Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 25, 1934, Page 7, Image 7

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    JIEDFOTCD MUIi TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAT 25, 1934.
PAOE SEVEN
Society and Clubs
Edited by IrVa Fewell
Margaret Dugai, Eusebe Dallalre,
Madelyn Chapman, Christine Devaney,
Katherlne Weston, Catherine Louie.
LEAD SOCIETY
Jllssw Foss, Ilohman
Entertained Thursday
Miss Helen Norrls was hostess last
evening at her home, Brookbank or
chard, entertaining with a buffet sup
per and linen shower In honor of
Miss E. Marie Pots and Miss Naomi
Hohman, whose engagements were
announced last week.
The tables were decorated with
lovely cut flowers and yellow can
dles, and about the rooms were ar
ranged bouquets of wild syrlnga. As
sisting the hostess was Mrs. Ray
Lenox, who poured.
Bridge was enjoyed during the
evening with prize for high score go
ing to Miss Foss, low to Miss Louise
Hollenback and traveling prize to
Mrs. Maurlne Duncan.
Invited guests were Misses Foss,
Hohman, Ellow Mae Wilson, Freder
icks Brommer. Gertrude Watzllng,
Laura Drury, Harriet Baldwin. Hol
lenback, Winifred Andrews .and
Mesdames Robert Norrls, Maurlne
Duncan, Hobart Price and Lenox.
Bridge Luncheon
At Chateau du Comte
Mrs. Charles Glenn Smith, Mrs.
Robert Norrls and Mrs. Donald Gray
were hostesses at a bridge luncheon
yesterday, at the Chateau du Comte
on the Pacific highway, Inviting forty
guests for the afternoon.
Prizes at bridge were awarded Mrs.
R. W. Sleeter, first; Mrs. B. L. Lage
son, second, and Mrs. Dwlght H.
Flndley, third.
Bible Class
Elects Officers
Thursday afternoon the Woman's
Bible class of the First M. B. church
held Its monthly meeting at the home
of Mrs. Holloway on South Peach
street.
Officers were elected for the com
ing year, with Mrs. Holloway a spresl
dent, Mrs. McNary as vice-president,
Mrs. Seversen, secretary; Mrs. Oi!e,
treasurer; Mrs. carder, work; Mr.
Bateman, corresponding secretary.
After the business hour, refresh
ments were served by the hostess,
assisted by Mrs. Cole, closing a pleas
ant afternoon.
The June meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Olle on King s nignway
Altar Society
Meeting Tuesday
St. Ann's Altar society of the Sa-
unort (Tnt-.hnllR rh.irr.Vi will can.
.,.-. I., raaiilnr rtliainPM mentlnn In
the parish hall Tuesday afternoon at
2:30 o clock.
A good attendance la desired. The
society has secured a concession for
lunches during the Diamond Jubilee
and further plans will be made at
the meeting.
League Meeting
At Mrs. Cook's
Southern Oregon League of West
ern Writers attended a call meeting
Thursday evening at the home 61
Mrs. Harvey Cook, 412 South Oakdale
avenue. Plana were made for as
many members as possible to attend
the state convention at Portland. A
social league, was also organized.
Mrs. Simmons Invites
Friends for Bridge
Mrs. E. W. Simmons was hostess to
a party of ladles Monday at her home
on Laurel atreet, entertaining at des
sert bridge. The table was beauti
fully decorated with a centerpiece of
aweet peas and fern. Bouquets about
the rooms were also from Mrs. Sim
mons' garden.
n
' club Entertains
At Card Pnrty
Mothers' club of the Catholic
church entertained at cards Wednes
day evening, with prize for high score
at contract going to Mrs. R. L. Lewis,
and for auction bridge to Mrs. Lee
Hunter. Mrs. John Doe received the
prize at five hundred.
Mr. and Mrs. Mills
Visitors In Medford
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Mills of Fort
land arrived In Medford this morn
ing to be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. I
Charles Voorhles. Mr. and Mrs. Mills
were formerly residents of Medford.
Chorus Practice
Scheduled Tonight -
Jackson County Teachers' ohorus
will meet tonight at 7:30 o'clock for
rehearsal, at the Baldwin Piano shop.
All members of the chorus are urged
to be present.
Interest Growing In
(iarden Ciub Show
In spite of unusual weather con
ditions this year's flower show, spon
sored by the Medford Garden club,
promises to be unusually large and
Interesting. The complete classifica
tion will be published In Sunday's
paper, and every one with flowers to
exhibit, or a clever Idea as to flower,
fruit or vegetable arrangement Is
asked to note It carefully and keep It
for future reference.
Miss Fay Woolsey, county librarian,
Is putting In a display of garden
books and magazines.
The Grants Pass Garden club has
asked for space for a pool and the
Illinois Garden club has promised an
attractive arrangement.
Another new classification this
yoar will be the arrangements of
flowers, fruits or vegetables by men.
There will be an Interesting display
of garden tools by a local merchant.
Other new features will be the ar
rangements of flowers In containers
to match the color of the flowers
used, modernistic arrangements which
the Portland florists please to call
the "California way"; also arrange
ments to demonstrate the standard
color charts used by art classes.
During the recent state federation
meeting of Garden clubs In McMlnn-
ville, flower arrangements were stress.
ed at every meeting. During the
business meeting of the federation
Saturday morning the Medford club
delegates extended an Invitation which
will bring the 1935 convention to Med
ford a year from now. Mrs. Seymour
of Forest Grove was elected state
president at this same meeting.
Business Women Plan
Conference at Yellowstone
Mrs. Leda Parker of Klamath Falls,
president of the Oregon State Fed
eratlon of Business and Professional
Women's clubs, and member of the
Western Council, and Mrs. Martha
Gssch of Portland, state chairman of
the conference committee, will be
delegates from this state to the west
ern and west central regional confer
ences of the national federation at
Yellowstone park, June 18 and 20.
Delegates from Arizona, California,
Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska
Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Washing
ton and Wyoming will attend.
The conference will feature the
distribution problem within America.
proposed roads to stable prosperity,
and kindred subjects In line with
the 10-year objective of the organlz-
atlon.
Mrs. Piche Hostess
Saturday, Bridge Luncheon
Mrs. Al Piche has Invited a group
of friends to the Hotel Medford for
luncheon tomorrow, after which they
will continue to her home. 47 North
Peach street, where bridge will be In
play during the afternoon.
Invited for the affair are Mrs. Mal
sle Dally. Mrs. M. E. Royce, Mrs.
Piatt Andrew, Mrs. Maynard Bush,
Mrs. E. M. Campbell, Mrs. Elder Con
ser and Mrs. T. E. Williams.
Dinner Dance
At Colonial Club -"
A dinner party and dance were
enjoyed at the Colonial club last
evening by members of the staff at
Woolworth'a store here. During the
evening, Charles Spencer entertained
with several delightful piano numbers.
ST.
RECITAL THIS EVENING
Junior department of music at St.
Mary's Academy will present a recital
this evening at 8:15 o'clock In the
auditorium. The program which fol
lows, will consist of several song
groups and piano solos:
"Sallormen" . , Wolfe
Norbert Mtksche, John Jensen,
Leo Mlksche.
"The Band Is Playing Dixie"
"The Robin"
Marguerite Kempke
"Drifting"
'Fishing"
Dolores Dell.
"Gentle Night"
"The Dream Boat" ............
William Gitzen.
"Rose in My Garden" ......
Hello Aunt 8arah" ..,
Phyllis Reye.
Nursery Rhymes
Selected
Grades 1 and 3.
"March of the Toy Soldiers"
"On Roller Skates"
, Kern
Joseph' Doblemeler.
"The Hurdy-Guray- Erb
"At the Zoo"
Patricia Parrell.
"Sing Little Birds" Spauldlng
Walter Clement, Joseph Doblemeler.
"Mirth and Gayety" Kern
"The Prog" Stilwell
Katherlne Weston,
"We Are Little Sailora"
Phyllis Reye, Dolores Dell.
"Witches Dance" Devoux
"Playtime" Aaron
Madelyn Chapman.
"Hanging Gardens" Evans
"Spooks" Eksteln
Walter Clement.
"Dance of Pireflies" Bugbee
"Falling Stars" Williams
Mary Logan.
"Cloud Pictures" Rich
"Old Fashioned Town" Squire
Junior Gins' Chorus.
"Swan Song" Baldwin
"At the Movies" Heller
Catherine Louie.
"Curious Story" Heller
"Plantation Dance".... Grant-Schaffer
Christine Devaney.
5th Hungarian Dance Brahms
Eusebe Dallalre.
"I've Got the Mumps"
Franklin and Green
"Hard Times In Boyland" Eldridge
Junior Boys Chorus.
At the Piano Oracle Lou Ivanhoe,
E
L
An order continuing the grand
Jury, Floyd Rom, Central Plont, fore
man, for the May term of court
starting next Monday, was signed yes
terday by Circuit Judge H. D. Nor
ton. The Jury waa selected for the
February term of court and held one
session.
Criminal matters scheduled to be
presented to the grand Jury are the
lightest In four vears. Two cases are
listed E. L. Fitch and May Murray, I
charged with criminal libel for the
alleged circulation of slanderous and
malicious pamphlets In which the
sanctity of the courts and the in
tegrity of law enforcement were Im
pugned. The pamphlet, with a fore
word said to have been written by
E. H. Fehl, serving four years In state
prison for vote stealing, declared the
65,000 expended by Jackson county
In the ballot theft trials had been
used to pervert witnesses and Juries
and "handle the court.
Fitch Is held In the county Jail.
May Murray Is at liberty on $1000
bonds. Both waived preliminary hear
ings, The offense Is an indictable
misdemeanor, punishable with a max
imum term of one year in the county
Jail and C1000 fine or both.
(Continued xrom page one)
ers Instantly. A second robber fell
wounded. Others, turning out one
blast of lead, dropped their weapons
and fled for the door.
Vigilantes Alert
Already vigilantes, organized and
trained for such emergencies since
two previous raids on their bank,
were swarming toward the bank. Leon '
Lagestee, chief of police of South
Holland, had noticed the strange
car parked at the bank and spread
the alarm. A half dozen special dep
uties rushed to their caches of guns
and ammunition in a neighboring
garage and In the village postofftce.
One of the two fleeing robbers waa
believed to have been wounded, but
with his companion he reached the
automobile and the car lurched Into
high speed, bullets drilling holes
through Its body.
Milton H. Waterman, 38, the cash
ier, describing the holdup, said: "We
were pretty much excited, but we
had all the confidence in the world
in Mr. De Young's marksmanship."
BT. FALLS BEATS
,161015
Butte Falls high school team de
feated the Amercan Legion Juniors
yesterday afternoon, 16 to 15,. In a
10-lnnlng game, the score being tied
In the ninth.
Tun gate for Butte Falls made two
home runs with the bases full, and
Clark, also playing for Butte Falls,
made six hits In the six times he
was at bat.
Llndley, for the Legion Juniors, got
three hits from his four times at bat,
and Ray Lewis of Medford made a
home run In the tenth.
Van Dyke, Lewis and Heath pitched
for Medford and Baylals caught, while
Tungate pitched for Butte Falls and
Conley and King caught.
Although the field was a bit wet,
the boys enjoyed the game, accord
ing to reports.
at high speed. The two officers,
traveling In a police squad car, ap
parently decided to halt the car and
Invest lgte.
Just what happened Is not clear.
The officers' bodies were found
slumped In the front seat of their
car, with a down machine gun slugs
In the neck and head of each. The
attack must have caught them com
pletely by surprise, as the pistol of
each officer was still In its holster
when the bodies were found.
A watchman for a packing com
pany, passing that way about half
an hour after the shooting, discov
ered the squad car with Its cargo of
two dead peace officers.
Policemen leaned today to the the
ory that Dllllnger or his gang was
responsible for the double murder,
but they emphaslbed they had no
proof. The fact that the officers
were shot down aa ruthlessly as Of
ficer O'Malley was last January In
a bank robbery which is generally
credited to Dllllnger, waa one circum
stance leading to the suspicion that
the fugitive desperado, waa Implicated.
ocratlc nomination with 24 votes.
Ed Hollenbeck of Prospect received
the Republican nomination for con-
Anderson of Medford, who won the
Democratic nomination over Howard
McKinney In a hot race by a major-
stable for the Medford district with ; tty of 34.
27 votes. Friends wrote In his name AH constabulary posts In Jackson
on election day. He will oppose Frank county have candidates.
EAST CHICAGO, Ind., May 25.
(AP) Two more police officers are
dead today in the bloody game of
"Get Dllllnger."
In this city where Policeman Wil
liam P. O'Malley was slain January
4 by a man definitely identified as
John Dllllnger, two officers, Martin
O'Brien, 44. and Lloyd Mulvlhlll. 28,
were machine-gunned to death here
last night.
There was no clue today to the
Identity of the killers. Dllllnger, fu
gitive from the Crown Point Jail
where he was held for trial for the
murder of O'Malley, was suspected,
but It was only a suspicion. The
only two men who might have been
able to say positively as to the Iden
tity of the killers were the police
men, and they died instantly.
Policemen Mulvlhlll and O'Brien,
veteran officers who knew Dllllnger
by sight, had been assigned to guard
a road along which it was believed
Dllllnger might travel last night. The
road patrol was established follow
ing word from Indianapolis that a
man believed to be DUlnger had been
seen there yesterday.
Auto Suspected
An automobile believed to have
carried four or five men approached
W. F. Barge of Gold Hill won both
the Democratic and Republican nom
ination for constable of the Gold Hill
district, aa did Tom Currier of Jack
sonville for the Jacksonville district,
according to the official count for
the primary completed yesterday.
R. W, Hall, regular Republican
nominee, received 695 votes, to win
the nomination for the Ashland dis
trict. George Inlow gained the Dem-
Look!
An Old
Favorite
On Sale Saturday at your favorite food store
Beck's Original
Potato Donuts
25c Dozen
BECK'S NEW CORN BREAD IS DIFFERENT
BECK'S . BAKERY
These Hot
Summer Days
A Cool Glass
of Beer and a
ROGUE VALLEY
CHEESE
Sandwich
II' m'
YOU GET WHAT YOU ASK FOR at
Ja ratlin's Cut Rate Drug Store
QUALITY MERCHANDISE . . . CAREFUL, PROMPT SERVICE . . . LOW.
EST PRICES. THESE FEATURES ARE BRINGING NEW CUSTOMERS
TO OUR STORE EVERY DAY.
-DRUGS AT LOW PRICES-
50c
Hinds
Almond
Lotion
39c
For Her Graduation Gift
50c
Phillips
Milk of
Magnesia
36c
35c
Vicks
Vapo-Rub
Salve
27c
A $2.00 value of Seventeen
Toiletries, all for 75c.
15c
Scott
Toilet Tissue
1000 sheets
2 for 15c
OTHER SAVINGS FOR YOU
50o Nydenta Tooth Paste with
2 Gold Fish, Bowl and Gravel,
all for 60c
Pints
USP
Milk of
Magnesia
18c
Z7
Armonds Bouquet Face Powder EOc
25c Noroma Deodorant Pencil Free
...because KRISPY Crackers are baked
extra flaky 1
Make this test for yourself I . . . Gently press
those dainty puffs on a Krispy Cracker! You'll
find them crisp . . . fragile . . . tender in tex
ture! It's your proof that Krispy Crackers are
flakier . . . And that's why Sunshine Krispy
Crackers make soups, salads, cheese and all
sorts of good-things-to-eat taste much better!
KR SPRApCERS
LOOSE-WILES BISCUIT COMPANY, PORTLAND
75c
Meads
59c
Pints
Special
Heavy
Mineral Oil
29c
Pints
Best Quality
Rubbing
Alcohol
15c
85c Kruschen Salts 59tf
35c Sloans Liniment 27
$1.00 Adlerika 79c
Pierce's Fav. Prescription 89
1-in. 5 yards Adhesive Tape 19?
1 lb. Kobi Strip Agar 79
Gallon Sp. Hy. Mineral 0il.$1.49
39c Zip Golf Balls 4 for $1.00
Pints Bay Rum 29
Pints Witch Hazel 29C
$2.50 Renaud's Imported
Perfumes $1.39
1 lb. bars Pure Castile Soap 29
30c Tooth Brushes, 9 2 for 29
50c Ipana or Pebecco Paste 39
15c Putnam Dyes 10? 3 for 27"
CIGARETTES
Luckies, Camels, Chesterfields
XVM pkgs, 2 for 23tf
ALL POPULAR BRANDS OF GUM
3 for 10
We carry the highest quality chemicals for
prescriptions, fio you ran be auured when
you bring your prescriptions to us they are
compounded or the best Ingredients by reg
istered pharmacists.
25c
Large Size
Dr. West's
Tooth Paste
13c
Two for 25c
$1.00 Nature's
Crystals
(from Mineral
Wells, Texas)
makes 15 gallons
69c
Modess
Kotex
Kleenex
Frens
15cPk8-
10c Woodbury
Jergens
McKesson
Toilet Soaps
5c each
6 for 29c
Celebrate Oregon's Birthday in Me'dford
mm
Special Showing of JUBILEE
Taffeta Evening Frocks
Just unpacked (roup of lovely taffeta party dresses, Maize,
blue, rose pink, long, full skirts, puff sleeves. In fact, they are
. Just adorable. Sizes 14 to 30.
$1475
String Dresses
The dresa you haye been waiting tor Just right for Jubilee
Week and Decoration Day. Will not show soil or wrinkle.
White, pink and maize. Good range of sizes.
$595.
Rayon Knit Dresses
Another holiday dress made of rayon In smart sport styles,
Pastel shades and white. Slues 14 to 20. Special
$249
1
"4
Summer Dresses
This group consists of light and dark silk prints and solid col
orsA few long sleeve and Jacket types. Also Chulla Crepes In
windblown floral designs and sport stripes. All sizes 14 to 44.
Special
'AV4
$750
Linen Wash Suits
. . y ttam ,,111.1 1'j :
Only three of these beautiful Im
ported linen suits left. Two and
three plere styles. Sizes 14, 18,
Reg. IIS. Special sale prlre
$1 395
Linen Suit)
Two-piece swagger linen
suits. Sizes 14 to 20.
$4.95
Pique and
Linen Suits
Two-piece short Jacket suits
Sizes 14 to 20.
$3.95
HATS
Another shipment of vide brim
med sun hats In straws and fab
rics. Also close out on all turbans
at this terj low ftatiirday special
price. , -'
98 c
HOSIERY
Chiffon, full fashioned
hose ,$1.00
SILK SLIPS
Flesh and white, lace trim
and tailored .. $1.95
Flesh and white, lace trim
and tailored $2.95
All sizes
RAYON SHORTS
596 79c, 89
All Spring Coats and Suits
One-Half Price