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The Goldendale Sentinel
H. FARIELLO Amo A. RADCLIFFE
RONALD RICHARDSON
PUBLISHERS
Emtoa
ENTi~ AT GOLDENDALL WASHINGTON. FOSTOFFICE EVERY
THURSDAY, AS SECOND tI:LASS HAIL MATTER
SUBSCRIPTION RATE, SZ PER YEAR
OFFICIAL NEWSFAFfJ~ OF ~OLDDIDALE ~ ~LICKITA7 COUNTY
MEMBER WJLSHINGTON NEWSPAPER ASSOCIATION
THE SENTINEL'S NINE POINT PROGRAM
1. A Goldendale city hall and community building.
2. A new Klickitat county court house
3. A Klickitat county hospital.
4. A new federal post office building.
Elimination of the MaryhiU loops.
6. A city swimming pool and playground.
7. Completion of an all weather Goldendale-Glenwood road.
8. An a~weather direct highway to Eastern Klickitat.
9. Restore Klickitat county representation in the state legis*
iature.
O
Attend Goldendale's Jamboree
THIS WEEK GOLDENDALE invites you to attend its Sixth
Annual Jamboree, sponsored by Louis Leidl post of the American
Legion, to be held at the fair ground in Goldendale, Friday, Sat-
urday and Sunday.
Since its inception six years ago, the Jamboree has established
itself as one of the West's outstanding rodeos. The same stock,
the same riders, the same ropers and the same bulldoggers that
compote at such famed shows as the Pendieton Roundup, Ellens-
burg ~ and the Calgary Stampede, participate in the Gold-
endale Jamboree.
Make it a point to attend all three days of the Goldendale
Jamboree to be held here Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Sept-
ember 9, 10 and 11. If you live in or near Go]dendale, invite
some of your friends from sway. They will appreciate the rodeo
and the atmosphere of the old West that it recreates.
Goldendale, its townspeople and its merchants, invites you to
attend the Jamboree. They know you will agree with them after
you have witnessed just one afternoon show of thrilling, blood-
tingling action in the fair grounds arena, when ttmy say of the
Goldendah Jamboree, "You can see bigger--but none better."
Residents of this vicinity should make it a point to attend Fri-
day, September 9, the opening day of the Jamboree, which will be
known as Goldendale Day at the show. Booster buttons are on sale
for this opening day of the big rodeo show. Buy one now and
assure yo~lf a good seat when the curtain goes up on the
1938 Goldendale Jamboree.
O
May The Best Candidates Win
BEFORE ANOTHER ISSUE of The Sentinel goes to press the
people of Klickitat county and the state of Washington will have
cast thir ballots in the 1938 primary election. Some candidates now
in the midst of this campaign drive will have been defeated.
Others, more successful, will be laying their plans for the crucial
general election to follow on November 8.
The record county registration recorded this year indicates
Klickitat county people are taking an active interest in the pri-
mary campaign. This in itself is an extremely healthful omen. Un-
less a high percentage of the eligible voting population take ad
vantage of their franchise and register and vote, no county, state
or nation can expect to have truly representative government.
In the opinion of this newspaper it would be foolish to at-
tempt to tell people how to vote their ballots on primary election
day, September 13. This newspaper believes that Klickitat
county voters know their own minds and are fully capable of sel-
ecting candidates best fitted to represent them in county, state
and national positions.
Certain issues, it is true, have been brought forth in the pre-
primary campaign. These issues, in most cases concerned with
political policy, are questions the individual voter is best fitted
to answer for himself. However, this newspaper believes it can
be entirely truthful when it says, capable candidates are available
for every office on the ballot.
Every registered voter in Klickitat county should make
W~yiaJ effort to cast his or her ballot in the primary election next
. In that way, and in that way alone, can Klickitat county
peo-~ e~t to get the type of public officials they desire.
Remember, Tuesday, September 13, is pri_mary election day.
Get out and vote. And may the best candidates win.
C
e Interested In Klickitat Too
NEXT TUESDAY'S primary election Kllckitat voters
have ~ opportunity to take the opening step in re-estal~lishing
county representation in the state legislature at Olympia.
Four nominees, two Republican and two Democratic, will
se~:ted in the Tuesday vote to contest for the sixteenth legis-
lative ~trict's two representative posts.
A tot~ of 10 candidates are now seeking these four nominee
posing. Of the 10 candidates, three are Klickitat county resi-
dents. Each of these three candidates is interested primarily in
~t~t county. If nominated and elected, it is safe to say, any-
one of them would work and vote for those measures most bene-
ficial to Klickitat county.
In as much as Klickitat, one of the two largest counties
m
~e sixteenth district, has been without representation since the
present four county division was formed it would seem only right
~t at l~t one Klickitat candidate be elected. However Klickitat
county can~dates can only be nominated and elected by the votes
of ~ir own county constituents.
In casting their primary election ballots next Tuesday the
voters of Klickitat county should not forget their own legislative
candidates--M~s. Merle Hurd, Guy F. Wade and Earl S. Cos,
they're i~erested ~ Klickitat county too.
o
THE G-OLDENI)ALE SENTINEL--C~ldendale, Washington
Millionth Check
Since July. 1936, when Washing-
ton'e old age assistance peyment
plan went into effect, bhe Olympia
social security department has mail-
ed ou~ one million checks to persons
over 65 ~es~dlng in this state.
I~ast week, the millionth dheck
was mailed out to a Spokane man.
Approxlm~tely 38,000 Washlngto~
aged were satd~ ~o have received old
age assistance payments for the
month of September.
Cut Speed
In an efort 1~o ~t down the hum-
l ings 0 The Past........Canfield Well
Y w. F. Qualified F o r
D. Gunning In Prosecutor Job
Died--East of Crold~nd~le on t~e':
Jamboree Swing
roads, Yaktm~ commissioners last
week placed a maximum speed of
imtt of 35 miles per ,hour on all
county ~ghways. ~hey also placod~
a maximum ~peed limit for trucks
~t 20 miles per hour.
The speed limit w~e also placed on
~he roads to sere t~he gravel from
being ~hrown off into the d~tehes by
speeding vehicles. I~ter many of the
roads will be oiled.
Case Dismissed
What evidently was a scheme to
discredit Senator Homer T. Bone on
the eve of ~is campaign for re-elec-
tion, fell throug~h~ last week when a
~ase involving ~tdio ~ttion KOL t~
Seattle were dismissed from Super-
for couP.
The dh~a~rge ortgin~lly filed against
Senator Bone, .Saul Haas, United
States collector of inter~al revenue;
the Columbia Broa~Rg company
a~& e Seattle station, KIRO, held
that Senato~ Bone, ~hrough lnflu-
fence exerted on the Interstate Com-
merce Com~ion, ceused the CBS
to d,rop KOL £rom their network and
substitute KIRO. ~Dhe plaiatlffs also
he,dr that Senato~- Bone was financ-
ially lnte~rested in K.IRO.
26~h ult., Mrs. Rachel M. Reed,
mother of Mrs. T. J. Duffield, in
the 81st year of her age.
Died---ln Cleveland, W'. T., July
26th, Mrs. Amand~ Mason, aged 82
~ea,rs, 11 months and 18 days. Mrs.
~n was an o~d ~loneer and moth-
er of G. W. Meson, Esq., of Cleve-
land.
Died---At his sheep c~mp near Me.
A~d~ms on la~st Thursday, the 26tla
ult., l~r. I~niel Cunntngh~m, of
brvn~httis of tihe lungs, in the 33,d1
year of his age. M~'. CunninghamI
was a single m~n and had resided
in the eastern paz,L of the county
ber of sate eccidents on c°untY,abou~ five years. Two cousins, JamesI
an~l, Arthur Cuuningham, are theI
only relatives he has in this country. Orville Mann Go]dendale 'eweler
Mr. R. B. Conover, an old S~tl,=m , ' " J
- - - il ..... l at the D. Gunning store, is another
typa is teanporax y empmyeu ]n ~ue .'
.. .; ..... Legionnaire busn~ess man who is~
~en1:'l~I O£[lce . . .
. . . " ..... [ worKing nard to make the Jamboree
A laxge num~oer oI lnaians trove_ ~- bi-s -" ~ ....
been ,p~sing ~h~oug~, town the past .
......... / z~ann was one of the nrst com-
ber aay~ on ~ne~r way to ~ne Derry
.......... mittee that established the Jambo-
l~atcn sou~nwest or ~,t. ~ams.
............. I ree six years ago. Since that time he
M. 13. WilI~, ~I~ Of'de T.lme sflerln O[ { .......
.......... has worKe[t every year to make ~no
bI11S county, IS foreman O£ the ~oun-
Thursday, September 8,
In dismissing ~he chaa'ge, at~-
ies for the plaintiff declered they
had been m,ietnformed regarding the
facts of .the case and thet Senator
Bone ~had no part in the change of
CBS franchise in Seattle.
Must Pare Burget
Yakima oounty c~ymmtestoners are
spending sleepless nights trying to
figure out e ~way to cut ~tthel~" county
budget for the coming yea~ $~o fit
e~tlmated revenues.
Art the present ~tme the ,buz~get re-
quires a $55,000 cut. One of t~he larg-
es~ invreases in ,the previous year is
$450 in flhe salaries of ee~h of nine
elective officers. This inorease is
made obligatory 'by an act of the
1937 state legisle~cure.
Coulee Generators
A $2,611,000 contr~ot for the con-
sbvuction of ~hree comolete genera-
tor units ,to be Ins~tlled in the pow-
er house ~t Grand Coulee ~as ewerd-
led :to the Westinghouse Electric and
manufacturing eoenpany of Denver
by Sece~bary of Interior Ick~e, last
week.
"Ph~ ,three generatoes will be the
~,rgest power units in fine world'.
Except for the big gene~tors in the
government's Boulder Dern plant, ~he
Coulee gen~erators will he ,two ~nd
~ne~b~lf times as large as any other
electric plants in the world.
Each of the tl~ree Coulee gener-
ators is designed to produce 108,000
kilowatt amperes. Tthese generators
will comprise ;the inRk~l in~lla~ion
of the Coulee power house.
A Real'Pioneer
To Rolland H. Denny, elderly
Seattle real estate ~lealer, .who last
week celel~rated ~ts eighty-seventh
birtfa,d~y, all so-called Seattle plo-
neers seem youngsters.
Denny is the only Hying mem~ber
of the orlglnai par~y of Se~t/cle set-
tlem. Only two months old e~t the
time he came to Seattle, Denny ha~
lived all (Ms life in the Washington
Queen ~lty. Denny, ~he son of Me~ne
pioneers, was ~born in Pc~lend, Ore-
gon, and c~me to Sea~fle with h~
~nts by beet.
Fishing In Peril
Unless stops are taken to l~rotoct
the fieh~, the Colum,bia river's once
~huge salmon crop is doome~ to even-
~tu~l destruction, Fred J. Foster,
regional dlrecto¢ of the United ~tte~
bureau of fisheries said last week.
Comm~rciel fishing on the Colum-
Goldendale show a success.
dry in the Oregcm penitentiary.
"l~ae brick work on the cour~ house
is now up to flhe second floor, and
from e~l appearance ~he work is be-
ing well por'forme@.
Johnny Hasey, step-son of W. H.
Wa~d expe~ts to start tMs week, we
understand for S~nta Cruz, Califor-
nia, ,to make that his fu,ture home.
W. J. Story retulm~d from Bick-
leton last week ~d ~ a~ hL~ d,u,tly
again in this office, and Otto Lear
will now take his summer v~tion
in a two weeks trip out to Trout
Leke.
I)~l~las Itemlzer: Rev. Jes. Thomp-
son and Thomas l~oster, of Kllckl,t~t
county W. T. brought down la~t
week e baaed of fifty horues nee,rly
all of w~h~ch ~ave been sold between
Hill~l~ro and ~Ms place.
"Phe Indi~ns will very likely be
obll~e~ll to go to the reservation this
w~n.ter or starve; t'he riwr being
flower this y~r .~han it has been for
years they were n~t able to catch
mtany ~lmon and since these were
:what tJhey lived on pr~ncipally, they
have been cut sbor~ of fo~d.
G. F. McI~inney brought his fam-
ily [d~ywn from the mount~Lns on
Satttrday evening arnd Mrs. Joseph
Nesblt¢, J. H. HiLl end wife end I. C.
D~rland a~td family returned from
Trottt Lake the latter part of the
week. They rep@r~ ~ large number
of ct~mpers fresh The Dailes and
Elsewhere over fibers.
Hiram Wing has pu~t a pump in
the well ~n front of his store, in
tbe s~xeet which has rem~ned coy-
ere& up asnd its ex'lstenc~ almost for-
gotten. W~here M,a~n street w~s wid-
ened most of ~he wells ~¢ers filled
up, bttt for come cause ~this one was
only covered ov~r. I~ will probably
come In @oDd pl~.y now.
For ,the first time as fax 'back ae
anyone c~n remember the Klicktt~t
Creek just no~th of Crolden, dele ~as
refused ~o run. All the water ~2at
comes down ~he stref~m is ~aken ou,t
Just above ~here, wi,th w'hlch to sup-
I~IY" ~he town and even ~hat it is fear-
ed will shortly become inadequate
to supply the d~me~nd. In which
event we will be oompelled to ~ll
back en ~r~ll w~.ter.
Work will .be commenced in a
few days on a 40X83 foot butl~ng
on 4~he co~rner ~t of the Palace
Hotel, ~hieh Will be used as a branch
of lnllloon Bros. Agricultural Implt-
meats ,hcmse of The Dalles. Messrs.
W. H. "Pur~er ~nd G. W. Stapleton
of this c~ty ~211 ~ve charge of and
conduct the ,business here~ Sealed
bizls for p~tt~ing up the building are
n~w being received end the lumber
being hauled.
Kenneth Fisher , Oregon youth
who last week was given a suspend-
ed sentence on a forgery charge
was shown leniency by the court be-
cause it was his first offence, Judge
~o~ard Atwell stated last week. On
the other hand Olaf Redhal, who
was sentenced to 10 years in the
state penitentiary and Fred powell,
church burglar who received a 1~
year sentence were said to be old
offenders.
Sell it through ~he Want Ads.
bla will in all probebLtlty become
unprofitable within the next cycle o~
two, the fis~herie~ expert ~td.
Unscreened trvig~tto~ dttohe~
D. Gunnings are the only jewelry
store in Goldendalc. They also fur-
nish a complete line of school needs.
While in Goldendale for the Jam-
boreo stop in at Gunnings and let
the youngsters select their school
supplies.
Read and use The Sentinel want
ads. It pays It---
A resident of the State of Wash-
ington all his life, Edgar H. Can-
ffeld, White Salmon attorney, now
a candidate for the Republican
nomination for the office of prose-
curing attorney, has a thorough un-
derstanding of state and local prob-
lems.
A graduate of the Willamette
University law school, Canfield has
also taken under graduate
both the University of
and Whitman college.
For the past year and
he has been a member of the
Salmon law firm of Barber and
field. During this time he has
ed a wide acquaintanceship
out Klickitat county and has
ablished a fine reputation as $
efficient capable attorney.
In seeking the office of
prosecuting attorney, Canfield
lieves his qualifications fit him
mirably for the position. He
a capable, effcient and
admnistratlon if elected.
stream pollution, dams wtthot~t fish
Sound apans is ~he $5,400,000 strut-
. I"~ |.#, * t-~ • ladders a~I~ over firh~ng, not Bonne- tu~ planned from Tacoma over ~he
][~t ~Orl~_l~ l~rll~jr rills and ~rand Coulee dems, are Nevrows to ~e Kltsap peninsula.
~ WHEN' " ~he chief ~azards to Columfola river T~e federal government throug,h
.. • IT CAME to choosing between several millions ofsalmon, Foster declered. According PWA has already granted $2,700,000
~ dolJars already given to the state of California in bridg~ and to the federal fisheries director slab- for tl~ Narrows bridge.
~nwa~ aml a promise of $30 a week in old age pensions it orete plans axe being made for
fish Still plenned but as yet u~sta~-
didn't take the California voters long to decide, propagaticm below Grand Coulee ed~, l,s the ,huge pontoon bridge to be
The result was the defeat of William Gibbs McAdoo for the d~n since fish ladders over the built from Seattle across Lake Wash-
: ~ratic nomination as United States Senator. McAdoo gave [s~cture exe Jm~ in~ton. This ~ridg~, to be ccmstruc-
unstimtingly of federal funds in constructing San Francisco's I Big Bridges ted by che state highway department,
great bridges and Southern California's fine reads and dams, yet l ~f present plans of the state high- wou:td 'be the l~rgest pontoon eden
t~e voters turned him down when they w~ offered cash of alway d~/nent a~d~ th~ federal gee,- .in the world. Iaterests working for
more per-,onal nature, namely $30 a month. [
eminent m~terlalize, W~shingtqn s ~he conet~euction of the Lake Wash-
eS
results of C~ifornia'B Democratic p~mary would seemliest Soun