Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1944)
TO SEEK VOICE IN Denver, Nov. 15 (U.R) In the land in which their forbearers made a last great stand against the westward surge of civiliza tion, a 1 peace table" was set up today py me American Indian. Unlike their forefathers; who warred against one and all who failed to comply with their de mands the Indians who gathered in Denver for .a three-day con vention were content to organize into 'a united body through which they hoped to gain recog nition. The convention Is In further ance of a conference held in Chicago last May,-when the na tional Council of American In dians was first organized. Delegates from most of the nation's more than ZOO tribes were in attendance determined to unite and have a voice in the administration of their affairs. "The Indian wants to speak for himself today, declared Mark Burns, a Chippewa Indian from Minnesota, acting president of the temporary executive body of the organization. After more than 100 years of the federal Indian service, the agency still is predominantely a "white man s organization," ac cording to Burns. He pointed out that 20,000 Indians 216 of them women wtre serving In all branches of the nation s armed forces. BOY BABY MARGIN SLIGHT LAST YEAR Washington, Nov. 13 (U.R) The bureau of the census took another healthy swing today at the old idea that more boy babies are born in time of war. Reporting on final tabulations of 1943 births, the bureau noted that:. As usual, boys slightly out- C0LDSJ FIGHT MISERY f. ' w here you feel it-rub throat, chest and back with time-tested WASHING MACHINES REPAIRED Parts & Service on Ml makes B & B WASHER SHOP 406 E. Main Phone 5302 BEST PHOTOS REASONABLE PRICES E. HAYDEN JONES PHOTO STUDIO PHONE 3364 607 W. 2nd Phnne numbi ander nam Mn Fred Ball 8 ounce $1 Atomiser 60 THE ORIGINAL AIR DEODORANT cleanses the air of odors. . instantly A whiff of Sweet-Air and the air becomes fresh as a breath oi spring. Doesn't simply "cover up" ... it completely dissipates unpleasant odorsl WAINSCOTT'S PHARMACY 400 E. Main for Thanksgiving Safeway has ample Tur keys to fill your Thanks giving needs. Due le shortage of efficient help we ask you to place your order early to we can have your bird properly pre pared! All ready to place in the oven! Leave your order with your nearest Safeway Market. No. I Gov!. Graded 4 Local Hens -Lb. Nip 6 AAs HHm'J sWJHiii5a A huge mushroom of smoke Indicates class Jap cruiser In Philippine Sea. was made despite wild efforts numbered girls. The ratio for 1943 was 1055 to 1000, com pared with 1058 to 1000 in 1942. Higher ratios in favor of boys have been reported 1059 and 1060 respectively in the peace years of 1921 and 1925. Between 1916 and' 1930, the ratio in favor of boys was high er each year than for 1943. The bureau said as it has several times before "there is still a better than 50-50 chance that the stork will leave a boy, but the chances are no better than they were during peace time." Livestock Pnrtland. Ore.. Nov. 15 (UP) MuMtrybi f!nttle. 250: calves. 100. AC- tlve, fully sieaay. tooa mwi o steers $14.25. Common steers S9.50O 10. Common-medium heifers $9(311. Medium-good fed heifers $12.25. Can- ni.jtuttir mm S5A6.S0. Shelly COWS down to $4. Fat dairy-type $7 JOS 8.50. Medium-good oeel cows wh. wwu vealers $13913.50. Good 325-lb. grass calves $12.50; medium grades $10. Hogs, 400. Rather slow, mostly steady. Good-choice 180-240 lbs. $15.25; 245-300 lbs. $14814.50. Good BOWS $13013.25. Good-Choice 106-lb. feeder pigs $13.50. Good-! .1iaI. wnnlprf Inmhft larCelV $12.50: i few to $12.75; common-medium $96 10.50. Good ewes salable SMBt.a. South San Itanclseo. Nov. (USD A) LlVCStOCK. Cattle. 100. Active, , fully steady; . zSSz i?i alf-1 few medium steers n nnri i.lfir Hfilahle til 012: load good 970-lb. range cows $11.25. odds and ends common cows $9(99.50, ...nn nnH fMittara mostly $68 Calces, 200. Fully steady; about 150 head . medium to good 350-380-lb. northern California slaughter calves $14 Hogs, 600. Steady to 25c higher, ad justment on 240-300-lb. averages: few loads and packages good to choice 200-270-Ib. $15.25; 270-300-lb. $13. Odd good sows $13.50. Sheep, 3,400. Consists about 1,200 Oregons, 500 north coast. 1,000 Sacra mento valley. Much sorting necessary, undertone - generally steady; choice grade salable $14 14.85 and common to medium $10 12.50; ewes $5 6. Chicago, Nov. 15 (UP) (WFA) Livestock: Hogs. 13,000; Steady to 15 cents lower. Bulk good and choice 150-300 lbS. $13.SUI0 14.3U; top SlV.Jil, DUlll food and choice suu-euu-io. sows 13.85 14. , Cattle, 1O.OO0: calves, 1.000: top ? 18.50 for 1.016-lb. yearlings and 1225 b. steers; several loads $18f 18.40; bulk $i4is; neirero top aiv.su; gooa cows $13 14; choice vealers $15.50 down: stock cattle mainly $11 13.50, Sheen. 4.000: good and choice na tive slaugl slaughter lambs $14.40914.50. held higher: native slaughter some held higher; ewes $0.79 down. Portland Produce Portland. Nov. 15 (UP) Whole sale produce market: Celery Oregon sz.oowa. Lettuce Local 3s $3.40 4. Onions Idaho white $2.60 bag. Rhubarb Calif ornia $1.808 2 per JTomatoes California, 2-layer, $3.50. Repacked 54.23. , Cranberries McFarlane $7.90 box. Early blacks $7. Pears Hood River W. and P. Cornice $4.90 box. Chicago Wheat Chicago. Nov. 15 (UP) Wheat: Open High Low Close Dec. .$1.644- $1.66 $1.64 May 1.58?i 1.60i 1.58i July 1 48l 1.491, 1.48H Sept. 1.471. 1.48 ', 1.47 1.60'i 1.49 J'. 1.48 la S. F. DAIRY PRICES San Francisco, Nov. 15 (U.R) Dairy market: Butter: 92 score 43, 02 score 42V4, 90 score 42V4, 89 score 40. Cheese: Wholesale prices loafs 27.9; triplets 27.2. Eggs: large, grade A 56Mi- 57V4; large grade B 43V4-44V4; Ac No. I -40c 17 Toms-Lb. IW Cruiser Hit by Helldiver (Acmt Tettphoto) where a Pacific Fleet Helldiver scored a direct hit In dive on Rumana This first line Jap ship went to the bottom two hours after this phot, of Jam to keep her afloat. Hit was scored on forward part of ship. Puppet Dies .. 'r,j 1 e l .-;v jJr ' - if? J i I"; (Acme Televhoto) Wang Ching-wei, Japanese-spon. sored president and premier of thi Chinese Nanking Government, whosi death was announced by Tokyo Wang, regarded by the Chungking Government as China's No. 1 traitor, entered the Jap hospital In which hi died in March, after an operation on old bullet wound Inflicted by wouM- be medium, grade A 51V4-52V4; small grade A 37V4-38VS. Wall Street New York,' Nov. 15 (U.R) Stocks churned aimlessly today around previous closing levels after a half-hearted attempt to rally from the lows reached in two successive previous sessions of decline. Selling on Monday and Tues day wiped out an estimated bil lion dollars in valuations of all stocks listed on the New York stock exchange. The uncertainty prevailing re cently in brokerage quarters found reflection today in the sale of an exchange member ship for $60,000, a drop of $14, 000 from the last previous trans action and compared with the six-year high of $75,000 paid October 6 this year. Today's closing prices on se lected stocks: American Tel Sc Tel 163V4 Anaconda 26 Chrysler 87V4 Curtiss Wright 6 General Electric . 39V4 Generals Motors 6034 Montgomery Ward 51V4 Penn. R. R 31 Vi Phillips Petroleum 42 J. C. Penney 101 Va Radio 10 Southern Pacific 31 Standard Oil of Cal 36VS Texas Gulf Sulphur 35V& Transamerica ..... 9V4 United Aircrafts 31V4 U. S. Rubber 47 U. S. Steel ; 56Vi JACKSON COUNTY CIVIC MUSIC ASSOCIATION No Memberships Available AFTER 9 P. II. Saturday of This Week Adults $6.00 Students $3.00 (Including 20 Federal Tax) Available Artists From Which Series Will Be Chosen (Number of concerts dependent upon size of Membership) VIOLINISTS Nathan Milsteln Joseph Siigatl Efram Zimbalist CELLIST Joseph Schuster BASS - BARITONES Douglas Beat tie Esio Pinza TENOR Mario Berinl GUITARIST Segovia CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 123 West Main Special Phone S588 Open daily at 9 A. M. On Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, until 9 P. M. ALL-TIME HIGH Denver, Colo. (U.R) You may not have noticed it from the weight of your pocketbook, but Uncle Sam is putting coins into circulation faster than at any time in history. The man who says so is Moses E. Smith, director of the Denver mint. Altogether, the mints at Den. ver, San Francisco and Phila delphia have turned out more;ing shipped. It is believed the than 3,000,000,000 coins within , frult wilI be sent to armed forces the past year. That's - about 1,000,000,000 more than ever be fore were turned out in a single year. Here at Denver, the biggest in crease has been in the lowly pen ny. More than 2,000,000 of them are leaving this one mint every 24 hours. On the other hand, the silver dollar also is enjoying a big increase in demand, with some 3,000.000 of them being made at Denver in the fiscal year ended June 30. In between the penny and the "cartwheel," there also was a lively demand for nickels and dimes. There's another Interesting bit of information about the penny, also, in case you're one of those people who never cottoned up to the steel penny that started cir culating when the war made cop per hard to get. None of these steel pennies has been made since January 1, and Uncle Sam is dealing with cop pers once more. But, says Smith "those steel pennies probably will be in cir culation for the next 100 years." Before the various mints re turned to the making of copper pennies they had put about $7,000,000 worth of the steel coins into circulation. : , HERO'S WIFE ENLISTS Chicago (U.R) Mrs. - Mildred Menkol, whose husband Theo-1 dore, a gunner's mate 2c, was killed when the Coast Guard cutter Escanaba was lost while ! on convoy duty in the North Atlantic, has taken his place by enlisting in the Spars. I DRIVE ON "YELLOW JACKE i Drive On "Yellow Jackets'' Los Angeles (U.R) Police have opened a campaign against druggists selling nembutal tab lets, known popularly as "yel low jackets," to youths who claim the drug gives them "pop." During the German occupa tion of southwest Russia, the coke and chemical plants of eastern Russia were the main source of supply for iron and steel works and in 1943 In creased the production of coke 20 per cent over 1942, produc ing 106,000 tons in excess of plan. ' SOPRANOS Vivian delta China Dussollna Giannini Theodora Lynch PIANISTS Claudlo Arrau Alexander Brailowsky Ania Dorfman Leonard Pannarlo E. Robert Schmits Jan Smaterlin ENSEMBLES National Operatic Quartet . Elie Seigmeister and his American Ballad Singers Headquarters! . A. H. PEACHEY Mrs. A. H. Peachy passed away November 15 at her home, 100 Lincoln street, Ashland, fol lowing a long illness. She was preceded in death by her hus band, A. H. Feachey, on Octo ber 15, 1942. Henrietta Ida Sayers was born in Wisconsin on August 19, 1863. On January 14, 1880, she was married to Albert H. Peachey at Westline, Mo. She leaves to mourn her loss four daughters, Mrs. J. A. Bish Mrs. Bertha , McKlnney, Mrs, Edwin Dunn of Ashland, and Mrs. Lee Port of Jacksonville; also four sons, A. L. Peachey of Ashland, Ernest Peachey of Bar ing, Wash., Lee Peachey of Med ford and Dr. R. F. Peachey of Paso Robles, Cal. A sister, Mrs. Carrie Shaffer of Hilan, Kan., also survives. There are 15 grandchildren and ten great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at Lltwlller's funeral home in Ashland, November 16, at 2:30 p. m. Interment will be in Moun tain View cemetery. Rev. Eerl Downing of the Ashland Chris tian church will officiate. 20 CARS APPLES Maurice Spatz of Crystal Springs Packing company reveal ed today that 20 cars of New town apples have been purchas ed bv the armv and are now ho. in the Pacific, While Crystal Springs made up the majority of the shipment, some was shipped by Reter Fruit company. Regular ceiling price was paid, Spatz said. It is one of the largest ship ments of apples from this area in several years, orchardists having been centering their ef fort on raising of pears. SEASON CLOSES . Applications for canning sugar, made with spare stamp 37, will not be accepted by local ration ing boards after midnight, to night, it was announced today, 'The canning season is consid ered officially closed as of No-' s. ' ;H v IIS. II i i !......,..x , . n,- EVERYONE Can Have ... Glamour In Photographs! Yes, our experts are trained to make the most of latest techniques spec ial lighting to accentuate the best tea tur.s of your face Hollywood make up, too, to bring out the glamour that ' - can be found in every face. Come in, S lease, and see how our own experts ave glamourised the leading movie and radio starsl HOLLYWOOD MAKE-UP SPECIAL LIGHT -I'l' "PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION" 40 South Central Phono 2069 Open 9:30 A. M. to 7 P. M. vember 15," It was explained. Sugar stamp No. 40 in ration book 4 will be good for 5 pounds of cannig sugar through Febru ary 28, 1945, but other than this no canning sugar will be avail able to consumers. For regular sugar allotments, sugar stamps 30 through 33 are valid indefinitely, and sugar stamp 34 becomes valid on No vember 16 for 5 pounds. WEATHER Northern California Clear today, tonight and Thursday, ex cept partly cloudy today ex treme south portion. Higher day time temperatures, but con tinued cool at night. Enlisted Waves outnumber enlisted navy men two to one in Washington on duty with the navy department, according to the navy bureau of personnel. TO LOAN! On JEWELRY CAMERAS and MUSICAL INSTRU. MENTS Used and unre deemed lowelry at great sa-'ngs PEOPLES LOAN CO. 229 E. Main Street State License P 137 v yl jh-NOT pationio- apsjy STUDIOS Xm fa Ocfsnm ftta. . . . Modford Saturdays Until 8:30 P. M. Wednesday. Not. 15, 1S4 MKDFOKD MAIL TRIBUNE THREE AW IE3AISGIVI3G CASS FREIGHT TRAIN BCars 4.19 Baa locomotive, tender, lumber ear, oil tanker and caboose Five-foot length. Natural finish with bright color detail. PXICff SLASH! Reg. 49c MODEL PLANE KITS 20' Vooght - Sikorsky, Airaeo bra, Lockheed. 32-inch wuuj' (pan. TEA SET child's t-I ) rL 1.59 WW" . Had. of plaatlo in beantlfal colors . . . hard to break. Has six saucers, cups and spoons, eight napkins, tea pot and sugar bowL Chalk & Slate Set 1.19 Has chalks, slat, f.lt eraser, crayons, .tenclls, etc., etc FREE! DONALD nd MICKEY by Walt Disney 16 Pages of Fun and Frolic ... In Full Color Get Your Copy Today GET NON-SKID PROTECTION Invtst In thm Best I mm i Perma-Llfe 11.05 BATTERY Packed with power for swift, sure starting! Let us prepare your car for Winter driving. Firestone Super Anti-Freeie. Light gear greases and oils. Bat tery testing and charging. Spark Plugs cleaned and points set. O OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT OR USE - OUR CONVENIENT BUDGET PLAN J 214 SO. RIVERSIDE Utu tt tit Vtla tt Unit VALUES Looks Ukm t fie final Onnl GENERAL GRANT TANK IJ29 Has three cans and a innner. Four concealed wheels. Ten-tich length. Suh Fun fo Mala I BASKET MAKING SCT 2.19 Has complete, easy-to-follow Instructions. Any little tlx! would lors ltl IILNGO 1.19 Has eighty cards and three hundred counters. Fast moving, lots of lunl for Slippery Winter Driving yirestone FACTORY . CONTROLLED RECAPPING oo.i. 7.00 Get the famous Firestone Oe&r Orlp tread. Materials and work, manship guaranteed. No ration certificate needed. For Quick Starting STANDARD 7.05 BATTERY isc hinge Baa Fll-O-Matls covers and .elected best quality separators. PHONE 4757 wsrl Mn( arMfac mm KB. 6. a