PAGE EIGHT Tb OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Wednesday Morning, Blay 18, .1938 Salem Market Quotations (Bijrtnt Prices) T prices below supplied by loral grocer ar radisatir at tha daily market Dot sra sot guaranteed by Tha State man. Applet Extra fey. Delirious $1.33 . ley. Winraapa. SI 05; orchard run Koraea, 7e. Banana, lb. o alalk . -0 ,Uands . . -OS Grapefruit. Calif.. Sunkiit. eratt 2.00 - Date., fresh, lb. ------ - Lrmoni,' erata 5 50 to 6 50 Oraxe.es. erata 2 65 to 3.1a VEOETABLES (Buying meet) (.Asparagus. Or., An. Asparagus. Califs lb. Beets, dos.' - " .90 .07 .50 .OS 03 2 50 1 50 2 ;'.0 Cabbaxe. lb. C'aUt.. crop .. Cauliflower, local. No. Celery, Ctah, rafa String- beans, Calif . 111. .1 t2 1 25 4.50 . 03 .f0 ...... .20 Brmroli. dos. Celery fiearts, do. Lettuce Calif. Onioa sets. lb. - Oruns. So. 1. rwt. Boil inc. 10 lb. No. 1 Green onions, dua. RjH i,h.t. doa. . .25 .: .25 .15 Peppers. greea. Calif. 12 to Parsley ; Parsnips, lb. Green peas. lb. - . i ' New potatoes. ft potatoes, looal. So. 1, cwt. No 2. cwt. bag " - Rhubarb, lb. . - ttiitabagas, lb. Spinach, local. . Strawberries, Calif. Hubbard s-juath. lb. ... r Turnips, do. ... .40 '-.02 . 07 2.50 .85 .50 .02 .01 .50 " 1.10 .01 .35 NUTS Walnuts. 1937. lb. filberts. 1927 crop, ll. .10 to .12 to .16 .15 HOPS (Baying Price) . . Cluster, nomiisl. 137, lb. 10 to .12 Fufgles, top nominal- - WOOI. AS MOHAIB (Baying Price) , Wool." medium; lb. . Coarse and tin, lb. liobair. lb. ; . rnn Aim POnLTET (Buying Price of Andresens) t .arc extras .19 .19 .17 .16 .15 .12 .10 .15 .05 .05 Median extras . ... Largo atandards --. Heaey hens. lb. Colored median, lb. Vh:te 1-enhorns. lb.' No. 1 White I.erhoins. lb.. No. 2 Whito Leghorn fryt Stags, lb. Old rooster, ib Colored springs .17 uipmv ruPAMt'RV Hurine Prices' Bwtierfat. A grade .24 4 Butterfat, B g-ada - .23 Stocks & Bonds May 17 STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by Th Associated Press . so 15 15 60 Indus. Rails Otil. Stocks 57.S 14.7 30.6 40.1 Toda Pre- dsy 7.S 14. Month ago. 57.9 13.9 Year ago 89.7 44.8 1638 high 68.2 21.6 1938 low 48.2 12.1 30.3 28.7 41.4 34.9' 24.9 54.0 31.6 39.8 39.4 66.3 47.9 33.7 75.3 41.7 137 nigh ..I01.O 1937 low . 57.7 19.0 BOND AVERAGES 20 10 10 - 10 Forgo 62.9 62.8 62.1 . 71.0 67.0 l.S 74.7 - 64.2 Rails Indus 55.6 97.1 66.0 97.0 Ctil 90.8 91.0 88.3 97.8 92.2 85.8 102.8 90.3 Today Pre-, day Month ago V . 51.6 93.0 70.5 49.7 99.0 95.7 102.8 98.0 93.0 104.4 95.5 j ear go . 1938 high .. 1938 low 1937 high 1937 low 70.3 LOVE tt 1 nvn TTI ..M .k- t, . uuia.saiu. suq uau vwu ua,,ug m. xtaa enjoyea xvormanax ' tremen dously and had done so much good work there that Felix Enwright was arranging a one-man Show for her when she. returned, to New York ' She" said .'she was supposed to be working .rjgt now on a. portrait' of i Henry Hargrove,' one of the torn J missions Barry had arranged for ; her, but he was in a nursing home I with a bad case of hives, caused by 'eating strawberries. She said,-"It seems he is allergic to strawberries rand be went to a dinner party the other night and ate some by mis-take.- . :. j Alee said he didn't see how any one, even an English actor, could eat strawberries by mistake . . . what did he think they were, radishes? ' And what in heck was allergic ? Gina said she hadn't the faintest . .v.. " .. a,www .,1V .Man' -. berries for, maybe they were in a mousse or something, and that al lergic meant you had a peculiar sensitiveness to certain foods or things. She said, "Some people can't be around cats or feathers without breaking out in a rash or starting to sneeze. It's been goicg on for jrears but they've only just namedajt, I believe." . The important thing, she went on to point out, was that because Har- she was in London with time on her hands. That had been depressing until she received his radio - now it was lovely. - She smiled at him and said, not - 2- t 1 . . quite as cainuy as sne meant to, "I've missed you more than I ean say, and I haven't been so excited In years as I was when I got your mei- "l know. All the way from South- atnntnn. I r vnitrfanito,- If wn would be at Victoria, and I should have been horribly let dowa if you hadn't been." Suddenly he realized that this was true . . that all the way to London he had been counting on her being there . . that bad she not been there, he would have, been unutter- aoiy disappointed. ? He reached for her band and held it closely in bis Through the soft suede of her glove he could feel the pulse beat in the tips of her fingers. He thought, "She . has the most flexible, expressive hands of any woman I have ever known . they were the first thing about her that . I fell in love with, they are the one thing about her that I shall always ' Then he thought, "That Is an odd . way to think about it . . as if pres ently I was not going to be seeing ranch of her ... and I am, of course. a Ti :r- T v -it . , , : f Gina. : " - He turned and looked at her, and . she smiled at him happily, and still holding her hand, talking lightly of a do-ea dLSerest and unimportant things, they rode the rest of the way to his hoteL Zt was only when he left her and went inside to arrange about his room that a sudden, cold little feel ing, or desolation setued on uina, wiping out all that warm glow she had felt at seeing him again, Sitting alone, in an unhealed Eng lish taxicabf aha remembered sud Grade B raw 4 per cent milk. Salem basic pool price $2.06 per hundred. Surplus s 1.08. ; Co-op Grade A butterfat price, FCHJ Salem, 24 H. (Uifk .based en .semimonthly butterfat average -. Distributor price, 2.34. '"-A grade butterfat De livercd. 21;i U grade C Rrade 18.. A grade print, 28c; U grade, 27c. - r ; Co'ored htns. ander 4',i Ibi. .15 Colored bens, over 4 l loa, .15 Leghorn htns. light j . .08 leghorn bees, heavy)-. .11 Colored fryers .. .. .16 Lrgliora -broilers .13 Rccsters : .. . ' .05 Rcjerts market aln Staga . i . 06 No 2 crradea. 5 cents less. : Large special . Largo extras 5tedinm extraa .... ... .. Lage standard . . Medium standaids -f-.,...,. . Undergrade . i Pullete . i i- . Dirty - extras"' ... .. . .21 .19 J7 .17 .15 .13 .IS .17 LIVESTOCK (Based oa conditions and sales reported np to 4 p. m.) Spring lambs 1 7.00 Lambs i ; 5.00 Yearlings i 4.00 Ewea i ...2.00 to 2.75 Hok. top, 150 210 lbs 8.00 130-150 lbs. 7.25 to 7.75 210 300 lbs. 4 7.00 to 7.50 Sows 4. 6.00 Dairy type cows i....4.00 to 5.00 Bee! eows i. 5.00 to 6.00 Bulls . 5 00 to 6.00 Heifers 4 7.00 Top veal 7.50 Dressed veaL lb. . j . .11, GRAIN. Hay AND SEEDS Wheat, white, bu. 4 -Ti Wheat, western red, bo. .T5 Barley, brewing, ton1 nominal Barley, feed, ton 25 00 Oata. gray, to.i , - 2rt.00 Oata. white, ton 90 Alfalfa, valley, ton t. 16 00 Oat and vetch hay. ton - 12 00 Clover hay, top U. 12.00 Alaiko clover seed, , fb. .24 Red clover seed. lb., top .25 , -" : r Selling Picks up; Some Stocks Rally NEW YORtf.jMay 17 - (JP) -Selling picked up In today's stock market and, while buying sup port was timid, leading Issues managed to emerge from a slug gish session with recoveries of fractions to a point or so. Early demand for aircrafts was a mildly bolstering influence, and, toward the latter part of the proceedings, selected steels,' util ities,: mail orders, coppers and specialties edged forward. .Although the; Associated Press average of 60 stocks was up .3 of a point at 40.1, moderate de clines were plentiful at the close. The activity picked up a trifle?- but it was still insufficient to warm up the ticker tape. Trans fers amounted to 416,060 shares against 359,920 the day before. I DARE By ALLEN E CUKLISS denly that nothing was any differ ent, in the. slightest, degree,, from what it bad been when, she had left New. York four months- ago.' Only this morning-, the London Times had carried a picture of Alee and an an nouncement of his engagement, to "Caroline Hoyt, ayoung American actress." . . " .'. .. . ' It had been an old picture of Alec, one taken at least five years ago when he had had his first London success with a comedy called THIS sice of the moon. He had. cabled her to join him at once, saying "We might even get married over here . . it's a swell town to do anything in. . .. ." ' i ' ' . . But she had been In Washington painting the very beautiful wife of a foreign minister and had cabled back that, much as she would like to join him, to say nothing about marrying him, she couldn't at the moment get away to do either. It was all very offhand and light- hearted and quite in the accepted modern manner . . and it was only now, five years later, that it seemed pathetic and tragic to think that neither one of them had really wanted to stop long enough to do anything about the other. And now, because they hadn't wanted to, Alee was marrying Caro line Hoyt, a young American ac tress, and she was going to paint toe portrait or Henry Hargrove, a young English actor. That is, when Henry recovered sufficiently- from having inadvertently eaten straw berries. : J s - In the meantime, she and Alec found themselves in London to gether So what ? So nothing, except that presently they would go along tocher flat 'and have tea, or cocktails, if Alee pre ferred cocktails . . . and she had been a fool to think that that brief ex citement they had both experienced at being together again meant any thing It didn't. Or rather, it didn't to Alee, and very soon now. in an other hour or so, it wouldn't to her. Alee came back and got in beside I her. "Well, that s taken care of . . j now where is this fiat of yours ? ' She gave him the address - and. looking at him, knew that not soon, not in another, hour or so, or next week, or next, or any other as long as she should live, would being with AJec not mean anything to her. But she also knew that if they were to continue with any kind of a decent relationship, she must never let him guess this, so she said now, with nothing more important than friendliness in her voice, "It's not far from here; it's right around the corner, really. And you're sure to like it. It has a bow window and a rather terrible red carpet, but the chimney draws beautifully which, as yon know, in England is much more important." Alec liked it. He liked it that first afternoon and he liked it all the numerous other afternoons that he went there during the next three weeks. To say -nothing about the evenings,-Not that they spent -all their evenings in the fiat on Half Moon Street. -They didnt. But they in variabl y spent them together. They dined at large hotels . on noisy squares and at small restaurants on quiet side strct-ta that Alee had dis covered on previous visits to Lon don. He introduced her to his Eng Wheat Drops Into .Tailspin Bumper Yield Prospects Do Much to Lower Value on Chicago Mart CHICAGO, May 17-)-Eclips-ing again and again four-year bottom price records, wheat tum bled 1 cents a bushel here to day and 2 cents at .Winnipeg. Increased likelihood of bump er yields both in the United States and Canada did much to pull values down. Widespread beneficial rains fell, southwest and northwest alike, and thfc fore cast indicated further heavy downpours. , ! ? r : . Demand Abroad Better Lower quotations brought some enlargement of tsport dosnand. Late estimates were that Europe purchased 700,000 bushels today from North America, nd that 265,000 bushels of Kansas and Oklahoma wheat would be loaded out of Houston this week, the first export shipment from Hus ton in six years. f (At ; the close, , Chicago wheat futures were cents lower compared with yesterday's fin ish, May 78-. July 75!i-76; corn si-2 down. May F7H-U: July 58-; oats off to up; rye unchanged to 1 M de cline, and provisions varying from 5 cents setback is 10 cents ad vance. ? Range Conditions Best Since 1931 PORTLAND. May 17-(rF)-Western range conditions pro vided stockmen with the most favorable outlook &ince 1931 the federal bureau of economics re ported in its monthly survey to day. t : The conditions in Oregon: I Willamette valley Frequent April rains resulted In abundant grass. Cattle are in good condi tion with losses liss than average and the lamb crop percentage is higher than a year ago. Thfi wool demand was very slow.' C o lu m b i a river Warmer weather and frequent rains have provided good griss growth. Big gains in weight of cattle ex pected. Soil moisture conditions best in several years. Howell Growers Meet Thursday NORTH HOWELL All straw berry growers in the North How ell pool are urged to.be present at a special meeting at the grange hall here Thursday ; night at 8 o'clock. A definite price agree ment is the objective of the meet ing. , : - ' NOT" lish friends and they went together to smart dinner parties . in - St. James's and to coektail parties ia small, de luxe flats in Fail Mall. -. Gina. was accented eacerlv every where ; not . only, because she was . Alec's, friend but on her own - ac count. . She Was ', surprised, and quietly pleased; to find that theso peonie were as interested and im pressed "with her portrait painting as they were with Alec's plays. She knew that in a little while she would tire of the whole thing, be cause - people en : masse depressed and enervated her, but for the time being she was having . fun. She bought more, clothes, particularly . evening things, than she had had in years, and spent both time and money on her hair and skin, with the result that during this period she' was lovelier looking than she had' been any time since those first years in New York. And If in the ten or twelve years since then her face had inevitably lost most of its youthful ardor and eagerness, it had gained a certain sharp and sensitive beauty that comes only with, having lived fully and intelligently. Alec, looking at her across a the atre box or a dinner table, during this time, found himself wondering again and again how she had man aged to get through the last four or five years, or that time since they had no longer made any claims whatever on each other, without having become involved in some sort of love affair. Men, he was sure, must have made love to her. Must have wanted to marry her. There were even one or two right here in London who he was certain were at the moment acutely interested in her. And there was Barry Bedard in New York. . . . One night when they had returned fairly early from a small but im portant dinner party to her flat in Half Moon Street and found a cable announcing Barry's arrival within the next few days, Alec said to her, "Does that by any chance mean any thing more than it says, Gina?" . The cable had said merely that he was sailing on a certain date, would be stopping at Alec's hotel, and would get in touch with her imme diately upon his arrival. Gina walked over. to the smau fireplace, poked np a sleepy fire, straightened, and said. "Why. no. Alec. What else could it mean ?" - Quite a few things . . . that he was crossing primarily, to see yon that you had arranged it be tween you weeks ago. ..." Gina laughed and sat down on a small aof a that was drawn up in front of the' fire and put her feet, in their narrow . chartreuse satin slippers,, up on the brass fender. Barry always comes to London about this time each year and if yon call writing me a few weeks asro that be would probably be here when I was, arranging anything, then we did.". . . .. ... . - "Then there is nothing between you?" ' ' . . . . . . . ; "Nothing except, what there has always been. A great deal of grati tude and affection on my part, and obviously friendly interest on his." "Are yon sure there is nothing more than that? On his part 1 mean!" (To he continued) USt.fcf Quotations i nOSUCS EXCHARQB P0RTLAXO, Ore., May 17 (AP) Produce ozehanft: Batter Extras. 35; larco standarda. 24: prime firata, 24; first a. 23; bat ttrfat. 25 25 Vs. EfKS Larfo extras, 20e; larje stand ards. 19c; medium extras, 19e; medium standards. 18c. Cheese Triplets, 13e; loaf. 13. Portland Grain . PORTLAND, Ore- May 17 (AP) Grain: Wheat Open High. Low Close May 78H 73 78 July . 73 .73 73 73 Sept. 73 73 73 73 Cash Grain: Oata, No. 2-38 lb.' white 26.00; No. 2-88 lb. gray 26.00. Barley, No. 2 45 lb. BW 28.00. Cora. No. 2-EY Ship. 28.75. - Cash Wheat (bid): Soft whit and western white 77; western red 76. . Hard red winter ordinary 75; 11 per cent 75; 12 per cent 79; 13 per cent 83; 14 per cent 87.- . Hard red spring ordinary 74 ; 11 per eent 75; 12 per cent 79; 13 per cent 83; 14 per cent 87. Hard white-Baart ordinary 76; 11 per cent 86; 12 per cent 77; 13 per cent 79&; 14 per cent 81. Today's ear receipt: Wheat 21; bar ley 1; floor 1; corn 4; millfeed 3, Portland Livestock PORTLAND, Ore., May 17 (AP) (USDA Hogs: Receipts 300, market active 15 higher, good-choice 165 215 lb. driveins 8.50-60, few select lots 8.75, carload lota aalable 8.75 and above, 230 60 lb. 8.00, 270 370 lb. 7.00-75, light lighta 8.00, parking sows 5.85-6.25, feed er pigs salable 7.75-8.25. Cattle: Receipts 50, calves 25, mar ket active, steady to strong, few common medium steers 6.50-8.00, good fed steers salable 25 9.00. common heifers 5.75 6.25, medium-good heifers 7.00-8.50. low cutter and cutter cows 3.75-4.75, com-men-medium 5.00-6.00, good beef eows 6.23-50. yonng cows eligible 7.00, bulls 5.50-6.50, choice vealers 8.00-50, medium 6.50-7.60. " , - Sheep: Receipts 250, market alow, spring lambs ' weak to 25 lower, good 72 89 lb. spring lamba and few medium gcod 7.50. old crop lambs scarce, old kinds aalable 6.00-25. few medium-good 160 lb. slaughter ewea 2.75, good light ewes eligible 3.25. Portland Produce j PORTLAND, Ore.. May 17 (AP) Countr- meats Selling price to re tailers: Country killed hogs, best butcher under 160 lbs.. 10 10e lb.; vealers. 12e lb.; light and thin, 9 lie lb.; heavy, lOe lb.; bulla, 10c lb.; canner revs. 8 9c lb. ; cutter eows. 9 10c lb.; spring lambs, 1617c lb.; old lambs, 13 14c lb.; ewes 4-7c , : Live Poultry Buying broilers 1 to 1 lbs., 2 lbs.. 14-15e lb.; price: Leghorn 17-18e lb.: colored springs. 2 te 3 lbs.. 16-17e lb. r over 3 lbs.. 17-lSe lb.;. Leghorn hens. 13 14 e lb.; colored hens to 5 lbs., 18 20c lb.; over 5 lbs., 17-lSe lb.; No. 2 grade, 2e lb. less. Turkeys Buying price, breeder hens. 17-18e lb.; selling price, 22c; toms 17-18e lb. ' ; Hops Nominal, 1937, ll-13e lb. Mohair Nominal, 1938. 15 17c lb. i Sugar Berry or fro its, 100'. $5.05; bales. $5 20; beet. 94.95. . . Cascara bark Buying price. 1933 pell. 5-5e lb, . Domestic flour Selling price, city de livery, 1 to 25 bbl. lots: Family patent, 49a, 5.75 6.35; bakers' hard wheat.. net. 5.15-6.85 bakera' bluestem, 4.60-4.95; blended hard wheat 4.75-5.15 ; aoft white flours, - 4.55-4.65; graham- 49s, 4.75 who! wheat.' 49s. 6.35 bbl. ' i Onlons--Dry, No- 1. $3.25-3.50. old erop Oregon; Texas Bermudas $1.85 50 lbs. Wool 1938 nominal: Willamette val ley medium, 18e lb.: coarse and braida. 1617c lb. ; eastern Oregon, 1617c lb. Bay Selling price to .retailers: Al falfa.' Ko. 1. $18 18 50 ton; oat vetrh, 914 ton; clover, 913 ton; timothy. eaU era Oregon. ( ) toa; do valley, $15 ton Portland. -- TurVeys Buying price: Hens, 24e lb.; No. 1 toms. 22e lb. Selling price: Voms S4e IV: bens 26c lb - Potatoes Yakima Gems, 2s. 70c; toeat, 65e rental; central .Oregon,' $1,15 1.25 cental; new Texas. $1.00. . MICKEY MOUSE 7. HVW-HAW-r4AVt OtS.Ai: i IS A. BETTER NK3KTS J " . XJBGeERED ON', J :$;a&vv- ... I LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY HOMESt FRETJOlE S'wtAM-MDU CRO.9 MV HEART AW CAUTT FOOL MC.! HOPE TO Die IF MY Y'SL- L AM8S ARE UTTIE UAAABOVrrr0lJRjaTCKlUMB A HURDLE 3UST LIKE AfVfFn "TO 90 ,T TOOTS AND CASPER HiniBLE THEATRE SO LONZr,PAVl I'M 0snsiA II THERE kl -9 H aLP-iSJ 1 VOU MEAN TO T hE KNOCKED OOT "TAXI IS 1 1 MISS VOU A LOT, HE ,OES! X.O ,Yi' AV THAT SISSY- I ALL. FIVE OP 'CM, WA1TIN AND F' TINY, AND SMALL. M( COLONEU tU--.T f LOOKIN KID VOU I CASPER M AVBE TOECAtIh TJtyE UTvw2V:'' BLrTfe 'M.H0OFER!J HAD HERE LICKED) HE DONE THEM TRAirojowjgSv fz m 7ANPS, JLA FAVOR C-r IMS. Zmt tmtmm lull III, be W-M nk mmrm - 1 18 at Portland Wool in Boston BOSTON. May 17 (AP) (USDA) Pleecee offered from the middle west through Boston houses showed a weaken ing tendency today. County paeked mixed lota of three eighths and quarter blood grades of bright fleece wools were being offered at 24 to 24 eenta in the grease delivered east. ' A little demand waa be ing received but there were few buyers ipterestd at th prices askd. Some mills were bidding only 24 cents in the grease; delivered east, for graded combing, quar tet blood offered from the middle went. Asking prices on spot graded bright fleece wools ia Boston were unchanged but the few bids receivejl were mostly below the prices offered last wek. Gardeners' and Ranchers' Mart PORTLAND, Ore.. May 17 (AP) (USDA) Produce changes: Apples Oregon Newtown s, extra fey, $1.35-1.50, fancy $1.15-1.25; Washing ton Delirious, extra fancy, $1.65-1.75; Romes, extra fancy, large $1.25-1.50, fey 90c $1.00. Artichokes California, 4-6 doien, $2.50-2.75. - Asparagus Oregoa IrrSgon, Hermis ton, 12 pound crates, green loose V. S. No. 1, 5 -6c, No. 2, 4-5e . per pound. Hood River crates; -bunched 24-pound U. S. No. 1, $1.75-1,85; 30 pound sacks. $1.80-2.00; Washington, green loose, 12 and 24 pound V S. No.; 1, 5 -tie per pound; No. 2, 4-5c. Beans Florida, 8-lle lb. - Cauliflower Caiif., No. 1, 1.75-1.85. Cabbage California, ball bead, $2.35 2 50 per crate; unlidded. $1.75 2.00; lo cal crates 90e. Celery California hearts, $1.33 1 40 per dozen; heart material, '$1.50-1.75; Ctah type, $2.00-2.25; few best $2.50; white. $2.25-2.50; small low as $1.50. Grapefruit 48-100, Ariiona, . fancy, $1.65 2.00; choice, $1.60-1.80; Texas-, marsh seedless, -$3.25-3.50; Florida, $3.75-4.00. Lettuce The Dalles,' dry packs, 3 dox., $2.50-3.00 local. $1 50-1.75; Washing ton. Mary hill, 3 doxen $2.25; California, Salinaa iced, 5 dozen, 3.50-4.00; 6 dom., $3 25-3.50; Stockton, iced, 5 dozen, $3 3.25; dry. 4s, $2.50-2 J5. - " Lemons Fancy, all sizes. $5.00-5.25; choice grades 50c to $1.00 less. Onions Oregon yellows, U. S. Xo. 1, 50-pound sacks medium to large, $1.50 1.75; No. 2. 50-pound sacks. $1.00-1.40; onion sets, yellow, 2-3e per pound; Tex as, white wax, $1.75-1.85; California, white wax, $1.25-1.50 . per 50 pound sack. , t Oranges California ' navels, fancy, all aises. $3.25-3.60; choice, Valenciaa, fey., $2.40-2.85; choice 25e less. Peaa California Pismo 50-pound ell., No. 1, $2.40-2.50; No. 3. $1.85-2.00; crates $2.75-3. Pineapple Cuba, 25s, $4.65-4.75. 'Potatoes Oregon, local sacked per hundredweight, long whites and Russets, U. 8. No. 1, 80-90e 50-pound sacks; U. 8. No. 2. 22 -.7-; Deschutes and Yaki ma, sacked per hundredweight. Russets, U. 8. No. 1 $1.15-1.25; 25-pound sscks, 30 85c: 50-pound sacks, TJ. S. No. 2, 35 40c. ' New stock, California, 100-pound sacks. White Rose. U, S. No. 1. $1.75 1.85; TJ. 8. No. 2. $1.50-1.60. Rhubarb Apple boxes. 50-55e; bulk, 1-ltte. Sweet potatoes-rCalifornla, 50-pound crates, 2.35-2.50; Louisiana -yams, $2.23 2.50. ' Spinach Oregon, best 60-65e per -'cranio box. -. Squash Banana. 2c; California. Zne chini. $2.25-2.50 per lug. 10-lle per- !b. Strawberries Florin and Fresno, best $1.15-1.25 per 12-baaket crates, poorer la as 90& : - ' Tomatoes Mexie. $2.50-2.75; T paeked $9.00-8.25; Texas, is is $2.35 2.50: California. Imperial era tea 6x7, $1.63-1.75; Indio, $1.80-1.85. Bunched vegetables Oregon per doa, ea bunches: Beets 25-30e; green onions 17-20e; narsley 25e;-Tadshe-C5-27c: lecke 30-35. California:. Beets $2.50-3. 60-CSe dozen; carrots $3-3.25 rrate 45 50c dozen; Texas beets 3 dox. crates, $1.50-1.60. . - ! . . - - . . Root vegetables Sacked, earrota $1 L.25. lugs 50 60c; beeU 1.15-1.25; lugs 35-50e; rutabagas $1.15-1.50 per hun dredweight; lugs 40 60e; turnips $1-1.25' h? .. NOT oiuv do: FtX-,-TlNOS SO KETCX ME A WWA.UE;- BUT I rVLSO GlT3 SA.RDtNE VKTI NOW DOJT VOL! AAOVC.FREDOtE, OR MAVBC WOOLLY WILL NOW 6ET SCARED AN" WOMT OUMP CAOE.VtXJ KNOW, TO HET5 OUST LEARM' Starrins Popeyc wc A BEADY TO MAKE THE TOW ROPE FAST OKTA 7 1 I I Season To Open June 1 Gooseberries,! Strawberries Coming Close Together 1 Tliis Spring Indications are that Salem can neries will swing .nto action gen erally on the 1-9 3 8 operations with gooseberries about June 1, and that strawberries will follow In from three io five days. Reid Murdoch and . company have been working: intermittently -for several weeks on their ftpara gus pack, the inly one .t this locality, and will be reviving asparagus for another month. The grass is exceptionally fine this season, and th4 pack will run equal to or slightly larger than the best so far from their acreage- I Although canhers hare made no statements, pensral i uainess conditions point to a small?, pack along most line4 this year. Buy ing has been unusually slow in opening up and jt is evident that canners will no"t outbid ? a c b other on the befry crops a was the case last yeir. Final settle ment of prices oi the North How ell berry poof i$ expected to be made Thursday fniRht at a spe cial meeting at j? the grange ha'l there. Libby Mr Neil has agreed to take the pool. A receiving Station for the North Howell and Harel Green districts will be set up on the Harry Bennet parm at L&bish Center. i .- . The Woodbur cannery !s re ported to be Contracting the Haxel Green str4berries, though no price has been announced, and is also reported to be fur nished plants for larger acreages there. - II- t ' - Earmark jFund for Northwest Lands WASHINGTON. May i7-(Jpy-The agriculture department today allocated $84,33 for the acqui sition of additional area for four land utilization projects la Ore gon, Washington and Idaho. The authorizations included $33,476 for thji central Oregon project in Jefferson county and $10,000 for the western Oregon project - in Tillamook, Lane, Lin coln and i Yamhill counties. Ore gon. . : - - The department estimated the additional fundi would permit the purchase j! of between 7060 end 8000 acres more for the central Oregon and between 1000 and 1500 acres fori the western Oregon;- !:' f 1 fr Son to Scotts FAIRVlEW-f-Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wood are . the!, parents of a - son 'born May 12 at the Manning hos pital in McMinhTille. He has been named Wallace Wendell.. This Is their first child. ' , rrr tmndredweirht, S0-35e lug; parsnips 0-65fl log., sacks; Sl.35-1.50; horsaxadisb root -25e per pouad. A Monk?y-Wrench in the Works ' : 1 I . .. " - . I . I'LL. ME ATI BE.EN Cannery VI I 1 Y. Wbll? WHAT'S. 1.1; . v. i f .PtXKTV . ,omb-.-.- I : ; GedRichlQuick-Freddie By BRANDON WALSH 1 AWOurr 5TALLr-. YOU I SAID HE COULD DO XT . .Aase a eu f r . jM ,i-a-. w VOCTRE! KpYJ TRAIM HlaA MAKE 5TABTIW JP13 AUBIS- - fsr; A Timely Lesson Watch Your Step, Wimpy J . , . -I; : ! 'i " MEt2V? COMES'A ROPEJ, -1 haay? . . I J-r-r-i rrTTTST-&&&j I a. Closing ' NEW YORK. May Air Reduc ' Al Chem & i)ye..l50 v Allied Stores.... "6U Am Can... $H Am & For Pow.. 3 "4 Am Pow & Lt.., 5 Am Rad & St.... 12 Am Roll Mills.. 16 U Am Smelt & Rf- 37 A T & T. 1304 Am Tob B : 70 Am Wat Wks Anaconda 27 Armour III Atchison 284 Bait & Ohio , BT Barnsdall .....13 Vs Bendix Avia.. . 11 ? Beth Steel 4 6 Boeing .. . 2SH Budd Mfg 44 CaUf Pack .. Callahan Z-L 1 Calumet Hec , 6 Canadian Pac : 5 Case (JI) ....... 76 Vt Caterpil Trac 42 H Celanese . 13 Certainteed 6U Ches & Ohio 2C Chrysler ... 43 Col Gas & Elec. 6 Coml Solr 7 H Comwlth & Sou 1 Con Edis .. 24 17 - (A,) - Consol Oil .Corn Prod Curt Wright Douglas Du Pont . Elec Auto Lt.-. Elec Pow & Lt.. Erie RR 1..... Gen Elec - ' Gen "Foods -Gen Mot I Goodyear ..Tires.. Gr No Ry Pf- -. Hudson Mot.. Ill Cent Insp Copper. Int llarvest ...... Int Nick Can...... Int Pap & P Pf-. I T & T... Johns Many Kennecott .. Lib O Ford : Llg Myers B...... Loew's Monty Ward Nash Kelvinator Nat Bisc . Nat Distil ... Nat Pow & Lt...- NY Cent North Am Nor Pac .... Packard. JC Penney Messages Filmed For old Friends HAYESVILLE Message4 from relatives were ' delivered in an unique way Saturday when Mr and Mrs. W. Cook and ft-inilr from Jersey City. N. J.. visited Mrs. Cook's girlhood schoo mate. Mrs. Lyle Carrow. Before leaving New Jersey the Cooks took, moving pictu-es of relatives of the Carrow family, and showed them here; then took moving pictures of the Oregon family to take back to Nw Jer sey. r -k " ;" - Mr. and Mrs. Hulbert Camp heli and daughter. Marie, were also guests at: the Carrow home. Hulbert was a shipmate oi iyiea during the World war, and the two made numerous trips reross the ocean .on the I evlathlan. Woman in Hospital as Result Auto Accident SILVERTON Mrs. Frank Dur schmidt Is at the Sllverton hos pital following an accident In which she figured early Sunday morning near Mt. Angel. Three others - were riding in the car with her and three were in the colliding car. None of the others was reported -injred. Reviving C. E. Unit UNIONVALE: Miss Evelyn Magness delightfully entertained 18 young people at, the home of her mother Friday night in the hope of reviving Interest suffi cient to reorganize the Unionvale Christian Endeavor society which has grown inactive during the last few months. . : "i ,sA ' ' I SON? WRONG a .1 I- r, Jl RATS. CQIPPiED . 7 i 60SHe DiD IT I ALWAV5 SAID THAT a r w I Aiklf I AaiD 1 AAlr rw - . - . l-,aVrT- S-vW a-r I'LL TEACH HIM LOTS SUCH.' IT MA"V THE trou STUFF- HAVE THEIR STOP KICKIKl THOSE Li PEARLS IKl'A X. r yr-v 1 m r- r- s-- i, v', J , . - ' ' ... rvlf; Quotations Today,s closing prices; 8 Penn RB 64 Phillips rei. 5 pressed Stl Car 45 PubSer-NJ Aircraft 101. Pullman 16 Radio 10 Rem Rand IK ReD Stl - 3 S Sears Roe Shell Union So Cal Ed....--.-. 30 18 U Sou Pac ... 16 U Stan Brands ' 6 St Oil Cal. 8 St Oil NJ 11 Studebaker 55 Sup Oil ........ T" A 6. Texas Corp 29 TImken Det Aile 8 Transamerica 7 8 Union Carb .. '..-. 33 Union Pc ...... 29 t'nlt Airlines...... 90 Unit Aircraft 42 Unit Corp 32 Unit Gas Imp.... 7 US Rubber 22 US Steel 20 Walworth 7 West Union ...... 13 White Motor 20 Woolworth Shi CURB 3 Cities Serr New.. 4 Elec Bond & Sh 10 8 Winners Listed In Scout Camp STAYTON At the annual Boy Scout camporee of the Cascade area which waa neld in the Stay- I ton city: park the following won meuais in ine puu t"ic". -Building, Delbert Henderson, troop No. -4, Salem; knot tying, Harold Blake y. troop No. 14, Deaf school, Salem; signsling, troop No. 8, Salem, Harold Smith, captain; -cooking. Bill Thoi. pson. Sea Scouts, No. 12. Salem; first aid. troop No." 21, Albany. Ray TalbertfcJ captain; fire produced by flint and steel. Harold Smith, troop No. 2, Salem. The contestants did not know what they were to do unl!I the time of the contest. ' Informal Tea Thursday To Honor Recent Bride TALBOT Mrs. Henry Tur nidge la giving an Informal tea at her' home Thursday afternoon between 2 and 5 o'clock honor ing Mrs. Len Edwards, a recent bride and a new resident pf this community. Anyone interested Is invited to- attend. ' ' Three Families Move, Result of Exchange! SILVERTON Mr.- and Mrs. Norman.Kolln and the Q. J. Wot gamott and G. W. Imbaden fami lies .have exchanged - residences. The Imbaden are now, on High street, the Wolgamott on Adams streets and the Kollns will go to Corvallis where Kolln will study architecture at the State college. By WALT DISNEY .PLEKTV! S- Jl RATS. CQIPPLEO -ml'W X. IM a- a. irtv .r I r i WOOLLY 15 TOO UTTIE TO GO A TRAVEL IM' WITH A CIRCUS MAYBE HE COULDHT LEAPfsi AMY HARD TRICKS THEM THEV MIGHT TREAT HIM MEAM-. BESIDES, HE ISMTMV LAMB- WHOEVER REALLY HlMl WILL FIWDOUT WHERE HE 13 AM THEN. Or COURSE, THEY'LL. TAKE ma mume. id Mis FOLKS An HE. WON'T BE AM ORPI4AMJ aartirw I . it By JIMMY MURPHY Tiraru VES.ArJD LV rrr on YOU'LL, BE "THEIR CELL MATE IF YOU DONT STOF WEIiHINZ, INI BEFORE THEV , TO LEARN LESSON - t r BEHIND PRISON WALLS THUMB LATER WITH THE FOODS ON ! YOU SELU BY THE POUND ! By SEGAR