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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 3, 1920)
pini sn 'KEDTorrn sixth tkibuae. mkijfokd," "okeoon. moxpay. may n. 1020 i t LOCAL W. C. T. U. IS Tc,l,; ASHLAND. M.iv filiestiullilhlc n:uvies ;mr lo film- under tin' Ijmii, ii well .'is chii'j- ml intoxicant, in jH-eonhijH'e v. ith tin' WllitW 1-itlllMH 11)1 A't-IIH-lll II- -!lt lilicil :it the rc't-nt rouniv -inv.-nt n-n of the Voljifii' ( !ui-t!iin 'tVini'"r- nwe I'ljiuii J'ltri-i, in -e--ini A.-'il As till- US i-i-ll-ur.-.hiti i.t l!l ir is oiirerncl, i):itiun:il n i-r-rjit i hut runsiderw! i-t'l icii-nl -nn:l''h. -': SCilUCIltlv Ct l'orts will lie ir ;l 1! I- li) li:ic tllC Ct'llSUlsllitJ I'tcj'l I II l'lC(-I illLr Mil'.' t;i veil (Miniiniiriit v. Tin' tmti:nti Iliiitinst tiihur'-u will iniliiillv Im- M::iii nil ('(lncationitl mil', ruiluucil itii vih-Ii further rcstrii'l i f n.i'ji-uif- ;is ii:;'v lie deemed jmI i-alli il lii-iiiL' ent that proliliii iii'j tin -nil nl ciiir ctteK to niiiiiirs is not c;i Irvine tin I'rosfi'iption Jiir cnoii-h to meet the 1-IIMTLM'IH'icS ol' Jl sitlllltioll V 1 1 i f I ! tin- W. (". T. 1. con-iilff- :i vital i-ii.' tiK'nni'itii: tin- outli ol' tin- liiinl: lii'iicc there will he :in open tiuht n'jiiiiiM tohneeo in unv l onn whatever, :tn.i a ciiiiipiiiL'i with this re.iiill in view lias liraetif-iillv heen ileeiilei! lin!:. :i first step heiin- to eliniinitte the aitver tisini; of the "weed" on hill honul-. t ) 1 rU'-1 1 .n t the eoiintrv. Stale le-is-lation in behalf of Sabbath nh-i-n-I'liee will alo receive attention, in connection with a movement for in stitlliiiL' eelisorshiti hoards 'for niovi" hliows in sniall towns as well as lie' liitr ones. The count v eonrt will at-11 he petitioned in hehalf of an niiro priuliou for the sui'iiorl nf a niatro.i to look alter the moral delinquent -in the eoiinl v at lai-ue. Kesollll ions aiil ill"; to all llle fore uiiiiK.' phases of welfare work were presented and exiieilitiouslv ,'n-ted upon at the reeenl Ashland I 1km iiiir. the eonimitti'e havinir these specific mutters in ehar":e heini; .Mrs. .1. ('. Wood. Mrs. . ,. SiriL".'s. mid .Mrs. II. II. I.ooniis. Mrs. A.-herafl. of Ashland and .Mrs. Ih.well f Medio:-.;. laetfullv nianaL'ed an ideal iimur: which ineoriiorateil limelv subject, on "Kdueational I'rohletns.'' hv .Mr. IV rozzi, "Tlie Jloviie,' I'ieture Show." hv Mvh. Ilovt. and "Moral IMia ation" liv -Miss Hurnelt. Aureeahle to a eor dial invitation c.vlemlcd In the eandi dales for puhlie office, irrespective of partv affiliation to he present ;i! tin; convention and Voice an expres nion of opinion ri"'ardinu' their atti tude resieel in..- nneslions al isue liendinir the L'eneral eleetiun, unite u few responded it! n pleasing and c' feelive manner, this feature of in" liroiM'nin proviiur an interest in... inno vation eonneeted with the pi eediie:-, of the :i(ith annual unlhcrin.- of the Ashland unit held in reunion with the miil-vear convention id' tin- Jackson county V. ('. T. I'. ori;,ini.nl ion. EAGLE POINT EAGLETS BtA-t nowiott .1. i.. uonoriKon, our hoss farmer, wan In town Wednesday afternoon nml reported t lint hi- had fitly aereii of corn plumed mid v' pusliinK hus Iiiohh ho us to kui a hiinilreil acres moro plimtoil. Ho does business on u larKo m-ale. J. AVattenlniiK. who lias chnruo of tho Joo Itader farm on Anlelope creek, hrouKht Ills aulo In Wuilnes clay to tho C'hildrelh shop to havo II lopulreil. (Win. Lewis, our sheep IiIiik, took a hand of about sun sheet) thru here. BoIiik south o tho raai;e so as lo save the crass norlli or here for tils sheep while, shearlui;. Ho experts to eoln moni'o sliearliiK next week, uhnul May 4 or a. C.eorKO l.oo.seley of Ashland anil lllH son Kay of fori Klaiuatli, ealue ill Wednesday, olok dinner, had a talk with Fred .Nell, who has iharne of hla caille, and went vaek to Ash land that evenini;. Willie liere Mr Kay l.oosoley made arraiiKenieiils with J. 1. (Join, our ar.ate man, to j;o out to Fort Klaaiuth and assist in caring for his stork, and Mr. (loin started Friday nioruiuK. Mr. lioin has heou a regular hoarder al the Sunnysldo the most of ihe time for over a year and Ihe people of the Fort Klamath country will find him un all rii-.ht fellow. II. .1. Hevani'V, our hanker, look a trip up into Idaho lookiilK over the field for business and returned Thurs. day to his post in Ihe K.ie.le 1'oini bank. In my lasl loiter there was a mis take as lo who was nssistan! e;isbier hy su ffer the oiscem ft r. cv:a embarrnsstm-fits of a Coitrc,' O.G.C. pr.-p.iratLtti f,.r Kutm- li is t-. n-lilt-u nun). Why p;iy urii rnl Iuifi.ii.,1 Hi.I!.. I. t ,., (ip.:inn.-.ii (t r. tmm-.i kl.tiu-mIi. n ( ' t, ( . can hi (t't;nh tl i-r Mali .i cti):ai a A : Kialliih inlinifi i f) 1 f tl,.f. tlr i I." .1 ... .. .. fulury rciiulti, or y n r nnn.y will I , f futid.t. O ti.C. in m.IiI Jn. -. t. by ni.nl only. Wiil.'inr I,,,,.!. !.(. O.O.C. Ct!I;MICAI. COMPANY in 1 1)0 Kalo I'ofnt ban It: it hhould have lioi n that Mi.-.s Mawl Hrowii wa a.ssilant and that .she had charm f ihe husiiH'ss of the hank dnririK 'Mr. Ifevaney's aliH'-nce. Mrs. Mury A. Wright, fonm-rly Mrs. Mary A. Wrinht JliiiKi;r, now ! ivurc-d from James KiiiK'.;r, was h-re Thursday pa'-kitm uj hr furnl Hirv and prparini; to take it to lier homi in Albany, Ore., us she lias sold her house and lot to Mr. Mittelta-dt. M is.; Nydati X'il was a pa.si-nj;r on the Jiulie Fall; .stae Thur.sday on lice way limine. Or. ,1. L. Hohnes, the .Med ford vet - rifiary. and VA incr I'i-i ers ol Med Itird. f ailed for dfnnf-r Thursday and fo did Victor lturseli, a popular can didate for county commissioner, and hr. KirsfliKcssner. There was a fair representation of t he 111 k s went from here Thursday evening to (Jrams Pass. They were, Fred IVlou.e, i(. (;., J. I- and Win-! Krown, J. il. Holmes and Hoy Ash pole, and (hey started to have a good time find report that they hud it. I. K. Whitley of Persist and I). I., Vuii Need a came out from Med ford cm the stae Thursday and Mr. Von Needa went to M-dl"ord. Mrs. I'M Tucker and daughter of Brownsboro, wen; shopping liei'i. Thu rsclay. Charles Nickel who has been I he foreman on the J. H. Cooley on-hard lor .some time past resigned his posi tion and expected to move to Phoe nix today, Saturday. Kills Oavidsou of Applciite, and W. C. Hailey of Mcdford. came anil spent Thursday niht wit h Mr. Hailey was conversing for a silo company. There seems to lie considerable' travel on tin roads now but I hey ate still very rough out in the hills. Then were three men went up lo Butt Fulls Thursday on the stage and oik man was left for want of room in tie ar on account of the heavy mail and parcel post. W'e had a very in leresi ing out laiumeiil by our school Friday and the attendance was unusually large in fact alter the folding dooj's had been opened so as to throw the two lower rooms into out; and the seats and chairs had been placed so as lo fill all available space, leaving tin most of one room for the children lo perforin their parts, about every seat was filled and several sat on the win dow sill. The exercises commenced wil h Ihe usual singing, led off by Mrs. It. (',. Brown and Dr. Holt Hing ing Whispering I lope. Then Ken- tuiky Itell by the Nth grade students. This was followed by recitations by the students of the dll'ferentgrades, and then the grammar grade gave an exhibition of pb vsical culture I hat was very fine. This was followed by Pied Piper! story, told by 1 )orot hy Pierce, and dramatized by primary pupils. Little Misii horothy is a little tot and went l h i n with her long part of Ihe play without a breakdown and I may say that the primary pupils carried off the laurels, considering t heir ages. This was followed by character build ing hy Hix little girls. These were followed by different recitations by pupils in the lower grades. Then we had n history drill that wfts fine, by t ho Mb grade, it was remarkable wit h what prompt ness they answered the questions and such a quantity of them. This was follow ed by story and pantomime by Jane Van llurdenburg and Dorothy Coy. Wo then had tho Indian club work that was fine, given by the grammar grades. These were followed by reci tation by Kenneth .lack. We then had a fine display of physical culture by tho primary grades followed by the May Day dnnco by six little girls (hat was well rendered. Tlijs was followed by a spelling contest by the Nth grade. They spell ed I'M) words and at the close of the hundred words the judges called ofl the number of t host1 who missed spelling one or more words ami they took their seats leaving five who had not missed and then the principal, Miss Lansing, resumed the work to see who would win out, and for some time it looked as tho we were going to be kept there for some time, but finally they began to drop out until the class was reduced lo two, Cyril llaak and Miss Cleo Robertson, and tor quite a while it was nip and tuck between them, but finally Cyril llaak missed a word and Cleo spelled it . making her the champion speller ot i be school but I must say t hat t he spelling was fine and the all deserve credit for the work they have aecont plbhcd. This was followed by folk dances by the grammar grade. Kittle lied Kidini; Hood by primary grade and t hen song by gram ma r grade. Owiii to the length of the program I have had to abbreviate on account of space but taking the entei taininent all thru it was simply fine and the teachers, M iss Lansing and M iss Young are entitled to a great deal ol credit lor the i: re.it pains they have taken in instruclint; their pupils. C. II. N.itwicU came out from the work on the Crater Lake high v. a and report s that t hey have about forty men at work at pio-eut and are pushing the work iii-.h; along. Fred Neil came in e-t day fo; dinm r and so did O. I. Mci oert Poi tl.iud. John Hoi's, one of the fere ; : an t.er-j, tame o er from l'.-i . an I'.j ' Fib!a. Mis C L. S.-hicffelin. s. iet.u o' Ihe Ked Cro-s of M.-dmrd. - w.;s be!, lo attend the M-hool ent'-r a:;-p.ei! Mies llrhna and Li-s-ie ).v:.i ranie in f!om tbt i;hhirhood today hand. He had it caught in a saw a the iniprey miil and cut off the en of one of his fingers. Mr. Thorn, a s-jlieiror for the Wes tern Farmer, was ht-ro for dinner to day and so was Thomas Fiif-on, .Mrs It. I. Stuart and Miss Isabel Stuart o Medford. Mr. Fumih represents ai insurance company. Mr. Isabel who has charge of th Wm. Von dcr llellen farm on Kec 8' creek, was in town today and report that thi-y are shearing Mr.- You dc 1 lolleu's goats. PRICES. WILL FALL WHEN EXPORTS TO Pi r. ap iiid Heiieiiuei Saturday. ib-orge Laidley and li L. Cn ean-e in on i he stage tnun Med lord a tot went up to Hutie Falls. Tle-y an hoi h forest service men Win. Marion of lK'ib. came in thi morniug to have Dr. Dolt dress his EDECL NKW YOItK, May :j. Bankers educators and economists of tin 1'nited States and Kurope discussei the facts and causes of inflation am high prices and their remedies at tin semi-annual meeting of the Academy of Political Science, which openei here today. Dr. li. M. Anderson, Jr., of tin National Bank of Commerce in New York, declared that tho shortage ol goods and tin; attendant speculaiioi is the prime cause of present higl prices in this country. "When our enormous export bal ance disappears and when our do mestic junrkcts are called upon ti absorb three or four hundred millioi dollars worth of goods a month which they have not been absorbing we shall see lower prices", he de clared. The speaker said that increased product ion had been expected whei. the five million men withdrawn fron. industry for Hit; army and navy, re turned, but that it had not come. Dr. Anderson declared bank expan sion ha?, been "more a passive result I hau an active cause of the risinj. prices." Kdwin T. Kcmmerer, professor ol economics and finance, Princeton u n i ve rs i t y , after rev i e w i n g the t wo groups ,of causes for inflation Ihe country has experienced which he classified as "non-war causes anil war causes," he said: "We won oui independence nearly a century and a half ago in a war financed predom inately by paper money inflation, wc maintained the union a half century ago by a war financed extensively by paper money inflation, we have just preserved our political inheritance by a war financed in tho FniteU State: 1,'!V:"1',' by deposit currency in flation and yet we nearly all con demn inflation as a most inequitable method of financing a war. "The great difficulty has been, and I fear will continue to be, that fi nancing a war by inflation, with all Its injustice and with its necessarj aftermath of economic and social problems, is none the less both polit ically and economically, during the war Itsell, the line of least resis tance. li FILE, SAYS KOSKBFKC, Ore., .May ?. Ap proximately 2aO applicants have filed on Oregon and California rail road grant lands, according lo W. 11 Canon, register. This number in cludes those who exercised .squuttei rights and also those who have taken their preference right. A lurue por tion of the applications were receiv ed from squatters who are filing on lands on which they have made their homes. However, ex-service men are now filing in large numbers on various units an. I it is expected that more than ::."0 wilt have placed their ap plications before the drawing is held. There are only a few tracts with con llictiug applications. It reached your eyes Did it reach your HEART? MAKES SUICIDE BLUFF FolM'l.AND, -Me.. M;( ..--(.. I. t'ra:i;. pa I rdican with tin- Ai:to 'Iheft I .urea u ol lie- I 'm t la ml indue de I'ait'Mt nt. wa- held in iail here t -lav ;i- ttie re-ult ol an e-cM;:le :! hi. In liit Ye-leniaY. v. lieu, aerol di'l'. lo tile poller, he -.hot lino-elf in tie' band in an ai!i"-.ed atU'ieiM at s:ueiilr. t I. ml; I. ail ii iea;l been pi:hln'l erili ei-ed by one of the local j-nlge- l.l ! In-, irre-t o! lour box, and llil--. ''.'; police sa, hud made him ile-pomle: ;. j ;:nd eau-cd liini lo make Mii.-.d. ; thread. i Apply Zomo, the Clean, An tiseptic Liquid Easy to Use Does Not Stain Creasy salves and ointments should. n.t Iv applied il" pod clear skin is wanted, l iom any dtuist lor .r SLIM.) lor 1;ikc Me, cct a NUlc of .t'iii' When applud as directed it tt'cctivcly removes ram:i, (juu-Uly stop; tichitK'. and lu-aU skin troubles, alsi rcs, burns, wounds and dinting. It ix-uc-t rates, cleanses and sthe. Zttno is a clt an, (ie;x-ndalile and inexpensive antist giL' hguul. Try it. as we W-licve nothiiK you have ever u.-d la as dice live and s.iti-lymi;. The li. W. Kmi Co.. CtM-UKl. 0. You've seen the interchurch advertising. In newspapers. In magazines You know that 30 great denominations are co-operating in a world plan to make each church and each denomination render bigger, broader service for all mankind. You know something of the needs that must be met More and better hospitals More and better Christian schools More doctorsabroad More teachers abroad A living wage for ministers Americanization Meeting the rural problem An expanding program in our American cities An adequate program of Evangelism for the whole world To make the spirit of Jesus dominent in our national and world problem and program Ynu'vc read ol' this il reached your eyes, lull: lias it reached your heart? Millions of nieiiilier.s of our churches have already responded generously! The response is growing every day, every hour. IJut hundreds of thousands who are not connected with the churches, but are friendly to the Kvanu'elist ic and Philanthropic program of the churches, have not been reached hence, this direct appeal. If you have not been asked lo fjivo your share to Ihis. Clod's work for mankind, give now and give from your heart. NOW (live now. .Don't wait for a canvasser to call. You need send no payment now your promise will be sufficient. Please fill out the pledge below, (live the niaximu maiuount according to your ability to give or as you have been prospered this has meant thus far amounts ranging from many hundreds of thousands per month down to $-)0 a month. a mouth, $7) a month, 1 a month even the smallest amount will help carry on the great work of the Kingdo mof (iod just 1 lint much further. AVrite your address plainly and mail the pledge below today. INTERCHURCH WORLD MOVEMENT Tl'.c iiul.lkation of this advertisement is made possible throuqh the co-oneratlon of 30 denominations. TEAR OFF AND MAIL TODAY! In recognition of the goodness of (iod. I want to assist in making possible the en largement of the missionarv. benevolent, educational and philanthropic work of the CO OPERATING CHURCHES IN THE INTER CHURCH WORLD MOVEMENT And I hereby agree to give, for one year only. .May .13, IflL'O-May 13, 1921, tho sum of $ which 1 promise to pay' in Monthly installments, beginning May 13. 1!)'J0. (Quarterly installments, beginning May 13, 1920. Payment in full by check herewith. Name Street Address City State ; Send pledge or make out check to Walter Frazier Drown, .Jackson County Campaign Manager, Medford. Oregon. ' n George M. Fowles, 45 West Eighteenth Street, New York Citv.