=--==---=-==... —==============9 SHLAND without Medicine, cures aid cases out a proven tact. A shland D aily T idings United Press Wire Service VOLUME 2 (Successor to the Semi- Weekly MEDFORD MAN CHARGED WITH WIFE MURDER Tidings. Vol. 43.) MALARIA Germs cannot survive - - three months in the rich ozone at Ashland. The pure domestic water helps. • ================== ASHLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 13, 1921. Nine Story Office Building - --------------------- / NO. 215 EUROPEAN PEACE THREATENED BY INSURRECTION OF SILESIAN POLES Moved; Work Goes on Weighed 5,000 Tons; 12 Men Do Work PITTSBURGH, Pa., May 13. — move was caused by the widening of While hundreds of clerks worked at Second avenue to an 80-toot boule- vard. Engineers lifted the whole their desks and scores of customers building on 1.200 jacks. They raised MEDFORD, May 13 T. W. passed in and out of a big hardware Gruetter, chemist and assayer of this it 18 inches, sidewalks and all, after city, was arrested here Wednesday, store on the ground floor, a nine-they had cut off the steel columns concrete founda- charged with the murder of his story office building weighing 5000 imbedded in the wife, a bride of two months. The tons was moved a distance of 75 feet tion. charge made against him alleges his without the interruption of so much Meantime they had built up an complicity in the death of his wife as a minute’s work by any one. elaborate system of wooden timbers which the jacks : a short time ago at their homestead : Twelve laborers performed the task, and I-beams on near Agate. His bail was set at $20-¡which is pronounced an engineering, rested. Then they inserted row on 000. He is represented by attor-feat never before attempted. row of 90 pound railroad rails on LONDON, May 13. — Europe’s peace is threatened by the Polish in- J., May 13. ‘ ? ••*:•** • ? CAMDEN neys O. S. Blanchard of Grants Pass In addition to the building, the top of heavy timbers, and on these • surrection in Upper Silesia, Lloyd George told the House of Commons, to- Banana peels, which Frank Smith, and John H. Harkin. sidewalks fronting on Wood street rails laid 800 steel rollers, about • CHARLES GORDON “I’m frightened" he declared, “at what may happen if confidence 6. of Philadelphia, says netted him i day. The case has a number of peen--and Second avenue, the basement of three inches in diameter. These roil- • MAC CRACKEN is not restored, ” said there’s no rea son why the Allies should object to "easy money,” has landed him in liar features, one of which is that the building, including “the big ers acted as wheels between the • the use of force by Germans to restore order in her own province. jail for six months. He was ar- the affidavit for the warrant charg engine and boilers, all functioning building and the concrete floor. Jacks • Since starting to work as i “That would be simply fair play,” h e declared. rested in the offices of the Pub­ route carrier for the Tidings, ing murder was signed by James S. properly, went along with the build- were placed against the concrete lic Service Railway company here. along Second avenue. in June of last year, Charles Bomgardner, well known Josephinei ing, while the hardware business cellar wall blow them up if the insurgents are damage where he presented Gordon MacCracken has saved county miner. living about five j overhead was uninterrupted. under the curbstone. These were * 13 __ The compelled to retire. claim for injuries sustained in a COPENHAGEN. May miles west of Grants Pass, who is a The building is 80-by 20 feet and laid horizontally, so that when oper- $100 as a start toward satisfy­ trolley car ou Sunday night when independence of Upper Silesia has, * former husband of the woman. When about one hundred feet in height, ated. they would push the building • ing his ambition of becoming a he slipped on a banana peel. liis Italian Minister Quits. | Ninety pound rails, lawyer. Charles performed his been declared by Adalbert Korfanty.' 120 of them, I northward toward Third avenue. o the warrant for arrest was issued by insistence that his claim be set- the Polish leader, according to dis-1 As the building slowly was pushed • duties as a Tidings route car­ Assist ant Prosecuting Attorney Imade the tracks on which the struc- LONDON, May 13.—There is an tled out of court aroused suspi­ patches which were received here to- unconfirmed report here that Count forward, the iron roller that was • rier faithfully until the begin­ George Codding yesterday afternoon, i ture was moved. cion. It cost the owners about $80,000 released on the south side of each • ning of last week when he gave day. is was supposed that she was still Sforza, Italian foreign minister, has his route to Elliott MacCracken, the wife og Bomgardner, but that the to move the building, but it would set of rails was carried forward and • The police say they learned i resigned. $275.000 to tear the reinserted under the north side of • his younger brother. couple were separated, It developed ‘ have cost that Smith had presented similar Sforza met severe criticism on his Korfanty, the former Polish ple- Charles was born August 16. that the former Mrs. Bomgardner I building down and build a new one. the huge structure, so as to make a • claims against the Philadelphia A biscite commissioner in Upper Sile- return to Rome from the supreme The technique was simple. The continuous line of rollers. ‘ 1909, in Winnetka, 111., and is had married Gruetter at Chico, Cal., Reading railway and the Phila­ Ì sia. directed the armed expedition council session for not demanding the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon ahout two months ago. When the delphia Rapid Transit company. into that region and seized more | immediate action to protect small MacCracken of this city. He is murder arrest warrant was issued, ! He is alleged to have admitted he than half of the country. Allied forces in Upper Silesia, threat- attending the Junior high the prosecutor's office was in ignor worked with a companion who pre- Although Germany won most of ened by the advance of Polish insur- school, is in the Sixth grade ance of this situation. ceded him into the cars and drop- I the region as a result of the recent gents. and intends some day to claim The circumstances surrounding ped the peel, and that he had I plebiscite, the Poles hope the Allies------------------------------ ------ Yale University as his Alma the death are such that it is prob- worked the scheme. will give to them those portions Mater where he will prepare for able that the body will be exhumed ; which they have occupied. his life work as an attorney. and a post mortem examination made Charles is an optimistic chap to determine the exact cause BERLIN, May — Officered by and is very decided as to the death. members of use he will make of his life It seems that about 20 years ago the Germans after school days are over. Mr. and Mrs. Bomgardner were mar-. Judging from his record while ried and after living together for With a total amount of $2000.00 their bit. The soliciting captains * on the Tidings carrier staff and she some time were divorced. Then less successful. raised for the Chamber of Commerce are expected to finish their drive by .. his school class work there is married a man named Ames, who Dispatches here said Polish offi- L. F. Ferguson, chairman Saturday of this week so that a com- every reason to believe in his died, and it is said that some five budget, for an armistice píete report of the drive's conclu full measure of success. or six years ago she went back and of the budget committee has ‘ 1 siou may be inaile by Monday. the insurgents in lived with Bomgardner. Several nounced that the reports made by territory they have The following is the report made | months ago they separated and in the committee members show an ex- by the soliciting captains, the read- seized. TOKYO. May 13. — Great ship- their agreement to part Bomgard-cellent response to the Chamber of ¡ng of which will form part of the German mine owners, returning und various ner gave her a gold brick and gold Commerce drive. Some of the lars-Chamber of Commerce luncheon to from a trip into Upper Silesia, de­ loads of machinery WILLIAMSON. W. Va„ May 13.-- . ,.1./ other material for the great fleet and cash, in all to the value of about est subscriptions have not been re- be held Tuesday I clared the Poles ha ve secreted ex- of next week. Guerilla warfare continued along the. ..... which preparing to build $2800, and his Ford car. Japan i , plosives in the mines, threatening to ported and the banks are waiting Captain A. C. Briggs $25,00! El- f i nge « Tug river today. --------------------------------------------------- - are continually Then came the marriage of the completion of the drive before add- hart $145.00; Dodge, $100.00; ; Fighting between striking miners woman to Gruetter at Chico about ing a ten per cent subscription to Lamkin. $42.50 pa per« say that while Japan re­ Smith. $193.00: G F Billin and state police and county slier- ceived no submarines, beyond those two months ago. The condition of the amount received. Every merch- Engle, $262.00; Carson. ’ iffs, which opened at dawn yester- About May 3rd last Dr. Dow of ant who has been approached by the Pierce, $140.00; which Staples, 1251.00 ! who was struck by day, reigned at Miarrimac, Spriggs. | Medford was summoned to the committee has subscribed a minimum Kaegi, $72.00; of spoils from Germany, such Nininger, $104.00 I Wednesday evening. is improved it Hawk and Alburn, according to Gruetter home near Agate by Gruet­ of his last year subscription and Simpson, $112.00; Rose, coming in constantly in take- $97.00 today i by his son, meager reports which reached Wil- ng shipped through down form. ter and there found Mrs. Gruetter many have given more. A great McNair, $42.00; G. H. Billings, $60; | was reported be liamson. I Homer Billings. avoid the in bed unconscious and in convul- many new business firms have done J. W. McCoy, $226.00 in order He expects to One man was killed and four ‘attention of the Allied Reparations sions. Mr. Gruetter was there, also i out the first of the week. wounded, according to lastest dis- his mother who was visiting the ANGORA. Turkey, May 13. — Ismet Commission and on vessels belong- |‘ Mr. Billings was struck at , the ' with Pasha, who defeated the Greeks at ing to the biggest Japanese and patches. Wire communication home. Dr. Dow worked over the com- | street intersections of .... .............. ... East Main streets at the Plaza, the battle area has been severed the valley entrance before the city pañíes which are under obligations, as she showed patient and then left about 6 o'clock Wednesday evening since the fighting started. of Eski-Shehr, has become a nation- because of subsidies, to the Japanese signs of improving, although stilli i i The — man reported killed is said alist hero second only to Mustapha government. unconscious. .by a car driven by E. E. Phipps, al I Great interest is being taken in 1 local real estate man. Mi. Billings to 6 be Harry Staten, a former mas Kemal Pasha. That night or the next morning . istrate Dow that his and a witness Ini the state His victory has made foreigners large number of airplanes and one Gruetter phoned Dr. was crossing from the Simpson i - iin the Matewan gun trial here this | remember that the Turks have been Zeppelin, which Japan is receiving as wife was dead and asked him to come The Chamber of Commerce Hardware store and almost reached . . ... It I year, He Is said to have been shot fighting for nine years, on a stretch, her share of the German spoils and out and view the body. On exam- hold their noon forum luncheon at I the curb in front of Murphy’s elec- while standing in Iront ot his store and are the only soldiers in Europe, which are now arriving in considér­ ination of the body the physician pioneer Hall Tuesday of next week, trie shop, Mr. Billings was hit by ât Spiigg. save the Hungarians, their blood rei1 ¡able numbers. Japan is making remarked that he was not satisfied Dr. E. A. Bulkin, an evangelist a fender of the car and knocked to The fighting is said to be the se-atives, who are not tired out. strenuous efforts to catch up with give the cause of death and asked who has been speaking at Medford, one side of the machine, striking on verest in the history of Mingo coun­ to be allowed to make a post mortem will be the principal speaker. He Ismet Pashat used the winter in other nations in development of her EAST ST. LOUIS, 111., May 13.— his head and shoulders on the ce­ examination of the body. Gruetter will talk on “City I Building from The Rev. Guy Kyle was sentenced to ment. The accident is thought to ty and Sheriff Pinson is summon- organizing the rabble of an army air forces, which are without doubt ing. a number of special deputies left over from the armistice and the weakest part of her defense. In refused to permit this. He said that Four Angles.’’ Music will ho fur- serve six years in prison and was have been unavoidable. for immediate service at the two which was defeated by the Greeks addition to the airplanes received his wife had been subject to epilept c mished at the luncheon by and fined $3000 in federal court today towns. spells. 10 months ago. He won his battle from Germany, she recently bought Mrs. Lewis. John H. Fuller SBC- when he pleaded guilty to robbing MOTHER MAKES PLEA FOR A later report stated that Merri- by letting the enemy think he was 83 machines from France. About this time Mrs. Gruetter’s retary of the Chamber of Commerc the mails of $189,000. SON BEFORE HOUSE COMMITTEE ¡mac also was being fired on sister from eastern Oregon arrived has urged the attendance of all mem from going to retreat. Then he about- Loren Williamson. part- WASHINGTON, D. C„ May 13.— the Kentucky side. at the house, and she told Dr. Dow bers. faced and counter-attacked. He has , . her in the garage business at Mount Speaking with a pronounced German Captain J. R. Bockus and a squad stated that he used the tactics of that although she had not seen her Vernon, III,, who had been previous- accent, Mrs. Emma Bergdoll sketched of state police were reported hem- offra at the hattia the Marne. sister for many years she remember­ . , Joffre at the battle of the ly found guilty, was given a similar for the house investigating commit- med in by firing parlies at Merri- The victory is of vast importance ed of her having suffered one such sentence. tee incidents surrounding the escape mac. It is reported that the state, for the Turk nationalists and. its attack years ago. of her slacker son Grover. Told police’s supply of ammunition is political importance may be such as Later when Bomgardner heard of Six hundred men are employed in how she converted $100,000 worth low. Captain Brockus has ten men to evenually drive the allied troops his former wife’s death he reported the sponge fisheries Tarpon of treasury certificates to gold, he- at Merrimac and in addition there out of Constantinople: let them be the matter to Sheriff Terrill and Springs, Fla. fore his escape. . are six deputies there. asked that an investigation be made. replaced in political influence byi Then followed conferences between Moscow, and also encourage the Serbs Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Cod- and Bulgars to take advantage of a ding, the sheriff Deputy Sheriff Mc­ weakened Greece. It is pointed out Mahon. Bomgardner and Dr. Dow, here that those nations responsible WASHINGTON, D. May 13.— after which the arrest warrant was for not preventing the Greek often- Secretary of War Weeks today an- I ei sworn out. The warrane charges sive appear to have been so confi- nounced the appointment of General ST. LOUIS, Mo., May 13. — The the murder of Minnie Bomgardner, i lient of the success oi Greek arms John J. International Fur Exchange, the as chief of staff. as at that time It was not known that largest wholesale fur house in the I that they did not stop to consider United States army. poo she had married Gruetter. the consequences of Greek defeat. United States, issued a statement to FOOTED Ismet Pasha is a man of 45, and SHOES its stockholders today, informing I deaf. His deafness is cited by the them of a deficit of $9,000,000 in the Turks, who love silence and contení' | concern’s finances. plation, as one of the reasons of his “A sudden, violent collapse of the successful planning. He is a pro- ' wholesale market in furs in the | duct of the great war, having been , spring of 1920," was given as the chief of the general staff under Er- reason of the deficit. Reorganiza | I ver Pasha. tion plans are being considered. Tidings Carriers Strive to Achieve Business Success Earns Living By Series of Skids on Independence of Upper Silesia Is Declared By Polish Leader Banana Peels $2,000 IS RAISED FOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BUDGET: RESPONSE : OF BUSINESS MEN IS GENEROUS JAPANESE HAVE MINERS AND sesreraay" ^"'SI Ì ADA[ DDAADAM i LANL NUUNAIV POLICE HAVE FOR NALY BLOG GUERILLA WAR m Condition of G. F. Billines Improved Today! an automobile Worshippers Land Turkish a g (eneralputeh rorts Dr. E. A. Bulgen Will Speak at C. of C. Lunch to PRISON TERM GIVEN MINISTER MAIL ROBBERY ALIC ATTI DDAINTC ' WTTC ) WHOLESALE FÜR HOUSE ANNOUNCE LARGE DEFICIT PERSHING CHIEF Three Reasons see MOTHER. TERE5 " BEANY, AND MUSH (HEy BARE MV (AM ’RE I TARE I ANO STOCKINGS OFF 100? Junior-Senior High School Picnic Given The yearly Junior-Senior class high school picnic was given Tues- May at a point just below Gold Ray dam near Grants Pass. The picnic was in accordance with the school custom of the Junior class entertain­ ing the Seniors before graduation. The party, about 100 students, mot­ ored to Grants Pass early in the day. remained for inter-class games of baseball, tug of war. and other field activities, after which they returned to Ashland and made up a dancing FORT MORGAN, Colo.. May 1 party at. the Memorial hall. Twenty cars were used to convey, the stu­ Within less than three hours after he had been bitten by a rattlesnake, the dents to the picnic grounds. Ender’s department store furnish- 2-year-old son of Charles Carson, ed the school with a motor truck I who lives near here, died in terrible with which to carry their provisions. I agony today. The Misses Freeman and Farrar, | The child saw the snake in the and Coach Hughes, members of the barnyard and approached to play high school faculty, accompanied the with It when the rattler struck the boy. students. AMBASSADORSHIP TO JAPAN REFÜSEO BY DAVIS HILL Elks Ladies Open Club Room With WASHINGTON, May 13. —Davis Hill has finally decided not to Party-Speeches Jayne accept the ambassadorship to Japan, RATTLER STRIKES COLORADO BOY DIES IN 3 HOURS ( Contributed. I it was learned here today. It was ascertained. at the same ¡Club Room last night was one of the time, that Hill may be made ab- most pleasant affairs of the season, (bassador to Germany when diplo- Both bridge and 500 were played, : matic relations with the Berlin gov- | Mr Frank Dow and Mr. Fred Wag- ernment are resumed. ner having made the nigh scores in bridge. Mrs. L. Schwein and Mr. $0690093909999 Nate Bates scored high for 500. At SAN FRANCISCO MARKETS the sugger Mrs. Wagner, Mrs. Per- rozzi and Mr. Tomlinson made short (Special to the Tidings.) speaches. Mrs. L. Lodge presented SAN FRANCISCO, May 13. — Fol- the prizes. It was a most enjoyable lowing are market quotations: affair and the hope was expressed EGGS— that all the Elks ladies will make it HENS—25c @ 37c. truly a club home. BROILERS—35c a 40c. The opening of the Elks Ladies’ {Copyright)