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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1938)
PAGE TEN The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Thursday Morning, December 8, 1933 Salem Market Quotations rxuiTs (Baying Prices) . (Tks priet btWw f applied by , a lel trocar art indicative of tba daily market price paid to froweri by Salem bujsrs but are at (uaraaUed by Tba States man ) Apples All rarietles, 0 (rads, per bo. eo-ese, - Bananas,' lb., stalk .06 Hands , .tVi Grapefruit. Texas i S.OO Dates, frosh, lb. .14 Lemons, crate . 3.50 , Oranges, crate 2 27 to 2.75 VEGETABLES . (Baying Prices) Beets. dos Cabbaee. lb. Carrots, loraT do Cauliflower, Portland Celery, Utah, crate . Celery Hearts, dos. Lettuce, Calif. Onions, boiliag. 10 lbs. No. 2 50 lbs. Green on ion, dos. - Kidisbes, dos. , . Peppers, green, Calif. Parsley - Potatoes, local, ewt &C lb. bsfs. . Spinaen .25 .02 .25 1.50 1.35 .80 4.00 .14 .80 .30 . .30 .10 . .40 1.50 .50 .75 .30 .01 .30 lai-ih dox. . Hubbard, lb. Turnips, dox. avis (Price paid by Independent packing plant to grower) Walnuts Pranquettes. fancy, 12c; me dium, 10e; small 8c; orchard run, 8 to 10c. Walnut meals 25 to 30c lb. FillM-rts Bareelonas, large, 124e; fan cy lle; babies, lie; orchard run 11 to I2e. Durbilly 1 cent higher. (Co-op Prices to Grower) Walnuts Price range, depending upon way nuts run in 14 different grades, lift to 18c. Filberts All moTed out. HOPS (Buying Prices) Clusters, nominal, 1937, lb.-lO to .12 Clusters,' 1938, lb. . .........CO to .21 Fuggles. lop : . 23 WOO AND MOHAIS (Buying Prlcea) Wool, medium, lb. .22 Course, lb. i .22 Lambs, lb. . .18 Mohair, lb. - .28 EGGS AND POULTRY (Baying Prices of Andresen's) Large extra Medium, extras Large standards - Pullets - Colored trys .. Colored medium, lb. White Leghorns, lb. No l- Whita Leghorns, frys Whit, Leghorns, lb. No. 2.. Heary bens, lb. .33 .31 .31 .22 .15 .15 .12 .13 .10 .15 Grade B taw 4 per cent milk, Salem 'basic pool price Co-op. Grade A batterfat price, FOB Salem, SO He. (Milk based on semimonthly : butterfat average.) Distributor price, S 32. A grade butterfat Delly ered 80,c; B grade 29 Uc; C grade, 24 He, A grade print, 32c; tt grade 31 He. Boosters .05 LIVESTOCK ' (Buying price lor No. I stock, based on conditions and sales reported np to 4 p.m. Lamts. top 7.50 Kwes, 2.00 to 3.00 Hogs. tops. 150-210 lbs. 8.0O- 130-150 lbs. f.7.25 to 7.75 210-310 lbs. -. 7.00 to 7.25 SOWS - 00 Dairy type cows 3.50 to 4.50 Beel eowa . 4.50 to 5.00 Bulls . i 4.50 to 6.50 Heifers 5.00 to 6.00 Top Teal, lb 7.50 Hogs, top (Midget Mkt.y 7.75 Dressed veal. ll. (Midget)- .11 MAfilON CBEAMEBx Baying Price .30 Vt .10 .08 .13 .14 .06 .05 Butterfat. A grade Leghorn hens, over 3H lb Leghorn bens, under 3Vi I bs Springers .. Colored hens, over 5 lbs. Slags, lb. Old Roosters, lb Re.'Cits. market value. No. 2 grade 5c less EGG FBICES Large extras . , Large standards Medium extras -- Medium standards Underxrades GRAIN. HAT AMD SEEDS Oats, white, ton 23.00 Wheel, white, bu - .60 Wheat, western red, bu 60 Barley feed, ton 20.00 to 22.00 Oats. grav. feed 28.00 to 29.00 Alfalfa, valley, toa - 15.00 Oat and vetch hay, ton 13.00 Alsike clover seed. lb. 09 to .10 Red Clover seed, lb 13 to .14 .35 .32 .31 .28 .20 Substitutes for Teacher LIBERTY Mrs. Roy Farrand is doing substitute teaching of the upper grades at the Roberts school for Josephine Cornoyer, who is ill. Corn Makes Big Upturn 2-Cent Argentine Boost Gives Impetus for -Chicago Climb CHICAGO. Dec. T-fJamps of 2 cents overnight in Argen tine prices led to a cent a bushel upturn of the Chicago corn mar ket today. Profit-taking later shared the gains here. Leading traders said soaring of Argentine quotations indicated the United States and the Dan ube region had become the only available immediate sources of corn supplies. It was added that regardless of heavy feeding of low-grade wheat abroad, Europe would require large quantities of corn from North America be tween now and spring. More than 10 cents bulge In the price f Argentine corn has resulted during the past 10 days. Tending however, to check ad vances here was the fact that only a few loads of United States corn appeared to have been taken today for export. At the close, Chicago corn fiir tures were higher com pared with yesterday's finish, Dec. 49149,, May 51-. Simultaneously, wheat , was un changed to M, cent lower, Dec. 64-, May 66-67, oats vary ing from decline to ad vance, rye unchanged to up. and provisions showing 2 cents to 12 cents climb. Turkey Mart Firm PORTLAND, Dec. 7.-P)-F!rm prices accompanied good move ment of turkeys from Portland to eastern markets today. Activity increased at country prices. : Lo cal retam sales were nominal at mixed quotations. "MY LOVE IS NEW1 By Iris Bennett ' CHAPTER I TERRY was coming home to day! And suddenly Constance realized that the ancient yellow roadster was exceeding fifty miles an hoar. Lifting small foot in a brown and whitesport shoe from the accelerator, the speedometer turned back quickly. In apology to the ear as if it were an animal she were driving too hard and too fast, ; she thought, "Ifs because I want to see Terry so terribly I It's been so . long since I saw him- last, since Christmas 1" It was a warm Saturday after noon in June. Twilight had scat tered coolness. To Constance, driv ing from the farm where her aunt and uncle lived to the city of North wood, her home, it had never been a lovelier day. The honeysuckle growing wildly had never been sweeter nor the flowers in untended fields brighter. A, shiny brown colt kicked up his ardent heels and went bolting down the pasture. Constance ; thought, "You're glad to be alive, too." Everything was beautiful today - because Terry Cannon whom she had known and loved for as long as she could remember was coming home. And home to Terry, though in the winter he was the assistant athletic coach in an upstate univer ' sity, was the big, shabby cottage two doors from the big, shabby cot tage of the Darby family on Vine Ct XT .V I She had many memories of the tall, lean, bronze-faced, bronze- haired Terry and all of them were sweet.. When they were children, he V..1 ..... l. j : l games. It was he who had taught her to swim and later to drive a can It was to him she had poured out her moods and feelings since child hood. But rather suddenly they had ceased to be children and on one bitterly cold January night when they had been skating on the river, Constance had fallen and Terry had helped her to her feet. But his arms had stayed around her and a light she had never seen in his eyes had come to them. They had known then that they were not children any longer and that they were as com pletely and as passionately in love as two people could be. From that moment on, from that first kiss, she had waited for him to finish college , and establish himself. Now he was coming home for the summer-. . . Would he ask her now? Would he , think he was ready to deserve her? . Many times writing to him she had wanted to write, "Terry, you and I have always been poor. .We havent eared much. What are wa waiting . fort These are wasted 'Tears when we might be together. Ill live in one room in a boarding house near the eampus and never complain, dar ling." But she had not written that because she knew that Terry wanted - to give her a home when he married her.' ' . ,. ; ' ;. " Bis letter had come yesterday and tears of joy had sprung to her eyes. The past weeks had been difficult. .She had lost her position when her employer died and efforts to find another had availed nothing except vague promises. And at home her parents depended upon a large por tion of her salary, borrowing but never paying back. She could never refuse her mother who hinted sweet ly, "I do need a new ruz for the dining room dreadfully," or "I do wish I eould get some new porch furniture. The modern kind looks so comfortable." Then Rosalind, her younger sister, usually wanted a new dress .... About five miles from Northwood she realized that the old roadster was running bat of gasoline. . . ' i Pulling La at a filling station. she . noticed a, long, sleek black car. The hood was op and the proprietor of the station, a stout, bald, unshaven man in overalls, was peering at the motor. Constance heard him mutter, "Sorry I can't help you, sir. Dont V. ntM.. .v,f v Mivn uv uuu wu m vx vir. I aint no mechanic. In the twilight she could see only ue iau ngure 01 tne owner ox tne car. But suddenly someone Inside ' the station turned on the lights out side and she saw him clearly. He was as tall aed as lean as Terry and he was wearizg gray tweeds. He was as dark as Terry, was blonde. Blade hair, black eyes, annoyed now at the delay, a short, dose-cropped black mustache. He raoka in den. ermA tnnM. "Ill have to call Northwood and get a mechanic. But that will prob ably take some time and IVe a din ner engagement." Then seeing Constance ka nm to her without hesitancy. "I'm in rather a bad spot," he said. "Something wrong with the motor and no way to get to town until a mechanic comes. Ill be tre mendously rrateful to von if vcraH give me a lift." In the srlare of the lie-hta he in her and the annoyance in his dark eyes aiea instantly, now could you be annoyed, he asked himself with enough he would know that the peo ple in the Hills associated only with their neighbors. There was a line you could not cross. Nodding, he kept his eyes on her. "A proper name for a blonde Con stance. Did I tell yon to leave me at the Howards, if yon will? I'm stay ing there tonight but I'm taking house in the Hills for the summer. Bad pennies have a way of turning np. Bat I couldnt think of a better place to write a book. Everybody seems to be writing his and her experiences. I think 111 try my luck at mine." So he had come back to write a book. . . . She kept her eyes on the straight white road. "I'll be tremendously grateful to you if you will give me a lift." amusement, vhm vnn warn lnnV-intr at a girl with blowing honey-colored hair, flecked eyes with a fringe of dark lashes, and a full red mouth? An incredibly lovely girl in a print ed silk dress ... He smiled. Always she was to re member the first time she saw him smile. "I'm Gordon Keith. Perhaps we knew each other a long time ago. In that ease I'm not a stransrer he. ging for a ride." tier eyes kindled with recogni tion. Gordon Keith I All hai- lit ah had heard of him though he had gone away to become famous as a loreign newspaper correspondent and lateras a radio commentator while she was still in grammar school. Funny that she had not recocnized him when a frctfmantlv his photograph appeared in the lo cal papers. 1 he small-town boy who had made pood, who w inferrta. tionally known, who had married j i j i aim ucea uivurceu cy en neiress, who associated with the great and near-great ... She smiled. "We've never met be fore but of course 111 give you a lift." Never met von but Iv raa. reams and reams about yon, North- wood favorite son I Thank van. YotiVa varv VinA it you can wait a moment until I call a garage in town. . . . UI course, I could wait and ride back with the mechanic but I'm due at the How ards for dinner. If I remember cor rectly, they're pretty punctual people."-: ' : i . He would be going to the Howards for dinner, she thought, as he went into the untidy little station. Who but the wealth v. rifvrH. TTaw. ards who lived in the gray stone casue-sort-oi-nouse in the exclusive Hills section would entertain Gor don Keith? The proprietor put five gallons of rasoline in the tank. Then GnrAm Keith came oat and got in the car beside her. . "Yon havent told me your name." Tnt Constance Darby." Did he think she was one of the elegant girls Xrom the Hills 7 Soon, if he had frirtrottan ha vnnM wali-a tVi. snobbishness of Northweed, Soon "You're not lacking in exneri- ehce," she said, smiling. "Adventure is a better word." When she declined the cigarette he offered from a silver case, he lighted one. Then, "You seem to know a good bit about me. But I know noth ing about you." A lovely girl wasted in wormwood, he thought. In New York people would turn their heads to look at her a second time. He was curious. "How do small-town girls spend their time?" I worked until three weak My employer died." secretary 7" She nodded. " " "Why. you're inst tha rvnnn r looking for! I am in luck!" remaps luck would begin to come his way strain. For miita vmw Hma it had been running the opposite way, running last But no one in Northwood need know that. Let them continue ta Tnrrl him a. Ana of the town's most distinguished sons i xt was odd how superstitious he was. When the motor of the ear that was not paid for had failed. ne a tnougnt, "A fine beginning for wnat is going to be a hellish sum mer." Then a beautiful Hrl YA come along. . . . instance's eyes left the road and looked at him. Was he joking? Mi eirl Friday." ha u "You're hired! After all, this book must have some inspiration. You start Monday and the salary is twenty-five dollars a week. But I warn you, your duties will be strin gent. You must make me work when I'd rather nlav tennis and must lunch with me. I think we're going to hare a lot of fun. It is a deal, isn't it?" She was too surprised to anawa at once. Secretary to Gordon Keith 1 xi ow people would talk! : Would Terrr obiect? Bnt aha rwadajt tha money terribly, her parents needed , ana u Terry asked her to marry him. there was a tronan n sider.... Why not? Let them talk! -it s a xeai,- she said. Splendid." (To be continued) OsMricM trl SssesBi MstrfteMsvSrex&ralratfUbt Quotations at Portland raoDucx exchaxob PORTLAND, Ore., ee. 7. (AP) Produce Excasnge I Batter .Extras 29e; standsrds 28He; prime firsts 28He; firsts 28e. Butterfat S 1 8 m e. . Large extras, 33e; Urge stan dards, S2e; medium extras tie; medium standards JOc; small extras 27e; small standards 26. Cheese Triplets He ; loaf 15c. Portland Grain PORTLAND, Ore., Dee. 7. (AP) Wheat: , Open High Low Close May ;6S 66 65 H 66 Dee. -. 63 63 H 3 . 63 H Cash Grain: Oats. No. 2-38 lb. white, 27.00 ;No. 2-88 lb. gray, nominal. Barley, No. 2 45 lb. BW, 23.00. Corn, No. 2, EY shipment, 23.75. Cash Wheat Bid: Soft white 65; western white 64 Vx : western red 62. Hard red winter ordinary 62; 11 per cent 62; 12 per cent 64; 13 per cent 67; 14 per cent 70. Efrd wbite-Baart ordin ary 85; 11 per cent unquoted, 12 per cent 65; 13 per cent 65; 14 per cent 66. Today's car receipts: Wheat 37; bar ley 1; floor 10; corn 6; oats 4; hay 1; anillfeed 2. Porllautl Livestock PORTLAND, Ore., Dec 7. (AP) (TJS Dept. Agr.) Hogs: Receipts 400 including 18 direct, market strong, good choice 165-215 lb. driveins 7.90-8.00, few lots 8.10, 230-70 lb. butchers 7.40-50 220 ib. up to 7.73. light lights 7.45-50, packing aowa 6.00-25, lightweight 6.50, few good-choice feeder pigs 7.00-75, few specialties 8.50. Cattle: Receipts 100 including 25 di rect, calves 50 including 20 direct, mar ket slew, early sa'es steady, odd common steers 6.00-50, light cuttery steers 4.50, medium-good fed steers salable 7.50-8.75, common-medium betters 5.00-6.50, cutters 4.00, low cuttor and cutter cow 2.75 3.75, common cows 4.00-25, fat dairy type cows 5.00 and above, good beef cows 5.50-6.00, bells 5.00-75, cutters 4.00, choice vealers 8.25-50, medium 7.00, common 375 lb. calves 3.50. Sheep: Receipts 500, market slow, scattered sales steady, few medium-good 85 lb lambs 7.50 gcod-choice salable 7.75 and above, choice few wooled lambs car load lots 8.35, sizable lot good-choice 78 lb. early shorn lambs 7.75, add yearlings S.50, good-choice ewes salable 8.00-75. Portland Produce PORTLAND, Ore. Dec. 7. (AP) Country meats Selling price to retailers; country-killed hogs best butcher, under 160 lbs. 11-Utte fc; heavy, 6-9c lb.; lambs Id lb.; ewes 4-7c lb.; bulls 8-8e lb.; entter cows 7-7 o lb. ; canner cows 6 6Ve lb. Lite poultry Buying prices: Leghorn broilers 14 to 14 lbs, 16e lb.; 2 lbs, 16c; colored springs 2 to tVk lbs., 15c lb.; over Stt lbs. 17c; Leghorn hens over iyk lbs. 1415c lb.; under 8 lbs. 14c Ik.; colored hens to 5 lbs.. 18c lb.; over & lbs. 18e lb.; No. 3 grade 5e lb. less. Turkeys Selling prices: Dressed, new erop kens, 23-25e lb.; toms. 22-2He lb. Baying prices: New hens 23 He lb.; tons 21ttc b. Potatoes- Yakima gems 1.20 cental; local 1.00-1.10; Deschutes gems, 1.20 1.85 cental; California sweets, $1.25 1.70 for 50-lb. crate. Onions Oregon, Xsv 1, 65-75; Taklm 40-50 per 50 lbs. . Wool Willamette valley, nomial; me dium 22-23 lb.; coarse and braids, 22-23 lb.; lambs and fall 20 lb.; eastern Ore gon 18-22 ib. Haya Selling pre to retailers: Alfalfa No. 1, 16 00 ton; oat vetch 11.00 ton; elover 10.00 toa; timothy, eastern Ore gon 19.00; Do valler 14.00 ton Portland. Hops New crop Clusters 20 lb; i'ug gles 23 lb. afohar Nominal: 1938, 26-27 ib. Cascsra Dark Buying price, 1938 peel 5c lb. Sugar Berry and f r n 1 t , 100s, 4.90 ; bale 5.10; beet 4.90 cental. . Domestic flour Selling price, city de livery. 1 to 25-bbl. lots: Family patent, 49s, 5.45-6.05; bakers' hard wheat, net, 3 70 5.15; bakers' bluestem, 3.95-4.30; blended wheat flour, 4.20-4.45; soft wheat flour. 3.85-3.95; graham, 49s, 4.15; whola wheat 49s, 4 60 bbl. Wool in Boston BOSTON, Dee. 7 ( AP) (TJS Dept. Agr.) Scattered inquiries were being re ceived today for domestic wool, but ac tual purchases were of limited volume. Occasional aales were closed on fine original bags, territory wool, at prices ranging mostly 66 to 68 cents, scoured basis for good French combing length and at 64 to 65 cents, scoured basis, for average to short French combing length. Graded combing bright fleece wools were very quiet with nominal quotations steady at 32 to 33 cents in the grease for three eighths brood, and at 81 to 32 cents for quarter blood. Stocks and Bonds December 7 STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press 30 15 15 60 Indus Rails Otil Stocks Net Chg. ; A .3 Unch D .1 A .2 Wednesday - 74.3 20.3 34.7 50.7 Previous day 74.0 20.3 34.8 50.5 Month ago 79.3 23.2 37.8 54.7 Tear ago 66.1 22.5 34.8 47,2 1938 high 79.5 23.2 37.8 54.7 1938 low .i. 49.2 12.1 24.9 33.7 1937 high 101.6 49.5 54.0 75.3 1937 low 57.5 19.0 31.6 41.7 BOND AVERAGES 20 10 10 10 Ralls Indus Dtil Forgn Net Chg. Unch A .2 Unch A .1 Wednesday .. 57.9 98.4 92.3 63.4 Previous day 57.9 98.3 92.3 63.3 Month ago .... 62.1 98.8 9X9 65.2 Tear ago 74.4 97.0 92.6 65.7 1938 high 70.5 100.3 95.1 67.0 1938 tow 46.2 93.0 85.8 59.0 1937 high ... 99.0 104.4 102.8 74.7 1937 low 70.3 95.5 90.3 64.2 1932 low 45.8 40.0 64.6 42.3 1928 high 101.8 ' 98.9 102.9 100.5 Aged Man on Long Walk '. UNI0NVALE Frank Westfall. almost 79, walked the mile from bis home to the Unlonvale sttTe Monday and suffered no Incon venience from the unusual trip. Stocks Climb Then Retreat Five-Point Break in D & R Comes as Dividend Is Omitted NEW YORK, Dec. 7.-()-The stock market scurried back into its rut today after popping out for a forenoon rally. The leaders for a while looked as if they were off on a worth while recovery. Steel, motor, cop per shares and other industrials were up as much as 2 points. But demand petered out around noon and the market sank again. End About Same Final prices were mixed an1 little changed on the average. A five-point break in Devoe & Ray nolds "A," following omission of the dividend on the common, stir red the market toward the close. The Associated Press compos ite price of 60 stocks ended at 50.7, up .2 of a point. For sev eral weeks the market has been fluctuating within a comparative ly narrow range in the 50-53 lev el in the Associated Press average. Gardeners' Mart PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 7. (AP) (US Dept. Agriculture). Apples Supplies liberal, demand mod erate, market steady Oregon. Washing ton Delirious extra fancy large to very large, 1.75-2.00; fancy, 1.25-1.35; Spiti enbergs. extra fancy medium to large, 1.50 1.60; fancy, 1.25-1.35; Newtowns, fancy, 1.65-1.75; Winesaps, extra fancy, 1.50; fancy, 1.35. Artichokes Calif., fuerte 1.75-2. Avocados California foerte 1.75-2; Pueblo, unquoted. Bananas Per bunch, 5-5 He lb.; small lots. 5 ft -6c Besns Fla.. bltck Valentin 1415c lb. Broccoli Lugs, 35-40c. Brussels Sprouts 12-cup erste, $1.10. Csbbsge Oregon ballhead, new crates $1-1.15; old crates 83 90c; red 32Hc lb.; broken lots. lUe. Caaliflower Local, No. 1, 1.50-1.60; Calif., 1.35-1.50. . Celery Oregon, Utah type, $1.00 per crate; whi's $1.50-2; hearts 65-75e; Wash., Utah, $1.10; Calif., Utah, $1.50 1.65. Citrus fruit -Grapefruit. Texaa marsh seedless, $2.65-2.75; Arixona, fancy,. $2 1.35; choice $1.75 2;-Foster, pink, $3 3.50; lemons, fancy all aises. $3.50-5. 5a; choice. $2.75-3.50; limes, Calif., 50-lb. bx., $3-8.30 according sise, disp. cartons, 75e; treys, 18c; oranges, California, Va lencies, 200s small, $2.75-3.75; navels. Closing Quotations NEW YORK, Dec 7rT)-Tod ay's closing Comwlth & Sou. lVx Consol Edison . 2S4 Consol Oil .... 8 Corn Products . 62 Curtis Wright . 6 Du Pont de N..144 Doug Aircraft . 70 Elec Power eVLt 10 Erie RR ,1 General Electric 41 General Foods . 374 General Motors. .48 Goodyear Tire . 33 Gt Nor Ry Pf. . 24 Hudson Motors. 7 Illinois Central. 15 Insp Copper ... 15 Int Harvester .. 59 Int Nickel Can . 53 Int Pap & P Pf . 46 Int Tel & Tel. . 8 Al Chem & Dye. 182 Allied Stores .' 11 American Can' . 95 Am For Power.' 3 Am Power & 5 Am Rad Std San 18 Am Roll Mills . 20 Am Smelt & Ret 52 Am Tel & Tel . .148 Am Tobacco B. 86 Am Water Wks. 12 Anaconda ' . . 3 4 Armour 111 .... 5 Atchison 36 Barnsdall ..... 17 Bait & Ohio ... 6 Bendix Avia ... 23 Beth Steel .... 71 Boeing Airp . : . 30 Boige- Warner ;31 Budd Mfg . . . . . . 6 Calif Pack .... 20 Callahan Z-L . 1 Calumet Hec . . 8 Canadian Pacific 5 J I Case , 90 Caterpil Trac . . 4.5 Celanese ....... '23 Certain-Teed . . 10 Chrysler . . .. . Coml Solvent Johns Manville.101 Kenneeott Libbey-O-Ford . Lig & Myers B. Loew's Monty Ward . , Nash-Kelv Natl Biscuit . . , Natl Cash ...... 79 Natl Dairy Prod 9 Natl Dist 43 52 98 59 50 8 24 24 12 28 prices: Natl Pow & Lt. 7' Nor Pacific ... 10 Packard Motor. 4 J C Penney .... 80 Phillips Petrol . 40 ! Pressed Stl Car. 10 Pub Serv NJ ... 30 Pullman 33 '8 Safeway Stores . 26 Sears Roebuck .73 Shell Union ... 14 Sou Cal Edison. 22 Sou Pacific ... 1 7 Stand' Brands . . 6 Stand Oil Calif. 26 Stand Oil NJ... 50 Studebaker ... 7 Sup Oil 3 Timk Roll Bear 49 Trans-America . 6 Union Carbide . 85 United Aircraft. 38 United Airlines. 117. US Rubber .... 49 US Steel 62 Walworth ..... 7 Western Union . 23 White Motors .. 12 Wool worth .... 50 New York Curb Cities Serv 6 Elec Bond & Sh 9 all sizes. $2.33 3.25; choice, $2,15 2.40; pl;ire pack, $1.9i2 00; tanperines, Fla. 2-2.15; Japs, $1.35-1.40; i'lorida grape fruit. 54 64s, $3.50-3.75. Cranberries 5 bbl. McFarlands, $3-4.50; Oregon $3.75-4.00. Cucumbers Hothouse, per doz., fancy 1.1.V1.20; choice unqtieled; standard. So. 2, 40 bOc. . - Dill 6 8c ,1b. Krdire Loral. 2a 30c dozen. Kggplant Calif., 1214c- lb.; per lug, $2-2.15. Figs Local white, 60 65c flat; Hack, 50c. . Garlic Local, be&t, 7-8c lb.; poorer 5 6c lb. Lettuce Oregon. The Dalles unquot ed; California, 5 dozen,' Iced, $&-"5-4.00; 6s, $2.80-3.00; dry. 5 dos., $3-3.25. Mushrooms Cultivated, 1 lb., 35 40c. Onions 50 Ue.. Wish, yellow, 65-75c; large, 80-85C; O.-egon Labish yellows, 50 poand sscks 70 eOc; 10 pound sacks, 18-20C Pears Oregon.' Bosc, loose, 50-60c; ex. fey., 90c $1; Anion fancy 80-88s, tned. $1.25 1 59; C grade 80 90c. Winter Ne lis, orchard run, 40-60c; Cornice, ex. fey., $2.85-3. Peas Xminsl. . . Peppers Calif., green lugs, $1.30-1.40; Florida, $5-5.50; loose, 1416c lb. Potatoes Oregon, local Russets and long whites. No. 1. $1.00-1.10; No. 2s, 50-pound sacks. 37 -40c; Denchutes and Klamath. No. 1 Bassets, $1.25-1.15; No. 2s, 50-pound sack, 47 H-&0c; Wash.. 40 7He per 50-p o a n d sack; Washington Rassets, $1.20 L.35; 25-pouad saclcs. 35 7e; No. 2, 40 45e per 50-pound sack; baker. 100 pound, $1.50-1.60. ' SHash Oregon Wsabintton Danish crates, $1.10-1.25; MaxWebeaJ. 1-H4 per lb.; Uubbard 14-1 H.e;, Bohemian, lugs, 60-65s; pumpkins, 1-1 Vie per lb.; Danish. $2.00-2.25 lug: ' . . Swet Potato's California, 50 pound crates, SI. 50-1. 60; No. 2, $1.20-1.30; Louisiana yams, $1.10-1.60; Xo. 2, $1 40 1.50. Tomatoes California, lugs, repacked, $2.00-2 25; Ore;on hothouse, 15-1S Ib. Spinafh Orison, 70 75c orange hns. Bunched vejfnables Oregon, per 'dz en bunches; beets, 25-30c; carrots, 25 30c; green onions, 25-uOc; parsler, 20 25c; Jap radishes. 45 50c lug; winter 20c; radishes, 30-35c; turnips, 22 25c per dozen; ce'ery i-oot. .r0 per dozen; broc coli, lugs, 40 45c; California parsley, 35c; radishes, 45-50c. Root ve-jetables Carrots, lugs. 33 40-; sacks. $1.00-1.25; rutabagas, $1.35-1 50 -hundredweight; beets, $1.10-1.25; tur nips, $1.25-1.50 per cwt; lugs, 40c; parsnips, 40 50c; horseradish, 20c lb. Lulu Arrives at Mcllvenna Farm PORTLAND, Dec. 7.-(yF)-Er-nest Irene Mclrenna, whose dairy herd has been rated as one of the seven highest Jersey herds in the United States, boasted a choice addition today. It was a $1000 cow from the Isle of Jersey, Brampton Valiant Lulu, a six-year-old. One of MCllrenna's cows has won the . grand championship at the .Pacific International Live stock Exposition for the last tare years,' His- dairy farm Is "on the outskirts of Portland. - POLLY AND HER PALS A Penny for Your Thoughts, Carrie! By CUFF STERRETT 55 - Jb HERE'S A - AywSVJI HOW ON. A J" ( TPS JUST THAT I ET.rfrH EXTRAVAGANCE I lfflrXEZh -fr i Sr&L I PENNVFOR.) lVAAWa " PS EARTH VOU X-S JUi 1 WAS APR.ICTED lcS! JWBx MICKEY MOUSE Playing to a "big House" By WALT DISNEY WELL I S'POSE YOU BIRDS H ,k W AFTER ALL, WE OWE A i-. KNOW YOU'LL HAVE QUITE A yMSS 'y r,i VEST TO SOCIETY AND. A FEW YEARS IN THE X. J . J r J.ET IT NOT BE SAJD THAT CL-rSrVES, WE RATHER) 5 &Q2TE " .Urtnrt. t ... .rrA-fi.-J tn.nt mmm, n, f ' ml J BUT OUR TIME SHALL N NOT BE WASTED! WE'LL ORGANIZE A DRAMATIC CLUB! r DRAMATIC ) ( SUCH A DRAMATIC ' O CLUB AS NO J ? 0 PRISON HAS. "C W , 1 , Jtr LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY Through Borrowed Eyes By BRANDON WALSH now i cam see you - if you tav-e owe STEP BACKWARD -vOU BECOME A BLUR AAV EVES HAVE BEEN FAILIWG- FOR YEARS - CAN READ AMD BEE PLAINLY PROM A SHORT DISTANCE BUT BEVOND Si FEET EVERV OBJECT BECOMES BLUR , BUTWMEM f AMVOiE COMES in THE DOOR TAL TO TWEMOUST AS SOOM ASTHEy OPCMTHE tOOR- tv TPAIK1ED AAVSELP TO RECOSMIZE TOOTS TEPS - THE SOUND OF DiPPEREMT vOCES - TO k'EEP EVERy. OlE FROM LEARN IMG OF MV AFCLICTIOM - IF TUP -rwEATGTE OWNERS EVER LEARN THgv WAVE A BUMD .DOORTEMDER PLEA5E.M(7 BARNES -DOMT. TALK LIKE, THAT VOU AWT BUMD AAAV6E VOU OUT 5EE VERY GOOD, BUT VOu'G?E. TEPRiBLE SMART AM' EVERVBOOY THINKS vOLl'RE SWELL - I KIN TELL BV THE FRIEMDLV WAV TVtEV LOOK VOU mi THEY ARE ALL VERV, KINO z1-" 1 AN' BESIDES -.ZERO AN' ME WN SEE GOOD -PRETTVSOON rLL KNOW WHO EVERYONE S VM BIE55 YOUR AN AAAVRE I rf KIND HEART- KIN HELP VOU H VOU WAVE GWEN A UTTLE BTTM MEAN IDEA I TOOTS AND CASPER A Dress Occasion By JIMMY MURPHY 1PH0NED THE Nj CLUB FOR AN sNTROOUCTIOM TO SOME NICE I MIDDLE-AED ,,M WOMAN I Jr ''A WW AbLLV. IW. V g 60NE AND J I Done rrt f I IF I RUN RUN ACROSS THE RIHT WOMAN flX. MARRY HER 4 IT ! Cetr. Wit, tint rVstnra Syndicate, Inc. Warid tim V 1 TOLD 'EM MY NAME IS MR. JONES THEY AINT 60NMA KNOW MY RI&HT NAME UNTIL AFTER I SEE THE 6AL EY &ET IV a a THEY SAID THEY'D PHONEME WHEN THEY FIND THE RlHT WOMAN FOR ME 40SH7x FEEL. SHEEPISH; BUT ID BETTER BUY ME A NEW SUIT SO I'LL ; BE READY FOR THE INTRODUCTION! C!)IMMY sV S T r r r, -, yii 14" ir- va r a as icvj THIMBLE THEATRE Starring Popeye About Face, Popeye! HE PLOWS LIKE ) t T, OUR WOC2K ) A DwGr f VLL. ) N DEMON I A I THEYS" TrC HE S A ( IS FINISHED NO ' v 1 ' Yyy KING CAROOSO OF CUSPtDONIA IS PHOJING VOU f. I rL as Jr1 POPEYE. PLEASE COME TO MV . COUNTRY RIGHT AWAY THE POOEY HOUND IS STILL MAWNG- 7 s AT ME J