-J r" M;DAY FORCE - - I ?. I !" --- lit v A. J j I C AtfVlMlMS , j J jl TODAY'S BUSINESS MIRROR ,-i -. ' -rig f jij 4 r " Gould, who Inherited $10,000, 000 from his father, financier Jay Gould. Frank Gould had spent most of his life in France and still lives there. IS Priests Sentenced Prague, Oct. 25 VP) Reliable sources said today 18 Roman Catholic priests had been sen tenced to two years in prison each after a trail In Prague's Pankrac prison. They were ac cused of reading banned pastor al letters from their bishops. The informants said the priests refused to tell the court by whom the pastoral letters were delivered. YES! Army Team Coming Ma. Henry Petrola (right) and Sgt. Harold L. Hall (left), members of the army team that will conduct a class here for regulars and reserves of the armed forces the night of November 2 at Bush school. Hall is pointing to the M-Day Force chart. (U. S. Army Photo) 4 Next Class Set For November Policies and procedures of the Organized Reserve Corps of the army will be the topic for the next class to be held here for re serves under the army's organ ized reserve corps augmentation program. Set for the night of November 2 at the Bush school auditorium, the class is to be conducted by Ma. Henry Peltola assisted by Sgt. Harold L. Hall and is open to all regular members of the armed forces and reserves of all branches. Proper identification will be required, however, for admittance. Ma. Peltola is a reserve offi cer on active duty with the Sixth army operations and training section, organized re serve corps division. He served two years in the Pacific during World war II and is a school teacher by profession. Sgt. Hall, veteran of 29 month of duty in the Pacific during World war II, comes from the Second Infantry di vision, company B, 23rd infan try regiment, Fort Lewis. He is on detached service at Vancouv er barracks for a year. Gould Heiress In Convent FriboursJ, Switzerland, Oct. 25 VP) Baroness Marie de Morten ache, granddaughter of Ameri can millionaire Frank Gould. has been a novice at the convent de la Maigrauge for the last IVi years. Reached at the convent where she is studying to become a nun, the baroness, who is about 24 years old, denied a New York newspaper report she had re nounced her Inheritance. "I did not renounce the In heritance because I am not I nun, definitely," she said. The end of her novitiate Is an other 24 years off, and then ihe must make a decision soon whether she will take the final vows, which would commit her to a life of cloistered piety. If she does become a nun, she will be a member of the Cistercian order. Sisters at the convent athough reluctant to talk about their famous charge, said she spent most of her time in prayer and in working at the tasks of the convent, mostly embroidery and dressmaking. The baroness Is a granddaugh ter of the self-exiled Frank Jay Strikes Create Shortage; Raise Costs; Higher Prices By SAM DAWSON New York, Oct. 25 HP) Talk about a dollar-a-pound coffee by next year makes you wonder. Is inflation going to show up again in the place you'll like it least the family market bas ket? Already the men who package foods are starting to prepare for price hikes all along "With the strikes In basic in dustries," .says Paul S. Willis, president of the Grocery Manu facturers of America, "it isn't possible for food prices to con tinue to drop as we thought they would. On the contrary, an up ward trend in all foodstuffs will become noticeable shortly and be more pronounced toward the year's end." vou the line before the end of the year, reversing their own pre dictions of a short time ago. They acknowledge large sur pluses of grain but they say the government buys these up and neutralizes the law of supply and demand. A lot of items adds up. Beef i the hoof is selling at the highest price since last Novem ber. The agriculture department today says meat prices may be lower but adds that'll be next year, and mostly in pork. Grain prices turned upward as soon as congress voted to continue wartime high parity payments for the principal food crops. Bountiful harvests won't pay off too strongly at the grocery. Sugar edged a shade higher at wholesale, although there is a world surplus held off the American market by law. Cocoa has climbed up the ladder again. And some candy makers are re ported hard pressed to line up all the chocolate they'd like for the Christmas trade. The reason packaged food han dlers advance for higher process es to come is: They fear the steel, coal and aluminum strikes will soon cause shortages of neces sary supplies in their plants and raise their costs. Roasted coffee prices have gone up four times in recent weeks in the wholesale market, reflecting the sharp advance in the price of the coffee bean. YOU CAN OWN America's Most Distinctive Car the 1949 JjmoIi (3)Jnwioiitai For thirty days we am offering you a very special allowance on your used car. Come in and check on it before deciding to buy any other make you'll be surprised. immediate delivery! FROM THE OUTSIDE AS ft, , rawm ins maiisi vumtL-t There's something about Ventian Blinds that make a world of difference in the way your home looks. They have an individual beauty, a cleaner look . . . they whisper to passers-by "here's a home in good tastel" Sears Harmony House Steel Blinds are the best money can buy. Also available with word or aluminum slats. As low as $4 50. Fill In the coupon below for a free esti mate. No obligation. Mail or bring it to Sears. Last February a pound of green coffee beans brought 23 cents a pound, but now is around 38 cents. Futures prices for De cember delivery are at an all- time high on the New York cof fee and sugar exchange. Roasters are now asking as much as 60 cents a pound for their popular brands. Retail ers say their prices will soon go to 70 cents and by the end of the year may hit $1. Others, however, say that be fore that happens, Europeans will drop out of the market since tneir cneapened money makes coffee even more expen sive for them than for Ameri cans. The British food ministry has just cut its allocation of cof fee to the trade by 20 per cent, releasing some million and a half bags a year to the world market. The situation in coffee Is blamed both on man's growing taste for it, and on bad grow ing weather for the last two years. World consumption is now greater than production, More liquid needs to be used i these same product when the in making cakes and breads in air contains moisture, report dry climates than in making 'the department of agriculture. and wo are fast drinking up the. Capital Journal Salem, Ore, Tuesday. October 15. l4t IT urpius mmm siorva in lis xai years. But against these isolated food price advances, and the predic tion that others will follow be fore th end of the year, is a sizable and stubborn core of opinion that the only way the cost of living, as a whole, can go Is down. These observers believe that even the inflation ary measures passed by the con gress can't veto the fact that most foods and goods are now in plentiful supply. Palmistry Readings r oh Will WIU tell your ana luiure. t present advise on jp upen 9 a.m is to 10 p.m Under New Management 173 S. Commercial faiasla by Ik . ' ll 7 teases A 3J LIQUID k4 The slain makes the different In DYAN- SHINE Stein Parte Polish. It actually iftn'iu rich, true color Into the Uather, toning scuffs and faded ipoti to the real shoe colorl DYANSHINE kpl brown shoes brown, kpt black shoes black . . . and gives o hard, bril liant shine, too. Double action . , double value. Easy to use. And Ihrillyl At food, drug, variety stores. Barton Mfg. Co, St. Louis 1 5. HOGG BROS. 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