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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1938)
MEDFORD MATL TRIBUXE. MEDFORD. OREfiOX. FRTDAT. MAY 13. 193S. PAGE FIVE WEEK-END FISHING 10 BE PRODUCTIVE, Good Catches Are Reported . As Conditions in Gen eral Improve Survey Shows Flower Profusion The following recreational bulletin waa lasued today by Rogue River na tional forest headquarters: "The sportsmen should find good fishing conditions during the coming week-end. "In the Union . Cnelc rflntrfpt Lh Rogue river Is clear but high between iTaii ana prospect, steelnead are rlslne tn Rnlnnprs unrf rr-nnrtM f lat eral catches have been made during cne wees, uood catches of trout are being made between Prospect and Trail. Bait fishing for eastern brook and Dolly Varden In Copco dam, one mile west of Prospect. Is reported as "Bftlt fiKhlntr In PIV rea!r anr ed as fair. The road up Trail creek la open to the Swingle mill, six miles from the highway. The road up Elk creek Is open from the highway to the Bitter Uck bridge, a distance of about 12 miles. All forest roads are closed In the Union creek area. Main tenance work In the forest camps at Union creek. Natural Bridge and Farewell Bend ts being done, and the camps will be usable this week-end. Squnw Lake Productive' Roads in the lower elevations of the ADDlecate district condition but the roads leading to mo 'mgner elevations still remain i-iusra Decausp oi anow. pishing In all streams Is noor hecmiKA nr h'nn water. Several limit catchea of tn ut were made during the week at Squaw lake. The road Is closed to a point 1(4 miles from the lake. The bridge at Dividend Bar has been repaired. uan iisnmg with worms has given the best results In Squaw lake. "The Mount Ashland road Is open eight miles out of Ashland, it ts possible to drive to the ski run. The road up Thompson creek Is passable and It Is oosslble to mato t.h irin over to Carberry by that road. Car- wuy ciwk is too nign for good fish lng. ' "The Pish lake road Is open and in good condition to Pole Bridge creek. This leaves about one hour', w.iir t the lower end of the lake, a distance oi aDout 21,4 miles. It Is not advis able to ski Into the lak. Th tr.n la well packed down and the ground la open in spots. The Imnaha road la open to a point within two miles vi bus guara stauon. Flowers Profuse "The Copco dam on the south fork can be reached bv wav of prnmu. Fishing Is reported as being fair In euuvn ion ana middle fork. The water la still high In Big Butte but some fair catches have been reported. Ply fishing has been fair In Pourblt creek. "Wild flowera around Butte Palls ana on the Butte Pails-Prospect road are abundant. Purple violets, white lamb's tongues, bird bills, lady slip pers, red bells and wild strawberry plants are blossoming now." James Bell Rites Saturday At 2 p.m. Funeral services for James D. Bell, long time resident of Medford, who passed away at Salem, Ore., May 10, will be held at the Perl Funeral Home. Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock.' Reverend E. S. Bartlam, and Medford lodge No 1168. B.P.O.E. offi ciating. Interment will be In the Medford I.O.O.F. cemetery beside his wife, Claudia Bell, who passed away In 1S16. BIRTHS Born to Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Oibson of Jacksonville a girl weighing seven pounds and 13 ounces In Community hospital last evening, Thursday, May 12. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Allan F. Perry of 618 Park street a girl weigh ing seven pounds and seven ounces In Community hospital, Tuesday morning. May 10. The baby has been named Janet Louise. Your Congressman hi i f W 1 Hz-'- James W. Molt His re-Domination nd eJre tfon in ran i rontinurd active and rspcriencrd representa tion in ConaTTM. ;EAD Hlfc RECORD IN VOTER. ' AMPJTLF1 fTftf Ai.i The I Capital Parade (Continued from Page One.) WHOLESALE RATES ARE PROPOSED BY Important command at the presi dent 'a bedside, between presidential gulps of breakfast coffee- and the gay shouts and Joyous cries or nuie Slstle and BuzzJe Dall, who kept Interrupting their grandfather by atuffln their little hands In his mouth. Acheson lasted Just aix months. He and the president come to the parting of the ways on gold poli cies, whioh he did not consider con stitutional. When he was summoned to the White House to be handed the executive order on gold, he Im mediately told the president that he could not promulgate the order with out an opinion from the Justice de partment. The president replied that he had a favorable opinion. Acheson asked to see It. The president said that the opinion had been given verbally by the attorney general. "I'm sorry, Mr. President." said Acheson. "but there Is no opinion from the Justice department which is not a written opinion." That was the end of Acheson, who was treated thereafter as a con demned criminal might have been. After Acheson came Henry Mor- genthau. then Thomas Jefferson Coolidge, then Ro swell Magill. Nei ther Cool Id ge nor Magill had to go through qulto as much as Acheson. but their life was far from placid. Coolidge. a conservative Boston banker, expected to serve as a finan cial technician. Unfortunately his political Instincts were so horrified by the goings-on In the New Deal that a cat on a griddle would have had more ease and peace of mind. When Coolidge returned at last to Boston, to vote Republican In 1936, Magill was brought from Columbia to reform the tax system. And now he, too. is going, with a bad taste In his mouth, and the tax system Just about as dreadful as it ever was. It was Secretary Morgenthau who first conceived the scheme of hand ing the black act to John Hanes. The treasury roster has lately been denuded of big names, and no doubt Morgenthau hoped that Hanes would dress his office up a bit. Morgenthau took the notion to the president, who consented to Hanes' transfer from the SEC on condition that Hanes be allowed to continue his peace-making between business and the New Deal. And thus Hanes Is expected to do dou ble duty, as a hard-working treasury official and an Intermediary in the current civil war. In fact, it looks as though he might be worse off than any of the unfortunates who went before him. Hanes Is charming, J remarkably clever and exceedingly sensible. Yet an Insurance actuary would give a better chance of survival to a man with a rattlesnake In either pocket, standing in the crossfire of a ma chine gun battery. Ross Advocates $14.50 Per Kilowatt Year for Prime Power for Resale and for Use of Purchasers WASHINGTON. May 13. OP The federal power commission today made public nine schedules of wholesale rates which Administrator J. D. Ross proposed to charge for electricity gen erated at Bonneville dam in the Pa cific northwest. Ross submitted the schedules as the first step In the government's plan to provide cheap electricity to consumers in Oregon. Washington and Idaho. They must be approved by the commission before becoming ef fective. Six of the schedules which are be ing studied by the commission per tain to the sale of power at or In the vicinity of the Bonneville power plant. Ross proposed that 14.50 per kilo watt year be charged for prime power for resale and for purchasers use. He fixed a schedule of $9.50 per kilo watt year for at site secondary power for the same purpose. Purchasers wishing at site surplus power for rafale or for their own use would be charged 3.4 cents per kilowatt day. The remaining three schedules would provide for the sale of prime power, secondary power and surplus power at stations at various points along Bonneville's own transmissions system, to purchasers wishing the energy for resale. For this type of service Ross would charge $17.50 per kilowatt ?ar for prime power, $11.60 per kilowatt year for secondary power and 3.88 cents per kilowatt day for surplus power. daughter, born several months ago. The Osheroffs have lived In Medford since February, 1037, Dr. Lawrence W. Buonocore, now on duty at Camp Bly. will replace Dr. Osheroff as assistant district surgeon here, according to Capt. H. T. Gentle, district surgeon. 4 OR OSHEROFF TO Dr. Hyman R. Osheroff, assistant district surgeon with CCC headquar ters here, today received notification of his commission as a first lieuten ant In the regular army medical corps. Dr. Osheroff, who has been on duty here as a first lieutenant in ihe medical reserve, will leave soon for Vancouver Barracks, Wash., where he will begin his regular army duty. Whether or not he will Temaln long at that post Is not yet known as news of ' his commission was received here by radio from the war depart ment and details were lacking. Dr. and Mrs. Osheroff have a baby -rrfS SUVA! V3 J 006 fa C y0" :zW:r'7' fth.s - THE NORGE ODOR PROOF, FULLY SEALED ICE COM Pi R TKEHT KEEPS ICE CUBES TASTE. FREEI No unwanted flavors in your ice cubes sad frozen desserts. Come in and see the Taste -Test that proves it! New Norgc freezer shelves help give you ice 25 faster, too. Be sure yon see the Norge before you buy ! Lisi f. to FELDMAN ELECTRIC 237 Ba?t Main at Bartlett Phone 937 xviun SATURDAY FOR ELKS Thirty willing boxers from CCC camp3 near Medford will report at district headquarters tomorrow after noon, and from them will be made the final selections for the evening's fight card at the Elks temple. Although . a tentative card has been slated, definite bouts will not be announced until the boys have been weighed and examined by the district surgeon. The boxing show will be staged In the basement of the Elks' temple as a prelude to the benefit dance to be held up stairs. Elks and their ladles are In vited to attend. Troy King. 175-pounder from Pres cott. will meet Meiner of South Fork in the main event, according to present plans. Art Rowe of Wlmer and BUI Weavers of Applegate. will meet at 150 pounds In the semi final. Special Communication. Medford Lodge No. 103, A F. is A. M., Friday. May 13. tA 8 p. m. Work M. M. degres 3 tjs.ii MI . t uti iui 111. viaibura wcitumc. L. L. Sanders, W. M. R. E. Sweeney, Secy. Closing time foi Too Late tc ClaS' lfy Ads is 1 :30 p m. E 10 Britain and France Also Agree to Give Aid in Getting Arms to Invaded Country. Is Revelation GENEVA. My 13. (API Chinese sources said tdoy that China hfld obtained from league powers, partic ularly Britain nnd France, an agree ment for credits for purchase of arms and also assurance of aid in getting the arms Into China. Dr. V. K. Wellington Koo, China's suave delegate to the League of Na tions council, was said to nave ob tained the agreements in behind the scenes negotiations. Details wero not announced to the council and arrangements concerning safe delivery of the arms In Chtn' for use In the war against Japan were said to be secret. Dr. Koo waa understood to have rejected earlier offers ot credits and insisted on receiving also pledges that the powers would see that the munitions purchased reached Chlnesr territory. SHANGHAI. May 13. (AP) Jap anese warplanes loosed many tons of explosives today on the central China front In an effort to speed tho advance of a dozen Japanese columtu boring steadily toward the vital Lunghal railway from the north and south. Hardest bit by the bombardments waa Suhslen, 45 miles south of 8u chow on the Tlentsln-Pukow rail way, where the Japanese made three smashing raids. Farther to the west Japanese war planes leveled the Chinese defenseb at Yungcheng, enabling Japanese troops to capture the city and plac ing them tn a position to advance on Tangshan, Lunghal railway sta tion 30 miles to the north. On the north, the deepest-penetrating Japanese column was only three miles from the Lunghal, threatening to sever It at Slnanchen, 65 miles east of Suchow. MISS MAUER TO TALK AT MISSIONARY MEET Miss Katharlna Maurr, nationally known dacone and welfare worker at the , United State, Immigration station at Angel Island In San Fran. Cisco, will be a guest speaker at the annual district meeting of the Women's Home Missionary society of the Methodist church in Grants Pass Monday. Many Medford membera are planning to attend. Miss Mauer will also speak si me Methodist church In Ashland Sunday evening. Known as the "Goddess of Mercy of Angel Island." Miss Mauer Is loved and respected by all with whom she comes In contact. Her ad dress In Ashland and Granta Pass will be of extreme Interest, and large attendances are expected, THREE MEDFORD CCC SELECTED FOR CAMP NEAR ML M'KINLEY Three Medford mn will be among the 16 CCC en roll ees selected from the Bly and South Umpqua Falls camps of the Medford district to go to Alaska this month and help en tab -llh a camp In the Mount McKlnley national park. The Medford contingent will be among 200 men selected from Oregon and Washington to occupy the Alas kan camp during the summer months. They will leave here Sunday and will depart from Seattle May 18. They will return late In Septem ber. The Medford men are Louie W. Hodgson, Dick Olson, and Walden Fahrmeler. Others on the list are Emmett E. Bundy, Heppner; Vernon Coenenberg. Sutherlln; James Fair. Wallowa: Merle H. Ooegleln, Orants Pass; Alfred B. Hnlnes, Elkton; Wil liam A. McDonald. Roseburg; Loyal Ayrli. Klamath Falls; Lewis W. Den nis. Portland: Lloyd C. Lansing, Rai nier; William Lee McCullough, Port land; Lowell W. Mcintosh, Portland, and BUI A. Richardson. Coqullle. The camp will be operated by the national park service and the men will be engaged on road and trail projects within the park. All of the men making the trip have volun teered for the service, and were selected aa outstanding enrollees. the Alaskan adventure being a covet ed assignment. Women Reduce This Safe Way Thousands of women art Taking Off bat Safely . , . without dieting nr exercising . . . with LAXKID Fat Reducing Treatment It ts removing tat frm them Just as It did from .awrence Mack, when he lost 121 rounds In 12 Months, while taking It. These Women find that LAXRID Is Absolutely Safe to Take, rt does not contain Dtnltrophenol, Thyroid or Phenol In any form. All the In gredients in LAXRID Treatment have been used by Physicians for 60 years. ' Try It on nur Money Back Guarantee, Qet LAXRID today from your drug or department atora Walnscott's East .side Pharmacy a -gg - - ORIGINAL PRICE CUTTERS PRICES EFFECTIVE Friday Afternoon and All Day Saturday CAMEL CIGARETTES America's fastest sell ing cigarette made from finer, costlier to baccos. Carton of four flat fifties. 8 A 200 cigarettes I I V CHOCOLATE BARS Nestles-Hershey Economy size Plain or with hazelnuts or almonds. Fine to pack in the lunch box for school. 2 for 25c CHECK Cigarette Filter Holder A cigarette in the bar rel filters the smoke and removes the major :ty of all impurities and nicotine. For a cooler smoke. Try pCr Check fcW PPPP Another thousand genuine Balsa-wood Gliders to be given away Saturday at our Main Street Store. One for each child when ac GLIDERS comPanie1 y fatner or mother. 20 DISCOUNT On our entire stock of new Sun Hats Helmets Beach Hats. Frankly our stock is too large. We need the space ALL REG. 29c VALUES 23 ALL REG. 39c VALUES ... 31 ALL BEG. 49o VALUES 39 ALL REG. 69c VALUES ... 55 ALL REG. 89c VALUES 71? ALL REG. 98c' VALUES 78? ALL REG. $1.19 VALUES 95? Everyday Necessities EPSOM SALTS, 1 lb. tin .10? HYDROGEN PEROXIDE, pint ......15? MILK OF MAGNESIA, 6 o 8? OLIVE OIL, pint .1 49? $1.00 IRRADIATED YEAST ...79? PETROLEUM JELLY, lb 23? 60o ALKA SELTZER 49? 30c BROMO SELTZER 2R? $1.25 ABSORBINE, JR 89? 25c ZINC OXIDE OINTMENT 17? 25c WHITE ACE SKOE POLISH ....19? FREE FILM 1 DEVELOPING FOR ANY SIZE PRINT INCLUDING POST CARD SIZE -YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT WESTERN THRIFT- SCOTTISSUE 4 ROLLS I ICTCDIIJC ANTISKPTIC Lid I LnlilE MOITH WASH 100 CERTIFIED ASPIRIN 10c DOG FOOD 25c CARTERS LIVER PILLS 4000 SHEETS SO M7.K BOTTLES TABLETS BOTTLE MANKIND OR RED HEART 28c 40c 9c 2 for 15c 17c -YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT WESTERN THRIFT 500 CLEANSING TISSUES . . 39c ZIPPER TOBACCO POUCHES 50c NEVERFAIL LIGHTERS THE SEVEN DWARFS ROCKY FORD CIGARS GENUINE IMCO , AUTHENTIC MOIWI.S P PI RE CASTILE SOAP . EACfl Rot of Firt. 16c 29c 39c 10c 95c -YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT WESTERN THRIFT- BRING YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS HERE & SAVE THE DIFFERENCE MAIN & CENTRAL TWO STORES 125 EAST SIXTH ST. Under the Big Clock THE ONLY RED FRONT ON SIXTH STREET 313-315 N. Riverside. Phone 358 arc? PHONE 358 For Our Own Fr Personalized Deliver: Service It's a well known fact that you "Pay Less and Park Easier" at this com plete food market. 10 lb. 43c Cal. Small Idalio Red Mei. 25 Ifa 98C BEANS OXYDOL large package 19c MILK Swift Prem. Ig. can 5c BEEF ROAST Steer Href. Fey. Sho, Outs Lb. 15c BACON lb. 19c Dixie Squares, Swift cure. Fins for seasoning. VEAL BREAST lb. 95c Fine for making mock duck with dressing WIENERS lb. 19c That good "Oregon Chief" brand BOILING BEEF 2 lb. 25c Steer Beef. Very economical. CATSUP CORN 3 bottles 25c Standby, large bottle 4 cans 29c Case of 24 cans $1.73 Golden Bantam For Perfect Rofrigerator Ice Cream use I freezing I JMIX 3 cans 29c SPECIAL DEAL 2 pkgs. Post Toasties 1 pkg. Huskies . All for 1 7c FLOUR "ST 49 lb. $1.29 Guaranteed hard wheat Candy Bars 2 for 5c All Curtis Bars BOX 59C POTATOES 1 00 ib. 49c Klamath TJ. S. No. 2 Clean, bright and sound