PAGE FOUR
MEDFOnn MATL TKTP.ITXE, MKDPOKD, OT7EOOX, WEDNESDAY.- ATrOTTST 0, 1022
Medford Mail Tribune
XN INDEI'KNDENT NEWSPAPER
IJKI.IrtUKD KVEIIV AFTKKNOOH EICEPT
Kl'NIHY, II V THK
MEIlFOHl) PI1INTINU CO.
TIME FOR A SHOW DOWN.
Th MpcUoni Sunday Morning Kun It furnished
itiM'ritr desiring g seven day daily newspaper.
OftW Mail Tribune Building, 25-27-28 North
ftr ttreet. Phone 75.
A ron toll flat inn of the Democratic Times, the
M-d'ord Wail, tlie Medford Tribune, the Southern
Oiegonian, The Ashland Tribune.
, , , . ROBERT W. RUIIL, Editor.
' ' BUM IT KB 8. SMITH, Manager.
SUBSCRIPTION TERMS:
BY HAIL In Advance;
Daily, with Sunday Sun, year $7. AO
Daily, with Sunday Sun, month 7f
Dally, without Sunday Hun, yeur 6.60
uaiiy, wiinont hum l ay aim. month. . . .
Weekly Mat! Tribune, one year S.oo
Bundtiv Sun, one vem 2 0i
SV CARRIER In Medford. Ashland. Jaeltaan
Tllle, Central Point, l'uoenli, Talent and on
Bighwava:
Daily with Sunday Sun, month 7ft
-. Dally, without Hunday Hun. tiionth....
Daily, without Sunday Sun, yeur 7,i0
Daily, with Sunday Hun, one year 8.bO
All term by earner, eaali In advance.
Official paper of the City of Medford.
Official paper of Jack nor, County.
Sworn daily average cirrulution for all month
eriaing April i, wzz, smh, more than double
Hie circulation of any other paper published oi
circulated in jacKaon uounty.
The only paper between Eugene, Ore., and
pacTBmento, (Jam., a umtjince of over ft 00 miles,
having leased wire Asmiriuted Preaa Service.
Entered as second dawn nmttei at Medford
Oregon, under tlie act of March 8, 1879.
MEMBERS OP TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS.
The Aaaociated Press is exclusively entitled to
uie um tor rep u mention of all news nispiitcties
credited to It, or not otliemlae credited In thl
paper, and also to the local news published
nvrein, '
All tights of republication of aped a) die
patches herein are aluo rcervwl.
rrscL.. , J "j
IN LAKE CHELAN
. WEXATCIIEE. Wash.. AuK. 9.
Searchers Tuosdny found tho body of
J. C. Gelliar of LukeBlde. Wash., In
25 feet of water at Point No Point
oh Uiko Cholun. Ciulhard drowned
Sunday while rowing In an open
lioat from Prince creek to Safety
Harbor. The body of David llarry or
Malaga. WilkIi., who was with (iulhar
In -the boqt has not been found. '
A party stayed on tho lake Bhoro
Tuesday night and started hunting
fof Barry's body tills morning. The
bottom of the boat was found, Indi
cating that it had been smashed on
the rocks. It was a shallow boat, ac
cording to J. II. Mundt of Chelan,
and not well suited for use on Lake
Chelan. J j
, ' AVENATCIlHlo' Wasli., ' Aug. 0.
The body of .Iohbo V.. Ilrauhan, ukocI
39, of Seattle who was drowned In
the Columbia river Wodnesdny, Aug
ust 2, nt tho foot of Orondo street,
Wenatchoe, was found Tuosday night
at Columbia river aiding by D. II.
Settorholm, station agent at that
place. He notified Coroner Temple
ton and the body was brought here
Tuesday night.
Ashland's I.illila park Ih ono of the
finest natural parks on tho Pacific
roast, built at considerable expense
by a number of Ashland citizens. In
this park many conveniences aro pro
vided for tho comfort of tourists and
a beautiful camping ground has been
set aside as an auto camp. Pooplo
from all purls of soul horn Oregon
gather In Ashland park on Sundays
and holidays and tennis courts, cro
quet grounds, a dancing pavilion and
band stand and extensive picnic
grounds have been provided for tholr
ontcrtulnment.
Nearby Is Ashland canyon, while
through tho park flows Ashland
creek, a picturesque little mountain
creek. Ashland Peak, with an eleva
tion of 7,535 feet, Is only a few miles
from this park. Trout fishing and
hunting Is within cany reach. Two
beautiful Bky-lino drlvos for auto
mobile tourists afford them a splen
did view of Ashland and the valley.
Within I.lthia Park are many mineral
springs, Including llthla, hot sulphur,
sodium, magnesia, white Bulphur
and cinnabar; also carbon dioxide gas
springs. .
" Iiithla nark has Btich rare beuutv
and liKturalnoss that It has become
famous throughout tho west.
U .S. GIRL ATHLETE
; i,PAJHS, Aug. 9. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) .MIkb Flora Ilatsom
of New Orleans, captain of tho Amer
ican glr'8' athletic team here for
competition In tho international
Barnes and champion girl hurdler of
America, suffered a Bpraln of tho left
an Rio and was badly bruised in tak
ing the hurdles at tho Colombes sta
dium this morning. It was feared
the mishap would keep Miss Matnon;
out of tho championship competition.
'"I Mrlncra Sail for Alaska
SEATTLE, Aug. 9. A delegation or
Seattle Shrioers wifl leave this morn
ing on the steamship Alameda on Nile
temple's eighth pilgrimage to Alaska
point. - '
IT LOOKS like a i'ilit Id t lie finish. The extension r the railninil
l rilte to the Four lirolherhooils, brings the .situation to u crisis.
Tlie essential issue in the wnlk-mit of the Chicago s itehnien is
this: lias the non-union man the siime right V work as the union
man.
The talk about Hie culling out of Iroops emlanneriiifr the lives of
union workers is the most transparent hunk political bunk. It is
an obvious effort to arouse public sympathy, when no public sym
pathy is deserved.
Little, if any, lawlessness by troops has been chronicled thus far.
l'raetieally all the lawlessness has been on the other side. Non-union
men have been stoned ami beaten, some killed, ancf troops have been
called, not to attack the strikers, but to protect law-abiding workers
from attacks BY the strikers, in other words to uphold the law, and
maintain the principle that refusal to join a union does not deprive an
American citizen of his life, liberty and pursuit of happiness.
1 1
eirretlable as any prolongation of the strike will be, the issue
must he met some day and might as well he met now. Tho right of
labor to organize, tlie right of collective bargaining must he main
tained, because it is fundamentally right. Any effort to destroy
organized labor as such, must be opposed because fundamentally
wrong, 'hut on the other hand the theory that the rights of organized
labor are superior to the rights of Hie public, that union labor is jus
tified in 'lawlessness, whenever non-union men aro employed, must
be put down and put down hard.
In short, both the radical labor minority and the radical capital
istic minority must be persuaded, or if persuasion fails, must be
forced to abandon their extreme and essentially destructive views,
and adjust their policies to those principles of abstract justice, which
must be maintained if Democracy is to endure. And as in the present
instance the radical labor leaders arc the aggressors, they should be
the first to be disciplined.
It is a tremendous job. No president ever faced a more trying
domestic situation than .President Harding faces today. But in any
thorough-going effort to bring organized labor to reason, he will have
the overwhelming support of public opinion, and with that support,
he is certain, in the end, to win.
FOREST FIRE MENACE IN
OREGON IS GETTING SERIOUS
Ouill Points
Hypocrite: A man who doesn't cuss a little when a rear tire
dows out.
Masculine: bigamist; feminine, bigamistress.
"The American standard of living" is the one fixed by the
neighbors.
And it may be t It lit woman's mind is cleaner because she changes
it so often.
AVhen n' man goes out for a whale of a time, some woman usually
makes a sucker of him.
flclting finger-prints of suspected employes is all right, but the
more sensible thing is to get foot prints on their pants.
The junior Rockefeller says the wood pile helped t,o form character
in boys. So did the wood shed. ;
Most of tho votes that appear to he cast for a candidate are merely
east against the other fellow.
When they meet their fate, ho says: "This is the girl I want."
and she says: k'I guess this one will do."
And some double chins exercise so constantly that one can't tell
whether that roll is fat or muscular development.
The man who whizzes by a pretty girl who has had a blowout,
may not be discourteous, lie may have on white flannel pants.
Ol, Y.MIMA, Wash., Aug. . Early
ruports today to tho office of Slate
Koroster Erod E. Papo indicated a
moro hopeful forest flro condition
throughout tlio stato. With the ex
ception of tho big flro in Wntcom
and Skagit counties oast ot Wicker
shain, all blazes were reported under
control. Eire wardens In charge ot
(ho work on tho Whatcom-Sknglt tiro
wore reported us" confident of tholr
anility to control tho blazo with tho
force of firo fighters now available.
- l'laue LiiihIm (iranil Canyon.
WASHINGTON, Aug. !). (Liy (be
Associated Press) Tho first airplane
landing In the grand canyon of Ari
zona was made -today by Lieutenant
H. H. Thomas, officers reservo corps
of Kansas nt Turtle head, Pont o Plu
teau, near El Tovar. tho national park
scrvlco announced. The landing
place was 3000 feet below the liln of
! tlie canyon.
RippIingRhun&s
. S.X.I- IX 11 -haU
BE PATIENT.
LAST evening, as I drove my car (ilong tho thoroughfare, a
tire blew out with frightful jar, at which I tore my hair. To
me it is a punishment to change a rubber tire; for I'm a wide and
portly gent, I fluently perspire. And so when I had stopped the
1ms, and it had ceased to ehoo, I roundly started in to cuss as
Flanders troopers do. "Be patient," said my stately aunt, who
on the back seat, sat; "it makes me tuod to hear you rant and
see you smash your hat. Just wait till some one conies along and
sees your damaged vart, some youngster who is hale and strong,
with kindness in his heart. We'll note that you are too obese to
ply an iron tool ,that when you toil the melted grease forms round
you in a pool. And he'll observe your martyr looks as you survey
tho wreck, and he will say to you, 'Gadzooks! I'll change your
tire, by heck!' For human kindness is a star that glows with
changeless fire, and when men see how fat yon are, they'll gladly
change your tire." My aunt, she wears Elijah's robe, her visions
all como true; and soon arrived a youth named Job, who made
things good as new. And when I paid him half a buck and gave
him blessings nine, I said, while cranking up my truck, "This pa
tience graft is fine !"
"This is tho most serious forest
fire season we have had for several
jears, and unlesB the public who are
using the forests aro moro careful
even more serious fires than we have
had are apt to occur," said (leorge H.
Cecil, district forester, recently.
"Wo have had few If any lightning
fires to date, but we are very apt
to have many of these during the
early part of this month. No one
can prevent tho lightning fires, but
If people who go Into the woods, for
business or pleasure, would only
realize the constant danger from'
fires spreading, we would have far
fewer losses of valuable timber.
"The II. S. air service Is usslstiug
In tho patrol again. As a precau
tionary measure, wo have been com
pelled to require ail campers, fisher
men and hikers on the national for
ests of Oregon to secure camp fire
permits, as is being done In the na
tional forests of Washtngton.
"Ifonly the people who go Into the
forests would rollow a few simple
rules what a saving In valuable tim
ber and expense to the government,
Btutos and torest flro associations
would result," said -Mr. Cecil.
"What wo call the six rules for pre
venting forest fires are short and
simple, easy to understand and easy
to follow," said -Mr. ' Cecil, "Here
they are:
( 1 ) Matches Be sure your inarch
is out. Pinch it before you throw it
away.
(2) Tobacco Throw pipe ihes
and cigar or cigarette stumps In tlie
dust of tlie road and stamp. or ..uhjeh
out the Hre . before leaving them.
I Don't throw them into brush, leaves
! or needles'.
(3) Making Camp Build a small
icampfire. Build It in tho open,' not
against a tree or log or near brush.
Scrape away ' the trash from all
around It. , . '
( 4 ) Leaving. Camp Never leave
a'Vampflro, even for a Bhort timp,
without quenching it Willi water and
then covering it with earth. ,
(5) llonflres Never build bon
fires In windy weather or where
there Is the slightest danger of their
escaping from control. Don't make
them larger than you need.
(6) Fighting Eires ir you find
a fire, try to put It out. If you can't,
get word of it, to the nearest t'nited
StuteB forest ranger or stale fire war
den at once."
HOW MUCH DO
YOU KNOW?
1. How many AVi'Ht Point Bi'adu
atcH Herved in tho Civil War?
2. AVhut Is the proper tempera
ture for a cold bath?
3. What is the proper tempera
ture for u hot bath?
4. Jh rice paper made from rice?
6. AVhat fruit contain tarturic
acid ?
0. What fruit contains exalie
acid?
7. What was God's firtit com
mand ?
8. What was tho name of Now
York's fii-Ht newspaper?
!. In what state. was P. T. Itanium
born ?
10. What other famous highway
led out of Home besides tho Appian
way?
Answers, to Yostrrday's Questions:
1. Who Is tho author of tho quo
tation "A penny, for your thought?"
Ans. Dean Swift, the author.
2. Who wrote the opera "Mar
tha ?M Ans. Frederick von Flotow.
3. "Who was tho hero of the tales,
of tho Arabian Nights? Ans. Al
ladin. 4. Who wan the first Roman to
march against Home with a Roman
army? Ans. Sulla in the civil war
of S3 It. C.
fi. Who first called Turkey "the
sick man of Europe"? Ans. Nicho
las I of Russia,
7. What famous dam is located in
Arizona ? Ans. Roosevelt dam.
8. ; What nro twoynonyms for the
word ignorant? Ans. uneducated,
uninformed.
9. Where does poison ivy grow
the most? -Ans. In Atlantic state.
10. How does the population of
the District of Columbia compare
with some of the smaller states?
Ans, Tho district has a larger popu
lation than Delnwaro, Wyoming, No
vada, Idaho, or Now Mexico.
Bible Questions
; and Answers
1. What lie fIia,Cun,t.eI Ornl
when asked :.t. " Where t, is Abel thy
brother"? . ' , '
2. How did David 'release Haul
from his fit of madness, when sum
moned to his (Saul's) court?
3. Wero the Apostles ' all Gali
leans? 4. What did Job do when he re
ceived word of the death of his sons?
5. W'hy did Herod have John tlie
Baptist put in prison?
G. What form of punishment was
tho "bastinado"?
Answers to Vesterdn y's Questions :
1. King Ahasuerus had Hainan
hanged for the way he had treated
the Jews.
2. Moso.s slew an Egyptian be
cause he was inflicting the bastinado
upon an Israelite.
3. The Ark was three stories high.
4. The flood came and took ail
the sinners away when they did not
repent at the preaching of Noah.
5. Aaron was dependent upon
Moses for guidance and authority.
6. " It is supposed Jeremiah died In
Egypt. .
With Medford tra;e rs Med ford mnr)
A Very Desirable
Package
is Wnd' "iVKKK-KNI) PACKAOK" for one who
is tfoin"; to.!e away from tho "home boudoir" for a
lVv Uiys. Six sui'iviiu'ly good toilet requisites,
daintily v'ai-kod: Hind's Honey and Almond Cream,
Hind's J'Vc lewder, Hind's Soap, Hind's Talcum,
Hind's Cold C;i'oam, Hind's Disappearing Cream
All in one box. 50e.
Heath's Drug' Store
109 East Main Street
The Coolest Store in Town
' BIG MONEY IN
GRAPES AND RAISINS
' WE OFFER THE
BEST GRAPE LAND
IN CALIFORNIA
At LIVINGSTON (Near Turlock)
Proven Land for Grapes, Peaches, Melons, Figs,
Nuts, Sweet Potatoes, etc.
Price $200 Per Acre
10 Years to Pay
Soil, climate, water, production, all proven you take
no chances in buying here.
Selling fast to experienced men.
Write or call on Stockman, who lived in Medford for
eleven years, and let him prove above statements.
Lyon & Hoag
(1(10 Miirkct St.
Shu Kntiioisco
Harry G. Stockman
Livingston, Calif.
District AkimU
FOR SALE
USED CARS AND TRUCKS
We buy and sell' used cars
and trucks. If you want a
used car see us.
i
2 Snappy Bugs, A-l shape.
1 Dodge Sedan, 1920.
1 3-4-Ton White Truck.
1 l-Ton White Truck.
1 2-Ton Federal Truck.
1 3-4-Ton Cadillac Truck.
1 1-Ton Kissel Truck.
1 1913 Cadillac. Will make
A-l light delivery truck.
1 Ford Touring.
If you don't see what you
want ask for it and we will
get it for you.
CRATER LAKE
AUTOMOTIVE CO,
123 S. Front St. Phone 202
GIM CHUNG
China Eferb Store
This is to certlrj thHt aim Chun of
Medforil, Ore., 1ms cured mo of Kollro
and stomnch trouble. 8. M. Leonard,
509 J St.. llrnnts l'aas.
Thl Is to certify that Glm Chung- of
Medford, Ore., hHa cured me of rupture
of four years' standing. K. O. laham,
411 3 St., Urnnts I-nas. Ore.
Medford. Oregon. Jan. IS. 1917.
This la to certify that I, the under.
alKtied. had very severe stomach trouhle
and had been bothered for several years
and last August waa not expected to
live, and hearing of aim Chung (whose
llerh store Is at 111 South Front sL-eel,
Medford), I decided to get herbs for my
stomach trouble, and I started to feeling
better aa soon as I used them and today
am a well man and can heartily recom
mend anyone afflicted as I waa to flee
Oim Chung and try his Herbs.
(Signed) w. R. JOHNSON.
Witnesses:
Win. Lewis, Eagle Point.
W. L. Chlldreth, Eacle Point -
M. A. Andersen, Medford.
S. B. Holmes, Kagle Point.
C. K. Moore. Eagle Point.
J. V. Mclntyre. Kagle Point.
Oeo. Von der Hellen. Eagle Point
Thoa. K. Nichols. Eagle Point
WSil') .
M ' An . ; ' I
jjj Extremely;" . ' i
Delicious rl
j Beverage ... j 1
GRAPLO L
Best Drink j
every member g
of the ' I
THE FIRST
FOR
THIRST
When you are hot and want a
'; cooling, refreshing drink-think of
Graplo.
t
It tart, tantilizing taste is tempt
ing) to any thirsty tongue, and
yot'H never be without it in the
home after tasting it.
Ask Your Dealer for Graplo or
Order a Case for the Home
JACKSON COUNTY CREAMERY
Manufacturers of All Kinds of !
Soft Drinks