Medford daily tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1906-1909, December 28, 1908, Page 7, Image 7

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    So that the
.. . ..
fU No other firm or person can buy or sell these hats. When they are advertised by other stores at cut price
)they are old stock, out of date styles imported from defunctstores elsewhere. The NONAME HAT con
tains more honest merit and iron cap wear than any other hat made for the money. Sold only at the
Medford's Greatest HP O T? np f? TJ "VT Exclusive Agents of
Value Givers 1 17111 1 UVjrVjJlJ I (he No-Name flats
SCENE FROM "IN WYOMING."
At the Medford, Monday Nlgbt, Dee smber 28.
Social and Personal
i nomas Kichardgon of Trail Crock
was in town recently with Htorics of
mow a foot deep on his hometitead.
J. D. Finley, the expert ton! Khamenei-
is exported back in Medford noun to
rename In work in tho nliop of the
trvgon uranito company.
For CliriRtmaB tickets will be on sale
2.td, 24th and 25th. For New Year'g
iH-oember 31at and January at. Return
limit .January 4, 19(19. 243
W. R. Ktaumdl ItaH left for an extend
l vinit in Portland,
J. F. Hopkins of Nome, Alaska is a
visiting friends in Medford.
.1. P. Roberts and wife of Salem are
Visiting Medford friends. They
rbarmed with the vnlley.
L. M. Lufland of Kale Point was in
Mntliurd recently on husiaers.
A. (Joblo the. 'expert fisherman of
1'rotipect, was a recent visitor in Med
ford.
.Jndjjn Halo of Orants Pass paid a
proiessional call on Jacksonville Stnur
day.
rranK jjnnsiRnout of Walking was
a recent Medford visitor.
T. T. GalHgnr of Rock Point wan a
recent Medford visitor.
.?. W. Hicks of Central Point trans
acted hnsinens in Medford Saturday,
Miss Martha Lawrence is visiting
with relatives in Oakland.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. TTumlin have left for
visit to Han Francisco. Mrs. Hamlin,
who has been unwell for a number of
years hopes to Improve by treatment in
one of the Snn Francinco hospitnls.
R. F. Clark has sold a lot in west med
ford to .?. Herman of Port I find, thecon
nideration being $4H)0.
Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Miles hj t
Christmas in Ariilacd.
Miss draco Walduf has returned from
& visit in North Dakota. Who is a sister
of Mrs. W. K. Johnson.
A loaded wagon upset near the Bear
Creek bridge Saturday, a looad of wood
being unt'ermonionsly dumped out.
W. F. Kggers and wife and H. Piatt
and wife are recent arrivals from North
Dakota who contemplate locating here.
Mr. and Mrs. Home Pelton of Sain 's
Valley were recent Medford visitors.
Cfaas. WickKtrum, the geninl mana
ger of the Nay lor sawmill was in Med
ford and sent up to the mill a peicc of
machinery to be used in hnuling the logs
into the mill.
W. J. Qimckenbush. foreman of the
Talent orchard company 's ranch, nc
rompani:d by his wife and little child
pent Saturday night visiting the family
of .1. H. yunckenbush.
Ed Anderson of Nuth Pheonlx was
a Medford caller recently.
Henry Helms and wife of Talent
wen visiting down this way Saturday.
Mrs. V. It. Stamliff and her mother
Mrs. Ijillie Rlackwood, of Pheonix were
in Medford last Saturday doing trading.,
C. K. M e '1 a i n a nd w i f e h n v e gone
to i'hico, Oil., for a short visit.
Mr. and M rs. J. N. Manning of
Talent spent Satnvdiy and Sunday in
Medfonl.
SEE
MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MEDFORD.
People may know the truth. We are the Exclusive Agent in
Medford of the World Famous " r
1
JL
Mrs. U Watterman of Talent has left
for a months visit wiih her son in
Oklahoma.
tf, H. Robbius, wife nnd little eirl
of this eity departed on Wednesday for
Nacretnento, t al., where they will visit
with( relatives for some lime.
Will and Jonas Spltzer came down
from the Wagner Rutte mine the first
of the week to spend Christmas with
their families
Miss Dessie a popular ladv of Talent
is now visiting with her relatives in the
Willamette Vail, v, and expects to re
main there fur the winter.
Justice of the Peace W. H. Canon
m Saturday continued until Monday
the hearing of the case of the state vs.
Myrtle Painter, atoault and battery. W.
Dearborn is the complaining witness.
J. W. Hicks of Central Point was
a Medford visitor Saturday.
H. F. Mul key and daughter visited
in Medford Snturdav.
Try the Clam Boullion at the M. Sc B.
Candy Kitchen Ht 5 cents. 200
The meeting of the (heater Medford
elub has been postponed on nccount of
the holidays until the first Monday in
Junuarv.
Try the hot chocolate at the M. & B.
Candy Kitchen at 5 cents. 2(16
Miss Martha Lawrence left Saturday
for Oakland, where she will make an
x tended visit.
Try tho hot drinks at the M. & B.
Candy Kitchen for 5 cents. 260
Train 16 from tho south was delay
ed Sunday night by a fi eight wreck on
the Shasta division, not reaching Med
ford until 2 n. m. She is duo at 5:20
p. ni.
The Orants Pass Observer thermonie-
er registered 13 above zero last Sunday
morning. That uieaus 19 degrees of
frost, the lowest registration since this
thermometer wag brought to Orants
Pass five venrs ago.
Harry Messier of Medford was in this
city last Sat unlay, says the Orants Pass
Observer, calling on his many friends.
He has sold out all his interests at Med
ford and may decide to locate here if he
can find whnt he wauts. I
H. T. Andrews has resigned his posi-
ion as secretary of the Orants Pass
'mmercial elnb, and after n much need
ed vacation will probably engage in the
real estate business in his city. Mr. An
drews made an efficient secretary and
the club will have difficulty in filling
his place.
Mrs. Alice U.eon, who lives in the
northern end of tho Rogue River val
ley, is clearing up a large part of her
SO-acre tract north of Hold Hill with
the intention of planting it to Tokay
grapes. The success which attended her
last year's effort in this line hns en
couraged her to greater endeavors.
Mr. and Mrs. W. Voegele spent Christ
mas in Oriuits Ps with Mrs. II. h. An
drews. William Hart Hamilton nnd .7. F.
It eddy have purchased the sixth inter
cut in tin Hltiom field mine owned by
Joe Admin, formerly of Mini ford. This
is one of the most promising prospects
of the Hlue I.rdge district.
Miss ll7el Davis, daughter of Bank
SEE
f
NAME HAT
er G. A. Davis of Jacksonville, is vig
iting friends in Medford.
John Wilson of Orants Pass has ar
rived m Medford for a visit- He says
that something of a commotion was
created in Merlin recently when Ed
von Allman came in from his homestead
and reported seeing a monster black
bear on his way down. A company of
sports was immediately organized and
the woods were beaten for miles around
with no trace of Sir Bruin. From one
cause or another every dog in the dis
trict that could be depended upon in a
bear chaBe hns met a violent death dur
ing the past season, and much regret
hag been expressed that at least one of
them had not been spared for emer
gency use. . . , .j ; . .
Mrs. T. J. Bell of the Bell house in
Talent has returned home after a two
weeks' visit to the Barnehurg family
near Medford.
The ladies of the Greater Medford
club will give the third of their social
dances on Tuesday evening in the Angle
opera house.
A report has reached Medford that
Louis Bennett hns been married. Par
ticnlars have not yet arrived.
Kngene Savage and wife, formerly of
this eity but residing at present in
Olenvillo, returned to their home Sun
day evening nfter visiting with the par
ents of Mrs. Savage, Mr. and Mrs. James
Bass.
Riehnnl Smith has arrived in Med
ford from North Dakota. He intends to
locate in the valley.
Mrs. V. P. Gould nnd son Albert are
visiting relatives in Portland.
Mrs. A. R. Phinps is visiting her sis
tor, Mrs. R. Denton, on Myrtle creek.
B. M. McGee, who has been in -Med
ford for some time on business con
nected with the coal mine southeast of
this city, has returned to his home
Los Angeles.
Lynn Pnrdin, the geninl editor of the
Gold Hill News, spent Christmas in this
ty. Lynn reports great activity in
the mining district metropolis.
H. v. Lumsden and wife are home
from Los Angeles for o few days. They
expect to return to southern California
soon.
Charles Carney, superintendent of the
Oregon Granite company's quarry, left
Monday to resume his duties after
spending Christmns in Medford.
Starting with December 2S, the Lou
vre will furnish a merchants' lunch
from 11:30 a. m. to 2 p. m. 240
F. H. Farrar. Jr., son of F. H. Farrar.
superintendent of the Gold Ray power
house, who is employed in the O. R. k
N. railroad offices at Portland, and his
sister. Miss Emma Farrar, bookkeeper
n the Home telephone office at Port
land .are spending the holidays with
their parents at Gold Ray.
Count de Bogus, better known as H.
A. Punly, is in receipt of nn elegant
Christmas present a swell 25-cent pipe,
presented to him by one of his many
admirers. The pipe is of French briar
with a perfectly curved hardened rub
ber stem. Pipe the pipe.
George Owings is spending a week in
Yreka, Cal.
All Dtptndt.
Tour la t It looks like pretty good
soil around here. Whut crops do the
fanner grow In this section? Na
tive That all depends, stracger.
Tourist Deiwuds on what? Native
Ou whut sort of seed they puts In.
Just So.
"I wish you would use your Influ
ence to get Jinx to attend our poker
purty this evening."
J!nx: hy. bo's the poorest poker
player you ever saw!"
"1 know It."-Houston Post.
Com maud lare fleNK but cultivate
email ones. Virgil.
ELS FOR DUDS
ADVT. INSIDE
OREGON. MONDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1908.
London's Bridota.
Few people nre uwure of the extent
to which tho city of London in bridged
over. In all, it seems, there are no
rewer uian seventy-live bridges. Of
those nineteen nre rallwuv hHriuwa
three are bridges over roads (such as
Hdborn viaduct), and fiftyTthree are
undoes wjjicii rcmieet private prem
IseH.-Poll Mall Gazette.
Placing Him.
"May I asl: .von what your profes
sion is?"
"Certainly. I cure jwople of the blues
by hypnotic power."
"Ob, I see. Yru'ro what you tnlgh:
coll a cbeerutXM!!::!."
, Mean,
Maud (bofnr." (!:; InuMns hyena's
cage) How iimviikliig! Here we'va
been twenty minute, and the hyena
oosn t luuKhed mire. EllaStrange,
and he's been eyivg your new hat tool
His Crest Love.
She nnrMnjr. On you lore me? Ho
rkuisli:? her rapturously ami repeated
lyi Do I? I wNh you were a twu
bended pirl. That's all I ran say. Lon-
d-.ii Tit-lltro.
Our Wonderful Railroads.
C;l Ilaui i uu was ripht when aha
sr.;d that If there were never to bo
u:iy ralhvcys ou iLi co.n Lu-m It
vv;.hl have bei n I iperilMente :ir
l':u;:iuu3 t" b.ive lilsio.er'.tl It Oi:Jy
by the railways could Its niiignltlceut
uluunc-cs be bridged. E:;u:i!Iy corrK"t
tvau Charles Carroll of Curmllhm. the
In survivor uf the signers of the Dec
laration of Independence, wueu, on
throwing up the flvat shovelful of
earlU for the llrnt r::ihv::y of the i:tit
ed Stales which wuh intended lo curry
passengers nnd freight, the La 111 un re
and Ohio, be uNc!aI:ued. "I. consider
this event eoroud only to that cf the
adoption of the JJeclurutluu of inde
pendence. If second oven to that"
That was in 1HJM. Hut England was
far ahead of us In railway buEldln:: in
the beginning. Even Russia got a bet
ter start than we did. At the outset
we Imported not ouly our locomotives
and cars, but ulso the mils on which
tlii.v were run and Hie men to run
i lie in. However, John Stevens. Peter
Cooper, Evan Thomas. Matthias Bald
win mid others changed all this and
in their various fields laid the founda
tions of a railway system which is to
day In dimensions and completeness
far ahead of that of any other half a
dozen countries In the world combined.
Leslie's Weekly.
Th Franz Hals MuMum In Holland.
Old Haarlem calls up the shadow of
Frani Hals. The museum Is verily a
sanctuary to bis memory. There the
famous corporation pictures hang. One
sees the members of the various guilds
In the fullness of careless life, eatlnjr.
drlnUIng and merrymaking. Here Hals
Is seen at the height of bis power. The
Fplcrdid cokr arid UlreeiT:e of v.orlt
are n revelation. Every figure seems
alive, and one is convinced they were
all In the flesh once. This great mas
ter with ouc bold stroke of hi Imnh
made these men immortal. At elgVy
years he still painted, uud his last pic
ture hangs beside his uiasierpleces.
Haarlem and Hals will be asforlntcd
as long as the place lasts. One mar
vels at the execution of t'ie Dutch
painters, whether It be lit Cie bntu!
work of Hula or In the nilnlnluie fi-.:Iv'i
of the genre masters. AH of tl.em hnd
a splendid sense of values, atmosphere
and human life: n perfect harmony of
relation fills their canvases. Spring
field (Mass.) Republican.
Unconquerable. -
It was a vetcnin solt!'err ihrt re
peopled the plantations n:-d the hoTne
stcatls of the south, writes Tbomas
Nelson Fage in the Did Dominion, and
withstood the forces thrown against
them during the period of reconstruc
tion. In addition to. personal pride,
self reliance and- physical courage,
they possessed ulso race pride, which
is inestimable In a great popular strug
gle. However beaten and broken they
were, the (teople came out of the war
with their Hj.lrlt uniucnched and a be
lief that they were unconquerable.
A story used to be told of an old
Confederate Midler who wns trudging
heme after tho war. broken and rag
ged and worn. Ho was asked what be
would do if the Yankees got after him
when he reached home.
"Oh, they ain't goln to trouble me,"
be said. "If they do I'll Just whip 'era
again."
Cold and a Candle.
Pr, Mors of the English polar expe
dition of 1875 and 1870, among other
odd things, tells of the effect cf cold
on a wax caudle which he burned.
The temperature was 35 degrees below
::ero, ni;d the doctor must have been
considerably discouraged when, upon
looking at bis candle, he discovered
that the flame had all It could do to
keep warm. It wns so cold that the
flame could not melt ull tho wax of the
candle, but was forced to eat its way
down the caudle, leaving a sort of
skeleton of the candle standing. There
wns beat enough, however, to melt
oddly shaped boles In the thin walls of
wax, and the result was a beautiful
lacelike cylinder of white, with a
tongue of yellow flame burning inside
of it nnd sending out into the dark
ness many streaks of light.
8i.g, of Cret.
Crete can claim to have been the
scene of one of the longest sieges on
record, longur tuuu the siege of Troy,
for In the seventeenth century it took
the Turks more than twenty years to
capture Its capital city. The Island. In
fact, is fumuus for protracted military
operations, for, though the revolution
of 1821 was Hpeedlly successful in the
open country, the fortified towns were
still nncaprarcd when the powers In
tervened lu 1830.
Awkward For tht Aeronaut.
An element of humor characterised
Bedford Time Table
Northbound I
160regon Express j 5:24p.m.
HjPortland Express... - 9:49a.m.
sonthbonnl
15Cahfornia Express.. .10:35a. m.
13 San Francisco Exp.. . 3:20 p. m.
No. 225From Orants Pass....) 9:15p.m.
No. 225For Ashland 10:15p.m.
PACIFIC ft EASTEEN RAILWAY
No. lLeaves Medfonl. . .
No. 3Leaves Medford. . .
No. 2j Arrives Medford...
No. 4 Arrives Medford.. .
... 8:10a.m.
. ..j 2:50p.m.
...10:28a.m.
. .. 5:08 p.m.
KOOUE BJVBB VALLEY XAILWAT
No. 2Leaves
No. 4Leaves
MotorLeaves
MotorjLeaves
Medford
Medford
Medford
Medford
10:a.m.
5:35 p. m.
2:00 p.m.
9:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.
3:30 p.m.
1:30 p. m.
7:30 p.m.
No. ljLeaves
No. 3 Leaves
Jacksonville. ,
Jacksonville.'.
MotorLeaves
MotorjLeaves
Jacksonville..
Jacksonville.
MAIL CLOSES
A.M.P.M.
Northbound .' I 9:191 4:54
Southbound 110:05 2:50
Eagle Point j 7:201 2:00
Jacksonville 10:20 5:28
SOUTHERN PACIFIC XAILWAT.
one of Mr. Spencer's Indian expef.
encea. One day, after making a para
chute descent, his balloon, traveling
on, came down among some fisher
folk, who promptly unpicked, the net
to use for fishing lines and cat up the
balloon to make waterproof clothinj!-
London Captain.
Humility and Vanity.
It Is the humble man that advances.
He recoRiilzes his liuixirfectlons anj
strives to improve. His progress Is
the result of his knowledge of Belf.
The valu, conceited, arrogant man
stands still. .
A Rule of Auto Etiquette.
No gentleman will take another
man's automobile out in the country
and blow it Into such small pieces that
It cannot be removed to a repair shop.
Chicago Record-Herald.
Quite Obvious.
A needle has only one eye, but It
looks sharp Just the same. London
Family Herald.
Classified Advertisemen ts ;
WAJTTBB.
WANTED Horses to board by tie
montb. Plenty of good, clean hay, good
warm barn; terms $6 per month. to '
horses taken fcr less than one montb. ,
Walter Moore, Fboenix. 250 i
WASTED Portland property forcou-1
try store or stock of goods. W. M.
French, room 7, Jackson County Bank
bldg. 266
WANTED 1 desire family washing t
do. 1 go to the bouse and wash by the
day. Prices reasonable; satisfaction
guaranteed. Mrs. M F. Schaenfele,
Medford, Or. Box 2A, honte No. 1 25
WANTED You ati ambitious and pos
sess at least an average amonnt of ta
and perseverance. Therefore, we want
you and will poy you $75 a month for
taking only four orders a doy. You
can earn a big income. We furnish
all supplies free. Write today to Man
ager, P. O. Box 1150, New York
City. 240
WANTED To buy $2508 hardware
store or stock. W. M. French, room
FOX BALB.
FOR SALE A good small business in
the center of Medford. Address Bol
125, Medford, Or. 266 S
FOS SALE Houses, lots and land
Phoenix, or in tracts to suit from one
acre to 640 acres. Matt Calhoun, Phoe
nix, Or.
FOE SALE Five and ten-acre tratti
within and adjoining city limits, at s
oargain on long tunc. Address PU.
Box 418, Medford, Or. 248
8 '
FOB 8ALE-rA good small basis e. on g
Seventh street. Reasons for selling.
Address, P, O. box 512 or call at this
office. tf I
FOB SALE Extra dry cordwood, fir E
and pine, tier wood, oak, fir and pine.
F. Osenbrugge, Stndcbaker Bros. Co.
warerooras. Telephone 361. 262 J
FOR SALE One piano for sale at a
nargatn, been used about three months;
Krell piano at a bargain if sold at
once. See H. M. Coss at his residence,
eorner West lOti and K sts. 244
FOR SALE Four homesteads on one
section; 6 million feet pine, good fruit
land; most of it tillable when cleared.
W. M. French, room 7, Jackson County
Rink bide. 266
i l