MEDFORD M VTL TRTBUXE. MEDFOTID, OREGON. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 193.
PAGE FIVE
y
BEER BRINGS HUGE
SI TO HOP YARD
1RKERSJ WEST
$4,000,000 Spent This Year
in Harvesting Crop Ore
gon Largest Producer
Yield Short This Year
PORTLAND, Or.. Bept. IS. (API
Beer la pouring nearly e4,000,000 Into
the pockets ot west coast hop work
en. Other millions will soon now
into the bank accounts of growers.
The tangy aplce of drying hops 1
In the air of country places of Ore
gon. Washington and California. The
tall, green vines are stripped and
growing brown. The hop picking sea
aon Is drawing to a close.
It will be a week or ten days before
buyers drop their Incognitos and be
gin to get down to terms with the
producers. The current week finds
them scurrying over the countryside
on unofficial inspections of quality
and grades.
Oregon Crop Light
Oregon, the largest producer of the
three coast states, will show a con
siderable reduction in production for
this season, while Washington will
produce slightly more than last year,
and the California yield will run close
to that of 1933. Dealers declare, how
ever, that the decrease In production
will be more than offset by a very
material Increase In quality.
West coast hops travel far to the
brewing centers of the world. They
are muoh favored In continental Eur
ope, and England buys In great quan
tities. Many thousands of bales, of
course, are used by domestlo brew
masters. Pound Per Barrel
Competent observers estimate the
Oregon crop this year at 90,000 bales
compared with 108,000 bales last year.
A bale weighs about 190 pounds. Few
breweries use more than one pound
of hops to a barrel of beer.
In Washington production Is esti
mated at 60,000 bales compared with
43,000 last year, while In California
this year's total yield will be around
62,700 bales compared with 64,000 a
year ago.
Growers estimate It costs about $20
a bale to harvest, dry and bale the
crop. This would bring something
like 11,800,000 to Oregon for such
labor; 1. 100,000 to California, and
about 81,000.000 to the state of Wash
ington. Picking Pay Boosted
Pickers this year received between
$1.25 and 81.50 a hundred pounds for
working In the yards, compared with
an extreme top of $1 and an average
of between 80 and 90 cents a hundred
In 1933.
There has yet been no general
opening of the market, but buyers
generally predict quotations will
range from 23 to 25 cents a pound.
Growers have Ideas of higher prices.
In Portland this week the sale of 34
bales of fugglcs at 31 cents a pound
was confirmed. Salem reported a
current price of 20 cent for 1933
clusters, and 35 cents for top fuggles.
Yakima, the heart of the Industry In
Washington, hed as yet received no
overtures from buyers. California
centers believed 20 cents would be
the general offer.
GCNS Repaired' and Cleaned. Ex
pert work. Medford Cycle. 23 N. Fir.
NOTICE
GLADIOLUS GROWERS
It has come to the notice or
the Gladiolus Association that
tome Gladiolus have not
bloomed out, or hare wilted.
If yotir gladiolus hare not done
as well as they should we will
Inspect your garden and try
and help yon solve your prob
lems. Yours tor better Glad
blooms. Phone 10D3. No obli
gation. Gladiolus Association
3r
"Saved at Last" Cry Liner's Survivors
PORTLANO. Sept. 18 (APj Mrs.
Edward Hlrsoh, 88, widow of Edward
Hlreoh, atata trsasursr during Oov
rnor Moody's administration, died
her Tuesday. She cam to Oregon In
1889 and maintained continuous resi
de no. her. Thra daughters and two
son aurvlT.
past la sugar best fields, the tvrttl.
lavd goossfoot, robs th soil of food
but also lessens th ton ot ourly -top
disease If it passes through th ad
A plant usually thought of as a befor attacking th beets.
f v:." i. - - -.-H CINDERELLA SHOP
t'''SC: "'Z:-. .v-.iv fcV-:V. -Sold Exclusively Jnk,.
.-.X , . ' .l:r.- at Jbpi AMirX
P. VCS' . r.7-C.;riw-J Underella bhop L ? iy;& J
r s: . r C'- i' -T"' l 7 r: M'n
..; m:-' 'rM-r--1-' ' fa,
f- rLv ' T ' "-v n r I I I JfV JY-
I 4, , - ' ' . -V k'.-A1 l.. ;;tii;i . ' U
tvMi i 'jbSsLjAJJ- ... j.'.-ii'l - 'i f lit. t M II t, . . 'iK V-ve ,
The photograph Illustrates the danger confronted by those of the Morro Castle passengers who were able to escape the flames, which raked the if jl 1 1 Is A 4j&Kt.-(' "v''' WW
vessel off the Jersey coast, claiming more than 100 lives. These surTlvors clambered aboard a life boat In stormy sens, and safely made their way to IJtlA' It I T I " Tli "li I
the 8. 8. Monarch of Bermuda. They are shown preparing to board the rescue liner. (Associated Press Photo.) I f y tf I 1 " f ''-!2Sk ', 11i
SINCLAIR 10 SEEK Br-J. W. 'DAD' DUNLOP DIES " W L$0S:
UII1JL.fllll IU UL.L.It The novelist declared: Hs Is survived by his widow. Mar-1 l I'' T1 f i xJa-'i
FPIR RFFFRFNnilM iiiXSiSSiS-S IN GRANTS PASS AFTER SSSsSSS I -'v I n
LI IU 1 1 11 LliLllUUIll next week I will be ready. The peo- lln wrirtn lop of Boston, Mass. W ( ' . I K jt !
pie of the state have spoken. I am I fiLVV fit TlAfl VLAU 1 TV , " i
ir Oni nilO nrniPr going to carry out their mandate." LLlLOlJ U IIU LH U P. W. Bartlett. furrier and taxi- ' W A l"' I
lb IIIII IV lUbllXh 1 dermlst. In new shop, ao 8. Central.
II 0ULUIW lLI U0L
Candidate Returns to Find
Democrats Three Largest
Counties in State Will
Accord Full Support
SAN FRANCISCO, Bept. 18. (AP)
Upton Sinclair stated, upon his re
turn to San Francisco Wednesday
from a two weeks' trip east, ne will
carry his EPIC (end poverty In Cali
fornia) program directly to the peo
ple through referenda. If necessary. In
the event he la elected governor of
this state.
The novelist and, former socialist,
now democratic nominee for governor
who conferred with President Roose
velt, Postmaster General James A.
Farley and other administration of
ficials on his eastern trip, learned
upon his arrival the democratic" cen
tral committees of the state's three
largest counties have voted to sup
port his candidacy.
Three Vote Support.
San Francisco, Loa Angeles and
Alameda county committees went on
record last night for his support, al
though the Monterey county commit
tee voted opposition to his policies,
and most of the committees report
ing declined to commit themselves
either way.
The man whose nomination has re
sulted In the defection from the party
of several democratic leaders, de
clined to discuss his conversation with
President Roosevelt, saying only:
"Any statement as to what hap
pened In our meeting" must come
from the president.
He expressed belief his visit to the
postmaster general was "productive,
but attain said any statement "along
those lines must be made by Farley."
Don't Want Conservative Aid.
Speaking of party leaders who have
refused to support him, Sinclair said:
"I hope that all such men as Justus
Warden (one of his opponents for
democratic nomination) and Matt
Sullivan will go to the other side.
They do not fit in with the new Idea
of democracy."
Sullivan, classed as a "progressive
Unique Ad Series
Planned To Show
Advantages Here
'Nooks and Corners of the World,"
Illustrations of the strange habtta
and living conditions peculiar to
other sections of the earth, will be
shown In each of Jarmln's advertise
ments in The Mall Tribune. The first
one will appear Friday.
This series Is designed to Impress
people of southern Oregon with the
advantages they enjoy here tn com
parison with those of other countries.
'Nooks and Corners of the World"
Is based upon authentic information
and photographs from life, during the
world wide travels of B. E. Sherwood,
according to Mara Jarmln.
GRANDMOTHER OF RUSS
REVOLUTION SUCCUMBS
PRAHA, Czechoslovakia. Sept. 13.
(P) Countwss Catherine Breshkov
skaya, "the grandmother of the Rus
sian revolution," died today at the
age of 90 years.
BUY WUEUE VOU SEE TULMtED HI INC 1I0RSE
GRANTS PASS, Bept. 18. (Spl.)
Funeral services for James Wilson
Dunlop, 62, who died at his home on
Park road here, Wednesday, following
a long Illness of heart disease, are to
be held from the Hall's funeral home
at 3 p. m. Friday, with Interment In
the Hlllcrest Memorial park. Rev. H.
H. Mitchell of St. Luke's Episcopal
church will officiate.
Actively engaged In business here
as manager of the Rlvoli theater from
1023 until two years ago, Dunlop was
well known In Grants Pass and In
Medford, where he was engaged In the
real estate business some years ago.
Mr. Dunlop was born December 30,
1871, at Cambridge, Mass., and came
west when about 25 years of age.
After spending several years In Se
attle, he wane to Alaska in 1B99, then
returned to Seattle and married Miss
Margaret Hawkins In 1908.
In 1909 he moved to Medford where
he was In the real estate business
until he went to California and Arl-
ona in 101B and 1919. In 1922 he
bought an Interest In the Rlvoli thea.
1 ter In Grants Pass ana operated It
No More Piles
Doctor! Prescription Guaranteed
Thousands of Pile sufferers do not
know that the cause of Piles is in
ternal ad circulation of blood In the
InwAF bowel.
This Is the sclentlflo truth xbout
piles the real reason why salves and
suppositories do not give lasting reflef,
why outtlng does not remove the
cause.
Your Itching, bleeding or protrud
ing Piles will only go when you act
ually remove the cause. External
treatments can't do this an Internal
medicine should be used. HEM-ROID.
the prescription of Dr. J. 8. Leon
hardt. sold by good druggists every
where, succeeds because It stimulates
the circulation, drives out congested
blood, heals and restores the affected
narts.
So why waste time on external
remedies or worry about an operation
when Jarmln's Drugs, Woods Drug
Store, also McNair Bros. In Ashland
Invites every Pile sufferer to try
HEM-ROTD with guarantee of money-
back If not Joyfully satisfied with the
help ont bottle gives.
C0MTIC0
built ot Triple TEMPERED RUBBER
Millioni of WorlrJ'i Fair vWtor. hav tn TempaW'
rrt"b cut7'g! loncr? lg,t a ,0"9 a itxll Only
UTSTRoyali of Triple Tempered Rubber grv you ludi
omailng toughnsttl Replace thota smooth, slippery,
dangetoui old tires today with 1934 U. S. Royals. Lei
the extra toughness of U. S. Royab ae ou money. We
can guarantee present low price foralimrted time only.
Act today.
Be Thrifty!
Buy Today!
Rogue River Chevrolet, Inc.
Chevrolet Cars and Trflcks Complete Service Genuine Chevrolet Parts
E. A. CALKINS H. D. BYINGT0N C. M. HURD
32 NO. RIVERSIDE PHONE 188
Bring Yon
Th Smartest Fashions
Coat that frame your face luxuriously with fur...
coats that dare to bo simple because they're so per
fectly tailored. See this new collection of Prlntzess
coats today. And remember, we have your exact
size, WHATEVER It may be ... moderately priced.
prlnucs
8. Central Avenue
Phone 265
IT IS NO LONGER A
LIGHTBI1L
IT WAS IN 1890
MMeiMBaaT
dUT
TODAY
LIGHT is & very
smaJI p&rt of it
USED TO CALL
the monthly statement
from the electric company your
light Bill. It was a light bill
then. Itrepresented a few lights
here and there about your
home. But now . . . light is a
small part of the total electric
bill. Today electricity is used
for cooking, refrigerating,
washing, ironing, sweeping,
cleaning and entertainment.
Yes, indeed ... the light bill
disappeared with the pompa
dour and the bustle of 1890!
THE CALIFORNIA OREGON
POWER COMPANY