PJGE FOUR
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1932.
News Notes of Granges
By Official Reporters
EAGLE POINT GRANGE
(Br Mr. Gertrude Haak)
A Urge end Interested froup "a
present at the lut regular meeting ol
toe Eagle Plant Orange. August 16.
A large delegation was present from
Lake Creek and Roxy Ann linages,
si veil as visiting members from
Talent. Central Point; Jacksonville
and Bellvlew. Among ths visitors
were Mr. and Mrs. Gorge A. Andrews.
master, and wife, of Bellvlew Orange:
Mr. and Mrs. Ru-j Moore, muter, and
wile of Lake Creek Orange; Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Sims, psst msster, and wife
of Jacksonville Orange; Roscoe Rob
ens and Prank Hansen, master and
secretary, of Roxv Ann Orange: Geo.
Carter of Talent Orange and H. Tom
Fsnkey of Central Point Orange.
The following member were voted
as delegates to the Jsckson County
Recreation' club for a period of one
year: Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Mlttsl
staedt, Mrs. Bltterling, Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Barrett, Laurence Wlnslow.
This group Is to elect two of Its own
members to act as delegates to the
John Bradford recreational school In
ths fsU.
Mrs. C. P. Davlee. chairman of ths
Jnome economics committee, reported
Home Economics club will meet at the
home of Mrs. W. K. Davlee, August
81, for regular meeting. All ladles of
the Orange are urged to attend these
meeting. Each lady attending Is re
quested to bring one melon (any
variety), also to bring a clipping on
any subject la which they are par
tlcularly Interested, for reading and
discussion before the club.
. George A. Andrews gave an Inter
esting talk on co-operative market-'
lag. Mr. Andrews Is chairman of a
special committee on co-operative
marketing of the Pomona Orange,
and ha urges co-operation In the solv
ing of this very Intrlcste problem.
Be also urges any who may have any
good Ideas along this line to write
to some member of the committee
and give their Ideas. The other mem
bers of the committee are Wm. Carl,
Applegate, and W. H. Sparks, Bogus
River. Mr. Andrews' sddress Is Ash
land, Route L
Other Interesting speakers were
Roscoe Roberts. O. Rues Moore, Ted
Sims and Mrs. Sims.
i Members of the Boxy Ann Orange
'presented the following very Inter
esting snd entertaining program In
charge of Prank Hansen:
, Two violin solos by Be mice More
house Bolger. Mrs. Bolger Is one ol
the prominent professional violinists
of the valley and her remaraaou tx
nresslon and technique was well
brought out on her exceptionally fine
Ouarnertous model violin, an instru
ment more than 250 years old.
: Herman Mitchell pleased with two
yodellng solos; two cornet duets by
Wendell Tolls and Burrell Thornton
with Marine Thornton at the piano;
two vocal duets by Roscoe Roberts
and Anna Hansen, accompanied by
Miss Hansen at the piano; and In.
tereettng readings by Mrs. Henry Han
sen, Miss Anna Hansen, Daisy Ter
rell and Frank Hansen.
. The program was concluded with a
eery Interesting talk by i. l. xnomss
of Marshfleld, speaking against the
Zorn-McPherson bill. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas were welcome guests of the
Orange.
i After the meeting refreshments
were served and a social hour en
Joyed. At the next regular meeting, Sep
tember 6, ths men of the Orange
will put on a competitive program,
under the leadership of Sam Coy. The
fallowing meeting on September 20
the ladles of the Orange, under the
direction of Mrs. Bertha Young, will
put on A lecture program. The two
group are competing for points,
i The latchitrlng of ths Ragle Point
1 orange Js always out for visiting
0 ranger.
Sams Valley Grange
; SAMS VALLEY, Aug. 23-(Bpl.)
Many attended Bams Valley Orange
Saturday night, when the program
was put on by the legislative com
mittee. Numbers were a Up dance
exhibition by Bud Snyder of Oold
4 -More Lectures -4
WEDNESDAY NI0HT Freeing Your Subconioioui
Mind Through Psychoanalysis.
THURSDAY ATTERK00N (2 o'clock) A Kiw Sod
to Youth and Beauty (For Women Only).
THURSDAY NIGH T Discovering Your Own Soul
The Hidden Secrets of Happiness.
ADMISSION rRER to all evenlnf lectures, at 1:11. Ctqulallt
muale from ?:4S to 1:18 br Lurte Bmrb, lnlernallonallj faraous
vlollnlil. K cordial Inrltallon to ever adnlt In Medfort,
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS HALL
Carver ttti and drape 81a,
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC-ALL WEL00M1
Hill; a farmer song by Mrs. Dick
Straus, Mrs. Fete Buerson and Mrs.
O. T. Wilson, who lm persons ted men:
a musical selection by Mrs. Sims
of Jacksonville and song practtcs by
all. Watermelons were sold by the
H. B. C. Visitors Included Mr. and
Mrs. D. W. Bee be, John Anderson
snd Mr. Yakel of the Central Point
Orange; Mr. and Mrs. Ted 81ms and
Miss Joyce of Jscksonvllle Orange,
Mr. and Mrs. McKnlght and Miss
Thelma and Mr. Snyder of Oold Hill.
subjects discussed at the buslneei
session were the school merger bill,
bus and truck bill, recall agitation
and road oil work.
MOSCOW, Aug. 23. (AP) "Shock
brigades" numbering 100,000 peasants
wsre reported organized In tbe
Ukraine today to complete the grain
harvest, which la- still fsr In arrears
as compared to last year.
Kharkov dispatches told of the mo
bilization, declaring the peasants were
answering the cell of the official
newspaper Pravda for more speed In
completing the harvest before coal
weather comes.
The dispatches said Indications were
thst ths campaign waa having very
favorable results. ,-
Up to August . only lM.ol3.too
scree or 63-8 per cent of the entire
sown area had been harvested com
pared to 156.323.500.' or 71.4 per cent
at the same date in 1931.
PRUNE PICKERS1
, PAY AGREED ON
' ROSEBURO. Ore.. Aug. 2S. (API
Douglas county prune growers today
announced a scale of wages for la
borers tn the prune harvest, which
will start about September 1. Com'
mon laborers are to receive $3 per
day and drlermen 3.50 per day. Pick.
era will be paid three oents per bushe)
for Italians and four cents per bushel
for petltee. Pickers will also receive
a bonus of one-half sent per box for
remaining until the end of the season.-
Laborers will be required to
provide their own board.
The wages are approximately (1 per
day less than those paid last year.
TEDDY, JUNIOR TO
MANILA. Aug. 3S. (AP) The
name of Roosevelt, which la borne by
the Democratic presidential nomlne,
also will be brought Into the Repub
Hcan campaign In behalf of Presi
dent Hoover.
Theodore Roosevelt, governor gen
eral of the Philippines, said today be
would sail for the United States Sep
tember 14 to participate In tbe effort
to bring about the re-election of ths
president. Mrs. Roosevelt will re
main here, atnoe her husband ex
pects to return in December.
Noted Educator Dle.
ABILENT Texas. Aug. M(AP)
Dr. Oscar Henry Cooper, TO, one of the
outstanding educators of the south
west, former state superintendent of
the publlo Instruction and former
president of Baylor university and
Simmons university, died at his home
here today.
By Dr. Stanford Kingsley
Claunch
Xminent Food SolentUt,
Psychologist ui
Fiychottnalyrt
Tonioht
Your Thoughts
Tow They Make or
Break You.
7
F
SELL EASILY SAYS
OF
Handling and featuring nationally
advertised foods, particularly those
advertised In local newspapers, has
proved so satisfactory for gateway
Stores thst, according to an an
nouncement by their president. M. B.
Sxaggs. this big food distributing
concern will. In the future, confine
practically Its entire effort to this
policy.
"We have found." Sksggs sale,
"that the buying public la much less
skeptical and better satlifled when
offered brands with which they have
become Intimately familiar through
reading about them In their own
newspapers then Is the esse when
they are offered an unknown brand,
even though the quality of the un
sdvertlsed article may be fully as
good as that of the well advertised
Item. Somehow, people seem to In
stinctively mistrust merchandise
whose mskers sre unwilling to come
out in mack and white and tell the
public about It.
'Advertised brands, particularly
those featured In the local papers In
towns in which we have stores.
quire little or no selling effort and
there Is rarely any complaint about
either quality or price. If anything
should be wrong with the advert'ud
goods the purc'.iaier nr blame
us but places the blame upon the
manufacture-, where It properly be
longs. Moreover, when buyers see in
lm adve-tlstl by the manufacturer
II the aame issue o: ,h paper In
which we sis offering hat Item for
sale they kno. Immsl'aUIy, rl?ht
wnere tney ran get It and we. as well
as other merchants, finl our own ad
vertising more effective and satisfac
tory. In fact our experience with the
sale of foods advertised by the man
uiacturer in the same local papers
in wnicn we advertise has been
satisfactory that we plan to lend our
major anpport to such Items.
Sksggs further announced that ill
concern had practically discontinued
the use of handbills snd drculsrs
and would, hereafter, confine their
advertising almost exclusively to
newspapers. He said their experience
In nationwide merchandising bad
convinced, them that tbe local news
paper Is tbe most economical and ef
fective medium for reaching , t ie
C I9M, lctrr a Unas Tomcco Co,
77 O . r -J C) O
J s( lilXs - AIS Ui islS V
I
Envoy To China
w -It
AID -
t, . ,
public and they were, therefore,
eliminating practically all other forms
of printed advertising.
Idaho Farmers
To Hold Wheat
LEWISTON, Idaho, Aug. 23. (AP)
Upwards of 400 farmers in this area,
one of the richest wheat districts in
the Pacific northwest, were bound
by an agreement today to sell none
of their wheat for 60 days', unless a
profit can be made. They control
5,000,000 bushels of wheat.
'
Sams Valley Veal
Stolen Is Report
SAMS VALLEY. Aug. 23. (Spl.)
Abe Vincent reports he Is a victim
of cattle thlevea and lost a fat veal
from his corral last week. I
-rr0
esterfield
oJanJntojLeJtiellorJi
t
CINCINNATI. Ohio. Aug. 33. (AP)
Libby Holman 1 in seclusion In
Baltimore, the Times uld today,
pending much of her time knitting
clothing for the baby she expects in
February.
And, whether It Is a boy or girl, the
child will be named Smith Reynolds,
In memory of Llbby's husband, for
whose death she has been Indicted
by a North Carolina grand Jury. She
now is at liberty under 125,000 bond.
Reynolds died July A of a bullet
wound at his Winston-Salem, N. C.,
estate. Reynolds' friend, Albert Wal
ker, also has been Indicted on
charges of murder, but Urs. Reynolds
has consistently, through her father
and attorneys, maintained the death
was a suicide.
Preparation for apprsachlng moth
erhood has taken Llbby's mind from
the tragedy, the paper said, and her
only Interest now is the child. I
f
KIDNAPED. BEATEN
CHARLES CITY, lowa. Aug. 23.
Ulia U..la Qttttl mMU.afrarf '
st wanvu uvutti uuui-Bw jtiwjm
county observer of the poor, advised
Mayor N. O. Gray today that she had ;
been released by a group of unem
ployed men who abducted her from I
the city hall and took her to Altai
Vista.
Miss Stull was quoted by the mayor
as aaylng the men had knocked her
unconscious, twisted her knees and
struck her on the head. She said !
she was taken some distance by seven I
men In an automobile.
It was understood four or five un- I
Identified men have been committed
to county jail In connection with the
kidnaping. The abduction followed
dissatisfaction of the men over pay
they were receiving from tho city for
emergency relief work.
Temporary Bridge
For West Siders
SALEM, Aug. 23. AjP) The tempor
ary bridge over tbe Mary's river on
the West Side Pacific highway at
the south city limits of CorvalUi,
made neoeaeary by the collapse of the I
fgr c-";"
eld steel span when It was struck by
a heavy truck last Tuesday night, !
was opened to traffic Monday after
noon, it waa announced hers today
by O. B. McCuUough, bridge engineer
for the state highway department.
HEAD IS ARRESTED
PORTLAND, Ore, Aug. 33. (API
A. A. Asbahr. president of the North
ern Saving ez Loan association the
Northernbanc corporation and the
Service Finance corporation of Port
land, waa arrested here yesterdsy on
warrants based on five secret Indict
ments charging him with unlawfully
lending funds of a savings and loan
association without security.
Robbers Escape
In Bullet Hail
PORTLAND. Aug. 23 AP) Two
youths who tied and robbed William
O. Knox, service station attendant,
early today, escaped In a rain of bul
lets after Knox loosened his bonds,
picked up a policeman and chased
the fleeing hojdup car. One of the
robbers wss believed to have been
wounded In tbe leg.
r -Mtit'i 3t PRETTY BEFORE I WAS II
t IT! MARRIED-NOW LOOK I . 1
V, . II ATTHEM-THATS WHAT 1 , 1"S I DAKllMf,
ZT-M DISHWASHING DOES! II I T YOUR HANDS E , I
r- ' i . ' .... i
1 2W S I 'J 4.1 THEY USED I f ' ' v
kW lux for dishes I 4r V - ANVsi? Tw ,,.,,,. Xtttk
m ,TKEEPSrOUR l.fi I b beauty care In tftf
TO HANDS ATTRACTIVE U E . THE DISHPAN,
ittaf y-T ,r arzmti I L '- " J&l
LUX for Dishes
- i.: ,
over
LABOR ANALYSIS
WASHINOTON. Aug. 33. (AP)
Business upturns which it said were
more than aeaaonal In character, were
noted today by the labor department
In Its July analyals of trsde.
"The first really noticeable expan
sion in industrial activity that has
occurred so fsr this year." aald the
department's employment informa
tion bulletin of July gain.
Specific Increases were in the boot
and shoe industry, with "quite a num
ber" of factories bsck to a full-time
basis: the textile Industry, especially
manufacturers of woolen, worsted,
rayon and allk products: anthracite
mining, . showing re-employment of
several thousands; highway construc
tion. Increasing not only direct em
ployment, but swelling the payrolls
of stone quarries and cement mills.
"A more optimistic feeling pre
vailed." the bulletin concluded, "with
the outlook for August considered en
couraging." Mute Chorus Wins Strike.
BELGRADE (AP) Because they
couldn't collect long overdue salaries.
A WEEK
Everybody enjoys
a milder cigarette
. . a cigarette that
tastes better
In over 80 countries Chesterfield ciga
rettes are bought and sold . . . smoked
and enjoyed. Why is it?
Because
Because they taste better. -
Their mildness begins with milder,
riper tobaccos the right kinds of Do
mestic rrith enough Turkish, blended
and cross-blended to an even finer taste.
And wherever you go, up and down
and across the world, Chesterfield
goes too . . .
Wherever you buy chesterfields
you get them just as fresh as IP
YOU came by our factory door.
mm- i-k-x:-
x: SS5c A
the chorus singers of the Jugoslavian
state opera here started a "sound
sulks" In the midst of a perform,
ance, opening their mouths wide, but
making no sound. They got the"
money.
Russian Woman
To Be Executed
SAMARA. U. 8. 8. R, Aug. 5!.
A kulak (well-to-do peassnt) woman
named Qrlbenova. today become the
flrat of her aex to receive the deata
penalty under a new decree classify.
Ing as capital offenses thefts from
collective farms. The woman wii
sentenced to be shot after she had
been convicted of stealing gram near
the village of Oslnovka.
SAN FRANCISCO'S
NEW HOTEL
O-X FORD
Every Room with
Tub and Shower
Single .00S.50
Double 2.50&3.00
Twin Beds M.OO
NOTHING HIGHER
Garage Service
Theodore A. HsdscMsr.
MARKET and
MASON STS.
LATER
ver
they are milder.
i
4
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