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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1916)
f POTE SIX ' MEDFORD MAIL TRTBTTNTC, MEDFORT). OREOOK. TUESDAY. 'ATTiFST 1.". Ifltfl RURA CREDITS BILL Fi TILLERS OF SOIL Details of Farm Loan Bill Explained Places Farmers in Position to . Borrow Money on Easier Terms Wlien Secured by Mortgages Re ' "if suit of Thorough Study. .. . .. Hy Sam T, lluli-s. ' WASHINGTON, Aug. 15. For the fii;Bt time l oi"" history the federal government lnm enacted u luw for the purpose of nroniotltiK the (Illum ing of the fiuinoin. That luw Ik now In cf fert. It Is called the federal farm loan act, and la the result of long limitation and for the reform, culled ly wrllern tind BpeakerH "rural rredlts." "The federal farm loan' net deals B-lth I he matter of liiitlliiK farmers nil over the United States In position to borrow . money on easier terms hen secured, hy inortKuties on their farms. It does not, deal w"h ,ii1k ness of loinliiR farmers money on their iniKer1iii;ed, promissory noles or on notes secured by chattel mort gages.. ConnresH felt tha,t this should lm a laler development. , ltcttci' l''iuniliiK,'Mon I'VxmI. The federul farm loan act Is simple In' principles and In purposes. The government and the luw's fiamors iope to jiut I lie huslness of farmiiiK on tt more liusliiess-ljle hasHtnUie end that this nation shall have,' more farming, and hotter farming and, therefore, more food, hotter food, cbeaped food, while the farmer him self shall, at the same time, find his business more prof liable. There are no opposltes In this statement. llotli propositions ore entirely feasible. The problem before the framcrs of the hill was to draw a luw which would work In America. The obstacles to a law exactly like that of Clor jnany, Franco or Italy are partly legal and partly in the fact that farmers In this country urc not situated economi cally or socially like those of Europe. The bill wus drawn with an eye to the benefit of the farmers, and with no other purpose, Onco In a while con gress does a good thing and this is one. No bill of which I have any knowledge, not oven the federal re nerve act, was ever labored over more unremittingly, more painstakingly. . Two commissions went to Europe to study the question hi fore any bill was drawn. The people of the Hulled Slates may hovo a good or a bad rilrul credit act; but It Is certuln tlhat It was honestly drawn, after long filnily on the part of hundreds of aide snail, and when finally passed wus as ood a hill as honest purpose, greut Btujdy and ability could make It. It Is jirobably Imperfect, however, unit will need amendment. alien' Will lie 11! KtNlcml Lund Hanks I'mler the federul farm loan act, mortgages will nut be held by Individ uals at all. Tlitiro wll I, e 12 federal banks, situated In different parts of the country, a good deal us the fed eral reserve bnukB are situated, and each of these federal land bunks will hold ull l,he mortBKBes Issued lu Us one-twelfth of the United Stales. The mortgages will nut be sold. They w ill be held by the system. Much federul land bunk will Issue land bonds se cured by the mortgages It holds. These laud bonds will be in different denominations, some as low us $!'.", so that any person with suvlngs amounting that t lint sum or more run Invest In lund bonds without having to' wait until he m-hii have a whole 10' wait unlll he eau buy u whole mortgage. These land bonds will lie safe. They 'will not be taxable. They w ill he m'. cured in three ways. First, by the endorsement of the federal land bank which Issues them, handling one twelfth or the Pulled Stales. Second, by all the other 1 1 federal laud hunks. Third, by the national farm loan as sociation, which Issues tliem In the first place, and which Is a co-operu-;tive organization of borrowing far mers In the vicinity of the land mort gaged. Fourth, by the land mort gaged, which must he worth at least, twice as much as the face of the mort gage, according to the appraisement of t!e loan committee of the associa tion and a government appraiser. ,.. (ioil um tiovceiimcnt IIoihLs. .. The guarantee of the local loan as taociatlon is bucked by a ' per cent guur.inly fund. One loan out of 20 might be a loss before this gnurunty fund would be used up. Altogether, it. looks as ir the lund bonds would be considered as good ns government .bonds but of course, the govern ment doeir not guarantee them. Tin' government, however, does .subscribe to the I stock of the federal land banks the 12 I mentioned provided that private capital does not INANCES take thu slock. They have $750, 000 capital each. Ten or more furms may establish a national loan association and begin Issuing tnortguges. It i a simple and easy thing, but under strict govern ment supervision. All they need to do Is to meet, declare that they want to borrow on mortgage and proceed. They will each have to buy l.'i of stock 111 the federal lund bank of their region for every $100 borrowed, but they will get this money back when they puy off their mortgages, and In the meantime will get their dividends If the federal land bank earns any, which It Is expected lo do. Vny Interest and Alo lCiirn Dividends In other words, instead of paying a !i per cent commission for a loan, us some now do, the borrower will pay the same sum for stock which will probably earn dividends for him, ;ind which he will get buck when he pays off his debt. Tho mortgago Is not allowed to draw a higher rate of Interest thun the legal rate of the locality. It will draw as low a rate as will be proven plssible by the sule of the lund bonds. If Investors and savers think so well of the land bonds that they are wilt lug to buy them on a basis of 4 per cent, tho mortgages will not. draw over five. They may not draw as much ns one per cent ubove the l-'iu'l bond rale. That depends on experi ence. Anyhow the farmer will get his money at actuul cost to (tie great system of banks handling the busi ness. . He cannot borrow over $10.00(1. If he wants more than that he w-III have to borrow In soino other way. Tills federal farm loan uct provides for federul Joint-stock bunks, which can also lssuo land bonds under govern ineiit auspices. It Is thought by some that these hunks will be organized promptly and so rapidly that they will cover the field and prevent the organization of very many of tho eo-operntlve orgnnl- zutlnns of borrowers which I have de scribed. If so, peihnps It will ,ho bc canse the American farmer liken to deal with private banks rather than to organize co-operatively. If this proves true, the farmers will hnve themselves to blame. 1'iiylnjf Off tho lxmns. Tt Is also among the possibilities 1'iat tho private Joint-stock bunks, orgunUed under this new law, will be able to furnish money a cheaply as ro-oporutlve associations can do, and thus nave the trouble, slight as It is, and the small Investment In stock. vAftor five years any mortgagor under this system may pay bis loan off whole or In part. Hut loans under this system either through a co-operative association or a Joint-stock bank, are made on the basis of paying a lit tle of the principle whenever Ihe In terest Is paid. Thus these loans will be extinguished, principal and interest In from 20 to ill! years by paying lit tle, If any more, than whut mere In terest amounts to on ordinary loans. This Is called amortization, and offers the easiest known way for the grnduul payment of loans. IAN I OTTAWA, Out., Aug. l.V-Thc uiilitiu department tiuiiouiici'd today tliut the t'nuudian troops at the front have been li'iiiisl'ei'ied from Ihe Yprcs salient to the Solium-. The troop comprise tour divisions. The nu nouncemcut is taken to menu llml the 'iiiuiiliaiis have I n called upon to join tin- Hriti-di, Australian and New Zealand troops in the threat oll'ciiMtc on (be Sommc I'roul. lu the lime Mie.v held Hie Ypre iilicnl, the Canadians' work was es sentially ilelViisivc. Tliey I'oimlil al St. .Iiilicii. Si. i:i..i .. .ilh'iieke, llooue and I'Vsiubi'il uilli total i;iimltic- of :iil.lilill. TURN FOR WORSE IN XKW VOliK, Aug. K.-Tlie epi demic of lufunllle puruMiis has taken ft turn for the worse, despite the con tinuation of unusual cool weather. Iiurlng the 2 4 boms ending at 10 n. in. today, Id:! new cases of die dis ease and !'.! deaths were reported, an Increase in new cases of nearly 100 per rent over yesterduy's figures. Failure of physicians to report cases over (be Sunday holiday was sug gested as a reason for (he Increase. rillice the epidemic began II. ere have been ii,.".:!2 rases and l.till deaths. New Jersey's statewide (puiranliue against the plague win put illlo ef fect today. Special guards were placed at all Icrminnl points to pre vent children under lli years of iic from 1'uteriii" the state and local re strictions of the most stringent chai'iii'lci were onlcrcd nt die vaii oils con si l esotU. SCARCITY EXISTS IN SUPPLY OF Employers Finding It Difficult to Se cure Gunmen to Shoot Strikers - Most of Class Now Employed In Guarding Munition Plants Steei Trust Maintains Army in Ore Fields lly NII.KOM (lAI.'DN'i:!!. WASllINfiTOX, Aug. !.-. A scarcity of gunmen is becoming- an important factor in the national slrike situation. With more strikes in progress than ever before in the history of the country, employers are rinding; il increasingly difficult to get recruits for their ''-.pecinl si lice" and deputy sheriff private ur uiies. Of late yi ais such forces are used supposedly "lo protect property," bill in realily lo guard slnkelireak ers and to arrest, shoot up and gen erully terrorize Ihe striking workmen. Il wus this gunman army hired ly the Uockefcller interests and enlisted as 4iiilif iaineu that committed the Lud low massacre in Colorado, and it was such a force, hired by the Standard Oil company nt ISayonne, X. J., that kilhil twenty-seven unarmed work ers at Hooscvelt, X. J. Likewise it was the ounmcn of the coal operators who, in West Virginia, committed the outrages which were exposed in the hearing conducted by the senate enm millec. In that slate miners and their wives were shut in their beds, Ihe civil courls were suppressed and scores of innocent workmen were railroaded lo the penitentiary lv military Iriliiinuls calling themselves courts miirliiil." Steel Trust Army. The largest army of this sort now under anus is that recently enlisted by Hie United Slates steel trust to I'iglit its men in the Ilihhing- iron mining district, seventy miles north of Pululh, Minn. Sheriff John K.I Meiuiug of Dnlnlh, on orders from (iovenior llurmiuist of Minnesota, lias sworn iu over a thousand men an irresponsible seini-criminal lot, picked up among Ihe preferably un employed of Ihe big cilics and has turned them loose to carry nut the purposes tor which they are lured. riiey urc alined with carbines, revol vers anil riot-slicks. The government's department of Inbor, whose agents have .just com pleted an investigation of the llibbing dilution, find thai the character of the gunmen is depreciating- as the in reusing demand presses on the de rcasiug supply. The more reliable miiimcn - Ilic experienced ami rcfer- ci d men have found permanent occupation guarding the munitions plants. The demand for this purpose bus been immense, resullingin an in- reuse of gunmen's wages from to t.'i a day. Formerly the so-called Icleolivo agencies,'' which make a business of supplying gunmen, paid the men if: I ami charged the corpora tion '). Xow the mail has to gel .f.'i. Supply Diiiiiiished. The supply has been diminished aKo by the fuel that the fool-loose and adventurous, who were willing lo lake this kind of wink, have, in many uses, enlisted iu ihe regular or vol unteer army, or joined the foreign' legions in :nioK'. Some have even: enlisted In the revolutionary forces "f Villa and Cnrratlu ill Mexico. j This difficulty iu getting gunmen 1 has rcMilicd in the prompt set I lenient of several strikes recently begun,1 -nob as ihe reel cur strikes Iu New I York and I'liiladelphia. It is pluv-' lug an important, (hough unofficial, pari in die deliberations of the rail load mauageis in making their plans ; lo deal with the llilcatcncd slrike of. Inn. nun railroad employes. If times Here harder and labor and ' tinmen easier (o gel, the opcraloi i , feel I In-v would be lieiier able to re sis the deniauds of iln-ir men. When lieorge I'. West of the coin- j millce on itolu-lrin! relations spoke. to Sbi'tilf Mciniii" iibont die olo-ion LABOR FIGHTERS ZEROLENE ihe Standard Oil or Motor Cars ty depraved character of his gunmen, remarking that they looked like thugs, ihe sheriff replied cheerily thut "there might he" thugs umoug them, mid explained that he hud been obliged lo lake what he could get without any nice iiiipiirics into the men's past histories. fiunmen Itre-uk Strike. These particular gunmen are now (be stu(e government in die steel liiisl's iron mining part of ilinne- soia a tract embracing 100 sipiarc miles mid ".1, 01)0 population. The local officials. County Prose color Greene of Dumlli, Sheriff Meining- and the chief .of police of I (ninth, mid Governor Burniiist, net ing for Ihe powerful steel trust, have not hesitated to use the gunmen aiiuy und the slates machinei'y of goyrn men! to break the slrike. "Agitators" which means , any body friendly to the workers have heon arrested hy the wholesale They are taken seventy miles from Ihe scene of arrest aml'loThicd in juil nt Dublin. Amnn; those in jail at Dtiluth nrc Carlo Tresea, Lawrence strike leuilci: Frank l.itlle. Sum Scarlett, ,foe Schmidt, Joseph fiilduy Leo Stark and others. These men are held on a fur fetched charge of murder, on the silly t henry thut something they may have said may have incited to the killing of . a company guard who had invaded a miner's home. The department of labor sent two representatives, I levies and I'airley to offer mediation, but Ihe steel trust is unwilling to medinic unything looking to an eight-hour day and a minimum wage of a day. FIGHTS FOR LIFE VANTOl'VKH, I!. (, An. V. - StrnpptM to a l:ivy imn rhiiii- :iih' liystrricnlly riilliri.ir lo be taken back to (M)iirt, Uoc.ro Kcrraiilc, who was onviclod on bis own pftitl'cssion nf tlip munler last ypni- of his partner, Dick Korea ecu, whose head Kerrante nt ot'C and dropped down a well, was handed at the New AVest minster prison today. Kerninto fouiiht fran tically niiuiust bis execution and be fore be could be taken from the death cell bad In be pinioned and strapped to a chair in which the' guards car ried him to the scaffold. lie still sat strapped in the ebnir when the trap was sprung. . le was pronounc ed dead in four minutest RUSSIAN DRIVE CONTINUES (Continued from page on) on the enemy trencher south of AriuentiereH caused much commotion In enemy linoH, or which our artillery took full advantage. French Take Trenches. IP A HIS, Auk, 1 ii. Kronen troops ruptured (lernuin trenches on a front about "HP yards deep north of the chapel of Saint Fine, at the intersec tion of the Kluery ami Vaux roads on the right hank of the Meuse In the Verdun sector yesterday, says the war office statement today. On the Sommo front, the French artillery was very active at Helloy, Ustrees and Kihons. Elsewhere the night was calm. The statement says "On the Sonime front our artillery displayed great activity In the sectors north ofthe river, south of Helloy and Est rees and north of I.ihons. South of Helloy a Cermau reconniteritir. party was dispersed hy our rifle fire. "North of the Alsne an enemy de tachment, after u lively tioinhardmeut penetrated n small salient lu our lines northwest of Ueonlne. It was driven out by an immediate, counter attack. "On the right hank of the Meiise, Verdun front, a series of minor ac tions was carried out lirtlliantly by our grenadiers north of tho Chapel of Saiute Fine, enaldin us to carry some portions of German trenches on a front of -too yards and a depth of aliout 1 1 0 yards. The enemy at tempted to recapture them hy a counter attack which was hroken up by our curtains of fire. "The bombardment continued with considerable violence in the sectors of Finery und Vaux le Cbapitre. From Asphalt-Base Crude the crude endurseJ In Lieut. Brytn,ji U.S. CJovernnient Ex pert on motor cylinder lubrica tion, in his sutemem betbre the American Society of Nwl Ea gineen. Sold hy dcalcn everywhere and it all Servivc Suiions ul the Standurd Oil Company (lllihifM.l Medford WASIUNOTOX, Aug. JR. The liouse today approved by a vote of 23 to 51 the senate building protjrani, including provision for eight 'capital ships next year. Seven representa tives voted "present." The house also concurred hy a viva voc vote In the senate amendment Increasing the navy's personnel to 7-1,0(10. , WASIIIN'fiTOX, An-, l.'i. Aft two hours' debate Ihe house lodav udnpted nil, nl' Ihe.iiavnl bill afrreed iipun by bouse und sennle conferees mill proceeded tn a vole on the hi: huildiiur program and the increase ii personnel, the only two disputed points. Their passage was predicted by adunuistriitinii leaders. WASIIIN'fiTOX, Auir. !.-. A lively right was in prospect when Ihe house look up today lor final ncliim the coiilciencc report on the naval ap propriation bill carryino; upproxi- mntely .f ;u.i,HII0,IHHI. The principal contests ulicad were ""'i me senaic iiuiiiimi; nnil person nel increases. These provide for const ruction of l.',7 ships iu a three- year program, including (our battle ships ami four battle cruisers iu 11)17 and an enlislcd strength of 7-l.dllll. Ihe light was expected to come when ('hairmiiii l'adgclt of Ihe naval committee moved that the luuise con cur in the increases. Advocates of a small navy were on hand to vigorous ly oppose Mils step. II is regarded as virtually certain, however, that Ihe increases would be agreed lo. lieprc sentntivc Kitihin of North Carolina, Ihe majority leader, was on today's list of speakers in opposition to the adoption of . the conference .report.- lie all along has opposed the ailinin islration's big- army and nuvy in creases. WASIIIN'CTOX. Aug. l.Wf'ondi- tional ratification yesterday hy the Danish lower house of parliament of the treaty providing- lor the sale of the Danish West Indies to Ihe I'nil- ed States has served lo luislen eon- Milcrution of Ihe treaty in the sen ale here. Chairman Stone l, ailed a mccling of the foreign re lations committee for tomorrow morning, und be bones to reiwii-l u oinnienilalion for its ratification In ihe venule by tiiniorrniv niobt IK VOC AKK A SICK WOMAN. Can you afford to doubt such over- whelmins evidence, ns that of the letters constantly being published In the dally press, showing how l.ydia K. Plnkhanrs Vegetable Compound. that good old-l'ashioued remedy made from roots and herbs, restores suf fering women to health and strength? Thousands of women suffered just as ou are sulTering and in letters over their own signatures, stale they havH been made well hy I.ydla K. l'iuk bain's Vegetable Compound. Why don't you try It ? Adv. DAMAGED GOODS lfifi This slore U best knewn FOR IT S HIGH GRADE JEWELRY FOR IT'S RELIABLE TIME PIECES FOR IT'S DEPENDABLE REPAIR WORK Hut here, silver tableware is of iuil importance and we invite Your in-HM-tion of a stock that i both varied and complete. Martin J. Reddy Tlip Jeweler. House of Quality. 12 East Main Street, Medford Visitors Always Welnuue- Falitna sensible Because it contains all the richness and luxury of the finest Turkish tobaccos and the substantial smoking qual ities of the best Virginia. Because-r it is rich enough, but not too rich, full-bodied, satisfying and yet mild Bec&use it is put up in an inexpensive package, so that the value goes where it should be in the cigarette 1 -JBll a sensible "VALUES TELL" L ON ALL ODDS AND ENDS All Broken Lines in nials and Oxfords Knife in This To date we h.ivc sold a i;ooilv huihIhm' of pairs ol' tlicsc hin'o-ains, every pair a real value. We do .just as we advertise, so don't delay. We have added another lot of low shoes to elean up at L-."), values up to !i4.r0. f Also a lot of Oxfords for Men, Outing Shoes for Youths and Hoys at very low priees. We still have a fair assortment of Low Shoes at oiily .!.!).- it pair. At the Sign of M "GOOD SHOES" BUILT OUR BUSINESS. rV a i cigarette CUTTING THE PRICE IN HALF Women's Pumps, Colo must Go Under the Clean-Up Sale SEE OUR WINDOWS. SclrcdtttJl North ""'oo Shoes" entral Av6'