J
V
Ohennan ÖTnattfy journal
Seventy Tliinl Year No. 38
These
T h in g s
We
Note
Moro, Oregon Friday
Publicity Shower
A h n ilt
rW U U l
flip
i f 1C
f ,f lim lv
V O u flly
21. llkil
County Official Paper
taing news about people
you know or know about
Local Ballclub To
Gives Farmer
Wheat Yield Drop
Play at Home
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hicks and
Mr and Mrs Byron Copenhefer Flowers were used to decorate
family entertained Mr. and Mrs. of Goldendale brought Mrs Gwen the rooms and small bouquets de- N p y I Sunftnv
lien Hicks of La Grande over the Sempey ba?k to .wis,
1. M
. m . itoifpn
, , th
,, e in
. dividual
,. ., . t»KUu
. .
Mrs. T.
H olies co rated
M lf/IttflV
weekend. Sunday both families after spending a few days with fi’n ,/
|n‘
ua
ta »le>
attended a reunion of the Counts them, they visited a while with
wh,ch
J * ’38 * r^ '
The Sherman County Braves
Wheat farmers have been get- family held at Goldendale.
Mrs. Rolfe before returning home I
r u J V a> “I
** wl11 play thelr thlrd ho,ne game
ting some of the kind of publicity
Mr and
w4tb M'or‘n« honors held by Mrs of the season Sunday. July 23, to
The wheat
Sherman
they like in the past ten days
Weekend guests of Mr. and anJ chiWren“ 3 i
when editors from Portland came Mrs Floyd Root and Mrs. Rose honw in
to see what harvesting was like Rveppell included Mr. and Mrs. sperujing a weej
and see for themselves how farm- Dud R°ot and son, Mrs. Alfred niotber Mrs j
ers live and work. Presumably Evans, Rosemary
Rueppell
n
t
,
.. and Kent.
morion at prize. Others present were Mrs on their 2-3 record to date.
threshing wheat are all on a pre-
the public relations firm hired by Mrs- Gary King and son, all of
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sondomu iV1' “ ’
^,rs Ftien Kee, Mrs
The game is scheduled for 2:00 litninary basis so far as few fields
Giles L. French
the wheat league had a hand In Portland.
and Lynne and Pennv arrived
^ ters’ Mrs Jack Adams p in. on the Sherman High school have been finshed and results not
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Glenz and Sa,urday from ToWo io' vl,R her
It’s an old trick: watching the the matter.
W
l
, ' eld A d ">‘ “ “ >"
•*
d«»a' computed (or these
pea under the first shell and try The actual job of raising wheat Danny
returned
from
Mr. and Mrs. Don Smith were tion.
Whether it was the rust, the
u h ij
i c i u i i i r u last
la s t week
w een .
ir u in m o t hf»r M r« A v n n
»»
.......
ing to guess where it will be i3 little known to city dwellers a vacation trip to Cadott, Wis- and Mlis ‘ p rftrik ^ Vr
. -
*? Tbe Dallps Sunday and spent
The
winner
of
the
second
half
hotweather
or something else will
ami Mrs. Frank Sayrs and Tony the day visiting his parents, Mr of the Big Wheat League meets never be known
next. The handler always and in and is getting so complicated that cousin, where they were guests and
because there
Melissa of Moro and Mr. and and Mrs. Gus Smith *
this case it is Russia, that has no one out of touch with it a few of Mr. Glenz’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank von Borstel had din
Condon, the winner of the first will 1« no agreement. But yields
us watching Berlin.
years would be able to go ahead Mrs. Fred Glenz.
Mrs. Harry Stark and daugh- half, to decide who gets the tro- a»'« down from the almost fab'i-
ner with them Sunday
T T W N
with it. Since the end of World
Houseguests of Mrs. Elva Deh-
The trouble with smart guys is War II chemicals
and fertilizers ler are her son and daughter in
often that they’re not very smart, have added to the complexity of h'W, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hines and
The
president must be finding growing wheat and the knowledge their family of Whldhy Island,
that out; the nation knew it.
that told a farmer when to sow’ Mr Hines is working in the har- Mr a n d M r« I ph r□rinn.i n -
J .
*' vvumy agent in tne state.
this year.
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and how to plow must be multi- vest.
stayed for a longer visit with the o! Voro’ k‘ft Sundav f^ r 4 H club Zaniker, Thompson or Jensen
Early returns from the Hay
Ty Cobb has died, an old, ill Plied by knowledge of when to
July 4 the young people of the Garlands
sunnner camp at Suttle Lake for and Hastings will be the battery Canyon country which is Just
man, who didn’t even look as if fertilize and how and when to Wasco Church of Christ enjoyed Mrs ixmald von Borstel was a week.
for the locals.
about average in quality of land
Mrs. Bert Cox left July J Tur '
he could flash across the out- treat weeds and how.
a picnic outing at Maryhill. They
would
indicate that the average
hostess to the 4-H club outdoor Chehalis to visit her m’o ther/M r7
field or steel second while a catch- The stories will be valuable if were accompanied by Mr. and cooking nroiect <rroun
h .
,,
-------- • ...... • n * a
...
yield would lx? in the neighbor
et was drawing back his arm.
they tell some city people that Mrs. Jerry Barnett, sponsors of home Mondav and T i L , i ., v 1
( H- Augpp wbo was 444 and pass- K |r t h C e r t i f i c a t e s
hood of 25 bushels. That will
farmers are real iw onU w L
the irn „ n
° m.e ™on<,dy and Tuesday last ed away July G. Mrs. John R ust
T T W N
mean something between 2,000,-
(MX) bushels of wheat for the coun
ty.
Board of
Elders will call that a good crop
parents of but no one whose experience
_
_
school comes solely from the nerind
production operations to be f o u l Anne and C n lt °,fXISale"' Mrs "heir mnch “for a ' X
7 en" ',i “ r; and M™ Lawrence th‘s ta" '« «Main birth certlfl-
1910 will think »o. Since
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It is had enough that so many anywhere.
Prosser, a sister of Mrs. Root, re-
1
a luke Tuesday, Augee and daughter of Los An- Cd,es for tbp,n aa soon as possible, that date we have had an extra
mained while her husband attend- ‘ n pan led by Mls- von Borstel. geles brought his sister Mrs. Cox
A rpR4stratlon card may be oh two inches of m o istu re have
Americans have gone on relief;
ed a meeting at Pendleton Sat-
M ^ IX>n Clod el ter was hostess hom e Thursday on their way to 4a4™ 4 ^om the Board of Health earned to> a p a y Vo wee^s and
and it is a national disgrace that
urday. On his return to Wasco,
ber, br4dgp club at her home their
home in California.
’ ^ r a fee of one dollar by address aiJ the remalnlerntlv WSPH
the self reliant Amish should New Farm Bill
Mr. Prosser stopped in Athena to ^ “^ y u
wl?
Mr and
*nd Mrs
Mrs. Larry
Larry Smi4b
Smith a”‘l
and lng
lng tbe
tbp re<iue8t
rwR«est to to Vital
Vital Statistics
Statistics tu
to apply
apply fertilizer
fertilizer Machinery ha2
have their personal property con
<
nVlted
Mr
pot Oail Pickard, a nioco of \Irs
including
Art Chris-
i ’Krio. fomii»
-----* • last week . MoHinn
» z\
. . improved
y
Up To Senate
ding Alts
.Mrs. Art
family of Portland spent
St‘c44<m. Board of u„.i*u
Health, » P.
O. steadily
fiscateti for not going on.
tianson,
Mrs
i. T*ta Eslinger and end here visiting his parents, Mr. Uox 231 > Portland 7, Oregon.
The crop of barley
bai
The Senate Agriculture commit- I"x>1' „Wh° wl" vlslt ln Wasc° for
T T W N
was good.
Mrs. Lester r Conlee of Moro, and Mrs. Don Smith.
Children born outside Oregon Even —
in the
A magazine tells that family tee last week approved an omni- 3 Ue€K ° r 8°‘
the nor
Hurt h end \\ tiri »■
may obtain a certificate from the the growing of barley has not
income has been increasing which bus farm bill which is virtually
Mr. and Mrs. George Harris of
S .1 e where they were born.
been very successful barley re
sounds fine. But the family ex- certain to be reported to the Sen- Walla Walla visited in Ivrsco
turns were good and the remain
penses often go up faster.
ate this week and debated.
over the weekend. Saturday they
der of the county can usually ex
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The new Senate bill provides: were overnight guests of Mr. and
Scholarship Group
pect a good fiarley crop.
Prophets are saying
the wea- (it A one-year extension of the Mrs. Lawrence Funk.
Sunday,
ther will be dry and a little on special “one-year-only” feed grain they were dinner guests of Mrs*
Named By Prexy
the cool side during August. That program of 1961.
Elva Dehler.
„
,
Republicans Plan
isn t so had if it can reverse the (2) A one-year wheat program
Mrs. Elva Dehler had
as over
Mrs. Nellie Fields, president of
next two months.
which would require wheat grow- night guests Thursday Mr. and
the Sherman County Historical Fund Raising Feed
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ers to cut their 1962 acreage by Mrs. Charles Rourk of Fullerton,
society, has appointed a scholar-
irvi«» tinr»
u
u
When you re lost you are sure 10 percent in return for payments California. Mrs. Dehler got to
Shn. , , , , , , , conS|st,ng „( The.
‘ s‘av9
of something that isn t so, whe- (in cash or kind) equal to 40 per know the retired naval officer
.«lore Johnaton Wallace May th„ ,nemtx,rii o( lhu(U^ '
ther you are in the timber or in cent of the 1959-60 average annu- and his wife on a visit to Hono-
and Eva K irk elie to choose the have an Op p o rtu n itv to h e a r <4en.
to hear Sen-
your own mind.
al yield on the land retired from lulu several years ago.
winner of a scholarship to be atei John opportunity
G. Tower, the Texas
T T W N
production. This program would
given by an anonymous donor R< publican who was recently
Whitaker Chambers exposed permit growers to retire an addi-
Coming a? surprise to the Ru-
to some graduate of the 1961 elected to the senate, the first one
the rats in our closets and scared tional 30 percent of their wheat fus Pp°Plp was the wedding last
high school graduating class of of that party to be so elected.
the daylights out of a flock of acreage in return for payment weekend of Miss Joan Brackett
Sherman High school.
The dinner will lx? at the Marion
parlor pinks,
depression com- equal to 50 percent of the average and Char,PS Griggs. They announ-
Hotel in Salem at 7:30 p. m.
munists and ’ college ‘‘liberals’ annual yield.
ced Sunday at the Rufus church
.NEW Hl’P E itlN IE N D E N T
standard time. Tickets are $25
who lacked faith in our country.
(3) Expanded authority for use that they had ran away to Wash-
Appointment of Sheridan v per couple as It Is a fund rais
Watch ’em take after him now, Of marketing orders checkoffs 4ngton to be married. Joan is the
Panther to succeed Charles Me ing dinner.
Ten of the
17 graduates of good sand o ff.
T T W n
for research, promotion and ad- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fay Moro high school in IMS met to-
Eight of those present are ph- Dowell as district line su|>erin
The depression is officially end- vertising would be authorized as Brackett and 4s a
graduate
«
rlh
rr
»„„day
and
bMl
.
ri(h
t
..r
w i: M . / b H.I.;,' l i , n „ h 7 r™ - .g"'*"1' '“T
’T ” ! *
Women S hnw .r
ed but in reality it goes on about part of any marketing order The of Sherman Higb Charles is the ■ood llm r U lk ln s. Other» o( that
Ted Th..».|M»n. Dori» Morrl- ' "m ipany
',anv ,n The Dal1«
’* « " W O m en S h o w e r
like it was last year
list of commodities eligible for son of Mr’ and Nlrs Joe Gr4ggs same age or near h> it came to non Wayne Thompson, Gene- announced by Art Thrasher,
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orders would be expanded.
of Moro and 4s a 1960 graduate of broaden the field of conversation vieve Nahouse, lx>is Kenny and PPAL district manager. McDow Bride To Be
Daylight saving has made its
(4) Extension of P. L. 480 (the Gherman High School.
ell has been reassigned as Cen About 65 friends and relatives
and the afternoon w as spent A ustin Foss,
perpetrators unhappy.
Agricultural Trade Development
After
hot most of all last pleasantly. The dinner gave it a
tral Oregon district line suj>erln- attended a miscellaneous bridal
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Act) for .i three
ter.dent for Pacific Power.
shower for Miss Penny Hlgley
« me years,
. . .... with an au- wpek 44 4s starting out like it will ------------------------ ——---- -------------------------------------------------
Friday, July 14, In the Moro Pes-
On the grounds of the Blue Sky 4hor,za44on of $1.5 billion per year be hot most of this week. It got
v ar i f
r 1« > i r»
it
t i
hvlerlan church.
hotel is a Quaking Aspen tree f'»r sales of surplus commodities up to 110 degrees last week at one I TOCV 00(1 N e llie F ie ld s rlflC lU v C e le b ra te
Weed Control Includes Mrs Elton Eakln entertained
about a foot through. Where for/ ° i ? ,gn currencies.
p|ace in p ufus
was most un.
with a piano numlier. She played
branches have been discarded by ;v- w S A r tf " r ’ U f y e a r.Na" ,nal Z ' X X m n T r X 1^“ m
Fiftv Years o f Married Life
Seed Prevention
The Man I Ixive”. Another mu
the tree some bugs have ex
.... ..... ..............
isted and woodpeckers have dug
Several changes In the basic degrees according to the ther-
Good weed control practices In sical number set the atmosphere
Open
house
between
the
hours
ti»i
grandmother,
’rr::
Plan-
them out leaving holes. In one 4pg4s*at4°n governing the Farmers momter.
clude prevention of weeds front for a bridal shower as Miss Shir
u . u
. °f 2 and 5 p. m. was held at the che Dingle stepdaughter of Richie forming reminds Martin J. Zim ley Watkins, accompanied on the
such place the woodpeckers have iome Administration,
Rufus
Grange
Hall
on
July
16
for
Dingle,
wore
as
flower
girl
fifty
merman, Sherman County Weed piano by Miss Judy Watkins
—„ a hole large enough for a
“
"
dug
in earnest last week and most of the 50th wedding anniversary of years ago.
nest and inside it was a family of To Picnic Sunday
the north end farmers were cut- Mr. and Mrs T. L. Fields of Ru- R. t . Dingle, brother of Mrs. agent. These jjests will spread Hang “True Ix>ve.”
Assisting
from
dissatisfied offspring that kept up
The Oregon ,,
ting wheat or barley or they are
for ,hc open hoUse ,.-,V|'.I h . who’ims Iwen an'invalid rapidly ,r°
'n , field to field
f“ " If al- »l„?
Z 2 the guest of honor as
a constant complaining day and n„sslon repor,„ that dlstrlh,Jt|on in the fields with combines this were Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Field, for 12 years was brought up from
.K 0* “t i L T I J „ i '
Mona P»v!„ ’ „ _ u w - were Miss
•Mona Eakln and Miss Sharon
night unless the parent oirds of revenue from liquor sales and ' ' Pek
F rom tbe reports the of Wasco anj Mr. and Mrs. Basil The Dalles for the occasion. Mrs
wildllfe’ llvP8tock a*4d ma Belshe.
i ' , r ‘: / . ngof5d. . i " . . ’iUJ “ n.gJ th.e,o Pr'VlIege tax collections for the ,a_' ™ r s . arcn ,l Wttlng the yield „ aln8 of Portland.
Ceorge Smith, sister of Mrs chinery nil carry seed large ‘ dis
The tea table was beautifully
tant es before dropping them
mouths with whatever food could tnree-month period ending June as tbey bave ln some other years
The hall was lavishly decorated Fields, was unable to come from
decorated w ith an arrangem ent
They don’t know
go|de„ g,adlo||, the glft ,a. „ „ hJ mt.
ranada ,„r , he
again on to .he soil
he found. Photographers stood 30 amounted to $3,075,069
' for “ their
------ wheat.
- ............................
Just what
was lno
the lrou’
trou- Me» and punch h ,.,hl,.
„ cover- »ion
Modem f.om ihcmlcals u n be
“ roM s «»d I'lnk candles
patiently about the tree awaiting
According to George Van Per- f,-.- sure Jual
w,lal was
table w.
were
used to prevent seeding cf many g°unng were Mrs. Henry Jaeger
the return of the parents who gen. administrator, a total of $17,- o<' a"d .f an,t, ?T‘ ,an asl|mat*
«1 with golden colored table-
Guests coming from
common weeds such as Morning ;,nd ' 4rs Harold Eakln. Hostesses
diu not hesitate to make trips as 924,412, nht.-iiniw, fmm 11«,,«. 44’ aR the field is cut. From all
long as the men stood still.
Startles Farmers;
Voice He Wants
Cause: Unknown
T T W N
It looks like the path of the
i n h a w m r " ’^ b blM ''asb*thered " " ‘ at l , ? 1A ’®4^
gooders meet more resistance.
Wh“e, ,hr ‘n“ r'
an<' ‘ '!OO,'
Pirated cities and county treasur-
The farmers aren’t the only
les « ^ ‘ved $3.217,113. $13,072 Ones to tighten their belts, the
Who would have thought that was par™arked for the state cen- working men have been laid off
since the strike Just before July
a nation started in opposition to sus fund.
1 and they are feeling the pinch
a minor increase in the tax on
of the times too. There’s not
tea would ever stand for taxes Distributes Funds
much worx going on at Rufus
such as w'e have?
Plans are rapidly shaping up
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right
now excepting apricot pick-
for the annual picnic Sunday,
Killing the goose that laid the July 23, for members and families lng at the local fruit orchards,
golden egg is nothing to the bu of The Dalles Elks lodge No. 303. and that will he finished this
reaucrats who try to kill the in according to Ev McReynolds and week
dustry that pays their salaries John Becharas, co-chairmen for
Mr. and Mrs Earl Weatherford
and provides the cumshaw for the event. The picnic will again
the improvident« who elect them. be held at the Dufur city park and children of Olex joined Mr.
rnd Mrs. George Fox and all went
i r w n
and will be an all-day affair the to Vancouver, Wash., to a family
We certainly hope our grain chairmen said
reunion of Mrs. Fox’ relatives
surpluses last until the govern
Families should supply ‘heir at the home of a sister Mrs. Al
ment gets out of the farming own picnic lunches and table ser
Relatives come from
business Any set of dummies can vice and the lodge will furnish ice Jenkins.
Seattle, Tacoma, Corvallis, Ore-
store a surplus; we would starve cream,
soft urtnxs.
drinks, coffee and rnn c i t v m a k in g n r t v in «n
cream. son
If government handled poor
emoy .- ¿ a ,- o, ^ tlng and plc.
crops.
mlng, w l» ° X * o il old. and. 'wl,7 n* 'n« Th’
«'a» *daa'
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ming will take place In the city there for the outdoor party. Plc-
If the machinery operators that
arc striking really want to work
J
they act funny about It. We sus
Section chairmen for the event movie machine when the reunion
pect that union is doing nobody will include Pete Miles, Joe Ten- was held here,
any good, the public, other work ney. John Lindsay Bert Holland,
Dwight Hull of Seattle, Wash ,
ers, contractors or even the men Gay Dinger, Jim Sandos, TeJ war. a houseguest of Mr. and Mrs
themselves.
Walker and Clair Creighton
T. L Fields over the weekend
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' 60
-Th«, T " r , V
S7 ? r“ w "
Wlllla"' slab Knapweed'sho'u"d"i«''spr'v.
4^p Wasco Womens Study Club of Goldendale, Wash , Mr. and
aprved at the punch table. Mrs Mrs. Verle Fields and sons, Mark,
C. W. Fields, Mrs. R. T. Dingle, I aui and Kerrick, Mr. and Mrs.
Zetta < arter, Mrs. Stuart John- Stuart Johnson of Salem, Mrs.
sor’ Mrs Arvilla Beeks served Zetta Carter of Vancouver, Wn.,
coffee and tea. The ladies of the Besse Pound ami grandson, Nick
Tillicum Bridge Club received Pound of Pittsburgh, Pa., Emma
4be g4flfl and tbe lad4es of tbe Schearer, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weg-
Wasco Church of Christ opened ntr, Mr. and Mrs. Richie Dingle,
4hfc gifts for d4«P4ay-
M,‘ and Uw
The serving table was laid Mr. and .Mrs.
Albert Kaseberg,
with a linen cutwork cloth, cen- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spencer, Mr.
tered by the wedding cake, baked and Mrs. Bernie Rice, Mr. and
ano decorated by Mrs. Harold Mr and Mrs. Gene Courtney,
Brown, grand daughter, flanked Mrs. Pat Courtney, all of The Dal-
by gold candles and mixed flower les, Mr. and Mrs. George Harris
bovquets
of Walla Walla, W ash, David
Mrs. Emma Schearer, aunt of Fields and Tom llenche, of Ken-
Mr Fields, made the wedding ncwlck, W n, iXvight Hull of Seat-
gewn and dressed the bride fifty tie, Wash , grand daughter, Cln
■ _> u
—
..
. . . -----’
lih T .“ ’W 'r X n T n £ «
« r y The W m c o Woman', Stu.lv Black'of Lo. Angel«. Celif. and
(
The
were
irw leaves of the corsage ww
made from the silk illusion of
het bridal veil.
Little Cindy Inman, grand dau
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold An
drews wore the same little dress,
gratulate me
the nanny
happy couple.
graiuiate
counic
Preceding the anniversary par
ty of Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Fields
a potluck diner was served in the
basement of their home to 42
members of the family
.
2i)
f , , , , wPh a
’
wetting agent.
These weeds may also be tilled
lo
from needing
__________
««
1 s. D
M a r k e t K ep O tt
* 160 head.
Livestock totaled
U S No. 1 and 2, 180 230 II»
butcher hog8 b™ ght $l»10 to
j , 9 rx) Goot, fpe<|er bogs 70 to 100
lbs. brought $20.00 to $22.80 a
cwt. and good weaners $8 50 to
$13.00.
Standard fed steers $20 50 to
$21.60 Good 550 to 700 Ih. feeder
steers $20 00 to $22 00 Medium
steers $18 00 to $20.00 and dairy
types $1500 to $18.00. Heavy 950
to 1100 lb. uraa»
grass s steers
to
lo
ie e r s » $18.70
is ./u w
^ *°°"
Weight Changes
Car Lights
Drivers pulling a boat or trail
er or with hack seat and trunk
1< aded wltn camping or vacation
equipment were urged today by
the Department of Motor Vehi-
i les to have their car headlights
adjusted to avoid blinding oncom-
leg drivers.
The department said it had re-
celved several complaints this
summer from motorists who nave
l»ein blinded by headlights of on-
coming vehicles loaded-down with
vacation equipment,
The department explained that
a headlight adjustment is requlr-
ed io
to comitensaie
compensate tor
for the addition
addition-
»si
'" « » ± 2 . -
' “2
Otherwise, even headlights on
.
In good demand at $12 00 to $14.«
50 with utility to $15 50.
Baby calves ranged from $12 00
on light dairy breeds to $27 50 on
Holstèlns.
flll(| (uinaeif
uted by State Police for driving
a vehicle with improperly adjust-
ed headlights If he fails to get the
lights adjusted, the department
concluded.