4 I Record-Courier THURSDAY, JANUARY 7,2016 Editor’s Note: I found this article which Orville had written for the Record-Courier and the introduction about OrviUe which was perhaps written by Belva (Maxwell) Ucknor. The photo of Charles Swan is a photo belonging to Ucknor and the Eastern Oregon Museum in Haines has a copy. I have left Mr. Fisher's article as it was originally written, so some of the names of business owners at the time may still not be applicable. Orville Fisher (1901-1988) was an active farmer in the Rock Creek area. He, at 85 years of age, still put in a full day on the ranch he ran with his son, Cecil. As a valley native he had a wealth of experience and memory to draw upon. When younger, he followed rodeo and buckaroo as a way of life for many years.He was marshal of the Haines, July 4 Stampede Parade over the 4th of July prior to 1980. He has served this area in many ways over the years. Readers who have the Baker County History book could clip this article and include it in the book, friends of Mr. Fisher suggest, and they urged him to write this sketch for The Record-Courier. Charles Swan, Haines Marshall Early Haines As I Remember, Before 1912 to WW1 and Early ’20s Ay Orville Fisher There were four stores: Haines Commercial, Haines Mercantile, D.B. Womack's Dry Goods Store and Weaver Grocery. Also Ida Young's Confectionary (she was Lonnie Young's mother), Durgan's Bakery and meat shop, which was first owned by Jake Jarman, then by Rozier and John Toney, later by Harry Bieber. The Haines Commercial was orig­ inally owned by the "Three Johns," namely, John Christenson, John In­ gram, and John Hammond. It was located north of the brick buildings. Lee Duncan bought it about 1905 and it became the Haines Commer­ cial. My dad, Geo. A. Fisher was bookkeeper for the three Johns in the 1890's when the McCarty boys were trading there. He was well ac­ quainted with them. Dad took the receipts from the two stores to the bank in Baker by rig. The Mc­ Carty's had lived part time in a house where Dick Camp's store is now located. The Haines Mercantile was origi­ nally the Wilcox. This was a farmer- owned store and was managed by Johnny O'Bryant. I can remember five saloons. First Young's, I don't recall his given name but he had a gentleman's place. He wouldn't stand for any roughhousing by the patrons. Then Hat Pearson, Berry Jolly and Jess Toney. Charles Eilert- son had a saloon but it burned ear­ lier. Ed McCullough owned the Hat Pearson saloon at one time. After the saloons went out, Sam and Earl Hearing had a pool hall. They sold it to Louie DeLine who operated it for several years. He ran poker and blackjack games on Saturday nights. If you wanted big stakes you went upstairs. The original building burned in 1918 and he built the present pool hall building. The bricks used in our present , house built in 1919 were left over from the pool hall. Louie DeLong sold them to dad cheap Lester and Ace Toney ran this pool hall for several years. Later, it changed hands several times includ­ ing Ed Heard, George Loennig, George Duncan, Ben Pearson and others. Edna Ensminger Boyles sold to Neil Aldrich and he to Gor­ don Johnson. At the present time (1987) the business is closed. There were two hotels and one rooming house. Mars owned the Oregon Hotel. Jake Jarman (Geor­ gia Scott's grandmother). Later it was owned by a man named Tripp, then by John Lang, the a man named Steele. It was located north of the present red warehouse, west of the railroad. Mrs. Jarman served meals. She had a triangle gong on the porch, which she rang for the meals, breakfast, dinner and supper. The triangle could be heard all over town. The Ben Toney Hotel was east of the Steak House in the middle of the block. Mrs. Sumerall had a rooming house where Sivan Calhoun's Baker Mill and Grain office is now. Toney's restaurant was on the main street. Charles Swan owned this place later. Fred Bull had d restau­ rant in the Hat Pearson saloon after the state went dry. Charles Swan was Haines Marshall in the early 1920's. He rode a big pinto horse around town keeping order. When a boy in the 1890's, he lived with the McCarty's. He left town and was BP gone for several years before return­ ing. Livery Stables There were two lively stables: The Red Front which was close to the Oregon Hotel and the "Feed and Living Stable, proprietor Albert Hornbeck," on the east side. It was probably first owned by Ben and Lester Toney. Ollie Robertson’s freight bams were where the grange hall was de­ veloped after WWII, and Lonnie Fi­ dler's bams were where the John Henner house is. These were big bams; freighting was a big business. Hitching racks were on both sides of the three streets running east and west of the main street There were three blacksmith shops, Bill Bell's located south of Baker Mill and Grain near the ce­ ment building; Charles Hoberg, where the Myers Garage building is (formerly Howden's, then Heimer's, then Bahler's); and Scrivner and Cook where the Bahler home stands. The famous white board-front Twilight Theater was located where Jan's Beauty shop is located. The Theater was tom down in 1966. Thè first drag store that I remem­ ber was owned by N.E. Dodd and Vic Devall. In 1904 when Dad started carrying the mail the post office was in the old mercantile store. Johnny O'Bryant was postmaster. Later the office was in the drag store, then on 3rd street in quarters behind the cor­ ner restaurant on the main (front) street. Frank Caston was Postmaster in the Republican years into the early 1930s. The first telephone company was former owned and in the Haines Mercantile building. Then Vic De­ vall had it in the Three John's store. He sold the company to my uncle, .WallerHeard, then on the H.O. Wiswell, then to Vance Dix and then to the present owners, Cascade Utilities. The first operators that I remember were Mabie and Mildred Toney. Tom Parker had a pool hall and sporting goods store here in the early 1900s. W.D. Nelson established the Haines Record in 1901 on the cor­ ner north of the Odd Fellows hall. The newspaper plant and office burned in 1926. The paper was pur­ chased in 1928 by Charles and Eliz­ abeth Brinton's as publishers and Byron became editor and was pub­ lished as The Record-Courier. It continues now, with sons joining him. The Bank of Haines was started in 1912 by John Toney, Henry Fisher, Frank Loennig and Ben Harder. The bank eventually moved to the county seat in 1934. The Thomas Murtha Grocery store was opened in the early years of the century. It was sold to Del Hall who operated it for many years then changed hands several times and is now closed. Stock Yards The original stockyards were on the east side of the railroad tracks near the south crossing. It was then moved to the northwest side of town. Ed Coles installed the scales and shipped from 1 to 104 carloads of cattle and hogs to the Portland market every week for many, many years. The Jim Mitchell lumberyard and planer mill was located where the old Gillette service station was lo­ cated. It was sold to Riordons about World War I. The first creamery was just south of the Joe Henner. House (Tom Duncan place) on Rock Creek west of the railroad track. It closed and later Lonnie Young had a creamery station in the east of town. The first baseball park was on the west side and here the first stam­ pedes were held. The present Stam­ pede grounds were built on the John Christensen property in 1922. There was a large grandstand and race track. Louie LeLine, Ernie (Wamp) Hearing, John Christensen, Jr., Elmer Simon and Albert Fisher were the principal boosters. All of we young guys did a lot of donation labor during the years. I remember Dr. Francis. He was a big jolly fellow and pulled my first tooth. Dad was with me and I yelled "Kill him, Kill him," Doctor always laughed about that. Dr. Roger Biswell, Sr. practiced in Haines for several years. There was another doctor for a while then Dr. C. D. Houser from the late 20s till moving to Baker. There was also a dentist, Dr. Hall, for a short time in the mid-20's. Churches Built There were three Churches, the Baptist on the east side, Methodists on the west and a Catholic church which was later moved to the coun­ try where is was used as a bam. Barber shops: By a man named Page who sold to Dewey Burton, later owned by a Mr. Critchfield. Tom Smith, a colorful character, who claimed to have been with Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill and we often heard about it. He en­ tertained with tall tales of his expe­ riences. He had one of the first flush toilets on the main street of Haines. He said "All the people keep com­ ing in here to use my Sanitarium toilet. They had one son, Buster, and one day when his mother was taking a bath he got out in the street. There was a ran away team dashing down the street. Mrs. Smith dashed out of the home. Tom later said, "Mom as naked as a Jaybird and the prettiest damn sight ycfti ever saw. Jess and Albert Heard had a lunch counter and card room where the Fred Bull restaurant was. Ray and Norva Pullen operated it for many years. It is now the Steak House. Clyde Siman had a shoe repair and saddle shop north of the Oregon Hotel. It was a gathering place for the livestock. Haines was known as the Biggest Little Town in Oregon during the teens and twenties. It was a big shipping point for cattle ship, hogs and horses. Ed Cole was the major shipper. Later it was Coles and Charles Duby, the Coles and N. E. Dodd for several years. Others who shipped livestock were principally Billy Green, Charles McCullough, D. M. Cartmill and others. Lee Duncan of Haines Commercial shipped thousands of tons of hay each year. There was not much grain until World War I and after. A popular rhyme was: Toney's town Wilcox treat Gilkey's restaurant And nothing to eat. Allow me introduce myself. I am "Tillie" and I’m a senior female Black Lab. Retriever mix. I am not sure how old I am, but probably between 8 and 10 years. I am not sure how long I had been in the sagebrush, stickers, dirt and cold, but I was certainly happy when a family found me and put me in their warm vehicle. I am currently living in a clean, warm, indoor kennel where I am happy. I walk well on a leash, know basic commands and am trained not to go to the bathroom in my clean kennel. My eyes look like I might have some cataracts, but I am still active and get around without difficulty. I would love to find a home with a family that has time to provide me with some light exercise, play time and lots and lots of love and attention. I want to be a family pet living inside where it is warm and cozy. My vaccinations are current and I am spayed. Please give Best Friends of Baker, Inc. a call Call Best Friends of Baker, Inc. Charles Swan was Haines Marshall in the early 1920's. He rode a big pinto horse around town keeping order. Haines Trailer Fire Photo by Gina Perkins This travel trailer was consumed by fire on New Year's Day. The owners live at the old Florence Daugherty place east of Haines and are building a beautiful new home. The Haines Fire Depart­ ment responded and protected the other structures. Mark Luker and LeAnne Woolf sumptervolunteers@gmail.com or 541-894-2303, leannemywo@gmail.com At mid-elevation in Sumpter, the low for Dec. was 3oF, the high 43 oF, and the amount of snow settled against the snow stake was 23”. January started out with some negative lows then warmed up enough for another couple of inches of snow Sunday morning. Measuring snow as it fell shows 11 inches in Novem­ ber and 54.5 inches in December. The ,2014-15 winter total was 52 inches for the whole season. Def­ initely making progress. Another 7 inches and we’ll have 2013-14 beat. Calendar (as of Jan. 3) Thursday, Jan, 7 - Planning Commission, City Hall, 7 p.m. (alley vacation hearing at 6:45 p.m,) Saturday, Jan. 9 - Sumpter Valley Railroad Board Meeting, Baker City, 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 9 - Sumpter Valley Blue Mountain Snowmobile Club, Schoolhouse Community Center, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 12 - City Council, City Hall, 7 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 14 - Sumpter Valley Community Volunteers Meeting, Schoolhouse Community Center, 6:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 15 - Bingo, School­ house Community Center, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 19 - Sumpter Volunteer Fire Department, City Hall Tuesday, Jan. 19-Powder River Rural Fire Department, Mosquito Flats station Thursday, Jan. 21 - Bag Ladies, Schoolhouse Community Center, noon-? Thursday, Jan. 21 - Planning Commission, City Hall, 7 p.m. assets was the only negative. Organizations Cracker Creek Museum of Mining (CCMM) held its annual meeting at the Sumpter Munici­ pal Museum and Library on Dec. 30. 2015 saw work done on the giant (nozzle for washing away hillside to get to fresh dirt) and cone crasher (style of crusher that did first reduction in size of rock and ore, which were then further reduced by a stamp mill or arras­ tra). The Sumpter Dredge State Heritage Area has items in its in­ ventory that don’t relate directly to the dredge and has offered them to CCMM. President John Young is excited to get those items moved over. In 2016, plans are for more signage and contin­ ued restoration of exhibits. Sumpter Valley Blue Mountain Snowmobile Club held its annual New Year’s Eve Bonfire and Chili Feed at Volunteer Park this year. The function started about 5:30 p.m. and was attended by 30-40 people. Cary Clarke cleared parking, walkways, and an area for the fire several yards away from the back door. Picnic tables inside the storage/restroom building gave people a place to; eat and chat, or they could stand? by the fire and tell trail stories. Other than that, most organiza- ■ tions and people have had a quiet- couple of weeks for the holidays.' By the time you read this, though," the Masons will have had their; January meeting, Sumpter Volun­ teer Fire Department Auxiliary ; met on Tuesday, and the Christ-,;, mas Activities Committee could; be holding their Thursday mom-. ing debrief as we speak, depend-j ing on when you got your paperl - Churches City On Dec. 29, Jacob Collier of Guyer & Associates presented the Reviewed Financial Statements for the City of Sumpter for the Fiscal Year ending June 30,2015. His job is to analyze and review the bookkeeping for the City. He found no changes necessary to meet accounting and budgeting principles. On the plus side, the City has a reduction in long-term liabilities. Depreciation of capital J Frame & Craft -—Custom & Ready Made Framing & Matting • Art Supplies Scrapbooking & Craft Supplies Baker City Sunday morning services are held at St. Brigid’s in the Pines at Auburn and Bonanza in Sumpter* on the first and third Sundays of the month at 11 a.m. followed by a coffee ‘hour.’ Weekly services at McEwen Bible Fellowship in­ clude Sunday School at 9:45 * a.m., Morning Worship at 11 a.m., and Wednesday evening • prayer at 6:45 p.m. Seethe Record-Courier website: thercojiline.com Copy, Ship & Mail • UPS, US Mail, Packaging & Gift Wrapping • Laminating - up to 26” • Copies - B&W, Color, Enlarge up to 36”, Multi-Media • Fax, Scan, Send to E-mail, Save to Disk • Office services & Computer work 2101 Main St. Suite 111, Baker City Open 9:30-5:30 M-F 541-523-4199 E-mail: news@ therconline.com Phone: 541.856.3615