THE rPRESS; ATHENA; OREGON, AUGUST 29; 1930 FARM PROTESTING DELAY Protest To Commerce Com mission On the Propos- ; ed Postponement. Portland. The general farm or ganizations of Washington, Oregon and Idaho have filed a protest by Walla Walla County Fair Will Feature Baby Show: Babies of the Countryside Walla Walla.-1-A Baby Show will be one of the high -lights of . this year's Walla Walla County Fair, it was announced yesterday by Charles Baker, secretary of the Fair board, and all babies under the age of five years in Walla Walla and all of the surrounding, country will be invited to attend. The babies will be examined bv a special medical clinic, with Dr. Miles Hopkins, local physician, in charge. assisted by Miss Mary Elliott. Other local doctors will be invited to assist wire with the interstate commerce 'Dr. Hopkins in this work. A special . commission opposing postponement of the effective date of the grain rate reduction order. This action was taken on receipt of a copy of the application of West ern lines asking the commission ' to extend the effective date for freight rate reductions from October 1 to January 1. The railroads claim is that there, is not time in which to prepare and publish the new tariffs required by the order. - The wire of protest was sent by Arthur M. Geary, attorney for the protesting farm organizations, after consultation over long distance phone with farm leaders of the interior. The protest follows "Due to.; the present low price of wheat being insufficient to pay pro duction cost, grain growers of Wash' ington, Oregon and Idaho are in very bad condition. They are counting on and need badly the reductions pro vided in new scale. The bulk of wheat from Washington, Oregon and some sections of Idaho moves to North Pacific ports, over reasonably direct routes, making publication of tariff containing new rates compar atively simple. See page 632 of com mission's decision. "Although substantial voluntary reductions were made from many points in Middle " West ' to Atlantic and Gulf ports on export grain last season Northwestern carriers refused to make like reductions to 1 Pacific ports to the great prejudicial disad vantage of grain growers of Wash ington, Oregon and Idaho. The high freight rates to Pacific ports, coupled with unfavorable - market conditions, caused considerable grain of last year's crop to be held over at country points in this area. This, coupled . with present crop, ' is clogging avail able storage' facilities at interior points. By commission granting car riers permission to, publish new rates on shorter notice than 20 days it would seem that the new rates could examination theatre will be fitted up in one of the fair buildings and equip ped with weighing and measuring tables and all the devices necessary lor conducting a modern baby clinic, Each little tot registered at the baby show headquarters will receive a thorough physical examination by the doctors and health diplomas and blue ribbon certificates will be issued to all sound, healthy babies,' examin ed by the clinics. A baby beauty show will be held and prizes of silver loving cups and beauty medal certificates will be pre sented winners of the six age classes. Special cups will.be awarded the most beautiful girl babies ; and the most handsome and manly boy babies. Official registrations for the baby events will, start this afternoon and special awards will be made for the first 100 babies entered for the health and beauty show. Registrations may be., made daily from 9 a. m. until 6 p. m. at the office on Second and Main street. Special photographs of each baby entrant will be made at the expense of the Fair Association and will be placed on display at the baby regis tration offices at the corner of Main and Second streets. Chessman Named . Merle R. Chessman, editor of the Astoria Budget, was appointed by Governor Norblad . as a member of the Oregon State Geographic board to succeed the late Dr. J. Q. Bowlby of Astoria. : ; i . :.' be published throughout country on basis of the decision. "In any event there is no Justifica tion for failure of carriers to publish the new rates effective October 1 to North Pacific ports from this area. The undersigned Join in protest against any postponement of effective date of the commission's decision." More Barley Raised In Oregon for Feed. Ureed By State College Experi Oregon State College. Oregon shock leeaers who pass up high grade uregon barley to import corn from the east or light barley from Call forma are overlooking the high feed mg value of this grain savs G. R. Hyslop, chief in farm crops, at Ore' gon fetate college. He also believes that more barley should be raised in Oregon and recommends several varieties. "Barley at $23 to $25 a ton is cer tainly cheap feed as compared with Number 2 corn shipped half way across the country and sold at more than $40 a ton," he said, "Oregon grown barley has a very high dry matter, content while a great deal of the eastern corn shipped ' west con tains from 2 to 8 per cent moisture, "California ships a great deal of barley north, but the practice is to separate out the heavy, plump ker nels and export these to England for brewing purposes, shipping the rest as feed barley. It usually has a test weight of from 38 to 42 pounds while good Oregon Hannchen, Trebi or O. A. C. Number 7 frequently e-oes from 50 to 55 pounds." For general spring sowing ! 0n heavier sous, Hannchen is still favor ed after many years of trial, being popular for feeding because of low percentage .of hulls and lack of beards after threshing. Trebi is used on the high irrigated sections of eastern Oregon, and Mariout is the best for strictly dry farming, experi ments at the Moro station show. The experiment station is under taking to develop a strain of barley to meet the special needs of the Ore gon barley manufactures who have a market for. that product. .This de mand may amount to several thous and acres in future. . British maltsters are importing an immense amount of barley and pay premium prices , f or , select quality which for them means high in starch and low in nitrogen. Oregon con ditions favor production of good malting barley if good fall varieties are developed, Hyslop believes. Governor Norblad Upholds Warden Chffords Ouster We .HavilhO . . that Money Can Buy We Are Making 4; Specialty on ilk Shakes M KILGORE'S CAFE Governor Norblad will not inter fere in the judgment of the state game commission in the recent con troversy resulting from the removal of Harold Clifford, state game war den, and Ed Clark, his chief deputy. This was announced in a statement issued at the executive department. "Sould I interfere with the discre tion of members of the game com mission in the matters over which I appointed them, there would be no use in having a commission," read Governor Norblad's statement, "The commissioners in such case would be mere figureheads and puppets at the behest of the governor and certainly no self respecting man would want to hold office under such conditions." . :The statement referred repeatedly to Clifford and Clark as efficient of ficials, and reviewed briefly their out standing achievements while in office. CAPPER MEDALS 10 BEST GIR L CANNERS Awarded To Two 4-H Club Girls Who Enter Contest From This County. Special awards by Senator Arthur Capper, of silver and bronze medals to the two 4-H club girls who enter Umatilla County's best jars of home canned fruits, vegetables and meats in the National Canning ConteU at Shenandoah, Iowa, is announced in a message to the Press from Shenan doah, Iowa, where the contest is be ing held under the auspicies of the Household Science Institute. , Senator Capper, long a friend of the 4-H clubs and a member of the National Committee on boys' and girls'. - club work, in making the awards said that ; ha- honed these leisis that has pleased the Cylinder Boring t We have added the latest Model I CYLINDER BORING MACHINE f! ' ; to our mechanical equipment and we are prepared to rebore automobile engine cylinders for the trade; on short notice. Come in and see the new Machine. REMEMBER . WE ARE EQUIPPED TO DO EXPERT WELDING AT ALL TIMES Gallaher's Garage J. E. Gallaher Athena Phone 471 THE ATHENA MARKET We carry the best Meat That Money Buys Kippered Sanson, all Kinds of Salt Fish. Fresh Fish, Oysters, Crabs, Clams, Kraut in Season. X W. LOGSDON Main Street , Athena, Oregon. Airplane To Be Used In Fertilizing Land Walter Holt, county agent informs the East Oregonian that the wheat ranch of Sim Culley, southeast of Athena is to be used in demonstrat ing the fertilization of fields from an airplane, Clayton L, Long, Northwest rep resentative of ft company for the tests which will also be made at the Harry Price farm pear Pullman. L. M. Boyd, Portland flier, will bring the airplane on Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. The ferti lizer will be spread at the rate of about 150 to 200 pounds an acre, ac cording to Long. This is the first time such trials have been carried on in this county. ' Prisoners Busy Canning Corn from the garden plots of the Washington state prison is now be ing canned, giving employment to about 60 prisoners, The corn will be used for other state institutions as well as for the prison. Clarence Long, superintendent of the prison, states that in its two years of opera tion the cannery has shown a profit to the state. Canning this year will include 125 tons of Italian prunes, 150 tons of apples and about . 180 tons of tomatoes, as well as other products.'7' ' . '-y.i- Grouse Hunter Fined Joe Stover paid a fine of $25. In justice court in Pendleton for hunt ing grouse put of lesson. H was hunting in the McKay creek district when arrested by Game Warden William Albee. Typewriter Repairing Have Your Typewriter Cleaned and Overhauled During Vacation . Terms Reasonable Telephone tIZ Coad's Typewriter Shop 109 W Maia St Walls Walla awaras wouia ' serve to encourage home canning work among farm girls and that they would prove of value to 4-H club leaders and exten sion workers in furthering this work. The Capper medals are in addition to the list of 470 prizes totaling $4,250 in cash, loving cups and rib bons which will be distributed to" the winners in the contest. The n-rand sweepstakes award of the contest carries with it a cash prize of six hundred dollars. The contest is open to every wo man and girl. There are no re strictions as to the nature of the iood sent.. Contestants may enter fruit, vegetable or meat division, any two of these divisions, or all three Entries should be sent immediately upon canning. These will be kept on exhibition at Shenandoah till the clos ing of the contest on October 1. The list of contest judges includes five of America's outstanding home economics experts and nutrition au thorities, headed by Dr. Louise Stan ley, Chief of the Bureau of Home Economics, U. S. Department of Agriculture. That the judging may be thoroughly impartial and the dis play of Jars absolutely uniform, con testants are required to send their entries in standard glass jars of the quart size. A sample . Ball ' mason ar and carton, together with prize entry labels and full information for entering may be had without cost by writing the National Canning Con test, Shenandoah, Iowa. Any preferred method of canning may be used although it has been found that the hot pack method to gether with the use of a pressure cooker for the sterilizing is best, especially for non-acid vegetables, states Grace Viall Gray, nationally known canning expert who is secre tary of the contest. This method of canning is recommended by the U S. Department of Agriculture be cause it saves time and fuel and as sures sterility, while preserving the natural flavor, color, and texture, of the canned article. Governor Will Postpone Deer Season Unless Rain Salem. Unless rain falls within the next few days, Governor Nor blad will be asked by the state forestry board to postpone the open ing of the hunting season from Sept ember 15 until October L The pro posal was said to have been con sidered at a meeting : of the state forestry board held in Portland Fri day. Governor Norblad said he would give the request consideration. Sportsmen have contended that hunt ers are not responsible for fires in the forests and they are opposed to delaying the activities of the hunters until October 1. The governor, indicated that he would issue a statement dealing with the request as soon as it arrives offi cially at his office. , Death of Charlie Owens Charles Owens, former well known Adams man died at the veteran's hos pital in Portland, following ptomaine poisoning. Of late years Mr. Owens had resided in Bend, where he was a member of the fire department. He will be remembered in Athena as a baseball player, where he played on local and Adams teams. He was a veteran of the World War, going from Umatilla county as a member of the 146th Field Artillery. The body was laid beside his parents In Athena cemetery, 280 High Schools In State There are 280 standard high schools in Oregon with a total enrollment of 45,868 and employing 2115 teachers, according to figures made public by James M. Burgess, assistant super intendent oi puplio . instruction. Standardization of high schools in the state has progressed materially since 1920, when they numbered 211 en rolling 23,867 students. Lane coun ty leads the state with 25 standard high schools and an average enroll ment of 59 students. ., Silverton Defeated The Silverton junior baseball team was defeated at Colorado Springs Saturday by the Long Beach, Cali fornia, team in an eleven inning con test, 8 to 3. New Orleans defeated Long Beach for the Western title and will meet the Eastern champions in the "little world's series" at Mem- jihis, Tenn, lire McGorm paMtoir J housewives in every community I ick-Deeririg Ball-Bearing Cream Separator TP he next time you are near our .place, stop in and look over the McCormick-Deering Cream Sepa rators we have on our floor. Hero you will find a machine in just the right size that will suit you in every little detail. Or tell us when it will be most convenient and we will prove to your satisfaction, right at your own house, that the McCormick-Deering is the closest skimming, easiest-turning, easiest-to-wash cream separator you can buy. You will stay pleased year after year with a McCormick Deering. Come in and look it over. Rogers , Goodman (A Mercantile Trust) ' Present Returns Are Under Cost of Produc tion To Stock Raisers Oregon State College. Eastern Oregon stockmen are wondering just what is wrong with the mar kets for beef cattle and sheep, says Herman Oliver, large scale stockman at John Day and a member of the state board of higher education. In an address at the recent field day of the Burns branch experiment station he gave some figures on costs of pro duction as taken from his own records. "There is plenty of money to fin ance stockmen, and more people in the country to eat the meat than ever before and yet the markets are so low that we lose on every lamb and every head of cattle sold at present prices," Oliver pointed out. "Under present conditions it costs me $0.50 to raise a lamb. Counting wool at 17c, also below the cost of production, and 100 per cent lamb crop to bring 6c a pound at 70 pounds, the return from lambs is around $4.20 each or $2.30 below cost of production, "The same is true of cattle,'' he continued, citing more detailed fig ures. "At the present country price of 4H to7e the grower is losing about $35 a head if all costs are considered. Unfortunately the farmer cannot re duce operations and cut down over head as other industries do in times of depression," he added. t Adequate tariff on hides would be real help, Mr. Oliver believes. While it may seem unimportant it would make a difference of getting from $2 to $2.50 for hides as is now done to $8 to $10 under adequate pro tection, , New Barley Variety' A hew variety of barley, the Ben Beardless, has been developed at the Union branch experiment station and promises to be a high yielder for sections of Oregon. It is already used in the Grande Ronde valley with success. It appears to be the best beardless barley for the rather mel low, sandy soils, says the college farm crops department. Fir Sweeps Stockyards . Fire Friday destroyed 75 covered pens at the Portland Union Stock yards. George Pearson, president, estimated damages at $25,000. The fire is believed to have started from hot tar used in reroofing some of the pens, v Five thousand head of live stock were driven to safety and 125 employes' automobiles were shoved out of danger. Portland Lawyer Succumbs Charles Y. WigfalL 37, Portland at torney, died Friday night from bulletj wounds inflicted when a men ne naa given ft ride attempted to rob him. Propose Barge Line For Columbia River A barge line will be placed in operation on the Columbia river from The Dalles to Portland March 1, 1931, if Mid-Columbia shippers will agree to supply 60,000 tons of freight an nually, Fred Rosenberg, representa tive of the Martin Shipyards, Inc., Portland, told shippers and members of the Columbia Valley association. Rosenberg said more than 250, 000 tons of freight are shipped from Mid-Columbia cities annually and the proposed barge line could carry 150,000 tons but only 60,000 would be necessary to assure successful operation. Costly Wheat Fires Two fires which started in wheat fields in the Lewiston section caused at least $26,000 damages. Suspect Taken Cecil Criteseh, 24, Agness, Curry county, Oregon, was arrested by C. C. Wells, deputy United States marshal, on a charge of setting forest fires in the Siskiyou national forest, in No vember, 1929. Criteseh will be given a hearing Wednesday. Bail was fixed at $1,000. Faster Highway Speed In New York state as the national highways pile up with vacationing motorists the law waves its baton for a little more Speed, and "keep moving" is the new command of the traffic rulers. We Can Cast Your Plates The installation of an Electricaster Stereotyp ing Machine makes it possible for us to accom modate our merchant advertisers and others in the ma t ter of making printing plates from matrices. It means aval-. liable addition to our equipment in the mat ter of serving our patron. H. A. Frick parpenter and Contractor Pendleton - - Phone 1192J Specializes in Metal Weather Stripping Real Estate Wheat Alfalfa and Stock Land SHEEP FOR SALE L. L. Montague, Arlington Pleads Guilty to Sale and Possession B. B. Richards, when in terviewed by the Press man, pleaded guilty to the sale of the best insurance obtainable for the money and possession of more policies in reserve ready at a moments notice for your use and purpose. A policy for every hazzard. B. B. RICHARDS, Insurance