Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 06, 1912, SECOND EDITION, Page PAGE EIGHT, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, QKEflON. SATURDAY, APRIL (5, 19.12.
RRITISN STRIKE
IS DECURED OFF
LONDON, April C Tho Miners'
Perforation today officially declared
tho coal miners atrlko off and or
dered the men back to work. Tho
voto wan 440 to 125 In favor of end
ing the strike.
Operations In (he mines will be
resumed Monday with complete forc
es, according to an announcement
mado today by officials of tho Miners'
federation.
Tho clash today camo at a secret
meeting of the federation at which
delegates from the mining districts of
England, Scotland and Wales were
present. A mnjorlty of tlio repre
sentatives, It Is reported, were op
posed to ending tho strtko and the
officials were Just as determined to
call It off. The meeting ended with
out any agreement being reached and
with most of tho delegates declaring
that the branches which they repre
sented would secede.
22 SPEECHES BY
m
mm
MISSISSIPPI LEVEES BREAK
LINCOLN, Nob., April (i. Travel,
linp '200 miles and mnkiup U2 speeches
is the remarkable record with which
Seunlor llobcrt M. LaKoUctte is cred-
ited today after his first 21 hours of
campaigning in Nebraska.
Beginning at Vlattsmoulh early
yesterday La Kollello journeyed
through the fanning section between
that city and Lincoln, being heartily
greeted at each stop. He closed the
day with n meeting at the Auditorium
The second day nrounrf Omaha is Hu
Wisconsin man's field today, with
Omaha hi objective point tonight.
Monday and Tuesday will he spent hi
western Nebraska and the La Toi
lette party will depart for the Pacific
coast Wednesday evening.
In the course of his speech here L.
Follette declared that "Roosevelt does
great good as n lonelier of morality,
political and civil, but ho i. not a
constructive statesman."
La Follelle predicted that he will
carry Nebraska, Utah, Oregon an 1
California.
3 SPELL-BINDERS JAPS GET ONLY
m
MM
Continued from Page One.
lower end of tho government levee
when It collapsed have been rescued.
The river hero today reached a stage
of 44.9 feet, a tiso of seven-tenths of
a foot over yesterday's high water
mark.
At CaruthcrsvUlc, Mo., a force of
stato militia Is patrolling tho river.
No water Is in the streets of the city.
but tho flood from the Pleasant Point
Gap is fast filling up tho Little river
basin, several miles back of the town.
Every store In the town Is closed to
day and tho men employed in them
have joined the already large force
of flood fighters.
TO OPERATE SAWMILL
CHICAGO, April ('..--With three
special trains of presidential tioinui
ution candidates touring Illinois-, with
a score of minor spellbinders huy
boosting their various presidential
choices, and n dozen gubernatorial
aspirants touriiii the state, Illinois
is worked up todav to a high pitch of
political excitement.
The three trains mo those of
Theodore Roo-cvclt, Governor Wood
row Wilson of New Jersey and Sec
retary James Wilson of the ngrieul
tural department who is booming the
candidacy of President Tuft.
Woodrow WiNon spoke today at
Galo.shiirg, Molinc, Sterling, and De
kalb, lie will deliver a big address In
Chicago tonight.
lloosevelt is speaking today at
Hockford, Froeport, Dixon, Lasalte
and IMoomiugton. Tonight ho will
conduct his banner meeting of the day
ut Springfield.
Senator Charles K. Towuscud of
Michigan will conclude the campaign
for President Tuft in Chicago to
night.
FISHING
GROUNDS
m
m
EDITOR
SPIRITED
AWAY
ST. LOUIS, Mo., April 6. The
break In the levee below Hickman,
Ky.. Is 360 feet wide and no attempt
has been made to stop up the gap,
according to an official report re
ceived here today from the weather
bureau at Cairo, 111.
"The river has fallen three Inches
at Hickman and a foot at the break,"
said tho report.
Mack Harper, a railroad engineer,
arrived here today from tho flooded
district. Heteild:
"Conditions at Columbus, Ky., arc
terrible. People who were perched
on top of houses and in trees wcro
floated away ou the flood waters. A
common danger among tho flood vic
tims Is the fear that some relative has
disappeared and they refuse to leave
threatened territory until they re
ceive assurances that other relations
are safo."
Smith Hros., who have been Iden
tified in lumbering concerns in south
ern Oregon for tho past fifteen years,
have secured options on about 2,000,-
000 feet of merchantable timber in
the Evnns creek district and have
made all preliminary 'arrangements
to install a 20,000 feet per day capac
ity sawmill. They have already let
contracts for hauling the logs to tho
mill and have hopes of having the
mill running by the 23th inst. The
mill will bo located on Queen's
branch, a branch of Evans creek, and
a distance of seven and one-half
miles from Woodvllle. About twenty
five men will be regularly employed.
Tho Smith brothers are men who
have mado a success of sawmllling,
and that they have made their ad
vent into this district is a source of
relief to the people of this part of the
country. Tho mills In the past in
these parts have proved anything but
satisfactory, owing to mismanage
ment ot affairs, and now that wo
have men who have proven beyond
all question of doubt that they know
their business tho timber industry
will be rejuvenated.
SAN DIEGO, Cal April tS. Do
flaring that the kidnapers of Editor
Abraham Sauor of the San Diego Her
ald had been recognized by witnesses
and that arrests would follow today,
Sheriff Jennings is taking nn nctivo
part In the latest development in the
fight between the police, vigilantes
and I. W. W.'s hore.
Saucr, whose paper, a weekly, has
bitterly attacked the police in the
free speech fight, was seized last
night by six men in front of his home
near the business district and nearly
across the street from the fashionable
University club. Members of the club
heard the cry of "murder" followed
by a revolver shot. Screaming for
help, the editor wns forced Into an
automobile, and as his wife and two
daughters rushed onto the porch, was
whisked away.
WHITE, I. W.W. LEADER
(Continued from Page One.)
DAMAGE TO COTTON
HICKMAN, Ky., April 0.. More
than 1(1,000 acres of cotton hind
worth 100 nn ncrc, today is sub
merged between Ilickmun and Tiptoii-
ville, 'Jcnn., as a result of the break
ing of the government levees yester
day six miles below here. The dam
age is conservatively estimated tit
.$1-1,000,000. Tho gap in the levee is
C00 feet wide. The number of homo
lesK in tliis vicinity is estimated ut
8,000. With the breaking of tho levee
the refugees wero forced to higher
ground.
Doruun, Mo., directly ucross the
river from here, is under teverul feet
of water njid the town is practicall.v
depopulated. Only 11 persons remain
ut Craig's Landing Mo.
Launches lire busilv engaged today
in bringing refugees here from the
flooded Reel Foot Luke section.
SENT FLOOD DISTRICT
WASHINGTON, D. O., April C
Secretary of War Stlinsou today sent
SUO.OOO of tho yur department's
funds to officers of the ciuartermaa
tor general'8 department in the flood
districts along tho Mississippi and
Ohio rvers to purchaso rations for
the destitute victims.
President Taft wrote to Chairman
Fltzgorald of tho liouso committee on
appropriations, explaining that he ex
pectti congress to reimburse tho war
department.
National Dlroctor Dlcknell of tho
ited Gross society in duo to reach tho
flood district today.
that he had printed the circulars
this in spite of the fact that the local
uuion imprint wns upon the circulars,
that it was urintcd in tyoe carried
only by him, and that he had admit
ted the limiting in the morning.
White Drafted It.
White states that he, with one oth
er, whose name he does not disclose,
drafted the original circular mid
brought it before the Central Labor
Council. It wns discussed and chung-
cd in several particulars, then ord
ered printed. Tho matter was not
submit ted o u referendum vote of
Hie different unions of the city, and
therefore was illegally issued. This
may lead to strife within Ihu union
ranks us many of the union men of
the city nro very indignant ut i
whole affair, and charge that the
socialists nnd I. W. W.'s are striving
to break the ranks of organized labor,
for, by doing so they will drive many
recruits from the union runks into
the I. W. W.
A stormy session is expected next
Monday night when the labor council
meets. Non-socinlist members of the
council stale however, that they liuve
little hope of doing much, us the
socialist members nro in control, anil
have been for u number of months.
It is churged further Hint this condi
tion bus ulready wrought much dam
uge to the local cause of labor unioiu.
Union Man's View.
"If the souinlists mid I. W. W.'s in
the ranks of labor in this city bticcecd
in their plans," slated one prominent
union mini today, "they will disrupt
every labor organization in the city
hoping in this wuy to drive union men
who are not socialists mid I. W. W.'j,
into their runks. That is the whojo
scheme in a nutshell. This iighl has
been going on a long time. The issu
ing of this circular is indeed a hard
blow to organized labor here, yet I
trust the citizens of Medford will
realize that unionism was only used
us n cloak to hide thu sociulist and
tho I. W. W. behind tho move. Union
men, generully, who are not socialists
or I. W. W.'s. and there ure many,
believe that circulur to be as infiirn
ous us do tho leading citizens und
boosters of Medford,"
All seem to agrco that as Pagln,
In "Ollvor Twist," Nat C, Goodwin
has accomplished tho difficult feat
of "coming back."
TEDDY WARRIOR
A
NT
raw
ROCKFORD, 111., April (i. "I am
n warrior, not a prophet," declared
Theodore Roocvclt before a crowd
of 8,000 people in front of the court
house here today, in his opening
speech of the Illinois campaign in be
half of his candidacy for the repub
lican presidential nomination. The
colonel was given n great ovation.
Tomorrow Colonel Roosevelt will
attend tho Easter sen-ices in the
Presbyterian church in Springfield
which was attended half a century
ago by Abraham Lincoln, occupying
Lincoln's old pew. In the afternoon
he will place a wreath on Lincoln's
tomb.
At Fountains & Elsewhere
Ask for
a
JO"
HORLIGK'S
Tiia Original and fltnulnt
MALTED MILK
Tht Ftri-drink ftr 111 Aft.
At restaurants, hotels, and fountains.
Delicious, invigorating and sustaining.
Keep it on your sideboard at home.
Don't travel without it.
A qaick lunch prepared in a minute.
Take bo imitation. Just say "HORIJCK'S."
Not In Any Milk Trumt
Pretty MoutH
A
ljSSlSlSBBiSSl s3UE
' VfW I
a r
fitur.r.
am
s
Is generally thought to ,lto so on ac
count of the oven, whito teeth Inside
of It. Ypu cannot Imagine a beauti
ful smllo backed up by brokon or
discolored teeth, can you? Wo aro
experts In tho Dental lino and can
ubburo you a handsomo set of tooth
If you have our porsonul care. Wo
are pructlcal professors of overy
branch of the business.
DR. BARBER
THE DKNTJBT
Adklna Block, Cor, Main and Central,
Both Phonos, i
WASHINGTON, I), C, April .
What purports to bo a full explana
tion of Japan's activities In Mexico,
prepared by Mnrqulft SalonJI, thu Jap
anese pronuor, was Issued hure to
day by tho Japanese embassy. It
says:
"So far as tho Japanese govern
ment Is concerned there Is positively
no truth In Inst Sunday's Toklo dis
patch that negotiations between Mex
ico and Japan had been concluded re
cently for the establishment ot a largo
Japanese settlement at Mngdnlena
Hay. The following facts have been
ascertained:
"Some time ago agents of the Toyo
Tnlhn Kalshii, tho Oriental Steamship
company, obtained of their own ac
cord from tho Mexican government
fishing rights ou the west coast of
Mexico. Later they transferred these
rights.
"This fishing district extends from
Topic to Oaxacn stato, which has geo
graphically no connection with Mng
dalcna Hay. The tUliiug rights run
for a term of tcu years only, and
have no political significance what
ever, It being a purely Industrial en
terprise by a Japanese concern. Nor
Is It a privilege exceptionally granted
to Japanese subjects, a similar right
having heretofore bceu granted to
citizens and subjects ot America."
FORWARD
MOVEMI
:M
MARKET
N13W VOUK, April fl Tho stock
market opened today with n rcauin-
Hon of Thursday's huj'lntf' movement.
Canadian Pacific, American Hugnr,
American .Car, American Can, North
ern Pacific, Union Pacific and Itoolc
Island preferred rono 1 to 'i points.
Heading wuh tho only hinder that
failed to open with a gain over good
Friday. United Statcn Steel wan In
demand, Tho market closed buoyant.
Honda wore firm.
HOTEL MEDFORD
All hunuin history at teats
That, happiness Tor man, thu hungry sinner,
Since 10ve ato apples,
Much depends o.n dinner.
l
ftifha
$1.00
M.
Hydrant Plant Burned
RKDDING, Cal.. April 0. The
hydrant plant at Ilcmult, ou the Pit
river, wns destroyed by lire toduv.
The Jos i .f;i,000. The great iron
Mueller nearby wn unharmed.
CATARRH GONE
Xo Moro Hawking ami Snuffling
When You llrvnthc Hyomel
HYOMEl (pronounco it lllgh-o-mo)
is guaranteed to cud tho misery ot
catarrh.
Breathe It, destroy tho catarrh
germs, and soon lufWIclug and snuff
ling will cease.
Breatho It, and cruBts will no long
cr form In tho noso; mucus will no
lodge In the'throat; all Inflainmatlu
will leavo tho mombrano of tho nose
and throat and your head will fed
clear and fine. "
Breathe It for coughs, colds and
soro throat; its sdothrng, healing,
antlsoptic action Is Belter than nil tho
3tomach dosing remedies In croatlon,
and there isn't a paftlclc of opium,
cocaine or other habit forming drug
In It.
Complete outfit, which Includes In
haler, ?1.00. Extra bottles of HYO
MEI DO cents at Chas. Strang's and
druggists everywhere.
Now .Here. Is Your
EASTER DINNER
fi to 0 V.
Crab Cocktail
Celery en Branehe Uipo Olives
Chicken Gumbo a la New Orleans
Consomme Princess
Stripped Bass al'Italiu
Ponnnea Parisionnu
Minions of Tenderloin of Beef, Salvini
Banaira Punch
Roast Young Oregon Turkey with Dressing
Baked Sugar Cured Jlam, Champagne. Sauce
New Potatoes in Cream Succotash
Salad Maeedoino
Apple Pie Lemon Meringue
Assorted Cakes
Tutti I'Tiiitti Ice Cream
Swiss Cheese
Mixed Nuts
Cafe Noir
HOTtiLMtiDKORl)
Ran-Mohr Co., Props.
Crackers
Layer Raisins
SUNDAY
April 7th, 10 1'2
Women who bonr children and ro.
Rutin healthy nro those who prepare
their yatomi In ndvnncv of buby'n
coming. Unless tho mother aldn
nature In ltsj pro-natal work tho tirlntu
finds her ystcm tinominl to tho do
nmndi mnde upon It, nnd who Is often
left with weakened health or chronlo
ailments, No remedy li o truly a
help to nature ns Mntlior'u Friend.
It rellovcn tho palu nnd discomfort
canned by tho utrnlu on tho 1 1 nu intuitu,
makes pliant those llbron and munolou
which nature In expanding, and iioothoti
tho Inllammntlon ot brunnt glamtn.
Mother's Krlcnd nssurou a speedy and
romploto recovery
for thu mother, Wa4I.JIi
and nho Is loft a ijlOlllOPS
healthy woman to -wi
enjoy thu roar- jFsvMJIlfl
lug of her child.
Mothor'ii Prleiid In sold at drug ntonm.
Write for our froo book for expectant
mothers,
fllADFIEU) RECULATOlfCO., AlU.l.. Ca.
sssssssMl. ' ' '
isisisisisiswv y 9il
LissssssssssE,'k'.s1
SBSvKBSvHkfc BbV
SSSSjBiSSfcMSM ' '
Dr E. Kirchgessner
Practlcu limited to chroulu diseases.
HOTEL HOLLAND
WcdnoMdaya. Hount, 10 to !l.
Office Hotel Holland. Both Phonos,
llosldeucu phono, Farmer lGxxG,
The following selections will be rendered by the
Misses Crawford and Crewell: ,
My Honolulu Honey Lou
The Pink Lady Selection
Spring Awakening Bach
Hungarian Dance No. 0 Brahius
Ave Maria Gounod
Largo ..; Handel
Chocolate Soldier '. Selection
The Rosary .... Nevin
Intermezzo Mascagni
Adoration Borowski
O Dry Those Teal's Teresa del Uiego
Hone v Man
Ht t m h 1 1 h -
a
i
I AT-
NO DRUGS USED
The drug method of examining
eycrt for glasses Is annoying,
expeuolve, olil-fntihlonod and
often very dangerous.
Tho latest Scientific Method,
avoiding drugs, employs mud
tii skill, tho latest Instru
ments, U absolutely safo, Is
not unpkmemit, Is modornto In
cost and secures far auporlor
roaiilta In tho future caro of
tl.o oyes,
T)r. RicKcrt
I!) flight Hpfclnllut
Own Kent hit's, Mcrifnnl
"
t
Your Easter Suit
MANY men wait until Easter before considering the
Spring clothes question. If you are one of those who
have waited, let us suggest that you wait no longer.
Will be open late tonight and will
deliver your suit for Easter services.
Wc arc now well prepared ts sffcr for your choice a complete
assortment of hsw styles, new colors and new fabrics in Spring
clothing.
Our clothing houses have made fsr us some vsry exceptional
Spring garments. They have tailsred into thsm an uhusual
amount sf styls they have cut these clsthss after ths msst
correct Nsw York msdels, that is, snug fitting, shajpsly, with
soft rolling lapels and vsry little padding. Thess are ths sort
of clsthes that until now only th? highest class custom tailors
knew hsw to produce.
' Ws waht you to ihspschthess clothss at the earliest possible
moment, while the stocks are still complete and ths widest
range of choice is' offered.
ViSSSSSlb.
A Knox Hat for Easter $5
Beacon (mado by Kiiox)
$3
and ypu'U look right
Model Clothing Co.
Wilson Bros. Shirt
$1.25 to p .
and you'll feel right
A
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