Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, March 30, 1954, Image 21

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    Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore.
8B Tue Mar. 30, 1954
59-Cenf Pound
Butter Prospect
WASHINGTON Iffl Secretary
of Agriculture Benson says some
retail outlets have reported they
will offer butter for as low as
59 cents a pound Thursday when
the government's dairy price sup
port program shifts to a lower
basis.
Benson said, however, that
most of the retail prices for but
ter are expected to be in the
"mid and upper 60's." Retail
prices are now generally above
75 cents a pound, mostly around
80 cents.
The government's support rate
will decline about 814 cents a
pound from about 65 to 57 cents.
The dairy support program, now
at 90 per cent of parity, will be
reduced to 75 per cent for the
new marketing year beginning
April 1.
Benson told a news conference
that many wholesalers and re
tailersincluding food chains
have informed him that they are
willing to forego a part of their
normal price markups in an ef
fort to help the dairy industry
solve its surplus situation.
The secretary estimated his de
partment will own about 350 mil
lion pounds of butter, 420 million
pounds of cheese and 550 million
pounds of non-fat dried milk by
April 1, acquired under dairy
pries support commitments.
Benson said he was not yet
ready to announce plans for dis
posing of the government surplus
stocks. He said the 18-member
National Agricultural Commis
sion, appointed by President
Eisenhower, will go into this
matter at meetings to be held
here Monday, Tuesday and pos
sibly Wednesday.
ITEMS FROM
THE BUSINESS BEAT
ASSOCIATED Plywood Mills
Inc., will hold its annual meeting
this Saturday at the Multnomah
Hotel in Portland. A luncheon
session is planned with a social
period to follow. Leonard Ny.
strom, Eugene, is the current
president of APMI.
ROY C. GIBSON, who resigned
a position with M and M Wood
working Co., Portland, last week.
was formerly with the Vaughn
division of Long-Bell Lumber Co.
Gibson was assistant to M and M
Vice-President Taylor Alexander,
who also resigned. Alexander was
in charge of raw materials and
submitted his resignation when
the company changed its policy
of procurement from an overall
procedure to local plant purchase
ing, according to United Press.
Stafford
Jottings
STAFFORD
meeis p.m. Tnursday, April
1, at the home of Mrs. Wm. Wil
son. Mrs. Joe Aringdale is m
charge of the program. The lad
ies will quilt on the club quilt.
. The Jack Sandgath family are
adding a room to their home
Mrs. Harry Hill brought her
son Dean, home for a visit of one
day from the Sacred Heart Hospi
tal, where he has been confined
for months after a severe car ac
cident. He returns for several
weeks more of care in the hospital.
Mrs. K. H. Daniel attended a
meeting of the Three Rivers Gar
den Club at the home of Mrs. H.
Jensen of Camp Creek, where they
planned next year's program for.
the club.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rotering and
Bell Faules have returned home
to Wisconsin after visiting a
month at the Raymond Hill home.
All voters not registered for the
May Primary election are urged
to register before April 20, as
registering closes on that date.
Square dancing will be held at
the grange hall Saturday evening.
GENT FARMS will hold open
house Thursday through Satur
day this week in observance of
the organization s 30th . anniver
sary. Hours will be from 8 a.m
to 6 p.m. daily, and a special
free program is planned Thurs
day night at 7 p.m. at the Hatch
ery Feed & Farm Supply Store
at 2884 Elmira Road. Gent Farms
operated four breeding and rear
ing poultry farms at Irving, Alva
dore, Noti and near Junction City.
The farm store is operated in
conjunction with a hatchery with
electronically - controlled incuba
tors of 130,000-egg capacity. The
Thursday night program will in
clude both educational and enter
tainment offerings.
ARTICLES of incorporation were
filed in Salem this week for Roy
Timber Products, Inc., Eugene.
Incornorators are Jessie M., Roy
O. and Roy Holloway Jr.
dealers and others working In
the electrical industry was incor
porated last week under articles
signed by Merle P. Bailey, Allen
E. Hamilton and C. James Vitus
The league has plans to utilize a
54,000 budget, collected throu:
membership dues, to familiarize
the public with the proper and
safe use of electricity and electri
cal products, carry out research,
help formulate minimum stand
ards for a safe and adequate elec
trical wiring program for general
use in Oregon, and to work in co
operation with state and local
agencies in promoting safety.
Members already pointed out that
the average local home now has
30, or more electrically operated
appliances or devices, and that
this number can be expected to
double in the next decade.
The Broadway
Adding Space
HAROLD O. ANKARBERG, 241
E. 12th Ave., Eugene, has been
elected to membership in the
American Institute of Accounts,
national professional society of
certified public accountants. An
karberg is office manager for
Olympia Harbor Lumber Co.
Work to remodel (he former
Pennywise Drug Store location at
36 E. Broadway was started Mon
day. The space is being joined to
The Broadway department store
next door and is expected to be
ready for occupancy about May
l. Rov Morse, owner of The
Rroadwav. reoorls.
The new section will be joined
to the department store by an in
terior archway and will provide
1,500 square fcetjor an expanaea
draperies and home furnishings
department.
Work a so will De none to re
mnrlol nnrtions of the present
store and double the infants' and
children's doDartment as well add
one-third to the size of the dress
vardasre department.
An accessories rjar is ptanneu
nr he arenwav Deiween me
new and the present store sections.
Frank Hitchcock of Eugene is
the architect for the store cxpan
sion project. Waldo S. Hardie :
Son are the general contractors,
EMERALD EMPIRE
"tur effect nf Bnvprnment nrice supports has been over
rated as a factor in determining prices on farm commodities, says
the American Farm Bureau Federation. Supporting this view is a
chart, reproduced below, from the U. 'S. Department of Agricul
ture which shows the trend of prices of "basic" price-supported
New Addition,
Lorane School
LORANE Dedication of the
new addition to Lorane School
was held Friday evening in the
third grade room of the new
building.
Following the business meeting
of Parent-Teachers Club, a skit
was given by the local Boy Scout
Troon 82. Scouts demonstrated
how to roll a pack to take on an
overnight trip for a new mem
ber who had done everything
wrong.
The welcome address was given
by Arvid Rothauge, chairman of
the school board, who also intro
duced the other school board
members. He gave a brief his
tory of the school district.
County School Supt. Mrs. Lucille
Klinge also gave a short talk
ard Mrs. Erma Schwcppe, ele
mentary school consultant, ex
pressed her pleasure in the new
building. A representative trom
Albert Vic and Son, contractors
who built the school, and Charles
W. Endicott, architect who de
signed the building, each spoke
briefly. Endicott presented the
keys of the building, which were
accepted by Archie W, McCrae,
superintendent of Lorane schools.
Peggy Leach .and Doretta Cas
tro each did a tap dance at the
close of the program.
Refreshments of pie and coffee
were served, by mothers from the
four upper grades in the school
cafeteria after the school was in
spected by the audience.
DESPITE OPTIMISM
Business Still Lags
ARNOLD D. THOM has been
appointed as new manager of the
Eugene Overall Laundry, Edward
Anderson, president of the firm,
reports. A resident of this area
for five years, . Thorn is married
and has a son in junior high. The
service he now manages special
izes in industrial laundry and
rentals to garages, service sta
tions, machine shops and similar
Sunshine club businesses. The laundry is located
Nelsons Have Son
JUNCTION CITY Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Nelson of Wash
ington, D. C. are the parents of a
son, Glenn Michael, born March
24. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ott, and
paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Nelson, all of
Junction City.
Eugene Markets
BUTTERFAT
Premium : arc
First Quality B7c
Second Quality 62c
BUTTER (Wholesale Prices)
AA Prints 72e
A Prints 72c
EOGS (Buying Trice)
Larue AA 41c
Larue A 38c
medium AA 38c
Medium A 37c
small A 31
EG (53 (NW Wholesaled
Extra Large A H2c
Extra Largo A 80c
Large AA 47c
Large A 44c
Medium AA 44c
Medium A 43c
Small A 3Bc
Large Checks 43c
EO.c.s (Ore Wholesale)
Jumho A .. . . enc
Extra Larjje AA 52c
Extra Large A 50c
Large AA 49c
Large A , 47c
Medium AA
Small A
Large Checks 44c
Kuiis (I'ubiic market, retain
at 347Vi W. 5th Ave.
THE ELECTRIC League of
Oregon, a Eugene organization of
electrical contractors, appliance
Oregon Mother
01 Year Named
SALEM m Mrs. Virginia M.
Kletzer, Portland, mother of three
children and active in many
school and service organizations,
is Oregon's Mother of the Year,
Gov. Paul L. Patterson an
nounced Monday.
She is past president of the Ore
gon Congress of Parents and
Teachers; state commander of
the Oregon division of the Ameri
can Cancer Society; past presi
dent of the National Congress of
Parents and Teachers; state par
liamentarian of the American Le
gion Auxiliary; parliamentarian
of the Portland Federation of
Womens Clubs: and a vice presi
dent of the Oregon League for
Nursing.
Her children are a daughter,
Mrs. Clark Spurlock, Portland; a
son, William, with the Commer
cial Bank in Newberg: and an
other son, Kenneth, a teacher at
Lincoln High School, Portland.
She is a member of the First
Unitarian Church, Portland. Her
husband is a retired teacher, and
now is in the building supplies
business.
Actress, Prince
Just 'Friends'
HOLLYWOOD WV-Gene Tier-
ney s studio says she returned
Tuesday to a Mexican beach re
sort whore she held a weekend
meeting with Moslem Prince Aly
Mian.
But the actress said before she
left that they aren't married.
We are not contemplating
marriage at this time," she said
by phone from a film location
near Mojave, Calif. "Prince Aly's
trip was merely one of friend
ship."
The prince and the actress
reached the resort, Rosarito
Beach, between Tijuana and En-
" 47c scnada. by devious routes. Aly
wc came from Pans, via Montreal
and Mexico City. Miss Tierney
jumbo fie: and her mother flew from Holly.
Kxtra Larse AA Mel wood to Mexico City Friday, a
i.r8 a a ssc 20h century-Fox
FARMERS' PRICES
Companion of Prices for Prla-Svpporfd "Baile" Commodiliti
With Tfiou of Nonsupported Group
OF 1910-14
1 I
300 1 1 -5 kg-
Not price supported iVy Ag.
(FSUITS, TRUCK CHOPS. f S
OTHER VEGETABLES, MEAT y
ANIMALS, POULTRY, EGGS)
200 P
I Price supported ,
J , , I , ,
( BASIC C0MWDITIES-F0OO GRAINS, tin -Hi.
FEED GRAINS, COTTON, TOBACCO! bita
' I I I I I
1935
1940
1945
1950
1955
v ipifMiutwre i
By J. A. LIVINGSTON
All the numerous outward
signs of good business are still
here. Plenty of help-wanted ads.
especially for engineers. Crowded
trolley cars, buses, and subways
carrying people to jobs. A nope
ful stock market. Easy credit.
Finally, raw material prices
are steady there's an absolute
absence of panic. There are no
signs of the disorderly price de
clines usually associated wun a
nroloneed slide In production
such as we have had since July
(see chart).
On top of all that, President
Eisenhower still reserves judge
ment on the business outlook. To
be sure, a month ago he said that
March was a key month; that if
employment did not pick up, the
overnment would have to taKe a
critical look-see. And the pick up
is still as remote as Molotov.
Yet, the President still feels
recent events are no occasion for
alarm. All the March statistics
won't be in for some time. And
ladies aren't buying their spring
finery yet because of the late
Easter.
On one point the President is
sure. This is not the moment for
slambang emergency action.
TOO MUCH
The President doesn't say so,
but it's easily deduced that his
economic advisers still look upon
this as an inventory recession.
Several Receive Injuries
In Accidents Over Weekend
OREGON HENS are laying 62
more eggs a year than they did
in 1926, according to ti Depart
ment of Agriculture's crop and
livestock reporting service. In
1926, the average Oregci hen laid
141 eggs. In '53, an all-time pro
duction average of 201 eggs per
hen was attained.
MINT RUST control measures
will be particularly important
this spring and should be started
early, the OSC agricultural ex
periment station reports. Citing
the effect of recent wet weather,
the station slates that rust is now
beginning to spread and recom
mends that any mint not covered
when plowed be treated now to
prevent infcclation of the rest of
the field. The infected mint should
bp thoroughly covered with spray,
preferably on a sunny day.
commodities, compared wtih the trend of non-support commodities.
The Drice of the non-support group, as the chart shows, has been
above the other group most of the time for the past 20 years.
THE PEAK of emergence for
prune thrips is now here, says
W. B. Parker, county extension
agent. Now is the proper time to
be looking for these small black
slender thrips which may be af
fecting many trees in this area.
Not all trees will be affected but
growers are urged to observe
their trees to see if these thrips
are bothering. An application of
spray or dust of DDT to thor
oughly reach all parts of the
tree is necessary if the thrips
are found. Sometimes two appli
cations are necessary where
thrips are found in large num
bers emerging over a long period
of time. A simple way of deter
mining if you need to apply ma
terials is to take several hundred
buds from the orchard as a sam
ple and if you don't find more
than 25 to 50 thrips per 100 buds
and very little or no injury, it
may not be necssary to apply
materials.
Three Saturday night and Sun
day accidents in central Lane
County resulted in minor injuries
to those involved.
The worst hurt was Ronald
Mertz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
J. Mertz of 2924 Stark St., Eu
gene.
He was thrown from the fam
ily car just before noon Sunday
when it collided with an Ashland
car near Meadowview,. south of
Junction City.
Ronald's arm was broken and
he was cut 'and bruised.
His brother Dale received mi-
eat Price
Seen Steady
CORVALLIS OPI Little change
in 1954 wheat crop prices from
1953 levels was predicted here
today by the Oregon State Col
lege extension service.
Marion D. Thomas, extension
service economist, said price sup
ports, available storage space and
acreage restrictions would work
to hold prices for this year's crop
at about the same level as last
year.
At mid-February, the 90 per
cent parity price on wheat was
$2.23 per bushel, just two cents
above the price used in establish
ing 1953 loan rates.
Income, however, from the
1954 wheat crop in Oregon is ex
pected to be lower than in 1953,
Thomas said. Acreage allotments
for the state total about 30 per
cent less than that for last year,
and few farmers are expected to
exceed their allotments, due to
penalties on excess wheat.
Portland Market's
NEW YORK STOCKS
SELECTED LIST
Reported by
Foster it Marshall, Eugene Office
DOW JONES CLOSNG AVERAGES:
.10 Industrial;, 300.89. up .83
20 Ralls, 99.59. up .37
15 Utilities, 35.85, off .18
Volume, 2,130,000 shares
NYSE SELECTED LIST:
Larffo A 55c
Medium AA He
Medium A 53c
Small A 50c
poultry (Swift's mirlnit Price)
No. 1 colored hens, all welRhts .. 23c
No. 1 Lefihorns, all weights I!c
No. 1 colored fryers, 4 lbs 2Sc
No. 1 colored roasters, 4 lbs, up 26c
No. 1 Leghorn springs, 2 lbs. up 22c
cocks and Mags 1;,C!f if l t
No. 2 poultry, 4 e under above prlcesi rOrMflnd LlVOSlOCK
No. 3 poullrv, h of above prices. nnn-rt vn nr. .. j
POULTRY (NW tnivlna nrlresl RTI'AN w "".
No. 1 colored hens, nil weights .. 23c
No. 1 Leghorns, all weights 19c
SUPPORT LOAN rates
barley will be $1.26 per bushel
and S52.50 per ' ton in Lane
County this year, the Depart
ment of Agriculture has re
ported. For Linn County, rates
are S1.28 and S53.33; Douglas
County, $1.22 and 550.B3. In
creased supplies, due to farmers
increasing barley acreage be-
spokesman cause of reduced wheat allol-
saul. jmcnls, are expected to drop
Miss Tierney returned lo! wholesale prices well helow the
Mojave Monday, to resume work j support levels later this year,
in "The Egyptian." And Monday according to market observer
night she said she was headed quoted by Associated Press,
for Mexico again.
PORTLAND HI Buttcrfat Tenia.
live, subject to Immediate change
Premium quality, maximum to .35 to
one per cent aclditv, delivered In
Portland, 68-71 lb: first quality, 66-69;
second quality, 64-67. Valley routes
and country points 2 cents less.
Butter Wholesale, f.o.b. bulk cubes
to wholesalers Grade AA. 93 score.
66!a lb: 92 score, 65U: B grade, 90
score, o'lv;: nu score, ttz.
Cheese To wholesalers Oregon
singles, 40T&.43; Oregon 5-lb loaf, 46-49.
bggs to wholesalers Candled eggs,
containing no loss, cases Included,
f.o.b. Portland A grade, large, 45'a
46i,3; A medium, 43,,i-441,a; A grade,
small, 3814-39' a.
Eggs To retailers Grade AA, large,
52; A large, 49-50; AA medium. 49; A
medium. 47-48: A small, 40-43, Cartons
1-3 cents additional.
Live chickens No. 1 quality, f.o.b.
plants fryers nad roasters. 26-27; light
hens, 19; heavy hens, 23; old roasters,
14-15.
Turkeys to producers for breeder
types, f.o.h. farm. New York dressed.
pj.; heavy hens 31: toms 28: ncltsville
nviir. lums, io. r.vi.-verairn irozen,
to retailers., hens 57, toms, 51-54.
Rabbits Average to" growers Live
white, 3i,a-5 lbs. 20-24. 5-6 lbs. 21-23; old
does, 10-12, few higher. Fresh dressed
fryers to retailers, 58-61; cut up, 84-67.
Wholesale dressed meals:
Beef Steers, choice, 500-700 lbs,
37.00.39.(10: good, 35.00-38.00: cummer,
clal. 31. 00-35.00; utility. 27,00.32.00; com
mercial cows 26.00.31.00: ultitlv. 27.00
32.00; canners-cutters, 23.00-26.00.
Beef cuts choice steer:. Ulndouar-
tcrs. 43.0047.00; rounds, 42.00-45.00; full
loins, irimmea, rji.iiu.HH.uo: triangle
30.00-34.00: forequarters, 33.00-35.00;
cn"cKs, .tru'iMiuw: nos, .uj.uu-aft.do.
---t ci ts loins, choice, 8-12 lbs
, '4ers is lh, 41.00
45.00; sparcrlbs, 53.00-57.00; fresh
i.uu-utt.ini,
Admiral 20',4 Lib Owens 46'4
Air Redn 23 Lockheed 353,i
Al Ludlum 30Va Loews UVt
Al Chem 8314 Lorrillard 24V4
AI Stores 42 McKesson 39Vs
AUIs Ch 48is M&M Wood 814
Am Alrt 12!S Mack 13,4
Am Can 3814 GI Martin 23
Am Cvanmd 44'a Mont Ward 59Va
Am Gas 35',a Nash 14.
Am Rdtr. 16' Nat Bis ,W4
Am Smelt S.Wi Natl Dlst i7s,i
Am Tel 163 Natl Gpsm 24V,
Am Tob 6014 Natl Lead 427',
Am Wool I814 Nil Steel 491
Anaconda 34,i NY Cent 2314
An Prich 5U4 No Pac oSW
Armco 39H Pac Gas 41ij
Armour Wt Packard 33a
Asoc DG 21 Pan Am Air 10i4
Atchison 95 Paramount 304
Avco 53i Penney 79
Baldwin 914 Penn RR 16H
Bal Ohio 1914 Pepsi I5,4
Bendix Av 68" Pfizer 33'4
Beth Stl 55'a Phllco 32
Boeing 78' Phillips 62
Borg War 82 P-"" Gam '1
Bucvrus 24-?! Radio 27
Vurllngton 12 Rayonler 31
Cdn Pac 2414 Rem Rand 17'4
Cclanese 20V4 Rep Steel 49V4
Cites Ohio 33"i Rcxall 7
St. Paul 10'a Reynolds 37T's
St. Paul Pr 36 Richfield 55
Chrysler 62(4 St. Regis 23
Climax 4114 Safeway 421s
Colu Gas l4i.B Schenley 19ij
Vultee 24 Sears S9')i
Conl Mlrs 9 Sinclair . 3914
Corn Prod xd72f4t Socony 39Tr
Crane 334 Sou Co 16-14
Cro Zelt 4VA Sou Pac 4014
Curt Wrl , 10 Sou Ry v
Douglas 112S4 Sperry ' 55
Dow Chem 35:14 Spiegel 714
Du Pont 1141,'s Std O Cal 5314
East Alrt 23 Std O NJ 79?
Eastman 55'4 Studebkr 13"4
Erie 16 Sunray 18.i
Firestone 73 Sylvanla 3ta,
Gen Dyan 43H4 Texas 68I-4
Gen Elec 104'a Textron 9
Gen Foods 59ls Tidewater 2IS
Gen Mlrs 64'i Transam 26'
Ga Pacific II14 TWA 1414
Glldden 33 Tw Cen Fox 20
Goodyear 61 '4 Un Bag 46
Greyhound 1314 Un Carbide 72
Gulf Mob 27 Un Oil 4414
Gulf Oil .1514 Un Pac 111
Homcstake. 39 Unld Aire 57
Howe Snd 13' Unld Alrl 23
Hudson 9 Untd Fruit 49
111 Cent B214 US Rubber 3H4
Int Harv 2914 US Steel 41
Int Nickel 37 H Walker 55
Int Paper 61 Wcs Union 39
Int Tel 15 Westlnghs 61-
Johns Man 62 Wlllvs 13
Johns I.a 21 Woolworlh 4314
Kennecotl 72- Zenith 69
nor bruises and their mother,
Ruth, received face cuts.
The father was cited by state
police for failing to yield the
right of way to the other car,
driven by Thomas Eugene Best
of Ashland. Mrs. Best suffered
minor cuts.
All were given emergency
treatment at Sacred Heart Hos
pital and released.
Three persons received minor
hurts just after midnight Satur
day two miles north of Eugene
in a'head-on crash.
Max Peter Nielsen and his
wife Helene, of Rt. 3, Junction
City, received face and head cuts
when their car collided with an
auto driven by Donald Paul Low
dell of Alpine.
Lowdcll told state police he
went to sleep.
His cuts and the Nielsen's in
juries did not require hospitali
zation. The other accident occurred
Sunday afternoon at the junction
in Glenwood. Harl R. Hawkins,
59, of Portland, was treated for
rib injuries at Sacred Heart after
his car collided with one operated
by Curtis C. Newman of 1212
Mill St. There were no citations.
NO SUGGESTION OF PANIC
Commodity prices holdup despite W
decline-a sign of underlvinr, iTJum
, 3 -"""""iff)
wnolesa r .
rrSnt
lf0irnn,iLm In..-
..
giocAlllllllllllllllllllllllmillllllH! Wllllliunn '
Oommodltv Price. 1 lnWiniyS..
gl!0 . J,'x.':::,.ilc,'
u sTnTiTiTrirrriiTTfri r 1 1 n n 3 iMwiiliSf
i,9S2il53j l,9S., crSsti
Smk DapuimmI ( Ubof Jilt-
""wwa
Business men had a biltcr taste
of shortages after the Korean
war. So they played their stocks
long. They preferred too much
to too little. They weren't going
to be caught short.
Then last summer, sales stoo
ped rising. Inventories, which a
few months before had looked
meager, suddenly seemed ample
if not superfluous. When sales
men came around with their or
der books, business men would
point to'choked shelves and say,
"Enough."
Then, as business men stopped
buying from one another, sales
dropped still further. Conse
quently, inventories which didn't
seem large relative to sales in
November and December now
look oversized in relation to the
reduced sales of February and
March.
All that, the administration
considers "normal." Secretary of
the Treasury Humphrey told the
Senate Appropriations Subcom
mittee he was "not looking for
any sudden or immediate turn."
It mightn't come before May.
NO LONGER
Definitely, the administration
is no longer talking of a "rolling
readjustment" upturns in some
industries which offset declines
in others. Now, it's generally
agreed that the decline has de
veloped more force than the
President's advisers had expected,
tnougn a decline of present pro
portions had always been within
the outer range of their "calcu
lated risks." It's definitely a re
cession a word often used in
this column,
The strong spot in the economy
is construction. . New housing
starts and contract awards were
up sharply in February. This,
again, is an indicator of basic
confidence. It supports the
President's economic advisers in
their hope that before the year
is over a recovery will get under
way. Their reasoning might well
run u s this:
"The decline has moved fast.
New production in many lines is
DeiOW incnmmn ...
sharper the mnSZ I
ou ckor it ,in Jncni dowj, thl
th?" -ere
prices would He .l.
tax cuts, n f "W Ail
will give buying a,"
LATEST TUNE ' '
Nevertheless, lh aWi,,,
senee of a March nnt ' 1
favorable. Theodore
new bead of Scars, Roebuck
wil ben , al
oonl f, ."""01,
" toia reporters h
not as irnnrl TO,
" o"" is we hmti!,.
Ill
would be." Naturally j
idaier was laken nlo s..-. M
annninlnrl l
vulv;uiauons.
. J"e operating rate of the Ih
industry fell again bet ,.T
to below 67 nor rem , """1
The diroelori of .;. "
n.iiJ7j". r """Willi
77 uiucrrea action on til
dividend-in the face of , 3
mal defic t in p.k. '11
ville Ind. Republic Steel qJ
has laid off 300 workers at vj
sillon, Ohio, and II s ci..n"l
""2 uemplws of the MlJ
..". nauis iron ore from tJ
docks at Conneaut, Ohio, toPiJ
burgh. Yet March is custom J
turn espl"
Late in the week, the sltl
mimei, Dcgan to show sraj
regret after pushing to .
lughs-as if Wall Street
saying: "This upturn's si I
speculation. Don't count on ij
Remember
. IT'S
HIR0NS
Everybody's Drug
93 WUIimtttl
For the
BEST IN
VITAMINS
Hikers Leave
Dogs Behind
SENECA, Md. W Ray Riley re
ported Tuesday that he has a
couple of dogs on his hands
stranded after last week's hiking
exedition along the Chesapeake
and Ohio canal led by Supreme
Court Justice William O. Douglas
and party.
The dogs, one a collie and the
other a beagle hunting dog, joined
the Douglas party at Sharpsburg,
Md., and "hiked better than 50
miles." The dogs were left behind
here when the expedition contin
ued on into Washington.
Riley says he is anxious for the
owners to claim the dogs.
Four new insecticides
t-re umvu one no ar tortv. l.. , . n
C'stlle 200, holdover 200; market fair. : "' Mran " ' aMCU al urrS"n
at. t ninrH cviAtnrs " - 'i"ercn eariy sales snout oinii: . uui-yt. irtju: wm i ui
1 a'iti calves Gooti-eliolce. all
II.'" (.11,111131; AUl V.UIIILIH Ul 11,111 ' 44.IH1.
weevil and crown moth, majorl Lamb choice-prime, 4i.oo-46.ooi
next allarkinff lrvhrrv: HMW-.I.
No,
, j t ns si ih u y wun mio ftionnav mtipr-ru . nmrn hm inn ncn et,,.jntB
XrUZ(Mo no iaste difeVbe-
r,r" rt " flei nroniul 23 liead rholcn Mrrrs Monday I tWCOn untreated berries and
batiks I.. im,h.u:J?;??cr.,-?r ewitho$o crowliic on soil with nl-
ncr-dittcr cows o.5(M(.:5o hut mot ofi('rn1' dicldrin, hoptachlor
Cascfti-fi, lb. dry . ........ 12c
rry Grape Root, lb. ........ fic
HIDES AND WOOL
HfRvy Beef . . Sc
LUfat Doe! ........................ So
Bull lc
Call He
Kip So
Mohair, 12 mo. clipped .......... HOc
i.a mo a rmon woo.
Long Wool
supply unsold: few uthitv rnu v
14; commercial lo IB; utility bulls 14-
Calves 25; market steady; tew good
low choice vealers 22-2ft.
Hos 200; market active, strons;
cnniro l-a nuichers IfliMlj lb. 20.50.
-'!.,; small
, . ti , "' viirrtM' mum., WlllfllUCUP VH.
plants, caused no flavor chanRCley medium, Sl-S.l lb; Kastcrn Oregon
nnu ann nan moon, fu-RZ.
Country-dressed meats, f.o.b. Port
land: Bref-Cnwa. utility, 24-28 lb; can
ncrvcuttrrs. 22-2.1.
Veal Top quality, liRhtwelght, 34
Hons Lean blockers. 3EMO: mwi.
andl"1', L. ....
Mutton-Best, 14-16; cull-utlltty, 9-11.
Fresh Produce:
Onion 50 lb sacks Oregon vellows,
No. 1, med, 1.75-2.00; Idaho yellows,
med, 1.00-50; Texas Bermudas, 4.75-5.00.
Potatoes Willamette Valley Long
Portland Grain
PORTLAND Hi-No transitions.
Tuesday's ear rerelptsi wheat 4;
Hour 2i corn 3; oata 1.
chlordane. For use acainst straw
berry pests, the insecticides are
usually mixed in dust form with
commercial fertilizers and ap
nlied in the snrine titst hpfore
nt 50n. . I.,...,- nerrips arn n antnri Tho nci no. it Mt-an
' 2: ". . icWc are poisonous and should 1 '3. i'-ss: n iniV
iuoibvteadv: iat. Men ... be handled carefully, partic!!-;"-.1 "! . 63-: '
rMi-e-prlme un lb. noied i.mh. iVilarlv when In rnnepntrnto farm ln!r'i' Ja-i windows, as.
MINISTER GETS
PLENTY OF HELP
TRENTON, Tex. MV-AII the
volunteers who showed up to
dig a foundation for the new
Baptist church here brought
empty tin cans along with
them.
It didn't take the Rev. Fred
Thomas, the pastor, long to
figure it all out. Said the
preacher:
"I'll have plenty of help this
week, but I may be hard
pressed for volunteers until
these fishing worms are used
up."
U ft VI jK A
HART'S
AUTO GLOSS
SURE POES-TWE TRICK !
ALL YOU DO IS..,
PUT IT ON,,. LET IT DRY.,,
WIPE IT OFF
AND IT CAN 8B
APPLIED IN DWECT
SUNLIGHT,'
BE I
'SECT J
few lots heavier wel.M M V. .j'.il.j :.iS,0i' "l Idanoflve
choice feeders ..l.hli .rnT,H ' ' '' " --'
soon-cnoica slaughter ewes
9.50.
""..J..".' low mannfar-tiirors' In.ln.xlUn. I Hay U.S. No. 3 reen alfalfa, most.
"y 30.00 ton, delivered car and truck
lr -
Hots, f.o.b. Portland and Seattla.
FOR SALE AT LEADING SERVICE STATIONS
Distributed in your area by
EUGENE
Commercial Auto Supply
Oeorue Halton Company
Lane Tarts Company
Pacific Auto Supply
TerrUI Auto Parts Company
Walker Auto Supply Company
COTTAGE GROVE
Cottaje drove Auto Parts
Nordllni Parts Company
Walker Auto Supply company
JUNCTION CITY
Junction City Auto Parti
Mac's Auto Supply
.WANTED WANTED
MAKE UP TO $400.00 PER MONTH
We are MANUFACTURERS of a famous PRODUCT that UK
WILDFIRE. We are just opening up counties In this area and NEED
MEN (no agle limit) to carry a stock of the product and to mU
deliveries to local merchants. NO SELLING or BUSINESS EX
PERIENCE NECESSARY. We start you ... the merchants phone or
write you for their supplies as you wilt be the exclusive distributor
In your territory. $600 cash required, secured by merchandise dt
pending on the number of stores you want to supply. No office
necessary. THIS BUSINESS CAN BE HANDLED FROM YOUfl
HOME. (Part time to start If necessary.) EARNINGS UNLIMITED!
We will help finance expansion, once credit is establslhed. If you
have the necessary'cash and mean business . , . ANSWER THIS M,
and be on the ground floor with this most sensational repeat
ORDER ITEM that is in constant need. Can stand strictest lnvesu
gatton. Replies confidential,
WRITE BOX NO. 386 CARE OF THIS PAPER
Jf
May & Mead Co. 857 Pearl St.
Phone 4-52Z1
Q3J GOSJ&tEE
No one lioujf, no ono suit, no one salar)
will lit everyone. There is no one pattern
(or the planning of an estate that will blan
ket everyone. Earh account now manaaetl
by J. Henry Helser & Co. is maintained
tppnrately and managed individually in
full recognition of the personal problems,
needs, and goals of the client. May we I'"
you more? Please write or call for more
information.
J.HENRY HELSER &??,
atwrnrrTrlfl
IS
INVESTMENT MANAGERS
Eugene
Olfic
..... tiff.
Kenneth J. rotin. " jj
Collins Hini"'