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ttflCDFORD MAIL TRIBlffJE
AW rariRPRKDRNT NKWHPAPEB
' PCBUSUEU KVKKV AITKHNOON
' SUNDAY, BY TUB
UEDPOKU rUIWTINO 00.
. Uedfcrd Sunday Morning Sun li fumUhM
abNotibera deiirlng Ui aeveti-daj daily nawa-
' Office: Mail
(forth Fir itreet.
Tribune Building,
I'hona 76.
A consolidation of the Democratic Tlraea, the
Medford Uail, the Medford Tribune, wt bguuv
ero urcgonlan, the Aamaiia 'jrirtune.
ROHEItT W. HUlll,, Editor.
S. SUM1TP.R SMITH, Mmiaffer.
R Mill In Arlvanee:
Daily, with Sunday Run, year $7.60
Dally, with Sunday bun. month ...... .yd
Dillv. without hundaY Hun. rear 6.60
Dtdlv, without Sunday Hun, mouth ... .&
Weekly Hall Tribune, one year t 00
Sunday Sun, one year J.00
Y CARRIER In Wed ford. Ashland, Jackaoo
111, Central I'olnt, I'hoeuii. Talent and od
Higliwayn:
DaTiv. with HunrfaT Run. month t
Dally, without Sunday Hun, month...... .66
Daily, without Sunday Hun, one year... 7.60
Daily, with Hundsy Hun. one y..f 8.60
A!) tenna by carrier, cash in advance.
Entered ai second -claaa matter at Hedford,
Oregon, under act of March 8, 1870.
Official paper of the City ot Med ford.
Official psfier of Jackson Ccuity.
The only paper betweer. AIdktij, Ore,, and
Clilco, California, a distance of over 400
- mllee, having itaaed wire Aasodated rreae
KrviM.
Sworn dnily avera cTrcirtntion for tla
month a end! tig April 1st, 1024, 3ofl9, more Own
aoume uie circulation or any oiner paper pur
llah'sl or circulated in Jackson County.
MEMJ1BRB OF TflR AfWOOIATn 1HK8R
Tito AaHOclated Preaa fa excluaivrly entitled
. to the Une for republication of all newa die
patch pa credited to It or not otherwiae credited
in tnia paper, and aiuo to the local newa pub
Uahed herein, . - -'
All rights of republication of ipeolal dlt
pa'-chea herein are alao reeervod.
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry.
MrsM-H. Full and Sinclair liavo won
(i j , another victory. In their f.Kht to re
. Kit In civic purity, niter implication In
Iho oil Kcnmlul, hut the mnil clerk
tried and ncijulttcd. without the aid of
' tcchnlcalltieH, of Htcallnn nine HtalkH
of rhubarb. 1h not working for Uncle
Sam anymore.
'"There in no place like Portland.
(Kdlloiial paniKiaph, Orcponinn.)
Amen! And who wild there vvuh?
i -i The moHt HtU)endouH j?ct-away-'froin-homo
mnvement In the hiHtory
of lluntlinKoi-ftmi, exceeded the ex
, f)ectalioiiK of ltn , muHt cnlhuHiuNlic
uupiiurlerM.
Tho Ku Klux Klan hurt moved its
hdadfnmrlerH to WaHliltiKton, I), (?.
Home moonlight niKhl the Komnilttee
, on Defacement of I'ubllc Property,
, will paint K1UY. on tho Whito 11. m.sc
titups.
' Tho brilliant and iniKln.il, ciimh who
', ' K ,ttlt: "In it hoi enough for you?" Ik
Iooho aKuin, holly purmied by thp
keen observer of men and thlnt?H, who
-loHtlficH: "It is hot." Kli-Mtly, it i
nohody'H huincKH whether tho heat In
iu nufficleut, and Koeondiy, a majority of
tho population arc fully'coKuizant of
tho torridlty.
A review of troops, and polltlcknm,
-Vill ho held at Camp JacltHou Mon
day, ruin or Mhlne.
srri! a oiTPoritiNfj
(t'oi-MilliN ;iicilc-TliiirK)
They held h nehool htidKet
meeting In Suletn the other day
to p;irm on a Sr.17.000 levy. Kx
actly one tnx payor turned out In
addition to part of the Hchool
hoard.
He Idtwcd her, removing the cIk
aix'lte from his llpH first. (Salurday
KvcnhiK PoMt.) OHisldcrate, but un
necesHary. "None but the hravn d.-Kcrvo the
fulr," hut it KcrveH them rlht.
' The Kinoni In an cHlhnable. Hlesuly
.i-:7-ll "ml industrlourt youiiK man, who linn
u a fine position. (Maker, Ore., lemo-z-
crat.) They always are.
f""- Now 1h Die time to mImj; about
(i "tireenlnnd's ley shorcM," mid ctm
hiV slder the dl'omriinre of Sbadrach,
ileKhmh, and AbeilacKo, who were
heaved into a fiery furnace by Nebu
chadnezzar, and came, out unhealed
- and unsigned.
Men. hi t xot xoritismxc;
(Albany Democrat -llcrahl)
If there Is a lather In this town
who has no one to remember him
on Knlher's Day. In his step in
here on June L'O and sdcci a
necktie at our expense. l-'red
Ward's Men's Store.
Party who stole Ford is known.
Iteturn at once and avoid trouble.
Amundricn retinoid from the North
Pide in time to ko in search of the
explorer who went In search of him.
J. (' After General Activity, will come
. ;f Colonel IizluesM.
T1IK H.WVIMU T
(Salem C'aplial'ilournal)
M is. II ichler allcKes t hat ho
has freuuently taken meals with
her since that time, and adds,
"that plaintiff Is not afraid or me
nor to eat my food so long as I
pay for it, cook It, and serve it."
If anybody cares to die, without
trouble of commit tltiff suicide, they
sli on bl ii w remark. In a snippy man
' iter, while the mice are away the cats
will play. If the writer does not see
'you anymore, good-bye and good
luck, and take care of yourself.
Our Movernor and rand Lecturer
will visit the encampment the first of
the week. I !e has not been on l he
Main Stem since he appointed a fish
commissioner from muh hern Own,
The dihtiiiKtllHlied visitor y. still cot
tiilK the titxrM "Info," ith utie hall'l
tird behind hii0
The usual thre lino nhortnee cxIkIh
nt the base of t) cid.. so it Is neces
sary to pull oVwn the top nml crane
Ihe deficit.
GOOD WORK,
WJVA.lt, KRKTIIERX, the "Deed 1ms been Did!" And in spite
of the somewhat torrid
spi-infis and a few pats on the
For in tukiiif; 2(101) (Jmirdnmen to Crater Lake todig, tlio' people
of Medi'ord have ajrai demonstrated that they can do what can't
be done. Once more the title of
stands forth unsullied and unstained. A .national record a world's
reeord.for that matter, lianas, at
ers of this' caravan and to every,
Hail 1 nbunc extends its sincere
And this feat was accomplished in spite of considerable local
opposition. Many citizens felt the expedition , was uncalled for.
Many doubted that the benefit would' justify the outlay.
Hut when it was learned that
to make this trip, the opposition
city as a whole, regardless of their
the Chamber of Commerce, and
Good work, well done! It is
it is this spirit that will carry Medford on to greater things in the
future.
QUILL
Well, .suiiimi'i is here at last. The early lull hats are on display,
- Hard work doesn't cause rheumatism, Who ever heard of a
rhetimalio tongue?
The dentist s ehair isn't finite
not strapped in.
The real eause of divorce is the
that characterized courtship.
The pedestrian has rights, but
them after they are violated.
.Among the most worth-while books is the one you need to com
plete your bid of four spades. ,
There isn't much wrong in a country where 83 per .-cent of the
general complaint concerns women's styles. j
It is estimated that amateur gardeners provide u living for fifty
three billion potato bugs. j
Cirr(M!t this sentence: "Keally,
raid she. '.but I don t believe in
COMMUNICATIONS
Non-HcllKhni Is K plained. .
. To Mm Kdilor:
Kindly -tillow mo a small spaco
In your ccduinns, as i am very much
criticized for my nnn-rcllKtous senti
ments. I would like to explain how
I como by these sentiments. My
mother was a Baptist,, my fat); or an
Inridel. I loved them both, as they
both deserved my lovo. Mother had
the moHt Influence ovor me, henco 1
believed in the Jiible, ben use mother
said it was till true. I Joined tho
Methodist church when I was 35
years old. I had charge of tho
senior Itlhle class nnd began study
ing the liiblo. (I had never read
the hihlo before, only tho selected
lossons). Tho more I studied It, tlio
moro my religion began to got
weaker. I saw very soon, if I stayed
In tho church I . was n hypocrite,
for I can not possibly believe tho
llible Is any word of Divinity; If it
is, it 1h not human nature to be
lieve In its teachings. I urn taught
by 'the book and by the pulpit that
to dlsbelievo I will he damned (of
course, that means I will go to hell).
If this is correct, my father l
in hell. Ko are all my people who
believe as ho did, if I am In any
church I cortuinly must helievo that
or 1 am a low down hypocrite.
v H is not my nature to think such
a thing of the loving father I had.
The very minute 1 go Into n church
hniiKO I nm told, virtually, that my
father is in hell, others may
stand for that. 1 positively will not.,
RipplinRhlraQs,
wait
FALSE
W IIKX Imsiiicss is Juittuniiii:. and coin is rolling in, nnd
tilings ii ro up m. d coming we wear a gmuly rrin. We
tliink we're surely doing important things and fine, high aims
we are pursuing, we'd make tlie old world shine. With 'honors
we are weighted, our wreaths are multiplied, our bosoms are in
flated with false nnd foolish pride. If we islwuld die tomorrow
who would reeall our deeds? Our aunts niifjht whoop in sor
row, nnd wenr some sahle weeds; some friends mipht wipe their
faees to rid, the same of tears, hut men would take our plaecs
while we held down the biers. Before the hells ceased tollinj?,
before the dirges stopped, live wires would eome a-rollii.t; to
take the jobs we'd dropped Perhaps they'd do things better,
than evef wo have done,, the arrogant go-getter would win
more fame and nion. I often read old papers, the recAVds of
the past, to mark tjie prideful capers of men who didn't last.
The swelled-up men of forty or fifty -years gomy by ! They
charged around, rip-snorty, their fame was wide and high. These
haughty men and clever 'kicked up a startling hree. and
thought they'd live forever in people's memories, ttut when
they died of glanders or gout or Spanish flu, Jhese passing
Alexanders made way for Alecks new. Their glowing names
Ikvc perished, all are forgotten m.w, te dreams and pride they
cherished arc dead as Caesar's cow. We are not so essential
-tlvnt men will Speak our fame
have (uit the game.
TVfEDFORT) MATti" TRTRTmE,
WELL DONE 1
atmosjiliere. a few hearty hand
municipal back are in order.
the liiest Little City on the Coast
Jledford's belt, and to the lead
citizen who participated in it, The
congratulations. ' ,
Medford had pledged her word
dwindled, and the people of the
personal opinions, rallied around
put it over.
this spirit .that has made Medford,
.. i-
POINTS
so bad as the electric chair. You're
early decay of the good manners
ho is so seldom here to defend
you know, my legs are perfect,?
kuickors
And again I find In the new testa
ment Kt. I.uke, Chapter 14, Veruo 20,
"If any man como to mo nnd hate,
not IiIh father, and mother, and wife
and children and brethern and sis-1
tors, yea, hlH own .life also, ho -can '
not bo my Disciple." If this Is the
ordeal I nm forced to go through I j
ask to bo excused, others may qualifyf
to this. I can not. I will not., Among
some othor things I find. A man
is not . nbovo a benst after death,!
liccles. Chapter 3, Verso 111-20, and
also I find there la no reward after,
death. Kccles, Cap. 9, Verso 5. This
I am forced to think, is a moro rea-
I sonahlo attitude, which I will not
dispute I could refer you to many
more things, which would explain J
why I am not a follower of any;
religious cult, for it would force mo
to be a hypocrite.
rimpson; wilson,
Central Point Juno 20th.
U. S. BALLOONISTS PROTEST
AWARD OF RACING PRIZE
1IIUISSELS, June 20. (A. P.) Tlio
American ImlloonlttlH.1 "Viile T. ;Vnn
Ornian, tolny formally iirotested yos
torday's offk-lal decision of tho Aoro
club declaring tho HoIkIhii, M. Veen
stra. wlnnor of the recent Gordon
Hennott cup halloon race. The protest
nutomallrnlly husdpiuIb tho aw'ard of
tho cup to Vernmru.
Prime Minister I'mli-r Klllrc
IlliDArnST, Hunnary, Juno 20.
(A. 1'.) Count Stefan llethlen, Jl.un
Rarlan prlino minlHtor, becamo Sud
denly ill hint nluht nnd undorwont
a HueeeHHful nppendleltlft operation.
Msyon.
PRIDE.
ill irrints rovrrriit ill! wlicn vo
MEDFORT). OT?EGONT. SATURDAY. JTTXE '20. 19.1 -
r CROSS-WORD
tx v HER
: This is the '
6-1 1-17-23-30' -35
cake. . See the
bride and groom
standing 33-36
top I
27-28 people al
ways have cakes
at their 2-4-5-9-13-19-26-32,
I
wonder? Isn't
3-4 a cute little
b r i d e g room ?
1-3 I 32-33 wish
he could speak!
Do you think .
it is ill-6-7-8-9 to
18-19-20-21-22 . a
house without
ringing the door
bell first? I often
run in to 12-13-
14-15-16 my aunt
and never 8-12-18-23 knock at the
door. She lives on Park 14-20.
(street abbr.)
23-24-25-26! Hear that bell!
It's the alarm clock. I 29-30-31 it
answer to
5 6-7-8-9-10 (branch). 18-19-20
, (he). 13-1415 (the). 1017 (of),
Copyright, 1020, by The
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY. M D
8iinM IvtUra ptalntng to Mrmn
IrMtmmt. will b. anaw.rad bv Dr. Brady If
L.ttara ahould"ba brti and wrlttan In Ink. Owing to tha laroa numbar of lattara rwalvad. only
a law oan ba anrwarad tiara. No reply oan ba mada to uarlaa net oonformlna to Inatruetlona
Aadraee Dr. William Brady, lr rjere et thla newapopar.
Wlmt to Wcur
One of those oh bo balmy days
early In April when the weather man
gave us. a bit of July, poor Bill came
plodding w e a rily
home from school
in sore distress,
mopping his dewy
brow every fourth
pace and mutely
telling the world
he still had his
winter underwear
on. 1 felt sorry for
lie's a fine
boy, is 1 111. and
he seldom brouks any of our win
dows or nulls us tickets to KhlndlKs
that never come off. 'Hut I hud to
let htm draff his 75 pounds of tfonu
ina boy siufC right on homo. You
see, ' Bill's' pa 'lie a doctor himself,',
and, it might seem presumptuous if
J were to play tho Samaritan. All
I ventured,', therefore, was u word
of sympathy as poor Hill laboriously
rounded the corner and headed for
home. . Not until a week later,
when we were having regular April
weather again, did 1 realize that 1
had not done the right thing by Bill, I
for strike niq pink if Bill's ma didn't
come out all of a sudden with her,
hair bobbed. It is conceivable that!
if Bill's ma chose the chilly damp
early spring weather for her hair
cut, she might not bo horrified at a
suggestion that it would bo perfectly
safe, apd healthful for Bill to chango
hl summer underwear at will, Bill's
will. I mean.
Multiply Bill's suffering 10 million
times and you havo a fair, conception
of the price children have to pay
for the superstitions of tho parents
and Ben Told. Tho situation is -improving,
but very slowly. I fear. 1
can remember when the Fourth of
July marked the official end of tho
winter underwear agony. Today it is
nut quito so dreadful as that, but
here we aro-knee deep in June, nnd
there aro still a lot of unfortunate
young 'una suffocating in heavy
underwear simply because, that infal
lible health authority. Ben Told,
deems tills' season "Just tho easiest
time to tak'd cold." And Ben Told
tsloyully supported by tho hokum
taught in chool,' In tho name o
physiology 6r hygiene. In fact I sus
pect Ben j writes the school text
books. '
My opinion doesn't count for much
against Bn'n. with people who be
lieve in talcing cold, but I want to
broadcast it among the 10 million
sweltering victims of tho supersti
tion. Speaking as an avowed health
authority, l assure every feller who
is not sick and under a doctor's
Caro that It is always safe, and
healthful and advisable to obey that
impulse tho ''moment it comes and
chango to tho kind yog find com
WANTED CHERRIES
Bings and Lamberts 1 .
JOHNSON PRODUCE CO.
241 North Fir St.
Screens
: OTder Yoiir Window Screens aftd ;
, Screen Doors From
TROWBRIDGE CABINET WORKS
Medford
-A Modern Mill
Our Own Make Prices
Screen
PUZZLE STORYj
CAKE ,
. I pi 73 -i, i3 lb m
7f W W 35" 37" TI ; .
33 " ST" SS " 27" as I ,..v
at two so I would not be late.
1-21 I 16-22-28-34 on a tackl
ouch! I would have 10-15-21-27
if I said it did not hurt.
Last fuzzie
(two). 22-2S (be). iMO (sol mi
27 - 28 (Is). 23-24 on) 11 fim
International Syndicate
iimiiii antf hyoiwi. not to dlMw dlMno.1 r
a idmMd. ..If u I....
ThLs Soason. ,
fortable. After all, the chief factor
in the hygiene of underwear or for
that matter all clothing, is comfort.
If any urticlo or kind of clothing is
too warm for comfrot, it is unhy-
Bienlc and certainly harmful to one's tr'tors as Joffro nnd Oalllenl, Lyau
health. On the other hand, there tey. Gouiaud and Mangln. The list
is no sound phJHlolOBical or hyRi-1 nicrely bcRlns jvlth these. General
enic basis for the corollary that Jacques Adelbert Plneton de Cham
clothinK too Hunt for warmth is un-!urun was already beine cited In army
healthful. - Indeed some ot tho lead-! orders 20 years oro in the far cast
Ing child sncciallsts. notahlv Pater-
son in EnRlnnd, advocate hypotonic Three years since ho received of
rt '.lnllr!iti" .t.iiri.in. flclal r'erocnitlon of his worw In tho
just a reasonable removal of thoVil"y of tho Wergha in Morocco,
harmful excess so often Inflicted on where he pacified unruly tribes nnd
just such children by superstitious
parents. Patcinon specifically urges
this "to Incrcnso boat loss from tho
skin."
Of tho four matprlals, wool, silk
cotton nnd linen, probably :ilncn
tno most comfortablo for summer
underwear, because it absorbs mois
ture best and so aids in the evapora
tion ot sweat.
QI HSTIQNS AN I) ANSWERS.
Savo the Illankets.
When a patient has pneumonia,
and tho blankets and other ' bed
clothing ,hnve been washed and nlred.
is .tbpro-any danger, in ' using thcin
again? How ubout the mattress?
S.. SI. F. '
Answer O r d I n a r y ' laundering
makes any such bed clothes per -
fectly safe to use again. If a mat -
iic- una men soneu, navo :ll steam
cruized, or remove' the cover and
have it . laundered, or If it is grossly
soiled by evcrctlons or discharges in
any infectious disease, better burn
i..u ..mill ess. A mattress properly
IUIUUIM.-U uy sncets in sncn nn illness,
is pneumonia is not Infected and re
quires no particular treatment to
make it safe for other .'persons to
use.
! : nirth Mark.
I nm a girl 12 years old.. I have
a birth mark on my right cheek
below my eyo. Can If be removed
Without injury to the eyesight? What
can it be removed with? M. G. It.
Answer The obliteration or re
movnl of tho birth murk would not
involve a risk to tho eyesight. Va
riuos methods of treatment are used
according to tho condition. Consult
a physician who is a skin specialist
anu leave tho method of treatment
to his judgment.
Iron in tho Water.
e have recently moved from
Chicago to Wisconsin nnd find our
well water strongly impregnated with
iron, so that the taste Is marked and
to us dlsngreenble. Is there nnv
dnnger to health in drinking such
water and using It for cooking?
l,. u. A
Answer Xo. if the water Is free
from pnlhition.
Phone 97
'i.M V-.--
- Screens J
Oregon
RightpQuality the Best
Screens0
Autos killed 1900 ih-oiiIc Inst'yenr.
t way' iiothin' o tlio Uioustiu'8 o' poor
little thin soled KlHs Unit Had I' ivniK
'miles t' Uier homos, or hack t' tit'
public square. I'd lintc t' bo a lioot
U'rkot u' have' V pretend V liccd tin
overcoat Avtty np t' Jnly. '
C.cii. lie Chambruii.
Although the present punitive
counter-offensive of tho French
forces a k h in et tho wild Hlffian
tribesmen in Mo
rocco was conceiv
ed by Marshal Ly-
nutey, credit for
tho actual launch
ing of it success
fully is given to
General de Cham-
brun, 1 A ni c r i can
born.
Tho general is
anothor graduate
of the stern and
efficient school of
Fren ch arms that
MrVSQUBtlOWW
produced such sol
diers and adminis
a"d the Sudan
established lasting order in a few
monins wnnout tno loss ot a man,
Men of tho Chambrun line have
served Fnuice well, for many a gene.
ration, both on the field of battle nnd
ls1,n tn0 Inu prosnic work , of gov
eminent. Jn modern times another
of them,, tho general's brother, is a
member of the chamber of deputies
for the .department of L.ozere. -The
third brother is a diplomat.
- General Chambrun Is linked his
toricnlly with France's sister repub
He, through -Marquis de Lafayette.
whose great-grandson he Is. An
other link was formed when he mar
ried Miss Clara Longworth of Cin
cinnati, a sister of . the . present
speoker 'of the house of reprosenta
tlves. The general himself was born
in Washington D3 years ago, on July
Uj; 1872, and he wont to be the
1 French military attache thcro In
1908.
Associations familiar to him were
therefore revived during tho world
war when he spent several months as
chief liaison officer between the
French general staff and its Amerl
can counterpart at Chaumont. This
tnur of duty was preceded and fol
lowed by distinguished combatant
service in command of artillery units
at the front. Thon, two yoars after
tho .war ended, ho was sent to Mo
rocco to reorganiye and head the
French artillery there and engage
with it,-. in his-.fifteenth -or .slxloenlh
campaign.
-A
yburVacation :
enjoy the Canadianfticific
Mite-hiRh in the wonderful Camdisn
. Pacific Rockies-metropolitm hotels
in marvelous scenic settinfis - ideal
iar your vacation-
Banff and Lake Iuise offer
Golf, Fishing, Automobile
" Trips, Horseback. Climbing,
' Swimming, Dancing. Perfect
service ' and accomodations;
, never-ending pleasure whether
, you stay a week or a month.
inv exc rston fares arc
nnu- in effect: no passports
are required.
At fnr mir .Venial
Pfl d.l ff,,tf ifrtti- ramft
Ganadiaiv Pacific
VH Detcon-UcrH Agrnt -PdiirOeor
Who's Who
t3
I
Children's Pictorial
Cross" Word Puzzle
HOW TO )LVE PUZZLE.
The' words start in the numbered
squares and run either across- or
down. kily one letter ' P'd in
each white square.' If the proper
words are fount-each rom'binatibn
of letters in the while .squares
will form words. - The key to
puzzle the lirst word is given in
' the drawing. Below are keys to
the other Words. '... . .'
, ' Running Across.
. Word 1. In the picture.
. Word 6. A conjunction.- -Word
7. Scattered irubblshi a
bed of loose straw. 7 . - , -Word
10. A prefix. : -Word
U. Opposite of stop.
. Word 12." A national flag or
banner; a naval officer.
Word 15. The same as Word 6.
Word 16. In bed. . :
Running Down.- -Word
2. A litil" child.
Word 3. Skill. ' ' -
'Word' 4. A number of -'vessels
together or under the Bame com
mand. ' '
Word fi. A laz; person: a beo
that doesn't make any' honey. -Word
8. "A wayside hotel.
Word 9. Common urticle of
food.
Wot: 13. To weep with a catch
ing of the breath.
Word 14. Wroth; anger.
' YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE
v -ANSWERED, ., .
'pictSrtaflte
Every mile pro
tected by Auto
matic Svtm
f . 'the moat com
plete known to
'science.'
Portland fc
- -Limited
tlx aalr throah
train between Portland
and Chicago. Observa-
noncar witb library.
lounging room; club
room, smoking and card room, barber '
. shop, shower bath, valet service.' New
Pullman sleeping cars with improved
and more commodious-dressing rooms
for-the ladies. -Unexcelled dining car
service. Nothing in parlor In transpor
tation. Na extra tare. ....
" 70 Hours '
Betwoen Portland and Chtaaio'
taavea Portland ojt 9:35 ovary motninj
Standard and tourist sleeping .cars
through to Chicago, also standard sleep
ing car for Denver and Kansas City.
Continental Limited
Another 70-hour train between Portland
and Chicago, leaving Portland at 4:00
every evening, with observation car
and sleeping cars through to Chicago.
Through standard land tourist sleeping
can to uenver-ana Kansas City.
Low Fares
in effect dally to September IS to all the nrlnrf-
p Battera Citiea. Final return limfrOctober
31. Liberal ttop-over privilcjr. t ' '
One-way via CalUornla
either aoina or returning may be arranKed if
desired without much additional expense.
Zlftn National Pa rk Low summer
fares to the new Wonderland of Color in
the Utah. Why not take ft in on
youf way Eait? - -
TaUowusaa National Fa ft-May
also be made ai a aide trip at a small ad
ditional coat.
Aik for free booklet descriptive of.theae
famoua reaorta.
Our representative mi K- sUri -4 a.ii
infonnation and help you plan your trip.
ddl? nWM. McMURRAY '
General Pauenser Aaent '
' ' ) Portland. OrMnn
Union Paciifo
nftOnwY SEVENTH
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