The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, January 10, 1957, Page 16, Image 16

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    Inside TV
Rose Parade Good
Change of TV Fare
I)
By EVE STARR
HOLLYWOOD. Jan. I STARR
RKPORT: Loa Angeles viewers,
who have long been treated as the
second cousins
or the TV au-l
dienre, get
major break
every Jan. 1
when the annual
Tournament of
Roses parade Is
telecast right in
their own back
yard.
With most of
fity's seven atationt covering the
event in one form or another, the
Los Angeles viewer gets to see it
as nobody else in the country
does, including the hardy souls
who every year stay up all night
to assure themselves a seat, or at
least a place to stand, at the
parade itself.
The coverage here begins at 5
In the morning, presumably lor the
benelit of those New Year s Kve
eelehrants who never get to bed,
and takes in the last-minute primp
ing of the 68 floats. The parade
si art s at 9. hut late risers can see
it from beginning to end. starting
as late as 11 a.m. when several
stations pick it up as the head of
the parade passes the finish line.
Owaera f color sets were doubly
fortunate this year, for NBC tele
east the parade la color beginning
at I. and TKLA picket It Hp at
11 with its oaa color cameras. And
If you haven't seen a Rose Parade
la color, then you just haven't
seen a Rose Parade,
It was particularly welcome to
West Coast color-set owners, who
have been subsisting on a steady
dirt of lenticular, film ti e., color
kinescope recordings' and who had
aim t forgotten what a live color
cast looks like It looks beautiful,
is what it looks.
TV, of course, was practically
Invented for things like the Rose
Parade and the tour Rowl games
f New Tear's Day. It .comes as
a refreshing and welcome change
from the standard commercial
fare and has a way of renewing
one's faith in the medium. All in
all, It aflords an etrrllenl start
lor the Ne Year.
THE TV FILM INDUSTRY Is
also off to an excellent start. A
recent survey by Daily Variety in
dicates that some $90,000,000 will
be spent on TV film in Hollywood
alone this year, the figure repre
senting what it costs to produce Ml
sponsored network film series. The
leader is Desilu. with no less than
$ 1. VMS. 000 earmarked for its own 1
productions.
PARAMOUNT. WHICH la atlfl
sitting oa Its backlog of old lea
tare pictures, la getting ready to
crap Ha theatrical acwareel and
more R over Into television a
reported twice-weekly basis. The
studio la also considering going
Into the production of TV film
shows on Its Sunset Boulebard lot,
which Is largely rented out to
other production companies.
GREAT OAKS still grow from
little acorns. When it was an
nounced some weeks ago that the
TV Academy was going to select
six candidates for Miss Cinder
eromy at its first annual New
Year's Eve Ball, a magazine
writer put in a phone call to a
friend at NBC and suggested that
a certain secretary be entered,
just for fun. So the secretary was
duly entered and much to her
surprise emerged as one of the
six candidates. Came the New
Year's Eve Ball and she was even
more surprised to find herself
chosen as the top winner. Miss
Cinderemmy herself. Lucky girl is
Gloria Weeks. See what can be
done with just one impulsive phone
call?
VERY HAPPY TO REPORT
that Eddie Jackson, whose recent
throat operation made It look as
though he would sever be able to
alng again, Is singing again two
songs a tight at New York's
Coparabana with Jimmy Durante,
ltd the eustomei. tre loving every
tote of It.
STARRDUST: Tennessee Ernie,
faced with the grind of five day
lime shows every week on lop of
his weekly nighttime show, is go
ing to drop one or the other next
season, most likely the daytime
outing. Enough is enough, and six
shows a week is too much . . .
Mary Martin will break in her two
hour "Annie Get Your Gun" spec
tacular with a ten-week tour of the
show in the fall. The TV version
Is tentatively scheduled for No
vember ... Sir Cedric Hardwicke
has had to bow out of the "Play
house 90" show Jan. 10. "Mr. and
Mrs. McAdam." He's ill. and will
be. replaced by James Dunn . . .
George Gobcl'i Jan. 12 show will
feature Tennessee Ernie in his
third appearance with the, come
dian . , , Imogene Coca has re
turned to New York to appear on
the Ed Sullivan show Jan. 13. Next
day she starts rehearsals for the
"Rugglet of Red Gap" spectacu
lar. She still want to live in Call-
inula yri iiiaiiriiii.r, ul" mrt in m
canyon. She saw five' fires In five
days in her neighborhood over the
holidays and is now looking for I
mall island in the middle of the
Pacific. ,
SHORT SHOTS: There's t talent
scout Irani "Do Y'ou Trust Your
Wife?" touring the major cities
looklag lot marrintl couplet to ap
pear at the show. So keep your
trams straight , . . Waller Win
rhell't replacement tt NBC wfll
be t eomlc strip. Hal Roach's
tew "Blondle" series Is taking
aver ... A tew. film series,
"Wells Firgt," lakes tt the tir
Marat II, replacing the Buddy
Rackett show r. . Jackie Gleaani't
vacation last week cost him a
I4.I-1I.I drubbing In the Trendes
ratings Ire m Perry Come . . Ot
top of his tew weekly TV show
text season, Frank Sinatra may
also play the title role la a aew
picture, "The Damon . Runyon
Story."
ICopvrllht l87.
Cincral fritures Corp.)
Ultra-Violet
Light Stops
Germ Spread
BALTIMORE, Jan. Scien
tific sleuths have found impres
sive evidence in a veterans hospi
tal ward that germ-laden air is
the thief spreader of pulmonary
tuberculosis.
They also have discovered that
ultra-violet lijiht sweeps the air
clean of germs, thus providing an
effective way of controlling the
spread of tuberculosis in hospitals.
The stx-member research tram
was headed by Dr. Richard L.
Riley, associate professor of en
vironmental i edicine at the Johns
Hopkins School of Hygiene and
Public Health. He reported the
findings last night at a meeting
of the Hopkins Society of Hygiene.
The Riley team carried out its
experiments in a six-room ward
at the Baltimore VA hospital. The
air flow in the ward was con
trolled. Itabbils were first placed in the
empty ward and tubercle baccilli
the tiny droplets that explode into
the air when a tubercular person
sneezes or coughs were sprayed
into the ward Ah of the rabbits
came down with TB.
Then ultra-violet lights, previous
ly installed, were turned on. More
rabbits were placed in the ward
and more bacilli sprayed. Not a
single rabbit got tuberculosis.
Tubercular patients were next
moved into the ward and about ion
guinea pigs placed so that the air
exhausted from the ward went
through their special cage. That
was in early fall.
Early in December tests srrwed
two of the animals had gotten tu
berculosis from breathing the air
of the ward, contaminated only by
the patients. Three more inlected
annuals were discovered lust
week.
Giant River
Bill Includes
Area Projects
WASHINGTON. Jan. OH - A
11,630.000.000 omnibus authoriza
tion bill for river and harbor
projects once rejected by Presi
ded Eisenhower was introduced
in the new Congress today.
Chairman ("haver D-NM, of
the Senate Public Works Commit
tee, told a newsman he expects
the bill to pass both the House
and Senate.
"And I don't think It will he
vetoed this time," he added.
Eisenhower veoted the huge
authorization bill Aug. 10 because
some protects included in it by
the Senate had not received the
customary review by the Army
Engineers and states concerned.
Chavez predicted that favorable
reports would be received by the
i committee from Army Engineers
! on all the projects,
i The bill contains no money but
would authorize construction by
I the Army Engineers of numerous
' navigation, beach erosion, power
j and flood control projects in vari
ous states when and if money is
.later made availahle by Congress.
Projects which would be author
ized by the bill Include:
' Navigation
Oregon Yaquina Bay and Har
bor, $19,800,000.
Flood Control
Oregon Columbia" River Basin,
i including Willamette River Basin,
$112,00.0000.
Salem Firm Given
Contracts to Build
Air Base Housing
SEATTLE, Jan 9 - J C.
Watts Construction Co. of Salem,
Ore . was the low bidder today
for construction of four airmen's
dormilorirj at Fairchild Air Force
Base near Spokane.
The Army Engineers' district
office reported the Oregon firm's
hid was $1.397.15.1. The govern
ment estimate was $1,299,825
Nine bids ran as high as $1,603,
315. '
DAILY
ACHOS8
I. Variety
of ceffM
C. Eurepttn
Oldest
Dra vidian
Itnfutf
14. HinU
12. Aromatic
horb
t$. Oirl't
mcknam
14. HtTtM
(colloq.)
15. Joatlt rudely
11 'Tht
Wisardaf
ooBoawaant
IT. Kronen river
it. DtfTtda.
11. Taunt
25. Gown
28. Annoy
27. Oriental
nurse
28. Card ftmt
19. Chilled
31. Behold!
33. Behind t
vessel
S Btrtkt
it. Depart
38. 8harp
40. Conical tent
41. Warning
signal
42. Writing
table
13. Ctrden tools
DOWN
I.Turkish
soldier
2 Among
J. Work,
holding
devtet
CROSSWORD
4
Milt
ttvertf
Rub hard
in washing
Interviewed
secretly .
Eject
Linden
(Eur. I
Edlblt
roouteck
11. Observe
It. Shtdt
el a
color
IT. Question
It. Intkt
20. Ptrfornta
22. Conflict
23 Plteti
sport
24. Tsllur.
lust
fiym.)
21. Muti
tote
2. Man's
nick.
name
21. Writ
$0. Small
atrtam
12. Not
clogged
13. High
(mua.)
f Mleroar's aatvot
$4. Plant ovule
IS. Ticker
18 Collect
(Ohio)
tT.BUt
It. Tret
m r w.
'ZZZKl
r w
lf III
in: :pt:::
- w
Logger's Widow
Sues Timber Firm
PORTLAND, Jan. t I - A
$150,000 damage suit against
Weyerhaeuser Timber Co. has
been filed in federal court by
Mrs. Mabel St. Dennis, the widow
of a logger who drowned last
December near Coos Bay. '
She asked $100,000 for the loss
of her husband, Edward L. St.!
Dennis, a fallcr and backer for ,
Weyerhaeuser, and $.'0.8no for
menial shock she said she suffered 1
watching his boat sink into the
Coo- River as he helped clear a '
log jam. His body has not been
recovered. i
Salem Quotations
Slow Trading
Marks Grain
CHICAGO, Jan t W - It was
another slow and indecisive mar
ket on the Board of Trade today
although a majority of grain fu
tures ended higher.
Wheat closed lower to S
higher, corn unchanged to i low
er, oats l4 lower to higher, rye
Vl'- higher, soybeans 'vl'
higher and lard 17 cents lower to
2 cents a hundred pounds higher
At the finish old crop wheat
futures were about t cent higher
than thry started.
Light rain and snow overnight
and during the day in a good part
of the winter wheat belt held back
new crop wheat futures.
Statesman, Salem. Ore., Thurs.. Jan. 10. '57 (Sec. Il17
Markets at a Glance
NEW YORK, Jan. t i Markets
at a ft net
StockHnhr: ateeli In rUmand
Bond Muad, i $ oerr.menta im
prove. Cotton --Steady; tradt buying.
CHICAGO
WheatMixed; amall prlct rhartjri,
Corn Easy; hedging preaaure.
Oat a Mixed; amall prite rhangea
So beans Me d , good demand for
aovhean meal
Hog t fart v to IS rentj down
lame Steera weak to V) cenli
higher
Dow Jones Averages
NFW YORK. Jan B .
Jnvtn ifN'k aerat!i
MlCh !-ow
:in I no nutria it . 4m 4'n ;7
l Haiirnad 04 IM !M
i rntitset . m rvt n
le
m
174 12
BUTTr.RFAT (Andreen i) '
Premium .. ,
No. 1 ... . . . 2
EfiGS (Oregon Kit Prod iirmt
Prie nt iiirmrrv arc A tn 9 cenm
under tnrj, u!mrtie price..
Jumbo A .57
Rklra Large A A 4
Large A A , ,4
arte A .......... .. 44
Medium A A -'' 4 1
Small A . . a
miM.TRY tVnrthweit Po iltrvt
Old Romirr (t
Colored Hent ,14
l-eg norn Hena . ; j
I Western Securities
Chicago Grain
investment Trusts
1 (II K V SMI I HI n t ( l M )
Stocks Post
Mixed Close
NEW YORK, Jan. t 1H-Steell,
aircrafts and sugars rose whilt
oils declined in today't irregular
stock market.
I Pivotal stocks registered gains
or losses running from fraction
to around 2 points in mnderatt
I trading.
The Associated Press average of
(n slocks was unchanged at $181.20
with the Industrial unchanged,
the rails down 20 cents and tht
utilities unchanged
Volume totaled 2.3.WOOO sharet
compared with 2.2:tO 0OO vester-dav.
Winter Lashes Wide Area
Of U.S., Threatens East
; Thnr bid and -k n"'i".
0lrv itifmhff Mf Ihr ilin
nriition of Security neil.-i
wmilrt 'rarte uini irrnTil
nn
Bill
v ,
II ,
Sprague Sees
Middle East as
U.Ns Big Test
POHTLAXD, Jan. Former
Gov. Charles Sprague today said
the United Nations must solve the
basic differences between Israel
and the Arab states which make
the Middle East a "friction spot."
Sprague, publisher of The Ore
gon Statesmtn it Salem, told the
Portland League of Women Voters
that bringing lasting peace to the
turbulent Middle East may be the
mosUsevere test to which the I'.N.
has been subjected.
Any I'.N. plan also must include
guarantees of unrestricted pas
sage through the vital Suez Canal,
he said.
The former U.N. delegate said
that in other trouble spots Korea
and Kashmir the world organiza
tion has fallen short of completing
durable settlements.
McKinney to
Head Salem
Veterans Unit
William McKinney was elected
commander of Salem Barracks 113
of Veterans of World Wor I at a
meeting of the 450-member organ
ization Wednesday night in Vet
erans of Foreign Wars Hall. He
succeeds Ralph J. Baldwin, who
was elected quartermaster.
Mrs. M. Irene Strohmeyer was
named president of Ihe auxiliary.
Other Barracks officers elected
Wednesday are Claude Sellard,
senior vice commander; Emery
Raboin, junior vice commander;
Odland Beard, chaplain; David O'-
llara, judge advocate; and Carl K.
Pyeatt, three-year trustee.
Besides Mrs. Strohmeyer, the
auxiliary elected: Mrs. I.ela
Young, senior vice president; Mrs.
Joan Hunt, junior vice president;
Mrs. Mnllie McKinney, chaplain;
Mrs. Tillie Isham, conductress;
Mrs. Frances Lawrence, treasurer;
Mrs. I.u Raboin, secretary; Mrs.
Hazel Hagednrn, guard; Mrs. Bea
White, one-year trustee; Mrs. Mary
Beard, two-year trustee; and Mrs.
Arlcne Swinby, three-year trustee.
Offices will change hands at a
joint installation at, the third an
nual birthday party of the Salem
Barracks Jan. 23 in VKW Hall.
Baldwin was named general
chairman of the 1957 state con
vention tt be held in Salem June
6 to S.
Visitors at the election meeting
included Mrs. Norma Dillage of
Eugene, national senior vice presi
dent and state president of the
auxiliary, and her husband, John
Dillage, past stale commander,
npht
Extortion Plot
'Possible' in
Actress Case
LOS ANGELES, Jan. -Dist.
Atty. William B. McKesson
said today information he ob
tained in a secret nighttime ren
dezvous may involve "some sort
of extortion plot'' in the Marie
McDonald disappearance case.
The prosecutor, who personally
gave (he information to Police
Chief William H. Parker, declined
to elaborate other than to lay that
his confidentitl data Involved four
or five persons not previously con
nected with the actress' report
that she was kidnaped.
Parker immediately assigned
the matter to Capt. James Ham
ilton, head of the police intel
ligence squad which operates
structly undercover in keeping
track of known criminals, es
pecially 'those from other towns.
"I am not prepared to say at
this time whether this information
will even have any bearing on the
McDonald case." Parker told a re
porter. He declined any comment
at all about "extortion."
He said the information requires
investigating the background of
"a number of people" and this
would take an unspecified amount
of time.
Miss McDonald, in seclusion at
her Encino home, has signed a
crime report saying she was kid
naped from her home late last
Thursday night, held captive
somewhere in Los Angeles and
driven to the desert near lndio, ISO
miles away, where she was pushed
from t car late Friday night.
Musty Old Painting
In German Church
Called Tintoretto's '
LITEBECK, Germany, Jan.
A German art expert said today
a musty old painting hanging al
most unnoticed in the Catherine
church is a Tintoretto.
Prof. H, Scbmalenberg, director
of the Luebeck Museum, said the
signature of the famous Italian
Rrnaisstnce artist was discovered
on the huge painting when It was
bfin cleaned.
The 12X11 feet picture, "the Re
awakening of Lazarus,':, is dated
1.176, and is almost buried under
layers of varnish.,
Man Carries
$13,500 But
Rejects Fine
CHAMPAIGN. 111.. Jan. 9 IAV-A
3S-year-old man who carried more
than $13,500 cash with him chose
jail today rather than pay a
$42.50 fine for several traffic and
motor vehicle misdemeanors.
Francis P. Breedlove might
never have had to face the choice
last October. He was arrested to
day on this charge.
He protested he didn't have
enough money to pay it, but a
routine police search of hit cloth
ing turned up several hundred
dollars. Police found $13,571.99 in
til on his person and in the glove
compartment and trunk of Breed
love's 1991 automobile.
Breedlove said the money rep
resented 10 years' earnings, and
explained he doesn't "believe in
banks." He has made a business
of chaufleuring railroad workers
between the downtown station 7'9Vid
the yards north of Champaign.
While finding and counting con
tents, of sacks and boxes
crammed with coins and cur
rency, police also determined that
Breedlove had no driver't license
and that his auto license plates
were fictitious. He was charged
with all three offenses.
Breedlnve's money was put in
the city treasurer'! vault for sale-keeping.
Amen Services
Due Saturday
Funeral services for Gaylon Du
ane Amen, Salem man who drown
ed in Willamette River while hunt
ing Dec. I when a boat capsized
near Wheatltnd Ferry, will Mb 1:30
p.m. Stturday in Clough-Barrick
chapel, the Rev. John L. Cauhle
officiating. Burial will be in Bel
crest Memorial Park.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Winter lashed wide arras ol the
midcontinent Wednesday with a
cold wave", heavy snow and sleet
storms.
The wintry combination was ex
pected to overspread most of the
East on Thursday.
Summerlike weathrr prevailed
in parts of the South Afternoon
readings were in the 7(1 to Bfl-de-gree
range from Florida to the
Southern Plains and across Texas
to the Oklahoma border.
A storm swirling eastward from
the Texas Panhandle dumped snow
oi. the Central Plains, parts of the
Northern Plains and the inid-Mis-sissippi
Valley.
A treacherous mixture of freez
ing rain, snow and occasional sleet
extended from Southern Kansas
and northern Oklahoma eastward
into west-central Illinois.
Weather bureaus in the Midwest
issued a warning' of possible heavy
snow of two to four inches for
parts of Nebraska. Kansas. Iowa
and Missouri, and two to five
inches for extreme norlhern Illi
nois, extreme southern Wisconsin,
southern lower Michigan and ex
treme northern Indiana.
Freezing rain was expected
along the southern edge of the
snow area from northern Okla
homa etstward to northwestern
Ohio.
Winds with gusts up to 70 m p h.
swished up clouds of dust . from
eastern New Mexico to western
Texas.
Rain pelted-'in area across Ten
nessee and Kentucky into parts of
Anglo-French
Press for
Suez Talks
By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Jan.
9 Britain and France, irked
at what they complain are Egy
tian delaying tactics, were re
ported today pressing Secretary
General Dag Hammarskjold for
new talks at an early date on a
Suez settlement.
Christian Pineau, French for
eign minister who saw Ham
marskjold, was said by French
sources to be especially angry at
alleged delays in clearing the
Suez Canal. He was reported to
have insisted that new talks be
held even before the canal has
been cleared for itt first convoy,
now scheduled by the U.N. for
some time in early March. x
The British top delegate here,
Cmdr.. Allan Noble, conferred
with Hammarskjold regarding the
method to be used in the new
talks, a British spokesman said.
The two high diplomats met
Hammarskjold before the resigna
tion of British Prime Minister
Anthony Eden was announced.
Informed sources here said, how
ever, the resignation made no dif
ference in the British-French view
that talks must be held soon on
the Suez Canal.
Pineau made art appointment
with Secretary of State Dulles at
3 p.m. Friday for a far-ranging
conversation on all Middle East
Problems.
It was reported that Pineau will
urge Dulles to do his best to get
Hammarskjold started on new
Suez talks. However, diplomatic
sources said the United Slates
likely will let Hammarskjold de
cide when to start the conversa
tions. 1
tlie null -Atlantic state., anil North
Carolina. Their was a dri.zle in
eastern Massachusetts and light
snow foil from interior New York
into New England
A blast ol arctic air brought
near-zero readings as far south as
Iowa and Kansas Subzero rold
covered most of the area from
Montana to northern Nebraska and
the upper Mississippi Valley.
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4 nmpilffl' hv The Avwirtaled pre,l
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Mnntn Art
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1'i .rt IT Hin
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i"ss M i in
Itv.S I..i
WISH AM R
" 14 I 14
Rail tnri' t'4ilt Frcn
1
Net (lumie
Weflnevdai
Pre irui. hav
UeK Afi
Mnnlh An
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nvi st h,ii
I 'IS 57
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Chicago Livestock
Bank
Hank
Cha-
Firl Nalii.n;,!
Fir1 Nat (Vv N
f. S Natmn.il
V
Chicago Onions
State Ragweed
Problem Growing
'Out of Control'
PORTLAND, Jan 9 f - The
Oregon Hoard of Health today
said ragweed has leaped out of
control in I'matiila and Josephine
counties and has heavily infested
Marion and Clackamas counties
The board reported that 100.000
persons in the state will suffer
ragweed reaction this year unless
a more comprehensive eradication
program is started on "this most
vicious of all pollen-producing
plants "
Oregon's 1SS3 ragweed' control
act placed responsibility on land
owners and did not provide eradi
cation funds to the state Depart
ment of Agriculture.
Rep. Fred Meek earlier this
week announced here he will
introduce a bill in the Legislature
to authorize $50,000 for ragweed
control.
The stale board said ragweed
also has been found in Benton.
Polk, Washington. Yamhill. Mor
row, Columbia and Jackson coun
ties. ,
.tamiarv
.February
Manh
Jan 0 e Oninn,
Oprn Hich I." 4"la
I in 111 I n:i i n.i
1 21 I 2.1 1 14 1 14
I M 1 37 I 2S 1 2
Portland Livestock
Postal Receipts Up
PORTLAND. Jan. 9 - Pnst
office receipts here hit an all-time
hi,7h of 12.n22.3!2 in lfttt. nrarly
a 5 per cent increase over 19.W.
i Postmaster Albert Hodler said
todav.
PORTLAND f-'l'SDA '-Cattle
salable i:0: fed steers and heifers
sleadv: cows generally weak to M
lower; load average to high choice
'steers held above 22 (Ml; load of
choice 1.018 Ih steers half 22 00.
half 21 TV other good and choice
steers 20 SO-2 125; several lots of
good and choice fed heifers 18 75-
(19 00; standard heifers I6 00-I6.SO;
utility steers and heifers 1100
l.iOO; sizable lot commercial cows
U00; utility cows 12 00-13 SO; can
ners and cutters 00 10 00; utility
bulls 14 .SO lfiOO; light cutter bulls
to lion.
Calves salable 65; god and
! choice vealers 21 00-26 00, few high
j choice to ?8 00; standard calves
and vealers 16 00-20 00: lot of good
1 heavy calves 1" 00; cull and utility
calves and vealers 10 00-14 00
Hogs salable 350; trade active,
'steady to strong; six head mostly
No 1, 20 23: mixed 1-2 grade
butchers 19 50-19 75; several lots
20 00; mixed 1-2-3 grades M 75
19 25; sorted off No 3s Id 00-18 50;
sows 300-500 lbs 13 50-17.50
Sheep salable Mo: woolcd
slaughter lambs steady; shorn
lambs mostly 25 lower: good and
choice ft.i-105 lb wonled slaughter
lambs 17.. 50-'. II 50: few lots 19 00;
good and choice shorn Iambs
16 50-17.50; deck and part deck
with fall shorn pelts 17 75; few
good and choice leedcrs 1500
16 00; cull to good slaughter ewes
2 00-5 50.
( HK AIitl Jjn S e it'MIA' !
It..- lliNHi ..teHdv lu2SI..ei. iii.nl
rt,. 2 .i l' 2Tln ih tititiuei- 17
t: rai iup in imi most lj to :an in
hiilvriem miiinh 2.7 J'r.ide I6H0;2.V
No 2 :t but itm,tl .Is 2141 IMI Hi buti ii
cr IstKi iaati. 14 7S 14 no
Cattle IStHHj ralvei .100. htfh ,-hnii e
and prime, steen uteadv to SO
huner. heavier wenhtu iteadv tn
eak ipntn 2S to .sn lower neifrr
iteadv to SO hisher i-nn i and hulli
teadv to 2S tower vealen tullv
lead; itockera and feeder firm.
Innd fif hieh prime 1 ISO lb Nebr4 kn
iteerv 27 So other hifh rhou-e and
prin e Merr 2:: M 27 2S mint g,id
and chimr .leers IS INI 2:1 00. rhoire
and prime heifer I the !b doun l'i Sn
2.100 food tn low rhnue heifer,
17 SO 19 2S utllltv and i ninmervial
row .s Id 2S 12 SO. , anner and rutters
9 00 11 mi. ten i-miimerrlal bulls 14 ?S
1ft SO most eiMt and rhnlre ealer.
2,1 OO 2S 00 ulilitv and standard eal
ers 12 00 21 00 inn bead irnod 7S lb
feedine heifers IS !J, fund !OU in
feednif Mens 17 imi
Sheen 4 lino sUuel.ter lan.hu nr.-ik
to :'S lower i,,,iehter sheep str.,d
In VI higher i'.ukI to prime wimled
laniliM IBVI2H7"i lull In low ,.nil
lamb, inon moo. wnoled slaughter
ewes 5 no 7 rail
New York Closing Stocks
Reporttd by
NTt-tr.ll I vnc. 1'iene Fei.ner nd Ke.ma
Ailmu.,' I'
Al Ch, .
Allied St;.
A!'is Ctiit
Al.
A
A-'
Am
A "i
A"
An
A..
An.
An
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A ' nn
'Atrh
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inn., ltd
Airlinfs
f'n
( v an
St Fd-
T - T
( oier
m Top
rlin'ki.'' I'i'i
14'. Fold Vn'nr ,'ii ,
MS
4 1 1 J Cen lis nao n s fi ',
M ' (.en Fler S'.
(,en Foods 41',
Ho", c.tn Motors 4!',
22 ' t irtl Tire
41 ' firo Par riv . 77',
"S', f,.r;te 4.1
S's r.lidden 14",
41' I fioorlnrh 7"1
'""' Con. hear 74
"2 r.iare WR S5
1 f.-t Sn fi, II',
w' f.iet Vsrst Sug 21'j
1'4 Grevhoimd IV,
Cult Oil 114',
Rrndv
B.-' Fo. il
Mr''' Sll
K... . A
B.nd.
Ho f '.
Fu. ru-
B .
Hon,
tnt
In
Int
Adiling
Chicago Butter-Eggs
CHICAGO, Jn 9 - .I'SDAi -Butter
iitradv. uhnlrsjitr huuni
price unchnmrrrt 9,'i more A A .Vn,
3't'j fi2 a SOi v',; f0 R 5R '.-.Vti.
8!( C .W.W,
f-IK s1pr1i : uhHff-nl huvintt
prici-s unchanferi tn 1 rent htfher,
(... 4fr cent or better A white .KUni,;
fiertmniji 27'4 2lj, nt unriflrfi 2H2HV
checki 22y,
Portland Grain
PORTLAND tjf Coarse grains.
1 15-day shipment, bulk, coast deliv
ery Oats No. I. M lb white 5J 50.
Barley No 2, 45 Ih B W 5150
52 00 Torn No. 2, K. V. .shipment
62 25-62 75.
Wheat 1 hid to arrive market,
basis No. I hulk, delivered roast:
Snft While 2 4fi'?: .Soft White 'ex
cluding Rcxi 24fi'Jr. White riuh
2 4fi'j.
far receipts: Wheat S.". barley
2: Hour 9. inm 4. mill feed 5
Calif i'a. k
( ainpti Soup
C. n I' in H
Curr .1 I
CA'erp Trar
Crlane.sr
Crrlaimred
C he- .s. (1
du M .S St P
C I W 111
C I H I- Hi'
Ciruli r
Cities Se--v
C'tm.iv Mnlv ...
Cluett Pea
Cora Cn!a
Colgate
Com Credit
Cnmw F.dison
Cont F.dison
. Container
' Cont Can
l Cont Oil
'Crane (o
Crow n 7el
Cllrtl Vsr
II
D. er A Co
Dia f..trh
noug Air
Dosv Chem
DeD T de Ne
T.
Fast Air t.i
Fast Kodak . .
Fl Paso C...1 .
Fmer Radln . ..
F Cnin
r
Fninhd
S.V.
i : ',
am ,
14'.
2S',
41',
. 1 01 ' ,
4S
... 47
40',
4S',
4S',
12',
. 14,
S4',
4',
SO'.
S4',
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as ,
17'.
sn
H
lke M .
I
H ir est
N.vkel
P-per
J
Ji.l.ns-Man.
Junes A M Stl
K
Kai- r Alum
Kennei tilt
Kern Land
I.
I.ll.hv MtN
l.;47 Mvrrs
I. OF fi'.iss
l ot kberit Air
I.nr '.s Inc
I.inllaid
M
Mrsnai o
Marsh Field
Merrk A- Co
Mont Chem ...
Mont Ward ..
Motorola . ..
N
Natl Blsruit
Natl Cah Rjeg
Natl Datrv
Natl Dulill
NatJ Ovpsum
Natl Iran
Natl Supplv
NY Central
No Am Avia ...
No Par Rv
ffW Airlmes
O
nl:n Nfalh
On Flev
!2
ll'i
Pjbcn
Par C. A Fl
Par TAT
Pun Am Air
Pennri I C
Penn Rv
Pepsi Cols
47,
S'.
44
I2ti
an1,
41',
IS',
M',
.11
M',
Jf,
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2'.
. JO',
112
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.14',
.77',
V,
I'1.
41'.
4.1 ',
4"l
127
2!
20,
I'MeliK-nidee ..
PhiH-o furi
P'l I M.HMS
Phil Pel f.l
PHNhiiM
P'.v, A Cho
Pn Sn p K I.
Pure (ill
R
nrlin Corn
navrnif Inr
Repuh si
It, v no'' . MM
Pes no'd. Tob
Tn blir d n
n-,v.sl n.trh
S
Safrwv Sirs .
SI Joe lead
St I. A SF Rv
St Regis Paner
Srhrnlev Ind
Sro't Paper
Srar i Roe
Shell Oil
Stnrl.-ili Oil
Skellv Oil
S,ronv-Mnh
Sou Cai Kdl
Sou Par Rv
Sou Fy
Sperry Rand
S'd Brands . ..
S'd Oil Cal
Std Oil Ind
St-1 Oil NJ
Sturtr-Park
Simi ,,v Oil
Sunshine M
Svstft A Co
S- l ania F'
T
Texas Co
Txa Gulf
Textron .
Tlde-Aa.o
Tranaam . ,
Trans Wn Air
Tarn Cen Fox
V
I'ninn C arh
Vnton Oil
I'nlon Par Ry rf
I'm Atrrrft ...
t'nl Air l.lnea
t'ni Corn
I'm Fruit
t'S Plvwnod
VS Rubber
I'S Sterl . .
W
Warner Pir
Wh Water P .
Weat Air Rr
Wealern Air
Western Fler
Western I'ntnn'
Wo-tlvs nrth
T.
7rn:th
l'4
l.'a
si
4l'k
"4
JS',
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. Ill,
. a:i
71 .
S4.
. 41',
4'
4S'.
. 23',
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44',
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4S',
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47',
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44',
24',
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2I,
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20',
41',
7'i
Salem
Obituaries
Bargain: House
For Only $100
Cash and Carry
RICHMOND, Va.. Jan. 9 m
You could buy a pretty good
house here today for less than a
nickel on (he dollar of valuation.
More than 30 homes wore for sale
at auction and the first one a
$9,100 two-bedroom brick dwell
ingwent for $300.
The only catch in the bargains
was that the houses have to -be,
moved out of the way to make
room for the new Richmond
Petersburg toll road.
Seventeen were sold in the first
hour and a half. The auctioneer
knocked down figuratively, that
is for a total nf $f045 houses
that had been valued by the lax
assessor'! office at $144,000.
Duinf A men
Lait r m dent of .W HifHand Av ,
aSalfm, Drrrmber Jnd, lfiM. Survived
bv wlft, LaVonne D. Amrn, Salem:
ions. G avion Duane Amen, Jr. and
Larry Roy-Dean Amen, both Salem;
parents, Mr A- Mrs. Earl R. Amen,
Salem: vister, Mrs. Wanda Lee Gard
ner. SaVm; brothers. Rillie B. Amen.
Salem, Donald E. Amen, Salem. Spr
virei will be held Saturday January
12th at lift) P.M. in the CbApel of the
ClouKh-Barrlck Funeral Home. R"v.
John L. Cauble will offinale. Inter
ment at Belcre.it Cemetery.
Jtobert Geddri:
Ite re.Mtlent of KWfl Donna Street.
January 8th. Survived by wife Rhea
Oeddes, a aon Albn Gedden of Salem.
Sisters Mrs Sidnev L. Stevens of
Salem and Mrs. Winter C. Wilson of
Seattle. Washington. Funeral an
nouncement wilt he announced later
by the V. T. G-olden & Co.
Minnie R. Grimm
Late resident of MM N. Cot tare
W.. Januarv 7th in a (oral hospital.
Survived by husband,. Charlea A.
Grimm, Salem; sons. Howard J
Grimm, Salem; Claude A. Grimm.
Denver. Colo: daughter. Mrs.
J P. Tobin, Seattle, W.ih. Grjndson.
Harold R Grimm, Salem. 3 treat -jErnndrhildren
alo survive, Ser vitrei
will be held in the Virrtl T. (Volden
Chaprl Thursday. Janu.irv 10. at 10 .30
a m. Rev. George H Sw:ft v, .il of
ficiate. Interment, City View Cerne
teiy. Sadie Petersen
Ldtp resident of Rt. 1, Turner, at
a Stay ton honpitAl. Januaty 7th. Sur
vived by husband. John Petersen,
Turner: 4 daughters, Mm. Audrra
Cnx, Florence, Ore., Mrs. ArVne Col
lier, Turner. Mrs. Lorraine Pfhif,
Spokane, Wa.h , Mrs. Dnnna notl,
Tacoins. Wash ; sons, D.-rrl Piter
sn. Dallas. Keith Petersen. Dallas,
Hartan Petersen, Leslie Petersen,
Morris Petersen, all of Turner; broth
er, Vernon, Comstock, Minn. Fifteen
frandchtldren also survive Services
will be held In the Virgil T, Golden
Chapel Thursday, Jsniury tn. at 2 00
p.m. Rev. Rjohert Luther will f.ffte
late. Ritualistic services by V'rtona
rhapter OFS. Interment, Relcresl
Memorial Park.
John P. Srhlmbrri
Late resident of 1010 South 14th..
at a local hospiUtl .Miliary tth , sur
vived by wile AnAfT M Sthlniberi?
of Salem. Announcements will be
made later by' the Virgil T. Golden
and Company.
James Wttllam Wood
At the residenee, Norlh River
Rd. Survived bv wife Fmma M.
Wood, SBlem; riaihlfrs- Mrs Abby
M Poltnn. Salenf; Miss Betty J.
Wood, Salem; sons.'IRnv A. Wood,
Loi Anseles, Calif : ftav Joseph
Wood, Salem: James V Wood, Salem;
sister. Mrs. Nora Rnbrton. Turner;
brothers. Carl Wood. Eutene: F.mery
Wood Salem: Fverett Wnod. 'Slem;
1.1 frandchtldren, one B'eat-frand-child
Services wiM be St'irdiv,
Januarv 12th. at 10 50 am, Clnuth-
R-irrick Chaiel. Rev Gen H ' Swift
officiatine Interment will bt Bel-
I crest Cemetery.
Portland Produce
PORTLAND i - Buttrrfat
Tentative, subject t o immediate
change Premium quality, deliv
ered in Portland. M-7 cent per
lb; first quality, tl; second
quality, 50-59.
Butter Wholesale, fob. bulk
cubes to wholesalers Grade AA,
93 score, 6,1: A rrade, 1 score.
62; B grade, 90 score, 60'i C
grade, 19 score, 58',.
Cheese To wholesalers Oregon
singles,'4M8 lb; Oregon 51b loaf,
4B'i-53'i.
Eggs To retailers Grade AA.
large. 46-47; A large. 44-4.1: AA
medium, 42-44; A medium, 41-4.1;
A small, 37-30. Cartons, l-t cents
additional.
Kggs To wholesalers A large.
42-434; a medium, 39-4l'i; A
small, 35-36H.
Live poultry No. 1 quality,
f.o.b. Portland Fryers 2'j-4 lbs,
21; light hens, 1011 at (arm:
heavy hens, 13-15 at farm; old
roosters, 7-9
Turkeys To producers L i v
weight fryers, 27-29,.
! Rabbits Average to growers
Live white, 3V4', lbs, 21-24; col
! orcd polls 4 cents less; old does,
j 10-12, lew nigher. Fresh killed
j fryers to retailers, 56-58; cut up,
i 60-63.
Wool Nominal, clean basis, i
I blood, I IS : H blood, 125; ' blood
1.03-Ofl; 'i blood, 140: fine, 1.50.
Counlry-dreasra Meals, f o b.
' rortland:
I Beef Young cows, utility, 20-22
lb- canners and cutters, 16-17.
' Veal Top quality lightweight,
1 30-32; rough heavies, 18-25.
Hogs Best light blockers, 24-
26; lean light sows, 20-21
Lamhs Top grade, 34-36.
Mutton I.iRhtweight ewes and
withers, 10-12: heavy culls, 5-1.
Fresh Produce
Onions Idaho Yellows, 50 lbs,
2 35-50; mod. 1 75-2.00; White; 3 50-
75: Ore. Danvers, med, 1.75-2.00;
3 in, 2 50-75. - - .
Pot.iliX's lxcal Russets. No. 1,
100 lbs, 2 50-75; Central Ore. Pus
sets. 3 00 50: Ige. 6-14 01, 4 00-25;
No. 2, 50 lbs. 1 15 -25; Idaho bales.
5-10 Ih, 225-50; Wash. Russets, 100
lbs. 3 00 25.
Hay No t green alfalfa, baled,
f o b. Portland. 3400-3500 ton. j
Apples Unchanged. i
Cclrry-Caltf. t-V- Ant. 5 50- j
i 6.00; few 3 do low as 5 00; hearts I
2.75-3.00 doi: local hearts 1.72-2.00 '
1 doz. ' I
Great For Batting Workers
When Grandma Was a Girl
Almost Inslinctivtly man and woman in naad ol
work or wishing to changa jobs chock -tha Classified
again and again. Tho, advantage of your job-oponingi
told thoro will holp you fill vacancies fist. May wa
aid you to dotcribo thtm woll? Dial EM 4-6811.
. . ..MklarVer
AriloV"
Job