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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1930)
MEDFOttD MATL TKTRTTyEo MTCDFOTvD, OTKnoy, FTCTDAY.ArOTTST V, 1!tt0. Shower Given for ! Guests Here Bridc-to.no . . ) From. Massachusetts': Mrs. Phil Stansbury of Medford I Misses Dorothy WJsht.i Zilpha assisted by. .Mrs. .Milton Franklin House and Dorothy Hoyee of West of Ashland, entertained Tuesday j Springfield;-. Mass., who have' been e v e n tin (j ..with a miscellaneous; the guesfs of Mrs. Ida Wood-and shower, , honoring Josephine Bur- Florence Craves, of - this city, Jeft her, whose marriage to - Terry A. this morning for Crater Lake. Talent of Seattle will be an event) The women left West Springfield of early August. I Juno 28, and have visited Rocky Durins the early evening bridge i Montain, Zion.and Yosemite na- was enjoyed at the home of Mrs.; tional parks, Carlsbad Canyon and, .imon rranKUn on Allison street, uoyce canyon. Jietore returning after which the guasts adjourned to ; home they plan to visit Mount Kai the home of MIsh Barber, where1 n!er and Yellowstone national the shower wax held. Late In the' parks'. Black Hills, S. D., and Ham evening refreshments were served ilton, Ontorio. . I by the two hostesses. Cluest list for the evening In cluded the MiKses Pearl Wardle, Marjorio Crouch, Rosalind Wise, Harriet HeviiiKton, Dolly Tra.sk, JeanT Stmtton., Alice Bowman, Madge Mitchell, Marie Mitchell, Jqan Halls, Dorothy Chappie, Gertrude Ahlstrom, Marea Carlson, Louise Rufier, heona Ahlstrom, and Mrs. Shelhy Venable, Mrs. Otis Johnson,. Mrs. Uay Clary, Mrs. Al I'arr, ' Mrs. Burton Wynne, Mrs. William Kerr, Mrs. Ted Lockhart. Mrs.-. 13art Fraljpy, Mrs. Dick Cump bell, and Mr .v Leo Finneran. Ash-land'iTidinga- . ' - - -r-f-f . Whlllock-Stutz v Wedding Sunday The marriage of Miss Bertha ' Whtllock; dnURhter of -Mrs. C. W. Whillock, 714 West Tenth street, to Mr. Lester K. Stutz of Corvallis is the outstanding social event planned for Sunday, August 3. The ceremony will be performed at the Whillock home at 4 o'clock with Rev. Alexander G. Bennett of ficiating. Mrr. Delmer M. Oioodc of CorvalllB will be matron of hon or and Fred Stutz will be best man. A reception. will be held following the ceremony. A number of out-of-town guests will be present, including Mr. and Mrs. Delmer M. Goods and Miss Lilly Nordgren of Corvallis, and Miss Letha Bunting of Portland, who left Corvallis the early part of the week to visit several resorts, including Crater Lake, before com ing. to Medford, Misfc Mprcoi Honored With Serenade- Miss Marion crccr, who left Medford on the evening train yes terday for Boston, Mass., - was serenaded during the train's utop In Ashland by a group of local friends and members of the Busi ness and Professional Women's club, who motored to Ashland to voice their lantgood-byes in songs. Members of the serenading party were: Miss Winifred Walker, Miss lidna."' Mae Wells, Mrs. Dorothy Bnucom. Minn Clarice Bonscboter, L Miss Elsie, Brown andMrs. Grace Mrs. Jennings Is Honored on Birthday Mrs! Louis Jennings was honor gueHt at a chicken picnic dinner and swimming party given by Mrs. linlpii Jennings at Jackson Mot Springs Wednesday evening, cele brating her birthday. Following the dinner, the evening was spent lit iniiniature gulf. Those present included Mr. nnd Mrt. Louis JeJnnings, Miss Jose phine Koppes, Miss Lucile Garrett of Santa Ana, Miv nnd Mrs. Aubrey N-orrfcv 'Mr. nnd Mrs. R. It. Baker, Mr. an&Mrs. Oi W. Dunford. Mrs. Lydrt' King, Mrs. Hlva-. Mitchell, and Ralph Jennings, Honored at t Vreku Luncheon Mrs. C C. Davis and daughters TJetty and Phyllis of Albuquerque, K. M., who are tJ-.e guests of Mrs. Davis' sister, Mrs. 1. O. Larisun of 240 South Holly street are leav ing today for Vreka. Calif., where Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Larison for merly lived, and will be the house guests of Mrs. Bernard Pollard of that city. Mrs. Pollard will entertain In their honor Saturday with a bridge luncheon. Dr. Davis will motor to Medford from New Mexico the middle of August to accompany Mrs. Davis nnd daughters back to their home In Albuquerque. ' SWeet ami. Cool The lines of youth thrive on the sparkling tang of delightfuj Banquet Tea. A cold drink that keeps the spirit up and the weight down. With . the flavor you prefer.-. .A sample will convince writenow. ' Thursday Bridge Club At Johnston Home Members of the Thursday Bridge club, who .enjoyed the hospitality of . T. Slater Johnston's country home on the Rogue last evening are spending today there fishing and swimming. M r. J oh n st o n Is attending the Bohemian Club jinx near San Francisco and gave the club- use of the cabin during his absence. Return to Ross Tomorrow K veiling Miss Ellen Hill and brother. Granger- Hill, who- have .been guests In this city of their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. F. Corning Kenly, will leave tomorrow even ing for their home, Ross, Calif. They will bo accompanied by John llamill of that city, who has been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Hamill. Hlrtlidny Party Thursday Miss Catherine Chaney was host ess -to a grouj) ot her girl friends Thursday, entertaining with a thea ter party at the Cratern and lunch at Franklin's. The occasion was Miss Catherine's birthday and her. guests were Hazel Moffatt. Lois i Nichols, Dorothy Gore, Joyce Ban- ish and Evelyn Leonard, (By Mrs. K. K, Gore.) j "You aro being paged," piped; Miss Marjorie' Wescott to her ao-I companist. Mrs. George Andrews, art she prepared to sing her en- j core after an-intermission follow ing tea- and n delightful program) of songs at tho home of Mrs. L. j A. Salade, Jr. Thursdi.y afternoon.) Miss Marjorle, who lives in Chi- j cago. is the nioce of Mrs. Salade and Mrs. Marjory Feasley, andt with her mother, Mrs. Wescott; is visiting in Medford. She is now j ll years oiu ana nus ot-en iuh.viii voice, piano and languages since five years of age. She sings in French. Italian, German and Swed ish, while her English diction is faultless. Her voice is exquisitely placed and lovely in quality and her phrasing and interpretation are controlled by artistic feeling. Hanna Butler, her .irent-aunt. is also her teacher. The "Bell Song" from Lakme, with its difficult sus tained notes reaching "E in altls slmo," were marked by singular beauty and clarity of tone. Nothing is more universal than the longing on the part of par ents that their children shall have so If -expression through music, and nothing is mure elusive and subtle than bringing- such - talent to flower. It seems that once Jn a long time, through forces over which we have little control, the distilled esseifuo of this 'longing is concentrated In some ' fortunate child and a Yehudi, a Ricci, a Mar jorle. is the result. . t M irjorie's voice Is a coloraturo- sopruno of exceptional runKO and beauty and all thut she did was marked by charming childish sim plicity. About CO guests enjoyed Mrs. S.i lade's hospitality. Tho Program. German Lullaby Mozaft Swedish Folk Song . , Serenade Grevalska Lullaby Cyril Scott Bell Song Delibes Little Pink Rose Carrie Jacobs Bond Chnrmant Oiseau David Ho. Mr. Piper ;...Currnn Encore, Cam Nomi Verdi ;Ss. $d.40; pastry flour, 49s. S5.7U. I . (Prices by Sperry Flour Co.) j C-ann sugar Sacked basis. Cane, i fruit or bcrrt.' $4.iii per cwt.. beet engur, .$I.T.u cwt. , . , j Wall Street Report menU) River district would com plete shipment of llartleit pears to morrow, wilh Uike county starting to ship August 4. The La'.-e county crop is esti mated at TlMQH tons nnd the Men docino county crop at LS.bnu tons., Mendiciuii district started ship-' ments yesterday, Mr. Ilofmanii suid. Gilmore Oil , Officials Spend Day in Medford Mr. and Mrs. D. A. RoweU of Los Angeles and Lloyd Gedamke of Portland were in Medford today en route to Los Angeles by auto, and were quests of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. O'Hanlon. Mr. RoweU is general sales man ager of the Gilmore Oil company, and Mr. Gedamke is northwest sales supervisor for the Gilmore com pany. .Mr. Rowell passed through Med ford by airplane two or three weeks ago en route to Alaska to join Mm. Rowell on a vacation. PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 1 . A1) Flour prices followed tho don ward wheat market today. Reductions averaging' -io a barrel wr an Inounccd by tha Sperry Hour com ipany. This brought family patents to $;.L'u and pastry flour to S.70 The butter market was firm al Thursday's advances. Receipts were comparatively light. Tie egg market as a whole was fairly steady with supplies rcasou ; able. Pullet eggs have "begun to i come in from Oregon farms. They i bring 14 to 15c a dozen sold to re tailers. j Huckleberries aro on the local market at "OivU pound. I THE MARKETS j i BAND SAW INJURES SAWMILL WORKER j Livestock. I PORTLAND. Ore., Aug. 1. (Pt ! Cattle 130, calves 10; quotably steady. ' Hons ?."0. including around 200 on eon tract: opening steady. Shucp 200; quotuhly steady. RAKER, Ore.. Aug. 1. (P) Tvo Spriet, resident of this section for the past 26 years, died In a hospi tal hero yesterday from injuries re ceived Wednesday in an accident at Jacobs sawmill at North Pow der. Spriet was lnjjured internally when "a band saw broke. r ; Sacramento, Cal., has voted a $160,000 bond, issue for a munici pal airport. ' ; NEW YORK. Aug. 1 . (! Bears ; won the honors in a slow motion j contest in today's stock market, in I which little less than l.loo.Otm : shares were traded, the smallest ! turnover since November' 3. HH'ti. j Hulls regained control of the ) price movement by bidding up the tobaccos and a few specialties for I a time during the afternoon, but bearish pressure against the util ities was heavy throughout the day j uiul losses of I to fi points pre- dominated at the close, i The close was steady, sales ap ' proximated 1,150,0(10 shares. . Today's closing j rices for 1 5 selected stocks follow: Am. Can Am. Tel. and Tel Anaconda Cel. Gas CurtisM Wright General Electric (new) General Motors Kennlcott Copper Mont. Ward ' Radio Corporation j Sears Roebuck S. P .. : : Vnited Air Craft ! V. Sf steel . : Int. T. T Dividend Held I p. 1 SALEM. Ore.. Aug. 1 -P Pay. ' ment of a Uii'ko dfvictt'iid in the; liquidation of the defunrt Lane! County State & Savings bank at; Florence has naln been held up, Statti Bank Super! n't e n dent Schramm said today, by a petition, for reheariim -filed in tho supreme' court in behalf of certain deposit-1 SALEM, Ore., Aug. l.-i-P) The state of Ore.vun must furnish -Its district -Mtorneys with sets of the new ( M'egoiv code and trust the next legislature to provide money to pay for them, says an opinion hy Attorney-General VanWinkle to Secretary of State Hoss. In the 4'itHt of circuit jiiflKcs thft codes may be paid for from their ex lnse fund . appvoiirlutod ; by the l!'L':t li-cfslature. Produce . PORTLAND, Ore.. Aug. L (!') Butter Firm, unchanged. Kggs Fairly steady, unchanged. Milk, poultry, country meats, on ions, potatoes, wool, mohair, any stead and unchanged. Flour and Sugar PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 1 . (P Flour, lit). ceut lower. City de livery pi lees: Family patents,, 4s. $r.l!0; whole wheat, Ifs, $..w; gra flSs. $fl; bakers' bluostem palenls, llofmnmt stated that the Sacrr. IMS. SACRAMEN1 0 PEARS NEAR SHIPPING El mm&c f) Mux llotnmnn. representing tho Scuhckl iV; t'o f San Fran cisco, arrived.' in' Medford on the Shnstn this morning, coming here Local People Visit Caves - j Mr. and Mrs. John Goodwyn,! MUss Gail Sankey of San Francisco and Mrs. Joe O'Brien motored to the Oregon Caves yesterday. i t Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence- Bragg 1 and son Lawrence-Jr., who are en joying a trip to Lake Tahoc are expected to return nextt week. Mrs. Walter Robinson and her mother, Mrs. Klttie Gray, are guests today of Mis. Lewis XJhicU at her cabin on the Rogue. Meteorological Report Aug;. .1, 1930 -, v.- Medford and' Wolniiy: Tonight nnd Saturday fair except some low cloudiness tonight; no change in temperature. ' Oregon: Fair tonight and Satur day but low clouds in western val leys tonight and fog along coast;, slightly cooler in east portion Sat Local Data. 4 cn a? i o, 55 . ,8 r.5 81 .00 Clcur Lowest temperature this morn ing 65 rteBi-ees. Temperiituro (deKreea) S9 HiRheat (Inst 12 hours) 00 Lowest (Inst 12 hours) 54 Hel. humidity (per ct.) 25 Precipitation (Inches).. .00 State of weather Cloudy Total precipitation Binco Sept. 1, 1929, 13.97 inches. Temperature a year ago today: HiKhest 90; lowest 58. Sunset today, 7:30 p. m. Sunrise Saturday, 5:05 a. ni. Sunset Saturday 7:29 p. in. "Observation! Taken at 5 A. M. 120th Meridian Time Mccormick & co inc t- "'1 Baltlmor. Md. fSlMJ vrl'CoBMicK&Co. CITT. g" i 9 i 1 I ? 1 linker City BO Cloudy Bismarck 90 72 1'. Cdy. 1 Buise 94 5S Cloudy J Denver 88 64 Clear , Dcs Moines 90 04 Clear , Fresno 100 74 P. Cdy. Helena 90 02 Cloudy ' Los AnR-clce 90 74 Clear Marshfleld 72 52 Cloudy j J'hoenijc 100 84 Clear Portland 80 50 Cloudy Med Bluft 102 72 Clear HosebuiB: , 82 52 Clear Salt Lake,:.. 94 72 Clear San Francisco... 70 54 Clear Santa Ftt 70 56 Cloudy Seattle ... 74 68 Cloudy Spokane 92 00 Clear I Walla Walla .... 90 , 04 Clear Winnipeg i. ..... 80 00 1". Ctly. V. J. jiUTCfilBON. j Meteorologlat. Sparkling Beverage For Every Taste This Is "Canada Dry week." dur ing which time those who enjoy a nice, refreshing beverage, and have not tried this popular drinK, are urged to ask for It nt the fountains or use it in their homes, on the picnic or the vacation. Besides their regular ginger ale there are two new flavors golden ginger ale and sparkling lime offering a beverage to suit every t-te. Canada Dry. the "champagne of jringer ales," comes In cartons of 12 botttee and can be had at your grocers. A gasollDe truck driver ran out of fuel near lola. Has., and had to walk to the nearest town (or fuel. , More than 20U self-help students npn nviuwtorl In ..mil Lnt North Cn,l!na utqln rnlln.A t li lu rear i Medford' s heading Store Since 1894 Pay Las--Dress BetterWe Give S. & H. Green Saving Stumps Begins Tomorrow - -The M.f IVL Store's Jk. llJ tsJ S I La EE SHIRTS Men's Shirts. 98c A special group of collar attached shirts. Regular values to $1.35 included in this sale lot. Men's fancy shirts, fancy or plain, patterns, guaran teed fast colors, two pock ets, S2.45 values at $1.45 Rayon Shirts A new shipment of fancy rayon Shifts, in shades of green, blue, tan and peach, specially priced at $1.95 Extra Size Shirts A special lot of extra size Shirts for large men. Size, Wz to 19, priced from ,$1.45 -$1.95 OFFERS SENSATIONAL VALUES Cool. Summers FROCKS A special lot of prints and travel crepe frocks in' un usually ..pretty ..styles which regularly sell up to. ,$32.50 will be offered to morrow for $16.75 and $19.95 A Special Showing of the newest creations in smart Men's Pants A specfal bargain table of men's pants In our men's department on our - main floor. Prices reduced to $2.98 $3.25 ' $3 95 - $5i95 Fall Apparel Be sure to see our advanco season's displays in our ready-to-wear department. , Percale Prints Beautiful percale prints, the very best quality 80-80 sq. material. 35c a yard value, special tomorrow, yard 25c Summer Dresses Unusual values Will be offered to thrifty and , style-wise shoppers at the M. M. Store' tomorrow. Just see tho bargains' represented in thoso three big lots. 1 $24.50 Dresses, Now $12.25- ' $16.75 Dresses, Now $990; . $12.25 Dresses, Now tyGDO Spun Silks Smart spun silks. 30 Inches wide in shades that Will 1 appeal- to every - femi nine shopper, 85c value reduced to, yard 69c Waffle and Rayon Prints Waffle and Rayon prints in the best col ors for summer8nd early jfall. Fast col ors, 36 Inches wide. Values to 65c. 49c a yard Flat Crepe 40 inches wide' a heavy all-silk, flat crepe, yard .49 - (, ft crepe, HP Coats All of our summer coats, during this mid-summer sell ing event are going at VfeOff This stock includes Coats as low, as s $10.00 ."; ' Spreads and' Bolsters A rpecial lot of attractive 80x80 cpreads and emnrt bolsters to match in tobo, 'gold, heliotrope and oea green. Regular values to $12.50 going at - v $7.50 Silk Hose $1.00 Full fashioned silk hose In the very , i best of the summer shades, 1 1 f T 'Mill I ( , ' j w Silk Crepe ,jrSe , fi New! g.nuin'Stlkrepe 'u'll.Biihioned . Inj8iintan, Roseador arid Sunbatk. An eipeclally attractive value ,, pair SALE OF Women's . Light Shoes A cpecial lot of light 8hoes, Including ties, strap and pumps in medium and high heels. $4.85 Siloes ... $3.95 $5.8.1 Hhoeii '. ..$4.'45l SHOES Close Out of Men's Tan Oxfords A special lot of men's tin ox frrds, regularly prioed from 15.85 to $6.89 reduced to S4.45 7D 0AKrMErrswB C. A. MEEKER, Manager flfllCTM Hy'' 8 'J I i Id I I i . r.v g I'Kql Children's, Shoes r ' Sizes 5'2 to 8 ' $1,49 to $2.29 8lies 8'j to 1 1 ' $1.98 to $2.48 Sizes 11', to 2 $1.98 to $2.98 Bargain Table of Dark Shoes We are closing out a fine lot of dark 8hoes, broken Sites, 14.85 values. S1.98 Men's , Oxfords S2.98 to $3.95 .1 n !l A TT;TH i Monarch Percales 36-inch Monarch percales In attractive patterns. A real basement mfd-tummer special at, yard 12c Children's Shoes Fine quality summer Shoes and sandals will be especial ly featured in our basement.- Oxfords $1 Sandals 08' Bargain Table ofU. . Summer . r! Shoes j A tpeclal array of light Bhoes, which regularly, tell , at. $5.85, ' closing out at . ,.,S2.79 ' Boys' Oxfords (Special) S2.98 Men's Work Shirts ; Full cut, good quality-; ,, chambray, special ,f 50c