Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, January 10, 1945, Image 6

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    SIX MEUFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday, 'an. 10, IS4I
MEDFO
Ettrrona In Biotas Off
"eiS. th. MaU IrlbWr
Daily Snapl
nrORD"p!uNT2NO CO.
17-29 North ril St.
nnRvnT W RUHL.
ERNEST R GILSTRAP
Phona UL
Editor.
ARTHUR PERRY Sunday editor
MRS OLIVC STARCHER. ,So MltOI
GERALD LATHAM Clrrulatlnn MST
An Uidcpandant N awl pa par.
Entered aa second elut matter at
alsdford. Orel on, undel Act off
March . IS7. .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By UaU-In Advance
Dally and Sunday one
Dally and Sunday-six months 4 00
Dally and Sunday -three moa t.K
Dally and Sunday one month 7
By Carrier In Advance Medlord
Ashland Central Point, Jackson
villa. Gold HUI. Phoenix. Talent and
on motor route: anlu
Dally and Sunday one ysar. -.SS.0I
Dally end Sunday one month .7S
All lerma cash In advance.
OlflcUl Paper of the City ef Kedford
Official Paper ef Jaiatoa County
Uniud Prti Full Leaaed Wire
MEMBER, or AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising RJ"'!'t;'T ,
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY WO
Offices In New York Chlcaso. D
trolC San rraneleco. Los Anaelee. Se
attle. Portland. St Louis. Atlanta,
Vancouver. B. C.
I m
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
The fair sex are now "rolling
their own" cigarettes, and, a
right messy Job they are making
of It, with a half-sack full of
debris left In their laps, after
hkIi nnomtlnn. Thev can roll
their stockings so they will stay!
up, but not their cigarettes so
they will stay together. Here is
a chance for the only cow-girl
In the county, who can "roll
'em" with one hand, to start a
Smoke While You Learn school,
e e
The latest Herr Hitler rumor
from Stockholm says the outlaw
is no longer able to hear, nor
"use tones of irony and con
tempt," or his ' "famous false
heartiness." With all the other
ills to which he has allegedly
been heir in the past six months,
he should be well bunged up,
and in need of a deputy to chew
table legs for him, when angry.
e e
OP ALL THINGS1
(American Mag.)
"Once, while still In Russia,
I saw a pair of slacks Illu
strated in an American maga
zine and made a pair like
them for my vacation. When
I made my entrance at the re
sort in them the manager re
quested they be removed."
A Great Achievement
General Douglas MacArthur may be a grand-stand-er,
a show-off and a snob some of the boys who
have returned from the South Pacific claim he is.
But there is this to be said for him custom-made
chapeau and all he gets RESULTS I And he has
been getting results ever since he made his midnight
get-away from Bataan.
And now, as he promised, he is not only back, but
he is only as far from Manila the heart of the Philip
pines, as Roseburg is from Medford and with 4
bridgeheads already established! Great work gen
eral hats off to you and your men ! , .
A CCORDING to the press dispatches this landing,
f" like nearly all others in the South Pacific, took the
Japanese "completely by surprise." Just how tnat
could be is difficult for this department to under
stand. But where there is so much smoke there must
be some fire. And as far as we are aware these sur
prise claims have never been officially denied.
With such extensive bombing preparations, how
ever, it does seem strange the Japs could be "sur
prised" by any landings in the areas bombed unless
oerhaps the bombed areas cover so much territory,
the Japs can only guess at the precise objective and
their guessing processes are as defective as their
strategy.
HOWEVER, that may be, this successful landing
at Lingayen gulf is a great achievement It
again demonstrates that the United States now has
not only the largest and finest navy the world has
ever seen, and one of the strongest armies, but has
attained a masterv of amphibious warfare which only
two or three years ago, no military expert in Christ-
landom believed possible.
This achievement is probably the outstanding
triumph of this country in World War No. II, a su
preme tribute to American industrial and inventive
skill, imagination, fortitude and resourcefulness.
There were those Yankee landings on the Norman
dy coast, which even Joseph Stalin declared, we
quote:
"All the history of war does not know any such under
taking so broad in its conception, so grandiose in its scale,
so masterly in its execution.
And now six months later the U. S. landings in the
Philippines! The American people surely have rea
son to be proud of what the least war-like nation in
the world has been able to accomplish in less than
40 .months against two of the most war-like nations
ever known!
Blue January
The largest local throng to
assemble since a steam shovel
dug the telephone company
basement gathered Tuesday p. m.
to watch Tod Porter weild a
mop in his tonsorial parlor. The
amateurishness of the mopper
did not hold the morbidly cur
ious long.
Mist Alaska Robin arrived the
first of the week on her annual
visit to the Cthse Lawn and East
Main oaks. "We, of the north.
have no prejudices against spar
rows, as sparrows," she said.
"Some say they chase away the
song birds. From some of the
singing, I have heard around
here, I don't blame the spar
rows." She wiU fly south for a
short stay, then hurry back to
Juneau to be the first robin of
spring.
H. Flewher, the late demon
baker, after an extended stay
in India, is now In Italy, station-
ea only a few miles away from
G. (Cannonball) Jackson. The
presence of the pair of local
whizzes In the genera vicinity
of Mt. Vesuvius, will cause the
. natives to hope all three forces
don't get active at the same
time.
A portion of the California
press sees In the proposed na
tional service act, a step towards
"civilian dictatorship" in Amer
ica. As the voters, in the past
12 years have shown a tendency
to try any thing once, If properly
soft-soaped, It could be.
e e e
BIGNEDi 'OBSERVER'
(S. F. Chronicle)
"I was present at the Pres
idential Follies the evening
that the "eagle eyed" police
men made the "pinch." They
sure must have wonderful eye
sight or a vivid imagination
for although I had what I con
sldered an advantageous seat
I saw very little that I can
not see any day in a street car
when members of the fair sex
sit with their legs crossed."
(From a letter).
e
London commentators are still
heckling Gen. Elsenhower, for
the German break-thru on the
northern front in KlirnnA a n H
lauding Marshal Montgomery for
halting Von Rundstedt's drive
This is not very "sporting" of
the British scribblers. Many can
recall when Marshall Rommel
the nazi pride, and Gen. Mont
gomery were chasing each other
u. and down the North African
desert, like a couple of basket-
Dan teams.
Cloalna time far Clauinxf Aria
a . m. Too Let to Classify UJO
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Paul Mallon
January occupies somewhat the same place in the
year Monday does in the week the dominant tinge
is blue.
It is Blue-Monday and its Blue-January too for
with the holidays over, the holiday bills coming in,
income taxes to compute and income taxes to pay
well it isn't a very cheerful prospect particularly for
the taxpayer.
And who ISN'T a tax payer these days! .
CO THERE is likely to be, a greater temptation to
turn in those war bonds for cash this month, than
any other month in the year.
Well here's a tip don't do it unless you HAVE
to!
And by "HAVE TO we mean unless it is an ab
solute financial necessity. Not only because keeping
those bonds is the best thing for you selfishly and
financially you lose a profit if you sell them before
they are due but best for the country and the men
at the iront too.
I7E DON'T pretend to understand the intricacies
of high finance national, international or
otherwise. And it is more than ever a Chinese puzzle
with this present war-tinancing going on.
But we do understand the more this habit of buy
ing war-bonds one day and cashing them in the next
GROWS; the more uncertain and dangerous the fi
nancial future of the country is bound to be, and the
more diiticult for our government to figure what
can be relied on financially, and what can't be.
e e e e
WE HAVE every sympathy with those who are
in nrtcntivn tivuiHln ortrl oftno.11r W17.1?.T"i fVin
money they have placed in bonds. Ok let them sell
them.
But we have no sympathy with those who are in
no great distress financially, sign blithely on.the dot
ted line when the solicitor comes around, then as soon
as a decent interval elapses turn in the bonds pur
chased, and the individuals cash balance in the bank
is about as it was before, only said individual is riven
credit for having made a contribution to the war
effort he actually never made.
DERHAPS this should not be termed "cheating"
but it is certainly the depths of cheapness. It is
like offering a soldier in distress, a gun and then be
fore he can use it. taking it back attain.
So if you are tempted so N soon after making all
these fine New Year's resolutions to turn in those"
war-bonds you just purchased resist it such moral
fibre will not only pay you cash, but spintual cuw
dends before another Blue January rolls around.
Washlneton. Jan. 10. Trying
to dispel some international fog
yesterday, I reported that inas-
mucn as nus
sla delayed
the Dumbarton
Oaks agree
ment, and is
now sealing
off Central
Europe with
her armies,
she probably
would be glad
to join the
clublike Dum
barton world
order in the
coming promised negotiations
which Is to complete the club
charter by April (we hope).
The club naturally would
guarantee her gains forever
with arms and perpetuate a
postwar Europe, which directly
or indirectly Is now dividing
spheres of influence between
the Russians and British, with
the Russians in possession of
the lion's share.
Will this nation, the senate
or even the administration, be
so strong for the coming char
ter to preserve forever what is
something short of our an
nounced ideals? What do we
get out of it?
Well, we get the mandated
islands of Japan In the Pacific.
No question of that. We also get
our own hemisphere influence,
or recognition of it, as we al
ready had it in fact. The com
ing Mexico City meeting is sup
posed to bring Argentina around
and establish a front of diplo
matic solidarity on our longi
tudes. Thus the coming world
charter will direct our vision
westward and south.
We are defeating Japan with
out the assistance of the Rus
sians. The help we are getting
from the British will raise some
question of postwar British in
fluence in the orient (Hong
kong, etc.,) which must be set
tled, and there is a communist
army in China.
Yet the results of the war
and the proposed charter give
us the top position westward
and southward, which we clear
ly do not have in Europe, Af
rica and most of Asia (India).
Our future, under the current
conception of things here,
would see, therefore, to lie in
those directions, but not too far,
perhaps not too deep into Asia.
BIG TRUCK BILL
IN FIRST GRIST
BEFORE SENATE
Salem, Ore., Jan. 10 XU.B
The Oregon legislature was of
ficially down to serious work
today, following two days of or
ganization, preliminaries and the
introduction of bills which wiU
start the wheels rolling this
week.
The senate received an early
session slate of bills yesterday
afternoon when, seven were in
troduced. Among them were the
so-called "Big Truck" bill,
which would impose permanent
limitations on the size and
weight of trucks In the state.
The bill, brought in by the roads
and highways committee, seeks
a 50-foot, 54,000 pound and 60
foot, 71,250 pound limit.
Would Up Pensions
A bill by Sen. Thomas Ma
honey, Portland, calls for the
lifting of the $40 old age assist
ance ceiling. No top limit is pro
vided In the bill. Townsend
groups have asked for $60.
Other action proposals made
at the brief sessions yesterday,
included in the senate
A resolution proposing a tax
studying committee, and a re
solution which would create a
committee to investigate the liq
uor control commission of the
state, in conformity with the re
quest made by Gov. Earl SneU
at a join session on the first day.
Tax Change Sought
Bills to amend income tax
laws, providing permission of
filing of separate returns by
husband and wife in any pro
portion they see fit; creating a
state hospital in Portland for
mentally diseased; construction
of a governor's dwelling, not to
exceed $100,000; prohibiting gift
taxation upon persons who filed
tax returns under the now In
valid community property law,
and to revoke the commury
property status and to restore
property titles as before.
In the house
Only two noteworthy meas
ures were proposed. One to
change filing time for candidates
before state elections; the other
to validate stickers now In use
in lieu of metal automobile li
cense plates.
1ERY definitely, I think the
v administration will want this
arrangement. Mr. Roosevelt Is
a little on the Russian side any
way. Announcements have sug
gested this is about all we can
expect to get
WIU the senate and the peo
ple go for it? They might. The
available alternatives may not
be pleasant. The arrangement
might be presented upon a
"take it or get-something-worse"
basis. Quite a powerful nation
could be maintained within the
sights of our new vision, If it is
effectively organized.
But I think our acceptance all
depends upon how fully and
convincingly -our hopeful ideal
of democracy is held out to the
rest of the world, particularly
in Europe, by this charter.
Unless there are genuine
prospects of Atlantic charter
idealism, not mere words real
freedom of peoples in place of
the fake freedom preserved by
armed might and directing pow
ers, as well as feeding out eco
nomic substance to them I do
not think the charter can be
made very popular In this
country. And even put through
the senate by sheer force of
administration power, it could
not endure. Only solutions
which answer the yearnings for
real freedom in the hearts of
men can permanently hold their
support.
You can feed Europe, as some
of our people wish to do, to im
prove our prestige and power
there. The Chinese have a
phrase for such tactics. Church
men carrying Christianity to
the orient found it sold faster
with a bowl of rice. But they
also found that not infrequently
as soon as the rice ran out, their
converts lost zeal. They were
called rice Christians.
Nothing will take the place
of genuineness and soundness
in human or International rela-
tlons, and the measure of these
qualities In the coming agree
ment will determine the results,
ITALIAN FIGHTING
CANCEL C-C MEET
Washington, Jan. 10 (U.P.1
The U. S. Chamber of Commerce
today cancelled its 1945 annual
meeting, which had been sched
uled tor the I'lrst week of May
in New .York, In compliance
with War Mobilization Director
James F. Byrnes' request that
large gathering! be called off to
ease the transportation burden.
STUDENTS OWN FOREST
South Hadley, Mass. (U.R)
South Hadley soon will be one
of the few school systems in the
Berkshlres to own its own for
est. The department plans to
purchase a 35-acre forest where
the students can learn practical
woodcraft.
Te!orf 1 !. Ooo4 stragnMr
caivea i3i. i
Hose, aoo. a uu y .icnuj. . j --,
nee. Load-lota i-'''-.XY?
choice barrowa and filta S15.7S, me
dium $14.23: good eowa W-23.
Sheep, none. Nominal. Late Tuesday,
one load 85-90-lb. full-wooled. lamb;
tlSJO. Good full-wooled ewea quoted
SB.
Chleaio. Jan. 10 (UP) (WTA)
Live, tock Hon, 18.000; food ana
choice 180 Iba. end up S14.75; odd
lota 130-170 Iba. S142S 163; good
and choice sows S14. Complete clear
ance early.
cattle, B.uuu; caivea, ow. cicci. wV
117: aliable supply S15 91S.90; year
linn beat 116.75: mixed ateera and
heifers $10.90: bulk all ateera and
yearlings $14910-23; vealera S15-S0
down: atockers and feeder $10012.80.
Sheep, 9,000: opened ateady; three
loads good and choice fed wooled
western lembs $18.60, aome held
slightly higher: two decks good year
ling wethers 113.25: scattered lot na
tive ewea $7.78 down.
Portland Produce
Portland. Jan. 10 (UP) Wholesale
market prices:
cauliflower no. i KoaeDurr, ft-oa
3: local ftl-75 crate.
Lettuce Arizona $4-50 crate.
Onions Green, 90c dozen bunchea.
Spinach Texas 9101.50 per ham
per.
evuroiy ' aWismi. ai qomd uuuuica.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
January 10' 1935
at Was Thursday)
Suicide of maid employed In
home of Mrs. Lindbergh's moth
er adds mystery to Hauptmann
kidnaping and murder or in
fant.
Loan for Medford irrigation
district near Attorney Porter J.
Neff wires from Washington.
Medford high quint to play
St. Mary's tomorrow night.
Chicago Wheat
Shtcago, Jan. 10 (UP) Wheat:
Open ' High Low CI
May .$1.65n $1.63 "i $1.64 $1.(
July 1-38?S 1.38I 1.87(4 11
Applegate dam problems aired
at meeting.
Two Inches of new snow falls
in Siskiyous.
Italy takes over control of
large region in Africa.
Sept.
uec.
1.8' fa
1-57 'a
J-Of
l.B6j
1 .871.1
1-86
' S. F. DAIRY PRICES
San Francisco, Jan. 10. U.R)
Dairy market:
Butter: 92 score, 43c: 92 score,
42Vic; 90 score, 42 '4s; 89 score,
41c.
Cheese: Wholesale prices, loafs
27.9c; triplets, 27.2c.
Eggs: Large grade A, B0V4c:
large grade B, 41V2C; medium
grade A, 45Vc; small grade A,
41V4c.
Occasional rain. High 48, low
I degrees.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
January 10. 1925
at Was Saturday)
Secretary of State Charles E.
Hughes resigns, and Frank B.
Kellogg, ambassador to Great
Britain named successor.
New British battleships to
have airdromes for carrying war
planes.
Rome, Jan. 10. U.R) Snow
shoe troops on both sides en
gaged in a number of indecisive
clashes, but severe weather held
activity to a minimum along the
i am and Eighth army fronts,
neaaquarters announced today.
The Germans sent a patrol
across the Senio river below
Highway nine of the Fifth army's
eastern flank, but It was driven
back and attempts of Americans
to cross the river were resisted.
Several German patrols were
contacted and driven back in
the Serchio valley in the western
sector.
Planes of the Mediterranean
allied airforce hit bridges In the
western Po valley, attacked troop
installations and flew support
missions over the Fifth and
Eighth army fronts.
Livestock
Portland, Ore., Jan. 10 Livestock
Cattle. 350; calvei, 50. Active, steady
but quality less desirable. Medium
aood steers scarce early. Few common
heifers 9Q10.50. Canner-cutter cows
S5.50(!7.50. Fat dairy-type cows ibi
10. Common-medium bulls 8 ($ 0.50.
Good heavy beef bulla quotable to
$11.50. Good grass calves 914. Good
choice vealers salable $14.50 and
above.
Hon. 350. Active, steady. Good
choice 170-370 lbs. $15.75; 275-350 lbs.
9145015. Good sows $13.50 9 14,
Choice feeder Dies si 4. so.
Sheep. 150. Few sales steady. Com
mon-medium oo-ea -io. iambs iio.5U?T
12. Medium-gooa vb-id. uooa
choice wooled lambs salable 9149
14.75. Good ewes quotable 9 600.50.
South San Francisco. Jan. 10(UP)
( usuai L.ivesiocK a 1 1 1 e, va.
steady to . strong, oooa steers ana
heifers absent. One Dackase medium
urmj-iD. steers ii.ou; gooa range cows
912 50 12.73, medium $11 50t U.
Weighty dairy cows $101150, few
$12. Cutters $8.75(19 50, cannert $?
8 50. Medium sausage bulls quoted $10
910.50. Caivea, 30. Good to choice
Wall Street
New York, Jan. , 10 U.F
Stocks reversed themselves
abruptly in late afternoon deal
ings today and climbed to a new
high for more than seven years
after early softness.
Industrial stocks led the up
turn, rising to a further new
peak since Oct. 25, 1939, as trad
ing crossed the million-share
mark for the 26th time in the
last 31 consecutive sessions.
Wall street quarters found no
specific development in the day's
news to account for the late run
up, but there were indications
that the period of adjustment
after last week's bull movement
had run its course. Virtually all
of the selling that forced the list
down just before Tuesday's close
and that manifested itself in the
first three hours today was look'
ed on as profit-taking.
.Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American Tel. & Tel. . 164V4
Anaconda ..... . 33
Chrysler .. ; 96
Curtiss Wright .6
General Electric 40
General Motors ...... 65
Montgomery Ward 50
Penn. R. R ; 38
Phillips Petroleum .. 46V4
J. C. Penney . . (Unquoted)
Radio 114
Southern Pacific 44
Standard Oil of Cal. 39
Texas Gulf Sulphur . 38V4
Transamerica 11V4
United Aircraft .. 32
U. S. Rubber . 84
U. S. Steel . 63
Flight of Time
Medford and Jackson Co His
tory (torn the files oi the Mail
Tribune 10. 20. and 34 rears
age.
Cloudy. High 39, low 37 de
grees.
Hollywood film actors mak
ing pictures in Rome, ordered
nome because of unsettled con
ditions.
Medford hieh defeats Yreka
31) to 6.
Jesse D. Tresham. Gold Hill
dairyman, leases old Pankey
iarm in sams Valley.
Farmers week to be held her
January 21.
LOCAL MEN HEAR
OPA DISCUSSIONS
About 30 Medford buslnesi
men, including hardware, furni
ture and electrical dealers and
operators of drug stores, met last
night with two OPA representa
tives from the district office in
Portland, Harry Huddleston and
J. K. Hubbard.
Pricing methods were discuss
ed by the two men and then a
round-table discussion followed
for a considerable period. This
morning a number of dealers
continued their conferences with
the men.
This is the last of a series of
trade meetings held to inform
dealers of pricing methods and
Huddleston complimented the
assembled businessmen on their
pnmnlinnrff with rpeulntlnn mu.
ing that Medford was outstand-'
ing in this respect.
Boeing Cargo Plane
Makes Trip Across
Nation In 6 Hours
Washington, Jan. 10 (U.R) -
The war department announced
today that official figures show
ed the C-97, cargo counterpart
of the Boeing Superfortress,
made the 2,323-mile, non-stop
flight from Seattle last night in
six hours, three minutes, and 50
seconds, an average speed of 383
miles per hour.
. The new plane, exceeding all
existing air transports in range,
payload and size, left the Boeing
Dlrnni4 n. Cattla Wa.k b Q.QO
p. m. PWT and arrived at the kv
National airport at 5:41 p. m.,
PWT.
The huge transport is capable
of carrying more than 100 fully
equipped infantrymen in its two
pressurized cabins at altitudes
above 30,000 feet.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
TODAY
January 10, 1911
at Was Tuesdav)
Oswald West sworn in as gov
ernor.
Use Mall Tribune Want Ads.
Crater Lake map to be revised
Light snow falls in Portland.
OBITUARY
MARGARET E. PATRICK
Mrs. Margaret E. Patrick, 79,
passed away at her home in
Gold Hill early Wednesday fol
lowing a short illness. She had
lived in this community for
about 60 years. Arrangements
are in care of the Conger-Morris
Chapel.
KLAMATH MARINES SEND
REQUEST FOR CUE KITS
A request for two floor lamps
and for billiard cue kits for the
marine corps barracks in Klam
ath Falls has been received by
Mrs. Leonard Carpenter, serving
at present as chairman of the
Jackson county chapter commit
tee of the Siskiyou Camp and
Hospital council of the Red
Cross.
Anyone having these articles
or having information where the
cue kits could be secured is ask'
ed to call Mrs. Carpenter. The
lamps must be of sturdy con
struction, the chairman states.
STATUTE MAYpFrMIT
COLLECTION OF TAXES
Salem, Oro., Jan. 10. (U.R)
Possibility was seen today that
the statute of limitations may be
extended to permit the collection
of 1942 income taxes, now delin
quent and unaudited because of
lack of auditors.
The joint ways and means
committee of the Oregon legis
lature which held its first meet
ing Tuesday is Investigating the
possibility.
Cloalng tlms tor Classified Ada O
am Too Lata to Classify 12:30
STEWART INFANT
Thomas Alvin Stewart, Infant
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce E.
Stewart, passed away in a local
hospital early Wednesday. Ar
rangements are in care of the
Conger-Morris Chapel.
- THOMAS DIXON
Services for Thomas Dixon.
who passed away at his home
near Central Point Saturday, will
be held In the Conger-Morris
Chapel at 2:30 p. m. Thursday
with the Rev. D. E. Millard of
ficiating.
Interment will be in Siskiyou
Memorial Park.
He was born In Brodhead,
Wis., Nov. 23, 1860, and for the
past 19 years had made his home
In this community. He is sur
vived by his wife, Mrs. Maud
Dixon; two step-children, Mrs.
George Taylor, Wallace, Ida.,
and Merrill Edmiston, La Jolla.
Calif. There are two brothers
and a sister living in Brodhead.
The first discoveries of gold
In the Panamint Mountains
were made in April, 1873.
Os Mall Trtbuiw Want Ada.
PL0WIII&
HARROWING
DISCING
No Jpb Too
Large or Too
Small
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED!
PRICES
REASONABLE!
Place your order now and get
Tour work dona as loan
weather permits. Phone or
come to
RIVERSIDE
MARKET
PARTS and SERVICE
for all
Makes of WASHERS and
REFRIGERATORS
YOUNGER'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE CO.
91 N. Bartlett Phone 2419
DRY CLEANERS TO POST
LIST OF CEILING PRICES
After Jan. 13 all dry cleaning
and pressing establishments will
have posted a list o( ceiling
prices for 12 Items, It was stated
today at the local war price and
ration board, in order that cus
tomers may check on charges. A '
recent survey of local establish
ments by price clerks found un
usually high compliance with
regulations, It was said.
John McLaren, guiding spirit
of San Francisco's Golden Gate
Park, hated statues in parks and
always planted trees or disguis
Clmin Urn (or Sunday Too Laic ng shrubs about those ha had
to Clansily 5 30 Raturdaj alwrnooo- I to (oi-.,..
t
PLASTI-KOTE
A Plastic coating for painting used for every purpose.
Transparent and White that doesn't turn yellow. Beauti
ful colors for floors and linoleum. A cellophane-like
finish that needs no waxing and is non-tkld. Heat or
alcohol leaves no marks. SiWer-leal and white, wet and
dry. Will paint over moist surface and seal. Our ce
ment. Perma-Stal. for cement floors, walls and porches,
waterproofs and seals out alkali. With several beautiful
colors to choose from. Yet. we have it for high tem
peratures from 450 to 1000 F. Whether It bo Interior or
exterior teal with Plattl-Kote and you will have the
best. See your dealert now. They will supply you.
fly nr.
ELECTRIC SERVICE
131 WEST MAIN STREET
BURGOYNE'S
South Pacific Highway, Near Medford City Limits
SOUTHERN OREGON'S MOST
POPULAR NIGHT CLUB
IPEEJS
'mrnmr
DINING and
DANCING
ORCHESTRA EVERY NIGHT
Except Sundays and Mondays when
Burgoyne's Will Be Closed
CHICKEN and STEAK
Dinners Luscious, Satisfying