Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, April 21, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    JOURNAL» MORO, OREGON
Mr and Mrs A. F. Balzer e *
tertained relatives with a dinner
at their home Sunday in honor of
their son and daughter in law,
T Sgt. and Mrs M>elvin D. Bal­
zer of Everett. Wash Other guests
.ncluded Mr and Mrs C R Broc­
kert of The Dalles, Mr and Mrs
Gus Hartman of Wasco, Mr and
Mrs W E Brockert of Klondike,
and Mr and Mrs R J Brockert of
Moro.
Miss Cas’ie Holmes came home
Saturday from The Dalles to
«-nFild the week end with rela­
tives.
Miss Cassie von Borotel w?nt
♦0 Portland Sunday where rhe
will be employed.
Henry Kelly was taken to The
Dalles to the mid-Columbia hos­
pital for mtdical attrition.
Lyle Olds, A.M.M. 2nd Class,
arrived here Saturday from San
Francisco, California to spend his
have with relatives and friends.
He recently returned from 22
nx)ruths overseas.
NOTICE: Anyone hav ng a sewing
machine they would like to
loan the Red Cross please con­
tact Mrs Dorothy Olds Perry.
B a rre ll Case
ÏRIDAY, APRIL i l , 1944
brush, he ihrt^hkn again to keep
him still.
This wfas all on the evening of
Novametor 7, 1938. Morgan \ m
back working ¿n ten days. long
before the body was discovered
November 21. Discrepancy in the
dates made the case harder to
fathOm.
Morgan is a native of Missouri
where he was raised by an aunt,
his parents having died when he
was young He had no prevou3
Continued from page one.
hie talents <*s a mechanic were
used in welding.
He came to Portland occas- on­
ly, and was sometimes interview­
ed by the police, willingly. He
was always watched. Two weeks
ago he canne to Portland to go
to a new ranch he had Sought
near Orofino, Idaho. He talked to
police. Last Thursday, April 13,
had
been a
criminal record,
steady worker, good mechanic.
Assisting in the case in various
capacities since it began were
C. C. WTaon, sheriff ♦ who con­
ducted first investigations in Ore­
gon towns, A. K. Lumsden, cap­
tain of state police investigation
bureau, Sgt. Thomas Sheridan,
Sgt. Charles U ’Ren, Sgt- Prank
Grimm, when .n charge of The
Dalles station, Officers H. L. Ben­
in gh off and D. A. Petrie.
THE OLD RELIABLE for
Quality-Dependability—Courtesy
Shantung?
Does Jersey please
ri
F
F
/
ay a / 4 a
F
y )
1
H o w about Butcher linen or Romaine?
dere are cool Bon-Bons that w ill
sweeten
and enrich your spring
summer wardrobe
Misses and W o m e n ’s
.VICTORY
-----
"H Night-time is about the best time
a service man has to call home.
U N IT E D
STATES
spend a six day furlough with
hrs parents, Mr and Mrs T M
Rolfe.
Mrs Helen Bayer, Mif» Harriet
Cole, and Dorothy Barnett were
v sitors im The Dalles Sunday.
Cpl. Wallace Stark, w h o . M
stationed • in New Jersey. and
Miss Marjorie Miller of California,
were married recently at New
Brunswick, New Jersey.
Mrs J W Blagg and daughter,
Marie, returrted , home Saturday
from .Forest' Grove where they
have been with her ¡mother, Mra
Aea Eslinger, who ¿a very ill in a
hospital there.
Willard Rolfe, U. fl. Navy, now
stationed oversea« was promoted
to 1st Claes AO.M.
The next Red Cross meeting
wiP be held Wednesday, April 26.
at the Grass Valley library. Ev­
eryone is welcome to come an I
help sew hospital supplies.
John Rolfe and family have
moved to Bourbon on the P N
Lemmon ranch recently purchased
by T M Rolfe.
Shelton Fritts and sons. Ed
rnd Doran, were bus ness visitors
in The Dalles Saturday.
Mr and Mrs C P Adams of The
Dalles spent the week end with
their son in law and daughter,
M» and Mrs Don Qodfelter.
The Ladies Social Service Hub
met at the h ome of Mrs W F
Schilling Thursday afternoon with
14 members present.
Mrs Maynard Nelson arrived
here Saturday from Rockford, Ill­
inois, to spend several ..week*
w.'th her parents. Mr and Mr«
George Wilcox.
Dr- Wendell Ball of Tillamook
veiled several days last week ai
the Ted Ball home.
Mr and Mrs W C Todd. Mr
and Mrs Kenneth Todd, and Mrs
Art Schilling were business vis­
itor» In The Dalles Tuesday.
Mrs O N Ruggles is caring for
her mother, Mrs Wili am Oauthers.
who b ill. Mrs Cauthers arrived
from Moro Friday.
— .
... ■ .—J
Thafs a good point to remember
when you feel the urge to make
WAR
a Long Distance call between 7 and 10 P. M.
BONDS
If it isn't important, we hope you won't make it.
Let the men in service have first call on the wires.
AND
STAMPS
for
n c i w r - airv i m
t e d states w ak
TH I PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
THE OLD JUDGE SAYS
j f f f
You can bo a "tonfinol of safety" by
safeguarding America’» food supply.
Avoid waste and use every foot of
available ground for a Victory Garden.
“ Quite a stack of newspapers I left you
yesterday. Judge. Aren’t goin’ in the news­
paper business, are you?”
“ No, 1 ju s t enjoy reading d ifferent
papers so my nephew George sends them
to me whenever he takes a business trip.
1 got a big kick out of some he sent me
(jom several counties where they still hate
prohibition. Particularly from some head­
lines that read Drunk Driving Arrests Rise’.
•Bootleggers must post Ceiling P rice■*’.
‘Federal Agents seize* Trick’ Liquor True.
Doesn’t that go to prove, Joe, that prohibi­
tion dots not prohibit?
“ I watched conditions pretty carefull,
during our 13 years of prohibition in this
country. The only thing 1 could see we'got
out of it was bootleg liquor instead of legal
liquor...plus the worst crime and corrup
tion this country has ever known.”
THE K A H M A B S A PE THE BACKBONE OF OFFENSE
f
C m /frm r« • / A lc o M t t B—r r a f II