Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 04, 1915, SECOND EDITION, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i"irra-n
aagMtf!
pW0PwllW0fflw01
-7RW7!
i T -fn;
i-Kws-'
D"!M
.it' r
H- 'llr
' pxgebix:
WEOTORP WTOI TRTBUNB. MEDFOKD. OBEOOy. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1015 .
GERMANS TOLD
FIRST DUTY IS
LOYALTYTOU
.S.
EC
B
NT HARBOR
MEANS LOW RATES
TO SAN FRANCISCO
"ABOLISH THE PRIVATE ARMIES OF BIG BUSINESS!"
FAMOUS HERO SHERIFF OF BAYONNE
DEMANDS
OIL STRIKE
Hyphenated Americans Arc Roundly
Scored for Attitude Taken by VII
lard Germans Came to America to
Escape the Very Militaristic Au
tocracy They Now Uphold.
STOCKHKIltfJK, Mns.. Ht-pt. !.
Oswald GurrUon Villanl, ptibliMhur of
tho Now York Evening Post, in nn
ndilrefiH toilny ilerliirrd tlint tho
niovciiH'tit among American citizens
of foreign, especially of Gorman iln-hci-iiI,
to form bodies npart from the
uilizonship presented a fnr-roaching
(lomi'Htiu isNiie which the American
people must i!0it(ii(!i.
Mr. Villanl tuiid an importnnl fnc
for in the oontinuunoo of tlio "Aincr
ican moiling pot" Iny in educating
immigrants to the propor duties of
citizenship.
He nnid lie was "burn on flemuin
soil, of a Oennnn father."
No Divided Ctllzentililp
Korofgners becoming American eil
icnu tliould be mado to understand,
Jlr. Villard nnid, that them can ho
no' divided citimiHliip or loyalty or
nlleginnco under the Ameriean flat;;
that no one can accept political oh
ligntiniis hern while at limit loyal to
nuother hoeial hvMiui, entity or code
of lawH.
Mr. Villard ipioted from an address
made by Carl Sehurz, In which Mr.
Koluirr. nnid Hint no mntterhow warm
the affections Ocniinu-AincrioniiH had
held for their native land they had
never permitted their affections to in
terfere, with their duties ns American
citizens, nor to reduce them to ilso
their power in Ameriean polities for
foreign ends,
"How amazed Carl Schnrz would
he to return to the United Ktntos to
day," nnid Mr. Villard. "He would
find t uIiih horror that nt Huh mo
ment the presence on thin soil of (lor-niim-Ainnncaiis
adds fuel to the
Humes of bitterness.
Would Amuo Kchiirz
"Natuially Kcliurz would Menu the
horizon for hoimo dirtoriminatory itct
on the part of our government, r
Miinn mnnitcstntion or racial preju
dice ngninst (Icrmaii-AiiicricaiiK. Hut
he would Hud nothing of the hint.
"Tho mighty convulsion we are wit
nessing, lie would nseorf'iiin to he due
entirely to foreign complication, to
a determination on the part of our
Ooriunn-AinorioniiH to stand li.v their
fiilherlaiul through thick and thin,
right or wrong.
"What could iimnze him more than
to find unnumbered Hermans who, liko
himself, eauio to thin country to os
cape tho very militarislio auloeraey
they now uphold, today denouncing
the nation that adopted and Hhcltcr
til, fed and clothed them?"
COUNTY
TO
OPEN
WEDNESDAY
The annual Jackson county fair
will begin Wednesday, September H,
and eloso Saturday, September 11,
and there will bo Ich of liurseraeing
mid more of baseball tbau in previous
years. Tlicro will be plenty of Iiorse
meing, hut it will take a back seat.
There will ho three days of oNoitiiig
baseball, instead of thieo days of
liutlcbs horseraciug. The hall gunio
and othor attractions will lie for one
price of admission, No admission will
lit) charged for autos and vehicles.
Littoral premiums have been offered
for tho products of tho Hold and or
chard. There will bo a children' ex
hibit. One of the features of tho wok
will bo tho relay race, Tho fair
iroiuihO to ho tlui bot in the history
of the county, with the promise of a
largo ateiidaiico from country point.
WATER SURVEY MADE ,
( Contluueu troni pngo ono)
Rurvlco and etato authorltlon for nld.
and though tho fund provided has
UHiially boon used for arid land pro
jects Instoad of settled dlstrlotn, nn
oxcoptlon was inudo for tho bouoftt
of tho valley, whoso neod of irriga
tion aid UsreulUed own In Washing
ton. To sooure tho co-operation of tho
roelHinatloH aorvlci), Jt was necommry
lo nocure tho approval of Hocrotary
of tho Intorlor Franklin K. lno,
which was readily forthcoming,
through the assistance of Senators
Chawberlttla and Lane anil tho co-op-erattoit
lf Governor Wlthycombo,
Mate Engineer Lewis and other offl
IIY JOHN MOItTLMKIl
Tlio Imperative necessity of cheap
transportation to tidewater for tho
resources of Southern Oregon will
benr clono scrutiny and deep thought.
Now to get nt this subject In n somo
whnt comprehensive manner let iih
coitHlder what tho dovcloiitncnt o(
Home of our moro Importnnt resources
of this section would mean to us iih
compared with other localities where
dovoloprncnt hns nlrondy tnken place
under low schedule of freight rates.
.Stoiunvnrw
A crock or jug manufactured nt
Redwing, Minnesota, Is retailed nt
nny point In that stnto for ton cents
per gallon, In tho Itogua river vnllcy
nt 2i cents por gallon. Thcro Is n
largo payroll In Hedwlng, 500 men
being employed In tho business. All
glazed sower pipes, crockB and Jugs
iiroiI on tho Pacific coast comos from
thoro. Wo hnvo tho heat of clay for
making stonnwnro and conl to tiro It
with, but lack of cheap transporta
tion makes It Impossible to manufac
ture hero, tho ferlght on stonowaro
from this soctlon to Snn Francisco
or Portland being much greater than
from Hedwlng, but with low rates
to Crescent City, n factory located
hero would supply all tho Pacific
coast stntoH.
CopHM
Tho payroll In tho Iluttn, Montuiin,
copper district Is more than J 1,000,-
000 por month, yot loented botween
tho Itogtio rlvor vnlloy and Crescent
City Is tho greatest and richest cop
per oro bolt In tho world, nnd If n
harbor was constructed at Crescent
City nnd n railroad built from this
district to that point thoro would bo
moro mon employed In this copper
district tlinn tnoro nro now mon,
women nnd children In Jackson nnd
Josephine counties.
Irrigation
Thoro Is n strong movement on
foot for Irrigation In tho Hoguo river
vnlloy so that moro nlfnlfn, grain mid
fruit can bo rnlscd nnd not n thought
as to what tho producer could do with
his hay nnd grain, Thursday flnu
wheat wnH snlt) hero nt 70 emits per
bushel for chicken fcod. Alfalfa can
not bo shlppod to Snn Francisco, its
tho rato of freight, 111.00 por ton,
lenves nothing for tho growor, but
with n rata of .1.00 por ton via Cres
cent City, great quantities could bo
shlppod to that market with profita
ble results to tho growor. Now If
wo don't got busy and llfo ourselves
out of this high freight condition nil
wo ran hope to do Is to ralso ntock
which can bo driven out of tho coun
try.
Lumber
Consider tho Imhiouso quantities of
lumber Europe will requlro to build
up with when tho present wnr Is over
nnd hero wo nro with over 200,000,
000,000 root of tho finest timber In
tho world In this district anil totally
uutablo to furnish Kuropo with a sin
gle foot of It without it hnrbnr at
Crescent City and a railroad to It.
Development
With cheap transportation to tide
water wo would seo capital como Into
this dUtrlct for safe Investment, our
resources develop and tho big ranches
out up Into ftvo nnd ten aero tracts
with a family living nnd working
on each ono of them. Tho Iron In
dustry nt lllriulnlmin, Alabama, fur
nlshog n payroal of moro than $800,
000 per month. Nn such a combina
tion of Iron, roal mid limestone exists
west ot Colorado In tho U. S. as wo
have here In this dUtrllt mid there
Is not an Iron blunt furnace in opera
tion west of Pueblo, Colo. Hud wo
cheap transportation to tldnuntcr
great quantities of heavy Iron and
Hteol could bo manufactured In this
district and exported to forolgn coun
tries. Tho city of Toronto, Ohio, depends
entirely upon tho payroll of the great
output theor of brick nnd tile, which
could bo mado hero nnd tho Pacific
coast btntos would furnish n big mar
ket If wo hud u low rate of freight
to Crotcont City and n hurhor thoro
which could handle our business.
Flro hrlok could bo mudo horo us well
as In St. Louis, but freight rates nro
much Ions from Toronto, Ohio, or
St. Louis, Mo., to San Francisco,
than from Itogua river valley points.
Timber
The S00 billion feet of timber In
this district, ono of our greatest ro
houroos. Is bottled up by high freight
rattvs only to 1m uustod by getting
ovor-rlpo or by flro.
ltallixiad to tlailxir
A harbor at C'riMcont City would
moan a rullroud from Hoguo rlvor
valley to that point and would foreo
linns of railway from tho ait luto
tho vnlloy, then that part of Oregon
oast of us, Northern Nevada, and
Southern Idaho would make groat
MTiigroM In sottloment nnd develop
ment and prove a grout mid oomtunt
market for much of our products.
arl(sl Industrie
We are raupi) ou'rburdeued with
Man Whom John D., Jr., Twice Found
"Hard to Manage" Tells Truth
About Standard Oil Gunmen
Gives Mall Tribune Correspondent
First Interview Since He-Won Fame
(My KBNKHTH W l'AYNE.1
ALLKNHOIIST,' N. .!., Sept. !.
'ITho'iirini'il strike wiui d is a' Wanton
iliuruYror! Tlio ofnefut who employ
him arc niorallv guilty of his crimes.
The tinned gun id must be hauUhcd
troni America by federal statute!"
It isn't a labor leader speaking, but
the voice of law and order itself, is-suing-
from the mouth ot the most fa
hums police executive in the Cnitod
Stnlc's today Sheiilf Kugcnc 1 Kin
kead of Now Jersey- bases the oc
diet upon his own immediate experi
ence in stemming the Itockcfcllcr
brand of tttrikv warfare whoso recent
bloody outburst in Hayonne, V. .1.,
would have grown into n horror
worn thnn Ludlow but for the hero
Ism of Kiukcnd himself.
Ah long ntf John Lnwson of th
United Mine Workers lies in prison
out in Colorado, convicted of' murder,
mid as long as the officials and gun
men of the Itockufrllor Colorado reg
ime go free, the question of tho em
ployment of private gunmen to t"r
rorize strikers remains one of the
most vital problems before the Amer
ican people.
For his handling of the recent
Hayonne strike Sheriff Kinkeml lias
won national fame, bccoino n prob
able cundidnto for tho Jersey governorship.
"Our wealthy men nro nfrnid."
exclaimed Kiukcnd, starting at tho
root of tho mutter. "Their paid gun
men nro cowards who begin the
shooting first."
"Hut how can wo prevent tho
Itoekofcllers mid their like from us
ing gunmen in strike troubles " I
asked.
"Hy federal law," snapped Kiu
kead. "Congress should pass nu act
somewhat similar in principle to the
Mann white slave net, prohibiting tho
interstate (rininportntion of privately
tinned guards destined for the de
fense of properly. Most of the
guards are picked up from the gut
ters mid disreputable saloons of the
big cities. Foiining tlicni into a pri
vate a nny to bo sent from state to
slate ut cull has become a wicked
source of vast prolltHilo certain so
called 'detective' agencies."
Sheriff Kiukcnd is unquestionably
tho most popular personality in Hie
east today. His auinzing wild west
porformuueos with gnu and I'M, in
quelling n reign of terror that had re
sulted in the killing of four strikers
and tlio wounding of seventy men,
women nnd children ! indiseriminnto
shooting on the part of John D.'s gun
men, have been reported nil over the
country. Today he is mentioned for
Cnitod States senator, ns well us for
SERVIA FAVORABLE
T
0C0NGESSI0NSF0R
BALKAN
LEAGUES
&miz?Kz:
-Wf
i tiiAjjtu.tKi iwj
rKrnttr&vzmmzzwmmmi
Victim of "private" ivarefaro. Flying tho flag of tnico nftcr a striker,
scon lying on the railroad truck, was shot down by "gunmen" ummI In tlio
"private nniilos" (luring the Colorado trouble. Inset Is a lectins of Sheriff
!:. K. Klukead of New Jersey, who, nftcr settling tho Hayonne Slandaixl Oil
strike demand federal laws to alsiIWi "private armies."
LONDON, Sept. I. In tho absence
of marked changes on nny of the bat
tle fronts, tho Kngllsh public has
again turned Its attention to tho dip
lomatic sltuntlon In tho near cast.
It Is announced officially nt Nlsh
that the fluid draft of Serbia's answer
to tho note of the quadruple cntcnto
Is ready and will bo presented short-
Jly. It Is presumed acre uiai mu ;-
ply on the whole will Do rnvoramo m
regard to concessions to Bulgaria.
Advices from Sofia Indlcato that
unlcFs tho wholo of Macedonia is con
ceded there Is llttlo chance of ro-cs-tabllshmcnt
of tho Ilalkan league.
Intonso activity of the artillery con
tinues to bo roportod from tho fight
ing front In Frnnce. Paris alludes
to tho lost engagements as of partic
ular violence.
Mllltnry observers nbroad Incllno
to the belief Hint tho persistent boin
bnrdmout of German positions pros
nges nn offenslvo move by tho entcnto
allies In tho west.
Potrograd, In Its latest statement,
ndmlts a retirement of tho rtusslnns
to tho north bank of ho Dvinn In the
sector whero tho despcrato strugglo
to protect Hlgn and tho rood to Pe
tfrograd Is In progress.
North of Vllna, where tho German
linos hnvo apaprcntly mado llttlo
progress of Into, tholtusslnns claim
and to hnVehtfoiaohmhmhmhinhmh
to hnvo continued offenslvo opera
tions nnd to hnvo gained ground
ngnlnst tho Germans, with tho cap
ture of more than n dozen mnchlno
guns and 300 prisoners.
GARONER WINS
AMATEUR GOLF
CHAMPIONSHIP
the governorship of New Jcr-cy.,
It just happens that in 181HI Kiu
kcnd was a football star on the
eleven of Hrown university, and John
1). Itockcfcllcr, Jr., was umiiagcr of
the team. Tlio story is told h,v Have
Fultz, nuother player, that one day
Itoekofellor said to him, "A wwiidcrful
player, that Kiukcnd, Hut don't jou
think bo's hard to manage?"
And John I). Rockefeller's Stand
ard Oil company of New Jersey has
found out totlav 'again that F.ugcuc
Kinkead is a hard iiiau to manage.
He has openly told the truth' about
the Rockefeller giuuimn m u way
which is ilisconccrting.to the men who
mu accustomed to the humble sub
servience of state i.ofticialrt mid
judges in Colorado.
Jn Colorado the princd guards
waged their bloody war unhampered,
mid some of tlio striken, who woeu't
theliisolvoH murdered nro now being
convicted of iniirdor.
Hut in New Jersey Sheriff Kin
kend, admitted to be nb-olttlelv lair,
Inys practically all tlio guilt lor tlua
local strike killings similar to, those
in Ludlow, upon the shoulders of the
company gunmen and tho officia's
who hired them, lie himself arrc-Md
tho Standard Oil guards and rcit
crated today that he would do his ut
most to force their vigorous prosecu
tion. "Ono of those gunmen actually
threatened' me, mi officer of the law,
with his revolt er," Kiukcnd told me
today, "and nil the country has been
told how they kept up n fusilado on
the strikers' homes nil one night, mid
at various times fired unprovoked in
discriminutelv into the crowd,
"For such crimes I think the of
ficials who hire them. nro morally to
bin me."
How will the Rockefellers answer
these accusations of tho sworn state
officer! .
BIG GOLD HILL DELEGATION
COMING TO COUNTY FAIR
Word has been received by S. I.
Hrown, secrotnry of the Jackson
County Fair from Gold Hill Hint
a largo delegation will bo down
In nutoB nnd on tho train nnd will
bring their band on Saturday, Sopt.
1 1, which has been designated ns Gold
Hill, Hoguo River nnd Central Point
any nt tho fair. A big delegation will
also bo down from Central Point.
The schools of tho county will be
closed Friday and all school children
will bo admitted freo.
DKTROIT, Sept. i. Robert A.
Gardner of Chicago, won tho national
amateur golf championship hero this
afternoon for tho second tlmo. Ho
defeated John A. Anderson of Mount
Vernon, N. Y., In tho flnnl match, G
and 4.
Gnrdnor's ability to put when ho
had to, this nftgrnoon gnvo him an
easy victory. Veteran golfers said
that soiiio of Gnrdnor's drives wero
tho longest they hnd over scon. Ilia
long drives gnvo him n margin on nl
most every green.
Ho was ono down nt tho beginning
ot the afternoon round. Squaring tho
match on tho twontloth holo, Gnrdncr
ook the lend on tho 21st nnd wns
novcr bended. Anderson, for tho
first time In tho tournament, wan
visibly norvotis nnd continually vna
In trouble. His Inst hopo died when
ho sent his ball Into tho crook which
guarded tho thirtieth grocn. That
mado Gardnor four up.
They halved the 31st nnd tho 32d
wont to tho Ynlo nthleto without a
serious strugglo.
Heavy brush fires nro burning on
Foots nnd Gall crooks todny, no tim
ber being menaced hy tho flnmos. A
sqund of men nro being hold lit read
iness by the stnto forestry Borvlco for
emergencies. Tho fires In tho Trail
and Hutto Falls districts nro all tinder
control.
Wh&
m 'ulUllll .M
i : aurauasi
WtttWPJT j&
"" M'Fr
10
,ii"Tl0
Smokers of
Turkish Trophies
Cigarettes fifteen years ago
oro smokers of
Turkish Trophies
Cigarettes today!
anltpTtunCtpirttetttilifiGM
cheap electrical power nnd raw inn
lorlul of o hundred kinds can ho pro
duced nnd mnnufirtured hero with nil
tho Pacific const states for a umrkct,
not to mention eastern nnd export
IiiisIuchb via tho Panama canal, If wo
hud low rates of freight to tidewater
a harbor nt Crescent Cty means
Just that. .
Tho (iicnteM OpMrtuully
Should wo overlok this great op
portunity 'which Is knocking at oui
door? Tho Hoguo river vnlloy woul
dorlvn untold benefits from n bar.
bor at Crescent City, because of It
central location to tho vast rcsourceJ
nature so lavishly bestowed to tht
wonderful district.
Can (Jet What Wo Want
The government appropriation fol
tho harbor Improvement at Crescent
Cit) can bo obtained If wo will alp
take nn Interest in tho project mid
futthrully work for It. Wo wanted
nn automobile road to Crater Lake
and wo sot It. Wo wanted n paved
boulevard through Jackson county
over the Siskiyou mountains; It cost
a halt million dollars, wo worked
fnlthfully for It, and we got It. Wo
can get tho harbor nt Crescent City
and'n railroad' to it by fnlthfully
working lor It. Do ou ronllio that
tho people In this district hnvo not a
ehnnra In the world to get tuck ono
half of tho money they have put In
uiiIom cheap transpoVtntlmi'Ho tide
water U tuKuirqd and It bohoovea us
all to help the Live. Wires In Cres
eont City and ('.runts paw to got nn
appropriation from our government
for tho harbor nt Crescent City nnd
then we must all work for u railroad
to It. It Is not unrouMuublo to su
that tho Horuc river valtay would In
flvo yours after tho harbor and rull
road wus cowpUtod. kv n papula
tion of at la 1 30,900 poaple.
FORD OFFICIAL SCOFFS
AT CRATER LAKE
Mr. Cornell en ui tmif lio hud been"
urged to nrnke the tup by K. O. Me
Cormick, vjce-preulent of tho South
ern Pacific, and lh.it it wiin very dis
appointing. Thev lelt their private
cur at Klamath Falls find autocd to
the lake from that nli. Mr. CouziiiN
daughtur-iii-Iaw iis dl most t the
trip
I WILL GIVE $1009
If I FAIL to CURE CANCER TUMOR i t-ui
boferi it POISONS itti (Utii ir tttKta tt BONE
WithwIKmlecrPJin
No PAY Until CURED
MRIMIN GUAilANUE
pliimt. 5 S i-3
A'iv TUMOR. IUMP t
SORE on lliolli", f- 3
or ti o .1 t I
11
CANCcn, ' 1 r
r UK Hill I l'S'J
I0-PACC BOOK ii
KiirK, 1. t. 1
tuomau. S.RitllMI
vm.J
SW&ti
4
4
O
o
4
o
4
o
4
O
4
4
4
O
V 4 A
$
i 4 s!f
'-
4
i
4
i
V 4
V 4
O
4
o
4 j
4
o
4
We f nkc groat pleasure
in announcing
That the well-Known firm of C. 111. Gales has entered the
employ of the Savage Tire Company as .Factory Distrib
utors for Mcdford.
A eomploto stock of strictly fresh, highest grade Savage
Tiros and Sin ago Rod-Orafite Tubes is now at the store
of the above iirm, ready to moot the needs of the most
exacting motoiist.
.No mad too avago for
SflVME
TPFG
' " .Direct from factory to you.
liumombor, when vou buy Savages yon get the best tires
and tubes that it is possible to make.
You deal direct with tho factory, a California firm of
known responsibility, through our own .Kaetorv Distributors.
You pay loss than you would have to pay for lower tirade
goods.
Vou pay exactly what every other motorist pavs for the
same Savage Tire or Tube. '
Whether you call or mail your order, you get the same
jjiuiiijh mm cure 111 1 auemion.
yot acquainted with Savage Tiros and Tubes todav
j, Ask fgrSavage Tire Uook tmd Savage liod-Cirafite Tul
AnyLUMPmWOMAN'SBREAST
isCANCER"
rrt
LONDON. S,4. I. Tin. douth ,.t
Cnrdinul CImihIius FruHeU MkjMrv is
aaaii'iiit'tHt in ti lip.it. u I,, ill,. 1', i,
trl e tn-u. Autttt. u unt.i
Oil,
w.
r..
' 1
vnsl.H ! arm
4 Mil J QUICKLY
1' S f (K'tt
i ijr v uiu( ill
r v until
Dr. & Mrs. Dr, CHAHLEY & CO. SMtfJfB
Stiicoy ntni e4ttt Cinttr SMottttt Uvi"
4340 ( 436E Valno St. Sin francttco. Col.
KiNOLY MAIL THIS ' m m tJJ CANCtB
l'HICIW
P. t. II. .Veaixxst Itrum-h or IM-
trllmtor. Tenus: C. O. 1).
" llod
IMuln Suvago Graflto
Sl.o Tread Grip Tread Tubes
:tx:t 9AQ Hl-6 i 10
MxlH 11.10 1S.SS !.90
iZk IS. 10 18.00 1.10
i.txl 17.40 SI.S0 X.31
.'llxl , 17.90 I0.S0 4.00
:0! 1S.S5 tl.SI 4. to
35x44 "SO IS. 10 1.10
SKxtVj 15.00 IS. 10 I.S0
37x4 S6.0S 10.01 130
37x5 19.10 S 10 6.10
Adjustments on batU of 4100
HI lit
The Savage Tire Company
San Diego, Cal.
A. W. Savage, Pros. John I). Sprecklas. V. Proa
Hurry L. Titus. 2d V. P. Claus Sprocklo. Sec.
A. J. Savage, Troasuror.
Factory Distributor
C. E. GATES
Bedford, Oregon
Taliiiniae homo industrv. ,onov
-pent for Savage Tires stays on the
Pacific coast.
P 4
o
4
,o.
4
O.
4
, O
iV 4
4
4
o;
o
4
:e:
4
O
4
O
t 4
o
o
4
4
H