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About Rogue River courier. (Grants Pass, Or.) 1886-1927 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1913)
FRIDAYV DECEMBER 3, 1013., WEEKLY ROGIB PIVER COURIER PAGE Bl.V P 'i: MX m 4 W-.. lfyfeS'Si PilESEHTS i'lII : l&,;il?mlikhi:V. rl J"t the fltn.HMt, catch- Mi'W-'l ""c" novelties imngma. I .','J ' -f. i t ,".'. fff-'.- '.! worn uonnany. KVJ " mM Portland Houring 4 HTICIKi: Mi.US TIKS I P IXMAN'.U'OUS lll.SlXFSS i Indianapolis, Dec. 1. Indianapolis surged about the wagons, trying to call for ouly about $34,000,000 more was strikebound again today. The' Persuade the drivers to quit, but the than was appropriated for 1914. tie-up was more complete than dur-; l)olice charged recklessly among The total estimates, Including Ing the recent street car strike. The' wm liurllng men, women and chll-. $306,953,117 for the postal service present fight, however, promised to! (lren a8l,Je- knocking some down and ' (payable from postal revenues) call he less one-sided. making many arrests. '. for $1,10S,681,772.02, as against $1,- On tho previous occasion the streat! Policemen on foot carried long j 074,305,869.73 appropriated for car company "stalled" along, itj "'sin sticks, with which they batter-i 1914- brought In strikebreakers to run Its ed every head la 8sbt in their efforts; Where In other years the pension cars, but union sympathizers would! to Prevent street gatherings. i ro11 has grown y enormous leaps not allow them to work, and tho city! Special deputies swarmed every- thls year'9 C3t,n,ate calls f(" mre government would not give them ! where and Acting Mayor Wallace than ?11'000'U0? cut- The total es adequate protection. I served warning that his men ere'"1"3 J9 1 169,150,000, as against Tho result was that tho company, under orders to shoot to kill as soon! ?1 ' .fnaJr , . , . , . at the outset haughty and unyield-!' they deemed tho use of firearms1 . "a department of labor, which ,ng was soon forced to capitulate.! to quell vlo.nce. j ;ned.U, pinch o .v Today the teamsters were out. Butt Nevertheless, there were employ-i j3 3 390 jQ lgi4 In tho meantime Indianapolis hadjers who showed signs of anxiety. In ' . ' hnH,uhIa 'nA D,ah .A I H'U - l 1 ' vuiiiH''i iiiiiiuiB. vuoiO Mil II 81UK18 i big Interest was attacked by the car men, hundreds were put on the de ft ntdve by tho teamsters. . . ptitlzod, armed and ready to act' vigorously at tho first sign of dls-J order. i learning that their emvoyes were, 01 ine.r, a8kg for U;glnnlng thls work ?7(800. R?'iiK to walk ..,!.!, cat buslncbt, tn. P ! own frces. There were business 000 aa agaIngt $6i2C7500 ln 1914 warned Mayor Shank, at the head of n,en' to- wno W0lI,d nt ow their, The j,anama caual cal,8 for 26f. the city government when tho trac- tcams t0 be taken out, fearing vlo- 326983 aB comuared t0 $2i,i46, tlon employes won their victory, len('e- 824.38 in 1914. In this estimate Is that he must do one or the other of The Commercial Vehicle Protec- $2,500,000 for fortifications, provld two things: Prevent the teamsters' t've Association Issued a statement ; ins $1,200,000 for ten companies of strike, furnish adequate protection 1 this afternoon declaring the strike tousl artillery. for strikebreakers, or resign. unjustifiable, and arguing that the: The military establishment de- Faillng to do any of these things, I IliaJority -of teamsters in the city , manded $106,000,000 as compared to they declared ho would be Impeach-! vere non-unionists, who, though they $95,000,000 for 1914, and this In ed. They were convinced, they add-' faI,d to r?I)ort for wrk today, did duded $150,000 for fifteen aero cd, that ho sympathized with the j 80 only through fear. ! planes. men, and they proposed to have ant Thomas Farrell, the strike leader, For river and harbor lmprove executlve who sympathized with announced that the teamsters' In- incuts, Secretary of War Garrison tlieni. dlanapolis union numbered 3,000 asked $41,400,000, a reduction of Comptroller Wallace succeeded J nien' and said more were Joining $10,000,000. liliu as oi'tlng mayor. No told the hourly. For continuing and completing business mon he would give them' The unionists demanded better pay post offices, Secretary of the Treasury all tho protection they wanted. and improved working conditions. : McAdoo asked: Albany, Ore., $10,- By dawn this morning ho had the, U0I Berkeley, Cal., $40,000; Chico, entire pollco force on duty, reln-j Indianapolis, Deo. 2. An uulden- Cal.. $20,000; Ceour d'Alene, Idaho, forced by a body of 500 business tllilJl1 1111111 WU!f bllot a"d killed and 1 0.U00; Nanford, Cal., $31,000; and professional men, specially tie three others seriously wounded In a Juneau, Alaska, $70,000; Medford, Business concerns had 1,000 striko-1 throe negroes and two white men, Santa Barbara, Cal., $20,000; Dalles, breakers ready to take tho places of! "Strikebreakers, who wore riding In U., $23,000. tho men who walked out. I empty wagon belonging to the Nevertheless no attempt wai Citizens' Ice & Storage Company. Culiforniu Woman Seriously Alarmed made during tie forenoon to dellverl They asserted the first shot came; food, fuel or other merchandise. from il n,ob standing on the cornor , anJ eaused me a great deal of "aunoy Forowarned, housuholders Eeneraiiy t Indiana and Capital avenues. inner. I would have bad coughing hud laid in such supplies, oo that.1 Aftor tho 'ooting a squad of po- fl'fUs and my lungs were so sore and at the outset, little inconvenience n.shed to the scene. The "J JJ resulted. For their groceries, at any ol,ll'trs "spd their clubs freely. . chamberlain's Cough Remedy, say rato, the citizens paid cash all the Ono of ,ho 111011 lnJllI'd the lng she had used it for years. 1 uroc.rli.a hn.i tnnn.,.i nrAt I rioting was not expected to live. bought a bottle and It relieved my sn, p. rn, u i Htl'llinrn '.lnvhiiP nnnaiini'ml llmt thm v. ,n., I...,.,... !,. u i;. ,u ....!..... t i .,... that supplies sulllcleut to feed them would hi distributed during the strike. Tim iii'lvra nf hrnwnrv wmmna i, , . . ., ... , , belonging to the Brewery Workers I'nlon, and not tho teamsters, were Mill at work. Taxleab nuui also were not yet affected. Newspapers were permitted to supply themselves with print paper and mall and express wagon and hearse drivers, with the strike lead ers' authority, remained at work. Those who wero out Included coal, grocery, market, commission house, tr.uk, furniture and loo wnaon team- sters and draymen, excavating, grad ing and department store drivers. Indianapolis, Dec. 1. With Mayor Shank deposed as too friendly to labor rnvd In Ms place as acting mayor Comptroller Wallace, pledged 1o uphold capital's vauso, Indian apolis employers were prepared to deal Htcrnly with tho teamsters' strike, which began lure today. Mounted policemen surrounded the wagons, manned by strikebreak ers, which began starting out from scon's of business house after the i short tie-up of teaming during the earlier Crowds hours of the forenoon, j of strike sympathizers' Bnl.nKnl . D3" cl ai luuiaurea non-union team- sters were not allowed to unload coal at shops where union men were em- . . ployed, the owners fearing they .....l.l .! , strike riot at Indiana and Capitol "vcmioa shortly before noon today, The fatal shooting was done by "Make ns fow arrests as possible i was the order issued by Acting 1'olh - o Superintendent Coffin to his 1,1,11 - 'Whenever a crowd forms I around a non-union driver, rush them nnd crack beads." An automobile, carrying seven de- initios, each armed with n rifle, pa ' ,. . . A ' trolled the down-town streets today The police stations were veritable arsenals. .. Strike loaders telegraphed to the labor department ln Washington to send mediators to the city, nnd n!d they expected a resolution would be Introduced ln congress soon for a federal Investigation of labor condi tions here. The resolution would chnrge, they said, that an alliance fx!s(p(. ,,0,;cpn lars:p rn,lovP nnd the city administration for the use of pollco to break strikes. Only milk and brewery wacons wore moving. Ell llli ( use Exactly "When father was sick about six venrs a co bo read nn advertisement of Chamberlain's Tablets In the pap- evs tb,,t fit his rase exact!-." rit's Miss V area ret Campbell of Ft. Smith. rk. "H.- purchased a box of them and be has not been sick since My sister bad stomach trouble and wa nlso benefited by them." For sale by nn dealers MYRTLE HUNT HANK IS RORItEI) OF $1:1.000 Marshfield, Dec. 1. The vault of the State Bank of Myrtle Point, near here, was blown open some time be tween Saturday night and this morn ing and approximately $12,000 In gold and currency taken. The rob bery was diate-vered when the bank , was opened for business today. The robbers gained entrance to the bank .by cutting away the flooring of an office above. Then drilling a hole In i to the Interior of the vault from the top, the robbers put in dynamite and ; blew the safe open. Several resi dents of Myrtle Point stated that they believed they heard the detona ! tion of the explosion about 2:30 this ! morning. No clue was left behind. I H.IKE C OST r THK Ki .i(i of c.overnment j Washington, Dec. 1. It will cost 1 oae billion, one hundred and eight million auj a few odd thousands of dollars to run the United States gov- eminent under the democratic econ omy regime in 1915, according to departmental estimates submitted to ! congress today by Secretary of the ! Treasury McAdoo. The pruning knife was thoroughly applied to the figures, with the result that, though the government business will be much vaster in 1915, the estimates ' " ' ' " ' -"'lV bnnt ilft rnvori waa tho 191 nrn. rnni . . , ,u Vo,. r..,iM t . . u avy Daniels In contrast to the one ,mtfwh! lnH, vonP 'Ore, $24,000; Olympia, Wash., $30,- 000; Pasadena, Cal., $60,000; San Francisco sub-treasury, $00,000; cough the first night, and in a week 1V i ,.,, xx,.,a mi Mnria riorhor Sawtelle, Cal. For sale by all deal eis. PIULIPPINES NOT READY FOR SELF-GOVERNMENT New York. Dec. 1. Cameron Forbes, former governor-general of tho Philippines, does not believe the natives of the islands are ready yet for self-government. "As far as the Filipinos are con cerned," said Forbes here today, "self-government must be gradual, and not nn overnight affair. Any step toward autonomy at this time would be premature." LACKAWANNA MI ST PAY Washington. Dec. 1. The supreme court atV.nr.cd today the $ 2.O00 fine Imposed by the federal circuit court at Buffalo. N. Y.. upon tho Lacka wanna railroad for violation of the "c'OT.t.iodi'.Scs clause" of the lnter- r:at commerce- act. The comnanv ,,,,,,.,. , .. . &mi transporting hay to be sold to its own mine statues at Soranton, longed the validity of the ArtlsM. Job work at Courier offl- M PRKML ( Ol UT I PHOLUS j MAXIMl.M FREIGHT RATE! Washington, Dec. 1. Kentucky's maximum freight rate law was ap proved, in effect, here today by the! fuil arul c n uruni k nnnft (n Q tact an i t I brought by the Louisville and Nash ville railroad. The decision reaffirm ed the right of states to create rail- road commissions with the power to ....... fix intrastate rates. While the supreme court did not directly declare the maximum freight law valid, it aihrrnxd the decision of the Kentucky court. The Kentucky rate case was the lat of the 45 so-called "railroad rate cases" before the court, 44 of which were decided last June against the railroads, beginning with the famous Minnesota case. Justice Hughes framed the decisions In the former cases, which arose from Min- nesota, Arkansas, Missouri, Oregon .nd We.t Virginia. In all the right of state railway commissions to regu- late Intrastate rates, although they Incidentally affected interstate rates,! until congress acted otherwise, was mnlnt.ilnpd hv thp r-nurt Anthnrlfv . . , , nf stnfp rn Uunv wimm k nni tn roan. late their IntrastatP ratPs wis Bnnarp.1 late tneir intrastate rates was square- ly raised In the Kentucky case of to day. The Kentucky federal courts upheld the "state's right" doctrine in. the trial below. The State Railroad , ..u Commission of Kentucky was created: under the "McChord act," a state law! passed In 1900 as drawn bv Inter - state Commerce Commissioner Mc- Chord. It gave the state commission power to "fix reasonable rates and en-aia ",1U uua,i- u' U":"'U6 ii,a force restitution of overcharges" up- 'Kexroat- on strictly Intrastate traffic. The test case decided today was brought by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, which flatly denied the con stitutionality of the McChord act as an interference with Interstate com merce and federal rate Jurisdiction On August 31, 1910, the railroad sued to enjoin enforcement of an . . T order of the Kentucky commission reducing rates on liquor between Louisville, Covington and Newport, Ky., and sixteen Kentucky cities. The . . . . , rates were declared to be conflsra - tory. The railroad also particularly alleged unconstitutional the clause of the McChord act denying appeal of the railroads from any order of the state commission to any other trl- bunal- ' ATTEMPT IS .MADE TO ASPHVAIATE MLRDEKER sma11 towns near Los Angeles, H hours, Ralph Lopez, Mexican sex- j searched all night, no trace had been tuple murderer, was alive inside the Salt Lake, Dec. 1. in a deliberate 'ound early today of the lone bandit workings as late, at any rate, as 2, attempt to asphyxiate Ralph Lopez,! who held up a score of Pullman pass- a. m. today, as could be told by his the Mexican sought as a sextuple . angers on the Southern Pacific Sun-j hammerings on an air pipe which murderer, who took refuge in the set express late last night and shot! enters the mine, in response to the Utah-Apex mine near Bingham last:and killed IT. E. Montague, a travel j tappings on the pipe by his beseigers week and stood off several hundred llnS passenger agent for the railroad, j 0n the outside, pursuers with his rifle, fires were! The robber boarded the westbound j To later rappings he made no started today at the entrance to the1 limited at Pomona, went through the reply. Whether or not this indicated mine's 700-foot level. j rear Pullman with a drawn revolver, ! that he had succumbed, the besiegers The 15 other exits from the mine robbed the Isngers of -.bout $250 j Were uncertain. They took no risks, had previously been battened up ,n monev and diamonds and other but continued to feed their fire at the from outside, the fire was fed wltbJ Jewelry worth about 300, and ,eft.only unsealed entrance to the mine, cayenne pepper, sulphur and dampthe trnIn at E1 Monte, 30 minutes The bulkheads would not be re gunpowder, and back of It a squad 'aft?r he cllralied aboard. moved. It was declared, unless Lopez of riflemen was stationed to shoot 1 announced his surrender. This was down Lopez if he should attempt to San Francisc. Dec- 2. Vice- considered unlikely, persons who rush past and escape. The fugitive apparently was trying to build a bulk- head to keep the fumes out. ; 1 Lopez kill,..! n fMW Mpvi,.nn M ' Bingham on the night of Nov. 21 and took to the hills In an attempt to escape. A posse of three officers fol lowed him, but when they came up with him, the fugitive, ambushed on a hillside, killed the entire trio. When the news of this reached . . - ham hundreds of men took the trail Cornered, finally, Lopez found re-j fuge in the mine last Thursday. He had a small quantity of ammunition. After waiting for the Mexican to show himself, Deputies Halsey and! Mandrlch volunteered yesterday to I go In after him. They entered the1 mine and Lopez killed them both, i Their bodies were recovered later ln I the day. while he was in some ntbori part of the mine, and It was then! , Wonu'!1 ofle" suffer, not knowing .... .... ... . ..the cause. uuu me tenders oi tne posse resolved i to psphyxlate or smoke him out. ! Lopez tried at 11 a. m. today to' irregular urinary passages weak escape by breaking his way through :IU1'8' anSur .... T" . Rain a torture of itself. " l" ne entrance. Together hint at weakened to the workings, but two guards out-!neys. side opened fire ns soon as he started1 Strike at the root got to to tear down the planking, and forced !ca,,?p. him back. i , Xo ther remedy more hiuhlv en- There was no verification of the l'1 report that with Lopez In the mlno Endorsed at home was Mike Cranovich, who shot and' Here's convincing 'testimony from seriously wounded his wife several!11 ('rants Taps citizen, days ago, but that the two men were r Mrt8, p" Shattnck, 309 West I St., Alpine one another was believed hy veTlnn'' "Xhmt a Seven sheriffs, each with tf? & I ' .S roe of deputies, together with inhered mo a good deal' I was n'd n.itiy volunteers, were at the various iv,so'' t0 try lean's Kldnev rills nnd ec.ir?nrps to the mine. !Tt0k UTW hmv Tllev c"red n,e- The s'.cce was Mm conducted aft foJT'f 'la3 ,nevpr ret,11-ied nnd an altitude of more than 7 000 foot, ' porrntunt' " " there wa.s a heavy snowfall last night, j For Paio by al! dealers Trice no' the wind wns cold today, nnd the be- pf'is. Foster-Miiburn Co., Buffalo slecers wgre suffering severely. N,nv Vork. sole aaents for the fnir.! Office ttatloncry at the (' nrUr. D. D. Bo In Hospitals; Standard SMit Cure How many ho-.pltal patients. Buffer Ins the friKhtfui iuh. the raw scotch ing pitln of skin ihsease, have boen "by the nur.tf lwad-T I -. ' rv t That f.iild U tho famous u. v. u. prescription for eczema. titb !HPi:arL?iirO jrCBSB of one of our prominent Catholic Institutions (nunie of nur.se and Institute on appli cation), writes regardiiiff a patient. The disease had eaten her eyebrows ewnv. Iier nose and lips had i become, disiiured. Since the use of V. U. i her evebrows are prowlnir, her noso end face have assumed their natural expression," Hovr manv eczema sufferers are pay ing their doctors for regular treat ment and are belnir treated with this eaine Eoothiner. healing fluid? US. QEO. T. EXCHABDSOir frankly M. CLK.MKXs. 1 ypi-wtTR IS hFXTFXL'FD TO j " ' nxsoos 'y iit Wheaton, 111., Nov. 29. Henry Siencer, convicted here recently of the murder of Mrs. Mildred Alllson- 1 Rexroat. was sentenced today " ou w v by Jud'e Slusser to hang December 19., , , ... . wnen auencer was asneu uy juu6o Sloor,r If l,a hH nnvthln tn aav. thfl murderer answered: "You bet I have. I have a whole1 it." y' , . , . . , Spencer then rambled on Inco- ! herently for nearly an hour. He re- dted th Btory of h,s early life ln ! Chicago, his association with crimln- .1 Annl1.. Vi, nUVi ATfo The aetense s motion tor a re ; trial was overruled. GRANTS PASS FOLKS ASTONISH DRUGGIST We sell many good medicines but we are told the mixture of buckthorn , bark, glycerine, etc., known as Adler- '3 t.he bet9t w? ?'e8011vd-raBn1t,S 1 1 ass folks astonish us daily by tell- j ing how QLICKLY Adler-I-ka relieves sour stomach, gas on the stomach and 1 constipation. Many report that A 1 SINGLE DOSE relieves these troubles j almost IMMEDIATELY. We are glad we aro Grant8 Pas3 asentg for Adler. . ika. The National Drug Company. i SI NSFT DAl'llFSS 1IF.LI) ' i - i,o.I I Los Angeles, Dec. 2.- BANDIT Although police detectives and deputy sheriffs, aided by the peace officers of a dozen lt-a',,,r"1 - ui me aoiun- President E. E. Calvin of the South- ern Pacifl" today authorized a $5,000 rearl ror tne capture or the bandit Whfl lflQt Tlirrht rnhllfirl t Vl n nncimitTiMa tu u,c 1"r,"na In a Pullman on th.e Sunset express near Los Angeles and shot and killed ii. r. .Montasue. traveling passen Ker aeent for the railroad. Los Angeles. Dec. 2. A. Q. St. Convert 1 VIMflrlAt. rif A -.- -1 1 1 OA Blng-r;,' " miles east of Los Anseles. te enhonod the sheriff's office here "today that two men. one answering the descrip tion of the El Monte train robber, were hiding in a storm drain on his ranch. WHY WOMEN SIFFEH. .Many Grants I'jiss Women are Learn in!" the Cause. Backache nervousness' headache, dizziness, ed States. Koniombor the nrd take no other. name Donn's- writes "D. P. D. Is supertor to any. thin I hava ever found. Soft al oothlng, yet a powerful agent." To do the work. D. D. D. Trescrln. tion must be applied according tj directions given In the pamphlet around every bottle. Follow these dU rectlons and Bee! And H certainly takes away the Itch at onco the moment the liquid Is an. piled. The skin Is soothed calmed, so thoroughly refreshed delightfully cooled. All drupplnts of standing have th famous specltio as well as the efficient V. D. D. Skin Soap. ' But we are so confident of the mi. Its of this prescription that we will refund the purchase price of the first full size bottle if It falls to reach your cose. You alone are to judge. . Ilow'tt This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, nnd IipIIpva him nprfp.etlv hnnnnliU j In all business transactions and fin. ancially able to carry out any obliga. tina hv hio firm """" ," ." r V, 7V.," A ' i u..v wi tw.i.uuat, v Tin T o r cx nrr t nr n Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter- nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 Testlmonlals sent free. Price 73 cents per bottle. Sold by all drug- ,stg ! T;,,:o IIall'B Fam,1-V rills for 0011 station. KKANCE NEEDS MORE MONEY Paris, Dec. 1. The Increase In France's 1914 budget Is estimated at $160,000,000 over this year's ex penses, according to an announce ment made today. Army expenses have Increased $95,000,000 for 1914. Of this $41,000,000 went to Morocco and $34,000,000 to defray the cost of the three-year compulsory mill-, tary service Instead of the two-year service. France's entire budget for next year is estimated at $1,100,000, 000. Sl'LPlirit FUMES SMOKE OLT A MIKIJLRLU Salt Lake City, Dec. 2. Though dense smoke and sulphur, wet gun powder, cayenne pepper and form aldehyde fumes had been pouring In- i to the Utah-Apex'mlne for more thaa know him declaring they were sure le would die rather than give hlra- gPif up. h1s escape seemed impos- v i SWie. STATE CAPITAL AGAIN VOTES SALOONS OUT Salem, Dec. 2. Practically a com plete count today showed that the amendment to the city charter to pre vent the licensing of saloons was passed by a majority of 930 votes at yesterday's election. This Is the second victory for the dry element within a month, the majority for local option being 487 at the elec tion November 4. The only other charter amendment to pass was one providing for a public playground. The saloonkeepers are expected to take legal action- to prevent the char ter amendment going into effect. Old papem for sale. Courier. Hi nuitlimi $1.00 A WEEK Brings the Opera to your home. HOWELL'S TALKERY the'H J$r$ I . . . i