Russians I n creasing Iports Into MAY GO OVER 40 MILLION BUSHELS WASHINGTON (UPI) The Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) today reported a "substantial increase" in Soviet wheat exports into free world warkets. , It estimated the wheat imports in 1958-59 to these mar kets would reach 35 to 40 million bushels or more. - This compared with the previous post-World War II record of 36,500,000 bushels, set in 1951-52, and 1957-58 luses Challenge President WASHINGTON UPI Senate passage of a wheat bill aimed at curbing the costly growth of wheat surpluses posed another di rect challenge today to Eisenhow er Administration farm policies. The measure was passed Fri day night on standing vote after the President's own plan for deal ing with tne problem was swept aside. The issue now goes to the House. The Administration opposed the final , wheat bill because it con tends the price support levels of fered ere too high and would boost federal costs by 50 million dollars. .. - In a second big step, the Sen- ate approved, 57 to 20, a new $35,000 ceiling on total price sup ports the government may pay on all crops to any single farm or farmer. The house approved a $50,000 limit earlier this week. Throughout the debate, senators agreed with the President's view that something had to be done to stop piling up a wheat surplus. It will totul nearly 1.500,000,000 bushels, a year and a half's sup ply, by July 1, MSO. , The stop-gup Senate bill would give wheat farmers three choices for their 1U00 and 1961 crops. A grower, could continue plant ing at present levels .and receive price support at 65 per cent of parity, as opiioscd to tho present 75 per cent level. Ho could cut acreage 10 per ecnt and get 75 per cens or parity. - . Or, he could reduce acreage 20 per cent and got 80 per cent of parity. Each farmer would make his own choice for his own farm Opponents argue thut farmers will cut their ucreate to take ad Vantage of the higher price sup port and then pile on fertilizer to jiicri'usu ;profiucuun on tne re tinted 'planting. . The Mouse is exacted to act "Xnon on a different whent hill. It jvotild tillow farmers to choose be tween two plans in a nationwide referendum this summer. t One would fix supports at 90 icr cent of parity with a 25 per x-cnt cut In plantings. The other would cut supiwrts to 50 per cent of parity with unrestricted pro duction. - QUOTES FROM i THE NEWS ' United Prtu International ' GENEVA Andrew Berding, U.S. delegation spokesman at the Dig Four conference: ' "We hope that the Soviet dele gation will put forward next week . some constructive new proposals that may serve as a basis for dis cussion." WASHINGTON The AFL-CIO, In objecting to the Senate-approved labor reform bill : "In the name of democracy, the Senate bill denies to workers the right to determine democrat ically tlie way in which they would operate their own unions." .', JACKSON. Miss. Gov. J. P. - Cou:iian, in defending his request "for tho . FBI to investigate the Muck Charles Parker lynching, a - move that met with sonic opposi tion in Mississippi: "I think the lime will come "when all people will sec the wis dom of whnt I have done. The people of Mississipni don't con ilnno the lynching, although we've had some who have played poli tics with il." MONTGOMERY, Ala. Slate Son. E. O. Eddlns, on the dispute over a children's book depicting the niiirriagc of n while girl rab bit and a black hoy rabbit: "There are many other books of "1 ho same nature and others that ore Communistic which should be burned ns well." Dlf S AFTER WARNING ' NEWARK, N. J. (UPD Bobby Ivery, 7, and three other boys re- 'fuscd to heed warnings to get off the roof of an apartment house -where they were playing, a wit ness said. Bobby tumbled over a guard rail and fell five stories to his death Friday nifiht. movement 01 auotii in.uuu.uuv uusn- cls from Russia to the West The agency said these Soviet wheat exports were in progress despite continued lurfie shipments to Communist-controlled East Eu rope. The agency said the Soviet Un ion appears to be making a con siderable effort to establish perm anent cash markets in free world importing countries. The success of this effort will depend mostly upon Soviet production and export policy, and East Europe's import needs. FAS said there appears to be little reason to expect east Eu rope's import needs to rise above current levels. Therefore, unless Russia uses the wheat domestic ally or stockpiles it, it Is likely to sell its surplus to free world markets. The agency noted that while the Russians have not publicized their wheat export intentions, trade de velopments in recent months have indicated clearly that a substantial rise in expors is Inking place. It cited wheat shipments to France, Japan, Algeria, The Netherlands Portugal, Switzerland, Afghanis tan, Iraq, and Egypt. WASHINGTON (UPD The Ag riculture Department today hoisted a warning designed to steer some lamb buyers from running afoul the Packers & Stockyards Act. The department said some pack ers, dealers, and market agencies subject to provisions of the act are engaging in certain practices that are injurious to producers, in thme purchase and sale of lambs in prominent lamb producing areas. The warning was contained in a department statement defining its general policy on current lamb buying practices and how provi sions of the P it S Act apply to these practices. The department said the statement was issued not as a rulo or .regulation itself, but as an interpretation that certain practices arc considered unfair under provisions of the act. Specifically, the department said these methods of buying lambs are considered unfair practices: 1. A buyer's limiting payment for lambs to a designated average weight, and not paying the lamb producer for any additional weight. 2. A buyer's subtracting weight from the true and actual weight of the lamb. The department said these prac tices result in the issuance of in correct sculo tickets, invoices, and other documents relating to pur chases and sales and in mislead ing market information. The de partment said It believes such practices are prohibited by the act. The department's livestock di vision also has received numer ous complaints from lamb pro ducers about methods used in price discounting for excess weight. WASHINGTON (UPI Sen. Eu gene J. McCarthy (D-Minn.) has proposed that the Agriculture De partment immediately start buy- Here's 10 discount if you can say: hftrtti iff ! w tt fit put 12 ! It yon ai not now hmmi with hmart -and your ab drivtnf antJUa. yon to thai additional diacount-eonlact your neigh borhood Farmer. Inaunwo Group ami and ban how you on fat thai 10 savin AVTO. TBDCK. nil, UFI-All TOUR IMIUKAMCI NIIM DOUG HOUIAII INSURANCE 1107 Adams (Across Street From Post Office) PHONf World aBaMaaMMMaMaMiMaaaaaa NEWEST AUTO FIRM Ed Brog, shown looking over one of his new cars, is manager of the newest car sales firm in La Grande, the Low Cost Auto Company at Third and Adams. Brog handles Jeep vehicles and the French made Renault Dauphine. In addition to a sales and display room, Brog also manages a service station in conjunction with the new cars. (Observer Photo) ing hens to help meet the crisis of falling egg prices. McCarthy wrote Secretory of Agriculture Ezra T. Benson that a hen-buying program would help "a segment of American agricul ture which is in desperate need of prompt action." McCarthy said in a statement Friday that the government-purchased hens could be frozen and stored for the school lunch pro gram or distributed overseas un der the surplus food sales pro gram. Ho wrote Benson that the secretary's proposal for stepped up advertising and promotion of eggs was inadequate to help hard pressed egg farmers who find prices at their lowest levels in more than 20 years. WASHINGTON (UPD The Ag riculture Department said today a 3 per cent reduction from last year's planted acreage of nine processing vegetable crops is in dicated for 1959. This year's planted acreage is expected to lie 10 per cent less than average, the department said. Declines from last year: Beets for canning, 10 per cent; cabbage for kraut (contract ucrcagc only:, 4 per cent; cucumbers for pick les, 10 per cent: green peas, 9 per cent; and tomatoes, 14 per cent. Of the nine crops, changes up ward arc indicated for four: Green lima beans, 1 per cent more than last year; snap beans, 5 per cent; sweet corn, 12 per cent; and winter and spring spinach, 22 per cent. Tho department said the changes indicated for all crops except green peas nnd spinach arc based on reports from processors on in tentions to p'ant. These acreage intentions may be subject to some changes before planting is complet ed. The acreages for green peas and spinach are estimates of planted acreage. The department estimated the total acreage for the nine process ing vegetable crops at 1,522,310 acres. m .' r j t Ya f into lot CUira-rm diacount m ! anttra auto Irian ra no. peacniuro it yon now Insured wilh the WO 3-371 1 Wheat Market t . is Three Killed Near Roseburg KOSEBUHG (UPD Three per sons were killed in a collision be tween a pickup truck and a car about five miles south of here late Friday night. Another was critically injured. State police identified the dead as Everett K. Ward, 54, box 570, Tipton Road, Roseburg: his wife, Gwendolyn Caroline Ward, 47, and William George Redcnius, 63, Roseburg. ' John D. Terry, 20, Roseburg, was in critical condition in Com munity hospital. State police said the pickup truck occupied by the Wards was northbound and thut the car driven by Terry was southbound on Old Highway 99 just north of Winston when the accident oc curred. The mishap brought the l!B9 Douglas county highway death toll to nine. JAILED BY TOOTHACHE KMOXV1LLE. Term. (UPD Tho 'liquor on his breath was from soaking his aching looth in whiskey, Tom J. Ballard said. Fifty dollars and 30 days in jail for drunk driving, the judge said Friday. GIAT"SPEGIAL"FiilGI GOLD CflOUtJ UflLUE! 1351 FEATIRE-MCKEI 10.1 CI. FT. REFRIGERATOI ! wo-' J PLIS: All Porcelain Enamel Inside Automatic Inside Light 3 Big Removable. Shelves Full 1-Year Warranty, Plus 4-Year Protection Plan SALES & SERVICE BOILV Gov. Hatfield Dedicates New Institution SALEM (UPD Gov. Mark Hatfield today recommended that the state of Oregon establish both a youth and adult authority to determine where various types of criminal offendenders should go. The governor's remarks came at the formal dedication of the new intermediate correctional in stitution near here. Hatfield said such a program would make Oregon's plans for rehabilitation more flexible. He will recommend the plan to the next Legislature. The governor expressed . ex treme disappointment that the Legislature did not include some $900,000 for a vocational program at the new institution for young ol fenders. But, he said lie would ask the Board of Control1 to inquire as to whether the city of Salem could provide a more adequate vocation al program for the institution on a voluntary basis. ' Also needed at (he institution are a chapel, complete hospital and a multi-purposes building for sports and recreation, Hatfield said. Despite the Legislature's action in lopping off many plans for the institution, Hatfield said the open ing was a "proud day for Ore gon." Facilities are now available for 300 inmates and when the pro gram is completed by future Leg islatures some 600 men- will be housed here. Appling Presides "We have here now a jail," Hatfield said. "What we want is facilities for rehabilitation." Hatfield - was confident that eventually a program could be worked out. He also put in a plug for a second fence which also was cut off by the last Legislature. At the dedication were Oregon's chief justice, William McAllister, and Sanford Bates, nationally known penologist. Secretary of State Howell Ap pling Jr. presided at the flag raising ceremonies. A vanguard of 71 inmates al ready assigned to the institution will arrive here Tuesday, May 26. FISHES FOR SALAMI CREMONA, Italy (UPD-Fish-erman Natala Poli felt a nibble and pulled a salami out of the Naviglio Canal Friday. He dived in and came up with 50 more salumis, all well preserved. Police figured they were hastily aban doned stolen goods. JUST ARRIVED Another Shipment of Dresses By Osgood 7.95 JUNIOR REGULAR - ESTHER'S Sac Annex Next IT'S HERE mil Now Own The Best at a Budget Price! Hrre are n your most-wanted features in a brand new it)39 Frigidaire model ... all at the year's lowest price Why buy less trtAn the best when you can aflord to buy Frigidaire now! Hunyl See it . . . OWN IT .uMnoaowl EN'S "HOME OF FRIGIDAIRE" Observer, La Grande, Ore., Sat, May 23, 1959 1 Page 6 TRICK WAS ALL IN INTEREST OF SCIENTIFIC ADVANCEMENT By DELOS SMITH UPI Staff Writer NEW YORK (UPD For the purpose of advancing man's knowledge of man (which gener ally is accepted as a worthy pur pose) a psychologist pulled a dirty trick on a bunch of school children. First, he bribed them into eat ing the very vegetables they dis liked Hie most. And then, when they had ulmost finished the eat ing, he told them. he was going to tell their parents. The scientific goal achieved by this was a partial confirmation of a new psychological theory, called "cognitive dissonance." From a parental viewpoint the result had to be good because the childreT ended up liking the vegetables they had disliked or at least dis liking them less. Theory Or Fact? Theoretically "cognitive disso nance" works this way: If for some kind of personal gain, a person does what he woulun t have done otherwise, the inner harmony of his mind is disturbed. A discrepancy between outlook and action is established and this automatically loosens a drive to eliminate the discrepancy and re store harmony. As one of a number of experi ments designed to find out if this theory is fact, psychologist Jack W. Brehm tested it in 8th grade school children of New Ha ven, Conn. Their teachers gave each a list of 32 vegetables and each child indicated which vege tables he liked or disliked "very much." They were told a research organization was studying people's eating habits. A few weeks later the kiddies who had revealed the vegetables they disliked "very much," were summoned one by one to a spe cial school room. There they met Brehm who said he represented a consumers organization which tested food products in order to Charles R. Cooley Dies At Grants Pass GRANTS PASS (UPD Charles R. Cooley, 65, a well-known lum berman, died suddenly at his home Friday afternoon. Death was believed caused by a heart attack. Cooley, who, had been in the lumber business since he was 18 years old, was president of the Three C's Lumber Company and a partner in the Southern Oregon Yard Supply Company. Ho also had extensive real estate holdings. 11.95 HALF SIZES APPAREL to the Bob Shop ! Plus (while they last) we will give FREE, with the above, en all porcelain, FULL width hy drafor. A $12.95 value. 108 DEPOT 3-3327 DARE help people with their shopping. Right now, he continued, the or ganization was asking all sorts of people about what they got out of particular vegetables. Offered A Bribe ' Each person was asked about only one vegetable, th? children were told, and for each person, the particular vegetable was chos en at random. But actually each child was confronted with the very vegetable he most disliked. He was questioned in detail about his feelings for it. Then he was I ' fir l l& DEAD WOOD REPLACED An old wooden water main, which leaked, near Oak and Spruce streets has been replaced by cast iron pipe as part of the city's pro gram of replacing the old wood system. Earl MacDou gal of the city water department is shown making a service connection just before the new pipe is covered. The old Wood pipe was left in the ground disconnected. (Observer Photo) SUNDAY at your Price Good One Day Only Grocery Depl. Special: KITCHEN CBAFT FLOUR Lb. Bag 50 Lb. Bag Produce Depl. Special: ALL GREEN ASPARAGUS Meal Depl. Special: ; USDA CHOICE STANDING RIB ROAST SMALL BALF lb. 75c WHOLE OR LARGS HALF Prices In this advertisement arc effec tive Sunday, May 24 only at the La brande Safeway. offered a bribe to eat it then and there on the grounds that this would help him answer further questions. ,' The bribe was a couple of the atre tickets or phonograph ' rec ords. The youngsters who refused the bribe avoided "cognitive disso nance," of course. But those who accepted the bribe aid ate the vegetable, got also a good dose of this mental disharmony. Brchm's psychological testing showed they turned it into harmony by not dis liking the vegetable this once. Ei ii W. J SPECIALS La Grande SUNDAY, MAY 24 1.7 lb. &3C f v atiftillP..V