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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 15, 1921)
TXflE ETCiTTT rEDFOTJT) MATL TRTBUXR fEBFOD. YRKC;0s. FRTDAY. APRIL 15. SWEAR OFF I "No-To-Bac" nas Helped thousands to break the costly. nerve-shattering tobacco habit. Whenever you have a longing for a HKarc-tte, inar. ))i. or for a chew, Just ihu.-e a lian:iliH.i No-To-Hao tablet in your inoulli i" Htead, to help relieve that uwful de Hire. Shortly the habit may be com pletely broken, and you are better nit mentally physically, financially. It's no easy, so simple. ("Jet a box of .'o-To-I!ao and If it doesn't release you from all cravinu for tobacco, in any form, your druBiilst will refund your money without question. Adv. WI1KX M'B SAY "Master Tailoring" We mean the highest type of hand tailoring that is possiblly turned out. Hundreds of men and luetics recognize the superiority of our tailoring and you, too, will ap preciate It after you have elveu It u trial. And with this tailoring service goes the finest foreign and American woolens the most exclusive weaves and patterns we hnvo ever shown. PRICES ARE DOWN considerably lower thun a yeur ngo. HUBER Ladies' and Men's Tailor I E. THE BALKA ' s; CoXSTAXTINOroJS Swindling' Of travelers in con nation with pahsort vjhcs has hucoiiit one of the favorite i ma ns of Jiv-llhood of minor officials in ttitf Orient, ami Haiku n ountiien. Mjh. .1. II. K. Jv.liy, wife of nn A inn it an luisim-SH man living in London, w:ih riMontly a victim of this fraud while traveling on the Orient KxprcHs, running from hre to Paris. When the train was passing from Itul aria into Serbia, at 2 o'clock in the morning, an official in uniform lepre fentlnK hiniHeif a a u Serb inHpeutoi. demanded to nee her passportx, in formed her that the vine obtained at the Kerb J,eKiition in !onntanlinoile was invalid and ordered her to leave tin? train. Alter protestations, he consented to accept $35 to let her con tinue her journey. She had already laid $;i0 for vises, of hep passport. itefore leavinn Constantinople many travelers aru obliged to Kivo large nuniH to get vises which later may be declared invalid in this manner. '' Make T!i? Oregon Your Hotel 1 WHEN IN PORTLAND ropuL.n spacious loijbiv At the Center of Everything Broadway at Stark St. V auuKcat you write, phono or wire for itcHurvutions AKT11UK II. MKVKH.S, MullllKcr ; WE REPAIR Batteries, Generators, Starters, Ignition, Lighting, Magneto Systems All Work Guaranteed. Official Service American Bosch Magneto Co. Perkins Auto Electric Co. 27 N. Grape St., Medford, Ore. Phone 237-R Night Call 985 AUTO PAINT SHOP L. 0. SPRINKLE, Prop. Automobiles Painted and ; Kevarnished j Phnnn 777 221 North Fir. "GeisIt" Ends All Corns Just As Good For Calluses. Mono? Back If It Pails. Thirty seconds after you touch tho corn With tlilH liquid corn remover tho Jttb bine, Rtnbhinir pain of It Btops.tor all tliuo. . . Simple As A, B. C. , No corn, hard or soft, is too old or too deeply rooted to resist "Gota-it." Im. mediately tt UrU'3 antl slirivol.4, tlio ctlKijs looxtm from tho true lle.sti nnil soon you can peel It right ofT with your flnnurs as puliileNSly ns you trim your culls. Don't coddle corn peats. Don't nurse and pamper them. Don't cut und trim them. HRMOVK them with "GETH-1T." Costs a trltlu nt uny drutr itore. Mfd. by IT Lowrenoo 4 Oo.. Chicago, Your Choice of All Makes Oakland 6 lflL'O, moili'l heavy i'mino vuii less tliiin 1000 mill's $1450.00 Cleveland 6 1!):M model, run 3000 mill's, equip ped with front mill renr bumper, spnre tiro, motor-motor. Moolinni cally in first class condition. Guar anteed , $1600 Buick 6 fi-passenger, 1!)17 model. (iunr iinleed in first, class condition $1200.00 Willys-Overland 7-passiii;er, U'18 model. New paint j'ib. Cord tires, 4 spare curds. Motor-meter, power tire pomp. Cuarauteed mechanically in good condition, Velie "-pas.scuKci' V.HH model. Iteauti lid limning ear. Cord tire equip ped. Spare tire, motor, meter und bumper, power tire pump $1200 Dodge 1!M7. Looks like new ' (lood tires. New spare tire, 1 Oil 1 li cense $000 (ilia la lit eed Mechanically Ford Touring ' 1!L(. Hun very little, (iood lires. Motor bored for .starter. Studebaker 6 "-passeiisicr. newly overhauled. Motor rebored. IV I, uxe pistons, new rear end, heavy rear springs, making ideal static ear. Now Stroniberj; Carburator. (lood tires This ear is priced riuht and will make some one want ins; to haul bii: loads to lake or do stage work a fine ear. Chevrolet Touring l!)-0 model. Al condition Hittson Motors 1M S. l-'ir. - I CONSTANTINOPLE. The task of editing a loeal newspaper here is ex actly four limes Dion- difficult than in an American city for here there are Turkish, ilritish, French and Italian censors. . A paper hoie after the censors have finished with it, sometimes bears little resemblance to what the editor in tended. ... . . . . Here are gathered some 20 national ities, and each requites an organ. The Greeks have seven newspapers in their own languages, and one printed in French; . the Armenians have lour in their own language . and one. in French; the Turks, have nine dailies, in their, own language. The .Jews have one in French and two dailies in Spanish, the French have one in their language, the commonly spoken and written language of the Levant; and they also pay subsidies. to several oth ers., The British have one rthe Orient News,, .. .... , ,,v .,: ..... The Arabs have, their organ.. So do the Persians. Likewise the Russians, anil and pro llolshevik. Strange peo ples from other lauds. liave their little sheets... The. Americans print a maga zine of, business and a weekly, the Far Seas, printed by the United States navy. . The Italians. used to have their organ, and .soon will have It ngajn. The lireek Patriarch has his. There Is also In French the weekly bulletin nf the- Vatican's Apostolic Vicar. , It, is an" easy matter to print a paper in English or French. However, con sider that the Jewish paper Is printed in. .Hebrew letters but In the Spanish lanHauge, also that (he -Turkish lan guage requires four kinds of type and has 00 letters to its alphabet. The Arab language is a good deal like the Turkish, except that It is different in accent marks, and the same mny be said of the Persian. . Now put four censors, each of a dif ferent political opinion, 'onto the job of eliminating the undesirable part of these newspapers, mix with three or four interpreters to each censor, so he will know what it is all about and the result is a . distracted lot of editors who print tho news when they may. r The , editors claim they often are obliged to print their paper four times over before issuing It. As this coun try of sunshine and racial heat Is also ti.e land of exaggeration, they may not set up their papers so many times. Dut their printers' bills are heavy and. without racial pride to call forth sup porting money, the papers 'would. many of them, cease to be published Most of them do. . WALLA WAI.LA, Wash., April 14 1'ifly thousand dollars was the value a jury In tho superior court placed on the affuctions of Mrs. .Mary Hughes when It uwarded a verdict of this amount to Philip Hughes against his brother, Patrick Hughes. Mrs. Hughes was recently granted a divorce from her husband. The parties are wealthy wheat ranchers, owning and leasln several thousand acres. Tho plaintiff asked $200,000. This Is said to be Uie largest vordlct ever given In the courts of this state in un alienation suit. The greatest amount ever sustained by the state supreme court is $15,000. Attorneys tor the defendant guvo nollco of ap peal. , OBITUARY UAHUNF.ll May E. Gardner was bora Sept. 1,1th, isr,0, Mrs. Gardner moved to Sams. Valley, Ore., with her husband, L. F. Gardner lu 1!'02. where they kept the Sams Valley store, also the postoffiee. of which she was post mistress until the spring of l'Jlll, when she sold to Mr. C. 10. W'llhlte. Her husband having passed awav April 15, 11110. Mrs. Gardner had been falling in health for several months, when her sister. Mrs. Shut tuck of San Francisco, came to care for her In January and moved her to San Francisco Feb. loth, where she passed nway April T, l'JL'l. Shu is survived by ner two sisters, Mrs. Shadley of lloston, mid Mrs. Shaltuck or San Francisco. Also sev eral nieces ami a nephew. She was always greatly Interested In the wel fare of the community und will be missed by her many friends In the valley. Arabian myths that the roc, now t'xtliH-.t, bore off elephants to feed its yntins. RM1Q1D5 i v.. . (GRANULES) - EilNDIGESTION DttioUo instantly on tongue, or In hot or cold water, or .. tichy Try oda fountain. QUICK RELIEF! ALIO IN TABLT.T FORM HADK tir COTT BOWNK 1 i .1 ' MAKERS OF ' . SCOTT'S EMULSION BLUE SKY LAW PORTLAND, Ore. No efforts have been made to protect small promoters, Inill."penslble side-partners'' of the prospectors, during the era of pater nalism which has swept the I'nited States, Sidney Xorinan, editor of a Spokane, Wash., mining publication declared in a talk here recently at the Third International, Mining .congress. Mr. Norman's subject was "Protec tion for the Promoter." He said "blue sky" laws In thirty odd stales of the union had so circumscribed legitimate efjorts that the greater number of the "unconquerable optimists who in past days brought the opportunities of the west to the public attention" had given up the fight and migrated to other fields of effort. Mr. Norman said he. thought this condition had done much to retard the prosperity of the west in a general way. "It is inconceivable" he said, "that any western state anxious to develop Its mineral resources should so cir cumscribe the efforts or honest men. in protection of fools . who could not be protected outside the four walls of un insane asylum, as to make the bus iness of promotion in a small way pos sible. . . , "The spirit of venture, .which has built the west, must he, preserved if we are to enjoy the prosperity of ear lier. days. Elimination of the hope of big reward, 'blue-sky', if you will, has limited the spirit that prompts the small Investor to put his luck to the touch. Hlg corporations have never engaged, in Initial development work of prospects and probably never will. That must always be lert o the con tributions of the many, collected by the Initiative, optimism and energy of the small promoter, spurred on by the hope of reward.".. Tho speaker believed this to be one of the big questions confronting the mining industry and asked that deep consideration be given to formulation of some national plan by which the small promoter could be restored to former activity. He suggested that supervision of mining and oil corpora tions seeking capital by public Bale of stock he placed In charge . of the Bureau ol Mines under some plan by which the promoter, after establishing bis bona fides with the bureau, could automatically gain the right to seek capital in any state of the union. WILLOW SPRINGS ;; Milk can be sterilized and render ed free of barferia by electricity with out raising the temperature above (ill degrees centigrade. . . : i , Experiments are being, conducted in making soap from clay and tests thus fur Indicate Its cleansing- properties to be even better than pure soap. The J. W. Elden family and their house guest Miss Nelson motored to Ashland Sunday and spent the day picnicking at the park. A chimney fire at the W. H. Harris home, Monday morning caused consid erable excitement for a while. Little damage was done except smoking the wallpaper and blistering wood work. There was little wind and the roof was wet or it .might have done serious damage. ' Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Nichols spent" Arbor Day beautifying the grounds surrounding their new residence on the Pacific highway. Dr. L. A. Salade has Just purchased a new Cleveland tractor. Calvin Hilleter, an O. A. C. student on his way to California from Portland stopped over on Saturday to visit Rus sell Harris. The storm .of last Sunday while of little magnitude on the floor of . the; valley in this district was very severe, along the Kanes creek . road in the t vicinity of, the Ralph Dean and F. M. Palmer ranches. Hailstones, many of them a half inch in diameter, covered the ground. Lightning, struck , in . a, number of. places burning out phone9 ( uiiu umiui iiguuiig systems out ui commission. Last Saturday Mrs. Win. Thompson gave a delightful one o'clock luncheon to a party of Medford ladies. And on Thursday evening of this week the Thompson home was the scene of a jolly gathering. A largo party of Med ford ladies whose husbands were at tending the Elks lodge, made merry tliero until a late hour. M. F. Young has just purchased a new Nash Six and the family gave it the first tryoijt on Sunday. ' ! On Wednesday afterhoon lirsW. K. Parker entertained Informally In hon or of Miss Nelson of Chicago, who is a guest at the J. W. Elden home. -.Children's , i i vi fi lSUKUfc.Kh ot tne stomacn ana consupaiion aic JLJ.the most common diseases, of children, ...jTqs correct them vou will find nothing better than Chamberlain's Tablets. One tablet at bed time will do the work and will make vour child bright and cheerful the following morning. Do not punish ? l:ij ' 1 l' ! : .i 1 - :t riiomko. yvui ciuiUL cu uy giving tucm trtoiui.un. i viw.w- n Iain's Tablets are better and more pleasant to take. fill TlVt TIbM liflfTi MOTHERS FfilEND For Expectant Mothers Used By Three Ieherations NftiTC KW IOOXLET ON H0THIMH0OO AND THt BABY, MM Brapncld RtUUTOR Co,, Dirt. 3-D. Atlanta. Ca. . .. . Licensed.. CITY SCAVENGER, All refuse immediately removed on short notice. Weekly visit In resi dence ' districts. Dally business dis trict. Phone 89S. Central Lumber Company New Stock Lumber and Shingles Yards Central Point. Phone X-2 MEDFORD-ROSEBURG AUTO STAGES Leave .Meilford 11 a. in. Dally- Leave Hosclmrg 1 p. in. Daily - ? MEDFORD-GRANTS PASS 1-liAMO .MKDI'OUI). 10:00 a. m. 1 :00'p. m. , 4:30 p. m. Cars stop at all intermediate points. Waiting room Medfonl, 5 South Front. I.EAVK U1UXTS P.ASH. 10 a .m. 1:00 p. in. 4:30 p. m. rii'one 300 INTERURBAN AUTOCAR CO. Car, Truck and Tractor Repairing Yo stand back of every job wc do. ' . ... 821, V, .TENTH ST. ' . ' . PHOXE 38G-W YOU CAN GET MOST ANY OLD THING AT MOST ANY OLD TIME AT DE VOE'8, The first recorded lottery was con ducted In Hinges lu 144(i. AFTER THE WINTER MONTHS You will want your car. washed, polished 'or simonized for spring and summer use. We are in'a position to give you the very best satisfac tion in Washing,' Simo'nizirig and Polishing Jobs. The Polish we use will not injure the finish on the finest car. G. A. Childers Motor Co. 127 N. Riverside Phone 26 lll-l- 1 ' i i illll WATCH The new 1921 Cadillac Motor Cars on the streets of Medford. owner how much better they perform. Ask any The Coupe Mrs. Frank O. Owen The Touring Car Dr. .7. J. Emmons The Sport Model Mr. T. E. Daniels The Cadillac will out-perform, out-ride and out-last your car rio matter what you are now driving, and its second hand value, when you get ready to buy a new one will be higher than that of any other car. GLIDE AWAY iti A CADILLAC The Busy Corner Motor Co. I 1