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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1923)
PAGE SEVEN" CLOSEWALKWITH Dr. A. W.Chase's Tonic Pills The Old Reliable Family Remedy for Building Up , the System, Nervous Af- 41 . a : t t wmetimWomeShoe&Hsh UILLHUIM. I IIMllllirilU BFR . SIEOTOIfD $FKIB TRTBTTNE, SIEOTORB, PBSRPy. TVEDXESTOlY.' yoTEMBEK 2f . "1923 JACKSON CO. BAR ASSOCIATION Will : MEET IN ASHLAND , LCujInvlvU. v V. U si In this sb-ennons age, most people are afflicted with some form of nervous trouble. Hospitals are over Sowing with men and women seeking to win back health or body and mind. If you are nervous, irritable, 'jumpy," if your system is run down, if you feel that you may be on the verge of a nervous breakdown, , : read what P. J. Cole, of 628 & Lambert Street, Brazil, Indiana, says: "It would be turd for me to bow much rood I ban re erred from the uh of Dr. A. W. Chaae'a Tonic lieiie) Pilla, 'I wo to rundown In health 1 could hardly eo. I had no . appetite. Could not aleep or ret. I w&a weak and aoTery nerv. eue. I iQtTered eomepai? but theworitof my trouble wubecana. beta ao weak and eajf to gel tired the aerroua coodition was wwaa than the paio. I decided to oae your Tonic (nerre) Pilla. A few boxel re tered me to perfect health. 1 can eat and aleep well. I have ami found anyUilnf better foi a rundown ncrvotia condition.1 Ton can bay these Tonic Pills nt all Drag Stores To be aura of (attlng the genuine, sea that portrait and signature Of A. W. Chase, M. XX, are on each box yooc protection against Imitations. DR. A. W. CHASE MEDICINE CO. ' 357 Washington Street, Buffalo, N. Y. UsIiigltiMsFiree Service? It comes with every sack of cement. It has been made possible through the Port land Cemeut Association by the eighty-tfix cement manufacturers who are its mem ' hers. . They realized that important research and educational work was necessary to give people the best information on how to use cement They also realized that this could be done better by unified effort than by any individual company alone. As a result,you may have for the asking . the benefit of this Association's long and . exhaustive studies on how best to use cement for the most satisfactory results in , concrete construction. Whatever use you plan to make of ce- , . - meat whether you are building a con crete hog house or concrete dairy barn, a stretch of concrete walk or a concrete road, a silo or a skyscraper, a home, workshop or a factory you needn't guess. You can know. If you want information about the use fulness of concrete under certain condi tions, how to mix or . place it to get the greatest value out of every sack of cement you can get it by writing anone of our 28 offices listed below. Supplying dependable information without charge by booklet, by letter or by . -personal conference when necessary,"! the work of this Association. Millions of helpful booklets, covering a multitude of uses of concrete, are distributed annually to people who know they needn't guess who know they can get the facts from us. One of our new booklets, "Concrete in Home Sanitation," will surprise you with . the number of easy ways in which con- . crete can be used to make the home''" healthier and happier. Address our near est district office for your free copy. PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION ' 111 West Washington Street CHICAGO o4 National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete Atlanta Denver Knm Oty New York Snhndm II Brainoham Dei Molncfl Loe Angeles Parkenburf Seattle II BoeteiT Detroit Memphis Philadelphia &. Louie U Chicac Helen Milwaukee Pittaburah Vancourer, B.C. II Dalit Indian polia Minneapolis Portland, Oreg. Wnmgnm.D.C II jMiUMvitU NavOricaa StitLeJu Ore 4 n CITY TREASURER'S NOTICE of semi-annual assessments due NOTICE IS HIEEBY GIVEN that the semi-annual instal ment (one-twentieth) and interest on paving, sewer and water main assessments upon all properties for which application was made to extend time of payment, will be due and payable at the office of the city treasurer December 1, 1923, and will be delinquent after thirty (30) days from said date and shall bear a penalty of five per cent (5) upon the amount of such de linquency. Thirty days after such delinquency the property will be ad vertised and sold for the amount of such delinquency, together with penalties and costs of such sale in accordance with Sec tion 148 of the City Charter. ' Dated at Medford, Oregon, this 17th day of November, 1923 .; . J MARY A. WEBBER, Treasurer of the Cfoy of Medford, Oregon. A good Blzed audience listened with deepest, Interest last night at the PrestWterlari church as Rev. L. B. Quick) tinswered many or the objec tions oreed against Divine Stealing. Sucft; questions as "What Is your basis, for Divine Healing-? What grounds) have you for anointing with oil? Do you pray tor every "one who askaToi prayer? Why are not all healed?'' Can people loose their heal ing ?" were answered from the basis of the Bible teaching and also from his own rich experience. The speaker recited irriany remarkable experiences. Case iaTter case was cited in which those ,who had been healed lost their healing because they drifted away from God. " It needs the close walk with God who has given the healing in order to keep It. Miss Gertrude Parker sang very beautifully, "The City Four Square." At the close of the meeting a service of prayer was held lnw the prayer meeting room at which several were prayed for by the ministers and elders of the church Who were present. . The ufternoon services yesterday .was une of clear presentation of the truth of the results of disobeying God showing how failure is sure to fol low disobedience in our Christian lives. It was based on the story of Achan taking of- ,the forbidden spoil and all Israel buffering for It, show ing .how the ohiirch tot Christ Is held back In failure because of the disobe dience and weak living of many con fessed desclples of .Christ. Today the message was on ',The : Glbeonltes." The chapel Is filled every afternoon for these messages of truth from the Scriptures. Tonight the subject will be "The Ijiver" and lessons from that Old Tes tament symbol In the tabernacle for our dally living. "Seeing the Wind and the Waves" will be the theme for Thursday night. Miss Edna Steiner will sing a solo at the service tonight. Tlu- maH quartet will furnish special music for tomorrow night. There will also be a service of prayer for heal ing at th. close cf Thursday night meeting, l.iose wishing to be prayed for should see the local pastor beforehand. Marli. noSeparates OH from Water BIRKENHEAD, England. A new marine-oil separator, which promises to nave much money, was recently demonstrated hre. Oil and water pu 'pcd from a ship's bilge pass through t ie n.aahine, an ny a1 certain process .ne oil s return .. to the vessel's tanks and the water to the sea. Benito Kavl.in fuel, tti nrae- tice will reduo- the danger of oil firei) on the water of harbors and rivers. AH members of the Jackson and Josephine, county bar associations are to be te tcueata. of the member? of the Ashland bar at a banquet and meeting to be held in Ashland on the evening of Saturday, Dec. 8th, next. This gathering Is the culmination of an Invitation extended to the bar associations by the Ashland bar at the Constitution day . meeting in Grants Pass. This occar-ion Is planned to be op a much more elaborate scale t'at.n any bar association affair which has evr been held in southern Oregon, and this time each member of the bar will be expected to bring his wife or lady to the banquet and meeting. Aside from the banquet, the bar associations are to - have as their guest William O. Hale, denn of the department of law of the University of Oregon, .who will talk on the sub ject of the proposed increase in re quirements for admission to the bar. Dean Hale Is one of the foremost iegal minds in the west, and his presence will insure a full' attendance. . Circuit Judge C. M. Thomas will be asked to cover the subject as to how the attorneys may be of assistance to the court and H. D. Norton of Grants Pass will be asked to give a thorough discourse on the subject of legal ethics. Other speakers will be an nounced later, It is said. Fim.l Invitations giving the pro gram, .;ud particular details of the meeting are to be sent out within the week.- The committee in charge of arrangements are Wm. M. Briggs, W. J. Moore, and Mlsd Nelllo Dickey, all attorneys of Ashland. Tl BEND, ORE, FOR BEERE BEND, Ore., Nov, 21. A survey of government' timber In the Deschutes national forest to determine the de gree of p'ne beetle infestation will bo started In the next two weeks, it was announced here by J. A. Jaenlcke, entomologist for'1 the north Pacific forest district. Jaenlcke has just com pleted a survey of Fremont national forest and of ndjucent privately own ed timber lands in southeastern Oro gon. . i . Pino beetle protection Is destined to become ns important In the foroHt protection In Deschutes as It now does in Klamath and Lake counties," de clared afuonicke. 1 More Contributions tp RedLCross The following names wort' solicited on Sitii.day, the 17tn on the street and gave their donations to the Roil Call of 1023: Mrs. L. E. WIlllamH ....12.60 H. O. Frobaoh 10.00 L A. Crane , 11.00 Mrs. Schleffelln B.00 Mrs. Alice Holloway 6.00 Trogl 1.00 Alex Walts 1.00 Mrs. Thayer 1.00 Mr. Miles 1.00 Chandler Egan 1.00 Mrs." Chandler Egan ... 1.00 Leonard Carpenter 1.00 Delroy Qotcholt 1.00 J. W. Churchill 1.00 Evan Roamos .............................. 1.00 louls Halade .... 1.00 W. M. Jones 1.00 Pauline Treavis 1.00 Miss Barron '. 1.00 C. A. Knight 1.00 P. Hamlll 1.00 Mrs. Q. Carpenter ... 1.00 Corbln Edgell . 1.00 Mrs. Corbln Edgell : 1.00 Mrs. Leonard Carpenter 100 R.'O. A. Yocum 1.00 P. Hamlll ..i...... 1.00 d; t). Duff 1.00 S. 1 Hathaway 1.00 Mrs. Heine ,. 1.00 Mrs. P. J. Neff . 1.00 Mrs. M. C. Barber 1.00 Miss N. McKeen 1.00 L. C. Narregan i 1.00 Mrs. R. A. Clark 1.00 Wm. Von der Hellen .. -.) 1.00 Mrs. F. C. Sander 1.00 D. W. Gilbert . 1.00 J. G. Edglngton 1.00 Mrs. Matilda Parker .-. 1.00 Mrs. J. C. 8. Wellls 1.00 Louise Eldred Janney .... ........ 1.00 Anne Lange 1.00 V. S. Rankin 1.00 Mr. Hart, Hotel Medford 1.00 J. G. Vloll 1.00 Ora Cox .,.... . 1.00 Blanche Canode .......... 1.00 Mrs. E. E. Kelly , 1.00 M. Clarke 1.00 Agnes Wltherson ........... 1.00 B. H. Lee 1.00 Mrs. M. T. Edwards 1.00 K. Yamashlta 1.00 Dr. Thayer ........................... 1.00 Mrs. B. Webb 1.00 Ursula R. Burgess ..... 1.00 Mrs. Huberman 1.00 Mrs. Robinson . 1-00 Miss Van Scoyoc ; 1.00 8. M. Weltrhan Jr. 1.00 Mrs. Alice D. Happln 1.00 Mrs. K. W. Llljegran........ , 1.00 F. A. Fraser ....i... - 1.00 Dr. J. C. Hays ....i . 1.00 O. B. Morrow ..... ....... . 1.00 J. C. Thompson . 1.00 Wm. Shepard 1.00 Anne Dean 1.00 Mrs. W. A. Folger .......... . 1.00 A. 8. Bliton .. - . 1.00 K. A. Palmer " . 1.00 Marlon Vorhles . , 1.00 John W. Carpenter .. .. 1.00 Mrs. Marion Riddle 1.00 Mrs. Mollis Child .. 1.00 Mrs. James Cevett 1.00 A. M. Prltney .. - 1.00 Gordon Vorhlei . . 1.00 8. M. Bullis .i - 1.00 Mrs. 3. M. Bullls 1.00 H. G. Launspach .. . l.oo F. H. Hart ., 1.00 Mr. Brenneman. . 1.00 r. h. Burton urr:: 1.00 Mrs. Edward Pomcroy 1.00 Mr. Ctatjons 1.00 Dr. Riddell 1.00 Mi-.i, Riddell 1.00 7T. J. IvTceller 1.00 A. B. McDonald , 1.00 W. A. McKenzle 1.00 Wm. F. Keeling :....... 1.00 Mrs. T. V. Williams . 1.00 H. B. bhoffer , 1.00 Mayor Gaddls 1.00 R. L. Wilson 1.00 Charles JeBseman 1.00 Mrs. Manning 1.00 Mrs. Deuel .. . 1.00 MrsvReddy 1.00 The following have added their names to the list of donations to the Roll Call of 1923, of Medford: Mason Ehrman ..$60.00 Geo. T. Collins 26.00 Hotel Holland 80.00 Co. A, 186th Inf. O. N. 0 10.00 W. H. Lydlard 6.00 Jackson Co. Creamery 6.00 Frank T. Applegate 1.00 Mrs. C. W. Shields 1.00 8. Barkhoorn '. 1.00 C. W. Shields 1.00 Watt Nelson .. 1.00 The following were solicited by M. Maruyama for the Red Cross Roll Call: M. Maruyama $ 3.00 K. Nakano 2.00 R. Fujiwara. . , 1.00 K. Busukl 1.00 J. Ryu 1.00 K. Salto 1.00 Chas. FuJImato ... 1.00 N. 'Tahase 1.00 8. Ito ... 1.00 8. Ultake 1.00 F. Watsumoto 1.00 The Secret of Tasty Cooking Meals prepared by some one else,, fre quently taste better than your own. You can be sure people will say how good tilings tasted at your bouse, when you use Kitchen bouquet. It is the secret of tasty cooking. Start the meal with a real tasty soup. Add a tablespoonful of KITCHEN BOUQUET just befbn taking off the stove. y : Your grocer sells lots of HTCHEN BOUQUET and SmmA mm set AUXhildVen" Should Get a Shinola. 4 . Home Set .to Use With Shinola A genuine-bristle dauber and big jamb's wool polisher giye quick, easy, and economical shines 1 (The polish to choose for family shoes Shinola improves the appearance and makes the shoes wear longer. Fifty shines in handy key-opening box ! Black, Tan, White, Oxcblood, Brown "The Shine for Mine" Less Vibration with this Nori'Detonating Gasoline There's a marked difference in the way gasolines ex plode. One kind detonates a crash against' the piston head delivers all the power in a single blow.. V , These Sudden blows, repeated, . cause ' vibration, in- creasing wear and tear. '., And detonating gasoline limits compression by its r tendency t;o explode prematurely. . Thus a loss of power and efficiencyin your motor result. More Power, Prolonged , Union is non-detonating gasoline.' The explosion is prolonged, sustained. Piston heads are thrust rather than v "kicked" down. You'll find a new "lift" on hills and no "knocking." Non-detonating gasoline permits of higher com pression, for as all authorities know, compression is limited by the tendency of a gasoline to detonate. So more power is delivered by Union Gasoline. You find a new rush in the pickup and more speed on the level. Impulses come more smoothly, so there's less vibra- . ' ' tion rthis saves wear and tear. And all this higher efficiency means greater fuel econ-' omy. So Union Non-Detonating Gasoline delivers superior service in several important ways. Union is always uniform. It doesn't disintegrate, thus doesn't deteriorate in storage. It has all the power when you use it.that it has wiea it leaves the Union plants. , ' - I . J oCalifcwii5&. " union uasol ine