The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, June 11, 1937, Page 17, Image 17

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    The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, June 11, 1937
PAGE SEVENTEEN
Wheat Gains
Are Cancelled
Official Estimate Lop9 Off
big Chunk on Winter
Crop Forecast
CHICAGO. JuHeH 10.-(ff)-Fll-nre
to confirm reports current
that black rust had attacked
spring wheat nullified late today
2 cents a bushel upturn of the
Chicago wheat market.
More than four cents Jump of
Minneapolis wheat value took
place, but was also largely wiped
out. The black rust reports
brought denials from responsible
authorities.
Flurried purchasing of wheat
futures, however, resulted for a
time, and was followed by brisk
selling. Aside from the rumors
of black rust interest centered
mostly on the United States gov
ernment crop which coming after
trade had ended was construed as
moderately bullish.
Wheat futures in Chicago
closed unchanged to of a cent
higher. July $1.10-1.10. Sept.
S1.0$-. Dec. Sl.UK-.
corn 3 down, July 31.13
1.14. Sept. $1.02-. Dec. 75Ti
76. oats off to M up. July
39, and rye varying from Ts
setback to advance, July 86.
The outcome in provisions wa
unchanged to 7 cents dearer.
Trim Forecast Down
Wheat traders generally ex
pected that the official estimate
of 1937 domestic winter crop
production would be hear to lai
month's figures, 54,000,000
.bushels. Instead, the govern
ment's new forecast was 64S,
597.000 bushels.
The transient upward spurt of
wheat prices today amounting to
5 cents frxm an early extreme
low at Minneapolis was generally
regarded as Indicating much con
cern over possible rust damage to
spring wheat.
On the other hand, the fact
that receipts of new domestic
wheat southwest were enlarging
decidedly led to early setbacks of
1 cents a bushel.
CHAPTER XV
During: the weeks following the
first of the year Jonathan grew to
look upon a northern winter with
genuine respect. Old timers as
sured him it was the worst winter
in a number of years and he could
' well believe them, going out upon
streets which were smoothly sheeted
in glare ice. He told himself grim
ly that it was an ill winter which
blew the doctors no good, for he
was having plenty of work. 'Flu,
fmeumonia, accidents a day hard
y passed that did not bring a
sprained ankle, a fractured leg, a
bad bruise or a general shake-up.
His practice was not always per
manently increased by the fact that
people often fell down at his very
. doorstep, but it grew steadily, if not
dramatically.
He had been called to the Sutton
house shortly after Christmas to
attend the ex-state senator who was
suffering from over-eating. That
formidable gentleman seemed much
less so when viewed prone and de
flated, surrounded by polished bed
posts, pillows, down quilts and can
opies. Mrs. Sutton wrung her hands
and pealed the bell for the servants
alternately, and whispered to
Jonathan in the hall that there
wasn't any use prescribing "nasty
medicine" for her husband or order
ing a meagre diet as he just wouldn't
bey orders and if she grew insist
ent, he would probably throw a hot
water bag at her. Jonathan listened,
endeavoring to maintain a profes
sional gravity and eventually sent
to the hospital for a couple of
strong-minded nurses, not too
young, who would not, he devoutly
hoped, be intimidated by the pres
tige of their employer.
The senator suffered, and not In
silence. Cured, however, of his ail
ment he was loud In bis praises of
Jonathan who had managed some
how to be both firm and tactful. And
this providential laying low of the
mighty brought patients to the
Kimber door, patients to whom Doc
tor Ballard had never sent a bilL
Tm getting on," he told Rose
gaily on the day after Mrs. Living
ston, ample, white-haired and in
fluential, bad sent for him regarding
her arthritis, and Rose nodded and
told him how glad she was.
She was not seeing him as often
as in the earlier days. He was busy,
' v;. ,11. tnnk him out at all hoars
and in all weather. The main high
ways were being Kept open ny snow
iloughs to a great extent but the
ess used reads were heaped high
with drifts and there were days
when Jonathan left tne ntue car in
w .- mrA tiirwi ai horse and
cutter at a livery stable. On such
occasions, muffled in overcoat anu
n wxma mrtA foolin- the warmth
of the soapstorie Evelina insisted-on
putting nnaer wis ounsio reus. -felt
that he had managed to go
back a generation, and he liked the
sensation.
T k.vtm, h - Mwm rllfficml-
Awo w ... -- . - ,
ties which sometimes she discussed
with him but more often kept to her
i tt-w nTter had entered
school shortly after Thanksgiving.
Rose remembered mm as imam
noisy boy tearing about tne resi
dential streets, picking quarrels
with bis playmates, breaking win
dows and fretting himself generally
. disliked. Now ne naa snot ua puy
airmllv nut all recognition. He was
taller than his brother, heavier, and
a good deal handsomer. Later, no
doubt, bis features would thicken as
his brother's were beginning to, mj
Mnld att!a intn a nrototwne of bis
father. But now there was merely
"Rich Girl -Poor Girl ,
the foreshadowing or this, in we
thrust of the Jaw. and be had
wicked, attractive dark eyes and a
. consciously ingenuous grin. He was
eighteen, a full year older than the
average member of the Junior class.
At faculty meetings he was not
much discussed, and never under the
, eagle eye and sharp ears of Mr.
- Martin, the principal, but whenever
two or three of his teachers gath
ered informally together, bis name
hras apt to come into the .convex
Ration. Rogers, the tall, thin, ner-
1 ua an who tausrht mathematics,
Quotations
EODUCE EXCHASGB
PORTLAND. Ort., Jnna 10. UP)
Pro4u sxrhsnss:
Batter Extras UK; standards 30tt.
prima firsts SO; firsts 28; butterfat.
33 33H
Ksf Large extras 20; tare stand
ards li; median a-trss 19; assdioia
standards 17.
Cssss Triplets 17; lost 18.
Portland Grain
POBTiaXD. Ora.. Jan's 10. (AP)
Grata : i
Wheat: i Open, Hica Ixw Close
Jul- U.oife 1.01 ft l.oi H 1.01
Kept. 1 00 1.00 1.00 1.00
Cash wheat: Big Bend blaestem, hw,
12 pet 1.10; dark hard winter 13 pet
1.20; 1 2pct 1.21; 11 pet 1.13; soft
white, westers white, 1.11; hard win
ter 1.09; westers red 1.10.
Ostx. No. white 33.50, gray 32.50.
Barley, i Jfb. 2-4 S lb. bw 40.00. Cora,
Argentine 42.00. Mitlrun standard 31.00.
Today' car receiata: Wheat 11;
floar
Portland Produce J
PORTLAND. Ore.. Jon e 1. (AP)
Batter .Prints. A c rada. 3 lb. la
parchment wrappers; in cartons 35e. B
trade 33c ia parchment wrappers, 34e
ia cartons.
Batlerfat Portland nery. bayinc
priee) A grade. 33 34e lb.; country
stations: A grade. 31 -82c; B grade IVi
eenta less; C grade. 6 cents less.
E grade cream fei market Price paid
producer: Butterfat basis. 55.2e lb.;
milk. 63 7e lb.; sarplas. 45 .-Price paid
silk board. 67e lb.
Eggs Bayiag price by wholesalers:
Extras. 19c; standard. 16c; medium, 16c;
medium firsts, lie; undergrade 15c dnsen.
Cheese Oreroa triplets. 17c; Oregon
loaf, loc, Brokers will pay e balow
(luntstions.
Country meats Selling price ta retail
era: Coaatr- killed hoes, best batcher,
ander 160 Iba.. 13. 14c; eealers. 13
14c; light and thin. lo.I2c; heavy. 10
lie Ib.i canaer rows. Se; cotters. 10.
lie lb. I balls lie lb.; apriag lambs.
Id 20a; yearlings. 10 13e; ewes 4 84e lb.
Lira poultry Buying price by wi
sslers: Colored hens 4-5 lb.. 15-1 6o lb.;
over 5 lbs. 14 ISe lb.; Leghorn hens
ander 3 lbs., 13-1 4e lb.; a-er S
lbs 14c lb.; colored springs, over
3 lbi, 10 20c lb., 2 to 3 lbs. 18
le lb. Leghorn broilers. 1617c lb.;
root ten. 6-7e lb.
Cantaloupes Hrawiey. jiimho. 45s.
$3,50 3.73; standards. 45s. S3.00-3.50:
jumbo, 36s. S3.25-8.5U; pony, S3. 75.
Potatoes Deschutes, $2.25-2.50;
Klamath No. 1 $2-2 25; Xakim Ke.
1 ( ) cental; local. $1,75 2.00 cental.
New potatoes Calif., whites, $1.0
$2.00 per 50 lbs.; Texss, $1.25 per 50
lb. ssck.l
Onions-Oregna Ho. 1, $1.40 1.50 per
50 lb. bsg
Onions New crop. Calif., red $1.40
per 50 lbs : Coehella, $1.40; Spanish.
$1.40 501b. bag. ,
Wool 1937 .nominal: Willamette sl
lei. medium 35c lb.: coarse and braids.
33e lb.; eastern Oregon. 28 29c lb.;
crossbred. 32 33 lb.; medium. 31 33c lb
Hay Selling price to retailers: Alfalfa
No. 1. $19 50 ton; oats and vetch. $13:
clover, ( ),ton; timothy, eastern Ore
gon. $20.50 Ion; do valley, $16-16.50 ton,
Portland.
had been heard to remark that a
good horsewhipping would do a cer
tain young man all the good in the
world, in which Rose was forced to
agree.
Larry was obviously much more
sophisticated than the other boys
in his, or the senior, class. Not that
the average small town boy wasn't
sophisticated, with the wisdom of
his generation, a generation in
formed ! in life by the' printing
presses and the motion picture the
atre, and learning a good deal from
experience as well, with fast cars
available, which can eat up miles
and so lessen the distance between
town and city. But Larry's wis
dom was of a sleeker, more habitu
ated, less routine type, lie had not
been in class six weeks before he
was its acknowledged leader; and
he hadn't been in class two days
when two girls blossomed out into
redder lipstick and three in more
elaborate permanents.
"He's plain ditmo, remarKea
Mn.rira.ret Smith, who had him in
chemistry, and Rose nodded. As she
had him in English literature sne
was perfectly agreed. Learning
was not Larry's forte, he was no
student. He'd graduate if he did
graduate -at. nineteen ... and un
ashamed. And whether or not he
would be able to go to college was
another matter. Of course, he might
tutor summers, providing his Idiotic
mother did not drag him off to Eu
rope again "for his health."
But - Rose's new preoccupation
with young Larry Dexter had very
little to do with his scholastic stand
ing. She could take his deficiencies
in her stride, laugh or frown in pri
vacw over his sIoddv. haphazard
test papers and listen to his utterly
"a" .a . m l! 1
unapoiogetic uck oi preparation in
class. It was his attitude toward
herself which disturbed her.
He had entered school unwilling
ly enough, quite aware that about
eight hundred pupils ana tneir
teachers knew why he had returned
to Riverport. He hadnt expected
that the nervous breakdown with
which his doting maternal parent
had endowed him had been very con
vincing. But, encountering Rose
that very first day he beamed upon
her cheerfully from the front row
with an expression of gratified as
tonishment. Rose was fairly accus
tomed to this. She was a perfectly
normal girl and she had been in
formed often enough that she was a
very pretty one as welL If no one
else Lsd ever told her, she had mere
ly to look in the mirror and con
firm her own pleasant suspicions.
She had been as popular as any girl
durix.fi her own school and univer
sity days and Bill Lynd and Jona
than Kimber were not the only men
in town who appreciated her charms
and told her so not that Jona
than had ever really told her so,
she thought, sighing, not in so many
words. Moreover, her brief teaching
experience had taught her a number
of things; and she had learned that
youthful pupils are prone to sudden
fervent enthusiasms. To be sure.
there were no red apples on her desk
now, in season; no wilting field
flowers. ! But it was a legend in the
school that during Christmas recess
a soptunore and a freshman had
fought a bloody battle because the
freshman had stated that he, for
one, didnt think that Helen of Troy
had greatly resembled Miss Ward.
Rose could count on loyalty ana
devotion from the majority of her
pupils. Some of the younger, sus
ceptible girls, giggled and blushed
when she spoke to them, sent her
valentines and left boxes oi candy
on her doorstep and otherwise be
haved ia the normal way ox little
fourteen year olds whose attentions
have not yet been deflected into the
inevitable oaths. And one gangling
boy who walked to school three miles
arverw dav of his life and whom she
had once rescued from a foolish,
harmless scrane had told her. with
difficulty and -a wildly working
.. . . . , . i i t j ,
Adam s appie tnac sne was jus iuea-u
Tet all this had not quite prepared
her for Larry Dexter.
Ha waited for her every daw out
side of school in his car and offered
to drive her home. The first few
times she accepted amiably, and
then, on once overhearing a whis-1
at Portland
Hops Nominal. 1936. 35-40c
Mohair 1937 contracts. 55e ib. :
Caseara bark Bujing price. HI 7
oeel. 8e lb.
Sugar Berry ar fruit 100a, $5.80;
balea. 85.45: beet. $5.20 cental.
Domeatia floor Sallinc price, city de
livery. 5 to 25 bbt. lots: family pateata
98a . $6 95-7.35; bakars : hard wheat.
$8.15-7.85; bakers blaestem. $5.70-5.90.
blended bard, a.75-.S; graaaas, o.ia-
5.95; whole wheat, So.Ov barrel.
Portland Livestock
PORTLAND. Or. Jane 10. (AP)
(U.8.D.A.) Hon: Receipts 550. In
cluding 60 direct, market mostly steady;
rood ta choice 165-310 lb. driveins 10.65-
10.75, 225-260 lb. weights 10.00-10.25.
lirht lirhts and slang-tar pigs 10.00-
10.25. few choice lots bp ta 10.50; pack
ing aaws mostly 7.75, lev ap ta 8.00;
feeder sirs 9.50-1000
Cattle: Receipts 350, including 94 di
rect, ealrea 25. iaeladiag S direct, mar
ket alow unevenly steady to 25 lower;
grassy steers and heifers off moat, dry
fed steers scarce, salable arooad 9 OO-
10.50. scattering eamataa grass alaagh-
ter steers S.7S-7.75. cattery kinds down
to 5.00 few stoekers 5.50-6.75, eamaaa
c-rasa heifers 5.5O-7.00. ratters dowa to
4.50. low cotter aad eatter cows 8.75-
X 2S ronnm ta medium rrades 5.50
6.75. grassy dairy typo eowa asuslly
below 6.00; bulls 5.75-6.50. cotters dowa
to 5.25: veslera weak, good grades moat
ly 8.00-8.50 choice aootable to 9.0O, coat
mon to medinm grades, a.oo-T.oo.
Rkj; Raeeinta 800. inrludinr 137 di
Met market moatlv steady: balk good
sri - Umbo 10.25. few aorted lota
10.50. common to medium gradea 7.50
9 75. few feedera dowa to 7.00. common
ta medium yearlinrs 4.50-5.50. colls
dowa to 3 OO. common to medium ewes
1.00-2.00, few good grades 2:50.
FuntJs for Higher
Education Sought
State board of higher education
members will appear before the
state emergency board here Mon
day and ask for the diversion of
aDDroximatelv $37,000 from the
general fund for use of the high
er educational institutions.
The money origiriallHwas lev-
led lor tne support 01 cne senoois
but now . goes into1 Hhe general
fund.
The emergency board also will
consider an appropriation suffi
cient to employ seven additional
guards at the state penitentiary.
Such an appropriation would al
low the present guards one day
off each week. I I
Under the present working
schedule at the prison the guards
have only one day off each month
pered "Teacher's Pet!" in a singu
larly unpleasant tone from a group
of seniors standing near the car.
had afterwards refused. She
thought of an eighteen year old boy
as a child growing up. She could
not, however, think of Larry aa a
child. In the first place anything
childish in his appearance had long
since disappeared and his manner
was the reverse of juvenile. In his
own phrase, he had been around,
he had gone places, seen things and
done things and did not consider
himself a school boy and it was
borne in upon Rose Ward that a
school boy was the last thing in the
world he could claim to be, despite
the fact that he was going to school,
the oldest, and perhaps the worst,
student in his class. .
He was. she admitted to herself.
amusing enough; a wise-cracker,
with a gift of arrogance and a cer
tain charm. But one day in Feb
ruary when he waited for her, ask
ing humbly enough if he could drop
around to see her that evening, to
talk over something he did not quite
grasp in his work, she found her
self at a loss for an easy reply. He
was not the first pupil who had
asked this of her, and she had al
ways been glad to tell his predeces
sors to come, without hesitation, But
now, after ah imperceptible delay,
she shook herself slightly and re
plied, smiling, Why, or course,
Larry." Ridiculous, just because his
eyes literally danced in his head,
and his full, pleasure-loving mouth
had curved to a smile the reverse
of respectful, that she should feel
be was using- tne class work as an
excuse.
It was obvious that that was ex
actly what he had done, for when
evening came and his car slithered
through ice and snow to a stop be
fore her door and he romped in,
in his absurd coonskin coat, and
made himself completely at home,
he was hard put to it to find exactly
what had puzzled him in his lessons.
"But what was it, LarryT"
He looked at her. She wore a
little dark red woolen dress and her
eyes and cheeks were bright. Ha
said, laughing, "Honest, MUs Ward,
I've forgotten. . . - :
"But
He said easily, "I had to have an
excuse, didn't I . . .?"
She blessed the ring at the door
which heralded Bill Lynd. Larry
didn't stay long after Bill arrived.
He regarded hint sullenly and was
so patently rude that Rose was
alarmed. Bill, under his easy-going
exterior, had a more than adequate
temper.
After Larry had gone Bill asked,
"What did that little beast
wsntT"
"To talk about Chaucer," Rose re
plied, laughing, "and he's not very
little."
"No, he's not. Too darned big!
Chaucer, sez you?"
"Sex me," agreed the Riverport
instructor of English Literature.
"He's a bad egg," commented Bill
after a moment, "it's a pity he ever
came back here. Phil's a saint com
pared to that kid. ..."
"That's a little overdrawn, isn't
it?"
"No. Phil's crazy, of course, no
manners, like all that tribe of top
hats, drinks too much, thinks that
be together with the Suttons, owns
the world. Bat he's a good business
man, strange to relate; and has
some fairly decent traits," argued
BilL astonished at his own magnani
mity, "but this youngster's just no
good. If you ever have any trouble
with him "
"Oh. but I wont." Rose declared
with a confidence she was far from
feeling.
Bill looked at her keenly. . He
said.
"Look here. Rose, you're twenty-
four. Larry Dexter's eighteen.
That sounds like a no. doesn't
it ... T Well, it isn't. He's not a
Riverport eighteen, you know. Fve
heard things about him. . . ." : He
frowned. Then he said, contentedly,
Mice news; be re. sjoia as the devi'
outside."
(To be continued)
OeanUMIWllwBalowia.
Pttlrlsetod a KIbm restarts aadlaita. s
Steel up but
Ends in Fall
Rails Also Show Rally but
Fall Back; -Volume
Continues low
NEW YORK, June lO.-iflV
The stock; market was a lop-sided
affair at the start and Its con
tours were even more irregular
at the close of today's session.
Fairly cheerful business news
was offset by fresh clashes in the
steel strike although there .were
some in Wall street who thought
they saw a possible settlement
of this controversy in the near
future.
The gold bug's bite was less
noticeable In the financial sec
tor, but many traders failed to
see any appreciable break in the
clouds surrounding the interna
tional position of the yellow
metal. -
Steel Shows Pickup
Notwithstanding continuance of
the labor rift, steel issues gave
a better than ordinary perform
ance in the morning. These fell
back before the final gong. It
was the same with rails .and
specialties. Late selling, whUe not
especially insistent, pulled down
numerous stocks that had re
corded early gains of fractions to
2 or more points.
Volume was still less than half
the amount necessary for most
commission houses to break even
on 'expenses. Transfers totalled
567,750 shares compared with
624,040 yesterday. The Associa
ted Press average of 60 Issues
yielded .3 of a point at 67. It
is now only 1.5 points above the
year's low.
Carryover of 1936 Hop j
Note Put at 10,000 Bales
Henry Cornoyer, secretary of
the bopgrowers' association, an
nounced that 1426 bales of 1936
hops remained unsold in the
growers' hands ia California. He
said there were 1515 bales un
sold In Washington and enough in
Oregon to boost the total 1936
holdings to 10,000 bales. A few
recent sales were reported by
Cornoyer at 25 and 30 cents.,
POLLY AND HER PALS
ftnCKEY MOUSE
TWO GKOSTt-Y
FGUR.S
GUIDE.
THROUSH
TH. CrXMT?
THE. PORTERS
ARE. TERROR
STR1CKEH, tN FU-E.
WTO THE.
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en I
V ME GETTTN' THIS NEW SLfUN M I iSl ffU ZJZL- N KJS-I
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LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY
:
AU. NIGHT
DCEAMIKl'
GREAT
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3a W
TOOTS AND CASPER
CLARICE'S DO-t.
"ammy; was
killed by an
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AW.
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Salem Market Quotations
. Grade B raw 4 per cent
milk. Salem baste pool price
$2.10 per hundred.
Co-op butterfat at price,'
F.O.B. Salem, 82 He.
(Ulik tsss4 aa sasdsoaialy
satterfat BTsrsge.)
Distributor price, f2Jtt.
A grade butterfat Deliv
ered, 82), e; B grade, deliv
ered, 81 Me
A grade print 84c; B
grade, 83c
Prices pale ta (rowers ay Salem barer.
(The prises below enppliea b a local
grocer are ladleativ of Ua sally aaarket
bat are set gartMd by The Slatea-
rBOTts
'Sarins races)
Apples. Nswtowns
Winessss. ba extra fancy-
naaanaa, IB., aa atai
aaoaa
CaaUloopes, rrata
uatee. iresn, lb.
j leriaa . .,
Lemoas. . erata
Ora njes Ji avals
Fancy , ,
.4.30 to
S.50 ta
.S.50 ta
5.00
4.00
4.00
3.50
1.74
metre
Valencies
Strawberries, local, crata 2.00 ta
Etterbergs, erata ,
TXOXTABIX&
Boriag Prices)
Asparafna, local, doa bo.
Beets, local, doz.
Beans, greea, hamper
Cabbata, lb.
-SO
.50
S.&0
.04
.70
1.50
.55
t.15
S.2S
.10
.OS
t 00
1.15
J5
1.SS
varrota, aot.
Cauliflower, Calif.. crsta.
Oacambara, local, bathons. dot
Celery. erata " ta
Utah ,
Ersplant, CaJU lb. ,
Gooseberries, local, Ib. .05 ta
Uttaco, Cai teed, doa. 1.T0 ta
Local, crata, dry pack ,
Onions, frees, do.
unions, Ha. 1.
Stocks & Bonds
(Compiled by Associated Press)
Jane 10
STOCK AVERAGES '
(Compiled by the Associated Press)'
t.lS
S.35
n 1 1&
C25
tA. 11
a as
6.50 ta 1.60
80 15 15 CO
Tndast. Rails UtiL Slocks
Today . 93.1 42. - 41.S 67.0
Prev. day 92.S 43.9 41.S . 67 J
Month sfo 88.5 43.6 41.4 65.4
Tesr ago 84.4 35.6 48.4 63.1
1937 high 101.6 49.5 54.0 75.3
1937 low 88.5 37.8 40.9 65.4
1936 hifh 99.S 41.5 53.7 73.8
1936 low 73.4- 30.3 43.4 55.7
BOHD AVERAGES
20 10 10 10
Rails tndusU UtiL For'rn
Todsy 93.7 103.9 98.1 72.8
Prev. dsy 93.8 103.3 98.3 73.6
Month ago 93.6 103.1 98. 71.1
Year ago 90.2 102.9 101.8 69.3
1937 high 99.0 104.4 102.8 74.7
1937 low 92.6 102.4 97.8 40.5
1936 high 98.3 104.4 103.1 73.0
1936 low 86.9 101.8 99.S 67.6
Vf!MhT t' ( Mt? , ) ?oU NW PROTECT KOUPROPERLJ d THEY HrXVB GONE
MPkH-K K-H-K. J 4-4 -A" "ROUND-UP V SEE TKCM
IJ i iV C i. uv Tw M-ycij-i those, "porjers I . agmk! rs
" JS fe'-fek V-"':
"' "' 11 Yir ll'-ai'''"J''M" I .'i n . .... I
I VUAS RONNIH' AS FAST AS "
I COLX-D - BlTT COULDM-r pukJ
VERY FAST CAUSET I WAS
CAROV1WG A TERRIBLE LACiS-T
LOJG VAS
THAT SOME
BG ROBBERS
CHA5I ME VJTIH
BAQ FULL t-)-
MONET
KKJIVES I
4wi.. . 1
Drv-vo uini iUf LOVED 1 ZiOH ,
- THATS
TWAT OZr! HER HEART A X HATE
SHAME !
WILL B-
BROKEN !
Ctft. mT. Kf i
Starring Popeye
r irsi o irfr.D
BRN(Cj IU A VRDCK OF
6UILTV 605 U)EL GET
SIX HUNTS Vtt 0AVL-VJE
NEEDS A PLfsCE TO SLEEP
IT VkJONtT
NECES5ARV TO
GO TO THE.
OORW-ROOM.
AN Wt UKES
MRS.SOCM.LLS
ALREADY
COOKIN
DEOOEO,
,1 ( er-
lIkAilX
ysi7.vr.T mi .
Sadlskes, dot. '
JO
Peppers, green. Calif.
.23
1.00
Peas, local, lb.
New Potatoes. SO-lb. baa-
Potatoes, local. Nk. L cwt
s.oe
-a. a. in, a . is ta mi
Raabarb, local, par lb. .03 V.
Radishes, doa. , J
Epiasch. locaL eras re - .65
Sweet eera, doa. - .60
Temstoee. 30-lb. crata, top 4.50
Twraipa, doz. .56
Watermelons, Calif., retail J0i
nxrrs
Walnata, lb. .11 ta
.1314
attb
ruberta. IBIS eras, lb. 16 ta
HOPS
(Bayla Prices)
Clastera. 1936. lb. 38 to
, 'aggies aomlnal
WOOI. AJH ICORAXB
.46
(sayta races)
afohatr
Medio wool
.
.as
.n
.0T
.0214
Coarse wool
C.SCA-A UC
Dry. Ib- .
Greea. ib.
K ASS FOULTIT
' (Xaylac Price ad AadreaeBs) !
White extras r J6i .
Brew extras .16
ICediaaz extras J4
Larre standards . .14
Mediaai etaadarda .13
Pullets ' , .13
Heavy hens. lb. ... . .14 r
Colored Mediums, lb. - .it I
Medians Lag-area, lb. JO .
Stags, lb. MS
Old reestera. lb. - jOi
Colored springs US
woite ixcborna, rrys J5
MARION CR
CREAMERY Baying Prices
Butterfat, A grade
a grafts
- J1H
Uva pooltry. Ma. 1 atork
Colored heas. ander H Iba
Colored heas, ever 4H lbs
aa
.16
J!
J
J4
.03
colors, try era
Legborm baas,- bssvy
Leg-ore baas, light .
Leghorn broilers
Roosters
Rejects nsarket
valaa
Stars. Ib.
No, 2 rradea, 2 crata less.
Eggs Candled and graded
Large extras -Medinm
extras
Lsrre standarda
Medians
Undergradea
Pullets
IS
J4
Dirty extras
UYZSTOCX
(Baying Prices)
1937 spring lambs, lb
Yearlings, lb.
...04 to .05
Ewes
3.00 to S.50
Hogs, top, 150-210 Iba. 10.50 '
130-150 Iba. ..10.00 ta 10.25
210-230 Iba.
Sows 7.50 ta T.75
Dairy type cow
Beef cows'
Bulla '
Heifers
.3.00 ta 5.00
.6.00 to 7.00
.6.00 to 6.60
.7.50 to 8.50
8.50
.13
Top veal
Dressed veaL lb-.
Dressed hogs. Ib.
.18
URAIB AKD HAT
Wheat, white. 'o. 1 , .94
Wheat, western red ...... . .... . .94
Barley, brewing, tea 0.00
Feed, barley, toa .39.50
Osts, milling, ton g n
Peed, ton 35.00
Hay, baying prices
Alfalfa, valley
Oat and retch, ton .
Clover, toa
.13.00
. 9.00
10.00
Hash Money?
A Cross-Country Marathon
Hie Stuff That Dreams Are Made of
i.iac All
Useless Sacrifice
TOOTS, X
MAD! THE
l
ME TO ESUT
BREAK
THE NEWS
TO Mfcr-SHHM-
Take That You City Slickers!
i - 7 hi .ill jr in
Wsr4 -A - 1 J VirAiSfr Pi 5dbrr- J r
TUIV VA1ANID&S ARE
BE.
TRNriG TO -tT
ROOM AKD BOARD
OOR OAIL- ArAU
STANO F0RT5i
111 l-itl.KT
I v j --
r (rji
B
Gardeners' and
Ranchers Mart
PORTAND, June .Hff-Oiiiy
moderate supplies of produce on
the ' Gardeners' and Ranchers
market today coupled with an ac
tive demand resulted in several
price advances.
Asparagus, strawberries, let
tuce and cabbage all advanced in
price. Local supplies of the let
ter are not arriving in sufficient
quantity to take care of the de
mand, and out-of-state packs are
still being shipped in. . .
- Demand for old crop onions is
very light, with shipments of new
onions from the Walla Walla dis
trict expected this week.
The first large shipment of cel
ery, coming from Labish, arrived,
and sold at $4.50 and $5.00 a
crate. It will probably be several
days before - this commodity ar
rives in any volume.
-California apricots' and plums
and watermelons are decreased In
quotations as a result of a very
light demand. -
- Heavy supplies brought down
the cantaloupe prices.
" Apples WaaMngtoa Wlneaaps, extra
fancy.. 32.50 3.65; Oregon Newtowna ex
tra fancy 83 00-3.35.
- Aspersgns Oregon. 8 9e: SO-Doond
crates, $2.40-2.50.
Eeaas Calif., lt-lSc-.
Beets Per sack. Oregon. $1.85. .
Broccoli Orata, S3.25-2.80.
Braaaela Sproata California, eat
fourth drama. $3.75.
'Cabbage Calif.. $2.40-3.60 crate; Sse
rameato, $3 00 3.50; Oregon, $2.85 3 00.
Carrots Oregon, - 4a par lb. ; Cslif
banched. $4.25-4.50 crate.
, CaaJiflewer Califs pony, L.10-ia5;
Oregon. $1.10-1.25.
" Celery Calif. crates. $3 00 8.50.
Cucombera Oregoa and Washington
hothouse, $2.50-3.50; CaUL, $1,501.63
per flat.
Eggplant Calif.. !ug. $1.50-1.60.
Garlic Per pound, 10-15e.
Gooseberries 6-8c lb.
Grspss Emperors. $1.60-1.75.
Lettnco Oregon, - dry, 8-4 doa., 60c
$1.10. .
Mash rooms One poand cartons, 40
45c. ' :
Onions 50 lb. aacka, V. 8. Ke. 1, yel
low. $1.15-1.25.
Onions Green, dos- banehca, 20-25e.
Psrsley Per docen banehea, 40-45e,
Psrsnips Per Ing, S5-40e. t
Fesa CahL. $-.75-2.00; Oregoa 4-5o-
lb. . .
Peppers Mexico, 15-20e Ib.; $4.50
5.50 per crata. -
Potatoes U.S. Ko. 1, 100 Iba., Oregon
russets, $2.50-2.75; Wsshington russets.
$2.60-2.85; loeal $2.10-2.15.
Radishes Par dos. banehea. 25-SOe.
. Kaspterries 12's. $3.25.
Rhubarb Oregon field grown, apple
boxes, "60-75c.
Butabagss Washington. 100-Ib. aacka.
$1,50 1.75.
ru tT ti' RCEATH
Au'uJUPU
FROM RUMMlr4'- AM' THE ROBBERS!
r-.n
iir-z eeei
uAS OST -faNl i lc; .
BUT I HOU.EBEO YBJ"'UEiJP
t SOLOUO -I WOKE MySEX-F UF-
I GUESS
SO MOCM
FULX. OF
TT MAKES
BOUT
HOPE YOU WOrsTT BE
MONET TU.V.S"
rtt-vv r-p-s
I 5PENT UN
SAMMY
AND
INSTEAD!
L
HOT
60LTV J
fRtt
THS
US
rrrxX
AROICT
mm
Logan Prospects
Down at Hubbard
Loganberries controlled by the
Hubbard Berry Growers associa
tion will produce not more than
45 per cent . of a normal crop,
Hairy Huglll of the association
declared yesterday while in Sa
lem to attend the blackberry con
trol board meeting.
At the present time, the Hub
bard blackberry; deal looks like
an 80 per cent crop, be states,
but adds that ' earlier prospects
of an estimated 70 per cent
Youngberry . harvest there will
probably be cut down some aa a
blight has appeared on the crop
recently.
The Hubbard growers are
about through picking Marsnalls,
the severe heat of a week ago
cutting down the yield there as
in most sections of the county.
Red Hearts are coming on and
promise a fair yield, he says.
Huglll estimates pfcklng of
logans and youngberries will
start about July 4.
Good Drenching Rain
Is Hope of Farmers;
Would Help Berries
-y -.
Farmers were genuinely dis
appointed that yesterday's light
rains did not develop into a good
soaking downpour, for all crops
are badly in need of moisture
that is all except the first cut
tings of hay which the rain v
caught.
Strawberry growers expressed
the hope that a good rain would
come last night or today, as this
would help materially in salvag
ing the Marshall crop, seriously
damaged by the sudden Intense
heat lsst week and would also
help prospects on the Ettersburg
harvest, due to be In full swing
next week.
8pinsch Oregon, 60-75c.
" Turnips Dos. bunches. 80 OOe.
Tomatoes Oregoa hothouse, 18 23s
per pound; llexiro, $3.50-5.00.
Strawberries Oregon, 12s, $1.25-1.30;
24s. $2.00-2.25.
Sqnssh Oregon, per pound, Hubbard.
2 tic Marblehead. Se.
Turnips Oregoa hothouse. 50-60c
Tomstoes Oregon hothouse. 18 !3e
per pound; Mexico, $8.50-4.00.
By CLIFF STERRETT
By WAIT DISNEY
BY BRANDON WALSH
I FOUKlD I VUAlS
-DPA4lKl' IT MAO-T
CI AH ALL fER J
IVE BEEN weireiMfs ,
ABOtTT CHEblS
5CX-D ALL. CWy
ME DREAM
COLD ALL
MIGHT
By JIMMY ftlURPHY
1X SOONER DO WnrHOLTT
THINZ,S,MYSELr-,SO SAMKfCAN
WAVE SOMETHING MYHE;Ll.
LOOK NICE WITH THIS COLLAR
HARTa;S i PW-Trt I run '
,i .
WE'LL
WA-t HIS
TAIL-!
j si
By SECAR
it --a
n. is- w k ii-ni
AND LET
BE A
WESSON
TO V00