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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1933)
FKGTZ SIX JfEDFORD HAIL TRIBUNE, MEBFOUD, OREGON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1933. WILL BE THAWED E Total of $398,735,000 On Deposit in 376 Banks Closed During Depression Climax May Be Loosed WASHINGTON. Oct. 0. (JP) A to. tal of $308,735,000 111 frozen deposit Is Involved in ths list of 378 banks for which reorganization plans hare been approved by ths treasury. Of this amount, the treasury est! msted today, depositors will receive approximately 60 per cent If the banks carry out the plans agreed up on and are licensed to reopen. When plans are approved. It has been ex plained here, the situation then Is . up to the banks, and In some In stances they have not been able to meet the conditions Imposed. 370 Itnnka Cloned. A total of 31. 151.000 In unre. trlcted deposits Is held by the 376 bsnks. "While frozen deposits of these na tional banks amount to 1398. 738.000, this does not mean that such a sum will be released to depositors when and If reorganization plans are acted upon and Individual banks are re opened," the treasury said. "The total represents the amount of deposits carried on the books of these Institutions when conservators took charge of them after the bank holiday, it la obvious that the banks would have reopened Immediately had they been able to pay 100 per cent of then deposits. 60 Per Cent to Depositors, "However, It Is estimated that, In most instances, depositors will receive an average of slightly better than 50 per cent of their balances when and If these unlicensed banks reopen, with additional percentages belli? available as slow or doubtful assets re converted Into essh. "The $31,161,000 In unrestricted deposits represents deposits mado alnce conservators have been In charge of these Institutions. Such sums are segregated under conservatorships. Ths unlicensed national banks whose reorganization plana'have been approved as of September 30, wl'.h the location, name of bank, amount of frozen deposits and amount of un restricted deposits, luted respectively, Include: Oregon. Clatskanle, First N. B $567,000 and 58.000. Pendleton, First Inland N. B, $3, 005.000 and $114,000. Salem, First N. B, $1,136,000 and $33,000. Total, $4,603,000 and $304,000. Idaho. Lewlaton, Lewlston N. B $063,000 and $133,000. Moscow, First N. B $533,000 and v $30,000. Total, $1,435,000 and $163,000. Washington. Medical Lake, First N. B., $113,000 and $11,000. Palouse, Security N. B, $383,000 nd $18,000. Reardan, First N. B., $333,000 ano $37,000. mtrvllle, First . b., $308,000 and $16,000. Spokane, Old Natl. B, $10,451,000 nd $030,000. Sprague, First N, B $300,000 and $37,000. Total, $11,653,000 and $1,018,000. Rogue River HELD AS SUSPECTS IN O'CONNELL KIDNAPING iOalJa..'rtlhain'i , TrW" ' t. ii iu.i.i. . , MZZi-'ft nm. in ,inilf,a Five men and two women arrested In New York In a police roundup wars held suspects In the kid naping of John J. O'Connell, Jr., of Albany, N. Y., who was abducted last July and held for $40,000 ransom. 8tandlng, left to right: Anthony Relno, Charles Herzog, Leonard 8carnlclf Philip Zelgler and Fred Prentel. Seated: Mrs. Eleanor Scarnlcl (left) and Mrs. Emm Russo. (Associated Press Photo) ROOUE RIVER, Oct. 6. (8pl.) Live Oik Orange met Monday In special meeting. Deputy Brown and wife were present. Other visitors were Mr. and Mra. John Anderson of Cen tral Point Orange and R. E. Nealon and wife of Sams Valley Grange. A very enterestlng and profitable meet ing was enjoyed. The lecture hour was held and a program given by the Olrl Scouts, which was appre ciated by those present. Other vis Itors were Mr. and Mrs. John Ander son of Central Point Orange and R. E. Nealon and wife of Sams Valley Orange. A very Interesting and prof itable meeting was enjoyed. The lec ture hour was held and a program glvon by the Olrl Scouts, which was appreciated by those present. Re freshmcnts'were served by the ladles. Mrs. Una Mcllvaln returned Friday from Portland, where she spent seve ral weeks visiting and attending beauty achool. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Hart and daugh ter, lone, Mrs. Fred Dengler and Mrs. Richard Scott were Mcdford shop pers Wednesday. Born September 37 at the Commu nity hospital In Medford a daughter. to Mr. and Mrs. Dwignt Horton. Fred OKelly and wife returned Wednesday from a two weeks' vaca tion at Steamboat. Pruns dryer on the Whipple ranch was started last Saturday. The dryer crew is Mark and Jim Wrlppte and Ray Edwards. A very good crop Is on the trees this year. Mrs. Alice Robblns and daughter. Ruth of Eugene visited Monday with Mrs. Robblns' parents, Mr. and Mra. J. M. Whipple. Mr. and Mrs. Theo Nelmuth left Friday for their home at San Jose, Cel., where they wlllt spend ths win ter. Mr. and Mrs. Nelmmuth will re turn in the spring and spend the summer here agsln at their summer home on the banks of Ward creek. Mr. and Mrs. Nell Doty and baby and Judd Doly of Oold Hill have taken apartments at Vie Waldorf hotel for a few woeks while hauling logs here. Wslter Combs has bought the low on the corner of Pine street and the county road from Roland Taylor and Is leveling the ground, getting ready to erect a garage and service station. Lee Mnlone returned Mondsy from Tule lake, where he Is employed. He was called home as a witness In the Fred Wolf case. Ewlng Sacre met with an accident Saturday night when his car colildlcd with a car parked in front of ths McLaren residence. No one was In jured, but the Bacre car was badly damaged. Alfred Combs of Bakers field, who SPEAKING OF CLOSE INSPECTION . . . The meats you buy at the l.inKRTY M ARKRT ant all government inspected. They're deliriously fresh and choice and they're kept in prime condition hy a modern system of refrigeration, atop In tmlny and make your selection or Jim telephone, Weil deliver the same elect run OS T1MK. FAT HENS Saturday, each 45c HIGHEST GRADE BEEF PORK, VEAL, LAMB Al Stewart's Caponized Fryers and Roasters HENS and RABBITS The Home of Good Meats Swift 'i Gov't Inspected Meata had planned to spend the winter here with his brother, Walter, left Tuesday night for Bakersfleld, where he ac cepted a position with the Perkins Cementing Co. John Leyen htu leased the Milton store building and plans to have a feed and seed store started by Novem ber 1. Double Feature Craterian Bill Saturday Night Tomorrow being Saturday, and every Saturday night being preview night at the Crntcrlan theater. Jack Oakle and Shirley Orey will be shown on the extra feature in "Uptown New York." Others in the cast are Lee Moran. Raymond Hat ton and Henry Armetta, which should insure enough comedy. 'Uptown New York" has Oakle, dumb about love but smartly ambi tious about his penny-ln-the-slot gum-machine business, finally waking up to the fact that the girl (Shirley Orey) means everything to him. but with the girl romantically inclined to ward a young doctor. HI romance finally ends successfully, but not without going through some hilarious moment, in which Oakle is aided by the comedy work of Moran, Hatton and Armetta. The picture, on the whole, can be snld to be all Jack Oakle, with his own particular brand of comedy to make everything lively. KMED Broadcast Schedule Saturday. 8:00 Breakfast News, Maily Tribune. 8:05 Musical Clock. 8:1B A Peerless Market. 8:30 Shopping Guide. 9:00 Friendship Circle Hour. 0:30 Morning Melody. 0:46 Schubert's Love Songs, 10:15 Eb and Zeb. 10:30 World Series Broadcast. 1 :00 The Grants Pass Hour. 1:15 Varieties. 3:00 Classified Edition of the Air. 3:00 Songs for Everyday. a:30 KMED Program Review. 3:35 Music of Old. 4:00 Cocktail. 4 :30 Masterworks. 6:00 Cecil and Sally. 8:18 Quartettes. 5:30 Anson Weeks and His Orch. 5:45 News Digest by Mall Tribune. 6:00 Medford Theater Oulde. 8:15 Andy Slough. 8 :30 Hollywood Impressions. 6:45 Holly-Time. 7:00 The Hawk. 7:18 Interlude. 7:30 Chanduu the Magician. 7:45 to 8:00 The Arkansas Kid. Phone 642. We'u baiu away youj refuse. City 'Sanitary Service. PLEASANT WAYS TO SERVE FRESH PEARS ARE TOLD Every woman who Is responsible for the family's meals faces the problem frequently "What can X have different for a change?" There is one fruit that is as old as civilization yet does not appear on the table nearly so often as it should when its excellent food qualities are considered the pear. During the past few years, how ever, the culture of pears, particu larly the late varieties, has increas ed enormously and with better meth od of storage and transportation this delicious fruit can be obtained at almost any grocery store or fruit stand at prices that permit it to be used freely. Here are a few ways of serving pears that will .help you to add va riety to your meals: Fresh Pear Pie . Cook 4 or 5 ripe pears with V,i cups sugar and little water. Cook un til fairly dry and tender; place half of pears In baked pastry shell and cover with 3 tablespoonfula pear conserve; then add rest of pears and cover with 1 tablespoon ful rich cream. Add top crust and bake 30 minutes In moderate oven. Fresh Pear and Cheese Salad Mix a package of soft cream cheese with a little sweet cream and add 1 teaspoon of chopped nuts. Fill centers of two halves of freshly peeled Bosc pears and fasten halves together. The salad is made more attractive by coloring the pear with pink vegetable coloring or beet Juice. To add to naturalness of effect, re place stem and put clove In blossom end. Set pear on lettuce leaf and serve with nut dressing. Pear-Pecan Salad Cover the halves of a pear with a sour cream dressing, garnish with pecans and maraschino cherries. Set on lettuce leaf and serve. Pear-Date Salad Take half of a fresh pear, peel and place on lettuce leaf which has had the edges dipped in paprika, form ing an uneven edge around the let tuce. Fill hollow pear with three dates stuffed with soft cream cheese. Serve with cream dressing. Coddled Pears 6 years. 2 cups boiling water. Vi cup sugar. Few cloves. Cook un peeled fruit In water, sug ar and cloves at simmering point until tender but not broken. Re move to serving dish. Cook syrup down, pour around fruit and serve with whipped cream. Baked Pears Select firm, medium sized pears. Place la baking dish, sprinkle with brown sugar. Add a piece of stick cinnamon or few cloves; add enough water to cover bottom of pan; baste often. When tender, remove pears to glass dish, cook down syrup and pour over pears. Serve cold or with ice cream. '' Pear Shortcake Pear shortcake can .appear, very inexpensively and appetuUngly, on any menu during fresh pear season. Split a roll, rather generosly sprin kle the halves wltsh sugar. Close with a filling of chopped ripe pears and crown the whole with thick whorls of whipped cream, each whorl Interspersed with a ripe white grape. The latter is optional. Pear Pick -Up Pear Pick-Up is dellclously like Its name suggests whether styled a salad or dessert. On a bed of cream lay a ripe pear half and "gar nish" about the edges with thinly sliced banana. Vanilla Ice cream seems to blend best with pear. In a good diet a balance of acids and bases Is essential. The alkalin ity of pears Is of value In the main tenance of this acid-base balance. LIQUOR SET FORTH WASHINGTON, Oct. . The bu reau of Internal revenue has dis patched to all of Its collectors a memorandum setting iortb taxes and duties which would become automat ically effective upon the repeal of trie ism amendment. This shows a lev; of 11.10 a gallon on all distilled spirits with an addi tional 30 cent tax on rectified spirits. It plsces the tariff on distilled spirits at IS a gallon, the figure stipulated in the Smoot-Hawley law. A CAINATION-AIIHS HOT CERIAL Oxp&uence- Try Guuution Oats tomorrow and you too will realise why 10 msny experienced houiewires prefer them. The reason: their distinctive taste, their uniform smooth nets. Lowest price in msny yesrs. Quick or Regular 1 ft C V jr- w m mm r a - 3 XT MsasBSSsw - 33-7 Rw-um for vegetables and fruits. an seal with regular Ball Cops. LilbeEMty Food Stores Alexander Grocery, Inc. FREE DELIVERY. I. F. ALEXANDER, Gen. Mgr. Battle Creek Health Foods Richlieu Canned Goods Chase & Sanborn Coffee, lb -. 29c Three 10c cans Oold Dust Scouring: Powder. One 30o Turkish Bath Towel Free. 62c value for 23 Two lb. pkp;. Good Coffee for 69c. Set of Glasses Free 09o value 69c No. 2 lite MEC0 Sweet Peas, 2 enns 25c4 Clabber Girl Baking Powder, 3 for 23c1 Large bottle Tomato Catsup 13 Largs pkg. Carnation Oats ... 19 NEW FIGS-RAISINS-DATES Gal. can Sweet Pickles 59 Bulk Sour Pickles, pint . Q K T V J J LP 15 HOME OWNED Phone 9 Free Delivery Piggly Wiggly offers you the best and the most for your money. Judge for your self this week end. Shop this convenient self serve way. K. C. Baking Powder 25-oz. can 3c M. J. B. Aladdin Coffee Lb. can 25c Mayonnaise Best Foods, pt. 24c French's Mustard 6-oz. jar Qc Sunbrite Cleanser 4 for 19c Liberty White Soap 4 bars 10c Pen-Jel 2 for 27c llsisssssssBisssssssssssB-ssiss.ssssfsrsi.ssss. f , Troco Lb. 10c Bulk Cocoanut Long Shread y2lb.l5e Penn Chief Motor Oil 2-gal. can $1.39 SPUDS U. S. No. 1 25-lb. bag 55c M. J. B. Coffee 4-lb. can $1.09 Grape Nut Flakes, pkg. 9C FLOUR Golden Bell 49 lbs. $1.79 Piggly Wiggly $4 QQ Best Grade oi' Baker's Cocoa V2-lb. can IQc Sanka Coffee Lb. can 45 SUGAR 8-lb. bag 49c Myrtle Coffee Lb. pkg. 19c Sweet Spuds 4 lbs. 17c Tomatoes U.S. No. 2 crate 33c Onions Dry Sweet 7 lbs. 15c Pancake Flour Sperry'slg.pkg.25c Purex, qt. 1 5c Budweiser Malt Lt. or Dark can 59c MEAT MARKET 206 E. Main. Free Delivery. Phone 46 The Economy Market is proud of the high grade meat it sells. When you order meat here you can depend upon getting the very best! It looks good . . . tastes good . . . and is good! Choice Beef Pot Roast, lb 1 Qc Choice Beef Short Ribs, lb gc Choice Pork Roast, shoulder cuts, lb 1 Qc Choice Smoked Picnics, sugar cured, lb He Pure Pork Sausage, no cereal, 2 lbs 25c Pure Lard, 3 lbs 25c New Sauerkraut, qt. 1 5c 2 qts 25c Full line of Fresh Fish Crabs Clams Oysters ' TT