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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1943)
PAGE SIX MEOF01 UNB tttrmrromm la Soatbsn, Onm Mdi the UmU Tribua" Dally Bxcapt Salttrdar Published bf ICSDrORD PRINTING OOt T-tt North Ptr au Pboo tl4l ROBERT W. RUHU Editor. BNCST R. OIMTRAF. Uuvr, As iDdtpondaat Newspaper. Cntrd u Mcond eletu tnttttr at Hd ford. Oregon, under Act f March ft, till. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bp Hall In Advaneat Pally and Bunrtay ona yaar T.II Dally and Sunday alt months... 4.01 Pally and Sunday thraa month. S.II Dally and Sunday ona month... .Tl y Carrier In Advaaca Modford. Aih land. Central Point JaokionTllla, Gold Hill. Phoenix, Talent, and on motor . routeei , Dally and Sunday ona year .0I . Dally and Sunday .one month.. .Tl ' All term caah id advance. Offlrlal Paper of thm City of Mrdford Official Taper of Jackeoa County -ruU Lned IVIr. MEMBER OP AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS ' Adrtl.!n Repregentatlr. WBST-BOI.MUAT COMPANY. INC. Offloaa fn New York, Chlc.ro, Detroit. Baa Pranelico, La. And... s..ttl Portland. St. Loiils, Atlanta, Vancour.r, B. G Mamitt fBiiiSHlrufsfsoaiiiTioa Ye Smudge Pot By Arthur Perry A beauty expert lengthily discussed the proper and fashion able location of the feminine eyebrow over the radio yes. The proper place for the fem inine eyebrow seems to be any place but where the Lord put It. Some rain has fallen. How ever, not enough to wash the family auto or determine de finitely the woodshed roof leaks. . . "LIQUOR CONSUMED BY BOYS STAGGERS SHERIFF." (Exchange hdline.) 15-year-old stuff. e . a Nervous trigger-fingered hunt ers in the Fremont forest area have been shooting willy-nilly and each other' with rare aban don. As. a matter of fact, the more squeamish in the firing zone, left shaking by the wild recklessness, have departed hur riedly lest they provide a Job for the undertaker. The natives, with family ties and property interests, crawl under the barn, as a safety measure, and hope for the best. It is estimated 8,000 ' armed men roam the ridges with the nearby potato patches of Klamath county in dire need of hands. There were only seven men on the much cussed Portland bond drive raft. . - . , DON'T ASK UST ' (Santa Barbara News-Press) "Now who are these people In office who are so much wiser, saner and more depend able than the American people from whom these officials sprung? When by some un announced ' change did the : accident of appointment and ' election confer upon . Amerl ' can Individuals superiority of ' Judgment concerning what is good and safe for the common herd similar to the mystic superiority once attached in tradition to aristocratic birth." ... The Allies report, In their ef forts to seize the island of Coo, a link in the road to the Bal kans, "too much reliance was placed in the co-belligerency of the Italians." It may be the commanding officers figured the late foe would be as co-opera- tlve in the fighting as in their co-eating. "It still requires several years and a minimum of Intelligence to make a good printer or re porter or advertising man even an editor." (Siskiyou News.) Ye ed. hurls a cushioned brick bat. " A republican congressman, un wittingly bites the hand that helps his party no end by pro testing the recent aerial jaunt, by army bomber to the South Pacific, of the gracious and charming First Lady. As an unofficial GOP pre-election cam paigner, she has no peer. The latest results could have been no better had she taken Madam Perkins along as a traveling companion. to No Illegal churns have yet shown up on the score or so of Butter Creeks in the state. In Prohibition days the law was always seizing a still on Whiskey Creek of which also there were many. ... The first 1944 calendar has been unveiled. There is only one Friday the 13th in the year and It falls in October, Due to Leap year February has 29 days. REWARD OF ARTl "What was the obligato from the high priests of jazz, and the sycophants at the altar of down beat? Reverence, silence, re spect for the Immortality of the . hymn? Oh, no. The harmonics out front were the clatter of dishes, the discordance of thick voices, the rauclty of clinking glasses and restless chair? . And finally, the greater souls beyond the tinseled proscenium, with puny largesse, tossed pennies and dimes on the floor at the 'end of the long." Deplorable The fatal truck crash on East Main street early this morning would be deplorable under any circum stances, but is particularly so with our visitors from Mexico the chief victims. These smiling orchard Rio Grande have by their industry and kindly ways pression upon the people of this community, and as their time of departure has come nearer, there has been a growing sentiment that under similar labor turn to Oregon again. With tioison-food. however, ereetine them on their arrival, poison bugs and in the eastern part of the of a truck-load of workers in broad daylight on an open highway, it is doubtful if this sentiment will be as strongly reciprocated, as had been hoped,- and under more normal conditions would have been true. THE direct effect upon the visiting Mexicans, how ever, will not be.so far-reaching or unfortunate as the effect upon the people of Mexico as a whole. The Mexican workers have been well treated, have made good money, and have given every evidence of having enjoyed their sojourn here in every way. These facts, however, will not be wired to the Mexi- can press, poison tooa, car crashes will. The prevailing idea south of the Eio Grande is not entirely complimentary to the American "Gringo" as it is. The experiences of these Mexican workers, we fear will not contribute to the removal of that preju dice, as effectively as would have been the case, had not an ill-fate seemed to have pursued them, ever since they arrived. Clarification Needed A New York Federal Court has ruled against the Associated Press in the suit ment, charging it to be a straint of trade. This is a surprising decision, particularly to this newspaper. For the Mail was an .Associated Press paper, and then for certain business reasons, changed a couple of years ago to the United Press, the AP s outstanding competitor, and very successful one. - There has not been so much as a ripple of incon venience caused by this change, and not one reader complaint has been heard. It is doubtful- in fact if more than one-half-of-one-percent of the readers of this paper ever have realized ANY change in press services had been made. Yet the federal charge now sustained declares the Associated Press to be operating in violation of the federal anti-trust laws, thus restraining trade and tending to establish a monopoly! ...... THE decision undoubtedly U. S. Supreme Court for final settlement It is to be hoped the highest court will clear the atmosphere by making a clearer-cut distinction be--tween a corporation operating in restraint of trade, as to some of its policies and practices; and maintain ing or tending to maintain in any practical sense, a monopoly. The monopoly charge against the Associated tress completely absurd, as the experience of this paper ias demonstratedOn the rules and regulations restricting competition, through he member protest provision, may tend to restrain trade, entirely from a standpoint. A Supreme Court decision should be able to so interpret the anti-trust law newspaper monopoly can be and the complete demoralization of the newspaper business, through needless duplication and uneco nomic and uncontrolled competition, on the other. Newspaper Week This is Newspaper Week. to have newspapers tell about themselves and impress upon their readers the advantages of a free press. Frobably all the talk in the world along these lines doesn t mean much unless a newspaper is doing the oi the year. And 11 it is doing its job from dav to day as it should, its readers being told. To the best of its ability, truth and all of it. In these rnVvl.-, n ,1 4.1,. c-iuiu hi iiuu wie uutu in discovered. Limitations of necessary for a newspaper comes to its mill. This newspaper strives to exclude only that which is untrue, unimportant or uninterest- ng. . THIS newspaper has learned that if a publication is rf oornrin rr ifa nAtviTwnnUt? fV. wair if aTimild if will hear about ?.t quickly avenues for compjaints wide open. It strives to make sure that anyone who has a kick gets a hearing. This newspaper is convinced that continued support of its readers through the years is the only real proof whether it has achieved its aims. JAIL'S COOK WORRIED Salem, Ore. (U.PJ Sheriff A. C. Burlt said he would have trouble paying the Jail cook it Salem area residents continued to behave. A short time ago there were only five prisoners in the county Jail, and he thought an all-time low had been MEDFORD MAIL workers from across the excellent behaviour, steady made a most excellent im in their favor and a hope conditions they would re strange epidemics reported state, and now this wreck tjck iever ana iatai motor brought by the govern monopoly operating in re Tribune for over 20 years will be appealed to the other hand certain A.P. legalistic, super-technical that all danger of any eliminated, on one hand; The declared purpose is it is representative of what remaining fifty-one weeks doubtless know it without this newspaper prints the days it is not alwavs nos- t . !L 1 Ji - wj rtjuuinuze il wnen it is time and space make it to exclude much that enough. It seeks to keep reached. A few days after that, the total dropped to four, and the county can't afford to pay a cook on a per diem allowance for so few prisoners. Average yearly production of limes In Florida between 1928 and 1937 was 20,000 boxes. TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, Personal Health Service Br William aigned letters pertalnlnf to personal bMlth and fejgtene, eat to allien diagnosis or treatment, will bo answered by Or. Brady It stamped sir. addressed envelope u tneloatd. Letter, abould be brief end written la In. Owing to tbe larce number of letters received only a few can re answered here. Mo reply can bs made to queries not conforming to Instructions, address Or. William Bradr. sea El Camlno, Bererlj Hills, Calif. HOW TO PREV One with paralysis agltans, shaking palsy, .Parkinson's dis ease or syndrome, arises from a chair, hesitates a moment, takes aim and starts off in a direct line, body and head bowed for ward, laggard legs trotting to keep up with the body. The steps grow shorter and shorter, as Dr. Bradr though the pa tient were about to totter and fall, but presently he or she catches up, so to speak, and con tinues the journey, never, in my observation, falling. This characteristic gait, to gether with the attitude, the fine tremor of hands or fingers, the mask face, makes up the picture of Parkinson's disease. But thereJ is still an important feature or sign which requires special con sideration in the treatment of Parkinson's, whether in the el derly or in a young person. This sign or feature is rigidity, stiff ness, tenseness in the muscles. It is the main cause of disabil ity, and the degree of disability the patient will have in any case depends largely upon how con sistently and constantly the pa tient himself or herself combats the tendency to rigidity. Muscle rigidity in Parkinson's disease is like frozen water. On a cdld day water freezes, but is less likely to freeze when mov ing. Calm, quiet waters-freezes quickly. So one with Parkinson's disease must resist the tendency to remain quietly seated or lying abed when they might be up and doing If nothing more than the gentlest rhythmic exercises cal culated to promote or maintain freedom, resilience, grace of movement. Just what exercises to take depends on the individual con dition. Go Into your dance, play News Behind The News by Paul Mallon (Continued from Page One) earning less than $5000 a year." (That is, they earn four-fifths of the current national war in come.) Two breaths later, he pro posed tax Increases not so large on this class as on all other tax sources. Indeed, his plan would have eliminated some of the smallest taxpayers entirely. In short, he argued for one thing and then proposed another. ... ANY commentator must be " driven to the conclusion that the plan was proposed largely for political purposes. The treas ury knew well that people do not understand and analyze such matters thoroughly, but figure only how the taxes might hit them - personally. Thus this scheme had' the benefit of a popular appeal, even though this appeal wore thin in the face of the prospect that congress would not enact it, as the treasury well knew when the proposal was submitted. Even so. as previously out lined in this spot, the income tax burden is already so heavy on all groups as to furnish a proper excuse for the rejection of the plan, and it was the only one which the house committee men offered in public. This left the tax question in even more of an impenetrable quandary than had been expected. What to do? ... CONGRESSIONAL taxmakers no longer will develop soma idea of their own, but there is hardly a chance that any strong group in congress will pick up Mr. Morgenthau's facts and go after those whom he says are mnklns four-fifths of the income. In truth, the great bulk of wartime Increases is going to what was formally the lowest In come groups. The incomes that have doubled and trebled are those nf certain war workers, the lowest skilled and unskilled labor, the carpenter, etc., and special groups of labor. There is one way, only one, by which these swollen war Incomes could be tranned. The ceople who have the money are spending it. i sales tax would certainly reach them. It is not a tax on a class or a KrouD. however, but on every one. It would also hit to some extent those whose Incomes have not been Increased much. As related In this spot so often nearly everyone In pontics afraid of the Idea. Only two committeemen snoke out for It at the Morgenthau session. There OREGON, THURSDAY, Bradr. M. D. ENT RIGIDITY your game, skip the rope, roll somersaults, step out frequently for a little walk, keep your hands busy at any skilled work, knitting, crocheting, needlework. carpentry, carving, household chores, calisthenlc drill, singing, Instrumental music. In any case the Individual with Parkinson's disease wheth er of the old fashioned type or of the modern postencephalatlc type, is JU advised to retire or give up his regular occupation and rest. Rest is bad medicine for shaking palsy. Activity, in cessant activity but not excessive or exhausting work, play or ex ercise, is the best course. Further than to add that med icine of the atropine, belladon na, hyoscine or hyoscyamus type gives the most benefit to the tremor and the helplessness in shaking palsy, I can offer no other advice. I QUESTIONS ANSWERS ' Heat Rash That little pesky shin ailment, heat rash, seems to . cause many of us training and fighting In warm cli mates more trouble than anything else. The doctors prescribe "calamine louon, notmnst else, ana this gives little rener. (D. A.I Answer Prickly heat, heat rash. miliaria rubra spells moist heau Cue la to wear least possible clothing or. covering consistent with protection against sunburn. Bathe affected skin with rubbing alcohol 'if you have any. When dry, powder freely with dusting power composed of 2 parts saucync acia, 48 parts cornstarch. 60 parts boric acid. ' - protruding cars T am often kidded about my pro trullng ears. Have become quite sen sitive about it. Is there any way my ears can be made to set closer to head? (Sgt. W. H.) Answer Yes, by plastic operation. Ask one of the doctors at your eta. tlon to recommend a competent olss- tlo surgeon. BlOOd IS BlOOd Is there any test whereby tbe race (Negro, white or Indian) of a child may be determined? (Mrs. O. B.) Answerno. ' . (Copyright, 1943, John F. Dills Co.) Bd. Note) Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brady should send letter direct to Dr. William Brady. M. D 265 a Camlno. Beverly Hills, Calif. - will be more but not enough to cause its adoption. ... As everyone is reluctant to reach for the money where it is, and as the taxes on other sources of revenue are already about as high as they can go (Mr. Morgenthau concedes this), the possibility of any tax legis lation grows increasingly re mote. ARMISTICE KALIS Fourth Corps Headquarters, Oregon Maneuver Area, Oct. 7 (U.R) The 75,000 troops on man euver In central Oregon today were enjoying an armistice, Maj. Gen. Alexander M. Patch, man euver director, having halted the fourth problem at 3:15 p. m. Wednesday. When the combat halted, the Red army was in the midst of a mission embodying a delaying action and holding a line run ning through the towns of Fort Rock, Silver Lake and Summer Lake. The Blue army mission 'was to advance westward and seize the town of Silver Lake. A critique on the fourth phase of the maneuver will be con ducted Saturday. When flying In actual combat, each engine of an army or navy plane averages approximately 100 gallons of gasoline per hour. G.O. P. Leader Wendell WUlkle. Republican part, leader, does a two-fisted Job of lighting a cigarette aa he tells a to, Anrelrs press eonlerenoa thai ". O. P. can'l tn with a prof ram oi negaUoD," OCTOBER 7, 1943. 70,000 WOMEN TO KEEP MULES 82,000 Additional Workers Needed to Maintain Rate Of War Production. By Anthony G. Da Lorenso United Press Correspondent Detroit (U.R) Detroit's abil ity to keep pace with mounting production schedules hinges up on the success of its efforts to re cruit 82,000 additional war workers 70,000 of them wom en by January, 1943. The continuing departure of men for the armed services threatens to curtail output of war materials unless a .suffi cient number of women enter factories, according to Montague A. Clark, regional director of the War Manpower Commission. Clark said employment of-men by Detroit area war plants dur ing the last six months actually has dropped from 517,105 to 505,000 as of Sept. 1. The latter total, he said, doubtless will con tinue to fall as additional men are called for army and navy duty. . , Show Steady Rise Our figures show," Clark said, "that our production since the first of the year has man aged to climb because of the number of women going into the factories. Employment reports show that more men have been lost in the plants than have come into them, while the num ber of .women going on payrolls has increased steadily." Although the number of male employes has increased by fewer than 10,000 since September, 1942, the number of women em ployed has jumped from 61,700 to approximately 200,000. It was pointed out that if this trend continues major plants not only will have to fill all of the 82,000 new Jobs with women. but also will need several thou sand additional female workers to replace a net loss of men. Recruiting more women doesn't solve the - manpower shortage completely, Clark said. It also will be necessary for male workers to give up "easier" jods to women, move onto sec ond and third-shift jobs so that women can form a greater por tion of first-shift working forces. Reluctant to Change "Most men won't want to make these changes," the .WMC official said. "They have built up seniority rights and have, in many cases, easy jobs on light machines. Now the time has come for men to do the tougher work that women cannot do. The men will get their old jobs back when we have won the war.". Clark said the commission Is formulating with management and organized labor a compre hensive program to protect seniority rights of workers re quired to switch to less desirable jobs for the duration. The agen cy already has asked manage ment and labor leaders to amend their contracts to facilitate the job transfers. Another effort to ease the manpower shortage is the es tablishment by the commission of a labor priority system to promote full utilization of all available workers. Clark said 83 plants in the Detroit area al ready are on the priority list giving them primary access to employees registering for Jobs with the U. S. employment serv ice. Additional plants will be added later, he said. HURRY LANDING BOATS Washington, Oct. 7. (U.PJ The navy is shunting aside part of its destroyer escort construc tion program to speed the build ing of landing boats which wiU be needed by the thousands for invasions in the European and Pacific areas, it has been re vealed. ' , WEARS STRAW Cleveland (U.R) The familiar feminine refrain: "What shall I Wear?" is something that never bothers Mrs. Marguerite C, Rellley, superintendent of the Marysville Reformatory for Women. Mrs. Reilley, who didn't have a hat to wear to church while visiting in Cleveland, startled fellow - worshippers at St John's Cathedral by donning her husband's straw. The dou j ble-duty chapeau, with the brim turned down rakishly, would have won acclaim from any mo diste. Oaa Mall Tribune Want Ada. Many Never Suspect Cause Of Backaches nwaOUTralaOfMeVkiisHaaarRaM WImb dimrder ol ttdmy foaetioa Mrmlta petoonoo. matte, to nuuJn la roar blood. IS mar wuh patims Moaaone. rbeumaue puns, let palaa, loaa of pep sod tatter, tattles up nlcbt swulips. pumocM i m uaMr um FYnniiMnt tw to. BMoaeowi moo. ounneoa. I aoanty with .manioc and bunting 1M. ikNI tk.M U HHMtkln M.U .,1 your BldnOTS or bladder. Doa't waltl Aik Tour ArocrM for Don's Wta. nwid noonarallr by nilUoni lor on 40 rear. Too; tin h.ppy I.IKI and will balp to. IS mil., ol kidney tuba, tusk oat potaa. vatM Iran row blood. Om Doaa'l PUla. BIGHAM FUNERAL 1:30 P.M. FRIDAY PERL MORTUARY Last rites for Pearl C. Big ham, retired Medford business man and SDortsman who died Tuesday morning of a heart at tack at the beginning of a hunt ing trip in the Lakeview dis trict, will be held Friday, at 1:30 p. m. at the Perl Funeral home. The Rev. T, O. Satter fleld and members of the Med ford Elks lodge, to whicH Mr. Bigham had belonged for 33 years, will be in charge of the services. Fellow lodge mem bers will also act as pallbearers. Mr. Bigham, who had resided in Medford for 37 years, was born in Ventura, Calif., July 26, 1876. He was married to Ida May Gardner in October of 1903 at Boise, Ida., and for a time the couple lived at Spo kane and Republic, Wash. For 15 years Mr. and Mrs, Bigham conducted the soft drinks bottling business on South Bartlett street and he was affectionately called "Soda Pop" by his many friends, Twenty-four years ago the Big- hams retired from the business, but recently Mr. Bigham had been employed at the A-One Brewery. During his years as a mem ber of the Elks lodge, Mr. Big ham had been active in the group's social life and had al ways helped to prepare food for the lodge suppers and feeds. He was an enthusiastic fisher man and : hunter and at the time the campaign was being carried on to close the Rogue river to commercial fishing, Mr. Bigham took an active part in the affair, traveling over the state in behalf of the plan. Mr. Bigham Is survived by his wife, Ida, at the family home, 503 North Grape street; two brothers, Fred Bigham of Spokane and Lester Bigham of Hayder, Alaska; two nephews, Henry and Richard Bigham of Spokane, and! a cousin, Jake Bigham, Oregon City. Mrs. Grace Anson, Sacra mento, Calif., and Mrs. Sher man Powell, Rosedale, Calif., sisters of Mrs, Bigham, and Mrs. Ella Bigham of Oregon City, have arrived in Medford to be with the widow and to attend the services, - Following the service here at Perls, concluding private serv ices will be held at Grants Pass. JAMES W.SMYLIE PASSES AGED 64 James W. Smylie, 64, a resi dent of this community for the past 43 years, passed away in a local hospital Wednesday after noon. He was born In Kansas, Octo ber 26, 1878. In November, 1899, in Mankato, Kan., he was united in marriage to Kittie Wells, who survives. They made their home here on a farm for about a year and then moved to the state of- Washington where they lived for about a year. They moved to Medford In August, 1901, and had re sided here continuously since then. Three children were born to this marriage, one son, L. W. Smylie, Medford, surviv ing. There are also two grand children, Delores and Darrel; three brothers, .Lee, stocKton Calif., Robert and Charley Smy lie, Vallejo, Calif., and a sister, Mrs. Minnie Rowley, Medford, Mr. Smvlie was an active mem ber ol the Methodist church since 1902. Services will be held in the Conger chapel Friday at 2:30 p. m. with the Kev. Louis u, KIrby officiating. Pallbearers will be E. G. Roseborough, L. N. Younger, H. H. Harvey, F. F, Burke and George H. Fisk. In terment will be in Siskiyou Memorial park. Dae Mall Tribune Want Ada. From Every time Lera Martin hears about another Jap battleship be ing sunk-or another Nazi city being blasted-Lem grits his teeth, and digs into his pocket for more War Bond money. "With oar soldiers over tiera doin' better V better at their acorin',-Lem M3-9 grtmis uwe can do Uie same at home." It's easy to think that If the f!s.Boin8(we. we can afford i?i!!,d'nl"staUltle '"stead o rea Izing that the bigger our offensive gets the more our boys " going to need eq;Upment nd munitions. 4"o. 71 of a Series Flight o' Time Medford and Jacksoe Co. His tory from the files oi the Mai. Tribune 10 and 20 yean ago TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 7. 1833 at was Saturday) Vmnm AKR.tjf to be thawed aa hanks reooen. treasury department says. : Vwiiwnl that Bonneville dam be called the McNary dam rouses Portland Democrats who de mand it be called the Martin dam, after the governor. President Roosevelt !n address flays NRA objectors in both cap ital and labor groups. Labor prospects In Oregon ' rosy. Fair and moderately warm. High 81, low 48 degrees. New York defeats Washington 4 to 3 to win world series- Horn, er by Mel Ott Is deciding factor, . Trial of lady president of the Good Government Congress on horsewhipping charge to open next Monday. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 7, 1923 (It was Sunday) A. F. of L. national convention at Portland adopts resolution op posing Communism. Fair and cool. High 89. low 42 degrees. Charlie Chnnlln. film rnms. dlan, is eye witness to New York jeweiry roDDery. Lecture under ausntce n Kii Klux Klan to be given at Ash land Sunday. Bill Hammett. John Tomlln. Leon Hasklns,-John Orth and T. E. Daniels leave for hunting trip on upper Rogue. This is Fire Prevention Week. Ashland and Klamath Falls battle to a 13-13 tie. WM. BAKER RITES TO BE SATURDAY Services for Wm. E. Baker, who died as the result of In juries received when struck by an automobile last Sunday eve ning in Gold Hill will be held at the Presbyterian church in' Rogue River Saturday at 2:30 p. m. Interment will be in the Rogue River cemetery. Arrange ments are in care of Conger Funeral parlors. , Mr. Baker was born In Kirks ville, Mo., January ,25, 1885, and had made his home in Rogue River for many years. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Trine Baker and six children, Mrs. Vivian Patmore, Holmes, Calif., Virgil Baker, Jefferson Barracks, Mo., Mrs. Edith Bur nett, Sacramento, Calif., Vera Baker, Santa Rosa, Calif., Mrs. Ethel Ritter, Gold Hill, and Mrs. Nina Pitcher, 111. He also leaves his father, Ell Baker, Rogue River, a brother, Henry Baker, Rougue River, and three Hlster. Mrs. A n n i a Smith. Weoth, Calif., Mrs. Maude Mof fitt, Long Beach, Calif, and Mrs. Eva Palmer, Santa Rosa, Calif. Use Mall Tribune Want Ada. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE COUNTY COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON FOR JACKSON COUNTY. In the Matter of the Estate of CASPER MILLER, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I have been appointed by the County Court of Jackson County, Oregon, Administrator of the estate of Casper Miller, deceased, and have qualified. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present them, with proper vouchers, and duly veri fied to me at the office of Neff ae Frohnmayer, attorneys for said estatn. fnnlau. Q,,tuiH. ' Medford, Oregon,, within six months from the date of this no tice. ?aed -and flwt published October 7th, 1943. OLIVER MILLER, Administrator. where I sit . . iy Joe Marsh Prom where I ait, here's the wy It la . . . It's np to everyone or ns to pnt not only our snare money into War Bonds, bnt to figure out new ways of saving o that well have still mora oney to Invest in Victory. As Lem says: "We asked for Plenty of actlon-and we're sura getting it All over the world our men have got them Axis fellas on the run. Let's Back the At tack with War Bonds."