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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1921)
PAOE Einirr MEDPQftT) MATE TRIBUNE, ME'DFORD, OTCKCION, WEDNESDAY. TUNE 1." 192f INSPECTOR FOR POWER CO. WALKS TEN MILES A DAY "I don't believo that anybody In Portland feels any belter than I do 'now, but It's only due to Tan lac that 1 can make thin statement' imid I. A. .Russell, 318 JO. 3flth street, Port land, an Inspector of stations for the Portland Hallway, Light and J'ower '. Company. ' J was In i, "terribly weak and run down condition, and my uppetltu whh so poor that '1 ate little more than enough, to keep mo alive. I had tired, warn out feeling all the time and could scarcely hold up under the leant little exertion. I didn't have uinbi 'tlon or energy enouKh to even want to walk around, and I simply felt miser able nearly all the time, i ''One day a friend of mine told me about thg remarkable Rood Tan lac had done him and he advised me to try it. Since taking three bottles of Tanlac, I am feeling altogether like a different person. I have an excel lent appetite nnd have bo completely regained my strength that I walk from eight to ten miles every day at my work without Its tiring me at all." Adv. FREE! : In order to 'introduce- ft , new ; Kexall 'Fiu-c Powder, we will give one regular size 50c package of . -'.jJ ' ' Violet Dulce Face Powder , lxc with edj'li -iiiireliase of the well known Kexall Coca gutter Cold .-Cretan. Friday and Saturday Only MEXICO CITY, Juilf 1. (Ily the Ahkck-IuK'1 Pi-ckh) PrcHident Obre- Kon, in a circular Benl last cvenliiK to the KuvcrnorH of alt the tttatPa fle- scribed bolHlieviHta aH perHuns acting wholly outHidc the law and retiueHtcd that all jneaiiH and incaHurcH bo ultil- ized to prevent dcmonKtratluiiH of a hoi'Iouh nature by them. CltiriK the forcible entrance of hte national palace during the adminlK tration of CroviHional I'reHident I)e la Hucrtu the recent trciKcdy in More lia and the radical invasion of the chamber of deputlcff uh evidences of aKKt'cwdvencHH on the part of bnlshc viatn, tho prenident declared ho felt called upon to define his attitude "onco and for all." POHTI-AND, Oro., Juno 1. Thore was a strike of meKnonRor boys of the Western Union Telegraph company hero today Ijcchuhc their pay was re duced from two and a half cents to two and a quarter cents on each mes sago dnllvored. Manager Wllliunis siiid 10 boys quit, hut that normul service was being maintained. The hoys said 20 per cent were out. We develop Kodak Films Free. .- LOST OK MISLAID I'ollcy No.'2B6681, Issued by tho Ponn Mutual Life lnsuranco Conipany, on tho lire of QoorKO N. Anderson. Tho finder will plcaso return It to the , undcrnlgnofl. An application lias Iteen mado for tho IksuIiis of a du plicate. , ,'. GEO. N.' ANDEUSON S44 E.'Muln, Asntand, Oro. Those Of xou Who Keep In Touch With Things Theatrical Know That CEO. M. COHANS, COMEDIAN! (kJ K7 m ust WORD IN Musical ISNt lTA SSMP OlDNAMt. ? Is The Most ... Talked Of Musical Comedy Sensation Of The Year AT DATI? MONDAY THE l AVjCy JUNE 6th lrfail Orders Now. Seats Friday lriow, floor $1'..0: liulnmy 2.00, l..'0. SI. phi 10 per en-ill tvnr tnx Latest Arrivals at Auto Camp Grounds Tuesday's arrivals at tho city auto camp Included Mr. and Mm. 11. C. Young and three children and Mr Young's fathor, en routo from Spo- kano to Ashland; Mr. nnd Mrs. A. lUtchie- and two children, en route from Fresno, Calif., to Portland: H F Stophonson and party of fivo from Keuhcn, Ore., spending the day hero; II. Wilson of Sacrumeuto, planning to locato liore; Mr. nnd Mrs. W. Kav and nine others from Merlin, Ore., in a big Hudson car, spending tho day hero; Mr. and Mrs. J. F, FItzon and child of Wntsonvlllo, Cullf., on route to Sunnysido, Wash.; A. C. Young nnd party of nine men and women in two cars from Lindsay, Calif, en route to Washington sUto. BIG PERIL FOR JAPAN (Continued from Page One) of tho jK'ople (no leader, no precon cert) felt that this election would be fraudulent and insignificant and start ed the idea that It should be boycot ted. 1 think it a fact of utmost hio ment that the people considered this suggestion, found It good and are now carrying it out to the consternation. of tho government, which has been tnr ing to save its face by postponing the date of the voting nnd putting forth every effort to get out the voters. H may well be alarmed; the outsider. anyway, will think that nothing could be more ominous. National Feeling Grows 7. It used to be said that the Chi nese had no national feeling; tho only place you ever saw a Chineso flag was on a government vosscl or building and most of the people did not know there waB such a thing. Today you can see'the flag of the republic float ing over thousands of dwellings and stores, in city,. town and village. You can even hear an occasional band ex perimenting with the new national hymn. 8. All this time Wu Pol fu Is slowly gathering his democratic army in Hu nan, his army ok students; for while he teaches them arms he tenches thorn no less the history and theory of de mocrncy and the rudiments of an edu cation. In the view of many this is the coming man of North China and apparently the people are turning toward him as their eventual leader. Please nolo that he is the sternest democrat in China. 9. Mack of everything else is the steady pressure of the American idea; for ns I told you before, it is America that has Inspired nil this. In evoiy Chinese city tho students returned from American universities and ardent with new ideals are the core nnd nu cleus of on Indomitable progrcsslvism. rtut beyond oven their ceaseless activ I itlcs and influence towers to the Chi : nese mind the example of one nntion which has never exploited China, has stolen no Chinese toriitory, worked no swindling railroud concessions hero, played no tricks, tried to soil no opium nnd Is at the same time a nation where tho government Is tho will of tho peo ple. It Is tho owor of these ideas that has mado what there Is of Now China and I can see no reason to think it will stop where It is; having, the more faith in it when I stop to remem ber the character and worth of the peoplo on whom it is working. Thorcforo, the present day condi tions may bo as bad as tho worst rep resentation of them; they nre, nfter nil, only .superficial, tho froth nnr for mont boiling to the-top. Thore never was a revolution on earth that wus not followed by these manifestations. Nor one in which they did not subside into the ways of rational progress.' Nor one that wont backward! It will be so In Kussla, It will he so In China, It will bo so everywhere in the good time o! lnevitnblo processes. ui u in inu ii.-isnu.iiiiuuu ui inn-en. The -police also had a report that three St. Louis and Han Francisco railway switchmen and u brakeman had been shot to death. The trainmen were killed, it was reported, because they refused to per- (mit members of the opposing mobs to ride upon a switch engine passing between the lines. Tho engineer was reported" to 'have escjiped. . Offlcluls bad hoped that with the coining of duwn the Urouble which bvaun over the arrest of a negro late yesterday for an alleged attack upon a white girl, would die, out. As tho dawn broke Sixty or seventy motor cars filled with armed white men formed a circle completely around the negro section. Half a dozen alrplancH circles overhead. Thoro was much shouting and shoot ing. A row of houses along the rail road tracks vaB fired. A party of white riflemen was reported to lie shooting at all negroes they saw and firing Into houses. The negroes were wild to lje returning tho fire desper ately. With the situation growing admit tedly worse today, efforts were made to have tho threo local companies of tho -Natlonnl ' Guard cope with the trouble pending the arrival of Adju tant Ocneral Charles F. llarrctt, who was reported en route here aboard a special train bringing additional troops from Oklahoma City. ' Under orders issued last night by General Barrett, guard companies in several towns were prepared 'for pos sible duty. 4 Dick Howiand, the negro charged with assault, was removed from the county jail during tho night to a place of safety, it was learned today. and protested nnd tho administration ordered uncfor heavy ponnltlos tho re moval of the notices "Boycott Jnp nnoso Goods!" that adorned so ninny wulls. Forthwith (in some places) under tho eyes of the police, clown cumo the notices. Hut they woro suc ceeded by others that rend "Hoycott Inferior Cioods!" which to tho Chinese mind meant exactly tho same thing. On went tho hoycott oxactly as boforo and was one of tho causes of tho busi ness panic that lilt Japan so hard last fall. If thoro wero anylhlng hottor sottled than unothor nbout tho Chineso it was that they could not oxlst without gam bling. Tho Chineso character domaiid ed It; tho Chinese government had nl wnys legitimized It. Hut ono of tho first things tho new government at Canton did was to close nil tho gam bling houses nnd (hero is now no pub lic gambling In Canton. Even thnt great and famous house on tho river front, so. long familiar in tho sight of visitors by rlvor -clnsod tight as n safe and boarded up, as a photogruph in my possession attests. Sonio ncrvo was required for this reform bocauso tho government receipts from tho gambling houses wero goodly nnd tho iniquities of former administrations had left tho cash box empty. Hut the houses woro closed, nevertheless, nnd remain closed. And tho peoplo npiuovod. 3. Ono of tho lnnovntlpns in Can ton Is nn excellent street railroad sys tem. Inuiglno streot cars In Itabblt Warren Canton, you globe-trotter of other days! After n time, women wore employed as conductors and in alitor capacities, nnd successfully. While I was In Canton one of tho. Incidents of a day was tho appenranco of nil tho woman conductors nnd tho rosl In n body boforo tho office of tho company with n demand for an eight-hour day and somo other concessions. And when they wero nrRiied with about this, they said, Well, that was what their work ing sisters in other countries of tho world woro getting nnd what they wero going to have in Canton. Can wo really bank very far on nn unchanging China If this is tho fact? 4. When tho school teachers struck tho other day against tho Northern government, they struck not In one Place bKt in all places and not pully- huuly but all together. Wo have oven had Instances of the strikes of pupils supported by their parents and spread ing by somo magic fre-o masonry im possible without the sunso of solidar ity. 5. Canton is not tho only Chinese city that Is undergoing transformation At Foochow and Shanghai and else where you will see demonstrations of the same purpose. From a strictly ar tistic point of view New Foochow has even surpnssed New Canton. (And will you look at the changes in Peking It self In the last fifteen years. 6. The Peking administration lias been trying to get up some kind of an election for Its socalled parliament. Somebody or somebodies in tho iimsa RACE WAR SWEEPS TULSA (Continued flora Page One) muuicnted with Governor Jlobcrtsoll and asked for troops. At 8:110 a. m., two white men killed In tho lints had been Identified. Carl O. l.otpelseh, 28, Riimla 11 . Kns., shot through tho breast and F. M. Haker, Havelln, Kns., 27, shot In the back with buckshot, died this morn ing at a hospital. Tho body of on unidentified white man was taken to an undertaking parlor. TCLHA, Okln., Juno l. At 9 n. m., 2.000 negroes hail gathered at con vention hall under guard. It was filled, ns was nlso tho police station. Tho remainder of those gathered up nre being taken to the baseball pnrk, nil under armed guard. Tl'IiiA, Okln., June t Steady gun fire broke out shortly after daylight near the negro quarter of Tulsa, the scene of all night raco disturbances In - which hundreds of armed white men. and negroes took part and which resulted In the death and Injury of an unknown number of persons and the calling nut of Oklahoma National Guard units to put down the disorder. The fire eniue from a spot where throughout the early morning hours 500 white men and a thousand ne groes faced each other across rail road tracks. First reports to the po lice said thnt the bodies of from six to ten negroes could be seen lying In a space described ns "no man's hind." l.nter reports placed , he number of OF INTEREST TO WOMEN A tll.ltlllll.w-t tilfi1..1r..t un... tl,t lit. iiIIuhmiIk nre nut HUrKirul nm's, that is int'y are ntu chummi iy mTUuis iis- iilni-niiiiuilu of i'i-,iu.liu Ci'iniii.iiiiu similar in ehnrncter nre often brought nbout by much nimpler ronriitlnnH. We, thert'foro, urge every woman who sufferM from barkaehe, headaches. Hearing uown pains, himo ache, lr reirillai'tt tes. nrrvoiiu ittMiwimlitiw m wenktH'HH to give Uvrtia K. I'lnkhnm'tt Vegetable Cmnmmml n trinl. It ikim an n natural reNtorallve ami often pre- eutM more nerious troubles. Aav. H s. o. s. SERVICE OF HOLMES IS A WOllllV S.WKK Let Holmes lnuirc . Your lropcrty ' nnd Assume the Worry It. A. HOLMES THE INSURANCE MAN AM Tonus Insurance nnd Honda Jarkn County Hank Itltlg. In a fresh outbreak at 7:30 a. m.. in the Htandpine hill district in the extreme northern section of the negro quarter, Mm. B A.lluorc.a while woman, wan Knot in tho left arm, und Hide. .Min. fiilmoru waH' Htunding on the front poreh of her home, when she was picked off by a negro, one of a score or nioe barricaded in a church. Hundreds of white men. are being rushed to the district in automobllen. An dpen battle Is believed imminent. . The trouble is reported to have started as the result of the arrest of Dick How la nd, a negro a 1 leged to have assaulted an orphaned white fc'irl. First attempts to fire the negro quarter occurred at 1:30 a. mir-Firemen who attempted to lay hose on two burning houHes used as a garri son by about fifty negroes, were turn ed back by tho whites, , . About 6:40 a. m., fires In negro snacks along Archer street were started. Ah the flames spread ne groes with upraised hands and cry ing "don't shoot," fled from the blaz Ing houses. They wore rounded up and placed in the prison camps. Adjutant General Uarrett took up his headquarters at city hall and an nounced that Colonel II. II. Mark ham of Oklahoma City would bo in com mund of field operations of the guardsmen. The negroes assembled as refugees and prisoners were being cared for by civic organizations and private citi zens who volunteered for the work. Ice water and sandwiches were being served and the wounded or sick were receiving medical attention. Throughout the morning long lines of negroes streamed westward along the streets lending to convention hall. Many wore their night clothes and ran to safety in their bare feet. Their Sunken eyes told of a sleepless night and their ashen faces bespoke grip ping fear. ' Men, women nnd children carried bundles of chithing on their Wads and backs. One old woman clung to a bible; a girl with disheveled hair carried n wonley white dug under her arm and behind trotted a little darky girl with a big wax doll. nui u those who came to convention hall were not non-combatants. Repeatedly grim-faced men, ' heavily armed, whirled up to the big hall directly from the scene of fighting. With them, closely guarded, were negro prisoners captured with guns during tho fray. ' ill!!l!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!lllllllllllllll!IIIIIIIIIHIII 1 w. J i '-S ELKSt I Shirt Waist . Dance i I TONIGHT 1 JUNE FIRST 1 Tickets $1.00 Couple Extra Ladies 25c Sit 1 Mann's The Best Goods for the Price No Matter What the Price Mann's Tomorrow Will Give the Shrewd Buyers of Medford Another Great Opportunity to Supply Their Summer Needs at Great Savings OPPORTUNITIES IN SILK DEPT. Crepe de Chene, best quality, 40 inches wide, in navy, black, jade, Harding blue, grey and tan. Sold formerly at $3.98. Op portunity Day $2.19 price, y&rd . . TAFFETA v -36-inch' black Trojan Taffetta, every yard guaranteed. Sold formerly at $3.50. Opportunity Day Je y $2.19 SATIN White - Crepe Back Satin, 40 inches wide washable. Sold reg ular at $4.00. Op portunity . Day price, Si.dX I yard SPORT SILKS 39 inches wide, for the new summer skirts, in tan, coral, Harding blue, grey and white. Sold at $3.50. Opportunity $2,98 Day price, yard . . . '. OPPORTUNITIES IN CORSET DEPT. Women's open mesh Summer Corsets, elas tic top, in pink only; A good $2.50 quality. Opportunity Day price $ 1 i98 pair . . . ; . . , . . . . BRAISSIERES 4 new models Braissieres, pink and white, all sizes)" 75c m values. Opportunity Day Price ,'. " 48 C each ........ CORSETS Women's open mesh Summer Corsets, inch top. All sizes. A good $3.00 grade. . Opportunity Day prce $2.25 pair OPPORTUNITIES IN WASH GOODS Cotton Crepe, best quality, AAA Japanese Imported Crepe in all colors. Sold at 50c. Opportunity Day 39c price, yard GINGHAMS 1000 yards fine Ze phyr Ginghams, new patterns, fast colors, 25c values. Oppor tunity Day 1 9 C price, yard ... MEN'S SHIRTS VOILES 40-inch Dress Voiles in a wonderful line of patterns. ' Up to $1 values. Opportunity Day price Q c yard OPPORTUNITIES IN READY-TO-WEAR 50 new Jersey Coats in a finedine of colors. All wool. Sold not long ago at $12.50. Op portunity Day price $7.50 each DRESSES New Gingham Dresses, 'Sassy Jane' styles. Regular price $3.50. Opportunity Day price, $2.98 each WAISTS New Voile and Lawn Waists in a great va riety of styles. All sizes. Opportunity- Day Pce, $35Q each ...... .. WOMEN'S TRIMMED HATS All this season's, styles, well made,."lnicely trimmed. Up to $8.50 values. $5.00 Opportunity Day price s . ........ . OPPORTUNITIES IN WHITE GOODS Rangoon Nainsook, 36 inches wide. Fine soft finish quality. Our regular 35c value. OQp Opportunity Day price HOUSE LINING 36 inches wide, good quality. Our regu lar 10c value. Op portunity Day ' H price, yard .... BATH TOWELS, Large size, 'heavy quality. Sold "at 75c. Opportunity Day ..,.....33c OPPORTUNITIES IN UNDERWEAR Princess May Union Suits, bodice top, fine quality. Cheap at $1.25. Op "portunity Day price, suit . , ATHENA , Union Suits, fine grade, all styles,. Op portunity Day price, suit . $1.48 GLOBE Union Suits, good, quality, bodice top, summer weight. Op- portunity Day price, $1 CO suit J' -5 r. i Made of fine Percales, all sizes, fast colors. Opportunity $1.19 Day price, ea. Mann's Department Store THE STORE FOR EVERYBODY Entrances on E. Main and N. Central MEDFORD, OREGON MEN'S HOSE v Tar. heel" and toe in black and tan. Sold at 25c. Opportunity sale pri.ce. 15c pair Agents for Pictorial Review Patterns Mail Orders Promptly Filled Postage Prepaid