Heppner Gazette Times. Heppner, Oregon Thursday, June 2, 1938 Page Four Heppner Gazette Times THE HEPPNER GAZETTE, Established March 30, 1883; THE HEPPNER TIMES, Established November 18, 1897; CONSOLIDATED FEBRUARY 15. 1912 Published every Thursday morning by CKAWPOHD PUBLISHING COMPANY and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. JASPER V. CRAWFORD, Editor SPENCER CRAWFORD, Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year Three Years . .. Six Months Three Months Single Copies .. $2.00 5.00 1.00 .75 .05 Official Paper for Morrow County i v Member. 04&frNewspaperPiblilK:es A Parity Price NORTHWEST wheatgrowers rec ognize that a commodity loan of 60 cents a bushel on their prod uct will not be the means of obtain ing a parity price. A loan of 60 cents .establishes at least that much value which must be obtained from some source if the loan is to be repaid. It costs at least 12 cents more to get the wheat to terminal which also must be realized from the wheat's sale. With market quotations at Port land below the 72-cent total, how, they ask and correctly is the wheat to move to clear the way for future deliveries? These wheat men know that it costs an average of 66 cents a bushel to produce wheat in the Columbia basin counties in Oregon. (This fig ure was determined by a competent survey made by U. S. D. A. exten sion service last year.) And they are told that a bushel of wheat must bring $1.15 to buy as much of other commodities as the income from a bushel of wheat purchasel in the 1909-1914 period the relative posi tion expressed by the word "parity" which the agricultural adjustment act aims to attain for wheat. What Northwest wheatgrowers are now asking of the crop adjustment control administrators is that the loan value on their wheat be re duced to 48 cents, and a compensat ing direct payment of 12 cents be made to cooperating producers un der the adjustment program. The 12-cent payment would help guar antee them somewhere near a parity price while the reduced loan value would make it possible to place the grain on the market at a figure where it would move on through the channels of trade. Cooperators under the control pro gram so far are slated to receive 12 cents a bushel for 88 percent of their normal yield to compensate them for diverting 16 percent of their fallow or 12 percent of their planted wheatland from soil depleting to soil conserving crops (taking out of wheat and putting into crested wheat grass or other permanent forage crops). The additional 12-cent pay ment would also be on the 88 per cent of normal production basis, making a total of 24 cents times 88 percent of. normal production co operators would receive in addition to the market return on the whole crop. Recent market tendencies and the prospect for an extra large wheat surplus this year indicate that the market return will not be large in any event. If the 48-cent figure is established as the loan value in the .Northwest, it is believed the total return to the grower will be approx imately this amount per bushel on his 1938 crop plus the 24 cents a bushel on 88 percent of his normal production, or a guaranteed return of 72 cents a bushel should his crop be just 88 percent of normal, a fig ure aimed at in the acreage diver sion plan. With 66 cents of this taken up in cost of production and 12 cents re quired to get the grain to market, the market price must still bring more than the 48-cent loan value if the producer is to realize a profit. These are something of the math ematics the producer is facing un der existing conditions. If he is to get the added 12-cent payment, it must come from congressional ap propriation. And so long as Uncle Sam is attempting to. regulate pro duction and is, actually, pegging the price, the contention of the North west growers is just and fair. The habitual outlet for wheat of this section is through export channels. It must still so move, and Uncle Sam must see that it does, while making it possible for the producer of this section to retain the comparative status with the producer of other sections of the country that he held before Uncle Sam started to change the established order. Qualified informants say that the crop adjustment control program has no connection with party politics, that it was conceived by farm lead ers and is basically by and for ag riculture, and as such should have the support of everyone who de pends upon agricuture for a live lihood. Certain it is, the wheat production of the country was too greatly en larged at the time of high World war prices. The present program's effect will be truly beneficial if it results in bringing the production again to the more nearly normal basis that existed before the war without working undue hardship upon anyone. The immediate concern of the Northwest must be, however, the marketing of its 1938 wheat crop at a profit if at all possible, and the growers' present plan should be given wholehearted support by all Northwest people. Snell Thanks Friends For Primary Support Secretary of State Earl Snell has issued a word of thanks and appre ciation to his friends throughout the state, who brought about his nomin ation in the recent primary. In addition to building a fine rec ord for efficient and courteous ad ministration of a big job, Snell's first term in office has been marked by the inauguration of a most success ful and extensive traffic safety cam paign. His work along this line has resulted in marked decreases in ac cidents, a steady reduction in fatal ities for month to month, and placed Oregon in the first rank of the states of the union in point of accomplish ment in this work. In the recent primary, Snell polled the largest vote of any candidate running for a party nomination, his total being exceeded only by two justices of the supreme court, who ran on a non-partisan ballot and re ceived votes from both parties. LOCAL. NEWS Mrs. J. V. Crawford left this morning for Corvallis, driving down for her brother, Norton King, who is finishing his first year at Oregon State college. They expected to re turn Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller of Ore gon City visited for several days this week at the home of their son, Dr. Dwight Miller. Willie Hynd of Hynd Brothers company was transacting business in the city Saturday from the Sand Hollow farm. SHIP BY TRUCK The Dalles Freight Line, Inc. Daily Service Between PORTLAND : THE DALLES : HEPPNER and Way Points Warehouse: KANE'S GARAGE Carl D. Spickerman, Agent "PREVENT FOREST FIRES IT PAYS" La Verne Van Marter, Noral Os borne, Harry O'Donnell and Hugh Crawford have been spending a week's outing at Hidaway Springs. Bad roads delayed their return. f Wid Palmateer was in the ctiy Saturday from the Morgan district, reporting crop prospects there quite favorable. Mr. and Mrs. Pruitt Cox of Oregon City were Memorial Day visitors at the home of Mr. Cox's sister, Mrs. W. Y. Ball. Tom Wells and Reese Burkenbine enjoyed a fishing jaunt to East lake over the holiday and report a fair catch. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Palmer were visitors in the city Saturday from their Lexington home. Mrs. H. A. Cohn, Philip and Sally are visiting in Portland, having gone to the city Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Anderson of Gooseberry were Memorial Day vis itors in the city. Mr. and Mrs. Rhea Luper and son Freddie were Memorial Day visitors from Portland. J. E. Craber was transacting bus iness in town Tuesday from the farm near Hardman. Mr. and Mrs. C E. Carlson were among Gooseberry residents in the city Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Denny of Lex ington were Heppner visitors Me morial Day. Jim Hams was in the city yester day from the farm near Hardman. Kpeirt CLAUDE PARMALEE Big Game Hunter one of the fastest and most accurate shots with high power rifle in the country. From Winchester Repeating Arms Co. in TRICK AND FANCY SHOOTING Wild LifE Pictures Movies taken by Parmalee in Canadian Rockies will be shown. ELKS HALL MonvJuneI3 8 o'clock ADMISSION FREE Everyone Invited Sponsored by Giliam & Bisbee 7 BIG PUBLICATIONS EACH FOR ONE YEAR A Total of 124 ISSUES - 12 Issues - 12 Issues - 12 Issues " 12 Issues " 12 Issues 12 Issues All Seven For One Year 3 HERE'S WHAT YOU GET! McCall's Magazine Pictorial Review -Woman's World -Good Stories - -The Country Home The Farm Journal The Gazette Times - 52 Issues REGULAR VALUE $5.25 YOU SAVE $2.25 YOU WILL GET ALL SEVEN publications forONE FULL YEAR, and if you are already a subscriber to ANY of these SEVEN pub lications, your present subscription will be extended one full year. 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