Image provided by: Rogue River Valley Irrigation District; Medford, OR
About Central Point American. (Central Point, Or.) 1925-1927 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1926)
JULY ¿2. 1926 CENTRAL POINT AMERICAN PAGE 5 I Hes Increase the p4»wer nr the rain CHURCH OF CHRIST water to dissolve the mineral constit uents of the earth's crust, the gases I. G. Shaw, Minister ■ make It p4»sstble for plants and anl- Vacation is over and the minister I mala to live In rivers and (saids which The country has gone mad on credit. I ’ve will preach at the regular services Every emotion that rouses us has to ' would not support life If the water got it figgered out that a big per cent of our of the church next Sunday. ; were chemically pure. lie worked oft by some corrrs|M,nillnit credit is unnecessary, foolish an’ disastrous The morning theme will be a com bodily effect, us a sort of safety valve to both creditor an’ debtor. The man who to the bruin. mon sense study of The Kingdom of run tors fur the necessaries of life kin only git from 30 to 90 days in debt until he has to Just as a cut purrs ami n tlog wags Copper is used for sohlering tools Christ. A study of the “ Rights ami (I'g up or go without, therefor, the only ad its tall, a«» we humans have to cry o, j oi*»'ause it Is a 2 » h «I heat conductor, Duties o f Christian Citizenship’’ us vantage of credit is to spur a man to greater lau^h or clench our fists, according to j bus fairly high specific heat, tills read! they are provided for and limited hy effo rt when he gits to the end of his credit the »lilTerent emotions to be expressed. ly Will solder, and has no alloying the Law of the King. The more I see o f credit the more I ’m con 1\ hen the emotion of pleasure is ex I metals to sweated out us in the vinced that a feller ju st as well an’ better, Bible School 10 a. m. Morning perienced by a whole crowd at once, ••use of brass. be three months ahead as three months be sermon 11 a. m. Communion of the we have a further desire—-to commu hind. We run our faces ns far as we kin Lords Supper 11:45. Christian En nicate our own sensations to our then we go round an’ round like a brace an’ REAL E STA T E TRA N SFERS neighbors, as well as to the speaker.' deavor 7 p. m. Evening sermon 8 hit tryin’ to catch up so's to renew our credit actor or other person who has pleased again. I (Furnished by the Jackson County p. m., Sermon subject: “ What Will us. And the only way we can com Darn my pesky hide folks, there nin’t an the Religion of America be 100 Years Abstract Company) municate our feeling Is hy making a ounce of excuse fur 90 per cent of us runnin’ From Now?” Isaac J . Hays et ux to William j noise. on credit fur the everyday things of life. If you buy on “tic,” yo owe it to your creditor There are only three ways In which Rice et ux W. D. $10, Lots 15 and | Our Bible school is in a great con test with some hundreds of other to stay with hint when you’ve got cash to we can easily do this: By shouting, ! 16 Allendale Add to Ashland. spend an’ if you pay cash all the time, you I schools, and we have a fine chance . .tA S I hy stamping our feet, or by clapping kin buy where you kin buy cheapest an’ you our hands. I City of Gold Hill to Thos. W. Ver- j to win. I f you are not enrolled in wont’ buy near so much when you buy fur cash as you will where u* W. D. $50, Lot in Gold | Bible school “ come and help us” put The first method is very often used, j non you buy on time. but generally out-of-doors. The stamp The difference between bein’ three months in debt an three Central Point on the map by winning ing of feet needs not only boots months out of debt is ju st the lack of judgment in economy. _ . I this contest. Twelve more than we There ain’t no use talkin’ folks. I ’ve learnt a heap since I ’ve but n hard surface to stamp on, und : Kh‘ R° y* et UX to X e" ‘e Pow- had last Sunday will assure it, will found myself slidin’ down the shady side of life. I’ll be henpecked since the ancients, from whom we In I ers D* W. D. $10, Lot on Beach street ' be one of them? if I ain’t. herit our method of applause—which ! Ashland. As long as youre honest an morally cloap you ain’t got a word means a "clapping at"—»lid not Sunday school 10 a. m. Preaching ounce of worry as to what the public thinks of you. When people wear boots and, therefore, could not . W. I. Coffman to J . A. Howath st‘rv£ ‘>sl 11 »• n>- and 8 p. m. Ohrist- nn-asuiv yaur value an’ social standin’ from your outward appear - vv v i' i lan Endeavor 7 p. m. Preaching stamp audibly, hand-clapping became Q. C. 1). $1, N ' ance nn’ your intrinsic worth, you’re dead safe in tellin’ ’em to go of . E of NE Sec services both morning and evening ndopted us the recognized fashion of to hell fur hell is the department they’re tradin’ with an, the very d l Tvvp 37 S, R 3 West. I by the Rev. I. G. Shaw. expressing pleasure. minnit you let their criticisms scratch your hide, your sdul has Mrs. J . E. Weaver, S. S. Sup t.; started slippin’ from the path of unselfishness, I'll be henpecked Glen Eabrick et ux to George H. j Mrs. J . O. Isaacson, Supt. of Pri- if it ain’t. Grover et ux W. D. $100, E. 42 ft ,nary Dept.; Mrs. A1 Ilermanson, The man that sells on credit *is the feller that’l take the lot 11 Blk 2 Queen Ann Add to Med Supt. of Cradle Roll Dept.; Mrs. G. count, sooner or later. I ’ve heard business men say that they got C. McAllister, Pres, of Ladies’ Cir ford. better prices where they sold on time an’ they got more customers cle; Bernice Shaw, Pres. C. E .; Mrs. Most people know that seaweed, I Warner, V - — .,- C L . : , n Director. : _____. ___ an’ that’s pesky true, but that business man furgits that he is Choir which becomes moist und clammy Ralph L. Pollock et ux to W. G. dealin’ largely with the leavin's of the rash store business an’ Rev. Shaw, Pastor. when rain Is coming, makes an excel Wright et ux W. D. $10, Lot 1 Blk his losses are rertain. I f his losses are made up the best cutomers lent barometer. Flowers are sensitive of the store must make ’em up just us sure as shodtin’ they have. A G IRL’S CHICKEN BU SIN ESS 10 imperial Add to Medford. to weather conditions and those in a I nin’t got a pesky thing against poor people but I ’ve learnt position to observe them can general from my own experience that the poor man is generally poor be Clive B. Barnes to Hurry Force All chicken-raising on a large scale ly tell something of the coming day. muse of his own poor judgment in the use of his money in the times when money is reasonably easy to git. So true a prophet Is the scarlet pim et ux W. D. $800, Lot 4 Blk 32 Gold j isn't done in the West. Freda Bliss, Will. 10-year old miss at Mansfield, Mass., pernel that It has been called “the The credit man ain’t always hard hearted either, in fact, in a heap o’ cases its his big heartedness an’ loyalty to his friends in raises from 250,000 to 300.000 chic- poor loan's weather glass.” extendin’ ’em almost unlimited credit that puts him on the shelf. Ralph L. Pollock et ux to R. E . | kens a y ea., operating the laregst Crocuses, dandelions, anemones and There ain't no use talkin’ folks, a strictly cash business, ir so wood sorrel close their flowers on the Arnold W. D. $10, Lot 7 Blk 6 1 hatchery in New England. Of course far as the necessities of life are concerned, would be a God-send approach of rain. I-'ir coues open and imperial Add to Medford. the chickens must pay and that to both the buyer an’ seller. close us the weather Is fine or wet. In Elm er H. Carter et ux to Pine Belt means a lot of work. If them that kin, by proper economy at the proper time, is some parts of the continent, especially o---------- forced to pay cash at all times, them that are made independent In Germany and Switzerland, where Banking Co., W. D. $10, Lot 11 Blk by virtue of unavoidable circumstances will be well taken care FOR SALE— CITY LOTS many quaint customs .survive, they 15 Butte Falls. of through the human sympathies of them that are able to make 2 *4 lots, good location, best soil • have a frog weather glass, which con both ends meet, like wimmin’s dresses now-a-days, I ’ll be darned in town, fenced for garden, priced sists of a green frog in a bottle half Geo. W. Barron et ux to Butler if they won’t. right. Inquire at this office. tf filled with water. From the neck of ,k 'lhompson Co., Q. C. 1). $10, Lots Yourn, the bottle, and Just touching the wa j l , 2, 3, -1 Blk 21 Medford. HY. Brick Ice Cream at Damon Cafe ter. runs a flight of steps. If the frog remains under water, near the bottom John F. Rocho et ux Roy C. or actually at the bottom of the bot : W itter Q. C. D. $10, Lot in Jack- ' S ili'A . J i J .ViL ! TO !»'ÂA .1 TO TO TOTO A'J7M ATI TO 7fil P Xfft Jfl.1 Iffl l¡y Jg tle, the weather will be fine, but when I sonville. he comes up ami sits on the steps It Is certain to be dull, cold and wet.— Jackson County Bldg. Loan Brief Stories. I Association to S u s a n Watson I Schmidt Deed $1^>, Pt lot 9 blk 2 Sunrise Home Park Add to Medford. W H Y = Hand-Clapping Has Eecome Sign of Approval Hiram Says— W hy C opper in Soldering j j j Why Flowers Can Be Used as Barometers , j lo & Why Married Men Live j Longer Than Bachelors Do married men live longer than bachelors, or does It only seem long er? The great philosopher, Herbert Spencer, declared that the apparent longevity of married men was not due to their marriage. The physically and mentally strong, lie said, would he more likely to marry ; therefore they lived longer not because of marriage, but in spite of It, so to s|ieak. Theo logians, philosophers and doctors— even statisticians—have always main tained that married men live longer than bachelors. Insurance companies, which base their expectations on cold facts, have so far been unable to come to any conclusion on the question. They arc inclined, however, to prefer married men for insurance. VVhy Phrases A re B arred In April, 1913, the editor of a Swiss newspaper placed a ban on the use of the following metaphorical figures of speech by the members of his edi torial staff: The voice of honor, the cry of conscience, the restraining hand of conscience, the needle of remorse, the whip of satire, the shield of indif ference, the trumpet of fame, the bases of society, the annals of crime, the chariot of progress, the torrent of pas sions. the artifices of language und the broadside of pleasantries. It is of interest to obser>e that most of these expressions are as threadbare in the Knglish tongue as In the French.— From La Huigarle. Sofia. (Translated for the Kansas CU> Star). W hy Sap Travel* The old conception was that ns soon as the leaves drop from trees the sap or moisture In a tree went down. This Idea is false, as all through the winter the roots of the tree are nrtdng rnol*ture. The highest sap cut is jUHt l . before the leave stii n the ect to sprling. It would he ruore going Sfly that the sap is co•ut inn up in a tree instead of d< wat er content of a d » j pie t fall of the je a r la 27 | winter 32 per cent, a the leave* appear in the per c e q t . n W hy Rain W ater Is Best Ordinary rain water contains appre ciable amounts of dissolved oxygen. nitr»,"‘-n. ammonia and carbonic acid ana. und In special cases It Is fouud to contain nitric acid, sulpharic acid and other component* of the Impure sir of Utica XU. acid a imparl ui R. H. Shirley et ux to Charles ■E. Holmes W. I). $10, 8. 50 ft of I ^ SV. lot 3 Blk 1 Cottage Add to Meo. ! Lawrence R. Coder et ux to Law- | renee R. Coder et ux Deed, Lot in , Ashland. John Grieve to Jam es E. Grieve et / ux W. D. $1, SE of NW of SW o f! j N’ K Sec 28 Twp 32 S, R 3 East. Aaron Andrews et ux to Adam j I Schortrren et ux W. D. $10, Ld in 1 DLC 17 Twp 38 S, R 2 West. P. S. Anderson to Andrew Olson ! et ux W. D. $10, Ld in Sec 23 Twp 33 S, R 1 West. R. A. Clark et ux to Charles E. Holmes V . D. $10, Ld in Sec 21 Twp 37 S , R 2 West. D., W. Breecher et ux to Carl A. B elt* et ux W. D. $10, V i i o f W fc I.f NW of NW Sec 29 Twp 36 S, R Wedt. i Y[. , -John B. Walker et ux to S. Dwinnell W. D. $2666 Ld in Sec 26 ! Twp 33 S, R 2 Wgst. City of Medford to Alfred F. rden j et ux W. I). $600, Lot 4 Blk 1 Page I Adii to Medford. Poter Vanderslni* et ux to Louis E. Wakeman IV. D. $10. Ld in DLC 57 Twp 3« S, R 1 West. F. J . Gross et al to Harold E. Hines W. D. *1 0 , Ld in Sec 16 Twp 39 S, R 1 East. Ora Stump et vir to R. A. Petty W. D. $1800 Lot 12 Blk 1 Lumadens Adi to Medford. W. ] T.O W. D. r. Gole ILL i ax to Alva E. Cook lots 1 and 2 Blk NOTICE To accommodate people who can- i not to go to Jacksonville Dr. Geary. I county health physician, will hold office hours in the larger rotnmani- ' ties ones a month. He will ha at | the library mom in Central Point the i third Friday o f each month from 4 ock p. m. fo r free . 1 :30 I cosili atiov 1 SERVWELL Magneto Charging Station At the Independent Garage Central Point, Oregon Drive in and have your Ford Magneto tested F R E E A fully charged Magneto gives your motor more efficiency and saves gasoline. We have just installed the latest up-to-date Magneto 1 ester and Charger. Also Coil and Plug Tester. The only Tester and Re charger of this make in Southern Oregon. If you have electricity at your farm we can drive out. Test and Charge your Ford Mag neto and start your car. Charges at garage: Magneto Tested, Free Recharging - $1.00 Mileage will he added for country drives C. T. G E N Z E L . T Ï T .W'%TT*tTLyFVFB!'!y