Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, October 29, 1942, Page 3, Image 3

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    Inspection Rigid
EAT APPLES FOR
RICH VITAMINS
(111 rat,
Rictiirv
VIilk
t/ll
LUI y ivitm
Orni ugnili, it a ili«' betflnnlng uf
upplv
Harvest
*< iisuri
Tln
the
pt* iik <>f tli«- iiiiivt'Mi eeason wll
IH'I hi( M gK'uter tluiii nurnutl *up
piy of fresh, erlsp and flnvorful
tu market
uà a
national
h pph»N
»tciuiy i < hm I Hp. ■lini ilnrliig Ih«
ut Octolier
IV
throilKh
period
Uh tobvi SI, Hic' iilltiM lo un an-
hi»uii riuciit muti« toduy i»y itay il
hwaitg,
Minte
Hupervisor
for
Urvtfuii uf th« Asili ullurul Mar-
A i I iuiii I mìi .itlun, IJ l» 1 t « <1
kelilig
Minto« Department <r Agricolture,
\ Itumlii-rh h
w het hut
n pplea.
provide
vu i «■ ii i'uw
or
coukvd.
houMvwlVt»N of th*« Nutlon with a
lunty, vvuiiuinb ul uiiMWer to then
( lmm I pin bi«’ ms, unii api«* are one
<T out fliivMi hviilth foudn. Gruver*
in Oregon mi «» * oopvrtiling with th«*
upplv tfiowom uiid th«« Government
by i «mûri rm vi^lvtira of uppir«*
»u« h <iN I>«*11« I oun . HpH»«'iihurg und
Ortley un th«« .Xutlon'e nuinbei on«*
food xiihi**, dvNlgimtlng thorn um i
V ivlory i*'uud Hpdclui,
OriK’ere diNpluylnic thr crnblrm
of u fllh'd food bunk Ml uvrr-luid
with thv “V” for Victory eynibol.
t*»K«*thvr with the word«. ”A Vic­
tory Food Hpvvlul,“ m«? I'ooprmt
iliac with th«« fui iik ’I' m of America
and the Government In
moving
pt rlnhuhh* coimiiudltlee dv«lgruii«Mi
ma
bring r«’glonully or nationally
in Mbundun«*«*
Gr«Mtvr home «on-
Nun»pii<*n uf Victory Food Hperlal«i
will help
rliminalr food
waetr,
will h«-lp fnrrnerM r«*<rlvr u prier
P««rinit(lrig thrin Io «ontlnue pro-
«lui'tloii, and will help pr«*iM*rvv oui
«upply of proceeded und canned
good« needed by oui arrnlre and
oui Alhra
Oregon Wheat in Form
of Meat Ail Needed
iluinvmukrra ^i>v bring a«k«*d,
through pur« haalng Victory Food
Hprciala, to aprrud their food buy­
ing power in m rlirhtiy different
way «»o mm to make full um « of those i
foods Jn moat ¿abundant auppl) I
i*rh*«*M of fouda In abundant supply |
ur«* gtmcrully low in relation to1
priera of otner fuuda not so plcntl* !
ful.
What hufiirimikera buy lud o
will help determine what will b«<
mvm II m I i I«* for tomorrow.
1-ack of Math In
High Schools Serious
OREtX) STATE COLLEGE
Oregon high school students are
being handicapped by not being
required, or in some instances
even permitted, to take high school
rnulhoinatlcs, believes Dr W E.
Milne, head of the mathmatics
department here The sudden de­
mands of war service for more
and more people with mathema­
tics training have only emphasized
a condition that has long existed,
said Dr. Milne.
The college alone ia at present
being corti|>elled to provide in­
struction in high school algebra
for Close to 700 stuents who must
make it up before proceeding with
college inniathcmatlcs required in
engineering and for military re-
serve programs This constitutes a
heavy and unnecessary expense to
the state, says Dr Milne
-- •-----
Methyl Bromide Get*
Earwigs Too, Stated
Ex peri men la conducted in Calif-
ornia on European earwig in
nursery stock have whoUm that
thia peat may be killed rather
easily by fumigation with methyl
bromide Aa a reault of thia find­
ing. several Oregon nurserymen
who make large shipments to Cal­
ifornia are fumigating nursery
stock with methyl bromide in the
proven dosage* and are thereby
eliminating any possibility of de­
lay at destination or return of
atijek. r«Tx>rta the nursery service
of the state department of agri­
culture.
Until California recently re­
moved * the
‘ "reasonable cause to
presume" grounds for rejection of
nursery stock, some county agri­
cultural commissioners there had
sh«»wn great concern over ship­
ment of nurset-y stock from Ore­
gon. For a period of 10 to 12
years Oregon nurserymen have
feared rejection or condemnation
of stock shipped into those areas
in California
Recent studies have shown that
the earwig is not an agricultural
or nursery pest, though once
<*stab)ished in a favorable locality
its spread apparently cannot be
stopped. Climatic factors limit
its distribution, California re­
searchers have decided.
Page 3
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Thursday, Oct. 29, 1942
i
I
When considered in terms of
the feed needed to produce live­
stock and poultry products. none
of
Oregon's
20-million-bushel
wheat crop can be called "sur­
plus." advises It. B. Taylor,
chairman of the state USDA war
baurd.
All of the beef, milk, mutton,
pork, wool and <'gi> .that Ore-
goo’s farmers can turn out tn
1943 will be needed. Vast amounts
of feed will be required to ob­
tain thia production.
Fortunately
the
chairman
points out, there's plenty of feed
available stored in the over­
flowing elevators and farm gran­
aries in the Columbia basin
wheat belt. The government feed
wheat program
provides the
machinery for moving this wheat
fiom the granary to the feed pen.
More than a quarter of a mil­
lion bushels of wheat were sold
under the government program to
Oregon farmers during Septem­
ber Taylor expects that this vol­
ume will increase every month,
as more fa rfftorti “become aware of
the feed value uf wheat.
Several years ago, when pre­
sent wheat supplies were still
merely a possibility, the O. 8. C.
experiment station in cooperation
with the
................
AAA carried on exten-
sive wheat feeding experiments
and demonstration*
These, aa
well a* teats in other states,
showed that wheat Is superior to
corn for fattening hogs, and is
equal to other feed grains in feed­
ing beef, lambs, poultry and
«ialry cattle, when properly hand­
led.
Information on beat methods of
feeding wheat.
together with
recommended rations, is found in
several recent bulletins issued
by the experiment station and ex­
tension service, obtainable free
from any extension office.
Farmers may pool ordera for a
carload of feed wheat through
county AAA offices, which can
also supply information on local
prices. Dealers who wish to pur­
chase wheat for resale to farmers
or for grinding into mixed feeds
can now do so without posting
bonds as formerly required
and engravers in a drive by the
Advertising Club of Los Angeles
with the U«Hible-barreled purpose
of aiding both the WPB'i efforts
to get war metals and the Boy
Scouts' preparation for civilian
defense.
A committee headed by Rich­
ard C. Rusweil aa bencral chair­
man
voluntarily undertook
a
canvass of local printers, adver­
tisers and engravers, asking them
to weed out all cuts, electros, and
type forms that had no prospect
of immediate use and turn them
in for accrap. Local Boy Scout
troops undertook the tedious job
of removing hardwood blocks
from the back of the cuts.
Money received will go to the
Poy Scouts Emergency Service
Corps for buying civilian defense
equipment such as stretchers,
trailers, and first aid eqquipment,
and the blocks will be used for
Scout handicraft and w«x>d-carv­
ing protects.
The Advertising Club's graphic
arts salvage committee plans a
follow-up canvass at regular in­
tervals and is asking similar
groups in other districts to do
likewise
„ . .----- •-- - -
Statp Raises Fees
For Shipping Points
A raise in federal-state shipping
point fees of one dollar a carload
on fruits and vegetables was put
into effect October 1«. reports the
state department of agriculture.
Necessary salary raises to keep an
experienced personnel and higher
operating costs were responsible
for the raises
Under the new schedule $6 is
charged for the usual car of
apples, pears, lettuce, mixed vege­
tables, cold pack goods in barrels
and brine cherries, with an $8
charge if the load exceeds 5 per
cent overage but does not exceed
1% minimum car.
The 36 fee and overage apply
also now to pruEP-t. fresh berries,
cauliflower, celery, fresh cherries,
tomatoes, peas, mixed fruit, cab­
bage, beans, peaches bulbs, car­
rots, garlic and parsnips with a
minimum charge of $4 per half
car or less on these commodities.
----- •-----
—Buy War Havings Stamps—
milk shortages and milk
inspection n popular topic these
day*. end each mall brlnairiK the
of
uariculture
state department
<|Uerl«s on these subjects, A. W.
Metzger, chief of the division of
food« and dairies, points out that
there le a rlsid inspection service
tn (ir««on for milk und cream
used for factory purptMHM. Factory
milk or «ream la that used for
dairy
product*.
manufacture of
such us creamery butter, cheese.
cottage cheese, ice cream and eva­
porated milk.
Since the Oregon milk, cream
and butter grueling law was adop­
ted In 11*37, compulsory grading
of all milk and cream use«l for
factory purposes has been a matter
of routine here. This grading has
been supplemented by quality im­
provement programs
participated
in by the state Collette and the
state department of axriculure un­
til the quality of dal ry products la
today improved materially.
’Aianufucturing plants and dairy
men alike have been exceptionally
cooperative In this
quality
im­
provement program.
And
while
the dairy farmer la working under
most trying condition* at the pre­
sent time, we in the department
of agrlculure have found no de­
sire on the part of dairymen to
eaw up on
sanitation
require­
ments",
Metzger declares.
"A
great deal of credit
should
be
given to the thousands of dairy
people in Oregon who labor long
hours to maintain their herds and
to produce fine quality milk".
Every can of milk or cream
used for factory purposes in this
state I* graded by state-examined
and licensed graders.
State laws
and regulations
outline
specific
standards for first grade milk for
factory purposes,
paramount
of
which Is that such milk, like the
fluid milk delivered to one's door­
step. must be from health cows.
All milk or cream delivered to
a manufacturing plant
that
ia
found to be unlawful is denatured
with a harmless coloring matter
so it cannot be used for human
Consumption or returned
to
the
plant.
Milk or cream condemned
Baby Chick Operators
Prepare for Busy Season
Oregon hatcherymen are work­
ing their euipment to the extent
that suitable batching eggs are
available in providing fall-hatched
chicks for the nation-wide meat
producing campaign, reports H.
& Cosby, head of the poultry
husbandry department at O. S. C.,
who attended the fall meeting of
the Oregon waby Chick association
in Salem.
This was one of the best meet­
ings in the history of the associa­
tion, he said, with around 80 mem­
bers attendng. including a group of
visiting operators from Washing­
ton.
The labor situation 1s such that
it is doubtful that as much increa­
se In chicken and egg production
will occur next year as would
otherwise be possible, the hatch­
eryman agreed. Increased costs of
production will doubtless force a
slight increase in the price of
baby chicks, it was said.
----- •-----
Red Cross Serves
In Many Ways
The American National Red
Cross ia today serving the armed
forces in many ways, it was an­
nounced from the field office of
the American Red Cross at Camp
White, Oregon. Through Camp
Field Director’s office and local
chapters a close bond is main­
tained between the service man
and his family. A recent letter
from Lt.-Col. Charles R. Oastlen
of the Medical Corps to the field
office of the organization express­
i es what the Red Croaa is doing:
---- •-----
Experienced
Leadership ,
JUST COUNT the
BENEFITS !
^LEADERSHIP
for the four critical
years ahead.
LEADS RSHIP
Investing In good insur­
ance—particularly in War
times—is the greatest thrift
you «an practice. You are
building a
reserve that
"rainy day." You are pro­
tecting yourself and family
against and disaster. You
are investing in "peace of
mind."
seasoned by exper­
ience as a Legislator,
Speaker of the House,
Secretary of State. No
candidate for Gover­
nor in the history of
Oregon ever had so
broad a background of
experience in affair*
of the state.
^LEADERSHIP
that is able, aggres­
sive, dynamic. Leader­
ship that is friendly.
Billings Agency
Rich Haul Made
From Old Files
In Print Shop I
BEAL ESTATE Md
BEAL INSUBANCE
Phone 8781
I
IAXi ANGELES - Twenty-thou­
sand pounds of dust-covered en­
gravings and printer's plate de­
picting Princess Eugenie hats,
boyish bobs, trousers with cuffs,
and other Americana of a slightly
dated character, joined recently
the local scrap pile.
The huge pile of copper, brass
zinc, lead, and tin was "mined"
from the old files of local printers
"To Field Director, American Twin Falls, Idaho are spending a
Red Crues, Camp White, Medford, ferw days at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Webster. Mrs. Gillette
Oregon:
..A- representative of this unit. and Mrs. Webster are sisters.
I wish to express to you and the
Mr. H. Stearns of Ashland was
splendid women of the Red Cross a business caller in Talent. Thurs­
our deep appreciation of your ex­ day afternoon.
treme courtesy and speed, as well
CpI
Harold Rrnanger. Coast
as the hours of labor spent by Guard on the Pacific Coast in
these
representatives of
our Southern California is home on an
American Womanhood, who mad« eight day furlough.
the sweaters given to our organi­
Mrs. Forest Jennings and child­
j zation.
“To me, who has seen the Red ren left Saturday for Susanville,
with California where Mr. Jennings is
' Cross from the inside and
the viewpoint of the outside Army employed. Mr. C. E Miller and
man who makes a request, it is family of Ashland moved into
the Jennings property. Mr Miller
most gratifying.
"The pleasure of the men who Is employed with the Skeeter's
receive these gifts Is most en- logging Company.
Mr. and Mrs. Norval Stockstill
couraging. for after all that ia
what counts. I am sure that on were shopping in Ashland Thurs­
these cold evenings and mornings day afternoon
The local health unit surprised
the knowledge of the real help
given these sons will partially re­ Mrs. Walter Engberg, Tuesday
afterndSn by gathering at her
pay the women for their efforts.
"On behalf of my officers and home on Wagner Creek.
The Talent School will hold
enlisted men I thank you again
for the gift."
their annual Hallowe’en Carnival
The American Red Cross is a at the Gym, Friday night, Oct. 30
vital link between family at home Higher prizes and more games are
and the men in the carnps and in offered than ever before.
the field, the announcement said.
A number of ladies gathered at
Enlisted men with problems to the home of Mrs. Tom Bell Mon­
solve should seek the service of day. The occasion being her biijh-
the Red Cross, and families at day. A covered dish luncheon was
home who are in trougje should served at noon. The afternoon
contact the local Red Croas
was spent in visiting. They report
a very enjoyable day.
Mr. Walter Wolford returned
TALENT NOTES
home Monday from the Klamath
Country where he has been work­
Mr. J. Rose and family moved 1 ing in the potato harvest
to Medford this week. Mr. Rose
Mrs Mar Dobbins left “Monday
was a mechanic at the Bates morning for Eugene where she
Garage.
will make her home.
Mrs. Myrtle Sutter of Kansas is
visiting her son I. Sutter and
family and other relatives in the
valley.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Wolsey
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Bates
family of Klamath Falls were
guests o? Mr and Mrs. Will
Bates Sunday.
This is school census « week.
____
Every child over 4 years old and
under 20 years should be register­
ed. Any one who has not been
called upon to register at these
ages, please notify Roy Pam,
principal of the Talent School.
Mr and Mrs. Bill Bruin have
sold their property north of Tal­
ent and plan on moving to Talent.
Lyle Tame of the Dead Indian
Area was a caller in Talent Mon­
day morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Keener and
family who arrived in Talent
from Kansas last week have rent­
ed the property recently vacated
by Mr. A. Graham and family.
Mrs. R. G Jennings having ac­
cepted a position in the commer­
cial department of the Phoenix
high school has resigned as presi­
dent of the Talent Community
Club. At a recent meeting Mrs. I.
Williams was elected to that off­
ice.
Mrs. I. Ottinger and Mrs. I.
Williams attended the district
convention in Ashland Oct. 7. The
Art Exhibit in charge of Mrs. V.
Mason is scheduled for the Nov­
ember meetings.
Mr and Mrs. Ralph Gillette of
as Oregon’s next Governor!
FROM THE
EXPLOITERS
wk* we«W nttraiiaat* eur STEELHEAD
MARKET V
HUNTING
NH
FISHING
treat it th* •m»rk*t husttrt* luve
killed eH betfaie, carrier gigeea,
piumage fewi, aad ravaged
Dr. C. C. Dunham
Chiropractic Physician
Chiropractic service free to En­
listed men
Office 244 Hargadlne Ph. 3321
-v ether wild gaaie!
I
O'
★ GOVERNOR"*
_______ “Snail Ctft Things Bnnt* .
(Pd. Adv.) Snell for Oov. Com.
Jerry Seyler, See., Platt Bldg , Portland
HARRIS
ELLSWORTH
Closed Until Further Notice
FOR U.S. CONGRESS
FOURTH DISTRICT
(/0&14
ElllU’tflh'l Slogan:
Ceaceetret« •* Victory:
Eliminât« nM-«tMnti«l(;
Oevelep OregM't Miner-
alt, Farms and Ferettif
> ♦ Harri» Flhworth it not a pro­
fessional politician, he is a citizen
interested in getting good government
for ALL cititene
i ♦ H» hn an enviable record of
wcceitful accomplishment for ho
community, hi* dittrici, hit state.
PD ADV ELLSWORTH FOR CONGRESS COMMITTEE, ROSEBURG ORI
* ♦ Thi* measure i* Senate
Bill No. 53, pawed by over­
whelming vote in Senate and
Houie, tigned by the Governor
making it a law. Referendum
ha* been invoked by those who
would exploit, by "net fishing"
—the gameit of game fish—steel-
head. Doe* not effect Columbia
River commercial fishing.
On September 30th, the United
State* Government ordered re­
leased for civilian use, 20%
of the 1942 «almon pack, which
i* proof that there is no short­
age of good fish for the army
requirements.
Oregon is the only state in the
United States which permits game
fish to be taken with "set nets".
V ote 310* YES
UNDERGOING REMODELING AND INSTALL­
ING MORE EQUIPMENT
Watch The Miner For Opening Date
COLLEGE CLEANERS
823 Siskiyou Bml
Phone 6336