Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 13, 1915, SECOND EDITION, Image 1

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    i, i
Medford Mail Tribune
SECOND
EDITION
WEATHER o
Hlintrcrn tonight, m KrMr
Mav. .Vl MM. 4ft t ft. .!.
Korty-f
Daily
forty-fifth Year
MBDJTOItD. OIWION, TIirJfSDiW, MAY lt 1015
j 'ft
rntli Yrnr.
NO. l!
BRITISH LOSE THE BATTLESHIP GOLIATH, BUT SUBMARINE ENTERS THE SEA OE MARMORA
( .
TURKSTORPEDQ
Bill 1
N DARDANELLES
nnlllc&lili Goliath Sunk, COO Lives
LostBritish Submarine Enters
Sea of Marmora, Slnklitf Two
Turkish Gunboats ami Transport
Allies Make Process on He'lmSls.
LONDON, May 13, .1 P. m Tlio
llrlllih battleship Oolinlli linn been
torpedoed In (lio Dardanelles. It Is
feared 500 live Imvo been lout,
Announcement of tin Ion of tlm
(lollnth was mndo In tlm liouno of
commons Kill nflnriionii by Winston
Hptinrer Cliurolilll, first lord of tlm
admiralty.
Whllo no tlrinlti liiforiiinllon nj
pnrontly linn iM'eit.reft'lVeil as to tho
number of live lost, Mr. Churchill
rnlil ho feared It would reach r,on.
,Mr. Cliurolilll olso announced Hint
tlm llrltUh MUtiiiinrlmt IM) hml
pciirtrntcd through the Dardanelles
mnl Into the urn nf Mnrmorn sinking
twoTurkish gunboats nnd n Turkish
ttmisport.
Twenty officer anil 100 men of
Hit) Goliath crow were saved.
U Older Imlllcidilp
Mr. Churchill, on announcing llm
hum of I ho (lollnth said:
"Tlm (Jollatli vn torpedoed Irtwt
night In n torpedo attack li' do-
Mro)ur, whllo jirotccltriK tlm French
flnnk Just Inside (ho strait.
"Twenty officers nml 100 man
wnro saved, which 1 fear mean (tint
over 600 were lost.
"Tint nilmlrnl commanding nt tho
Dardanelles nlso telegraphs Mint tho
mihmnrltm IM I. which with ho much
daring venetrnlcd to tlm Hon of Mar
morn, has reported Hint slm sank (wo
Turkish gunboats and n largo Turk
ish transport."
Tint (lollnth was ono of tho olilor
Hrlllsli battleships of llio prdrciid
iioukIiI typo. Rim was liullt In 1K9K.
llrr complement win "GO num.
Tho (lollnth was 400 ft-ot long on
tlm water lino nml 7t fcotbeam.
Her displacement was lS.naoton.
Him was nruiPil with four 12 -Inch nml
12 fi.lneh guns. IS 12-pnund, six 3
pounders nnd two mnrhlno guns.
Kim hml four torpedo tubes.
Ilomluinlmciit lltiimc1
PA It IB, May 1.1, ft: 10 n. in. A
llnvns iltiipntrh from Athens says;
"An allied fleet reentered tho
Dordaneloii Init night nml bombard
il Dm fort nt Kllllil llnhr, Cl'innnk
Knli'iml nml NnKnrn. Tlm hombnrd
mi'iit wnH Interrupted nt 8 o'clock but
was resumed throo hours Inter nml In
IioIiik continued.
AlthoiiRh tho Turks liavo horn
HlronKly rolnforcort, tho bombard
ment from nllled warships la cans
Iiik them heavy losses nnd thoy aro
uteiullly IoMuk ground. Turkish
tieuchcH nro tilled with bodies."
YAQUI INDIANSIL
lIHBE AMERICANS
NOOALKS.JHounrn, Mox., Mny in.
Ynqul Indians, attacking n colony
of 05 Americans, IncludlnR women
nml children, nonr Kuporniun, nouth
of nunymnu, killed threo nnd wouiuN
ed Hovurul otharp, nccordliiR to Infor
mntloii received todny by KredorlcU
Hlinplrli, American cohhu! hero, Tho
bnttli) Htlll cnntluucB, It wiih stated,
tlm Amurlcnim HtrlvliiK douperntuly
to keep tho Indiana from ronchluR
tholr homes,
FIGHTING ON BETWEEN
VILLA AND 0BREGQN
, KL lAR0,.Tcx Mnv 1.1. It1iltiiK
'linn Ik'riiii liwceu llio Villa nml Oh-
ii'KOit fori'dri eiihl iiiul went of Leon,
hluln of Oumijuulo, ui'corilln In u
inuKNujin today froin YMIu'h heiiiliUiir
terrt nt Loon. 11 wnn slnleil OIu'okoij
V'liH vemilfleil to. tliu ennt, losing UOO
IsllliHl. '
UN
H
1 43.500 SLAVS
Russians Deny Any Such Losses
French Claim Great Gains on West
Front Cossacks Win Victory on
Dukowlna Frontier Battle Is in
Progress In Gnlicla.
.ONMHIS, Mnv l.'l. Tlmflennnn
war office ntiiiuiiiici'il IihIiiv Hint in
the i nl liylilniu' in (Inlii'in mnl
ItllKHillll I'olniiil I l.'l. Illlll IIii Iihh
Iiiul ln'iii ciiilurcil, II nli.11 Kliiii-f.
Hint (1!) minimi nml -'' niiii'liini' yiiux
hml lireii lii (.en rimii Hie iihimix
nml Hint Hie vicluioii Au-lriun nnd
f JiTtiiuii fiiices I'liiiliiiniiitf tlicir nil
vniice eiilwuril in flulicla, lire im'
iiiiniai'liiiiif l lie fiirtii'MK of Prremyxl.
The IVciieli wnr nffiei hiiiioiiiiitiI
Hml itt'-iM liad litt'ii won in Hie
new ipff'iiiM' mmemcnl of Hie nllii-
Jiih( Miutli of Hie I'iciii'Ii lionlcr. il
ix mi Id the Kreueli exteriln.V en d 11 red
Hie fori nl Notre Dnini de Lorclle
Willi ninny IreneliiM; Hie villiiRe of
Cnreue.v nml inoxl of tlm illnue of
Xeuville, nml Hml liumlreilH of (Icr
itiniiH were Imyouettiit nml l.'iUI) tiikeu
lirioiieix.
Ilattle In Kallcln
A iliiimlciufjiun Tnnmw, (Inliciu,
unye llie cienUnlllo in llml reuum in
nenriiiK n eomduMlon pluioe. Terrifie
fiRlitiui; I'liiilinut'o lo Hie cnt of Tar
uotv. Aloii llm CurimlliiaiiH front
Hie AiiHlritui claim llicir udvnnce Iiuh
plneeil llm Hii4innh in ilnnser of be
ins: Mirnmnili'il,
An AtlieiiK ili-palcli rnori1 n dc
eiili'il iiilvnnce of Hie lltilidi nml
French lniiw nloui; the (lallimli pen
iiiMiilii. Home icHirti e'n claimed
Hie nei'iiimlioti of certain height
which would iupiiii Hint the entire mm
Insula ww miller eontrol of tin in
vmlerx.
At two pointH on the wewleni line
of oMriiliou, offensive nmvenienli
nn miller way. The finl, initialed
hv the (lennans. m naiiist Hie Hrit
Wi, Kreneli nnd llelj-inu force near
Vren, while Hie ceind i Hie punliinir
of French lronp aKiiinl the (lor
maiiN lo Hie north of Arrn.
Coikjickk Win Victory
On (he llukowiuu frontier I'ctro-
Krai! repoiN a hrilliiuit sueccsn won
by llm KiiKHimi (Vtonaekx envalrv ovc
the Auhtnau mlanliy. llm Itiiinii
horiieinen, foreiiiR their wnv tliroiij;!'
a hvr'w of barbed wire entani-lcmcnlK,
iIIkIoiIrciI the AuMiiuu fiom their
lines of Irenehei nml eapluied 'J000
prinonerH, a hallery of ipiiefc-fiiim;
L'lins. Hcverul t-earcbllbli and a
whole htrinir of fnUhons.
KiiHsia nilmiU that the Autro-
flennan offenivo in Mill prneeedini:
in wchtein (lalleia, while leiina
i'IiiIiiih that tlm IltiHhtnii reheat in fnnl
lii'coiiiiiiL' a rout, witli tlm iuvadcrx
mffcriiiir enonnoim losei,
NOT PRESBYTERIAN
IWULADISMMMA, Mny 13. Union
Homlimry, locntod nt Now York lins
ceased (0 ho "loRlcnlly In nny senso
a Prcsbytorlnn luatltutlon an dlstlnR
ulshed from any other donomtnn
Hon," according to n report which
will bo submitted to tho Prosbytorlnn
Konoral nsRombly In Hochostor, N, Y
this month by tho commlttco appoint
ed at tho Kenernl auHombly lit Atlan
ta two yearn oro. Tho commlttco ap
pointed lo InvostlRnto tho legal, oc
(doHlaRtlcnl and doctrinal stntim of
that liiHtliutlou points out In Its re
port mndo publlu bora today that It
wan not appointed 0 mnko nny rcc
ommcmlatlonH hut merely to report
Itn fludluRs to tho gonornl ussombly,
TURKS TO SEND ALLIES'
SUBJECTS INTO WAR ZONE
LONDON, Mnv 1.1, I:-"'" i. mv
cfti'illiifr to advices iviiehinir hero from
Coiixlinitinonlo. tlm Turkinh autlmH-
Hon aro tlucalcnini; to Heiiil into tho
wur wino on tlm (lulllpoli peninsula
all tlm DriliKli nml Fienuh mthjeub in
TuikOy. . m
TAKEN CAPTIVE
WILSON'S NOTE
ON LUSITANIA
WIRED BERLIN
Guarantees Demanded That Su!ima
rlno Attacks on Merchantmen Car
ryhifi Neutrals Cease and That Rep
aratlon Be Made (or Violations of
American Rlyhts In War Zone.
WAHIIINOTON, May 3. Picul
dent Wllnon durlUK tlm forenoon to
day put the flnlahliiR touches on tlm
note 10 he ilcRpntclmil during (ho dny
llo (lertuaiiy ilnmandlng guarnntfy
that nllnckH on. merchnutmen carry
ing uon-comlmtnulft shnll end, and for
reparation for violations of American
rights In tlm wnr zone.
The note will not tm mndo public
hero until ufler It has been put In
rode, which probably will bo Into to
dny. nml when (he document has
marled on'IU way lo llerlln.
Few changes are bellovoil to Imvo
been made In the document, tlm main
principles as outlined to (he cahlnol,
on Tuesday, being maintained. Whllo
couched In friendly terms, It Is firm.
Xi Coiii-m' OiiOlneil
It does not say what steps will bo
taken or what rourso will bo pursued
In the events of an unfavorable re
ply, but Indicates that tlm United
Hlntes will spnro no pnlns. either by
diplomatic representations or other
wise, to obtain nn acquiescence In Its
position.
Tlm text of llm note was eagerly
awaited by official Wnililimtun. Tho
unofficial outlines published today
lucroiish(bu mulety to lunrit tho ox.
act phraseology of the document. I)I
plomatlstii wero especially Interested
In (he text which they wero prepared
lo cable to their governments as soon
ns copies could bo obtained.
It Is known positively that tho
United Slates government has had no
conversations cither In Washington
In the foreign capitals with other gov
ernments concerning tho noto or tho
course that will bo pursued, should
(lermany refuse to comply. In somo
quarters friendly to (lermany tho Im
pression prevailed Hint tho llerlln
government would nccedo to tho
American demands nnd stnto Its ox
Hctntlnn Hint tho United States
would endeavor to securo tho unre
stricted passage of foodstuffs and
conditional 'contraband consigned to
the civilian population of fJormany.
Presented Tomorrow
When tho noto Is finally dispatched
to Ambassador flerard n copy of It
will bo delivered hero to tho German
embassy.
At I oVIocJc this nftcrnnon tho note
hail been cleared over llio telegraph
wires from Washington nml wiih
Marled on ils way over tlm cables. It
muni go by way of Gibraltar and
.Malta ami then to Home nnd by over
land lines to Vienna ami Merlin. Ah
a courtesy a copy is to he delivered
to Count llcniMnrfft the German am
bassador. Home timo this evening the
utato department will give out copies
for publication in tomorrow morn
ing's nowepnpers in tho Unit oil
Stnlcs.
THE tWRECKER OF THE
ik
.
4l
Typo of tho gnat new suhinnr
liuiin, it is hclievod, heeanso it was 1
Fuillicr, such Kuhmiu-incs had been a
:)00 foot in length mul cnvryiiiK four
I
1
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w v. iiiiiiisiiia T' ' 1 n'-x.
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vWsaHsBHIIsSlBWBBBBwBHHBsWlswBlsssMasswsBBi iliiiMil.vsil!nMPMrMl'ffl9nissMHMMlMMsMHMRM
MBASSADOR;HE SURE IS IN PUBLIC EKEn LEADER
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UB I .VtJDCRUOOU
HHjV Various
WM Iterntirfl. of Oer-
m 1" the lulled State..
r Hit crii- oer the Americans JoM.
V C . f,0ln l'lp Luxitanin, Uenintorfi is ver-
B f.vj much in the public eye.
- rjn
AUSTRIA AND ITALY
DDTuWlmDUAD
I 111 I Hill I'UiV ITnli
" ALONG FRONTIER
rni.VK, Italy, May 12. - F.verv
premration has been mndo for the
proclamation of a Mute ofxiege in all
llm AuMrinn territory which lionlcr
on Italy. The government already is
in tlm hands of the police and mili
tary. Italians wIkko homes are ia Aus
tria already have fled for safely
aeross the frontier in g,ront numbers.
It is cstmintcd that 10,000 hnvo left
Trieste alone, while the total will ag
gregate 120,000. Large contingents
of Austrian troops are constantly ar
riving nt Trieste ami points in Gonr.
nml Grndi!cn, It is asserted in mili
tary circles hero th.it Austria hat
been quietly gathering this new nnny
for pobxiblo opera! urns against Italy.
At somo points on tlm frontier Aus
trian ami Italian troops aro in such
close contact that they can sco each
other.
" 'it '
CUNARDSTEAMSHIF LUSIT
'$tLf"W''P
7 fir
!VJMi
inca of tho Gorman navy, literally undcr-water ilrcadnuughts. It was on 0
.100 miles away from n Herman mvval
otcd in
11 tho neighborhood wlicuu tho Lusitaiim went down. Tlm boat is belt
tovpudo tubw,
Tho pit'tuvo ubovo is
TO
TAX PAYMENT
CLKVKLAXI), O., Mnv 13. John
T. ltoekefoller won today nn impor
tant ietory in hi- fight to prevent tlm
collection of luxe on $;tl 1.000,000 in
crouul pnipeilyhy Cuyahoga coun
ty, .ludge .John II. Clarkp in (he
United .States district court hen
granted nn injunction sought by
Kockefcllcr to nv train Hie collection.
The Ihncs sonht nmounted to about
$1,. "00,000, including a penalty of f0
per cent for failure to pay when due.
Tim assessment was made in Feb
ruary, 10H, when lax commission
ers visited tho lfockefellcr summer
home nt Forest Hills here. Tliey al
leged Itookefeller had remained in tlm
county more than six months of tho
tax year, ami therefoiu under the
Ohio law was n resident of Ohio for
taxation purposes.
Judge Clarke decided that lloeke
feller'n contention that he intended to
leave Cleveland in October, 10KI, in
Mead of. remaining hero until Febru
ary, 1011, duo in tho illness of Mrs.
Ilockefeller and her sister, Mis Lucy
Spellinnu, was a valid 0x0110 ami did
not ituiko him nn Ohio resident under
tlm moaning of the law.
ANIA-GERMANY'S NEW SUBMARINE DREADNAUGHT
v
base, and only Ihu great now suhmev.
of such u aulmiiuino,
OB AN
STATES BARNES
Controllinn Factor In Party In New
York Was Senator Platt, Declares
Present Boss on Stand In Roosevelt
Libel Suit As Assistant, Only Did
Party's Dirty Wwk. ,
KVRACUSK, Mny 1.1. William
Marries today went on tlm witness
tnnd in the supreme court hero to
li'Mify an 11 witnc 1 111 bis own behalf
in his suit ngaitiM Theodore Koosr
velt. His coiium'I planned to hate
him answer allegation- made hv Col
onel Itoocvelt when he was on the
-tnnd, nml to ivc his vendor! of sev
eral incidents.
Mr. HnnicH niil he was the pub
lisher of the Kvcning Journal of Al
bany, nnd nt times had been llm edi
torial writer of that ncwniier. He
nl he was the re-pon-iblc cdilor of
the paper. After Icllinjr of hi-t early
political career incc lSSl), Mr. Harney
said:
On Klulc Ciiinmltleo
"I was a member of tho state com
mittee rnmi 18!)2 until 11)1(1. In 1808
I was npM,iutcil ehainiiaii of the ex
ecutive committee hv Odcll. biter I
was appointed lo the committee on
oilier occasions. My activities were
confined to relieving- the chairman of
detail and doing work Hint was of no
purMc.
"While I was ehninaan I went to
the Fifth hotel every day, read the
mail and saw tropic who the chair
man of (ho committee did nut care (o
see."
Mr. Hanie mi id he was not the
controlling factor in the imrty's di
rection, ndding that Senator Platt
was the state leader.
Under further questioning, Mr.
Unrncs said he first met Colonel
Iloosevelt in the fall of 1898. Mr.
Ilnnios centinued:
Meeting Itooscvelt
"l remember meeting Colonel Itoos
cvelt on a train before ho was in
augurated. 1 don't recall I ever met
him on a train aflcr that. After ho
was in office I called ou him to pay
my rc-pects, as was customary. I
did not see hiin nt the capital for
some time. Mv health was poor and
I pent moM of my time at my house,
my office and tho Albany country
club. I was then surveyor of cits-
toms, having been appointed by Fres.
itlent McKinley. I wns subM'tiuchtlv
nppointcil to that office by President
Uoosevelt. I don't recall seeing Gov
cnior Uoosevelt duriug the first two
months he was m office, except
twice. I Imvo told you tho first oc
ension, I wont to tho executive man
siou to sqe him. Tho visit was at his
request. I found Hint hu wanted to
discuss with mo somo appointments
I had made. Ho then discussed the
election."
Mr. Itarncs said lie hml read the
record of Colonel Itoosovclt's testi
mony, hut Mr. Ivins withdrew "tem
ponirily" tho question nsked before
icccss.
(Continued on i'ago 6)
tin
of theso craft which sunk tho Lusi-
rsibles eoulil attempt sucli cruising.
oved to hu tho U.I1U, a uraft marc than
HAYWOOD TELLS
W.W. PLANS
Ideal Era of Freedom Described as a
Wwld in Wnlch On IMm Welri
Control All Means of Pr&JwtUw
General Strike te Carry Out InIs
Expected.
WASHINGTON', May 13.-ilBqHliy
into tho relations between capital and
labor was contlnniMt tmlar lfar (''
federal industrial relations earn mis
sion with William D. Ifnywoed, sire-ary-trcasurer
of the Industrial Work
ers of tho World, again on tins wit
ness stand.
Mr, Haywood told the eemMtotfeR
of an Ideal era of freedom for whlek
labor is striving, which be dMcrild
ns n world In which oho nnlsn would
control all means of production, la
which there bo no "capital." Thl
could bo brought about only by
means of Implacable war between
capital and labor, by means of a
strike, confiscation of goods and
production.
( cue nil Strike Soitglit
Commissioner WeJastack contin
ued his examination of Haywead and
developed that when the general
strike to wklck the I. W. W. teeka
forward as a means of revolution
izing society, bad taken plaee thra
would be no government, stRtr
national.
"The workers Bf U6 .ntry,"
ilayweod said, "would be efjsaRHHxt'
Into Industries Instead of cities sad'
states. As a citizen of Industry every
worker, man, woman ami chlbl.
would have n vote in fixing the con
ditions under which he would work.
At present labor has practically no
voice In the affairs of the country."
Keep Plugging Along
"Hut you can not change the
whole world overnight," said Com
missioner Welnstock. "What are
you going to do in the meantime?"
"It may not come for 100 years."
replied Haywood. "Meantime w
will keep plugging along with this
class struggling, hope for the great
chango tomorrow, but working fer
It, even It it takes a century."
Mrs. J. Dorden Harrlmaa asketl
Haywood why, If he opposed war, he
favored violent measures In labor
disputes.
"Tho working class is the only
class entitled to any consideration,"
said tho witness, "and as 1 have said,
I believe any tactics that will ac
complish our purpose are right."
Unemployment lrolkiH
Questioned by Commissioner
O'Conncll, Haywood jsaid that unem
ployment was one of the most press
ing causes of induMrial unrest nnd
suggested Hint the government extend
ils reclamation, river ami harbor itii
pnivcmeut and other puhliV works in
order to nffonl opportunity for em
ployment. President Frank J. Goodiiow of
Johns Hopkins university told the
commission Hint tho lawyers and
judges today were not generally qual-
itied to consider economic and social
questions uri-iug in labor litigation.
Ho expressed tho beliof, however, ihat
"every Ainorenii citizen as n general
proposition can securo his rights in
llm courts faiily noil evenly,"
GERMAN AMERICANS
SUPPORT PRESDENT
a
UOCHKSTEIt, N. Y,, May J3, At
the conclusion of a meeting 4 Hut '
Gormnn-Amerlcan Alliance last IM .
President Wllllem Otta issued th
following statement;
"Although the ergSBlwllWiW
not take definite aetkw, lb MMts
ment was Ih favor t nnMlttfMl
support of President Wilst lit
whatever action ha takes. ;Tmi M
man-Americans or tbk stty KffLlkMI
tral In every raspsst, $4'im pt
their soelatlM will Una
taxonlstk to tup policy of ttv ,
lstratloM.E '
FOR MILLENIUM
.1 vg
4C
'!"
it