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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 5, 1914)
iTx'rTrfnv--raarnvsfVnKihtiJ. ('ttLQB SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, OflTOHHR 5. IflM V D r Ik l NOW IS TIME ' FOR ORGANIZATION OF APPLE CLUBS WASHINGTON', I). C, Oct. G. Now In (ho time to form apple, clubs, nnd tlio U. S. department ot nprlcul turn In corporation with the agricul tural colleges of northern nnd west cm Rtntcs Ib endeavoring to Interest thn boys and girls of apple-growing ncrtlnnB In tho possibilities of npplo culturo nn a protltnblo nnd pleasur able occupation. The organizations for the young people on the farm nro being planned nnd begun In tho New Knglnnd states, Now York, Now Jer sey, Dolawnro, Ucnnsylvanla, Michi gan, Ohio, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington. Any young people in Micro states wishing to find out the details of tho new apple-raising clubs should wrlto at once to tho state agent in charge of club work at tho stato collego of agriculture, or tho 1'. S. department of agriculture, Washington, D. C. For School Children Tho now clubs will ho organized on tho sarno lines as nro those for the. encouragement of potato, corn, and alfalfa growing, gardening nnd canning, and poultry raising. Mem bers must bo not under 10 nor over 18 years old. Each of tho club mem bers will bo allotted not less than 10 apples trees, six or moro years old, in the same orchard (nnd nil In ono row or block If possible) of which ho will have the cxcluslvo caro for ono year. Each clnb must have at least five members, and these will bo un der tho Instruction of a local leader who will rccelvo Instructions from tho stato leader in chargo or tho county agent. Following theso in structions tho young member who Knows nothing nbout applo raising will learn to pick, grade, crate, and market apples: also to can and label fruit for exhibition and for sale. Tho instructions will aim to show each of theso young pcoplo how ho may get tho maximum results from his ten trees with the minimum expenditure of labor. As in tho other clubs for boyg and girls co-operating with tho depart ment, practical prizes will bo award ed by local fairs and Interested pco plo to thoso who excel, tho best prize however will be experience and a net profit on Investment to each member. Club agents aro already at work making enrollments for tho new ap ple clubs. During October and No vember tho plats will bo selected and assigned to the individual members nnd tho trees will bo marked to show to whom they aro assigned. As soon aiftho present npplo crop Is gathered preparations will begin at onco for tho next year. Sonio trees may need fall pruning, cleaning out and mulch ing. These details will be attended to and the young pcoplo may be In structed in the best methods. nil T BATTLE FRONT TO INSPECT FORCES PAH1S, Oct. Ti, 7:'20 n. in. -When the lon-dmuti-out battle in the north was returned today there ww a feeling in many o,unrler that de cisive developments wcrr triunincnt. Ooti'.ennenlly this nftornonn'K lute ment of tho war office on tho lialtle of the Aisuc, nniiiu in the history of battles wns numteil with the greatest interest. . While the French rcalire thai tho lint tie luts not lccn won, it does not ncciii to many of tlieui that it can now he lost. If the allies1 win, no doubt is felt that thev will pav for it, the snerifiee on both s'ule.s already bcinj; great. The tone of the official communications have furnished tho reason'? for the hope on the part of the rrciich, although announcement of the imI of President Poinenre to uie iront was an additional lactor for the confidence and optimism felt in ropnrd to the intense struggle. I li notion is generally commented on indieatinjr that success is nt hand. Despite the hope of the French, the military critic, Lieutenant Colonel Itnussct, declares the battle sil din Inst for some time, pointing out that modem encounters last now as lone ns cerlntn conditions iormerlv did. In 1S.V.) the situation was settled in two mouths, while in 1870 it took thirteen weeks, the ffchtiinr after Se dan and Mctz beiin; merely a contest for honor. In the furious fielding now goiii" on. Lieutenant Colonel Kousset sins, neither adversary can claim what Xa )M)leon called "the result." RUSSIANS BEGIN CLAYTON BILL TOINVADEHUNGARY AND CUT RAILROAD E HELPS 001 ALLIES LONDON, Oct. 5, I:3i a. m. The correspondent of the Times nt Uordcaux, Commenting on tho battle In northern France, says: "The time has not yet come to reveal tho com position of the allies' left which is now striking up toward the Delgian frontier, but when tho veil hiding the movement In tho neighborhood of Amiens is drawn an ay It will be seen what a potent factor the French railway service has been In tho bat tles of Northern France." LONDON, Oct. ,., 10:10 11. m.- A dispatch to tho Star from Home, spenkiiur of the Hussian invasion of Hungary, says; "Having eaptuicd all the Carpath ian passes, the KiissinHs lurto com menced the invasion of Hungary, ad vancing to the south, nnd they have occupied Hossjrumeo. Then the eos snvks effected a daring coup. They crossed the river and cut the railway nt Czigvt, thus isolating the remain der of Hungary." HO.MK. via Paris, Oct. fi. 7:18 a. in. News from Itussiim headquar ters says the invasion of Hungary through the Carpathians has two ob jects. The first is to insure the left Hank of the lhi-sinn army operating against Prremysl nnd along the San river, nnd second, to open n new field of action in the vnst Hungarian plains, where it can frighten the pop ulation, distuth the drilling of Hun garian reservists and recruits nnd cut the railway communications, he sides freely feeding an important portion of the army from the 10 sources of the country. It is recalled that diirimr the Kus. rdnn-Turkish wur of 1877 nn expedi tion commanded by (icucnil (toconrki and mostly eomposed of cavalry, did the same thing, crossing the Italkau mountains nnd entering eastern tin-mania. STRIKES MNOLY DECLARES WALSH JACK J Li OHNSON ES $55,000 CHICAGO. Oct. 5. A J5C.000 bond given by Jack Johnson, tho ne gro prizefighter, was forfeited today when Johnson failed to appear in tho United Stntcs court for re-trial on charges of violation of tho Mann whlto slave act, in transporting Bollo Schrclbcr from Pittsburgh to this city. Ho was convicted on tho first trial but was given a new trial be cause of error. The negro fighter was last heard from in Paris before the outbreak of the war. WILSON TO. MM PEACEWITHWAHERSON PEACE TREATY WITH T WASHINGTON, Oct. 5. Count von Henihtorff, German ambassador, called at the state department today and conferred with Secretary Bryan half an hour. When he left the am bassador carried copies of the new pence trcutictj between the L'uitcd States, Great Britain, France, Ilus sia, China and nearly a score of other countries. Such a treaty was proposed to Germany some time ago. The ambassador declined to discuss his call. OUTER ANTWERP FORTS FALL (Continued from pig 1. Im'cii strongly 1 clinker for his Russo jihilo agitations. The lenders ()f the Itiiinaniiiu parties havo declared themselves in favor of continuing the neutral policy of tho Huinanian.gov criimcut. "A manifchlo issued by the Hu iiiuuiau (socialist party assumes that tho neutrality of tho country will be preserved, condemns tho Hussdphilc propaganda in certain newspapers and emphasizes thu dangerous posi tion of Kiissiu." "Tho government of the Nether lands lias strouglhened tho Dutch J'orco along tho fionliur districts to disarm Belgian troop,, when tho latter Clot's tho frontier from Antwerp. Cardinal's Statement "According to n statement made by his eminence, Caidinul Hettinger, the highest Roman Catholiu authority in Kavaiia, tho stateinenlH appearing in I'lnglifth and American newspapers that priests havo been shot and buy. onelcd by Gorman soldiers wliilo at tciidintr the wounded in Belgium, aro to bo considered as absolutely with out foundation. "It is also declared that the Kug Huh ncwupapcr correspondents over look thu fact that n largo portion of lliu Uvttuuu xruiy ia Human Culbplio, WASHINGTON, Oct. .V- That President Wilsou is about to make peace with Henry Wattersou, editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, as well as with George Harvey, editor of tho North American Review, whom he saw at the white house yesterday, was suggested today when President Wilson told callerr. he hoped In sec Mr. Wattersou nt the e.u-eu io man sion. He added that no arrange ments for such a meeting IiihI been mndc. ALLIES RESUME OFFENSIVE (Continued from Page 1) port asserts is going in their favor, just as confidently ns General Jof frc maintains the contrary. Germans on Defensive III tho eastern theater of the war the Germans would npjear, accord ing to hiiHish observers, to he con templating a neriod of defense before undertaking the offemdve. Thev are busily engaged between Thorn, in east Prussia, nnd Galicia, in en trenching themselves tiyuiimt the Russinn hosts gathering on the other side of the frontier. It is calculated that there are no fewer than four million fighting in this eastern arena, and a repetition of tho long and ard uous siege battles, which have been niich a feature of tho struggle in France, seems u certainly. The Russians continue to push eastward on Cracow, evidently with tho hope of getting thence Jo Bres- lau, and they go on stretching their tentacles out boutlnvurd toward Budu Pest. Cossacks in Hungary Cossacks are well in on the plahis of Hungary. Kvcn Budn Pest ad mits thut they havo crossed tho river Theirs, which wart regarded as one of tho main obstacles to their prog ress. By getting acros tho railroad at Szigeth they secured tho second lino loudiu to the Hungarian capital. lhey had already seized the Loin-bcrg-Buda Pest lino at 1,'nghvnr. The Aiistriaus, on tho other hand, claim further victories against their smaller enemy invading Bosnia, hut they are silent on the subject of Kar ujnvo, which, according to Servian and Montenegrin statements, i sur rounded by their allied uruiii-tf, I BY SEVERE QUAKE SMYRNA, Asiatic Turkey, Sunday Oct. 4, via London, Oct. 5, 1:13 p. m. Tho towns of Isbarta (popula tion about 25,000) and Durdur (pop ulation about 12,000) in tho provlnco of Konla, wero Hovcrly damaged by an earthquake last night at mldulght. Tho loss of llfo was very heavy. These two towns nro centers of tho carpet industry. A dispatch from Fort do Franco, Island of Martinique, received In New York last Saturday, said that short ly after 1 o'clock that day a sevcro earthquake shock was folt at Fort do France. Tho direction was from north to sluth. No damago was dono locally. Tho same shock wns recorded also through tho Windward and Leeward Islands. TO EUROPEAN WAR ZONE PJTTSBCRG, P11., Oct. 5. -J. S. MeFnydcn, general manager of the Heir's island stockyards here, today was notified by tho Pennsylvania railroad to prepare to handle 3000 horses tomorrow, feeding and water ing mid uuloadiu- them foor a rest of Jive hours. Thev aro being brought from Hast St. Louis and aro on their way to New York, where they will bo shipped to Kurojiu by tho British government. Nino thousand moro are to follow as rapidly as they can he handled. Tho horses aro traveling in special trains, fifty cars to the train. WOMK.V MAI' KK STItOXG and onjoy llfo whother in tho home or business world if thoy nan keep at bay thoso ailments peculiar to their sex. If overy woman realized how Lydla 13. Pinkhum's Vegetable Com pound, that simple remedy mado from roots and herbs, goes to tho root of tho trouble and overcomes such symptoms as buckucho, head aches, nervousness- and Irritability, thoy would bo healthier, hupplor ami stronger, If you suffer from any form of female Ills why don't you try It? It will pay you to do uo, Adv, WASHINGTON, Oct. R.Tho Clayton nutt'trust bill was defended In the senate today by Senator Walsh of Montana who replied to tho crltl elsins of Senator Ueed ot tho pending conference report on the measure. Senator Walsh said tho Clayton bill ns framed by tho conferees wns III accord with tho democratic platj form pledges and followed tho policy to which congress committed itself When It passed tho administration trade commission bill. ' "Tho present bill." ho said, "Is aimed at the practices which aro tho indulged In beforo the offender be comes sub'Jccl to tho Sherman law." Senator Walsh said the pending New Haven railroad eases, in which, with a civil suit for dissolution pend ing, the department of justice is working on ennimnl prosecutions through a grand jury, illustrated the object of tho Clayton bill. "Wliilo the trade commission is in vestigating charges of unfair compe tition against corporations," he ex plained, "the siime chnrges mny be the ImsU for criminal action under the Sherman law." ' ' '" " '" " a 4 President to Aid Congressmen WASHINGTON, Oct. G. President Wilson began work today on a letter bo will send to Majority Leador Un derwood ot tho house, endorsing for re-election democratic members of tho house and. praising their work during tho present congress. Tho president plans to mako tho letter ono of his chief campaign docu ments nnd will tell of tho achieve ments ot tho democratic majority of the house in supporting tho leglsla tlon. POT SHOOTING LEADING FEATURE BATTLE OF NACO .NACO, Sonnrn, Mexico, Oct. C. Pot-shooting by.both sides opened to day the third dayof tho bntilo of Naco. Governor Mnytoreim'n forces 'so far have made no progress. Gen eral Hill, commanding tho Cnrrnuxn garrison, reported his louses up to daylight today im six killed and eight wounded, Hill's scouta ropoited thin morning that Governor Maytorena was dispos ing hlti troops In a manner Indicat ing an Intention to attack thn town In front. This would mateilally In crease tho danger to llfo on tho American side of tho lino, particu larly iih the attackei-N have displaced a consistent lack of marksmanship. Ono of Mnytorena'H gun crews today tired n shrupnel shell, Instead of fl)lng over to Hill's entrenchments tho shell burst within Maytorona's j. , i 1 ii own linen, On tho other hnnd offi cers of tho American bonier patrol report Hill's machine gun flro effective. Attention ttctteknh. All members of Ollvo Itoboknh lodgo No. S!H nro requested to bo present Tuesday, October Gth, at 7: M0 p, in, lmpoitnnt biislnesH nnd rehearsal, y order ot Train Captain. M. h. MKADOWil. Why Not Get tho best smoke, Gov, Johnson, and also patronUo homo. mr (.. f J S a:; HirA Central taytt It tow dealer f I you an imkribwn brand of roofkiff, ask trim who stand behind it ami whether the manuf actarefis a responsible concern. If he doesn't know, or if he refuses to five you the information, you are just ified in buying elsewhere. Dealers who handle Certajnteed V 4W -.!k j Srt-uLi Roofing cuJw do not hesitate to say who make it. In fact, one of their strongest arguments is to tell their customers that we are the manufacturers of Certain-tced Roofing. Cerialn-tttd Roofing Ii guaranteed $ yean lor l-ply, 10 yt.v for 2-pIy, snd IS years for 3-ply. and we stand behind this guarantee with the biggest wofiruf and building (viper mills in th world. rVMTUOTTT rs Cora for Corporate 3M. Tho ntftrtlln rtlaclonirri of cor porate rnlamanusemcnl In ths laat tn yrr hv brought about a general fxllne that publicity of corporation affair la both nccaa. ary ana dealrabl", for the fulura wel.b.lng of all corporation. Thla publicity may ba anactad In many way a and ahouM alva the publlo aa rail aa tht atnekhoMcra urh In formation aa will allmlnata all poa albla chanca for corruption and tnlamanagcmenu In lha put, manager of oma corporation hava operated their buelnea In a, mora or Jena arrogant faahlon. ptralatenlly refualng to maka their act known to the pub lie or even to their alockhoMcr. In moat Inatance If iheae operation had been mada publlo at the I line many of the Ilia from whkh they are now aurferlne; would not have occurred, and millions if dollar of Invretment would hnva been aaved. Tho effrct ot corporate mlaman agrment la greatly magnified, bow. er, when 11 dlacovery come too lata by governmental .Investigation. Uenerally apeaklng. If the facta were voluntarily made public, or If they were made known through aa tabllahed method of publicity, In the regular course of bualneaa, the mtamanagement of tho corporation would never occur or It could be remedied Immediately and the bad effect of It would be comparatively small. And o It la with many houae of bulnta In the (laid of commerce and manufacture. They are afraid of publicity afraid lo hava their factorial examined and to let pur chaaer verify statement or facta, concerning the goorla. Th only conclualon to bo reached In auch cate I that the manufacturer ha something to conceal, which. If die covered, woull not bear out hi as sertion. I'ubllclty la relation lo alt bual. nes matters la the best cure for their evils. Just aa light and air kill the germ of dlaeaae. Consult your local dealer. lie will b glad to give you detailed Inioniutloa about our complete lineof goodi,nd will quote you reasonable prices. Be sure goods arc made and guaranteed by its, Geaeral Rooflaf Mff . Ctaasay WurW limit t tnauut"rtn of KealaJ and UuMlmg JVire CMtn.1 Bulhisafr SMU, WsA. np-i.-i a.i a JrilSSK , fcHSf cttj JRltS tt ImU- rutu..i irelw ttalu K4asCay MaaaeeseeW Ifln Waieirs iaW SAID ADMIRAL "FIGHTING BOB" EVANS REGARDING PROHIBITION I would nilliiT take mv snihuH lo ANY OTNIM AMKItK'AN PORT THAN AlAINK'sS. for the reason that my men return to their Hhips. NOT SO .MUCH 1)1? lTN K ION as CUAZY, which is duu to tho VILK DECOCTION OK DKUCiflKD MQUOHS-they have supplied to them (by the "JJlind-l'iggers"). REGISTER BEFORE OCTOBER 15 VOTE 333 X NO AGAINST PROHIBITION Defeat of the proposed prohibition amendment will not effect the present efficient local option or home rule law. (Paid Advertisement, Taxpayers anil Wogo Karnora' I.cobuo of Oregon, Portland, Oregon.) !9B rts Patronize Home Industries THESE GOODS ARE MADE IN TH E ROGUE RIVER VALLEY. KEE P THE MONEY AT HOME SCREENS WINDOW SCREENS SCREEN DOORS WE Make Them If you want a good Porch - ,..ftwing,,let us make it, i Pacific Furniture and Fixture Factory E. G. Trowbridge, Jr., Prop, 113 & Uolly Street Medford Iron Works B. Q. Trowbridge, Prop. Qenoral Foundry and Machine Works Pacific 401; Home 298L. Res. Pac. 5031; Home 227 L. For GALVANIZED TANKS OIL AND WATER and JJIRIGATINO PIPE Go to J. A. SMITH 128 N. Grape It. Tolophono 990 Keep Your Money at Home. Wo inuko a specialty of Door and Window Frames and Insido Finish. Also Doors and Windows. QUALITY TIII3 DIDST. PJtfOES RIGHT Factory Corner Eleventh and Fir Streets. Medford Sash and Door Co. , f' ,Kl f v ' I j I' r-A-E-'--rj-,r vji- ltrtt al