ki: :- I S W W w m & I' k v it i i .t .W mtm four WEDFORD L-Hi-JL Ji-L.-'M rATTI TJimUNTC. SJL..-J LL-i-! MEDFOfiD, 0R1W0N, SATlTRDAY, .'MIM.'.l. I U-.- MEDfrOKD MAIL TRIBUNB "aT INtlttPlMtmSNT NKWBl'Al'Rn' IMIXIMHIIKP MVKttV APfKltNUOtf JJXCKIT HUMMY 1)1 MKUrPIU) J day nv Tin: .Offo North i i Mull ffrlMin llulldlnir. 25.37.29 lr Rlrccti tcleplicnie 75. Tim ninoernllo Tltilo. Tlio Mtilford Mitll. Tim MtMirnril TMliuno, Tho South ern OrcKoniau, The Anhlnnti Tribune. TmBORIPTICm JftATEI One yrar. hy mnil. .....i........,..... $5.00 Due month, by nmll........m.. .... .60 l'ir month, Ofllv rul by cnrrlcr In Mnlfonl, I'hupiilx, Jncksonvlllo anil Ontrnl 1'nlnt ...-......- .BO Paliinlny only, by mall, per year-- J.oo WcMily, ntr ycar,.-.........-. 1.60 Official I'npcr of tho City of MeiUoriL Offlclnl Vftpcr of .tttrkhon County. Knterftl lot Hfcoiul-rlnim innttor nt Mnlfonl, Oregon, under tho net of March 1, 187V. THE ROGUE RIVER FISH SILLS T1110 Koguo vivor is tho most bountiful of tho ninny lipiiuHfnl rivoi-s nf Orniwii. Fiulm tnilhir sides, ho- ." " - - -r--- - - r . ' Hvotn Circulation for 1S14, SSSS. Km 1 1 leased wire Associated l'ress din- pntchOH, Subscrlbora falling to recolrd papers promptly, phono Clrcu- 4 lntlon Mnnagor at 2C0U. W.C.T.U.OFCOUNTY DISCUSS PENDING ON STATE LEGISLAT Thursday, January 2S, tho Mcdford V. C. T. U. entertained Jackson county's organization In tho M. K. churcli. Tho morning session was dovotcd to business. Tho superin tendent for tho different depart ments wcro appointed and Mrs. Qraco Holmes elected as vice-president. A night letter wan sent to Hopre- HonlattTo Towne urging her to vote no on Mil 132; also a letter wna sent to our congressman and senators at Washington, protesting against tho amendment of tho post office appro priation bill and anr measuro that would curtail tho freedom of the press. A committee was appointed to look up tho bill before the house pertain ing to tho shipping of fire arms to warring nations. At noon a good chicken dinner was served to the. delegates and visitors, ifty wcro present Tho afternoon session was called to. ordqr by the president, Mrs. Lydla Howell. After tho devotional, the different uniona told of the work they had dono and they help they have had through the press and otherwise. Christian Cltienship was ably handled 1y Attorney If. Canaday, who mado tho appeal, to mothers to train their children for the right kind of cltlenu, and whorover.thoy may be they will remember their mother's teaching. Mrs. A, Walker gave n reading, "Only 10 cents for a Glass, hut It That All?", Mr. Hawklna spoko on "After the Passing of tho Poor Man's Club, then Whnt?" A very llvoly discussion fol lowed. MIsb Urona Roberts gavo a piano solo which was very beautiful. Mrs. C-rcnby and Miss Bratncy sang a duet. Mr. K. W. Mears gavo a talk on "Practical Politics." urging a world wide, then nation wide view, thereby wo can adapt local conditions accord ingly. Our conception of politics Is of bomcthlng dirty, grafty and unfit to speak of, whereas It U not, but Is an investigation of wiiat l.i for indi viduals, and practical politics is put ting tho results of that investigation Jplp use, and as newly enfranchised citizens we should try and grasp this velw-polnt and use It in a practical way. The Misses Myrtlo and May Meadows sang a duut which was en Joyed very much. Among the out of town delogntes were Mrs, P. Ashcroft, II. P. Holmes, Stoner, Woods and Sehobel of Ashland, Mrs. Vogoli, Wplfemott and Snider of Tnlent, Mra. Moore, Btanclirfe. Peck, Ilarnum, and Martin of Phoenix. twoen t'ir-fnmrotl hills, vordnro-olnd vnlloys niul vook- ribbotl prooipioos, nn ovorgrnwn nionntnin brook, swirling mid tnrbnlent nt its narrows, swift and shallow ovor gravel bars, eddying in and out of occasional placid pools, it races and tumbles madly to tho sea. Save near Us month, the ftogno vivor is in no sense a commercial fishing stream. To open it throughout to commercial fishing means tho speedy extermination of tho fish for the benefit of a few fishermen, mostly non-residents, who, with nets drifting from bank to bank, clean tho stream of fish, although the salmon taken are inferior because of their long sojourn in fresh water. Tho ftogue river is the finest angling stream in the world an asset as a tourist attraction and the great recre ation ground of the people of southern Oregon, who em phatically protest the reopening of their river closed in Jackson county for the past ten years. Senate bill 27 opens tho stream to its source it should be defeated. Tho people of Jackson county have to fight a biennial battle to protect the fish in "Rogue river. Failing to secure justice from the legislature of 1909, they appealed to the people of Oregon and an initiative bill closing the Rogue to commercial fishing was passed by a majority of 1(5,000 in 1910. Bills to reopen wore vetoed by tho governor in 1911 and 19151, but the present law, permitting a two months' open season for a teu-milo strip at Grants Pass, oiio hundred miles from the mouth, passed over the gover nor's veto and the expressed will of the people of Oregon set aside. The people of Jackson county have no quarrel with the legitimate fishing industry at the mouth of the river, which, with its large investment, is a commercial asset to the state. They only ask that protection bo accorded above the Illinois l'iver, twenty-seven miles from the mouth a protection given all other small streams in the state, a protection as essential for the. preservation of the fish for commercial purposes as for angling. Senate bill 2G opens the river to its source. It should be defeated. Senate bill 102 closes the river above the mouth of the Illinois. It should be passed. The legislature is again asked for a square deal for the fish of Rogue river. BUSH AIRSHIPS I OCT AERIAL RAID ON OSIEND LONDON. Jan. !10. Wholes ad vices from Ilerlln bring a report that of seven KuplIMt noroplnnea which luvvo hoinbnrili;d Osteml and ebrug KC three- failed to return. It Is slated that throe mnchlnOH wore sur rounded hy German nlr craft and cap sired Into the open sea. THE COMPENSATION LAW RUSSIANS ORE IK IN PERSIA LONDON, Jan. 30. Tho Paris correspondent of neuter's Tolegrum coinpuuy telegraphs that he learns that tho Russians havo routed tho Turkish troops In Persia and havo entered Tabriz, capital of tho pro vlnco of Azerbaijan, which the Turks occupied early In January. PARIS. Jan. 30'. Turkish forcos havo suffered a fresh defeat in Por tia, following those Inflicted upon t)ieu, ntjrth of Erzermn, according to dUjiatc!oa received by the Matin. 'Tho Turkish 'right tying, which in vaded Azerbaijan, tho dispatches say wa routed by, tho Rnwlaus who have returned to Tabflz, Tho Turka aro wild to bo retreating toward Maragna, (9 miles boilth of Tabriz. A STRENUOUS effort is being made at the legislature t to repeal the Oregon compensation law and substi tute the Michigan law in its stead. The Oregon compensation law is one of Hie people's laws. It passed, the legislature with but three dissenting votes. It was indorsed by a popular majority of 10,000 at the referendum election. The opposition comes from two sources the ambulance-chasing lawyers and tle eastern and foreign casu alty companies, whose graft it interferes with. The compensation law is not compulsory only those concerns who wish it are under it. Its funds arc invested in Oregon securities the money stays here instead of being sent away to stay away. Two new high schools at Amity and Rainier were built with proceeds derived from the sale of bonds, with accjdont funds, when it was impos sible to secure outside loans. Before the lnw went into effect it was impossible for n workman to secure damages without a lawsuit with the casualty company, with the result that the lawyer got half of the money secured. Frequently the casualty com pany or the employer, retaining able counsel, secured im munity upon technicalities, and the injured man or his family got nothing. The Michigan law permits the casualty insurance com panies to carry the insurance at a profit, every dollar of which comes from the injuries of the workers. Instead of the state carrying the risk, it is farmed out to foreign cor porations, who keep the money out of the state. Casualty concerns, private interests, should not be per mitted to come between employer and employe to reap a harvest from human distress. Compensation for injuries is best provided as a part of the government, not run for profit, but for the public good, Washington lias found state compensation a relief to both employer and employe. So has Oregon. Special in terests should not be permitted to emasculate the law. Only those changes should be enacted which the commis sion recommend as shown necessary by tho experience of the past year. Let us keep our money at home, giving tho workman and employer both protection without a needless profit to liability concerns and shark lawyers. The above dispatch may Indicate a new nrltloh nlr raid on tho UcIkIuii coast towns. The Inst Urltlsh raid reported In that direction occurred nt ZccbrugRo January 22. Two llrltlsh aviators took part In this at tack and It was stated thnt th.Hr bombs dnmnged n submarine and killed or wounded tho crows of the guns mounted on the mole. Tho Her mans report of this raid :ill that no damage was done, , MISS TOWN E PIEASR E PIER VENIC E DESTROYED I.OS AXOHLKS, rul., Jan. 30. lleavy sen ridiiifr in on nn unusually high tide Mvept owny half o tho pleasure pier nt Venice today. Sev eral coiicPfihiotiK, including a museum nnd u btoic, went with it down into the Mtrf. A fifty-mile gale which mvept tho southern coabt yesterday had dwin dled to a twt'iity.four mile brcezo to day, hut huge breakers htill swept the Mrumta of every bench lefaort bo tween Kiinhi Monica and Lon; ISoncli. At Del Hey boverul houses were washed out to sen, while, hovcral lengths of hulkhuds at Long Bench went into the sea. Several persons had narrow escapes nt vaiioith points, hut no casualties have been reported. Damages have been variously esti muted at from .fj0,000 to $100,000. STOLEN IN GOTHAM NKW YOI1K, Jan. 30. Between $40,000 nnd .f50,000 worth of dia mond!, were stolen today from tho pawnshop of Adolph Stern, on tho upper cast side, by four men, who drove up to the Mora in nn automo bile, held tip Iho three clutks with revolvers, bound and sagged them. threw the jewels into three fiilit eases and escaped in the cur. A water grade highway up Hood river Is being planned. SAI.KM, Or.. .Inn. 30. KfforU to break in upon the integrity of the di rect primnry precipitated a denoue ment in the hon that resulted' in a demand for n call of the lumen to re trieve thoie who had fled to escape a roll call. The Mtuutum nroe when II. 11. ID. introduced bv fonrad I'.J OKim of Multnomah eamc up for final passage. This bill pi eposes to abol ish iho system of circulating petitions of candidates' and to substitute in its place n svstcin when by n candidate may dcKs!t a stipulated Ice with the secretary of state or county clerk and find place upon the primary bal lot. Mis Marian II. Towne of .Jackson county led the fiht in oppo-itlon. In a thrilling perch before the men member she declared the hill un- American ju undemocratic nnd un attack upon the primary that .-houlil be countenanced by no legi-dntnr. "If it is right to impose fee at all, it is right to' fix the fee-," she said. "The next legislature mav amend it by fixing the fees o that it will he impossible for young and munitions attorneys nnd otheiv to become enn didales at all." t'j; mi .TANUARY ...l!L. no, V9- ' Ifllfi I" JU-JU. TURKS DEFEATED CAUCASIANS BY CZAR'S ARMY I'WTUOOUAI), Jan. HO Successes by the Itusslans In tho vicinity of Tn brln, l'ersln, Is Indicated In tho offi cial communication by tho general Rtaff of the army on tho Caucasus to. day. The stntcment says: "In the valey of Alnihkort we eamo In contact with the ncmy and after a Btubborn battle captured tbolr colorH, guiiH and military mippllcs, Tho enemy himself retired toward Tabrlx, abandoning on the battle field tunny hundreds of kilted." Spnnktng of other fighting In tho Caucasus tho statemont suys: ''In the region around TchoroUh, south of (latum, n column of troops THE PAGE Mctl ford's Lcntllnn Theater TONIGHT LAST TIME WILLIAM FARNUM In That Great Photo Play SAMSON Mr. Frrnum in the leading role help ed make "The Spoilers" famous. Most critics consider him at his best In "Samson." This Is a strong, intensely Interest ing moving picture. Last Time TONIGHT Admission's-1 0-1 5c of tho onomy wcro repulsed In tho village or llaitrhklol, They tctrcntcd precipitately. "On the front nenr Hurl Kninysh thuro has been no Impoitaut change. On Jniuinry 28 tho Turkish artillery cannonaded energetically n part or our front but with no success." .XA.NW, Kruuce, .Inn. fill. -Tlio mayor of n large town-hip in the i ciiiily of N'ancv has been suspendctl from office for a forlnlghl for shoot ing at u (let man uciophuic its it was fl,itlg titer lii town. '.'hi, Inking this measuro Iho higher unjlioritiq pi' Naitcy held that a civ ilian hud lit) right to net us a com bataiil, it h so doing he only brotti;hi upon the liciult of the civil nut population scncic icitn-al"." STAR ij JL xjlJlv rU'mvvoM.y tt Ktilcitiiliiinciil That Is Won It Whllo , Man From the East Otto Pint Smugglers of Lone Isle Two Partit The Bend Sinister Ouo Part Out of the Past Two Parts Cupid Backs the Winners Olio Part MutlmvUl.t livening 7MUI Friday-Saturday JACK LONDON'S Valley of the Moon Seven Parts Performances Start Promptly at 2:15, 4:15, 7:00 and 8:45 p. m. YY Theatre toii.w Mullitco and i:citlug ZUDORA The Hccrct or tho llaiiutcd Hills Mutual Weekly War News A Special Two Reel Feature A Lively Comedy Six licit Ah-IiII n unit Ittc ADMISSION 10 CENTS Hearst-Selig War Pictures Matinee Only HERE SUNDAY 0NLV European War Pictures The Kaiser's Challenge And at tho Canal Price, .1 and tllc. A. i v A A A A A kAAAAArAAr.iArA d. Ta A? iTTrT-ur'n 'iTT wd Vyrryr Vr V W J JmJ55 Jt J 5 JW John A. Perl TTHDERTAKim Lady jualauftt m B. BAHTLCTT PhoaM M. 7 ma 47-W t f y f r t Y Y t Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y t Y t Y Y Y 7 Y Y Y Y t Y t Y THE PAGE MEDFORD'S LEADING THEATRE SUNDAY AND MONDAY January 31st and February 1st Afternoon and Evening A WONDERFUL SPECTACLE HISTORY OF THE World's Greatest War IN FIVE REELS OF MOTION PICTURES A tremendously thrilling, vividly sensational and entirely authentic history of tho gigantic war now raging in Europe. These marvelous motion pictures wore made on gruesomo European battlefields amid tho dismal ruins of old-world cities; in the blood.running, fighting trenches by tho bold and intropid Selig camera men in co-operation with the fearless and efficient Hearst newspaper correspondents. Y Y ? Y Y Y Y X Y Y Y Y Y t ? Y Y Y Y Y 7 ? i f Y Y Y Y J Y Most Spectacular Motion Pictures Ever Produced CJ:11'l:v.I.Five Reels of Exciting Battle Scenes Greatest History of the World's Biggest War Remember the dates, Sunday, January 31st, Monday, February 1st t i t . . SUNDAY Doors open 12:45, pictures start at 1 o'clook and run continually until midnight, MONDAY Doors open 10:45 a. m., pictures start at 11 o'clock and run continually until midnight. ADMISSION: Lower Floor, 26c; Balcony, 15c. Ohildron, 15c. NOTE Patrons can come in at any time during the pictures and enjoy them, as it is not a conneotocl story. -y t 1 Xl . I C: - T xw i i-aWA.Vtifcit