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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1934)
PAGE STX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934.' Jackson County Now Celebrating' "All Oregon Products Days SEEOUSTINGWHEN HE LEAVES OFFICE Gloojny Faces in Many State Departments Einzig Fated Pray and Lewis Believed Sure to Remain By VIROIL riNKLEY United Press Stuff Correspondent STATE HOUSE, SALEM, Ore. (UP) Governor Meier's withdrawal from politics hat brought long and gloomy (aces In many offices throughout state departments. Many office holders appointed by Meier bellevo their tenure of office will bo completed oarly next Janu ary. The argument they advance, and a sound one tooo, la that should a Democrat bo elected, he probably would clean nous wlWi a gusto. Moat Republicans expected to run also would niako numerous ch tinges. Klnzlg Sees Ousting One office holder, State Purchas ing Agent, William Einzig, i8 virtu- ally certain to step out when Mclor completes his term. Einzig has been the center of nu merous attacks directed against the Meier regime. The office calls for a basic salary of (6,000 a year and $410.66 a month under reductions sow In effect. The office at present pays $5 a month more than the sec retary of state receives. The Incoming governor also Is ox pec ted to appoint a new budget di rector to replace Henry Hanzon, , Meier's polltcnl sage, The budget director la one of the Juclest plums, calling for a monthly salary of 9600. Many Effected Other high salaried positions sub ject to the pleasure or tfie governor are commissioners of public utility, Insurance and corporation depart ments, and the three Industrial ac cident commissioners. Removal of heads of various de partments also would affect numer ous office holders, in the public utility department, for Instance, one official receives 386 a month as a baslo salary. Sovoral others receive 1300 or more a month. . Pray, Lewis Safe Charles Pray, superintendent of tut police, and James Lewis, war den of the state penitentiary, are as tie In their positions as any public official can be, . Lewis has an almost unequalled record as warden. No ccnvlct has made a successful escape during the ' past eight years. Expenses have been kept at a low figure, and discipline, one of Lewis fundamental require ments, Is high. Fray and his force have a high record In crime detection and the rec ord of convictions Is also well above the average. In the matter of arrest ing drunken drivers, the state police record Is laudable. Pray has shown himself to be an able executive as well as a good detective and police man. May lltt Others The coming chango in guberna torial administrations also might strike at the state tax commission and superintendents of various atate Institutions. The general policy In the past, however, was not to remove executives who have run tho hos pitals and various homes and schools efficiently. Some state employes are planning modest vacations this your, while others do not expect to leave Salem except on ahort trips. Most employes will breathe easier If their Jobs are secure several months after tho new administration Is seated. Civil service does not apply to atate mployea. Their Jtfba are dependent upon the governor, board of control or heads of departments. All kinds of .g . oisnks tor sale tor rent, no hunting, no treapaaelng and other cards for sale at Commercial Printing Dept. of MM Tribune. Menus of the Day By Mrs. Alexander George BANANA FRITTER RECIPE (Meals for Three) Breakfast Pineapple Juice, Chilled Cooked Wheat Cereal Cream Scrambled Eggs Buttered Toast Coffee , Luncheon Ham Sandwiches Pear Salad Fruit Cookies Tea Dinner Spinach and Cheese Souffle Buttered Beots Bread ' Butter Tomato Salad Banana Fritters Orange Syrup Coffee Banana Fritters l'a cups flour. 3 teaspoons baking powder, 14 teaspoon salt. cup milk. 1 tablespoon sugar, 1 cup sliced bananas. Mix flour, baking powder, salt, egg, milk, sugar. Beat well. Add bananas and drop from a spoon Into deep hot fat. Fry five minutes, turning with fork to allow even browning. Remove to tissue paper, drain well. Orange Sauce cup orange Juice. 3 tablespoons lemon Juice 1 cup sugar. 1 tablespoon flour. teaspoon salt. 16 cup water, 1 tablespoon butter. Blend sugar, flour, salt. Add re maining ingredients. Cook slowly, stirring constantly until sauce be comes thick and creamy. Serve warm. Spinach and Cheese Souffle (Serving Three) 3. tablespoons butter. 4 tablespoons flour. 1 cups milk. i cup oheese, cut fine. 14 teaspoon salt. !4 teaspoon paprika. teaspoon celery salt. a egg yolks. 2 cups cooked spinach. 3 egg whites, beaten, Melt butter, add flour. When mixed add milk an 1 cook untl 1 thick, creamy sauce forma. Stir constantly. Add cheese and seasonings, Cook slowly until oheese has melted. Add yolks tnd beat one minute. Fold In rest of Ingredients and pour Into buttered baking dish. Bake 36 min utes in moderately slow oven. FEDERAL AID TO JUBILEE PARADE Ti OF Each Entry To Be of Historic Importance Hours ot Research Devoted to Task Of Authentic Display. SALEM, April S7. (AP) Hcelpt or 1100,000 of fedoral aid funds from the emergonoy roller administration at Washington today will maka It posslbls for 496 Oregon rural school teaohers to complete the current school year, Oharlea A. Howard, state school superintendent announced. The program, which will be hand led by the state board of education through the SERA as an education projeot, calls tor the employment of even teaohers In Baker county, Clat sop six, Columbia SO, Coos 103, crook six, curry IB, Douglas it, umman three, Orant 32, Harney 3B, Lane 43, Marlon nine, Morrow 31, Malheur 14, Pork, eight, aherman five, Tillamook S3, Union nine, Wheeler three, Wal Iowa 43, and Yamhill one. A tentative line of march for Ore gon's Diamond Jubilee celebration pioneer parade next June reveals a complete historical record of the Ore gon country. Each entry In the pa rade will be of .historical Importance and will be accurate In Its presen tation. Hours of research Into Ore gon history by the parade committee Is making this possible. Flags will be at the head of the procession, followed by a flfs and drum corps. The marshal of the pa rade, Judge William Colvlg, astride a horse, will be accompanied by aides In charge of Major Clare H. Arm strong. The Native Sons and Daughters, well known southern Oregon pioneer organization, will be In charge of an elaborate float carrying the queen Mother of Jubilee week, paying trib ute to pioneer motherhood In Oregon. (Standards Ten story Standards announce Lt. Broughton discovers Mt. Hood In 1793 and that Captain Orey discovers the Columbia river. Pur tradera are carrying a flag similar to the one used on Captain Drey's ship, Indicating the vessel car ried mostly such passengers. The Lewis and Clark expedition of 1806 la represented by the two fa mous explorers, led by Sacajawea and accompanied by 18 soldiers, nine Kentucky hunters, two French In terpreters and 18 other soldiers. It Is planned to have this entry pre pared by the CCO companies sta tioned at the fairgrounds. The his torical salt calm at Seaside Is In the line of march. Indians on ponies fol low. A standard tells of the formation of the British Hudson Bay company in 1834. A float showing a replica of Fort Vancouver and also .having represen tation of Dr. McLoughlln, father of Oreson.' Marcus Whitman and others Is next. The D, A. R. has been Invit ed to prepare this entry. Indicating the first arrival of trappers In a new country, a group of fur seekers laden with a collection ot fura are march ing. ' A standard tells ot the first efforts to have emigrants oome westward to Oregon. This occurred In Boston in 1833. The parade here tells of the departure of the first Methodist mis sionary, Jason Lee, "r Oregon from Boston In 1834. The first church Is built In Oregon City In 1843 and dedicated In 1844. Pulpit Rock on Float ' A float depicts Pulpit Rock, Im portant In Oregon history. A float tells of the first marriage in the Ore gon country thc'J of Jason Lee and Miss Anna Plttman. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Daniel Lee. The first Methodist mission is es tablished at The Dalles In 1839. The local Catholic church has agreed to prepare a float showing the early efforts of the Cathollo In Oregon In 1838. The Ministerial as- locution will be asked to represent the pioneer circuit rider,. Exact re productions of bulletins and hand bills, first printed In the 1830 s, urg ing emigrants to come west will be distributed among the parade spec tators as souvenirs.' The Rotary club Till tt Invited to enter a float significant of the first emigrants to Oregon, showing the widely scattered sections from which they came. Ten covered wagons fol low the Host. The seal of the pro visional government ot Oregon, 1843, Is shown, followed by a carriage con taining a person representing the first provisional governor. First Soldiers March The first military organization In Oregon 26 soldiers without uni forms are marching behind the car riage. A float, having the first printing press brought to the state, Is to be entered By the Medforc printers. The parade reveals tnat an Oregon settler, John Marshall, discovers the first gold at Butters mill In Cali fornia. An entry tells of thslmport nace ot the Pony Express In Oregon history. Replica of Heal Shown Parade spectators are shown the replica of the seal of the territorial government In 1848, A carriage car ries the first territorial governor. A standard tells of the first gold dis covered In Oregon near Oold Hill. The Masonic lodge has been Invited to enter a float showing the develop ment of mining In Oregon. A pack train of burros Is being driven toward the mines. Early development of agriculture are Indicated by the entry of pioneer reapers and threshing machines. Early modes of transportation are represented by five or six stage coaches, Several floats will reveal tho dif ferent sspects of pioneer home life and how pioneers lived 76 years ago. A standard tells ot the first com mercial fishing In Oregon near Scap poose In I860. The local Active club will enter float of the first photo studio in the state. It was estab lished In 1861 or 1862 by Peter Brltt in Jacksonville. Band Wagon In March A standard announces the estab lishment of the first woolen mill In Salem In 1867. A large band wagon, drawn by four horses, follows. The birth of Oregon statehood In I860 will be represented by an elaborate float and the first governor of Ore gon will be drawn in a royal car riage. ' A parade In excess of two miles In length and the entriek mentioned form only a skeleton of Vie actual presentation. Historical facts were carefully ascertained by Miss Fsye Woolsey, county librarian, and Mrs. C. L, Hopkins who spent much time in this research. More entries are ex pected from all parts of the state, with northern California also well represented. The earnest cooperation of all southern Oregon residents Is sought. NEW MACHINE AGE CLEVELAND (UP) Walter B. Pit kin, whose two books of the past year stayed simultaneously for months in the best seller division, sees a new machine age, through the ronlest of rose-colored glasses. The Columbia University professor, I speaking here, predicted a new ma- chine age, no farther than Just around the corner, which will relieve man of tiring, exhausting work, thus Increasing the span ot life. Instead of trying to fit ourselves Into jobs, jobs will be created to fit ourselves, Pitkin further ventured. COMMITTEE 10 EKE SALEM, April 27. (AP) John M. Pipes, Raymond B. Walker and J. D. Netlan, all of Portland, were named by Governor Julius L. Meier yester day as a committee to review the case involving Theodore Jordan, ne gro under death sentence for the slaying of F. j. Sullivan, Pullman car conductor, at Klamath Falls nearly two, years ago. . During the past month hundreds of letters, moat of them signed by members of the International defense league and urging Jordan's release, have been received at the executive's office. Oregon Weather Fair east and eloudy west portion tonight; Saturday fair but overcast near the coast; moderate temperate; gentle, changeable winds offshore be coming northwesterly. STRANGE CHANGE 1 Eastern Centers Shiver Through Coldest Winter In Popular Memory While Other Portions Warmer. By Harry W. Frantx United Press Staff Correspondent (Copyright, United Press, 1084) WASHINGTON ( UP) Millions of people In New York, Boston, Phila delphia and other eastern metropoll ahlvered through the coldest winter in popular memory, but now find that a large part of the United States actually was warmer than usual, and that the world climate tends to oe come milder. United States' weather bureau study of winter weather anomalies showed that the abnormal cold of the past season 1 was confined to northeastern United States, while the rest of the country was warmer than average. Strange Movement For some unknown reason the cold waves from h Arctic In the last winter moved across Canada into the Great Lakes ad New York instead of following the usual storm tracks across Canada Into Montana, the Da kota, and Minnesota. While the metropolitan millions suffered from the unwonted cold and high fuel bills, sections west of the Mississippi river had average temper atures above the mean, and less pre cipitation than usual. Except In the spring wheat belt where planting was delayed by drought, the abnormal winter does not forecast any major set-backs for American agriculture. Early fruits, as peaches and plums, were damaged by the extreme cold in nortnwestern United States. Average weather In the Cotton belt was not abnormal, although some sections bad an un due amount of rain in spring montns. Interesting Comparisons Dr. J. B. Klncer, ohlef of the dlvls- HOME OWNED STORES m m i i ""fa, st"-". t m m m m m aw To Make Certain that your family I, always happy see to it that livery dinner Is really good. To banish all doubts, buy your foods from Plggly Wlffly, where famous brands assure you of unfailing goodness. You'll find Plggly Wlggly delightfully convenient, too, and wonderfully easy on the budget, Featured Values for Fri, Sat. and Mon. lb.pkg. 19c 19c PHONE For Tree Delivery Coffee, Myrtle Brand, . Carnation Wheat Flakes 24c Packasw Double Cooksd Whole, What Nothing Added or Takon Away mm FOR THE ELK'S MAY DAY DANCE A Special Treat! Brand New Music! BOB KAYSER'S TO RYTHM BOYS The Finest Music The Best of Entertainment Direct From The Chicago World's Fair Bob Kaser's Boyg have taken the country by itorm Don't mfsg this initial appearance of thli outstanding oroheatral Elk's Temple, Sat. April 28 For Mombers and Invited Quest Swan'i Down Oake Flour, pkg. Anchovies, 2-oz tin ......15 Alber's Flapjack Flour, large pkg 23 Durkee ' Worcestershire Sauce j JJ- 4 3-4 oz. bottle . I 5JC French's Root Beer 4 J. Extract, 3-oz. bottle 1 1 C Bosoo, 20-os. Chocolate Drink 33t Chase & Sanborn Coffee, lb. can . . . 28c French's Biscuit Mix, large pkg 29 Prudence Domed Beef Hash, 20 ot 25 Minute Tapioca, 8-oz. pkg .'. 12 Ocrto, bottle . 24 Underwood's Deviled Ham, size, 2 for 25 Underwood's Whole Olams, No. 1 can .10 Underwood's 01am Chowder, No. 1 can 10t HAD Punch, assorted flavors, pkg 5 Kellogg's Bran Flakes, pkg . Snowdrift, 3-pound pail 41 Gem Nut Margarine, pound St Durkee's Salad Aid Qt. 29c; Pt. 18c MILK All Brands tall can 4 cans 25c With Premium Large Pkg, Old Dutch Cleanser TO Procter and Gamble's Bob White Soap 10 bars 19 c 1 bar of sees With the purchue of 6 BARS P and G Soap Glint Sire 25c Ion of climate and crop weather, In a United Press Interview, said that the winter ot 103J-3S afforded on Interesting comparison with that just passed. Or. Klncer ssld the extremely cold winter In northeastern United States was an exception to the characteris tic high-temperature trend In the United Ststea and the world as a whole. Re hss made an elaborate study of temperature at key stations In both northern and southern hemi spheres with a view to determination whether world cltmste Is changing. The analysis of world weather was made by a system of moving 30-year summations of temperature data, employing the longest records avail able. The data employed Included not only United States and Canadian records, but also records of Copen hagen, Paris, Vienna, Santiago (Chile), Buenos Aires, Cape Town, Trinidad, W. I., Bombay and Batavla. Large Cities Not to Blame Dr. Klncer said that suggestions have been made that the tendency toward higher temperature records In recent years might be due to the fact .that data Is frequently obtain ed from large cities where thermo meters might be unduly affected by artificial conditions which would not prevail In the open country. - Investigation, however, did not demonstrate the accuracy of these suggestions. Records for cities Isola ted country stations, and the aver ages again proved the upward trend. Black Lace Frock Worn By Princess PARIS (AP) T'e Princess Qaetanl la among sm.rt continentals who sre wearing lace these evening1-. She wears a frock of sheer black lace modeled to the figure, the skirt end ing In a deep flounce which flares forward. The high decollete Is finish ed with a trill of the lace which flares out over the shoulders. For Garden l-iuwing Tel. 8 13-J. LOCAL WOMEN GAIN SOUTH FOB JUBILEE Thousands of csilfornlsns learned ot Oregon's Diamond Jubilee celebra tion .here next June 3 to S as a result of the efforts of two local young women who returned this week from Sacramento and the bay region where they had spent 10 days In Interest of the big event. Miss Beth Chase (Miss Medford) and Miss Msrgaret Board man receiv ed a royal welcome In the neighbor ing state. Miss Medford, formerly a well known radio entertainer of California, had little trouble In gain ing recognition for the Oregon cele bration. Columns of space and pictures were devoted to she and Miss Bosrd man by the metropolltsn newsps pers, Including the Examiner, Chron icle and Call-Bulletin of Ssn Fran cisco, Post-Enquirer and Tribune of Oakland and the Bee and Union ot Saoramento. Pictures and stories sll appeared In the best editions, reach ing many thousands of readers. Radio stations cooperated to the, greatest possible extent. Over one half of the news broadcast program released over KQO and the NBC net work was devoted to Miss Medford and she was also heard over KTAB, KLX. KROW and other stations. Mrs. Chase said cooperation was forthcoming from numerous Sources, particularly the San Francisco Cham ber of Commerce which went to considerable efiort to aid her and the Jubilee cause. She was Invited to appear at a number of big gath erings but due to the lack of time was. unable to do so. Despite her short stay in the south, Medford and the Jubilee received Invaluable publicity. PURE CANE SUGAR ;r: $4.93 mild DOMINO MILD CIGARETTES 9c pkg. of 20 Carton 89c "lt your taste be the Judge" Potatoes, U. S. No. 2's, 100-lb. bag 75c Lettuce, large local. Head 5c Bananas, golden ripe, lb 5c Green Beans, fancy, tender. 3 lbs 25c A Hi keV ike spot Yes, X marks the spot where you sat at your bridge luncheon yesterday and real ized how dismal that "bargain counter" coffee was. Wasn't it weird how the pres ence of guests made you sense that un inspiring flavor? And to think that your poor husband has been drinking such coffee! You thought he was satisfied what's more, you tried to believe you were. And all of this regret because you felt you should economize on coffee. Let's not go through this experience again. Re member, you drink coffee by the cup not by the pound. And when you buy Hills Bros. Coffee you'll get so many fine tasting cups of coffee that you'll want to have the girls over for lunch again at once! A , x CtpritU mi Hith .