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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1944)
TURNESA TO FORE ROSE CITY MEET Portland, Ore., Nov. 25 U.R) Slammin' Sammy Snead and Mike Turnesa held their superi ority over the field In the Port land $15,500 Open Golf tourna ment at the three-quarter point tonight despite a day-long rain and good golf from the closely bunched pack at their heels. - Turnesa, the White Plains, -N. Y., perennial contender, one of seven golfing brothers, finished early with a three-over-par 75, boosting him to 217 for three days.' He passed the Virginia Hot Springs Ace, Snead, yester day by two strokes and will be hard to blast out of the first money, although the stretch drive will be close tomorrow. Snead itlU was having trou ble with his drive and putts but toured the first nine in 38. one over par. In the same three some, nowever, National PGA Champion , Bob . Hamilton" of Evansvllle, Ind., was burning up the course with a 34, including four birdies in the first nine holes. Seven strokes back when play started . today, Hamilton will certainly be a contender in the finals. ,-, Zell Eaton, dark horse from tos Angeles in third place at the half-way mark, slipped back with a 78 on the water-covered greens to end up with 223, the same score posted by Denny Shuter Akron, O., whose 76 to day was his worst of the tour nament. Fred J. Wood, Van couver, B. C, also finished with 223 on the basis of a consistent record of 75, 74 and 74. A par-busting 70 by Jimmy Johnson, Dearborn, Mich., ty ing Snead's open round, dropped him down to 227. The silkworm, used in China as early as 2600 B. C, first, ap peared in Japan in 300 A. D. YALE, VIRGINIA PLAY DEADLOCK New Haven, Comi, Nov. 25 (U.R) T h e Virginia Cavaliers, caring little for the fact that Yale's Bulldogs were shooting for their first perfect record season since 1023, blemished the Eli Escutcheon today with a 8-to-8 tie before 18,000 badly dis appointed fans in the Yale bowl. For Virginia the tie settled a score that had rankled with the rmTaMara tnfA 1041 when Yale scored a 21-to-19 , upset victory to spoil a perfect record season and the valedictory appearance nt All. America Rill DudleV. the top back in the southland that year. HOWARD ENTRIES WIN Inglewood, Cal., Nov. 25 (U.R) C. S. Howard took top honors in the double-barreled $10,000-added Haggin stakes at Are You One of the 20? 9X-R A Y technicians and 11 Occupational Therapitti M AT J I I -1 .... urgently for duty in Army Hot pitals throughout the country helping our wounded fighting men back to health. These are technical Jobs and if you have will be trained at Army Medical y Schools by the nation's i inett in structors. Hollywood Park today when his Sea Swallow won the second di vision and his Bismarck Sea and Mediterranean took place and show in the first heat. B WAC Sergeant Mary Elisabeth Wood of Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, gives thermotherapy treatment to . a wounded soldier at Halloran General Hospital, Staten Island, New York. The work she is doing will help wounded soldiers regain the use of torn muscles and in jured limbs. Twenty-two thousand women are needed to serve as WAC medical technicians in Army hospitals. ROKEN-BODIED men are returning constantly from the war fronts. To Insure ithem the health that they so richly deserve X-ray technicians are needed to help in the diag nosis of their Injuries so that they may be helped back to nor mal life as soon as possible. Oc cupational therapists ... 1 1 from Medford are needed desperately to help men regain the confi dence, and the will to live they have lost in the hell of the mod ern war. YOUR job is with . them, teaching them how . to work again despite their war Injuries. THE U. S. ARMY MEDICAL DEPT. URGENTLY HEEDS 20 MED FOR D W0M Ell II 0 W! Can Yoa Qualify? What it Means forYoi II you are between the ages of 20 through 41 (In clusive), have no dependents under 14 years of age and hav two years of high school education,, you are eligible to become a WAC and serve with the Medical Department. Previous experience is not necessary. , As a soldier serving with the Medical Department you will have the personal satisfaction of knowing that you're doing YOUR part toward aiding men back to health who have been fighting for you. After the war you will have the full advantages of the G. I. Bill of Rights, plus technical training and experience'; which, you could ?ver obtain in civilian life. .-. Good soldiers .. 7 A ff ' -WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS U. S. ARMY RECRUITING STATION POSTOFFICE BUILDING, MEDFORD, ORE. Please send me, without any obligation on my part, the new illustrated booklet about the Wacs . . . tell ing about the Jobs they do, how they live, their train ing, pay. ollicer seiecuon, ee. NAME t ADDRESS CITY STATE PHONE NO. Please answer 'yes' or 'no' to each of the following ques tions: - .. Are you between . . 20 and SO?. Have you any chil dren under 14?... Have you had at , least 2 years of high school? Published as a Public Service by the Bakers of ea- UIIEHU V2) and CAKES DUKE, ALABAMA L New Orleans, Nov. 25 (U.R) Duke university's Blue Devils will be pitted against the Crim son Tide of the University of Alabama on New Year s Day in the Sugar. Bowl, A. B. Nicholas, president of the New Orleans Mid-Winter .Sports association announced tonight. Duke completed its nine-game schedule today with a 33 to 0 win over North Carolina, its tra ditional rival. Duke won five and lost four games, falling before Pennsylvania, North Carolina Pre-Flight, Navy and Army on successive week-ends, while com ing back strong to win their last four over Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, South Carolina and North Carolina. ESCAPEES TELL OF LIFE AND DEATH P PLAYS OAKRIDGE Talent high school's six-man football ..team, winner of the eastern division, -will meet Rogue River, western division champion, on Medford high school turf Tuesday afternoon at. 3 o'clock for the Jackson county . championship. Winner of the game will clash with Oakridge at either Med ford or Roseburg for the state six-man championship. Roy Parr of Talent said yesterday the site would not be. definitely picked until alter, the game here Tues day.' ........ Oakridge has an undefeated team and readily agreed to meet the Jackson county champions. BELGE PARADERS Brussels, - Nov. 25 U.R) Po lice clashed today with the van guard cf , 20,000 demonstrators protesting the disarmament of rewistende groups and first re ports said up to 40 persons were injured in. a battle of machine guns and hand grenades in front of the ministry of Justice build ing. , The parades were the greatest demonstration . yet against the Hubert Pierlot ministry two weeks ago . in ordering members of Belgium "White Brigades" to surrender their weapons. After Drier Hurry of violence, the parade reformed peacefully. II! Sunday, Nov. 26, 1S44 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE THRE! Washington, Nov. 25 (U.R) "Those remaining, about 300, were immediately gassed and burned in the usual manner." This line, varying but slightly. runs like a refrain through first hand reports released tonight by the war refugee board of life and death inside the German "extermination camps" of Aus- chmitz and Birkenau. The reports were, written by two Slovakian Jews and a Polish majcr who escaped from the camps. They estimate that about 1,765,000 Jewish prisoners were gassed at Birkenau from April, 1942, to April, 1944. Both camps are in southwest ern Poland. Although Birkenau was the main slaughterhouse, Auschwitz produced its share of murders, too. Jews generally were gassed. Some were killed with injections of phenol in the heart, Non-Jews usually were shot. Theoretically, only the aged, weak and ill were murdered. Those able to work were per mitted to work until they be came ill. A prisoner ill enough to be hospitalized seldom re covered, especially if he were a Jew; he was gassed or given a heart injection of carbolic acid. Jews from all over enslaved Europe were transported to the two extermination camps in the hundreds of thousands. The Pol ish major described a "hygiene institute" where German doctors performed biological experi ments, with "male and female prisoners, especially Jews." . "Here," the major's report said, "sterilizing by X-ray treat ment, artificial insemination of women, as well as experiments on blood transfusion were car ried on," QUIZ BY SENATE EARLY PROSPECT Washington, Nov. 25 (U.R) Agents for the Senate War In vestigating committee today be gan gathering information on the basis of which the group will decide whether to conduct a full-dress inquiry of the grow ing cigaret shortage. At the same time, District of Columbia Office of Price Ad ministration officials mapped plans for an inquiry into the cigaret shortage which Notional OPA officials said might "be used as a model for similar in vestigations in other' areas where "smokes" are particular ly scarce. The inquiry is de signed to bring in information about prices being charged for cigarets and other information relative to the shortage. . Sen, Homer L. Ferguson, R., Mich., a member of the Senate committee, proposed it under take an inquiry into the cigaret shortage because "news from the front indicates that the scar city of needed smokes is affect ing the fighting men." JAPANESE GIVEN TTO OVER COLUMBIA New York. Nov. 25 (U.R) Dartmouth defeated Columbia, io to u, before 12,000 fans in Baker bowl today in a bitterly contested game. The big green struck twice on long gainers, opening the scoring with a 47-yard pass in the second quarter and closing with a 75-yard spring in the final period. In between they sandwiched a 26-yard drive in short plunges, with Fullback Harold Saanson scoring from four yards out in the third quarter. Brownsboro Brownsboro, Nov. 27 Mrs. Martha Schierholz of Glendale, Calif., is visiting at the home of her daughter,' Mrs. A. . R. Rut- ledge. En route to Oregon Mrs. Schierholz spent a month in Car son City, Nev., at the home of another daughter, Mrs. ' Esther Lane, who visited In Brownsboro last summer. Cpl. Eldred Charley from Puerto Rico is home on furlough for a few days. He is visiting his grandmother Mrs. E m 0 g e n e Charley, and his uncles, Leland and Claus Charley. Wayne Wakefield, 2c, and Mrs. Wakef eld of Medford visit ed at the George Brown .home a few days last week. ' ' Mrs. Weaver of Bandon is spending a few weeks visiting at the home of her brother, J. E. Renfro. . ' : ' Mrs. Hawe Strahm, Mrs. Jim Trammell and Mrs. H. W. Wright attended the Eagle Point exten sion meeting at the Keim home last Thursday. . The community extends its sympathy to the Reed Charley and Nora Bradshaw families in the death of their mother, Mrs. Jennie Charley. Mrs. Charley was one of Brownsboro's pio neers. Her outstanding fine per sonality has been an example for marty. Mrs. Berty Crews of Medford is spending a few days at the Howard Johnson home. O. R. Wright of Medford visit ed at the home of his brother, H. W. Wright, last week. Panthers Conquer Penn State, 14-0 Pittsburgh, Nov. 25 (U.R) Clark Shaugnessy's Pitt Panth ers struck twice in the third per iod today to. defeat their tradi tional rivals from Penn State 14-0, before 10,000 fans at Pitt stadium. Entering the game as 8-5 un derdogs, the Panthers went to work - in business-like fashion, threatening . twice in the first period, staving off two state scoring threats In the second and then putting the game on ice in the third. GREAT LAKES WIN Great Lakes, 111., Nov. 25 (U.R) Great Lakes' Bluejackets poured through for 21 points in the second quarter today ' to whip Fort Francis E. Warren from Wyoming, 28-7, before 2,000 shivering sailor fans at Ross Field. Sixty-five per cent of all car thieves arrested last year were under 21 years of age. U MM I rrlbuue Want Ad T Cleveland, Nov. 25 (U.R) Nearly two years ago Henry Ebhihara, 24-year-old Tokyo- born Japanese, wrote to Presi dent Roosevelt and asked for "A chance to fight to preserve the principles that I have been brought up on and which I will sacrifice at any cost. Today, Ebihara had his re quest granted, for he was the first of his race in the United States to volunteer under a new war department ruling which permits Japanese to enlist in the army. Ebihara, a war worker in Cleveland since the war reloca tion authority moved him here from the west coast about two years ago, said he expected to be called up soon for a physical examination preliminary to his Induction. PLAN DRIVE FOR New Orleans, La., Nov. 25 (U.R) A vast recruiting drive to secure 100,000 additional work ers for- critical war industries will be launched at once by the American Federation, of Labor in response to a plea made by armyi supply chief Lt. Gen. Brehon Somervell, it was an nounced today by William Green, AFL president. The drive will be under direc tion of Louis Hines, Washington, former director of labor for Pennsylvania. AH information will be cleared through him and distributed to local unions. Green's announcement came after he conferred today with leaders of four international un ions and military representa tives. Complete Factory Approved SAFETY SERVICE Chrysler Fac tory Engineer td and Inspect- c Parts for Chr filer Dodg PLYMOUTH Dodg Trucks L. C. TAYLOR CO. a096E,rf2dfat-TRlJCKS 112 So Riverside - Phone 2968 PENN DOWNS CORNELL Philadelphia, Nov. 25 (U.R) A Penn eleven, stung Into a sec ond half fury by touchdown depriving penalties and a stub born Cornell line, roared back in the last two periods today to defeat the Big Red, 20-0, in the 21st annual renewal of their historic gridiron rivalry. CORN REMOVER OM bwlaal IM tnm lite Ml ttolr nxnN kit him, Ma eon fct ke too. etHaewt, mm. rapUMui. eluk aalU. 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