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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1945)
rOOT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Bunder. March XI, 1141 ii. lml SatatSar CO. 1141 North rirSl. Phona S141. iToBtUT W. fUHU BBMEST B OrLSTRaJ, Editor. HUM' "v oOim pt.rrv Sunday editor 1 ras OLIVX STARCHXK, Soe. BJJWI OUuEd t LATHAM. ClrUatfn MS- Aa ladaraavlatii Nwapapr. Enterad aa aaaond elaaa ? l SUBSCRIPTION BATE Br Mail In Advanes: Duly and Sunday-ona raa ,-' Dallr and Sunday ! months oo Shy and Sunday thraa moa. t.10 Bally and unday ona month, .is By Carria In Advanea Madlord. Ashland. Ctntral Fatal Jackson villa. Gold Hill. pnoanlJL Talant and on motor routes: . Billy and Sunday ona yaar.S.w Daily and Sunday ona month .78 All terma caan In advanea. Official Papar af tna City of Madford OffltUI Fapar af iacHaoa County Vat tad rraaa roil UaasS Wlia UXMBER OF AUDIT BUBEAU or CIRCULATIONS Advartlalni ttapraaantatlre WtST-HOLUDAY COMPANY, DJO Offlcaa In Nw York Chlcaao, D trollian Frandaeo. Ua Anjajaa, fta. aula, Portland, St Loula. Atlanta, VancotrvarBC ' Ol!Cjo(jjSpir't P u 1 1 s it e rjT 4sTc)i a r i o Ye Smudge Pot By rthui Perry Defeat is mounting in Ger many like taxes, and the Ohio river. The most war-like and bullheaded of all the nations, will fold and fall in 10 days an expert predicts. If this cheers up the people, there is another ex pert with a wet blanket. He pre dicts America will be fighting the Japs for years and years. - Jim (Purewater) Owen was down town in mid-week, and recalled when he was the first mayor of Pierre, S. D., and out witted Coxey's army. a a The Les Taylor boy Bob of Phoenix, has a goat he is raising on a bottle, under the super vision of Grandpaw, who is run- . ning the farm and Bob. He says both are fine kids. Albert (Irish) Coleman found 4wo errors herein last week, he thinks. He is so smart let him find the error in these lines. a a a A returned traveller from K, Falls, the first of the week, re ports the ground was white with snow, and, at least one citizen green with civic envy, due to the fizzling of their bas ketball hopes. ' .. Snow fell in the hills to insure, if nothing dire happens, ample water for irrigation and chasers the coming crop season. a , a . Chet Leonard became a proud and bouncing grandpaw the past week. As yet ha hasn't compared grandsons with V. Brophy. the Tolo cowman, who is also en thused, enthralled and enrap tured by his new glory, Dime Flynn is also ablaze with Joy. .' ' a a Next Sat. is the 17th of Mike Gibbons, and the anniversary of Jerome, the air voice, landing in the valley. a a a Mrs. J. Cochran Robin was mad enough to peck the eyes out of the woodman, who did not spare her favorite cthse lawn tree Tues. She was beside herself, and behind herself, but wiier counsel prevailed. This spring she would' have built her 11th nest in the fallen elder. a a a The legislature will wind up by mid-week. This will give them a chance to clear off their desks, attend championship bas ketball games at Salem and Eugene, and be home in time to start a new week. Nutritious, Refreshing Lost River Milk GRADE A PASTEURIZED Milk offers mere than any ether single food lor child and adultl Make It an important . part of your diet, because it is so raadily dl- ' geitible and so dellclousl letter lecauie It'i Made That Way Bear With Unprecedented Interest brought an unprecedented a demand which, in 1944 U. S. and Canadian publications to an ail time nign of 48,533,790 per day. This is in spite of newsprint rationing, higher circulation rates, and the fact that millions of men and women are now in the armed forces and unable to bujr newspapers. NEVER has news been so plentiful; never have so many people been so eager to read it. The Mail Tribune's list of readers has soared in recent years. Like many other growing newspapers we feel increasingly thepinch of newsprint rationing. THAT is why our circulation must be frozen, that is why the news coverage, which has been a matter of pride with the Mail Tribune in past years, must hp inpreafiinirlv restricted. It is why advertising, so much in demand right now, will have to be curtailed. Paradoxically, the urgent calls from the government and quasi-federal agencies for support of war bond and Red Cross drives, recruiting, salvage, etc., through our columns have increased, while newsprint supplies have diminished. OUR own immediate newsprint emergency will be relieved somewhat after April 1st, when new quarterly quotas become effective. We hope that earlv victory will see the end of ALL rationing. Until that day it is, of course, a wartime necessity. In the meantime, u your if there is less news, fewer smaller ads please bear with us. Remember e'est la guerre! H.G. Editorial Correspondence Palm Springs, March 8: Who the old General who was here three years ago at La Serena General X we called him. And nothing changed about him that w could detect including the firmness of his opinions. A rugged old salt is the General and belongs to that familiar military type that can't be wrong. Talk about losing face being art oriental peculiarity; these old-school U. S. army officers are aa bad if not worse. They can't be wrong for that would be bad for army morale. They would no more admit error than cowardice. a It piay be recalled probably won't be that General X as he sunned imself in the Serena patio, spent a large share of his time cursing out the "Rooshians." They were simply N. G. all of them front the foot-soldier to the bemed ailed Marshal In his palace. The Germans would make monkeys of them in World War II, as they did in World War I. That was the General's theme song when last w met. Naturally, In fact the Central never said what we thought he said. He declared then th Russians under the Czar were no good as fight ers; but he always had an idea they would be good under a dic tatorship of the proletariat for 09 per cent of them belonged to the proletariat, r- ' And of course they HAVE been the General as USUAL 100 per cent tight! ,. '., a , a a a a We have often envied vigorous extroverts like the General who never make mistakes. Life ferent place tea them than to the and yet . . K Sometlmesrwe wonder if it ALWAYS right to NEVER be in one" really appreciate being right if how could one really appreciate day like this it it NEVER rained Another thing. We sometimes wonder it such from, that internal spiritual conflict that usually accompanies a double life. Can any sane human really fail to recognize all mis takes that he or she makes no amount of self-deception or guise? And when those mistakes are they must be outwardly denied and that sort of make-believe la bad for the soul. And what Is bad for the soul Is always, to a greater or less extent, bad for the body. So-ooo-O But we are getting Into pretty desire to step over Into the realm of metaphysics. Moreover, we Just can't picture the General as being pestered by inner-qualms or doubts of any sort, anywhere, any time, present, future or the pastl Although the General grants Russia has done a grand Job, he holds to the belief that man for man and officer for officer, Russia is still far down on the list and France under NORMAL conditions at the top. Any military man who Is willing to spend lives like these Russian generals, can if his supply is practically unlimited, get where he plans to get. Russia he figures, has lost more men, than all the rest of the warring nations combined in this conflict. But they can lose 10,000,000 more men and not feel it, he added. We said nothing, but this remark removed what doubts we had, that our recollection of what the General did say. shortly after Russia entered the war, was correct. UsPlease in wartime news has demand for newspapers raised the circulation of man irmune is smauer of your favorite features, should we meet In the Plaza but it isn't his theme song today. the world must be such a dif ordinary garden-run of humans, doesn t get monotonous to be error. In other words how can one is NEVER wrong? Just as really savour a sunny, warm or snowed? people don't sometimes suffer even those of a character which specious rationalization, can dis recognized within, of course deep water here and have no Our Landlord Says We Have to MOVE If we don't find suitable location I suppose we will bo having a law suit. Ho will bo trying to kick us out. Wo will be trying to stay until wo have a suitable placo to move to. But in the meantime wo are having a y2 Price On Our 10,000 FRAMES NOTHING RESERVED! 8x10-5x7-3x4 Take Your Choico 'i Price BELL STUDIO 109 E. Main I Ten million men lost! And most of them youns; men the cream of the crop! And what for? Yes we admit it. There are times and as the bluff old Gen eral talked thus glibly of wholesale death, was one of them when your correspondent is an out-and-out pacifist! Nothing can justify war 'as it is waged today no possible benefits can be worth the hideous price. And the price in the most cherished of all human possessions YOUTH. And youth the heart of the family the cornerstone of the race! m m m But after the General had gone he spent 10 years in Eng land by the way and never misses his tea and in a different atmosphere we repeated a frequent process, that of thinking the thing THROUGH (Just as R. Moore follows through to the very ultimate whether he hits the ball or doesn't)! Well there loomed as usual the alternative, and the only alternative. What IS a nation to do when, as was the case In this war, it is suddenly and treacherously attacked? Nothing? Or when war is declared against it. as Germany and Italy declared war? Again, nothing? And if nothing then what? In this particular case if the the war there is no doubt Hitler Hirohito master of the Pacific real a living axis around which the world all the world- would now be forced to revolve. ,So while we remain a pacifist In theory, we can't remain one In practice facing the world peace is worth almost anything, but not every thing. Now and then as was the case in December 1941. it demands TOO high a price! But unless the post-war world than' the pre-war world WHAT Your Health and Its Care By DR- WILLIAM BRADY. M. D. Readers should address Inquiries tot Dr. William Brad; 2BS Ei Camino. Beverly Hills. Calif. . HOW DO PROTECTIVE In the past ten years or so it has become almost a cliche, this phrases "protective foods." Some physi cians who pre tend they k n ow what they're talking about i s e it glibly. Some humbug "food e x p e r ts" or "diet special ists" or "nutri tionists" use the phrase with telling Dr. Bradr- efect upon prospective customers. In reality it is as nice sound ing but as vague and misleading as the sterotyped phrases of yesteryear "good nourishing food" and "easily digested food" remember how the doctors used to say that was what the patient needed besides rest and fresh air? And how they never stopped to specify precisely which foods were nourishing and easily digested. Well, the present generation ts more difficult. People today have the impudence to ask the doctor, sometimes, please to tell them Just which foods they may and may not eat and worse still, by jingo, some of them now know enough about the tricks of the trade to elevate an eyebrow if the doctor has the temerity to hand them a printed diet list in lieu of hW own ad vice. So of late years the doctors, in order to save face, have adopted a new line. Caught napping when the vitamin "craze" devel oped, the doctors found this happy solution for their predi cament. When patients inquired about vitamins the doctors had only to laugh about the "racket" and assure them that if the or dinary everyday diet is well balanced and includes liberal amounts of fresh milk, green vegetables and fruits-the "pro tective" foods one will get all the vitamins the body needs to maintain good health. It really sounds good, doesn't it? Milk andjnilk products, par ticularly cheese of any kind you like or can get I mean real cheese not' the "processed" stuff and green vegetables or greens, as well as all fresh vegetables and nuts, fresh fruits and eggs, and just as important' though often for some peculiar reason not mentioned at all, fresh meat, are the protective, corrective foods, because these SALE! Stock of United States had not entered would now be master of Europe; the Axis would have become a as it is, facing the facts. - , Is far different and far better a price to pay!! R. W. R. FOODS PROTECT? foods are the richest source of minerals and vitamins. If they make up the main part of the diet one is thereby protected against development of defi ciency diseases. If one already has mild deficiency disease, lib eral use of these foods tends to correct the trouble. So far so good. But let's not fly off the handle. The doctor who blandly or blatantly tells the word that the use of these protective foods in liberal pro portions assures the body all the vitamins the body needs is talk ing through his hat. "If the American people con tinue to use wheat and sugar in amounts currently consumed" stated Prof. Geo. R. Cowgill of Yale University, in an official report to the Council on Foods, American Medical Association, (J. A. M. A., Dec. 9, '39) "simple calculation reveals that, in or der to secure the 550 units of vitamin Bl, which has been lost during the past century as a re sult of refinement in the milling of wheat', one would be .forced to consume tremendous and im possible quantities of these par ticular 'protective foods'." The author quotes Jolliffe's estimate that one would have to consume daily 625 Gra. (1V4 pounds) of fruit, nearly as much potato, and about IV pounds of other vegetables and 8 pints of milk! But don't let me stop you, folks, if your doctor assures you that you can get all the vitamins you need from the protective foods. When your doctor tells you so you should follow his advice or bust. 'QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Saccharin In Coffca I live alone and can get only five pounds of lunar. I do some baking and also drink three cups of coffee dally and that tnkea lota of sugar. Would it ba injurious in any way to use saccharin instead of suirar for sweetening my coffee. If not, how much may I use? I am 70. (Mrs. H. M. C.) Answer One-fourth of a grain of saccharin has the sweetening capacity of about a teaapoonful of sugar. It Is harmless for any one to use a few grains of saccharin (up to five grains) a day. (Copyright. 104S, by John F. Dllle Co.) To Portland R. E. Sweeney leu f ritlay evening for Portland where he will spend the week end on business connected with the state Commandery, Masonic branch, of which he Is deputy grand commander. as h .atPT. Jackson County Federal savings & loan association 125 EAST KAIN I KOTICE OF MEETING In the County Court of the State of Oregon in ana tor jaexson . County. Jackson County Grating Beard In the Matter of the Change of the Boundary of the PILOT ROCK GRAZING DISTRICT of Jackson County, Oregon. To the GRAZING BOARD OF JACKSON COUNTY. ORE GON, and to the ADVISORY BOARD OF THE PILOT ROCK GRAZING DISTRICT and to the Signers of the Pe tition for the Change of Boun dary of the said PILOT ROCK GRAZING DISTRICT of Jack son County, Oregon, and to All Parties Interested in the Said Grazing District. GREET INGS: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that on the 21st day of February, A. D., 1949, there was duly filed in the office of the County Clerk of Jackson County, Oregon, a petition in writing duly signed by twenty or more of the free holders residing within the pres ent boundaries of the said dis trict, asking that the boundary of the said district as now organ ized and existing BE CHANGED so as to read as follows: "Beginning at a point in the Northwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of Section 29, in Township 39 South, Range 2 East of the W M., Jackson County, Oregon, where the 'Old Pacific High way' and the 'Ashland-Klamath Falls Highway' as said re spective Highways are now laid out, established and used, meet and Intersect one with the other, and running thence in a westerly direction along the said 'Ashland Klamath Falls Highway' to where said Highway cuts' and intersects the north and south center line in Section 33, said Twp. and Range; thence North on said center line extended to the center of Section 28. said Twp. and Range; thence East, along said quarter section line extended a distance of miles, more or less, to the Range Line between Ranges 2 and 3 East; thence South on said Range Line to the North west corner of Section 6, Twp. 40 South, Range 3 East of the W. M.; thence East on the Township Line between Town ships 32 and 40, to the North east corner of Section 6, Twp. 40 South. Range 4 East of the W. M.; thence South 2 miles, more or less, to the South east corner of Section 7, said Twt. and Ranee: thence East to the Southwest corner of ' Section 12. said Twp. and Range, said point being on the County Line between Jackson and Klamath Counties, Ore gon; thence South on said County Line to where said County Line intersects the State Line between the States of Oregon ' and California; thence West on said State Line to where said State Line inter sects the 'New Pacific High way' as now laid out, con structed and used, thence fol lowing along the line of the said 'New Pacific Highway,' as now laid out, constructed and used, in a northerly direction to where said 'New Pacific Highway' Inter sects the 'Old Pacific High way,' as now laid out, estab lished and used: thence follow ing along the line of the said 'Old Pacific Highway,' as now laid out, constructed and used, to where the said 'Old Pacific Highway cuts and intersects the said 'Ashland - Klamath Falls Highway,' as aforesaid, being the true point of begin ning as above set forth." YOU ARE FURTHER NOTI FIED that a meeting of the Graz ing Board of Jackson County, Oregon, has been duly called by the County Judge of said coun ty, to be held at the hour of 10 o'clock A. M. on Monday the 19th day of March A u ivo. in the court-room of said Court in the Courthouse in Mcdford. Orpzon. and such meeting will be held at said time and place for the consideration of the said pe tition, at which said time and place all persons interested in said Pilot Rock Grazing District are hereby required to appear and show cause, if any they have, why-said Petition should not be granted, and why an elec tion should not be called and held in the said District for the purpose of determining whether HOME M..1 f a wc-or-mcoiriej thru nnr I 'M$t Aomei F" details 1 on request. I or not such proposed change In the boundary lines of the said District, as asked for in said Pe tition should not be made. This NOTICE is given and mailed, posted and published, under and pursuant to an Order duly made and entered by the Jackson County Grazing Board under date of February 26th, 1945. as said Order now appears on file in my office, and to which said Order reference Is hereby made. Given under my hand and the seal of said Court onthis 3rd day of March, A. D 1945. Li. . lAIUUt, County Clerk. Flight o Time Mediord and Jackson Co- His lory from the filet ot the Mail Tribune 10. 20. and t rears ago. TEN YEARS AGO TODAY March 11. 138 (It was Monday) Fire department members of early days to hold banquet and meeting tonight. All dogs in Portland quaran tined for rabies. ' Revolt in Greece crushed. Unsettled with rain. High 80, low 30 degrees. Four members of the deposed state relief committee mad at Gov. Martin. Rep. Moore Hamilton of Jack son county heads move to kill all minor bills before legislature to speed adjournment. Business outlook on coast Is brighter. Bill Bates is high gun in Sun day trapshoot. Dog tax penalty of $1 goes into effect in county. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY March 11. 1925 . (It was Wednesday) , State treasurer notifies banks 30 per cent of state funds de posited will be withdrawn to check interest. ' Ethel Barrymore, famed act ress, is seriously ill. Pacific fleet maneuvers result in San Francisco being "laid waste" in mythical attack. Apricot and almond crops, and early gardens hit by light frof today. E. M. Wilson completes audit of county books, and reports they are in fine condition. Ben Harder is elected presi dent of the golf club. THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO TODAY March 11, 1911 (It was Saturday) Nation to invade Mexico if necessary, President Taft states. The Gift for EASTER ilJalPWWiUJU j a IS W P sri- : S . alaaaaiBaaaaBBieBBa&ai YOUR PHOTO WHAT GRAND surprise this Eaiter --a gift from YOU ... and the rmeir girt you could possibly give YOUR" photo! Arrange at once to have it made at EVERGREEN and you'll be assured GLAMOUR that only Hollywood training, with famous, screen and radio atari, can bring. Wo have thi latest Hol lywood lighting and make-up techniques, too, which will make YOUR Evergreen photo truly one of glamour! l?STUDIOS 1 ' "PORTRAITS OF DISTINCTION" 40 South Central mg c. ru.. Phone 2069 . . . Modford Open Monday Through Friday 9:30 A. M. to P. M. Saturdays 10:30 A. M. to 7:30 P. M. City bond election! attract little interest. China-Russia war threatens. Use stall Tribune Want Ada. RESPECT For the Departed ... Through many' years of ex perience in serving the peo ple of this community in their hour of great loss, Perl's have the deepest re spect for loved ones who have passed on. and kindly sympathy for those left be hind. That Is why Mr. Perl, Mr. Davis or Mr. Wheeler . personally handle all de tails) that is why Perl's up-to-the-minute facilities are devoted to the very import ant task of providing the finest of tributes to loved ones. PHONE 2675 AMBULANCE SERVICE LADY ATTENDANT IPeipfs FUNERAL HOME 426 WEST SIXTH ST. L 1 IS YOUR CAR FOR SALE? SEE HUMPHREY NOW for a HIGH CASH PRICE! HUMPHREY MOTORS USED CAR EXCHANGE 33 S. Riverside Ave. If , 1 (H .. T