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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1954)
! ' - Y .-.I'.""' : ';; ! ' Y Y - a - ! - Y .1 : " Y i ! M f- f (' : a.aa.::, - i ; ;Vf ; , ; ''---'.--I :: ' p. i j Sets Record for Births -' ' - ; 1 ! ; . ' . ... ..... . .. ...... . . , ' i " ' , f A' - . y v iv't: A a '' r ft.Lt t-"' V v;' s - - v i M-jnimi n mfmimmmi'-jm W'-w""!,,TCr'l 'MSsi . ,!l if.hr1 ; 1 I " s mi . lit i :tm; i i i ;r Gambled Kttfe His Crippled Daughter, Commits Side lae SEATTLE (jii A professional gambler who ("always wanted to help" his crippled daughter, gave up Tuesday i killing her and himself in a swank Seattle apart ment ! . ! ; i)ead are Harry Andrew Wag ner, 65. and jVirginia Mary Wag ner, 11. The i daughter, victim of spastic paralysis- which meant she never would be normal, was found by Mrs. Wagner dying- on the couch of the Wagner apartment Around the! hall corner lay the body of Wagner, a bullet through his head. Coroner John P. Brill said it plainly was a case of mur der and suicide. The mother had left the father and daughter a short time before to go to the laundry room. The father then was trying to feed the little girl some peaches while they watched a television program, hv erything appeared normal, the 38- year-old woman said. Called Ambulance When Mrs. Wagner returned about 3 p. m. and found the girl on the couch she thought the child was suffering from a brain hem orrhage and called an ambulance It wasn t until an hour later she was informed the husband's body had been found in the in cinerator rjxm down the hall. "I can't imagine what made mm ao it an ot a suaaen, me ssj Machinists to RAH WAY, N. J. Mrs. Clara M. Bnriff, 35, is pictured in the Rah- j Mailltaill Ldie way, in. j. Memorial Hospital wnere sne gave nirin iu inpicis and established a record of having igiven birth to five children in less than l year. In incubators, lower photo, are the triplets. In addition to the eleven month-old Itwins, the Buroffs also have two older children. Nicholas, the father, is a night supervisor in f k t P T CUT v"' l" national Association of Machinists j record level oS the last two years. inc Matesman). ; apparently will continue to "go it show officials pointed out that this i .i alone" in! negotiations with West j vear's champion and reserve Negotiations I BELLINGHAM w - The Inter- i - s i . mother said. "He loved her very dearly and he always wanted to help her." , Never Fully Normal r i The couple had had some hopes Virginia would walk some day but knew she never could be fully normal physically; Mrs. Wagner said. j I ; "She had been j suffering to an extent and Harry had been wor rying because he was: a little short of money. But I didn't have any idea he would do anything like this. ! 1 "I guess he just couldn't stand to see her suffer along with his other worries. She may have been crippled but she had a good little mind." j I Mrs. Wagner said: she married Wagner at Goldfield, Nev., Aug. 3, 1941, and he had worked much of the time since then as a card dealer in Reno. Las Vegas "and around here.",At the time of their marriage, Mrs. j Wagner was secretary for General Electric Co. in Las Vegas. j Virginia was their only child. Hereford Bull DENVER UTi I The big sale of the National Western Stock Show was held Tuesday.: It saw 162 of the nation's top registered here ford bulls go j through the sales ring at prices j which ranged up wards to $17,000. j The first 51 bulls sold returned a total of $164,545,' for an average of $3,226 per animal. While the totals! were below the. New CbiHmand Pilot it- a. i L. Stotfunan, Solom. Or 21. 1934-4Sc Stock Market Honeycombed By Hesitancy NEW YORK I .The stock market was honeycombed with hesitancy today, but it 1 managed to hold steady and closed higher. Key sections of the list: displayed gains that went to around a point at the best Losses were small. FrOm time to time some strong spots emerged, but many of these were, erased before the! close. The market started higher with a jfirst hour volume jof 520,000 shares. Thereafter it moved some what narrowly in a lower range. Before the close there was enough of a pickup to turn the market definitely ahead by the; final bell. Distillers were in demand along wfth the oils and many railroads ! and motors. The aircrafts did well at one time but were mostly lower at ' the close. Steels were undis tinguished as were the chemicals. .Today's advance was the sixth for the market in the! past seven sessions. On average the market now stands at the best levels -since late March of last year. ;, Volume expanded as prices ad vanced and the trading pace slowed when price progress halt- Profit Taking r- I 1 . i w Hits Wheat CHICAGO un A very mixed market developed on the board of trade; Wednesday as wheat and soybeans! suffered from profit tak ing while demand expanded for oats and rye. ; Wheat! closed uunchange to 14 lower, corn , lower to ?4 1 higher, oats i H-l H higher, rye ! -l t higher, soybeans 2 cents lower to mgner ana iara a to 42 cenu a hundred pounds lower. Portland Grain HAMILTON AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. Cot Ira F. Wintermute (left) receives command pilot's wings from Brig. Gen. C. D. Vincent vice commander of Western Air Defense Force, for which Wintermute is assistant deputy for operations. Wintermute's 4,000-hour flying record and 15-year service qualify him for the wings. (Air Force Photo). . .- Deelz Hearing Monday Relates To Grade A Milk License Only l Coast shipyard employers A three-hour conference by in ! ternational representatives attend i ing the f Pacific Coast District, Metal Trades Council (AFL), broke up Wednesday afternoon without bringing the Machinists back into I hp inint nppntiatinn fold. By LILLIE L.f MADSEN The council president. William Farm Editor, The Statesman !H Wav of Portland, said acree- Folk who show up at the ElmerjDeetz, Canby dairyman, hearing j ment WJ(S reached on only one next Monday at 10 o'clock expecting to hear a battle between himjpojnt jn a four-point proposal and and the Milk Control administration are going to be disappointed, j ne did not disclose which point. The appearance of Deetz at this- time has no connection with his j 7ne proposals, submitted by the controversy witn tne uregon muk jjuarKeung (miiK conxroi; aamin-, machinists, were these lstration, u. neais, oi tne siaxef oeparimeni oi agricuiiure, saia Wednesday. -f Beals adds, mat anyone, m course, who desires may attend the hearing which involves matters Strand Complains Over Submitting Copy to Dornjan PORTLAND UP) Dr! j A. L. champion bulls were not offered ! Strand, president of Oregon State PORTLAND (iP) I No bids. Wednesday's car receipts: wheat 9; flour 11; mill' feed 11. Portland) Projduce PORTLAND uB Butterfat Tentative, subject to immediate change Premium quality, maxi mum to .35 to one per cent acidity, delivered in Portland J 68-71 lb; first quality, (&69; second quality, 64-67. Valley routes and country points 2 cents less. Butter Wholesale, flo.b. bulk ed. Business of the day amounted ! besA t0 tlolTKa,e,!;s-radeA-U 1,960.000 shares as compared g K ITS 4 '' kith 1,840,000 shares the previous. I 99 SCOre' 64 2 ' P SC0Tt 62' for sale. These two bulls tradi tionally top the auction Transainerica Bank Deposits, Profits Climb I : SAN FRANCISCO (J) Trans america Corporation announced rlatinff to the state grade A fluid milk sanitation code and not pric ing or control questions. To Shew Cause Deetz will attempt to show cause ! Balky POW iWrites Mother College, said in an interview with the Oregon Journal Wednesday 1. Each union would make its j Tuesday that its 47 majority owned own aecisions as 10 wages ana banks in five Western states in- contract provisions, rather than be creased deposits, loans and profits governed; by a majority vote of last year. Each bank is operated all unions. i in its own community by its own ) The m nrhfni cl c urfiulH rptain rr: .,) i their separate collective bargain-j Loans of tkej 47 banks totaled!? LXlTdirec1! well as the right to about 723 million dollars at the!"""' s Ammo Dump Exchange Set WASHINGTON Wt The Air Force has agreed to exchange its ammunition dump site at Vanport.l that a situation which cortibcls the near Portland. Ore., for another- State Department of Higher Edu- site in the same general ara, BcpJ cation to submit copy for its waiter isoroiaa iK-ure reponea: publications to the State ji Director . Tuesday. of Finances "certainly is a hazard ; The Vanport site has been con-; to higher education." ' sidered by promoters as a possible He referred to a 1951 law giving 1 location for a proposed city sports power over state printing to the and exposition center. department of finance, and to the ! state attorney general's recent rul- j ing that copy must be submitted j to the finance director, fj i Strand agreed that the' 'intent of j the law was to cut out unnecessary i publications not to create a cen sor. But he said that as , it now stands, the law "could beitised very ; definitelv for censorship." He! Mothball Fleet- May Store ain Surnlus I 1 i. Gi - Salom Market Quotations1 Ai of lit rtttr4ajr) kUTTEBFAV Frmlum No. 1 i No 1 i .CT BL'TTER Wholesale Jtetail .Ti-.n .... U EGGS (Burial) (Wholesale price range from f to 7 rents over euytni piieel Large AA .41 Large A j .39 Pullet 1 .31 ; Cheese Selling price to Portland wholesalers Oregon singles, 42 Vi 43 lb; Oregon 5-lb loaf, 1 48 li-51. Eggs To wholesalers Candled eggs containing no losi cases in cluded, f o.b. Portland A grade, large, 50 1-a-51 Ji ; A medium, 49 Vi 50 4; A grade, small j 45 "j-46 i. ' Eggs To retailers- iGrade AA, large, 53-54; A large j 52-53; AA medium, 52-53:1 A medipm, 51-52: A small 47-48. Cartons 3! cents addi tional. , Live chickens Noj 1 uality. f.o.b. plants Fryers, 27: roasters. 27; heavy hens. 25-26 Medium AA Medium A POULTRY Colored Hens Leghiirn Hens 4 Colored Fryers I Colored Roasters i Old Roosters I .38' J7 .17 .27 13-17; old roosters, Rabbits Average 14-15. to growers CORSICANA. Tex. lR The mo- action wjas unsatisfactory. ing rights, as enter separate negotiations if joint year's end, up 5 per cent. tor. SPOKANE r Ships of the Navy's mothball fleet moored id the Columbia River and Puget DeDosits stood at 1.550 million. whv his application for a grade A'inpr nf nn- nf 91 nnn.rpnatriatei 3. Procedure of the Coast Dis-; up 1.7 per cent. fluid milk license should not bei,, war prisoners received i trict Coincil would be changed so Xet profits ! increased more than tleniea Dy ine state oeparimeni 01 letter from him Monday wishing agriculture. 'jher happy new year. Because of .the great amount of ;f Mrs j. h. Adams of Corsicana interest shown in the Deetz milk : (reported the message from POW controversies, the hearing will be toward G. Adams Jaid: Happy Jew Year. Make it one. Dorman said he has no intention i Sound may be used as stop-gap of beine a censor but agreed that storage for what is expected to be under the attorney generals ruling tne regions Diggest wheat surplus bond avebagei Stocks and Bonds (Compiled by The Associated Press) Jan. 2 STOCK AVERAGES ; 30 ! 15 15 60 Indust. Rails Util. Stks. Net change ...A 4 tlnch Al A3 Wednesday 149.0 82 1 Prev. day 1486 iR2.1 Week ago fc.l45 8 179.4 Month ago 143 8 h8 5 ar ago 148.6 91 0 New 1954 high. I light hens. 56.5 56 4 55 8 55 3 M6 111.7 111.7 10S.4 108.1 114.0 son in held in room 321 of the statehouse ;j as the department of agriculture headquarters has no space for hear ings. Beals lists as reasons why the de partment proposes to deny Deetz application as: Inspection has shown his milkhouse does not have two rooms separating the cooling, bottling and capping of milk from the washing of utensils and equip-j ment in a manner to prevent con lamination of milk and clear equipment; it does not have a three-compartment vat for wash ing and sanitizing utensils; window openings are not screened; ther j is no approved bottling machine .f and there is no acceptable bottl f I'fapll JnfTI csppcr. tfl Similar t National's The Oregon regulations. Beals says, prescribing the qualifications for a grade A dairy setup are sirri- the council could not be domin-ii2 per ated by one affiliated union or ; thousand dollars. The banks serve about a million clients at 154 offices -in Arizona. California. Nevada, Oregon and Washington, j . f craft." i 4. Other unions would agree not to intervene in any representation elections sought by the machinists I shall. In good ! health. Love. I without ; obtaining written consent Howard." ' from the machinists. Mrs. Adams said the letter was i At its morning session the coun printed and signed by him. Ac-! cil instructed its officers to make cording to the letter, it was re- a fight for a strong American Mer ceived hv IT S officials .Ian. 7 chant Marine. Delegates to the and forwarded from Panmunjom, j h annual convention directed the j Korea. i oiucers m tdiij un mc It was the first word from her ! through West Coast congressmen. several months.themother Support Given To Catherine Peiitajjon Blamed For Keeping Allies Out of Korea War Mental Patient Kills Self in Kerosene Fire LODI, N. J. A 35-year-old mental; patient built a kero sene fire and committed suicide Tuesday night by jumping into the blaze, fighting off would-be res cuers who ! tried to drag him to LA GRANDE (t A proposed dam on Catherine Creek won sup port here Monday in an Upper flar to the standard United States j Columbia River Basin Commission Public Health ordinance which has hearing. been adopted by 1,542 municipali ties and 34 states as well as two territories and is used as the stand ard for interstate carriers rail roads, airplanes and steamsnips.! Asn.m urmv x,un J()hn Niewadornskii LiOuge: saiu luesuay a iiumuwcu decision in the Pentagon" prevent ed three nations from sending troops to the United Nations Com mand to fight in Korea. Lodge, U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, declined to name the three nations. Nor would he irrigation water ; in late summer. The alternate proposal was to Th state rienartment of aericiil-! widen the Grande Ronde River ture has been made the official rat-! Rorge below the valley to allow ing agency for Oregon by the na-1 jhe river to carry off flood water tional Public Health service, which j faster. indicates acceptance of the en- Farmers said they feared he t ; nronn Rial ! gorge-widening would lower the lUIlClUCIll K.b.... ... , , , , J n i'ii... said they favored the dam to help f've ap"yn"neS aZ I Z i? control spring floods and provide ! the Tentagon decision he de- By a "mistaken decision" to re quire Allied nations to pay in dol lars which they did not have for clothes and transportation. Lodge said, three nations could not par ticipate in the Korean War, al though they were willing. adds. Three Courses Open -In the Deetz application grade A licenses to sell milk valley water level, increasing the late-summer water shortage. or Catherine Creek is the principal ;t tributary of the Grande Ronde " - ;1 IS "30 daysaf ter The ing e.valley section the department should still deny the application, three courses M open to Deetz. Beals states: ; 1. He may apply for a grade B fluid milk license. Under this, bac terial standards and the milk house and milking stable sanitation) re quirements are not as high as Tor grade A. Deetz applied for (this type of license on Dec. 23, but with drew his application after aj de partment inspection showed jthat he could make grade B with jonly minor changes in his present setup. 2. He may make changes in his present plant to meet grade A. 3. Or he may appeal to the; cir cuit court in Marion or Clackamas county for relief from the order of the department. In such an event the court may either reaffirm the department in its decision or may require the department to issue the license for which the application was made: j In the meantime petitions will be circulated next week on an in itiative measure to repeal Oregon's milk control law, Deetz said Wed nesday. This is the second milk battle in which Deetz is involved and will be carried into the autumn public election. It will not be dis cussed at Monday's hearing; ! , TRUCK HAS SEX APPEAL NOWATA, Okla. jT) Ranch ers' trucks are being equipped with cow-calling horns that bring cattle on the run-when they are used. Cattlemen say. the rnourn- fu. mooing sound ; works charm. The theory; is it bles a mating call- Trie commission, created by the Legislature to consider Eastern Oregon water problems, plans to hold meetings in the next three weeks at Baker. Vale. Burns, Red mond, John Day and Pendleton. LAD SAVES BROTHER BAKER, Mont. UP) Carter Schye, 6, saw his little 2-yearK)ld brother, Craig, slip on the edge of a 15-foot deep cesspool and start to fall. Carter made a despe rate grab, caught Craig's arms and ne'd on until his parents an swered his screams. a resident of the Curcio Trailer Court, killed himself in the self-made pyre within sight of the trailer camp. His wife and 6-year-old daughter, Diane, were in their trailer at the time. Neighbors of his said they no ticed Niewadomski filling one sallon cans J with kerosene from tanks placed back of the trailers, J but they thought nothing of it at 1 the time.) But at 6:15 Tuesday night Niewadomski went into an empty lot next to the trailer court and built a fire with the kerosene. Then he rolled into the blaze. : Three unidentified young men rushed to his aid and pulled him out. M He fought them off and hurled himself back into the fire. He was pulled out again and taken to Hackensack Hospital. He died an ! hour later. Niewadomski had been unem ployed j since being discharged Dec. 21 from Bergen Pines Mental Hospital' in; Paramus. Liquor Agents Reinstated PORTLAND OP The Oregon, Liquor Control Commission said Tuesday it had reinstated two ; special agents who h a d been charged with being involved in a Roseburg night club .'brawl last month. jj j Thomas J. Sheridan, assistant administrator, said that because of the good past record for the agents, William Hoffer Jr. and Dean O. Morris, both of Portland, reinstate ment under three-month probation ordered. in history. Pete Stallcop, secretary of the Pacific Northwest Grain ; Dealers Assn., said Tuesday that crop fore casts indicate there will be about 30 million bushels left over after all available storage is used. Be has included new elevators and warehouses planned for constric tion in his figures. f Ships now in mothballs could take care of from 20 to 25 million 20 i 10 10 10 Rails ndust. Util. Fgn. : Net change A l i A 3 Unch Unch Wednesday 95.1 1 Bfl.5 88.0 81.3 Prev. day . 95.0 ! SW.J 98.0 81.3 ! Week ago ..... 94.7 ! 97.9 97.S 80.7 1 Month ago ... 94.2 1 9fi.7 96.3 80.4 j Year ago 8S.5 98 0 97.6 77.0 ! Live white. 3 fe-5 lbs, 19-23, 5-6 lbs. 20-22; old does, 10-12.) few higher. Fresh dressed fryers jto retailers. 57-60; cut up, ' 63-66. Wholesale dressed meats: : Beef, steers, choicer 500-700 lbs, 40.00-42.00; good, 37.OD-40.00; com mercial, 32.00-38.00; jitility. 29.00 34.00; commercial cows 27.00-33.00; utility, 26.0-31.00; canners-cutters, 23.00-26.00. j Beef cuts (choice gteers) Hind 48.00; full loins, trimmed, 73.00 80.00; triangles, 29.00-34.00; f o r e quarters. 31.00-36.00; jrhucks, 38.00 40.00; ribs, 54.00-59.00 Pork cuts Loins, choice, 8-12 lbs. 6.0O-66.0O; shoulders, 16 lbs, 41.00 45.00; spareribs, 48.00-56.00; fresh hams, 10-14 lbs, 61.00-66.00. Veal and calves Good-choice, all Portland Livestock PORTLAND (JWtUSDA) Cattle salable 350; market active, strong bushels, he estimates. The assojbi- t0 50 higher; part load good-choice ation hopes loading can be started within a month. was Gas Estimate Challenged X At Hearing j WASHINGTON Of) Reference to natural gas estimates of the Petroleum and Natural Gas Con servation Board of Alberta spark ed the Pacific Northwest gas hear ing before a Power Commission examiner Wednesday. The reference came as W.I K. Hudson, attorney for Pacific North- Iwest Pipeline Corp.. ended this LONDON OP The Russian lengthy questioning of W. I C. people were told Tuesday the Uni-: Spooner, geological consultant! for ted States and its military allies 1 Westcoast Transmission Co. would be subject to crushing blows Both Pacific and Westcoast, by air and underseas fleets in the Russians Talk Of American Vulnerability 1.087 lb fed steers 24.00, trucked lots 1,180 lb 23.50, load average good 1,097 lb 23.00; scattered lots canners-cutters, 22-24. weights, 36,0-46.00; commercial, 33.00-41.00. ; j Lambs Choice-prime 41.00-43.00; good, 36.00-41.00. I Wool Grease basis. Willamette Valley medium. 51-55 lb; Eastern Oregon fine; and half blood, 55-62; Willamette Valley lamb wool, 42; 12-month wool, 45-50. Portland produce (changes: , Country-dressed meats, f.o.b. Portland: j ! i Beef Cows, utility. 26-30 lb; commercial-low good 19.00-22.50, utility down to 14.00; part load com- j mercial-good 711 J lb heifers 20.00 j lightly sorted, few utility-low com- mercial heifers 13.00-18.00; canner-; cutter cows mostly 9.00-11.00, shells ; ; Veal Top quality, lightweight, 34-36; rough heavies, 25-30. : Hogs Lean blockers, 39-40; sows light, 33-35. j Mutton Best 12-15; cull-utility down to 7.50 and below, utility j 11.50-14.00, commercial grades Ffes!l Prod.uce,: , , 14.50-16.00; utility-commercial bulls , Onions 50 lb sacks, Wash, yel steady at 14.00-16.50. i lows. med 1 00-10; large. 1.10-25; Calve, nurket 1 jSfSKl bieauy. swu-vnui-e hu pr) loral Lnmr Whites. 2.00-25; Deschutes Russets, No. 1, event of a new world war The" Moscow radio gave full treatment in its domestic service to a 2,000-word article in the gov ernment newspaper Jzvestia aimed mainly at U. S.. foreign policy. Washington's "policy of strength ultimately leads to war. and war under modern conditions means colossal destruction." said the article, written by an anonymous "general in reserve." , Boulders and Mud Threaten Homes I I j r.rrv ' v pi"".-"-... -.1 1 . f a v ' IVT ,-':a' vVH'J ' I !'..' T JLJ aatt.tMKi, ' like a resem- sitKKA madre. Califs Volunteer workers battle to keep mud and boulders wasnint down from ! nearby XBj4Nutaini from Uaugiag bosses the northerm oatsklrts of Sierra Madre, Southern Cali- lornia lOOtnlU City. Some residents evacuated their Hemes as heavy rams started the slides watersheds recently burned over ly forest lire on ML wuon and Monrovia rea. caf wirepneu to The Statesman). ' - 1 " : r j. "I , ;:. 4: !i ' . i : I , i - : - ::r:iAAA::::yl V 4 --..yh A J : .;-... ....j , ; ; - A: r- ; y 4 Workers Held In Mexico by Border Armv "V, EL PASO. Tex. ' Ufi Troops in six northern Mexican states have been mobilized to prevent a general exodus of farm workers Tuesday. Mexico closed its borders to farm workers Saturday night fol lowing the collapse of negotiations for renewal of the United States Mexico migrant labor pact The government also announced that the border closing had been or dered in protest against a U. S. "stop gap" plan for admitting the Mexican workers; Since the breakdown of the talks in Mexico City last week, fear has been expressed by govern ment officials that farm workers in the interior of Mexico would stampede to the .border in hopes of contracting for work in south western United States farms and ranches. I! Reports reaching Juarez, Mex ico. Tuesday said troops in the states of Chihuahua. ; . Coahila, Son or a. Lower California, Nuevo Leon and Tamaulipas had been ordered held in readiness to aid in .patrolling the border, the Times aid - -J- .a along with Trans-Northwest Gas Co. and Northwest Natural Gas Co., are seeking commission P west market. Hudson referred to the board's recent report which he saidl esti mated natural gas reserves in the Peace River area held by .West coast at 805 billion cubic feet. Spooner has estimate the reserves at 1,565 billion cubic feet. He then asked Spooner if he held to his own estimates in the'; light of the provincial board's report. Spooner said he did "because I do not know how they calculate their reserves." f Hudson's question drew Objec tion from Robert May, Westcoast attorney, but was permitted by examiner Daniel J. Kelly. The ex aminer said the figures cited by Hudson, would be considered as without official weight because the Alberta report has not been in troduced in evidence at the hear ing. i 25.00, prime grades to 27.00; size able lot good-choice 510 lb slaugh ter calves 19.75, utility -commercial calves 11.00-17.00, few head choice 400 lb stock calves 19.00. Hogs salable 200; market active. strong to 25 higher; choice 180-235 ; lb butchers 28.75-29.25, one lot choice No. 1 butchers 29.50, few choice 240-280 lb 26.50-28.50; choice 350-535 lb sows mostly 24.00-25.00. Sheep salable 150; slaughter lambs around 50 lower, other classes steady; good-choice wooled lambs 18.50-20.00, few head choicer prime grades 21.00, choice 70 lb feeders 16.00; choice light ewes 6.00. ! ! ! 2.15-25; sije A. 2.50-75 ; 25 lb sk, 80-85; 10 lb mesh. 40-45; paper, 30 33; windows, 35-37; No. 2, 50 lbs, 80-85; Wash. Russets, No. 1-A, 2.25 50; Idaho. 3.15-25. Hay U S. No.; 2 green alfalfa, mostly 28 00-30.00, delivered car and truck lots, f.o.b. Portland and Seattle, j ij Filberts Wholesale selling price f.o.b. Oregon plants. No. 1 jumbo Barcelonas, 29 lb; large, 27; medium, 25 '4. Walnuts Wholesale selling prices: First quality Franqucttes 32-33 Vi 3b; light halves, 79-83; shelled light amber halves, 70-75. New York Stock Quoiations When jewels were first weigh ed in carats, their weight was compared to that of seeds of a legume called "carat" I NOTICE" Or FINAL ACCOrNT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. That the undersigned, as executor ot the estate of HARRY R. WORTH, de ceased, hat filed in the Circuit Court of the State of Ore eon. for. Marion County. Probate Department, ita Final Account, ana ttiat said Court, nas, by an Order thereof, fixed (and ap pointed February 15. 1954. $ at the hour of :15 A.M. at tne Circuit courtroom in the Court House at Salem, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing objections to said final Account and the settlement of said estate, at which said time and place aU persons so objecting are hereby required to appear and show cause, if any there be. or If any exist, why said Account should not in all things be allowed and approved, said estate settled and closed and the feSecutor discharged. THE UNITED STATES NATIONAl. BANK Or PORTLAND, OREGON. As executor of the Estate of ' Harry R. Worth. Deceased. ASA L. LEWILUNG ; Attorney for Estate. Jil&T AM By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I Admiral Corporation 20 V Allied Chemical 75 I Allis Chalmers 48 j American Airlines 12 j American Power & Light American Tel; k Tel. 159 I American Tobacco 62 , Anaconda Copper 31 Atchison Railroad 97 Bethlehem Steel 52 Boeing Airplane Company 49 H Borg Warneri . .77 Burroughs Adding Machine i 17 California Packing 23 H Canadian Pacific ;23 Caterpillar Tractor 49!i Celanese Corporation ; 19 Chrysler Corporation j 60 Cities Service i 83 H Consolidated 'Edison 43 Consolidated ': Vultee Crown Zellerbach i 33 4 Curtiss Wright I V Douglas 'Aircraft ! 8a Vt du Pont de Nemours 107 Eastman Kodak 49 Emerson Radio H General Electric 90 General Foods 59 General Motors 63 Georgia Pacific Plywood u Goodyear Tire 56 Homestake Mining Company 34 International Harvester International Paper Johns ManviHe. Kennecott Copper Libby, McNeill Lockheed Aircraft Loew's Incorporated Long Bell A V 29 57 69 H 68 iia 23 Montgomery Ward ' 61 Nash Kelvinator! 17 New York Central 20 V Northern Pacific; , 56 4 Pacific American Fish 7 Pacific Gas & Electric 40 h Pacific TeL 4c TeL 117 Packard Motor Car 3? Penney! (J. C.)iCo. 79 Pennsylvania Railroad 17 Pepsi Cola Co. 14 Philco Radio 29 Radio Corporation 23 H Rayonier Incorp. 28 Rayonier Incorp. Pfd Republic Steel ) 49 Vi Reynolds Metals 56 y Richfield Oil j 53 Safeway Stores Inc. 40 ft Scott Paper Company 71 H Sears Roebuck; 4 Co. 61 Socony-Vacuum Oil 37 Southern Pacific 39 ft Standard Oil California . 56 ft Standard Oil N. J. 75Ts Studebaker Corporation 21ft Sunshine Mining S ft Swift k Company 44 ft Transamerica j Corporation 28 ft Twentieth Century Fox 21 Union 'OH Company 40 Union Pacific j 112 United Airlines 22 United Aircraft 47 United Corporation 5ft United States Plywood 25 United States ! Steel 40 Warner Pictures ,13 Western Union TeL 41 ft Westicghouse Air Brake 24 Westinghousej Electric 54 Woolworth Company 45 ft