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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1918)
TI KSDAV. MAY 7, 1918 LA (iliAADE KVEIvfXO OBSERVER ' Mih TWO BRING US omens your : GROCERY Street LIST -(IntheCovntryGenllemari) AND LET US j. 1 ! liner Mrs MAh - tor-am:: New Silk B ' ' Wl ftrf'W Tl B fiii 11 A, ,7 s WK-;W; 1 "OW li-fei., , IE T,7J j Afternoon! Evening Wear An unusual showing, both from point of material and style. ' . There are soft crepe de chines, fine Georgette Combinations of Georgette and Satin. The styles are the newest, lines are fine, materials unskimped. Priced from $9.85 to $42.50 j Hill's Denar tment Store I M T-ir-i"ir'rr'rvrT,ri"i". 8IG. SALE DAY riCTlKES FKO.U H.O.ME. CEMETERY SOCIETY A II RANGING ; FOR MEMORIAL DAY $53 NEI'-i work department at the May Hay! Mrs. Ji. M.- Oliver over Sup. lay, ale j Her children, Miss --Mavr.ie '-" o Woodell, and brother, George, accom panied her. Mrs. W. W. Graham, of La Grardi!,;,,. was among those who attended the an-1 "" " "clp ""IW ' ni8 rur nual meeting at the Summerville i ' The Boys. metery. .': ' .Mr. Mild Mrs Kd rtmhoa nh.-. In order to brinir home the snirifc .TED KHO.M SALE INJURED unm friends from Harney Count v. "f non:0 i'Jst little closer to the snl- CHILI) IS lMPROYINfi. ' M. M. Woodell and wife motored to diers in the liie cantonments on the . La Grande last Wednesday. " ....,....,., . .. - I' Mrs. Frank Smith took her two- SUMMERV1LLF. May ft-tSpec! o(l ht , the h iu, M ial.)--At the annual meeting held by , f.rani1(. )nflt Wt.,,lleS(1 wner0 th(. the Summcrvdlc Cemetery Society, it , ittc on0 llm,(,nvont somo minor mtl. whs decided that a supper was to lie ntions jfiven on Memorial Hay, as has been ''.", . . -toe nopular custom for years. The ! Wm. Park wasa Vsitor in LIriii last ;.., r ...in i.. i.. ln. ,wcck. Pacific Coast, the national war work council of the Y. M. C. A. in the west ern department, is asking for a photo graph of the most familiar spot in this community. From the picture a lantern slide will be made and thrown upon thc screen in the Y. M. C. A. buildings. An effort is being made to secure me Alay liny sale was a success; ojA-nntu un.-.- ui-uMr,niK " photographs from every town in every way. I f'al receipts-amount- uecamo "vmieuic. bsmlet in the west. The and j cd to over ?r,.i. . ;the brooders during a night of lnit.must t,e so t,.lt the rcpro(Ul.. Mrs. C. M. Hale whs in l.a Grni:de'W-ek, and were found ik-Hd the next tion win hv ccar Theilc photo. on Saturday. ' jmnrning. frnphs should be sent to F. F. Runyon, Miss Lydia Hug returned from L,l ' Mrs. Louis Meier, of Yakima, is Associate Secretary, National War Giandc Saturday morning. lover on a visit with her parents, Mr. 'Work Council, Y. M. C. A., 519 First . Mr. and Mrs. I.ee Fine were in f a and Mrs. Jim Kelluni, and other rela-' National Hunk Building. San Frnn t; ramie the forepart of this w. itlves mid friends. jcisco, Cnl. Mrs. Enos Fisher made a business j Madeline Oliver, who was bitten by j' A short description, giving the ti trin to Elgin last Friday. a dog last week, is getting along nice- lie of the picture, and thc town which Mr.' nd Mm. John Niedercr visited , ly. There has been no report from ; it represents should be written on the with their daughter, Mrs. Hoy Spepccr Portland in regnrd to whether the !o;;i leverse side. Every cities and com m Elgin last Friday. ihad rabies or not. jniunity has its object of interest.. It Mr. and Mm. John Murchisnn an-lj Mr. and Mrs. Harlem Huffman mo-! may be a busy corner, old building, two of their children motored down tored over from Elgin the forepart of : fountain, adobe, cosy park, natural from Covo to attend the May Day sale the week to put in a few potatoes or. phenomena. Whatever it is, it will be given by the ladies' aid society. jthe Fine farm north of town. In welcome sight to the boy away from . Mrs. Ida Moatcs, of l.a (ir.vdv Mr and Mrs. George Hardy, whi are' home. It will be a reminder, an in formerly a SummerVille resident, took i living on the Jasper farnrtiear Aiicel 1 spiration, an old friends and will make active part as saleslady in the fancy Were guests at the home of M nnd'him happy. ANNOUNCE MENT In reply to a statement juiMished in the Oltsen-er last Thursday by Y. 11. l!ihnenkainj Co., stating that : "The aiilumtihile business is rapidlv weeding nut audits who have no ' faeiliiies for looking after their custo mers op rendering' them service, anil is yetum; on a more legitimate basis." , 1 wish to state that 1 told the ( "he 1'olet representative last January to Ket another a.ucnt as soon as possible as I did not care to handle their cais any lonucr, so 1 tliink the liohuenkanip Co. is wrour aUut their weeding proposition. Kioni May IS, 1)17, to October 1, 1 T)l T. I sold fnrty-fniir new autonmbiles of which the Auto-Klectric Service Co. joo'ked after the service end of the business. I hope to sec the new agents sell omewlieiv near that number f ears in tin- same lenirth of time with all their facilities. J also wish to thank the public for the courtesy shown to me while 1 was in tlie biwiuess. ' GEO. B. RICHARDSON OUIiUNO the. farmer's hare of the wheat dol lar Is one of the war time Jobs Uncle Sam lias done since food control . became possible. After Ave. months of grap pling with the problem. Uncle Sain Is now trans lating Into the pockets of both produc ers nml consumers benefits derived by the Nation. He has shut off specula tion, produced a free market aud movement of nil grades of wheat, cut expenses and Induced a normal (low of wheat In natural directions, and ef fected a thousand other economies. The Food Administration Grain Cor poration, which supervises the sale, or Itself buys every bushel of wheat pro duced In the Nation Id its progress from country elevator to foreign buy ers or domestic consumers, marks a new step townrd national efficiency. How In four short months It has been done Is lnld In the following episodes wherein two bushels of wheat traveled to market. ; One tlno fnll afternoon. Col. Kill Jenkins, who farms somewhere in Mis souri, loaded his wheat Into a -wagon and drove along the black road that led across the prairie to town. When he reached the co-operative elevator of which he was a stockholder, h pulled up on the scales, checked his gross weights carefully, and began to unload. The manager came out and asked: "When yon want to sell this wheat?" MI dunno,H. he answered. "One time's about as good as another. these days. T won't weigh any more later," he added, with a dry smile. , "Wheat shrinks a lot," admitted the manager. "I hear the Government wants as much wheat as It can get Just now understand the Allies do eat a terrible lot of It since the war." "What's whent to-day?" asked Col. Jenkins, getting Interested. "Well, let me see," parleyed the manager. "I guess this wheat'd bo a good No. 2 under the new grades." "Grades? What about grades? That Fond Administration seems to mix Into mighty nlgh everything from rabbits to axle grease." "Hold on, Colonel," said the eleva tor man, good-naturedly. "The Food Administration Is not to blame. Con gress passed the act nnd told the De partment of Agriculture to fix the grades. - They became, effective last July. I sent out a letter on It." "Well, I guess you better sell for the best you can said the farmer. "Lam needed at home." And he drove away. A New Order In the Grain World. ONYERSATION'S of this kind might have taken place in almost every lit town lu the great grain WJ belt of the Nation uft tW er August 10 : for revo lution in grain market ing was taking place. Uncle Sum had started on this rcmarkablo ex periment; he was going to see wheth er wheat could be marketed minus rake-offs to the speculators. This necessitated complete control by the Government of storage facilities, trans portation end distributive agencies, and the marketing machinery for whent and rye. Everybody was troubled; most of all, tho officials of the Food Adminis tration Grain Corporation who had undertaken, without salary, and nt the sacrifice of their personal connection with the grain trade, to whip Into shape the forces that would drive for ward the big business machine for marketing Aiuericnn whent A single control; and a $30,000,000 nonprofit making corporation to do the work. This work Is n necessary arm of the Food Administration, allowing the Government to do business quickly and without red tape. Its stock Is held In trust by the President of the Unit ed States. For the time of the war It will supervise the rate or purchase the part commercially available of the 800,000.000 bushels of wheat and the 50.000,000 surplus of rye grown! In America In 1017. Its Job Is to find a market lor every bushel. Irrespective of class and grade. Under its patron age, wheat screenings are moving Just us easily as No. 1 Northern.- It mut also work out satisfactorily the local prices for wheat nt each of almost SO.00O country elevator points, adjust thousands of complaints, organize the gathering and annlysls of date, Inspect concerns reported as dealing unfairly, solve vexntlous disagreements among the trade, and deal effectively wltn thc allies' purchasing agent nnd the neu trals who may desire to purchase. In the early dnys, following thejde temilnntlon of prices for 11)17 whent by the President's Fair Price Commis sion, confusion existed In every part of the wheat-producing regions. This was Intenslllcd by tho Inauguration of the new grnln grades, as promulgated by the Department of Agriculture, which took place nbout the Rame time, nnd led to diverse complaints and a feel ing among farmers that the Grain Cor poration of the Food Administration was responsible for both the price as determined nnd stricter observance of grain grades. But the corporation was responsible for neither act. It Is pure. ly an administrative arm of the Gov ernment formed to buy grain or super vise Its sale at the prices determined by the commission, and It must do Its work on the basis of the new grades. Rut to return to our farmer and his expectations of price. Introducing Two Bushels of Wheat Lying side by side In his wagou had been 2 bushels of wheat Hint fate had marked for strangely different ends. They were very much alike, those bushels of wheat, and to look at them you would not have suspected the strange and wonderful adventures In store for them. Yet one was destined to travel abroad for consumption In France; the other to find Us way Into Georgia, where It was milled and Its flour finally reached a New York baker on the East Side. But In the siim of the travels made by the two, as wo shall follow them, will be un folded the International panorama of wheat marketing In time of war. Finding a Price at a Country Point High war costs of production gave Our Missouri farmer much concern as, to his returns nnd accounted 'for his depression over the prospects of his wheat "grading down"; for that meant a reduction of 3 cents per bushel un der the No. 1 grade. But It graded No. 2 The elevator would also deduct r.n nddltlonal & cents a bushel to cover the fixed charge made In this locality for handling and selling. The 5-cent charge Included the commission of 1 cent per bushel customary In 1017 among commission. men for selling the wheat to domestic millers or foreign buyers. . , The elevator man was none too sure ns to how to get at the price which this whent should bring. He knew considerably more about human nnturo than freight rates and decided to "check Hit" the problem to the nearest zone agent of the Grain Cortorntioiv, So lie wrote a letter to the representa tive slntjoned nt St Louis. That let ter was reCerred to the trallic expert In the New York oflice,. who transmit ted the following rule for determining the price of wheat at any country point: There Is only one price for wheat at a country point That price is always to be arrived at by taking as a basis the price at the most advantageous primary market where we have fixed a price and deducting the freight to that market and a fair handling profit That Is the price to be paid for wheat at any station, regardless of the point to which It may be shipped. Working out the price which should be paid for whent at your station Is n fine occupation for nn off day. If you cannot find the answer, write to the Food Administration Grain Cor poration In New York City and Its trallic expert will 'give you alii. Finding the Price of No. 2 Wheat at Sikeston. AKE an ncninl example: An elevalor mnn In Sikeston, Mo., wanted to know what price No. 2 wheat should bring at his station when ' No. 1 wheat at New York City was $2.2S per bush el. Here is-how lie went about It: The freight rate from Sikeston to New York being 16.08 cents per bush el, he deducted that from yj.'JS per bushel nnd found Hie price nt Sikeston lo he $2.1102. From this he deducted 1 per cent per bushel for the conunls- I slon firm's charges, which put the net price f. o. b. Sikeston nt $J.1002. Ho next compared this price with ; what he could get If he sold at St. ' Louis, bis nearest priinary mnrket At St. Louis the basic price Is $2.18 per ' bushel, and thc freight rate from ; Sikeston to St LouAs C cents per bush- ! el.' This would make the Sikeston l price 52.12, less 1 cent per bushel for selling charges, or ?2.11 net The St. . Louis prico would therefore govern, being advantageous to the Sikeston seller. If our Imaginary 2 bushels of wheat J had started from Sikeston, 6luce It was : I a No. 2 grade, we must deduct 3 cents . J per bushel, which would bring the i price f. o. b. the elevator point to $2.0802 per bushel. As our Imaginary ' elevator man Is charging 5 cents per J bushel for handling, which Includes i the coaiiolsslon fee Juet mentioned, we ! deduct nn additional 4 cents to arrive i at the price the fnrtner received. This J price would bo $2.0-102 at the elevator. . i Some of that 4 cents will return to our ! farmer If the elevator prospers; for It i Is owned co-operatively. J When Farmer and Elevator Man Dis agree. ' " Had this elevator been owned by prl rote firm or person, or had It been a "line" plant, Col. Jenkins would not have been so bland and trustful. He might have refused to sell nt nil and arranged to store his whent or he might have taken It over to a com petitive concern which offered a high er price; for the Food Administration has not yet nttempfed to regulate the prices paid farmers for whent nt coun try points. It does, however, offer to sell for any farmer or farmers' organ isation wheat offered at terminal points, but makes a commission charge or l per cent tor its services. SHOW YOU OUR 6000$ - AND PRICES. That's fair. All we ask is for you to bring in your gro cery list ami let us show you our goods and our pirees. . Ye know we have the best quality; we know wt; lm; fair honest prices and you will find that our good groceries cost no more than others ask for inferior grades. ' ; : Phone us vour grocery order todays . ,' HARRIS GROCERY Phone Main 70 and 77, Farmers Black 192 408 North Fir Street Across the Track "United States Food Administration License No. G50255." ' ;: STAR Theatre ULUKMTil) PHOTOPLAY. TODAY ELLA HALL in 1 He in armer An eiiga: her best. dug Comedy Drama with Ella TIa.ll at Also A NEW NEWS WEEKLY ...... i n OIL BURNERS Your wood is gone, the summer is here, that s oil burner that, you have longed for is ready to install in your Range FREE. TRAIL and guarantee cover your dollars. TH Y THRIFT STAMPS AT, Furniture Exchange Fir nni Jefferson E. J. DONOHUE Ulack 1241 Best Prices Paid for Used Furniture ... , The Kodak business has so far in-. creased that we have had to enlarge . our room for these goods and all Kodaks are now free fi-om dust and . in plain view, so that customers may ! see at a glance just whnt thev need. ! Haily 5-7 tf. " ' BABY I-HIY ,lv" 'WHIM"! in Prt.lumi "0'iJjt lhtmlinitl. I -I ialoRn.h.i " P'UhiniB. California But nnl lh V. me la Mr. Grain Farmer: Are you prepared to handle your grain in hulk? Do not wait until Spring nnd Summer when you are buried with work and worried with labor shortage, hut build your graneries now. You can buy tho lumber nnd roofing paper for a first-class 1000 bushel portable granary for Sfil.oR ami it will hisl for years. Sacks for the same amount of grain will cost you $125.00 and this would be a dead loss against this year's crop. ' A granary of this size can be moved anywhere, and can be filled directly from the thresher, doing nwny with high priced labor handling and sewing sacks. The boys in the trenches need the sacks for sand bags for the protection of their very lives and perhaps your boy is among them. Spend your money in your own valley by buying lumber manufactured at home. When you buy sacks part of the money goes to India. BUILD YOUR GRANARIES NOW Be prepared by building them before the farming season opens up. Be sure to get good lumber, well seasoned, as low grade lumber will give you trouble in a few seasons. Don't Use green lumber. Save money keep what yon spend at home prevent loss and damage from exposure to weather leave the sacks for our boys in thc t nckes; help win the war by building gtanarics now. Tortable granaries of this type are universally osed in other sections. One trip with a good team will haul the ma erial for one granary For particulars as well as prices on Union County lumber for ail farm purposes, see The George Palmer Lumber Co. LA GRANDE, OREGON Job Printing, The Observer, Main 7 Ever try advertising? 0 0 0