inz to his core. Hands enveloped b flames: sacred fires environ him : And his uniform, with its tassels. tawdry and erirn-, ,1s licked by flames. Il'irlows. and " it burns: It sinks from him in ashes, and the -" searcher turns. , While from the smouldering pyre, as in a spell. . ' He hears the last soldier savins his final farewell. On the Mountain of Skulls, cleansed bv the fire's ravs. stands a naked man. sinless, amazed. Without a shell or a bomb, or a dan cer or gnu. ' He looks about him like creation's first son With .the , eyes of a child: and love trnlv erent Contemplates the ruined world and its i fratricidal fate. .' And thrbnch blood and horror, and fire's smoulderinz trace r He winss his hopeful wav toward the ' new down of the race. Died of disease: Corp. Walter Penco, Salem, Ore.; Privates Earl E. . Bugger, Ontario, Ore.; Elmer A. Mills,' N'ewberg, Ore.; Sgt. Random S. Anderson, Portland, Ore. ; ,' Killed in action: Private Gudmund Hogenes, Astoria, Ore. Wounded severely: Private Irving Balderree, Dallas, Ore. . f Died, previously reported missing n action: Private Conrad C. Cocker line, Estacada, Ore. Wounded slightly, previously re ported missing in action: Private Roy A. Wright, Portland, Ore. : Wounded,, degree undetermined: Private Lawrence K. Thompson, Prai rie City, Ore.; Sergeants Henry M. ' Align, Cone, Ore.; Leslie R. Morgan, . Scapooso, Ore.; Elhurn T. ' Sims, Woodburn, Ore.; Private Frank M. Piatt, Portland, Ore. - Wounded slightly: Lieut. Frank L. lioughridge, Ostrander, : Ore.; Pri . vates Antonio Volpe, Portland, Ore.; Ollffofd O. Mabee,. Hillsdale, Ore.; Charles A. McGinnls, St. Johns, Ore. Wounded slightly: Private James A. Cook, Lostine, Ore.; Melvin Solve, XJandon, Ore. SOME SOLIWEnS REDUCED TO , liKGXJARY, SAYS GKX. WOOD . CHICAGO, Feb. 22. Major Gen oral Leonard Wood, In a Washing ton's birthday addreBS today appeal ed to "good citizens" to look after 111 e interests of returning soldiers. lie said many soldiers and sailors could not be blamed for feeling bit ter when they wore unable to find work. Some, he said, had actually !bocn reduced to beggary. "The lowest type of person Is the man or woman who preys upon the i-oturnlng soldier or sailor, and robs or swindles him out of whatever he has," Major General Wood said. "Yet such as these are the ones who have oxtonded tho welcome greeting while our good citizens have remained npn'thotlc." . : ' ' TODAY'S CASUALTIES A POST MORTEM OF VICTORY. THAT eminent Y. M. C. A. strategist, Oovcnior Henry 'Allen of Kansas has been detailing to the senate committee the alleged military; mistakes of the battle of the Argoime. Inasmuch as ho was not at the front, and his information was based upon gossip in "Y" canteens, he was rather reckless in his charges. Hut ho drew co piously from his vast amount of misinformation based upon tittle-tattle. Allen charged that Kansas troops of the 35th division had been shot down by their own cannon, that there was a reckless sacrifice of life, 'an insufficiency of supplies and armament and' inadequate, air protection all of which charges were refuted by General Peter E. Traub, division "commander,. who personally and was gassed live tunes m the battle. The battle Avas gloriously won. The strongest forti fied positions in -France were speedily captured. The 35th 's record is a magnificent one as is that of all Ameri can divisions participating iu the Argonne battle, or ot her strenuous battles in France. "What then, is the object of seeking to belittle and discredit the rank and file of the army after it had proved its mettle and won the war? What is the animus of these malicious charges and these senatorial postmortems? What does a Y. M. 0. A. worker know of strategy and tactics, of militarism and war, and tho conduct of war, even if he is a Kansas politician1? In what position is he to pass judgment upon the(battle raging at thesfront from his safe position in the rear ? Such malicious meddling, can only react to the discredit of the Y. M. C: A., whose business is welfare work and not managing tho strategy of war. ""What is the object of this postmortem of victory? What else can it be but polities an effort to discredit General Pershing and the conduct of the war which would have been won so much better had the politicians been allowed to manage it instead. Why in half the time, the Germans would . have been talked back to Berlin. And so we may expect the gab-fest to continue and every one with a real or fancied grievance permitted to air it but tliey cannot mar tue glorious achievements ot the anm-. THE -WOMAN WHO DRESSED LIKE A MAN. T N THE death of Dr. Mary world loses cmo nf its the first of American women to win fame as a physician and surgeon, a pioneer in sex emancipation, in feminine dress reform and as an advocate of woman suffrage. She became celebrated in both the United States and England as a lecturer in the half a. century following the war and was the first woman to attempt to cast a vote. Her livli hood during all these years, for she never married, was earned by her private practice as a physician. Four years of her life was spent on the battlefields of the Civil war as a surgeon. Graduating as a physician at the age of 23,-she practiced her profession until the out break of tho war, when at the age of 29, she volunteered her services and entered the Union army as assistant sur geon with the rank of first lieutenant. By special act of congress she adopted male attire, dressed like her brother officers, wearing a gold stripe running down the trouser legs, wearing a felt hat with a gold cord and an officer's overcoat. The jacket was cut like a blouse and fitted loosely at the neck. Dr. Walker was distinguished,' not only as the first woman to be commissioned in the army, but also as the only woman in history who, when held as a captive iu war, was exchanged as a prisoner of war for a man of equal rank in the army of the foe. Her proudest possession was the bronze medal she wore, engraved with the legend: "Presented by the Congress of the United States to Mary E. Walker, A. A. Surgeon, U. S. Army." After the war, Dr. Walker availed herself of the privi lege granted her by congress' to wear male attire in civil life and always wore a black frock coat, trousers and a "stove-pipe" hat, and carried a cane. She was the only woman in the country who ever Avon her right to dress as she pleased. Though a pioneer in advocacy of woman suffrage, she had no sympathy with the spectacular efforts of the latter day suffragists and deplored the antics and strong-arm tactics noAV in A-ogue. The efforts to bulldoze congress by insulting the-president' disgusted her, and she recently declared, Avith considerable vigor: , "Women will get suffrage just as soon as they stop making fools of themselves. They've got to Btop talking so much and do some work. These everlasting amendments will never get them their rights. They want to state what they want and stick to it." Short Talkson Mr. Bachelor, was your net income for 1918 $1000 or more? Mr. Benedict, was your net Income for 1918 $2000 or more? - It so, you are required to file an Income tax return with the collector of internal revenue for the district In which you live on or before March 13'. Congress has carefully differenti ated between the person who "falls" and the person who "wilfully re fuses" to make a return, and pay tho tax within the time specified by the new revenue bill. Delinquents of the first class are subject to a fine of not more than $1,000. Those of the second class are subject to a fine of not more than $10,000, or Imprison ment for one year, or both. For making a fraudulent return, the pen alty Is a fine of not more than $10, 000 or imprisonment for one year, or both, and an additional assess ment of 50 per cent of the amount of tax evaded. CHICHESTER S PILLS -E-V . TIIB IHAMOND A NIK A x.naicsi AfUTonrurucaiiiiiir Aa lM-che.f rt J!mond ItrandVVV 1MIU in 11 vd nd Uald metMleSSJ Ikuw, tailed nfUi blue RIU nu s Take no other. Hut of Tour v HAMOMD ItUANU WLLft, for if years krnwDli Best. Safest. Atwivi RellJ A W 0 SOU) bUWISTSH WHERE led his troops on the front E. Walker at the age of 87, the nirisf nii'hirosmip fliiivnrfprs. Income Taxes For falling to make the return on time, in addition to the $1000 fine, there is an assessment of 25 per cent of the amount of lax due. Taxes may be paid In full at the time of making tjie return, or In four Installments, the first of which Is due on or before September 15 and the fourth on or before December 13. If any Installment Is not paid when due, the entire amount becomes diic ten days after demand therefor by the collector. For falling to pay the tax when due there is a penalty of 5 per cent of the amount unpaid, plus Interest at tho rate of 1 per cent a month during which It remains un paid. Last year Income taxes were due on or before June 15. The bureau of Internal revenue Is seeking to empha size that this year, to avoid pehalty, the taxpayer must pay at least one fourth of his tax on or before March 15. JOHN A. PERL Undertaker Phone M. 47 and 47-32 Automobile licarso Service Lady Assistant 82 SOUTH BARTLETT Auto Ambulance Service, Coroner Theaters and Movies 0XOOOOQQCX'XXOOOCOOOOOOOOOOCH'CW THE ' COUNTRY COUSIN" AT PAGE TONIGHT. It - W few . 4" -tot -roprvv.C i Ono or tho bright spots of humor iu "The Country Cousin." tue nomn Tarklngton-Jullan Street comedy In which Miss Alexandra Cnrllslo conioa to tho Page-tonight is tho lad ot eighteen who announces that ho Is not only going to marry tho charming girl of his choice, biit that soma day ho will be a great man by reason of his oratorical ppwors nnd that before ho is thirty, he Vtl'l liavo seat In congress. This lad, Sam Wilson by namo, Is not only n plcturoaiiua rhiir- i m ' '." ' l 5 LAST TIMET0N18HT The niHicofaiiiic.ot Khrico Caruso, the famous tciior.i'in Arternft nic. tures. was the occasion lor imiiicnsu' crowds at tlw I.ilM-rtv theater where j his first nhiitiinlva'v. "Jlv Cousin." is I on view. It is n splendid tihotoplav in which Mr. Caruso plavs two roles with eonsuiiininte, skill. It uyiv l'uirlv bo said that Mi:. X'uruso's advent in mition pictures iii'ii success from ev ery standpoint. Tomorrow onlv. Dustin Karnum in one of the best stories ever screened, "The Virsininii." and bv special re oucst Ilarrv .Maiminir. Mcdfonl's Cnr uso, will siiiL' some favorite select inns. Bn renin prices. ' . PARIS, Feb. 22. (Dy Associated Press.) Th American rnnip at IK-Sur-TIll, was destroyed by flro ac cordlns to a dispatch to tho 1 lavas agency from l)ijon. HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD T Says Cream Applied in Nostrils $ X Opens Air I'asnages itight Up. . '? Instant relief no waiting. Your clogged nostril open right up; the air passages of your head, clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuf fling, blowing, headache, dryneii?. Xo struggling for hrenlh at night; Tour cold or catarrh disappears. Oct a small liottle of Ely's Cream Salm from your dnigglut now.! Apply a little of this fragrant., antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It pen etrates through every air pannage of tlio head, soothes tiin indumed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes in utantly. v It's jut 6nc. , Don't stoy etuffed-up with a cold or nasty catarrh. , I KODAK FINISHING : AT JAP? ART STORE : Hato, Film dnvolonin'rr.'irm roll. ' . Prirititiir. post enrd size. 3 lor 10c. I'rintiii-r "add "Kiiutller. 2 for 5e'. l in 1 V I 1 1 i V. ! fl roa TO OIIDEU 2B.0O Vf Also Cleaning, Pressing and Altering 12H K. MAIN. UPSTAIRS MEDFORD IRONWORKS FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP Also aitent for Fairbanks and Morse Engines. . 17 Smith River3ldn. Vulcanizing All our work strictly guaranteed to ho first'elnss.' 13 N. Fir St., Mcdford I'bone 4!I-J MEDFORD VUUCAKIZING WORKS to iDfO K ItOTHCS t . 'A j I actor but moreovo,r has historical lu loresi for Hmiii ftfiwr llm pl. WAA produced tho lad was recognised a qiinlnt portrait of TarkhBlon' for mer fellow townsman, Si'iiutur Alburt Ilovorldgo of ludluiia. llcverldiio had curtain leanings towurd oratory and announced at ll0 tender uits of oliih tccn that ho would some day bo a figure of national liiiporlnnro In tho I'nltod Stale senate. lie mudu kooiI his boast mid In llm play, Sum Wilsiin dues llkfwlso. - , S THE UNIVERSAL CAR , Ford cars have become such a world utility that it would almost seem ns if every faiyily oiifjht to have its Fonl car. Kuiiabiiitt, Touring Oar, Coupe, (Sedan, ((lie two latter have enclosed bodies), and the Truck Chassis, have really become, it part and parcel of human life. You Avant. one because its service will be profitable .for you. "We solicit your order at once because, die production t come, first firs C. E Gates Auto Co. ' iiiii .. :J rxcaooooGooox)boooaooocoooo (: Stocked Up and r i V Ready for Business'-' Sewer Pipe Irrigation Pipe Concrete Cylyerts Drain Tile "c furnish estimates, on nil classes of road con struction and concrete Avork. No job too large; no job too small. , ' Let ns figure on your work. Wc contract.'.. Medford Concrete'Constniction Co. ',.. v Office Jackson County Bank Bldg. (POOOOOQCOQOOOOQOCO ROOSEVELT AT RIALT0 TONIGHT AND TOMORROW if lln Uiiill Inim lite tv iii'Im ui' llio iiia';ii( kivm ill Soalllc tliit. work l'ivt! n r - li;; lic-t iiii'luifs cvim' iisiuli' nt' li lull' I'llllUH.'l. Iiiiiiscvcll Wit Iiiii. t si iln'.ilit eiii mil" of llll' KlVulci.1 citiM'll'i 111" I'liiicl; Slnlcs bus ever iimdiii'til ii'i.l ovv, imn hi Ali'ulonl is ntlun i In i i' I MlUlJcrllll IH'V1 Ili4 t lit' v will be shown in "Tim lii'al linuscv.'ll " Annul!! Kiiiiln I'nlnl vliilliiia In tlio oily Saturday rail Siimbiy wri .1. It. J;H'Uhii:i, J it t''illlin, A. II. Itrowii a n! !". J. 1' it ic'.l. RECUPERATION of tho vilul forces, of tho body, depleted in the strttCRlo with nculu disense, dcpetidu not uponupiir ficial atimulotioh bul upon oik quale nourishment. Tho body needs to be nourished bock to strength end power. a pure", vholesome tonic-food, aiMolutaly non-alcohollo, tone and atrnnKthriu by nouiinhlnx the whole tyitom body, blood and nerve. Nourinh yoor body back to strength with Soott'm. is limited, it Avill bo A pi'( nl iivr-rrlriisi kIipvimi; ol' lllti "real Kt.iwi'Vivl"' lu nIihwii 1 I , ii Iiiiiiiii iinv ami Tui"-ili'v mi I supplied. HELPFUL WORDS Krniit .Mi'dfiiiil t '.'! -la your buck luiiiu mid luiiiiful? Iioen It niihe (iiini"liilly'li(ti' oxur llon? In tlitu'o n tiiii'iimiia In dm klduuy ri'Mioii'.' , ' Tlic;pyi i!itiiiiii iiiiiusiwl vok.klU iiiiys, If mi Ihi'iu l diiiiimr In ili'uy. W'onii liUlnuyM ml find wimlmr. " tlivo .viuir liiMiblii U'oiiiit iilloii i'iiii. Dmiii'n Ktilnoy 1'llln mo for wunk liMlll'J'B, . . ADi'r nolr.bbiil'H into mid n'aiiii iiui'id thniii. Iti'iul thin Mcdford (nutliiliiny, J, II,' Alwidl, piiliili'r mid pupdr linm;ir, 139 VWnt MIdviuiIIi struul, i-i'.'k: "IIiiiiu'ii Klduuy I'IIIh liro all ;hiy urn cIiiIiiiimI to bu uiul 1 mil ill ways uliiil In I'lH'oiiiiui'iul uiiylhliiK I hulliivn will liu of biini'flt to "thorn, I liavn tiikon I iiuiii'h Khluny I'IIIh on iMl furr ut i"i'iihIoiiii when I hitvo hud uiiv tniiilitu with uiy back or klilueyn nii'l Hii'V luivv iilwiOH iliiiio lilt) work, A fi'.v iIii.-imi now and llivu kiwp my k iluotii In c. 1 1 1 ' I workliiK iirilur." I'l'j-n ii or, all ili'iiiiTn, Don't n'mrlv ui k lor a klilmiy rumoily nt 1j:i:i'ii Klihiny I'IIIh tho minui Hint .Mr. Aiw.)!l liri'1. l'o'.i'r-.MIIIiuin Co., A; C r. ., I", i 'Iu'ii, X. V. Adv. Smelt Free Ton pounds nf mmill free In tho kiddie lint yours or inidor who brim v thu mint wnri'a c:s !o f.'om Irtlm.l taken from I ho words ".MiNlrnril Pb.li nml Poultry Market" Fur vxiimplo thoru liro two T'n, you may use two In your wurtls. Tlmro Is only ono I. you ran only use It onto In a wur.l. Thu Kiiiolt will bo given nwny to the ono krliiRlnii tho most words, su a ii in bur your words nnd bring them In by Friday, Fi It. In enso ot n tin wo will tlvc second ono arriving S pouiidii of mnult, third ono 5 pounds. Wlnne-rn' names will bn inihllnhad in tho paper on Sunday followlnx, Mcdford Fish and Poultry Market ., I'Kli In llrnln Food. I OH rt Main. I'li'mo Utia Ranch Supplies Formaldehyde Blue Stono Sodium Fluorido Whale Oil Soap Stock and Poultry Remedies A PHARMACYita . I'liniin III JUST ARRIVCb - A nine line, of SILK FLOSS -MATTRESSES ' ' Also a nice line, of BUGS AND LINOLEUM At Prices that will save you nionoy. Poole Furniture Co. Sulphur, Wizard and Land ( Plaster. White and Red Seed Oats. Speltz and Barley. Alfalfa, Clover, Timothy and Graffs Seeds. Full Line of Garden Seeds. Monarch Feed Si Seed Co. LIBERTY TAXI Willi now OoiIko car, Stallonod at 10 N, Front St, 33 Ilaln ti I.yon, loops' Plume