PAGE EIGHT The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, July 21, 1937, i Chicago Wheat Prices Tumble Losses of Over 5 Cents Recorded as Selling Causes Collapse Chicago, j n l y -O.-fP) Col lapsing under a big burden of selling that found buyers rela tirely scarce, the Chicago wheat market fell S cents a buahel maximum today. Mucb of the selling of wheat came from holders who were pessimistic because general pub lic demand for futures hal failed to broaden as expected. A reason which trade specialists save for this failure was talk currca that spring wheat crop losses both iMaa rf tKa sT noHfon hAAitr Yiat ben OTer-estlmated; " . " .: ' At the close, Chicago wheat fu tures were 4 H-5 cents under . . . . . a at a jesieraay a nnisn, JUiy- ii.2i, unr si 7 1 -- as. - & :r .4 - corn 1 cent to 5 cents down, July SI.-3; Sept. 1.0-, Dec. 7 i oats 1 - ' off. Sent. 4 J ,r and rye showing 3 ft -7 drop; Sept. 8 5 4 . In proYl sions, the outcome , ranged . from '15 cents decline to 25-cenU ad vance.. I' , ; .. ; . Chicago July wheat contracts ". suffered: .the sharpest - drop here today, and from a top of 11.27 rant : tri ' o ty ' It 4tV. ' lil :losed at $1.21, Sept. fell to 11.21 i where it was down to .the 6-cent permissible limit, and showed a decline of 7 cents from the season's- peak : reached a few lays ; ago. . , : Wool Stock Set at 215,105,000 Pounds WASHINGTON, July 2 -(-Itocks of raw , wool, the census The Captive Bride j SYNOPSIS I According tc the terms of her father's will, Denise Keith, a young San Francisco socialite, must visit bis hunting lodge. River House, oa the Stikine River, in Tarnigan, Canada before disposing of it Lar ry Keith, ar outfitter for big game hunters, loved the place and bad lived there alone for years because his selfish, pampered wife, Sylvia, refused to spend even one month a year there. When he would not give it up, she divorced him and remar ried. Aboard CaptainRevelry Bourne's Stikine Maid enroute to Tarnigan, Denny meets a varied lot of individuals enroute to River House for the hunting season. Among them are Dr. Pool Van Clove, who is suffering from a nerv ous breakdown ; Rio Carew, weal thy divorcee; Derek Haskell, Larry's half-breed guide, with whom Rio is enamoured, and Harp MacParlane, foreman of River House. The beauty of the surrounding country appeals to Denny and she wonders why her mother hated it so remem bering her words: "Tb Stikine irt m witeb tivet. Dangerous. Cruel. It pots a spell oa yon. It won your father from me." Soon Denny would know for .herself Harp had spoken about the treach ery of the Stikine. praising Bourne's skill as a navigator, saying he waa swift to see and lightning to act, Although Harp s praise had preiu diced Denny against Bourne, there ' was something about the blond cap tain which attracted her, even though she preferred dark men like her fiance, Murray Hart . Denny bad a glimpse ox Bourne s charac ter when his dog, Tongass, would have killed Rio's police dog in a fight had not Revelry intervened and knocked his own pet senseless. plot every man has the courage to be a brute to the thing he loves, Harp remarked to Denny. j CHAPTER VII Later, when the West was bril liant with sunset, the Maid crossed the boundary between Alaska and Canada. ' ; When the lonely yellow Custom house flying- the Union Jack came into view, some one commented, "We more from the Land of the Eagle into the Land of the Maple Leaf.l Denny, watching with the eyes of the South the eyes of another ha tion, said to herself, "The country . of my father; the flag of my father." . Dusk deepened. Poplars turned to black-velvet vagueness on the banks! between which the river flowed like glinting ink. The pilothouse ' was dark, but Denny could make out the dim figure of Captain Bourne at the wheel. U titvn An a. m ar mtm fn l 11 . vt L. i wau, auiias at uu 111 a iisuutuca, looking straight ahead. She was surprised when one of the engineers '..I J .L.. Ik.i .1 , " , -toia.ner vast toe aiaia wouia soon tie on to the name "No one ran run the Stikine at night, he ex puuseu.. iou usuigxrous, even ior a sJuiroer Dka Revelrv Bonnie." t,. asBugci . nu vmj ivug eii . ua,u heard that word applied to the Sti kine; yet it was plain that all these Northerners loved the river. From the galley now came the voices of Ted and Boom and Harp, singing a river song. The chorded harmony of the chorus drifted out on the dusk. "Oh, send me up the Stikine past . , . , . mo Boundary j Set me down and leave me there alone. - :'' ;! . Let me laxe along a bar K i la the golden Cassia r. It's the only land I want to call ' my own." ; -. - ... , The words made her think of her father. This, in truth, was the only una mat he had cared to call his own. It had been the cause of all the bitter quarrels and passionate reconciliations that had marked each of the five winters he had spent Hth Kvlwfa I. )-l C 1 ! . . ,w ?u f (SuuBCO home. Sylvia kept insisting that he sell River House and what she called his ridiculous business there, and go Into, her father's . investment con cern. ; He kept refusing, -; He had gone north the last time, owing he would remain at River House until she consented to spend rt pat ona month of the banting Salem Market Quotations Prices paid ta gio- s- Sates aarara. (Tlx pritaa bslow snpplisa by a local tracer ara iadieati af tha aaily Market bat sr sal gaarantaca' by Tka Slatas- room fBayiat meat) Applet, WUBI 1.11 J.65 .04 M 1.75 4.25 Ja 1.60 3.00 T.75 5.7S 1.23 08 l.0 2.50 1.15 1.75 .u5 , .07 ,cs 1.7 2.00 Winasapt. kn sxtra faaer- Buiaii, la, atolk . uatl Caataloopca. rrats Grapsfrnit, CsliL, Baakist. crata Dataa, (rasa, lb. Currants, crata Grapes, ssadliag, las Lemons, crate 6 50 ta Oraafea. Valaacias S.S0 ta Lotaabarrlea, crata Peaehaa. local, la. Plants, Calif, crata , , Strawberries, Etterbarg. crate Raspberries, crate Blackcap, crata , Pia ehsrrles, lb. Bajral Aaaes, lb. Lambert cherries, lb. Teaagbarriet, crata , Wild blackberries, crate , TZORaBLEt (Baring Prices) Aprleete. Tie Dane, crate .67 ta Aipsrsrns. Calif, erau ' Beans, fraea and wax. Ib. , Beans. gTeea aar wax, lb . Cabbage, lb. , , , , " , .83 1.00 .04 ' J05 J2 Ai 1.25 J5 2.85 s.oo 1JM 1.10 .35 1.23 JtS 45 .04 Carre ta, local, e. Cauliflower. Calif- crate ... - Caenmbers. loeaL hothouse, dos Celery. . a rata ta CUk Local heart, at. - Lettuce, local crate, dry pack Oa ion, rreea, aoa. Onion. No L ewt, -, .... n . Radishes, dos. - Peppers, rreea. Calif, lb Pea, local, lb. - bureau J said, totaled 216,105,- 000 pounds June 26, compared with 214,522,000 June 27, 1936. Of the total for the second quar ter of this year, 141.850,000 pounds was in apparel wool stocks.. Carpet wool stocks totaled 35,612,000 pounds and top and noil stocks totaled 37,643,009. ' Apparel class shorn wool stocks on a greasy basis totaled 245,681, 000. pounds June 26, 1937, while carpet class stocks totaled 46, 818.000. Apparel class pulled wool stocks, greasy basis, totaled 40, 492,009 June 26, and carpet class pulled wool stocks totaled 4, 301.000. season with him there each year. She had retorted that he might go but he need never come back to her until he was ready to live perma nently in California. Denny knew now that these must have been foolish words spoken in the heat of anger, with no intention of fulfillment; but when Keith failed to come home that winter, Sylvia, in a high-handed effort to bring him to his senses, as she put it, had promptly divorced him. The move failed. After six months' silence on both sides, she had mar ried easy-going Paul Loftus. As long as Larry Keith lived, he forwarded a monthly sum to Den ny; a sum which Sylvia regarded as pin money for her own use. , Dur- Murray was eager that Denny should know his Bohemian friends . . . and so she met Madonna one night at a sculptor's studio. ing the first years he had also sent packages of raw furs to his daueh ter ermine, beaver, silver fox and white. Sylvia had these fashioned into magnificent wraps for herself, excepting only the beaver, which she left for Denny's little coats be cause she fancied the fur was un becoming to her. . ' . But there was one gift which Syl via could not use. It had arrived on Denny's tenth birthday a small, fringed and beaded buckskin suit, snow-white and soft as velvet "A barbarous outfit l"-: was Sylvia's laughing comment Up in her room Denny had tried it on.' The tang oi aider smoke dune to the buck skin, a strange, pungent odor oddly pleasant She remembered It still; and the dark-haired, green-eyed child in the mirror, who had looked gravely back at bar smoothing down the jacket with both hands. ; In the pocket she had found a snapshot of a tall, bareheaded man in riding breeches and flannel shirt He stood beside a horse that was drinking from a river shallow. One arm was opflung in a hailing Res tore; the wind was blowing his thick hair back from his laughing face; and there were poplars in the back ground. 5 Denny, whose ideas of her father had already been molded by Sylvia's careless remarks, studied the pic ture in pleased surprise. Here was no uncouth trapper. He looked like a polo player. "And he's young I she said to herself. Younger than Uncle Paoir Child though she was. she felt the allure and vitality of that pictured face. It was almost as if he were calling, beckoning to her. And she knew that must be the Stikine flowing at his feet The witch river that had taken him from Sylvia. ; , , ... , Denny, the woman, loolrinc now at the living waters of the Stikine flowing past is the twilight, felt a vagua sense oi unease as she re called how the river had held him 4?rade B raw 4 per cent milk. Salem basic pool pries 92.10 per hundred. Co-op Grade A batterfat price, F.O.B. Salem 84c (Milk based ea lenU-mootkly batterfat average.) Distributor price, f-JU. 'A grade batterfat Dclly ered, 84c; B ' grade deliv ered 82 He. ; A grade print, BSC; B grade, 84c Kew Potatoes, (0 Ik. bag. Poutoes, local, Ke. 1, tw Hs. 2. ewt baa 1.65 LftO 140 ta Rbabarb. local, per lb. .Ola Kaaiaaaa, aos. SninaeBL Im) araa-a 5 J)t .60 S.OO 1.90 45 .03 1.10 Sam mar Squash, lb. Sweet eora, doa. Tomatoes, 20-lb. crata Field growa, Calif. . Turnips, dea. Watermelons, Calif., retail. Corn, . box , Walaata. Ib. .11 to filberts. . 1838 eros, lb. 10 to wsinnt meats, pieces, lb. .as Walant meats, light ksWes. lb. J2 BOPS (Boyiag Psco Clnsters, 1938. lb. .........28 to IS laggles " - - nominal WOOI. AND MOHAXS (Baylag rxlcot) ktokanr .50 JO aiediam wool Coarse wool . Lambs wool CASCAXA BAKS Drr. lb. .06 Greca. lb. OG3 AND POUXiTET .02 H (Baring Prico at AsartMBi) Wkite extras .11 Erown, extras Medium extras Large standards Medinm standards Jl .17 .12 J4 as .10 .05 J5 .05 JS Pullets Hesry baas. lb. Colored medium a, lb. . Medium Leghorns, lb. Stags, lb. White Lecborat. m Old roosters, lb. Colored springs MARION CBEAUEBT Burins' Prices Bntterfst. A grade . .14 B grade .82 H Lire poultry. No. 1 stock Colored hens, under 4 lbs.. Colored hens, orer 4 lbs. JS as JO ji Colored trreri Leghorn hens, besry By Barrett Willonghby during all those years he had waited for word from Sylvia. And how, when she had at last called to him, it had kept him from answering by taking him to itself forever. She went swiftly over the events that had led up to the tragedy of his drowning six weeks ago. A year ago Denny had met Mur ray Hart, dark, good-looking, two years her senior, and the most care lessly delightful companion any girl could wish. Murray was the matri monial catch of her particular set If at times he drank too much, there were many in Denny's young crowd who did likewise, and Murray was always affable in his cups. He was a driver of swift, foreign-made cars, a seeker for all that was new and lively; and Denny, thanks to Sylvia's training, was always ready for any diversion he proposed. : Murray fancied himself in the role of patron of the arts. Not that he cared a hoot for art, but he did enjoy the whole-hearted way in which the younger intelligentsia of San Francisco abandoned them selves to. pleasure when they did plsy; and the originality they brought to their gaiety. He was eager that Denny should know his bohemian friends. ' Chief among' these was Madonna Baggs. . . .., r , ,. Murray was no end amused by Madonna, who was several years his senior. "RVia'a th darafeat most foul-mouthed, most exciting fe male l-ve ever met," he told Denny, Iaufihine. She wrote) erotie fii-tinn. none of which had yet seen print ; uenny met the woman one night, at the studio of a aenlntor on Tl, graph Hill. The evening was mem orable, not because of the meeting, but because she and Murray had left the studio to join their own crowd at a yacht-club dance, and there they had realized that they were in love with each other. TheV nlanruwi an lmra.i.f. riage and a honeymoon trip, around the world. But thev rlrnnrf -ritfc. out Sylvia, who was not only ap- pauea oy. weir naste, but deeply hurt :- - "Dennvl aha erfed . "Yon V-n- how your father's haste deprived me of the greatest wish of my life a cathedral weddinzl Yon know how I have planned, ever since you were bora, that von ah mild an that I missed! Oh, how can yon be so cruel to your own mother! Se selfish! So disappointing!" Bv dint Of teara and ntnlini, -t via worked? on Murray until he, al ways prone to avoid controversy, capitulated. (To be continued) CeanlcM by Sanett WUlautak . . baaMaal Market Favorites Moving Upwards . j .- . " Better Quarterly Earnings been Cause of Rise in ! Rails, Motors NEW YORK, July tO.-(Jfy- wlth buying centered principally la j motors, rails, utilities and specialties, stock market favor ites today cracked through profit selling barriers for gains of frac tlons to around 4 nointa. Brokers attributed extension of the advance principally to- the conunuea now of satisfactory second Quarter earnings stater meats, although there were some who credited fresh attacks on the administration's court bill as a factor. The session was not a one-way affaif, however. Steels and some other recent sprinters took a rest and there was an assortment of losers at the close. Dealings were the liveliest for the past two weeks, transfers totaling. 1.199.000 aWfta. The. Associated Press average of 60 issues was . up .8 of a point at 9.4. Leckora' kens, Bht Leahora broilers Roosters -- Rejects ...k.. .00 .14 .OS .OS rains Stsrt. Ib. . K" I aTaies, S cents less. - qv urs exirse Mediam extras Ibarra standards Medium standards "Jadercrades .,. ., i-uiiets Dirty extras ll9 rJVTSSTOfTB. 1997 sprint lambs, lb... 7.50 to 8.00 !(, ib. .. ..04 ta .04 H Ewes n i. tlots, top, 150-210 lbs 12:00 130-150 lbs. .11.00 to 11.25 11.50 8.00 to 8.25 8.50 to 4.00 5.00 to 6.00 5.00 to 5.75 S.OO to 7.00 ... 8.00 io 8.50 210-230 8ows Dairy type cow.. Eeef cows Bolls Heifers Toj) real Dressed veal. Ih 13 uressed aors, lb. ijii l GBAIS AMD HAT Wheat white V i n- Wbest, western red '97 Barley, brewing, ton .32.00 eeea, barley, ton 29.00 Oats, milling;, ton 27.00 reea. ton nif Bay, boyinf prices Alfalfa, ralley to nif Oat and Tetek, ton 9.00 Clover, ton . 9. 00 POLLY AND HER PALS ft SE2 WERE IN Trf HOTEL WVPER. "ANOTHER MYSTERY OF THE DEEP IS THAT EVERY . MORNIN AT EXACTLY SEVEN aCLOCK- ftnCKEY MOUSE -JOTg w )(. kYf TSSfPrjl spooks! V A I ( wwi mfl ''J i I (k c-,, i LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY 1 1-FALSTAFF ? A verv &M NOW rJWE?E DO H I iTAiMTUNDEe V3U av be rivFo mr a io s n.a . ..v -a 1 . ...,... 1 - u . , . . . y ,) . . IWW... "Twe COSToAAtL r s &-5f TOTAif vrTI 7 I'J H.1-SOAAfCWHECE -4THE MOOSE OR BWEVE LOOKED AM LOOKED. BUT I SUES 3 I tts TC CTA ..U. A- t'SS?04 if sarocm - rr isa KEEPSAKE -he Nwc-ve beem look.w im th-vrdkig. A UKE AJrS iTKf Hi l -H y!lJPt Y WnWSHE5 "ADii ALL "TO KEEP A IVj PLACES -6E,I W.ST COUtOFlMO eiMJySf iToAs: "AS "''XA O-OTHPS f Q r,lr-) SHARP lOOKOUT-AS IT IS KV S IT- MR. MENTELL IS SO 41CE TO ME LZ ? IgEJHEWW - - 3 ......... - 1: - - . . - 11 11 '' - --T. n. ..j -I TOOTS AND CASPER THniBLE TIIEATRE---S TEAR HIM UPS LEAVE Po i SEE V f TOMMY, 1 DO WISH pTOU TtHJ p START V TOMORROW, LOOKINir FORdfrc, CLARICV AsB j jjPy jj HIM V TOMS. 1 :. . ;. -- ass- a - ! Quotations rXODUCB XX ICHAHGB POBTLAfTJ, I Ore.. Jnly 20 (AP)- Frodoee exebaare: Batter Extras 82 V, : standards 81; prime firsts 81; firsts 3tt; kBttertat 4?j-3. . t-ff Larse eitrme 24; large ataad ards 22; medium extras 23; mediam standards 20. Ckeeae ; JrlpleU IT; loaf IS. Portland Grain PORTLANDS. Jnly 20 (AP) Wheat: Opea Bicb. Low Close Jaly 1.11 1.11 1.08 H 1.08 Sept. 1.09 H 109 1.08 1.06 Oaak wkeat: Big Bead blaestem, kw 12 pet 1.08; dark bard winter IS pet 1.25 r 12 yet 1.10; 11 pet 1.10; aoft wkite, western : white and western red, 1.08; Bard winter 1.07. ''Oats, No. S wkite 81.00. Barley, No. 1-45 lb. bw 83.50. Cam, Art-en tine 42.00. Millrna standard 28.50. Todey'e ear receipts: Wkest 4; bar ley 1; conr-7. . , Portland Livestock PORTLAND, Ore., July . 20 (AP) (U. B.. Dept. Act.) Hoca 250, market alow to stead, good-cboice 170-210 lb driveins 12.40, i few 12.25, sr load lots 12.65. 220-270 lb 11.75-11.90. light lights and slaughter pigs - 11.50-11.90; packing; sows 8.25-8.50, few light weights 8.75, feeder pigs 11.00. . Cattle' 100, ealrei 15, market slow, steady with Xonday's close, sows 25 cents lower ' for two dsys, scattering grass steers motly oa stocker and feed er aceouata 0.00-6.75.' Pat grass steers 9.85, few heifer S.OO-7.00, low cutter and cotter 3.75-4.25, common-medium 4.60-5.50', few good beef cows 6.00, bulls 5.50-4.00. vealers '9.50, common calres 4.00. , ' ' r Sheep 800, market slow, steady to weak, few 'fairly goad spring lsmbs 8.00, common-medium 6.00-7.50, few on feeder accounts 6.25-7.00, ! odd besd - yearlings 5.00-5.50, wethers 3.50, good slaughter ewee 8.00-3.50, common 2.50. Stocks & Bonds (Compiled by Associated Press) ' July 20 STOCK AVEBAOES (Compiled by tba Associated Press)' 80 15 15 60 lndnst. Bails CtiL teeks Today 96.6- 41.5 Pre-, day 96.1 40i3 Month sgo. 89.2 88.7 43.5 69.4 42.9 40.4 52.0 54.0 89.1 53.7 43.4 68.6 64.2 67.6 75.3 62.6 72.8 55.7 Tear ago 80.2 88.9 1987 high -..101.6 49.5 1937 low 87.9 '. 86.1 1936 high 99.8 43.5 1936 low 78.4 S0.2 BOND AVERAGES 80 10 Indast 102.9 102.9 102.7 103.5 104.4 102.2 104.4 101.8 10 10 For'ga 72.9 72.6 72.6 69.6 74.7 70.5 73.0 67.6 Bails . 92.8 5 . 92.8 . 92.5 . 93.6 . 99.0 . 90.9 . 98.2 . 86.9 am. 97.3 97.0 97.3 102.6 102.8 95.8 103.1 99.3 Todsy Prer. day Month ago Tear ago 1937 high 1937 low .. 1936 high 1936 low TOMMY MUST A ,yLE) ; 3' C'COUPSE NOT, VUH DUMB I : ' 1 1'WTE ABURN THAT I Ur-- DODO DO VUH WANT A "T SEVEN SHARP IS S TE ItS J I THERE PAPER. ( ( VUH ) BATTERED EDITOR ON , V VVHEN MASeiES Sfi --C'- SfTnSr SAfwt& QJtCKl J ONE V OUR -J BEEN TAK1N' HBJ j- RINfER FOR, THAT RICH OUNIOR ROCKABILT BECAUSE av.KiBODY FOR "THE TuUMAp , . MILLIONAIRE Z 1 tarring Popeye ""1 assvssasssssjssM S SSSMS 'S2QrH a at Portland j Portland Produce ( PORTLAND, OrevJuly 20 (AP) Batter Prints, A grade, 35c lb. ta parchment wrappers; ia cartons, S6e; E' grade, 34c ta parchment wrappers; 25c ia cartons. Batterfat (Portla-a delivery, baying price) A grade, 34 34e lb.; country stations; A grade, 32-32 He; B grade 1ft cents less; 0 grade. 6 cents less. B grade cream for market Price paid producer. Batterfat Mars SS.2e lb.; milk, 67. 7e lb. ; surplus, 45-9c Pries paid milk board, 67c Jb. Eggs Euying price by wholesalers: Extras, 22e; standard, 19c; medium 19c; medium firsts, 16c; aadergradaa, 14c dox. Cheese Oregon triplets, 17e; Oregon loaf. 18c Brokers will pay He below quotations. if Coantry meats Selling vrleo ta re tailers: Country killed hogs, best butrb er, nnder 160 lbs-,- 15-V5e; vealers, 14c; light and thin, 1013c; heavy, 10. lie; eanner cows. 7-8c; cutters, 15-17r; balls 10-1 le; spring lambs. 14-15; y lear nings ( ) ; awes 5-7e. i Live poultry baying prire by whole salers: Colored kens, 4-5 lbs. 16e Ib.; over 5 lbs . - 14o-, Ih. : , Leghorn- bens under 3 H lbs., 1212e-lb.; ever 3M lbs., 12-i5e lb.; colored sprinss om 3 lbs 18 19e lb.; 2 to 3H lbs.. 18 19e lb.; Leghorn broilers 17c Ib.; roosters, 7-8e lb. Cantaloupes Delano, lumbo. 45a. $2.50 2.75; atandards, 45s, $3.50; jumbo, 36s, 12.50-2.75. Potatoes' Deschutes, $1.75; Klamath No. 1, $2; Yakima. No. 1( ) cental; lo cal, $150 cental. . New crop Yakima White Bose, $1.75 cenul; local, $1.15 1.25. orange box. Oniona New crop, California red. 85e $1;. 50 lb. bag Walla Walla, 75c per 50 lb. bag. ( ' Wool 1937 nomlnsl; Willamette val ley, .medium 35c lb.; coarse and braids, 33e lb.; eastern Oregon, 28-29e lb.: crossbred. 32 33c lb.; medium, 3 1-3 4c lb. sy belling price to retailers: AKsl fa No. 1, $18 ton; oats sbd vetch, $13 -r clover ( ) ton; timothy, eastern Oregon, $20-50 ton; do valley, $16.16.50 ton. Eortland. Hops Nominal, 1936, 26-28c Cascara bark Buying price, 1937 pee!. 5e lb. Sugar Berry or fruit, 100s, 85.30; bales, $5.45; beet $5.20, cental. Domestic floor Selling price, city de livery, 5 to 25 bbl. lots: Family patent. 98a, $7.15-7.55; bakers' bard wheat. $6.35-8.55; bakers' blneatem, $6.05-6.45: blended hard wheat, $6.30-7.50; graham, $5.95-6.85; whole wheat, $6.55-6.75 barrel. Wool in Boston BOSTON Jul- 20 SP.TT s n.r.1 Agr.) Trading was slow in the wool msrket todav. A few hnvar. m.J. oc casional bide but prices were below the iirun iBKins prices. Most bnvera for mill, en if inn m . L-. however, made no effort to take wool.' moot nouses, on ua otner hand, accept ed the situation a. .i.,nml ' jmi.t.... pending developments in the goods mar- While askinar nrice renpmllv rAnl1 not be realtxd. them w.. ini;.t;jin Of a diSDOsition to BhftdA Ollntatinn in . n effort to find outlets for wool. Just Window Shopping With Spooks on Deck! Still Water Runs Deep 1 Like a Fairy Tale BE A IAO- FAWIOJ ZVlRLS U - WAVE AT HIM AND SPEAK TO HIMTHINXIN-T HE'S tOUNj ROCKABILT 1 ,ET MISTAKES HIM ''TOO Salt of the Earth Gardeners' and Ranchers Mart PORTLAND. July 20 -(&)-Trading in fruits and vegetable was moderate on' the Gardeners' and Ranchers' market today with few prlffB changes! noted. Apricots were- up 5c per box following lighter ! receipts due to colder weather la the valley. Sup- nlies of Deaches were light with additional shipments from Cafi fornia expected.. K Melons were in fair demand at unchanged prices. . Cantaloupes were slightly weaker. The toma to market had a stronger under tone aa arrivals became ' lighter. The pea market was firmer as prices held unchanged. ;; Apples Washington Winesapi, extra fancy. 3.00-3.50;. transpsrents, . 4-ie a poonei. Asparagus Oregon. 30 lb. , e rates $2.10 2 35. ' ' Avocados Summer, $3,25 3.75; grecar. $3.50 flat. . .;, Apricots Oregon, 65-75e. lans Local 5-6e per pound. Beets Per sack, Oregon. $1.85. , . Broccoli Crate, $2.2a 2.35. Brussels Sprouts California, one fourth drams, $2.75. Berries Raspberries, 2.25-2.50; ear rants, 2.1042.25; loganberries, 1.85-2.00; blackcaps, 2.25-2.40;. youngberries. 1.50 1.90: . : . . : Bananas Per' banch, 5-5 He. Cabbage One hundred-pound crates, 1.50-1.85. - . . - Cantaloupes California, Imperial Val ley jumbo, 45a, 2.90-3..5-; 36s, 3 00 3.25. Csrrots Oregon. 4e per lb. ; Calif., bnncbed, S 5 60c doa. Cauliflower 1.10-1.23. Celery Oregon, 4a, $3.50-3.75. - Cherries Kings, Lamberts, 6-7e Ib. ; pie. 5-6e Ib. Cora 1.40-1.50 for, 6-7 dozen. Cucumbers Oregon, Wsshington lot house. 65-75e doien. 1 Citrus fruits "Oranges, Valencia. -4.75-6.00; lemons, - California, 8.23 8.35; grapefruit, 2.75-4.75; lemonettes, 3.00 3.25. Eggplant California, lugs. 1.40-1.50; Oregon, 1.50-1.60. Pigs California, 75-S5e flat. Garlic New. 9-10e lb.: Oregon. 7-8e. . Grapes Thompson seedless, 2.50-3.00. Lettuce Oregon, dry, - 3-4 dos., 75e 85c Muthrooma One pound " cartons. 40 45c Onions 50 Ib. sacks. V. 8. Ko. 1. jel low. 85-90e; Wash., 75 85c. Parsley Per dos. bunches, $1.25 1.35 Parsnips Per lug. 33 40c Peaches Nominal . Oregon, flat $1. Peas 4e per pound. Peppers California Bells. 12 15r; Oregon, crite. $1.00-1.10. Plums California, Santa Bosas, 4-bss let crates, 1.50--I.65. Peaches Triumphs, 1.00? Bales, ear ly, 1.00. russets. $2-2.25; Washington russeta. $2.60-2.85; local, $2-2.25; Whfte Rose, V. 8. No. 1. $1.50-1.65. ATU V firatcnrTs MEADOWS I'M HAVINr THE TME OF MY LIFE! fM .)llT . LIMOUSIKIES MAYBE I'M BErlNM1Hr TWEET f . I XTHERE VOO A V TWEET J f VJrtERE ( ARE. RGHT J Sr ( AM 1?? 1 VL THERE! Rhubarb Thirty-pound boxes, 60 76a, Rutabagas Washington, 100 Ib. sacks, $1.50 1 75. Radishes Per dozen bunches, 85e 40e. ' (Spinach Local, 201b.. 75 85c "Turnips Jo. bunches. 60-75e. : Tomatoes Oregon hothouae. 10 16e lb. per pooad; Mexico, $3.50 $5. Bqnaah Oregon, crates. 75-80C " Turnips- Oregon hothouse, 50-60e. Tomstoes Oregon hothouse, 90c-1.00. per Ib. Watermelons California, 514 2e Ib $1.75 2 00 ewt. Prune Men Eyeing Federal Market Flv delegates from Oregon, Washington and Idaho prune growers' organizations met with control board members yesterday at the chamber of commerce building, and appointed a com mittee to draft articles of fed eration under which cooperatives and small groups of the industry may unite as a body to get fed eral purchasing in dried fruits from this area. - Mr. Nashdahl, .a representative of the WPA, spoke on future pur chases of dried fruit this year by the federal: government. He said it was likely that these purchases would be made from growers' or ganizations, if they are united to deal as a group. Nashdahl inti mated that federal buying of dried prunes for relief purposes will continue this year. Another meeting was set for Monday, here. Market Agreement Looms. Cauli flower WASHINGTON. July 20-(JFT- The agricultural adjustment ad ministration said today a market ing agreement to regulate ship ments of cauliflower grown in Oregon will be placed In effect July 23. The agreement, and an order making it effectiye, will regulate shipments by grades and sizes. prorate shipments to outside mar kets . during the growing season and enable the industry to use the surplus removal operations of the federal government as an outlet for surplus production. A control committee, consisting of four members representing co operative handlers, five represent atives of independent handlers, three representatives of northern growers and one representative of growers In the southern district, will administer the program. By CUFF STERRETT By WAIT DISNEY BY BRANDON WALSH By. JDDIY MURPHY aTHAX' rOOD,SlR. AMD BY THE WAV, BIR You . v. FATHER SENT WORDTHAT HE'LL - BE HERE TO SEE TOU EARLY, NEXT j weekI 7-ai By SEGAR GET UP KO fTiET OUT! 1 Ncn 1 mi nil U JLPRE MV BUTLER J M I