Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 13, 1943, Page 10, Image 10

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    PAGE TEN
MEDFORD. MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1943
PROSPECT YOUTH
Livestock
Portland. Ore. Oct. 18 (UP) Un
it lock:
Cattle. 195: calVM, 35. Active,
steady. Common-medium bulla, $7.00
9.00; good veaiere. aiB.aoaia.oo.
uoei, 4uu. eieaav on trucK-ina.
flood-choice iea-335-lb.. mostly ai".
few held higher: 345-390-lb., S1S.7S
14.00; good aowa, 11.7S 13.00;
good feeder pigs, 913.00; choice, quot-
.ou,
able to (19
Sheep, floo.
intlfa ituit. Awl.
Leo Kelly, IB, prospect youtn choice lamba, tia.oo; medium-good,
who had been the causa of a tiojwaiijo; Heavy feedera, sio.00;
widespread search since Sunday toa " M.ooaJQ,
evening, when he failed to re- south San Francisco. Oct. is fin?)
turn to his party hunting on the Livestock . (Federal - Stat Market
m j i . o I iaiu, iuu. slow, aoous eieeay,
lounu jcsicruajr ? lereelv odda and enda of rani. .
Two Prospect loggers, Wayne I co- ennoo.o: cuttera.
Downing and Robert Slagle, Us.0098.6O; eanners, 7.ooe)7.60; mc-
came upon the youth at the toot oium aausage nuns, s10.00910.ss.
nf Rnhhlt Earn mountain. clv. - Steady. Good to choice
. n,KM nlinM 1 HIVlAllM
rveny whs unnun oui coin uu H. on. Bf..n in i.h.r
hungry and immediately asKea Bulk 330-3o-ib. good barrows and
for something to eat and a gilt. SiSJSmisjS; odd medium
-Ino-otto W. M h hod imnt gOOd BSWe, 13.00 13.76.
-u- j..i'iu i, , I Sheep, 1600. Lamb undertone
around in an effort to find his choice no-lb. wooied lamba. su.oo.
way down to the valley. erem top; cull to good ewee quot-
Andther Prospect mill em- '.
pioyee, unester yviicox, wno do- Chicago, Oct. 18 (UP) (U8DA)
luiius luai irum uiiumci- iiuiiuijs jjivesioca::
party Sunday afternoon, made Roga, 8000. All good and choice
his wav out Monday by follow- n.e" L aoweover 140 lbs. unchanged
CHURCHILL RAPS
IN WAR'S MIDST
ing the Rogue river downstream. i'i4 0oi4 36P
pigs under 140.
Between 60 and 70 residents of cattle, lo.ooo: ' calves. Too. Oood
the Prospect and Union Creek and choice fed ateere and yearlings
districts had been searching for ;. n"?e n,sMr; "J" -the
two hunters. imd mns" gooa gnKlM
Sheep, 7000. Market on western
Iambi not yet established; other
classes steady. Bulk good and choice
native jamas, ai3.7Di4.oo.
E GOING TO
X AS h AM Portland Produce
Portland. Oct. 13 (UP) Whole-
aaie market prices:
Berries strawberries.
John MeCabe. a member nf
fk. aAluAA. I $3.25
41.1. . ia -j Ai. Cranberries Coast,
una wen, icifc buuuy . nin-
Oregon 13,
8.38 9 8.60
ir.eda, Calif., to undergo basic
training in the U. S. coast guard
He is vice-president and manager
of the A-One Brewing company
of this city and one of the own
ers of the company and will re
sume his position with the con
cern at the close of the war, it
was announced.
BUI Chrysler, president and
gales manager, will assume act
ive management of the A-One
Brewing company in. McCabe's
absence.
Mrs. McCabe and the Mc-
Cabes' three children will con
tinue to reside in Medford at 301
Valley View Drive, the family
home. '
3433e lb.
10912c lb.;
bushel box.
Melons Watermelons,
Beans Oregon green,
yellow, 13c. i
Celery Oregon, 18.36 crate, .
Corn No. 1, 81.60 1.60.
Eggplant Local, $1.60 flat.
Lettuce Local 3s, 63.60 & 3.78 box;
Pasco, 63.75.
Squash Marblehead, 22o lb.
Tomatoes No. 1, 6076o flat.
London, Oct. 13. (U.R) Prime
Minister Churchill lnferentlally
rebuked American politicians to
day for indulging in political
rows in the midst of the war,
He told commons that in "some
countries which I should not ven
ture to name" the soldiers abroad
and the politicians at home were
fighting "with equal vigor."
His remarks coincided with the
American political controversy
touched off by charges of five
U. S. senators on their return
from the world's fighting fronts,
"As soon as the war is ended.
be said, "the (British) soldiers
will leave off fighting and the
politicians will begin. Perhaps
that is rather a pity, but at any
rate it isn't so bad as what goes
on in some countries which I
shouldn't venture to name where
the soldiers are fighting abroad
and the politicians are fighting at
nome with equal vigor."
Laughter swept the house.
CRESCENT HARBOR
FOND IS APPROVED
IINT
ABOLITION ASKED
Chicago Wheat
G. 0. P. GROUP TO
Chicago, Oct. 13 U.R) De
neen Watson today announced
dissolution of the Republican
Postwar Policy association, and
said he would form a new or
ganization to support Eric John
son, president of the U. S. Cham
ber of Commerce, for the Repub
lican presidential nomination.
- The Postwar Policy association
was formed by Watson last
spring to urge commitment of
the Republican party to postwar
International collaboration. At
the time It was established, polit
ical sturces believed it would
support Wendell Willkie for the
GOP presidential nomination.
CUT
E
Official notification of reduc
tion of the value of A, B and C
gasoline coupons from four to
three gallons was received yes
terday afternoon by the local
war price and rationing board.
The wire, sent by Frederic F.
' Janney, Portland, district ration
ing officer, stated that the board
should "continue issuing renew
al supplemental rations on the
same basis as heretofore, and al
low no adjustments for reduc
tion until further notified" and
added that complete instructions
would be sent at once.
The government officially
changed the name of the coun
try of Siam in southeastern Asia
to Thailand in 1039.
Chicago, Oot. 13 (UP) Wheat:
Open High Low Close
Dec. 61.S3H 61.63 1.62 l.oSft
May 1.52 1.63 1.52V1 1.63
July 1.49 1.60 1.40 1.60
Wall Street
New York, Oct. 13 CU.R)
Stocks declined fractions to
more than a point today to the
.lowest general level since Aug
ust 30 and then came back mod
erately. ,
Selling came into stocks short
ly after a narrowly irregular
opening. Lowest prices - were
touched around noon when
Chrysler sold at 77 off IV
points and Pepsi-Cola hit 40.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American Tel. Tel
Anaconda .
Chrysler ...
Curtiss Wright
General Electric
General Motors .
Montgomery Ward
Penn. R. R. .....
Phillips Petroleum
J. C. Penney ............,
Radio
Southern Pacific
Standard Oil Cal
Texas Gulf Sulphur
Transamerica ..
United Aircrafts
U. S. Rubber 42V4
U. S. Steel . 52
155
25
78
7V4
36V4
81
42
28
48
94V4
9
25
37
37V4
8
29
S. F. DAIRY PRICES
..San Francisco. Oct. 13 OJ.PJ
Dairy market:
Butter: 93 score 43. 92 score
422, 90 score 4214. 89 score
41.
Cheese: Wholesale prices, loaf
27V4, triplets 27.
Eggs: Large grade A 57, me
dium grade A 53, small grade A
49, large grade B 48.
ALLIED FLEET STEAMS
INTO MEDITERRANEAN
Madrid, Oct. 13 (U.R) Ad
vices from La Linea said an im
pressive Anglo-American fleet,
including the British battleship
King George V, two British -aircraft
carriers and a United
States battleship, moved out of
Gibraltar harbor Into the Med
iterranean today.
GEEEDT FEE -
.SILAIES
300 CUBIC
FT. LOAD
Timber Promos Company
mm
DIAL 2123
Washington. Oct. 13 (U.R)
The $49,470,000 Umatilla dam
project to extend commercial
navigation on the Columbia river
ana provide 600,000 kilowatts
additional power to the Pacific
northwest was tentatively ap-
piuvea toaay Dy tne rouse rivers
ana narbors committee.
The committee, considering an
omnibus waterway bill, also ap
proved inclusion of 33 other
.Pacific coast projects.
Other projects given tentative
approval included:
California:
Crescent City $1,610,000 and
$2,000 annually for extension of
breakwater.
Oregon:
- Chetko Harbor $190,000 for
dredging.
Coquille River $2,000 an
nually lor extension of channel
and maintenance. '
Umpqua River $55,000 and
$10,000 annually for channel and
basin. .
Winchester Bay $34,000 for
channel to Umpqua river and
mooring dock.
Yaquina $162,000 and $50,-
000 annually for channels and
basin.
Depoe Bay $214,000 and
$5,000 annually for breakwater
and basin.
END FIFTH TEST
Fourth Corps Headquarters,
Oregon Maneuver Area, Oct. 13.
(U.R) With a driving blue army
climbing after retreating red di
visions high in the mountains
north of Fort Rock valley, the
fifth tactical problem of the cen
tral Oregon war games ended to
day.
Maneuver Director Ma. Gen.
Alexander Patch halted the fifth
maneuver problem when it was
evident that nothing further
could be learned by the partici
pating troops, a maneuver are;.
report revealed.
During the fifth war problem.
red troops were charged with
holding a defense line east and
west of Fort Rock and then or
dered to withdraw through bat
tle obstacles.
Troops will begin a sixth prob
lem in a few days, said Gen.
Patch.
Closing time for Sunday Too Late
to Classify. 6:30 Saturday afternoon
f lease rememoer.
"REGULAR" AGAIN
AFTER 2 WEEKS!
r c
"Cereal Brought Relief from
Long Siege of Purgatives i"(
Here's a sincere, unsolicited let
ter every disappointed "doser"
rill want to read:
"I m a solttrer front eoHIHon eenitl-
Eatlon. Took pills or medirlnss of some
ind. but got no laiUna relict. Finally. 1
tried KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN. Han
been eating It about 9 weeks now, and
have stopped taking pills and thlnss, Mr
bowels move retrularlr every VUy. 1 am a
KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN eater from now
on I" Air. Burl Brown, Warren. Ark.
How. do scientists explain
KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN'S gentle-acting,
amazing relief, so fa-,
miliar to thousands? Simply thust
Lack of certain cellulosic elements
in the diet is a common enure of
constipation. KELLOGG'S
ALL-BRAN Is one of Nature's'
richest sources of these elements1
which help the intestinal flora
lighten and fluff up the contents
of the colon, for easy, natural
elimination. ALL-BRAN does not
"sweep you out" Not a purgative.
It is a gentle-acting, "regulating",
food!. 1
If this Is yonr tTouble eat
KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN regu
larly. Drink plenty of water. See
if it doesn't give you the relief
you've dreamed of. Insist on pen
nine ALL-BRAN, made only )y
KeJtoggJjJaJiatti?. rieW- '.
Washington, Oct. 13 4U.F9-
Rep. Charles Wolverton, R.. N.
J., today called for the abolition
of the war production board's
appeal board after it had been
accused of awarding extra-quota
supplies of newsprint following
allegedly ex-parte hearings.
The accusation was made at
the house newsprint subcommit
tee hearings by Elbert Antrim,
assistant business manager of
the Chicago Tribune. He said
that unless "hard and fast'
standards were adopted to guide
the appeals board, there always
will be "undue favoritism" to
some publishers. "All publishers
fear the establishment of a news
paper czar who would allocate
newsprint," Antrim said.
We are not going to have a
newspaper czar and we are not
going to stand for allocation of
newsprint," Chairman Lyle
Boren, D., Okla., interjected.. "If
newsprint is being allocated
through the back door then
we'll stop it. We like the demo
cratic system and we intend to
preserve it."
Japanese Admit
Chinese Untamed
By United Press
The Japanese-controlled Hsin-
king radio in Manchukuo tacitly
admitted last night that organ
ized and well-equipped Chinese I
troops still are fighting In areas
of North China, which ToVyo
had claimed were "fully occu
pied as long ago as 1938.
In a broadcast recorded' by
government monitors, the enemy
station claimed major successes
against Chinese forces in the
north, asserting that 347 Chinese
military installations had been
destroyed up to Oct. S.
POLICMNG
LADYJLUEBEARD
Seattle, Oct. IS U.R A lady
joiueoeara wno has been marry
ing soldiers and sailors en route
through Seattle to nosslble
death in war zones in order to
get their allotments was the oh.
ject of a search today by civil
ian and military police.
Nobody knows how manv hus
bands she had but the absolute
minimum is three.
Documents in the hands of aui
thorities showed she was mar
ried three times in 1042
time to service man.
Her activities were revealed
last night when Lt. M. A. Supo
vitz of the military police arrest
ed a young soldier la a hotel for
military reasons.
The soldier was registered
with the woman, who had disap
peared, as Mr. and Mrs. Smith,
address, U. S. A.
Supovltz ordered his aides to
search the woman's effects. They
found an allotment from a sail
or aha "other documents" which
told of the three 1942 marriages.
Boise, Ida., Oct, 1301.19
Southern Idaho and western Ore
gon peace officers today joined
in search for two. armed men
who last night robbed and beat
Freeman Holland of Eagle at
Spring Valley, about 20 miles
northwest of Boise.
The two men escaped In Hol
land's car. Holland, whose jaw
was broken and face "battered
to a pulp," according to Sheriff
Don Headrlck, by the thugs, was
reported in "good" condition at
local hospital.
Holland was en route to his
home at Eagle from Klamath
Falls, Ore,, where he is em
ployed. He picked up the two
hitchhikers in Cascade.
He was robbed of "approxi
mately $500" when the two men
set upon him at Spring Valley,
Hedrlck said. Holland reported
the two men threw him to 'the
side- of the road and left him
for dead after removing all iden
tification papers from his clothes.
MINOR FIRE CAUSED
BY BURNING MOTOR
The local fire department re
ported today that equipment
was dispatched at 5:52 p. m. yes
terday to 813 E. Jackson street.
A refrigerator motor had burned
out, filling the house with
smoke.- According to the filed
report, Vern Albertson occupies
the residence, and no damage
other than smoke damage. to
the interior resulted. N
Barton Clemens
Honored at U-0
' University of Oregon, Eugene,
Oct, 13 CSpU Late last week
78 names of Juniors were. an
nounced for honors privileges.
Among these was Barton Edward
Clemens, . Medford, major In
medicine.
Work in honors leads to gradu
ate degrees with' honors. A grade
point of 2.75, or slightly below a
B average, must have been main
tained for two years at the uni
versity for work in honors. '
Barton Clemens is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. C." Clemens,
Medford. .;,'
HOWARD UNIT POSTPONES
MEETING DUE TO DEATH
The meeting of the Howard
Extension unit,- which was to
have been held " tomorrow, has
been postponed due to the death
this morning of Mrs. Frank
Croucher, a member of the unit.
Smadler Here Leonard
Smedley, boatswain's mate,
third class in the U. S. navy,.
who has spent the last 13 months
in the Aleutian Islands, is here
spending a 20-day furlough with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eari
Smedley,' 650 Pine street. The
youth, a Medford high graduate
and former carrier for the Mail
Tribune, has been stationed on
a United States destroyer and
took part' in the attack and oc
cupation of Attu and the blood
less occupation of Kiska, which
the Japs had evacuated.. -
ON SOFT LUMBER
Seattle, Oct 13 flJ.B Dl.
trict OPA Price Executive Wytze
Corter today announced "in
terim ceilings" have been es
tablished for retail sales of lum
ber from softwood distribution
yards in Washington, Oregon,
Idaho,- Montana, Nevada, Wis
consin and the upper peninsula
of Michigan. - . .
The ceilings provide specific
mark-ups which may be added to
mill prices on sales by distribu
tion yards and will remain In
effect until dollar-and-cents ceil
ings are established, Corter said.
In the northwest area, the In
terim ceilings are established as
the mill ceiling price, plus al
lowable freight, plus an addition
of $5 per thousand board feet
for handling, and mark-ups of
25 per cent on softwood classi
fied as "lower-bracket" items"
and .35 per cent on "upper
bracket" items. .
The Tomb of the Unknown
Soldier is constructed of Yule
Colorado marble.
Ose Mall Tribune Want Ada.
DUTCH BOY PAINTS
Full Stock 1
YOUNGER'S APPLIANCE
J SERVICE CO. v
31 N. Bartlett Phone 2419
. 'yJ'j
Wood eafrerisf bT U. MCCoraick after oil pelaUnf by Junes Chapia
leairas Tiiiiig Mae i