J
Page Six
LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE. ORE.
Monday, August 21, 1933
i)
ILCXDAIL
Guet at Cove - -
Miss Maelizabeth Cooper went to
Cove today where she Is a guest at
the Logan Anderson home. She ex
pects to return to La Grande next
Wednesday. Mr. Anderson Is pout
master at Cove.
From Hnokniie
Miss Seville Pratt arrived this morn
ing from Spokane where she Is study
ing nurses training. She expects to
remain here for about a week visiting
her father, Guy Pratt, and other
friends.
Tonsils Removed
A. E. Chandler had his tonsils re
moved Friday at the Bouvy hospltul.
Huh Operation
lng at his home from a tonsil and!
adenoid operation performed at the
Bouvy hospital on Saturday,
From Pendleton
D. I. Cowan, of Pendleton, was
, transacting business hero on Satur
day. Net urns
Mrs. Oscar Bergcr has returned
from Brentwood, Cat., where she vis
ited her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs, Frank. VonderAhe. Mrs.
VonderAhe was formerly Miss Bertha
Berger.
End Vacation Trip-
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Thompson and
Mrs, James McNamee have returned)
from a vacation trip to Seattle, Yaki
ma and Portland.
Tonsil Operation
Mrs. Cecil Taylor, of North Powder,
underwent a tonsllectomy at the
Bouvy hospital last week and has
now returned to her home.
End Vacation
Mrs. A. K. Parker an J, Mrs. Hut die
Taylor have returned from a vacation
trip to Wallowa Lake. They spent
several days at the lake.
At Meeting
Larry Allen, editor of the Joseph
. Herald, was In La Orande Saturday
and attended a meeting of the print
ers of Eastern Oregon.
Prom Union
Miss Mary Hutchinson, -of Union,
was a La Grande visitor on Saturday,
transacting business.
Mm. Parker Here
Among the business visitors In the
city today is Mrs. Viola Parker, of
Union.
From Haines ,
Mrs. E. V. Lemon, of Haines, was
In La Orande on Saturday shopping
and receiving medical attention.
On lliisliiefw
MIsb L. E. Williams, of Union, was
a business visitor in La Orando Sun
day night.
From Enterprise
Mrs. and Mrs. E. O. Stonemsn were
among the visitors from Enterprise
Sunday night in La Orande.
From llakcr .
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. McCultouah, of
Baker, drovo to La Orando Saturday
evening and transacted business.
Pram Wulln Wnlla
MIbs Natalie Nasclmento, of Walln
Walla, arrived In La Orando the lat
ter part of last week to visit Miss
Edyth Olthcns.
Today's. Baseball
AMERICAN LEAGUE
R. H. E.
Boston 10 4
Cleveland .. 10 11 0
Wetland and Perrcll; Pearson and
Spencer.
B. H. E.
Philadelphia 12 17 1
Do trot t , .. 7 11 0
Batteries: Barrett. Combs and
Coohrane; Aukcr, Frnslor, Hogeett
and Posow.
Persons receiving oldt-ago pensions
In St. Louis county. Minnesota, wore
given a two months' "vacation" when
the county decided to bhvo 415.000
by not giving pensions during July
and August.
Dorothy Huelster, 10-year-old St.
Paul. Minn., girl, saved 700 ponnlcs
to pay for her first airplane ride.
More students are graduated yearly
from Kansas high sen 00 In than were
enrolled in all the schools of the
Bin to 30 years ago.
To chock the Increase in cattle
stealing attributed to uso or auto
trucks, the Idaho cattle law gives any
cattle man tho right to stop and
search n truck.
A monument has been proposed to
mafk tho trail followed by Oeneral
Mackenzie in his Indian expeditions,
south of tho present slto of Floydada
Tox.
Allowing tomato pulp to ferment
In tho process of saving seed helps
control th spread of bacterial can
ter, says tho United States depart
ment of agriculture.
Patients and ntteiuants at the
Nebraska state hospital at Hastings
consume cabbage at the rate of 2000
pounds a day during summer.
An 11-lnch branch from a crahnp
plo tree near Nocona. Tex., held 65
apples.
Sport Slants I
' My Alan J. Onuld
Human nature and curiosity being
what It Is. Primo Carnero may be
a popular heavyweight champion of
the world, simply because his aire
and strength appeal to tho multitude
BEDIEIFjr
t i aicuis t
KXI'KCTIXO TOO MUCH
My Ilrooko I '(-ten Church
I think that we tend to require too
much adult responsibility from our
children,
It may be that we think it good for
them to learn early how to take care
of themselves, or, as Is often the
case, that mothers and teachers take
that means of ridding themselves of
some of their burden.
Childhood, cvon among the ani
mals, has a certain period of free
and P?taneous action before
It assumes the duties of life.
Whereas we tend to prolong the
latter end of Infancy too far, it.
seems to mo that we demand too
much of the earlier years, To ask a
small boy to fill the wood box as his
dally chore Is one thing, but to put
him on his honor to flu It as full as
possible and to make him feel that
ho has betrayed a trust when he de
liberately leaves gaps In the under
layers, seems to me unfair.
Physical responsibility can hurt
no child unless the task is top great
for his strength, but moral responsi
bility mny tend to make him over-
serious or even morbidly conscienti
ous. The small boy who used to play
hookey in the spring to go to the
swimming hole was a far more nor
mal human being than the sedate
little creature of today who knows
of the dangers of cramps and colds
and the evils of not being promoted
on account of absence from school.
Fortunately, human nature being
what it Is, there Is still left a host ;
of happy, care-free little mortals who
keep the truant officers busy, but
we are doing our best to eliminate
them.
Much of the careless laughter will
be gone from life with the disap
pearance of the happy-go-lucky free
dom of youth, and this laughter
nothing can replace,
of those attracted by the sub-normal
tho abnormal or merely the unusual.
''Da Preem" was once a strong boy
in n circus traveling In France. No
doubt the same folk who found Inter
est In the trained fleas and the lady
sword - swallower paid their francs
to stand In awe before the heavily
muscled, thickly sinewed Italian
youth, who was shortly persuaded to
try wrestling for a livelihood and
then built up for the more lucrative
opportunities of professional pugil
ism. No champion ever covered a
stranger route to the top. When
Camera first camo to the United
States threo years ago ho was quite
frankly exploited as a freak. His
baokors reali&od ho had color and
what Is known as "circus appeal,"
but It was essential to cVevelop the
Idea he had a punch commensurate
with his hugo bulk.
For all outward effects and pur
poses, this was simple enough. There
was no trouble gotting "pushovers."
Some were brought out of retirement
Just to bo bowled over agnln by tho
flailing arms of tho new man moun
tain. Tho experts laughed openly.
They described the type of "bathing
suits" worn by those selected to "go
In tho tank." The crowds packed
tho arenas, on Broadway as well as
Main street.
Canto The inevitable
It was all In good fun. One and all
went away laughing heartily as the
Italian was led on one of tho most
extraordinary tours In fistic history.
A few difficulties cropped up and
in Boston the bnt tie -worn Jimmy
Maloney took off tho "wraps'" and
gave the big fellow a punching. Again
In Florida Camera failed to dislodge
Maloney from his feet In. 10 rounds,
although Primo went through this
affair with a broken rib.
That was two years ogo and the
unanimous verdict was that Camera
could not punch and never would be
ablo to punch, but he still was the
blKgest heavyweight In tho contend
ing class and tho "bulld-up" was not
slackened.
Persistently ho loomed In the
background while Jack Sharkey and
Max Schmollug waged their private
war for tho world championship,
each the hotter for a year and each
outwardly disdainful of the giant
from Italy.
It was Inevitable that 0110 or the
other must take on the man moun
tain and perhaps it was Inevitable,
too, that one or the other would tum
blo down from the attempt to sur
mount such size and power.
Ol ven two years for development,
for experience and tho acquisition
of something more nearly resembling
a punch than the clumsy clout of a
brown boar, Carnern's defeat of Shar
key mny seem entirely plausible and
convincing.
Who Is thero to match such phys
ical handicaps with a devastating
enough punch to bowl over "Ua
Proem." except possibly tho nigged
Max Baer? Isn't tho very freakish
build and strength of the man suf
ficient to keep him dominant?
Much to Live Down
Obviously, you won't find the an
swer here or anywhere else for some
time to come. The Camera board
of directors wilt run no unnecessary
risks in such times as these. They
came in on the Inst big-money wave,
when the folks were easily fooled
and liked it, and It has been tough
weathering the financial ebb tide of
pugilism.
None of the logical sequence of
Camera events, however, can dis
lodge from memory tho picture of a
vast specimen floundering against
third -raters, bewildered obvWusly by
anything approaching flrst-iTi ring
ability, winning most of his eights"
ttith phantom swishes of those huge
1T.1V.U.
Bo'QKiiwilmmon made tho classic
remark that "the bigger they come
the harder they fall" and It doesn't
take much Imagination to figure
what a slashing fighter like Jack 1
Denipsey or a master boxer like Oenc
Tunney would accomplish against the
sort of
ft target Camera offers,
GAINS NOTED IN
STOCK EXCHANGE
NEW YORK, Aug. 21 VP) Stock
prices moved Into" higher territory to
day, with most categories displaying
a strong undertone throughout trad
rf..ii. nin. nt i mom than a
points were scattered over a wide
front .although the alcohol, were the
favorite Thn nlnHA WflA firm. An-
proximately 1,600,000 share changed
hands.
Closing figures Included:
Air Ifcxluo 101
Ah Chem. and Dyo 132
American Can 88
American T. and T .
Bothlehem Steel :.. 40
J. I. Caw 73
Col. a. and B - 10 54
Continental Can 63
Oeneral Motors 3114
Johns Manvllle 6014
Llbbey-O.-Pord 29
Uggctt and Myers B 04
Montgomery Ward 2B
National Distill . 00(4
J. O. Penney - 48 'A
Pub. Scr. of N. J. 41 J4
Southern Pacific 28
St. Oil of Cal 37
St. Oil of N. J - 38
Union Pacific 124 i
Onlted Aircraft 37(4
United Corporation 8(4
U. S. Indus. Alcohol 74
U. 8. Steel 64
"Slippery Elum"
Value Is Fading
In Diamond World
wr amttt.tm KaH i&i Thin Is the
story of a tree e tree that has helped ,
make baseball history and "made"
one big leaguer's career.
It's the slippery elm tree, but It
of teeth It has caused innocent bats-1
men.
Twenty-six years ago, when Clar-
nm Mlt-j.hAll Rnnthnnw nnttballer
who baffled National league hitters !
fnr mnnv vpnra (wan Hist a VOUmr-
ster, he dreamed of the glory that ,
was to be his on major league pitch-;
lng mounds.
But he used a sDit-ball and all
the old-timers told him there was
no substitute for slippery-elm bark
as a saliva-producer. So for months
young Clarence tramped the woods
In this part of Nebraska looking for
a slippery "elum" tree.
Supplied flock of Pitchers
Finally he found It on a neigh
bor's farm. The sapling was uproot
ed and carried away to the Mitchell
homo, where it was carefully re
planted, nourished and cared for ten
derly. Tho tree grew, and so did Its
ourator right Into the big leagues.
The years went by, and Mitchell,
southpaw splt-baller deluxe, rolled
up success after success, all because cnn LcB'on Junior bascbnll players
of a slippery elm tree back homo from Woodburn every ono with o
that was supplying what he called , "shting heart as large as a watcr
"the old miss 'cm moisture." mcllon wero preparing today 'for
' There were others equally profl- their trip to Topeka, Kan, where they
dent with tho moist delivery, and 'will play for the western interiec-
most of them wore drawing their tlonal championship Aug. 25-27., i
chewing- supply from the Mitchell I Champions of Oregon, the Wood
tree. Then came 1020 and tho law burn boys scored two runs In 4hc
barring spit-ball pitching for new- ninth Inning of the Northwest titular
comers, although allowing those then game against the Pocatollo American
using tho delivery to continue. i Legion nlno Saturday to tlo the
One by one the veterans dropped
by the waysido, and one by ono tho tlon of baseball went on to score an
numbcr of boxes of elm bark bolng other tally in the 15th frame to .win
dispatched from tho Mitchell homo 4 to 3 and capture the Paclric North
to various addresses In tho big west title. In the seml-finnls, they
icogues become smaller, ooon mero
was only Burleigh Grimes, Jack
Qulnn, Urban Faber and Mitchell,
himself, left.
lie Loves That Tree
Last year Father Time overtook
Claronco and the Olants released
him. But tho tree kept right on
growing Its quota of bark, and tho
three old-timers Faber, Grimes and '
Qulnn keep on getting their ship-
ments of "chewln'."
Mitchell now Is devoting much of
his tlmo to cultivating his elm-bark
n-nn nnrf l.A novo .tin Ire. nrlll
never bo cut down and will always''"" ,to "f" P 700 ft of new
be ready to supply the -needed bark c"VCm ' "Panogos cave In Utah
as long as a spit-ball hurler lives to "" accessible only through a 100-
211 Signers Under
Blue Eagle Locally
(Continued Prom Pago One)
confer with Oregon NRA officials.
"There is no doubt as to the suc
cess of tho NRA." Creel said. "This
is nn emergency act the same os we
"xperlcnccd In 1017 and 1018. Alter
Sept. 4 there will be a spirit of en
forcement. Tho question is. has there
been a lineup through the nation
ns strong as during the war? In my
opinion, there has been.".
Creel directed propaganda for the
United States and allies during the
World war, and is tho author of
eleven books on political economy.
"Thero wilt be prosecutions of those
concerns which have not joined) the
NRA movement." Creel declared. "But
there positively will be no orgy of
prosecution. Wo wish that made
clear. First we want to dotermlne if
tho men and concerns who havo not
signed up are defying the law, or if
their attitude can bo corrected. If
they will not co-operate we will see if
they cannot be prosecuted.'
POLICE GET
REPORTS OF
COMMUNISTS
(Continued rrom Page One)
at tho latest, to retire from the post
he holds.
By then he expects his emergency
work to be filched. He plans to
return to private industrial life as an
associate of Bernard M. Boruch, with
whom he has worked since World war
dnyrt. A permanent administrator
will enrr on Jn Johnson's place.
President RoosAclt t.Tprovr codes
for the basic steel and0il Industries
late Saturday night.
A mouse short circuited the switch
Tf on electrically controlled furnace
and set f0c to the Roosevelt school
in Salinas, Cal.. causing several hun
dred dollars damage.
CRANE FLATS IS
WINNER 4-3 OVER
FROG HEAVEN "9"
Pnde and nearby C.C.C. camp base-
ball fans witnessed the Crane Flats
4 to , , to"t"'p os
' . . B
( Heaven C.C.C. nine at the High school
j IflW yeflterday oftern0on. The game
was one of the snnppleitt and most
'interesting played on the local dia
mond for some time. m
The Prog Heaven nlno took a 2-un
lead In the first frame when Wood
ruff, load-off man, htnglcd safely.
Neeso, next man up lined a slsszllng
grounder through tho box, past sec
ond, and under centcr-flcldftr Sca
vlch for a homer, scoring Woodruff
and himself.
In tho first half of the fifth frame
Frog Heaven tallied another, making
the count 3-0, '
Crano Flats, held well In hand by
Frog Heaven's hurler, Hunnon, until
that time, broke through to score 1
run. They ran 2 scores across in the
6th, and another In the 7th. which
put tho ball game on Ice. -
It was announced at the field) that
a La Orande baseball nine consisting
ox local players win meet the Crane
Flats team here in La Orande next
Sunday afternoon. i
Score:
Crane Flats AB R H PO A E
Orlsbach, 2nd 4 0 2 2 1
Hughes, ss
Webster, o .
Cray, 1st ...
Duffey, 3rd
Regan, cf .
Holland, If
4 1
0 0
2 14
1 10
3 0
4
Cooper, rf
" " 1
Stalker, p 3
Totals 34 4 0 27 6 0
AB It H PO A E
Wood". 3rd 4
Savlts'kl. rf 4
Grant, 1st 4
Donovan, If 4
Hannon, p 3
Scavlch, cf 4 1
Evans, c 4 0
Banko, 2nd 3 0
Gomellskl, p 1 0
0 10
0 2
0 0
0 0
Holmes 1 0
Totals ...fl0 3 8 24 10
( Pinch hit for Banko In 0th).
Woodburn Junior
Team Ready For
Topeka Series
POCATELLO, Idaho, Aug. 21 W")
A Jubilant group of Oregon Amerl-
count, and In a spectacular cxhlbl-
nad won from Walla Walla 8 to Si-
SMOOTHING WKINKI.KIl VELVET
If your velvet evening dress has be
come crushed or mussy, liold the
wrinkled part over a basin of very
"ot water with tho lining side next
to tho wator. This treatment will
mako the velvet even and smooth.
Civilian conservationists have un
dertaken the driving of a 121-foot
YALE
'HE PERFECT
POLE VAULTEJV,
3
mm
v-v ma
4
ft-' tit Hi jsysxds- STh
AREVou-QH,
AREVou NOT
' A WORLD
CUAMPIOM
7
list
I1ASEDAI.L STANDINGS
Coast League
M 's
W. L. Pet.
Los Angeles 85 56 .603
Hollywood 83 68 .689
Portland 81 69 .579
Sacramento 80 61 .667
Oakland 60 75 .468
San Francisco 59 83 .415
Mission 58 85 .397
Seattle 63 87 .379
Yesterday's Results
At Hollywood 2-9, Portland 6-8
(second 6 Innings).
At Sacramento 0, Los Angeles 7
(second gome night).
At Mission 2-5, Seattle 7-8 (second
8 Innings).
San' Francisco
At Oakland 3-10,
8-1.
National League
W. L. Pet.
New York 88 43 .613
Pittsburgh :....62 62 .544
Boston 63 53 .343
St. Louis 64 64 .642
Chicago 62 63 .530
Philadelphia 48 64 .429
Brooklyn '. 45 05 .400
Cincinnati 44 72 .370
Yesterday's Results
At New York 6. Chicago 1.
At Boston 5-8, Pittsburgh 4-1.
At Brooklyn 2-0, St. Louis 6-5
Only games scheduled.
American League
W. L. Pet.
Washington ; 77 38 .670
New York 68 46 .506
Cleveland 61 59 .608
Detroit 59 60 .600
Philadelphia ...55 69 .482
Chicago 52 63 .452
Boston 49 65 .430
St. Louis : 44 76 .367
Yesterday's Results
At Chicago 3-3, New York 14-11.
At St. Louis 1-3, Washington 2-4
At Detroit 5-4, Philadelphia 4-1.
At Cleveland 14-9, Boston 6-4,
0. S. C. Group Will
Speak at Rotary
(Owntinuea iom Page Onol
Inn, with alumni, former students
and stuc'ents of Oregon State college
BROWN IS ONE OF
NINE MO MAVE
CLEARED "TtlE
BAR Af MORE
frlAM 14 FEET
HII"
HE IS A PURL
OF A-C GILBERT
VALE COACH
j WoRED FOUR
OF 1HE
NINE
BROttW STiLL
HAS fwo VEARS
OF
COMPETiUqjJ
wEFT.
i
ANGELS CONTINUE
TO LEAD LEAGUE;
PORTLAND THIRD
I
Los Angeles pitching continued to'
dominate Coast league baseball as 1
the pace setters blanked Sacramento I
twice over the weekend to Increase j
their first place margin over Hoi-1
lywood to one and one-half games.
Buck Newsom hurled his third suc-
I ccsslve shutout Saturday In stopping I
tho Solons 2-0 with 3 hits. Emmet I
Nelson followed yesterday morning at
Stockton with 6-hlt tossing that de
feated Sacramento 7-0.
The Senators came back on their
home grounds lost night to wallop 1
the Angels 14-9. Los Angeles cap-!
tured the scries 5-2.
Although beaten twice over the '
weekend by Portland!, Hollywood
came through with a 4-3 scries vic
tory. The Beavers pounced on Buch
anan and Schulze for 15 hits, 8 of
them for extra bases, and a 10-4 win
Saturday night and then cased
through to tako the first half of the
Sunday twin bill, 5-2. The Stars
outslugged the Portlanders 8-8 id the
6-lnnlng nightcap.
Dcclsloned by Son Francisco 7-6
Soturday and 8-3 In yesterday's open
er, Oakland recovered to win the
short second gome 10-1 and the
series 5-3.
Manager ueorge Hums' lowly 1
Cat,!. Wl.n. hl.D.AH. V.nt- ....... '
a double victory over the Missions
yesterday. 7-2 and 8-5' to eke out a
4-3 series win. The Reds battered
Phil Page for 10 safeties as they ran
away with the Saturday night game,
10-4.
Net Semi-Finals
Postponed a Day
FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Aug. 21 (,T)
Tho remaining ecml-ftnal matches
of the women's national tennis cham
pionships at the West Side Tennis
club today were postponed until 2:30
p. m. IE.S.T.) tomorrow as a steady
overnight rain, which soaked the
courts, gave no signs of abating.
Lewie Hardage, head football coach
at Oklahoma, was an all-southern'
halfback four straight years at Van
derbllt and Auburn.
The PORTLAND ROSE.
. Good fn
DELUXE COACHES
AND IN
TOURIST SLEEPERS
upon payment of regular
lleeping car chorgti
For complete Information and
aitiitance in planning your trip
to the World'i Fair, Inquire of
J. H. KEENEY,
Agent,
La Orande, Ore.
PACIFIC
Ill CHICAGoj
Jpnuio
iL Effective Daily Us
Q U on oil Union Poeiflc Iraini, including I 1 1
The PORTLAND ROSE. tT
TOURIST SLEEPERS
upon payment of regular E
lleeping car chorgti E
fFor complete Information and fj
aitiitanc In planning your trip EH
I MARKET NEWS
CHICAGO WIla'AT
Open ll'Sl' Low
.M',, -H!4 .H4
.VH.:il't M'At .H54
.03!J4.UCi4 .ou'4
Kelt.
Dee.
Slay
C1IICAQO CORN
. ..l.53l, .M .51 !4
.5H'j.5l) .HI) ..111
. .my, .nay, .ui',(,
Sept.
i)co,
.May
PORTLAND WIIGAT
Open High Low Closa
,70 r .7(1 .70 .70
.75 . '. .75 . .73 .75
Sept.
Dec.
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
PORTLAND, Aug. 21 VP) Cattle:
2115, calves 108; steady.
Steers, best, t5.25$5.75; common
and medium, 3.25 i 4.50; helfors,
best, $4.00a4.25; medium, V3.25 &
3.50; cows, best, $3.00(Ti 43.25; com
mon and medium, 1.75i2.60: can
ners. 1.00cr2.00: bulls, best, 3.0O8
$3.50; medium, $2.75 8 $3.00; calves,
best, $6.00(.i $6.50; good, $5.00a M.50:
ordinary, $4.00$4.50.
Hogs; 1360; active. Top light butch
ers, $5.50 (: $6.00; heavy butchers,
$5.25 ( $5.50; sows, $3.26 Co $3.50;
slaughter pigs, $4.25 $4.75; feeder
pigs, $4.25 a $4.75.
Sheep: 3037; lambs 25c higher.
Eastern Oregon lambs $6.25; lambs,
best, $6.00(3 $6.25; medium, $4.75 Cf
$5.25; feeder lambs $4.00 ce $5.00;
yearling wethers, $2.00 s $3.00; owes,
ei.OOQ 41.60.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
PORTLAND, Aug. 21 (P) Butter
Prints, extras, 21c; standards, 20c.
Butterfat Portland delivery: A
grade 18o lb. Farmer's door delivery,
16c per lb.; sweet cream, 5c higher.
Eggs Pacific poultry producers'
selling price: oversize, 24c; extras,
22c; standards, 20c; mediums, 20c;
pullets, 16c dozen. Buying price by
wholesalers: fresh extras, 19c doz.;
mediums, 16c doz.; undergrade, 11c
doz.
Milk Contract price, 4 pet, Port
land delivery, $1.70 cwt.; B grade
cream, 3714 c lb.
Country meats Selling price to
retailers: country killed hogs, best
butchers, under 150 lbs., 7', 8c;
vealers, 70 to 100 lbs., 9 0 10c;
spring lambs 10(3 11c lb.; yearlings
4(3 5o lb.; heavy ewes, 2 en 3c lb., me
dium cows, 660 Lb..; canner cows,
23c lb.; bulls, 4 ',4 (3 5c lb.
Live' poultry Portland delivery:
buying price: heavy hens, colored 3'
to 514 lbs., 12c; do 514 lbs. up, 12c;
hens, over 314 lbs., 8c; under 314 lbs.,
7c; springs, 2 lbs. up, 11c; broilers.
l-2 -lbs., 13c colored springs, 4 lbs.
up, 14c; colored roasters, under 3 lbs.,
13c; roosters, 6c lb.; ducks, pcklns,
broilers, 8 10c lb.; old ducks, peklns
( ); do colored ( ).
New potatoes Local white and
Special Today Only!
ICECREAM
.Vanilla Chocolate Strawberry Orange
Pineapple -
25c Qt. 2 Qts. for 45c
SHERBET
Orange Peach Pineapple Strawberry
20c Qt. 2 Qts. for 35c
SHAKE SWITCH SHOP
DOLL NIGHT
EVERY MONDAY NIGHT!
On The Screen ....
John Barry more in
"REUNION IN VIENNA"
T0M0RR0W!-
PARDON HIS ERROR!
But they doi
n't core whnt tliu A
IlITERMTIOH&L HOUSE
with Ihe dizziest collection of
comedians ever assembled!
PEGGY HOPKINS JOYCE
W. C. FIELDS RUDY VALLEE
GEORGE BURNS &GRACIE ALLEN
COL. STOOPNAGLE & BUDD
CAB CALLOWAY & ORCHESTRA
SARI MARITZA STUART ERWIN
BELALUGOSI Baby Rom MARIE
. GIRLS IN CELLOPHANE
OF THE DAY X
Close
.!H.U(,
.i4;a.95i
red, $1.00$1.76 cental.
Wool ' 1033 clip, nominal Wil
lamette valley, 23& 250 lb.; Eastern
Oregon, 18ii21c lb.; Southern Idaho,
16( 20c lb.
Hay Buying prlco from producer:
alfalfa, No. 1, new crop, $17; clover,
No. 1, $14; Willamette valley timothy
$16; Eastern Oregon timothy $10;
oats and grain $15 ton.
WHEAT HEARING
ON IN PORTLAND
PORTLAND, Ore., Aug. 21 VP)
Plans for reducing the Pacific north
west's wheat surplus, estimated at
near 40,000.000 bushels, through guar
anteed benefit payments by the gov
ernment for tho difference between
the export and domestic price on
shipments to foreign countries, par
ticularly tho Orient, wero before the
agricultural adjustment administra
tion hearing here today.
At the hearing the first attempt) to
evolve an export plan for a basic com
modity will be made under tho agri
cultural adjustment administration. It
Is the first major move to Insure ful
fillment of the) law and similar hear
ings will be held on other basic com
modities. DR. MURPHY
WILL RETURN
TO HIS WORK
Dr. Roy P. Murphy 1b returning to
La Grande on Wednesday, Aug. 23,
and expects to start practicing In his
office in the Sommer building on
Thursday, the following day. Dr.
Murphy has been ill for several
months with arthritis and has been
a patient at the Veteran's hospital In
Walla Walla. Ills health Is now com
pletely restored, It Is reported.
Residents near the Newton woods,
Cass county, Michigan, believe an
elm 15014 feet high and more than
24 feet in circumference three feet
above the ground is tho largest In
tho stato. -
mi