PAGE TEN MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER ZZ, O.D.T. PREPARES QUARTERS HERE AT MAIN AND GRAPE Operation With Staff of 13 Expected by October 1 Marshall Nauman Crief. A district office of the Office of Defense Transportation, hav ing Jurisdiction over eight south ern Oregon and three northern California counties, has been opened In the old Farmers' and Fruitgrowers' bank building, 204 West Main street, and Is being refurnished and renovated under the direction of Marshall Nauman. who will be in charge. Nauman formerly was assistant to Herman O. Sites, ODT field manager for Oregon. The Medford office is expected to be in operation by October I with a full staff of 13 employes. tome of whom will be local res idents, Nauman said. The district covered by the local office in cludes Cooss, Douglas, Curry, Josephine. Jackson, Klamath, Lake and Harney counties in Oregon, and Siskiyou, Del Norte and Modoc counties in Califor nia. Nauman said some 16,000 vehicles coming under direct ODT control were now in oper ation In this district. Control Vehicle In order to conserve tires and equipment and make certain that vehicles are operated at full capacity, the ODT will assume control over virtually all com mercial vehicles in the nation effective November 19, Nauman explained. These vehicles In clude trucks, buses, taxlcabs, ambulances, hearses and other types of vehicles available for , public rental. Each vehicle will be forced to carry a certificate of public necessity, and without the cer tificate the vehicle owner may not operate, purchase gasoline, oil or tires. ODT, according to n order announced recently by Joseph B. Eastman, ODT direc tor, may amend, modify, recall, uspend, cancel or revoke any certificate for good cause. The order further provides that ODT may cause any vehicle for which a certificate has been Issued to "be operated in such manner, for such purpose and between such points as the ODT shall from time to time direct, regardless of any contract, lease, or other commitment, ex press or implied with respect to the operation of such commer cial motor vehicle." Mall Blanks Soon Nationwide mailing of appli cation blanki for the necessary certificates is scheduled to start Wednesday, September 23, and will be completed in ample time for each eligible operator affect ed by the 'order to obtain his certificate before November IS. when the order becomes effec tive. The blanks, with complete instructions on how to fill them out, will be mailed to every person registered on December SI. 1942 as the owner of a motor vehicle available for public hire. After the applications are fill ed out and returned to a speci fied location for codification, they will be sent to the district ODT offices which will Issue the certificates. The certificates will specify: the name and ad dress of the person to whom It was Issued, the vehicle or vehi cles covered, the purpose for which and the conditions under which the vehicle or vehicles may be operated, and such other terms or conditions as ODT may from time to time direct. Medford Soldier Helps Plan "Night" RIVERSIDE SPEED ffj : v -i-H The "Stat of Oregon Night", slated for October 3 at Shpoard Field. Texas. nars rtalitv as eommittee heads prepare plans. They encourage Oregonians at home to send greetings or per haps a prise or a refreshment gift. Left to right above) Pvt. Terry Metcalf. Portland) Pvt. Robert shaw. Medfordi Pvt. Brian Mimaaugh. Portland) P?C Walt R. Vernstrom, Portland) CpL Anthony Yturri. Ontario, general chairman) Sot. Robert McClay. LaGrande: Pvt. Wallace Barr Portland, and CpL Ralph Severson of Portland. Delicious Rogue River Valley pears will be enjoyed at this party through the courtesy of the Reter Fruit company. Cigarettes aud candy are being sent by the Jack son County Chamber of Comn.erce. ELLA LEWIS OF CP. Klamath in Need Of Harvest Hands Portland. Ore., Sept. 22 OJ.R) The U. S. employment serv ice announced today 4,000 har vest workers will be needed In Klamath county. Ore., and Siski you and Modoc counties, In Cali fornia, for the potato harvest, expected to be in full swing by September 25. Digging prices are the highest in history, officials of the service said. Ella Adeline Lewis, 49, a res ident of Medford for the past 13 years, passed away at her home, 204 S. Central Ave., Tuesday morning after a brief illness. Mrs. Lewis was born in Penn sylvania on April 20, 1893. She came to Southern Oregon In 1929. Her husband, Walker Lewis, passed away in Feb., 1938. She is survived by one daugh ter. Mrs. Yvonne Haas of Camas, Wash., and one son, Selmer Lewis, of Medford, two sisters, Mrs. Orville Smith of Camas, Wash., and Mrs. Myrtle Knaule of Syracuse, N. Y., two brothers, Bert Lightner of Penna., and Frank Lightner of Syracuse, N. Y. Christian Science services will be held at Perl funeral home Thursday at 2 p. m. Interment will take place in Central Point cemetery. ATONEMENT DAY The Day of Atonement serv ices attracting Jewry from as far away as Yrcka, Calif., ended last evening at the Masonic temple with over 160 enlisted men, officers and civilians in at tendance. Chaplain Emanuel Honig of the 44th division sta tioned at Fort Lewis came on special assignment to conduct the services. He chanted many of the old Hebrew prayers. Another Medford "first" was scored at the conclusion of the service with the wedding of Phyllis Zelchner of New York to Sergeant Jordan Mohr of Camp White under the tradition al canopy supported by four sol diers. Arrangements were under di rection of the local army and navy committee of the Jewish Welfare board. BIRTHS STRAUBE To Mr. and Mrs, J. W., Jacksonville, September 19, a boy, seven pounds, at Com munity hospital. SMITH To Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy, 416 Western Ave., Sep tember 17, a boy, seven pounds, at Community hospital. McKINNEY To Mr. and Mrs. C. S., Prospect, September 21, a boy, seven pounds, at Com munity hospital. , KUNZ To Mr. and Mrs. W. E., Medford, September 17, a girl, seven pounds, at Commun ity hospital. WALKER To Mr. and Mrs. Robert, Butte Falls, September 19, a girl, five pounds, at Com munity hospital. GOVERNOR To Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd, Gold Hill, Septem ber 20, a girl, seven pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. WILD To Mr. and Mrs. Ber nard, 1024 Court street, Med ford, September 20, a boy, six pounds, at Sacred Heart hos pital. TOTTEN To Mr. and Mrs. Lowell, 249 S. Riverside avenue, Medford, September 20, a girl, seven pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. Legion To Install Wednesday Evening Medford Post No. 15 Ameri can Legion will install officers for the coming year, Wednesday night at the club rooms in the Armory. ,. Preceding Installation the le gion and auxiliary will join in a pot luck dinner at 6:30. Entertainment by service men from Camp White will be a fea ture of the evenings' entertain ment. All members are requested to attend. California Deer Reprieved by War San Francisco, Sept. 22. (U.R) War-time restrictions on deer hunting were reflected today In the kill reports of the Bureau of Game Conservation of the state division of Fish and Game. Only 1,245 legal bucks have been reported since the season opened September 16. A year ago, 8,298 deer were killed. ...Windsor ff V T- Is sur fo fllvo you vVJ Kd-V- ' a lot of pleasure) J -H without costing .Ss A fptc youalotofmonyl'' 6Vx ,J"f "THI OIT tOt TOM MHfT M V C, H LONGORIA To Mr. and Mrs. August C, 420 North Grape street, Medford, September 20. girl, six pounds, at Sacred Heart hospital. W. Douglas Gardiner Is First Lieutenant W. Douglas Gardiner,- former advertising manager for the California Pacific Utilities Co., has been promoted from second lieutenant to first lieutenant, ac cording to a press release from the Quartermaster Replacement Center at Fort Warren, Wyo. In addition to his army promotion. Lt. Gardiner also was recently promoted to the rank of parent hood, with the arrival Septem ber 8 of a baby son. Mr. Gardiner married a Klam ath Falls girl after leaving here for duty in the army. Woman, 61, Enjoys First Film Show Johnson City, Tenn., Sept. 22 (U.R) Sixty-one-year-old Mrs. P. Lewis Arwood went to a movie yesterday the first one she hnd ever seen. She planked down four fruit Jars containing i.zou pennies at the ticket booth got a $25 war bond and $3.75 In stamps. A war bond was the price of admission. She said she had a grandson missing In ac tion, three nephews In the armed forces and two sons who win enlist soon. Thomas C. Reames, eharged with violation of the basie rule, on North Riverside avenue by exceeding the speed limit of a restricted zone was fined $2.90 and costa in Justice court jret- leraay. Clifford E. Medley and Ray mond E. Burton, charged with having no muffler on their cars, were each assessed $1 and costs. James H. Roberta paid $1.90 and costs for no clearance lights on a truck. Two of the defendants were too busy at work to appear In court and were represented by others in entering pleas. SOLDIERS. LADIES E Twenty-one rural schools of Jackson county have opened to date and most of the remainder will next Monday, according to tne county school superintend dent's office. Some schools have opened but have not yet report ed to the school superintendent's office, it was said. Schools listed as opening are: Griffin Creek, Neil Creek. Valleyvlew, Independence, Sams Valley, Talent, North Phoenix, Rogue River, Provolt, Browns boro, Applegate, Foots Creek. Trail, Reese Creek, Wagner Creek, Gold Hill, Evans Valley. Oak Grove, Elk Creek, Butte Falls and Fern Valley. Enlisted men of the 91st In fantry Division at Camp White will be entertained at a dance Saturday night in the huge sports arena just inside and to the right of the south entrance to the cantonment, and all sol diers are urged to bring their ladies and dance to the smooth music of the division orchestra. Headquarters of the 91st an nounced that government trans portation would be provided the soldiers and their guests from Medford and Ashland. Vehicles will leave Medford from Main and Front streets. "Lost ground can be regained, but lost time, never," admon ishes President Roosevelt in stressing the need for war sav ings bond investment. Whin you taste Roman Meat porridge you'll discover trior K has that wholosoma flavor ef roasted ears. That's because it's mad of ripen ed what irairw. The action taken a week ago Monday by Teamsters' local 962 of Medford in indorsing the candidacy of Earl Snell for gov ernor has been followed by similar indorsement by the Gen eral Teamsters union, local 162, in Portland, according to H. H Baum and Frank R. Meads. business representatives of the Medford local. The Teamsters are reoudiatins : the recent State Federation of Labor indorsement of Lew Wal lace and Instead are supporting Snell, because, it was stated, "he has taken a strong stand for labor as far back as 1937 and in our opinion has been consist ent in his stand for organized laoor up to and including the present time." i BATISTA INDISPOSED Havana, Cuba, Sept. 22. OJ.R) President Fulgencio Batista was confined to his living Quart ers in the government palace for the third day today by a "slight indisposition." He cancelled all , appointments. I MODEL Bakery Wednesday SPECIAL Rye Bread Seeded and Plain Soybean Bread Bear Paws 203 W. Main CANADIAN FISHERMEN STRIKE DURING "RUN" Vancouver, B. C, Sept. 22 (U.R) British Columbia's vital sockeye salmon Industry was disorganized by a strike of fish ermen today in the middle of the greatset "run" in nearly 20 years. The fishing fleets on the Fraser river and In the gulf of Georgia halted fishing because of a dispute with canneries over prices and grading of sockeye. The strike affected nearly 2,500 (ishing boats. The rank of petty officer, a position any ambitious young sailor can achieve in the U. S. navy. Is indicated by chevrons: V-shaped bits of braid sewed onto the sleeve midway between the shoulder and the elbow. National Distillers Products Corporation, New York, N. Y. 85 Proof. VI KMED 2 P.M. Imc JA Telephone Lines Are the Busiest In History Ton Can Help Us to Help Yon We want you to know that we are meeting the war emergency with everything we have, but in these ' critical times delays are bound to occur. In speeding Victory, the telephone lines are busier far busier than ever before. We cannot plan and build new lines and new switchboards, as we normally would, because copper and other strategic materials have gone to war in planes, tanks, and guns. Unnecessary and needlessly long telephone calls should be out for "the duration." War calls must be given the green light. Your considerate thoughtfulness in making only the most urgent calls is inspiring to all of us who are earnestly endeavoring to uphold the finest traditions of telephone service. May we also ask you to help us further to help you by being brief on all calls, by calling by number when mak ing long distance calls, and by answering calls promptly. Thank you. THE PACIFIC TtltPRONC AND TttCOIAPR COMPANY 14S North Bartlott. T.Uphon 2101. PAWN'S Entrances on Main and Central Avenues I Self Trimmed and Beautifully Furred COATS Xrristlbl la both warmth and boauty, the Fall and Winter Coats of Carnal Flooco, Wool and Caml Hair, and drossy Fabric. Many trimmed with luxurious Furs. COATS Versatile gad-about ar that Smart slf-trimmd Caml Fleeces, Wool and Carnal Hair Coats. Fitted and Boxy typos in popular Twoodi, Strip and Herringbone Tweeds. Full length lined and interlined for warmth and long life. Sises 10 to 20 and they ar 100 wool. $2995 Dress and Sport Types If you ar interested in a Coat soiling around S4S w most certainly suggest thet Now 100 Wools. Hero ar Drossy Fabrics and Sporty Fleeces in Fitted Bait typos and Boxy Swaggers from such famous makers as Rothmoor and Morris Haft, Coats that will giv many seasons of satisfaction. Sis from 10 to 44. $45. and $49.95 Fur Trimmed Models Keep winter winds at a safe dlstanc by choosing on of out luxurious Fur trimmed Wool Coats for "your winter coat." Her ar lovely garments with generous Fox. Persian Lamb. Wolf and Raccoon Collars in comfortable Boxy stales. Coats featuring such popular fabrics as Needleooint. tweed and Dressy Fleece. Sites 10 to 40. New Autumn colors. $49.95 to $95.00 me -- t- y u v f VI- W w Coats 2nd Floor Fabric Section - Main Floor x WE HAVE THEM ALLI i 0 I WAY JUMPER FLANALAIN First you so it advertised in "Liio" then you buy it at Mann's that's th story of "FUnalaln." a new Spun Rayon Flinnol in delight ful Printed motifs for the Autumn season. Full 39 inches wid. $1 00 , ?zy mi 859 3tc Ju A D