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The Herald-Palladium from Benton Harbor, Michigan • 17

Location:
Benton Harbor, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
17
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4 3, 1950 the news palladium, benton harbor, mich. PAGE SEVENTEEN OBITUARIES Fraudulent Livestock arket News Mystery (Continued From Page One) Mrs. Carrie Rogers home and resided' at 211 East Mam street His wife, Roseta Bailey Benefiel, died in December, 1944. Surviving besides his sons in Benton Harbor are the ollowlng children; Hugh Benefiel, of Indianapolis, Herman Benefiel, Mrs. Ethel Griffin, Mrs.

Edna Coyle and Mrs. Mildred Surber, of Alexandria, Ind. He also leaves a brother, Wil- Stocks Drift In Cautious Trade Today Stock Averages Pack Brings Grower Fine A Stevensville farmer who sold black raspberries on the Benton Harbor market yesterday, was fined $10 and costs of $450 In Municipal court today for over-facing the blackcaps. A state department of agriculture Inspector charged that Nick Cuprisln put large berries on the top of boxes to cover smaller one. Cuprlsin received $3.30 for flvt 24-pint crates that he sold to C.

L. Heinlen and Son yesterday. He was ordered to make restitution for the sale. It was the first reported case of over-facing black raspberries on the market this year. Large JViles Plant Idle NILES, Ang, 3- (AP) -Operations at the Simplicity Pattern Co.

were at a virtual standstill today because of a strike of 400 members of the AFL International Brotherhood of Bookbinders. The bookbinders walked out yesterday in support of demands for a blanket pay raise. Today photo engravers, sterotyp-ers and other members of craft unions refused to cross picket lines. The plant employs approximately 900. Compiled by the Associated Press Indst' Rails Uti? Stks 30 15 15 60 Net Change D.5 Unch A.l D.l Noon Thur.

105.0 472 435 79.0 Prev. Day 105.5 475 43.1 76.1 Week Ago 102.1 47.6 42.8 74.9 Month Ago 104.7 41.0 44 5 74.2 Year Ago 89.8 32.7 403 63.4 1950 high 114.2 47.6 47.7 80.3 1950 low 97.6 39.6 425 70.5 1949 high 101.6 40.2 43.6 72.2 1949 low 81.4 294 38.2 58.0 WATER VLTET, Funeral services ror Mrs. Carrie Rogers. 80, will be held Friday at 2 p. m.

at the Hutchins funeral, home here. The Rev. Clifford Hilllker, Bangor, will omciate. Burial wiU be in Wa-tervliet cemetery. Mrs.

Rogers died Wednesday at 3:30 p. m. at the Clear Lake Convalescent home near Buchanan. Born May 12, 1870, Mrs. Rogers was the widow of George Rogers, who was killed near here in an ac cident on March 14, 1949.

He was retired; Chicago taxi driver, who moved to Hartford then to Water-vllet after his retirement. She Is survived by a sister. Mrs. G. McDonald, and a nephew, Earl McDonald, New York City.

Austin Benefiel Austin Jefferson Benefiel, 91. father of George and Raymond Benefiel of Benton Harbor, died at 2:15 p. m. Wednesday at Mercy hos pital, where he had been a patient since July 29. He had suffered 111 health for several months.

His body was taken from the Reiser mortuary Wednesday night to the Davis and Strlcler funeral home in Alexandria. Ind. Funeral services will be held at the Meth odist church In Alexandria at 2 m. Frlay, with the Rev. L.

G. Ja cobs officiating. Burial will be in the Odd Fellow cemetery there. Mr. Benefiel was born June 16 1859 in Madison county, near Frankton.

He moved to Alexandria, during his boyhood and lived there 75 years. Four years ago he came to Benton Harbor to make his ltem, of Franklin, Ind- a sister, Mrs. Margaret Bauslog, of Elwood, 10 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Mr. Beneflel's sons are all en gaged In the grocery-meat market business' Burroughs Will Filed In Probate Today The will of Mrs.

Dora Moore Burroughs, of Benton Harbor, who died July 26, was filed today with Probate Judge Malcolm Hatfield. The estate Is valued at $3,000 In real estate, and under the terms of the will it is to be divided equally between her five sons and two daughters: Ernest Moore, Appleton, Florence Saddoris, Fostoria, Ohio; Stanley Moore, Haslett, Sylvan Moore, Battle Creek; Sterling Moore, Lowell; Jurden Moore, Grand Rapids; and Genevieve Moore Mench, Denver, Colo. MONTHLY REPORT PAW PAW, Aug. 3 Frank Blaney, register of deeds, reports that the receipts of his office for the past month were $897. Sources of the revenue received wre: deeds, $278; oil leases, $42; death certificates $13; affidavits, wills and probate orders, mortgages, chattels.

mortgage discharge, $5V50. I I .1 butter SUGAR Cigarettes Pure Cane All Popular 59 5-lb. Bag Brarid8 NEW YORK, Aug. 3-(AP)-The stock market got stuck in a price rut toaay Business faded away and prices changed less than 50 cents a share for the most part. Gains and losses were tnorougmy scrammed.

Most traders felt there were too many imponderables floating around which might have an effect on prices war legislation in Washington, the Korean fighting, and the Security Council debate This same mood of caution has been apparent all week although some issues or groups have moved independently of the market as a whole. LOCOMOTIVE STOCKS did a lit tie better than average today, with gains posted for Lima-Hamilton, American Locomotive and Baldwin These companies are important sup pliers of heavy armament. Also ahead off and on were Bethlehem Steel, Eastern Stainless Steel Packard, J. I. Case, Douglas Aircraft, American Cyanamld, West-inghouse Electric, Santa Fe, Chesapeake Ohio, Texas and Loew's.

Holding back were U. S. Steel. General Motors, Goodrich, Sears Roebuck Lockheed, Admiral Emerson Radio, Radio Copper, Air Reduction, Allied Chemical (new and old stocks), Du Pont, American Can, Southern Railway, Standard Oil (NJ), and Johna-Manville. Railway bonds, especially those In the lower price range, tended upward.

U. S. governments held steady in over-the-counter dealings. Heavily traded at a higher price In the curb was Waltham Watch. Demand was said to have been stimulated by war orders.

Also up were Lakey Foundry Menasco Ryan Consolidated Petroleum, Irving Air Chute, Imperial Oil, Humble Oil, Creole Petroleum, and 'Arkansas Natural Gas Losers included Lone Star Gas: Trans Lux, Illinois Zinc, Clinchfield Coal, Claude Neon, and Cities Service. Grains Gain Slightly In Slow Trade BY WILLIAM FERRIS CHICAGO, Aug. 3-(AP)'-With lack of selling pressure again a notable feature, grains crept upward for modest advances on the Board of Trade" today. The best gains were scored by soy beans, which appeared to have re covered from the blast directed at trading In this commodity yester: day by Agriculture Secretary Bran- nan. 1 1 I I I SI .79 I II lh li li A II I ru.

Ill II 111 III IJW II i I li I Fruit Prices Sold Steady; Duchess Off NOON PRICES Most commodities were generally vteady on the Benton Harbor fruit market, although an increasing quantity of Duchess apples turned a little weaker in price. Prices up to noon i today were: Apples: Bushel, Yelew Trans-' parent, U. 8. No. 1, 2-inch-up, 11.25 to $1.65, mostly 214-f inch-up, one lot $2.25.

Duchess, i U. S. No. 1, 2 Vi -inch-up, $2.25 to $2.75. Sweet Bough, U.

No. 1, 2 -inch-up, one lot $2.50., 12-quarts, Michigan No. 1, $1.75 to $2, few off to $1.50 and tew best $2.10 to Michigan No. 2, 75c to $1.15, mostly. 8-quart cardboard i basket, U.

S. No. 1, few $1.25 to 1 Michigan No. 1, few 8-basket crate, $3.50 to $4, mostly $3.50 to 16-quart crate, round plum type, mostly 4, Italian plum type, one lot 4.50. i Red Raspberries: 24 -pints, $3.10 to $3.75, mostly $3.25 to $3.50.

Black raspberries: 24 -pints, few lots $2.50 to $3. Dewberries: 16-quart, few $3.25 to $4. Cucumbers: Bushel, slicers, $1.50 to $1.75, one lot No. 2, few 75 to 80c. Peppers: Bushel, green, few $2.50 to $2.75.

Peaches: Bushel, Red 'Haven, 2-toch-np, one lot $3.50. Blueberries: 16 -quarts, marsh, few 12 -pints, cultivated, $2.75 to Wednesday's fruit trading on the 3nton Harbor market saw tomqp oes again back all the ground tney lad lost the two previous days, vlost other commodities held about steady during the day, with Yellow rransparent apples and -cucumbers lolding to the low ranges they hit he day before. Some of the first small lots of pears and peaches howed up on the market yesterday, ndicating that these items will to appear with more regularity the next days and weeks ahead PPLES Apples were the heaviest volume tem of the day. Yellow Transpar mts, U. S.

No. 1, sold from $U0 to 2, mainly 'one11 lot, high vs .2.50, for 2-Uich-up, while one out landing lot of 24 -inch-up sold for 2.65. Some, Utility grade, 2-Inch jp, moved around $1 to $1.25. U. 8, o.

1 2 -Inch-op, tanged rom $2.50 to $3.25, mostly $2.75 to 3, and Utility grade drew to 1.25. Red Astrachans, 2-inch-up. old in generally the same range as Duchess, few. oft to $2.25., for U. S.

-io: 1 grade. Apple receipts num bered 5.947 bushels. TOMATOES Twelve-quart baskets of tomatoes, ifter an uncertain start In the early lours, turned firmer around noon. Afternoon sales were $1.75 to $2.25. ifew off to $150, on the Mich.

No. 1 Morning bids had been most-y 1.50 to $L75, few off to $155. So. 2 pfferings were 80c to $123, nostly around the $1 mark. Eight-luart cardboard baskets, U.

S. No. i and some Mich. No. 1, sold mostly it $1.25, few $1.15.

Eight-basket urates were $355 to $4, mainly $3 JO $3.60, while plum tomatoes in 1 8-quart crates sold from $3.50 to mostly the higher figure, with a lew up- to $450. Tomato receipts otaled 3,670 packages. RED RASPBERRIES Red raspberries suffered some as tie result oi excessive moisture, ana he price range extended from a low $2 to a top of $455. The general ange was from $2.50 to $325 nostly $2.75 to $3, with a few best id to $3.50 to $455. Some poor con- (dition lots were as low as $2 and 52.25.

The day's volume ot reds was 24-pint crates, for a season's Igure of 111,092. RI.ArnC RASPBERRIES (Blackcaps offerings continued to -un heavier than expected for this (ate In the season, with 1,337 24-ilnt crates offered yesterday. Sales were between $255 and $2.75, mostly the lower half of the range, with a few best up to $3 and some poorer to $2 to $2.15. The seasos total if black raspberries now Is 139,100 rates. CUCUMBERS I uusnei oasKeis oi sucer cucum-aers were $150 to $2, mostly $1.75, Tew up to $255 and $250 early.

The So. a stock was $1 to $155. Pickles in 12-quart baskets were 75c to IsUO, with the small sizes taking he upper figures. Receipts totaled 729 packs. DEWBERRIES 8 lx teen-quart crates of dewberries from $3 to $3.85, with most transactions closed around the js3.50 mark, on a volume of 636 pates.

CURRANTS I Small lots of currants in 16-quart fcratea were $2 to $2.60, on a volume 162 crates. SOUR CHERRIES A few Jots of Montmorency sour herries in 16-quart crates did most ly $350. CANTALOUPES A few small lots of Honey Rock I COLD 1 5 BEER I Former Latvia Official Dies At Hagar Julys Druva, 67, former general secretary of the Latvian Farm labor party and former prominent editor and publisher in Latvia, died at 9,:30 p.m. yesterday in Hagar town ship, where he was employed as a tenant laborer on the Eric Kerli-kowske farm. The Druva family come to the United States two months ago from a German DP camp.

Mr. Druva, a close associate with the president of Latvia, was president of the Latvian Public Association for 40 years before his family was forced to leave Latvia during the Russian invasion before World War II. Surviving are his wife, Lidja: two sons, Janls and Karlis, both of Hagar township. The body Is at the Kerlikowske funeral chapel. Funeral arrange ments are incomplete.

Fred Stein BARODA. Aug. 3 Funeral rites for Fred Stein, who died Monday at his home in Baroda, were held at 2:30 p. m. Wednesday at the Baroda Congregational church, the Rev.

John Van Puffelen officiating. Mrs. Granville Nye, accompanied by Mrs. Clarence Wendt, sang Sometime We'll Understand" and Face To Face." Casket bearers were Louis Peters, William Summers, Martin Hucko, Melvin Estes, William link and Joseph Hanley. Burial was in the Stevensville cemetery, Mr.

Stein is survived by his wid ow, Norma; one daughter, Mrs. Grace Holden, of Baroda; one sister, Mrs. Barney Kulczyk of Calumet City; three grandchildren, and ten great-grandchildren. Out-of-town relatives attending the services included Mr. and Mrs.

Barney Kulczyk, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Kulczyk. Ben Kulczyk Mrs. John Kulczyk, Mr.

and Mrs, Joseph Kulczyk and son, and Mrs Edgar Hertzig, all of Calumet City Tony Kulczyk, Hammond, Mrs. Steve Betustlk, Hammond; Mr. and Mrs. Leo. Nye, Mr.

and Mrs. Lee Nye, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Farano, Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Farano, and Mrs. Roy Nye, all of Chicago; and Mrs. William Borman of Spring Lake. Mich. Gerald B.

Camp Gerald B. Camp, three-and-a- half year old son of the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd M. Camp, 1035 East Main street, died Tuesday at the University hospital, Ann Arbor, where he was admitted on July 25.

The child, who had been ill seven weeks entered Mercy hospital here on June 25 and was a patient there until he was transferred to Ann Arbor. He was born Jan, 11, 1947 In Chattanooga, Tenn His father 18 pastor of the Church of God, 252 Colfax avenue. Besides his parents, he Is sur vived by two brothers and two sisters, Donald Larry Peggy Ann and Beverly. He also leaves his grandparents, Mrs. Nellie Camp and Mr.

and Mrs. F. B. Samples, of Chattanooga, Tenn. The body will be taken from the siaugnter 5t am iunerai nome today to Chattanooga, where funeral services will be held Saturday aft ernoon.

Burial will be in Greenwood cemetery there. Charles F. McKeen Burial services will be conducted here Friday afternoon for Charles F. McKeen, 69, a former New Troy resident, who died at his home in Chicago late Tuesday. He had suf fered a heart attack Monday while visiting a Perley Tibbs, in Pipestone township.

Mr. McKeen, was born In Chicago and moved to New Troy when a child. After having served overseas In France during World War he moved to Chicago. His wife, who survives Is the former Olga Tibbs, member of a pioneer Pipestone township family, Mrs. McKeen had taught In sev eral schools In Berrien county be fore their marriage.

Other survivors are one son, Charles, of Chicago; a brother, Robert McKeen, South Bend, and two sisters, Rebeccah Barnhart of Battle Creek, who Is now in Brazil, S. and Mary Barnhart Smith of Dayton, O. 4 Funeral services will be conducted at 10 a. m. Friday at the Fern funeral home, 856 West 87th street, Chicago.

Following the rites, the body will be brought here for burial at 1 p. m. Friday In Crystal Springs c6TO6tcry. The McKeen home in Chicago is at 455 West 71st street. The deceased was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Mrs. Alberta Mitchell Mrs. Alberta (Bertha) Mitchell. 65, of 660 Pearl street, died at 11:30 a. m.

Wednesday at the Berrien county hospital, Berrien Center She had been a patient there one week. Born July 13, -1885 In Ontario, Canada, she was the' daughter of John and Sarah Houston. She bad lived in Berrien county 62 years. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Kath-erine Johnsln of Covert; two stepsons, Oscar Mitchell, of Benton Harbor, and Frank P.

Mitchell, of Chicago, and two step-daughters, Mrs. Bonita Fowler and Mrs. 11a Bright of Chicago. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m.

Saturday at the Bethel Assembly of God, Cherry and Cedar streets with the pastor, the Rev. E. D. Cooley, officiating. Burial will be in the family lot in Oraceland cemetery, near Bridgman.

Mrs. Mitchell was one of the oldest members of the Bethel Assembly of God. The body is at' the Robbins Brothers funeral home, where friends may call a rncccc 11 zii to arrange for Pauley's testimony. However, In answer to a question by Senator Lyndon Johnson (D-Tex), Pauley said that his state ment reflected only his own views ana had not been submitted to an; department In advance. Tydings' advance air of mystery about the hearing led to all manner of speculation as to what was, In prospect There were even rumors that Gen.

Douglas MacArthur was flying here. There was a big turnout of reporters, news photographers, newsreel and television men but not many spectator. The Senate eaueus room, which seats about 300, was only about half filled. Last week. Pauley called on Presi dent Truman.

He told White House reporters then that he was in Wash ington to discuss industrial locations in North Korea with Defense department officials. The presump tion was that the information was for purposes of strategic boombing. Pauley also said he had advised Mr. Truman in 1946 the Russians might seek to force communism on all of Korea. For the Senators, Pauley produced letters and recommendations he had made to President Truman in 1946 indicating his belief that the communists were seizing complete control oi North Korea and would set up a puppet government there, KOREA, Pauley said, "is a land in which the north and south are as tied together as a pretzel.

under these circumstances the country was meant to be a whole, and it was for that reasoji we so argued in the United Nations. The Soviets know it was meant to be a whole, also and that is why you have war in Korea, today." Pauley said that the Russians, after much pressure, agreed that a United Nations trusteeship should be set up for Korea. But Pauley said the Russians carefully set up a strong communist control in North Korea- from the start with the idea of taking over all of the land. Pauley added: "Korea may be only the first bat tleground. Korea itself is but i symptom, bloody and costly as it may be, of a malignancy that could sweep the world." Korea (Continued From Page One) cut off the tanks.

The Red Koreans stopped the first tank and the last one with immobilizing tactics. The tank crews and most of the armored escaped. The Americans then fanned out tc the north and south and fought back to the main U. S. defensive position near Wonbung about 10 miles northeast of Chinju.

Associated Press Correspondent O. H. P. King quoted Maj. Gen.

John E. Church, new 24th division commander, as saying the daring tank foray was fortunately timed. "Our attack stopped "theirs from getting underway," Church said. Leif Erickson, Associated Press correspondent at U. S.

Eighth Army headquarters in Korea, said the big withdrawal of allied troops, in the west and north put the defenders on a line of their choice, the Naktong river. The fall back, he said, disengaged hard-pressed American forces while the newly arrived Second Infantry division and elements of the First marine division were being deployed The new arrivals in the battle sec tors have the heaviest arms yet to be brought into combat on the allied side. ON THE NEW CONSOLIDATED FRONT the Americans and South Koreans face the Communists on virtually equal terms in division strength. There were five Ameri' divisions facing an estimated nine to 10 North Korean divisions. Erickson said, however, the United Nations still lacked enough pow- er to embark on any real counter- offensive.

He said there would soon be more carrier-based planes to help break up the long supply lines the Communists now must maintain. The Far East Air Force report ed damaging .76 North Korean ve hicles, 29 railroad and six locomotives. U. S. B-29s bombed nine bridges, including one ot their more familiar targets the rail road bridge west of Seoul, the long-lost South Korean capital.

N. (Continued From Page One) Ecuador, Cuba, Norway and Nationalist China followed the United States' lead yesterday in insisting that the Council discuss the Korean question before considering Admission of Communist China to the Council, and that the two questions be treated separately. American. Chief. Delegate Warren R.

Austin led the fight to reject any "deals" for settlement of the Korean war. He declared the U. S. will never agree that the end of North Kor- ean aggression depends en any other issue. THE COUNCIL IS STILL TANGLED in debate over what it should discuss, and in what, order.

Some delegates hoped to get a vote on the question today. Jacob Malik, Soviet spokesman and present U. N. council chairman, has insisted en the program he presented: 1. To consider seating the Chinese Communist.

i I. To consider a "peaceful settlement" In Korea. In demanding this agenda, he has denounced U. S. military action in Korea as an aet of aggression.

The U. is pushing for consideration first of its previously-submitted proposal denouncing North Korean's defiance of the U. N. and asking member nations to help localize the war. IV.

T. Stocks (By AP) American Can 93 American Tel Tel 150 Anaconda Cop 32 Armour Co 9 Baltimore Ohio 12 Bethlehem Steel 40 Bonn Alum 29 Briggs Mfg 29 Budd Co 15 Burr Add Mach 12 Calumet Hec 6 Canada Dry 9 Canadian Pac 17 I Case 41 Chesapeake Ohio 29 Chrysler 66 Cont Can 32 Cont Motor 8 Curtiss Wright 11 Detroit Edison 22 Dow Chemical 61 Du Pont, 74, Eastman Kodak 40 Elec Auto Lite 41 Erie RR 14 Ex-CeU-O 38 Freeport Sulph 64o General Elec 45 General Foods 44 General Motors 86'4 Gillette 38 Goodyear 56 Gt Nor Ry Pfd 42 Hudson Motors 14 Illinois Cent 40 Inland Steel 47 Inspir Cop 17 Interlake Iron 15 Intern Uarv 29 Intern Nick 31 Intern Tel Tel II John Manville 39 Kennecott 60 Kresge (S S) .....38 Kroger Co 58 Lib Glass 63 Lies Si Mever 78 Mack Trucks 16 Mont Ward 53 Motor Wheel 21 Mueller Brass 15 Murray Corp 17 Nash Kelv 17 Nat Biscuit' 35 Nat Dairy Pd 40 Nat Pw Lt New York Cent Nor Pac 22 Packard Motor Parke Davis 39 J. C. Penney 66 Penn RR 18 Phelps Dodge 54 Phillips Pet 71 Pure Oil 38 Radio Corp 16 Radio 8 Remington Rand 13 Reo Motors 16 Republic Steel 37 Sears Roebuck -42 Shell. Oil 46 Socony Vac 21 Southern Pac 60 Southern Ry 40 Std Brands r.

21 Std $4 Pfd 65 Std Oil Cal 69 Std. Oil Ind 54 Std OH 79 Texas Co. 69 Timkeri Det Axle 16 Union Carbide 1 Union Pac 97 Unit Aire 32. US Rubber 45 US Smelt Pfd 58 WesternUnion Tel 31 Wool worth 44 Zenith Radio 44 Nab Midget Lunch Bandit JACKSON, 3-(AP)-J Chicago police notified Warder Julian N. Frisble of Southern Michigan prison of the arrest there Wednesday of Steve Mogodalski, 62, who walked away from the prison's Dal-ton Farm May 5.

He is charged with auto theft in Chicago. The warden has sent an inquiry on whether the prisoner will waive extradition. Mogodalski was sent enced from Berrien county 18, 1946, to 7 to 15 years for armed robbery. At that time he pleaded guilty to a charge of holding up the Midget Lunch In Benton Harbor. Local Forecast (By U.

S. Weather Bnreaa at Chicago for this area of the Michigan fruit belt)' Benton Harbor-St. Joseph Fair and cool this afternoon with high 68. Clear and quite cool tonight, low 64. Friday fair and warmer with high 78.

Northwest winds 15-20 mph this afternoon diminishing this evening and becoming southerly 10-15 mph Friday. General weather forecast: Lower Michigan Clearing and quiet cool tonight, with frost likely in lowlands of north. Fair and warmer Friday. Upper Michigan Clearing and cool tonight. Friday fair and warmer- 1 BUTTER Aug.

3-(AP) -Butter steady to firm; receipts wholesale selling prices unchanged except cent a pound higher on 92 score at 60.25. Eggs Irregular; receipt wholesale, selling prices unchanged to a cent a dozen lower; U. S. standards 33-36; current receipts 32.6; balance unchanged. mostly $2 to $2.25, on a volume of $7 packs.

PEARS A few bushels of Lawson and Wilder pears sold for $2 to $2.25, and a few half-bushel packs brought $155. BLCEBERRIE8 Culivated blueberries were $325 to $350 mostly $355, In 16-pin crates, and the 12-plnt flats, cellophane-wrapped were $2.76 to $2.95 for small and medium sizes. Marsh blueberries were around $655 for 16-quart orates. Receipts of blueberries were ,758 packs. Nine hundred grower loads, with a total of 17,509 packages, entered the -market Seventeen day buyers were registered, I r) vVrr" nival III I KwW Manor Dan I II BE AHS III Max-House I 1 1 I I I I I I I I Ill II No.2rtF-c I fA FJ A I 1 I Tins LO III 1 1 lUJfUJ HD, I Tin IJ i jr li if PICNIC SUPPLIES In- M.

m' I rwn ll ii ii viixr ill in Wheat near the end of the fIrsUan divisions and five South Korean Parka SUced vJl II I Ill Beans Pineapple III niNo.ZriOC II I' II Nn 2 AP-r III II 7 Xmm 1 Ill I i I I I a i mm mmm mm. mm mm I 7 I 1 Swift's Select Beef -N Chuck rn ROUHD -S POT EC STEAK ROAST I i I Oscar Mayer salT II (o)c SaMn panii S' sfluares Uii-ii Cello Wrapped DEER AND WINE TO TAKE OUT hour was cent higher, Septem ber corn was unchanged to 1 higher, September $14, and oats were higher, September 78. Soybeans were I-2 cents higher, November $2.61, and lard WM At) SH VCU14 uuutxicu yuuwu higher, September $1452. LIVESTOCK CHICAGO, Aug. 3-(AP) -Salable hogs slow, around steady both butchers and sows; top 24.35 one load; most good and choice 180-250 lb.

23.75-24.25 250-280 lb. 23.00-24.00; few 290-310 lb. 22.00-22.75; few heavies up to 360 lb. down to 20.25; small lots 140-170 lb. 20.50-23.50; good and choice sows under 350 lbs.

20.50-21.75; few choice hens under 300 lb. 22.00-2255; 350-400 lb. 19.00-20.50; 400-500 lb. 18.00-1955; 500-600 lb. 16.75-1855; good clearance.

Salable cattle salable calves 300; steers steady; heifers steady to 25 cents lower; cows about steady; bulls fully steady; vealers steady tto 1.00 higher; good and choice fed steers 29.50-3150; package choice yearlings 32.00; few medium to low-good steers 25.50-2955; good to low-choice fed heifers 29.00-3055; medium to low-good heifers 25.00-28.75; common 700 lb. grass steers and heifers mixed 22.00; common to low-good beef cows 19.25-22.50; cannert and cutters 18.75-19.00; medium and good sausage bulls 23.00-25.00; medium to choice Vealers 27.00-33.00. Salable- sheep generally steady all classes; small killers best buyers; big packers bearish; top 28.00; bulk good and choice offerings 27.00-28.00; odd selected lots 28.50; cull and common 20.00-23.00; bulk slaughter ewes 9.00-11.50. POVLTRY CHICAGO. AUf.

3-(AP)-(USDA)- Live poultry: steady; receipts 22 loads; FOB paying prices unchanged except a cent a pound lower on roasters at 30-36. ARRESTED IN SO. HAVEN SOUTH HAVEN, Aug. 8 Paul Laska, South Haven, was arrested by city police here yesterday at Art's Tavern on Phoenix street, on a charge of being drunk and disorderly, I Cantaloupes brought around $3 to 3355 per open bushel, and few fcrates, 9x9 and 10x10, went for 3.25. BEANS Green beans in 12-quart baskets around $1 on a few lots, BLACKBERRIES i I Several small lots ot blackberries 24-pint crates took from $3 to $4.

PEACHES One small lot of Redhaven peach 3 -inch-up, sold for $5 per bush pi, and a few Orioles, same size, did 13.78 to PEPPERS Green bullnose type peppers in Whels collected from $2 to $240, SUPER MARKET 282 TERRITORIAL RD. THE STORE WITHOUT A KEY OPEN 8 A. M. UNTIL 7 DAYS A WEEK -FREE PARKING WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES SUPER MARKET '4.

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