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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 17, 1946)
OP CAMPAIGN HERE Plans for the 1948 March of Dimes In the fight against in fantile paralysis are moving rap Idly ahead lr. Jackson county. William Grenbemer is general chairman in charge of the coun ty campaign. The local campaign, which opened Jan. 14 and closes Jan. 31, is part pf the nation-wide appeal of the National Founda tion for Infantile Paralysis for funds to continue the fight against poliomyelitis. As In the past, March of Dimes coin collection boxes will be placed at convenient spots throughout the county and coin cards will be distributed. In the light of widespread public knowledge of the National Foun dation's tremendous achieve ments in recent epidemic years, the local ;ommiltee is expecting a greater response this year than ever before. Mary Pickford, for many years chairman of the women's divi sion of the campaign for the National Foundation, has ap pointed Mrs. Lewis Ulrich chair man of that division for Jackson county, Mrs. Ulrich in accepting DIONNE'QUIOTS' always rely on this great rub for COUGUDS It Must Be Good! All thru the years at the first sign of a cold the Quintuplets' chests, throats nnd backs are immediately rubbed with Musterole. Mustorole instantly starts to relieve coughs, sore throat and muscle sorenesa of colds. It actually helps break up fiainful local congestion. Makes breath og easier. Great for grown-ups, tool In 3 strengths. WASHING MACHINE REPAIR FOR ALL MAKES " Also Refrigeration Service Younger's Appliance 31 N. Bartlett Phone 2419 the appointment laid "Every woman should enlist in the war against infantile paralysis and form shock troop against the epidemics. They should stand ready at all times to give every possible aid to local medical and health authorities and for this reason every woman's organiza tion should enlist now." Jordan Funeral At G. Pass Saturday Funeral sen-ices for Emma Jane Jordan, 71, who passed away In Bremerton, Wash., Jan. 12, will be held Saturday, Jan. 19, at 2 p. m. in the L. B. Hall Funeral Home, Grants Pass. The Christian Science church will conduct the service and in terment will be in Pleasant Val ley cemetery. Mrs. Jordan had lived In Bremerton but two months, hav ing previously lived in the Applegate district. She was a native of Grants Pass, having been born there May 15, 1874. OBITUARY SCRANTON INFANT Bertha Kay Scranton, infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Scranton, passed away at the family home 523 Marie street early today. She was born Nov. 19, 1944. Besides her parents, she leaves four sisters and two half-brothers, and an aunt, Mrs. Charles Skeeters. Funeral arrangements, in charge of Perl Funeral Home, will be announced later. EMMA STRANG JACOBS Emma Strang Jacobs, sister of the late Charles Strang, passed away Jan. 12 at Los Angeles, Calif. Mis. Jacobs was born near Salem, on March 3, 1863. She spent her childhood in Jackson ville and Medford, and was unit ed in marriage to Newton A. Jacobs in Medford on Feb. 12, 1887. He passed away April 20, 1918. Mrs. Jacobs has lived with her son, Newton F. Jacobs, in Los Angeles for the past 23 years. Besides her son, she is surviv ed by one granddaughter, Mrs. Helen Seeman, Los Angeles; one grandson, Dr. Newton Frank Jacobs, naval dental surgeon, stationed aboard the U.S.S. Santa Fe, and one great-grandson, Robert Seeman of Los An geles, also several cousins living In Medford and vicinity. Funeral services will be con ducted from the Perl Funeral Home Friday at 1:30 p. m., with the Rev. Father George R. Tur ney, rector of Saint Mark's Episcopal church, officiating. In terment will be In the family plot in Jacksonville cemetery. BIRTHS ARMSTRONG To Mr. and Mrs. J. W., Shady Cove, Jan. 17, 1946, a girl, seven and one-half pounds, at Community hospital. PASTEURIZED SKIM ?KM ADDS TO ITS GOODNESS OF ASHLAND SAFES Ashland, Jan. IT Officers were following meager clues to day in search for the person or persons who broke into safes of two Ashland business firms some time Tuesday night. Approxi mately $175 was taken from the Culp Motor company safe and $125 is missing from the Selby Chevrolet company. Clues indi cate both places were entered through rear windows, accord ing to sheriff's officers, state po lice and A-ihland city police, who are conducting the investigation. In both robberies tools found In the garages were used to knock knebs off the safeidoors, according to police. Only cash was taken, checks and bonds be ing left behind. Police placed time of the crimes as after 9:30 p. m. since Selby employees worked until that hour. Officers described the rob beries as 'neat jobs" and said signs indicated they were not the work of amateur cracksmen. Prospect Prospect, Jan. 17 Prospect P.-T.A. is giving a public card party in the school dining room, Jan. 19, beginning at 8 p. m. Anyone interested in the school hot lunch program being con tinued are urged to come, as the proceeds will be used for this purpose. Refreshments will be served after play. Committee in charge is Mrs. Earl Ulrich, Mrs. Wallace W. Dickens, and Mrs. Clevenberg. Home Extension unit will have the January meeting at the high school building, Jan. 18, start ing at 11 a. m. Subject for the day will be "Handle With Care," and the lesson will be present ed by Mrs. Roy Vaughn and Mrs. Melvin McGrew. Bring small children to the meeting, and they will be cared for by Mrs. Everett Shafer. Mrs. Rueben E. Moore, was hostess for the Bumblebee club, Jan. 9, with a luncheon and aft ernoon party. Mrs. Glenn Fair child, Sr., will entertain the culb Jan. 23. Bridge club met at the home of Mrs. Wallace W. Dinkens Jan. 10. Mrs. Floyd Kelley won the high score prize. Guests in cluded Mrs. Earl Ulrich, Mrs. Louis South, Mrs. Mary E. Grieve, Mrs. Elmer Clemens, Mrs. Jam;s H. Grieve, Mrs. Mar ion Carter, and Mrs. Floyd Kel ley. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Ross returned to their home here last week, after spending three weeks in San Francisco and Oakland. Mr. and Mrs. Ross were both 11 with influenza for several days while away. Mrs. Roy Lenderman, Jr., who was taken back to a Medford hospital Jan. 12, and is critically ill with , double pneumonia, Is reported slightly Improved at this time. Funeral services for Nelson Nye, were held at the family home Jan. 11, and were conduct ed by Mills Butler, a close friend of the deceased. Interment was made in the family ceme tery. With the exception of two years spent near Medford when a small child, and two years in Alaska with his brother-in-law, Hungry for Aa aatdetv Here's why these peas ore what you want Grown from our They're bantiled own special strain wh" they're of eed, where soli reody. Day or night I and climate produce Flavor won't wait, the finest quality. LOOK FOR They're blended for flavor balance. A quality selection of just the tastiest peas In the pod. They're faifpoelred right after picking. For nothing's mora Important In canned peo quality. read the quality peas with the &uev tfiuV blend Joseph Phfpps, Mr. Nye had spent the remainder of his 74 years of his life on the Nye place five miles west of Pros pect. Pallbearers were Frank Ditsworth, Gus Ditsworth, Ed Boothby, Ed Hollenbeak, Charles B. Broomfield, and Jack Hollen beak. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dobbyn bought a farm near Albany, and moved their household goods there last week. Leo Hoag of Medford has leas ed the garage at Cascade Gorge from Harry H. Hart, and will open for business within a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Hoag and family have taken up residence in the Dobbyn house. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Clemens and Glenn Fairchild made a trip to Grants Pass last week where Clemens and Fairchild received medical attention. Visiting at the Nye home this week are Mr. and Mrs. Stanley E. Jantzer and sons Johnny and Glen, who arrived here Friday to attend the funeral of Mrs. Jantzer's father, Nelson Nye. Jantzer, who had arrived in Se attle from Japan on Christmas eve, had received his honorable discharge Jan. 7. He had seen active service in Leyte, and Lu zon, and has the purple heart for wounds received on Easter Sunday, of last year. Jantzer will resume his business that was in terrupted by his two years in the service, associated with his father, John Jantzer in lumber manufacturing. Lewis Jantzer Is adding an other house to his camp, which will be occupied by his bull dozer operator, Roy Lenderman, his wife and family. It is one story, and has a 20 by 38 foot floor spare. Improvements noted at Ross DeArmond camp during the last week was the installation of an oil furnace In the Lester De- Armond home, and a new fire proof roof on the company house occupied by the David Cormie family. Darwin Bevens, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bevens, who was second class petty officer in the navy, has received his hon orable discharge, and returned to his home here. Bevens, who was a student at Oregon State college at time of his enlistment in the navy in the fall of la" expects to attend college again next fall. Maxine Chandler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. Chandler, un derwent a tonsillectomy at a Medford hospital, last week. Mr. and Mrs. George Jantzer and Edmund F. Pease of Med ford attended the funeral of Nelson Nye. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Gentry and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Gentry left Jan. 13 for their home at Selah, Wash., after spending two weeks here visiting at the Reuben Moore, Clyde Onn, and Victor Chapman homes, and also rela tives at Medford. Glenn Fairchild, Sr., has re covered from his recent Illness and has resumed his logging con tract with the Medford Corpora tion in the Imnaha district. The Matteson Lbr. Co., which owned the Goetz Lbr. Co. mill that burned last fall, are having the debris cleared from the site, and plan on erecting another sawmill at the same place. Mr. and Mrs. John Jantzer of Azalea spent the week-end with relatives and friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Shafer and children Ray and Roma Jean, were guests over the week end at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shafer at Medford. The Lewis Jantzer Logging Co. who have been hauling logs Into the Ross-Armond mill from the Ulrich Road, have moved the equipment to Kiter Creek, nine miles east of Prospect, and ex pect to begin operations there within a few days. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Chandler and daughters. Norma Dean, Maxine, and Juanita, returned recently from Santa Ana, Calif., where they visited relatives over the holidays. Mrs. Victor Chapman and new little son, Dwayne Victor, re turned to their home here, from a Medford hospital last week. Farmers set a new peak in the purchase of life insurance in 1945. Countrywide, they bought nearly twice as much as in pre war 1941. WERNERS TO GIVE L AT Caroline Andrews Werner, coloratura soprano, and Richard Werner, violinist and conductor, will appear in a candlelight mu sicale at the Officers' Outpost Sunday, Jan. 20 at 5 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Werner recently ar rived from New York where they have been extensively en gaged in musical activities. Mrs. Andrews has appeared In grand opera, concert and on na tional radio programs while her husband has been a member of the New York Symphony and al so a conductor on Broadway. The announcement that they will now make their home in Medford was welcome news to music lovers since their wealth of talent will add greatly to the musical life of the valley. Miss Phyllis Furry, talented young pianist, will serve as ac companist and Mrs. Roberta Ward Bebb is arranging the program. Mrs. I. E. Schuler, director of the Outpost, states all army and navy officers, wives and pa trons and patronesses are invited guests of the Outpost for the af fair. A buffet supper will follow the program. Honored guests will be Col. J. Merriam Moore, new command ing officer of Camp White; Lt. Col. Glenn J. Allen, command ing officer of the 1259th Engl ness Combat battalion; Lt. Col. John Horsley, executive officer of the post, and Dr. H. B. LaFavre, captain in the navy medical corps and commanding officer of the Camp White naval hospital, V Henry Ford II Is Young Man of 1945 Chicago, Jan. 17 U.P.) Henry Ford II, 28-year-old pres ident of the Ford Motor Com pany, today held the United States junior chamber of com merce award as "the nation's outstanding young man of the year." Ford, selected for his accomp lishments In industry and civic affairs, was presented the dis tinguished service award, a diamond-studded key, by Na tional Jaycee President, Henry Kearns, at a banquet In Chicago last night. Spud In Fiddle Improves Tones Eugene, Ore., Jan. 17 (U.R) The Portland Symphony hasn't adopted this idea as yet. Mrs. Ruth Hill of Eugene dis closed today that she gels better tones from her cello by using Idaho potatoes. Mrs. Hill explains that she keeps a potato (Idaho variety) inside her cello case to prevent the seams of the cello from com ing unglued and the air humidified. Ladles Quartette At Church of God A ladies' quartet from Pacific Bible College of Portland will give a program of one and a half hours at the Church of God, Haven and Holly streets, Friday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Rev. A. A. Blankenship, also of Port land, will bring message con cerning work and progress of the school. The public is Invited. Rep , Clare Luce Denies Film Aim Washington, Jan. 17 XU.Rl Contrary to any rumor, Rep. Clare Boothe Luce, R., Conn., isn't going to appear in a movie called "The Congresswoman" and starring George Raft. "I am far too busy being a congresswoman to act one," Mrs. Luce told a reporter. She said she had been asked to play the lady lawmaker part but had refused. Sugar Shipment To Ease Shortage Pearl Harbor, Jan. 17 (U.fil More than 21,000,000 pounds of sugar are being transported to the United States to replenish mainland navy stocks and indi rectly ease the civilian short age, the navy announced today. The sugar is being shipped aboard the SS Jonathan Peter and the SS Word Knot, both en route to Oakland, Cal. There are now seven times as many people who own life In surance policies In the United States as there were In 1000. LUMBER 2x6 to 2x12 16 Ft Rough 1 Comm. and Btr. 2x4 to 2x12 1x4 to 1x12 Surfaced Dry Flooring and Siding as it Arrives at Our Yard NAILS AND ROOFING Cedar Posts Redwood Posts WE CARRY LOW PRICE LUMBER R. 0. STEPHENSON CO. Court and McAndrews Phone 2000 REFRIGERATOR CARS NEEDED FOR ANJ0US Valley shippers report there is now a lack of refrigerator cars locally for the shipment of D'Anjous pears to eastern mar kets but believe the situation will be relieved by first of the month. A few cars have been shipped to date. Local shippers report they would like to get the local pears east, before Argentina pears start arriving In New York In February. Closing time for Classified Ads 8:30 a.m. Too Lata to Classify 13:15 p m Thursday, Jan. 17, 1848 MEDFORD MAIL TRIB UN E BE YEN WEATHER Northern California Clear today; Increasing cloudiness to night and Friday with light rain on extreme coast Friday morn ing fog In the valleys; little tern perature change; light variable wind off coast except moderate southerly wind above Cape Mendocino. -tr y pure g -jj Vanilla The delicate, alluring flavor Is still there after biking if you use Schilling pun Vanilla. Insist on Schilling. Schilling mi WE GIVE S & H GREEN STAMPS Prices for FRIDAY and SATURDAY, JAN. 18, 19 For Quality Foods and Nationally Known Brands Shop your Piggly Wiggly store where there are always complete stocks of nation ally known brands of foods on the shelves. You'll find your favorite brand waiting for you and a courteous clerk to direct you In your shopping. EGGS KLEENEX PEARS Pack VEL DUST PANS Grade A Med. In Cartons Guaranteed Strictly Fresh 200 size (While Stock Lasts) Pkg. GARDEN BRAND BARTLETT Ig. 2V2 tin Packed In Medford. Famous Rogue River Valley Fruit THE MIRACLE SUDS Steel Pre-war Quality Dozen 48 13 36' All You Want E,.29c You've been waiting for these for a long time. Smoking Tobacco Specials Prince Albert-1 2c sz. ctn. of 12 1.19 Velvet-12c size, ctn. of 12 1.19 Granger-lOc size, ctn. of 12.... 99c Geo. Wash.-l 0c size, ctn. of 12 99c Prince Albert-lb. tin 79c Granger-lb. tin 79c Save On These Popular Brands 'Albers PEACOCK BUCKWHEAT , 20-oz. pk. I7c Lg. 2Vi Ib. pkg. 33c Buckwheat Hot Cakes are a natural these chilly mornings. O Seedless Raisins 4-lb. pkg. 49c O Wine, Honeywood Gooseberry fifth 95c O Gum, Orbit 3 packages 10c O Cookies, N.B.C package 16c Macaroon or Chocolate Twigs O Duffs Gingerbread Mix, 14-oz. pkg. 19c Medrord's lowest price on this popular item O Waldorf Toilet Tissue 3 rolls 14c Guyer's Market ROY GUYER GEORGE WOODCOCK, Owneri WHERE YOU GET QUALITY FOR LESS PRICE U. S. and Federally Inspected Meats Piggly Wiggly S. Riverside at 13th and S. Central FRESH FISH and OYSTERS Fresh Columbia River SMELT Shrimp Meat Eastern Oysters Salmon & Halibut Fresh Ground Beef F,0Miuta,i,y lb. 29c Pork Sausage No Cereal lb. 39c Pure Lard U. S. Inspected 3 lbs. 65c HEN TURKEYS Fresh Killed Fey. Colored Fryers Roasting Hens 528 South Riverside Plenty of Parking Space