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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1925)
o G O o MEDfORTV MATL TRTBtTNTl MEDFOUTv, OUKflOSi MOk'IftV, (Y'TOWKR V-V 1fli: PAGE THREE ASHLAND BEATEN W. BARKER PLEADS Young Folks Win Fame Down on the Farm BY NOT GUILTY ON E LIQUOR ASHLAND, Oci. 12. The Klamath Felicans gave the . Ashluhd HI foot ' hall equad a warm reception on Sat urday afternoon but Hem the AHhlitntl team home with the small end of u . 12-7 score. Thin was the first g-umo of the season for Ashland while their - adversaries huve already had three " other contests. Ashland men are light In weight and the ubsence of veter , ens seriously cripples the team. Kla 'tnath Kalis has the strongest team that they have sent out for several years. A number of Ashland folkB went to Klamath Falls for the game on Saturday. Miss Kva Poley was hostess on Saturday night to the members of the ; sewing club for which she has been advisor. The girls have done splen did work under : Miss Foley's guld : unoe and finished a 100 per cent club. Their work In Division If, Hewing, " which was exhibited at the county ; 'fair was of unusuul merit and won ' ; the first three awards. The club also ;; fortunately placed at the state fair at Kalem and Miss Mary Guley won high point honors on her personal exhibit. . i Tho first part of the evening was tie- ' voted to games which furnished a lot of fun for the girls who then enjoyed v a season of piano music and singing. !;"Mls8 Poley served ice cream, cake and f'jhot chocolate. The guest list includ Vt'eil Misses Letha Miles, Lorruine Sparr ;1r lomlly Taylor, Adena joy, Madeline Stevens, Helen Chaney, Marie Davles, Kllen Daley, Edith Brookmiller, and .. Mary Qaley.; Miss Poley was assisted by her niece, Miss Mary Poley and by her mother, Mrs. Josephine Poley. ' N. Wayne Phelps will speak In Ashland each evening of this week. Mr. Phelps In a well known author, '. lecturer, and evangelist- who - comes . here representing the World's Purity ; 'Federation. Mr. Phelps has . been 1 working for years against the white slave trade and hns a vast store of knowledge of his subject upon which to draw for his lectures. His lectures begin at 7:30 p. m." There Is no ad mission charge. The following netted - ule will be followed: Monday, Presby ' terian church, "loosing Our Grip on Morality": Tuesday, .Congregational . church, ' "The Foundation for Moral Action"; Wednesday, Christian church ' "Key to Noble Living"; Thursday, f Baptist church, "Can One Get a Dl :vvnrce and Be a Christian?"; Friday, ' Church of the Brethren, "Women All the World Loves"; Sunday, Nazarene . church, "White Slavery." M ins Marie Prescott spent the week end at her home in Ashland. 'J- TA Iss Prescott teaches near Eagle '' Point. ' ' Miss C. B. Buoher, of Colfax. Wash. i who has been In Ashlund to visit her $ home on-Wednesdayt:Mfs. Bunnell -i will make .her home-with Mrs. -Lulu Howard on Clresham stroet.'1 - ' Mr. and Mrs. George Stevens and Miss Dorothy Stevens motored ' to Myrtle Creek Saturday to take Mr. Stevens' mother, Mrs. Mary Stevens, tu the home of her daughter, Mrs. 13. (V Lacent. Mrs. Stevens, after visit ing her daughter, will go on to her home In Cottnge Grove. Word has been received by Ashlttnd friends of the marriage of Miss Leota Rogers of Independence to Otto M, Lance, i Miss Rogers was recently nn Lnglixh teacher In the Ashlund high school and hns a large number of friends In Ashland who will be glad to her of her good fortune. Mrs. Emma Oeder and Mrs. A. E. Kinney were visitors In Klamath Falls Saturday. A group of Ashland ladles attended the Southern Oregon College club which met at Medford on Saturday. Those who made the trip were Mes dutnes V. D. Wagner, Emit Peil, Frank Dickey, M. C. Reld, H. ' A. Stearns, -Wilms and the Misses Jar mon, Tarr and Templln. Miss May Hadfield, a former Ash land girl was married Friday to Floyd Rush at the home of the, bride's bro ther, Ed Hadfield at Oranada, Calif. In the evening the happy pair mo tored to Ashland- where a wedding supper was served at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tadfleld, Mr. and Mrs. Rush Intend to make their home in San Francisco. Charles McWilliams of Klamath Falls was a Sunday visitor in Ashland. .One hundred sixty-two enthusiastic boys and girts from the 3rd, 4th and Sth arades were enrolled this week In the Week Day School of Religious Education. There will be several ad dltluns this week of children who were absent last week on account of Illness. Mrs. Grace Andrews reports the greatest enthusiasm among the nludents, which of course promises success In tte work. .Misses Edna Goheen nnd Gertrude llnan had for Sunday dinner guests Misses Nora Ward and Clara Ander son, and Mrs. Grace Andrews. . Mrs. Chnrles A. Haines left Thurs day evening for Portland for a ,two Wft?lt8" 'Vllfita - " -- Carl Loveland and Ralph Billings have been doing Jury duty at Jack sonville the pnst week. '.. Mrs. J. M. Ross, Mrs. A. II. Hays, j Mis. Elluibeth Van Sant, Mrs. 'Walk ' er. and Miss Stella Hays returned Frl ' day night from Portland where they utlended the synodlcal. Tbey report an Interesting meeting and a fair at tendance from over the stute; , - i ' ' ' Scottish Kite. " f Regular meeting Siskiyou lH.-f. of Perfection. Monday A evening. Supper :30 p. m. All members of tne Kite are Thla mofttlnir Is to bO Of Pttf- ! ticular Interest to members of this . lodge, i PAUL B. RTNNINO. ; 154 . Secretary. Marorll'a Miracle Mineral. ' A radio-active substance of the earth. The great blood and body builder. Laboratory at Portland, Ore. See Mrs. J. A. Everett. 30 Willamette street. Jackson county agent, Medfrd. Ore. Tel. 690-V. , 186 Notice. On and after this dnte I will not be responsible for any debts enntractea y Mrs. W. C. Helm or Myrtle Helm. . . These yoling folks didn't leave tlie farm to acquire fame and success. ' Left I Leo Mallard of Eullocb county, pa., whose prize cornfield won him a scholarship in the University of Georgia. Top: A youthful French-Canadian farmer, Jean Boue, brings in some blue-ribbon clover. , Below : Miss Barbara Lucksinger of Onondaga Hill, N. Y.. winner of first prize in the calf exhibit at Syracuse, N. Y. fair. i ELEVEN KILLED OVER WEEK-END SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 12 Eleven pontons were killed in automobile accidents on the Pacific const yester day and one person died when a rail road train hit a huge boulder. Ira Marsh, 2$, was killed inptantly and six others, including three young girls, were injured in a collision be tween ' two automobiles in Sacra mento. James Sabliner, 64, of Campbell near San Jose was killed by an auto mobile on a Burlingame, Cal., street. Four persons were killed in a grade cruHslng crash near Pomona, Cal., when their automobile was struck by a Southern Pacific train. Ignacio RodiigueK, won- killed and threo others seriously hurt when their machine capsized on a turn In Brea canyon near Los Angeles, Leland Edwards, Jr., 18, was killed in a collision In downtown Los An geles. Eva Dann, 21, and James Klrby, 23 both of The Dalles, Ore., were killed on the Columbia highway near The Dalles when their motorcycle skidded on wet pavement. Maynard Daw, 12, was killed and his brother Russell received serious injuries when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by an Oregon Electric train In Salem, Ore. ; l Robert H. Lee, fireman of the Con tinental limited of the Oregon-Washington Railway and Navigation com pany, Was killed when pinned beneath the locomotive when the tran struck a boulder which had fallen on the tracks. Twenty persons were in jured in the crash. 24 SACRAMENTO, Calif., Oct. 12.--, Reconstruction work now under Way on the Pacific highway in the Sacra mento canyon between Redding nnd Dunsmuir has progressed to a point where tho state highway is now open to traffic for a period cf 24 hours daily, - This announcement was made here today by State Highway Engi neer It; M. Morton, who stated that the contract with the Nevada Con tracting company whore tho widening and straightening' of the highway be tween Halfway creek nnd Dog creek is now more than half completed. Work remaining to be dono Is large 17 off the present right of way and for that reason there will bo. little inter ference with traffic from now on un til the completion of the work. Closing restrictions are therefore ' removed and the highway will be open throughout the 24 hours of each day. E i OREGON GAS TAX When arraigned before Justice J. L. Roe at Jacksonville haturdny afternoon, W. CV Harker nnd step daughter, Allle M. Romey. arrested Friday by Htuto Traffic Officers C. P. Tulent and J, J. McMuhon at the end of North Riverside while In the act of delivering a gullon of alleged moonshine, pleaded not guilty to the charges of possessing nnd transport ing moonshine proferred against them. Their cases were turned over to the grand jury with bonds set at $3000 for Barker and $1000 for Mrs Romey. Tho, defense attorney, O. M. Roberts, wus not present at the hear ing. Jack Flnfrock of Los Angeles, Cnl., arrested Friday night by Traffic Of ficers McMuhon and Talent near Phoenix, pleaded guilty before Jus tice Roe to charges of possessing moonshine und speeding. On each charge ho was fined $300 and $50 respectively. Officers Bay he was trnvellng at a rate of 00 miles an hour in a large Hudson cur a short time before bin arrest, and that he also hud a bottle of moonshine. PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 12. Truck companies of Oregon and Washington have filed suits In federal courts, here and at Tucoma, attacking the gaso line tax of the respective states. The allegation Is made that the tax Is un constitutional because It Is in effect a toll upon traffic on highways con structed in part by federal allotments of money. Sees Bolshevists at British Throat rV'V 'Nbn-ve'nomous snakes, are harm? less. They are just aa glad to get away from you. are. you are frorrt them. It is the fear of these snakes that often spulls the joyof a camping trip," said Prof. Tex A. bchubach. curator of the California snake farm at Berkeley who, Is In the city today giving three lectures on stato protec tion of the reptiles and treatment of bites Inflicted by poisonous snakes. The professor operates a farm at Berkeley for the purpose of selling snakes to. carnivals, circuses and other attractions. He has over 1000 on the farm and is now hound there to place them In hibernation, doing this by placing them in prepared drawers for the winter. He has been in the business for 26 years past, re ceiving the Inspiration, he said, when he Wua bitten by a Diamond Back rattler. Ever since he has devoted his time to snnke culture. He Is traveling by automobile, ar riving here from Salem, where he had attended the state fnlr. With him he has 120 Jive snakes, several Gila Monsters and pickled snakes. He exhibits n, collection of several hun dred fangs extracted from mouths of rattlesnakes. , Naval liny ProolnlmonV SALEM, Ore., Oct. 12. Oavornor Pierre today Issued a proclamation setting asld Tuesday, October 27, as "Naval duy." nnrtrrrd On Iter the Lnt4t. LONDON. The girls are wearing gartered gaiters In tne rutijy season to protect their silk stockings from mud. - . CooK wltb fiM. L. U9 WSSttm I IL.lt il.'-- . T H ? - it ' i" J h ' ' I . , . M . ''-:','v'-' Bolshevism is rampant - In England and seriously threaten ing the empire, declares Lad; Cowan, president of the British Women's Futriotii League, now bi New York. ' She says Com ntunfits are insuring trouble In the future by .rttlng up schools to destroy the faith of children iniod and the rulers of. the country.- . ASSAULT CASE IS GIVEN TO JURY, HERALD CASE UP The Jury In federal court In the trial of WHbUr' Eggfiman,1 KlamatH Indian rancher charged with assault, In which Monroe Faithful, a fellow tribesman, sustained a wound In the heart, and lived to testify about it, began deliberating this morning at 10:30 o'clock, and' at two this after noon was still out. The case attracted wide attention among the Indian residents of the reservations, who are said to be di vided Into .two factions over the case. The case is the outgrowth of a fight the two men had over cattle, on the Eggsmun ranch. ' The civil suit of E. J. Murray, pub lisher of the Evening Herald of Klamath Falls, against former Klam ath county officials, alleging assault and conspiracy to prosecute, was be gun thla morning, and the jury in the case will be completed this afternoon. Murray asks damages of approxi mately $60,000, - i The suit grew out of a newspaper controversy, and next to the courU house squabble, was the hottest row In tho history of Klamath county. One of the phases of the suit, is the alleged seizure of the newspaper plant. SEEDING DELAYED PORTLAND, Oct. 12. A very good ran lor harvesting, but not much op portunity for fall seeding to date, says F. L. Kent, statistician U. S. De partment of Agriculture. Records of the Portland weather bureau show that tho September rain fall at that point was only about three-fourth of the normal, and the absence of October rainfall makas the total precipitation from September 1, to date, but little more than half of the normul. The September rainfall was very "spotted," and In some parts of west' ern Oregon the soli was In good con dltion fur plowing at the end of Sep tember. Some little seeding has been dono in the western part of the state, but mostly "disked" In on the stubble fields, and confined for tho most part to fall seeded hay crops. In the prln oipal eastern 'Oregon wheut counties there has been practically no rainfall, and the soil Is therefore In poor con ditlon for full seeding. However, many growers will seed "in the dust1 beginning about October 16, unless good rains occur before that date, Should the fall continue dry until very late It is quite probable that con siderable acreage, Intended for full seeding, will be held over until spring. The good results obtained from the spring seeding of last full's winter-killed areas, do not appear to have Inclined many growers to great er than the usual spring seeding. LOCAL LEGION MEETS AT ARMORY The regular meeting of Medford post No. 15, American Legion, will be held this evening at the Armory. The chairmen of the different Armistice day committees are asking the mem bers on these committees to be pres ent In order to get the work started at once. The different committees will have reports to make of the progress being made toward the Armistice day cele bration. All members who hare, golf tickets which were given out this spring are requested to turn these In at this meeting. Miss Rogers Gained 15 Pounds in Sii Weeks Skinny Men and Women Gain Five Pounds in 30 Days or Money Back. My dear Friends; After my attack of Flu I was thin, run-down- and weak. I had a sallow complexion, my cheeks were sunk In and I was continually troubled with gns on my stomach. -1 felt stuffy and had lost my appetite. I had read about McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Com pound Tnblnts and decided to give them a trial. At once, I began to pick up an appetite, my cheeks filled out and my complexion becamo healthy looking and 1 gained U pounds In six weeks and am very thankful for what McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets did for me. ' Miss Alberta Tingiy-a, 264 W. Cerro Oorda 8t., Decatur, 111. To take on weight, grow trong nnd vlgnroi. to rill out the hollaws In cheeks and neck, try McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compaund Tablets for t days. 00 Tnblets 60 cents at Heath's' Drug Wore, and druggists everywhere. If thsy don't give you wonderful help In 10 days, get your money baci you be the Judge, imt he sure ask for McCoy's, the original and genuine, . : Take a Joy Ride to Laughland Today With MATT MOORE and Dorothy DEVORE 'HOW . fff feaxteri Butted M A rippling comedy of laughs and tears a drama of tickle and mock heroics a picture In seven big, roaring reel that you will boast of (eelng. Also H. C. Wltwer's Brand New Two-Reel 8torle "THE PACEMAKERS" RIALTO 8TART8 TOMORROW!, Prom th Saturday Evening Post Story by A. M. Sinclair Wilt ho you eat between meats Next time you're tempted to "eat a bite" between meals try WRIGLEY'S. V , Don't overburden your stomach .don't humor a false appetite! Let WRIGLEY'S Stimulate a genuine hunger and get you ready for a good meaL And then use it also, AFTER EVERY MEAL, as a pleasant digestive aid. v ra sax THEtV FLAVOR LAST? Ml "after every ntetfl Mr P10T J 3 U ICAUKWNIA OMOOM iKWOktXNMNYl "LIVE WIRES " The degree that a town uses electricity like the size of its banks is pretty apt to tell how 'live" a town fa. It's Inter esting to note then that the communl ties we serve have advanced further in the use of electric ranges, washing ma- . chines, and other labor-saving equip- . ment than many of the largest and presumably most advanced cities in the country 1 ; , ' : . It is a region of "live wires'' and of unlimited natural resources and wealth an up-and-coming one in which to . live and grow. . ' - In helping to develop the region this Company sees a real opportunity for ; service and to that end has created its New Industries Department. The De partment is supplying a supplementary Chamber of Commerce type of service to the one California and five Oregon ' counties within , our territory. If you know of anyone whom you believe might come here either to live or take .. part in our industrial growth, the De partment will be glad to help you bring ; . ' them here ( Or if you are ready to let electricity do the work in your own household, or , business cost information and other data will he supplied at any of our offices. CALIFORNIA ORIGON POWER COMttNY i Madfonl, Grants Psss, Klamath Falls, Rom burg, Orsgosb Ynka, DunsBrairt California. ' ' 1925 Buick Master-Six Coach Like New :: The Busy Corner Motor Cd. 'I J 111 V '