Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 29, 1921, Page 7, Image 7

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    PXGE SEVEN."
HOW TO HAVE
Rich, Red Blood!
In, addition to eating1 plenty
... of wholesome food and taking reg
ular exercise, your blood should
be kept pure.. S. 8. S. will enrich
the blood and drive' out the im
purities that cause rheumatism,
eczema, ' tetter, pimples, black
heads, boils or other skin dis
eases arising from impoverished
. blood, ij
' : For Special Booklet or for inrfi
vidua! advice, withoutcharge,
'i' write Chief Medical Advisor,
. '. , SSS.Co., Dep't440,Atlanta, Ca.
hi. 0. at your aruggiKt.
For Rich, Red Blood
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGOOOOOOOOO
The'
Oakland
Sensible Six
Tills 44-liorsopowor, light six.
cylinder car gives front 18
Ui twenty-four miles' to one pill
ion of gusolino anil averages
front eliit to twelve thousand
miles to one set of tires. ,
Twenty-nine Improvements In
tliu new 11121 models.
Price "'
$1375.00
at Med ford
NEW MODELS ON HAND
Tumy
Motor Co.
12S-125 So.. Front St.
oooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Minneapolis
ALL STAR
ELK
Minstrel
and
Glee Club
Chautauqua
Auditorium
ASHLAND
JULY 7
. Auspices
B.P.O.E, No. 944
of Ashland
ADMISSION
Adults SI, Children 50c
Plus War Tax
'
Medford Coast Ry
MKDFOB.D-.TACKSONVIIXB
FARE 13c; HOIM) TRIP 25c
BUSINESS MEN OF.
JAPAN EAGER FOR
- DISARMAMENT
TOKIO, June 29. (By the Asso
ciated Press) The National Cham
ber of Commerce.iin session here to
day, adopted a resolution declaring:
"The League of Nations now Is
established and armament restriction
Is important.
"Among the powers, Japan, which
always , has loved justice, humanity
and peace," the resolution declares,
"should reach a proper agreement,
with the powers regarding disarma
ment and should employ every energy
for the promotion of industry by safe
guarding international peace. This is
the urgent need of Japan at this mo
ment." I The chamber voted to cable the res
olution to the League of Nations and
also the chambers of commerce of tho
other countries.
Strong arguments In favor of
Japan's taking tho initiative In pro
posing a disarmament agreement
with tho United States and'- Great
Britain wero made by prominent
speakers. It also was urged that tho
government reduco appropriation de
voted to preparations for war "which
are arousing tho suspicions : of tho
powers and endangering Japan's fu
ture." Viscount Chlbusawa, in an address,
declared the fact that ' Japan was
spending". nearly half her budget on
armaments was leading to tho belief
abroad that Japan had militaristic de
signs. Her relations with America
and China, he asserted, were regret
ably unsatisfactory. '
Ho urged that tho government
should withdraw troops from Han
kow and from tho Shantung railway
in order to counteract anti-Jdpaneso
sentiment in China. Ho urged that
tho gentlemen's agreement in regard
to immigration with tho United States
be modified
LONDON, Juno 27 (By the Asso
ciated Press) Tho question of( "dis
armament, .particularly! as to an
agreement which Great Britain and
the United States might be parties,
and tho possibility of Japan Joining
In such ; a disarmament move was
brought up in the house of commons
today. . ;
GHALK BALL IS
LATEST STUNT TO
- HELP
NEW YORK, June 2!). Chemistry
has been cnlistea to aid pitrhers in
their efforts to stop the avalanche of
heavy hitting In tho big leagues.
A Philadelphia scientist has invent
ed a moist chalk-like substance
which, rubbed on a brand new ball,
roughens the glossy surface and gives
the twirler a firm grip.
The umpires, not the pitchers, rub
this unnamed substance on the horse
hide. The experiment "was first tried
at Shibe Park, Philadelphia, a few
days ago. It was tried again at the
Yankee-Washington game yesterday
and Carl Mays, the New York pitcher,
said: , . .
"It's fine. It gives a pitcher, a
chance to' throw a curve ball. I
would have won five more games this
year If we'd had it all along." , :
. Walter Johnson of Washington also
likes it. Umpires Nallln, Chill and
Owens,' who have coated the balls,
said they would recommend Its ap
proval to the heads o tho major
leagues. .
LUNCH ON A SURF BOARD
GOING 30 MILES AN HOUR
0 1
Here Is a little trick for deep-sea fol
lowers that in not as simple as It
looks. Miss Lora Boyd MacTaggert,
of Seattle, Washington, says It is a
very easy one. She thinks nothing of
eating a meal whila seated on a surf,
board going at the rate of thirty miles
an hour.
To the Citizens of Medford
We are announcing our new Square
Deal Wet Wash Laundry at G08 North
jr" Ifff'?'
INDEPENDENTS TO
WAGE WAR UPON
'MOVIE' COMBINE
MINNEAPOLIS, June 28 Delegates
to tho convention of the Motion Pic
ture Theater Owners of America, to
day will consider a plan formulated by
its executive committee last night for
formation of a co-operative distribu
tors organization among Independents.
Encroachment of some motion picture
producers Into the exhibition field was
resKnsibl6 for the action of the com
mittee. The plun calls for n million
dollar fund on a percentage basis from
each motion picture theater and every
imiH)rtant producer in the country. It
will be spent on a national advertising
campaign In opposition to the Famous
Players Lasky curoration of which
Adolph Kukor is president, according
to initial plans, which were laid before
tho committee by Benjamin B. Hamil
ton of Los Angeles, an Independent
producer. '
Chnrifps were made nt tho convon
tld.li that a "nlovlo trust" controls fifty
per cent of. tho moving pictuio busi
ness In the United States.
San Francisco Is making a strong
bid for tho 11122 convention of the or
ganization, . which was formed last
year ami which now has 15,000 mem
bers. PROTESTS FILED
AS U. S. ATTORNEY
WASHINGTON, June 29 (Tele
gram Washngtou Bureau.) Opposition
to. tho possible appointment of Pat
Gnllalier of Ontario as United States
attorney for Oregon has devedoped In
so many quarters that it is probable
that no npiMjIntment for this office
will be made or recommended by the
Oregon senators until the motion has
been submitted to the Oregon Bar as
sociation. At least there will be no appoint
ment to this office which is unsatis
factory to the association.
Bar to Be Consulted
It is recognized that this position
requires a lawyer of ability who Is
acceptable to the Bar association and
the present plan is to make the recom
mendations in conformity with the ex
pression of the members of the Oregon
bar. v
This will In, a sense remove the of
fice from the political arena and dis
pose of it upon question of legal at
tainments and peculiar fitness for the
ofHce.
Six Candidates File '
The candidates for United States
district-attorney are:' Arthur I. Moul
ton, Barge E. Leonard and II. M. Tom-
linson of Portland; George Neuner of
Roseburg; P. J. Gallagher of Ontario,
and Julien A. Hurley of Vale.
BOLSHEVIKS ARE
T
T
RIGA, Latvia, Juno Recent' ar
rivals from Moscow declare that tho
world little realizes how closely So
vlet Russia is pushing Its friendship
with tho Near East.
in Moscow now the Turkish lega
tion occupies one'of the most sumptu
ous of tho old -palaces and tho per
sonnel, garbed In faultless European
clothes, present a strange contrast to
the poorly garbed Muscovites. ''he
Afghans and other Near Eastern del
egations also occupy luxurious quar
ters, give elaborato banquets and
otherwise carry on with all tho pomp
of tho old Eastern courts. . :
Members o Lenlne's government
are frequently guests nt these affairs
and entertain the legation personnels
equally lavishly in return.
Besides this, Lenlne has so accor..
modatcd himself to tho psychology of
the east that he now exchanges pres
ents with the rulers of Turkey, Persia,
etc., as did the rulers of ancient clays.
A Moscow -dispatch today reads
like a paragraph from what might
have beon an ancient tablet of heiro
glyphics describing tho visit of a
Babylonian envoy to King Cyrus of
Persia. It says: "Tho representative
of the soviet government has made
his first official visit to the Shah of
Persia, presenting to the Hhah on a
golden salver an album with photo
graphs of soviet leaders of the whole
of Russia as a personal present to
tho Shah from Lenlne."
A man who recently arrived from
Moscow said: "Few persons realize
what a close connection now exists bi.
tween Russia ond lis old enemy, Tur
key, and for that matter, all of the
Near East. Lenlne Is accomplishing
here what the old Russian govern
ment could not do by playing up to
Eastern psychology;
"Tho so-called Bolshevism in these
Eastern countries Is nothing at all
Ilko the Bolshevism of Moscow, but In
each case tho Russian agitators have
a distinct brand of propaganda de
i:W.-;;- i.- :';-
i. ....... . .
" ilia III 111 III lsgil I!
20Jok20 cents
in air-tight packages. Also obtainable
in round tins of SO, vacuum -seated.
THE BIG LVALUE for
a
. -1'
iP
Plain Tread
pi"
30
pi
f''i V ' : .
a. -tt"tn .
Milk I Ml
CIGARETTES
Fist Standard
$14.50-Red Top, Extra
x
Built to Sustain a Reputation
' Sold to Meet Competition
an extra wrapper
to keep the Flavor in
and theDrynessjiitf
You don't lose one bit of that
fresh tobacco fragrance rich Turk-
ish blended with Burley and other
choice Domestic tobaccos.
You get '.fresh cigarettes firm,
full-flavored and cool burning.
And you can't know how much better
a fresh cigarette tastes until you try
Chesterfields.
Liggett & Myers Toiiacco Co,
If.
mmm)
and the blend can't be copied
the SMALL CAR
Non-Skid
Ply Fabric $22.00-Cord $27.50
t.v. Moifnr.1 7: rtnii.v;xaeaaag
wier.
10 V.yr..() ,,!