Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 19, 1920, Page 3, Image 3

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    luTin o nninnn !
JINAK A Dnhio
DRIVEJNASHLAND
.. . i
WTDTOTTn yTXm TTxTBrTTF'. SnnyFTTOT. OttF.iiON. MONDAY. APRIL 1. Ifl20.
fOTE TUBER
leaving a .
lniuiiK ill-.-.
ork of Ik
'lrrdns o !. apportioned
t"'ing home projects. The
: of lo.-iiy win take aa she.
C 1.1 l.or
oilmen on ih,- br...jd pr
all will t) hcnefUed thei
lively a oudget of S-;n
proposed, but when t .-
: woiners s , 0Ver h
I week, r-.-ui;., it! ay i
, prcviuus el:
, mem loar.i
top
bi-h;
ASHLAND, April 19. Tliere will
M municipal uprising in ill.. ,:!
town on Tuesday morning. April :'u.
promptly at ten a. ni.. when Ashland
tUI be at the mercy of forces niili
aBt durini; a period of four days,
paradoxical as it may appear, how
jter, civic regulations instead 01
uurtial law will nevertheless prevail,
lino everybody will be posses,!
Ihe aciuinn h
tuiis. r;; t-.i."
lli.it this ca::;;
1. in hon-.,- t
"i Ashlar.!' i:
help.
Tlie !in.--ip
, i'e!o( k un Tin-!dez.)-j,
,
ruphed. I.at,
s in
'! other i
-s b.n lar
Let it be t
'iiirn is bv
:e roster's
has been
the pre.-er.ti
that, hke
of Koivrt
r Tr.eatares.
pely -,-ver-enieibere-i
lo-.al work-
Violet Fleming in Three Faces East at
the Page Theatre Wednesday Night
:'r;tory. ar.d
t-Js. Heme
rill take plac
:i brhal'
hurrv to
uay morninf?. the rer.
c:ty hull, where the
ir.el will e photo-
iltn iuo oi-.ii.. -I t.,i.-i-1 ia,i irom this group will 'iiate-:iil-
J. that local militant forces will l,e!iz. delineatnm the determined and
ibundantly able to cope with the sit-; 1 .liter exp.-wsion oi the t- pieal h
utlon, without invoking outside aid mid bnos-er. !:' von wi.-h to be
except insofar as suburban neigh-1 Grouped at conlir.itly, join the proc-es-lorhoods
afford. Composing the r.mklsiun at once, for tho manv have beer,
ud file there will bo majors, cap-jcalled, more should and will be oho
Ulns, non-coms, and privates; al.-oisen. On the first day lutuheon at
an ensign in command of the flying I the Hotel Austin will be served on
iquadron which will invade the rural the "Dutch treat" plan, at U' o'clock,
districts. All officers will be on the 1 the campaign tax or the same being
active list, with few brevettcd. and j merely nominal, and all are invited
positively nunc iciiieu. .Majors - eien :no nut Deing included anions
the
W H. McNalr and A. I . llriggs will
be In supreme command of the two
districts into which the town has
been arbitrarily divided Into sectors,
Ilguratlvoly representing the Ar
gonne and Verdun respectively. It
wlli be noted that "divisions" are
commanded by a major whose rank
Is minus the "general" suffix. In
Jlajor McNalr's division there will be
Captains Henry Knders, Fred Wag
ner, Homer Billings, and John Hill:
In Major Hrlggs' division, Captains
Fred Engle, Homer Klhart, Johnny
Murphy, and Wbodrow Wilson Hur
ler, all veterans in the sendee, Inas
much as every single one of them had
relatives, either near or far, in the
late war. Two "Amazon" brigades
of Bhock. troops will support tho di
vision forces,, captained by Mrs. Ito
bcrta Everton and Mrs. Kdith Klmore
having for. their assistants Lieut.
Anna Wagner, Corporal Maude -Max-ey,
Sergeant Laura Pierce, Chiet
Pharmacist's Mate Lorena JIcNair;
Yeomanette Evelyn Paulserud, and
Boatswainess Louise McNalr. Ensign
ired Homes will lead the flying
squadron which Is to invade the rural
districts, having Impressed for his
aides Fred Holibnugh. Hert Joy and
harry Tomlinson. . About a hundred
camp followers will bo closely at tho
beck and call of officers who lead,
and there will be no "forlorn hope"
either, for all details of the munici
pal campaign drive have been ar
ranged. 1
By way of digression from affairs
militant to those civic, the foregoing
preparations refer to the local cam
paign in behalf of fortifying the
Commercial club as to membership
and financial resourcefulness, also
tn nrovlrtn a community budget from
which to make requisitions to meet tractors
a multiplicity of calls due to the im
perative demands of present-day
needs. All remember Ashland's
community chest of the war period,
and how it responded to every appeal
team workers. The mein'oershin
of the team organizations will be
seventy as a minimum, while the
budget teams number ten. including
V. O. N. .Smith. 11. ;. Knders. Sr..
-I. 11. Mcliee. Louis Dodge, L. . Tct
guson. T. H. Simpson. Mayor C. B.
Lamkin. 11. 11. Gillette. J. V. McCoy,
and K. E. Marcy. Mr. McGee serving
as chairman. Local banks, as here
tofore announced, stand ready to
pledge ten per cent of the community
budget, whether the fund is based on
a JtiiJOO foundation or even larger.
58 ACRES AT GOLD
OOLU HILL, April 111 A real
estate transaction of considerable
note was cln.-eii here toilav when V.
W. Ilittle reported the sale of lii:
aS-acre farm in what is known as tin
I!iver.-ii!e cuKmv. two miles we.-t of
Gold Hill, to Hoy II. Gunfield i'"r
1IJ.UUII. Ganfield, trivintr his resi
dence as Medl'ord, will occupv th,'
premises in 110 days.
The little farm a few years 'ast
was a patch of chaparral and rocks
ami was boitsht liv Ilittle at a vcrv
reasonable figure. Builiiim: of the
Gold Hill irrijratiun canal, which runs
above the uroDfrty. and construction
...t ilw. l'.ieitie lliehwav ulom: the
river side of -the property, the con
of which used the rocx-
uttered over the land in road work
have raised the value of the land to
the present sale figure. This sale ha
set a new mark in land value in thi
nei'-'llborhood.
:j. . -rl.- .s.-y. v..,e- . v-TiT' - '
i . - - -W. K'
V
..si. J.
U. S. PEACE
I!
GALLONS OF GAS;SB:
The number and variety of uses of
0
ealions of k?roene. No'- only will
I thf size of 1 his sinplo or. lor op.-n 1
j son'.e- eyes, but iisms'Ko-up is signifi-1
; cant anil disconcert in;. j
' Taking th.- fiptiros of the Imrt-au j
Jot mint. on refinery production last:
year, we find that the output oi sasO
I line was no: quite douMe that of
the output of lu'-ri-
ss than hlf that o: kero-
the army wants ek-ven
ni h pa.so:i:ie f.s KeroM-iit?,
and twice a much lubricating oil.
Tho discord bt-'.ween demand ar.d
sumilv in :hi one order is even
petroleum and its products are con- wort(fur fUt. uil. of which the out
Usually increasing, but even niore!,JU1 jat year was about five times
striking is our increased dependt-nce! that of kerosene; and yt-t the army
oil refinery, notabl
sene. the many types
oils, and fuel oil.
There are said to be 3vrt or more;
products of ne:roleu:n, each with it1
own use. Some of these product?
serve merely our convenience, such
as the artificial vanilla or the cover
of parraffino on the jar of jelly or
marmalade. Others were found dur
ing the war period to be absolutely
essential to industry on a large scale
for example, the heavy oil used in
tempering steel plates.
One picture of the demand for the
principle petroleum products can be
seen in a recent statement of Vnited
States army peace requirements,
which include 7 4 million gallons of
fuel, 11 million gallons of gasoline,
two million gallons each of lubricat
ing oil and prease. and one million
prou
y gasoline, kero-
i.f lubricating -
An important event in the local i
dramatic season will be ushered in ;
next Wednesday night. April 21
when Cohan & Harris will present
Anthony Paul Kelly's gripping play
of the secret service, "Three Faces
East," at the Page theatre.
This delightfully thrilling stage
offering held the stage of the Cohan
& Harris theatre. New York, for the
whore of last season and its highly
successful engagement was inter
rupted by mid-summer heat. "Three
Faces Fast" is a mystery play deal
ing with the machinations of. a band
of German spies and their apprehen
sion at the hand of England's secret
service; but the plot and counter
plot are so successfully manoeuvred
that no one in the audience is able
to discover the master spy thru
prologue and three acts of intensive
guessing. Practically the entire New
York cast will be seen here including
Miss Violet Homing, who created the
leading feminine role of llelene
Director o
The Po
! will hold
1 tomorrow.
iSHOUGK OTtS SMITH,
f l". S. lieoloiUcal Survey.
u 1 1: e r n Oregon V r e b y t e r y
a meeting at Grants Pass
.NATIVE
f3
ftl&hZOO SUSS b
fomfU'T AND JL
R$$tlQQ &QSZS U2
Mown. JnAU,.6IZE jO$,
A TABLET ii te kt tifknM
iuir. Yo& j(t up ia tt rac rur. n Imjqc
u:i'of ftp. Yoa rc nporou, your km
r. that healthy )5r eyt brpit.
y-rur itej eintrc, ir.3 ir.it drhsbrful fteint
I. : youth rrtiicci o 'how who re (etrmg
t'i. MCipe Patter ten. S.ioal. Ind.,
tritfi: '"I am 6f year eld. do all mf own
nvtt, never miu a meal, cat all I want
and my,r.ir.( I want, and ax jwm
tciJT 1 r-.i:y year aro, whxh I
tt:iate m taSrir.r on BLISS NATIVE
HKRUS TABLET each right beicre
nnr-c KO!i'aY-UACK GUARANTEE ia
tidi hex. At all Drug Store. 2C-0
II. M. jmall tire ?3c. w
AL0N2OO.lLISSC0,WASU.,D.C. 3
HWE COLOR IN CHEKS
Be Better Looking Take
. Olive Tablets -
To have a ckar, pir-k skin, kricht
eves, no pimples, a fueling oi buoj-ancy
like chi'dhood davs, you must keep
vour hxiv free from poisonous -astes.
l)r. Edwards' Olive Tablets (a vege
table comjiound mixed 'aith olive oii)
act on tho liver and bowels like calomel
vet have no dangerous after eiicct.
Take one ni'ihtiy and note results.
Thev ftan the bile ana overcome
Licensed City Scavenger.
rvt grK--a;ii.'g.i.;;i,;r..-j
ah retuse luiineillately removed on
short notice. Weakly visit In rest-
ax millions! of I denc8 district. tily bualnes ai-
5. " ' Z oil., in-nivl 25c irict. Thones 505-R.
Tor rosy cheeks, happy 1
smiles, white teeth, good
appetites and digestions: I
Followins the banquet at the B:'P-tii-t
ehurcli Wednesday niuht. Dr. J.
II. Franklin, of the northern Biurti-ls,
poke of "The New World Muvc
ment." He spoke in part, as follows:
"Late in July, 1914, I was in mid
Atlantif when the mirncle of modern
times, the wireless telenraph, 'told
the passengers aboard my ship th:t
Germany was mobilizing for war. A
few days later, when we droppco
u lior at Bergen, Norway, we learned j world movement
at Germain- was moving .T.-amsI
ranee and Bel'-dum. The earth was
leing shaken. .Men were muhii:.
ivilization has failed.' And it
eemed as if the strueturc we eall by of the spirit of ('hrir.t in human re-
that name was, nfter all, morel v n j lationhips. The financial obieetive.
oile of nncemeated stones which were however neeesarv. is not the real
its benefits are as GREAT
as its Price is SMALL!
- it satisfies the desire for sweets,
and Is beneficial, too.
Sealed Tight KePtRteht
1 rr'Ms:s.J('V,
sides of Judea, sanetified bv the
ero.-s of Calvary, lias survived every
a-san:t
Todav. thoughtful men in every
walk of life are seeing that there is
no permanent solution of humnni'v's
gravest problems apart from spirit mil
revival. 'Ye must be bom again.'
'The soul of nil improvement is the
improvement of the soul.' said one of
our groat men. Herbert Spencer de
clared that there is no political al-
ehemv wherebv golden conduct can
be secured from leaden instincts.
Even David llarum saw it when he
said there could never be an honest
horse race until we get an bones!
I human race.
j "The spiritual Tenewal of man, the
1 dissemination of the spirit of Christ
into all human relationships, and iti
application to our domestic, social
I industrial and international rclation
j ships that is the task before us.
That is t ho olnective ot the new
world movement and all the new
of the several de
nominations. No siiiHT-cliurcii is in
tended. No compromise of convictions,
is reciuired. We co-oparate in realiz
ing the great objective is the triumph
tumbling in on our heads. -Men were
living. 'Statesmanship has failed.'
A few. said. 'Christianity has lulled,
to which it was promptly replied,
Prav, when was it ever tried f
"Mnnv have taken the name, but
how few have ever reallv tried the
Christianity of Christ. It is a nar
row way that is pointed out by the
one who said, 'Kxcept a man re
nounce all that he hath he can nol
be my disciple.' The Christianity of
hrist has never been tried widely in
uir social, inuusirai or iniernaiionai
relationship, 'l'rav. when was it
ever tried?' The war was a result
of the failure to apply the teaching
f Christ to our international rela
tionships.
Soon after the war was over 1
was in Kurope again, visiting the sis
thousand square miles of devastated
regions with two thousand towns, vil
lages and cities which were complet
ely or partially destroyer, crossing
the unsalvaged battlefields which
were still bestrewn with unexploded
hells, hand grenades, helmets anil
as masks, and looking upon thous
ands of crosses that mark a portion
f the eleven million graves left bv
the conflict. Those crosses never
failed to sav to me:
We are the dead.
Short ilavs ago we lived.
Felt tiiiivn, saw sunset glow.
And now we lie in Flanders fields!'
Ami all this came because we had
failed to try Christianity in our in
ternational rekitionships.
Winn the war was at its height
for us, llenrv Watterson. the veteran
editor of the Louisville toune:
lournul. wrote these words:
'Surely the future looks black
. L II - 1. - ' 1
enough, vet it noios a noinr. ii siu-i
hnne. One. and one onlv. can arrest
the descent and save us. That
the christian rehg.on. Democracy
is but a side issue, the paramount
issue, underlying the issue ot de
mocracy, is the rel'gion of Christ, nr i
him crucified: the bedrock of eivili
ration: the sour. e nnd resource of all
that is worth having in the world,
that is, gives promise in the world
to coaie: not as an abstraction: not
as a huddle of sects and factions :
but as a mighty force and princ pl.--of
being. The word of God. dclivervl
by lie lowly Nazarine upon the hill-
purpose, iiunurcds oi minions oi
dollars are required merely to pav
the operating expenses of our move
ments. "We can co-operate with each
other, since the eternal co-operates
with no group exclusively. Moreover,
men are changed not so much through
our distinctive doctrines as though
our point of agreement Jesus Christ.
"We would ioin hands ill giving
Christ and his teachings to uien
everywhere. We would go in his
spirit and in his name with his mes
sage and bis works to the ends of ill
earth. Not onlv would we make oral
deliverances. We would establish hos
pitals in darkest Africa. We would
plant schools in Japan. China, India
and elsewhere to train Christian
preachers, doctors, editors, merchants
and statesmen to lead in the Chris-
lianization of their own lands. Chris
tianity is planted in Jnpan. One
minister. Mr. Kannmor. has lead
JSIIO of his fellows to Christ. Thr.
of China's six representatives at the
!oaee conference were trained under
Christian auspices in China. Mr. C.
T. Wang, China's outspoken leader at
Paris, is an earnest Christian man.
Let us ioin hands nnd pro vers nr.d
offerings in the great campaigns thai
lies just ahead. Let us contribute
hundreds of millions of dollars, lile
and prayer to give the world the only
hope 'n single hope ANatterson
called it the Christ of Calvary. Here
is the source of the world's spiritual
renewn.''
FOR SKIN TORTURES
Zemo, the Clean, Antiseptic
Liquid, Just What You
fleed. Is Not Greasy
Dar.'t worry about cc2ema or other
skin troubles. You can have a clear,
healthy skin by using Zemo. Ob
tained at any drug store for 35c, or
extra large bottle for S1.0O.
Zemo generally removes pimples,
blackhead?, blotches, ccicma and ring
worm and make3 the skin clear and
healthy. Zemo i3 a clean, penetrating,
antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor
greasy and sums nothing. It is easily
applied and costs a mere trifle for each
application. I', i: always dependable.
The E. W. Kox Co., Ckvckad, 0.
Those be mighty practical days and it's up to every man to keep on the III I
economical side of every proposition. New motor ears are scarce, so make I I
tt t T7':i0r4 your present ear do. Ami your lord ear will J
V T? 4 moet a11 dcmaiuls if V0U have' 113 keep in g0"d 11
YOlir rOrO mnuingorder. Don't monkev with your car. It 'j
Car Going
is i bit of valuable mechanism and ought to be i
. . . II
III handled by men who know it. Bring your Ford ear tons tor repaus i i
I when needed. 11
C. E.GATES AUTO CO.
MEDFORD, OREGON- '
1 1 Insist on Gcnulno Ford Part. 'II
' '
i G L'l R A
r
TANK-TYPE TRAGTOR
Added Power Same Weight Lower -Price
Because a greatly Increased output means a
lower manufacturing cost we can offer a better
, Clctrac and still reduce tho cost to you.
Burns "gas," kcroseno or distillate. Does more
kinds of work, more il)'s In tbo ycWi at lowest
cost. You can't go wrong on It.
With more power and Improved construction,
the 1920 model will prove to any farmer, any
where, that Cletrac farming is profitable form-Ins-
'
The Cletrac Is the right slio and type for almost
any farm, the one tractor adapted to all con
ditions. It has proved its ability to stand up to
Its work. And now that the public )ias recog
nized Its worth, It Is out In front to stay.
Turns short and works the corners clean. Com
pact and low set. Ideal for orchard work. Trav
els faster and does nioro thorough plowing.
A bigger motor and added strength; no ,tr
weight and no more friction, saving you all the
power we've added.
The new 8-Inch track one-third widecr-means
a lighter tread and stronger grip on the ground.
It's a tractor that has all-year service built Into
It, one that cuts farming coats .by handling all
Jobs wall, not Just a few. - . -
And over 1200 distributors and dealers, , with
repair stocks near you, are backing It, up to
make evcrv Clotrao owner a booster.
One ear late models Just received In Medford. ,
CX1K AM 8KB THKM. '
BEST POWER FOR ANY PURPOSE
HUBBARD BROTHERS