Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 25, 1940, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE TWO
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY. JUNE 25. 1940.
RUE SANDWICH
E)
Murray Bell, owner of Mur
ry' Maid-Rite, located at the
corner of South Central and Bth
itreetj, atated today that work
men have completed the remod
eling and expansion of hli sand
wich shop.
The expansion program has
enabled the shop to double the
counter space as well at install
modern new fountain, Bell
said.
The shop will feature In ad
dition to the poular food and
fountain service, a drive-in tray
service with ample parking pro
vided for both drive-in and In
side patrons, it was learned.
Mr. Bell came to Medford
six years ago from Newton, la.,
and opened the first Maid-Rite
shop at (th and Crape streets,
later disposing of It and opened
Murray's Maid-Rite at its pres
ent location.
ST
AT LAMM LUMBER CO
EXPLAINED BY WORKER
- Unsanitary living conditions
and the method of operation of
a company-owned store were al
leged by J. O. McCulloch today
as the reasons why employes of
the Lamm Lumber company at
Yanuay, 73 miles northeast of
Klamath Falls, were out on
strike.
Mr. McCulloch, member of the
publicity committee of the
strikers, stated that the crew
called strike vote "when the
company failed to bring living
and sanitary conditions In the
camp up to standard and to state
requirements," and that the com
pany, in turn, pulled the crew
off, shut down operations and
labeled the action a lockout.
"In order to get away from
the profiteering in (he company's
store, a supply department on
the no-profit basis was set up
behind the picket lines," Mr. Mc
Culloch explained. He added
that merchandise is brought In
and distributed among the peo
ple at cost.
Mr. McCulloch said that 45
families and 80 or 90 bunkhouse
men resided In the camp, many
of them from Medford.
TO OREGON'S TASTE!
omiD a't'th t OlMllUW
OlSTIlLERS CO"
to OaM. H
WOILD'I f t ,mmJ ITAIOM1
IAIOIIT fj.llll SOUISOK
0: PROOF
jil1 r i &4
A COOLMORE
Air Conditioning Unit
WAS INSTALLED IN
Murray's
BY
Petroleum Heat
In The . .
By Frank Jenkins.
A T noon Monday (Pacific
Coast time) the French en
voys have been ordered to sign
with Italy. They have already
signed with Germany. The dis
patches tell us that six hours
after signing with Italy firing
will cease.
So ends a new chapter In the
book of history.
IT Isn't really new chapter
only an old, old one, rewrit
ten according to the old world
standard pattern.
France is stripped and hu
miliated, made to bear the cost
of the conqueror's occupation
and administration, disarmed.
compelled to be a passive en
emy of her former comrade-ln-a
r m a. Hereafter, Frenchmen
must take orders from foreign
conquerors.
The result, as inevitable as
the rising and the setting of
the sun, will be a new fanning
of the embers of hatred to be
followed sooner or later by a
new outbreak of the ever-more-terrible
flames of war.
HOW can you avoid saying to
vnnrlf- "T.p' H t m n A
America, to the last man, If
need be, but KEEP OUT of
this evir.rpriirrlnir aM wniM
cycle of hatred and conquest
and vengeance, to be followed
quests and NEW vengeance."
THE terms, according to sec-
this Is written, call for surren
der or Internment of the French
fleet.
There is still the possibility
that the old recipe for rabbit
soup may apply: "First catch
your rabbit."
A MEMBER of the French
government at Bordeaux
explains In today's (Monday's)
dispatches his country's reasons
for capitulating to Germany.
The reasons seem to be the
same as Godoy's for not con
tinuing his fight with Joe Louis.
pONGRESS. recessing for the
Republican national conven
tion, leaves behind a bill fot
$14,039,970,627 to operate the
U. S. government next year.
The situation has so changed
In recent weeks that hereafter
those who protest against spend
ing will be branded unpatriotic,
but at least we can demand that
boondoggling be done away
with and the money be spent
EFFICIENTLY for sound gov
ernment and national defense.
PARAPHRASING" Plnckney's
immortal statement, the Re
publicans might well make this
the financial plank of their plat
form: "Billions for defense, but not
one cent for boondoggling."
DRUNK DRIVER GIVEN
3C DAYS, $100 FINE
Craig Mac Cooper of tho
Tabla Rock district, charged
with driving an automobile
while under the Influence of In
toxicating liquor, entered a plea
of guilty and was sentenced 10
serve 30 days in the county
Jail, fined $100 and his driver's
license was ordered revoked
for a year, by Justice Coleman
today.
Commitment was deferred
upon payment of the fine and
costs, and the court granted 30
days in which to make pay
ments. Rattlln' Good Story
St. Augustine. Fla. (JP) E. C.
Creech of St. Augustine drove
his automobile over a rattle
snake on the highway and then
got out to see if he had killed
it. The automobile wheel,
Creech said, not only killed the
snaka but had made it cough
up a dime, dated 1913.
Biographer Dies
Portland, June 2S. W) Mrs.
Minnie Roof Dre. 73, author of
the George H. Himes biography
"from oxcart to airplane," and
prominent northwest writer,
died yesterday.
Maid - Rite
& Burner Co.
DISPUTE DELAYS
(OobUdum from n Om.)
was imperilled by those who
would make the government and
nation tools to be manipulated
by one man at the head of an
unelected oolitical bureaucracy
Martin asserted that "a steady
drift toward governmental ab
solutism both at home and
abroad" must be checked this
year, and declared the purpose
of his party f convention to be
"to rally all patriots In cru
sade for Americanism."
Even before the first thin
stream of delegates had begun
to move into the big convention
hall, Willkie told delegates of
ni native Indiana in a break
fast talk that he was not "dis
couraging other candidacies,"
but on the contrary thought
they were "all fine men."
Gang Up On Willkie
Leaders of the forces of Sen
ator Taft and Dewey simulta
neously were tightening their
lines against inroads by the
tousle-haired utility man.
Though a "stop-Willkie" move
ment had been dumped Into the
convention, no open alliance of
the opposing forces to achieve
that purpose was disclosed.
In a press conference, J, Rus
sell Sprague, the New Yorker's
manager, said he was standing
by his prediction of 400 Dewey
votes on the first ballot and
forecast an increase of "at least
SO" on the second. Sprague
agreed there had been some
"fluctuations" in delegate line
ups. Willkie used the occasion of
the Indiana talk to say "the
utility issue" had been raised
against him and added:
"Surely the Republican party
will not want to engage in the
new deal custom of raising class
distinctions. I have been inves
tigated by every new deal agen
cy. If you can find any suc
cesful accusation against me, I
want you to be against me."
Governor Harold E. Stassen.
of Minnesota, in his keynote
address last night told the
crowded convention hall that
these times call for a frank
approach to problems If democ
racy is to live.
Unity Needed
'We must have a united peo
ple with each citizen willing to
make sacrifices and ready to
stand shoulder to shoulder in
the interests of national de
fense," he said.
The audience gave loud ap
plause when he termed the cab
inet nomination of Henry L.
Stimson and Frank Knox, prom
inent Republicans, "a politically
timed appointment on the eve
of this convention" and one by
which "the president made an
eleventh hour confession of
tailure in his national defense
administration."
Stassen criticised President
Roosevelt's proposal for compul
sory national training, along
with a wide variety of new deal
actions. When he asked if the
nation dare continue for the
next four years under such
leadership, the crowd roared
back: "No."
41 OW THEY"
STAND
American League
W. L. PC.
Cleveland 39 23 .629
Detroit 34 22 .608
Boston 32 23 .582
New York 28 30 .483
St. Louis 29 33 .4t8
Chicago 28 31 .456
Philadelphia 22 34 .393
Washington 24 38 .387
Other leagues unchanged.
Congratulations
MURRAY BELL
For Continued Success
In
Your Fine Enterprise
GROVER'S DAIRY
and PRODUCTS
505 West Sixth Street
ARMY WILL ENLIST
Preparedness requisition No.'
2. calling for the Enlistment of
about 800 army recruits in the
Portland district, was received
today by Staff Sgt. Willis S.
Estep, in charge of the recruit
ing station in Medford city hall.
In the country as a whole, the
requisition calls for the enlist
ment of 38,000 regulars by
August 31.
This is an unprecedented num
ber of recruits to be enlisted in
the Portland district in so short
a time, Sgt. Estep said. Listed
on the requisition are two en
tirely new combat regiments to
be formed with recruit person
nel, the 53rd infantry at Camp
Ord, Cal., and the 75th coast
artillery at Fort Lewis, Wash.
Other enlistments will be for
the quartermaster corps, medi
cal department and signal corps.
The 28th engineers (aviation) is
also a new unit to be formed at
March field Cal.
MERCURY FAILS
TO
After reaching but not sur
passing the 1940 heat record
yesterday, the temperature cool
ed off considerably today. Early
this afternoon the mercury stood
at 85 degrees as against 98 at
the same time yesterday. ,
For the second time this- year
the mercury hit 100 yesterday.'
The previous 100-degree heat
was recorded June 1 1 vrH
ford has been leading the state j
in nign temperature, but yes-1
terday Grants Pais nm I
through with a mark of 102
degrees.
The humidity was noticeably ;
higher today than it was vm. i
terday and that explained why
me weatner did not feel so
mUCh Cooler as th mni. I
ture indicated.
Forecast was for fair tvmhr
tonight and tomorrow, cooler !
tomorrow. I
Orders CIO To Resume
Portland, Ore., June 23. (P)
-Wayne L. Morse, west vt
waterfront arbiter, ordered CIO
longshormen to resume loading
the freighter Portland at the
B. F. Johnson mill dock here
today. Portland waterfront em
ployers charged the dockmen
were in collusion with CIO lum
ber workers who picketed the
plant but Morse said he found
no such evidence.
Dm UaU Tr.Duns want ads.
New Vrtdtr-arm
Cream Deodorant
satly
Stops Perspiration
m Does not roc dresses, does
not irritate skin.
2. Nowiitingrodry.Ciabcuscd
ri$ht iftei shiving.
3. Instantly stops perspiration
for 1 to ) days. Removes odot
from pit "on.
4. Apure,white,grcaseIess,sto
less vanishing cream.
5. Arrid has been awarded the
Approval Seal of the American
Institute of Laundering for
being harmless to fabrics.
23 MILLION fare of Arrid
have boen told. Try a jai today I
ARRID
39 I-
11lfJ0 tolUl f
0 anrl )
FOUNTAIN and
DRIVE-IN SERVICE
Completely Air Conditioned
ALWAYS COOL and COMFORTABLE
MURRAY'S
MAID-RITE
South Central At Ninth
The Best Is None Too Good For Murray's Maid-Rite
WING'S CLOVERHILL
Golden Guernsey Milk and Cream
CONGRATULATIONS! MURRAY
On Your New and Up-to-Date Drive-in Service
Wing's Cloverhill Golden Guernsey Dairy
Offers
Complete
Counter Space Doubled
Maid-Rite, the magic word spoken at Murray's, brings you taste delight
that Is not soon forgotten. Our menu also Includes many special summer
plate lunches and sandwiches. At the new fountain you can now get
your favorite drink or ice cream dish. Come in and try Murray's Cool
Treats for Hot Days.
DRIVE IN
Courteous attendants
and food tray service
will do the restl
Producer el Medfsrd's Premium Milk
Murray's
MAID-RITE
A
New
We have doubled our
counter space la order
to bring is our greatly
Increased patronage the
very finest service that
it la possible to give.
will give you complete fountain
at your car just drWe In wa
Featured At the Fountain
EXCLUSIVELY!
(
V t
412 E. MAIN ST.
PHONE 1114