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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1945)
HENRY GALEY OF A new grand Jury was drawn in circuit court this morning during opening session of the May term. A special venire of petit jurors was also drawn. Serving on the grand jury will be Henry C. Galey, Ashland, foreman; Gertrude Stanley, Eagle Point; Leola Faber, Cen tral Point; Allen D. Curry, Med ford; Gertrude Brower, Ashland; Dorothy A. Bennett, Medford and Clyde N. Caton, Ashland. There being no matters for con sideration, the grand jury ad journed for the time being. The special venire was drawn There's 'Tilfa 1J an i rhWMtw to supply additional Jurors from which to select jurymen for the trial of Susie Coy and Maude Coy Robinson versus Vaughn and Ruby Quackenbush which opened in court this afternoon. The "forcible entry and detain er" action was brought by the plaintiffs to force defendants to vacate a Gold Hill restaurant. Drawn on the special venire were Irene Humphrey, Betty Marie Allred, Carl Fichtner, Arthur R. Davis, Mayme Leon ard, William J. Warner, T. J. Hight and Helen Grey, all of Medford. Mrs. Brown's cook started it She quit. But it was a real estate agent a woman as it happened who did the rest It was be cause of her a Navy wife and two children found a home exactly one jump from a park benclju And, altogether, nine others ! You tea, when Mrs. Brown's cook left, it finally became pos sible to convince Mrs. Brown she couldn't keep that big house going single-handed. Miss Green, the agent, induced her to sell by finding her a small apartment she knew would be vacated because Mr. Black was being transferred to another dry. With a fourth baby coming, the Whites were -desperate for more room. Miss Green, the agent, flashed them word about Mrs. Brown's house. That's how come the Navy wife, through Miss Green, got the Whites' flat In this many-sided deal, Mist Green arranged a bank loan, provided the latest government information about remodeling, somehow managed transporta tion for these clients on almost no gasoline and kept tht whole works moving with thai fine salesmanship that is really service. Wo hoto to think what shape the bousing situation would be in but for the help fulness of the real estate peo ple. In the course of making a living, they've made it possible for thousands to say "There's no place like borne" instead of just "There's no place." Nothing Is simple any more. Yet few things are more com plex than the housing situation. So many individuals ate in volved and so many war-time pressures. We speak for many thankful clients when we say the real estate agents are doing an important job in bang-up fashion. IfUswMiirfsnt V MM I w Udmmd a.Wjiarf MiMtOI mmm n I mi asaaa a saai Livestock Portland, Ore., May 28 (UP) Livestock: Cattle 1,000. Calves 250. Active; fed steers 25 -35c higher; other classes strong to 25c higher; bulls slow, steady; vealers 50c higher; good choice fed steers 17.50-18.00; top 18.00 equal to record high; few stockers i.uu; meatum-gooa neuers ia.uu 16.00: cutters down to 9.00: canner- cutter cows 7.00-10.00; medium-good beef cows 11.50-13.50; medium-good sausage bulls 13.00-13.75; good-choice vealers 13 50-16.00; beef type to 17.00. Hogs 250. Steady; butchers 15.75; sows la.uu; leeaer pigs m.ou-zu.w. Sheeo 900. Steady to strong; Kood choice spring lamps 13.75; wooled old crop lambs up to 14.25; medium-good grades iii.ou; snora lamcis uown; good shorn ewes up to 6.75. South San Francisco, May 28 ITJP, fUSDAl Livestock: Cattle: salable 500. Slow; steady to weak. Few medium frass steers 14.50, odd head is.au. ixiaa lots gooa steers ana neu ers scarce, mostly grassy she-stock. Younff sood cows Quoted 13.00-13.50. few loads medium grass cows 12.50, canners and cutters $7.00-9.00. Load uniformly good 1525 lb. beef bulls 13.00. Calves: 25. Steady. Good to choice 300-350 id. siaugnter caives 14.50-15.50. Hosts: Salable 150. Firm: few Deck- ages good and choice 200-300 lb. bar rows and gilts 15.75; odd good sows Sheep: Salable 2.000. Lambs slow. Nothing scaled. Shorn ewes active, largely 2.50-6.75. Chicago, May 28 UP (WFA Livestock: Hogs active, fully steady; good and choice barrows and gilts 140 lbs. and up at 14.75 ceiling; good and choice sows at 14.00. Cattle. Calves largely fed steers and vearllng run; trade active, steady mostly; not as erratically high as late lsst week; bulk 15.50 to 17.50; top 17.85 on weighty steers, 17.50 on yearnngs ana if. in uh sto heifers fully steady: cows strong to zac nigner; nuns mwy heavy sausage offerings 13.00 down. load good to mostly choice around 107 lbs fed clipped lambs mixed No. 1 Bna ian muni - gooa ana ciioiw "i -and 3 pelts 15-15.25: two decks mixed medium io cnoiuw Portland Produce VEGETABLES: r.hhno California S5 Der crate. Local, S4. . Cucumbers Local, hothouse. 21 .9c lb. . . Eggplant cauroroia izrsc o. n?finLocal. No. 1. 35c: New Mex- lco. 40c. Pepper Mexican io.bc. Radishes Local spring BOe. Dhuharb Field Grown, local S1.25- 85- Turnip, Local S1.50-1.6S. Cm WBnlrv Mav 2B (UP) Dairy Market: . Butter: 93 .core 43. 92 score 42',b. 90 score 42".. 89 acore 4'.'t. Cheese: ix)ais z.w. "-j, Esks: Lame grade A 40'i. medium m. 4 a a 7i. .mail srade A 351., large grade B 37l,4. . Central California Eggi: Larg" A 42, medium grade A 39, amall grade A 37, large grade B 39. Nve Nlen Eggs: Large grade A 42, medium grade A 39, small grade A 37. Chicago Wheat TO GO ON TRIAL Chicago, Mar 28 Fange: Open July .,167'i Sept. ..IBS'. Dec. ..l2a Mar -162 (UP) Grain High 169', 165 1.4 164 y, 164 Low 167 162 162 162 Close 168-167', 163 'i-'i 163",-!, 162',. Wall Street VnrV Maw 28 (U.R) Strength in merchandising .h.r.. urtcH the stock market to a further new high for more than seven years In forenoon trading today, volume was moderate. The mercantile group took Its fnm Snare-Roebuck. UD more than a point to a new high since 1928, on Wan street ru mnn rtt an Imnendine stock split - up. Montgomery w a r a, T on Rrvnnt. CJ. K. rvinnev t-o., and J. J. Newberry had gains of a point or more each. Philip Morris, a feature Sat urday on announcement of a 2 for 1 splitup, ran up IV points In ns hlirh at 115V4. Chrvsler resumed its advance after a mo mentary setback! "n" gained more than a point. POLE RESUMES POST London, May 28 (U.R) Lt. Gen. Tadeusz Komorowskl has resumed the post of commander in chief of the Polish armed forces, the Polish government in exile here announced today. Paris, May 28 U.R) U. S. Su preme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson said today that the first Nazi war criminals may be placed on trial "within a few weeks." Jackson, chief American pro secutor of Axis war criminals, would not say who the first de fendants would be. Neither could he fix an exact date for the start of the trials. He said he was engaged In preparing evidence for the trials, which he said he hoped would be heard by an interna tional military tribunal repre senting the four principal pow ers the United States, Russia, Britain and France. London, May 28 (U.R) Two more Nazi bigwigs, one of them the successor to Reichsmarshal Herman Goering as commander of the German air force, were dead by their own hands today. The two latest Nazis to follow Himmler in suicide were Mar shal Robert Ritter von Greim, who succeeded Goering as com mander of the Luftwaffe April 26, and Dr. Hugo Jury, gauleiter of lower Austria and former social welfare minister in the notorious Seyss-Inquart govern ment of Austria. 8T.I T Alumni of St. Mary's Academy are holding the annual meeting tonight at the academy auditor ium at which time graduating seniors in the 1945 class will be welcomed into the group. In ad dition the group will observe the 100th anniversary of the Sisters of the Holy Name. A musical program will fea ture Mrs. Eve Prentice's accor dion band and solos by Betty Mae Walker and Bob Wright. All St. Mary's alumni are urged to attend the meeting. , Heading the committee on ar rangements are Mrs. John O'Nell and Mrs. Ronald Baker. Serving on the refreshment committee are Mrs. Madelon Klinefelter and Mrs. Larry Espey and War ren Loffer is chairman of the entertainment committee. Cabbage, which contains vita mins A and C, is the most pop ular vegetable, next to potatoes, In the United States, according to leading nutritionists. It packs a lot of food value in a small place. Us Mail Tribune Want Ada. NOW Is the Time - TO ORDER - GREEN FIR SLABS DIAL 2123 Per Lead of 300 Cu. Ft. DIAL 2123 Company LOCALS To Attend Meeting Four Jackson county women will at tend the annual meeting of the Home Economics Extension serv ice state council to be held in Corvallis June 1 and 2. Attend ing will be Mrs-. Jason Ottinger, Talent, chairman of the county home economics extension com mittee; Mrs. A. E. Stevens, Phoe nix; Mrs. 'A. T. Lathrop, Central Point and Miss Marian Farreil, county home demonstration agent. Mrs. Stevens and Mrs. Lathrop are members of the executive committee of the state council. Miss Farreil will con tinue to Portland from the Cor vallis meeting for a vacation and her work in the county will be carried on by Mrs. Virginia Wait in her absence. Notice of Annual School Meeting ixuiiir, iO rttKtrJY U1VEN, in compliance with Sec. 111-908, O.C.L.A.. to the legal voters of School District No. 49, of Jack son County, State of Oregon, that the ANNUAL SCHOOL MEET ING of said District will be held at Senior High School; to begin at the hour of 2:00 o'clock p. m., and to close at 7:00 p. m., on the third Monday of June, being the 18th day of June, A. D., 1945. This meeting is called for the purpose of electing one director for a term of one year and one director for a term of five years and the transaction of business usual at such meeting. Dated this 26th day of May, 1945. R. E. GREEN, Chairman Board of Directors. Attest: REBECCA JENSEN, District Clerk. German's View Atrocity Victims -J'.'..p ....... .i.-.i, . ,.w ( Acme 1 elephoto) German civilians are forced to walk past bodies of 30 Jewish womei starved to death by German BS troops In a 300-mile march across Czecho slovakia. Signal Corns Dhoto- LT. FREE OF PRISON Lt. Thompson (Tommy) White of Medford, bomber pilot who was taken prisoner by the Ger mans Jan. 11, 1944, has been re leased, a Red Cross message to his brother, Wilton White, Route 4, Box 39, stated this morning. No other details were received. Lt. White suffered a broken leg and other injuries when he parachuted from his bomber plane at the time he was shot down but was treated and recov ered, messages from him stated. The last letter, written in No vember, was received in Febru ary of this year. His father, Charles White, resides in Portland. In 1944 Chicago lprt '" - tion's markets with receipts of 927,33 tons of meat a.. truck. Omaha was second with 889,877 tons. Fort Devens, Mass., May 28. (U.R) Pvt. Joseph McGee of Worcester, back on army duty today after the revocation of his court-martial sentence, said the German prisoners "deserved it, and I'd dp it again." McGee said he had no com plaints against the army and would remain in it at least until the end of the Japanese war. The 23-year-old soldier, who was dishonorably discharged and given two years at hard labor for striking nine German prison ers of war in France, received a hero's welcome when he ar rived at -his home in Worcester yesterday. He spent the evening with his family and friends and returned to active duty here at midnight. Closing time for Classined Ads 8:30 a. m. too LAte to laasauy u:ib p m ffl MODESS WITH THE PROVED 7 iMAGHt A 0SODORANT SALP V VRY MOO ESS NAPKfNfANO LABTSTS SHOW TS ASTOMSHWGLY I ffCTIVf MOD ESS fS SOfrR AND SAR, TOO M FOR THAT Bf BARGAN BOX" QUCKlSAVeS t3f -1 N EXTRAORDINARILY EFFECTIVE-accordlng to 25 tests by lr partial laboratory. PRAISED 8Y THOUSANDS after year's tryout. You'll cheer, toot NO BOTHER with separate powder, no fuss. ( SOFTER I SAFER I S out of 4 women found Modess softer to touch in nationwide poll. 209 nurses, in hospital tests, found Modest safer, less likely to strike through than nationally known layer-type napkins. COSTS NO MORE. Big Bargain Bos even saves you 1. Try Itl 1'Jt.V v gbt me etG bargaw box sorren. safih sanitary ADOLF RESPECTED STALIN'S ABILITY; ALSO HATED HI Berchtesgaden, May 28 (U.R) Adolf Hitler respected Josef Stalin, but he certainly didn't like him, the Fuehrer's short hand reporters said today. When the Red army would score another ictory over the Wehrmacht, Hitler would rant: "That old schwein put it over again. That fellow has strong nerves." Schwein means pig. Gerhardt Herrgeselle and other official shorthand report ers from Hitler's headquarters said that Hitler never wanted to meet Stalin, even when Ger many and Russia had diplomatic relations with each other. Hitler reportedly often said that if it hadn't been for Stalin "Russia would have been fin ished in 1941." Contrarily, Hit ler believed until April 22, when he finally admitted that war was lost, that he still could beat Rus sia. The stenographers said that at least three times a day in the weeks before the Russians' final offensive, Hitler said: "It is my holiest conviction that the Russians will suffer the greatest defeat in history on the Oder." They said that Hitler was very angry when Field Marshal Fried rich Von Paulus let himself be taken prisoner at Stalingrad. He thought Von Paulus should have shot himself in preference to captivity. Hitler, perhaps significantly, Monday. May 28, I94S MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE THRES said, "I, myself, would have taken a pistol and shot myself." Again last April, he was quoted as saying, "If ever I am in danger of being captured by the Russians, I shall take a pistol and shoot myself." Sergeant Bathes For Camp Callers Camp Bowie, Tex (U.R) SSgt. Richard Earle thinks he should get a medal for devotion to duty. He says he doesn't mind suf fering the wear, tear and horror of the battlefield. But he thinks things went a little too far when he was or dered to spend the day demon strating how the GI washes for gaping visitors at Camp Bowie. Closing time for Classified Ada 8:30 a. in. Too Late to Classify 13:15 p. ro. We haye 100 years of faith in the strength of that little ring this year of New York Life's 100th birthday, more than a million and a half wedding rings symbolize the beginning of family Lib for young American couples. These simplo, precious wedding rings reflect the same high-hearted faith in the future which has characterized American families throughout New York Life's 100 eventful years. New York Life shares the faith of today's courageous young couples. Its 100 years of experience and sta bility are dedicated to helping pro vide security and happiness for many of these new American families a and for many more families to come. New York Life is Mutual Com. pany Founded in 1845. Home Office: 51 Madison Ave.,NewYorklO,N.Y. NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY PROTECTING THE FAMILY SERVING TOE NATION 1 56 89 MUCINS CONTAININO A O10D0KANT only