Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 11, 1923, Page 4, Image 4

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    PA'GE FOUR
!MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREO OX, FRTDAY, MAY 11, 1923
Medford Mail Tribune
AN INDBPENDENT NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHKU EVERY AFTEKNOON
, .... JSXUEl'T DUMMT. hi 7HH
' MKDKORD i'itlNTINO CO.
HELP. THE EX-SERVICE MAN.
The Medford Sunday Morning Sun l
. furnished ubacrlbera deilrlng a seven
umj ua.ii nowapaper.
Office Mall Tribune Building. 16-87-2
nwin pit Bireei. i'none 10.
' A' consolidation of the Democratic
Times, the Medford Mall, the Medford
Tribune, the Bout hern Oregonlao. The
Aarwano iriDuiie,
ROBERT W. BUHL, Editor.
B. 8UMPTER SMITH, Manager.
BY MAIL In Advance:
i .Dally, with Sunday Sun, year.17.50
c, Dally, with Sunday Sun, months .75
' Dally, without Sunday Sun, year- 6.60
uauy, wnnoui nunuay un, niontn .oo
Weakly Mall TrUmna, one year.... 2.00
Sunduy Sun, one year . 2.00
BY CAKiti Kit in Medford. Ashland,
v Jacksonville. Central Point, Pboenlx
f jaieni ana on iiiKnways:
' Dally, with Sunday Suu, month .76
. . Dally, without Sunday Sun, month .66
j Dally, without Sunduy Sun, year 7. CO
Dally, with Sunday Sun, one yeur 8.60
' All terms by carrier, caah In advance.
Official paper of the City of Medford.
Official paper of Jackson County.
The only paper botwneu b-ugnne, Ore.
na wucrumt'iuu, . am., a uisiuutjo ui
over 600 ml leu. having leased wire Asso-
Entered as secona class matter at
Medford, Oregon, uuder act of March 8,
1879.
MEMBERS OP THB . ASSOCIATED
PRKHS.
' i The Associated Promt Is exclusively
entitled to the use for republication of
all news diRpatcnetf creuiieu to ii or nui
otherwise credited In this paper, and
also to the local news published herein.
All rights of republication of special
oiapaicnes nerain art) iuho reniTvqu.
Ye Smudge- Pot
By Arthur Perry.
There was another "hammer mur
der" yesterday, and the victim might
aa well bo dead. She was picked to
pieces.- :.
, "Mine treasures are all hurled In
the Holds, and we have meat and oil."
JoremlaU 42:8. On the top of the
world.
A Vancouver, Wash., preacher has
como out flutfooted agaliiBt evangel
lata, and use of the church for the
political advancement of perpetual
office-seekers. The reader will please
note the latitude and longitude of the
reverend gentleman. Nothing does a
community so much good as a rousing
revival meeting that it never getn
over:
,. THE MUFFLED KNOCK
(Al&any Democrat)
64N, a magazine of tropical art,
has a poom, "Something Bad,", by
David Qreehood, Instructor in
.English at "Oregon College," In
a. late issue The poem Is qultov
up to Us title. x
f Convicts In the statd prison at
'Salem, are escaping to California al
most as fast as those enjoying their
liberty.
THERE are 800 disabled ex-service men in Oregon, who want
work. These men are not invalids or. cripples, but they are
seriously handicapped in the struggle for employment, ,because of
certain minor disabilities.. Governor Pierce-recently requested the
employers of Oregon to assist in providing them employment.
It would scarcely seem necessary to urge all employers in southern
Oregon who need men, to give these applicants the first chance. All
these ex-service men have been specially trained for those pursuits
for which they are, by previous training and physical condition, best
fitted. They are not men who want easy jobs or special favors. They
are casualties of the war who merely ask an opportunity to work.
If you are in need of men, write to United States Veteran Bureau
Ninth and Oak streets, Portland, Oregon and the bureau will furnish
full information regarding the men available, wages asked, and other
details. - - '
A more genuine public service could scarcely be conceived,- than
for the employers of the state to join together in seeing that these
ex-service men are given employment, the moment they are- able to
take it.
THE AMERICAN SPIRIT.
', The old order changeth. Instead ot
making the' usual jump, a fair dnmBol
of Ban Jose, Calif., who strayed Into a
strange auto, threw out the party of
the flret part
' Conditions will soon be rlpo for ft
scientific demonstration of the theory
thai a box-car can be heaved down
the Main Btem, on any afternoon that
the .wind Is In the north.
'if another war must como in 1020,
ns predicted, tliore are apt to bo a
couple of Impromptu revolutions on
the Bide, In the forlorn hope that peace
time strutters will be chased Into a
training camp bofore all the ills that
man is heir to, hits thorn.
-, -. ,
THE PEEVED SCRIBE
! (Corvalllt Qaxette-Tlmeii
'-'"The editor of the Pendleton
' East Oregonian says tho editor of
the Corvallis Oazetto-Tlmes Is a -Bolshevik..
If this sort of nccusa
' tlon came from a responsible citi
zen with brains enough to come In
out of the rain we would feel hurt,
but coming from whoro it comes
from it is meroly an Indication
that the said "Bolshevik" has trod
on the aald Peudloton editor's'
favorite form of Insanity. At the
present time, the K. O. seems to
think It Is Its solemn duty to do
fend the Idlosyncraclos ot Oregon's
accidental governor.
Espionage, or whistling by Iron
horses, scorns to be on tho docllno.
All doubt about tho lurid night life
of tills metropolis was dispelled on
the 9th Inst when a policeman strollod
out of an all-night boanery, eating a
doughnut. The tlmo was approximate
ly 2 a..m. '
But In .Russia they try ,'om whoro
they catch 'em.
; Ton- are unlike all othor men I've
, ; ? known.
In your uppearanco, in tho things you
f say,
i And In the way you dross you're qulto
, , alono,
' In fact, I think you have a dltferont
; .. . "ay
.In everything. When I first saw
you stand
Among that crowd of men I picked
, , you out
As somelhtuK now In this dull, nuctont
land.
You made me rub my eyes and look
about .
In wonderment And though soma
time has passed
Blnce you burst forth UHn my Jaded
eyes,
I still believe you have them all
, ,- outclassed
F1 absolute unlquonnss. I surmise
I'll never see another man like you
And hero is hoping that I never do!
(Oakland Tribune.
a. .w WN -- . - ..
SECRETARY HOOVER, isn't an orator, but he makes some excel
lent "talks" which seldom receive tho attention thev deserve,
Here is an extract from one given only-two days ago, which was dis
covered in an inconspicuous part of R metropolitan newspaper. It is
tho final answer to tho feather-brained reformer, and the bomb toting
Bolshevik:
Our goal ln economic llfo Is to do thla great thing, to preserve
Individual Initiative, an equality of opportunity and thus a oonstantly
advancing- national standard of IIvIiik. Our economic and social system
Is fundamentally right. It has produced the largest advance In the
standard of living to the whole of our pcoplo that has ever been wit
nessed In history. Its faults are many hut they can, and ore being
corrected without destroying Its progress. It hus brought us steady
advances despite the fabulous losses of war, and must therefore have
great inherent vitality. In short this great conception of America that
every man should bo given an equality of opportunity to take that posi
tion ln the community to which ho Is entitled by virtue of his character
and ability, Is tho keystono of our structure. Wo must preserve it as
the most precious thing wo possess, for when all Is said nnd done the
flnor flowers of civilization do not grow from the cellars of poverty
any more than they grow from the palncoB of extravagance. , TTiey
grow from. the bettering comfort and well being of tho whole of great
peoples..
Quill Points
Clothes don't make the man. It's the hair-cut.
Our own opinion is that Prohibition is here to stay iii spite of all
dry agents can do.
It is well to remember that every sound belief the race now has
vas at one time called heresy. . . , '
One thing about turning lie other cheek is that you cau do it with
out paying some lawyer a fee.
About the only difference is that the old-fashioiied peddler sold
tinware and the new one rides in it.-
So live that it never will be necessary to ask the public to post
pone judgment until all the facts arc 'brought out. f ,
As we study the new jewelry it occurs to us that the human car's
recording, ability is not so remarkable as its tensile strength.
As a rulo you can get at the truth if you will take what a partisan
says and subtract four and divide bv two. .'
RipplingRhyines
a i S f...tu. .r "
-
GRINNING OVER IT.
MY IIA1R is' falling out, my shoes are full of gout, I've mala
dies to spare, . but found out long ago that telling tales of
woo won't get me nnywhoro. Ileforo I learned the truth I sat
before my booth, beiyath my banyan tree, and handed out a
. sigh to neighbors passing by, ,and cried, "Ah, woo is mol" The
neighbors hurried on nil anxious to be gone, before my lalo was
sprung; they didn't wish to hear about my spavined ear, or my
bnek-firing lung. They did not wish to wait until I should rclato
a yarn of grief and groan; they had their chores to do,their er
rands to pursue, and troubles of their own. I heard them say,
"Oh, ehce, beneath his banyan tree that dreary relic sits, nnd
talks forevcrmorc of boil and corn and sore, anil all known
brand of fits. It's strange that ho's so dense, so lacking common
sense, he doesn't grasp the truth that men don't liko the jay
who talks for half a day about an aching tooth." Then I woke
up at last; the errors of tho past loomed largo before my eyes; I
said, "Though lame and sore, I'll fill tho air no mora, with my
heart rending sighs." My side has got a stitch, I suffer from tho
itch, n crick is in my back ; but you may hear me sing, may hear
my laughter ring, within my humblo shack.
E
K88EN, May 11. (Hy the Asso
ciated Press) Sabotage gangs dyna
mited an Important railway bridge
last night as their apparent answer
to , the verdict of - the French court
martini at IJuesscldorf Imposing tho
death . sentence upon 'Albert Schlog
etter, convicted- with six others on
charges of - sabotage and csplonuge.
The bridge was. an the main line
between Waltrop und Lunen. Tho
burgomasters of , these two towns
havo beer arrested by the French
military authorities and fines will be
Imposed. Cutting of- the- railroad
line Interferes with tho transporta
tion of coal and coke from the Dort
mund district and will cause consid
erable Inconvenience to the French.
The Noted Dead
NEW YOnif Mnv 11 rirlirnrtlr.p
Genera! Henrv 1W Rnhorf TI S A..
retired, author ot Robert's Rules of
Order, a standard work of parliamen
tary proceduredied today in Hornell,
1 .
General Robert, who was 86 years
old, was a native of South Carolina.
He was retired in 1901.
He was lu command of a party
which explored a military route from
Vancouver, B. C, to Puget Sound In
IStiO, and served during the Civil war
as an engineer on the defenses of
Washington, Philadelphia and New
Bedford. .
He was a member of the commis
sion that designed the sea wall tor
Galveston, and also ' designed the
bridge conectlng that city with the
mainland.
TO
. PORTLAND, Ore., Slay 11. W. F;
Woodward, chairman of the state
board of conciliation and Otto Hart
wig,, president of the State Federa
tion of Labor and member of the
board of conciliation, conferred this
afternoon on the building trades la
bor strike with a view to -arranging
for a hearing of the demands ot the
men for an Increase from $5.50 to
$6 a day.
Pending Investigation by the board,
the men have returned to work and
Woodward said today that he under
stood several of the contractors have
settled Individually with the laborers
employed by them.
Airmen Knrouto to Portland.
BOISE,' Idaho, May 11. Captain
W. E. Lynd, IT. S. A., flying an army
airplane, reached here today from
Salt Lake City. Captain Lynd is on
an air route mapping tour from San
Antonio, Texas, to San Francisco,vlav
Portland, Ore. .
Mrs. M. D Olds and daughters,'
Miss-Olds and Mrs. O. L.- Buhrman
have returned from a two weeks visit '
in California.
m
NAT PLUNGE
Opens
Tomorrow
SATURDAY
2 p. m.
"Come on in".
' iiii'iii'illllllllllllllllllllilliillllllillllllllllllPllllllllllllIll iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiliiiiiiinimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii iiiiiniwiiiii iii iiiiiniiffliiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiii i i iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiilllilllllPllllillllliil
Purify your Blood
this Spring with
:Vbo4tl-
p . .... -
OF conrso you
will purify
your blood, you
realise tho Im
portance of it.
Many people,
howevor, ovorlook
tho (act that Win
ter, with Its
1 heavy moat diets,
1r thai
j.wl blood thick nnd
slugglBh. That IIbUoss, tired feeling
creeps over them. Thay feel thai
something Is wrong-yot, they ran not
say Just what) Hut isn't It easy to
throw oil tho Ills ot wlntorl Tako, for
tnstnnoo, S. S. 8., ths world's best
blood medicine for' five generations.
8. 8. S. purines tho blood. It makes
It clonn nnd rich. S. S. 3.. stops rheu
matism and skin eruntions: Dlmolos.
blackheads, ncnsi bolls, ecsemal It
builds up run-down, tired men and
women, beautifies complexions.' and
makes the flesh armor! 8 S. 8. will
glvo you greater endurance, energy
and strength!
Mr. D. 8. Cintrtll, lt Im 4th St..
Alton. III., wriutt "For iiy yrsri I r
troubled with pimpht and blMckhtidt a
air ' d tick. Aim Mliaf S.S.S.
lor oolj e - short whilo all my plmploa
started to Irart. I ittl 1001 tietrtr and
can oat more than evtr. U m
grand modieino.
Try It yourself. S. 8. S. la sold at all
good drug, stores. The large also Is
mora economical. Qot a bottlo today!
S S. S. makes you feel likfi yourself again
Hi'
MANN'S The Best Goods for the Price No Matter What the Price MANN'S
JUST ONE MORE DAY
, r, . ... ' ' ' -
V . . .- ..- . -.1 - . ".
Plenty of Good Shirts Left
r,
And Every Shirt Reduced
95c
$1.45
I $4:95'
($1.25 and $1.50 values.)
Good quality striped per
cales, also.- plain white, and
tan. Plenty of these. Both
with ('dual's attached and
without', collars. Sizes 14
to 19.
I
. ($1.75 and $2.00 values.)
Oood eighty square percales
and madras. In- stripes,
small checks and plain col
ors. A good assortment ot
these. Sizes 14-to lV
3 for $4.00
(Regular $5.50 and $8.50 values.)
' Pongee Shirts, Jersey Silk Shirts, Silk and
Fiber Silk Shirts, plain colors arid stripes.
Some with collars attached, some without col;
lars.
$1.95
$2.85
($2.50 and $3.00 values.)
Some have collars attached.
Others im band neck style,
Oood quality inadras in
stripes and plain colors.
Not so many of these left,
but all bargains. Sizes H'J
tol7(.. , ' "
3 for $5.25
($3.50 and $4.00 values.)
Satin striped crepe shirts.
These 'are' an exceptional
bargain at $2.85. Were cheap
at $.'1.50.
Some French Flannels. A .
few with collars attached.
2 for $5.50,
Arrow Greenhood Lakeside Shirts
. Seee them in our windows.
Mann's Department Store
THE STOKE FOR EVERYBODY
MKuronn. ORKGON
Mail Orders Filled Promptly.
Postage Prepaid
SPRING SUITS
Whipcords
Tweeds, Serges
Some with two
pair of pants
$25 $30
$35 $40
Palm Beach
Suits
$15 and $16.50
jji''
-
Your Straw Hat Is Here
II
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