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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1933)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUXE, MEDFORD, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20. 1933. PAGE FIVE Local and Mlu Fairbanks Here MLu Ruby Fairbanks of Yreka, Cal., wu trans acting bualneaa and rial ting friends In Medford Tiieaday. Ear Treatment Mrs. Mary Nerin of Medford was In Grant Paas Mon day for ear treatment. Grants Pass Courier. Arrives from North Mrs. Gilbert Cheever of Portland Is In Medford Tlaltlng Fred Brugger. She arrived this morning on the Oregonlan. Fined for Drunkenness W. W. Phillips, who appeared In city court on a charge of drunkenness this mornln?. was fined 10 by Judge A. D, Curry. Gets Building Permit A building permit for improvements at a coat of 130, at her home at 543 Haven street, was Issued to Ora Lane by the city today. Leaves Hospital Ed Pierce of this city, who had been a patient at the 6 acred Heart hospital for the pa&t week, has recovered sufficiently to return home this morning. On Business Here H. E. Troyer and J. E. Earnest of Seattle, repre senting the Northwest Police Journal, are spending today in Medford, con ferring with Chief of Police Clatous McCredle. Accident Reported Ira E. Chas- tain of 28 Groveland and Eugene Groat of the Jacksonville highway were drivers of the two automobiles which collided at the corner of Jack son and Bartlett streets' Tuesday evening at 5:15 o'clock. Goes to Lnkevlew Cal C. Wells. deputy United States marshal, left last evening for Klamath Falls and Lakevlew on government business. From Lakevlew he will take Nathaniel Gardner to "Portland on a federal counterfeiting charge. Guests of Muurys Mrs. J, F. Cow- glll of San Carlos, Cal., and Mrs. Hal Pierce of Coqullle, slater nad niece of Miller Maury, are guests at the Maury ranch In the West Side district this week, where Mr. Maury has been re ported very ill. He is visiting his stater, Miss Mary Maury, and brother Henry there, having arrived some time ago from Crescent City. ULINARY RAFT.... By Estella Dorgan, Director oi Home Service. California Oregon Power Co. Tomato Recipes. Tomatoes are. perhaps, the .most popular of All vegetables In this country. At least, we know that more tomatoes are can ned than any other vegetable, and, with the growing demand for canned toma to Juice, they are Indeed becoming very Important In the market and In the plans for home canning. Tomato Juice for breakfast, toma to soup for lunch and tomato sauce with meata at Estella Dorgnn. dinner are some .uses which bring the tomato Into use three times on many, many days each year. Some well-seasoned and dependable recipes are given here: Tomato Juice. Wash, drain and cut In sections. Add a small amount of water If nec essary to start simmering. Cook un til soft, stirring to avoid burning. Light seasoning may be added If de sired. Strain through a fine sieve then bring to a boll for one minute. Four Into Jars and seal. Tomato Soup No. 1. 8 quarts cooked tomatoes 5 green peppers, chopped 1 cup chopped onion 8 bay leaves 1 T mixed lckllng spices 1 T salt 'A t pepper 1 c chopped celery Cook together one-half hour then put through strainer, bring to a boll and seal. Tomato Soup No. 2. 4 gal. tomatoes (peeled and cut up before measuring) 14 stalks celery, cut 7 medium onions, sliced SI cloves 10 bay leaves Cook the above Ingredients to gether slowly for two hours then put through a sieve and add the follow. In to the trained tomatoes: Make s?.uce of 1 c butter 1$ c flour i o salt 4 c sugar 4 T paprika Melt the butter, add the flour and stir, add seasonings then blend with the tomato mixture. Seal while very hot. To serve, add one-half as much cow's milk and heat. Ripe Tomato Re1lh. tj peck ripe tomatoes 6 green peppers 4 medium onions 'i c cabbage 2 t celery seed 1 t ground cloves I Today and Thursday I i -i. W mm (VI' I ALSO I Comedy . Cartoon News Personal Home from Bay City Mr. and Mrs Chas. 0. Oravee returned this week from San Francisco, where they were visiting for 10 days. Mr. Wallace Here 0. T. WaUace, railway representative for the Chi cago Great Western, la la the city on business today, having made the trip south from Portland on the Southern ! Pacific. Rankin Returns Hugh B. Rankin,, supervisor of the Rogue River na tional forest, returned last night from an inspection tour through Lake o1 the Woods, Upper Rogue and Elk Creek sections, in the interests of road construction. Pattersons Expected Mr. and Mrs. R. Patterson of Portland are expect ed here this week on their return to Portland from San Francisco, where they have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. R. S- Patterson, who are well known in Medford. Storms at Lake D. S. Libbey, nat uralist and assistant superintendent of Crater Lake national park, Is In Medford today from the lake, and reported two snowstorms recently, each with a. fall of three Inchest It was raining when he left the lake this morning. Prof. Davis Calls Professor V. A. Davis waa a visitor In Medford today from Siskiyou, and was greeted by many friends. He is an active mem ber of the Southern Oregon League of Writers and also has many friends, who formerly attended school with him as instructor. Newmans Return Mr. and Mrs. Frank Newman have returned to the city from Portland, after accompany ing their son Benton north to enter the University of Oregon p re-law school. They also visited their daugh ter, Mrs. Marian Alexander. In the north. Meet on Friday Lincoln School Service olub will meet In the lunch eon room at the school Friday after noon, September 22, at 3 o'clock, It was announced today. Tea and wa fers will be served. The exchange rcom for welfare work la now open, and the department la ready to make exchanges and take in any articles of clothing that might be donated. All persons Interested in attending are urged to be present. 4 t mustard seed 54 t red pepper (2 o elder vinegar) (V, salt) augar) Scald and peel tomatoes then chip finely with remaining vegetables and forst group of seasonings. Add the vinegar, H cup of salt and cup of sugar and let stand over night. Pack Into Jara and process at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Sesl tight. Ripe Tomato Preserves. 0 lbs. ripe tomatoes, peeled and cut up 8 o sugar 2 lemons . 2 T ginger root or candled ginger Wash lemons and slice very thin, ad dto tomatoes and cover with the augar and let stand over night. Add ginger root and cook slowly until to matoes are clear, about one hour. Seal while hot. Chill Sauce. lS'lbs. ripe tomatoes 8 green peppers 8 large onions 3 e brown sugar 2 t cinnamon 2 t cloves 1 T salt 54 t red pepper " 4 o vinegar Scald, skin and slice tomatoes. Chop the onions and peppers fine and combine al Ingredients. Cook two hours slowly, stirring to prevent scorcning. seal in sterilized Jara. India Relish. 8 green tomatoes 0 ripe tomatoes 2 green peppers 2 red peppers 1 doa. medium cucumbers 2 large onions c salt 1 salt 2 c vinegar (cider) 1 e water Remove seeds from peppers and tomatoes. Slice the tomatoes and cucumbers and chop the peppera and onions quite fine; eprlkle all with ssit and let sUnd 24 hours. Drain, then pour the. vinegar and water over them and bring to a boll and drain again. Add the following spices, cook ao minutes and seal: Mix well 8 T sugar 1 t cinnamon 54 cloves H t tumeric 54 t allspice 2 T chopped mint 2 T white mustard aeed 2 T celery seed 2 c boiling vinegar Green Tomato Mincemeat. 1 gal. green tomatoes DANCE h Dreamland TONIGHT DINTY MOORE'S LITTLE GIANTS Men 25c Ladies 10c Well Seasoned k BODY FIR OAK and LAUREL Sate nr ordering NOIT. MED. Ft EL CO. Tel. 631 Goes To Cuba Jf JVv TO Claude Swanson, secretary of the navy, left the capital aboard a naval cruiser for Havana, Cuba, but ft was stressed at the White House that he waa not going under or dera from President Roosevelt but merely was going to atop there en route to the west coast. (Associated Press Photo 1 T salt 4 lbs. sugar 1 lb. seeded raisins 1 lb. currants 1 c vinegar 1 T cinnamon H T cloves 2 oranges, rind and Juice 1 lemon, rind and Juice Chop tomatoes in small pieces, place in colander and pour boiling water over them three times. Drain well and add sugar, raisins and currants and cook until tender, stirring care fully. Add vinegar and let cool then add remaining ingredients and stir thoroughly. Seal In sterilized Jars. E An order granting L. A, Banks, local agitator now serving a life term In state prison, for second degree mur der, SO days additional time In which to file a bill of exceptions has been granted by Circuit Judge George P. Skipworth of Lane county. Banks la planning an appeal to the state su preme court. Defense counsel In seeking the time extension set forth that another month Is necessary to permit the court reporter to transcribe steno graphic records of the trial. Time for filing the petition expired today. Sixty days grace for filing of appeal paper expires this week In the case of Gordon. L. Schermerhorn, former sheriff, under a three-year sentence for ballot theft conviction. Scher merhorn Is at liberty on $7300 bonds. pending filing of the appeal. 4 WHEAT ALLOTMENT "TIME WEARING END Next Monday September 25, Is the final date for filing applications for wheat allotments under the agricul tural adjustment act. County Agent Robert Q. Fowler flgurea that close to 100 applications, representing 60 per cent of the wheat acreage of the county, will be filed, before the final date. FORMER P. M. AT BLY ADMITS EMBEZZLING PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 20. (API- Thomas E. Wallls, former postmaster at Bly, Klamath county, pleaded guilty here Tuesday to an Indictment charging him with embezzling $731 of postal funds. Sentence was de ferred. Shows at 3:00 7:15 0:13 0 WORLD'S FINEST SOUND . . RCA Ends Tomorrow Night She Challenged the Menace of a Selfish Mother! FRIDAY SATURDAY Cnming to THRILL You! "Tomorrow at Seven" STORE CODES ARE PASSEOTO CHIEF (Continued trom Page One) was substantially the same as the master compact except in regard to store operation. It contained an ad ditional prele control provision, how ever, ta limit discounts on trade marked drug articles. This section, made applicable to any retail estab lishment handling drug products, read: "No retailer shall aell standard trade-marked drug products whose retail prices are advertised to the public or Indicated on the goods, their packages, or containers, at a discount greater than 21 per cent from auch declared retailed prlcea. "In cas ethe retail sales of such goods are slow or unsatisfactory the retailer may give the manufacturers or wholesalers from whom such goods were purchased. If hla address be known, the opportunity to repurchase such merchandise at the wholesale delivered price as hereinafter defined lee sdellvery costs. "In the event that the manufac turer falls or refuses to repurchase such goods within five days after the retailer has sent such notice, such goods shall at the option of the retailer be classed and treated as clearance merchandise as prolvded for in section 3 of this article. Section 2 was identical with that of the general retail code. Y SOON TO TAKE UP TRIAL COST CASES Assistant Attorney Ralph E. Moody, who handled the prosecution of the ballot theft case. Is expected to re turn from a vacation within a week, and take up the cost bills, filed against the defendants by the state. The state seeks, under Oregon stat utes to secure the costs of the trials, which totaled approximately $26,000. County officials estimated that be tween $8000 and $12,000 may be re turned by the actions, and the coun ty reimbursed that much for its fi nancial outlay In restoring law and order and community peace. Under the Oregon law, the coats of the trials are docketed as Hens, and are enforcable as Judgments, against property of the defendants. Heaviest expenditures were entailed In the trials of L. A. Banks, former local agitator serving a life sentence for murder, and E. H. Fehl, serving four years In state prison for ballot theft. Banks secured a change of venue to Lane county, and hla trial coat $7,700. Fehl's trial was held In Klamath county and cost approxi mately $5000. The trials of LaDleu. Jones, Scher merhorn, and Glenn each cost In the neighborhood of $2000. They were held here. TIMBER LAND SALE An order to sell timber land In the south end of the county, In the liquidation of the Citizens' bank of Ashland, was filed today In circuit court by the state bank department. John Leeson of Ashland agrees to purchase for $275 a certain strip of timber lund from which all the pine haa been logged and nothing but fir remains. The land Is one of the assets of the bank. Mats, . . . . I lie Kvc 230 Kiddles a Dime HIGH FIDELITY WIDE RANGE DUNNE As the wife who dared to out . . . mm cord . , . that bound a doting mother to her married sonl JOEL MCCREA PRANCES DEE ERIC LINDEN LAURA HOPE CREWS Kay Francis in The triangular conflict oi a man who falls in love' with the wife of hla best friend Is treated from a new angle In "Storm at Daybreak," at the "Strange as It Seems" Skipper Visits Medford He Is 26 years old. Is making lots, of money. Ia good looking. Has a j very southern drawl (one from the old south), lives In Hollywood, and j hasn't been married yet "Strange As I It Seems." That's not the story John Hlx, originator, writer and cartoonist of the famous newspaper and motion picture feature of that title, sug gested for his column when he ar rived in Medford today. But it s the one he admitted under cross-question ing. Sans pen himself, he declared, "I'm on a vacation." And although he admitted an un controllable yen for his motion pic ture work, he la still true to his first love the newspaper, Mr. Hlx Insisted, with no reservations. x Accompanied by his brother (or accompanying, as he would have It) Ernest Hlx, representative of Mc Naught Syndicate, and business man ager of "Strange as it Seems," Mr. Hlx came to Medford this morning on return from British Columbia, head ed south. "I wish I could stay In this sec tion," he volunteered with a flash of brown eyea and white teeth. "I've never been In southern Oregon before. I thought we had mountains down In the Carolines, but I hadnt seen these." Turning to the Carolines, he went back to his first newspaper Job. "I did a dally cartoon for the Green ville Daily News, when I waa In high school. In order to be sure that the people saw it, I also delivered papers on the side. I got seven dol lars a week for my full services." "I happened to be lucky enough later on to do editorial cartoons for the Washington Times. Then I started syndicating my feature six years ago. I've been on the alert moat of the time during those six years. This is the first vacation In a long while. I could have found some good Ideas on the trip, I know. But I Just shut my eyes and said, 'I'm on a vacation'." Asked about hobbles, the cartoonist Insisted he had no time for them either. A little golf, a little tennis, a swim about once a year, he said composed his recreation. A desire to fish the Rogue, he did add to his wants, however, and declared he would get around to it some day. Mr. Hlx haa a staff of seven men working under him now, his feature appears dally, and In full-page Sun day dress, In so many newspapers of Special Hat Event law ' Famous Gage Creations $2.95 to $5.95 Other Reliable Makes 39c to $2.95 Ready-To-Wear Coats and Swaggers $11.95 to $25 Fall Dresses $1 to $12.45 Skirts, Sweaters, Jackets, Blips, Hose. Very mod erately priced. The Band Box & Shoe Box "The Store That Savos You Money" 223 E. 6th St. Phone 089 Craterian Film Craterian t nearer today and tomor row. Kay Francis and Nils Asther are co-starred, with Walter Huston and Phillips Holmes In the support ing cast. the nation he refrained from naming them. Then there are the motion picture features (one of them Is show ing at the Rial to theater today.) In using Crater lnke In his feature some time ago, Mr. Hlx said he played up Its unusual blueness, the fact that It never freezes, that It never gives up Its dead and that It has no known Inlet or outlet. He has also used the redwoods In his column, but failed to mention any other nearby scenery as having found a place in newspaper cartoon or motion picture skit. 4 ORGANIZE TONIGHT The extension class In modern eco nomic problems to be taught In this city by Professor Taylor of the South ern Oregon Normal school will open tonight in room 13 of the Junior high school at 7:30 o'clock. Those taking the course will re ceive University of Oregon credits, and a large and enthusiastic attend ance is anticipated. Broken windows glazed by Trow o ridge Cabinet Works. RCA PERFECT SOUND End TONIOIITI -BILLION DOLLAR SCANDAL" Thur. CI.IVE BROOK In "SHERLOCK HOLMES" Medford Bargain House will be closed Thursday, Jewish Holiday. Thursday, Friday, Saturday 200 more new hats Just arrived. Come in and see the Marvelous Values we are offering. Fall Shoes New and smart for every occasion, $1.95 to $4.95 Kiddies Shoes Famous "Robin Hood" health shoes. $1.25 to $3.45 FIELD REPRESENTATIVE OF RELIEF COMMITTEE E Claude W. Reynolds, field repre sentatlve for the state relief com mlttee under the national program. will be speaker here at the bi-monthly meeting of the Jackson County Health association. Miss Mildred Carlton, president of the health as sociation, announced today. The meeting will be held In the county court house auditorium at 2:30 o "clock and a large attendance la expected as an Invitation la being extended all interested persons as well as members of the health asso ciation. Mr. Reynolda has announced as his subject for the meeting, "Mor ale and Employment." Members of the Gold Hill unit will be .hostesses for the afternoon, y attending the meeting the peo ple of thla county are promised they will gain much valuable first hand Information regarding the operation or the relief program. For that rea son a very Interesting meeting Is an ticipated. CLASS TO OPEN A public speaking class for the younger business men of Medford haa been arranged by the Chamber of Commerce and will In all proba butty be started next week It was announced today by chamber offic ials. Ralph Bailey, instructor In debat ing and public speaking at the high school, will conduct the class which Shows at :00 7:18 . 9:15 liiViHf'ryji I SOUTHERN OREGON'S FINEST THEATRE i Today and Thursday THEIR EYES MEET! THEIR LIPS DEMAND! THEIR HEARTS THRILL! 5 i - With their countries at each other's throats . . . their loyalty to her husband ... his best friend ... in the bal ance ... all the forces of man and fate against thorn . . . noth ing could keep them apart 1 i ADDED s Our Gang "Mush and Milk" BOBBY JONES fthowi "The Downswing" will last for a period of twenty lea- sons. Chamber officials state that It ts not with the Intention of only de veloping public speakers that the class Is being organized but rather to promote leadership so that the younger business men will be better able to take over the reins of civic affairs in the years to come. Anyone interested in Joining the clasa Is asked to communicate with the Chamber of Commerce lmmedU rtely as only a limited number can be accommodated. The will of the late Mrs. alary Panny Scott of Miami, Fla., provided $1,000 to buy religious reading ma terlal for her only son. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY CASH PAID tor men's secondhand amis, odd ooats. oats and shoes. W1U a. Wilson. 93 N. Front St. TOP PRICES oald (or and band fur niture. Berrydalt 2nd Hand dtora. 1603 N Riverside. Phone itt. FOR S.L& Coot stove and heater, call at Apt. 8, Duron court on No. Holly. FOR SALE OR TRADE New 4-room modern furnished house, H950. Make your own terms. 308 A&hland. Ave. RE-UPHOLSTERING. Thlbault. Phone 869-R. CUCUMBERS, cut flowers, pickles. Mrs. Dressier, 1107 E. Main. FURNISHED apartments for adult. 903 W. 10th. GET YOUR Fall Coat at Adrlenne's. Special sale group of Tweeds and Dress models. Some with fur trim. Only H8.0S. PEACHES J. H. Hale, 1 and 3 cent per lb. Meehan store, corner Jack-sonvllle-Phoenlx road and Orchard Home road. Phone rural 10-F-13. WANTED 100 tiers 13-ln. and l-ln. body fir, on ground. Will psy csah. State price. Box 13818. Mata. 256 Evea 3M Klddlea a Dlma . , , , and the strangest, most exciting romance you have ever seen is bornl irt witn WALTER HUSTON EUGENE PALLETTE PHILLIPS HOLMES Louis Cloistr HALE a. I III! ' liMBBamHi