Jacksonville post. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1906-19??, March 26, 1921, Image 3

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    Relle of Noah.
THE CHURCHES
The Desert de Curlftte, In the Pyre-
uno«, close on 10.000 feet above the
sea, contains no fewer then HO Inltc- of
varying sizes. These, according to lo­
cal tradition, were left at the ti ne
of the flood. When the water subsided,
It Is said. Nonh ami his family landed
on the I’tiy de I’rlgue. one of the high-
a.st peaks In the distrleL
WHAT you lose
Th? Pioneer Church.
»,»
Sun 1 ly School at It) o’clock.
*1. U. Gallup, Superintendent.
Easter Services at 11 o’clock.
Subject: “The Imortal Life."
A special feature will be a solo by
Mrs. B F. Lindas. ’
You will be welcome.
.
-
B F. LINDAS.
,5Ogood cigarettes
•1
for 10c from
one sack of
*>...
ST. JOSEPHS CATHOLIC CHURCH.
.
GENUINE
BULL'
DURHAM
»t
-- -i,
-
p"
IT
Town Talk
; ; •
• .».
•
J
cause when you use it—there are
no failures-no losses. Every bak­
ing is sweet and palatable—and
stays moist, tender and delicious to
the last tasty bite.
E3£ùS)Sa!S5)SSSâ)iK9 e®?jtt?ÍS€®S®S5fel
That’s a big saving—but
that isn’t all. You save when
Oregon Normal School
you buy Calumet and you save
when you use it.
Summer Session Announcements
The summer terms of the Oregon Normal School
will be held as follows:
MONMOUTH:
Presbyterian Church.
TOBACCO
-
MASS
9:30 A M.
On the second, third and fourth Sun­
days of each month until further
notice.
R ev . W m . J M eagher , rector.
’ ’ thru baking failure
must be added to baking
costs—it has to be paid for.
Calumet Baking Powder
will save you all of that. Be­
a
Mr». Sargent euggests that we cajl
»ur new .park “Cluggai^e Park” in
haiior of James Cluggage, the man
who descovered gold in Jacksonville ip
18$L
9:00 A. M. Sunday School with our
special set vices.
.10:00 A. M, Morn'ng ser-vicea. Sub­
ject “The E later Faith”. Mr». Gard­
ner will »in’ a silo an J th» chiir wil
render special choruses.
Opportunity for church membership
will be given and the Lord’» Supper
will be appropi-gitly observed.
7:00 P. M. Christian Endeavor.
7:30 Evangelistic servivce ard spec­
ial music.
All aye cordially iuvited to attend
and even urged to come Easter Sunday.
R ev . J. K. H oward .
•Mr». Eilen Beason of Central Point
»pent. Friday afternoon with Mrs.
fasten Hartman.
• •
The Medford high school girls this
E. S. ètultz and Dalton Terrill ¿rami» J »week started a cruaade against modern
a busjness’trip to Medford Friday ■ styles which it elude paint, rogue,
'forenoon.
j short skirts, low necked waists and
Mr and. Mrs. A. R. Eeyeart and outrageous styles in hair dressing. An
daughter Ethel, were in M«dford Sat- j earnest and widespread movement of
I the sort wouW be gratefully received
urd«y. . .
- •
».
I by every one.
All worg -done at W. R. Sparkf in
Mr. and Mrs. John F. White and
1921, »pot eash. Thin means what it
grandchildren were Jacksonville visit-
»ays,
-
j ora Sunday.
Rev. Wm. Meagher, who has hi»
headquarters at the Sacred Heart hos- I The tickets for “Dust of the Earth”
will be on sale at F. J. Fick'S hard­
pstxf at Medford was in Jacksonville
ware from 1 till 5, Tuesday afternoon.
«Ài ktuaipess Wednesday.
A aeries of Passion week services
.Hugh Jones, a resident of this cify have been' lield in the Presbyterian
in former year», has returned here ai d chtirch this week. Rev. J. K. Howa-d
anay dpc.de to locate permanently.
presenting a number of interesting
Mi.» Zola Khox is reported to be iil talks.
at her home on California street.
George and Chester Wendt attended
•
<• :
•
; ■
Mrs. D. H.-Jackson of Ashland and bund. uyaetice at. Medford Tuesday
daughter, Mfs. K'-yle of Portland, were evening.
Two very beautiful rainbows in close
guvets of Mias I»»ie McCully Friday. •
proximity, were observed in the north­
The Fortnightly Bridge club which ;
ern sky Ute Tuesday afternoon. The
was to have met last week, was post. ]
rainbows were the clearest and most
pened because of the ¡lines» of’several1
brillian*' that have been seen and both
mombtma
furmed the complete arch.
'"Duet of the Earth” will be pre­
Mr. and. Mrs. J. H. Hu sera;, made a
sented by the high school students at trip to Medford Friday morning.
thè schoui house Thursday evening.
. The many friends of Mr. shlf' Mrs.
J.;W. Opp returned Monday from a i Eugene Thompson of Medford, ftwwtter«
weeks ¿»uainen trio to Portland and ly. of Jacksonville, extend theit .¿con­
ether northern points.
I gratulations on the birth of -a, eoa .to
-Amo» McKe» of the Applegate, was Mr., and Mrs. Thompson,last. Saturday.-
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Martin and Mrs.
a business visitor in thè city Frida., .
Ge»rge Martin of Hillcrest visited Mrs.
Mu* Mvrtle Byrum of Medford has
been »penning the past weele with her Mary Wendt Saturday.
Mrs. F. J. Fick arid Mis» Alice Hoetb
aunt, Mrs. W. H. Venable.
spent Monday afternoon in Medford.
O. M Cornitius, real estate agent of I
Mrs. Lewis Ulrich who has been
Medford, was at the court house Tues­
day for the purpose <f paying his quite for the past ten days, is mueb
better.
taxes.
J. H. "Usott,
M elf ord’s expert
photographer and Mrs. Izsot were
guests of Mrs. Mary Wendt Sunday.
Mr. ty'id Mrs?‘L. rf.-1 Niede.rmeyer
Catarrh is a local disease, greatly left Tdesday‘for J^brilaiiil, where the
I influenced by constitutional ton- fotmer will enter a s’hnit'aruiln for
' ditione. . HAWS ’ CATARRH
medical treatment. Mr. Niedermeyer
i MEDICINE is a Tonic and -Blood has been in ill health for a number of
Purifier. By cleansing the blood and year£ and it'is hotted that the treat:
building up the System, HALL’S inent will benefit him greatly.
CATARRH MEDICINE restores
L. A. Liljequis’, assistant to ’he
aormsl conditions and allows Na-
i attorney general, arrived from Salem
tup to do ita work.
Monday, to assist County Prosecutor
AU Druggists. Circulars free.
Rawles Moore in the bank £ases.
T. J. -Cheney 4 Ct)., Toledo, Ohio.
Tomorrow is Easter Sunday, and
special set vices will be held in all the
rhurches of this city. Plan to attend
some of these services..
High«»’ quality, jewelry
repairing, diamond set
State Superintendent of Banks
‘ting, watch repairing,
Frank Bramwell, and- 'Marshall Hooper
aga'tV mounting and jew
assistant superintendent, have been at
airy •manufacturing.
rhe c> urt house each day on the bunk
Martin J. Reddy,
v
irotiri.
cases.
Catarrh ....
CONSERVATION AND PRODUCTION
CONCENTRATE your energies
upon both of the above.
Care-
ful using of present resources is
as important as producing a max­
imum amount for the'future. Econ­
omy in the one is Jinked to Ef­
ficiency in th^ other.
Connection
with the First National Bank will
gain our ço-operation in produc­
ing; Use of our facilities will give
you a system for conserving.
If. you. are not able to personally call upon uj ,
open your savings or checking account by mail.
• Ttt Ps tell you or write you about it.
sHiaÜmigd.Bank
MEDFORD
f
Regular Cours s six we-ke beginning June 27. 1921.
Elementary Teachers Training Course, twelve weeks,
ning June 27. 1921.
CALUMET
BAKING POWDER
PENDLETON:
Regular Courses, iix weeks, beginning June 27, 1921.
For detailed information cone» n ng Moi mi i th write to
ACKERMAN. Monmouth, Or. gon
For detailed information concerning Pendleton write to
1NL0W, P<ndleton, Oregon.
It is reasonable in cost and
possesses more than the or­
dinary leavening strength. You pay
less and use less. You get the most
in purity, dependability and whole-
somencss.
In every way — it is the
best way to keep down bak­
ing costs. That’s what has made it
the world’s biggest selling baking
powder — has kept it the favorite
of millions of housewives for more
than thirty years.
Pound can of Calumet contains full
16 oz. Some baking powders come in
12 oz. instead of 16 oz. cans. Be sure
you get a pound whenyou want it.
Doa’t forget the “Dust of the
Earth” at the school house Thursday
evening.
Citizens who have subscribed to the
city park since last week are Mr. and
Mrs. E. S. Wilson, Andrew . Cantra’l, I
Mrs. Sarah Coitrall, Bui Lawrene",
Miss Lizzie Reuter and Mrs. Kate I
Hoffman.
Mrs. Laura Ryan who has been
seriously iil of pneumonia, is no.v very
much improved.
Calumet
■Sunshine Cake
Recipe
1 > cup of butter,
1L cups granu­
lated sugar, 2'$
clips flour, 1 cup
water, 2 level
teaspoons Calu-
m e t Baking
Powder, 1 tea­
spoon lemon,
yolks of 9 eggs.
Then mix in I’m
regular way.
PERSONAL SERVICE
J
Don’t
est in the world, but it Is by noTneaus
the costliest. Tills distinction belongs
to the national memorial to Victor Em­
manuel II. erected on the Capitolina
hill In Rome nt a cost of $20.000.000.
It took 31 years to complete this huge
pile of marble steps, covered with
statues, bas-reliefs, and mosaics Sae-
coul. the architect, who designed IL
died long before Hie ivork was finish­
ed. hut he left models complete In
every detail, nml his original plans
«’ere never tampered with.
in
Get a Set of
Weed Tire Chains
Statue of the Greek Slave.
This famous statue was the work
of Hlrnin Powers (1805-1873), the I
American sculptor, completed In 18-13.
Five replicas are said to have been
made by the artist, the first of which
.f
was sold to Captain Grant and taken
/On March thirty-first the students’ qf ..to England, and is now in the gul-
lery of the duke of Cfeveland. The
the Jacksonville II gh School w;ll pre­ second copy Is now In the Corcoran
sent the drama entitled “The Dust of Art gallery at Washington; the third
the Earth,” in four acts.
Is in possession of tlie earl of Dudley; i
Pathos and humor are delightfully the fourth was purchased by A. T i
mingled in the play, making it appeal Stewart, the New York merchant, and i
the fifth became the property of Hou.
to young and o.d alike.
The scene of the story is in the E. W. Stoughton.
sunny South, and the heroine is a slip NO HELP FROM THE DOCTOR
of a girl of eighteen, placed in rather
unfortunate circumstances Her striig Abundant Reason for the Depression
That Was Manifested in the Golf
gle to win out in the world- is the main
Bug’s Attitude.
theme-of the play.
ra
Vaudeville numbers will be given be­
The
golf
Img
lias
a
sad
face.
He
Is
tween the acts of the drama.
plainly out of sorts. Something Is the
The students of the h:gh school have matter with him. He lias .lust come iÍL'
been working hard on this production, t from the doctor's office where he has i Œ)
and you are assured of spending a ! undergone a thorough physical exam­
pleasant evening if you attend the ination. lie Is sore and depressed, but
play next Thursday night.
not from what the. doctor found, hut
from wlint lie refu jed to find.
"You are all right.” said the learned fri
NOT SO TRAGIC, AFTER ALL
physician. "You are as sound as a
Fair Traveler’s Emotion at Seeing At- nut.”
That was a little Joke the golf bug
footing Parting Was In Large
did not enjoy.
Part Uncalled For.
"Are yon sure that I am In first-class
The temperaments* difference he- condition?” he asked.
tween a restrained and an emotional I “Absolutely.”
“Is my blood pressure normal?"
race occtiAloiinlly bring» about kindred
"Perfect.”
effects through accident. A lady, «alt-
Ing for n belated train, witnessed a I "Heart regular?”
"Heart O. K.”
most affecting parting between an
“Lungs clear?”
aged father and his son, both Italians.
"As
a bell.”
The old man seemed in u frenzy of
"Liver In good working order?”
«'oe.
lie moaned, raved, lifted tils
"Splendid."
clenched hands toward heaven ami
"No trace of jieurltls?”
shook them despairingly.
“Not a bit.”
"Poor, poor souls!" she exclaimed,
"Am I not bordering on a nervous
compassionately. “The young man go-
Ing away to seek Ills fortune nml the breakdown?”
“See no Indicating of It.”
.»Id man left tiphfml, I «uippose lie
"rm sorryX,.
fears they may never meet again. A
"Sorry,
»»li-it for?"
common tragedy, but It grips one's
"1 tliotuMJMBrely you'd dig up some
very heart;”
“Clievr tip!“ briskly advlsoil her gooj evHjR^for me to go away. No«
companion, who understood Italian. I'll have to be honest nml say I'm go
"The young clittp Is only going to the Ing South simply because I want to
next town to visit his married sister play golf."—Detroit Free Press.
and the venerable old person Is wor­
Ancient Cornerstone Laying.
ried because he loaned him Ills sea­
son ticket and wishes no«- he hadn't
The custom of laying th«- corner
promised to do so. lie says he know» Stone of n nubile building with cere
the boy will l<s-e It. but. anyway. If monies win priK-flt-ed by the am-lente
fie does, he'll break every lame In his At th<> ITIylng of the cornerstone «ln-n
body When he gets hottie. Tlmt's all." the cnpltol of Rome «ns rebuilt n pro
cession of vesta) virgins, robed in
white, surrounded the stone mid con
MONUMENTS OF VAST SIZE serrated It with libations of living
wafi^r. A prayer to th»* gods followed,
That on Leipzig Battlefield, Though I ami then the ningl trams, priest«, sen
Higher, Less Costly Than Me­
liters and knights laid bold of the
morial to Italian King.
ropi s nml moved tin- mighty stone to
Its pr<,; er position In n holloa cut
Leipzig possesses n monument In the Stone were placed ingots of
wlileh rises only a few Indu s «hort gold, silver nml otliet metals «Iil -li
of 3f»> feel. "The Buttle of the Na
had not been molted In any furtuiet-
tlons" monument .«lands In the middle
Wltli the Jews the cornerstone was
of the plain «here Bluelier routed Na
considered an emblem of power, niffi
poleon's army.
One million cubic they also performed <-er<-motile« at It«
merer» of earth were displace»} to laying. In medieval film's the rite
make room for Its base. It Is sur­ W hs taken lip by the order of I l ee
rounded by no enclosure a quarter of masons and has by them been brought
a mile wide and nearly half u mile do»vn to modern dnys, the Mnsonb
< en-m.my of laying n cornerstone be­
Next to the Pyramids It Is lEe high t ing tyiiibolliuL
. A
High School Will
1
J
Present Drams
10 per cent off list price
Fick’s Hardware
I
¡ssasasaaaasKa saaaiPSísasassKi
THE CITY DRUG STORE|
Ny.tl Remedies
Santox Store
Hobson’s Celery and Iron Tonic
H< bson’s Exema Ointmeut—best made
Hobson’s Frost. Cream for face and hands
Fine Stationary at Lowest Prices
Subscriptions Taken for all Magazines
J. W. Robinson, .1)., Proprietor
Oregon
Jacksonville
A Big Drop
m
c J ell -0