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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1933)
PAGE FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEPFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1933. RETURN OF PAPER SEIZED FOR WAGES (Continueu nom page On) signing or the "working agreement." Re explained the bill of sale signed by Mrs. Fehl and admitted that the paper wee charged to her aeoount. though the document read "cash in hand." ! A. J. Blschoff, bookkeeper, was also called as a witness, telling of bust' . sees operations. Justice Coleman announced that the Issue was: "Who owned the pa per, and - It Is. the intention of this court to get all the facts, In order to render a decision. Eugene wight, who signed the at tachment papers, for bade salary al legedly due, testified that the "work ing agreement" was unsatlflfaotory. and that other employes had com plained to him. Wright testified thst a meeting was held about a week ago, to protest against "the editorial pol icy, as It was hurting the advertis ing." . Wright said the mechanical workers were perturbed about their pay. Attorney W. K. Phlpps appeared as counsel for the employes. Attorney Phlpps said he was counsel for the employes, not L. A. Banks. A number of employes were pres ent In court as witnesses and spec tators. The case Is expected to be conclud ed early this afternoon. PARTIATBREAK PREDICTION FOR COASTAL ZONE (Continued from Page One) Society and Clubs Edited by Eva Nealon with moderating temperatures, a re porta came In telling of an Increase In the number of deaths attributed directly and Indirectly to ttie effeota of the atorm, . Chicago counted a total of 33 dead aa the city surveyed the effects of the coldest weather In 34 years. Ohio counted nine dead, with thermome ter readings dipping down, as low as 14 below zero; Iowa, five; Michigan, six, with a temperature reading of . minus 63 In the Upper Peninsula re gion; Missouri, six; Wisconsin, seven; JJew Jersey, Kentucky and Indiana, two each; Pennsylvania, North Caro lina, Minnesota and Nebraska, one each. In the west and southwest 18 were known to have perlahed since the storm began early this week. Five of these were In Oklahoma, two In Texas, two In Oregon, and. one eaoh Jn Kansas, Montana, Idaho and Cali fornia. Despite a slow but steady modera tion In the ley blest, aero and sub rero readings held good In many sec tions, with fires adding to the phy sical handicaps of the weather. Two women were burned to death In their jbomes in Wheeling, W. Va and fire men In Chicago were called out to fight numerous fires, including a million dollar grain elevator blaze in the Goose Island district, ALL (Continued from Page One) hurled 2500 feet across a stretch of railroad tracks. Densely populated workmen's quar ters in the vicinity suffered badly. Police cleared Inhabitants of several streets out of their homes and there were many distressful scenes, as sur vivors Reached about for members of their families. Heunktrchen looked as though It had been razed by shell flreu The second explosion, although smaller than the first, made several tottering walla -jllapse. and additional persons were Injured, The greatest destruction was In Sarbrueckener strasae, alongside the works, where 60 houses were laid in nuns. Many residents rushed out of town In panic. The main blast was heard as far as Cologne to the north and Basel, Switzerland, to the south. People - throughout Baden thought there was another earthquake. High School Set Anticipates Dance. Members of the younger set are get ting out their dancing slippers today with an unusual fling ol enthusiasm, and. they are wearing their hearts on their sleeves. For the party to be held tomorrow evening at St. Mark's Guild hall In their honor promises to be an extraordinary one. It will have for Its inspiration the rapidly ap proaching St. Valentine's day, and decorations in keeping with the sea son will remind all, who may have forgotten, that the time of love and laughter has arrived. The decorations are being arranged by Tom Swem, which means a lot, and he Is being assisted by a very able committee. Each feminine tete-a-tete at high school today was monop olized by dance plans and it Is hoped that the young ladles' talk "shall not have been in vain," when danc ing begins tomorrow evening. Members of Altar Guild are spon soring the affair and a small charge will be made. The major committee Is composed of Mrs. Fletcher Fish, Mrs. Wilson Wait, Mrs. Emerson Mer rick, Mrs. Aletha Vawter and the Misses Frances Kenney and Helen Winter. ;. . Elks' Valentine Dance ' ; To Be Gala Affair I St. Valentine's day, one of the most festive and romantic holidays the cat-1 endar offers, will be fittingly observ ed at the Elks' temple next Tuesday evening, when a dancing party for Elks and their friends will be held. Hearts and all the other frills and fol-de-rols associated with the giv ing of valentines and welcoming of spring, will be in evidence. Mrs. Larry Schade is general chair man of the affair and will be assist ed by the following committee mem bers; Mrs. Charles Gilbert, Mrs. J. O. Thompson, Mrs. Bob Strang, Choa. Gilbert and Grover Oorum. Music for dancing will be played by Reginald Flfer's orchestra. Prizes will! be offered for the best dancers, and numerous other features are prom ised. Building Br'ge Club Meets at Duff Home. V The home of Mrs. B. A. Duff was the meeting place yesterday of the Building Bridge club and formed a lovely setting for the affair, the, din ing room being decorated in yellow and white with daffodils and yellow candles In the candelabra forming the center of the decorating scheme. Hostesses were Mrs. Rose Schleffelln and Mrs. Duff, Br . " ' - There were five tables of bridge in play during the afternoon and prize for high score was awarded Mrs G. R. Satchwell. presiding at the tea table were Mrs. H. O. Fredette and Mrs. Ralph Jen nings. ; : Daughters of the Nile Hold Meeting Tomorrow. The first regular meeting of Zu lelma temple, Daughters of the Nile, with the new officers In the chnlrs, will be held tomorrow. Mrs. Ethel Boggs. newly Installed queen of the temple, asks officers to be at the Ma sonic hall at 10:30 o'clock for prac tice. Luncheon will be served at the Holland Hotel at 1:30 and will be fol lowed by the meeting of the temple in Masonlo hall at 3 o'clock. Catholic Women Announce Another Card Party. Another party In the very Inviting series announced by women of the Sacred Heart church for this season will be held at parish ball next Wed nesday evening, it was announced to day. Card playing will begin at 6:00 o'clock, with both bridge and 600 offered. An invitation is extended the public and plans are being mode for a well attended affair. Christian Endeavor to Hold Food Sale The Christian Endeavor group of the First Presbyterian church will .hold a food sale in the church par lors Saturday, February 11, and the girls of the organization are very busy today completing plans for the affair. The sale will open at 9 o'clock and cakes, pies, cookies and candies will be offered. Mrs. Krauss Hostess At Quilting Bee Mrs. 8. B. Krauss entertained at a quilting bee Wednesday at her home, 404 South Peach street. An enjoyable day was spent by those present. The gueste Included Mes dames 8. M. Hawk, J. H. Newton, O. C. Sabln, Bertha .Tlmmermon, Mrs. Roy McConlche, Mrs. Nice wood, Mrs. Pahl and Mrs. O. B. Sabln. Holts Entertain Dinner Club Monday Dr. and Mrs. Wm. W. P. Holt were hosts Monday evening to their bridge club. Dinner was served at a table beautifully decorated In sweet peas and other early spring flowers with covers arranged for 13. Following dinner the usual number of bridge games were enjoyed. Pocahontas Dance Event for Tonight. ' Members of the Pocahontas lodge will entertain this evening -with a Valentine dance for members of the Redmen and Pocahontas lodges end their Invited friends. Dickey's or chestra will furnish music for the affair. Card Party at Pythian Hall This Evening. Pythian Sisters will be hostesses this evening at a card party at the K. P. ball, beginning at 8: o'clock. Bridge, 600 and pinochle will be played and refreshments will be served by Mrs. George Laldley, Mrs. Beryl Harwood and Miss Cecil Sulli van. Miss Hoover Leaves For Roseburg. Miss Ruth' Hoover, house guest for several days of Miss Dorothy Eads, left this morning on the Shasta for her home at Roseburg. Miss Hoover .and. Miss Eads were roommates at the University cf Oregon. MISS MEILING IS LEADER IN VOTE L (Continued from Page One) Nellie Bushnell .. Jean Fltzglbbon .. Eunice Wheeler Edna Brewold .. Elizabeth Purcell Wanda Walzak Hilda Slngler .... Audrey von Bteln Eleanor Ortb Billle earless . 1,000 . 1,000 . 31,800 . 1.400 Lutheran Ladles To Hold Food gale. The Lutheran Ladles' Aid will hold a home cooked food sale,at the Re liable Grocery Saturday, February 11 Adrlenne's announce a new ship ment of Silk Princess Slips; sizes 32 to 53, in tea rose or white, ai.9o and .9B. . . Lace-trlmmed Princess Slips a new shipment of sizes 33 to S2 tea rose or white silk tl.95 and 93.90 at Adrlenne's Bernlce Cameron Flora Collins Maud Demorest Joyce Banish Ruth Hanscam Virginia Gregory ... Frederlcka Brommer . Marian Moore Marjory Mulholland . Geraldlne Latham . Cecil Humphrey Dorothy Nyswanner . Neva Samuels Bernlce GUI Clara Younger .. Mary Blschoff .000 000 ,000 ,000 .000 ,000 000 .600 ,000 ,000 1,000 ,900 ,400 ,800 ,000 ,900 ,000 ,000 ,000 600 600 ,000 Catarrhal Deafness And Head Noises If you ..have catarrhal deafness, or head noises, caused by catarrh, or if phlegm drops in your throat, secure proper treatment at once. Sprays, salves and Inhalers may bring tem porary relief, but permanent results can only come from a constitutional treatment that will expel the catar rhal poison from your system. Get from Jarmin Ac Woods or your druggist 1 oz. of Parmlnt (Double Strength). Take th'le home and add 4 pint hot water and a little sugar. Take a tablespoonful four times a day; clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy, mucous stop dropping. All sufferers from catar rhal deafness or head noises need the simple, pleasant, inexpensive Parmlnt treatment. . Dorothy Leonard i Marlon Ham rick, Ct. Point Venlta Anderson .... Mollle Brown ,, Shirley Offord - Alice Parnsworth Loleta Bennett , Dorothy Shaw ,-..,.,..,,,., Ruth Demorest , Chrystlne Pearson . father! ne Stewart . Helen Stewart Oenevleve Brown ,. Dorothy Reynolds Sally Roberts Prances Sparrow . Erlene Taylor, Ruch Dorothy Lee Pearl Rhodes Peggy Glnn Viola Strong Louise Laugheaoj, Jacksonville Alice Walton, Jacksonville Bernedlne Arnold, Jacksonville Norma Gordon, Ashland Prances Hess. Ashland ... 1.000 1.000 1.800 1.000 -.1.000 1,000 1,000 1.000 1.400 1.000 1.200 4.200 1.500 12.400 8,500 1.100 35,400 1,100 1,600 8.500 7.000 1,200 1.000 1.000 , 1,000 1,000 Beth Joy, Ashland Prances Splndler, Ashland Marie Woodson, Ashland Doris Conger ... - - Mary Polly. Ashland -.- Katbertne Applegate - Elizabeth Applegate .......... Marcel la Smyth Goldle Hlgdon . Marguerite McAllister Ruth Boussum Evelyn Leonard Margaret Burroughs , Tbelma Heard Ruth Me use 1 Louise Elrod Billy Ranney Josephine Power . Evlyne McEee Winifred Jones Edna Newbry, Talent Jean Chamberlain .. Jean Swlgart . - Oracle Wakefield. Jacksonville Frances Wakefield, J'ksonvllle Virginia Pick, Jacksonville - 1.000 1,000 1.000 1.000 1,000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1300 96,300 8,100 1.000 1,000 10,600 11,000 1,200 1,000 1,000 1.000 1.000 8,400 0.000 1.000 1.000 1,100 4,600 PAY THE BALANCE DUE . on this like new $625 GRAND Take over this almost new baby grand for the balance due $203 over half paid. Trade in your upright piano or other musical Instruments s t a r t payments In 30 days--2 a week ig ' Pay 4 .A Only J?) PIANO SALE Week Choice of six good used pianos, sold at 4350 to $600 new. Just the piano for a beginner. Come early for best selection. Our usual guarantee and exchange privilege. Prices start at 969. Pay tl a week. CLINE PIANO CO. Open Nights. Largest Coast Distributors Main and Riverside. Sparta Bldg., Medford OleU Rogers 168,SOO Marie Rlgdon, Ashland . 1.000 Lucille Gordon. Ashland. 1.000 Prances Cramer, Ashland 1.000 Maxlne Miller. Ashland l.ooo Florence Bellinger, Ashland l.ooo Virginia Crandall, Ashland 1.00U Geraldlne Thompson l.ooo HERE'S THAT QUICK TO STOP A COLD Take Bayer Aspirin according to direc tions in package. Dri Full Glass of Water. If throat is sore, crush and dissolve 3 Bayer Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of warm water and gargle accord ing to directions. Almost Instant Relief In This Way uine Bayer Aspirin Tablets dis solve with speed and completeness, leaving no irritating particles or grittiness. Get a box of 12 or bottle of 24 or 100 at any drug store. The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. i It is recognized as the QUICK EST, safest, surest way. For it will check an ordinary cold almost as fast as you caught it. Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, see that you get the real BAYER Aspirin Tablets. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Gen- Ask your druggist about the recent price reduction on the 100 tablet size Bayer Aspirin, "TPs J A V NO TABLETS ARE GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN WITHOUT THIS CROSS Unusual Bargain In Antiseptics at Local Druggists Local druggists are Introducing a new oral Antiseptic msde by the mak ers of Vlcks VapoBub. It Is called Vlchs Voratone Antiseptic Of course, the only real proof of Its quality and economy Is actual use To make this proof possible, a special trial sire has been prepared. It con tains 3 '4 ounces a 35o Talus. It price, while the limited supply last. Is only 10c. You can use Vtcka Antiseptic, in jour customary way for bad breath, as a gargle, mouth-wash, or antlaeptl, lotion; and for all the other custom ary antiseptic uses. Born in a depression year, Vlckt Antiseptic is priced accordingly. Til? regular sIm, large 10-ounce bottle a uiual 7 fie value la only Sflc. Utah GOAL Fence Lump with free kindling Per Ton Hertford Fuel Co. Tel f)St 12 UlllllUlll.ll.i...,.,!,,,,!,,. HERE'S THE BIG BARGAIN BASEMENT SHOE SALE You've WAITED For Tomorrow We're Going to - Filter papers in each tin 'saves you 3$ per Ihj .It is absolutely impossible to brew the finest DRIP coffee without. a filter paper. These sell regularly for 15 per 100. But 20 filter papers are in each tin of Schilling DRIP Coffee -and Schilling only. That's 3 per p ound savi I Schilling Drip Latest UoJ.l DRIP Coffe. Maker and 1 lb, of Schilling DRIP Coffee k I ?0 at your grocers '"or send Jl.10 to A Schilling S Com San Francisco. Money back if not satisfied. US , Standard Schilling Coffe as usual. iTTYY TYTI I TfTTt I 1 T TTTTTTT r T T In This Price Smashing HERT SHOE SALE at the M. M. Store Tomorrow BARGAIN TABLES Final Close Out FABRIC OXFORDS, STRAPS AND PUMPS In brown and black, Cuban and me dium hecla. Final close out In this sals 98c PUMPS TIES STRAPS Another BARGAIN TABUS for final close out tlea, pumps and straps which regularly sold to $6.50. Special sale price $1,49 CHILDREN'S SHOES 300 pairs of children's shoes all styles and all sizes from 6's to 3's. Final close out sale price c 9 SCO Pairs of New Spring Styles and Prices White Oxfords White la going to be very popular this season. Here's a special bar gain lot of white sport oxfords, composition soles and leather lin ing. A real basement sale value $1.98 mCs Novelty Oxfoids Youll want a pair of these new style, white kjltte tongue sport oxfords, fashioned of white calf with pack toes. Specially priced for this sale $2.45 Spring Shoes We're offering them at this price for Immediate sale smart two-tone sport oxfords with composition soles, wing tips Both tan and smoked leather combinations, sizes 9's to 8's. Amazing values at mi wmm mmmmeBmnnim n-niwraiiiiiiMiinf'-ri-rHrrjl I I a. a i h i $1.79 Dress Oxfords Here's a real sale value! White dress oxfords with Cuban heels, spec ialty priced tomorrow at $1.98 Comfo-Arch Oxfords Here's a shoe that combines real comfort with smartness Comfo-Arch oxfords and ties with Cuban heels, both browns and blacks, all sizes to $2.45 Here's a chance to make amaz ing savings and secure S. & H. Green Saving Stamps, too! Oxfords and Ties Women's arch shoes In extra-wide widths. These shoes come In black and have smart Cuban heels. Base ment sale special $1.98 M M I SaJ White Elk Oxfords Misses' and children's white elk oxfords with kiltie tongue. Real bargain price $1.29 Infants9 Shoes Bargains In Infants shoes In patents and straps. Smoked elk and tin, excep tional values at this bargain price 39c and 49c Boys' Shoes Boys' heavy work shoes of. trlple-stltched calf with sturdy composition soi?s. All sles from 10 to 6. E.isoment sale price $1.59 Men's Work Shoes Black calf, Blue her style work ahoee, triple stitched with plain toes and compo sition soles. Sizes 6' to 12's. Bargain price $1.49 Boys' Elk Shoes Boys' elk Blucher style shoes with sturdy composi tion soles and full triple stitching. Basement sale $2.45 21 aiAttfc