May 8, 104S HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGB TVTELV1 Top Food Prices For Local Stores To Be Announced Top prices anr t or to tha Klamath Falls area may charge, beginning Monday, May 10. 194!, tor nearly half the food Mam i that go into tti housewife1! market basket, were announced today by Edward Ostendorf, diatrlot director of the Klamath rails OPA, Stores must plainly port their selling prices for those Hemi. The complete text of the order will be published In the Klamath News-Herald on Monday, May 10. Copies are being mailed to all local food stores In the area today. . The OPA action, taken simultaneously in more thao 190 Hies throughout the nation as a major step In the drive to "hold the line" of the cost of living, will not alter the general level of present ceilings but will enable1 the housewife to know In the simplest terms possible the max imum amount which a food store may charge her under any cir cumstances for a pound, a pack age, or a dozen of any of the hundreds of food items listed. As a result, housewives will find reductions in those prices which have exceeded the ceil ings. Week by week the district office will establish similar over all ceilings until virtually every essential item in the family food budget is listed. Highlights of the OPA action are: (1) A top price is specified for brands, grades, sizes or contain er types of the listed products. The price is the present maxi mum at which small indepen dent stores have been permitted to sell these particular items. . (2) Large-volume stores, hav ing lower ceilings under present regulations, must continue to ob serve their present ceilings and will not be permitted to use the top prices listed today. , (3) A special staff of OPA price investigators will be as signed exclusively to checking stores whose ceilings are below the new top prices to make cer tain that their lower ceilings are observed. (4) All retail food stores must plainly mark their ceiling price for all items on the new list. Tho selling prices must appear on the item itself or on the shelf or bin where the food is displayed. ' (5) Top prices apply through the following area: The city lim its of Klamath Falls, and any tores located on highways lead ing out of Klamath Falls as far south as, and including, Weyer haeuser; as far east as, and in cluding, the Lakeview junction, and as far north as, and includ ing, the Pelican Bay Lumber company. (6) Outside this area, stores will remain under their present ceiling prices. The area, how ever, may later be enlarged. Tvnical toD nrices follow: . Royal Club Natural grapefruit Juice, No. 3, 17c; Del Monte grapefruit, No. 2, 16c; Sanka cof iee, 41o; Wadham's coffee, 37 Maxwell House coffee, 38c; Del Monte red salmon, 1 lb., SOc; White Star tuna, i, 21c, i, 39c; Wesson oil, pints, 33c; Mazola, pints, 37c; Crlsco, 1 pound, 26c; Boyal Satin, one pound, 24c; SiV verleaf lard, one pound, 45c; Sklppy, one pound, 48c; Royal Club, half pound, 22c; Carnation milk, tall cans, 11c; Carnation quick oats, three pounds, 27c; Al ber's Corn Flakes, 11 ounce, 9c; Post Toasties, 11 ounce, 10c; Drifted Snow flour, 49 pound, $2.85; Swansdown cake flour, four pounds, 32c; Albert flap jack mix, 2s pound, 25c; 92 score butter, one pound parchment, 56c; quarter pound parchment, 15c. "These simplified prices repre sent a goal toward which OPA has been working for months," Mr. Ostendorf explained. "The new list of ceilings are the up per limits under regulations which have been in effect for a number of months. In some in stances, they are the ceilings of the GMPR which has been in ef fect nearly a year. Any rollback which may be worked out to lower prices of a number of sta ple foods In line with an earl ier announcement of Price Ad ministrator Brown will cut prices below the newly listed tops. Besides the products listed today, foods already under spe- cifia dollars and cents maxl' mums at retail are pork pro ducts, for which every meat store, without exception, must disnlay an official UfA poster showing its ceiling prices for in dividual pork cuts. Similar prices on beef, veal, lamb and mutton and soap will be an nounced within a week. The list of top prices was worked out in the district OPA office operating under a wide grant of authority from Wash ington. For most products, the ceilings were determined by ap plying to the cost of merchan dise the maximum mark-up per mitted under existing regula tions. Eggs were not included in the list because they are for the most part currently selling for as much as ten cents below the ceilings. The list of top prices applies only to retail stores. General Drovision of price regulations applying to retail sales remain in force. Stores which have custo marily given sales receipts or slips to their customers musi continue to do so. In addition, regardless of store practice, any customer who requests a receipt must be given one showing the date of sale, the name and ad dress of the store, the custom er's name, each food item sold, and the price charged for each. To protect the customer against indirect price rises by forced purchase of unwanted merchandise in order to obtain food under community-wide ceil ings, the provision is set out that the seller "must not, as a condi tion of selling any food, require a customer o Duy anyming else." Mr. Ostendorf stressed the im portance of this new "Market Basket" price regulation. House wives are urged to clip the table of prices from the paper, which will be printed Monday, May xv, 1943. The complete text of the price order will be published in the News-Herald, along with the table of prices set to-date, Mon day, May 10, 1943. EAGLE'S PRESIDENT Jack Henry was elected presi dent of the Klamath Falls aerie. Fraternal Order of Eagles, at the annual election of officers field Friday night. Others named were J. G. Bal- thazor, vice president; Sid Her bert, chaplain; Walter Uppen- dahl, conductor; Andy Meek, sec retary; Alfred Dooiey, treasurer; A. Baker, three-year trustee; M. M. Pernell, Inner guard; Sam Aekerman, outer guard; Dr. Wayne McAtee, lodge physician. Courthouse Records ' Justice Court Robert Blind. Assault and bat tery. Charge dismissed on mo tion of complaining witness. $5.95 costs paid. Alvls Roy Smith. Sodomy. Bound over to grand jury. $5000 cash ball, committed. Helen Hazel Paulson. Failure to procure operator's license. Fined $5.50. fig rjjwyet8; enlist ' ber 1 vssb ftagai fifty IW HAWAII Robert O. Lyman, son of Mrs. Mary Ann Lyman of this city, is in the Hawaiian isl ands. HOD IS IB old and enlisted Decem ber 14, 1942. On completing his basio training at San Diego, he was sent im mediately to Oahu for fur ther training. He writes his mother and friends that Ha waii is very beautiful. In his last letter, he said he expects to be shipped soon to "parts un known." He Is a former student of KUHS. To his mother. Bob sent this Mother's Day verse: MOTHER I know you're waiting, mother, For what I have to say, It's that I love you, darling, And my letter's on it's way. I'm many miles across the sea Yes, I am far away, But every night l Kneel me aown And this is what I pray: God bless my darling mother Protect her till the day When I come marching home again The winner of the fray. All my love, BOB. HELD FOR PEYTON Memorial services for the late Oscar Peyton, well known Klamath Falls business man who died Friday in Portland, will be held in the chapel of the Earl Whitlock Funeral home Monday afternoon, May 10, at 3 o'clock. A reader from the First Church of Christ Scientist, will officiate. Friends are invited to attend. Honorary pall bear ers will be Ed Ostendorf, Elbert S. Veatch, R. R. Macartney Sr., H. D. Mortenson, R. C. Groes beck, J. Royal Shaw, Henry E.- Perkins, H. E. Roskamp, Burge Mason Sr., and Paul O. Landry. . Final rites will ba held In Portland. Wallace To Speak At Mother's Day Program at Eagles The annual Mother's Day pro gram arranged by the Eagles lodge will be given in the new hall at Ninth street and Walnut avenue, Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The public is invited. Senator Lew Wallace of Port land will be the speaker of the day. Also present will be Bob Voorhees of Portland, state sec retary of the Eagles lodge. Mrs. Lucille Rugge has been named Mother of the Day. All mothers of World War 1 and 2, will be honored on this day. - Insure your independence with a Bond. Hans Norland In surance. 118 N. 7th. DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT ARMORY Muilo by Baldy's Band Dancing 9 Till 1 Admission! Woman, lie Tax 9 Total 20e Men, SOc Tax 9c, Total 99c Service Men, SOc, Tax So Total S5a Notice 044, Carbonated Beverage Bottle Deposits Starting Monday, May 10, the deposit on all carbonated bev erage eases and bottles will be 70c per ease. This step ts made necessary by the glass shortage and the re cent freeze of all pine stock, used for bottle cases. Nehi Bottling Co. Crater Lake Beverage Co. N CL i 1 17 V H VNx V i f i fTT;. t, j y i Im j 1 r f ;' . His First Gift. . . Each year Mother's Day will mean more to. him. As the toddler .grows into the boy, and the boy grows to the man, his tie of utter dependency wi II become an instinct to lighten mother's burdens We want him to eat lots of our enriched bread, and cjrow up big and strong like daddy.. We want mother to depend on Fluhrer's for her baking; to use our slenderizing (but vita min rich) breads -- we want her. to stay young and beauti- . ' iul '':.'.v r. . To those of us whose business 1$ serving mothers, this day means much. Our bakery business, first, is built on taking the 'drudgery of baking day .out of mother's life. More than . that,: it is built on providing scientifically balanced ingredi ents,' to be made into breads and pastries in our modern bakery.:We are keeping at the job. u KLAMATH'S FINEST BAKERY