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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1911)
a nronon city Hull Hull S SUBSCRIBERS Valllnu' to ifnt lmj'ir wlU hrtva duo dcllvsrofl liy ulionltur of- j riot by 0 y, in. Medford Mail Tribune WEATHER Fnlr Mnx. 00; ltd. Humid Ity r per rent: M!n. no.Q, Dully -Mlxlli Ymir. I'orly-rirnl Vrnr MISDtfOIiD, OWKJON, TUKHDAY, AUGUST 29, 1911. No. 186. COUNTY COURT TO NAME ROAD BOARD Permanent Highways to Be Built Under Contract System According to Approved Specifications, Sas Judge Neil JUDGE NEIL DEFINES POSITION ' OE COUNTY COURT REGARDNG 0 ROADS AN N 1 J E Cost to County In Taxation of Ouml Issue Less Than Under Present Sys tem of Unsatisfactory and Makeshift Highways Will Name Com mittee of Five Lcndlnp. Citizens to Select Roads to Do First Con structed and Specify How Thoy Shall Be Built Bonds Not to Bo Issued at One Time, but as Needed In Actual Construction. UnplIAT the interests (if the people in nil parts of .Jaek- son county may he safeguarded in ovovy way, .1 agree that, if the good roads hond issue is sustained at the coming election, that, (ho county court will name a commiMeu of five citizens and taxpayers lo select (he roads (hat should he first construc(ed and specify how thoy should ho luiill and that the county court will proceed lo Imil d.sai droads hy contract (o (he lowest and hest hid dor." This is a paragraph from a statement (o (ho people of .faclcson couu(y from County .Judge J. H. Neil, discussing the highway situation and (he proposed hond issue of $ I .nO(),()00 for (he cons( ruction of a permanent svsfom of highways. .Judge Ned covers (he situation thoroughly from all viewpoints, as follows: Mrs, Cleveland Fights. Fire BOARDMAN IS FREE: EVIDENCE WS ACKNG Discovers New Pest TO Till-; PEOPLE OP JACKSON COUNTY'; It inny tic Htiperfloim to ndvnnri (lull what .luckmiii futility, if not til whole slide, probably need num tlinn imylliiiiu' elmt in a y.ttin ol jjrtotl j-mihIk Hint ill reduce the rout if trAiijtrlUtliUvir II to u mini, iiiiitn Id Mity nothing of Did tmtirifiiu t i i i of tnnolinc over It if on pleas urn liciit. Tli in in a buiM'M prop.) xilion llint hurt inhi'iilcil itself U every prosperous, wideawake ! inanity, and is ono that must nlv be olved hy .IiicKhoii county. He volution at ii fill u ro time would uii'tiii liiinui'iitl Iom of coiiMiiloriililt iniiorlioiiH lo (he mo)o at liuti' ItriHit iiicoiiviininiii'iiH ami would rltu; tho wheels of irngret mill hiiimum. To orflnhlMi roitilH that will iiiih wer every purMne, bo permanent and require, lilllo repair after thoy arc luiill, it h ni'i'iwiHnrv to provide Mif ficienl means. Therefore at l!i' Migonlimi of many of the taxpayer of tho county, Hut I'liuuly emirl hns enlled a Niri'ial oliMitiou, to ho hold September .'lOJh,1 In deeidn whether tho pitolo are in favor of bonding Iho county in tho sum of .fl'fiOO.tlOO piiyahlo in twenty yearn, to pay fir hiu'Ii hnprovi'uiiint. II lm In-ui I'oiiipufiil hv I'xperls in HiIh lino Unit this hiiui of iiioih'v is none too big to ni'i'oiiiplihh tho purpose for which it in intended, .liudjHon I'oimly Ik one of tho iiiohI in immense ninnmit of work muht lie ildno to Imild mh'Ii a hvstotn of roads ax is demanded. There is no intention to iw these ImmkIh at one timo. It Mould lm entirely unueoes- wiry lo ilo no. Tho construction of tho rotitlh miller the prntord plan wuiini ooiiHiiiiin lour or livo yearn ami lho liomN will lio issued only ntj iho money i required. Jleueo they will not draw intercut until they pnriH into tho hands of tho purchas er. At five Mir cent iuterext the ImiihIk would find ready huyern and a Milistanlial preininin would ho oh lained hiwidex. There mjciiis to ho nit idea nre- vailiut; Unit the immnuco of (Iicho ImhhIh would inorease tnxaliou. Thin in oorlainly without foiimlntioii. Kven when all of tho ImuhIh are in. niied-Miy fio yearn houcc-lho an nual intore.st ehnrne lo ho raised hy taxation would lie only ..7.ri,000. The amount of taxable, property on the auniwhinent roll for 101 1 will up proximately ho $10,000,000 ami it would reipiiro a levy of Ions than two millx on the dollar lo meet the entire iitno on Iho whole issue if IiouiIh for ono year. In round umiihcrH, it now reipiires ul least $100,0(10 per annum to pur sue (ho present method of road itu- prnvei its which have proved so unsatisfactory and this epens(, m Hleailily hecomiiiK greater. At the BUCKET BRIGADE EIGHTS BLAZE IN CLEVELAND HOME ItcMiIentH of Tamworth, N II., aro Htlll (IIhcubhIui; how Mra. Orovor Clovolainl and her children formed a bucket tirlRiido and nsHliited Wllllnin O, Cook, ner caretaker or Mrs. CIovo InadV eHtato, In Or.htliiK a flro which munnced their liomo. Cook received InJiirleH from which ho Jiiay dlo. Tho flumcH woru In a Rtis Iioiiho a short dli'tauco from tho homo. Mm. Clcvehtnd and her children rtiitiied froni the. hoime at lho Bound of an oxplorton and Immediately set to work. Mm. Cleveland carried bov eral ImcketH of water to tho burning building, whllo her children brought freHh Hiipi'llcs by runnlug to and fKi mthelr homo to tho gan Iioiiho. Justice Taylor States That Court Was Not Presented With Enough Facts to Warrant Holding of Butte Falls Man Accused of Settinrj Fire. CASE BROUGHT BY THE STATE BOARD OF FORESTRY Iiiiiioi Imil counties of tho slain and1 (CmMnuoil Krom I'ago Two.) PARCEL PD8T SERVICE WASHINGTON, 1). C. Aiir. 20. Parcels post service, increase of seo oiul class mail rales and changes in (he system of compeusaliiii; the rail troads for mail transportation are amouj; the recommendations which Postmaster General Hitchcock will include in his annual report to the president. Hitchcock's idea rojrnnlhif; the parcels wst us evpluincd here today contemplate the introduction of the service on the rural mail routes firhl and later gradual cNtcnsion to Mie cities and railway mail service. FOREST FIRES EXTINGUISHED Supervisor Erlckson Loslnii Worried Look as Season Passes Without Serious Blaze No Fires In Forest at Present Time. One by ono lho lit Ilo wrinkles which depict worry aro disappearing from Iho clushio brow of M. i. Krick mni, supervisor of lho Ornlor Nation al l'Vest, as lho days go by one by one, drawing closer to tho time when a fall rain bliull come, lo cud tlio 11)11 fotcst 1'iro hciikoii. Not u sin gle, blao is burning now within the courines of tho Cralet Nutioual l''or esl and although forty fires have Marled this season not ono has caused any considerable amount of damage, owing lo Iho vigilant wntoh kepi on tho fotcst. hast year at this lime i'lvo companies of soldiers were engaged in lighting (ho fires in tho forest. While Mr. Krioksnu and his men are not "out of tho woods" yol, onuh day brings the end of tho i'iio season nearer and lllifl in tho reason thu aforesaid Hit lo wrinkles are, ailcnjly olio hy one, imssiiifj away. REFUSES TO ENFORCE THE LAW E. S. Van Dyko, Deputy District Att orncy Under Mulkcy Says He Has No Intention of Preventing, lllcrjal Flshlnn In Roquo River Can Uso Nets or Gaffs In Taklnn Salmon. District Attorney h. v. Mulkoy Is to ho naked to demand an explanation or I-:. H. Van Dyko, doputy district attorney of Grants Vn&a, for state ments accredited to Van Dyko recent ly during a trial of two men for (Mo ral risking In tho Uoguo near Grants Pass. Van Dyko Is roported to huvo stated that ho "him no Intention of preventing rosldojiita of this city (Grants Puna) from taking salmon from tho Iloguo and that tho way thoy take thorn makes llttlo dlffor onro." Further, Van Dyko Is said to havo stated that tho law closing tho Koguo river was not supposed to af foet Grants Pass resldontH who socuro Con(lauoil on I'nsn 6.) CHAMP GLARK CALLS TAFT INGRATE QUINCY, 111., Aug. anHojilylng to Prealdont Taft's Bpeech dollvorod at Hamilton, Mass., last week, Speak er Chump Clark of tho Iioiiho of rop reiieutatlves todny gavo tho oxocutlvo a sharp grilling, saying that If It had not boon for tho Iioiiho democrats Taft would ho today a thoroughly discred ited official. In charging tho presldonl with In 'gratitude' Clark assorted that .tho Hamilton sioeeh was a "bald mis Htutdmojit gf hlHlorlcul facts," "I porsonally accept Taft'H on slaught as a Imdgo of honor," said tho democrat lo spoakor. "Ills attack on tho democrats 1b ungrateful," In stated Clark, "hucauso It It had not boon for tho democrats In tho houso of tho Gist and G2il enngressea In lin ing up unanimously In favor of Can adian reciprocity ho would havo boon tho most thoroughly dlBcrodlted pros, tdent filneo tho days of Androw Johnson." Witnesses Against Boardman Showed Themselves to Be His Enemies and Weakened Testimony. Justice of tho Peaco Glenn O. Tay lor Tuesday morning freed B. B. Itoardman of Hutto Falls and allowed him to go. Uoardman was recently arrested charged with setting and threatening lo set forest fires in the privately owned timber In the vicin ity of Hutto Falls. Justlco Taylor In mnklng his decision stated that the caBO wan a close one, hut that enough cvldenco had not been presented to tho court to warrant binding Donrd tnan over to tho grand Jury or to pUco tho man under bond. Tho caso was brought a few days ago by K. C. Lewli. special agent of tlio tnto boarder fqreatry, which ook up tho caso on tho request of Kdgar S. Hnfcr, manager of tho Cra ter I.nko Lumber company. Scvoral fires havo been set In the holdings of ho company and recently Mr. Hafor received n theatenlng letter through tho mails In which much vile tan gling owns used nud tho threat made that tho writer of tho letter would burn the company out. Mr. Hater suspected Iloardnmn following evi dence given him by Hoardman's neighbors and It was Hoardman that l4)wis started to watch. I.ater Lowls hnd the warrant Issued and tho case called. Two of tho witnesses brought to testify against Mr. Hoardman Bhow ed cvldenco of being bitter enemies of tho accused man, and this dam aged their evidence. Justlco Taylor stated this morning that tho caso was n closo one, but that tho evidence was not strong enough to hold Uoard-mnn. STRIKE SEEMS A CERTAINTY Pcrslstancc of Employes In Federa tion Plan Likely to Bring About Speedy Tie-up of Southern Pa cific Lines. SAN FllANCISCO, Aig. 29. Flat declaration of war If tho shopmen of tho Harrlman lines porslst In tho domund of tho system fedorntlon was mado hero today. Tho position of tho roads wns sot forth by tho Hnrrlman Hues In n statement hy F. G. Abeam, bond of tho bureau of economics, tho princi pal public vohlhlo of tho roads. It roads: "Lot tho shopmon present tholr do mnnds through tho hoads of tholr In dividual unions and thoy will bo con sidered. If tho doumuds aro present ed through tho officials of tho fed oriiUonVhey will rocolvo no recognition." Disguising hla declaration In a mazo of words, Kruttschuttt states that tho railroads under his control cannot nud will not recognise any fedorntlon of the unions under tholr employ. Ho assorted formally that ho will cnufor with J. W. Kllno aa prealdont o( tho blacksmiths; J. A. Frankllu'liB pres ident of tho hollormakors; M. F. Ryan aa prealdont of tho enrworkors: M. O'Sulllvnn na prealdont of tho sheet metal workors and J. D. Duckalowl as vlco-piosldoiU of tho machinists, fc .sifc LIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIV'" 'LiiiiiiiiiK NEW DISEASE S FOUND HERE CALLCONGRESS OS PPERS ON Profchnor P. J. O'Gara, Pathologist, U. H. Oep.irtnicnt of Agriculture, and In cliarge of field rork In Jack sou county. ALL ARMY OFFICERS TO BE VACCINATED AGAINST TYPHOID BYP.J.O'GARA New Crown at Root Trouble of Al falfa Which Has Never Before Been Found In United States Ap pears in This Valley. O'GARA HAS LONG BEEN MAKING STUDY OF IT Department of Agriculture Confirms His Suspicions Was First Dis covered in Europe. WASHINGTON', D. C. Aug. 29. Beginning today every officer and en listed mnn in tho United States army must submit to vaccination against typhoid fever except thoso over 45 ycara, or who have already been vaq clnaicd or havo had tho disease. The order is compulsory and was Issued by tho secretary of war on tho rec- ombmcndntlon of Surgeon. General Terney. Tho recommendation was made only after cxbaustivo tests with tho vlrua. CUMMINS DECLARES FOR BOB LA FOLLETTE WASHINGTON, D. C. Aug. 29. Senator Cummins of Iowa todny has openly announced his opposition to President Taft as tho next executive nud -Jus support of Senator LuFol- lette. It is said that tho Iowa senator, despairing of his own chances of se lection us n compromise candidate' and lingered nt tho president's at tack on tho tariff record of the pro gressives, has chosen LaFollotte. Cummins, however, has becu careful to leave a loophole in case tho un suspected should happen. His en dorsement of tho Wisconsin senator, wbilo strong, does not definitely com mit him. Professor P. J. O'Qnra hns discov ered a disease prevalent in the alfal fa fields of this valley, which, co far as is known by the government authorities is the first time that it has appeared in the United States. During the past three months he has been studying tho trouble and has just hnd his suspicions confirmed by the mycologist in charge in the de partment of agriculture. Professor P. J. O'Gara tells the story as fol lows : (By P. J. O'Gara.) Sometime ngo several specimens of alfalfa plants were brought into the laboratory for examination. The grower stated that there were larpo patches in his fields where just such plants had died; or, at lehst, had failed to grow. A hasty examination showed that tho trouble was some thing new and systematic work was begun to determine the causo of the trouble. In tho meantime, a careful survey of tho valley showed that the trouble is more or less widespread. The affected plant3 show numer ous galls upon the crowns and roots, these galls or tumors greatly inhibiting tho growth of tho young shoots which come from tho crown Some specimens with tho roots very well developed, but with a Inrge num ber of galls near the crown, only de veloped a few weak shoots not more thnn six or eight inches high while the healthy plants near by developed shoots fully two and a half to three feet high and in large numbers. A careful examination of the dis eased plants showed that tho trou ble was indeed new; not ouly to the valley itself, but fo tha United States. In bulletins published by tho differ ent stations no ( mention is rande of it as occcurring in the United States; in fact, these bulletins stnto that tho trouble does not occur in the United States. Wo have references showing SEPTEMBER 28 Medford Traffic Bureau Asks Com--merclal Organizations of State to Send Delegates to Discuss Situa tion and Formulate Program. EQUITABLE RATES TO INTERIOR POINTS SOUGHT - f h .i A i Initiative Bill to Be Presented State Commission Asked to Postpone Hearing. (Continued on rase J.) ACCUSED YOUTH TO GO ON STAND Virginian to Take Stand in His Own Behalf to Try and Clear Himself From Chargo of Murdering Wife Paul Beattle's Story Implicate s Cousin. CHESTER FIELD COURT HOUSE, Va., Aug. 29 From Henry Clay Ho attio, Jr., himself will oomo tho story of his night rido with his wifo which resulted in tho murdor for which tho young banker is now on trinl. Attorney Harry bnuth, clnof coun sel for tho defenso, said this aftor noon that lloattio will surely tako tho stand nud attempt to set at rest tho suspicion that has been woven about tho ease. Smith says it will bo much better for Beuttio to toll from his own lips the conversations nnd notions which many others have boon testifying about. That Heat tio will assail lho story (Continued on Pace 4.) PREPARATION FOR STRIKE IS MADE ClIICACiO. Aug. 20. Preparing for tho worst, comploto arrangomonts for an Immediate striko will bo mado bo- foro tha "systom todoratlou" officials ropresontlng tho Illinois Control em ployes ontor Into any conforonco with tho railroad managers regarding tho domnnds for recognition of tho federation. Prolonged conferences woro hold today hy union officials, but no stnto mont will bo given nut until tonight. Railroad officials likewise decline to talk, but It is understood thoy firm ly rofuso to rocogulzo tho fedorntlon. Although 4000 only employes of tho Illinois Central havo affiliated with tho federation, union loadors pre dict that all men will go out it n strike Is called. At a meeting of tho directors of tho Medford Traffic bureau held Mon day evening It was decided to call a shippers' congress to meet at Salem September 28 to discuss railroad freight rates for Interior points and agree upon concerted action In tho matter of securing reductions and es tablishing cqultnblo rates. Every commercial or shippers' organlaztlon in the stale will bo asked to send delegates. Tho matter of Initiating legislation to establish a maximum disanco tablo of rates to bo applied to tho. entire, .BtataP will, .also-Jt brought before the congress. Tho traffic bureau has requested tho stato railroad commission to postpone for GO or 90 days tho hear ing made on its own initiative of the rate situation scheduled for the lat ter part of September, In order that It may have time to properly preparo and present Medtord'a case. Secreatry B. A. Welch is today sending out tho following letter to the various commercial clubs of tho stato: Gentlemen: Wo enclose n resolu tion ndopted'by tho Medford Traffio Bureau asking your cooperation in a campaign for an initiative bill es tablishing a maximum distance table of rates to bo applied for tho cntiro state, and prohibiting any donation from this schedule in tho granting of lesser distance class rates. Equit able rates for nil, ono schedule of distance class for tho entire state, will bo lho slogan, nnd wo ask thnt your body adopt similar resolutions. The Oregon shipper must dotcr mino his own rates, and if tho stato railroad commission does not attend to this matter properly nnd mako equituble adjustments, wo must ex ercise tho initiative nnd in bo fur us a uniform maximum distance tariff is concerned, voto it into oxistenco and make it prohibitive of preferen tial system now in vogue and which Portlnnd will seek to continue if not to enlarge. Tho ideal adjustment is found in Illinois, nnd tho growth of tho in terior cities of that stato oxemplify its benefits nnd tho snmo adjustment in principle should bo in forco hore. Siuco tho passago of this resolu tion, tho stato railroad commission, which has failed to render decision in cases pending boforo it for ono year, brought by Medford, has an nounced an "investigation" of rates ou hs own initintivo on thirty dnys' notice loo short a timo for any city to prepare its caso. Wo hnvo, thorforo asked a CO or 00-dny post ponement of this hearing that wo may properly propnro for it. To tho end 'hat tho interior points of Oregon may work togothor for tho common good of nil, wo horo with request thut vour bodv ntmomt dolegntes to meet with representa tives from other cities in a shippers' congress nt Salem, Oregon, Sept. 28 1911, and tjiorcat formulato a pro gram of notion, Thoro is no politics in this a bus iness movo by business mon for bus iness purposes, Kindly let us hoar trom you, whothor wo may oxpeot your cooperation nnd whether you will bo represented at tlio Snlem congress of shippers. Yours slncorely MEDFORD TRAFFIC BUREAU, By E. A. Weleh, Secretary. 4 i