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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1926)
PAGE EIGHT BUTTER, EGGS BOTH VERY FIRM POULTRY STEADY Portland, Awe. 21. (VP) Al though butler and egg prices wero unchanged on the local dairy board at the final session, both commod ities closed very firm, especially on top grade stock. Receipts took n slump during the past week nnd storage holdings were drawn upon to meet this market's require men i a. 'Bear Interests are attempting to keep the local egg market down and they are partly successful. Portland Is Btfll the lowest egg mnrkct on the const having fnllcd to respond to the full advances at other coast cities during the past week. Closing prices on the dairy ex change were: Extras 36c; first 81c; mediums 30c; undersized 18c, nd current receipts 33c. There Is a brisk demand for good butter and jobbers nro paying premiums on fancy cubes for out Bide shipment. Closing cube prices on the exchange were: Extras 42 He; standards 40c; prime firsts 39c, and firsts 36c. Prints held firm at the 47c level with no change announced for over the week end. Bids for butcrfat ranged from 44c to 46c in tho country. Country dressed meats cleaned up along the street and there will bo nothing to speak of carried over, . Choice light : calves were firm at the 18c level while hogs were a trifle draggy at 18c to 18 c. Tho poultry market eloped in good shape with prices fully main tained. Heavy hens are generally bringing around 26c, although sales as high as 27 cents have been re ported. Light hens held around 16 to 1 7c. Nov enough ducks in during the week to test values. I'OltTTANn LIVESTOCK Portland, Or., Aug. 21. (AIM Caltlo receipts none; calves none. Ktccra good $S.0Q8.25; medium 17.0008.00; com mon 16.0007.00; ennners and cutijr steers IS. 0000.00; heifers, Rood l?,U 7.26; common and medium $4. iO0 T.00; cow, Boor M.00 06.60; cor .mon anil medium S4.2BQfi.00; low c.nncro nd cutteri I2.00O4.2S; bulls, gotJ beef (yearling excluded) 14.7505. 25; com mon and medium (canners and Bolog nas) f 4.00 4 4.75; calves, medium to choice (milk felds excluded) 18.500 - 10.60; culls and common 16.00086.0; vcalors, medium and choice $10,500 12.50; culls and common IC.&O01O.5O;. lloga slow, receipts none. Heavy weight (250 to 300 lbs) nu-dlum, good and choice t 12.000 14.00 ; medium weights (200 to 360 lbs) common, me dium, good and choice $13.254214.26; lightweights (1C0 to 260 lbs) common, medium, . good and choice 114.000 14.00: llRht lights (ISO to 2G0 lbs.) com mon, medium, good and choice SI 4. 00 014.50; pachlng hogs - (rough i smooth) $11.00012.00; slaughter pig (90 to 130 llis) medium. Rood and cboli 1 14.00 01 4.50; feeder ami Blocker pigs (70 to 130 lbs) medium, good and choice 114.00015.60. Khecu nom steady, rets none. Lambs medium to choice 110.001911.60; culls and common $8.0000.60; yearling wethers medium to choice S7.SO01O.OO; wet, common to choice J4.OO0t.26; cults $2.0004.00. Outside quotation baaed on Mt, Ad ams, eastern Oregon and similar type Inmba Few valley lambs selling, above $10.60. MARKET NEWS I SATU KDAY, AUGUST 21", 1926 nuiTcn AND EOOfl Portland, Aug. 21 lOggs strndy, enr rent receipt 32c; fresh medium 28c fresh stnndurd firsts 32c; fretih stand rl extras 34c; pewces lCc, Dultcr stendy. Extra cubes city 42!lc; standard 40c; prfnio firsts S'Jc, first 30c; prints 47c; cartons 4 Sc. Milk steady. Best churning cream 44c per pound net shippers track tn sou one. crenm delivered For liana 46c poi pound. It aw milk ( per cent) 12.26 owl. c. o, b. for liana. rOUTLANU WHEAT Portland, Or., Aug. 21, (AI1) Wheat Bill) hard white, hard white, bluest in banrt. soft white, western white $1.32: federation $1.31; hard winter, northern spring $1.20; western red $1.27. Today's car receipts: wheat 14C; bar ley iii flour C-; corn 6; ont 4; hay 6. ONION 8 "AND I 'OTA TORS Portland, Or. Aug.. 21 Potatoes slow $1.2601.60; onions $1.25. 10 PERCENT LOSS . IN SPLIT PRUNES Walter Pemberton, well known prune man and prune buyer, esti mates that prune crack In tr from the recent rains will not represent much more than a 10 per cent loss. He figures that all the prunes have cracked that are going to crack and that there will be many of the cracked prunes that will not show up bad in the drying. He says there is a llttlo brown rot in the hilts south, but very lit tle, although this Is good brown rot weather and it may develop Into something serious before the season is over. POWELL MOTOR BUSINESS SOLD Arrangements have been com pleted whereby the Fred M. Powell Motor Car company has been pur chased by A. C. Bishop, more wide ly known as "Biddy" Bishop, and by A. J. Rouseau. j Mr, Rouseau- and Mr. Bishop ! have adopted for their combined motor company the name already used by Bishop for tho company dealing In Oldsmoblle cnrnv Tho name Is Capitol Motors, IncI They will contlnu to handle the Oldsmobile and the Packard cars. The service department has been mprovea by the addition of Tom Watts to the staff. Watts Is an au tomobile mechanic of wide experi ence nnd Is well known in Salem. Thi former staff Is also being re tained by the company. ino company occupies the nlnnt build by the Fred M. Powell com pany ofc 350 North High street about a year ago. GORMAN AND 6RASS0 JOIN TUNNEY SQUAD Speculator. N. Y.. Ant. 91 trp Gone Tunncy'a corps of sparring partners Is being augmented. Bud Gorman of Summit, N. J., a likely heavyweight, is expected before "Hunan, -lomorrow the camp ex pects to receive Johnny Grnsso of New York. Tunney plans to continue train ing for the present at the hotel of Bill Osbornn .n fnpme. "hi..l.l.. Tunney In the marine corps. oenc continues in a business-like manner In his bag punching, shad ow bOxlniT. ronn Rblnnlni. DnnKnin and last, but not least, his reading, nnicn seems to be no small part of his training program. NO Sitn for 11 trnlntntr nnmn Philadelphia hns yet been selected. POULTRYMEN OF STATE ORGANIZE Permanent organisation was ef fected yesterday for the Oregon Accredited Hatchery and Breeders' cooperative by a group ot poultry men from various, parts of the state which met In the rooms of the Balern Chamber of Commerce. Election of officers by those who Hlgncd applications and paid mem bership fees resulted in the follow ing selection: Amljoise Brownell. Mllwnukle, preuident; F. H. Cocltell, Milwau kee, vice president; A. Q. Lunn, Corvnllls, secretary-treasurer; Wea-i ley M, Wire, Newherg, nnd Elmer Gribble, Cunby, directors. These; flvo officers, constituting the exec-! utlvo committee, held a meeting last evening following adjourn ment of tho regular meeting. Plans for placing the association In op eration at the earliest possible date. were considered. i Under the plans of the associa tion as organised, poultry men members are divided Into three classes breeders, flock owners and Hatcheries. A supervisor will be appointed who will inspect all member flocks after which prod ucts of these flocks or hatcheries mny be sold as accredited or cer tified, and may be advertised under a general trade mark. Supervis ion or locks is to be under the di rection of the state agricultural college and the United States de partment of agriculture. Twenty-one poulsrymen had signed up by last evening, with the understanding that certain points in tho regulations over which there is some question will be Bottled by a second general meeting in the nenr future. Any who nro dissat isfied after such decision may withdraw nnd have their fees returned. FALLEN ANGEL ORIGINAL SHEIK Aleppo, Syria. Taous Malak, the "fallen angel" whom God expelled from heaven. Is the patron saint of the sheikhs not those whose hand somo profiles thrown against the American screen havo made flap pers' hearts flutter. Tho tribe of the Yazidles, wor shippers of Satan, from which the original shlekhs sprang, are nomads living from cattle raising. They number about 12,000 nnd their hab itat Is north of Aleppo near the DJebel Soumann. Another branch is to bo found at Khnltar, a small town In the vicinity of Diarkeblr. Shickha claim they can trace their ancestry from heaven, being direct descend en ts of Shiekh Charaf bddin or "the moon." Another early shiekh was Amadln, which means "pillar supporting heaven1 while a third one was directly re lated to the sun. t Some of the present day shlekhs claim to have the power of miracle in rendering inoffensive the bites of snakes and scorpisiH. SCHOOL CAMPUS IN TWO STATES Kansas. City, Mo. Students of tho future Lincoln and Leo anlvcr-, ally of Kansas City will pass from one stato to another every tlmo they go from tho Inw Bchool, for in stance, to tho administration building. Lusty cheers for a football vic tory may be ht..rd in two states and a baseball clouted for a home run may be retrieved by an alert small boy in Missouri. The Kansas-Missouri boundary line runs through the site for the new university. Thirty-seven acres of the 273-acre campus lie In Mis souri and the rest Is In Kansas. STOLEN JEWELS FOUND IN PAWN New York, Aug. 21. (P) Two Hnrlew pawnbrokers, Joseph Both and his son, Herbert, were In jail here today charged with receiving stolen goods, in connection with the theft of jewels valued at as much as $500,000 from General and Mrs. Conrellus Vanderbilt at Newport, H. I. 1 While the pawnbrokers were be ing arraigned here for their al leged connection with the theft, de tectives began checking over the seized gems worth $18,000. Five cases of jewels wero stolen from the Breakers, the Newport mansion, two weeks ago while tho Vanderbilts were entertaining friends at dinner. Among the jewels stolen were some Irreplaceable family heir looms, and so many were missing the family had difficulty in com piling a list. Some of the gems seized by de tectives here when the Roths were arrested was a brooch set with 95 diamonds, three diamond studded bracelets and seevral rings. There was also a horseshoe pin of yellow metal, set with ten stones believed to be pearls, eleven blucstones and 30 white stones, forming the words good luck." BIRTHS, DEATHS MARRIAGES OIRTIIS 4 FISH En To Wr. and Uri. V. A. Plsher. 1187 Myrtle ave., a son named Fred Arthur Jr. Born on August It. . BinC 11 To Mr. and Mr Beryl Birch on August 10, a daughter, named Julia Ann. Tho parent! live at 2l, aoulb Summer street. SCOTT To Mr. and Mrs. Alvah Scott of So loin a boy, on August 10, Given the name It it-hard Gene. UUIt.NS To Mr. and Mr. Theodore's. Hums of Polk county, a daughter, on August 16, Named Marian Ma sine. FA It ItlRIt To Mr. And Mrs. Chnrlo Woitley Farrier of Marlon county, w duURhter, named lively n Mae. Horn on August 17. HKRTZOC1 To Rev. anil Mrs. William H. llertzog, 1415 Saginaw street, son, on August ,14. Named It) chard Urnest. BRUCE To Mr. and Mrs. George Oscar Bruce, 2235 Chcmekela street, a girl 00 August 15. Named Kva Lorraine. SCHOFIKLO To Mr. and Mrs. don! on J. Schofleld a son, named Hex Craw ford, on August IS. The parents live at 240 north 24th street ROBERTSON A son, named ' Chartrn Glasgow Jr., was born on August 14 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Q, ttouert son of S77 north Capitol street. DEMYTT To Mr. and Mrs. - Leon G. Dcmytt a daughter, on August 17. The parents' residence Is at 215 south 14th street. 1MED FL A N N I G AN M re. Lottie J. Flannlgnn died August 20 at Sun Mateo, Cal., ol the ago of CI years. She Is survived by her widower, S. B. Flannlgnn, three sons, Homer C. Bray of Sa lem. Charles Orville Bray of Port land and John Wesley Bray of Kan sas City, Mo., one daughter, Mrs. Nellie Coulson of Portland, and one brother, Albert Darr of Salem. Fu neral services trill bo held Monday, August 23. at 1:30 p. . m. from the Rlgdon mortuary, with Interment In tho City View cemetery. Rev, ShanhH will officiate. FUNRltAI.S Funeral services for Cella St, Hllnlrc who died on August 20 at the home of Felix La Branch, one mile east of Sa lem, will be -held Monday, Aug. 23, from St. Joseph's church at 9 a. m. Ro sary will bo recited Sunday evening at seven o'clock at the chapel of the Sa lem mortuary. Interment will bo tn St. Barbara cemetery. Rev. J. R. Buck in charge. , ntm.IHNO PERMITS ADAM ENGLE Two dwelling. 1410 and 1420 north 18th, J3U50 each. MARRIAGE! I.ICRNSES RCHNUELLE-KII1BY Lorenz Schnu- elle, 22 and Myrtle Klbbey, both of Salem. bburlcil at the present time. A SUBLIME TIIOUGHT For some say that the body Is the tombb of the soul, as being Plato, W. T. Rigdon & Son ; I'OULTMT Portland, Or. Aug. 21 roullry steady lens 6 per cent commission, heavy hens 15026c; light l&tblGei' broilers, -white 19020c; colored 26c; young white ducks l!013cj colored 16017c 1 NUTS, HOt'8 AND CA8CARA Portland, Aug. 21. Nuts firm, wal nuts No. 1 18014oj fliorrut uomj al mends IO0 34o, Hops sternly; J-yenr contracts 22023c; 1D2Q contracts 16a. Coacara bark firm, Ic; Oregon grape root nominal. CHICAGO GRAIN Chlrngo, Aug. 21. (AP) Opening c to lc down. Chicago whent values suf fered a slight further drop. Corn, oals and provisions were cany, corn stnrtlng to Ua off, and subsequently reced ing a llttlo more. Wheat closed weak, lic 'to 2Vio 'net lower, corn lit ttf lo down, oats H to c off, and .provisions varying from unchanged figures, to 15c decline. nOP MARKET New York, Aug. 21. (AP) Hop steady, Pacific coast 192C 313tc. New York, Aug. II. ( A P) Specula tive Interest on the long side of the market was revived today when bullish demonstrations developed In several specialties under the leadership of Grn ml Asphalt common and preferred, which soared and t points respect ively, to the highest prices In more thnn five years. The rally followed an early period of Irregularity during which an Ineffectual attempt was made to unsettle the general list by renew ing selling pressure against U. 8. Steel common and General Motors. ' Westlnghouse Airbrake was bid up nearly four points. Special strength also wna shown by Panhandle producer and refiners, Lambert Chemical, Am erican Baftty Raior and Remington Typewriter. Ralls were quiet but firm: Chesepeaka and Ohio and Atlantic Const line rallying briskly from their levels. Tha closing was strong. Total sales approximated 150,000 shares. Salem Markets torn plied from reports ol 8a tent dealers for the guidance ol Capital Journal renders. (Revised dolly.) WnolrnnlS nee Grain, No. 1 whits $1.10; red wheat sacked) fl.lt; oata 45a bu; hay, oats and vetch 14 ton. Meat, top hogs f 14.00; sows 11c; top steers S cents and cents; cows 149 4CI bulls 40&C( 1931 lambs, II aarl CO pounds, le: top live lambs, 10 lbs. and under 10c; top live veal lOtei dressed veal lie; dressed hog tOa Poultry. Uffht hens IBet heavy 'hens lie I spongers 17022CI root r et heavy colored Cry Ilei Leg horns, light 17c - Kggs, pullets ttc; medium S0c; stand ard loot selects 12c; per pound lie. Bstterfat tie; cream butter 44a. . Vetistsblss and fruits. Sacked veg etable beets eents. anions 40loc riasen bunches! celery TSeOtOcVIl.lO new cabbage 243',4o; Calif, lettuce II. IB dos; potatoes IU; watermelons ! cantaloupes l.7lf.t; local to rn tees He i local cantaloupes Ce. FOR THOSE WHO CANNOT SHOP DURING THE DAY WE WILL REMAIN OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 8:30 You Can Find Them iii The Capital Journal Classified Ads J cildls and Eocu SALE We're clearing out all odd pieces, discontinued suites and drapery remnants at prices far below the original selling price. . PHONOGRAPHS HALF PRICE Look For the Red Tags Shop Tonight liilP' FLOOR LAMPS With Silk Shades As Low As $7.50 Plenty Odd Buffets USE YOUR CREDIT COME THIS EVENING Capital Journal classified ads will save you unlimited trouble should you be seek ing a maid, a cook, a chauf feur, a bookkeeper, or any other experienced or unex perienced help, or if you have anything to sell or trade or something you want to buy at a bargain. . Into the great majority of the homes of Salem and environs, your advertise- ment will go. And when you, see the number and character of the replies, you will realize the advan tages of advertising in The Capital Journal KCSsbSk9 jentt ffwr ins put