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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1930)
Slirvey Indicates ; Moderate Utter Marcn aiump Spring Production of But ter Will Show Decline'.'. PORTLAND, Ore.. Mny 17. (JT) The toni-ml level of farm prices rJiinri sharply durlne the first weeks of March mid ulnco have. lhavo made ft moderate ro- .i,a united States uenart- pfDt of agriculture report of iirilcatecl. ' ,-,.,. ,,-r. nf iai on Fob- imlnv nf ni'lpp re- Tveil ly producers decline five Hints to 1" or 10 per cent be ,' me level of lust year and .bout n low "s u waa ln 11,0 flrKt Jjrtot l'J27' accordlns to tho Ve- lw!''' ihn vtiiHntiu pninmn- lletaniiiiK - - dltlra the-report said: Wheat: Tho world wheat hui- ,.. jituatlon has not ehanBcd inii itrially la the past month but the mirlu market situation has 1m Mwed. The BhortaBO of tho Artentlno crop Is bcR-lnnlne to bo (tit Supplies ln tho United States wntiauo lame and the carryover wheat la this country on July 1 may be about ns largo as on July I, 1)39. '' Business: Business activity for ilio month of March appears to have been somewhat lower than tor February. After allowing for nraial seasonal trejids, industrial litauctlon avenmed about two per rL less in March- than In Feb ruary, although about flvo per cent above the low point of lust Ucceiucber. l'olatoes: The general nverngo ol farm prices of potatoes on March 15 at 137 cents per bushel ma two cents lower than on Feb ruary 15 and 'compares with 58 cents on March 1 0 a year ago. ' Hogs: The decline ln bog prices which started ln late February continued throughout March but iraa checked In early April when prices steadied and made a slight recovery; The" downturn came about a month earlier than the usual spring decline and at a timo when supplies were continuing to decrease, thus reflecting a much weaker demand situation than had prevailed eurlicr ln the winter. Cattle: Supplies of cattle In April and May aro expected to pieced those of a year ago and It la doubtful that the movement ol unfinished cattle to the coun try will continue at the relatively Wl, ,nl. ,.r ....... Inhere. ' aro Indications" that !u r Art at least of tho country buy ing this year was duo to tho an llclpatlon of spring grazing re quirements made possible by the abundant supplies of hay and low priced feeds. Cattle prices, after an advance during the first week of March, started to decline, and reached the lowest level for the year to date the third week in Jlarch. Some recovery took place the following week but prices of all kinds for beef cattle were lower than tho first week of April. Butter: Butter prices have ad vanced sharply but consumption even at recent low prices has only illShtly exceeded that of last year and storage stocks are about 25 million pounds greater. Spring Production does not promise to bo sreat and prices probably will de cline less than usual. Hubs: With heavy rceelpts 1 of 'ess and tho possibility that tho Present storage holding, will huvo a depressing effect on tho demand Iw storage, It Is not likely that ,.J prices will make their usual klit seasonal rise in April and My and u small dccllno may bo fell. Wool: In the latter half of 'larch domestic wool prices -declined In response to tho lower prices registered at tho opening ' the London wool sales, ltccent Prices huvo become - mnro stable """ever, tho London sales closing "host the opening level and " Improvement In prices oc curred at tho final Wellington sale April a. l'oultry: While the seasonal tid l'icc In the farm price of chick en" may continue -during tho "P'hiB months, - it can hardly bo "" sreat as last year or on us 'high JJcvel as prevailed then. Stoi ''5C "ocks of frozen poultry aro !!0jhatcliei:y reports indicate Officers of Siskiyou Lodge of Perfection Officers of Siskiyou Chapter Rose Croix MKBFORT) MATT, TRTBUNE. MHDFORD. ORTXiOX. SUNDAY. MAY IS. .:!(). -' . 9 1 vr 'PA015 THRKE ,r, , Wise n,..,.. .. . 3J."""'"' -aner II. Jones, , A. Chum- ; I.. Lonl- I L. v.. I C08VALUS 10 FISH MODEL Senior warden, D. bers, ls. Junior warden, W gan, 32. Secretary and ireasur Williams. 32. Orator, W. c. Van Kmon. 32'. Almoner. S. W i..r, .... Master of ceremonies, I. ji' Cederwnll, 3;. Kxnert. A u i.., ... Assistant expert, Harold H Brown. 32. Standard bearer, George W Porter, 32. uuaruian of the 1-3. Peaslev. 3-a Tiler, Lew Rukes, temple, A. FIREJjfflON Structure Will Cost $60,000 and a Monument to Tom .Graham, Veteran Fire Chief, Has Novel Loca tion Board. ENDURANCE PLUS 32 SAl.KM, Ore.. May 10. (,P A , dream of many years will be real i ized by Tom It. (iraham. veteran nlentifnl uii n,'e ch'!f "' t-'orviillls. Ore., when 1 "' ,hl" sn,lnK d ho returns from tho Hawaiian Is- competitive lands early this summer and finds unimor; prlres ot h V may weaken the demand for poultry. The farm price for chickens on March 15 was 20.6 cents, rising from 20 4 cents on February If,. The aver age, rise for this period during the past five years has been about four tenths of a cent. PLUNGE FROM ROAD KILLS K. F. AUTOIST KLAMATH FALLS. Ore.. May W' C". Herrer i. 26, was killed near here last night when his automobile crashed through a hiKh fence near Algoina and rolled 3m feet down a hillside. Relatives said the youth bad been drinking ' " T-. . Origin, Development of Poppy Sale Told tlmi the city's model fire station hits been completed. it js esti rmiled the structure costing moro than $tit),000, will be complvtcd about June 1. Not only is tho building tho thiiiKs which Chief tiralium is most Interested in, but It Is the center of attention from the of fice uf Clare A. l-oc, stale Insur ance commission and ex-officio slate fire marshal, for the reason that the building is to be a model of what a modern fire station should be. Lee calls the building "Tom Cialiam's baby. Crahnm has been fire chief at Coi-valtis for about 30 years. ly profession tii-alinm is a druggist, owning a string of stores, and re ceives no salary for" his servleo as head of the Corvallis fire de partment. Years ago he made fire prevention his hubby with tho re sult that ho built up a remark ably efficient fire department, be came president of tho Oregon State Klre Chiefs' association, prcs jldenl of the Pacific Coast Klre . Chiefs' association and has won I for himself uu international rep j illation. Not long ago (trnham I suffered a break in his health and S Is In the ilawniian Islands for re 1 euporation. The new fire station will have feet, ' two 1 ' If tWV l ft i." . !' K- tlx iXsf?l$m the following order: Koi h : Clemenceau Q Kolng t" tho 1'nitod States to whimper uml sent I men talizo, like tho old dot -aid he is.'Q This Is uUegod to have boon raid when the "Tiger visited tho Vnited States during his I'roneh-Amorieun ik'nt oon troversy. ' ajf Clemem-eau: "Koch was n In MiilioVdiimle stddior." Out of the Hood of comment I which this post-mortem duel is creating tn Franco, then emerge' "a general feeling of 'regret that IlKN'D. le Ii30 aiiKlinK hhmui such a fitui (i)n ehould have i cn the Pauline lakes opened with arisen. 'n ue.ar-bll7.zard sweeping across thu Hditifiir-' vtimmed n up oy say- scvt-ii-miie wme caiuera. Ing that Koch and Clpmencenit "both greatly served their coun try, and In time, this ulone wiU bo remembered. ' , , Eight round trips between Sim Francisco and Lou Angeles without once stopping the motor, was the endurance record eMablished Inst work by this Hudson J rent Eight coach which registered the rcinnrkuhlu economy of 15.3 miles per en I Ion of snoeinted Ethyl gasoline and over 550 mile per quart of Vcedol motor ail for the 6.977 mile trip. It. M. Sharp (rigfci), service manager for Stanley V. Smith, Inc., Snn Francisco 1 Hudson -Essex dttriltitorn, who directed tho run and drove tho car on three of its 1000 mile laps. Is shown with Eorrot Miller, San Francisco City Sales Mnnngcr of tlto Postal Telegraph lionipanr who arranged for official checking of the car's arrivals und departures in Snn Francisco ' and Los Angeles r The idea of the poppy as a me morial flower for tho World war dead sprung up ns naturally as the little wild flower itself grows dimensions of lOUxtil In tho fields of, France and Flan- 1 liles high with a fire drill tower ders. The flower was the one'"' torio high. On the first touch of beauty which survived amid the hideous destruction of war. Along the edge of the trench es, beneath the tangled barbed wire, about the ragged shell holes and over the fresh graves it rais ed its bravo red blossom. It seem ed to be the one immortal thing in that region whore death reign ed. The soldiers of all nations came to look upon it as the living symbol of the -sacrifice t)f their dead comrades. AGRICULTURAL CHIEF'S TAB! C I litC fSADnCMk floor will he the apparatus room with space for l'J piece of equip ment. Tho alarm room will have two telephones with a man con stantly on tho job. Upon receipts of the alarms he will jot tho loca tion of fire on a blackboard with the necessary equipment to' fight f it. lie will then receive tho board ; on a pivot so that it faces the : ..pparatus room. In turning the j board it will automatically send ithc alarm to the dormitories and elsewhere. ' - i ? : The building -will be of brick finish'. , . , ... WASHINGTON (P) Secretary of Agriculture and .Mrs. Arthur M. Hyde are achieving a reputation In the capital for their attractive table decorations when they enter tain. At a dinner given for Vice President Curtis placuucs of yel low and blue Dutch iris adorned the long oblong table. Between these wero tulips of lavender, red and pink, while maiden hair ferns and pansier strewn all over the table trans formed it Into a regular flower garden. Classified advertising gets results Pershing's Silence Balks French Hope of 'Answer to Clemenceau P.,v T. T. Topping I "I ha i (Associated Press Staff Writer) j over a PAUIS, May 10 (p) The un-"bul my disguised hope of the French ! ed as uv e to start a controversy oi'fin." " the Tiger wrote, hlli neo would be contsru albeit tinged with alarm, that Oenernl P e r k h I n g would hop aboard the Clcmeneeati-Foch con-trovor-vy beyond the tomb, in which former President -I "rem let' Thereupon- he proceeded to lani bast the daylights out of Koch, in cidentally taking pot shots at poinrare and Potvhing. The reference to the 'American Poim aro recently joined, was j Army which caused Interviewers da. shod to the ground when the-to try and obtain Oenerul Porsh commander of the A. K. F. land- lug's comment read: "Foch him- EUCHONIC. Ore.. May 17. VP) John Creech of Salem has been appointed yell leader at the Uni versity of Oregon; Itobert L. Mil ler. Portland, athletic manager; Norman Fast man, Silverton, will manage basketball and Kenneth .Moore, Portland, will handle swim ming. Appointments were an nounced by Tom Stoddard, presi dent of the student body. od at Cherbourg recently. I have nothing to say oral Pershing told reporters, "and If I ditl have something to say 1 should prefer to say nothing." Interviewers pointed out that two entire pages of ClenioiH'eau's book "Grandeurs and M bieries of Victory" described tho stale' of af fairw behind tho American Army's lines in tho Argonne, as "chaos" hut General Pershing refused to-comment. A few days after Marshal Foch 1 died, a book written by M. Hay-; niond llecouly, a noted French author, purported to quote. Foch ; In some statements which left no ! doubt jy to the allied commander-in-chief's otiinlon concerning Georges Clemenceau, generally j known here as the "Father of j Vh-tory." ' This was in March. 1 i J I . and! Clemenceau immediately began to ; work on hit' book. Grandeurs and Miseries of Victory," laboring ho j hard that he came to nn untimely . death so the doctors say at the age r ss. self demanded supremo command Gen-1 of the allied armies, and suddenly stricken with paralysis of tho will power failed to exorcise it. He refused tn September, 1!) IS, to give Pershing the orders Imperi ously neccM.-ary to the good of the country. 1 had to enjoin him In writing to enforce his authority Filch as quoted by Hecouly had already .replied to this attack: "I never so much sought to command ns I did to bring those around me to concur with my ideas'. To command ls nothing; what is required Ih to understand the eharacter of those you are dealing with and to make your self undorMootl -by them. To un derstand one' another, that's the whole secret of life.' r one com me ntat ir, rather mel ancholy, says: "Foch and Clem enceau never understood' one nn- other and there Is the whole se cret." . . , . Some of the amenities exchang ed between the Commandor-In Chief of the Allied Armies and the French War Premier are In l'at tllli.Nil.l.. l,.ulms D. L. Il!t-lun 1o 4 I 41! 1i-n ... '." , 4 l. l" January n, T t- M. Wilson, 3J, January fl, , 1,J-5 to January 9. 102. I 1 aul H. Hynning, 32, Jan T nnry l, lgjs to January 10, WELCOME!- ! Scottish Rite to a Great Country Economy Meat Market The First National Bank Extends a Cordial Welcome To All. VISITING SCOTTISH RITE T ncruMc nmstcr, D. L. DuV- t id.... .. ... J "fniur warden, J. F. Lnw- 19 J9. Officers, IHHO 1 Junior warden, ' "Ing, 32. I ,fa,"r, P. B. TiynnlnB. 32, T "J'nioner. s. W. McOuiit, 32, Meretary, L. E. VIUIani, 32". . O I J'rurer, V. H. Vawtcr. 32 ai.ter of ceremonies, S. A. Kronchel, 32. T "Dtrt, L. D. Inskeep, 14 , Amtanl r.r VI H Chax. A. GREETINGS SCOTTISH RITE o If we can be of 0 service to you, come right in! Jacksoe County Bank TROWBRIDGE CABINETWORKS Extends corciial Greetings 0 to all visiting 0 SCOTTISH RITE T O DAY,o AS FOR YEARS BUICK DEDICATES ITSELF TO THIS BASIC SERVICE Ask for q Copy of Buick's Owner Service Policy Th complel, foclt ragardlng Buick rvic,, including Buick'. n,w Ownsr Touring and Chang of Reiidenca privl lg,., may now ba had in a brief, compact booklet, "Buick Owner Service Policy." Buick would like everyone who own. or expect, to own a Buick car la be thoroughly acquainted with the liberal proviiion. of thi. Policy. You may obtain a copy of thlt intere.ting booklet from the neare.t Buick dealer, or by writing direct to Buick Motor Company, Mint, Michigan. "Satisfy Iho customer." This has been the service policy of the Buick Motor Company throughout the twenty-seven years of its history. And so faithfully has Buick followed this policy that today thefamiliar . emblem of Authorized Buick Service means prompt, efficient and couitcous maintenance to moro than 1,500,000 Buick owners. Buick has. twice os many owners as any other company selling can priced above $1200- Horo aro a few of Ihe many important points of Buick's Service Policyi More than 4,000 factory-supervised Service Station -assure all Buick owners the same fine standard of skilled Buick service. ' A written Warrantycovering the first 4,000 miles 'or 'the 'first 1 90 days of ownership, whichever shall accrue first, guarantees every new Buick canto bo free from defects in material or wo-kmanship. ' ...... Should parts or workmanship prove defectlvs'bt any time during ' Ihe Warranty perlodi Buick dealers will supply the parts -and " perform lh necessary labor free of 'Charge. n addition to careful pre-delivory 'tests, tho Buick owner receives two major inspections without cost one after -500 miles and another after 1500 miles of driving. These include thorough road lest of all elements of performance. :'' '-"'' ' -The "Tourist" and "Change of Residence" clause's permrt'fhk) Buick owner to change his residence as frequently as he desires or to tour any part of the U.S. or Canada and till receive -th full Warranty benefits from the nearest authorized Buick dealer. ALL BUICK dealers fulfill these provisions of BUICICS service policy. All dedicate themselves to the task of serving promptly, efficiently and courteously. .... ..., " BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN Canadian Factorie. Diviilon of General Motor. Bultdert of Mclaughnn-Bukk, Othowo, Ont. Corporation kukk and Marquette Motor Can - SCHERER MOTOR CO. 38-40 North Kivorstdo BUICK AND MARQUETTE DEALERS Pbane 13 STANDARD SEDAN Down Payment Only Balance In 11 maty monthly naymenll. .ul prim ((95 to fl)50. Prica f. o. b. Toledo, 0., and specifications subject to change with out notice. A-- - i is your first impression I ... Beauty of line, co1op,aml Interior fittings whirJh you would expect to bco in a motor car of far higher cost. riii comfortahle roominess that affords youlpleas urable relaxation while rifling. . , . Plus the Willys Six robber-insulated motor which " develops 65 horsepower for a 72-mile-an-hour gait or 45-in-sccond for dushing pickup. WILLYS-OVERLANDf INC. TOLEDO, OHIO, WO ILLY 5 IU J. J. OSENBRUGGE AGENCY : 128 S. Riverside i Phone 1109 ' , u, tifvHffH iw.f.A At fc',l(rtlHr,iis.Tt rff- M T..rt-i...'t - ' ' WM f-.-! : Bron. 32. ' Cl'tain of the host. Otto .1 -MarK, 32'. r Tllr i . ... o o 1 n nun)?, a;