HZ MEDFORD MAIL THIBUITB
Medfo
UNE
.rjon la Sooth Or.io
Dally eap mtnry
Puhllshed bj
MEDrORD PMNTINO CO.
t7.2 North fir St P"" "
ROBIRT W. RUM
Editor.
ManafSI
ERNEST B. GILS'
im nl.IVE STARCHER, 800. Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Htr.
An Independent Nawspapar.
Entered u lecond
Madforf. Oregon, under Act
Marrn 3. !ai?;
BIIHRCRIPTION BATES
B Mull In Advance- -
Dally end Sunday one year
Silly and Sunday-el months 4 00
Dally and Sunday-three moa. 8.10
' Daily and Sunday one month. 78
By Carrier In Advance Medlord,
ByA.hlInd Central Holnt. J'Oon.
' vine, Gold Hill. Phoenix, Telent, and
; on motor route: M
Daily and Sunday one year. .,88 00
Daily and Sunday one month 7a
All lermi raiti In advance.
Official P!er o( the City ol Metier
Official Paper of aackaoii County
"""uiii'ied Praia fuU Leao4 Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUBIAW
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising; Representative
WEST-HOLLIDAV tfOMPAin. INC.
Officee In New York Chlcam. De
troit, San rranclaco, Loa AnieTes. Be
attle. Portland. St. Loula, Atlanta,
Vancouver, o.
Mtmis
Obec
Puiusi
S OCJl A T 1 0
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Parry
Moscow hears Messrs. Hitler,
Himmler, and Mussolini plan to
seek refuge In Japan. This
would serve them right, but is a
. bit more punishment than Japan
has coming.
An OPA administrator ad
dressing a Eugene eating club
discussed "Logistics and Laugh
ter". He did not tell any OPA
stories about ration points that
Involve the logistics of counting
and cussing.
. e
Tor Sale Rocking chair"
(Wantad This Paper). The owner
is an armchair general who map
ped military campaigns from
Dunkirk to the Rhine, by way of
North Africa, who has decided to
stand up to make the peace
' terms.
i Yesterday was prevue of
Spring In the valley. There was
some warmth in the air, but not
enough to cause any demand for
shade. A couple of civic leaders
basking in the sun, advocated
planting more onions, someone
else would have to hoe.
e. e
: "One of the minor Inconsist
encies is the young woman who
smokes a pipe, but is somewhat
ashamed to hear that her great
grandmother did the same."
(White River, Mo., News) Grand
maw didn't wipe lipstick off the
item.
' It will soon be April, which
long with July harbors the two
Fridays the 13th, allocated to
this year. Older Girls say, it they
can bet, by next Sunday (Easter),
without rain on their hats, hair
'dos, and ensembles, anything
that happens on the aforemen
tioned fateful Fridays, will be
forgiven, and excused.
e e e
WAIT St SEE!
(S. F. Chronicle)
"The American people may
as well paste it in their hats
right now that when the Ger
mans surrender the news will
be told to them by Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, President of
- the United States, and none
other. Nobody needs to be
taken in by any rumor, ticker
bulletin or flash from Samar
kand, Tahiti or Timbuktu.
When it is true the President
will tell you. Do you think he
is going to let anyone else beat
him to that news? Woodrow
Wilson didn't."
ine nation is once more
caught between a propagandic
cross-flee. Military experts in
Germany predict the end of the
war is "distant"; the secretary of
war announces the defeat of the
Hun is total and complete; and
the British premier asserts 'the
hour of success is near." And.
all the while the Germans are
surrendering en masse, faster
than they can be counted. Some
body is spoofing somebody, In
an effort to submerse the land
in "baloney".
Operators drilling for oil and
gas In 1944 penetrated the
earth's crust a total ot 1,655,240
feet, or 332 43 miles.
Wanted - Saleswoman
For Art Needlework
Should understand telling,
embroidering and knitting.
BOX 22 TRIBUNE
rridty. March SO. IMS
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, March 30 Mr.
Roosevelt's request for power
to cut the tariff another 60 per
cent (making
75 per cent in
all from the
1934 rates) fell
on hard con
gressional soil.
Some not
alone the re
publicans, say
it represents
practically
free trade ana
nowhere near
the actual dif
ference be
Paul Halloa
tween the cost of production at
home and abroad which is
what a good tariff rate should
be. I know at least two highly
placed democratic senators who
are displeased. Labor is begin
ning to grumble also. A. F. of
L.'s Matthew -Woll came out
against it in a statement which
Is supposed to be a forerunner
of labor opposition. There cer
tainly will be a fight and the
outcome is by no seund means
foretellable yet.
The president called for it
as one of "the kit of tools" he
needs to handle postwar trade,
but the republicans are calling
it a monkeywrench. Without
doubt it contrasts strangely with
some of the other tools he asked
for, particularly the proposed
balloonish world bank, which Is
to lend money for the develop
ment of industry abroad.
Under our own foreign loan
and rehabilitation program we
gave money, for example, to
finance the building of a steel
plant in Brazil. For another,
during the AAA days when we
restricted cotton production, the
cotton growing industry in Bra
zil and other countries grew
rapidly.
THIS competition is such that
at a recentl congressional
hearing there was testimony
that cotton, can be produced in
Brazil, Mexico and other South
American countries cheaper
than In the United States. For
others, we have put money into
Mexicd to finance mineral In
dustries which can compete
with us. Indeed, the ujw deal
favors Industrialism of the
world.
Now the new deal argument,
used by Mr. Roosevelt, is the
familiar one heard often from
his new commerce secre'ary,.
Wallace, that as we are a cred
itor country and all the world
owes us (Indeed far moro than
It can ever repay) the tariff
theory must be abandoned at
least 79 per cent abandoned
But the tools in the kit he
has asked for would make us
even more of a creditor nation.
In short his whole policy is a
spend-lend program for foreign
trade the giving of money to
the bank to enable them to build
more competing industries and
the giving of money to the sta
bilization fund to support a fic
titious value for prospective
foreign buying nations, and cut
ting the tariff generally so ev
erything can get into this coun
try. We cannot avoid winding
up out of ' such a proposition
with every nation owing us even
more than it does now.
e e e
WOULD anyone then think
th omtturA nf tha flnnl 9S
per cent of the tariff would help
our creditor position? or would
we not then realize our creditor
danger had merely been dou
bled? Certainly the more we
spend and lend the more they
owe us arid the money comes
from our people.
There are so many problems
to foreign trade that the vast
ness of the subject Is bc.vond
human grasp, at least bevond
mine. But, in any case, the new
world we are coming Into will
Involve wholly different prob
lems than those of oldtlme tariff
walls.
Think, for Instance, of Chi
nese labor costs and the Rus
nians' government production
system, which can value any
thing at any price. Both of
these were not involved seri
ously before, but they may be
come more important than
trade with Britain and Canada
(the two nations the president
mentioned.
More than 1.000 Allied air ,
men, sailors and soldiers were
rescued from the Ei.gllsh Chan
nel by Coast Guardsmen on D
Day.
Flight o Time
Mediord and Jackson Co. His
tory from the files oi the Mail
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years
ago.
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
March 30, 1935
at Was Saturday)
Senate demands quick trial of
NRA. Test cases.
Townsend Old Age pension
plan revised to eliminate mil
lionaires from payments.
Gen. Johnson, former NRA
czar charges "Father Coughlin
Is trying to be a Hitler!"
Fair, with
temperature,
degrees.
frost
High
or freezing
6S, low 41
CCC camp on Roxy Ann near,
Chamber of Commerce is ad
vised. Fishing season to open next
Friday.
Improvements in Snider!
Dairy near completion.
Cleaning firms of city agree
to Increase prices 25 per cent.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
March 30, 192S
Ot Was Monday) '
Total state tax is increased
over two million.
Unsettled with rain.
54, low 36 degrees.
High
Lightning causes $6,000 dam
age at state prison in Salem.
Gordon Kershaw, high school
yell leaders will play comedy
role in school play.
Frost Expert Foyd Young ad
dresses the Kiwanis luncheon.
Clean Up Week to start In city
tomorrow, and women urged to
htjp.
Craters Club to stage parade
tonight.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
TODAY
March 30, 1911
at Was Thursday)
City to have rock pile for
drunks and hoboes.
Central Point to install water
mains and sewer system at cot
OI $123,000.
South Park addition on south
Holly street, containing 130 lots
opened for sale.
Livestock
Portland, Ore., March B0 (UP)
Liveetock Cntlle. 25; calvea, 10. Most
ly a clean-up market. Demand rather
narrow late. Steers and heifers scarce.
?X ? """-cutter cows .steady at
87(98.78. Medium bulla 81v.50wll.25.
Common-medium vealers 1 f 10 14
Good-choice vealers salable'$19lS
Hogs, 25. Demand broad, red sales
ftn'te IUn- Weight, above
11)0 lbs. $15.75. Good sows I5. Good
17 50 ,!eder P'8 Quotable 116.30
Sheep, 80. Quality poor. Few sales
steady. Common-medium w o o 1 e d
lambs 811CM.1. fSnrvl.ohnlM
snlable $15.50616. Common yearlings
ill. Medium ewe 17.80. Good ewes
salable 1808.80.
South San Franelimi. Mavh an
(UP) Livestock Cattle, 25. Nominal.
For the week 878. Steers steady; bulk
good to choice 816 16.00. common
and medium feeder steers 814, heifers
112 30. Low-grade she-stock active,
common cowa 10 1 1 canners and
cuttera S7.5099S0. Calves, 'or weak
43. Steai
10
ly package good 815.50.
100. Firm; load good
Hogs,
oad food agfllh
barrows and gilts 815.78 lightly aort-
ed; medium to good sows $14315. For
week
neccipis j.a0. frompt clear-
ence.
Sheep,
1.200.
bu. nulla. nvnuiMi. v ur wcck
uooa spring iambs 813.25G
15.75, choice quoted 816. Wooled ewes
weak, medium to good f7.50w8.50.
Portland Produce
Portland, March 30 (UPI Whole
salo oroduce markets:
Live poultry Buying prices from
producers: Broilers up to 2 lbs. 31 '4
60c: fryers 2 to 31.!, lbs. 80o lb.: roast
ers over 3 lb lbs. 31.80c lb.: Leghorns
28.30c, colored hens all weights 28.30c,
roosters and atags 163 up.
Live poultry Sell prices to retail
era, stats 18'?20c lb.
Onions Idaho. 3-lnch 8292.10, do
No. 1 local Oregon 82 50-lb. bag.
S. F. DAIRY PRICES
San Francisco, March 30
(U.R) Dairy market:
Butter: 93 score 43, 92 score
42V4, 90 score 42Vi, 89 score
41 V.
Cheese: Loafs 27.9, triplet
27.2.
Eggs: Large grade A 40Vi
medium grade A 37Vi, small
grade A 35Vi, large grade B
37V4.
Francis Scott Key, author of
our national anthem, served as
district attorney in Washington.
D. C, for three successive terms,
1833-41.
MZKSM
W M ri li:.'
7V-yV A'.
wwwv
First: Golden Hour Easter Worship 9:30 a.m.
Second: Victory Hour Easter Worship 11:00 a.m.
Third: Easter Pageant "Symbol of the Cross" 7:30 p.m.
Vested Choir ting at all three Services.
Pastor, Louis C. Kirby, preaches two Bible Sermons.
Reception of new members at both morning Services.
SLATES FESTIVAL
OF EASTER MUSIC
There will be a festival of
Easter music at the First Chris
tian church. Ninth and Oakdale,
Sunday night at 8 p.m. This pro
gram will be presented by the
choir under the direction of Mrs.
Margaret Daniels, minister of
music, Mabel Sims, accompanist.
Personnel of the choir follows:
Sopranos: Eleanor Hamilton,
Elole Wlnklebleck, Joanna Wy
att, Tresa McMannis, Sally Coop
er, Georgia Burnham, Stella
Saxbury, Yvonne Haggard.
Eunice Smith.
Altos: Oletha Olson, Vera
Smith, Leona Rector, Verene
Bailey, Loree (lontieth, Kay
Rice, Shirley Morrow.
Tenors: Louis Centner, Her
bert Burnham, Carl Winklebleck
Basses: John Kirkpatrick,
Floyd Coller, Robert Church,
Dick Hake.
The program will be: piano
prelude, Mabel Sims; hymn, "All
Hall the Power"; Invocation;
anthems, "Alleluia", Heyser,
and "He Was Brought As A
Lamb", Shawker; scripture read
ing, Virginia Hunter; sextette,
"Down in the Lilied Garden",
Wilson, sung by the Mesdames'
Cooper, Winklebleck, Olson
Smith and the Misses Smith and
Montieth.
Anthems, "He Is Risen", Wil
son, "Behold I Show You a Mys
tery", Fory, with incidental
solos by Carl Winklebleck and
Yvonne Haggard; quartet, "Ho
sanna", Granier, sung by Mr
Gentner, Eleanor Hamilton, Ole
tha Olson and Mr. Kirkpatrick;
offertory, solo, "Consider the
Lilies", Scott, sung by Eleanor
Hamilton; anthems, "Praise to
the Lord", Wagner, and "Joy- to
the World", Petrie; benediction
and postlude.
STOCKMAN GETS
30 DAYS IN JAIL
Walter Wooldridge, charged
with permitting stock to run at
large in the Camp White area
was sentenced to 30 days In jail
and fined $25 and costs by Jus
tice of the Peace W. P. Tuckei
this morning. The defendant ha
been up on the same charge be
fore. The complaint was Hied
yesterday following a round-up
of a half dozen head of horses on
land leased to the Antelope
Stock association by the army
During the past ten days, a
number of complaints have been
filed with the sheriff's office
protesting stock at large in vari
ous parts of the county and raid
ing pastures and gardens. Other
complaints are scheduled to be
filed, authorities said. ,
THE GRANGE
Eagle Point Grange
Attorney O. H. Benetson
spoke on the inside operation of
trie Oregon Legislature at Eagle
Point Grange March 20 meet
ing. Mrs. Blossom Flury was
received Into membership. Vis
itors welcomed were Sadie
Frink, Frances Spurlin and Mi
and Mrs. John Peffley from
Sams Valley Grange where Mr.
Peffley is worthy master.
Red Cross collection to date
of $709.50 was announced by
Wm. Perry.
Immediate volunteer help Is
requested to finish the ceiling
in Grange basement before
Tuesday, April 3.
Serving committee for next
meeting. April 3, is Mr. and
Mrs. James Town and Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Hammel.
BIRTHS
ROMILLY To Mr. and Mrs
C. W Trail, March 29, 1945, girl
7 lbs., at Osteopathic Clinic.
STALEY To Mr. and Mrs.
John. 21 Hawthorne. March 29,
1945, a boy, six and one-half
pounds, at Community hospital
Methodism
with
HER RISEN LORD
West Main and Laurel Streets
Four Glorious Easter Services
Easter Sunrise Meeting 6:00 a.m.
European Veteran 1
Returns To States,
Will Be Home Soon
Staff Sgt. George Simmons
has. returned to the united
States alter serving 22 months in
Africa. Italv. France and Eng
land and is hospitalized at Tern-
nle. Tex. Set. Simmons, who
holds the silver star medal for
action In the Italian campaign
and the purple heart for wounds
received in France, has written
relatives that he expects to be
In Medford within the next few
weeks.
Set. Simmons Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. P. E. Simmons, 147
Granite street, Ashland, and his
wife and 22-months-old daughter
Sharon, live on Route 4, Box
379, Medford. The sergeant has
never seen his daughter.
TALENT'S WATER
OUTLOOK BETTER
Irrigation water prospects for
the Talent district have lm
oroved considerably the past
month according to Robert Kent,
district manager, who now fig
ures there will be sufficient
water unless there is a long dry
summer. ' Recent measurements
show 29.5 Inches of snow at
Hyatt Prairie and Emigrant dam
will be full by Saturday night
Manager Kent further reports.
The Talent district, In the early
forecasts, was rated as having
poorer water prospects than
other valley districts.
Representatives of Klamath,
Josephine and Jackson county
interests concerned with irriga
tion the coming season will meet
here Friday, April 6, to make
the final water and stream flow
forecasts for the year. Arch
Work, head of the federal-state
snow surveys has called the
meeting, one of a series through
out the state.
AT
A course in welding, featur
ing electric, acetylene Bnd braz
ing, will be offered at the Med
ford high school shop beginning
Wednesday, April 4. Hours are
from 7 to 9 p. m., three nights
per week. Nights will be ar
ranged to suit convenience of
the majority of the class.
The course, sponsored by the
State Vocational and Education
al Department and the Medford
School System, is planned prl
marily for workers already em
ployed in Industry, who desirt
to increase their usefulness or
advance their status und is not
war production class of the
type formerly given here.
Instructor is Delbert Berg-
man, of Medford. Persons, in
terested should contact E. H.
Hedrick, City Hall, Medford or
call 2157.
Easter Observance
At Sunday School
The First Presbyterian Sun
day school of Medford is plan
ning an Easter program starting
at 10:45 a.m. Sunday. There will
be Easter songs of greeting by
the beginners and primary de
partments followed by recita
tions by pupils in the beginners
department.
"The Call to the Cross" will
be presented by students from
junior and intermediate depart
ments assisted by the junior
choir under the direction of Mrs.
Jean McAllister. '
GOLD HILL MAN DRAWS
FINE IN JUSTICE COURT
James LeRoy Swindles, Gold
Hill, was fined $50 and court
costs yesterday before William
P. Tucker in Justice court on
charge of unlawfully furnishing
beer to a minor. A 90-day jail
sentence was suspended pend
ing future conduct of the de
fendent. Swindles was arrested
March 26 by Robert M. Elder,
juvenile officer.
Uia MaU Tribuna Want Ada.
Marches!
TALENT CORPORAL
TO GIVE ACCOUNT
OF
Paratropoer Cpl. Keith Ar-
graves, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.
W. Argraves, now of Portland,
has arrived in Medford on a 30
day furlough. He is scheduled
to tell some of his experiences
In the high school auditorium
on South Oakdale avenue Satur
day at 3 p. m.
Cpl. Argraves has returned
from 26 months spent In Italian
and German prison camps. He
was with the aerial armada that
made the flight from Landsend.
England, to North Africa, the
longest combat flight on record.
Among his many experiences
is being wounded, escaping from
prison camps three times and
spending months with guerrillas
in northern Italy.
He wears the presidential ci
tation, has two citations from
the British army, one from the
French army and wears the
purple heart. He brings a first
hand account of the North Afri
ca campaign and conditions in
German and Italian prison
camps. The public is invited to
hear him speak.
Cpl. Argraves graduated from
Talent high school and was at
tending Southern Oregon Col
lege of Education when called
into the army early in the war.
Penicillin Found
Trench Mouth Cure
San Diego, Calif-, March 30
(U.R) A new penicillin treatment
for trench mouth which removes
the causative organisms within
24 hours, was disclosed today by
two dental corps officers at San
Diego naval training center.
CHECK FORGER GIVEN
SUSPENDED SENTENCE
James Alton Weathers, 38,
charged with forgery, entered a
plea , of guilty in circuit court
yesterday ana was grantea a sus
pended sentence for one year by
Judge Herbert K. Hanna. Terms
of probation include going to
work, discontinuance of drink
ing and paying back the checks.
Weathers' employer appeared In
his behalf and told the court he
would provide employment
Weathers was accused of forging
and passing a number of checks
in this city.
There's a BiG
DIFFERENCE
IN BUYING
m now
I It hot
RANCHO SOUP
Delicious Tomato
SPECIAL MORNING
MILK CANS .
FRISKIES
Dog Food Cubes
Trupak SPINACH
2Vt Can
GARDEN PEAS
No. 2 Can
MECO CORN
CREAM STYLE
CHOICE QUALITY
COFFEE
knights Templar to
hold easter service
Annual Easter observance of
Malta Commandery No. 4,
Knights Templar, will be held
at Masonic Temple Sunday at
2:30 p.m. The Rev. Harry Han
son will deliver the message and
Mrs. Elsie Strang will be In
charge of music. .
All Knights Templar and fam
ilies and the public is invited to
attend the service.
ADMINISTRATRIX
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned has been appointed
by the County Court of Jackson
County, Oregon, Administratrix
of the Estate of Charles L. Ham
ilton, deceased. All persons hav
ing claims against said estate are
hereby notified to present the
same duly verified to said Ad
ministratrix at the office of Gus
Newbury, U. S. National Bank
Building, Medford, Oregon,
within six (6) months from the
date of this notice.
Dated March 30. 1945.
MARY C. HAMILTON,
Administratrix of the Estate of
Charles L. Hamilton, De
ceased. GUS NEWBURY,
Attorney for Administratrix.
NOTICE AND CITATION
In the County Court of the State
of Oregon for Jackson County.
In the matter of MILDRED
GARANT, Alleged Dependent
Child.
TO ERNEST A. GARANT
GREETINGS:
You are hereby notified and
required to appear in the above
entitled Court within twenty
eight days from the date of the
first publication of this citation
to-wit: on or before April 7
1945. to show cause why the
above named child, Mildred
Garant, should not be decreed
to be a dependent child and com.
mined permanently, wnn au
thority to consent to adoption
to the care of some authorized
child caring agency.
You are further notified mat
In case you fail to answer this
citation and the said child be
adjudged dependent and a tern
porary commitment be made
such commitment may be modi
fied or may be permanent with-
Complete Factory Approved
SAFETY
SERVICE
Chrysler Fac
tory Engineer
ed and Inspect
ed Parts for
Chrysler-
Dodge
Plymouth
Dodge Trucks
L. C. TAYLOR CO.
112 So. Riverside Phone 2965
a-smaaTnajMaaaa
a mm
LARGE, FIRM
LETTUCE
Tender, Coreless
CARROTS
CRISP, CRUNCHY
UPI FESV Good ui
UCLCni Good lor Ycul
8 ALTON SEA
GRAPEFRUIT
4
6
2
2
2
23e
60e
23e
37e
29c
for
Ib.
for
2 No. 2 Cant 9
ib. 25
mm
out further notice to you.
This service or citation by pub
lication is made in accordance
with an order of Circuit Judge
James Crawford, of Jackson
County, Oregon, made and en
tered on the 7th day of March,
1945.
Dated and first published this
9th day of March, 1945.
G. R. CARTER,
County Clerk
NYDAH NEIL
Deputy
Seal of County Court
Jackson County, Oregon.
COY'S
CHICKEN IRS
OPEN SATURDAYS
SUNDAYS and MONDAYS
Serving Fried Chicken
Dinner Parties Served During
Week by Reservation
Phone Gold Hill 251
NO
V DELAY
FOR
FACTORY METHOD
IVRFfAPPIMG
FIRESTONE
STORES
214 So. Riverside Phone 4757
"Dew Kist" Vegetables
FOR HEALTH'S SAKE
2
26
Heeds
2
Bun. jgC
ib. 13'
6
Sunshine
Krispy
CRACKERS
2 lbs.
SOME MORE OF THAT
GOOD MEAT
IT'S A PLEASURE TO EAT!
BEEF SHOULDER
ROAST
GOOD BEEF
Round Steak
TASTY FRESH
STEW MEAT
' AMERICAN
CHEESE
Ib. 23e
Ib. 38"
ib. 23
ib.39e
MINCE j..
MEAT 2 lbs. 4c
v
y
r r
i
r
it