Eight Stocks Turn Irregular on Profit-Taking New York, Aug. 24 UP) Steel and rail stocks encountered a little selling opposition in today's market but scattered buying of aircrafts and other industrial fa vorites served to keep the price scales pretty well balanced. Quotations were narrow from the start and, at the close, frac tional variations either way pre dominated. Dealings, fairly live ly in the morning, dwindled af ter mid-day. Transfers for the full proceedings were around 375,000 shares. Sneculative and investment contingents inclined to go slow pending outcome of the intensi fied nazi drive on Stalingrad al though bullish news from the Pacific helped bolster sentiment. A lot of good earnings state ments, as well as some bad ones, were practically ignored. Talk of a nearby anti-inflation pro gram was a cooling factor. In the share division Sparks Whington made another new top since 1940 in further response to the first dividend in 11 years. Onndvear Dosted a new high for the year, Up occasionally were General Motors, Cerro JJe Pasco, Boeing, Douglas Aircraft, Glenn Martin. United Aircraft. Wcst- inghouse, Johns-Manville and Texas Co. Faltering tendencies were ex hibited by U.S. Steel, Bethle hem, Sperry, Western Union, American Smelting, American Can, Allied Chemical, Santa Fe, Southern Pacific, N. Y. Central and Goodrich. Numerous issues sold at Saturday's final levels . Dow Jones preliminary clos ing stock averages: industrial, 107.25, off 0.05; rail, 27.00, un changed; utility, 11.70, off 0.05; and 65 stocks, 36.02, off 0.03. Stock sales were 376,140 shares compared with 270,960 in the previous five hour ses sion Friday. Curb stock sales were 66,955 shares against 75, 850 Friday. Wheat and Corn Futures Rally Chicago, Aug. 24 (U.B Scat tered commission house buying and a let-up in liquidation today enabled wheat and corn futures to rally moderately and recover part of the day's losses. . Corn closed unchanged to Yt cent a bushel lower; wheat un changed to off ;oats off to H; rye off '4 to ; soybeans off Ys to up 'A. Scattered liquidations sent May and December corn down to new seasonal lows. Favorable crop news and the government's encouragement to farmers to use more wheat for feed continued to have a bear ish influence on corn. Wheat futures lost fractions of a cent and showed little Inclina tion to rally. Easiness at the Minneapolis market, reports of larger receipts of spring wheat to northwest terminals and weakness In corn stimulated sell ing. May oats dipped to now low ground for the season in a wave of selling that reflected the lnrgc receipts to northwest terminals, Rye also dropped to new low ground, with scattered liquida tion headed houses with eastern connections. Soybeans held steady In con tlnued light dealings, pending more definite decisions by the government on distribution of the year's crop. Salem Markets Compiled from reports of Sa lem dealers, (or the guidance or Capital Journal renders. (Kerlsed dally). Buying Prices Wheat, red or white, 05o per bu, Oray onto, No. a, 30 lb., $20 ton Barley, No. 3. bright. $25 ton. Hay Clover $14 per ton; onto and veren an per ion; local second cut ting alfalfa, $17 per ton. Retail Prices Egg Mash $3.09 cwt second grndo n.uo. ruuet urower Masn $3.10. Chicken Scratch. $2.2.1 l Whole Corn $2.40, cracked $2.43. Midget Market Renorui Hogs 168-218 lbs. $14.80; 318-280 lbs. $14; 280-300 lbs. $13.80; packing bowb iu.ou. Sheep-Lambs $10. eves $4-$9. CattleTop veal dressed 21c, veal alive 14c. Heifers $0-$8. Dairy cows $4-$8, beef cows $6-$7; bulls $7.S0-$8.50. Poultry Heavy colored hens, No 1, 20c; No. 2, 16o; frys 28o. White Leghorn hens 16c, frys 21o lb. Kggs Buying prices: Large grade A white and brown 38o doz., ined. 38c, Standards, B largo 35c. Pullets 21o dozen, cracks 22c dozen, Eggs Wholcsalo prices: Ex, large white and brown 41c, mcd. 38o doz. Standard White and brown 3Bo doz. Butter PrlnU: A grade 47'ic lb. B grade 46'4c, quarters 48'ic. But terfat: Premium 49lc, No. 1 48c, No. 2 45c lb. I Market Quotations Portland Eastslde Market Supply was greatest oi me seasun today on the eastslde market. Dnane lihoral in Aiinnlv. S1.1S-25 box. Spear melons $2.28 crate, canta loupes hlgner, s ior ine uuo, some Hearts of Gold $2.28 and Dll- tn o a PnapVi nlnnu 1 .28 box. JUIUO IAJ p-.uu, - -... 1" First umnese lettuce -.du y crate, unma lettuce s.ou wmc. Raspberries and strawberries $2 a crate, blackberries $1.26. Green broccoli $1.28 lug. sspinacn $1 orange box. Road's End peas $2.60 box. Cabbage firm, $3 crate. Tomatoes Sl.ia-za, mo. a ioc aox. nnan. nrmnprs S1-&1.25 box. Jef- fcrson sweet onions 3c lb. A small lot of parsnips sold $1 lug. AnnW Klnw 00o.-Sl.25 few $1.38 box. Bartlett pears $1.28 box. Portland Produce Exchange The following prices were named on the Portland exchange effective today: Butter Cube extras 43c, stndards 43c, prime firsts 41V4c, firsts 2Bo. Cheese Oregon triplets zzo id loaf 23c. Jobbers pay Ao lb. less. Eggs Quotations between deal ers: Grade A large 40c, med. 38c dozen. Grade B large 38c, med. 33c doz. Grade A small 27c, B small 20c, B small 26c. Portland Wholesale Market Butter Prints: A grade 47'c lb. in parchment, cartons 4814c. B grade 46!4c In parchment, 4714c lb. in cartons. ButtcrfaWlrst quality, max. of .6 of 1 acidity, delivered Portland, 47-4714C lb. Premium quality, max, .35 ot 1 acidity 48c lb. Valley routes and country points 2c less than firsts 441-ic; 2nd quality Portland 44V4-45C. Cheese Selling prices to Portland retailers: Tillamook triplets 281io lb., loaf 2014c. Triplets to wholesal ers 2614c, loaf 27140 f.o.b. Tillamook. Eggs Price to producers: Large A 38c, B 36c dozen. A med. 35c, B med. 33c dozen. Resale to retailers 4c higher for cases, Sc for cartons. Live Poultry Buying Prices No. 1. grade Leg horn broilers under 1 14 lbs. 25c, over 114 lbs. 23c, fryers under 1V4 lbs. 23c, fryers 214-4 lbs, 29c lb., colored fryers 2-4 lbs. 24c, under 214 lbs. 25c; colored roasters under 2 lbs. 20c, roosters over 4 lbs. 29c, colored hens 22c lb., colored springers 2614 27c. Leghorns under 214 lbs. 19c lb., over 314 lbs. 23c lb. Good hens 23c Selling Prices to Retailers Light hens 21c lb., medium 2114c lb. colored 20-21c, colored hens 23-23 14c lb. Colored springs 31c, broilers 20 22c, white broilers 26-270 lb. Stags 13c, young 21-23c. Roosters 13c lb. Pckln ducks, 1942s, 18-20c lb., young 23-24c lb, Guinea hens 50c each. Ca pons over 7 lbs. 24-280 lb., hens 28c lb. Dressed Turkeys New crop 33-35C lb. Rabbits Average country killed 30c lb., city killed 28-30c. Fresh Fruits Apples Spitz, ex. rancy, box $2, fey. $1.68. Wlnesaps, ex. fey. $3.00, fey. $2.78. Delicious ex. fey. $2.68-$3. H.R. ex. fey. $1.78, fey. $1.76. Yellow Newtown, ex. fey, $3, fancy $2.78, Jumble $1.26 box. New crop Yellow Transparent $1.25 box. Local Grav- ensteins $1.25-50. Apricots Yakima $1.18-28 a box, The Dalles $1.18-25 box. Avocados Green $1.75, Eldorad $1.35-80 box. Bananas No. 1 hands 9c, bunch es 814 c lb. Blackberries $1.60. Boysonberrics $1.78 crato. Cherries Mid-Columbia Blngs, Lamberts, loose, lO-llo lb. Blngs 18-lb. packed oox $2.60. Early nle stock, looso 70 lb. Royal Annes packed, 10-12c lb Cantaloupes Yuma 36s $5.50 per oox, 45s $4.25, jumbo Bueno $1.48-80; jumbo 27s $S-$S.2S. Yakima stand ards $1.80-$2 crate. Southern stand ard 36s $5.80. The Dalles stand ards $1.7S-$2 crate. Dillard $3.85. Grapes Calllornla Emperor lidd ed $2.50 lug. Grapefruit Texas Marsh seedless pinks $375 case Ariz. $2.25-$3.25, Cochclla $3-$2.25, Pla. $3.80, River side I4.50-SS case. Lemons Fancy $S.40-$0, choice $5.25-35 case, Loganberries $1 08 crato. Oranges Valencia!, fancy $3.88 $4.50 case. Peaches Oregon Mayflowors $1 $1.10 box. Oregon Alexanders, $1.23 $1.38 box. Oregon Triumphs $1-$1.10. Oregon early varieties $1-$1.2S box. Oregon Early Crawfords $1.18-$1.25 oox. Pears Mcdford Cornice $1.38 box Pineapple Mex. 12s $6-$0.80 crate. Raspberries Crato $2-$2.28. Strawberries Crate $2.25. Watormclons Calif 6o lb. South ern 8c lb. Boardman 314-4c. Youngbcrrlcs Crato $1.60. Fresh Vegetables Artichokes Calif. $2.S0-$3 box. Asparagus Oregon $3 pyramid. Yakima 10c lb. Sunnyslde 814-lOe, Beets Calif. 60-600 doz. bunches Oregon 25-30C. Beans Calif, green 13-lSo. north west green 6-7c; wax 6-7c lb. Broccoli Calif. 14o lb. Carrots Local 80-60C lug. Calif. new $3.78 crato. Cal $2.10-28. Oregon 48-650 dozen bunches. Cabbage No. 1 local $1-$1.2S cte. Red $1.10-16 pony crato. California green $3.50-75 crate. Oro. $2.50-78 crato. Celery Calif. $3.70 crate. Oregon hearts $3-$2.2S dozen bunches. Ore gon $4 crate. Ore. green $4 crate. Cucumbers Hothse. local: stand ard $1.38, cholco 90c box, tcy. $1.39 ex. fey $1.50 Iowa $2.28, mld-Colum-Pla. field 68-600 box. Pics Heedless 40-470 lb,, clusters, seedless 38-46c, seeded clusters 40a Garlic No. 1 150 lb, Now crop, 140 10, Lettuce Local No. 1 $4.50-$8 crate. Local No. 3 $2.S0-$3.78 crate. southern 4s $6.50 crate. Mushrooms Hothouse 450 lb, 2So ior 14 pound. Onions Yakima $2.28 sack. Ore gon dry $1.50 sack. Idaho $2.25-40. sets asc Id. oreen 60c doz. bimchis l-cxos sweet type $2. Calif, sweet type n. cant, red 60s to $135. Dr Mullen $1.88 Calif, newest type j.io-j ssck. Ysiiow $1.00. Walla Walla $1,10-18, Walla Walla-Yakima green $1.18-25. Red 80s $1, Peas Imperial $3.18-28 a bush-l, Pugct Bound 80s $2.80 per tub. Calif $240-80 The Dalles 8-e lb. Oregon coast 25s $2-$3.50 box. Snake raver litis $2.80.79 tub. Peppers Texas green 16-180 lb. Mexican green 25c lb. Local No. 1 $1.60-70 box. Old Potatoes White, local $3.28 80 cental. Deschutes Gems $3.38-50. Texas $2.60-78, Shatter, Cal., White Rose $1.60 50 lbs. Yakima No. 2 Gems $2 SO-lb. bag. Klamath No 1 $3.50 cental. New Potatoes Calif, whites $1.50 SO-lb. lug Texas $2.60-78 Florida red $3-$3.2S 60-lb. lug. Shatter, Cal., White Rose $2.80 100-lb. bag, local $3-$3.2S cental. Yakima $3.80-65. Rhubarb Hothouse ex. fey. $1.30, fey. $1.20, choice $1.05 for 15-lb. box. Wine variety 6c more. Local field grown 50-60c apple box, No. 1 $1.23 orange box. Turnips Local 8O0 lug. Cal. 00 83c doz. bunches. Radishes Cal. 48-50c, Ore. 50-55C dozen. Squash Zuccnmnl 55-65C box, white $1.80-75, yellow 60-65c lug. Ore. $1.30-60 flat crate. W. Walla $1 box. Danish $4.80 crate Marblehead and Hubbard 2 14 -3c !b No. 1 85o-$l. Solnach Blngen S1-S1.25 orange box. Local No. 1 $1.16-26 orange box. Sweet Potatoes Calif $2.35-50 a SO-lb. bag. Southern Yams 10c lb. New 15c lb. Milton-Freewater $1.7a $2.25 lug. Tomatoes Calif $2.20-50 a crate. Hothouse ex. fey 20c, fey. 22-25c ib. Calif, field grown $3-$3.25. Texas $3.20-50 lug; Merced field $2.75 Mexico field $2. Texas $3-53.25 lug. Mllton-Freewatcr $1.30-75 lug. The Dalles 18s $1.65-75 box. Yakima 80c $1.10 box, Meats Country Meats Selling prices to retailers: Hogs (ceiling prices) 17 17140 lb. Country killed hogs, best butchers, 129-149 lbs., nominal Veaiers, fancy, 23c; light, tnm 15-18C lb., heavy 16c lb., rough heavy 18c lb., bulk 16c lb. Canner cows 14c, good cutters 13-14c lb. Bulls 1614-17C Yearling lambs 18c. Springers, good 22c, heavy 12-lSc lb. Ewes 8-9c 10. Wool, Hops Wool 1942 contracts. Ore. ranch, nominal 34-37C lb., crossbreds 40-42c, Mohair 1041 12-mos. 45c lb. Hides Calves 10-22c, green beef 10c, kip 17c, green bulls 6c lb. Hops 1941 crop 40c; 1942 con tracts lOo lb., seed stock 1041 crop 44c; stock seed 1942 contracts 42-52c lb., 1942 crop, seeded 45-46c, seedless 50-51c lb. Fugglcs, cluster seedless 47 Groceries Sugar Refinery basis: cane $5.45 beet $5.53 cwt. f.o.b. refinery. Port land prices to retailers: cane $5.90, beet $5.80 per 100 lbs. Nutmeats Walnuts, light amber halves, broken lots 55c, pieces 50c, ambers 46c, standard ambers 38c Ib Filberts, Barcclonas 50-60c lb. Pe cans, light halves 55c lb. Portland Grain Portland, Aug. 24 (VP) Wheat fu tures: Sept. 0414, Dec. 9814. Cash grain: Oats, No. 2 38-lb. white 28.28, barley. No. 2 4S-lb. b.w. 23.78; No. 1 flax 2.29; wheat (bid): soft white 1.07, excluding Rex 1.10; white club, west, red 1.10; hard reel winter: ordinary 97, 10 pet. 1.04, 11 pet. 1.07. 12 pet. 1.11; hard white baart: 10 pet. 1.12, 11 pot, 1.10, 12 pet. 1.20. Car receipts: wheat 68. flour 10, mlllfeed 12, barley 6, oats 3, hay 3, corn 3. Portland Livestock' Portland, Aug. 24 UP) (USDAI Cattle 3000, salable 2900; calves 300. Market active, mostly steady, strong, some grass steers and canncr-cuUcr cows 25c higher. Gross fat steers $12-$13.50, four loads wintered grass- crs 13.65-75; two loads good led steers 14.35, lightly sorted. Common beef steers $9.50, grass fat beef heif ers 10-11.50, com. dairy type down to 8. canner-cuttcr cows 6.75-7. mod.. good beefs 8.28-0.80, young cows to 10. Med.-good bulls 9.50-11. com: light down to 8; good-choice vcalers steady at 14.50-15.30. Hogs 2100, salable 1500: truck-Ins fully 25c below Friday, carloads steady with last Monday. Good- choice 170-215 lb. drive-ins 15.35-40, few 15.50, carloads 15.50; 230-270 lbr. 14.75-15; light lights 14,50-75. Good sows nearly steady at $14-14.50, choice light feeder pigs scarce. 16.51' Sheep 1760; mnrkct active, steady strong. Good-choice spring lambs $12; med.-good 10.50-11.50, feeder! 9-0.75 including shorn feeders at 9. Few good ewes 4, best held above 4,50. Com.-mcd. 1.50-3.50. Chicago Grain Chicago, Aug. 24 (U.B Cash grain: Wheal No. 2 Hard 1.18'i, No. 3 1.18U, No. 4 mixed I.IB'4, No. 5 1.11 Corn No. 1 yellow 84, No. 2 83 '1- 64, No, 3 H2-B3-H, No. 4 81H-83, No. 2 white 1. 04 M-1.041.4. Soybeans No. 2 yellow 1.71. Oats No. 3 mixed 49, No. 1 white 5014, No. 2 50-50U, No. 3 48'4-40'4 No. 4 46'4-47'6. Barley Malting 80-96n, hard 65- 72n, feed 53-65n, No. 1 80, No. 2 95 No. 3 92; No. 3 malting 95, No. 3 94. Cash lard In store 12.90b, louso 11.90b, leaf 12.4011, bellies 15.75b. Chicago Livestock Chicago, Aug. 24 (ft (USDA) Hogs 16,000, salable 13,000; active, steady to strong on all wts. Good Cholco 180-240 )sb. $14.85-15.05, top 15.10; 240-270 lbs. $14.70-15; 270-360 lbs. 14.40-80: 160-180 lbs. 14.35-90: sows strong to 10c higher, good and cholco 330 lbs. down 14.35-80; 330- 400 lbs. 14.10-35; good 400-550 Ibj, 13.60-14.15. 8heep 9000. salable 3500. Opening very slow, bidding barely steady or around 18.25 on best spring lambs held unevenly higher to 15.80; other classes steady, Oood-choleo year lings 12-12.25; med.-good 11.25; throwouts mostly 9.S0; small lots fat ewes $6.80 down. Salable cattle 17,000, calves 1500. Fed steers and yearlings steady to 25c lower, mostly 10-15c off with med.-good grades carrying vt. and all grades yearlings showing most decline. Very little change on mod erate supply strictly good-choice steers with wt. Market slow i.nd somewhat on peddling basis. Top 16.40, these cholco steers scaling 1299 lbs. Next highest 16.35; sizeable supply 15.75-16.25: long yearlings 16: largely 13.75-16.75 steer and year ling market, order buyers much less active than last week. Heifers weak to 35c lower, best 15.28. Cows slow, weak, bulls and veaiers active and steady. Weighty sausage bulls $13, choice veaiers 16; stock cattle scarce, The Capital Journal, Salem, Oregon Bean Growers Appeal for Aid To Salemifes Harry Pearcy, who operates a bean yard near the Lakebrook hop ranch, today Issued an ap peal to townspeople to rally around the bean growers to help pick beans, especially over Sat urdays and Sundays, citing his case merely as a sample of a large number of bean growers who will suffer large losses, as well as large losses in the crop itself. 'I have heard a considerable number of bean growers declare if the picking situation isn't clarified they'll discontinue growing beans next year, and some of them stated they'll quit harvesting this year unless the picking situation improves as they are faced by heavy losses financially which they cannot meet otherwise," said Pearcy. "In citing you my case I am citing that of a large number of others," he continued. "I have a crew which comes out Monday through Friday but doesn't pick over Saturday and Sunday. That means we have to enlist towns people over those two days. The beans have to be picked; they are a crop that won't wait and going unpicked those two days leaves a large percentage of too large beans on our hands Mon day. It then takes about three days to get caught up on the picking and we are hauling, a heavy percentage of culls into the cannery through those days. 'Other growers are in even worse shape than I am. I know one grower that couldn't get a picker for his patch. 'I called up the statehouse and endeavored to get a crew organized there but if it met with any success I haven't heard of it. 'There are scores of relatives of boys who have been con scripted who could come out to the patches and help out. After all, the greater share of these beans are being picked for part of the food for our armed forc es and unless the crops are saved the boys will go hungry, let alone the civilians who will be the last to be served. It's not only a case of" life or death for the bean growers but is also a matter of no small concern to the rest of the population which will find itself on pretty short rations if this and other crops are not saved. 'And bean growing in this section will be sharply curtailed in the future if the public does n't rally around. I am not talk ing merely for myself but for the entire industry and the community, I hope the people will wake up." Tomato Picking Will Start Soon Lebanon About September 1 will see tomato picking under way, reports Hal Gross, farm replacement representative of the U.S. Employment office, There are about 200 acres of this crop in the Lebanon vicinity, by far the largest acreage in the history of the community. From 250 to 300 pickers will be needed, but since the entire crop is to be packed ' for the army, the nature of the work requires pickers over 14 years of age. The picking price will be from 8 to 10 cents per tomato box, according to current reports, Mnny growers are offering camp sites. Since this is a new and growing crop here, the future depends largely upon the suc cess of handling it, Gross stated. He urges all persons who will be available to register at the em ployment office. There is still a shortage of bean pickers. Soon after Sept. 1, prune picking will begin Markets Briefed (By the Untt.ri Pr.wi Stocks Irregular in moderate trading. Bonds irregular Curb stocks Irregular. Cotton off around 70 cents a bale. Wheat closed unchanged to -Hi cent lower; corn unchanged to is lower. Silver unchanged In New York. active, choice light yearlings 13.50; comparable calves to 14.30. - Boston Wool Boston, Aug. 34 m (USDAI An nouncement that the ouartermas- ter's dept. would soon place orders for cloth requiring large quantities of domestic wools brought additional inquiries in the Boston wool market today. Buyers arc waiting to know definitely grades needed for futurs orders before closing sales. Some scoured n fleeces sold at $1.07. 'if!,';' , Great Lakes Aircraft Carrier Commissioned The U. S. S. Wolverine, transformed from an excursion steamer into the only aircraft carrier on inland waters and the only side wheel "flat top" in the world, is placed in full commission on Lake Michigan as navy pilots in Grumman "Wildcat" fighters roar over the flight deck. The carrier will be used in operational training of pilots at the Glenview, 111., naval air school. (Associated Press Photo.) Livestock Will Pour Into Meat Markets Chicago, Aug. 24 (P) Within a few weeks the greatest flood of meat animals in history will begin to pour into the nation's livestock markets. This will be the marketing of the record spring crop of pigs, which producers have been fattening for months. Livestock men said today they hoped this would bring relief from the nation's meat headache a combination of local short ages at many points, particular ly in the east, and of threats of meat allocation, rationing or livestock price ceilings. While the big increase in mar ketings will be hogs, livestock men said any expansion in the supply of one" type of meat au tomatically eases the demand for other types. The September run of hogs at slaughtering centers usually is larger than in Au gust and the big supplies begin to pour in by October. Heavy marketings last through most of the winter. Normally hog prices decline as supplies increase. Last year, despite increasing demand, there was only a drop' of about cent a pound from the average price in September to that in December. Whether there will be any reaction at all this year remains to be seen. . The recent steady rise of live stock prices has undermined the ceiling structure holding con sumers' meat costs down to March levels. When ceilings on dressed meats went into effect last spring, meat trade experts thought this would tend to sta bilize livestock values. But com petition for meat from civilian consumers, military buyers and lend-lease exporters so whetted demand that cattle rose about 16 per cent and hogs 9 per cent since then. Even lambs have moved upward from levels that prevailed when ceilings on dress ed lamb went into effect only about three weeks ago. War Insurance To Aid Consumers Washington, Aug. 24 (IP) Price Administrator Leon Hen derson ruled today that savings through reduced war risk insur ance rates recently announced by the war shipping administra tion must be passed along through price reductions to pur chasers of all price controlled products in Alaska and the Vir gin Islands. Henderson said the new war risk rates were substantially be low the former rates. Since the cost of this insurance is an im portant part of the shipping cost, he added, the reduction should result in a corresponding price reduction on commodities ship ped to these territories after Au gust 20. Linn Bean Picker Demand Continues Albany The bean picker de mand continues to exceed the number of workers in Linn county, It was announced by. J. D. Wilson, farm placement man ager of the U. S. employment office here. Work was Interrupted in the Ji R. Schlogol yard when the wires in the field collapsed, but work will be resumed Monday In all other yards near '.here continues great enough to ab sorb many more pickers than have reported to date, Mr. Wil son staled, Persons wishing to pick beans will find trucks at a number of centers throughout Albany and will be given their transportation to and from the fields. . 4 wmnmn mn II wirftrTniin n ill r-m i n-TMa i Canneries Appeal For More Male Help With the pear canning season just hitting its stride in local canneries they are beginning to complain of lack of manpower and sending out an urgent call for male help. At least one of the can neries, Hunt Brothers, reports it contemplates putting up the big gest pear pack in its history while other canneries plan huge pear packs as well, and in vir tually every case the lack of men that will be needed'has been em phasized. Pears have been rolling on here from Medford, Yakima, the Umpqua valley, Hood River and other pear producing areas, as well as local pears going into storage for canning within the next few days and while a few runs have been made on this pro duct the big end of the pack is just around the corner to last from 50 to 60 days. Some canneries are facing other complications than the pear pack. For instance, Reid Mur doch & Company, which has had Tompkins Says FDR Misadvised Lyons, Ore., Aug. 24 Presi dent Roosevelt was misadvised when he vetoed the synthetic rubber bill, according to Mor ton Tompkins, State Grange master, in his dedicatory address at the Santiam Valley Grange hall Su'rjday. Tompkins spoke of one of the "biggest battles now raging" as the one involving the petroleum corporation , and East Indian ruber interests which fear that rubber will not be developed again after the war, versus American agriculture. Tomp kins suggested that the president and congress look to Russia, "who is leading the world right now," and note that Its synthe tic rubber was being developed from cgricultural products. "The nation's greatest wheat surplus could help alleviate its greatest rubebr shortage," said Tompkins, who insisted the farmer was willing to do more than his share, but "he wants and equal basis parity, not a parity of 20 years ago or an imi tation parity." He urged that American agriculture be allow ed to take its place in Industry "instead of being set aside for selfish outside Interests. Under direction of Santiam Valley Grange Master Albert Julian, the hall's mortgage was burned and the building dedi cated before scores of members and visitors. Entertainment for Pickers Arranged Independence, Aug. 24 (IP) If entertainment is what it takes to get hop pickers here and hold them for the duration of the har vest, that's what the growers in this area will provide. Confronting a serious labor shortage as the peak season gets under way, some growers al ready are staging nightly shows. Plans for others include almost everything, including boxing, Wrestling, movies, dances and vaudeville. Pickers are earning the high est wages in years two and one-half cents a pound. Rectal Soreness Gt lUl.if Nw Easy Way Sit In Comfort Don't ntll Itehy riw bVn ipot round rectum. Few ptact tr to titbit to Infection. A quick dependable reliever of rtcul toreneej iiPro-Urmoti Rectal. Brlnrt, nothlRf itnii of comfort upon contact, forme pro tee tint Aim over tor are, help dettroy Infectious terms, tide Ntturt heel up raw, broken tUeuet, No oil no treat to eta in elothtnt- Sld on money back ruar. ante. Get thii modern relief today . . , aek for PROLARMON RECTAL iifl Hint ittut tecuo&j ' 1 iTITia ) mi MMHMa a few preliminary runs of pears, receiving them from Medford, Yakima, the Umpqua valley and local pears as well, has started receiving peaches from Yakima for an extra large pack just ahead and will be doubled up with the two heavy packs to handle. This company expects to start on peaches sometime between Thursday .and Monday Just what date is not yet defi nite because of weather condi tions. The hot weather has had the peculiar effect on peaches that instead of ripening them they have been at a standstill and the first deliveries are ex pected tomorrow or next day from Yakima and just how long they will have to stand on the floor before being in readiness for canning is still a guess. At that cannery it was stated the women are mostly lined up for the. peach pack but as yet they are uncertain whether they can get enough men to run two shifts when the pack starts. While faced with a shortage of manpower on the pear pack, canneries also have been taking something of a beating in the market. This year it proved to be a runaway market, going from $60 a ton to as high as $80 a ton, with a ceiling price of $55 a ton being fixed and the canneries have to absorb the dif ference. The pears probably average around $77.50, so ap proximately a $20 differential has to be taken up. In addition to peaches com ing along in some of the local canneries to add to the pear bur den the prune pack is also in the offing to start around the mid dle of next month. -Just to add to the troubles is the fact that a lot of man power in canneries has so far been coming from, among high school students and when school reopens this will probably mean another headache for the can neries. Some canners say they don't know what they would have done so far without this class' of help. "They have been a lifesaver," stated one canner. Picking has been going on in the two largest local orchards, the Paul Wallace orchard across the river and the Louis Lach mund orchard in the Keizcr dis trict. The Lachmund pears go to Paulus brothers and the Wal lace pears are handled by the Producers' Cooperative. . Both crops are reported to be ex cellent and picking is expected to last probably 30 days, or to the middle of September. The Starr Fruit Products com pany expects to start Thursday on its first pack of peaches ever made in the local plant. These peaches are coming from The Dalles and the run is expected to continue to about September 15. This cannery, too, will start on another pack about Septem ber 12, a little before or about the time the peach pack winds up, this being its annual tomato pack. This cannery like the others, faces a dearth of male help and is sending out an SOS in that line. BUI, t.tm, N.D. Dr. G. Chin, A.. DKS. CHAN-LAM Chinese Herbalists III North llbtrtr lTiUln rnrlUnd ncnsrtl Eltrlrle Cn. orricf it,n Titidir and 8atardi Mr. la a.m. In t a.m.. la 7 a.m. Caniallatlftit, Itlaad ,rri,rt and arlna Icita ara tr af chart. rraetlttd alnca lal Monday, August 24, 1942 Von Clemm c Hears Sentence New York, Aug. 24 WP) Wer ner V.on Clemm, 44, former Ger man artillery officer, was sen tenced today in federal court to two years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine for conspiring to sell Dutch and Belgian diamonds in this country in violation of President Roosevelt's freezing order of 1040. Von Clemm, who is related by marriage to Foreign Minister Joachim Von Rlbbentrop of Ger many, was convicted last week by a federal court Jury. The Pioneer Import company, which the German-born New York Importer headed and which was also convicted, was fine ft $10,000. Both fines represent1 ed the maximum penalty. Births, Deaths Births Backe To Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Backe, 1075 Larmer Ave., a daugh ter, Patricia Anne, Aug. 12. DePaolo To Mr. and Mrs. Peter L. DePaolo, Brownsville, a son, Carl Joseph, Aug. 11. walset.hTn Mr. and Mrs. Wen- tu a Haiseth. 2225 N. Liberty, a son, Wendell Timothy, Aug. 15. Fagg To Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Fagg, Rt. 1, Oswego, at a local hos pital, a 'daughter, Janice Evelyn, Aug. 17. Harvey To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Harvey, Jr., Portland, a son, Jos eph Charles, Aug. 17, A) St. Paul To Mr. and Mrs. Albert . Berhorst (Loretta Kuensting) a daughter at Woodburn hospital Fri day, Aug. 21. Sllverton To Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kollln of Wlllamlna, a son, 8 pounds, at Sllverton hospital Aug. 22, Sllverton To Mr. and Mrs. Alien Kropf of Molalla at the Sllverton hospital Aug. 21, a son. Deaths Rossi Mrs. Laura Rossi at Val lejo, Calif., August 19. Survived by widower, A. J. Rossi of Vallejo; fath er and mother, Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Smith of Salem; three brothers, Dal las Smith ot Lacomb, Ross Smith of Stayton and Wallace Smith with the US coast guard; sisters, Miss Grace Smith, Miss Mary Smith and Mrs. Rosa Yates, all of Salem, Mrs. Mabel Rosenberg of Los Angeles, Mrs. Lorena Fisher of Portland and Miss Joy Smith of Stayton. Funeral services Wednesday, August 26, at 1:3 p.m., from the Rose Lawn Fun eral home. Concluding services at Belcrest Memorial park. t Tcrvo In this city August 21, John Tervo, at age of 27 years. Late resident of Portland. Survived by his father, John Tervo, Sr., of Port land; sister, Mary Tervo of Portland, and an aunt, Hllma Salmela, of Portland. Announcement of funeral services later by Rose Lawn Fun-, -eral home. Eberley Silva Eberley, 40, at her residence, 415 Pine street, Sunday, August 23. Announcements later by Terwuuger-Eawards Funeral Home. Obituary Mrs. Anna Streff Stayton Mrs. Anna Streff, died August 22 at a Salem hospital. Sur vived by her widower, Charles; sons, George and Ed, and a daughter, a nun in the Holy Name order. Reci tation of the Rosary at the Weddle Funeral home Aug, 24 at 8 p.m. Ser vices will be held Tuesday, Aug. 25, at 9 a.m. Father Snlderhon officlat-Jj) lng. Interment In Catholic cemetery in Stayton. 1 Louis Patrick Glcason -' Gervais Louis Patrick Gleason, 69, died suddenly at his home here Saturday night. Born Feb. 4, 1873, In Portland and had lived in Ger vais 40 years. Life member of Salem Elks lodge. Survivors Include the widow, Etta C; five sons, Morris J. of Eugene, Earl F. of Salem, George L. of Tillamook, Wayne R. of Van couver, Wash., and Patrick C of Gaston; three daughters, Miss Ju- anlta Gleason of Dowlng, Cal, Es ther A. Keppinger of Gervais and Winifred M. Sherwood of Berkeley, Calif.; four brothers and four sisters In Portland, 17 grandchildren. Fun eral announcements later by the Rlngo mortuary of Woodburn, John A. Ellis Portland John A. Ellis, late of-v Ocean Lake, died August 21. Fatherf' of W. R. Ellis of Pittsburgh, Pa.; brother of Anna Kerslake of Los Angeles and Will Ellis of San Diego. Friends are Invited to attend funeral services Monday at 1 p.m. In the small chapel of Portland Crema torium, SE 14th and Bybee, under direction of A. J. Rose and Son. Why Suffer Any Longer? WHEN OTHERS. FAIL, use our ChinMe remedies. Amatinc Success for $0M yeirs In CHINA. No matter with, what ailments you art AFFLICT ED. Disorders, sinusitis, heart, hints, liver, kidneys, stomach, tas eonstlpi tlon ulcers, diabetes, rheumatism, sail and bladder, fever, skin, female com plaint. Charlie Chan Chinese Herb Co. OFFICE HOURS Tttesday and Saturday only, 9 a.m. to 8 p. m, Wednesday and Sander a.m. it iA:s , m. 122 N. Coml. 8t Salem, Ore.