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The Largest Paid Circulation In Klickitat County Of Any Paper Om Earth
1879 Goldendale, Washington, Thursday, September 8, 1938 Vol. 59. No. 36.
Will Rule Over
City's
~~4'~ ~I~1 Ohosen to reign a~ Queen of ~lel
"1-1 IK~I £11938 Jum'b°ree' Miss Versa Culver' II O MEET
~J' .~, tl7-yoax-old daughter of M~rs. Lilly
~0Q,e I Culver, will rule ower Goldendale
Feature Many Tight USherS. te oon; Goldendale Stores
Contests . hoses by tJhe American Legion erintendent's Office To Close First Day
registered electorate
county history will go
DOlls next Tuesday, Septem-
to select party nominees for
offices. Primary election
Will also have a voice in so-
Party nominees for United
senator, fourth district rap-
flee, thB two sixteenth dis-
~te legislative posts.
~lates for three state su-
iVourt positions will also be
time high county registra-
6504 is recorded this year
37 voting precincts,
Baker, county auditor dis~
This record figure is 370
the total county registra-
the 1936 general election.
Many Contests
county office not up for
this year is the post of
commissioner, where
i~[atsen, incumbent, holds over
more years.
are offered in virtually
~osition, except in the second
commissioner race where J.
incumbent Democrat,
Kamholz, Republicau
are unopposed.
candidates, E. C. Kaiser, C.
T. F. Smart, and A. J.
are contesting for the Repub-
for county sheriff.
H0uae, incumbent Democrat,
in the primary.
~our For Treasurer
county treasurer's race Joe
J. A. Miller are contest-
the Republican nomination
B. Bennett. and E. E,
are seeking the De~ttc
Sue incumbent
is unopposed
Republican nomination while
Pollard and A. C. Millikav
seeking the Democratic
Bradley is unopposed for the
nomination for prosecut-
while C. W. Ramsay,
and Edgar J. Canfield
for the Republican
'Dudley Unopposed
the county auditor's race
Dudley, Democrat is upop-
While Gee. M. Baker, incum-
Carl Harper are seeking
to carry the Republican
In the general election.
Gray, incumbent, and
1~. (Pat) Mc~wen are con-
for the Republican nomina-
county assessor. On the
ticket Archie Banns and
are candidates for the
~omination.
Incumbent, and Mar-
are contesting for the
nomination for county
Roy Adams is unoppos-
Democratic nomination.
For Commissioner
incumbent, and Ward
are seeking tJhe Republi-
in the first district
race whle J..G. Skin-
~. Talcott, and F. W. Peter-
for the Dome-
three Republi-
~m,n. ~tee to reign as Queen Versa
of tlib Jam,borBe, Miss Culver will
occupy the royal box at thB rodeo
here F,riday, Satu~day and Sunday.
Queen Verna g.mtd.uated f,rem Gold-
en~dale high school in June ~.nd has
re.~ided in Gollde~ndalB practically all
her life. During her senior year in
h~h sdhcv~l she was preach,ted the
C~tizen~hip a,w~rd given each year to
Ithe outstanding gLrl in the glxldu-
"ngcl*ass.
atlSunday, Queen Versa attended
[t{l~e Ellensburg Rodeo as a guest of
~,oncer. She was introduced to tim
'huge Sunday ROdeo orowd and rode
in *he par~d,e ~hrough downto~vn E1-
lensbuTg. S~he w&s a guest e~t a lun-
QUEEN VERNAI
oheon given ,by I-I~rry Anderson, man-
ager of the Ellensburg Rodeo.
During t~he Goldendale Jamboree,
Queen Verna will ~rule ~'ltho~t at-
tendants. She will tridB in the Jam-
bores p~rade ~nd occupy e~ place of
~hon~r in the royal box at the grand-
s:tand each day.
Goldendale's
Schools Enroll
415 First nrD:Y
With a near first day eant
of 415, Goldendale's schools opened
for the 1938-1939 term Tuesday
morning, September 6. The opening
day schedule included little more
more than routine enrollment, class
organization, tevt book distribution
and assignments.
Only three new teachers ,have
been added to the Goldendale fac-
ulty this year. They are Frederick
Taylor, seventh grade instructor and
assistant coach, Miss Isabel Tran-
turn, drama and French instructor,
and Miss Helen May Bryan, home
economics instructor.
Many New Students
According to Paul Johnson, city
superintendent, a number of high
school students have enrolled from
outside districts In the vicinity of
Goldendale. High school enrollment
this year totals 153. Individual class
enrollments are: seniors 44, juniors
26, sophomores 42, and freshmen 41.
Grade school Bnroiiment as releas-i
ed by H. D. Roberts, principal, was
140 divided as follows: eighth grade
44, seventh grade 38, sixth grade
29, and fifth grade 29.
Primary enrollment as released by
Mrs. Ruth Ledbetter, principal,
totaled 122, divided by grades as
follows: fourth 23, third 34, sec-
ond 34, first 31.
First Oraders Listed
The complete list of first graders
registered for the opening day in-
eluded: Kelth Densley, Billie Paul
Does, Edward Gosney, Larry Ges-
chwint, Melvin Kughes, James Lloyd
Hanson, Donald Holter, Dyrck Hall,
James Harvey Doubravsky, James:
Alden Johnson, John Lewis, Ronald
Mollne, Sterilng Mataque, Johnle
Radcliffe, Russell Richardson, Don-
ald Theodore Scherer, Jlmmie Van-
deVanter, John Smith and He'ward
Howell.
Other first graders are: Erma
Jean Anderson, ~larle Doothea An-
derson, Heta Brown, Connie Craven,
Lois Maynes Crevling, Joan Camp-
bell, Frances Edgar, Frances JOyCB
Long, Delores Loraine Newberry,
Donna Mac VandeVanter, Marjorle
Hamilton, and Donna Riley.
~ HHH,~
ADAKS FLIGHTS
JIGGS AND MAGGIE
ANTICS NO FUN IN
ACTUAL PRACTICE
Roiling pins may be funny in
the comic section hut they're
no joke in real life.
Frank Green, Klickitat man,
probably realizes the truth of
this statement more than any-
one else because he has eight
stitches in his forehead and a
badly blackened eye to help re-
mind ~him.
Green was struck on the
head by a flYing rolling pin
went wild into the crowd at
Klickitat's union Labor Day
picnic, Monday. The rolling
pin was thrown by Mrs. Or-
ville Watson, of Goldendale,
wh~ on a previous throw had
won the rolling pin oontest.
Green was knocked out by
the ~blow but recovered after
treatment at the Klickitat hos-
liital. Aside from the severe
gash in his forehead that re-
quired eight stitches to close,
he suffered no serious injury.
County Wide
AAA Meeting
1 s Scheduled
Klickite~c couv.ty w~he~t farmers
Their schools already under way
on the 1938-39 term, Kllckltat
county teachers, 115 of them, will
gather in Goldendale Saturday, Sept
10, for their annual fall meeting.
The teachers' institute, called by
Mrs. Sue MGrehead, county school
superintendent, will be held in the
audttorit~m of Goldend~e (high
school.
The session will begin at 9:20 a.
m. Attendance by all Kllckitat coun-
ty teachers is compulsory, Mrs.
Morehead said. Dr. Glenn S. Usher,
of the state department of health,
and J. L. King, state department of
education official, are scheduled to
be the principal speakers. A Wash-
lngton Education Association speak,
will be given up to dR~ 4nformatlon Clar
nay Ferrell, Goodnoe Hills;
on the wheat sftuatlo,n ~t e county- Dist. 29,
Marie Engman, Lyle; Dist.
or, whoso name has mot been re-
10a~ed at ~hts time, w~il else speak, I
Mrs. Morehead announced. I
Should Make Reservations t
Teachers planning to attend theI
noon luncheon meeting should maket
their reservations with the county/
school supertntendent's office not I
later than Thursday afternoon. Not
Saturday afternoon institute sessiont
will be held, making it possible forI
all ~eaoh~rs to atter~d the Golden-/
dale J~mboree.
/
The complete list of Klickttat
county school teachers for the com-
ing year as released by the super-
intendent's office follows. O n •
asterik indicates the teacher is new
in Kliekitat county while t"wo
setertks indicate the teacher has
taught in the county before but not
in that district. Snowden school is
the only district in K!i~kttat county
that has not signed a teacher for
the coming year.
Teachews IAsted
Dist. 1, Selma Myhr, Dallesport;
Dist. 5, Ralph A. Brown, Golden-
dale; Dist. 8, Edna Burleson, Gold-
endale; Dist. 9, Gladys Walker
Klatt, Goldendale; Dist. 10, Neola
Lyle Hanson; Dist. 21, Marie Paull,
Goldendale; Dist. 24, Ida BJorge
Wade, Goodnoe Hills; Dist. Gertrude
Garner Berglund*, Olenwood.
Dist. 27, Levia Klnsey Anderson,
Goodnoe Hills; Dist. 27, Denitia Me-
Injured in a fall from a moving
truck, Arthur McCourtie, of Seattle,
chairman for the Bonneville project
engineers now engaged In location
work through Klickitat county for
the Bonneville-Grand Coulee back-
bone line, was taken to the govern-
tha K. Rord*, ~Husum; Dist. 54,
Jean Agnes Burdett, Husum; Dist.
54, Emma Baals Woods, Husum;
Dist. 56, Emile Lackey Conboy**'
Goldendale; Dist. 59, Enida Kit-
patrick Brown, White Salmon; Dist.
63, Earl M. Smith, White ~almon.
Dist. 63, Edith COamett Lea,ton,
White Salmon; Dist. 66, A. L. Ros-
Seven Democratic, are seek-
two nominations for state Special flights around Mt. Adams serious. (ConUnued on I~mt Prigs)
in the sixteenth district, will bs featured during Goldendale's .....
Skamania, Klicktat, Ben- Jamboree week by L. J. Sohler,~ __ _ _ _ .....
'rankln counties will ballot Portland flyer, who will be
here for ] FnrtnnP In Olrl Rill~ F,',.n,-1 On
candidates, the t ee d y show. Sohler has a[
number three for the six passenger Travel airplane pew- A 1 • I ~'~ ~ • . I I r~
t~nle court is contested f~r ered by a 330 horsepower Wright] Z-laeaLUle/XeClU e" LWealn l' Oa
candidates. In the fourth Whirl~vlnd motor. During the past] ~ ~
summer Sohler spent most of his an a c c ----'--
I On mbu~an e ot aria'outs to lt~t Lyle, is suffering from ~vere in-
time making flights for the govern- ! a W,hite ~lmon th~aptml where he is juries ~he received in a flail ne@r his
ment forest service over forest fires r 1 ill Wflham Morrow
• se tons y , " , , rag- i home last T~h,uraday.
S'r~E]~'r-.-- Sohler's air base will be in the ged 89-year-old Lyle recluse, last L~t year Morrow ~m away from a
Robertson field south of Ooldendale
Wolvewton handing out on the state highway.
~t~°~ters~.~b~" Day.Bill Hudsonz~la BrooksW°rk- G]~UD~." ]~.C'R
~a~l~ul o~ b~g peaches from In ~hat Is alleged to be a grudge
'~Ylhtll ~vanoh. Joe Abehler race for a purse of $1000, Sea Bls-
WiOh ~ ~rou,p of cowboys, cult H, owned by Campbell Brown,
~tWaon headed for the Roosevelt, and Hop A'long, owned
~)~e Tuesday morning, by Ted Elmore, of Oregon, will meet
~o71~ carrying papers,on the rodeo track Saturday after-
~t sweeping floors aftra' noon.
~kt~. o~ sohool. Floyd Pew. The two horses are rated as even-
to three people ~t once. ty matched and should present a real
bound tor apicn~c, thriller. Both owners are boosters
for the Goldendale Jamboree.
week discloeod why he always spurn-
ed offers of state relief.
The reason was $5244, $4560 of
w~hich ~w~s ~n $20 ~ills, many over 50
years old. Of ~he balance $750 was i
in new bills and $34 in silver. The
tunney was all secreted about his
person. Morrow ~aid ,he ~d saved
thB money from his life ~tme earn~ng~
as a sheep ~erder.
The money was plaid In ~ White
Salmon bank and the eoua~t appointed
Oscar G~d,ner, of W~nlte Salmon,
guardian ,for the aged ,man. Morrow,
who for ,~he ~t four years has lived
in a ~fltack ~lear ~ll~ r~ilremd t~ks
county operated old age pensioners'
home at V~tte S~mon where he had
been taken by welfare authoritie~
who believed ~tm to be in neecL
Morrow, 'w~ho was bor~ t~ Ml~ouad,
lived in 'Ilh'e Dalles for many years
and once herded sheep for I.~o F.
l~rune, of D~ltespo~. The recluse
sa~s .he ~has no known relatives.
The aged recluse lived, in a tiny
one room shack near the ratlrvad
tracks and wore ,r~gged clothing. His
bed co~ted of a piece of e~n~s
and ~ha~ a dozen gunny sacks, C. 11.
House, county sheriff, who tnvesti-
ge~ted the case sa~d.
q[~llle and Ed Bowman, riders and topers from Hollywood, who will p~.
form for the pleasure of Goldendale Jamboree fans d~uring the show here
Frldt~$, S~tturd~y and Sunday, rate as top performers front California to
Madison Square Garden. You'll roar at. drear antics as bull fighteL's, applaud
their skill as equest~, aatd thrill at their ability as repots.
SMITHS HOLD LEAD
IN NEW TELEPHONE
DIR RY LISTING
Such family mon~cors as Jones
or Johnson, mob- lead the way in
some metropolitan dl~'ectories
bttt 1~hey'~ Just other names in
Goldendale's ~ew telel~one
q~ook, i~u~d last week.
Smith, ~he nation's ~tvortte,
howevWr runs true to form to
take first ~honccs t~ the new
,Goldendalo pi~xk and 'blue cov-
ered "phone ,book." .Matt~on fol-
lows eecond~ wt~l~ six telephcme
n,um'bom to their collective e~l-
it. "J~e Smi~lm ha~d seven.
Other leaders were Wfl~on,
A~ldaon, An~te.~on, Hanson and
Hooter. Laet ~me in the direc-
tea'y is K. A. Zevely, ~hlle first
~pot tn Che &lrectm, y list goes to
~dward A~eling. Only letters in
~he 0.1alphabet miesing from the
roll ~e Q ~n~ X.
SomeChtn~ different in tele-
phone dtrectoriee is offered this
year w~tthl am engraving of M/e.
Adams w~th the Klickitat valley
In the fm'eground ~nd ~ picCure
of ~tonehonge memo~a~ attrac-
tively di@pl~tyedl on the cover.
Labor Picnic
A t Klickitat
Draws Crowd
Despite thres, ntening weatl~ew con-
clarions an estimated crowd of 1000
people gathered ~t Kllekltat Monday
for ~his cA)un~y'e first union sponsor-
ed L~bor Day picnic.
Sponsored Jodntly by C~ldendale
local 58 amt Klickimt local 2805 of
the Lmmber and ~wmlll Workers
unions the picnic ~as ~eld on the
baseball diamond at Kllckitat.
A 1000 pounld steer w~ barbecued
over an open fire by Jefferson 2qhom-
~son, one time negro slave, who w~s
ba~ought ~rom Portland for the oc-
casion. "Phe picnic dinner itself was
a pot tuck altair.
Claude H. Moran, l~bor commis-
sioner for the Yaklma district for the
slate ~lopa~ment of I~bor ~nd In-
dust~Y, was the principal speaker of
the day. A lull i~,~ogrs~ of sports
and games was ,held i~ the aRernoon
under the direction of Russell Hard-
In ,the evening a deuce wee theld at
the Kllckl~et gymnasium. ~he dance
~tar~d off with oM .time music and
ended with modern dance rhythm.
MANY IN SEED P00I,
Klickitat county farmers are co-
operating in a seed pool for the
purchase of 6,000 pounds of crested
wheat grass to be seeded this fall
in cooperation with the federal AAA
program, L. W. Ternahan, county
agent~announc? today.
.... COUNTY CALENDAR
Sept. ~dale Day at the
Sept. ~res close foe afternoon
Sept. ~...Emaee at Utop|an ball-
Sept. IS--Jamboree ~:00 p. m.
Sept. lO---D~mce at Blockhouse.
Sept. 10---Danes at Utopl~ bail.
Sept. ll--l~hutl da~ of Jambo~,e.
Sept. ll--d~m~h ~
8apt. l~Idons dub at Maes
Sept. l~--Prtma~ election.
Sept. 18---Eagles ledge 8:OO p. m.
Labor Day Is
Unmarred By
Bad Accidents
Q
Despite record holiday traffic on
all county highways and a full
schedule of local activities, only two
minor highway accidents and one
arrest were reported for the week-
end, Sheriff CA R. House stated
Tuesday.
Jasper Shipentower, Pondleton In-
dian, incarcerated by Frank Ham-
llik, city night marshal on charges
of drunkenness, accounted for the
l only arrest. Shipentower was arrest-
led Monday evening in downtown
~Goldendale In a drunken condition,
House said.
Although no one was injured in
highway accidents over the weekend
in Klickitat county, two cars were
damaged. A 1937 front-wheel drive
Cord, operated by H. L. VanNos-
traod, of Seattle, overturned on the
Satus highway near the Klickitat
county line Sunday afternoon. The
car was damaged slightly and was
towed to Goldendale for repairs.
A car owned by the Clark-Wilson
Lumber company, of Ltnnton, Ore-
gon, overturned at the Maryhill
junction early Monday morning but
the driver, its only occupant, was
uninjured• The machine Was badly
damaged.
Hunters, Anglers
Will Meet Monday
The open meeting of the Klicki-
[t~t County Hun~ters ~nd Anglers club
postponed last l~ridey because of
oonfliet~ng d~tes, will be held at Con-
tel'villa Monday night, September 12.
Al#hough held on the regular mee~-
[ng date of ~the club the session will
be a public affair in ~aonor of t~e
opening of consta'u~tion work on the
Spring Creek ~hatchecy, William Lay-
man, club president said. The meet-
ing will ~ae held in t, he K. of P. hall
e,t C*ntvrville and will begin at 8:00
p.m.
Water Line Work
Will Start Sept, 19
A WPA orew will ~begin work on
the upper portion of G~aklenda~le's
water pi~pe line by September 19, T.
E. Hendvick~, zone engineer for tthe
Vancouver office of the Works Pro-
grass Admtnl~ta~ion, asml~d the
city council Tuesday evening.
According to Hendricks, ~ crew of
25 or more WPA laborers will bb
av~ila~)le for the p~pe line work. This
gro~tp of men will be ~ble to com-
plete ~he scheduled w~ter llne im-
provement before winter, Mayor J.
G. A~llyn said.
'fine a~emainder of ~ue~day night s
qty council meeting ~m davoted to
routine ,business. ~he counett ad-
journed ;to meet again Monde.v, Sept-
ember 19.
• "O i
Sunday Irrigationi
Will Be Allowed
With peek munmer l, gaUon;
, season oven-, Goldenzlale water tmere
i will again be allowed to water their
iaw~ae on Sunday, W. W. Lea~, city
m~trshal announced this week.
Sund/ty irrigation hours will be
from 6:00 to 10:00 t~ m. and 4:00 to
8:00 p. m. In all seetiomt 0~ the city.
Equipped to handle the largest
J~mboree crowds in history, Ameri-
can Legion morn,bars ai~d officials
this week uxe putting ~he finishln~
touches on tlh,e fair grounds in prep
~r~tlon for F~riday'~ opening of the
three, day rodeo.
All stores will elos~ Friday after-
n'oon as local residente turn out on
masse for Croldenda~e Day at the
Jamboree. q~he show is s~uled to
open ~t 2 : 00 p. m. E. C. Kaiser, Jam-
boree maztager said the largest open-
ing day cwowd in hlztory is antlci-
pat~.
New Seats
Eight hun~d~,d new ble~cne~r ~ea,~
:rove been added/to c~re for the spec-
t~tom exited ~¢e F-ride-/. ~at, ur-
day and Sunday. Already inquiries
h~ve been received here foe Janitor-
ee resevwattons ~r~m people in Yak-
imam, Th,~ Dallas. Hood River. Wanes.
Enterprise, Oregon and other clttc~.
New ca~c~h cor~a,ls have been eon-
stru~ed et the arena and heavy cor-
rals made front fir logs are being
built for the Br~hmae
M~ck B~rber's string of livestock,
including the Brahnm bulls and buck-
ing horses is expected here Thurs-
~day. A portion of the string has al-
t~dy ~rrived. Barber this week is
showing at L~keview. Oregon.
()pen Show
~he 1938 Jamboree will be an
open show with both TUrtles aaxd
Northwest riders eligible far oo~e-
eRtcm. The exact number of ridm~
th$~t will compete in ~e 1938 J~tm-
boree will n