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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1910)
'4 MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORtiOOX, AVFDSDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1910. I- ir MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE AN INDEPENDENT NEWBPAPEK PUDLISHIID DAILY EXCEPT SATUR DAY BY TKE MEOrORD FRINTIN0 CO. A consolidation of the Jtedforil Mall, naltllillHlmil 1889. the- HoUtlluril UrOKOn- liui, atnbllHhprt 1902; Un Democratic Time, ealnbllHlii-d 1872; Urn Anhlnnil Trlluine. ctiililllicl 1896. nixl tho Mcil- foril Tribune. Mnbllwheil 19UC OHOIiaiJ PUTNAM, IMIIor ami MnrmKr KEEP THE BALL ROLLING. Kntoroil iih Hucunil-claHn inuto-r No vi.riili..r 1. 1009. al tho DO.ltof flco ill Mi'dfonl. On-Kon. under the net cf Mnrcli n, 1879 Official lMpor (if the City of .Mt-ilfuiil. .SO nunscaiPTioK hates. Ono your, by mall. "'92 One month by mall . . 1'or month, ilellvonil by carrier In Mvilrsrii, JncKfionvilie mm icn- trnl Point t Hiiniluv onlv. bv nmll. nor year.... zoo WVi'kly, jr yenr 1 o ' rull Loafed Wire United Prcia Dlipatchei. Tho Mull Tribune In on Halo nt the I'erry Nuwh Htiiml. Han Kriinoluco. 1'orthitiil Hotel Nowh Stand, l'ortlund. llovvimiii Newr Co., l'ortlund, Or. W. O. Whitney, Heuttle, WiibIi Hotel Hpoltune News Htuml, .Hpulcnne. BWORN CIRCULATION. AvcmKi dally for a January, 1910 2.122 March, 1910 2,20.1 April 1910 2,301 Muy, 1910 2,ir0 June, 1910 2.502 July, 1910 2,624 AUKURt, 1010 2,527 Heplembrr, 1910 2,531 Uctobcr, 1910 i 2,795 Wovembnr Circulation. 1G 17 18... 20... Jl... 22 2.1 3,0i".(l 2f :i,or,o 27 3,076 28 3,000 29 ,., 3,000 30 2.975 7C.999 3,076 3,076 3,050 3,10V 3,050 3,050 3(tta 3tl Oil 2 3,350 .'1 3,100 '!? 3)100 r .,. 3,160 7 3.1U0 8 3,100 9 3,100 10 3,100 11 3,100 13 3,160 14 3,100 16 3,100 Total Dally nvoraiio, 3,080. HTATK Ol-' OUIXION, County of Jack HOIl. HH. : Oil the. first day of December. 1910, Personally appeared peroro me. ueorKf Putnam, iminuiror of tbn Medford Mall Tribune, who, upon oath, acknnivledKefl flint the abovu riKuren nrn truo ami cor rout. (Heal) II. N. YOC1CHW Notary Public for OniKon. MEDrOBD, OKECtON. MetropollH of Houthern Oregon and Northern 'California, nnil tho fimtust- itrowuiK city in ureKon, Population IT. 8. ccnHiis 1910; 8810. extlmuled In November, 1910, 10,000.. Klv hundred thoumind dollar Oravlty 'Water HyHtem complutcd, kIvIiik flimm Niipply imru mounluln water and Hlx tren mllcH of Htreut bolnjf iaved and contrncterf for at a cohI nxccedltiK 11, -ooo.ooo, making a total of twenty iiiIIoh of pavomnnt. PoNtofflco receipts for year cndlntr November 30, 1910, show a sain of 51 per cent. Hank dopoMtH wcro 12,376,532, a gain of 22 per cent. Milliner fruit city In Oreson ItoKiie Jtlver HpltxcnberK nppJi'n won nwcep Htakef) prim and t It It) 'of "Appl Xlnir of tho World" nt the Nutlonal Applo Hhow, Hpoknne. 1909, uud it enr of Nrnvtownn won ririt PrWa In 1910 nt Cnnndlnn International Applo Hhow. Vnncouver, II. C. llocuo lllver pfars brnuslit IiIkIichI iirlccH In nil mnrKetn of tho world dur ing tbn pant nix yearn. Wrlto Commercial ulub. IucIohIpi; C cnntH for jioalaun for tint fluent. coiiiiiiu ijlly pamphlet ever written. i nan i i i,,.'tv" , ,i, t i, , Thoy hnvo discovered Unit Wood row WIIhoii was bom In. Virginia, lint thlH la not Intnl. TTSTlTir a population of 25,750, Jackson county now ranks fifth in tho list of count ies of Oregon. In the past decade the increase has been J2,(w8, and the gain Vo per cent. By the census of 1000 Jackson county ranked eleventh on the list. The increase and development during the past ten years have been greater in this section than in any oth er section of the state, barring only Multnomah county. Medford 's population of SftlO shows a gain from 1790 in 1900 of 'YJ2 per cent, leading all cities of the country, except one, in percentage of gain. Though the population of other Orogon cities has not been made public, it is prob able that Medford ranks fifth ajnong the cities of Oregon, being exceeded only by Portland, Salem, Astoria and Eu- gene. In the past three; years Medford has passed Baker City, Pendleton, The .Dalles, Albany, Rose burg, Grants Pass and' Ashland. The same percentage of growth for another decade will give Medford between '10,000 and 50, 000 population in 1920, and there is no reason in the world why she should not attain this population. The census of 1920 ought to show a population of 150, 000 for Jackson county. Lts area and resources will amply support many times this number of people. The entire Rogue River valley should be an immense, continuous orchard, with a family upon every ten acres. Thousands of men should be employed manufacturing lumber, quar rying granite and marble, manufacturing lime and cement, and thousands more in mining. The creation of a jobbing center at Medford, of tourist resorts at Ashland, the open ing up of scenic attractions, like the Crater Lake national park, and our climalo will do the rest. But these things will not do themselves. Medford supplies the major share of the initiative and enterprise of the county, and Medford must redouble its 'energy that the future may fulfill the promise of the present. It is in our own hands to realize our own destiny and to make Mat destiny what we choose. We are on the right road, but cannot afford to stop for a minute. Keep the ball rolling. BUSINESS AND POLITICS. INSURGENTS LINING UP. (Continued from page 1 ) plaeo of (ho pliin for u "committee on cowmitleos" which I lie insurg ents advocated Inst session, nnd in framed us nn improvement on th.it plan. It provided for tho election of tho nieinbers of tho principal poiuuiittens. The resolution divides the coun try into twelve upoxniphipul divia imm for the election of minority members? The (humous nre to he, us nearly tig poH-ilile, eipiu! in representation. Kneh division i to elect n member to ench of the principal cominitlcis, classified an "first c!iih" by the resolution. Thh. will niako the b'm commiltcos of the house each hnvc a inemborship of 2Q. They will in clude the committee on rules, which will name the. members of the unim portant emninitteps. BODY OF WOMAN FOUND. (Continued from pako 1.) Hct'iiu. A careful examination wan nindo or tho body nnd tlio ground HtirroundlnB, but nothing was discov ered beyond tho fact Mint n few yards nwny a lady's bnek comb waa found, and ovldenco that someone had been eating npples. Tbero wns no ovl denco found that a train had struck tho wotnnn at that point. A few feet ncross tho track wns found n oalr of men's working shoes. On the body there was nothing found to Idon ilfy It beyond the fact that a comb and nn empty bottlo were found nnd an onvolopo upon which was written: "Chief of PoIIco, Ashlnnd." Doing good la llko using an um brella you have to hoop It up la or der to gut any benefit out of It. Ten thousand good Iownns built a dirt road :iS0 nilloa long, stretching clear across tho state, In ono hour. Count do Doaufort has made a lilt on tho vnudovlllo'stagoii thing ho seoniH to have failed to do as n hus band. .- Klinor (llyu's first book was "Thioo Weeks," hur mirrent ono In "Ills Hour." Lot thu nuxt bo "Ono Mlmtfu. I'lonso." Many things can huppou In two yoarH. Mr. Hoomnolt may run for prorildout u a flying machine for all wo know. I.oiiIhvIIIo U doHorlhed ,an the Uuto. way of tho South. Tho meant cuiuus returns would ludlixito that people J not pasDiid through, Ai a rule, thoro Is something wrong with tho young man who can ho rulntttl; ho wni half ruined before tho tempter upponrud. HognrdloM of ugoful teaching freely offered the rug oontluue to be about tho uuly thing properly Ktch orlxud by mot puuplo. npllli parallel between business and government is clear- ly portrayed in an article by" Lincoln Steffins in the December Everybody's. In it he skillfully shows that business is government and that the management of one corresponds exactly to administration of the other. "Small businesses are little monarchies, as all primi tive states were and some states are today," says Mr. Stef fins. "The head of a little shop or of a small', competing factory is the absolute ruler of his private business. And public business used to be called the king's business; and it was his. Even the people were his, his subjects. They had nothing to say about the public business ;they had no more representation in the government than the depositors of a'bank have in their, bajik, .And that seemed liijtural and right to kings and people once. Jut so many kings abused their power that the management of public busi ness passed gradually out of the monarchial stage into the republican form and we see the beginnings of democracy in .politics. And that's where business manairenient seems to be going. "A corporation is a republic. It has a constitution and flections. There is a property qualification; only stock holders vote; not tho workers, for example; but it is a representative government. And if the stockholders of a corporation would attend to their duties as voters, they could, as in polities, govern. Hut, as in politics, thev neg lect their duties. Thev nay out their nionev. fake their shares, and leave the business to the parly in power. In -the case of banks, the citizens, so to speak, deliver their money in hard cash, just as citizens turn in their taxes, and the depositors, like the taxpayers, don't know and don't, ask what is done with the money. All this is the op portunity of strong, active personalities. And, just as m politics, strong personalities seize the riunity. They organize a machine or a party they PATJtOXIZi: THU SQUAItK DKATi WOOD VAUI) All kinds of dry wood for salo at oasonnblo prlco.3. Dollvor to any mrt of tho cfty. CAM, MAIN' 2C01. C. 15 Ghynor of Ashland Is down n business. If. A. Pendleton wns down from shland Wednesday. II, II. Mann has returned from Col fax, Wash., where ho has been vislMng 'lis slstor. Tho store that pays n lot of money 'or space in which fo .say Komothiiif o you must believe Hint what it sa imporfnnt tq you. Stntuo Unveiled. WASHINGTON', 1). C, Pec 7. -V statue of Huron Frederick Wil Jiblin AujjuHlAVhi Stubon wurf tin- oiled today" iu 'Lit r'nyoltu sipinr" The principal nddre-s was delivered 'iv Coiirorihtiuiii Hichard Hurtlmldt f Missouri, president Tuft. See re nrv of War Dickinson nnd Count Von Hernstorff, tho German ninbiis 'jidor, nnd tho,, representatives of . lumber of German societies occu tied the plntloiin. Mls Helen Tall htuahfer of- tho president, uuveilei1 he statue. ' The statue fncos Ihe wltilo house The marine hand and n mule choru f 1000 voices: furnished music foi 'he occasion. XMAS PRESENTS. Tho rowwni iHtnut wIiIowh mo will, lug to try nuirrliigu a koouiuI time U booHUiit) they bellovo the Heond couldn't be any wonte thnu the fint, anyway. N'lek I.ougworth of Ohio Is upply Ing hlv eouHlltuuuts with the govern meut'ri (look hooks. lSvldeutly he h iHiin in me -stuirtArtt" route to n itma's liiMtrt. In New York m hueUtid rtur)iwl homo nfter U had Ihmii ryerWd thut ho wh tlMd Md hlH wile collated hU life tiwurKHc, Now, what were th wife's frrallityi? Morte hi ooncludwl that he win uo louger nk for a pardon. If the preei (ImiiI will only turn hint out of prtaou. This aeoms to be a new application of tho fiction of high finance. Maybe tho man who want to be tried Ma Chicago for murder rather than In Haul St. I.ouU tor burlary ha boon lookliiK over tho reran) to boo whero ho would bo lee certain of punishment. oppoi collect this money, stock and power, as political" hosscs coueci naiiot.s, com rihut ions and influence. The boss in business has his ring of followers, who herd the voters, and lie nominates them on tickets; one ticket in business, two in politics, and so tbe boss puts in office his friends, men who are loyal to him, presidents and directors who rep resent him, not the public and not the stockholders, but the hosts. So the business boss "controls" the corpora tions, and, having the people's money, uses it to buv up the' people's political bosses, so he has'a "pull" in politics, too. The business boss is the boss both of business and of polities. "Xo wonder he has power. His power is enormous. We call it financial power and wo think of moncv. Ami money is a part of it. .Money is the footstool of credit, and cretin is me very crown ol financial power. Hut the con trol of credit comes through the control of banks and rail roads, and public service corporations which corrupt and control cities, states, the I'nitcd States. It is sovereign, the money power, but the money power is not based on money; not alone; certainly not on "their money." It is founded upon the control of men, presidents of companies, dircctoi-s and stockholders, depositors, and the public. In other words, financial power is not merely financial, it is political. It is a matter of the management of men." HARD TIME GETTING JURY TO TRY DR. BURKE SANTA KOHA. lil.. lkc. 7. At tuiupU to MM'tir a jury to try Dr. Willurd 1'. Untie, proprietor of the Simla Kh eatiitoriuiu. chanted with utteiuptiiiK to dynamite l.uftta! Smith, formerly oonneeled with the iiwtitutiou, nuil her infant aoii. met Villi puav suecee when the hvtuiujt wius roaiuoed today. Two juror, tentatively unwilled, weie in tho box and tho mmm uf leu oUuu i the nttorncNn foi were drawn. (jiu'lioiiintr bv the veuirviuou nlteady had foruic Mtme Mart of nn opioiim on the case Record-Herald Editor Retires. t'llH'AOO, 111.. Iter. r.-roriH-liii' MiAuliff, for 1A yearn inauttitiiiK 'l itor of the fhiniKu lword-IIeriul hH rvaiirned on acrouut of ill-health and ahortly will leave for (xlifonua to ipend Ihe winter. McAuliff i Kucceedwl by Henry Chamberlain editor of the Voter, a ikditicnl iuhl' ttjiiiie. Cliauiberlttiu i- an oldliuu fhlpoif uewipHptr iiiiio. Mi-Anli'i will reliiiu iMnuimtii.ii with lb.- K (Ipern jjliisscs niahe Ihe best Xmn -itesents. "Thero's n reason." The at.! a lirctunc. Tit whole lomilv con io them. Tlirfy increase the jilons lie of hhiwx oiio-htilf. You can rem lie orchestra iiiueln from the 1ml .-tiny, tliux uii.Ytiue oun iee the ml anlrtuo of linvtiiK opera xbiwes .it he theater. I A fine iii.rlnient in moroico onoked nnd i) iwail, void mount -d, with nnd without hnndle, at l)i 'Joliltt'n 0tical I'artoiii. (ilttHKeM ground while you wait I'ho mitrt eomploto ollicft i-lioi he- ween Pun laud nnd Sacramento. Set' big eve aittn. Have you noticed tho now build Iuhh going no In Onkdalo Park ad lltlon Juet south of Mr. Hoot's? tf both bide dovulouud that tuuit olMtVUvndd in nil ndxmorv euuit XMAS STATIONERY From all the Fam ous Manufacturers EATON. CRANE &. PIKE. WHYTE & WYC0FF. WHITING. IN BEAUTIFUL BOXES, FROM 20c to $2.00. MEDFORD ,.Book Store.. 'T LIKE THEIR CLASSIC NAMES SPOKANE, Wash., Dec. 7. "Spo kane Indians do not llko Blblcal namou," said J, A. Webster of Fort Spokane, recently. "If you should be dropped blind folded Into the Spokane Indian reser vatlon you might easily Imagine your self In n Jewish synagogue. You hear Moses speaking to Isaac, Reuben whispering soft words to Judith nnd possibly Uenjamln, Aaron, Lovl and Joseph In a heated controversy over money matters. "When I first took charge of the Spokane nnd Colvlllo agencies six years ago, I thought the Spokano Ind Inns a very religious lot of people but I soon found out that It waa In name only, nnd that they wero not nt nil satlfled with the names." Almost the first day nn Indian camo to him, snld Captain Webster, with nn Interpreter, asking to have his namo changed. Ilo had "very bad" name ho said. Ills no mo was Ilenjaniln Isaac. Hundreds of Indiana havo asked to have their names changed, and today they arc "Tom Dick nnd Harry". In tho early days when tho French Catholic priests wcro tho only white men uniting tho Indians In this count ry, tho nntlvqs adopted their old pic turesque names, llko "Good Thunder' "Afraid of a Cow," Rain In the Face" and so forth, or olse French names, but nbout twonty-flvo yenra ago a evangelical missionary changed all their names and caused nil tho troub le which Cuptaln Webster has had In furnishing "common" American names. K To Save Steamer. VICTOKIA, H, C, Dec. 7. l'rcp nrulions have been completed for Ihe hauling of tho steamer North western from Ihe rocks of San Junn ifflnnd tndny, and if everything J-'oes well film should he freed from hur perilous position by this afternoon. A stenmor nnd tujj of tho Uritish Columbia SiiIviiko company reached Victoria hint - nisiht, bringing Louis l)e Costu, one of the fmlvnjjo crew. He was injured in nn uccideut yes terday nfleinoon uud wns removed Uy n hospital. Do Costa reported nerythim.' wns in renditions to pull 'ho Northwestern off the rocks to day. A tnislciidinc ndvortisemcifl. Svould ') almost as disastrous to a store n i fire with no insurance. SHOP HERE Yon owe it to yourself to buy foods in the low est market. AVe invite you here to sliop and compare qualities and prices. XMAS CANDIES Plain, broken and fancy mixed candy, per lb 15c "Broken peanut candy, per pound 25c Chocolate drops, lb. 20c FRUIT Pkt?. Pressed Figs ..10c Cal. white and black dried Figs, J) lbs 25c SEEDED RAISINS . 3 BOXES FOR 25c. You should see these. AVe bought a big lot on account of tho excep tionally low price. I) boxes of fine seeded rai sins, conmiQiuy sold at loc a box see our win dow we sell you 3 bxs for 25c. Seedless "Raisins, three pounds 25c Finest California Looso Raisins, pound' 10c Fine Spitzenberg Ap ples, box $1.35 Fancy Cal. Oranges, per doz., oOc and 40c Olmstead 6 Hibbard West, Side Phone Miin571 ALONG THE KENNEBEC" NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT The next hie attraction to be seen in thitf city is that slerlinu New Knjrlund play, "'Alonjr the Kenne bec," which will be jriven in all its entirety, wealth of rurnl scenery, the ,'ront quarry scene with its working drills nnd n real steam engine, at the .Medford theater, Friday, November I). The company is one of the best traveling nnd numbers many well known players, including some clev er specialty nrtisls. The characters are all unitiuc i" originnlity nnd there nre several types entirely now to the stage. ln all. the play in iK entirely will compnrc favorably will) tho best of New England plays, such us "The Old Homestead." "Counly Fair" nnd "Shors- Acres." The com edy duel scene in the third act N very ftiiin'i mid is sad to surpass Ihe celebrated duel scene in Joseph Jefferson's jlliiy of "The Rivals." Like all New England plnys, laugh lor must intermingle with tenrs nnd the humor is so carefully blended with sentiment thnt jusl as you are on the verge of tenrs something hu morous hnppens which turns the tide (o excruciating laughter. No piny of recent yenrs has had a tnore sumptuous production in point of scenic detail nnd the production in this city will he given with careful attention. As an advertising fea ture the company carry a fine baud. wnere to Lo vm m i onigai NATATORIUM EXTRA. Midfld Race and Relay Race Be tween Ashland and Medford Next Wednesday. "If you can walk you can Icnm to skntc." BOWLING. Rest Music In the West. "NAT" THEATRE . . Entire Change of Program Tonight. I Mother and Child. 2 Sleepy Jones, the Devil. 3 Louis the Ninth. A. good orchestra and cozy the ater. ADMISSION 1(1 CENTS. All these pictures are extraor dinarily good, and you will miss a treat bv not seeing them, flood music, 10c ADMISSIONIOc. U-GO Hinli-Class Stock Co. TONIGHT For Four Days Only, Beginning Sunday December lib. DOXT l-'AIli TO SICK I .MAlWOItli: .MAXIiVIIiM? STOCK COMI'AXV In n bonutlful four-act Comedy Drama. DOHA TIIOItXH From Ilortha M. Clay's Novel Dlroctod by D. 13. Athey's SnoclnltloR between acts by MIhs Mnudovllle. Ilegiiiuing-Thursday, Dec. 8. MV FltlKXD FltOM INDIA Throo act Comedy UGO OUC1II3STHA Directed by Anna Aubrey Fames. UI3SFUV13 YOUR S 13 A T S BY PIIONI3 .MAINSH7I. New Attraction at THE ISIS THEATRE The plaeo where you can nl wnys spend u pleusaut hour and havo a hearty laugh. MAVIUIU TUIO Fl'UOl'KAX CIIAItACTHU Chalice i:iectrh'al Novell)'. Singing, Talking ami Dancing :t itHKi.s of PirriJHus :i ALL NEW SUBJECTS. 1--A Lucky Tootluiche. J -I,i.V CwriHr. 3 The LvKatr. SO.VO RUXKBK HILL" Hy UAItRY 1UNCIIARD. MMtiuoe every Saturday and Sun day at 2:30. gmfwgPm c j Med ford's Kxolusive Picture The ter. Idlest Ideobsod Photo plays. One Dime n,, Mre One Dime. IS "BRYAN OF ENGLAND" LONDON, Dec. 7. Arthur J. Bal four today Is dubbed tho "Bryan of Kngllsh politics," owing to tho third successive defeat of the Unionists un der his leadership. Efforts already aro under way In the party (o forco out Balfour. The Indications today wero that the government coalition hns Increas ed Its majority by at least one dis trict over Its representation In the last parliament. ' The present standing 1: Conserva tives 147, liberals IOC, nationalists 2C, laborltes 20. A slorc would soon filial if it pniil for any considerable nmoiinl of nd vcrtising which' it could not malco it to your interest nnd profit to read and answer. ' See v the Mechanical Doll Demonstra tion at Kentner's Store Every Afternoon One to Six Saturday Three to Six and to Nine thirty A '" Big Attraction HTW nww- -etim!m -vi