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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1944)
AUTHORITIES SEE .OF XoIIsctor 1 Cleveland (U.R) The hussy with the talse eyelashes and the heavily rouged cheeks may be I a sweet-faced child when her face is- washed,, but as a "Vic tory Girl" she constitutes a men ace which is likely to get worse, not better, when the victory is won. That was the consensus of juv enile authorities who gathered , here for the 38th annual conven tion of the National Probation association. "The young lady with the green fingernails who turns out to be 15 instead of 20,", accord ing to Miss Rhoda J. Milliken, director of the Women's Bureau of the Washington Metropolitan ponce aepanmem, is oiien an k-v Ejm ft V AFTER FOUR YEARS In the Bel. giao Army of the Interior, White Army men emerges proudly in a tint form dropped by British aircraft. Lavishly bedecked with ligai and in signia garnered from Allied liberators, be continues the important job assigned to bim rounding up collaborators ol the hated Germane E E One case of diphtheria and two cases of scarlet fever were reported to the Jackson County Health department during the week ending November 17, the weekly statement of the health officer, Dr. A. Erin Merkel, shows. This is the second case of diphtheria in the county in recent days, and is in the same Talent family as the first re ported, the department states. The two cases of scarlet fever are in Medford and Prospect. Also on the report are three cases of mumps, one at Prospect, one at Phoenix and one at Cen tral Point; one case of amoebic dysentery at Camp White; two cases of pneumonia In Medford; two. cases of trench mouth, one at Camp White and one at the air base, and three cases of malaria, Camp White; BIRTHS HOWARD To Mr. and Mrs. Wm. D., route 4, November 21, 1944, girl, 9V4 lbs., at Sacred Heart hospital. HEAD To Mr. and Mrs. Rich ard, route 2, box 181-H, Novem ber 21, 1944, boy, 7 lbs., at Com munity hospital. BEATY To Mr. and Mrs. Waiter, route 2, box 429-C, No vemebc 19, 1944, boy, 9V4 lbs., at Community hospital. E John T. Woods, 50, Gold Hill, charged with Intoxication on a public highway, was fined $25 and costs In justice court yes terday. The fine was paid. Robert Lewis Kulbe, 17, want ed for grand larceny, waived preliminary hearing and ex pressed a willingness to waive extradition. His case was con tinued pending further investi gation. The youth is alleged to have stolen an automobile. Jack Raymond Cox, 17, of St. Louis, charged with obtaining money under false pretenses. also had his case continued. He .Tuesday, Wot. 11', 1S44 allegedly passed a spurious $8.50 , check on the Riverside market. FEEDFOlf STOCK Sacramento, Calif., Nov. 21 (U.R) The 1944-45 supply of live stock feed In California will be the third largest in the state's history, W. C. Jacobsen, secre tary of the state board of agri culture, estimated today. Three enlisted members of the women s army corps have re-1 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBtJrTE TTTS Marvin D. Clark "Big inch." the worid-i biggest n;. , f pJ oil pipeline, delivered 98,292,000 uivi in U. rass barrels of crude oil from Texaa Funeral services for Marvin fields to eastern refineries dur. D. Clark, Grants Pass, who died ln8 the last 12 months, accord Sunday night in the hospital !ng to. the petroleum adminlitra. there, will be held Wednesday at 2 p. m. at Hull and Hull par lors In Grants Pass. Besides his wife two sons. Le- placed three men as aides to the ,a,ndc,la'k of Medford and Mar secretary of war, according to I clarlt ot Granta P"-'. the war department. i vlve. WASHING MACHINES REPAIRED Parts St Service on All Makes B & B Washer Shop 408 E. Main Phone 5302 BEST PHOTOS REASONABLE PRICES E. HAYDEN JONES PHOTO STUDIO PHONE 9364 607 W. 2nd Phone aume.i under nemo Mrs Pred BmU enterprising and intelligent girl." I But, Miss Milliken added, such a girl got her patriotic, motives mixed and set out from an un-1 satisfactory home to "see what it is all about." Protest Blaming Youths Probation officers at the con vention were vehement in pro test against the assumption that the youngster is entirely to blame for the ' current rash of juvenile delinquency which has spread across the country. with youth," says Austin L. Porterfield, professor of sociol ogy at Texas Christian Univer sity, "grows out of the peevish ness, rejection, Impatience, irre sponsibility or criminal attitudes of those who complain." Parents, most everyone is will ing to agree, are usually to blame for the unsettled home conditions and lack of innocent recreational ' facilities which drive children out - into the streets, according to the conven tion consensus. "Victory Girl Even the most seemingly-brazen of the wartime delinquents, the "victory girl," is often the "victim of exploitation" accord ing to Miss Milliken. Here the pasty-faced night clerk in a cheap hotel may befriend the adventuresome young girl he meets in a skating rink. "Through his 'good offices' she meets a number of young sol diers who cheerfully assume that any girls they meet at the place were there for the express purpose of brightening their fur lough time in every way." And, without quite knowing how it happened, the girl is classified as a sexual offender by the po lice. ' Urges Attention Today But, warned the authorities, the problem is not one to be pushed into the post-war files. Today's problem, said Mark Mc Closkey, director of the Com munity War Services of the Fed eral Security Agency, must be handled today, and in a more efficient manner than it has been thus far. World War II, he said, has not produced new causes of delin quency but has turned the spot light on old ones. "The nation was shocked," he added, "at re sults they should have expected from disrupted families, uproot ed homes, loosening of social re straints, fewer children at school, more children at work with more money to spend." Use Ua:i Tribune Want Ads LEG PAINS MAY BE DANGER SIGN Of Tired Kidneys If backache and leg puns are making yon miserable, don't just complain and do nothing about them. Nature may be warning you that your kidneys need attention. The kidneys are Nature's chief way of taking excess acida and poisonous wast out of the blood. They Help moat people pass about 8 piuia nay. If the IS mQea of kidney tubes and filter don't work well, poisonous waste matter staya in the blood. These poisons may start nagging backaches, rheumatic pains, leg pains, loss of pep and energy, getting up nights, swelling, puffiness under the eyes, headaches and diiil neas. 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