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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1931)
PAGE EIGHT MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON; THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1931. E 10 ATTEND MEET PEAR PROMOTERS Traffic Assrw Ratifies Plan For Advertising Cam paign Other Districts ' fall In Line With Idea. At a meeting of the Rogue, River Traffic association this noon, plana for the Winter, Pear promotion and Advertising campaign launched last spring were rattled, and David H. Rosenberg, president of the Pacific Pear O rowers Council, named as a local' d legate to a meeting to 'be field in Portland tomorrow morning, when final endorsement of the plan will, probably be made, v Delegates from all northwest districts will be in attendance, ' - ' It was estimated that 000 cars of winter pears, grown In this district, were now .signed up and that 100 more would be secured at once. ,'This includes all the large orchards, with one or two exception, and many of the email growers who have not been contacted. The plan, calls for an assessment of two cents per packed box. The early season estimates held that 1500 care of winter varieties would be Eilppcd from this'' section but It is thought this total has been roduced by heat and drouth."- Others Favorable -r ' ' ' According to Mr. Rosenberg, the Wena tehee, Yakima and Hood River districts are 80 per cent behind the advertising plan. At the Portland meeting tomorrow the pear tonnage signed up will be revealed. It is thought that slightly more than 20,000 will be raised for eastern ad vertising. . A large percentage of the valley shippers have concurred In the plan,, and assured President Rosenberg to day they would make an effort to contact the small' growers. . : It Is felt !by the shippers and a large percentage of the growers,; that the time has come; for an extensive national advertising campaign to bolster up -the pear markets, owing to ''competition and- Increased produc tion, and that It. would be business folly to longer delay the start, .. The Xzzard company, advertising specialists, represented by William Horseley, Seattle, has agreed to modi fy H8 plans to meet present condi tions. ':r ;i' 7W,; Horseley plana to visit this section within the next ten days, and , fur ther outline plans for the coming season, which include advertising In New York and other eastern markets. THE DALLES, Ore., Aug. ao. (AP) The river steamer Umatilla left The Dalles at "4:10. o'clock this morning bound for Portland with 2780 bags of Balfour Outhrie and Grain Cor poration wheat. FOREIGN LEGION TAKING HAND ' HOLOUIN, Cuba, Aug. 20. (AP) A blrdseyo view of the battle of Gl bara Indicated that the rebel forces were planning a strong counter-offensive was passed on the Associated Press today by an Amerlcun college student here. . -1 . ;f .. , William Otis 'Puller of Portland. Me., an undergraduate at Harvard, who i )i running v garegs here for the sumrritrV said he stood on the hllV of Loia de la. Truz, located be tween here and Glbara; and witnessed with . binoculars a part of the three day siege of the north coast port, resulting in a tactical victory for the federalists. Three of the government's ten alr plnnm, were shot down.. . but large quantities of arms und ammunition were taken from the rebels. ' According to his account, a verit able "foregn legion" of about 1,000 Americans, French, Japanese and Qer mans. amplified by native soldiers, landed at Oibara Saturday morning In -the German vessel Isle Volmaner, and took possession of tho city with hardly a struggle. A force of about 2,000 Cuban sol diers advanced on the town Monday afternoon. Their artillery laid down a heavy fire, airplanes ralcedl the town from- above, and a cruiser di rected (('bombardment from the har bor. The battle raged for 72 hours, with great bloodshed on both sides and military maneuvers worthy of or ganized warfare. TWO BATHERS LOST ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. 20, (AP) The list of missing bathers reported to the beach life guards as having probably been lost during rthe unusually high tides yesterday was reduced to two today, when one re turned to the . home where fee had been staying, - . He Is Homer Pry, 17,, Carnegie,-Pa. . There seems to be no doubt that Eugene Beauarle, IT, Paterson high school athlete, drowned. During the height of the beach phenomenon he was seen struggling in the water. : i . '. - - ' BOSEBURO, Ore., Aug. 20. i(AP) Cecil Beckley, farmer, was charged expels SMULsIP-IDDIP ASE matursillv -; J (Black biting, harsh irritant chemicals) proGenf in every tobacco leaf if - f J 4 I V 0 us Thel finest to bacco qualify plus throat Vn protection. Thev'reaut- so they can't be in!" Hrfular Lurky Atrikm Dam On rhma v. Lucky P(iftyOKAftm N. H. C. ntworlt$ very Twcfday. Thursday mna Saturday-mail Mr chnlc la rlty Urikt, ill tik AW..N.V.C, v Every LUCKY STRIKE Is made of the ' finest tobacco leaves the world can offer the fin est from Turkey the finest from Kentucky, Ten nessee, Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas the Cream of many Crops throughout the world. But all tobacco leaves, regardless of price and kind, as nature produces them, contain harsh irritants. LUCKY STRIKE'S exclusive "TOASTING" Process a process that mellows, that purifies, that includes the use of the modern Ultra Violet Ray expels certain harsh irirtants naturally present in every tobacco leaf. We sell these expelled irri-" tants to manufacturers of chemical compounds, who use them as a base in making sheep-dip, as 1 w'ell as a powerful spraying solution for trees, flowers and shrubs enough to permit the daily dipping of over 50,000 sheep or the daily spray ing of many thousands of trees. Thus, you are sure these irritants, naturally present in all tobacco leaves, are not in your LUCKY STRIKE. "They're outo they can't be inl" No wonder LUCKIES are always kind to your throat. y. S. Depu of Agriculture, Bureau of Animal Industry, Order No. 210 It's toasted" Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays Sonshin Mellows Hear Purifies Vow Throdt P. of ctlon ogalnst Irritation ogolnst cough with first degree murder In two In dictments returned today by a special grand Jury convened August 10. Beckley Is Indicted separately for the murder of his wife, Alma Beck ley, and his step-daughter, Margaret Clutter, on a farm near Glide, July a. Beckley was accused of shooting 4- ,hls wife while she was picking ber to his father afterward saying he had shot bis wile and then had shot and killed his step-daughter. He later nee. Beckley allegedV shot himself through . 1 found and taken to a hotp, he recovered. r"'i it 1 P I f For nineteen years Montgomery Ward & Co has been selling Riverside Tiret. Millions e Riverside tires are in use today. The rum Riverside has always stood for: (1.) Highti quality. (S.) Rock bottom price. (3.) Wonderj ful tire performance. (4.) A fair and liberal guarantee. But now Ward's has surpassed even its previous record. A new Riverside tire has been developed. Its name is the Riverside Mate The RIVERSIDE MATE upholds all the trJ ditions of the splendid Riverside name. It is I fine tire. It is sold therefore, under the regulaj Riverside guarantee of "Satisfactory servia without limit as to time or mileage." 00 (& CuTilCTTiB (Sum mm (m mm LUXE WUStli m 4?fi WW sum -And that, we believe, makes th RIVERSIDE MATE the greatei tire value ever offered. So briefly, this is the story of the RIVERS1D MATE. 1 It is the newest member of the famous Rive side line of tires which Ward's has sold eo tinuously for 19 years. 2. It lives up to the traditions which have mac the Riverside name famous and is a fit tire both in appearance and in quality. 3. It is sold under the regular Riverside gua antee of "Satisfactory service without lira as to time or mileage." 4. It is Offered at the Lowest Pr!c at Which a Riverside Tire Hi Ever Been Sold ! ixe 29 x 4.4021 I EACH ( 1 When " J Bought : I-- J In Pairs Here' how vnn uw on t1i nv RTVFRSIDF M ATP and the Other tirf 'sold by Ward's. (Ward's tires are made by one of the world's largest ou . f ... , . . t HincturcTS pi nne tires.; Siia 29 x 4.4021 29 x 4.5020 30 x 4.502T 28 x 4.7519 29,x 5.0019 31 X 5.2521 32 x 6.0020 33 x 6.0021 Rlvartlda Mat "tch ., - Pair $ 4.35 $ 8.40 4.80 i 9.50 4.85 : 9.40 5.70 11.10 6.00 ' 11.70 ; 7.55 14.40 9.85 19.50 10.25 19.80 ' pi. '. v Rlvartlda Haavy Duly (t ply) - Each ' $ 7.15 7.55 i: 7.48 8.50 8.90 10.25 11.50 11.65 Pair $15.90 14.50 14.50 16.10 17.50 19.90 22.50 22.60 Wartfi Trail $ 3.85 $ 4.55 4.45 5.25 10.: Medford, Oregcn 117 South Central Phone 24 c - a M '