EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday. March 21. 1245
4,000 ACRE FEET WATER
REPORTED IN FISH LAKE
PanBma " ' 'artment of
Colombia until 1908. .
fmm U rtilni MNTItV
FEMALE
4
(JUullMltMiUcTMkl)
Lydls B. Plnkham'e Vegetable Corn
round Is lamout to relieve not only
monthly pel" but a"0 accompanying
nervoul. tiled, blgnetrung I filings
wnen due to functional perlodlo dis
turbances. Taken regularly It helps
build up resistance against such dis
tress. Plnkhsm's Compound helps na
ture Follow label directions. Try Ul
There Is at present approxi
mately 4000 acre feet oi water
in Fih Ink main irrigation
water suddIv of the Medford
Irrigation district, Manager Don
Spencer reports. It has a capaci
ty of 7000 acre teet. it was rain
inn at the lake this morning.
The storm the firs of the
Wees IJlipi UVCU uiiBauuu Jw
pects materially, irrigationists
report and with the spring run
off In mine, it is fieured the
present Irrigation supplies will
be substantially Increased.
I GWMIITEBced
mmm
To make possible better, more complete service for youl That's
the reason Gilmore Dealers have tcamcdup with Mobilgas Dealers.
This happy, progressive, and voluntary affiliation means, to
former Gilmore dealers and their customers (1) Greater con
venience in buying, (2) Greater availability of products, (3) Im
proved research resources behind each product. Buy America's
favorite petroleum products at the Sign of the Flying Red Horse.
ILFARE.OUM
LITTLE CHANGED,
REPORT REVEALS
Reports presented at the
March meeting of the Jackson
County Public Welfare commis
sion this week showed little
change over recent months in the
amounts expended through the
various departments.
General assistants for Febru
ary of 1943 totaled $7,694, about
the same as January when the
total was $7,792. February's fig
ure was for 213 cases including
100 single persons and 113 fam
ilies, while January was for 200
cases, including 94 tingle per
sons and 126 families.
Under old age assistance the
report shows 829 cases received
$27,399 during February, as
compared to $27,560 in January
for 833 cases. Eighteen children
were cared for In foster homes at
a cost of $469, while in January
14 were cared for at a cost of
$396.
Aid to dependent children for
February totaled $4,526 for 62
cases numbering 153 children
and in January 137 children were
aided at a cost of $4,647. Assist
ance to the blind was $405 for
nine cases, the figures being the
same for the previous month.
BIRTHS
KINGMAN To Mr. and Mrs.
Orville, 216 N. Peach, March 21,
1945, a boy, 8 pounds, at Osteo
pathic clinic.
Use Mall Tribune Want Ale.
HALLMARK
EASTER CARDS
America's finest. Cards for
every relative and friend
here or across the miles.
Priced 5c to $1.00.
SWEM'S
G'FTS
Salem, Ore., March 21 U.R)
Senate Bill 1, first introduced
in the Oregon 1949 legislative
session, was signed by Gov. Earl
Snell today. It is the bill which
repeals the 1943 Community
Property Law.
The law was recently declared
invalid by a U. S. Supreme Court
decision on the similar Okla
homa law.
Two other bills relating to
community property, allowing
those who filed income taxes
under the old law to get out
from its provisions without pen
alties, and saving them from
provisions of Oregon's gift tax
lav), are still pending.
Two in a series of liquor con
trol commission bills were signed
today. Senate Bills 144 and 145.
they caused one of the biggest
fights of the session in the House.
The bills define property to
be declared a common nuisance
in drinking establishments oper
ating In violation of law, and
give more teeth to the commis
sion's regulatory powers.
SYD BROWN TO VISIT
CLINIC IN PORTLAND
Sheriff Syd I. Brown, who has
been indisposed for the past
three weeks, at his home, will
go to Portland tomorrow for a
check-up in a clinic. Members
of the family said today his con
dition has shown improvement
and he is resting well.
County Judge J. B. (Blin)
Coleman, who has been ill the
past two months, is showing
steady improvement and expects
to return to his desk within the
next month.
THREE TO BE REMOVED
TO PRISON ON FRIDAY
Woodrow Wilson Newburn,
sentenced to six years and six
months, James Junior Collicut,
and James Ferguson, each sen
tenced to serve two years, will
be taken to the state prison Fri
day by Deputy Sheriff William
Grenbemer. Newburn was con
victed of statutory rape, Fergu
son of forgery, and Collicut of
probation violation.
MUSIC STORE TO
. Saturday has been set as the
reopening date for Mr. and Mrs.
H. O. Puruckvir's Medford music
store, they announced today. Re
opened in a new location. 111
North Central avenue, the store
will be known as the Purucker
Piano House. For IS years the
Puruckers carried on business as
the Baldwin Piano Shoppe.
A feature of the Saturday
opening will be the making of
recordings, it is announced and
musicians are Invited to bring
their musical Instruments to the
shop and play for a recording
which will be given to them as
souvenirs. A special musical
program Is being planned for
Saturday evening.
Puruckers announce that the
store will handle a complete line
of pianos and that new pianos
will be on display. In addition
the store will carry all musical
instruments, a complete line of
sheet music, records and cabi
nets, radios, when they are avail
able and all types of music mer
chandise. "We have planned a really
outstanding music store for Med
ford," the Puruckers declared
and added that it would com
pare favorably with those in
larger cities of the coast. Hour
of the opening is Z p. m.
LEE REYNOLDS, HURT IN
WAR, IN BASE HOSPITAL
Pfc. Lee M. Reynolds, pre
viously reported by the War De
partment to have been wounded
in action in the Pacific area, has
been removed to a base hospital
according to a letter from the
young man received by his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford R
Reynolds, 38 North Peach street.
The young man wrote that he
was feeling better but that his
face wounds, caused by shrap
nel, were still giving him trou
ble.
Pfc. Reynolds has been serv
ing with an overseas infantry
unit for 16 months. He was
wounded Jan. 23.
4
IVJien your Red Cross
Solicitor comes to tiie dmr.,,
OPEN YOUR 'HEART!
Remember He represents more than just
the American Red Cross ... he speaks for hundreds
pf thousands of G. I. Joe's. Through him you can
bring a bit of laughter to wounded men lying id
hospitals; a bit of hope to American boys stagnating
In prison camps; a bit of home id men yrho. have
hot seen home in years.
Your Red Cross must He at His side for a long,
long time. The wounded, the 'discharged veterans -
the men overseas, all need Red Cross. Help. So give; Jnore this year for the need is
greater than ever.
me t voun
RED CROSS
Volunteer SOLICITOR
with o simei
Open your door, your heart and your pocket-book
wide when this faithful neighbor calls on you. He b
donating his time, his energy and his money, too,
for your G. I. Joe's. This volunteer worker Is helping
to. keep your Red Cross at "his" side,
GIVE NOW!
GIVE MORE!
Ktt? yr RCD CROSS
ttklsskt
A
rWi itiltmnt Idt lien prtftrti mi ttUuti j BUTt-XtTINrlARD COMPANY uith lU
tPfrtvl ml Multnouub Conlj CitfUr lie AmttrUm Kti Cm
'Unconditional' 1
Surrender Said
Prolonging War
Washington, March 21 (U.F0
Rep. Howard Buffett, R., Neb.,
today called on President Roose
velt to announce proposed peace
terms for Germany and Japan
with a view to shortening the
Buffett told the House that
the "swashbuckling, uncondition
al surrender," had given the ene
mies a propaganda weapon to
keep their peoples fighting to
the last, prolonging the war at
a high cost in American lives.
"Until the terms are dictated,
there seems to be no possible
ground on which a body of, opin
ion can be built up in enemy
countries to effectively work for
peace," he said.
"A short time ago, on the floor
of this house, the president prac
tically acknowledged that the
terms of 'conditional surrender'
were being effectively used by
our enemies to prolong the war."
Berserk Father
Bludgeons Five
With Flat Iron
San Bernardino, Cal., March
21 (U.R) A pretty, young moth
er and her four children were
in critical condition today after
war-worker Albert H. Summers
went berserk and bludgeoned
his family with a. flat-iron to
"save them from suffering."
Summers methodically beat
his wife, Elvira, 35, and their
three sons, Donald 8, Richard, 7,
and a baby, William and their
daughter, Barbara, aged 2, late
yesterday at their home in a war
housing project.
Richard and William were In
dangerous condition - but physl
cians said the others had good
chances of recovery.
Summers said he .was suffer
ing from an incurable disease
and was afraid it had been trans
mitted to bis family.
BRIDGES ORDERED TO
SHOW ALIMONY CAUSE
San Francisco, March 21 (U.R)
Harry Bridges, west coast la
bor leader, today was ordered
to show cause why he should not
pay his estranged wife $450 per
month alimony to support her
in a style and manner fitting
. . a wife of a prominent un
ion official."
Mrs. Agnes Bridges late yes
terday obtained a temporary re
straining order freezing the Au
stralian-born labor official's bank
account and his salary from the
Internati o n a 1 Longshoremen s
and Warehousemen s union
(CIO). Bridges' earnings, she as
serted, are in excess of $1,000
per month.
MOSQUITOES PIN-POINT
COPENHAGEN GESTAPO
Stockholm, March il (U.R)
The Danish Press Service re
ported today that an attack by
British Mosquito planes this
morning destroyed Gestapo
headquarters In Copenhagen.
The Gestapo headquarters.
housed In the Shell building,
was destroyed, the report said.
LANDING FIELD FOR
EVERY TOWN URGED
Washington, March 21 (U.R)
An airplane executive pro
posed today that some sort of
landing field be built in every
U. S. community after the war.
W. T. Piper, president of the
Piper Aircraft Corp., told the
Senate Commerce Committee
such a program would open up
thousands of Jobs. When the 10,
572 proposed fields have been
built, he added, "our people can
fly where they want to."
P.-T. A. Activities
Eagle Point P.-T. A.
At the regular meeting of
Eagle Point P.-T. A., March 14.
plans were made for an amateur
night on April 20, proceeds to
be used to better equip our
school cafeteria.
A speaker In behalf of the
Boy Scouts gave an Interesting
talk on how parents and mem
bers of the P.-T. A. can best co
operate with Boy Scout units. A
short program was enjoyed.
Ankara March 20 (U.R)
Several towns in southern Tur
key were shaken by earth tem
blors today. Early reports indi-
(nt-1 mnnv VinlMlnffa vprA de
stroyed and the dead and in-
year feellna of fetlgae asay ke
dte t Constipation
Tea, constipation ean steal yotrt
energy. Take Nature'b Remedy (N B
Tablets). Contains no chemicals, no
minerals, no phenol derivatives. NR
Tablets are different -act different.
Purely vegetable a combination of
10 vegetable ingredients formulated
ever SO years ago. Uncoated or candy
coated, their action is dependable,
thorough, yet gentle, as millions of
Nil's have proved. Get a 2H box
today .or larger economy eise.
Caution: Take only aa directed.
ID-NIGHT) TOMOMOW AUWHT
Atl-VEGETABIE LAXATIVE
rW-TABLETS-Wt
'ONE WORD SUGGESTION
FOR ACID INDIGESTION-
"TUMS$
Phone
2119
For Towing or
Wrecker Service
Anywhere Anytime
Lewis Super Service
Jured might number in the hundred!.
19 M
4t 99 M
sfaj iaM ar m mJ
Spoils Sleep Tonlgnt.
You'll like the way
Va-tro-nol works right
where trouble is to
Sien up nose relieve
uffy transient con
gestion. (Also grandfor
relieving snlffly, sneesy,
stuffy distress ot
head colds.) Follow
directions In folder.
YICHSVA-TCOKOL
tea
Ml
imps suss
IreitlBRg I
tnUr- I
tirKss I
ItttW I
WASHING MACHINES
REPAIRED
Parts tr Service on All Makes
B & B Washet Shop
4.0B E. Main Phone 5302
3 ot itiontg!S- fi
The latest fashions from New York
tad Hollywood, clever new accessories,
delightful styles for children, good
looking outfits for men . . . you'll find
the apparel yon want In our big
Spring catalog. See It today in our
Catalog department The merchandise
yoo select will be rushed here
3
1
3
si 1
B I ", XL ft cur warehouse,
B ls)JKt-
for you from our fresh stocks in
-MONTGOMERY WARD
V':. :V. .... . -y I ... a
Wallpaper that's. . .
Fade-Proof
Priced as low an
20
DOUBLE
ROLL
Before a Ward wallpaper ts designated at "FADE
PROOF." a sample of that paper must pass a Fade-O-Meier
test, equal to approximately three years' exposure
to sunlight on the walls of an average room. Il hat been
proved that colors which can withstand this test are non
fading, and will retain their original tone for years.
That's why when Wards says "Fade-Proof," it means Just
that! And when Wards says our 1945 patterns are care
fully selected for correct styling and striking beauty;
well . 1 1 com end see for yourself)
IVIontgomery Ward
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