500 Forfeit The Tribune Guarantees Twice the Paid Circulation in City or Country of the Morning Mail UNITED PRESS DISPATCHES D1rtec!fr(SI 'Baity Griflnme The Weather Fair weather is promised for tonight nuil Wednesday; north to oast wind a. By far the largest and best news report of any paper In Southern Oregon. THIRD YEAR. MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1908. No. 201. STANDARD OIL CASE REHEARING DENIED COURT OF SECOND TIME AGAINST UNITED STATES BELIEVED IHAI BONAPARTE WILL ATTEMPT TO CARRY THE CASE INTO SUPREME COURT FUe-0f $29,240,000 Will Never Be Paid Unless High est Tribunal in Land Reverses the Court of Appeals-Fined For AGGepting Rebates CHICAGO, Nov. 10. The United ( States court of anneals here today denied a rehearing in tho ease of the government against the Standard Oil company, in which the f ino of $-11,-240,000 was assessed by Judge Lund is. Tho deniul is another defeat for the government in tho famous ease and, in cording to tho counsel for the govern ment, ifl a hard blow for the interstate eomtnorcn net. 'i - It is bolieved that Attnmoy-Oonerul Bonaparto will take the rase before tho supreme court of the United States on a writ of certiorari. " This was the second time tho United States court of appeal had acted in the case. Tho case was originally taken to tho appellate court bv tho Standard Oil ; company after .fudge Land is in the dis- roniuul;ug t bo cast to Judge Land is for trict court had fined the company $20.- r trial. This opinion, written by Judge 240 000, following n trial replete wit li i Oosseup. contained what has been ehar ftcnsations. adorned as the most remarkable exceor- Acceptcd Rebates. intion of one court by another in the A jury in Judge Lnndis' court, had history of the American bench. The found the company guilty of aeeepting opinion denounced Judge Landis in un rebates from the Chiengo & Alton Hail- measured terms, bidding that he had road company. The Alton company had rea'ly convicted the Standard Oil corn been indicted by separate juries on puny of Xew Jersey, when it was not 6428 counts charging violations of tho even on trial. Elkins anti-trust law, which prohibits On August 14 last, District Attorney tie granting or accepting of rebates on Sims filed a petition for re hearing of oil or other products. the case before the appellate court, al- The trial began March 4, 1007, and Joging that the circuit court had mis- lasted six weeks. United States His- triet Attorney Sims represented the government nnd Attorneys John Miller, Virgil P. Kline, A. D. Kddy and M. W. Martin nppeared for the Standard Oil company. Tho specific indictments on which the authorities elected to make their tight numbered 1402 and charged the acceptance of rebates aggregating $22:1, 000 from the Chicago & Alton railroad on shipments of oil from Whiting, Did.. to Pant St. Louis, HI. Verdict of Guilty Rendered. The trial ended in a verdict of gnil 'ty on each indictment, nnd 'on each count in each indictment. The maximum fine was $20,240,000, with the provi sion that it could be less should it be shown that the Stnndard Oil company nf Indiana, a 1.000,000 corporation, was not iubsidiary of the Standard Oil com pany of New Jersey. After eonvietion and before ho pronounced sentence. Judgu I.nndis expressed a curiosity to have this Intter point cleared up. nnd he subpoenaed John I. Rockefeller and leaser lights to explain the conneetion between the two companies. On Au gi.tt i, 100S, Judge Land is fined the con paoy the maximum, 20,240,000 in ' "' an nnen opinion scoring the company C Powell and son Henry of Boise, Idaho, are visiting with J. X. Powell and family of this city. Not Yet But Soon niiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii WHOSE ADVKRTISEMKXT IS MINSIXd FROM TUTS lKSlTKf miiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiin iiiiitiittiiiiiiiiiiiuiiinntHiiiiii ininiiim S E E X E X T ISSl' E For Thanksgiving Sale APPEALS unmereiuilly. riie Standard Oil company immediate ly tool, the case to tho United States ei'iirt of appeals, averring that the trial couri li.-id erred in ruling that the mini he of offenses should bo reckoned by the number of carload lots and not by the mniber of shipments; that the trial court had erred in ruling thnt ignorance of the law is not an excuse for viola tion of U. and that the trial court had rtSMt-fod an excessive fine and had gone beyond his power in hearing the tes timony after the jury had returned a . enlifl. Decision in July. Last .July the appellate court handed iloun ils opinion on this writ of error petition, reversing tho trial court and understood and misquoted the ruling of (! trial judge nnd alleging further that : the circuit court's ruling, if sustained, wuiild make of the interstate commerce act "a mere will -of-the-wisp of legis lation, a phantom statue.' Today's ruling was on this petition. Decision Is Unanimous. The decision today was unanimous. The opinion was written by Judge (1 rosso up and Judg.? Baker in concur ring gave additional reasons for the ruling. The opinion is almost identical, in the language used, to the former ruling. The contention is made that tho ac cepting of rebates should have been considered by each one complete and it, is held that Judge Lnndis' ruling that each carload constituted a sepa rate offense was wrong. The decision in directly refers to the bringing into the case of the Standard Oil company of Xew Jersey, when it was not named in the indictment. The court holds thnt the person back of the defendant could be reached only through proper proc esses of law and not through supplemen tal proceedings, in the nature of civil proceedings. The court reiterates its original ex coriation of Judge Lnndis. William Henderson of North Medford is seriously ill. He is in no immediate danger. DECIDES FOR THE WEST WINS F IN WRESTLING Local Man Shows Science Welch Injured Arm by a Fall From Stage By taking three out of four falls, though one was by default, W. 11, West of .Medford Monday evening wrested : new laurels from Jack Welsh of the . I win cities in n wrestling match in the ROM WELSH Anle opera house. Both of tho men ' national liberals, today ma do a sciisa proved their aptness at tho game, and j 1 io,ml attack on tho monnreb of Gor l..,!..! .ciu .i . tlinSi. ' momv. WVst is nil that in dnin.rd for ! I,h. W.-IhI. mn.lo UJ Ilssor- ' Hons that he knew the game. The first fall caused a slump in the stock of the local man, for Welsh show ed (arty in the game that he was a big husky. However, West showed scion tifie form ami repeatedly brought cries of approval from the audience by his tricky ways of getting out of tight holds. Throughout the first Welsh was the aggressor ami finally put West on his back after a go of 10 minutes nnd IS seconds, employing a crotch nnd half i .Volsoii to do so. Over the .Footlights. The second fall went to West by de fault after six and a half minutes of tussle. The two men did not realize how close they were to the edge of the stage and a sudden lift threw them over. Welsh fell find and sprained his arm. He asked for ten minutes nnd West claimed the fall, which was grant ed. In the following bouts Welsh favored his arm, saying he was unable to use However, changing his tactics to the .defensive, he put up a great battle. However, after 10 minutes and 50 sec onds nf work with u far arm Nelson ind a crotch. West put his man to the mat. The final go was worth all of the ad mission fee. For 15 minutes nnd 41") seconds the wrestling continued, but fi n nl ly West got n ha r hold a nd half Nelson nnd put Welsh down. The fans enjoyed t he match and a movement is on toot to have a second go between tho men.. Welsh proved superior in strength. but West offsi't this by his science. Dr. K. I(. Seely refereed the -bout and Jack Donahue and L. F. Whiting kept the time. The sport was clean ind wholesome and thoroughly enjoyed MEETING TO ORGANIZE FISH PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION Thursday evening at the Commercial club rooms fishermen nnd others inter ested will meet to form a fish protec tive association for the Rogue river. Fvorvnne, whether a sportsman or not. interested in restoring good angling to the Itngue, is requested to be present. It is intended to wage an aggressive fight at the coming session of the legis lature and secure the passage of laws that will prevent the wholesale slaugh ter of steelhead and other native trout and secure the restocking of the stream The Rogue river is famous for its nn L'linc. and can be made a source of much profit to the country through its being made a Mecca for fly fishermen from all parts of the Cnion. BUTCHER LOCKED IN ICE BOX CUTS HIS WAY OUT OAKLAND. Cab, Xov. 10 Fred Lew is, n local butcher, entered his ice box j at the close of business to adjust his stnek and took along nn ax. A spring lock nn the outside dipped from his hand, nnd he immediately be gan pounding nnd shouting for asust- : ance. (he intense cold rendered linn numb, and he finally, nfter two hours imprisonment, attacked the walls with the ax. Neighbors who heard the muffled blows believed that burglars were op- erating, and a !4wis prowled through the hole ho hail made he was confront- , ej by n policeman, to whom ho ex plained the ituatio:i. " j (Continued on page 4.) WOULD LIMIT THE POWER OF EMPEROR BILL Der Kaiser Is Ronndly Abused on Floor ol the ReiGhstag by Leader HF.KL1N, Nov. 10. Demanding that .Chancellor von Boulew Introduce a bill ,imitinK " kaiser's personal power , , . ,. 7. , . Oil ml serotinus on tho nnrt nf the em p,.l)tr. llerr Wnssermnu. leader of the "Ul".v ''"" Billing ui nit ri'iseiiHing. " I"'"""' ' -n-ni-linnary (Won ni ffurK in toe ucriiiltu Cllipiro tllHt made tho country moro benighted - in many wuvh that Turkey or Kussih There was the wildest excitement when the speaker denounced Wilhelm and the reichstag applauded again and again. The government ministers re- gun! the situation as critical and fear t lint a ministerial government similar to that of Knglnnd will follow the agi tation aroused in the German parlia ment. ) "We want to stale plainly and pub- I icly ( o t he world , " cried H err Was- Hcrman, "thnt we are not atraid of yellow perils or any other perils, hut the danger from an international policy based on the sudden moods of the kaiser is incalculable. "fiermany's fate must no longer de pend upon one man's impulsive tcmpcr auienl. The idea of person n I absolut ism is undermining our nntionnl secur ity." SPECIAL SESSION OF GRAND JURY IN COOPER CASE XASHVILLK, Tenn., Xov. 10. A spe cial session of the grand jury has been ailed for tomorrow to consider the use of Colonel Duncan B, Cooper nnd his son, Robin Cooper, who slit dwn and killed former Cntiod Slates Sena tor Kdward Ward Carninek on the street ato yesterday, and it is expected that sensational testimony will be adduced. It is understood that Colonel Cooper nnd his son will waive preliminary ex animation at the hearing nnd the ense ill go directly to the grand jury. Though Colonel Cooper did not fire shot, but stood by, revolver in hand while Robin killed Carmack, the father and son are charged jointly with the Killing. Governor Patterson, n warm personal friend of Colonel Cooper, issued a state in on t today curling to defend Cooper. It. was on acponnt of editorials written by Carmack based upon the relationship nf Colonel Cooper, the governor and other political leaders, that the tronbh between the Coopers and Curmack arose. The governor says that ho was in con versri t ion with Colonel Cooper yes terdny a short time before the shooting nnd thnt Cooper gave no intimation that he expected trouble with Carmack, lie says thnt Cooper did everything in his power to avert a tragedy. It is said, however, that witness s will be produced in an effort to show that the kilting wrs premeditated. It is said that one testified that the Coop, ers' daughter telephoned him saving that her father had gone out to kill Carmack and ask ing him to find nnd disarm him. He was wrought up over the affair which resulted from the light fur the governorship. j ! XASHVILLK, Tenn.. Nov. 10. Kd ward '"armack. editor nf The 'IVnnes t ftf-etni mid ex-senator, wns shot nnd killed yesterday on Seventh avenue by R.diin Cooper imhi of Colonel Duncan H. rMoper. Carmack met Colonel Coup rr ;uid son. and soon ntior thov came - jM tight of one another the shooting began. Itobin Cooper firing two shot Hud Senator Carmark one. Colonel .Cooper drew his pistol, but dfid not DEMURRER IN RAILROAD Demurrer to Complaint In Case of J. F. Reddy, Re ceiver, vs A. A. Davis et al, thrashed Out A demurrer to tho complaint in the case of J. P. Reddy, receiver of the Medford & Crater Lake Railroad vs. A, A. Davis and 57 other stockholders and creditors, brought for tho purpose of securing nn accounting, nnd to force holders of watered stock to pay for the same, was argued Tuesday after noon before Circuit .ludge H. K. Hunan at Jacksonville. Judge W. I). Fen ton of Portlnnd, Judge W. M. Colvig of Medford and Attorney tleorge 11. Dur ham of (I runts Pass represented A. A. Davis, the chief def'iidant, and Attor ney A. K. Kennies of Jacksonville the plaintiff. The defendants' attorneys held that it was out of the receiver's province to go into the stock transactions of the company and that his duties consisted only in realizing upon the assets and paying the creditors from the proceeds, and that the receiver hail no right to offset claims against thee oncern by counter claims for unpaid for stock held by creditors. The receiver 's attorney held that such an accounting was neces sary for the distribution of t he com pany 's assets. The receiver has on hand in tho Gor man American bank of Portland t he S,'U0 received from the sale of the Medford & Crater Lake railroad to the Pacific & Eastern Itailroad company, I he present owners. This money was in the form of certificates of deposit in the Oregon Trust & Savings bank of Portland, nnd they were taken over by tho Gorman-American bank of Portland ilong with the assets and liabilities if the former bank after its failure. The court allowed the ilcrmnii American bank two years in which to pay the la i m. The suit was brought to compel hold rs of unpaid stock to pay for tho same and to offset their claims as creditors with the unpaid for stock, aud the court was asked to segregate those entitled to share in the proceeds from the sale of the road from those holding wa tered stock. WIDOW STOPS COOKING LONG ENOUGH TO WED ST. LOC1S, Xov. 10. Mrs. Augusta Hnffmeister, widow, was expecting that William Sleffens would ask her to marry him some day, but she was not looking for it the other afternoon when he called to see hor at her home, No. 1 152 North Fifteenth street. Sim was conking, and wore an apron, but when he came in nnd said: "Come on, Augus ta, let's go nnd g-.'t married today," she wiped her hands on her apron nnd answered : "All right, I'll be ready in fifteen minutes. ' ' They went by trolley to St. Charles, and were married by a justice of tho pence and back in St. Louis in time for supper, which the bride cooked. Mr. Steffens is n.t years old and lias four children, all married. ID' has been a widower three years. Mrs. Hoff meister is ."tl years old, and has been a widow two years. She has eight chil- lren, all married. George A. Kmery, agent for the Xew York Central and Vanderbilt lines, spent Monday and TuesdHV in Medford. riie. Curmack fell, dying initautly. Robin Cooper was shot in the right shoulder, but was ..ol. neriouily wound in. It is thought that the trouble w s one of 1ho retuiltn of the recent gubrr natoricl election in which Carmack was defeated. Carmack, editor of the TennonseeHn, criticized what ho culled the democratic machine. He printed several editorials about Colonel ( 'oop er. It has been asserted that Colonel Cooper notified Carmack that these edi torials moid ci use. Another editorial referring tu tin colonel appeared and this is nupposod to be tho cause of the tragedy. Young Coot is in a hospi tal and Colonel Cooper is held ftt po llen lieud.piarters. Ho has made no state inent, Robin Cooper is an attorney, li" vcbm of sg a'd single. HILLCREST STANDS AS TESTIMONIAL TO FOR SIGHT OF J. H. STEWART How the Dreamer's Dream Has Come True Only to Immortalize the Dreamer As the "Father of the: Fruit IndusUy in the Rogue River Valley 174 Acres of Fine Orchard Meets the Eye Some t wo decades ago a man who i was that ram combinat ion financier and dreamer dreamed a dream, aud in his dream ho said to himself: "I will plant me an orchard of pears and ap ples an orchard that shall yield me thousands for my toil. It slinll prove of such success (hat many will marvel at it, aud will in turn plant fruit trees for themselves." So out of the soil of the Rogue Kiver valley he dug it; from tho clasp of the scrub oak and sage he tore it, ami as he saw in his vision it lies today an orchard that has brought him thousands. And the ot tiers he dreamed of have come, and have builded a citv with the wealth that they liuvo taken from heavy laden orchards, anil in that city, near the green country, with its warm anus of winter and its cool night breezes of the summer time, tho dreamer, lion. J. H. Stewart, is immortalized as "the father of the fruit industry." Now it so happened that tho father had n son, in whose mind was instilled the fact that to gain wealth one must plant orchards. Ami, accordingly, t he j son chose a place east of Hie little city upon (he low rolling foothills, and ub- tinning IfiO acres, set a portion of it out in Comico pears, brought from the distant shores of France, lie, like his fnther, saw his orchard thrive, and nfter nine vcars sold the place, for which he had paid .m(H, for 'J1,."00. In such manner did J. W. Stewart dispose ol his placn to J. W. Perkins, who gave the place the name ' II illercst. " Hut in the meantime Mr. Stewart had added a I0 acre tract to his original 100 acres. And upon the 'Jon aero tract he had 'JO acres of Cornice pears and between .10 and HO acres of other fruit, leaving 100 ne res bare. 1 Mr. Perkins in Charge. It was four years ago that Mr Per kins first became the owner of "Ilil! crest." The orchard, which was al ready famed in the little valley, was to become known throughout the marts ilikI highways of a great world, wher ever men dealt in fruit. It was to hold for two successive years the world's rerun! for prices for pears and was to attract many fruit men to the liogne River valley. Mr. Perkins planted VI acres of New town apples and 40 acres more in pours. Ho erected a splendid residence aud spneious bums. And then in April of the present year, when his young or chard was three years old, and he had sold pears for 7.lo a box in New York city, he was induced to sell to Spittle capitalists for 7lt.noo. Laud which was first purchased for iftfrinii ami soiu lor li1t.Vl0. was to treble nnd again sell for .tTO.OOO! The last, purchasers were Howard W. Dudley, John A. Torney and W. J. Martin of Seattle. Later they took in with thein Worrell Wilson and It. II. Parsons of Seattle, and a corporation was formed known as the 'Mliilcrett Orchards company." The new owners immediately tiegati on improvements. Money was spent like water until today there is nu finer orchard in all the valley. And its owners say inai t m.""" low a figure to induce them to part with Hillcrest. Visit to Orchard a Pleasure. A visit to tl rehard is a pleasure. The approach is a gr:nliml climb up I he low rolling foot h ills, making nn iisi'ent an esv one, but enough to be able, when the orchard is gained, to g,-l a magnificent panorama of the valley below. The approach to the buildings is along a well kept road hemmed in on either side by well, kept fences. When the farm house is reach ed the one impression gained is that of cleanliness. Not only is the house such it one that it could stand upon anv city's street and not be an eyesore, but the bams, yards, packing house, bunk house and other buildings, one and all, toll a tale of thrift. About the house rose bushes grow in profusion, and it is with reluctance that the home is toft for the orchard. In tho cities fruit is a freinht and E speculation. Slips of paper nnd broken boxes oi fruit stand for carload after carload of it. Transportation facilities' do all that is done to it. Man only, handles wooden boxes as they do mer chandise and no man knows the fruit for what it is the product of man's labor on the soil'. Hut here it is to bn found on its own stage. About one or the sloping ground of the foothills stands in perfect rows tho trees thnt -bore it. Trees made moro beautiful by tho tinge of odor autumn has given to their foliage. Hero man plowed, planted, pruned, cull ivnted, and har- -vested tho fruit that, was to bring prices breaking the world's rocords. Here mnu has toiled nnd every apple. overy pear, in tho nearby packing house was a fragment of a season's work of someone 's summer work the visible, symbol of effort, wisely spent, tho ful fillment of promise. -Young Nowtowns Abound. One, upon leaving the ranch house, 1 - liters first into an orchard of young Newtown apples .VI acres in alt. These Xewtowns, three years old this season, imagined that they wero equal to tho" bearing of a crop. In tho spring time they planted their roots deep down and their buds were filled to bursting with the mystery of plant life. Throughout tho summer their blossoms mado their little corner of the world beautiful with color, the littfv apples wero set and then man, in his superior wisdom, ducked the apples when they were , first set, knowing that in doing so the N'ewtowns would make greater progress. But if man chented the trees in their effort to be worth while, they made up for it by giving the young trees tho best of cnltivatinn. And tho young ' sters look hardy and well able to go through the approaching winter .for which, even now, they give evidence of ,,roi.;-nt ion. Leaving the young Nowtowns,' one drives into the original '20 acres of ( 'orn ice pea rs t he orchard that has fathered nearly every orchard in the valley. What talcs they have told of ' their native France land can only be con iectured. Rut they" (piickly adjust ed themselves to local conditions and have given their owners returns beyond the wildest dreams. Wonderful Fig Trees. Leaving these trees, one can wan der through orchards all telling tho same tn! Near the old homestead on the upper portion of the farm aro three old fig trees from which hundreds of pounds ol figs have been takon and still t hoi' branches are loaded with tho fruit. Tiro ililtcrest orchards contain 174 acres in all planted, leaving but 2tf acres upon which to grow focd. Of tho 171 aer.'S there are 17 acres of Bart lefts, Howolls and Hose in one tract. 20 acres of Comuo, seven and one-half acres of Hose, three ncres of young Itnrtletts, seven and one-half acres of Jonathans, Ct acres of Nowtowns ana SpttzenlmrgH. "t ncres of young New towns, in nens of d'Anjous, and 13 UITI'S 'l VOli M Hi eiierril-H, pi-Mt-uvn m.M Hartletts. The one reason that the Hillcrest or chards are such a success is the' at tention to details. r or insianc, throughout the orchard are scattered hives of hees. not for the honey, but that they might dissminato pollon. And as for care ol tho trees each has a history and each is known, even as a targe family. Gravity Water supply. A spring on the hillside nbovo the orchard is the source or a gniMi ter supply, and, as a result, a truck garden is maintained, furnishing to tho men fresh vegetable of the season. ;et urning from the orchard, n visit to tho buildings is worth white.' The bunk house is as substantially builded as an apartment house in a city. Tho men have each a private room, and aro furnished with baths, a rending room, and the long summer evenings may be spent on the wide verandas surrounding the building. The cook has to her self her portion of the house entirely (Continued on page 4.)