Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1927)
■WT9 The VsMay View Conynaalty club met last Thursday for a very successful and laterertlng all-day session at the d ak house. I»uring the forenoon M lee Fter ence Turk of Medford conducted a demonstration fit a u M l * • and packing Christmas fancies n a 4 confections. ’ * < /. - She gave MQdt lady -present a typdl collection ot candy.rbctpes .which wan very mack .»ppncint- A t soon.an excellent' covered dish lunch was served by-the re fresh meat committee. ,'?* Miss Chamberlain and M i a s Palmer were guests of the club for dd day and to th e afternoon Miss qhambertaln gave inch a splendid talk on club workfc, In her usual interesting way. Be sides seventeen ot the club mem bers who were present, t h e r e were eight visitors. i Don Lowe turned bin Chevro let aedaa on the highway sooth of Medford one day last 'week. The car urns not badly damaged and no one was hart. W. F. DeFord brought several hundred head of sheep over frogn Northern California last week for himself, Harry Weagnnt and J. R. McCracken. Mrs. H J. Carter and Mias Bernice Carter of Ashland were callers at the W illiam G l e n n borne last Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Robson and son and daughter ef .Vancou ver, B. C-, Who were vlMting Mr. and Mrs. AZ H. Davenhlll for a few days last week, left for Cali fornia last Wednesday morning. Mr. Davenhlll accompanied hia guests south for a short visit with relatives at Chico. San Jose and Santo Crux. Calif, * . Mrs. J. R. McCracken of Valley View and Mrs. F. L. Natter qf Ashland drove to Grants Pass last Wednesday e>ofa|ng (•ta m ing Thursday forenoon. They at tended Home Rissionary meet ings while In Granin Pass. Mr. *pd Mrs. J. F. Arnold. Mrs. Albert Arnold. Orpba, Edith and John Arnold spent last Saturday to Medford. Mrs. N. E. Bond returned last Thursday evening from Klamath Falls, where she had been visit ing for a few days _ J. R. McCracken and son, Geo., and J a m es Lennox apd son Keith, attended the father and son ban quet im Ashland last Friday eve ning. Mr. anw Mrs. H. R. Westerherg ■•14 »H alf* field the* scrota,the b'gkw»y and through D H. Jack- son's orchard and on up to ths h|Ha. Tito Misses Rosin* and t r u e M Gallattn who are students at tee Oregon Agricultural Cnllegn . will aot ha at home for Thanksgiving hot expect to spend the Thanks giving holidays with friends to Portland ' . M r. and Mr*- Juatla Judy and three daughters ot Griffin crunk wars guests last Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. McCracken and an» George. Mrs. W illiam Gieen left last Saturday to r. Mississippi for a three months* visit with, h e r mother, staters and brothers, who all live there. Mrs. Glenn w ill also visit relatives in Chicago on her trip house in the spring. Mrs. Kenneth Lansing a n d . little daughter Peggy Mae. ef Portland, who have been visit- ing Mrs. Lansing’s parents. * Mr. and Mrs. James Lennox tor sev eral weeks, returned to X h* a 1 r home last Wednesday. Mr and Mrs. Hughes and fam ily have rented and moved into ■the Weyrich home- in Valley View? Mr. Hughes is a son of Ed Hughes ot Phoenix. The food sale conducted by the P. T. A. last week at Hardy Bros, grocery netted them a neat sum which they wfll use toward pay ing the women who w ill cook the hot lunches for the Bellview children. . The Thanksgiving • program given nt the NeU Creek school Tuesday night by the children of the school was a success. T h e hoase was well Oiled with, par ents and patrons of the school. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Nell and small daughter, Joan, were vis itors in Portland last week, re ts idling <0 their home hare n few days ago. / Mr. and Mrs. Mark True were business visitors in Medford the tost of the week. Mrs. Barans reported to uq eh Saturday that she had glvan m dinner party for the teacher of r smdh daughter, Frenosn, Mrs. tvid MeKinncy. The. guest list lacluded, Mr. and Mrs. McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. Gordaa Mr. and Mrs. Ed Shaw and Frances Barnes, besides the- host a n d hostess, Mr- and Mrs. S. K. Barnes. e wit: enM ay-18, »4M. September! STOCKHOLM— (IF)—-The an IS, ISSI. December 18} ISSI. , nasi Swedish sattfteg match of May » / M H , n*d November O . Amerio»» tobacco destined to IS M . . 1 •• , •. - - i ■ ■ made Into'snnff tqok plan», m- For many colleges, the | | | 7 football saaaaa ends with tri* afternoon’s gnaip- Thou it wUi be time to light up and settle down to » IB M » serions discussion as to the merits of the star players qf what he» been in m»ny ways à remarkable season. When the arguments wax hottest on the snhject of hpcMeWr men of 1 8 |7. the odds are that the namps i t **Sfedw” GehsçAl*#' >rdlqg to eNahh, "A l” Marsters will be beard as frapoeatiy as any. The* Marquette tornado and the elusive Dartmouth wl^-q-t*p- wisp were two of the greatest halfbacks of the year. Bach g|qy miss mythical All-American fame, bat not If the folks in Milwaghpp and Hanover have anything to say about it. Wallie Gebert baa been declared by forerai western crittes *8 the equal of Joestlng. Flanagan. Almquist, Bby and Gilbert—dm«*» who attained more national recognition. Marquette’s “¿wede,” weighing only 171, k it the line ttfca » wild locomotive on the dovd grade. He «m id pmaeb through qp sift through, and once among the secondary defense men, O eM rt was elusive as an eel in a barrel of grease. y When on the defense himself, Gebert frequently harassed qnette’s ^ lM ? opponents by Intercepting tyrvarfl passes, vhifo man who have been tackled by hila vouch tor hie terrific power ruthless disregard of Injury. “He tackles the way *Tack’ Hgrdwick used to," said one pack <x «nth to to Vflwcetal— critic who watched Gebert to action.' •. . " , The "helmet" ntyle ot hat, so popular now,, with' Us earflaps ”A1” Marstera. Dartmouth’s great ground.-galnqr, von general either in the same material as the recognition as the hardest back to step to the East. Once loose to hat, as^dor Instance, in velvet or In felt, are hot to remain fash a broken Jleld, Marsters threatened to score.* Against Yale, the best, team in the East, the Dartmouth half ionable. Instead, the het . will back ran 85 yards, eluding no fgwer than seven EMI tackle«, »11 of fit low over the back of th« head, coming dowd over the neck. ‘ whom got their hands-on him. . , - For the coming fashion is to Slow-motion pictures of that run emphasise Marster^* great ness and cast- some interesting light upon how the master ball conceal the neck. The ultra fash ionable model w ill be something carrier ^oes his stuff. .like a fireman*» helmet^ the brim, ”A1” started from, his/>wa M yard line, where he intercepted a pass from Bruce CaJdweil. Prscticgliy the entire Yale team was very lafge. bent dow* to conceal ¡e between the Green flash and the Bine goal. >f Yet the ^pictures show that Marsters never went more than ie six yards from the sideline down vhiph he started, and that each a of the seven Y»le men who tried to down him lost a grip on "A l’s” hips because of the eel-like quality of h is 'maneuvers. Without shifting head or fact from the straight line for the goal, Marsters threw his hips first to one side and then to the other as men in blue flung themselves at him. "Red” Grange and other great backs had this trlak, but I neyer have sekn it demon- strated so strikingly as in these ptop-iqtolQn pjctnres of Msrajprs* run. Vale players declared “AT* the best back they bad to stop this season. He ran 78 yards for a touchdown against Brown, and 60 and 8« yards for two others agginst pqragH, heaMas being »» im portant cog in Dartmouth’s passing game, v M SHOP EARLY early weeks before Christmas, if dsltoy ered to the poet office, or postal station in perspn, or tied together, ih a handle, labeled to shdw thgt they are Christmas cards, and de posited in a street letter or pack age box. They will then be segro- Sto^Rn stamped with the date on which to he delivered, and dellv- opotly in Btoahholm. Tobaoeo experts and directors of snnff factories from all ovar the country attended. The Swed obeeruattoa it to o*r optato» th^tm ir prohibition lpv> ate ha- ing sanely Shd economically up toroad? . , ' J ish govpnfpaat had the vtodp- ’’Äavlng examined toto an matters that appeared meet and Agfna wseeaaaaaipd in EXPERIENCE AND CARE *fc- taehed envelop«. Only tea price fit tea ppadaet wan gtean. The snuff experts then had to deter mine by sniffing the quality of the tobacco. The shape of the leaves ¿ad the thickness of the fibers was also passed on. The samples whisk were anally select-' ed had to undergo grot another smelling and then |h«lr Identity was revealed. ■ This w ill make it impossible Ao see whether the wearer has bob bed hair or not, and Is generally Intended 'to conceal the process of allowing hair to grew longer. The 18-toch hair and the helmet hat will mean that sautolr and necklaces w ill be worn with the slack in front again, and not be- hind,, as at present, and mean» quite a number of chnngdn la the fashions of wearing Jewelry all around. D. W Bletell, , A Charley HoekersmUh In handling the savmga of t h o u s a n d s of members permits ns |o solicit yonr investment in the Association. No losses to our investors is the best proof of our safety. Write us for liter*tore—prompt and cour teo u s a tte n tio n will be given. Jackson County Building & Loan * Association JQ Harth Central Ave. lfedfont, Oregon Infection Statement of Dr. Frederick D. Strickler, Secretary of the Oregon State Board of Health, Advises in Favor of Pasteurized Milk in an Official Re- Mrs. John Hessenaur and Mrs. and so» Bichard ef Talent were Oscar Martin ware visitors In Sunday gnesfo of Mr. and Mrs. Shop now and mall early. Postoffices will make every ef Medford . last Friday morning G. W. Nichols m»d family. fort to handle ths Christmas M r. and Mrs. R. N. Chaney and transacting business and calling malls without congestion and de Clifford visited - Mrs-^ Chaney’s g little while on friends- lay, hut owing to ths snormoas parents, Mr. and Mrs.^Herbert of It is reported that. Mrs. Roy volume of b usin ess this pan be Ashland last Sunday. Mr. Her Heasanauer and, son Harold left done only with cooperation of the bert was celebrating his 80th last week t o r 1 Klamath Falw public, according to Postmaster where they are visiting w i t h birthday. F. D. Wagner. , r ' Paul Nichols, with friends in M rs.' Hagsansuer’s mother. Mall early for deHvery before Ashland, attended ths dedication Christmas day, Is the advice, be ef the aew chnrah at Trail, last cause there arc to be no deliver Snnday. Ths latest California earth ies Monday, December 28, after Last Monday morning a beau quake seems to have been a fixtle, 12 o’clock noon. tifu l big bnpk was seen taking Ito so far as damage Is concerned During thevlast few years way leisurely across thq J. F. Ar- That is,' unless yon ask Florida.— there has been a great Increase in the number'of Christmas card» going through the malls. The following advice Is offered for parly delivery of cards: Patrons sending a quantity of Christmasecsrds, say 18 or more, should prepare and mail them , two or/ three weeks In advance, IT PAYS., as millions kre mailed and they san ndt possibly be handled and * I ** delivered if mailed only two or Vs Ho Tour Greasing three or four div« before Christ mas. To avoid this, patrons may mail their cards two or three Th» poasilrflity of infantile paralysis being a milk- The patjent should be Isolated as completely as pos- slble In a elegq, bare room, well screened to keep ogt Insects. Visiting should net be permitted, and only the necessary attendant should come In cpptoCJ with, the case All discharges, including sputum, nasal secretions, urine and feces, should be thoroughly dis- to(«cfod. . ' . - \ ' K- - / / ' No Worry •bout whether your ear is being given the bgst of Eating utonstjs should be heltod. Everything that comes In soutact with (he patient should be. st»r- lllged. Towel», bed linen and other fabrics should be boOed or dipped to a ftrong. germleidal solution. The period «at Which Isolation skouft be maintained cannot be gnessad at. Children are not permitted to return to school for three weeks. In the presence of Tin epidemic, street and house dust shonld be kept down by sprtohUng, oiling, or other means employed 'fo r tele purpose. Dust should be allayed whether there is an epidemic or not. Ddrlng epidemics chil dren should be kept away from public gatherings. service if you bring it to oiir station. Best Oils Best Workmanship Prices Reasonable. Keep Your fa r Inside This Wet Winter Weather The possibility of infantile paralysis being a mllk- honfe infection emphasises Jhe Importynn of the prophylactic value of pasteurized milk. We Supply Pasteurized In the strictest conformance to state law and under supervision of Inspectors who so frequently can gad inspect oar plant, the opera tive processes, alt .milk' delivered frem the Jackeon County Cream ery Is of unquestioned purity, free from disease germ l^fect^on. The Jackson Cennty Creamery provides paineurlsed m ilk for Ute City o f Medford. Milk that meets up with the every requirement . Milk bottle coatefoera ere thoroughly sterilised. Nq doubt can te lin , cev- Jy by iso- Ito peraly- from the [».said: "Seyetoy-tete . cages of epidemic infantile pgraly- î 1* to the Oregon sjate board of M glte. There 1» no désir» to cause unnecessary alarm, but the foot remains thgj there ie an unusual nqmher qf capes qf Infantile paralysis ip this state. Reports from otepr states toccata a * Increase in the nutoher •< çÀsee At infantile paralysis reported as Community Hospital not be permitted to epmq in touted with sick ser ions whether It be adults ot children who arp 'Ml. " It may he well to hear f o mtod that (nfontHe paralysis Is a disease of childhood. About 88 pev cent of the cases occur when under 8 yean of axe. and about 80 per cent betwàpn Aie ages qf 8’ and LQ. Most of the remaining 5 per rent of the eases are -to persons under 20. T b £ it a p ^ . r , t h îT veiy yodW chUdfoAMfo most llk e l, f o ia v » t h t o d U f f 9 1 8 1 II NEW AND COMPLETELY EQUIPPED SURGERY Vp-fto-Dat* XUUy and Laboratory facilities ' exist as to the cleenltoees, the germ-free fcondltlpn of the bottle alter passing through .the 208 degrees wash and steam treatment. Huiqan touch is unknown to any surface this milk touches, even- the sealing cap a mechanical device. 1 Nowhere to any scientific ra»ort ha» fevers or Other mghadles been traced to pesfouriaad mUk as the carrier of the total germ. Pas teurisation Is • health Insurance. Dr. Strickler’s'statement em phasises this fact. He advises the use Qf pasteurised milk. Heed hjs warning! . • Likewise AU materials from which our Tee Oregin is manufact ured is petoteurized, as well ad the croarn from which our “ Gold Sfeal” butter is manufactured- - « r — Basal Metabolism (goitre) Teats "A ll known casés aho.uld be Isolated »ad piscad »r qnaranm s daring the acute atege, and chil- ta contact wtth,surh t»ses shahid sfso be Iso lated dprlng thpepsriod of lacabatloa There to no routine teat by which carriers can be jetoatfld pad  OBABVATX jrownw OHLY e»y case ot acute lUnees (s|qire'»o«asSs gfo^ebortlve la type, and do »ot develop paralysis. In «u»y case of scute lllnem where pollotepaUtls to inspected the patient, should be Isolated <»d re p o rte fto ths health department as a suspicions «ape." . BUICK>IQ28 Medford Auto Co erick D. Strickler, Secretary State Board of Health. of Dr. Strickler ge an authority. b M piu>*n Medane-toldfS to 02875 Coupee < 8<W te «MB0 •por« Modele— <1405 to 81778 All prices f. o. b. Medford. Ore., government tax to be added. Th« G. M. A. C. financing plan, the moot, desir able. Is available. ' ____ prophylaotie value of pasteurised milk.—Dr. Fred, QUJET FIR ST LiTHIA SPRINGS GARAGE T < borne infection emphasises the importance of the Medford, t .-e - 1 v t ñ a íl - • t. - 'Z • " i; ¿ s -. '•*? -V , VHOHX U