Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 19, 1920, Page 6, Image 6

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KEDFOTITJ WHTj TRTBUNT!, TiTETTFOTl'n, OTCFiOX, MONDAY, 'APfiTL 1ft. 1920.
ONLY PLAYS HERE
Ilownril Hull will present lit the
Vagp tlieiitre on Mumliiv niulil. Auril
20,. Ameni'us ureut iMiiiitiiiuitl n(ftp
Murirnnit Anu'lin in lirr latest sin
cSK, "The Woman of liroiizi;," mliii.t
ed from the Frem-h, li V 1'mil Kcsti r.
Hiss Aimlin lias assembled and re
hearsed n numimnv of uniisaal exe-.
lenee. The setting, the work of
I.ivinirston I'lall is warm, eolorfal and
artistic. The nlav is L'riiiiiiiur "iiiii
affords Jljss Anirlin opportunity for
her finest interiirelation. Jn tho luinl
inif eharaeter of Vivian Hunt her m
fical is immediate ami her audieiiei
is held as hv a imiiMii spell from l!n
rise of the curtain until the close ol
the play.
Miss Aniilin's company in(dud..s
Fred Kric as the husbiuid, Nedda llar-
rit'an as the irirl, and Walter Con
nolly, I.nmidon llruce, l. (1. Keinmet
Harriet, Spalilin'.', Marion Jiarnr.y
Kallv Williams and a number 'if
others.
"The Woman of l'ron.c" has scored
ono of the season's successes and it
will be numbered union!; the plays
that last, and comes to Mcdford from
A record run at the Columbia theatre
Sim Francisco, playing no other cities
en route.
Mail orders are now beini: reccivee
and the box office salu ( bemns
April 24.
EAGLE POINT EAGLETS
By A. C HowUrtL
T; P. florin, our nirale man, lia
been liirniiiL' his hand toward iiiiiliine
some improvemeutH around the Sunuv
Sido liotel in the line of fencim.'. II'J
Iiuh reinoveil the old delapilatcd
wiro fence and pat in its place a neat
pigket fence, beside makim: some
other much-needed improvements in
the carpenter line.
J. llenrv French and wife were in
town anil reported that they linvj
installed a water system so that now
they have water runnim; in Hie kitch
en and will soon have a hot water
tank ho as to do away with the old
and inconvenient way of ilnim; busi
ness, and lmvc hot and cold water
in ,1110 bouse, so as to lighten tbi
work of carinir for the milk cans.
ereum separator, etc. A family w bo
lias a lew cows and hens and will
strtetlv attend to business soon
reach the point in life wberp it can
have the modern conveniences and
sail Ihroimh life, if not on flowery
beds of ease, call greatly improve on
tbn old system.
John Hader. one of our leadiu
fanners and stockmen, was ainonir
tho early callers Thursday niornini:
and so was Charley ('imjeade, another
of 'our stockmen.
'Mr. ,1. Wnttenbunr and his daugh
ter) who are livinir on the Joe lfadir
place, were also callers Thursday
nioniiiiL'.
Mrs. William Urown irnvo mo the
followinir news item Thursday for tli;5
Knglets: There will be a clothes fit
ting and clothes ropairim: meetini: at
the lied Cross rooms over (lenrje
Urown & Son's store on next Friday
and Saturday, April 1(1 and 17, and n
general invitation is extended, espee..
ially to tho ladies and uirls in their
'"teens," to eomo and receivo in
struction frco and learn how to cut,
fiUiiiid iiiake their own clothe am!
to economize in the line of weariiar
apparel. Miss Pool, our county
demonstrator and Miss Holes, n train
ed .lecturer from the 0. A. C. will be
tluiro tg render all the assistance
fboy can. All the ladies in this sec
tion of the county are cordially in
vitod to attend, and in addition In
revolving instruction in that line of
liousokecpiiiL', huvo a royal irood tii.ie
in u social way.
J. I,, llovev, the present snper'n
tcmlont of the Alivista orchard, was
in town Thursday shakinir hands with
iiis old-time friends.
Mr. (ict.on, one of the Mcdford
vctcrinaries, was out Thursday to
doctor u lino cow for William l'crrv.
bat bo did not reach hero in time
and as a result, she died, (piilo a loss
to Mr. l'crrv.
.W. K, llenslev of Wellen wart a
business, caller Thursday.
Corbin Kilucll was a passemrer on
the Lewis jitney for Mcdford Thais
tlllV.
Mr. C. C. Carter of Seattle, a coil
sin of William C. llalcv, was nUif a
passenger on the Lewis iitney. Tbev
had not met before for several ve:irs,
and Mr. Carter accident y heard of
his lieitisr here, as be recently boimlit
the ticoru'e von der llellcn mopny
iust above town, ami came out ami
met him here.
The iiiauaement of the forest re
serve men have been uiiikiiu: soim
changes in the arrangement of the
men, as two of them, who have been
slopping here, have been called over
to Ktaiiiath county. Mr. (icore Wesl
mid John I), llolsl, and Mr. Fred Mul.
has come to assist the other two.
Mr. Andrew I'ool, and Win. Junes, in
finishing up the telephone line cm
ppctitiL' Trail with Itutle Fulls im.l
Mcdford line. They expect to i'iil:i'
the line completed by Monday or
Tuesday.
Flovd Pierce, who had one of hi.
lens batllv crushed several years at;o
in a runaway, and had it patched
up by the doctors of Jacksonville at
that, time, has been to Portland and
hud it overhauled and the bones re
set, came home last Tuesday ami has
i..;.,i.f I,...,,.., .,! .;.,;.. n... r
bis lesr imam, and his mini v friend
here are rejoicing w'itb him and his
family over the successful (nieration.
W. L. Childreth, our blacksmith,
and auto specialist, met with an ac
cident the other day. He was trim
mini: one of bis fruit trees and in
tryimr to i!et out of the tree bis foot
stuck between two limbs and he hud
already let loose of the tree with
one band, so in trying to extract him
self, be wrenched his knee anil ankle
so that he has had his shop closed
since Wednesday, but be thouuht that
be would be able to resume business
by the first of the week.
MV. and Mrs. Sam Courtney came
in Thursday afternoon and Mrs.
Courtney is stayimr here assisting
with the work in the Sunny Side tor
a few days.
Ainonir the callers for dinner Fri
lay beside the regular boarders, were
Dr. J. L. Helms, veterinary of Mcd
ford Horse Hospital: Win. Meyer. Al
bert Peters, Fred anil ifalph Stanlev.
Clifford llanscm, and Charles Lavcn.
flic Stanley boys bad sold a lot of
mules and horses to Dr. Helms ami
he was out to revive them.
Later in the day John Foster. S.
Pcrauks and J. P. True called on
their way to the Fish Lake ranch.
They bad been up the creek working
on a flume to brinL' the water across
the south fork of Little liutte creek
on the Fish Lake ditch and had com
pleted the iob and were 011 their way
to beaibiuarlers.
Herb Carlton of Prospect was here
in town Friday.
Mr. and .Mrs. Campbell of north
west Washington came in Fridnv
evcii'ii!:, and are still here at this
writinir. Saturday evening. They are
interested in the at:ate business.
Mrs. Slocford and baby of Hrowus-
boro, who went to Mcdford last Tues-
lay, returned this Saturday inoi'nine
and went up home on the staue.
Mr. ( 1 11 v F. (Jane of (irants Pass.
who has been up in the Lake Creek
country looking after his farm, the
Daniels place, came out today, took
dinner at the Suunvside and went'
to Mcdford this aftY'i'iioon.
W. II. Uuskirk of Portland, who
stopped here last fall on bis way to
Los Anircles, came in today noon arid
this afternoon went out to hunt
amites, and I should have said that
Mr. and Mrs. Campbell are puttins
in their time buutini; auiitcs.
Friday evening tho followim; mem
bers of the liutte Falls basket ball
team called for supper: Miss Foley,
Norma Stewart, Norn Williams, Kl
len O'Prien, Alia Stewart, Frneslinc
Frodonbonr, Sam Hodges, Milton
lliimmersly, Lawrence O'lirion, Tbeo-
loro Fredcnbui'!!, Orbv Abbott, Ivir-
nest Albert, Eston Alhlslrom, Prof
II. P. jennett and (lien Albert. They
were on their way out to Central
Point to play basket ball iiL'iiinst t lie
Ceptrul Point teain. Hwill be re
membered that 11 short time 111:0 tin
Itutle Falls team went out and done
up the Central Point team L'ood am!
hard and this time they were iruinu
to finish the job, hut the scale turned
and the score stood 22 to 15 in favor
ol Central Point. Hut they hud a
very fine lime, Innrii crowd and the
Initio Falls team took their defeat he
roically.
Sunday morning wuh one of those
lovely mornlnga uucli as Is seldom
seen oxcopt in southern Oregon,
whoro peoplo who have boon living
up In the northern part of tho state
and Washington, Idaho and .Montana
lira entirely unacquainted with such
weather, but when they como boro.
enn fully appreciate such a day. For
Instnnco wo hud Mr. and Mrs. 11. K
Campbell of Furiivlllo of northwos'
torn Washington, and W. 11. Dunkirk
of Portland, and they could hardly
reullzo thill it was the II til day of
April, but so it was.
Whan tho church boll rang for
Sunday school wo found not only the
regular attendants, hut also ipilto a
few additional who ciiino to enjoy
I ho Sunday school exercises. On my
way to tho churcrh I noticed quite, n
nunibor of nutos whizzing along the
highway beaded tor tho different
camping places for plcnlclng and by
tltOftimo 1 reached homo tho guests
negan 10 urrivo tor dinner. Among
tho first to arrive were Mr. mid Mrs.
11.. It. Satcliwoll, .Miss Wilson, Ilk-hard
Plerco and Mr. and Mrs. Utickel
of Mcdford. Then cnnio Judge Ton
Velio and wife, and tins tho Tailor
and wife, L. V. l.uso and wife, K. (i.
l'rowlirldgo, Mrs. II. K. Hoyden, Jllss
Florence Trowbridge and Albert Tar-
bow, Mr. and Mrsr. .1. W. Wakefield,
Mrs. W. 11. Kllliinun and Viola Bllll-
maii, iMr. and Mrs. T. 11. Sllllimm,
Howard .Silliman, Vivian Urown,
Cliailcs Wakefield. Hester Wakefield
Mr. and Mrs. K. M. Diikeflold. Kfflo
Taylor, Olive llessetl, .Mr. and Mrs.
,loo Itader, tiraee H. live. W. S. Sum
mer, tho manager of Potter Palmer
business at Table ltuok, 1). P. Wood,
Mrs. I). P. Wood. A. II. Clayton and
wlfu of Portland. .Mr. and Mrs. Kahl-
Ktrom, Mr. and Mrs. tlammlll. -Mr.
Illoom, Mr. and Mrs. p. H.'Mclioyn-
obls and daughter. Miss Kva. Miss
Kva came out to celehrato her tenth
birthday with her parents at the
Siinnyslde. Otlr. and Mrs. It. M.
Campbell of Furm llle, Wash., mak
ing just fifty transient guests besides
seven of tho regular eaters.
Sunday morning Andrew Pool and
Fred A. Matz. W. II. llusklrk and
I. P. (iota, our agate men, took their
lunches with them ami went out 10
look for agates, remaining uio.u of
the day and when they came In had
quito an assortment of stones of dif
ferent varieties and some of them
were seemingly very good. '
Fred 11. Neil went up In the Trnll
creek country Sunday.
Wallace .liergsmiiu and family
wero visiting Mrs. X. E. Wut kins
Sunday, and Mra. Knaps who lives on
ths old llurlmugh farm, uml the
Misses fteed wero visit the family of
John NorriK, the foreman on the J.
M. WlKley orchard, Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Kllis and Hugh
Darice of Ashlund spent Sunday
night at tho Sunnyslde on their way
up to visit W. S. Haker who has a
homestead on the Derby road.
There was an election held in the
Climax district last Saturday to vote
on the herd law to decide whether
stock should run at large or not, and
the result was that those who fa
vored the enforcement of the herd
law won out by a majority of ten,
and now after sixty days there will
lie no stock allowed to run at large at
all, thus requiring all the cuttle men
who have been using that runge for
the last fifty years to either herd
them off of tho entered land or take
them away to other ranges, and
where cattle have been raised on a
rungo It will be very hard to hold
them in certain bounds and about all
that tho land la fit for Is for range
purposes. Hut I understand that the
few settlers who live In that section
are interested In sheep and gouts and
they have to herd them and now they
will have a complete monopoly of the
range.
W'hllo Mr.. and Mrs. H. E. Camp
bell wero here Saturday and Sunday
Mr. Campbell bought out the Interest
of II. J. Devuney, our banker, In the
First State bank of lOaglo Point and
started back to his home In Wash
ington Sunday evening, expecting to
return and take charge of the bank
by .May luth next. It Is with regret
that we huve to chronicle the change
for during the tlmo Mr. Devaney has
been among us ho has mado a host
of friends and It Is with reluctance
that wo glvo him up, but wo nro as
nured that Mr. Campboll Is an all
right and up to da to man and tho
short .sujourn of himself and wife
made a very favorable impression on
all of those who met him.
Among tho business callers Mon
day were John Hader and wife. Mrs.
Itader has been here for several days
stopping with her daughter. Mrs.
Hoy Ashpole, one of our hardware
merchants. Kd Fisher of Indian
creek, W. E. llammel, Marshall Min
ter, Sam Courtney and Charles Hous
ton were also callers.
When the Persist mail truck went
out the driver, Mr. Adanison, had a
large bundle of long cano rods cut
off at the email end, and on inquiry
as to the purpose of such rods Mr.
Adamson said that they were for Mr.
P. F. Johnson of Trail and that they
were to be used In making "fruit
thinners". Mr. Johnson has invent
ed und patented a contrivance for
thinning fruit. Stundlngon the
ground with these light poles and a
cutting machine on tho und a man
can reach to any purt of the tree and
thin the surplus fruit without the
risk of falling from a ladder and
eliminating the work of carrying a
ladder around in the loose and often
sticky ground.
'Prof. H. P. Jewett of Butte Falls,
came out on the Btnga Monday morn
ing and so did Miss Nydah iXeil. She
came out from Medford to visit her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank It. Xoll
of Derby, and Jack Tailgate was also
a passenger on tho Hutte Falls stago.
S. L. Stewart of Salem, a traveling
man who keops his business to him
self, came In Monday morning and
spent tho night with us, going to
Hutte Fulls on the stage Tuesday
morning.
Other diners at the Sunnysido
Monduy wero Geo. Cattrell and H.
M. Conley of Butte Falls, Mr. Conley
having bought the John Higinboth-
Just where and how
is the money to be s
For the Church's Work at Home. A score oMtemi
coma under this head. Consider only one. Five and a
half million people In the United States cannot even
read and write the English language. Who is to carry
forward this vast work of Americanization if the Church
does not?
2
For HOSPITALS AND HOMES. Every year thousands
of men and women seriously 111 are turned away from
Church hospitals because of lack of room. The children's
homes are compelled to turn away more children than
they can receive.
For RELIGIOUS Training. At least 12,000,000 children
and young people under 25 years of age are entering Ameri
can life wilhoutany religious training at all. Romembering
the faith of Washington and Lincoln, do you think that
America will continue to produce Washingtons end Lin
col ns If Faith dies out of the hearts of its youth t y
-A
For Hioher Education ; Of the 450,000 American
students In institutions of higher grade, one-half are in
institutions founded and supported, by the Churches.
Many of those institutions have had no great endow
ment campaigns, but their needs are just as pressing us
the needs of larger schools; and you have only to lead
their list of alumni and alumnae to measure the value
of their contribution to America.
For THE CHURCH'S WORK Abroad. Influenza came
first from the Orient thirty years ago; nearly all plagues
are Oriental plagues. So long as China has only one phy
sician to eveiy 400,000 people the Orient will continue to
be a menace, . So long as one-third of the babies of India
die before their 'second year our own babies are not safe.
A Christian doctor or teacher sent abroad is working for
America as truly as '.hough he worked at home.
6
Preachers' Salaries. The preacher Is called the'For
gotten Man," and well he may be. Eight out of tea
preached are pid leas than $J0 a weekl "
INTERCHURCH World Movement
of North America
Til pmUietMtm tf Mil tJvtrtittmtmt it mtdi point lAronjl lit nepmlin tklrtyinumlmaHtrnt
11m place and Mr. Cottrell has bought
the Iuck sawmill on Clark creek.
T. K. aad H. 10. Killer were also hero
for dinner Monday. Mr.r and Mrs.
Irvli; Duiey of Lake creek, wore also
In town Monday 011 their way homo.
They had been out to Medford and
rented a house and were going home
to move out.
I see that tho Independence Cream
ery company have a new truck and
have made a change in the name of
the company. The truck bears the
name of the Kldrldge Dairy Produce
company.
Ji& Cowden and family and Fred
Pettlgrew were in town Monday.
T. W. Sanford of Ashland, came in
and spent Monday night at the
Sunnyslde, and Tuesday he and Fred
It. Neil, also of Ashland, spent purt
of the day trying to catch some fish
out of ltogue river, but fulled owing
to the water being so muddy, they
said.
There wero two strangers camo In
Tuesday for dinner, but I failed to
learn their numes.
Thomus F. Nichols, wife and half
sister. Miss Naoma Smith, were
among the shoppers Tuesday.
Gcorgo Hollenbeak, the man men
tioned some two weeks ago who was
here having his hand treated by Dr.
;IIolt for blood poison and was taken
to the hospital in Medford, returned
Monday and while Dr. Holt was here
Tuesday to dress his hand he report
ed that the stork had visited the
home of W. L. Merrltt, on tho 11.
WatkinB place and the result was a
fine daughter was added to the fam
ily on lust Suuduy.
Today, Wednesday, Is ono of those
showery days and tho result is there
seems to be no one coming to town
as the roads are too slippery for cars
and too muddy for horses.
A businesslike Answer to
a businesslike Question
THIRTY denominations cooperating in the Interchurch
World Movement have budgeted their needs. No busi
ness could have done it more scientifically.
They have united to prevent the possibility of duplication or
waste. At least a million dollars will be saved by the fact that,
thirty individual campaigns are joined in one united effort.
Each denomination has arranged its neetls under six main
heads as shown at the left
Each denomination has its own detailed budget, and will ad
minister its own funds. Your pastor has copies of the budget:
examine them for yourself. In the week of April 25th-May 2nd
you will be given your opportunity to help. You can do it with
the full satisfaction of knowing that every dollar of your gift
has its post of service assigned to it in advance.
Every dollar for a better America and a better world.
When your church calls on you, give and give from your
heart as well as from your pocket-book
Do Not Get Careless
Impurities Invite Disease.
You should pay particular heed
to any indication that your blool
supply is becoming sluggish, or
that there is a lessening in its
strong and vital force.
By keeping your Llood purified,
your system more easily vards off
disease that is ever present, wait
ing to attack wherever there is nn
opening, A few bottles of S, S. S.,
Every Purchaser of the
J. B. L. Cascade
is enrolled as n member of the TYRRELL'S IIYGIE-,
NIC CLUB, and is furnished with a certifiiiate of
meniliershi), together with a special number on the
club books, and is entitled to the unlimited consul
tation on any quest ion. of health or sickness, either
personally or by mail. For particular, call at
Heath's Drug Store
The San Tox Store , , ,
pent (
1.
United Financial Campaign
April 25th-May 2nd
With Your Blood Supply
alnon 111..- -..nl wnnnfn1,lA Mrtrtl VMnltJ
cine, will revitalize your blood and
give you new strength and a
healthy, vigorous, vitality, every
one needs- it just now to keep the
system in perfect condition. Go
to your drug store and get a bottle
to-day, and if you need any med
ical advice, you can obtain it with-
...l L 1 4 MoJinul m
I rector, Swift Specific Co.t 109 Swift