FOUR MEDFORD MAIL TRIBDWB WlnescUr. March .8, lt4i
Medford.Tbibtoe
DallT Except Saturday
MIDFOHD PRIKTWO CO.
. North Fir St PhonaSMl
ERNEST Etf clil. Mak-.
ARTHUR PERRV. Sunday Id t tor
MRS OUVB STARCHER, Soc. Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation MP.
An Independent Newspaper.
faltered u second class matter 'at
Medfora, ureson, "
March 3. 1870.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
By Matl-In Advance:
bally and Sunday on rear i.. tj.0
Dally and Sunday six montha 4 00
Daily and Sunday three mos. 1.10
Daily and Sunday one month.. .70
By Carrier In Advance Medford,
Ashland, Central Point, Jackson-
. ville, Gold Hill. Phoenix, Talent, and
on motor route:
Daily and Sunday one year. ...9. 00
Dally and Sunday ne month .70
AU terms cash In advance.
Official Paper ol the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackson County
United Prett ruU Leased Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertising Representative
WEST-HOLLIDAV COMPANY, INC.
Offices In New York, Chicago. De
troit. Sen Franclaco, Los Angeles. Se
attle, Portland, St. Louis, Atlanta,
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Minis
0Eoo()NLJs(piPi
Publish ERjsf44sS)iin
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Parry
DEUTSCHLAND KAPUTI
1 "The defeat of Germany is
complete and crushing," Gen.
Eisenhower reports. It was what
the had coming. She asked for
It, begged for it, insisted upon
it, and went out of her way to
get it. The inglorious finish
serves her right. The same fate
awaits Japan, an able mimic, al
so now groggy from the harvest
of her own treachery. For both,
there is nothing left but uncon
ditional surrender. The terms
are harsh and bitter, but just.
Never again will Prussian gen
erals and phony Oriental gods
try to enslave the world, and
falling, enslave themselves and
their own people.
Everything that could happen
fo an army, is now happening to
the Wehrmacht. They have quit
fighting but are still running
and doing a magnificent job of
the latter. No formal surrender
is expected. The late uncon
querable super-race will come
dressed a. they are, with enough
wind left to say "uncle."
After the Nazis have been
thumped to within an inch of
their national life, one of the
problems will be to re-educate
them. The education they are
now getting is thorough and the
best thing that ever happened
to them as a people. After the
Nazi youths have learned to sing
"I Am a Little Sunbeam," they
can start packing red apples to
their Russian masters and teach
ers. Premier Stalin will prob
ably put his foot down on any
notion to establish tap-dancing
classes, ala WPA, for the Teu
tonic brats. There will also be
no rush to fatten them up with
Yankee grub for World War III.
Peace rumors ye&:,rday swept
the nation like Gen. Patton
sweeping Into Bavaria. It was
officially quashed before the
bulk of the population could
start brewing their own rumors,
a trick at which they are adept.
People who like to believe any
thing once, were given no time
to enjoy it, let alone think up
rumors of their own.
In the midst of the excite
ment Argentine, the late "good
neighbor" suddenly discovered
she was mad at Germany and
declared war upon the Axis.
For a long time, Argentine
wouldn't say no, and wouldn't
say yes. She gave an outstand
ing exhibition of mulelshness.
Herr Hitler is still at large,
and has been listed by the Brit
ish as the major war criminal.
There has been some shyness
heretofore, about classifying him
In this category. He would love
to sneak off some place, like his
fellow-scamp, Mussolini, and
have all the malignant diseases,
until the world felt sorry for
him.
PEDDLERS JAILED
San Francisco, March 28 (U.PJ
Eight alleged members of a $4.
000,000 nationwide dope syndi
cate were held throughout the
country todnv nn r-hnro-n f
possession, sale and transport of
. liHrcoucs.
Five men Were tflkpn In Nam
York, one in Florida and an
other in southern California. In
San FranClsCO. Fmnk Kr-nnnii.
turn,, 38, was held under $5,000
bond for appearance today be
fore U. S. Commissioner Francis
St. J. Fox. The remaining: mem.
bers of the ring, five still are
DPing sougnt and two were pre
sumed Qeaa,
NATIONWIDE DOPE
Editorial Correspondence
Los Angeles, March 25: Yes, back in L. A. on orders from
G.H.Q, Have to meet "Baby Snooks" and chaperone her to Mexico
City for Easter Sunday. It is not an unpleasant task, in fact the
undersigned rather likes the idea!
e e
Really hated to leave Palm Springs, particularly as yesterday
and today were warm and- "chahmin" as Andy is won't to say.
After the "Big Wind" such weather was especially appreciated.
That storm incidently was one of the worst ever experienced at
the Springs. It took half a day to clear up the debris on the golf
course, benches, tree branches, signs and leaves were scattered
all over the place.
This is Palm Sunday a very important and holy day In the
Christian world. Coming in on the bus we saw hundreds of palms
but no people carrying palm branches.
Not so on Palm Sunday 40 years ago, when your correspond
ent was lost In the hills of Italy near Viterbo astride a bicycle
which he had brought from home and it had an eliptical sprocket.
Everywhere the villagers and peasants were coming home
from church, with palm leaves in their Hands men, women and
children, and very solemn and devout they were. So was your
correspondent but not for the same reason. For he was just plain
lost, couldn't speak a word of Italian and no one he met could
speak English. He finally ended up at a hill town without a hotel
or restaurant called Todl and spent two days and nights there
In a deserted mansion.
But that is another story! '
TTnuravap nrai ,itb. ,ttrl,41w MmlnJJ -. 1 L - .
........ - wu . . . ''j isiumuoi ui iitai, vApenencsj on
our arrival here at the Biltmore. Came up In a yellow cab with a
couple of marines, on leave from San Diego. They were terribly
young didn't look even 18 and had the address of some pri
vate home where they were told they could get rooms. One of
them had a verv serious, sensitive fnra hut h was i
ribly depressed and "lost" the
of it.
"Oh nnmA nn Wnlt nhnar ,, n
- - ' -..v.- .,. ,
and it won't be so bad and after
do things. That was pretty tough
L. A. nn RnfnHnv ilrKl"
"I knOW." WflH Wfllt.'a lliotifirtnti rani,, T 11, ill
- ' " o - " -
place, it CONFUSES me. I wish
"Oh shucka Walt we'll him o
, -
tomorrow it will all be different,
here pal cheer up!"
"Yes. cheer nn anlrlipr " w,
j t. ' wi win soon ue
over in Europe the way the boys are going now, and then we can
clean up on the Japs, and EVERYONE can go home."
"Yes." the bov turner! tnurnrH no uudvII,, nnj -.-i ui.
- -- , auu jret, wim a cer
tain curiosity, "hope you're right mister. They sure aren't pullin'
any punches over there are they? But say what you like, there
. w.ii. Hung wtmi wHm
-
What the final result
---- U uuv niiuw, iui vnen we goi
out. But it seemed to us rather typical and worth reporting. There
must be literallv mrp rf oi,-. un,. i.i .u.i. ,
"
Angeles every week-end and we
thorn foal am A7 nU sf-14 i
" v spue
they would rather be home than
rather cheering and wholesome
We arrived here on a Sunday
but not until 11 p. m. Everything
uui alter we left those two
ing for their sanctuary, how were
at the "cocktall-hour" here?
Well let the venerable bellboy
the ball, we quote him in his exact
.Pretty noisy In these court rooms mister, now. hut. the n,w
boys will be checking out In an hour or so, and it will be ok
its like the Big Game night here every week-end since the war
started, but they earn a bit of a spree, and no real harm's done,
and you'll get your sleep, ok, mister!"
No doubt we will. And we don't
the situation anyway.
But just for the record and
ings is to report things as they
was entirely correct in his reference to "Big Game" night. As
ine record win show your corresoondent soent a week-enrl in
this same hotel after the New Yeart football conflict the Rose
Bowl game three or four years ago.
xes, the bottles crashed in
the boya yelled up to "Blondie," and "Blondie" yelled down to
the boys, and Blondie sang a song very well too and believe
it or not this time it was "Ave Maria" and when it concluded
the boys cheered and threw out more bottles, and nne nr turn
yelled "bravo, bravo!" And Blondie responded with "ALWAYS!"
ana men a raucous voice asked
room?"
Well, there you have it, and
again crashing below.
And this is Palm Sunday, March 25, 1945. and the boys over
there brothers of the boys here are fighting and dying to make
this world a better place in which to live and doing a truly
magnificent job!
There are the facts as of this
of the globe.
Add up your own score!"
Aid To Veterans
Bsbson Discusses G. I,
By Roger W. Babson
Babson Park, Fla March 9
(Special Correspondence) I am
astonished by figures just re
leased. These show that over
3,600,000 draftees have been
turned down because of poor
physical condition and over
1,600,000 discharged; while the
average intelligence of the en
tire army equals only that of a
13 year old boy.
Loans and Education
Yet, politicians pretend that
this situation can be remedied
by loaning each returning sol
dier from $2,000 to $10,000, or
by giving him $500 per year
plu. $30 per month to get some
kind of a diploma! I am glad to
have veterans receive these
gifts; but they must not think
the loan or the diploma will en
able them to operate a business
successfully or even to hold a
good Job.
It would be far better for the
government to help these men
dovclop self-mastery and con
structive thinking even to use
themselves as a laboratory in
stead of bothering with some
college laboratory. The truth
Is that their brains have been In
a concentration camp for the
past few years. The veterans'
future depends upon the use of
their brains, in hard construc
tive thinking under expert guid
ance. Your Boys' Brains
Without doubt tlio United
States will enjoy a few years of
"prosperity" loll jv. ing World
other was trying to snap him out
" Vim aaM (mr-iii " t ii r
..u sum, i, c n iiiiu wile piace
a good rest we can go out and
last night, but hell, vou know
"o - i win, HUU b lute LI115
I was home!"
Hrlnt, j ..... j
. auu juu uxkb n nap ana
and we got three more days
,,f f i'ui- m
10 go xiUMril
e ,
wujB imc mat nere in jiOS
venture to say 99 per cent of
s .si . . .
01 an me nuiabaloo and whoopee
anywhere else. And isn't that a
sign?
from Medfnrrl WV In rkn,
had quited down then.
marines In the velinw rah inir.
they observing Palm Sunday
.
who ahnwerl lis mil mnm talra
words:
feel disposed to moralize over
all we try to do in our wander
are and do occur the bellboy
the brick courtyard below, anrl
"What's the number of your
'
as this is written the bottles are
'
date in this particular section
. R. W. R.
Loam and Education
War II. Certainly, this will last
until the people spend the
money which since 1940 they
have been accumulating. As to
what will happen thereafter
will depend upon the thinking
powers of the returning soldiers.
G. I. loans and free education
will not keep people employed.
In fact, why should any man ex
pect any other man to employ
him? Why should not all have
initiative and originality enough
to create their own Jobs?
The answer to the above ques
tion Is that very few people
have been taught to do original
and constructive thinking. This
is a basic cause of unemploy
ment and one which must be
rectified. Here are matters of
great Importance to every par
ent: has your boy a definite
goal In life? Has he self-control
and self-mastery? Has he Imagi
nation, energy and stirk-to-it-
lveness? Has he been "born
again" spiritually? Is he return
ing from the war more or less
thoughful with better habits?
The answer to these questions
by honest mothers will deter
mine whether the United States'
debts will be paid or repudiated
a weM as our postwar employ
ment situtaion.
Great Discoveries Ahead
At the Adult Conferences to
be held at the Babson Institute
in April and May, these que
tlons will frankly be discussed.
Parents will then be given def
inite help by experts. The first
teo ia to realue that body
flAsrR saMtirV aBarHl4 sat '"eat MA ftVJfrl 4Jir
a truly spiritual rebirth u the
most eneciive zounaauon lor a
useful, healthy and hannv life.
But those attending these
courses will learn of other meth
ods of stimulating men whirh
have untold and unlimited pos
sibilities. The future of your boys after
the war will not dunenrl nnnn
money or college diplomas but
upon sen-mastery and brains.
Neither or these neerierl assets
is secured by reading books or
oy listening to the radio. They
will come only through self-development,
hard thinking anrl
bitter experience unless some
entirely new methods are dis
covered. Personally T holioue
such discoveries will take place.
nence, i am optimistic as to the
future. There should be hun
dreds of 'thousand nt
Einstelns and Fords!
Encourage Employers
Heretofore, hrai
and psychiatrists have worked
omy wiin tne insane or those
who are broken.rlnum nervous
ly. In the new era following
World War II, I believe they
will work with normal boys to
stimulate their thlnlclnu nrt
personal powers. You see im
mediately that this has tremen
dous rjOssibilitfes snil nnnM nm.
pletely revolutionize education
al metnods as well as religious
work. We will have more and
better emDlovers. Let every
reader encourage the employers
wnicn are now carrying the bur
dens of the war and nre nre-
parlng for the new tasks of the
peace years ahead.
Flight y Time
Medford and Jackson Co. His
tory from the files of the Mail
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years
ago. ,
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 28, 1935
(It . Was Thursday)
Russia and Britain confer
German's stand for re-establishment
of arrny.
Unsettled. High 61. low 30 de
grees.
State llhltnr Pnntrnl Vinorrl an.
nounces AU beer taverns will
have to "toe the line, or else."
Elks to Initiate 18 at meetine
tonight.
nishiireal rt s.anJ- nr 9
- .a ui 1UUIIU3 UII 1UCU'
ford Trr.0nt.nn . a 11 nt-
O uwh.lv aJUi.Ua
started by federal reserve bank.
Fruit and herrv census ti he
taken in the valley.
Time table of Southern Pn.
clfic passengers, north onH
south, to change April 1..
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
March 28, 1925
Ot Was Saturday)
Democratic
short $50,000, and advertising
man sued for accounting.
Hlffh school in nresent "Pina
fore" on April 1.
Half inrh nt rain folia anrl
proves boon to orchardists.'
Owen-Oresnn
ball team to play tomorrow.
Tax collections this veer, sio.-
973 less than last year.
More telephones show nnnnls.
tlon Increase here.
Probable rain. High 86. low
37 degrees.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
TODAY
March 28, 1911
(It Was Tuesday)
Peace in thirty days seen In
Mexico.
Letter to editor states Fir
street is a disgrace, and leaves a
bad impression on newcomers.
Light frost last night. No dam
age.
ROTAilSHEAR
REP. BENGTSON
Some of the inmates' of the
feeble-minded Institution of this
state are "forgotten people" and
a system for periodical review
of cases should be Initiated simi
lar to the penitentiary parole
system, according to Hilding
Bengtson, state representative
from Jackson County. Speaking
at a luncheon meeting of the
Medford Rotary club at the
Hotel Medford Tuesday, Bengt
son lauded the able supervision
of the penitentiary and describ
ed the parole system of the
state as "adequate."
There Is need for reform In
the feeble minded hospital, how
ever, Representative Bengtson
said, and Immediate steps should
be taken to effect it. He was a
member of a legislative com
mittee Investigating various
state Institutions.
Jackson County's "freshman"
legislator told of interesting and
humorous incidents at the re
cent session and outlined some
of the problems faced by both
the senate and house. Lobbyists
generally are high type citizens
and their views are often help
ful In clarifying Issues, Bengt
son said.
George "iates, Rotary pro
gram chairman, introduced the
speaker, y
SIGNATURE TO 24
T BILLS
Salem IvTnrcVi 9A ,) P)flnv
Earl Snell signed 24 more bills
of the recent legislative session
late today bringing the total
flnnrnverl rlnrinc the rlav tn 47
This is the largest number the
governor has signed In one day
so far. Several important bills
were Included. v
Two alcohol control commis
sion hills fSR's 1 1 7.1 1 RV were
signed, which give the commis
sion mnre repulntnrv nnwpr
Others were three appropriation
Dills (HB's 457-458-459) granting
money for the Department of
Agriculture, the Historical So
ciety and the Battleship Oregon
Commission, and the legal de
partments of the state..
Three workmen's enmnensn.
tlon measures, three of a series
of "compromise" bills which
raise the benefits payable, were
also among those signed (SB's
70-77-78) as was the bill which
provides for the machinery by
which a "fringe" area may be
come part ot a city (SB121.)
The last in a series of com
munity m-ODertv bills
signed (SB176) preventing gift
tax penalties on those who elect
ed to come under Oregon's com
munity property law, recently
invalidated.
Other bills signed:
Senate bills
65 Relating to acknnnrlea.
ments and the validation of ac
knowledgments. 106 Relating tn the n.l.
9 IUIO
tlOn Of mutual savin as hint.
178 Permitting relatives of
deceased state employes to col
lect funds -due.
181 Relating to ownership
of municipal cemeteries.
197 Authorizing an advi
sory board for the State Train
ing School..
215 Creating a game refuge
in Polk county.
220 Raising amount . which
a county may spend for a war
memorial from $10,000 to $25.
000. .
House Bills '
260 Relating to apportion
ment of Income tax money.
270 Authorizing county
sinking funds in certain cases.
348 Permitting formation of
a committee to raise funds for
the purpose of placing statues of
two of Oregon's outstanding cit
izens in statuary hall in Wash
ington, D. C.
413 Changing provisions of
the motor vehicle and nvintinn
gas tax.
Salem. Ore Mornh DO Iln
, u u.n
The state employes retirement
ano merit system bills were
signed by Gov. Earl Snell today.
They are, the governor said, "an
important part of the major ac
complishments of the 1945 legis
lature." The bills (HB's 294-344) set
up a system of merit-promotion
for state employes, and a sys
tem of retirement nnri Hicnhnitv
pay for public employes and
inose ot political subdivions of
the state. ' i
The retirement TTiPn euro tn.
eludes school teachers "which
is a very progressive and forward-looking
step, and one
which shoud react to the decid
ed benefit of Oregon's school
system," the governor said.
CHICKENPOX HITS
EPIDEMIC STAGE
.A mild epidemic of chicken
pox has broken out in the coun
ty, with 20 new cases renorted
to the county healih department
during the week ending March
23, the weekly report shows. Of
these, 12 were In Jacksonville.
Oakgrove, Phoenix and Ashland
each reported two new cases
and Bellview and Talent each
one new case.
Two cases of scarlet fever
were reported, one in Jackson
ville and one in Central Point.
Four new cases of whooping
cougn are on the list, two In
Gold Hill and one each in
Brownsboro and Ashland. Other
cases listed were three of
mumps, one each in Medford,
Oakgrove and Ashland; erysip
elas, one case in Ashland, and
measles, one case In Medford,
News of4-H
CLUBS
Roxy Anne 4-H Club
Roxy Anne 4-H Club will
meet at the Grange hall Friday
at 8 p. m. and it Is stated that
parents are invited to attend.
Each member of the club is
asked to bring colored Easter
eggs to the meeting.
The first political party in the
united States was the Federal
ists. Its first leader was Alex
ander Hamilton, the first secre
tary ox to ueaauiy.
LENTEN SPEAKER
DRAWS CAPACITY
NIGHT AUDIENCE
An audience that filled the
Zion Lulheran Church greeted
Dr. Russell V. DeLong, Lenten
speaker, last night as he spoke
from the subject: "The Cross
and Successful Living." He
stated that every person is con
fronted with two major life
problems (1) The problem of
being and (2) the problem of
doing. "The Cross of Christ
gives meaning and solution to
both problems," he said.
Tonight the Lenten series
sponsored by the Ministerial As
sociation of Medford will con
tinue at"the First Presbyterian
Church, Holly at 8th streets, of
which the Rev. Harry Hansen is
pastor. The service tonight is
designated as Patriotic Night
and all war mothers will be
honored. Dr. DeLong will speak
on "What Are We Fighting For,
or After the War, What?" Music
will be furnished by the all-city
choir under direction of John
Eby.
Noon services, 12:05 to 12:35
p. m., at the USO auditorium
are increasing in interest and at
tendance daily. Dr. DeLong is
delivering a series of addresses
on "The Cross and Christian
Certainties," at the sessions.
Thursday will mark the closing
of the noon series in the USO.
Thursday " and Friday eve
nings the Lenten series will be
held at , the First Methodist
Church, Dr. Louis C. Kirby, pas
tor, -me annual Good Friday
program will be held in the
Medford Church of the Naza
rene, Rev. Fred M. Weatherford,
pastor. At this service the local
ministers will speak on the
Seven Last Words of Christ and
a concluding address will be de
livered by Dr. DeLong. The
day will close with a great
Youth Rally at 7:30 p. m. at
the First Methodist Church.
DEMURRER IS FILED IN
GOLD HILL DEATH CASE
A demurrer to the indictment
charging Fred A. Wolf, 63, with
murder m - the second degree,
for death of Percy H". Ijames, 43,
as the climax of an altercation
at Gold Hill, February 4, was
iiiea today by Attorney Don R.
Newbury for the defendant. The
court granted the defense until
next Wednesday to file a brief.
' The demurrer holds the In
dictment returned by the grand
jury last week fails to "state
sufficient evidence to constitute
a crime."
TALENT SUNDAY SCHOOL
SETS EASTER PROGRAM
Talent, March 28 Talent
Friends Sunday school will pre
sent their Easter program Sun
day, April 1, at 10:30 a. m. It
will include numbers by Gloria
Quackenbush, Joy Ellen Cook,
Barbara Sample, Joy Cook,
Dixie Kendall, Billy Hays,
George Bales, Jean Hoffman,
accompanied by Mrs. Robert
son, Lilly Millage, Mrs. Elmer
Robertson, and George Bales.
Court Records
Justice Court
Pete Nelson, no auto license.
cited.
George Douglas Beer, violat
ing basic rule, $2.50 and costs.
Vernon Dale Chamberlain,
Chamberlain, failure to dim
lights, $2.50 and costs.
Police Court,
Mrs. Eldred Colver and I. S.
Stenerson, overparking, $1 bail
eacn.
Bill Eatherton, no operator's
license, $2.50 fine.
Cyril John Wogan, Kelly
Ethridge, Olaf Redahl, drunk,
$iu bail each.
OBITUARY
BENTON LEE GOODNIGHT
Benton Lee Goodnight, three-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton B. Goodnight passed
away at his home in Medford
Tuesday evening. He Is sur
vived besides his parents, by a
baby sister, Nancy. Funeral
services will be held at the
graveside in Phoenix cemetery
Thursday, March 29, at 2 p. m.
with the Rev. J. C. Whitsett of
ficiating. Conger-Morris Funeral Par
lors are in charge of arrange
ments. BIRTHS
DASPIT To M. Sgt and Mrs.
Alvin, 132 Almond St., fifarch
28. 1945, a girl, 8 lbs., at Com
munity hospital.
HOLMAN To Mr. and Mrs
Henry T., R. 1, Box 243, March
28, 1943, a boy, 8 pounds, at
Community hospital.
FIRSTBROOK To Mr. and
Mrs. Howard, 161 4 Mistletoe
street, March 27, 1945, a girl, 8
pounds, at Osteopathic clinic.
Soldiers turned sailors In one
Mediterranean Theater port Jo
operate tugboats and a huge
crane speeding the unloading of
supplies to the 5th army trout.
LOCAL and
' Returns Mrs. Frank Carson,
Butte Falls, returned this morn
ing from a week's visit in Port
land. Leaves For South Mrs. Elsie
Narregan leaves April 1 on a
buying trip to San Francisco
and Los Angeles for Mann's De
partment store.
a a
Need Listings Anyone hav
ing apartments or houses avail
able to rent to officers is asked
to call the Outpost, where many
inquiries are being made for
listings, it is stated.
Visits Aunt Frank William
Endert, CMoMM, and wife are
visiting at the home of his aunt,
Mrs. Jean B. Brault, 208 Sum
mit, avenue, while Endert is on
leave from the navy.
a a
Yarn Received A .shipment
of yarn has been received at the
office of the local Red Cross
chapter and will be supplied to
knitters who call at the produc
tion' corps room, it was an
nounced today.
a
Meeting Tonight A radio
meeting will be held at the
chamber of commerce building
tonight at 7:30 p. m with "Post
War Radio" at the subject. The
general public is invited to at
tend.
To Have Dinner Pnnnhnntas
lodge will meet at Redman hall
Friday night of this week at
6:30 o'clock for a nnthmv din
ner. Members of the losing side
ui me memoershlp contest will
furnish dessert and entertain
ment. Completes Tralninn TJt
Dell J. Clarke, of Prospect has
completed training in the iurnn
Transport school of the First
women's Army Corns training
center at Ft. Des Moines, la.,
according to a release from the
center.
Returns Mrs .Tqtv,ab nHiri,i
. . vu,ii, WiK0Uj
returned yesterday from San
1?nnM , .....
""-' wnere sne visited her
son, James Grigsby, Jr., E3c in
vi. navy, wmie in- California
Mrs. Hriachv llrao n 1 M r
. --0uuj " a gjucab ui ivir.
and Mrs. G. Fletcher Williams.
Young Grigsby is assigned to a
naval transport.
Reports Back TPneio-n ot.fiijn
- .M.gll 111111JJ
Todd left yesterday for Oakland.
Calif., after two days with his
family at their home, 843 East
9th Street. Ension TnA ...111
leave Oakland by plane to re
port to Miami for further train
ing. He received his wings at
Corpus Christ!. Tev shnrti,,
fore coming home.
G.P.
SHOOTING SCRAPE
Grants PassMarch 28 Mrs.
Elizabeth Agnes Brandley is
dead and J. J. Skinner, prom
inant Grants Pass insurance
man and former employe of Cal
ifornia Oregon Power company
in Medford, is in a local hos
pital suffering from bullet
wounds In the abdomen as the
outgrowth of gunplay In Skin
ner's Insurance office Monday
evening.
Mrs. Brandley, who had been
employed as a housekeeper for
Skinner, who is a widower, is
said to have fired at least two
shots at Skinner and then turn
ed the gun on herself. Skinner
wanted a nan block to a drug
store to summon a doctor. After
beine told
....w uuub me
shooting, police went to the in
surance office to take Mrs.
Brandley into custody and found
hfr y'ng n the floor in a pool
"'""a. one died last night.
Mrs. Brandley had kept house
for Skinner for a number of
years, moving to Crescent City
last week. She returned to
Grants Pass two Or throA An-.
ago, according to news sources.
Livestock
n -. ,
, , , , March 28 (UP)
acuve, fully steady. Few eood flj
steers S16.25. Canner-cutter lwi JSi
wz& via
nogs 10U. Active, SteadV Welsh,
above 157 lbs., S13.75; few US i?h.
$13. Good sows $15. Good llsht , a
;p, 'k, '3, 3- Good-choice feeder 52
salable $16 50 $17 50 p
..?hf,p 10- Fed sood'sprln lamhs
85 "bs- lateYuesdavSVe
first of season. Good-choice truck'ln
wooled lambs salable $,5.50 a T $ia
Good ewes quotable 8 $8 50.
Portland Produce
.P.VX.n7l?e,?8-UP,-Whole-Asparagus
California t30 $9
pyramid 32-33 lbs. "
Cabbage No. 1 local, green, round
'?.'.:. $ Oswego. $5 crate
Chtvea Local. $235 t) $2.50 flat
Chicago Wheat
Chicago. March 2 (UP
r" low
May 16!, IKS', lsn
Srpt. IUI, uan 152
L'tS. Hi), ..Si), 1.51!,
Close
1 69
1 .31 't
1 32',
PERSONAL
Permit To Remodel E. p f
juerncK was issued a building
permit yesterday at the office of
the city superintendent to re
model residence for about
$200.
... e
Visiting V. A. Mercer, of
Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. Har.
old Mercer and family are in
Medford this week visiting at
the home of C, E. Mercer, 60J
North Bartlett street,
Home From School Richard
and Raymond McVeigh, sons of
Mrs. Alberta McVeigh, 513
South Holly street, arrived here
today from Klamath Falls
where they attend Sacred Heart
Academy, to spend Easter vaca
was bora March 24 to Mr. n4 V
Mrs. L. E. Robinson of Kansas "
City, Mo. Mrs. Robinson's
mother, Mrs. Frank Gritsch,
341 South Oakdale avenue, has
gone to Kansas City to spend a
few weeks with tha Robinson
family.
Juniors To Meet Members
of the Degree of Honor Junior
club will hold an Easter party
at the home of Mrs. Ida M. Wil
son, director, 7 Chestnut street, ''
Saturday of this week from 2 to
4 p. m. Mrs. Wilson states that
the party is for club members
and friends.
Cars Collide An auto driven
by Mrs. Buck Tosh, Rt. U col-
lir?e4 va,tW. , ,,,
jvoiLiuaj illuming witn a
Pick-UD driven hv "! P nDiu W
stem, 444 North Front street, at
tne towards and Beatty streets
intersection causing damage es
timated at $75 to Reichstein's
truck, according to an accident
report on file today.
V '
Seamen Here Lawrence G.
Youmans, RdMl3, and Aldo
Robustellini, SM2c, are visiting
this week at the home of You
mans' parents, Mr. and Mrs. H.
O. Youmans, Rt. 1. The boys
will leave Saturday for Sacra
mento and from there will go to
Reno. They were stationed in the
Aleutians before returning to
the United States.
Promoted Sybil Berniece
Reames has been promoted to
corporal m tne marine corps,
according to information re
ceived here by relatives and .
frienHs nl r ,
"7 "ft, -nctunes is sta
tioned at Parris Island, S. C,
and is ip charge of the insur
ance department of the base.
Cpl. Reames has been in the
marine corns siiohtiv ,,.
a year. She is the daughter of
n, r .v s- -Reames,
Crater Lake highway.
S. F. DAIRY PRICES
,-iSan. "ncisco, March 28
(u,P.) Dairy market:
42W, 90 score 424, 89 score
27(2heeSe: LafS "'9- trlpleta
Eggs: Large grade A 40V4,
medium erada A wis.
grade A 33V4, large grade B
Wall Street
New York, March 28-j(U,R) ,'
Peace rumors evaporated In the i
financial district today and the "
stock market extended yester
day s gains by fractions to more
than a point.
Preliminary .losing Dow-
Jones stock averages: industrial
"P 0.37; utility 27.37, up 0.16
65 stocks 56.89, up 0.38.
Sales totaled 720,000 shares
yeSy Ul0'000 .
lecTeTsS)ng PflCei W
aS2S -16
Chrysler ..
Curtiss Wright ." jst '
General Electric 40!
uenerai Motors 843A
Montgomery Ward"
52
35 Va
49?s
108
10
Phillins ' Pof.AiT.V2T
fii. n. it.
. - vicum
J. C. Penney .
nauio
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil of Caf
Texas Gulf Sulphur
Transamerica
United Aircrafts"T
U. S. Rubber
U- S. Steel
40'4
40' 8
3914
1014
28
55
61 1'a
COMEDY SLATED FRIDAY
AT CENTRAL PT. SCHOOL)
Central Point, March 28
cn? hrV- the junior elm of
Dresi .fmt hiBh sch0' m
Present the annual class play to
gymnasium. The nlay. a farce
y in lhree JcPts.8enftatr
Th nf ff' .HoW Could You!"
ihe plot is said to be clever and
I, pIay uproariously funny
from surf to finish.
Shull and Tommy Colley In the
nonPrring, "1 "re BVt
Doran n,U'Se Lofand, JoAnn
npf h lv Ie7"ene Gebhard, Ken
Hnn Watt' Jim An"s, Don 1
Hoand and Don Thumler. f
North Carolina's Symphony
Orchestra is the only one in tha
Country aunnnrfoH ...;v. .,,.
. r - . nun bm
fund