Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 20, 1915, SECOND EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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MMWORT) MAIti TftrBTJKE. MEOTOttD, OftKOtiK, WEDNESDAY,
TAGTB -FOUR
.TANHARV 20, Iftlfi
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MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
AMtNnrciKNtmNT NISWHI'Al'Ktt
I'UIIWHUKI) KVK11V APTKKNOON
KXCIliPT KUNOAY I1Y TUB
Micurono imuntinq co.
Offlcn Mull Trltmno Dull.llnir. 2G-37-2
North Mr street: telcphono 76.
Tho Democratic Timed, Tim Medford
Mall, Tho Medford Tribune, Tho HouUi-
cm urcKOimm, 1 no jvimisnu xnuunc
subbcjuptiow bates
Ono yenr, by innll.r.........5.on
Ono inonlli, by nwll......... 60
Ver month, delivered by carrier In
Medford. Thoenlx, Jacksonville
and Central 1'otnt ......-....- .... . .SO
Bntuntay only, by mull, licr ycar.. 1. 00
Weekly, per year, ........ 1.50
Official Tapor of tho City of Medford.
Offlclnl Paper ot Jackson County.
Kntonn an nocmul-clUKS mutter nt
Medford, Orecon, under tho act of March
, 1879.
Bworn Circulation for 1014, !S88.
Full leaned wire Associated Press din
rmtel'.en. Subscribers tailing to receive,
papora promptly, phono Clrcu-
Intlon Manager nt 25011.
'
4" J-
10
WASHINGTON. Jnn. 20. The
stale department litis requested of the
Itritish embassy information of why
tho American steamer Greenbrier,
from 2tfow York to Bremen with cot
ton under certificate of the .British
consul nt New York, was stopped by
n British cruiser, Kent under the Brit
ish flag to n British port nnd detain
ed two days before allowed to com
rilctc her voyage to Bremen.
COMMUNICATIONS
Favors Si;ar Beets '
To the Editer:
The leading members of the beet
stiar committee hare stated that I
nin opposing the establishment of n
beet sunr factory nnd that 1 am ex
erting my influence to defeat thir
efforts in securine;tho required acre
age accessary for the establishment
of such a factory in this valley.
1 desire to state in answer to this
charge that I am not opposing and
never huvo opposed the erection of a
beet stigar factory. Neither have I
used my influence with other land
owners to prevent their fcigniug up
beet sugur ucrcngc.
On tho contrary, I a'tn heartily in
favor of the oreetiou and operation
of siifh n factory, providing suffic
ient acreage of the proper kind of
Miil for growing btignr beets can he
obtained.
I consider thnt the intensive culti
vation which would bo necessary for
tho successful growing of sugar
beets nnd tho conseaucntal rotation
of crops would more than double the
productive value of tho laud upon
which the heels were grown, to say
untlung of the sugar beet pulp for
btook-fceding purposes.
I have not signed up any acreage.
My reason for not doing so U n bus
iness reason purely, which I consider
good and sufficient, and has no bcur
ing whatever with my opinion as to
the great value which the successful
growing of sugar beets would be to
thu laud owners of Jtoguo River val
ley. lint I wish to add that I am op
posed ami shall continue to oppose
the establishment and operation oT
the district system of irrigation, and
the coiiBequentnl bonding of land
owners in Hogue Itiver valley. It is
plainly evident that the laws govern
ing tho dintrict system were passed
in the aid of land owners located in
mid regions, and I consider tho in
voking of these laws for tho estab
lishment or tho district system in the
Hujjtio River valley us unjust in prin
ciple and impraolicablo nt this time.
Yours vurv truly,
FRANK K. UPTON.
Central 1'oiut, Jnnuar- 10, 1915.
To tho Editer:
So many misleading statements
nro atloat regarding beet raising that
muny nro kept from signing up on ac
count of 'talk that la all tommy-rot.
One man tells a lot of would-bo grow,
era that tho largo atzed beets will all
bo thrown out can't be handled.
Another says, any beets broken In
any wuy leak out tho sugar, render
ing thorn unfit for sale, another says
beets that liavo boon irrigated are
low In, test, making Jho prlco per ton,
too low to bo profitable, whtlo anoth
or many saya uo land will prow beets
without an abundance or water.
Each Htory holps the tenderfoot to
back down and the chances are half
of tho same men don't know a
sugar beet from a mangle wurzel
beet, Bomo ot them never saw a
beqt, unless it was a "dead-beet."
And U ilila beet factory is not built
there will be an oyer production of
that commodity in the Roguo river
vaHey in the next few years.
Mr, Farmer you raise the beets, the
factory will do the rest,
fJORUESPONDRNT.
BILL 10 ABOLISH
OF
SAL1.M, Ore., Jan. 20. A Mil
changing tho judicial system of tho
state nnd providing for eight addi
tional circuit judges Is being urc
pared by Senator W. I.alr Thompson,
president of the senate.
Among the chief features of the
bill nro tho abolition ot tho office of
county judge, transferring tho pro-'
bnto work to tho circuit courts; tho
creation of a circuit court of appeals,
and the creation of eight new circuit
judgeships.
it Is argued that the saving by the
abolition of tho office of county
judge will moro than offset the added
expense to result from tho eight now
circuit Judgeships, nud In addition
tho outlying counties will bo better
served by tho circuit courts.
According to tho bill the circuit
Judges will bo apportioned as fal fal
eows: Baker, ono Judge; Clackamas, one
Judge; Clatsop and Columbia, one
judge; Coos nnd Curry, one judge;
Crook and Jefferson, one judge;
Douglas, ono Judge; Grants and Har
ney, ono Judge; Malheur, one Judge;
Jackson, one judge; Josephine, one
Judgo; Klamath, ono judge; Lake.
one judge; Lane and Benton, two
Judges; Linn and Marlon, two judges;
Gilliam and Sherman, ono judge;
Morrow and Wheeler, ono Judge
Umatilla, ono Judge; Union and Wal
lowa, ono Judge; Wasco and Hood
nivcr, ono judge; Washington, ono
Judge; Yamhill and Tillamook, one
judge; Polk and Lincoln, one Judge,
nnd Multnomah, six Judges.
Tho proposed circuit court of ap
peals would be given jurisdiction over
all cases appealed from the circuit
court in which amounts Involved are
not over $500, and where titles to
property, and a number of other
points are not Involved. Tho state
would be divided into two districts.
In each district the court would con
sist of thrco circuit Judges to be
named by tho chief Justice ot tho su
preme court. In tho first district the
court would sit in Portland, and in
tho second district it would hold ses
sions in Pendleton.
L
HOME, Jnn. 20. Next to Avcz
zano, one of the places to suffer rwt
from the earthquake wns Ortucchio,
a few miles from Gioja. de Murci,
where less than -100 iwoplc were sav
rd out of u population of 2."()0. In
tho church, which was n lurgc edi
fice, there were between HOI) and -100
people when the carthqunko came.
Tho priext and the entire congrega
tion were imprisoned under the ruins,
as the whole building suddenly col
lapsed. Only four women have since
been taken alive.
Collnrmele, 3000 feet up in the
mountains, is another of thoso towns
in this purt of Italy from which
many persons had emigrated to
Amerira. Here n thousand persons
out of a population of 1"00 were kill
ed. The priest in this town perished
while conducting services nt tho nl
tar, and the worshipiwrs chiefly wo
men nnd children, died with hfm. The
church is in ruins, but two statue
of saints nro still standing midr.iu
aged. HOOKKVELT, N. J., Jan. 20. Tho
federal commission on industrial re
lations, now holding hearings in Now
York City, began today nn inquiry
into tho shooting of striking laborers
by deputy sheriffs guarding the Lie
bii? nlunt. Ono of tho wounded
strikors died Inst night and several
others nro in n critical condition.
Mayor Hermann declared thut he
was going to force tho settlement of
the trouble between the strikers nnd
their employes to nn issue. Ho said
he had been usked bv a committee of
strikers to intervene with their em
ployers for nn adjustment of their
differences through nrbitration.
"1 had l.'0 of tho strikers searched
for arms directly after the shooting,"
he declined, "nnd not a single weapon
was found on unv one of them.'
A flood Resolution.
To help build up Medford payrolls
by smoking Oovornor Johnson or
Offltt
COUNTY
JUDGE
PREPARED
0
SAVED
I
0F2500P0PU
IN
STRIKERS UNARMED
WHEN SHOT
DOWN
Mt. Pitt cigars,
MAX FIGMAN IN "THE MAN .
ON THE BOX" AT THE STAR
SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSiSSHHSSSSSSSSSSSSSKv 4 1 n
jSBSSSSBHSSSBQNf -ii
iisisHrPL
HisisBnBvVv
- a .- '"
E
LEADERS PLEAD
GUILTY TO PLOT
FORT SMITH, Aik., Jan. 20.
Seven defendants in the Prairie
Creek coal mine conspiracy cases
pleaded guilty when they appeared
for trial in the federal court here to
day. Among those who entered the
plea were Peter It. Stuart of McAl-et-ter,
Okln., former president of the
United Mine Workers of America,
district No. 21, and Fred V. Holt of
MeAlestcr, former secretary of the
district union.
The others who pleaded "tiilty were
James B. MeNamara, former member
of the city council of Hartford, Ark.;
James Slnnkard, a former constable
of Hartford township, nnd Clint Bur
ns, Sandy Robinson nnd John Muick,
miners. All of the men were chnrged
with eonspiniev ngninst the govern
ment. They will be sentenced this
afternoon.
ine government entered nolle
prosso in the ensc of Y. W. Rob
erts, former manager of a telephone
company nt Mansfield, Ark., nnd
eleven other defendants. The case of
John Edwards, a merchant of Hart
ford, Ark., wns left on the docket
without action by the court.
The action of the seven defendants
who entered pleas of guilty nnd that
of the government came ns n surprise.
Jlireo hundred witnesses had been
summoned and it was exacted the.
trinl would last several weeks.
Today's action probably brings to
nn end the trouble in the Prairie
creek mining district.
McNumarn this ufternooii was sen
tenced to two yours in the penitcn
tiary nud fined $1000 the maximum
sentence. Slnnkard and Holt were
given six months in jail and fined
.flllOO each. UtirrU. Robinson and
Mnnii-k were sentenced to six months
in in il nud fined $V)0 each. Stewart
xtw fined .flOOO, but was given no
jail sentence.
VAUDEVILLE ON
Lovers ot good vaudovlllo will hao
an opportunity to see Eomo of our
best local talent at the Star thcatro
Wednesday night as Mr. Bernard has
arranged with several of our best
known artists to appear.
Thoso who will appear are Miss
Caroline Andrews, Miss' Florence
Clark, Earl Bonner, Jack Barry, Cou
ela Mlttlebergcr and Charles Bart-
lett, the famous black faco comedian.
Yaudevllle will bo prominent on
tho program nt tho Star overy Wcd-
tesday night and only local talent will
appear.
Everyone that can sing or dnnco
and wishes an opportunity to show
their frionds Just how good they aro
should tako advantage of this opopr
tunlty nnd make arrangements to ap
pear on tho program.
A number of very Interesting mov-
'ing pictures w.111 bo shown and tho
show will last two hours.
E
Madam Wlnteroth, notod clairvoy
ant, palmist and trance medium who
created such a oonsatlon in our city
Just boforo the holidays is back again.
All who aro Interested in their past,
prosent or future, don't fall to see this
gifted woman. Ill corner South
Central and Ninth streets. HB
John A. Perl
UNDERTAKE
Lady Assistant
M H. BAItTLKOT
Phone M. 47 M 47-JI
4tubula Mrlet lHtr Otwftmr
ARKANSAS
SOISSONS BATTLE
E
WASHINGTON, I). C, Jan. 30.
"Ever since tho beginning of history
In western Kurox Solasons, Htorin
center of tho uio.it bitter fighting of
recent weeks In the western war
theater, hao taken a prominently
chronicled tnrt,"'gays a statement Is
sued by thu National Geographic so
ciety today. "Before the Roman tide,
directed by Julius Caesar, flowed
over Gaul, Solcsons, thou a metropolis
In a nation of twelve cities, was the
capttal of tho warlike Suesslonns,
ono of the most powerful peoples In
Gaul. Dlvttlncus, one of their kings,
had even managed to extend his au
thority beyond tho sea, among the
Britons."
"Sols8ons Is a small town pictures
quely sltunted among well-forested
hlls, on the left bank of the Alsno.
It lies C5 miles northeast ot Parts,
and constitutes one ot the links In tho
chain of French second-line defenses.
The region all about Solssons is
agricultural, and tho city's trade Is
mostly in grains, vegetables, live
stock, leather and forest products.
Manufactures of the place aro not of
great Impertance: they consist of
leather, foundry products, flannel nnd
cotton cloth nnd farm Implements.
There nro extenslvo lumber yards in
tho city.
Importance Waning
"Tho one-time Importance of Sols
sons has long been waning. The siege,
bombardment, sack and brand of war
have been repeated often In the exper
iences of tho city, and seem at last
to have tapped Its will for further
growth. Ono of tho oldest cities In
Frnnce, there nro ery few cities In
the republic which liavo scon more
rugged battlo service.
"It wns known ns Novlodunum to
tho conquering Itomnns. Under
Roman rule, it became n strategic
point in tho Empire's northern do
tense. It wns here that Clovls ob
tained. In 4SG, his famous victory
over the Boinnu general, Syagrlus,
which expelled Home from Gaul and
brought in tho Germans. Holssons
beenmo capital of tho Prankish king
dom, but soon resumed Its position as
borderland between tho Latinized
German of tho Prankish kingdom and
tho Germans of beyond the Rhine.
Famous Old Abbeys
"There nro a number of mauos old
abbeys In Solssons, and prlvato build
ings of centuries ago. Tho royal ab
bey of Notcr Dame, now a barrack,
was founded In 060; that ot St. Me
dard, or which little now remains,
was founded about 500 by Clotalre I.
At one tlmo this abbey was among
the most powerful In Frnnce. Its
abbots coined money, nnd were lords
of moro than 200 Ivllages. Ono or
two meager fragments nre all that Is
loft from its ancient splendor.
"Solsfons has tnken part In all tho
wars of Frnnce. It stood with tho
Gauls agnlnst the Itouinnu, until King
Galba submitted to Ccasar, whon the
German onslaught south began, nn
onslaught which, for Solssons,. baa
lasted, with more or 1cm lengthy per
iods of respite, for nenrly 2000 years.
MUST BELIEVE IT
When Well-Known .Medfonl People
Tell It Ho 1'Inlnly
When public endorsement Is mado
by a representative citizen of Mod
ford tho proof Is posltlvo. You must
bollovo It. Read this testimony.
Kvory sufferer of kidney bnckacho,
every man, woman or child with kid
ney trouble will do well to road tho
follewing:
Mrs. William Charley, :05 N. Grapo
St., Medford, Ore., says: "I had
much pain In the smnll of my back
and Eometlmes I could hardly bend or
straighten. At night the trouble
bothered mo too, and often I couldn't
sloop. I tried plasters and llnlmonts
hut nothing helped mo. When almost
discouraged, 1 heard of Doan's Kid
noy Pills. In leps than two weeks af
ter I began taking them, I foil bet
tor. I used In all four boxes of
Doan's Kldnoy Pills and thoy made
mo well. Doan's Kldnoy Pills so com
pletely cured mo of kldnoy troublo
that I havo had no sign of it for over
throo years."
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't
simply aok for a kldnoy romody got
Doan's Kldnoy Pills tho samo that
Mrs. Charley had. Fostor-Mllburn
Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Adv.
For Reliable
Stylish Tailoring
L KLEIN
128 East
Main.
Unstnlrs
CARED
N
IN
CONQUEST
DARKEN GRAY HI,
look young, piny
')
Grandma's recipe of 3ap,e Tea and
Sulphur darkens so naturally
that nobody can tclk
Almost everyone knows llisil Snge TV
nd Sulphur, propnrly eompounded,
brings hxA tho natural color and lustra
to tho hftlr when fsded, streaked or gruyt
iIbo cads diuslrulT, itching sculp and
stops fullltvg hair. Years ago the only
wy to gut this mlxturo wns to niiikn it
at twine, which Is mussy and troublo
some. Nowadays, by asking t any drug
store for "Worth's Sng and Sulphur
Hair llwmxly, you will get a lixrgd Uil
tie of this fiuiuu eld reclo tor aluut
CO cents.
Don't stay gray! Try III No ono
can possibly lll that you d.rkinrl your
hair, ns il does It so naturally and
evenly. You dauivu a songti or suit
brush with It nnd draw tlilt through your
hair, taking one smnll strand nt a tiiiini
by morning tin) gray lulr dlsnpjVArs, and
after another a jipllntt ion or two, your
hnlr bccomni beautifully dark, thick and
gloisy.
D A fT? THEATRE f
i AvjlL Thursday, Jan. Zr 1
BIG
CLIFFORDS
WTHE
r,a;vfaoW
HIT!
x mA JsmUMisssssssssM MS FA -!
" Bm a Bks&. sniiiiiiiiiv v vr m .w . ss -
vmHPW'4'
..liissssssssssssssssssssvr llff s mJ
yarw J 'f J f Kr
NW1C3Y rSM Mil.niMK'm ixwzr
viRoiitcmmTT fP wink jnwsfu
GtfAT TANGOESC&JS-yWWM
QOSTWWS A RtOT y COIOQJ
Cmt ENVIRONMCHZ supeRaiy dcsignsd.
PRICES 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50
Scat Sale Opens Tuesday. Mail Orders Now. Miotic 4 18
THIS IS NOT A .MOVING I'll Tl 1(1! SHOW
THE PAGE
Mctlfortl's Lcatlin-3 Theater
OwinK to "September Morn" being here Thursday,
, Fifth Episode of the MASTER KEY will only be shown
WEDNESDAY Matinee nnd Evening It's a Big Seven Reel Show
if ftKeyTo Every Emotion!
- .issW .issssssk. .issssssv .A. isssl ssssMk iWlTi .isssssWIlksV IssssslZJsl kJ I Kssissssssssssssw
TfTTTjj jT "Tr'ii ii i Ji & Jl i i i) mirSBKcMfmMjM sssttM utLJ
I
1
3 The Master Key unlocks
to every thrill of Human existence
IS LOVE THE GREATEST THING IN THE
V. CAN FEAR
ft&fk - AFTER
v,.
zum
1 W&frri.
r
' ,
John Dorc, Ruth
answer every one or these questions pcrtcctly in the (VlAIfc,K ,
KEY the most, remarkable serial drama ever produced. ,jjj.(
V,
ldv
W'flflllg
The Yellow Streak When It's One of Your Own
Two Parts Ono Part
A Drama of the Prize Rlns OTHER PICTURE8
Matinee 2 P. M. Evening 7 O'Clock Admission 5c, 10c and 15c
IT'S ALWAS A BIG SHOW AT THE PAGE
COMING That great photo-play TUB IDLER Friday Mutlnec nnd Evening
PAGEUP
JANPAttY JJUNB
WILLIAM FOX
Presents
CIIAKLKS RICIIMAN
AND
CATIIRINK COUNTISS
THE IDLER
Friday .Mutlneo and Kwiilug
This groat photoplay was hooked
for Prlihiv and Saturday, but owing
to "Mult and Jeff' being hero on Sat
urdnv, this can only be shown Friday.
On thin account theio will ho an ex
tra malliieo Friday afternoon 2 p. nt.
No Adinnco In AilniUilou
DAraR53JNGEEPi
to SALLE avbum
C CHICAGO)
UCCCS3,
BLAST HAPPINESS AND WRECK LIVES?
YEARS OF HATRED, IS REVENGE SWEET?
IS GREED A VITAL PASSION?
IS REMORSE OUR WORST
Gallon, Tom Gallon, Jean Durncll and Willccraon
-iiA.ia'(v."' ."VS'ISSI' '. 4 Zk&'iihyfwt '.
" ' nvw'w''rxr":KV,:iij(, ffryJfKivri'.
rJrATiairc M t
STAR
WEDNESDAY
Child Thou Gavest Me
Ono Pari
The Deacon's Son
Ono Part
EARL DONNEn JACK BONNER
Saved by a Watch
Ono Part
.miss iVeiikm.m: claimc,
Vonlt.
Mysterious Black Box
Ono Part
MISS CAROLYN ANDREWS
f
Man From the Sea
Two Paris
COUSIN MITTLEDERGER
Athletic Family
One Part
Two reels will he wl out of program
at cvcnlnu performance tut account
of Vaudeville.
HALL TAXI CO.
CITY RATES
l.urnu Drown Taxi or llupmnbllos.
Direct trip any plnco on pnvoinent,
2Gc each for ono or two pnsseiiKera,
tic for each additional panseiiRor.
fiovuii PassotiKor Cant
Ono passoneur 60 eonts
No charKo for second pnssetiKor.
tSo for each additional passotiKor.
iiperlnt rated for shoppInK or when
Mnndlni; tlmo Is required.
Finely cuulppod cars. Hxporloticod
rhaufteurs.
I HALL TAXI CO:
Wednesday Only
Matinee and Evening
rcc
the door f
WORLD?
"PUNISHER"?
l Tl
rTrX5rnl.TrJH)r4.
1
iw
N
M
. ,4kE &S&Aki.