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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1921)
MEDFOTm !MXrL TfiTBTJNT?, "NrRDFCRTTi, OREGON. TinrnSBAY. "NfAY If). 102f Frilled Frocks for Girls And After Graduation for Parties The delicious thrills of being a senior and receiving a diploma are second only to the thrills of possessing a frilly lacy frock. While stocks are yet complete is a good time to look over the new arrivals. Even' the very loveliest ones are quite moderately priced. F. K. Deuel & Sons, Inc. Quality Is Economy Medford, Oregon BBUBVHHBSBSEBfW - MONTE BLUE in The Rentuckians' From the f.'tmoiiH Mory by . JOHN FOX. .11!. Mil. nncl .MRS. Pl'IILfC: You'll iimst certainly admire Moulo Illuc iih 1 1 lt IIUHIIltUill ror who knew iki polite huv (hut biulu him. lech nit out) nay, lo iu-l niinUicr; nml vlwl lie felt lie iiiiulu' plain. nntlirr Bide nf Kentucky Is hwii lo "Illua Kuiulny" comedy, unci liuHtcr l.nMnr'H music in appropriate. SINDAY Hurry Cnrey la "II MARTS RIALTO DAQP NEXT TUESDAY NIGHT Seats on Salo Tomorrow 12:00 o'clock ftWMV OF FUN. SOA'ff AX LAUGHfE'Rs n -.i GREATEST iCTNfll GARDEN TRIUMPHS PricH'u: I3.B0. SUMO. 2.5o. 2.no, $!.. plus 10 iht inn war tux F I HE CHAUTAUQUA Tin rp will lp n inpptinK held at 12 noon Friday, May 20ch, in the dining room of the Holland Hotel of the wixty citizens who uigned as sureties for the Medford Chautauqua. A luncheon will be served and the meni- Ihmh of thl committee will have an opportunity of meeting a representa tive from the Ellison-White associa tion of I'ortlund. ! It is imperative that all of the siKners Tie present. The ticket cam- jjiilKn Is to he started Friday and to make the bale of the tickets a success j every one of the sixty guarantors will ! he expected to give all the assistance j they can. It is hoped that the citizens will I take a real interest In this movement to make the chautauqua a regular thing in M e d f o r d from now on. Whether this can he done or not will depend entirely on how the residents of the valley rally to the support of the committee. All those who buy season tickets will not only save money by so doing, hut they will make it possible for the sixty citizens who stood good for this chautauqua lo cam-el their obligations before the opening of the meetings. F The third luncheon fr the business women was served today by the la dles of the 1'rcHbyterlan and Month Methodist Church at the Christian church. Mrs. Welch and Mrs. Lovett acted as chairmen, assisted by their capable workers from the two I'h inches furnishing the luncheon. -Two hundred and twenty guests were entertained the Tri-lj girls occupying a. reserved table. Missus (ill, Survey and llussong solicited membership for the club and secured twenty-four new names for the commendable organiza tion. The final supper and rally will be given Friday night at six o'clock liy the ladies of the Itaptlst church nt the Christian church. A great time is beir.g planned. After the rally, all of the ImsincHH women who attend, will assemble and go to the tabernacle where seats will be reserved for Ibis delegation. "Once again oil excitement was stirred to fever heat thiH afternoon when Capt. J. W. Siemens returned from the oil well with a five-pound coffee can filled two-thirds full with oil and sand," says the Klamath Falls Herald. "This is the first showing of oil that lias been brought In since drilling stopped to permit of the plac ing of the 8-inch casing, and It was sufficient to again start skyward oil stock values and cause many to see visions of the millions that will come when this field is fully developed." For Sale Good garceu and lawn sediment. Phone 912-J. tf In Justice Taylor's court Wednesday afternoon Shorty Miles and the two women who were arrested In a room with him last week were fined when their attorney, CI. M. Roberta,' appear ed and entered a plea of guilty. Miles and the two Klamath Falls wtimen, it Is understood left town Sunday or .Monday. Miles was fined ( I GO and ;:osts for bavins liquor In his posses sion, and Hose McKenzie and Helen Mann were each fined $25: and, costs for Intoxication.. The flhes, were de dueled from . the $200 cash Jiall put up by Miles, and the $50 each hail money put up by the women following the arrests-. Other'chargcs will he held In abeyance by Hie county prosecutor's office. Of the fines $175 goes to the county as two of the cases were state ones, and the only money received by the city is the $25 fine of one of the women charged under the local iutoxl cation ordinance. Patronize home and build up pay rolls by insisting on bavins brooms made by Hogue Hiver lSroom Works. 03- Guests from u distance registered al the Medford are Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Spedding and Mr. and Mrs. H. Uolling- liam of Auckland, N. '... and Mr. and Mrs. Blackwood of Vancouver, 11. C. who are touring south by auto, F. V. Marlon of Hebron, Neb., 11. It. Sclienk er and Fred W. Hall of Chicago, .Mr. and Mrs. C. I., llorlebuss of Kansas City, and X. Kmerson of Minneapolis. For Sale Good garden and lawn sediment. Phono 912-J. If- Mrs. Paul llnusei., corsollore for NuHone. Phono 5S0-J. If The bad weather of the past few days has decreased Hie number of ar rivals at t ho unto camp ground. Nine parties were still encamped there this forenoon, a number having pulled out Wednesday afternoon and last night. The only new arrivals yesterday were .ir. and Mrs. Leppin and son and Mrs. U-ppln's two sisters, the party hulling fiom Alohon, Ore. They are enroute to California. Two popular dances Jacksonville Friday night. May 20th, and Knglo Point Saturday night, May 21st. .Ma jestic orchestra. , Mrs. John Itter Is the new manager of the Jacksonville Telephone ex change, succeeding Mrs. Win. F.aton who recently resigned. Chicken reed wheat $2.10 per hun dred delivered to you. Jlyuarch Seed Co. Chief of Police Timothy saved the big funeral procession of yesterday afternoon from being cut in two us the lead of the procession Just crossed over the Southern Pacific tracks when the south bound passenger train start ed to pull out from the depot. The chief hurriedly ran to the engine, ex plained thqt two war heroes were be ing buried and asked the engineer to please wait until the procession pass ed by. The engineer courteously stop ped the train and held it about thirty minutes until the long, string of autos had passed over the crossing. Invest your savings In the Jackson County Building and Loan association If- Californlans at the Medford Include I.. K. Cochran, F. H. Carruthers aud Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mitchell of Ijoh Angeles, and the. following from San Francisco: F. D. Heastand, P. R. Sternlerger, I.. L. Defenbaugh, Wm. Klcher, Chas. Treadwell, C. L. Ilrock wuy and A. J. llaker. Lawn mowers sharpened right. Lib erty Shop. 2C1-J. tf- blocks and dry slabs rur sale. Call 859. tf" FRENCH ARE BLAMED (Continued from Pag One) day when answering the address of Prime Minister Lloyd George before the house of commons Friday that in vasion of Silesia by German troops would not be tolerated by France. M. Hrlancl said he did not see the desirability of meeting Lloyd George before all the documents relating to the Sllesinn plebiscite hnd been re ceived from the inter-allied commis sion at Oppeln. "I, too, want tp soe the treaty car ried out," said the premier to the correspondent of the London Dally Mall, but there Is nothing in the treaty which stipulates that all the rich min ing districts In Silesia, must go to the Germans while the Poles get what is lert." Briand Faces Attack When the chamber of deputies re convened today after a recess of three weeks, the Ilriand cabinet was expect ed to be the center of a concerted at' tack. Friends of the ministry asserted it would receive a great majority when the question of a vote of confidence was put. Twelve Interpellations were inscrib ed on the blotter of Uaoul Peret, presi dent of the chamber, when the session opened. Ilene Vlviani, former premier was prepared to give an account of his recent mission to America. :-- Premier Briand, had declared he would not make a statement until he hail heard all tho interpellations, when he would make a comprehensive its ply. It was not believed the putting of the vote of confidence would bo reached before Saturday. Tho address of Prime Minister Lloyd George on the tipper Sllesinn question and payment by Germany of the first reparation installment of 150,000,000 gold marks were said by the premier's supporters to have so lidified his iosit!on. tendaiK-e on the supreme bench was traditional. At ihe bedside when death came were the wife of the chief justice; his two nieces, Miss Ann Montgomery and Miss Mary Lee llroussard, and the Rev. Father S. J. Creeden of George town university who had administered the last sacrament during the early evening. Justice McKenna, as senior associ ate member of the supreme court, formally notified President Harding. Vice President Coolidge and Sieaker Gillett today of the death of Chief Jus tice White. Following trie couit's cus tom in such cases, the news was sent in a letter Inscribed upon black-bordered parchment and enclosed in an envelope deeply edged in black. "I am directed by the supreme court of the United Stales to notify the sen ate through you that the chief justice of the United States died this morning at 2 a. m.," Justice McKenna's note to S'ice President Coolidge said. The eight members of the court will act as honorary pall bearers If the family agrees to the suggestion that an official funeral be held. capital. Although the speculation cen tered chiefly about the name of for mer President William Howard r manv indications tnai President Harding was far from a de cisioii and might find the selection difficult one. Ml indications pointed n consmei .ii,. in makinsr the appointment. -'Another whose name has been link- Taft May Lose Out WASHINGTON, May 19. (Hy Asso ciated Press.) The choice of a suc cessor to Kdward Douglass White, as chief justice of the United States, was one of the most widely discussed sub jects today in official circles of the justices. The names most frequently mentioned In connection with such a liossible promotion are those, of Jus lice Day of Ohio and Justice Holmes, of Massachusetts. Should a promotion he made, the vacancy thus created would be gen erally expected to go to George Suth erland, a former United States senator from Utah, and former president of 'Another wnose name una wv. T, , i,iictiil iho American Par association. TtaTHtUe state! Dnrii, the - gn - Sulh untiirthTeretired in mC to accept thelqnarters at Marion and has continued. republican nomination for the presi dency. One circumstance whlcn is sugriesi ed as a barrier to such a transler is ihe prominence assumed by Mr. inc.iw.a as Kpcreiaiv of state in view of the iniKrtant phases through which the nation's foreign atfans are pass i,i i-Mnprt to Sir. Taft. some republi can senators were recalling today the bittery controversy they had with nun as nresident at the time be promulgat ed his rule against appointment of jus tices who had passed tne ou e.u mark. It was described as an entirely arbitrary ruling, having no foundation in legal regulations. Mr. Taft will be 04 in September. Sutherland Mentioned $oti In some quarters there have been j onus suggestions that a temporary solution of the problem might be reached by the promotion of one of the present since the election, n close friendship of many years standing wun tue president. mi i :i M1J 'XPECTA , For Thre Generations Have Made Child-Birlh Uuier By Usinq W.ntPO. BOOKLET ON MOTHERHOOD AHDTHC BRAOFICLD RtSUUUOK CO., DIPT, 8-C- ATLANTA, CA, Publicly endorsed by every lover of humanity as the greatest, most enthralling sermon on re generation ever shown on the screen. 'THE INSIDE CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE DIES (Continued from Pagb One) tho national capital, where during his long years of service on the supreme bench, he hud grown In the admiration and esteem not only of his official as sociates but the entire community. Although all hope for the chief jus tice's recovery following an operation Inst Friday had been abandoned since he took a critical turn for, the worso two days ago, the news of his death, which occurred at two o'clock this morning, came as a shock to friends and associates. The chief Justice, who was 76 yes old, had enjoyed rugged health up to Ihe time he Was forced to submit to the recent operation for bladder trouble and bis record of nt- When Winston Cliurchin wrote the novel., with energetic pen lie struck nt the very roots of Social in iquity, sham and Inpo cilsy! . As the character mc p from the pages of the fa mous ImmjIi, the tremen dous dramatic force id' (he plot carries all before It. (RACK H1UAVX has ar ranged a u espci'l ally 1 i ( -ting score for tJds screen masterpiece. page! Who Is to Blame for What They Did? Sl'XDAY The Dangerous .Moment" A delightful roiiutii'-e of Greenwich village. 9 w- s ir ree PAGE THEATRE SATURDAY MAY 21 AT 10:30 A. M. -GIVEN BY G. A. HUNT & CO. AND THE MAIL TRIBUNE All children will be admitted free on pre senting this coupon at the door. You must have a coupon. ATTRACTION FOR SATURDAY "Mrs. Wiggs of Ihe Cabbage Patch" This picture will be shown at 10:30 a. m. only. FREE COUPON This coupon presented at the door of the Page Theatre Saturday at 10:30 a. m., will admit any cfiild free to the matinee.