PAGE SIXTEEN The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Friday Morning, October 21, 1938 I? 1 ! Salem Market Quotations ; fsuits (Bayiaf Prleas) j (Taaspriws below supplied by a lal Itncit ara indiratias f ttaa daily market t- pries paid la growers by Saleia buy era but srs now guarantard by Tba Eta tea oian I ft Apples Mmalltai 60 to 85c; SpiU..S to 8oe; Delicious 63 to 5c? Pinoins 35 to 55; Griraea Qoldea 60 to 85e; Bald- " wia , i 60 to .8S 'rBtnimt. lb. oa a talk .06 T - Hande 0fc- Crapefruit. Texaa, ... , . 8.64 . Grapefruit. Calif, Sunkiat .crate. 850 1 Gronnd Cherries, lb. - .10 Hueklebemra. .. , -.. t.00 Da tea. fresa. IU. , , - .14 , Lemona, crate S 00 :.- Orange, erale $3 63 to S.15 (Baying Prices) Beets, dea. Cabbage, lb. . Carrot a. local, do...,, , , Cauliflower. Seattle Celery. Utah, crate Celery hearts, doa. ., Lettuce. Wash.. . Onions, boiling, 10 lbs., fco. 3 SO lbs. Green onions, do a. Radiance, doa. Peppers greea. locals Parsley New Potatoes local, ewt 50 lb. bags Spinarh Dan it h, dosv . Hubbard. Id. Zneehini smash, flat Turnips, dox. .23 .oa ' .as .70 t 35 .so r l 25 .14 .80 .25 ,B0 " .oa .40 1.50 .40 .60 .30 .01 H l.n.v .30 - -: : - - MOTS (Prlea to Grower) "- Walnut rVanquettee." fancy. 12c: medium, 10: am a 1 1. 8c; orchard ran, 8 Ao- 10c. Walnut meats 25 to 30c lb. Filbert Bartelonaa, large, 12e: fancy 11 hi cents; babies. 11c; orchard run, 11 to 12c Duchilly. 1 cent higher. BOPS (Baying Prices) Clusters, nominal. 1947. ib.10 to .12 Clusters. 1938, lb. 18 to .20 . Fogglea, top .23 WOOL AND MOHAIR . (Buying Price.) Wool, medlnat, lb. Coarse, lb. .,.. ..- Lambs, lb. .22 .22 .18 ..23 Mohair, lb - EQOS ADD roUHBI - (Buying Price of Andresan's) X-srgo extra . Medium extras .. Larre atandards - .30 Pullets Colored fry a ,.,, , , Colored medium, lb White leghorns, lb. No. 1 White Leghorns, frys White leghorns. Ib. No. 2, Heavy hens. lb. - .Boosters .17 .13 .15 .12 J3 .10 .15 .05 LIVESTOCK (Based on conditions and sales reported op to 4 p.m.) Spring lambs, tcp 6 00 Lambs -1 00 to 3.50 Ewes : 1.75 to 3 25 Hois. tops. 150 210 lbs. J 30 J 50 lbs. 210 300 lbs. Sows Dairy type cows Beef cows Bulls Heifers - Top -eal. lb. 7.75 .7.00 to 7.50 6.75 to 7.00 5.50 to 5.75 .3 00 to 3.50 4 00 to 4 50 4.50 to 5.50 .4.50 to 5.50 8.00 Dressed eal. Ib .12 MAHION CKEAMEHY Buying Price Butterfat, A grade -28 Leghorn hens, ertr lbs .10 Grade B raw 4 per tent Bill-, Sale-i basic pool price Co-op- (Jrade A butterfat price, FOB Salem, 28 He. (Milk baaed tea semi monthly butterfat average.) Distributor price, $LS2. A irrade butterfat Deliv ered S8r; B grade, 26Jc; C irrade, Kc. A grade print, 31c; B grade 30c. j ' 1 Leghorn bens, under 1 lba.' -eS . Colored fryera .14 Colored aeas, over 5 lbs. , .15 Leghorn fryers , .14 Stags, Ib. r -0 Old Hooitm. Ib. .05 Kejerts, market value. Mo. 2 grade 5e teas Largo extras Large standards -Medium extras Medium standards Undergrade .34 .31 .20 .25 .20 GRAIN. HAT AND SEEDS Oat a. white, ton 1S. 00 to 20 00 Wheat, white, bu . .58 Wheat, utt'trn red., bu. .. .50 Barley, feed. ton- 18.00 Oats. grav. ton 22 00 to 24 00 Alfalfa, valley, tn 13 00 Oat and vetch bay, teol 1.00 to 12 00 Alaike clover seed, lb - 09 to .10 Red clover seed, lb.j .. .13 Farmers9 1 Night Schools Drawing In Linn County ALBANY Farm evening schools, .under , the direction of George. Gentemann, Smith Hughes instructor at the Albany fciga school, reports are attract ing a great deal of attention. Three schools have been organ ized so far, one at Riverview having been organized '. Wednes day -night of this week. Livestock, feeding, pruning of fruit trees, soils, home beauti fication, special ! seed crops and weed control were considered. The next meeting of this school will be Wednesday night of next week when feeding dairy cattle will be taken up. Next Monday night the second meeting will be held of the Con nor school. William Pirrett of North Albany will take np the subject of grafting fruit trees. Pruning will also be discussed. Tuesday evening of next week the second night school for the farmers of the Santiam! central district, which takes in the ter ritory of Crabtree, Sanderson bridge and Cottonwoods, will be held at Santiam! central hall. Radio Corp Is Top Rally Lifts Selected Stocks Though Trading Slow in Many Lines " : NEW YORK, Oct. Traders took a little' more notice of constructive '.business news today and a selective rally lifted leaders fractions to a point or more. While dealings were compara tively alow In most departments. there was a heavy turnover in low-priced stocks and, near the finish, a flurry in the oils step ped up the volume considerably. At that, transfers for the day of 1,616,190 shares contrasted with 2,433,90 yesterday when the trend was distinctly downward. Radio Corp. was far and away the -fastest sprinter of the pro ceedings,' .getting up a point , at 8 54 to a new year's peak as the corporation's chairman indicated commercial television was p proachlng. A total of 136,700 shares of this issue changed hands. . Steels, motors, coppers, utili ties, rails, department stores and aircrafts were accorded support, after a spotty performance in the forenoon, and closing prices were around the best of the ses sion. The Associated Press average of 60 issues regained .5 of a point, at 52.5, of the .8 of a point loss the day before. Auto Stock Is Vp Belated attention was given the reemployment jump in .the automobile field, as well as the reported rescinding of price cuts In the steel sector. Helpful also were reports of a substantial pickup '-in department store sales. Bank clearings took an other step forward and freight loadings for the past week were estimated to have shot up more than seasonally to a new 1938 top. Corn Picking Machine Used at Central Howell CENTRAL HOWELL A corn picking machine which picks two rows at .a time has been brought into this neighborhood this fall and has picked corn acreages for a number of farmers. It is now busy at the Ernest Roth place.- Th even or uiamonas By BAYNARD !A. KENDRICK A CHAPTER XXVI I ''Snowbird!" He, said the word! Millie was looking across the ' in Millie's ear. room. The man and trirl who iust "Mos; of them are. came in. Do you know them ? ! PCTed . backr "They she whis have to be "I hope not if you mean the f el-1 hopned up Dei ore tcey can snoou low in the chocolate suit with bal-i What are you going to aoi loons in the shoulders." Start trouble.' . "He's a trigger man in Ciprilli's -That s nice. Lets hurry. I m mob." ' getting thirsty." f "Maybe it's just his night off." They maneuvered close to the Stan nturposM. "anrf r. won't , chocolate suit. bUtn stumbled awK- ahoot. Once an evening is as much as I can stand. Could he have been driving Fowler's car?" "He could have. I don't think he was. He hasn't nerve enough to drive a car that fast " "Does he know you?" ,- "I don't think so. I've only seen him once before." f I feel in a mood for retaliation. Do you ever feel in a mood for re taliation, Millie?" "Retaliation t" She found the word a trifle difficult, "I'm feeling a bit tight. I think we better finish our wine." "Cheek for cheek," Stan ex plained. "When your opponent has gouged out your eye and you get him down you kick him on ' both cheeks." "I know that. "A tooth for a tooth. Let's finish our wine." "Exactly," said Stan delightedly. ""There you have it. Retaliation in the unvarnished rough and tumble. I've been hit on the head and in sulted. I've been put on a roof and shot at. I've had glass stuck in my ear drawing the Rice blood. Shall I stand for that ? Shall a Rice have headaches without retaliation?" - "If we finish our wine we -could ret another bottle. It mixes so well with the rum and Martini cocktailsJ Then we could have a tooth for a tooth and I'd be only too glad to help." "You're a brave girl, Millie, a very brave girl. And I'm glad to have you working with me instead f against me." 4 They shook hands solemnly and returned to the table to toast their bravery in the balance of the Cha teau dTquem. When it was gone Stan ordered another bottle. While waiting for it to chill properly, Stan wrote a note on the back of a menu, and started across the room to a table near the door. Two men were seated at the table, and rather anxiously they watched Stan's pro gress in their direction. "He's full to the "ears," Hogue re marked sotto voce. "I doubt it," said Patterson. "But , if he is I dont blame him. Well be that much more careful." Near the table, Stan stumbled and almost fell into Hogue's arms. When he straightened up with grave apologies, the menu was on the table in front of the plain clothe! man. He continued on to the men's room,' and in a few minutes was back at his table with Millie. He " beckoned Thomas to personally su pervise the opening of the new bot tle, and the replenishing of glasses. Tennessee 'Johnson's orchestra went into action. Most of the tables - in the Alligator Inn were filled, and in a short time the -floor was crowded to capacity with dancers. The young man in the chocolate suit, dancing too near to a pretty hard-eyed girL swung by close to where Staff and Millie were seated. Stan got cp and held out a hand. Together, he and Millie worked m way through the jam of dancers. They had circled the floor twice, and were receiving plenty of sour looks and remarks, when they found themselves close to Caprilli's hench man and his partner. Stan swung Millie around in time to catch a flimpse of pinpoint pupils in snaky lack eyes, and bitten-down finger nails on the hand resting oa ths irl's back, . wardly and came down painfully on the young man's toe. At the same instant, Millie kicked the girl vio lently on a silk clad ankle. . Then the tough, young gangster reacted with proper justification, his remarks low and furious. "Get off the floor, you old stew, before I poke you in the puss!" His companion was standing on one foot, nursing her ankle, her face contorted with pain. Stan recovered himself with difficulty, hauling him self upright hand over . hand on Millie. "Exhuse me, pleashe," he apologized thickly . "No offensh. No otfensh. He released Millie and ex tended one hand, then toppled for ward and came down on the young man s other foot. ) Millie burst into shrill laughter, and threw one arm around the girl s neck, separating 4her from her es cort. With her face close to the girl's ear, Millie said sweetly: "If you try to pass him his rod, honey, Millie will blow open your little tummy! Better stand to one side and let nasty mens fight it out!" The girl choked down some choice words, but made no effort to move. Goaded into rashness, and seeing no chance of getting his gun from his partner, the young "man struck out madly at the smiling face of the drunk who had spoiled his evening, Somehow he found himself on the floor looking up at a circle of startled faces. Blood was running out of a cut over one eye. Forgetful, for an instant, and lusting to kill, he started to reach for "the place where his gun should have been. A number eleven shoe pinned his wrist to the floor. He was jerked to his feet by the rough hands of Detec tives Patterson and Hogue. Five minutes later he was seated In a chair in an upstairs room, 'gazing defiantly into the frosty blue eyes of Miles Standish Rice. "Charlie Carew, Mr. Rice," said Patterson. "We found a letter on him 'from a dame. He's staying at the Tivoli Arms HoteL It's a dive. We've got enough to hold him." He pointed to a small metal case on the table. "Hypo outfit and morphine.' Stan shook his head sadly. "That's too bad. They tell me these hopheads suffer when you cut out their dope. Maybe we can do some thing for the poor fellow. Did Ca- pruli send you gunning for me, Charlie?"., : : , Go to blazes! You've got nothing on me. X don t know what you re talking about and I never beard of this firuy Capnlb." Carew s mouth twitched nervously at one corner. "I've got a user's permit from a doctor. You better let me go.' ; "Tough-egg," said Hogue. "The Captain likes 'em that way. He's peeved about Caprilli coming back to Miami anyhow." The door of the room opened to admit Millie. She was carrying the silver bucket of ice containing the bottle of Chaeau d'Yrrue'm. "Is she with you?" Hogue asked Stan, Stan nodded. "Pour us some wine, Millie. Glasses are there on the sideboard. I'm thirsty. Did you ever hear of Charlie Carew?" Millie took the bottle from the Ice and arranged four glasses in a row on the sideboard. She filled them carefully almost, to the brim. "Help yourself, boys. It's delicious and only eight bocks a bottle. I just or dered Another so there's plenty to go around. S cu picked so 'Snif fer Carew?" - - - "Yon know him?" asked Patter- , son. - She walked around in front of the man in the chair, and slowly sipped her wine. He shifted his gaze, toying at his upper lip with discolored teeth. "Nov. think of you being picked up by the cops in a hick town like Miami, Sniffer." Millie's violet eyes suddenly blazed with hatred. Do you remember what happened to Leila Covington? Even Zorno got after you for that didn't he?" She whirled around on Stan. "This skunk tortured a girl to death in Cnicago five years ago. They lynch such lice down here, don't they?" Stan took his glass of wine and drained it. The two detectives came up and stood ominously silent, one on each side of Carew's chair. "Where's the girl who was with him?" Stan asked. "I turned her over to the men in the radio car you called. They've taken her to headquarters." "Good!" Stan pushed back his hair with a slightly dramatic ges ture. "I don't think Mr. Carew will ever see the inside of a jail in this town. We're sworn to protect a prisoner from mobs and violence but we're not sworn to keep snakes alive. What about it?" "That goes, for me," Patterson agreed. Hogue nodded with him. "What's your idea, Mr. Rice?" Stan refilled his glass, and tossed it off. "Lock the door," he ordered Hogue. "Now well wait, I'm just drunk enough to think straight. Well send out a story to the mobs that will clean them out of Miami for ever and a day. All my life I've wanted to get hold of a woman tor turer I That's the lowest type of beast in the world." . He pulled a chair closer to Snif fer Carew, and grinned so evilly that Millie scarcely breathed and placed a hand to her breast. "Well wait," .Stan continued, looking through the twitching figure in the chair. "Well wait until the pleasur able sensations of your dope drugged brain are entirely gone until the crowd has all gone home and this place is dark and deserted. Then we'll show you how dogs die in the south for you're nothing but a dirty dog. YouH have the unique pleasure of Sniffer Carew, the tor turer, watching the slow disappear ance and assimilation of Sniffer Carew, the dog." : Blank, terrifying silence en veloped the room as he stopped speaking. The breathing of the oc cupants grew and increased like far off heralds ef a coming storm. Carew tore a fingernail to the quick," and whimpered at the spot of blood. Downstairs the orchestra of Ten nessee Johnson moaned and blared with the blues. "It's madness," whispered Detec tive Hogue, and crossed himself, i Thafs it," Carew screamed. "He's mad crazy 1 Get me out ef here get me out of here" He wilted down in the chair under the look in Stan's eyes, drooling at the mouth. . . "Certainly I'm mad, Carew, quite mad but maybe for the first time I'm ' sane. I've seen with opened eyes the proper fate for your kind. With a sharp cleaver from the' kitchen I'm going to cut you up, Carew. A finger at a timea toe at a time a wrist at a time! Ill nurse yon tenderly so yon can keep alive and watch" "Yon cant! Yon cant. Stent" Millie was openly sobbing. - "Oh yes I can," Stan contradicted flatly. "While the dog looks on and remembers niee- h - by joint I'm going to feed him tc Jskel" (To Be Continued) ' . CawiUM Oraanbia, Uaaa. a. Quotations at Portland F&ODUCS EXCHJLKQB PORTLAND. Ora., Oct. 20. (AP) Pro-uca Esc-aaca t Buttar tvaa 38 He; ataadari -0 He; prim lirsrs -6c; lira Is 24 a. -Bttrta 29-29 He. Ehs Larrs extras 5e: larra stand ards Sle: medium extras 80: medium standards 9e; small extras 22c; small atanaaraa Cheese ' Triplets le; loaf 14a. I'ortlautl Graiu PORTLAND. Oct 80: (API Wheat: Open Hig- Lew Close Dee. 62H 63 S2 S May i 834 S 34 6A Cash rraio: Oats, No. 2, 88 lb. white 20.00: At. 2. SS-lb. fray aominal. Barley, J.O. 2, 45 lb. BW 21.00. Corn, Ao. 2, KI shipment -4.75. Cash wheat -id: Soft whit 63 H ; weat- era wnue 03: weettrn red .S2ft. Hard red winter ordinary 61: 11 per cent 61: 12 per cent 64; IS per cent 67; 14 per cent 70. Hard white Baart ordinary 64; 11 pa cent ; .12 per cent 64; 13 per cent 66H: 14 per cent 68. Cir .teeeipts: Wheat 13; flour 8; corn a; miilieed a. Purl la ltd Produce PORTLAND, -Ore., Oct. 20. (AP) Live poultry Buying- prices Leghorn broilers, 1 to lf4 lb.. 16 17c; 3. lbs 16a lb.; colored springs 3 to Sty lbs.. 17 lb.; orer Sty Ib. 17 lb.; Leghorn hens Tr Sty lbs., 14e lb.; ander Sty lb., 12e lb.; colored hens to 5 lbs- 18a Ib ; over ft lbs.. 18 lb.; No. 3 grade 6 lb. less. - " Country Meats Selling price t re tailers': Country killed bogs, best batch er ander 160 lbs.. Hi lb.; Tealera, 14, lb.: light and thin 8-10 lb.; heary 8-9 lb.: bulls 8ty-9e lb.: spring lambs 13-13 tyc lb. ewes 4-6c; cutter cows 6ty7e; eannar cows 6-6tyc. , Turkeys Selling price dressed sew crop hens. 33e; torn a, 23-24 lb. bay ing price; new hens, 21e lb.; torn 21e. Potatoes Takima Uimi, SI. 10 . per 100 lbs. ; local 81 per cwt; Deschutes Gems. $1.20-1.30. i Onioti Oregon C5-75e; Yakima, 40-50c per 50 lbs. Bay, Selling Price to Retailers Alfal fa No 1, $10 ton; oat, retch, 810.50-11 toa: clover $10.00 ton: timothy, eastern Oregon $19; do valley $15 ton, Port land. Wool Willamette valley aominal me dium, 23c lb.; coarse and braids, 23e lb.; Iambs and fall, 20 lb.; eastern Oregon, 16ty-26tye lb. Hops Nominal; new crop, 18-20c; fug- gles 23c (Jaseara Bir iJS peel se id. Mohair Nominal; 1938, 23-25 lb. Domestic flour, selling price city de livery 1 to 25 bbl. lots: family patents, 49. 5.65-6.25. bakera' hard wheat net $3.90 5 40; bakera' blueetem $4 25-4.55; blended hard wheat. 4.35-4.65; aoft wheat flour, $4.60; graham 49a, $4.35; whole wheat 49a, $4.80 bbl. , Sugar Berry or fruit, 100s. $4.90: bales $5.10;. best $4.80 cental. Portland Liveslork PORTLAND. Ore., Oct. 20 (AP) (USDA) Hoga: Receipts 550 including 176 direct, market active, fully steady. good-choice 165-215 lb. driveins 8.00, few outeUnding lightweighte 8.15, carload lota quotable 5.15 and above, 225-55 lb. POLLY AND HER PALS 7 50, tigbA lights and slaughter pigs 7.25 50, few ap to T.SS, packing bows' 6.25 50, choice light feeder piga 7.75. V Cattle: Receipt 150," calves 75, includ ing 87 direct, market active, steady, few common-medium steers 5.50-6.50, strictly good grass steers salable S.10 and above, common-medium beifera 4.75-6.00;- eot trry dairy type heifers 4-00 and dowa, low cutter and cutter cows 2.75-3.50. common-medium S. 75-4.75, including heav ier dairy type rows at ViJ, good beef cowa 6.00-50, bulla 4.50-5.50. choice veal ara 9.00, common-medium 5.00-7.50. few medium good 350-400 lb. calves 6.00. .' Sheep: Receipts BOO including 47 di rect, market very slow, fat lambs wesk, :astanres 25 lower than week's top, good 74-88 Ib. trucxj-1 in lambs 6.3, common' medium 5.50-6.25, few medium slaughter ewes 2.00, good kiuda qaotable 2.50 and above, few 119 lb. brceoing ewes 8.00. Gard Ranch eners and Mart ers Wool in Boston BOSTON. Oct. 19. (AP) (USDA) A moderate volume of buaioets was be ing transacted today in the Bolton wool market. Prices were strong to slightly higher compared with laat week, even though trading was less active. Twelve month Texas wools of average character were bringing 68 to 71 cents, scoured baaia. Some very - choice lots of twelve month Texas wools running staple comb ing in length have brought 73 -to 75 cents, scoured basis. OccssionsI sales of graded French combing lengths fin ter ritory wools were being closed at prices withia the range 66 to 69 cents, scoured basis. Stocks & Bonds October 20 STOCK. AVERAGES By Th Associated Press SO 15 15 60 Indus Raile Utit Stocka Net change A .6 A .4 A .4 A .5 Thursday 76.5 21.5 36.5 52.5 Prevr day .. 75.9 21.1 ' 36.1 52.0 Month ago 69 3 17.5 31.0 46.0 Year ago 70.0 24.8 . : 85.2 49.8 1938 high 77.4 22.0 37.1 52.9 1938 low 49.2 12.1 24.9 33.7 1937 high 101.6 . 49.5 54 0 75.3 1937 lew 57.7 ' 19.0 31.6 41.7 BOND AVERAGES 20 ' 10 10 Rails . Indue Otil Net change -TJnch. D .1 Unch. Thuraday . 59.6 99.1. 94.9 Prev. day 59.6 99.2 94.9 Month sgo 54.7 97.7 91.6 Yesr ago 79.3 98.7 91.8 1938 high 70.5 100.3 95.1 1938 low 46.2 93.0 85.8 1937 high 99.0 104 4 102.8 1937 low 70.8 95.5 90.3 1932 low 45.8 40 0 64.6 1928 high 101.1 98.9 102.9 10 Forgv A .1 64.7 64.6 62.5 65.6 67.0 59.0 ' 74.7 64.2 42.2 100.5 New AAA Ruling CORVALLIS, Oct. 20.-()-The AAA has established a rule per mitting crop loans on mixed wheat, Edgar Ludwlck, state crop loan supervisor, said today. PORTLAND. Or., Oct. 20. (AP) ( US Dept. Agriculture). Apples Spitxeabergs. fancy and face and till. 1.W0-1.23; O grade, 60-75e: de licious, wrapped aud packed, rxtra faaey very large to Urge, $2.00-2.25; O grade medium 90 $ 100; iaclaased . loose pack. au-aac; 40-aiaaaa, fancy. 1:50-1.60, aa Jaeeea, iar ana uu, e-73c Art:choks--Calif $3.25-3.50 box. Avocados Califcraia fuerta. $2.85-8. Beano Oregon, greea. Stye; Kentucky anquoted ; . Yoaat. large, 5c: Limaa, 6-6c Lima. 5 -6c . Broccoli Lags, 85 40c Brussels 8prouts 12 -cop Crt. 85-95c Cantaloupe Oregon, $1.25-1.50. Cabbage Oregon. Billhead. $11.10; red tt- ii.; broken lots 2 2 tyc, Cauliflower Local, No. 1, 75-85c; No. -2, 40c " ' Celery Oregon, Milwaukie Utah type, 90c-$1 per crate; Labia, white, 70-75e; a carta luouc Cora 5 4os $1.00-1.25; Waah.. $1.25. euros lruit Urapelruit, Honda, 64 96s, $3.65 4.00; California's 64126s, ex tra fancy $i 75-3.O0; choice large $2.40 3.6a; Teiaa Marsh seedless $3.75-3.85; Foster p:ak, $3.85-4.00 ; lemona, fancy. an aues, itsu j.vu; chotra 83.Z5-3.50 ; Limes. California 50 pound boxes, $5.50 600, diaplay eartoaa 75e: traya, 18c; oranges, California Valenciaa. fancy 1.0-1 70s. f.yu-3.2a, 200a, smaller, $2.40- 3.00. cnoire aa.uu .2. Cranberries ty bbl.. McFarlands, SJ.JU-B.70; Ur., V3.3U-3.75. Cucambars Ore., flats, 40c Dill fc-8c lb. Endive- Local,' 85-40 doa. Eggplant 5-7e per lb.; flats. 65.73e." rigs Local whit. 60 65 flat; black. boxes. 50-60c; Toksys, 85 90c; Califor Garlic i-ocal. beat. 7 8a pound; poor er 3 6 per pound, . - Grapes Oregon Concords, 20-jouad ala lug boxes,- Thompson seediest, 1.30, ordinary ' $1.10-1.25, p&orer, $1.00; To kaya. $1.00-1.10; nalidded. 80-8 5c; Lady Fine-en, $1.00-1.25; malagae, 90c $1.00: RiUfcra $1.00. lettuce -Dry pack S and 4 doaen. beat local. $1.00-1.25; ordinary. 75-85c Mushrooms Cultivated, 1 lb. 85-40c. Onions Washington. Yakima yellows. No. 1 medium, $1.00-1.10;. large, $1.20- 1.39 h-tnaredweight: 50-pound sacks. 55- 65e; No. 2, 50 60c; Idaho 50-pound sacks white globes. $1.10-1.25; Oregon Labiah yellows,' 50-pound sacks, 65-75e; boilers. 50-pound saeks 50 55c, 10-pound sacks 15-'20e. Peaches Orange clings, 50 60c: Krum- mels, 50-60c. ... Pears Oregon,- Boae, loose, 45 50c; ex. fey. 90e; Anjou, fancy 80-88c; Bed., $1.35-1.50. C grade, 75-85e; loose 1 grade 40-ooc; sartietts from storage. loos. Peas Oregon Lower Columbia. boxes, 65-85c; Warrenton, No. 1, Z.-5. Peppers Oregon luge. 35-40c: oranze boxea, 65-85e; red. b 10e; flata, 25-30e. Potatoes Oregon locsl Rosaets and Long Whites. No. 1. 90c $l 00; Washing ton Russets, $1. IS 1.25; 25-pound sacks, 32-35c; No. 2s. 40-45c per 50-pound ssek; bakers. 100 pounds. $1.50-1.60; Deschutes, No. 1 Rusaets, $1.15-1.25. Squash Oregon. Washington . Crook- neck, scallop Zucchini, 40-45e per fist; Dsnisb, flats, 5-55c; Bohemian, lug, 50-65; ltye. Tomatoes Local. No, 2, 50-6Ce. 60-70e 25 Ib. 82.00- crates, 85-90c; pumpkins, 1 ty- 1, 75-85c; No. 1 Closing Quotations NEW YORK, Oet, Al Chem Dye 192 Allied Stores .. 12 Amer Can . ...lOltt Am For Pow ., tA Am Pow Lt . 6 Am Rad Std San 18 Amer Roll Mills 19 Am Smelt & Ref .54 20.-P5-Toda's closing; prices: Com with " . Sou Consol Edison . Consol Oil .... Corn Prod .... Curtiss Wright 1 Nat Pow & Lt 3214 Northern Pac - 9 Packard Mot 6 V J C Penney . 6 Phillips-Pet . 84' -12 5'.. 391. Du Pont de N . .147- Pressed Stl Car 10'i Am Tel Tel . .147 Amer Tob B .. 90 Amer Wat Wks 13 T4 Anaconda 3 3 Armonr 111 .... 574 Atchison ...... 38 Barnsdall ..... 17 Ts Bait Ohio ... 8 Bendir Aria ... 24 Beth Steel .... 64 Boeing; Airp ... 28 Borge-Warner . 35 Budd Mfg . ... 6 M. Calif Pack .... 21 Callahan Z-L .. 2 Calumet Hec . . 9 Canadian Pac . . J I Case ... ... 92 . Cater Trac .... 54 ; Celanese .."...." 22 Certain-Teed ..11 Ches dc Ohio .. 35 Chrysler 82 Com Solr ..... 10 Dour Aircraft- Elec ; Pow. & Lt Erie RR ...... G.en Electric ... Gen Foods . . . . Gen - Motors . . Goodyear Tire . Gt Nor Ry Pf Hudson Mot . . Illinois Cent Insp Copper . . i Inter Harvest . Int Nick Can .. Int Pap P Pf Int Tel & Tel .. Johns Manville Kennecott . . . Llbby-O-Ford . Llg & Myers B Loews ...'.... Monty Wkrd . . Nash-Kelrinator Nat Biscuit ... Nat Cash . . . . . Nat Dairy Prod. Nat Dist ...... 57 Pub Serr NJ .. 33 12 Pullman ....34 2 Safeway Stores . 20 44 Sears Roebuck . 76 39 Shell Union ... 15 50 Sou Cal .Edison 24 32 Southern Pac .. 20 23 Stand Brands . . 7 .9 Stand Oil of Cal 29 14 Stand Oil of NJ 53 17tudebaker ... s 62 Sup Oil ...... 3 66 TImkn Roll Brg 53 43 Trans-America . . 10 Union Carbide . .104 United Aircraft; . ; 49 - United Airlines. . 57 US Rubber .... .101 US Steel . ..... 55 Walworth 52 Western Union . 111 White Motors .. 26 Wool worth 26 - New York Curb 14 Cities Service . . ' 27 Elec Bond & Sh 9 87 33 11 53 63 - S 28 14 49 "S 13 Spinach Or., 50-55 orang box. r bunched vegetables Per.' d s a bunches, beets. -0 22c; e a r r o t s . 25- 30e rreea onions 20 25c: parsley 25 85e; radishes. 20-25e; turnipi, 30-35 doien; broccoli, lug, 40-4jc. - Meloas Casssbas,- crates. $1-1!5: Ice cream. Ore.. 1-1 4e; watermelon, . 4rle; honeydew,' $1.35 crate. . Root Veaetablee Carrots. lurs 45-50c, aacka. $1.25-1.50: ratabajraa, $1.00-1.2-5 cwt. lugs. 50-60c; beets. $1.25 1.35; tnr aips $1.65-1.75; parsnips, hundredweight 50-55e lug. - , -. . . ' Ballard Says Planning- Vital for 'Farm Setup CORVALLIS, Oct. 26WPV-F. L. Ballard, vice-director of extension for FILBERTS and WALNUTS Orchard Run or Graded Also Not Meats M. KLORFEIN PACKING CO. 277 S. Liberty Ph. 7633 of Oregon State college told the fourth annual farm security ad ministration workers conference today that agency planning was becoming a necessary step both for. the. farm administration and other governmental and private agencies concerned with farm bet terment. - W noOV I ' aw---- . 1 Is The Last Flap by CLIFF STERRETT CiOrrs EAT1N' AT 1 Tj? SSr S x TONTT MlMD HER. A 1 I I . , T tyHSAMBO? y I'M WORWED SORR.VT') ( SNOOPIM' IM MV MAIL , CaN f VCSTIDDV SHEY f ' 7 - - JS -t fCrA 0JT TH' i iHEARrr CXXASlOrULiy..Zrs t -T, Sr I -TUlErtT' STEAM MICKEY" MOUSE The Boss Is Always Right! By WALT DISNEY t)VERAl. DAYS PASS LKEVE4TFLU.V. THERE ARE NO NEW ROBBERIES NOR ANV FLfRTHEH CLUES TO THE OLD ONES XfHEH, ONE NIGHT. AT QUITTING TIME T ( LEAVE THE TOOLS IN , " k . , THE BAG. SONNY! I'M SjLL 'V ?rh- 1 OOIKIO BACK TO . (L m 5Ms.-.a!. 2 ii Ll . 5. . it. i, (! - - I wortl f- mt V BLfT THAT JOB WE'RE ON- -THERE'S NO RUSH -I IT r- iu I ARE YOU Questioning MY RIGHT TO WORK. IP I CHOOSE? 'NO.&R! V f VERY VEUI NOT AT L( I HAVE MY . J ALL I V, REASONS? ONLV -! J ( SOU MAY . -yL SlIEL WAiT'LLI JpM WV TEU.TH Spzz j:t3 . "n"Ffl-. ABOUT 'HTIr i LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY - Mrs. Van Major Stands Corrected! By BRANDON WALSH HI. PCIWCES3.' WHAT MAKES V'ifC 1 VOU SIT THERE LOOKING AS SOLEAAM UvYTf . I AS A LITTLE OWL ? IS THERE r-?M Ela t f ANYTHING WRONG T CO OU Sd&2L tSlristl f gFCEL ALL RIGHT f ; l j On.' i Dttxrr 1 6EE.VOU If FEEL FINE 1 1 EVETRVTHING rS ALL RlG-n, I GUESS I AAUSTA ISEEM ACTlN" A LITTLE EST TOODCCOROOS xecorckis??1 WHAT5 THIS DECOROUS TUFT?TEL ME ABOUT IT- aa i I SI -1bV ANT YOUR SISTERMRS.VA.H MA3D57.SEZ. THAT IT I5NT LAUTUKK.TO RUN ABOUNO WOLLEOtN AM OTLlAAPtKi' THAT THE BEST WAV IS TO ALW4.V5 ACT Tj ECOROOSAKl REPINED AN CULTURE TJ AM" THEN ' EVERYBODY WONT SAY xfP IH-s ' aAa-l a Msva aV kJ "7V. XUIiZ-kD- COURSER I AIN'T VERY GOOD AT DECOROUS STUFT YET BUT itAATffyiN - HARD TO LEARN ITS KINDA HARD AT F"IRST 0 ' I UNDERSTAMD. PRINCESS HAVE A UTTLETALK WITH MY SISTER ABOUT THIS DECOROUS BUSINESS ; r io-ei K- at- i i ii ,h.. i t- TOOTS AND CASPER Just a Regular Guy By JI3niY MURPHY HUMPHREY MARRIEfD A RICH - WIDOW AND THAT EXPLAIN- WHETRE; HE ZrOT HIS MONEV. BUT FROM HIS CONCEIT YOU'D THINK HE E ARMED IT,, HIMSELF! 1 1 I - . i nil r?VV V I m . w r -a. ya f . EE . I'M ZrL AD T MARRIED YOU CASPER, INSTEAD OF i HAT 5 OH.ROV. LOOK ZtOOD TO ME NOW! -T- n I MAI'- THE I If SPIRIT, HONEY! ) j M ADMIT THAT - J NCe6, YOU'RE -LAD aw I r i at f 1T 4 -aw M ar w aw a aa ar- m-w kr a M a a v. YOLTRE NOT A PRINCE OR A DUkT. -a a saw a .a -. w- ' , BU 1 A VYLJUU1-TS' I SWAP YOU FOR ANYBODY TV. 10-21 TOOTS. I'M A REGULAR 6tV and that's a -Wood enou &h title for " . '1' f Pi' THIMBLE THEATRE Starring Popeye A Pair of Heels for a Toe BYSEGAR POPPA. VA CAKTT 1 .STT OKTA GROUND IN 'OKI AcTCTOOMT OP THE 1 DE-MINGS ACE ANGRY WIT WIMPY AND THEV. AOE KiCKIN m a r . - rj r 7T - r. YAM POOPDECKH PAPPV AN I SITS WHERE. I SITS tPE'MlNgS.'- A. A . PK j 5? it V v''.SV'- IrDFOrJ IDE-MIKJGS s3 m&M3 y)t. Vaa. ra ' '