Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 19, 1940, Page 11, Image 11

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    LOCAL and
Ob Business Eldin Hicki of Firemen Called The (ire de
Gold Hill wai a Medford caller partment's chemical crew was
today. called at 12:39 p. m. today to
put out a grass fire in the park-
To Klamath The Misses I ina atrip of the 400 block on
Edna Shaver, Betty Vilm, Mar
garet Dow and Maxine Love
spent a brief time on business
in Klamath Falls yesterday.
Visiting Hare Mrs. George
Collins of Oakland, Cal., a for
mer Medford resident, is the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jap And
rews of 1404 West Main street.
Mrs. Collins arrived last night.
Improving P eggy Dean,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.
Z. Dean of 1006 South Oak
dale, who underwent an appen-
dectomy In Community hospital
July 13. is reported improving.
She is now at home.
Johns Laaves Claude Johns
left this morning after spending
a month here on business. He
la auditor for the state unem
ployment compensation com
mission. He plans to transact
business on the coast.
On Vacation Mr. and Mrs.
Howard B. Glascock and their
daughters, Mary and Rosie. are
spending a fortnight's vacation
at the family cottage at Lake
of the Woods. Mr. Glascock is
a city fireman and amateur
radio operator.
On Timber Mission Alexan
der J. Jaenicke, division of tim
ber management of the U. S.
forest service at regional head
quarters in Portland, today be
gan a study of white and sugar
pine in the Union Creek dis
trict of the Rogue River national
forest. Purpose of the study was
to establish a silvicultural prac
tice, including the selection of
trees, in the cutting of commer
cial timber. Mr. Jaenicke ar
rived from Portland by car
last night.
Plana Pasiengars H. R. Lu-
Vens arrived from Seattle by
United Mainliner this forenoon
and passengers leaving on the
same plane were Miss Marjorie
Hart of Eugene and Miss Vir
ginia Lowrey, to San Francisco,
and Mrs. Charles T. Robinson,
to Los Angeles. Arrivals on the
midnight Mainliner were Mrs.
Catherine Byrne, from Port
land, and R. W. Crutchfield,
from Seattle. Departing on the
same plane were G. T. Sedl
mavr. to Oakland, and W. R
Hearst. Marion Davles, Gus
Wahlberg and Miss Lee Wenz-
lick, to Los Angeles, The Hearst
party arrived at the airport by
motorcar from McCloud, Cal.,
where Hearst maintains a ranch.
H. C. Rhodes left for Portland
last night. Mrs. L. C. Wren left
for San Francisco last evening
after visiting here. Departing by
Mainliner yesterday afternoon
were R. C. Woodruff and Mrs.
K. Grieve and Billy Grieve of
Trail, to Portland, and J. B.
Stam, to Seattle.
EMIL'S
MARKET
Main fc Grape Phone 850
4 Free Deliveries Dally
Buy At Emil's And Savel
Super!:
Qualit)
Refined
In
America
...54C
95.39
Cash Prices.
Kraft Cheese
Demonstration
K -Ts Jl
IT Sunt .r.-r
I iSf 10 lbs
Li I 100 lbi
2 lb. box 49c
Burnetts lea Q
Cream Mix ean Ol
Rtg. 10c. Choice of flavors.
Club House Coffee
Try this coffee Q7f
for quality, . O I W
Toilet TUsua C
2 rolls 3 w
Fresh Tomatoes 4 A.
3 pounds I U W
Grttn Beans 4 Qm
3 pounds .. I WW
Local Green 1 H
Peppers lb. I U W
Lsrd 4 lbs. 27C
Pork Sausage lb. 10f
Pork Liver lb. IOC
Veal Steak lb. 15c
Bacon, sliced lb. 5r
PERSONAL
South Riverside avenue.
Daughter Born Word was
received today of the birth in
Portland Thursday evening of a
girl to Mr. and Mrs. Kelton
Strader, former Medford resi
dents and well known here.
The baby weighed eight pounds
and has been named Karen
Lee.
Completes Mission Freder
ick Furst, division of wild life
and range management at the
regional U. S. forester's office
in Portland, left by car this
morning for Roseburg after en
gaging in a general inspection
ui me iuguc niv iiuuui ici
est. Roseburg is headquarters
for the Umpqua national forest.
Grass Fire A ward alarm
was sounded at 5:09 p. m. yes
terday when the fire depart
ment received an excited call
to send a truck to 1120 Niantic
street. When the firemen ar
rived, however, they found only
a little patch of grass burning
in a lot between two houses.
The blaze was put out with a
garden hose.
In Hospital E. E. Stump of
route 2 is confined in the Com
munity hospital. His two -daugh
ters, Mrs. Evelyn Mathew and
Mrs. Edythe Wilson, came to
Medford to be with him. Mrs.
Mathew lives in San Francisco
and Mrs. Wilson came here
from Ely, Nev. She will rekle
in salt Lake city, Utah, alttr
leaving here.
At Airport Lieut. E. N.
Stidd stopped at Medford mu
nicipal airport this morning to
have his army Douglas obser
vation plane refueled. He was
en route from Oakland, Cal., to
Fort Lewis, Wash. Arrivals yes
terday included Capt. J. H.
Clark, Salem to Oakland in a
North American combat plane,
and Capt. H. N. Bailey, Port
land to San Rafael, Cal., in a
Boeing bomber.
Divine Dua Home Dr. Sher
man L. Divine, pastor of the
Presbyterian church, plans to
return this evening from Port
land and will occupy his pul
pit Sunday morning speaking
on "The Message of the River
and the Hills." The message is
based on a. 1500 mile journey
by motorcar across Washington
and Oregon, including a visit
to Grand Coulee and over the
stone bridge on Lake Wash
ington. During the past week.
Dr. Divine has assisted the Rev.
Engvald Iverson as vice moder
ator in presiding over the an
nual Synod of Oregon meeting
in Portland. Mr. Iverson will
return with Dr. Divine to Med
ford.
Chosen For Nit t F our
youths, selected tentatively for
enlistment in the U. S. navy,
will leave here by train Mon
day night for Portland to take
their final qualifying physical
examinations. They are Robert
L. Dooms of Ashland, Samuel
Warren of Klamath Falls and
Fred Ingram and, Hiram D.
Harris, CCC enrolle'es at Camp
Wimer. If they pass the final
medical examinations, they will
go Immediately to San Diego,
Cal., for eight weeks of inten
sive preliminary training before
being, assigned to actual duty.
Applications for future enlist
ment quotas are being received
by George E. Patterson, re
cruiter, at the navy sub-station
in the Medford federal build
ing. Radio Highlights
By Associated Press
(Time is Pacific Standard)
Tonight: Europe, CBS 4:55,
6:30: WJZ-NBC 6; MBS 6, 6:15:
NBC 8.
WEAF-NBC 7:30 San Fran
cisco Chronicle salute to Byrd
expedition.
Saturday Europe subject to
change NBC 4 a.m.: ' CBS 4
ajn., 2:45 p.m.; WEAF-NBC 9:45
a.m.; MBS 2:45 p.m.
WARM, LIGHT SHOWER
DESCENDS ON TOWN
A warm, light shower In mid
afternoon portended electric
storms in the higher elevations,
the weather bureau said. A new
batch of forest fires from light
ning was feared.
Clodjis tun for Too Lata to CUa
ilIT Ada ts I'M p m.
Bring Your Feet
To The
OASIS
Spring Dance Floor
SAT. NITE July 20
GOOD MUSIC
MEDFORD MAIL
"Earthbound" Coming To Rialto
In . i ii mi ji iii j I in nM i ii " nip.p.i''i"-'i'."jiiui -iy .
rid!"!'1!' li'liMlK : I-- J "1
. . .... x ,,.,. , ..;;!,. , i. .Hi'.!.! 'ii,! Ii v , T
,fV"' Bi!i:;!;:;!;i!ilii!l:::i .-f v.-u
stt:i k
J Q4'
?4
An unusual picture that goes
as far as to out-top the famous
"Topper" comedy is "Earth-
bound," the story of a man who
could ot dieof , ghost who
was haunted by the living
which comes to the New Rialto
theatre for Sunday and Monday
with Warner Baxter in the title
jrole as the man who exper-ifire
ienced the greatest of thrills; j
attend hr own funeral; flirting
with his own wife after he had,
laKen uic turm oi n kuum, Kei-
"My Favorite Wife" Here Sunday
WW
..... I---
a
M vt if hntnl lrlf ri.Ti-.tiT. i
ing a man and woman as Mr. .
inH Mn IikI fter Hie same I
man tvith a different wnman
had registered also as Mr. and . Sunday at the Craterian the
Mrs. atre. The clerk Is Donald Mac-
Cary Grant is the man, Gail j Bride.
The Joneses
Jed Prouty and Spring By-
ington head the cast of the
popular Jones Family in their
newest starring fun hit, "Quick
Millions," which plays today
and tomorrow only at the Roxy
theatre with "Riders of Black
River," starring Charles Star
rett, as the comoanion Western.
In this newest film, the Joneses
strike it rich for a day in a
Western gold mine but run
into more Indians than they do
gold. ,
San Francisco Butter
San Francisco, July 13. IIP,
(USDA) Butter unchanged.
Sacramento. July 19. lP
Churning cream butteifat, first
grade 31c; second grade 29c.
TRTBUNE. MED FORD, OREGON. FRIDAY. JULY
(ting even w.th,the friends that
I had tormented him and killed
j him in life. Andrea Leeds and
! Lynn Barl play the two women
in his life. Others in the cast
include Henry Wilcoxon and
Charley Grapewin.
"The Last Alarm," the story
of a fiend who murders with
and featuring J. Farrell .
MacDonnld, Polly Ann Young
and Warren Hull, will play as
the companion feature with the
unusual r.m uiuuuiiu
nnrl !rn
Dunne are '
the two ladies in "My Favorite
Wife " Ihn hilarinim marital I
enmeHv nneninff a Ihree-riav run
CONFER REGARDING
HUE SUPPLY LINES
Emphasis was placed on the
supply lines at a forest ire sup
pression conference sponsored
yesterday by Medford CCC dis
trict headquarters at the quar
termaster's office, headquarters
j detachment here,
I The conference covered the
administration of fire camps in
general but stress was put on
the handling of subsistence and
other supply items.
Attending the conference
were Dwight Phipps, district
fire warden of the state forest
patrol, Maurice L. Tedrow, as
sistant forester in charge of fire
control on the Rogue River na
tional forest, E. J. Bruggcr, as
sistant quartermaster of the
Medford CCC district, and com
pany officers and project super
intendents of the Applegate,
Williams Creek and South Fork
CCC camps.
Tou'll enjoy th Fresh Sea Poods
from Holl;'s, 136 I. Blitb.
-JS W
;.i.i.p,n s
- . . S1S - te.
PEBBLE
SPRINGS
STRAIGHT BOURBON
WHISKEY
Mike your next whiikey "buy"
Pebble Sprir.i. Here ii a fully
ltJ, mild and mellow Strnrht
Bourbon from the "Whiikey Cen
ter of the World." You'll like
Pebble Springs . . tnd you'll like
le low price . . .
pints si .00
QUARTS S1.95
Pebble Sprints Straight
Bourbon Whiikey. This
Whiikey is 4 Years Old...
90 Proof.
FARLEY 10 STAY,
AT PARTY HELM
FORFI
(Continued from wo ONI
adjourned sine die at 2:05 a
lEDT) today.
Rowdy Windup
It was a rowdy wind-up to
; four days of stop-and-go politics ,
m wnirn raricy ana a scaupriiiK within an hour after the per
of anti-third term conservatives manent organization of the con-
sought to make a river flow up
hill. They lost. The galleries
clamored and there were shouts
and boos from the floor last
night and today as the constrict
ing pressure of White House in
fluence forced the convention
steadily toward Wallace, a Re
publican recruit, for vice presi
dent. The campaign is on between
the Roosevelt-Wallace ticket rati-
fi.d anH Rpmihlirn -.,.
dontial ranriiHM w.nri.u I.
VnjUue and his running mate,
sen Charles L McNarv of Ore
: gon.
It is
the New Deal vs. the!
most articulate and adverse
critic of the Roosevelt adminis-lthe
tration
that business has pro -
Whether this convention sucn , dra" 8.hould. be . "P0"
"drafted" Mr. Roosevelt or wasjT'. 1 "v 'he "'ntost sim-
"stane manaeed" into nomin.t. !
ing him is a matter of some dis
pute. There are conservatives
here who believe the latter.
Ultimatum From F. R.
Conference room and plat
form rebellions blazed through
the afternoon and early eve
ning. But Wallace would not
stay down. Mr. Roosevelt sent
word that he would address the
convention at 9 p. m., and then
, i . .. . i . . i j . i
li in . v. ML. m uui unless net
, wl. ,, . .....
........ sv ...... ...
a wrangling roll call.
And then a silence fell upon
the assembly. At 12:20 a. m.,
the president began to speak
just as eight years ago he spoke
from the platform here in the
Chicago stadium to accept his
llr,t nomination.
But this time he Was
not
there. His VOICB Came. Smooth
and reassuring as a benediction,
from a cluster of loud speakers
overhead as this Democratic
man of all time, said "I will."
No Campaigning
No campaigning will he do
this year, he told the conven
tion, but he will talk to the
press and over the radio from
time to time to report to the
people on the crisis he says
exists and to refute "deliberate
or unwitting falsification of
fact, which are sometimes made
by political candidates."
He was loathe to continue In
the White House and would
rather retire. But for the de
velopments after Europe's Sep
tember declarations of war, Mr.
Roosevelt said, he would have
renounced public office long be-
bliow4 Mil.:
1:1.1 -a IS- 7:mi-s:lS
Ends Sal. Nitel
2 Thrill Hits!
ChMter MnrrU
Anita Lnuine
(.hbyM Hayes
"WAGONS
WESTWARD"
Tim lUnfrfW Royal
Mounted in 'Murder
on the Yukon".
The Most Unusual
Show You'll Ever See!
Tha laughable
atorjr of m man
who could not
ol ... a ghoat
who km haunt
rtf by tha II-
ln(:
Si
SUN and MON
WO FEATURES.
A mad killer
with a torch .
S u - f - I
who murders
. Thrlllsl . .
to'i
i. Famll
Mac Donald
Polly Ann
Vounf and
1 into Hull
. 4
19. 1940.
. ... , . . ,. . ,.l The gallery whooped itself
fore this. But, he said. h. could hd.,cnT trvm(, t0 prnt r.
not renounce it now. ley from shoutmg into the tu-
"Every day that passed call-jmuU tnat h did" , wan, t0
eu lur pusiiHuieiiieiil OI personal
plans and partisan debate," he
told the packed stadium, and
the nation, "until the latest pos
sible moment. The normal con
ditions under which I would
have made public declaration
of my personal desires were
gone.
No. 1 Drafts
"Thinking solely of the na
tional good and of the interna
tional scene, I came to the re
luctant conclusion thai such
declaration should not be made
'before the national convention.
u was accordingly made to you
vention.
In this speech of acceptance
Mr. Roosevelt made himself the
nation's No. 1 draftee in the
cause of peace and national de
fense and he said all citizens
are agreed that some form of
draft was as fair and necessary
today as in 1917. And if his
draft sticks, It will be because
of the voters next November
and not by action of the con
vention, he said.
"My conscience will not let
me turn my back upon a call
I to service, ne connaca.
" ... ,, u
Jc"t"
.,Ame"c?n .!"e,hod ,of,.free
lc",' - """' "'"J ,"" Jtu,"c "'"'V;
selves can draft president. If
P''C" wlln 5 ne'P
continue to serve with the best
of my ability and with the full
ness of my strength."
And he thanked the conven
tion for naming Wallace be
cause, he said, he wanted a man
of that turn of mind to fight
beside him.
F.irst Lady Speaks
The first lady moved all smil
ing to the platform at the end
of the bitter roll call for vice
. . . ; . .
presidential nomination and
sald her husband was too busy
to be there.
"To be a candidate of either
great political party is a very
serious and a very solemn
thing," she said. "You cannot
treat it as you would treat an
ordinary nomination in an ord
inary time.
If the back of rebellion
against Wallace was not broken
before, she broke it. Mrs. Roose
velt was telling those delegates
to behave by appealing to their
love of country. And she had
her own tribute to Jim
Farley and one he probably
treasures more than the radioed
words that came from Washing
ton this morning. The big man
who went along so long and the
woman who went along too, and
still is going, are great friends.
Bankhead Second
ROXY
Mum !: 1 :4 a:l. V.w.:l
THE JONESES AT
THEIR FUNNY BEST!
They "
(iroiptrtlng
tor roIiI . . .
and are
54r-l"'
1 .tig a time!
-' X
SUNDAY FOR S DAYSI
Ptue Frrtf ftont- In
"NO PLACE TO GO"
... -.-Tea
111 rSSDtf rL""""
trims itiMtei s -
- na iocii kit I
met iiixit k ' v.'iHv
'"' '"" j I vt7-
TODAY
and fcin
SAT. Thrillers!
run for the vice presidency.
Speaker William B. Bankhead
was put up first and he ended
with 329 and a fraction votes
to Wallace's 627 and a fraction.
There was real steam behind
Bankhead and many a vote cast ;
for him was preceded by some
crat." It will not down that
Wallace was an Iowa Republi
can for years before he became
an Iowa new dealer and a mem
ber of the president's cabinet,
and each time Wallace was
mentioned, directly or indirect
ly, there were lusty boos.
McNutt, withdrawal and all,
took 6B votes, Sen. Alva B.
Adams, (D., Colo.) collected
ll'.i on the one and only vice
presidential roll call. Farley got
eight and from one to five were
distributed among Jones, who
also withdrew, and half a dozen
others more or less informally
nominated or not at all.
ILL UNDER TO
Improvements being made In
the remodeling of the First
i Christian church on South Oak-
dale avenue at Ninth street In
clude a new entrance for the
sanctuary, a new covering for i
the outside which will be paint-;
ed white, and flooring of the ,
basement which will be divided j
into classrooms with steam heat
and new equipment for the edu
cational program of the church, i
The sanctuary will be changed j
to provide a more worshipful at
mosphere and for the convent-1
ence and comfort of the wor-'
shippers, said the Rev. R. W.
Coleman, pastor.
A special service will be held
Sunday to commemorate the 27
i years of service given by the
present sanctuary. It will be the
last service before the sanctuary i
is remodeled. All the older j
members of the church are es-1
pecially invited and a bouquet 1
will be presented to the person
present who has been a member
of the church for the longest
time.
Mrs. M. E. Fisher Is the only
charter member of the church
now living and the pastor hopes
WHEN HE TRIES TO HIDE HIS
BRIDE FROM
partes
I J ji--Ni I Mayba funnier pie
WSyf -ftU!. 1 1 fures will ba made
f C 1 I S some day but un-
i r 'v r 111 lh,n fhi en
IHlRHYl' POSIIIM.LY KM TOMORROW M1.11TI
00 1 Gorgeous Technicolor
n
-1,
PAGE ELEVEN
she will b able to attend. Sha
joined the church when It was
organized November 24, 1884.
The public is Invited also.
The church was organized In
the home of E. D. Elwood, 135
South Central avenue. The
church occupied a number . of
sites before moving to the pres-
ent site in 1913
It ,, expected that remodeilng
i of the church will ba completed
j by September 1. Meantime regu
i lar Sunday services will be held.
OLD-TIME
DANCES
Modarn and Old-Tim
Musio
EVERY SAT. HUE
at
U. I. Hall. Jacksonville
WALKER'S
DANCE
DREAMLAND
Sat. Nile
7 Piece Orchestra
Good Floor. Good Crowd
Good Tim
Spend the
Week-End at
LAKE 0' THE
WOODS
Dancing Every
Saturday Nite ;
HERB COCHRAN
And His ' '
Orchestra and EnUrtalners
Men 7Sc
Ladle Free
HIS WIFE
Something's bound
to happen! . . . ...
SUNDAY - 3 DAYS
Complrt. hot !.: t :IVS:3-T-:15
Mali: lie. i.i r s.v e tm: 4Jc. tat w sec
Chlidrrn It to IS tor Klddm lot Anrllm.
I
nj.tT.'g7J.:i.;ii.'