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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1928)
f'TTOT, SEVEN DirectorfJailed; 3 KILLED, EIGHT STATION OPENS I T MEPgORP "feB'TRTBTO!, WEPFOTfD, flTraflONT. TUESDAY. ftFfiTTST 2T, !ffl58. wrTT" I i w I r . Ait n wonderful cure for the fisherman's well-known uppetite, just picture a ilislt of your own fieshlv rn light beauties stripped with I'RYE'S "DELICI OUS" BRAND BACOX. The finest bacon that careful selection, Govern ment inspection, anil wonderful curing can produce and because it is so full of real nourishment, so very economical, uud so easy to prepare, no wise fisher man will start, out without a generous mipplv of FRYE'S "DELICIOUS'' , bRAND BACON. Van be had in tempting slices, wrapped in sanitary Cellophane packages. Stye's Delicious -H BRAND Prevents Misunderstanding in Property Deals When You Put Them in ESCROW And in addition to incomparable service that relieves everybody of both technical and time consuming details ESCROW eliminates dangers arising from misunder standings and protects the interests of everybody con cerned. Put your property deals in ESCROW the mo ment the terms are agreed to, and be assured of quick and harmonious negotiations. Opening f the new "Cloverleaf ' nt the corner of South Hiverslde 'and Thirteenth. ' streets marks a distinct step in the incorporation of architectural beauty in Medford - business structures. The building which was erected for Charles A. Wing, well known local realtor, i is of stone-tile construction, fln- ishcd in light stucco. The com- mmlious station yard is surfaced j with specially prepared crushed rock, both tile and reck being fur nished by the Medford Concrete : Construction company.' ! The store and station will be tin 1 der the direct management of Hur ; old fi. Wing, and will supply n popular gasoline and oil from rapid j and accurate gasoline upmps and I modern ail and greasing equip ment.: also good tires will be car ried in all sizes. Through the compact nrrange ' menl of interior space the build , ing is enabled to carry a complete stock of groceries, featuring prin- j jcipnlly the Monarch brand, und'j I fountain dispensing Snidor's dairy 'ir- ;proiucts, amr canay ana looaccn ; displays. ; The main building and auxiliary ; structures were erected by I,, .1. i 'pp. contractor and builder, who' has a number of fine structures to ! ; his credit in Medford. The finej ! five-coat stucco finish and plaster i work was handled by V. W. James i and son. who have special equip-j . ment for tills clnss of work. : Lighting nrrangement, which j plays an important part in up-to-,dale. nutomohile servicing, was in ! stalled by the Medford Hleetric. j company, and embodies the "last word" in illumination for this type of business. Air and gas lines and Interior fixtures were Installed hy the S. II. Hawk I'lumblng shop, with special attention to arrangement for effic ient and rapid service. The South Riverside avenue lo cation was chosen by Charles A. Wing after' careful consideration of the advantages of various sites. The heavy traffic borne by the Pa cific highway which enters the city over Riverside, and the intersect- ! in corner of Thirteenth street. I which carries heavy traffic from South Central, and the added fact ! that "Automobile Row" is rapidly1 expanding both north and south I on Riverside, would seem to justify 1 the large expenditure which was made in building the "Cloverleaf" for permanence and beauty. Roth Charles A. and Harold O. Wing invito visitors to Inspect the I new station and equipment, and station operatives will be glad to explain the 'operation-of-tuenr servicing machinery. 4 , t mk'hackkn1. ks., Aim. 21. irPl Throe li'iunnion :iro (U'Uii and eight 01 her liersons injured, two seriously, us the result of u head on collision 01' "The Wj'sl oilier." Missouri Pacific passenger train en roue t'rom Kt. I.oills to Denver, and a J'reislit train, six mil west of hero late hist niuht. The In jured included five passengers. The dead: I'. IL. Yiiutii;, Hoisin--;ton, Kas., : imssenpev train outline! Ilolsliistoi, freight i . George W. Ritter, fhove, city law director and prominent attor ney of Toledo, 0., has been sent enced to five days it jail by Mu nicipal Judge Ira Cole for con tempt of court. Ritter criticised the judge for marking state affi davits in vice cases off the docket and substituting city affidavits. The former carried prison terms and the latter only fines, the di rector pointed out. Gossip From New York City Hen Kline, hrakeimtn. Charles Cotton, freight lirake- , man. j ; F. E. I'eiiKii, also of HolKin.'Uon, ' I freight engineer; suffered a hroken riiiht let!, internal injuries and ; cuts. I Mayer Vandeai iff of Denver, who .was riding on a coal car of the . freight, was injured internally. The other injured: Muse Davis. I'uelilo. Colo., pus 'sender conductor: left hip hrulsed. ! ' W. It. Nash, Alulers, l.a.; rilm ; hroken. Mrs. W. U. Nash: hack wrenched. , Mrs. S. J. Johnson. Grand .lunc-: lion, Colo.; left hip hruised. Mrs. l.eo T. CSihhens, Scolt City, Kas.: lacerations on face. i ('has. Hardesty, lloisliiBton, pas senger lirakeman: hack wrenched. I All of the injured were lalien to j in hospital at llolslnKton Ion a spe- ! cial train. ' Tom Trlplett anil Jesse Mall, 'firemen, both of Ilolsiiiston, Jump- l ed to safety. Otfichils. (of the railroad 1 were reported on their way here from .Osawatnmle to Investigate the cause of the wreck. It was re j ported that it was the result of a ! mlsunderstnndlliK in train orders., The passenger train. II was said. , it E T E come down ' TRE ORANGE PEKOE A. ( lly (;. I). Seymour. A.ssociatiMl I'ICKS SUlff WlltlT.) .NI-;V VOKK. (Pi Kixly-slx pri- ville residences faced on (ii-amercy park 4') years aco. Today there are only four. All the rest have been remodeled Into suites or re placed hy tall apartment huildiiuts the newest a lti-story structure which will Print,' 200 new tenants into the (pilot srpiai'0 this full. I.onB since vanished the tho.wlla onlorcd on the sidlllK here to homes whore lived xtnnioril White. )p( ,ne frelRht pass hut passed Robert (I. Iimersotl. Henry H. Har-j alpa(1 0p schedule, per. the publisher, and Cyrus Kield.j pwo ha.-jgaKe cars of the passen loyer of the first Atlantic cable. ger train were telescoped and olnht Other houses have been converted i rnra of the freight loaded with por iiuo clubs, like the one in which J ishahle merchandise loft the truck. lived Kanniel Tllden, democratic , presidential cnndiilate In 1870: rfnd i No Change in Weather still others, like the Ithlneiaiulor ! Oreuoii: pair tonkin and ed- honie. hnvf been rebuilt Into small "esuay inn iao u.iy in u.o , . It on ton aht with loc on coast. .No apaiillli Ills. , , ,,,,. I,,,,,,).!!,.- I,,.,-.. -,.,,l i 11, ,'!-., In bts ' 1, .1 l,u ,ti,l tl utl lnr. elinne,! ntt Ilia riiulmtcn In 1 - tH When the weather man announces that the mef cury is headed up, there's a quick way to pull it down: Tree Tea Orange Pekoe Iced. Iced tea needs a tea of full flavor and strength enough to with' stand the dilution caused by pouring over ice. Tree Ted Orange Peoe is that kind of tea I.ckIoii Henri Stilcliles. I UIODWOOl) . CITY Kxi'llshlK himself from his family Just he !fore dinner lOric Thompson, for-' Co'nvlcis Flf-hl Kill's. Trotting Itecoltl llrokcn. KAN tJCHNTlN Convicts ln STOCKTON Said to bo a new prison read camps may he used i Pacific, coast mile trotting record. lo,fii:ht forest fires throughout ' Hal rl I. owned hy I.:. J. Gianni Ition tonight with fou on coast. Nojnivr head of the Anierlcan l.oRlnn.the state liereafler. The prlson and driven by tjeorire Atachado $7.50 Tor any amount to J7r.oo viilue $i per J1000 for . MscroWH fr.om )7illll to JJ.i.tHIO 50 cents per $1000 for amounts from S.ooo up Jackson County Abstract Co. ESCROW DEPARTMENT 121 E. Sixth St. Phone 41 Yot inn purU 'tsrlf. lionndtHl by n tall prilte fencn und verdant wllh velvet lawns and .stalely trepy. Is just about as tt was when It was .set aside, 0 7 years nn, for the exclusive use of residents of the square, And It is still as private. I Moderate north coast. to west wtiulK on home lust sni.-iilo by nmbt and cininnitled lnini;nin himself. str department perinls Hiisftbm tin road virk lion tn nt the San .In sterdav iKiuin enuntv fair L IN I TOMORROW NIGHT JACKSONVILLE. Autr. 21. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Xorris and chil dren motored lo Kin math Fnlls Saturday evening returning Sunday. Mrs, Xorris" sister. Miss Mary Mor gan, w-ho has been visiting hero for n few days, accompanied them to her home nt Klamath Falls. Miss Oale Contrail of Medford was n Jacksonville visitor Monday O. A. Kitchen of Kirk, Ore., was a visitor at the X. C. Smythe home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Larson made a trip to Yrekn Monday. A Rood attendance is urffed at the meeting which Is to bo held nt the school Wednesday Two Hundred Hold Keys. j Keys to its two K'lteways still are Issued lo landlords of the i square, but only 1100 of them are.! out despite the fact, that firaniercy park now counts its residents l.iy the hundred IffsTtttd "of the score. lOxtra keys have been, Klven to some apartment house and hotel proprietors, hut in no cae more than four, and with tb ni"-"- stnnding that no more than four families in one liulbiinK w ill t'i., the preserve at once. With each key is levied an as sessment of SL'fi a year, which pro vides funds for the upkeep of (he modest pair of a ores within the stout Iron fence. Alhny of the newer residents seldom enter the Kates, beinK content to share its peace from their windows, but It is the playKiound all day of the chil dren of firumcrey nnrk families some of ihem Krcnt-Krnndsons of residents of an earlier day. tl&e giant's liigkvvay... Quaker Church Remains. Former property-holders have parted one by one with their homes as growini; tax hills made only apartments and hotels profitable. A court decision protects the park I from taxation, but its value is reck oned in the appraisal of abutting property. A single bul I fling in the quad rangle is older than the park which 'anln j Samuel Itimgles set aside in 1 s.tl REICHSTEIN AND DEUEL WOOD ALL KINDS OF DRY WOOD OAK-LAUREL-FIR Summer COAL Prices GREEN PINE SLABS MEDFORD FUEL CO. 1118 North Central Tel. 631 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING GETS RESULT I August 22. The object of the meet-! Ing is to discuss the question of I the playground equipment. ' Mr. and Mrs. Archie Sutherland I of Medford were visitors of Mrs. ! Kthel Olson and family Sunday i evening. Lyle and Wesley 'Ifnrtman made a trip up lt(g Appleiinte Sunday, ruetrning by way of Thompson creek. ; Mrs. Ed Reverence and dnugh-1 ter Uuth were Medford shoppers i Monday afternoon. ' Mrs. Vivian Pnthman audi daughter Elva from Savage, Mont., arrived the latter part of the week to visit her sister, Mrs. O. O. San- ! den, and other relatives at Phoe ' nix. ' Miss Emma Armstrong, a native, or Jacksonville and now n resident of Portland, visited Miss Issie Me , Cully Monday, Miss Armstrong will return to Pout land Thursday. Mrs. Italph Jennings was calling on friends here Saturday. Mrs. Edna Homroy nnd daugh ter of Alturns, Col., arrived Mon day to visit Mrs. Ftomroy's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Xorris. , Lloyd Sparks was taken Monday evening to the veterans' hospital at Portland. C. It, Dunnlngton ac companied him there. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Stanwood nnd Mr. Stanwood's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Orin Stnmvonrt. all Hill, were visitors Sunday at the E. c .Stanwood home In Jackson ville. Among the people who motored to Crater Lke Sunday were Or. J. tt. Hohfnson nnd wife. !r, Ji(nn lieuter and sister. Mrs. Vogt and on Paul nnd daughter Maxin of! The Ialles. Mis Mzfcfe lieuter, Mr. and Mm. Herbert Itanna and their guent. Miss Antry of Portland, Mr. and Mrs. (leorge Mrixwetl, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Fleming nnd guents , from California, Mr. nnd Mrs. Pork jftnd liruee Fleming. 1 Mis Loi Smythe and O. A. Kit- .cnen attended the rircijs Ju 'Xur.d Saturday evening. to attract home builders to the old Orn mercy farm. It is the Quaker meeting house on the sou then st corner, where the Society of Friends has gathered for more than a hundred years and where still, on Sunday mornings in the winter. It distributes coffee and rolls to the poor. j NURSES know, and doctors have i declared there's nothimj quite like j Bayer Aspirin for all sorts of aches and pains, but be sure it is genuine. Bayer ; that name must be on the : of fiold ' packaEer and on every tablet. Bayer. is Kcnuine, anu me woru gcmiinc in red 13 on every box. You can't bp wrong if you will just look at the box; The Redwood Empire is one oi the scenic wonders o the world a land of giant red wood forests, of rivers and lakes, of rugged coast, of ma jestic mountains, of gor geously colored canyons, smiling valleys. From the Golden Gate to Grant's Pass, the Redwood High way takes you through a country that is the very spirit ol the West. See the real West on your trip this suinmci your automobile club or any tour ing bureau will tell you all ahout this and other "ditier cnt" places. Sometimes you'll find the going a bit tough, hut it will be easier il you use Castor lube. Few people are as hard on a car as a travelling salesman he expects and demands ioo performance, and then some. Henri wlhil one of tin Ttnpti repieseitlntrves nt) about Cnitorlnbe Castorlubc Refining Co., San l'rantisco, Calif. ft ..it's no cream puff territory P. O. Box 571, Eureka, Calif. Get Cantorlube at independent filling station)? 60 garages Castorlubc Refining Co. Gentlemen: When Mr. Hallahan, our sales man ager, first told me about Castorlubc I was using oil, which 1 thought was the best Eastern oil I could buy. I tried some on his say so but didn t pay much attention to it until I made Crescent City the first time altei I put it in. Then believe me it put that Nash of mine in the Rolls Koycc class because outside of a few mud holes in the timber I made this entire trip on the high. In two weeks I did it again and made the Singley hill on high from low gear as some cows blocked the way at the foot. I never did that fceforc. 1 hen I watched the oil and made 3471 miles on two quarts addrd and hadn't had my valves ground in 1 5,000 miles. (Just had them ground and refilled the crank case with Cas torlubc again.) I covei about 2800 miles a month making out of Eureka to close to Grant's Pass, Oregon, and this is no cream pull territory as far as roads are concerned. A lot of wisenhcimer knockers told me the castor oil in Castorlubc would gum up the engine, and almost had me believing it. Well, it hasn't gum med it yet and I've used it all winter and the engine starts easier than when I used oil. Youi salesman told me that you would be interested in getting the facts about how your oil operated ovci these bum roads. It surelv made a booster out ol me. Yours truly. 1 1 H I.ocwenthal. Aflolrln ! .Mi ci- M.riuMctiir UvQictitacit)ftr Of &IUC7UCICI4 LEWIS SUPER SERVICE STATION DISTRIBUTORS