Show FARRELL ANALYZES FARMERS AT LOGAN MEET our tanners farmers in their struggles to dispense disperse with their crops and surpluses are asking the federal government to devise machinery and oreate create laws to relieve them and help maintain a price level which will insure them a livelihood george E farrell director or of tile the agricultural adjustment administration for the western region told visitors to the utah state agrical ural college extension conference and philosophy s school bool in logan last week they are looking for some way of more nearly adjusting output to consumption he asserted when he has a surplus of produce a farmers income Is even smaller than when his farm production Is near normal furthermore the loss jazz which the farmer sustains when lie he sells his product tor for less than tile the cost of production does not mean a j reduction of price to the consumer im for example the price ot of a lost loaf ot of bread is just as high now as when wheat was a bushel mr air fanell fan ell Vb charged arged the difficulties with which the farmers are confronted in attempting to dispose of their crops in tho the face ot of heavy surpluses and declining prices are some of the more important problems of rural life he points out discussing the 1938 agricultural program soon to be launched by the AAA mr air said that conservation practices arid and potato goals will be announced in the next few days and that sugar beet payments would be made as congress made the necess necessary aTy appropriation 0 al almost most cattle and horses and more than sheep arid and goats grazed on ten national forests last year forest service eta released recently indicate there were permits issued for cattle and horses with an average ot of 24 head per permit sheep and goat permits totaled almost 1800 with an average ot of head per permit utah has twice as many sheep and goat permits and more grazing permits for cattle and horses than any other state in the united states |