Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 19, 1921, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAflE FOUE
HEDFOED MATE TRIBUNE. MEDFORDIOREGONV VEDXESPAY, OCTOBER 19, 1921
Medford Mail Tribune
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHED KVERY AFTERNOON
EXCEPT SUNDAY BY THE
MEDFORD PRINTING CO.
The Medford Sunday Bun l furnished
subscribers desiring seven day dally
oewspaper. '
Office Mall Tribune Building, 26-17-21
North Fir street. Phone 76.
A consolidation of the Democratic
Times, .the Medford Mall, the Medford
Tribune, The Southern Oregonlun, The
AsblsJid Tribune.
ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor.
8UMPTER 8. SMITH, Manager.
TTBIOKXPTIOBT Tiami
BY MAIL in Advance:
Dally, with Sunday Sun, year 17.60
Dally, with Sunday Sun, month .76
Dally, without Sunday Hun, ytfar 6.60
Dally, without Sunday Sun, month .06
Weekly Mall Tribune, one vear 2.00
Sunday Run, one year 2.00
Y CARRIER In Medford, Ashland,
Jacksonville, Central Point, Phoenix.
Talent: - ' ' . ' .
Dally, with 8unday Sun, month .76
Dally, without Sunday Hun. month ' .66
IlAllv.-wlthcut Sundav Sun. year.:. 7.60
Dally, with Sunday uun, one year 8.60
All terms uy carrier, casn in auvuime.
REGARDING A GOLF CLUB.
Official paper of the City of Merfford.
WKUUlUl puller VI, ii.nauii iJ
worn dally average circulation for
alx months ending Oct.. 322U
Entered ai grcmiv cMm manor at
Medford, Oregon, under tna aot of Maroti
. 187b
MEMBKK8 OK THR ASSOCIATED
The Asoaclnted frean la exclusively
ntttled to the uHe fur republication of
all news dispatches credit'! to It, or not
therwttfe credited In this paper, and also
tin locul news published herein.
Ail right a of republcutiun of special
flaps ten ea herein are uiso ''esurvuu.
Ye Smudge Poi
i... Arthur fnrri
What tho country noeds most right
now Is a batch o( plousunt Hounding
slogans like, Too proud to plow, l'un
cakes on the horizon, and veul stuw 1 i
the air, tho freedom of the choose,
and He Kept Uh Out of tlio Pcxirliomie.
Bube Ruth, tho fizzle do luxe of tlio
world series, has recovored from the
swelling in his elbow and Is now Buf
fering from the name In tlio head. The
homerun king Is denying organlzod
baseball and will strike out again. '
Old Dock Brunifleld drunk a cup of
coffee In a Portland beanery and tile
next-, tiling he remembers be was In
Canada! 4
: Oil has been discovered In tho Nush
district It contains a high percentage
of oxides on a rocking cbuir base.
THE.AD VALOREM DUTY ON
QOAT8 IS TOO' HIGH
. ''' ' : , (Eugene Register) ' "
, ' Mi's. ' the iifl'uhle hostess
'"of the' Foley Springs suniinor re
P. pcrt, left yesterday aftor closing
her celebrated watering place for
,.tho stlason.
THERE should be a large attendance at the meeting tonight, 'to
consider the formation of ak'dford Golf club. There is no
question of strong juiblic sentiment in 'tavor of such an organization.
The problem is to crystallize this sentiment- into effective and con
structive action. This cap only be possible, if the decisions arrivedat
represent not one factum, but the city as a whole. Therefore it is to be
hoped that everyone interested in this project attends tonight's
meeting. "V
No city in the state is better situated than Medford to support
successful golf club. AVith its delightful climate, with the cstablinh
inent of a comprehensive water system, with its high grade of citizen
ship with its many attractions ns a tourist center, a good golf course
would answer u genuine community need.
No feature would .he a belter drawing card, for the eastern busi
nessman, jookiug: fpv (iniore attractive climate in which to live'thau
a golf course. (J'olf more than any other sport, is universal in its ap
peal. ' It is no longer an exclusive game. Its devotees represent all
classes, rich and poor, young and old, women as well as men.
Portland has a number of golf courses. On one course alone, this
last year, the Eastmoreland course, :!!),()()() cards were issued. Kugeue
Oregon has a golf course, so has Salem, so has C'orvallis; all of them
arc .liberally supported, ami conspicuously successful. ,
Certainly Medford can support a golf club, if Eugene, Salem and
Corvallis can. Medford had a golf club once, but. it died. The reasons
for its demise are fairly, apparent, today, and that experience should
serve as a valuable warning to the promoters (if the present venture.
One thing is certain, if a golf club is to succeed, it must lie a rep
resentative organization, ami the expense involved per member, must
he low enough to give the average wage slave who wants to play I
ii-,,!!',, 1, ,.. In ..I,... !l rM i ( , i.. ... , , ' ... ., . . ,' I
(.. .. ,i . ,., ,,,, , i in; !iii:uu nwii in e Milium ne suiiorillliaicd 10
the sport feature. ', ,
However, all these matters can be threshed out, when the de
cision to establish n golf club has been definitely reached. Meanwhile
the immediate need is In. have a representative gathering at the li
brary tonight. ' ' ' v ' ' ' 1
LEST WE FORGET.
IN THE RUSH and turmoil of modern life, many people forget, how
many of the pleasures we now enjoy, would have been impossible
but for the service and sacrifice of the early pioneers.
We whirl along our paved highways today, covering ground iu'iiii
hour that couldn't luiyo been covered in a week, three score years ago,
and seldoin think that we did not do all the work ourselves.
, The Ashland and Medford chapters of the Daughters of the
American Revolution-appreciating this fact, have decided to erect a
monument on the Pacific Highway near Phoenix, commemorating the
work of the f irst good road builders in Southern Oregon;
This is a splendid idea, and worthy. of an organization consecrated
to the perpetuation of American ideals, and the stimulation of patri
otic remembrance.
Not only (lie people of Southern Oregon, but the people, of the en
tire country,, as they motor through the valley hereafter. will be re-
minded of what, the hardy 'pioneers accomplished' and will thereby
W:'. ,
TPh w rult of one lawsuit is another.
Worry ij out of trie ifii
Keep tKe Lvuier-taker-r
.. .. 1 L. . L
(S)Tke paper- pay oii dlea.1 ' of 'Mention, "to
women withia. past. men. with., a -foiofm
It i5 baJ enoigrt "ho hair- rct youc
. . teeth, bob ikere MM hop "i-f yoo don-'-fc
lose yoyr. -narve. w.j --.
act pari; of ' birtft 'horn, ,ySsj7
t yoo have Tithi nk SC1 jifBW
(Sr) The on.ter the lavvsoit "the -fatter Itie ee..
5S
vj.MHez HK'3 WIFE SAYJJ
tlWtn git over the
HOW MUCH DO
YOU KNOW?
' 3 -
owe these
tude.
pulili
1 :Vhat ore geiidai'mcs?
2 What is gluten ?,,'. : .....'
!l What sort nt.u.,ntghl Is It most
'.nit to frost? ' . .
s'liiritcd women of Jackson county a debt of grati-f 4, Where .Is tho Hall of Fame?
5 What well kiiJW" fevont In his-
Groat distress has broken out among
the peasants in the Aiiplsgatoskl. Hay
went up a dollar a ton Tues.
Tlio stato game commission is not
as game iib supposed. They illsmlss
nlans to modify the Ilogtio Hiver fish
hill, a matter that sume of the old
Inhabitants remember dimly. Talking
about It is the favorite winter sport of
Oregon. .
'"The city might buy some modern
fire equipment by charging garage
.rates for cars occupying the open air
garage on Contrnle Avenldu. Tho con
gestion thereon accomplishes nothing
now, but slows down the milk wngon
to CO miles per lir.
, ' HELPI HELP1 1
,' (Oregon City Enterprise)
, Anton Nellson is under the
doctors '
, Prof. Galnos of Stanford university
reports that tho Pacific slope was orig
inally .Inhabited by Ksklmos. This bird
; bus been stopping in a modern hole I
with alleged steam heat.
The. lady bluebeiud fed hot- dying
S husbniid whiskey and hamburger with
j. out knowing the contents of either.
f The, hunter who used to proudly ex
i hiblt .a deor with horns, is now show
i log a Chinese pheusant with two legs.
, Autumn leaves are fulling thick and
fast, but there are not enough first
1 offenders in matrimony to exhaust the
' surplus.
!
' , MAL DER ROAD
(Eugene Guard)
The roads are getting so rough
between Groenlcuf and Swlsshonio
that ; the Jolting made our malt
carrier slcjc:rhC'.hls stouuich the
.other trip. ;,- ....,
A 'new York song writer lias sued
, Jack Dompsey for $100,000.60, for
skedaddling with the affoctions of his
-wife. The $100,000 Is for the lawyers.
and the 50 cents for the plaintiff.
Henry Ford still wants to run the
railroads. Even bets are being made
that be .can't do a worse Job than
McAdoo. '
., Walter Miller and Ilalph Hand
'rawselled at G. 1 If 11 last night. The
strangle hold and tho deadly dollar
clutch were barred.
' Work on the Joe Gagnon railroad
hag been held up on account of the
non-arrlvol of a high-poworod pencil
sharpener. It will be run by electric
ity Jet the shavings full where they
JfHI, .
The average bolt of lightning con
tain" several trillion volts of elec
tricity. . - r
Quill Points
Suggestion to business: Money is a boomerang; turn it loose.
The best cure for unemployment is a vigorous epidemic of buying.
When you meet expenses, it, is good form to say, "Fin tinned, I'm
sure."
Wh
ere I our
1 irne voes
The present situation
wish can lib called food.
affords considerable food for thought, if
Whatever it is Hurt affljets Congress, it would be fine if our speed
llianiaes 'could eateh it. . . '
The man who has neither training nor knowledge bus little clioiee.
He must do common labor, or get elected to Congress.
When you see a man with that complacent air Of superiority, you
can't tell whether he has religion or the daily bath habit.
"The Rough Riders are going fnst.V says a magazine writer,
Henry could obviate this by putting speedometers on the things.
We produce some of our own great men, in spite of the fact tist
Sims am! (Jumpers and Chaplin were boru under the British flag.
Life must be dreary for the girl who isn't quite pretty enough to
get into the movies and is a little loo pretty to work for a living.
RipplingRhqmGS
Valt Mason
- ERA OF BLOODSHED. , ,
STILL bloodshed is tho modem fad, my protests don't avail ; in
almost every little grad some slayers are in jail. All kinds of
folks behind the bars are locked, for gory deeds; famed clcrgy
, men and movie stars, and dames in widow's weeds. The furies,
free and running loose, urge crime with every breath, nut) any
frivolous excuse will do for sudden death. When all the nations
were at strife, and gents slew scores of gents, men learned to think
that human life is not worth fifteen cents. They carried back this
grim belief from scenes of death and gore; and this delusion,
fraught with grief, has spread from shore to shore. And so we
hear the crack of guns throughout this country wide, and every
day we're planting tons of delegates who died. The husband'
shoots his loving wife because she wears punk lids, the grandma
takes the butcher knife when she'd correct the kills. The wires
arc burdened with the news of murders and of brawls, notin the,
alleys and tho mews, but in the. stately halls. And men of stand
ing go to. jail, and queenly dames are there; and all my protests
don-'t avail explaining my despair. We're wasting foreeton lit
tle things, denouncing minor flaws, while yet the armed assassin
springs and laughs to scorn our laws. ,
tory .occurred at .Harper's Ferry, ..W.
,Va.? .; ' -.'' ;.
' fl Where-are tho Appenines moun
tains? f1 i '!..;.. '
7 jHow many strings has a harp?
8 Who discovered Haiti?
8 What distinguishes Hammerfest,
Norway i from other cities?
10 How many books, maps, pieces
of music, etc, are there in the Con
gressional library?
' Answers to Yesterday's Questions
1 What are calipers? Ans. An
Instrument, like a pair of compasses,
for measuring diameters.
2 What is the duty of a coxswain?
Ans. He steel's and has cKargo of a
rowboat? :'
3 What will dissolve celluloid?
Ans. Denatured alcohol.
4 How many foreign '.born Irish
men uro thore in the .United States?
Ans. The 1920 census shows 1,036,880.
5 What was the first book printed
In America which contained cuts . to
Illustrate the .text? Ans "The poq
trina Christiana." It was published In
.Mexico In 1D44. ... -
G What causes, hogs to eat soft
coal? Ans. Absence of charcoal in
their diet.
7 How many foreign born Russians
and Poles are there lnv the United
Stutiip? Alls. Thore are-1,308,999 Hus
siuns and 1,139,57S Poles of foreign
birth lu this country according to the
lt.it crasus.
8 Wt Is the tallest, building in
the eitlre world? Ans. The Wool
worth building In New York City. It
is 792 reel high. :
9 In what play did Joseph Jefferson-
become famous? Ans. Rip Van
Wlnlilo, ' '
in In what story is' Isliabort Cralnr!
a character? .ns. In "The Legend
of Sleepy Hollow."
People lire ' always . uuniiilaiuiiuj:
about the length' of time thai they
work. It Is a big item In a lifetime
but not so big as most titt us imag
ine, if "the days of our aire ;:re
three score years and ten,!' ::iere is an
approximation of the way i man of
seventy han spent his life: ;r
i . : Yl's-
1 Sleep ..J 23
2 Work ...... i 19
II Amusement '.. 9
4 Religious devotion . . .y, . . . . - 1
Quotations You
Should Know
These are the times that try men's
souls. Thomas Paine. 1737-1809.
j Healing Cream
j Stops Catarrh
Clogged Air Passages' Open at
Once Nose and Throat Clear.
If your nostrils are clogged and your
head stuffed because of catarrh or a
cold, get Kly's Oram Halm at any drug
store. Apply a little ol this pure, anti
septic, germ destroying cream into your
nostrils and let it penetrate through
every air passatie of vour head and
I membranes. Instant relief.
How good it fctW. Your head is
clear. Your nostrils arc open. You
breathe freely. No more hawking or
snuffling. Head colds and catarrh
yield like magic. Don't stay stuffed
up. choked up and miserable Relict
is sure.
Ti Killing . ... '. ,...-..; 6
6 Traveling ...........I....... 6
7 Illness 4
8 Dressing'' 2
That's where tho tinio goes to. Of
course the reader must allow for his
or her own sttuaUon; a traveling' man,
for instance, combines a good part of
Ills-sleeping, eating, and dressing with
his traveling. . .
But we can mention two great
eeonomies. open to all. Everyone is.
better off when tho Work- Item Is not
carried home, In the form of worry
to cheat the Sleep Item. ' and the
Amusement Item. And -obody de
nim that regular. Ilth - exercise,
enough sleep, enourh work,' and list
too much foo will curtail the four
years most of us spend sick In bed.
That's the place to economize In lime!
Collier's Weekly.
How I-Earned-:
My First Dollar
A series of pen sketches describ
ing hew seme ef Medford's well
knswn citizens climbed the fin:
run. ''
'" "' f ' .' ; III.
P
SERENE THROUGH SAVING
Old ag& with plenty, and no need of depend
ing on even, one's' relatives,, is beautiful antK
e;'enet j'i; 1 ! -mi ..!, . t..
'(:;o& for'ven'inpdjijfit,:.
wants dependent "on " charity is ;a thing-
merelv to be endured. ...-. -
A First National savings account, with care
ful investments, will provide 'for you an tide--,
quate income for the sunset of life.
Zfie FlICT NATIONAL BANK
MBFORd OREGON ;
iLnrasKsaeaelr
TO A FINISH
World's Middleweight Olympic Champion, 1912.
';TED THEm
. Multnomah Cbib, 6f Portland
' Will wrestle to a finish at the Medford.' , I iv
Natatprium
Friday, Oct 21
All wrestling holds will be posed in the ring, bc-
tore the match, especially the holds barred. , ;
GOOD PRELIMINARY
BRING THE LADIES
' Tickets on sale at
Brown & Brown's .
! Adams & Brown
Elk's Club
CHARLES MELROSE, Referee
John Moffatt j
When I was 11 or 12 years old, I
oarned my first dollar running all over
town looking for a left hndd monkey
wrench that a bunch of vljlago barbers ;
wanted 1 gave up the search, and a
kind. old man engaged meto find a No. i
12 postholo. I also fell Tlown on this
job and lost nil faith In mankind when
they hnd mo searching for doughnut I
holes. The miserable wretches after I
pestering me all afternoon were trou
bled with their consciences and took
ASKFOR-
Scholz's
Genuine
Butter Roll Bread
, at your grocer ,
Pure and Wholesome and Made With Milk
up a collection which netted me 1
tho first one I ever gothold of.
GUI CHUNG
China Herb Store
-
DAY OR NIGHT
. !
' raliiii
t.53j a AS.JI .
WEEKS-CONGER CO
TunsrsJ Director
I
1 Hrb CUro TOr Mrart!. realantim mi.
rrh. dlplherln. -sore throat. Iun troubls.
Kiflney trouble, stomacn. iroums, . ne-iit
trouble, chills and fi-ver. cnimi, coughs,
ooor circulation, carbuncles, tumors.
sSTpkuatons." iU k""1? of BD"er
' Mdlford. 'or'eiton. Jan. 13. 191.
This Is to certify that I. the undnr
"g"ed. hyd very severe stomach trouble
tnd hnd been botheretl fni hi-...!
jnd last August was not expected to
live and herlnB of Olm Chung (whose
L i VI ; soum rront street.
; Medford). I decided to set herbs for my
stomach trouble, and I started to fcollnd
no ov.. an , uwu mem ana todny
im a well man and can heartilv lecom
mend anyone afflicted as 1 whs to see
3lni Chung and try his Herbs.
(Signed) w. K. JOHNSON.
Itneseesr
Win. Lewis, Ragle Point.
JV. L. Chlldreth, Ragle Point.
M. A. Anderson. Medford.
S. B. Holmes, Ragle Point.
.C. B. Moore, Eagle Point.
J. V. Mclntyre. K.-tgle Point
Ceo. Von der H.llen. Eagle Point.
Thn. V. Klenm Pjgle (nln
1 .
TOTJ CAM GET MOST ANT
OLD THING AT HOBT ANT
OLD imi AT D VOE'I
PAINTING . .
PAPER HANGING
'Z TINTING
Interior Decorating in all its
branches.
PIANOS
Sefinished and Polished.
FURNITURE
Finishing, Polishing and
Repairing.
All Work Guaranteed.
Estimates Cheerfully" Givin.
City Auto Paint Workt
28 North Bartlett
Phone 754-J
i .-