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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1920)
ASHLAND. April! 5. "Do it for Ashlnnd" is the sloirnn adopted pv tbe local drive in connection with the reorganization campaign in behalf o' the commercial cluh. the trustees of the organization having formulated e. plnn for a campaign of our own, elimi nating the ninin features, which aroused opposition to the American City Bureau project. The club an nounces that this is not to be a cam paign to raise monev for outside ad vertising purposes, but rather a drivo to cot toeethcr the host thouirht .md co-operation of our citizens with the object of makinir Ashlnnd a better city. . In Questionnaires which nrc to he sent.. out to ono thousand men and women throughout the citv within the next week, responses are invited in j dealing with the following three direct propositions: 1.. What; in vour opinion, is the first thing tho Ashland Commercial club should do in making Ashland' a bigger and better citvf 2. What is the thing of second im portance in vour opinion 1 T '- & What is the first thing the Commercial club should do to holp vou 1n your own business or improve tho conditions directly nffecting vouf ' The' returns from these question naires will fro. through a sifting pro cess at the hands of a committcu of representative citizens, who bv a pro cess of elimination will automatically evolve a plan which implies tho survi val of the fittest as to practical ap plication of the recommendations nml suggestions made, and at forum gatherings tho propositions as sub mitted will he further threshed out. Up-to date nearly 73 suggestions have been filed, revealing a wido di versity of opinion as to the merits of ' projects from industrial, educa tional and social standpoints. The classification reveals good, bad and indifferent plans for the solution of many problems, as might ho expected and the purpose is to strike the hminv meSdium as between extremes. Already this plan is creating intorest, and thore promises to ho somo lively com petition over respective contentions ns. 4o whut .ones should bo thrown into the discard. The executive committee, which is actively ., fostering the enmpnign movement along new and novel lines, inoludcs J. II. Fuller, chairman, and E. V. Carter. Rev. C. A. Edwnrds, G. A.':,Briscoc, Irving Vining and V. 0. N. Smith, six leading citizens whose efforts will he reinforced by an ad visory committee of nearly 100 citi zens, chosen from among business, professional and industrial circlos. . f)etails will be explained at a Dub lie meeting to be held at campaign headquarters on tho Plaza Monday evening, April -5. All nro invited to participate, and it is planned to call the gathering to order promptly at 7:30 o'clock. Remember, this is a meeting of home people, to discuss home topics, and eventually spend our home monev for home purposes, in stead of paving tribute to outside ex ploitations. I WEDDING BELLS I Two well known young people of this city, (Miss Ruth Hemphill and Le lan'tf V. Jacobs were united in mar riage at 8:30 a. m. Saturday, April 3rd 'by Rev. L. Myron Boozer at the latter's homo. Tho Presbyterian ring service was used. Both are graduates from the high school, the bride hav ing 'been graduated last year and the groom several years ago. Mrs. Jacobs taught school this year and for sov- 10 Claims for Qiaality are only ' proven when opportunity is given for comparison. ' ; Among cornflakes j TOASTIES are paramount and their, success is based upon cjuality. 'The crispness, flavor and all round likability of TOASTIES stand any comparison. Sold by Grocery Everywhere ! Made by Postum Cereal Cb..Batlle Creek, Mich. PUTNAM GLAD TO SEE THE ANGL ACCEPT HIS VIEW . To the editor: I have been much edified to see In the columns of your valuable paper, that, despite the fact there is fully as much harmony and even more loose talk among the sportsmen of tho Rogue River valley than there Is in the United States senate, a treaty of peace has been negotiated among the warring fac tions of fishermen, containing reser vations not acceptable to bitter- endors, as destroying their constitu tional right to damn the cannery when the angling Is poor. What wild' Utopian idealism, league of fishermen to bring peace where there is no peace! What foul conspiracy Is this that the Medford Pole, Spoon and Rait association, and the Ashland Gaff, Harpoon and Sal mon-Kgg club, and tho Portland Rod Spinner and Rait society, have en tered into-to deprive the dear people of their sacred right to ruin establish ed Industry? Haven't tho same par ties been proclaiming for years that tho Rogue river was put on the map exclusively for the'pleasure of a few anglers? Haven't the good people of Medford pungled up coin year after year to have the negotiators of tho treaty tell it to the legislature, and hasn't the dome of the capitol echoed and reverberated with tho brainstorm of the divlnerights of sportsmen, for lo! those many years? . It is true that tho pooplo of Ore gon, outside the beautiful valley of the Rogue refused to get excited or he stampeded. Only a year ago last fall thoy sustained by referendum the right of the .cannery to use gear which Muclcay now voluntarily rolln qulshos, and thoy generally applaud the peace' treaty as the first sane and constructive effort on the part of the Rogue river sportsmen to end an in cessant clap-trap clamor ot which theyware woarted and disgusted, but that Bhould not prevent the battalion ot death from initiating a constitu tional amendment requiring wet win ters to insure bettor summer angling. ' For many years I worked construe tivoly for better angling In tho Rogue, seeking by increased propagation, re stocking, screening and in other ways to offset the Increasing ravages of tho automobile, the tourist, the local fish-hog and the irrigation ditch. My reward was to be read out of the sportsmen organizations, state and local, because I stood for a squaro deal for both angler and cannery. Now that the organizations in ques tion, having gone around a wind- jamming, hell-roaring, four-flushing, flim-flamming circle, have ended where I began, I wish to welcome those skillful anglers. Toggery Bill Daniels for Duds,. Harry the Hosier and tho noblest fisherman of them all, Charlie Thomas, (who angles for suckors instead of trout), as new members of the "Bought by Macleay" club, to which 4hey elected me charter membor. . i GEORGE PUTNAM. Salem, Oregon, April 3, 1920. eral months wtts a substitute teacher at Washington school; The groom is connected with a wholesale grocery house in Medford. ' At tho hc'mo on Capitol Hill, of Mrs. Thomas Somplo, tho brido's sis ter, at 4 o'clock Saturday afternoon April 3rd, Miss Wilhelmina Hyslop and Thomas P.' Vestal were married by Rev. Myron Boozer. Thev will reside on tho Vestal farm at Roese creek. The'brldo came hore from Scotland six months ago. Mr. Vestal is an ex-service man, and well known thruont the valley. ftfiDffOmj TRTgTTNll, EAST. SURPASSES ALL DESCRIPTON Mr. I?. Bruce MVKeown, of the local committee on raising funds for Xenr Knst Relief, is in receipt of n copy of a cablegram iust received from 'he Nenr East, which sets forth in a ter ribly vivid manner tho awful condi tions in the Near Knst today, and the wonderful work the Near Knst Ho lief is doing, under tho direction of Colonel Haskell, nn American nrmv officer, representing the allied armies in the Caucasus, in that desolate land of cold and hunger. Read it, and vou will ngrco with Herbert Hoover that "this is the most desperate situation in the world to duy." And having read it. and come to realize that the Near East Relief, and thev alone, can relieve the situa tion, resolve that if vou have not ns vet contributed liberitllv to the Near hast campaign which is now on here, von will do so immediately and gener ously.- Don't put it off! Whatever is done must he dono at once ! Every dav of delay means the loss of mora lives ! EAGLE POINT EAGLETS Bt A. C. Howiett Carl Borgsmnn and Alex Vostal called Saturday night for supnor. Among the arrivals Sunday at the Sunnysido was H. C. Christoffcrson of San Rafael, Cal., IS. G. Trowbridge and Sirs. H. E. Bordun of Medford. Mrs. Lapworth of Seattle, Mrs. J. K Holmes also of Seattle, Ward Spatz o Hastings, Novada, ilarry Rosen berg and his brothor David of Med ford. Andrew Pool, one of the forest ran gers who has been stopping at the Sunnynide for somo time, made a trip up to his homo on Trail creek Sunday morning and John Holtz, another one of tho company went to his homo in Sams Valley, and George West, still another ono, went to Medford on the Sunday morning stugo to moot his wlfo who came down from Portland an the Saturday night train, remain ing until -Monday morning when both camo out of tho Eagle Point stage. Mrs. West has "been stopping for some months in Portland under the care of a specialist, but has so far regained her health as to bo able to rejoin her husband and they expect as soon as practicable to move to Klamath coun ty where Mr. West expects to be en gaged looking nftor Uncle Sam's In terests in tho measuring of lumber on Anna creek. Wm. Jones, another of the forest rangers who is stopping here spent a part of the day gather ing agates but they all went to work Monday on tho telephone lino be tween here and Medford. They have been handicapped by lack of materia! as they have not been able to get the poles out from tho Butte Falls coun try on account ot the bad roads. They also lack insulators, etc. When they came in Mrs. Holmes greeted me as tho we had been long time acquaintances for she said that she seemed to have known me for some time as her son had been cut ting out the Eaglots and sending them to her regularly for a long timo and that she looked for them regu larly as the week rolled round. After eating dinner and looking around the place admiring our beautiful Little Butto croek they settled down to make a visit and a more enjoyable timo was seldom hac, and they left expressing tho wish that wo would meet again under like circumstances Later in tho day George V. Loosoloy, wlfo and littlo daughter camo In for supper and then went cn to Ashland that night. Mr. Kred Neil and his father, 1 learned, later came in from Ashland to see Mr. Noll Sunday after noon, but as thoro was none of our family present and Mr. Nell was out look after the cattle that Mr. Loose- ley has bought and turned on tho rango in the foothills thoy did not stay long. Mr. Goln who hnppened lo be In the house entertained them and reported to Mr. Nell when he came in. Thoro was a lady came out on tho Medford stugo and went on up to Lost creek on tho Lake Crook stage, to take charge of tho school there, I learned later, but did not learn her name. Ralph Blcbcrstcadt was a business caller Monday morning. Mrs. Susan Hart rho has been In Medford working In a hospital for some time, camo out on tho stage Monday and went out to her farm. I see that Wig Jack has the con crete pipe on the ground and is got- tlng ready to pipe the water from his new ditch under the street near tho Eagle Point Bank building. Our creamery men were both on time Monday, and Mr. Pickel, one of the drivers says that the volume of cream is increasing, that he is get ting fifty gallons of cream n week now from one man near Brownsboro and that ho Intends to add twenty more cows to his herd and that then he will lie able to supply him with a hundred gallons a week, and that his business is increasing in the Little Butte creek country. The fact of the business Is there Is some of the best land in Jackson county in that sec tion and furthermore there is as fine a lot of men and women up there as can be found in the state and they are not afraid nor ashamed to work. MKDFORT). rT?EC!(VN", MONTYXY, 'APUTL ,r, 1020. I would not run a ra-ry when you have to get up and go out to milk at five o'clock in the morning and then again at night, and I notice those samo persons havo to ruu a limited store account and seldom have any cash on hand, while the dairyman has tho cash to pay and can trade where he pleases. I met a man who has u fine cow ranch and asked him if he had brought in cream and he said no, that ho had but one cow, but remark ed that he could keep a hundred dairy cows on his ranch but that it was too much work to attend to them. But if ho would put say fifty or seventy five good cows on the ranch and lease it out on shares what an income it would bring him, and what a help to somo poor family or families and to tho entire community. Mr. Johnson, formerly one of tho creamery men of Medford, passed thru here (Monday on his way up tho country. Jack Grigsby, Sam Coy, Charles Hanscomb, Gus (Nichols and wife were business callers Monday, and so was John Rader and Henry Slun loy. Robert B. Baker camo out Monday from Medford with a Jitney driver and was met hero Monduy by iBur nace Edmondson, who came out on the Rutte Falls stage, and they two went to 'Medford together, ' were married and tho next day camo out on tho stage and went up to Rutte Falls. Joe Riley passed thru Monday with a road drag levelling down tho roads. Sherman Wooley and Harry Lewis camo in for supper Monday night. Jack Tungnte of Butto Falls, went out home on the stage Tuesday morn ing. Ho had his finger wrapped up Millions of Tiny Real Relief Comes Only by Cleansing the Blood of the Germs. Vnn mof rnaliva fT.nl- 1.1..J vu ...uuv v.luu JUUI U1WU is loaded down with catarrh germs, ana mcso germ3 must be removed from your blood before you can expect real, rational relief from the disease. And of course, you inow that you cannot reach these, germs jn your blood with send foroursiis Your copy of Morse's Garden Guide for 1920 is ready for distribution today, and it's free. Just send us your name and address (a post card will do) and we'll mail you this 100-page book at once. ' Morse's Garden Guide covers all phases of Pacific Coast Gardening and the 1920 issue is better than ever. We have already sent out copies to those whose re-1" quests we had on file people who have come to rely year in and year out on this practical, instructive hand- ' book on market, home and flower gardening. If you are going to plant vegetables or flowers, you will need a copy. So don't delay r send for your copy today. Rememiet Mont's Sttdt art joJ at dealtrt in 5c paeketi. Quantity quotation! on application tt C.C.lORSE&CO. Seedsmen and Seedgrowert since 1872 , 12S Market St Handled in Medford by MONARCH SEED & FEED CO. 317 S. Main St. Mass Meeting on School Question at Page Monday The school hoard has notified our committee appointed at the meeting held at the library that their positron remains unchanged. We teel that some decisive and final action should be taken by tho taxpayers and voters of the district In this matter, so seriously affecting the school Interests of the cam mil nity, we have therefore decldod to 'intend to settle our course of action call a meeting not only of the Parent-1 at this meeting.- ' Parent-Teachers Council WM. M. COLVIO. A. C. Al.LKN. . .. A- MANSFIELD, . . . 1 and on Inquiry I learned that ho had had the end of his finger cut off by u pulley. 1 did not leurn the particu lars as ho was about ready to start when I saw him. James t)wens, ono ot tho county commissioners, was hero having some work done on a road drag. John .M. Allen and wire of Derby, camo out Tuesday to havo his horses shod and lo pntronizo our stores. . Mrs. W. U. llainniell was here Tuesday. Sho had been out to Med ford to attend tho homo gathering of the Kehckahs. Thomas Cingcado has finally pro cured Hie necessary repairs for his wood suw and hus It started and is sawing wood for people around town. O. S. Frank of Itoseburg, and 1). W. Paul of Paul's F.lectric storo, Mod ford, wore here for dinnor Tuesday. Mr. Frank and Mr. Paul are both in terested in the electrical business. Sir. und .Mrs. H. K. Webb of Derby were hero on business Tuesday. Mr. Minis, the Medford postmaster, and Miss Florence Lunsing, the prin cipal of our school, wero hero for supper Tuesday. iMrs. Ijoo, tho county nurso was bore Tuesday night and wont u,p to Brownsboro, Butto creek, Lake creek, etc., today, Wednesday. Our county surveyor, Frank Rhodes spent Tuesday night nt tho Sunny sido. Another I. W. W. Guilty. STOCKTON, Cal., April 0. After being out for nearly 1(1 hours, the inrv in tho trial of It. V. Lewis, I. W. N. loader, accused ot criminal syndi calism, found the defendant guiltv on the first mid third counts mid not Biiilt-v ot the second. Germs Lause Your Catarrh snravs nnd rlnnphna S. S. S. will clennso your blood of tho cause of Catarrh, and givo real relief. It has been in con stant use for more than fifty venr.q. nnrl ia nl,l lr nil Buy a bottle of S. S. S. today and iusb iiu lunner timo in getting on the rhrht treatment. Valunhln ndvinn CJIRO Will hn fi.,,il..l A J ..... ..u IDUU iiuu, flu- dress Medical Advisor, 103 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Go. Su Francis c Teachers associations but of all tho voters and taxpayers of tho district to bo held at tho Pago theatre on Mon day evening, April 6, commencing promptly at 8 p. m. Dr. R. W. Clancy is requested to again preside as chair man. Wo feel that wo are lielng treated unjustly by the hoard, and wo urge the attendance1 of every taxpay er and voter In the district, as wo i Why are V flavors like the pyramids of Egypt? Because they are long-lasting. And WRIGLEVS is a beneficial as .well as long-iasting treat. it helps appetite and digestion, keeps teeth clean and breath sweet, allays thirst. ll CHEW: IT AFTER Sealed Tight- mm Kept 'Right New Schedule For Interurban to Begin Monday, March 29 ; ASIIt.AM) Mi;i)l'Oi;i) Dally Except Sunday Lv. Medford Lv. Ashland 7:15 a.m. 7:1.0 n. in. 8:00 a.m." 8:00 a.m. 8: !! a.m. K : 1 r a.m. 0:30 a.m. t 9:30 a.m. 10:15 a.m.' 10:15 a. . 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 12: 00 'Noon 12 Noon 12:45 p.m. 12: -15 p.m. 1:30 p.m. ' 1:30 p.m. 2:15 p.m. 2:15 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3 :.! 5 p.m. 3:45 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 5:15 p.m. 0:00 p.m. 6:0U p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m.. 8:4 5 p.m. Sat. only 8:45 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 9:30 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Sat. only 12:15 Midnight . Sunduy only 9:00 a.m. 9:00 a.m. 10:00 a.m.. 10:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 12 Noon 12: 00 Noon 1:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 4:110 piin. 5:00 p.m. . 5:00 p.m. G:30p.m. 0:30 p.m.. 9:30 p.m. 0:30 p.m. Films Developed FREE! Until April 15 wo will dovolop all Kodak Films FltER whoro orders nro given for prints to bo niudo from tho films. Kogular prices on all printing. ' AGHNTS FOK THIS EASTMAN KODAKS Italpli Woodford C)Jc Plcffliai2iaCV Proprietor Fifth and North Riverside Telephone 11 The Dow Hospital Graduate Nurses Only Special Attention to X-Ray Cases. Temporary Location Overland 4 Willys-Knight Republic Trucks McCurdy-Bowne Motor Co. Front End Crater Lake Garage VKm THKEl" ti EVERY MEAL A10 J ACKSQX V I MjK MR 1 tt'OIU) Dally Excopt Sunday. Lv. Medford Lv. Jacksonville 8:00 a.m. 7:20 a.m. 9:30 a.m. 8:30 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 10:00 a.m. 12:00 Noon 11:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. 4:30 p.m. 3:45 p.m. 5:30 p.m. 5:00 p.m. Sat. only 7:30 p.m. ' 7:00 p.m, 9:30 p.m. Sat. only 8:00 p.m. Sat. only ip: 30 p.m. Sunday Only i . Lv. Medford Lv. Jacksonville 9:00 am. 10:30 a.m. 12:00 Noon 2:30 p.m. 10:00 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 1:30 p.m. 3:30 p.m. .1:00 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 9:50 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. . 0:30 p.m. 10:30 p.m. Office and wnlllng room No. E S. I'Vont, 'Nash llotol 'Iluildlng. Jacksonville Waiting Room at Ro tor's Confoctlonory. Availing room, Ashland, East Slda Pharmacy. , Phono 309, Modford, Ore. 5N i I i i r. '6 j 1 . ( v.. ( I once in while hear ft wan say, O