Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (April 5, 1963)
f > ‘ I 1 c I P iC .k I S B E K M 1N 4«>CNl*t JU IK N M ., M hkü, Hltl.GON husbandry to surplus male--' after they have abandoned their role husbands. 4211 m L Weaefe ____ E d ito r a» Hnxl»unds must realize that the PultlLUiril F tr r jr F rid a y «1 fcoeral governm ent is usurping Moro, Oregon th eir function as protestor and Enter«« M M*un« rlaaa matter at the biead w inner for a family ami faatarftca at Mara. Orrgaa, an««r Art that the biologic and social lule • f C*n|r,M •« Marc* J. 1*79. is that when any organism tease-, to have a Use it is eliminated NIW SFAMB Awake, husbands, you are in com petition with a powerful enemy. PUBLISHIBI XÍlOCIATION HOM EMTEA1» E \E M PT IO N ,Ì>i|priaan (County J o u r n a l OFFICIAL COUNTV PA PER NCBH4K1PTION KATOS «N E YEAR ..............- .......... *X00 APICIL 5, IMU KICK COUNTY, KANSAS T he state senate passed a bill last week to give varying exem p tion to ¡»arsons over 66 who have incomes of under $250 |»er month It is a bad bill. It Is bad because it divides citizens into , classes and groups each getting different am ounts of exemption from the property tax which is -o r should be— based on property ow ner ship, not on social condition. We feel certain that the power behind the bill came from irres ponsible sons and daughters who want to inherit the family home stead w ithout the penalty of pay ing taxes thereon. Some of it may have come from advocates cf unlim ited tax spending who wished to elim inate one group of com plainers against taxes. • We would like to amen 1 that hill to stipulate that property ow ners who had income under | 000 pel' \cai o u WHO HAD NO CHILDREN WITH INCOME O\ EH $3000, might qualify. And wc would like to change the gen- e»al theory about taxes so that property taxes could never get fo high that a couple, aged or otherw ise, who had an income of $3000 per year could not pay them. » lu I* u . \r » :n I’M. 1 Grass Vaifty by A una Italzer na Lai idia, Th iri- cm» tier the IOOE hall net in ine Tue-iday evening for their regu lar meeti.ig Peggy Higgs presid ed and 17 were present. Mrs Kt ndrick Dunlap, advisor, Mrs irold Eakin, assistant advisor Harold and R« Ijekahs Mi b Earl Olds and Mrs Hnl Rolfe and Mrs Selma W atkins of Wasco, president of the Heb k ih assembly were pre sent. The girls had drill prac tice and made plans for the candy sale held it th«- C&C store Satur- day which was successful Ite- fresi mnets w ere served at the «’lost of the meeting. Mr and .1rs Robert Tatum and Hilly of Kent went to Albany Saturday to visit her m other Mrs J.E.N orton at the hospital who was injured in an automo- bile accident last week. They also took their daughter, Bonnie and Peggy McKay to Monmouth. Mrs Frank K etter was hostess at a party at her home Monday evening with three tables of bri dge in play. Mrs John Rust held high score ami Mrs Hill Pausch low for t'ne evening. O thers pre sent were Mrs Dick Rust, Mrs Glenn Perry, Mrs Harold Eakin, Mrs Earl Olds, Mrs Arzell Lem ley, Mrs Kendrick Dunlap, Mrs Jack Adams. Mrs Don Smith and Mrs Hay Rayon of Moro. He- freshmen» • were served later. Mr and Mrs William B rinkert and Gary mil Mrs Hill Hrinkert were busi ne visitors in Vancou- ver, Wash., Saturday Among the members of the George iJell jxist, American Ix»g ion who attended the joint meet ing of the jx»sts of the county in Moro Wednesday at the Legion hall were Prank vonBorstel, Hill fohnson, Harold Owens, George Helms, I5HI Bardenhagen, George Geiser and Ralph Busse. Da tere. lay w here si tl (or medica I Mis ll.O D ugger, Mr ad M Bert Cox and Mrs John ust went to Sandy la it Tuesday here the r attended ¡{rave side • Garfield D ugger who ?rv‘ I away at Washougal, Wash, Mi and Mrs Harold Eakin and Mon went to Portland Friday night and on Saturday they went to McMinnville for a visitation at Linfield < «’liege, returning home that nig Mrs O m Stark and Kathy were business v isitors in The Dalles Sunday. Mr ami Mrs H erm an Peter* went to .Madras Saturday to visit their son and wife Mr and Mrs Arden Pet?rs, returning home IT'S YOUR LAW Reiprcl for Law Malut Dtmocracy LI*« In preparing your tax. »eturn the first item you m ust determ ine is your gross income. Unless you are engaged in a business or have income from property this fig- u re will norm ally l»e made of ca h rece ived from your employ- er. However, some cash receipts are excluded and you may h a \e income even though you receive no cash. Normally the fair m arket value of things you receive as com pensation m ust be Included in income. If your employer pro vides you w ith a house in which to live its rental value is income to you. So too if he pays for jo u r me als. The only exception to this rule about meals and lodging is that if they a te furnished to you on your em ployers premises for his convenience they are not in come. For example, if it is es sential to your employer th at you bf on his property 24 hours a day and he furnished you a house on the property its rental value Is not income to you. If, on the o th er hand, he pays your rent as an inducem ent to get you to move to a new location, the rent he pays is income to you. Although usually the fair m ar ket value is the am ount to be in cluded in income as the result of the receipt of property from your employer, If you have ag reed to work for a specified am ount and he pays you w ith pro perty rath er than cash, the am ount you have agreed upon will norm ally be the am ount to in- cjude in income, Some cash paym ents by an em ployer are not included in in come. Prem ium s paid by the em ployer for group insurance, and group health insurance, etc., are not income. Paym ents made by the em ployer for moving expen ds when he requires an emplo yee to move to a new location arc not income to the employee, accept the pain of living through are in the nature of a bonus. And probably most im portant, most paym ents made to an employee while he is unable to work be cause of sickness or injury are not required to be included in income. The United States News & World Report tells about a small county, "21 square miles com par ed to Sherm an’s 824, anti some 14,000 people compared to S her m an’s 2888, that is lieing re-dev- eloped by aid of the Area Redev elopment Adm inistration. Some citizens opposed, prob ably the in tjority; some favored, it appears that officials usually it vored, thinking perhaps, that th eir duty was to get all they could of the m aterial things. The sp iritu al problem was apparently left to the preachers and the editors. The editor of the largest papet thought people really had to help them selves but if they could get TAX REVOLT Magazines arc running articles some tiling fo r nothing that was desirable also. He w asn't philo aliout the growing dissatisfa tion sopher enough to know that it over the grow th of luxes of all is Impossible to get som ething for kinds and especially, of eopise, é nothing. The o th er editor m en the one th.it Is immediately Hue tioned burked and snorted, but Hight now it is the income tax w ithout taking very direct aim. and even the peojile who have Mr and Mrs Bill Pausch were by R obert H. Eisner The theory that makes AHA paid som ething on th e lr’s week possible has been expressed by by week are unhappy alxmt the dinner guests Sunday at the h o n e of Mr and Mrs Arzell Lemley. N early 1,500 bills have been at least for the next two years. res|>onstble citizens over in W as grow ing complexity of it all. Mrs F rin k vonBorstel and Mrs introduced during the first 12 Most opponents of the bill felt In Dreg >’i farm leaders and o r co county, i When we say “res|»on- sible’’ we mean by reputation, ganizations are talking more than A. vonBorstel w’ent to Moro Mon weeks of the current legislative th at it is an infringem ent on per ro t by action in relation of AHA» ever about the property tax and day and snent the day with Mrs session. Yet, only a small per sonal freedom and free compe honoring her datigh- centage have come up for votes tition to determ ine — through It is that the federal governm ent how it in s grown and the Ore Frank legislation when people can or is going to put out billions of 1 gon sen ite lias pased a bill to ter. Mel Is <»n her 1th birthday, in eith er the house or senate. Hill Ho! returned home Thur- W ith so little floor action to cannot buy or sell retail m erchan dollars to many areas for a num j.winukc that tax easier on the old- stlay from »rtland where In* had date, it indicates a hectic w ind dise. l»er of ¡»rojects of variable ust stets. Still to lx* considered is a bill, It isn’t so much the money as spent ten .ys in a hospital for up, as com m ittees begin to heap fullness; the ocst will lx* on tin hills on tn eir respective houses HB 1612, which would regulate tax bill; If a com m unity does not it is tiie power governm ent takes treatm ent. and control trading stam ps com Mr and Mrs Howard Garland for final debate ami voting. get its share it is losing tax mo (Her the people when it has mi- liinited money to spend So much and Cathy of Lexington spent the ney. The seemingly slow progress panics in Oregon. Introduced by No pl.t •«• Is there mention of government sjiending is touched w eek end here with his parents, thus far can be attributed largely a single legislator, this bill actual Mr and \| •s Len Garland. ,e. the abundance of bills up for ly would elim inate most, or all, morals; no place is there con with some sort of immorality. Mr and Mrs Frank vonBorste« e< nsiderut' >n anti the necessity m erchants who offer trading We are old enough to rem em cern over right and wrong; n< visitors in The for each t<> he funneled through a stam ps in this state. In addition place is there s|>eculation on tht ber a tax revolt. It hap|x*ned were husine- probable end of a nation that right here in Sherm an county D.illes I ’r|.I.iv mt I called on Mrs committee. Here they are screen t<, telling stam p companies how t!.« y may operate and with whom Wasco and Mr ami ed, amended an I often killed. engages in such massive boon ind it was a dilly. It was hack I. P.Hav •n lit t h e liiH l itto ttlftH o f t h e tte p r o x - Mi . U iH’hvan o n th«* WHV «toggling But this tiiku» time, w hether tl e> must do business, the bill ion when no one had any money home, the bill is of utm ost im portance would also require them to pay Hire county, Kansas is a pros Mr a nil .Mrs Dick E arl and or of questionable need. In this ¡i $5000 annual license fee in perous county, always among tlit to pay tax *s with anyway so they leaders in income among the made a virtue of It by forming family of I'he Dalles were Sun- regard, there seems to l»e an in EACH Otegon county w here theii ru ral counties of that state. It hi« Sherm an County Tax Reduc day vl ¡tors at the home of his creasing num ber of superfluous stam ps are offered. The state board of pharmacy, Is not the top county as Sherman tion League, which insisted on parent Mr and Mrs Jam es Earl. proposals. More and more legis H arr .*■ tark made a business lators feel inclined to introduce in asking for introduction of HB is in Oregon, but plenty pro.s|>er Utting lo u n ty taxes. We keep ous. that list of officers although mos* tri!» to M i tras Wednesday. •political" or "pet peeve“ bills. LOO, seeks i»ower to PROHIBIT The argum ent that many things if theth are uead. Many law m akers no longer l»e- sale of aspirin, headache rem e Mr an Mrs Don Clodfeller li« ve tbtat legislation should be dies and common medicines to We wish all officials could need doing all over the land Is bud less visitors in The Dal undoubtedly true Who makes the know alNiut that tax reduction were generated by the people, who log d: ug stores only. les Momlay. We wonder if the public asked argum ent we do not know, it ?ague which had for its motto. ic;«! ly are the ones to point out Mrs \ , a Dunlap returned home for these bills. r.lg h t lie contractors, wishful " I o Reduce Taxes, »Spend Less Friday a specific need, express dissatis ’er spending about a A nother bill seeks to cure a 11.mkers or im practical dream ers Money". Sounds simple, hut it week at faction w ith an existing condi The theory that citizens and beats all the tax shifting notions daughter veli Willey visiting her tion, or inge action w hen a chan 50 year old law which requires ml ¡ <on in law, Mr and ge is necessary. freight trains in Oregon to have ind iv id u als— should lx* willing ¡ill hollow. Also the story of that Mrs I’ ,i >1 noper, three brakem en, even though to pay for what they get is net group sh mid put some caution Today, there are those who l»e Mrs D.m.ild vonBorstel easily to stability ¡n economics. into tax s|M‘i>d«*rs, for they swung and heve governm ent should auto- most states either have no such d Mr and Mrs Hill maDrally lx* bigger and play a requirem ent or else specify that The AHA program is based on a broad a.xn end cut some tiling* Pau linner guests Sun- greater role in our private lives two brakem en are adequate on n either morals nor economies, they sho d Lit have. Hut, as they day at une of Mbs Claus but Is purely political and moral- said, they didn’t have any money ami divisions. They would have today’s modern railroads. Trains Hard which can cross the nation, un td pay '.axes with anyhow ly contam inating. Mr Hurt Holland ami g o v e r n m * nt solve more of our der present law, must add ano they didn'-i wan, anything on problems, regardless of our abil faun! Dalle were lunch- record i'he four Hills ( I ity or incentive to solve them ther brakem an when entering H UNIIAN IKS, UNITE.’ th e ionie of her oui selves, they feel governm ent Oiegon. Central issue is w hether dale, J a »n, P« iw e Hr an Tile realization that the federal headed it Mr» \ \ I »iinlap i h e tte r qualifie«l to think for this is a m atter for legislation, or g< t em inent, through the Aid to negotiation In most states —and Official i should never p sh tax us than we are for ourselves. Im pendent C hildren program is es up so fast ¡tihl go fm is H o Dugger, Mr in other industries— management that . O.'ien. s|x»nsors of these bigger am abetting som ething that could revolt is t Cox and Mr and and labor negitiate such m atters, l irted. Hut it U >ks a.- M r governme it bills believe they ac- eventually make husbands olwo- if they i', .ci learn. Th st took a drive Sun- ti allx are aiding the public and in suporting the bill <SB 275» the ere ¡II' h te sh mid be sufficient ause for so many utiiiec« I he Dalles back to ssary items our f enterprise system , w itli railroads lxrint out that no pres an organization to protect hus- budgets i iwdays \rlington and Con- that t.txp.iv er ng the new problem s ently employed brakem an will bands, especially in a country are co h d an tly lied awhile at that t 4 * 1 1 1 p Hl tO .rise a result of their lose his job in Oregon if the w here then* are many organiza- Mo ;ans. legislation passes. som ething a)x»ut 1 » gis tions. irold Owens and Although a federal law cover So far as we can reinem \ 'om nilttee last Headers will understand that county w e d right on at •r the e Dalles F riday ing minimum wages applies to tu r limbs down on th the government will pay sizeable ey had suptier tax redu?"k»i league g dal Sunday closing most Oregon w orkers, SB 64 pro- »unis to any female jx»s eased of with its whacking. Mi K thii Dive Hickman > f tl kill ed the issue— posed in the legislature would a child who is without the pro- stuff governm ents do (o even farther. lection of a husliand. Th« num ber very hnnortant. ami . o: children neces »ry to bring in tent ion ny t ixpavers ea much money as a husbaml fur most » f |t. Really, g varies, but husliands are often lias l»t*eii entrusted o\ ern* •nt expensive to m aintain, requiring that no on«’ wanttxl d with «»ne b upkeep ami recreation so that enough t » do n t hem their earning pow er is not all Tax revolts at p re available to m others The federal stuff and |X’op|e ave K«'xernin«nt pays money direct little «I« •rate Ix'fi arti to the mother, . tx’gularlly, m ever one <»r •»<«• ju st t 'Ugh Ilk, I <n-a.i,w |n four Bills. But for shakin« elo-liun u n til th,. child t, fat ol I from budget « and oi J eat old. (ly that time, if off!« lai head-, we »»he In* male she is alreadv m them bush» *-, lieisvif. Salem Scene ' ' W A N T A D i MARI. INDY I E\Y GRANGE Meets first an«i tm rd Mondays at 8:(M) p in. Max Belshe, Master Ellen Frieilline, S«?cretary |;uri*ka Ixxlg«* \o . 121, AT.A AM. Meets the 1st an i 3l I • •fh u rs ¡ay evenni : « .,« i .0 month. Visiting member fordially invite J t.» meet with ui l»un King, W. M. Irving H art, Secretary & Ih llll. II. Ill I f i.ll’ti I \ . 7 s II I > Meets every second Thurs- •*®A-«lay each month. Visiting v members invite I. Moro, Dr Linda Heed. W. M FOR SALE: 11 sec. John l>ee. •..»I,«» I D tx.l . I 0 .0 I rotary hoe with hitch. M uller’s — Meets 1st an«l >», Plies- FOR SALE; In Wasco • C»“O ia>s in 1.0 .0 F. i.-»i. Tran 4 lots 85x50 $1500.; 1 lot 100.x dent an 1 visiting bfotherg 100 $000. W rite Ira Fridley at cordially invited 455 SE 20th, Hillsboro, Oregon Floyd Haines, N G. Ix'o W atkins, Secretary Phone MI 8-4362 23-4c IT STUD TAYIXilt IA)I>GE A.F. & A.M. Sire: Chief Joseph of the Plains. IVASCO, Meets the first C\ Dam: Wasco’s Babe. Fee $35 fuesday of each month. N Board $1 per day. Floyd Rathbun fishing brethern welcome John H ilderbrand, W M. jr. GI 2 5247 23-6 Vernon Root, Set:-, ary For Sale: Beef cows with cal ves. Phone JO 5-3600 or JOS- 3278. 23-5p LEGAL NOTICES WANTED: a job bookkeeping or any kind of work. Also babysit NOTH E OF FINAL HEARING Notice is given that the under siting. Call JO 5-3293. Otfn signed Executrix of the E state DRESSMAKING and m inor alter «f William H rinkert, deceased, ations JO 5-3245 47c-tfn has filed in the County Court of FOR SALE— Registered yearling the State of Oregon for the Co H ereford Bulls. Mill Iron and unty of Sherman, her Final Ac Silver breeding. Contact Frank count, and that Wtidnesday, th e Monahan, Condon, Ore. Phone 24th day of April, 1963, a t th e 384-5536. 22-25C hour of 10:00 o ’clock a.m., in the 80 BED OREGON state approved County Court Room of the Sher nursing nome located in beau man County Court House at tiful Hood River Valley, with Moro, Sherman County, Oregon, lovely fenced grounds. We ac have been fixed as the time and cept all types of elderly cases place for hearing said Final Ac as well as room and board care. count and any objections thereto. Dated anil first published the FOR SALE: In Moro 4 BH house, 2 baths, dining-living room has 22nd day of March, 1963. Elsie E .’ B rinkert hardwood floors; kitchen, base Executrix ment, oil furnace. Call John A. Foss, GI 2-5255, Wasco 17-19 c Phipps, Phipps & Dunn Wanted: Pasture for 35 head P'oneer Bldg., The Dalles, Ore. of cows. Floyd Rathbun, Wasco A ttorneys for Executrix March 22, 29, April 5,12, 1963 23-4 c CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING five days a week. Custom curing. Meat cutting, w rapping, shaip freeze. K enny’s Market. Grass Valley. Cull ED 3-2315 for ap pointm ent. 23f STATE W IDE PAINT CO. com plete painting and decorating service, spray or brush. Phone CY 6-3977 or CY 6-5293, 1205 E 12th St. Vern Campbell and Jack Null. The Dalles, Or.t-1- FOR SALE: in Moro, 4 B.R house and shop. Call GI 2-5216.14 I- & E Paint Shop: Interior and exterior Decorating — Spray Painting. .10 5 3641 Moro 12tfn P r o f i t w ith G O L D E N NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons having claims ag ainst the E state of A rthur H. Christianson, aka A. H. Chris tianson, deceased, are required te present them w i’h vouchers te the undersigned, at Moro, Ore gon, within six m onths from the date of the first publication of this notice. The date of the first publication of this notice is March 29, 1963. Frances K errone Christianson, Executrix Dick & Dick The Dalles. Oregon A iturneys for the E state March 29, April 5, 12, & 19, 1963 \ b f ' H A R V E S T FERTILIZER P R O F IT ! P acific G o ld e n H a tv e s t re tu rn s up to $6 fo r every SI inve ste d! G O L D E N H A R V E S T ! T h e C irc le P Brand fo rm u la te d fo r ?sorth\vest sod c o n d itio n s . T o p q u a lity d e liv e re d to you at low e st cost because you pay the c o o p e ra tiv e p ric e ! F E R T IL IZ E R G R O W H O W ! I ’he m an in th e C irc le P tru c k has it. C a ll h im fo r fe r k h.m n l“'l>, ” » '«PPtng It,.. k " »■ .„„I funtls ,„ Buying An m l K«»x em inent instead of t*>r, of,n.g t“ n , ‘h<’ unrell«N« »up- Insurance Stock? it«, i* I* is growing as H liy w s l| «l-H » .v « * a i> , , • merits Ixxome more widely know n The s«x i4| *V fr«‘«xloin is .« mi II»«* i I uhm * a neu nntiied another attraction • M If .1 »«OHI|».,il» ulti l»r peofit.ilile? ‘«•a a little uriou.sity VI.1111 long esl.ililislied i »he can acquire a fa dly with pruvrn insili .me« eom eiiis aie « wide variation in j ze, build IM.Villg ll|» I A* e.isti il lv M ui« I rac- ial Ixe kgnmnd hi* varletv adds end*, «ml Meveral aix* i illlng' »pl<*e to life at a iliMonnt of tene tMHik Th«*xe facts, «lutti n «»elli. i’.v th«> itxtirds of till •Hy att« tisi ,, Health, Ed Current list« fie ucati«>n and S hould Iw Sunday aPernoon. Archie Contrail and daughter, Mrs Jim Rodda and children of The Dalles went to Moses Lake Saturday, .Mrs Cantrall and Mrs Kendrick Dunlap went up Sun day to visit their son, Airman 2-c and .Mrs Cantrall and the new grand daughter, returning home Sunday. l>anny Rodda stayed with his i.rand parents, Mr and Mrs Bill Rodda at Soap I^ake. Mrs Olan Stark an Carol Ow ens were business visitors in The Dalles Wednesday. tiliz e r service and savings. D rie s o r liq u id s —c o m p le te m ix tu re s o r sim ples. sure stgtt fo r fertilizer M em ber PA C IFIC C O O P E R A T IV E S '»em ■nouid tie iva.xon enough for m o n r a n iu tb n of hushstid« Path «•r.x wiij continue to necessary, o f course, but then* is .. n<> reason to Hunk that sums publn n ln«i«*d «iogooders will no( attem pt to aPply th? principles of livestock Write, or phone collect J W DODD Tygh Valiev, Ore Phone 611 MgT W J. Collins .t Co. IIS IIS S »/«Ani; f t |i$ t $ $ t t $ $ $ |i • > • TM Umm.SWts N a h o n s i B m B tl $1$$$$$$$$ S S U tlS S M S S S S I NrtUM Member Federai Depost itnoraoce Corporation $ $ $ Grass Valley Grain Growers Grass Valley. Oregon