Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 14, 1910, Page 3, Image 3

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    'J.UIK MIUDFOftn MAIL TltlHUNE. MKDKORO. OIJIWON, MONDAY, FKHHUAKV 14, 1910.
The
p OF
SSBfL Booth
'I WITH XIV.
tA'V iiililinj, i.i (Inn wiih no iiiIn-
IllMlIK Mil pillplllllf UMI'MHI"
JKtk "' ,H M'"' wlili h Mr. iVrej'.
fiililirtil hiiiir., ri'unnlril tin
liclmvlor u ,Uh Klllott mikI iiiym-lf u
mil iiitix fiHIiiit iiiuii tin vciiiikIii
of ilh' iiiiiii, Tin- IIu'Iiih nf tin- Inn
wi-iv till m. I'lii- HhimIhIi wiiimni mill
M. IIiiiiii'iiii liuil iniiilf tlii'lr ii iMattr
ii lire for ii iiiunu'iit, liiilf im I j ii r cur
Urn. In cxcliiinwi' a inl with (ln-lr
follow vlullniit. mill noun iiftur llio ex
llniiiilNliliic nf I lie In iuM in tliolr n,
Hit'c(hi' iiiiiiiiiifiiiH (Icnoicd their re
tlroiiiciit fur (lie nlclit. In lliu "kmiiiIu
unite" all liiul Ih'i-ii dark anil nllont fur
nu hour
I ki'pt uuIiik over and ovor thu ill
IiiIIn of Uiulno llnrinaii'M plan iih tlio
Klrl ImhIIi me hail outllni-il It, bend
Iiik aliovi tin hiihiiIkv xUi'tulilxMik.
"Tn iniikc iImmii ihlnk tin- (light U for
Purl." nlii Initl uriil"lo Turin by
way of l.l.ili'iix. To niiilic that man
youili'r hcllcvo that It In toward I.I
nIciix while they turn at the crown
roiiilH ami ilrlvu ncroMx thu country to
Troiivlllc for lliu inornlni; lioat to Iln
vri'." It wan jilinple. That wn lU great
virtue. If they wrru well Mnrtril they
wore nnfe. ami well iitnrliM meant
only that Larralxv Ilnrinan Mioultl
leave the Inn without an alarm. With
two hour' Mart nul the pumult nneiiil
ItiK niofit of Im energy In the wrotiK ill-rectlou-that
In. towanl I.hileux nuil
1'arln-thev would lie on the deck of
the rreneli-Canadlan liner tomorrow
noon, milling out of the lmrbor of I.o
Havre with nothing hut the Atlantic
ocean hftweeii them and the Ht. Ijiw
renee Kudilenly I Haw n light hIiIiio from
Kenilei-'H window.
I remarked, "Now, If you will permit
me, I'll otTer you my encort, hack to
QucMiay." I mild to MInh Klllott.
I went Into my room, put on my cap,
lit n lantern ami relumed will) It to
the veranda. We itohmnI the gnnlen
nn fn,- iih the nlepH. Mr. Percy hIkiiI
Iht I hi aiirival. 'Cumin nee the lit
tie lady home, nre viiiiV he nald gni
clounly. "I wan rKiiWii' It wan nbom
time mVeir."
The union door of Hie "gniiide nultu"
opened ahove me. ami at the wound
thu youth ntarted. nprlngliiK hack to
neo what It portended, hut I rati
quickly up the ntepn. Ken-dec ntood
In the doorway hnreheadisl and In lil
nlilrt nleevon. In one hand he held a
traveling ting, which he Immcdhitcly
gnvo me.
ilo wont hack Into the room, cloning
the door, and I doicended the niejin ns
rnpldly nn I had run up lliem. With
out panning I nlnrled for the rvar of
the courtyard, Minn Elliott at coi jpany.
Ing me.
The nentry Imd wateluil thene pro
ceedings open mouthed, more tn, mi
lled than alnrined. "I.uk here.'' he
nald. "I want f know whin thin
meaiiH."
"Anything you chooao to think It
mcaim." I laiigheil, heglnnlug to walk
a Utile more rapidly, lie glanced up
nt tlio wluilowt of the "grande mille,'
which were again dark, and hegau to
follow nn nlowly. "Whut you gut In
that grip?" he linked.
"You don't think wo'ro carrying oIT
Mr. Unrman?"
"I riH-kou Iui'b In IiIh room "nil right."
Bald the youth grimly, "uiiIihim he'n
How out."
Wo emerged nt tlio foot of n lunc Im
hind the Inn. It wan long and narrow,
bordered by Htono wallu and at thu
'I'ou loin; kmial 'ciJI.'" he iclled.
other end dehouched uikiii a road
which panHid thu rear of tho Ilaudry
collage.
Minn Klllott look my arm, nnd wo
oiitercd the lane,
Mr, Percy pauned uuilechlcdly, "I
want t' know whut you think y're
dolu'," he repoated angrily, culling
after iih.
"U'h very Hlmpli)," I called In turn.
"I think" you may uh well go back.
iWro not going fur'cuougli to need a
GUEST
QUESNAY
Tarkington
, Cf frtiM 191 181 t Ikl U4ft CmHD
guard."
Mr. I'ercy allowed nn oalh to encapw
him, and we heard liltn muttering to
hlmnelf. Then IiIh footntepn nounded
behl;id nn,
"llo'n coming!" Minn Klllott whlv
pered, with ticrvotin exullalloti, look
Ing over her nhoulder. "Ile'H going to
t follow,"
We trudged brlnlily on. followed nt
name llfly pacen h'y the perturhod
watchman. We were embarked upon
a nlugular mheiilure. not unattended
by a certain danger. Wo were tingling
with a hundred npprchcimloim, occu
pied with the vital uecennlty of clrnw
lug the little npy after itn-nml that
wan ti ntraiige tiiotnent fur a muu (and
nu elderly painter mini of no ma'rk at
tliuti (o hear hluinelf called what I
wan called then In it tremuloun whln
per clone to my ear. Of cournu nhe
linn denied It n I lice. Novcrtl)elenN nho
nuld ll-twlce, for I pretended not to
hear her the II mi lime. I made no nn
nwer. for nomelhlng In the word nhe
called me and In her nceuilng to mean
It made me choke up no that I could
not even whlxper. Hut I made up my
mind that after that If thin girl naw
Mr. I'nrl I'ercy on bin way back to
the Inn before nhe winded liltn to go It
would be hccntiHc he had killed me.
Wo were near the end of the lane
when the neigh of n borne Rounded
noiiorotmly from the road beyond.
Mr. I'ercy came running up nwlftly
ntul darted by un.
"WIio'h that'" ho called loudly.
"Who'n that In the cart yonder?"
1 tn't my lantern down clone to tho
wall, and a hornc and cart drew up
on the road. It wan I 'ere Hnudry'n
bent home, a ntotit gray, that would
unnlly uial.e Trouvllle by daylight. A
womau'n ilgure and n mau'H (tho Jnt -tur
that of I'ere Ilaudry hlmneiri could
bo made out dimly on the enrt neat.
"Who In It, I nay?" nhoutod our ex
cited friend. "What kind of n game
d'ye think y're puttln' up on mo here?"
A glance nt the occupnntn na Mailed
him. "Mm. Ilnrinan!" he yelled. "Mrn.
Ilnrmnti! 1 kunwed I wan n fool to
come awny without wukln' up Ita
menu. Hut yon hnven't bent us yet."
He drove back Into tho lane, but
Junt Innlde Itn eutrnnco 1 met him.
"Where nre you going?" 1 nnkwl.
"Unck to the IMgeon house In n hur
ry. Therc'n devilment here. I wnnt
Itnmcau!"
"You're not going back." nald I.
"The h- I nln't!' nald Mr. I'ercy. "1
give ye two necondn f git out o' my
Take yer hiindn offn me!"
I made nure of my grip, not upon tho
refulgent overcont. for 1 feared ho
might nllp out of that, but upon tho
collar of bU coat and wnlntcoat
"You long lef;gc. uevll!" ho yelled,
and I Innlautly received a nerlen of
coucunnloiiH upon the face and head
which put me In nupreme doubt of my
nurrouinllupi. for I ncemcd to have
plunged eyen foremoit Into the Milky
Way. I wan coumloun of nomo one
ncreauiliig. and It M-ciucd a counollng
part of my delirium that the cheek of
Minn Antic Klllott nhould be Jammed
tight agalnxt mine through one phaxc
of the explosion. I hung to him, an
I'ere Huudry to.stlllei. for a minute nnd
n half, which m-ciiih no Inconsiderable
lapHe of time to u person undergoing
ouch experlencen nn were then allllct
lug me.
It nppearcd to me thnf wo were re
volving In Hiioriuoun circles In the
other nnd I hud long nlnco given my
bmt gimp when there came n great
roaring wind In my carti and a rnngo
of mountain toppled upon un both.
We went to earth beneath It.
"I la! You mum create violence,
then!' roared the avalanche.
Tho voice wan tho voice of Koredec.
Bomo ono pulled mo from under
neath my Htruggllng nntngonlnt, and,
tho power of night In a hazy, zigzag
ging faHhlon coming back to mo, 1
perceived tho llguro of Minn Anno Kl
llott recumbent benldo me, her nrms
nbout Mr. Percy's prontrnto body. Tho
oxtraordlnnry girl had fntUonod uikiii
him, too, though I had not known It,
nnd Hbo bad gouo to ground with us,
but It U to bo said for Mr. Knrl Percy
that no blow of bin touched her, and
alio wns not hurt. Even In tho flnnl
extrcmltlcH of temper ho bad careful
ly dlncrlmluntcd In my favor.
Mrn. Ilnrinan was bending ovor bur
nnd iih tho girl Bpraug up lightly
throw bor nrnm about her. For my
part, I rono moro nlowly, section by
section, wondering why 1 did not full
njmrt, lips, nonu mid checks bleeding,
nnd I had a fear that 1 should need to
bo led like a blind man through my
cyelldH Hwolllng shut. That wiih some
thing I earnenlly desired should not
happen; but, whether It did or did not
or If tho hca vc iih fell, 1 meant to walk
back to Quesnay with Anno Klllott
that night, mid, mangled, broken or
half dead, presenting whatever up
pcarnnco of tho prize ring or tho abat
toir that 1 might, I Intended to tuko
tho samo train for Paris on tho mor
row that she did.
For our days together wore not nt
nn end, nor was It hurs nor my desire
that they should bu.
It was Oliver SulTrcn-nH I llko to
think of blm who helped mo to my
fcut and wiped my ftico with bis
llnudkurchluf and when tbijt ono was
ruined brought olhern from IiIh bag
ami stanched the wounds gladly re
ceived In Hie service of Ills wife.
"I will leiiiemher" he said, and hln
voice broke. "These are the memo
ries which Keriilcc says make a limn
good. I pi ay I hey will help to redeem
me" And for the hint time I heard
the child In him speaking; "I oiniht I"
bo redeemed. I intint be, don't you
think, for her mike?"
"Lone im time!" shoiitNl Kercdec.
"You must be gone If you will reach
thai certain town for Hie ! o'clock
train of the morning." This was for
the spy's benefit, It Indicated Mnlcux
and the (iiilu to Paris, Mr. Percy
struggled. The professor knelt over
him, plntnuliig his wrists In one great
hand and holding liltn canity to earth.
"Ila, my friend" he addressed bin
captive "you shall not have cause to
say we do you any harm, Them shall
be. no law, for you are not hurt, and
you are not going to be. Hut here you
shall stay ipllet for n little while-till
I nay you can go." As he spoke he
bound the other's wrists with a short
mpe which he took from bis pocket,
performing the same olllco Immediate
ly nfterward for Mr. Percy's nuklen.
"I take the count!" was the sole re
mark of Ihal philosopher. "I can't go
up ngaliiNi no herd of elephants."
The two women were crying In each
other's amis, "Ooodby!" sobbed Anne
Klllott.
Mrs, llarman turned to Kercdec.
"Coodby for n little while!"
He klsMed her hand. "Dear lady, I
shall come within the year."
Khe cnine to me. mid I took her
hand, meaning to kiss It as Kercdec
had done, but suddenly she was closer,
mid 1 felt her lips upon my battered
check. I rcincmbcr It now.
I wrung her husband's hand, nnd
then he took iier In bis nrms. lifted her
to tho footbonrd nf the cart and sprang
up beside her.
"God bless you, nnd goodby!" we
cnllcd.
And their voices came bnck to us,
"flod bless you, nhd goodby!" '
Tim KKH.
LEAPS TO HIS DEATH IN
ICY WATERS OF BAY
SAN FHANTISCO. Oil., Feb. II.
-Police of this city and of Siiun
lito todny nre socking to learn the
identity of n man who leaped from
the deck of tho ferryboat .Berkeley
into the hay last night. The suicide
left nn overcont on the deck, in the
pocket of which wns a flatiron, which
it is believed he intended lo uo a a
"sinker." It in thought, however,
that the man, seeing that the swilt
tide would enrry him to destruction,
discarded the iron nnd lenped over
bonrd. "Sundny, 0 p. m. Tomorrow nt
0:30, if you will call up Kearney
4018, they will tell you who owns the
coat," rends a note found in one of
tho ockcts of the overcont. Beside
the cont lny n hat and walking sliclc.
In the hat band are the initials "J.
M. B." Tho walking stick is of bam
boo, ornamented with Jnpaneso curv
ing. The telephone number 'referred to
in tho note in that of J. L. & B. N'n
gle, attorneys here. Xoither of the
lawyers could recall ".1. M. B." nor
eouid they idontify the suicide's ef
fects. The body has nut been recovered.
$12,525 Eleven acres in Cornice penrs, 10 years oil,
nine acres in Bartlett and Anjou pears, 1 to 3 years
old; close in; good soil. Terms.
$12,000 Eleven acres in Cornice and Bosc pears, 14
vears old. These trees are in full bearing and will
on the Drioe asked.
$24,000 Thirty-two acres in Bose and Anjou pears;
trees are from -1 to 7 years of age. Complete set
of buildings. Close in.
$7000 Thirty-five acres of black sticky, three miles
from Bedford, all under tho ditch and can bo irri
gated. $13,000 Thirty-two acres, close to Medford; eight
acres in Nowtowns and Spikeubergs 5 to 7 years
of age; 14 acres in alfalfa; three acres in peaches;
two acres in berries; irrigated; buildings.
$13,000 Twenty acres; 1G acres in 7-year-old New
towns and balance in 3-year-old Bartlett peal's; no
buildings.
$7500 Ten acres, all planted to Newtown and Spit-
zenborg apples, 7 to 11 years old.
$18,000 Thirty-five acres, about 25 planted to apples
and peal's, ill bearing. Trees are from 6 to 15 years
old; buildings; tour miles from Medford.
$14,000 Thirty-fivo acres; buildings; exceptionally
fine place for a homo; twolvo acres in apples u d
pears 3 years old; about an acre of bearing orchard;
11 acres in alfalfd; all fine deep free soil.
$150 to $200 per acre Stewart acre tracts; two miles
from Medford; tracts are from 10 to 25 acres in ruze.
jFino building spots on all; can all bo irrigated;
cheapest tracts in the Medford neighborhood; easy
terms.
$300 per acre Finest five and ten-acre orchard and
garden tracts in the valley; easy terms.
$35,000270 acres; buildings; 26 acres in bearinn
Spitz, Newtowns and Cornice pears, about 60 acres
in ono and two-year-old apples and pears; fine or
chard land.
SELLING- AGENTS FOR SNOWY BTJTTE
ORCHARD TRACTS,
W. T. YORK & CO
REV. B. LEROY HALL
IS GIVEN WELCOME
L;rt Reception Tendered the Hew
j Mar'shfictd Pastor at First Bap
! tlst Church In That City.
(Tons I lay Times.)
At llio Flint HnptiSii church in
Jlurslifittld hint evening ft reception
nuil wolconio was cxtcliileil to llilc
Hov. fl. I.eioy Hull, llio new pal..r
of Hint church, mill his- wife by the
congregation nuil rcprosontativfs (
tho oilier congregations. There was
a good nttondnnce ami tlje sflnir
proved a most onjoyablc one.
During the'evcuing, Itcv. Mr. .ugg
of tho rrcbhylerian churoh delivered
a short humorous talk. Ho was fol
lowed by A. 0, Walker, minister of
the Church of Christ, who spoke on
"Advantage of Fellowship." Itcv.
II. I. Kutlcdge of the Firat Methodist
church spoke on "Toinptatlons of the
Ministry," nnd He v. Hull ppoke on
"Aids to the Minister's Efficiency."
All of (he addresses were good.
During the evening, vocal number
were rendered by Mioses Uma Marsh
and Alpha MauzcV ntul Mcfdmne J.
Ingram and F.niost McCray.
Light refreshments were served
during the evening.
VETERAN OF STAGE IS
VICTIM OF HEART DISEASE
OAKLAND. Cat., Feb. 14.-- Veter
an of u stage career extending over
a quarter of a century. John H. Fur
lontr, .VI venr of age, is dead todny
in this city.
Furlong was a member of "The
Virginian" company. Shortly nfter
he had gone to his room in hi hotel
last night he felt coming upon him
the recurrent heart trouble to which
he was subject.
Furlong hnd a presentiment that lie
would succumb to the nttnek, and
hurriedly walked to the hotel lobby,
where John It. Smiley and Chnrlo
H. Gilbert, other members of the com
pany, sat.
"I'm dying, boys," he said. "I
cnii't brenthe well, now, and I wanted
to be with you when the end came."
Gilbert rushed to cnll n doctor, but
Furlong wns dead before he returned.
Tho deceased actor was known in
New York, where his children live.
I.OTH VOll SAI.K.
Five very choice east front lots, on
Ivy street, three blocks from Sev
enth street; Ideal locations; nil the
advantages of Oakdnle avenue with
out tho expense; new buildings go
ing up alt around these lots; Investl
gnto this, the only choice east front
lots cloie In available for building.
Enquire 240 S. Grape st. 2S2
I)
By DAVID G. HARTLEY.
(CopyrlKht. 1310. ny American PreM Amo
elation Hooker, tl Iron king" of New
Yolk, wmii n,i Irtlliible iiinii nnd n
stingy one Ills IuIiich wns spec
Uls'liig In Iron, ami to do this fiuecess.
fully he was obliged u xeeure Infor
mation from nil purls of the world ns
10 (he production, consumption, stock
on bund mid nuch other Items as tend,
ed to fix the price of the meliil
Hooker gnve his slxtcr's son. iidwip-d
Knrle, n position In IiIh ofllee. At twenty-live,
though the young man wns
iniiunuer of ihnt brunch of the tuisl
no which pcrtulned to Informiitlon.
lie wns inM Inn twelve hundred n year.
On this he supported his mot her, n
wife ii ml two Utile children. lie
hiifed under his uncle's sttuglncxM nnd
on one ocensiou naked for more snlnry.
He wus Informed that If 'he could do
better elsewhere he wns welcome to
go. The young man appreciated the
proverb "A rolling stone gathers no
moss" nnd remained where he was.
One dny Hooker Informed Ids elerk
that he wished liltn lo go to Ctiglnnd
to Invintlgnie the condition of the
mnrket there. He furnished the young
tnnu with a second clnsn ticket on an
ocean liner nnd bnrely enough money
lo pay his bonrd nnd travel third clus
between the principal English Iron
manufnctnrlue towns,
One morning Enrlc. who wns In
Sheilleld. nrose nnd while breakfast
ing with IiIh pajs-r before' him saw a
notice of the failure of an Iron firm
located in the neighboring town of
Itlrtnlughnm. The concern being a
small one Earle nttacbed little Impor
tance to the failure, but during the
day a business acquaintance who bad
an Interest In favoring him gave him
a bit of secret lnformutlon that caused
him to change his mind. It wns be
lieved that the failure would Involve
a larger Arm. that firm would Involve
u number of others, nnd the whole
community of Iron firms In Englnnd
would go down like card bouses. This
would throw n large lot of Iron on
the market that had been held spec,
ultitlvely for n rise, and consequently
the prlei-s would fall considerably.
There wns no Atlantic cable In those
days, wi Earle wrote the Information
he had received, giving his opinion
that n crisis was'ut hand nnd ndvtHlns
his ymployer to sell ut once all the
In-n he had on hnnd. The. ship bear
Ins the letter had no sooner sailed
than the second firm In lino failed.
This caused Earle to feel still greater
confidence In the Information be bad
received, nnd he had no doubt that
all be hnd heard would be realized.
The young man proved himself ad
mirably fitted to assume responsibil
ity, lie took a risk that would make
or break him. In the name of Hooker
& Co. he was not authorized to sign
the firm name, but It was not known
he contracted to deliver thousands of
tons of Iron nt a figure below the mar
ket price, the Iron to be delivered in
ninety days. This done, he took the
flrt steamer that sailed for America,
the one that Isire the news of the Iron
panic in Euzlnnd.
6n the morning of his arrival he
went straight to the otllce. There
snt .Mr Hooker at his desk with a
morning paper before hlra. Earle
caught sight of large headlines nn
nouuclus the tumble of Iron In Eng
land It had been sent from Sandy
Hook. Hooker was white ns a sheet.
"You worthies seampr cried the
head of the firm to his employee.
"Why didn't you write of the begin
ning of all this? I'm rubied: 1 had
an immense stock on hand. and. learn
ing of a shortage on the continent. 1
bought more."
1 wrote by the last steamer, giving
you Information that pointed to thu?
result nnd advised you to sell out ail
the stock you had."
"Your letter uever came. You should
have brought the Information your
self." "Are you sure about the letter?"
"Jumes." called Hooker to a clerk,
"are there any letters that have not
been delivered to me?"
"There was one came. sir. a few days
ngo. You kuow that you ordered all
letters on which the postage was not
paid In full to be left at the postotllce.
There was 8 cents due on this one. and
I refused to pay It."
"Oh. heavens!" groaned Hooker.
"Was It from England?" asked Earle
of the clerk.
"I thluk It was."
"It must have been n mistake of tho
clerk's at the llrltlsh postotllce. 1 put
on stamps to cover the cost as he quot
ed It to me."
Hooker's head dropped on his desk.
Irritated some time before at receiving
unstamped letters (at that time such
letters were delivered!, ho had given
orders that all mall on which any
money was due should not be taken
from the postotllce. For refusing to
pay 8 ceuts he had been ruined.
"now much Iron have you on hand?"
asked Enrle.
"A hundred thousand tons." groaned
the speculator without taking his bend
off hla desk.
"Well. Mr. Hooker, cheer up. It's
not so bad. after all. I took n big risk
while abroad.. I sold in your name
Just ns the panic began rJ.".(KH) tons to
be delivered In ninety days."
"What!"
"1 sold for you 125.000 tons at about
what your stock cost you. There'll bo
some iow figures today on the publica
tion of this news, Perhaps IM better
go on to the exchange and buy a part
of It In."
Hooker fell on his nephew's neck
There was a profit on the transaction
of many thousand dollars, and from
that day Knrle took his uncle's place
ns the "Iron king,"
THE "IRON
You nood a Ihiiek.
281
I B. KNYA'lt'l , I'resiilom
JOHN s i HMD
Vfti MEDFORD NATIONAL BANK "
CAPITAL .. $50,M0
SURPLUS .. .. ,. $,G,K
Safety boxes for rent. A icneral Banking Ruslnesi transacted.
Wo solicit your patronage
WAA1ED
Timber and Coal Lands
ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING CON
TRACTS TAKEN AND ESTIMATES
FURKISEED.
B. H. Harris & Co.
MFDFORD - - - - OREGON
Office in Jacnoutj vouuty Bank Upstairs
I
PLUMBING
STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING
All Work Guaranteed Prices Reasonable
COFFEE.N . PRICE
11 North D ft . Mwlford. Ore. Phone 303
'In
5LT
WHERE COMFORT REIGNS
In tho homo oqulppod with electricity Comfort
Is tho prosldlng goddess. Tho Illumination of th
Interior may bo augmentod by a lighting arrange
ment on tho porch that will add Immeasurably to
the Joy of tho home on hot summer evenings.
Aside from good lighting a houso wired for
oloctricity Is prepared for oloctrlc fans, whoso
soft broozes aro llko balm on humid nights.
Fans aro portable and may bo connected with
electric sockets either Indoor or on tho verandah.
Send for tho estlmato man and let us bring
beauty and comfort to your homo.
ROGUE RIVER ELECTRIC. CO
' C Hansen Inn, Moffat.
Wp make any kunl and stylo of windows. We carry
irlas anv size on hand
Medford Sash & Door Co.
DRIVERS that know the country
RIGS that cover the country
QVICKLV AND WITH COMI-MST TO YOU AUK AJAVIVS TO UK
FOILS l A I THE
FAR LOW & DOWNING, PROPRIETORS.
WEST SIDE STABLES
PHONE 2431 8. GRAPE STREET
GOLD RAY GRANITE CO.
Office: 209 West Main St., Medford, Ore.
Operating Quarry
DEALERS IN
BUILDING, MONUMENTAL AND
CRUSHED GRANITE
J. A. PER11Y, Vieo-Prosldout.
W H. JACKSON, Ass't Cashier.
at Gold Ray, Oregon