MEDFORD MATT, TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON. THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1940.
V
Gala Northwest Jackson County Fair Saturday To Attract Throngs
PLANS ARE MADE
TO SERVE 3,000
AT FREE BARBECUE
Parade, Exhibits, Contests
and Games On Big Calen
dar of Gold Hill Event.
Gold Hill. Aug. 29. Spl.V
Mor exhibits, more prize
more sports and game, more
entertainment nd bigger free
barbecue dinner that um up
the annual northwest Jackson
county fair to be held here this
Saturday.
At the barbecue itself Gold
Hill expects to be host to 3.000
oersons. Last year, by actual
count. 2,800 visitors were
served at the barbecue dinner
and the fair board is counting
en an Increase of 500 this year.
Another feature will be the
parade Saturday morning at 10
o'clock during wnlcn tne wueen
of the Fair will be crowned.
Winter Grange Eaters
Premium prizes for exhibits
will be awarded only to exhibi
tors In the northwest part of
the county but non-competitive
exhibits from all parts of south
ern Oregon are welcome.
A new entry In booth compe
tition this year is the Wimer
Grange. In addition booths will
be entered by the Gold Hill,
Live Oak and Sams Valley
Granges. The Grange booths
will be housed in tents pitched
near the spacious dance pavil
ion. Livestock, of which a sub
stantial increase is expected,
will be Judged as before, in the
vicinity of the dance pavilion.
A large Increase is anticipated
also in the number of land pro
ducts entered.
On View Tomorrow
Exhibits will be open to pub
lic view from 7 to 10 p.m. Fri
day and all day Saturday ex
cepting for the period of the
street parade. Judging will be
done Friday afternoon so that
winning exhibits will carry
their premium ribbons Friday
night and Saturday- All exhibits
must be in place by 2 p.m. Fri
day. All entries excepting live
stock will be Judged Friday af
ternoon. Livestock will be judg
ed Saturday morning. All exhi
bitors are to register at the of
fice of the Gold Hill News.
Arts and hobbles will be ex
hibited In the News building,
minerals next door In the Ore
gon Ore Reductions building,
flowers in city hall, textiles and
canned goods in the I.O.O.F.
hall. Cash totalling $750 will be
awarded as exhibit premiums.
In addition there will be many
other prizes for entrants in the
parade and to winners of games
and contests.
Saturday's schedule:
10:00 a. m. Parade, with
floats, humorous entries, cos
tumed adults and children, pets,
organizations. Gold Hill accor
dion band and non-competitive
entries from towns outside the
district.
Barbecue at 6:30
1:30 p. m. Sports program
with all kinds of games and
contests for young and old.
8:00 p. m. Dance in the pa
vilion, this being an added fea
ture. 8:00 p. m. Musical program
on the lawn at city hall.
6:30 p. m. Barbecue, with
menu of barbecued beef, note-
toes, brown gravy, bread and
butter, pickles, cheese, coffee
and cream Guests are asked to
bring their own sen-ice: every
thing else will be provided free.
5 5 5
comfortable.
quit roomi
all with hatha
from
e 5 minutes
from Union
R.R. Terminal
e 19 minutes
mmlOltriOO
land of movies
and radio ....
TAvraN.cmiL
(rage Issllitiss
Ms an
9 to 2 Dance, with Glenn
Hamilton's yrchettra of Grants
Pass.
Queen of the Fair Is Miss Ina
Pearl Lucas of Sams Valley
Grange. Her princesses are the
Misses Virginia Centers. Gold
Hill Garden club: Edith Howes.
Gold Hill Grange: Charlotte
Carter, Live Oak Grange, and
Geneva Moore, Wlmer Grange.
The coronation ceremony will
be held during the parade in
the center of town, A. A. Walk
er to give the address. Mayor
R. G. Wigle will turn over the
key to the city to William
Howes, general fair chairman.
Chairmen Listed
Other fair board executives
are John Gray, vice chairman,
Mrs. Cleo Gilchrist, secretary,
and Mrs. Paul Force, treasurer.
Committee chairmen, who al
so are members of the fair
board, are H- D. Force, parade,
Wallace Iverson and Everett
Rosecrans, afternoon program
and dances. Jack Pinkerton,
Mrs. Jeanette Greer and Mrs. A.
A. Walker, barbecue. Otto
Fuhrman, land products: Mrs.
Vaughn Whitmore, canning and
home cooking, Mrs. H. D.
Force, textiles, Mrs. Paul
Throne, flowers, Mrs. Nellie
Reed, arts and hobbies, John
Gray, livestock, and Mrs. Wal
ter McLean, queen's float.
Salem fir. An 9.Q 1 Tsunl.
lv the second strinff candidate
nn A nrpslHentlnl tirlcet la mnrm
ornamental than useful but the
1940 campaign sees the nomi
nees for vire-nresirlpnt entfa-prl
In a battle of their own. Their
special field of endeavor is the
agricultural-vote; they are mak
ing their appeal to the Ameri
can larmer wniie Mr. Roosevelt
and Wendell Wlllkie conduct
the major engagement.
Oregon a Charley McNary
fired the opening gun at the
state fair grounds Tuesday and
now comes Henry Wallace with
his 4-epIy. Before November 5
the fanners of the land will
have plenty to think about and
draw comparison between the
plans for aizrlriiltiiro arivnratrl
by these two specialists in that
subject. There are several mil
lion farm votes and it is a prize
worth fighting for. It was prin
cipally because of their acquain
tance with farm problems that
Senator McNary and Mr. Wal
lace were selected as running
mates for Mr. Willkin anH inr
Mr- Roosevelt In his third term.
ine name of each is a house
hold word wherever acres are
cultivated and crops grown.
In this contest to win the
agrarian vote the material ad
vantages are on the side of Mr.
Wallace. The department of ag
riculture has the largest organi
zation of any in the government.
Representatives of the depart
ment, of which Mr. Wnll.ir-. ....
secretary for the past eight
.e-rs, are scattered in each and
every one of the several thous
and counties in the United
States. These are reinforced by
local committees. The farm pop
ulation (which Is one-thlrd of
in mtai population) Is touched
directly by the department and
he lives of these people are In
large measure guided, directed
f.1, fon!ro"'d bV he machine
which Mr Well.-, i... ..
This, In itself, Is a trem-nrf-.,.
advantage Mr. Wallace has over
Senator McNarv. .
An even greater weapon pos-
hundreds of millions of dollars
-yes billions which he has
d stnbuted In the p.,, n b(,np.
tures. and which the depart
men, : I, preparing , J ,
the campa1Rn. Included in the
resource , of Mr- V,iace -re
"ozen, of statisticians who can
Provide on a momen, , Z"?.
may M,h to. u,e to combl)t
statements of Senntor McNary.
PKR,,Ar th met rifeou-. w.,.
- n statesmen li
the new o-.l rn-ord hsn.llnc
s.rlculture. The re-oM cannot be
eipunsen nor altered Principal re
sponsible for the administration rec.
KIDNEY TROUBLE
Vou won't belle, e. until too here taken me herb treatment that man.
sufferers from barkadie dlvo.er mat the real ran of their trouble
ma- hae been blitnee dlsnrrlers. Mhen disorders t kltnr functions
permit poisonous miller in remain In your Mixxl It mav rause inn
harks, he. rhenmatlr pains, loss ol pep and enerT, ettln up 1 or S
limes at nllht proof thai there Is snmethliif, ronf Kith, ir.nr
kldneis or sIsiMrr. Rut dnnt aslt! Tome In now, before It Is ton Isle.
Inquire Immediately
HENRY LEE HERB CO.
Pail? 0 a. m.-fl p. m. Mrpt ftuntla
Cormorants Are Making
Good Catches at Lake
If It Isn't one thing to plague the fisherman. It's a few
other things. Right now it's a flock of IS cormorants up at Fish
lake. If these big, voracious birds keep up the pace they've
been setting, there may be no fish left in the lake for the sportsmen.
Because of the drain made
upon it for irrigation. Fish lake
is lower now than it has been
in years. It is so low, as a mat
ter of fact, that the cormorants
can catch fish at will. Attend
ants at the lake estimate that
each of the IS cormorants is
taking 400 to 500 eastern brook
trout out of the lake daily- If
the multiplication table hasn't
been revised lately, that means
the flock is doing away with
6,000 to 7,500 fishes every day.
If a fisherman were greedy
enough to catch even a small
fraction of that number, he
would get pinched as a law vi
olator. Cormorants, however,
are immune to arrest.
Before any reader dismisses
this as sheer exaggeration, be it
remembered that cormorants de
vour fish voraciously and have
become the emblem of gluttony.
Hence a greedy or gluttonous
person Is called a cormorant.
And these cormorants devour
not only the small trout. They
ont is Mr. Wallace and It will be
bla taak to defend It whenever Sen.
a tor ftteffary undertakes to point out
Ita defects, which the senator plans
doing. He gave a sample at the Ore
gon state fair grounds In his accept
ance speech.
In that apeech Senator McNary as
serted that In the seven lean years
of the new deal the farmers annual
Income was only seven billion dollars
(mostly contributed by the govern
ment) and In the year 1S3S the
farmers' share of the national In
come waa the lowest sine statistics
have been kept. The senator said
the seven prosperous Republican
years (which Include the black sear
of 10331 saw the farmer Income
reach 13 billion dollars.
Sometime during the campaign.
Mr. Wallace must attempt to explain
why the farm Income has been ao
decreased, despite the federal treaa
ury contributing substantially to
bolster It.
THE vulnerable apots In the new
deal agricultural policy will re
ceive attention from Oregon's "Char
lev Mac" In a speech which he will
deliver In the mid-west In a few
weeks. The senator Intends, If pos
sible, keeping Mr. Wallace on the
defense and explaining, which la
always an awkward position for a
candidate to be pieced In.
His own votlrw record Is a tower
of strength, and Senator McNary has
no alibis to make.
THOSE who look for oratortal
pyrotechnica from the Wallace
McNary controversy will be disap
pointed. Neither the senator nor the
secretary Is a spellbinder and neither
ran be classed as a rabble rouaer.
They are deliberate speakers, rarely
lifting their voice above a conversa
tional pitch, and are unhurried,
placid talkers. What they will de.
pend on Is the meat In their state,
ments, their facta and argumenta
rather than rlp-roarlng Fourth of
July oratory. Farmers listening to
the talks on tha radio will be given
Oar statements without any e-clte-ment;
they sin not be of the pep
talk character.
Senator McNary la aware of the
material advantages poaseesed by Mr.
Wallace but he also knowa that the
record of the new deal can be rid
dled by an unbiased presentation.
This waa Illustrated when he ab
solved the secretary of responsibility
for the trade treaties which were
detrimental to agriculture.
LIVESTOCK
Fortlsnd
Portland. Aug 39 (AP-USDA1
Hogs: Salsble and total. 300. market
active, ateady to strong: good-choice
170 to 31-lb. drlve-lns mostly 97 3.
medium grades 97 00 down: 33ft to
3ft.b. butchers HI 50 et) 75: llnht
lights 99.3ft 0.7ft; packing sows 94.79
dr ft 3ft; feeder pigs scarre, good
choice quotable 903547 00.
Cattle: Salable and total 300;
calvrs salsble 3ft. total SO. market
active, fully etesdy; few good fed
sters sn-.V10J: few grass steers
90 00? 9 3ft: common grades down to
90 7S. inferior dairy type steers down
to 99 3ft; common-medium heifers
9ft SO 7 ftO; canner common coma
s.t.sooo. odd hesd fat dairy type
cows to 95 3J; g.xxl beef cows 90 00
a)9 35; toung rowa eligible to 90 7ft
or above; common-medium bulls
90 00 9 7S; good beef bulla to 97 35.
vealera steady: good-choice grades
910 004- 10 90: common-medium kinds
97 00 9 00; few common S30 to soft-
lb. cslves 90 35
Sheep: Salable 400. total 900; mar
ket slow; generslly SMiIng steady or
around 97 79 .J 9 00 tor good-choice
trucked. in spring lambs, few feeders
90 7ft a 7 3ft; common-medium ewee
9n V Centra'. R.n.t A-H
have been seen flying off with
large ones that extend out the
sides of their beaks.
As one cormorant flew away
the other day, a leader was
seen hanging from its beak. The
theory was that a fisherman's
line had broken, the fish had
made off with the leader and
the cormorant had made off
with the fish. Just what the
cormorant thought about it all
when it woke up with a fish
hook stuck Into its innards has
not been learned.
Cormorants ' are sometimes
trained to catch fish, a band be
ing placed about their necks so
they can't swallow. Such pro
cedure, however, would prob
ably be against the Oregon
sportsmen's code of ethics, if not
the Oregon law itself. But if it
could be done, fishermen would
probably have less difficulty in
catching the limit and thus
there would be less need for
lame excuses. Maybe the cor
morant has some use after all.
steady at tl.753M: fairly good
awes S3 00.
South San Franctaco
South San Francisco, Aug. 39.
(AP-U8DA) Hogs: Salable 600: un
even, mostly 10 lsc lower than yes
terday's packer top: most ISO to
335-lb. Callfornlas 7.7Sa7S0, latter
top;- odd packing sows S9.00.
. Cattle: Salable 100: about steady:
steers scarce: fed steers quoted up
ward to S8.7S. grass steers to S9.15;
package fed 8-7-lb. heifers SS 3ft:
load fed 1.019-lb. range rows S7.00,
few grans 970-lb. cows sorted
at i..00; weighty dairy cows S5-S0T,
5.75. canners and cutters 3 50 si 25:
packaga l.OdO-lb. grass bulla SS 10.
Calves salable, none: good to choice
vealera quoted S10.S0311.ftO. -laughter
calves SS ftOf 10 00.
Sheep: Salable 135: lambs nomi
nally steady; good to rhotc wooled
lamba quoted to SO 00: shorn ewes
steady, packsge 117-lb. S3 90, SO
heed medium 93.00.
Chicago
Chicago. Aug. 39 (AP-USDA1
Salable hogs, U.OOO; total. 14.500;
very slow, weights 340 lbs and down
around 10c lower than Wednesdsys
average: heavier weights lolftc
lower with some bids off more; good
and choice 190 to 940-lb. 97 30.7.55;
top 97 Aft: 340 to 370-lb. S7.10 7.4ft:
370 to SOO-lb. 9080.s7.30: sows 10
15c lower: 900 to 350-lb. 98 15 a 0 40;
few lighted weights 90.90: 350 to 400
1b. 95 7540 .18; 400 to 4S0-lb. 9SJ0
9 90: 450 to SOO-lb. 95 35 5 00.
Salable sheep. 8.000; total. 8.500:
law Wednesday's spring lambs 18)
31c lower; most If 3c off: yearlings
3ftc lower: sorted heavyweight natives
S9SO;9.05; other natlvea mostly
89.80 down: three loads 93-lb. west
erns 90.00; bulk fed yearlings 9800:
natlrs ewes mostly 93 00 3 00: few
light wnghts 8S.78I4O0; today's
trade, marks on native and western
spring Ismbs not as yet established;
most offerings held at steady prices,
bidding slightly lower on natives:
few light handywelght natives ewes
93 903 50.
Salabls csttle, 8.000; cslves, 1.000;
shipper demand less active and gen
eral market rather draggy, strictly
good end choice grain-fed steers fully
steady however, supply small; all
others off 3Sc, mostly 10ISc lower;
general run yearlings and weighty
steers sppmslmstely 38c under week s
high time: top today 813.38 paid for
1.30J-lb. averages: nest highest price
919 18: best long yearlings 813 90;
mostly 99 50 13 38 market with com
mon greasers 97 00 7 80: heifers
barely steady: strictly choice kind
absent: best 9118ft: cows dreggy and
weak: no reliable outlet for light
canner cows selling at 84 00 down;
meet beef eows 85.188 18.
Portland Produce
Portland. Aug. 39. (API Butter,
butterfst. cheese, egs. unchanged.
Country meats: Selling price to
retailers Country killed hogs beet
butchers 128 to Ifto-lb. 9i,10c;
vealera fancy IS', je 10c; light, thin
lOslftc; heavy 10 lie; Ismbs spring
IS', IOC: ewes 47c; good cutter
Dial
I FOR GREEN PINE.
SLAIBS
Timber Products company
msso V;
fND NORTH
eows 9e; canner cows 9 e 9e lb: bulls
10 lis lb.
Uvs ooultry. unchanged.
Dressed turkeys: Nominal eld crop
selling prices Old hens Ho. I 10c;
toms 114 14c; new crop 31 a 33c lb.
Onions: Oregon crystal was 92.75
80-lb. bag; Oregon Danrera 90c a
9100: Yaklmae 80 SOc.
Portland Wheat
Portland. Aug. 39 (AP) Oram:
Wheat: Open High Low Close
Sept. .73 .73 .73 .73
Cssh grain:
Oata-No. 1. 38-lb. white 994 00.
Barley No. 3, 45-lb. B. W. 93080.
Corn No. 3. r. t. shipment 931.00.
Flat No. 1, 8181.
Cash wheat (bid):
Soft whit 73c; western whits
78 ",e: western red 73c.
Hard red winter: Ordinary 73c;
11 per cent 74c; 13 per cent 78e;
18 per cent 78c; 14 per cent 79c.
Hard whlte-baart: 13 per cent 60c:
18 per cent 83c; 14 per cent 94c.
Today's car receipts: wheat 99;
barley 0; flour 8; com 3; oats 0;
hay 3; mlllfeed I.
Chicago Wheat
Chicago. Aug. 29 (AP) Wheat
prices fluctuated within s range of
less than a cent today, bobbing above
and below previous closing levels In
accordance with the flow of mill
buying, profit taking and spreading
and closing with small net losses.
In the absence of outald specula
tive Interest most deelere were con
tent to permit the market's drift,
keeping their own accounts evened
up aa much aa possible. Reports of
pending settlement of the Balkan
dispute caused realising sales by
dealers taking advantage of the fact
that prlcea were about 8 cents above
the season's low.
Wheat closed unchanged to e
lower compared with yesterday's fin
ish. September 71tJn71iC Decern
ber 7474i,e: corn ic lower to He
higher. September Oi'-ic. December
S7t 95714; oats unchanged.
Wheat: Open High Um Close
Sept. .744 .73 .7H4 ,71,
Dec. .74 .74 S .734 .7414
May ,7ftti .78 .7,
Wall St. Reports
New York, Aug. 29 (IP)
Selected stocks kept on the ral
lying route in today's market
but many leaders were side
tracks. Dealings slackened apprec
iably on the failure to extend
Wednesday's recovery and
transfers for the full pioceed
ings were around 173,000
shares against 381,000 yester
day. Business news was credited
with boosting quotations for In
dividual issues as well as limit
ing selling throughout. Helpful
was a jump in last week's rail
way freight loadings to new
peak for the year.
United Aircraft edged for
ward, along with sev;al avia
tion stocks, when announce
ment was made that the com
pany had beeng ranted a $160,
000,000 order for army-navy
plane engines.
Accorded support were Boe
ing. Sperry, Glenn Martin,
Montgomery Ward, Sears Roe
buck, North American. DuPont,
Bullard. N. Y. Central and
Johns-ManviUe.
Backward were U. S. Steel,
Bethlehem, Chrysler. General
KIDNEYS
MUST REMOVE
EXCESS ACIDS
Help 15 Mllea of Kidney Tub
Flush Out Pot o nous Watte
It fftt hv ao tcM e( tHrta Is ytw b.rxv,
your IS tml ( kidney tuh mv b nrrr-tw-.
TtM tiny filtn kM tut tr work me
day ami -itM to blp Nature rM your ajsten of
- an-la ami poi--nvm vaete.
ftho aiavnl-T of licloy fuorHloa fwrreita
pfiaooMn matter to rnvn in yxir Mood, rt
may rauM nagcinf backai-ht, rhunati paina,
lel paina, loa ol rwp aoet nnrv, fttinf up
tut itlm, pufbrnwa undar tba -. bai
rb and dutiriMa. Frount or tntr r--Rtw
nh arnartirm mn4 burnina ao-retim
hiia Uar u oLutbite arrocf atvii four
kntri or bLa-t'lrr.
hifitifva niay tH balp tbe aama aa Snfb,
M ak v,mr druuiat for Pe-arj a Pilla. nm4 itio
ewlullT by tTilK-tet fr evw 40 yaara. Thay
eiva happy rrli. and Mp the 15 mil tf
kKity tubaa flunb out potaoaous Watt Ilea
rour blood. Gat Doeo Pule.
2123
see cubic
TOOT LOAD
CENTRAL
Motors, Anaconda. Kennecott,
General Electric. Westinehouse.
Texaa Corp. and J. C. Penney.
Today's closing prices for S4 se
lected stocks follow:
At. Chem. A Dye. unquoted
Am. Can .. 87
. T. t '"H
Anaconda 3114
Atch. T. S. F. -. 18'4
Bendls Avis. 39 ,
Bethlehem Steel TTj
Caterpillar Tract, 48
Chrysler - 79
Curtlaa-Wright 7tfc
Douglaa Aircraft 714
DuPOTlt telfr
Gen. Electric S3
Oen. Foods , 4114
Oen. Motors sot.
Int. Harvester 441
Johns-Msnrllle g3i
Kennecott 2714
Monty Ward 40 4
No. Amn. Am. 1014
North Amer. istj
Penney (J. c.) 83
Penns, R. R. 3014
Phillips Pet. 33
Radio m 44
Southern Pactris . 714
Std. Brands 8 14
Std. Oil Cel. . is
Std. Oil N. J. 84 14
Tranaamerlcs 454
Union Carbide 7314
United Aircraft . 8814
United Airline ioh
U. 8. SteeL 81 14
San Francisco Butter
San Francis, Aug. 39. (AP-US
DA) Butter: 93 score 80c; Bi, 30c:
90. 38 14 c.
Sacramento. Aug 39 (AP) Churn
ing cream butterfat: First grade 33c;
second grade 80c. '
Menus of the Day
(Rt Mrs. Alexander Ororge)
COOKINO FOR TWO
Brrakfast
Fresh Berrlea
Scrambled Egga and Bacon
French Tout Syrup
Cottm
Luncheon
CotUgA Cheese and Fruit Salad
Orahatn Bread Fresh Apple flauoe
Gingerbread Tea
Cold Siloed Tn?u
Corn on the Cob
Craamed Potatoes with Paralev
(QDDll
?3S-ME
The Tire Sale
of the Year!
LOOK AT THIS!
A Genuine
Goodrich Silvertown
. With the Golden
(OOxlt for
$9.95
el
5:50x17 at S9.25
Thste prices Include your eld tirs
L
See Us Before
Lewis Super service Station
TH AN3 TRONT
Bread Spiced Peach Jam
Radishes Chilled Melon
Coffee (Hot or Iced)
French Toast
t egg or 3 yolks
4 cup milk
14 teaspoon granulated sugar
l, teaspoon salt
8 slices bread or leftover toast
3 tablespoons fat (bacon suggested)
1 tablespoon confectloLer's sugar
Beat egg, milk and seasonings In
a shallow dish like a aoup dish.
Dip the bread quickly Into this mix
ture and then place It In the fat.
heated In s frying pan. Cook over
moderate beat until well browned.
Carefully turn and brown the other
stdea. Sprinkle with the confec
tioner's sugsr and arrange, with edges
overlapping on s heated plater.
Serve.
Gingerbread
H cup fat (lard la fine)
4 cup granulated sugar
I
cup molasses
14 cup water lor sweet milk)
1 teaspoon clnanmon
4 teaspoon ginger
I4 teaspoon nutmeg
teaspoon cloves
5 teaspoon salt
14 cups flour
14 teaspoon soda
Vs teaspoon baking powder
KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON VHISKEY
y$ V"1 - J)
Nation:, Distillers Product- Corporation. Vew YorV
Ply
You Buy
Cream fat and sugar. Add other
Ingredients and beat well. Pour Into
s shallow pan lined with waxed
paper. The batter should be shout
an inch thick In the pan. Baks 30
minutes In s moderate oven.
Closing time for Too let to Clas
sify Ada la I JO p. m.
- CONVENIENT
COMFORTABLE
ECONOMIC!.
IK) Proof ,
F '
A 11
si
MAKE YOUH OWN
Easy Terms!
CREDIT TO EVERYONE
Jut tWrft hit you nfd. show aa yonr
llrrni IdntlfUstlon and tfll u how yn rn
Dar. There 1 no rd tip, nn dlat and
1H maka 1ramMiUt IntiallaMon.
GOODRICH SILVERTOWN TIRES
Th only tlrt lth Ootdn Pt blowout pro
i1on. i11vr(own'a drrp, ahurp Irfd flrpt
ad'led aaffly for ttlntr dtiTio.
GOODRICH BATTERIES
Th nw Good rich KathanM ritrtror1r la
tnarantofd for at lon a ym drlt yoor rar!
DIAL 2111