57
7
July fl, 1043
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH . FALLS, OREGON
PAGE SEVEN
STOCKS BUTTLE
FOR PURCHASE
By VICTOR EUBANK
NEW YOltK, July 0 W)
Stock I had to contend with lour
ing conmodtllo lor buying at
tention In today's nirket nd,
while putting up selectively good
competition, they were over
shadowed throughout.
Ulilltlci, ulr traimport and
spt'clultkts w o r o outstanding
share favorite from Ilia atait
but leader In other dcpurtmenl
wrro more or )'( Indifferent.
Guiu ranged from (ruction to
2 point or o (or popular awing-'
O-s mid ninny now lilglta tor
.e year or longer were record
ed. Thrro waa aiiiutlorlng ot
nilnua sigua at the cloae. Pro
ceedings were around 900,000
aliarea.
Prominent atocka on the up
aide Included Electric Power ft
Light preferred. Consolidated
, Edison, North American, IVpal
Cola, Santa Fe, Proctor St Gam
ble. American Alrllnea, Nurlh
wt Alrllnea, Standard Oil
(N.J.), American Telephone and
Chryilor. Laggurda were Belli
Irhem, Southern Pacific, J. C.
Penney and United Aircraft.
Dondi were Irregularly bet
ter. Cloilng quotation!:
American Can 00
Am Car St Fdy 431
Am Tel St Tel ..lS5t
Anaconda 274
Calif Packing 201
Q?t Tractor ......... Sit
"omm'nw'lth A Sou i
General Electric 39 1
General Motor 831
Gt Nor Hy pfd 29
llllnom Central Mi
Int Harveatcr 721
Kennecott .'II J
Lockheed 201
Long-Bell "A" 10t
Montgomery Ward 481
Nash-Kelv 131
N Y Central 17J
Northern Pacific 151
Pao Gaa St El 28
Packard Motor 41
J C Penney 08
Penna H R 291
Republic Steel 101
Richfield Oil 101
Safeway Store 441
Scar Roebuck 011
Southern Pacific 2HI
X'undard Brand .... 71
O nahlne Mining 01
Trana-Amcrlca 0
Union Oil Calif 211
; Union ruclflo 110 i
U S Steel 871
Warner Picture 19
Poiatoes
CHICAGO, July 0 (Pj Po
; ratocs: arrival 250; on track
304; total U. S. ahlpment 648;
atipplle rather heavy; for belt
; California Long Whites demand
good; market firm, atrongor; for
southern Bill Triumph mar
ket good for best dock; Cob
bler In all aectlona demand
light, market ateady; California
Long Whltea U. S. No. 1, $3.73
4.10; commercial $3.55-3.75;
Arkansas Blltt Triumph $2.00-
d43; Virginia Cobblers $3.08
,0; Mlsaourl $2.35-2.40.
LIVESTOCK
SO. S. F. LIVESTOCK
; SO. SAN FRANCISCO, July 0
(AP-DFA) Cattle: 150. Steady.
Medium to good grass steers
. quoted $14.00-15.00. Few me
dium $13.00. Dcslrablo she
stock absent. Medium sausage,
bulls $0.50-10.50. Calves: 30.
Steady. Packago good 344 lb.
calves $13.00.
IT HOGS: 230. Around 25c hlgto
. er. About two loads 200-240 lb.
. burrows and gilts $14.80-14.75.
' Most good sows $13.50.
SHEEP: 2000. 13c to 25c
.( higher. Two decks good to choice
lambs, $13.00-15.50. Modlum to
good lumbs $14.00-15.00. About
800 shorn ewes steady,' largely
090-6.50.
CHICAGO, July 6 (P) Sal
able hogs, 20,000; total 31,000;
fairly active, weak to 10c low
er th'an Friday; most decline on
weights under 240 lbs.; good
and choice 180-330 lb. $13.00
$14.10; top $14.15; few good
. und choice 150-180 lb. $12.50
'! $13.75; sows 5-1 0c lower; good
Bnd choice 330-550 lb., $13.00
$13.35; choice lighter weights
," to- $13.50.
, Snlnble cnttlo 13,000; salable
j calves 800; fed steers und yeurl-
Ings fulrly steady; largoly steer
j and heifer run; heifer steady
to weak; early top choice fed
steers $16.00; some held high
?er; bulk $14.75-16.25; very few
$ Heifers sold; best around $16.25;
I cows moderately active; fully
, steady; .cutters $10.25 down;
)iners $7.80-8.75; strictly Rood
cows $13.80-14.00; bulls fairly
LET-
State Farm Ini. Co.
Promt Your Prlvlliii to Drlva
J. I. Board, Agent
into Main
COMMODITIES
THIS CURIOUS WORLD y wuiiom raon
, Li!XvMr2$ PLANET VENUS )
I JfA-S r.j7&) IS SO BBILLIAMf THIS MONTH '
SS J 7jSjH0W t THAT IT CAN TO! V M
PPf J, I VJ it '! iMyzavr, m
1 'Vjl (Z 11 ) AND APTgR. SUNSET IT fcf
1 ' ( M. C ) LOOK fOO. THIS GLEAMING W
PENNIES
i ARE LEGAL TENDIR
ONLY UP TO
vrv oant react a person
TO TAK MOBE THAN THAT
NUMBER IN PAVMENT OF A
DEBT.
76
ANSWER:
NEXT: Chinese
SINGING STAR
HORIZONTAL
1,7 Pictured
Inner :
13 Whim I
14 Soli td
IsExlit
. IT Re quiet! .
MHMf-em
19 Kind of fish
20 Painful
22 Ronmer
34 Habbit
25 Browned
bread by
fire's heat
27 Girl' name
28 Symbol for
atannum
2D Current
30 Yard (abbr.)
31 Each fnbbr.)
32 Symbol for
acetyl
34 Oodrleii
37 Mother
30 Order
41 Image
43 Pednl digits
44 Notion!
46 Primitive
ax-shaped
' tone
Answer to
'.ft.trx-i1
N E. EOvl
d d i r T
totn tool
I U.WI
IS
lALL
5E1E
blL.F
(PARES
47 Aged
4AHone
4D Near
31 American
humorist
52 Konlbuck
(var.)
53 Lubricated
17 ClftMlflcotlon
according
to rank
SB He Is a
radio
VERTICAL
1 Color
I
mi
lb
i8
41
active; ateady; praotlcnl top
weighty sausage bulls $14.00;
add head to $14.25; vealcrs un
changed at $14.00-13.00; small
choice lot $15.50; undertone In
stock cattle very dull.
Salable sheep 3000; total 14,
000; fat spring lambs and yearl
ings active; fully steady, Im
proved killing quality spring
lambs considered; good to
choice native spring lambs $14
$13; top $15.25 for few choice
natives to outsiders und one
doublo choice 00 lb. Idaho rang
ers to puckers; good to choice
fed westorn clipped lumbs now
termed yearlings mostly with
No. 1 skins $13.00-14.00; one
double mixed fat and feeder
yearlings $12.50; sheep under
tone wenk; most native ewes
wanted at $7.50 down; smnll
lots choice Idaho owes $8.00.
PORTLAND, Ore., July 6
(AP-USDA) Cattle: salable 750.
total 1350; calves, salable and
total 125; market active; fod
steers around 23c higher; other
classes stendy-strong with lust
week' advance; bull around
28c higher; vealcrs unevenly
stendy to 80c lower; few londs
choice fed ntcers $16.80-75; good
fed kinds $13.25-35; grnss fnt
Friendly
Helpfulness
To Every
Creed and Purs
Ward's Klamath
Funeral Home
Mr. A. A. Ward, owner
Wlllard Ward, U. S. Navy,
Mariager
Arthur W. Larsen,
-Acting Mgr.
928 High Phone 9334
j - rJ(it a
r
Ceylon.
coiucnrttlonv
Previous Tunle
11 Potential
energy
12 Annually
13 Throws
15 Great fear
21 Revere
23 Poem
24 Pertaining
to the liver
2(! Coronet
32 Stage
performer
33 More chilling
33 Harmony
31 Sum up
37 Mold maker
38 Placed a
poker "take
40 Vein of an
imed' wing
43 Stop
43 Hindu
garment
4ft Oriental ah
SO Two lives
53 Size of shot
54 KniRht of the
Gnrtcr (abbr.)
55 Grand Sorlb
(abbr.) .
5C Symbol for
silver
EiE
2 Musical
drama
3 Rallroftd
nbbr.)
4 It U (cpntr.)
5 Colored with
ochre
6 Comp.isa point
7 Doctor of ,
Science
(abbr.)
8 Measure
0 Srbaccouii cy.tt
10 Symbol fur
sodium
a
IO
12
38
M4
S6
steers $14.75 down; few stock
ers and feeders $13.00-14.00;
grass fat heifers $14.00 down;
common medium $10.00 12.50;
grass fnt beef cows $10.51-11.30:
few $11.75-12.00; ennner - cutter
cow $6.75-8.50; medium-good
bulls $11.00-12.78; odd head and
ono sizeable lot range vcalers
$15.50.
Hogs: salable 2Q00, total 2650;
market active, fully steady;
good-choice 180-230 lbs. $14.25
to mostly $14.50; odd lots
$14.60; 250-280 lbs. $13.75-14.00;
lifjht-lights $13.25-75; good sows
mostly $11.50; choice light
feeder pigs $17.50-18.00; heavies
down to $15.00.
Sheep: snlnble 800; total 2000;
market slow; fnt lambs around
25c lower; other classes fully
stendy; good-choice trucked-in
spring lambs mostly $13.50; part
carload $14.00; common mostly
$10.00-50; medium-good shorn
ycnrlings $10.50-12.00; latter for
No. 1 polls; good ewes $5.00-75.
II
3
UA.C IB u L.BiJ
DEN RTbr
FIT t N Tj
P t 1 IT A W
t' iHO'Pt
J.jZ.0'0
MflTING fCf CANT Kill SPARKlt
t IN DRINKS MADE WITH
CANADA DRY WATER
ITS "PIN-POINT CARSONMION" LAIT1 10NOIRI
P.S. Iti pclal formula mikM any drink tatta battar.
Portland
Produce
TKH A A (rl rlnti, inti; ntum: ill,? ;
A I'Bqai ff(IVI, ta-f,C ) CariOIII, 4JC; 11
unuis .rlnU 4A43, Mrtotil, 1c lb.
liUTI KItKAT-nm 4)uIKt. milmurn ttt
ut I pr cAl teldltjr. titttvttp'l at hft
laiiifl, ft ISIS lb. prtmlura qntlltr. tni.
mum of M ttt I fMr Mnt iMIty, 63 Uj'e
It. ; vail roHtt nr otiuntry prlnti, in
tfmit flni or MM'yint irronti ully
itt I'fjriltnd le unojf first or &6-&0140 lb.
I-IIKKHK-Rvlllnf prle to Portlam! r
lftllrai Orrin tripUl t9r, lh j U,t, Vw
Hk; trlpUU to hollAlri, ITo lb. lotf
X?Sn F.O.H,
JUOH-Meti Ot rUMra In A
irl lirg. ut; A nMlum 40ci a
until toc doitn. Komirtal prteti Ut pto
dturftj A Uf 4ltf Ur U'Aji A
mtdlum, I7e ft Uf, M.
I.IVt fOULTIIV-Burlnf prli: Ko. I
fi1 Ulhnrn fcfollft up to t',i Vtc;
ctlofH fryers, un4r I'i it ib. yj-,
cilnrtil rostUfl, out i th Vie; lsvnn
hms undr 1 Ihi., Ut; ovtr V lt
ii'itj cilortd hn, I to i His. ftvr
ft Ibi. isuei old rooiUri, Ue Ib.i sUgs
ti,y lb.
rXIRAAKD Irlllnf prlcm
Country OrtMttf brHrr hn, 10 lie lb.
h Mi fin -Oornmtni c I ling : Avrag
utrx Ult to rUHrl 41c lb., ll price
t produws, ! lb.
ONIOITA Otfn M0 (tot a bunehn:
Vui n M.7I- Calirornlb M) WaCa
Walla W W sr 0-lb. bag.
roTATOKtvKtw California trhlU Ho. 1,
DM.
fOl'NTUT MRATH Kollhark prlea to r
tailont Country hllkd hogs bst but4hrs,
i M0 Iba. Wei vaalars, AA. VJ A, ltV;
H. itje; u. lei D. ISHe lb.; nnr
(Ttitt-r mvt H'io II.; bulls, carver euttr.
Hr; Urn hi AA. tf: A, Mltr; R, H'V:
t'. so-; rwa fn. iso; wdlnnj Itei H.
ltt; b4f. AA. Sll4c ; A WV; B, Ue.
HAV WhftlMtl prion nominal: Alfalfa
No, g r battr, M No, I Monuna tlmothr,
is; No. I grass hay, M; oat-Ttth, lU-no
t'ln, vallfjr potnUi Umothjr (ralley), Mi twsii
clover $U W to
Market Prices
for
Gardeners
MRTLAKD. Jglr (Kt)-UH 114. M,r
AKI-ABAdl H-Cnl.f Inaw Xo. I, ll.tl
pjrrimld: tu.rli,l, Sl.M pr.mid.
CAIiriAIIK-Kound l, 13.00 CTt loci
polnUd, ll.t poojr er.U.
IlKA.vn-Urrcn It-lie lb.; ;ello, IMH
lb.; hnr. II.WI lu.
rAI'I.IFUlWKN (rooll)-Si. I. t!J0
2.:s: ordinary ftttAl tin. I, 41.7 er.t.
CHKmiir.A-Slnl,. IM Koytl AOOM,
IS-l, lb.; nk. lOr lb.
B(H)T VltIBTAl.-Tiinilp. ll.IO-l.tl;
bu. r.70d doiro bunditti wrvu vt-iie
4or,n bunebM.
nixMruKRKtn- amtr. m lb.
IIRKKSrWHl(. eh,ri,, lie Aoltn bunchf:
w.urrrtif. Il.no rfolM bunch,,; muiLrd
Tf. doi.n hunch...
I.KTTI 'CK-Uttal. tlBl.TI trti
,tnch. V 4oi,n hunrh,,.
ceAS-i,! tr n.
al'IS'Aril-rel II.IOI.W (rill. bul.
RADIKIIKS-No. 1 .prfni. fed. -0e d
n bunch.,. . .
RHi nARB-n.ld. It.lft-I.64 b.
ONIONS-Own 0-flOc doi.ft bunrhM.
RASPRRRRIKS M-B-tJIi bUckcpt,
II Ml II er,t. . . ,w .
STRAWnr.RRIHR Orernd Mrblrf. II.B
S.ro frl,; KM HrL. KM cttu.
Oi ?iU n FRRI KIV Wfll
roTATOK-Nw a-l lb.
WHEAT
rHifAfiO Jnlv 8 lP) Alt de
liveries of rye advanced the per
mlssable five cents a bushel
dally maximum within an hour
of the cloae today on buying
prompted by the prospect that
corn ceiling would be lifted.
Wheat scored good gain In
sympathy with rye and the
bread cereal was in demand by
distilling interest and flour
mill. i
All deliveries of rye closed at
the extreme tops for the day, or
5 cent above Saturday' finish,
July $1,121; September $1,101;
wheat gained li to 21c, July
i ul.1 enimhr 11.481 to
$1.46; and oats were ahead 21c
to 21c, July 72 cent.
Vllt Mr. and Mr. Lyle Bar
tcls of Aberdeen, Wash., togeth
er with Mrs. Dodson of Log An
geles, are guests at the home of
Mr. and Mr. Roy bock, IS7
Hieh street. Mr. Dodson 1 Mrs.
Bock's aunt. Also visiting at the
Bock home are hi sister with
her husband and ton, Mr. and
Mr. Ben Norwood and Billy, of
Broken Bow, Okla. They plan
to make their home In Klamath
Fall.
On Furlough Mr. and Mrs.
Irwin Ewlng have arrived from
Pecos, Tex., for a short visit with
hi parent, Mr. and Mr. C. E.
F.uilns of Summers lane. When
he return to Texa. Mr. Ewlng
will go to Lakevlew to spend a
few months with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Ash
craft. Visits Granddaughter Mr.
Lnr Farnsworth of Portland is
the guest for a few day of her
granddaugnterg iamny, rar. ana
Mrs. Beverley Thomas of the
Enterprise tract. She has been
visiting her sister in Joplin, Mo.,
and is en route home.
It used to be "See America
First." Now It's serve America
first so we can see America
later on.
1
Nelson, Murray Look Over Steel
War Production Board Chief Donald M. Nelson and his aides go into th
with their plea for more production for our war moch lne. Shown at th
Illinois Oo. are. left to right foreground. Charles E. Wilson, rice chairman
CIO, and Donald Nelson peering Into a hot steel furnace a
Yank Gunners Over Italy .
Battling waltt gunners of B-24 Liberator bomber find plenty ot
action In raid over Grottagli. Italy, as they fight off attacking
German Messerschmitts like one above. Over the Mediterranean
on the way home. TSgt. Vincent F. Wachs of Pittston, Pa., dishes
It out to trailing enemy planes while TSgt. H. M. Conlee of Mord,
Ore., not content with the Nazi attackers he has already fired at,
searches the sky for more.-'
Food Preservation to Be
Demonstrated Next Week
Food preservation demonstra
tion for Klamath Falls people
have been arranged by the Klam
ath county nutrition committee
and will be held during the week
ot July 12 to 16.
The schedule for demonstra
tions 1 as follows:
Monday, July 12 at 2 p. m at
the Mills school cafeteria, on can
ning. Tuesday, July 13, at 1:30 p. m.,
at the Altamont Junior high
home economics room on can
ning and freezing.
Wednesday, July 14, In the
basement of the Christian
church, Ninth and Pine, canning
at 2 p. m., and 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, July 14 at the
Fairhaven school cafeteria at
7:30 p. m., on drying and freez
ing. Thursday, July 15, In the base
ment of the Christian church, at
2 p. m., drying of fruits and veg
etables, at 7:30 p. m., freezing of
foods.
Friday, July 16, in the Chris
tian church basement, at 2 p. m.,
freezing foods and at 7:30 p. m
fUERS CotnMeol Redpe'l
OLD-FASHIONED CORN
t cup lifted flour
lV4j tip. nil
H tip. aoda
IW cupl Albrr'
Corn Meal
3 erga. well beatet
lH cup, buttermilk
or lour milk
$ tbspa. melted
abortenlng
Sift flour, salt and soda; stir in corn meal.
Combine eggs, milk, and melted shortening.
Add to dry ingredients and stir just until
blended. Pour into greased 8" square pan or
corn-ear pans, and bake in a fairly hot oven
(425" F.) 25 to 30 min. Serve hot. (If aslightly
tweet corn bread is preferred, add 2 tbsps.
sugar with the flour. If buttermilk is not
available, measure 2 tbsps. vinegar or lemon
juice and add milk to make lH cups.)
Albert Com Mtal, bolb Vf'bitt and Yellow, is
- wholesome, fine-flavored, fine-textured "just
right" for ptrfett tookint results)
drying of foods.
Mrs. Vivian Freeman, canning
specialist of the northwest, will
be here to present the canning
demonstrations.
Women who will do the freez
ing and drying demonstrations
are from the home economics
graduate group.
Those who will participate in
this program are as follows: Mrs-
John McFee, Mrs. Wallace
Thompson, Mrs. Jean Puckett,
Mrs. H. R. Listoe, Mrs. Harold
Teale, Mrs. John Kerns, Mrs, C,
E. Brissenden, and Mrs. Gene
Gross.
' The public Is Invited to these
free demonstrations and the men
are particularly invited since
many will be interested in seeing
the operation of the dehydrators.
BREAD
Production
NEA TiUehoto)
heart of Pittsburgh's steel Industry
Homestead plant of the Carnegie
of th WPB; Philip Murray, of th
th worker look on
Kaiser Nursary
Plan Undsr Fire
From Labor Council
VANCOUVER, Wash, July
OP) Henry J. Kaiser' plan to
build a $280,000 nursery for
children of mothers employed
in hi ihlpyard here was under
fire from the Clark County
Central Labor Council today.
The council, in a formal reso
lution yesterday, charged the
nursery would duplicate facili
ties now being operated by the
Vancouver school district.
OBITUARY
FLIGHT OFFICER BENJAMIN
OTIS HORSLEY
Flight Officer Benjamin Otis
Horsley, a resident of Bonanza,
Ore., for the last 13 years,
passed away at Kingman army
airfield, Kingman, Ariz., on
Monday,' July 6, 1943. He was
native of Lakevlew, Ore., and
at the time of his death waa
aged 24 year, 4 month and 8
day. Surviving are: hi wife,
Mr. Josephine Horsley of King
man, Arizona; tils parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph L. Horsley of
Bonanza, Ore.; one sister, Mrs.
Leland Stoehsler of Dairy, Ore.;
three brothers, Cadet Clyde
Marlon Horsley of Santa Ann,
Calif - Carol Eugene and Don
ald Joe Horsley of Bonanza,
Ore., and his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. O. F. Burgoyne of
Eden, Idaho. The remain will
rest in the Earl Whitlock Fun
eral home, Pine street at Sixth,
upon arrival from Kingman,
Ariz. Notice of funeral to be
announced at a later data.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our friends
for the kindness, sympathy and
beautiful floral offerings given
us in the loss ot our beloved
wife and mdther. We wish es
pecially to thank the employe
of the Weyerhaeuser Timber
and Wheeler Pine Co.
The Shulmire Family,
The Higgins Family.
Even with everybody work
ing, there's far more said than
done when all Is said and done.
BP"'
etnf
,tW
I . T.ln.t
Unless you can prove your financial responsibility tip tot
$11,000, you risk your right to drive or register a car, under
the new Automobile Safety-Responsibility law. In case of
accident, you may lose everything you own!
Don't go on driving under this black cloud! Secure our low
cost Auto Liability Policy todayl It will protect you, raia
or shine
MOORE NAMED
OF
Naming of A. Vernon Moore
as county chairman for Klamath
county for the Keep Oregon
Green campaign this summer
was announced today by Gover
nor Earl Snell. Intensive organi
zation of every county in Oregon
In the public drivo to keep fires
from forest and farm lands is be
ing rapidly completed.
"Our most Important home
front job this war year Is to stop
all fires caused by careless ac
tion of the general public," Gov.
ernor Snell cautioned the county
chairman. "We must not give
aid to our enemies by starting
forest fires which could hinder
our coastal air command, or
which might ground our planes.
In addition to the county chair
man, Governor Snell named the
following citizens of this county
on a Keep Oregon Green county
committee and ha asked that
they give every possible assist
ance to this campaign: G. S.
Kephart of Klamath Agency, and
Charles Ogle of Klamath Falls.
McNary Bill Aids
Fire Protection
WASHINGTON, July 6 (P)
A bill by Senator McNary (R
Ore.), authorizing an increase
from $2,500,000 to $9,000,000 In
federal expenditures to be
matched by the states in com
batting fires in privately owned
forest lands has been passed b?
the senate and sent to the
house.
The agriculture committee, In
approving the bill, reported that
this fund, when matched by the
states, would extend fire pro
tection to 144,000,000 acres of
forest which now have no subh
protection and would bolster ex
isting protection over 282,000r
000 acres.
Paul O. Landry
this question:
"If I do not own a ear
do I have to show proof
of financial responsibility
to drive? How can Z do
it?"
For Information on any
Insurance problem, consult
THE LANDRY CO.,
419 Main St. Phone 5612
The Courthouse Is New
One Block Down th
Street From Our Office.
JW,, rams ttpjfft eCI?
CHAIRMAN
-: . Atw a- rt tros '
.tlvV 1 i I
etraw 1
.-II W
voNtMOxetrt
Fer complete Information, tall or unto
PORTLAND BRANCH OFFICE
72J Yeon Building ;'
Portland, Oregon
Telephone Atwater 9438