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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1959)
Meeting Veterans Allied Council will hold a business session tonight at 8 o'clock in the American Legion hall, Central Point. Stve Overheats - City fire men were sent to the home of Jack Gardner, 504 Edwards st., about 1:29 pjn. yesterday when an oil stove overheated. Horses Loose Two horses were loose beyond the Big Y on Crater Lake highway on Saturday afternoon, sheriffs reports show. Firecrackers Thrown - The Starlight Drive-In theatre re ported to the sheriff's office Saturday night that someone in the back of the theatre was throwing firecrackers. ' Pump Pilfered - E. T. Cobb of Albany, Ore., reported to sheriffs deputies that some one removed a Hydro pump and hose valued at approxi mately $600 from his mining claim at Elliot creek. Door Damaged A vehicle struck the door to the lubri cating room of the White City Union Service, doing consider able damage, it was reported to the sheriff's office. The mis hap occurred Friday night or Saturday morning. Falstr Alarm - A complaint of a trash fire in the '2200 block of Dellwood ave. was made to the fire department Saturday evening. Firemen who investigated said they found no fire.. Patients - Convalescing at Rogue Valley hospital follow ing tonsillectomies are Vicki Sue Webster, 9, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Leo Webster, 929 South Ivy st., and Janeen Williams, 7, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Williams, 189 Vashti Way. Also a sur gery patient at the hospital is Mrs. William E. Roberts, 5480 Gebhardt rd., Central Point. Grass Burns Firemen were summoned to two grass fires Sunday morning. One, at the rear of the Harley Dressier home, 414 Arcadia st., cover ed an area of about 100 by 150 square feet and apparent ly extended from sparks from a trash burner, firemen said. They were called about 9:30 a.m. A grass fire at the resi dence of. George Denny,' 41 Myers ct., about 9:20 a.m. was started by children playing with sparklers. AIR CONDITIONER Montpelier, Vt. -(UPD-. Ver mont state Rep. Margaret Hammon won the heart of every male legislator when she moved that they be al lowed to shed their coats dur ing the summer months of the session. mm i I ENDS TUESDAY! IT . Mi It I Mil IT! ROBERT RYAN ALOO RAY TINA LOIKSS MT WMN 'jsssmsmS. j, STRIBUNG Sumpter Valley Panning Yields Gold Ths following ) a condensation of a fnotorlog which appeared in the Sunday Oregonian, one of an annual aeries loon tored by TheOregonian and the Oregon State Motor Assn. These travel articles - describe vacation trips and vacation spots of particular interest to out-of-state visitors coming to Oregon for the Centennial Celebration. By RICHARD NOKES City Editor, na Oregonian You, too, can be a gold miner this Centennial summer. Just like the prospectors who dis covered gold near Auburn in Baker County 98 years ago, any tourist this year can strike it rich with a gold pan Well, maybe- not strike it rich, but Vera Manary, man ager of the Chamber of Com merce in Baker, says that for approximately $1 a head any tourist may pan for gold with a guarantee of "color" in his toric Sumpter Valley. Take Tops $2,000,000 From California Gulch in which you will pan, more than two million dollars in gold was taken by miners, although the stream is so narrow you can step across it. We tried our luck at gold panning at the "weekend" op eration of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wood of Baker. They have a neat little cabin on California Gulch, a cabin which they bought, from a prospeptor and have enlarged to make it com fortable. It is here the tourist will be able to try his skill with a pan with the promise of finding at least a trace of gold. Harold is a superintendent at a lumber yard in Baker while Mrs. Wood works for the Baker Democrat-Herald. But both of them repair to their hideaway each weekend and work at their hobDy of tryini to extract gold from the san and gravel of the stream. So far they haven t.-hit a mother lode (the biggest piece of gold they have found was worth about 20 cents), bi they have had a lot of fun. Visitors Agree And so did wt have a lot of fun. In fact, young Douglas Nokes said the gold panning wag the most fun of the whole trip we took through four northeastern Oregon Vacationland counties on a motorlog sponsored by the Oregon State Motor Assn. How do you pan for gold? Well, first you get your pan a plain looking pan about 16 inches in diameter with slop ing sides. You undoubtedly can borrow a pan when you want to try your hand at it, but wife Evelyn wanted a couple tp X0'&''jjf ' 'i You can still find gold In them thar hills in Northeast era Oregon if you are patient. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wood of Baker are "weekend panners" in California Gulch. Mrs. Wood shows Kathy (left) and Gail Nokes how its done. - for her own so we acquired them ($1.25 each) in Baker and now use them on the patio as serving dishes. After you have pan in hand, you scoop it into the sand and gravel of the stream bed. Then you swish the water in the pan back and forth and wash out the light pebbles and dirt until (if you are lucky) you have left only the heavy black sand. If . you are luckier still, the black sand will have flecks of yellow in "it and that's the stuff men have fought and died over. While Harold rigged up his hydraulic rig, Mrs. Wood ex plained that the black sand is important in. g o 1 d panning. "You might find black sand without gold," she ,said, "but you'll never find gold without the black sand." Doug and his -sisters Kathy and Gail found black sand and flecks of gold in their pan, but there may have been a pit of "salting? from a jar kept by the Woods. With gold in our blood for sure now, we headed up Sump ter Valley in the heart of the Blue Mountains. Extensive work is being done on the old road for the first few miles beyond the Wood cabin, but equipment operators were cooperative-in. making way: for the white AAA station wagon as we headed for the "almost ghost town" of Sumpter where miners kicked up their heels in the lush days. The first few miles along the Powder River were beautiful beyond compare. The remains of. the old narrow-gauge Sump ter Valley Railroad right-of-way were still visible along the gravel road, old" fashioned rail fences bordered farms and ranches; cattle grazed in the verdant pastures and the sun alternated with storm clouds over the Blue Mountains to the right and the left. But halfway up the valley we came upon a shocking sight. We had heard of the devas tation wrought in God's coun tryside by gold mining opera tions, but -never before had we seen it firsthand. Tailings as high as a two-story building covered the valley for hun dredsprobably thousands of acres. Yellow subsoil, stones and boulders stretched as far as we could see. This was the result of dredg ing operations along the Pow der River from 1913 to just three years ago. The dredge that created this havoc while digging out $8,000,000 in gold, still sits like some pre-historic monster in the town of Sump ter. Don't miss . it when you drive in there. , The monster, making its own lake as it waddled up and down the valley, churned the earth down to bedrock . and buried the rich topsoil forever in search for riches. : Quartz Available Doug and Evelyn did find in the tailings some sand and rock with yellow flakes which they brought home and "panned out" in the kitchen. There also is plenty of quartz for rock hounds. The town of Sumpter is col orful. The entrance sign, says the population is 147. Many of the old buildings are still occupied, but others of this once-thriving gold town have been deserted many years. One modern note is the Sumpter School. ; r By the middle of June the road from Sumpter across the Blue Mountains to Granite in Grant County will be open and tourists will be able to see Or egon's only major gold opera tion, the Buffalo Lode mine. It has produced almost all of the gold reported by the Or egon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries in re cent years ($118,335 in 1957 and $57,750 in 1958). , You may finish the loop over good Forest Service roads to Anthony Lakes, camping, if you please, in Forest Service campgrounds. a"' I Powder i?rani pAKEPs Auburn Jxj Map shows route tourists may take from Baker through fold mining country to Anthony Lakes and back to highway. Ben-Gurion ToHead Israel's Destiny Jerusalem, Israel - IUPD - Re signed Premier David Ben Gurion will continue to guide Israel's destiny because of the tense international situation and the growing Suez canal crisis with Egypt, informed sources reported today: Ben-Gurion turned in the resignation of his cabinet Sunday night when four re bellious left-wing cabinet members ignored his ultima tum to them to quit. The cabi net crisis was brought on by Israel's sale - of $3,500,000 worth of grenade launchers to West Germany. San Francisco - (UPD - Team sters President James R. Hoffa said today his union has made an agreement with Harry Bridges' International Long shoremen's and Warehouse men's Union for the organiza tion of Hawaii. WashingtCxi IUPD President Eisenhower will hold a news conference Wednesday. TOP t Hi I Si, " 71 w .. ...... 1 i WIPING OUT VILLAGE with loss of 200 lives, Combeima River near Ibague, Colombia, overflows banks.. Large boulders are all that remain of .rural road running through village. Bodies of many victims are being sought. Six County Youths Held in Rape Case Six Jackson county youths from 18 to 20 years old are being held in the Jackson county jail today pending in vestigation of possible rape charges against them, accord ing to sheriff's deputies. The alleged -victim, a 16-year-old girl from near Jack sonville, charges that the in cident happened Friday night on the Applegate. A formal complaint is to be filed later today by the district attorney's office. Meanwhile, the sher iffs office and the district at torney's' office is making fur ther investigation. - UNBELIEVABILIE BARGAINS STORE WK!! Sale Tables Located on 1st Floor Balcony 2nd Floor Doors Open 9 a.m. Daily No Lay-Away s Come Early Get First Choice We' believe a sale should have genuine bargains. We like to clear out our Odds V Ends to make room for new merchandise. "We gat space, you, the customer, get the bargains! The Management "Bonus for Cash!" Extra 5Difca0sunt. On AH Sale Merchandise Paid for in Cash or Check Only Sale Items and Only This Week Sale Starts Saturday, July 11th jNEMOPP. OREGON r Weather FORECASTS Medford and vicinity: ParUy cloudy through Tuesday. Low to night 48. High Tuesday 80. Western Oregon: Considerable cloudiness with a few showers to night. Partly sunny Tuesday. Warm er Tuesday. Low tonight 4S-55. High Tuesday 74-80 except near 65 along coast. Northern California: Fair tonight and Tuesday except local fog and low clouds on coast night and morn ing hours. w- LOCAL DATA TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday 65; below normal s. Record hieh this date 104 in 1922 Record low this date 43 in 1925. PRECIPITATION: 24' hours to midnieht 0. Midnight to 10 a.m. 0. Total this month 0, .05 in. below normal. Total since Sept. 1 12.85 in., 4.99 in. below normal. HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 31, highest this a.m. 6o Obituaries JESSE B. WATTS Services for Jesse B. "Watts, 62, of Grants Pass, who died in a local hospital yesterday, I will be held at Conger-Morris Funeral home : Tuesday at 11:30 aon. The Rev. W. O. Fisher, of the Grants Pass Church of the Nazarene, will officiate. Committal will be in Marshall, Ark. Mr. Watts was born Jan. 7, 1897, in Marshall, Ark., and had lived in Grants Pass for the past four years. He was a vetgran of JVorld War I. He was married Jan. 9, 1916, in Marshall, Ark., to Zetta Mc Cutcheon, who survives. Other survivors include two sons, Clyde D.' Watts, Las Ani mas, Colo., and Larry Watts, at home;' 'a: daughter, Mrs. Willodean V. Scoles, Portland; a brother, James Watts, Sut ter, Calif.; two sisters, Mrs. Olisidne Luttrell, Sutter, Calif., and Mrs. Emma Thomp sm, Leslie, Ark., and six grandchildren. MRS. MAMIE PAUP Services for Mrs. Mamie Paup, 722 Grant street, who died Saturday, will be .held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. in the Conger-Morris Funeral home. The Rev. D. Kirkland West of the First Presbyterian church will officiate. Commit tal will be in Hillcrest Memo rial park. JACK RICE Jack Rice, a long-time resi dent of Eagle Point, died to day in Eagle Point. Arrange ments will be announced by Conger-Morris Funeral home. LORRAINE BUCK Mrs. Lorraine Buck, 51, of 521 Beatty St., a resident of Medford for the past 11 years, died in a local hospital this morning. Arrangements for funeral cervices will be an nounced by Chapel Mortuary. CLIFFORD, HENDRICKSON Clifford Walter Hendrick son, 43, of 303 West Jackson st., died July 5 at a local hos pital. Funeral services "will be announced by Perl Funeral home.' i , High 4:30- 24- . city - Tester- a.m. hr. f . '. ' day. Low Free. Brookings ..65 49 JOB Grants Pass 80 46 Klamath Falls 75 43 MEDFORD 80 54 Portland 72 51 .02 Seattle , ,-66 51 .13 Spokane ... ,..69 44 . .02 Yakima ;76 43 Eureka ... ,..62 50 ' Red Bluff 95 68 Sacramento .-91 57 San Francisco 65 53 Los Angeles ...86 64 Phoenix ,.107 85 Denver 87 i 60 Chicago . 89 67 Miami Beach 89 78 New York .......v 74 68 Washington, D. C .87 68 FIVE-DAY FORECAST (Through July 11): .,. ... . Western Oregon - Western Wash ington 'Temperatures averaging several degrees below normal. Max imums, generally in 60s or low 70s in western Washington and in 70s or low 80s in western Oregon. Minimum! mostly 45-55. More rain than seasonal, mostly occurring Wednesday and Thursday. Northern California No pre cipitation through Saturday except a few showers near Oregon border. Temperatures slightly below normal. , California Fire Still Uncontrolled Sierraville,. Calif. (DPI) A forest fire started by a 6-year-old boy playing with matches raced eastward on high winds through the Tahoe National forest, still out of control in its fifth day today. "We've lost it completely on the east," Forest Service Dispatcher John Bigley said. "All of Dark canyon is going, and we're trying how to save our forest service radio relay station at Harding Point . . . but it looks hopeless." More, than' 10,000 acres of timberland have been destroy ed so far. Winds which reach ed 50 miles an hour in gusts Sunday forced fire fighters to run for their lives. The weath er bureau predicted even stronger winds for today.' One hundred men were withdrawn from the main fire fighting line in a desperate eff qrt to save the Harding Point station. Cardiovascular diseases take an annual toll of 800,000. ARTEMESIA H. EASTERING Ashland Mrs. Artemesia Hall Eastering, 91, of 391 Lib erty st., died July 4, following a brief illness. She was born Jan. 3, 1868, in Bass county, Ky. She married John M. East ering, Dec. 14, 1886, in More-, head, Ky.', andicame West in 1901, moving to Ashland in 1903. Mr. Eastering died Feb. 22, 1930. Among the survivors are three children, OUie Easter ing, Emerson Eastering, and Miss Pearl Eastering, all Ash land, and Orville Hall, Klam ath Falls, nephew, who is an Ashland High school gradu ate. , . Funeral services will be held Tuesday, July 7, at 2 p.m. in Litwiller's Mountain View chapel.with the Rev. Carleton Yerex, Newberg, ; Ore., of ficiating. Burial will be in the family plot in Mountain View cemetery. MEETING With great animation, Mrs. Richard Nixon greets a friend at a reception at the Russian Embassy in Washington. The reception was given, for visiting Soviet First Deputy Premier Frou R. Ko'zlov (right). At rear are Vice President Nixon (left) and Russian Am bassador Menshikov. Industrial Stocks Record New Highs CLARENCE S. BOOTH Private funeral services for Clarence Samuel Booth, 70, of 221ii North Holly st., who died at his residence July 3, 1959, will be held at the Perl Funeral home, Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. with Dr. George G. Roseberry officiating. Inter ment will be in Siskiyou Me morial park. Mr. Booth was born in Gold Hill, Nev., Aug. 14, 1888. ' Mr. Booth was a tile con tractor and had resided in this community for the past two months. - Survivors include his wife Mrs. Norma Booth; one daugh ter, Mrs. Blanche Stembridge, Medford and one son, Clinton Booth, San Bernardino, Calif.; four grandchildren , and Six great grandchildren. ERNEST L. HOLBROOK Ernest L. Holbrook, 49, own er of the Harley Davidson Motorcycle shop, South Pa cific highway, died this morn ing in a Portland hospital. Funeral services will be an nounced by Perl Funeral i iiume. MYRTLE L. ROADARMEL Private funeral services for Myrtle Lavona Roadarmel, 75, of Eagle Point, who died, at the farm home Saturday morn ing, will be held at the Perl Funeral home Tuesday at 1:30 p.m. with the Rev. Duane Al vord of St. Mark's Episcopal church officiating. Interment will be at the Siskiyou Me morial park. Mrs. Roadarme was born on July 27, 1884 at Ashland and received her education at Lake Creek, Ore. Survivors include one daughter, Mrs. Dorothy Zun del, Eagle Point, one grand child and two great-grandchildren. ' New York- (UPD -Individual j gains ran past three points today as industrial stocks rose to. new all-time highs. The si mmer rally picked up where it left off last Thurs day before the market closed for the long . holiday week end. Steels were strong as a group with most of the lead ers at new 1959 peaks. Mo tors were higher and new tops were set by some of the pivo tals. Nonferrous metals were in favor as were selected drugs and electronics. Tires, oils and aircrafts were lower. American Home Products was an indicidual standout, rising 7 points at its high be fore running into some mild realizing of profits. DOW-JONES AVERAGES New York (UPD Dow Jones final stock averages: 30 industrials 660.09 up 5.33; 20 railroads 169.12. up 0.20; 15 utilities 88.74, up 0.64, and 65 stocks 220.34, up 1.42. Sales to day were about 3,720,000 shares compared with 3, 610,000 shares Thursday. Today's prices on selected stocks: -. Allied Chemical 118 Vi Alum Co. Am 106V American Can ..... 45Vi American Motors 46V AT&T.:., J.... 82 Anaconda Copper 64 Armco Steel 793s Bendix Aviation ..... 77 Bethlehem Steel 59 ; Boeing Air 36Vi Caterpillar Corp 115 Chrysler Corp 69 V4 Portland Produce Portland (UPI) Dairy market: Eggs To retailers: Grade AA large, 42-44c doz.; A large, 39-41c; AA medium, 34-35c; AA small, 26 27c; cartons l-3c additional. Butter To retailers: AA and Grade A prints, 65c lb., carton, lc higher; B prints, 63c. Cheese medium cured To re tailers: A grade Cheddar single daisies, 41-51c; processed American cheese, 5-lb. loaf, 40-43c. Farm Market First shipment of 1959 crop Ya kima valley apricots sold on the Portland market today at $6 for 30 pounds with 14 pound flats of Phelps and Riland varieties going at S2.75. Bush beans from Port land's St. Johns district went at $2 a lug. Best local strawberries went at $2.50-2.75 a flat while Oregon red raspberries went at $2.25-2.50 a flat. Poultry, Rabbits live Chickens Wuoted to grow ers at Portland, Salem and south to Eugene: f.o.b. ranch, No. 1 quality fryers, 2i-4 lbs., 19c lb.; light hens, 7-Bc; heavy hens, 9c. Dressed Chickens No. 1 grade dressed to retailers: Fryers, whole drawn, 33-36c lb.; cut up, 38-41c; hens, heavy type whole drawn, 35 38c; light-type cut up, 29-34c lb. uressed Turkeys to retailers: Frozen ready to cook A grade young toms, 40-43c lb.; according to weight: A grade young hens, same basis, 38-40c lb. Breeder Turkeys To producers: A grade hens. 24c on an eviscerated basis; A grade toms. 30c on the same basis: to retail: A grade hens. 30-33c lb. Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b. killing plants) Live white, 33,i-4'2 lbs. f.o.b. Portland, 19-21c; colored pelts, 5c under. Fresh killed fryers to retailers, 56-58c lb.; cut up, 60-62c. Continental Can Crown Zellerbach Curtiss Wright Dow Chemical Du Pont Eastman Kodak Firestone General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pacific Graham Paige Greyhound Gulf Oil Homestake Mining Idaho Power I. B. M. .. Kaiser Ind. . Int Paper Johns Manville Kennecott Copper Lockheed Aircraft Katy . , Montgomery Ward Nat'l Biscuit New York Central Pac Gas & Elec Penney J. C. Perm RR . Radio Corporation Richfield Oil Safeway Sears Shell Oil Socony Mobil Oil Southern Co. ' Southern Pacific Standard California .. Standard Indiana .. Standard N. J Sun Mines Texas Co .... Texas Gulf jSulfur .. Tex Pac Land Trust .. Transamerica ...... Trans World Air Tri-Continental Union Carbide - Union Pacific United Aircraft United Air Lines U. S. Rubber U. S. Steel. Youngstown S & T 4758 .... 5112 ..... 35Vi ..... 92 Vs ....25234 .... 91 ... 147 . 8058 95 Vb .. 55 46 3 .... 2334 .....11034 . 43 V4 .... 461s ....450 Vi 1834 ...423 55V2 ....1043i 3134 6V4 48 52 29 607s 112 .. 19 70 .... 83. .. 37 483s 79VS 45 3714 .. 72 .. 52 U 46 50 .. 7 . 80 205g .. 2434 29V4 23 . 4112 -147 V . 3434 .. 5134 .....42 6334 ...105 VI ...135 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Monday, July 6, 1959 . 9 In the 154 years from 1801 to 1955V the population of France. increased from 27 mil lion to 43 million. Portland Hay, Grain Portland Wholesale Hav Prices: New Crop No. 2 green, alfalfa, baled f.o.b. Portland and Seattle. $32-33 ton; some to ?35 at Portland. Wholesale Prices as reported by the Portland USDA market news service. Basis by the ton. bulk, prompt delivery, f.o.b. track, Portland. Wheat. No. 1 white $66.50 No. 2 Milo, Eastern shipment $o5.00 No. 2 corn, Eastern shipment $5750 No. 2 Wh. oats, Coast. .$53.00-53.50 No. 2 Western barley, Coast ........ $44.00-45.00 Soybean meal, 44 percent protein , $8150 Standard millrun S37.00-38.00 Over-the-Counfer Western Stocks The following bid and asked prices on selected Western securi ties provided by the Medford branch office of Pacific Northwest Company are unofficial and do not represent actua' transactions but are intended as a guida to the approEiat price range. Common Stocks Bid Asked Bank of America 47 ' Calif. -Pacific Utilities 35', cascades .Plywood 34 Lons. n reightways Copco First National Bank Morrison-Knudsen ... Northwest Nat. Gas .. Pacific Pwr. & Lt Permanente Cement 28 Permanente Cement Co. 28 Portland Gen. Elec U. S. National Bank. United Utilities West Coast Tel. . Weyerhaeuser 26i 37 U 54 2 36 'j 17"4 39 27 70 30 "4 .. 24" .. 45 0' 37 36'2 28 39 ,4 58 38 18 42'4 29 29 29 74 32 26 48 investment Funds Noon Quotations on selected funds supplier! by th M"dford Branch of Foster & Marshall, mem bers New York Stock Exchange Fund Bid Asked Bullock 14.26 15.63 Lhem fund 11.73 Eaton Howard Stk 24.81 Fidelity 17.17 Group Sec A via Elec 1137 Group Sec Com Stk 13.92 Group Sec Petr ...... Group bee bteei Keystone B-3 .... Keystone B-4 . Keystone K-2 Keystone S-l Keystone S-2 . Keystone S-3 Keystone S-4 Mass Inv Grth Stk . TV-Elee Value Line Inc .. Wellington 10.81 10.84 16.12 10.24 15.04 19.88 13.21 15.88 12.91 14.50 16.45 3.99 14.64 12.68 26.52 18.56 12.45 15.24 11.84 11.87 1758 11.18 16.41 21.69 14.42 1733 14.08 15.68 1755 6.55 15.96 BIRTHS MOSS -To Mr. and Mrs. Willard, post office box 331, Jacksonville, July 5, 1959 a boy, 5J3 pounds, ''at Kogue Valley hospital. HENSLEY-To Mr. and Mrs. Richard F., 1626 Woodlawn dr., Medford, July 5; 1959, a boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Val ley hospital. . CANDLE ROOM Charcoal Broiled LOBSTER TAILS An especially .good place to eat if dieting! HOTEL MEDFORD '.ilK fpL2:0t0o?rPkia.ys E if 9 News About Servicemen WITH FLEET Stanley L. Cester, aviation electrician's mate second class, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl C. Chester, 1010 South Third st., Jacksonville, and William A. Weaver, aviation electronics technician third class, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Weaver, Rogue River, are serving aboard the Hor net. The shiD is servine in the western Pacific as a unit of the U.S. Seventh Fleet. Portland Livestock Portland ctTPIi Ctl nn Low choice fed steers. 835-1075 lhs 29; 1275 lb. 28; mixed good and choice 28.25-29.50: good grades 27 28: standard 25-26.60: mixed good and choice 790-77 lb. fed heifers 27.75; 727 and 769 lbs. 27.50; utility cows 16.50-18; canners and cutters mosUy 14-1550- heavy cutters to 10; ugnt cutter bum 18-22. Calves 125. Good and choice vealers 25-28; high choice 50-30; utility and standard vealers and calves 20-25. Hogs 1200. VS. 1 and 2 butchers 190-225 lb. mossiy 17.50-17.75: most ly No. 1 butchers 18; mixed No. 1. 2 and 3 lots 16.75-17: few 150-370 lbs. 16-17: No 1 nnd 2 sows S85.3.SO lbs. 14-15: 400-500 lbs. 11-13. Sheep 3000. Low choice 105 lbs. high yielding range Iambs 23; good and choice 60-105 lb. nearby spring lambs mostly 21; good and choice feeder lambs 65-90 lbs. 16.50-17.50; cull to good slaughter ewes 2-4.50. Garden Savrdasl McGiniy Fuel Co. Ph. SP 3-6297 HURRY! 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