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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1910)
,,ussU.ti- ford Mail Tribune juk zmaarsHBSxT stbwwavbb IB BAXLT XXOBfrT ATXT- BAT' BT naxHroM TBOtTXKtt 09. JMttlon of tha Medford Mall ISSIt: thn KouthUrn OrrOn- 'MteMlshed 1902: th DemocraUo established i7i; we Asm&na yrlbune, established 1106. established 189S ana tn wea- mmemiV FUTNAM, Editor and Maaacer 'Bslirml as second-clsas matter. No A, Oregon? under the act or 8. 7. I Paper of the City of Medford l. i. at me poai oincs at. uwKJBxrriow ju.tjm. a,ytr by mall SS.00 as ssenth by mall .50 Vr tanth delivered by carrier In jftMKord. .Ashland. Jacksonville . m Central Point.. .0 Bliss y.,ly. by mall, per year.... J.00 wiiMr.-tw yw ....I.? "i-8 yB & Wire Watte Press Bis- patcaea. Tn Mall Tribune Is on sale at the TCon-a Rtanrt. San LVanrlsCO. Bfl . HOiei Mews Biuiu, jrorunau., Mi News Co.. Portland. Ore. . Whitney, Seattle. Wash.. Spokane News stung, apoicane. rostafe Bates. I t- It-pas paper. . . Jo KB t je-pace paper c f i.-pago paper... c swoxb cxctoatxoh, JLtstssq dally for rswrwsber, 1904 J.JOJ 3ealr, 1909 J.fi? JHWM7. 1910 1.JI5 BVkcriary, 1910 J.lfl 1910 ,................i .?i 291U .. . j10 ..... S.SGS 1910 .- 1,614 Avsvar cxbcvxjltxov. ye 17 IS 19 a- ' a 3X. ZX ' M.. 24..: 25 2(... 2t Z9 30a 31 2,550 2,650 M" 2.-650 2.550 2,660 2,660 9.49 2.460 2.510 2.460 2.460 2,463 VeaaM. ..w... 68.140 Bnftr 'Average. 2.517 lTK OF ORBOON, Couaty of Jack- tke 1st day of September. 1910. y appeared oerore me, wp manager or ine iieoiuru ut V ..nnm n.tli APlranVlAdrM tae above figures are true and cor- CBJ? NbtaryTubllo for Oregon. XBB3fOBB, OZMOaT. IsacrepeKs of Southern Oregon and r citv in Oregon. uailiornia, ana ine iuic' Utlon. 1910, 9.000. deposits $2,760,000. 0 uravuy waier aysiem cum ln July. 1910. Riving; finest jup- tmh mountain water. Btatoen miles of street being paved i m oat exceeding 31.000. making a of twenty mlnuea of pavement. PMstofflce receipt for year ending sat 30, 1910, show a gain of 36 per T- fruit city in Oregon Rogue fcpsr apples wan sweepstakes prlxe and ' AW9U MLVof Ww" 1 a National Apple Show.- Spokane, Vnma Rlvrr nun brOUffht hlKn- aa artees In all marketa of the world ine paai live year. for postage of the finest com- Commercial Club, enciowag pamphlet ever wrmen. M &b&s. of orchard aad ty prop- ty.- rrM.r IJ. , eoollt la cook. Mm choppers. :.3itaenl bona work. for Sale tore' and lease of 5-room mod- sea aottse; rent $20. A-vtttoas, $40, $50, $70, $90. and 19-year laase, close in. sees netting $6000 yearly. Itoouture, with lease, modern house, ike location, $300. FRUIT LAND. acres, 10 in orchard, 25 alfalfa, ier ditch, tools, stock, $15,000. acres, ou inut janu, uuu coras wed, close in, $15 per acre. 17 meres, 14 in heavy bearing, 2 miles sit, $500 per acre. 5;am& 10-acre tracts bearing orch ard, close in, easy terms. M ssres finest Bear creek bottom, will subdivide; easy terms. 91 aeres Bear creek bottom, all in Jrait. $7000; fine building site. ! acres, improvements, 4 mile? out, $2750; beautiful location. at'aered. 10 acres Bartletts and Sewtowns, $2500. ar-Aeres. half mile west. $600. CITY PROPERTY. St tose-In lots, east side, $750. S-iMnn modern bungalow, $1000. S-vogbi house, lot 100x100, close in, $1800. 14 good' lots, $2000. S acres, all platted, 2 houses, $7500. fRmt Main lots, 60x240, easy terms. 4 Kvnwood lots, $1100. Iton Central, closo in. $1000. 4 Jots North Riverside, sewer and water;. $1150, tends. .Walnut Park addition, lots 52x112, your own terms. and lots in all parts of the " HOMESTEADS. mores', never filed, only 3 miles tnm. town, on railroad; fine soil, 3 springs to irrigate, wood anud tisaber; snap at $250. !!... t "... 2,550 S. 2.550 B..t. 2,5RA - Sj.... . 2.550 ......... 2,550 ;... 3,00 ....... 2,550 9. ...... 3,52b M.......... 3,690 M 2,560 Jt... 2,500 SS-... 2,550 M 2,650 at. -2.550 Wanted BITTNER MEDITDRD M AIL, TRIBUNE: MEDFORD, QUEZON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 37, 1010. THE PRIMARY ELECTION. Wuu Again the people of Oregon have announced their de termination to rule. Again the people of Oregon have asserted that State ment No. 1 has come to stay part of the law of the land. Again the people of Oregon have shown that they are amply , capable o. selecting party nominees, without dic tation from politician's! Again the people of O.regon have expressed their disap proval of conventions and "assemblies," that assert them selves better ablo to choose for the people than the people themselves. Yet so bone-headed' arc politicians that they cannot learn, but continue their blundering careers, and their re actionary organ, the Portland Oregonian, and its feeble echoes are already proclainiing from the ruins of their col lapsed pie counter in the air, that the assembly is still an issue, that the jolt administered Saturday was not hard enough to put a quietus on the movement. Only the most sanguine omd secure crumbs of comfort for the assembly from the primary election. The assembly candidate for governor. Jay Bowerman, was nominated through divided opposition liy less than a third of the voto cast. One of the assemblv candidates for congress was de feated oy a Heavy vote, and the other pulled through only by a narrow margin. All of the assembly candidates for state office, except, one, were defeated. The entire legisla tive ticket.in Multnomah, the largest county in the state, was decisively defeated, and the vast majority of assembly legislative candidates throughout the state were snowed under. The only anti-assembly candidate for su preme court justice was nominated. In Jackson county the entire assembly ticket met defeat. Judge Colvig polled the full strength of the assembly element, less than a third of the vote cast, and this is the full strength of the stand-pat element here. There are none so blind as those who will not see, and we have the shattered assemblyites concentrating their strength to elect an assemblv man for governor, and we have the Oregonian proclaiming that "the voters have not accepted or rejected the principle of the assembly as a rule or method of party action," despite the fact that the assem bly intends to "put the knife to the hilt" in Statement No. 1 candidates. But not only were republican assembly candidates de feated, but democratic "assembly" candidates were also beaten. Jeff Myers for governor and John Manning for congressman were both turned down hard, showing that the rank and file of both parties have no need for nor use for "guidance" by politicians. A Good Live Agent Wanted Columbia and Maxwell Automobiles . iV U 4' ,'.vl5; Columbia Cars, $2750 to $3500. Maxwell Cars, $000 to $1000. Good proposition for right man. Mr. R B. .COOT will be in Medford Wednesday, Sept. 28. Address Hotel Moore. United Auto Company 534-6 Alder St. & E. COI1N, Manager. ft. Portland, Oregon WILLIAM ERHART SNYDER IF 5 CONCERT PIANIST WILL APPEAR0N PROGRAMME OF SOCIETY VAUDEVILLE FRIDAY EVENING,, SEPTEMBER 30. MEDFORD OPERA HOUSE MTJLKEY'S GALLANT TIGHT. B. F.-Mulkey made a gallant single-handed fight for nomination for congressman. Had he entered the fight earlier, had, he. had any money to spend, had he had any support from outside the district, he would have won. Mr. r Mulkey did notf ile in time to get his name in the of ficial pamphlet. Thishandicapped him and crave his op ponent an advantage. The only aggressive newspaper support he had was that of the Mail Tribune, the few ag gressive papers of the district being stand-pat part' organs, the rest being colorless aaccording to custom. Mr. Mulkey was able to visit but half the counties in the district. Hie could not lay his case before the voters in these counties and so lost them. Jackson county gave Mr. Mulkey a two to one vote. Had it not been for the caucus and a" full vote been cast, lie would have gone out with a 1000 majority from his home, and he deserved it, for he has fought the good fight. But the principles of insurgency, the ficrht acrainst Can- nonisra, Aldrichism, stand-pattism, and pork barrel meth ods, typified by Mr. Hawley, still goes on, and will win the final battle, despite the loss of the first skirmish. Illinois Regulars Who Fought Insurgents For Renomination. BBBSBBssm iissssPislMBBK; jalfcs. 'kmmm sssssssssassssMBffi?ffissssssry' J.' "", 'Y'd?. mL4.ty& ff yV)v!KJ '''idtlfr "$'$ f$rf'? 4'' ' t SSBBBBBBBBBBBWBBBSBBBBslsSBaBiVMvM'V Sip"Pffl .BalHmf;wPr Mk. mm BiKaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBKBsftSBBW W ' T MsWI BBBBaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBsl ll' '' ''ESBBBBBBBBBBHSN 'S'sBBBBBBBBBB'IW KITCHEHOR TO BE HEAO OF ARMY Such a Move by Cabinet Would Prove Most Popular as Grim Old Worrlor is a Favorite With the Masses. LONDON Sept. 27. I the present Eulwh 'cabinet wishes (6 become popular suddenly it could not do better than apK)iut Lord Kiteh enor as bead of the territorial army in Great Britain. By so doing the government would not only put an end to the agitation against the shelving of Kitchener, but it would also provide u meaiin of discovering whether tho territorials ure such a failure that the only thing to do with them is to disband them in favor of u national scheme of conscription. For that is what Engluml is fac ing nf the present moment the territorial "iinny or conscription. Created us the lust hope against compulsory service, the territoriuis have not coin'u lip to expectations. With n regular iinny admitted on all sides to he inadequate in cane of n European war, every one agrees that there must be some large um etticieut force in existence to guard England against invasion should the regular troops be, employed in for eign service. - It was hoped that tho territorial army would have supplied this need, hut on all sides it in now agreed that, under present condi tions, the force would be of very lit- Uu avail iipniiHt a foreign invader. Insufficient training of the men, lack of capable officers, deficiency in numbers are the respects in which the territorials full short. Tho pop ular idea is to givo. Kitchener a freo hand with th'e force. It is pointed out that apart from, being the great est soldier England at presont pos sesses, he 'm u born organizer mid work of tho kind suggested ought to show him ut his best. Besides, ho would be performing tho grcutest service lo his country, should ho be HHccensful, that ho- could possibly render. And, after nil, there is no reason why ho should not come out on top. The failure ifthetorritoriul army has all along been duo to the defects of the schema rather than of tho men. The Ilritish. war office, or at least those of tho officials who aio not coiiKcriptionist cranks, have been trying to ttitn civilians into trained soldiers, just by giving them a few hours' drill eaoh weok and a fort night's training under canvas unco a year. Naturally tho results huvo not been cood. Chase and Stalllnas Clash. NEW YOItic, Sept. 27. Tho hick orlng and lll-feellng botwoon Ooorgo StalHngH, nmnagor of tho Now York Amorlcans, and Hal Chaso, the "peerless rirtst basoman" of tho Hlghlandera, culmlnatod today, whon Owner Farrcll announced that Stat llnss had been dopoucd and that Chaso had been appointed maniiKor temporarily. Ithcr Chaso or Arthur Irwin, tho Highlander scout, probably will be npoplntcd permanont manager. Itecoutly StalllnBS charged that Chaso was "laying down" at first baso and not playing his best game, hoping, thereby to causo tho team to loso games and secure his own appointment as manager. Stall logs' charges have boon undor Inves tigation. "To wasto Is mn offense," so sell thoea sscond hand things you'rm coat ed U ushe. Suck aalea are "waat a4 bustaeM." Notlco of Solo of $.10,000 School Ilonds, Dint. oK. 40, Jackson County, Oregon. Olds will bo received up to Octo ber 15, 1910, nt tho hour of S o'clock, BBBBsWi ' SBBsV '"''' BBS p. in. of said day, by Jan. M. Crono mlller, treasurer of Jackson county, Oregon, at tho offlco of tho county treasurer, In tho town of Jackson ville, Oregon, for tho purchaso of SC0.000 (fifty thousand dollars) coupon bonds, of $1000 denomina tion, to bo iHsued by School District No. 40, of Jackson county, Orogon, pyablo In twenty yonre, ten yonrs op tional, bearing C por cont Jntoront por annum, Interest payablo Boml-nnnu-ally. Illds to bo accompanied by cor t'fled check for five por cont of tho amount of tho bid. Tho board of di rectors of wild School District No. 49 reserve tho right to roject any and .til bids. JAS. M. CUONKMILLKIl, Treasurer of Jackson County, Oro. Dated this 17th day of Soptombor, 1910. Residence Lots AVo offer for your inspec tion a block of lots located in tho center of tho oxoIub ivo high clnaH restricted ros idonco district of Medford, lying botwoon East Main street and .Roddy avonuo, only five blocks from tho business center. Each and oVory lot commands a beau tiful viow of tho city, moun tains and vulloy. A boautt- ! ful aitrht for a home with a j bracing and invigorating at- uiospucru. LMir- resiriciions will insui'Q for all timo" tho eharactoi of this tract. No shack's will ovor mar its beauty j destined to bocomo tho aristocratic residence section Of tho city. Streots tire now boing paved, comont walks and curbs,, sowei'Saifd waijor systoms installed. Four- caroful consideration today may save you many regrets later. Lot lis show you tho property. Buy at present prices. A lot pur chased today for $.1000 can not bo duplicated a few years honco for $5000. Don't delay. Investigate, and wo will show you tho finest res idence property with tho greatest future and for tho least cost of any high class sub-division in tho city of Medford. For particulars see A. F. BAEKTETT, Jackson Co. Bank Bldg., or TANNER & MURPHY, Corner Main and C. Ste. . SOMETHING UNUSUAL Wo are pleased to announce that Morritt Loltoy, thu chalk talker, !n been secured to give his famous chalk tulk MAKINO PACKS iu our city. Me will appear ut thu Hiuh .School Friday, Sept, .'10. Mr Ielioy has a national roputa tioli, having been before the public for 15 years, mid during that time has uppoarcd in nearly every prominent city in the United .States. This is the first trip through thesu parts, and all should avail themselves of tho oppor tunity to hear him, and see his humor. uos cartoons and beautiful chulk pic tures which ho draws while ho tolls th nudlenenco tho iunidontH in connection with them, Some Good Investments . House and lot, 50x161, good well, 6 largo rooms, also largo, well built barn; a good buy, cash or good notes $1G00 1 lot, 50x106, south front; water and sower in $400 New 5-room bungalow; modern; lot 57x106; good terms can be had. A good lot on tho cast side, 50x130, cash $10 per month $250 2 fine lots, 50x174; 30 largo apple trees, each, terms $500 A fine largo homo, largo lawn, in a good part of the city $5300 Thos. H. E: Hathaway 134 West Main Street. I See DIAMOND for DIAMONDS WE HAVE THE LARGEST AND MOST COM PLETE STOCK OP RARE GEMS EVER SHOWN IN THE CITY. J. W. Diamond For Sale by MWEHN. CO. 213 Fruitgrowers' Bank Bdg RANCH PROPERTY 10 acres bearing fruit, iy2 miles out $15,000 10 acres bearing fruit; good buildings, V2 miles out.... $15,000 2y acres truck and berry land, water, buildings, 1 1-4 miles $2500 10 acres truck and berry land, water rights, barn .... $3750 8V1 acres fruit, good build ings, tools and stock, closo in $7000 20 acres all fruit, 10 bearing, n bargain $12,500 7 acres bearing fruit, good buildings', Vn miles out .... :.;..,...... $9000 30 acres near Central Point, part bearing, good build ings, water, a bargain .:'..'.. $16000 240 acres best fraitlnnd, part bearing,; house 'arid barn, 4 miles out, per ac:ro ..;.... ..V.V$3d0 35 acres, all in fruit, build ings, spring, wells; stock, lUOIB ..Xy,OUU 40 acrds near Central Point fruit and alfalfa, worth $400 por aero $12,000 CITY PROPERTY 5-rom bungalow, modern .... $2500 8-room houso,.3-4 aero $1800 Knes residence lots on 8th St $500 to $700 6-room modern house $2700 5-rom modorrf cottage $2000 2-story house, lot 168x258, $2,000 ,5-room modern cottage $2100 Fine residence lots and dwellings in all parts of the ciy FIRE INSURANCE, BEST COMPANIES CALL AT OFF. TOE OR PHONE MAIN 2592 -' - X' Fa ! gVV ,-, 20C Taylor & Phlpps Bldg. 115 Cast Main Medford, Ore, ! t,. ' ; ty.V.,, ij - JUaklns for Health. i -a.wr Jl 0