PAGE TWO
SEEDFOItD MAIL TRIBTJXE, SIEDFORP, OltECpy, TIIURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1933.
I
Newly Mined Metal Must
Contain at Least Two
Ounces Refined Gold and
Two Parts Gold In Five
WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (ff On
dar new regulation Issued bj the
treasury, consignment! of newly
dined gold Intended for Ml or ex
port must contain at least two ounces
of refined gold and at least two parts
of gold in five, by assay.
Tha gold will bo receivable In the
form of bar, kings, buttons, retort
pongs, lumps, grains .and dust In
their native state free from earth or
tone or nearly so.
Affidavit Required.
All consignments must be accom
panied by an affidavit showing the
aourc of the gold and tha time It
was mined. Persona delivering gold
must keep an '"accurate record of all
gold mined or acquired, and these
records must be available for exam
ination by representative of the
treasury for at least a year after a
consignment of gold has been de
livered. The regulation ssld:
"When, after a delivery of gold on
consignment for sal, the mint 1 at
Ufled that th aame may properly be
old under tha provisions of the ex
outlv order of August SO, 1033, and
these regulation, and that th con'
Ignor ha fully complied with the
aame, and after assay, It shall certt
fy to the federal reserve bank In the
district in which the mint 1 located
that It has available for sale, In ac
cordance with the said executive or.
der, for the account of the person by
or on whose behalf the gold wu con.
signed, the amount of gold shown by
uch assay, and shall also certify the
mint charge Applicable thereto.
Bale Authorized.
"The aald federal reserve bank are
authorized to sell such gold, nearly
a may be In the order of certifica
tion, to persons licensed to acquire
gold for use In the arts. Industries
or profession, at th price deter
mined by the secretary of the trea
ury from time to time. Th ecre
tary of the treasury will telegraph
dally to the federal reserv banks
price which he determine Is
Gets 199 Years
V v.V
i 1
AT
IN RECENT DAYS
Grain and Butter Consider
ably Under. Values of
Month Ago Farm In
come Is Over Year Ago
Mr. Eleanor Jarmsn of Chicago,
called th "blond tlgre" by police,
was entenced to 199 year In pr.
on following her conviction on
eharg of murder In connection
with the (laying of an aged men
hint (Associated Press Photo)
the
equal to th beat price obtainable in
the fre gold markets of the world
less expenses Incident to shipment
and aale.
"Th aald bank shall notify the
respective mints of aalea made by
them. If auch gold la not aold upon
th day of and th day following it
certification to a bank it shall be
offered for sal to foreign purchasers
oy tne federal reserve bank of New
York .
"Proceed of aalea, less th charges
determined by the secretary, and mint
charges, shall be paid to th con
signor by th federal reserve bank of
the district where such gold waa de
posited." SUGARPlNESOLD
AT HIGHER PRICE!
Three carload of rough sugar pine
lumber ihave beea sold by tha Owen
Oregon Lumber Sales company to the
government the past week at the
highest price for rough lumber In
me memory or jamei H. Owen, gen
raal manager of th local plant. The
snre cars brought from 900 to
1700 per oar.
The lumber shipment waa eoB'
algned to the navy yard at Bremer
ton, Wash, where it will be used In
making pattern for naval construe'
tlon.
All th lumber waa clear, aawed to
assorted size and lengths, and b
for accepted waa Inspected by the
lumbermen association and govern
ment Inspectors.
. Th Owen-Oregon mill here Is now
operating under th provisional NRA
coo. The final cod will be released
eeptember as.
According to Manager Owen, all
wage in tne operation were Increased
as per cent August 91, and affected
bout 190 men employed In th mill
and 00 employed In th woods.
DOG HERO SAVES
FIRE PATROLMAN
IN BEAR BATTLE
T GREY '
PASSES, AGED 71
CHWSTON BANK. Knglsnd. Sept.
1r (API Viscount Orey of Pallon
don, who, as sir Edward Orey, th
British foreign secretary, gave Oar
many th ultimatum plunging Oreat
Britain Into th world war, died to
day at th a of 71.
H virtually retired from public
life In IBIS becaua of falling eye
sight and Jiad been ftertouily m for
more than a week.
Death cam to him at Fellodon.
his beautiful horn on the North
umbrian coast, and waa believed to
hav resulted from high blood pres
sure. A foreign secretary for th eleven
yer from 1905 to 11S. Viscount
Orey waa fated to play a leading
role In the destinies of Europe. He
never wavered In his stand on be.
half of Belgium after exhausting v
try effort to avert th mar.
P1NB
SLABS
Per toad In To
lsd tots
.MEDFOKD ri FX CO.
Tel. est
f88
ABERDEEN, Wash., Sept. 7. (AP)
John Huelsdonk, famous "Iron Man
of the Hon," whoss wilderness feats
have become almost legendary In the
Olympic peninsula, grappled for his
life Sunday with a she-bear and sur
vived. Ruelsdonk waa out on fire patrol
on th Swamlsh trail when his cou
gar dog Tom scared up a bear a few
feet off th trail. With on amash
of a hug paw, the bear hurled the
dog 90 feet acre th trail and took
after him. The dog ran and the bear
attacked the 88-year-old nloneer In
stead of pursuing the hound.
Biting and cliwlng, th bear car
ried Huelndonk down while the man
battled fiercely. Then th counar
aog, wno i nearly a famous on the
peninsula aa It master, charred tha
bear ao ferociously the bruin' atten
tion was diverted. ' Huelsdonk rirau-
ged himself to his rifle. A ulnol.
bullet dispatched the bear a It and
tne dog were locked together In combat.
With one teg mangled and hieetn
from a dozen claw wounds. Hueia-
donk and the lacerated dog limped
their way five miles to their ranch,
home In the middle Hoh river valley,
17 mile by trail from Porks In Clal
lam county.
District Fir Warden Oharlea Crln-
pen hurried to the ranch bv horse to
remove ttueisflonk to tha hn.mf.1 .t
Porks. But the settler crufflv re
marked he had lived In the wilder
ness. 43 years without going to a
hospital and "h wasn't irolni to
start now because of a few scratches."
Me admitted he had a close call and
credited the dog with saving his life.
Sonfe 80 yeara ago scores of Penin
sula settler declare Huelsdonk car
ried on hi back a Mil alee cook stov
with a sack of flour In th oven. He
transported the load from Pork 17
mile by trail to hta wilderness home.
A forest ranger who met him on th
trail commented on the tlx of the
load but Huelsdonk, thinking noth.
Ing of It, said the only thing that
bothered him waa the sack of fim.r
shifting around In the oven and un
settling the load. Even now at 88
hla physical strength Is said to he
remarkable and many cnmpflre tales
nav oeen woven about hi feat.
BUSTER K EATON IN
'WHAT! NO BEER7'
Buster Keston and Jimmy Durante
turn the laugh on the beer queetlon
In "What I No Beer?" now at th
Studio.
Between them these comic turn
3.J per cent beer' Into 10 per cent
laughs. i
SALEM. Ore. (UP) Price of
most farm product are now lower
than during early summer, report
the bureau or agricultural economic,
department of agriculture. Prices
of grain and butter are considerably
lower and bogs and other product
siutntiy lower tnsn a month azo.
Though farm income ha declined
somewhat. It is still much higher
than at the same time a .year ago,
the bureau reported. Most recent
estimates placed average prices 78 per
cent those received In 1010-14, re-
gsrded s normal years. Thl 1 com
pared 64 per cent early In June of
this year, S7 In July, 1933, and the
all-time low of 49 In February, 1933.
Costs Grow Slowly.
Average price paid by farmers,
while running higher than those re
ceived, have not advanced ao rap
Idly, th conomlt say. Exchsnga
value of farm product for com mod
ule purchased now standi at 72 per
cent, compared to pre-war value of
100 in each case. Exchange value
percentage waa 83 In June and 83
a year ago.
Employment and payrolls have con
tinued slow gain. Latest survey In
dicated factory employment waa 84
per cent normal, factory payroll 48.1
per ceni.
Industrial activity, report the eoon
omlat, I now entering a teat phase
of th business cycle. The past four-
month have been a period of build
ing up inventories, accompanied bv
only a moderate increase In retll
aales. Should consumer purchaalng
continue to Increase In the next few
months, further Improvement in gen
eral Business condition may be
pected.
Wheat Surplus Cut
Average farm price of wheat In
July was 89.9 cent a bushel, com
pared to 88.7 cent the previous
monr.n ana as.e cent in July, 1832,
mce in tne united States la almost
nign enougn to start imnort aver
th tariff wall, aa world prlc ha
noa markedly increased, wheat aur.
plus in the United State waa con
siderably decreased by a ahort crop
thl year, less than what I normally
vonaumea.
Potatoes thl year are arrowing a
noted increase In orlces. Durin .n.iv
the average U. S. ferm price was 97."
cente a ouanel. compared with 49.8
in juiy. 1033. and B1.5 for the aver,
age of last five years'.
Hog Market Poor.
Hog market, on eve of the govern
ment reduction plan, remalna depress
ed, with price low and feed cost
mounting, with Increasing laugh-
raiug mouse or poor Dastur and
feed prospect, beef cattle price arej
uaeiy w ns during coming month.
Butter price mounted rpldly dur
ing th aarly part of th summer,
but have alnce declined aomawhst.
Prlc of butter haa followed closely
depreciation and appreciation of the
dollar valu on foreign exchange.
Egg price are Increasing slowly, de
eplte the feet that production la
greater than a year ago.
rarm prlcea of chlckena allowed a
slight increase during July, compared
to a ususl mld-summer decline. Wool
market la not actlv now, but price
are holding firm.
a year ago by several thouaand, of'
flctala reported.
Th Royal Hoearlans of the me.
tropin and the Cherrlana of Salem
will feature t,he day with ceremonies
upon arrival of th special train
from Portland.
Boaeourg. with Its Junior band,
captured th day scheduled 'for Sa
lem day yesterday. The band was
accorded a haerty reception.
More than 4000 watched the race.
Th pan-mutuel wagering was boost
ed by more than 60 per cent over
Monday netting, due mostly to In
auguration of tha 1 ticket for the
first time sine the racing bill be.
came effective In Oregon. The for
mer minimum ticket waa 83.
grandpaTholsThost
SAMS VALLEY 3ept. 7. (Spl.)
Attendance at the birthday dinner
given Grandpa Hoist by friends Sun
day, nesred th 300 mark. Other
guest of honor were Mr. Katie
Raaah and Miss Lenora Buchholz of
Ooodhue, Minn., who are nieces of
Mr. Hoist. Among those attending
were friend from Portland. Medford,
Rogue River, Central Point, Jackson
ville, Eagle Point, Gold Hill, Antl-
och, Klamath Falls and Table Rock.
In honor of hla birthday. QrandDa
tioiat treated the crowd to loa cream
and watermelon. An hour In the
afternoon was devoted to singing
nvmns, arter which the crowd depart
ed, wishing Orandpa. happy and pros
perous birthday for the future.
SABOTAGE SEEN
RECOVERY PLAN
(Continued Rum Pag On.)
Ices henceforth to treat N. R.
stories "more objectively."
The pugnacious general met these
open challenges In the press Immediately.
He took to the air and Informed
the radio audience again they ahould
buy only from those who had ad
hered to the recovery program. Fur
ther, he commented on the fact N.
R. A. had asked all newspspera to
reprint In advertisement form the
Prealdent'a Re-employment P r o-
gram."
Some of them did It," he asserted !
aggressively.
bl than any other In recent year
If th soft coal men ar to be be
lieved they hav reached th end of
their rope. They eay they have been
living on capital for some time and
simply cannot stand an additional
burden of Increased wages and short
ened hour.
Mr. Roowvelt told leading bltum
inou operator they were over-producing.
Thl waa nothing new to
them. They know It only too well.
A matter now stand, the bitum
inous operator a re look Ins at a fed-
erally-wrltten cod only because they
nave nothing els to do.
But they hav an answer, H la
to accept th Inevitable against which
they have been fighting for years and
close down about 60 per cent. This
wouia solve the problem of over-pro
duction and eventually bring about
economic readjustment of the Indus
try. Such a move would wreak havoc
however with the general Idea of
putting more men back to work.
A MENACE-,
John L. Lewi, head of the United
Mine Worker. 1 fighting thl con
tingency to the last ditch. He has
Just doubled hi membership, draw
ing almost entirely from hitherto
non-union fields, on a promise of
better working conditions.
"Ah me,' ay th operator, "there
have been too many of ua for a long
time. Right now bins that ahould
be filled In anticipation of winter
are only 36 per cent of last year.
We'll hare to give up the ghost."
Uncle Sam seem to be in a very
uncomfortable middle.
Vil
to uir and tctvlp. bat
can b qoicttj ear.
nctad by
LUCKY
TIGERS
1 Basle rrttoets
tHtilttrtotha hair. A iiWU bottia U crftaa
utHdant to altmlnBt dandruff .mat firtt
fpik-ucn nop cna. uiivu neoimg.
O lucky Tljjvr MasjM Imwih hnmt
Utelr HranM tba v'p tod (MturtirVa
seat
HI r,A lU Tlnmlw
luiter and ihean. Praam, hair la any at.
HO. IK7 V ai7
At Your Druaaf at OF
OF FAIR VISITORS
SALEM, Sept. 7-(AP) Pc)tland
day at Vie state fair ao far drew the
finest weather of the week today,
with the aim ehlnlng bright after
on day of rain and two of partly
cloudy weather. But the attendance
the first three days exceeded that of
IS
Johnson has. a highly attuned
sethoacope laid on the muffled pul
sations from the antl-N.R.A. move
ment within Industry.
Be It remembered that before he
took over the Job of coaxing Amer
cers Industry Into paying higher
wagea for ahorter hours he waa one
of Barney Baruch's rlghthand men.
Baruch. from his Inscrutsble position
in the world of higher finance, haa
long laid an uncanny finger on situ
at Ions while they were still in the
incubator atage.
Rest assured that advance warnings
or attack are flowing steadily Into
the Blue Eagle's neat.
There la one Industry affording
the Roosevelt administration a. real
heartache.
Thl on la bituminous coal, already
bluntly told by the President It was
obviously on the decline and had
caused the government more trou-
Robert Crura Umbrum. alias Charles
Condlcy, mechanic, waa arrested
here jesterday by state police and i
Deputy Sheriff Phil Lowd on infor
mation wired from Perry. Okla.,
where he Is wanted on a charge of
felony, -
Umbrum waived extradition to Ok
lahoma, was placed In the Jackson
county Jail and will be held there
until Oklahoma officials arrive for
their man. Detalla of the case are
not known here, but official are 'ex
pected to arrive from the south In
th near future.
PERMANENT
WAVES
$3.75 Complete
A stlf-Mtt!nfc wave
with ringlet ends.
ALAINE'S
Tel. 1518. 113 E. Main
(Upstairs In barber shop)
ttranae
t'Jkase of
little Mary DocW
a real life movie
D5") yxin.
For Greater Savings
THE NEW-
IMPROVED
SENTINEL TIRES
Built To Meet Today's Needs For
Greater Value At LOW COST
We Offer The-
Most Surprising Tire Value in History
4.40-21. Reg. ,. .$4.98
4.50-21. Reg. .. .$5.65
4.75-19. Reg .$6.05
5.00-19. Heavy duty $8.30
5.25-18. Heavy duty $9.25
6.00-18. Heavy duty $10.95
Don't Wait for Holiday Troubles, Equip NOW
with the New LEADER OF VALUES, Built
With BLOWOUT PROTECTION
Firestone Service Stores, Inc.
Ninth and Riverside "One Stop Service" ?hone 520
d'uoitoki
maut
APPQlMTMINM
"Its price is so small and its
value is so great that it simply
doesn't pay to be without it"
Saving strength is not a luxury. It' tne thrifty
thing to do, in household or business.
An old subscriber tells us, who discontinued her
telephone in recent months and now is ordering
her service restored, "I found that my telephone
saved strength and time more than I had ever
dreamed, and more nickels, dimes and quarters
than its monthly service costs."
Nothing does so much for so little as your tele
phone. Home Telephone and Telegraph Company
t. How putzled Mary Dodd's par-
rnta were! She had always been such
bricht, vivacious little girl. So full
ol life and interest in everything
about her. And now. . .so 'listless,
Irritahle. Not herself at all!
'V"$v : j
a. So Mrs. Dodd took Mary to Dr.
Kent. How surprised she was when he
mentioned constipation. And then
..."more outdoor ejterciae, fresh fruit
and vegetables, lota of water between
meals and added bulk in the diet."
1. "Added bulk?" Mm. Dodd asked.
Th kindly doctor smiled. "She like
cerrals, doesn't she? Well, why not
giveheroneoftherineat cereals I know
Post' 40'"j, Bran Flakes? It's deli
cious, and it dot have eatra benefit."
4. And Mary . . . well, Mary knows
nothing about the extra benefit thia
delicious cereal provides. She only
knows she's nrer tasted anything so
good especially with sliced bana
nas. And mother and dad agreel
PERHAPS YOUR CHILDREN TOO
may benefit from this delicious cereal
Post's 40 Bran Flakes (with
other parts of wheat) provides
the bulk most systems need . .
bulk so many diets lack. And 1
thus it helps to insure normal
elimination ... to prevent mtesn.
nal sluggishness.
You'll all love Post's 40 Bran
Flakes so crisp and rcfrcshine
and delicious. Get a package to
day I A product of General Foods.
ft?
3
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O 2 Ft Cofjt, IJ1J
I j ;
M klKKw, awaoxli, dm, clUn? k dotn't , to "7
so -it -W..k a. mcs it aL. tmoZ 2? r"
E iXJ . i Z
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A m tjbtfei iti.ikiM..l aOa a mmKtnm wl. aj,u
F 1 - Ma, br antnl iWahm, HkWJ. j j. ,
THE CALIFORNIA OREGON
POWER COMPANY
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