LA GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER, LA GRANDE, ORE.
Page Nine
HYDE AND LEGGE
SEEK REDUCTION
ARGUMENTS FOR
NEW PLAN FILED
Thursday, July 10, 1930
Two Present Wheat Acre
age Statistics to Col
orada and Nebraska.
State Government Con
solidation Bill Supported
by Miller, MacPherson
STERLING. Colo.. Julv lfl (tfn R,
retary of Agriculture Hyde and Chair- ' SALEM, Ore.. July 10 W) Afflrma
man Legge of the federal farm board tlve argument for the state govern-
navo presented io eastern Colo- ment consolidation bill, to be voted
rado and Western Nebraska statistics on by the people in November, was
and Interpretations through which filed with the secretary of state Tues
they hope to bring about a voluntary day by Senator Ed W. Miller of Grants
reduction of acreages by hard winter Pass and Representative Hector Mac
wheat growers. Pherson or Albany. It will be printed
Continuing the tour of the area in the voters' pamphlet,
which began Tuesday at Hustings, Tho third member of the interim
Neb., and will take them through Blx committee appointed to prepare the
Etates, the secretary and agriculture argument is Representative Homer D.
and the farm board chairman faced Angell of Portland. The committee
an audience composed of farmers and met in Portland yesterday and pre
bankers, pared the argument.
Reviewing the factors which he said The bill, which was passed by the
contributed to the present wheat legislature and referred to the people
surplus and depressed prices of ag- proposes a cabinet form of govern
rlcultural products. Secretary Hyde ment of nine departments,
said changes in diet had caused shifts "In Oregon," says tho argument,
in the markets for farm products and "wo havo 74 different officers, boards
the country's per capita consumption and commissions, 17 large state in
of wheat had declined seven tenths stitutlons and 16 privato Institutions
a bushel in the last 20 years. .receiving state aid a total of 107
"The increase in farm production agencies doing our state work. The
, has not been confined to our own payroll Carries over .6000 names witli
country." said Mr. Hyde. "European almost $650,000 outlay per month In
agriculture is struggling to regain Its wages and salaries or over $7,500,000
. pre-war position. There has been a a year. There is no general super
great increase In land under cultlva- .vision, no adequate system of reports
tion in relatively new agricultural and accounts and not even a corn
counties, and a tremendous expansion mon fiscal year."
of tropical agriculture. I It is declared that the cabinet
Cannot Easily Absorb 'plan is a proved success in Europe.
"The surplus with' which the farm in the United States government, over
thinking must busy itself, is that 400 American cities and several states,
part of the crop which the market, It is argued that the plan provides
domestic or foreign, cannot absorb a business like and stable program of
without disastrously breaking the state development, promotes better
price." citizenship, makes state government
The secretary said If the theory more efficient, saves taxes and ends
that the farmers duties was to obtain tho creation of boards and commls-
the largest possible production pre- slons.
vailed, enormous surpluses resulting
would have to be sold in competition
with foreign agriculture, "Which has
the benefit of cheap lands and labor
and In Increasing degree labor sav
ing machinery."
"Such expansion would mean ever
increasing surpluses from America
meeting foreign competition In the
world market. No debenture or other SEATTLE, July 9 () Striking
Biieiuw u auuaiuy uuum cic ouui nt tne importation of Russlon manu
conditions." ;factured lumber, the West Coast
In Inflexible Law Lumbermen's association today tele
Asserting the law of supply and de- gmphed the secretary of the treasury,
mand is "as inflexible as It is Inexor- Washington, D. C. protesting the ac
ablc" he said. "Agriculture has been ccptance of cargoes in the United
breaking itself by violating Its plain states.
mandate." Tno' telegram, sent in protest of
, Reiterating his contention that the acceptnnce of two shiploads of lum-
proposed equalization foe debenture ber deiayed ln the east yesterday,
plan and other proposals for caring rend-
for the country's exportable wheat ,.Tno iUmbcr Industry of Western
surplus would not work. Chairman Washington and Oregon strongly
Legge In his prepared address renew- ..r- un rinr hit.m.t. nf in, nrpnont
ed his recommendation for a "gradual lftW ln rcsect to the importation of
slowing down with the object of articlos in wnose production convict
or enforced labor has been employed,
bo enforced ln connection with
Russian Convict
Lumber Shipped;
West In Protest
eventually balancing domestic produc
tion with domestic consumption.
GOVERNOR OF
MINNESOTA IN
cargoes of Russian lumber now in the
U. S. and en route to the United
States.
i "At least 40,000 sawmills and log
einR camn workers in this region are
lDrir T1 A "I without employment on account of
J1ZVjWJlS 1 fJUX JL decreased consumption and the com-
petition of woods imported invo me
PORTLAND, July 0 (TP) Thcodoro u- s- Wo earnestly that protec
R. Chrlstianson, Minnesota governor, lion intended for American labor by
arrived hero today, said business was tho law ... be not nullified by trival
obviously bad. in. Portland.. St. FauL. objections or technical, tica.
Minneapolis and tho remainder of tho " "American labor should hot - Bo
country, saw no immediate improve- ftskctl to compete with Russian
ment of the unemployment situation convict or impressed workers,
and then caught a train for Seattle. "Fully 50 per cent of the total cost
Governor Chrlstianson, accompanied of logging and manufacturing in the
by Mrs. Chrlstianson. and Colonel Douglas fir region is paid to labor
I. E. Nelson, assistant adjutant gen- directly as wages. Out of an average
oral of Minnesota, had been attend- cost or $19.42 per thousand foot of
ing the governor's conference at Salt lumber manufactured here during
Lake City and was enrouto home. tho past three months $9.77 has been
"Shorter working hours and the PW to workers.
nor said arc two necessities to im- J(7AZZjS HOOK.
situation.
"There is no use looking to foreign
markets to improve conditions as
Europe and other jiormal markets
for the United 8tates have been
forced to Intensive agriculture and
industry and do not need our pro
ducts," he said.
Governor Chrlstianson has served
six years. He seeks re-election.
FOR FEAR OF
LIBEL ACTION
NEW YORK, July 9 P The New;
York Times says today that fear of'
r. possible libel suit over one 01 uic
Incidents related In Owen, Wistor's
new book. "Theodore Roosevelt, the
Story of a Friendship. 18S0-1919," was
the cause of its temporary with
drawal by the publishers, MacMillan
and company, Inst montn.
Blu. Ore. Places
s 1 -f o, Copies of the book which had been
Ur(ll (l KlQSeiL distributed In advance of the date or
t publication were recalled by MacMil-
PORTLAND. Ore , July 10 m The Inn with no explanation other than
way Inn and the Bucket of Blood It was made necessary by "clrcum-
Hiwav
pool hall at Bly, Ore., having been ad
judged liquor nuisances. Federal
Judge Bean Tuesday signed a perma
nent Injunction against John Stolt,
owner of the former place, and Otto
V, Boyd, owner, and Tony Bens and
stances bevond their control,
The Times says the story which
led to the recall purported to tell of
a ruse ustd by a hostess In a south
ern city by which she succeeded ln
inducing Mr. Roosevelt to enter ner
Jack Russell, operators of the latter, home while he was a visitor In the
from use of the buildings named
These injunctions and others resulted
from conviction of several Bly resort
operators on liquor charges.
city to the great vexation of other
ambitious nostesses.
Mr. Roosevelt, according to Wister's
story, was much displeased when he
learned several months later, that he
had been Imposed upon. "
After advance copies had been dis
tributed, the Times said, there were
intimations of a libel suit. Wnstcr
I was abroad, the publishers consulted
LIVINGSTON, Mont., July I) lfl - their attorneys, then recalled the ad
For the second time, marital rifts in vanco copies and waited until Wister
Smooth Marital
Rift Among Hills
the family of Walter Hill, son of the
late James J. HU1, railroad builder,
rave apparently been smoothed.
' Dismissal of a divorce suit brought
by Mrs. Mildred Hill, former follies
girl, against tne son 01 tne rauroaci
could be readied.
The objectionable
deleted.
passages were
THROWN 45 FKKT
SALEM. Ore., July 9 Pi G. O.
magnate, is sought in an action filed Hirsch, sailor from the navy, hero
yesterday ln the district court by 0p. furlough, was thrown 45 feot
counsel for the Hills. Tho petition al- , when his motorcycle collided last
so asks cancellat'on of cross-corn-, night with nn automobile driven by
plat n ti filed by Hill. V. A. Johnson. Seriously injured,
Details of the reconciliation arc no: Hirsch was taken to a hospital.
known. . r
Presibye Opposes
Senator Kiddle
PENDLETON. July 10 tiVl E C.
Prcstbyc. Athena attorney, will oppose
Fred kiddle for state senator from
tho nineteenth district, accordinif to
the Umatilla county clerk. Prcslbyes
name was written in on the demoratlc
ballot at the May primary.
IS Coal Miners A re
Killed In Germany
BtltLIN. July 0 (Al The Telc-
jrraphen Union today reported from
Breslau that 18 coal miners were
killed and scores were Imprisoned by
cost gas explosion ln the Wencos
laU3 ai -ne near Ncurode.
SI '.l'Kf'TEI) Kil l Kit AltHKSTKI)
I
I
NEW YORK. Julv 9 11 A man
whom police described as a former
secret service atsent of the German
government and more recently an op
erative for the Soviet government wa
arrested today &3 a sttspect In the i
search for the mad killer of Queens.
The prisoner, whose real name po- I
lice refuse to reveal, was arrester
early this morning. He was found
hiding ln underbrush in a desrrtec
section of DouglastDWu. L. I.
Complete
Slock
GOODYEAR
TIRES
Davis
Super Service
Union, Ore.
Phone 322
look at him with a
knowing grin and say:
8
MD
W IklEdDW.
E
EADERSHIP is the coveted prize in every
industry, and the rubber industry is no
exception.
So it is only human that our aspiring friends
occasionally indulge in the thrill of talking about
Leadership, whether they have it or not.
We mention this in all good humor, and merely
to explain-the somewhat confusing advertising
you see now and again, in which one rubber
company or another blithely forgets its definitions
and shoots the works.
The justification for such a fling is that the use of
the term Leadership in most cases is 'qualified,
even if obscurely, by being based on some sub
ordinate phase' of the business in which the
advertiser claims to excel.
UT what's all the shootin' for is Leadership
really an important matter?
We think it is, as the most dependable indorse
ment of a product that the public can find upon
which to rely.
When a plurality of the world's motorists, for
example, year after year singles out one make cf
tire as the highest representative of value and
merit, that is tremendously important.
It affords the average buyer the finest and safest
possible guidance in his purchasing and for his
good and our own we desire to keep that guid
ance clear.
DISPENSING, then, with equivocal claims,
evasions, qualifications and adroit expres
sion, what company actually holds Leadership in
the rubber industry?
The public has decisively answered that question
in concrete terms of dollars and cents, and has
conferred the award upon Goodyear.
Goodyear in turn submits to you the solid facts
which support its Leadership.
It does this in no spirit of boastfulncss; on the
contrary with a priyileged sense of the responsi
bility which its outstanding position entails:
in both volume and value of annual sales, Goodyear
is the largest rubber company in the world.
Goodyear consumes 16 of all the crude rubber used
annually in the world approximately 50 more than
any other manufacturer.
Goodyear builds more than 14 of all the tires sold in
America, the remainder being divided among some
forty manuy.icturers.
For years Goodyear has factory-equipped between 1 4
and 1 '3 of all the new motor cars manufactured.
Goodyear exports approximately 40 of all the tires
exported from the United Slates and Canada for
other parts of the world.
Goodyear maintains the largest development labora
tories and corps of experimental engineers of any
rubber company in the world.
In the last seven years Goodyear's annual production
of pneumatic tires has increased 172, as against
an increase of approximately 75 for the industry
as a whole.
ITH special reference to tires, Goodyear
holds Leadership because:
Goodyear has made more tires for motor vehicles than
any other manufacturer by jnilions. .
Goodyear is making, today, more tires than any other
manufacturer in the world by millions.
Goodyear's (ire business has increased faster tit the
last five years than any other manufacturer's by
milions.
More people ride on Goodyear Tires than on any
other kind by millions.
T
HERE'S the story, good people, figure it out
for yourselves.
Certainly it means that in Goodyear Tires the
average user finds a quality and a value which he
cannot equal elsewhere.
Certainly it means that when you buy a Goodyear
Tire you buy something good enough, outstand
ingly good enough, to have won a special and
unrivalled place in the confidence of the public.
And when any other rubber company confuses
you with talk about Leadership, just treat your
self to a knowing grin and say: "Sure! We know
You're Napoleon I" -
y"M h v .M w a . -- w mr -ztsj-a n -t-a m. -- i r.
j&pffBP'- L m xjsum'xm tj w
THE GREATEST NAME IN RUBBER
AH Sizes - All Types - All Prices
ALL G00DYEARS
COMPLETE TIRE SERVICE
PLAYLE OIL CO.
SUPER SERVICE STATION
G00DYEARS
E. Z. TERMS
"Pay As You Ride"
BOIINENKAMP'S
lr--
mm-
mm1'