MEDFORD MATT; TRIBUNE. MEPFORD. OREGON. TUESDAY. AUGUST 6. 1940.
PAGE EIGHT
JERSEY HERDS TOj
BE CLASSIFIED BY
UNIVERSE JUDGE
Breeders, 4-H Club Mem
bers and Friends Invited
Friday and Saturay.
Rogue river valley'f regis
tered Jerseys will parade Fri
day and Saturday before Prof.
W. R. Regan of the University
of California at Davis, a Judge
of the American Jersey Cattle
club, for official classification.
Through the classification, the
breeder is afforded an opportun-
T. H. Warren
ity of knowing how an experi
enced judge places his cattle in
comparison with the ideal type
as adopted by the cattle club,
Robert G. Fowler, county agent
explained. The procedure is not
unlike the methods used in pick
ing a bathing beauty contest
winner.
Breeders of dairy cattle, 4-H
club members and their friends
are invited to attend the two
day event.
The classification program
will begin at 10:13 a.m. Friday
at the E. B. Poycr farm in Ash
land. The Poyer herd will be
classified first. In the afternoon
the herds of J. R. McCracken
and C. J. Hunter will be clas
sified. Baskat Picnic
The program will continue at
B:30 a.m. Saturday at the Jersey
Paradise farm near Grants Pass.
George R. Riddle's Jersey herd
will be classified in the morn
ing. After this event a basket
h.TBlitf
Sl.1i
yew"
VJ.
Jh i
iMI
i. V-
picnic lunch will be enjoyed In
the city park.
The afternoon program will
be held at the farm of F. W.
Schutzwohl where the Shuti
wohl herd will pass before Prof.
Regan.
T. R. Warren of Portland,
western field man of the Jersey
cattle club, will attend the two
day classification event. He will
come to Medford by plane
Thursday evening from the
Montana state fair.
Classification rounds out the
way of judging cattle. For many
years there have been definite
systems of ascertaining produc
tion. The register of merit sys
tem of testing was established
by the American Jersey Cattle
club in 1903 and the herd im
provement registry in 1928.
Until recently there was no
comparable way of ascertaining
the degree of excellence in re
gard to the type of dairy ani
mal. In response to this need,
the Jersey cattle club, adopted,
in 1932, the Jersey herd classifi
cation program which has since
steadily gained in popularity.
Mr. McCracken's herd has
been classified before. All the
other herds will be classified
for the first time this week.
BOMB THREAT AGAINST
IS
AS
Hollywood, Aug. 8. (P) A
bombing threat with fantastic
possibilities death or injury to
hundreds of motion picture
celebrities simmered down to
an apparent hoax today.
Formally dressed film not
ables thronged to the $5-a-seat
gala opening last night of a
week-long performance of three
Noel Coward one-act plays for
the benefit of the British War
Relief association of southern
California.
Before the opening curtain
a sign was discovered in a tele
phone booth at a drug store
adjoining the theater, reading,
"Warning three time bombs
planted in Br. relief show. Do
not go unless you want to be
blown to bits, A. C. L."
While the capacity audience
including such personages as
Ronald Colman, Charles Boyer,
Mary Pickford, Richard Greene,
Gracie Allen, Elsa Maxwell,
George Jessel, Brian Ahearne,
Irene Dunn, Hedy LaMarr,
Rosalind Russell, Mary Martin
and Simone Simon sat undls
t u r b e d, homicide detectives
quietly made a fruitless search
for bombs.
E
GRANTED LEAVES
Southern Oregon College of
Education, Ashland, Aug. 8.
(Spl.) Miss Allie Depew, assis
tant professor of English, and
R. W. Mc.Ncul, assistant profes
sor of geography, have been
granted leaves of absence for
next year by the Oregon State
Hoard of Higher Education, ac
cording to Dr. Walter Red ford,
president.
Miss Depew, who has been at
the College since 1932, has been
granted a leave for the fall and
winter quarters and plans to vis
it various experimental junior
colleges and to spend some time
in travel, study and writing,
Mr. McNcal, who has been at
the college since 1927, will
spend the fall quarter at the
University of California doing
advanced work.
TO BE LAW CLERK
New York. Aug. 8. ;p
Franklin D. Roosevelt. Jr., 26-vear-old
son of the President,
has landed a Job in the Wall
street law firm headed by Eu
gene L. Garry, who gays he's
no new dealer.
"After all," said Carey, "the
kid wants to be a lawyer and
we're not going to treat him
nny different from anybody
else. He'll huve to run errands
and do everything else that
the Job Implies."
Young Roosevelt. graduate of
the University of Virginia law
school, still has his bar exam
inations to pass. Hell begin
as a clerk.
SEARS ROEBUCK SALES
SHOW JULY INCREASE
Chicago, Aug. 8 iT Sears
Roebuck & Co.. today reported
a!es for the month of July to
laled $M.3M.R96 as compared
with $43,941 139 for the same
month a year ago. an Increase
of ;. 410,757 or 18 9 per cent
DIAL 4923
lt Oulra. prpendahk Sen Ire
Unique Cleaners
II. .Irl tlirn nidi Hud laarenli
T !
TO HOLD REMAINS
OF LABOR BOSS
Mike Carrozzo- Former Chi
cago White Wing Dies a
Millionaire Rise Rapid
Chicago, Aug. 8. UR) His
associates arranged a funeral
with a $10,000 bronze casket
today for Mike Carrozzo, boss
of 15,000 Union Street workers
and hod carriers who started
34 years ago as a penniless im
migrant "white wing" and died
a country squire, reputedly a
millionaire.
Carrozzo was only 45 when
he died yesterday at Presbyter
ian hospital where he was taken
for an operation for a kidney
ailment but he was the czar of
six street paving and mainten
ance unions as president of the
International Union of Pavers
and Road Builders and he dom
inated 18 other local unions as
president of the Hod Carriers'
and Common Laborers' District
Council. He had been assailed
by columnist Westbrook Pegler
as a "gangster and labor rack
eteer." Rite Quiet, Fait
His rise to wealth and power
was almost as quiet as it was
fabulous and few could tell
how he achieved them. Some
said he, like Al Capone, once
had been a bodyguard of Jim
Colosimo during the early pro
hibition era. But he was a pro
tege of Timothy (Big Tim)
Murphy, old-time Chicago labor
leader, and started his labor
career as president of the Street
Sweepers' union in 1919.
That his rise to wealth was
rapid was evident, for he pur
chased first a $75,000 estate on
the Indiana shore of Lake Mich
igan and later he bought a
$140,000 Lake county, Ind ,
farm with $1,000 bills. It was
at the Lake county farm that
he established himself as a
country squire.
Under Indictment
He was one of 10 union of
ficials Indicted June 24 and
charged with violating the fed
eral anti-trust laws by conspir
ing to prevent the use of ready
mixed concrete in Chicago.
When the federal government
recently placed a lien of $241,
088 against him for 1937 and
1938 Income taxes, Carrozzo
came to the U. S. courthouse
and deposited $277,251 in bonds
to lift the lien.
F
Chicago. Aug. 6. (ff") Radio
station WHIP, Hammond. Ind.,
announced today it had noti
fied the German American Na
tional Alliance of Chicago of
cancellation of the alliance's
einheitsfront (united front)
hour, after August 10.
Dr. Georgo F. Courrier, presi
dent of the radio stition com
pany, said Hammond citizens
had been objecting to the
broadcasts for sometime and
that he ha! promised to ban
the program "if it proved to
be subversive."
The program, broadcast in
German
carried official no -
tices of tile front's activities.
The announcer last week urged '
listeners to attend the "keep
out of war" meeting in Soldier
Field Sunday.
WHILE CREW SITS
Wenalchee. Wash., Aug. 6.
(Vi Publisher Rufus Woods and
his son, Wilfred, took over the'
FOR GREEN PINE
SLABS
$2.7S
Dial
TimberProducts company
Klamath Council
Has Hot Evening
Klamath Falls, Aug. 8
(If) Perspiration poured
from the brows of city coun
cilmen last night as they la
bored over the city's prob
lem's. It was one of the
warmest nights of the season
and the city fathers fidgeted
at the slowly dwindling pile
of business ahead of them.
Then someone touched one
of the steam radiators. It
was goine full bli,t.
stereotyping department of the
Daily World today when regular
union members of the shop
staged sit-down strike.
A dispute has been in progress
as to whether the publisher's son
should be allowed to work In
the stereotyping department. On
previous summers he has work
ed in the editorial, composing
and press rooms.
Harold Langham, head stereo-
typer and his assistant, George
Reed, sat on the railing in their
workroom this morning while
Editor Woods and his son han-
died mats, plates and molten
metal.
Moscow, Aug. 8. lP) Russia
completed the process of absorb
ing the Baltic states into the
Soviet union tonight when the
supreme sovi'et (parliament)
voted to admit Estonia. Lithu
ania and Latvia previously had
been admitted.
The supreme soviet sitting In
the great white-walled council
chamber of the Kremlin, ap
proved Estonia's petition to enter
the union as the sixteenth repub
lic by a show of hands, amid
ovations for Joseph Stalin, who
sat at the back of the officials'
tribune.
This action, on the fifth day
of the parliament's session,
swelled Russia's population to
193,000,000.
DEFENSE CONTRACTORS
GIVEN TAX ASSURANCE
Washington, Aug. 8. OP)
Congressional tax leaders called
on national defense contractors
to go forward with the defense
program on the strength of as
surances that they would be per
mitted to deduct from their tax
able income the cost of defense
plant expansions.
Chairman Cooper (D-Tcnn.) of
the house tax subcommittee gave
out the oral statement in the
presence of William S. Knudsen,
I national defense commissioner,
who attended a closed meeting of
I the subcommittee.
PASTOR FACES CHARGE
Alamosa. Colo.. Aug. 8. (VI.Ri
Rev. J. M. Dyer, 51, pastor of
the Monte Vista Baptist church,
was in jail here today for in
vestigation concerning charges
of incest involving his 16 year
old daughter. .
Undersheriff I. L. Funk of Ala
mosa said the minister had ad
mitted Intimacy with the girl
1 during the last three years.
Cm Mall Trlbuna want ftds.
THE BEST
Not necessarily the biggest.
Is what we wish people to
think of our uitd car de
partment.
CookseyMotorCo.
lard Car Lot, sth Ban in t
Dial 3618
100 CUBIC
rOOT LOAD
2123
EDICT FOR JEWS
Krakow, German-wrcupled
Poland, Aug. 8. bV) This
city's entire Jewish copulation
of about 40,000 is scheduled to
begin a mass eastward migra
tion within "a few days," DNB,
official German news agency
reported today, quoting
the
narschauer Zeitung.
The "emigrants" will be al -
lou..H in ivm all hin
inff. with them, thft npwtnatvr
said.
TIRED. ILL.
TAKES OWN LIFE
Los Angeles, Aug. 8. 'JPi
The coroner wrote suicide to-
,ter name of Fred J.
Maclsaac, 54, widely known
author of mystery and adven
ture novels, whose body was
found in his Hollywood home
yesterday with a bullet wound
in tne head. I know that Wendell Willkie
Detective Lieutenant William 'never changed nor had any oc
Chase said there was a note on casion to change his name and
Maclsaac's dresser which said: j that he and his forebears never
"This is a case Of sui.ide. I'm 'deserted America or American
111, tired and goinj broke." I ideals and tradition. . . ."
Maclsaac was born in Cam
bridge, Mass., in 1888, attended
Harvard and worked cn news
papers before turning to fic
tion. His widow survives.
126 REGISTER FOR
IE
"
Southern Oregon College of
Education, Ashland, Aug. 6.
(Spl.) Final registration figure
for the second summer session
at the Southern Oreson College
of Education shows that 126
students are now resistered.
This is an increase of approxi
mately 2' i per cent oer the
corresponding period last year.
Of the 128 registered, 55 are
men and 71 are women. The
teacher education students to
tal 95 and the Junior college
students total 31. There are
20 advanced students registered
at present.
V
I IS"' f
V V -t '4
! " -- rtirt' i' ni . I
LI 7 J
I 1 , :mnKr
MILK
Thf VlUmtnt that mtlfc conutn A. B, C. T. t and
r ar ilphibthul iuranrt of loiUMlt?. rtltnc
to lufrtiton. and enteral xxl health. Whether ton
drink It m a bexernte or eat It a a foiwt
reinemher that a cjiurt of ntrir't milk t equal
tn the taliie of a pound of tieak. or tight en,
or teien oranje!
Snidzr's Milk Your Best
Health Insurance
SNIDER DAIRY & PRODUCE CO.
DIAL 2168
GUFFEY DAPPED FOR
'DIRTY POLITICS' IN
E
! Washington. Aug. 8
' Senator Van Nuys (D , Ind.) as-
serted in a formal statement to
day that Senator Guffey (D.,
Pa.) had been guilty of "dirty
mendacious partisan politics" in
declaring In tne senate yesier-
'dav that Wendell L. Willkie,
' KepuDiican presidential nom-
. Inee,
bom and baptized
Lewis Wendcl Wilkus."
"Having known Wendell
Willkie since his birth, visited
in his parental home, practiced
law at the same bar with his
father and mother for many
years and being proud of the
success of this Hoosier boy, I
denounce this attack of Senator
Guffey as untrue and as dirty,
mendacious, partisan politics,''
Van Nuys said.
"I do not know oreare from
what source Senator Guffey ob
tained his alleged information,
but as a native Hoosier, with
three generations of Hoosier an
cestry behind me, and speak-
ing from personal knowledge. I
McNary Due Home
By Plane Aug. 25
Portland, Aug. 8. iP) Sen
ator McNary will reach Port
land by plane, Sunday, August
23, and go directly to Fircone,
his home near Salem, in prep
aration for his notification of
the Republican vice presidential
nomination on August 27.
Ralph Cake. Republican na-
tional committeeman, said it
was virtually assured Joseph
Martin, minority house leader
and chairman of the Republican
national committee, would at-
tend the ceremonies at the state
fairgrounds.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
MALONES
FOOD SHOPPE
For That Ltinrh Bx and Picnics
andnll1rt, Cake, rte, Pulad, Etc.
419 i E. Main Phone 3185
Re sure of the
KENT Si;
"snltler'a" ...
and remrmber our
new THOSE II1W.
M MIll K 3-1-6-1
Lr rienty
of
FtF and
ENERGY
WITH
GRADE A
PASTEURIZED
Mw
of Lovely Summer-;!
DRESSES
Linens
Sheers
Rayons
in smart
one & two
pc. styles
Regular Values
Up to $8.98
Mann'i Drass Shop
a huttf n lures tnmftrrnm-
in reason mis ciean-up
pc. Summer Drtiiet Here
are tailored frocks, sport
typea and dressy modeli
in solid colon, printt and
combinations. Regular,
Junior and half aiies.
SECOND
FLOOR
Mi
Close Out Sale of
Fine Quality
LACE CLOTHS
Think of buying a
lovely 72 x 90 inch
hand made lace Din
ner Cloth for )ust
12.99 . . . That's just
what you can do to
morrow at Mann's
A close out sale of our
regular S5.9S cloths
lor this sensational
price. Take advan
tage of this sale, buy
for your own home
or for gifts Only 15
left ao be here early.
Regular
$9.9
Li
August
Clean-Up
v ' Mm
mi
MM
f i 1 i W
willb. I h
L '
I Xf Nl
a. . J
$5.95 Values
i i
s
r
NEW PHONE
NUMBER
DIAL 2133
UliiriiHiIrd t nlar !lr;
A Prod are t'uninj
End Noilh Central