Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, July 30, 1943, Page 2, Image 2

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    t
r/tbife, % bHEMMA# C Ó L *11 JOURNAL, MORO, QREGON
So far, it appears that »I kbcus -
¿Pitergfeui (Loimtg I n u m a i
3ion of the plhn for peace is still
in the hands of the politicoans —
P.iWbAcd Every Friday nt
those who ure either trying to
Moro. Oregaa .
influence the enemy in order to
Editor soften him up or are trying to
Giles V French
ntey in e fll« in toeir own co«mtry.
E ntered a> second class matter at
We hope there fa . majonty of
the postoffice a t
M oro, O regon reaiista and repreeentat.»« of the
u nder A ct o f Congress o f M a rc h
people at the peace tame, wpec-
-¡ally from our aide.
3 , 1879.
€ D IT O R IA I_
SSOCIAT1ON
NATI
O lí
P lI L I S
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Payable in Advance
ONE YEAR
~— X
- - ............ I2-C0
JULY M. 1943
WAR AIMS
FRIDAY, JULI 30, IM*
time and place for the final hear­
Kelly’s Column
Mrs. Jim'Wilson
(Coni. iiu-il I •!>» I'M.e one»
¿ V a-Jh V.
Vi* its Briefly
"W ake U p . A m erica !"
move westward out of California
points.
fue,
ape
*
*
* **
up
yanfii of
«««•eMeæ w
»»¿0
0.
CtAW
Aseare Lasting Pease!”
Mrth>wjt are building and la-un­
Mrs James C Wilson and dau- iJSaèxe. tc.nZiSh
^hing ahips and by the time <he
push starts in earnest the gasoline Khter Nellie were here Mat week
As d e b e lli h *
and oil will be in readiness. N at­ end visiting friend > and relatives.
Mr. N orm a« Thosna*
M
r.
W
illia
m
4
*
-
*
GEORGE HYSLOP
urally, these prodigous quantities J C Wilson was ir. Portland and
(jAdirwsM
ExecwSfise Cee««eh<re
A rting Fc^MdrsM w/
D eath claim ed George Hyslop
F-w Far r«rW Cauto!
of petroleum products will sub- Mrs Wilson and NeHie accompan-
Sunday morning as he » a , pre- sUntiaJI
lh(.
and fuc,
ied them back.
_ __t__.Ifaae'«
rZVa»lz
paring
for w&
another
day’s work 4«1 available for civilian consum-
MB. THOMAS OFBNS: This de­
MR. AOAB OFBNS: Nothing can
Carl L Frank» was a visitor assure
lasting peace except a change bate wiU not be a heed-on collision.
for the agriculture of Oregon.
ers and a strict rationing o f these at the j jj Wilson ranch visiting in human nature That’s no reason, 1. too, believe in world federation as
Paying no heed te weratop. r f U l
(.an
exported. H the Ren J Gardener,
•»owover. to be defeatist, to say wars the logical expression of a coopera­
health he staged on the job. Th t
push is in the winter it will
w—
t . Morton
are necessary and then follow the tion of free peoples to rid the world
w m like George H v-stop wfco put
|eM
fo(.
Bni,
}
Nort<jni is here path that leads to war To have paaoe of militarism, universal conscription
.ve must plan, work, and then oom- and exploitation. But world federa­
his work ahead of tomsen.
office bunldmgs x reduction under
Mrs Fred Haynes wafc a vis­ nine with other nations to keep It tion would mean disaster If <1>
It ha- since been said, and with w h en ^he navy will back a truck
Absolute freedom la a dangerous Il­ pressed to the point of a centralised
itor here last Sunday. *
lusion. U means freedom to do any- world sute; er <8> reduced to a mere
truth, that he was Oregon’« .most up to a private home and pump
Mr and Mrs L W Amick of •hirg except stay out of war. For, police power alliaece against a po­
prominent man in agriculture- He out
oy jn storage tank in or-
The Dailies were in Kept Sunday w»^» modern weapons, an armed tential aggressor. The kind of alliance
knew every section of the state.
/ urniah
fOT the fleet,
nsuoo can overwhelm one neither; galled “nuclear" by W alter Ltppmaao
visiting
a few hours with friends ai ned nor psychologically keydd to or advocated by S ir Norman A nted
what crops it grew and what it
and relatives.
strike firs t Democracies cannot be really to underw rite the British Em ­
could grow. He knew more far-
The. American people' will be
and
Mr andMre Roy Justeeen, Guy *eyed to attack so they must combine _ pire would be as impermanent
mere than any other man, and more economical after the war.
¿or mutual protection.
j productive of quarrels among the
L Hockinson and Arthur Juste-
The prim ary tasks are to set up | Allies as have o lh e if i such leagues
more farms. No one had a wideT They are learning to utilize things
sen were business visitors in permanent pro c a sas ■ to decide oon down through the centuries. The
knowledge.
which were formerly tossed away
- cret of peace Is not a blind prom-
diet* on the basis of human tow, no
The Dalles Saturday.
A list of the things he had done anj which in the jj tress o f war
jungle lew. and to prevent those who iya of victor nations to cooperate
Lester Wj’son is here to help admit i u i . law from disturbing the with one another eternally regardless
for Oregon would fill a page. Our they now realize are valuable. The
peace Cooperation implies delegation of the arrangements they are to en­
with the haying.
seed program, our new craps many
ranges from tin caps for hot
«»f
o m e authority to a central power force. New dangers to peace w ill rise
James Strader of Portland is
new ways of improving old crops^ffeg to tubes for toothpaste and
3 u ( it ti-iAt brings peace Instead of less from the defeated nations than
here visiting at the L F ph er war It is an extension not a lim ita ­ iro m differences of interest and
all came from George Hyslop. He shaving eream. The matter of
ranch.
tion of freedom. O ur States gamed policy among the victors, and ra-
worked day and night, without fertilizer is coming to the fora
greater
security, consequently free­ sentment against Imperialism and
The State oiling crew left from
holiday, because he liked his work. aa scientists say that the land on
dom. by federating. Nauons can do white supremacy The kind of peace
That was his way of enjoying life, the we^t side o f the Cascades is here last Friday for a town 80 the same. It is a big step, but evento matters profoundly.. American coop­
force It on us in tinto Federation eration should ba conditional on a
It is regrettable he could not being exhausted and something mires the other aide Of Bend wtU
w
ill
not automatically prevent arar. structure of peace whose corner­
known as Lupine.
have continued.
must be dene to increase its fer-
But it w ill form a fram ework within stone w ill not be vengeance against
Mrs M K Pleumke and J>hn v h .-h with good w ill, we can keep whole nations, exploitation of any
---------------------
tility. From the days of ,the first
r.ca. or the preservation of anybody's
Brownlee
were in . The Dalles one ttv* peace.
,
MUSSOLINI
white man in the Pasific northwest
empire.
It is easy now to jeer at Benito craba have l>een cau<h t and after i**7 ?*** T * * * 1* 1* M,r Brown
MB.
THOM AS
C HALLSW OS»:
‘ Granting that conflicts should he de­ . MB. A O A B C H A Lf.K N O B S : The
Mueeotini aa it is to scoff at any
hiU] t>een extracted the
phymc^ dheck-up.
cided “on the basis of human tow"
who strut across the sU ge for a «hclln were thrown into th f sea _T " 1?
j
- and that the right sort of World Fed­ kind of peset? does matter prutounu-
few years of protninence.
We Conservationists now explain that ^ * 7 VJS* Or’ a t the L Sather® eration would h e ld I make one com­ Ivl But it w ill not grow autom ati­
cally What qpre can there be for an
don’t know where he is at
the these* shells contain elements that ^ h>,e tKe‘r P*ren‘3 Mr ”nd M r * ment and ask one set of questions. alliance except the “nuclear” states,
peaceful society exists simply on to ciudlnr China, who wtU possess
■moment and it doesn’t seem
lm- are needed to rebuild the aoU and Kenneth Sather were in. Portlan i. No
the basis of police court tow to settle power when the war ends? If ¿h«y
They return d here Sunday
conflicts. The law has to ba pretty determine to prevent w ar. tf they
portant. He Is about as mportant should be used as fertilizer
take the children b<me. , ,
generally accepted as approximating recognize the right of all people to
as a deflated b a l l o o n --------------------- *
J B Adams of Moro was
a justice and furthering cooperation. eventual freedom, they can form an
Yet, here is a man of aixty who
Now 1 ask. whose “human law ", en­
business visitor in Kent Monday forced by what sort of federation, enduring federation We must assum«
finds hmraelf without a job and
their good faith. One safeguard is mat
of this week
for whose b en e fit? Ours? Stalin's?
with no training with which to
they can only agree on measures just
Jack Hoffman o f Antelope was The British Empire's? That's baste, to all If they forget this war's les-
secure another one. Scientists say
-.♦herwtoe your federation may be an i son namely that their security de­
a visitor in Kent Monday of this uneasy League of Victors to
that if a man becomes so adept
pends on the security of all. they w ill
week.
dissentlon and revolt
at one thing he cannot readily
ta'I and w« w ill have war again soon.
Mr and Mrs Giles Frenoh were
change he is lost when he can no
M B AO A B ■BPLIB B: Right! The
callers in Kent ’ast Monday.
N X T H O M A S a e r i . lg « : 1 am roT
law must ba pretty generally acivj*«-
longer «pursue his old job. Despite
Arthur Norton is here to spend •4 . It must be enforce*! impartial»? • wund federation tf It is consciously
the fact Benito was no great suc­
for the benefit of individual men anu wisely planned for peace Mr.
a while with hris brother, J E Nor­ •veryw here. And there is a human Agar would baptize an alliance of
cess at dictating he is like that.
ton and family?
law. It's not ours stone, or Stalin a empires as a “world federation", to
There is no room for a dictator
Ross Norton risited Saturday or Britain*« it belongs to all as the the innocent hope that ine "nuclei **
anyplace, with one exception. That
bills of civilized society, the foun­ allies “can only * « ’ »«* »n measures
at the G L Hockinson ranch.
is Hollywood.
dation of m orality and religion it's just to a ll“ Nonsens«- ’*'»#« cun »agree
a. or. tem-
Mr and Mrs Kendrick Dunlap the naiarsi law on who* authority ^oo war-breed»ng v -
Mursokini has been- an actor
..« weak—in ­
of Carlton and Mrs Fr?d Haynes o e r kyuuding Fathers wrote the pre- j porarily, on explvti«
for a long time. DeMille might
amble to the Declaration of* Inde- cluding China to wnuu. England baa
were visitors at tH» V E Mobley ywsndence. Washington called It “a ..^ p ro m is e d Hong Kong. Eventually,
pick him up and give him a rale
ranch Monday of this week.
»Bianca w ill meet die inevitable
standard to which the wise and hon­
with, say W C Fields in a bad
est can repair.** I relieve a federal hmfLr’ic rate of power politics deals,
man western. It is too bad to
fiam ew ork is necessary But wb won < r iiV America to participate to it or
cast him aside as utterly worthless
have peace unless we do live up to u ir» write it is lo doom o u r little
»••»»idi«» to a T hird World Wnr.
the standard.
in a world that is going to need
all the laughs it can get.
This a? probably the correct
time to discuss far aims
Good
war aims have a powerful propa­
ganda value and many are pro­
posed for that reason alone. Yet,
until we know who has won the
war, the sacrifices each of the na­
tions has made and the commit­
ments each has ,it is almost im­
possible for any nation to ssy
just what it will propose or accept
around the peace table.
To date roost of the expressed
war aims have been pulh baloney,
of the type that are put out for
jjvopaganda purposes. N o t a b l e
among these is the Atlantic char­
ter ,born in mid-Atlantic to u
couple of the world’s shrewdest
and most publicity hungry poKti-
cians. .
It calls for no Anglo-American
aggmndixroent by which we are
supposed to believe that neither
England nor the* United States
is going to ask for, or even have
thrust upon them any more ter­
ritory. If England gives Psntel
Jeria back to Italy or the United
States gives Japan any Pacific
islands we are going to b i sur­
prised—and disappointed.
It calls for self determination of
boundries on a nationals«« basis.
Woodrow Wilson tried that. It
also speaks for self determination
of government although the na­
tions that proposed it seem det­
ermined to ^orce democracy on
all nations.
It calls for free trade- Smart
guy, this ChurchHl. Who is there
who supposes the citizens of this
land will lower their standard of
living by establishing free trade
and thus put every one n direct
competition with labor and indus­
try in all other countries.
It calls for international social
security which must mean that the
United Nations are going to take
care of every one after the war.
It calls for the now famous (or
infamous) four, freedoms which
are impossible although political­
ly shrewd* freedom of the seas,
(we have heard of that before)
and the outlawing of force, which
is what We are trying to do right
now.
Although Joe Stalin isn’t much
on talk he broke down and gave
out wHh a fiat of things for which
he purported bo be fighting. A-
mong them b racial exclusiveness,
whidh, if adopted will endeavor
to make the southern whHe man
like the negroa. Joe aiao went ior
equality of nation, and Uboratlon
of those nations enslaved e/en
though he has a death grip on
Latvia, Esthonia and Lithuania.
And, believe it or not, Stalin
would restore democratic liberties.
That is going pretty far for Jot,
who has had no truck with demo­
cracy or liberty.
It. is all a bunch of stuff to
amuse a quiet hour and is not
meant to be taken seriously.
There is a possibility that af­
ter thia war there will be enough
international generouaity and In­
terest In prevention of future
wars that til m tfon. will be treat-
Wy m
in the
toe peace
peace trw ty, g i-
ed fairly
ven . chance to trade on on equal
»aa,. end protected from .« r e - io n
from other nations- That much
- , , , a naeamity.
As to setting up an interna-
tional eotoasus wWi air, army and
naval power to enforce its will,
that may be fraught with as «much
danger as doing without. If such
a- power could always be managed
without giving special favors to
the nations heading it .it cou F
be a force for good. It wou kl
be surprising tf it was always so
handled Sure ,lt could enforce
peace, but R might not distribute
justice of a sort to suit any but
the lead
“Weald A World Federation
In Kent
Hurdles to Health
In Other Days
BACK UP
YOUR BOY
From the Observer, July 29, 1904
Mr and Mrs W D Wallan retur­
ned Thursday after a pleasant
visit with relatives at Adams, Or© Woundpd A m erican soldiers now
take special e r r r c ’S“g In hesnhal
and Garfield, Wash.
W B McCoy is making a auccess gynsnaalur-.s ti r:hsbilltate th e ir in-
of dry upland atfalf. mUing. H i, J„ur,c< V?"» " m
P r ‘''»1"
•econd crop for tin . «•»wn. near
,u.. k,
„
Moro ,is now two feet high and (»¡hert. Tfcgy .'«re k sitilallsed o ver­
looks fine.
•
%
seas.
A new oven for the Moro bak­
ery was received by Mrs Gar lick
C H U R O H E: A
Monday. It will bake 45 loaves at Moro Community
one baking and is quite an im­ Presbyterian Church
provement and something needed
James D. Moberg, pastor.
to keep the supply wren with the Bible school at 10:OQ A. M.
demand.
y Pastor on vacation «luring Aug
Fred Mathias began harvesting uvt.
the crop of Horace Strong this
week., using his Holt combine, Christian Science Society
Harvey Strong Tuesday hauled
Sunday morning services a •
11XX) A. M. Subject, "Love”
the first
wheat
of
<the
season
from
aa .
x
__
Wednesday night service at $
»hi. field to come to a Moro ware- includes testimonial* of healing
house.
The reading room in the rea-
Fro« the Observer, Jaly 81, 1|11 of the bnild.ng is opeit. *’ All an-
thorised Christian Science literr
An extra train service was put ture can be bought or borrowed
in effect on the Sherman county
line of the O.W.R. A N Co. last METHODIST CHURCH
week, being in effect a daily Sunday School at 10^0 A. M.
freight service to a s far as Grass Preaching Service at 11:00 A. M.
Valley from Biggs. The regular Subject, “The good Shepherd”
train will be a passenger tram Epworth League at 7:00 P. M.
from that point to Biggs each Preaching service at the Grass
Valley” Methodifa' churehT Sunday
day hereafter.
Two fire alarms were sounded afternoon at 3:00 o clock. **
at Wasco last Friday. One was
Rev. F L Cannell, pastor
a chicken house burned a t the
Glen Aker, reaidenee, cau»htiram
Mogt >H
fln n e r i >r((uoJ
bond«« «toe»! the ««’er w a . « Kent « « now t h ^ : , harve^ing.
hayetook owned by Roy
From reports we beer. J L Davis
“ W " ** « " J *
1« «««»Hed with the le s t crop of
who slept there the night before w)jeat
As an indication of the
p en
ro
G ran
G*>rg* Witter was in our city
fram Antelope.
He
mised good time in Sh* ™ ‘ " on
_ Tuesdey
____________________
__
cdunty, R is stated that the far-
cn>p8 exceptiorjLj ly gOfxi
mens in this part of the state hl the Antelope .ectirtfi He will
have apent more than 850,000 for Tun a tor—her engine for Chris
fexm machinery this year. Thompson, formerly resident of
From the Observer. Ang. 1. 1924 Kent, who will harvest a turkey
red that will go better than 25
John Shearer hat terminated sacks to the acre.
hi< work with the
« Barzee. confee-
0W’*
Columbia river
tionery store and has accepted a highway east of The Dalles bet-
portion as
and
N»e Deschutes river and
salesman for the I mon ( »1 com- Qi<rgl h<1
auth<>riied by tlw
ptay at Wasco, operating os state highway department nn<l
far south as Kent.
woric already begun.
t
p a y rill tarlafft
ing on said account.
j
. Echo B. Vintm, - fi*««u(trix
Date of first
9 1948
publication
Jifly
7-29-48
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
SHERMAN COUNTY.
In Matter of the Estate of R.
C- Cannon daoeaaed: SS. Final
notice. TO WHOM IT MAY OON
CERN: Notice b hereby given
that Goa Engstrom administrator,
has presented and filed hi« final
account herein, for aettbm ent.
and the court has appointed Mon­
day the fith day of September, 1943
at the hour of 10 o’clock A. M.
m the County Court room of the
County Court house in Moro,
Sherman County, Oregon, as a
time and place for the hearing
of objection», if any. thereto.
Gus Engstrc-i.i
Administrator
Date of first publication July
9, 1048
‘
7-29-43
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
SHERMAN COUNTY.
In Matter of the E s ta te of Vir-
grina Y,(W hittier) Ciiby, deceas­
ed. SS. Notice to creditor«. You
are hereby ntified that the above
entitled Court ha« duly appointed
Roy J. Baker, as Administrator
of said estate, and all persons,
having claims against same, are
hereby required to present same
to said administrator, at his law
office in Grass Valley, Oregon
with the proper vouchers annex­
ed, within six months from the
date of the first publication of
this notice.
Roy J. Baker
Administrator, with Will Annexe'!
First publication being July 9
1948.
"
7-29-43
A brightly m achined p**?:*^
looks a s s ’tck as g !sc s. fiv?
sea H through a microscc^s:
That sn a g g le ­
t o o t h e d s ?. ’V
e d g e can. r ‘p
gouges in c Lin­
der walls in a
fash. That’s why you use -no-
tor oil to keep cylinder and
piston apart. And tk ifs why
you need an oil like *'RPM” ;
one that w on ’t leave bare
spots, by crawling away from
high engine heat, or draining
into the crankcase when the
engine’s id le.1 Special com ­
pounding makes RPM Motoi
Oil cling stubbornly to kot or
cold m etal surfaces. N ow ,
when cars and parts are pre­
cious—switch to RPM M t or
Oil, and change it every 1000
miles— right on the dot!
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
SHERMAN COUNTY.
In Matter of the Estate of G.
C- Vintin, deceased
SS. Notice
o f Final settlement . To WHOM/
IT MAY CONCERN: You are
hereby notified that the under­
signed executrix o f tMe estate,
has made and filed with the
above entitled Court her final ac­
count herein, and that anftd Court
ha
has se t Monday September 6,1943
—■
fa-— A — —— i as ■ ---------
. .
at the hour of ten o’clock A. M.
Whether you’re “m an power” oi rely on cooked foods in the hmeh of s^id day, in the County Court
room, in Court house an Moro
“woman power” as f a worker in as a source of vitamtn C
Sbenpan County Oregon, as a
tJh« w .r prodnetton im iurtn« o,
M„ y
w the home, your physical fit-
lackhlK
nuW tive
Ixtoge N < 418, L O .O .P .
XTorv"
t“ ’ - “ " “ *1” *lthou<h
fc»
- Moro, 'Oregon
X
In ih AnWriC*n* ? * ”
to «P«elty. The
Meets 1st and 3rd
need of .1, their re« ™ , force,
u
knne<j
Tuesdays
in the
of stam ina, v .U h ty and morule. „ . mea, „ „ ahouW
e at
I.O..O.F. hall Trai-
aiont and visiting
If you are one of the nrnny .d u ll. leMt
brothers are cordi
doing far more phy.kml
work tioo>,
Th„
WBy
ally
invited to meet
thu year
than prevomriy
yon to rrt th . required food into t»,.
_______
-rith us.
must look to the foods you Wlt lunch every day i . to think of all Ck.rlM C. Wilson.
N.G.
to keep you on the job.
the meals together and of each Percy Thompson, Sec.
It is everyone’s duty to eat
one u fittfar into . day', pattern , B1>lw,
L w l,. N o . 1 i .
¡'«'«ie ¡" »he do-ily
m ed V tb y V t l ^ t o ' l ^ d
Mora.
Oregon
meals the foods necessary to keep
can’t make up for poorly planned Meets 2d A 4th Tues
as strong and as well as possi­
mealo eatkn day after day.
day of each month.
ble. Food management is the job
Sandwiched ore uaually a part Visiting members wel
of every homemaker and if it is
responsibility to plan and
T 7
M ‘ ke ‘ h* m V e ñ á ■»-■ -¿ - ’ a»/.
î ^ h e . you w ^ h t Ilk. T " 1
h“ lth .b> « h » « ” « « " « .
i
tious
fillings
and
bread
made
with
^
e
o
c
e
JekaafB
.
ft
to check them against too four X i / w h d e * 1^
or enriched E®r»k* « «dre No 121 A .F.A A .M .
sign , of a good kmch. « « « - t m l * .
flour. Alternate the kinds of bread Meets on the 1st and 3rd Thurs-
by the standards set up under the
day evenings of eacn
as often as you do the filings —
National Nutrition program
-
. ..
month.
Visiting mem­
1 M«k as a bevera«« or in soup
Uy
Makes the most cf
bers are cordially in­
( ^ h ^ w d ’ere 7 r ’v i a b l e * " c ^
lunC£
vited to meet with us.
your mileage coup:::s
.o o p ,)
,
S* VmtU'W m B with
H i M w z t o K ealtm
Ay, A D A R ^ M A V N E
ic
OREGON ( <pAIRY
COUNCIL
STANDARD
GASOLINE.
2 Two vegetables, one of them
green or yellow
3. Meat or a meat alternate
such as cheese, eggs, beans "
other legumes, or peanut butter,
4 Enriched or whole wheat bread
wfth butter.
- And a fifth food to look for
W(njW u a
vitjam| n &
This should be a raw fn iit or raw
vegetable or salad greens. Don’t
■
?
.
**
te—e , eu«-
F. McLeod, W.M.
C V. Belknap, Secretary
1. Ground spiced ham and hard
cooked egg with salad dreasing.
-1
2. Grated Awwriran eheeee with
No-
O
¿ ■ ¿ -a raw - n o t e en d , » 1 ..,
‘ „
‘“ <>r0’ 9 ” * ”
J?
'
Meets Every Second and
drew».ng.
Fourth Thursdays
i n
3. Baked beans, minced onion
and catsun
»■ sw- - Each Month. Visiting
W
Members Invited.
orange ^.nrma 3 ^ ^ , . w jg.
Merle Hoaklneon. Sec.
or Mail Your O rder Today
C. R. ANDERSON
Grass Valley, Pi or. j 232
GEORGE B. MOON
Wasco Phone 552