Observer, La Grande, Ore., Toes., Feb. 10,' l'W Page 8 4 ' V to v. V U.S. Chamber Of Commerce Calls For Spending Reduction it LITTLE MISSILE Infantryman at Ft. Lewis, Wash., alms a ride grenade that can knock out a tank or concrete pillbox at 120 yard:!. The one and a half pounder replaces the World War II model. Market Quotations By United Press International PORTLAND LIVESTOCK POHTI.AM) U'Pli iUSIMi -Livestock : faille 300: 10 head lot atcniKe choice around UK0 lb. fed slcers 27.75: few loads mixed Rood choice steers !IW)-10'J0 11). 20.75-27; few good low choice heifers 25.511 20.75: til Hit y cows 17.50 - 111.50; canncrs-cullers 14.5016. Calves 50; Rood-choice vealers 20-35; slundard 24-211. Hogs 3."0; 1 and 2 butchers mostly 111; mixed I, 2 and 3 lot lfl-l.50; sows 300-550 lb. 13-10. Sheep 150; nut enough sold early lo lest market: choice lamlis Monday 18.25 18.50; unod 17.50-18; ewes 4-9. PORTLAND DAIRY PORTLAND (L'Pli Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large. 44-4I1C doz.: A large, 43-44e; AA medium, 3B-42c; A medium, 31141c; AA smalls. 34-3lic; cartons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints, Uttc lb.: carton, lc higher: B prints, G4c. Cheese i medium cured i To re tailers: A grade cheddur simile daisies, 41-51c; processed Ameri can cheese, 5-lh. loaf 40-43c. PORTLAND GRAIN - White wheat no bid Soft white hard, applicable 'no bid White club no bid llnrd red winter, ordinary no bid Hard white baart. ordinary, no bid Barley no bid v New York Stocks NEW ' YOKK L'PI Stocks snapped back with a vengeance today. 'lhe market's resurgence came on- the heels of a sharp sell-off Monday which was attributed to technical reasons. . Individual gains in the list ran past 4 points in some of the lead ers and gave the whole market a bright look. UiKcns hteel paced its- group wun a gain naming past 4 points umer issues in the steel group generally added fractions. Maytag also added around 4 at its best on a good earnings report. DuPont was up almost 4 in the chemicals Motors met good support. Amer ican Motors, Ford, and General Motors all added a point or' better. Nopferrotis metals, enjoying a stronger price structure, had a number of issues up a point or more, including Alcoa, Anaconda, and Magma Copper.. The market's show of strength buoyed spirits in Wall Street and followed the predictions of the ex perts. They fell thai the recenl decline was only of a technical nature and that the market would rebound. . Kails .scored gains ranging past a point in some of the leaders. Chemicals boasted 4 number of slocks up n (joint or more. Elec tronic); and npjiliancc issues got a whirl, with Zenith up more than 2 points at its high. WASHINGTON LPli The U. S. Chamber of Commerce has called for a cut in federal spending but the AKL-CIO said the nation's needs must be put ahead of costs on budget balan cing. The conflicting views on the na tion's fiscal program were con tained in statements prepared for a Varing by the Joint Congres sional Economic Committee. Walter Eackler, assistant econo mic research director for the chamber, said the government spending was the greatest single caese of inflation. He said possible inflationary ef fects of business or labor were insignificar.1 when compared with the "inflation generated by gov ernment spending, taxing and debt policies" and subsidy programs. Eackler also urged a major overhauling of the federal tax structure. He said the present tax system "penalizes success, dis courages initiative and restricts investment." AKL-CIO Vice President Waller P. Iteuther, on the other hand, proposed a heavy federal spend- John Hiatt Dies In Provo, Utah John Hiatt, 93, a former Union county resident, died in Provo, Utah Tuesday and funeral services will be held in Springvillc, Utah this Saturday. Mr. Hiatt was born Dec. Zi, 18115 in Slaterville, Utah. For the past year and a halt Mr. and Mrs. Hiatt made their home in La Grande with their daughter, Mrs. Carl K. Haiim. The family recently re turned to Springvillc. Mr. Hiatt is survived by his wid ow; lliree daughters, Mrs. Lee Huff of Springvillc, Mrs. Baum of Springvillc and Mrs. Earl Pack ard of Mesa, Ariz.; four brothers, Elijah of Milton Krcewater, Alfred uf Redmond, Charles of Umatilla and Bert of South Gale. Calif.: one sister, Mrs. Royal Grande of Bonidm.in and two grandchildren in La Grande. Dulles To Have Major Surgery WASHINGTON (UP! Secre tary of State John Foster Dulles, on leave from his cabinet pnsl for "a few weeks." enters Walter Hoed Hospital today for his sec ond major operation in a little more than two years. Dulles, who will be 71 on Feb. 25, was to undergo surgery for a hernia. It was tho latest in a series of illnesses that has plagued him since he was oper ated on for intestinal cancer - in November. 1056. President Eisenhower was ex pected at his news conference to day lo discuss the secretary's lat est illness, announced just after Dulles returned from a whirlwind trip to Europe to confer with Al lied leaders on Soviet threats to Berlin. In a letter Mo the President, Dulles also gave n second reason for entering the hospital. He said his doctors had advised him that he had "not wholly thrown off the effects" of a colon inflammation he suffered last December. ing program to assure full employ ment and economic growth. "A decisive change in attitude and direction is needed in re gards to federal exenditures and programs," he said. "The major test as to whrlher or not they are worthwhile should not be cost or budget balancing, but their need." Reuthcr. chairman of the AFL CIO Economic Policy Committee, called for wage and price increas es, a boost in the minimum wage, federal aid to depressed areas, higher unemployment compensa tion benefits, stepped up defense expenditures where necessary, for eign aid, aid to education, a big housing program and other spend ing. The labor leader urged Congress to close loopholes In the tax slruc lure "to raise as much as an ad ditional nine billion dollars in rev enue" for the government. World's Best Bridge Players In Contest By JACK V. FOX NEW YOKK UPI The world's best bridge players are at their favorite Sort this week so we went over to the Statler Hilton to check these rumors that some times they cheat. Last year there was a ruckus in Rome when Italy beat America for the world championship. A couple of losers noised it around that the winners used a sly trick they held their fine Italian hands up high in the air for good cards and down low when they got a stinker. Well, we can report that if there is skullduggery it's a lot more subtle than a kick under the table. The games are played in a glass "fishbowl before oOO spectators. We personally saw the Italians keen their hands low all afternoon and still draw good cards. Sunday's match pitted Harry Fishbci.i. owner of a New York bridge ci 'b. and Lee Hazen. a lawyer. ;s"nst Walter Avarelli, an Italian in-iistrate, and Giorgio Belladonna, yo'ing Roman public utilities worker with a charming smile. We watched t!.:ir mannerisms with unwavering intensity. Here are what our notes show: "Fishbein startles spectators by drawing plaid tam-o-shanter on head. Italians do not protest." "Playing in glassed box, 10 by 10 feet, soundproof.' Equipped with table, chairs, four ashtrays, jug ice water, glasses, box Kleenex, mic rophone. Referee and commentator also in booth. Draped with Ameri can. Italian, Argentine flags." Argentina is also in the tourna ment representing South America against champions of North Amer ica and Europe, i "Players, never say 'pass.' Say 'no bid.' Italians speak English. ,' Must wait three .to five seconds j before making any bid lest hasty! 'no bid' indicate very weak hand." "Afternoon round of play ends. ; Americans win. Tournament goes! on all week. No cheating ob-j served." Recapping Poorly Nourished Mothers Less Likely To Have Fraternal Twins By DELOS SMITH - UPI Science Editor NEW YORK 'UPI Science can now show lhat poorly nour ished women have less chance of becoming mothers of fraternal twins than well-nourished women. But' it can't yet detail a mother-to-be diet which would increase a, woman's chances of being dou bly blessed. Fraternal twins result from two Tax Group Says Plan Boosts Taxes SALEM a'PIl-Tlie Stale Tax Commission has estimated that the average Oregon citizen would pay slightly higher taxes under the plan revealed by Gov. Mark Hatfield than he would have un der the budget proposed by ex Gov. Robert D. Holmes. Compared to present taxes, some Oregonians will pay more and some less under the Hatfield program. A married man with two de pendents and a $8,000 income now pays $!ll. He would have paid $(16 under the Holmes plan and $112 under Hatfield's. A single man earning $6,000 who now pays $217 would pay $162 under the Hatfield plan, and $138 under Holmes' plan. A single man with a $3,000 in come now pays $72. Under the Holmes budget he would pay $48 and under Hatfield's recommen dations, $55. Arch C. Willett Funeral Rites Set Arch C. Willett, a former res ident of La Grande, died Sunday ;n Lostino nt the home of his daughter, Mrs. Jack Read. Funeral services will be held I in Loslinc Wednesday. Mr. Wil l lett hud recently returned to Lostine from California. He is survived by his widow. Mrs. Grace Willett: one son Maurice of Tracy, Calif., and ont daughter, Mrs. Read. Lostine. fertilized eggs, whereas identical twins come from one egg which split at an early moment of de velopment. The new scientific knowledge threw no new light on the causes of this splitting, but it showed the mother's nutrition al state was not important. This new knowledge comes from a satistical study by M.G. Bulmer, a noted British statisti cian, of birth rates in Norway, Denmark, Sweden, The Nether lands and Franco during World War II and before and alter. The populations of Norway, Tho Neth erlands and France were severe ly undernourished during the war. Those of Denmark and Swe den were not. Bulmer established Hie propor tion of twins to single births in all those countries before the war, when the food supply was normal and their women were normally nourished. He distin guished fraternal twins from idential twins by a mathemati cal formula based upon the known ratios of one king to the other. Then he established the propor tion of both fraternal and identi- Rancher Dies In Barn Fire Near Estacada ESTACAJJA (UPI I A 56-year-old Estacada rancher died in a barn fire on his property eight miles east of here Sunday night. Clackamas county sheriff's of fice said Hector Herbert Anders had gone into the barn to turn out the livestock. The animals were apparently out of the barn when the fire started, officers said. An investigation was underway to determine the cause of the blaze. No estimate of damage was immediately available. Anders is survived by his wife and 5 children. cal twins to single births during the war years. A comparison of these proportions to those of the pre-war years showed a sharp drop in fraternal twins" and none of statistical significance) in identical twins, but only in the undernourished countries. When this breakdown was marie for the five post-war years beginning in 1946, when the food supplies were -becoming normal again, the statistics showed that the pre-war rate, of fraternal twins to single births came back almost at once and maintained it self steadily. In the countries where food supnlies were not greatly dis turbed, twin birth proportions re mained pretty much lhe same be fore the war, during the war, and after the war. That the nutrition of the mothers was involved was underscored in yet another way. During the war years, north' west France was much better nourished than the rest of France. Eulmer isolated the sta tistics for this region and showed that its proportion of fraternal twins to single births was like that of well-nourished Denmark and Sweden and was free of the dip shown in the rest of France, Norway, and The Netherlands. Having arrived at these impres sive statistical results, Bulmer proceeded to account for them. In mammals other than human, undernourishment of the female is known to result in a decrease in litter size, he recalled. In undernourishment, he con tinued, there must be a decreased ability of the ovary to produce double eggs. Perhaps this is due to a decreased secretion of the hormone, of the pituitary gland which stimulates the ovary. It is known that a continued under feeding of experimental animals will cause a diminished secretion of this hormone. Masonic Ladies' Night 7 P.M., SATURDAY, FEB. 14TH MASONIC HALL Masons and their ladies, and visiting Masons are invited to lhe Sixth Annual Ladies' Night this Saturday evening at the Masonic Hall. Entertainment will be followed by games, dancing, cards and buffet supper for those who plan to participate in tho evening's fes tivities. LA GRANDE LODGE NO. 41 1 uwiU!Bs8&yi!m&'r . " IT SAYS HERE, HOUSEWIVES T&ft&V HAVF IT EASIERTHAW EVER PEFGR...THANKS 16 THE INVENTIVE SfMUSOf MAN! " why hand iron?- fc BUY Ironrite automatic ironer NOW! CALL W0 3-5614 GLOBE FURNITURE Adams and Hemlock HOUSEWARMER TIPS CAN CUT FUEL BILLS IS .-. ' ' ' f.VVst NW'-' , 4 V .x When you close a window, always lock it. This souls the window tight, keeps heat from escaping outside. Save even more by using Standard Heating Oils exclusively: They give you more pure heat per gallon! Save on chills, too, because you never run out of fuel with Housewarmer "keep-filled" service! For still more ways to save, look to your Hotisewnrmer the authorized Standard Heating Oil distributor in your area. Ask him about a thorough check of your heating system. .Call today. STANDARD I KEATING OILS R. LISLE SMITH - oraNDE, o WO 3-5711 STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA For people who dont want a look-alike car but do want a low price tag EDSEL made to be the most distinctive car on the road -yet it's priced with Ford, Chevrolet and Plymouth. And Edsel gives you many "eye-opening" extras that the low-priced field either forgets or,charges extra for. Look at this "Eye-Opening" Econimy! Extra Economy whin you buy you get more for your monoy more size, room, comfort. Extra Economy when you drive you choose from four engines, including two VS's that give you spirited performance on regular gas, and a thrifty Six as well. Look at tliesi "Eyi-Openini" Eitns! Extras built. into vry Ediol self-adjusting brakes, Diamond Lustre finish that never needs waxing, wall. to-wall carpeting, electric clock, aluminized muf flers that last twice as long as ordinary ones, foam-rubber seat cushioning, and many others. If you want to hear real enthusiasmtalk to a 1959 Edsel owner HAND FORD SALES Chestnut & Jefferson