Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1946)
A ? -* — r- --Il 9 m £ 1 B è -UI â —— ■ ' jbtàKAh. Muào, UKKOUK ' '•■ " 'I ¡ 18 F A il) AY, J V X » M, IMO .... - -i *3 |j . ,« I S ,r ».A POVNTV IfrUMfrit, ¿ W e oft^n thfth the better train« WASHINGTON COLUMN Jr '■ ¡i^ _ 'J . __¿ f e w y F r íü y a( ones. > V 4 family, Waseó Pastor Friends will be glad to know that „Mrs W. E. Bruckert, who Is -In the Emanuel hospital in Port land, is improving. • .»unHpl from page one. WHEAT URO WER WfeATHMK "Í5í»ior Whether the final result—to be determined by the speed of the Furtoffiew a t M oro. Orep^n wheat trucks—is good or not, the Um«r*-*» of M arch I . 18'M. *.vheat grower has certainly been favored by the weatherman this month. With the exception of those who lost their crop by hail, the farmers have had good wheat CDITORIAL- growing weather during June, to a major extent in May, SSOCIATION and Jupe has been cool, even cold, with only a day or two of warm weather. Even now, with the OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER ■'Fourth of July a week away smoke curls from nearly every ¿LlfeC klPriO N KATES chimney at evening. Payable in Advance Cool Junes are almost as neces ONE YEAR ..... $4.00 sary to full wheat kernels as June rains. We have had both, ”7 JU N K 28, 1>4« and while • they might not be Those wj- who w o u ld 1>-U« e abl? to “ j!1* coun“ r.,some earlier, rather , * unfavorable conditions freed o m fo r s e c u r ity nI e they will help. There’s weeds in the north end where seeding was d eserv in g o f n eith er. •done early, but in general the Indefinitely; he must start ac tion within one year. A man in Alexandria, Va., which ! is a suburb of Washington- D. C., fil ed suit against the Mutual Ice Co. demanding $34,200 back pay. He claimed that he worked over time on Sundays in 1938 and since, and that all told, he has a claim to that staggering amount. If the worker wins the case the ice company will have to go into bankruptcy. Any worker who feels that he has a just claitai against his employer can Idrop a post card to the wage and hours administrator, Washington D. C. and be informed of his rights. There has to be a definite time in which a suit may be started and workers cannot go back in- tc the dim and silent past, when witnesses' may be dead or gone after a period of many years. Sugar Beet Acreage Returns For . Tenth Year Rev and Mrs Canneli returned Monday evening from the Meth odist convention at Seaside to be gin their tenth yèaé in Wasco. Rev Canneli and .. h isw ife - hold the honor of having served in one community thft longest time of any pastor J n the Cascade dis tric t Ed Stokes had a stroke Mon day and! was taken to the hospi tal. George Drinkard Sr. was taken to The Dalles hospital Saturday night suffering from blood poi soning in*his arm. Mrs Dale Howell and daughters of Kent visited last week with Mr and Mrs Joe Drinkard and family. Mrs Htowell and Mrs Drinkard are sisters. Lewis Martin, son of Mr and Mrs Orville Martin of Portland, is visiting Mr and Mrs George Drinkard. Mr and Mrs J. O. Lane of Rose- ville, California, are making their home in Wasfco this summer. The young adults of the Meth odist church held a potluck din ner in the church basement Sùn- dav, June 23. Gordon Hilderbrand was re leased from The Dalles hospital and returned home Friday. Gaylord Guy of Portland is spending the summer in Wasco with his grandparents, Mr and Mrs Frank Lamborn. Dallas Miller, Donald, Elizabeth and Toby Miller of Hoquiam, Washington visited last week with Mr and Mrs Art Macheel and family. They returned to Ho quiam Saturday. Mr Miller is a brother in law of Mrs Macheel. Mr and Mrs Cart Meli, former ly of Wasco, are the parents of a baby girl born Monday, June 17, at The Dalles hospital. The baby has been named Carol Ann. Anita Meli is spending two weeks visiting at the home of Mr and Mrs A. H. McIntyre and crop looks like it would satisfy ordinary hopes, especially with PRICE CONTROL the price at a ceiling price Allowed To Increase What is now likely to happen about, two bits above the loan German prisoners of war while to prices is no more clear than (price. it has been for the last six mon- , Wheat growers have queer engaged in farm work in Mal ths. The best seems to be that juck, in that conditions remain heur county from May 1 to June prices will continue to rise until the same for a number of years 15, added $130,184.40 to the U- there is enough production to .^he drouth of the early thirties nited States treasury balance as stabilize • them and satisfy the lasted until everyone was broke they blocked and thinned or hoed demand for goods. grid the big crops of the forties. 13,525 acres of the total 22,000 Despite the boasts of the OPA have prevailed until all are rich, acre sugar beet crop in that sec that condition has pretty much little more mixing of condi- tion, announces J. R. Beck, prevailed all the time. It was tions would have given a less state supervisor of the extension service farm labor program. recently found nesessary to raise troubled life. Six weeks work by prisoner the price of butter 11 cents a n d ____________ groups was halted June 15 when cheese six cents to insure pro duction. Certainly OPA must ad- ITCH HITTER the War Department ordered mit that as a controller of price A Portland legislator is report- preparation for returning the these no perfec- have criticized the plan men to Germany. tion. Farmers paid the prevailing ?'*« . ... . ... . 1 . av hereby taxpayers were given S.J{? L i1*!?.1 can*back some of their payments in wage rate for all prisoner of war be atab‘! “ ** u" U! the 0PA and 1944 and 1945. He says, now, that labor, Beck explains. The pri p_^T, P -f® iart„ rem<iV1ed’ 4he money should have been kept. soners themselves were allowed Producers will «111 be waiting w hat a «-rrthle nuisance mem- to keep 80 cents per day;; the for a free market, a practice ory would to hlm He foughl remainder of their wages going that probably has much to do ajj during the session for a big to the U. S. treasury. The prison with the shortage of meat and forgiveness of income tax, want ers were allowed to keep a total the black market in that com ed no tax, introduced a bill for of $23,165.60 from their earnings. modity. Many of the cities are 60 percent, cut it 25 percent. Was However, a good share of this short of meat although shipments defeated by the income tax sup personal money went for can- of stock to market is almost nor porters. canteen items, army officials re mal. port. The forgiveness plan was ex The American people are not pected to return a small amount, As a result of government calls sufficiently law-abiding to obey but receipts were so large it for increased . sugar production, «tsim m m uuntununm xnm m m ta regulations that are not popular grew to 75 percent, and then the sugar beet acreage in Mal and reasonably sound. We do dropped to 30 percent and was heur county has grown well be not wiped UUl out HI in the last icf legislative yond the limits where local la Mr«« have »«v a large enough , police 'Wipcu U1C iaoi bor is able to handle the crop. °°ntro' any session by appropriations, more than we had enough of ficers to keep people from drink- The OPA must have decided MORO , Phone 271 OP.EGON . ing liquor in prphibition days. that it need not even try to be Beef and Lamb u u u m u a »»nnn«nnnmn»>K»« n There is evidence that produc popular. It raised the price of Lupine Rekrksh. Ixxlve N«. lift tion has nearly caught up with beer the other day. Meets 2nd , And 4Vh Subs.dies End Sunday Tuesdays of each demand in some goods and sta month. Visit ng mem tistics indicate that we may soon They brag about a country have an actual surplus of some where you can sleep with blan So that Oregon livestock pro bers welcome. ducers may arrange their m ar goods kets on every night in the year, keting accordingly, the state L. Mcl^chlan NG Flore-nce Johnston, t' The __ price , will certainly . t>e hi- but what should be said about a gher. It has always been higher country where you have to PM A committee reminds that Chapter No. 78, d after the inflation of war. It has ,8ieep under blankets every both the beef cattle feeder sub Bethlehem M*et»: Every Second urx sidy and the sheep and lamb steadily Increased in peace time night. Fcftirti Thursdays ;n ea.-u production payments will be and It must follow the trend o f ------------------ Montik Visiting Member^ ended as of June 30, 1946. wages that have been permitted Man has lots to fear from big invite«— Moro. Oregon The PMA committee calls at of increase by government action, things; big organizations, big mo- Helen Rugglea, W. M. Prices are already up and will be nopolies, big corporations, big tention to instructions for hand- Edna Melger, Secretary higher yet, OPA or no OPA. governments, big bombs. There during the remainder of the per- i ’ ureka Lo^’re N o . t ^ l A.F.^fc A.At. ling applications for payment *------------------ • should be a limit on size. Meets on the 1st and iod. Animals owned by feeder- 3rd Thursday evening« TEN YEARS slaughterers must be slaughtered of each month Visitin« eligible for payment. Similarly, . Robbery while armed with a members . are cordially before midnight June 30 to be invited to rnnt wPh ’■ dangerous weapon is not a charge in the case of a feeder who sells LeRoy Wright, W. M. to be taken lightly. The penalty to a slaughterer or toe a person H. B. Pinkerton, Secrc -ar>_ upon conviction is a minimum From the Observer, June 28, 1907 other than a slaughterer, the of ten years, with life the maxi animals must be delivered to a doro Lodge V»i. 1 !>• J .O.6.F mum and the law warns • that The night of the 20th S. A. before midnight Meets 1st anf^ 3r* the minimum penalty is not to Moshers team of horses became slaughterer Tuesdays in I.O.O.r June 30. be given due care on the part of unhitched from the rack in Moro, ha I'.- T ran sien t an “Delivery to a slaughterer,” the court . .. and went home, 11 miles, without risit ng brotheril Two young men, neither hav- a driver. They must have struck it is explained, means that the cordially rriviMd animals are weighed to the ing reached majority, are charged a lively gait as the seat was to m eet w ith un- or waiting to be charged with shaken loose, the circle split and slaughterer and complete owner Ernest Houston N. G. ship is vested in him. that offense for acts committed tongue damaged. A. R. K< ssinger. Secretary on the highway« of Sherman v Seemingly L. Barnum is going county. into the weather business, hav- The question is not what to ing supplied himself with baro- do with them. That has already meter, thermometer, wind veloc- been determined by existing by recorder, rain gauge, etc. The laws and previously performed Observer will publish the fore- acts of their own. casts. What to do to prevent such John Clark has a fine well on crimes is a question that has nev- his Kent farm, and has released er been answered. Faced with the tank wagon. His well, pump, the facts in such a case the windmill, reservoir and all corn- moralist's expression is “Tish, bined cost $1,700. Tiah”; the legal mind sees cause - Ray Ragsdale’s name appears and effect and beckons the prft in the list of graduates at the son doors open; the reformer Monmouth State Normal this wants to change society; the so- week.. cial theorist blames some one prom the obaepver| JuIy ,, 1927 else, usually some one with mon ey, or sweepingiy blames the en- Miss Marjory Ginn has return- tire social structure. • ed from Ashland where she has We have about one-tenth of been a student at the state nor- one percent of Oregon citizens mal. She will teaeh School east It’s much easier than falling off a In the penitentiary now and pro- of Kent next term. log! Just try Chevron Supreme in hably two or three times as many Members of the Moro and Grass have been in and o u t It may be Valley boy scout troop are ex- your tank. It’s tailored to your car that that is about as near moral peeled to break camp at Suttle with the same skill that perfected perfection as we can hope to lake this Friday, arriving home reach. Still, there are thousands late in |h e afternoon. Standard’s war-proved flying fuels. pf ciswt we, as e eoclyty of men, Jack Kelly was down from N ew blending agents in Chevron Supreme give you*fast ooukl improve. < _ Kent last Monday morning with starts, smooth acceleration, pingless performMnce. It’s the It may all go back to careless news that the rain storm of the or ignorant parents, broken night before had resulted in .73 finest motor fuel Standard ever produced—y+u can bank homes, poor moral education, yet of an inch recorded at the govern- on every trip being a pleasure trip with Chevron Supreme! these things seem to bear more ment instruments. on the kind of crime committed The open air pavillion al Was- as upen the commission of crime co Is recivtng oil and sand in pre J. C. WILSON. PHONE-552 itself. paration for the summer dances. WASCO, OREGON Certainly there Is no one ans- The postoffice at Wasco was wer. and just as certainly no one broken into and robbed Wednes- answer that would work for ev- day night for the third time since li C. ANDERSON, PHONE 232 eryone of the men who are spend* W. R. Tate has been in charge GRASS VALLEY. OREGON ing their lives removed from of the office. The safe was blown rcontact with their fellows. It open, but it is not known at this does seem, though, that the boys time just how much loss the ■who are allowed or encouraged effort caused the Wasco postof- A S T A N D A R D O F C A L IF O R N IA P R O D U C T to grow—up tough and Inconsid- flee, nor at what time the burg- erate of others get into trouble lars operated. « C. A . Ruggles INSURANCE - Mr and Mrs Wes Fuller and son, ..Mr and Mrs Fred Dormaier and family and Mr and Mrs Art rodeo in Tygh Valley Sunday. Macheel and family attended the Mrs Louise Endlcoctt is spend ing a few days visiting her aunt in Oregon City. Mr and Mrs Coleman of The Dalles, and their daughter and grandson of California, visited Grandma Slscel Sunday. Mrs Coleman is a daughter of Grand ma Slscel. \ Mrs Ida Andrews bps returned from Portland1 where she - has been visiting her children. Mr and Mrs Charles Schwedn- hart returned to their home in Hoquiam, Washington Saturday after a six weeks visit with their daughter, Mrs Art Macheel. Mr and Mrs Arthur Sargent spent a few days last week visit ing with their daughter, and son in law, Rev and Mrs Charles Ne ville of Corvallis. Weekend visitors at the home of Mr and Mrs Vernon Van Gil der were their son and daughter In law Mr and Mys Glen Van Gilder of Portland Mr and Mrs Jim ' Robinson of Portland Violet Hoeschelle, also land, k bevirai members d ths Pytb* ian Sisters attend«#. »Memorial services given for Mary Andrews in The Dalles, Monday evening. Mr and Mrs Marvin Thomas and sons and Joyce Wallace spent tMfe weekend jn Portland. Mr and Mrs Carl Tuggle are visiting in Seattle, Washington. Visitors In The Dalles Tuesday were Mr and. Mrs Dan McDermid, Rawleigh Products FRANK I,. ’r - T ” z MORO. ORRPGON Phone 45» D istric t T>*» t 1«;- -f.r Gilliam A Sherman Counties »Mt Mr «nU M»» BvwW WllWM, Mr and Mr*. . O'***” and »on». Pat OMeara. Clem Welk made a business trip to Portland last week. * GEORGE G. UPDEGRAFF A tto rn e y A t L a w and W i GAS AND OIL Tires-Accessorlea r . H. McKEAN and SOM I N g V R N C Grain, F e e d Floer, Fuel F ar» Implement«, Bags, Twine BARBED WIRE—GOOD POSTS PHONES Feedstore Office Residence 163 OBHDOM WASCO Our Motor Tuneups Are Deluxe! Bruce Muir, our motor tuneup expert, c m really make your car run like new again Drive In, let us tuneup your motor now. O u r R e p u ta tio n Ja Y our P rotec tion Sunset Motor Co. OLDSMOBILE CHEVROLET NOTICE OF FINAL HEARING NOTICE is hereby given that the undersigned have filed in the County Court of the State of Oregon • for Sherman County their Final Report and Account as Executrix and » Executor of the last will and testament of J. L. Davi^ deceased, and that Saturday, the 127 day of July, 1946, at ten o’clock A. M. of said day, at the County Courtroom, a t the Courthouse in Moro, Sher man County, Oregon, has been fixed by the Court as the time .and place for hearing of objec tion« to said Final Report and Account and the settlement of said estate. Emma Davis Luther W. Davis Geo. G. Updegraff, Attorney for Executrix and Executor. 34-37C CADILLAC RECAPPING GUIDE T U AD ALMOST OOM Ì WATCH O UTIM A Kt A DATt WITH US TO U C A P T IM I ÌM OOTH U C A P AT OMCt U t US TODAY RHEUMATISM and ARTHRITIS tASPIC W O W IN Q THPOUOH DO N’T DtLAY UNTIL THIS H A PPtN t I suffered for years and am so thankful that I, found relief from this terrible affliction that I will fladly answer anyone writing me for information. Mrs Anna Pautz P.O.Box 285, Vancouver, Wash. Pd-.»Adv.-NUE-OVO Laboratories SB US FOR QUALITY WORM SUNSET MOTOR COMPANY j la Other Day; THE SEASONED TRAVELER Goes by T ra in W I T H F A S T E R U n ion P acific train s now o p era tin g . . . w ith lo n g -d eferred b u sin ess, fa m ily and pleasu re trip s to m ake . . . w ith am ple space available . . . w h y put off travel ? F a st, com fortab le U n ion P acific train s w ill take you w h erever y ou w an t to g o — N O W ! R ecen t sc h e d u le ch an ges o f S tream lin ers and steam -pow ered trains eastbou nd, w est- bound and lo ca lly have cu t sev era l h ours, in m any cases, from p reviou s ru n n in g tim es. T h ese chan ges, w h ich becam e e ffe c tiv e on June 2, work to the d efin ite advantage o f the busin ess traveler and th e va ca tio n ist. For com p lete in form ation , inquire at any U n ion Pacific T ic k e t Office or o f your local agent. J. H. Cunningham C. A. 1st Na tional Bank Bldg., 2nd & Alder Sts. Walla Walla Washington. . Phone 30. U N IO N P er ■Aia bt tp ttlflt- T ttg C IF IC AMA R M IL R O A