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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1920)
POTE SEC DECLARES TREATY RES WILL BE AN ISSUE IJ f l TO - i W fin d iter? is ackartjbrjrour. car' Our Board of Lubrication Engineers has deter mined the correct consistency of Zcrolene for your make of car. Its recommendations are available for you in the Zerolene Correct Lubrication Charts. Get (, , one for your car at your dealer's or our nearest sta tion. Use Zerolene for the Correct Lubrication of your automobile, truck or tractor. STANDARD OIi; COMPANY California). Jlgmdefor tack type of engine W. E. Walker, Special Agent, Standard Oil Co., Medford ' . ft, mm mi Said Theodore ROOSEVELT: (( TVEN men who are not profess fj edly religious must, if they are frank, admit that no community permanently prospers, either morally or materially, unless the church is a real and vital element in the community life." Put n church in a town and all real estate values increase. Put a church In a town and it becomes at once a center of inspiration for better schools, better politics and general community improvement. Put a church In a town and you insure a community where law and order reign; where the personal and property rights of men and women are respected, where children grow up trained in the ideals that have made America great. Kill the church and you kill the Voice that is con stantly calling men to more unselfish living. Kill the church and you cut the nerve of your hos pitals, your colleges, your civic organizations and even of respect for government itself. w Thirty denominations, realizingthat the problems fac ing them are too great to be solved by any one da nomination alone, are cooperating in a great forward campaign under the name of the Interchurch World Movement. No modern business could have made a more scien tific survey or the task than these denominations have made. No budgets could be more carefully drawn. You have the satisfaction of knowing that every dol lar you give has its post of duty assigned to it in advance. Every dollar for a better America and a better world. For an American where the iik-uls of Washington and Lincoln and Roosevelt will continue to grow strong. When your church calls on you in the cam paign week of April 25th give, and give with your heart as well as your pocket book. INTERCHURCH "Wforld Movement of North America The fuHiiaiim tf ihn tdvtrtistntnt h mjJt pctiitU thrittgh the tmfiraticn tf thirty Jrntmiintmm, MONTKYIDKO, April 21 Kornia lion or an "Ameriejin lenmie ' on a basis of absolute eouulitv betwiv American nations for common actiii against atrirrrssioii tliieatcnini.' anv one of them from outside nations anil lor arbitration of Inter-American disputes, was proposed bv Dr. Halt azer liiiim, president of L'riiLMinv, addressing students of the University of Montevideo tonight. lr. ftrum declared other American eouiilrics should make a declaration similar to the Monroe doctrine, to obtain the solidarity of the American continent, lie said should anv mem her of the "American leairuo" have controversy with the Lcaiinc of Nn tions, that nation should ask for tl co-operation of t he "American League," in settling the cont rover Taking up the Monroe doctrine. In' llriiin pointed out how it hud "con stitutcd, on the whole, an el'fieue lous safeguard to the territorial teuritv of nianv American countries. Dr. Rrum asserted the entry of the United Slates into the war was "an tii'ipated application of the Monroe loetrine," adding: "Owini; to the state in which Euro p.ean countries remain after the stru ;!(!, it may he said that fear of ii vnsion bv them in America has been removed for many years." 'Hut is that sufficient reason for us to take no interest in the future, anil turn away from the Monroe dm: trino with the pretext it is now un necessary?" he asked. "I believe that today .more than ever, wo should usi foresight in searching for formulas that may assure forever the peac and full independence of American countries." Heferring to his selicmo for nn American league," as Iho same us President Wilson proposed organizing Dr. Brum thought it could eo-exisl with the League of Nations without difficulty. lie pointed out that unsettled bonn (larv micslions were still embarrass ing many American countries and said settlement would be possible bv the "American league," without appeal to the League ot JVations. liegarding the internal ouestions of individual nations, he thought no intervention hould be permitted unless two-third of (he allied countries decided to in tervene. President Rruni expressed belief that the American political .-world hould also declare against diplomatic interference bv outside nations. WHISKEY PRESCRIPTIONS LIMITED IN CHICAGO CI1TCAC10, April 22. Chicago :hv sieians will be limited to 1(11) whiskey proscriptions every three months, be ginning May 1", Captain Hubert How arti, promou ton commissioner, an nounced today. The allotment now is Ihree times that number. IO EUGENE O'BRIEN COMING IN "THE BROKEN MELODY" In a play described as one of the most lavishly produced pictures of the season, Kugene O'lirien will again ap pear before local patrons of the screen when his new picture, "The Hroken Melody,' opens a two-day engagement at the Liberty theatre to morrow. "The Itroken Melody" is a ronian- ue srory oi two voung artists, a painter and a singer, who attempt to climb the ladder of fame through the 'Ucntioe nT their love for one nnotli.y.- only to find that love is (he force that drives all ambition to success. It is a sympathetic tale of bitter sac rifices and the unfaltering fidelity ol two strong hearts .and is said to lie the most pleasing vehicle the popular lar lias hail. Miss Hcminq at Rialto. Violet lleming the stage star ol 'Three Faces l-'asl" win, ini.,,-,,-...i .i the Page hist night, U at the Ki;.It,. theatre lor the lia ance of Hie week in "The Cost." This is an excellently handled pieturization of David fira ham Phillip's novel of eolleee anil political lite. Miss Hcmine- prove- hor-olf nn actress of charm and con siderable emotional nr,iu-iK4 Tin. Cost" abounds in well conceived cues of college life, and good act- r bv a more thsili emmtxt.mt ...,t including Wut'liurton (Iambic. Kahili Kellard, Cailotla .Monterey, and Kd win Mordant. llarlev Knoles who aKo handled the special. "I.ittl.. Women," directed. DKK MOINMCS, la.. April 22. President Wilson and the peace treaty were condemned and the railroad law commended by Senator ' Cummins; president pro tempore of the senate, in an address here today to the Iowa republican convention. Predicting republican success next Xovember Senator Cummins said a republican president should be chosen "because it is high time that the presi dent should be a right minded man." "Kur surely," he continued, "eight years of mystery, 0f uncertainty, of inconsistency, of abnormality, of in conceivable twisting and turning in the office of the chief executive arc punishment enough for all the sins and blunders we may have commit ted and we have earned our einaiici pntion." Senator Cummins characterized the law returning the railroads to pri vate ownership as "a great forward step in progressive and constructive legislation," containing "a code for protection of railroad workers." iieiterating advocacy of anti- strike legislation, Mr. Cummins said the railroad labor board is "a tribu nal which will render the railroad wage workers a surer and higher jus tice than they can ever hope to se cure through a strike." The treaty of Versailles will be a campaign issue, said Mr. Cummins. who asserted that it contained "un constitutional and treasonable pro visions." ;l.ilMNi The greatest problem now facing America. Mr. Cummins said, is "to re adjust the disordered relation which has inevitably appeared between wages and compensation for personal service and the price of commodi ties." Increased production, he added, was the remedy.'' ILE AT MILES Get you there and bring you back with a smile How's This? Wo Offer One Hundred Dollnrn for any cnae of Catarrh that cannot bo cureti oy Hairs uatarrn Medicine. Hall'B Catarrh Medicine nan hann tnlren by catarrh sufTorerrf for the past thirty five years, and has become known as the moat reliable remedy for Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood cj the- Mucous surfacen. exnelhne tha Pol. son from the Blcod and healing the dis eased portions. After yon have taken Hall's Catarrh Medicine for a short time you will eve a Krcfit Improvement In your general health Start taltlnjj Hall's Catarrh Medi cine nt onfo and got rid of catarrh. Send for loHlrnonfnlB, free. j .i. tmi'JMi'Ji fir M'oieuo, Ohio.' FnM hv nil lntP"Hsts. 75o. A. W. Walker Auto Co. Medford, Oregon CHANSLOR & LYON. CO. Pacific Coast Distributees Largest distributors of automotive equipment in the world 'i'aifuMrail liriiiniiiMiMM-friin eals Cooked Automatically Could Xot Stand Straight It dots not take lonir. when iho kidneys are out of order and not do- niK tholr work nionerlv. for unison ous acids to accumulate in the system and cause aches and pains. P. C. Da inond, 2St!o W. 30 St.. Cleveland, O.. writes: "I raught cold and It fettled In my kldnevs. .Mv linrk wero so1 lame snd soro I ronlil tint stand straight. I used Foley Kidney IMIls Willi Rood res u I Is nnrt nm irlnH lo testify to their helping power." BIG BEN'S BROTHER WILLING WESTING-HOUSE DOES THE TRICK . In the morning before you go shopping set the automatic time switch at 11 o'clock (or whatever time you want the heat turned on) and your meal will be cooked to a turn at noon. Why be a slave to your Cook Stove? Why not cause it to be a silent reliable slave to YOU? ' ' Miss Grace Bogue of the Westinghouse Company i s Demonstrating how it can be done, At PEOPLE ' S ELECTRIC 5TORE 214 West Main Street. 1:30 to 5:00 p. m. " . !i CALIFORNIA-OREGON POWER COMPANY ' Medford, Ore. ' . ' i' J