3 o TUitfist It. 1942 HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON PAGE SEVEN STOCKS IIP UP RECOVERY ON MARKET By VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK, Aug. 11 UP) Block whipped up a Utile re covery Interest In today' mnrkel without the benefit of much out standing bulll.ih news. Transfer were around 2.10,000 inures. Bonds jtcedled end major com moHIIe, nflnr on enrly decline. on Ihe government s bill crop figures, regained Ihelr equilib rium, Anionil stock edging Into now hltih ground for the year wore firhfnle.v, Notional Distiller nnd IMirlly Bakeries. In front tho renter pint of the time were Dil Punt. American Can, Electric Autoiltn, Allied Chemical, U. S. Steel, Santa Fe, Atnerlcnn Tele phone, Standard Oil of Ind., Sear Hoebui-k, Dow Cheinlciil, Kashmiri Kodak, U. S. Itubbrr cumnion nnd preferred. Warner Ilrijt,, Paramount, Popsl-Coln, Chrysler, American Airline nnd Kuslorn Air Lines. Occasional barkwardncs win llpln.ycd by Wooiworlh. J. C. Penney, Pullman, Inti-rnnllonal Nli-kol nnd Union Carbide. Closing quotations: American Can (1M Am Car Fdy 23s Am Tel ft Tel H7i Anaconda i OFFICIAL U. S. TREASURY WAR BOND QUOTAS FOR AUGUST EVvrv-N OlM-ifiONI O.S.TriuryOHlelIW.gond'ouotiorAuqil I f turnip km I mm 1 r', V i MnwT 7 L 1 jr - q ; ipuid; "l f r "'; Y i pWt) .100.000 ) '".2W0O 'j 36,200 I "l58.6fT0 --. f wJ i a ! ur- L' -Li j 10.800 j j ' s Washington, I. ('., Aug. 10 Henry MorgenUiau. Jr., Secretary of the Treasury, teday announced the August War Bond (Junius for the 3,070 counties In the nation totalling HIS,(00,000. The August quota for the Slate nf Oregon Is f8,7.'iO,OIIO. In arriving at (he county quota for August, as shown In the ahnve map, the Treasury Department look Into consideration major factor affecting In come which In turn cause significant variation In sale during the twelve-month period. Hereafter actual Bond sale in the various states will be compared with quotas on a cumulative basis. The amount by which sales fall short of or exceed quotas In any month will he added to or subtracted from quotas fur future months. V. 5. Trtatury Dtfarimtnl POTATOES MIUtDU'lli O Calif Packing 1H4 Cat Tractor ' 3M Comm'nw'llli A- Sou HWI General Electric 201 Goveral Motors 871 C't Nor Hy pf.r 22 llllnoli Central U lot Harvester 4lU Kennecott -m Lockheed Ii Long Hell "A" ... 3 Montgomery Ward 201 Nash Kelv SI N V Central Bi Northern Pacific IH Pc Gas it El lt Packard Motor 21 Pennn R Ft 21 Tirpublic Steel 13 Richfield Oil " (iears Roebuck 831 Southern Pacific ..: l.li 4 Standard Blonds 31 Sunshine Mining 4 Union Oil Calif Ill Union Pnclflc 73i U S Steel 47 Warner Picture BI CHICAGO, Atif. 11 (AP-USDA)- Potatoes: arrival !; on track I .VI; total U. S. ship ments 1!44; supplies IlKht. do maud slow; mnrkel barely rlendy with slightly . weaker feeling prevailing; California Long Whites U. S. No. 1. S3 75; Idaho Bliss Triumphs U. S No. 1, $2.(10; Russet Burb.m,k U. S. No. 1, $3.50 55; Long Whiles U. 8. No. 1, $3 40-50. WHEAT CHICAGO. Aug. 11 It Grain futures and soybeans dur tna the first half hour on the government's report of huge crop prospects, today rallied to close at about the some level as yes terday's finish. The slump at the opening fail ed to bring out much liquidation, a furl which was considered en couraging to the buying side. Wheat led the subsequent ad vance, other grains displaying Joss recuperative power. Trading quieted to a slow pace near the clo.e. I Wheat finished strongly on , gains ranging from i -1c, Septem ber $1,171, December $1,201-1.! Corn closed unchanged to ic j higher, September 881-lc, De cember 881c. Final prices on oats were unchanged to 5c lower, on rye l-ic higher and on soy beans up ic. PENDLETON, Aug. 11 (AP) With more than a carload of Au trian winter pea being cleaned and sacked here dally, shipment of winter legume seed to the southern tntc are In full swing from Umatilla county. Used by southern farmer to replace nitrate going Into muni tions, more than 2000 carloads of the nitrogen producing crop will be shipped this year from Ore gon, the nation' principal source of supply, Pea of this variety were pro duced In Umatilla county on a large scale for the first time thi year, with 5pprox!m5ely 9000 acre being narveiiea, an in crease of 8700 acres over last year. Yields have averaged a ton an acre and have been of high quality. Greatly expanded production Is anticipated next year by A. R. Coppock, chairman of the county AAA eomiidtUe, who a y many Umatilla county farmer plan to divert acreage from wheat to winter field pea In compliance with Secretary of Agriculture Wickard' call for underplanting of wheat allotment. If 1 have to choo?e between rigid state control and no organ ization and laistei-falre, then I should choose state control. Ernest Bcvln, British labor minuter. BOSTON WOOL BOSTON, Aug. 11 (AP) (U. S. Dept. Agr.) Demand for half blood and fine territory wools continued at around ceiling prices In 1 he Boston wool market today. Some dealers reported their .stocks of the.'.e grades are getting very low. Purchases of fine and half-blood territory wools were reported In the country at firm to slightly higher prices. Medium wools of all types remained quiet. our only possible chance of win ning this war. Senator Josh Lee, Oklahoma. The date of the Chinese New Year changes from year to year. mi& LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 11 (Pf-(Fed. -State Market News) Cattle: salable 150; ac tive, fully steady; load north coast 1012 lb. grass steers $12.65; package 750 lb. grass heifers $9.50; load good 1000 lb range cows $9.00; late yester day three loads cutter to com mon range cows $7.00-8.00; can ners and cutters scarce,' mostly S6.00-7.00; medium sausage bulls $9.50-10.00. Calves: salable 50; steady; choice vealers quot ed $13.00-50, two packages 405 428 lb. calves $12.00. Hogs: salable 100: around 10c higher; .odd lots good 185-235 lb. barrows 'and gilts $15.60; few good sows S13.10. Sheep: salable 1100. Steady; late Monday: 15-25c lower, com mon 50c lower; bulk lambs $10.50-12.50. choi.ee quoted $13.25; today: deck medium to good No. 3 pelt 70 lb. Oregon lambs $11.75 straight; medium to choice ewes quoted $4.00- 5.25. Horse and Biic Dap list Hew to Goshen Bill Cane Puts Nags, Sulkies Back on Mao Oho Kn By BURTON BENJAMIN riCA Srr.le luff OeirMpemJtnt GOSHEN, N. Y., Aug. 11 William H. Cane brought back hos and buggy disys to the stern senboard long before war and gas rationing maoo u necessity. Bill Cone's buggies were sul kies; his horses, trotters; and his spectacle, t h e H a m b letonlan slake, which will be raced Y f"l ii, r If William Cane for the 17th time at Good Time Park, here tomorrow. A dozen years ago sulky rac Ing by harness horse was con sidered as passe a pongee shirts a n d bull o n shoes. Yet, In the midst of a fast, highly mechanized age, in Ihe summer following the Wnll Street crash of 1929, Cane reincarnated nn outmoded sport. The Hambletonlan slake was rnced for Ihe first time at the New York Slate fair al Syra cuse In 1020. II. was worth $73,451. The co-nttractlon boost ed attendance. Tho first renewal was raced at Lexington the next fall. The crowd was disappointing. II flopped at Syracuse In 102H and al Lexington In '29. That was Iho year Bill Cnnn won tho rnco with Walter Denr driven by his friend and trainer, Waller R. Cox, who died Inst December, FAILURE OF EVENT WAS CHALLENGE TO CANE Cane had driven trotters for years as' a prominent amateur rolnsman, He hod Ihe distinction of building Ihe arena at Boyle's Thirty Acres In record time (or the Dcmpsey-Cnrpentler fight. Ho was a man of enterprise, and the poor attendance at trotllng's blue-ribbon event was a chal lenge to him. So the 1030 running of the Hnmblatonlan was held at Cano's Good Time Park al Goshen. II. has never been rnced anywhere ls since. There was no Instantaneous ap proval of the meeting. It. had to Iwi: - ftft "-Vu, V r ij y 'Oops' Pardon the Elbow'-rDefense Workers on the Move V - r A I h -rS4 Mrs tm t. . tm . f ill' You can tre scenes like this In every city In the United States the nation s aeiense worriers on me way w tbeir Job. Tliey'ie shown bare, lunch nr. ;. r girg: and all. Jamming Into buses which will carry them jo ori in tbe eaa rtancisco area. The Circus Is Coming . 1 IWii&l' (AP) (U. S. Dept. Agr.l Cattle Salable 150. total 550; calves: salable and total 200; market very slow, mostly steady but some bids and cleanup sales 25c lower; few common light steers $9.25-10.75, odd head to $11. 25; load short-fed steers and heifers unsold; common to medium beef heifers $9.25-10.75, common light dairy type heifers down to $8.00; canner and cutter cows $5.50 7.25, odd common beef cows $7.50, medium to good beef cows salable around, $8.25-9.75; medi um to good bulls mostly $9.50 10.50; large lot medium to good vealers $14.00, common grades out at $10.00, few choice vealers $15.00-50. Hogs: Salable and total 300; market active, strong with early, about 25c lower than Monday's average; good to choice 175-2,5 lbs. mostly S15.00, few sales up to S15.15 and late sales up to $15.25; 240-280 lbs. $14.25; light lights $14.00-25; good sows 350 650 lbs. $13.00-75; choice feeder pigs 53 lbs. $17.00, heavier weights salable around $15.00-16.25. Sheep: Salable 200, total 400; market about steady; good to choice spring lambs $14.50-75, medium to good grades $10.50; feeder lambs $9.25-75; good ewes $4.00-25, common to medium $2.00-3.50. fa Prettv Milonqs Escalante. aerialist with Russall Bios.' circus, gives the final touch to the fabulous makeup of Merry Mell, the clown. ..... .... ... Bell Ringer tfjvK -'Hi 1 V iW m. --''..1 1 Circus Combines Modern Trends With Tradition Combining- all the cherished , scheduled for 8 o'clock, and Sat- big top traditions of old with the urday's will start at 2 and 8 latest modern trends and im- p. m. Colby Hanover, left, Fred Egan In the sulky. Is favorite In nth running of 40;0 nmetl'S Stake at Good Time Park, fioshen, N. Y., Aug. 12. Leading contender Is Pay Up. right, shown In al-. fectionats pose with trainer-driver Lee Smith. 1 be promoted and publicized. Ob stacles were plentiful. Public re sistance had to be broken down for acceptance of an allegedly slow, hick sport In a racy era which paid h premium on speed. STANDS FACE SETTING SUN The grnndsland had to be built facing west into the setting sun, for, try as he did, Bill Cane couldn't buy a strip of land on tho west which would hnvo been the slle of stands faring east. Refusal of the owners to soli this hind meant Hint a trlangulnr track had lo be hild out to fit purchasable space. Horses in the back stretch had lo race away from the grandstand and into a far corner of tho course before turning lo come back alongside highway 17 and finally turning again to enter Ihe home stretch. Yet, despite these discouraging barriers and with Intorest at a low ebb, Cane built up the Ham bletonlan slake lo a unique posi tion in sports circles. Like Epsom Downs and Louis- villa, population In this town of some 4500 swells nearly eight or nine times during the Hnmble- tonlnn hegira. Country cousins rub elbows with city slickers, Iho thermometer scrapes 90 and yet, despite the town's relative inaccessibility, the mon Keeps coming. COLBY HANOVER, PAY UP FAVORED ' Cane's faith In trotting has been a boon to the sport. The Hambletonlan gives it a peg, just as the Derby, Preakness a,nd Ar lington Classic boost the thor oughbred runners. Rationing and travel restric tions may cut down attendance tills year, but everyone from Jov ial Mayor Walter Brown to the lowest stable boy, believes that thousands will make the trip, even if they have to buy a sulky and a nag to get here. There are 40 entries in this year's race. Nine to 12 will start, Colbv Hanover, owned by C. W. Phellis, New York, and I. W. Glcason, Willlnmsport, Pa., is the favorite, although he has not started this year. Pay Up, bay colt by Follow up, won Ills lusi mice Bimis .it 1041 nnd copped the Matron Stake, leading preview to the race, this year. The colt is owned bv R. H. Johnston of Charlotte, N. C who had Bill Gallon, last year's winner. Other contenders are Cannon Ball, The Ambassador, Capitol Hanover, Dot Chappell, and Sophie Hanover. In these tire-less, gas-less days, the 17th Hambletonlan stake may ba more than a trotting race, It. may help you handle your streamlined, 1944 sulky. . The uoorest gambler we know of is Ihe fellow who is afraid to lake a chance on himself. The boxers In the ring are al ways the principals but it's the referee who counts. Jem , t TV, r i Head The Classified Page "TlOST THEAT Our of Your Oil! L.l Ut Ssrvltt Vout Burnet Nowl Call lor Nam! at Klamath Oil Co. i Phone 8404 3 v. AIRPLANE HAT-K.th. erlne Feenry at Alexandria Bay. N. Y wear a scale model navy, plane a her ehapeau. Plane ) one- of 69,000 model aircraft made by N. T.'s school children. When In Medford Stay at HOTEL HOLLAND Thoroughly Modern Jos and Anne Earley Proprietors provements, Russell Bros.' Great 3-Ring circus will exhibit at the South Sixth str.eet circus grounds, Klamath Falls, Friday night, Aug. 21, and two per formances Saturday, Aug. 22. With the gleam of a Fourth-of- July Santa Claus in' his eye, a slightly effusive press agent ex tolls the circus as "pack jam med and heaping up with enter tainment, filled to the hilt witn breath-taking thrills and excit ing action, enshrouded through out with an exhilarating gaiety of spirit, drenched with brilliant color, and glittering with glam our and pageantry." The traditional time-honored elements so dear to circus-goers, the emissary from Spangleland continues, have been revitalized by "refreshing novelties and in novations, a smartness of pre sentation, and a swiftness of pace that attune the circus to the spirit of present-day living. On the star-spangled program are such stellar features as Jbr gen M. Christiansen, Europe's foremost master of equitation, presenting his internationally re nowned Argentine Criollo horses, and Winston's Equestrian Sea Lions, which perform incredible feats of balance on horseback, Add to these the Seven Sky rocketing Escalantes, exemplify ing the poetry of motion in the air; Senorita Esterita, daring ex ponent of reckless heel-and-toe catches on the high swinging trapeze; the Sensational De Wavne and Bell-Thazer troupes of whirlwind acrobats, tumblers and risley experts; the Four Ace vados and Orton Trio, equilib rists and wire performers; Maree and' Her Pals, White's leaping Greyhounds, the world's only troupe of trained Great Dane dogs; and Congo, gargan tuan African ape, not to mention the clowns. Indians, elephants and scores of other features, In keeping with the times, the circus opens with a grand pa triotic spectacle, "United for Victory." Friday night's performance Is The old-fashioned steel-wheel ed wagon will return to the na tion's farms because of the rub ber shortage. Production of combines requiring rubber tires ends July 31. Production for 1943 will be limited to steel wheeled equipment. . While the government is mak ing a search for new taxes, we're still looking for the old ones. Anyway, it's better to get out on the wrong side of the .bed than sleep all day. Alter much easting about, Holly wood directors decided Jngrid Berg man (above) will play the role of Maria to Tor Whom the Bell Toll." Ingrid, hair cut short. Is on location In the Sierra, Nevada. She replace Vera Zorlna, originally named Jor the part. REAL MABKSMAK ELKHART, Ind. UP) Nljjr watchman Adam Krsider sharpshooting performance on Indiana's opening day of squir rel season should be warning enough for marauder! to detour around the plant ha tends. Adam shot five shells, killed five squirrels! Dealer shortages put new value on used merchandise. 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