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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1938)
MEDFORD MATL TRTBTTNT:. MTCDFORD. OREGON" THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 10, IfKS. PAGE THREE HELP IN SENDING DELEGATE ABROAD IS AIM OF Chamber of Commerce Aid , Sought' for Representa tion of County at 1939 World Meet in London Support of the Jackson County Chamber of Commerce will be sought in representing Jackson county at a- conference in London next sum mer of the Associated Country Wo men of the World, according to plans made by county women meet ing here Monday afternoon. The far-reaching benefits to be derived by Jackson county in this move were foreseen, and the co-operation of all county and civic or ganizations will be solicited. The Jackson county extension committee, in cooperation with Mrs. Mabel C. Mack, home demonstration agent, has launched this project with the fol lowing committee In charge : Mrs. Lee Port of Applegate, Mrs. Olive Floyd and Mrs. Rita Myers of Med ford, the latter from the county committee alumni. The help and inspiration brought to this section through representa tion in London and the publicity derived will be of untold value. It was pointed out Monday. Having It's enough to make a camel hump IN SAUDI ARABIA you can't just say "Slip on your burnouse, dearie, and come on over." Getting around if a prob lem, even for a camel par ticularly when heavy loads must be carried. The land is virgin, covered with drifted sanATherc are exactly no roads. ' ' In such terrain, we are pros pecting for oil that the na tion's supply may never fail. To solve the transportation requirements of this roadless land, men have been at work in a chain that reaches half way around the world, Tractors which pull caterpillar-trailers have been specially devised. But even newer are the three-axle all-wheel drive trucks set on 13.50" x 20" six ply tires, which carry a maxi mum inflation pressure of only 10 pounds per square inch, specially engineered for the job. You know the theory if you've ever let the air out of tires to escape a sand-trap and then pumped them up again. So that tire experts, engine experts, automotive experts could make genuine tests we had to take a tip from the mov ies and relocate Arabia in of of all places Indiana. But we did it. In a land of factories, farms, and homes we discovered a sand-dune fastness like some thing out of Beau Gcste an Arabia at home where uncom- promising practice could put theory to the test. Standard Oil Company of California THE WORLD-K.. . . rillXiFi . . . Mffc adtimlmt i itttti . . . I't tmnh htntitb tht tntttt utnttoui of tht kM. MHtraf of tht Oakland Bridft Ittt "Trtssmrt Ulnd"ltt9 ct tht 19)9 CONVENIENT To Everything In xVV 11. 3 , ' I.ST ! ' 4 1.1 1 mLiJim l tmam i ninim hi i At Work in New Nestle Down Shop iM4 ft ft M W Ml ' 1 . Shown here Is a group of workers at 408 East Main street. one or tne county a own country women at the conference also will bring the honor of representing Ore gon, since the state la not yet af filiated with the Associated Country Women, and will give opportunity for an exhibition of the work of homemakera here, the meeting stressed. Opens In May The conference will be held In May and June, 1939. and delegates from the United States will be enter tained at the world fair in New York on May 23, country women's day. That the Associated Country Wo men of the World is deserving of support from all who wish to see the world's present state Improved was stressed. It ts a university of rural studies, a solvent of preju dice and Ignoance, and will have world ' peace as Its main topic at the coming conference, speakers said. The A. C. W. W..I3 the champion of a neglected and disregarded section of the world's population, its country women, who are yet the very basis of economy, they asserted. without the country homes there would be no stream of healthy rein forcement to the cities and work shops. It was pointed out. What the countrywoman has done to serve her country and help herself has been by her own organized effort; what she can do to serve the world by her unique powers and Influence will be through her own organized International effort, the meeting was told. To Sell Magazines Home extension units of the county are aiding the move to have a rep resentative in London, and have launched magazine subscription sales. Sales chairmen met with the county committee and Mrs. Mack Monday. The following have been named In the numerous units to take charge of subscriptions: Mrs. Roland Beach. Medford; Mrs. Alta Croucher, Howard; Mrs. Goldle M. Wolf, Ashland: Mrs. Grace Pann. Orlffln Creek; Mrs. Delia Inlow. Bellview; Mrs. Minnie Pox. Lake Creek: Mrs. Tresslc Vaughn, McLeod; Mrs. Cora Hall, Trail; Mrs. Abble Buttorfleld. Evans Valley; Mrs. The rm Taylor. Eagle Point; Mrs. Brace Moffatt. Roxy Ann: Mrs. V. A. Brennensholtz, Sams Valley; Mrs. Charity Sanders. Oak Grove; Mrs. Zola Pick. Jacksonville: Mrs. otto Caster. Phoenix: Mrs. Wlnnlfred Ms son, Talent, and Mrs. Lee Port Apple gat. POLK COUNTY II PORTLAND. Ore.. Nov. 10 Up AJ E. Roswr, former eecretary of Ore gon APL teamsters, was transferred from' the Polk to the Multnomah county Jail Wednesday where he was being held for 8fcamola county, Wn. Rower, who ha appealed a 13 year penitentiary sentence for com plicity In an a;son plot, has posted ball aggregatl-tig 066.500 In three Ore gon countlrj but not In the Wash ington county, where he was under indictment on a charge of participate lng tn a beer truck bomb plot. Hla bail in Skamania county was $25.- oor. Use Mall Tribune Want Ada cUcc Here i San Francisco's newtst and most modern downtown hotel focal point for business tod professional people and tourists from all parti of the world. In the heart of the business, shopping and theatre districts. Six hundred rooms with fcath; popular-priced Coffee Room. Dining nd Dtnelng to Famous Bsndi in tht PERSIAN ROOM tnon 1 u i u I U U J 1HP : a -. turning ont Nestle Down products LOCAL FIRM PLANS SALES EXPANSION Equipped for Increased production In Its new and ,more spacious quar ters at 408 East Main street. Nestle Down Products, Inc., today was launched on a sales expansion pro gram. A distributing branch Is already In operation In Portland and sale pro- grama are now under way In other cities throughout the state, the com pany said. Distributing branches and sales campaigns are also sched uled for Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles and eastern centers as rapidly as adequate production facilities re available In the new factory. It ws stated. In Its new premises the company has four time the floor space it had at its former locatlpn, 316' Bast Main street and the factory Is being equipped with the latest type ma chines for .iicrea&ed production. About 35 persona are now employed by the company. The firm manufacturers a number of products containing as basic In sulating material the finest northern waterfowl down. The principal pro ducts are household and outdoor Items, Including the exclusive and original Nestle Down beauty sleeper and Nestle Down aWper rolls. The products are said to meet the demand for light but warm bed coverings. The basic construction principles of Nestle Down beauty sleepers are covered by patent and trade mark. Lonns to farmers from production credit associations were reported -t a five-year high of tlR3.000.000 at the mid-point of the 1938 financing season. Excursions Example 00 FROM PORT LA NO ROUHD TRIP TO CHICAGO (trains 7& $ft5Shtuur' C,n OF PORTLAND -iro-Port- t j A.o n, m., on i ',u' i3,dh .'iMf asth. 30K fc loChic.90. N. .!''" Service. -I"" PACIFIC "WIT"- 5 whom I" cel... I x Visit SUN VALLEY fluke T Year-round Sporta . 'cVnler Haached onl, T For nlalK rnn.ult "outh.m Parlftc Aecnt. or write J. C. rnmmlnr. Ofn eral Pawnrr Aient, llllork lllork. rortiana. J.r I KM T I ne . IN Btt" s JSf SM UM HUM rACf 10. .(J In the company's new quarters TREND JJALLOT PALO ALTO, Cal.. Nov. 10. (fl3) Former President Herbert Hoover Is sued the following post -election statement today from his home on the Stanford university campus: "The returns Indicate a majority of the American people voted for gov ernors, senators or congressmen, either Republican or Democrat, who are opposed to the New Deal. "This protest should enable the be ginning of the end of this waste of public money, these policies of coer cion, political corruption and under mining of representative government. "The re-invigorated Republican party la now in position to Join ef fectively with the anti-New Deal democracy to check these policies lr. the congress and thereby contrlbwe to restore employment and agr vul ture, to reestablish confidence lr. bus iness, and above all, to restoe faith in America. "Over the next two yea: g It Is the duty of the Republics, party not alone to join In this check but to develop a construe tiv-; program which will commend itse'f to the country for 1940." Ceeirithi IMS. Lioutt A Mrut Tosmco .y.sS NLrvftx A-A$kk&M$w mm ) NfTl&1& MyWt. r4J rtfk Xo I n MtU threat man' ffe5 -Wt' the reason ChesterfieU $i:l$?J-t j WZZ,' "- stands out from the others mm:mi ;m, ffri - r4ll00mA n ; ' 1 different is because it combines the Wm H rfJ smokingqualitiesoftheworld'sbest ffiwWlWn Kn K f&. f L J cigarette tobaccos in one cigarette. MW0Ml4M M V It's the right combination of tfaeso i0Ww0 riiM ty - tobaccos... mild ripe home-grown WMBF (SB) andaromaticTurkish,roUedinpure WfmmiMm mlJl cigarette paper...that makes Chest- WWWMMml mfi' .erfield a better cigarette for you to mWMiifm Wl V smoke.e.milder and better-tasttt. mMmMMM' L xx . j m i BALLET COMPANY WINS P RAISE FROM PRESS IN SANTA BARBARA SERIES In Santa Barbara this past summer, when the San Francisco Opera Ballet which plays In Medford November 18 at the Holly theater, was featured on the summer bowl series with an or chestra from the Los Angeles Phil harmonic, the press commented on the following day that the ballet save "a magnificent performance." Mag nificent ts a highly descriptive ad jective In the English language. Youth, with delightful freshness and virility. Is an outstanding char acteristlo of the dance group from the southern opera company. The average age of the artists Is In the very early twenties, yet there is a maturity and finish to every move ment, figuration, and gesture that combine to Justify the word "mag nificent." Christensen's choreogra phy has a suavity and pace that al low the watcher to forget move ment while conscious or a smooth flowing, colorful picture truly mag nificent. Chrtstensen, ballet master and choreographer has had unusual material to work with. Dancers such as Merle Williams, who excels In roles of broad characterization. A fine technician, she controls a broad sweep of movement so vital to ballet pantomime for It is a panto mime of its own devising, never quite touching reality yet clear Iff Its purpose; the exaggeration that U a part of the fantasy of ballet in quires broad strokes with a trubtle brush. Among the male dancers ete sever al diverse types. Ronald Chetwood carries the classic role?., when not danced by Chrtstensen, and James Starbuck the humorous character parts. Starbuck srowa to advantage in such ballets ns "Bartered Bride" and "In Vienna." while Chetwood shows to advfutage in the more for mal type of ballet, such as "A Bach Suite." McAdoo Successor Named for Senate LOS ANGELES. Nov. 10. (AP) Gov. Frank F. Merrlam today ap pointed Thomas M. Storke, publisher of the Santa Barbara News-Press, to fill the unexpired term of Sen. W. G. McAdoo, who submitted his resig nation by letter to the governor. Storke Is a close friend of McAdoo and although a Democrat, support ed Governor Merrlam for re-election on the Republican ticket. McAdoo's term expires January 8. at which time Sheridan Downey, Democrat, will begin a six-year term. . . . the blend that can 't be copied ...the RIGHT COMBINATION of the world's best cigarette tobaccos CA Old English By Carolina MANTEO, S. 0. (UP) Inlanders who visit North Carolina's primitive and romantic Outer Banks meet many strange sights and sounds, not the least of which Is the native dialect spoken by the "bankers" who Inhabit the narrow rope of land stretching thread-like from Norfolk, Va., to Wil mington, N. 0. The dialect is a strange mixture of native dialect and Elizabethan English, spoken on Roanoke Island, Ocracoke and other small fishing villages along the banks, and outsid ers who sometimes stumble into the midst of this Isolated colony are like ly to be amazed by the language. If the outlander asks a native for Information about the fishing there abouts, he may be told that "a folne tolme to go fishing Is at hoigh toide." Because many other words and phrases aro so similar In texture and constr uc tl on to the phraseology of Queen Ellzaboth's day, hlstorlanr and phlloglsta believe there Is a distinct although unexplained connection be tween the two. Some contend ear' .est settlers brought their native fingllsh speech to the Carolina orea during the days of Queen TiUtKsbeth, and that this has been preserved through gen eration after generation of natives who live cu the "banks," seldom If ever gett'.ig very far away from their native aearth. At Aodanthe they still alng the old English songs and ballads that were 'popular In the days of Ben Johnson and Shakespeare. The ghosts of Spenser and Chaucer, of Beowulf and Piers the Plowman are conjured up when one hears an able and affable man spoken of as "being wltted and couthe." IS Still Spoken Fishing Folk A plump, good-looking girl Is a "throddy may." The old word "fleech" means to coax or flatter, and when a man falls to keep an en gagement or do his part, he has "scooped" you. When he dies he has "gone leeward", and if he goes to "the country" he Is visiting the main land across the bay. Persons visiting the "barjes," are told of the "ghostles" whf?re the old wrecks lie scattered along the shore, of hens that have "n-jattes." or men who aro "fitten" for certain services because their "ninth er wit" makes them "mlndab'o." A flask of whisky will contain uot a pint but a "point," and the vtr.e from which wtne Is made la the wine" and not the "vine." STtlWE.I PLEASED BY RESULTS IN OREGON WASHINGTON. Nov. 10 (AP) Former Sen. Frederick Stelwer of Ore gon expresea extreme satisfaction to day over the return of Republicans to power In his state. The ailing Stelwer, who resigned early this year because of Ul-health, told visitors he was "very proud of Oregon today." "It la most gratifying to me and a source of extreme satisfaction the people of Oregon have seen fit again to put their almost complete trust In the Republican party," ha said. EAGLE PT. TOWNSENDERS MEET MONDAY EVENING EAGLE POINT. Nov. 10. (Spl) The Eagle Point Townsend club will meet next Monday evening tn the Oasis hall. All members are urged to be present. Enjoy the refreshing goodness of Schilling Tea! Made from choice tea leaves, it always gives you a dear, delicious cup delicate in both flavor and aroma. Remtmber, Schilling Tea is protected and kept ! esh in an attractive, red cellophane sealed package. 7&z Cat Gets Nightly Est PITTSBURGH, Cal. (TP) Mrs, Myrtle Ewald, proprietor of the AU pine hotel, is authority for the state ment that Mercy, the hotel's 4-year-old Persian cat, has brought horn a rat every nlRht for the past two years. The or.y variations have beam the occasional nights when ss brought back two rata Instead af one. A SOUND IDEA SPREADS FAST 95c QUART 1.80 Schenler'i Friendly Red Label delicle, perfectly balanced, deliciona and hill 90 proot Try It you'll agree with moil American, that "LIGHT" IS RIGHT! 'Frimndly to your lout SCHENLEY'S RED LABEL UNDID WHISHT Sihuln rKlll.rM. Uc. N. T. C GOOD RADIO SERVICE Coits So Little More Than Gneuwork Phone 1398-M And Phillips Radio Servic Will Give Von REAL Rente. 11 N. RIVERSIDE Initall Extra Outlet! Now For Holiday Llihttnf OLSON ELECTRIC Phone IIS. S N. Bartlett r KHiET 1 I