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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 10, 1925)
'PA HE stx o o o MEDFOTCP MATL TKTr.UXT:, MEnrOT?D, , OKFiO. WEDNr.ftTUY,. .TUXE ID, 193 20 MINISTERS PROTEST FAIR G. County Court Is Petitioned to Stop Motor Car Races at Fair Grounds This Sunday and All Future Sundays Reasons Are Given. ' Protestant mIninttMH from all parts of JackHon county, whose nanu'H f I w, presented n formal protest yes terday to llio county court and the. Jackfion County 1'air iihhiw fatlon itKainst the practice of permlltlnK Bund ay racing at the county fair grounds. The Htiitement Is as fol io wh: To the Hon. Court of Jackson county, and to the Jm-kson County Fair Association : Dear HIih: We understand, through tho public press, that it Is the in tention of the Jack Hon County Fair association to hold, or to permit to be held, auto and motorcycle races at the county fair grounds on Sunday, June 1-1, this mouth. Upon a former occasion when announcements Itad been made relative to similar use of tho county fair grounds on Sunday, protests wore made by tho As Hoclatlon of Ministers of Aledford and by tho vote of their several church congregations assembled, and we-wre given to understand by our committee who took the mutter up with those In charge, that on account of certain ecn tracts being signed it could he called off only at considerable fi nancial loss to the Fair associa tion, but that in the future they would not permit the use of the county fair grounds on Sundays for such events. We, Protostant ministers of the several communities of Jack son county,, representing a mem bership and constituency uf sev eral thousand citizens of this county, hereby enter a most em phatic protest against the. use of the JackMun county fair grounds for the purpose of commercial ized umuHcnu'ntH of tills nature Sunday, June 14, this mouth, or oniany future Sunday. Such a practice wo believe lo bo opposed and at variance wit It the established usage and sanc tity uccorded the recognized Christian Sabbath in America, Wherever and whonever this recognition has been vlolutcd, it has tended to destroy the com munity morale In Its attitude toward one of the oldest Instl tutloiiH of the nation, the Amer ican Christian Sabbath. We do not believe that our communi ties or county through any publicly-owned Institution, can af ford to disregard this undent usage. May wo also call to your at tention that the practice of per mitting Sunday amusements of this nature, is an aflront to tho Christian conscience of the thous ands of citizens of this county who adhere to the organizations which we represent and cf many others, wo are persuaded, who have the same regard for tho Hanetity of tho Christian Sab bath, as have we. t Very respectfully, E. P. Lawrence, Presbyterian: D. J. Huwe. Christian; J. It. Coan, Methodist South; 10. J. Johnson, Lu t h era n ; W. II. Ka -ton, Baptist; J W'illard DeVoe, First M. K.; C. M. King, Nun arene; Capt. A. Pitt, Salvation Army, nil of Medford. v W. McAfee Wilson, Presbyte rian, Hoguo Itlver. W. Lee Orny, Presbyterian, Ilutto Falls. W. II. Amos, Presbyterian: S. J. Chancy, Methodist; Jud on Oldfkid, Congregational; V. K. Allison, Church of Christ; It. C Miller, First paptlst; O. M. llrower, Ch. of tho Itrethren; J. C. Morgter, Presbyterian, all of Ashland. Wm. Vltuont, Methodist, Tal ent. K. F. Atchley, Ch. of Christ, Central Point. K. H.-Kdgar, Presbyterian. Jacksonville. SKATTLK. June ln.A Canadian Plena dispatch received here toda Httld . after witncxNCH testified thai George Schrader. Klmwond. Manitoba had refused use of his bout in attempt to rescue Hubert Peek. 13, dimvne' In the Hod river Saturday, a coroner's jury yesterday held Schnnb-r negli gently responsible for I be 1mv'h death and expressed the opinion that bin conduct wan such as to make him at "undesirable citizen." The boy's mother pb lM wit I . Schrader for the use of the Immi. inn was refused, test I ninny reveah-d Sh Kaiil While- the lad was i!rw nine 1 Schrader t"d w "I h,M boys many timet to keep away fnm the river. They take no notice, uiu! I don't car If they drown." RACES SUNDAY E WILBJTS PLEA Secretary of Navy Gives His Ideas On Evolution and the Bible Believes in Both Bible and Nature To Ig nore Either Foolish. DURHAM, N. C-, June 10. (By Associated Picks.) Some of the ques tions Involved In discussions of the lllble mid evolution were touched upon by Secretary Wilbur of the navy department In a prepared commence ment address today at Duke univer sity, on the subject "common sense.' I Quoting as his text "If any man lack wisdom let him usk of Coil who giveth abundantly and uphraidcth not, and it shall be' given him." Appealing for application of com mon sense to many of the problems of life, .Mr. Wilbur said: "We nt-odj common sense In relig ion. "If the Hible Is the inspired word of Cod as we believe." he added, "then lie created the universe find left the record of that creation forever In scribed upon all created thingH. There are at least two divine books, the Holy Hible, on whose pages are inscribed the doings and sayings of holy men, ami the book of nature. A parf of this historical story Is plainly written upon the geological strata which circumscribe the glohe. Com mon sense suggests that these two records be considered together find that to reject nnd utterly ignore either is equally foolish. "Science today, whatever cIko it may have accomplished, has demon strated that the universe is construct ed on a plan nnd has been created according to laws which still opeiate daily. "These results not only suggest, but they demand u Planner and a Creator and n Law diver. Reason cannot go so far as to discover these laws and plans and created things without go ing a step further to the Creator, dis cerning some of bis attributes by the things He has done. "1 was asked the other day if I believed in a future life, ami what proof there was of such life. I re plied that it took faith to apprehend and believe In a future life. Hut there are ample proofs of a future life If we care to weigh them and the funda mental one around which alt others center is the resurrection of Jesus Christ.,. If Christ rose from the dead it proves that there Is a future live. ( What evidence Is there of IiIh resur- red lull 'I'll is desk behind which 1 .stand, this building in which 1 speak, litis inMituliou in which you are trained and every Christian church in existence and eery Christian Institu tion and every Christian in the uni verse now and since the day of the e.HUt i c ctioii, if! evidence of the resur rection. It was this incident which transfoimcd the eleven disciples from fleeing cowards and dismayed at the crucifixion into inspired prophets who assailed the world singlchnnded and ' sought In a generation to convert all men to Christianity ant) to a belief in the resurrection. It was faith In this resurrection that enabled men who had fled from mere rebuke and cen sure to calmly face a martyrs death. To believe In such a transforma tion of the disciples without an ade- iiaie riiui ri'iuiit?t nit'i"r uivuuiii) i than to believe in the resurrection. nid when they themselves asserted the resurrection of Jesus as the source I f their inspiration they furnished the explanation of their conduct nnd gavel evidence of the truth of their asser-j Hon. "If we accept as a basis of life the first verse of the first chapter of (diesis, the first verse of the twenty- i third psalm, and ihe first two sen-1 tences of the Lord's prayer, we shall 1m ve In those declarations, made bun-I dreds of years apart, a sure fnunda-' tlon for investigation Into the truth of religion as revealed In the Hible and In nature. "These verses are as follows: " 'In the beglnninu: Cod creat ed the heavens nnd the earth.' " "The Lord Is my shepherd. I shall not want.' " 'Our Father who art In heav en, hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will he done on earth as it Is In Heaven.' "And If we are willing to reg ulate our conduct according to the truth thus discovered, we cannot go far wrong, for H Is written 'he that doelh the will of (lod shall know of the doctrine whether it be true or false.' " STRIKE FOR $8 KlXiKNIC, Ore.. June 10 Demand ing a want scale of $S h day, nil union plumbers of KiiRene went out mi strike today. Ross plumbers went to work Immediately after tho strike whs declared, and aro endeavoring to 'any on during the time a settlement is pending. The former scale of wages for union men was $7 a day. Approxi mately 25 men are affected by the walkout. Bible TTiouqktar Tb&q MOW TO PltA Y.- Therefore I sny unto inn, What thlni: scerr ye de sire, when ye pray, believe that ve receive tlicni. uud ye ahull huve thftu. Mur1U ;4. WON SENS IN RELIGION I PREPARING SPEECH I MIAMI, Fla.. June 10. William Jennings Hryan remained serene when informed todav of the formid able array of counsel engaged to de fend John T. Scopes, charged with having violated the Tennesse anti-evolution law. "From the number and prominence of the defense counsel they realize the importance of the ease the magni tude of the issye Involved, but we will he ready for them," he said. "This case deals with education and religion who shall control the public schools anil whether they shall he allowed to undermine religion. Religion and education are the two greatest sub jects known to man." Air, Hryan said he would spend most of his time on his estate near Miami, until the opening of the evolution trial July 10, in preparing his speech to the Jury and in compiling Information on which he hopes to convict Scopes. IS RIPE SUBJECT PARIS, June 10. (Hy Associated Press.) The French senato lust even ing was the scene of a heated debate on the question of whether Roquefort cheese should only be entitled to the name Roquefort when made from shceps' milk find ripened in the Roquefort caves. The pro-Roquefort senators demand to that effect was challenged by the pro-druyere senators who argued that the departments producing (iruy ere cheese had to pay fin export tux of fifteen per cent while Roquefort paid no tax and therefore that it was only Just to allow the druyere depart ments to make "Roquefort" even from cows' milk, as compensation. During. the debate one of the speak ers quoted tributes which he said hud been paid to Roquefort cheese by Pliny, the elder, and Julius Caesar. So decision was reached. PORTLAND, Ore., June in. An audit of the books of the fish com mission for the four years since it has been separate from the game coin mission is to be made by John Y. Klchardson, an accountant, engaged as a result of a motion offered at a meeting by A. Ci. Heals of Tillamook, one of the new commissioners, who succeeds F. P. Kendall. Klchardson said that In a preliminary inspection , he had found several accounts that , were not itemized. ' J BASEBALL SCORES XiKlonul At ChlcilRO Tl. H. K. Ni-w York 5 8 0 OlieiiKo 3 8 1 Dean nnd Snyder; Hlm-k, Jacobs nnd Gonzales. At Cincinnati U. II. .V. Philadelphia 2 3 1 1 Cincinnati 3 7 1 Mitchell and llenline; llenton and Wlnno. At Pittsburg K. II. K. ltoston 6 15 0 Pittsburg I 0 2 Oraham, Lucey and Dixon; Moran, Adams. Shechan and Smith. 8T. l.OriH, June 10. (A. r P. Honors llornsby, star batsman of the National league, lilt his sixteenth home run of the season In the fifth inning of today's game with Prooklyn. Huhhell was pitching. Today's homer gives llornsby undis puted pussesshm of first place among the home run hltters'of bolhe leagues. At Pt. Louis n. Tt. Brooklyn 2 6 2 Ht. Louis .... 11 14 1 Fbrhardt, Huhhell and Taylor, liar, greaves; llhen and O'Farrell. American At Philadelphia Tl. IT. E. Chlenpo 8 11 1 Philadelphia ! 15 0 Thurston, lllankenship and Kchalk; Haumgartner, droves, Htokes and Cochrane, Perkins. At Poston Tl. Tl. K. St. Louis 15 17 3 Poston 8 13 7 Wingnrd and Dixon; Puffing. Fran cis, WiiiKfield and Moving. At New York . H. H. K. Cleveland 6 7 1 New York 6 11 2 ....Karr. Ituckcye nnd Myatt: Jones, Kci'kuhoii and ItcKough, Schant;. Wall Street Report NEW YORK. June 10. The clos ing was firm with special strength being shown by I'nlted States Cast Iron Pipe. International Paper. Ijiek n wanna, lenernl pet role ifm nnd Standard Milling, nil up two to four points. West Penn broke twelve points. I Sto k prices drifted withf narrow and irrcKtil,,! limits in t Hint's quiet ihjii kt-t. Th' io va u m-wed dc- iud for a o)ertt'd liM of oil. motor, public utility and raW shares. Total gilt's approximated 90000 shares, SHERIFF SEIZ& RANCH STILL IN J'VILLE DISTRICT! Forty gallons of mash, thee quarts of moonshine and a still were confis cated by officers when they raided the ranc hof Frank M. White, two and a half miles north of Jacksonville on tho Gold Hill road about 8 o'clock Monday evening. . The mash was just In readiness for the next day's run and apparently the supply of moonshine had all been sold out when the still was raided, for only three (marts could be found. Mr. White readily confessed his guilt, even ; giving the information that he had ' been receiving $j a quart for the fin- . Ished product. The equipment was very crude, and the sheriff's office believes that the finished product wnH more or less pois- 1 onous. When tested for alcoholic con- ' tent 80 per cent wns found to be the result when the moonshine was cold and when heated It tested many de grees more. The officers who made the arrest were Sheriff Ralph Jennings, Federal Agents C. McCredie, K. McKollar. Dis trict Attorney Chancy and Deputy j Sheriff Lewis Jennings. ' SHE KILLED MAN NEW YORK, June 10. -(A. P.) Direct testimony of Dorothy Perkins, admission that she killed Thomas Templeton, her unwelcome suitor, ' was given in the trial of the 17-yar-old girl in general sessions court to-' day. I Joseph Harssel, friend of Temple-' ton testified that after the shooting in the Perkins home, Dorothy fell across Templetoti's body crying "I didn't mean to do it." "Did she say I killed him?'" nsked the prosecutor. "Yes, sir, she did say It, at the time she said 'I didn't mean to do it." " Harssel nnswered. SURPASSING ALL EKCORg - BREAKING SHOWS OF THE PAST A WONDERFUL BILL THAT'S WHAT YOU HEAR THEM SAY. ' FEATURE 1 With AILEEN PRINGLE IA tzxA ANTONIO 'ft DOROTHY MACKAILL COMEDY HARRY LANGDON in "The Sea Squawk" - MUSIC 'Peggy" Ridley at the Organ NEWS INTERNATIONAL PRICES: Matinees - - - - 25c Evenings - - - 35c Kiddies 10c Any Time . FRIDAY RJCHARD DIX in TOO MANY KISSES' Irs alto 1 v- MANN'S-The Best Goods for the Pries, No Matter SENSATIONAL SALE OF SILK DRESSES AT MANN'S THURSDAY J ' tBffls&iJ $25 DRESSES $14.95 50 new print'd crepe silk Dresses and Floriswah Washable Silk Dresses, every one a different style, all good patterns and col ors, up to $25 values, on sale Thursday, ea. $9 Wash Dresses $3.95 300 now Voile, Silkottc and ZSronrl rloth -Dresses in stripes, dots and plain colors. All sizes. Many iiew styles to choose from. Up to $9.00 values. On sale QE Thursday,, each .&0Vp Mail Orders Promptly Filled PHONE - 486 :!! II VTe" If $1 8 DRESSES $10.95 25 Brand New Dresses made of fancy striped tub silks, printed crepe silk, and beautiful crepe de chene, all new up to date styles, and colors. Real $18.00 values, while they last Thursday . . $14.95 C "THE STORE FOR EVERYBODY" J - 487 mil m It Is to Be Efficient the funeral home must he really home-like, for if the cheery, comfortable atmosphere of the private residence is absent, then the funeral home cannot serve its purpose completely. It is for this reason that we have taken great care to make our funeral home a place where all who call upon us will feel instantly at home and at ease. Jisiinciive oeirvice ' 3IA.IMMI UArMJALE What the Price-MANN'S $10.95 . $15 Trimmed Hats $5 25 of this season's best grade Trim- jj mod Hats in a great variety of ' shapes and colors. Sold all season up to $15.00.- On sale lEi CC H Thursday, cadi 3 Agent3 for Butterick Patterns KEOFOftO.ORtOON . 14