Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 02, 1935, Page 9, Image 9

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    MEDFORD MXTL TRIBES, MEDFORD. OREGOX. TUESDAY, JULY 2. 1935.
4
Local and
I .
Conner to Bay City Guy. Conner
of Guy Conner. Inc. fruit Rippers,
toft lwt night for 8fiii Francisco,
malting the trip by train.
Back to Baker Little Eleanor Mc
t vm xoectd to leave this
morning by train enroute to Baker.
Ore.
To Enter Hospital J. C. Row of
Trll lft thia morning on the Ore
gonlan to enter the Veteran ho
t Rosebure.
" . .
Portland Visitor Katherlne Cook
of Portland was attending to business
In thia city thia morning, having ar
rived on the Oregonlan.
Guct at Grunts Pass Miss Mar
tha Matney of Medford haa arrived
here to epend aeveral days as & guest
at the home of Mr. and Mra. W. J.
Hes. Grants Pass Courier.
j From Gold Hill Mrs. Alva E. Cook
of Gold Hill arrived this morning by
train to be with her daughter Maxine.
who recently underwent a major op
eration at the Community hospital.
Leaves for Eugene Mrs. B. Cline of
thia city left by train this morning
for Eugene, to spend two days visit
ing there at the home of Mrs. Le
land Castor.
Here from Salem Mrs. Phil Sin
gleton and daughter Susan are here
from Salem visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Fry at their home on Park
street.
Leaves for Exposition Mrs. P. B.
Biftlow left yesterday on the United
Airline plane for San Diego, to visit
the California Pacific International
exposition.
Climate City vHltors The Grant
pass Courier states that Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Harvey and children of Med
ford were visiting relative in Grant
Pass Sunday.
BuMneM Visitor Business visitors
In Medford today include C. D. Laf- ,
ferty of Portland, assistant general
freight agent, who arrived this morn-
lng on the Oregonlan.
I .
Will Resume Drills The two local
national guard units, Headquarters
company and Company A. will re
sume drill tonight at the regular
time, It wan announced by Cpt. Carl
T. Tcngwald.
Visit Llthla City The Ashland Tid
ing tate that Mr. and Mrs. Scott
MoLarnan and daughter and Miss
Mary MoLarnan of Medford visited in
Ashland Sunday afternon at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Guetzlaff.
Max Carter New Ranger Max Car
ter, graduate of Medford high school
and a student lest winter at Uni
versity of Oregon, assumed duty the
first of this week at Crater Lake, In
the capacity of ranger.
Will Locate Ilere--Geo. Denbackorcf
Oakland, Cal., spent Sunday a guest
of Mr. Jennie Lewi and family. Mr.
Danbecker was so favorably Impressed
with Medford and the Rogue River
Tnlley that he has decided to locate
M here.
X
Arompanled to California Mrs. 8.
A. Parker accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Dan Campbell of Medford to Ten
nant, Cal., Sunday. Clarence Camp
bell, who has been visiting in Ten
nant for the last month, returned
with them. Ashland Tidings.
Plan Trip to Coast Rev. and Mrs.
S. H. Long, daughter Lois and Jean,
and Ethel Walsh are leaving today
for Yachats, Ore., where they will
spend a few days, after which they
will go to Portland and attend the
annual conference and camp meet
ing of the Free Methodist church.
Mrs. Long, who ha been quite 111
for the past few weeks. Is recovering
rapidly and it 1 hoped the trip to
the coast will be beneficial to her.
Makes Short Visit More Mrs. Lois
Olson of Seattle stopped in Medford
for a brief visit with her parent. Mr.
and Mrs. M. L. McCoy, and her daugh
ter 'Merle, who Is spending the sum
mer with her grandparent. Mrs. Ol
son la n route to California to visit
friends and relatives and attend ihe
exposition at San Diego, and expects
to spend some time In this city on
her return.
Here on Business L. E. St. John,
Jr.. of Portland, district manager for
the -Pacific Motor Transport Co., ar
rived this morning on the Oresonian
to spend the day here attending to
business matters. Another arrival
thia morning who la attending to
business here is G. t Arehart, trav
eling agent for the Pacific Motor
Transport Co., whose headquarters
are also In Portland.
A sip will (onvince you of its great
mellowness and full Mustal flavor
BRANDS
mstiLledSprinom
Y
I -n$m
rMMiliM Lvx mAxiB
fltePi0 1 f jkj J ' ""aw are
Personal
I j
I
Mrs. Powell Recovering Mr. F. E.
Powell, ill in a Portland hospital, is
recovering nicely, It wa learned here
today, and should be up and about
In a short time.
Cone to Wyoming Gladys Sturlin
has left for Jftckaorr, Wyo.. to visit
her brothers. Forest and Clover, and
also to take In the rodeo at Wilson,
Wyo.
Here for Summer Ml Helen King
arrived In Medford Monday evening
from Seattle. Wash., to epend the
summer vacation month with her
father, Johnnie King, and Mrs. King.
King.
Discharged from CCC Discharged
from the CCC, the following left last
night on the train for their homes:
Donald Shepard, to Cresoo, Pa.; Earl
J. McQulgg. to Boise, Ida.; James J.
O'Nell and John F. Donellan, to Port
land; Jack E. Bronson, Hiram Hens-
ley, Dpane H. Schreiber, Ben L. Regal
and Joe R. Sciacca, to Los Angeles.
On Vacation in South Rev. W. R.
Balrd and family are in California for
several weeks' vacation, part of which
will be spent at Fresno, visiting rela
tives. They will also spend three
weeks in and around Pacific Grove,
where Rev. Balrd will exchange pul
pits with Lee Sadler, pastor of the
Christian church. Mr. Sadler, wife and
son, Lee Wesley, arrived by auto Mon
day and will occupy the Balrd resi
dence. They will visit Crater and
Diamond lake, Lake o' the Woods
and other scenic resorts, and do some
fishing. The Sadlera are old time
friend of D. E. Millard.
TONE HOLDS FIRM
PORTLAND, July 3. (AP) The
market tone lor butter ruled firm In
early trading and demand continued
steady. Brisk bidding which develop
ed at the week-end showed no sign
of abatement. Supplies were fully
adequate, although current receipts
were being purchased liberally In
outside markets. Butterfat was un
changed, and cube extras maintained
their standing, although standards
and prime firsts fell off one-half cent
on firsts went down one cent.
Eggs were steady, arid Jobbing quo
tations were unchanged. Close clear
ances were being effected dally, with
liberal shipments of current receipts
to other markets.
Poultry, live and dressed, showed
firmness. Supplies were plentiful, but
the market tone remained steady.
ERNEST A. PURVES OF
Ernest Arthur Purves of Ashland,
65, passed away at 1 a. m. today at
the Jacksonville sanitarium, where he
had been receiving medical care for
the past, several weeks.
He had been a resident of Ashland
for the past five years. Surviving are
his wife and one daughter, Wanda.
Funeral services will be conducted
from Btock & Lltwiller Funeral Home
at Ashland at 2 p. m., Friday, with
Interment at Talent.
DINTY MOORE ORCHESTRA
WILL PLAY IN ASHLAND
When Fourth of July crowds of
Medford townspeople visit Ashland
over the holidays, they will have the
opportunity of dancing to the music
of Dinty Moore and his new orches
tra, who recently opened a series of
engagements for the summer at the
outdoor dance pavilion at Twin
Plunges. Besides regular dances every
Wednesday and Saturday nights,
Dinty la playing tonight, tomorrow
and Thursday nights of this week In
obserance of the Fourth.
San Franriwo Butterfat.
SAN FRANCISCO. July 2. (AP)
First grade butterfat, 27c, f. o. b..
San Francisco.
precious. Call ahead!
Dse Mall Ttiouko want ad. (silver barely steariy, lower at 69'. I
- , weekend houn e I
while away don t forget
to call those at home. 6iGreat29S
The Home Telephone & Telegraph Co.
Livestock
PORTLAND. Ore., July 3. (AP)-
PORTLAND. Ore.. July 3. (AP)
(USDA-(P) Hoe receipt, 100. Mar
ket slow, unevenly weaker to S5c
lower than Monday s average. Good
to choice 175-200 lb. weight mostly
9.50. Extreme top $9 00. Weights
240-2(0 lbs. S8.75-9.00. Few light
lights $9.00. Packing sows mostly
7.25. Good to choice 83-125 lb. feed
er plfls S9.50-10.00.
CATTLE receipts 50; calves 10. Mar
ket around steady on limited supply.
Few common grass steers $5.00-6.00.
Heifers $4.00-5 00. Low cutter and cut
ter cows $1.50-3.75. Common to me
dium grades $3.35-3.75. Good beef
cows quotable $4.75 or above. Bulls
$3.50-4.50. Good to choice vealers
$6 50-7.50.
SHEEP receipts 500 Including 100
direct. Market steady. Good 70-85 lb.
lambs $5.75-8.00. Medium grade $5.50
down. Few light yearlings $3.75-4.00.
Aged wethers down to $2.50. Slaugh
ter ewes $1.60-3.00.
CHICAGO. July 3. Pl (O. B.
Dept. AgT.) HCX36: 13.000: moder
ately active, eteady to 10 lower: 300
330 lbs. 9.50-85, top 9.85; 140-300 lb.
8.75-9.80; sows 7.90-8.30.
CATTLE: 7.000: better grade Jed
steers and yearlings strong, others
about steady; ahlppera buying nu
merous loads well finished medium
weight and heavy steers 11.50-12.50.
holding best around 12.50; choice
light weight yearlings higher In in
stances; 900 lb. 11.25: best heifer
Yearlings load lots 10.00; vealera about
steady, selects 8.50; bulk 7.23-8.00.
SHEEP: 3.000; spring lambs and
yearlings active, bulk strong to 15
and more higher: sheep firm: good
to choice 87-80 lb. native lambs 8.60
9.00: common to medium throwouts
6.00-7.00; range lambs absent; no
strictly choice freshly shorn yearlings
here: deck toppy 90 lb. carrying four
months fleece 7.00; grassy 77 lb.
downward to 5.75; ewe 3.00-3.35.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND, July 3. (AP) Butter
Prints, A grade, 2614 c lb. in parch
ment wrapper, 27'?c lb. cartons; a
grade, parchment wrapped, 25aC lb.;
cartons. Sfl'c lb.
BUTTERFAT Portland delivery: A
grade deliveries at leat twice weekly.
25 26c lb.; country route, Mtitvoc
lb.; B grade, deliveries less than
twice weekly, 2ft a 26c lb.; C grade
at market.
B GRADE CREAM FOR BOTTLING
Buying price, butterfat basis, 06c
lb.
EGGS Sales to retailers: Special,
28c; extras, 26c; fresh extra, brown,
26c; standards, 23c; fresh mediums.
25c; medium firsts. 21c dozen.
EGGS Buying price of whole
salers: Fresh specials. 33c; extras.
23c; standards. 21c; extra mediums.
20c; medium first, 17c; undergrade,
17c dozen.
NEW POTATOES California whites
S1.75 per cental; Pasco 50. 90c per
50-lb. bag.
Cheese, milk, country meats, live
poultry, onions, new onions, pota
toes, cantaloupes, wool and hay.
steady and unchanged.
Portland Wheat
PORTLAND, July 3. Pi Grain:
Wheat Open High Low Close
July 74y4 74Ji 74 ,i 74V4
Sept 74 75 74 74
Dec - 78 76',i 75 75
Cash: Big Bend blucstem, 13 pet.
93: Big Bend bluestem. 88: dark hard
winter, 13 pet. 93; do. 11 pet. 80:
soft white, western white, 76; hard
winter, 14: northern spring, 75; west
ern red. 73.
Oats. No. 3 white. 36 00.
Corn, No. 3 E. yellow, 39.50.
Millrun standard, 33.00.
Today's oar receipts: WTieat, 5;
flour. 1.
Chicago Wheat
CHICAOO, July 3. P) Wheat:
June (unquoted).
Open High Low Close
July 86, 87V4 85 e
Sept. i 87?, 88Vi S5H 87'4
Dec. 89 90 88 88-89 Vir
Make arrangements. And
S liter. 1
NEW YORK, Jury 3. (AP) Bar III
Sea Drama on
.t, wifiM iiiniB.il r -nr" mini
With mutiny and the much-feared
typhoon serving as atmospheric back
ground. "Eight Bells." a nautical
story of one girl set In the midst
of 60 men on board a China-bound
freighter, play today and Wednes
day at the Rialto theater. Ann Soth-
Wall St. Report
NEW YORK. July 2. (AP) The
utilities gave a bullish performance
In today's stock market, but other
sections of the list wavered and the
close was somewhat Irregular.
Another defeat In ' the house of
representatives for the administration
on the holding company bill aided
sentiment for the power group. The
activity was more pronounced than
in the previous session, transfers ap
proximating 1.160,000 shares.
Today's closing prices for St se
lected stocks follow:
Allied Chemical & Dye 161 Vi
American Can 138
American & Foreign Power 44
A. T. & T 126V4
Anaconda
Atch. T. & S. F.
Bendlx Aviation
Bethlehem Steel
Caterpillar Tractor
Chrysler -
Commercial Solvent -
Curtlss-Wrlght . ......
14i
47,
14
38
48
48
1H
3
102 V.
35-
82
45
854
. 63
. 37
. "18
. 74
. 31
DuPont .................
General Foods . ..
General Motors -
International Harvester .
I. T. & T
Johns-Manvllle .....
Montgomery Ward ...............
North American
Penney (J. CI
Phillips Petroleum ...........
Radio ....
Southern Pacific 17
Std. Brands - 154
Std. Oil Cal 34
Std. Oil N. J 47'!
Trans. America 6
union Carbide 62
United Aircraft 14
O. 8. Steel 33
ALWAYS TIRED
AND RUN DOWN?
Can it be that Improper digestion,
sluggish bowels, and a tired and run
down feeling keep you from enjoying
the pleasures of life which are right
fully yours?
If no. It Is probable that the us
of a tonic, laxative, and stomachic is
needed. By combining these three
important action in one product.
William 8L.K. Formula ha proved
very effective In obtaining relief from
such conditions as indigestion with
gas arid pains, atonlo constipation,
sick headache, loss of weight and ap
petite, and general run-down feeling.
Williams 8.L.K. Formula can be ob
tained on money-back guarantee
from the Heath Drug Store. Ask for
your bottle today. (Adv.)
Today and Wed.
Titters !
Thrills!
Tickles !
IPS
I
J Musical V''1..:, flUt
"Pare. Pare"
Rialto Screen
ern, Ralph Bellamy and John Buck
ler carry the leading role.
Spectacular photography of the
storm tossed ship is said to make
"Eight Bella1' an unusual thrill
drama with more than the usual
quota of exciting moments.
Ends Vl.lt at Butte mils Mra. M.
L. Heryford of Eugene, who has been
visiting at Butte rails for the past
ten days, left this morning on the
Shasta for her home. While In Butte
Palls she waa the guest of her daugh
ter. Mrs, A. E. Abbott and other rela
tives. Today and
Shows I 4
1:45 I PI
7:00-9:00 IO
TWO MEN AND A GIRL!
Doomed by the fury of the
dread typhoon . . . damned
by blind hate and' doubt
... as 60 savage men draw
lots for their lives in the
most breath-taking drama
ever shown!
mum
' , J, I WELDED
A into
llili 1 l 1" to battle forMnan but vient
fffA Vj i " J' other girl breaks all the rules . . . I
Kfimtek 1 ?HH $0THtn GEORGE BRENT I
l ff f PATRICIA ELLIS I
J DONALD WOODS J
dLr( iJ Tnrloon In Color m li f i
i r US-l m A, t,. it PoMtively Ends Tonight - ; VJ.
Yv Wi g ,,, . , ut ,., .4
'feXSLfej "Is My Face Black" UlimliJ .Ji
? fffiX NEWS EVENTS ,.,., nnVFD a;'IN
SSSIjyl j with CHAS. BOYER jk Ll
HENRY HULL
WARNER OLAND
Kay Francis Coming to Craterian
JH'P!UI4)!
With George Brent as her lead-1
lng man. Kay Francis come to the
screens of the Craterian and Holly
theatres tomorrow in "Stranded." a
dramatic romance replete with thrills
and action with a background or
the new Oolden Oate bridge.
Centering about the life of a
worker of the Travelers' Aid, who
thinks only of humanity. Miss Fran
cis 1 shown in love with Brent,
hard-boiled engineer employed in
the construction of the mighty San
Francisco bridge, who considers hu
man beings only as cogs in an In
dustrial machine.
The clash of characters, with the
added menace of "the oth.er woman,"
t . ... - ; - i
I s in
Wednesday!
."V
Coming Thursday!
Half Man
Half
ANIMAL!
COLE STEELN
r; -;iYd ' and a V
MJ W0MAI1S WARM HEARm
h 1 WER Ell
played by Patricia Ellis, and the.
fast-paced action that at times 1 as
thrilling as the wildest melodrama,
maks "Stranded" a picture with
universal appeal.
Although the film will be shown
matinee and evening at the Cra
terian theater, the Holly theater will
be opened only for th evening
shows.
Shows
1:45
7:00-0:00
TOMORROW ONLY!
A thrill-packed drama
Gate Bridge . . . with
your acccommodation
HOLLY THEAT
The same feature ... the same shorts ... the
same prices . . . and 1200 added seats to give
all a chance to avoid the enormous crowds.
r
Starting Thursday
SHEWS
NEW 25ft SIZE
Ask your
flruubt
Lydia'E. Pinkham's Tablets re
Ucve periodic pains and discom
forts with their accompanying
backaches, headaches tod blue
spells. They act as a uterine sed
ative, antispasmodic and tonics
Chocolate coated. Easy to take
Inexpensive and effectives '
Dance Tonite
- and July 3 and 4
TWIN PLUNGES
(ASHLAND)
DINTY MOORE
AND HIS
ORCHESTRA
set against the Oolden
a spoclal showing for
tomorrow night at the
" ltMrtm'intiinr,',,iTi--"
I Mats . . ISO I I
3 Eves . . 33C
BE
EZZ3
of Southern Oregon