MMMMA» '«Wiìtt
TAMM l
ir
«uUMIAk
H E R M A N COUNTY JOURNAL tw o
QK£4H4*I
FNIM AT, JA h V A M T
*t pnce
_______ _____________ _________ ■_____
And th en W ayne Mw*<*. w ho *"ui
Pabttsbed Every W d a y a t
n»t had * sen ate to ta lk to for a
Mar©, O regon
w hole fo rtn igh t, broke out w ith a
Editor speech and so here w a s a nam e-
M w d rr ------ J
at u» c a llin g spree fo r everyon e.
h M to ffk a at Moro. Oreron »adar Act o f
Ag fa r a s can (be seen from here
--------- -------------------------- - in the m iddle o f a w h eat field
-—
none o f it did a b it o f good. There
,
AHI
w as no adequate exp lan ation o f r a
O U W L J W * « /1’ - -
w as no adequate exp lan ation of a
.
”
o„e'',Oó ^ t o n * o f eX
“ X O ò X .
h ile »
I
F rench
É D IT O R IA L -
SO C I AT IO N
y /¿ z n ^ U _
O FFIC IA L C O U N TY P A P E R
>< - R
K IPT
I I ’T IO
K N R A TES
SU B SC
lyable in Advance
P ayable
» N E V E A R ...............................
JA N U A R Y 11. 1946
H ELP! H E L P !!
Hi
Washington Column
Continued from p age ong.
from The Dalles are now visiting Mory Lodge
Kent
a t th e hom e o f Mr and Mrs Jesse
Helyer.
* ' •
Mrs John Decker left Monday
for Portland where sh e w ill re
ceive «medical attention.
- Seattle Man
profit, a fte r all c o sts had bten
charged a g a in st it, o f $29,530,917.
Increase in a ir m ail pound-m iles
an th e fiscal year en d in g June 30,
1945, is given b y civil aeronautics
» board . as 45 percent.
. •
board a s 45 percent.
P resident T r u i n ’ h a s ,tM e d
»
J /I
T \ II
/ f lC U O L k l^ S
*T*f
Lyons le
f t Thursday
r Pffc
i c j Jack
« ck uyuiis
irov
T**<>
° . / M
^or Cam P Cam pbell, K entucky, af-
. FS
roT/n ter spending h is furlough with his
inir
S
W a ash.,
w ei e r - e _____ A_ >
,____
,
A r o . i ------
in
g from
S ea
e a ttle.
ttle ,,W
r ti
w
nor
an<1
/v<
m arried on The D alles Friday a f-
P * » *» I « • » . U x lf e N .. 121 A .F > A^M.
.•
•
M eets on the 1st and
W hether John «or J o e or Jacq u es th a t ap p roxim ately
$41,000,00V,- *1Ve In
3rd Thursday evening«
thinks Bill or B ert or Bob is a 000 has been sp en t fo r len d -lease,
Mr and Mrs Jerry Wilson and
of each month- V isitin g
m em bers are cordially
com m unist or a reaction ary
is e.i- w h ile co n g ress has
appropriated G eorge W ilson returned M onday
nvited to m eet w ith u s
tirely w orthless th e se days
u n less $66,000,000,000 fo r th is purpose, from Tacom a, W ashington a fter
LeRoy W right, W. M.
accom panied w ith a definition o f R ep resen tative D w orshak o f Ioaho «pending a f e w d a y s vw iting MyA
H. B. Pinkerton, S ecretary
■thp term
hag introduced a resolution for an N o ra W alters, w ho has hsah BW-
deitermme
w h
h at
at w>usly
w>usly mi.
til.
If a m an com es up w ith an idea in v e stig a tio n to
determ ine w
lu p in e Rebekah Lodge No 11«
that looks like it m ig h t se ttle becam e o f th e rest o f the m oney.
Mr and M rs W ilbur He*yer
2nd and 4th
problem s o f the w orld, L end-lease w as supposed to nave from The D alles w ere visitors a t T uesdays of each
can w ell afford to IU U n ondod U .t October, b u t th e Idaho th e
D . W. H elyer
iro n , m o n t h ^ V W t n , m e «
w hether th e man is a com m unist
so cia list,
southern dem ocrat, or
other typ e o f reactionary. •
It is rtot likely th at th e republi-
can party is goin g to choose either tim e for an
accounting. officer«.
«L
-
‘
Mr T a ft or Mr Morse to set its
Indicating th e purpose o f the
Mr and Mrs Robert
Tatum w ere
policies, although both m ay hi.ve farm bloc to in s is t upon legi«la?4On dinner g u e sts o f Mr and Mr» Jx>-
e share in that job.
o f special in te r e st to agricu ltu re, bert H d y e r Sunday.
■*
i n fa c t th e whole deal is cock- Senator Capper of K ansas pre-
MT
W w Bfck W A “ wa-'
ey ed. D em ocrats w e know are ju st sented to th e sen ate th e en tire --------------------- ;— ,------------— -------- -----
S p ecializin g ln all form e o f
ag much ag a in st the ideas o f th e platform adopted a t a recent n a
C IO-PAC as are the republicans, tional convention o f the gra n g e
p a tc h e s .
but th ey m ay how l less about it which se ts fo rth item b y item the
When
Mr B yrnes w as in the under th e circum stances. Our p o l- proposals favored o r opposed by
U nited S ta tes se n a te he
had a yti<-ad divisions are historical
and th a t organization. Since Senator
reputation o f being som ething o f n o t re a listic . We need new ones.
Capper
is
the
acknow ledged
A nnuities
a
politician, a shrew d t r a d e r . _________ _____
spokesm an fo r the
gran ge, th h
Endow m ents
When he w ent to C hicago and ob-
Henry K aiser h as «made another platform is expected to be the ba-
Lim ited paym ent plans
t>ined a third o r fourth nom ina- o f his successful raids on som e s ia fo r fu rth er farm
leg islation
S alary S a vin gs
tion for Mr R oosevrit he w as con- on e’s labor supply, and the appears proposals.
R etirem en t Incom es
sidered one o f the finest and m ost t o have done it w ith a m inim um -- --------------------
P
A
U
L
R.
McCULLOCH
successful cloak room diplom ats o f coat to h im self.
P eople these days are figuring
405 E a st 2nd.
The D alles.
in the business.
-----------------------
. «P th eir incom es and p reparing to
But w hile Am erican politics is
This is th e kind o f w eather m
fa r a lot o f governm ent, th ey
not ex a ctly bush league stuff, w hich people renaark th a t w in te r s
order, didn’t u se and don’t
there seem s to b e little chance o f axe g e ttin g milder. Chances are w ant.
• trood m a n from our league step- th a t before lon g we w ill have s o m ’ -----------------------
p i ^ T t t o t b e international circuit o f th e kind o f w eath er th at m a k e,
N eed fo r a c o u n ty o r g a n u a f o n
Johnston. 8«
f
Mr. Byrnes has returned from
Moscow and a fter a few days in
our deligh tfu l land, departed f t r
London. Mr B yrnes is our secre-
tary o f sta te, and our m in u ter
abroad.
He com es from South
Carolina
w here the natives used
to
work m ules in th eir cotton
are to prom ote the cou n ty’s in terests
«ia becom ing known and a m eetn .g
w ill probably be called w ithin a
So fa r all o f our scien ce has r ^ e k . T here is lota to do and m ore
dedicB to, to
life
do it.
-------_ _
rPacht<1 th e a cm e o f devel- NOTICE TO C R ED ITO R S
opm ent
th is effort
perhaps
NOTICE IS. H ER EBY G IVEN
curves.
T ruder, o f thewe little bushy-
haired p o m e, are too rood for the
boy who learned .the mole tradinr
frame in Ma youth down m South
CaroHo*.
--
.
P erhaps it wouldn t hu
so
m uch if Mr B y r n e a k n e w when he
r o t rtuck w ith a bad hom e. But
he com es hom e b raggin g. B ut the
fo lk s a t home can see th a t he s
traded off the fam oly coach hor.c
fo r one th a t’s wiad-bwAien, ring-
boned, string-halted^ ^gUaa-eyed,
rat-tailed , and poorly fed.
T here’s no sen se in toading af-
ter th ese M uzhiks all the tim e,
If Mr B yrnes ca n ’t wpe*’ up like
som e effort m igh t b e m ade tow ard th a t
te&ching man
< 4 ^ ^ h is sp ir it duiy
th e undersigned has
been
appointed by the County
Ore|ron fcr
----------------- Sherm en County,
a,
E xeeutriv
In
thig internati on ai loaning ^ ’^ ‘e e sta te ^ j u H u s M edler, de-
ifS devoutly hoped th at
a-lwaya be in position o f
Ap p e ^ n g h avin g claim s again-
' ¿„stead of saved. If we
e sta te are hereby required
barrow fn n n
Europe to
present th e sam e to the undèr-
m
nce
it
m aintain
aintain our
our trade
trade oaH
oabinc©
it sig n ed a t W asco, Oregon, with
wouJd n<>
be « o n o -J c a H y , vouch^ „ properly verified as by
diplom atically and so-
w ithin six m onths
innx>s8ihiet and greeted w ith f
h date o f
publics-
a w him sical sm ile.
and Mr M ok tov, le t’s send som e
one w ho can. Thia bringing home
a spavined horse every trip is
bound to run down the quality of
our
r stock p retty peon.
So fa r we have given up the
B altics, Poland, the B alkans, all
n ations we had prom ised a full
dem ocratic life after the w ar. W e
are g e ttin g out o f Iran and R ussia
w g e ttin g in. W hile we are not
d u ty bound to do much for Turkey
ft ia slig h tly d istaatefu l to sec that
n ation ’s bones picked over so rinse-
ly by the bearded gentlem an from
jkcrose th e Black eea. W e tpok
Japan all by ourseJvee ex cep t for
nhght aid from B ritain and now
Mr S ta lin w a n ts to be an adivsor
in th a t territory.
We can’t stand m any More of
th ese trip s by Mr Byrnes. The
R ussians have already won m ore
from w h at w e »0 glib ly call cur
diplom ats than they won from the
Germ an arm y. And it has taken s
short tim e, too.
---------------
TA LK IN G FOR T H E RECORD
For a man w ho has sp e n t
m any years in the senate Mr T iu -
m an is devoid o f pri>lic understand
ing and esp ecia lly lacking in
know ledge of how to g e t along
w ith the boy« on the hill. I t’s a
good th in g television w a sn ’t be-
m g used the other night w hen he
talked fo r w a tch in g the p resid en t
c u t hia own throat would have
been a grue*>me s ig h t
C ongress probably has no inften-
tion o f p a ssin g much o f the le g ’s-
lation the president asked;
it
m ig h t b e batter if the president
rem ained sile n t and let th e bills
die for it look» to b e rather paotly
designed a t beat. N ow th a t he’s
gone over the head of Congress lie
has no b asis on which to appeal
tion r f th is notice.
G INA M ED LER , E xecutrix
<wf the EeJtate o f J u liu s Med-
ler, D eceased.
G A V IN & G A V IN , The D alles,
_
O regon, ’A ttorn eys for E state.
From the Observer, Jan. 11, H»07 D a te o f first
f irs t publliraiti(yn.
p u b lic a tio n : j J a an
n . . 11,
m eeting of the county 1946.
1014
the tax levy was m iw e a s
follow s: sta te and _ county
fund
m ills, county school 21 m ills,
ro<d
x
>|oro had a 10
miy tox for cjty and 12 for school,
LAW YER
Qraas V alley a 12 m ill for city
WASCO
MORO
and g f or school and W arfco 15
io r city and 12 for school. Valua-
^jons were som ew hat low er.
Tbe big
in
d t y ’g w ater
THE OLD JUDGE S A
gygteim fined w ith m uck w hen the
^ ve up
m0,iature la s t
I »
w eek.
Tueaday even in g Mrs Robert
U rqubart and Mrs H. S. M cDanel
entertajw d a t wftiist a t the la tte r ’s
hame
From the o b serv er, Jan 12, 1917
Tbe
¡n bhe rabbit hunt en-
In Other Days
T. Lester Johnson
-« o
. et/ P^ e r y Second
Second ant
M eets E very Secon
Fourth Thursday« ri n ea?b
Month. V isitin g Member«
Me
Oregon
IiP’lted.— Moro. Or,
H elen R uggles, W. M.
Edna M eizer, Secretary
J
R. R. McKEAN and SON
in s u r a n c e
Grain. Feed, Flour, Fuel
Farm Im plem enta. B ags, T w ine
BA R BED W IR E —GOOD
Feeds torte
163
WASCO
PHONES
Office
PO ST?
Residence
182
OREGON
162
THOR ELECTRIC DRILLS
LOCK W R EN C H ES
P R E S S U R E W R EN C H ES
BLOW TORCHES
EA SY OUTS
PLEW OILERS
T A P W R EN C H ES
DRILL SE T S
LOOSE DRILLS
WOOD CH ISELS
E X T E N S A L amp
S H E L F BR ACK ETS
SA W S
HAM M ERS
AXES
CAN O P E N E R S
DRY CELLS
SM A LL A D JU ST A B L E V ICE'ALL SIZ E S STO V E BOLTS
WOOD SCREW S
HACKSARIB
LAG SC R EW S
show er M eads
ALL SIZED H IN G E S
STOCK TANKS> 3 SIZES
G R E A SE G U N S
TOOL BOXES
24 FT. E X T E N SIO N LADDE)
SA W SE T S
PLIER S
M EAT SA W S
r
ALSO FIRTEX
W RENCH SE T S
A LL SIZ E S F IL E S
T A P E M E A SU R E S
MOP H E A D S
P U SH BROOMS
CORBIN PADLOCKS
P U T T Y K N IV E S
TIN S N IP S .
SO LD ER IN G IRONS
STO V E P IP E & ELBOW S
Mors» ansi W i
E rn est H ouston N . G.
A. R. K essin ger, Secretary
ROLLER SKATE
FOR HEALTH, PLEASURE,. EXERCISE
M o n d a y & T h u r s d a y N ite s
M o r o H a ll
S k a tin g a t M a u p in F r id a y s & S a tu r d a y s
ooooooodooboowcMoooooooodoooooooooodooooiSoooGoSr
Is an old established firm that has been selling,
servicing and repairing cars for a generation.
The dependability of its products and the qual
ity of its service has been proven‘many times.
Now, when it is doubly important that you
have good workmanship and quick service to
keep your cars and trucks running, have us take
care of your service problems.
T ire R epair and Recapping
4 0 1 E 3rd
T h e D a lle s
Grangers ©row Social Crops
that benefit /
all Oregonians
W fw -'X
£
w «r-
; /
? »
aí
c,
y
> 5« ’ è
¿ -. i / -
<5 , n . H''
í » -
’X ’y'î*
■
'ZAZI '
■'*s , *
-, 1 1
. - x •' A iK ; ; v i i k
i *
W e’ve got it!
M o ro L u m b e r & F u e l
'-4
M A R Y A N N MULICK
1. . « T ite « — i
Y S ...
Atusas
j THE GRANGE and its members have been^
zhe’"educational and motivating spirit which has
tertainod the w inners F riday af-
tem oon and evening. Officers of
th e sta te gam e com m iso.on w ere
here to talk and s«h»;v p ic tu re s.
Clifford Woods had a runaw ay
la st w eek w hile goin g hom e from
school. The reach of the b u ggy
broke and the horse ran aw ay to
be stopped by J .C . Hockm an.
L ittle dam age.
By 1917 the sta te tax w rs to
2.88 m ills, the school fund w as 1
m ill, county 4.12, roads 3.4 for a
to ta l o f nearly 12m ills.
Sherm an county e e ttle rs
nave
defeated Sam uel Herrick in his
effort to obtain 20 percent of the
claim s approved fo r lo st non.e-
steads.
From the O bserver, Jan 14, 1927
F ire
destroyed
th e
elevator
shortly a fter six o ’clock Tuesday
night despite heroR* effort» o f vol-
unteer fire fighters.
to them directly.
Two rural fa rm
hom es
were
Snimtor T a ft didn’t do a bad >ob aeenea o f social affairs la s t F i-
o f p o iw a lr rtr l throat cu ttin g him . day night w hen Mr and Mrs Henry
se lf a n igh t or tw o later. It is Barnum and Mr and Mrs Roy
possible to cast considerable doubt P ow ell-en tertain ed a t 500.
o n th e sta te m e n t th a t Trum an ho»
Vhe Columbia G orge s ta g e uck-
gone com pletely to the left. F o r a et office has been moved to tjie
■ « » A im p oU tteb n . a sm a ll, mid-». R oss confectionery from the More
dle-Amerfaan dounty judge and a H otel.
farm er by trade to go very far to
D. W. N ish saya that since the
th e le f t 1« aot possible. I t ia more sparrow hunt began the birds are
Rkaly that he b tryin g to do the flying high w hen they return to
Sid Roman standing stunt and ride tow n a t nights.
A ttorney A t'
W a lth e r-W illia m s C o.
G A S A N D OIL
Tire«—A ccessorie«
Is there anything
here you want?
M IK E A N D
GEORGE G. yPDECRAFF
Houeton, N.G.
con gressm an in sists th a t it s oper- Sunday u n til Tuesday.
ation s are continuing unabated. It
S atu rd ay n igh t th e I.O.O.F . nod
is now four m onths since h oetiii- th eir an nual o y ste r feed at w hich
tie s ended and he b eliev es it is tim e th ey a lso hod lnstalla-ti^M O
and doing a n y th in g but strik in g people remark th a t w in ters
out. These R ussians have too m tn y g e ttin g colder.
N o. I l l , |,tí-O .F .
M eets 1st and 3rd
T uesdays in I.O.O.F.
hall-
T ransient and
v is it’ng brothers áre
i
cordially invited
to m eet w ith us.
**“ •*
brought into being a large percentage of the more
‘
c
1
-than 200 farmer-owned and operated cooperatives
k"
in Oregon. During 1944 these did a business of
*
***
.
$105,000,000 —37%
- ‘
-
•
I
of Oregon’s cash farm income.
, Cooperative projects are as vital a part of Grange ‘
activities as better agriculture itself. That is why 28,000
progressive farmers belong to th e ’ Oregon State
I
Grange—why membership continues to grow—why
the Grange is a dominant force for social progress.
H A R R Y: **I don’t know what they’ll weigh
up. Judge, but m y cattle and poultry sure
have.been gettin fatten since I started to
u«e distillers’ dried grain« in their ration.”
OLD JUDGE: “ You’re about the tenth one
who has told me that, Harry. How,do you
account for i t ? ”
H A R R Y : “ The J>y-product recovered from
grains used by distillers is very high in vita
min and protein content It’« the best feed
supplement we can get to balance the rations
we feed our dairy cows, livestock and poul
try. Mixed with original grain, these di»-
Tltit
tillers’ dried grains have a much greater
feeding value than the original grain ha«.”
OLD JUDGE: “ Have any trouble getting
all you need ?”
H A R R Y: “ Yea, at times, even though the
distillers produced 1.200,000,000 pounds of
it for the year endin' last June. I hope they’ll
be in a position to produce a lot more
next year.”
OLD J U D G E :' Ia n I guess nobody can
tell you grain is v.asted in distilling.”
H A R R Y: “ Not me, Judge . . . I know.”
Informatioo about the purpose
and accomplishments of the Ore
gon State Grange is contained ia
a booklet "Let’s Lode at the
^Record”. Contact your local
Grange for copy, or write direct.
OBECOa STATE CRANGE
lus KL
St, Pertkmd 14, Orages
72
O F S E R V IC E
s>mwrW by C^nftrttet • / XMbeNr
ZiU«ttr«tt. Za
to
oaseoN
f a r m i B s