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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1921)
MTDTTmT) MATTj TRTTUTNE, "MTyDFORD. OREflOY, TTTUTiT.Y. .TFXE Ifi. 1021 L !S SYRACUSE, N. Y., June 17. K. H. Gary, chairman o( the board of di rectors uf the L'nited states Bteel i or )iortltln. f told Syracuse university students 1n a coninieneeinent address feeently that capital is necessary to proRrpss and prosperity of every coun try and any people. The only alter native .to it, he declared, was the anarchy 'or sovietlsm now gnawing at the vltrilsof ltussia. This Russian system 'Ij'M described as a poison In the natural system of national and Individual life, which would eventuate 111 destruction. if tho, people of Americ-a would study thb facts about this vital ques tion, he said, there would bo no epi demic of. sovictlsm here. Capital and the rights of all people would be con eerved: : III thlH OOlintl'V tho rlwtl nf n, ... tunlty la open to both capital and la bor and neither, ho said, should be permitted to abuse it. He expressed the opinion that there might bo no objection to a fair and reasonable law subjecting: organized capital, exceeding certain amounts, to governmental inquiry and restriction In Its uses, "provided organized la bor should also be subjected to tlio tmitie tHtatute." irl Gary began by pointing out that the people of tho L'nited States have' the greatest opportunity for success In every department of worthy endeftVor. The expression that "the world owes each individual a living,' was too frequently used and It was foolish to endeavor to support that claim . by citing the acknowledged principle, that all men nro created free inncl equal. This meant, ho said, no more and no less than the right of equal protection and opportunity." "Capital, whether Invested in chari table, religious, educational institu tions, or commercial . or industrial enterprises, will be protected and, ns a corollary, the rights of the people without discrimination will be con served. "If it should be urged that accumu lated wealth exceeding certain amounts and possessed by organized cnpltal should be subjected to gov- ta use, there might be no objection to a fair and reasonable enactment covering this question, provided or ganized labor should also be subject ed to tho same' statute. , ' Open and Closed Shop. "Tho door of .opportunity for legiti mate advancement is open to both capital; and labor.' Both should be Krateflll for tho' privilege. Neither Hhpuld be permitted to abuse it." Mr. Clary declared that tho platform of .labor union leaders Is tho antithe sfa!uf the principle" of, equal opportu nity.1 :' ,He asserted that, industrially, tht. irtdividuaKcan realize the' full ad vantage of tho opportunities which this country offers only through the principles of the open Bhop as dis tinguished from the dominance and arbitrary control of the union labor lenders. He added: ''The open shop means freedom to the employe to engage in any line of employment, at any plnco and time, upon terms and conditions voluntarily agreed upon between the employe and tha employer. "The closed shop means that one desiring employment can secure a place only on terms approved by the union lnbor leaders or leaders having jurisdiction over the particular closed xliop. "The great majority of the people of 'oMseountry stand for the open sea, oppri; ports-of all countries open coVo nante with cither nations, open dis cussion of nil proper questions and the upen shop: and with this free dom and justlco to all. VKquallty of opportunity. I believe. Is tr avowed doctrine of our preseif' administration, from tho president throughout the whole governmental structure and will be intelligently and faithfully applied. Therefore, we hay-i reason to look forward with confi dence expecting increasing prosperity in all .directions as tho months pass by.""- 50 buys bruu! "vDOrthltvil- . writer, other makes , ml tttrtotive phoeft. fiee ubforcyou buy. .HFOFOKM HOOK STOIJB SUPPORT CAPITA Corn f Chowder MZZ MUSIC WAS WEALTHY NEVADA WOMAN DOES HER USED TO AROUSE SHOPPING AND VISITING IN AIRPLANE WORST PASSIONS . " - J - SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, JifTic 1G. 1 Music has become a force and not nn adjunct in the life of every American citizen, Anna Faulkner Oberndorfor, Chicago, national music chairman of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, declared in an address here to day at the federation's Great Salt Lake Council. I "We Americans have had the wrong' attitude regarding music for so long that it is difficult for us to grap quick ly the full realization of its power" she, said. "As a nation we have treated music as a thing apart from, instead of a part of, our daily life. It is not so, many years ago that tho average American business man was all but ashamed to acknowledge n lovo for music. "Now a change has come. If we re view the pages of musical history we will find that the greatest growth in music always follows some great war. The pre-war status of music in Amer ica will never return." Airs. Oherudorfer urged daily music hours In the homes during which the folk songs of America will he sung. Music memory contests should ,ue started in every community. by wom en's clubs, she declared. ' jt The speaker declared many large Industries, which started community sings for employes during war times, were forced to forbid the singing of "Jazz" music In (heir factories. " 'Jazz' music," sho said, "In its orig inal form was used as accompaniment to tho Voodoo ceremonies by which the uneducated and almost barbaric aroused all Ills vilest and most sen suous nature." UNION DRIVE. !N THE NORTHWEST DENVKll, June 115. Tho federation of labor plodged its assistance today in launching a campaign to "complete ly organize" the lumber Industry of the northwest. "Unbridled wage slashing Is dan gerously menacing the tmion wage standards of all union .workers throughout the northwest territory," said tho resolution which was adopted. W. M. Short of the Washington Fed eration of Labor, in tiipportiai the resolution said that men are being shipped from tho cities to lumber camps at a wage of $3.35 a day and forced to pay $9 a week for board. .He declared that eighty ier cent of, Ihc workers In the lumber industry! 1 ... I. I ' ni5 i-iuiifiuu m iiiu employers moor organization and that thousands are dissatisfied and ready to join the American Federation of Labor. "The political situation in our state is corrupt," Short said. "The state legislature is dominated by tho lumber interests. Tho industrial condition is demoralized. . - "There isn't a union that isn't threatened with heavy wago reduc tions. "We are asking that tho living stan dards of every union organization in tho state may bo protected." J. Word has just been received hi tho city of a serious accident which last Saturday befell Frank J. Curran. for mer manager of tho Oregon (ins & Electric company in this city, but who has resided nt Los Angoles for the past year where ho has been in the employ of the Los AngeleB Oil & Gas company, while his wife and young daughter continued to reside here at 420 Laurel street. He with others were working on a pipe lino, and when they made a tost to see if it was working ail right there was an explosion, as a result of which one of his arms was broken In two places, a leg was broken, cutting the cords hack of tho knee, and he may lose an. eye. The Injured man was taken to St. Vincent's hospital In Los Angeles. The news of the accident was received in a letter by Mrs. Cur ran, and at the time of writing it was not known whether Mr. Curran would recover. ASSOCIATED PROTESTS OBREGON OIL RULING MEXICO CITY. June 16. Formal protest againBt President Obresou's recent decree increasing taxes on ex port petroleum was filed today in the treasury department by representa tives of the Associated Oil "Producers of .Mexico. It was declared the tax. as a whole, was excessive, and did not take Into aeount the statistics safd to have hpen furnlnhed by the govern ment relative to oil production and exjKtrtatlon. (Ity liitrrtiat tuiul SAX FltANClSTO, Juno KV The ItuiK'T a ,l hi (ik f the future. H is a reality. "Home James." That is what M ra. V. A. Keildh', owner of a fitrhK u( valuable Nevada ritiuhos told her aerial chauffeur '.he other day when nho suddenly dcehU-.l to return to Ueno, New Mrs. Keddie, who has h-iiK hi en an enthusluNt of aviation aiul trav els almost entirely by airpl iu". called her pilot by telephone and kiUI "Lets leave at 2 o'doik.". W. W. Williams is Mrs. Keddie'H pilot. Mrs. Keddie,' who nets us inanoKer fo(- her several ranches and calls Fnllon. New, her' home, purchased the 'itinchine some time mho to he used in travelling between her ranches. She found it no successful that when she deemed it necessary to remain In San Krniu-iseo on businesH-she telegraphed for the plane, that she might finish her af fairs here and slill return to He no. in. tlino. to meet business appoint ments ihere. ... At each of the ranches fcW has installed a landing field and n sys tem of lighting has also been established in event of night flying. However, Mrs. Keddie has done little night flying. J .Mrs. Keddi1 said ihv expected to take n vacation this Summer an aerial one In which the expects to visit New York and other Eastern cities. Newspaper Standards Changed Says Editor C. E. Ingalls On his return to Oregon City from attendance at tho sessions of the American Press Association, the Live Wires of Oregon City extended a ban quet and "welcome home" reception to MjE. llrodic, tho now national presi dent. Th Oregon State Editorial As sociation was represented by its presi dent.' C, 10. Ingalls, w;ho delivered a snii;t! address of welcome at the ban quet in behalf of the Oregon press, of wljich the following is a part: gradually the old idea that a news paper was a door mat for . tho com munity, has been obliterated... No longer .do respectable -newspapers trade subscriptions for produce; no longer arc respectable newspapers run as the organ or motitli-pioco of any particular clique or clan; no longer do respectable newspapers prostitute their columns with personalities con cerning the rival editor. That used to be the. stock In trade of most newspaiers. A newspaper row in every town was as much to be expected as the regular epidemic of smallpox and typhoid fever, and just about as good for a town. Hut an inoc ulation of the genus of respect for the profession has largely eliminated all N CLEVELAND, O., June lfi. Con victs In pcnitentiurR'.i show a hiKher average of intelligence, than the ffuue- riil populntlon, Dr. Hurmun Adler, of tho Cleveland Foundation's Justice survey, told memborn of tho Clove land Academy of Medicine at a re cent meeting. Repeaters, men returned to the penitent iay time after time, show a hlphor average intelliRonen than those CORD TIRES Now Selling at the Price Level in Tire HITTSON MOTORS 36-40 So. Xrun Sorvlco). Uity of iutIiiI Hum 3 i 11 U that, greatly to the good of tho news papers and the communities in which they are printed. .' This change lias been brought about very largely by the work of tho uuws paer associations. Newspaper men have learned that a healthy competition is a good thing, hut that it should bo a competition of newspaper, excellence and value and servlco to the community rather than a competition In editorial blackguard ing and cut-throat price fixing. They have ndoptod advertising scales based on circulation so that every business man knows that he is getting the same kind of n deal that his competitor Is getting and that there is no use trying to get space for less. This In Itself has had a great deal to do with making tho business 'man np prociato the value . of advertising. When ho was able to get it at any price ho offered ho .considered it was worth just about that much and us ually it was, for no newspaper run on that kind of a basis could bo success ful and unless the advertising medium is successful, unless it Is read and has the respect of a large share of the community It Is a valueless advertis ing medium. who learn their lessons for tho first time, Dr. Adler said, i CrlminnlH who are coukIU and con victed are not necessarily those least intelligent, but those., with an antaK onfzfnK personality. Dr. Adler ex- t plained. An engfiKinK. personality is the most frequent cuuse of mlHear rinjres of JUHtirctl he added. Tqir-million pooplej in, tho United Htatos nro classed as "feeble minded, that Is, they would be confined If brought into court or a mental clinic, ho said. These conclusions were derived from a tabulation of mental tests of 1,700,000 men in the draft army, and 1000 convicts in the Illinois state peni tentiary. The tests in turn were con firmed by examination of selected groups picked according to military qualifications before tho tests, were made. California has mure than 40,000 acres planted to olives. 30x33 - - $24.50 32x4 - - 46.30 34x4 - - 54.90 ! ' (And Other Sires in Proportion) Tire repair men, who judge values best, class these tires a having the sturdiest carcass made. Forty-seven1 high grade car manufacturers use them as standard equipment. They are the quality choice of cord users. This new low price is made possible by strictest economies and specialized production. ' , ' Plant No. 2 was erected for the sole purpose of making 30x3J--inch Non-Skid fabric tires. With a daily capacity of 16,000 tires and 20.000 tubes, this plant permits refined production on a quantity basis. All materials used are the best obtainable. The quality Is uniform. It is the best fabric tire ever offered to the car owner at any price. T GATE WILL BEAT NEW YOKl. June 1C. The DeinpKcy-Curpeiiticr boxing bout for the worUl'8 championship at Jersey v-iiy, July win draw the greatest "gate" in the history of sport. A month before tho fight. Pro moter 'Tex" Kit kurd announced that the seat wiles totalled $ir0,000. Vimc that day, the Halo of all seats has gone on briskly except for tho $T0 pasteboards, which are exhausted, and (he genera) admission nents, to be placed on wale the day of the fight. Kickard estimates that approximately tiu.OOo persons will pay over 11.000, 000 to view the ring action at Itoyle's Thirty Acres. Those figures will eclipse by far all previous records for ring contests or any other sport in this country. The Wlllard-Dctnpscy battle nt Toledo, O,, whlrh established the previous record drew $451,000 at the box office, a puny figure an compared with what the coming spectacle will attract. The Harvard-Yalo fnothall game and the Indianapolis Speedway races are annually reckoned among the largest and most widely patronized sporting events In this country. Iast fall, 79.000 persons were .lammed Into tho Yale Bowl, when Harvard met the bulldog, and tho total receipts were approximately i!."0.000, about one-(iiinrtiM- ' of the coininir fight. The attendance at the Indianapolis Speed way event usually ranges between 100.000 and 125.000, but total receipts fall short of what Kickard and his assistants will have gathered in when the gong sounds for the first round of the Jersey City battle. "Tex" Kickard stnrted his career ns a promoter of championship bouts on a targe scale when Joe (inns met bat tling Nelson In Coldfleld. New, In 190(1. The receipts for that memo rable battle were $60,710. That fig ure was topped when Jack Johnson fought Tommy Hums In Australia, on Chiistmaa Day, 1008. but Ulckard again established a high mark In 1910 when boxing fans from all over tho country paid $270. 775 to see the Jeffries-Johnson conflict at Heno. Xev. Figures for the Willnrd-Demp-sny bout at Toledo. July 4, 1010, sup planted even that large total and Kickard. in the coming Jersey City match, ban entered the select cirelu of "million-dollar business men." Figure on leading bouts of recent venrs, follow: Principals fl"n P- Wlllard Dempsey $tf2.r21 Johnson-Jeffries iu.id Willnrd-Mornn 140.000 Johnson-liuYnn 07.000 Cans-Nelson fid,7ir Wlllard -Johnson .leffrles-Shnrkey . .Toffries-Corbott Corhett-McCoy . McCovern-Ernu Estimated. GS.000 00.300 R3.J140 sc.ar.o 52,000 Ouesls at tho Nash includo U. T3. Oliver, W. T. Parker, R Ellison and O. II. Itussman of Oakland, Calif., W. O. Constant of San Francisco, E. Mo Collins and Frank Wood of Klamath Falls, W. M. Flood of Auburn, Colo., W. It. Smith of Now York, Harry E. Hell of Tacoma, and Chan. V. AVhlte. Robert Clarke, and M. S. Spiker of Portland. Oil ia being; distilled In New ealand from kauri-gum peat. Lowest History Fir St., Medtord "A New Lease of Life Through Internal Baths" Mr. K. Shain of Santa Crux. Cab. writes to the Tyrrell Hygienic Insti tute: ".My w i f o a n d I will be 8 .1 yea rs youitK next rirthday and consider that the 'J. H. Cascade' has given us a new lease of life, for we now en joy the best of health. AVe were KoiiiK down hill fast, hut the Cascade has Kiven us such health as we have not enjoyed in yenrs." The "J. P. Cascade" cleanses the lower Intestine Its entire length and keeps it always free of poisonous waste. Thousands testify that Constipa tion, Indigestion, Stomach Troubles, Pillousness, Headaches and all the many serious troubles which they cause are absolutely relieved and pre vented by this Nature Treat nient. West Side Pharmacy, Main and Crape St., will be glad to show you the "J. It. I j. Cascade," ex p tain Its siuipto operation and will give you, free on request, an Interesting lit t hi book by Dr. Chas. A. Tyrrell of New York, a noted specinlist on Internal 1 lathing for 2 5 years in that City. Clip this out as a reminder to ask for the booklet at your first opportu nity. Adv. MAIL YOUR FILMS to SWEM'S STUDIO 217 East Main St. Medford It'H quite truo that you'll be mitisflcd with our hrriul. Other follH in thlM cuinniuuity who Imvo a cliscrhninntiiiK tiiKto nml nn exnrt mnso of vuliii'R oat It nml pralso It ho wo nro miro that you will lllio It. Wo know you will. SCHOLZ'S "BUTTER-ROLL" BREAD at your grocer PAINTING PAPER HANGING TINTING Interior Decorating in all its branches. PIANOS Refinished and Polished. FURNITURE Finishing, Polishing and Repairing. All Work Guaranteed. Estimates Cheerfully Given. City' Auto Paint Works Phone 754-J WOOD We linvo tho Blackburn Wood Yard and nro now pre wired (o furnish nil kinds of wood ami slabs by the tier or cord nt REDUCED PRICES Ynnl nt llil S. I'lr direct. Phono 8 .in or H70-J. Ilt'lhcr' to any part of city. W. W. HALL YOU CAN GET MOST ANY OLD THING AT MOST ANY OLD TIME AT DE VOE'B with oys L?V)o SEWARD HOTEL "HOUSE OF CHEER" ALDKIt AT 10TH BTRKET, POKTLAM). OIUJGOS. All tha Oregon electric cars stop l unexcelled. Ws strive to please. Rates J 1.60 and up. With bath $2.00 and up. Our dining room Is very popular, and our business men's luncheon, and our regular and Sun day dinners are not equalled else where at our price. Opposite Oltls. Wortman ft King's big store. W. 0, CUUIIISRT30N, I'roprletor. 1H. A. IICUKLUND Chiropractor Unite A and Sparta building, cornrP Main and Hlverslde. Office phono UeitUlei.ee Wl'l. Medford Coast Ry Ml:l)l'()Hl-.IACKSONVII.IK r.-ur. i.h , liwi inn .tic I,v. Mi-dloril 7::I0 dally, -x. Sunday !). 10. 11:30 A. M.. I, 2. 3:30. 4:30, 6, !i:30 P. M.. 10 P. M. Sat. only. I.v. Jacksonville, 7 dally ex. Bunday 8:30. !:30, II A. M., l'.':30, 1:30. 3. 4, 0. 7:15 P. M. Hides Skins Pelts Wool and Tallow Wo have established... a., branqji house at Ashland, Oregon, and are now ready to receive consignments from one skin or pelt to a carload lot, at highest market prices. . . Ship Your Hides and Pelts to us and save freight charges. ; ; .. The H. F. Norlon Co., Inc. 1st and A. Sts. ' ASHLAND, -ORE. READ ; H - TUP' ..' - I lit i . ., , ' Pacific Record Herald; "The loading weekly of the west," Published nt Moiiforcl, in' th heart of Sunset land. - No crime reports, .no Rcnudnt. Just the "truth about tho WestA' Every page a live one. Sample ropy free, or send 50 cents for three months' trial sub scription, $2.00 for one year; . The Pacific Record Herald , Medford, Oregon. . , Make T!ie Oregon Your Hotel . : WHEN IN ' V PORTLAND POPULAR SPACIOUS LOBBY : At the Center of Everything Broadway at Stark St. iO W suggest you write, phone or wire for Reservations ARTHUR n. METERS, Malinger Old papers for hoiispcleanlns t Mull Tribune otfloo. .