THIRTY TEA IIS AGO May JO. 1933 Intu rifw ijunili ts In I tin I.frin r W. H. IUri(l rrfl'l'-iitf i Hie nrnrr of Oim n rn W-l friilcr tnt u uhl h lias Ihih r iTi"i rd in irt nuiiili'l nintluaiy fUtllilH. TtiM namrd t lli jiprwr Jlljjh tud-nt ikhIv M Hrfi- Howard t Ipvrlartil, rmilcnl; llnyd t- tun:, vhv ttrrkldrnt; licit y h hi-rly, iMirrlary; lri Turner, lrrakurr Huddy Hatty, tuTL'ranl at arm, and I'aul M'rly, tl (1UI. Twrnty Ihrw member t.f the dniui ( '35 of llrj.jmrr 1 1 i c MhM'l mrlvrd dllrna at chuh iiMtm inciil rfnim, Honored tx-l WtUon, Hhu wm iirwtcnled Uitf Norton Wlnnard Memorial run y I'aul M. Grmmrll. (HdUall'in of I hi new I.eln ton crant; hall will In Salur day afternoon, Junn 8. TWENTY TEARS AGO Mar 31. ms Town rcnu laken during the pat wprH ahowa an actual pop. u tat Ion figure of HII. m gain of Tit slnre the rKl rrnaus. Funeral arrvltiv were hild Tuesday for Charlea Klley John sort. 71, a Heppner pioneer, lorn In this vicinity In 1M7I. Klrr broke out at 5:.) pm. Frl nay completely dmtrovlng th' rrantc r.nchrar reaiderwr on North Court atreet. L'ln a her subject, "A Hui pita I for Morrow County," Mra. r.. c. Heiiker tMT ntly received a $J5 prl2 clink a winner In a national content spoMired amonn the grange ry th lountry (entlcrnan. preMiite.l diplomas t.t 13 Mirh mihm.i onlix 4t Friday even mil .! lal award wrr tfcwii torlan, and Jean Turner, aalut aiorian. Pascal Receives Top Printer Award Key Inn lil Pancal. Ilnotytxt on. erator fur the I'.mn-ur Tlmm. Tucday icerlvrd a pla'ioe. erf. litlcaie and medal a Printer rf the Year at IUkll Iruiuute. luiwrriMe. Kan. fr J.. tA II waa notified of the award hy letter front the InMHut la work. I'm a I attended nfiool there for two )rar ntudvintf to Iw a linotvf ofwrator and came to the C.aette T1me on April 1 a an ot-rator. Ilia homo U at Fruit land, Wh. ('av al wa a atraiirrtt A atudent at the vora- llonal ahoo ourlnif the two yeara heri and waa trelt-nt of Ih print anno and a mernU-r of the; rrekhyterlan Youth Frl. JnWhl) I p. In hU acloc-tlon at Printer of the Year he wu rho-n from 40 fellow tudent atudylnir letter prrM and offwt printing and Ilnotytie oix-ratlon. ntttnin CAirm times. TWad?. ) j. ms TEN YEARS AGO Hoy 28. 1ISS Miaron iirvani. iienttn r "U'h m hl Junior, waa mimed at a IVriilleton Itound l'n i.rln h. Hi n e l' al M i'li M'hiMd bo M. Juv .Sumner of lleppnt-r, anl Cry White and Krnel lrke of lone have heen arUi-ted to at tend Heaver llya Ktate. Mr. and Mra. T)ioma Well. ft ... I a - . . . . xjuuiTt anil oiM rar oi lfi- I r t WUhliitf Well Uilve In. have an- immflr rhnAI noume.i their frand oH-nlntr for JUIMIIIul JLIIUUI net luemiay. larolyn t tatdree. da Mr. and Mra. mi C rat (liovn Morrow tunty hkihi prineeM by the (Jranj'e. l'hy lllw Nolan and Ivirrv (rovea were vaietiicturlan ami ialutatorlan, reN-tlvely, of thia year a Lealneton llleli ai hool eraduallnu claaa. kaaaaaaaai HaHllaHIIIIHa BBBjajaaaajBBBBaBBaBBBBBMBaBBaBBaBBBaBai Where It G OSS o 4-H Offerings Announced at 05U Wlll.mil Hardman News Sy ALTA STEVENS HARDMAN Mr. ami Mra. Kenneth lileakman of Rufua via- lied In Hardman on Saturday. Mr. and Mm. Ike Shank of Mt Vernon wer Memorial Day week-end puenta of Mr. and Mm It C. Lesley. Mra. Khanka and Mra. lenit y are IMt. Mr. and Mra. Clen Walker and h and Mra. Betty Gentry and rhililrrn all (if I'l-ndlitnn vUlf. A severe cerebral hemorrhage at lnc nom(. of Mrs ch'arl""' took the life of Hanaon Hughea thia week. Leonard l Tate, principal State Forestry Protection Cost Over $3 Million Walker and Bonnie Keaaell on Memorial Day. Mr. and Mm. Ivan Mt Daniel and aona of Monument called at the home of Mr. and Mm. Sam Mi Daniel on Sunday. Dinner euet at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Cunning ham In Heppner Memorial Day mm In law an ind Mm, Parol Forest protection coi,t of over S1.WM.000 U anticipated for the fiscal year Iwrlnnlng July 1 on about 15,3tt.0(l) arrea of forest land admlnlNtered by the State Forestry Department and allied Forest Protective Association, nernrdlnff "to State Forester Iwleht I.. rhlnts. In addition to this budgeted amount, about Sl.&lM.iirN) In fighting funds use after a minimum prescribed expenditure has been made by the protection district. Another $2,0ri0.()nO will be sent by In dividual private timber owners on their lands for hazard re duction and other extra forest protection measures to further fire proof their forests. Of the $3.9!M.0O0 budgeted the Rcnernl public will contrlb uto approximately $1.37.1.!00 to ward the cost of protecting this half or Oregon a forest lands. Some $S29,7(K) of this will come from the state general fund for conservation activities of the department and fire protection administrators In the field. The other $5H.20O will be federal tax monies that comes to the state through funds allotted under the Clnrke-MoNary act. Forest landowners Including pri vate, federal and state will con tribute some SZG20.100 to the normal forest protection activi ties. Of the $l,f.18,000 available In the form of emergency fire fighting funds, about $1,371,500 Is contained In n west side fund made up through a Revera nee tax on all tlmher harvested from lands within the boundaries of the forest protection units In western Oregon. A forest ncre nge assessment and severance tax In eastern Oregon for emer gency fire fighting has accum ulated over $76,000 In emergen cy funds. The other $200,000 comes from timber harvested on state-owned lands and can be used for fire responsibilities where a conflagration breaks out on these lands. were their daughter, Mr Hams. Mr. and Mrs. II. L. I.Mn, Jr. of Hermlxton were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Stevens. Mr. and Mrs. Bob ste vens and children and Alta Ste vens were also guests of the day Kho lileakman or John Day stopped .Saturday at the Harold Stevens home on his way to Cecil to visit Mr. and Mrs. Herb llynd. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Bennett of Madras called on Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Bechdolt Sunday emergency fire evening. is avauarue tor jtcent visitors of Mrs. Chnr lutte Walker and Bonnie Kcssell were Mrs. Walker's mother, Mrs BUI Ogle of Bend; her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kes.scl of Walla Walla; Mr. and Mrs. It. W. Kessell of War- renton, Bonnie's grandfather and Ktundmothcr; Mr. and Mrs. Charles 1'hegley, Mrs. Tom How ell and daughters Brcttl and I'iittl and Helen Anderson, all of He)er, also Mr. and Mrs. Boh Lovgren and son Chris of Lex ington. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil MeDanlel and children, Steve, Scott, Kickle, CJInger and Pixie, went to Lonerock Memorial Day to the pot luck luncheon held In the grange hall. ' Monday visitors at the home or Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Mcuanlel and family were Mrs. McDaniel's patents. Mr. and Mrs. Km melt Davis of Lonerock: her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mm. Lee Davis and family of Gen esee, id., onu Mrs. Kosenau of Lewiston, Ida., mother of Mr3 Learning about new and dlf- ferent aubjeeta has long been a feature of 4 II club Summer School. Tills year, the H) A II club member will be able to choose from more than 50 class es. The emohasls on learning ha been a feature of 4 II Summer S-hdol alnce the first aesklon held on the Oregon State Unl- verity campus In TJ16. This year. Summer School delegates on campus from June 14 to 19 will participate In special cere, monies marking the 50th anni versary of the statewide event. The Summer School class schedule Is designed to give 4 11 member a chance to learn bout subjects which might not bw offered at home, to explore areas of Interest to the Individ ual club member, and to be come acquainted with some of Ihe career possibilities open In i their field of Interest, reports ! Burton Hutton. OSU state 4-11 club leader. Summer School delegates will attend classes In the morning and have special events during the afternoons. Classes vary In length from 40 to minutes.' Delegates to Summer School are divided Into three age groups so that the classes may be geared more nearly to their age level. Hutton points out. The divisions are 13, 14, and 15 and older. This year, the 15 and older group promises to be the biggest single division In Sum mer School. The older 4 II club members attendinu Summer School had a selection of 2 different class- es from which they could choose two, Hutton said. Actually work shop sessions, the classes run four days for DO minutes a day. Classes for this group, all taught by OSU faculty members, include leadership, communl- cations, camp counseling, how Americans live, money matters (dealing with cost of education beyond' high school), medical self help, home economics car eers, animal science, food en gineering science, plant science. forestry and fish and came science. DitVls. Craig and Keith Davis are cousins. making a lonjjer visit with their Mrs. Gladys Carrlgall of Tort- land visited around town Mem orial Pay and with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Sum Mc Daniel. Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Bechdolt and Guy CJiapIn attended the Pioneer Memorial picnic at Heppner on Sunday. Home from Portland to oend me Memorial Day week-end with parents were Misses Mar- tha Teterson and Gail Hoskins. Martha visited her mother. Mrs. Lucy Peterson, and Gall enjoyed a short vacation from school with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. tred Hoskins, Jr. Mrs. Peterson recently returned from Spokane, Wn., where she had visited a week with a son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Darrel Ployhar. TYPING PAPER, Mimeograph paper and other office sup plies for sale at the Gazette Times office. JUNE GRADUATES! Bound for College or Headed For A Job? THE EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE HAS WHAT YOU NEED Jin Intensive Course In Shorthand and Typing To Improve Talcing Notes And Making Reports And Re fresher Courses In The Subjects Required For College Work Or Business Employment) Including Accounting And All Business Machines. YOU SIGN NO LONG TERM CONTRACT! YOU CAN DROP OUT At Will. No Questions Will Be Asked; No Bill Collector Will Hound You; No Credit Bureau Will Threaten You. You Will Have No Future Liability. NO FIXED LENGTH OF TIME IS REQUIRED! STUDENTS WHO WORK HARDER, Or Learn Faster, Can Cut Off Weeks Or Months From The Time Estimated For The Course. They Save Tuition And Draw Salaries Sooner. WRITE FOR INFORMATION TODAY THE EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE Calvin Crumbaker, Ph.D, Pres. Kathryn Crumbaker, BJU Mgr. 383 E. Hth Avenue Ph. 345-3413 Eugene, Oregon S7401 I, i 1 . . '''- k - . 1 .' A". TOUGH I i The pants that conquered the west 1 He's a working cowboy you can spot that at a glance. It's the pants. Lee Riders, the real west ern pants. Lean, lanky legs. Low slung waist And tight-twisted Sanforized Lee denim Is the toughest In the world. Has to be. Try 'em. Look for Lee with the authentic branded ,z- label. NEW YORK STORE 8. W. Emigrant and Main PENDLETON PH. 276-4551 f r O mm AV. PRICE in 1964 J&Z W 0 Sf " Wp1 iJ Tlr 0.8 .Farmer, 3.2 lAuudes other Xsra produce mere-1 dientt, such ; dry vllk soll4s,lrd, (MIllEI, GRAIN NANOLIMC, AND TIANSPOKTATION) Baker wholesaler, 11. 4 Retailer, 3.7 at mrr nice of si st n bu. nt at rimti would hsvc atceivto am additional 9 it. THIS ADDITI0H fOULD HAVC HAIiCD Tt KtTAIL MCt TO 2l.it. mtiMCLvoet vAive or whcat srer6 cmririCATe. U. t. Df PARTMf NT OF AGlCULTUC NfC. lS I7IJ(1 CC0N0MIC REaEARCH SERVICE RETAIL PRICE Or HO. 1 LOAF Or BREAD 1947-49 Average 12.7c Average, 1954 16.3c Average, 1964 20.7c February, 1965 20.9c WHEAT COST PES LOAF 2.7c 2.8c 3.1c 2.7c WHEAT AS A PEBCEHTACE 21 17 15 13 (Source: U. S. Deportment of Agriculture) Opponents of Wheaf Program Legislation . . . . . . CHARGE THAT DOMESTIC CERTIFICATES GIVING 100 OF PARITY TO WHEAT GROWERS WOULD BE A BREAD TAX AND THEREFORE UNFAIR. THIS CHARGE COMES FROM A FARM ORGANIZATION. THE ABOVE ILLUSTRA TION REFUTES THIS CHARGE COMPLETELY. Letters Are Needed . . . Word coming from Washington, D. C. says it is a must for wheat producers to write their Congressmen and other Congressional leaders on pending wheat legislation. Your views are needed by these people. They always appreciate a typed or long hand written letter from you. In fact, these are needed if one is to expect improv ed legislation. Some of the points you might want to mention are: 1 A 4-5 year program instead of two; 2, mandatory 100 of parity on domestic certificates; 3, include the escalator clause as is in the Pureed bill; 4, the cost-price squeeze of the farmer; and 5, farm in come must be raised. There are others but these could be used as guides. Your own thoughts on legislation can be very effectively used by the members of Congress. Letters should be written to our Oregon delegation as follows: Wayne Morse and Maurine Neuberger, Senate Office Building, Washington, D. C; Al Ullman, Edith G reen, Wendell Wyatt, and Robert Duncan, House Office Building, Washington 25, D. C. Others on the Senate Agricultural Committee to contact are chairman, Allen J. Ellender, George McGovern and Milton Young. House members on the committee are Harold D. Cooley, Chair man; W. R. Poage, Graham Purcell, Chairman of Sub-committee in House on wheat, Tom Foley and others you might know. Secre tary of Agriculture Orville Freeman should also be included. Working In The Interests of Wheat Growers Morrow County Grain Growers, Inc. FARMER OWNED AND CONTROLED Lexington, Oregon