THE PRESS, ATHENA, OREGON; - APRIL 25, 1930' 1 GRAIN CORPORATION TO CONTINUE WORK f;:' - . - ' Attack On Farm Board Not ; Feared Profits Declar r V ed Made. Chicago. Happen what will, Presi dent C. E. Huff of, the Farmers' Na tional Grain corporation said the or ganization would keep right on marching "through the wheat." I Huff, president of the $20,000,000 marketing organization, made his re ply to the campaign started against the agricultural marketing act and its results. ' ; Organized at the behest and under the , tutelage of the federal farm board, the corporation landed on its own feet at the inception and has stood there ever since, said Huff, who has been president t less 7 than two weeks. Here are some points on , which President Huff was emphatic: Repeal of the agricultural market ing act and subsequent abolishing of the farm board would not stop the ac tivities of v.. the Farmers'. , National Grain corporation. The corporation confidently expects to handle 250,000,000 bushels of 1930 wheat, equivalent to approximately one-third of the 1930 crop, .and .ex pects - to handle relatively - large amounts of coarse grains. : The corporation is not and never has ' been an object- ofcharity. It made a profit on its first transaction and has functioned on its own power ever since." , , A facilities program is being de veloped on a country-wide basis fol lowing studied analysis. , , ' Branch agencies will , shortly be opened at all principal markets. . The corporation has, as stockhold ers, most of the large grain co-operatives, in the United States, and the growth of these co-operatives has been greater in the past few months than at any time in M8tor.-:r:""T'r' Finally, Mr. Huff added that "our plana are going forward undisturbed and our outlook now is better than ever. This thing is in band. The support of the co-operatives is com plete and increasingly enthusiastic as we face the new crop." i While the Farmers' National Grain corporation has issued no financial statement since its organization, it is generally known that its profits dur ing its brief four months of existence are expressed in six figures. These profits, it was stated in a recent an nouncement, are sufficient to enable the firm to pepare for handling the crop of the coming year. ' Chairman Alexander Legge of the federal farm board, took solace from the i campaign against the - board started by the Minneapolis Grain Ex change. r v." The chairman was disposed to re gard the Minneapolis plea for repeal of the agricultural marketing act as good advertising for the farm board. "It's funny, isn't it, that they shoul 1 make so much fuss about something which they said would not work," he said. . . .-. V ' . Acknowledging that opponents of the board had strength "in some lo calities," Mr. Legge said there was nothing new in the opposition of grain, produce and commodity ex changes. -.' ' . ; - . '. ""We have been picking up reports of this kind for the last two months," he said. "If they are enjoying it, so are we. . Canning Concern Inter ested In Pea Production A representative of the California Packing company, ' Mr. Delwich, was in Weston looking after business mat ters connected with the company? seed pea operations in that district, says the Leader. This big concern has contracted with mountain farm ers for the growing on uplands of 200 acres of seed peas, and will operate on a larger scale next year in the Weston region if this year's . tests work out satisfactorily. . It is said to have been influenced in making the experiment by F. C Sloanr president of the Washington Idaho Seed company, which is oper ating at Weston quite extensively and has a cleaning plant at Weston. Farmers with whom contracts have been entered into by the California Packing company are Linus Ander son, W. P. Cable, Harry Beathe, James Smock and Ross King. - Announcement y THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATHENA, OREGON, Announces that it has com-pleted the organ ization of a . . Trust Department j. and is qualified to act as' Executor, Administra tor" guardian, or in any other fiduciary, eapac : ity. ' ' Just think what 37 years of successful banking experience would mean to the executor or ad ministrator of your estate. ; i r Ask us , for Information General Eepair ing ; Done Right ( at Right Prices VEEBOL ' .Oil Richfield Gasoline Automobile; Accessories CORNELLS GARAGE Let "Wonder" Crops Be Tested By Experiment Station Before Planting .. ; Oregon State College. Most of the new and widely advertised croos about which so much can be read in farm papers have been tried out thoroughly by the Oregon Experiment station at CorvaUis and at various branch stations, says D. D. Hill, act ing chief in farm crops at the college. Nearly all have been found unsuited to Oregon conditions, though a few are becoming a valuable part of the cropping system. Lespedeza or Japan cloven is one of these that has been attracting many press notices. The annual type of this plant is not at all adapted to Oregon conditions, and the perennial type needs much more experimental work before it can be recommended. The latter may prove valuable on pobr acid soils on which clovers and alfalfa will not thrive. Kudzu is a "hardy perennial" as far as inquiries about it are concerned, but it has. not possibilities as an Ore gon crop, says Hill. Sudan grass, one of the sorghums, is another crop that While not really new still causes many inquiries. Most Oregon f arm ersswho have tried it, as well as the experiment station, have decided that it may be good in the south but not here.' . : Soy beans are excellent in many states, but only in most favorable lo cations are they good in Oregon. Hill finds. The real Johnson grass is adapted to warmer conditions than prevail in Oregon. In fact a good rule to follow with any new crop, he says, is to consider first under what conditions it grows best, how they compare with one's own conditions and then find whether the experiment station, supported for just that pur pose, has tried it out already. Washington Warehouse Conditions Holds Up Loan Snokane. E. M. Ehrhardt. presi dent of the federal Intermediate Credit Bank of Spokane, told di rectors of the North Pacific Grain Growers Inc., that grain warehouses in the northwest are in such "crude condition" that advances to growers are being held up. Methods of supervision, he said, are "loose and nrimitive" and state inspection inadequate. - Before the credit bank can loan money proviaea by the agricultural marketing act; he asserted, the bank has found it neces sary to send out inspectors to check over the condition or tne rarenouses, inspect the concern as to its "financial intesrrity and management, all of which takes time." Efforts have been made to obtain a blanket, surety bond to hasten ad to farmers, but bonding houses are shy, he said, because of recent) ruling of the Washington state supreme court on liability of bonding houses in connection with wheat warehouses. V. R. Summons, of Snokane. state warehouse inspector, defended state supervision, but added that in tho case of "line companies inspection is merely a matter of form." He told the directors that the next legislature was expected to enact legislation to add more inspectors to tne one now in the field. Ehrhnrdfc exnlained the thiec classes of warehouses in this region. The first, he said, is federal licensed, wheat receipts from which are ac cepted without question. The second were those under state license, with financial status such that they war rant approval without a surety bond. The third class embraces an ottiers. THE ATHENA MARKET We carry the best Meat That Money Buys Kippered Salmon, all' Kinds of Salt Fish. Fresh Fish, Oysters, Crabs, Clams, Kraut in Season. A. W. LOGSDON Main Street Athena, Oregon. I PASSER Workers Widen Highway Widening of the Oregon and Wash ington highway, between Weston and Milton is under way this week. The work is being carried on about three miles south of Milton. INSURANCE PLUS Every motor vehicle should be pro tected by Public Liability and Pro perty Damage insurance. , . Cost very little and is worth many times the cost. Every owner should carry Landlords, Owners and Tenants Lia bility insurance, only $7.50 and may save your liome. This is an age of ambulance chasers and damage suits. You owe it to yourself and to society. Neglect may wreck your fortune; it is wasting at the bung hole and sav ing at the spigot. Liability protects you, life insurance protects your fam ily. . We write it and servica our policies throughout the policy year. Insurance plus service. B. B. 'RICHARDS Dr.W.H.McKinney Physician and Surgeon Dr. Sharp' Oflice Office Hours at Athena 1 to B p. in, Phone 462. Office Hours at Weston 8 a. m. to 12 noon. Phone 83. Calls made day or night. SERVICE MAY 15 I Real Estate Wheat Alfalfa and Stock Land SHEEP FOB SALE L. L. Montague, Arlington i Varney Lines Put on Boeing Planes For Salt Lake Portland Route. Louis H Mueller, President of Var ney. Air Lines, announces that May 15th had been set as a definite date on which his company will start a passenger service over the Varney , mail and express lines, from Port land to Salt Lake City, via Pasco and Boise. . There will be two services each way each day between terminal points. Ships will leave Portland at 6:15 a. m. and 5:20 p. m. arriving at Salt Lake City about 8 hours later. Ships will leave Salt Lake at 9:30 morning and evening, arriving in Portland 8 hours later.' People 'wishing east bound passenger travel from Puget Sound section may board coastwise planes at Seattle or Tacoma . and transfer to the eastbound 1 ship at Portland ' without delay. This ser vice was planned to give people of the Northwest complete transcontin ental air travel accommodations, with total elapsed time of only one busi ness day to the east coast. At Salt Lake City, passengers will immediate ly board trimotored transports of the Boeing System San Francisco-Chicago line. Pilots on this service will be regu lar air mail pilots and the line will follow the Department of Commerce improved and lighted airway. Equip ment will consist of Boeing passenger and mail ships, manufactured in Se attle. The air schedule will consume about one-fourth .that of train time. ; There are many scenic wonders along this airway, including - the famous Columbia River Gorge, Mount Hood, Mount Adams, picturesque Blue mountains of eastern Oregon, and the agricultural counterpane cf southern Idaho. The plane will skirt Great Salt Lake for 40 minutes and fly directly over Salt Lake City. Of historical interest - is the fact that the airway is directly over the famed Oregon trail by which the pioneers oi years ago entered the territory; via covered wagon. ( The Itransporation time has been cut since those days, however, from almost two laborious months to less than 8 hours. Bees Formed a Part Of Varney, Air Mail Portland. There would have been an -uncomfortable time for Al Davis, Varney Air Lines pilot; if a certain part of a record air mail cargo which he brought to Portland through the Columbia gorge had miscarried in any way. That "certain part" was nothing less than 10 small boxes of bees, en route from the forestry department in Alabama to Puyallup, Wash. Luckily for Davis, the boxes remained intact and the bees were buzzing mer rily as they continued their air jour ney north. The bees made the trip from Alabama entirely by air in boxes three inches square and 1V inches deep. ' . ' H Davis' air mail load was said to have broken all records for Varney Air Lines. A total of 919 pounds left Salt Lake, 149 pounds were dropped off at Boise and Pasco and 770 pounds arrived here. Of this amount, about 400 pounds went on to Tacoma and Seattle. Fee Rules Stockholders Doubly Liable In Suit Salem. Considerable importance is attached to the decision of Judge James Alger Fee of Umatilla county in the case against the stockholders of the First Bank of Pilot Rock by A. A. Sehram, state superintendent of banks. According to information received by Schramm, Judge Fee holds, that stockholders of the" bank, are subject to the double liability. This bank was organized prior to the adoption of the constitutional amendment fixing the double liability but which increased its capital stock after adoption of the amendment. Eight other insolvent banks under going liquidation are effected by the decision, Schramm states. It is ex pected that the case will be appealed to the state supreme court. Ground Ready For Beans Disc and harrow work on 10,000 acres of land leased for planting of beans has been practically completed and the Eickhoff Food corporation is preparing to plant the beans. Seed from Michigan is en route and plant ing will start about May 10. Foot hill land is being used this year. Worms Damage Wheat Complaint comes from Juniper farmers that grain is being damaged to some extent by worms. It is hop ed that with the advent of warmer weather, danger from serious damage will pass. Localities north of Wes ton have also reported the appear ance of worms in the grain fields. Echo Merchant Dead F. T. George, for 25 years an Echo merchant, died at the Portland Sani tarium after a long illness. Death was caused by heart disease. SowetmmlS 1 WAY from the harvester- thresher, loaded to the brim with ripe, yellow grain. Rubber tires rolling through the soft dirt and stubble. Across ditches. Up steep rises with a 60-bushelload! It makes no differ ence how deep down the bottom is, so long as the wheels can reach it, this truck will bring every load through! And on the hard highway it will give you more speed than you can use safely controlled by 4-wheel brakes. It is the modern answer to the rural haulage problem, a Speed Truck with two complete power xwmaTruck ranges, with six speeds forward and two reverse: It is International Harvester's famous "SIX-SPEED SPECIAL" What , the grain farmer does with this truck you can do with a capacity load of live stock, milk and cream, produce, fruit, feeds, building materials, or anything else. It is the market's best combination of high road speed and pulling power. It is a handsome quality product, , strongly built, up to the minute in every detail. Let the Six-Speed Special tell you its own story. Wc will give you a thorough demon- v stration when you say the word. Rogers M Goodman (A Mercantile Trust) SIS-! Calif ornian Uses Exhaust To Put An End to Life , Walla Walla. After three days of brooding, H. C. Abel, 45, who came here a short time ago from California Saturday night killed himself in his automobile parked on a side road. A rubber tube, carried monoxide gas from the exhaust of his car into the interior. According to W. G. Coleman, prose cuting attorney and coroner, Abel had been in the neighborhood of the scene of his demise for the past three days. Much of the time was spent in the interior of the car. In preparation for his death the man tacked his driv er's license, issued in California, to the steering wheel but left no com munication as to the reason for his deed. Papers found in his possession in dicated Abel had been a resident of various California cities for several years. Only 40 cents was found in his possession when he was discover ed. Bumper Crop Fading Prospects for a bvjmper cherry crop in the walla Walla and KennewicK fruit raising districts are fading away daily as new evidence of winter killing shows up, according to Harold Mewhinney, district horticultural in spector. , 1 i 1 11 1 ""7 .. WATTS PRKSTBYB DR. BLATCHFORD Atton..yAt-Law Dentist Main Stmt. Athena. Oregon Post Buildlngt Athena, PhoM 682 State and Federal Court Practice DS. 8. F. SHARP PETERSON & LEWIS , ... . . ( PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Attorneys at Law - Stangler Building, Pendleton, Oregon Athena, Oregon ! .11 1)11 II I ' . I I II I I I .. li I . I Practice In all Stata and Federal Courts. - ' ' ' 1 Jensens ; Dr. W. Boyd Whyte c , chiropractor Blacksmith Shop Stangier Building, Phone 706 Pendleton. Oregon. 857 J R6ptiX "Work r": umm ; Prices Reasonabls Foley's Kidney Cure rwnKmnm mm Hnir m Atnena, Oregon fi$et MieijU direct Service to PORTLAND ' - . Travel over lines of Union' Pacific Stages is comfortable and economical. Our blue and cream motor coaches are the latest type of equipment ob tainable. Note departure time of stages: For Pendleton and Portland 8:05 a. m. 11:55 a. m. 4:05 p. m. 9:15 p. m. 4:05 p. m. Pendleton only, For Walla Walla, Spokane 8:10 a. m. 11:10 a. m. 1:55 p. m. 5:50 p. m. . 11:10 a. m. 1:55 p. m. Walla Walla only. tow fans and direct connec tions to all Eastara Points. CIP1C UJHIOtlrPA C. L. McFaddcn, Agent