✓
W IDAY, F E B R U A R Y
PAGE 2 SHERM AN COUNTY JOÜRNAL, MORO, OREGON
flC atsnfv
•
*
ter nt
or other strange fem ale of the
i r Act of com m unity.
1
New things fill a need for
change, like onions and radishes
and rhubarb after a w in ter’s
PER
fare of beans and potatoes (who
O reg
, i < (, h
ore?) but it
11 H 1 1 w ig
old and reliable that give
P U BUSMENS
itu - l I M A I
constant pleasure.
UATlDNAL CDlTOBl AL-— T here is enough of fun in a
‘ ( ( C lf IATIO N basket social for anyone. Sur
- prize, tension, delayed develop
m ents are all factors.
And it’;’.
u lu —
o ip k r
fun to see who eats w ith who
O FFIC IA L C © C N T Y J , ' £ 5 2 _ an d
«peculate for days a s to
SVBSClVlPTI<)N RATES
W hether it was accident or deeply
itted design.
82.00
ONE YEAR -----
— _
FEBRUARY 13, 1948
d r o i *
aftei spending the holidays with
Mr B ish’s parents in W est Minis
ter, M aryland. Dr. L R. Richel-
derfer flew to M aryland and mo
tored hom e w ith her daughter
and son in law, Mr and Mrs Ro
bert Bish.
Mr and Mrs J. A. Foss *w ere
GAS AND OIL
The
Dalles visitors Monday.
Ttree-Accessorie«
Mr and Mrs Carl Mayfield of
Pendleton w ere recent guest 3
p>
McKEAN and i SON of
Mr and Mrs Floyd Root.
w io ™
OREGON
Mrs Floyd Root left Tuesday
for Spokane, W ash., retu rn in g
IN S U R A N C E
home Saturday.
All paren ts of boys betw een
Grain, Feed, Flour, Fuel
the ages of 9-12 who are inter-
Mr and Mrs H. M. Zell re tu rn
ed from a m otor trio to W alport
w here they attended the E astern
Star.
Mr &nd Mrs Robert Bish and
son Douglas
returned
Friday
neers together and r i s i n g fond ;
Ç,u b p |ays;
fo r t heir churches and o th er pub
lie institutions. School desks ant
pulpits have been bought w ith CQ| c NxxW 1 lick»
the dollars and dimes th a t w ere L a l o 1 K W 171M1
collected from bashful bidders
-----Published E very Friday at
Moro, Oregon — • A
E d ito r fo r th e i,a s k et of th tsch o o l-m arm
Giles U French
MARKET
13, 1948
By M rs Belle C lothier
The T ester club m et at the
home of Mrs Floyd Root Monday
afternoon. A 1:80 dessert luncn-
eon followed by an afternoon of
contract. High score was won by
Mrs F rancis W atkins and door
prize by M il Paul McCoy.
Mr and Mrs A. C Kaseberg
retu rn ed W edensday after a two
weeks visit in Portland.
Farm Im plem ents, Bags, Twine
Mrs Cafeha Yates returned from
T h e re ’s N o th in g F in e r T h an A
Hood River Friday.
BARBED W IR E —GOOD POSTS
Mr and Mrs L. L. Funk were
STROM BERG-UAK I j SON
PHONES
Sunday dinner guests of Mr and Ppedstorp
Office
Residence
M ra W. A. Nlabet.
’
h
162
182
1
* 1W
Made-To-Measure Clothes
T. Lesier Johnson
WASCO
W 48€O < H l'W 'H OF C H B I8 T WABC&. ORBOON
IN V IT E S
LAND BANK LOANS
J
From where I s it... / / J o e
KÍIIH MOLALO
OIL PRODUCIS
TVo Book but the Bible .
No Creed but the Christ
No Name but the Divine
John and E tha DeM oss say:
stop in at our show room at De-
Moss 8pr. Pick out the Model you
would like to hear in ¿your ow n
home w ithout obligation.
From $35.95 Up______
Crop Dusting
and Spraying
Cody- Wiecking Aero Service
PAT
NM O N
STANLEY SWETr
Ed’s Place
N orth tu rn a t WASCO
Wasco, Oregon
Phone
282
A u L o R ep airin g
For Steaks Cooked the way
You Like Them
A tlas T ires
A tlas Batteries
Tasty Salads - -Good Coffee
magazines
CHEyRON
GAS STATION'
D rin k s - F o ci - S n o o k e r - I < u n ta in
ON H A L F A DAY’S NOTH E W E’LL GET ANY K IN D
Ol D IN N E R YOU O R D E R FOB A GROUP. F U L L F IV E
COURSE D IN N E R W IT H W HAT YOU W ANT IN IT. f
We’ve put in
2 1/4 M ILLIO N
TELEPHONES
since V J Day
w
1. W e h a d to b r e a k r e c o r d s . .. a n d we did. To
day we’re serving over one-fourth m ore telephones
th an a t the w ar’s en d —a net gain of three-quarters
of a million. And, since every day m any custom ers
move, we actually had to install more th an two
and a q u arter million telephones to make th is gain.
P A C IF IC
2 . C o m p le x s p li c e « l i k e th i« — thousands of
th em —w ent into the two million miles of wire
we’ve p u t in. And th a t’s only p a rt of the story
m ore th an 200 new buildings o r ad d itio n s. .. « im
plex new switching equipm ent in alm ost all our
buildings . . . these and oth er facilities are being
added in th e face of sharply rising costs and tough
supply problem s.
3. W e’re s till w o r k in g a g a in s t tim e . O rders
continue to flood in. To fill service needs we’re add
ing facilities a t the ra te of more th an half a mil
lion dollars a day —every day. A huge investm ent,
yes. But telephones have been going in as never
befori* in the W est. And as th e system grows, your
telephone service becomes more valuable still
No. 110
Meets 2nd and 4th
Tuesdays of each
B A S K E T S<M I A L
m onth.
Visiting
an adver m em bers welcome,
This paper can
tisem ent for an oid-fashloned Bertha Bclshe N (.
liasket social, the first such af Clara Houston, Sec. }
At 3**
fair for the public oi which there
has been notice recently.
In M oro I Xu l g r N o . H3 1 .o .o .ll.
am usem ent (as in other things'* Meets 1st and 3rd
x itU if t.
we alw ays search for, tf
I.O.O.F. Ä i i
Tuesdays ir. i I.O.O.F.
and bizarre in an effort t t , , , ’ hall. T ransient and
ourselves and neighbors
visiting brothers are
if* Î
the m eloncholy distilled by the! to rd ially invited to
ov. n company. It doesn't alway
meet with u
w ork.
j
o’
Now h#»r° is an exah
I<eo W atkins, N. G,
som ething old.
Basket social:
John De Moss, Secretary
were a m eans of getting the pio
.....
CODY— BILL W IECKING
P .O . Box I«5 S<ap|HW-,e, Oregon l-honr 171
HE CHOOSES...
Lodge
YOU TO A C C EPT
friendly
.............
Ite h e k a h
MORO
J
Chapm an Bldg., (over P enney’a)
‘
PHONE 3715
The Dalles, Oregon
v-----------------------—
POSHES INTEREST DOWN
oh
Anyone w ith a chart of ecoiv ^roni the Observer, Feb. 15, 1929
have fore-
omic condition: could the
A num ber of cold w'oather re
m arket.
told the drop in >f tim e after cords of past years has been bro-
About this length drop fn Ebe boom te n th is , m onth w ith the advent
a w ar there 1
You bocome a m tm b tr of tka N a tio n al Farm
the of the storm that is yet with us.
th at brings conditions below
Loan Association tha minuta you taka a Land
If usual One of, these was the longest con-
the line of average ..
Bank Loan. As a mam bar you p articip ata in tba
utive
cpld
spell.
Past
records
conditions p rev a tk - this
earnings and •» » « tba low interest charged it
re 15 days in 1919 exceeded
ga
V
a
sion” will continue tor
further reduced by the dividends you receive.
ar by four, m aking a total
or m ore after which we v ill rui thi:
consecutive days below
ins
fo
of
IN V E S T IG A TE
along wrth norm al concuu
COOPERATIVE LAND BANK CREDITI
ten
perhaps as m uch
and infant
Mrs Forrest P<
me n
Then you can put
son left the hospital at The Dal
N ational F a rm Loan A ssociation
ches in your belt.
les last Sunday for their home
T h e D alles, O reon
There is alw ays the possm nivj
£ repeat itsNt in Goldendale.
W ll
that .histt
Mr anti Mrs A. H. Barnum re
and th a t tiepressi ms will como turned last Sunday from a three
an
scheduler!,
sooner or later tr
The economists and the stock weeks stay at St. M artin’s hot
A d v tt.iu m tn l
m arket men are s tying th a t this springs.
is a m ere temix ir> ¡et back, F rom the G. V. J. Feb. 14, 1919
by the gov-
H arry Key published figures
that it was cause
M arsh
to ! top buy showing profit of $3.80 per acre
bui
not!
h made 340
ing wheat, that
raisir
(1 pi
for
inti so
pe
grains and other
pourn
affected by them wit be
6
cents.
W ill's Proud
d
ed bv the m arket droi . Th
Total taxes to 1 collected by
tnd th< Sheriff Buxton is $189,978.17.
the same thing in 195
enthusiastic
Rev. Givens, a
same thing i 1929
of His Big Ears
Probably there is litth
e K ent mem-
Odd-Fellow, told
iar bers and Rebekal m any pathe-
th a t our economy will fi
right now. T here will
tic and hum orous tnries and ex-
And fa rm e rs have w illingly
Will Dudley’s mighty proud of
cu ts In prices anti a lready sucn periences in arm y life at f
shouldered
th at responsibility.W ill
his big ears! Best crop of corn he’s
cuts are here. As for wheat this m eeting Saturday night.
spends
extra
hours in his cornfield
1,400,000,0()<l
nation
produced
F rom th e O bserver, F eb. 12, 1909 grown since ’38. And Will, like so
...c
o
m
e
s
home
tired to a tem per
bushels last year, s hipped 500..
many
other
farm
ers,
has
plenty
of
Miss Jennie Ginn came up
000,000 bushels abroa d (or iritend from The Dalles th is week to reason to be proud of what he raises. ate glass of beer and early bed, to
to) ate. sowed and f eu betw een attend the wedding of her friend
be ready for the next day’s work.
* The fa rm er has always been a
700.000.000 and 800,000 000 Whei Miss Lillian Stanley and Mr.
From where I sit, America can
c ro p ’ prospects began looking Fred Rose of Hood River Tues keystone in our economic life, and
good th ere ju st was i’t any rea day evening.
be
m ighty g ra te fu l for her five mil
MI sj ^ la r g a r e t the l^ey to our national well-being.
son why w heat shoi ti • lie price«' Stanley is also here I
wed- B ut from where I Bit, he’s more lion farm ers . . . for their produc
Our c a rry ding b f her sister.
at $3 00 per bushel,
tivity, hard work, and tem perate
im portant now than ever. H e’s not
rh
over will be large t
a E
John" Kelly and Mi
M anufacturing is catching up, cock w ere m arried in The Dalles only feeding A m erica—but friends living — of which Will’s m oderate
glass of beer is proof !
too. Electrical goods that were at the home of C. P. Johannsen o f A m eric a o v e r s e a s — b u ild in g
so hard to get are now advertis S aturday
night, Justice J . A. pood will for this country a t a time
ed all over wdth deliveries prom* Douhit officiating. Both bride when friendship for democracy is
ised imm ediately. One can even and groom are residents of Moro.
most im portant.
buy some — plum bing fixtures
W hile in the city from P o rt
The stores haye nearly all foods, land th is week E. Peoples made
ind u stry is catching up and when a trad e of his w arehouse and
:s Brewers Foundation
it does the boom will t>e over store property to Rev. John T on
and prices will drop dow n to a kins, for the ranch of the latter
t m petitlve level.
in Gilliam county.
T hat is all to the good. Prices
th at m ake excess profits are no
good to the nation and can b<>
harm ful to responsible industry
T here seems to bt no reason
to feel th at the wh it price will
he low at next hai est although
$3.00 w heat doesn’t seem likely.
It ought to be w orth $2.00 a t lea
st and th e re ’s a good profit in
w heat at th at price.
Meat will
stay p retty high, in o u r opinion,
because the m eat-hunger of th<*
preve
well paid Am erican 1
WASCO, O R E G O N
ed the accum ulation of
« a su rp
Phone
552
The price
of m eat anim a
i deterrent
grain has als< b
N O T IC E O F H E A R IN G ON
indicatif
I IN A L R E P O R T
T here are
er.eral
w
th at
people
Notice is given th at Saturday,
spending mo
than they the 13th day of March, 1948, at
w ere m aking because food was the hour of ten o’clock A M. ol
too high. T hat is alwa
bad said day and the courtroom ol
condition for ev e r' one 11 hl tc the C o u n ty C ourt in the court
b ta b T e to earn a good living if house in Moro, Sherm an county,
he w orks steady, even at th«1 Oregon, has been fixed as the
per •eek
m ere 40 hour
■<>v’ tim e and place for the hearing
perm itted.
of all objections, if any, to the
In the stock m arket prices final report filed by the under
have been low for some tim e and signed in the estate of Ida May
th ere are some very cheap stocks King, deceased, and the settle
available when earnings are tak ment thereof.
en into account. Reason for their
Levi S. Hines
low prices is • apparently that
A dm inistratoi
buyers feared th a t prices w ere Carlton L. Pepper,
too high.
A ttorney for adm inistrator
Everyone felt th at prices w en
going to drop and m any were .un NOTICE TO C R E D ITO R S
doubtedlv w aiting “for that droi
All persons
having
claim:
to come. H ere it is. It will prob
linst the estate of ’ F ran k
ab^v broaden and deepen before Lum born, deceased, are required
T o a busy executive, time is m oney.
it is over and prices will more to present them , with vouchers
nearly represent actual value* property verified, to the under-
He m ust reach his destination quickly,
for several years. -
signed executrix, at Wasco, Ore-
— — — —
'
gon, w ithin six m onths ‘f rom the
safely and refreshed . . . in shape, m en
date of the first publication of
DRIVING IN S< HOOLN
th is notice.
ta lly and physically, for im p o rtan t
Alice Josephine I.a inborn
The secretary of state and the E xecutrix of the will and estate
business upon arrival. He chooses the
association and a few of F rank S. Lam ’>oi n, deceased,
m<
eem pleased that lessons
13-6c
otl
“City of P o rtla n d .’
riving a ie being g i\e n u B ethlehem C h ap ter No. 78. O.E.S.
It may help th«'
some school
Meets Pvery second and
★
★
*
ut will do much
car driving
fourth T hursday in each
harm to education in general. -
m onth: visiting m em bers
Daily Union Pacific Passenger Train Scheduler
We. Am ericans get spells abou'
invited. Moro, Oregon.
such things and think’ that some
to the East
Pauline Douma W. M.
thing should be taught to evbry
S tr e D n a lilM K
Edna Melzer, Secretary
one.
■cis
Almost anyone can remember E u re k a Lodge No. 121 A.F. & A.M.
when it was sw im m ing and th«
Meets on the 1st and
public pressure to teach musica
3rd Thursday evenings
Lv.
The Dalle«
7:20 PM
11:15 PM
10:20 AM
notes to every child is still taking
each m onth. Visiting
up school tim e. P erhaps it ju st 2
m em bers cordially in-
as well be safe driving, if it it
For compJou. tra v e l in fo rm a tio n , consult
vited to m eet w ith us.
agreed that we should put asitlt
Irving
H
art,
W.
M.
educational necessities for some
H. B. Pinkerton, Secretary
LOCAL AGENT
thing else.
L u p in e
F or Men and Women
A lterations, Pressing, R epairs
Lowell R. Young
LAWYER
D IV ID E N D
la Other Day:
m dtor
trip to California
and
She was accompanied
please A rizona.
. E loyd by Mr and Mrs Fred H ennagen
of Portland who were overnight
re tu rn guests of Mrs Hailey and left
weeks for Portland Saturday.
ested in cub Scouts will
get in touch with Mrs
Root.
'
e
Mrs B E strelle Hailey
ed F riday after a three
'
U N IO N
P A C IF IC
R A IL R O A D
of eie “D wiitf
4. W h e r e d o e « t h e m o n e y
c o m e f r o m . . . millions of new
w o rk in g d o lla rs n e e d e d to ex
tend and im prove service? Mil
lions m u st come, not from tele
phone bills, but from thousands
of people who p u t th eir savings
to work in the telephone busi
ness To a ttra c t these working
dollars, we m ust pay a reasonable
am ount for th eir use. This re
quires the sale of our services
a t fair and adequate pricea.
The
Pacific Telephone
and Telegraph Company
More than 65,000 people working together to
furnish ever-better telephone service to the West