-v o cr - "o ctj n o r- ci ?-i c h o r- :z i: c - u u CO 'i O o o : ..' ;j - o OPA to Blame for Sugar Shortage Says Congressman From 2nd Oregon District Representative Lowell Stockman, republican of Oregon, member of the Republican Congressional Stu dy committee made the statement that the OPA statement blaming the current shortage of sugar for home canning on last year's chis eling by housewives on their can ning ration is a "typical adminis tration smoke screen designed to cover its own fumbling and in efficiency." "The fact is", Representative Stockman said, "that if the .beet sugar growers of this country had been encouraged even to maintain the production of sugar they turn ed out in 1940, instead of planting their land to dry peas, there would have been more additional sugar availble for canning this year than OPA charges housewives with hav ing falsely secured for that purpose last year. "In 1940." he said, "American beet, sugar growers planted 916,000 acres of sugar beets and produced 1,773,000 tons sugar. In 1944 those same sugar growers planted only 558,000 acres and produced only 985,000 tons of sugar. The reason for the decrease in sugar acreage is that administration food theor ists decided," Representative Stock man said, "this nation needed dry peas far more than it heeded sug ar and boosted the price of peas almost 300 percent while permit ting the price of sugar beets to go up less than 80 percent. The result is. that while there is now a short age of sugar so acute that vast quantities of fruit may go to waste this summer because it cannot be canned, we have dry peas literally running out of our warehouse windows. ''The story behind the dry peas is that early in the war administra tion food theorisis decided that sooner or later we were going to run short of meat and called in dietary experts to figure out a substitute protein food for the Am erican people. Dry peas are one of the foods highest in protein value, so it was determined that dry peas would supplant meat in the Ameri can diet. Thereupon, the growing of dry peas was encouraged by a government subsidy and support price which raised the price from an average of $1.90 in 1940 to $5.65 for U. S. No. 1 peas and $5.40 for U. S. No. 2s in 1944. At the same time the average price of sugar beets was permitted to increase only from $7.02 to $12.50 per ton. "Tha response was what might Death Summons Ernest K. Wyland Ernest Wyland, 59, passed away Wednesday morning at the family residence in Heppner following an illness of approximately two years. Mr. Wyland was a native son of Morrow county. He was born Nov. 14, 1885, in Heppner, his parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Wyland, having been early settlers in the Hard man section. He attended school in Hardman and Heppner and in 1910 was married to Ora Devin. mmber of another pioneer family of the county. He farmed in the Hard man section a number of years and Jatef resided on Rhea creek just be low Ruggs. remaining there until illness made it necessary to give up ranch life. Surviving besides Mrs. Wyland are two children, Ellis J. Wyland, Pendleton, and Elrrua (Mire. Ben White who resides in Arizona, and one s'ste'-, Mrs. Eppler Dickey of John Day. Fupornl arrangements wfrre be ing withhold pending word from Mrs. White who expressed a desire to be precent but because of dis tance could not state definitely whpn fhe could arrive. T,pfn TTumnhrevs left Sun day for Portland where she is en paged in buving new stock for the Humnhres Drug companv. She was accompanied to the city by Mrs. F. W. Turner. Mrs. Joe Hughes and Miss Rose Hoosier. o RitCFD TO CAPTAIN Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Drake have been informed that their son. Lt. Donald Drake, has been raised to the rank of captain. Heppner, have been expected. Acreage which had been devoted to sugar beets and other crops was planted in field peas and production jumped from 3,439,000 bushels in 1940 to 8,873.000 bushels in 1944. While sugar beet acreage was decreas ing from 916,000 acres in 1940 to 558,000 acres in 1944, the acreage planted to dry peas jumped from 240,000 in 1940 to 727,000 in 1944. "Montana. Idaho and Colorado are important beet sugar produc ing states. In 1944 their combined sugar beet acreage was 70,000 acres less than in 1940. "OPA's next move will probably be to tell housewives how they can use dry peas as a substitute for su gar in canning, for while canning quotas of sugar are being reduced this summer, we produced in 1944 more than five times as many dried peas as our total civilian re quirements, and still have more than 440,500,000 pounds of them on hand. , "OPA officials seek to blame the present shortage of sugar for can ning on last year's chiseling by housewives, by which they mean use of sugar obtained with canning coupons for other household pur poses in this manner. By a strange coincidence, this is the exact amount by which OPA itself ex ceeded its allocation of sugar for canning purposes. "In 1944 OPA was allocated 750, 000 tons of sugar for home canning use. Against this allocation OPA authorized use of canning coupons totaling 1,150,000 tons exactly 400, 000 tons over its allocation. If the sugar for which these coupons were issued was not available from the home canning allocation, it had to come from the allocation for other domestic uses. Therefore, if OPA exceded its canning sugar alloca tion, the sugar those coupons called for had to come from the normal home supply and its use for ordu nary home consumption was not a criminal diversion but the purpose for which the sugar was allocated in the first place. , Regardless of the purpose to which household sugar was put in 1944, however, it is obvious that if American beet sugar growers had been" encouraged to produce even at the 1944 level, we should have had 788,000 more tons of su gar for all purposes this year than we now have. This year's sugar shortage cannot be blamed on Am erican housewives, but upon ad ministration bungling." GIVEN DISCHARGE Sgt. Joe Aiken is home again, this time on permanent furlough. Joe was granted a furlough to come home for a visit after a long period across the Atlantic and then Germany surrendered and the ser vice point system went into effect. When army officials checked up on his record it was found he had the requird 85 and plenty to spare. The Heppner lad was in the army air transport going first to Eng land, then to North Africa, Sicily, Italy southern France and into Germany. His unit was transferred to India but Joe remained in Italy in an administrative capacity. SALVATION ARMY SOLICITORS IN TOWN THIS WEEK Envoy Lillian Gray McCormick is in Heppner this week in the in terests of the Salvation Army. She has been calling on the people of Oregon and southern Idaho for many years this being her 19th year over the state. She is accom panied by Mrs. Mary Davis who is assisting her in soliciting funds. FINISHES BASIC COURSE Among those graduating recently from an intensive course of basic engineering training at service schools at the Great Lakes naval center, was Roger Alan Campbell, son oi Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Camp bell, Lexington, Oregon. Mrs. J. T. Knappenberg, who has been a house guest of Mr. and Mrs D. M. Ward the past month was called to Portland Thursday, June 7, by the death of her husband. Mr. Knappenberg has been ill for the past three years. Mrs. Knap penberg and Mrs. Ward are sisters. Oregon, Thursday, June Eagle to Scream In Morrow County On Fourth of July Civilian Air Patrol Plans Celebration For Two Towns It has been quite a spell since the eagle screamed in the good old American tradition in this neck of the woods but taking a tin from the stir around Heppner this week it will be only a matter of weeks until such another celebration is recorded. Announcement has been made by the Civilian Air Patrol unit, with headquarters at Hepp the natal day will be staged at ner. that a full day observance of Hoppner and Lexington with a program Ifojlowing the military manner. Headed by the commanding of ficer, Lt. Walter Ready, . the staff of the Heppner unit including Lt. Richard Hayes, in charge of cadets; Lt. M. R. Wightman, parade; Pvt Earl McKinney, transportation; Archie Munkers and Pirl Howell, maintenance; Sgt Lloyd Burken bine. first aid; Lt. Edmond Gonty, M. P.; Lt. Conley Lanham, finance; Cpl Alma Perkins, advertising; Pvt Henry Perkins, carnival; Lt. Walter Ready, airport and personnel, and Sgt Venice Stiles, clerk, plan the making for a big day, offering a type of celebration new to this section. A tentative program calls for a parade at 10 a. m. in Heppner, with local and visiting units in full dress. Lodges and other organiza tions of Heppner have been asked to participate. Following the parade a drill contest will be held at the Rodeo grounds participated in by visiting and local CAP units. Plans contmplate the assembling of 35 planes from Oregon, Washington and Idaho which will pass in re view over the field during the con tests. The afternoon program will open at 2 o'clock with a (parade in Lex ington, with an air meet and dedi cation ceremony , at the proposed Lexington airport, the site for which is expected to be purchased by that time. Members of the local unit are arranging a carnival and jitney dance to be held in the Odd fellows hall until late evening when a dance will be given in the Lex ington grange hall. A public dance will be held the evening of July 3 at the fair pavilion in Heppner. The City of Lexington, negotiat or and purchaser of the airport, has tendered Heppner CAP first rights on the field in token of. the unit's efforts in behalf of the port. Nicoli Thompson Dies in Norway News of the death or Nicoli Thompsen, former Ella and Goose berry farmer, was contained in a letter from Mrs. Erling Thompsen of McMinnville, formerly of lone. The family recently received the news through the Norwegian consul at San Francisco. Mr. Thompsen died Jan. 22 of this year in Nor way and information was relayed through Stockholm, Sweden. Mrs. -Thompsen included news notes relative to other members of the family. Lt. Ted Thompsen, home from duty in the Pacific, is visiting at the home' of his mother, Mrs. Karen Thompsen, in McMinn ville. Ted was in command of a mine sweeper and took part in the landing of troops on Saipan and other points in the Mariannas. He will be reassigned from Washing ton, D. C. after June 17. James Thompsen left May 31 to begin training with the navy at San Diego. . ' PVt Norris Thompsen recently graduated from army air corps ra dio school at Soiux Falls, S. D. and spent a 30-day furlough in Mc Minnville and Portland. He has been sent to an airbase in Madison, Wis. for further training. The Thompsen boys attended school in lone when the family re sided in Morrow county. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Baker left for Portland Tuesday on a business trip. 14. 1945 School Election On Docket Monday Taxpayers of the district should bear in mind the annual school meeting scheduled to open at 2 p. m. Monday. June 18 at the city hall in Heppner. Election of one director" is part of the business to come before the meeting. C. W. Barlow is the outgoing director and' he has not indicated, publically at least, whether he intends to run again. A special election will be held to vote on the question of increas ing the tax levy over the amount limited by section 11, Article XI, state constitution. The district finds it needs to exceed the six percent limitation to the amount of $7,282.34. Aviation Subject Of Meeting Here The future of aviation was dis cussed at some length Wednesday evening in a meeting at the city hall when representatives of the Shell Oil company gave their ver sion of skyway activity following the war. Speakers were M. K. Lakin and J. M. Beatie and they left no doubt in the minds of their hear ers relative to expansion of air industry, which they contend will outstrip the development of the automobile industry following the first world war. HAS NEW TILE FLOOR Patrons of Heppner cafe walked into the restaurant on a new tile floor when the popular eating place reopned for business this morning. Harvey White, proprietor, closed the restaurant for two days while Gus Nikander and Setward Cole were laying the new floor cover ing. The tile comes in foot square blocks and although having., the appearance of linbleum is of more durable material. The proprietor is as happy as a small boy with his first pair of brass tipped boots. o GOES TO CONVENTION Mis. George Gertson left this morning for Portland where, Friday evning, she will leave for St. Paul, Minn, to attend the national con vention of the Degree of Honor Protective Assn. as th Oregon dele gate. Returning homeward she will visit Mr. Gertson's relatives in Ha vre, Mont. o Another sailor at home for a few days is Dewitt Jones Jr., Gm 3jc. His ship is in dry dock for repairs for 30 days so Dee has taken ad vantage of this oportunity to visit his family and friends. A recent communique irom Bob Runnion states that he anticipates an early trip overseas. At present Bob is in San Diego, Calif. Morrow County Ward Popular Spot With Patients in McCaw General Hospital Three young men from McCaw hospital, Sgt Wright. Sgt Clark and Cpl Cramer, the former a veter an of tha Pacific war area and the others from the European the ater, were guests of the Morrow county unit of the camp and hos pital council Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Ralph Reser, secretary of the council accompanied the boys as did a field director. Mrs. Reser spoke on Morrow county's varied interests at McCaw and explained more specifically how she uses the $25 from the local committee eaoh month. The like parties nnd what is a party without pretty girls and food. That is where Foser comes to the fore. She gathers 20 or 25 attractive young women and they go to ward 47. Games in which the boys, bedfast tho they be, can participate, are played, re cords are played and then refresh ments. It is claimed over at the hospital that Morrow county's ward has the best parties so more and more of the ambulatory patients "just happen to be passing by." Refreshments, which are meant for 50 have to be expanded to many times that number and those $25 checks and Mrs. Reser's wise plan ning do the trick. Incidentally the boys have asked for strawberry short cake and cream for this Volume 62, Number 12 Warehousing for 1945 Wheat Crop Presents Problem Triple-A Official . Trying to Remove Local Bottleneck Unless a solution is found within the next few weeks to the problem of clearing existing storage facil ties, a lot of the 1945 wheat crop will be without a home, according to Merle Cummings, state field man for the AAA, who is in the county this week in an effort to help straighten out the warehous ing difficulties along the Heppner branch of the Union Pacific sys tem. Cummings related some of the storage facts in a talk before the luncheon group of the chamber of commerce Monday noon. Warehousing facilities have not been built in proportion to in creased production in recent years. That would not be necessary if it were not for tne fact that the rail road company cannot spare cars enough to keep the grain rolling to the seaboard terminals, thus tax ing the capacity of local storage space. Carryover from the previous year has come to extend right up to harvest season, although every available car is being sent in to move out as much wheat as pos sible before the 1945 crop begins to roll in. Cummings stated that storage capacity in use and being built will amount to about 1,644,000 bu shels. There is in storage 1.500,000 bushels, of which 340,000 bushels is in Commodity Credit Corporation bins. Should all old wheat be mov ed out in time for the new crop to be stored there would be a sur plus of approximately 1,000,000 bu shels if the 1945 crop reaches an estimated 2,800,000 or even 3,000, 000 bushels. "The problem has not been solv ed, but we. are working on it," Cummings stated, "and hope to have , something definite within a short time." The speaker also mentioned that government crop insurance had been reinstated. This covers all risk due to wiath(t-r conditions. The government lost money on, the original program but hones to make the new law a successful operation. Guests introduced included R. C. McCracken, insurance man of Portland. Earl Simonton, assistant forest ranger in the Heppner dis trict, and Bernard Davis from the accounting division of the secre tary of state's office, here checking over the county's books. month's party. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thompson were hosts at lunch at the Lucas Place to the visitors and a few guests before the meeting vV'ch occurred at 2:30 at the Elks hall. It has been decided to try rais ing funds to carry on the commit tee work another year without so licitation. Neighborhood chairmen have been named by Mrs. Earl Gilliam, finance chairman. If the response is not ample a soliciting campaign will be launched. Contact your chairman or leave your con tribution with Mrs. Gilliam or Miss Florence Bcrgstrom, treasurer. Bus iness people will not be solicitd at their residences. Chairmen are tho following: Heppner: Mrs. Frank Connor, Mrs. J. O. Hager, Mrs. Elbert Cox. Mrs. Harvev Miller, Mrs. Wm Barkla, Mrs. R. G. McMurtry, Mrs. Fred Parrish and Mrs. Ad Moore; bus iness section, J. O. Turner and Mrs. Earl Gilliam. lone, Mrs. Fred Mankin; Lxing ton. Mrs. Rilnh Jackson; North of Lexington, Mrs Merle Kirk; Al pine, Mrs. Wm J. Doherty; east of Heppner, Mrs. Ray Drake; Lena, Mrs. Edwin Hughes; Eight Mile, Mrs. Ben Anderson; Hardman, Mrs. Jim Hams and Boardman.- Mrs. Clyde TannehilL f r- ' o o o m