May 28, liMS HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON PAGE SKYEN Mcsikeh and incuuUcd MARKET SHORT COVERING HITS PROFIT TAKING By VICTOR EUBANK NEW YOHK, My KB (I') Short covering took the strliiK out of further profit cashing; In today's stock iniirkvt and, wlillo decllnvs were plentiful, assort ad favorites roached beat lavola or tha pint three yesrs, Blddlnit muhIii centered In 1)1 no chlpa ultlioiiKli a few low priced perfonnoiK wore lively without g o 1 1 1 n g anywhere. Prices gouorully were on the off aide In the forenoon. A flurry in Chrysler, which hot up 2 points after mid-day, steadied lip i ids appreciably. Transfers were around 1,000, 000 shares. UcsUlea Chrysler, stocks get ting In the "now high" category Included Montgomery Ward, Seuri lioobuck, Dow Chemical, Allied Chomlcnl and Johns-Man-vlllo. Closing quotations: American Can 62 Am Car & Kdy 44 Am Tel Se Tel 1541 Anaconda 2DK Calif Packing 271 Cat Tractor 4711 ' Comm'nw'lth & Sou 81 General Klectrlc 31)1 Unnoral Motors Bail at Nor Ky pfd 311 Illinois Central 101 Int 'Harvester OS Konnecott 321 Lockheed 221 Montgomery Ward 48 Nash-Kclv 12 N Y Central 181 Northern Paclflo 101 Pac Gas & El 28a Packard Motor 4 1 I'enna R rt 3H Jtopubllc Steel 18 Richfield Oil 101 Safeway Stores 401 Scnrs Roebuck ..... 701 Southern Paciflo 281 Standard Brands 7 Sunshine Mining II) Trans-America 0 Union Oil Cullf lul Union Pacific 00 U S Hlccl BS Warner Pictures 13 Tho .00 caliber aircraft ma chine gun, which used to cost $1000, Is now produced for $400, Kossll remains of ground (tloths as large as elephants have boon found. k, Digging Under at Malta n.i..iHk i.i-nj fApMi mnim Dl limn n i n 1 1 1 1 1 1 . ... . . glng under to protect her peoples and. machines of war from axla bombs. Here worker excavate rock for a bomb-proof underground workshop; These Sub Commanders Sank 250,000 Tons of Jap Shipping 1ttr11.lf. j,.(jt...u i m-nrrrrn w .yMtyf- ffr'-WS J. vj i i iiniiir" . . i . I x- - - a - ,g iZ 1. ' r iii vim. ii n Nnvv iih nkmnnra who collective y nave siin.1- ' - h'.uuw "'" ini niiinua, TZl IS at i Pearl Harto" or i May S3 In whleh thvey received awards from Pacific Fleet Comdr. In Chief ' t"r coreitionlea nt I oori rr "',mmo,lH, ' w n-,mo. Wmtmlnstar. Maim.: Ueut. Coraar, Potatoes ClllCACiO. May 28 (AP-US-DA) Potatoes, arrivals 81; on track 01; total US shipment! 1, 2B!I; supplies very light; demand moderate; market ateady at cell lug; Alabama 100 lb, sack Bliss Triumphs US No. 1, $3.03-4.18; Louisiana Rliss Triumphs US No. 1, $4.10; Mississippi Bliss Triumphs US No. 1, $4.0S; Cali fornia Long Whites US No. 1, 14.40-115; Commercial $4.26. WHEAT CHICAdO, May 28 (P) Ry rallied from the day'a lowi to day after declining about cent, but could not recoup all of the previously lost ground. Some local traders took to the buying Ida In much lighter trade than has characterized recent ses sions, Rome hedge selling appeared In September wheat and all con tracts of that grain weakened. There were reports of cashwheat being offered more freely In the southwest. Oats sank on commis sion house selling on the basis of fairly liberal imports of Ca nadian oats. At the close wheat was l-lc lower, July $1,431-1, Soptomber $1,441-1.44; corn was unchanged, July $1.08, oats were off l-lc and rye finished Ic lower to 1c higher. TO STATE COUNCIL SALEM, May 28 (P) Appoint ments to tho new stato apprent iceship council were announced today by Governor Earl Snell as follows: Carl Gorllngcr, Jr., of Dallac, Fred C. King of Portland and H. R. Kreltzor, Portland, em ployer members; Ralph Wag goner, Klamath Falls, C. W. Crary, Modford, and C. E. Hoi Mr, Portland, representatives of employes' groups. In addition to tho appointive members, tha commissioner of the bureau of labor, the execu tive official of tho stato board of education and tho chairman of the stala industrial accident com mission are to servo on tho coun cil. aerllnger and Waggoner are appointed for one-yoar terms, King and Crary for two years and Kreltzcr and Holzor for the three years. I IV. i t i v. -" In II. a tariltAi-rnninnta Rtlll dltf. ' f ' I . 1 - t I : .'.'. 'OL -J LIVESTOCK SOUTH 6AN FRANCISCO, May 28 (AP-08DA) Cattle: sal able none; nominal. For week, no test on good fed steers, me dium steers BOo down, mostly $13.00-14.00; rang heifer steady, quality plainer, feeders $13.00-13.78, range cowl weak to 25c lower, bulk $12.00-12.50, most common cows $0.00-6.60, canners and cutters 25c lower, largely $8.00-8.00; medium bulls $1.00-1.80 lower, extreme late top $11.50. Calves: none; nom inal. Hogs: salable 250. Around 15c lower; bulk good 200-240 lb. barrows and gilts $15.10, sorted IB per cent at $14.80; odd good tows $13.80, about 25c lower. Sheep: salable 400. Under tone steady; for week, lambs 25c lower, bulk $14.00-14.76; shorn ewes medium to choice quoted $5.00-6.00. PORTLAND, Or., May 28 (AP-USDA) Cattle: salable 10, ini.l lfto- calves 10 and 25: mar ket moatly nominal, no fed steers offered; medium-good salable $18.00-16.60; week'; top 16.85; week's top fed helfort $16.25; new high few light stock cows today $10.50; with calves at side at 14 BO: odd sood bulls $14.00; common down to $10.50; good- choice vealert $i5.oo-ie.ou. Hogs: salable 80, total 1000; mattered sales strong but ho full tost of merkot; few choice 190 lb. truck-lru $18.00; bulk 185 226 lbs. Thursday $14.78-85; choice light feeder pigs quot able to $17.75. Sheep: salable 50, total 1600; tattered sales steady, medium- nnH snrlnir lambs 114.00: food- cholce quotable to $15.00 and above; common old-crop iambs $10.00 lato Thursday; load gooa Itnrn ewe with No. 2 DC Its $6: sorted 50 per cent common-me dium $4.00, The North Portland livestock market will remain open Mon day. CHICAGO, May 28 (AP-USDA) Salable hogs 7000; total I4,uuu; opened fully steady with Thurs day s avorage; later trade active, 5e to mostly 10c up; top $14.40 rather freely: good and choice 180-380 lbs., $14.65-40; generally $14.25-40; good and choice ISO- 180 lbs, largely J13.doh.zo; bulk good 360-550 lb. sows $13.00 14-15. usually $14.00-10. Salable cattle 1500; salable calves 400; pre-hollday trade on most killing classes steady to weak; most fed steers $14.15- 16.00; best In load low $18.25; short load $18.50; heifers f.is.73 15.10; no strictly choice steers or heifers of ford; cutter cowl $10.50 down; bulk beef cows $11.00- 13.00; odd head good weighty of ferings $13.60; eastern shipper demand for bulls very narrow and some weighty bulla being taken off market, outside weighty sausage bulls $13.75; vealcrs $16.60-16.50, mostly $16.00; de mand for stock cattle continues active, especially 700-850 lb. thin offerings selling at $13.60-14.50. Salable sheep 4000; total 7000; lato Thursday: fat lambs fairly active; bulk all classes fully steady; sheep active; today's trade: fat lambs fairly active; fully steady with Thursday; good to choice fed western wooled lambs $15.76-16.25; good to choice fed western clipped lambs with No. 1 and 2 skins $14.80 16.28; odd small lota good to choice spring lambs, 76 lbs. $16.00; sheep steady; good to choice shorn native ewes $8.00- 8.50. Housewives protest against so much fat, gristle and bone being left on meat. The meal should be trimmed, not they. When the bill collector finds the lady of the house in, she's out. The original "Punch and Ju dy" show was written in 1600. ra; - Tornado Strikes 7? i'"K';ij:"-' y. ir . . . . ir. 1 " (NBA Radlo-TtUphoto) This Is what remained of the Port ftily, Kans., Cavalry replacement Center after a tornado swept through It on May 15. Forty-seven buildings were damaged, 21 completely destroyed and damage estimated at 178, 600. Ons hundred seventy persons were Injured, of which 3 were hospitalized. Photo from Port Riley Cav alry Replacement Training Center. Courthouse Records ATKINSON -CASTILLO. Evert LoRoy Atkinson, 22, soldier. Na tive ot Greer, Ida., resident of Klamath Falls. Otila Castillo, 20, sales clerk. Native of El Paso, Tex., resident ot Klamath falls. SPENCE-HARMON. Ell John son Spcncc, 42, farmer. Native of Virginia, resident of Klamath Falls. Myrtle Ann Harmon, 43, housewife. Native of Oklahoma, resident of Klamath Falls. Complaints Filed Daisy B. Wittle versus Nlch- lit fr'-"t4 li-tWt, i w ft , ' ' t f JrWi - t ' it A Memorial Day Metsagt to those Ameri cans who sometimes ask themselves: "Are we fighting each other or the Axis?" THE eve of Memorial Day somewhere on an American battlefront! An American boy and a letter from home. It sure is good to get mail. I wonder if Mom and Helen and Jack really know what it's like for those who are doing'the fighting the constant alert, the nearness of death, and those moments when fear creeps in fear which can be fought off only by reminding your self of everything that's at stake, and of the ter ror, the nameless terror, that would sweep the world if by any chance we should lose this war. He begins to read the letter. And at first it fambles on, as good homey letters always do, through the little events of the week back in America his brother's marks in school, a movie, a promotion for Dad at the factory. But what's this? "People are complaining about the gasoline shortage. Meat is being rationed, and there is not always as much as some axe used to having." Ft. Riley; Buildings Leveled, 170 Injured folas W. Wittle. Suit for divorce, charge cruel and Inhuman treat ment. Cdtiple married in Van couver, Wash., September 22, 1041. Plaintiff asks restoration of maiden name, Daisy B. Pres cott. Merryman and Napier, at torneys for plaintiff. Anna E. Echer versus James E. Echer. Suit for divorce, charge cruel and Inhuman treatment. Couple married in Reno, De cember, 1041. Plaintiff asks re storation of former name, Anna mmitfiw i I . i .. . mmmmmwvmmmmWA. a,mmtum.i n ,u in an - The Letter from VETERANS of FOREIGN WARS of '9 m E. Smith. Merryman and Napier, attorneys for plaintiff. Justice Court Benjamin Joseph Henzel. Fail ure to stop at (top sign. Fined $5.50. Virgil Henry Collins. No PUC permit. Fined $10. You keep more friends if you're good for nothing when it comes to a loan. About the only ones having a tough time keeping their spirits up are the liquor dealers. War is tough on civilians, he muses. But some one ought to explain to them how many gallons of gas it takes to push a tank ten miles through jungle. Someone ought to point out that, if there is not enough meat at the front yes, and excess to allow for submarine and bombing losses our army or our allies just won't have enough to keep them going. He turns the page. "There's talk about the Peace. And there are those who say we mustn't let ourselves be carried off our feet with a lot. of idealistic words on World Cooperation. Is this the old isolationist gang in there punch ing again? Haven't they got the idea yet that Memorial Day itself stands for all the wars we have had to fight just because there was no way to keep international bullies under control? Have they forgotten the hell that Dad had to go through in France in 1917 just because some body killed a duke in the Balkans? Must kids like me go to war every twenty-five years just because of those who would rather not "take a risk" for peace? "Food prices are going up," the letter goes on. "The farmers say that Congress should permit higher prices for wheat and hogs. Labor is grumbling about the ost of living; business men about taxes. OREGON LIFTS POTATO MOTH QUARANTINE Another quarantine, this one the potato tuber moth quaran tine which has been on Oregon's books for more than 25 years, was lifted on May 23 by the state department of agriculture with approval of Governor Earl Snell. This action followed a first hand investigation of the tuber moth situation in California by a department representative, who found the need no longer exists for the ban for the simple reason that the California area once infested with tuber moth is now free of it. The action is also in line with recommenda tion of the 1942 meeting of the national plant board, which sug gested that all states having R GOOD FOR 5 LBS. FOR HOME CANNING BE SURE IT'S wre cane sugar Pilli miff w Home . . . Congress is on the rampage, snipfng, criticizing, playing politics as usual a tightening up of party lines in preparation for net year's elections.' Haven't these folks back home learned the facts of life? Conflict, strife, dissension! Between nations, it means war, and stinking death in fox holes. Within a nation, it means disunity, weak ness, and the discord that gets decent men fighting each other instead of the enemy. Farmers against labor, whites against blacks motorists against ration boards, labor against management! This is the sort of thing the enemyi himself is trying to stir up. And in every speech that smacks of selfish sectionalism, in every yelp of special interests, in the repetition of every sneaking lie of the Axis rumor-mongers to stir up racial and religious bigotry in all these the Nazis and the Japs have allies in our midst. Don't people know that it was just this' sort of Nazi-concocted propaganda first a fantastic campaign of lies against one the United States same remove their potato tut moth quarantine. California is virtually the only state affected by the removal, which now permits that state to ship potatoes into Oregon with out fumigation or certification a to freedom from tuber moth, either proeedtire now belnf found unnecessary. That State ships a considerable quantity of new or early potatoes into Ore gon, but it is not anticipated that this movement will now bo greater than It has been. DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT ARMORY Musle by Baldy's Band Dancing 9 Till 1 Admission! Women, lie Tax I total 20c Men, 90c Tax 9c, Total tie Service Men. 50c, Tax te Total 55c EACH f SUGAF.'Ffrr v ifCANE . religious group, then against every other group that enabled Hitler to rabble-rouse his way to power? Someone, somehow, must warn America in time. PRAY GOD IT MAY BE IN TIME!