Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 28, 1909, First Section, Page 5, Image 5

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    Tins MISDFOW) MAtlv T1UBUNI4, aircPFORD, OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEiMBER 28. 1909.
IT
asm: a anmpfrx na i
1
I
I). W,' IVneo'of Elk Crock was in
Mi'dfrd Hutimluy m liu-ine. 1 1
lAlnicH Ihiil'lhiS water on tin tipper
4ltiKitu wish iih hig)i, II' not higher,
Chilli In, November, llHKI, llio record
jfnionth lip Id tliltt llinu.
Atnl. Munilo Riddle in vislttlng lr
timiiltor, Mrri. flonrgo ImutoH, of tilth
fully.
J ClinrlfH E. 'full hit Mtld llm WoM
Vildo HtiililtiH to Fro.d Downing nnd K,
Jl. Knrlow, who will oniiduot tho Inm
lin'H In fntnio under tlio firm nnmo
W Downing & Knrlow.
IT. 1 1. Kelly, Jr., nrt In Medford
front Trail Saturday.
Mrs. TlnjiniiM".iiol(nii loft Sulur
luy evening; for i'orllniid on a vlait
of several wdoUh durnfton. v
Cluronoo (Ion, who it ntlondiug
tlta U. of O. nt Eugene, nj-nt Tliiutkfl
glving at luiimi in Modl'nrd.
John I'ortor immo homo from Cor
vallU, uhoro hu Im attending tlioO.
A. ('., lit upend Thnukagiviiig willi
his pnronlH, .Mr. anil Mr. I. C. l'or
tor. ,
.Mr. ninl .Mr. (1. H. Holdlnger of
Tnlmit wnro in Mudfonl Friday nnd
Saturday.
Deputy Sheriff William I'tnVli wn
in Jackwnnvillu Saturday on liuimtf.
Mr. Jo Kimacll of .Inekmiltvillo
wiw in Modioid Saturday chopping.
Dnvo Ioua of Elk Crook wim i:i
Modfoid Saturday on luminous.
(In Newbury who in .luokdonvillo
on pr(ifional liimiiiUAii Saturday.
Tho now Arrnnoti'li collar in btiini:
introduced liy Dnniel for Dud. 'JIB
Van l) Cor anil .Ioiuiiiiii will uliott
ly omiii an iii-to-dHti j"Mlry utore
on I "nil Main wired in tlio now
I'hipp building. A complete ( i
of tlio fluent jewelry over "oen in
Southern Orison him arrived and will
bo installed n noon ns the onrpcnlt"-
finit.li their work, tliu finit of the
week. Hcforo making Christum o
leolioiiH, wait nnd fcco IIioao goods.
They aro up to ditto and tho latoht in
design and finish.
Al Sturgis in building a modern
tuo-Hlory house with all tlio latent
convenience on his Applcgnlo farm,
where ho has spoilt mnt of hi tiino
for tlio punt two mouths. Tlio family
may movo onto (he fann next mini
mor. It Ih one of tlio finest farms in
tho county, oouHisling of 1(10 nonw
of rich alluvinl noil, for which ho!
recently refused sfJrt.OOO. j
.Marlon Tryer of Talonl received n
telegram Thursday telling him o
eoino at oneo to JfaryHvillo, Cal..
15,000 GIRLS
WIN IN FIGHT
Shirtwaist Makers Go Back to Work
. After Employes' Capitulate '
Dlttcr Flflht Was ,
Waoed.
MJnlloit Vtf I.cnr..l Wlro) ji
N'KW YOHIC, Kov. 27.--Oiio hi
dred and iiiueloon hliirlu'iiisl maiiji
fiiclurcrM cigiitiilalod today to Qio
tornm mado hy their 15,000 ntrikfiiK
fihlrtwail j;irl dinployoH, and lite 1B,
000 nt went lim-k to work, victor
iotiH, At lilt) Hitmo linn; 1'J lenders, of
Ihu Hlriko wyro ieiitto I'liilitdelpjiin
hy tho union', nrnicd with authority to
call ft Konornl utriko of all tho liirl
waint iiiakorn in that city if it 'it
found, iih MUHpccled, that tho N'c'
York iiianiifiidturorji aro turning over
tlimr work to iniiinu net tirerx tti tint i
(own.
$100,000 CLEVER
SWINDLEFTS GRAB
Gets Away With Bin, Haul In Portland
After Operating There for Some
Time Under Very Nose of
tho Authorities.
l'Oim,ANI), Or., Nov. 27. Foi1
ornl mithorition estimate that S. V.
Oavidor, who Iiiih Kkied town after
hiincoiiiK many noor porsoim, hart
netted $100,000. Davidor while in
Portland wnB known to detceliveB nil
jover Jhc, country an a thief of the
most doporato diameter. Hit pic
ture In in tho roKiic' (itllery.
There wan never any effort made
to arroM him unlit the ooret servico
landed evidence and when he hoard
ho had henn indicted hy the federal
Krnnd jury he skipped.
EVERYTHING READY FOR
WOLGAST-POWELL GO
GARFIELD SAYS
LAW IS GOOD
Replies to Recent Statement of Arcli
liold In Regard to Sher
man Anti-Trust '
Law.
TAFT WORKING WALL STREET
ME
E
CLEVELAND, O., Nov.
where hi nupllow, Frank Tryer, Vn
lyinte in nu uiicnncioUK eouditfpn,
en lined from falling from a trmii.
Upon arriving ho found that it tym
not Ii'im nophew, hut somonue el.e.-:Ile
will return Saturday evening to iiU
homo in Talont. it
.Mrs. John .McClendou mid Mtn.
I.uko .Inntiinx of Hold Hill werin
fudford Sntnrdny.
A. I). Cornell 1ms reliinnid from n
-iiit with hiii fa mi linyoinfwyppji
vihit with his family in Grant Pits.
Joohu A. Mullor of Trail is spuuM
ink' a few dny in .Med ford on husi-
ll(8.
Mr. nnd Mix. 0. F. lino of Lin
coin, Neh., arc registered nt 'the
Mooroe. J
M. A. and V. 11. Wntkins of Wat
kiiiH, Or., were in Mcdtord Sntnrdny
doing Iiumiiuhh with local tnerchaiit-.
V. I. Swctland of Steamhont was
in Medford Sntnrdny Inlying supplies
for tho milling' reason.
A. C 1 luiimi- f Ornntu Pass mn
in Medford Friday on profoipnnl
hiiNiucss. ,
A. Miller, formerly of tho finn of
Miller & F.whnnk, left Saturday nfht
for Ontario, Or., there to niako hit
homo for xomo timo. Mr. Miller ha-j
roHidcd in Medford for the pnt five
yearH and Iiiih many friends who re
L'rel hin depnrlurc.
(I'tiltml VrtH I.ad Vlr.)
SAN FH A NCI SCO, Cal., Nov. 27.
Everything in in iendino for th"
BtoiiK jvhiidi will cull Ad Wolnt and
Lew Powell into thorin for their
20-round u'O nt the Drenmlaml nreiiit
Monday nilit. Hoth men put n
whirlwind fininh to their (milling to
day and tomorrow will confine their
work to mild fc.vinnnslum exorcise i't
order to keep their muscle limbered
up. It i nnnounced tonight that
Powell tips tho hen mat 131 and Wo)
gflfrt nt 127. Met tine; on the- result
continues hrisk, with Powell the fa
vorite nt 30 to 7. Woljjust declares
he has $1000 to bet on himself at
the odds.
Former Secretary of the Interior J.
It. Garfield today answered the
fttntumcnt of John I). Archbold (hat
tho St. Louis decision against the
Standard Oil company had proved
that the Sherman anti-tnifat law was
uuHntisfactory and would probably
ichuH' in Its repeal.
Garfield said:
"The statement has been made rc-
'ocntly thnt the St. LouU decision w:i
barroii of viotorj'i mctly proving
j that till) nuti-tniHt law was uiiKatH
I fuel pry. Such nn interpretation is
'iinj.jillifiod.- It is true that Colonel
Koocvclt pointed out nu mimtific
jtory oouditioii of the lnw and urped
I a oliniiKo, hut he only did ho on the
condition the. government have con
trol over the industrial corporations
similar to .flint over regular railwuy
nnd other common carriers.
"Tho court sustained our conten
tion thnt the law "-ecks to prohibit
companies from unfair competition
'and the restraint of'trade."
Will Contain Many Important Mat
ters and Will Define His
Policies Against
Roosevelt's.
BEAUTIFUL WOMAN
TAKES HER OWN LIFE
LANGFORD BACKS HIS DEFI
TO JOHNSON VITH REAL COIN
f
MOSTON, Mnss., Nov. 27. Snm
Longford lias covered his deft to
Jack JohiiHon wiih a $10,000 forfeit.
This morning Laugford's manager,
Joo Woodman, deoi!ed t.:i .flooo
hills nt tho bporting editu' office of
the Moston American with tho under
standing tho amount wns to go as n
lido bet. After he ixisted the money
Woodman snid: "All we ask Johnson
is to post $r000, the same to cover
any loss nrising out of complication
with the legal nuthorities of California."
(fnltwl I'rei I.am-J Wire.)
NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov. 27.
Mrrs, C. W.. Toll, the beautiful wife
of Captain C. W. Tull of the Pan
iiina canal commission, committed
suiuidde at her Panama home today,
according to dispatches received
here.
, It was nt first thought that Mrs.
Tull had been murdered, hut nn in
' vostigation showed that she had cut
her own jujgulnr vein with a hatchet.
Mrs. Tull, who was only 20 years
old, was considered one of tHc most
. beautiful women in Panama. No
rensou is assigned for the suicide
in the dispatches.
Unltfl Pros Loaned Wlro.)
WASHINGTON I). C, Nqv. 27.
Although the opening of the 01st
'congress is only nine days off, Pres
ident Taft has not yet written n lino
of his nnnual message. Ho has nil
the necessary material within bound,
however, ond the actual composition
of the document will not be a hard
job.
The message was tinder consider
ation nt the cabinet meeting yester
day and tho finishing touches were
.on it.
j The mcssnge will be the first com
prehensive nnd concise enunciation
of Mr. Tuft's own policies, as distin
'guished fro intho.e ho inherited from
Mr. Roosevelt.
The question of greatest public
importance nnd utmost impersonal
'concern to President Taft, ns pre
sented in his communication to con
J gross, will be such tilings ns the
Hepburn railroad act, as will give the
interstate commerce commission
power to control railroad companies
and the right to appeal nnything di
rect to the supreme court; the grant
ing of initiative powers to the inter
state commerce commission in bring
ing complaints against corporation.;
granting the commission authority to
fix rates after a complaint is filed;
power for commission to protect ship
pers; to compel through rates nnd to
regulate the issuance of stocks nnd
bonds and prohibit the holding of in
terests in competing lines; to allow
' l ec - i r 1 it.
ituiiii; uieeuieiiis luuna 10 uieir ap
proval and to place telegraph and tel
ephone companies under tho jjuris-
w- lw V. aU UiUtllW.TIUll Vli IUU
fifimo fnnt?rif nc rnilrnnr1c
GETS SCARE
Mone yand Politics Frightens Street
Into Another Bad Break
Stocks. Reclined In
Harmony.
M THE CHURCHES ,
JOM PMINT1NG Letter bends, bill
heads, statements cards, tags en
velopes pamphlets; prices right. II.
V. Monde. 123 East Main.
OLD FAMILY FEUD
RESULTS IN DEATH
(United Press leased Wire.)
HOUSTON, Tex., Nov. 27. As the
result of nn old feud, Pnul and Lee
Dunham, brothers, wore shot and kill
ed todnv bv Edward Weber.
(United Pross Leaned Wire.)
NEW YORK, Nov. 27. Money and
polifitcs frightened Wall street into
another bad break today. Amalga
mated Copper led because it wns the
most vulnerable issue, but nil the
stocks declined in harmony, showing
thnt the cause of the break was gen
eral and not confined to any one set
of securities. In early trading when
Amalgamated was weak the trndcis
got a notion that the copper merger
had been abandoned, but this is not
true. Whether the merger is a bull
ish or bearish argument on stocks is
a separate 'question, but tho merger
itself is progressing favorably.
What caused the trouble was a
report that Morgan nnd a few other
favored ones had received from
Washington advance drafts of the
president's message.
Reports of what these advance nd'
iiccs contained indicate thnt the
president intends to say nothing more
to congress than he has already said
in his various speeches. The presi
dent proposes, according to Wall
street reports to day, to let the inter-commerce
commission have so
ma'ny powers that it amounts to the
wiping out Of the boards of directors
of all corjwrations of which Morgan
is said to be a member.
Morgan as said to be laboring with
Mr. Taft in the hope of getting some
modification of the language which
he considers more alarming than the
situation warrants.
Christian Science.
Services Sundoy morning nt 11
o'clock: Subject of losMon-sermon
for next Sunday! "Anoiont and Mod
ren Nooromnnoy or Mesmerism and
Hypnotism." AH are welocmo. buti
daj school at 10 o'clock. 128 North
Grape street, north of Shcnnnn-O"
Music House,
SON OF ENGLISH LORD
BLOWS OUT HIS BRAINS
SEATTLE, Wash., Nov. 27. "I
prefer death in this manner to con
finement in a mental hospital," wrote
Stanley E. Wakelin, whose private
papers indicate that he was tho sou
of an English lord, just before he
sent a bullet into his head. The body,
found Thursday, was identified this
afternoon. Wakelin, a consumptive,
came to Seattle two weeks ago in the
hope ot benefititng his health.
Preshyterlan Church.
Next Sunday, Novembor 28,
preaching nt 11 a. m. The subject
of the sermon is "The Divinity of
Christ a Necessity." We would like
to consider this vital question to
gether for one-half hour. Special
music. Preaching nt 7:30 p. .$
Sundn.y school at 10 a. m.; U. t.
ciety at 0:30 p. m.
Rev. Mr. Hicks, pastor of th
Baptist church at AshlAnd, will o"
cupy the pulpit at the Medford Bap
tist church in the morning. In th
evening Enrl Olin will lead the ser
vices. Tucsdaj', December 7, Rev.
A. A. Holmes of Horning, Cal., will
open n series of meetings, continui"
until the following Sunday.
..Beautiful and impressive services
arc promised for nil thnt worship at
the First Methodist Episcopal church
next Snndny. The music will bo es
pecially in keeping with the spirit
of praise and Thanksgiving. A Inrjr
chorus of 25 voices will sing "Tbt
Lord Is Exalted," by West, and
"While the Earth Rernaineth," by
Tourf. Rev. W. R. Dyer, whose ser
mons are intellectual fenatfl as well
as spiritual uplifts, will preach the
morning sermon nnd Rev. Bclku
the evening sermon.
First Methodist Episcopal Church.
Mornim? service. 11 o'clock Or-
'T ' .
gnu voluntary: invocation sentence
(Harringtonl, invocation; "Glona
Patria" (Meineke); processional "O
Mother, Dear,. Jerusalem' (Ward) ;
Apostles' creed; prayer; anthem,
"The Lord Is Exalted" (West); re
sponsive reading from Psalter; "Glo
ria Patria" (Greatorex) lesson from
New Testament; organ offertory;
offertory .sentence; Hymn 71; ser
mon, "TK&Glory tf the Mystery
Among the" Gentiles"; Rev. W. R.
Dyer, D. D.; Hymn 428; benediction
organ postlude.
Dr. F. G. Carlow was a Jackson
ville visitor Saturday morning.
mm
LaGreque (Borsets
jtfa
You are cordially invited to an
Exhibition and Demonstration of
La Greque (Borsets
Prom Monday, Novombor 29th, to Saturday, Decem
ber 4th, 1909.
An export corset iero from New York will bo here
to sjiow you how much improvement you can make
in your figure by wearing these stylish, shapely and
thoroughly practical corsets.
Jilvor.v woman desirous of looking her best should
get export advice of this New York Oorsetierc. AVith
hor aid you will enhance the good linos of your figure
and !n : rove any poor one.
I WW.
mm
WW
MORE THAN A BEAUTIFIER OF FORM :
A HYGIENIC SUPPORT AND ''' :
PROMOTER OF HEALTH
LA GTJECQUE Corsets first won popularity among
opera singers, who quickly appreciated the advan
tage of a fashionable stay which did not interfere
with full, deep breathing.
The athletic woman became equally enthusiastic,
the dressy women in general learned that the "well
defined waist lino and roomy cut over the diaphragm
t not only gave greater comfort, but also added to one's
' grace of form.
Special models aro designed to inept thepeculiar ...
demtinds of various physiques. A1 satisfactory fit-'
is certain; permanence of a correct contour assured
during the life of the corset.
Prices Ran$e From $1. 75 to $5.00
'if.
'9
'
Ladies' and Misses' Suits
In Silk and Woolen Textures
Tho best bargains of tho year in handsome, styl
ish garments. Every suit or dress is tho season's lat
est, style, tho shades becoming, tho materials among tho
best and most favored by fashion, and all magnificont
values. Tho assortment is complete no two exactly
alike. Tho values such as no storo in sonthorn Oregon
has ovor oqualod. Do not judgo tho values of theso
offorings ih anay way by tho price. Tho value can
only bo attested by seeing tho morchandiso, which is
strictly first-class, and worth doublo tho sale price,
-f 05.00 values t $18s75
$20.00 values $12.00
$.1750 values $9,25
i
Girl's Dresses
$30,00 values $16.00
$25,00 values $13,00
AVe have tho most complete line of children's Drosses
to be found in southern Oregon. They aro to bo found
in all tho most desirable weights and colors, with work
manship such as distinguishes all tho clothing handled
by us, which means that it is impossible to buy anything
better ; $1.25 up