Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 07, 1932, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SIX
JfEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1932.
F
MAIN TOPIC FOR
BEND, Ore., Oct. 7. (AP) Prob
lem of reclamation funding were
considered at the opening session
here today of the 22nd annual Ore
gon reclamation congress, attended
by representatives from several of
the western states and by reclama
tion and Irrigation groups from all
sections of Oregon.
Successes In production and In re
financing of projects that have bad
financial difficulties were part of
the record as the congress began Its
two days of deliberation. Commit
tee report submitted and addresses,
stressed the need of basic informa
tion of land resources and water
aupply and of a continuing program
of balanced and harmonious devel
opment. A program of federal co-operation,
tentatively outlined, included the
following points: A district refin
ancing over long periods at low In
terest on a basis of productive value;
physical rehabilitation of pioneer
aystems; supplemental storage for oc
cupied lands under ditch but with
Insufficient water; federal power re
ceipts above construction coat should
be credited to the reclamation bu
reau fund; Vie Cotton bill should
bs passed to stabilize range land ag
riculture. As a state participation the fol
lowing recommendations were made:
Provide for registration of Irrigation
district bond with the secretary of
state reclamation commission; any
other than districts should pay cash
for delinquency ceriflcates; district
managers should be authorized to
refuse water delivery where opera
tion and maintenance payments are
back more than one year; give any
district voting to refund tho right to
levy a general obligation asssessment
amounting to II an acre per year.
Be
On Saturday, October 8, local poul
trymen will be given en opportunity
to see trie world's largest privately
owned poultry research farm In op
eration when a special three-reel
moving picture la thrown on the
screen at the Grants Pass high
school auditorium.
After a series of showings In other
parts of the country before thou
sands of poultrymen, ' the new film,
entitled "n the Trail. of the Golden
Egg," comes to Grants Pass with a
reputation of being an absorbing and
educational show for poultrymen.
The program la sponsored by W. S.
Carpenter, Smith Hughes Instructor
of agriculture at the Grants Pasa high
school.
Besides picturing the unique meth
ods used on a giant experimental
farm with Its special equipment for
maintaining minutely accurate rec
ords, A. P. Rolf (In charge of poultry
research on his farm tor the past
10 years) will give an Interesting
talk on the latest research findings.
Mr. Rolf has had a wide poultry ex
perience, having been formerly asso
ciated with many college experiment
stations. He was In charge of the
College Experiment statlo nln Con
necticut; he also organized and stag
ed the first egg-laying contest in the
United States (Storrs. ' and
was at one time assor' Or.
-Buttger, who dlscoverr;
pullorum. Mr. Rolf v.
merly associated with tltr
experiment stations: Mlsisslp,
gla, Oklahoma and Louisiana,
former secretary-manager of the
tlonal Single-Comb White Leghu
club.
"On the Trail of the Golden Egg"
promises to reveal many labor sav
ing methods and profit tlpa which
the observing poultrymen can apply
to his own business. Mr. Rolf will
explain test operations on thousands
of chickens of all ages.
There will be only one showing of
the film, starting promptly at 8
o'clock. Admission Is free.
Huge Russian Power Dam Ready
For Dedication to Soviet Industry
The world' Jnrgoit hydro-elrctrlo plant lias been erected on the Dnel eper river in the Ukraine republic
of the invlrt union under supervlHlon of Col. Iluph L. Cooper (right). The roaring spillway ) pictured above.
How the dam and lta generating plant will form the source of power for neighboring Industries Is shown In'
sketch.
(By The Associated Press)
Power I
To get the power necessary for her
gigantic schemes of industrialization,
soviet Russia, has built Dnleproatroy,
the greatest electrlo plant In the
world drawing lta energy from a dam
140 feet high, which Impounds the
drainage of 170,000 square miles.
The dam. soon to be formally open
ed. Is Russia's biggest construction.
But the soviet union plans to build
another dam at Volgaatroy that Till
have a capacity three times Dnle
prostroy'a and will Irrigate 10,000,000
acres.
Power has been the cornerstone of
Russia's Industrialization program.
Slnoe 1920 more than a score of large
central stations and many smaller
stations have been erected. Power
plant output last year was 10,160.000.
000 kilowatt-hours, twice that of
1938 and five times the pre-war out
put. To existing capacity Dnleproatroy
U expected to add an average annua,
production of 3,530,000,000 kilowatt
hours. Its nine turbines, when In full
operation, will have a capacity of
756,000 horsepower. This compares
with 430,000 horsepower at America's
Niagara Falls, and 013,000 at Muscle
Shoals,
Since only three of Dnleproatroy
nine turbines can operate at all sea
sons the plant will be supplemented
with reserve steam plants having
300,000 horsepower capacity.
At the dedication. Col. Hugh L.
Cooper, American engineer and chief
consultant, will take a principal part
along with A. V. Winter, head of the
soviet administration of the project.
Colonel Cooper has been awarded the
Order of the Red Star for his work,
the first foreigner to be so honored.
Russian materials and Russian la
bor were used almost entirely In the
construction, but American methods,
supervised by American engineers,
and with American machinery were
back of them. The American plans
for construction were chosen after a
comparative test was made between
them and a European design.
Russian labor set- several records,
among which was the feat of pour
ing 510,000 cubic meters of concrete
In 1930. This, It Is claimed, Is more
than ever had been poured before
on a single project.
The dam, by eliminating a series
of rapids, makes navigable the Dnie
per river from the Black sea, 300 miles
south, to some distance abarve Dnle
proatroy. u.
Polish Student
Escapes As Cow
VILNO, Poland, Oct. 7. (AP) I
Honey Maid Grahams
win in the race
T
LIFE OF HOOVER
LOS ANOELKM. Oct. 7 WA) Jos
eph Scott, Los Angeles attorney who
nominated President Hoover at the
Oh lea go Republican convention,
oharged In an address before the
county central Republican committee
late last night that President Hoover
has been the recipient of threaten
ing letters. He did not go into de
tails. Scott charged the attacks on Hoov
er had been "unfair and unjust' and
declared "It Is no unknown for a
President to be assassinated."
His reference to threatening let
ters earn In the remark that Presi
dent Hoover recently has been the
redptent of more threatening letters
than any other President.
Glep.daie Given
Land For Park
ROSEBURO, Ore., Oct. 7. (AP)
T?ie Douglas county court today au
thorized donation of three blocks of
land tn the city of Olendale to that
municipality for public park pur
poses. The property, secured through
foreclosure of delinquent tax lands,
Is located at the edge of town and la
traversed by the stream which af
fords Olendnle Its water supply.
When needing aupllcattng sales
books, flat-packs or fan-fold cash
register forms, ledger sheets
for bookkeeping machines or
any other kind of printing,
don't order from out-of-town firms
and psy More. Phone 75 and one of
, our representatives will calL
Real Estate or Insurance Leave u
to Jones. Phoae Wt,
Vitamins. ..calories. ..Honey Maid
Graham! abound with them especially
Vitamin B, which ii so important for
growth. Mothen are interested in fad)
such at these. But yonnctten care more
about the crunchy goodness and incom
parable flavor (sweetened with honey,
you know). Honey Maidi are the ideal
between-meal "bite" for mother know
that they encourage healthy appetites.
Save Money
buy thrift packages!
Oven-fresh from Pacific Coitt bakeries
nearby, and scaled with wax wrapping.
The large money-saving green package
ii the one your grocer will recommend.
NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
"UrtMda Bakers"
Jfoney Maid
so. J v. ft. rT. or.
Grahams
Polish border guards near here re
ported a Russian university student
slipped across the frontier into Po
land disguised as e, cow. They said
soviet guards paid no attention to the
youth, Welslaw Hawrylowlcz, as he
lumbered across the line, after sew
ing himself up In a cow's hide.
OFF FOR BATTLE
BLTOENB. Ore., Oct. 7. (VP) Thirty
three Oregon University warriors were
ready to leave for Portland shortly
before noon today for an afternoon's
brisk workout on the Civic Stadium
field, Where they will meet the Wash
ington university Huskies tomorrow
afternoon In their first Coast con
ference (lit.
In the 33 was Stan Kostka, the
Webfoot star who turned In the
touchdown that last week defeated
Santa Clara, conquerors of California.
His arm was In a sling, however, and
he faced the prospect of sitting idly
on the bench throughout the game.
Coach Prink Calllson Intimated he
will star the speedy Oee In the pow
erful Kostka's place at half, but he
made it no secret he Is worried st
the necessity of keeping his 225
pound line crasher out of the game,
and said there was a possibility he
would be used If the Washington
threat cannot otherwise be turned
back.
Calllson said his probable starting
lineup will be:
Bailey or Morse, left' end: Captain
BUI Morgan, left tackle; Fry or H.
Olesecke, left guard; Hughes, cen
ter; Clark or Oagnon, right guard;
Nllsson, right tackle; Wlshard, right
end; Bower man, quarter; Temple,
left half; Gee, right half; Mikulak,
full.
SEATTLE, Oct. 7. &) When the
University of Washington Husky tan
gles, with the University of Oregon at
Portland tomorrow In probably the
most important Pacific Coast confer
ence football game of the season to
date, It will be the "underdog"
against the Wobfeet for the first time
In many years.
In each of the last four years,
Washington has rated as a favorite
over Oregon, but each time the Hus
kies took a beating. With this suc
cession of victories, and Coach
"Prink" Calllson sporting a powerful
lineup, the Webfootera have finally
been doped as the favorites.
Close to 10,000 Washington fans,
MeteoroIogicalReport
October 7, 13.
forecasts.
Medford and vicinity: Tonlttit and
Saturday partly cloudy and unset
tled; moderate temperature.
Oregon: Partly cloudy tonight and
Saturday; unsettled west portion:
moderate temperature.
Local Data.
Lowest temperature this morning,
41 degrees.
Temperature a year sgo today:
Highest, TO; loweat, si.
Tota'
ber 1,
Ipttetlon linos Septem
.03 Inches.
Relative humidity- at 6 p. m. yes
terday, 39; 6 a. m. today, 81.
Sunset today, 6:43 p. m.
Sunrise tomorrow, 6:16 a,
Sunset tomorrow, 6:41 p.
Observations Taken at 6 i
120 Meridian Time.
City
HI
z S
Is
a b
Baker City .
Boise
Chicago ..
Denver
Des Moines
Eureka
Fresno ....
Helena .
Los Angeles
Marah field .
MEDFORD .
New York
72
74
56
82
69
. 56
. 88
, 50
, 70
. 58
. 81
. 70
94
60
60
72
Salt Lake 78
San Francisco.... 60
Seattle 66
Spokane ...... 60
Phoenix
Portland
Reno
Roeeburg
.10
l'oggy
Foggy
Clear
P. Coy.
P.Cdy.
Cloudy
Clear
Cloudy
Cloudy
Foggy
P. Cdy.
Clear
Clear
Clear
Clear
Cloudy
Cloudy
Cloudy
Clear
Clear
the majority from Seattle, are ex
pected to travel to the Oregon city
to witness the game that may mean
the finish for one team as far as the
conference championship Is concerned.
CAR NATION. WHEAT
THE
HAND !
up Growth Hill
JsLlIERE'S no sliding backward in the
long climb up Growth Hill when Carnation
Cheat gires a helping hand.
Here's Vitamin B stimulant to appetite,
digestion and nerve force. Next Vitamin A
necessary to growth and appetite. Then
Vitamin E essential to vitality. Add to
these up-building proteins energizing car
bohydrates regulating bran blood-and-bonerbuilding
minerals. A truly vitalizing
cereal, approved by the American Medical
Association. And children"love"its smooth,
creamy flalces, its delicate flavor and deli
cious warmth. . . In fact a "good morning
for everybody starts with a steaming bowl
of Carnation Theat always easy to pr6
pare. . . . And think of it) For a trifle mors
than half a cent a serving!
FnEE..a'-DM-A-DKH"towelofuuffy,sbsorbent
flour-seeking msterisl. Hemmed, blesche d snd lsun
dcred. And bis; 30"i 30" snd overt One of these will
be sent you free upon receipt of the top of a Urge liie
package of Carnation Theat. Trim top around edges
for convenient msiling, send with nsme snd sddrest
to Carnation Company, 1075 Stuart Bldg., Sesttle.
mk
YOURS FOR A
votfjttcitmf
Hadio. .Csmstion-Albers "Cross
Cuts from the Log o' the Day, with
Laurs'nce U Cross snd Qusrtette.
Every morning 8:45 to 9 o'clock,
icept Saturdays and Sundays.
Stations KFI Los Angles . . KCO
Ssn Francico . , KCW Portland,
KOMO Seattle and K.HQ Spokane.
"our or a Coo a" Matning.',
CARNATION A L B E R S CEREALS
CARNATION THEAT CARNATION OATS ALBERS OATS ALBFRS INSTANT TAPIOCA
PEARLS OF THEAT PEACOCK RICKTHF.AT FI.I'FF CAKE FLOI R ALBERS FLAPJACK
SELECT COOLIDGE
10
A
TROT, W. T, Oct; 7. OP) Four
newspapermen found a allm-flgured,
serious-countenanced passenger In a
parlor car here yesterday afternoon,
staring aoberly out of a rain-swept
car window.
Re wore a neat brown suit and s
soft brown hat.
"Good afternoon, Mr. Coolldge."
said a reporter.
Calrln Coolldge roused and smiled
faintly. Passengers all around, wrjo
had not recognized the former presi
dent, sst up.
"Will you tell us where you are
going, Mr. Coolldge?"
"New York"
"Will you say what you Intend to
do?"
"I'm going to a railroad meeting."
"Have you anything to say on the
political situation?"
"No."
Oeorge T. Morris, a former, sher
iff, pushed through the newspaper
men.' "Will you shake hands with a good
Republican?" Morrla asked.
Coolldge shook hands mutely, and
went on staring out of the window.
The train pulled out of the station,
the rain still drumming on the window.
Pender and body repairing. Prices
right Brill Sheet Metal Works.
ORANGE DANCE. Laie Creek, Sat.
night Butte Palls orchestra.
A Dr. H. P. Coleman
Chiropractic Ptiyslotnerapy
and all Natural Methods
ORKGON LICENSE 2B4
California License 3D2S
YEARS IN MEDFORD, ORE.
HOME
OWNED
STORE
Phone
FREE
YOUR DOLLAR DOES BIG THINGS
FOR YOU AT PIGGLY WIGGLY
It buys the most in quality, value and satisfaction. Tour
marketing troubles vanish when you shop at this Home
Owned Money-Saving store. Try it today.
Snowdrift . . 3-lb.tin45c
American Malt 39c
Sperry's Rolled Oats 9-lb. bag 29c
,tp.29c
3 bars 19c
Piggly Wiggly Dependable
Flour Every Sack Guar. 49 lb.
ijux n iaices, large
Del Monte Tuna M size
Mother's Cocoa, 2 lb pkg.
Kitchen Brooms, each
Ovaltine, regular $1 size .
Camel Cigarettes, carton
Beans, Red Mexican
99c
23
-2 for 25
23
39
$1.29
-4 lbs. 19
-5 lbs. 24$
3 lbs. 19
Large White Beans
Baby Lima Beans
White King, large pkg. . . 35c
Chandu Magic Cone & Small pkg White King FREE
We Reserve the Rlfcht to Limit Quantity.
ECONOMY
Meat and Fish Market
Patronize the Economy Market where you get high quality
meats only We maintain a strictly sanitary shop and keep
our meats fresh in clean, refrigerated cases.
SPECIALS
Cottage
Sugar
Cure, lb. .
Butts
Bacon Squares
Lb 10
Pork Back Bone
Per lb. . . 6c
Picnics
Mild
Cure, lb. .
9c
Pork Shoulder Roast
Per lb. . . 9C
Veal Shoulder Roast
Per lb. . . 9c
Pure Home Rendered Lard
3 lbs 25c
206 E. Main
Phone 46