Fifty-Fifth Year No. 28
Moro, Oregon. ITiday, M ay 21,
Caution—Wrecked Plane Being Repaired
^ ay Blake
1943
O fficial O o M ty Page
Wasco Refunding
Last Rollcall
Leaving Bank;
City Bonds
Beckett Coming
News released this week to Next Month
. W ashington D.C.— Loggers, mi
ners and others Mho are engaged
in the hardest kind of m anual la
bor will g et n e t - J «‘nnc*1 of addi
tional meat, according to Mrs.
a®
Phillip Crowlie, employed by the
Washington D. C. office of OP A.
Mrs Crowlie who is rated by OPA
a* a ‘typical housewife” consul
tant rt 'ently spent one full .day
In P u f 'in d investigating the re
quest e* loggeri^niners and others
em ploy:! in the heavy industries
for an ex tra allotm ent of m eat
“It would be unwise to g ran t these
me two
iwo seem
seenungry
p o c c iu i ra
i».»»
Surprised? So were we to learn that the
ingly peaceful
ra l
men any ex tra allotm ents of meat,
said Mrs Crowlie, when interview- aeerrs depicted above realty masked the repair and rerteratlen to w rvfca
.................
. -------- plane.
.---- M
*1 em
embers
of the
the service
service group
group at
. knru o
Hnva
.» “ I have •» • wrecked
U . 8. a ir force
bers of
ju s t
f t fr J o y m
retu rn ed
a plane
.
tr ip
G reenville. 8. C .. are taught to rescue, salvage, and re p a ir w recked
pjanes iB a battle area anhject to a ir and ground a tta c k at any tim e . At
to Oregon a t which time I investi- |op plBnv
covered by a screen which blends it Into the disguise and
gated the request for ex tra m eat m akea U unrccognlxablc from the air. .The "farmhauaa” and ‘‘alio’’ in
rations for loggers, miners, etc. the background actually are engineering installations. Delow, a realistic
They m urt
to c h a n ,, th .lv
to added to .He e .m m - M . - t a H a t t o - - .be «vv.ee y v ... by
eating habits .and the wives of
cewa.
these men m ust m ake adjustm ents
~
- -
7«
in their cooking,” said the lady J v G O i J C l f Z
Q .V tI f f
expert on the subject. So, th e n
_ . • -
"
you have one of the numerous rea-
t 5
llC flo lt Z
sons why so many people would
1YI
B
Wheat League
H
ll lI ll llV
1 Q W
I
O
aa8UTne charge June 1; according
arrangem ents made this week
Mr
bought the stock
“ * Bucholtz
----.-------. of - ~
. . BeUhe
« . v
an(J equipment
Darold
anJ wU1 — e
{m
a.
a m eeting of the executive com-
m jttee <rf «the E astern Oregon
w h heat
e a t le
a g u e was
___ <" held in Arling-
W
league
Wednesday fo r th e purpose of
rfecxUna
In Portland
Life Ends For 50 Year
Resident Who Served Gly
and District As Officer
James Philip Yates, who was
“Uncle Phil” to half of Wasco,'
died Friday morning m Portland
from a heart attack. Although he
had been ill for over a year Us
death was unexpected as 1 m had
been up the day befoiw and was
in apparently as good spirits as
before.
Mr. Yates was bom in Spring-
field, Illinois, March 80, 1874, ef
a family that was noted ^for 1U
interest in public affairs, members
having been governors and Unit
ed States senators.
The family moved to Oregon
when he was a youth and in 1888
he came to Sherman eounty'to
work, sewing seeks and bucking
wheat. After a few y ea n etf' this
work, intersperced with 'ecfeool
terms in Portland in the winters
he decided to live in Sherman
county permanently and thia had
been his home ever sinee.
He became qwner and manager
of the Waeco Lumber eooapany
Tulv 16 1661 of Barents who had
interest of ne? rly $30Q-Per ye a r- Commodity C redit in steel and
which he controlled for 27 y e a n
Jdo
the
The neW b° ndS
* T wooden bins and in transit.
until
its sale to the Tum-a-Lum-
fnade tt o t o y trip across the
and callable which will enable
.
______
Lumber
Co-
.
---- -
the city to pay them a t any time
Public Service Long
with her parents and October 3,
Wheat Stocks Over
900,000,000 In April
Fanners Can Now
j
driver’s seat and giving orders on
___ ___
, ____
, _ a»x>ut.
subjects
they
know _ nothing
Any schoolboy would know th a t
men working in heavy industries
need ----
and ” 7 m 7 ust
have
7 ------
72 m
xx. ore m eat
than the pitifu
pitiful ’ amount they »re
are
r f If
allowed
if Ifcey
they « w to nm tm oe
thefr wo>k
’ ’ ’
There seems to be little posato-
ty » th
a t any - of the west coast
ility
—
--------
Japanese now in relocation centers
will be returned to western Ore-
Buried Monday
th a t W. -Ray Blake, who has been
m anager of the Sherman County
Indebtedness Cut and Interest
Branch, F irst National B an k ,.
Reduction Expected By
since Lloyd Htnnagin was moved
Refunding Operation
to Portland, is resigning from his
•a
position to begin work or a cred-
The city of Wasco is going to
it company. He will have head- refund 116.000 of its $17,000 ir
quarters in Tacoma he announced city bonds next
June 15, thur
Wednesday brfore Ms departure tak ,n S anoth«r 8trt>
for Portland on business.
du<in« the ‘ W * fixed charfte for
x m
debt and toward actually reducing
Mr Blake a place will be taken ,. . . . . .
x i » i.
i .
>t» indebtedness. $2000 worth of
by Merle Bedfiatt, lately m anager .
,
....
. ?
. w x XT
^1 L
. . „ ? , bonds will be paid.
of a F irst National branch at Wa 1-
..
,
, ■
.
„ .
• v.
,
When the new bonds are issued
Iowa. He is a native of Morrow a,
..
-
o
..
. a .
the city Of Wascq, which has a
county and well acquainted with
will have
valuation of $200,369 will have
the type of farm ing done in this a percentage of indebtedness of
county; Mr Close, who is hera
tem porarily, will remain for a
few week» before moving into
when the city was paying for
Stocks of wheat in all posi-
the city. • ,
street improvements and had tjons jn the United States at the
bonds of $60,000 outstanding.
first of April were estimated at
v
Terms
of
the
refunding
and
rate
900 556,000 bushels, an increase
|<J a t y |a y f o f l a O i e S
of interest on the new bonds will of 90,074,000 bushels over April
/
»
not be known until June 15 j 1942 stocks. Comprising 'th is
ix r J
j
W C C lP P S C la V
when the bids will be opened by geason»a ta tal were 327,667,000 bu-
,
/
the council. i nasinUch as Moro re-
farm s*' 1*74 59r 000 ?n
, Ida May Hines King, long time
rofnnded a sim ilar amount 8he" ‘ *
, ’ ’ .
re s ident of Sherman county, died . . T .1 -
s
f .. w nprGBnt C° UIL ^7
e eV,H °™’
l ^ L . y
o
pe™ .
Moult
o f O hp»rt
attack
’’ probable th a t Wasco will do 455,090 bushels in m erchant mills
M n Kinw w aJfcom a t Corvallis ,ikewia€ and achieVe a reduction and 62,712,000 bushels owned by
Committee Favors
te ShT £
Confectionery
,1889 was
arried in The Dalles
—
400»
wan m
umiirtyi
Randall M a r t i n __ “
f
w
Certificate Plan
» fnanv X years Ä o n .th e ir i farm west
w..a
. ,
PuchoRz confectionery
V U
Ex-Senator Yates
Police To Catch
Buy More Tools
.
The newly created Office of
Pf Wa»co- No «kildren were bom p
, D r iv e r *
Civilian Requirements, WPB, to
them -
IF l ▼
day took the first of a series of
I > Surviving ave ¿ one
sister,
Mrs
' " ' ’ ‘"TT’, ““ ’J
M otorists who exceed the 35-
doeiimed to Drovide faw ners
Mitchell
Willits,
*nd mile w artim e speed, the maxiQm
to g e t’ items m ost
Mvo b r o th « ., » J L a i o « r t a J t t o al,o w rf
OPA
^ „ ¡ r e . T f o r . the f -„ l
He was electAl mayor of W m -
co for two terms and in 1828 was
elected state representative from
the 22nd district, GHlisea, Wheel
er and Sherman counties, serving
with Oregon’s present governor.
Earl Snell. He later served -a
term as senator, a poedtlon from
which he resigned in 1834
Of late years he bad owned a
dry goods store in Waeco. He also
owned a farm east of Waseo
bout the firvt o f July, thus g rat-
certificate plan, now in the
tioning regulations, will be “do-
-
a Hfe long ambition to <.pn«te committee on aericu ltu r. te r and
^ ,nea
I *aIlea-x cbed” by t h e O r e g o l i S t a te P
beccane a farm er. He has success-
f orC8try, startin g action to ' Puneral servte*
neld Police in a program to prevent
To m ake P0*"’ e 1 e
porary
.
.
.
.
.rmiuruHv.
«
k
—
«-
.
,
.
-
diversion
of
small
quantities
of
f uHy
the confectionery » have farTner8
----
v operated
-.----- ■.— —
fa rm e rs represented
reDresented in in fut-
fut- <s »t ^rd ay; _ May « lai Z p.m. at tire abuse worked out in cooper-
,
,
. .
an<j restau ran t recently sold for u
discussions o f price ceilings .W aaco
burial in the cemetery
the digtrict QPA Rich. niatoria « an
ms
a ice s o
F u n e ra l services w ere held in
J zv X
X
nr, the
farm program
, the army,navy
nearly - 15 years.
*’ ---------
. o n
wheat and to ask for the re- l^ e re
ard ---------
G. Montgomery, director,
an- thp
, D rw ram 1 - xi_ nrmy.navy Portland Monday afternoon and
and lend-lease and other govem- interm ent w a s made in Uaoahi
gon for fawn work. American lx?-
Mr M artin has been employed tention of B W Whitlock as grain
nounced today.
-
,
__ ,
_
Under
an
agreem
ent
with
Su-
ment agennea have agreed to re- Memorial cemetery there. S u r
gion posts
with
as mechanic
and loiuivi
farm er here
for investigator
•
Riuii
prvzavo have now joined
—---
--
iiiw-JMmau Alivi
uviv iv*
in Portland.
perintendent of fWIce C h.vle. Iln’ u‘’h “ ^ rt of
P ™ "* - viving are his widow, Casks MUr
m
r » H * v andiAfarmers
»««x> — a
--------- — in a e aeVeral
v e r a i y e years
a r s a n and
u e n enters
v e n s u u business
am ess
certificate plan, S.888. is a
the e g grange
union
r
Pray,
»tate
enforcement
offi-
t,on
«»gm
ally
ass.gned
.to
them. ray, a sister. Mia. Ruby CZMear»
protesting such Action by any ag- with the beat wishes of everyone. proposai sim ilar to the McNary- - -
,
w. j .
, e n will immediately begin “do-
The program w.ll provide a and a brother, Richand H Yates
ency of the govemnment and th eir ---------------------
Haugen plan in th a t it would give I H O U g h t E l i d i n g
motorists ano
and re-
mechanism
for farm ers to
protests are being received by
a profltabie price fo r dom estidy
eking” speeding motorises
re- simple -----------
— ............
members of the Oregon congres- P e a f | ( h o m D S O D
consumed w heat and the world
L ’^ t o c k producers are being
a t Salem
nam es make the purchases ,and also
sional delegation. The O r e g o n
th a t ha<}
ex. notified th at present allotm ents of of registerwl owners will be veri- rides retailers and wholesalers O r U n k e n U n V C F S
state grange was first to file an F n W p r a |
"
Ported
feed Wh€at handled
h the
f ie<j and
and violators
violators reported
to the
necessary
>orted.
-----
—------ throu*
------ -r,--
-- fied
reported to
tue with
«»v* the means -----------
- to ob-
m.u it« action was
league executive committee Commodity Credit corporation will opA ¿¡s tr jct office in Portland for tain needed supplie». The proce- 1 ^ - ^ L lC e ilS C S
official u protest and
ly followed
PeBr, ThornpRon
died
Sunday
with
gome am . be exhausted by about
July 1. re- hearing
an(J appropriate
^ tio n by dure will enable a farm er
* mw « s ^ w
closely
followed by
by the
the fa
fa rm
rm e e r,
r,
-------
------ _
---------------
lftVorea m e p » n . w*M
.
J
,.c»x...K «..»
---------------------
. to buy .
¡n p ^g of _
ports,
H. A .Lindgren
waj. price
¡ce and r a tionjnar
union. 7 L is t week «¡malar
«¡milar protests jn The DaIleg a fte r on Hlness
1>ort9’ H<
Lind« ren .extension b cal wRr
tioning reasonable amounts of needed
Suspension and revocation pro
. , from
X___ American
X___ •
-
_ was a sister
. .
glKWnent.
„«• nor*
lx___
ki« sirolnr
kp,wl«
Rems directly from his
dealer ceedings wars invoked again#!
were received
Le- geverai - -«reeks.
She
Meetings have been held bet- an(^ ia^ husbandmani ^at
OSC
The
director
of
the
grain
divi-
z
w. ;« without complicated forms,
gion poets, fu rth e r indicating the of Percy Thompson and a daugh- ween ^ i n dealers and the OPA,
157 Oregon drivera during
This enforcement program is
e
K w » , ^ o ï t e d ' , ’re îà « v ë '’t o ' ‘«,«
« ’<“ CCC ~ '“ rU th a t t eaics
“ lcs
strength of the anti-J«pene»e sen-
and Mrs J O Thompson j ,n,
month
of April, follocrtag tkAtr
wt »8
---------- — —
,
....
extremely im portant to rubber
Since a store may not
now
both deceased.
__
establishm ent of a Iceiling price have be^n averaging o^e mil ion
Montgomery, d e- have 1n stock the item or items convictions for v r ir i b M 74tf nib-
timent.
** ’ * .
*
M»as Thompson was bom near pn wheat. The league asked th a t bushels daily since sale«
dared, “for speeding constitutes a a farm er may wish to purchase, tor vehicle regulations, it rids dfc
Starting early ia .a bill authori- Monkland, June 9, 1889 and lived .¡nf orination be given to i t about on the new 100 m * l1(>n U8 a ' gerjous abcse of tires Drivers ¡t is suggested th at the farm er closed at the secretary of 8tdA*a
zing the construction of a dam ¡n Sherman county until 1915 *hig m atte r and th a t producers be lotm ent March 25. Congested ran ^ enerally ftre observing pth e 35- place the order now and allow office today.
at Um atilla in th e Columbia river when ghe moVed with her parents rrT)regented a t fu tu re m eetings of «portation facihtie« a m l i e y .o
advent of his m erchant time in which to
Of the total, 76 caeos were re
between Oregon and W ashington
Tye,h Valley, later going on to tb5g nafcure
cau?e deliveries to be strung a.-
weather speeding, has in- replenish his stock of such items. vocations and 81 were eaapen
It is S348. Of the various projects The • Dalles where she had made
Ag Mr Whit lock .has been active ong some 30 days a fte r sales are
Despite recently published
The dtems
be made aVail- sions. Of the 76 revocations. 89
or 90 percent were for Yrndng
for power dams in the Columbia her hfMne in recerrt year8, ex- Jr investigations about w heat and discounted.
statem ent, giving an optim istic able undeT the program are:
Umatilla was the first propose 1 ceT>t f or goirne years spent in Cal- .+ ? «rradifig and the elmmation of
Lindgren suggests
a
g
fu tu re rubber situa-
. . .
.
. , while intoxicated.
and was the subject of congressionl ¡fornia as nUrse in a children’s
nt
league executives asked livestock producers adjust
eir
fire gtockg jn this area
Adjustable wrenches, a g n e u -
retained in Portland own feeding program s _jn_accor-
in accor- _
Wegt Coagt anf
o il s
Daie ties,
hearings. L ater a s ta r t was made home •
be ret|dnftd
are tUrai
tural xoras.
forks, auger bits,
bale
the
l
.
n
t
e
.
t
wheat
dance
with
thia
development.
It
wjth
no
pro,_
barbed
wtre
braaa
valve,
(one
at Bonneville
and
the
Grand
Cou-
Funeral
held
were
services
— -------------------
-
• ------- -
------------------
p
p i R is one
„» points
nointa in
in the
the w
weat
¡« po.««>l*
fu rth er allotm ent.
• jm
w itb goort inch and under), chain, (eoil, log
lee dam- came into being, b u t en- Tuesday afternoon in Wasco and r
est
_ annual me»t.n«r will be held of government w heat m aybe made P
from
halter, cow tie and tie out)
gineers have alw ays contended interm ent was made inthe Wasco
The D alle, thia
fall " t about but there la no direct word yet
r<> chain rep air hnka, clevtaea. de-
that Um atilla is a natural site cemetery in the family plot. Sur-
___ ___
, ...
. , .
, „
horning saws, drills (bit stock,
The general crop report m of
for a dam and fits into the devel- yiyjng js Percy Thompson, brother,
game tim e as usual .the com- as to such intentions.
doubled, not slackened.
. ,
_vonv
’
,
. Mx;n_ blacksm ith, and straig h t »hank May 1, 1948, tadientos conditions
opment of the river. An argum ent and many cousins in this county. mdttee decided Work of th e lea- -------------- -
For some months past, ration -
improved somewhat during A^rU
for the U m atilla .dam is th a t it ---------------------
seemed too im oortant to ner-
p
boards h«ve been revokng some ca
” )•
would provide a suitable w ater- FARM MEAT REGULATIONS
m it of abandonment of the meet- V V U llC Y W l l C 3 t V F O p
or all of mileage coupon, from
Farm machinery oiler., fence and are now regarded AS satis
way for produce from O raa^.iC ou-- New m eat rationing regulation» jn<r this year desuite w artim e con-
m otori.ta convicted in municipal and poultry netting «tapina, fenco factory although proggocts to gen
lee farm s when th a t reclam ation provid€ t hAt a farmeT and his ditions. A ttending the committee P |* 0 £ n £ £ t s I OOF
court of exceeding the 36-mile ji-Hers, field and
garden hoes, eral are not as favorable ra ib e'
.peed rule, Mont«omery stated, »aahlight b a tte rle ., fractional hor were a year ago Winter wheat
project m aterializes. Action on
consume m eat raised m eeting from Sherman countv
se-power motors» general purpose made fairly good progress though
the Um atilla dam will be deter- on any farm
owng or operates, were Millard Eakin. preaident and
May 1 condition» qjoint to a
wrench sets, grain »coop«, grease condRione are spotted to aoone
mined largely on the availability and
tra n sfe r m eat from one LeRoy W right, county agent-
w inter wheat crop -in
in Oregon of
guns, hames, hand tire pumps, areas of Oregon as a result af
of m aterial for construction o f t H
b -g farmg t© another to provide
_______ bushels .which may ( J j g q | W 3 S t e F d t S
only 9.633.000
harness hardw are, horse eollars, the low winter temperatulUS
dam and this, m turn, on the
f or members of the household
' A rin x P R V RATIONS be compared with 17.841,000 bu
la ria t rope, low pressure tire early sown spring crops are <8ri8g
shels produced last,
last year
length of the war.
„
without giving up ration points.
*v«i«
vear and the
tb I J r n r p J A ^ S U F l
gauges.
well.
C,
C,I
,*
v..«
-
.»
—---------
-
-----
A
t
their
discretion,
s
ta
te
war
1932-41
average
of
12.274.000
bu-
©
•
*
“
•
even if the m eat is not »laughter-
Machine K
punches, -------
m etal belt
Members of some of the ration-
j,jg f apm However, if the hoard« ©an now cancel countv ouo- shels. The acreaare seeded last fall
Although housew..~„
„«.v.....®
-- -
ing boards are w ritng in and pro- farm owner does not live on a tas on any or all types . of farm w«« below average which together are m aking more use of the fa t fasteners, m ultiple batteries (for _ _
testing th a t they are giving more
be m ust give up ration m achinerv according to r e v i s e d with some winter kill particularilv rendered in cooking than prior to fence control, ignition, etc.); m ils, VYHF v O S t S VrVBT
M
il
of their time than they can afford
anv m eat he consumes. m machm erv rationing order in the northeastern p a rt of the mea t and f a t rationing, the WPB neck yokes, pipe fittings 1% inch
’
and suggesting th a t a different efcewhere. Under the original re-
bv the W ar Food Admin- state has resulted in a relatively salvage division report« an in- and under; pipe wrenches, plow
group or panel be appointed to ffUja ^iBngt a form er who brought jotration If a state board exercises small acreage remaining for har- crease in the amount of waste fat bolts, poultry netting, radio bat-
War expenditures by tfce U. B.
handle each separate item, such
ig QWn
own cattle to a cugtom
custom »laugh- thjg
this authority, farm er»
ers will be vegt
vest as grain-
grain. Furtherm ore, m
the s turned in a« salvage for glycerine teries. regular p attern, wood lian
sucn b
hig
as meat, gasoline, fuel oil and
plant
to surrender red required to locate the machinery, current condition of th e cron in- The WPB has urged housewives to ¿led screw drivers; round point- Government during tbe rponth of
other commodities as are to be
„tamP« fo r the m eat, while they w ant to buy before they arc* dicates a yield of only 19.6
,6 bu- re-use kitchen fats until every ed shovels, no. 2 irrigating; round April amounted to
an increase of $178,000.008, or 3
rationed later. By expansion of }f
kined and Pressed the ani- p.,-Ven a purchase certificate. -Fur- gHels per acre which is «lisrhtlv
pf«sible bit is utilized. Only the pointed shovels, no. 2 regular.
ilightlv possible
the
w a t was
therm nre. c countv
fsrm rationing^unifer
a v e r s e ......
and much below waste fat, which ordinarily would
vne panels
m « h i ««« the work
- - - - - - would be f sim- rmn himself,
mniBcn« the
m m
w«»«. ration
»«.»ay», rnermnre,
c ju ih - v i»»ma
unusT nvn^xv
Slip joint pliers, square pointed percent over March- Daily expen-
■ employer
8 — . — committees m av se t the
. a expiration
• ■ •
a a _ < yield
• _ S J of
—
^8 S
4 In
T the A 1 be thrown
ll .___A. out,
!
Ala a ax shovels, no. 2, standard cold chis- diturea averaged $280,400,000 to
plified and not all loaded on the
*arm or
the vew h:\h
1942.
is a«ked J 2 in this
backs of the original rationing
^eedg
^ u lo v e e s in a bunk ¿ ate of purchase certificate« anv three P a c ^ c northwest states of drive. The importance of the d r i v e r s , steel
wire hog rings steel April compared to $263 400,000 to
boards.
t house or dining hall m av now use time between 10 and 60 da vs a fte r Oregon, Washington and Idaho, j, emphasized by the WPB in p jpe ( lU inch and s m a lle r ), March, an increase <rf 6 percent
♦
• •
m eat and
other rationed foods igwaT1ce. o r m av cancel the cer- the w m ter wheat crop is forecast .pointing out th a t only by contin- ^tickmen’s knives, telephone oat- From July» 1940. through A^dl.
Cloakroom gossip now
proposes ^ 5 ^ on his fanm on the same tifleate a fter the holder ba« had a ftt 40 874.006 bushels or 47 per- Ued processing of waste kitchen terie«, tracto r tire chains, whif- 194«, $94,900,000,0000 bad been
th a t one billion dollars be made
ag
employees were reaonable time to buy the specified cent below last year and 24 per- fots can essential requirements oi fletrees and singletrees, wood disbursed for war porpora« h '
the U. S- Government.
----- CMrtlBPH or P*f«
fed in the household
machinery.
/
cent under average.
. glycerine for explosivea be met. tackle block«.
IVllCat SfllcS
April Improves
Crop Conditions
M
J
i
In Mtfil