Medford daily tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1906-1909, May 04, 1908, Page 3, Image 3

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    THE MEPFOKP DAILY TRIBUNE, M ED FORD, OR., MONDAY. MAY 4, 1'MW.
PORTLAND AFTER
j hnntie. The next iuurniiil Mninliiy
tht'v walkril to Iti'iiit'ia. ami oh tho road
rnnrcoc lurrx1""' ""'ir r"M i"'ri,'"'- T,'y
UKUlltKo IhLLI i' h""im:i" lak-'n u.
ivth thi'in ami wanttil tu walk alnui
. tin ruilroail track, tolling them tlu-v
wi re " lli an i.li tlv ijalH. " Mm. Combs,
Delegation Seeking National Convention a9 a last r,..,rt, l.t at the Chinaman's
Railroad Companies Asked for Half i f,,,'t f"r ilis ,ifl'-
t..... a...,. - . At B'nieia th Rirln ' tfrahl.e.1 - the
ne5ons-newi,ill(1 hBwa(f0 f ,,.,,, train an,!
Affiliatious with Development League ''-'""e to Sa'ruimnti, where Ihey hoanl
j t-1 the nortlihuuuil Oivguii for Chit-o.
! I hey perched themselves on the water
HOPKINS REPORTS SMALL
DAMAGE BY FROSTS
PORTLAND, Dr., May 4. A special
delegation leaves Portland today for
Boston, where the National Retail Gro
cers' Association will ocuvene next
.uomiay to inv.te that association to
hold its 1H09 session in Portland. Dr.
.1. Whitconib Brongher, pastor of the
"White Temple, goes to Oklahoma City
to attend the Northern Baptist fonveu-
lion the middle of this month. Rev.
Willi4in,Hirnm Foulki-M will go to Kan
sas Uty to participate in the general i
assembly of the Presbyterian church
Portland will indorse in the heartiest
' manner tho invitation to be extended
by Seattle for the convention of
this body.
Half Fare Ratos Asked.
The Commercial club of Walla Walla
Wash., has passed resolutions urging
tne raiiroail companies to grant a one-
fare rate for the round trip, bv eontiu
uous passage, between points in inter
ior Washington ami Oregon, and the
seaside resorts of these two states. -It
is understood that the club also favors
a higher rate when stopover privileges
are allowed. The Walla Walla club has
requested the commercial bodies of
Eastern Oregon, Washington and Idaho,
as well as the Commercial club of Port
land, to pass similar resolutions. Tt is
hoped that -favorable action niav be
taken by all, as the people of the in
terior should bo given the opportunitv
of visiting tho coast, especially during
the summer months, at the least pos
sibl coat.
Notes of Development.
Tho Mount Angel Commercial club is
the latest sff illation with tho Oregon
Development league.
The Sumpter Valley railroad, com
prising a length of h'7 miles between
Maker Oity and Austin, Or., runs
through the Snmpter mining belt and
is soon to double its ntilin. Today
Hit per cent of the freight nt' this road
cjmhob from timber, though it is not
generally known that linker City is a
lumlier eeuter.
It will be the 15rh of May before the
new eight-story steel building of tho
Portland Commercial club will bo ready
IViV occupancy. The club will formally
open its new quarters on .Time 12, the
anniversary of the laying of its cor
nerstone. The cost of the building and
its furnishing has been $-t.'!4,000.
Successful Horse Sale.
Hot Lake, Or., has become one of
the most prosperous resorts between
the Jtocky ninsjitains and the Pacific
ocean. The lowest attendance for many
months has been 130.
Last week witnessed the most suc
cessful sale of horses ever held in
Portland. Breeders and buyers from
Washington. Oregon, Montana, Idaho,
Calif train and British Columbia were
there, with a liberal sprinkling of
K'tstern owners. The average was $240
each for every horse sold during one
day if the pale.
TWO YOUNG WOMEN
HOBO FROM CALIFORNIA
tank to the engine and had their sue
ond experience. A burly hobo wanted
to come up and sit beside them, but, de
clared Mrs. Combs, "I held that hobo
off for two hours at the point of my re
voiver.
Ari'viug in Chieo, the girls expressed
their intention of making the rest of
the trip in male attire and the Southern
I'ricitie depot men they are an accom
modating lot soon h:id the desired np
pare) on haad. When tho time came to
make the change, however, the cirls
lid not possess the courage, and de
spite thef act that skirts retard clam
li"ring ontt locomotive tenders, they
difideil to go on in female attire. In
(i rants Bass they purpose to secure
l:h:iki suits.
Provided Mr. Combs does not object
when the girls arrive the two will work
for a week and then continue their
trip to Port bind; thence east through
Idaho, Mont ma 41 nil to Chicago, and
in 11 to Terre Haute.
HOBSON PICTURES WAR
BETWEEN AMERICA AND JAPAN
Captain Iliehmond P. Ilobsmi, who
speaks in Med ford t his e veiling, con
tributes an article in the forthcoming
(June) Cosmopolitan Magazine, giving
an imaginative description of a possible
war between Japan ami (lie Puitcd
States. Captain Hobson gives dia
grams of probable naval engagements,
showing the advantages the Japanese
would have through the presence of the
new Dread naughts, the Hut an ma and
the Olii. After lengthily detailing var
ious naval and military movements, the
'It is time patriotic Americans were
considering the possibility of a war for
our very existence. They should real
ize that everything would hinge upon
the control of the sea in tho Pacific.
We must take no chances of having the
permanent control of tho sea in this'
ocean. Jt our tleet wore on the I'ncitic
oast at the outbreak of war and should j
remain on that coast, moving out no
further than Hawaii, it would allow
tho Japanese to occupy the Philippines
for tho time.
"Except for cruises by our armored
cruisers wo should stand fast and pro
coed to build up 11 new fleot as big
acrain as our present fleet, ami in the
meantime should undertake tio offen- !
sive movement except to gain complete j
control of tho Hawaiian Islands and
establish a great naval base there.
'Of course, Japan would proceed to
build new ships also, but we could not j
ask better than a race in building ships, i
Wo could so move that the Japanese
fleot could get in action only by cross
ing the ocean.'
(Portland Journal.)
A heavy frost in the vicinity of Med
ford was believed to have done serious
damage to fruit buds, but later inves
tigation IritiU tit a different conclusion.
F. H. Hopkins, proprietor of the famous
Snowy Butte pear orchards near Cen
tral Point, came tu Portland vesterdnv
on btuiuess and said there will be a
big crop tif fruits 111 the Rogue Kiver
valley.
"While thero was some damage to
pears, the hudu show "that there is a
large Krcentage of the fruit unhurt,
and that tho uar crop will be ample.
The frost did not hurt apples at alt,
and thero is no occasion for alarm
about tho Rogue river valley apple
crop."
Similar reports of frost damage to j
Kastorn Oregon wheat are proved to be
unfounded. A. A. Morse, freight agent
of the Harriman lines, has just re
turned from a trip through the wheat
country inland, and ho said the crop
there this year will eojial the big yield
recorded in llt)7.
4
the Office Rnv
Wise Talks By
the Office Boy
hfll)
We are selling on an average
more than lit Ml sacks of Waits
burg Pure White Flour every
mouth. There is a reason for
this. More people aro reaiix-
: 1....
ie:ikef. nii'i't- whifor Itretitl timl
more of it than any other
a flour on tho market in Med-
4 fi id. Try it and if this stnte- 4
4 iiieiil isn't true in every par- 4-
tici'bir wo will cheerfully re-
fund vour money.
ALLEN
6
REAGAN
Xb Orocery on tl Ootatfc
-f a $ ft if ! 6 -f
f
Pa say8 ft row toy any other
name would bo just as expen
sive back eaat this time of year.
I sometimes think he pines for
tho piuoy woods in old Penob
scot, Frappe County, Maine,
where he was raised but that 'ft
ono thing yours truly never
yearns for. Th good mountains
and the good old ocean a id nice
old Oregon atmosphcro are good
enough for 111 . But it's all in
how you wore raised. Pa likes
clam chowder and corn on the
cob, and harvest apples and n
lot of thing that a kid who
was born this side of tho snow
sheds hasn t had much chance
to got acquainted with. Those
who have lived on both sides of
this great country aud lived
long enough to know what's
what can get all those things
just as nico one place as an
other, if you know whero to buy...
We've got clam chowdor from
Boston that is just as nice as
any you ever nte on tho sand,
and lots of other things that
have that " Bown Fast" taste.
MIIIFR & KWfUNk
Do you want a bargain?
SO acres within 5 miles of Hertford, $'20 per acre, for
quick sale. (Inine quick if you want this bargain.
ALFRED SMITH
OVER JACKSON COUNTY BANK.
Ii
R EI NHART
Has just received liHH) barrels of California Cement.
Xapa .1 unction make, guaranteed to lie equal in tests
and results to (lie best Knlisli or (ierman makes. If
tbis guarantee is not true 1 will refund money.
One sack equals 10U pounds
Four sacks equals one barrel
Trice, delivered, per sack '...$1.15
Price delivered, per barrel $4-00
AVill allow 1' l-'J cents for all empty sacks returned.
LEAVE ORDERS AT THE POSTAL
TELEGRAPH OFFICE
!
Cedar Beveled Siding
ANYTHING MADE FROM TREES
Quota' ions promptly and cheerfully furnished
Woods Lumber Co.
KILNS AND MILLS AT OLKXHALK ORKOON
YARD AN' I) OKF1CH AT M KDI-'ORI), OUKOOX.
With hats awry and faces and dresses
stfeaked with oil, t wo pretty ' ' hobo
girls" of San Francisco Mrs. Roy if.
Combs, trained nurse, and Miss Helen
Bale, chorus girl arrived on top of
tho water tank of the northbouml Or
ogon express on their way from Cali
fornia to Terre Haute, Ind., a trip they
are making by beating passenger trains,
walking and begging their way. They
claim to be 19 nnd IS years of age, re
spectively. WhoCjseen by n newspaper represen
tative the girls told an amusing story
of their adventures. Mrs. Combs has a
grnndmother, Mrs. Anna Robinson, in
Terre Haute, and a husband in (iranls
Bass. The girls roomed together in San
Francisco, and both being out of work,
they decided to beat their way to
0 rants Pass and thence to Terre Haute.
Accordingly, armed with a revolver
and an extra dress apiece, they watkWI
from Kast Oakland to Richmond, where
they passed the first night at a farm
H. E. Boyden Sells Ranges That
are Unsurpassed "
IX TIM 14 AND LAP.OU-SAYTNO QUALITIES, ALL
STYLUS AXI) PRICKS, GUAIiAXTLKI) TO I'LHASH
Till-; MOST PARTICULAR.
Moore
IS THE XAMI-l OF THE RAXOFi. II. K. P.OYDKX IS
THE NAME OF THE PLACE TO P.UY ONE. CALL
IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.
All Kinds and
Varieties of
Lumber
We Have
Cement
That will stand the Test
Prompt Delivery
atRlGHTPRlQES
Iowa Box & Lumber Co.
MEDFORD OREGON
The Most for tho Money. :
The Auburn automobile in the most ;
roomy nnd best machine ever offered i
for the money. See it. before liuyiug, !
Ii. It. Brown, agent.
time.''
The Old
Howard Ranch
milt's south uf Mcil ford uud
wo;! of I'loMiiix, is now nit up
Thn
mil
in small t rarts to suit the purchaser.
Oni' fourth cash, balance in three pay
tin nls. This is a rare opportunity for
turn of small iio-ans. Listed with all
tin aciils.
GREAT 6 FOR
ALE
BEGINS
Wednesday, May 6 at Meeker & Go's
DRY GOODS STORE
TJIIS IS THE FIRST SALE OF THE KIND EVER INSTITUTED IX THIS CITY. NO MATTER WHAT YOU IUY, DRESS GOODS. SHOES. FURNISHING GOODS. NOTIONS,
LICOES. GINGHAMS, OUTLNG FLANNELS, HATS, GLOVES, PIBRONS, HANDKERCHIEFS, HOSE OR ANY OTHER GOODS Til AT WE CARRY IN STOCK. YOU ONLY
PAY FOR "), 1)UT GET . OUR REASON FOR THIS MOST LIBERAL OFFER IS THAT WE WISH THE PEOPLE OF SOUTHERN OREGON To REALIZE MORE TIIOR
OU('i"flLY THE HIGH STANDARD OF QUALITY AND STYLE OUR SPRING STOCK CONTAINS. OUR' PRICES ARE ALWAYS THE LOWEST, AND WITH Til E GREAT
OFFER WE ARE MAKING IN THIS GREAT U FOR'.-) SALE YOU ARE SAVING KlTO-'xt PER CENT BY TRADING W IT 1 1 US.
(i yards of Dress Goods for the price of.... 5 yards
fi yards of Lace for 1 ho price of.. yards
pairs of Shoes for the price of " pairs
fi pairs of Hose for the price of pairs
ti pairs of Overalls for the price of
(I pairs of Suspenders for the price of
ti dozen Buttons for the price of
(i Papers pins for the price of
... pairs
..,1 pairs
....) doell
...") pairs
REMEMBER, I F YOU BUY " OF ANY ARTICLE THE SIXTH IS ABSOLUTELY ';;;.
W. H. MEEKER & CO.