Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 10, 1943, Page 8, Image 8

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    Mnrch 10, 1943
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE NINE
Market I and fyl
ST
T
By VICTOR EUBANK
NEW YOKK, March 10 (!')
Stocks today oxtondod Tuesday's
downward curve Lut the market
received good support nt the low
er levels mid volume taiulod to
diminish on tha decline.
Leaders rrglslorod lusitos rung
lull from fraction! to around a
julnt.
Itrokors reported a moderate
niounl oi telling to provmo
fundi for tnxaii dun March IS.
Transfers approximated 000,
0U0 shares.
Johns-Manvllle, Hurvejter and
Caterpl' r Tractor were down
about a point each at the worst
and Eastman Koduk dipped 2 or
so. Lesser declines wore shown
by U. 8. Steel, Ucthlchom, Gen
eral Motors, Chrysler, Philip
Morrli, American Telephone,
S.indard I (N. J ), :!ant Ke.
Pennsylvania, Great Northern
and Baltimore and Ohio.
Bath Iron Works and N. Y.
Shipbuilding rose to new hlglu
for the year along with Texas
and Pacific Railway. Tex us com
pany and Savage Arms likewise
Improved.
Bonds steadied utter early Ir
regularity. Closing quotations:
American Can 78
Am Car& Kdy 32
ni Tel & Tel Hlii
luroncU 2H
Packing 2M
Cat Tractor 40e
Comm'nw'lth A: Sou I
General Electric 35
Genrral Motor 481
Gl Nor Ry pfd 2B
Illinois Central 10
Int Harvester 64
Kennecott - 32
Lockheed 211
Long-Bell "A" 81
Montgomery Ward 364
Nash-Kelv 8i
N Y Central He
Puc Gu t El 28i
Packard Motor 31
Penna R R 201
J. C. Penney 834
Richfield Oil 81
Safeway Store 381
Sears Roebuck 64 1
Southern Pacific 20
Standard Brands 81
Sunshine Mining St
Trans-America ,.. 8
Diion Oil Calif 181
Union Pacific 80
U S Steel 83 1
Warner Pictures 8i
BOSTON WOOL
BOSTON, March JO (Ar
USDA) Domestic wools were
very quiet in the Boston market
today. Purchases of good mo
hair, both tli o r n and to be
shorn, were reported from
Texas at country prices of 83-
85 cent for adults and 78 cents
for kid hair. Imports of wool
finer than 68's from Argentina
were restricted.
OPA Extends Date
Of Chicken Prices
SAN FRANCISCO, March 10
if) Tho regional OPA has an
Qiunced extension beyond the
original expirotion date of
March 15 of an order establish
ing special prices at wholesale
levels for locally-produced broil
ers and fryers.
The office said it was expect
ed that the order, applying in
California, Washington, Oregon,"
Nevada and Arizona, would re
main in effect indefinitely un
til a new national price schedule
i formulated.
Approximately 60 per cent of
the visitors to Yollowstone Na
tional park are women.
r
I Farmers
YV NOTICE!
THE MINNEAPOLIS
MOLINE IMPLEMENT
BUSINESS
formerly operated by Joe
Zumpfe at Tulelake hat
been purchased by
Byron Johnson
and It now located
, t the
STANDARD
Service Station
at
MAUN
Phone 173 Malin
Oil Off
MARKET
HAS
GQODSUPPDR
WHEAT
CHICAGO, Murch 10 (?) In
terest luggud In the gruln pit to
duy and prices declined moclor
atuly In rather slow trade.
Wheat wot down ubout I cent at
ouo time, but steadied and re
covered on commission house
buying. Other grains followed
the broad cereul.
Traders said there wos some
selling of wheal hero against
purchases ul Minneapolis, whero
tin) market was steady. Hedge
telling whs only moderate with
reports from tha southwest Indi
cating less gruln Is being re
deemed from tho government
loan us a result of recent price
declines.
Wheal closed i-lc lowor. May
S1.4Me-i, July S1.4UM, corn was
unchanged at ceilings, May
$1.00, outs declined t-ic and rye
was unchanged to ic higher.
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN KRANCISCO,
March 10 (APFSMN) CAT
TLE; Sulublo 25. Strong; me
dium to good steers, heifers, and
rnngo cows absent, lurgcly near
by she-stock run, fow common
cows $10.00-10.50, cunners most
ly $8.00-8.50; medium bulls
quoted $11.50-12.30. Calves 10.
Mcudy; good to choice voalcrs
$14.00-15.00.
HOGS: Salable 450. Mostly
30-40 cents lower; one load Ora
tions $18.00 extrcmo top, bulk
220-240 lb. California $18.75-
15. DO; good sows $14.75.
SHEEP; Soluble none. Under
tone fully stcudy; good to choice
wnoled lambs quoted $14.60 to
$15.30; medium to choice ewes
quoted $8,00 0.00.
PORTLAND, Ore., March 10
(AP-USDA) CATTLE: Sulublo
and total 100; culves, salobla and
total 23; market active, steady;
few medium steers $13.50-14 75;
go.d fed steers quotable to
$15.75; or above; odd medium
heifers at $13.00; cutter to com
mon heifers $0.00-11.00; csnner
and cutter cows $7.25-9.25; shelly
cows downward to $6.00; fat
dairy type cows $0.30-10.50;
heavy heifers to $11.00; medium
beof cows $11.50; medium to
fairly good bulls $11.80-12.78;
strictly good bulls quotable to
$13.80; good and choice vealers
$15.50-16.50.
HOGS: Salable 300; total 500;
market active, steady to 15 cents
higher; good to choice 180-230
lbs., $16.00-13; one selected lot
$16.25; 240-300 lbs.. $13.50-75
llght-llghLn mostly $15.23; good
sows $14.50-78; smooth sows to
$15.00; good 110-155 lb. feeders
$18.28-16.00; good 67 lb. $16.80;
choice solablo to $17.28.
SHEEP: Salable 80; total 300;
murket steady, but mostly nomi
nal; fow good wooled lambs
$13.00; medium grudes $14.00;
common salable down to $10.00;
good ewes salable $7.78-8.25.
CHICAGO, March 10 (AP
USDA Salable hogs 14,000;
total 20,000; slow, lew small lota
early around 25 lowor at $15.80
60; extreme top $18.60; later
trade generally 35-S0c off; bulk
good and choice 180-330 lbs.
$15.25-40; somo 150-180 lbs. av
erages $14.50-19.25; bulk good
360-550 lbs. sows $15.00-35.
Salable cattle 0500; salable
calves 800; strictly choice fed
steers and pearlings steady; oth
ers weak to IB lower improved
killing quality considered; good
and choice steers predominated
in run; early top $17.28 with
$17.40 bid; bulk $14.60-16.78;
heifers steady. Best around
$15.75; with mixed steers and
heifers up to $16.50; cows fully
steady; cutters $10.80 down;
strictly good heavy fat cows
$14.00; bulls active; firm to
a:i ii!o iMii) i
oHSJWo,mtt,NJu:
THIS MAKES TO SEVENTH SWEATED
SOMETIMES t WOHOERc
DOtft LIKE THESE FINE
shade higher; with $14.80 paid
freoly on weighty sausage offer
ings; vealers firm ut $16.00-17.50.
Soluhlo snoop 6000; total 8000;
Into Tucsduy fat lambs fairly
active; steady to strong; top
$16.75 on strictly choice 07-104
lbs, fed westerns; bulk good and
choice $16.00-30; medium and
good 70 to around 100 lbs. lambs
with No. 1 skins and fall shorn
$15.00-15.68; yearlings absent;
sheep scarco and steady; toduy
trade no early salos fat lambs
or sheep; fat lumb undertone
weak to lower; talking around
$16.00-80; on good to strictly
choice wooled offerings; best
held considerably higher; under
tone about steady on sheep.
Basketball Players
Get "Chicken Feed"
For Scrap Drive
MERRILL Basketball boys
and those who assisted with col
lection of scrap Iron were feted
at a "chicken feed" in the high
school recently, hostesses being
members of the Girls Athletic
association.
Thirty-five tons of scrap gafn
ercd early In the winter will
provide funds for purchase of
athletic equipment usually fi
nanced by the annual school car
nival which was dispensed with
this your. Merrill high school
is co-operating in the natlon-wldo
plan for a better physical educa
tion program to prepore boys of
high school age for military fit
ness. Victory Garden
Club Started by
Merrill Four-H
MERRILL Boys and girls of
Merrill ore going In for a Vic-
tory garden club in a big way.
pledging a summer of hard work
to add their bit to the winning
of the war. Plans for the garden
club project gol under way at
a meeting attended by Clifford
Jenkins, Klamath county 4-H
club leader; Mr. Allen, state 4-H
club director; Mrs. Wlnnlfred
Glllen, home demonstration lead
er for this county: and Professor
R. G. Hyslop of the department
of agriculture, Oregon State col
lege. William Wahlert, employed at
the Merrill mill, volunteered to
direct activities of the club and
those who sign up for member
ship will be eligible for free
seeds from Murphey's Seed store
In Klamath Falls.
Jenkins will meet Friday with
the prospective gardeners to
complete arrangements for the
program.
Tulelake Students
Have Bond Contest
TULELAKE Tulelake high
school students are taking the
hurdles of the war bond buying
contest between classes in leaps
and bounds. The total sales for
February alone mounted toW,
929.78. Leading the parade are the
sophomores with $8288.90. Sec
ond In line are the juniors with
$3917.74. The freshmen are in
third place with S261S.73 and
the seniors trail with $2110.75.
The less lome people have on
their minds the more they seem
to want to talk it off.
P I LE $
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALISATION
No Ue. ol Time
Permenent Reeultol
OR. E. M. MARSHA
Chiropractic PhyoldM
m Hi, Ilk - acquire Ttnetrc tits
Phew IMS
IE OUR ROYS
FOODS BETTER
? . BUNDLES r-s
DEDICATES FLAG
NEW PINE CREEK The
knotty-pine walls of the East
Sldo grungo hull bulged with a
record crowd at the public pro
gram dedicating tho community
service flug here lust Friday eve
ning. The program In which the
children from the three schools,
Willow Ranch, State Line and
Kelly Creek took part, followed
tho regular grange meeting.
The flug, which is made of red
and white silk-woolen material,
bears 50 bluo sturs sewn on the
central white background in a
double-line V shape, with a bar
of stars at cither end and "one
gold stor directly over the V.
Gold fringe adorns tho bottom
of the flag in a scalloped design.
The gold star stands for Pvt.
Roy Steward, of the remount
service, who was killed while In
training when a horse fell with
him at Fort Reno, Oklahoma
The program consisted of the
following numbers:
Song, "Star Spangled Ban'
ner," audience; skit, by the State
Lino school, "We're 'Hoops'
About America"; recitation, "For
Want of a Nail." by Neil Perry;
Song, "Just a Bit of Cloth." by
Elsie Turpin, Evelyn Cundlff and
Donna Rcld, who also played the
accompaniment; recitation,
"Americans All," by Billy Dun
nigan; playlet, "Needle, Thread
and Jabber," Willow Ranch
school; recitation, "I'm Glad I'm
An American Girl," Donna Ham
mersley; recitation, "Let's Keep
Old Glory Flying," Jo Anne Har
ris; reading, "These Four Vir
tues," by Buna B. Faris; "The
Flag Speaks," by Kelly Creek
school; musical Interlude, Erma
danders; presentation of the
service flag, Wanda Lightle and
Ray Bishop; prayer, by chap
lain; song, "America," by audi
ence. Following the program was a
potluck supper.
It was decided at the meeting
that in keeping with the current
Red Cross drive, the grange
would give a Red Cross benefit
dance, March 20,
Always read the classified ads.
Wvr -fi; ami'
J jtt1- " '...t-liLi-aai I
rU ra II
hi J1
I 'ttfs.T
MARCH SERVICE
SPECIAL
STEAM CLEAN CHASSIS to
dirt accumulation
WASH CAR completely
VACUUM INTERIOR
ROAD-ACTION LUBRICATION
tidf Twaorrriftu
PACK and ADJUST FRONT WHEEL
BEARING
Dick B. Miller Co.
The Big Olds Tower at 7th and Klamath
Phone 4103
1 ,
Merrill Red Cross
Drive Needs More
Volunteer Workers
MERRILL--Volunteer work
ers to help in the Red Cross war
fund drive are urgently needed,
it is announced by E. E, Kilpat
rlck and Ucl Dillard, in charge
of the drive in the Merrill com
munity. More help can be used
In canvassing Merrill and rural
areas.
The drive opened with a
rousing start of $25 donated by
the Merrill volunteer fire depart
ment. Other Individual dona
tions of $1 to $10 have brought
in a total of $120 of the $600
quota.
A booth it open in the post
office where students will help
with the campaign and those in
charge are urging every individ
ual to give as much as possible
The need Is urgent.
Donations merit a membership
receipt, coat button, and window
sticker. Contribution! may also
be left at the Merrill branch,
First National Bank of America.
Tulelake Red Cross
Has Luncheon for
War Fund Workers
. TULELAKE Mrs. M. V. Max-
well was hostess Friday at a de
i lightfully planned luncheon for
I co-workers in the Red Cross war
fund drive who will canvas the
I Tulelake district in Modoc coun
I ty. The quota for this district
DANCE
EVERY
SATURDAY
NIGHT
ARMORY
Music by
Baldy's Band
Dancing 9 Till 1
Regular Admission
ifflMji
remove winter
i
sac
JS
r
4
00
I
I
war-:- -Vi-: w
is mat
Tr lici-li
Is $200 and those who are assist
ing ask co-operation of everyone
in an effort to put the quota over
the top.
Places at the table were
marked for Mrs. George Yost,
home service chairman of the
MUFFLIK
2.39
Lccd- Coated for
longer HfelFord '3 S
'3S. SsvettWtros,
BRAKI SHOE
2.49
Ready-lined for easy
installation. Ford
"37-38. Ezchangtl
FAN BELT
55c
Long-life Cable
Cord constructioa.
Ford'37.'4L
1
Install a Set of Ward
SPARK PLUGS o. 29c
Wirdg "Itandinf . , gtt tli lm
port in t fMttiTM ef national lyadvr
tiaatf plug at far lata cost I
KEEP A TUBE
REPAIR KIT HANDY 35c
I7tt cq. In. strip rubber, 16 Mr,
patch , bullcr, I tub, cement. -
turns Pitch, i-ply -lie
Lonny Frey Endorsed
Baseball Glove 2.29
Pult .Ire. Stursitr meve ft 994
luillty Tin HoreehlKel
V.unfctcra' Becebcll IM
Pro-Styled Baseball
Cap Reduced 35c
Reel rclciclcncl itrllns , , ctrcnf
murine its new wool, bilinn
i wed wool, Scvc newt
USE YOUR CREDIT . .
Any purchases totaling $10 er mor
will open a monthly payment account.
Tulelake district in Siskiyou
county, Mrs. Ted Johnson, Mrs.
Howard Dayton, Mrs. Roy Eas
ley, Mrs. Lester Vernon, Mrs.
Chester Main, Mrs. Sam Ander
son, Mrs. Dan Crawford, Mrs.
Marvin Thomas and the hostess.
ENJOY TROUBLE-FREE
CAR PERFORMANCE AGAIN
for Tori
"Renew" your car at Wards low price! Eliminate
expensive repairs . . . cut gas and oil expense. Wards
blocks are rebuilt from the ground up, by factory
experts . . . nor just repaired. This one has 112 new
parts, 52 factory renewed parts, 164 rebuilding
operations! Price is with trade-in motor good for
rebuilding. ' Available on Wards Time Payment
Plan. Blocks for other model cars low priced, tool
lawa
100 PURE PENNSYLVANIA 99
OIL CUT IN PRICE!
Yes, It's PENNSYLVANIA ... the same quality you'd pay up to 35c
qt. for at many service stations. Made from famous Bradford-Allegheny
crudes, the best in the world! Triple-filtered ... double
dewaxed for free-flowing, easy starting. The belt protection you
can give your engine ... the kind It needs to make it last-out the
duration. Bring your containers ... stock up at Wards sale price!
att!!s!!
STRIPED
"T" SHIRTS 98e
Mttffum walRht oottsn, tutor!!. In
irteti or him and whlta trips.
BUY WAR STAWPS1 ON SAIB
w
A lot of war workers have
gotten down to brass tacks and
found they are gold.
Horse meat Is healthy, so to
those who eat it more horse
power to youl
MONTOOMIRY WARD
132'
1 95
8 "35-'34
WARDS KWIK START
BATTERY REDUCED
6.55
GUARANTEED 24 MONTHSI
45 heavy-duty plates, 100 amp.
hr. capacity. Equal or belter
than most original equipment!
KWIK START 10N0 TYPI 8.55
OvaranrcMl 24 Months..
Heavy Weight Cotton
SWEAT SHIRT 1.10
Douhlt tit uri to Hon (!
tlnicf. Roomy cut for actlonl
"T" inirl, haavy cotton 7
AT
SEE THE CATALOG 3
In our catalog department far thetH
sands of values not In storo stocKs.