The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, July 28, 1955, Page 7, Image 7

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    Statesman, Salem, Ort., Thursday July 28, 1955-Sec l)-7
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NATION W1H EVENTT
AT AfwlBICA'S lOVJESf PEilCES!
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n
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o
GENUINE COLDSPOTS AT
PRE-17AR PRICES
AS LOW AS
I
Compact 7,6 cu. ft.
518!
Regular
159.95
fir
$5 Dowi
$7 Month
1 g(5)y& ; :
- A SPECIAL FEATURE
z2 sy 7 OUR SEARS NATIONAL HOME J
i j " UlL, - ,. . APPLIANCE SALE" L
Mrm glod I bough! Ihif Coidspol I F
( Frtezer.lt has such a big frozen food I -.. ZrTfrG' I I
m),; UK r hiqt $io noi'iM
tlpRji Jl $11 Month on Sears
' nfTTI'--l--LB.?i ' Eoiy Payment Plan ....
11 111 B JI.'.V' M-l'-'-ti- J " I f H 1 S , ... .t.. , - ... r1 a "V t.v 1
i-"-" ' " jS" I 1 l i""T"!"" 11 jj Three f ost-freexe "
' Wr' ' " :f lrL.! fr..z. food
r wniooding; po for
I big pOCkoflM.
" (
- ' ' - ' (
Kenmore Deiuxe Aulcmalic I Kenmore Fully Automatic I
O Popular,' full-width, 30-pound frooxer
eheit
tm mm m t.t ill ! mm t M. a..a
O rUll-Wiarn unuicr I roy Twr mm y
O Handy Strri-Shtlf door storage for bottles
Forage Crop
Seed Values
Show Decline
9.4 cu. ft.-CoIdspot
..... K
on
Regular
229.95
II
ktiMIB
$5 Dowi
$930 Month
O Quit running Perma-Thrift power unit
0 Gleaming white "Dura-Bond" finish
O Delivered, installedtested FRIE
114 cu. it Coldspot
Regular
259
.95 j
O Complete with four Servi-Shelres on door
O Full-width, 49.3-lb. capacity f reexer chest
Giant, full-width Crisper for vegetables
11.4 cu. ft. Coldspot
Regular
349.95
Slide-out, 52.6-lb., bottom f reexer drawer!
Controlled Cold for correct temperatures
Bottle-Basket, slide-out Servi-Tray shelf
-dn i !
1 ' , ..nil
I M I- - I Wl Jl W 1 II H I I
StODowi
510.50 Moil
$11 Down
$13.50 Mon.
mm
vze unmatched for quality!
816 U in. AU CHANNEL TV
...for the price of a 21!
New 14 KV cha
is far clearer pictures
O Big 9-lb. load for Family Sixe Washes 5 1 0 Dowi
O Three temperature water selection $10 Month
O Porcelain enameled workspace top OiJoirtltfl
O Plus 5 year gear east guarantee Ptymenl Plu
O 1 it quality, time saving, 9-lb. capacity $5 Down
O 3 heat control Safe for every fabric $S Month
O Ultra-violet sunfresh lamp sanitixes . 0a Sears EtST
O Sold only by Sears! hywonl Plw
ONLY
24-IHCH TABU MODEL
O S.ricel on j by Sen
St
rememberTTTT"
W SERVICE WHAT VEJEll!
By LILLIE L. MADSEN
Farm Editor, The SUtesmaa
While At : nation's farmers
paid more ,f or hay '. and pasture
seeds - this", past spring, they
aren't going, to get as much for
the seeds of forage crops this
year as they did a year age.
Dealers interviewed this week
were on the cagey side, most of
them saying, "We are rather
marking time for the present"
Growers were milch of the same
opinion, showing no 'particular
eagerness to sell at the present.
However, harvest in tie Wit -
lameite Valley's big grass fields
is just getting well, underway.
A few small lots were cleaned
late last week. Most of the grass
seeds, remain yet to be har
vested. Reports from the Agricultural
Marketing Service Monday show
ed that retail prices for all seeds
for spring purchase averaged 11
per cent above 1C-54. Red Clover
showed the greatest increase 72
per cent Kentucky Blue Grass
seed retail price, however, was
down the most this spring as
compared to a year ago 3? per
cent '
July Prices Noted
July prices, listed by the Ore
gon Seed and Feed Dealers Price
Reporting Committee showed
that common ryegrass, generally
was being quoted in 100 pound
bags at $7, although one dealer
was offering but $6.75.
Perennial Ryegrass (blue tag)
dealers were offering $11 when
they were offering. Some deal
ers just said they "were not buy
ing. Buyers for Alia fescue blue
tag said the price was $8 to $40
"if anyone is buying." Calls
around showed a few .were; a lot
were not Valley Chewings'
Fescue was unsteady between
$20 and $23 a 100-pounds cleaned
and sacked. Eastern Oregon was
getting from $21 to $24 for Chew
ings, and $24 for Penn State
fescue.' Creeping red fescue
offers in the Willamette Valley
was $20 although very little in
terest was showing in this. East
ern Oregon's Creeping price this
week is listed at $23 for creeping
and $24 for Illahee, and F74
creeping.
Northern Alfalfa seed, ladino
clover, common and certified tall
fescue, are now listed for the
first time as available for export
sale.
'Another way of saying that
there's an oversupply of grain
and that prices will not be too
good is the constant reminder
that "cheaper feed will help live
stock feeders make a profit this
season."
Barley Fields Good
Pacific Northwest markets re
ported the first arrival of new
crop wheat and barley .this week,
but this wasn't "from, the , Wil
lamette Valley. Barley in the
valley is looking unusually well
from a field-standpoint However,
in a few fields, where not much
fertilizer was applied, the growth
is comparatively thin.
Cash trading in the grain mar
ket this past week was slow as
buyers held back for a good look.
Sellers, too, now supplied with
plenty of storage space, showed
no eagerness to sell, terminals
reported. Old-crop barley prices
dropped as much as $1.50 to $2
at Pacific Northwest markets. At
the same time, new-crop barley
went up as much as $1 a ton.
The new crop is coming in later
than expected this year. New
crop No. 2 western barley, test
ing 45 pounds, was being quoted
at $46 a ton, 15-day delivery. The
San Francisco barley market,
while quiet showed ' steadiness.
Farm economists were warning
farmers this week that barley
sells lowest at harvest time and
that grain farmers should be in
no hurry to part with it They
expect the demand to go up later,
and with a rising demand there
will also be Tismg prices in bar
ley, the economists said,
Russ Radio
Airs Die Talk
MOSCOW W In an unprece
dented move, Moscow radio Tues
day night broadcast the text of
President Eisenhower's Monday
night TV-radio report to the Amer
ican people on the Geneva summit
meeting. The full text also was
carried by the official Soviet news
agency Tass for newspaper pub
lication. Never before in the memory of
Westerners living in Moscow has
a speech by a Western statesman
been quoted here in full.
The account of the President s
broadcast ' included his remark
about the wide gulf so far dividing
East and West a gulf as wide
and deep as are the differences
between individual freedom and
regimentation."
The Moscow radio report took
15 minutes to broadcast
CAP
TO-
mm M
are
House Passes
Militia Bill
WASHINGTON (B The House
Tuesday passed and sent to the
Senate a measure authorizing the
states to create local militias.
The purpose is to create a core
of men in each state trained to
handle local wartime problems, is
case national guard units are
called to federal duty in an emer
gency. Militia forces then would
be expanded.
This plan was part of President
Eisenhower's original blueprint tot
expanding the military reserves.
Deleted from that measure, t4
militia provisions were incorpora
t
irini
I ted in a separate measure.