2
0
e .
a
- O
HWl. Wto'! off.
Hyjff sEr fyct. 76.
A O0tUlttl0D of tl
I the Xhorruf TtAA
Mford kfrll, Uic fledlord
ard Tributia, BpjB
tv Urpm..n, Ui Asblaud iribuii.
'. BOBKKT W IIUHL, Editor.
' B. 8UMPTKR BMJTH, tUiu0r
Bi y ill hi Advance:
UtM, with Rnndir fun, rr 17.60
OmUf, wltb Huiiday Hun, month 7f
0.1W, without Sundiy Hun, year 0.60
Daily, without HutiiU Hun. muntfa ... .
Wklv Mall Tribune, out year t oo
IuihIuj 8uu. orwj year S.Of
V CUHKIKK In Itedftrd, Aalilund, JicUon
tltla, Onlral Point, PtioeDii, Talent tu
Aitrfauava:
UaTlj. with Sunday Sud, month $ .71
Patly, without Hunday Sud. tuonttu Ot
atilf, without Sunday Sun, ona year.. 7.60
ally, with SuJtday Sun, one year 8.60
AQ (trai by earner, caah In advance.
totrd aa woond-claaa matter at Medford
PtHL under act of ilarcn B, S79.
BKMBKRS OF TII& Aanuuivrrrn TORSS.
ftn; Aeworiited I'reaa fa eicluaively entitled
to tiw uae lor republication of all new dia-
Ml(iei oredited to it or not otherwise creditor
0 lt19 Pper, and aiao to tue local oewi pub
tid berela
All tight ot republication of tpadal dla
M'-uot oercin ara tiao merwi.
Ti Smudjft Fof
if
i. i Iff Artlc -ferry.
Another college student Jiuh failed
with; "Perfect Crime." The only
"I'ferfect Crime," seems to lie a well
known and popular make of small
i
cai'.i , i
. royUcnl observers wonder what ef
fect South Dakota's proposed law for
a "ohe-house legislature" will have
n other siutes. It will prohalily re
suit lh Oregon Ht riving fur u three-
huu4i legislature.
tilt) assess are $1(1 jyid IiIh liabilities
Vnru). tie nnu neen a success. ui
merchant at one time, (Cuoh liny
lia!rtnr. The HofteneU blow.
; ;1 -
,. Myf, Jack Horner,
.. (irffne around the cottier
, At too faHt a puce.
M Id iho wreck und the walls,
' nd Ihe visions of Julia
' ' The ludy, Hhe powdered her face,
; uu c
' KvoVy paper one picks up these
tluyn, UI1b of farmers being Jabbed by
Wall Hi. and pitchforks. a
.
IJTOt'ND Purse with Utile money.
Antoit Gerber, Falls View. (Oregon
City ISnterprlHe.) Why mention It!
AjUy Newbury shows .up iff the
pilgrimage plcluruH. L,eurned cuuiihcI
Ih MweurliiK blH Jimt-won-a-lawHiilt
Hmliff! Colonel (real) Thommtn hup
poijij him In OiIh pulmiiliiK drama,
andJaVwtiiH to be under the ImprcHfllun
llm()oiiiothliitf uwful Ih going to
i jjj : TKAH-IU'M.i
.iffiiCorvalllH (;uzrttc-TlmcK)
; jOii r Hympathy goes out Jo (lov
erttor IMercc. He has been
ofiUtfed tocancel several apeak
lite flutes on account of lumbago.
tt! give you one 'guesH aa to
w'hirh hurts the governor most, -tho
jlumbago or the cancellation.
Sale, B-rootn bunKalow. Owner
han,' bought a Hutck and bus no
further UHe for hU house. (Albany
Uemucrat-Heruld.) Hlgna of the
tlnik.:
.
1 AU the girls are now dressed for
InsUinl leaping Into a classtcul dance.
'
Ajrljauto mechanic was aeon frying
to $x a postofflce lien recently,
mKTUinUTOHS OF DODGERS
DLOUNCKD ( lldllne Coos Uuy
Timet.) l'ed est rlu us score victory.
j Tin; smc;iitki humh:
):!' (Sulein C'apllal'Jouriiiil)
, Ration, June 21. Coming as n
great surprise to his many frit' mis
Wan'; the announcement of the
ma)'! luge of Miss Kihcl Illlyeu of
HaiVlsburg and Wayne Iturber
which took place at Albany Wed
nteiduy uflernoon.
MUtuh CI, Wash. MmUlox has been
left;out of the list of shining exainples
of s)ulhern Oregon.
It' did no good to cuss the weather,
but prayers for cooler days have been
unswfrcd.'
the RteolhoadH and uporkh'd
bt'uutlfH are not tn ttie river; neither
are till the cutlhrmitH. m
Th- overnlls of Kudo, the WHinp
yeuhg' Jtinttur-to-he. Hhrunk In the
wtiNti. . The exlKeney wuh met with
t'huraitterlHIIr Oriental HtulelHin, mul
by washing Kiulu.
1 may be Inspiring
Whei ,NnioticlnM-H untiring
Ket'jrputUng the world on the head
And uutlng the laggard
To 4to" looking haggard
And. substitute courage for dread.
It may be uplifting
When spirits ure drifting
To have someone ease your distress
Ity warmly remarking
Yuu Hin will be parking
YoinV fVot ftn the rungs of success.
It's njee to persuade us
No guftl can evade us
If oplX we banish the frown
Hlnce tmllen und perslsivnce
Will Ijteok down resistance
And .ciown us with world-wldo re-
iiown.
Hut ho me how-or other
The-cer-sllnglng brother
)lut .wearies our obstinate soul;
Much rather than winning
Ity ettfelessly grinning
We'd crawl In a hottomluKs hole.
Yotircan't keep empliyinent
By showing enjoyment
Or hanging sweet imttoes about:
The chop who kocps plugging
While others ure mugging O
Cornea' first ' when succi'Sfl is pussQ
'6uu (Baltimore fcun.) i
.
ANOTHER EARTHQUAKE DISASTER.
"wp fiE shocking triiKtidy in C'nl
W to tl instaWlity of the earth
Yesterday
Kanla Uiirbara was
modern city on the Pacific Coast,
i3. .
many people killed and injured, Qd thegwork of a generation
wiped out in the twinkling of an eye.
Only a few years ao as the ugtm run, this calamity woiihhave
been ascribed to an an;ry tliety, mid frijihtened people would today
Ik offeriu; up saerifiees to apase the wrath of paan avis.'
As recently as 18!)(i when 20,000 lives were lost in an carth
iiake mid tidal waves in .Japan, spcciul services fere hel in the
temples to iro)f,tiite the finantie catfish, which the masses sup
posed livcj beneath the surface of tje sea and by the swishing of
its tail caused tlif earth to nick and the buildings to fall.
Hut in the treat disaster of two ars af?, such outbursts of
superstitious i'eur were rare and
their (jods, appealed to the scientists, and ic organization of mate
rial relief and succor.
This chiinnc is of a beneficent
strength is needed at such a time,
support is necessary, it is to imperial forces and scientific knowledge
to which the human race must look to secure protection from dis
asters in the future.
During the last few years, great advances have been made in
cur knowledge f earthquakes,
past two years, in fact, may well
enment, that earthquakes may predicted with some degree of accuracy.
And to know when an earthsuakc is threatened would be to
greatly reduce, if not entirely eliminate, the tremendous losses of
life which usually attend these seismograph' disturbances?
Recent investigations have also
certain well-defined earthquake areas, and certain areas where earth
quakes hnvc never occurred and probably never will. In the earth
quake areas it has also been found,
mors going on nearly all the tune.
ins 'hcen estimated there is a tremor every day, but only the deep
listurbances lead to serious disasters.
As knowledge increases and fear and ignorance disappear, one
can look forward with reasonable
such a calamity as Santa Barbara
countries nt least, through predictions and proper building construc
tion, be practically unknown.
QUILL
"The right sort of people" are
cluding debt.
The words most used in a typical
'she said."
The ant may out class the grasshopper in the matter of thrift,
ut not as a pedestrian.
A parking space is where you leave the car to have th) remaining
fender fixed that way.
It isn't probable that primitive
much. They had no money.
Woman doesn't need profanity,
at the supper dishes next morning.
Tho two things destined to meet
genus homo and white pants.
If he uses large words to express his ideas, he got the ideas
where he got the large words.
The comforting. thing about the
Russia are financing it.
Don't worry. The moro foolish
will be a common-sense wave.
Will the fundamentalists five
hat they descended from us?
Ripjdiii$Rhi)ir9
Walt
THE NORTH
rTMIK North 0ic ;s vision,
phantom, in roll isioil Willi
phantom, in collision with
path that leads you to it winds weirdly through the snow, and
bones of dead men strew it, o'er hummock, berg and floe. No
fertile lands arc round it, inviting you to stop, so that, in caso
you found it, yon. couldn't raise a crop. There are no lights to
guide y;, save beams from frozen stars, no hot dog joints pro.
vide you wth eats and rich cigars. 0Hut all is empty, ghostly,
a stretch ot frozen woe, the landscape made up mostly of cheap
and worthless snow. l"p there a man may perish with none
to hear his sighs, save critters polar-bearish, who'll eat him
when he dies. And yet the men of daring outface the Arctic's
moods, and liravely they go faring to voiceless solitudes. It is
the old, old story, the race is virile yet, and man, to gather
glory, will laugh at danger's threat. He'd have a bard en
chanted enVbulin his deathless name, and have his statue planted
in someone's hall of fame. And we, the village bakers, the
tailors ncid the clerks, the eop.s and undertakers, denounce him
and bis works, "lie is fool for going away from home and
friends, up there where is is snor ing where winter never ends."
Hot if all men were cravens, and feared to sail away, from
safe and sheltered havens, where would we be today f If Chris
loGicr had faltered, as doubtful of his ,!,, tlm ("iticlaw's
mustang, haltered, would be the country's hope.
7"
il'ornia tiulay UK'iin calls attention,
on which we live.
apparently as .secure as aWy
today iris aJ1nas.s0f ruins, witni
the people instead nppetilingj to
character, for while spiritual
and something beyond material
'
the data secured in Japan in the
lead . eventually to such enlight
demonstrated that there arc
that there are earthquake tre
In some districts of Japan it
confidence to the time when
has suffered will in the civilized
. .. '
POINTS
expected to be in evervthing, in
.
conversation are "he said" and
men haled one aflother very
anyway, except when she looks
misfortune are infants of the
,
war in China is tli.it Jannn and
the world cots, the quicker there
thousand years from now admit
Mason
JSb-
POLE.
it
mill
has no shape or form, a
endless, cold and storm. Tho
aW Ml X .jti -
THE NXW S
Q9
"Come to the window and see the pretty new 2-4-S-7-'8 tacel
It is right 1-3 the curve of the moon," cried little Alice, pushing aside
the ru Illy curtains oi her window.
a "Where do you think the 8-9-10 goes when the moon comes?"
asked little brother Willie, pressing his face against the window
pane and looking intently at the crescent moon,
i "Oh, the sun doesn't go, Willie, it is 9-11 that go rind and
round!" explained sister Alice.
"1-2 sure I don't feel a bit dizzy from going around 1" said
Willie very much puzzled indeed.
"Oh, 3-4 we couldn't feel the motion at all because the atmos
phere of our world goes about with us I" said Alice.
"My I" said Willie, "We stick 6-7 very tight, don't we?"
"Yes, gravitation helps us do that I" said Alice. "':
Answer To Last Puzzle
1-4-8-13-16 (watch), 3-4-5-6 (says), 17-19 (Ed), 15-16-17 (the), 11-12-13
(Mac), 8 9-10 (tea), 1-2 (we), 6-10-14 (Bat), 12-15-18 (ate), 2 6-9 (eye),
7-11 (am).
Copyright, 1025, ly The International Syndicate
Personal Health SerVice
By WILLIAM BRADY. M
8llnd letUra MrMlltlna Co Mruui
VMtlTIMIt. Will bt aniwarid bv Dr. Bndtf II
Llttar. ihould-'ba brlaf and wrlttan In Ink. Owing
van u anawaraa nara. no ropjy NU Da moot tO fjuariM not MnromMf 10 InitriNIIOM
Addrm Dr. William Brady, Ir aara of Dili nowmMr.
Our Fi'leml
Instnct Is stronger than reason in I
nn emergency, and prejudice seems
stronger than Instinct. Jinny ohser-
vntions have proved that the common
feur of snnkes Is not Instinctive, but a
matter of education,
Infants show no
..h untoi ihpv
ha.vo been taught by
their elders that
snakes are to be
feared. The less one
knows about snakes l
the more one fears
thein,- People who '
know, much about !
snakos have no fear
of nny kind of snake, though they have 1
respect for tho venomous kinds and
they know whether a pake is of the
venomous kind when thev see it. People
who know much about snakes have no . 1 nls 18 no1 nn antiseptic.- out an ac
fear of any kind of snake, though they "ve oxidizing agent, the oxidation de
have respect for tho venomous kinds ;stroylng the venom in the tissues,
and they know whether a snake is of 5- Of course burning gun powder
the venomous kind when they see it. " wound, or cauterizing or senr
People who nro well Informed in this with a red hot iron. If Immediately
branch of natural history not only feel done, is the most effective way to de
no fear or repulsion for the common stroy the venom in the tissues, short of
snakes but often admire and even cul.
tivnto beautiful specimen, ns nets. I
doVt know enough about snnkes mv-
self to understand this, but I know
enough about snakes to realize that
they are our friends and that it Is
cruel to kill them wantonly as so many
people do. t
people so steeped in Ignorance of ' "uiiiuuiuiitviii
nnture as to bellevo that inosnnilons ,ene discovered by Calmetto has been
deevlop from nothing but the shade of
tall grass, weeds or underbrush nre
likely to believe that the forked tongue
of the common harmless snake is- n
"stinger1 'and the deoner their Ignor-
nnce the hnrder it s to make them un-
derstnnd the ridiculousness of the no-
tion that mosquitoes or nny other form
of Hfo can nrlse spontaneously or
without parentage. The tongue of a
snake has nothing to do with the
fangs, long sharp fteeth in the upper
Jnw, and through these teeth the
venom or poison in injected into the
wound made y the fang or fangs.
Kven bites by tho venomous snakes
found in North America rattlers,
copperheads, moccasins, chiefly are
not nearly so fatal ns the popular pre
judice leads one to imagine. Raymond
ii. Bit mars curator of reptiles at the
New York Zoologicnl park averts that
more thnn 100 persona have died from
snake bfte in the United States annual
ly for three or four years post, but
he has not heard of a single death
from snake bite In New York, New
Jersey or New England in the Inst 15
years. In one county In North Caro
lina, ho tells us, three persons died
from rattlesnake bites one summer.
Mv. Dltmars merely estimates. As a
general rule persons bitten by rattle
snakes soon recover. Fatalities are
certainly rare in proportion with the
number of persons bitten.
A pretty reliable way to distinguish
the venomous snake from the harm
less kind Is the shape of the head,
which is triangular with widened jaws
in. the venomous snnke and round or
narrow In the harmless vuriet.es. The
j venomous snnke has n vertlral or elip
I tion I pupil, like a cat's and the hnrm
i less snnke n round pupil like a man's.
The venomous snakes of North Ameri
ca nre mainly pit vipers, that Is. there
is a pit or depression on each side of
the hendin front of the eye while
i the harmless kind has no such depres-
'slous in the head.
Some of the common hnrmless
j black snnkes and wnter snakes nre
, useful tie cause they destroy field ver
min, nnd certain kinds may be consid
ered good friends to titan because they
.kill venomous snakes.
Or, H. F. Higgnr epnrts In n recent
number of the (ntral Journnl of
j Homeopathy that Iodine applied in
and nbtuit tljo wound and administer
ed internal!;? is 9t effective antidote
fur rattlesn.ike pulsion. Prop doses of
the tincture of iodine nre idven inter
nally every ten minutes for the f ir.-t
hvT.r. then every half hour for three or
. four hours. .
vmmwmm phii.il i i mi i j i' i
ntalth mnm hwal.n nnl JI.Aaaa rfUann.l.
ilimnid. ..If adrivMMil anwalnn I. annloMd.
to tin Urn numbar ot lattan rao.lvad, only
the Siuiko
-QUESTION'S AND ANSWERS
This is tho best first aid care in l
'case of snnkeblt, according to authorl
'ties with experience:
1. Twist a bandnge or handkerchief
around the limb above the bite, as a
'"rniquei, to acmy mo spreau oi ui
venom tnrougn tne circulation.
I J- Cut '"1o the Punctures loft by
, the rnnKs' with a rnzor or a penknife
ior n l'loce ot B,nss or n Bhlu " P'n or
anytning wnicn win induce meeaing.
to wiiHh out as much oof tho venom
as possible. v ' - .
3. Suck the wound for several min
lltes, to draw out niore of 'the venom.
4. Hub into the wound some srys
tnls of potussium permanganate, oi
better. If possible, intact into the tis
;ucs around the wound a hypodermic
syringeful of a 1 or 2 per cent solution
of 'he permanganate In boiled water.
.excision or tne mass involved.
6- Hot strong coffee Is the best
.stimulant, or a half toaspoonful of ar
omntlc spirits of ammonia in a little
coltl water every half hour, but never
wnisaey. io stimulation or tnis Kina
necessary unless tho patient becomes
nale, dizzy or stuporous..
I round effective in trcntlng poisoning
"V rattlesnnKe Ulte, coDra bite ana otn
ler venomous snake bites. Such serum
's obtainable in a few hospitals and is
'produced in the Institute of Serum
.Theraphy, Butantan, Sao Paulo, Bra
.21'.
8. Aside from the specific 'measures
mentioned, the treatment and care of
of the wound should be ns nearly
aseptic as possible, that Is, the same
treatment ne would give an ordinary
wound.
9. The torniquet should he loosen
ed for a few seconds nfter the first 15
minutes and again every five min
utes, to prevent mortiflcntlon.
10. Hypodermic injection of adren
aline solution are probably an nid to
the destruction of the venom In the
blood.
XIcc Cold Shower
I would like to hear your opinion
with regard to cold baths, whether it
is a healthful habit for one aged 45
years to take a cold bnth every morn
ing. Irately I heard some doctor's
warning thnt cold baths affect the
heart. (T. B.)
Answer. Cold baths affect the
heart, usually beneficially, sometimes
detrimentnlly. As a rule the habit Is
healthful. Any reasonnhly young per
son who enjoys a cold bnth every
morning nnd feels refreshed nnd In
vigorated afterward and not depressed
or cold or weary. Is1 probnbly benefit
ted in health by the habit. Teople
with health impairments, whether the
impairments are called "old age" or
cardiovascular disease or whatnot,
Hhould indulge In such a habit only on
the approval of their own physician.
Cool Wont her In Bond.
BKND. Ore.. June 29. The temper
ature yesterday reached only 85, drop
ping to 45 during the night. Forest
fire conditions were much .mnrnved
this morning, forestry official report
ed, the relative humidity reading fifty
nt eight o'clock this morning. '
New York's largest hotel has 2200
rooms.
DTEES
HATTER1
CLIANEEI
PLEATIRI
Phon 144 e
13 N. fir It.
rr
Th' Elite Irus Store lins landed
til' graduation i-Ionn paint contract
fcr th' Apple irovc High School
commencement. Tlf Busy Comer
FIIUii rtallon tins been rebbed so
many times 111 til' last few 'lays
that It has decided t' do a stlckly
credit business from now on.
Who's Who
Moulay Ilafld
Teople look with more than idle
curiosity at the picturesque figure of
this dethroned majesty, Moulay Hafid
of Morocco, the sultan of a Thousand
nnd One Nights, ns
ho t.-ull-a with
f stately gait thru
lie was a thorn
In the French for
yea is, and one of
I he worst massa
cres of the epoch
was perpetrated at
Fez under his rule
In 11)12. Moulay
Is sus pec ted of
h a v I ng been in
German pay. When
the French de
throned him after
NWLEY-ABD--HrfiD the Fez affair he
was exiled to 'i an
glers, but for many years he has been
living In Spain. Finally, making up his
mind to eut humble pie nnd formally
and definitely recognize French rule
in his country, he craved nnd obtain
ed permission to come and settle in
France. '
Moulay Hafid Is a man of curious
contra.su. - A direct descendant of the
prophet, he is in many respects high
ly cultivated, and attentive to modern
thought and progress; with the soul
of a warrior and the brain of a states
man, he Ip, perhaps, the last .Moorish
chief of :the type of his ancestors,
who nearly conquered Kurope - and
gave to' Morocco a civilization which
Inspires wonder and admiration to
day. At the same time there Is In Moulay
Hafid's character some of the freak
ishness possessed In a much greater
degree by his crazy brother. Sultan
Abdul Azis, whoir he dethroned in
peculiar circumstances. Moulay was
fighting the tribes of the Atlas when
word came to him that Fez was sick
of Abdul's mad performances and
wanted nothing better thnn to over
throw him. So Moulay marched on
the capital, which his brother had
hastily thrown Into a state of defense,
Abdul's troops consisting mostly of
desert brigands and thieves released
from prison specially tor the occasion.
Moulay, laughed in his beard when
he learned of the quality of his broth
er's forces. Halting a few miles from
the w?ills of Fez he sent against the
city nt daybreak not his army but a
long column of donkeys led by black
slaves blowing trumpets. On the
donkey's backs were baskets of silver
duros that gleamed In the sunligh nnd
fired the henrts of tho motley crowd
of defenders with envy and covetous-
ness. Unable to resist the temptation,
Abdul's ragged mob rushed out to
seize easy booty nnd were still fight
ing among themselves ns Moulay's
nrmy marched into tho city without
firing a shot.
The last crazy whim of the sultan
was gratified at Tangiers. Seeing for
the first time a dentist's articulated
chair he immediately ordered one to
be made for him in gold nnd in purest
Louis l'hllippe style.'', He used it as a
throne in his palace, nnd took a child
ish delight in working it in every
direction during his audience.
First Insurance
Agency
A. L. HILL, Manager
Phono 105 30 North Central
Medford, Ore.
OOOOOCXXSOOOOOOOCXJOCXSOOOCVIC
CASH PAID
For Second-Hand
Furniture and Stoves
W. A. KINNEY
Furniture House
315 E. Main Phoiie 505
nvsi tu
5 INSURANCE 8
.0
Children's Pk'I'H'inl
O Cross Word I'lizie
Kunnintr Across.
Word '. The bird in tile picture.
Word 4. Kill.
Word 8. Two thousand pounds.
Plural.
Word 7. An eastern state. Ab
breviated. Word 8. The point or place
where a thine is.
Word a. Opposite of fat -
Word 11. Where the sun rises.
Word 12. A piece of noetry.
- tannine Down.
Word I. A narrow opening such
as the hole in which pennies are
s placed in gum and weighing ma
chines. Word 2. A light shade of brown.
Word it. A kind of sea food. -Word
4. A heavenly body.
word b. I ent; nick.
Word 7. What the sun docs In
the morning.
Word 10. Third person singular
present tense of "have."
SATURDAY'S PUZZLE
ANSWKItED
Poems That Live
' . TJnes
There rolls the deep whore iew the
tree.
O eurth, what changes hast thou
seen!
There where the long street roads,
hath been
The stillness of the central sea.
The bills are shadows, nnd they flow
From form to form, nnd nothing
stands;
They melt likt mist, the solid lnnds,
Like clouds they shape themselves and
Bo.
But In my spirit will I dwell,
And dream my dream and hold It
true;
Fqj tho' my lips may breathe adieu,
I cannot think the thing farewell.
Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
QUALITY
L CORNER J
Fountain
Lunches
and we have Winstel't
Delicious Candies.
Davidson's
Corner Fir and Main
MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS
That Distinctive Look
of a Tailored Suit
THERE'S
A REASON ;
It is hand tailored, not
machine built. Made
right here in Medford,
too.
ORDER YOURS
NOW
Delivery in 48 hours
0 if needed.
Prices from $35.00 up.
"' ' '" ' TTTIIIIlftlllll III II Hint
UPSTAIRS
" o