PAGE TEN DAILY EAST OREOONIAK, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 8, 1922. TEN PAGES. DAILY MARKET NEWS, LOCAL AND GENERAL Including Fcndletoa Prices and Associated Press Seporta OUTBURSTS OF EVERETT TRUE fiolort Cattle Command Premium At Portland (From the Oregon Journal) North Portland showed a mixed up pearance for livestock at the week's 1 opening, hogs being steady to a trifle easier, cnttle were slow to firmer and higher while sheep were steady to a weaker undertone. Total run In the alleys over Sunday included 110 londs, compared with 73 loads a week ago, 111 two weeks ago and 112 loads a year atro. In the. cattle alleys, while there was the same old showing-of lack of af fection for the ordinary to poor qual ity stuff, evcrnl select loads sold at , an advance of a quarter. One, lot of selected steers moved at $8.2.1, which Is a new high mark for that dlvlHlon, while In - the coy alleys the selling of some fancy stuff at 5.75 stretched 'that division's extreme a similar amount. - No other price changes were made at ihe start. General cattle market range; Choice steers ...t 7.75 W S.25 Medium to good steer's., t.169 7.S0 Fair tp medium steers.. G.7ftfr 6.75 Common to fair steers . . , 4.00 B.75 Choice coys and heifers fi.25 5. Medium to good cows and heifers Patr to medium cows and heifers Common to fair cows and nelferg s Cunners . . . (,.... 4.25 If 5 3. 50le! 4.25 3.00 3.f.0 3.00 3.S0 Hulls 3.00 4.00 Choice feeders 6.00 & 5.60 Fair to good feeders ... 4.00 ffi 5.9u Choice dairy calves S.OOtfji 8.50 Prime light calvos ..... 7.f0 8.00 Medium light calves ... 7.00fi 7.50 Heavy dairy calves .... 4.00fti 6.50 While early sales were made in a way around the previous extreme mark of $13, the undertone in the hog alleys started with less Btrength than recently noted. Of the total supply of 2252 head reported In the alleys over Sunday, .848 head, or seven loads, came direct from the Mid-West to lo cal killers. General hog market range: Prime light $ 1 3.25 1 3.00 Smooth heavy, 230-300 lbs. 11. 50(912. 25 Smooth heavy. 300 lbs., up 10.00011.50 75 Rough heavy .. 8.005 9.75 I Fat pigs 12.00(12.50 00 ' Feeder pigs 1 2.00 r 12.50 Stags 6.00 9.0 In the sheep and lamb alleys there was a liberal supply of 488 head re ported over Sunday of which 2118 head or 14 loads went through to out side packers. Demand for sheep and lambs was considered steady with the possible exception of Willamette valley lambs, which were inclined to show a degree of easiness and even weakness, nl thoug no early change was shown. General sheep and lamb range: Prime east mountain lambs $10.00l3llV.fl Choice valley lambs 9.00(3)10.00 Medium valley lambs . . . S.OOffl 9.00 Common valley lambs .. 6.00(fj) 8.00 Cull spring lambs 5.00 6.00 Heavy yearlings 6.00 7.00 Light yearlings 7.00 8.00 Heavy wethers 6.00 ifH 6.00 Light wethers 6.00(!J 7.00 Ewr.s 2.00 5.00 THE OLD HOME TOWN By Stanley THB POST MASTER i cr:'-n - sLTvjl rC..r-Lr UAQCUU OTEV WALKER PfiOMlSR ' frS."a , TO Cl-EAf UP THE ROBBERY QUICKLY. Does an Education Pay? An extended research by Dr. Timing Proved that 277 times as nuiny college trained men amassed groat wealth as 'bono who did not go to colics. The average eamliigs of a college trained man In thiri country are as much an Is received from an In vodmi'iit of $M0,OMI.M in htanilard e-iir;tit., nor ran such an education bo lost. Cine dollar nil) begin n Savings Account licro anl Uiis added to HVKUtmatlcally and persistently, will eventually lie sufficient to cover tlir, cost or a enl legn cducaUon, and in Iho end prove to lie surely a very good Investment, 3 lA.W CT I )WM ..u4mw ? The American National Bank Pendleton. Oregon. 33 Yars Of Continuous finkinjg. ca : ,it:ni 1 " lj m. J mm T il WE HAVE SOME BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM SETS IN GOLDEN OAK, MAHOGANY AND WALNUT. Golden Quartered Oak table and -1 chairs with genuine CC (( leather seats J.Vl Sold on Monthly Payments S3L CRUIKSHANK S HAMPTON 124-23 E, .Webb Thone 548 T OM rmhr Takfa la Exrtiaas aa Pwt Tnrmt oa Xwm taHft Asm h rradlMaa far MoPnacaa Kltrfcra raaaaw Speculative Kails Are 1'avoWte HoncK NEW YORK, Aug. 8. (A. P.) Buying of speculative rails, a number of which reached new high prices for tho year, featured yesterday s bona . dealings 'on the New York stock ex change. J Missouri, Kansas & Texas adjust-j ment 5s. when issued, and St. Ijouls & San Francisco income lis were (he 1 favorites, each breaking through for new top prices, as did St.. Louis Fnmii western Consolidated 4s, .Pore Mar quette 4s, Long Island refunding An, Like Shore 4s of 1928 and tho Atchi son adjustment 4s stamped. Profit-taking caused slight reces sions In some of the sugar company securities, notably Cuba cane 8s and Punta Allegri 7s, but the rest of tho list held up well. Public utility issues advanced in sympathy with the rise in stocks of that group. The French government and muni cipal issues held fairly firm, donpltc the weakness In foreign exchange, do minion of Canada 5 l-2s and city of Zurich 8s were at the year's best prices, wihlo moderate gains were al so made by Berne 8s and Christianio 8s. Belgian 6s dropped below par for the first time this season nd Brazil ian bonds moved slightly upward. Lib erty issues hold steady. Total sale, par valuo,. were approximately $15, 981,000. . I'VE- TiOKSt TMH'N2. P-OlCE MOON ANP Ldc- THOSer. You Z SScp n!l 1 ' j f t a. . 1 S 1 TO 3eT Karoias City Livestock Market. KANSAS CITY, Aug. 8. (IT. S. Bit rcau of Agricultural Economics) Cattle, 81,000; better grades beef steers, weak to 15c lower early sales. others around 25c lower; some bids off more; top, $10.35; she stock and yearlings weak to 25c lower;, in-between cows off more; bulk cows, $5 5.50; few lots, $6 6.50. most grass hoifers, $r.256; canners, bulls and calves, steady to 25c lower; most can ners, $2.50lr2.75; bulk bologna bulls, $3,504; good and choice vcalers, $8.60 i 9.50. Hogs 11,000; 25 6 40c lower; choice light-lights, $10.10; part load lights, early. $10.15; 180 to 220 pounds, $10(!(10.1rt; good, 230 to 250 pound weights. $9.60'9:75; 200 to 300 pounds. $9.40 (if 9.60; practical top, $10.10; bulk of sales. $8.90fff 10; pack- lug sows, 25c lower, $7.25(9 7.75: stock pigs, steady, $10510.75. Sheep 5000, mostly 25c lower; Col orado, $12.50; natives, $12.30; most sorted nntives, $12i!512.25. sheep, steady, 25c lower; Texas wethers, $6.85((i'7; Colorado ewes, $6.75. 15. tame oat, $14 (f( 1C; wild oat, $10 12; alfalfa, $13ffll5; Block, $9 11; straw, nominal. Seattle Grain Market. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 8. Wheat, hard white, $1.12; soft white, western white, hard red winter, soft red, west, ern, northern spring, $1.10; western red, $1.08; B.'g Bend bluestem, $1.20. PLANT FOR FUMIGATING FREIGHT CARS OPENED f OFFICE CAT WASHINGTON. Aug. 8. (I. N. S.) Freight ear fumigating house capa ble of holding fourteen railway curs simultaneously hu been placed in ope ration by the Federal Horticultural Board of the Agriculture Department, It has been announced. Officials stated It Is another link in the chain of fumigating houses maintained to prevent the entry into the t'nited Stales of the pink bell worm of cotton. by jUNy;s : ,ua Itlfi UNIFOBMITY m' Every gallon like every other gallon. Every drop ca pable of vaporizing rapidly and uniformly in the carbu retor, and being consumed completely in the cylinder at ' the jump of the spark. I That's "Red Crown.- - .. That's quality in gasoline. - Use- "Red Crown" and nothing else, and your car 1 will develop the maximum power that its makers de , signed it to give. " V Fill at the Red Crown sign at Service Stations, lhe (jdSOline garages, or other dealers. of Quality STANDARD OIL COMPANY flralu at san Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 8. Tic- eelpts: Flour, 6.100 quarter sacks; wheat, 10,600 centals: barley, 18,246 centals; barley, 18,246 centals; corn, 4170 centnls; potatoes, $2340 sacks; onions, 622 sacks; hay, 869 tons; hides 1312; lemons and oranges, 1350 boxes. Wheat Milling. $ 1.85 W 1.90; feed, $1.85ftr 1.90; barley, feed, $ 1 . 1 7 4 i 20; shipping. $1.25(fi 1.35; oats. red. feed. $l.nr(i 1.75; corn, white, Egyp tian, nominal. Hay Wheat, $15!?17; fair, $13 Have you heard the sweet tune that the tuna fish slnss As he flashes about in the bay, And the cutting remarks that the sword fish makes. As he slashes about, in his play? j If you tell me you've se.en a plump ; oyster stir. The sand In his cup of tea. Then you must admit you've been drinking a lot , or else yon are lying to me. IT'S A Ql FJEIt AVOItI.l: CHICAGO, Aug. 8. You know. It's perfectly all right for a young buck about thirty-five to tell his Jane he's only twenty-five and if he's full o pep he anay get away with it. Tint it is very different when a young buck is 105 and tells his Bpouse he's only ninety. That's when trouble may start, and that's why Itabhl Solomon Mllles. the oldest man in Chicago, and incident ally an authority on marriage and X woman begins to show her ag, marital woes and sorrows, is a little mi,. whp Hhp lriol) ,0 hide , leary of what his wifo may do when she finds out he's lopped off fifteen ' Kinx-rior years from his real age. Well. Solo- j ..jn(, u BOO(1 nan , ,Wnk mon Is up against it, that's ail! And I )nsr ,, m,w steps," . , " nr win no aoie 10 get 1 ih 1 ,. .h'. u.,.l .,H hn,.l.l. uuy neip 1ro.11 nis eignt cnnnren, : , ...hr ipl thirty-six Krnndchildren and nnac-: counted number of great-grandchildren when tho trouble busts. The young lady next door says her father used to be scared to death when, a man reached for his hip pocket. Now he's tickled to death. If the skirts keep getting longer we men will be looking where we're go. ! Crook county hay and grain grow-I . ers have been asked to send displays' Checks amounting to over $91,000 or their products to the second annual j are being mailed by the Oregon Grow Northwest Grain and Hay show, to be' era" Cooperative association to its 1.100 held at I'endletnn in September. prune srower members. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS TOM GETS A FEW THINGS READY. ID By Allman fPfMrTMis rod is in pretty (f'll LI It GOOD SHAPE VET- ' s" tr- . I CAM USE IT oh fnoW DON'T J OS THESE PoT ... , ) . Yl E frriZ?LP A!AfT,5r6 TArIH?M AtXi AA , ) si v H TrlERE AND 1 1 FT X SP00NERS LOSE FAVORITE STAND RUTHERFOHD, N. J., Aug. 8. (I. N. S.) Rutherford young folk are en raged today at the razing of the handstand, "Spooners' Paradise," in Lincoln Park. It was ony a paradise of timber and paint to begin with, which made it an easy matter to raze when the puritanical element decided It had to so. There was no one here who would assume responsibility for the destruc tion of the bandstand, although indig nation was at fever pitch. If it had to bo torn down this-was no summer for such nn act, it was argued, with rain a daily occurrence and no shelter in town except the movies where lov ers could comfortably hold hands and whisper sweet nothings. It never would have come down at all it complaints had not ceen made to Kdmund Tate, a Borough Council man, that it was detrimental to the morals of the young people. . Was there not one occasion when a youtn had smashed an electric light bulb so that darkness .might brood over the "Spooners' Paradise" ? IVas it not set ting a bad example to the children of the town that their flapper sisters and flapper . brothers should set out for the bandstand with the avowed inten tion of spooning? The Council appealed to H. H. Edwards, president of the Shade Tree Commission. In the dead of night, after the next nteeting of the liorough Council, the bandstand vanished as if by magic. Some of the neighbors vowed they heard a hammering, a banging and a rumbling cart In the early hours of the morning, but there were no eyewitnesses of the destruc tion. The townsfolk feel they have been cheated out of their bandstatid for nothing, " "I can't imagine who took It down," remarked Mr. Edwards, sorrowfully, as he surveyed the spot. "And I' don't know why It was. done In the dead of night. There was a difference of opin ion between the Shade Tree Commis sion and the Morough Council. W did not refuse to take the stand away, but we asked for nwe definite reasons why Is should come down." 1 WEST VIRGINIA WOMAN ; OWNS A SINGING CHICK SHEPIIERDSTOWN, V. Va., Aug. 8. Sir. and Mrs. Robert Ievett, re: siding near here, have a little chick en that sings. The chick was caught in a trap and. bad its leg broken. The fracture was splinted, and tho chicken, was kept by Itself. During this period of separation the chick was very attentive to, the blrdu around It, with tho result that It has acquired a sweet little trill, with dis tinctive bird notes. HILL A Select Non-Sectarian Boarding School Hoys between 6 and 20 years ' Social Advantages, Homelike Atmos phere Small Classes and Men Teachers Detailed IT. S. Army Officer Opens Sept. 18 1922 PORTLAND, ornxioy f Helen! om. Helen! i3 VJHCRE IS THAT PATHW& J 1 11 1 wru 1 ujpdp ri. -nT J l - ? fl h . 1 y I . f ITS ON THE TOP i y nn.LN ; , ZQ ( SHELF IM VOX'R. -vT 3 I .r.'.i VC0 I CLOSET BOTITHIMr- . 'V4V'YWttJ (VVr-1 Vol) HAD &ETTEC 0'Sl !?l 1 Safety and Service Founded on ample capital, managed by experienced and successful business men, under the direct supervision of the Federal Reserve System, and the Banking Department of the State of Oregon, this bank of fers to its patrons and friends an efficient and courteous ser vice in every department of ; banking. i On this basis alone, new ac v counts are invited and every person entering our doors whether as a prospective bor rower, depositor or Safe De posit customer is assured a . complete and friendly hearing. The Bank of Community , Interests. The Inland Empire Bank Pendleton, Orgon