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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 24, 1919)
PA75E jw . BanpffOftB MXffi ritrntryff, meppokp,. 'owrcaoy. Thursday, aptut; 21. int Medford Mail Ixibune A XT TMnwunu,MP NRWRPAPER PUUL1HHKD EV1CKY AFTERNOON SlXOEJT SUNDAY PY TUB MEDFORD PKINTINO CO. Offlc. Mall Trlbun Iuilclln, 1S-1T-29 norm fir iireec rnonv . A eonnolldfttton of th Democratic Tlrnftd. The Meilford Mall, The Medford Tribune, (he Southern Orogonlan, : The Aim ana itiduiio. The Medford Sunday 8un is furnished ftUDneriDera aeainng a aeven-aay wuiy newspaper. . v ' t ROBERT RUHU Rdttor.v 8, S. 8MITIL ManaKor, " xrasosxYTXOir terms i BVMAILr IN ADVANOh; Datlv. with Sunday Sun, year ..1100 . Dully, with Sunday Sun, month .65 " VailV, without Sunday Sun, year.. IS. 00 laUy, without Sunday Sun, month .SO Wfkly Mail Tribune, on year.. 1.S0 Simdny Sun, one year 1.60 .BY CARRIER In Mtriford. Ashland. Jacksonville, Central Point Phoenix: Dully, with Sunday Sun, year 17.50 Dally, with Sunday Sun, month .6 Dally, without Sunday Sun, year- .00 Dally, without Sunday Sun, month ,60 Official paper of the City of Medford. Official paper of Jacknon County. . irmnrfd laa second-elaaa matter at to e I ford, Ore Ron. under the act of March 8. 1878. . ' . won dally tTerar etroalatloB for Bis month nOlntf Zeo. 81, 19ia..-,04 MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED . PRESS Pull Leaned Wire Service. The Asso ciated Preas la exclusively entitled- to the UM for republication of all new dispatches credited to It or not other wlae credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of .republication of special dispatches herein aro also reserved. Ye Smudge Pot ' s , By Arthur Ferry " . "Tho next sontr I sine." li home erown warbler informs.-"will be 'For All Eternity.' which is plenty lone enoiurh. ''' ' - ... j A number of citizens, are still'snf tcrme from the sprins fever thev ab sorbed in the- fall of 1890." " ' ,- .-; Verv well this eol. recalls a year aero. - It was cettine rerv dark in France. Everywhere men were look ing blue, and cussine. . '' Wed. a letter came to hand, un signed, and. hence no action can be taken. ; . .- - '..' ;,. - ! ' . In the rebuilding of hnman nature bv lem-slntion, it is to.be hoped, that the frivilous and costlv habit of ent ine will be boiled down to once every full moon.' On second thot the change woyld do no eood. Thev would catch the ultimate consumer .at the next crossbar somehow. -' ' ',- 1 1 1 : ' . I;,.'., A gent of Memphis, Tenn., depart ed the first of the month with $62 000 of -his boss' dough: They caught him at Palm Beach, Fla., Toes.' with a lady goodlooklng enough to win a beauty prize. .-The agent declared he . recalled nothing, since he got hU mitts on the swag. The falling mem ory alibi is an old one and there are no Incidents where the afflicted one picks out a one-horse town and a homely companion. .-- THE BATTLE SCARRED RETURN - . (Echo, Ore., News) . Lincoln Hafner. a 'Walla Walla boy who saw nearly a year of service in camps on this side of the' pond, is visiting at the home of H. A. Brandt.' The Italians who were howling "viva" when the president was in Rome last January, are now howling something else. THE PARIS CRISIS. THE supreme crisis has eome. In a few days, per Laps in a few hours, the world will know, whother the allies having won the war are now to lose tho peace. Italy is the stumbling block. Balked in her selfish im perialistic aims, she promptly assumes the characteristic role of the threatening black'guai-d. " j "Should.the break become final, Italy will take steps to'mako a separate peace with Germany.". -That is the uitimatum from, the Italian embassy in Paris. ; Whether, or not a compromise is effected now, by that treacherous and contemptible threat, Italy from a moral standpoint makes the break final. V The only hope How seems to rest with the' Italian people. Apparently King Emmanuel supports his om- nxissanes. If the Italian people tan to repudiate their representatives then the only self respecting course is to allow Italy to; make the threat she has made effective, and draw the peace terms accordingly. ITALY THE REACTIONARY FROM a moral standpoint Italy has never been in spir- itual alliance with her allies. From the first she has been actuated by supreme selfishness and unprinci pled imperialistic ambition. She entered the war an ally of the Central Powers. For months she was inactive, ready to join either side wliich promised her the largest bribe. The allies pffered the better terms, so she treated her alliance as a scrap of paper, and entered the lists against Austria.'? " ' ' ; . Her arniieS bought well, her people suffered tremen dous sacrifices," but politically she remained, as she is to day, animperialistie-' hrigand, faithful to the outlawed principles of her old alliance. - True she Was granted cer tain concessions? London, but as Presi dent Wilson pointed -out those concessions were invali dated by the changes in the map of Europe, by the crea tion of a finer conception of racial justice. . t-j If her pretensions in fighting the Central Powers had been other than hypocricy, she would now be willing to modify her demands; and not lay claim to territory which belongs to the Jugo-Slavs, on the grounds both of nation ity and peaceful reconstruction. . President -Wilson in his stand against the demands of Italy, is merely insisting that the fundamental principles for which the allies fought, should not be treated as scraps of-paper. Whatever sympathy there faiay haye been with Italy before has been removed now by her despicable threat to traitorously join with, the ejteniy. ; j , " LOYALTY : IN PEACE. IF there had been any disposition tO. equitable, COmprO lnisp OT) tVl A TM1 lf nf TiaV'lri- VnacnnaKla maiwnn jinn doubt President Wilson ;woHld have withheld his ultima tum. He has no selfish interest in Fiume. ; Neither has the American people. He desires and they desire merely uiai jusuce De servea. . , r;' ; . -" Of course from this' rlistTifA. a-nA ' wirt tK -poinoti liifdrmation it is difficult to be dogmatic, but as far as we can see is as important to stana bjr tne president now as during t.hpAvnr ' - " - ' The necessity of unity, of freedom from narrow parti sans hip is as great today as it was a year ago. Theissues involved are not of any party but df the country and the world. We have a deep and abiding conviction that the president with all the facts at hand must be acting wisely and for the best interests of his countrymen and human ity. In this hour of stress and danger we feel he deserves and should have the undivided support of the American people. - '..:.:.'. .:...,.; .,.-;.".. v-o ., ; - .- "As far as I can see," says Nation al Chairman Cummings of the well known democratic party, '.'the- future looks bright." The estimable gentle man can not see as far as November. 1920. . :: ' '; v :v V Jr ; -The wheat field on the west side of ' the phone office, gives a rural 1 touch to a metropolitan surrounding. :yr THE REFORMATION ; i-i' (Albany Democrat) ''!': Some time ago the Democrat commented upon the unfavor able reputation that Albany was apt to receive as a result .of freakish laws, petitions,- etc., if -the thing persisted. First it was , dogs and then bees',' and others may have. different ideas stored . within their cranium's for fur ther use in making Albany look f. like a Joke, to the outside world. Somebody is always kicking over the traces somewhere .. . . Owing to the high cost of creases It costs more to press a pair of pants . '...--,, V 'A' ' Than before the kaiser's famous kick-up. . . .. . ... Wolda Burns, agent of the Burns Sros. show is in the city making ar- . rangoments for the appearance here of that attraction In the near future. Thar ts more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other dlaeanes put together, and for years it was eup- fioaed to be Incurable. Doc ton prescribed ooal 'remedlea, and by conatrjiMy falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it lnourable. Catarrh la a local dlaeaae, greatly Influenced by constitutional con ditions and therefore requlrea constitu tional treatment. Hall'a Catarrh Medi cine, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, la a constitutional remedy, la taken internally and acta thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfacea of the System. One Hundred Dollars re ward la offered for any case that Hall'a' Catarrh Medicine falls to our. Send for circulars and testlmonlala. F. J. CHENEY ft CO., Toledo, Ohio. ' Sold by Druggists. 75c. : Hall's Family Pills for constipation, Mitau Bolsheviki Objective Long Coveted By Prussia i WASHINGTON, April 23. Mitau. an objective of Bolshevik! operations in Courland, Russia, Is described in the following bulletin from the Wash ington headquarters of the National Goorgraphic society: f "Mitau affords evidence that Prus sia's desire- to spread 'kultur' . by force. is no new-born impulse. A 'German.'.mjlitary order, the Brethren of . the Sword, later amalgamated with the Teutonic knights, felt calted upon, early in the thirteenth century to Implant Christianity in Courland, of which JHtau later became the cap ital. . ... "On an island in theSemgaller Aa, 20 miles south or the Gulf of Riga, the Knights of the' Sword built a pal ace in 1265 and three centuries later a town grew up there which became the seat Of the dukes of Courland.-A. "Under the dukes of the Kettler line Courland flourished and . even acquired an African and a West In dian colony. But when Duke James, last of the Kettlers died, there came an adventurer whose life story shows how easily Rasputins attach them selves to the Russian court. , "Ernst Johann Biren, grandson of a' groom, was expelled from the Uni versity of Koenigsberg.. When : he drifted back to Mitau one of his sis ters was a temporary favorite of Peter Bestuzhev, minister of the Duchess Anne Ivanovna, fail mistress. Upon this ladder of liaisons Biren climbed to Anne's attention and fa vor, became her lover, had Peter ban ished, and when Anne became Em press of Russia, the debonair and handsome soldier of fortune took up his abode in apartments of the royal palace adjoining hers. ' '' "Nominally grand , chamberlain, Biren became a stop gap for royal graft, and thus accumulated enor mous lands, moneys and jowels. He induced his Imperial mistress to make him Duke of Courland. He re built the nlstoric castle at Mitau, en gaging as architect Count Rastrelli, designer of the original Winter Pal ace at St. Petersburg which figured Scene FromMA Man And His ; -Money" Jat the Rialto Tonight ' k; stf- .,...-,..,.... .,t.,., . ....... .p liH4 sdl OORB 6 A MAN ami HIV MONKY An Expert Nurse for Member' of Every the miinity To uitl fomiiiunitit'S to make oulilic hen I Hi ntirsiiiL' a uubliu utility (mil so brinir cxiiert niirsinc enro within the reneh of every uitincn of tho coun try, i tbe.tiltiiunte object of tho com nrehensivo' vrotrmm for 1910. iidopt ed bv the National Orennizntion for Public lloulth Nureine. of which Mrs. Alice riollowhv 'of Mi'dford is the stute roprescnthtivc. The- report was adopted at n recent conference of the directors of the orcnmisntion in Clevolund; , ' ; ' i - The . nationals orcaniintum feels that a rapid' development, of public health nnrsinir throiiuh private niien cies and local nnd state sorcrnments. enn help to reinedv cxistinu condi tions, which suridiiKlv threaten na tional health.-'-.' .' - The 'immediate Wrcnse of public health nurses ncyc-Hnrv i to bo se ctired . throueh' slbe -raisins of a scholarship fundj of $150.UU0. and throuch ent'ournktliL' the development of new postgraduate courses and summer institutes. Seventy thousand dollars of this1 s'cholurrihiu fund has already been lrntiitcxl ' bv the Kcd Cross at the remiest of the national orcanizntion. and $10,000 more rais ed for special Irninine of women de sir in ir to equip themselves as teachers and executives. A permanent supply of publio heulth nnrscs can probably be secured onlv -throuch the modifi cation of nurtiintr education to in clude ' public health nursinir. - The possibility of such a nrbdificntiou is to be studied bV a committee ill)-' do in ted nt the rcnuest of the national ortTHnization for ntibhn health nurs inc nndhbnded bv Professor Winslow of Yale, a member of their advisory council. Stimulation 'of state nnd national direction of public health nursine. so dramatically in the overthrow of the czar In 1917. ''But Biren overplayed his hand when he persuaded Anne; upon her death bed, to make him regent until the. infant Ivan VI should come of age'. In three weeks he was deposed His property was confiscated, includ ing diamonds estimated to be worth several- million dollars, and he -was consigned to . political oblivion for more than twenty years. Catherine II restored him as Duke of Courland, and when ho died, nine years later, the duchy which had denied him any dignity in his youth and resented his being forced upon them by Anne, -had come to regard him as a Kind and capable ruler. "This same palace of Mitau housed Louis XVIII, while he was ydt Count of Provence, and for a period during his exile from France. . -; - Indications are that there will be a very large attendance at the Elks dance Friday night, which. Is only for members of the lodge and their in vited lady guests. )' -, - - . -'. Heal Skin Diseases It is unnecessary for you to suffer witheczcma,blotches,ringworm,rashc8 and similar skin troubles. Zemo, ob tained at any drug store for 35c, or $1.00 for extra large bottle, and prompt- ly applied will usually give instant relief from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderful, penetrating, disappearing liquid and is soothing to the most delicate skin. It is not greasy . is easily applied and costs little. Get it today and save all further distress, - The B. W. Hoee Co., Cleveland, O, - JOHN A. PERL -. 7 ; Undertaker -v . ' Phone M. 47 and 41-32 Automobile Hearse Service - Lady Assistant - 82 SOUTH BARTLETT 4nto Ambulaace Service, Coroner throuiili. utiito lo'.'iHlntiun iro iiliiitf for dlvisioii-Mif publii heulth iiursini; within state.' di'pnrtniviilM; of health with a uiuilil'icil pttblitt hcallii nurse for chief, will be urved bv tho nrviin. izntioit. , Tim U. S.;, -VuWip Jlcnlth Service litis ,'nlso Veen askod to oon. tinuu the division of public health niirsHiiiti-rentcd bv it fur the period of the war. nnd whieh iiceoinnlislieil remarkable results in extrn-ennton-ment home's. . The national oranuiznl ion's pro gram nlso ineludiia the development of courses for trained nttundants who will be einnloved under tho direct supervision of publio heulth nurses to take fhnrtfo of household arrniiec ments as well its to assist in the cure of the toiek. ', .' ,- .. 1( ''" - I, !'. t- . .: . -f- V: i i . Ho Escaped Influenzal "Last spring I had'a torrlble cold and grippe and was afraid I wna go ing to have lfluenza," writes' A. A. McNoese. High Point, On. "I triad many kinds of medicine, but remain ed clogged with cold, I thon took Foley's Honey and Tar Comdound, feeling relief from tho first. I used soven small bottles. If was a sight to see the phlogra I conghed up. I am convinced Foley's Honey and . Tar saved me from Influenza." - Checks coughs, colds,' croup and whooping cough. For sale by Medford Phar macy. . CHICHESTER S PILLS r4lc! AH your wmuiat fr a 1MIU U Kd mi 4. old tnulllcW mUt mtih Illu KlU-MuxJ Take no trthrr. Hv f rwr lmr:v AkforifM luVfritu DIAMOND I1IIANU 1'ILI.H, for vcart kwwn u Ut.tUft. Aiwtva KeiUl.l SCLD bt WilSTS EVLWHLRE ONE MORE DAY , ' AND The Mystery Car ' Is Here. Wait and watch for the ' season's auto sensation. A Car with Quality, Class1 and Price Elliott & Cook Auto Co. . Successor to Power Auto Co. s t ' i S. , Y" -i i .-.- (-.I '-'A' ,.''"- ,; !"J3.ii 'f ' ' - ' ' ' 'M 'f . iff Milk and Snow Flakes "As fjJ C8 wunds." Snow Hahea orp tilted ju:t right, baked to a tun!, cfisp ond lien; erved with rr.ilk it i really .difficult to conc:;vo a better balanced meal for sick cr well, children or grown ups. Don't ask for cracker," tay Snow Makes. . . fSJ- II JF Bedbug Rillers Tested ' ' Tho fff.f llvoiui4 of cxtmulimlcira of IkmIIiuux Ik ih'rrHnNl In l'. H. (lnvtf niiH'iit lliilli'llii No. 707. 'mwlm Siilillniiitn In n l ht cnt Akuuk Milutlo'n wiw fuunil.tu kill KM) xrwit. I'Ure liurvl IHurdor wns vi' pffiftlve.ToIwCfo uml IIi'1IiIkm f no vallin. -Hiilpliiir fuuibinilon at the rattf.tif I lb. to liHHl ruble fwt, klllnl ovprytlihiff. Wo pri'iiaro (litwo irmrntlinm n illio. tp.l by flm liovrrnnit'iit. ' ' '" ; . ' , Heath's Drug' Store . Phone 884 ; ; I . The Sm Tox 8tore Balancing the Books i BEFOliR wf; settle down to peace and pros perity for tho rest of our lives wc nnist ' SETTLE UP. Uncle Sam' still carries nu unpaid balance on his war debt and by : v (lipgiiiflf down and digging 'up with our Hub- " - scriptioiiai-j-we eun soon fiiiili tho job." Count upon the First National Bank's help if you need it. ; ' ,: v:;; capital $100,000. ' 1 , the FlRvST National Bank r 1 ' Mddford Oregon John Deere-Dain Mower WESTON'S (jjamerq Shop the Only Exclusive . Commercial Photographer in Southern, Oregon. ..;' ; 1 Negatives made any time or - place by appointment. , ' ' Phone 147-J. 1 ", We'll' do;tli rest.'. J. B. PALMER ' ' Medford. "2fW IfSist Main Street. : Star Brand Typewriter Ribbon give clear, permanent copies. Will not smut, dry out, or fill the type; . Buy typewriting luppll of - MEDFORD PRINTING . COMPANY This mower-frame is more liborally propor , :,- tioncd and henco is heavier and more- sub- ...' .. X stantial than is tho common practice. It is - - made in one solid , piece and both tonguo ' : socket and pitman extension are heavily rib-' bed to ifl'ovcnt vibration and insure slubil- ity. ' '','- ' ''. : 'Vi-;':-,'.',,'' Liberty Loans at par for Merchandise ' Hubbard Brothers U . f. -