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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1910)
I'jU - COMMISSION IS wmmmiwmmmmmmm J s. 4. Much Dcslrablo Publicity Is Result of Scndlnn Letters and Pamphlets Natlon-Wlde by Country Life Commission In Northwest. 10 3,crc ft 4 .i MAKING 00 SPOKANE. Wash,, Oct. 24. Washington, Oregon Idaho and Mon tana aro receiving much doslrable publicity of contlnent-wldo extent as a result -ot thousands o flottors and pamphlets sent to all parts of tho United States by the Country Llfo committee of the Spokane cham bor of Commerce to editors of agri cultural pournals, educators, farm ers and business men In an endeavor to Interest tbom In the Country Llfo convention In Spokane on Novomber 17 In connection with tlo National Applo show. t Tho commlUco Is working with stato commissions In accordance with preliminary plans formulated at tho conforeuco In Spokane last November. These commissions aro ma Jo up as follews: Washington David Brown, Spo- kaue, chairman; A. L. Rogers, Wat ervllle;; J. L. Dumas, Dayton; Miss Mary Carpenter, Belllnghasi and W. H. Paulhamus Puyallup. Oregon C. E. Whlsler, Medford, chairman; Edwin Mays, Flanagan; E. H. Shepard, Hood River; George A. Dorrls, Eugene, and T. L. Rey nolds, Salem, Idaho Ralph E. Schneeloch, Jerome chairman; H. T. French, Caldwell; Mrs. Mary Q. Butterfleld, Welsor; Miss Alice Beach, Black foot, and B. T, Byrnes, oMscow. Montana J. H. Durston, Anacon da, chairman; P. S. Cooloy, Bore man; M. L. Dean, Missoula; Mrs. C. H. Conrad, Kallspell and Mrs. H. B. Mitchell, Great Falls. Tho purpose of the convention Is to hear comments upon tho country llfo hall, which Is part of tho con solidated rural schoql and commun ity center project, with a view to working out a practical plan to be agreed upon by tho convention. It Is the purpose to begin work soon upon tho community center In Spo kano county, the first to be estab lished in the United States, and upon its success depends largely tho ccre atlon of similar districts in many other parts ot the Northwest. The plan, outlined at tho confer ence here last year, has slnco at tracted the attention of the fore most educators and sociologists of the world, who see in its adoption tho solution of the problem of how to Improve and popularize farm life nad agricultural pursuits, whilo Its projectors believe the practical appli cation ot the Idea will do more than any other popular movement to at tract a desirable class of borne mak ers and producers to tho sparcely settled districts of the Northwestern and Pacific states. Triangle 5 Ply Collars A better collar never was shown in the city of Medford. Every man who buys these collars conies back for more. The reason is they are the only i'ive ply collars on the market and that they wear so much longer than anything to be found at anything near the price. Just come and try these collars- we'll guarantee that you will always uso them. New Neckwear New lines of fine neckwear, mufflers, silk scarfs, etc. If you want neckwear of quality, neckwear that shows style and durability and a combination of the very newest styles, we would like to have you call here and see our line. The assortments aro complete and you can buy just as many as you desire. 25c to $1.00 The Wardrobe THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES Butte Falls Items e Wcould fill soveral moro houses with tenants if wo had the houses ready for occupancy, but as our mill has been delayed by tho installation of the new machinery wo have not had the building material on hand, but this will not be the case any longer, as tho mill is rendy to fill all orders as fast as they can saw the timber. The Crater Lake Lumber company is hauling all of Its stored lumber to a point on the railroad for shipment and from tho stir around there it Is quite likely that there Is some Im portant move on foot. I only wish that our county com missioners had to travel over our roads and ford some our streams, where thero are no foot crossings, Vote So on Annexation. The portion of Washington county proposed to bo annexed to tho Mul tnomah is seven miles wide, contains 112 of our 730 sections, Tour and a half of our fifteen millions of taxa ble property, one-fourth of our vot ers and population and one-half of our railroad mileage. Five hundred voters of this strip tavo signed a remonstrance against annexation a cloar majority, as less than 300 sign ed tho petition and about 90 votes wero cast at the last zcenral elec tion. In addition to the many who favored annexation now oppose it and say tho cut was made too deep. Wo ask you to voto No on Washington-Multnomah division. W. D. Wood, chairman Anti-Annexation committee, HlUsboro, Oregon. (Paid Advertisement,) especially the ono at Palous, and they might see that our complaints are not groundless. I certainly hope the people will vote for, the amend ment and allow counties to bond and that we will have an intelligent, scientific road construction and this annual waste of. money and labor be a thing of the past. Quito a number of valley parties are passing through town on their way to the hills for hunting. Charles Edmonson has a largo log ging contract for tho mill and Is working to finish it before the win ter rains sets in. A Mrs. Roblnett of Eagle Point, who J has been working at tho Dupray ho tel with her son, will removo to tho valley soon and take up her resi dence there. Tho Rev. Mr. Jones Is making a hand In the erection of tho new Presbyterian homo for tho pastor. Ho is tho. right man In the right place and re dnceroly hopo ho may be successful la hia work. Ralph Tucker of Brownsboro brought In for J. P. Hughes several hundred pounds of flno Spltzenberg apples. Mr. J. P. Hughes received a largo consignment of splendid country butter on Thursday and Is expecting many goods by freight as his busi ness Is growing dally. Mr. Thomas, who hns lion llvlnrr I ' o In the Fredonl urgh homo, Is about to return to Eagle Point as he hasj nearly finished his railroad contract. Several new homes aro under con struction and the builders aro busy getting them under cover. The N. B. Stoddard house Is near ly completed and will be n tasty and comfortablo home. On all sides are evidences of pro gress, from ? material po'nt of view, and It Is expected that tho near com ing of the railroad will bring with it an advance and increased population of dcslrablo citizens. Ed Cowden Is kept bucy hauling, as is also Uncle Ben Edmonson, lum ber for tho new homes being built. OATTING AND FIELDING AVERAGES WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP SEARIES CHICAGO, Oct. 24. Following are the batting and fielding aver ages of the Chicago Nationals and Philadelphia Athletics during the world's championship series of five games: CHICAGO. A store tbould be advertised as Tegularly as It Is opened for business. It TRY' THIS FOR CATARRn. Get a HYOMEI (pronounce Iligh-o-mo) outfit today. Pour a few drops from the bottle Into tho Inhaler that comes with each outfit, and breathe In It four or five Uruea a day. Immediately you will know that HYOMEI soothes and heals the ln lamed and Irritated membrane. But HYOMEI does moro than soothe and heal; It kills tho germs, thoso porsovering pests that aro at the root of all catarrhal conditions. "Last year I suffered terribly with catarrh. I used ono bottle of HY OMEI, and my catarrh was better." Miss Helen McNalr, Loyalton, Cal. A complete HYOMEI outfit, In cluding a bottle of HYOMEI, a hard rubber pocket inhaler and simple In structions for uso, costs only $1.00. If you now own a Hyomol Inhaler, you can got r.u oxtra bottle of Hyo mol for only 50 cents at Chas. Strang's drug store, and druggists everywhere. Guaranteed to euro catarrh, cioup, asthma and soro throat, or money back. Player G. Shulte, if. 5 Chance, lb 5 Tinker, ss 5 Sheckard, rf 5 Hoffman, cf. . . Zimmerman, 2b. Archer, c oieiniemt, au u Kling, c 5 Brown, p 3 Beaumont, p 3 Cole, p Pfcister, p Overall, p Melntyre, p. . . . Necdham, u. . . . Rculbach, p. . . Richie, p ... 1 ... 1 ... 1 o !!. i ... i ... i Player G. Collins, 2b 5 Baker, 3b 5 Coombs, p 3 Davis, lb 5 Murphy, rf 5 Bonder, p 2 Strunk, If. 4 Thomas, c 4 Lapp, c 1 Barry, os 5 Hartzel, if 1 Lord, cf. 5 AB. 17 17 18 14 15 17 11 20 13 I 2 o 1 1 1 0 0 AB. 21 22 13 17 20 G 18 12 4 17 5 22 R. BH. Av. 3 0 .353 1 0 .353 2 0 .333 5 .4 .280 2 4 .207 0 5 .235 1 2 .182 0 2 .100 0 1 .077 0 0 .000 1 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 PHILADELPHIA. R. 5 G 0 5 0 1 o o 0 3 o 3 BH. 0 0 5 G 7 2 5 3 1 4 1 4 Av. .429 '.400 .385 .383 .350 .333 '.278 .250 .250 .235 .200 .182 PO. 4 51 11 8 7 10 27 2 11 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 PO. 17 9 1 43 0 1 10 27 4 8 2 8 A. 0 4 14 2 0 18 3 12 7 0 0 3 1 0 o 0 1 0 A. 17 11 4 1 2 o 0 8 o 12 0 0 E. 1 1 1 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 K. 1 3 2 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Av. .800 1.000 .ncti .909 .975 .900 1.000 .875 1.000 .909 .000 1.009 1.000 .000 .0G7 .000 1.000 .000 Av. .972 .809 .714 .930 1.000 1.000 .909 1.000 1.000 1.000. 1.000 l'.OOO Orchard Tracts IN PERRY'S SUBDIVISION JUST OUTSIDE OP TOWN r v r f . 5 A ifWe havo a few ton-acro tracts and one 40-acro tract vot unseld: 40-acro tract has Beautiful Oak grovo for building sitos, good houso, barn, windmill, gaaoiino on giiie and everything convenient; thoro is no bettor land in tho Roguo River Valloy; no bettor location for an ideal borne. If you want a good pioco of land or boaiitif til home, see our one-acro tracts in tho big Oak grove. Prices arc lowor than anything in tho valloy, considering location and quality of soil. Call on J. A. Perry, ownor, or have your agent show yoii these tracts. J. A. PERRY, - 604 W. Main Street, Medford, Ore. - ' r r if 3 r Clyde Fitche's Great Drama 'The City Coming' 1 r 1 ' 1 "The City," tho last and by com petent critics consldorod tho great est play written by tho lato Clyde Fitch, comes to the Medford theater on Wednesday, October 20th. This will bo Its first presontatlon'ln Med ford, coming directly from a year's run at the Lyric theater, Now oYrk, whoro tho drama croatod a vorlta blo sensation and wnu tho talk of tho metropolis for months. "Tho city" Is tho story of tho uard family, prosperous, ambitious, not over-scrupulous, who movo to Now York city from an up stato vll lnge and thoro moot with various di sasters, I Thoro Is a skoloton In tho cloHot In j tho form of Qoorgo Fioderlcj'c Shan non ,a "dopo flond," a ilog'onorato, a blackmailer and tho Illegitimate son of tho head of tho family. Tho fathor dies Huddonly and whon tho I family sottlo In tho city of Han nock bocomoa confidential secretary Ifo tho thon master of tho houso, Ooorgo Hand Jr., tho younger Hlstor, and Hannock, Ignorant of tholr truo relationship, fall In love and nro married. Whon Kind loarnH of HiIh ho Is horror strlckon, tolls Hannock tho truth, nud dcclnres that tho mar riage 1h no mnrrlago. Hannock atlll pomlsts In his determination to tako Clcoly away with him, having boon discharged by hlu omployor, and whon Hand calls In his ttlstor to ox plain tho situation to hor, Hannock nurvod for onro to act tho man, haws a rovolvor and Hhj)otB tho girl through tho heart. Tho Moss. Shubor aro wending an oxceplonnl cast or players In "Tho City." Norman Hnckott will play Ooorgo Hand, Jr., and oOoffroy C. Stoln will bo soon as Hannock. Othor well known mombora of tho company aro Mm. Jouophlno Florence Shop hard, Uthol Martin, Suuinno Wllla, Arthur S. Hull, Mario Majaronl, otc. Boats on ualo at HnHkliiH. After Imperial Cotton. If you never "loso any tlmo" ex cept that spent In fruitlessly answer ing want aCs, yju'H get along! LOS ANGELES. Cal., Oct. 24. U. Aria, vlco president of tho Japan ese firm of Mlrlmura & Aria, cotton Importers of Yokohama, Is In Ios Angoles today, determined to socure the greater part of this season's cot ton crop In tho Imperial valloy. Bid ding for tho crop, which will bo nearly 100 por cent moro than when tho oxperlmont of cotton growing In California was inado last year, Is ex pected to bo spirited. L. It. Car,? well of Gold Hill was In Medford on a business visit Mon day. J. P. Prlco of Silver Lake, Ore gon, Is In Medford on a business vis- of sovoral diys, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Cannon of Roseburg aro la Medford on a short visit. S. A. Pattison of Central Point was a Medford business visitor Mon day. ' J. E. aWtt was a Contral Point visitor Sunday. FOR RENT Only hotel in tovn of 1000 inhabitants on Southorn Pacific rail road, Rop;ue Rivor valley. Nowly refurnished, papered, painted; equipment modern; buths, toilets, electrio li(;htn, hot and cold run ning wator. Now doinp; businosa, CALL ON ALDENHAGEN ROGUE RIVER ELECTRIC COMPANY, 216 West Main St., Medford, Or. PLUMBING STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING All Work Guaranteed Prices RonBonablo COFFEEN (Q. PRICE 11 North D St., Medford. Ore. Phone 308 T