Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 30, 1950, Image 5

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SEEK SEAT ON HIGH BENCH Pictured above are the three candidates for the seat on
Oregon's supreme court being vacated this year by Justice J. O. Bailey. From left to right they are
Walter Tooze, Portland, presiding judge of Multnomah county's circuit court; Robert Maguire, Port
land, an attorney and former bar association officer who served as judge at one of the Nurenberg
war crime trials, and Austin Dunn, Baker attorney and state senator. All three men have visited
Medford within recent days.
Pofluck Dinner To Feature Family Night
A potluck dinner, scheduled
for 6.15 p.m., will be a feature
of family night at the Medford
YMCA Friday, according to Dar
rel Huson, chairman.
During the dinner Dr. Lee
Mellish will speak for the bene
fit of new members on their
place in the YMCA. The McKit
rick family, players of stringed
instruments, will present a pro
gram of music, and there will
be group singing.
Hiram Martin and his six
piece orchestra will furnish mu
sic for square dancing after din-
30c
WOODLAND HEIGHTS
MARKET
Open 8 A.M. to 8 P.M.
1501 Prune Street
BOB AND ROSE GUERRETTI
Proprietor!
ner. Curtis Donahue is in charge
of the entertainment, and Dan
Neill will call for the dancing.
Mrs. Elton Waldron is in charge
of the dinner.
All "Y" members and their
families are invited, and are
asked to bring a covered dish,
bread and butter sandwiches and
service. Coffee and dessert will
be furnished.
Dishes Rattle When
He plays His Organ
Racine, Wis. U.R) Dishes rat
tle and chairs move in an apart
ment house here when Fred
Hermes, a real estate salesman,
plays his $31,000 organ.
Hermes, 23, bought the mam
moth instrument from a church
which was shifting quarters. He
paid $300 for it and installed it
in the basement of the building
housing his office.
The apartment house tenants
can feel the bass notes in their
bones when Hermes gets down
to the end of the keyboard. So
far no one has complained but
Hermes hasn't tried playing late
at night.
There were no woodyards be
tween Alabama's pioneer settle
ments and early steamboats had
to fire their boilers with trees
which crew members felled
along the river banks.
Degree Conferred On
Candidate by I00F
Medford lodge No. 83, IOOF,
held its largest meeting of the
month Tuesday evening, and
conferred the second degree on
Gordon Greenwood.
An officer of the Klamath
Falls canton, who is also a mem
ber of the department command
er's staff, spoke at the meeting,
and delegates and alternates to
the grand lodge meeting in As
toria in May were elected.
A baked ham supper was
served after the meeting. Third
degree work will be given at the
April 4 meeting.
Teen-Age Club Study
At Shady Cove April 3
Shady Cove, Mar. 30 The
meeting of representatives of or
ganizations in this area to dis
cuss the possibility of forming a
teen-age club will be Monday,
April 3, instead of as previously
reported.
The meeting will convene at
7:30 p.m. at the Shady Cove
school. An official of the Med
ford YMCA will attend.
The slaves who hauled the five
massive stone columns of the old
state bank building in Decatur,
Ala., from Trinity mountain
were given their freedom upon
the completion of the building.
MEDFORD HOMEMAKERS GET IN ON THE
I
a7
'"MM
life
frlUflly SEASONING
See how Nucoo brings out
the flovor of hot vegetable!
. . . teatoni tquash ana
other special dishesl
ltyiy BAKING
For cookies, muffins,
cakes enoy Nucoa's luxury
baking at budget cosll
fVUfiy SPREAD
Nucoa's tops on bread,
hot rolls, toast, pantalets
and waffles 1
ferM
tiucoA
ict vniiD ftDnrtQ
y, fcfci i vvn viivmi
make 1950 thrifty. He's got lots
of special bargains in store for
you this week "Thrifty-'50"
bargains planned to cut your
food bills. See his special
'Thrifty-'50" displays ... and
ask him for your copy of the
booklet, "Nucoa's Recipe
Round-Up for a Thrifty-'50"
full of wonderful ways to save
money with Nucoa margarine
and serve more satisfying meals.
for
ALL COOKING .
Nucoo's wonderful for
making condies, smooth sauces,
HAtrtrfi . . . far frvina
1 basting . . . vrythinat
move t - I4 in s .l of N. " mine.
"nun. 1
""". , Z "'hatb. nder- "bout 3PUI 01
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i
Candidate For
Supreme Court
Kiwanian Speaker
Declaring that concentration
of power in government leads to
destruction, Walter L. Tooze,
Portland, presiding circuit Judge
in Multnomah county, yesterday
warned Medford Kiwanians of
the danger of such concentration
at the nation's capital in the last
30 years.
Tooze, a candidate for the
state supreme court in the May
primary election, pointed to the
bureaus and bureaucrats over
which the people have no direct
control. This bureaucracy, he
said, has been vested with the
power to make rules and regula
tions having the force of law and
no adequate judicial review has
been provided.
Power Encroaches
Power given to the executive
orancn oi government, me juuge
brought out. encroaches upon
the legislative and judicial
branches and destroys the sys
tem of checks and balances in
the constitutional government of
this country.
The three-branch system with
checks and balances is one of the
two all-important principles of
the constitution, looze siaiea.
The other is that power rests in
the hands of the people, that
government's power is only that
granted by the people, that gov
ernment is the agent of the peo
ple and its officers the agents oi
the people.
Freedoms Are Reason
Constitutional freedoms are
what have made the American
wav stand out, the speaker as
serted, adding that compromise
of the system could mean
sweep toward totalitarianism.
Tooze charged that bureauc
racy is an alien theory of gov
ernment and un-American. He
said that congress is responsible
for the growth of bureaucracy
and that no political party can
be blamed for it because com
gress is composed of both demo
crats and republicans.
Tells Dangers
Indicating the dangers of the
theory of planned economy in
curtailing freedom, Tooze stress
ed that planned economy and
socialism are in truth the same.
He warned of clever propaganda
whereby citizens are given the
feeling that the nation owes
them a living. Capitalism has
brought the United States to the
forefront among nations, he
stressed.
Tooze attacked bigotry and in
tolerance as having no place in
the American way of life. There
is no "second class citizenship,"
he stated, and all are equal be
fore the law.
He spoke of the stabilizing in
fluence of the church, saying
that it must be left free and that
individuals must look to the
church for leadership for preser
vation of the American way.
Josephine Voters To
Ballot on Budget
Grants Pass, Ore., Mar. 30
(U.R) Josephine county voters
will ballot April 29 on school
budgets because they now exceed
the state six per cent limitation.
Balloting will be held here
and in county schoolhouses.
The county unit budget is set
at $881,862, including interest
and principal payments on an
existing $700,000 improvement
bond issue.
The District 7 budget will be
completed at committee meet
ings this week. Both are well
above the amounts asked in pre
vious years.
Highway travel in the United
States during 1949 surpassed the
400-billion-mile mark. More than
half of the mileage was on city
streets.
Female Fagin
Hired Youths To
Rustle Cattle
Hayward, Cal., Mar. 30 !U.R)
A 23-year-old registered nurse
was in custody at the Santa
Anita prison farm today after
she allegedly admitted she was
a "female fagin," who hired teen
agers to help her rustle cattle.
Also being held were three 17-year-old
boys who said they were
hired at $25 apiece to help in
the rustling of the five calves
The rustling operation was not
very profitable. In addition to
what she paid the boys, she also
had to rent a truck. The slaugh
terhouse paid $135 for the
calves.
A native of Florida, the attrac
tive nurse said she spent some
time in Wyoming. It was there
she learned to love cattle and
horses, she said. She took her
nurses' training in Boston.
Mrs. Band and the three boys
were booked for Investigation of
grand theft.
Six Valley Men
Enter Air Force
Six young Rogue valley men
have reported to Lackland air
force base, .San Antonio, Tex.,
where they will receive 13
weeks of basic training in the
air force. Following this train
ing, they will enter technical
training, or receive assignment
to specialized work.
The course includes an evalu
ation of aptitudes and inclina
tion for particular vocational or
career specialties, according to
the base public information of
fice. The men are Pvt. Richard O.
Osborne. 18, son of Mr. and Mrs.
T. L. Osborne, Trail; Pvt. Peter
D. Flury, 18, son of Mr. and
Mrs. T. R. Flury, Eagle Point;
Pvt. Cornelius L. Sullivan, 19,
son of Mr. and Mrs. G. P. Sulli
van, Medford; Pvt. Paul D. Par
ton, 17, son of John T. Parton,
Trail; Pvt. Bradley G. Wood, 18,
son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Wood,
Talent, and Pvt. William C.
Carlson, 20, son of Gus G. Carl
son, Eagle Point.
James Cecil Voss, 33,
Dies in California
Ashland, Mar. 30 James Ce
cil Voss, 33, a former Ashland
resident, died Monday at Long
Beach, Cal.
Mr. Voss was born in Ashland
Sept. 17, 1918, and attended
school here. He was graduated
from Ashland high school and
attended Southern Oregon col
lege before going to the Univer
sity of Oregon where he took a
degree. He had been employed
in Long Beach for about 10
years as a laboratory technician
for a steel company.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Juanita Voss of Long
Beach; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Voss. Ashland; three sis
ters, Mrs. Harold Anderson, Ash
land; Mrs. Harold Gebhard, Cen
tral Point; Mrs. W. A. Reed, El
Cerrito, Cal., and an aunt, Mrs.
Sebcstian Apollo, Medford.
Services will be conducted
from the Litwiller funeral
home at 2 p. m. Friday with the
Rev. W. H. Tillman officiating.
Interment will be in Mountain
View cemetery.
Seaside Student Wins
Scholarship Award '
Astoria, Ore., Mar. 30 (U.R)
John Hcnsala, Seaside, Ore.,
high school senior and former
newspaper carrier boy, today
was named winner of the Ore
gon Elks scholarship award.
Thunder. March SO, 1930
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE FIVE
Bvry cook's delight!
these NSW
SEG0 tAIU(
GIFT SPECIALS
L'f h french'fry
Wk n wSm r WIRE basket
WMmml for 18 LARGE
W&M&!I SEG0 M,LK C0UP0Ns
ALUMINUM PAN J ' h
for 18 LARGE D Pj
tHIII MIMIUMI Will NOT I II N I I Y MAIL
Please redeem coupons ah
STAMPER & GOFF BROS. HARDWARE
225 West Main Street
Medford, Oregon
San Francisco is the smallest i More than 200 different types i The largest Indian village la
county in California. I of cheese are made from milk. I the southwest is Zuni Pueblo.
2 Flavor
1WO KINDS
Diiroi rucoiAiot
No wonder faces brighten at the first dp
of Schilling Coffee! Here's richer, more
delicious coffee, always uniformly good
because it's theThermo-Regulated roast.
billing Mksg
&reteSeo&fbfi3 Super-Speck..
Old Dutch
t CLEANSER H
If. 2 CANS
V 23c J
NALLEY'S TANG SALAD
Dressing Pt. 32c, Qt. 57c
SPIC AND SPAN
Cleanser 16 oz. pk. '25c
20 MULE
Borax Powder 2 lb. 27c
LIQUID SELF-POLISHING FLOOR WAX
Aero-Wax Qt.tin 54c
WALDORF
Glass Wax pint tin 29c
SPRING TYPE
Clothes Pins 29c
Sweetheart Soap R9i b1 ,23c
' BATH SIZE 21c
A HUNT'S
if Strawberry
fc Preserves
V i lb jar 5v
V 35c J?
Buys m Meafand fbulfly
HENS lb. 39c
FRESH 4 TO 5 LB. AVERAGE
SHORT SHANK TENDERIZED
PICNIC HAMS lb. 39c
U.S. GOOD SHOULDER CUTS
VEAL STEAKS lb. 49c
PURE LARD 2 lbs. 25c
VAL PACK
BACON sliced lb. 39c
BACON JOWLS lb. 19c
HUNT'S iUFFIT TINS
Fruit Cocktail I 25c
Garden Pears 29c
STANDBY WHOLE
Kernel Corner 21 c
NO. 3 SIEVE
Standby Peas T 2 24c
HUNT'S (UFFET TINS
Tomato Sauce ,1 13c
GIBBER'S STRAINED or JUNIOR
Baby Foods J 25c
NALLEY'S CHILI
Con Game "i". 58c
SKIPPY
Peanut Butter y,.?. 39o
Crmy or Crunch Stylo
WHITE STAR SOLID
Pack Tuna N'T143c
SEGO MILK
2 Large Tins 25c
. it apt r AlUMINUM PAN
a Small Tins 25c intsEoo
. miu couroNiusi
v vmmm
INCH PIY ISEGO
Will tASKIT I SB
for II lg SEOO ItfflfS
MILK COUPONS 1 15
CAULIFLOWER-;--
CRISP CELERY
TOMATOES
EANCY
FIRM
FIELD GROWN
lb. 15c
lb. 12c
lb. 15c
LARGE SUNKIST
ORANGES
Per Dox. 59c