MEDFOTtD MATT, TRTBITKR MEDFOTtD. (YREOOV. FRTDAY. .TULY 22, 1933.
PAGE FIVE
SALEM, July 32. (AP) Revoca
tions and suspensions of motor
vehicle operators' permits In Oregon
were 32 percent higher during the
first six months of 1038 than during
the corresponding period In 1937.
Secretary of Stat Earl tinell reported
today.
There were 88 revocations and 44
suspensions reported during June,
13 per cent more than during June
of last year.
AH but six of the 88 revocations
were for driving while Intoxicated.
Reckless driving was responsible for
more than half that number of sus
pensions. Failure to pay Judgments resulting
from traffic accidents also caused
several license suspensions.
Army Barracks De Luxe
LONDON (UP) The barracks of
British soldiers are being modern
ized and made more comfortable.
The first of the new-style barracks
are being built for the Camerou
Highlanders ' in the north of Scot
land, They are equipped with con
cealed lighting, sleeping cubicles fur
nished in a "restful style."
jfity I i J f "He's added
fr7 RICE KRISPIES
fJLSS? to his one
yMtnon band I"
When children fuss and fret
at the table, serve Kellogg's
Rice Krlsplei. These toasted
rice bubbles are so crisp
and erunchy they crackle in
milk or cream and how
children love that seundl
The flavor almost always
brings them back for second helpings.
All grocers sell Rice Krlsples wholesome
and easy to digest. Ready to serve. Made
by Kellogg In Battle Creek.
Society and Clubs
By Clara Mary Davit
Maxine Robinson
Fetes Bride-Elect
At Shower Party
Miss Evelyn Herman, bride elect,
was honored Tuesday evening wlien
Miss Maxine Robinson was bostrss
for a delightful shower party at her
home on Rose avenue.
Miss Herman received many lovely
gifts during the personal shower from
the following guests: Miss La Verne
Stephenson, Miss Leabel Miller. Mrs.
William Knlps, Miss Bethel Single,
Miss Jeanette McKee, Mrs. Olen Wat
son. Miss Everett Olllesple. Miss
Mary Van Dyke. Miss Margaret Wat
son. Mrs. Dean Palwell, Mrs. Wayne
Harris, Mrs. Don Falwell. Mrs. Q. V.
Robinson and Mrs. William FMwell.
Cards were played during' the eve
ning with Mrs. William Palwell and
Mrs. Olen Watson recipients of prizes.
Miss Herman will become the brldo
of Mr. Richard Watson In a neon
wedding at the Episcopal church tomorrow.
Bittle Home Scene
Of Bridge Party
The Tuesday club was entertained
by Nell Precis Tuesday evening at
the home of Mrs. Lou Bittle.
Three tables of bridge were In play
during the evening. Those winning
prizes were Gladys Waltermlre and
Alice Lewis.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess assisted by Mrs. Bittle. Quests
enjoying the affair Included Nelle
Melllng. Myrtle Kent, Alice Lewis,
Nellie Purdln. Florence Rush, Verna
Rowlings, Gladys Rammln, Gladys
Waltermlre, Myrtle Kent and Mrs.
Bittle.
Central Market
Closes Sundays
NOTE: A few weeks ago a group of grocery stores in Medford got together
and wrote an ad stating that after staying open a few Sundays they were
going to close. They also stated that the only reason they stayed open these
few Sundays was to arouse public sentiment against Sunday opening. Of
course, the few dollars that they might have taken in, by staying open, had
nothing to do with it. Was it merely the public sentiment angle they were
thinking1 of? We wonder, because now without advertising or without any
public notice these same stores are again leaving their doors open all day
Sunday! We still do not believe it is necessary to work our employees Sundays
and holidays. We again urge you to help us stop this unnecessary opening
by doing' your shopping on the six weeK days.
T. F. HAWS.
DEVILED MEAT . . 3 for 10c
H size cans
PEANUT BUTTER . 2 lbs. 19c
No. 1 in bulk. Freshly Ground
NOODLES .... each 15c
Fancy Egg. Full Pound Package
CHEESE ...... lb. 17c
Elkhorn, made at Central Point
PICKLES .... qt. jar 17c
Stafford's Sliced Fancy Dills
PORK and BEANS 5c
Van Camp's 11 oz. cans
OLIVES . . No. 1 can 10c
Sylmar Fancy Ripe
CRACKERS . . 2 lb. box 27c
N.B.C. Snowflakes or Grahams
FRESHEST
Fruits, Vegetables
Cantaloupes 2 for 15c
Turlock Jumbo, extra large
Watermelons . . lb. 2c
Guaranteed Ripe and Sweet
New Spuds. 10 lb. 23c
Local White or Red
Lemons .... doz. 23c
SGO Sire, Full of Juice
Green Beans 3 lb. 10c
Local, Young and Tender
Tomatoes lb. 5c
Solid and Ripe
Squash . . lb. 5c
Zucchini, Scallop, Crook. Neck
Gelatin
Royal Fruit
package
5c
Baby Food
Heinz or 9 El
Libby 3 cans fcJG
Rice Krispies
Kellogs, 1 flf
Nourishing, pkg. I UU
Miracle Whip
Golden West, in Qg-
Tea
Golden
Reg. Ice Tea glass
Pineapple
Broken Slices,
Lg. Vi can, 2 for
Broken Slices, OP.
Sugar
Brown .or
Powdered, 3 lbs.
Imprnve
rtiur Sarads
17c
qt. 34c
FLOUR
Quality at consistently
Low Prices
Fisher's Blend
491b $1.59
Four Peaks
Money back d4
guarantee. 49 lb. 5 I t3
Golden Heart
Hard wheat 4 QQ
blend. 49 lbs. 9 i09
AIRLIGHT (4 4
49 lb 3) I . I O
in our STEER BEEF
BREAST of VEAL, lb 12c
FINE WITH DRESSING
BOILING BEEF 2 lbs. 25c.
FROM YOUNG STEERS
BACON SQUARES, lb 19c
JOWLS 1.S STREAKED
BACON BACKS, lb 25c
SWIFT'S I.KillT WEIGHT
COTTAGE CHEESE, pt 11c
Quality Lunch Meats
MEAT DEPT.
VEAL
ROAST
Fey. Veal Shoulder
lb. 15c
FANCY POULTRY
S. & H. GREEN STAMPS on all MEAT PURCHASES
HTRAL MARKET
"WHERE QUALITY IS NOT EXPENSIVE"
129 No. Central " Phone 1980 or 1?81 for Free Delivery. Prices for July 23 & 25
Shakespearean
Committee To
Launch Sale Soon
The sponsoring membership com
mittee of the Oregon Shakespearean
Festival association will meet tonight
at the home of Mrs. H. Chandler
Ean, chairman, at 8 o'clock.
Purpose of the meeting this eve
ning will be to launcn the member
ship drive and formulate final plans
for the ticket sale which begins Mon
day. Committee members Include Mrs.
George Codding. Mrs. Will lam McAl
lister. Miss Gertrude Butler, Mrs. Wel
ti on McBee. Mrs. Almus Prultt, Mrs.
D. R. Wood, Mrs. Th":mas Puson.
Mrs. B. H. Hedrlck, Mrs. Da re 11 P.
Huaoiu Mrs. Charles W. Lemery, Mrs.
R. J. Henry. Mrs. W. H. Mulrhead.
Mr Gordon Davis. Mrs. Edith Stev
ens. Mrs. O. L. Overmyer and Lieut.
Roy D. Craft.
Shower Honors
Young Couple
A pleasant shower party given last
evening at the future home of the
bride and groom to-be. Miss Betty
Cundlff and Mr. J. L. Campbell, on
Ivy street, was held Thursday eve
ning when a group of friends gath
ered for a no-host affair honoring
the couple.
Miss Cundlff and Mr. Campbell will
be married tomorrow evening.
Guests enjoying last nigr.t's party
Included Miss Ncncy Heath. Miss
Wanda Konkel, Miss Jean Bowen,
Miss Shirley McCulUch, Mr. find Mrs.
Roy Cundlff, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Campbell Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Robe.t
Walker. Mr. Robert Wilson, Mr. Mor
ris Stelner and Mr. Morris Campb&'l.
The honored couple were present
ed with many useful gifts "during the
shower affair.
By
I PLANES
Crew Picked Up by British
Cruiser French Anti
Aircraft Batteries Fire On
General Franco's Planes
LONDON. July 3. p Lloyds re
ported toc&y the Danish freighter
Bodll was b:mbed by airplanes and
sunk off the Spanish coast. The crew
was picked up by the British crulsrr
Shropshire, He Bodll, cn route from
Dun rig to Nice, was 844 tons and
owned by J. Laurltzen of Copenhagen.
PERPIGNAN, Prance (at tho Span
ish Frontier). July 22. yp) Prencn
anti-aircraft bntterles fired today on
six airplanes which flew over the
French border from Spain at Osseja.
near Bourg-Madame, 50 miles west
of here.
After three shots had been fired
the planes swung about and return
ed to Spain. Border guards said ti:ey
believed the planes wore Insurgent
craft which, according to border re
ports, bombed several towns and vil
lages In northern Catalonia during
the afternoon.
Durhams Feted at
Kiwanis Dinner
Adjutant and Mrs. G. R. Durham
were honored at a delightful dinner
party. Wednesday evening at Rogue
River lodge.
The affair was given by the Ki
wanis club members and their wives.
Dr. C. H. Paske, past Kiwanis pres
I ident was heard in a farewell talk in
j ti e Durham's behalf and Mr. Ever
t ett Faber presented a brief address.
1 Mrs. R. S. Wilfley was In charge of
! the affair.
Following the dinner visiting was
! enjoyed for the remainder of the
evening.
Adjutant and Mrs. Durham are
! leaving here soon for Portland where
they will make their home. They have
been feted at a number of very pleas
ant entertainments the past several
weeks.
Former Resident
Visitor Here
Mrs. Stanton Grlffls of New York
visited In Medford the past several
days. She was a former resident of
this valley and this visit marked her
first one ln 23 years.
During her brief sojourn In this
city, Mrs. Grlffls called on several of
her ranch colony friends and was en
tertained at small Informal affairs.
Miss Williams9
Vacation Ends
Miss June D. Williams returned to
her home on Almond street In Med
ford recently from an enjoyable va
cation spent In the north.
Miss Williams was the guest of
friends and relatives In Seattle, Ttt
coma and Bremerton.
Picnickers poisoned
PORTLAND. July 22. (AP) Eight
persons who came from Mist y eater -
I day to seek relief from the heat at
' a river resort were In the hospital to
day suffering from food poisoning.
Four were in serious condition.
NOTICE of Special 8chool Meet
ing, July 26, 1938, at 8 p. m., Griffin
Creek, District No. 2, Jackson County,
for the purpose of voting $6,000 for
remodeling and enlarging White
school house. All taxpayers of Dis
trict are eligible to vote.
HENRY HUKILL. Chairman.
BESSIE SNYDER. Clerk.
School District No. 3.
H END AVE. France (at the Spanish
Frontier), July 22. (P) Insurgent
dispatches reported today that gov
ernment troops had been driven from
the Espina mountains northwest of
Segorbe, making It dangerous for .jov
crnmcnt General. Jose Minja to con
tinue to hold the main highway to
Valencia.
Segorbe. a key to Valencia, Is 84
mlle southeast of Vlver on the Ter-uel-Sagunto-Valencla
road, which the
Insurgents' heavy artillery blasted,
preventing the government from mov
ing up munitions and supplies.
The capture of the village of Hlg
ueras In the Espina range linked t;o
armies of Insurgent Generals Garcia
Vallno and Jose Varelo and gave the
Insurgents a continuous front i"om
Vlver, 34 miles northwest of Valencia,
to the Mediterranean,
The campaign against Valencia, fo
cal point of the general offensive,
waa resumed on all fronts. Insurgent
dispatches from Zaragoza admitted
that drives on the central-southern
front were designed mainly to pre
vent General Mlaja from drawing off
troops to reinforce defenses of Va
lencia. South of Madrid, along the Tagus
river, and In Estremadura province,
however, Insurgents said the offens
ives were developing successfully in
their own rlgdt and were slowly re
ducing the amount of government
held territory.
ACTOR WALBURN
ENJOYING VISIT
Raymond Walburn, Hollywood film
actor vacationing here for the past
week, has definitely decided that
the Rogue river and surrounding
country are wonderful.
Mr. Walburn may, however, be
slightly prejudiced toward Medford
especially since he had the thrill of
making a limit steelhead catch last
evening.
The well-known actor is at pres
ent a guest of Jimmy Valentine at
his summer home near Trail. Val
entine also landed the limit Inst
night. The two sportsmen were fish
ing directly in front of Mr. Valen
tine's home on the Rogue river.
Mr. Walburn Is so much Impressed
with this location that he la plan
ning on building or buying a sum
mer home himself )n the near fu
ture. He stated that he had no Idea
the valley could boast such a va
riety of excellent sports and he
plans to spread the word around to
many of his movie friends.
FALL OF
BEFORE
IS
E
Weather
Northern California: Fair tonight,
Saturday and Sunday, except fog on
coast and local thunderstorms over
high mountains; not so warm In In
terior of north and central portions
Saturday; light to moderate north
west wind off coast.
Oregon: Partly cloudy tonight and
Saturday with local thunderstorm
over mountains and fogs on coast:
not so warm Interior Saturday; mod
erate northwest wind off coast.
ai R I HERSMiEl
u m m u La ii m v u a i
City Softened by Three
Weeks of Relentless Ham
mering Warships Able
to Approach for Climax
SHANGHAI, July 23. Foreign
military observers predicted today the i
Imminent Japanese capture of Klu- j
klang. defences of which have been
battered by three weeks of relentless
bombing.
Authoritative Information was tint j
Japanese warships were able to ap- ;
proach Kluk'lang, strategic city 135
miles down the Yangtze river from
Hankow, whenever dealred. to deltver
the final assault with planes and
ships. !
Anti-aircraft guns having been 1
silenced. Japanese warplanes could
bomb the city at will. It was believed
the Japanese were withholding the
final blow pending a cleanup of the
entrance to Poyang lake, ten miles
east of Klukiang. where the Chinese
have resisted stubbornly every Jap-,
anese move. !
After capitulation of Klukiang, the ;
next phase of the war would extend
30 miles uprlver to n boom between
Wusueh and Tlcnklacheng, almoin
halfway to Hankow.
The Invaders' planes Incessantly
raided Chinese positions on both
banks of the Yangtze, while Japan
ese troops withstood Chinese counter-attacks
in villages all along the
narrow Japanese foothold.
The Chinese maintained they ty
pulsed Japanese landing on t,he north
bank. Land batteries damaged two
Japanese warships.
The Shipping Review quoted "au
thoritative sources' that the Jap
anese aircraft carrier Notoro, 14,000
tons, was so badly damaged by Chi
nese shells on July 3 she had to be
towed to Japan. She carried 40
planes, the paper said.
11
JERUSALEM. Jlllv 22 t AT Thro
Jews and eight Arabs were killed and
five Jewish workers were wounded
during a series of clashes in widely
separated districts today.
A Jew was killed In ambush on the
Jerusalem-Jaffn. mnln hitrhtunv th.
I eight Arabs were killed by police
na troops pursuing a Dand which
attacked a colony near Haifa yester
day. Two Jewish police wore killed and
the five workers wounded by an at
tack from ambllBh on a lorrv rnrrvlno
workers near Saba In Sharon.
In an average 2 hour moving
picture the eye sees 200,000 separate
pictures.
FOR 7 SHORT DAYS
A Merchandising Event
MATCHLESS
ELIZABETH
ARDEN
PREPARATIONS
20? OFF
Mot just a few, but all the famous Elizabeth
Arden Preparationi are included in this unusual
offer. The Summer season's Just beginning:, so
stock up now on your favorite essentials for
loveliness at substantial savings.
JULY 23 TO 30 INCLUSIVE
WEST SIDE PHARMACY
REXALL OIFT SHOP
West Main at Grape.
Phone 775
GRIFFIN CREEK SCHOOL
TO CONSIDER WPA HELP
ORIFFIN CREEK, July 22. (BpM
It Is planned to have a repre
sentative of the PWA or someone
familiar with loan operations of
that body, present at the school
meeting here at 8 o'clock Monday
evening. In view of the proposed
building program for the school,
patrons are represented as wishing
to consider a possible loan and grant
from the PWA, if it Is decided to go
ahead with the project.
It was also declared today that
the school board has had the pro
ject under official discussion only
since the annual meeting June 30.
tJt4fe4 WITH
ROOT BEER
So
1$
MM
ET
313-315 N. Riverside Phone 358
Open Evenings and Sundays
TOW Mh
In fact we're very
w i ii e awaxe to
every family food
need. Have time,
errort and money
here.
SPINACH
10c
No. 22 can
VAL.VIT0
CORN No. 2 can 2 for 25c
DEL MONTE
SALMON Alaska packed can 10c
SALAD DRESSING
Dinner Bell
A Durkee Product
full quart jar 23c
TOMATOES No.2y2can 9c
Extra Standard Case of 24 cans S2.09
MILK all brands 4 cans 25c
10c
PEAS
Ooody
Goody
No. 2 can
Case of 24 cans S2.29
BETTER MEATS
VEAL
Fancy grain fed
Chops lb. 20c
Rib or l.oln
Shoulder lb. 15c
Breast lb. 10c
LAMB
Genuine Lamb
Chops lb. 19c
Rib or l.oln
Shoulder lb. 15c
Breast lb. 8c
CUBE STEAKS each 5c
GENEROUS SIZE
DIXIE SQUARES lb. 19c
SAUSAGE
2 lb. 25c
PURE PORK, NICE AND LEAN
RAISINS 4 lb. pkg. 25c
MARKET DAY SPECIAL
WAX PAPER 40 ft. roll 5c
SHORTENING 8 lb. pail 89c
PEARL
Phone 358 for Free Delivery
Fresh
Produce
.LOCAL
String Beans
EXTRA FANCY
2 lb. 15c
LOCAL CABBAGE
TOMATOES
EXTRA FANCY
WATERMELONS
lb. 3c
4 lb. 19c
lb. 2c