Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 5, 1945)
C* e < u » COUNTl i» J O tT R N A L .^ M O R O . O KL g o Y F R ID A Y , rreot a » money. Thia bond buyer» tfi— ty Journal Every know. I* is proper fo r the county to Lake at Friday pride in doing its appointed part Mara, O ro g »a to supply Che men who are fight- Itr ing. It ia gra tify in g to live where U K reach ~ people take their public reaponsab- ir»a a* Asa ilM ea so seriously and meet them ». in ». ro generously --------- : • é d i t o r i a l .- MONTGOM ERY W A R D MAT« _ A S S O C IA T IO N The government has again taken over Montgomery W a rd on a presidential order. The W a r Labor V a r d claims aufflcient authority from an executive decree. It ia pii •an A T III P ia n ti r o k eren la w O F F IC IA L C O U N T Y PAPER k**1 * * * * permitting such JANUARY 5, *945 Kelly’s Column ,7,1C (Continued from Page One —.— v «p e thesis e d e a n of all len W lease obligations incurred in th.s -war. Repeal o f't h e Johnson act » regarded as a must in legislation to aid in rebuilding world trade, ae is an increase in the lending power of the export-im port banx. A s fo r lend-leaoe obligations, a- ^ de from a tentative announce Russia that her account p ajd cash over an ex- U r(le d period, no hope is held by anyone in authority that aid giv- is a « seizure. other countries under lend- k ese will ever be repaid in any sub l e t it ^>e fii'st stated that tneie ^tantial amount. The more pessi- la*, been long contention about observer« in the S U B S C R IP T IO N RATES the labor policy o f Montgomery Payable ia Advancq V W ard , whose reputation fo r p lyin g O N E Y E A R ........... - ........ — 92*0 wages of sufficent size for ordinary livelihood is of the poorest. It ap- J A N U A R Y 9. 1945 pears that the company is in a p<Qr position socially to resist at- U mrpts to raise wages ’of emplo N O F U T U R E I N IT yees. Opposition to the retama of Jan It may be in better legal position. . ...... .... t u anes« citizens to the Graaham area The present argument, seems ta be mote baldly placed is not about the size of or economic ground, than in any & “ J t 'h ^ g h ito back . however, the pay- of i t 'alì CiJpitol have even ventured the op- jnion <hat UniLeri States will fortunpte if it escapes esca.pes. being ____ j Ap classed as a debtor when th» claim s of G reat Britain and some other nations are presented. • * • Consumers in the United Stata3 will continue the’’- r v of O alifom - ia olive oil end such substitutes a* may be .available fo r a consul- e rib le time yet N o olive oil will b - received from the liberated parts of Italy until damage done a u ing food ration stamps, McDan- nell Brown, Portland district O P A director, pointed out that the 0P«€ had no alternative m view o f the tigh t food situation. Ha reiterated statements from W ashington that the actions were necessary becam e civilian «(applies o f sugar, butter and commercially canned fru its t , troyed by the retreating G erm ans and onlv the sm all presses in I tai- the supreme court. Then we will k -— -£• - . . .? .L . - r u » n homos are now being op eran d fmo out whether the executive, by They oroduce - - W r e oil mere order, can make an employ And than ** re(l uire<1 for t*0™ «* 1* UB- er p ay union due» or not. also we w ill find out whether pri- people o f this nation w ant to v a te p r o p e r ty c a n b e se iz e d by arK^ Mrs Soren Hansen, living nine change the èonaütuüon and exclu - the government and operated by m il«* west o f M oro, - w as taken de p e r m s o f certain colors, sizes, government under an executive last Wednesday with diph- racial characterbtica. or shape of , th thinirs can be done theria and the progress o f the d.- « k - A w — 1--» - — u ret that » tbcsr privilege. Until that la done the law will h rv e to protect the Japanese in *v_i_ d »_ « their property. E x - clusfaa methods will have to be without the law . It waa hut a com- paratvaly few y e a n ago our grand fa th e n were e r r hiding Chinese from this «am e - r . om t u e aame area by some very direct methods. w in cert^ inly go 11 in e s e i n m g s c a n o e « m u , o rd er «,™ 4 h in jr new have txwn something new will w ill have Inwn ad- ad ded to the United State« concep tlon government. W e started the idea that our officials were *<*»*<' day c meat supplies are declining. Brown sa id : “Supplies erf food school basket bad pubhc servants; perhaps the roles team have completed arrangem ents fo r their M orrow county trip and w ill be reversed. ---------------------- t leave ’ * p' on 14th' p l“ < ' Columnists are w orrying about ing j ng tlhe and Heppner higa one Ione w .u ^he ultimate fate orf Henry W a l- » h o o l teams the evenings of the lace. A few years ago he wanted ¡4^1 and 1 5 th . “ b~ ° T * * * . 5 ^ “ * ^ mi!k ’ Marri<,<t' “ * * w * r Manpower board. »v rv e y did not include stamp 33, which became good on September 1. N O T IC E OF F IN  L Notice is herby ACCOUNT _______ _____ given that the * u n d e r s ig n e d h a a filed in t h e C o u n ty count and Report as the Adm inri- trator the - E atate of N ora Sm th deceased, k and that W ed- nesday, the 7th day of February 1945. at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A M of c o u rt_ room o f said court, in the court house in Moro, Sherman County, re’ 4den' e ° f M r- O .c » o n. have t>oen fixed by • th . stayed indoors and paid strict at- done «round the capitol and with members attend. th« tw o months regu lar consumer ra- tx>n outstanding. The su gar * ° ra P “i that the thl 1 „r f Oregon Ck______ for -----------------7 ' Court o f the State o follow ing, re- Shfcrman County hij> FiHa, A c. DM ctfaT ^ . 7 » urod to praettm shoo k w cigar- and that H o tte n to t G e o rg e W ilk e rs o n n e a r R u f u s , S u n - ettes out erf Chinese mouths and s - hart « f r « h quart of milk da.ly, d ly f j „ . 2, B r u w M ilU rd and •bein g pig tolls off with long and W h y don t the dairy interests ffrao M i„ W i |kereon. both of A o s p knives. ^or ^ i * . * relatione 9i i m r fn r p rvtualw r o lsa4 wirma man? m an" Rufus. Accidental demise o f Chinamen ---------------------- tfoa t r e g u l a r m * e tin g orf the io- I f possible it would seem was not considered cause fo r le Montgomery W ard should hire cal Farm ers Union is this S atu -- g a l action by frontier sheriffs. _ a prominent _____ __________ Election orf officers, sack*. O c o < a n ly fam ily Jpme* ‘ Caeaar Petrillo as preui- dry. cculd keep dent. He knows how to get thing« and other important business. A ll Untion <0 his h«4£n sa d beam . abowed th M unused sugar stamps and coupons equivalent to about c _u r t c ou rt as the time and place foi; heari of to M ld F in a, Acoount and settlement o f said Estate. A rth u r J. Smith Adm inistrator T. l i s t e r Johnson Attornay at law, Waaco Oregon publication From the (>bBervert j an. g, 1926 and /or t o j ... . I^ * t P »*!*»*» Jan. 5, 1945 ¿an. 26, 1945 ■¡V« w a th. B-M erwh » » M t : e MocUioUd hr As debated by , ✓ F arm » .• | - • Jaba CaeWa Harry M r , Lecturer, 4 a ? W a / ’ W « I . F ^ r w f w » B n *” ” ' “ / « * — Fi« * “ . to know time a ^ I t a ri, has beater b y a greater degree id Elactrcian W m . H oggard w iring 7 residence« 3 places orf business • m THCM! is hereby given to the creditors Preaching at Graae Valley 3 p. m. of, and all persona having claims “ A N e w Y e a r’s Sermon” against »aid deceased, to present F L. Cannell. pastor. them, verified as required by law, within six months a fte r the first publication of this notice to said Moro Community Executrix, c-o Mrs. Hildred Zell. Presbyterian Church Lible School 10 a. m. Morning W orship at 11 a. m. Waaco, Oregon. Dorothy M iller Executrix of the Estate of Communion Service C E. at 7:30 p.m. C arl Victor Anderson, deceased D tted December 29, 1944 8-12 >» H » , . more to this stole/Ton'll soon see Corby’s on using W C. do enough • an i t < - — Whiskey for ° » e Oheerver, Jan totoru- K a t b , eldest daughter available to those who prefer a fine light bodied sociable blend. Ask for it next time. "A Grana O ld Canadian N aate" I C O R B Y ' S P R O D U C E D IN THE U . $. A. vn d »r the direct tu p e r y itie n o f o u r e x p e rt C a n a d ia n b le n d e r 86 Proof— 68.4% Groin Noutrol Spirits \ JA I. sasoay 6 co, UMirm rsosu, iu in o is J4a ¿ T * “• ano» »a toacuv a oa «.»**** 7. 1914 orf au x the shelf more often— it’s pre-war quality same place them with to ito b b l Canadian Name! ITe’re »hipping more and ’ «• to Mr a - ir« rar—. »- - •— T . —> u * r * INSURANCE to-be o f the whiskey with the G rand O ld ha* and Byrant, C. W . Axtell, C. K. Coch is disaeted towoord getting a w r y ran, C . L. Ireland. Wm . Hoggard, aitisen to b u y a band, to aee that B. F. Pike, G. E. Jamer, the ** 8 a «h » Market, Poatoffice, and Rod arne. i f t n e w a re tote orf dollarA gers b a ib e r tiaop. ao mugh the better. A t the regu lar meeting orf the N o one In buying a bond thinks city council held January 2nd «1 o f «he person or the agency taking saloon license w as granted to the order. T h ey may h a grateful D ave and John B lggerstaff a s p art <0 him a r her because orf the Job ners aand also a license to L. H they are doing, b u t a aaeutal pic George, form erly o f Oregon City. ture orf a brukb covered fox h o b upon petition orf the proper num in the humid Philippines, o r the b er orf voters. orf rfoughtrover Bel A very pretty wedding occurred at the home o f R. W . Pinkerton and broken in Seattle. Wednesday evening, tras, is first la the bond Dacember 27th. The contracting I t fe to the young men parties w ere M r. Edwin Newton t r < * sha™ " * » « Mi- Em h a o d haytog ma Wnkertorl’ orf the naw X G R E AT N EW S for the friend« and friends- fo r electric to Hghting. The new places ° f !«»••» « • the home, of 7 , **. the war. Effort orf I m *] -- - can S that From the Observer. Jan. 5. 1906 b W* i T ■ V - R A T IO N S ’ U" ao" U~ * aa •"■ « ‘ »in Th. „Orth bou^ n * excellent raeord— and te exceed train on the C. S. Ry w a » ditched it W e taks pride in beating the Wedne - quota and in knowing that our E morn« rf caused by too heavy bond quota the bigbeat in the a bam i S € . A . Ruggles o f th is F am ous is g ra tify in g i i E ot M B . G O B T T E O P E N S : Wishful thinking and Irrational expectations must not spoil the potent effects of our bombers upon Japan. B-29 • tlon* w ill not crush this foe. They will Ore<OE blast and burn Japanese industries Moro and cities hut that win not avoid mnnmi i »»mnnu»uinuiBBUtti»ni landing millions of American hoys on N O T IC E T O C R E D IT O R S nese home islands and the C M 4 A ll persons having claim s fi- _____coast Japanese islands are hope lessly vulnerable to air bombings. g<«ins< the estate o f 0 . P. King, Industrial targets are met the mo-* oeceased, are hereby notified to ment B-2Fs reach the coast Trunk railways stretch along that coast nol present them, with the proper 100 feet from Che water. Main cities voucher» and duly verified, to the are at water level, rendering Impos undersigned the duly appointed, sible the digging orf adequate air raid qualified and acting adm&niatrntrix shetiers. Thousands of main facto rim are sturdy, concrete and steel strue- of the Estate orf Q. P. K ing, de tures, hut minor plants and hon.es ceased, at the office o f T . Lester generally are flimsy and easily de- stroyed by Are. Every B-29 raid will Johnson, attorney at law, in Moro lower Japan's aircraft production, Oregon, within aix months from making each raid less ccetly to ua the date of the first publication of Jhpan will be pounded into a Jelly« However, there is everv reason te this notice, to-wit: December 15, tike enemy will fight on, forc- 1944. _______ Japan which campalgn __ in Japa Frances King to he ooe of the moet bloody fense of their homeland, the quality Adm inistratrix of the planes they fly will be the of the entire war. Slmultoneouriy, Date of fy-st publication Dec. 15, we must in Chins to annihilate deciding factor. Japan has produced nothing yet that compares with the aeveral millions of Japanese troops 1944. British Spitfire which turped the tide in China. Manchuria and Korea. Wa Date orf last publication Jan. 12, for Britain. Remember: the vast tech can only win by killing masses of nological efforts and money which Japanese soldiers with our ground 1945 have been poured into the creation forces in Japan and on the Asiatic continent. and production of the B-J9 have 1 MB. FABBBN C H A L L E N G E !: The' N O T IC E O F F I N A L H E A R IN G for but one purpose— knock oat Ja pan's industries. Notice is hereby given that industrial resources of the Japanese MB. GOBTTE C H A L L E N G E !: Ja outside the mainland are Inadequate Blanche Estella Everett, Adm in pan has built an effective .industry in for sustained fighting by her armies istratrix of the Estate of Lulu B K ires since 1910, in Manchuria since any place. While the Japanese m ili has filed In 1>31 and in China since 1937. Now tary may have considerable stores on Spencer, deceased, s?e scurries to shift war plants to the r*Hina mainland and In other con- the County Court of the State of the mainland. Like those at home, all quered areas, additional supplies will Oregon fo r Sherman County, her are within our bombing range. We be confctontly needed from her arma cannot be stopped In the air. How ment factories. As an example: our Final Account and the Court h a » ever. nothing justifies the hope that ammunition shortage, now, on the set the 17th day of January. 1945, her armies will quit even when re Western Front In Europe. If. then, as in the Office of the County Clerk duced to fighting with rifle and hand- Mr. Goette and I seem to agree, the grenade. Japan has a potential army B-29 caa crush Japan's war Indus in the Court House at Moro, Ore of 7 million with 250.000 more avail tries I say her armies ia the field wfl^ gon, at 10:00 o’clock a.ra. as the able yearly. Inevitably we win win, die of armament anemia; that there time and’ place fo r the settlement but only after every Japanese with a will be no need to fight a major con-, of said accounting and fo r hear rifle has been kil'ed or captured. GI tinental war in China or Japan. Joe on land must accomplish this. MB. GOBTTE B E F L B ! : Japan pits ing objection« to the same, if AHY- MB. FABBBN »’.EFLIES: Jap fa flesh and blood against our superior B L A N C H E E S T E L L A E V E R E T T naticism I admit »•it this is a war armament. She combats our complex Administratrix of machines. Machines are produced «1,500,000 B-29 with the speedy but ,ln factories. Jabs are no more fanati weakly armed Zero costing only • J Tracy Barton cal than Nazis. The llazis will quR, few thousand dollars. Thus her sol The Da lb s , Oregon regardless of how ma.iy millions of diers will fight 00 when war plants Attorney for the Estate men are still physical y capable of are no more, eating little, conserving *l<htlnR. when her actories are bullets and living in holes like ani knocked out and can no longer sup mals. Japanese troops on by-passed N O T IC E TO C R E D IT O R S ply her armies. In this war of ma islands did not die on the vine as we* The undersigned having been chines you need only destroy the expected. They live on the land, enemy's capacity to pr >duce ma adapting themselves to guerrilla war-5 appointed by the Count Court of chines. not destroy 7 mill) m soldiers fare. This cannot win, but will take the State o f Oregon, for Sherman individually. You can't si p a tank years and countless American lives with a rifle bullet; shoot dc *n B-29*s to overcome. The bloody shores ofi County, the Executrix of the Es with bows and arrows; m,r sink a Guadalcanal. Tarawa and Leyte por tote o f C arl Victor Anderson, de tend the future. „ battleship with “fanaticism" ceased. and having qualified, notice b It at The rea ling r. om in the r»a* of the buii.l ng is open. A U a ir ilioiized Christian Science liters | uure can be bought or borrower I tm m n m m tt n a m s a m a t M t a m m m *1 HKO Q uULUC fíCP In Other Days j Tuesday Christian Bctence Sunday morning sei 11:00 a. m Subject ** G ad’r Bethlehem Chapter No. 78, O E-S. Within a matter o f fifty years ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ■— -■ *- • Meets Every Second *nd ‘Bad nan wc have lost all hate fo r the “hea- ,Bad n* w* ™ f t l y ” »’ H ugh W alker has had a trani Fo-irth Thursdays ?n each then Orinee' and consider him a ar‘ proverb, written before form er placed on the power line f í i n i Month. Visiting Members true brother in democracy a stur- 01,7 arm y if01 *n control of irrfor- o f the Sherman Electric company V Invited— Moro, Oregon dy Bgkter in the world*» battier. nwt^on about battle 1 oases. It is where at passes his farm horn ft Alice Ornduff, W . M. a fine and generous friend, etc., * * hoped our general» are less rorth o f Moro. Marie Hoskinson, Secretory etc^ etc. u ' afraid of the Germans than of 1 «»nine Rebekah No. 116 M r and M r« A. M cN ab of W a - ©c are the parents of a son bom Meets 2nd and 4th W W A m m l , g m . U ahow that Anwriean opinion. Saturday evening at .the hospital Tuesdays of each if on« b r o in * te be » rabid r t i u - ~ Z h. T V D . I I - . " ,<>nth- V w lt ng mem » « » M and try te « « l o d e »ome new mrom<‘ U l ,o n " may C H U R O H R S bers welcome. »r o n p be going to hare te be b‘ b “ ‘ w* ’11 - i 11 Henry Barnum and bride a r 4 ’ ce McKee N G. W A S C O M E T H O D IS T C IIU R C il re«J7 te ebMwe every no» end taka ** much m<,n' y 10 " " * o u t rived ............................................ home at Moro on N ................. e w Y e a r':’ F lo re n c e J o h n s to n . S« Sunday School at 10:00 A. M. «ben. There Is no eonaietenry in ar before. Filling that oort of a they having arrived at The I ureka Lodge No. 1 2 1 A .F .& A.AL it. e>o fotere, e , tbi. generation ,orm “ not ,a «*n.ng D alles on December 30th. r Meets en the 1st arfl m ight say 3rd Thursday evenings M ia» G w e n d o ly n « F o s s e n t e r t a i n It would be interesting to know 0» each month. Visiting ed at luncheon last Saturday a f W » . » whether we are being rationed for members arc cordially ternoon in honor of her sister, Mi&s B O N D C A M P A IG N - *“d meet with us. the benefit orf our souls, our Stom M arguerite F o « b , at which time R. P. Brishine W . M. Sherm ae county has done it at ach«. our mental attitude or just M is« M arguerite R V. Ic^khart, secretary announced her t a in , end kllce other champions, to ketp the bureaucrats in prac engagem ent to Lawrence E. Kane Moro Lodge N o. 113, I.O.O.F. h a » done R a little better than tice. berg. Included am ong the fifteen M eet« 1st and 3rd ever before. Sales orf E bonds will H e re ’, hoping 1»45 end« better P " ” " ’ 1 wer<“ W- Tuesdays in I.O.O.F. be near SIS percent when all tbc hall. Transient and Guy orf W asco and Miss Bee S tev than it starts. • visit ng brothers are t o t a l^ a r e M and eomgrfled. Sales enson orf Klondike. The last nam cordially invited orf other individual bonds w ill also to meet with us. N e w simile: A s slow as the ed has since the luncheon became he shove 990 percent, .perhaps the bride of Marion McKee of freeze on the Russian front. nearer 900 percen t Corporation Ernest Houston N . G. Hermiston. P °rc v Thompson. Secretary bond eales, whBe well over quota a re not so high in percentage be cause w e have no resident corpor ations orf ranch slse^ meet i rig 2 p. m. James D. Wuberg, pàstuf, '*<f MB. FABBBN OPENS: The heart of were not la rg e enough to permit spending of both the 1945 ration s nation at war is its war industries. Jkpan, unlike Germany, cannot « s - sti.mpa and all o f those carried pe-*se her production centers due to o v e r fr e m 1944.\.... . l< ographical limitations. The great “‘W e all reognize that most peo- Industrial nerve centers erf Japan hkve been photographed time and * '* y h° ° “ J““ p* nl. sim ply didn t need the food at again. They are in the bombeights of the time the stamps were intended the Superforts on every raiding mls- sJ.m. The bomb-punishing power of fo r use. Enough stamps w ill be :*»e B-J9 is unquestioned. Its strato made good in 1945 to assure eacn spheric altitudes make flak-fire e consumer his f a ir share o f the prayer-amd-a-ntlss defense, and cre 1945 supply. It would have been ates unfavorable conditions for' fighter u n fair to let some people spend opposition. The B-29 in the next sev- stamps unneeded in ’ 1944 fo r food eral months should have punched a damaging hole In the reservoir of a v a jjaj)ie m 1946.” Jsp armament production. There is To ^ o w extent o f unspent one thing that might halt this ever- pption stam ps and th.hi parsihle in creasing devastation »/. . that is if effect Qn futu re rationing, O P A the Jape were to throw up the heroic ann(>unce<1 results of surveys made type of fighter opposition the RAF by the Census Bureau, gave to Britain during the Dark Days of the Luftwaffe blitz. While the Jape su rvey» showed that at that are more than willing to die in de Fnday • The high W akï U p , A m irica and vegetables are at the lowest point since the w ar began sod yet p r o l o n g . It is reported that R of un_ 3f» days Is msuAcient time for ion membership. That means that f.m iliM now occupying Jnp owned (h<. umjm w l n U con)|Wly w land to move to other quarters. union due« out of paycheck» ky ,h<‘ G * ™ “ 1“ *“ * been rePl l r ~ li-ne outstending proce-sed foods ReeoIUction » « m t the Jxpuncee (> h ic h j , not Koi^ to M AH the ,tallan < M «e ) ’ Lampe equalled 2.8 months v d o r t e r ti plants were systematically dee supply. On su gar, the surveys w e r . jnorod in Much tíme. m ike U ^ CT, An ton« M our eowtrtutroo m y . that any person b o m in thia • co untry la a citizen with rights equal to those o f any other citizen, wt will have to get along with the Japanese who a re citizens. I f the Missionary Commenting on action o f the O P A in cancelling certain outstand ». i<