Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 23, 1945, Page 6, Image 6

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SIX MEDFORD MAIL-TRIBUNE
MEDFORDWTRIBUNE
Bverrone in Southern Oregoa
Reede the Mali Trlbim,r
Daily Ixeept Saturday
Puhllfhed by
-M Nrth flF St Phon. SMI
BflpMIT W.
RUHU editor.
ERNEST ft. GILSTR,
Af Manag
HERB GREY, Adverttalng Mljr.
ir t, , .t-Avj uinani Editor
ARTHUR PERRY, Sunday Ed'1.0'
MRS. OLIVE STARCHER Sou. Editor
GERAL1J LAlllAMt i.uwv -
An Independent Nwipaper.
Entered aa aecond clai mavter i
Medford. Oreaon. under Act m
Mart i, J";.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
bally and Sunday on year .7 SO
Dally and Sunday elx montha 4 00
Dally and Sunday three moe. 110
Dally and Sunday one month. 73
By Carrier In Advance Medtord,
Aahland. central nt-. . .i
vllle. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Talent, and
Dally and Sunday one year. .. 00
uaii ana HunaaT ii""'"
All terma caah In advance.
Official Papur of the City of Medford
oiriclal raper oi . i
United Preee Full Leaied Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
Of CIRCULATIONS
Advertising
nx Repretentatlva
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMrAWl.
INC.
De
troit. San rtanelaco, Loa Angelea, Se
attle. Portland. St Louie. Atlanta.
Vnrouw;rt B. C.
MmU
0tClOflj
PAPER
SO UK II 01
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Parry
The future was never darker,
H. G. Wells, British author, rays
"The world is at the end of its
tether," and the "Crack of doom
nears . . . with no way out,
around or through It." On top
of this, Paul Mallon, columnist,
predicts an "economic hell" with
everybody starving Is Just
around the corner. It was a
great world while It lasted,
e e
The first signs of Christmas
have shown up. The small boy
element (four to six) have start
ed advising fond Papas they
want Santa Claus to bring them
a football the kind the big boys
use.
e e e
"Two of those Tiata' the ladles
wear got tangled up and had to
be removed before they could be
separated. It occurred to us that
they might be mounted and hung
over the mantel Just like a
couple of locked antlers to show
to all comers." (Maxlne Buren
In Salem Statesman.) Madame,
in your younger days did you
ever get your hair-net caught on
a beau's coat button?
e e e
What this neck of the weeds
needs Is a rain that will leave
the ground soaked and soggy
like the Klamath Falls football
field for "The game of the year."
e e
There are capitalistic rumors
flashing around Europe that
Premier Stalin of Russia has a
"bad heart," medically speaking,
and is not long for this world.
There are also reports Josef will
relinquish a number of official
positions. This will be no great
sacrifice, as he Is everything but
postmaster at Moscow.
e e e
SIGNS OF THE TIMES
(Kansas City Star)
"Paul Jones says he Is hav
ing a sign printed for his
Lyons News office, reading:
'Don't abuse the editor, you
may be crazy yourself some
day.' "
e e
The wood that should have
been cut last August while try
ing to catch a fish was not In
the woodshed this morning
This lack of preparedness enured
any number of piscatorial en
thusiasts to look at their friendly
fireplaces and shiver.
e e e
Astronomers report the dls
covery of a nest of 300 billion
stars in the general direction of
the Milky Way. As there Is al
ready a surplus of stars and no
meed for 300 billion more, the
public should take tills news
calmly.
e e e
"MORE VIOLETS DUE IN
MOVIE STRIKE." (Hdllne fx
change.) They turned out to be
a tender brickbat.
e e e
Excuses are now offered by
Washington for not removing
butter rationing. The excuses
are as thin as tl butter is cut
e
ENTIRELY TOO HUMAN
"Mr. Truman shoots from the
hip too often without taking
careful aim, lie sometimes Is
sues statements on vital sublects
without adequate study of the
issues Involved. He has sur
rounded himself with Missouri
cronies who are 'good guys' ard
loyal friends, but men with ex
tremely limited backgrounds and
little or no experience in govern
ment. His longing to prove that
his rise from haberdashery clork
to President of the United
States has not Interfered whh
his being a 'regular fellow' is
certainly not objectionable in It
self, but docs lead to some curi
ous conduct for a President."
(The Progressive).
Eight southwestern states
spent an a vera Re of $8.43 per
capita In 1041 for state highway
maintenance.
Tuesday. Oct 23. I84S
Panama Canal Padlock
Whether wartime leases to the United States
of two Ecuadorian land sites, maintained by Uncle
Sam as defense bases since 1942, will be extended
into an era of peace will be considered at a special
session of Ecuador's congress in November. The
bases are at Salinas, on Ecuador's Santa Elena penin
sula, and on one of the smaller islands of the South
American republic's Galapagos group, 600 miles west
ward in the Pacific.
Current dispatches point out the strategic mili
tary position of both sites. Suitable locations for
naval stations to serve in the defense of the Manama
Canal are scarce on the Pacific side compared to the
many on the Atlantic side
dorian sites are among tne
e e
THE Santa Elena peninsula forms Ecuador's west-
1 ernmost mainland tip, jutting westward at the
southern end of the republic's coast, says the National
Geographic Society. It is
from the Panama Canal, 160 mile3 south of the Equa
tor and 75 miles by rail west of Guayaquil, Ecuador's
chief port.
Salt, sulphur and pitch are taken from the ground
around Salinas, long popular as an ocean resort town.
Enough petroleum to meet Ecuador's needs has been
extracted and refined in
decades. The climate is pleasant through the latter
half of each vear. but humid and enervating from
January to May. Indian tribes people the land, which
is barren and desertlike in
equatorial forests close by
THE Galapagos islands
miles southwest of the
a total area about half that
ber five principal islands and numerous others, taper
ing in size down to mere pin-points of rock. Volcanic
in origin, they range to one mile in height and provide
manv. well-sheltered anchorages. Isabella (Albe
marle) Island, on the west, holds half of the group's
area. San Cristobal (Chatham) Island, on the east,
is the seat of Ecuador's governing officials. The
population, farmers and fishermen, number less than
one per square mile. .
Known for centuries as the haunt of buccaneers,
the islands gained fame as a paradise for naturalists
after Charles Darwin published "The Origin of
Species." Darwin had visited the Galapagos group
for five weeks in 1835. at the age of 22, and had
thoroughly catalogued its
rVARWIN noted the giant tortoises which give the
group its present name. Observing differences
from mainland species in the Galapagos birds, lizards,
insects, plants and fishes, he was aroused to the re
volutionary conclusions of
many years later.
Not until the Panama Canal loomed as a reality
were the islands seen to have possible importance in
western hemisphere defense an idea universally con
ceded by the course of events from 1941 to 1945.
N.G.S.
MllllllltltlllMMIttllMMIIItllMHMMIIIIIIIIMIlMlllinilltlllt
On 1 he bide-By e. v. Duriing i
(Distributed by King
Itt,,iIM)l,t,ll,HI,",HI.IIII
Please, God, tend him home
safely.
To thare part of Ihli
A home ftOrri with memorlea
Overflowing It aeetni
Earn Utile rornrr
All filled with our flrr.. .i-i.
Our lrtnm4 that we ahiued
Our wlshen come true
So bring him home lately
My faith U In you.
Elena Auitln.
(Husband of the author of
above is still overseas with the
U. S. army occupation forces.)
Queries from clients. Q. The
reasoti men write the most pop
ular songs Is because they are
not as sentimental as women
Men grind out love songs me
chanically and with no feeling
Surely, you do not believe Irving
Berlin felt each of his composi
tions. A. You certainly picked
the wrong man to prove your
point. When Irving Berlin wrote
"When I Lost You ' and "Always
those songs enme straight from
the heart. Q. Very often when 1
tip my hat to a female acquaint
ance I get no rcsponso from her
escort. Has the custom of tipping
your hat to a lady become old
fashioned? A. Not ut oil, sir. Pay
no attention to the boorish guys
who are too lazy to acknowledge
your courteous gesture. Keep
right on being the little gentle
man your mother taught you to
be. Q. Why Is It you practically
never mention the brown-haired
girls or should I say the brown
ettes? A. An unforglveable over
sight. What more can 1 say when
I sav thut 1 am sorry. Our Horses
& Women's Department har been
ordered to Immediately engage
upon extensive research as to the
care, character and handling of
brownettes. Look for the first
report in an early issue.
Asides
"You soy Grace Moore sang
All Alone on the Telephone' in
the music box revue," writes a
New Yorker. "The title of that
song Is "AH Alone by the Tele
phone.' One stogie pleose.
Wrapped carefully, of course.
. In 18U5 in Shiindon, talir.,
twin brothers. Hlllls and Willis
Truesdale, married twin sisters,
Nora and Zora Grainger. Both
couples recently celebrated their
golden wedding anniversaries. So
it would seem twin brothers mar
rying twin sisters might be a
good Idea.
Argument
A husband and wife of Toledo
of the canal. The Ecua
best or tne lew avanaoie.
e e
oUU air miles southward
the region in the past two
comparison with the moist,1
to the north. .
ride the Equator 950 air
Panama Canal. Covering
of Connecticut, they num
animal and marine life.
his famous book, published
Features Syndicate, Inc.)
are arguing as to what time
women stopped wearing black
stockings and took to wearing
stockings of beige and kindred
colors. The husband says
"around 1815" the wife says
' around 1910. Our Horses &
Women Department Is asked to
settle this argument. A hosiery
manufacturer queried says that
"around 1915" Is right. So the
husband wins. He must be a very
observing fellow.
Goldfish
Are goldfish affectionate? Do
they wag their tails in recogni
tion of their owner? Nobody has
asked me those questions yet but
If and when they do I have the
answers. A Californlan says she
has two twelve year old goldfish
who gaze at her lovingly when
she approaches the bowl and
"swish" their tails as a greeting.
Old Custom
An old European custom was
for single men and women hav
ing a desire to marry to wear a
ring on the first finger of the left
hand. Those who wished to in
dicate they were single but not
Interested In marriage wore a
ring on the little finger of the
left hand. There might be an
Idea there for the We Wanna Get
Married club of Pittsburgh. On
the other hand a girl who wore
the ring in a way to indicate she
didn't want to get married might
inspire the most male Interest. A
man who wore a ring indicating
he did want to get married might
be injured in a stampede of anx
ious females. A bachelor wear
ing a ring Indicating he didn't
want to get married would so an
noy some of the better looking
women they would try to make
him fall in love with them Just
for the pleasure of turning him
down.
TAVORISHI
Berlin, Oct. 23 U.P TSgt.
Georg Myers of Fairbanks,
Alaska, reported today that a
Russian military policeman
smashed his camera while he
was taking pictures In the Soviet
zone of Berlin near the Unter
Den Linden. Myers, a corre
spondent for Yank Magazine,
said the Russian shouted some
thing in Russian as he seized the
camera and hurled It against a
brick wall.
tie Mall Tribune Want Ada.
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
Washington, Oct. 23 My bare
mention of the campaign ol sell
professed liberal leaders to abol
ish the indus
try of commer
cial domestic
science In the
brave new
world brought
a ton of letters
from both sides
the house
wives and the
domestics. The
domestics who
wrote me rath
euj maiioo
er agreed with
the liberal rjre-
tense that such work was as a
leading national weekly wrote it
"beneath the personality" of
tne individual,
e
MOW, my column deals only
with major events, the Inside
on the economic, political and
international news of the hour,
and some may say the proposed
abolition of this industry Is not
fit subject for me to delve
into. Frankly, I know of noth
ing more important than the art
of living, and a proposal to abol
ish It is more Important to every
numan being than what the sen
ate will do with taxes.
Whether you work at a ma
chine or a desk, you have a home
and the conditions under which
you live in it are as vital as life
itself.
Dignity? What Is more digni
fied than a clean, well-kept, com
fortable home? What service
contributes more to humanity
than those services which con
tribute to the joy of living?
Personality? What personality
is more respected and loved in
this world than that of a smiling,
genial, friendly human being in
whatever walk of life?
e e e
IT7HAT art contributes more to
the happiness of the individ
ual than the art of cooking? I am
only Interested when these non
sense peddlers propose their fun
ny business in economics, politics
and world affairs, but when they
propose to abolish cooking they
get me riled.
What do they eat? No doubt
vitamin pills and bicarbonate of
soda, as I have heard one of them
say. They do not know the dig
nity of a well-cooked steak over
a charcoal broiler, one about two
Inches thick, not rare, just slight
ly pink in the middle, flavored
when done with a little butter
and pepper and salt.
What breathes more person
ality into the human soul than
a roast turkey, done so the juice
spurts when you stick the fork
into the crisp browned skin. A
pheasant stuffed with onions,
carefully basted! Why, even the
lowly beef stew has great per
sonality. But few people can do it right.
As a matter of fact few can do
any of these things well, so far
have we teen led away from the
Elysian field of the kitchen by
propaganda pipers and prevari
cators. The best stew I get is
what I make myself, and the next
best is in a one-arm restaurant,
where the cook Is better on the
subject of beef stew than the
fancy cooks of the high-priced
hotels.
Cooking is not beneath the
dignity of anyone's personality.
I do not care how great he or
she may be, and I include the
doorman of the Savoy hotel In
London whose dignity surpass
eth anything I have seen, in
cluding the United States su
preme court.
e e e
WHY, then, do these fake lib
erals propose to abolish the
art of living, by repudiating its
plain social significance? The
first answer which probably
would occur to unyone is that
they are nutz more than that,
they are Just ploin nuts. They
are obsessed, like the commun
ists with whom they fraternize,
with only one ideal of life
politics.
They see nothing more In hu
man existence. There must be
no Joke which does not convey
a political meaning, no stage
play or movie without political
propaganda significance, and
now they have put politics into
the home.
They are trying to convince
evry maid, cook and servant
that such work is beneath them
in order to mako them rebel
lious against their jobs. If there
is one thing which will ruin any
man on any job. It is his conver
sion to the theory that the work
Is beneath him. He cannot do
the Job Justice, and he cannot
have happiness in his work. He
ruins both the pleasure of living
ond the work he Is doing.
Of all the political bunk
worked off on these United
States as valid liberalism and
forward-looking progress, this
effort to mislead public thought
is the most stupid.
POWS SKIP
St. Louis, Mo.. Oct. 23 (U.P.)
Two Gorman orisoners of war
were at large today after escap
ing from their Chesterfield, Mo.,
camp. They left a note explain
ing. ' ho doesn t rlsK can I
win." The FBI said the Ger
mans. Joseph Swoboda. 30 and
Michcle Kuni, 27. were first
mi.cd at roll rail yesterday.
JAPS FACE HARD
T
Inflation and Black. Market
Threatens to Bring Mass
Starvation to Hungry Nips
By Miles W. Vaughn
United Press Correspondent
Tokyo, Oct. 23 (U.R The
Japanese people have been
caught up in a whirlwind o in
flation and black marketeering
that threatens to plunge them
into mass starvation this winter.
It is a whirlwind of their own
sowing, brought on by four fan
tastic years of trying to fight a
war without adequate control
of prices and supplies on the
home front.
When the war ended, the gen
eral cost of living was 20 times
as high as It was on Pearl Har
bor day, and the situation now
is rapidly approaching a crisis.
Today, the people are trying
frantically to unload their
hoarded Japanese currency in
exchange for almost any kind
of goods mostly on the black
market.
Exchange Sought
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's
headquarters repe a t e d 1 y has
urged the allied governments to
establish some fixed exchange
rate for the yen to give it a
stabilized value in relation to
the American dollar and the
British pound sterling.
ihe Shidehara government,
too, is trying to alleviate the
situation by providing more con
sumer goods In the hone of les
sening the inflationary gap be
tween suDply and demand.
MacArthurs spokesmen ad
mit it may be difficult to decide
what the yen is worth, since
Japan's true economic position
cannot even be approximated,
but they insist some value must
be established soon to enable the
Japanese to buy rice and other
food from Korea, Indo-China
and Formosa. If foodstuffs can
not be Imported from those
areas, the people of Japan will
come perilously close to starva
tion this winter.
Bonds To Be Sold
The government's anti-Infla
tion program calls for the sale
of Japanese government bonds
to soak up as much of the peo
ple's surplus cash as possible.
plus heavy Imports of food from
abroad. The latter program, it is
hoped, will frighten Japanese
tarmers Into relinquishing much
of the food they have been
hoarding in anticipation of still
nigner prices.
Indicative of the present sit
uation is the fact that the na
tion's number-one food staple,
rice. Is selling on the black mar
ket for 17 yen per pound S4.25
at pre-war exchange rates, com
pared with a Pearl Harbor price
oi less than four cents a pound
Sugar has been unheard of
for two years, although there
are some black-market operators
wno win agree to try to get some
at something like $40 a pound.
snoes $125 Pair
Shoes never were rationed In
Japan, with the result that the
cheapest grades were available
on the black market at 500 yen
per pair $125.
To this observer, who lived In
Japan for years before the war
and has had ample experience
In the complexities of operating
a household here. It Is obvious
that most Japanese city dwel'ers
are not getting enough food to
maintain their health.
I questioned a bank clerk.
whom I knew before Pearl Har
bor, about that phase of the
problem. He said he was earn
ing 500 yen a month, which
would have been a relatively
high salary in pre-war years, but
now Is barely keeping himself,
his wife and two children alive.
Go-ernmental bungling of the
rationing system, which the Jap
anese agree could not have been
much worse, has been corrected
to a considerable degree since
the war ended. But any ration
ing system will prove difficult
to operate under existing con
ditions, because of the lack of
transportation and proper dis
tribution outlets.
Transportation Shy
The transportation shortage
alone is causing huge stocks of
sweet potatoes to rot In sdme
regions while the rest of the
country is starving for this fav
orite vegetable.
The government has been
forced, to a large extent, to Ig
nore the black-marketeering
Big business firms, in order
to save their employees time and
trouble, operate regular black
market bureaus which buy food,
clothing and other essentia!
wherever they are available.
Then they are distributed among
the firm's employees at cost.
Nothing Is more horrible than
a forest fire, rushing pell-n.ell
through green, verdant forests.
Killing deer and game as it goes
ROBES that have so many
uses. Magnificent Karakul
Robes. Five beautiful eolors
to choose from. Banquet
Room. Holland Hotel. 10 a.m.
till 9 p.m.
Flight o Time
Medford and Jackson Co. His
tory from the files oi the Mail
Tribune 10. 20 and 34 years
TEN YEARS AGO
October 23. 1935
Ot Was ' Wednesday)
Roosevelt lands at Charleston
S. C, after fishing trip on crui
ser, and told "prosperity gains In
nation.
Fair and slightly warmer.
High 62, low 31 degrees.
Black Tornado to play Salem
high Saturday.
Crater Lake bears raid park
home in search of food.
Rogue River fish bill bobs at
special legislative session.
Price of hogs drops to $9.85
per hundred on Portland mar
ket. TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
October 23, 1925
' League of Nations orders
Greece and Bulgaria to cease
hostilities.
Col. William Mitchell, formal
ly charged with conduct pre
judicial to good order and dis
cipline for his attack on air serv
ice. Fair, high 78, low 29 degrees
grees.
Three new homes spring up
in Willow Springs district.
Prospect high to have new
gym for basketball.
THIRTY FOUR YEARS AGO
October 23, 1911
(It Was Monday)
William J. Bryan's name to
be on Oregon ballot in primary
election.
"The Travelling Salesman"
at Opera House Wednesday
night.
New Josephine hotel is open
ed at Grants Pass.
Suit filed to block sale of
Good Roads bonds by county.
France Debarkation
r c .. D7 .
Claim of Soldiers
Boston, Octr"23 (U.R) Sol
diers who arrived here aboard
the SS Sea Snipe yesterday said
today that Camp Lucky Strike at
Le Havre, France, is a "sorry
place where 65,000 soldiers are
sweating it out in army tents
waiting at least three months for
a ship home."
Conditions were described as
"very uncomfortable" with only
three theaters accommodating
1,500 each while it takes 45 min
utes to get a cup of coffee.
The SS A. P. Hill docked yes
terday from Antwerp with 626
miscellaneous army personnel.
AUSTRIA TO WAIT
Washington, Oct. 23 (U.R)
Full U. S. recognition of Dr.
Karl Renner's provisional gov
ernment in Austria will be with
held until it completes Austria's
first postwar national elections.
Daily Weather Report
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity. Clear tonight
and Wednesday. Slightly warmer
afternoons.
Oroycn: Clear tonight and Wed
nesday hut purtly cloudy in north
portion. SHghUy warmer afternoon
;nd -ilso in northwest portion tonight.
Gentle east wind off coast.
LOCAL D 4TA
Temperature a year ago today:
Hiehest 79; lowest 43
Total monthly precipitation .49
inches
Deficiency for the month .40 inches.
Total precipitation, s.nce September
1. 1915. 95 in:hes. .
Deficiency f j.- the season .59 Inches.
Ke'atlve humidity at 4 30 p.m. yes
terday M 4 30 today 100.
Tomorrow
Sunrise 6:34 am. Sunset 3:16 p.m.
Observations taken at 4:30 a.m., 121)
Meridian time-
Hltrh Low Pree.
noise ....
Boston .
48 21
Chicago
Denver
Eureku
Havre
I, os ngeles ,
Medford
Nev.- York
Omaha
Phoenix
Portland
54
53
56
40
. 72
. SS
70
38
88
59
54
59
50
68
50
45
. 78
59
45 .
33
42
29
48
10
42
62
35
24
39
28
51
34
26
Reno
Rosehura
Rait Lake .
San Francisco
Seatt
SpokHne
Washington, O C.
Yaklir.a
Closing Ume rot cnaasiried Ad S'30
.n lot Late tr Classify 1215 p m
Do you suffer
from MONTHLY
NERVOUS TENSION
wit U weak, Nrta fttHt ?
If functional periodic disturbance
make you leel nervous, tired, restlee
t such ttmea try thu great medicine
Lydta E. Pinkham' Vegetable Com
pound to relieve such symptoms. Taken
regularly it helps build up resistance
tguiut sucn distms. Also s grand
touutcalc tonic. Follow Label directions.
Interior and Exterior
PAINTING
PAPER HANGING
Work Guaranteed
CALL 2419
Younger's Appliance
DUTCH BOY PAINTS
31 N. Bartlett
IS
Washington, Oct. 23 (U.R)
The senate voted today to set up
a special 11-man senate commit
tee to handle atomic energy,
which Sen. Wayne Morse, R.,
Ore., descibed as the greatest
problem congress will face in the
next 100 years.
The committee was directed
"to make a full, complete and
continuing study and investiga
tion with respect to problems re
lating to the development, use
and control of atomic energy."
Passage came on a voice vote
after the senators decided, 45 to
27, to increase the committee
membership from nine to 11. An
18-member committee had been
suggested by Sen. Joseph H. Ball,
R., Minn., but at the suggestion
of Democratic Leader Alben W.
Barkley, Ky., the senate com
promised on 11.
Morse said atomic legislation
is the most important congress
will handle in the next century."
"The use of the atomic bomb
by the United States and our dis
cussion of it has stirred up world
wide suspicion about our inten
tions," he said. "Those sus
picions are not well founded. We
are going to live up to the San
irancisco charter, but we nave
got to act quickly . . ."
Earlier President Truman was
urged to call a world conference
to prevent through an interna
tional control group a "mad race
in atomic armament."
SEEK LOST PLANE
Seattle, Oct. 23 XU.R) Navy
planes continued a" three-state
search today for a torpedo
bomber three days overdue on a
flight from Red Bluff, Va., and
the Pasco, Wash., naval station.
Ens. Robert W. Book, Shenan
doah, la., piloted the navy plane
on what was scheduled to be a
routine four-hour flight, 13ih
Naval District headquarters aid.
The United Company of Oregon, Inc.
is offering, for a limited time, a small block of its
CAPITAL STOCK
at the par value of $1.00 per share. This is an Oregon
corporation and sales of stock will be confined to residents
of Oregon only. The right is reserved to withdraw this
offer without notice. For particulars, call upon or write
to J. H. Dawson, President, 129 North Riverside Avenue,
Medford, Oregon, (Phone 3463) or Lew G. Gilman, Secretary-Treasurer,
Route 3, Box 296, Medford, Oregon,
(Phone 6429.)
r
RUPTURED?"
Improved Patented
DOBBS TRUSS
Washable
NO STRAPS
BELTS Nor BULBS
FOR MEN, WOMEN
AND CHILDREN
(WASHABLE...
WEAR BATHING)
FOR SALE
We Offer for Sale Our
CIRCULAR
Li
SAW
Located 17 Miles North of Medford on the
Crater Lake Highway
Daily Capacity 20.000 Feet
125 H. P. Diesel Motor
and other necessary equipment
Gulf Red Cedar Company, Inc.
P. O. Box 308
STOCKTON. CALIFORNIA
British Halt War
In Java Capital
Batavia, Oct. 23 (U.R) Brtt
ich fnrrp had a firm Brio today
on Semarang, capital of Middle
Java, and the violence wmcn
greeted their landing last week
had simmered down to occasion
al clashes.
The British frigate Loch Gorra
anchored off Semarang and
trained her gun turrets toward
the city as a warning to the In
donesians to keep a pledge riot
to molest Europeans there.
THE GRANGE
Upper Rogue Grange
Upper Rogue Grange had a
covered dish luncheon in their
hall on October 18 with a good
attendance. After dinner a busi
ness meeting was held with
Master Roy Vaughn In the chair.
Next meeting, November 15,
will be election of officers for
1946 and members are urged to
attend. A large class of new
members will also be obligated.
Closing time for Sunday Too Let
to Classify 4:00 Saturday afternoon
Please remember
Don't miss the Big Blanket
Sale now going on in the
Banquet Room at the Holland
Hotel. Open till 9 p. m.
sepff
attaU
."I
Humphrey
Is Still
v PAYING
CASH
For
USED CARS"
See Humphrey First
Humphrey Motors
USED CAR EXCHANGE
33 S. Riverside Ave.
CANNOT SLIP. Holds muscles
together with a soft, concave
pad. Keeps rupture tightly clos
ed at all times while working,
lifting, walking, or swimming.
Light-weight.
Reason should teach you not to
place a bulb or ball in opening
of rupture, which keeps muscles
spread apart.
No matter what Truss you are
now wearing, you owe it to
yourself to come and see the
Dobbs Truss.
FREE EXAMINATION AND
DEMONSTRATION
One Day Only No Obligation
Wednesday, October 24th
Medford Hotel
Ask For Coleman
2
Pill 111