Y The Weather Prediction Rain Maximum yesterday 31 Minimum today 29 Precipitation 05 Mail Tribun Weather Year Ago Maximum -.39 Minimum 15 Dally Seventeenth Year. Aurkly Klfty-siecund Year. MEDFORD, OKKGOX, MONDAY, JANUARY l!2, 192:1 XO. 237 MEDF01R.TI) E -i ENGLAND IS AFRAID WAR WILL COME British Leaders Alarmed By Developments in Ruhr See Great Britain Drawn Into Conflict Against Her Will- Russia Also Expects Out Break of Hostilities. LONDON, Jan. 22. (By the As sociated Press) Tho critical sltun tlon In tho Ruhr in n subject of inurli anxious comment in the morning newspapers which regard the oulluuk lis ho dangerous that It Ik impera tive some way of relieving the dead lock he found. Fear in expressed in some quarters that Cirent liritain will be forced into some form of active Intervention against her will. Home circles also are fearful that If France pursues the present line of poliey, she will he obliged to increase her forces greatly in the occupied district, with tho re sult that Germany may follow with military action which would mean war. Strikes of miners in the Ruhr val ley, called yesterday by the labor con ference at Essen, were in progress at the various pits throughout the val lty today. The strikes, complete or partial, were in the privately controlled workings whose directors were ar rested by the French last week. Withdrawal of the occupying troops from the state' owned mine properties that had been seized was followed by resumption of mining in these workings, although on a scale reported somewhat reduced. While no news of a general rail- road strike order has appeared, Duos seldorfiidviccs report only about ten per cent of the trains running, and these manned by French crows. Tho banking situation seems to hnvo been eased somewhat by the re opening of the Duesneldorf branch of the Ueichsbank. Tho Essen branch and the private banks of that city re mained closod. I .It was announced from Mayenc" that the court martial trial of Fritz Thyssen and1 the other industrial magnates arrested, would he held Wednesday, with the proceedings completed in one day. Hevivnl of the talk of proclaiming a Ilhlnelnnd republic, which would form a buffer state between France nnd Germany, met with editorial comment from Home that such a move would not be tolerated by Ger many's creditor nations. Germany took a further step In abstaining from Versailles treaty co operation with Fiance by withdraw ing her member from the mixed F.ranco-Gcrman arbitration tribunal in Paris. France again delayed presentation of her new reparations settlement plan. This, it was believed, was due to tho continued uncertainty of the J'.ermnn situation brought about by the Ruhr occupation. Germanv officially denied the re ports that she was contemplating the renewal of compulsory military ser vice. No disorders were reported from nny point In the Ruhr valley today. MOSCOW, Jan. 22. (Ry the Asso ciated Prow) Although Russia lias reduced her nctivo nrmy to 600.000 men, she has not shut her eyes to possible mifituiy danger nnd it is understood that tho government , lias taken a number of measures to create nt the necessary moment n force able to repulse any attack, writes M. Steckloff, editor of Izvcstla. Ho ex presses tho opinion that there art more war possibilities In the Euro pean situation today thnn in 1914. lie revives tho theory of the old quarrel between America nnd Japan nnd finds thnt tno commercial nv.-.uv (Continued on Page Six) AMBASSADOR DENIES DIFFERENCES WITH HUGHES AVASIHNOTON. Jan. 22. Secre tary Hunhes received today' a copy of a radiogram sent hy Ambassador Harvey to the North American lle vlew, denying published reports that he nnd tho secretary are not In no cord on Important questions of for eiftn policy. The messnue sent In response to n nuorv was transmitted from the steamer on which Mr. Harvey Is re turning to his post. The umlmssadiirs message said: "A radio dispntch conveys to me Information thnt reports have been 75 Indictments Expected By State In Bastrop Hearing BATON ROUGE, l a Ian Attorney General A. V. Coco who was called from Hastrop to the capital to confer with Governor John .M. Parker on tho More- house situation, declared last night as he was leaving on his return to Hastrop to resume the open hearing into hooded hand activities In Morehouse parish. that 25 to Kft arrests with 75 to 100 IndictnientB would be the outcome of testimony presented the state's investigation. Following the conference with the govornor, Mr. Coco an- nounced that thirty more wlt ! nesses will be heard, and ho ex- pected the hearing would come to an end next Thursday. 4. OFFERS BILL ON Jackson Co- Senator Would Exempt Payments of Inheri tance Tax On All Bequests for Benefit of Oregon Mu nicipalities. SALEM, Ore., Jan. 22. The house today passed the Woodward bill re quiring school districts of 10,000 or mnro population to provide special Instruction for students classified as exceptional. Tho senate today passed. Senator Eddy's bill providing that tho stuto highway commission need not ap prove the plans and specifications of county courts for bridges, unlesB the cost exceeds $35,000. This figure was reduced from 50,000 by unanimous consent of the senate. At present this limit is only $2500. Provisions of a bill passed by the senate a few days ago exempting from the Inheritance tax the estate of the late Judge Bernard Daly of I.akeview because it was left for tho education of needy boys and girls of that .county, would lie made general in their application by a hill intro duced today by Senator Dunn of Jackson county. The Dunn hill would exempt payment of tho inheritance tax bequests left for tho benefit of municipalities. 8 A LE M. O ip Jan. 22 . W. E. Crews of M Ml ford who has been ap pointed by Governor Pierco ns stnte eorporntion commlnfliner. RiUd to day that Georgo Codding ot Med ford probably will bo named by htm nH his asuistant. Codclinj? at least will accent a position in tho office. SALEM. Ore., Jan. 22. Governor Walter M. Pioree today Issued a statement declaring thnt while no legislation toward tax reduction had been accomplished in two weeks of the present session, he was confident that tho present week would see pro gress toward fulfillment of pledges upon which ho nnd tho legislators "though for the most part oh dif ferent tickets, hnd been elected." Tho governor advocated nn In come tax along lines of tho federal law, nnd urged that legislation aimed at consolidation of departments nnd abolition of boards nnd commissions be accomplished, saying that under the present law tho governor's hands are tied "by this board and that com mission," and until ho hnd a free hand the governor Is given no op portunity to establish a less v costly government. lie reiterated recommendations that the public service nnd industrial accident commissions be mnde self supporting through contributions from the industries with which they enmo in contact nnd forecast intro duction of measures giving tho Ptate tax commission authority over county assessors. m published to the effect that sharp dis agreement with respect to foreign policies exist between Secretary Hughes and myself nnd that I Indi cated such division of opinion while In the I'nlted States. "I wish to deny in my nnme nny such statements or intimations. They are absolutely false. 1 am In full nnd complete accord with Secretary Hughes and 1 have not uttered a word thnt could hy the wildest stretch of the tmnglnntlon be con strued 1o the contrary." A similar denial wn authorized by Secretarv. Hughes. SENATOR HM NHERITANCES Grandpa" New Title j i.i. King George As Stork HoVers tzz king ceoROE I fTmnJtW Wt- fQk. tW """Wl ' c' H p.t'4liP ' i ' ill ' LONDON KiiiR George and Queen look exceedingly renal and resplendent here in crown and ffrniincTrobes of state, it is safe to say both will play roles much more to their liking soon, when they become simply "Grandpa" and "Grandma" to a child expected to be born to Princess Mary v The child of Princess Mary and Lord Lasccllcs will b; the first grandchild of the English royal pair. The four brothers of Princess Mary, arc all unmarried. The eldest, the Prince of Wales, is 28, and the youngest, Prince George, 20. Princess Mary is 3" years old'and her husband 40. The child can have no royal pretensions, since its mother signed away all claims to accession vrjicn she married Lasccllcs. If a boy, it will become on his death the seventh Earl pf Harcwood., . IRISH IRREGULAR STAFF CAPTURED, THREE EXECUTED DUBLIN', Jan. 22. By tho Asso ciated prest.) Tho staff of the first southern division of the irregular military forces, together with oil its records for tho last six months has heen captured by the column of na tional troops operating from Ma croom, county Cork. BELFAST, Jan. 22. Tho Dunkirk correspondent of tho Exchange Tele graph reports that three men, resi dents, were executed today. Official confirmation was lacking. The dis patch says that the men were cap tured in county Monaghan three weeks ago after the destruction of a bridge. A notice of the executions, posted on a door in Bridge street, Dundalk. reads: "Please pray for the repose of the soul of James Melln, 20, who was executed In the Dundalk Jail this m6rnlng." Tho free state headquarters in Dundalk this afternoon confirmed tho reports of the executions and an nounced that In addition to Molla, tho men executed were Thomas Lenon and Joseph Ferguson. All were of Dundalk. s These executions brought tho total In the last Blxty days to 4 8. FEDERAL OFFICE T'Ol'.TLANM), Ore.. Jan. 22. Miller E. MeOilchrlst of Salem has neen nominated bv Federal District Attor ney John S. Coke ns assistant United j States district attorney, nnd Thomas i H. Mngulre. assistant under Coke's'. predecessor, hns been recommended to tho position of chief assistant, a place made vacant by tho resignation of John C. Veatch last November. MeOilchrlst has been In tho office of tho attorney general In Salem for sonic lime. . Ex-U. S. Ambassador ' to China Reported Dying in Shanghai SHANGHAI, Jan. 22. (Hy the As sociated Press) Dr. i'aul S. Keiiisoh, former Cnited States minister to Cliina, is believed to be dying from broncho-pneumonia, which set In ns a complication to encephalitis. He is unconscious. Dr. Helnsch cnnie here from tho interior of China some time ago, suffering from a complete breakdown. FIVE BURNED TO DEATH, 4 KILLED PITTSHUUO, Jan. 22. Five persons were burned to death In a fire which destroyed tho Duties hotel in Home stead near hero today. The loss was (15.000. The dead are: Mrs. John Winnie; her twin sons, six years, and her daughter Catherine, 13 and Thomas Dnvles, hotel proprietor. PlTTSnrrtO, Pa., Jan. 22. Four men are known to have lost their lives in the collapse of an old house In Twenty-fifth street here today. Waiting, L CHICAGO, Jan. 22. Selection of a Jury wns begun today to try Daniel Hayes, head of the Daniel Hayes com pany of Idaho, and seventeen other defendants charged with conspiracy to use the malls to defraud In the sale of western land. Two or three days may be required to completo tho Jury, It was believed today. Hayes and his co-defendants, it is eburged, by tho government, circu lated tho Daniel Hayes company liter ature through tho malls In Belling small parcels of land in Madera and Merced counties, Cal., to purchasers in many states. It wns charged that tho land was misrepresented as fit for cultivation, when, the government prosecutors charge, only a part of It was ready for cultivation and the greater part was not Irrigated. HEAT, TWO OEAD 1 ; .!)'. SACRAMENTO,. Cal , Jan.! 22. Two men are dead and Boven others are slowly recovering from poisoning caused by drinking n concoction ob tained from a patent "ennned heat" containing1 parafina and wood aco hol. William Smith, laborer, and an unidentified man died Saturday night. Tho other polBoned men are recovering. Hcfiamttnn Plan Postponed. PARIS, Jan. 22. (!ly tho Asso ciated Press) Presentation of the new French plan for a fiermnn rep aration settlement wb-h It had been announced would be given to tho members of tho repnrnllons commis sion today, has again been delayed. It 'Is expected now the plan will not lie ready ui.til tho end of this week. Girl Anarchist in Paris Kills Reporter Then Shoots Herself PARIS, Jan. 22. ( Ily tho Associated Press.) Gcrmnluo Horlhon, 20 year old woman an- nrchlst. entered the offices of the royalist newspaper I, 'Action ! rancalB today and fired two revolver shots, killing Marina Plateau, onn of tho reporters of tho paper, sho then turned (he weapon on herself and was lak- en to the hospital with u wound In tho breast. Witness Claims Victims of Outrages Played Poker On Night of Alleged Attack Keys Found Near Lake Are Introduced By State. BASTROP. I.a.. Jan. 22. Tho al leged aTtempt to nssaslnate Dr. li. .M. McKoin, former mayor of Mer Ttougo which Is believed to hnvo prompted tho kidnaping and killing of Watt Daniel and T. . K. ltlehnrd, was brought up at today's session of tho open henring conducted by tho stnto into tho activities of masked men In Morehouse parish, particularly into tho murder of Daniel and Kichard. C. W. Wagsdale, tho first witness, testified ho was In n. poker game at the homo of J. L. Daniel at Mer ltougo tho' night Dr. McKoin is said to have been tired upon from am bush. Watt Daniel, J l. Dunlol.T. F." Hlchard. W. C. Andrews, Tom Dell and a man, named Hleks w-ero tho other plnyers. "After I left tho gamo I went to n restaurant," snid Wagsdalo, "after which I went to my home. .On my way I heard two shots.' I did not pay any attention to It. I was going away that night, so I left homo and walked down to tho restaurant again to wait for the train. I Joined Watt Daniel, Hlchard, V. C. Daniel nnd others In tho restaurant. 1 did not hear of nny attempt to kill Dr. McKoin until I renched Ilonito the next day." It had been testified thnt when Wutt Daniel, his father, "Lon" Dav enport, ltlehnrd nnd Andrews were kidnaped by masked men on August 24 near Hastrop their captors ques tioned nil but Davenport about tho attempt to nssassinate Dr. McKoin. J. L. Daniel nnd Andrew were flog ged, nnd with Davenport later were released. Watt Daniel nnd Hlchard wero never seen ngaln until their mutllnted bodies wero discovered in Lnkn LaFouroho 25 miles from here on December 22. Thero wero only two witnesses In court nt ten o'clock when tho henr ing was resumed. Italn has mado the highways almost Impassable. 8. J. Dennett, 40, general manager of the Southern Carbon company plant nt Spyker, was the next witness. "How long wnp Harold Teeger- strom In your employ?" Dennett wns asked. "About four years, both a Dnmp kln nnd Spyker. Ho was employed us timekeeper," he nnswered. Teegerstrom disappeared tho night of December 29, a few dnys heforo tho hearing opened. Two days later he appeared at tho homo of Henry Jones near Bastrop. Jones testified Teegerstrom Informed him It wns best for him to leave because fede ral agents wero "hounding" him con cerning certain evidence nnd he be lieved If ho should contlnuo to re mnln In tho vicinity they would Im plicate him In the kidnaping ense. Keys Identified "Do you remember someone re porting to you he had disappeared " Bennett was asked., "Yes, tho matter wad reported to me by Dean Ashcraft after I made Inquiry ns to where 'Teeg' was. I (Continued on Page six ) gov '. PIERCE'S TAX TO COME UP AT , ..BALEM, Ore.. Jan. 22. With nlno bills slated for third reading In the house and one In the senate, the legislature began Its third week to day. Measures before the' house In cluded tho Woodward hills providing for a department of research nnd guidance In the public schools nnd for tho segregation of educationally exceptional children. Whatever tax reduction measures CSovernor Walter M. Pierce may have under consideration were looked for this week. !oth houses will adjourn Wedes day for the annual visit of all mem bers to tho Oregon Agricultural col- ASSASSINATION STORY. BASTROP UK DOUBTED CALIFORNIA SHAKEN BY EARTHQUAKE Red Bluff and Other Towns in Sacramento Valley Visited By Tremblor Gas Tank at Willows, Springs Leak Clocks Stop, Plaster Falls No Extensive Damage. SACRAMENTO, Cnl., Jan.. 22. An earthquake which lasted for several seconds, shook Sacramento nnd towns In the Sacramento valley early this morning. At Sacramento, ac cording to N. R. Taylor, metereolo glst of tho United States weather bureau, tho trembler stopped tho clocks In tho weather bureau office. A report received here said the shock damaged a gas tank nt "Willows. The quake was felt in Sneramento be tween 1:0B a. ni.. nnd l:0tt n. m. Meteorologist Taylor stated that ho bad reports from Chico, Red Bluff, Ueddlng and Willows, all In the nor thern Sacramento valley, that tho earthquake was felt there. The "Wil lows report said a gas tank sprung a leak during the shocks. The clocks in tho Sacramento weather bureau office stopped at 1:08 o. m., and Taylor said his re ports Indicated other clockB in the upper valley also wero stopped by the quake. RED DIAJFF. Cal.. Jan. 22. An earthquake which was estimated to hnvo continued for two minutes, oc curred hero somo tlmo botwoen 1.07 n. m., nnd 1:10 a. in., today. It caused doors -and windows to rattle and cracked plaster In n number of homes, but no material damage wns -reported. Tho local weather-v bureau ' observer believed the tremors moved from east to west. EUREKA, Cal., Jan. 22. A severe earthqunko was folt here at 1 n. m. today. ' 0IIICO, Cal., Jan. 22. An earth quake estimated to have been of ten secondg tluration was felt hore a few minutes nftor 1 a. m. As far as known no damage was done. T1ERKELEY, Cal., Jan. 22. The noodle of tho University of California 1 seismograph was thrown orf Its drum I while recording ifn earth shock begin ning nt 1:05 a. in.. It was announced today by Professor John Ilnwulda of the university geological department. Spokane Also Shocked SPOKANB, Jan. 22. Earth shocks starting nt 1:05 a, m. nnd continuing until 2:18 a. m with the heaviest tremors nt 1:08 a. m. were recorded on the Gonznga university seismo graph today. The disturbance, de scribed as "quite severe" was esti mated to be 100 miles distant, in the direction of California. ST. LOUIS. Jan. 22. An earthquako described as "of very spvnrA" IntAnaitv I beginning at 3:0!) a. m. today and last ' ing until 4:20, was recorded nn the j seismograph at 8t. Louis university. I Six distinct shocks were recorded, It i was said. The disturbance was esti mated to have been 1800 miles south , east of St. Louis. SISSON, Cal., Jan. 22. This town was severely shaken by an earth quake at 1:04 a. m. today, windows and doors being rattled and citizens awakened. The shocks seemed, to travel from south to north. . . 8AN FRANCISCO, Jan. 22. A landslide at Scotia, 20 miles south of Eureka, Cal., caused either by a storm or the sharp earthquake which visited the Eureka region early to day was reported to the united States (Continued on Pag six. I REDUCTION BILL SALEM THIS WEEK lego nt Corvallls. A similar excursion to the University of Oregon mny take place on Wcdnesdny of next week. Ten bills covering the program of the state committee on tax Investi gation were distributed) today In pamphlet form among members of tho legislature, but had not been formally Introduced. Although Gov ernor Pierce was a member of the committee which wns appointed by Governor Olcott following tho session nf 1!I21 and In compliance with an net of thnt session, it la reported thnt Pierco Is not in full agreement with tho other menvhers of the committee on some ot tho bills.