Orenon Mlnto'lca? tMftty
city Hnll
M
Medford Mail Tribune
WEATHER
Fair and warm Mux 9t
Mln (II; Ho! Hum ill).
SECOND
EDITION
I'driy-Ki'dMiil Yi'r,
Dully Hnvwith Vi'iir.
SUFFRAGETTES
PLOT DEATH OF
ninzliuj Chair Thrown Into Crowded
Theatre at Duhlltt to Destroy
Structure Eluht Women With
Gunpowder and Inflamahles Taken
One of the Prisoners Threw Hatchet
at Asiiulth as He Rode to Hotel
All In Custody Eniillshwomeii,
MUHLIN, July 111. Klwlit Hiiffni
getlcs went til rested today, dunged
uilli complicity in llht pint liiHt night
In burn Hid Theater Itnynl, where
Picinicr AHitillli Ih Id speak tonight.
(limMiw!orr (lioltiiiu mill other in
I'IiiiiiiiIiIch were ruiiiiil In their lodg
ing. Tim tiuttioritit'H arc iiivtMtiK'liK
whether the suffragettes plotted to
dynamite ur In Inirn llii' theatre, niul
whether tlii eight women miller ar
um acted independently or hud or
ganized HiipMrt.
All tlm prisoners arc l-!ui;liiliviiiii
I'll. It i believed t lift t till) WOlllllll
who throw u blur.inir I'lmir fiiuii n
box tit tin Theater Royal hint night
is iiiihiiil' those arrested. Another tf
tin eight women who threw it hatchet
nt Asipiith us In rode to tin (lrc
Iiiiiii hotel alter his urriviil lien from
Loudon.
Tin Hrttiui of tin nrcmicr in he-
ini carefully unaided. The jmiIicc
lit'lifvo that the prisoners eatiii' lien
to start a disturbance anil a demon
stration of violenee which would far
oetlui(low any of the window
smnshiiu: ninl rioliiiKH recently con
ducted by suffrngcttcK ill I.iiiitlou.
.In lutalialloil, It i thought, for
the manner in which Premier Asittith
gave tho KiigliMi Hiiffrngettcs tlm
flip when hi left bunion early Wed
ucsditv morning to fill a leetiiM en
gagement here, miffrauettcs In -t
night attempted to break up the
incctiiii; which he wiih itddrcsMiug at
the Itoyal theater here.
Asipiith in eouipniiy with .lohn
Itednioinl, the. Irish lioiiu rule leader
wax scheduled to speak on tlm Inline
nile ipieHlion. niul when Asinth, who
followed Iteiliuoiul on the program
appeared on the stage the score or
morn suffragettes in tlm theater be
gan a deiuoiiHtratiiiu. one woman, oe
ciipyiui; a box near the sIiikc, hurl
ing a t laming chair at the premier.
In the riot which followed Redmond
wax slightly Iiijtncd in the face
Ahqiiilh escaped without injury.
LORIMER LEAVES CAPITAL
BY AUTO FOR CHICAGO
WASHINGTON, JhIv ll. Kxwll
eil from tlm United States senate,
William l.oriiucr today Iclt Wit-diing-I
nit for Chicago by iiiitomohile, Lori
mer wiih accoiupanicd only by Wil
liam Cooke, his chief lieutenant. If
he motors the cutiie distance lm will
leach Chicago next Tuesday.
SAN KHANOISCO, July 111. Son
sational developments arc expected
today in tlm case of Charles O. Heal,
self-styled heir to .fl ,000,000, when
lm returns from Virginia i" oustody
of officoi-H to answer to a charge, of
cuihcxr.ling $10,000 worth of diiiiu
oiiiIh from Iho Forest Jewelry com
pany of thin city. Iteid, with his
foster brother, Leslie Wheeler Iteid,
who is now in jail here, is jointly ac
cused by Mrs. Caroline Swears, an
employe of the jewelry company.
Leslie lfeid hun been in jail here
for more than a week, coiinlnntly at
tended hy his bride of a few months,
in default of fiOO bail. The cap
ture of the older brothor in Virginia
destroys all h f rt'h'asu tE-tn
jail, as Cluuies Iteid was supposed
lo be raising money in the cast with
which lo secure both young men
their freedom,
Pertinent questions regardiug
transactions between Mrs. Swears
and Charles Held were not allowed
at the preliminary hearing of Leslie
ltcid, but it in said will ho brought
out when Charles Iteid re! urns,
ISHPRM
FWELRY 1
TAKEN IN VIRGINIA PROBE HI
" ARCHBALD HAS CONGRESS!".
TWO WEEKS TO AIRSCANUAL
I PREPARE CASE OF CONVENTION
Senate Sits as High Court ot Im
peachment and Gives Archhald
Until July 29 to Prepare Defense
to Charlies Against Him.
Will Try and Dispose of thu Case
Uefore an Adjournment is Taken
fur the Summer.
WASHINGTON, July I!). Sit
ling 11 " Inch coin t of impeachment,
the senate today wave .Inline Arch
hald of the commerce court until
duly till to prepare hi-, defense to the
charges against him.
ludic.itions are that the senate dc
sires to push the trial to a eonclus
ion before the adjournment of the
present session.
After Archbnhl's defense is in, tin
house prosecutors will he gixcn uutl
August ,'tl to reply.
Attorney A. S. Worthingtou for
Archhald stated today that the jur
ist would plead not utility.
Archbald's name was tlyice shout
ed aloud hv the hcrgeuit-iit-'nrius
when he entered thu senate cham
ber. Attorney Worthingtou then an
nounced tlm jurist's preenec and
prcHcntcd a written request for a
reasonable time to formulate a de
fense. Senator Clark', Wyoming, moved
that Archhald be ordered to reply by
July iM, but the date was later
chium-ed to July 211. F.veu to this
Worthingtou objected, requesting
twenty day. Congressman Clayton
thought four or five days would be
ample for tlm hoiisu prosecutors ami
on his statement August 'II was set
as the time limit whuii all plcinlinj:-,
including the house prosecutors,' re
ply to Archbald's answer, should be
presented.
NBW VOUIx, July 19. Tbnt the
lik truiiH-Atluutlc liners Mauretniila
and Orbit lo panned no close to huRci
IccIhtkh on tlm trlji over that thono
iiboiird were forced to wear heavy
wraps, was tho Htatomenl nmdo by
tlm pitHHeiiKcrH when tlm ocean Krey
IiouiiiIh arrived In IIiIh port today.
Onu IcoIiitk encountered, It wan
nlateil, wiih 1,000 feet Ioiik and 50
feet nbovo tho water.
A story also wiih told nnd corro
borated that tho Mauretaiiln xvhllo
riiniiliiK throiir.h n foj:, dlHcerned nil
IrelmrK a ipiartor of a inllo ahead,
directly In her path. Tho liner wiih
forced to count to a dead atop, and
chnnr.0 hor course, to avoid tho born.
CharlcH Frohinan, tko theatrical
producer, wiih aboard tho Mauritania,
IFORD'S
SKATTLB, July ll).--Judgo C. II.
Iluuford's speech agaiiiht the l'in
chot policies before the national
conservation congress in September,
1 111)1). nnd testimony of attorneys in
the (lill recall, and the Seattle, Ken
ton and Southern injunction suits,
featured this morning's session be
fore the congressional probe commit
tee. iranford's conservation speech
was made an exhibit in connection
with thu testimony concerning the
Ilauford Irrigation company. In tho
testimony of (Icorgo II. IMuinmer,
western sales agent for tho Northern
l'acifie railway, it was shown that
the Ilauford company obtained thou
sands of acres of hind in eastern
Washington which the federal leclu
matioii service desired held in re
serve if possible. The exhibit was
allowed to go into the record as
tending to show personal reasonn
for Judge llanforil'H activity against
tho government rooluniatioii depart
ment. Walter Shaffner, attorney for Hi
ram Gill, in tho injunction suit to
BIG STEAMERS
SCRAPE ICEBERGS
M.I3I)F0UD, ORlfflQN, J'MUDAV, JULY 10,
Attacks Upon Nomination of Presi
dent Taft to Be Made In Both
Houses Next Week and Defense by
Root and Others Will Follow.
Charue of Stolen Delegates to Be
Refuted and Roosevelt's Actions
Assailed hy Bartholin.
WASHINGTON, July l!l-Attacks
011 the nomiiiatiou of I'lcidcut Tail
as bitter as those at Chicago and de
fense of the lepiiblicau coueutioii
action fully as hot will be aired in
congress next week. The entire Chi
cago convention controversy probab
ly will he fought over again.
Tup PrxMoli.nl 'I'n II. Sentilor Hoot
plans to speak in the senate, while
l nii(,'rcsMiiuii Diiriuoiui auo louueo
will uphold bis cause in the liouc.
Knot ami Senator Crnuc of .Mnssa
chusetts are now collcclini; data. It
in iilniiiii.il dial all sncccliCM will he
Hi ven out for Ht'iierul ditribution .is
caiupaiK'ii uocuuicui.
"I am prvpiiriiic a sm'cc1i refuting
tin. Uiiiihkvi.1I idinrces nf 'xtoluii dele-
Hates' at Chicago. I will show how
viciously baseless these charges are.
CoiiKrcssuuiii .Moiuloll plans to make
a M'liarato mk'ccIi L'iiiiL' in detail the
actions of tlie credential committee
in sentmi: the Taft contestants."
Notified of the Taft plan to dis
credit the lfoo-cvclt movement, Colt
Hreshinan Norris of Nebraska said:
"The progressives will have soine
thiiiu to say if the Taftites try that
scheme. 1 shall insist on beiuu' heard
I.. ....,!. l tin. Tul' I iiii.ii niul will dis
it -.,. " ... ..... ... .-...- --
cuss at length the illviml frauds
which resulted in Tuft's so-called
victory."
Other progressives plan to aid
Norris in his fiht in the house, while
Senators Clapp and Cummins are
planning to defend Colonel Roosevelt
in the sonato.
Considerable building is beiun
donu iiIoiik the line of the l'acifie
Knslcrn bt'tween Medford and KukI
Point, in the way of warehouses and
shipping stations to facilitate the
shipment of produce cl,',,v'" in (but
section.
The Hoj;iH' Wive Fruit and Produce
association has just constructed it
large warehouse at Davis to handle
fruit from that section while Hokuc
lands, Inc., have built two ware
houses to handle shipments from
their tracts which arc increusiiu:
rapidly.
Although sonar has been inudo in
thl) I'hllllpplncH for centuries, thu
flrHt modorn mill was opened ouly a
few weeks iiko.
RECALL ACTION
prevent Ilia recall election in 1011,
testified that Judge Ilauford told
him ho did not want to stop the elec
tion, but merely to prevent unlawful
expenditure of money. Shnffner was
attorney for Wan I; II. Scobey, a
non-resident, who owned property
which would Iiuve been affected to
tho extent of seven cents by the elec
tion, Wihuon Tucker, attorney on the
opposing side, testified that in his
opinion the only question hoforo llun
ford, was one of jurisdiction. He
also said that any kind of an order,
such as restraining the comptroller
from spending money on tho re
election, would have the effect of
jeopardizing the holding of tho recall
election.
Seott Calhoun, corporation eoun
sol at that time, testified briefly in
the Seattle, Kenton nnd Southern
ease in which Judge Ilauford enjoin
ed the Hainer Valley people "from
refusing to pay nioro than a five cent
fare," He was followed hy Howard
1), Hughes, assistant corporation
counsel.
N
1
A
SEASTERN
TOLEDO'S $180,000 MUNICIPAL MARKET OPEN FOR BUSINESS.
TOLtUOS
.
Toledo's 51S0.CO0 mnrkct bouse In South Krle street the city's Intent municipal acquisition, nud snld to be (be
InrRiMt luuulclpul market bouse under .roof In Ohio and the most modern In the country, baa been otlkl.tlly opened for
buidiicsrt. Alaror llrand Whltlock and Mrs. Wbltluck and Service Director Col well participated lu the icreinoulalt.
Seon-s of market gardeners and produce growers, city ofllclnli and hundreds of citizens attended
' Mr. Col well briefly recited the history of the nmtketnnd ezpresxed the hope that mnrketlu In Tnlcd will
cYr.iiti.illy become do toputur with the buying public that district markets will be established.
TURKISH
FORTS
AT
CONSTANTIXOPI.K. July 19.
VlKllnnee of the Turkish forts on thu
Dardanelles today prevented the
forcing of Unit passage by eight
Italian torpedo boats this morning
nnd probably prevented a bombard
ment of this city. It Is reported that
two of tho Italian warships wero
sunk and others damaged by tho
cannonade. ,
At 2 o'clock ihM morning tho
warchllKhtB of tho Turkish forts re
vealed tho Italian flotilla trying to
pass and Immediately tho cannon of
tho forts on both tho European and
Asiatic shores broken Into a furious
roar. Unable to reply to the storm
of shot and shell from tho Turkish
batteries, tho Italian fleet fled to
tho open waters of tho Aeglan sea.
Had tho Italians succeeded In
passing tho Dardanelea tho fleet ot
obsolete Turkish warships In tho
Sea of Marmora would hnvo been at
their mercy and a bombardment of
Constantinople would nlmost surely
have followed.
As a result of the Italian attempt
Turkey today again notified thu
powers that tho Dardanelles Is closed
to the shipping of the world.
IFORD MADE
ARTICLES STARTS
The first meeting of the .''.Made in
Medford" committee was held this
morning and plans laid for active
work which will commence immed
iately. Three beautiful prizes will be given
for the best dusigu to bo used for
advertising, the details of which will
be given Inter. The first prize donat
ed is a beautiful cedar chest made
and decorated by the Mission Furni
ture Works. A uieelinir of jobbers,
and innuiifuctuiei-. will be held at
f o'clock p. in. Saturday afternoon
at the office of the Medford lienlty
& Improvement Co., -HHi M. 1 vx: II.
Co. Huilding.
FIRE IN Y0SEMITE PARK
DESTROYS TOURIST CAMP
YOSKMITK. Cal July 19. Camp
Curry la lu partial ruins today, fol
lowing a J20.000 flro thoro. Many
of tho guests lost tholr personal ef
fects and sixty or seventy tents xvero
doatroyed.
Tho flro started la tho laundry ad
joining tho dining room, lu which
several hundred guests woro eating at
tho tlino. Tho dining room, xvaa
saved. Camp Curry Is tho largost
resort In tho Yosomlto Valloy.
TOULON, July 10. lteports wide
ly circulated today that a French
torpedo hunt hud been 'cut in two
in a collision off Corsica were offi
cially denied hero todny.
DARDANELLES
REPULSE
TALANS
CAMPAIGN FOR
1012.
IBO.OOO. MUNICIPAL MARMT,
9 DEAD, 5 LOST
V
KKN'O, Nov., July 10. -Nine .lead
and fix u missinj:, necordins; to mes
sages received here todav. was the
toll of death when a cloudburst last
night wied out the mining camp of
Mnzuinn, New In addition to those
known dead, nine persons xvere ser
iously injured. Seven Troughs, an
other camp reported destroyed, was
not" seriously diunaged. Only ft cou
ple of buildings there which stood in
the path of the wall of water were
swept away.
When the cloudburst struck Mn
zuma solid sheets of water fell.
briiigiu; down the mountainside huge
boulders, which, crnshini; and grind
ing in the stream at the bottom of the
valley where Mnzumn stood, abso
lutely annihilated the camp. Bodies
of those killed xvere found todny as
far as three miles down the canyon.
All the injured, so far recovered,
are being taken to Lovelock, New,
i'or treatment. Keseuers uro still
searching nmonir the debris of the
flood for five persons who are miss
ing, and who, it is almost certain,
have perished.
STOCKTON WIDOW LEAVES
ESTATE TO HER NEIGHBORS
STOCKTON, Cal., July 19. "I
hereby declare that I am a xvldow and
that I have no children. I hereby
bequeath and dovlso my property to
persons lu this will named, all of
whom, from tlmo extending from ono
to forty years, have been kind and
have shoxvn courtesies to me."
lly this paragraph la tho will of
tho late Jano Sanders, xvho resided
for many years on a farm near this
city, seven neighbors of the xvldow
and their children wero today given
her entire $20,000 estate.
DIVORCEE TELLS
POUTLAND, July 19. Hearing up
well under a vigorous cross examina
tion, Mrs. Helen M. Ooodeve, a pret
ty young San Francisco divorceo told
in Judge McGinn's court hero today
her story of the alleged wrongs she
had suffered at the hands of R. II.
Thompson, junior, an adopted son of
It. II. Thompson, senior, one of the
heirs of the large estate of It. It.
Thompson, a Portland pioneer. .Mrs.
Goodevo is suing Thompson for .?.")(),
000 damages for alleged breach of
promise to marry her.
Mrs. Goodevo told of telling her
friends in San Francisco of her com
ing inniTtugo to the prominent young
Portlander at whoso wish sho as
sorted she procured a divoroo from
her former husband. Shu describjd
in detail tho numerous presents Unit
hud been given her by California
frionds. Among these frionds she
mentioned a Mr. Casey of San Wwi
eisco xvho she said had given her
.f'JOO. Ah an illustration of the ma
terial damage sho had suffered
through Thompson's alleged broach
iffl
CLOUDBURS
11 AMP
GIRL SHOT DOWN
E
DKNTKIi, Colo., July 19. Lured
to a vacant lot and shot down be
cause she refused to elope with a
married man, Georgiana I.ichtenwal
ter, a 19 year old stenographer, is
dying here today. The alleged mur
derer, Kugene Miller, is nt large.
Miller had long heen attentive to
the girl, clniming that he had been
divorced. Two days u;o Miss Lieli
teuwalter discovered that ho xvas
married and jilted him. Last night
he asked the ;;irl to meet him and say
farewell, as he was going axvay. They
met and he enticed her to a vacant
lot, where he suddenly drew a re
volver and fired sint blank at her
twice. She fell as if dead, and he
started to flee.
The Kirl mnnnged to struggle lo
her feet and, seeing this, Jliller re
turned and fired two more shots at
her.
When found, the girl murmured
that Miller had shot her. Three per
sons saw Miller fleeing from the spot.
PRINCE PALATINE WINS
ECLIPSE STAKES, ENGLAND
LONDON, July 19. T. Tnrking-
ton's Prince Palatine, a .1 to I shot,
xvon the Eclipse stakes at Snndowne
Park today by a neck. Lord Derby's
Steadfast was second, with J. H
Joel's Lycnoit third. Jockey Malier
rode the winner. The race was worth
.foO.000.
Yuan Shi Kai May Resign
PeKIn, July 19. President Yuan
Shi Kal threatened today to resign
from tho presidency ot tho new
Chineso republic, following tho ro-
fusal of tho national assembly to con
firm his cabinet appointments.
ON THOMPSON
oC promise, she testified that William
H. Ilofias of Seattle, a "good friend'
had bofore Thompson gave his al
leged promise to marry her, present
ed her with n deed to $r0,000 worth
of property in Seattle. When she
thought she xvas going to marry
Thompson she testified sho gave the
deed, which never been recorded,
back to Ho fins.
A deposition front Hobert K. flaut
of Chicago in which Gaut said ho
knew of, tho nlleged marriage agruo
incut between Thompson and the
plaintiff and had heard Thompson
say ho xvas going to marry Mrs
Goodevo, xvas produced.
Numerous love letters xvero intro
duced as well as inuoh evidence re
garding lovers' strolls Thompson and
Mrs, Goodovo xvero alleged to have
taken in San Francisco. Tho love
lotters supposedly xvritten by Tliomp
son xvero addressod to "Hear Nell."
Mrs, Goodovo xvas an excellent
xvitness throughout. When it canio
to tho "Dear Nell" part her voico
trombled and her eyes filled with
tears,
LOPE WITH SU TOR
NO. 101.
BRIBE
AFTER PLEA OF
GUILTY MADE
Lincoln Steffens Details His Efforts
to Brinu McNamara Trial to a
Close and End War Between Un
ions and Manufacturers.
McNamara Had Agreed to Confess
Crime Before Franklin Attempted
to Bribe Juror, Says Writer.
LOS ANGELES. Cal., July 19.
Lincoln Steffens magazine writer,
continued on tho witness stand In the
Darrow trial today, Earl Rogers,
chief counsel for tho defenso, direct
ing his examination. It was expected
that Rogers would conclude his work,
and that District Attorney Fredericks
for tho defense .would take tho wit
ness lato today or tomorrow.
Steffens .testimony throughout
outlined his personal efforts lo se
cure an agreement that would end
the trial of the McN'omara brothers
for dynamiting tbo Los Angeles Times
building. Ho explained tho connec
tion of Clarence Darrow with tho ne
gotiations for tho conplusjon of the
case; told of his. Interviews with
leading business men of Los Angeles
to secure their consent to a plan for
tho brothers to plead guilty, and re
counted Darrow's Insistence through
out the entire negotiations that both
men. If possible, should bo saved
from tho gallows, arguing that ono
"victim" to' the state was nufflclent.
IJramntlc Recital
Steffens' testimony furnished ono
ot tho most dramatic recitals of the
trial. He was permitted to toll Ma
story with few Interruptions, Judgo "
Hutton. however, explaining that
certain portions of tho testimony
must bo regarded as hearsay.
Steffens declared that, after work
ing for days along Darrow's demand
that "no one bo killed." ho received
Information through O. P. Brant, tho
man selected to put tho ploa-revlslon
plan to District Attorney Fredericks,
that Fredericks would be satisfied
with pleas of guilty by both men, and
would not demand tho death of James
D. McNamara, tho man who planted
the dynamite that destroyed tho
Times building and took 21 lives.
This was on November 23, 1911, he
testified. Immediately arrow tele
graphed to Samuel Gompors, presi
dent of the American Federation of
Labor, asking that an accredited rep
resentative be sent to Los Angeles to
consider a matter of the utmost Im
portance. He suggester Olaf A.
Tveltmoo, Anton Johannsen or Ed
xvard V. Nockels of Chicago.
Krectors Protest
"There was some good natured
bantering among us," Steffens said
"as to which probably would bo mado
the goat. Darrow declared that he
did not care what tho result to him
self xvould be, as his plain duty In
this case xvas to save the life of J. B.
McNamara, If ho could."
Soon after this Steffens testified,
Harry Chandler, business manager
of tho Times, reported that Goneral
(Continued on Page C)
F
NEW YORK, July 19. Consterna
tlou reigned at police headquarters
here today at tho spread of an un
confirmed report that a gamblor had
mado full confession of tho gam
bling situation in Now York to Dis
trict Attorney Whitman. Tho gam
bler, whoso niuno was not rovoalod,
xvas said to have beon given Im
munity from prosecution la return
for his confession.
Whitman mado another demand
today that tho pollco clear up the
circumstances surrounding tho inur
dor of Herman Rosenthal, who was
Bhot shortly aftor ho accused tljo
pollco of protecting tho gambling In
terests. Jack Roso, William Shiiplro
and Louis Llbby, the three men bus
pocted of complicity In th ecrimo, re
mained In tho Tombs prison today.
Shapiro and Llbby are anxious to tell
all thoy know In order to Becure Im
munity but District Attorney Whit
man has rotuaod to grant this.
mm
MAKES
UU.
NN
1 7