Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 07, 1940, Page 9, Image 9

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, FRIDAY. JUNE 7, 1940.
PAGE NINE
P.O. REMODELING
10 BE COMPUTE
Menus of the Day
Considerable Change Is
Planned for Entrance
Work Following Schedule
Construction work on the
Medford federal building :
modeling and extension is pro
gressing according to schedule
and will be entirely completed
by November 1, supervising or
ficials said today.
Interior crews are putting
finishing touches on the addi
tion and are renovating the
basement, adding new storage
rooms and office quarters. Stor
age space for the Crater Lake
national park administration,
the U. S. deputy marshal and
other federal agencies will be
provided, along with quarters
for both the army and the navy
recruiting offices.
The entrance to the postof
flee will be changed consider
ably, it was stated. The present
front steps will be taken out
and replaced by a platform on
a level with the main floor.
New steps will be constructed
at each end of the porch while
a parapet will be raised facing
Sixth street The three main
doors will be retained in their
present positions and the new
arrangements are expected to
effect easier entrance.
Under the renovation plans,
the finance departments, con
prising the registry, money
order and postal savings win'
dows, will be shifted to the
northwest corner of the main
floor in the space formerly oc
cupied by the postmaster's of
fice. The postmaster will be
shifted to the east side of the
building and a corridor will be
constructed between the new of
fice and the letter boxes.
Additional boxes are to be in
stalled along the front and
aide.
(By Mn Alexander Gorr)
SIMMY tINVr
Th Mmu
Chilled Fruit Juloee
Roe Umb
Browned (wi Potato
Eggplant Savor?
Mint Bu Strawberry Jua
Breed Butter
BUM
Cnerry Cak Cotfee
Effptant 8ory
t eegplsnt
Vi cup French dreatfni
9 cups tomttoe
"eup chopped celery
1 tablespoons chopped colon
4 teaspoon salt
t teaspoon paprika
3 I cup crumbs (bread or cracker)
2 tablespoons butter, melted
i cup grated cheeee
Feel eggplant and cut In Inch
croesvar slice. Soak on hour In
Freneb dreeem. Cut Into cubes and
mis with the tomatoes and season
ing. Four Into a buttered baking
diab and cover with other Ingre
dient, blended. Cover and belt 35
minutes in motif rite oven. Uncover
nd bake 10 minute to brown.
Dutch Cherry Cak
114 cup flour
S tapoon baking powder
J tablespoon granulated ugar
S nbleepoon ft
1 egg or a yolk
3 1 cup milk
Mix (lour, baking powder. salt and
sugar. Cut la rat and slowly add
egg and milk. When a esft dough
form, pat It out until t Inch thick
on a greaeed shallow beklraj pan.
Cover with cherries.
Cherrle
t tablespoon oxt butter
a eup seeded red cherrle
(drained) ,
H cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon -
Mis Ingredient and apretd on th
dough. Bak as minutes In mod
erate oven. Serve warm with cherry
saue.
INE LABORAT
IN OREGON SOLVES
QUALITHROBIEN!
Every Gallon Released for
Sale in This State Is
Subject to Rigid Tests
CALLED BY DEATH
Stayton, Ore.r June 7. Spl)
Funeral services were held
here today for George B. How
ard, who formerly lived In Med
ford and who attended grade
school in that city. He was the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. How
ard.
Mr. Howard was born June
28. 1882. in Calaway County,
Mo., and went to Medford in
1888, living there until 1894
when the family moved to
North Santiam, a farming com-
munity near Salem, where Mr.
Howard lived until his death
June 4, of heart failure.
In December. !903. Mr. How
ard married Myrtle Van Nuys,
of West Stayton. Mr. Howard
la survived by his widow and
by brother. Robert L. Howard.
REWARD OFFER
KILLS RUSTLING
Tort Stockton, Tex. (U.R)
Time was when a cattle thief
swinging from the end of a rope
beneath some lonesome cotton
wood tree was used extensively
to discourage cattle rustling on
the southwest plains. But times
change and today notices posted
on those same trees, as well as
in more conspicuous places, are
quite as efficient.
Those notices read "Reward,
$250."
Three years ago, West Texas
cattlemen were losing heavily to
streamlined cattle thieves. Twen
tieth century rustling, with high
speed trucks, gave them lots of
trouble. A band of rustlers could
snot cattle in an isolated portion
of the range, load as many as 20
head into a truck, run them
across the' state line and sell
them before the rancher knew
they were missing.
Corvallis. (Spl.) A state
oenologlcal laboratory has solv
ed Oregon'a problem of wine
quality.
Located it the agricultural
experiment station here, the
laboratory has tested samples
representing more than a half
million gallons of wine shipped
into Oregon and some 200.000
gallons of Oregon produced
wines since September 1, 1939.
Every gallon of wine now re
leased for sale in the state is
subject to rigid lauoratory tests
under the act of th Oregon
legislature of June 14. 1939.
and regulations of the Oregon
liquor control commission made
effective October 30, 1939.
Three objectives have been suc-
cussefully achieved, according
to Ralph W. Staley, wine sup
ervisor for the commission:
(1) Unsound and substand
ard wines have been eliminated
from the state; (2) Oregon farm
ers producing fruits and berries
for commercial wine - making
have been furnished with guid
ance in the sanitary handling
of their products, with resulting
substantial improvement In the
quality of Oregon produced
wines; (3) the quality of wines
sold in Oregon has been im
proved to a point not only equal
to but substantially higher than
the standards of type, age,
soundness and general quality
fixed by the legislature and
the commission.
Unique.
The laboratory, which has
been Instrumental In solving
Oregon's wine quality problem,
is unique among state and gov
ernment wine-testing stations in
the United States. Assisted by
the food Industries department
of the agricultural experiment
station, it combines oenological
research for the benefit of Ore
gon farmers and farmer win
eries with protection for con
sumers health through Improve
ment in quality. At the same
time it guides the Oregon state
liquor control commission in
standardization and control of
any wines that, fall below the
standards established by the
state. It it regarded as one
' of the most efficient labora
tories in the entire west for
making wine tests.
In recent month Oregon
farmers have availed themselves
of the laboratory'i services.
Dale R. Mills, assistant tech
nologist in charge, has assisted
in all phases of fruit and wine
production, from the picking of
fruits and berries at the pioper
stage of maturity to mainten
ance of modern methods in
winery sanitation and the final
flow of the beverage into bot
tles. Among other services,
special wine yeast cultures have
been imported from Spain.
propagated in the laboratory.
and provided to Oregon grow
ers with instructions for care
and use.
Samp! Tested.
Every firm shipping wines
Into Oregon is required, under
its state permit, to provide the
iquor control commission with
certified chemical analysis of
purity for every individual type
of wine before shipment. Sam
ples are taken by representa-
ives of the commission. At its
offices at Portland all labels
are removed and the samples
identified only by number so
that the laboratory cannot iden
tify the bottler or source of
production. The samples are
then sent to the laboratory at
Corvallis.
After satisfying itself through
the laboratory's examination of
analyses ana eampic uwi tne i
wines were up to standard, the
wine department of the com
mission since July 1 has issued
over 900 permits for importa
tion. Many thousands of gal
lons have been rejected, de
stroyed, corrected or returned
to wineries as results of the
tests.
RICH ORE AREA
I lower levels of rich mining
I property, irrigate thousands of
scnu-arid arret in Tooele valley,
and provide a fast, economical
route for transporting men to ; rom n, toot'
th mine and ore (rom the
shafts.
requires eight "toots" repeated
four times or a total of 32 blasts.
It took the fire department so
I long to get the siren sobered up
that the 8 o clock
signal was 10 minute late and
th city's business life accord
ugly demoralized.
ONE CENT A MILE
DAYLIGHT TIME
Tort Wayne, Ind. (U.FB The
federal government has been
threatened with a suit of near
major proportions if it doesn't
do something about daylight
saving time.
The threat came from J. Leon
Lazarowitz. doctor of Hobo
ology. doctor of migration, presi
dent of the Ra-nbUng Hobo Fel
lowship of America, and chief
Justice of the United States Kan
garoo court. The sum he men
tioned off-hand was sau.uuu.
Lazarowitz contended that the
local daylight saving time stat
utes were in violation of the
federal law which fixe stan
dard time zones.
Driller Find Fish.
Alamosa. Colo. (SP Alamosa
drilled an artesian water well
and got gas and fish. City En
gineer D. H. Edwards Is con
ducting tests to determine if
the gas that bubbles upward
with water may be illuminating
gas and of sufficient quantity
to heat homes. Likewise, he it
investigating the source of many
little fish that swim around in
the well water.
Pittsburgh (U.R) Pennsylva
nia's $65,000,000 "dream" high
way really will be something
motorists dream about but sel
dom see, according to W. C.
Cline, a tunnel engineer who is
helping build the 160-mile road,
which will run between Pitta
burgh and Harrlsburg.
But it will cost money for
motorists to use It one cent a
mile, to be exact. Trucks will
pay 4 cents a mile for use of the
all-weather highway.
However, this is no ordinary
highway. For example, there
will be no steep hills, sharp
curves or a speed limit. It will
be 78 feet wide enough for
four 12-foot traffic lanes, each
separated by. a 10-foot wide strip
of earth.
Salt Lake City, Utah 01 rTi
Workmen who have toiled for
three year on the $1,230,000
Elton drainage and transporta
tion tunnel which bores 4-i
mile through the Oquirrh
mountains estimate they will
complete the ambitious mining
and irrigation project In 17
months.
Thirteen thousand feet of the
tunnel, which will link the
Tooele and Bingham mining
district of Utah, have been
completed. Only 11,000 feet re
main to be bored before the
deadline, et for August, 1941.
The tunneling is progressing at
the rate of 23 feet a day.
Th tunnel will drain the
City Sleep
Santa Cruz, Cal. OI.PD Th
fir department's new "fish
horn" siren, used for signaling
fires and awakening the popula
tion at 8 In the morning, went
on an unusual "toot." Th false
alarm came from box 123 which
Closing tan for Too Law So Claa
atly Ada la to p. m.
"Ileady to Serv
V" Only 5 Minutes' 1
icw m vivaums an Hnt.i
301
OEZIO
LUMANS'
Our Free Delivery at Your Service
Telephone 353 or 354
LUMANS
AS STOCK FEED
Birmingham, Ala. (U.R) Sweet
potatoes soon may become an
important livestock feed in the
south.
Feeding tests which have been
conducted at experiment sta
tions in Alabama, Georgia and
Tennessee show that sweet pota
toes have a high feeding value if
properly balanced with cotton
seed meal or other protein rich
feeds.
The experiments Indicate that
dehydrated sweet potatoes equal
corn pound for pound for fatten
ing steers.
Tests at the Alabama experi
ment station at Auburn revealed
an acre of sweet potatoes will
produce two to three times as
much feed as an acre of corn. "
AYI-TMI MILK
IS TKmifTV
PUTS MflLMtt CRIAM
IN YOUR
COOKING "
It' mrra rich thi milk
evaporated by Borden .
Vwn ffc. itt im
there being nearly th .4
earn a a quart of whole mS I
BJIklnMcbUXos-caa.
voir nourunins and
very drop I Irradiated
with sumbln Vitamin D.
Th br'r-nd to bay
Borden's, naturally! Do
bay today t
A
Produci
ELSIE SAYS-
lr ITS
ITS 521 TO BE GOOD
Progress Bows
Lancaster, Pa. U R The pro
posal of the American Business
club to erect a modern sieei iig
oole at Wheatland, home of
James Buchanan. Pennsylvania s
only president, brought such a
protest from historians that a
tall poplar pole was substituted.
CLASSES
Dr. R. M. Hoed. Optometrist
part Bldf.
Mala snd Wverrtde. Medford. Ore.
IklUfal aerrire Rratonabl price
Oregon's Own and Only Sugar
the Best Sugar You Can Buy
for YOUR CANNING
It's Berry time in
OREGON
Oregon houfine am aer trott ear eerta
than any other Mat. Why Perhaps till!
Oregon' froite ere o excellent and as lew in
eoat. Commercial canning Mi aba ertpartaat;
far incur. Oregon produces 78 of th
non canned totanberrk and M of ks eaa-
Fommite. wo. thai Oregon eugar , . . c4d
nder the "Whit Barm brand . . . k) th beet
eugar yea can obtain FOR YOUR CANNING
. . . beceuee h quality i milling and ke
en ye build Oregon when yam Orate
sugar- It's guaranteed for canning. JeDy making,
or preserving: or your money back. Abeohjteryl
Buy k in 100-pound dork, burlap, or paper begs.
end tee. Alee old a am Bar sua.
PtltE BEET SrCAB
Uee bt sugar and vc Endorsed far carowig
by th U. S. Government and by leading Ore
gon house enee and horn nnoinav),
CCAaVrUTTEE v-t
-Wkae - Safer !ZLl
mwi he everv mm ILT"Wi' ,WA
- Trr a. Z?Jt' f
Meeee ke eat CsMKULMeD I
mm, te ae Better lAH j
You Can Buy SM Fine
Foods This Week-End
At BIG SAVINGS
iir M 't-rsss' .
lilM.ll.1.-3..-N...:....-;jl...:,:!ii;:a,:J:,.,.nM, -.,I1I.-J tl..,il -i - ill
COFFEE
t lb. tins 24c
2 lb. tins 47c
CATSUP
It's the Finest
14 oz. bottles
31c
TOO GOOD TO MISS
Here to Food Newt yen bav been waiting tor. . to W. Tin Foods
t BIO SAVING this week-end It or tntereet to every housewife. D
lure to get year than nd enjoy the savings (long with th net.
SW CLAM JUICE
Serve Hot or Cold Q.
12 OZ. TIH8 EACH C
PINEAPPLE
JUICE
2
12 OZ. TINS
19c
57' DICED DEETS 2 No. 2 TINS 25c
WW! lilllU
aier.-
WHITE SATLTO UGAK
Se "20 Mul Tm" In action at
CraUrlan, June 9-U, Starring
Wallae. Bry.
SEE BORAX DISPLAY In LOBBY
BORAXO BORAX I BORAX
J for lib. CHIPS
27 I 250 I 2U
SUGAR
100 lb. sack $5.40
10 lb. sack 54c
MILK
Libbr ' or Oregon
3
TALL
CANS
19c
Pr ea. 41 can
$302
SHORTENING
(Wtmlnsir) .
4 Lb. Carton
39c
EGGS
FRESH
Extra Lerg.
Dosa
16c
Extra MteUum
Doss
15c
Lumans' FLOUR Prices
FISHER'S BLEND
KITCHEN QUEEN
ORBIS BRAND
It b guaranteed to plea, rou
4 lb.
lack
41 lb,
sack
41 lb.
sack
1.79
1.49
1.39
KLAMATH BOUQUETS 1.19
Two Phone
333 or 334
LUMANS' MEATS
fre
DotlTorr
SOLD TO YOU FRESH
WHEN FLAVOR IS BEST
SATURDAY SPECIALSi
Chelc young (at R. I. Rd Hras, ltv.
R. I. R4 and Barred Rock rrr.rs, milk and
corn fed. lb.... .......
Prim. Rib Roaati, boned and tied. lb.
Sirloin or T-Bon Sleeks, cut from young
tender bf, lb. .....,
Bf Pot Rout, choice cut, lb,
Pork Routt, ln and indr. lb..
Pork Stk. lb
lb..
rrh Sid Pork. lb..
Vl Stks, loin and rib cut.
Vl Routt, choice shouldor cut. lb..
CotUg Hams, Iran and tndrlsd. lb..
Bacon, mild cure, lb
Homo Rendered Lard.
.25
-20f
-..20?
15)
lSt?
15
12Vi
-20t
-150
-20
-150
. 3 lb. 29
AT LUMAII'S
TROPICAL GOLD CAKE
Tndr. yellow lyr with dUciou plnrappl all
through thm. Th oulald Is covered with our now
boiled Icing trlmmd with ptnrappl. allce.
49c
LUMAHQ'
Fruiti and Vcsotablos
wus-siro arscuu
Grapefruit doz.35c
Fresh local bu. Veg. 3 f or 1 0c
Largo, aolld
crisp
each 5c
Otto Bohnerft
Home Orewa
LETTUCE
Fresh RHUBARB
CABBAGE . . . lb. 3c
ORANGES . . 2 dozen 35c
Medium sis, full oi Juice
Buy Your Canning Stnwbsrriss He
say, DICED CARROTS No. 2 TINS 11c s
sw SWEET PIMENTOS 4 Oz. TINS 8c
01301
-10JE30
C30
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