PJGE TWO'
MTDFOTCn AfATL TRTRTjyTE. rETTFOTtD. OREGON". THTRSPXY. REPTFrBER 29. 1938.
Society
By Clara
Dancing Party
Enjoyable Event
Lively Rogues dancing club held
Its first party of the season last eve
nlng at the Knights of Pythias hall
Unique decorations In a hunting
scene motif were carried out,
abundance of cat tails and foliage
formed a nest for decoy ducs and
resulted In the out-door atmosphere.
Fifty couples enjoyed the affair.
Larry Ogle was chairman of the party
and bla committee consisted of Mrs.
Ogle, Mr, and Mrs, Joe Marshall, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hay, Mr. and Mrs,
Lewis Ulrlch and Mr. and Mrs. O. O.
Larlson,
D. A. R. Members
Advise People
By A D, A, R, Member
Ideal Americanism should be the
dominant thought In the lives of
every American In this hour of trou
ble. It would be most fitting for
veir home In the nation to take an
bour and read both the Declaration
of Independence and the Constitu
tion of the United State and to dla
eurs the many principles which are
as applicable today as they were when
this nation was established. It la es
pecially fitting that we live these
principles as an example to the men
and women who are becoming cltl
mns at their own request.
On next Tuesday at the postofflce
there will be about twenty admitted
and It will be with lrrepressable Joy
that they take the oath of allegiance.
The Americanism chairman of the
Daughters of the American Revolu
tion will announce the time as soon
as notice Is received from Portland
headquarters.
D. A. R- To Place
Historic Marker
Mrs. Bert B. Lowry, regent of the
Daughters of the American Revolu
tion and the historic markers' com
mittee consisting of Mrs. J. H. Coch
ran. Mrs. B. Q. Harding and Miss
Bara Van Meter are making prepara
tions for the erection of a historic,
marker for which funds are being
raised by a rummage sale at the nat
atorlum on Friday and Saturday.
BURELSON'S
Hundreds of Lovely New
COATS
i Await Your Visit to Burelson's
A
SPORT
COATS
Jnt mflred a lar
ahlpmrnt of npnrt
fonts, flltrd nimlrl,
dirndl style, mvac
Kr models and the
fsmou "Collrup Girl
Wrap." Plain and
rough weave wool.
Junior Upi is-1,1.17.
Ml'tv Hires U to 20.
Womrn' uliea 36 to
4S.
$985 $1250 to $1975
Colors: black, wine, nut, navy and teal.
BURELSON'S
Ladies' Ready to-Wear Store
Phone 28 Medford Center Bldg.
and Clubs
Mary Davig
Society Anticipates
Pioneer Meeting
Valley society In general Is antici
pating the sixty-second annual re
union of the society of pioneers of
southern' Oregon to be held at the
old court house In Jacksonville
Thursday, October 6 beginning at 10
o'clock In the morning.
Miss Clair Hanley is In charge of
inuance of dinner tickets and regis
tration. The meeting will be opened by
Senator A. K. Reames, president of
the organization after which a pro
gram of music and addresses will be
enjoyed. A reading by William Green
leaf, well known Shakespearean
player here, will be given.
Arrangements are In charge of Miss
Alice Hanley and muslo will be In
charge of Mrs. Elsie Carlton Strang.
At the meeting, announcement of
the rules governing prize essay com
petitions, to be conducted by the
society, will be heard. The first of
these essay contests will be held dur
ing the year 1830 under said rules
of the contest. As a result of the
contest, there will at "the annual
meeting for that year be awarded the
prize for the best essay upon the
pioneer subject assigned, which prize
Is 950.000, which has been donated
to the society by the Hon. Benjamin
B. Beekman of Portland, a pioneer
and member of the society.
The above proceedings will be fol
lowed by discussions upon pioneer
subjects and such other business as
may come before the meeting.
Gates Hosts For
Dinner Party
Mr. and Mrs. George pates were
hosts last evening for a delightful
dinner party at Rogue River lodge.
Quests present Included captain
and Mrs. Lee Bown. Mr. and Mrs. E
P. Merrick, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hub
bard, Mr. and Mrs. Ward Hammond,
Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Larlson, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Ulrlch and Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Goldy.
Following the pleasant affair, the
group attended the dancing party at
the Knights of Pythias hall given by
the Lively Rogues dancing club.
EVERY ONE SMART!
EVERY ONE A BARGAIN!
We Are Featuring a
Large Group of
KRIMMA
KURL COATS
In many new styles and colon,
(tenulne Krlinma Kurl emit,
can only be purrhar! at
rtiirelson'a. They must bear the
Krlmma Kurl label, which Is
exclusive at Burelinn'i.
complete range of Krimma
Kurls in Sizes and colors.
Fitted Modela Teal
Boxy
Swagger
Velvet
Trlmmod
Tucked
Modols
Copper
Ruat
Wine
Black
Navy
Sizes 12 to 44
$29.75
$35.00 to $39.75
BETTER FUR TRIMMED
COATS
tty r-rlntren, and Pacific Mali and
other leading manufacturer. All ntihhr
nratea, camel hair and tuaranteed
lining.
Colors : Fur Collars are :
Black Persian Lamb
Rust Beaver Grey
Brown , Krimmer
Teal Silver Fox
t Red Fox
Kid Skin
Natural
Squirrel
$29.75
$39.75 to $79.50
Miss Young Visits
Parents Here
Miss Sybil Jean Toting of Portland
ta In Medford vacationing and Is tbe
house guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harris Young at their home on
Beall Lane.
Miss Young arrived In Medford last
week for several dsys and then, ac
companied by Miss Nelle Qreen of
this city, went to Ban Francisco
where they sojourned for a week.
They came back to this city yesterday.
Mrs. Hart Visits
In This City
Mrs. Robert Hart and two children,
Ann and Sara of Klamath Falls are
In Medford for several days visiting
at the home of Mrs. Hart's parents.
Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Vllm at their
home on Genessee street.
The Harts formerly lived In this
city and moved to Klamath Falls
several months ago. -
Dixie Club
Meets Soon
Dixie Club will convene Saturday
afternoon at 3 o'clock at the coun
try home of Mrs. Rawles Moore on
the Old Stage road.
Mrs. John Peter will act as assist
ant hostess.
Miss Sparrow
Returns Home
Miss Harriett Sparrow, daughter of
Mrs, Alex Sparrow recently returned
to her home at Klrtland Forms from
Orescent City where she enjoyed a
week's sojourn.
While at the coast city, Miss Spar
row was house guest of her brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. James
Firth, formerly of this city.
Bridge Luncheon
Enjoyed Wednesday
Mrs. Alex Sparrow entertained yes
terday afternoon at Klrtland Farms
near Central Point with a very enjoy
able luncheon and bridge party.
Seven tables of bridge were in play
throughout the afternoon.
Calendar
Thursday
8:00 p. m. B.p.w..' CHrls' Com
munity clubhouse.
Friday
3:00 p. m. Missionary council.
Zlon Lutheran church. 4th street.
3:00 p. m. Women'a Relief corp.
home Mra. Eliza Mention, 19 Rose
avenue.
Obituary
Charles 8 trail be
BIO APPLEQATE, Sept. )9. (Spl)
Charles fitraube. member of a pio
neer Jackeon county family, passed
away at a Portland hospital Wednes
day, following a paralytic stroke, ac
cording to a telegram received here
by Fred Straube, a brother.
Mr. Straube spent 10 years of his
young manhood in southern Oregon,
coming to Willow Springs district
with his parents, Mr. and Mra. John
Straube, at the age of 13. The fam
ily came here from Dona vt lie. Cal
where Mr. Straube was born. He was
a blacksmith, and was employed for
several years by the late pat Done
gan of JscfcacnvHle, where he learned
the trade. When he was 22 he left
this county and spent several years
ranching in Washington. While living
at The Dalles he married, his wife
passing away two years ago. Recently
he had made his home In Portland,
and had been confined to a hospital
there for the last year.
The funeral will be held In Port
land Friday, on which day Mr
Straube would have been 81, Besides
his brother here ho is survived by
another brother, mill 8traube, at
Waterman, Ore.
Mrs. Marrlanne ffarjjent
O RANTS PASS, Sept. 3fl. (AP,
Funeral services for Marianne Sar
gent 78. were arranged here for this
afternoon. A native of the Grant
Pass district, she died in Portland
yesterday.
Relatives reported Mrs. Sargent
played an unusual part during the
World war, being section bow of a
railroad gang near Oold H1U.
Women Golfers Open
Championship Play
Thirteen woman golfers were today
playing first round matches of 18
holes in the annual Rogue Valley
Oolf club's championship tourna
ment, with eight of them competing
In the championship flight and five
in the first flight. Seml-flnals will
be staged tomorrow and the finals
over the week-end. All matches are
for -18 holes, without handicap.
Mrs. Bill Thompson, two-time win
ner of the tournament, is aaln en
tered, and la gunning for permanent
possession of the handsome club tro
phy. She won the title last year and
In 1032.
Closing time for roo Late to Clas
ilfy Ada is 1:30 p m.
A Better Way to
Treat Constipation!
When you're constipated, li s a
great temptation to be aatttried
with owe relic. But medicines
may become a habit. And Uiey
don t keen comtlpation from re
turning. It s so much bettor to get
at the cause of the troublel
If you eat what most people do.
chances are the only thing the
matter Is tou don'l per enough
"bulk." And bulk. ' doesn't mean
htm muc you eat. It means a
kind of food that tint consumed
In the body, but leaves a soft
bulky" mass In the Intestines and
helps a bowel movement.
What to do? Est Ke Hogg's All
Bran for breakfast every dav
and drink plenty of water. This
rrunchy cereal contains both
"bulk" and the Intestinal tonic,
Tltamln B, And It s not a drug
not a medicine! All-Hran la marie
hy Kellogg's In Battle Creek 8o!d
by grocers. Served by restaurants.
Sport
Graphs
Billy Hulert says:
. Pete's Return
Will Stimulate
Wrestling Here
Pete Belcastro returns to the Med
ford armory grappling arena next
Monday night, and every citizen who
has even the remotest interest In
the mat Industry
hereabouts will
welcome him
back with wide
open arms.
The Weed Mad
Italian la "box
office" in capital
letters, and right
now the game
here needs the
stimulus of
artmaaVu-ulV with
B 'viA'ffl 'an PPeal more
Is'ifc Vsfiri.'i . than at any time
"Billy Ho lea.
within the past
several years.
Attendance has
decreased alarmingly the past three
weeks, principally because of the fact
that none of the current bone-benders
are overly blessed with that In
tangible something called "color."
Although they are all good boys,
especially Paul Murdock and Charley
Carr, they Just haven't that dash
and fire which makes the turnstiles
click sweetly and the box office re
ceipts husky.
Dolrostro has that super draw
ing power, hence the many glad
dened hearts' among other wres
tlers, fans and Prmnotcr I.I Hard,
that Pete Is acomln' bark. It
might seem At range that other
jprap piers are tickled pink over
Pete's return, because Pete Is
rather disliked among members
of the mat clan, hut his appear
ance on a program Is practically
a guarantee of a capacity or
near capacity house, and wres
tlers, you know, battle not only
on their guarantee but on n per
centage, over a certain figure.
If the "take" passes a certain
mark, the wrestlers get a cnt,
so they are all considerably in
favor of Belcastro hanging around.
Pete's opponent Monday evening
will be Nick Bozlnls. the short, stocky
backbreaker specialist who formerly
wore a mask and called himself the
Black Secret. It should be a good
match, and one that will please those
customers who like those rock 'em
and sock 'em type Imbroglios. Pete
will outweigh Nick, but the smaller
fellow la tough as all get out and
will undoubtedly make a fight of It.
Remainder of the program will see
Paul Murdock and Buddy Knox
clashing In the middle encounter,
and Charley Carr and Tiger Tsakoff
opening the card. The Murdock
Knox encounter should be extremely
Interesting to lovers of clean wres
tling, aa both boya are tops In the
straight stuff. It will also bring
about a battle of two highly effec
tive holds the Alabama thunderbolt
aa manipulated by Murdock. and the
airplane spin as applied by Knox.
They came from behind twice to
tie the score, then won out In the
ninth frame, so you can count those
Chicago Cubs of Mr. P. K. Wrlgley
In the world series with the Yankees.
Such, anyway, Is this scribbler's
opinion of the National lengue dog
fight, following the Cubs' 6 to 8 win
over Pie Trnynor's Pirates yesterday.
The gnme was vitally Important, of
course, becauao tt catapulted the Chl
cagoes Into first place by one-half
game over Pittsburgh, but the Item
of biggest Import In that battle was
the proof that Oabby Hartnett bosses
a club that has what Is politely
, ' " -"VV.
TsME SERVES IT y
Little does ha know that Extro Pals Blltt-Weinhord jfltliiiii ff lV.
beer is now her favorite, too. Every day more and ?, . : gpj(Wr- My-.'"
more housewivet are making It a habit to keep o ; . . E1'. t&SW'
supply of this mild, clean-taiting Extra Pole beer ? fce. ."s;
In the home ot all timet... truly it'i breaking Into : . 'Jf If 9 1 1 t Jf ' "$
'refrigerators all over town. For Individual tervingi . - rr 7 If fjtl
ot home we recommend the pour-eoiy ttubby, and 11 a if. y - 4 Si'
the economy-sire quart for family or party use. ' -i LLI(:t ff sfe. '' i
blitz imtyi
w BLITZ-wtlNMARD CO- POgTLAWD, OStCON JssStoSSLaxJ "T '
, ' - - -
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nil i ? ri
I f mm
UP COIFFURE
problem for Mri. Maude
Williams of Oakland. Cal who
let her hair down at slate fair
in Sacramento, winning a long,
est-halr contest. Her locks were
78 inches; best a competitor could
do was 68 inches.
known aa Intestinal fortitude. With
that heavy world series sugar dan
gling before their eyes, the Cubs went
out and outbattled the Buca and
mjved Into first place. They had
what It takes In the clutch, and they
proved they are money players. We'll
take them to win the pennant now.
regardless of whether Pittsburgh re
gains the lead today. .
Remainder of the National league
schedule sees Chicago moving to St.
Louis tomorrow for a four-game
series and Pittsburgh Invading Cin
cinnati for four games. Double
headers will be played tomorrow, with
the slate ending Sunday after single
games Saturday and Sunday. It
looks like Pittsburgh has slightly the
tougher row to hoe. because the Reds
have done more this season than
have the Cardinals.
A good arm. speed afoot. and ac
tion at the plate are the first things
baseball scouts look for in young
players. Hank Severeld, ex-major lea
gue catcher, remarked when he was
here for the Cincinnati Reds' tryout
camp.
"Young players simply must
have good throwing arms." Hank
said, "and they should be able
to travel with haste. However,
they don't have to he great nat
ural hitters right off the bat.
ff they look good at the plate,
take a nice cut and stay In there,
that's all that's necessary when
we first sign them."
Hank said that Johnny Vander
Meer's fast ball was hla best pitch,
but that he had a wicked curve to
go with it. In fact, the big fellow
explained, pitchers had to possess
mat nigh, hard one to make good
In the majors. Hurlera can be taught
how to throw curves, he said, but not
how to boom that fast one In there.
If they don't have natural apeed.
they never will have, he remarked.
Eugene Trio Hurt
GRANTS PASS, Sept. 29. (AP) i
Three Eugene residents. Ira Sawyer.
C. B. Clark, and N. O. Clark, were
treated for minor Injuries at a phy
sician's office here Wednesday after
noon. A garage, reported their car
wsa practically demolished when it
was forced o-er an embankment on
the Pacific highway north of here.
DISTRIBUTED BY SNIDER 3 DAIRY
HOMES TOPPLE IN
TWINKLE OF EYE
IN VICIOUS GALE
, (Continued trocn Page One.)
he was "dazed by the sudden fury
wltn which the storm struck.
"I was on my way to work and
had Just parked my car in a tor
rentlal downpour," he said, "when
I heard an almost deafening roar.
I did not see any buildings collapse
It did not last more than 30 sec
onds or a minute at the most In
the neighborhood I was in.
"As soon as I got to the office,
a stone's throw away, I ssw that
all the electric power was off. Look
ing from the window I noticed the
roof of the Tlmrod Inn had dlsap
peared. As far aa we could see from
the windows of the office, Ch&rle
ton presented a picture of wrecked
buildings and uprooted trees."
"The storm apparently dipped Into
all parts of the city with a toll of
wreckage everywhere it touched,"
Rubin said.
J. JC. Lock wood. TJ. B. meteorolo
gist, said he believed two tornadoes
struck the city a few minutes apart,
WASHINGTON. Sept. 39. (API-
Norman H. Davis, head of the Red
Cross, said today 25 bodies had been
recovered and 840 persons had been
Injured when a tornado struck
Charleston, S. C
Davis, a caller at the White House,
said the report was received via naval
raci;o.
Thirty city blocks, he said, had
been damaged by the tornado and
100 houses blown down.
President Roosevelt already had
ordered the army. nvy and the works
progress administration to render all
possible aid to the stricken city.
The president acted in response to
a telephone request from Lieut. Gov.
J. E. Harley of South Carolina.
Harley advised the chief executive
that there was "considerable prop
erty damage and loss of life" In
Charleston.
The South Carolina governor, Har
ley said. Is In Oklahoma and cannot
be reached. The legislature is not
In session to take any action, he
added.
Stephen Early, presidential secre
tary, said this caused Mr. Roosevelt
to proffer Immediate federal assist
ance. READY TO FIGHT
PARIS, Sept. 29. (UP) The Duke
of Windsor, who holds high ranks In
the British armed forces, haa put
his affairs In order to rush beck to
England If he Is called upon, his
friends said tonight.
The duke has closely followed
events by radio and frequent tele
phone conversations with Bucking
ham palace and other Informed quar
ters. LONDON. Sept. 20 (UP) The
Evening Standard's gossip column,
"Londoner's Diary." said today that
the Duke of Windsor approves of
"every detail" of Prime Minister Nev
ille Chamberlain's efforts to avert
war.
"For the prime minister himself
the duke has an admiration which
has become fervent In recent clays,'
the column said.
Prolific
WICHITA, Kas., Sept. 29. (AP)
Sedgwick county residents marvelled
11 months ago when Bert Taylor's
cow gave birth to triplets. Now Bos
sle Is back - In the spotlight with
quadruplets, all In excellent health.
LABOR SITUATION
IN 'FRISCO TENSE
SAN PRANCISCO, Sept. 29. (AP)
The "hot" box car rolled again
here today and closed a wholessle
drug supply firm, while the Isbor
situation, Including a threatened
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strike of I.J00 grocery clerks, grew
more serious.
Three other paper company ware
houses In Oakland, units of 5a
Francisco firms, also were closed af
ter employers charged the Ware,
housemen's union with breach ot
contract.
Both sides disagreed on the num
ber of warehouses closed In the con
tract dispute. The operators said 134
were closed while union officials said
87 were shut down.
The number of men laid off was
estimated at more than 3,900 by the
operators, at 1,S00 by tbe union.
Don't forget to order
DaddtMjBI
of ageing which permits t
perfect jusion of all M-J-B's
flavor-factors in the roasting.
Thus M-J-B gives you the
most satisfying full-flavored
coffee at any strength. Try
M-J-B and see.
Set of u .
"7!
COSTS
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"H'lNd COSSOIAtlOM