Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, November 09, 1944, Page 6, Image 6

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    PACE SIX
HERALD AND NEWS. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
Quits FCC
The National Scone
..... rpiw lliillHII'n, ,..- '"I
lay lllelf explusj. bli
TDATTENDMEET
a Li- - iTT IIA'
crews fl,.w ln i',Villy,
m m mm
"J' vf uuiini iuiiu uiil.iv
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Irrigation experts, engineers
and water conservationists of
Oregon will represent the state
at the 13th annual conference
of the National Reclamation as
sociation in Denver, November
15, 16 and 17, it was announced
today by Robei' W. Sawyer of
Bend, national vice president of
the organization.
The conference, to be attend
ed by delegates from all west
ern states and many eastern
areas, will plan united action
to expedite irrigation reclama
tion projects, preserve western
water for western use, assure
state participation in water de
velopment plans and formulate
constructive peacetime reclama
tion programs which would pro
vide post-war employment.
Commissioner Harry V. Ba
shore of the U. S. bureau of
reclamation will be in Denver
during the conference, and with
the regional directors of the bu
reau will hold meetings with
reoresentatives of the various
slates, tie also win aaareas tne
conference on "Reclamation
Looks At the Postwar Era."
Weekly
Market Trend
'Editor' Note: The following market
Inform tj on is supplied from material
obtained .over the government leased
wire Jn the offlc of the sxtenMon
economist at Oregon State college. The
material, in the form of a weekly sum
mary of trend jn tne uvesiocjc .mantei.
ii not intended to replace day by, day
market reports.)
The seasonal shift in the marketing
of livestock Is now under way. The
peak of the fall run of cattle and
sheep is past and hogs are now com
ing to market in greatly increased num
bers, though not in the record propor
tions of a year ago. Prices are reflect
ing the changing supply situation with
cattle and sheep inclined toward higher
levels and hogs departing from ceiling
prices for the first time in several
months.
CATTLE MARKETS
The cattle market wan active both at
North Portland and rather generally
throughout the midwest on Monday,
November e. At Kortn Foruana. me
dium to good 900 to 1100 pound steers
sold up to $13.75 with no strictly good
kinds available to test the market At
Chicago, the top on fed steers was
(18.35, while the bulk of the slaughter
steers sold at a range of $13.50 to $17.75,
Current offerings in the midwest con
tinue to show a high percentage of
cows om e centers as much as 50 oer
cent of the total and a small per
centage oz tne Deuer graaes or steers.
Statistics recently released by the
BAI on federally Inspected slaughter
of cattle in the U. S. during September.
1B44, indicate an increase of 14 per cent
over the same month a year previous
and a 31 per cent increase over the
September average of the previous
five years. The figures for the first
nine months of this year are even
more striking. They show an increase
over the same period of 1B43 of 24
per cent In other words, federally
inspected slaughter which accounts for
most of the slaughtering of cattle from
January tnrougn beptemoer, trus year
was 34 per cent larger than during
the same period last year.
Slaughter of calves showed even
greater gains. September calf slaugh
ter was 42 per cent above September.
1643, and 62 per cent above' the Sep
tember five-year average. This heavy
slaughter of calves has been going on
for a considerable period. From Jan
uary through September this year, calf
slaughter under federal inspection was
96 per cent above the same period last
year and 36 per cent above average.
These figures indicate that large num
bers of cattle .and calves have been
slaughtered this Tear. Average weight,
however, is considerably less than last
year and dressing percentages also low
er, with the result that the Increase
in marketable beef is considerably less
than slaughter figures alone might in
dicate. SHEEP AND LAMB MARKETS
Marketings of sheep and lambs con
tinue to decline seasonally and are
now lagging behind a year a so. Some
markets last week were depressed by
off-quality offerings, but. quality con
sidered, the trend was steady to slight
ly stronger. At North Portland Mon
day sorted wooled lambs reached $13
but most of the trucked-fn good to
choice lambs went at 812.50.
HOG MARKETS
Salable receipts n the hog division
at North Portland totaled 2300 head a
decrease of 600 head from the pre-;
vious week but 500 more than a month I
earlier. Trading was very uneven with I
prices Inclined to recover somewhat
from the sham declines of th nr.
vious week but still well below the
ceiling oi recent months.
WOOL MARKETS
. Buying of domestic fine wools in
the Boston market the past week was
not of sufficient volume to indicate
inav nuns are covering raw wool re
quirements on the 10 million yards of
army serge to be delivered in the first
quarter of 1945. A few inquiries were
made on territory three-eighths and
quarter-blood wool, but very littte busi
ness resulted. Contracting of 1945 wool
ior euner purcnase or consignment, de
pending on whether the government
wooi purcnase oraer ts extended wai
reported In Utah and northern Call.
fornia. Advances based on grease
prices ranging from 40 to 42 cents,
were oeing maae on the better clips,
DUBOIS DP.PEATCn
ST. HELEN'S, Nov. 9 (Pi Co
llimhia rnnntw M . . T
Calhoun defeated L. A. DuBois
ior reeiecuon.
JUDGE REELECTED
TOLEDO. Nov. 9 OPi F. F.
Gilkey, Lincoln county Judge,
was reelected by defeating Jay
TRIANGLE
K-TRil
f ECO PRODUCER
lncras your gg prefilt with
Alt pololobU, Kltntifkotlr
bulll -vitamin bolonc.d"l..d.
8
:. iupptiu th high-producing
loywa with thilr raqulrtmtnli
for mort txtro grada
?giYurlal faad
Hlir tea frath
7
4 'it
Si! A
The scene above is typical of thousands of communities throughout the nation. It (hows Cleve
landers, In an ever-growing line, waiting outside a drug store after word got around that there
were some cigarets for sale inside.
Market
Quotations
NEW YORK. Nov. 9 (APt Stock mar
ket buyers took on modest amounts of
selected rails and industrials today but
neglected many leaders.
Individual business situations, with the
election out of the way, served as the
main bidding inspiration.
Closing quotations:
American Can - 87
Am Car & Fdv :
Am Tel fit Tel
Anaconda .....
Calif Packing
Cat Tractor
Commonwealth & Sou
Curtis-Wright
General Electric .....
-General Motors ...
Gl Nor Ry pld ......
Illinois Central
Int Harve&.er
Kcnnccott ....
Lockheed w
...ltSS's
27
26
... 43'
tt'
Long-Bell
Montgomery Ward
Nash-Kclv
Pac Gas & El
Packard oMtor - -
Penna R R
Republic Steel -
Richfield Oil
Safeway Stores
Sears Roebuck .;....
Southern Pacific .......
Standard Brands
Sunshine Mining
Trans-America
Union Oil Calif .
Union Pacific . ....
U S Steel l
Warner Pictures
: 10
. 52
LIVESTOCK
SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. 9
fAP-WFAl Cattle: 25. Small supply
following copious rain last niffrt. about
steady: medium to good steers, heifers,
and range cows absent. Odd canners
ana cutters $6.00-8.00. Medium sausage
bulls $10.00-10-50. Calves: none. Nominal:
good to choice vealers quoted $14.00
down.
Hogs: 350. Steady: few loads and
packages good and choice 200-240 lb.
barrows and silts S15.25: odd sond mwi
$1350.
sneep: 450. Active, strons:: choice
wooled lambs absent, quoted $14.75 and
above: about deck No. 2 plt medium
to good lambs $13-50. Good ewes sal
able $6.00. down.
PORTLAND. Ore Nov. y fAP-WFAl
Salable and total cattle 300, calves 50:
market moderately active, central lv
steady except unevenly lower on shelly
cows and cull calves: few cutter steers
$6.00-8.00: common kinds S!) 00-10 M; 1
cutter-common heifers $6.00-9.00; can- .
ners down to $5.00: canner and i-iiMim-
cows largely $4.25-6.25; many shelly cows
$2.00-4.00; fat dairy type cows S7.00
8.00; common-medium beef cows $6.50
9.00: medium-cood bulls $8.00-9.50: odd
heavy beef bulls to $10.00; cutters down
to S.SO: common-medium vealers Sfl.no- :
12 g;.good vealers salable to $13.00 and ,
above: cull-common calves $4.50-6.00. , ;
Salable and total hoes 750; market less
active but mostly steady: good-choice '
1BO-Z40 id. $15 25-50: 245-270 lb. $14-50-75; I
few lisht tichts S14 00-Sfl: anmi inu-i
$100-25: choice feeder pigs scarce; sal-!
Die arouna m..-mj-h.oo.
Salable and total sheep 300: market
active, steady: good-choice wooled Iamb
$12.50: medium-good Iambs $10.00-12.00;
few feeders $10.00 down with culls on
2 drops in each nostril
opon cloggod nose, you
breathe freer. Caution:
Use only as directed.
PENETRO HOSE DROPS
Potato
high energy
vi llllllt I ooc k"s e
IW .. to eat!
JlL&r Blue Bell potato chips are
PSHSikw most pop"'" 'uncl'
ssi 48s''va. Pa" f0''1 Thcy ,m
r f Wllr$$l$rvk. because they are fresh andj
I jwsB't'HjiJa. delicious. They add energy
I Sffefe&iriA because potatoes are high,
I Kk. energy food. They hav;
I 4'v?S3k t'1at 8ran(' potato flavor
I "WOK "They Are SABIN1ZED,?
' ,nc new modern method
Tttt1 that means r: .,
jjj Jjj Jier potato chips!
mil
for
m
feeder account at $6.50: good shorn lambs
$11.25: common-medium ewes $2.00-3.00;
good cuts quotable $3.25-75.
CHICAGO. Nov. 9 (AP-WFA1 Salable
hogs lo.ooo: total 19.000; opened slow:
closed fairly active, five to 10 cents lower
than Wednesday's average on weights
270 lbs. down, heavier weights and sows
steady: good and choice 190-270 lbs.
$13.40-14.-40, top $14.45: few good and
choice 150-160 lbs. $13.50-14.25: weights
over 270 lbs. and most sows $14.00; com
plete clearance.
Salable cattle 4000; total 4500; salable
calves 1000; total 1000: fed steers and
yearlings stead- to strung; strictly good
and choice kinds active: others slow;
nothing strictly choice here, top $16.25;
bulk $13.50-17.75; s lockers and feeders
slow, steady, mainly $11.50-13.50: other
killing elates steady; choice heifers ab
sent, best $16.15; cutler cows $7.00 down,
with most canners $5.25-5.75; good beef
cows to $14.00; heavy sausage bulls to
SU-75: bulls scarce; vealers $13.00-15.00
mostly.
Salable sheep 4000: total 8500: early
sales Ucady; odd lots good and choice
native lambs $14.25-14.40: three decks
good and choice fed shorn yearlings No.
1 pelts held above $12.50: cull to choice
slaughter ewes $4.00-5.75. short load good
and choice westerns carrying a small
medium end $5.75 straight.
WHEAT
CHICAGO. Nov. 9 -Al The heaviest
corn bookings of the season were too
much for the grain futures trade today
and all except the wheat market de
veloped a weak undertone.
Cash dealers reported more than a
half a million bushels of corn bought
since last night for deferred shipment.
Shipping sales at noon totalled 14S
thousand bushels.
Heavy selling of December corn by
a large elevator concern caused prices
to drop as much as 1V cents at time.
Local traders sold the deferred deliver
ies and they, too. suffered losses.
A pause in the buying and the weak
ness of corn caused rye futures to break
from the day's highs. An earlier rally
apparently eliminated many shorts and
some local traders went long. Some
buying by active professionals was re
ported on the setback.
Weakness of corn accounted or steady
sales of oats in small lots.
The trade In wheat was quiet and
more than minor losses were discouraged
by government price support measures.
The dtstant contracts remained strong
with the principal demand coming from
shorts.
At the close wheat was Yc lower to
ic higher than yesterday's finish, De
cember l.6't. Corn was off i to lUc,
December $1.06. Oats were down
to 3ic December 64Hc. Rye was 4 to
lfcc lower. December $I.llH-a. Barlev
was ic lower to ic higher. December
$1.03a-
If it's a -frozen" article vou
need, advertise for a used one
in the classified.
Potato
Growers!
See
Tom Thorn
before you sell!
Nick Delis Co.
San Franeiieo
Branch Office HaUUld
Chips.
Potatoes
CHICAGO. Nov. fi IAP Potttow: ar
rival! TO. on track 244. totnt U. S. ship
ments 80S; supplies moderate: (or west
ern stock: demand moderate, mmket
steady: tor northern stork: demand very
slow, market dull and weak; Idaho Itus
set Burbanka. U. S. No. 1. Kl.lM-3 ;u:
Washlniton Russet Burbanks. U. S. No.
1. 13.33.49: Minnesota and North Da
kota Bliss Triumphs. Cobbler commer
cials 93.10: Wisconsin C'hlppcwas. com
mercial S3.2S; Colorado Red McClures.
U. S. No. 1. S3.24-3.47.
Courthouse Records
CeatplslDts Filed
Vldon M. Brattaln and Geneva Brat
tain versus Lea Hatches and Jane Doe
Hatches, his wife. Mary Bella Centers
and John Doe Centers, 'her husband.
W. G. Marrlon and Rose Marrlon. his
wife. Suit to quiet title. A. W. Schaupp.
attorney tor piaintiit.
Ira H. Maaee versus Gladys Mngee.
Suit for divorce, charse cruel and In
human treatment Couple married Au
gust 29. 103a, In Vancouver. Wash.
U. S. Balentlne, attorney for plaintiff.
Tlrst Federal Savins and Loan as
sociation of Klamath Falls versus Hector
DeBaets. Ethel DcBaels and Jennie A.
Zlemann. Suit to collect money owed.
William Ganong. attornrv for plaintiff.
Klamath Valley hospital vervits William
C. Mayfleld and Vesta Mavfleld. Suit
to collect money owed. Bert C. Thomas,
attorney ror plaintiff.
G. T. Guthrie versus Edenr F. Les.
slnrer and Max F.lden. en-partners dpine
business under name and style of Inter
mountain Plumbing company. Suit to
collect S33.00O damages.
Justice Court
Charles Edward Clendenen. operating
motor vehicle as private carrier without
permit. Fined $10.
Elwood Francis Sine, having no license
on trailer. Fined 5.S0.
Think about the fact that each
family has someone at the front
and that manv familiA. mt.
their fallen husbands and sons.
lour ptaying around, your rais
ing hell in general, and your
immoral hphnvirtr htlfl lhacn nAA
pie. German army newspaper.
PERMANENT WAVE
nattnl lootlog curb and stasis now
touts easily. cool-Iy, comfortably,
at home. Don yoursdt. Toe amasina
59
PERMANENT
WV KIT
eooUiMewythinB you ned. perraa twnt wava
wuuon, curler, thampoo and wave wt. Enty
ai puttinB your hair up in curlers. InatRt on the
pnuine Charm-Kurl America " larceit tell.
MWine permanent wave kiLGft one today at
WaHoner Drug and all drug stores.
KFPP nM BUYING
I WaHoner Drue and all drug stores.
Contributions to the O. R.
Hyslop nKi'ictiltuinl research
ivtoimiHal fund lire nirivinit
daily In state liradquni'lein front
many parts of Orciton anil even
other states, reports Dr. D. D.
lllll, secretary of the fund out)
Professor Hyslop's successor as
head of tho farm crops depart
ment at Oregon State eolletie.
A stato oriianlnntion with
committees in every county Is
now citKRKed in raising such a
fund with $200,000 as a goal,
the income from which Is to be
used to perpetuate the work for
Oregon agriculture, to which
Professor Hyslop devoted his
life.
"Indicnting widespread Inter
est are out-of-state cheeks from
a Minneapolis company, a Los
Angeles firm, a captain In New
Guinea and a farmer's supply
company in Walla Wnlla," says
Dr. Hill.
Among farmers' organizations
that have voluntarily contribut
ed $100 or more each are the
Powell Butto Farmers' club in
Crook county, the Pendleton
Grain Growers association, the
Josephine County Cooperative
Growers handling ladino clover
seed, the Walla Walla Supply
company and numerous cooper
ative warehouses."
The single organization most
active in support of the fund
is the Oregon Feed and Seed
Dealers association. Dr. Hill re-
Eorts. Through Its secretary,
eon Jackson, tho member com
panies have nearly all sent in
generous contributions totaling
thousands of dollars.
Individual ' contributions arc
ranging from $1 to $2000 each.
The latter sum was given by a
successful young farmer in
Klamath county. Numerous un
solicited checks of S100 have
come in from individual farm
ers and business men who read
of the plan in the press and
wanted to help.
Classttie' Ad.i Brtnn Kestilts
Rubber Galoshes
TIN PANTS & COATS
Wool
Oregon Woolen Store
flth
WAR BONDS AND
V'lTiiiiaa-?-l asasaaaaasasssB
James Lawrence Fly, above,
chairman of the Federal Com
muuiciillnns Commission, long
a target of bitter chni'gea by
some congressmen and gome
segments of the radio industry,
has resigned, effective Nov. 15.
He plans a return to private law
pructlce.
To me a good team is llic most
important thing. During all of
our operations not one fighter
strayed from line lo knock down
an enemy plane and leave one ol
our escorted bombers or tor -
pedocs (planes) vulnerable.
Comdr. Jackson D. Arnold, Navy
Air Group 2 chief back from the
Pacific.
CanYou Eat without Worry?
If fi)od you ate ttwi ot strma to nun
dd .miiiitioti and upU tonuch.
eft nuicic. nappy rritci by mini
ddlciom Uitlm Ituart TibUU.
They enmnin InsirOicnl out a
uned by tlix lor lo icllcvc lynip.
tvms ct KM.iiirM and acid ladi
-.linn V.ni'll fHl nallft ssruf
lecp Ix-itrr. No mU.in
no bottle iy (o lake. wTii
("ft Bunuino fcllaMr. llrnt- fC$S'
tfftied Stuart Tablet at
your dtuctttt today. Only 234,
6W. or 11.10 undrr maker's pod-
li vt mnncy-Mfk luaranin.
Unionsuits
T
C T 1
LOGGER BOOTS
Heavy Mackinaws
and Main
IWWRHBSBa
Tri-mtrkl
Rei.U.SraLOrT.
THEN KEEP THEM.
LONDON, Nov. 8 T) More
than 1.100 American heavy bomb
ers pountii'd Cieriniin runtlliie
...... 111...... I.. It,.. Mnij ,...,.
III'OIIIWIIO ill MV t'l. 1 MIVU IMtlllJ
o clear a path fur the third
army fighting (or the. German
frontier,
Heavy bombers have buon used
In the past for carpet bombing at
till) start uf at new offensivu. The
Intl Wl.,'1, l,v.. ..f llw. f,lt,l....,i.l.,...l
aircraft, gcnorally employed
t....i.. I..... .i.i. .... r it...
oil ti.vsiii. uunimnnii us nil: v.n-1-
man homeland, was on July US,
Just before tho American break
through at SI. Lo, at tho base of
tho Cherbourg peninsula.
The bombers swept over the
hnttlelliies today at levels lower
than usual. Hundreds of dive
bombers struck (lie area built ho.
fore and after Ihn Flying Fort
resses and Liberators attacked,
Perhaps A00 lighters escorted
the heavies.
The main attack was timed for
about mld-momlng and was car
ried out In muggy overcast wea
ther, crews reported, No Ger
man Interceptors were eueotin.
" 11 imm
How To Relieve
Bronchitis
Crconnilslon relievos promptly be.
cause It goes right to tho srul of 111"
trouble to hHp loosen anil cxh1
germ laden phlegm, and aid nature
to soothe Biid heal raw, tender. In
flamed bronchial mucous mem
branes. Tell your druggist to sell you
a bottle of Creoniulnlou with the un
derstanding you must like the way It
quickly allays tho cough or you are
to have your money back.
CRE0MULSI0N
for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
1
i
1
Doctor satjs itsgooi
for Snooks". . .
Bordan'l Evaporated Mlllt Ii Irrndintrd with VitAinin D, r
know, to help babict have strong teeth and bono! And it'l kor
teniiad (that's the technical word) to mnke it emy digntinij
In fact, it was to wonderful for "Snooks," we decided in irv It a
our cooking ...
tut Sister !1l)ki
"Borden's does for soups!
Borden't Milk makes the creamiest, smoothest cream iouP Jj
ever smacked a lip ovcrl Dream soups-lioncstlyl I P"'
because Borden's Is eancnntrKtud from the finest fresh
Ul And try it in mashed potatoes,
Irradiated with Vitamin Dl
Hornegeniacd for quicker
digesting I
- - . ..iiiiinii ,,..... - iv
amy wciv pulle.i , '. ? Pre,,
' ' ""nek. ,"-' int
Iniur. yeIrho.irrrr-
Norland. in ..".""'Hi
Phono 60D0. "
In
.-....
delirious W,tn io ", '1,
.yrup. A W, ndta,,, '
malic Na ev'i ll.. "
Lumberjack
tool It's Jon'ous
ELSIE SAYS:
i
nmirrrnnsi
B ,' ' y i 1 1 ail I I M
WJIeJlll
area. d m1 3Ti;', Jtw
li mm
E .--VJ Btu. 1 I'll 1 1 hiTTa
ft ii in. Av-tiirniiaii
aC
.fcafci;:'-.
f r ..- ". -."-.iV: tVPti
if!'
Ssvsssiss at
mum