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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1925)
PXOE THREW, POWERS AGREE TO I -UCIIICI-! NllUICIIt I'll VII. a HtliilCllt ji .(up Itoynhy lit IhtllyMtMMl. - l.OS ANUKl.KH Prince ami Prill J cess Awi"k;(0f J;t Ht 11 'arrived from i New York and Washington, iravellne Incunrdtu. Mary l'lckfmd, Douglas Q Wcllesley linns SiinLern. .student members uf a student govern- Fairhaiilts and riiarlle Chaplin nre V i;Li,i:si,K Y. Sinoii for Welles- lug body favored permission of the uuing tu slimy llicm inutiuu plcluru J ley college girls a,,(X liuW forbidden, campus, but five faculty delegates pro- UKllLh'LlC Y, Cnl. The presidifi's - cisco, hadTken expelled fur bis refu offlco of the L'nlverslty uf California sal lo luke C'Wipulsury military train announced that I.eon KUlot Gold, Jr.. Inn wtU'lms of Mnllywni-d Ilay. l-olh mi and ifr tit campus. The 'valle LET CHINA HAVE- i MrcOFOTtT) MAIL TRIBUNE, MTCirPOTCP, QliKfiONT, T1IIM,'S)AY. NOVUM l!KU W, 1!)2.' M .;.5AV Ti AlWfa&'frt - i V J'EKINQ, Nov. 19. (A. P.) The I powers represented at tho Chinese cuntonia conference unanimously and unconditionally acceded to tho Chi t neso demand for tho enactment of n treaty giving China unrestricted tariff rights beginning January 1, 1129. China agrees to abolish, likiu on the eamo date. The action of tho conferenco was taken at a joint moetlng of tho first and second commisgions, which adopt ed a sub-committoo resolution reading as follows: ? -"VThB dolegates of the powers as sent led In tills conference resolved to , adopt tho following proposed article relating to tariff autonomy with n View to Incorporating it together with Other matters to be hereinafter agreed Upon, in a treaty which Is to bo sign ed, by this conference: " .,,"The contracting powers other than x Chi im, hereby regocgnlzo China's right to enjoy tariff autonomy; they agio to remove the tariff restrictions which are contained in tho existing treaties betVeon themselves respec tively and China, and consent to the jfping into effect of the Chinese na tional tariff law, January 1, 1929. "The, government of tho republic of ijjhtna. declares that tiro llkfn shall be ibolished simultaneously with en torcement of the tariff law, and fur ther declares that abolition of the )t!n shall be effectively carried out te the first day of the first month of aio eighteenth year of the republic Rfanuary 1, 1929 I Sub-committees were appointed on fie rates and purposes to be served ly tho Interim surtaxes which are to le applied. Adjournment was taken, lubject to the call of the chair. T NKW 'YORK.'- Nov. 19. fA. P.) ' Jfreaideut and Mrs. Coolidge arrived On a special train from Washington tjhortly before 2 P. M. They went at ,Ohcg to the .Waldorf hotel, whore the '-president tonight will address the ;tato chamber of coinmorco. r3 WASHINGTON. Nov. 19. (A. P.) .-g i'resiucnt Cooiitlge lett uasning Wun early today for Now York where Jio will address tho New York state .'.chamber of commerce.' .The party "included Secretary Sanders, Frank f$v Stearns, D w 1 g h t W. Morrow, t'hairmiin of the preKident's air Minn rrt f loni-cn I In rvnv. fnrmm atri- assador to Groat' Britain, Major anies- F. CoUpaV .'ti -White- Hauae ihysiclan and tho military and naval ides. Colonel Harvey's name was not among those originally . announced its members of tho party. Tho president had received no ato word .today from the bcdsldo bt his father, who Is lit at Ply mouth, vt. He was' prepared to go o Plymouth if necessary. KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Nov. 19. (-Kid Htarkey of Klamath Falls and ohnnlo Trambitas of Portland, light- eights, went ten rounds to a draw ero last night. The decision of tho udges was unpopular as a majority if the fans thought Trambitas had a flight shade. In a furious six round somi-windup, fVllhur Harrington, Klamath Indian, tutpointed Jack Crlm, Modoc Indian. The boys are lightweights. Substituting for Bobby Allen, an In llan, "Dummy" Poole, Weed welter, fought a slashing draw with Tommy tlurfthy of San Francisco, In a bat In which eclipsed all others for acton. DEAD MAN' TELLS TALE ON WOULD BE SLAYER VISAI.TA.- Calif.. Nov. 19. Frank Blfford. who waa shot for 'one of the Davis boys," by Jim McAllister, hill aticher, and left for dead when Mc Allister came to town to give himself tp, told his side of the story to tho (lstrict attorney. He denied McAllis jer's statement that he had fired first n the gun duel and accused McAlister f being the aggressor. SOLD MOLASSES FOR OPIUM. GET 9 YEARS KAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 19 Two lleged nareotlo counterfeiters were bntencod to five and four year terms jrspectlvely in the federal penitentiary y Judge John S. Partridge. Tho mon, f.d Agawaln nnd Mellco Guno, were harged with having sold cans con pining molasses for opium to unsus- ucting addicts. A Hold -no By froxr. . 'COCHRAN, Ga. The Southern atlway's Ponce 'Leon sperial was eld up here while a pnlr t if Mood minds , leisurely bayed n convict' ail down the track. . I W aV '. :. m" JUtammm jmmjr 'V., ' - ' J " II ' ' I i r 6 3: II i . NON-DETONATING '' GASOILEHE . AT DEPENDABLE S E Hty I C E STATIONS , : .. '.: . ' ;' - ,' - ',.'.-'.''' , -'..r , !,' '.-'', '; -- '.-'.-. i ' -'--'- - '