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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 26, 1922)
MEDFOTITY MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREflOX. 'TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER. 2fi. 1022 PACIE TTTRER R. R. INJUNCTION PUT IN FORCE BY FEOL JUDGE CHICAGO, Sept. 26 Tho .drastic temporary Injunction order asked by Attorney Goneral Harry M. Daugh erty against shop crafts strjko lead ers was put in force yesterday by Judge Wilkerson, without any of its effectiveness being modified. Several slight changes in tho word ing of the order submitted Saturday ere made by Judge Wilkerson to clarify its meaning. , Judge Wilkerson signed the order after Donald R. Richberg, defense attorney, said he was "unable to suggest any form of order which would be effective to give legal sanc tion to the exercise of an authority which we respectfully urged Is not within tho power of the court." "To call this proceeding in its method and result, 'due process of law,' totustify tho denial of consti tutional' rights of the defendants by this judicial finding based on ex parte affidavits, seems to mo to dis regard tho fundamental principles of our system of laws, as well as to ex ercise a power specifically dented to the federal courts by an act of con press passed in order to prevent the very deprivation of liberty and prop erty which is here accomplished," Richberg said. ( "It appears," he added "that no 'one of the named defendants Is even charged with the commission of any unlawful act, and I am unable to as certain positively from a careful study of the opinion of the court just what) unalwful acts are found to have been dono by any of the defend ants In furtherance of an unlawful conspiracy. "Apparently, however, tho court has found that there is proof of an unlawful conspiracy in 'the large number of unlawful acts shown to have been committed, the most of them by unknown parties,' and that the defendants are presumed to have knowledge that these things were done." Following the short plea by de fense attornevs that the govern ment petition for an injunction be de nied. Judge Wilkerson denied their motion to dismiss, added tho phrase, 'with intent to further said conspir acy,' in several paragraphs and sign Ed the order. The date of hearing for the defond- 1 ants not hoard In this action was sot for October 5. APPOINT EARL TUMY I. The announcement has been made of the appointment of Earl S. Tumy as general agent of the Northern Life Insurance company of Seattle, Wash., for the territory of southern Oregon and northern California, and offi ces of this agency have been estab lished in tho Liberty building of this city. This company is now in the fifteenth year of its existence and it ib generally recognized as one of the fastest growing life Insurance com panies of the country. Reginald H. Parsons, one of the largest property owners of tho Rogue IUvor valley and owner of the famous Ilillcrest or chards, is a trustee and director of this company. The Northern Life Insurance com pany has now over twenty-five mil lion dollars of life Insurance business on its books and owes Its remarkably fast, growth to its unusually liberal policy contract covering the assured by '6, health and accident insur ance under one policy. A life in surance policy that would pay the as sured up to $500 per month, income, as a result of sickness or accident, is said to be an unusual feature. The Northern Life Insurance com pany further contemplates loaning considerable money to the property -holders of tho Rogue River valley on first mortgage security and at ex ceptionally low Interest charges, as it firmly believes in the policy of assisting to develop the territory In which it is doing business, in any manlier within its power. Mr. Irving Morgan, the son of' D. B. Morgan of Seattle, Wash., the president of the Northern Life In surance company, will arrive In Med ford this week to assist Mr. Tumy in establishing the Medford general agency and to outline tho work of this office for the coming year. TRANSMISSION LINE 1ST WITH IN THE WORLD Attention, National Guard All members Company A, National Guard, will assemble promptly at 7:30 Wednesday evening. Inspection, quarterly muster. Visit from inspec tor. Every man report. H. A. CANADA Y, 1C1 Commanding Officer. MEDFORD J F. I WMWW , r i. . JJ "Vr 7 If ( ' x - '. it . J...JU fi' O. M .6 t A S ? LAXI HXjS; X32$r i V 1 r J OvL j ri 4- ' -J-e math i H ' i) ! ! " S9'L NOiTre -J r "" V Ct-i 'Oix V '"'T j) f 61 " ! M 0 D 0 : fc j ' " 'tjr"'' j C V w rV,-j3"T'! ' - humic?; j , t" U THE CALIFORNIA OREGON POWER COMPANY POWER STATIONS , -lmoro - TRANSMISSION LINES IN - i mSiTfr t SOUTHERN OREGON ate ca nrsrtjtr.jsiomiMes lBO . NORTHERN CALIFORNIA - . ' fcirlc 2mr . 1,11 AS A CENTER Kaiii CIic-Uk Turcst Kirrs. POUT TOWXSKXI). Wash.. Sept. 2(1. Hain hist niht uiid today aided materially in rhei kini: tin1 ft.r'st file wliii-li ih'-!nit'il tile I isi iivi'i v ltay Logging company settlement near here Sunday, and yesterday assumed threatening proportions. Willi Medfi.nl trade Is M.-ilmr.l nen Deer Hunters Notice Saddle horses for hire $1.50 per day; guide and horse $5.00 and found. Can haielle only a few parties. M. W. ampler. I'rosiieet. (lie. 160 Work on the new power transmis sion line between Prospect plant of the California Oregon Power 'com pany and Springfield, Ore., where the line will connect with the Moun tain States Power company's power transmission line is nearing comple tion and will be finished by (Novem ber first, according to power com pany officials, or two months soon er than at first anticipated. The new line which is furnishing ompjpyment and activity for a large number of men wil have a capacity of 8750 kilowatts at G6.000 volts and a capacity of 2100 kilowatts at 110,000 volts. The new line will close the gap the spanning of which will, complete the longest connected power transmission system in the world, extending from northern Ore gon to the Mexican border. Work of installing the second 18, 600 K. W. unit at the Copco plant of the company is also progressing with success and it is expected that the new unit will bo In operation sometime this fall. The plant will develop approximately &0.000 H. P. when tho new unit is complete. The accompanying map shows a portion of the district served by the California Oregon Power company in Southern Oregon and Northern Cali fornia. 'I?' ' ' ' The new transmission line being built rrom Prospect to Tiller is a tremendous structural achievement and persons who havi( viewed the new line between those two polntn state that the cut made1 through the timber for miles In length, wider than a road, crossing ridge after ridgo In a line as straight as! a tran sit could mako it, is a very impres sive sight. It 1h believed that the residents of Southern Oregon and Northern California have had a glimpse of a great power system In Us Infancy and from now. on will have an opportu nity to watch the interesting devel opment of one of the greatest hydro electric power systems In the world. T OF RITUAL MURDER JEW The attitude o'f the majority of the residents of Medford has been to per mit the operation of the Southern Pa cific lines in the future as in the past which is opposite to the decision of the supreme court recently handed down. Should this decision be sustain ed there would then be a decided change In railroad operation in this territory. What this change would bring has been a question of many answers and in order that members of ; the Medford chamber of commerce may be advised of the viewpoint of the Union Pacific lines they should hear Arthur Spencer, the chief counsel of that system who will address the i NEW YORK, Sept. 20. Mendel PielllKS, Jewish workman of Kiev, Itusslii, whose trial in lit 13 on- the charge of'ritual murder attriK'ted world wide attention, is a resident of New York, it was lenrneil today. He came to America in 1921 from Pales tine, where he went after hiR acquit tal in Russia and is established in a small printing business. Belllss, the only Jew In a city of 10 000 people, was arrested In 181 1 after the discovery of tho body of a thirteen-yonr-old boy, who had been muivlererl. orfieirtls rhai'Ked thnt he. Had killed nVhoy to ol.tn.in blood for rellgious-Titnal purposes. Ho wai kept in a rtunsreon for two years and then tried. After thirty days the jury freed him. . l . members forum tomorrow noon at the Medford hotel. . There lias always been a very largo attendance at the forums whenever tho" railroad dissolution question has been discussed and tomorrow will un doubtedly bo no exception in that re spect. . ' Latest Arrivals at Auto Camp Grounds OBITUARY BLACKBURN Frank Edwin Blackburn died at his home, 819 Tay-I lor street, September 2 5. Deceased was born at Cincinnati, Ohio,' January j 19th, 1S51 and was ofifco manager for tho Oregon Gas and Electric com pany, having been a resident of Jack-' son county for 13 years. A member of Talisman Lodge No. 31, K. of P. Mr. Blackburn leaves his wife, Gra cia M., and one son, Charles T. Black burn, one sister, Mrs. Ella Mills, Chi cago, 111., and one brother, Oscar Elackburn, Cincinnati, Ohio. Funeral services wil be held at the Episcopal church Wednesday morning at 11 a. m. Interment In Jackson ville cemetery. Funeral . arrange ments in charge of the Perl Funeral Home. Royal Arch Mason Crater Lake Chapter No. 32 Special communication Tuesday, Sept. 2Cth, 7:30 p. m. M. M. and P. M. Degree. Visitors welcome. A. F. NOTH, Secy. HiO To Aid Disabled Vets. CINCINNATI, Sept. 26. Congress will be asked to pass several bills of Importance to the disabled veterans in the world war when It convenes .in December, Captain C. Hamilton Cook of Buffalo, N. Y., national com mander of the disabled veterans said here today. Seventeen cars and forty-five peo ple stopped .at the City Auto camp last night. They are as follows: Charles Henllne and one other from I.oma Linda, Calif., who may locate here; John II. Caldwell and one oth er from Catham, 111., on the way to Los Angeles; C. E.' Drew and party of four from Duprec, .N. D., on the way to Lob Angeles; A. J. Schuer and family of four from Savannah, Mo., on the way to Santa Ana, Calif., seek ing a 'location; M. S. Swank and one cither from Chiloniiin, Ore., on the way north; J. McMahan and one other from Vancouver, B. C, on the way home; C. D. Hutchins and party of four from Salem, Ore., on the way south; W. 11. Howard and one other from 'Sliver Lake, Ore., on the way to Roseburg; Olo Hutchins and one other from Salem, on tho way south; J. C. Austin of Prospect, Ore., on the way south; Joe Swancze and one oth er from Woodland, Wash., on the' way home from the south; H, Locke and party of two from Spokane, on the wav south; John Carson and oilo oth er'Trom Spokane on the way to Los An geles; F. W. Griffith and one other from San Jose, Calif., on the way to Seattle; T. J. Blackford and party of Hire from Hardin. Mont., en route OEUth; Pearl Blackford and one other from Salt Creek. Wyo., en route south and J. D. Green and, party of four from Corpus Christ!, Tex., on the way homo. CLOUDS SPOIL TESTING OF EINSTEIN THEORY BERLIN, Sept. 25. (Hy tho Ah Rocinlcrt Pross) Clouds prevented tho Oermnn-Duteh expedition from taking photographs nt Christmas Island In the Pacific, Intended to test the Einstein theory, according to a report today to thf Astronomical Institute nt Potsdam. A few pictures of the :un's enrona. however, were tnk n through tht ' clouds. These may prove of service hi thn inveptlratlnn. . It Is nsstimed her" th;ii def.pif c ' he u nfa vornM"' f veatlnT tin- expf'-rtitimv wa alk -o uniko ImpdrtiinL. ohserviitioriK in con nect ton with tho eclipse. . LOXnOX,' Kept. 2". Professor C. A Chant of thf 1'nh- rsity of To ronto, one of the nHtronomers who went to .Australia to -observe the eclipse of the sun from Wallal, Aus tralia, said he hellevd the pictures teken on Thnrsd;y Inst durlntr th" ('lfs ep'-claHy the Mck ol.srvntnry photographs, would nove sufficient to verify, disprove or modify the Ein sieln theory. "' To Reduce Dangerous Varicose Vt ins People who have swollen veins or bunches should not wait until they roach the bursting point, which means much suffering nnd loss of timo, but should at once secure from any reliable druggist a two-ounce orltdnal bottle of Moone'a Emerald 1 fit! ffiiM atro'nfrlh . , By using this powerful, yet harm less Bormlcide treatment Improve ment Is noticed in a few days and by its regular use, swollen veins will return to their normal size and suf ferers will ceaso to worry. Moone's Emerald Oil treatment i. used by physicians and in hospitals . and Is guaranteed to accomplish results or money roturned. - t It redueeg all kinds of enlarged glands, goitres and wens and is used exclusively in many large factories as an unfailing first aid to the injured antiseptic. - Your druggist can- sup ply you. Adv. Flies for the Tent We make them. Med. Tent & Awning Works Opposite S. I Depot Big K eduction of m Price DU PHOT EXf Ltelf feS You Can Now Afford to I Farm With Dynamite ." Use the new Pacific Slumping Powder that floes 2 more work for the game money. It 13 non-head ache and non-freezing. Get our prices on different grades. Put ycur problems up to the Du Pont Service man. Medford Furniture 6 Hardware Co. lfj& Here is the El Sidelo Family I I III with its six distinguished shapes'. Select w 1 1 one. Smoke it. Note how it smacks of fine ' 111 : &b 1 i$t Havana and how very agreeably this, IW , ll 3 Havana blends with 'the bland mildness of H II JflP Connecticut shade grown wrapper leaf. Jil II l Wplillp See how freely EI Sidelo draws -how evenly ' II V 'ItSm. it bumsunmistakable evidence of tlie well ' . Jllli j IfeCflJlli made cigar. ' , . illllllll III Pil, EI Sidelo Clfnr U nude by M III ' IHstriliuU-d ly '5 ty Alt t J lD Allen nml Lewi, Porllund, Orc.i ,,,.. . v5jj ' 1 Ml ! .