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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1938)
PAGE SIX MEDFORD MATL TRIBUNE, MEDFOTtD, OREGON, MONDAY, .TUNE 27. 1938. MDFORDvtfeTRIBUtrc 'Kvrritic lp (Mtnlhvrn Oro Kui1 thf Uall rrthuiM." Dall Kirepl (talardHf. Puitiianwi by MHIJHURD PRINTING CO. ftlt-Kfl N Kit at. Phooi (I RUHERJ W RUHU BlUor DKNBKI R UIU1TRAK Umr. Art ln1pn1nl Nawsppr Botr(t t Mcoad-clu mitlii at M1 ford. Oregon, uortw Aol of Id arch 1. Itlf SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail" In A4anc: Dally, on var I Dally, alt month ... Dallv nnm month B Par Mar. in Art vine Martforrt. Ah. la nil. Jackonllla, ClotrH Point, Phoami. Talanu Oold Hill an - hlffhwarat Oaliy. on raar H-0 Dally, tlx tnooths Dally, on month All urmi eaah tn a1anca. Oft trim Hiim ol the City al Medfnrd orrirlnl Papm nt -Imrktmn County y km ii kh or riiR ahmh iaiku i-kkw HnrlvtiiR Pull Mmmxi virt nerrico. Tha AMociatail Pra i aiolualvaly an tltlart to tha us toi publication o) all nmwm Hlanalcha eradliad Id It Ot Oth ar wlaa erarlltert to thla pi par. and lao to tha incai naw puhiianan naram. All righta tot publication ol apaetai 4lapaichp haratn tra alan rmrvA. MEMBER OF UNITED HRKH8 af BMREJR OF AUDI! BUtBAU OP i;iRCHLATlON8 Omeaa In Naw York. Chicago. Detroit, flan Franolaco, Loa Angaiai, saattia, rortland, at. Lome. Atlanta, Taooouvor, B. G. . AAaimhar OrpnbrTNewsoaDei 0 Associate Ye Smudge Pot Bj Arthur P,rrj. The Fortune magazlna quarterly urvey ahowa the Preeident 1 highly popular with the people, but hit methods of attaining new ueai oo Jectlves and hit political advlaera are dtallked. It seems to be l case of taking an ax to the piano, Because the piano player can't play. The esteemed Bend Bulletin edito rially warns lte readers to lock the doors and windows of their home, inasmuch aa nightly prowlers of late have been busy. Once It was the cus tom to leave the door unlocked tn the spirit of western hospitality. Thus, In the absence ot the household, the traveler waa welcome. There was a general disregard of locks In Bend and vicinity. "Friends might want to get In why lock them out?" was the gracious social philosophy. It seems a horde of folks are surging over the land, with no regard for custom. The unlocked the door to the los was invi tation to steal everything not nailed down and they do. To them, the un locked door Is a "sucker trick." Both the "Old West" and the strangers are chauging. The householder, In the noxt ten years, may need steel doors, barred windows, and a guard-tower at the front gate. ... "Wednesday evening citizens were out testing the water for softness, and several drank of It." (Tula Lake News) Man will try anything once. The Klamath county entry for US, senator Is back In Washington, D. C, looking out for the Interests of the people and himself, and seems to be running around the White House like a grandchild. The chief executive hat promised to visit the Willamette Val ley next spring. This Is supposed to be political blessing for the Demo cratic nominee, who needs It this fall. There la not much use, offic ially, to send him to the national capital. He's there most of the time anyway. AHOY THE SPINACH CAN! (New Pine Creek Items) "The test of a sailor's mettle Is not upon p!rld waters, but rather In the turbulence of a storm-rocked sea. When the going gets tough If he can pull throigh he's a Popoye. After two set backs, the first being the rain out while In the lead with Wil low Ranch on the 1th and the second getting snowed under last Sunday with a score of 35 to 4 In favor of Lakcvlcw, the New Pine Creek baseball team's Ship o' Des tiny Is calling amid menacing white caps under an over-cast-sky." Hermy Offcnbacher. of the Apple gate sported a birthday Sat., and will soon be going like 00. WPA stories are plentiful, and worse than the Ford yarns of pre-depres-ilon days. "In Pendleton there were people who were glad that the prise fight Wednesday evening waa ended by Joe Louis' victory In the first round; they wanted to drive to Pilot Rock to sec the flood damage and the ywere able to get away quickly." (Pendleton East Orecontani The human touch. Dub Watson Is shy hit motor ve hicle. He abhors walking, other than on the golf course. Outdoor enthusiast! were hard at It on the Sabbath. F. Pry, the chin whacker. Elm CMlders, the nail pounder, and D Hutchinson, a minor tentacle of the power octopus, con quered a young mountain. Mr. Chtl dcr rscended a cliff he mistook for a srsffold, and all his ability as a human fly was called Into play. Many of the outdoor girls hied to the hills, jind report sunburn and motqultoet, in the same and separate spots. Veteran Printer Dies PORTLAND. June 27. AP Ellu B. Traxler, 60. linotype operator on the Oregonlan for 27 years, died yea- ' terday of a heart sllment. I Um Mail Tribune Want Ada, ' Adrartlainc .UpraianUttTM ... dtfP. Labor's Self Interest 1 ERE it is mid-summer, and quarters! How comet From Scranton Pennsylvania, John Ringling North plains it: With attendance what it great Singling Brothers-Barnum and Bailey show is losing money. It is cheaper to return to to operate in the red. So back RALPH WHITEHEAD, head of the American Federation of Actors, representing the circus union, is sorry to see this because so many circus people will have no employment. So is John Ringling's heir. But John R. offered to keep the show going if his workers would accept a 25 Jq wage cut, and also agreed to let the union officials look over his books and see for themselves the circus was losing money. But the union officials refused. Whether the show was losing money or making it, was not their affair. They had a year's contract at a certain wage scale, and rather than accept a cut in that scale which would violate that contract they would order a walk-out and Finally a compromise was would agree to continue at the job, at the present high wages, until they had moved the "big top", to winter quarters, then they would quit, and try to find work elsewhere, or, we presume, GO ON RELIEF. Assuming the above facts, as reported by the Associated Press, are correct, then we have a perfect example of the basic trouble in American industry, as far as labor relations are concerned. Rather than accept a reduction in wages, union labor prefers to have no wages at all, and see an industry close down, permanently. Such action means a loss to labor, a loss to capital, and as far as that goes a loss of entertainment to the circus-loving public. But the union officials prefer that universal sacrifice to making any concessions in year's wage contract. And whether the business losing it, is of so little concern look over the books of the company, to determine whether the management is or isn't telling the truth about it. OBVIOUSLY, as long as such an attitude represents the temper of organized labor in this country there is no hope of any satisfactory working agreement, between capital and labor, it's a fight to the finish with the devil or some horriferous American Mussolini, taking the hindmost. But fortunately such an attitude doesn't represent organ ized labor as a whole. We note, for example, Mcdford local union No. ll'J4 of Painters Decorators and Paperhangers of America, and the local carpenters union, affiliates of the American Federation of Labor, refuse to declare all producers unfair; unless they market their products under the following resolution : , f "It has been widely reported that Medford Union labor has declared all producers ot tho Rogue River valley unfair" unless they market their produco under the union label. "In view of the above, Local Union No. 1124, Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of America, an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor, herewith makes clear Its stand upon the matter. "This local will not, at any time, endorse such action. "Firstly, such a decree Is. itself, 'unfair' and Illogical, at least until, the employees of the producers themselves are organized; "And secondly, believing that the Interests of Industry and labor Bre ultimately Identical, our sole objective is to effect equitable and harmonious relations between them and radical or Ill-considered actions will not hasten that desired goal. That's the spirit the spirit of good will and fair play. Had the Ringling circus employees been imbued with the same spirit, they would have examined the books of the company, and if they had found the claim of the management sustained, they would have agreed to a '-'5 reduction in their wages, on the sound basis, that lower wages would be better than none at all; that no contract is saeroscant if the conditions under which it was made, no longer exist; and that it is to the interest of organized labor as well as capital, that business ANY busi ness, be allowed a subsistence profit. afOREOVER there would be precedent for this. The Mail 111 Tribune has operated a union shop, ever since it was established, and during all that time, the wage scale has been established by a signed typographical union contract for a certain given period. Yet when unforseen emergencies have arisen, such as the financial panic of l!)'J!) :l;!, the typographical union has NEVER FAILED to accept a reduction in 'that wage scale, when shown, that conditions demanded it, even though that meant the abrogation of a signed contract. Legally the union could have insisted upon the fulfillment of that contract, technically they were entitled to their "pound of flesh", but wheu they realized such action would result in the serious ambarrassment and probably the bankruptcy of the business, they voluntarily and willingly, accepted the wage reduction that changed business conditions demanded. THE circus union should have done that. Every union should do it, when convinced that unless such action is taken, the industry in which they are engaged and upon which they depend for a livelihood will have to call it a day and quit. This isn't, from labor's standpoint, any exhibition of the Polyanna spirit, any disposition to turn the other cheek, in fact when clearly understood it is nothing more.nor less than enlightened SELF INTEREST I For under our American system of government, if private business fails, organized labor fails; if the capitalistic machine goes to pieces every labor union in tho country goes to pieces with it. Itlvcrmcn In Itrunton CHAMPona, Ore.. June 37. AP) The men who once formed the back bone of transportation Mog the Wil lamette and Columbia gathered here yesterday for the 13th annual re union of the Veterans' Steamboat men's association. The steamer North- weatern. back on the river for an- other day of service, carried 300 to this historic landing and back to Portland. the circus is going into winter is and wages what they are, the winter quarters than continue to Sarasota Florida it is. the show would stop. reached. The union workers the direction of modifying a involved is making money or to them that they will not even union label, as shown by the I Identify BtMlv, PORTLAND. June 37.-l.AP On of the two bodies taken last weea from the Willamette river here was Identified Sunday as that of Harry B. Latyent. 43, Aberdeen, Wash the coroner's office reported. A brother Ross C. Larent, Seattle, made the Identification. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads t 1:30 p tn. Personal Health Service By William signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not lo disease diagnosis or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady If a stamped self addressed envelope Ii enclosed. Letters should be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the large number of letters received only a few can be answered No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Instructions. Address Dr. William Brady. 205 El Cam I no. Beverly Hills, Calif. FODDER, FIR In some parte of the world It U the custom to serve a dish of greens, raw vegetables, raw fruits, relishes, usually with dressing or sauce, under the name ot salad, and at the begin ning of the dinner. This It a com mendable custom from the point of view of the physiology of dl. gestlon and good health. But In other parts of the world the salad comes later In the course of the dinner, perhaps the last thing be fore dessert. This It a mistake so far as good digestion and good health are concerned. Anyway, what In tar nation does a fellow want with fod der after he haa put away a sub stantial meal of meat, fish, soup. vegetables and whatnot? There ought to be a law about aalad. I mean a rigid rule of hygiene prohibiting the use of any cooked food In a salad. A salad' should con. tain only RAW greens, relishes, vege tables or fruits. Cooking destroys or removes more or less of the vitamins In raw food and boiling or roasting or stewing or steaming removes more or less of the minerals In the natural food. If cooked food replaces some of the raw food In a salad the dish cannot serve Its purpose as a sup plement to the otherwise deficient meal. For those who are stout, over nourished, too heavy or logy from overeating, it Is most imperative that the first course of the main meal of the day shall be a salad. This Is the time to pack In a generous filler of roughage and bulk. It contributes materially toward the sense of full ness and satisfaction on which every one depends to tell him when he has had enough to eat. With the bread basket thus prepared, the rest of the meal rounds out the feeling of reple tion, on a total of calories far less than one craves when no salad is taken. The items generally making up a salnd provide most of the vitamins and most of the minerals required to keep the metabolism nor mal, and cooked victuals are usually deficient In these essentials. So the salad Is a matter of prime importance In tho corrective regime of the overnourlshed. Man About Manhattan By OKOltOt I-UCKEB NEW YORK. This la county fair time. And New York Is getting ready for Its county fair only it will be called the world's fair. Out on Long Island they have torn up a lot of earth, thrown In even more to cover the shal low flats, built buildings and exploded hulla b a 1 oo. I'm not much worried about that, be cause that was to be expected. But now there la talk of doing over Broadway, the Broadway which so the story goes has GEORGE TUCKER changed so much In recent years. I don't know exactly what they are planning to do with it and, as a matter of fact, what I think will not matter. And I cannot Imagine what they will do with It when they do change It. unless they throw up a bevy of modernistic buildings. You know the things you squint at and wonder what they are. Broadway haa changed. There la no dispute there. But, the change has come gradually; so slowly that after the scene changed you suddenly realized the old days, the old picture, the old characters were no more. Yet Broadway has still Broadway. True, the gaudy motion picture palaces took over where the legiti mate theater once held sway. True, but the legitimate theater -it 111 re mains, a bit on the side streets, per haps, but nevertheless very much there, and especially so during the past sarson. Broadway Itself today is a dirty, gaudy street. It has always been a dirty, gaudy street. There Is still the picture of honky tonks. the noise and curiosity. People milling, people, talking, people hurrying, people happy and people discontent ed. Broadway Iras always been a dirty and gaudy street always a happy street and always a street of sorrow and disappointment. The same people, cstcnsively. have pound ed Its pavement In yesteryears as of today. Broadway has changed. So they say. I say again thu the change has been so gradual that Broadway is still t:e same, ttenptte the difference some of It good, some of It bad. Remember when vaudeville held sway. Remember when troupers iMt for the hinterlands and were alwsvs glad to get back to the Palace on Broadway. They rame back chuck UtV how goxl It was to get back heme again, when the odds were t:.at home really was In Wan Hoo, Neb Broadway was changing and they Jid not know it. Broadway haa changed, but the place Is Just the sume. It Is still the place to wr:ich Oeorne M. Cohan. William A. Brady, Eddie Dowling and 8ophle Tucker not to mention a few and a thousand oth ers of a day long past them come buck at every opportunity. Perhaps tlnadttwy has c:-.Biijcd ano It Isn't what It used to be. But what 3 -4i Brady, M P. ST, FAT FOLK A second suggestion which applies In the majority of cases of overweight it that a quarter-grain tablet of sac charin makes a good substitute for 8 teaspoonful or a lump of sugar for sweeting tea or coffee, and for the Individual who uses sugar too freely this may amount to a large diminu tion In the caloric Intake. Careful Investigation by a committee of com petent physicians years ago proved that the dally consumption of lest than five grains of saccharin Is harm leas In any circumstance. Finally, the most superfluous, least essential course of a regular dinner la the dessert. One who has had t square meal can surely decline to pack in an extra 500 calories In this form, at least part of the time If not as an Inflexible rule. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS It Is Your Baby Tou offered to send the baby book if we would furnish a one.cent stamped addressed envelope. But I had to pay two cents due postage when It arrived. (Mrs. R. A. B.) Answer Bo many correspondents send toy envelopes which will not carry the booklet unsealed, that I have been compelled to discontinue that offer. Any one who wants a FREE copy of the Brady Better Baby Book may have it on request If he will provide a three-cent-stamped envelope of standard size (not less than 3xS Inches) bearing his cor rect address, if anything else Is to go In the same envelope additional postage Is required. Sage Have heard that a tea made from common desert, Spanish, Mexican or garden sage leaves relieves chilis Please give your opinion. (J. c.) Answer Anyway It Is harmless to "T. i alien hot, anv kind or tj,. other decoction or plain water tends io relieve cnill. Nervous Twitching I am 81, In good health except for a constant twltchlnir in mv t. which sometimes prevents me from getting to sleep. (Miss E. M. o.) Answer Send 20 cents coin and three-cent-stamped envelope bearlni your address, for booklet "Nerves and Nutrition." (Copyright 1938, John F. Dllle Co.) Ed Note: Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. -.Brad; should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D., 265 El Camlno. Beverl) Hills, Calif. hasn't changed? And If Broadway has 'changed, it hasn't changed enough to send the beat of a million feet to other streets. You can have your world's fair. And If t can have my cake and eat it, I'll have it, too. But, somehow or other 'I still think you and I would like our Broadway aa it Is today. It's crazier than any street In the world, and, In many ways, like the midway at the county fair. Let It remain so. f Communications A Farmer's Wife Speaks Out To the Editor: It amuses me the way some of the business men of the city try to make people think that some one Is mis treating them. I wonder who started this enisling business. Tell me a business that has nov gone out of Its way to stock up in something that Is out of a different line of business than-what he started out with. We will take the garages and fill- 1 lng stations. Some are straight ga- j rages, but most of them will have a j few tires and a gasoline pump, some 1 have as high as three pumps.' j Then . the filling stations hire as high as five mechanics, and chisel the i labor price down under the garages ! to get the business and give the men i only a percentage. Some weeks they make $5 up to 25. i The laboring class of people In this line of business very seldom makes ; more than their living, If they hap- ' pen to have any family. If a baby i happens to be coming you ask, t doc- ) tor his fee and ho says S50. just like that. Come to- the house? Nothing j doing. Go to the hospital another i $75. and the wife worries how to I meet the bills, then another child ' has to have an operation. Doctor and ! hospital $300. Never less than a hun- ; dred. j Same way In a1 farmer's family. So why not some co-operation on this business of living? Why dont the merchants organize, the garages, every business to Itself. j Have a co-operative hospital with each doctor doing what he can do j best doing it, and charge each family j a stAted sum each year that tho : working class can pay. Let the laborers who have the dirty , work to do organize and try to better j their conditions, not be afraid if 1 think for myself being afraid ot los- lng his Job. For they are trained by : long years of experience, and they ' want nice homes and education for j their children. Are they not entitled ' to It the same as your own children Now for the farmer and the fruit growers. They are entitled to the same consideration as' the laborer, as he works early and late, and the prices the middle man pays are not enough to meet the needs or his family and j the stock he has to feed. As the only way to meet the situa tion and every one not be feelln? like he has been mistreated la a bet- , ter understanding of what each group want and work for the betterment of the community s a whole. I would like to are every farm equipped with all the modern equip ment the town people have. Whenevei the farmer Is allowed more than an existence for his produce, you wlh find more work for the townspeople As the farmer and his wife have the same hopes and ambitions as von. and he is not allowed to set price of the things he produces, they put , men In office who they think will work for ills good. And they pass the laws that leave him the loser. You can't tell your milk and your cream unleae you fix the barn and a cooler such a way. The farmer It not going to endanger his children's health. They are a healthier group of people than the town folks as a rule. There are famlllea In towns who can't afford to buy the creameries' milk who would go to the farmer and pay him 5c a gallon for his milk, but a law waa passed that forbids that. For better conditions, NAME ON FILE. as a juggler plays with hi bright, many colored Indian clubs. They ire perhaps Inclined to favor theory over practice, but, considering the aver age level of bureaucratlo Intelligence In the past, they are men of remark able mental distinction. They are an odd set, the six intel lectuals Arnold, a former mayor of Laramie, Wyo., an academic wit, a rabelaisian poker of fun at the es tablished verities; the cold, domin eering, and somewhat devious 011 phant, who has as many enemies as any other man in Washington, yet Is generally acknowledged to be one of the best New Deal minds; Lubin, small,, genial, with a sort of precise gaiety which surprises yne in a passionate statistician; the sandy haired, tough-talking Douglas, a poor boy from the west with a hard, rath er belligerent common sense; Frank the eager enthusiast, who haa more Interests and gets his fingers In moie pies than six ordinary men; and Bal linger, and earnest left winger,, dedi cated to a crusade against concentrat ed wealth. j Patterson is one of the president's tame conservatives, while the six in tellectuals typify the men whom the New Deal brought swarming to Wash ington, who have made the New Deal what It Is. They have the good qual ities, and the defects, of the Nw Deal. They are all men of good will. Interested In the plight of the com mon man, reasonably disinterested, of unquestioned Integrity. They are also exceedingly tempera mental, and only a miracle will pre vent an unholy row among them bo fore the anti-monopoly Inquiry Is over. What Is more, some of them are malignantly Busplclous of opponents of the New Deal, and the majortty ire Inclined to pre-Judge the case they are Investigating. In the little ?roup y0U can the reasons for all sorts of qualities In the New Deal. You can see why its long term trend Is always to the left,' why It is occasionally so impa tient of ordinary governmental meth ods, why Its solutions for great proo lems arc sometimes so apt and direct, and sometimes so confused and dis tracted. Above all, you can see why the New Deal, a very ordinary left-liberal id ministration, far less radical in some ways than the English torles, inspires such an unreasoning, panic terror In many Americans. The average Amer ican business man prides himself on being a practical fellow, and looks askance on intellectual theory, and Intellectual brilliance. He has never seen these disquieting traits in the government before. And now he feels aa though he were being governed by a race of strangers, which of course, for good, or ill, he is. I The Capital Parade (Continued from Page Ons ) Comment on the Days News By FRANK JENKINS IP YOU happen to be in the mood for a little serious thinking, read this dispatch from Tokyo: "The people of Japan were told today (Thursday) that they would be expected to spend $2, 300,000.000 leas (fon themselves) this year to augment their army's war chest." THAT dispatch tells an Interesting story. The normal procedure would be to TAX the Japanese people 13,300.000, 000 more in order to carry on the war, but It Is evidently realized that they can't pay that much, so they are told tat they must get along with less to eat, less to wear and less In the way of housing. In other words, they are ordereo to REDUCE THEIR LIVING STAND ARDS. IP THE army needs more food, the people at home must get along with less food. If the army needs more Iron and steel, tbe people at home must use less Iron and steel. But the Japanese people are told also that trey must get along with less EXPORTABLE MATERIALS. That isn't so easy to understand but It Is equally Important to Ja pan's purpose. THE Idea back of limiting home use of exportable materials Is this: Japan must BUY ABROAD for war purposes, and war needs are so acute that she must buy more abroad than she sells abroad. Since she has no gold with which to pay ner foreign obligations, she must sell goods abroad In order to balance the ac count. So the Japanese 'people must DO WITHOUT the things they can sell to other countries. WHAT it all means, of course. Is that the Chinese war isn't so simple and easy as It looked at the start. Instead of a profitable adven ture In highway robbery. It is be ginning to assume tbe aspects of a life and death struggle. That Is a good thing for the cause of peace. As long as national ban ditry Is profitable, unprincipled na tions will go on being bandits. But if experience demonstrates that n this modern world the lot obtained by wars of conquest Isn't worth what It costs there will be less temp tation to go to war for loot. If you learn by herd experience that robbing your neighbor DOESN1 PAY, you'll be less likely to rob an other neighbor. WINDOW GLASS We sell window glass and will replace your broken windows reasonably. Trowbridge Cab inet Works. From Klamath Miss LaVerne Ste phenson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph O. Stephenson of 418 Arcadia street, recently returned to Medford from Klamath Falls where she had spent the past several months work ing In the farm bureau office. Closing time for Too Late to Clas sify Ads is 1:30 p m Dividends at the annual rate of 4 were declared on savings and invest ment share accounts for the six months period ending June 30. We know of no other equally safe plan which will pay you as good a return on your money. Funds invested by July 10th will participate in the next dividend figured from July 1st. Jackson County Federal Savings & Loan Association 126 East Main Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County history from the files of the Mall Tribune 10 and 20 yean M. TEN VEARS AGO TODAY June 27, 1028 (It was Tuesday) Democratic national convention at Houston opens. In high heat, and ad Journment till evening taken. . Looks like Al Smith on the first ballot. One Oregon delegate la "wet" but for a dry plank tn platform. Cigarette thrown from a second story window burns top of Harry Rosenberg's auto. Auto travel through city showa big Increase. Terrible Turk to wrestle Jack Roller In armory main event. Dr. K. G. Thayer returns after long absence In south. Rumors of railroad to coast re vived. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY June 27, 1018 (It was Thursday) Food shortages reported In Austria and Germany, and peace predicted before Christmas. Royal Bebb and David Griffith, Mall Tribune employes, have been as signed to the army engineers and will sail for France soon. Two citizens nabbed for "whizzing down Riverside at 35 per." Drafted contingent from Jackson county to entrain Friday. Food controller asks farmers not to cut grain for hay. Citizens urged to purchase war savings stamps by Mayor Gates. To Close CCC Camp ASTORIA. June 27. (AP) The Fort Canby CCC camp will be dis continued June 30, Captain J. B. Ter rlll, Jr., commander, has been in formed. The ciisure Is In line with the federal government's plan to reduce the number of camps on army reser vations. Chevrolet JINGLES Copyrighted Life's a battle not always won by the strong ... For Nature supplies a way to protect her throng. To the weak that can 't fight she furnishes speed. The strong are provided with claws or jaws they need. All through the animal king dom it's SAFETY FIRST Too often, with man, it's a case of THIRST. Or just plain neglect of brakes for a stop .... Or mechanical defects we can fix in our shop ! Chevy M. Hurd Rogue River Chevrolet Main and Riverside Service Dept. 32 No. Riverside Used Car Lot Riverside at 4th a"kl t