The Central Point American. (Central Point, Or.) 1936-195?, December 21, 1939, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
Mrs. Paul Nitschke is improving
from a long attack of the flu but is
still far from well.
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Nealon ar
.Mrs. Anna Bissell of Fort Junes
expected home from Portland for
i expect-id to arrive tomorrow to
Christmas.
spend Christmas with her stet- r
. rs. Dorland and family. Mrs. Do.
Jim Grimes will be borne fr.-n
laud
s brother C. 3. Pik»- fr :n
Corvallis for the Christmas vac.tl >
Alaska Is al o visiting at the I).,r-
Bobby Hoagland arrived home tod.:
land home. Atter Christ .aa» he wll
visit in Cali.ornia
Miss Doris Dor-
Embroidery and crochet thread
laud, who teaches rchool in Portoli,
at Faber’s.
Calif., will spend her va-atiou with
Mrs. Jack Tharp is sick in bed her parents.
today. Mr. Tharp is taking care o!
the board.
The Coffee Pot will close tontor-
row for the winter. This makes the
Mrs. Dickson has been very sick
clo>e of three successful seasons for
The doctor was called Wednesday
them. Mr. Wiltermood is owner
night but she is better at this time.
and manager.
Mrs. Catherine Hill, who has been
A free show will be given at both
ill with pneumonia, is slowly im the
Rialto and Craterian theatres,
proving.
Medford on Christmas morning at
A practical gift—A pair of Berk­ J:30 for all children.
During the week before Christ-
mas a strange and wholly modern
nviiiauii.
nomadic population ...i.
will move
through the slues. Y'ou will prob-
• migra*
ably not notice the yearly
plane leaving the ground every
three and six-tenths minutes! It
is - estimated
—----------- that the vast aerial
holiday migration will exceed hi
numbers the total populations oi
Mr. and Mrs. Don Faber arrived
Sunday for a week's visit with Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ayers are expecting Faber’s parents Mr. and Mrs. E. C.
Delbert home for Christmas. Delbert Faber, Mr. aber is athletic instruc-
is attending the Albany College at tor at the Albany College in Port-
Portland.
Frances Faber will !>< land.
home Saturday for the holidays.
M rs. Nettie B. Norris of Husum,
Boxed Handkerchiefs,
10c, 15c,
Washington, is visiting her daughter
25c at Faber's.
Mrs. Harry Rinabarger of Medford
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Langston and :nd Mrs. M. B. Lindley during the
Patty and Billy are leaving Satur­ winter.
day for Portland where they will
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Lindley are
Lang
spend Christmas with Mrs.
expecting Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Neff
ston's folks.
aud family front Bend to spend the
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Powell O1 Christmas holidays with them. Mrs.
Eagle oPint district were callers at Neff is Mr. and Mrs. Lindley's
daughter.
the A. E, Powell home today.
Vern H. Hansen Jr., is leaving
for Portland, December 27 after
spending the holidays here with his
family and friends. He is returning
to Portland for continuation of
further medical attention under the
personal care of Dr. Dillhunt.
A
tion, for few will pass directly
over great cities, and those that do
will fly so high that little more
than the beat of their flight will
reach you in the streets below No,
we are not speaking of a migration
of strange insects or wild fowl,
but of the air-minded people, re­
cently become a vast army, who
each year fly home for Christmas
On every day of the week pre­
ceding Christmas, right up to the
moment when the last electric
candle winks on in the latest
Christmas tree, the skies will be
alive with the hum of motors and
the whisper of high airs against
giant wing and fuselage. The mam­
moth liners of the sky will bear
thousands of Christmas nomads,
from every part of the country,
home for the yearly reunion at
Yuletide.
According to officials of the Air
Transport Association, approxi­
mately 400 passenger planes will fly
daily, 2,800 planes per week—a i
At-
VK*
Use.-
OU* ***** Ow
cities like Flint, Mich.. New Haven,
Conn.; Forth Worth, Texas; Grand
Rapids, Mich . Youngstown, Ohio;
Hollywood, Calif.; or Nashville,
Tenn From two cities alone, 122
planes fly daily in all directions—
70 from New York City and 52
from Chicago
Before the development of air
travel most people working far
from home could not afford the
time required for the long journey
there and back, to spend the holi­
day with their families Still farther
back, in the days of horse-drawn
coaches, when a 200-mile trip meant
a week on the road, few were the
fortunate who could go back home,
even to an adjacent state for the
Christmas holiday.
Thus, the industrial era, some­
times charged with the weakening
of family and home ties, has pro­
vided, through the development
and perfection of air transport, one
of the greatest factors in the re­
union of hosts of widely separated
families at Christmastide
kM ***
FOR SAW FILING and Knives and
scissors sharpened
see
C. H.
Mosher, 2 blocks nor»*- of Da­
mon's Cafe.
All work guaran­
teed.
ZIZZST—T—T—T!
I
Merry Christmas
and a
Happy New Year
<•
Long’s 2nd Hand
Store
I
Many Items Suitable
for Christmas
I
1
I
<■
4S-
ft
4b
ft
4i
i
4r-
ft
1 I
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ft
a
WISHING
ft
YOU
Merry Christmas
Faber9s Market
“A Good Place To Trade”
LAST MINUTE SUGGESTIONS
Misses Sweaters l>8c Value
Call Here for
Women's Bedroom Slipiters
tiiip, 98 c
Misses Soft Sole Slippers
-»or, tine
E. C. Faber
S
Central Point Market
Groceries—Fresh Meats—Feeds
PHONE 441
♦XMAS*
I
I
i
?
5 I
That Extra Card-
Gifts for Every Member of tlie Family—
Toys from 5c up—
Magazines, Books, Toilet Articles, Boxed Candy, and many
other articles suitable for .Xmas gifts
STONE’S DRUG STORE
MERRY CHRISTMAS
and a
HAPPY NEW YEAR
ROAST TURKEY DINNER, with »II the
Trimmings, 85 C
Sunday anti Christmas
DAMON CAFE
♦
k
DATES
MIXED NUTS
V
WALNUTS
Kilt Ski.I-
ORANGES
———
i
$
I I
7î>c
PEANUTS
BABY
CHICKS
Bass—What's that terrible
Barred Rocks, New Hamps, R. 1 racket I heart
Reda, W. Leghorns Black Minor­
Mr. Perch—The Swordfish are
ca« and other breeds from double fighting a due) for the h .nd of Miss
blood testi-d, clean flocks, at low­ Mackerel.
est prices consistent with quality
Order early for best chix.
Try an Ad in
DAVIS FEED STORE
Medford—Ashland
The American
4»
$1.60
Women's Wool Skirts $1.08 Value, Now
1 III SII ROASTED
FOR SALE—-Small cook stove,
price 35.00, J. A. Flaharty,
Oak St., Central Point.
months basis. On the Pacific coast,
both’ Oregon and Washington made
a better showing while California’s
record was worse. Other states in
the far west to show improvement
were Idaho, Utah and Colorado.
Oregon’s traffic fatalities during
the month of November decreased
15 percent from the toll for last
November, but national figures on
November are not yet available.
<.
f
Lower Prices
CLASSIFIED
UANTED
._ >
n
V
A-
c
leftovers—These go at
LODGE DIRECTORY
It is not too late to send the Cen­
tra Point American to your friends
for a Christmas gift. If wishing to
pay after the Christmas rush is over,
stop and leave your order and your
I. O. O. F. 193
Noble Grand, Theo. A. Glass
subscription gift will start with the
Sec. J. E. Vincent
first issue in the new year, and call
M>‘eta each Monday evening at Hal) later to pay for same. We have al­
Visitors Welcome.
ready received a dozen subscriptions
for Christmas gifts. This way form­
er residents will receive weekly let­
ter for less than the coat of a three
cent stamp a week
-TT—±
4?
ft
A good Christmas trade with a few
Richard Jewett
Active in Athletics
Send Paper as
Christmas Gift
• Oregon was one of the 1» states
in the nation to report traffic fata­
lity decreases
for the month of
October, 1939, compared to the
same month a year ago. it was in­
dicated in reports ironi the National
afety Council, received
today by
Earl Snell, secretary of state.
October traffic deaths in this
state were 25 percent under those
the same month a year ago while
the nation as a whole, the traf-
death toll went up four percent,
report revealed.
For the first ten months of the
year, Oregon’s fatality list was four
percent lower than for the corres­
ponding period in 1938 while for the
nation as a whole, the improvement
was but two percent. Only 21 states
showed improvement on the ten
5UGGESTI0n5
Have your neighbors ever dropped
Miss Charlotte Eyre will leave for
into jour home to borrow the weekly
her home in Salem Friday, to spend
collection of circular letters, hand
the holidays with her parents.
bills, etc., that the users think are
as good as advertising in jour favor­
Booth
and
Mrs.
Edna
Mrs. Jim
ite country newspaper?—Menomo­
Kilburn accompanied Mr. Coleman
nee (Wis.) Falls News.
to Roseburg where they visited Mr
Booth, who is in the veterans’ hos­
Many people > lay not know that
pital. Mr. Booth is now able to be leaving the receiver of a telephone
out and take excercise and Is slowly off its hook so that the weight is re­
improving.
moved from the hook, will make it
impossible for Central to ring any­
Mrs. Beunett and Mrs. Bithers one on that line.
went to Medford Wednesday after-
noon where Mrs. Bennett wll! re-
main with her daughter for a while
to be near the doctor whose care she
is under.
Mrs. Woodrow Reich and little
ffleili, Dec 20,—Richard Jewett,
daughter Diana ut Phoenix spent
Wednesday with Mrs. Reich’s moth- junior at Willamete university in
Salem, Orefon, will be home in Cen­
er Mrs. Frank Lawrence.
tral Point for the Christmas vaca­
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Cline spent tion period which extends until Jan-
Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Clara urary 3. Mr. Jewett is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. II. P. Jewett of Cen-
Farra.
tral Point.
Mr. Jewett is a member of the
Mrs. Territt is leaving tomorrow
Alpha
Psi Delta fraternity and is
to spend Christmas with her son
Dade Territtt and family at Yreka. sports editor of the Willamette Col-
legfan the official student publiea-
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hover, Carolyn tion. lits major is education. He Is
and Arthur left this week for Cor­ aetve in Intra-mural sports.
vallis where they will spend the
Wllaniette university with an en­
Christmas holiday with Mrs. Hover’s rollment exceeding 850 is the oldest
parents. They planned to stop for university west of the Mississippi
an overnight visit with
Mr
and and Is situated in the Wlllametto
Mrs. Miller on the coast.
valley at Salem. Oregon. In 1942.
the school will celebrate
hundredth anniversary.
Oregon One of
19 States Reporting
Accident Decrease
<---- 1 ” '
HomfWtrJ bound for Yuletide in th.- early 1800'e.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bennett of
Northern Idaho stopped for a visit
with Mrs. Bennett’s uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Homer. Mr.
Bennett is a carpenter and has work
on the dam at Redding.
Homer Myers enjoyed a banquet
17 th
Norman Hansen, an employee of Sunday evening December
given
by
the
Mail
Tribune
for
all
Newberry's store of Medford, has re-
cently been promoted to position of the Tribune carriers at the Medford
Hotel.
stock manager.
----------- -
■-
Christmas Migration, 1939
shire Silk Hose at Faber’s.
Central Point Lodge
No. 135
AF. & A . M
Stated Meetings
3rd Wednesdays
Harold Head, W.
J. E. Vincent, Secy.
THUR8DAY, DECEMBER 21, 1030
CENTRAL POINT AMERICAN, CENTRAL roiNT, OREGON
ELI ' IIRER'S
Stuffing Bread
SWIFT PREMI I M
Hams & Bacons
2
Lb.
19c
2
Lb. 35c
2
Lb. 25c
2
Lb. 25c
Eac » Ie
2
Loaves 25c
MADE Rl
PRICED Rl
s
PLACE YOUR NEXT ORDER
WITH US
57>e American