Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 1, 1952)
Sixty-Fourth Year No. 39 T hese , T h in g s We N ote By Giles L- French Moro, Oregon Friday, August 1. 1952 Thieves Break Threatened Rain . Into Two Stores Pats Speed Into Obtain $160 Harvesting Operations After two or Jhree hot days the first of the week wind came up from the west Wednesday evening and by Thursday morn- ing - the s ky was filled with clouds. A few drops of rain fell in Moro and in varying amounts ever the county. Harvesting was not stopped in many instances bdt fear of a harvest rain made farmers more apxious than ever to get their crop Into the eleva- tors. ------------------ • Thieves broke into the May & Son store in Mbro Wednesday night and took an estimated $150 from the cash register and also broke - into the Wasco « Market and obtained $10. The lock on the back door of the May store was opened by use of a small bar or a heavy screw driver which permitted access to the main store. The door of the Wasco store was badly broken in opening. Robberies of this qature have been going on for three or four Portland Sherman months, particularly in Wasco, and so far no workable cluea Countian s To Picnic have been found. ~ „ . um - Charles U’Ren of the - state ____ _ police was here Thursday |o former . . residents of Sherman , make an investigation of the county who live In and around ,, .. i »1 be v v held u at * r. i robberies but nothing was dis Portland will Peninsu- . , r, , * . i.u covered that would lead to im la park Sunday, August 10 with • mediate apprehension of the thief dinner at 12 o’clock. Those who or thieves. live in Sherman county at pre sent are ^always welcome to at tend. It is a day of visiting. ’ County Official Paper Yield Reports Elevator Breads Still Indicate Big At Hay Cany >n; Wheat Crop 30,000 bus. Loose Alipos* unbelleveable reports on the size of the* 1952 wheat crop continue to be heard and when all the cutting is done it should rate cs cne cf Jh j largest crop* in the county's history, Best crop reported is that of I-e Roy Beishee where a field made 60 bushels per acre. Report has it that Hugh White had a field oi 58 bushel wheat and Arvid An derson’s place produced 130 ac res of 58V$ bushels to the acre. Around 'Moro there are many reports Qf 40 to 45 bushel fields and at Grass Valley early returns are of 35 bushels per acre. Or Me county’s nearly 140,000 acrer One of the middle bins of the new Hay Canyon elevator broke loose from the main structure Tuesday afternoon about three o’clock and let some 30,000 bu shels of stored grain onto the road between the elevators and the bank. .Virgil Archer, in charge of the Hay Canyon elevators for the owner, Moro Grain Growers, said it made little noise and al most no Jar of concussion. The concrete and steel Just pulled out from the moorings and collapsed on the roadway. The elevator is constructed in two huge circular bins about ten feel apart. The space between them is divided into two bins, the outside of which is curved >n the same arc as the main bins. Appearance of the break indicates that this center bin was imperfectly fastened to the main bins and with -the weight of the stored grain It Just gave away. An » old" politician suggests that husbands and wives run for re-election at least once ev ery four years. T T W N A grocers job is to do the food buying for the community, the same duty in a different line falls to all merchants. The banker takes* care of the money, the editor gathers the news, the of « rain for th re sh in g t minister leads the spiritual life . ooo m o bushels , pect , i is for All the jobs are, in this light, . . over , . 4,000.000 ’ .. Wheat yields at Kent are re- community duties. . .. . , ported to be around 25 bushels ... . , , T T W N although there will be variation The- weather reminds one of in that when more farmers get the old rhyme: “pease porridge to cutting with a probability hot, pease porridge cold.” And that it will be higher. could we have a little just It is not presumed that report? warm, please. Commission Approves based on estimates before a T T W N field is dope will be borne out Government Stops ‘ We agree with Jake Arvey Company A mmubicn I,lability when threshing is all done. There Local Deer Season about one minor thing: Jack is is always some reduction when Engineers of the Central Cun a more popular name than Jake, cold mathematics come into play The game commission declined atruction company of Spokane Nevertheléss, we think that Mr. to make any change in its pre Setting Wages but it is not going to be so dras were here Wednesday and said Stevenson's backer will have liminary regulation regarding an Wage controls for agricultural tic as to reduce the yields t< that they would stand all costs difficulty getting to be known open deer season in Sherman labor under the Wage Stabilise normal level«. , K B - ™ Mr .Ho .i.o ~ Uh>' ** ** thr " ew C w <m A I»*1«“ * «’’»*»» «-‘«ht feet high of repairing the bin and would as Jack. Jake fits him so much county^ a,fid it will be legal to tion board were removed by con Reason for the size of Me crop elevator. The break occurred oh filia l the roadway blocking pas- start as soon as requested by better. hunt m W deerJ in Sherman gress effective July 4, 1952. M. C. > n process of debate when twe the side directly opposite the sage to the wooden elevatom the grain growers. Wendell Bal- T T W N - county on October 1. ‘ iîe- l ? a..n2.-Mir^ î 2 L o f the^agricub ^ m e rs ^ h,n ,n thr l>‘<««re. which are only «lightly nsed. siger, manager, says, however. When the convention began it The commission wrote T. tural wage division, notified the f°r such things. Elgin and Elmai ---------------------------------------------------------------------- — ..... I , _ ________ that repair will not be done un- was said that television would Lester Johnson, president of the county agent’s office this week are considered primary factors i j • j i r r -• « 11 /■ . 111 the grain can be removed change them. Now there is com Sherman County Rod & Gun by action of congress prior to ad the heavy late rain, the cool June r? plaint that it d id n't *• club that it had information Journment. ' the big kernels are other factors Farmers Advised Io Use Caution In W hat from the entire eievuor. stor • , age spaee will be needed this Indicating that there were lots . T T W N Regulations prior to July 1 M anY case Me crop didn’t look y D D L I 11 J D L C n • fall. Truman waited until the con of deer here and that a buck sea 1952 were that farm ers could not 80 S°°d. But it yields wonder IYlaV DP DTeaR In UpWUrd KUSh Ot I riCeS Worfc of picking up the grain vention of his party to let the son would not handicap the in legally pay .m ore than 15 per ^uDy well. Even though many signs of Five things are largely res- started the next day with a day steel strike be settled by per crease in deer within t h e . coun cent. above 1950 wages. Amend '— — ———— recession are showing in 1952, It jxnsible for the slow down, and night crew loading trucks mitting a $5.20 raise; maybe he ty. — ments to the Defease Production p . . . . a s « « « Isn't likely that the slump will Thomas writes. They are: in to haul into one of the wooden will give up on the Korean war Act has removed agricultural " aleh be either very severe or very ventorles have accumulated to elevators nearby. It will prob HARVEST GETTING ON by election time. wage control. Sherman county CONTINUE GOOD widespread-Xhe rest of this year, worry processors, manufacturers« a . £ ,a*e lhree or ^our <la-V8 Wheat harvest is getting along farmers therefore are not hound T T W N While the cost of living rose agricultural economics of, the hankers and business men; buy- p,c up fra,n un,e88 tha very well in the \yasco commun We are a little sorry that Av any more by wage regulations n c° ncrete relard« the work erill Harriman didn't get nom ity and another week will leave for the next physical year. during the first half of 1952, Oregon State college extension ing splurges after the war left Oregon residents purchased over «»rvk* conclude. consumers well stocked; consum- 3J bl" 2^2* tL Í ° ! d Grain has inated. With his ideas of spend few unshorn fields. U million dolían», in series E Mall-V Oregon farmers already ers, conscious of high prices and . .. . .... . ’? * ¿ ing money to aid other coun been pouring into the elevatot* defense bonds—an amount equal «I"* be,nK hüM W Me downward h!g are spending less and * K. \ ‘\ whelU •* - tries he might have gone' dom e^ "df "5 tremendous rale as eveityone $62.1 BILLION to the corresponding period last trend, economist W. D. Thomas saving more; and incomes _ and tic and reduced freight rates on has been cutting with all his ma year. points out in the latest issue of employmerit are not rising as chines and hauling with all his his railroad. “Throughout the state a tota! "Oregon Agricultural Situation, rapidly as a year ago. trucks. In two weeks the 1952 T T W N m ui in « » « n a of $11,201,406 In E bond« was and Outlook,” Strawberry - and There is no reason to get pan- New Dope Makes »1.34? P H lAAULT « IVS2 Census figures are being ana harvest will he history for most purchased,” Giles French,-coyn- cherry raisers,, chicken growers Icky over the situation, however^- - , _ _ farmers. » lysed with the release of some ty defense bond chairman, stat and w<»ol pioducer- are feel- th e ' economists feel, because (jFO W belated information about the ed. “An additional $2,497,152 ing .the pinch this year. Mar- "for .nearly évery weak spot In 1950 cens/t. The Information NEWS FROM RUFUS were bought in all other series kets for other Inflation leaders the economy, there still a A new way to save feed while doesn’t make much sense. Eight This Week will see the end of defense bonds, to bring the total of 1951, like beef, are sagging, firm one.” fattening beef cattle has been Oregon counties have no urban the wheat harvest* for some of sales for the first half of 1952 too. reported by the Oregon State col residents at all, cities under the farmers In this area. What a to $13,698,558. The substantial But the odds for last half of lege experiment station. It Invol 2500 (as we remember! not be relief it will be! No more worry purchase of small denomination 1952 seem to favor some recov- Banks Loaning More ves the use of male hormones to ing large enough to qualify. Re from machinery fixing or motors series h bonds,, primarily by rather than further reces- produce Increased rate of gain sidents of such are “rural non- from the combines pulled out payroll savers, reflects a heal- Thomas believes. There Is on relatively less feed, according of goods for sale -ifO o and taken to town for tune up. thy thrift pattern that is highly even a possibility that consld- Money To Farmers to Dr. Ralph Bogart, animal farm ” people. Yet In , diversity There’s so many working parts to commendable and desirable for erahle inflation could come If a hukbandman. of goods for sale many of thèse a combine that the man who runs Adequate capital is of increas- Testosterone, the male sex a sound business economy.” combihaton of events sparked towns compare favorably with it has to he alert at all times. $44.8 County sales in all series dur , another'spending spree and brot . log Importance In maintaining hormone, was --------- Injected ------- Into the . , . . . . ---- -------— — large cities 20 years ago, so great It’s easy for it to waste the BILLION ing the same period amounted (he . potentiaI purchasing power hlgh Pr<Ml«ctlon need- muscles of the animals in trials has been the expansion of sell wheat or leave chaff in the thre ed farm products, according to last year. Increased gains of .4 to $63,829, of which $49,611 Into the market. ing of food, clothes and home shed wheat. The wheat can go «AK M was in E bonds. i Christianson, who repre- of a pound per day dav were obtain- obta i nnstianson, wno Farmers are advised to keep equipment since then. W M lO WAS out along with the straw and close watch of »uputy, ."emahii i*.nU » » O*»«» Banker aasoel- ed. Feed uvlnga amounted to and chaff that is blown from the T T W N’ ' i and price conditions during the s h«™ an county a«tcul- nearly 150 pound, of feed for BONUS PAYMENTS Whether Mr. O’Dwyer Intends to machine. next tew month« «o they max lu**i ..<•>» "nan. __ each 100 pound, of g.ln. ■ stay in Mexico or not he might It is reported a combine turn market their products to best ad 'Operating a »ucceaaful farm New test, are under w .y thia UP TO DATE consider that Mexican citizen ed over while harvesting on the v a n t.g r In moat Instances, hold- ° r ranc,h ««tay,require. . much year Dr. Cogart reported. The ship is better than an Aermican Striker place last week. The department of Veterans’ ing for the past season’s high ar,fer "’ve.tmdat than It dW a atm 1. to find a more preetlcel jail. Mrs. Gordon Johnson’s son Affairs announced Thursday prtres 8(.umg 1|ke, lo few years ago, he said. “The method of giving the hormone - i-------- average Oregon farm is larger Now they are mixing the testos- T T W N Ryan fell out of a wheat truck that bonuses are now being paid appointment use mathematics and** overlook which she was driving. The ac than it was ten years ago. In terone right Into the feed and on — - a “cuij ent” basis, . which A government official says that cident happened about 9 a. m the face of the shortage of farm and results to date are promls- means that the backlog of and ranch labor,1 this means Ing. , ( 45 is the beginning of old age. last Thursday. Mrs. Johnson Said claims which had been approved f I P 1J but for which checks had not LjrclSS IS LlOlQ that.m ore work must lie done by jThe tests were started to The government just has to use she had just turned a corner and machinery. ' leirn whether the male hormone mathematics and overlook the was getting speed up for the been Issued has lieen wiped out. In 1951, the last full year of causes hulls to gain more rapid fact that some are youthful at straight of way when the door H .* i> n u " J ’u ^eru ’ Program Growing ir R a u l that th a t h t h n end n of f t the hn sor. .-aid by v the —o ‘ - — ~ — D ~ operation, Oregon banks serving ly than steers and both to put 60 and some are old at 30. came open and Ryan fell out. She said she made a grab for him, week (July 25) more than 78,000 Reports from many counties agricultural communities loaned on weight quicker .than heifers, T T W N bonus checks will have been paid In Oregon indicate a growing $88,867,000 to 24,807 farmers Dn the basis of testa by Dr. The air force, once scornful hut these big trucks are pretty to living Oregon veterans and interest' in the 1952 “Grass is and ranchers for all types of fl- Boffart. it appears that the hor- of those who had sighted flying wide across. Therefore, she was to widows, children and parents Gold" progdS^ Four»new coun- nanclal needs. Of this amount nione .does control the dlffer- saucers, is now photographing unable to reach him. Fortunate oi deceased ex-servicemen, In the ties, Clatsop, Multnomah, Tilla- $82,587,000 was borrowed by ®nces In rate and efficiency of them. Just another reason why ly, Ryan fell free of the truck. amount of about $32,000,000. monk and Wasco, will participate 23,695 farmers and ranchers to *aln a lar<® extent. A non- people don't believe the govern When he was taken to the hos He said that there are quite a for the first time this year, flanace production and operating masculizlng hormone, methostan pital for an x -r a /'it was found ment agencies very much., number of bonus claims with Some 17 of the state’s 36 coun- needs. This compares with 23,* waH tested and had no effect on he had a brain concussion above T T W N numbers lower than 78,000, how- ties were entered last year. 028 production igans, totaling either rate or efficiency of the left ear. He was in the hospi The state game commission tal for two days when he was ever, «till In process, and urged Initiated by the agricultural $70,14)6,000, during I960. These exhibits a tendency to overlook Testosterone liymlOM^ VM e veterans not to write concerning committee of the Portland cham- production loans Were quickly iTamoaUrone home to remain in bed the wishes of the citizens of the brought her of commerce, one of the prin- repaid, too, and only $31,484,000 ^ » ^ n g the gains by heifers, did for another week. these claims until requested state and to follow the reports _ The day Mrs. Johnson brought The “approved claimif’ hack- ciple features of the program Is were outstanding at the end of not qu,te brin< them up to the of its hired field men. It is, we Ryan home, she left her daugh level of steers getting the hor- log was built up over a period the naming of an Oregon “Grass- 1951. think, an error and is certainly ter Lola in the hospitakovernight. the state’s mone- Helfers with testosterone of months starting last October mah of the- Year" who will com- ”The fact that an indlcaton of arrogance and It seems as if Lola had run a rtlcularlv «alned 2 5 pounds dally while when veterans began filing their pete with finalists from Idaho banks are serving M ’ steers with the same treatment arrogance is an ailment the vot rusty nail in her foot about ten.; claim?- anti the bonus division and Washington for the regional the operators of small and mo- ", T 7 ‘ ™un<bT" witivMif'ThA the ers can quickly cure yvhen it days previous. She was taken to started processing the applies- title and a 81500 irrigation sys- derate-sized farms and ranches B hormone, heifers gained thout 2 pounds becomes pronounced. - the doctor for anti-infection rem tions. Payments, however, were tern or other equipment award hi shown by the size of the av- a day and steers 2.4 pounds edy. The shots didn’t work right held up until June 18, when presented by R. M. Wade & erage loan made by hanks dur- No ill effect« were reported We saw a man with a stove for Lola. She broke out with a money finally l»ecame available Company of Portland. The Ore- Ing the year. The average pro- wben the carCaMes of the test in his truck and a store was ad; rash and fever and was very un from the sale of $46,000,000 In gob winner will also receive a duction loan was $3,485 during anlmabi were examined They vertising blankets this week. comfortable when . she entered bonds to finance the program. $500 cash award from the Unit- 1951, and the average farm real were mariteted at 800 pound $5.3 What a painful thing is memory. the hospital. She Is l^ome hut al estate loan was $5,647/ Through the cooperation of tha ed States National hank. with only a slight tendency to BILLION secretary of state's office, which so has to remain in bed" for a Local county ¿ contests a r o ----- -— T T W N ward bullishness showing up In \ writes the checks, the depart- sponsored by various obganiza- UARH <X)LLIDE If anyone wants to know few days. one or two anlmalF Helfers did ment mailed out 45,000 checks tions, chambers of commerce, ki- A collision between two cars Bhow a higher proportion of whertTUie federal benefits come Mr. and Mrs. Earl Weifherford in a three-day period starting wanls and rotary clubs, cattle- occurred at the intersection of rear to front quarters than from the national debt is $262,- of Arlington were overnight June 18. Slpce then, payments meh's associations and others, First and Main streets last steers. 956,001,132.36. - guests Saturday of the- George Foxes. have been at the rate of about with county agents acting as co- Thursday?- Charley Bullard In . T T W N »452 mo 1500 dally,, K ordlnators. Several counties have crossing First street hit a Cal- Roy Philippi said he saw k bear There are many kinds of NOTICE From now on, -payments will arranged for special awards and Ifornla car amidships with minor wealth. There is wealth in mon on the breaks of the John Day To whom It may concern: ey which is the accepted kind river last week. When James Fox go out only as fast as claims trophies in addition. This phase damage., Tom Garrett, deputy The lobby of the poatofilce, FEDERAL TAXES and which brings happiness to w a s’Tiding his cattle pasture he come in and the bonus division , of the 1952 contest is slated w sheriff, was nearby and stralgh _ Moro, Oregon, will be closed very few; there is wealth in noticed big tracks which^he pre can process them. Saalfeld es- close on Altgust 15, deadlinejor tened out the ensuing argument, between the hours of 7:30 p. m. HEAD FOR THE learning, in friends, in accom suines were the hears. Or it timated this will he at a rate of entrance in the stale contest, obtained the reports and sent till 8:00 a. m. until further plishment, any one of which is could be a couger is in the vicin about 350filaily for awhile, then The Oregon award will' be pre the participants on their way notice, STRATOSPHERE more valuable and more sooth-' ity. It ¿s real uncommon to see a will slow down as fewer veter- sented at the state fair In Salem still nervous If not entirely hap- Lloyd R. Johnson ing to the soul. ans file applicatioiy. early in September. py. '' hear around this part. Postmaster