A6 News wallowa.com January 21, 2015 Wallowa County Chieftain Chieftain archives This old photo, which appeared in the March 3, 1927, issue of the Record Chieftain shows Camp 10 lumber jack dwellings, with an auto parked and a child playing in front. WC Grain Growers enters implements biz 100 YEARS AGO Jan. 21, 1915 The proceedings of the county court in laying out the proposed J.W. McCau- ley road near Troy were vacated by Circuit Court Judge Knowles and the county was enjoined from opening the highway or taking any further action in the matter. Last September the county court ordered the road opened. It previ- ously accepted the report of the road viewers, who recommended the open- ing of the highway, as it gave an easier grade than the old road and who also recommended the payment of damages of $50 to Mr. Burns. The court’s order allowed no damages. It was attacked by Mr. Burns’ attorney, J.A. Burleigh. Tracklaying was re- sumed by the East Oregon Lumber company on its railroad yesterday morn- ing. New equipment for use in this work arrived a few days earlier, and on Tuesday a crew of 21 tracklayers came in from Spokane. A new start on sewers, which promises to give En- T HE B OOKLOFT AND OUT OF THE PAST 70 YEARS AGO Jan.18, 1945 Compiled by Rob Ruth The Wallowa County Grain Growers, farmers cooperative and succes- sor of the Woolgrowers Warehouse Co., has taken over the farm implement business which has been owned and operated by W.S. Strickler. The transfer was effective January 12 and carries out the plans of the cooperative which were laid when the project of es- tablishing the cooperative was in the formative stage. The cooperative now owns the warehouse facilities of the Woolgrowers in Joseph, Enterprise and Lostine, the facilities of the Renfrow warehouse in Wallowa, the facilities of the Wallowa County Grange supply, and the Strickler farm imple- ment business. Helping to rescue a group of Dutch and Javanese pris- oners from the hands of the Japanese within 12 hours without the loss of a single terprise a drainage system before the coming sum- mer is over, was made by the council Monday night. J.C. Edsall, chief engineer of the East Oregon Lum- ber company, was engaged as consulting engineer for the city, and E.M. Billings, who also has been in the company’s service, was employed to do the actual work. Mr. Billings started Tuesday morning on a new survey of the city. Three suits, each asking $25,000 damages, were started in the Circuit court this week against C. Mur- dock, the Day Ridge farm- er. The plaintiffs are C.R. Fones, C.E. and George Downing, who were arrest- ed last June on complaint of Mr. Murdock, who al- leged criminal trespass upon his ranch. S KYLIGHT G ALLERY Finding books is our specialty 541.426.3351 • 107 E. Main • Enterprise • www.bookloftoregon.com Church Directory Summit Church Gospel Centered Community Service time: 10:30 am Cloverleaf Hall in Enterprise Pastor Mark Garland www.summitchurchoregon.org Joseph United Methodist Church ACROSS 1. Cut into cubes 5. Food flavorings 11. Longest tenured "Tonight Show" host 14. One being educated 15. British conservatives 18. End without completion 19. Boater 21. Indicated horsepower (abbr.) 23. Protects the chest 24. Expresses pleasure 28. Stiff hair, bristle 29. Blood type 31. Taxis 33. Ribbed material 34. Young female socialite 36. Game cube 37. Priest's liturgical vestment 40. 2.1 km tributary of the river Seille 42. The golden state 43. Powder mineral 45. Coat with plaster 47. Far East housemaid 48. Digital audiotape 51. Merchandising 54. Libreville is the capital 58. Incapable of flexibility 60. Language of Andorra 62. Repeat in concise form 64. Dark areas 65. Enough (archaic) DOWN 1. Disk jockeys 2. 9th Greek letter 3. Fish of the carp family 4. Medical prefix for within 5. Short for synthesizer 6. What part of (abbr.) 7. Farm state 8. Thermionic vacuum tube 9. Employee stock ownership plan 10. A crane 12. Filippo __, Saint 13. One below tens 16. Impatiently desirous 17. Inflict a heavy blow 20. As fast as can be done (abbr.) 22. Ma's partner 25. Carrier's invention 26. Possessed 27. Invests in little enterprises 29. Summate 30. Rosary part 32. A large body of water 35. Woman's undergarment 37. Essential oil obtained from flowers 38. Cripples 39. An explosion 41. Of, French 44. Fish of the genus Salvelinus 46. Bahrain dinar 49. Banded calcedony 50. Giant armadillo 52. In place of 53. Electronic counter-countermea sures 55. Large package of cotton 56. 3564 m French Alp 57. European defense organization 59. Check 60. Former OSS 61. Not old 63. Goodwill promotion 3rd & Lake St. • Joseph Pastor Kaye Garver Phone: 541-432-3102 Sunday Worship Services 8:30 & 11:00 am Child care provided at 8:30 am service Faith Lutheran Church 409 W. Main Enterprise, Oregon Worship 2 nd & 4 th Sundays - 2 pm Bible Study Tuesdays before the 2 nd & 4 th Sundays at 11 am LCMS (Lutheran Church Missouri Synod) Christ Covenant Church Pastor Terry Tollefson Church Office: 541-426-0301 Family Prayer: 9:30am Sunday School: 10:00am Worship Service: 11 am 723 College Street • Lostine Providence Academy Enterprise Community Enterprise Community Church Church Congregational 11:00am Group Worship & Discussion 9:30 AM Worship Service 11:00 Children’s S.S. AM 10:00am Choir 9:30am Adult Education 541.398.0597 Childrens program during service Blog: dancingforth.blogspot.com Lostine On the Hwy web 82, at lostinepc.org Stephen Kliewer, Minister Wallowa Assembly of God 606 West Hwy 82 Wallowa, Oregon 541-886-8445 Sunday School • 9:30 Worship Service • 10:45 Pastor Tim Barton wallowaassemblyofgod.com 301 NE 1St St * 541-426-3044 BigBrownChurch.org Worship at 11:00 301 N. Study E. First Bible at Street 9:30 Enterprise the “Big Brown Church” Sunday Worship 11A.M. with the Open Door (541) 426-3044 Pastor Joseph Donald Newcomer, L. McBride Pastor 541-263-0695 541-263-5319 305 Wagner (near the Cemetery) P.O. Box N, Enterprise, OR 97828 541-426-3751 Church 541-426-8339 School Sabbath School 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Worship Hour 11:00 a.m. - Noon Pastor Jonathan DeWeber Pastor Steve Gilmore man from the rescue party won the Bronze Star for her- oism for Pfc. Gilbert J. Cox of Enterprise. Hudson D. White, 34, whose arrest, conviction, and sentence to 30 years in the penitentiary here six years ago on charges of sodomy and contributing to the delinquency of minors created quite a sensation, escaped from the Oregon penitentiary at Salem Sun- day afternoon and was ar- rested about 9 o’clock that evening when he attempted to hold up two women. ... White was arrested here in January, 1939. Three small children at Wallowa had been taken out on the Pow- watka road and molested. 50 YEARS AGO Jan. 21, 1965 Burton Miller, sheriff of Wal- lowa county from 1925-1949, passed away Wednesday morning at the Wallowa Me- morial Hospital where he had been a patient for two weeks. ... Burton was a member of a pioneer family which settled in the Promise area. After 24 years of service as sheriff he established a substantial real estate business but continued to take a very active interest in the Democratic party in which he had often held of- ¿FH 'RQQD :LQJ¿HOG KDV been named Enterprise High School’s 1965 Betty Crocker Homemaker of Tomorrow. She scored highest in a writ- ten examination taken by se- nior girls Dec. 1, and is now eligible for state and national honors. The Joseph Ranger District of the Wallowa-Whitman Na- tional Forest reports a timber cut of 22 million board feet in 1964 on the district. Net re- ceipts from 13 sales amount- ed to $140,000 of which the county receives 25 percent or about $35,000. ... The total timber cut is estimated to be enough to build approximate- ly 2750 average size homes, more than all the residences in Wallowa county. 25 YEARS AGO Jan. 18, 1990 Should Hells Canyon be des- ignated as a National Park Pre- serve? That is the question that will be explored in a meeting scheduled for Friday night in Baker City. The meeting is being sponsored by The Hells Canyon Preservation Council, which lists its headquarters in Joseph, and Blue Mountain Environmental Council of Baker City. Dr. Lowell Euhus of Enter- prise traveled to John Day last Tuesday, Jan. 9, to testify at the QH[W WR ODVW RI 6HQDWH ¿HOG hearings on rural health care issues held by Sen. Bob Pack- wood throughout Oregon in a week’s time. During his oral testimony,... Dr. Euhus pointed to the many factors in modern medicine that adversely affect rural physicians and hospi- tals. He addressed the issue of Medicare reimbursements that are automatically lower for ru- UDO KRVSLWDOV 7KH GLI¿FXO- ty of recruiting and retaining physicians and other medical personnel to rural areas because of less pay for longer hours, and the pressure on rural physicians to deliver the most technologi- cally advanced care available, while holding down on medical costs, were among other issues covered by Euhus.