Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 6, 1962)
PAGES BUKHMAN COUNTY JOURNAL, MORO, OR EOO N, FRIDA Y, K I.Y b, IMS JO 5-3298. (C nun tu 3) u u ru a i (■ lir a I.. I I I T R A « .L O U S i ’ti ititniirti Ever}' F r id a y a t M o ro , O u-goit icund «la.» m atter at tlia (Irt-aun, under A rt M a rrh 3. 1S7». R n l.ir d l*u.to(l<< of Cui tfi M o to , N A T IO N A L E D IT O R IA L N EW S FA P i t P U B L ISH !«! ASSOCIATION O l L K IA I. < O l N IA S I l i s t l l l l ’ T IO N PAPER R A IL S UNE YEAR «3 09 It I A llil.li U A i ti, I »92 llM » D IV IS IO N Por and las* w eek lo r liioin lu in . coni /zr O u r Time K ill lo r I U lu li n o ie Highway ali ci lu r ’y tin invìi . that wi it is ti tue city we supi ibi stiate equally il iiig iiw : 5 funds »unties. I ii en the- »ay th en is seri- Die valu . of tiie >n we wonder how long the onomy can tolerate the prices iid. A?» it is, few individuals anti ivate firms can afford to build uch of anything. L unds for con- action are in >st often raised by kcs unless private companies ve some very rjoo.1 way of be- 1» assured of income. Utilities e sample, firm s w th gov- ontracts another, .tizens who vote against bud- big expenditures are cas ligated es I tumps on the road of progrès ( when most often they are me ely expressing dislike for involved. the prie What make« the prices so high? High wages are the main cause, it iiigii wages are not the w orst it. W orking rules that make »SKible the colliîc’ion of wages ab out perfori nance of much oik, .io more <lamage. Unless tills et»untry can bring »out a reforma »ion of its econo- my so we can go ahead with re building tiie factories so they can compete with foreign nation« we are on the downhill path. The argument is often made ny tiie self-styled intellectuals that we must spend more money on public works and less on ourselves. That i an teonom ic phantasy. We al ready spend too much on govern ment projects. No one else can afford to pen 1. 'file price is too nigh. If voters would stop all pub lc pro jects until the price came down they would be doing the nation a great service. W orking .sn't go ing to h urt anyone. COSTLY EH A M O H O S A H O C O M M O H S U G A R ARE BOTH FRO M S A M E CARBON SOURCE B a r OHLY SUG AR / 9 FREO O US TO L /F E ' " CARBON fS PRESENT A S CARBON PtOX/PE ZV THE ATMOSPHERE. (0 .0 3 ? .) f ^Advertising & C /E N T IS T S RECOGN/ZC THA T OHLY A PLANT HAS THE POWER TO CONVERT THE A TO M /C ENERGY O F THE S U H /H T O N O U R fS H M E N T S U /T A B L E F O R U V /H G M A T T E R .,, works for you! @ Y A PR O CESS CALLEO P H O TO SY N TH E S/S, WH/CH M EA N S "BUfLOfNG W /TH L /G N T " THE E N E R G Y O F S U N L /G H T /N THE PRESENCE O F CHLOROPHYLL. ( T H E G REEN SUB STA NCE / N L E A V E S ) C O M B /N E S CARBO N O /O Y /P E F R O M THE A / R W/TH M O /S T U R E F R O M THE SO/L TO F O R M S U G A R A N O O YTG EN... A U O TH ER F O R M S O F F O O O C O M E O/RECTL Y O R /NO /RECTLY F R O M SUG A R S. A COMMON M /S TA R E H A S BEEN TO B A H S U G A R F R O M REOUC- /N G O /E T S ...Y E T , A TEASPO O N FULL O F SUGAR ( / 8 CALO R/ES) SATTSF/ES THE APPET/TE F A S T E R .,, S U G A R ZS E N E R G Y F O O O . which may or may not lx? indica- tive of quality. Few buyers have enough knowledge of foods, cloth- es, machinery or anything else to prevent their tieing fooled. If m anufactuiers could set prices they could guarantee a cer tain standard of excellence, they «ay. T iny can no.v but it is hard It looks as if this adim nistra er. We are so dedicated to bargain lion is making an effort to have hunting it doesn’t seem likely the next Snake river dam buil. that the hill will get much by tiie federal government whlc.i port would freeze out local private companies and the W ashington electric co-ops, both of which Cattle Feeding Test have applications for a permit. \\ e hope tiie Federal Power late high- ou n ties or ife rc n l ar- re are good rea AtUitnc lm h coun- its no rm al a lia t now I iceli raised I . E T I ' L O I ’ I . L 1)0 I T Dui percent. ow ns Were oad tax lor non of n ids that led inn i »alities d l¡ v and took jin tiie . ountj t ru ra l c id e ili iwn it tin road en ii. e i uie applies t P u rt i in a Minali uun ly is Minali neve! oi , nr )Ml oi its tlioto- is. Aluliiiomah com m ission re fu •; ?s to let th e gov e m in e n t build tiie dam . tf~ ( f a f a r . Going On Now We fail to in* impressed with Another step Uward tiie day i lie argum ent that federal power when Oregon cattlemen may lie is tiie cheajiest. The cost of federal largely self-sufficient in produc loan la: ind n e ith e r iias nn.- (ruction is 11 w ays m ore and ing fast-gaining, high-quality fin e s le ín regoli cu .in th ’.s tiie o p eratio n if also m ore ex p e r ished lx*ef with local feedstuffs sive. it may see n cheaper because is reported in recent feeding tr i .‘d by U J lunds. als in eastern Oregon. oi H and arrogane'' has it pays no taxet A ctually tiie . overnm ent woulu A test lot of cattle a OSL s Mal iiiulated y addillo al re get moi e out of it if private com heur branch experim ent station .olile e pai ñid som p a t t l of its panles built tiie dam. in the first near Ontario made extrem ely high t: lie out to gel tile tilli place it would gi t 52 percent of all gains- averaging 3.18 pounds ol load funds. A ppai- profit« made fi mi the dam and daily—over a 151-day period on doe.ni t care w h eth e r tiie it operation in corporation taxeg high concentrate rations com pri tiling to it a re im proved next it would get nuch better and sed mainly of locally-grown feeds. lay we w o n tiie dty th a t T rials were directed by E. N. lien il doe.sn l care a lu n i cun- i licaper m anagement by private industry and then tiie governm ent Hoffman, branch station superin .on oi mch roads r a ta l (»re would also collect taxes on die tendent, witli Or. J. E. Oldfield, di not care eith er, and will dividends th a t were eventually OSU animal nuiri*ioni«t, assisting ‘W l l C 'I t paid to stockholders of the private on ration formulations. na.- ■lvv a» s surfeit'd companies. The gains— comparable to the in ii.opoly, II any other .igencv could get best midwest Cornbelt perform- city in the cii as (>o pe 'cent of die p r o ances were obtained with ra was Mome- tits of a business w ithout Invest tions made up of 15 pereen* steam n s lai k of politl- ting a dime it wo uldn’t I k * caught tolled barley 22.5 percent ground Now. iia*. it lias puttin g a lot of money into it. ear »corn, 22.5 percent dried mo to destroy I ’nlesf i, of coursi \ it wished to lasses beet pulp, and 10 percent at it wants build up a sort « »f governm enta’ protein supplem ent. a I hi t it empir» ‘ for politic al reasons, Protein supplem ent, tiie only and governmvt it needs to con- ingredient not produced in quan w hat money and tax !m » u r tity in Oregon, may also l«ecom:e hasJ not expend then It Is on Oregon product in the future. l.v in debt, Ii i, many pie 'dges The Malheur station last vear re- pporl v arios proje. ts and >ldi \ o \ s | \ s | nation groups and lll.IV lc: ? its goal up ieit financing, »f t io W A S H IN G T O N A N D agency so i re. I to invest mil- n r ba A l I r lian die federal port 1 excellent experim ental re .suit: in grow ing soybeans, a ma- jor juree of the supplement. 'Phis > ear, some 450 acres of soy- lieans are being grown under con tract in the Oregon-Idaho Snake River valley an 1 acreage is ex pected to increase in tiie N orth west. Interest has grown rapidly in the past decade for putting more Oregon feeder cattle into local fee.llots for finishing to market grade« for the expanding West Coast populations. Traditionally, most Oregon feed er cattle have been shipjied to California and eastw ard for fir ishing in the midwest which dom inates the feedlot picture. Recent high costs of local feedstuffs in Oregon in relation to feed grains in the mid-west presently po«e an obstacle to local feeding. Long-range prospects? Many local agricultural leaders say it’s only a m atter of time until neces sary forces combine to put Oregon into large-scale feeding business abundance of feeder cattle, ability to produce needed feeiMuffs, and growing, regional consumer m ar kets for meat. LET US DO f\ ÀpM Xt M<»ro YOUR PRINTING Journal LO DG E NO . 113 l.o .o p . Meets 1st and 3rd Tue» Cg 3 daya in I.O.O.F. hall. T ra n i'tent and visiting brother» » f (Oiaiaily Invited. Floyd Haines, N. G. Leo W atkins, Secretary ROAD BUILDING Estimates at no charge Phone; CYpress 6 6649 Route 3 The Dalles, Oregon SMALL BU SIN ESS” B y C. W J L S O N *.\ G t I S HARDER M O N LA ? Ne k a man lias 13.599*8)9 for »n»' i*it'iiiate.l it l e a nm unist m '. i tinn of as.' »elating group. He hired a good ud won i tie ea.'-e ' sure tiiat we ate ae- with many persons who a communist foi mucn $3.590 o9 and we know CW whose feelings could in that amount They l have that manv feel- do w • know w hether • $3.500..MX) is col’ietahle many people who go tiling others communi«ts t much In th e ir wallets >ank' Tiie law yer will i t 't hav'ng .Ion»* nearly >i k any wax e r else mav I h < tin» |<.s- ic storv, it cettain.y • t the once valuaole dol- tone down hill to beat in those I mted Stales, time when a president l»u«iness men -o~ some S(»lls, it Jj, w orth $3.5(H)- mate th it a very private l»e a communist, to io some new ar- ‘ I \ LD l’KI< KN In analyzing the figures th a t w ill be publicized to support the a ttem p t to slash U.S. pro te ctive ta riffs to tic in w ith the so- called European Com m on M a r ket. it is perhaps im p o rta n t to bear in m in d the story about the governm ent sta tisticia n who drow ned w hile wading across a r iv e r w ith an a v e ra g e depth of two feet. • • * S tripped of all non-essen tia l verbiage, the plans pro p o s e d have ily areas of operation for small business should be permitted to exist. • • • T he rep ort Indicates that probably some A m erican in dustries should, by govern m ent edict, be pronounced as inefilclent and thus be p er m itted to be destroyed by cheap foreign Imports. • a • U nder th is plan, it Is pro posed, th a t the businesses op era tin g in these condemned Industries be urged to produce som ething else, w ith the gov ernm ent g iv in g them loans to re-tool o r otherwise re va m p th e ir operations. but one final • a • r e s u l t . That c. W. Harder In addition, the governm ent is the establishm ent In the w III put up the money to re tra in I nlted States of a b ureau cratic , the w orkers In these firm s In ecoaomle dictatorship. new skills. • oo a a a Perhaps the best evidence of this result is found in the pub lica tio n ’ ’Im p o rt C om petition and S m all Business” w ritte n I ' ll"A .»:d S l ’ hjuet. m :.i. : specialist in in te rn a tio n a l econ- cm ics of L ib r a ry of Congress. • a o D raw in g most of his data from 1954 as his latest date which was before the full a(Te« t of m odern production m a c h in ery given to European nations by the V . s. give aw ay pro gram «, and before the rounds of wages increases in I*. 8. since then, and before the In crease In the m in im u m wage (hat was m ade law , he finds lhat m any Am erican industries cannot compete w Ith wage scales of Europe in a free m a rk e t. This, then, could be the fina l step to establish a dicta to rsh ip in A m erica. E ventually, it would also lead to governm ent te llin g farm ers what they could plan t; could not plant, a a a A fter a ll. bureaucracy now tells business how it shall keep books, how mu. h it shall col lect in taxes for governm ent, the lowest wages business can pay. In addition, an agreem ent on wages and hours reached In Pittsburg must be adhered to by a sm all plant In Idaho L alls. In short, bureaucracy ha* alre a d y made great strides In dictating how business shall be done in this nation. 8< the He points out. due to E u ro ultii • • • ke mous vendit« dation m nti.. rising that ?n fo r the pean subsidiaries, other m eas ures, Big Business can protect I And that Is to dictate w hat itself. It is the sm all business i kinds of a< llv lty a baslnesa of A m erica that w ill suffer. But may or n u . not engage In so he also raises the question ‘ that this nation of H arvar** *" whether o r not those A m erican I H arv a rd and for H a rv a rd shall Indus tries which are p n m a r- not perish from the earth. 34-6c ed down the national ord*r When governm ent agencies are allowed WANTED: To lease w heat ranch. Rejection of Turkey Have equipm ent; will furnish tc use tax money in such a way references; 15 years experience. that it penalizes people for re Clair K em errer, Condon. 3t-lfn Deal Hailed fusing to buy centralized govern m ent it is time for the people to WANTED. H arvest job or all Wiley Clowers, president of the take a long hard look ot other sum m er. Call Patty or Lori Al- Oregon Farm Bureau Federation, programs, he said. sup, JO * 3536. 34-5c said today in b dem, »he over whelming rejection of the Turkey uEGAL HOTxuBb N ational M arketing Order coming on the iieeis of the defeated Coch N O T IC E o f F I N A L A C C D tN T rane Freem an Farm Bill by Con- NOTICE is hereby given that gess, would indicate to Secretary the undersigned has filed in the h reeman the supply-m anagem ent County Ci u rt of the State of Ore program s are not acceptable to gon for Sherm an County, his F in lawmakers, farm ers or consum al Account as E xecutor ot the ers. E state of Vleda D. Van Gaasbeck, Clowers said the rebuff by tu r deceased, and th a t Monday, the key producers who last week 16th day of July, 1962, at ten voted down N ational m u k e tin g o’clock A. M. of said day in tire program predicated on govern court room of the County Court m ents agents setting production in Moro, Sherm an County, Ore quotas on producers is heartening gon, have been fixed by th e Court to all who believe private industry as the tim e and place for hearing can plan its own business better objections to said F inal Account than governm ent hureauciats. He and for the settlem ent of said es said the farm ers of this nation tate. will never yield to governm ent C lark Van Gaasbeck W ANT A D S as long as they nave the oppor Executor tunity to work out their own TOR SALE: House in Moro. Call T. L ester Johnson J u U-327,. 3bcllll A ttorney for E xecutci means of solving problem (. The Farm Bureau president al TDK SALE; Alfalfa hay witli June 15, 22, 29, & July o, .Ht some glass, reasonable, lla ila n d so reminded farm ers that this is a McDonald, Rufus. 34-7c notice of final hearing good time to press for congres sional approval of the Fai m Bu- CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING I n e NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN leau program of voluntary land uays a week. Custom curing. that E thel Andrea Strong, Execu retirem ent to aid farm ers in re Meal culling, w rapping, siiaip trix of the E state of E. Trum an turning to the m aket system freeze. Kenny s M arket. G rasi Strong, Deceased, has filed in tiie which lias built ».his countiy and \ alley. Cali ED 3-2315 for ap County Court of the Slate of provided reasonably priced food pointm ent. 23t. Oregon for Sherm an County, her for millions of people. “The only Final Account, and the Court has thing wrong with our traditional LIVESTOCK Moil - Do it you. set the 21st day of A ugust, 1962, sell • Ancnoi B rand” zrnlill m arket system is that thpre are at 10:00 o’clock *». m.. in the of xxvuiui n o d u c ts , penicillin, and fice of the County Judge of Sher dedicated people who do not W’ant instrum ents are available at man County, Oregon, in th e Coun to give It a chance to w ork,” said your Co-op OR and Supply at ty Court House at Moro, Oregon, flow ers. The Dalles. 20c tin as the tim e and place for th e Clowers also rebuked the De partm ent of A griculture for its bu BED OREGON slate approved settlem ent of sai 1 accounting and announced intent to decrease the nursing Home located in beau for hearing objections to th ? same, buying of turkeys as a form of re tilui Hood River Valley, witi if any. buke to turkey growlers who vot- lovely fenced grounds. V»e ai ET H E L ANDREA STRONG cept ail types ol elderly caser Executrix of the E state of B<‘ttilt>h<*ni~4. Iiapn r No? 7« O.E.R ■ s well as room ana board care. E. Trum an Strong, Deceased Meeis every second T hurs day each m onth. Visiting ■ &. E Paint Shop: In terio r an J J. Tracy Barton The Dalles, Oregon exterior D ecoiaung — Spray members invited. Moro, Ore Painting. ED 3-2273 Grass Val A ttorney for the E state Edna Paulson, W. M. ley. T2-tfn. Ju ly 6, 13, 29, an J 27, 1962 Dorothy H eater, Secretary TATE WIDE PA J NT CO. c< a- HAKEANDV1EW GRANGE plete pumin-to uecorat ng Meets first and tnird Saturdays at 8.00 p. m. service, ¿»pray or bi usn. Pnone AJax Belsiie, M aster CY b-»U7< or CY O-02J3, 12U5 E. Agnes Benson, Secretary x2th St. Vern Campbed and ja c k N tii, The D alits, Or. 3bllL L u p in e R e b e k a h L od ge N o . II<! SALES 4eets 2nd and 4th Tin*-» WINK - GOLDENDALE s i the qualifying factors you have tiie livestock. Guar days of each month. Vjsi* anieed top prices T rank Wink in funeral service. 1 ing m em bers welcom*? i aid, Goldendale, Wash has Cecil Hockman, N. G. a; auction every F rk ”,y a t one Clara Houston, Secretary o’clock. We have the m arket Taylor I,ODGE A. F. & A. M WANTED: 20 ton« good quality Wasco, Meets the first w heat hay, delivered to Sher Tuesday of each month. c/QV man County F air Grounds. Call Visiting brethern welcome. Frank D. Reid, W. M. Vernon Root, Secretary Eureka l.odge N j. 121 A.F.N L. ' Meets on the 1st and 3ra a E A R T H M O V IN G 1 hursday evenings eacn n n t it h . Visiting members 'x p '' cor. ially invited to meet wRh u# JIM ELLETT Bill Hall, W. M. LAND LEVELING LAND CLEARING Irving H art, Secretary W e .•i|>|ti»>c in lc th e inquiries frnm our manv out of town customers. We wish we could call each of you personally . . . . next best . . . . we send you a message via your local newspaper. Doors Open 10 A .M . FRIDAY Morning, July 6th SALE IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Dresses -Suits -Coats -Knit Dresses -Sportsvzear -H ats Back to school Wool Skirts also Cotton Skirts “ Sweaters Blouses - Lingerie - Accessories and Miscellaneous Items We offer you unbelievable savings on quality merchandise ail from our regular stock of Nationally advertised lines from the leading Manufacturers of America Drastic reductions in all Departments . . . Shop in our air conditioned shop . . . Welcome Friday 10 a. m. July 6 LANCE A P P A R E L Fashion Center of the Mid-Columbia 309 E. Second St. -c- The Dalles, Oregon m» r e t u n i ' n o e\< all sales final no ref.imL