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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1912)
ttggriJJfM"',' MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE f WEATHER Fair. Mnv. 07, Mln. 27. JloInClvo Humidity OH Pet. v i fflf; A SECOND EDITION Mily tiimti Yr. Korty-KlrHl Yrnr. AIY READY FOR INVASION IF NFCESS Military Pni:irnll(ins by United Status tor Intervention in Mexican Uirlslii Cmiiiilfti! American So tilers Ordered Alonii Border. ANSWER EXPECTED TO ULTIMATUM FROM TAFT Government Determined to Protect . American Lite and Proprrty nt All Haxatds. WA8IIIN0TON. i. c, Fob. r,. MlllUtrr iri'mi!ttloiiM by the United XtHtm tor Intervention In dm Mexican uprMiiK nro thl afternoon completed Mint tiiil'NM I'nwldoiit FrunelNco I. MRilvro oMti nlv Uih ITnltHil Htl nfttlifMclory JUuironew tlml Mexico In alilw to protect hII foreign Intonitu ll4r, American troop will innluiilit. wlljr b started for tliu border. MoxIcr'Kuimwor to President Tnfl' ultimatum Hint protect iikiiIiinI the iltHit null Ion nf American irurly nntl lHl(iiwluii)ii( r the cltlmum of til UiiIImI KUittM In Mexico Ih OXpuCtod Wlllilli -iS houi. Ttoops III Rcndlne. MtwHtliiiM I hi department of wnr Ih rushing proimrutloim for the moblll jtHlton of troop Hint order Iimvo l THNilr Iwon ImhhI by tlm wnr depart nimit tn Iiuvh 88.000 inun prepared for Mil luiiuodlnto ndvnnco. To mliiforru tho AintrU'uu lm nt 1CI I'hmi. Toxiih. order will bo Umiod to tho commander of Fort Whipple itr lrl Atmi-lio, ArU., to tlUpiitult u ,4(lliii)lit of Jnfnnirymid n squadron Of ouvnlry to It I I Mao. Tlio Kovornmont In ltrniltntl to protect American life nml propurty. .i.mi If Aiiiorlctui troop urn com pelled to Invade Mexico. No broach of tliH neutrality law will bo tolerated mul iHMlllvHly no firing from aero th border will bo permitted, .sltiiiitlon .Mont (inno, Kulluw ItiK conference today bo lweii KwrotMry of War Htliuwui nml HwhthI Leonard Wooil. chief of Nlnff Of tho Uullwl Stat. army, tlm "prop arfttlon nrdur" mh Iwmoil. Thl or der affect nil A merit an tionp with in mohlllMtlloii illNtaiu'iia nml nil triKiiw In tlm middle went havo licmi ordered umlor orleo mtloiiH nml niuiohliiK equipment. Aiuoilcuu lioopH will nlnii bo moved n out California. Arl.onn nml Allium wis to HI I'liNo. If necowury. No Httmnpt to conceal thu gravity of tlm Hltuntloit U made by tho do- iwrtimml of wnr. iih wiih ilono during tho recent Modern i evolution for the overthrow of thu DIiik regime. HeportM ti tlio ntnte nml wnr ile- lmilimmtH from Jtmros totlny nay thnt the mutiny of feileml troopn there In likely to reoccur nt nuy moinent, nml reporlH from Hontlieru pnitw or Mex ico ure (llminlelliiK'. BRYAN NOT IN Politics Havo Meant an Actual Loss to Nolirnsknn, Ho States in Refut hifl Balloy of Toxns Except for Advertising Politics an Expense LINCOLN, Null.. l'Vli. -r).- Denial of Heiiutor JoHepli V. Hniley'rt rceeiil dncliii'iitiou Hint William l. Mf.vitit in in politic "i'or tlio money," is innu in (ho NubniHkiv roinmonor, Uryuu'w liapnr, lodny. Tlio uiliele hii.vh: "Mr, Hryu'n Hiwed iibout 11)00 dur ing Itin roue yearn in eoii(,rvesri mid hIihmi tlml limn Iiiih huld no office and miido no money out of politicn. His iiuionio in derived entirely from writ ini; ami leeluriii. lliri IcelurcK luivo licnu mohlly iion-polltieal and his writing also. Kxcept Hint tlm primi deutiul uomiiintioiiH havo ivun him mlvei'liKcmoiit ami iieiiuaiutanee, puU iliew Imve buoii an oxpoiiKO to him. Ho reeeivim no pay for political Hpoouhim mid HpeiikH lo more people ul free incoliiiKH 1 linn from the loci mo plut-i'orm, RY GAME 0 COIN $250,000 PAID MEW YORK'S WjPTOBE UNDER HUDSON l!,VL!i. THAT COST MILLIONS. FIN ISOLD F0R2100ACRES .-'iMi.: smma PLACER GROUND yVji T -KttmmSm Salt Lake Symllcalo Takes Over Snvun Placer Properties on Foots Creek anil Will Ship Larue Dreclne to Scene. DRILLING WILL START WITHIN NEXT FEW DAYS Deal Is Result ot Activities nf Claude Ionian, Who Has Been at Work Some Time. Alex Hull nml V. II. (inNK. lepie Mi'iilhiK it Iiiik" niiniiiK xymlii'Hle of Suit ltke fity, loilwv eloHi-il u ile.il l.ii Jliiil ncii'- il' ilmiiM' Ki'Oiml "ii I-'iiiiU eieek. The price illVnlwil i Hi to Intel fj.'tl.llllll. The deiil un iMiKini'crcil dv Cluml" ('. Iiuniin, wh- htm Mpcut xim-nil iihuiIIik in the v ill -lev inewtiKliuC liri'reiil prepcrlu-H. The pioperly on KooIh creel; ni itlcil in the ilenl ini'liule-i I lie Mow ling, I.miee, Mttttiii AUttlieWH, ()--borne ami Short piepcilieK. Over '21(111 in-ret. in nil i in the ileal. H i rcpoitcd t Iih t the Nmlicule will hi in t work nt ouco drillmi; the Kroiiuil to determine iU riclmi'sK. A liiiKe drcdKC i to be ohipped to the propel tv Hinl put at work. Mr. Iuiiiiiii t nUo cnuiicctcd with the h.Midicalc and bun hpent home month here the ceiiipiin'M iikciii, Ncciiriii); optimiM mid iucsliKUtuiK va noun propci tic. swepttoIeath over niagara Ice Brldoo Breaks, Carryinn, Away Man and Wife, Who Go to Death Clasped in Each Other's Arms Man Refuses to Desert Woman. NIAdAUA FALLS, N. V., 1-Vli. f.. Hiimlicdm of pcioiirt today are M'Mii'liuiir IicIiiw (he wliiilpool nipids o Niagara for Hie bodies of Kldi-idgc Slaulon nml his wife of Toronto and lliirrel lleacoel; of t'levelaud, 0., wlm lo-. Ihcir livet ycslcrday when the uicnt ice bridge Hint for weeks hud choked the ner ehnuuel between lint cataract and the upper ntccl arch bridxe below the fiilltt broke. Wit nchMV of the tragedy Htatcd that the two men could have acd their live had they left Mrs. Stanton her fate Slaulon twice put usidc his chance nf ichciio to remain with his wife, twice HiimiiiiK nhMtunce for himself in u 1 1 i'liipt imlt to bind nhoitt the worn- mi's liuilv a rope dunghiii; from the lower mleel arch of the bruise. The lad, lleucock, turned back on the ice lo ivo assislauce o Stanton ami this cost him his life. Itcaliim; tlually that all hope of rescue was jjone and completely ex hausted by his efforts, Stanton raised his wife to her feet, kissed her mid chispcd her iu his arms. In this milli ner the went lo their deaths, NO ASSETS LEFT IN 81'MTTM3,,Wn8h Feb. 5. Harry W, Wilson, receiver for tho Coluniblu Ulver Orchard company nml Wnuh button Orchard IrrlRntlon (iml Fruit company, Ih hIIII bolni; besloKod by iiiany of tho vIcttuiH of tho alloKOil fruudiiluut euterprlHOH conducted by W. W. Oolnrin, proBldent of thouo companies, Dularm has dUnppcurcd offectunlly, WIIhou went ovor tho books of tho OroKPn-WnHhliiKton TimihL compnny at Portland, but Ih uualilo to hold out nuy bopo for tho bomlholdors. A. J. lllehl of tho Portland company malutaluH li;uoruuco or Dulann'H at f a Iih. Home ot tho Htorloa told by vie Hiuh who bad sold thole llttlo homoa to buy Htoclc and land corllflcatoa uro numt lioni't tending, MIODtfORD, vH! mM$m HHliBH m v w&tm MiiHlia Iff i'f!B mJ rj$$X3KEwi BfeeaBKBi2d aHHLKOJrrv iM Jiy TThi f iBwIIm i I MAYOR. PULLING SITCM THAT SUT OFF PINAL. BLAST IN TUNNEL UNDER. THE RJVER .. Now York' Krcnt water tunnel nt Storm KIiib was opemd by Mayor IMwr, exploded the thnntnlle blast that will nlluiv the tuuuel to carry wuter will coat Uio city ?170,000,000 when completed. MANGHUS IN PEACE TREATY TO Country to Bo Ruled Jointly by Presi dent and Premier Until President Can Be Elected hy All the People- Many Manchus Leave Pckiu. l'KKIN, Kcb. .'..The Inst sao of peace negotiations wa praetieally coinplcled here today with the an nouncement thnt the ropublieaiu had nroed to permit Provituouul Presi dent Sun Ynt Sen nml Premier Yuan Shi ICitt to govern China jointly until n provident could he elected by nil tho people. This niyutiuint followed an edict by the etuproiM dowager in trucling Premier Yuan Shi Ii to iisiiht southeni republieuim iu the formiition of u repiililic. The iu'wn of the Midden capitula tion of the .Manchus w'nn reeeied with great rejoicing, as it is virtually cer tain now that all hostilities will cotic us mioii a the news spreads through out the nation. Many oT Ihe Maneliu prim-en left I'ekin today, their de-tinalion, in most oiicos, being kept secret. DICKENSON REED FORJUTRAGE Portland Man Who Was in Apart ments of Woman Killed hy Bomb Held on Suspicion No Evidence Secured Against Him. NEW YORK, Feh. fi. Despite ad mission by the police that they had no evidence against him, Charles M. Dickinson, an employe of u motor company and formerly of Portland, Ore., who was iu tho npaitinont of Mrs. Helen Taylor here when sho was killed by an infernal innehine, was to day charged with the murder and ro, miimlcd to the Tombs. The inquest into Mrs. Taylor'n death was ad journed until Wednesday. Tho police believe that the murder was prompted by jealousy and ve vengo and uro working on this theory. Mrs, TaVlor recently was lined for harboring an Italian child who had been decoyed from Philadelphia. The ohild's parents, it is alleged, wove on raged because Airs, Taylor was not imprisoned and they threatened, it h said, "to get oven." Coroner Foiuborg today openly an nounced that ho thought the polieu nro mistakoii in suspecting Dickinson, be lieving that the bomb was sent to the woman with the intention of not kill ing, but ditlKuring w. GOVERN C OKKCIOX, .MONDW, KKHIUUItY 0, 1912. xwh? mt a& "ilw AA?im 7m v b'ae: iitti'K- siirHiuLjuBi z zm'ozmmm I S?HbUHmH 1& jf -7!- - iilH.JWaRm- iWtVTV.W iW r,f SsZ yQ 555U -sx: vm m z 4Sp-x - S Q& PK1 1 "iw m-'wir'j lunrtcL trniN n-iu.w -itw. eUAir. "MCr S viSfAV ILL HEALTH II PUT LITTLE BOB OUT OFHUNNING Breakdown May Force La Follettc to Withdraw Candidacy for Presiden tial Nomination--Statement Prc pared hy Friends But Withheld. WASHINGTON. Feb. .-.. With drawal of Scoutor Im Folletle from I ho rm-e for the ri-publu-Hii nomina tion for the presuleuoj is possible. Following a conluronee of repub lican pngrestes hare todtty, friend of Lm Follettc pu'parud a statement proponing tliHt he withdraw from the nice on (be ground of ill health. The slHtemeut wm nt submitted to li Follette, nud for thu present is with held. La Ftdlcttc's friends who partici pated in the coiitVrmte acted on the holier Hint bis health did not warrant bis assuming ie-onsibilily for a de cision in the matter ami thought it better to take the matter into their own hands. At tho I ,n Folletto hoadiiiarlers heie it was assciled that no official statement could lie made, but it was made clear that I .a Follette had mt been personally consulted on the sit nation, ami might ot veto the action of bis friends. Senators ('lapp of Minnesota and llristow of Khiis.is and Walter lions er, La Follette's H)litieal inanager, drafted the announcement of tlu Wisconsin sen. 'tor's withdrawal, which for the pn-eiit thev withhold. IN THE NATIVE ISLE l'ORTSMOl'TII, England, Feb. 3. King Oeorge and Queen Mary were given n noisy welcome on their ar rival here toda from their durbar trip, after an nhsonoo of throe months. The rojal liner M'odiuu, whioh with the lour escorting war ships that accompanied tho royal party to and from Indian the Natal, Argyll, Dufciisc and Cohrnne steamed through a doublo Huo of ves sels of the home l'U'ol shortly before I o'clock this morning while the guns on tho vessels and tho butteries on shore thundrcdo the royal salute. After a stop of hat 35 minutes tho king and quoou stalled for London. ROOSEVELT HOTEL FOR MAIDS AND BACHELORS CHICAG. Feb. C J. L. McKoovor, n realty broker hoio, la to bravo tho nntl-raeo sulcldo wrath of Colonol Hooaovolt by bulldltiR u "family botol" which will cator only to bach elors of both Boxes, will bar babloSt and will bo cullod "Tho Hooaovolt." KING AND QUEEN BACK tjry T&nur Guynor, who, dressed in oilskins, eleven hundred feet beneath the Hudsoa from the CaUldll Mountalna Into New l'ork city. The great engineerins feaj CONGRESS STRIKES FORESTRYSERVICE STUNNING BLOW Cuts Off Appropriation for Roads, Trails and Fire Fighting Appeal Made to Medford for Help by Gil ford Pinchot. WASHINGTON, Feb. 4. Mayor, Medford, Ore.: House committee has reduced foroet service appropriation by over ono million dollars for fight ing foiefet fires and preventing ihem by building trails, roods and tele phone linos. I urge your cooperation to get money put back Tolograuis to members of congress from you and bodies representing Medford urgontly needed. If this cut stands it menus Krmve dunger to life nud public prop erty. Hemembor forest flros ot 1910. GIFFOItD 1MNCHOT. Mayor Canon and I'rosldont Colvig of the commerciul club at onco wired tho Orogou delegation to got busy and all timber owners are requested to who. congressmen thoy may bo ac quainted with to assist tho good work. DISMISS CASES AGAINST WILDE Remaining Indictments Against San Diego Banker and Cooper Morris to Be Wiped Off No Prosecution to Follow; Impossible to Convict. PORTLAND, Ore., Feb. T.. Dis missal of the remaining indictment against Louis J. Wilde of San Diego, which charges him with embezzlement of jpTJ.SOO of funds of tho defunct Oregon Trust nud Savings bank, ami tho clearing of tho circuit court slate of indictments against V. Cooper Morris is the ultimate result'cxpeoted within a few days as the sequence of Wilde's acquittal by an instructed verdict. As Judge Kiivanaugh is ill today Presiding Judge Morrow will act in his plneo for a day or so. Distiiot Attorney Cameron stated today that the disposition of the Morris-Wilde cases would not bo tok en up until Judgo Kiivanaugh returns to his duties, As a result no dolluito time for action has been fixed. Cameron would like to place Wilde on trial again, but apparently is of tho opinion that the meaining ea-o would not stuud tho tost. On tho day that your storo is the best advertised stove iu town Hfo ought to havo a very rosy look to you I i START CLEARING : SOUTHERN RIGHBE- Men Grading for Spur for Big Pines Company Will Enable Removal' of Lumber Piles From Railroad Land Preparatory to Parking. The Southorn Pacific railroad com pnny has a gang ot men at work grading for a spur track to be put in from near where the stock yards are now located to the lumber yards I of the Dig Pines Lumber company. j The spur will be about 500 feet in ! length and will give tho Big Pines company an opportunity to unload lumber direct from tho cars into thoir yards with but very llttlo team hauling. This improvement will also make It possible for tho company to do away with the necessity of unloading and piling Us lumber on tho railroad grounds In front of Tho Mall Tribune building. Tho paint shop which has hereto fore boon standing on this same rail road right-of-way is also being moved off and taken to tho corner of Grape and Fifth streots. This Is tho initial toovo made by the railroad company leading to the beautifying of this part of Its right-of-way through tho city. (stocks show slight NKW YORK, Feb. 5. At the: open ing of today's slock market prices wore better than the closing Satur day. Missouri Pacifto and Wabash preferred sratned a point. St. Paul ll-l, Union Pavitle f-S and United States Steel halt a point. Later Union I'aoille, Lehigh Valley, Reading and United States Steel reacted from one to ono and a quarter points, but made fractional gains. Tho market closed dull, Donds were sternly. STEAMER IAQUA IN DISTRESS OFE COAST EUREKA, Cal.. Fob. 5. Wlreloss messages recelvod hero today ray tho steam schooner Inqua Is in distress oft Folso Point, north of Capo Men docino, and that tho stoiunor Kath orino and an unidentified stoani schoonor nro standing by. Tho Iuqua Is lumbar ludon, bound from Euroka to San Francisco and San Pedro. Sho Ih ownod by tho Eautorn Redwood company ot San FrauclBCO. ACEC I Ml No. 272. SUICIDE PACT ENDS ROMANCE BEGUN IN SIN Brtde of a Month Who Left Million aire Husband to Elope With Plumb er Finds Out Mistake and Takos Poison With Her Lover. SAID SHE HAD FOUND OUT WAGES OF SIN IS DEATH Body Lies Covered With Scarlet Roses and Lilies of the Valley Placed by Former Husband. NEW YORK, Feb. T.. With only members of his immediate family present, the remains of Frederick Noble, the young plumber who ended his life in n .suicide pact with Inn bride of ji month, were today buried in the family lot on lying Island. Tho body of bis wife, who left her mil lionaire husband, Walter Lispennrd Suydam, to elope with Noble, today lies in n receiving vault, her coffin covered with scarlet roses and lilies of the valley, placed there by her for mer husband. Both bodies were found in their apartments here, dend from asphyx iation by gas. Culmination of Romance. Late this nfternoon the dead wom an's body is being taken to Phila delphia for burial. Her mother and her former husband accompanied tho corpse. The double suicide was tho cul mination of an unhappy romance. A week ngo Mrs. Noble said to a friend: "We lnugh sometimes at the law "and nt religion Svhcn they "say 'Tfuia shalt not,' and we may sneer at tho saying 'The wages of sin is death but the time will come when we shall know that those quotations are right. One cannot oppo&o them without suf fering. 1 hnve learned that, and I have learned thnt the wages of sin is donth and worse. It is Hell on earth." Friends of the woman say that she realized she had made a mistake :n forsaking her husband for Noble and that she ended her life for thnt rea son. Couple Found Dead. Mrs. John J. White, mother of Mrs. Noble, who allowed her daughter $125 a week, is in a state of complcto hpysicat collapse. Saturday night Mrs. Noble visited her mother, who supposed she would remain over night. Upon awakening yesterday morning and finding her daughter gone, Mr. White hurried to Mrs. Noble's apartments in West Twelfth street. Tho door was looked. Alarmed, the mother summoned tho police. When the door was hrokou open and a barricade of chairs ami tables removed, tho couple wero found dead. Noble's una encircled tho womnn's body. NSURGENTS IN LEAD IN EASTERN OREGON BAKER, Ore., Feb. 5. According to h straw ballot which was conduct ed by the linker Herald, Roosevelt and Rryau supporters are more activo iu this hoetion of eastern Oregon than tho followers of either La Folletto, Tuft, Wilson, Harmon or Clark. When the vote closed Roosevelt had received 707 votes; La Folletto 252 amf Tuft 77 as tho republican choice for president. The democratic voto stoed: Hryan 277, Wilson 17-1, Clark 57 nud Harmon 22. With Rrynn and Roosevelt elim inated it was stilted that La Folletto and Wilson would havo led tho tickets by an almost overwhelming vote. MAKES BURGLAR WEEP AND THEN DISARMS HIM SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Feb. 0. Awakening to find a masked burglar covering him with a rovolvor, J. P. Jones told bis wife to "go back to sloop," and then proceeded to talk tho crook into a tit of hysterical weoping, after which ho took tho thlof's gun nml today lundod him be hind tho bars. Tho burglar says his namo la Edward Dovlln, 18. Tlio po llco do not doubt his story that It was hla first attempt at burglar.