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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 16, 1925)
PAGE -ftflTTT ri ; fFDFOT?T) ttnV TRTBUNE, METPORD, OftEflOy, TTirftftmff .TTTT 1925 ( WherevePYou Live o Oil 6ookst$-es Are "City Easy ifz r-r-aa. O you want a cool kitchen in summer, an fll-'roui?1, 00 . i. l o (ires tOQtend use a gogd oil-0 cookstove. Ir witt help sohy cooking problem aby making your cooking "city easy"! No mussy o li res to tend no fuel or Sines lulug tftnple noiseless iafd . But be wre to use Peart Oil for Ptafl Oil it mor than "juii ktnttnf'. It is refiitcd and re-rcfined by our fpeciah process so it won't corrode cookstoves or heaters; N will give yoti notlung. but absolutely odorless, in tense Name that's all beat I Insist on Clean-burning Pearl Oil ask 6r it by ame.'"P EARL O IL". STANDARD OIL COMPANY (CkUuraa) fPEARL AS i BADLY INJURED IN SAW MILL Jblftl for HEAT and LICllT OIL (KEROSENE) j WE ARE MANUFACTURERS OF Doors Screens, Windows and Sash, Window and Door Frames Mouldings, Cabinets of All Kinds Our Constant Aim Is to Keep Our Quality and Prices Absolutely Right. Do Not Order From Out-of-Town Concerns Before Letting Us Figure on Your Bill. TROWBRIDGE CABINET WORKS Medford A Modern Mill Oregon ed and his Uter, .May Parker, who visited In Ashland andfedford, have visited i.ake Tahoe idnce leav ing AHnd. "While very beautiful It does not compare to Crater lake and the road thereto In beyond descrip tion." Mrs. Mary Hole la visiting relatives and frlendH at Waterloo, luwa. Hhe wlJ)l)e away from Ashland fur some time. Air. and Mm. James Morgan and Mrs. Wm. Carletoti of Warner creek were visiting friends In Anhland reri cently. ; j Mrs. O. n. Brothers of Hornbrook I ls In Ashland to be with her son. who AKITI.ANT). July 15. Roy Plleds Is 1 Is In the community hoKDllnl recover- n patient In the Community hospltnl. ling: from au auto accident. the victim of an accident in the mill In The Hev. H. C. Miller and fnmlly which his foot wns nearly severed at have returned from Newport where the instep and the entire foot badly ithey have been spending Their vnca mnncled. Kield wits operatliiK a band Hon. Prior to B'Jub to Newport. Mr. saw when, in some manner the mem- ' Miller held evangelistic meetings at Per was drawn info the carrlaite and r-ugene. then Into the saw. The accident oc-1 Miss Ada Brewster, home detnnn curred yesterday at the sawmill, near strution agent of Jnckson county, oc- VJnehurst, which Fields and A. W. cupied the assembly period .Monday. Moim operate. I The message she brought to the teach. Kleven hundred librarians were- in ers was one of helpfulness. The attendance at tile 47th annual confer- phases of heV work were touched upon ence of the. American Library associa- and ways in which the teacher could Hon to which Miss I i Inn he Hicks. II- l help in the projects and problems brnrlnn, wns a. delegate. Anion.? tiiC were suggested. In turn her assistance topics discussed were "Adule Kdu-'wns pledged for the putting over of cation," "Library Trnlnlng." "Schcol plans for community betterment. Library Work." and "Library Kxteu- I Tuesday Mrs. Husanne Homes Carter lon." Among the speakers were num- brought "The High Lights of the N. bered H. II. II. Myer of the Llbrny of K. A." to the Rtudents of the Slimmer Congress. President Suzznlo of U. of Normal. The fact thai delegates were W.. Judson T. Jennings of the Seattle present from far awoy Alaska, the public library, Dr. Arthur liostwlclt Hawaiian group, the Virgin Islands- of the .St. Louis library, and Milton J. from east, Bouth, north and west, was Ferguson of the California State 11- noted. The keynote of many of the brnry. The John Newberry medal addresses were given ; that of Presl wns awarded to Chns. J. Flncjfcr of dend Newland being "The Abolition Fnyettevllle, Ark., for his volume. f War." The thought of peace was "Tales from Sliver Lands." South stressed in many ways; it being aug Anierlcan folk tales. The nuthor was Rested that the children be given the present to receive the medal. It Is thought of peace In the plaform excr- nwnrded for the best contribution to clses, the memory germs and in every child literature. Only American nu-,way possible. "Junior High," "Con- tliors are eligible. solidated Schools," "Type Schools," A special lecture is given tonight i "Part Time Schools" and the llliter- by Wnttoi'Hon Lowe on "Interior Dec- ncy Work," all had part In the dis orntlon" with special reference to cusslons. That a group of 5(1 teuch- "eurtnlnlng the home." It will be ful- ers were nppolnte dto draft a code of ly Illustrated ond nmnv new Ideas will 'ethics for teachers was an interest- lie given regarding this practical prob- 'ntf statement, as-was the fact that In lem. This is the second In the series there were two hundred thousand of lectures nrranged to ncennimodute children In high school as against busy people. A number of new minlls three million five hundred thousand have entered the Art School and keen today. Miss Mary MacKklmmon is Interest is manifest. the new president. A new bill will be ELECTRIC less 1 Km 4X COMPANY j ttJ.WAKlNKR3 Th i-tl nvemfte cot of currviit fur olrtirii- rooking nil liahiinU, toddler, In humra In thli ltrlfthbur Iiootf, to . mumh. The roast, for instance first a quick searing to seal In the savory jukes, and then a slow cooking heat as in a ftreless cooker. That's in the oven. But over here, something is simmering gently in a saucepan. Another pan is bub bling vigorously at the lid. Tomorrow morning's prunes are stewing leisurely between whiles. Dinner is being prepared and it must be watched, too. For each different dish requires a different method, a different heat. One fire will not do for all. f That's one reason why electric ranges, with their instantly regulated and easily controlled cooking temperatures, from a sizzling, searing heat in one place to a just-keejy-it-allve glow in another, are so favored by good cooks. Electricity makes good cookery better, and easier. ' And that, plus the surprising economy of -electrical cooking, is a reason why near ly one thousand eight hundred kitchens in the territory Served by this company are now fuel-less and ash-less. Nearly one tlpusand eight hundred electric ranges have jiiade them s. sk your nearest dealer to show you several models. Convenient payments, if you like. , o n 0 Dr. Andrew If. Oeder of New York presented to provide that there be a Ik riBintered nt the I,ithla SprlnRS secretary of education In the cabinet, hotel. He expectn to visit hln daughter The resume was made very Interesting Linda, at the Iike of the Woods this indeed by Supt. Carter. week. I On Friday niht of this week the Mrs. Josephine Poley. her da u enters students of the Summer Normal will the Misses Eva and Minnie Poley, Mm. he entertained by the Civic Improve AnKle En le and Miss Certrude Enle ment club and the Chamber of Com left Monday morning for Ranler Na- merce nt the club house. Ouite elab tional park. They expect to be gone a orate plans nre belnK made by the fortnight or more. 4 hosts and the affair Is anticipated with hrom cnniM received, Mnloolm Park- .consiaerame pleasure. Forty-two years ago Saturday, the Fillings fir mwas established, occupy ing for the first three years, the room Just across the street where the Pro vost Hardware store now stands. For seven years prior to that. Mr. Bil lings had been operating a flour mill, so for almost half a century he has been identified with the business In terests of Ashland. For thirty-nine of the years he has occupied the pres ent office. In 1886. when he and (I. ft. Butler erected the building in which the office la located It seemed quite too far out of town. At that time the town had not begun to grow toward that side. Mr.' Billings has seen the town grow from a village of 400 to ltff present population. In 1900, Ho mer Billings became a member of the firm. During Ashland's growth Mr. Billings has been actively interested In every forward looking movement, not the least of which was the Chau tauqua, of which organization he wan the head for many years, and to whom it owed so largely Us success. Mr. and Mrs. Harry I... Harner of Nevada Mo are guests at the home of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. .1. I. Harner of Almond street. They will spend a fortnight wllh their parents. Mr. Har ner visited In Ashland some years ago, taking the Lake of the Woods trip when it wns a most difficult matter, and one that was an endurance test on the part of the one taking it. to reach the lake. At that time there were no cottages there. Mr. arid Mrs. W, H., McNnlr and son and Mrs. Milton Fraley and children have returned from Corvallls . where they have been during the druggist's convention. Mrs. W. H. McNnlr was named president of the Woman's Aux iliary of the organization. Mrs. Rny Dlx is a guest at the home of her parents. Mr. nnd Mrs." F. I Putnam, of Vista street. She will re mnln for a few days. . Dr. Tj. A. Suggs J of Fort Worth. Tex., is a visitor In this section of the state. He Is deeply impressed with the scenic beauties of the lloguc Itlver valley, and the mineral waters were of especial Interest to him. COOKING watching 'PHU CALIFORNIA" Ol&KGON FOVVKR COMPANY o o FORD'S OFFER IS WASHINGTON July 16. ',A. P.) Henry Ford today offered $l.70C.. 000 for the 200 shipping board ves sels set aside for scrapping. His bid compares with 1,370,000 offered by the Boston Iron and Metal company of Baltimore. The Baltimore company's temler was favored by President Palmer of the fleet corpor ation", but rejected by the shipping board which called for new propos als. IS XKW YOKK. K..n. Mary July-. IS. (A. IM yeuihttli danclnit stiiiJ hlsrh tin on KloiVni aiegfleld's roll. Is Indignant over reports that she is tt marry (leorges Carpentler, the French pugilistic idol. Such reports were published soon after her departure for Tarls five weeks ago. "Those reports ar preposterous," the said, 1 585 O G O : ANNOUNCING 3 The Opening of a New, Modern and Sanitary Meat Market I in the Masonic Building? Corner of West Main and HoH? Strttis Saturday; July 18, 1925 It Will Be My Pleasure to Serve All Former and New Cbm toraers in My New Location with the best quality of Fresh and Cured Meats. ! LIBERTY MEAT MARKET EMIL'R. PECH, Proprietor ; Telephone 164 (Formerly with West Side .Markojt and .Medford Center Market) Often 50,000 Miles Without a Carbori'Sign! That's a common record with Aristo This western oil is economical to begin with it -costs jless than many other motor oils but its greatest saving is in the end. ' Perhaps the most con 'fusing thing about motor oils is the matter of price. Eastern oils, for example, cost more chiefly because they carry heavy freight rates. Westerfi oils, actually superior lubricants, are thus obviously the most economical. And particu larly is this true of Artsto Motor OiL Aristo's greatest sav ing, however, is not in its price. It's in that most formidable of items mo tor up-keep. Aristo combats the for mation of carbon. And as a lubricant it has no peer. ' The makers of Aristo have a pride in their product which takes no account of costs. It could sell for twice as much and not be a better oil. Sold at Union Oil ser vice stations, and at inde pendent dealers of the first class everywheree Motor OU BEST ALL .WAYS. Un'tfn OH Company w o Akofroduccrs of Union Qasolinc 2) o o it,' -0 Oo O O O- O O o G o o o o O o o G 3 1 , ., 1,1 O Q