\
P A G E 2 SH E R M A N
COUNTY JOURNAL. AU*!lO OREGON
FRIDAY, JULY 1 ‘, 1 ‘K
sell out to their iteighbors. Low
Ç au ntç 3our»*J food prices are a better politcal
asset than high farm prices ah
Rubltahed E v e ry F rid a y at
though all political parties will
M oro, .Oregon
continue to toast about giving
Giles I*. French - - ----------Editor loth.
A stable • market is the most
«« weond cl*»*
vf**
p
al M oro. O r e r ò * u r d i r Act of valuable
one for the farmer.
Ci»•<»re«» o f M arcii S, I ft. • . ■_
The extreme rises and falls in
prices usually cost him more
than he gains. It is doubtful if
R
O a tc jo Q p V IP b Z E wbmm
much
farmers have gotten as mucn
I AT I OH even from the war tune market
P U 111S e B.S Asp
as they lost in the depress on,
NATIONAL ÉDITORIAL— as much in dollars, per p ,
hut not in more linpor
UHL ^ « O C I A T I O N things.
The government takes
IJ lu
V ìi<
the money in lj(x»n> tlin^s’. - ,
creditor tal^s the land in <3e
O F F IC IA L COUNTY P A P E R
pressions. Stable prices are ns
Ì U ’INSCRIPTION R A T E S
-------------------
$
2
.(M
l
O N E YEAR
Cherry Trees
Dying In Rufus
Orchards
By Mrs George Fox
It is sad to see the once proud
cherry trees of the Rufuf; Qr
chardigts bow theIr heads an(j
die w here the flood water seep
tjirougj1 onto the orchards, all
cherry trees are dead or dy-
tha^ came In contact with
the water.
Some of the peach
t ^ s ar(? dyjng tQO but the cher.
were the most vulnerable.
The cherry trees on higher
L A N D O F F IC E S
ground which bore fruit have all
JU LY 16, 1948
band offices at The Dalles, been picked. The apricotsi are
Lakeview and Roseburg will be coming on and picking of them
Lakeview ano q
k
began Monday. The ripe now are
TR U M A N A N D BARKLEY
The ~ Democrats
have done closed by an executive
the Louis and the Peach cots.
alxiut what was expected of them by the president
Mr and Mrs Ralph Butts ac-
and named Harry Truman as . It to high time or
companied by Mrs Annie Butts
color liearer for the fall election, has been too little business at cam(? /rom gt Heleng Sunday to
He’s probably as good as the the one in The Danes 10 J**®
visit at the home of Mr and Mrs
¡»arty could muster at this time, time of the help employed. 1
James Tate. Mr. Butts who is an
Then, with an acquiesence came a mere retirement bonus un(de of Mrs Tate together with
neither enthusiastic nor opposed, for faithful politicians who serv- ^jg wife returned home Monday,
the convention named the aged ed the party boldly until the pas- ^ rg »rate»g grandmother, Mrs
Alben Barkley to run as vice-pre- sage of the Hatch act which Annie Butts will spend a week
sldent
* handicapped them some what.
here v|S| ting; this being her first
“Dear Alben” is a fit running
It may be hoped that the re- visit to this part of the country
mate for Truman only if it was cords will be kept straight and She expects to go to La Grande
the desire of the delegation to* available because there is much next week to see her daughter.
..
---- v.:„.— of
i„ about history in them,
Mr and Mrg Leonard Jordon
have . both
candidates
the same stripe. Both are from
made a trip to Paulina lake fish
»order states, both “achieved the
ing last weekend. Mrs Jordon is
ir only fame in the senate, neith
again tending her duties as Ru
er has ability other than as par
fus postmistress after a months
ty members.
vacation.
Barkley’s
and
narKiey S mind
u iu iu
<*■*'* moral« «
Mrs Lois Foster came from
have been changed by party edict Fr®» *£« <»b«erver, July 16, 1906
, with her bro
... became
Jim Kenny, son of our old
,n law and slster, Mr and
since
he
nationally
known. He is a carpenter who friend William Kenny, now liv Mrs Harvey McClain ' last week
builds whatever sort of structure ing at Olds, Alberta, is visit end. She left Monday to visit
her son in Spokane, Washington.
is called for on the bluep rin ts. ing friends here
John Twohy, one of the firm
Mrs John Mathieson enter
He is no architect, with ideas of
his own. 'He followed th^ totali of Twohy Bros, who have the tained Sunday with a dinner hon
tarianism of the new deal or the i contract to construct the bail oring her husband on the occa
Present
state rights democracy of the road up the Deschutes was a sion of his birthday.
southern states with equal fervor 1 Moro visitor Tueeday.
thelr chiidrent Mr and Mrs
and equal ability. Like Trum an.I A party of twelve will leave _ Ernie
. Engles
---------------
and family.
he Is essentially a politician-
1 loro Sunday to register at Spo
Mr and Mrs Glen Thompson
The men on the ticket are toolkane in hope of obtaining some spent Sunday In Wasco visiting
old. Trum anw ould b e '65 w henllndlan land.
a'nd 'having dinner with M r-and
inaugurated and no man th a t! ' U V. Moore has a new header . Mrs
.
----- * Van Gaasbeck
George
old should be starting a term aslhed finished for him by Mitchell . From
The Dalles came Mr and
leader of the world's largest n a l& Foss.
M rs’George Jenson and daughter
tion \n th the responsibility that F ro m the G. V. J. Ju ly 18, 1919 Sharon to spend Saturday at
entails. And should he fall there
The citizens of Moro realizing the home of Mr and Mrs Bruce
would be a man who would start [the necessity of having a first. Millard.
•
his term at 71 already one notch Irate hotel in their city held a
Going to tfee coast neai
d
¡»ast his three score and ten. Me (meeting Monday evening. Sever were Mr & Mrs Herbert C urc
of such age have value as advis al prominent ' men said they They-will be guests of their dam
ors; they should not be given would take stock in a hotel ghters and families
the burden of leadership.
building-
The Truman and Barkley tick*
evening another
Wednesday
et Is a pitiful attempt
attempt to > meet
" ^ ’Bhail storm hit the sectlop north
the demands of the times wh‘ 2 |o f Kent. P. N. Lemmon reports
por
better men were kept away b v r that he has about 100 acres left
the certainty * of defeat.
But (out of 400.
th? ¡>arty is deficient in good
I^ast Friday evening word
men. The long years of the new was phoned in that Gus Eng
deal period in which men could strom’s grain field was afire
•not aspire to leadership; it was But the fire was out before help
a time
time- for
lor coat-tallers,
coavuuic.», of un | arrived
thinking
followers.
The could
party di*
I n . the O lw erver Ju ly 19, 1929
ro t develop men who
h e ll'ro
come leaders and now is payingl L. H. Martin has placed an
the penalty by having to nomln-Border for a ltfc ton truck with
ate two "old party hacks for thelgrain body so he can haul grain
ration’s highest office. The war direct to .the elevator from the
¡»arty of America is in one of its field.
Nine schools will transport
lowest depths.
children to larger school units
* next fall: Biglow, Boardman,
Rosebush,
Buckley,
Sherar’s
1I1GH M EAT PR IC K S
Grade Others have been doing
NEW ON THE JOB . . A!e Ai.dcr
No thoughtful producer of go.
Scm onivich Panyushkin is the
meat can be entirely happy over
Today the local wheat market
the prices now being paid for ¡s maintaining values around new Soviet am bassador to the
S. He replaced Nicolai V. Novi
slaughter animals. Grass stPers $¡ 25 with future delivery $1.22. U.
kov who was reca!I?d to
at 34 cents and fed steers at 38 This is an increase of 40 cents for “ reasons of health,” or i..a>ue
and pork at 40 cents are profit- over the price six weeks ago.
you ptefer your own r e a sji,,.
•b it at the time but are crrtainlv
signs that the 1 onanza is reach
ing a point from which it must
4
OH mt
fall-
It is now prophesied by econ
omists that the price of grain
will be held at Its rresent levels
by government subsidy alone.
The estimate Y>f over 3 billion
bushels of corn and ,1.4 billion
bushels of wheat will provide
enough feed and seed and a sur
plus. Europe tsn’t buyton wheat
very fast now, and is busy har
vesting its own. which is abun
dant *this year.
When grains fall, there will he
less reason for the high price of
meat and from that the general
Io be temperate
means moderation
in all thir o
I
jû c jh t
P A IN 1 IN G
N EW STOCK
Late Summer Dresses in Pastels
Rembcrg Sheers, . D otted Swiss,
Eyelet, etc.
The Gay Shop
GRAIN INSURA NCE
H ail & Fire .
Full ot, deductable ^overage
NOTICK TO CREDITORS
AuS
“ All persons * having
claims
WANTED Bulk bln for No i against the Estate of A. H. Bar
International combine. Phont num, deceased, are hereby noti
467. Bill Buvther, Grass ViWlev fied to present them, with tl¡e
37t proper vouchers and duly* veri-
fied, to the undersigned, tlie duly
FOR SALE: 1840 A. fenced pas appointed, qualified and ; cting
ture, 5 springs, good water, Executors of the Estate of A. H
good grass. $7.00 per A. Ben Barnum, dei-Wised, af*the office
Taylor Antelope.
c-tfn of T. Lester Johnson, attorney
FOR SALE; Freezers — Harder
Freeze 9 cu; ft- tip — Orley
7Vi & 16 — Deep Freeze .^»-10-
4 16 — Wilson 6 up. Several
on hand.
RADIOS
Stromberg Carlson — Sparton
& Crosley;
& Refrigerators
DeMoss Springs Electric, Ph-
857, Moro. _____________
FOR SALE. Boy Bicycle used
• $25 00, Humidifier $50.00.
Ranch & Home Störe. Moro.
HELP WANTED: Are you tired
of working for someone else?
The best one man businss in
this county now available
Watkins Dealers are enjoying,
the best sales in the history
of the Company. Can arrange
capital for responsible , men
Income starts at once. Write ,
The J. R. Watkins Company.
137 Dexter Ave., Seattle, Wn.
37-43c
to make
Call at
iihetman Co-op Grain Growers
WASCO, OREGON
G riffith & M eeke, A g e n ts
F}
YJ
grow
WANTED: Reliable man with
car to call on farmers in Sher
man county. Wonderful oppor
» tunity. $15 to $20 a day. No
experience or capital required.
Permanent. Write today. Mcz
Ness Co. Dept.-B, 2423 Magnol
ia St- Oakland 7, Calif. 37-8p
1.
W y o u r te le p h o n e g re w in size as the
system serving it grows, it might look like
this someday. Since 1940 alone, telephones
have increased 75% on the Coast. And the
grow th continues. Today your telephone is
a bigger, more valuable servant than ever.
H ere’s how it got that way.
FOR SALE: 1935 lVi T. Chev.
truck, flat bed and grain box.
i W. D. Watkins, Wasco, Ore. 36p
FOR SALE: 12,000 acre combina
tion farm and stock ranch, 1000
1 a. farm land, 300 a. wheat, 200 a.
summer fallow, balance heavy
grass.
Creeks, springs and
wells. Six sets of bldgs. Located
★ •«
/ / • t h e W a te r "
in Wasco County. Mr. Wheat
Farmer thia would go good
with your deal and It’s not far
COMPANY. OI.YMPI A.WASHINGTON, U.S.A.
Mg)
from you. Price $7.00 per acre.
SHELLEY
REAL ESTATE
.........................
THE DIRT MERCHANT. RED
MOND, OREGON.
34-7c
LY M P l 4
BEER
decline begins.
It may seem odd, but the far
mer seldom gets more than half
the ptlce the consumer payp.
Right now it is 50 percent, a
drop from 55 earlier. It runs
around 40 percent in ordinary
timer and was as low as 29 in
1932. This means that the cost
of getting the food to the con
sumer is a more constant change
than the food itself.
Ordinarily the higher food
prices become the larger percent
age the fanner can keep for him
self and the lower they are the
smaller
rt of the total he gets.
Rises in wages have been
slowed, up in recent months but
laborers cannot lx* expected to
remain silent if food costs rise
while their pay tines not That
would start another series of
price rises that would put the
♦ ost of goods out of reach of
more citizens and reduce con
sumption of goods and therefore
t ays of labor and total wages
Politically, and this is that
‘ort of year, there are a great
¡ any more people distressed at
t »e higher meat costs than are
...-e happy about Uicm Farmers
minority ai
b -e in the
more farn er
so
1 »8 more
A
existing between the plaintiff and
soon reduced the fever and he at law, Moro, Oregon, within the defendant be forever dissol
six
months
from
the
date
of
the
was able to come home Sunday.
ved and set aside.
Mr and Mrs S. A- Wilson mo first publication of this notice
This Summons is served upon
tored to Eagle Creek over the to-wit: July 16th, 1948.
Theodore
Barnum
you
pursuant to an order made
holidavs where they met Mrs
Orville
Barnum
by
the
Judge of the entitled Court
Wilson’s family and Jiad a reun
on the 22nd day of June, 1948,
ion picnic.
Wilson’s mother, T. Lester Johnson
37-4OC which said order requires you to
Mrs Bertha Applegate of Portland Attorney for Executors
appear and answer the Complaint
returned to Rufus with them for
within six weeks from the date of
a further visit.
SUMMONS
the first publication of this Sum
lames Fox motored to . Trout-
The date of the first pub
Friday on a business trip, IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF mons.
lication of this Summons Is the
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR 2nd day of July, 1948.
returning the same day.
SHERMAN COUNTY
Mrs D. D. Williams and sons,
BROWN & VAN VACTOR
Dale, Paul and Mark, left Thurs Arnold Thomas Hanson, Plaintiff
Attorneys for the Plantiff
day for Colton, where they will
vs.
Post Office Address:
make their home next year.
A Anna Marie Hanson, Defendant.
Pioneer- B uilding
.moving van took the luridture 3*0- Anna Marie Hanson, Defen
The Daltes, Oregon 35-40c
and Mrs Williams took the fdm
dant.
liv and incidentals in her car.
ILr and Mrs Williams have taugh
IN THE NAME OF THE
Expert
OFF TO CHINA» . . Roger D. Lap. Mr and Mrs Williams have STATE OF OREGON: You are
ham. form er mayor o f San taught in the Rufus schafcl the hereby required to appear and
F r a n c is c o , has been named past four years and the com answer the Complaint filed again
c h ie f of the special mission munity will miss them. Williams st you in the above entitled Court P a p e rh a n g in g &
to China for the economic co
o p e r a tio n a d m in is tr a tio n , is attending summer school at and suit on or before six weeks
from the date of the first publi
which is the agency se t up to the university in Eugene.
adm inister Marshall plan aid
Mr and Mrs August Bergman cation of this Summons, and if
to distressed countries.
of Camas, Wn. were weekend you fail to so answer for want
guests of Mr and Mrs George* thereof, the plantiff will apply to
P h o n e 362— W a w o
the Court for the relief demanded
Billy Smith is employed on the Drinkard.
therein, to-wit: That the bonds
state highway crew at Rufus.
P E T E R (S h orty) D U F A U L T
of matrimony heretofore and now
Billy is the son of Mr and Mrs SPKCIAli S i’HDOL MEETING
Frank Smith at the Maryhill
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
Motel.
Mr and Mrs W. B. Rice of The to the— legal voters of School
Dalles visited Friday at the home District No. 17 ,of Sherman
of Mr and Mrs Charles Wilson. County, State of Oregon, that
The Rices used to be former in accordance with Title III.
Chapter 8, Article 3, OC.L.A-, as
farmers near Moro.
Mr and Mrs Charles Wilson’s amended, a SPECIAL SCHOOL
son Charles Jr was quite ill last MEETING of said district will
week. With a temperature of 101 be held at Moro School House
they took him to the hospital on the 24th day of July, 1948.
Wednesday. The penicillin shots from 8 o’clock P. M. until 9
indard Time
clock P. M.,
for the following purpose:
p
GAS AND OIL
lestion o
To vote upon the quest
W asco, O reg o n
Tire s-Accessories
consolidation of the fol dn*
named School Districts:
R H M c K E A N and S O N
Moro, School District “No. 17
WASCO
OREGON
Fairview, School District No. 21
Dated this 7th day of July,
IN S U R A N C E
1948.
Grain, Feed, Fuel
SHERMAN COUNTY -DISTRICT
BOUNDARY BOARD
Farm Implements
By
Vernon
I. Miller, chairman
BARRED WIRE — GOOD POSTS
Wily W. Knighten, Secretary
PHONE 1G3 Feedstore
/ -
37-8c
OLYMPIA BREWING
BORROW
SAFELY I
Our 30 y a r t of torvlco to agriculture »n
H»»» area gi^re to every farmer the tame
helpful counsel In taevring proper long
term credit to tu'rt hit needs.
TMI FAIMMY (O-OF SfBVfS HU IAMB* BUT.
LAND BANK LOANS
WHY open gates? All metal cat
tle guards.
For your hitches,
pneumatic tire crazy wheel
and fork complete.
Large
stock of steel and shafting.
Used pipe from 1V4 to d
Mac’s Welding Shop, Phone
332, Wasco, Oregon.
§>PETIC TANKS pumped and
built. C. F. Johnson, Phone 613
• White Salmon, Wash.
“YOUR HOUSE OF BEAUTY”
The Dalles, Phone 2797- Steam
baths for men or ladies, ^t-
fective, invigorating for rheu
matic; neuralgia conditions.
Hand message. Scientic redu< -
ing methods. The Dalles Phai.
Bldg. Rm. 1.
•
tld
NOTICE: The Sherman County
Fair Board will receive seale 1
hills for concessions at the Sher
man County Fair to he held Sep-
' tember 17-18-19, until August 1,
1948. •
2. C a b le s y o u ’ll p r o b a b ly n e v e r see h a d
3 . W h o pays fo r new equ ip m en t? H a lf
o be put in. New buildings, the telephones
themselves, complex switching frames . . .
an almost unbelievable amount of equip
ment had to be provided before the system
could grow . We must spend millions of
dollars to kjeep it expanding and im proving
...to meet the needs of the grow ing West.
a million dollars a day needed to expand
and improve comes from investors who put
their savings into the telephone business.
T o continue grow ing and improving, we
must sell our services at fair and adequate
prices that provide-profits for investors that
are fair and adequate.
4 . W h e n y o u m a k e a lo c a l
te le p h o n e c a ll the cost aver
ages less than a nickle. For those
few pennies you hire a mighty
s e r v a n t ...a bigger servant than
ever before. There will soon be
tw ice as many telephones on the
Coast as there were ten years ago.
They continue to go in rapidly.
And each one added makes your
telephone that much more valuable.
Th, Pacific Telephone
( i * : and Telegraph Company
More than 70,000 people working together to fur
nish ever better telephone service to the Weit