Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, June 21, 1957, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ©
©
o
©
0
^limitan County
Moro, Oregon Friday June 21, 1957
Sixty-Ninth Year No. 33
T h .6 8 6
T h in g «
We
N o te
By Gile° L- French
K S
J n . n f t h p use of
much curtailment of the use as
of
cigarettes for health reasons
long as smoking them is the style.
One might as well be dead as to
not conform, you know.
TTW N
We are willing to go to great
lengths to be like grandpa;
wear
,
whiskers, drive covere
® ’
sail across the ocean.
,
help us from working like gra
Pa-
T T W N
The supreme court says it is al-
right to advocate communism as
long as you don’t succeed. After
that it is too late.
TTW N
Scientists are said to be worry­
ing as to whether the earth is get­
ting colder or hotter. Some days
it is one and some days the other
Just like always.
TTW N
Overheard: “big enough to play
a tuba”; “getting thoroughly tan
ned is as private an affair as tak­
ing a bath.”
TTW N
Here is a classic quote: “Educa­
tion is the most important single
responsibility of government--”,
Sweetland said, -from OEA bulle
tin. National defense, protection
of life and property, keeping the
peace, all secondary, Eh?
TTW N
Girls State Girls
Win Offices; Learn
About Government
The five Sherman county dele­
gates to Girls State, together with
their chaperon, Mrs. Mildred Mc­
Donald, who acted as senior coun­
selor, returned home Sunday after
a week spent at Willamette uni­
versity in Salem practicing the
arts of government.
All five of the Sherman county
girls were elected to an office af­
ter nomination, a campaign and
election bv ballot of the voters of
e.ecuon
y a or the general as-
their counties
sembly of 246 girls, the largest
number to ever attend
Karen Wilson became county
commissioner, emulating her fa-
ther, Lester Wilson, Kay Kirkelie
was elected county judge of a dif-
ferent county, Bonnie Schaum-
burger was county chairman of
her party and Diane Schilling and
Geraldine Holzapfel were state
senators.
Mrs. McDonald was greatly en-
thused over Girls State as a means
baching
government
and - also
...„....... o---------
----------
^appy
congratulate the units
on sending outstanding girls as
county delegates.
Shrine Football
Tickets Available
Ernie Woods expects to get a
block of 50 tickets for the Shrine
“B” football game in Pendleton
by July 10. These are in the cen-
ter of the field and may be obtain-
ed from him by those who may
wish to attend the game.
Playing on the East team this
ar will be Louie Miller and Jim
year
Brady of Sherman high school
seniors and Robbie Hastings and
Jim Beishe are alternates who
will
used in the big game for
smaller schools.
Swimming Starts Sherman Countv’s
Hauling Needed
TTW
tv
A style doesn’t have to be bet-
ter, only newer. Political theories
are much like styles.
T T W
N
The
Moro TV
__ _____
. . club
---- -- at a regular
_
quarterly meeting Tuesday even-
ing elected officers for the com-
ing year. The officers elected are:
John Parker, president; John
.... .........................
To . produce an acre of wheat Jn p Uck, vice-president;
Ken Dunlap,
America, it once required 57.7 sec.treas. Also elected was a di-
man hours of labor. Today w ith rector for a three year term, this
mechanization, it takes 1.8 hours. p^R ion was taken by Clarence
These and other striking facts j j ujg
about accomplishments of agrlcul-
outgoing president is Clair Bal-
tural engineering have been out- zer, vice-president Andy Paulson,
uned by OSC as part of the 50th sec-treas. Lloyd Wooderson and
year observance of professional director Harry Benson.
agricultural engineering in this
Directors who hold unexpired
country.
terms are George Geiser and
B Rod««™- head ot a«rlcu1' Keith Thompson.
tura) eng|neering at the college,
for next year was
The nudeet
budget for
saYs
value of farm equipment ajso appr0Ved and an assessment
on American .. farms . is more
member was levied for
.. t than
. . of
______
billion, five times the total the upkeep of the line and other
investment in the automotive in- eXpenses. This figures out a little
dustry.
And today, the modern jes8 than 42e per month for tele-
farmer has at his disposal about vjsiOn service, after the initial
36 mechanical or electrical horse- membership fees are paid.
power per worker to help him do
At the present time the club has
chores.
65 members.
- ------ ------
.
---. . p .
The money the government
spends to help the farm situation
would be well spent if it helpei
the situation. Instead it makes it
worse.
T T W N
op-
Borrowers
w m ™ " are generally and
posed to a light m p b
lenders generally favor it. Maybe
l>orrowers and
there are more borrowers
and
there are eventually
,.v prevail.
nrpvaii That
»*
the?
willing to
will me
wld
loan money
rates in
bring n ®
en. will loan
itself un
B
*han jt will
money a
have to P t t W N
If we could mobilize the effort
Americans take to win plaques we ’Teac|1ers Salaries
couw easily fly w a » moon.
.. ..............................
aiiw Up
t t w n
Go Up and
inm
Who sald’ tWs'iCTeration Isn’t
some other'roum riM .’ So’in2
.o,y..h thi- morning a radio sta- teachers have not yet signed con-
tougn,
, „ Presley
—
.. only be-
tlon was in playing an _ Elvis
tracts, she -------------
reported, - but
record before seven breakfast.
cause they are “extremely choo-
T T W N
sey” about location and type of
We think labor will be in bet- position.
ter position when it is able toM re
Elementary teachers are in
Lma’lTweak men as organizers in- greatest demand, Mrs. Smith said,
small,
Slead’o, the big. s.x-fooier, now wlth the
cai, ,..r teachen.
stead
doing that Job.
in the Intermediate grades. This
T T W N
is a shift from previous years
Ernest Willerton of The Dalles when teachers in the youngest
died while on hls way to Montana grades —kindergarten to third
for a vacation trip at the home of grade—were most needed.
his daughter and son in law. He
About two-thirds of the OSC
was born in Hay Canyon March graduates are staying here in Ore-
13, 1884 and was well known to gon |O teach, according to Mrs.
many old timers of this county, smith. All could have been placed
TTW N
here, but opportunities in other
Fertilizer Effects
Being Compiled
July 2 For First
Hired For SHS;
Visit This Year
r akin Elected
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will
be at the Moro Community church
’ esday, July 2. from 2:30 p. m.
' 5:30 p. m.
The American Legion posts of
the county and their auxiliaries
are sponsoring this drawing,
Members of these units will have
pledge cards to be signed by don-
ors. However, for those who wish
to donate and do not happen to be
contacted cards will be at the
Wasco Market and Mae Reids in
Wasco, Cushman Equipment and
Doumas Market in Moro, Fields
Confectionery and Hoopers Union
Station in Grass Valley.
Since the drawing last year, re
sidents of Sherman county have
received 51 pints of blood at The
Dalles General hospital. This is the
only hospital from which we re-
celve a lab. sheet. We know that
almost as much was used in the
Portland hospitals. The 51 pints
were distributed as follows: Rufus
9, Wasco 27, Moro 4, Grass Valley
7
Ken‘ * Fr° m re|,;>rlS f ' Ve"
US by persons concerned we know
that residents of the Moro district
«.-celveU 12 pints at the Veterans
ta' and >» !>'"« «• other
Portlan<1 hospitals
Letters are l>eing mailed soon
w,ilb 3 niOrf Metalled explalnatlon
of the program and some of its
results. We hope to exceed our
quota of 86 pints and send 100 to
the center.
By a somewhat smaller vote
than the Sherman high school
budget received a week before the
voters of the county approved a
new tax i>ase for the high school
district 142 yes and 66 no In Mon­
day’s election The vote on the
budget was 166 to 23.
Harold Eakin was re-elected to
the high school board with few
dissenting votes, some of which
were cast for men residing out­
side the Grass Valley area. It was
necessary to elect a director from
that district although voters from
all over could vote.
The school board met Monday
night and elected William Bleker
as the new superintendent. He has
been teaching at Lorane, an
eleven teacher school in I-ane
county near Cottage Grove. There
were three full time teachers and
tWo part-time in high schoo , av
erage dally membership was¡38.8
and the assessed valuation *755-’
445. Mr. Bleker is 33, married and
has
children.
He is and
a grad-
" " Z three
. P - , elite
university
has
uate of 1 aciflc university an
obtained an M A. degree from
Oregon State.
Cloyd Duncan, science teacher,
has resigned to go to Athena and
a new instructor is being sought
l0 fin the position he has held for
the past four years. Incldently,
Gerald Dlsch, former Moro coach,
has accepted a position as coach
in a Florida school and
Oregon.
. ,
Herman Peters has accepted
the Job as janitor at the high
school and started work Monday
morning. Work on the athletic
field has l>egun and effort will be
made to _ get it drained and graded
and ready for seeding soon
Effects of fertilizers on wheat
yields throughout the Columbia
Qasjn dryland area from 1953
through 1955 are reported in a
new lxMk|'et' published by Oregon
e,.lfp ,.,,11 pen nffripnitnral pvnpri
L ?*
g
‘
1
'"Experiments on nearly 100
wheat farms of the area are sum-
____
______
marized
in the _ ______
circular, . Wheat
Fertilization Experiments in the
Columbia Basin”. While the circu-
lar does not pin-point fertilizer
recommendations, it gives pat­
terns of yield increases for vari­
ous climates and soil conditions.
Effects of fertilizers on test
weights and protein contents of I I 7 L - - 1 .
Di«,
wheat are also discussed.
** ilC a l ILXpOilS Dlr,
Bangs Testing Still
Going On In State
More than 27,000 Oregon cattle
Were tested in May, and another
18,214 calves were vaccinated in
the federal-state brucellosis eradl-
cation program. The testing re-
vealed 194 reactors, or 7 20th of
one
one per
per cent.
cent.
Officials of the state and fed-
eral departments of agriculture
at Salem said the May testing
wag carried on 2,590 herds, in 86
of which reactors appeared. More
than 600 herds were included in
the month’s calf vaccinations.
Fifteen Bang’s reactors were
found in Columbia county’s 289
cattle tested to give that county
the highest percentage of May re-
actors. Klamah and Lake, where
fewer
were tested,
showed
_ . cattle
. ______.
- ___ . __
___
44 and 4 p ercent of reactors, res
pettively, and Jackson county
with 1,614 cattle tested had 3.1
p e rc e n t reactors.
j n the cooperative testing for
tuberculosis last month, only one
reactor (Wasco county) was found
in the 12,708 < attle tested.
Kay Kirkelie Going
n _ 1 ____ t
.
QL
D I
Again In May
Keith Mobley of Kent has been
named winner of a scholarship to
Oregon State college next year.
He was one of 124 Oregon high
school seniors selected to receive
scholarships at OSC for 1957-58
under sponsorship of the state
system of higher education. The
scholarships are worth $138.
Mobley, son<>f Mr. and Mrs.
Verne E. Mobley, Kent, graduated
from Sherman high school earlier
this month. He plans to major in
OSC. in In
high
w-.“‘ ».-„ve
student
school he was active in student
government and during his senior
year Mobley served as student
President.
r*
V 11 .. D
Grass Valley r .
A
U.
m q n
a. J
1 O Be Dedicated
Mrs. Glendora Smith, Grass Val-
ley postmaster, announces that
there will be open house at the
postoffiee Saturday June 29 start­
ing at 2:00 o’clock with a flag rais­
ing by Boy Scouts and with an of­
ficial of the postoffiee department
on hand to speak.
In the evening there will 1* a
potluck dinner at 6:30 with all
lodges co-operating. A history of
,he Baptist church will bn given
ant* a' 8° a history of the <ra8S
al,ey postoffice. Patrons of the
rural route will 1 honor Matt Simon
mall carrier, who has served them
for 30 years.
Reason for the celebration is to
dedlcate the new building recent-
ly built by Mrs. Smith and the
installation of new equipment by
^ e government
Monthly records for export
movement of grain from Oregon
ports were smashed for the sec-
ond consecutive month in May,
according to the state department
of agriculture. More than 9.4 mil-
lion bushels of grain, mostly
wheat, were loaded last month on
ships at Portland and Astoria
ports. This is about a third of a
million bushels more than in
April, and represents almost 28
full cargoes,
T. Ralph Harry, chief of the de-
partment’s division of grain in-
spectlon, says much of the export
grain came from flathouse stor- Moro Grain Growers
age in the Portland area. Three
mothball ships were also unload- To Hear Youth
Members of the Moro Grain
ed during May.
The May exports included 448,- Growers will be able to hear a
000 bushels of corn and 529,130 program given by the Young _
Oregonians at the annual meeting
bushels ________...
of barley.
____________________
. ___ on June 29 which will be held at
On
the other side of the . picture,
more than 7.3 million bushels of the Sherman high school build-
Incoming grain, again mostly lng.
It has been several years since
wheat, were Inspected at Portland
and almost 820,000 bushels at As- a group of Young Oregonians
toria. The Pendleton office in- have visited Sherman county with
spected 51,300 bushels of Incom- one of their varied and entertain-
ing programs.
ing wheat.______________________________________________
---------------------------------------- —
J r
r i
Jtr
JU a D
U
a J
Mountain Sheep Released rrom Enclosure; may Not Be Hunted
_:_
On Long Trip
ture w lT w ha’t ’rve s a v V " ' said Salaries for beginning teacher. an^ , ys ^ a V y 'm ’.Ur't’’ Su°mtay
i ^ n <'TnprOtaieslhplusW.« l a* a«-t ’aTt 'with “ he dema nd“ condn u Ing " " ^ c r i'M h e V a U o n a 'iV o X a ’ s "
“ run
T , . . far
'3’ ahead of the supply in ,o a,,an<1 ,ha Nhem a a'« . '^
'°GU
1 .rH ? M d inflation
to
. 'n rllh n nnA
e eli
li
curlty an
N
aH fieldS( accordlng to Mrs. Kath-
h.mdre
The ins are often the party of ryn Smith, director of teacher
B4gnieen nunarea
A ftiiT h rL n fp re n re which will
tiffht money and the outs the placement at Oregon State college.
n . L 0«
TnivVthP n r i
oartv of loose money.
In fact,
All of OSC’s 352 teaching grad- . . „ June
to July un.nh
3 the thru
Ore-
rn.m an had a tight money policy uates this year could have been be held
ioi0<~ t irtn 26 will
mice and^held onto it. Any admin- placed weeks ago, Mrs. Smith
{ ^ ^ e w Mex?ci and Ari-
once
•
_ a J
M d A v iz w a
n
t i i ' i i i u i u i » from
m ill
stratlon is
afraid
of a inflation
if . said. Requests were r received
5« m X a
to u r of those
___ _____
1
all areas of the state, from
every “ X a n to
g V make
p aH fo rn la before com
It has any sense.
other state in the nation, and
T* and L . .
m S
X
a
The Sherman county entry in
the mid-Columbia Junior baseball
league went to Kinzua Sunday
and won a double header from
that team by scores of 12 to 4 and
7 to 5.
Playing for the Sherman coun-
tians was Tommy Eakin, catcher,
Terry Kaseberg, 1st, Butch Kir-
kelie, 2nd, Keith Hockman, 3rd,
who played those positions in
both games. Others playing were
Jim Brow n, Charles Griggs and
Jim Duncan, pitchers, J. Hollo-
way and Jim Duftcan, shortstops,
Lee Kaseberg, G. Smith, Tommy
DeMoss, Gary Thompson, out­
fielders.
Several cars were taken to the
Wheeler county town to trans­
port the boys to the game.
Parker Heads Moro
TV Club Now
Cattle in the John Day valley
should winter well to Judge from ■ .
J ProduCP
the size of the hay crop now being L 3 D 0 r 1 0 I lOUU -C
cut there.
Acre of Wheat Less
Superintendent
Young Ball Players
Mn Doubleheader
Monday; Local
Swimming classes sponsored by
the local chapter of the Red Cross
will start Monday, June 24, and
run for two weeks. The classes
will be held in The Dalles where
the chapter has rented the pool
and engaged life guards and in-
structors for the course.
Each community will furnish
transportation and chaperons for
those
those attending
attending the classes. All
children of school age are urged
to attend if they would like to
learn how to swim,
Classes in The Dalles start at
10 o’clock and end at 12.
Bus transportation will leave
the different communities in suf-
ficient time to arrive at the pool
prior to start of class,
Those from Kent are advised
that the bus will leave the school
house at 8 o’clock, at Grass Valley
they should meet at the drug-
store at 8:30, . at Wasco, Mrs. Pat-
----------
rick should be contacted for time
and place for the bus, at Rufus,
they should meet at the postoffiee
at 9 00 o’clock and at Moro no
definite arrangements have been
made as yet, but it is expected
that transportation can be ar­
ranged. Notice of arrangements
will be posted at the postoffice in
Moro, so check this for final in-
structions.
Children attending swimming
lessons who have not registered
should do so Monday at the pool,
The Red Cross has arranged for
the use of the pool, set the dates
and hired the instructor. Trans-
portation is a local matter
Bloodmobile Due
More Coyotes Killed
More than twice as many coy­
otes were taken in April than in
Marvh py Oregon predatory wii-
jna, hunierg. This is revealed in
the monthly report to the state
(]epartment of agriculture, coop-
pra(ing agency with the U. S.
EJsh and wildlife Service,
The tota, AprU take in 32 Ore-
gon counties was 814 predators,
compared with 551 in March. The
April destructions included 567
coyotes, 183 bobcats, 9 bear and
55 fox. The hunters also caught
39 badgers, 17 skunks, 66 raccoon
and 110 porcupines.
Umatilla led the ___
counties on
coyotes, with 74 destroyed; other
top coyote takes were in Lake, 63;
Crook, 60; Umatilla 50; and Mor-
row, 45. Itake county accounted
for 39 bobcats. Yamhill topped the
fox column with 18, Itane was
second with 12; and Marlon and
Linn accounted for 9 and 8, res­
pectlvely. The bear catch was all
in seven western Oregon counties.
Oregon Traffic Down
Oregon highway traffic record­
ed at 28 rural automatic traffic
nucleus , or furth < r releas <'5-
wlng ’ - A t one 8 tal ! e ot , helr ) our ‘ counters showed a statewide de­
crease of 1.5 per cent for May
The first sheep seen were two ney, a sheer drop of at least 30 1957, as compared to May 1956.
rams’ one Probably a 3‘year old feet was encountered with a 2
Despite the overall decrease for
with about a three-quarter curl to foot ledge which led off at an the month, some counter locations
hls horns- The rams were a,ready angle- Even bere the anlmala d‘d showed substantial gains. Gervais
on the move when observed and not hesitate but dropped over the
Market Road No. 629, 1 mile
heedlng for lhe aheer rock e8car{>
at u>p gpeed. Watching the
usi)9E
waa up ’ _
17 _ j _
w
_____ ____
ment on lhe S0Uth 8lope ° f lh<? anlmal8 closely through 12-power cent; Gresham on US26, 1 mile
canyon. On the way down other binoculars, it was noted that each eMt of GreHham Up 11.7 per cent;
blghorns jolned untH 28 were ,n anlmaI’ exc«l* the ,a!nba’ louyb* anil Midland on US97, 6 miles
the band which moved out onto ed the face of the rock once with s()Uth ()f Klamath Falls up 7.8
the face of the rock cliff The Its feet on the downward decent
nimble footed animals progress- perhaps as a braking action, o r _____________
ed without fear of the almost more important, as leverage to
sheer wall upon which they were twist its body in line with the College Grads Wanted
crossing, leaping from ledge to ledge. The lamb’s feet hit the face
The demand for trained gradu-
ledge, some scarcely wide enough twice, the second time twisting ates in agricultural engineering
for their feet to land upon.
the body in general direction of is constantly increasing, Rodgers
As the crew headed down the the ledge.
reported. Some 1006» agrlcoH ural
o i I i i t s , , , , , , l , , , , , ,o
Until BtinA InCCeO SeS,‘ Agile, FeatletS Animals Hard to Hetd
F or
the
, lrst , lme , ln ”
the la , e
'9°9' bighorn mountain sheep once
a&aln roam the scab rock coun‘
try of eastern Oregon. But don’t
get y°ur fever UP for 11 wU1 prob‘
ably be Quite a few years yet lie-
------U
all_ ,
fore any hunting
will 1 be allowed.
flrst re,ea8e of the blg rlm
rock t e l l e r s into the wild« of
Oregon took place last week when
Frank Grogan, district game blol-
T re X T e rU n m ^sion? ¿IB ¿¿I««." w lth'the help of five other
month. I resbj lerlan m.»slons will comm|sglon emp|Oyees, drove 18
be vi.sited
animals through the gates of the
. Miss K irkelie won the rip k ’- Hart mountaJn enciosure The anl-
ng one of eleven Jfom
‘ mai9 included two young rams,
land I lesbytery, for
’
four ewe8 four lambs, and the
and b<‘lpfui activity in the church.
yearlings of undetermined
jn. . T
•** Th* released bighorns have
Fl»h Tagging ShOW»
frctiexcesx^ ...ro a m
,l,v
Run Tendency
xsrn^AA
8 7 which
7 ^
on any part 0 of * the ^ range
Stace two of an eien alv e study They might find Io their liking.
htage two ot an expensive sui iy incy m »
Bfo „ n e X 1n , ? S <, : =
^ get
r « c excited
l ? e d " w nor
2 " 'did
h « '7 ever
v e i >»•<!• their «Kape
from Hart atrg arc available each June.
did ’ t they
panic. All they seemed to want mountain pen prior to the dellber-
0 SC a one ot 25 U S. collegea
*
d i«tanee l>etween them ate re1«*«« by the game commls- nationally accredited in agrlcul-
bX k^T e ^ Z i X 4 d ^
started last week by the Oregon
fjSh commission as a part of the
lenng research
tcxcarcn
fisheries engineering
Corps
of
program of the dnation is Engln-
. , 4 g
pers.
A determination
considered to be at least 400 yards.
caused bv heavy snow, or mautcr’K dem-pe levels
Only once did any of the crew get t->rh,ina
fl ()ppr Htfl,
much clowr and that about 75 P -fhaPa % a <*«' “ “ " " P '1"«
' ' ’" ’al clcctrifk atlon has brought
yards when six animals were en- 8*’1 ln- At c “
"i resk and es
an< <2>n,vTh"<'??:^ rL „
countered direct,y iwiow a rim
"
T ric o n '
"d r. S
task. During the 2 tt years of con-
finement since their introduction
.rum British
o n u ... Columbia
................ in Janu-
from
ary of 1955, the bighorns had tic-
c o it. f.m .lUr w „h e v e r y ,;» , of
lion deducted the pay be raised
tlOO But it might do something
___ 1 xx k k v I n
to halt the successful lobbying
efforts of tie tax spenders.
and physical sciences. Women tea-
year the fish commission
The day of release proved no diagonally across the cliff, over a
accurate count of the
cher3 are in great demand at pre- put plastic tags on approximately exception although O ’Ogan plan- pinnacle of rock, and then down
*
.
sent—a
reverse
from
>0
year,
ago
.„m
onoid,
at
Bonr.eviile
ned
a
carefu,
m
e
th
o
jo
,
attack.
^"n'g
“
t
h
^
v
X
.
________>_____ — i ________________________________i i - - a
___ a
□ 11
t h o fiSinth
lln p t o th p ftaffP- H nevp, CWI1 Hl BU u V n tT k n o w n
when
school
superintendents dam to assess average migration Ron Shay of the division was floor.
Ju8t hoW many Rheep ln 8,1 C° m'
TTW N
were crying for more men teach- rates for salmon prior to the com- slon’s information
X X , ' ' / m ho°: ers,
^ ^ Mrs.
X Smith
^ f pointed
f ? « out. main.
T * . 1 X S “ .ntOd*„„T^
nd ^ n O,ti.hef X ndo,Thke ^ " c o m m i s s i o n u rg £ al,
The OSC placement office main
much mai
that w«ra
was »•»«■»'»
before the
.U te >
lln s s records a,so
to
cliff
^ w n d T n o X ^ e commls ion
mucn
••— —
^ iln
also for
for graduate,
graduate!. salmon
.,a,1Ilw,, e,gM
w swim
. ............ - aho ¡ ^ s e ^ . h e = w
lxxaisi.A’ure really concerns the o{ pa3t years who are in teaching, i ie river miles from Bonneville case too many animals were drlv- one
average citizen? Not much, m o s t Some
.....................
... ..............................—
_ McNary.
~
«... a break in pace. The small Immediately as b» th<
7000 teachers
are now reg- to
Blueback and fall en down. It .....
was hoped that aw»,«
about out
Istered
with
Mr,.
Smith
j
a
l
many
Chinook
salmon
made
the
trip
15
animals
could
be
driven
thru
la
mist followed with the same It Is especially! «r»«"* ' 11
of it is petty. If a better Job was
the gate Io freedom, the rest to breakneck speed leaping pell-mell are seen outside the Hart moun-
done on the Important legislation of them are placed in b J » e r Jo,« more slowly, averaging about
nine days.
be held inside the enclosure as a through space as if they had tain vicinity.
the nation would be better served. each year.
,2^?’
o
iooo O;
«,
and beef cattle
feeding
this
’ \r?™iitiiral engineering It requlr-
-T it« , ,,t ¿5 nor cent oM he people
ed «bout 85 per cent of tne people
to do the jo .