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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 12, 1934)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUTE, MEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, MARCH 12. 1934. PAGE SEVEN Ml 3k PIP Read every ad on this puge . . . jou will probably find exactly the thlni you ivant to boy or sell . -. . " H Isn't there, adver tlie . . . It's inex pensive, ellectltel RATES Per word first Infection (Minimum 35c) Cacb additional Insertion. mr word .10 (Minimum 10c) Per line per month, without copy changes HM Phone 75 FOR WANT ADS LOST AND FOUND CASH REWARD For Information leading to recovery of Roll Past. red, balloon tired bicycle stolen Sun day on Queen Anne. Tel 459-Y. LOST If dog missing, call 1516. WANTED MALE HELP, BOYS WANTED To do pleasant, edu cational work afternoons and Sat urdays. Good pay. Ages preferred: 13 to 14. Apply by letter to J. T. cere Mall Tribune. WANTED Permanent, experienced wagon distributor, with truck oper ating in this territory, for fast sell ing line of cookies, crackers. Good commission. State experience, ref erences, and financial condition. Ap ply Box 110 '4. mourns MAN Age 18-4S. to qualify In Retail Merchandising Field and Govern ment Work. Experience not essen tial. Man selected trained. Per sonal Interview by writing Box 44. this paper. ' W ANTED-MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Small wood range. 530 So. C entral. WANTED To borrow aiooo to S2000. Gilt-edge security. Local. Box 11550, care Tribune. FURNITURE re-upholstered. Phone 989-R. Trilbault. WANTED Truckload of household goods from San Francisco or vicinity before April 1. Call 315. EMPTY furniture van returning from San Francisco last of month wants load from there or points en route. Hawley Transfer. Phone 1044-X. WANTED TO BUY 10-ton mill or more, crusher, amalgamator. Advise price and where can be seen. 417 Davis Bldg., Portland. Ore. WANTED Donations of used cloth ing for relief purposes. The Salva f.on Army. Phone 358, ill E. Main. WANTED 2nd hand goods and Junk. Pat's, 1506 Prune St. Phone 547-L. FURNITURE re-upholstered In ex change for what have you. Phone 869-R. Thlbault. WANT TO BUY 1929 Ford. Must be cheap. .333 W. and. WILL care for elderly sick people In my home. Phone 437-X. WANTED Household goods, stoves. 4 tools or what have you. Medford Bargain House, 27 N. Grape St. Tel. 1062. JUNK WANTED We pay cash for JUNK BATTERIES AND RADIATORS. ALUMINUM. BRASS, COPPER and Junk of (11 descriptions. MEDFORD BARGAIN HOUSI 37 Nol Grape. Tel. 1063. WANT TO RENT, with or without house. 10 to 30 acres orchard and alfalfa ground. Box 3399. Tribune WANTED Raw fura. hides, pelts and wool. Joe Konop. 120 So. Central. Across from Montgomery Ward 2o WE PAY CASH For rsw furs, hides, pelts, wool and mohair. MEDFORD BARGAIN HOUSE 37 N Orape St. Phone 1062 WANTED Fire hundred ewes. Ad dress 3334. care Mall Tribune. FOR RENT HOUSES VrOR RENT Fum-iahed house. Inquire 105 No. Oakdale. FOR RENT 433 No. Holly. 608 So. Ivy. 874 E. 9th. 60 No. Peach. 1st Insurance Agency, H H. Brown Tel 105, after 61670. COMPLETELY FURNISHED 3-room house: elec. refrigerator and range and oil burner. Inquire 003 South Riverside. FOR RENT Hornet, furnished or unfurnished. Brown St White. HOUSES 110. 113 50 and 615. water paid; wood ranee- Phone 105. FOR RENT APARTMENTS I 3-ROOM apt., downstslrs. Bertlett. FOR RENT Apt. 525 No. Riverside APARTMENTS FOR RENT 4-room. completely furnished, steam-heated apartment; equipped with Frigid sire. electric range and washer. Rnt. $.17 50 witriout garage. If you are looking for the best call at 135 N. Holly and look this over. COMFORTABLY furnished apartment Living room with fireplace: large dining room, kiteheneue. drewing room "and bathroom; hot and cold .iter. Hi am beat and lights fur n:hed ReiAonibls rent. Apply at Mail Tr.ju-e. FOR RENT APARTMENTS 3-ROOM turn. apt. for rent. 329 N Ivy. CABINS, as mo. 445 So. Front. FOR RENT ROOM BOARD FOR heated sleeping rooms call 1399-L ATTRACTIVE rooms 404 S. Grape. BOARD AND ROOM at 716 S Mala Rates very moderate. FOR RENT FURNISHED ROOMS ROOM for rent at 375 South Central. Phone 379-J. FOR RENT Beautiful room with pri vate bath, oil burner with hot water radiation: privileges of large yard with cool ahade In summer. Refer ences required. Mrs. Bert Anderson, 1501 W. Main. FOR RENT Large front room, close In: hot and cold water and shower 30 S. Fir. FOR RENT MISCELLANEOUS LAND FOR RENT 10 acres, best soil in the valley, close In on paved highway; suitable for corn, truck garden, etc.; water paid. Phone 726-W or call at 922 Reddy Ave. MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS A NICE assortment of good used pianos, $47.00 and up. Some like new. See Saturday, 111 No. Fir. FOR EXCHANGE FOUR wheel trailer almost new. Will sell or trade for cow. 835 North Main Street, Ashland. FOR TRADE Set of elr wheel and tires for Standard 18 Inch wheel & tlrea. Wlllsie Prultt at 56 North Riverside. FOR SALE or TRADE Purebred Jer sey bull. Young, gentle. Want Guernsey. Phone C. A. DeVoe. FOR TRADE Model T truck wood truck. What have you? Mrs. Moore, 1 mile south Talent on highway. FOR SALE OR TRADE White electric sewing machine for light seden Box 638. Tribune. FOR EXCHANGE REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE Six-room Oakland, Cal residence for Medford Box 877, 622 N. Central. SALE OR TRADE: For what have you? 3 lots In Grants Pass. Frank R. Myers, Central Point. Phone lll-XX. BARGAIN FOR SALE 80-A. relin quishment, trade for truck: 10 A free water, bottom lajid. small pay ment; 3 '4 A., new modern house, large hen house, garage, easy terms, 3 miles to courthouse; 3 Jersey fam ily cows, one fresh In 10 days. See Owner, Ed Bechtel, Myers Lane. FOR TRADE Willamette valley farm. 300 A., $15,000. Want river bottom farm near Medford of equal value. Box 11744. Tribune.' FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 5 acre tract on Redwood highway, 4!4 miles from Grants Pass. Price $350. Terms or cash and good car. -L. B. McKinnls, Wonder, Ore. $2100 NEVER bought such value as this 6 -room modern, 4-bedroom bungalow, with basement, city water, 4 lota, wonderful view, at edge of city. Practically your own ter. ss. Arthur E. Lalng, Real Es tate, 19 No. Bartlett. Tel. 1496. FOR SALE OR RENT Reasonable. 6 A. free soli, small house, city water, electric" lights. I mi. from Medford. Phone 865-X. WHEN you think of real estate, think of Brown & Whtie. LARGE LOT Fruit and nut troes. excellent soil Sacrifice (250. Write Box 56. Mall Tribune. FOR SALE DOGS PETS PEDIGREED Roller Canaries. Breed era. Phone 202, Jacksonville. Mrs Nellie Finney. ROLLER canaries reasonable. 523-J-2 WANTED Heavy work horse. Isaacs, first place end Radio Station. FOR SALE Part Guernsey heifer, fresh with helfeT calf.' cheap. R. F. Dean Ranch, Central Point. FOR SALE Work and riding horses. Medford Riding Academy. Phone 838-R. FOR SALE OR TRADE Bred sows, feeder pigs; also Jersey bull. 13 months. W. W. Large. Williams. wre. FOR SALE Team of mules Henry Kerby. Talent. FOR SALE POULTRY AND EGGS WHITE MINORCA hatching egg. P.. u. ijoiiano. central point. RED setting eggs. Phone 4-F-4. FOR SALE Russell's baby chicks, all breeds. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Plymouth Rock eegs, 40e per setting S. A. Leaverton, Row Lane. PURE Bronte toms. cockeran'a price stock (5. Jesse Nell. Rt 1. Ashland FOR SALE-AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE 1924 Bulck coach. John Darby, Route 1. OOOD USED CARS Chrvsler and Plymouth Trade In. 1930 Ford Model A 3-door Sedan. 1933 Ford Model B 2 -doer Sedan. 1911 Chrysler Sedan. lf30 Bulrk Coupe. 1Q27 Chev. landau Sedan. 1978 Chrysler Coupe. 1927 Hudson Coarh. Watch this Ad. Dally for New Trade Ins. ARMSTRONG MOTORS. INC. 88 N. Riverside. Chrysler and Plymouth Deilers. FOR SALE '29 Ford truck. Ftntnre Co ssy Make your bid. 132 S. Riverside. FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES SPECIAL VALUES IN USED CARS 1933 Chev. Deluxe Coupe. 1930 Bulck DeLuxe Sedan. 1931 Studehaker Sedan. 1929 Ponttec Coach. 1930 Ford Roadster. T-model Tudor, fine shspe. 150.00. Hup Roadster, licensed. 430.00. SANDERSON MOTOR CO. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS. HAY FOR SALE 1 mile So. Medford. L. F. Belknap. Phone 41-J-l. FOR SALE Spray rig. Z. F. Arney, mile S. Talent, Route 1. Box 145. FOR SALE Dodder free non-Irrigated alfalfa seed. E. B. Lucas, Beagle. FOR SALE Two old English Inden- tures, one Latin 1708, the other English 1730. Vellum with excellent hand work. Arthur 8. Taylor, 349 N. Main, Ashland. FOR SALE. EXCHANGE OR RENT Standard electric 500-egg Incubator. Tel. 358-J. O. V. Myers. BARGAINS IN USED TOOLS Tractora Plows Disc Sprayers Garden Seeder. HUBBARD BROS., INC. Tel. 231. FOR SALE 260-egg Incubator, also 15-Ioot cedar boat. 126 No. Grape. FOR SALE Bean sprayer, 300-gallon, perfect, $200. Room 315, Medford note;. FOR SALE One-row horse drawn corn planter, J. A. Manke, Rt. 1 Medford. . U FOR SALE Newtown apples, cheap. win deliver, pnone 132-L. FOR SALE Maytag washer, $22.50; 370 ft. ,-ln. cable. &,c per It.: In cubators from $4.00 to $15.00; cook stoves from $7.00 to $18.00. Trade truck for wood or what have you $65 Welsbach automatic gaa water neater. $20. oerryaaie, 2nd Hand Store, 1603 No. Riverside. FOR SALE 700 boxes good Newtown apples; orchard run. 35c box. W. H Watt. Phone 468-R-3. Medford, Ore. FOR 8ALE Placer claim: furnished cabin. See G. E. Carpenter, mile west Phoenix. FOR SALE Early seed potatoes; Net ted Gems reasonable. Tel. 921-X. FOR SALE Ferric citrate, sine sul fate, grafting wax. Iron sulfate, Baume testers. Monarch feed Co. FOR SALE Recleaned Kanota oats, $1.50 cwt. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE White Gold Seed Pota toesearliest white potato grown. Monarch Seed Co. FOR SALE Improved, clean ben beardless barley, $1.25 cwt. at ranch or storage, Medford. E. E. Foes, Talent. FOR SALE Tame oat hay or alfalfa. - Fred, Barneburg. Barneburg Ranch. FOR SALE Success beardless barley seed. Fred Barneburg. Barneburg Ranch. FOR SALE Alfalfa hay, baled or loose. Local, non-Irrigated alfalfa seed. Tel. 523-J-4. Otto Nleder meyer. IRON BEDSTEAD, springs, mattress, complete. $8. 315 Cottage. FOR SALE -Used sewing machines, all makes: terms if desired. All makes rented and repaired. White Sewing Machine Co.. 34 N. Bartlett. FOR SALE Furniture, chairs, table, beds. etc. 714 Welch St., off W. Jackson. FOP SALE Fordson, ear corn, water lilies and prune. Phone 7-F-14. SAND, gravel, sediment, teaming, plowing. Pbone 913-J. HAY. wheat, barley, rolled or ground C. A. DeVoe. Phone 623-J-2. A RAINBOW GARDEN of glads. 100 large No. 1 bulbs, not less than 40 varieties. Value $5 or more for 2 50. One Jumbo Plcardy free. P. H Reum. 923 South Oakdale. MISCELLANEOUS MEDFORD School ot Beauty Culture will open Saturday, 9 a. m. Phone 84 for an appointment. NOTICE TRUCK OWNERS If you haven't got P. U. C. plates, get your application in for your P. L. and P. D. Insurance at once. Long or short haul. Cargo, collision, fire and theft. Association of Commercial Truck Owners. Phone 1380. Room 13. Palm Bldg. FURS cleaned, repaired and glased. Coats rellned. Medford CaAh and Carry Cleaners. Phone 1700. THOROUGHBRED stallion service Box 139. Spring street. MINING PROPERTIES If you have fiuycity to wen or wisn to ouy. ee Geo. S. Bsrton. 33 N. Grape St. PAuMIST Truthful advice on busi ness, love, marriage 323 Kennel Be rrydale. INCOME TAX Let me prepare your income tax return. Year of experi ence. Both State and Federal are now due. Fred L. Colvlg, f25 a Central. Phone 735-J. I BUY Rold and lend money Cecil Jennings, corner Front and Main. DENTISTRY Dr. Main. H Gove. 335 B BUSINESS DIRECT0HY Abstract Jtl KSON CO. ABSTRACT CO. Abstract of Title and Title Insurance Tn only complete Title System in Jackson County. MURRAY ABSTRACT CO. Abtrel of Title. Room 3 and S. No 3? North Central AveM upstair. L xpert Window Cleaners LET OEOROE DO IT Tel. 1172 Holme Cleaning. Floor Waxing. Ori ent) Rug Cleaning specialty Painting and Peperhanging M. A. BLISSPiintmg and paper-1 fearing. XeL 649-W, n ,3 8. Orape, BUSINESS DIRECTORY Chimney Sweep. UEORGE EATON Chimney sweeping ana tree topping, an no. ironi &t Telephone 1192-J. CADS TRANSFER & STORAGE CO. Office 1015 No. Central. Pbone 316 Pricei right, dervu guar an wed HAWLEY TRANSFER Eipert pack era and mover Special llTe.it: moving equipment. Prloea right 019 North Riverside. Phone 1044-X KE'NKINQ TRUCKING O. Tranv fer and storage We haul anything at a reason a ole price. Ill No Pir Street. Phone 333. Nursery Stock "PLANT FILBERTS FOR BIO PROF ITS" Prices smashed on high qual ity fruit trees, shrubs, rosea and berry plant-9. Drive to W. B. Bar nunVs on Paclflo highway, 3 miles south of Mciford or Phone 851-R-a CARLTON NURSERY CO., CARL TON. OREGON. Money to Lend WE LEND MONEY ON FURNITURE AND LATE MODEL AUTOS. Three per cent per month on un ' paid balance. No other charges. See W. E. Thomas. 45 South Central, ground floor Craterlan Theater Bldg. State License No S-157. Job Printing MAIL TRIBUNE JOB DEPARTMENT Best equipped plant in southern Oregon, Printing of all kinds; book binding; loose leaf ledgers and blanks, billing systems, duplicating ca&h sales slips and everything in the printing lines. 38-30 N Grape Phone 76. LEGAL NOTICES Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State cf Oregon, for Jackson County. IDA H. WILSON, Plaintiff, vs. S. I. RICHARDSON and BEULAH RICHARDSON, his Wife, FRANK WILLARD TOWNS END and MARY IRENE TOWNSEND, his Wife, MED FORD NATIONAL BANK, a bank ing corporation, PACIFIC FRUIT & PRODUCE CO., an Oregon Corpora, tlon. Defendants. TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND ANTS: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON. You and each of you are hereby summoned and required to ap pear In the above entitled court and cause and answer the complaint of piaintur on file herein within four weeks from March 12th. 1934, the date of the first publication of this summon. You are further notified that if you fall to answer the com plaint within said time the plaintiff wm apply to tne court for the relief demanded In said complaint, a suc cinct statement of which is as fol low : Decreeing that there Is due to nlaln- tlff on the note described In her com plaint the sum of $4500.00 with in terest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from February 7, 1933, together with 160.00 as attorney's fees for the prosecution of this suit and the other costs and disburse ments hereof, and that said amount Is a first, specific and prior lien upon the following described tract of land situate, lying and being in Jackson uounty, uregon, to-wit. Commencing at a stake set in the county road on the south line of D. li. c. No. 54 from which the south west corner of said claim bears West 11.25 chains in Township 37 South, Range 3 West of the W. M.. and run ning thence East along the south boundary of said claim 8.40 chains; thence north 17.90 chains; thence west 8.40 chains; thence south 17.90 Mail Tribune Daily ACROSS Solution of Discount Fitting Eloquent ' speaker Take away Fodder pit Word of sorrow Boy Appear Dispatched Congealed water Polecat Old French coin Com motion Skill Assumed nam Sacrsd Lease again Prevent Thrlct: prefix Parcel v Before Greek pott and 4 player of ths lre Metric meas ures Conceitedly smart and Rut 42. Roman road 46, Philippine aavar 47. Legal claim 41. Roman gar ment Alluvial ds pojltt at river mouth M. Fores bX. Revoke a lecaey 14. Comuulilon gPj D ggD 1 E p S E R R A ORALE.il, NN1 jotUE A N PAR LEYS !9 A RiL j N G APULE NEE SAI DPEWE gP I E R HOD p A S E AN G I. E F U RIG E 1 B Afcl 6O N s T A R Vpr A NIgMP OTP llkSpPARlMEffi P A RIaMG UM B 0 W6 R BIS E. G Om? A S jE AlTgg CAT I a IE - i 5E i 2 1 ANtiAII NfegE MUMSU L G E lIa1stisdy1es1pe"e1d 2 3 4 F rE15 5 I? IO I 2 W WM' I !1ZZSZZ" Iftlll IF 1 25 2k 17 26 Iff;7 3" 1 1 j 1 1 f L 31 31 33 IT 37 ; 36 j? IT -f. S -v. '' ';,. 'M 42 43 AA AS fa7' ; n So SI SZ 53 1 1 M I llr 1 1 Tr ehatna to the place f beginning, ill in aatd D. L. C. No. M. said township and range, containing 15 acres, more or less, prior and superior to any right, title. Interest, lien or claim ol the defendants, or any of them, there in or thereto. Order in s and adjudging that satd premises be sold in the manner pro vided by law for the satisfaction ol (id decree, and that the purchaser at said sale be entitled to pooAe&sion of said premise free, barred and lore cloeed of any right, title, lien, inter est or claim of the defendant, or any of them, therein or thereto ex cept the right of redemption pro 'ed by law, and for such other and fur ther relief as the court may deem Just and equitable. Date of the order for service of this summon by publication la March 9th, 1934. PORTER J. NBFF. OTTO J. FROHNMAYER, Attorneys lor Plaintiff. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon in and for Jackson County. JACKSON COUNTY BUILDING AND LOA N ASSOCIATION , a n Oregon building and loan corporation. Plaintiff, vs. SYLVIA O. MILLARD and D. E. MILLARD, wife and husband: Z EL LA PEAKE and CHARLES F. PF.AKE, wife and husband, CHARLES A. WING and ELIZA BETH S. WINO. husband and wife; WALTER C. LILLIE and IDA L. LILLIE. husband and wife; also nil other persons or parties unknown claiming any right, title, estatj, lien or interest in or to the real es tate described herein, Defendants. TO: ZELLA PEAKE and CHARLES F. PEAKE. wife and husband; also all other persons or parties unknown claiming any. right, title, estate. Hen or Interest in or to the real estate de scribed herein, IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, you and each of you are hereby required to appear and answer the Complaint of tho Plaintiff on rile herein against you, or otherwise plead thereto, within four (4) weeks from the date of the' first publication of this Summons. You are hereby notified that if you fall to appear and answer the Com plaint ot the Plaintiff as required herein, or otherwise plead thereto. Plaintiff will take a Decree against you for the relief demanded In said Complaint, which is succinctly statpd as follows: A Judgment and decree foreclosing the Plaintiffs mortgage on property situated ana being in the County of Jackson, Stat of Oregon, and de scribed as follows; to-wit: Beginning at a point 32.15 chains North and 181.5 feet West of the corner to sections 19, 20, 39 and 30 in Township 37 South, Range One (1) West of the Willamette Meridi an, and running thence West 172 feet for a true point of beginning: thence run west 86 feet; thence North 506.5 feet; thence east 86 feet; thence south 506,3 feet to the place of beginning, being lot 9 of the Winn Subdivision unrecorded. Containing one acre more or less. Cross -Word Puzzle Saturday's Puzzle 7. Mlsehlsvous trick I. Remainder P. My. tie Hindu word 10. Certificate of Insurance 11. Maka amply 12. Interpret: archaic 17. The preaont church aea lun 23, Qerman phil osopher 24. Old cloth measure 28. Mountain la Alaaka 26. Turned a aid 27. Too great a aul 29. Air. comb. form 20. Compass point 33. Wrath 33. Held away 35. Faithful 31. Wrong 29. Saltpeter 40. Opera by Verdi 4!. Cio forcibly 43. Lncarated 41. Urge on 45. Biam of Mfbl W. Symbol for tellurium II. The Greek N DOWN 1. EniMh phytic Ian who traced ma laria to the moa'julfo :. CHy In Penn aylvanta 1 l.art-e bundle 4. Minute pnrtlclea . An far i. Act of rubbing out Together with all water right p. I purtenant the; to or to become ap- purtenant thereto. I This Summons Is published In the' Medford Mall Tribune, Medford, Ore- I gon. by Order of the Honorable H. D. Norton, judge or tne aoove eniitiea Court, duly made on the 9th day of March, 1934. The date of the first publication of Judith Lane by JEAXXE BOWMAX Chapter on PERFECT STENOGRAPHER inir on her known hntter in hlnw nn a ravl . rAtfttat.ratata-ratatatine . . . and her hat . . . maybe she could buy a magazine big Hashed from lobby to curb . . feot Holft hlno and nprkv ... trnnH nn hpr hnv ishlv cut black hair . . . ratatat . . . color made aer eyes iook aitnosi diuo m- stead of grey .. .tins! . With quick Bngeri ln whisked the sheet from the roller, slid It across the desk to her employer. Tom. Bevins, switched on his desk light with one hand and with the other reached for the telephone which whirred Impatiently. "Bevins Construction Company, Miss Lane, speaking. Oh yes. Jack- sen, I'll tell him. You'd hetter park the car and meet him In the lobby." She turned from the telephone. "Jackson's here with jour car, Mr. Tom." The big head with Its shock of iron gray hair turned with reluc tance "Tell him to go back home. I've got three hours' work ahead of me. I'll call h.m when I'm ready." "But Mr. Tom, you're acheduled to go to the Clement dinner. Mrs. Bevins called this afternoon and asked me to see that yru left here by fire o'clock. It's five fifteen now." "Confound the Clements. Linen and chatter and not a thing 111 for a man to eat I'll be to almighty glad when we get Into the field and I can have real grub oft an oil cloth table cover . . . says tbat reminds me, take this letter." Judith reached for her note book, snapped a rubber band over the first pages, chose a finely pointed pencil and waited. "Dale, Lanipere and Morrison . . . Better address this to Lampere, make It Informal. Dear ... ah, dear Morton: I spoke to you some time ago about the Rio Diablo project. "In case you've forgotten (strike that out). To refresh your memory, about ten years ago, a fly-by-night realty company conceived the Idea ot damming the Rio Diablo, a tem peramental Ftream In south-west Texas, north snd east ot the Rio Grande, a particularly desolate re gion. "The Idea of the dam was all right, I have ro doubt but what Irri gation and controlled water supply will turn It Into one ot the leading citrus trult sections ot the world. However, after they'd talked a lot ot poor suckers (strike thst out) homeseekers Into Investing their money in the land; had built a rail road spur Into the country to carry these poor . . . ah, homeseekers. there, they decamped. "When the affair (put in another word for affair. Judy) came to my notice I made a quick trip down there. I foum about a hundred ot these homeseekers still there be cause they didn't bav any place else to go. They bad sold their old homes to Invest In this desert land and were there grubbing a mere ex istence out of the soli. The spur had been abandoned and their condition was pitiable "I decided, after my survey, that I would build thst dam, out of my I figtVt this Summon 1 the 12th day of! March, 1914. BOGOS and BENGTSON. i Attorneys for plaintiff, 126 East Main Street, Medford. Oregon. , A request from a Kansas City fire (company lor a wheel chair for a paralyzed woman of their acquaint PRING rain pelteu at the office windows of the Bevins Construction Company. It sloBhed on the big B, ran in a trickling stream through C-o-n and C-o-ni, sheeted the sill, then shot eighteen stories to the asphalt pavement. Judith Lane looked at the window even n. her finsers beat a ratatat-ratata-ratatat- typewriter. She should have than to wear a brand new suit on a morning when the wind was bound storm . . . she d have to call a enough to cover it while she . ratata . . . such a duck of a so few hats these days looked own capital, It necessary, and with this end In view will leave here June first with my engineers to make a complete survey of the project. "I am going to want legal protec tion every step of the way. for it Is possible that the original promoters, finding they may make some more money out of that country, will try to horn In (you'll have to find som other word tor horn In, Judy). "I am going to want someone from your ofllce. either you or one of your partners, to accompany me on tbl trip tor the purpose of searching titles, etc. My secretary. Miss Lane, will he available tor any steno graphic work in connection with the project both here and In the Held and will be familiar with all details pertaining to the expedition, should you call at the office during my tem porary absence. "I will appreciate your Immediate attention to this matter and wish to know at your earliest convenience, which one of you (better make that which member ot your Arm) will ac company the expedition " Judith snapped the band on her book "Mr. Tom, you must go on home!" she entreated. "Not 'tli I sign that letter," he countered stubbornly. With resignation the girl turned to the typewriter and tent her An gora flying over the keys, Ratatat-ratata-ratatatlngl The margin bell echoed the final period, and again a letter whisked across the polished surface of the desk and again the telephone whirred. "Bevins Construction Compaay, Miss Lane, speaking." "Really," drawled a f-mlnlne voice. "Miss Lane, this It Miss San ford ot the Houston Tribune. Will you have dinner with me this eve ning?" Judith's Hps, which had curved Into a smile at the sound ot Clia San ford's voice, framed a quick answer . . . "Delighted." "Watt a minute," warned the other, "there's a Joker In this Invi tation. The dinner Is on the Tribune, I'm to Interview a perfect stenog rapher." "I'll eujoy that," returned Judith quickly. She'd been with Clla on other assignments. "Who is she? "You," answered Clla and before Judith could protest, "meet me In the lobby of the Itlco at six thirty." Judith turned from the telephone with such an expression ot bewilder ment that Berlna, looking up from the letter be had Just signed, laughed. "What's wrong. Judy?" "Nothing In particular," she fal tered, 'only Clla Sanford said she was going to Interview a perfect stenographer this evening and that I was" she paused, Tom Bevins, ance, published In a morning news paper, brought offer of eight by 9 o'clock the same morning. A new department tore in Johan nesburg, South Africa, W air-condl-tloned and house 11 sections, In cluding meat, fresh fish and dairy departments. Big Tom," as his men affectionately called him, bad flushed to the roots of bis hair. "1 let you in tor that," he con fessed. "A discussion of stenogra phers cams up at the Engineers luncheon today. Kline ot the Amal gamated said there was no such a thing as a perfect stenographer, be cause such a person would have to have the brains ot an Einstein, the patience of a Job and the endurance of a Robot- Judith," there was small-boy de fiance In his voice, "I not only ad- mited you possessed these qualities. bragged about It. Carlson ot the Tribune sat across the table from us and he must hare listened In." Ani to think you're noted. Inter nationally, tor your accuracy." chldod Judith. "What would happen it you exaggerated on a bridge spe cification like that' I should ask tor a raise, on the strength of what you've said, but you're already giving me more than I'm worth, so please. Big Tom, do go on home be fore Mrs. Bevins gets after me." "Oh all right." He arose, walked slowly to his locker, pulled a slouch hat over his hair at a defiant angle and umbled out, slamming the door behind him. The moon-faced clock on the tiwer ot the Tribune leered at Judith. Big Tom would he late and Mrs. Bevins would nagatblm. Poor, Big Tom. It would be a relief to ge'. blm Into the field again where he could re lax. Mrs. Bevins didn't seem to real ise tbat a man couldn't work at white best all day, then dine and play cards all night. Ot course she was considerably younger. She ad mitted being forty-two; Big Tom was past sixty. Net that this was any ot her bust-, ness. Judith reminded Judith. She waa only his stenographer . . . per fect stenographer, dinned the mem ory ot Clla'a voice. She laughed. To think that In this city ot three hun dred thousand, with Hi usual ratio . ot stenographers, she ahould have been called the perfect one. Five years ago she would have classified a stenographer as some sort ot an unskilled business do mestic She waa in collegr then. In tent upon fitting herself to become a civil engineer and her father' partner. She had all ot the practical education necessary, having trav eled with him line her mother'! death, when she wm twelve, but had wanted to perfect her technical training. She bad foregone the pleaaura ot a South American trip tor this pur pose, and one year before her course waa completed, Emtl Lane suc cumbed to a slow tropical fever which bad been robbing him ot both life and savings. Tom Bevins was In Austin when the dean broke the news to Judith. When he learned ot the passing of his friend and early partner, be hur ried to the girl and after ber grief had lubstded. helped her readjust her lit. He admired her Indepen dent altitude, and when she refused financial help, suggested she use the meager lite Insurance aa tuition at a business college where she could be speedily supplied with steno graphs training which would en able her to care for hsrselt. Equipped with a diploma and de termination, the progressed from position to position nntll Big Tom's secretary married, and she was called to take her place. tCopjrtpht. 1911, sy tanne Bowman; Tomorrow, Judith's Ufa, a man comas Inte riOeU;