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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (June 18, 1952)
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, UIB'i PAGE FOUR HERALD AND NKWS, KLAMATH KAl.LS. UKKGON MARKETS and FINANCIAL Stocks NEW YORK Wi The rock market advanced Wednesday with taMntj the apolliKht on the rise. Oalns went from fractions to a Utile better than a point while losses were held down severely with a few passing the point mark. Volume came to an estimated 1.300,000 shares. That compares with 920,000 shares traded Tuesday, the lowest In s month. Railroads carried the ball most of the session and displayed some of the day's best gains. I QUOTATIONS New York Blocks By The Associated Press Admiral Corporation 21 Allied Chemical W ' Alus Chalmers s American Airlines 13 ' American Power It Light 27 American Tel, & Tel. 152 American Tobacco T V Anaconda Copper J Atchison Railroad W 'a Bethlehem Steel Vt Boeing Airplane Co. 34 H Bont Warner Burroughs Adding Machine . 11 California Packing 25 4 Canadian Pacific 16 ? Caterpillar Tractor Celanese Corporation 0i Chrysler Corporation H t Cities Service 101 t Consolidated Edison 34 Ji Consolidated Vultee 18 Crown Zellerbach S3 Curtis Wright H Douglas Aircraft "I yt duPont de Nemours "I V Eastman Kodak 13 H General Electrio 60 Oeneral Foods 45 7i General Motors 50 Georgia Pac Plywood 20 Goodyear Tire Vt HomesUke Mining Co. International Harvester International Paper 461, Johns Manville 164 Libby, McNeiU 14 Lockheed Aircraft 24 Loew's Incorporated 13 Long Bell A 34". Montgomery Ward 62H Nash Kelvinator 1H New York Central 20H Northern Pacific 80V, Pacific American Pish 14 14 Pacific Gas & Electric 31H Pacific Tel. & Tel. 110 Packard Motor Car 4 Penney (J. C.) Co. 684 Pennsylvania R. R. 304 Pepsi Cola Co. 10 Philco Radio 31?i Radio Corporation 264 Rayonier Incorp 284 Rayonier Incorp Pfd Republic Steel 40i Reynolds Metals 55 Richfield Oil 654 Safeway Stores Inc. 314 Scott Paper Co. 524 Sears Roebuck ft Co. 53 V Socony-Vacuum Oil 38 Southern Pacific 19 Standard OU Calif ' - " 584 Standard Oil N. J. 19 Studebaker Corp. 17 Sunshine Mining 94 Swift & Company 31 Ta Transamerica- Corp. 264 Twentieth Century Fox 164 Union Oil Company 414 Union Pacific -115 United Airlines 274 United Aircraft 114 United Corporation 64 United States Plywood United States Steel 384 Warner Pictures 124 Western Union Tel 40 Westinghouse Air Brake 26H Westlnghouse Electrio 374 Woolworth Company !' Only $1.75 Down v yrf if' UNPAIHTED CHEST, '21.95 VALUE Limited quantity specialty par chaied . . . Better Hurry I M't ill smoothly Moded sod ready to paint in the glowing eolor of font choice. BeatwfalT styled in the modern mode. Glut-blocked throughout for strength. Re cessed drawer fronts. 30" wide, I j" deep, sjl" high. (50-p64) Atk tor low Print on Pomtt ond Painting SuppUo. GRAINS CHICAGO I Grains overcame early easiness, during which wheat wank to new lows on the crop lor the third straight day, to wind up with minor gams on the board of trade Wednesday. Soybeans and rve led the upturn. Wheat firmed toward the close on news West Germany had bought around 470.000 bushels of hard wheat for late June and early July shipment. Wheat closed 4- higher. July $2.39, corn 'a to 1 cent higher. sl.82 Vi-V oats V higher, July 78 rye 1 s-2 t, higher, July 2.Il-2.1l''4. soybeans 1 4-1 Vi higher. July 13.22 43.23. and lard 13 cents lower to 10 cents a hundred pounds higher.. July S11.42. WHEAT Open High Low Close Jly 2.28 3.29 St 5.28 2.29 Sep 2.31 S 2.32 S 2.31 4 2.33 t Dec 2.36 V. 2.37 S 2.36 3.37 H Mar 2.39 V, 2.40 V 2.39 V. 2.40 . PORTLAND 1 Wheat (bid 1 to arrive market, basis No. 1 bulk j delivered coast: Soft White 2.33; Soft White (excluding Rex 2.33; I White Club 2.33. Hard Red Winter: Ordinary 12.33; 10 per cent 2.33: 11 per cent 1 2.33: 13 per cent 3.33. Hard White Bart: Ordinary 2.36; 10 per cent 2.36: 11 per cent 2.36; 12 per cent 2.36. Car receipts: wheat 29; barley 2: flour 8; corn 10: oats 1; mill feed . LIVESTOCK PORTLAND OP (USDA) Cattle salable 200 trade moder ately active on all classes; some weakness on bulls, cows: other classes largely steady: good-low choice led steers 31.50-33.50: com mercial 28.50-31.50 including aver ages over 1,300 lbs at 30.00; can-ner-cutter cows 16.00-20.00; few utility 21.00-23.00: odd head high commercial 28.00: commercial bulls 28.00-29.00; odd head good weighty bulls up to 30.25; utility 25.00-27.00: cutters down to 24.00. Calves salable 50; vealers steady to weak; good: choice 33.00-35.00; commercial-good 26.00-32.00; utility 25.00 down. Hogs salable 300: generally stead'; choice No. 1 and 2 butch ers 180-230 lbs 23.00-25 few 24 27 lbs 20.50-22.50 heavy weights 19.00-21.00: sows largely 16.50 17.50: few lightweights under 300 lbs 18.50; feeder pigs slow. Sheep salable 500: spring lambs unevenly weak to 50 cents lower and trade slow; good-prime 80-95 lb spring lambs 25.50-26.00: utility- good 24.00-25.00; utility-good No. 2 ana I pens year linos 12.00-13.00: tew utility-good slaughter ewes 5.00-6.00; spring feeding lambs largely 23.00. POTATOES CHICAGO Otl Potatoes: Arriv als 112. on track 195: total U.S. shipments 1,109: market slightly weaker on whites, steady with firm undertone for best on reds; track sales, carlots per 100 lbs: Arizona Pontiacs $6.00 6.65: Cali fornia long whites $5.50 - 5.15, bak ers $620, triumph type $6.65 6.90. Street sales per 100 lb: Arizona reds $6.25 - 6.75: California long whites $6.00 6.50, reds $6.25-7.00; Oklahoma triumphs $6.00. COMMITTEEWOMAN Mrs, Marshall Cornett. National Republican Committeewoman from Oregon left today for Chicago where she will attend the Republi can National Convention July 7. ene is Being accompanied bv her sister and brother-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Byram, Klamath Falls who will spend the summer in the Midwest, Enroute to Chicago. Mrs. Cornett will stop briefly at Nevada, Mo. She will arrive In the Windy City June 10. $7.25 WeeWy i AT1 vj- ,( , Weather Western Oregon Sunny and warm Wednesday with morning coastal cloudiness. Scattered thun derstorms in mountain.', ol south. Partly cloudy and a little cooler Thursday. Highs Wednesday from 75 to 83 In north and 83 to 92 In south. Lows Wednesday night 48 to 54. Highs Thursday from 70 to 80 in north to 75 to 85 in south. Highs along coast about 60 both days Winds oif coast northerly to north' westerly and 13 to 25 miles an hour, increasing at times this at ternoon to 30 to 35. Winds will diminish Thursday. Eastern Oregon Sunny and warm Wednesday. Partly cloudy Thursday with scattered alternoon thundershowers I n mountains. Highs of 18 to 88 Wednesday and 73 to 83 Thursflav. Lows Wednes day night 48 to 66. Grants Pass and Vicinity Partly cloudy through Thursday with afternoon ilnindcrshovrs both days. High of 90 Wednesday and 85 Thursday. Low Wednesday 55. By The Associated l'rrss 24 hours to 4:30 a.m. Wednesday Max. Mln. Prep. Baker Eugene La Grande Lakevlew Medford North Bend 77 47 77 49 77 44 80 53 91 55 t3 52 T 87 56 18 63 Iti 54 10 SI - 77 49 86 54 85 68 90 55 58 51 11 67 T 100 65 69 45 70 50 72 48 Ontario Pendleton Portland (Alrp) Roseburg Salem Boise Chicago Denver Eureka Los Angeles Red Bluff San Francisco SeatUe Spokane LIVESTOCK SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO Wi (USDA) Cattle: 50. commercial good fat steers absent, one load good 916 lb feeder steers 28.00. aged commercial range cows 1,000 lbs and over 18.00-20.00, steady, dairy bred slaughter cows weak, 50 cents to 1.00 lower, few utility cows 17.00-18.50, slaughter bulls weak, utility and commercial 24.00- 27.00. cutters 22.00. Calves: 20. commercial-good 250- 300 lb slaughter calves 28.00-31.00. cull-utility dairy bred slaughter calves weak at 15.00-17.00. Hogs: 200. early generally steady on butchers and . sows, half car good 215 lb butchers 32.00, sorted 290 lb out at 20.00, light choice sows 16.50, bulk medium-good 14.00-15.50. Sheep: 1.500. around steadv early few loads good 86 lbs shorn lambs 26.25, late Tuesday bulk shom Iambs under 86 lbs cood- choice 25.00-26.50, several hundred medium-good spring feeder lambs 23.00 weak, 200 shorn ewes cull commercial 4.00-6.50, heaw shorn yearlings and two-year-olds 1.00 2.00 lower at 14.00-16.00. CHICAGO W Most hogs sold at steady to strong prices Wednes day on a holddown of 10 per cent in supplies. The market started off strong to 15 cents higher but this was only for outstanding quality. . Cattle were weak to $1.00 lower, veal calves $1.00 to $2.00 off, and sheep weak to 50 cents less. Most barrows and gilts were worth $19.00 to $20.75 but 20.00 was paid occasionally for the day s top. Sows took $16.00 to $18.00. Most good to prime steers ranged from $28.50 to $35.25 with one high prime load topping at $35.75. Good and choice heifers took $29.00 to $32.50 while cows topped at S24.50. See The Klamath Basin IJOUND UP JULY 2, 3, 4 in Klamath Falls For Thrills and MEN'S Children Sim 1 to S BOYS' Him te 12 3.65 1.98 249 1 1 k I & "NEWSIES" ENTER BIKE PARADE These five Herald and News newiboy paper teller! ere pic tured in front of Montgomery Werd end Co. where they signed up tor the annual Bicycle Safety Parade which will be conducted Friday morning. This colorful parade is tpontored each year by Wards, with priiei awarded to best decorated bike riden and emphasis placed on bicycle safety. Deadline for enterinq is Thursday, 5:30 p.m. The boys are (from left) Harold Daily, Larry Freeman, Gary Kramer, Tommy Bender and Larry Bender. Indians Set Meeting Members of the Klamath Indian tribe are to meet in general coun cil session Thursday at the Beatty community gym to take up about a dozen items on the council's pre pared agenda. The meeting Is called for 10 a m. (standard time) and a chicken din ner is to be served at the noon hour. Consideration of the 1952-53 gen eral council and loan board budgets and the 1953-54 general adminis trative budget is scheduled for the early part of the meeting. One member of the loan board Is to be elected, the position now held by Boyd Jackson. Officers of the general council for a two-year term are also to be made, and various other mat ters considered. The council session is being held at Beatty for the second time be cause repairs are being made at the council hall at Klamath Agen cy. Last month over 300 persons attended the meeting at Beatty, a crowd larger than has been at tending sessions at Klamath Agen cy in recent years. BONANZA FIRE The Bonanza volunteer fire department asks residents of Bonanza and vicinity to post the department's phone number 2085 to be used in case of fire. A bad fire recently got too far along to control because some one dldnt know what number to call. Spills Galore and see us (or your 66 Riders 4UTHIHIIC WKniN C0WI0Y PANTS Cowboy Dinim Scrotcjlproof Hip Pocket Divots SANFORIZED For firnionint fit Sfldfl rifting Umj lasting 6UAIAKTEED Sotlsfattlon or Monty lock BOYS' Kim 14 te It 198 3.50 2.98 BOYS' StiM 27 te 2 LADIES' Lm Jhm T7V JTj i i IV 1V,1 ICi 1111 I KNX's Mel Baldwin Visits KFLW Mel Baldwin, now appearing on his own late evening show over KNX was a recent visitor at KFLW, where he was chief announcer when that station first went on the air. He and his wife were housreuests of her fBther. Oeorge P. Davis, and while on his vacation he will visit stations in Salem. Portland and Tillamook. His interview over the Herald and News station was one of three of "name" interest in the past 10 davs: following Jlmmv Dorsev and Jimmy Fldler. Senate Kills PO Plan WASHINGTON I The Senate Wednesday killed a reorganisation plan submitted bv President Tru man designed to wipe out the re quirement of Senate approval in the selection of 21,438 postmasters. The vote to disapprove the plan was 56 to 29. That was seven more than the 49 votes necessary for rejection. Th Dlnn haH been ripfenriMi In 'riebntp bk Jt irreat fnm'ant tln In the merit avstem and attacked as a move to make the postmaster general an immensely powerful political figure W)EN YOU yiWMmun rt a LET PEYTON AND CO. EXPLAIN THE MAGIC OF THIS REVOLUTIONARY NEW HEATING SYSTEM. THE MAGIC OF THE MYSTERIOUS TWIN GRILLS WILL BE CHEERFULLY EX PLAINED. PHONE OR COME IN RIGHT NOW. TODAY. AND LEAI?N HOW COMFORT CAN COST SO LITTLEI Legal Nofice None l hrrvby given that tht under tnd guardian of lh prion and -tal of Frank I. Mathtrrs. an tnrt)tm I lent. will, on and after the 17ih duv ; of Jul . Itwa. it-1 1 to th hiRhcit nlilctor for cah al private alr lit following ( dtMCrihrd real property aituatvd lit Klamath County. Orrrion Th southerly B.1 ftt of l-ol tlx H i Block one 8h!rt addition to the i ftly of Klamath nib. Oregon, accord . tn tn the duly rerordHl plot thereof i Said aale heme, held pursuant to an j orttcr of the Hon or a hi David H Van denherg. Judge of the Circuit Court ttt the Stnte of Oregon for the Count) of j Klamath I Hida nvay he preaented to (he tinder. feigned at the office of her Attorney, 1. Orth Sl'emrrr 711 Main Street. , Kl'mitth rail. Oregon Dated thl Iflth dt nf June. 1013 t Orih Rlaemnre Mlnrney 1 rtta D Rota. Guardian ! J IB l.VJtilv 3 0 No 74 Obituary r.nrrs Ituby Mtrfftral Grrcn. SS. KUmalh Pallt. dld hrr iunt IT Mrs. Grn. a native at Othkoah. Wla.. had raaldad i In Klamath Falli for tha pan 18 yaara. I Survivor Inrludar tha widower. Charlaa I W. Graan. a ton. Jamea V. Greater. Culver City. Calif : and dauahler Mra. Elliott Beat. Santa Ana. Calif., alao four grandchildren and three great, randchlldren. Funeral aj-rangemenu are to be announced later by Waxd'a Klamath Funeral Home mm INSTALL Medo-Land brings you the 4 finest milk ... in the new, sanitary, gable top carton. It's easy to use... just follow these 4 easy steps: 2 Fold g,ib! top hick nd Ceirton it 'dy for pouring 4 To clot prii inner tl into pouring vnt. Thit will prt vnt milk getting ny k boi flavor. NEW LOW PRICES ON Jacobsen America's Favorite Power Mower" I' Wos 21-in. Lawn Queen Automatic recoil starter blade tip protective shields extra larqe, tami-pneumatic tires superb construction throuqhout no wonder it's the favorite from coast to coast. 154 Was 169.00 NOW 18-in. PACER Here's an outttandinq value for the smaller city or suburban lawns Ruqqcd all stool con struction fully enclosed chain drive extra touqh, heot-treated bed knife and reel blades. Was 126.00 HAT50 NOWU AUTHORIZED Service Station fr Jacobsen Power Mower jUr Merry Tiller fr Parts ond Service WI HAVE COMPLETE SHARPENING EQUIPMENT FOR ALL MOWERS I f 1' Lilt the double I j I f-ioled tk 3 Tilt Carton gently, t you wn M rUti bottle Until July 2, 1952 21-in. BANTAM Here it populor family choice. Dual clutch, either automatic or finqer-tip control biq air cuihion tires positive, fully-encloied chain drive here's the mower that make! mowing a breeie. -now$133 00 136.30 so 1 m )! iff TROY V. COOK Co. STORE FR MEM AWAYStmiRHJYSJn nth and MAIN 820 Main Phone 6778 2040 So. 6th Ph. 4803 wufcv-wwwwwwOavyv ; 7