Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 30, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUKE. MEDFORO. OREGON. FRIDAY. AUGUST SO. 1940.
FACE THKLt
T
AT IIS BEST FOR
LIVESTOCK
Mountain Scenery Now Par
ticularly Beautiful and
Cool Nights Are Zestful
Portland
Portland. Ors.. An SO I API
(U. 8. Dept. Agr.l Hos: Balsbls 100.
total SSO. insract actlv; lullv atcsdy;
(ood-cholot las-JOO lb. drlve-lns 7:tt:
lll Ulhta : a-4.S0 lb. packmj
soys 4JO-6.3&; sjcod-cbotca feeder
plj. quotabla tM-100.
Cattle: Balabla SO; total 60; calves
salabla 10. total 60; market steady
but mostly nominal; 1st demand
fairly broad; 'irass-fst steers quot
able around 8 25-9.35; good led steers
9:75-10:25; and above; week's ei- ,
tretna top 11.00 for good-choice Uaht- j
welsTbts; few euttery betters 4.75-
8 00; grass-fat heifers aalsble 7.75 snd
above; canner-common cows 3.50- i
8 00; fat dairy typ cows cslabla to
8 38 and above; good beef cows quot
able 6.00-76; common-medium bulla
aalabl e 8.65-6.75; good beef bulls I
eligible to 7.00; good-choice veaiers
salable 10.00-50.
Sheep: Salable 35. total 400; few
sales weak with Thursday's low time;
good-choice spring ismbs 7.50; shorn
lambs 6.50; good slaughter ewes sal
able S 00 or above; feeder lambs sal
able 6.75-735.
mills helped to start the upward
movement which gained momentum
as previous short sellers covered ac
counts. Brokers said tome traders apparent
ly were mre encouraged by recent
European news. The tact that spot
wheat pnoe snd government loan
rates sre substantially above futures
quotations also waa cited aa a
strengthening factor.
Wheat closed higher than
i yesterday, September 78-75',. Decern
I ber 75 34-',; corn unchanged to S
i hWher. September 81S-V December
I 57',.!.; oats S-4 higher.
! Whest Open High Low Close
Sept. .. 71', -S 7'4 71', 73-78',
Dec. 74-7J', 75, TSt, 751,-14
May .... 75',-1, 77, 75S T7',-y,
E
HIIS DRAFT BILL
The following recreational
bulletin was issued today by
Rogue River national forest
headquarters:
"Mountain scenery has been
especially beautiful the past few
days because of exceptionally
clear atmosphere. Camping,
therefore, should be at its best
for the holiday week-end.
"Crisp fall weather is setting
in throughout the high moun
tains and campers should be pre
pared for cool nights. Hiking is
also more attractive than during
the heat of the summer.
"The evergreen blackberries
in the Applegate district are now
ripe and, while the crop is rather
light, there are many places near
roads where good picking is
available. A few cattered huckle
berries may still be found in the
Union Creek and Butte Falls
districts.
"Special events have been
planned at Lake o' Woods for
the Labor Day holiday, includ
ing dancing and other attrac
tions. Roads Dusty. Rough
"Most roads are now dusty
and in many places quite rough
because of the heavy use
throughout the summer.. More
leisurely travel is therefore ad
visable. Slower travel will also
permit observance of a surpris
ing number of interesting fea
tures usually not noticed in the
forest, such as the wild birds
and small animals, the many dif
ferent species of trees and plants
and the small streams. Attention
of motorists on the Diamond
Lake highway is invited to the
ancient deposits of charcoal and
burned logs which were buried
thousands of years ago by layers
of volvanic ash which are plain
ly visible in the Foster creek cut,
six miles above Union Creek.
These deposits were over 100
feet below the surface until the
highway excavation a few years
ago exposed them along a half
mile of the highway.
"Fishing on the forest Is good
in only a few places. The south
fork of the Rogue river near
South Fork forest camp and
middle fork above the Prospect
road have been fairly good. Big
Butte creek is yielding a few
limit KBtpliH nf -m 11 itiV-.,..
....! 1 J II ' u. ..unuciu
Portland Produce
Portland, Ore, Aug. 90. (API
All product price ateady, unchanged.
Wall St. Reports
( hlrago
Chicago. Aug. 30 (API (O. B
Dept. Agr.l Salable hogs 7.000t total
11.000; active, mostly 10-20 higher
than Thursday's average: on all
weights bsrrowa and gilts and sows;
extreme top 7.75; bulk good snd
Choice IB0-240 lbs. 7.45-70: 240-370
lbs. 7.25-60; 370-300 lbs. 6.90-7.35:
300-350 lb. sows 6 30-50; few lighter
weights at 6 65 and above; 350-450
lbs. 690-6 40: 400-450 lbs. 865-6.10:
450-500 lbs. 6.50-75.
Salable cattle 1.500: calves 300:
week-end trade on medium to good
steers fairly active, steady; nothing
tstrtcly choice here: sprinkling good
to near choice offerings 10 50-11.50;
later price top on yearling steera and
light steers but extreme top 11.60
paid for Colorado fed 890 lb. heifers;
very few grain fed hellers here;
grsssy and short fed kind selling
mostly at 6.50-9.50; beef cows selling
at 6 50 down with liitit cannera well
under 4.00 thick fleshed western
grass cows up to 8.50 however, but
very few natives above 6 50; practical
top weighty sausage bulls 7.25. Veal
era weak to 12 00 down: stocker and
feeder trade active on all weight
and grades fully 25 higher than week
earlier: mostly 7.25-9.75: but good
and choice calves 10.50-11.50.
Salable sheep 3.000: total 6.000;
late Thursdays native and western
spring Iambs closed dull 25-50 lower:
bulk westerns 8.85-925 sorted light
ly; sorted natives 9J5: other handy
weight 9.00-10; few 9 25; bulk na
tives ewes 2.00-3 SO; few light weights
3.74: today's trade early trade around
steady on all classes.
New York, Aug 30 IJP) The
stock market, which often does
the unexpected, pulled a sur
prise rallying rabbit out of the
hat today.
The list was mildly improved
at the start but subsequently
slowed and prices wavered. Buy
ing in rails then touched off a
runup in steels, motors and other
industrial leaders. Gains for fa
vorites ranged from 1 to more
than 2 points, with dealings
faster than in the past two
weeks.
Despite intermittent sluggish
ness, volume stepped up to
around 350,000 shares, or about
double that of the preceding ses
sion. Quotations were shaved in
many cases at the close by a
little profit taking on the bulge.
Today'a closing prices for 84 select
ed stocks follow:
Al Chrm. & Dye 156
Am. Can 96',
A. T. & T. 161 H
Anaconda .. 21V,
Atch. T. Jc S. F. 18'.,
Bendlx Avla 301,
Washington, Aug. 30. !P
Pre-debate skirmishing opened
up in the house today on the I
peacetime conscription bill,
with a group of foes assailing
it as "unnecessary" and its ad
vocates predicting that it would
ride through to overwhelming
approval by the end of next
week.
The attack was Incorporated
in an eight-man minority re
port filed on the revise version
of the Burke-Wadsworth com
pulsory military training meas
ure which was approved yester
day by a majority of the mem
bers of the house military com
mittee. Actual debate is scheduled to
start Tuesday on the house bill,
which differs in one vital par
ticular from that passed by the
senate. The house measure
would require male citizens
from 21 to 44 to register for
possible service, whereas the
senate age bracket' was 21 to
30. Leaders saw a hot fight in
the offing on the age question.
The minority report attack on
the Burke-Wadsworth bill de
clared "that this proposal and
other Inevitably to follow to
conscript manpower, conscript
the farmers, conscript industry,
conscript labor to run industry
and conscript the wealth of the
nation is not only unnecessary
at this time to adequate defense
of the country, but that it is a
distinct and dangerous depart
ure which will lead ultimately
to the destruction of the Amer
ican form of government in a
totalitarian, military economy."
CONSCRIPTS KEEP
T TO VOTE
Portland, Aug. 30. Mil
itary conscripts need not worry
about losing their right to vote.
County Clerk A. A. Bailey said
today.
Under a state law all quali
fied voters in any branch of
government service have a vote
no matter where they are sta
tioned. If away from home or
out of the state they can vote
through absentee ballots.
Use Mall Tribune want ads.
tan Francisco
South San Francisco, Aug. 30.
(AP) (U. 8. Dept. Agr.l Hogs: sal
able 35. Steady to 6 lower; pack
see 300 lb. Callfornlaa 7:75. losd-lots
sbsent; packing sows nominally 8.00
down.
Cattle: Salable 36. Fed and grass
steers sbsent, quoted upward to 9:15
85: desirable grass or fed heifers
absent, mostly 7.50-8.50, few dairy
heifers 5.50 and 6.00; loadlots cows
scarce, few grass cows 6.50. canners
and cutters mostly 4 M)-S 25; odd
grsssy bulls 4 75.
Sheep; Salable 375. Lambs steady;
Bent. Steel
Caterpillar Tract.
Chrysler
Curtlss-Wrtght
Douglss Acft
DuPont
den. Elec.
Gen. Foods
Gen. Mot.
Int. Harvest -
Johns-Man.
Kcnnecott -
Monty. Ward -No.
Amn. Av'n -North
Amer.
Jenney (J. C.)
Penna. R. R.
Phllllpa Pet.
Radio
Sou.
Std.
Pac.
bodied gray hackles.. Lake fish
ing in the Butte Falls district is
mainly poor. Fishing in the
upper north fork of Rogue river
has been poor with no limit
catches in the past week. At
Fourmile lake fishing for silver
sides has been excellent, limit
catches being made in mornings
and evenings by still fishing
with cluster eggs. Rainbows have
been bitin on trolling with trout
orenos. North fork of Little
Butte creek is fair for small rain
bow fishing with grasshoppers.
Good Fishing in River
"Trout fishing the entire
length of Rogue river from Pros
pect to Grants Pass has been ex
cellent. Best lures are golden
grouse, orange blue and grey
monkey. A few salmon are mov
ing in on the spawning beds and
single egg fishing will soon be
ood. Steelhead fishing is now
the best it has been this season
because of cool nihts. The best
locations are Dowden falls. Gold
Ray and Happy camp. Best flies
are gray drake, ginger palmer,
and queen well glory.
"Almost every year the worst
fires in the Rogue River national
forest occur in September. Rec
reationists are therefore urged
to be extremely careful with fire
while on the forest until rains
relieve the present critical situation."
top choice quoted 9.00;
quoted 1.60-3.60.
Brands
St. oil Cal.
St. oil V. J. ..
Trans. Amer.
Union Carb
Unit. Aircraft
United Airline
V. a. Steel
. 791,
. 45',
. 75 'i
. 73
-.166',,
. 33
41
48
48
28',
41,
83
l. 21
84
8
8',
6V
IB',
: 344
73 1,
6'I
84 V,
Ssn Franclieo Bntter
Sacramento, Aug. SO Pi Churn
ing cream butterfat, first grade 83:
second grade 30.
Portland Wheat
Ssn Francisco, Aug. SO. (API
(U. S. Dept. Agr.l Butter unchanged.
Portland. Ore, Aug. 30 (API
Open HtRh bow Close
Sept. 73 72 73 72
Cash grstn: Oats No. 3 38 lb.
Whtte24.00.
Barley No. 3 48 lb. B. W. 3050.
Corn Kb. 3 E. T. shipment. 31.00.
No. 1 flax 1.59.
Cash wheat iblgl; soft white 75;
western white 74; western red 73H
Hsrd red winter: ordinary 72',; 11
per cent 74'i; 12 per cent 76',; 19
per cent 77'i; hard white Baart:
12 per cent 80; 13 per cent 83: 14 per
cent 84.
Today, car receipts: wheat 41;
berley 8; flour 14; oats 3; mlllfeed 4
Fights Last Night
By the Associated Press
Memphis. Tenn. Bob Sikes,
102, Pine Bluff. Ark., knocked
out Clarence Miller, 190, St.
raui u.
Pittsburgh Fritzie Zlvlc, !
HJ'4, Pittsburgh, outnointed
Sammy Angott, 137, Louisville,
N.B.A. lightweight champion,
UO-non title).
Waterbury. Conn. Ernie (Cat) i
Robinson, 146, Jamaica, N- Y.,
and Francesco Montanari, ISO,
Italy, drew (8). j
Chicago Wheat
Chicago, Aug. 30. (API Wheat
prices shot up almost two cents a
bushel todsy at the best level In
more thsn two weeks.
Buying stimulated by strength In
securltlca and some purchasing of
Jl sfa
(l,l-FA1llloKl HK.
MY AL. Charles K. Ful
ler, Ulreetor Forceful
(impel Pleaching, old
Hmns of the lalth
tUKV SUNDAY 5:00
p. m. KIKM-hoOS A
ation-wlde Gospel
Prof ram.
E
CHIEF TO SPEAK
Dr. H. V. Miller, recently
elected general superintendent
In the Church of the Nararene.
will be heard for the first time
in Medford Sunday. September
1, at 3 00 p. m. when he will
peak in the Church of the
Nazarene. Holly at First. Dr.
Miller will be accompanied by
Rev. E. E. Martin, district sup.
erintendent of the North Pacific
district.
Prior to his elevation to the
bishet post in the denomina
tion. Dr. Miller served for sev
eral years each as district sup
erintendent in the New York
and New England districts. He
was six years pastor of Chicago
Firt church and held the chair
of theology and Biblical liter
ature in Northwest Nazarane
college, at Nampa. Idaho, when
elected general superintendent
TASTE FOR YOURSELF
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QUART
era canoe
03? (30
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You'll discover how much more de
licious gin drinks are when madewith
a gin that hot "harmonized flavor.
Hiram Wolker & Sons Inc . Peoria, III.
fit"
MM35
xhkz 85'
rHavotyteeuutes-
from over the seven seas
The Schilling quc is never ended!
VChereAer finest flavors are found
Mexico, Madagascar, Europe. Amer
ica thest choicest quality is sought.
That's why Schilling fun Vanilla has
that exquisite, delicate flavor which
w on't bake or freeie out. That's w hy
folks enjoy the delirious, tang)- good
ness of Schilling new improved Mus
tard. Compare Schilling quality ind
flavor, famous for over half a century!
I It IXTIACII
Schilling:
I
PEERLESS MARKET
14 NO. BARTLETT DIAL 2632
ANY SIZE ORDER DELIVERED FREE
All of Our Meats are Either
State or Government Inspected
Buy For 2 Dayi This Market Will Be
CLOSED LABOR DAY
LEG O'LAMB lb. 22c
HENS sirs lb. 14c
ROASTING HENS lb, 18c
FRYERS as lb. 25c
VEAL ROASTS -sr lb. 13c
COTTAGE HAM lb. 20c
Swift Premium BACON lb. 21c
BY THE PIECE
BACON SQ. lb. 7c
PURE LARD 4 lb. 29c
Sirloin Beef Steak lb. 20c
B0B
PEERLESS GROCERY
DIAL 26S2.
FREE DELIVERY
EXTRA SPECIAL
fancy V. . No. 1
Sweet Potatoes 6 lb.
25
ORANGES, larg. lit. doi.n 22
KLAMATH SPUDS
50 lb. bag U.S. No. 2
49'
SALAD DRESSING. Ch.t'a Special quart 19e
KRAFT CHEESE
2 lb. box
Am.ric.n. V.IymU
Pimtnto VtlTt.ta
45'
Holloway's Reliable Grocery
w Bur wim I
and Economls. I
t
Holloway's
Buy for 2 Day
This Stor. Will
B. CLOSED All
Day Sunday
and Monday
We Support the Standard of Living
Labor Is Eager to Maintain
Anttiirs hu lonf gloHflrd, and tli world hat rnvled. tht til(h plan of
ItTlnr irtfttl DOMlbl tn ihti coon trr. Ami lira hat natural wealth and
an rnrtabVa pot) t Ion on the map, but without tha work at koncat la boa
tnli country could not be poulble.
t
For Tsmr we hare fought tht battle for a lltlnr; wage and flundava and
HoIldai off for food iore rntploert. Mitot atorrt tay they want to rJote.
He are standing behind our gun and continuing our policy of fair
treatment for labor. Food clerk enjoy a double holiday -etpeclally when
they honetfly have It coming. Let's alt observe Labor Iay next Monday t
Old Fashioned
Ginger
Snaps
Lb. 15c
Hot Cake Special
1 ran 1-ng Cabin flyrup
1 pkg. prepared Pancake Flour
Both for 27c
Always a
Largs Assortment
or '
Lunch
Foods
JELLO. all llaTori
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE. Royal Club
TOMATO JUICE. D.l Rogu.
CATSUP. Knight's, a big yalu. at only..
SHRIMP, fancy Royal Club, dry pack....
MAYONNAISE, Bast Food.
...pickag. 5
3 eant 27?
4 carta 25
15
can 15
.pln! jar 27s
MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE
Lb. can 25c 2 lb. can 47c
PEAS and CARROTS. Royal Club
SPINACH. Royal Club larg. 2Vi can
POST TOASTIES or X.llogg't CORN FLAKES..
PORK and BEANS. Van Camp larg.....
POTATO CHIPS. Blu. Ball larg. pkg
TILLAMOOK CHEESE .
2 carta 25
2 cans 25
.-.pkg. 5
.2 cans 25
2 for 25
...pound 25
Shredded
Wheat
th. original
' Pkg. 9c
HOLLOWAY'S
HIGH GRADE
Coffee
Lb. 19c
Certo
for Jami and J.IUsw
3 for 45c
SOAP, Woodbury's Facial..
FLOUR. Kltchan Ou..n..
. 4 ban 25
..4 lb. sack 91.39
Local Watermelons each 19c
CELERY HEARTS Jg. bun. 10
GREEN LIMA BEANS 2 lb. 13
LOCAL PEPPERS lb. 10
LEMONS doa.n 10
Bnnklst M Sis.
r ...
Dial 2126 for Food
Estp.rl.ncd Ord.r CUrkt
Any Sis. Ord.r D.lW.rad FrM
CITY
MEAT
MARKET
1 12 N. Central
The Home of Good Meats
DIAL 4060
'Any Size Order Delivered Free
Buy for 2 Days
This Market Will B.
CLOSED
MONDAY
Let's All
Observe
Labor Day
Swift Pr.mium
, SMALL PIG
HAM
23c
POUND
Should.?
Pork 4 g
Roast lb. 1 9c
StMr' Btaf
Short
Ribs lb
C'.oalr.i tin-.e rr Too lte to Ciss
:fy Alt la 1 30 p. ea.