Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 16, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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    BUTLER RESIGNS
i SECRETARYSHIP
JiF.SiL.ASSN.
Attorney 0. H. Bengtson Is
Named Temporary Secre
tary; Butler Going to K. F.
.TO
Yamdshita Enters AfraignrnTnt Court
CUT OFFICIALS
Tu.idar. Oci. IS, 1945
MEDFORD MAIL-TRIBUNE THREE
SLUM BILLS WANTING
Chicago (U.PJ American cities
izatlon devoted to urban plan
ning. Many of the bills now
pending before state legislatures
throughout the country fall
short of adequate planning stan
dards, the Institute said.
FRIDAY AT
AT
must have state legislation
which assures local government
control if they hope to do a
sound job of rebuilding slum
TILE CHAMBER
ISON'L
areas, according to the Urban
Land Institute, an Independent
Closlnf time for Classified Adi 8:30
a m. Too Late to Classify 12:13 p. ra.
Please rememoer
research and educational organ
If". 54H I
Arnel P. Butler, for the past
eight years secretary and direc
tor of the Jackson County Fed
eral Savings and Loan Associa
tion, has announced his resigna
tion to become vice president of
the First Federal Savings and
Loan Association of Klamath
Falls. He will assume his new
duties November 1.
Attorney O. H. Bengtson, who
has been an attorney for the as
sociation for the past several
years, has been named director
and temporary secretary of the
local association to serve until
a permanent secretary and di
rector is selected by the board of
directors.
Mr. Bengtson, prominent in
fraternal and civic activities in
Jackson County, is one of Jack
son County's representatives in
mm
ma.
lot
VOL
IV,
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MT10NU DISTILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK 5. N. Y.
85.8 FR00F . 51 KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY
fx.
I I't
Attorney O. H. Bengtson
(above) has been appointed a di
rector and temporary secretary
of the Jackson County Federal
Savings and Loan association,
effective November 1. He will
assume the duties of Arnel P.
Butler who has resigned to ac
cept the vice presidency of the
First Federal Savings and Loan
association of Klamath Falls.
the legislature. He has engaged
in law practice in Medford for
the past 12 years, during which
time he has been connected with
the Jackson County Federal
Savings and Loan Association.
Continues Practice
Attorney Bengtson will con
tinue his general practice in
Medford, with offices in the
Loan Association building.
The Jackson County Federal
Savings and Loan Association
has been engaged in savings and
home financing since 1D09 and
is one of the largest financial
institutions in Jackson County.
Officers and directors are all
well known business and profes
sional men of this county.
Mr. Butler has been associat
ed with the association for the
past 22 years. The directors
were high in praise of his serv
ices and expressed regret in ac
cepting his resignation. He is
the son of Mrs. J. H. Butler of
this city. His father, the late
J. H. Butler, was for many years
operator of the Medford Furni
ture and hardware Co., and
widely known in business cir
cles in Southern Oregon. Mr.
Butler is a member of the Ma
sonic Lodge and the Medford
Post of the American Legion.
Mrs. Butler and the Butler's
son and daughter. Bob and Ann,
will remain in Medford at their
home at 28 North Barneburg
Road until living accommoda
tions are secured in Klamath
Falls. Mrs. Butler is head of
the mathematics department of
the Medford High School and
both children are students in
Medford Senior high school.
Medford Liberee
Is Due to Arrive
In San Francisco
Dave Osborn, former Medford
resident taken prisoner by the
Japanese when Wake Island tell
to the enemy Dec. 24, 1941, is
to arrive in San Francisco today
or tomorrow aboard the trans
port Dickman, according to rela
tives, His parents arrived bare
from Portland earlier this week
and were joined by Osbern's
wife, Beulah, and the three con
tinued to San Francisco to meet
the released man.
Osborn, employed in construc
tion work on Wake when war
was declared, was a prisoner
from the time the island fell
until his release when American
troops occupied the Japanese
mainland.
Us. Mall Tribune Wan' Ads.
Call For Bids on Warrants
Willow Springs School District
14 will offer for sale a series of
five negotiable interest bearing
warrants payable one annually.
Four at S669.99 and one at
S670.01. These warrants to be
dated Odtober 30, 1945. Sealed
bids will be received by Mrs.
Robert H. Field, Clerk, Central
Point, Oregon, Route 1. Bids
are asked on both principal and
interest rate. Bids will be re
ceived up to 7 p. m., October 30,
1945.
Mrs. Robert H. Field,
Clerk District 14.
Jackson County Mining asso
ciation, newly organized group,
will meet Friday, Oct. 19, at the
Jacksonville Chamber of Com
merce hall it was announced to
day by Russell A. Mitchell, di
rector. Anyone interested in pro-J
motion of the mining industry
is invited to attend.
The new group completed or
ganization and elected officers
at a meeting held here in Sep
tember. Floyd K. Dover is presi
dent of the new group, Ted Har
lan is vice-president and Don
Stansell is secretary - treasurer.
Directors are Russell A. Mitchell,
H. P. McDonald, Jr., Fred Scott,
B. J. Hanson and Joe Thomas.
Purpose of the new organiza
tion is "to promote interest in
mining In this county, to aid
small operators by interesting
capital, to protect the mining in
dustry of the county from fur
ther encroachment of rights or
restrictive laws by federal or
state governments and to sup
port candidates, regardless of
party affiliation, who will work
for the aims and purposes of the
organization," according to Di
rector Mitchell.
Urqe Gold Hike
At the last meeting the group
went on record as favoring a
rise in the price of gold, to per
mit gold producers to sell on the
world market, and the use of
hard money in the United States.
Speakers for the meeting were
Gus Walker, president of the
Josephine County association,
and J. P. Hall, editor of the
California Mining Journal and
president of the Western Mining
Council. Hall told of the efforts
of the Western Mining council
for national recognition of the
importance of western mines and
minerals, for the establishment
of a steel industry for the west
and for relaxation of several fed
eral restrictive measures which
hamper mining and mine fi
nancing in the west. ,
Livestock
Portland, Ore., Oct. 16 (UP) Live
stock: Cattle 150, calves 35. Active, steady
nt Monday's advance. Few good steers
15.75; cutter common grades 9.00
12.50; canner -cutter cows, 6.50-8.00;
fat dairy type cows, 8.50.9.00; good
tjcei cows Monday iz uu-iv.au; com-mon-pood
sausage bulls 8.50-10.75;
Rood btef bulls to 11.25. Good-choice
vealers salable 13.00-14.00.
Hogs 100. Active, steady. Barrows
and gilts, 15.H0; sows 15.05; good
choice lecder pigs salable 17.50-18.50.
Sheep 350. Active, steady at Mon
day's advance. Good-choice wooled
lambs Jaifcely 12.75, extreme top Mon
day 13.0U; common-medium grades
10.00-11.00; good ewes salable 4.00
4 50.
South San Francisco, Oct. 16 (UP)
( USDA)
Cattle 125. Steers and heifers
steady. One load good Bteers 16.50:
few good heifers 14.50-15.00; good
range cows quoted 12.50-12.75; odd
head temmon to medium dairy bred
cows, 10.00-11.00; cutters B. 00-9.00:
canners 6.00-7 00' common to good
sausage bulls 10 00-12 00; calves sal
able .io: steady. Few food to choice
slaughter calves. 13.50-14.00.
Hogs 100. Firm. Good to choice
00-325 lb. barrows and gtlu 15.80;
odd good sows 15.05.
Sheep 300. Very active; firm to 25c
higher on good to choice. Broad In
quiry early. Late Monday. Several
decks 90-92 lb. lambs 14.00. Today.
400d lambs brought 13.75. Few pack,
uges medium 11.75-12.0; ewes quoted
2.50-5.25
Chicago, Oct. 16 (UP) (WFA)
Livestock:
Hofs. 5,500. Active fully steady;
good and choice barrows and gilts
140 lbs and up at 14.85 ceilings;
good ar.d choice sows at 14.10.
Cattle; 7.000. Calves: 1.000. All
slaughter classes steady, but only
steers, yearlings and heifers grading
top-good or better selling actively;
approximately 20 loads fed steers and
yearlings topped at 18.00 Including
'wo londs 990 lb. yearlings; most
choice led steers and yearlings 17.50
18.00. good to near-choice kind 15.75-
17.25.
Sheep. 2.500 Slaughter lambs bare
ly active. 25 to 35 cents higher, good
and choice grade 14.50 to 14.85, bucks
1 00 less, common sort-out lambs
mostly 11.00 to 11.50, bucks included.
Portland Produce
Portland. Oct. lfl (UP) Wholesale
market prices:
Chickens Buying Driee of whole.
salers- Boilers 1 to 2 Ins., 25c; 2 to
i2 !.. 20c; colored hens, 22c. Roast
ers, Kings, 14C.
Corn Orejron, 1.75-2.00 box.
Peppers No 1, tl.75 orange box.
Use Mall Tribune Want Ads.
or Generations
A Great
Centuciy Ws6ey "
m
BOURBON WHISKEY -A BLEND
49 GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS
(Acme Telephoto)
Japanese General TomoyukI Ynmashlta, flanked by American MPs, en
ters the courtroom at the High Commissioner's residence In Manila,
Philippine Islands, where he was arraigned on charges of being a war
criminal by an American Military Commission. Photo by Andy Lopez,
Acme photographer.
Chicago Wheat
ChUMgo. Oct. 18 (UP)
Wheat Open Htivh Low
Close
1.7ti'4
1.74',
1.68
1.66H
Dec.
1.76 M7's 1.7H's
1.74i 1.74i 1.73
1.68a 168 1.6714
1.67!i l.G7Vj 1.60!.
May
July
Sept.
S. F. DAIRY PRICES
San Francisco, Oct. 16 (U.R)
Dairy market: .
Butter: 93 score 43V4, 92 score
43, 90 score 4234.
Cheese: Loafs 28.2, triplets
27.2.
Eggs: Large grade A 55'
medium grade A 50V4, small
grade A 4216, large grade B
4814.
Wall Street
New York. Oct. 16 (U.R)
Steel shares led a late recovery
in the stock market today that
Hfted prices moderately from
the day's early lows. Toward the
close prices were irregular.
The steels shot up fractions to
more than a point, reaching new
highs for the year and longer,
in the face of a pessimistic re
port of the American Iron &
Steel Institute that the current
soft coal mine strikes may force
the mills to cut production to f35
per cent of capacity by Monday.
Much of the forenoon and
early afternoon soiling was at
tributed by informed market
quarters to profit-taking, since
there has been little if any news
sufficiently bearing to attract
selling Commentators have em
phasized that any adjustment
now would only be natural aft
er the recent extended price rise
to a new peak since early
March, 1937.
Preliminary closing Dow
Jones stock averages: Industrial
185.49 off 0 02; Railroad 59.89,
off 0 21; Utility 35.34, up 0.16;
65 stocks 68.86 off 0.03.
Sales totaled 1 630,000 shares
compared with 1,6.10,000 yester
day. Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American Tel & Tel 184
Anaconda 38Vt
Chrys'er 125
Curti.s Wright 8
Cxene.-al Electric 48'4
General Motors 74
Montgomery Ward ...... 68',4
Penn R. R 40'4
Phillips Petroleum 52
J C. Penney 128
Radio 18
Southern Pacific 52
Standard O'l of Cal 44
Texas Gulf Sulphur . 49V4
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN Ts7HouUKf'pie4A
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN XTS'TtU'uaHf'P'iedi
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN T$'7HolHiKf0?ie4&.
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN ITS 7oiHt(f'?rei6
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN irsoWWte
BREAD IS AT ITS BEST
WHEN ITS tttotHtHf ?XC4A
BREAD IS AT ITS
vr
j j i
Transamerlca 19
United Aircrafts 2814
U. S Rubber 70,4
U. S Steel 80 V 4
DISEASE TAKES
HEAVY TOLL OF
London U.R) If the mining
industry continues to lose man
power at the present rate there
will be no miners in 20 years
and Britain will become a third
rate agricultural country, ac
cording to Arthur Horner, pres
ident of the South Wales Miners
Federation,
Horner urged that the Indus
try be made attractive to the
youth of the country and free
from industrial disease, particu
larly silicosis and pneumoconlo.
sis, which affects men in the
Welsh anthracite coalfields.
He said every youth entering
the Industry should be medical
ly examined and if liable to
contract the disease must be
given alternative employment.
More doctors are needed to
make the examinations and the
government should take the re
sponsibility of training the dis
abled man for some other suit
able work.
A resolution has been pnssed
by the South Wales Miners Fed
eration expressing concern at
the large and growing number
of men suspended from the in
dustry through contacting the
disease and calling on tho gov
ernment to establish suitable
methods to enable the men to
resume useful productive lives.
Statistics show that in the
past five years there have been
64.1 applications for death cer
tificates and 7,465 disablement
certificates.
ROLLS DRESSINGS AT 82
New Orleans (U.R) Bernard
Romain, 82, has rolled 51,000
wound dressings by hand as his
contribution to the war effort.
Romain works seven to eight
hours a day at a small table
overlooking his second -story
porch. He estimates that It
takes 50 hours to roll 1,000
dressings.
BEST
.snuff wr
CAKES AND
Mm
?JbuOf.'?M44 PASTRIES
Members of the city council
and city officials were enter
tained by city firemen at noon
yesterday with a venison lun
cheon in the blue room of the
fire hall. The luncheon followed
a demonstration of the new city
pumper which was tested last
week by a representative of the
American La France company,
manufacturer of the machine
and an insurance representative.
Meeting requirements of the
representatives, the truck picks
up and delivers 1,000 gallons of
water per minute and can con
tinue at that rate for at least
three hours, Roy Elliott, fire
chief, said. The very latest
model, the pumper has four
man cab and 1,750 feet of hose
with four hose connections. At
present the truck is taken to oil
fire calls in the city and it Is
fully equipped with the latest
fire fighting equipments roof
ladder and a 20-foot extension
ladder.
Attending the luncheon were
Mayor C. A. Meeker, Councilman
Tom Bradley, Henry Herman,
Harvey Fields, Harold Fry and
City Superintendent Frank Rog
ers, City Attorney Frank P.
I-arrell and Police Chief Clatous
McCredie.
LIGHT RAINS NOT
T
Light rains fell over the val
ley last night and today but it
was not believed the storm
would hamper pear harvesting
according to C. B. Cordy, assist
ant county agent.
Picking of Boscs, Cornice and
Winter Nellis are now in final
stages and harvesting Is exptct
ed to be over by Nov. 1. Many
plants are storing Boscs and
other varieties to be packed
later.
Long stretch of Indian sum
mer weather here has greatly
aided harvesting of the record-
breaking crop. Clarence. Pan-
key, of the Reter Fruit com
pany and long time local resi
dent, reports he has never seen
a fall so favorable for pears.
CONCHIES FADE UNDER
JEERS OF SERVICE MEN
Washington, Oct. 18 (U.R)
Under the Jeers of a dozen sol
diers, sailors and ex-servicemen,
a group of pickets today Ceased
parading in front the Justice De
partment on behalf of conscienti
ous objectors In federal prisons.
Police said the pickets left
quietly and that there was no vio
lence. "We just told them to get
out and they did," a young ex
GI said.
YOUR FROZEN
LOG
At the Polar-Cold Company's New Locker Plant
in the Heart of Medford's East Side Shopping
Center.
100 More NEW LOCKERS Available
The Demand Was So Great, We Added Another
Hundred of Those Handy, Easy-to-Reach Lock
ers for the Late Comers. Order Now if You Need
One and Move Right In!
Expert Butcher Service-Cutting and Wrapping
Phone 5990
Office Hours 9 A.M. lo 5 P.M.-Locksr Hours 9 A.M. lo 10 P.M.
THE POLAR-GOLD CO.
9 Hawthorne Ave.
Your child needs a
special laxative.,.
FLETCHER'S CASTORIA!
ill f;-o
Adult laxatives may be too harsh
for a child's delicate system.
Fletcher's Castoria is the laxative
to use because it, is made especially
for children.
It's safe and gentle as a child's
laxative should be and it works
thoroughly and effectively.
OeC FUtcftar's Castoria at your
drugstore today. Look for thm
grmmn band and laboratory con
trol num6ron tha package,
Alwayt tak, a laxaUoe only at directed on
tnt package or by your phyitctan.
CASTORIA
Th. origin and genun.
ARE READY
NO
There are no harsh drugs In
Fletcher's Castoria. It will not causa
griping or discomfort.
Moreover,, Fletcher's Castoria
is pleasant-tasting. Children like it,
so you don't have to fight with
your child to get it dowo-
f'WOliM.. : f Si
""" .si
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FOOD