3308T7
5
1
4
i
LOCAL and
Phoenix Health Unit The
Phoenix health unit will meet
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Stewart Porter. A covered dish
luncheon will be served at noon.
Visiting Relative Miss Bettv
Vincent of Hillcrest Orchard is
visiting her uncle and aunt.
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mueller of
905 West Tenth street.
Back from Kansas Dr.
George S. Jennings returned
Friday from WInfield, Kas.,
whither he and his brother of
Portland had been called by
the death of their mother.
Visit Here Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Hale of Gilchrist were
guests here during the holiday
period of Mrs. Hale's mother,
Mrs. Almeda, Budge. Mr. Hale
is principal of the high school
at Gilchrist.
Arrested Four mnn were ar
rested by city police and charg
ed with drunkenness over the
week-end. They were listed as
John Enright, Arthur P. Close,
Carl J. Scott and D. Bingham.
All were to be arraigned in city
court tomorrow.
Fishing Poor Steelhead fish
ing in the Grants Pass area
turned poor Saturday and will
probably continue poor until
the current storm ends. Glen
Wooldridge, river guide, inform
ed the Mail Tribune today.
Dinner Guests Carl Boswell,
former speech instructor at
Medford high school and critic
for the Toastmasters' club, who
has been a New Year's guest
at the home of Mrs. Alice
V.Trowbridge, 905 West Tenth
1 street, was a guest of honor
. during his stay at a dinner at
'the D. D. Davis home. Mrs.
Trowbridge also was a dinner
guest. Mr. Boswell and his
wife now reside in Oakdale,
Cal., where Mr. Boswell is em
ployed in the schools.
Skiing Poor Conditions for
skiing in Crater Lake national
park were described by rangers
today as poor. Rain Saturday
spoiled the skiing and no new
v snow had fallen to give the
ground cover a fresh topping.
Weather this morning was
cloudy, visibility zero, the ran
gers said in their daily short
wave radio broadcast. Park
roads were mostly clear of snow
though in spots there was slush.
The snow was wet and had
settled to a depth of 30 inches
at headquarters. Lowest tem
perature during the' night was
32 degrees.
Happy New
Year a gift
0366 days
ALTHOUGH THERE'S a
ii popular belief to the con
trary, 52 weeks do not make
a year. Fifty-two times seven
always comes out 364 and
that's not enough daysfor an
ordinary year let alone a Leap
Year like the one just ahead.
Even 366 days do not make a
complete year unless they're
happy days.
We wish you a happy New
Year one made up of 366
days, complete in their fulfill
ment. For most people in these
times, that will mean an eve
ning spin, many a week-end
junket, and at least one annual
vacation trip that's really am
bitious. To your pleasure In these
things we'll continue to con
tribute, as in the past, to the
best of our ability. Wherever
you may go, wherever you al
low us to serve you, this Com
pany will do all it can to make
your travel carefree. Our hope
is that in the New Year you
will establish new records for
miles of happir:ss to the gallon.
Once a New Year meant lit
tle more than a fresh measure
ment of time. Now it means
anticipation of new places, new
people, new experience be
cause gasoline has given to ev
ery man a pair of seven-league
boots. Such magic is our busi
ness and your opportunity to
make more of the coming 366
days than of any which hare
gone before.
Standard Oil Company
of California
PERSONAL
Bus- Cancelled The special
bus chartered by the Rogue
Snowmen to convey winter
sportsmen to Crater Lake na
tional park yesterday was can
celled. Saturday's rain made
skiing conditions in the park
unfavorable and the Snowmen
decided not to inaugurate their
transportation inovation under
such an inauspicious situation
It was to have been the first
time that such transportation
hadheen made available, spe
cial permission raving been re
ceived from the national park
service to run the bus into the
park.
Plane Passengers Mrs. J. A
Sloan arrived from Portland by
United Mainliner this forenoon
and C. L. Hubble of Klamath
Falls left on the same plane
for Denver via Sacramento. The
plane, bucking strong head
winds, was a little late. Rich
ard Culbertson, who had been
home on a holiday visit, left bv
Mainliner last evening for Oak
land, Cal. He was to continue
after a brief stop in Oakland
to San Diego, Cal., where he
is employed as an aeronautics
mechanic supervisor. Miss Eu
nice Davis left for Portland by
Mainliner yesterday afternoon.
A heavy wind from the south
today was delaying planes from
the north and accelerating
planes from the south. The
northbound planes, carried along
by a 60-mile wind, were arriv
ing ahead of schedule.
EH.
TAKEN BY DEATH
George H. Morris, passed
away at a local hospital Satur
day evening following a brief
illness. Mr. Morris was born in
Nodway County, Missouri in
1871 and after spending his ear
ly manhood there, moved to
North Dakota where he was uni
ted in marriage to Elvira May
Devoe. They came to Medford
in 1911 and have made their
home here since.
Besides his wife he is sur
vived by his aged stepmother
Mrs. Mary Morris of Gordon,
Neb., six sisters, Mrs. Niels
Peterson, Mrs. Will Coon. Mrs
Joseph Skinner, and Mrs. Ben
Skinner all of Gordon, Neb.,
Mrs. Bert Evans of Stockton
Calif., and Mrs. Ben Dal Porto
of Oakley, Cal., also three bro
thers, Hamilton and Ernest Mor
ris, of Gordon, Neb., and James.
Yakima, Wash. Also many nieces
ana nepnews.
funeral services will take
place from the Perl Chapel on
Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. with a
Christian Science service. Com
mitment services and interment
will be in the family plot at the
Siskiyou Memorial park.
Friends are respectfully invited
to attend.
FIRST 1940 BABY
. STILL TO
E
The first 1940 Merifnrr! lhv
has not been born yet. a check
of local hospitals revealed this
noon.
The holiday season not only
failed to bring forth a new baby
on New Year's but there were
none reported as having been
born on Christmas day.
Two in-between Christmas
and New Year's children were
oorn however on December 30.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin George
of 227 Cottage street are the
parents of a boy weighing six
pounds, eleven and a half
ounces born on the above date
in the Community hospital.
A baby girl weighing six
pounds, one-half ounce, was
born to Mr. and Mrs. R. E
Hudson of 402 Boardman ave
nue, at home.
RILEY D. HENSEN
PASSESJED 71
Riley D. Hei.sen. 71. Dassed
away at his home Sunday morn
ing auer a short illness. The
deceased was born in r.run.
wue, lenn., and spent his early
life there. He was united in
marriage to Dora Belle Slotor
on March 17, 1879. In 1903 they
muveu 10 wana wana. Wash
leaving there in 1911 and enm-
ing to Medford where they have
made their home since.
He is survived by his wife
and five children, Mrs. Marv
Downing of Spokane, Wash
Daymond D., Berkelev. Calif-
Graham, of San Francisco, and
James and Stanley, Klamath
Falh, Ore.
Fi icral service will take
place from the Perl funeral
home Wednesday at 2:30 p. m.1
with Rev. Joseph Knotts offic
iating. Interment in the Med
ford I.O.O.F. cemetery. Friends
are respectfully invited to at
tend I
E
RICHEST IN
Gold Strike in Georgia Re
vive Hope More May Be
Found in Oregon's Hills.
By Victor Dallalre
U. P. Staff Correspondent.
Salem, Ore. (U.R) Discovery
of rich gold deposits in sup
posedly exhausted region? in
Georgia revives the hope here
in Oregon that rich finds are
yet to be made.
While most of Oregon's gold
is thought to be of the low
grade variety, surface findings
in past years have nearly equal
ed the 560,000 a ton strike that
Georgia reports.
One of the richest of the
early day discoveries in Oregon
was made by a man named
George Ish, who, while pros
pecting on the Rogue river,
uncovered a gravel bar that
was literally sparkling with
gold. The gravel paid Ish
about $12 a pound at a price
about half the present value
of gold.
How Town Got Name,
Looking for the source of the
gold, he found a small hill near
by which contained hard white
quartz with stringers of pure
gold in it accounting for the
name of the present town of
uold Hill.
Ish invested much of his
findings in a mill to recover
the gold and worked it for sev
eral years, but the gold even
tually ran out and the mine
was abandoned. A cement com
pany, quarrying the hill now. is
reported to manufacture cement
with a small gold content in it
Another fabulous gold strike
was reported by two men nam
ed Miller and Bellville, who
in 1855 brought a quarter of a
pound of almost pure gold im
bedded in quartz into Jackson
ville. They said they had lo
cated the ledge about 40 miles
southwest of Jacksonville where
they could see the ocean. They
were never able to find the
place again, but in 1904 a boy
found the ledge and took $35,
000 worth out of a hole 12 feet
long and a foot wide.
J'ville Nuggets Big.
It was not an uncommon
sight in Jacksonville during the
gold rush, to see nuggets weigh
ing 50 to 70 ounces apiece, old
timers have recorded. One mine
discovered on the Applegate
river produced $23,520 from 10
ions of ore.
One hears chiefly of the rich
strikes, but the steady workers
ana tne patient Chinese in Jack
son county alone during the
years ot the Civil war were re.
ported to have taken out about
i.uuu,U00 a month
In 1857 gold was discovered
on the Santiam river in Marion
county and for two
diggings paid the miners a fair
ly aecent daily wage. One
mine uncovered a vein of hard
white quartz with pockets of
mreaa gold valued at $20,000.
Rich gold discoveries were
made in eastern Oregon about
the same time, but most of
them were large bodies of low
graae ore. One was made on
the Powder river, however, by
two Portland men that ran up
to $10,000 a ton.
Black Sends Rich.
' Potentially the richest gold
fields m Oregon at present are
the black sands alone the snnt h.
em Oregon beaches. Gold and
other valuable minerals are
present in chemical formation,
but the cost of extracting them
so far has exceeded their worth.
Some day, probably, someone
will discover a method of re
claiming the precious minerals
in these sands and a scientific
gold rush will ensue.
Gold mining in the state has
received impetus the past few
yars from the increased price
of gold and many a stream and
hard rock ledge has again felt
the attacks of gold seekers.
Oregon production of gold
now
3W amounts to over $2,000,000
yea, according to government
figures
KNOXVILLE REPUBLICAN
WINS CONGRESS SEAT
Knoxville, Tenn., Jan. 1. Up)
Victorious By more than 5.000
majority, John Jennings, Jr., of
A Three Days'
Cough is Your
Danger Signal
Creomulsion relieves promptly be- i
cause it goes right to the seat of the
trouble to loosen germ laden phlegm, ;
Increase secretion and Bid nature to 1
soothe and heal raw, tender, lnflam-
ed bronchial mucous membranes.
No matter how many medicines you
have tried, tell your druggist to sell
you a bottle of Creomulsion with the
understanding that you are to like
the way It quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSION
for Cougrif, Chest Colds, B ronchitis ,
Knoxville, 59-year-old attorney,
prepared today to leave for
Washington to fill the vacancy
in congress created by the death
of Rep. J. Will Taylor.
Jennings, a Republican, will
take the oath of office Wednes
day as representative from Ten
nessee's second congressional
district.
ADA M. ROBERTS
PASSES AGED 70
Ada May Roberts, 70, passed
away at her home on Spring
street Sunday evening alter a
brief illness. She was born in
Coos county, Oregon, June 16,
1869 and had resided in Med
ford for the past 28 years, and
was a member of the Roxy Ann
and Pomona Grange.
She was married to William
D. Roberts, November 17, 1891.
Besides her husband she is sur
vived by five children, four
daughters and one son, Mrs. Ray
Loosley, Fort Klamath, Ore.;
Mrs. Burrell Redpath, Medford;
airs. Bert Tolladay. Prineville.
Ore.; Mrs. Zanta Hutton, Silver
ton, Ore., and son Roscoe Rob
erts, Medford, also ten grand
cnnarcn.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by the Perl
funeral home.
EROF
ASHLAND PASSES
Ashland, Jan. 1. (Spl.)
Funeral services will be held at
the Elks temple here at 2 rj. m.
Tuesday for Charles Lawrence
f orter.
Mr. Porter was born August
17, 1903 in Volga, S. D., and
came here with his parents in
1909. On June 27, 1936 he mar
ried Miss Helen Risce of Med
ford. The deceased was a long
time member of the Elks lodge
and a member of the Kiltie
band since its organization. He
is survived by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. I. J. Porter of this
city.
Arrangements are in charge
of Litwiller Funeral home.
EAST, 1ST GOLF
Rain and, more particularly,
a gusty wind reduced the field
in today's annual East-West enlf
match for the Shirley Temple
trophy at the Rogue Valley Golf
club course.
By early afternoon only 20
players, ten pairs, had teed off.
The West was leading as play
went into the afternoon rounds
AID HOME BEAUTY
Chicago. (U.R) Builrlino ,
terials have had their faces lift
ed ana henceforth will play a
more decorative part in con
struction of modern homes, the
home building exhibit at the
Merchandise Mart indicates.
The structural usefulness of
stone, brick, steel, tile and lum
ber is fading into the back-
siuuna as tnese materials, im
proved by streamlined manu
facture, step out in a new role
as "home beautificrs."
Today's home built for to
morrow will be structurally
sound and liveable as shown
by a series of mnHi
designed by some of America's
lorcmost architects.
Early Training.
Toledo. O (UP) Witt, -
birth certificate the Toledo Dis
trict Nurses' association hands
out a copy of a pamphlet, "Your
Child, prepared by the library
Girls Eager lo Fly
Rnctnn mot V
really want tn n n e"
of HF?
-uege siuaents voted in
favor of an aviation course in
their school and in other wo
men's colleges.
YickSoHerbCo.
Hours 10 l. n. In I .
Monday, Tuesday. Wednee
day Only
Chinese herb rem
edies ire very won
derful for tumor.
drODRT. nllM run.
ture. stomach ulcer, V ir ; V
lungs, heart, liver
stomach, k 1 d n e v
tSttk
bladder troubles,
asthma, eczema.
olood, gailitones,
yellow fever, epi
lepsy, rheumatism
rnd female com-
I. II. l-eonr
Herbalist.
S4 Years
Experience.
rlamta. Call or write.
Jackson Co. Bank Bldg.
Central and Main.
Medford, Ore.
NEW TECHNIQUE
IN ITSPROBES
Latest Type Investigation
Has 'Killing' Effect -Old
Inquiries Recalled
By Preston Grover
Washington The day of the
congressional "killer" investiga
tion has arrived to displace the
long series of whoop-er-up in
vestigations designed to put
across pet pieces of legislation.
Many of the methods adopted
by the one are about as fantas
tic as those of the other.
Two "killer" investigations
are underway and a third has
already completed its work. The
Smith committee investigating
tRe national labor relations
board has already brought out
enough evidence of dissension
and peculiar performances to
put the board s life in jeopardy
at the coming session of con
gress.
The Dies committee was large
ly credited with bringing about
the defeat of Frank Murphy last
year in his race for re-election as
governor of Michigan. It is ad
ding to the shelling directed
by the Smith committee at the
Wagner act.
The house Investigation of
WPA activities last summer
killed the federal theatre pro
ject by exposing an over-dosage
of Communist Influence.
'The Older Pattern
What a contrast are these to
the pattern of earlier investiga
tions of the type which began
with the securities and bank
ing investigation in 1933 and
1934. Banking practices, stock
market manipulations and phon
ey security flotations were par
aded before the incredulous eyes
of a newly critical congress and
a . country at large, both of
which were smarting under the
scorch of the depression. Out of
it came the securities and ex
change commission and a vol
ume of legislation designed to
make good bankers out of bad
bankers and to wipe out trick
security issues altogether. It has
worked so effectively that now
the cries arise from the other
direction that regulation is
stifling enterprise.
The Insull debacle brought a
demand for drastic utility re
form. The holding company bill
resulted. At the hour of a cru
cial test as to the kind of teeth
it would have, the Black anti-
lobbying investigation got busy.
A utility company had tried to
drum up an appearance of pub
lic antipathy to the bill by send
ing in a volume of protests.
unfortunately, most of the
protectants had names begin
ning with letters C to G. An
enterprising utility company
agent in Pennsylvania had sim
ply picked up a telephone book
and began dispatching telegrams
signed by directory names as
fast as he could copy them. The
committee caught him before he
reached the Jones, Smiths and
Zilches. It had a three day cir
cus out of that. Other utility
protests, many quite valid, were
discredited and the bill was
whooped across.
Half Successful
It took two years of munitions
investigation to reveal a degree
of corruption in the Interna
tional munitions trade and to
raise some real questions about
what got us into the last war.
But the result of that investi
gation was the neutrality act
which has troubled the admin
istration ever since.
Senator Wheeler of Montana
conducted a virtually one-man-
investigation of railroads to helD
him jam across some regulatorv
rail legislation. Much of it, how
ever, is still on the calendar and
in these days of increasing pres
tige for the once-spurned banker
and big business man, it hasn't
such a good chance of passing.
a nouse tax invest gat on oil.
loried several dozen greater and'
lesser tax dodgers to help whip
across the corporate surplus tax
na tne tax against Dersonal
holding companies. It took a re-
mm
Iht HOTEL
SOMERTON
40 6Uin 1TMET OOWDTOin
(TWCCN SUS0" AND TtfLOS
conpumt mmtm
Splendid oarage fac
ilities . and, courteous
service await the tired
motorist.
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
Service Unsurpassed
ItCI ILMI, SMUt'
a.
surgence of the depression to
shake oft some of that.
But now, temporarily at anv
rate, the shoe is on the other
foot. The left winger is no long
er the potential savior of his
country and the bringer of great
er liberties. The Dies committee
has made him merely a mem
ber of a "transmission belt" to
ward Communism.
! OREGON INCOME TAX
THIS YEAR IS BELIEF
Salem, Ore. (U.R) Oregon
will collect approximately $500,.
000 more this year on 1939 in
comes than it did on 1938 earn
ings, the state tax commission
estimates.
The total income tax collec
tion for 1939 will be about $4.
600,000 and 1940 receipts should
reach $5,100,000, the commis
sion believes.
The commission attributes
part of the expected gain to
the addition of between 4.000
and 8,000 federal employes to
tne tax list for the first time.
and a decided improvement in
economic conditions in 1939
over 1938.
The inclusion of the federal
workers on the state lists will
bring the total number of state
income taxpayers to around 94,
000 the commission said. This
figure does not include corpor
ations, partnerships or other
business coalitions.
The state income tax is used
to offset property taxes and the
increase in receipts will be felt
on the 1941 property levy pro
viding expenses are kept equal.
FIRST FOR YEAR
Portland, Ore., Jan. 1. W)
A hit-run driver killed Port
land's first traffic victim of
1940 early today, lifting the
holiday toll of the state to five.
Another man died in a eravnl
slide.
Joseph Van Gilder, about 60.
died a few minutes after being
struck by a hit-run driver at
1:15 a. m. His companion,
Stuart Wells, 49, suffered a
broken leg. The driver and a
young woman companion es
caped. Near Klamath Vails Henry D.
Turchardt, 38, of West Fir was
killed when a slide occurred at
the city gravel pit. A boulder
struck him on the head. His
brother, Charles, West Fir, and
R. L. Freeman, Klamath Falls,
were covered by the slide but
managed to dig themselves out.
SANTA BARBARA
FLOAT IS BEST
Pajadena, Cal., Jan. 1. W)
A float depicting three modern
racing sloops rounding a wea
ther marker, done in flowers
by Santa Barbara, won the
sweepstakes prize of the 51st
Tournament of Roses.
A special prize went to Port
land, Ore., for a Portland Rose
Festival entry.
Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 1.: (VP)
A million persons gathered from
far corners of the earth today
to watch the 51st renewal of
Pasadena's famed Tournament
of Roses.
Sixty elaborate floats, cover
ed with millions of flowers,.!
were rushed to completion dur
ing the night by weary workers.
Closing time for Too Late to Clas
sify Ads la 1:30 p. m.
1 1 rr T vre i
II I J I & v. Y rm is,
I MV J 11 I V CM4ka I
I WSKVaJV ... A
TOMORROW St WED1
NELSON EDDY
1
EXTEND 3,472 MILES
RGE
Snlcm. Ore., (U.R) There arc
3,472 miles of railroads in Ore
gon according to information
received here from the national
Association of American RaiU
roads.
The report shows that rail
way payrolls in the stnte
amounted to $17,418,002 for the
10,566 employes in 1937, the
latest year for which these com
plete figures arc available. Rail
way purchases of fuel, materials,
equipment and supplies for the
year amounted to $10,772,635.
in 1938 the railways paid
taxes amounting to $2,785,658
and in the period from 1900 to
iimb inclusive, the state, countv
and local governments collected
(u.ho in taxes from the rail
roads of the state, not Including
some ot tne minor lines which
have not reported since 1917
and many of the switching and
terminal companies, the report
snows.
Charlie McCarthy
In Detective Role
At New Craterian
Charlie McCarthy attains the
status of a star in "Charlie Mc
Carthy, Detective," seen yester
day at the Craterian theatre.
And as a stellar performer, he's
great in every splinter of his
being.
Of course, Edgar Bergen
shares the starring positien
with Charlie, edging in on every
one of Charlie's scenes but not
attempting to steal anything
from McCarthy. Mortimer
Sqerd, another of Bergen's fam
ily, is also starred.
"Charlie McCarthy, Detec
tive" is a murder mystery story,
with Charlie (with Bergen's aid)
ultimately unravelling the maze
of twisted clues and pinning the
crime on the guilty party. The
story is unusually sound, and
with Bergen's inimitable com
edy, the' combination produces
one of the top entertainment of
ferings of the season.
Robert Cummings, Constance
Moore and John Sutton furnish
the romantic element of the
story, with Cummings as a
magazine columnist, Miss Moore
as Bergen's partner in his night
club act, and Sutton as Miss
Moore's sweetheart. In other im
portant roles are Louis Calhern,
Edgar. Kennedy, Harold Huber,
Samuel S. Hinds and Warren
Hymer.
Miss Moore sings two songs
one more than does McCarthy,
who bursts into song for the
first time on the screen Char
lie's number is "I'm Charlie Mc
Carthy, Detective."
Hens Got Shellshock.
Los Gatos, Cal. (U.R) Mrs.
George Bailey, proprietor of a
poultry farm, protested strongly
to county authorities against the
continued blasting to destroy
trees in construction of a new
road. She represented 300 egg
producers who declared that not
an egg had been laid by a sin
gle hen since the blasting began.
Just Smoking. '
Boston (U.R) Search for
an apartment house prowler
ended when a squad of police
found a resident smoking on
the roof. He said his wife had
banned smoking in the house
and he had to go to the roof
to enjoy a cigarette.
WEDNESDAYI
16 cnMo'loot wIIm
BOTHork (it tlow...bt
ok! low ike could lie
ltd ! A nasd? sail
lb at (ill teip toi ii
- Ililcbsilll
Hlln I Mfl-n-l,i..,o . , ,,.
fSnl RIOT!
Tomorrow
i I I
"Honeymooners"
Ja
tv V
1 I
Just married (two months)
are Stuart Erwin and Marjorie
Weaver in the new comedy,
"The Honeymoon's Over," which
comes to the New Rialto theatre
for tomorrow and Wednesday
as the companion feature with
"Fugitive at Large," starring
Jack Holt.
"The Honeymoon's Over" is
gay hilarity of domestic life
with a swell comedy cast In
cluding Patric Knowlcs, Russell
Hicks, June Gale and E. E.
Clive.
MORiVlONS" SHIFT
RELIEF LEADERS
Salt Lake City, Utah (U.R) A
new slate of officers now super
vises activities of the 100,000
member National Woman's Re
lief Society, women's organiza
tion of the Latter-Day Saints
(Mormon) church.
New president is Mrs. Amy
Brown Lyman, nationally
known social worker and wife
of Dr. Richard R. Lyman, mem
ber of the ruling council of 12
apostles of the L.D.S. church.
Closing time for Too Late to Clas
sify Ads Is 1:30 p. m.
Too Late to Classify
LOST White embroidered evening
ba bearing Initial "R." Valued as
keepsake. Reward. 19 North Peach
or Phone 1283-Y.
CABIN for rent. Call 174-Y.
FOR RENT Small modern house.
Necessary furniture. 20. water
paid. Dressler's, 1107 B. Main.
&ARQAIN Beauty students kit and
text book, like new. Phone 1424-R.
WE HAVE several good seta of light
ana neo,vy aiscs on the lot nov;.
Also late model 25 HP. cletrao
tractor at bargain price. Rogue
Valley Tractor and Implement Co.,
5th at Rlversldo.
RAW FUK8 WANTED I
Eastern Cash Prices paid for your
fura at home. A Lao htdea. pelts
and wool.
MEDFORD BARGAIN HOUSE
J7 N. Grape St. Medford. Ore.
FOR SALE Newtowna. Nice quality,
good alzea. By the lug or truck
load. Bring containers. Myron Root
It Co., Ino. Warehouse 47 South
Fir St.
Less Tear, More Wear
with
Wes Coleman's
LAUNDRY SERVICE "
111S E. lllh. Phone 97
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