Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1925)
oo 0 G O STT WTiBPORH WXTC IftTBUNT!, WnPg(MP OKEflQNT FRTftAY, OCTOftEK 2.1, 1923 i It News of Jackson County DAVIDSON BOY OF MURPHY IS KILLED FOR DEER CENTRAL POINT COUPLE RETURNS FROM LONG TRIP 9 I; J Ii 'It 4 it p This namt, given in sincerity to either man or produce, is a tribute to itcrling and steadfast quality. .- TIT factory anj organization com prise an institution which stands four-square behind its product ever mindful of the confidence re pod in it by kgvrm of ua. Tri WST TEA md Gram Jm Golde West Copyright Clotm V Dtvm WITK MXDTOKD TRAD II HKDfOSD MADS. MURPHY, Ore., Oct. 23. The peo ple of the community wore put Into deep mourning caused by tile death ot Carter Davidson, who was recent! shot for a deer. We extend our most sincere sympathy to Mrs. Davidson, who has left to make her home a. Crescent City. 1 he public Is cordially Invited to attend a Halloween program and masquerade dance to be held in the old school house at Missouri flat on tbe evening of October 31, at 8 o'clock. The ladles are kindly requested to bring either cake or sandwiches. No admission charged. Buster Williams has returned home from Diamond lake, where he has been working. JumeB Burns, an old-time friend of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Cook, surprised them Wednesday afternoon by walk In,'; In on them quite unexpectedly. Miss Ixiin l'arke, who Is teaching at I.eluiid, was a guest of Miss Gladys iiollopeter during Institute. flllss IJstber Cook railed at the Mc- Fadden home one day this week. Mr. and Mrs. George Moore are now residing in Grants I'ass. George Sophie is visiting his mother, Mrs. It. Schwager. Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Miller of Keno are visiting Mr. Miller's pareuts. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller. Mr. aud Mrs. Zeun Kubll were visit ing Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Kubll. Mrs. Hugh York visited tbe school Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Coy nnd family spent Sunday with W. It. Jiolman at Lake Creek. Waller Charley nnd Ora Oomstock made a business trip to Medford Sat urday. Shorty Kurz and Owen Austin hunted Saturday and Sunday near here. They spent Saturday night with Andrew Grlssom. Mabel Wertz nnd daughters spent Sunday and Monday in Medford visiting and shopping. Atlco Dennis uttended the Teachers Institute In Medford Thursday, Fri day and Saturday. Many noted edu cators from various parts of the state gave excellent lectures. Nearly every number on the program proved to bo very beneficial. 4id Dulton Is hauling lumber from the -Climax mill t'o Guy Conner. First Showing . Of the Newest Doernbecker edroomSmite Finished in Ivory and Beautifully Decorated i Priced to Meet Every Pocketbook Bed... $24.50 Dressers. . .$24.75 to $37.50 Vanity.... $45.50 Chiffonier .$21.75 Dressing Table .'. . . .$21.75 Desk $12.50 Stand $5.75 Rocker $6.25 Chair $5.25 Bench $4.25 BUY ON OUR INSTALLMENT PLAN Your credit is always good at Weeks & Qrr Anjnstallment House With a Reputation By P. M. JONES. CENTRAL POINT. Oct 23. Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Pickett returned the first of the week from an extended tour of the eastern and north central states. They were gone several weeks during which time they visited old familiar scenes in Vermont,- Minne sota and Iowa, as well as many points of general Interest along the way. As they traveled by auto it was possible to take many side trips which uppealed to them and to stop at any sHt for as long a time as pleased them. Mr. and Mrs. Pickett report wonderful roads all along tbe way. stating also that tbe famous old Yel lowstone national 'park is laced with a network of paved roads which adds greatly to the ease with which one may reach all points of special In tel est. . . . As Mr. Pickett has been "hitting the ball" pretty steadily lor a number of years this was his first vacation tor some time, and as a result it was fully appreciated and the Improvement In health is easily noted. But with all the beautieB and wonderful coun try covered, Mr. Pickett says that "Oregon Is good enough for me. Mrs. I. F. Williams, who passed away on Saturday, October 17, was lam to rest in the 1. o. o. F. cemetery at 8 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. There was a short service at the brick church, ot which she had long been a member, after which the body was borne to its last resting place. The vv. H. C, of which she had been a member for years, took charge of the services, tbeir riles lending sim plicity and impresslveness to the last respects which they thus paid to a loved and honored comrade. Mauy friends of tbe deceased and flowers in profusion gave some slight Impres sion of the love and respect which the community bore this dear woman. Mrs. Amnnd Pool, wife of A. T. Poole, was laid to rest in the I. O. O. F. cemetery last Sunday, October 18. Little could be learned of the particu lars other than that Mrs. Poole had lived in this vicinity for a number of years, her husband having been for 17 years a ranger in the forestry serv ice. Mrs. Poole was 54 years of age at the time of her death. The Gateway theater, which has opened under new management, is doing nicely and have booked some dandy pictures for the future, plays which have never been shown in the valley before.- , Loren Paxson and his mother and sister, Mrs. E. S. Paxson and Mrs. Richard Hale, left iSaturday for their homes in Montana after an extended visit with Mr. and .Mrs. R. H. Paxson of this city. H. Fields has taken charge of the I. O. O. F. orchestra of Medford and reports fine progress, as he has some really good material with which to work. Mr. Fields also plays for the Artisans' dance Friday night, and you know what that means. Al Mermanson's feed store Is sport ing a nice new coat ot paint on its front elevation. Al not only painted the store front but also the truck und, in tact, most everything but the town that conies next. Ernest Hostel of the Mall Tribune staff breezed into Xown a few days ago. "Breezed'' is rather inadequate though, as the leaves are still rustling from his whirlwind passage through the city; Messrs. W. E. Duncan nnd J. E. Weaver are spending- a few days in Portland on business. Tbey motored to that city In Mr. Duncan's auto. The new home being erected by Earl Leever is beginning to take form and it will not be long before it Is completed. Jones, the jeweler, is the proud possessor of a nice stock of jewelry, which is now on display. 11. F. Cummiiigs, who suffered a stroke of paralysis some time ago, has' so fur recovered ns to be able to walk about and it is expected that he will soon be nut on the street again. U Hatfield, city recorder. In com pany with 11. E. Upton, C. P. Thoma sou nnd his son, Chester Thomason, returned Wednesday night from a tell days' hunting trip to Kagsdule springs on the Umpqmi divide. Tbey hud a fine trip and all benefited physically by the outing. C. 1'. Thomason brought down a nice three-point buck, while his son bugged a forked horn. I. Wold was a business caller in town Thursday. llruco Fleming of Jacksonville was a caller in town tbe first of the week. Mr. Fleming laid in some supplies for his tractor and called on his old Colo rado friends, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gear of the Hotel Central. Ed Russell and family have left the Touvello place north of town and will locato In Klamath Falls. Recent guests registered at the Hotel Central Include the following: 8. 0. Selllck. 8. P.; P. Schultz. S. P.; F. Martin, T. F. Pankey, Waldnort; W. T. Doyle. Waldnort: W. Young. Bel Belt, Chiloquin; F. R. Hermques, lookout, Cel.; E. Q. Malle and mother, Mrs. Mnttle itpmls; M. Lute and partv, Mnderla, C'al; William Pruksted, Med ford; C. D. Johnson, Will Stone, Sams Creek. Marccll's Miracle Mineral. A radlo-actlva substance of tha earth. The great blood and body builder. Laboratory at Portland, Ore. See Mrs. J. A. Everett, 80S Willamette street. Jackson county agent, Medford, Ore. Tel. !7-Y. 191 DYZKS MATTERS CLXANEKI PLXATXBS ending premature fatigue DO you feel tired, nervous, hungry, hours before lunch? Don't jump to the conclusion of poor health. Almost 90 of the time you'll find it's prema ture fatigue, brought on largely by an ill-balanced breakfast ration. Thousands have "draggy" mornings for that reason. To feel right, you must have well-balanced; complete food. You can't deceive nature into accepting breakfasts that lack even a single element to.vard correct food balance. That is why Quaker Oats is so widely urged today. It is almost a perfectly balanced dish. Contains 16 protein, food's great tissue builder; 58 carbohydrate, the great energy element; is rich in minerals, and in vitamines. Supplies the "bulk" your diet needs to make laxatives seldom necessary. Few foods have its remarkable "balance." That is why it stands by you through the morning. 7 The Quaker Oats you have alwayt) T. j known and Quick Quaker Oats KinaS Cooks in 3 to 5 minutes. You'll like Carnation best here's why! I You'll like it for its finer-than-evcr II creamy -delicate taste and color. , 1 You'll like it because it improves the flavor and texture of milk dishes. II You'll like it because it makes coffea fZLf "OVl II taste right and look right. You'll If . I It like it for the purity, goodness and VL . II vame which have made it rS- V II Oregon's and the world's leading II I It brand of evaporated milk. II 5 I JrJ For any one of a dozen reasons II 3 11 you'll like it! Be sure, then, to in- II S j If FREE Write for Mrs. Mary BlahSt II II famous Carnation Cook Book II S II Carnation Milk Products Company II : MM 74 Gli.mi Street, Portland, Oregon ' MM 1 1 Hade in Oreyon for years MM ' Tfow with that I I C&w pter-than-ever taste In two tlxei tall and small Carnation'Mi lk MP - - i .. r ii p l rum isonientea V.OWS O Phom 144 23 If. Tit It. 3) o o O m W M