ipendei I
Page 22, Register-Guard, Eugene, Ore., Sun,, Nov. 21, 1948
Neat Wheat, This, If It Makes
In fat livestock shows to promote I
wheat feeding.
Industrial uses for wheat are
not at the moment practicable for
the Northwest, he concluded.
Processing companies are lo
cated in the Midwest where they
can purchase competing products,
such as corn and grain sorghums,
both cheaper than wheat. To com
bat this disadvantage, the Wheat
Commission is striving, through
modern research, to find new uses
for wheat, new outlets for present
wheat and to expand the current
market
-
Fur Cleanlnr and Glaiint
ELECTRIC CLEANERS
1210 Willamette St Ph. 30
Browsing Room Hour
Changed for Vacation
The University of Oreeon LI
Sabin to Attend
School Meet
High Schools convention Dec. 9,
10 and 11 In Spokane, Wash.
Sabin was selected as one of
five Oregon representatives to the
meet by the state committee of
the organization. The delegates
will convene with principals from
Washington, Idaho, Utah and
Montana.
The party will leave by car on
Dec. 8 and will return Dec. 12.
Nylon Stockings for Madame
following w2W
brarv Browsing room hour will
a m. to6Pm7.fe
5 P-m-; Saturt'TIi,
PENDLETON OP) Nylons
out these facts in laboratories In
Peoria, 111., Albany, Calif., and
Pullman, Wash., Bell revealed.
When the data is compiled an in
not be presented Wednesday, Nov.
24. The program, normally given
from wheat?
"Sure, that's possible. Wheat
could be used as a raw material in
plastics and other spectacular pro
ducts, too," Wheat Commission
Administrator Ed Bell said. "But
none of these manufacturing pro
cesses now is an acceptable ouuV
for surplus northwest wheat."
Research projects now are un
derway to develop new Industrial
uses, but that is a long-range pro
gram, the administrator told a
Umatilla County farm bureau
meeting. Chemists, processors and
other authorities are being called
together early In December to ex
plore possibilities.
r , tJtll
SPRINGFIELD Owen W. Sa
bin, principal of Springfield
Union high school, will attend the
Northwest Assn. of Secondary and
to 5 p. m .
from 4 to 5 p. m. has been sus-
i u gay.
telligent, well-founded marketing
and promotion campaign can be
initiated.
The export market might be
expanded when surveys now being
prepared "tell us more about the
food habits of foreign peoples,"
Bell declared, explaining that
emphasis on export markets now
is being centered on the Orient
and South America.
Livestock feeding, another field
In which wheat may be used
locally, Is being promoted by
showing producers of meat, milk
COMPLETE STOCK
BRIGGS & STRATTON
ENGINES & PARTS
NOW AVAILABLE
See Your Engine Dealer, Hardware Store or
GEORGE A. HALTON CO.
na Worf fiih Am. Phone S478
CRUSHED ROCl
WASHED SAND and GHAV&
EXCAVANGndHCX:KrO!irmJ
T. C. WILDISH
Phono SnrinaflslJ SSI
Helen Homemaker says:
I shop at DICKSON'S mostly, because lis there I've iound
The best buys lor my money and I have looked around.
They're courteous and friendly; they -try to treat you right
From six-thirty every morning until nine o'clock at night.
TOMORROWS SPECIALS.-
Industrial processes now known
he said, could not use enough 'and eggs how to use wheat lor
wheat or could not pay the price , feed. The commission participates
AnDAM Cud A V mm mmmt
IflMUIDLIMI ijnUlfC
RADIANT
FRUIT MIX
16'
49'
PLENTY OF HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE
"Open Every Day But Christmai'
Roy and Peggy
Phone 7
DICKSON'S MARKET
Roosevelt Boulevard and Highway 99 North
for wheat that Is obtainable else
where. "The most Important thing to
the grower," Bell declared, "Is to
find markets where the most
wheat will be purchased at the
most favorable price to him. In
order to dispose of surplus North
west wheat we must think In
I terms of finding markets that will
take 10, IS or even 20 million
bushel chunks."
Reviewing a recent trip East
where he conferred with chemists,
processors and government ex
perts, Bell said that the best mar
kets lie within the United States,
but that more needs to be known
about wheat, as well as the mar
kets, before domestic outlets can
be fully exploited.
Researchers are busy digging
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