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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 25, 1943)
PAGE POUR MQF0RDtlkTBIBU7(B "BrM la altera Pit Dilr Exeat eataraar Pobllahoa kr midfohd paiNTuta oa tl-tt Nortk rir 8U Fhooo till ROBERT W. RUHL. Editor. RUN EST R, OIL4TBAP. JlkkkSkfw Al ladopokdokl Novspkpkr. laurid u iMOkd klua matur kt Mad- terd, Orkson. under Act or Ifkreh t, UTS. SUBSCRIPTION RATE B7 Mail Ik Advknckl Dkllr kkd Sukdoy kkk rokr.... .9T.lt Xkl)r kpd 8imdar Ol noktfcs... 4.41 ' tall7 kkd 6u&darthrkk month.. &aJtr kkd Sukdar kkk moolb... .Tl 7 Ckrrlkr Ik AdvkkCk kfkdford, A.k Ukd, Ckktrkl Polkt. Jkkkkoavlllk, Okld Bill Pkkkklk. Talokt, kad ka motor roktMi Sallr kkd Rakdap kkk roar.....l.M Pail, kkd londar kkk month., .tl All Urmo oaah la kdvauok. Oindkl hp of hk Cllr at Modfora' Official Paper of Jaekioa Cooaty Pal tod Prrk-raU Lkkkod Wlra KIUBER OP AUDIT BUREAU . OF CIRCULATION Adrartlalns RoproMotatlva WEST-HOLLIDA? COMPANY. INC. Offtata Ik Naw York, Chicago, Detroit Sak Prkaelkco, Lea Antaloa, Sokttl Portland, su lama, Atlanta. Vancouar, b. a OiegIi POIUSH Mtmia fit ItiTiai Ye Smudge Pot Br Arthur Parry The confab of United Nations foreign ministers Bt Moscow, Russia, each day finds Messrs. Hull, Molotov and Eden "in friendly harmony," press dls natches agree. It appears to be a diplomatic friendliness rather than the well-known kittenish variety. It would be news and a chanse if word came, the dis- tlnaulshed trio, feeling their vodka, engaged In "a friendly tiih.1i. " Thev mlsht even vary the irlendly monotony by play fully putting gunpowder in Pre mier Stalin's pipe, me rrauiwm explosion unfortunately singeing the left handle-bar of his mustache. The Galshevlkis had the wind rri th rain in their bandannas and galoshes yes. A number of impromptu lakes formed In the residential areas due to the need of a storm sewer system Instead ' of a road to the top ' of Boxy Ann' . The latest choice Item out of Lot Angeles relates how two teen-age maids held a knife duel in the moonlight over the "af ,wHnn of a married man. One combatant had a cut on her arm and the other lost a nana ful of hair. The cause of it all was not a movie actor, but a bus driver. To further add to the unusualness neither female duelist had anything to do with Hollywood. ' . . Th fniiblic is now urged to observe Potato Week and eat spuds cooked 247 different ways or raw to get rid of the surplus. This has nothing at all to do with the great mythi cal shortage of potatoes last spring when the masses were hoarding seed spuds instead of planting them. 1 a a ' a - GRANDMA W HAD ITJHI (Pendleton East Oregonian) "Darr Phelps took a severe header last evening while bi cyling. Two playful young ladies ran out and grabbed the handles of his wheel, the result being that he took a flying leap Into space and '. collided forcibly with the ground. He is now nursing several bruises." (50 Yr. Ago Due to a low celling price and the manpower shortage tons and tons and tons of cabbage are rotting in the fields or fed 4 innfc- This means less sauerkraut. On the brighter side, an eating house order of fried oysters win noi oe octum panied by more cold slaw than oysters. , , , In defeat Is than the German in vie tory, and, in both cases h s brutal arrogance is given full play. At Naples every form of criminal meanness the twisted W,l mlnrik could think of WBS practiced upon their Italian vic tims. They love that sort of thing and figure on Allied tend erheartedness keeping their ruthlessness from coming home to roost. PttSAX. EXCITEMENTl Ther was excitement at the Davis service station Sunday morning when a skunk became entangled in some rocks by the wash house, -dragging a trap fastened to Its front leg. Not seeing the skunk, Mrs. Davis In nocently passed by it, when It let fire with its bazoo gunl She said she thought, 'Goodness, there must be a skunk here abouts some where.' Back she came and repassed the odious critter to receive another blast from the bazoo gunl This time the varmint was discovered. Mr. Graham, the big game hunter from next door was called over with his twenty-two, and with one expert shot put the skunk out of his misery but not out of its perfume!" (Mer lin News in Grants Pass Bulletin.) Who Is To Blame? Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau, returns from a week in Italy to announce in North Africa that this is going to be a long and hard war. He regrets "the people at home" do not appre ciate the seriousness of the conflict, or the difficulties that lie before final and complete victory. Well, WHY don't they? ' ,' CECRETARY Morgenthau can find the answer to that cjuestion very easily by consulting with his recent high-up associates, who have the final word as to the nature of the daily war reports. How can the people "over Here" believe there is a tough up-hill battle going on "over there", when day after day they read nothing but the most sanguine and highly optimistic reports? , Some people blame- the newspapers. ' .'. But the newspapers are not to blame. Only a few of them have their own war correspondents at the front. If they did have, the war correspondents are usually forced to base their "eye witness" reports on the official communiques. 1 And these' are, we repeat, invariably MOST eir couraging. , . ' - . " LET any fair-hiinded person review them for the past six monthsr or the past week for that matter and what sort of a story do they tell? '.'.' Nazi defenses In Italy break before U. S. pressure, six more German bases seized by British army; Red army smashes on toward Polish border, Crimea cut off, half a million German troops surrounded; 300 Jap planes shot down, 2 U. S. planes fall to return: allied blockbusters ruin German war industries; Russians kill 8000 more Germans, capture 36 more villages. Etc., etc., etc. ad infinitum.' WJiat does Secretary Morgenthau and others high in authority expect the American people to believe when day after day, in every way, the war reports grow rosier and rosier? And also day after day, from no quarter, north, south, east or west, is there any discouraging news of any description? A ND vet every now and then, as the Secretary of "-the Treasurv has iust done, some high government official issues a similar bearish report and appar ently expects the people to believe it IT can't be done Henry. - You can't have your cake and eat it tqo. You can I deal only in sugar-coated puis and expect the people to be prepared for and welcome bitter ones. If there is anything discouraging in the war situ ation from an allied or a United States standpoint, 4Vi nornlo ertmo evirlnr ("if it. give Hits w.w uv.... , - 'la t ' . Without any, they won't believe it. And why should they? " . . . Not onlv are the allied nations marching forward on every front, but they have been how steadily for practically a year, in over a year mere nas Deen nu Axis victory of any importance not one. i SO with such a picture, painted in glowing colors, day after day, why should the people back home tvnof.r. this tn he a loner war or a particularly hard one? Like the late Will Rogers, they only know what they, read in the newspapers. . , No, Background nn,of i. tv.o rl answer to the above? Are the f V UUV U V4V - " ( J official U. S. war reports, army and navy, false and fhavhfnro Tnislpnriinp'? ''"''." " . .. i1.1 - 1 Or are they true, and tnese eiiorra jute secretary Morgenthau's, are merely put out as antidotes to ex cessive optimism? (Far better to have the people think this will be a long war and prepare for it, than to think it will be a short one, ana una inemseives unprepared.) , , a a ; WELL, yes and no as we see it The war reports are not false factually. But they do paint a false picture because all favorable news is put in the FOREground, and all unfavorable news either in the BACKground, or not included at all. "And it is that "background" tnai is we uy m m war report ointment. For in every war report there ia a background, but in these daily communiques it ia never or almost never included. . AND it should be to get a true perspective a time picture. Take for example the three mam cam paigns going on today the Russian campaign, the Italian and the Solomons. " ' , In all the situation is favorable to the allies, in all the allies are on the offensive, and promise to re main there, for an indefinitejength of time. Bin THE German eastern army is still intact and still on Russian soil. It may make a stand on the Odessa Leningrad line and hold there through the winter So in Italy. The Germans probably have 20 or 80 well trained and well equipped division?, there-perhaps more. They are being driven steadily back, but naps iiioie. t4i, k,r ooo (orA that is horrinff some ailiea iiaim-vwi-iv wj - always1 J possibility), they may well be still holding the Po river line the first of next year. .xr ai.- 0g Tin doubt an all-out allied offen- 1 rf Tis in fte rrTaking. But until then, while there inert setback since tne iau uj the Ph iPP ines p ogT-els has been exceedingly slow -Snly he perimeter of Japanese defense has be m 3d, and untU Germany has been jg e is little likelihood of any DECISIVE knocK-out ic tory over Japan. . . . . Jn the . S inere is your - rr. the war will EfbZ a loni and a ha7d HZ But the background as the day-by-day war reports are concerned!. Personal Health Service Br William Brady. M. O. If ntd Ikttera partalnlng to parana baalth aof bnlana. Dot to dlanai dlasnotla at traatmtnt, will ba aoaararea by Dr. Brad, tl a frtampkd sail, addrcucd anvelopa It aaclotttf. lattars shoaia. ba brtal aatl wrlttaa la Ink. Owing to tha larg a nambar of lattart racaltai only law can a atwarad bcra. No reply can ba maea to quanta not conforming to butracuoa Addreaa Dr. William Brady, SSI D Camlno. BCTtrlj HIIU, Colli. campaign Instigated by tha Amer ican Guernsey Cattle club. A booklet telling about the plan and listing tha hundreds oi breeders offering bulls on this basis is available from the na tional office of the Guernsey club at Peterborough, N. H. HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE For the reason that high-blood pressure Is not a specific or defi nite disease, but a sign the med- ical examina tion may re veal In numer- out ailments and sometimes in persons who have no ail ment so far as tha physician can determine, we can suggest n o . medicine, diet or other remedy for high' blood Dr. Brady pressure. A great deal of harm is done by "trying" remedies for high blood pressure on the theory or assumption that the high blood pressure Is a specific or definite disease. In the first place, the patient, even if he happens to be a phy sician, should leave the question of blood pressure entirely to his physicians consideration. I am sure it never does a patient any good to know Just how many "points" his blood pressure may be above the average or "nor mal." In the next place, I am equally . sure, the doctor who tells the patient how high the blood pressure is In any. cir cumstance is generally an in competent one who' hopes to im press the credulous patient or at least divert the patient's at tention from the fact that "the doctor really doesn't know what ails the patient and plays up the height of the blood pressure in order to keep the patient from changing doctors. .. I should blush, now, to admit that in some instances the best of physicians, after the . most searching examination and what ever tests modern medical gad- getry can devise, Is unable to account for high blood pressure, but never fear, my dear chiV dren, we doctors are still re sourceful enough to put a name to it that wil hold patients for a while. We call it "essential hy pertension," which is medical double talk meaning we hate to tell you we don t know what it means. I use the editorial plu ral, not to imply that I'm one of the best' of physicians but mere ly that I know no more about this or other types of high blood pressure than your doctor or any doctor does. Measurement of blood pres sure with an anaerold sphygmo manometer (dial type of instru ment for measuring blood pres sure) is likely to be inaccurate. indicating pressure higher than it really is. The mercury type of instrument (registering as barometer does) is accurate. There Is a popular misconcep tion that florid or ruddy com plexion or minute dilated or broken" blood vessels in tne skin, or sensations of throbbing, fullness or pressure in the head or headache are manifestations of high blood pressure. There is no foundation for such notions in most instances patients who complain of such sensation or of dizziness haven't high blood blood pressure at all. Most per sons who have high blood pres sure are rather pale than florid, Editorial Comment ' QUESTIONS ANSWERS Thanlu for a flood Doctor In order to set a coveted lob bad to have a hernia fixed. You ree ommended Dr. - , who gave me Injection treatments over a period of several months. This treatment not only did not Interfere with my work but proved a complete aueceu. X got tne OD, ana now, alter mree year, there Is no further trouble. (O. B.) Answer when a competent physi cian finds that the hernia la of a type suitable for Injection treatment (not all hernias can ba ao treated) lus treatment la aa likely to give a pr manent cure as the radical operation It. The doctors most skilled in the ambulant (Injection) method are now In military service and I am unable to recommend physicians In many communities. Transplanting eyes I would like to contact a special ist In transplanting eyes. Rave read of such specialists. I mean taaing an eye from one person and putting It In another. (. H. M.) Answer Byes cannot ba transplant ed. In soma oasee blta of cornea (tne clear surface covering of eyeball) may be transplanted, to replace a portion made opaque by scar formation, but this is a question to discuss wun your oculist. insulin for tmaerweignt Csnt seem to sain en; welsht. am 34 years old, SA Inches tall and welih onlv 108 pounds. Recently you referred to Insulin treatment. Please. (Miss R. L.) Answer Bend three-cent-stamped envelope bearing your address, for pamphlet "How to Oaln Weight.' belly injections of insulin by - tha physician or nurse under nis in structlon, beginning with 8 units, Increasing to twenty or mors units dally, bring about a gratifying gam of welfcht in some obatinate cases, (Copyright, 1843, John F. oilier co.) Ed. Note! Persons wishing to communicate with Dr. Brad should tend letter direct to Dr. William Brady. SI. D S6S El Camlno, Beverly Hills, Calif. (From Klamath falls Herald tad Mews) OPA was considerably con cerned, If not Jittery, over the local reaction to the changes an nounced for Klamath Falls this week another move for the ration board -location and dis continuance of the field office. It is true that Klamath has had a rather bizarre experience with OPA, but there is not enough public Interest in the matter to make any kind of an issue out of the discontinuance of the field office. About 10 persons were em ployed in the field office. The chief, Lee Jacobs, had already resigned. The others can easily find employment here If they don't want to go on with OPA. We hope they remain here. At the outset, a sensible ad ministrative setup was ar ranged with headquarters at Klamath Falls for a district cov ing counties in northern Call fornia and southern Oregon, Then . politics raised its ugly head (report has it Senator Dow ney of California was the com. plalnant) and objection was made to permitting OPA admin istration in a California area from an Oregon headquarters. The California counties were amputated from the district. Per capita administrative costs rose in the smaller district and that, presumably, was a major reason for discontinuing the district of(ice here. OPA officials tell us that many dis trict offices were eliminated over the country for the same reason, and that the theory of taklne OPA to the people" Dy establishing large numbers of administrative offices was aban doned. So far as this office was concerned, getting OPA close to the people where they could see the elaborate oftice ana per sonnel set-un aroused criticism. It certainly was not good poll- tics, but it was an education lor the people. Inasmuch as peopie Decame economy-conscious over this, it is hardly the thing to object now chanees made actually xor Olive -V - I Barber' X ) Obtemtiont ' a a . Flight o'Time Mediexd aad Jackson Co. His tory from the rllM et the Mat Tribune 10 and 30 years ago TEN YEARS AGO TODAY October 25, 1833 (It was Thursday) v State seeks funds for straight- f ening of Pacific Highway over SIsklyous. News Behind The News By Paul Mallon : (Continued from Pag One) Most people here think Bricker will have the south perhaps "has" is a better word. A strong Willkie organization exists in New England, but Willkie's story over-estimated it by perhaps 60 per cent. .. In short, the average republi can reaction in this anti-Wlllkie center of the party was only that he is making himself a for midable force to be reckoned with. .- , .' Th rri-nnlnff is ant to come next. Obviously, Mr. WUlkl is nnt nnw the reDUblican party. although no active opponent has yet appeared on the front pages ooninst him. allowing him to have publicity matters an ma own way. ' THE situation is ripe for some one to take issue with him, and the someone is likely to De rcumrinnr Bricker of Ohio. Bricker has not yet esiao- llshed himself as a candidate, but might rally the antl-Willklc forces of the party it he under takes such leadership. His agents say he has not made political .nuph bo vt. nr snown ninwcu Th aririis that a man elected governor of onio mree must be a good campaigner and have a story to toll. The main effect of the Willkie surge probably will be the draw ing of Bricker out into ui. ...itviin tha next few weeks. Mr. Willkie is right o twpv and MacArthur. Dewey cannot, or will not, campaign, but he can be drafted for the nomination if "favorite" son and unlnstructed state delegations demand him in sufficient num- ber' . a a I MACARTHUR is a military genius, probably the only one this country has developed since the Civil war. His un rivaled talents entitle him to a military place far mo re promi nent than he has, or s likely to get under this administration. n.. v,. ia not ant to be widely considered for the presidency because he has been out of tho country for so many years, has not and cannot express views on political issues, and cannot cam' paign His is a nooularity movement Unless our present military lead ership fails to end the war by next June, the activities of his friends cannot be formidable, True also, Mr. Willkie's an. nounced - new program estafr Ushes a strong campaigning ba sis. He wants employment through expansion of business, wants to do it by trading with Russia and China, social secur ity, accuses the New Deal of in competence and machine corrupt tion. On foreign affairs, how. ever, he is waiting to see what Mr. Roosevelt proposes, and has not committed himself. kkk DUT the fault most republicans still find with him is that hi' voiced support now comes from eeriodicals and publicists for' merlr in the left-wing of the New Deal and apt to be for Mr. Roosevelt in any Willkie-Koose- velt struggle. They forsee reoetition of 1940. Before the convention, he was then talked uo by all New Deal ers as a forthright and liberal big business man, but as soon as he was nominated, he became to all those interests a reactionary tool of Wall Street. OFFER GUERNSEY BULLS AT 75 CENTS ON DOLLAR Petertanrouffh. N. H. W. A. Johnson and Sons, Rt. 2, Box D.Rfl and E. F. at J. V. tainoun, Twinkle Star Ranch, Grants Pass, are offering to sell some oi mar Guernsey bulls ana accept se ries E war bonds at full maturity value in payment, inrougn in program these Guernsey breed ers are offering other breeders and dairymen the opportunity to secure bulls of superior heredity at a cost of only seventy-five - th rlnllar. kKIIW . . j This is part of a naiion-wiao to eponomv reasons, and It appears that such Is the basis lor tne recent action. OPA officials tell us that the bureau of the Duaget howled steadily over tne costs of the office set-up here. ' .It should be understood that there was no question but that tne rental was fair, but there was too much space per person under bureau of budget standards ana the whole set-up was elaborate for a ration board and field of fice headquarters. - So the OPA got busy and found quarters back in the other end of town, with merchants there willing to provide the rent far a leva months, at least. About that time, price control changes were made that added n iha hnrlsetarv burden of OPA artmlnlstration in uregon, ana it was decided to eliminate the field office and put the money inin iha nrice control program. So the field office has' been ordered discontinued, the ration board will move, and that's the end of the OPA "flier" In Klam ath Falls. It appears a price control officer will be located here, but otherwise, Klamath will have no special function as a location for Or-A auminunra- 41,a firrlvltlpo.. The thing has neen somewimi of a disappointment, and ura will admit several mistakes have hn made. We IhinK IX wouiu have worked if OPA had not mrtH mirh an elaborate and .....,.. expensive program a ma and if state line politics had been kept out of the picture. Autumn is. I believe, the most carefree time In a bird's life. As I write this, I'm on a log on tee lower slope of our hillside. J un cos, sparrows of several varieties, towhees, wrentltt and other spe cies of birds are within sight. It Is a morning made for easeiui thlnkine: not long deep thoughts on weighty matters, out siow, subconscious vagaries. The salty tang of the marsh, the frag rances of wet earth and fallen leaves are Incense to the per fection of such a day. Lately, I'm too much given to do my stint of writing within the confines of BcriDDie tsnacK. This is a mistake. Shelter is all right for winter days, but in au tumn one should sit on log and watch yellow, black-fared Jersey cows grazing on the marsh. Geese are winging south and as always, their honking seems to me to hold much of sadness in it, though I know it is just traveling conversation with them. Like the merriest of dogs always -has sad eyes. But the birds' voices are as gay as gay. Their family rearing accomplished, they have cause for gaiety. Maybe a bird, at the end of the season, considers Its Idleness well earned. I share, somewhat, this reaction. I, too, can sit In the sun and have fun lust existing. For my family Is reared and gone. No longer do I need to be up and doing "ntn a heart for any fate." I have no nostalgia for the time when I was young and hav ing a hard time to get through school. Where they get the idea that school days are the happi est of one's life Is more than I know. It's plain hooey. I burned more midnight oil trying to get to the bottom of the chapter in physics on heat, lisht and sound than the lamps of China, used; and with more hardships. Drugged1 with the need for sleep, I'd douse my face with cold water and re-read the poem about "While others slept, he toiled upward In the night." So I toiled, and maybe It's lust as well I did, for by doing so, I at least kept on the level. But for me the heights remained un attainable. That is, unless It Is something to have arrived at a state of mind where I can sit on a log, watch Jersey cows feed and hear birds sing and think it's fun. I feel a compassion for all the young things who have such a lot of living to do before they can take time off to sit on a sun-lit log in autumn and feel sorry for the next generation of young things. Valley poultry raisers organ ize. Herman Burgoyne of Medford kill elk in La Grande district. Hunter who shot companion la mistake for deer, is arrested for hunting without a license. Claims filed with county clerk shows 283 sheep killed by dogs past year. Property owners start new drive for improvement of Main street. Unsettled. High 74, low 47 de grees. Mussolini informs Italy fasr Ism is "hope of world.' TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY October 25, 1923 (It was Friday) United States offers aid to Germany and allies in settlement of reparation row. Siskiyou tunnel bandit clue near Yreka turns out to be hunters. t Continued fair. High 62, low 33 degrees. Pear shipments from valley to date total 1751 cars. T. E. Daniels and Leon Hag kins openly weep at sad scenes l In "Penrod" at the Page. Medford high and Rosebur. clash at Roseburg today. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Parker of Willow Springs celebrate their 32nd wedding anniversaryy. Movement on foot at Butts Falls to start a bakery. THE GRANGE Use stall Tribune Want Ada. ' Phoenix Grange Phoenix Grange will meet I Tuesday night at the hall. The meeting will be preceded by covered dish supper to which all Grange members and their fam ilies are Invited, Supper will be served about 7 p. m. Third and fourth degree obll gatlon will be given. Central Point Grange Home Economics club of Cen tral Point Grange will meet at 2 p. m. Wednesday, Dec. 27, with Miss Mary Maury, at her home in Central Point. All members are urged to be present as plans will be made for the Grange dinner on nov. 11 from 3 to 8 p. m. Harriett Lydiard will give short review of home life in Hawaii. COMMUNICATIONS Letters to the Editor must besr the name and address ol the writer although the use of a pen-name 3t Initials for publication Is per missible. The Mall Tribune re terves the right to edit all letters with a view to clarity and condensation. News Frdm Mrs. Nellie Regan To the editor ' I read the Medford paper and often hear of the doings" of for-j mer friends there.. 1 I am working in the Richmond shipyard No. 2 as a matron and like it very much. I expect to be here for the duration. I was a former Medford resident for 10 years. I have two boys who went to school In Medford and are now In the army air forces, the oldest. Perry D. Regan, Is a med ico in the headquarters staff in Hawaii for nearly two years now. The youngest toy, wauy Regan, who is well known there, is training to become an air pi lot at Santa-Ana, Cal. He has been recently made an instructor In tumbling and swimming. I am very proud of my boys and wlslv you wduld insert a paragraph In your paper so their friends back there will know. about them. Mrs. Nellie Regan, 3223 Alameda Ave., Oakland, Cal. LITTLE GIRL PERISHES HIDING FROM WHIPPING Rock Springs, Wyo., Oct. 24 (U.R) County authorities Slid to day that no charges would be filed against the father of seven-year-old Frances Archuleta, who perished of exr-osure when, faced with a threatened whip ping, she ran out of the house and hid In the sagebrush dur ing a heavy snowstorm. Oat MM! Trlsune Want Ada. i",.,''""- ' '. a SINCE 1888 F j J. , 4 'MJS. t AJ'-lMj I aa a SPEND WISELY CAN VITAMINS CHANGI GRAY HAIR? According to Good HotiielrmTngJaHtiwja Clcmm Pantothenate on tray hair: Ak-did not Mtm to afftct wilt. The eartteat rwtwi. occurred in a 50 jeai old; the latest ia 23 year old. Goto hefan to ippMr near the roots of thf hair. The color may not appear all over tba head at the tame time. Symmetrical areas. wr hapa oa the templet or the back of the heed, may ahow trace of color (int. after whfen U color will tpread to other parts of the head. Tim varied from 1 month to 6 month. tTMwttt 88 of those teited had poti live evi dence of a return of tome hair color. Now thousand! use CRAYVITA. whkh con tains 10 mim. of Calcium Puntothenatt (thj tu4imouot) PLUS 450 US P.unlupf Bj. TrfGrtAYVrTAk 30 day supply. 10, 100 days. M.0O. Phone, writs Wilnpotr Kt Side PhMiMcj, Mala n4 Blvertldw. 'n CONGER FUNERAL PARLORS SIXTH AND WEST MAW PHONE 9147 Office of . County Coroner e Conger tradition for service per formed well, comet not from low cost alone, but alio from its completeness and dignity. Today, In all purchases, spend wisely, and Invest to thf fullest extent of your family's ability In Medford's local Community Chest. Six deserving agen cies need your support.