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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1910)
'4 3fEDF0RD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, W.EDNHDAY. APRIL .13, .1910. Medford Mail Tribune FISH BOARD SHOULD ACT. Cmpteto Sorlcar Daily, Thlrtv.nlnth Fifth Year. Year; DATE,? SXOSPT SATUH BAT nx TRB KBDrORO PKKTtWO CO. T A consolidation of the Modfofl Malt. Xrtatlhihed 18St; the Southern Ore son kH. Mtabllehvd 1S0J: the Democratic TMweti, eatablUhcd 1872: the Ashland TrHmne. established 1816. and the Med tr& Tribune, eatabllahed 106. ggOROB PUTNAM, editor and Manager Xatered aa acoomVctasa matter No vwnfcer 1, 1909, at the poatofflce at Medford, Oregon, under the net of Xard 8, 1879. Official Paper of the City of Medford. nplIE supreme court, in a decision handed down this week, holds that the state board of fish commis sioners has authority to close any stream in the state to fishing by virtue of the statute to that effect, though such authority may border closely on a legislative function. The matter came up in an injunction sought in Multnomah county by the Portland Fish company to restrain the board of fish commissioners from closing the Willamette river between Maxell 1 and May 1 to correspond with the closed season on the Columbia river as agreed upon last winter between the states of Oregon and "Washington. As the authority to protect the fish and fishing indus try is a power inherent in the state, even irregularities HUB8CRHTX0J KATE SI One year by mall 5.00 One month by mall . -80 Ter month, delivered by cnrrler. In Medford, Ashland. Jacksonville, Talent, Phoenix, Central Point. Onlil Hill nnd Wondvlllo .SO jgSSS?. "o&S yyea?.V.':..r!?r:::: ttl will not be sufficient grounds to set aside the order oi the Tall Xaicd Wire United patches. Press The Malt Tribune la on sale at the Ferry 'News Stand. San Francisco. . . Portland Hotel News Btand. Portland, Bowman Nowa Co., Portland, Or. rw. O. Whitney. Seattle. Wash. JSotel Spokane News Stand, Spokane. Postage Bates t to 12-page paper............. 13 to 21-page paper 31 io 38-pase paper.... lo .20 .30 BWORX CXBOTTULTXOHt Average Dally for-- jneTCBiDer, iu December, 1909 JoHBBry, 1910 JTekruary, 1910 March Circulation! 1.700 1,848 1.925 J.11I 1.. 2.200 3 3,100 S 2.335 4 3,325 C 3,300 T 3,350 t 2,250 ...... 3,250 3 2,250 11............ 2,369 -H 1,100 14 2.250 IS 2,250 W 2,250 TnJul t . baas deductions 1,360 17 3,350 18 3,250 30 3.300 31..... 3.250 23 3,10 23 3,300 31 3.350 35 3,250 27 3,300 38 3.250 39 3.350 30 3,260 81........... 3.250 .(0.850 Met total 69.600 Arer&Ke net dally........ 3,202 3CKSX-CKB, OSUKMHT. Metropolis of Southern Oregon and 'erthern California, and faateat-grow-Mr city In Oregon. Population, April. 1910. 8609. Banner fruit city of Oregon Rogue trer apples won aweepstakea prize and "ApIo SOzga eS the World" tt National Applo Show, Spokane, 1909. egue River pears brought highest nrieea la all markets of the world dur i&g tho past five years. Writ Commercial Olab for pamphlets. board, which has for its object none other than the protec tion of the fish, according to Justice Eakin. goes into tho habits of salmon and reasons therefrom that the order was reasonable aside from being given in con formity with the power conferred and was not an infringe ment of any civil right of the plaintiffs. The attention of the fish commission is called to the fact that the Rogue river has the largest open season of any stream in the state, and that, owing to abuses by fish hogs, both salmon and steelhead arc rapidly becoming ex tinct. Evcrv effort made bv the people and the master fish warden to shorten the season and provide other protec tion has been successfully resisted in the legislature, through the efforts of the monopoly at the mouth of the river. The fish board should at once exercise its authority by cutting down the open season to correspond with the sea son on the Columbia and other streams, enforce a closed Sunday during the open season and close the Illinois and Applegate to commercial fishing. IN A lilt! CHECK James Kershaw Is Paid 32 Cents a Pound for Mohair Llttlo Troublo to Raise Goats In Southern Oregon. The man with the lodging house las got tho bulge on the rest of us. No man is a Republican nowadays wriess ha can show a certificate from iWicicraham. Jnmoa Korslmw. tho Antelope An gora gout king, was In Medford Tues day cashing a big check received from tho Mohnlr ratlins company In payment of his annual shipment of mohnlr from hW flock of goats. Mr. Kershaw marketed not only tho larg est shlpmont ot this kind over sont out of Orogou but rocolvod a top noUh price for It. Ho was paid 32 The opinion i couta 11 Pound, whllo tho tivorngo mar- t . ..... I A l - . ivui iu ico ranges aruunu -i cams, "This check is almost llko finding tho monoy," state Mr. Korehnw. "I got the goats' ami turned thorn looso on my place. They did tho rost by thomselves. Bosldcs buying coyoto poison and chasing these varmints off I had little to do until shearing time, and that was not n difficult task There Is good money In goats." Mr. Kershaw, aside from raising angora goats, Is a practical dairy man, and during the past winter reap ed a great harvest from hU baud of mltch cows. A Splendid Buy in HOSIERY WHAT TOURISTS DO. Seattle is already taking its cens erm, counting visitors two or three tk&es. That's the Seattle spirit. One ITedford tree-planter has dug fee holes and set out 18,000 fruit trees this year and they are all growing. The Sacramento Beo observes in s Tecent issue that 'ITedford, Or., Is getting to cut quite a figure on the ap.w Certainly! Captain Hobson declares that the enly way to save America is to spend hundreds of millions for battleships. let the Japs come; they might cap hire Hobson. Attorney Hartndge, who tried to graft Mrs. Thaw for $94,000. has lost his suit and will be disbarred for perjury. Theso are strenuous times fer grafters. Bailey's comet will not be visible for a month to the eye. But who wants to look for a comet when he u see miles of orchard in bloom. A dispatch from Catania states that tourists have more than made good the losses caused by the eruption of Mt. Aetna by spending more money in sight-seeing than the damage done by the volcano totaled. Money has, of course, changed hands. Fruit growers on the mountain slope have suffered heavily through the destruction of their vineyards, orchards, and, in some cases, homes, without an opportunity to put their hands into the WIRE-TAPPERS MAKE BIG HAUL IN EASTERN CITIES To the Roosevelt catalogue of Ears and mnlofactors, mollycoddles, weaklings, cravens, cowards and un desirable citizens, must now be ndd d Ihe "baseless fabricator." . , And now Tuft, in his desire to please, has mado another blunder Ly replying to a telegram from an Ital ian mayor, thanking him in the name f ihe American people for welcom ing Roosevelt. 23b trace of Cook was found at the wramit of Mt. McKinley. And now wiu someone finance an expedition io see if any trace of Peary can be fesnd at the north pole. If not, he mst also be a fakir. visitors' pockets. Townspeople, however, are reported as happy. The damacre done bv the volcano is placed at $5,000,- 000. Considering the lavishness with which the visitors! spent money, and the rapidity with which their landlords gathered it in, the estimate that this loss was more than made up is probably moderate. What the tourists have done in so short a time for Sicily they would continuously do for Oregon were Crater Lake made accessible. An immense revenue will annually be left by the never-ending stream of money-spending sight seers and pleasure seekers who will be drawn to Oregon to view the world's greatest natural wonder. Every dollar spent in opening up this mystic lake will be returned many fold to those contributing. The tourist travel is an asset Oregon has long overlook ed, but which has virtually made southern California, and can be made to make southern Oregon. ADVERTISING PLAYS A DOUBLE PART. SAN FRANCISCO. April 13. Mon In porting circles are still speculating today as to where tho wlro-tappors Intercepted racing Information Satur day and cloancu eastern poolrooms out of approximately a million dollars by sending "Redeem" as tho win ner of tho fourth race nt Oakland Saturday. It Is generally bell07cd that tho operators tapped tho wlro running out of Chicago, as tho poolrooms which I were hard lilt were eact of tho Mis sissippi river. Members of the racing fraternity arc of tho opinion that tho schemers are from New York, as It Is known that a numb r of wlro-tappcrs who frequent a well known resort In tho metropolis had been absent from their haunts for several days previous. Tho biggest ) aul made by tho mon was In Philadelphia, where $100,000 was paid on Redcm's fako winning. Raskin h fen HetJ u. La Folletto says the administra tion's railroad bill is "the boldest Ktid upon public right that bighbind re of big business ever forced on engress," and Bob is an authority b railroad questions. A brake that would stop a battlo riup going full Bpeed within its own leegth would be a useful invention, as lie navy department appreciates, but wiy not invent a brake that will stop engress from making extravagant appropriations for the navyf If W. H. Moore of the busted Orl gen Trust turns state's evidence Against his associate, Cooper Mor al, to secure an immunity bath, be wSJ lose the little respect still enter tained for him. Lytle had better lave served term in jail than to attempt betrayal of his associates, He would have ranked higher in pub Xe estimation, The day of advertising which is unmistakably with us brings with it some substantial good to the social order, Its first important benefit is that of serving the buying public by furnishing them reliable information about goods and prices and bring that information to them in the most direct, the quickest and the most convement way by the way of the newspaper. The perhaps still more important pnase of advertis ing's service to the people is the way it revolutionizes store methods and ideals. The merchant realizes that everything in his store must be worth advertising ready for "the ad vertising test." For advertising makes a doubtful bargain stand out as surely as an undeniable one thus .bringing its penalties as well as its rewards. It may be safely said that the necessity of publicity has operated to put selling upon a surer and more certain basis of conscientious desire to. win public favor by really de serving it by making "good value" the slogan in every store and exceptional values (which have especial adver tising value) the daily aspiration of the merchant. And the people get the benefits 1 GEORGE L. DAVIS LOSES A FINE TRICK DOG This morning when George L. Da vis went to release his two coach dogs from tho woodshed, where they had been confined, he found tho male dead. Thero was no symptom of disease and very little possibility of poison being administered. Yesterday eve ning Mr. Davis had tho dog out ex ercising him and ho seemed in good shape in every way. Tho dog was a very intelligent one and had been trained to do a variety of trioks and Ms loss is keenly felt by his owner. WAITER PASSES BAD CHECKS; IS JAILED SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., April 13. John R. Walker, a waiter, is in jail today charged with cashing chocks for small sums on various banks in San Francisco, The police assort that he confessed and said that ho secured less than $100. Walker was arrested lato yester day afternoon after a fight with de tectives at the window of tho paying teller of tho San Francisco Savings Union. Ilasklns for Health. Medford Shoe Shining Parlor' 0H, HERE WE ARE AT LAST! For ladies, gents, children, this is tho place whoro you will save time and money by gotttng your shoes shincd by an experienced artist. Oiling and dyeing is my specialty. Now, don't forgot tho placo, No. 4 South Control nvo jue. Open from 7 a. m. to 8 p. a.; Sundays till 2 p. m. Tho coast Champion Bootblack. V. W. II0WARD, Prop. NOTICE CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY'S LAND DEPARTMENT REPRESENTATIVE Mn. S. J. Adler will be at the Ho tel Moore until Anril 10 for the purpose of sccinir those who are in terested in the company's famous Al- oerta wneat Lands. Ue will 1 n re nared to furnish eomDlota infor mation, including maps, literature, prtoea. etc. Call on Mr. Adler and arrange to take advantage of oar low-rate semi-monthly excursions during this season and inspoct these lands. IDE-McGARTHY LAND COMPANY Colonization Agents Canadian Pacific Railroad. Every Thursday Night At Smith's Hall on Qrapo and Sixth, and every second, and fourth Monday in the month. Six lesson card for $5 or $1 lesson. Learn to waltt. Private lesson by appointment. Learn to dance and be graceful. PROF. AND MRS. JEROME, 124 South Central Ave. have been exceptionally fortunate in buying Ho siery this spring and big shipments have just arrived. Wo can show you very complete assortments of tho best values in hosiery over brought to Medford. You can't afford to miss a -visit to this store and a look at tho hosiery wo aro showing. You'll find the best values here. Ladies' Hosiery 15c to $1.50 ALL COLORS, ALL SIZES; PLAIN AND FANCY STYLES. Ladies, you will enjoy picking your selections from ihisnejv assortment, con sisting of all the late shades to match your costume; also the durable and much wanted plain lisle in black and colors. LACE AND PLAIN LISLE. A very complete line of plain and lace lisle Hosiery in all sizes and the price is only GAUZE AND PINE LISLE. A fine selection of gauze and fine lisle thread Hose, the durable, C(Vn desirable kind, at 75c and OXjXj A LIST OP COLORS. You can get pink, bluo, navy, tan, nilo, green, helio, maize and many other color's, all priced LOW OUTSIZE HOSIERY. Can bo found here in tho desirable sizes; ribbed tojw; a durable cotton and lisle finish, 130c X and Childs Hosiery A complete lino of children's Ho siery in cotton aud fine lisle for misses, and boys' heavy Athletic Hose; exceptional values 2$fi A very good line for only 15c Infants' Hosiery; all colore and black 15c and 25c Men's Half Hose Completo new line of men's Half nose. Just what tho men want to give service and satisfaction. Plain lislo and cotton Half Hoso in black, tan and colors, 50c, 35c, 25c 1 and FANCY HALF HOSE; all colors in plain and fancy lisle; 50c, C 25c and THIS STORE SAVES YOU MONEY. VAN DYKE'S Does this Appeal to You? A chance of a lifetime. Everything to start with and a most pleasant surrounding. Read the Inventory 14.40 acres; 1 mile from Central Point; main county road; rich heavy soil. 41-2 acres, 3-year-old Cornice pears, with poach filler 1-year-old. 10 acres alfalfa. Eight-room house; good barn; cement milkhouso; two wells; one team of horses; one wagon and harness; ono hack; ono buggy; tools of all kinds; ono Jersey cow; board and wire fenced. Price, $8400; $3000 down, balanco 'terms to suit at 6 per cent. Are You Looking for a Platting Proposition? 550 acres, 3 miles from lledf ord, on county road and a most sightly place; 300 acres in cultivation; $100 per acre, one-third down, balance long time. Walter L. McCallum Hotel Nash Lobby i