Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, March 25, 1943, Page 11, Image 11

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    March 26, 1043
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
PAGE ELEVEN
CLASSIFIED
ADS
42 MUcollimaoui Wanted
WANTED TO I1UY Qood troll
r house. Call 283 Fort Klam
ath utter B p. m. -2l
44 Livestock and Poultry
fVuuXKrLJ'Ll u is nfwv ''"' T
t WANTED Live poultry of nil
kinds. Alio eggs. Martin iro
due. Phone 8372. 6-17
SEE US before soiling your llve
dock to no-culled shippers. We
need cottlo nnd hogs lioro t
1 homo nd it win pay you to
soil dlroct to in. Pauley Pack-
I ln Co. Phono H323; nights
i 8505. Top hogs $1.10 under
f Sin Francisco. 1358tf
.Wanted to buy a auern-
I ley or Jersey heifer, 0 months
I or oldsr, or small milk cow.
1 Phono 8031 ((tor 6 p. m. 3-27
POULTHYMEN
For Poultry Litter wo have:
Billed Straw
Cedar Shaving!
Serval Can Litter
' Pent Moti
PEOPLE'S WAREHOUSE
2040tf
DAIRYMEN: Use Security Calf
Food and tell all of your milk.
People'! Warehouse. 20411
FOR SALE Guernsey bull, 15
month! old. B. L, Dodenhoff,
Morrill, Ore, 3-25
FOR SALE Durham cow.
Freshen In April, Rt. 2, Box
4011. So, (Ith. 3-20
FOR SALE 6 gal. Jersey cow,
(roan in a fw day!, Quartor
mile louth Mac's store on Mcr
,Q rill highway. L, A. Went. 3-27
FOR SALE Milk iTraln Roan
Durham bull, 3 yean old. T.
O. Wheeler. Telephone 0212,
Merrill. Ore. 3-27
48
Financial
First Federal Has
Plenty of Money
Buy i Modern Home
Refinance Your Old Home
Pay Lcs Than Rent
Long Tcrmi ! Low Rate
FIRST FEDERAL
SAVINGS and LOAN
Assoc. of Klamath Falls
Sixth and Main Phone BIDS
331m
LOANS
Established 8 Years in
Klamath County
Furniture Loans
Signature Loans
Livestock Loans
$25 to $300 .
Rogers Finance Co.
S-189
411 Main Dial 8113
3-3 lm
See
Lawrence Leochner
For
AUTO LOANS
PERSONAL LOANS
FURNITURE LOANS
Simple Credit Requirements
Complete Privacy
Qt 12 Months to Pay
Quick Service
No Co-Sluncrs ,
Locally Owned
Motor Investment Co.
K. A. Moore, Mgr.
M-275 S-241
114 N. 7th Phone 3328
3-31m
Portland
Produce
PORTI.ANn, Or., March tft (Ai'KMIT.
TRRAA irad) prlnti, ' filt, oirtoni,
A arntl prlii I A, liU'i our ton i, Mot
It rMa prlnti, Ala lb.
nUTTUnrAT-Klrit quality, maximum of
.6 of I par ent acidity, dellvprixi Id rort
land, MflSHo lb.) premium qunllty. mixl
mum of M of 1 per ont tehflty, ft.i-MHo
pJli.l vlly rout nnd country point, h
jru thin flnt or fiO'-ioi Mconrl quality U
Torilind, to uurfor flnt or 60-f.oiio,
CUKKHK Delllni price to Portlnnd r
Uilam Oregon trlploti, SOo Iht lour. BOA Ihf
trlpim to wholiialen a?o bj loaf, 7Uc
v.o.n.
KQflB Nominal prlcB to ratnllnnt A 1art
4loi l lara. 400) A medium, aOoj B m.
dlum, arc j A mall, flio dri,
KOOfl-Komlnal prtca to producrt A
law, 9di R Urn, Cloi A mtdlum, &70 D
mMltim. Sin dm,
T.IVB PODI.TnV-Ruylnt priori! No. 1
Kridn Tfthorn lirollftn. 1U to : lh., Sftoi
onlfirad frr'ra tinder 6 lhn.. Wat Tm si
to 4 Hi., flOot colored roantfra, over 4 lbi
Hftoi lahorn fina, undar U lha., unci twr
m,. fiAot fwlord lmna, 4 to B ll Mot
over a lb., tflni No, B Rrada hna. to Iimi
Wjn'ta, iftn IfMt rrtfintfr in 1o ll.
KTHtftflRf) TUHKRYR - RHHltu prlflMi
Country driad hna, fM-Mflj parWra atortta
hw. No. t, ai'ni maIi onrry, taiga toma
ovr M lh JMo cnnh-narry.
nAfinTfl-.novArnmfnt crtllnor t Ararat
ountry VI1M, to ratnllora, 44a lb. llva
prica to producara, tto tb.
QUICK WELCOME
RELIEF FOR
UPSET STOMACH
hi 3 Minutes or Double Your Money Back
'l.nom ATUAAT TABLETS oonl.ln lha fry
lngdlanlf ao oitan uatd brdontota (o btlnoj
Sulak waloon itlial ftom eld-lndlgaiMon
littaia oauiad hy asoaM alnmaah aoldtlr
llai aallna or difnklng. Dalloloua laallnal
aay In taka. No boMlat no mising. For won
darhil blaaaad fallal from axoaaa aald aullar
Ira, ity lamona STUART TAHIKTS wllhoiil
olalar. Al all drug atoraa 3So, eOo and $1.90
1 udH akM'. omr.baok suaranla
Market l aw& fyin&MXMd
CENTERS ON
By VICTOH EUBANK
NEW YOHK, March 25 7PJ
Buying power centered on rails
and Industrials In today's slock
market, one i ' tho broadest and
liveliest of tho your, and many
favorites ascended to peaks for
1043 or longer with gains of frac
tions to 2 or more points.
Brokers said a revival of bull
ishness was due partly to hope
fulness of Investors over congres
sional trendj, further efforts to
bout threatened Influtlon, tho do
sire to got Idle fundi working
and confidence regarding ulti
mate war developments.
Steels, rubbers, amusements,
mull orders, alrcrafts, air trans
ports and coppers led the proces
sion. Utilities were listless.
Transfers were around 2,000,000
shares.
Conspicuous on the swing
were U. S. Steel, Bethlehem,
Youngstown Sheet, Goodyear, U,
8. Rubber, Goodrich, Warner
Bros., Paramount, Twentieth
Century-Fox, Loew's, Scars Roe
buck, Santa Ko, Southern Hull-
way, Che.sapcnko & Ohio, Amer
ican Smelting, Phelps Dndito,
Standard Oil of Ind., Dupont,
Wcstlnghoutio, Douglas Aircraft,
American Airlines and Alle
ghany Preforred.
Rails maintained strength In
the bond department.
Closing quotations:
American Con ... 78J
Am Cor & Fdy . 33i
Am Tel & Tel 142
Anaconda 201
Calif Packing 281
Cat Tractor .... 64 i
Comm'nw'lth & Sou I
Genoral Electric ,. 35S
General Motors 4IH
Gt Nor Ry pfd 20
Illinois Central 121
lnt Harvester 05J
Kcnnecott 331
Long-Bell "A" 1)1
Montgomery Ward 33H
Nah-Kclv 01
N Y Central 14
Northern Pacific Hi
Pac Gus i El 28
Packard Motor ... 4 k
Pcnna R R 20J
Republic Steel 171
Richfield Oil 04
Safeway Sloros 361
Scars Roebuck 67
Southern Pacific . 21 i
Standard Brands 61
Sunshlno Mining 04
Trons-Amcrlca 7i
Union Oil Calif lot
Union Pacific 01
U S Steel ..: SSI
Warner 'Pictures Ill
Pierre Dorion, who settled
on the James river in 1775, was
the first white resident of
South Dakota.
INDUSTRIALS
TcOVA DRINK at fS
i jt1 ilffl jPp" 11 S l I I ml SUTCOIA MINK
Aka Movm SYKUP I iac wmi'w'wiM l
(jmf, V It LARGE GLASSES
PiT J" WarKlffCMOliraAat
. SMolf ' Lomonddo 1 mado at homo'
iuOl irT I 0ee d9 a homo
uJKISUbmI'"'' Tea i made ot homo
JUST ADD WATER AND SERVE ( j
L Xr aimsM. rooo himiti, MLWA-rtaitN ren,
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO,
March 2B (AP-USDA) CAT
TLE: Salable 15; nominal; modl
um to good steers, heifers, and
rungs cows scarce; fow common
cows $10.00-60; cutters $0.00-60;
dinners $8.00-50; medium to
good bulls $12.00 13.00. Calves
none; nominal; good to choice
voulors quoted $14.60-$15.60,
HOGS: Salable ISO; steady;
few packages 200-225 lb. bar
rows and gilts f 18.25; odd good
sows $10.00.
SHEEP: Salable none; nomi
nal; good to . choice wooled
lambs, quoted $14.60 f 15.B0;
medium to choice wooled awes
$a.oo-$o.oo. '
PORTLAND, Ore., March 28
(AP-USDA) CATTLE: Salable
and total, 125; calves salable 25,
total 40; market active, steady,
many cows 25c higher; bulls
fully 25c above Monday; few
good 800 lb. steers $15.50; good
choico 060 lbs. $18.00; odd me
dium heifers $13.50; good fed
heifers quotable $14.50, and
above; canner and cutter cows
$7.25-0.25; fat dairy type cows
$0.50-11.00, medium-good beef
cows $11.80-13.25; medium good
bulls $12.60-14.00, odd head
$14.25; good-choice vealers
$18.50-16.60; common-medium
calves $10.00-14.00.
HOGS: Salable 300, total 450;
market rather slow, unevenly
10-25c lower; good choice around
100-225 lbs. largely $16.00; few
lots $16.15-25; some late bids
down to $15.78; 230-325 lbs.
$15.23-30; light lights $15.25-60;
good 3;iS-530 lb. sow steady at
$14.25-75; feeder pigs scarce,
choice lightweight salable
$17.00 18.00.
SHEEP: Salable and total 60;
market nominal; good-choice fed
lambs quotable to $15.75; or
ubove; fow common lambs un
sold: good to choico ewes salable
$8.00-5.00.
CHICAGO. March 25 (AP-
USDA) Suloble hogs 9000; total
18,000; active, mostly strong to
10 higher than Wednesday's av
oroges; with "spots 15 up; top
$13.60; good and choice 180-360
lbs. $13.60-80; including numer
ous loads at $16.70 and $15.75;
most 160-180 lbs. averages
$14.60-$16.60; bulk good 360-560
lbs. sows $15,35-60; extreme
cnoice $16.65.
Salable cattle 5000; salable
calves 800; fed steers and year
lings along with fed heifors fully
steady; killing quality medium
to good; eastern order buyers de
mand broad; nothing strictly
clio ice hero; top steers $17.35;
bulk $14.75 $16.80; very liberal
supply $14.75-515.76; choice
weighty h elf era $16.50; bulk
$1J.73-$13.S0; cows slow; steady;
supply very small; weighty cut
lers $11.00 downward; strictly
good beef cows to $14.50; bulls
weak to 25 lower; practical top
weighty sausage bulls $14.73;
vculcrs steady at $16.00-$17.50;
stock cattle firm. .
Salable sheep 5000; total 10,-
000; late Wednesday fat lambs
slow; steady to 10 lower; good to
choice wooled Iambi 88-109 lbs,
$16.00-50; top $10.68; best na
tives $16.40; three doubles clip
ped lambs unsold; few with No.
1 skins $10.78; sheep steady to
strong; good native ewes $0.00-
26; practical top quotable $0.60
or better on choice offerings; to
day's trade-fat lambs weak; IS
lower; fairly active at decline;
good to choice wooled lambs
$1600-80; best held higher; dou
ble fed western clipped offer
ings with No. 1 and 2 skins
$16.65; look 20 lower than Tues
day's; sheep undertone about
steady; talking $0,00-25 on good
native ewes; deck good 72 lbs.
shearing lambs $14.78.
WHEAT
CHICAGO, March 25 UP)
Grains slumped today In re
sponse to reiteration by Price
Administrator Prentiss Brown of
his opposition to farm bills now
before congress which, he said,
would raise the retail price of
foods between 17 and IB per
cent.
Rye was under most pressure
dropping more than a cent at
times, as fairly heavy liquidation
from leading commission houses
entered the pit Early gains In
wheat and oats were erased on
moderate selling. All markets
lacked buying demand.
Selling pressure Increased In
the final minutes and wheat
closed li-llc lower, May $1,441
1.441, July $1.45-1.441, corn was
unchanged at ceilings, May $1.01,
oats dropped l-lc and rye lost
1I-2C.
BOSTON WOOL
BOSTON, March 28 (AP-
USDA) Early shorn southern
California wools bulk fine with
some half-blood was purchased
at a dolivered-east clean price
of $1.10-1.12 today. Good top
making fine Australian wools to
arrive sold at an out-of-bond
clean price range of $1.09-1.10
Montevideo wools ranging in
grade from quarter-blood to fine
medium sold aa toon as shipped
at an out-of-bond grease price
of 39 cent.
Colorado Governor ,
Haiti Induction
Of Farm Worker
DENVER, March 25 W) Gov
ernor John C. Vivian ordered to
day an Immediate halt to the in
duction of Colorado farm work
ers into the armed forces.
The governor, who recently
has asserted that Colorado war
crop goals could not be attained
unless workers were permitted
to stay on, the farms, announced
his action In letter to Brig.
Gen. Harold H. Richardson, state
director of selective service.
P L E S
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED
NO PAIN - NO HOSPITALIZATION
No Lota) of Tlma
Parma nant RmuIiiI
DR. E. M. MARSHA
OhlroDrietle Phvtielan '
tn Ma, nti - laejulr Theatrt Bidg.
7CII
moiv
taw wmaavea THiat nm '
Four-H News
ALTAMONT BREAKFAST
CLUB
Our 4-H Club cooking I, was
organized rather late in the year
but Is getting along very well
now. We are In breakfast meats
and sandwiches.
Our leader Is Mrs. Bowne. We
have our meetings every Thurs
day at Altamont Junior high
school. The only person that
has left so far In our club is
Dorothy Bryant who moved
away.
We are planning to finish our
work by the middle of April so
that we can show our achieve
ments. News Reporter, Peggy McCoy.
CHILOQUIN COOKING CLUB
Our meeting was called to or
der at 3:05. We then had roll
call and everyone answered a
name of a fruit grown in Oregon.
Then we had songs and yells.
The minutes of the last meeting
were read and there wasn't any
old or new business.. .
Our leader, Marion Doty is
offering a prize for the one who
first completes his work.
News Reporter, Joan Barnes.
BONANZA 4-H SEWING CLUB
At one of our earlier sewing
club meetings we chose "The
Busy Bees" as our club name
and elected the following of
ficers: Erlene Brown, president;
Ruth Brown, vice president;
Marjorle Multin, secretary; Llla
Drlscoll, news reporter; Helen
Gavan, sergeant-at-arms, and
Mrs. Drlscoll Is our advisor.
We held a party at the first
of the year, everyone enjoyed
the games and refreshments.
We have concluded that our
community fair shall be held
about April 15.
News Reporter, Lila Drlscoll.
HAZARDS OF WAR
FORT CUSTER, Mich (IP)
Pvt. Robert E. Graham of Sagi
naw, Mich., hasn't been out of
the United. States, but for 24
hours he was listed as a battle
casualty. He suffered a should
er injury while helping unload
casualties sent to Percy -Jones
hospital and was written up with
the returning wounded and as
signed a bed. He was No. 13 in
the list of Michigan casualties
until the error was discovered.
ONE-WAY TRIP
NORWICH, Conn. UP) C. A.
Gager applied to the office of
defense transportation for a sup
plemental gasoline ration to
drive from Norwich to Detroit
and return. "
He was told he would have
to be sure of a load both ways
for each trip of his vehicle.
Gager gave up. He's an un
dertaker and his vehicle is a
hearse.
CHEESE
Crater Lake,
Full Cream
Lb
38c
BISQUICK
Large 4E.
Package WaC
OLD DUTCH
CLEANSER
3 cans
for
23c
PEANUT BUTTER
Skippy, n.
Mb. jar OVC
PEANUT BUTTER
Garden, m
Mb. Jar 30C
COLA SYRUP
Makes delicious Cola
drinks,
12-os. bottle.. OC
KERR
FRUIT JARS
QUARTS . . . 89c
PINTS . .... 69c
. Corning
GLASS
TUMBLERS
Set of t
glasses ....
33c
LUX FLAKES
L,T 23e
package "v'1
LUX TOILET
SOAP
3 Bar, 20C
April Canned Food Ration
Stamps Become Valid Today
Br IRVING PERLMETER
WASHINGTON, March 25 UP)
April's canned goods ration
stamps became valid today, but
housewives are expected to hold
them for another week because
of strong hint from OPA that
their value will be increased
next month.
Future plans were kept secret,
but top officials who refused to
be quoted by name implied that
some reduction in the point val
ues of many types of processed
fruits and vegetables could be
expected, effective April 1.
Movement Drops
(A further indication of this
came from a statement of the
American institute of food dis
tribution at New York that
movement to market of impor
tant canned vegetables had drop
ped 60 to 95 per cent under
point rationing,
(Blaming newness of the sys
tem and "unnecessarily high
point values," the institute said
in Its earners' market report that
"this fault (high point values)
will be righted partly by reduc
tion of several point values by
April 1, and later by wholesale
revision of these values on May
1.")
April coupons were made val
id on March 25 to help persons
who come to the end of the
month with insufficient March
S Fry y . I
BLITZ-WEI N HARD COMPANY
run I LARD.
Eill'S
Points Price
7 TOMATO SAUCE, Standby
734j-oz. tin 5c
10 PINEAPPLE, Dole Tidbits or
crushed, 211 tin 17e
8 ASPARAGUS, Royal Club,
All Green Picnic tin ....21c
10 BEETS, Royal Club Sliced No. 2 tin ..15c
11 SPINACH, Fancy Royal Club,
No. 2 tin 15e
7 PINEAPPLE, Dole Crushed,
Buffet tin He
13 TOMATOES, Royal Club,
15'j-ox. tin 13e
8 FIGS, Fancy Royal Club,
No. 1 tall tin ..15e
Ground Round Lb 32c
Boneless Beef Stew,-
Lb. MC
Hamburger ...... 2 Lbt. 45c
Pork Sausage ... Lb. 25c
Dill Pickles 3 lor 10c
Peanut Butter . .. Lb, 25c
SPERRY'S Pancake and Waffle Flour
9.8 Lb. Bag 59
Large Eggs, Grade A's Dos. 36
Kraut, with Pimlento, 32-ox. glass jar 19
Pet Milk, tall tin 10
Dill Pickles, C.H.B 54-os. jar 35
Ripe Olives, Stradford Inn Tall tin 25
Black Figs 12-os. Pkg. 20
Apple Butter, Libby's ..32-oi. jar 27
Royal Club Strawberry Preserves..2-lb. jar 63
SUPER MARKET
8th and Pine Ph. 3167
stamps to meet essential needs,
or with odd numbers on March
points that won't stretch.
New Table Ready
A new table of fruit and veg
etable point values is expected
to be made public over the week
end. Between this and the meat,
cheese and fat and oil point val
ues, which become effective next
Monday, ho-iseholders will get a
new idea of wartime eating with
their No. 2 ration books.
While it may be proitable to
hold April canned goods stamps
for a week, officials reminded
that the March stamps must be
spent by midnight of next Wed
nesday or they will become
worthless. The March stamps are
the blue A, B and C stamps. The
April issue is the blue D, E and
F stamps.
The red meat - fat oil - cheese
stamps become valid in alphabet
ical order at the start of each
week, beginning with the A
stamps next Monday. Once valid,
the stamps continue to be usable
through the entire month of
April. Thus the A stamps are
good for a week, but they can be
saved and used, if the household
er desires, throughout the
month.
Alaska Is separated from
Soviet Russia by a strip of wat
ed only 34 miles wide.
-A
OREGON
The
Has
Points Price
13 PEAS, Libby't Garden, 17-01. tin ..15c
21 APRICOTS, Libby's No. Vx tin ......27c
14 BEANS, Royal Club No. 2 tin..........!9e
14 BEANS, Lane County No. 2 tin.......-15e
14 CORN, Diamond A No. 2 tin ..........17c
10 GRAPEFRUIT, Meco No. 2 tin 15c
16 UKELELE PINEAPPLE, No. 2 tin ....23c
48 SEEDLESS RAISINS, 4-lb. pkg 48e
32 DOLE PINEAPPLE JUICE, 46-oz 39c
1 BABY FOODS, Gerber'i
Strained, 4Vi-oi. can 7e
8 CATSUP, Monitor, 12-ox. bottle ....lie
10 GRAPEFRUIT, Royal Club
Fancy, No. 2 tin 18c
Onions ?rNo?iuw lbs. 43c
Grapefruit
Extra Fancy 99a
Texas Pink, Large Sise .... 3 for
Oranges ifu 2 .590
Grapefruit LBrg. Ar. 9c-
Tree Ripened, 70 Sixe 5 for .WW
Potatoes s80.2' $1.39
Artichokes JS'T 29c
SAVE YOUR RATION POINTS
A Surprising Variety of Unratloned Foods
Milk. Swift's ... .Case $4.47
. 3 cans ,.. 28
Vanilla or Lemon, Schillings, 2 oi. bottle.. ..33
4-ox.. bottle .....i ...63
Baking Powder, Schillings, 12-os. ...1.............39
Grapenuts 2 Pkgs. 25
Flour, Swansdown ........................49 lbs. $2.09
Rita Crackers, large pkg.
STORE NO. 2
1338 Ore. Ave. Ph. 4714
'2200
1 The March 31 deadline for
Oregon farmers to file applica
tions for payment earned under
the soil building or wheat phas
es of last year's agricultural pro
gram, will be met 100 per cent
by Klamath county farmers, It
was learned here today from C.
A. Henderson, agricultural
agent.
. Up to Thursday noon Hender
son said that "practically 99
plus" was the report on applica
tions and only a few remained
to file, these expected to do so
before Saturday. Approximately
1400 farms have been involved
In the filing. ,
Throughout the state It wai
learned that 27,138 farmers have
applied with an estimated 1000
more still due. '
HEARD THE
LATEST?
wo&'sGRO-PUP
IS NOW IN
MEAL FORM
7001
. rM Feed AwsrcM Seal
ef Approval bj AoMrkaa '
Vetsrkuri Msdleal and Ankaal
Hospital AssocistMtit
ADE from the mu fa
mous OKO-rOP formula
that has made ribbon form
ofo-pdp a favorite In thou
sands ef home. It providM
grown dogs and puppiM with
awry known mineral and vita
min needad for growth and
vigor. Experts indorse it; dogs
love itl Economical, alaol
bona fad directed is all you
need buy to feed the average
six dog one full weak!- Now
available at your grocer aa
both meal and ribbon form.
IDE IT
Foods
22
STORE NO. 3
S. 6th A Ph. 8875
: creek yS
-