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About Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946 | View Entire Issue (June 16, 1939)
Friday, June SOUTHERN OREGON MINER I.IMIS \ III li., Fiincnil seivl< > < u mina HeRinvyvi >1. q June IO ut thè bon*( John Hellmt • . ! J. Wordsworth, Minister .il W.iinii. Ore ■«•. fourth mid <’ N ucc I n Illune of Asili.uni wnj« arrangement* Our motto "The chinch w «'I < e you aie never a strangei gg Ubarli a » Ih-itcll. Gitili , ai i Ivi | j Sunday schiMil, 9:4A u in , .•V. spelili un indelliilti « Utley, Hupeiinti-iiili nt Y. ' Bud Robinson mid Geoige W« II. ut thè honie of bis >l4| bls >4 .indson, ol i'us.iiiciiu, l'.< r.. tei III lilW, Mi nnd | will be »pc« lui guests al Im« s< V Rrynolds nnd l.iniily. ice. One or bout will uddicus nr • Mr. and Mrs <’ ( Sunday school. Mr nnd M in Meiwii At il a. m the Rev. Hud I, II d.iugiitvr Huz.mne j i< b ulla viwlted Sun iv, inson will be guest piaacliet is u.iectloiiuie.y kno,.n through ’he hoine uf Mi.« II] out Ameiicu as "Uncle llild<i> ■ ' fumily. for mole than hull a century in hus pleached to the gicnt clow Is lie is unique, entei turning and i p rivaling in Ins ministry i’e«>,*u enjoy ms home spun phlloM>p.>y "Lncle Buddie" also will pn-.r :h •it 8 p. in Saturday evening Young People’s service, 7 p in Mon unirli In nnd Joseph P. Kennedy, II. S. ambussudoi Sunday. of Hronrr mid to Britain, millionaire, former «/ ( Evening preaching service, 7 At Prier* V<»u < chairman and maritime commis, on p. in., Ncnnon by pustor. Topic, chairman, is quite a family man he V.hy Young People Sliould lie rider. He'll gel nine presents li.nslians." A vital subject for Father's Day. youth Welcome to all. Church of the Nazarene • BELLVIEW • riieir Children Helped Make Thein Eamons gg Miss Velma Athanas of Asli land visited Friday at the home of Miss Marjorie Bell. • Miss Moua Yockel, who makes her home m Roaephine, Alta., ar rived here Tuesday to spend an indefinite time visiting with Mr. and Mrs. George Yockel and fam- i,y. She is u daughter of George i ockel. w Mr. and Mrs. Wade Wallis and air. and Mrs. Louis Pankey vis ited Thursday evening of last week at tne home of Mr. and Mts. Arch ie runcaid anil family. U Mr and Mrs. Miles Farmer and oaugnter Betty Lou of Dorris vis ited Saturday and Sunday at the home of Mrs. Farmers parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Byrd. • Mrs. Robert Dodge of Ashland visited Wednesday afternoon at the home of her parents. Mr. and “1 don't care much for Bankhead but Mrs. N. B. Hull. u Mr. and Mrs. Chester Apple I’d like to meet Tallulah:' So ran the gate and Miss Helen Kruger of song from "I'd Bather Be Right." U il the Dead Indian district spent ham Itankhead i« speaker of the House. Sunday at Modoc Point visiting at Daughter Tallulah is a stage actress. the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Miller. • Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stenrud and his brother, Joe Stenrud, spent Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Kincaid. • Volney Wiggens and Ed Wig gens visited Vv ednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter I Brahs and family. They were en route to their home in Roseville, after having spent a short time in Portland on business. Ed Wiggens is a brother of Mrs. Brahs. • Mr. and Mrs Edward Carlson and Mr. and Mrs. John Reberg and daughter of Troy, Iowa, vis ited Saturday of last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Ap plegate. Mrs. Carlson is a niece of Ormsby of Umpire Emmett Mrs. Applegate, Mr. and Mrs. Carl son, Mr. and Mrs. Reberg were the American league knouts his strikes enroute to San Francisco, where and fouls but must sometimes think they planned to attend the fair be twice to remember his children’s fore continuing their trip to south names Good reason—the. re 12 strong, rungtng from 2 to 16 yt « ern California. O Mr. and Mrs. George Y’ockel made a trip to Medford Saturday- day at the home of Mrs. Farmer’s on business. O Warren Fichtner of Medford parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Byrd, visited Tuesday evening at the and at the home of his parents. home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mr. and Mrs. John Farmer. • Dona d Marsh left Wednesday Brahs and family. O Denver Kincaid and Ettie Mor morning for San Francisco where ris of Ashland, and Mr. and Mrs he will spend an indefinite time on Orin Avent, daughter Jeanette and business. son Jim of Alabama visited Satur • Kenneth Bell left Tuesday morn day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ing for Greenville. Calif., where he will visit indefinitely with an Archie Kincaid and family. • Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Farmer uncle, Wesley Bell, and his father, , and daughter Dolores of Dorris, R. E. Bell. Calif., visited Saturday and Sun- • Mr. and Mrs. Louis Pankey, And It's CLEAN . COOL CONVENIENT • ECONOMICAL In warm, summer weather an electric range is a neces sity in YOUR kitchen ! It's CLEAN—no soot, ashes and grime, no scouring of pots and pans ! COOL, too ! Electric cooking ends the drudgery of preparing meals in an overheated, unhealthful kitchen. CONVENIENT in every way—instant heat exactly where you want it at the turn of a switch; automatic cooking, too, gives added hours of leisure. ECONOM ICAL ? Certainly ! Only half as much as you'd guess it would cost ! COPCO I Fir or Cedar Slabs, 2c cu. ft UNDAY, June 18, brings local observance of the twenty-ninth annual Father's Ihiy, a custom originated nt Spokane, Wash., in 1910 by Mrs. John Bruce I)« h I<1, now director of n funeral home. She started it in tribute to her a G.A.R. veteran father, named William J. Smart. Moat fathers aren’t illustrious, hut they’re Ihul to someone and nothing else counts. Some fathers are famous in their own right. Others, strangely, grow in stature partly through notoriety achieved through five their children. Here samples : S Life - Autu INSURAI districts. Tin* children will br riven, if they wish, free iikm - u I k - uo i for dipthvriu. scarlet fever nnd vaccination for hiiui 1I| m > x by Dr. Merkel un<l Nurs«* Parrish of Mitiiord. Mrs V E Seltx and Mrs R D Reynolds will lx* pres ent to aaaiHt Children will be Kamined thoroughly for fitness to enter school in the fall Parents are being urgeti to take advantage of the fre«* clinic Eighty five-year old Henry Morgen thau was famous years ugo as ambassa dor to Turkey and an international peace worker. Son Henry, nou secre tary of the treasury, keeps llenry Sr ’« name in the limelight Father Oliva Dionnr uus tosi anothei muti with a larga lamily unni di* quinti carne along File of « kuul Il olii il keep must meri finis Itili due forget thiil Paini I tranne hai inni olher yourig mouthi lo ferii! Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stenrud. Mr and Mrs. Archie Kincaid, Mrs. Ella True, Joe Stenrud, Miss Marie Walker and Miss Eunice Kincaid made a trip to Crater Lake Sun day, returning home via Klamath Falls. • George Yockel transacted busi ness in Klamath Falls Monday. • Bill Brahs spent Saturday and Sunday in Medford as a guest of Warren Fichtner. • Bert. Selberg .uni Edward John son of McCloud, Calif., were guests at the Walter Brahs home Satur day and Sunday of last week. • Mr. and Mis G. W. vTallace. who make their home in Brook park, Minn., and Mr. and Mrs. I Bernard Wallace, who make their home in Moline, 111., visited Satur- day and Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Applegate. Mrs. G. W. Wallace and Mrs. Ap- piegate are sisters and Bernard G unlace is a nephew. The Wallace families had been viewing _ the fair in San Francisco and are making a tour of the west coast. O 'Inursday of last week George courtright of Tule Lake, E. Ham ilton ot Vancouver, Mrs. Claire Taylor and Mrs. Beth Hamaker of Asniand visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Archie Kincaid and family. Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Korth and son Jimmie and W. E. Siebert of rinehurst visited Thursday eve ning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Martin. • Miss June Connor of Medford visited Tuesday evening of last week at the home of Miss Alice Metcalfe. • James Wiggens of Roseville, Calif., is visiting this week at the home of his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brahs. • Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sexton and daughter Elizabeth of Klam ath Falls spent Friday night and Saturday of last week at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed I Grimm. • The missionary society of the I Ashland Presbyterian church met Thursday at the home of Mrs. Homer Moore, the group of women enjoying an attractive covered dish dinner. • Miss Lottie Beswick returned j from San Francisco last week, ' where she spent a short time vis- j iting the fair. • Mr. and Mrs. Dexter Wood worth, who are constructing the Lodge Pole trailer camp, have I completed work on rest rooms and i showers. The new camp is located ■ two miles south of the Ashland ' city limits on the Pacific highway. 1 • The Bellview Home Extension unit held a picnic at the home of Mrs. Vincent Lanlni of the Dead Indian district Friday. The cov ered dish dinner was served out- doors at 1 p. m. No business nu-t Ing was held and members did fancy work and visited during the afternoon. About 20 women were present. « The embroidery club held a meeting Tuesday afternoon in the home of Mrs. Edwin Dunn. During the day members made cold and tissue creams from a recipe given by Mrs Mabel Muck, home dem onstration agent. Those present In cluded Mesdames Walter Long- st re th. Mattie Crow, Herman Helm. Roy Crow, Ben Christliub, Claude Conley and the hostess • The annual school election will be held in the Bellview school house at 8 p. m. Monday, June 19. Bellview people will elect one ilirector for a three-year term to replace Herman Helm, whose term expires, and a clerk to succeed Mrs. Charles Anderson. • Dale Anderson left Thursday for San Francisco where he will spend a month visiting his grand mother, Mrs. Mary Huahower, and with other relatives and friends. Dale also will eye the fair while thin- • Mr. Bennett of Portland is working in Bellview this week in stalling dial telephones The new instruments will not be ready for use until early July. • A summer round-up is to be held In the Bellview schoolhouse starting at 1 p. m June 29. and will be for all school and pre school children in Bellview. Neil Creek, Dead Indian and outlving ZEMTIi RA NKW RADIOSI Have That Radin (' Dickey’s Radio I'll Ilouh-i aril ’S STANDAR til sufwgimrd Iwith your ap|>ra and your cloth«-« uhm you tlimi to Shuntar«! for ctaaning! iiH'thod restores color and llfr la ri<«; Irngthrn« th«- llfr of the gun Me alno cirun mid block all l.is* hat«! * For Clraiting (»II STANDAR CLEANER! I »13 EAST MHS s nu» Let ’er Boil! The hotter the weather gets, the more you appreciate the frigid dependability of an electric refrigerator . . . always ready with cold, crisp vegetables and fruits, plenty of ice for summertime drinks, delicious and unusual frozen sal ads and desserts. If you do not now en joy the convenience and economy of electric refrigeration, see your favorite dealer this week and learn how easy it is to own one! And remember, electricity costs LESS in Ashland! DRY BLOX DELIVERED IN YOUR SHED All Kinds of Building Lumber As Low As $10 per Thousand Feet! ASHLAND PLANING MILL Local Sawmill—Phone 287-J îi Ashland Light Department “Your SERVICE Department