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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 29, 1937)
I PAGE SIX MEDFORD M ATL TRIBUNE, MEPFORD, OREGON. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1937. Nominal Church Head OOMTMBCB, O., Oct. 39. (API Br. F. O. Kerthner of th college of duoatlon at Butler university. Tn aUaaapolls. today wis nominated without opposition (or president of th International Convention of OhurchM of Christ (Disciples). Ow Msll Tribune want ad. MODEL BAKERY'S SPECIAL FOR THAT PARTY Hallowe'en Goblin & Pumpkin CAKES 59c Cakes with individual flavors all their own Pumpkin Pie Each 29c Corner Main and Grape X LLOYD R. PICKARD IN ASTORIA HOTEL Lloyd R. Pkkard of 81 Mistletoe street, died suddenly of. a heart at tack In a hotel In Astoria yesterday noon. He collapsed as he was signing the hotel register, according to word received here. He was 80 yeare old Mr. picksrd. was widely known among sportsmen circles throughout tne racmo northwest. He was a pro. resaional trap shooter and a well known figure at all the Important shoots in the northwest. He was known to his numerous friends aa "Pick" Plcksrd and hla company was eagerly sought because of bis con genial personality. At the time of hla death he waa on a business trip for the Western Cartridge company of which he waa the Oregon representative. Mr. Plckard waa born In Eugene where he attended school. For years be was employed at the Eugene post- office. Later he entered the employ of Meier it Prank company, Portland department store. From Portland Mr. Plckard went to Bend where he be came manager of the sports depart ment of the Bend Hardware com pany. Sis yeara ago he became affil iated with the Western Cartridge company. Mr. Plckard waa a member of the Masonic lodge In Bend and of the Mcdford Oun club. He la survived by his wife, Elsie, a daughter, Mrs. Neville D. Blden of Mcdford, a sister, Mrs. Grace Oevurtz of Seattle, Wash., and a brother, Eldon Plckard of Portland. Funeral services will be held In Seattle tomorrow. Burial will be made beside the gravea of Mr. Plckard's parents In a Seattle cemetery. Mrs. Plckard and Mr. and Mrs. Blden left here yesterday afternoon for Seattle. Livestock Portland. PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. W-IAl-' CBDA) Hogs: 460, Including 244 av rect: market opened steady; later aalea 36 cents lower; good-cnoice 175-316 lb. drlvelna. ae.75, early sales 19.00; 335-35S lb., 8.258.0; llgnt lights and slaughter plga SBUOaBJo; packing sows I77.3S; light weight up to 47.00: few good 137 lb. feeders 46.35; choice light weights 48.76 Or above. CATTLE 100, Including 11 direct; calves 100, Including 73 direct; mar ket steady on klnda available: steers scarce, -medium-good ateers nominally 17.600; 9.76; common grades aaiaoie 40 97; part load 73S lb. hellers 40.60; common 46.36; part load good grassy beef" cows 46.00; 3 loads medium good range cows, 46.36 5.86, sortea at 43.60 $4; few cutter cows, aaQ 3 AO, common butcher cows. M e 4.16; bulls, 45 6.60; few seiecteo veslers, 48.50, others $9.00 down; common grass calves, 44.60. . SHEEP 33O0, Including 3336 through and direct; acattered aales steady, wet fleeces considered, 103 lb. lamoa 48.00; good 180 lb. slaughter ewes, 43.50. Chicago. CHICAGO, Oct. 3S (AP-UHUA) Hogs 7000; fully steady with Thurs day's average; top 49.80; bulk good and choice, 180-330 lb., 49.36-tu; bulk 160-170 lb.. 49.00-35: 340-DUU lb., 48.90 s 9.35; most good packing sows, 48.00-40: lightweights to 48.60. CATTLE 1600; calvea 600; steady trade on small supplies, common and medium lightweight beef steers and moderate offering of the stock; most steers downward from 41U; scattering light grass heifers, atitt; cutter cows, 43.60 a 4.76; beef grades, 66.35 q 6.60 mostly; bulla scarce, rr ostly 46.00 down; vealers. ao-ouc lower; very few 410.00; bulls, S8.MI 9.60; stockers and feeders steady. SHEEP 6000; fat lambs opening strong to 36c higher; shippers active: native upward to 49.75 treely; six doubles choice westerns 610 acrsght to Bhppers; sheep also stronger; slaughter ewes, 43(94; beet hem around 44.35. (AP-CBDA) HODS 438, butchers 8 higher; top and bulk good to choice 300-315 lb. weight 9.08: load 148 170 lb. weights 8 68-880; few 346 306 lb. butchers 8.05-8.68: packing sows steady, good 6.80. CATTLE 78: steady, but market largely nominal; half load medium 1308 lb. ateers off beet-tops 8 50 sort ed 8 head: good around 900-1100 lb. fed steers quoted up to 925; part load good 1300 lb. cows 8.75 sorted one head: low cutters and cutters 8.00-4.00; few common to medium bulls 4.60-5.00, about ateady. Calvea 16; nominally steady. SHEEP 335: nomlnalv atoasfvf wwil. ed lambs quoted 9.26-9.76: part deck good 101 lb. medium pelt yearlings 8.78; alaughter ewes quoted 4.00 down. Portland Produce PORTLAND, Oct. 29. (API But ter Print: A grade, 37o lb. In parch ment wrappers. 38c lb. In cartons; B grade. 36c lb. In parchment wrap pers. 87c lb. In cartons. BUTTERFAT (Portlsnd delivery. buying price) A grade. 37&37",4c lb.. country stations; A grade, 36a3614c lb.; B grade, 3c lb. leas; C grade. 8c less. EOOS Buying price by whole salers: Extras, 39c; standards. 300; firsts, 33c; medium. 33c; medium firsts, 30c; small extras. 14c: under- grades, 16c dozen. COUNTRY MEATS Selling price to retailers: Country killed hogs. best butchers, under 160 lbs., 12 a 13'e; others unchanged. TURKEYS Buying price: uressea No. 1 hens, 23 24c; No, 1 toms, 22c lb.; selling price 1 to 2c higher. Cheese and llvo poultry unchanged. POTATOES Yakima Oems, l; local. 41.30 cental; Deschutes, 11. uo 1.25. Onions, cantaloupes, wool, hay, unchanged. more point In leaders. Sprrtng buying forces was a re vival of hope that the slaah In mar gins decreed by the federal reserve was more than a gesture of a friend Iter Washington attitude toward the financial sector and might Indicate other steps would be taken to reas sure "big business" and awaken the long-slumbering capital market. The list stumbled near the final hour on an unconfirmed news ticker report from Hyde Park that the pres. ldent bad intimated no modification of the undistributed profit and capi tal gains taxes would be recommended. There was a subsequent comeback. though, when It was learned the chief executive actually gave no direct comment on these disputed laws other- than to aay he had noted newspaper tones wnicn speculated on revision of the tax measures made no refer ence to that portion of the copula. tlon which haa very little money to uve on. Gains eased off at the close. Trans, fers were around 3.800,000 shares. Bonds generally trailed stocks, with secondary Issues exhibiting etrenath Today's closing prices for 33 se lected stocks follow: Al. Chem. ds Dye .. 165 Am. Can . 96 n. as Fgn. Power 5 ' 4 a. 1. fi x. ... . us RESEARCH URGED TO CURE ILLS OF E to Christmas club depoiltori than a year ago. "Industrial progreaa waa aidawlae, the rise In automobile and aeaaoa able goods operations falling to coun terbalance the dip In steel, metal product and some of the textile divisions." Ose Mall Tribune want ads. WILMINGTON, Del (UP) Devel opment of new materials for use In Anaconda , Atch. T. & 8. F. , Bendlx Aviation , Beth. Steel Portland Wheat South an Pranclitco. SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 39. PORTLAND, Oct. 39 ( API Uraln Wheat: Open High Low lilose May 90 .B0'i JtO Jill Dec. .87 ft .87 14 .87 Jri Cash wheat: Big Bend bluestem hw. 13 pet., 90VJ; 13 pet., B8'A; dark hard winter, 13 pet., 41.02: 12 pet., 981; 11 pet.. 90(4; soft white ano western white. B6'A; hsrd winter 89V4; western red. 87. Osts. No. 3 white, 624; gray. 420. Barley. No. 2 45 lb. bw, $27.50. Corn: No. 3 eastern yellow, anip, 630. Mlllrun, standard. 431. Today's car receipts: Wheat, 61; barley, 3; flour, 9; corn, 1; oats, 2. Under New Management I AM NEW TO MEDF0RD, SO I WANT TO MEET ALL OF YOU AND HAVE THE PLEASURE OF ASSISTING YOU IN ANY WAY I CAN TO MAKE YOUR SHOPPING MORE PLEASANT AND MORE ECONOMICAL. WARREN MASON, Manager. Chicago Wheat CHICAGO. Oct. 39. (API Reac tions of securities counted aa a weight on wheat values today' toward the last. Wheat: Open High Low Close Dm. . SS SI .95 .96!, May .9614 .96V4 Si Sti July Sly, 01 .90 SO PUMPKIN RAYMAL 2 Ig. cans 15c NONE SUCH MINOE MEAT. 2 PROS. 2St Wall St. Report COFFEE HUH Bro8. 1 lb. tin 26c NEW YORK. Oct. 39. (API The I stock market's recovery bulged wider I today, although It encountered late I i selling opposition that cut down a morning upswing running to 7 or ship construction will make today's modern liners appesr hopelessly anti quated In a few years, according to Dr. Ernest B. Benger, research chem ist. "It Is Inevitable that the revolu tion underway In land transportation. precipitated by superior structural metals and power units, will not stop where land meets water," he said. "The elements of change that In troduced the faster, lighter, rustless, streamlined train, that are- relegating the so-cslled standard freight car to scrap, that changed the automobile from a rich man's equipage to the average man's necessity, and today are causing aviation englneera to think In terms of continents and oceans and 100-ton loads these elements of change are also going to give us ships faster, lighter, stronger, safer and Infinitely more economical In operation." Dr. Benger said that If 3 per cent of the gross revenues of the United States merchant marine from foreign trade estimated at 6200,000,000 by the maritime commission were spent for research by chemical In dustry, a battery of laboratories could be established for research on a scale now unknown In shipping. Intelligently applied research, on a scale Justified by the size and Im portance of our foreign shipping In dustry would provide the cure for the Ills of our merchant marine," the research chemist said. Dr. Benger recalled that for more than a generation before the Civil war, the American clipper ship was supreme on the world's trade routes, with 90 per cent of America's ocean commerce carried In American ves sels. He pictured a possible return to that supremacy with the aid of science. "Among the more than 10,000 new metal alloys, the new plating pro cesses of the electro-chemist, and the host of other materials of chemi cal origin now available, plus the j newest developments In power units surely in this vast field of new things, as yet largely unexplored, can hA fminri tha cfuff ..... , ... pean market report. ..Id today ore-J merclal supremacy ,t Ma be 5 imb wee uiuving wnn guw . lasmoned," he said. demand on Liverpool, Antwerp ana rcotterdam auctions. Pears arriving In Paris were in poor condition. Bsrtletta, extra fancy 163-1 80s. sold from 63.40 to 63.46 st Liverpool. Caterpillar Tractor . Chrysler Coml. Solv ...... Curtlss-Wright DuPont Gen. Electric .... Gen. Poods Gen. Motors Int. Harvest. .. I. T. Jc T. Johns-Man. Mont, ward . North Amer. .. Penney (J. C.) . Phillips Pet Radio Sou. Pac Std. Brands ...... . Std. Oil Cel. Std. Oil N. J. Trans. Amer. Union Carbide United Aircraft U. 8. Steel , 32;; . 43 . 14 64, eoy, 7414 BVa 4 138 431, 33", 43, 76 73. 44 H 21 82 46 7 33 9 34 53 124 80 19 84 G000 PEAR DEMAND PORTLAND, Oct. 39. (AP) Euro- Eugene Iron Lung Placed On Display EUGENE. Oct. 29. (AP) Eugene s "Iron lung." only respirator of its kind In Oregon outside the one in Portland, arrived In the city tocay and was plsced on display at a downtown store. The apparatus, purchased by tunas raised In a popular subscription drive will be demonstrated at all city schools and then will be Installed at a local hospltsl where it will be available for paralysis victims. RETAIL DISTRIBUTION ' WEEK'S BRIGHT SPOT NEW YORK, Oct. 29. (AP) Re tall distribution provided the bright est spot in trade movements this week. Dun & Bradstreet said today in the weekly revlew-of business. "While gains lacked uniformity." the agency said. "Improvement was less scattered and more Items fell within tne line of demand. "Reorders to balance fall Inven tories sustained wholesale volume, with holiday commitments encour- nged hv prospects of larger waymenta SN0WFLAKE SODA CRACKERS 2 lb. RAISINS Market Day Speoial 4 lb. pkg. pkg- 29t 25c E5p H. D. JELL POWDER 10 DELIGHTFUL FLAVOBB 3 PROS. 14? SUGAR Fine GranHl-trd 10 lb. bag 49c Vitamin fl BRONSON'B MUSTARD PINT lOt CANDY Mixed 2 lbs. 25c FISHER'S HANDISAOKS CORN MEAL, ETC 2 LB. SACK 1S FLOUR Hard wheat 40 lb. aaek $1.39 FIO BARS FREBHLY BAKED 2 LBS. 25 WHITE KING Granulated Soap Lg. pkg. 29c FARMERS, WE PAY CASH FOR EOOS! LETTUCE 3 heads 10c SWEET SPUDS 6 lbs. 19c KLAMATH SPUDS 50 lbs. 39c GRAPEFRUIT . 3 for 10c WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES AND FISH MARKET ROY GUYER, Proprietor. 8. & H. Green Stamps 210 E. Main St. Free Delivery. Tel. 46 1 lb. Little Pig Sausage Our own make 1 pt. Oysters 1 lb. Sliced Bacon Morrell's Pride All for $1 1 Nice Fat Hen li lb. Pork Sausage Farmer style ALL FOR 1 RABBITS S lb. 27c 1 qt. Sauerkraut 1 lb. Huber's Franks 4 lb. Pot Roast Quality Beef ALL FOR Chicken Tamales, 2 for 25c Mock Chicken Legs, 6 for 25c FlTAMIWfi (W) IS NOW ADDED TO k'l DELICIOUS MEW RIUCOAVJ SAV. SIS-MISS FISMfR. THE VES WHATi'J f5S3i? HEAD DIETITIAN AT OUA , WONDERFUL MODERN l HOSPITAL, TOLD ME THAT FOOOMUCOAISI feSSSS1 X NUCOA HAS VITAMIN A SO DIFFERENT ife33 Nk DE; NUCOA HAS ALWAYS i THATS RIGHT I MISS ifc-'v M f BEEN WHOLESOME ANO 1 FISHER SAYS NUCOA I i i DELICIOUS. NOW, WITH I SUPPLIES AS MUCH - I VITAMIN A . IT IS BETTER 1 'OOO-tNIROV AS THE I V v 1 V THAN SVE R - I S PK CI ALLY I MOST EXPENSIVE SPREAD & J W 1 ovH 7 BOo FOR CHILDREN J FOR BREAD. AND THE Ai' 1 w'j V" 7,800 T. VITAMIN A IN NUCOA NIVIR W 1.1 V"M,N IC' XI I vARIi. ITS THE SAME IN J 'J KtXA I IN IVIIV SOUND. I IV GOING TO USE NUCOA AND NUCOA TASTES SO j. E Cl ' eflSX REGULARLY ON THE TABLE I 6OO0! IT CAVE THIS I l n&ZTtnt -J NOW" AND FOR ALL MY J CAKE MARVELOUS IF Ssll mWj? COOKINO. THINK OF THE f FLAVOR . IMAGINE JJ . I la? 1. sprf!ill I MONIV lit (AVI I J AN ECONOMY THAT iU El V! 0 1 N "Z TtyXT MAKES FOOOSJTASTI lhssZt0 uk" rm&-tm -O-l l B3 .tlu THI WHOLESOME "THRIFT SPREAD" FOR BREAD VOU SAVr AT LEAST ISf ON tVtY POUND SWIFT'S GOV. INSPECTED 0 BEEF-VEAL-PORK-LAMB ran PURE PORK SAUSAGE lb. 25c BEEF ROAST lb. 20c LEG OF LAMB lb. 30c SHOULDER PORK ROAST lb. 20c SHOULDER VEAL Br,r lb. 20c YOUNG TURKEYS . . lb. 30c HENS FRYERS OYSTERS ROASTING CHICKENS FANCY FRUITS and VEGETABLES Oornicbon Grapes Calavos Field Grown Tomatoes Hubbard and Banana Squash Apples Pears l 7 Complete Line Canned Goods Tru-Pak Rogue R. Valley Canning Co. Products Stuffed Dates LIBERTY MARKET Phone 164 "The Goblins Will Get You" Or maybe they won't if you buy one of Beck's Goblin Cakes made from a famous Betty Crocker homo recipe. 59c Each It comes in an attractive, blue box with cellophane windows. And the last slice will be as fresh as the first as Ions; as the cake remains in "the box. Also Becks Chocolate Whole Wheat Donuts 28 Per Dozen SATURDAY Have you tried Beck's new attraction Triple T's younger sister, Beck's Deluxe 1 lb. Loaf 10c WHITE "tlnrlfM" In b.sutlfiit rapp.r. This nw loaf lire, up to Bale's high standard of quaint rl-hnM and llaror. .t yonr children thrltf! Inrludp Bfck's bread In Ihflr dlft. At all good ft food stores '