PAGE FOURTEEN The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregoii, Friday Morning:, July 29, 193V Salem Market Quotations rOTTS ' V (Buying rrless) (TV prirsa txlo applied by kwml gi r ar ta.icatiYs ( tba daily market yriraa paid ta (roKl by Salem bwjrars but ara not gasraatard by Tha Stateamaa. Applcs Extra fancy Delicious 1.35; Wissaapa f 1.50, art bard rua Koawra. !. ll aritis ApHcata. IS Ik. Yakima. tiMiiv lb. a talk. - lianas ; , Catale-pt , Caamsa. lb-Currant LogaaaerrUs. erat ' - - .-- Urapafrn't. Calif., Sua si at, crate Dates, fresh. IW . Lrmaas, erat ... Oranges, crate 2 i ta oaackariea. . crate .. Bnye-a hemes, era la - . , .. ftepbrTiea crate - . - VEOBTAB1X . (Bu-iaf rrtcss) eels, -oa. , , .- , - - Ca -. b .45 .0 .061 2.25 .03 1.50 1.00 " 2.00 .14 5a .15 1.0O 1.25 1.50 Calif . Bew crop . , ,. Carrota, focal, doa. .. ,. aoliflooer. Seattle clerr. Utah, true . Ulnar Keens. Calif- lb.. Celery H carta, doa. . Leiiiu-e, teeal Onion. No. 1. cat. ... ttoiliar. 1 lh, Oreea anions, dor. Kadraaea, daa. . fepptre. freea, Calif- . I'aratey . Or-ea Peat. lb. .13 ta New Potatoes. Itcot. wt.... Potato, local No. 1, e-t. Zaeckiat sqasth, fit .. Turalpa. dix. - 1H7. lb. 10 Wain lit a. rilberta. Clusters, lat(la. ltUZ crap. lb. Hon (Baylaf Frica) aemiaat. 1.37. Ib.10 ta top . nominal WOOL ASD MQlUUm (Bo-taf Fries) . WmI, Dcdiam, , lb. . . .' Caaraa, lb. - Lamb, lb. Mohair, lb. EOG3 AMD POULT KT (Ba-ta Price ef Aa-reaeaa) Larfa axtraa Ms-jam eitraa . , , , Larra ataadarda . , , Mrdiam ataadarda ., , Pallet Coloaed fry Colore, ane-iaan, la. . bite Leg-eras, lb . Ne. Wbito Leg bom a. fry a Wbita Lefboms, lb., Ka. UeaTy hens, lb. . Roosters . - uvriTocx Baaad mm eoaeUUeaa and saJss ,S5 .OS , .03 .40 1 00 3.50 .00 1.80 1.15 3.50 .20 . .25 .40 .15 .40 ...06 L50 . 1.50 1.50 .60 ta .16 13 ta .15 .15 ta .11 .18 .IS .15 .20 .25 .23 ,23 .17 .17 .! .15 .13 .14 .10 .15 .05 Bf t 4 BUB.) Spring lamb a Lambs Kwe Hose, top. 1S0-210 Iba. . 130-150 Iba. . - 210-3.00 Iba.. , , ... 8.75 Sow I, Iairy type cowa 3 OO Beef ee-s 4.00 Balla .,. ,. 5.5 reported - 5.50 Haifara . Tap vaa I, lb. .3 00 ta 3.50 .1.75 Jo 3.25 " SO to 9.25 ta 9.00 7.50 ta 3.50 ta 4.50 to 6 00 ta 5.50 7.50 .4-50 Grade B raw 4 per cent milk. Salem basic pool price fl.lO. ; Co-op. Grade A botterfat -price, FOB Salem, -Stfc. . (Milk baaed aa T acmi aioathly -bat i erf at arerage.) I Distributor price," $2-32. , " A grade butterfat - De liTered, 25Jtc; B Tdet 21c; C crude. tOHc A Krade print, c; B grade. 27J.C. J t Dreucd eeaL lb. .11 UAJU0H CKEAJIEXT Baying Price Buttertat, A grade Battarfat. B grade , . lgbora hen a. kcary j . , Cotored br) era - -." Colored beoa. or 4 -iba. l!ghoni bees, toght .; Stags, lb. 25 .24 .12 .14 .15 .10 .05, .05 Old Kooalers. lb. . . Reject, axarket value. No. 2 grade. Sc less Large extras ,., , .25 Mediuaa extra . 1 i .23 l-trgm standards Medium styedarda L'odergrada .23 .18 .17 GRAIN. HAT AND SEEDS Oats, whita. toa i , . - , r 2a nn Wheal white, bu. L ,, .57 " Wheat, weatera.red, bo ...... .55 Barley. Weed, toa - U-? -.22.00 Ost. - rray. ton .22.00 to 24.00 Alfalfa, valley, too , Oat and vetch bay, ton 12.50 -10.0ft Stocks & Bonds Motors Lead in Rally of Stocks NEW YORK, July 28-fP)-Mo-tor stocks provided rallying pow er for today's market and leading Issues on average sot back nearly half their losses in Wednesday's slide. Gains ranged from fractions to 2 points, with a few of 3 to 4 in evidence. .. The Associated Press average of SO Issues was np .7 of a point at 4 9.5 against a drop yesterday of 1.5, the sharpest since last March! Transfers totaled 1,065, 630 shares compared with 1,973, 440 the day before. . Joly 57 STOCK AVEKAQEB Compiled Uy Tba Associated Press Set Chx Than. Previous day Month ago Year 1938 1938 1937 1937 ago high low ; high 191.6 low 57.7 40 Indu All 72.4 71.4 7.7 ."3 74.0 49.2 ' 15 -ails A.4 ,20 0 119.6 il7.7 J39.1 21. 12.1 49.5 119.0 15 L'til A.1 33.9 33.8 33.3 44.0 85.1 24.9 54.0 31.8 60 Stock A.7 49.5 48.8 40.4 68.7 50.8 33.7 75.S .41.7 BOHD ATEXAQES 3fl Cog. Thura. Previous day Month ago Year ago 1936 high 1938 low 1937 high low low 1937 1932. 3ft bulla A.6 61.6 61.0 54.8 92.1 70.5 46.2 99 O 70.3 45.8 1924 high 101.1 10 Indue f D.l 1 99.4 f 99.5 97.1 102.9 99.7 193.0 104.4 95.5 i 40.0 98.9 10 Util A.2 4.2 04.0 91.7 98.1 94.2 85.8 102.8 90.3 646. 102.9 10 Fergn .S! A.1 62.3 62.1 63.0 73.0 '67.0 61.2 74.7 64.2 42.3 100.5 Masons Building House MONMOUTH Mr. and Mrs. W. 10 J Tons Yellow Beans Harvested From 2 Pickings PLEASANTDALE. Ten and one-half tons of yellow wx beans nave been harvested and trucked tn the . Hillarinrit rn n norw tmm seven acres In the Henry t'resh- our rarm, it was revealed Tues day at the finish of the second picking. The thrd picking has been started and the vines are .pro fusely bloomine and bearinr be cause of the generous irrigation. There are 65 pickers employed. The three acres of (Kentucky Wonder pole bean harvest at the same farm , will start soon. Quotations at Portland FBODOCB EXCBLAHQB - PORTLAJii. Ora., Jaly 28. (AP) Produce exchange t Butter Extras, 25 ft ' large standards. 34ft; prima firsts 24; firsts 23ft batter fat. 26 26 ft. . Bggs Large extras, 26; large stand arda, 34; medium extras, 25c: medium standards 38. Cbeesa Triplets. 18ft; loaf. 14. ' Portland Grain Coast Butter Production 'Shows Drop, Says Report SA5I FRANCISCO, July tBiJP) Pacific coast butter production ran 4.C3 per cent lower than last year and 5.99 per cent lower than in the preceding week, the federal-state market service re ported today of last week's out turn. Sixty coast creameries turned out 1,145,749 pounds.' R. Mason are building a new home on South College street. Work Is progressing on the new home of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Price on Jack son street. THE STOLEN GOD By Edison Marshall CHAPTER XX "Andre comes first with me, after my father. If father is in volved in this thing at all, it is with honest motives. Whatever Andre has done, he's not to blame ; he's out of his head about Oriental art. If you want me to keep your secret, you must promise to save them both." "How can I promise thatT I'm not the law. I didn't come here to make arrests, only to restore the Emerald Buddha, but if Chambon goes too far. his safety will pass out or my bands." "Then perhaps I'd better go to mm now and warn him." She stood very straight. "It you feel you must, I'm at your mercy." For he had decided to lay an his cards face up, trusting every thing to Virginia's inherent fineness and high heart. He went on with gathering power "But I honestly believe that his best chance Is for you to let me go ahead In my disguise and do my best to save him from himself.' lie won't giv up his undertaking, at any warning or request from you. You know that." - Still she did not make a sound or give a sign. "HeU only cover up the tracks I've uncovered, and go ahead," Ned went on, in low tones. "Other men will take his trail, and in the end he'll pay the price. And this is in addition to the plain right-and-wrong of the thing your duty to help me stop a great crime against a nation and a king." Blunt words! If he had sized her np wrong, they would spoil every thing. But as he watched, hardly daring to hope, her blue eyes brim med full, her hand fell gently on his. . "IH keep your secret for the present." - There came an ache In his arms, an imperious hunger on his lips. If he could only hold her close, and try to tell her what her faith and help would mean to a lonely soul like his ... but nesting footsteps sounded on the trail. He had scarcely time to regain his countenance before Chambon himself pushed through the vines. The Vieomte glanced from one to the other. One wave of color sped across his handsome face, then ran back ; his eyes lighted once, like scimitars in the sun, then went out like blown lamps. He smiled faintly. ."So here you are Virginia," he aid with a e-air'tv e-Ttotamielv Ant of keeping with that smile. "Ton are holding up the whole caravan. TFan, you must have been telling her something very interesting." "Ueaven-Born is most kind, to lis ten to TFan'a poor words," Ned answered lmperturbably. Vl.l. u at - - J wwa wiijo iv (iw soi long, steadying breath. "They were very good words. TFan: I'll hear the rest some other time." The cars were loaded and ready to start. Five miles up the road they would strike the open savannahs of Interior Laos, and all danger of am bush by the Kha savages would be over. In the meantime, Ned sug gested that Chambon ride in one of .the rear cars and stay out of sight, "I do not think the little Jungle men will attack in daylight, Ned said. "Yet they may fly an arrow from the brush beside the road. 'Bet ter the rice-pot in a hovel, than a funeral with many drums." "That's right, Andre," Griffin broke In. You lay low till we're out of Kha country." - But there was no sign of the little savages along the road and in a few mrnutes they were en the open pla teau. Even so, Ned found it hard to believe that they had seen the last of the Khas. The highland they were crossing row was once the rich heart of Laos. The wilj prairie still bore the traces cf o!J - t;.es; vestiges ef . once thronged cities dotted the plains, and at every tittle crossroads stood a ruined ra-ode. At noon they left the road to visit th Hills of the White J vs. . There were hundreds of these Jars, dotting the tops of a circle of hills. Carved out of solid white marble, many of them were eight feet tall, and all in perfect line and proportion. From what far-off country the twenty-ton stone blocks had- been laboriously hauled, who were the long-dead artisans that had hollowed and shaped them, what had been their use, and why they now stood empty, scoured by wind and rain, the French rulers of the province did not pretend to guess. If the Laotians knew, the tale was told only in the joss-house, where the yellow gods sat smiling, and was never whispered in a white man's ear. The lid of one of the jars bore, the carved likeness of a skeleton, sue gesting that it had once held human bones. -Griffin made the guess that these were the sepulchers of the old Laotian kings and their families. Ned saw Pu-Bow furtively salaam ing to one of the jars, and even Chambon, fanatical antiquary that he was, walked among them with a kind of glory on his handsome face. Traveling slowly, before sundown they were in sight of the ancient Laotian capital, Chieng-khuang. As late as two centuries ago, its power and glory had seemed as secure and everlasting as its royal dynasty, the "Lords of Life." j Its fortifications ran for miles across the fertile fields. At least a hundred large pa godas, gave it the favor of Lord Buddha. Ambassadors came bear ing gifts half across the world, from the palaces of the Manchus, from the wild courts of the Burmese Kings, from the last of the Mogul Emperors beyond the Bay of Ben gal. Its caravans brought the wealth of all the Indies to heap at its shrines and at the foot of its ivory throne. . i Then something happened some thing terrifying and unknown. The Pali writings of the tale were lost : only the yellow-robed priests hinted at it in ritual and allegory. Anyway, when the French came, in 1893, the kings were fugitives and their pal aces fallen ; the hundred temples lay in ruin; the fortifications were mere grassy mounds hardly distin guishable from the natural hills: and the great, the eternal city, lord of a hundred cities, reduced to a mere town tinder Siamese rule. - "But it does not matter any more," Ned said after he had re counted the legend to Virginia. "The kings are dead. The Siamese have our Emerald Buddha. The French have come to stay. It is all forgot ten." -.'..;. "I venture some of your people haven't forgotten," Chambon said, and Ned marveled at the glitter of his eyes. They drove into what was left of tne city. The French governor, a dark man named St. Pierre, wel comed the visitors, and made them comfortable in tha big, rambling guest Dungaiow.; "Tonight you shall dine with me. St, Pierre told them. "And tomor row you shall see the Cave of the Million Buddhas. once the holv-of. holies of the Laotians and still one of the greatest wonders of the world." i - During the unpacking, Ned man aged to steal a quiet word with Vir ginia. - "Are you going to be Just an on looker, or wiu you lend a hand?" "I'm going to help you all I can." And how lovely she looked, with a little red cloud in each cheek. "Oh, if you only knew r "What shall I do first 7" she broke in, calmly. , i "Get the keys of the room where Chambon has stored the curios, and bring them to me after the dinner party. We're roinsr to look fo- something." . i In his native garb, Ned could not be invited to the governor's table, but he had told Virginia everything, and she looked and listened in his place. Griffin had never seen h- eyes so bright; or could recall when aha had looked so lovely, with a high natural color in her cheeks and the candlelight trapped in her hair. But Chambon scarcely glanced in her direction. The strangeness Grif fin had seen and wondered at for the past few days was even more marked, in this city of splendid ruins. "You may not remember, Vieomte, but we have met before," St Pierre said out of a clear sky. Chambon started. "I thought your face was familiar." ' "I was in your, father's brigade in the war. Five years after, he in vited me to his villa for dinner, and you were just home from college. I had the pleasure of meeting your mother, too but she was in ill health at the time, and only ap peared at the table for dessert. I hope she is better now." "Some better, thank you, but she has retired to her old home in Cor sica." Virginia gasped and started to speak, then stared hard at her plate. Until this very instant, she 1 had thought Chambon 's mother was dead. He had never told her so in ; so many words, but certainly his manner had implied it. "She was a Mademoiselle Valinco, if I remember right," Stl Pierre went on. "Oddly enough,-there is a Valinco River, not far from here. Perhaps you should find out if it was named in honor of one of your mother's ancestors." "It's not an unusual name, in Corsica," Chambon answered, eas ily. : ' The talk soon veered, and Griffin told the governor of his experience with the Khas. I "What a strange notion that Vi comte's, visit to the country would restore the Laos kingdom and' send the Khas back to slavery 1" St. Pierre marveled. Virginia resolved to play boldly the cards Ned had put in her hand. "Our interpreter, T'Fan thought that the Emerald Buddha might be somehow involved," she said calmly, with only a passing glitter in her eyes. "The return of the Emerald Buddha would set Laos on fire," St. Pierre said thoughtfully. "The Sia mese confiscated it from a temple in Chieng Mai, once part of Laos, and before then it was supposed to have stood for centuries in some other unknown Laotian tnnnl. Rn ft wouldn't restore the kingdom or en- save ute ivnas. ranee wants ne SUCh DOlitieal dvnamita in tVi- nAw. ince, and would simply return the image 10 uang-ok.- Virginia put down these last sen tences in a mental nnf-V-vnlr port later to Ned. j "Just the same, I'd like to talk to this T'Fan," St. Pierre continued. "He may know more than he lets on." An Annamese servant in uniform spoke raoidlv in Fmnch in h- ernor's ear. ? Lord, the man ia antei? nnw waiting with lantern to guide your guests back to the bungalow. And Nokka, Madame's maid, is there also." "Perhans. F-"nn vnn v.--.i- talk to him tomorrow, at your lei sure," Chambon broke in. "And Vir ginia send word -tn NnVVa f a m back to her quarters and stay there. er oia nones will take fever from the nlrht air. and w a& nA t.; a sick servant in our party." Virginia's thoughts were flying, and she saw at nnm that tt.-.R did not desire St Pierre to lay eyes on iMouca. no ooubt he feared that the governor would see through her neasant srarb and mmmiM v.- the mother of an out-law baron, t-r- This was mvateriona mnA afni.t-- enonsrh. -and - mh r m4 iw : beyond, over his shoulder, to the ' lornuess snadow or some darker, more terrifcinr mvsterv. herinninv to thicken under the lamp. Prob- ably it was only a figment of her own fancy. (To be continued.) Caayrtrbt br Edbea ManhaO. t mt aUag reefeme Sradfaa-v laa. - , PORTLAND, Ore.. July 28. (iP) Wheal: Open -High, Low- Class Sept. 63ft 634 63ft 63ft Dae. a -.65 ft - 65 65 ft 65 ft Caah Grain: Oats, No. 2-38 lb. white 35.00; No. 2-88 lb. gray 25.00. Barley, No. 3-45 lb. BW 14.00. Cora, No. 2 EY shipment 29.50. - Cask Wheat (Bid): Soft -Kite (Hd. Wh. App-.) 64; W. White or W. Slob 63ft; westers red 62; hard red winter ordinary 60; 11 PC 62; 12 PC 67; 13 PC 69; 14 PC 71. Hard white-Baa rt or dinary 64ft; 11 PC 64ft; 12 PC 68; 13 PC 71; 14 PC 73. , Car Receipts: Wheat 137; barley 8; floor 11; eora 11; bay 1; millieed 7. forlland Uveslork PORTLAND, Ore.. July 28. (AP) (L'SDA) Hogs: Receipts 400 including 198 direct, market actire after alow start, steady with Wednesday average. goor-choice 165-215 lb. 9.75, few 9.o5. carload 'lots quotable at 10.00; early sales 9.65, 225-80 lb. batchers 9.00-25, 300 lb. 8.75, few light lights 8.00-25, packing sows 70.0, choice,, 6d ib. feeder pigs 9.00. .. Cattle: Receipts 200 including 37 taaaugb. and direct, ealrea 50 including 34 . direct, market more actire on most classes, prices only steady at week s de cline, - anfinished steers under- pressure, scattered' lots common-low medium grass steers 5.00-6.50; lairly good Kinds 7.73, strictly rood grass steers 8.25. common heifers 4.', 6.00, low cotter and cotter costs 3.25-7D, . common-mediom grades 4.00-50, good beef cows 5.00, balls 4.00 65, choice Vealers 8.00. .4 ' . . Sheep: Receipts 400 including 63 "di rect, market steady, good trucked in spring laraba 6.50, common-medium 5.50 6.25. yearlings 4.00-25. good-choice ewes strong to 25 higher at 3.00-75. Wool 1938. aomiaal; Willamette val ley, medium, 22o lb.; coarse and braids, 2 1-2 5e lb.; aaatera Oregon, 16ft-26e lh. Hay Selling price ta retailers! Al falfa. No. 1. $16 toa; oat-etch, $14 ton. clover. Sll 11.50 ton: timothy, east ern Oregon. ( ) Ma; da valley, $15 too. Portland. - . ' - Mohair Nominal: 1938, SOe lb. Hops Nominal: 1937. 10-1 le lb. Cascara Bark Buying price; ; 1938 peel, 5c lb. -Sugar Berry ar fralt. 100s. $4.90; bales. $5.10; beet. $4.80 cental. Domestic floor Selling price, city de livery, 1 ta 25 bbl lets; family patents, 49s. $5.85-6.45; bsksra' hard wheat, net, $4.50 5.T5; bakers' blaestem. 4.25-4 60; blended hard wheat $4.35-4.67, aoftwheat floors. $4.15-4.25; grsham. 49s, $4.95; whole wheat. 49a, $4.80 bbl. ; ; Gardeners9 and Ranchers' Mart Wool in Boston BOSTON. Joly 28 (AP) (CSDA) Trading in wool today on tha Boston market Blackened somewhat compared with the early part of the week. A fair volume of sales, however, wss being closed on the finer western grown wools. Bayer were showing resistsnce to re cently , advanced asking prices. Prices on rood trench combine lengths fine terrv tory wool in original bags ranged from 65 to t cents, scoured bssis. altfaouEh prices on the high side ef the range were being realized less frequently than ear ner in the week. - Portland "Produce PORTLAND. Ore.. Joly 28. CAP) Country , Meats Selling' price to retail era: Country killed hogs, best botcher under 160 lbs- 12ft 13e pound; vealera, 12-12fte lb.; light and thin, 9-llc lb.; beavy. 9e lb- bulls J0 lb.: csnner cowa, 7e lb.; cutter cows- ?-8e lb.; sprang lambs, 13l3e lb.; old lambs. 7 -Bo lb.; ewea 4-74 lb Live poultry Baying prices : Leghorn broilers 1ft to 1 lbs.. 15-16e lb.; 2ft lbs. 15-16e lb.; colored springs, 2 to 8 ft lbs 16ft 18c lb.; over 3ft Iba.. 19 lb.; Leghorn hens, over 3ft Iba.. 14- 15s lb.: under 3ft lbs.. 14-14 ft e lb.; colored' hens, to S lbs.. 18-18fte lb.; over 5 lbs.. 18-18 ft e lb.; No. S grade, 5c lb. less. Turkeys Nominal buying price: Breed er bens. 20e Ib. Selling price: Breeder hens, 20 22a lb.; toms ( ). Potatoes New Sharter. si.zs-i.au ewt.. local $1.35-1.45; Yakima $1.50-1.65. Onions California white, $1.40; Wal la Walla -5-85e, 50 lb. bag. Late Downturns Offset Early Gain CHICAGO, July t&-(&-Lhte downturns of wheat prices today more than offset earlier fraction al gains that resulted largely from unfavorable conditions for spring crops, United States and Cana dian. At. the close,, Chicago wheat fu tures were unchanged to cent lower compared with yesterday's finish, Sept. 67 -68, Dec 69 -70. ' JEgg Production for 'Coast Is Boosted 1.8 Per Cent Last Week SAN PRANCISflfl Jul' Egg production increased 1.8 per ceui in raciuc coast Slates la Rf ult rennrfa tr ei-1 state market service indicated wuay. it was -i.e per cent low er than a year ago, however. Output at 65 coast packing plants totaled 62,012 cases, of -which' 35 California, nlantn ac counted for 38,948 cases, and 30 Oreeon-Washinrton nlants 23,064 cases. t PORTLAND, Ore, July 28. (Jp) (USD A) .Produce price chances: I ( Apples Oregon, new Vsnspareots. S5 . wound lags, - 75-80e; Winesape, fancy, ! Apricots Oregon, Wasb IS lb. box. 42 ft -50e; faced 50-57 ft c - i Asparagus ors, 0 lb. bunched. $2- t t. " ) Avocados CaUiornia. green. $2.35 8 35; others $2-2.85; choice, leas. 1 Beans Ore. green, 5 6c; wax 6-7e; Xount. large, 7-8c i Berries 24 basket erate. strawberries, local, $3.25-2.50; blacqesps . unquoted; blackberries, 85e-$l. i Cabbage Oregon Ball bead. 24-3o lb $2.50-2.75 cratef poorer, $2. Cantaloupes California jumbo, . 36s, $2.00; Wash, jumbos, 26a and 45s, $3.60- $.00. ! Caabas Calif lb. 2ft 3c. ! Cauliflower Lower Columbia, 90c-$l. J Celery Oregon. Utah type, 7o-75e doa en. $1.50 1.65 per crate; Labish, white, $1.25-1.50; nearts. $90c 1.00. ( .Corn Best $1.35-1.50. ) Cuedmbera Field grown, 60c; Xo 2, 35-40c. Pickling, size 1, 60c; 2, 45e; 3, Bjc. i Eggplant 7-8e per pound; . 20 pound riats. $1 25. j Garlic Local, best 6 8c - per pound. poorer s ac per : pound; new crop, 6 8c put. , - Grapefruit 48 100 Calif., extra fancy $2,25 2.50; choice. 81.75 2 00. Grapes Calif., Thompson needless. $2.25-2.35. Lemon Fancy, all sites. $5.50 5.75. choice grades 50e to $1.00 less. Lettuee Drv. 3.- ln o-.. $i; poorer low as 0c; Seattle $i.ij.-and AVayne D. Henry threshing Closing Quotations NEW YORK, July -S-CiPy-Today's closing quotations: Al Chem & Dye. 178 Comwlth &. Sou 194 Nor Pacific . . . 13 Allied Stores . . 10 Consol Edison , 28 W Packard. Motor. 5 Am Can ...... 98H Consol Oil 10 Penney (JC) .. 83 Am For Pow.. 4 Curtiss Wright . 5 H Phillips Pet ... 42 A m T A T . H rinPnnt 1 M ' 1 9 ft PrsaeI R Cay O &1 Am Rad Std San 15 D6ug Aircraft.. 51 Pub Serv NJ .. 30 Am Roll Mills.. 20 EI Pow & Lt... 12 Pullman ...... 33 Am Smelt & Rf . 50 Erie RR ...... 3 Safeway Stores . 21 Am Tel & Tel.. 141 General Electric 42 Sears Roebuck .71 Am Tob B ..... 86 General Foods . 34 Shell Union ... 17 Am Wat WkS ; 11 General -Motors. 43 Sou Cal Edison. 23 Anaconda . . ... Armour III ... . Atchison , . . . . . Barnsdall . . . . . Bendix A via ... Beth Steel .... Boeing Alrp "i Borge-Warner. Budd Mfg. .... Calif Pack .... Callahan Z-L . . Calumet Hee . . Canadian Pac . Case (JI) .. Cat Tractor Celanese . . . Certain-Teed Ches & Ohio Chrysler Coml Solv . 33 56 Ti 8 3 36 Goodyear. Tire . 27 Southern Pacific 19 6 Gt Nor Ry Pf.i 23 Stand Brands.. 8 37. Hudson Motors. 9 Stand Oil Calif. 19 Illinois Central. 12 4 Stand Oil NJ. . 20 Insp Copper ... 16 Studebaker ... 59 Int Harvest . . . 65 Sup Oil 29 Int Nick Can 51Timk Roll Bear 47 32 Int Pap & P Pf . 43 Trans-America 11 6 Int Tel & Tel . . 9 Union Carbide . 22 Johns Manville. 95 United Aircraft. 214 Kennecott .... 42 United Airlines. 9 Lib-O-Ford .... 45 US Rubber ... . 7 Llgg Myers BOS US Steel .102 Loew's . 54 Monty Ward .. . 20 Nash-Kelv .... . 9 Natl Biscuit ... . 32 Natl Cash ..... . .71 Nal Dairy Prod . 10 NaU Dist 49 Walworth ... 47 Western Union 10 White Motor . 24 Wool worth ... 29 (New York Curb) 16 Cities Service . 9 25 Elec Bond & Sh 8 85 2S 10 45 60 9 31 14 47 1.25. Unions Washington Val.nrii. N. i. Oranges Choice Valencies, fancy $2,25 3,00: choice. 82.00-2.20: Inn.. $1.23 1.75. ! v Pts Oregon Telephone, 6-7c; Lower Columbia, 8e. Peaches Triumph. Calif SI 15 Or-. gon. early, 60 75c; crates. $1.00; early uaica. oaa. . Peppers, Calif., $1-1.25; 50 lbs. $3.75. Potatoes Oreeon. . local aackl n.. hundredweight, lone whites. 100-nonnd sacks, CS So.: 1. $1.00-1.25: US So S 35-40c; 50 pound sseks Yakima, tacked machine which has been harvest ing "their crops j completed the work Wednesday.! Marauding Dogs . Caught in Field And Pay Penalty SCIO A' bad dog.' dead, be- per hundredweight. Russets. CS Jio. j , Comes a good dog, in the opinion $i.5o i.75. Kew stock,. California, sacked of stockmen who have lost sheep Srr$T25 Tundwgh0 us,and gpau through depredation, of prrasturj cauiaei wai uu wvot ui their marauding In the dark of the moon. " : Several stockmen : and farmers t-boies. No. l, 70-80c; Xe. 2. 40 50c. j in the vicinity immediately north White Rosa CS No. 1.1.40 1.50;-Wash f ctn ,- K- mlnr -v.An and goats for some time. W. A. Ewing, native Oregonian, and an officer of the Scio State bank for many years, was . among the .los ers. .- Ewing resolved to "make a cleaning." "Norm" Long was to give the signal when he. heard -a commotion among the flocks. The banker secreted himself - in a thicket. Bleeding and panting Plums Oreeon Beautvs. 15-noanJ Kn 90e-$1.00; peach plums,. 50-6O& Tomatoes California. 1 30-1 35- rm. packed. $1.75: Oreron finer. II 401 an. choice, $1.00; flats 65-70e; The Dalles! xiat noxes, Ington Cobblers. US Ko. 1. II 25 1 40 per nuna red weight. Squash Ore.- Wssh. Croakneck. Seal. lop.- Zucchini. 50-60e per flat; Danish. $1.30-1.40; marblehead, 2 He- Bunched Vegetables Ornon. nmr Aim. en bunches, beets, 25 30c; carrota, 30 40e; green onions, 25-30e; parsley 20 25e: radishes. 30 40c: turnips. 50 55c. Watrmelons California. KlonHike. mil Stripes, $2.00-2.25 per hundredweight. crates eslra- Threslier Ends Run ZENA The Frank Crawford him, and one goat had Just fallen 1 standard, merit card. a victim of the "canine's teeth. Getting a bead on a black cur, Ewing shot and the mongrel died with blood and goat hair in his teeth. A shepherd dog hesitated a few seconds to see what it was all about. That was another oppor- tunity for the rifleman to even uo the score, and a $250 sheep dog joined the ot:::r. "It may be. harsh treatment for erring dogs, but it is the next best to a chain leash," an observing farmer asserted on hearing of th incident. : - . - ,, Awards of Merit Given At Close of First Aid Instruction, Scio Area SCIO-lAwards of merit In the first aid Instruction series closed at Scio Tuesday night were is sued to: Junior, 'Jack Metcalfe, Virginia Metcalfe, Eugena Fine gan, Wilma Trunkenbolz, Nata lie Phillips, Maxine Moses. Stand ard and advanced: W. M. Calla way, Elmer Behrand. Rena Beh rand, Harry Zlegler, Gladys noagiana, Mrs. cnariey Dolezal. Jessie Reese, emnlnved t th sheep and goats were round about Scio Tribune orfice, received a him and nnn mat harl lust fallen 1 ctanrlgp m-t POLLY AND HER PALS Angel "Beats" 'Era to It! By CLIFF STERRETT -Tl SEE THEM 1 VSf&t- n K AN1 VJOrS Jr I STOPPED DOWN ) P i , " s- -v : aMINGEVVO.l', LjDr . '1-) T' SPIKE SPUD'S . ! SrTWC)UGMrN.r. ;ANGeSAMBLE " Mtf' WM WOr'i REAU.V VjJZ y TNRAS-dN MACHNEj ! S UCK1N' fSRATSjS fA 1 3 ' " ) , m MICKEY MOUSE Keep Dumb and Beautiful By WALT DISNEY . o j t , yZS AS LONG AS J l.rftl I V .... 1 J N . fcU THERE'S NO- J J MR. PlPER, 1 . KmSf -? WORK TO DO, f:M1 ! WHAT'S THIS V f V VJiKi I "MIGHT AS WELL m 24' I S- TOOL. USED - hfrX V LEARN SOMEP'N. K Z&S, i" FOR? S U LISTEN, SONNV! WHEN I HIRED VOU, DIDN'T YOU TELL ME HOW LTTTLE KNEW ABOUT PLUMBIN S V IBIN'? :J- WELL., DONT FORGET T . SEE THAT VOU DONT , "ST S- . LEARN ANYTHING! . LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY On the Job, But Not the Payroll! By BRANDON WALSH GE.E, ZERO-1 K1NOA GET THE W1M-WAMS WHETM JCC iu MAJK KDH.E. WHO WANNA totTT JUD iIM" JaT I rtNW WHtkt. TO , --f FIND OME- ro MEN 9 .V V1. T - sWw-i wA- OMC UOB3 AIKTT AS GOOD AS OTHER CTQQS l5-. BUT AMY UUH IS Better thakj no tob AT ALL. 'SPEClALLy ipr VOU LIKE "THE KINO OF A OOB VOO'RE NrvORKIM AT THEN ITS LOTS A PUN I GUE55 SOME FOLKS THINK DlSH-WASHlN' IS A HARD TOO BUT I THINK ITS NICE AN THAT'S WHV I P"EETL GLAD ALL OVER CAUSE I DON'T KKE TO VVORRY CAOSE. I A4NT bOI A UOO niirFy t crr.-: I II T .- 'lli YW-l I VI 1 1' X -rr-, -I, MRS MUNCHLY 5AYS I'M A DtMAB OX, CAUSE. I TOLD HER l YOU THINK A 70S AIMT HARD THAT AAAKES IT EASy BUT IP YOU THINK A tJOB s n 7 J S3 rKU- THAI MAK IT i 1 r HARD CVEM IF ITS . C 1 V-7'rERRIBLg EAsy Eg y TOOTS AND CASPER Casper Raises a Doubt By JIMMY MURPHY K WELLOOTS HAS BEEN OUT UM -THE tard i akin tr A . vJN-BATH 6i MAY T HAVE , tour AUTO-tRAPH. PLEASE 7 SURE. IP TOUH-L -3 IVE ME YOUR5- w ON A CHECK , NEED SOME MONEY TO ZaO SHOPPINZ! i r 1 r- r-- " I . CLi fJf.TOk - - - i i j ii it m r M m m "t 6f '1 'y jt? CP" f OH, DID YOU RECO-rNCZE EXCUSE ME! ) ME BY MY. FACE, I 1 THOUtHT ( OR BECAUSE YOU WERE 1 JUST ASKED ( A MOVIE YOU FOR SOME I t-i-rervj uomcVI ANYBODt Vy-TM BEAUTIFUL EYES LIKE YOU SHOULDN'T HIDE THEM BEHIND DARK LASSES! 1 DONT KNOW WHETHER TO PEEL. COMPLIMENTED OR 6ET SUSPICIOUS'.! MVHERE DIDTOU LEARN3 SUCH MOCTH CTALK TIIIMBLE TIIEATOE Starring Popeye 4Ka-Babage Without Corned BeeH BY SEGAR HAVE VOU OTw GOT HOLD OF L7P n yeah Gofw - 7 Ar HOLT OF-f(mX V him r- t J1 - r V EbLASTED DE-MlNOSli LEGGO OF SWEEPEA- r KlECjGO THAT K TO STEW HIM WITH KA-BAB- ACtE 1 y t-d iT-J - I !?P 'cTe THE KING J WHAT YOU W 3N Jk yASi &: W ONE-EYED rT VrtL W j ir-1n rb STILL HANG'Jsj) Jr V i---- .''i ..... .. ..,r nntwt Tkswt' i-m. u nvi --. TfeQ