Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 01, 1921, Page 1, Image 1

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    I
Medford Mail
nn-a
The Weather
Maximum yesterday 84
Minimum today 36
Predictiona
Fair.
NO. 165
Cally Sixteenth Tear.
Weekly Fifty-First Tear.
MEDFORD, OREGON, SATURDAY, OCTOBER, I, 1921
, !
!
!
PENNANT
By
YANKEES
American League Team Wins
Hard-Fought Race By De
feating Athletics 5 to 3 in
First Game of Double
header First Time Team
Has Finished at Top.
W
POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK,
Oct. 1. First game: R. II. E.
i Philadelphia 1 3 10 3
I New York 5.8 0
Second game It. II. E.
! Philadelphia 6 14 1
; Now York 3 13 0
' Batteries: Rommel and Perkins,
! J. Walker; Hoyt, Qulim and Decorm-
er.
POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK.
Oct. 1. New York captured tho
American league championship .his
afternoon its first in Its history
when they defeated the Philadelphia
Americans by a score of 5 to 3, be-
fore 25,000 people. The victory of
the Yankees ended the tightest fought
! race ever made In the history of ma-
jor league baseball.
i The New Yorkers needed one vic
tory in their three games, the last of
i. which was to be played on the clos-
'i.ig day of the season tomorrow. Mays
had one bad inning, when Philadel
phia scored three runs. After that
ho was Invincible. The recer.t in
valid, Ruth, returned to the gr.me,
but went hitless at the bat.
First Inning: Philadelphia Witt
grounded out to -Plpp unassisted.
McNally threw out Dykes at first.
Peckpinpaugh took Walker's bound
ed and toBsed him out at first,
i First Inning: Now York Miller
hit a hot single to right. Pockin
jiaugh filed out to Welch. Ruth forc
ed Miller at second, Brazill to Callo
way, Meusel forced Ruth, Calloway to
Dykes.
Second inning: Philadelphia
Perkins' hot liner bounced off Mays'
glove and was recovered by Ward
who threw him out at first. Welch
whiffed. Galloway bounced a hit off
Mays' hand. Galloway wont out
slenllng, Schang to Pecklnpaugh.
Second inning: New York Pipp
was a victim on strikes. Ward pop
ped to Dykes. Galloway threw out
McNally at first.
Third inning: Philadelphia
Ward took Galloway'B grounder and
got him at first. Brazill got an ln
flld single.' iPIpp took Sullivan's
d ive and doubled Brazill at first.
Third inning: .New York Shang
nned. 'Mays popped a single into
ft field. Mays scored on Miller's
Iple to left. Galloway robbed
eckinpaugh of a hit, taking the ball
.ear the bag and throwing him out,
diller holding third. Ruth lined out
to Dykes.
Fourth inning: Philadelphia
Witt hit a long triple to right cen
ter. Witt scored on Dyke's double
to left. Dykes scored on Walker's
single to left. Wa'.ker went out
stretching his hit, Ruth to McNally to
Pecklnpaugh. Ward threw out Per
kins. Welch tripled into right field.
Welch scored on Galoway's single, to
left. Calloway forced Galloway, Mc
Nally to Ward.
Fourth inning: New York Meu
sel fanned, Plpp singled hotly over
second. Ward hit Into a double play,
Calloway to Brazill.
Fifth inning: Philadelphia Cra
zlll singled over the middle bag. Sul
livan hit into a double play, Ward to
Pecklnpaugh to Plpp. Witt singled
sharply over Peckinpaugh's head. Mc
Nally threw out Dkyes at first.
Fifth Inning: New York Dykes
threw out McNally at first. Schang
going to seconds Miller forced Mays,
Calloway to Dykes, Schang going to
third. Schang scored on a double
(Continued on page six.)
, GET JOBS ON NORTH DAKOTA FARMS
WASHINGTON", Oct. 1. Through
recourse to "direct action" the na
tional unemployment conference had
one victory to Its credit today in the
campaign for relief of the nation's
, Jobless. Urblan Ledoux, champion of
1 the unemployed, yesterday presented
i to me comtrente us ,tu,,
I ..,;. I ni.ni lmir n hundred tinem-
I ployed gathered together in New
1,845,717 Chickens,
Costing $2,900,000,
Jewish New Years
NEW YORK, Oct. 1. The Jew-
ish new year, beginning at sunset
Sunday, was said by food experts
to be responsible for the record
supply of 1,845,717 live chickens
brought to New York from the
west in the last six days. The
experts figured that the birds cost
the consumers $2,900,000.
FOR ARREST OF
GARDNERS AIDE
George Wilbur, Charged With
Assisting Mail Bandit By
Raymond, Wash., Police
In Tacoma Day of Prison
Dash Now in California.
RAYMA'ND, Wash., Oct. 1. Chief
of Police Wilard Shumway of Ray
mond today wired the United States
marshal at San Francisco a request
to hold George Wilbur, former res
taurant keeper here, for investigation
in connection with the escape of Roy
Gardner, fugitive mail bandit, from
McNeil Island penitentiary Labor day.
Yesterday Chief Shumway received
a-lotter from Wilbur, dated from San
Francisco, in which Wilbur snld he
did not know that he was wanted In
connection with Gardner's escape and
offering to return. Chief Shum
way's telegram to San Francisco authorities-followed.
- --,;
Chief Shumway said today he had
learned definitely that Wilbur was
In Tacoma, Wash., near McNeil Is
land, on the day that Gardner es
caped from tho penitentiary.
Wilbur's supposed San Francisco
address was given in Chief Shum
way's telegram.
According to Chief Shumway, a
man identified later from photo
graphs as Gardner, obtained a room
at a local hotel, on the strength of
an order from Wilbur. He stayed
here four days and then disappeared.
The rent for the room was never
paid. Wilbur left here last Friday
ostensibly for Portland, Ore., to pur
chase supplies for his restaurant. A
few days later he telephoned his res
taurant from San Francisco.
JOBLESS CONFERENCE TO
RECONVENE OCT. 10
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. With the
national conferences on unemploy
ment adjourned until October 10,
after completion of an emergency
program for Immediate relief of tho
nation's involuntary idle, f sub-committees
ot the conference were pre
pared to resume work today to frame
resolutions for a permanent policy, as
well as suggestions for speeding tho
return to normal lit business and in
dustry. These will bo placed before the full
conference when it reconvenes ten
days hence for adoption of a perma
nent policy.
Outstanding among tho conclusions
announced by tho conference in the
.emergency program adopted on re
convening yesterday was that the un
employment emergency must b treat
led primarily as a community problem
with the responsibility of leadership
in its solution resting on the mayors.
The Weather
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. Weather
predictions for the week beginning
Monday are:
Rocky mountain and plateau regions
Cool and generally fair.
Pacific states Normal temperature
and generally fair except for rain on
the north coast.
"OF
.York, Boston, Philadelphia and Baltl
Jmore. Nineteen of these today left
'for Wllliston, X. D., work on farms
Ithere having been provided by W. L.
iBurdick, a member of tho conference
and funds for their trip having been
provided by Clarence Mott Woolley of
Detroit, president of the American
Radiator company and other confer
ence members.
WARRANT ISSUED
ABANDON
BRICK
BUILDINGS UTAH
QUAKE
SECTION
Tremors Felt in Illinois Elsi
nore, Utah, Damaged By
Shocks White Seams in
Mountains and Creeks Run
Blood Red From Oxides-
HARRISBURG, 111., Oct. 1. Two
distinct shocks, believed to ba earth
tremors, were felt here at three
o'clock this morning. Houses were
shaken and sleepers aroused, causing
considerable ularm, but no damage
has been reported.
SALT LAKE CITY, Oct. 1. Aban
donment of all brick and stone build
ings in Elsinore, a town 160 miles
south of here, came today after three
additional earthquake shocks struck
tho little town this morning and in
creased the damage wrought by tre
mors Thursday and Friday.
Additional shocks were recorded
this morning at 8:27, 8:45 and 8:57.
A school house upon which repairs
were being made because of damage
wrought by Thursday's tremor, was
almost completely wrecked by this
morning's shocks. Workmen fled
from the building as tho walls and
roofs began to crumble. Scores of
dwellings were further damaged to
day. Richfield and Monroe, two mmr
by towns, also reported minor dam
age from the shocks. Great white
seams havo been left In tho nearby
mountains by the fractured segments
torn away from the high cliffa and
flung tn huge landslides to the canyon
bottoms. All persons have been
warned "to keep out of the canyons.
Streams from the mountains arc
said to- be running blood red with
oxides shaken from fissures by tho
successive quakes.
CHINA FILES NOTES
TEKING, Oct, ,1. (By the Associated-
Press) Proposals for direct
negotiations relative to Shantung,
which were made recently by Japan,
are rejected in a note approved by the
Chinese cabinet yesterday, according
to information In official sources. The
note to Japan attempts to refute all
the nine points made In the commu
nication from Toklo. The message
will be submitted to the president and
it is expected, will be handed to the
Japanese minister here next Tues
day or Wednesday.
The foreign office proposes to send
identical notes to all foreign ministers
here, embodying China's reasons for
rejecting the plan.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
NEW YORK, Oct. 1. Chief inter
est in today's eastern college football
games centers in he initial appearanca
of Princeton, Cornell, Columbia,
Army and Navy upon the 1921 grid
iron. Princeton, of which much is expect
ed thin season, faces Swarthmore,
Cornell meets St. Bonavonture, Army
opens with a doubleheader against
New Hampshire, and Springfield Y.
M. C. A. college; Navy opposes North
Carolina State; Columbia plays Am
herst. Harvard will meet Holy Cross
and Yalo faces Vermont.
FIRST ESSAY PRIZE
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 1. George
Robert Suckow, Jefferson high school,
Portland, won first prize of $G0 in the
siate-wido essay contest held by the
Oregon Historical society, according
to announcement today. Second prize
of $50 went to Helen Whyman, Rose
burg high Bchool; third, 110, to Mar
garet Skavlan, Jefferson high, Port
land; fourth,, $30, to Edith Jacobson,
Astoria high Tnere were forty-eight
essays submitted on the subject, "tho
namo of Oregon; Its origin and signif
icance." The winners will receive medals in
addition to the cash prizes.
Quake In Nlrarngun.
SAX JUAN DEL SUH, Nicaragua,
Sept. 30. Two earthquakes were felt
here at 4:55 o'clock eastern standard
time, this morning. No damage has
been reported.
WORLD SERIES GAMES
The world series baseball
games between the New York
Giants of the National league and
the New York Yankees of the
American league, start In New
York next Tuesday, and bulletins
on the games, play by play, will
be posted by the Mail Tribune.
The games start about VI o'clock
a. m. local time. All fans are In-
vited. In case of rain, accommo-
datlons will be j provided under
cover. j
JAPS FOR GOOD
MALDEN ON HUpSON, N. Y., Oct.
1. Poultney Uigelow, author and trav
eler, who has just returned from his
fourth visit to the Orient, invited far
mers of the neighborhood to the Blge
low homestead today to hear K. Kuma
saki, Japanese consyl general In New
lork, talk about the (relations of Japan
and America. '
Mr. Blgelow praised the Japanese
for their culture, their cleanliness of
person; their courtesy of intercourse,
and their public and private honesty.
"There Is more crime in the city of
iew York in any week,' he said, "than
in a whole year in Japan."
Consul General Kumasakl explained
that when Commodore Perry arrived
in Japan in 1853 the country had gone
through 237 years of uninterrupted
peace. He deplored the notion that
the Japanese are a warlike nation, and
characterized as absurd tho reports
that spring up from time to time that
Japan is trying to get a foothold in
Lower California or Bmugglo Into the
Pacific states her reserve Boldlers, dis
guised as laborers.
L. OF N. WES FOR ,
OF
GENEVA, Oct. 1. (By the Asso
ciated Press.) The report of the
committee of the League of Nations on
the reduction of armaments was pre
sented to the assembly of the league
this afternoon by Lord Robert Cecil.
The report recommends that the
various governments be asked to fur
nish statistics of their armaments
and appropriation for war materials
military, naval and aerial for the
years from 1913 to 1921, with a com
pilation of their laws on parliamen
tary debates relating to armaments
The committee proposes that the
assembly ask tho council of the
league to repeat to the various gov
ernments Its appeal that appropria
tions for armaments in the next two
years be limited to the amount of
expenses this year.
BASEBALL SCORES
American League.
R. H. K.
Cleveland . -. 5 9 0
Chicago 8 10 2
Uhle, Malls and Shlnault; Russell,
Hodgo and Yaryan,
At Detroit: R. H. E.
St. Louis 11 18 3
Detroit 6 9 1
Batteries: Bayne, Van Gilder and
Severeld; Oldham and Woodall.
National League.
It. H. E.
Doston ...6 10 2
Brooklyn 7 13 6
. WatBun, Thnrmahlen and O'Neill;
Mitchell and Taylor.
It. H. E.
New Tork 3 7 0
Philadelphia .: 0 8 1
Causey and Gaston; King and
Peters.
At Cincinnati: . It. II. E.
Chicago 3 10 2
Cincinnati 6 15 0
Batteries: Alexander and.O'Farrell;
Marquard and Hargrave.
Second game It. H. E.
(Washington 6 15 0
Boston 1 7 1
Batteries: Erlckson and Charrlty;
Karr and Walters.
Norway Radicals Win
CHKISTIANA, Norway, Oct. I. By
the vote of 69 radical socialists against
47 of the conservatives, the storthing
today ratified the commercial treaty
with Itussln.
BEST SEASON OF
H STORYCLOSED
AT CRATER LAKE
Records Broken in Attendance
. Public Statement Soon
All Employees Leave and
Offices Closed Head
quarters in Portland.
The Crater Lake season for 1921 Is
now but a memory, for It officially
closed last night nt midnight. The
lodge closed up shop yesterday fore
noon, and all officials and employes of
the Crater Lake National Park com
pany, and last guests, departed for
Medford, leaving that beautiful and
mysterious region in tho tender hands
of Alex Sparrow, superintendent of
Crater National park and 1) is force of
employes who will contlnuo improve
ment work nt tho park until deep snow
drives them out. Tho Crater Lake
postofftee Is closed and the dally
carrying Bervice between Medford and
the lake ceased yesterday.
R. W. Price, vice president of the
company, and acting general manager,
Manager Kamps of the lodge and Mr.
Kiefhabcr who has been ncting as
manager of tho company's Medford
office left early Friday evonlng by
auto for Portland, where tho Crater
Ijake National Park company will
establish its headquarters at onco In
an office at the Multnomnh hotel, fin
ish up this season's business and make
plans tor next season's business. All
the books and records ot the company
have been taken to Portland.
The past season, the first with the
Crater Lake National Park company In
charge, has been a wonderfully suc
cessful one and breaks the record
both in attendance and financial re
ceipts. The attendance and financial
figures are hot yet obtainable, but Mr.
Price, before departing for Portland
said that as oon as the books had
been audited at the Portland office a
public statement would be given out.
So successful had been tho season, he
said, that there is no doubt that the
Crater Nationul Park company will ex
orcise Its option and take over the con
cessions from Alfred L. ParkhurBt of
Portland, which they operated this
past season under an agreement with
him and tho national park service.
This transaction with Mr. Parkhurst
will probably take place next March,
and the company has extensive im
provements in view for next season.
Tho company has this season spent
the $20,000 agreed upon with the na
tional park service, he said, and will
continue to incite improvements each
year.
Next season 35 more tent houses
will be erected, providing accommoda
tion for 70 more people, whllo an addi
tional wing for tho lodge Is contem
plated, said Mr. Price. A builder, ho
said, is now at the lodge preparing
sketches for tho proposed Improve
ments. All plans, oven to colors, must
first be approved by the national park
service.
Tho company will have a caretaker
at tho lodge from now on until the
season opons on July 1st next. In ad
dition to the rangers on duty In the
park, Superintendent Sparrow will
visit Crater National Park monthly.
BOOZE PEDDLERS TO
'FATTY' PROSECUTED
hav vnAvriHrn nnt. 1. Infnr-
(mations aro to bo filed with the fedo-
ral granu jury iuonaay aKainsi inruu
men suspected of having furnishod
.liquor to the party at tho Hotel Bt.
Francis In which Koscoo C. (Fatty)
At-Htw.lln In nllnvnrl In n mil mUnUirhtOr
'charge against hint, to havo fatally
'injured Miss Virginia Happo, llohert
H. Mtcormtck, assistant unuca
States attorney general, prosecuting
prohibition violators, announced to
day. McCormlck would not namo tho
men against whom tho 'informations
are directed.
NYALLA. REPULSED
KHARTUM, Eastern Sudnn, Sept.
29. A party of tribesmen under tho.
fanatical leader, Abdullah El 8ogha
yer, attacked Nyalla, Monday, but
was repulsed with heavy losn by ' tho
Infantry and police. The Abdullah is
reported, to have been killed. The
British lost five killed. Including a
member of the Sudan, civil service,
McNeill and Captain Chown.
The rising Is said to bo purely local,
without political significance.
Illiteracy in Oregon
Less Than in 1910,
Census Figures Show
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. The
number of Illiterate personB in
Oregon ten years of age and over
in 1920 was 9,317. or a per-
centage of Illiteracy of 1.5 com-
pared to 1.9 in 1910. The 111ft-
erates Included 1529 native
whites, tho remainder being
! made up of foreign born, In-
dlans, negroes and Orientals.
4
ASSESS PAY OF
E
I
Would Overthrow Law in
Eight States Separate Re
turns for Family Heads
Amendment to Smoot Law
Is Adopted After Debate.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 1. Economic
rights of women In eight states got
into somite dlHeuaaion today of tho
tax rovialon bill, Senator Ashurnt,
democrat, Arizona, and Broussard,
democrat, Louisiana objecting to a
commtttoo amendment requiring that
Incomo received by any maritlal com
munity shall be included in tho gross
income of the spouse having control
of such community property and shall
be taxed as the income of such
spouse.
Senator Ashurst declared this
would overthrow constitutional pro
visions of eight states California,
Texan, Louisiana,. Idaho, ArtKona, Ne
vada, Now Mexico . and Montana
which provide that one-half tho prop
erty of a marital community shall be
long to tho wifo. Ho asserted that the
husband and wife should havo a right
to mako separate returns.
Sonator Sntoot, republican, Idaho,
and Underwood, democrat, Alabama,
(contended that tax laws necessarily
had to bo geographically uniform.
Tho Utah sonator argued that it would
bo unfair to havo one federal tax sys
tem for the citizens of tho other forty
states.
After an hour's debate the commit
tee amendment to tho existing law
was adopted.
SOUTHARD TRIAL
TWIN FALLS. Idaho, Oet. l.r
With hut eleven men In the Jury box
and tho entire special venire of forty
brought Into cfurt yesterday exhaust
ed, the trlnl of Lyda Meyer Southard,
nccuscd of the murder of her former
husband, Edward F. Meyer, came to
a temporary end this morning and
Elisor W, H. Thompson wus directed
to securo another forty vcnlromcn for
examination upon resumption ot the
case Monday.
FAILS TO AGREE
PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 1. After
being out since five o'clock Thursday
tho Jury trying Dan Casey, charged
with being ono of tho slayer of James
Harry Phillips, a railroad policeman,
was discharged at noon today, being
Unablo to decide on a verdict. Phil
lips was killed In a robbery In the
railroad yards June 14.
E
DIED. PAUPER
NEW TOrtK, Oct. 1. Thomas
Proctor In whoso bed Abraham Lin
coln is said to havo died, Is a pauper
In tho city home on Blackwclls Island,
the New Tork Times says today. . Ho
was formerly a lawyer here, but a
breakdown of his health about ton
years ago, caused financial embar
rassment, which caused his being sent
to the home in 1915.
Proctor, when 17 ycara old, was a
clerk in the war department and had
a room in tho lodging house opposite
Ford's Jhoatert .where. Lincoln jyas
W Ft TO ENCOM
AX 0 HUSBAND
MORE HONOR
FOR JACKSON
STATE F
Blue Ribbons in Individual
Classes Mrs. C. E. Gates
Raises Heaviest Squash
Miss Florence Poole Praised
for Efforts Ashland Wins
Many Prizes.
SALEM, Oct. 1. (Special.)--And
still they come. Not content
with winning a sweepstakes prize at
tho State Fair, Jackson county today
ran away with the blue ribbon in
overy individual class entered, from
peaches to pumpkins. Here aro tho
winners:
Best three boxes of pears, Anjous
and Bartletts, Paul Scherer, Central
Point.
Best three boxes of appleB, (Deli
cious and Winter Banana, G. M. Frost,
Ashland.
Best plate display of peaches, !M.
J. Norrls, Phoenix.
Tuscan Cling, W. R. Bagloy, Tal
ent. J. II. Hale peach, Albert Johnson,
Ashland.
Heaviest squash, Mrs. C. E. Dates.
A blue ribbon for overy Jackson
county ontry. Can you see Pop, the
consort of the prize squash raiser of '
Jackson county! Pop is blown up
bigger than the state fair balloon,
which was so peeved by the display
that It refused to go up at all this
afternoon. And Mrs. Gatea raised
It In her back yard in spite ot the
city water shortage!
"Things come In hunches," as
Market. Master - Runyard ; onca re-.-marked.1
This has been : Jackson-1
county's fair from the start. ' Med- ;
ford's mayor bossing the stunts, and )
Jackson county farmers carrying oft '
all the prizes. And speaking of
prizes It should be noted that Ash-. '
lnnd was there with tooth feet in tho f
prize list, carrying everything before
nor In grapes and peaches.
No one is more delighted and no -one
deserves more credit than Miss
Florence Poole, the home demonBtra- 4
tion agent from Jackson county who
has been an invaluable assistant to
Messrs. Cnte and Oatman. As a mat
tor of fact without hor assistance tho
work would nover have been done on
schodulo time. An 18-hour day was
her regular program the first part of
the week, and now that the strain is
over and the battle won she refuses
to rest, but Is at the booth from morn
ing to night, showing the visitors Just
why Jackson county la the banner ag
ricultural and fruit county of" the ',
state. . : .;;
Old Sonator La Follette, the peach'
king of Marlon, who has a state wide
reputation for saying just what ba .
thinks, visited the Jackson county
oxhiblt this afternoon, and after
looking over the peaches for . some
tlmo, chewed his cud for several min
utes, scratched his head, then, ro
marked to no one tn particular, "Yes
sir, you got us beat!'
George -Mansfield appeared today,,
no state gathering would be com
plete without him, and brought
farmers from all parts ot the state to
see what Southern Oregou has dono.
Pop Gates lncidentaly ordered a
large blue ribbon bouquet made up,
ongrossed with the state seal which
will be presented to Messrs. Cate and
Oatman in addition to the $100 which
all the counties over 66 per cent are
awarded. This seal will be properly
hung and a photograph taken.
Pop Gates Is still going strong. .
Last night he presented a new carna
tion called the Ben Olcott to Govern- '
or Olcott and his party with-an ap
propriate speech which could be heard'
throughout the fair grounds. Today '
(Continued on page six.)
IN NEW YORK CITY
shot by tho assassin, Wilkes Booth, as
wet forth in tho story told by Proctor
Sand corroborated by his friends.
Proctor was returning to nig. room, ,
shortly after ton o'clock that night, he
suld, Just as a number of men crossed
tho street carrying the nnoonsclous
form of Lincoln. Proctor directed tno
party to his room, where th presi
dent was l&ld on his bed nd U4 at .
7:20 o'clock the following morning.
Proctor and Hobert Lincoln. tn .
former president's son. arc believed ',.
to be the only surviving witnesses oi
Abr.ab.am, Lincoln's deatrt,