Page Four Heppner Gazette Times, Heppner, Oregon Thursday, July 25, 1940 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 CBAWFOBD PUBLISHING COMPANY and entered at the Post Office at Hepp ner, Oregon, as second-class matter. JASPER V. CRAWFORD, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $2.00 Three Years 6.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months .75 Single Copies 05 Official Paper for Morrow County An Astounding Loss CjINCE 1933 fires have destroyed more than 14 billion feet of tim ber in Oregon, The logging and manufacture into lumber of this timber could have provided 20,000, 000 man days of work enough work to keep 150,000 men on payrolls for a full year and furnish support for 600,000 Oregonians. The Tillamook fire alone consumed enough timber to build 1,000,000 small homes. This is an astounding loss. The figures are taken from a letter re ceived from N. S. Rodgers, state forester, who is making an appeal to all Oregonians and all others us ing the forests of the state to exer cise the greatest care in preventing fire. June was the driest month of record in Oregon history, Rogers points out. The drought continues and intensifies the worst fire men ace the state has faced in many years. On top of that, forest work ers have been considerably disturb ed by increasing evidence that some of our recent costly fires were start ed by criminal incendiarists. For years, officials, the press and other agencies have sought to edu cate the public in the proper use of the forests. This has been effec tive in reaching thoughtful people but there remains a great deal to be done to reach those who for one reason or another remain indifferent. Despite warnings of posters, news paper articles, moving pictures, lec tures over the radio, there are those who are too apathetic to see, read, or listen, and consequently do not heed. It must be remembered that the loss in timber alone, while appalling, is not the only cost. It requires the services of a considerable army of men each season to fight these fires which, in a large part are the re sult of human carelessness. Added to that is the loss of wild life and the injury to watersheds, to say nothing of the menace to human life. The worst fire season is yet to come, unless a change in the weath er should bring sufficient moisture to abate the menace. This is hardly likely and it is up to every person 'entering the timbered areas to use all possible precaution to prevent the starting of fire. Those in charge of the forests have their hands full checking blazezs resulting from nat ural causes and their responsibility is increased many times by human carelessness. Let us all join in the "total war" against this enemy which yearly makes such devastating in roads on our greatest natural resources. Freight on Wool Uppcd by Decision A decision of the maritime com mission made on July 12 sustains a raise of 25 cents per hundred pounds for the transportation by common water carrier of wool and mohair, in grease and scoured, in bags and bales, from Pacific to Atlantic coast ports. .This information is contain ed in a report of the commission's findings forwarded to County Judge Bert Johnson last week. Schedules filed by the steamship companies were to become effective March 16, 1940, but upon filing of protests by the public utilities com mission of the state of Idaho, the secretary of agriculture, Arizona Corporation commission, public ut ilities commissioner of Oregon, board of railroad commissioners of Montana, National Woolgrowers as sociation and numerous state and county wool growers and market ing associations, farm organizations, and individual wool growers and dealers, the operation of the sched ules was suspended until July 16, 1940. Judge Johnson, on the trans portation committee of the Eastern Oregon Wheat league a few years ago, where he acquired a consider able talent for filing protests on frieght rates, was prevailed upon to intervene in behalf of the wool men and he forwarded a letter to the commission setting forth what he viewed as an injustice to the industry. The maritime commission heard the case at its office in Washington, D. C. on July 12 and ordered that the suspension be vacated and set aside and that the proceedings be discontinued. Conservation to be Re-emphasized In AAA Program Next year's AAA farm program will continue to emphasize soil con servation and soil improvement, will stengthen the "ever-normal gran ary" plan of balanced production, and will give Oregon farmers in creased opportunity to fit the pro gram in with their individual farm requirements. This summary of 1941 AAA plans was brought back to Oregon by Wil liam Steen of Milton chairman of the state agricultural conservation committee, following his attendance recently at the national AAA con ference in Washington, D .C. Plans for the following year must always be made in advance of fall seeding time. N. C. Donaldson, in charge of the state AAA office in Corvallis, ac companied Steen to Washington. While at the conference, they offer ed a group of suggested changes in the 1941 program, as made previous ly by the 36 county AAA commit tees throughout the state. Some of these were accepted and will be in corporated into the official farm program for next year, Steen said. The state chairman declared that the AAA program, as set up for 1941, will continue to be a vital factor in "agricultural preparedness" as an aid to national defense. An important recommendation concerns expansion of the grant of aid plan under which farmers re ceive advances of lime, superphos phate and similar conservation ma terials, with costs deducted from payments which they have earned. Another recommendation is that far mers be permitted to earn portions of their payments only by carrying out specified soil-building practices most needed in their communities. In general, next year's farm pro gram will follow very closely that now in effect, Steen said, and point ed out that there have been few major changes in the agricultural adjustment act since 1938. Cooperative Wool Auctions Slated The Portland warehouse of the Pacific Wool Growers will be the scene of the first competitive bidding wool auctions on the Australia-New Zealand plan ever held on the Pacific coast, when the first auction series sponsored by the wool cooperative will get under way August 5th and 6th. The association's second auc tion will be at their Stockton, Cal., warehouse August 8th and 9th. Although new to the Pacific coast, wool auctions have for many years been the method used in Australia, New Zealand, Great Britain and South Africa, in marketing the bulk of the world's wool clip. Between three and four million pounds of wool will be offered at the first series of the Pacific's auctions at Portland and Stockton. The Paci fic's sales will be held in sequence with auctions scheduled for late July in Denver, Ogden and Billings, so that eastern mill buyers can con veniently make the circuit of the five sales on one trip west The new auction program, an nounced this spring after two years of study and consideration by the Mrs. Fred Stark Reported Mending Mrs. Fred Stark (Velton Owens), who miraculously escaped death in an automobile accident near Colfax, Wash., recently, is reported on the mend. This information was con tained on a card received by her father, Creed Owens, yesterday, which stated that she had suffi ciently improved to permit removal of two nurses. One lung, collapsed by the acci dent, is building back fast. There was a 10-inch gash in her back thru which the doctors could see her heart beating. It was necessary to give her blood transfusions for eight days and she was kept in an oxygen tank for eight days and nights. Her escape from death was considered a miracle by attending physicians. How Mrs. Stark's 8-year-old daughter, Oween, played a part in saving the mother's life is told by Mr. Owens. Leaving her mother directors of the wool cooperative, has met with a very favorable re sponse from range growers in the northwest states and in California and Nevada, where the association also operates, says R. A. Ward, gen eral manager, and some of the larg est clips raised in these sections will be included in the auctions. Original bag and graded lines of wool from Oregon, Washington and Idaho, including Valley Oregons, and an accumulation of Oregon mohair will make up the Portland offerings. At Stockton, California and Nevada wools, including a line of California lambs wool, will be put up for sale. The Pacific Wool Growers is one of the oldest cooperative in the Northwest and has pioneered the cooperative wool marketing move ment in these states, marketing mil lions of pounds of wool and mohair for its grower members during the past twenty years. unconscious and digging at the wound after the car turned over, Oween climbed the bank to the highway and stopped the first car coming along. She told the man to stay with her mamma and then walked more than half a mile to a farm house to call a doctor while the man prevented Mrs. Stark from further molesting the wound. Ask ed later how she happened to do that, Oween said, "Mamma always told me in case of a car accident that the first thing to do was to go for a doctor." Bessie Harrinffton. Vancouver, Wash., and Retha Adkins from Newport, sisters, have returned home after being with Mrs. Stark for five or six days. Mrs. F. W. Turner returned home Tuesday from Valdez, Alaska, where she visited at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Raymond Huddles ton. Mr. Turner drove to Yakima to meet her. CRESTED WHEAT GRASS CLEANING Cleaning rate c per pound, including hammering out and cleaning the dou bles, purity and germination tests by the Federal Laboratory at Corvallis. This does not include special seed sacks. We will put the seed back in the original sacks unless instructed to do otherwise. We also clean other grasses besides Creted Wheat. . . Most modern grass cleaner in the Columbia Basin, removes all tarweed seed by using a Carter disc separator. Agents for Blue Mountain Seed Growers' Assn. of La Grande CONDON GRAIN GROWERS Co-operative Condon Oregon fx ujnm vrjzvum Him h MiwmuiMw koYt WWiiu Ff k I I k i I Tl i W ki iH gv!M4 r I I Ft I ! J M rl m mii KNOW THE LEADS MUST BE THE LEADER R Ilti TRUCK SAIES TRUCK VAU1E Truck buyers are careful buy ersthey thor oughly analyze and compare all types of truck ing equipment they want to "make certain that they'll get the make and type of truck best suited to their business requirements. It is a significant fact that more truck users choose Chevrolet than any other make of truck . . . because Chevrolet trucks could not have established their record of leadership in 1940 and maintained it for, six out of the last eight years had it not been that Chevrolet trucks deliver more dollar-f or-dollar value than any other make. All models and types of Chevrolet trucks may still be purchased at today's low price levels, so it would be wise to consider replacing some of your trucking equipment with new Chevrolets now. TRUCK nui.rH cAm WANT FACTS.. .CHEVROLET GIVES Certified Proof! - tock Chevrolet 7, , ' aUon ' turned in a marvpi 12"ton truck - economTect;8rfo;mance ths st run are H0 ,The fact! of fnterestirrb2ert,ined . y8 Who?" You uentit,ed bookIet from ayobtai this jwnr nevrolet dealer or by ting to Chev-roletMotrni. Co rs Salei rPoratlon, General iu,:r,'. "etroit ;an. FERGUSON MOTOR COMPANY Heppner Oregon