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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 29, 1931)
PAGE SEVEN IL How much Better STEP UPWARD IN jSEEK CO-OP AS they r Announcing . . . The Initial Showing of the Newest in Spring Frocks and Millinery ASTE la line with an expansion pro gram that has marked the activi ties of tho Oilmore Oil Company. Ltd.. since it began establishing branches in the northwest last year, -several executive promotions and additions to the personnel Commission Finishing Three Year Project to Conserve Moisture for Big Butte Springs. Oregon Cooperative Council Told There Is Too Much . Discussion Federal Board Members. 0 "MEPFORD Mffli TRTBUXR 'NfEDFOTvD. ORFiON. TTf rRSOAY, JANTARV. 29. in:'. I. TREE PLANTING COMPLETED AT WATER SOURCE ADVISEFARMER -- with this mellow Goklen Syrup. That's why good cooks like to serve this CiuMtm Mend of Hill I leer's with pan cakes, waffles and hot-breads. They know it has the true, old-timesugar-house flavor. "I use the finest premium grade of syrup from the first run of the best cane sugar refineries' says Hill Hcer, "to get this particular flavor." It's surprisingly inexpensive, too! STALEY SALES CORPORATION, Decatur, Illinois) Uu.lHekk Stalcy's Master B Under For 47 years Bill I Iccr has blended and tested syrup flavors. A sample from every batch of Stalcy's Syrups must pass the test of his educated palate at each sup in its making. 3 other delicious llavors Crystal White red label) Maple Flavored green label) Sorghum Flavored (brown label) Stalcy's Golden Syrup ccnes in the Blue can I PTTTTTrtTiiiTfTV1" '' nil fZAe MATMrWT) RATES 52 with both TO I I tlA '! mSS . s.ooo $ j'F 11 MAfWV t MCATrWAN JEWELERS MEDFORD, ORE. Pre-Inventory S I $k L S 25 to 50 Reductions on WATCHES RINGS SILVERWARE MESH BAGS TOILET SETS See Window Display Westfield Watches $17-75 Men's & Vomen's Watches . $12.75 The end of this week will mark tho completion of tho three-year program of tree planting the water commission has undertaken nt lilg iiutte Springs. During tho springs of 199 and 1930. 10,000 western yellow pine were set out. This year a greater variety Is being experimented with In con junction with tho school of for estry at the Oregon State- Agricul tural college. Twenty thousand western yel low plno have already been plant ed this year. This is the hardiest tree of tho west and Is familiar to everyone. Five hundred Scotch plno nro being planted on tho ridges. Hits trco is similar to the yellow pine, but having an advantage over it In that it is not susceptiblo to In sect attacks. One thousand Port Orford cednr nro being planted along the creek banks. This trco Is a native of tho Coos Bay region. It 1ms beautiful foliago and Is valuablo commercially. One hundred redwoods, wonder trco of tho northern California coast, will bo planted in a grove In the most sheltered location. Ono hundred Russian mulberries will ho planted on higher ground as they are a hardy tree and make a rapid growth In favorable conditions. This is an excellent tree for bird lovers as it exists where little other bird food sur vives. One hundred Chinese elm will bo planted In a grove. This elm is a recent importation from China and thrives in spite of adverse conditions. They attain a height of (15 feet and a diameter of two! or three feet. One hundred European larch, a hardy European spocles that makes an excellent limber tire, will bo found now in the Big Butte springs urea. The water commission realizes the importance of a dense forest growth on the water shed, and have taken advantage of the ser vice offered by the forestry de partment of the Oregon State Agricultural college. TALENT FRU1TN1EN WILL IE! FRIDAY: The Talent District Fruitgrowers will tneel Friday evening. January 3"tl, at tho Talent District Irriga tion office for annual election of officers and discussion of livo iiucs tlons .relative to tho industry. Light refreshments will be served. All growers aro invited. have boon mailt', no thut the sumo s.w.j:m, ore., Jan. uV) Sixty members of tho Orem Co operative council. eentrnl hotly of farmers' enuperaltve marketing or gonivai urns in this Mtnte, attended tho annual -.osUm hole yesterday and liMi'iiod to a dlsrulon of re cent m'livitUt of tho fodoral farm board hy t It. Don man, livestock momhor of thv board. Stabilization work of tho board through national grain corporation savod a disastrous agricultural price panic, ho declared, and whllo he is not in favor of tho govern monl entering business, ho said re cent stops wort emergency meas ures In accordance with tho mar keting act and that government I aiil to farmers Is no greater than has boon accorded other Industries in the past. '"I'hoio has boon too much dis cussion of board members and too nigh caliber of service euuui iime of markotlns uct ItHoIf," huUI maintained ntotiK with a growing! jjcnrn-,n. business. .Individual producers ho advised IM-omlnent umong tho executives j to, Kl.t hl ,, KtIiy in cooperative who have won a place "furtlior , mai koUlu, associations and nee up tho ladder" is A. M. O'Hunlon, Um thW are UukvtX toKether in who has boon named hy D. II. K- J rcgional ami national bodies. Co- laoi-norson, nonnwesi '""i01,l.u,lvw,i he said, must be In manager, as lubricating oil sales nosll(on to ..(..,uco BUreud between supervisor of the Oregon and Millinery and Frocks 303 E. Main Friday and Saturday a Corsage of Fresh Spring Flowers Will Be Given With Each New Hat or Frock Tait. AMoria: eentral. Mis. I'. . Shipley, Salem; southwestern, Airs. ". 11. Cooper, Marsh field; south western, Mrs. J. C. II tinio, Hose hnrg. ADVERTISING HELD ! CONFIDENCE BASIS; Communications May Primaries Opposed To the Kdltor: Koniier (iovenior of New York Alfred K. Smilh and CHiididalo for lueslilent of the United Slates, says In an arlicjo puhlished In tho Oregon Journal of January L'3 that .May primaries aro out of dato. In this articlo Governor Smith savs: "While I realize that there Is no law with rcgurd to tho time of nominating u caudldato for Hie presidency and that It In simply a matter of party regulation, there is no reason in tho world Unit I can see why a man should ho nomi nated for tho presidency Ip the month of May. It may have been all right years ago when it took a candidate all summer to travel around tho country to greet his constituency and talk to tho people, hut there Is no reason for it to day. "No man ahould ho asked to run for president for four months. I know that a great many people be lieve that ho doesn't really get Into action unlil late in September or early October. Anybody who has that notion In his head can very soon get rid of It by having him self nominated for president. Hy the time the camera man. the newspaper men. the committee on suggestions, the party leaders and all the rest of tho army that says with the presidential candidate during the entire four mouths, he Is campaigning, get finished with him, he has to go away some place In rest. I met President floorer III Florida In January after bis election. I was down there In search of tho samo thing hn was seeking rest and recreation after four months of tho most Inteusive and strenuous work. "The proper thing to do Ih to nominate In tho mlildlo of Septem ber. With our modern means of transportation, our publications spread out all over tho country, and our national radio hookups, all tho campaigning that Is ncccs sary can be dono in six weeks, al though yearn ago It may have tak en four monthH. Relieved of the strain nt two and a half months of campaigning, tho newly elected president will lie ready to assume the duties of bis office In the first two weeks of January." J. E. HENNKT. Medford. January S7. Klrrtrlc trnlley cars have been abandoned fur motor buseea In lluntsville, Selnia, Gadsden, Ala bama City and Attala, Ala, i,i4.li i- mi, I eunmiiuei- mill .-i,l,l southwest Washington district. In ..frl....,...v ... ,:riktini- maehincrv making tills announcement Mr. 0 ,)C !iUCC(.Ni(uli CoocrutVCS j,i general are still too local in nature, he said. Macl'herson declared that O'Hall Ion would head a staff of lulni eating nil specialists who will con tact every point in the territory to give experienced and timely lubricating counsel to dealers and the automotive public. O'llanlon is well known to the automotive and oil fraternity of Oregon and southwest Washing ton, having been affiliated witli tho oil and gasoline business for the last 10 years. Until bis pres ent promotion he was In charge of the tlllmore activities In Med ford, ('.rants l'ass and Ashland. Ho will leave next week to at tend a conference In San Fran cisco with other officials of bis organization and will then return to Oregon to assume charge of the recently created department. "Mr. O'llanlon has made a very commendable record In south ern Oregon and bis promotion has been Justly earned.'' said Mr. Macl'herson. ' Like other Oregon branch managers, his sales of Oil more ltlu-Oreen gasoline have doubled the original quota, and this factor, plus bia wide expe rience with lubricating oils fully qualifies Mr. o'llanlon for his new position." LONDON. Jan. 211. OP) Physi cians attending Princess Iteatriee, 74-ycar-nhl aunt of Iing Oeorge, who Is suffering from a broken arm and acute bronchitis, regard her condition as "not without anxi ely." Queen Victoria of Spain, daughter of the princess, is cn route here from Madrid. The physicians said the left arm which was fractured last Friday in a fall In her rooms at Kensington palace, was making satisfactory progress lint danger lay In the bronchitis. Sounds in Speech Differ WASHINGTON (!) Sounds in Hpoech as ordinarily pronounced differ widely in loudness, tests wild deaf persons have indicated. That of w" is loudest and that of "th" as In I bin Is one of the weakest. Vowels generally aro loud and con sonants weak. Hcho New warehouse and etoro room of highway commis sion completed. "The Silver Horde" Scores Hit at Holly SAN FRANCISCO. Cal., -Ian. 1M. (Ti Confiileneo. is tho Keynote to the present business situiition. Kennel h Hainanl of Petrol! told the f urnit nre dealers of western states In convention here. Hut-nurd is past president of the ul filiated Hotter Husiness Hnreaus of the Cniteil States. He was HtMrossinj; the, Western Furniture Dealers' oh sootal inn. Advertising is tho Uey In enufi denee, tie told the furniture men, etupliuHi'.iUK 1ho necessity for sound and dependable polities. Jiraiua, (hat portrayal by action of tho things that make up tho HlriiKKle of life. Is Klven its most vivid pioturina tion in ' The Sil vsl Horde." Ha-, dip rieturos' red blooded oultloon romance of the north, whleh op ened yesterday at the Holly thea tre.. Thousands read, enjoyed ami thi'JUed to this roiliantic n o v e 1 by I Hex lteneh. AHiitnn will find new thrills. drama and aetion I-Aolyn IJrrnl. in tile talhliiK sereen version. From the openlnK scenes where Joel McCrea and Haymond llatton fiKht their way through the frozen north, to the final sequences where Uvelyn llrent and Jean Arthur fight for tho love of their man, tho Htory is complete in its pathos, romance, drama, and comedy. Tho tremendous, sweeping aetion is given appropriate backgrounds by clnematogruphors who captured all the majesty of Alnsku's scenery and man-made beauty of metro politan scones. Tho manner In whleh the story inovoH from the frozen wastelands. to fishing villages, into an Ameri ca n metropolis and back again with rapid entertaining1 progress, brands (leorge Archalnbaiid, the director, as an artist in his Hue. Three terrific fights are staged with telling effect. One of them Involves many boats and scores of num. Another, between Joel McCrea and Ivan IJnow, is one of the most spectacular exciting ' ninn-to-imtn encounters ever stag ed fnr a motion picture. "The Silver Horde,'' distinguish ed with brilliant characterizations of at) uniiMiatly able east and carrying racing thrills throughout, is heartily recommended an ideal screen entertainment. n LfU l'OIH'l.ANU, Jan. ill. W) Mis. A, II. t'oiwlns of Portland will again bead the woman's aux iliary of the Oregon diocese of the Kplscopal church. She was re elected yesterday at the first ses sion of u two-day conference. . Oilier officers elected Included the following bonds of deaneries or the state: Northern. Mrs. John ' PORTLAND. Ore., Jan. 21). (VP) As u memorial to tho lute Nelson F. Macduff, who was for years su pervisor of the Cascade national forest, the United States geograph ic board named u moimiaiii after him. I'OllTI.ANI). Ore., Jan. '.!!. (fl) The Coffee Cup cafeteria at Hroadway and Washington street, for years a landmark of the city, was closed today and In the hands of receivers. Liabilities were list ed at ?:i:i.;il7 and assets at J7C37. NEW YOICK, Jan. 29. M') Testimony that tho Canadian rum runner Josephino K. was within tho territorial waters of the United States when sho was captured hy coast guardsmen Saturday night was before the two governments today. Captain William P. Cluett. mis ter of the vessel, km wounded fatally by a one-pound shot and liquor valued at HoO.000 was seized from his nud two other era ft. WHITE PLAINS, N. Y Jan. 29. '(I') Justice MorscbaiiBCr of tho state supreme court, who has been hearing about quunels of married folks for 27 years, is happily mnr rled hlmscir. This Is ono reason: He suddenly recalled something and declared a recess to solid 42 roses and a telegram home on tho I2iul anniversary of his marrlago. Light Travels Centuries NEW YOUK (PI Light from the great nebula Andromeda must travel IMi.iloO miles a second for more than SOOO centuries to ho vis ible from thu earth.. Tho nebula Is ISO quadrillion miles In dlamotor ami Is visible to the unaided eye. SALEM. Ore., Jan. 29. (P) Charles 11. Grum, state labor com missioner, was last night Instruct ed hy tho Joint wuys and means committee of tho' legislature to bring before the conimltteo somo scheme of .consolidation whereby somo other state activities can bo : joined with the labor-office.-Tho committee had In mind particular ly tho. atuto bureau. of Inspection of child labor and tho Industrial welfare commission Warrenton The Columbia ltlver Fishermen's Cooperative Packing Co. awarded contract to Edwards Ice Machinery and Supply Co. of Portland, for installation of new Ice machine at their plant, Dont wait until it is too late A fact you should not overlook More red-cells in the blood ! Good health and resistance to infection and disease, depend on that! boys of appetite, underweight, hIuc pi.'hncss, a weakened condition, nervousness, pimples and boils are tiymptoms, often seen, of a dc- ficiency of red-cells in the blood. If a lowered red-cell count is al lowed to continue, ANKWA often results. S.S.S. should be Cour safeguard. A hundred years O of experience hns proved Its use fulness In building: red-cells in tho blood. Take it liefore meals. Millions of people have found it the easiest and surest way to re store their rcd-blood-celli. The appetite picks up, the whole lwtly is InviRoratcd. Got S.S.S. tako it and poness a wonderful power of new life and vitality. Ask f6r the large size. At all drug stores. C S B . U. (QjC LAMPORT'S ANNUAL c SALE AGAIN Friday and Saturday For the benefit of those who were, unable to get the amount of bargains they wanted before we sold out last Saturday We Have Secured an Unlimited Supply of the Following: 18x36 Congoleum Rugs 9C 18x36 Turkish Towels 9C 3 Tumblers 9c Green Cut Glass Tumblers 9C New Green Sherbet Dishes 9C New Green Eight inch Plates 9C Special Magazine Racks 49c . Ivory and Green Combinettes 39c Ivory and Green Percolators 89c And Boy! A Lot of New Things This Time! Don't Forget That Our Paint and Wall Paper Sale Is Still On LAMPORT'S 226 230 East Main 'What You Want When You Want It" -- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING GETS KESUT O