Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 13, 1944)
tAUB-l.'T'daiauiAHÍ Cütiprit iobkwAu « 1 ,...^ « W V » « ! ' «bounty J o u rn a l muku . okegon ikioay t T ng ®enator «» he did a t the job of representing the w estern Oregon O ctober is , ---- - -X îsu NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT Notice i» hereby given th a t the undersigned ba« filed in the Coun g . . > . F r U a . ■ « counties. He im» already done c (Continued from Page One) ty C ourt of the State of Oregon ^|w - Qrego« good job for Oregon and should By Ju ly 1, 1944, Russia had . 1* continued a t .th a t job. for Shenman County h e r Final received 11,000 planes under lend- E d ito r Account and Report em Adminis gifaa U French ____ lease, G reat Britain 10,800. Most tra trix of the E state of Lilah Hall, ciT^L»^rt Jus -T9® CIX)THBS, CH ANG E o f the planes for Rusia went from deceased, and th a t Wednesday, the f CoocreM ®f March B. 187». / —~;i i , G reat Falls, M ontana to F a r- 15th day of November, 1944, a t ... . .. Some old fam ily pictures have . . *. KT . the hour of 10:00 o’clock A. M., mationauditori of «aid day/ a t the courtroom of ssociation ^ r x T r . Z h X ^ : zaid court, Vn the courthouse iu * . . , x. . Britain were delivered in the Med- H — uay Moro, Sherman County, Oregon when decorations of unany .. ... ..._, . , ' iterranean area, with a goodly num have been fixed by the Court as K nds were used on house and . • * * i j r i , A m •- Kt* . ber going to England d reot. To the time and place for hearing of housewife ahke. Odd pictures of o ... , , „„ ZWkn , . , . . . . . the British went 73,000 trucks and ohjectioina to said Final Account ati am Rn°L nev®*’ luuimi c ed in o tj1)tr motor vehicles and 5.1,000 and Report and fo r the settlem ent I«T 10 s ty le . „ever im arm ed .n d frith tanks To Russia w r e seM 3 ^ . fo re , solunm and grm . • • if having trucks and cther of said Estate. OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER (Hope H. Belshee a pTetlwe taken w a . a m atte r akin ing equipment. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Administratrix meeting ighty. The equipment sent to Britain and Payable In Advance T. Lester Johnson, Nowadays when .the photogra- Kussaa is but a small p a rt of the Attorney at Law, Moro, Oregon ONE YEAR .......... ................. |2 ? 0 pher pick» up his little black box w ar production. The gun«, tanks, 49-62 When the electric power failed In a mechanical respirator, Arlen« w ith flash bulb already attached trucks, etc., sent lend-lease are Kveton, 11, of Chicago, was saved when a manual pump wat^attached OCTOBER 13. I » « be wants some action; smile, wave only a fraction of the equipm ent to the iron lung. The Cook County hospital staff worked incessantly foi NOTICE OF7 FINAL ACCOUNT your arm s, talk to some one, be th a t has had to be supplied Am- eight hours with the pump. Dr. John P. Waitkns, left, stand« ready U Notice 1» hereby given th a t the PRESIDENT AND CONGRESS anim ated. They w ant some l ife in e r can force« and there are few relieve Dr. H. Bernstein as Nurse Marlies Stern gives aid. undersigned has ftled in the County o f the articles in the American Court of the State of Oregon for A personal letter from a friend Not so in g rea t grandpa’s day. equipm ent th a t will ever be retu m - PEDESTRIANS KILLED Sherman County his Final Ac raises a question that approach. ems to be m ysteries of having one’s ed. Counties which have been ex- Pedestrian deaths amounted to count and Report as A dm inistrator of major importance in this cam- ‘‘Now th a t school is under way, , . . cam' ffcee embalmed on a sheet of tin peering to acquire road -ho ld in g 36 per cent of the Oregon traffic il is im portant th a t school child of the E state o f Benjamin L. An IL Wt with the form ula concocted by the equipm ent from the salvaged WSJ toll for th e month of July when 22 ren understand and practice sa f- drew*, deceased, and th a t Wednes going » H for pjejjehm an, Daguerre, were j o goods no as®ur»noe th a t persons were killed, eight of which walking rule» while proceeding a- day, the 16th day o f November, « a tiM Roop- deep one approached the or- there will be enough still usable were pedestrians, according to an long rural highways. They should 1944, a t 10:00 o’cock A. M. of f . 10,1 , x _ A . an<* deal with the gtraightest of face«, to satisfv even 100 of the 3,009 announcem ent from the safety di- walk on the left and walk *in single «aid day, a t th e courtroom, in the year» e81 ent u n# sexf foRT The imodem camera requires but counties ir the United States.. • sion of the secretary of sta te ’s file. When crossing rural highway?, courthouse, in Moro, Sherman a fleet ng p a rt of a second to ----- ---------------- — office, j be sure no cars are approaching County, Oregon, have been fixed 7^/ —ch cooperation is w hat catch the scene beore it; in the A new shoe stam p will be good Of the eight pedestrians killed, near enough to constitute a haz by the C ourt as the t ime and place ruined the ambitious Wilson after days of tin types the se tte r had fo r the purchase of rationed shoej five, o r 62 p e r cent were engaged fo r hearng of objections to said ard.” w* r and of such coop- to hold h is features motionless on and a fte r November first. The in unsafe walking practices nt Final Account and Report and for •ra ion jB what made »he adnu» s- minute®. They even had braces present shoe stam ps—airplane on? the time they were struck. C H U R C H f c . 9 the settlem ent of said estate. r«t»on of Hoover ao dismal If fo r the more active. and two from w ar ration book thr^c ‘‘Pedestrian protection is both a William H. Andrews WASCO METHODIST CHURCH are h. retain our type of gov- Here they are. Grandpa and ~ win renvain val'd indefinitely and rural and urban problem,” accord Administrator ernment grandm a OUftiC and grandpa’s au n t S u s ie ’’“ •X spent ---- a s ----------- needed. ----- Late — in ing to the safety division. “In Sunday School at 10:00 A. M.^ - (with three separate -- •---(Wiu bran- giw iupa a ttUllV »-------------------------------- < -- *-------- T. L ester Johnson p o w > there m u.t end a host of relatives and tr e n d s Oct<>b*r 0P A wil1 announce which rural areas, persons who walk on Morning W orship at 11:00 A. M. A ttorney fo r A dm inistrator 49-52 ,fJ ' ™ “ among them a t atraight from the day when a man new ,hoe stamP is 10 *» »«ed— the right side of the highway, with Subject. “What shall I do to be ® «mergenoij, wa> „ . k e d - o r a mere lad w ithout Shoe rationing will likely be traffic, are in danger of being saved?” Statem ent of the ownership, Ma The history o f «he peat alx y ear, Ha whiakem when a lady wore " r’th “ « fo r some t:m e COTne- slruck by cars coming from their Epworth L«<gue a t 7 ;00 p. m. nagement, circulation? etc..'"requir “ proof « » u g h th a t Roosevelt is nx>w> «lothe. a t one time than the H ere’» the »»tuation. According to rear. In the country, the rule is, Preaching Service« a t the Metho ed by fhe acts of congress of Au rotog to hear natch coopers- " « d e n i one. own. ,h e W ar Production Board. , no walk on the left facing appoach- dist church a t Grass Valley Sun gust 24, 1912, and March 3, 1933 ttoa from eongreas, either the - they’re all alike, then and " ub’U ntial increase in shoe sup- ing traffic. Then, 9tep off the pav day a t 300 o’clock. F. L. Cannell. pastor. O< Sherman County Journal pub noua. or th* aanate. Southern aan- » » . » m e and enough to have pliea can be expected until muco ed portion of the road when cars lished weekly a t Moro, Oregon fnr •tnrahave been W, meet ooUpoke,. uloera, » m e thoughtleea and hap- larttcr du a" ti te s of leather, than October 1, 1944. State of Oregon. Moro Community erRiea. Even the aervile Barkley P7- And g rea t grandpa had a are now in « « ht- can •* made a’ County of Sherman ss. Presbyterian Church « o M not follow on the t a i MU, It twinkle In h i. eye a t 21 th at dainty vaila*>le for civilian uae. The ra- A d » Bible School 10 a. m. Before me, a notary public in . a southern mpreaentative. grandm a loved, and a barn dance twined demand for ahoea ¡a actu- FOR SALE: Heatirfg Stove, wood Morning W orship 11 a. m. and for the State and county • w t h . and a aouthem «m ater w a. a better place to get togeth- ally runnin« ab««* of current civ- and coal. Charles Bullard, Moro. Sermon “The One Religious Ne aforesaid, personally appeared ConuoUr. Who authored the e r than a night club; and - we’re Elian shoe Production. Luckily, ahoe 47-9c cessity” G lea L. French, who having been puted lab o r biR which Roosevelt alike under the skins and un- rntionm g was .*»tarted while there C .E .E . 7:80 p.m . duly sworn according to law , de TOR SALE: 30 bred registered vetoed der those odd and manifold clothes. was still a sizeable reserve inven Wed. 7:30 Junior Choir poses and says th a t he is the pub Hereford cows. L K Sm ith, Grass tory of ration-type shoes on hand. One oan call tha roll of aouthem Wed. 8 P rayer Meeting lisher of the Sherman County Jo u r Valley t 49-50p The present ration rate oi a new Wiators and find half of them in GUESSTIMATES nal and th a t the followng is. tn Jam s D. Moberg, pastor. shoe stam p every six m onths s i»P«*ki»jon to all the new deal and W ANTED: A table model s^para- tlie best of his knowledge and be Mr .R oosevelt «Und for. The era Columnists swing from one ex being maintained by allowing for a ' tor. Boyce Blaylock, Grass Val Christian Science Society lief. a true statem ent of the own Sunday morning services a I <rf the coat tallera U ahnoat over. trem e to another. A month ago carefully budgeted dipping into ley. Phone 542 49p ership, m anagem ent (and if a 11 a.m. Subject “Doctrine of Atone c »nrreea has reaaaerted itaelf as a ***? were 8ayJnk th a t ithe w ar ^ ur Pre-ratw>nJ 2 J slo e reserve. daily paper, the circulation) etc., Bethlehem Chapter No. 78, O E.S. m ent” »«1 part of the American govern- wC'Uld be over soon, within u week Since no one know-s wihen it will » j Meet« Every Second and cf the aforesaid publcarion for Wednesday night service a t 8 'fiv fo u rth Thursdays ; n ea?h — VfrM/ I i , or so. That was when our arm ies be possible to step up civt lian sho« the date shown in the above cap includes testim onials of healing. output, it is impossible to prophe — , ,'-&± .onth. Visiting Members ^Ut*Ma o f , f e e |n<( lt wer# «winging through France The reading room in the rea* tion. required by the Act of August ; .»kitc.b—Moro, Oregon sy exactly how long these re •SB ta • «elf erideut atatcnwnt the Germans in flight. To of the building is open. All a» 24. 1912, as amended by the Act /¿¡co Ond-.lff; V .M . M»at fw iij'ctfK a i Wiahea fo r some thaae wix> forgotten the Rhine serves must be made to last. thorized Christian Science liter* of March 8. 1933. embodied in sec Mari? Iloskinson, Secretary workable policy after the war that ° n<^ ’t seemed 7,ui.i..2Z bi kail Lor*r ; No. 116 ture can be bought or borrowed tion 537, Postal Laws and Regu wiU get us back into posco time t**7 k° on runnng to Ber- V eets 2nd and 4th t n m p u n ! n in m n n n n m i m t t r t t t t t C t lations, printed on the reverse of Tuesdays of each * » « ■ * • «caCa. That can hardly ba tlas form, to wit: dona without the pasaage of lari«- Now columnists are long 77 777 777 1« m oc month. Visiting mem 1. That the names and addressee C . A . Ruggles bers welcome. of the publisher, edi tor, and busi iauon as m-edmi should be f***®«1 and pubUc seems U> a.u;. vicinity are A ic e McKee N.G. fra» debate byt aa ooeraion. Th? ifeape d*tly d»h of despair. ness m anagers are: Publisher Giles ~T"” . . ---- TV- 2 ’ V. r much pleased over the rainstorm Florencq«Johnston, St1 L French, Moro. Oregon. Editor, del*W »hould M on*economic Hnes. There is no reason to be like a pen- ., a »w*t i*a*4!.a« '* -r?” ___ _, , . that fell in t h s territory .over the i ureka Lodge No. 121 A.F.& A. iL Giles L. French ,Moro, Oegon, Ma duhim, alw ays swinging from one weejc en<j Moro Oregon Meets on the 1st a:d naging Editor Giles L. French, T hat cannot happan with Rooae- •XtlWM to another. W ithout a Sheriff H ugh Chrisman recelv- 3rd Thursday evening« .................. .of each month- Visiting Moro. Oregon. Business Manager« » » H a . paaaidanV It ha. not hap- bt « k In morale in Germany we w(>rd Ford brok members are cordially Giles L. and Lela B. French, Moro P*p«^ for yaara. Bla admlntatratlon “ > ba"»J' reach Ber- jaj, at the , ame M bawTence nvited to meet with us Oregon. , A »W h, office an(J Hn until apnng We are ao sure Jon<w arre>tod dn IjO, R. P. Brisbine W. M. R. V. Lccjchart, secretary 2. That the owner is: (If owned 77 * " " * ’On* ,ix f 7* 1 W keJy ° Ur Angeles. The county judge and dia- by a corporation, Vts name and year ago. commanders are taking more time . . t , ... . . , . is —-y- c . ’ i tn c t attorney decided not to bring Moro Lodge 5lo. 113, I.O.O.F. »* «JtWWjr ware elected his admin- an effort to save more lives. . . Ko-v liV'W, f t Meets 1st and 3rd Tuesdays in I.O.O.F i 7 ? tiO" J OU,<’ 7” * “ d W< *“ ‘ W A R-ymond has completed the hall. Transient arm It ia a truism in American poll- An a «— a*, a _* > . - - w inter will speed the of remodeling the fro n t of the Sgs visit ng brothers are m >dTWn» tr>tiof» cai* victory, a break in Germany could C hristian Science church. ' cordially invite 1 luxuriate in a •J* resentments bring victory tomorow. W hat *s The World’s Series was hear«! to meet with us. e^ i° na important ’ .« th at Germany has a t the Moro Trading company E rnest Houston N. G. W B o w m l t not won a victory for months, through a wire direct from a Percy Thompson, Secretary ¿ “ T * the Contiw,ance °* Even *® ir count*r attack» on the rcdio a t Fom & Company. P itts- V O T E . FO R ngbta of the past twelve year», western front have failed. Some burg won f we >re to prageas we must have <*»yg they have held but they have From the Observer, Oct. 13, 1905 Kelly’s Column Arlene Saved by Hand Pump AL. . H .îs tg W ’ ------ - f ----r • > » 1 ll Jflhfl W anf address m ust be stated and also immediately thereunder the names end addresses of stockholders own ing o r holding one per cent or more o f to ta l am ount of stock. If not owned by a corporation, the names and addresses of the indi vidual owners m ust be givyi. If owned by a firm, company, or other unincorporated concern, its name and address a s well as those of each, ind vidual member, miuat be given) Giles L. French Mcro, Oregon. Lela B. French Moro, Ore gon. 3.. That the known bondholders m ortgagees, and o th er security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or m ore of dotal am ount of bonds, m ortgages, o r other aecur- tieg are: (If there are none, so state.) None. . , 4. T hat the two paragraphs next above, giving the nam es of the owner», stockholders and security holders, . if any, contain not only the 1st of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of th e company but aleo, in esses where the stockholder» or security holder appears upon the books of the company as trustee or in any other fiduciary rckition the name of the person oy corpor ation for whom such tru stee w acting, is given: also th at the said tw o paragraphs contain rtatem ents em bradrig affiant’s full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stock holders and security hoders who do not appear upon the books of t h ’ ormpany as trustees, hold stock and securities in a capacity other than th a t of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, aa- Eociation, or corporation has nnv interest direct or indirect *n the said stock, bond», or other '•jeur- ities than as so stated hv h -^ GHe« L French Sworn to and suhscrib-d ’ ¿for» m e thi« lllth dav of October 1944 Geo. G-, Updegraff My commission expires August 21, 1948. In Other Daysj "'Wd« rw’t PartiatC INSURANCE r . ' And MB. LOOK OUT TOR ‘ THE JOKER* —in the “Burke Bill”, Just as in 1918 the “dry»” are at it again. Protect your freedom — defeat prohibition. VOTE 313 X NO Paid Adr. Tha Anti-Prohibitioa Comaaittov of Orafoa. O. J. Me Parson, Chairman; PoaraoB-4th Avo. Bid«., Portland 7 r FARM PRODUCTION! I M C.J. to dlBwi",^h™t>On 11 ^- ^ ie made 110 Sheriff McCoy took th a t young Talk of early victory is futile, c garette fiend to the reform school Few if any of u« on this side of this week. Mrs McCoy accompanied CORDON FOR SENATOR Atlantic know the plans o ft& r h :m to attend the fair. „ general«. We do not know the The man who raised the first b*.* ^ n ^ o to a ffo n a of troops, nor the w heat in w hat is now Sherman If -» / uailt warE raise our hopes with- county still lives in the county and U I .* « inr\ ^ y> **** ^to Wffl out information is not the proper hie name Is A. Erskine. ) ha will ba. ,Oregi.n » senior a ttitu d e and we Americans are The fam ous black stallion re- aerator for a t least four year». He pron<? to b . optimistic. eently owned by C. K. Cochran is V M ° f Sen* tor With noth ng to use b u t & lay- <ksd. He had recently .been sold ary w. worked wan»g knowledge the impondera- to Leon Moore for $800. This was w ,r •PP«a r bo be these, one of the prettiest horses in the fa— probably the among others: the weather: the Inland Empire. •ato ^ d m < a n d ii|g g* of .T t oxee of strength of the enemy in m en, ma- M^rs L. Barnum, accompanied by any one in Oregon. It h a s been teriel, ships planes, m orale; in Roy and little Mary left for tli? to know about taxaa and thia case, the force of our allies; fa ir this week expect ng to meet he doea. His travels have taken th e ' continuance of our supplies Mr. Barnum there. h « a U over the state and he k a a r , depend on opening the chan- From the Observer, Oct. 15. 1915 ^hc state. He -worked w ifhlbe ports, strikes a t home and M arried: At (the residence of lumber men end can do more to shipping losses. One would indeed A. C. Thompson a t Monkland help Oregon lumber development an expert if he knew about Tuesday, Edna H. Thompson and than anyone. , a j gf. them. An estimate of the M artin G. Melzer. Rev A. J. Adams Tlieos are the usual things to date of war’s end without such perform ed the ring ceremony, asy about a senatorial candidate; knowledge is a pure guess. •" Ralph Briabine and Havie Stel- t l a t hs knows thfa or th at. The ____________ -la Hansen were m arried Wednes- bing that makes Cordon a really . . day evening October 6, a t the fine senator is th a t he knows how This ia a true «tory. A small M. E. .parsonage Rev. Robertson to get something done with what boy was made to be quiet and lis- offici ating. h* knows. He is friendly, witty, ten to a political speech one Sat- William Oehman *of Rufus and crrapaaiouable, tells a good story, urday night recently. The speaker A H. Bowman, motorcycle rider rem tm bera hto friends, likes peo- had a vsy broad H arvard accent of Grass Valley m et in head on p k and has them like him. Thus as hs talked about the exphofts of collision on the road to the fair he will obtain thing» fo r Oregon bis party and hi» pronunciation grounds Friday evening. Bowman bensnaa Oregon will have friends interested the lad, and amused him was injured. a t the capital. immensely At the close of the Hines has bought the R en In addition Senator Gordon speech, when the boy wa» again and Fields m arket an Wasco and young sad vigorous and work perm itted to ^w ak. he said. “T hat’s i., ready to buy your livestock at brittle. He works at the job of not ao much, I got a potty, too.” any time. wgB. BED JACKET SHORB DISCUSS YOUR PROBLEM WITH US FOR CONGRESS The Dalles Branch United States National Bank — P«L Pot Ada ‘HEAD OFFICE, PORTLAND MEMBER F D I C / l Rom where I ' hga. b ’ One A Successful Oregonian fo r U. S. SENATOR Ow« |» Greta Less Tram p in O u r Tow n THE 6IB S 0N Comfort incorporated! To wear at the hospital, and at home, afterwards, when you have to get up at night with the baby. Barbizon’a own rayon Crepe Romola, trimmed in satin and fagoting. Has a pocket too, for safety pins or what you will! Pastels in popular sizes. . sit... / / Joe Marsh * \ Esther Curless found a tramp asleep in the hammock in her apple orchard, and she didn’t hesitate a minute. She grabs a rolling p in —and the last they saw of him, the tramp was mak ing dust tracks to the state line. “ It ain't only that I don't like laziness,” »ays E sth er,u 'special ly In wartime. It's that that par* ticular hammock is Ned's ham m ock—and Ned's flghtin* for it overseas I* orchard, with Rags lying under neath, and a cool glass of beer beside me.” A soldier's picture of home! The little friendly pleasures that he m isses so! From where I sit, Esther's m ighty right in want- ln g to defen d th o se “ little things'* from a ll in tru d ers. They're among the things our men look forward to returning t o - t h e things we want to keep intact for them. Then she shows us Ned’s last letter w here he says: “ I keep dreaming of m y hammock in the «■id Adv. Mr. So*i>a W m I ui *«'*« O b » I M. Bwrt»«, S«c'y, Corbet Md». Portland The D a li- No. 98 o f a Strio» CopyrigAf, 1944, Braoing huhutry F osada^