. HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON May 18, 1941 , AGE FOUR .jMtmbtr of . Tp Auocutu Pnm ' Tht' Atiodaroa PrcH If ttclB ' alrrrr. intlllH to lha uit of tf- : eutjlk-atioa of alt nrwi dl.patchtt 'wwHffd to ! or not otlienrht prr-dittd in thli paper, md alio llit 1(11, newt oublLfird thereto. 'ill rlihli of KpuhlmtKa ol pedal dlipktAttea ara alio rc . tarred. I'-. M : .4 '';', 'KKAKK JENKINS "' Editor today's Roundup By MALCOLM EPLEY !j l-UVfJf'JLE .delinquency continue to worry (; J the older, generation, no doubt as It has from jthc beginning of time. : ) Wo. an imagine a night back some time In the dim ages' with a group of cave men and women, squat- ting about a fire, shaking their heads over .the antics of . the $ your-.-ters who were kicking ', - up their heels in those days even as they are today. .'. . ' - T Acf . annt a Hofentfct at. 3 titude toward 'fa through those I ' EPLEY and by and large, turned out 1 to be decent and worthy men and women. 1 That may be due, in part, to the fact that . jthe older generation does do a little worrying labout them, and docs undertake various meas ures to keep them on the right path. As was remarked at a meeting on juvenile delinquency here this week, we never know how much good we; do, because the statistical measuring ,4s always applied to the delinquents. There is iio way of knowing how many would have been delinquents if no effort had been made to pro ' Vide wholesome surroundings, entertainment or pother activities for the young people. ,. But we think it is a safe presumption that ifiost of our. youngsters are going to be all right, ieven including many of those who seem defin itely on the wrong track in their current .adolescence.! .- ........ i Av'few years ago there was a lot of talk about the soft and worthless Jtlon which, if .-put to the crucial test, would welfare agencies, a health -unit, a boys' club, .surely fail to measure up. Well, the test has ;s0me,-and; it is the cruel and acid test of war. These same youngsters are now fighting our t 'battles for us with courage, skill, resourceful ?ness.nd' honor. ews Behind the News Br PAUL MALLON ASHINGTON. May 13 Mud, more than ' exhaustion, is still holdirie back both tides in Russia. Yet 'it is only a matter of the reds and nazis will be at their respective throats again on the eastern Bt V sufficiently for ations by the end' of May or the first of June. ' ' The southern , TgiMVhich Hitler, has persistently " b d " JiMnk maintained , east of the Kerch ' P0"? exmed Vate. KS K.r,itj, ohvinne1v. hp ,.0 ' Tripoli. straits, obviouslv ,j , MALLON his spring or summer cam !paignwnulda be directed towards retrieving ::Caucasus oil, but perhaps too obviously. He ;(tri(Sd for that oft. 'once and failed. , The bridgehead does not actually, afford inv Jpqrtant military advantage for .jin that direction, as the bulk Uroops Wfould have to come : route pa' Rostov' in; any 'event, . j Far mord-likely it is that Hitler, will .strive clean-up. the : to deliver a knock-out blow , directly . at the Sicily and Crete) run anywhere from weeks !ovJetv " he could get Leningrad orJioscow, to months. Some commentators are even say .forj stance j, to cou d not .only retrieve lost ..ing that Hitler's last stand in Africa delayed prestige, but strike at the heart of soviet mili- the institution of a second front by six months tary power. - . . . . . . to a year. The southern front and the bridgehead across ; jthc' Kerch'could .be maintained to divert the jRussians from time to time and prevent them irom-.cpnceiitrating all their strength to meet Jhis expected blows in the' north. " The southern front involves great distances ' while a blow at Leningrad and Moscow would f-equire a much smaller concentration of force. ' ' -'- 'i" . . jFronco Peoce Pjea ; fTHB common . assumption that Franco wait I ' ' speaking1 for Hitler In pleading for peace is not .necessarily so; Hitler knows very well ho crUd -not. get any ; acceptable terms from anyohUnder; -existing conditions, and is hardly so tujjid as toj ask; ' ' ' : . : .. ' t r But' peace is essential to. Franco. Unless he fafjijjrtfne; based on, something like the exist h)g Jti'tus qu6 in. Europe,7; he is going to have f ..hlcey, little revolution on his hands. And he V.-IJ not get any help this time, at least not on then scale, he . obtained formerly from Hitler, st)inr'fuhrer will need everything he has and H-Hr. ' ' ' . V, wmmmmmm Vu&tM'ilMIS i !:;iMJifilJ;lr:;:f.f'TlMll,tTiij,i'M 1 from the Klamath Republican ' I ..'r;.My J4, )903 , , t The ('following baseball team has been' selected -to-represent Klamath Falls: T. O. Kinney, catcher; Jesse Hanks, pitcher; C. "Martin, first' base; C. I. Robertsi second base; Harry Ben son, Itfyrdbase; Albert Stahlman, shortstop;.' AI Sloan, right field; Fred JSclialiock, center field; Bert WHhrow, left field. ., , ; i ' ' . - . ---:; .'( ! Four smallpox cases are reported- In, Klamath Falls. The ; :'V-v '",. - " A femporiry eumhtnttmi f tht KTcntnf timid io Ui Klamath New. Pubtlr-beil every afternoon mil Mtinda.t t Eaplanid and Tint trecta, Klamath Flt Oregon, brth ll-iM 1'ut'lUlilni Co. And tht Klamath Kv PublUhlDg CeuipWJ Knttred iwd dau tnntUr at tha poatofhoe of Klamath Kalla. Or., oa Auguit to, IK under act of coafrfta, March I, llift. VI , .TIT. I our . youth, let critical periods, younger genera- city and county more, to meet obligations. hlmself and- Nazi Price ' days now until front. - The ground -on the . central' and meVd f te,r northern fronts generally-firms UV? ,t! fi;nal military pper- ou "r can. - tip bridgehead'. has suetrested inother -blow i Z?mZ7T TL"," T" r of iT:trrmt " around the land . needed respite w'wiara .as Klamath House is - under-quarantine. From the Klamath News Mar 14, J933 ' Sergeant Keith Ambrose of the state police arrived today to take over duties of Sereeant R. D. Davis, who will be away from ! his headquarters here on a two- weeks' vacation trip. 1 I Balmier May days have ar-1 rived at last, but good weather j lovers are still expressing their disgust over conditions here the past few weeks. One of our automotive indus tries turning out war vehicles has developed satisfactory sub stitutes resulting In savings per 100,000 vehicles of 5,000,000 pounds of rubber, 1,200,000 pound) of nickel, 800,000 pounds of copper, 200,000 pounds of chrome, 125,000 pounds of latex and 70,000 pounds of tin. 3m6r o Audit " Ri'mau Or CiacrtATiojt KcprtaaotH Nationally by Wmt-Hollidat Co., Inc. 8mi Fr unci ww, Nw York. S attla, Chicv ivrtlaud, Um Anialta. MALCOLM KPLEY Symptom of the Times THE. current flurry over juvenile delinquency is a symptom- of the rimes. The war is a vast and unsettling influence on all humanity. There is something haywire in the world when millions of men are engaged in the bloody business of killing millions of others. All life becomes upset under such abnormal conditions. At a meeting of local people Wednesday night at which juvenile delinquency was the topic of discussion, Dwlght French of the high school hit the nail squarely on the head when he said that the best solution of all Is to win the war as quickly as possible and restore peace and normal living to the world and to our youth. In the meantime, there is a vast need for the acceptance of greater responsibility by parents. It is absurd to expect local organizations, the police agencies, social workers, etc., to take over the supervision and entertainment of all the youth in the community. But sometimes, it looks as if that Is what parents are expecting them to do. The "khaki - wacky"girl seems to be the chief worry at the present time. Accoiding to the stories told at these meetings, girls from 11 to 15 years of age are running around at all hours- of the night on weekends with visiting soldiers. - I These youngsters ought to be kept at home, 1 and most parents could do it if they would. We Do a Lot KLAMATH FALLS, we believe, Is doing as much as any community, and far more than most, for Its youth. Youth help has been the purpose behind various local projects for many years, and these have increased in number. We have good schools, active Camp Fire, Girl Scout and Boy Scout organizations, church groups, social juvenile and recreation officers, a recreation program, and a good many other things designed to keep boys and girls on the "right side of the fence." This is a good time to put increased vigor and planning into all of these activities. his own forthcoming military . Franco, therefore was probably speaking forj not very confidently. for Time THE nazi Northern Tunisia army surrendered 25,000 men to us. About 80,000 more were bottled, on the Cap Bon peninsula. - Around ,110,000 Germans and Italians surrendered or 'Romme1' "treat from Tripoli sVges ?f tne d"Ye- l V i sala 10 n8ve abandoned' a uoiciiuuua ' uimy - vi uu,uuu or more men, leaving them-.virtually . without hope or air cover, to die or surrender without even making a bid to save them, although a continuing op- for weeks at and after It is clear Hitler left this army to perish obviously in order to buy time. The desperate price he paid is proof enough of the urgency of . his need' to perfect his defenses In Europe against a second front. - The enthusiasm of most military men at our for the next stage of the. fight. to now long it will take us to Mediterranean (Corsica. Sardinia oucn conclusions are not abcurate. The size of the force we. landed in Africa last Novem ber 8 was only enough to overcome expected vigorous French resistance. It was not large enough to conquer Tunisia In a hurry If the Germans determined to make any show of re sistanceand they did, to the utmost. Lewis' Victory JOHN L. LEWIS, far from being a chastened young errant is chuckling and chortling to himself about the predicament into which he has forced the coal strike situation (friends who have been around him during the negotiations in New York have reported on their return here). . , He is pleased with himself, expects to come out on top,-did not "object" to the government taking the mines indeed, may have Mr. Roose velt and Ickes keep them for the duration. If he decides to resist any WLB decision, it will obviously be to his advantage to keep working for the government rather than take an unacceptable agreement with the operators. Motor Vehicle Registration Drops SALEM, May 13 fT) There were 382,507 motor vehicles reg istered in Oregon on May 1, com pared with 388,039 on May 1, 1942 Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell Jr. said today, Truck registration increased from 36,671 to 37,548, while private passenger cars dropped from 316,808 to 310,329. - Bus registration increased from 658 to 1008. We do not want soothing syrup. We want to be treated as grown-up, free men and women. When there Is tough meat to chew, we are sorry, but do not fool us. Let us have it to sink our teeth into, and we will work all the harder. We will buy twice as many bonds, not half as many. Rep. Walter H. Judd of Minnesota. SIDE GLANCES i - iilTB MP, lui by Ntk ftrcvu-r in? t m. aro. u. a. "These veueltibles from our just wonderful! But if the der if we'd liuve room in our 50,000 Books a Day . . . That's how many copies of Wendell Willkie's new book, One World, are selling every 24 hours. It means, conservatively, that each day the book has 150, 000 more readers. Within a year the majority of the literate popu lation of the country may have read One World. It will have tre mendous Influence, for its mes sage is powerfully convincing. - The reason for bringing the subject up here is two-fold, Mr. Willkie announced the other day that he nlnnnpri in onrlw wl.if fn the Pacific northwest, to i-vnlnre1 I the industries and talk to the plain people of the region. That! mpnn. nf m,,r thni- ho'ii r i- to the woods. The second thing ts one small Item in the chapter on the Snvief "Rennhlin nf Vo. kutsk In One World. It relates to post-war timber trade. Most Americans, it's a good bet, did not even know there was a Remihlir nf ValmUlf until Mr Willkie wrote It up so graphical-! ly.' ."Likewise, right now most: Americans do not know that 1 there is a Douglas fir region in1 the United States. I rather doubt' if Mr. Willkie himself, wonder-; fully Informed though he is, has; much specific knowledge of the; importance of the 26 million! acres of Douglas fir forest In thej American economy, the part it1 will be called upon to play in j post-war housing and other con- struction, and in post-war foreign trade. World Problems It Timber Trade . . . A provincial American like myself, with most of fifty years of life bounded by the Douglas fir forest, Is given to cogitate by the quotation in One World from the remarks of Mr. Muratov. president of the Council of Peo ple's Commissars of the Yahutsk Autonomous Soviet Socialist Re public on prospects for forest i exports, He cited to Mr. Willkie a cut In 1942 of four million cubic meters, against annual growth of 88 million cubic meters. He spoke of America's post-war need for wood and wood pulp and the need of Yakutsk for American machines, and said Bombs Away! "! 1 v h " I I it t ks fa r "-45 t3!r 4t 5 t f' American-sent bombs, indicated by arrotf, head for the airfield on Nip held Nauru Island In the South Pacific during a recent raid by U. a. four-motored Liberator bombers. Orounded Jnp planes, circled, can be seen along the runway. Near the lower left circle are unharmed hospital . buildings. Official U. 8. Army Air Force photo. pat. orr. imnlen arc wondcrf u dctir. wur hisls much lonner I wot yurd for a little livestock?" "we'll be glad to swap." . That prospect threatens to col lide with the fact that four-fifths of the populous coastal region of the Pacific northwest is the best timberland on earth and fit for little beside timber growing; and the fact that the region's future must depend heavily upon ex port timber trade So the ques tion of how tho world timber market will be settled between Yahutsk and the Douglas fir re gion shapes up as a worrisome thing. Forest Crops Mull B Sold . . The twenty-fold excess of an- "UDl, growth over annual cut in. the iorests oI Yahutsk brings up ic poini or loresiry, mr. ! Commissar Muratov was cer- re meant enormous waste me roi- tin "nd, tne BTeater part of him "public s annual forest crop. We nDve th? 58016 Vtoblom, in many f5as of U!L 11 nUlo acres of i Old-grOWth DOUglBS fir. Recently four logs, over 10, feet in diameter and totaling 84 i feet In length, were taken from one fir tree. The rest of the tree, j U6 lineal feet, was left in the! woods rotten from old ageJ inere were many aeaa-topped trees in the same area. Good business demands the1 cutting of such timber stands in! the commercial forest before I more of the wood crop goes to ! waste. Forestry also demands it. ! so that the soil can be put to growing trees again. There must be stable markets for forest products to pay for the removal of over-ripe trees from timber land and for the growing and protection of new timber crops. Mr. Muratov faces that fact just as much under the soviet system as we do under the American system. How can the people of the for est corner of this country and the people of Yakutsk deal with that fact In harmony, so as to build up forest production, forest employ ment and forestry In two great forest regions of the "one world of tomorrow? Mr. Willkie, will you examine this question while you are our welcome guest in this neck of the woods? to Jap Airfield f ' ' 4 or 'f v ' ; ro; 1rflmM i , f i "IS ''71 TUNISIAN II FAVORS BULLISH STOCK MARKET By VICTOR EUBANK NEW YORK, May 13 (P) A number of odds-on favorites did relatively well in today's stock market competition but many leaders were left at the post or finished In the losing field. Buying and selling timidity was pronounced throughout and small fractional variations either way ruled near tho close. Transfers wero around 1,000, 000 shares. On tho sldo of the bulls was tho great Tunisian victory, grow ing idle investment funds and assorted hopeful business Items, Some potential purchasers, how ever, stood asldo to await de velopments In connection with the war strategy conferences at Washington. Thoughts of cur tailed expansion of armament production facilities also actnd as a curb on sentiment. Among laggards were Bethle hem, American Telephone, Gen- oral Motors, Douglas Aircraft American Smelting. Dow Chenv leal and Oliver Farm.' Resistant wero N. Y. Central, Southern Railway, Great Northern. East man Kodak, Warner Brothers. Texas uo. and Woolworth. Western Union and Postul Tel egraph Preferred jumped more than a point In tho morning on announcement of a merger agreement had been signed but both eventually retreated. Bonds were mixed. Closing quotations: American Can 83 Am Car Sc Fdy 384 Am Tel & Tel 152 Anaconda 289 Calif Packing 27 Cat Tractor 451 Comm'nw'lth & Sou ... 1 General Electric 37 General Motors . Gt Nor Ry pfd Illinois Central Int Harvester ............... sia 311 15 661 32i 22 42 11 18! Kennecott ......... Lockfleed ..." Montgomery Ward Nash-Kelv N Y Central Northern Pacific 17 Pac Gas & El 271 Packard Motor 4i Pcnna R R 31 Republic Steel 174 Safeway Stores .. 30 i Scars Roebuck 701 Southern Pacific 28i Standard Brands 74 Sunshine Mining 61 Tran-Amer!ca 8J un'on on Lam .... 191 " -.".- I Warner Pictures 141 Telling The Editor UttOT prlfHM Iwn) mill nor M mort than IM marm M I truth, mat t wm tm lifblr on ONt IIOI ol lh papor onlf, antf im1 bo otrmt Contribution! rolloataf Umm rulM, vt warmly wot. REMEMBER . KLAMATH FALLS, (To the Editor): Remember our boys In service, Each and every day, That they are out. for victory, And for victory they will stay. Remember our boys In service, Keep their needs on their way. Come folks, let's do our best, For we know that it will pay. Remember our boys in service And for them let us pray; Our prayers for them I know will help, So will a Bond in May. MRS. L. R, SIMS. Yamsay, Ore. Western Union, Postal to Merge NEW YORK, May 13 (VP) r.xecuuves of the Western Union Telegraph company and tho Postal Telegraph company an nounced today conditions for the consolidation, of the two big wire companies, made possible by recent congressional action. Albert N. Williams, president of Western Union, and Edwin F. Chinlund, chairman of Pos tal, disclosed In a joint state ment that under terms of tho agreement, Western Union would acquire all the assets of Postal and assume liabilities and obligations of the Postal com pany, including the amount owed at the time of closing the agreement by Postal to the re construction finance corpora tion. The merger is to become effective on or before next Oc tober 1. Brazil abolished slavery in 1888. It was the last country in the western hemisphere to pass abolition laws. ' iTCHING, IURNINC, Perspiring Feet? Go to any druegkt today and rot an oHtlnaj bottto) of Moono't Emerald Oil. Dont worry (Ma powerful ponotrellrtg oM bringa auch HH and comfort ftiet you'll bo abaa to so about your work aeatn, happy and without that amott unboorablo ach- Rub on Emarald Oil fmlahfroaolv. H dm nor Main to aconomkaT. Monoy back If net oatUAod, Good drunMa avar rVrtwrai V-HOME A V-Homt coniervti health, your family'i health It precioui ond valuable to tht Nation. Guard it cart fully at part of your duty at a participant In thii total war. Conservation li one lemtnt of tht Offici of Civilian Detente V-Homt pledge. Aik your Air Raid Warden or Block Leader about the other four, Mote yourt a V-Homel LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO, May 13 (AP-USDA) Cnttlo! 25. Nominal; medl u m to good steers, heifers and range cows absent; few 740 11). feeder steers $13.23; common cows $10.00 aown, cutters Stf.UO, ennners $7.00-8.00; medium bulls $11.00 12.00. Calves 13. Steady. Hogs; 423. Fully 10c lower; bulk good 200-240 lb. bnrrows and gilts $13.10-23; odd good sows $14.00. Sheep: 60. Nominal; good to choice woolcd lambs $13.00-30; medium to choice No. 1 shorn ewes $0.00-7.00. PORTLAND, May 13 (AP USDA) Cattle: suliible 123, to tal 290; calves: salable 23, totul 35; market active, fully steady; few good 950 lb. fed steers $16.00; good 700 lb. slockers Into Wednesday $14.73; few common-medium steers $13.00 73; common medium heifers $10.30-12.50; canncr and cutter cows $7.50-0.50; fat dairy type cows $10.00-11.25; medium-good bulls $12.30-14.23; good-choice vcftlcrs $15.50-10.50. Hogs: salable 400; total 600; market activo; steady; good Cholco 180-225 lb. $13.00 to mostly $13.23; 240-263 lb, $14.50-75; light lights $14.00' 50; good cows $13.23-75; good 120-140 lb. feeder pigs $14.50 15.00; choice light weights quot able to $17.50. Sheep: salable 200, total 300; old crop lambs slow, weak; other classes scarce; few good spring lambs unsold, held above $13.00; common shorn old crop lambs $0.50-10.00; medium-good ewes $3.00-6.00, - : ' CHICAGO, Moy 13 (AP USDA) Salablo hogs 11,000; to tal 20,000; opened steady to 10 lower than Wcdnesdoy s aver ages; closed slow at full decline; early top $14.60; bulk good and cholco 180-330 lbs. $14(33-05; generally $14.00-50; good and cholco 150-180 lbs. largely $13i75-$14.40; most good 360 350 lbs. sows $14.10-35. Salable cattlo 5500; snlable calves 700; choice fed steers and yearlings weak; medium to good grades predominated and sold weak to 25 lower; general mar ket alow; best yearlings $16.23 heifers steady to weak; bulk $13.73-$16.00; average choice kinds topped at $16.26; cows steady with strictly good weighty cows up to $14.00; most medium to good kinds $12.00' $13.25; cutters $10.50 down. Salable sheep 9000; total 12,' BOO; lato Wednesday fut lambs activo steady; good to choice 83- 98 lbs. woolcd lambs $15.50 $16.00; good to cholco 86-00 lbs. fed western clipped lambs with No. 1 and 2 skins $14.50-$15.25; two doubles cholco 05 lbs. weights No. 1 skins or fall shorn $15.50; sheep very uneven; shorn native ewes $8.00 down to pack ors; few to outsiders upwnrd to $8.30 and above; today's trnrlo fat lambs slow opening sales mostly steady; good to choice wooled lambs 15.50-$16.00; best held higher; medium throwout wooled offerings $14.00; only odd head spring lambs available; few head choice 71 lbs. spring lambs '$16.00; nothing dono on clipped lambs; talking around $14.76-$18.00; undertone on sheep about steady. From where Joe Almost everybody' figuring what thlngs'll bo like after the war. I talked about that today with Job Crowcll. Job-he's a veteran of the last Wor-naya: "One thing's sura, .Too. The boys this time won't return and find what wo caino buck to," Then he went on to mention Prohibition . . . and I ought to say right here that Job's a man of moderation ... a glims of beer or two 1b nil ho'll over take. It was the prlnclplo of tho thing that bothered him. No. 60 of a Scrim VESTIGES . Portland Produce hHiTUMt. orr.. Mi t) (AP)--ht'r TKIlAA (limit, -Htj cartoin, 6iUei A irtl i.rliili, flUioi caittitti, tici H irmU (.rltili. Mr Hi. 1 lit TlKIUAT- Klr.l qulltv, mittimim r.f .6 tif Mill Ht'l'IM), iphrrrt In ,h(. I ami, Jjaa-jjO h,j itirinhllii fit) II t)r. hit lit mum rtf ,i tt I ir ei,l nchUly, uuti lb. 1 VAliry rti( tttxt tMiliitr (itiU. Iff ) liu (lrl, tir W'-jp; crm jtiltjr hut. U1.1I, cc timlrf (itii t,r W Aayc, rilKKsK-Jiflittisf vttm t.i isirllim) r Ullrrat tlf.iit (rlt'lflt, fe M. !)(, m It. UM'I't la VMr.tvri, tH lb.) loW, infv r u.ii, KtJtff- Nuinlml nrlm rrUlltri; & irailit, Urtc, ju.'i It Utt I1. Wo; A inrilium. .i.c; (i ttir.iltim. Sir; A null. OOn .irn. NiifUlnnl wlrr la V'xUt?t ; A Uup, H Urgr, 94a; A iiiviliuin, Uo II ut'itltim, Mr. I.IVK ltl,TltV-ltu;lnf prWn Ko. I tri liharn broiltfi, up In t., 10 mlorril ttyct. umUr I'i lo ( lb., Mc rt)lt.fr rtiilri, nvrr I Itn., iwj IVsjitorn lini, umler m Ihi,, Wyri ntr lb. H-t ntl'trf-it ht-n. 4 to I b.( W'Vi o!4 rtMittrri. IlLjr. IiltrHSKIl TtrHKKYH- Lfelllnf prki rtiuntrr tlrcitfil Urn; itarhtrt itH lirn. Vo. I, &Act CAihrnrrjri Urt otr to Itn., He, ekertf. HAttlirrR-Outfftimtil r-lilnl fttfkw rounlrjr lllleil to r(lkr4 H lb. v prlt In nrHttirr, tie lb. UNtuNi tlrrtn, TOU0 An$. Or tm H17, IJ li W ill, ban: nrw M-04 yrll't. 13 TS per 80 h. It. lOTATOK-Nrw T 14. WM W ao lh. bc; n CiitArnU wblt. H renUl. ttc1 it. b' 014 u1 loch-rath ad ertf prlcl So. t. U ttV ISO Solb. ba; loo I. Hn. f II.U-I.M flb. bag; l.vcal. No. 1. UM tynUl. (OtiNTHY MKATfW (Klllnt prlt r taller! eounlry klllr4 bo, bl bUhrmv I JO-HO Ibi., lOo; ViftUfl, AA, ft A- tie) n. fillet C. ti4ei I, l4 Ih.j onif cultff ftiwi (new rolling). 11 u,, fnw filln, Ha lb. j lmti, A A, ff A. tttHr; II. HV: C. n'tft lM, Tt IJUf! tnfilhim. Me 1 R. tte h. A V Wboleltj prUcui: Alfalf. Vo. 1 or batter. il (V); So. , Ml Inn; Mt vKlrh, M 00 30 no tun. villoy pnlnU; oiby (yUy. Itsoa; An MonUn. tM.iaV jm tm 1 doTcr, lift.MJU.fl0 ! Potatoes CHICAGO, May IS (A USDA) Potatoes, arrivals on track 32; total US shipment 642; new stock supplies very light; demand good; market firm at celling; old stock no sales reported; Alabama 100 lba sack Bliss Triumphs US No. 1, $3.82-$4.20; Louisiana 100 lbs. sack Bliss Triumphs generally good quality $4.28-30; California 100 lbs. sack Long Whites US No. 1, $4.44-80. WHEAT CHICAGO, May 13 W Grains dropped about a cent at times today, wheat and oats moving to new lows for the past three weeks or longer, as steady selling uncovered a scarcity qW bids. Somo stop loss orders wcrW touched off, accelerating the de cline. Wheat closed 1.11 lower. May $1,431-1, July $1,418-1, corn was unchanged at ceilings, May $1.05, oats were off 1-1 1 and rye drop ped Mi. B08TON WOOL BOSTON, May 13 (AP-USDA) Shipments of consigned wools to Boston are beginning to arrive in volumo for appraisal. Pur chasing of low grade wool 36s to 40s for speculative purposes in Buenos Aires was recorded at an f.o.b grease price of 11 cents. Our symbol for pound, lb., is a contraction of the Roman word for pound, libra. I sit... MarsJb "Passing a law Behind on backs," ho says, "was vlolatln Jnst what we wero flghtln' for. Tho vory principles we fought for in 1776. Law-makln' without representation Is one of tho most undemocratic things wo can do." I guess we're nil agreed on that. Most folks admit we mad. n mlstoko once ... but the boy. who nro fighting this war con bt pretty miro wo won't pull any thing Ilk that again! E o CopyritHil9i3, Brewing Industry Foundation