*
PAGE 2 SHERMAN
COUNT*
Count« Suurnal
FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1949
JOURNAL MORO ORfeGOb
DES MOINES
gwOORAY^
DISINFLATION !
CALL FOR BIDS
P.
The Sherman County * ----
alr
Board will receive scaled bids
up to 2 o’clock P- m. July 11,
1949, for the purchase of the
wooden water tank at the soutn
end of the fair grounds; the
Fairbanks working bead and a
3 HP, 60 cyble single phase mo-’
tor.
The board reserves the
right to reject any or all bids.
----------
Bonnie P. Sharp
Acting Secretary
34-7c
Geo. G. Updegraff, Moro, Oregon,
within six months from the date
nrttipp to wit: June 10,
‘
Evelyn G. Bonney
& Updegraff,
ornev for Administratrix
<
32-5C
_____ ______
Oregon,
a time and place for
the settlement and final hearing
On
on said account, at which time
and place any person interested
in said estate may appear and
make objections thereto.
Date
of first publication being June
10, 1949.
Willard H. Barnett
Administrator
rse ll me somthing. What a won-
Fderful feeling. After wearisome
r um I . Fre ed.--------—
Bdfior years of chasing dealers who
BUm U Breed. - - - - ----
nothing to sell and wouldn t
f c S X . “.. - X d 0 ^ » 7 X X « u ? h a v e SOW It If they had, It's
ruKUiiiv* ««. —
-
- ».
• U
. fc7
4 sure a great feeling to be the
Constas«
of -------
March
7» .
THE COUNTY COURT OF
3241c
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER J pursued -again; maybe like a
THE
8TATE V OF
OREGON FOR
school girl contemplating her
iiit j
*
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
h h ERMAN COUNTY.
first date.
' ,
ONE YEAR ------------------- $2-0»
À superior service
It Is going to be a fine thing
SS. Final Notice. In Matter
of personal affen dance
for salesmen to have to work
of the Communal Estate
of
for a living, better,’ perhaps
Anna K. Barnett and Wm. D.
THAT COSTS NO MORE
NOTICE
than it is for me to be pursued
. „ , TO CREDITORS
.
.
, i „ Barnett, deceased.
All persons
having claims
Notlce is hereby given that
I may get as arrogant and on-
against the estate of Pearl Jones, the undersigned Administrator
ery as was the salesmen a few
deceased, are required to pre- Qf the above entitled estate has
years ago.
sent
them with vouchers to the rendered
filed, and presented
l
i
l
i
O
Ä
I
A
l
Do
ybu
suppose
that
in
store
n a t io n a l
undersigned,
at W ~
Rufus,
for settiement
****.v*»-^
— » —
- — » Oregon,
-
__ ____ his final account
rooms and in back alleys deal
DM
within six
slv months
mnnfhH from
from the
the date
___ hac and that the Court has
within
date therein,
ers are dusting off those old
»00 ttUY AVt
of the first publication of
this appointed Monday, August 1st,
signs “The Customer Is Always
A wide range of prices
notice.
The date of the
first 1949 at j q o’clock A. M. in the
Right’’ preparatory to putting
JULY 1, 194»
that meet« all withe»
publication of this notice Is
the county Court Room, in Court
them up in the front offices? ,
24th day of June, 1949.
house at Moro, Sherman County,
Of course one swallow doesn’t
UVA
Ina Byrd
‘make a summer, nor one sales-
Administratrix
It seems like all the most man necessarily indicate a chan-
Dick & Dick
34-7c
prominent politicians in
the ged economy , but still, for tne
AWomeyh
for
the
Estate
northwest have been sounding first time in years, a guy is
off about CVA this week and trying to sell me something.*
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL
many of them back In Washing-
P R O P E R T Y AT PRIVATE
L O V E L Y SP R IN G F R O C K S , S L A C K S ,
E
A
R
W
IG
E
X
T
E
R
M
IN
A
T
O
R
ton, D. C., too.
8AIJB
Householders in Moro are be
Notice is hereby given that
SW E ATE R S, and J A N T Z E N T E A SHIRTS
That is a bad situation to the coming interested in the tacinld
in accordance with an Order of
extent that it gives the impres fly which is the parasite that
the County Court of the State
sion that the CVA decision is kills earwigs. In Portland, they
of Oregon for Sherman County,
going to be made on a strictly learn, this fly has so well done
made on the 2nd day of June,
political basis.
It maybe, but away with earwigs that there
Mr and Mrs Don Macnab and 1949, in the matter of the Estate
a decision on political grounds aren’t even any samples for the Miller orchard.
W a s c o , O regon
Dr. Smith’s team ran away daughter, Jeannie, left for Port of An tone B .. Sandvlg, deceased,
is almost sure to be a bad one. taclnids to practice on. They
land Wednesday on business, Guy C. Andrews, as administra
from
Taylor
Bergln’s
to
Lone
As this newspaper has said borrowed some from Moro.
returning the end of the week. tor of said Estate from and af
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
This business of being a para- rock, breaking the buggy pole.
While they were gone their dau ter the 10th day of August, 1949,
ghter Karen spent the time in at ten a. m., will sell for cash
SHANIKO
Dufur at the home Of her grand in hand at private sale in one
X e r ° ‘ lrmr ^ t io n
and perhaps
’ Mr and Mrs Jack Ingraham parents, Mr and Mrs John Add parcel at the below described
x
p
r ln=
c yk,n^
:
and daughter, Janalice of New ington.
property in Wasco, Oregon, the
The Rufus Boy Airplane club
berg are visitors at the R. J.
Lots Two (2), Three (3), Four
ducing
rates).
taHnid h H
flv y.^ H
He
(4), and the East Twelve (12)
2
g o T n power
g ^ come
from ihe
the money
fe d e , a
of^the ^Uclnid
e Brown home. The Browns are will meet at the home of Vin
cent Rice Tuesday evening.
parents of Mrs. Ingraham.
feet of Lot Five (5), Block One
ai government. The work is go-
DreServe his life But have-
W. D. Hanks drove up from
(1) of the Town of Wasco,
be done under the super- Ute
« "^ n d
The Dalles early Friday to re
Sherman County, Oregon,
For Bargains to fit your purse
vision of the army engineers
reacted much like port the birth of & new grand
to the highest bidder subject to
»W
and the Irrigated areas are go- Mverut we
son, Steven Lawrence Hanks, v isit the store w ith in a store.
the confirmation by said Court.
F or D e ta ils See
.,ng*to be planned by-the reclam-
pursue lhe 9ub)ect bom at 11:30 p. m. Thursday,
The date of the first publica
G R E T A , T h e Dalles
W E W IL L PR O T E C T YO U
tion Is the 24th day* of June,
ation.MrvfOt«
further and compare the tacinld weight 8 lbs. Mrs. Glade Carri
gan
went
to
JM-
Dalles
to
see
A 130 there ia going to be sale to the new deal and the earwig the hliby a n d J B daughter Pat. Lupine Rebekah Lodg» No. 11» 1949.
J o h n E . M e e k e o r R a lp h A . M ille r
GUY C. ANDREWS
of power by the government on to the capitalist.
Meets 2nd and 4th
Administrator of the Estate of
much the same basis as Bonne
There, is something else abouta Mr anA M ljB G . B. Harris and Tuesdays of each
Antone B. Sandvlg, Deceased.
ville power is sold jmd yvith the tacinld. When he— or is it daughter^ Sharon Ann of Ione, month.
Visiting
or P H O N E W A SC O 231
Address, Wasco, Oregon.
the indirect Intent
o f doing ehe— locates an
earwig "it” , were here Saturday and Sunday members welcome.
visit friends.
34-7c
Sallie Martin, N. G.
away with private»-power com- (In lh e language of the bulletin' to Mrs
Rosa Harris was .surpris ¿lara Houston, Sec.
C O M PL E TE IN S U R A N C E
panies. And arid areas are go- lays an egg And listen to this:
ed by a visit of her grand dau
N O TIC E TO C R ED ITO R «
ing to be prgvlded with water •‘The egg hatches in about 30 ghter, Arleta and her husband
All persons
having claims
whether- there is any* soil or seconds----- ” yblch
is setae who were on their way to Mich Bethlehem Chapter No. 78. O-B-«
Meets every second and against the estate of Mae Moore,
whether there is any market sort of a record of gestation,
fourth Thursday In each
igan. Arleta 4s the daughter of
for the crop or any economic
The parasite attaches itself to Mrs Maude Smith and was mar
month; veilin g members deceased, are hereby notified to
IN S U R A N C E — R E A L T O R S
justification for the develop- the earwig and hangs on until
Invited. Moro, Oregon present them in proper form to
ried Sunday in the Methodist
the undersigned, the duly ap
ment.
The pattern we£’
it penetrates to the earwig’s in church in Longview, Wash.
Elsie Jones, W . M.
pointed qualified and acting ad
W a s c o - H ills b o r o - A lo h a
years ago and Is not likely to nards where it develops Into a
Dick Reckman and family of
Edna Melzer, Secretary
ministratrix of the estate of Mae
full
grown
tacinld
fly
ready
to
l>e changed
Grass Valley were visitors her«
Ka. ll« I.OO.F Moore, deceased, at the office of
lay more eggs to kill more ear-
Friday.
Meets 1st and 3rd
All this is a foregone conClu- wlgs to iay more eggs, etc.,etc.
Al McKinney was a business
The tacinld Is a well trained visitor in The Dalles Friday and Tuesdays n I.O.O.F.
sion.
hall. Transient and
The hearings and the testi insect that does not enter hous
Saturday.
» 1 W visiting brothers are
m ony and (he
political bickei es
t. , and
ailvt w
u,*
obligingly
dies when out
Miss Leona Lang and Miss cordially Invited to
ing is over something else: who
earwigs
Margaret Olsen went to Seattle meet with us.
is going to control.
,
— -----
by bus Friday. Miss Olsen re
The bill (S-1645) gives com- FOURTH OF JULY
Leo Watkins, N. G.
’ turning Sunday and Miss Lang
John DeMoss, Secretary
plete authority* to three men ap
Monday is the Fourth of July remaining to visit her sister.
and we i m hasten
pointed by
oy the
Uie president - and
— anu
m c u
V to
M admonish ev
- - Mrs Charles Browning.
Eureka I odge No. 121 A.F. A A.M
answerable to him. They would ery one to take a few tninutes on
Meets on the 1st and
A wedding reception will be
operate under rulings of their* that day and re-read the Declar- held in honor of Mr and Mrs
3rd Thursday evenings
own making and would have atfc>n . of Independence or at John D. Reeder o n
each month. Visiting
Monday,
members
cordially in
very, very .wide authority. The ieast a part of it.
July 4, 1949 at the home of Mr
vited to meet with us.
northwest would be taken over
i f the day is worth celebrat and Mrs G. H., Reeder, Shaniko,
L. V. Henrichs, W. M.
try a sort of regional superstate lng the reason for the celebra 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. Friends Invlt
H .B. Pinkerton, Secretary
that would be stronger than ftOn i8 worth learning,
ed.
>
state or local government.
It
There are those ‘ who would
would be like being captured.
say the ¡Declaration of Indepen-
Those who want a big, strong dence is out of date, that the
powerful, central ‘ government grodp of young men who wrote
like the CVA bill. Those who ft were of a different age and
prefer local antonomy dislike It. type of civilization. They were
Pioneers,
states-rlghters, t h e however, of the same race, with
in some fastest-growing areas
Independent and self-reliant na- the same ambitions. They made
1. Installers have been weefclng fast the
1
turally oppose. *
' a mark on history that no gen-
first half o f 1949 . . . keepin gjip their pace of
the
wait
still
is
long—but
we
re
There are many who are giv- eration of Americans since have
the postwar years. Here in the wwt, 145,000 new
en to supporting the adminlstra- touched. They added more to
telephones will have gone into service in the first
making
steady
progress
tlon willy-nilly who are follow- human freedom.
six months of the year. Although new orders
in* in this CVA matter. Demo-
Read what (they said about It
keep pouring in, we’re able to take care of them
cHits of the old school would na- it is news, good news, today,
faster. Seventy-two per cent are filled within
turally oppose being believers
thirty days— that’s practically three out of four.
In states-rights. New dealers or
the tru-dealers, fair-dealers or
whatever is the latest word
turally favor being believers in
_ _______
Mg government. ^ h? r
£ From the o h .e r.rr, Julj 4. IMO
“AT THE CAPITOL CITY”
going alo7« b^ ’ u^ , ' t, X r a t l o n
A celebration was held on the
^ h a a ^ n t S d 8^
“
l'
Published E v e ry Frid ay at
Moro, Oregon
AM RECEIVING - •
The
G ay Shop
HAII
EIRE
CROP DAMAGE
GRIFFITH & MEEKE
N 0W 30U T 0F4
TELEPHONE ORDERS
FILLED IN A MONTH
You can get a lunch or a meal
from 6 in the morning until
2 in the morning at
Ed’s Place
In Days of Old
Taft-Hartley law
Grange leader
WT
Tompkins has been hired by
nnnnpville.
perhaps more for aoors or uie
such a contingency as this than next
his ability as an organizer.
family
How then, does the average
citizen make up his mind? As-
Burning that he has no partlcu-
lar lovality to the Republicans
or the Democrats or the new-
tru-fair-dealers, or the grange
or labor or Bonneville or pri-
vate power, how will he decide?
Beefo” O ’Meara, prop.
o ^ th e
Grocery
held at the
▲
T
a .
L ~
1 UUÛV W j
D n f » A n k m / in l c
iiv ii
v o u m v u ic j
Iz*A
ÎTI
aww */«%.**»*>
Dell
Olds home, 44 members were
seated at the dinner table.
OPEN SU N D AYS .
From the Observer, Ju ly t. 1»«»
A. C. Thompson, accompanied
by his son, Dewey, upset their
car on Willow creek grade ln-
Juring Mr. Thompson w m ew hat
Mrs. Thompson and Edna had
returned home by train and es
He can get a copy of the law. caped danger.
He should be able to find a copy
DeMoss brothers are busy
of the 308 report of the engin grading a race track.
Unless
the California mustard
eers _ _
in which the whole pro-
*
v
----
gram is mapped out.
He can
is removed wheat land will
think through his ideas about goon be worth about 30 cents
more and bigger government
acre.
Actually there Is little likeli From the Observer, June 29. 1900
hoot! that the present bill will
Wes Rigdon and John Collier
be passed.* It is too sweeping drove a four horse team up
and in any event should be Buckbollow to the mouth of
amended. Were It changed to Finnegan antf while It wasn’t
give the jxv>ple of the northwest much of a road they caught 60
through their s t a - t e
govern fish.
The flood after Saturday’s
ment?:. nuthorhy over the pro
ject It would be acceptable to storm washed out gardens and
floated Elrod’s lumber piles.
many who now oppose it.
But it Is important to know Main street stores were flooded
what the disagreement Is about from the hillside,
P D. Martin, president of the
It is about control.
It 1« not
EOL
Co., accompanied by Mr.
over whether t h e Columbia
shall l>e developed or not, nor Parr, was here Saturday. All
bv whom It Is whether Wash but 12 cases have been settled
invum D C., shall rule the nor- satisfactorily,
tlw est or whether northwest-
The first peaches on the Port-
e r X shan fo so-
>»“ 1 n’ arket camP from tho J' X
From where I s it... ¿u Joe M arsh
Now I'm Going Back
To High School I
When I »aw light» burning in the
High School auditorium last night,
I looked in to see what went on.
About twenty people were listen
ing to B u n Ellis, the electrician,
talk about television.
I slipped into a back seat and
asked Hap Thomas what was up.
Hap told me it was the new Self-
Improvement Club. I stayed to lis
ten - and learned a lot. Buzz really
knows bis stuff.
Turns out this club meets eve* y
Friday night. Each member gr. .»
a talk on the subject he knows most
about. I joined on the spot because
learning new things is one of my
favorite hobbies.
From where I ait, it’s willingness
to learn from t h« other person that
makes Americans tolerant towards
so many different viewpoints and
tastes in things. Jnst because Bus«
Ellis goes for chocolate malteds,
while I prefer a mellow glass of
beer, doesn’t mean I’m right and
he’s wrong. Incidentally, next week
Vm going to talk on how te run a
newspaper.
Copyright, 1949, United StatM B r enfer» Feundetia»
I
2. Hundredi of mile« o f telephone câblés have
been going in at a fast clip. But these voice-high
ways are still bottlenecked in some places— in
many of our fastest-growing areas, practically no
telephones can be installed for months , . . until
the lines and other facilities can catch up with the
mushrooming demand. The telephone picture
looks better. . . but it’s not yet all we want it to be.
3. Nearly a million and a half tiny soldered
connections must be made before new equipment
like this can begin working in a medium-sized
office. But we’re hurrying all we can to make the
waiting time shorter still. Your telephone needs
are very real to us and we won’t he satisfied until
everyone . . . everywhere in the W est. . . has more
and better telephone service than ever before.
4. Huge iwmi of m oney havf
gone to work in the West to ta»k«
this new equipment possible —
and your own telephone more val
uable. Millions must come — not
from hills— but from people who
put savings into the telephone
business. Tb attract these dollars,
»ve must pay a reasonable amount
(or their use . . . must sell our
jervices at fair, adequate prices.
The Pacific Telethon a
!) and Telegraph Company
Your telephone is one of today a
biggest bargains