PAGE FOUR MARWS and FINANCIAL ; Comeback Staged ! By Most Groins CHICAGO Wl Grains developed It firmer tone toward the close of .Tuesday's board of trade session on reports of renewed export and flour business. ! Bakers were reported to have S.k.n n estimated one million sacks of flour, and Austria was said to have taken a cargo of corn In addition to an equal or larger I amount taken earlier by United .Kingdom. The resulting short covering in wheat and corn pushed all deliver j les above the previous close in lBrAtnthe finish Wheat was to , hlfhcr than the previous close, uv a.tlk-Vt. Corn was la. to 't Mower; Ma? M.8S t4-4. Oats were lower. May 80 86 i, Rye Iwas li higher to , lower. May tint 'i-'i. Soybenns were un changed to 1 i higher. May $2.93 vTand lard was 10 to ,18 i cbiw . t hundred Pun,hwfr' May ; Open High Low Close I mov 2 51 2.52 2.50 'a 2.51 Ln 2 44 4 2 i 2.44 , 2.44 , " Dlnnrl Livestock PORTLAND W ,,i,SD),nT Cattle salable 100; holdover 100. 'market sow generally steady to I weak bui no' test on fed steers or :mm?ll cows, lew g? merclal beet steers 21.00-32.25 few 'utility dairy type heifers 22M i - 24.00; canner-cutter cows rgely I n.00-20.00: shells down to 14.00 ! utility cows 21.00-25.00; few utility bulls 5.50-27.50. Calves salable 35: market ac- five steady: few choice vealers 35.00-37.00; odd prime 38.00: com- ... a -aWe vpalprs 27.00- . nitrciiu-Bwu . . . , , . 33.50; utUlty vealers downward to Hogs salable 300: holdover 100; market fairly active: mostly stea- .J.. .I.U MnnHav'o AVr'flffe but eX- ! treme top 25 cents lower; choice ' . 180-235 lb No. 1 and 2 butchers - on nn .a 9ft 9S -hnir No 3 F U,UV W 11IW.IJ . tvpe and medium grade down to " 19.50; few choice 250-310 lbs 18.00 f 75; choice 150-170 lbs 18.00-19.00; a choice 350-550 lb sows 1550-17.00; lighter weights to 17.50; few lots good-choice feeder pigs 18.00; some medium feeders unsold. " Sheep salable 50; market ac I around 100-105 lb wooled lambs five; steady; few good-choice 26.00-50: one lot choice 105 lbs 25.50: few utility lambs down to ww.00; good slaughter ewes sal . able around 13.00. Obituary a Paul Francis McNeal. infant son nf a Mr. and Mrs. Francia H. McNeal. died - hera March 34, 1952. Besides the par i ents survivors include: two brothers. Wayne and Raymond and five sisters. " Kathleen. Janice. Barbara. Donna and Sharon, all of this city: a grandmother, Mrs. Agatha McNeal of Glendale. Cal. a Funeral arrangements will be in- nounced by Ward's Klamath Funeral Home at a later date. Proudly ...the nude look Blue suede and mesh QUOTATIONS By The Associated Press Admiral Corporation 28 i Allied uncuuciu Allis Chalmers American Airlines American Power (i Light American Tel. & Tel. American Tobacco Anaconda Copper 71 49 3 1 14', 25 154 68 ; 4tP 80 l, 49 47 i 68 j 21 35 ' 49 41'. Atchison Railroad Bethlehem Steei Boeing Airplane Co. Rnrtr Warner California Packing Canadian racmc Caterpillar Tractor rdtannaa nnrnnrnlinn Chrysler Corporation 74 'a 107 ' 34 17 i 6'i 8fs M ' 04 , 43 '4 14 57 43 4 53 21 ' 44 36 a 31 , 46 68 t2 75 t, 8", Allies eervice Consolidated Edison Consolidated Vultee Crown ellerbach Cui'tiss WrlRht Douglas Aircraft dupont de Nemours Enstmnn Kodak Emerson Radio General Electric General Foods General Motors Georgia Pac Plywood Goodyear Tire Homestake Mining Co. International Harvester International Paper Johns Mnnvllle Kennecott Copper Libby. McNeill Lockheed Aircraft 20 tj 17 39 ' a 6:1", 20 ! 18 , 16 ' 34 111 66 1, 18 9 t. 29', 26 t, 58 40 ii 59 , Loew's Incorporated Long Bell A Montgomery Ward Nash Kelvinator New York Central Pacific American Fish Pacific Gas & Electric Pacific Tel. & Tel. Packard Motor Car Penny J.C.) Co. Pennsylvania R. R. Pepsi Cola Co. Philco Radio Radio Corporation Rayonier Incorp Rayonier Incorp PId Republic Steel Revnolds Metals Richfield Oil Safeway Stores Inc. ' Scott Paper Co. 17 i, 31 U 53 39 66 1 . 53 ' 75 36 2 31 s, 2ri 17, 41 lj 116 2 28 30', 5U 34 39 14 i 3 25 H 37 2 'i Sears Roebuck si -o. Socony-Vacuum Oil Southern Pacific Standard Oil Calif Standard Oil N.J. Studebaker Corp. Sunshine Mining Swift Ai Company .Transamerica Corp. Twentieth Century Fox Union Oil Company Union Pacific United Airlines United Aircraft United Corporation United States Plywood United States Steel Warner Pictures Western Union Tel Westinghouse Air Brake Westinghouse Electric Woolworth Company cat irxr ia rharii.5 w Rey nolds. La Grande, was reappointed Tuesday bv Gov. McKay to a three-year term on the Oregon Highway commission. we Present . . . n io")iiiicfS STYLED BY HERALD Weather ' Western Oregon Cloudy with occasional drisr.le Tuesday and Tuesday night: fog ricar the coast. Pnrtly cloudy Wednesday avnd somewhat warmer. Highs 50 to 60 Tuesday and 53 to 65 Wednesday; lows Tuesday night 38 to 48. Winds otf coast westerly to northwesterly and 18 to 28 miles an hour. Eastern Oregon Partly cloudy Tuesday and Wednesday, with scattered showers in mountains Tuesdav. Highs both days 48 to 62; lows Tuesday night 32 to 42. Northern California Fair Tues day through Wednesday except local log extreme north coast; warmer Tuesday. Northerly to northwesterly winds of 15 to 30 miles an hour off the coast. Grants Pass and Vicinity Partly cloudy Tuesday afternoon and night: fair Wednesday. HlKh Tuesday 60: low Tuesday night 42; High weanesaay do. By The Associated l'rfs, 24 hours ending 4:40 a.m. Tuesday: Max.Mln.l'rcp. 63 34 T 61 37 T 65 47 .06 53 44 .02 52 . 34 T 53 - W ,. .04 51 ' 48 .31 ' 69 ' 41 ' 69 48 T 64 50 .48 53 49 .06 54 48 .34 ! 54 40 .10 38 25 42 . 15 52 .. 47 .05 6V 50 44 37 8(J' 56 60 51 51, . 45 .07 57 39 Baker Bend Eugene La Grande Lakevicw Medf ord , North Bend Ontario Pendleton Portland Airpt. Roseburg- Salem Boise al Chicago Denver Eureka Los Angeles New York Red Bluff San Francisco Seattle Spokane San Francisco Livestock SAN FRANCISCO tfi (USDA1 Cattle 75: salable supply aug mented by 100 holdovers, supply consisting mainly of dairy type slaughter cows: slow, early sales generally steady with Monday's de cline; few canner and cutter cows 16.00-19.00. couple lots cutter and utility cows 20.00, small lot high utility cows 23.50: . MondRy all classes generally one to two dol lars lower, steers showed least de cline and cows most, two londs mostly good fed Nevada slaughter steers. Including several choice. 37.00, nine commercial out at 29.00, short load good and. few choice 880 -lb slaughter heifers 32.50: three out at 30.00; two loads mostlv utility 1015-1080 lb dairy type slauchter steers 26.50: bulk canner and cutter cowa io.wl.ju 19 no; utility dairy type 20.00 some 19.00; utility dairy type 20.00 22 00- few utility and commercial bulls 26.C0-28.50; half load good choice 325 lb feeder steers 31.25. Calves none. Hogs 400: market not establish ed: Mondav load choice 220 lb butchers 19.00: few choice 575-590 lb sows 13.00-13.50. -steady. . Sheep none; Monday, few cull to 9.00-15.50, good slaughter ewes mostly wooled pelts. for those AND NEWS. KLAMATH FAIJ.S. OREGON i Vi.i u ii nmmimi mi nii.im mi; i una an !i IIINTIUl'T rornT v-Aiitn L. Taylor, no wiht rtcipi. L-rteftitr r. Edward!, OTr.w IkvisH. FUm W. .i, Kmilk H. Klin, no pmrainr Cn.. Fil.a $7.50. John H Anspuxn. inioqutn wwr gpnry brake. Km W. Kmnk IMcm. non-iupport t wife. Waived urelimluary heartnf. Bond Li a rent- n. Kaaper. no wii.wi llrftiae. Une Paul V. MrKntrny, violation bailc rule, rine W.W. , . , Cart C. Van rieat. fallura driva rtht tide hljtluvay. Ktne CIA. Jack Duvr, petit larceny, rtva month prx'builiMi. . Ronnlil Frledrlch, pt larceny. Five month prtilwiUon. Kfiinetb K. Wallan, no vehicle U tene. Fnrfell ball. , Cart o. Crane, Urunk on highway. Forfeit 3fl ball. , tl Wilma J. Foster, no operator i H cerue. Forfeit Sti ball. , , Jlmmte Chock tool Jr. drunk driving. Fine SMO or UJ(i day. CommHted. , Millard A. Splane Jr., no vehicle II ecnar. Forfeit $10 ball. Huth W. Kortna, no vehicle license. Forfeit J3 ball. MIMCII'Al. COrnT Barney Cowan, drunk. Fine 13 or T Andrew Foater, drunk. Tine M0 or lvMer Covert, drunk. Fine $13 and 3 day. l,ene Arnold drunk and vagrancy. Pleaded not guilty both count. Juttlno Hamoa, no operator license. Forfeit $3 ball. -1M , Willie Jamei. drunk. Fine $100 and 50 davf, probation one year. Baluh Ropklna, ran top algn. For feit 3 ball. Mr. Cecil Hendricks, no operator llce;.e. Fine S3. . Cecil Hendricks, allowing unlicensed o.u-r.l. rme. Fine $10. Robert J. Dover!, violation basic rule Fin - Funeral !".HRINI Funeral rvlc for Vlltorlo iVlcl Fnhrini. t7. ulio died hei -larcn ...... will take placa from tha Sarrd llaart Church. Huh al Slh Sts. Wednesday trhen a requiem mass will be cele brated for the repoa. ot his soul cora nenciti at 0:30 a m. Rev. T. ? Casey officiating. Commitment service and interment In Mt. Calavary Memorial Park. SeclUllon of the Holy :to.ar.v ...ill '1a!i nlaro from the ChSOel Of Wurd's Klamath Funeral Home, 92i High St., Tuesday, S p.m. ROHINSON' Funeral services- for Leslie Bryant Robinson, who tiled m uealty. Marcn 2' will take olace from the .''u!l r.o.ol rKurrh Chlloouln. Wedne.day, 10 :10 a.m. and 1:39 p in.. Rev. Forrest Bard ofttcinting Commitment rvlc. and Interment in the Chlloquin ceme tery. Ward's Klamath Funeral Home la charge of the arrangements. W U.KI R Funeral services lor Gayle Marie Walker, a. who died here V-rch 23 will take place from the Assembly of God Church. Thursday. 1 p.m.. Rev. Daniel Bayliss olilclating. Commitment service and Interment in the Wilson cemetery. Ward's Klamath Funeral Home in charge of the arrangements. Potatoes CHICAGO Wi Potatoes: Arriv als 129. on track 3-13: total U.S. shiDments 725: supplies limited: - 1 market .very firm at ceilings; track sales, ici per- iuu 10: laano nuv sets $6.15, standards $5.55: Minnesota-North Dakota Ponttacs $4.91 washed. Potato Shipments 50-51 51-52 March 21 - 23 28 'Month to date .- 595 438 Season to date 10.685 7951 acbusmkned to paying more Crater Lake Snow Melts Rainfall and warm weather low ered snow depths at CraK-r Lako National Park lo 208 inches, ac cording to word received hero late Monday from Chief Runner Lou Hallock. The xnowpack on the highway, a foot deeu In aumo spnl.i, has been turned to sluh In some lo cations making chains necessary for sale travel. The Annie Spiinn Rim Village road Is rl(ed. Over the weekend 66 cars brought 276, among them 68 skiers, Betty Brondejsky Is Valedictorian HENLEY lielly Brnndejsky, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry u..u.uubu will hi. valedictorian uf this yeBr'.s graduating class, It was announcea urany u i George Elliott, Betty finished with .. rmip u. nvMrniH. of 3.525. She also recently won the state Four-H news wilting contest and lias been a several times winner with beef entries In tho Rotary sponsored Junior Livestock show. Inking iho Grand Champion ribbon 01 Richard Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hill wllh a four year schol asllo average of 3.428 will be salu- tutorial). Baccalaureate services are nlannrd tor May 18, graduation lor May 23. Ambu'ance Service Sy stem Discussed D.Ksihintv of Instituting an am- bttlanee service was discussed by members ot Suburban Volunteer Fire Department at their monthly meeting Monday night. According to Fire Chief Buster Gordon a similar service Is operat ed by many volunteer flro depart ment's throughout the state and proven satisfactory. Gordon said the Idea Is till In the Investigative staRes. Probation Given On Theft Charges Two men arrested by City Po lice over the weekend on petit lar ceny charges, were given live months probation each In District Court Monday afternoon. Charged with stealing hub citps from a car on the Parker Pontiac used car lot at S. 5th and Klam ath Friday night were Jack V. Dow. route 3. bo 331. and Roni'ld P. Frledrlch, 3900 Oreensprings Dr. The two pleaded guilty to the charges In court. Police sa" the arrests cleared up two other thefU of hub caps Saturday night. YEAR'S LEAVE CORVALLIS l.n - Arthur S. King soil conservation specialist for tile Oregon State College Exten sion Service 22 years, will leave April 4 on a year's leave of ab sence. He will go to Washington. D.C.. to take charge of a fertilizer, seed and pesticide program for the U.S. and Marshall .Plan countries. . , Fawn ond Brown Kid , Purple and Lilac Kid Seymour Troy's fabulous originals have the respect and awe of. the entire shoe world. That you can have this high calibre of design at a Troylings price is, without doubt, the talk of the shoe world. . . the experts, we mean. $1395 and 1495 I ttJTll'sis!Saa y a ,.,, , ny,i,a tContlnued from Pate I) corn scandal that makes sense Is that tho bureaucrats, once they hail bought the coin and BOOST ED 'nib: PRICE, lost imprest in tho over-normal granary Idea. After that, all they were able to seo In It was1 a SUBSIDY that would keep the coin farmers vot ing tho Democratic ticket. If the stored corn rotted Well, In Ibat event, It waa OFF THE MARKET and could no long er depress the price. That's the trouble with a planned economy. In time. Iha planners ceaso lo be economists and BE COME POLITICIANS. The Itlea that eventually dominates tne thinking of all politicians Is how to keep themselves In power. Let's go back lo Ihe slart of Hie evcr-noiiiial granary Idea. It Is told Ititut Interestingly In the Book of Genesis. Joseph, the eleventh son of Jacob mid the apple of his father's eye, was sold Into Nlavery In Egypt by his Jealous brothels. He was bought by rotlphur, Iho caplnln of Hhuiaoli s guard, aim eventually became a biu man In Egypt. The Pharaoh had a ilream. In It, he Mitv seven Cut cows grazing !' Hie river. Then along came aeven lean cows anil ule up the seven tat cows. He went to Joseph, who interpreted the dream to mean (hat Ecviu would have seven years of plenty, followed by seven years of famine. Greatly Impressed. Pharaoh pro moled Joseph on Ihe spot to be the overseer of a plan to store the grain In the lut years and riWpeujo It In the Icim years. Ii worked so well that when the Iran years came Egypt sal pretty through all of them. There came famine In Ihe Land of Caiman, us well as In the land of Egypt. Ja-ii'pli's pcrflcl loua broth ers came to Egypt for grain. He was a noble character. He sold them grain, but put Iho money for It back In Ihe sacks. I haven't tlmo to tell Uio story In detail here, but the upshot of It was Hint Joseph's aged tuihcr. when ho saw iho gruln and learned where It came from, said: "II Is enough. Joseph my son is vol alive. I will go and see him before I die" So all his children and grandchildren 1 and even great-grandchildren, load led their things Into the wagons and journeyed Into the land ot Goshen, where Joseph met them. rnaraon permuted lucm lo scuic there. They remained there for the rest of their lives and tnelr descendants lived there UNTIL MOSES .LED THEM OUT OF EGYPT. I hope you get the point that they lived there until Mosca led them out of J-'.KVpt and back home. In the meantime, over the slow passage of the years, they had be come SLAVES. That's what a planned economy r i - "i ' " l- Geese Marked To Show Route If 3ii see a Canada goose during the next month or so wearing a brightly colored neck band of red, green, yellow or white, don't think II Is a freak, says (lie FIMi and Wildlife Service. Instead, tho blid Is a member ot the winter colony at the Tea Ialnnil National Wild life Refuge 111 coastal North Caro lina and one from a group marked with plastic neck bauds for the purpose of loarnlim more iiuoiit local movements In relation In food supplies and evidence of niiiliuili I lion. About 260 of the Canada geese which wintered at the l'ea Inland Refuge during the past season will CIV northward Willi ineso iingm bands around their necks, 'incno geese huve Just slarlcd their north. ward flight up the Atlantic Coast and across the Eastern mutes. All persons who sen any of thene marker! urtnse are uruiul to I'cpni'l the place and date of observation immediately lo the Wrd Handing Olllce, Fish and Wllillllo Service, I'aliixenl Research Iteiuge. uauiei, Maryland. Probably not more (hull one or two birds th liny (lock will carry the telltale Identlllcntltm bill it can lie seen at about 100 yards with Ihe naked eve. or quarter ol a mile with binoculars. Hie plastic bands are expected to disintegrate or drop off wllhin six weeks or two months. These neck bands are quite dllleient from the, conventional aluminum leg i bands which may remain nil birds ifnr 10 vears or more. Sometimes I these are worn so smooth that chemical treatment Is required lo mnkri llielr numbers become vW- inn. aouin. Preliminary IrsU with the plastic neck bands on captive grcso Indicate they are harmless lo the birds. From banding rtvoverles o t southbound geese during the hunt ing season, there am Indication that most of the North Carolina birds nest In the region from James Bay eastward through the Province of Quebec and Into Labrador. The malorltv of these are believed to move northward In the general vi cinity of Chesapeake Hay over cen tral Pennsylvania and through the Finger Lakes section of New York. Some however, are known lo take a coastal route, as evidenced by recoveries Iron! Mnsaacinr.cu.-i, .Maine. nd New Brunswick. does to people. It seems so easy ELSE to do all your thinking nnd all vour planning for you. No head aches. No worries. Jusl leave It all lO J-Al-A. I'm afraid that's what all this planned economy Is doing to us. SO What I hope Is that we may find a Moses who will lead us out ol It before It Is too lale. Before we become slaves of the dangerous habit of leaving everything to Pnpa and not worrying our little heads about It. , Black Calf . Red Calf The nn n TUESDAY, MARCH 2B, 10IW Thieves Get $600,000 From Truck (Continued from pl II funds were Involved. Police questioned the thret guards Johiiuseii. and Detmli Walsh, ot Boilon, and Joseph Rllev of Revere to determine jusl what happened 111 Ihe robbery. IIKiGEHT IIAI'l. The Danvers robbery wi tlia tint Ion's biggest cash haul since. Feb. : whrn Ihe home of I.. V. Redfirld In flciio, Nov., waa burg larised of ll.nnil.OOO. It was Ihe lalesl In a aerlrt of recent holdups In New England which netted $116,000. The Credit Union of Ihe Quon. set Point. K.J., Naval Air Blallnn wim robbed of 1 1 ml, 00(1 oash nnd a bank In Medford, another Boston suburb, of tIS.IHlO. Tuesday's holdup was Ihe larg est In this area since Ihe Brinks Express Company was robbed of I1,2Ihi iiuu casu in uoaion on jbii. 17,. 11)80. Los Angeles Fire Takes Six Lives Cuntlmieil from pan 1 Club was burned out In another fim shortly alter ndlnlghl. I'lPsUlcnl Frank Winnie estimat ed Ihe loss, chlelly lo Ihe kitchen and banquet room, at $200,000. B!x employes escaped. Get 13 wk of J The KIPLINCER ) LETTER for only $3 i fo hp you plan ahtad J You'll profit whrn you ul th Kip liimrr wjhmion 1 tiici, bccAUH. I You'll et tlw advance Information I inii imuly.ii thai keep Yli ltd of competition - mi warn you of . thm-tic Atlccimg your job, your ' bui.nrt. ytiur taming. I You'll know wiW to tptct in ov I rimncnt policy, butinrtt lrrn.1i, a i.u ci, production, control, ihoit I Whrn you rctl your flrt Wulv Ingion I filer, you'll undrtttincl why I it U impiiiiftnt to board chairmvn, to nmg eircutivr. lo (be owner of one-man ihp. Lach wtkly l.ftrr ti packed with ftuit ... no editorials 1 about hat "ought lo b." but prac- I tKl. uirnj gutdanct on how to plan fix today 't dilbcuUitta and today's opportunities I You can have the Wuhlnetoa I el ler on your deik vty Monday I morning ior i j wtcu tor oniv j.uu. (Regular full-year rate it Jll ) 1 I J ml (ear out thh id. and return tl I a lo u UxUy. Attach your check, or I . trll u in bdl yoo, later. Fit her war, I we'll itart your UiaJ aubacripuon ' immediately. J KIPllNGER2w- I Via . 1 7J$H SI. M W..Wihlngton 6.O.C. I u -- "-- . . . Blue Calf and Mtsh . . . Black Potent and Math 717 MAIN mm