Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1949)
5 ‘ • I V 4 ■ . * PAGE 3 . - ' ■ SHERMAN COUNT! JOURNAL, MORO. OREGON FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1948 . Cauthers Family Meets For Reunion With Flatt Family Mrs Anna Mullen returned home Saturday after a few days in a hospital, in The Dalles on account of Illness. Glen Virtue went to The Dalles Wednesday to bring his wife and baby daughter hdme. Word from Eugene to John DeMoss Tuesday informed him that his uncle, P. Waldo Davis, 77, had died that day at 1:30 in a hospital there. Funeral servic es were to be held Friday in Eu gene and John and wife went down to attend. County Agent Tom Thompson is on a range tour in the eastern part of the state, this week Guests here last week end were three daughters of the late Wil liam Cauthers. They were Mrs Gilbertson and daughter, Gwln- an of Long Beach, Mrs L. A. McCulloch of Pittsburg, Penn., who was accompanied by her husband and Mrs C. L. Knutson of Washington, D. C. and her son. The McCulloch? have been here before and are now on their way to India to continue mis sionary work. With Mrs P. Ev erett Curtis of The Dalles and Frank of Seattle and Charles of Washougal they picnicked at W alt’s Sunday1. This was the fir st time all the Cauther’s family have been together fpr many years. Mr and Mrs Carl Trent and daughters, Carlene and Janice, of McMinnville ‘were week end guests at the Darwin Van Gilder home. Mrs Trent was Florence Fagan and was born in Moro. Mr and Mrs Lester Conlee came up from Ocean Lake Fr - day and spent Saturday harvest ing and Sunday visiting son, Howard in Bend before return ing to their coast cottage. J. K. McKean and Giles L. French were among those who went to Hart mountain last week end for the annual meeting of the Order of the Antelope. •Mr and Mrs John- Dynes of Long Beach, and uncle of Vernon Flatt, and their daughter, Mrs Grover wards of Chicago, 111. were here last week end while on way to Seattle before returning home by the coast route. Mrs Bob AxUH and toby dau- ghter returned home last week from the hospital Mr and Mrs Max Barzee re tur„ed home Monday fron-, New- nort after having spent sever days visiting his Kran<lp% ? X ■ Mr and Mrs E. E. B ar«c. While there they helped celebrate M r B a l e ’s 80th b i r t h « ^ Otttem nr<HM>nt were Mr and Mrs ha. tv Barzee of Portland and Mr and Mrs A. L. Barzee of Fossil Mr,i Gina Medler of Portland In company with Mrs Ora Uork man of Wasco, visited at the E. Barnum home a few J^ r® Saturday afternoon. Mrs Medler and Mrs Barnum are sisters in lavir Mr and Mrs Robert Belshee had as their guests recently the ir daughter, Alta Snodgrass, her husband and daughter from Bol ae, Idaho. Sheriff Norman Fields spent a couple of days In the hospital with a septic sore throat and food poisoning from which he is re- covering. State Representative Earl Mc Nutt and son of Eugene stopped In Moro Saturday while on their way home f r o m Enterprise where McNutt Bros, have a con tracting Job. » John Lamb’s front porch cau ght afire Friday afternoon caus ing a fire alarm and a call by the fire truck. Hasty .action with garden hose, however, had put out the blaze. A drivers license examiner will be in Moro, Thursday, July 28 at the courthouse between the hours of 10 a. m. and 3 p. m. ”Ti M Jim * - • Born: To Mr and Mrs Lester Wilson of Kent, a son. Lester is county commissioner and he and Mrs Wilson are parents of three girls. -Claude Thompson returned t hia week from Oroville, Wash., where he had been attending a horseshow. He also sold an Ar abian and an Appaloosa while away. Norman Whiteacre has been appointed marshal of Moro and is doing repair work while get ting used to law enforcement duties. \ A grass fire on the south side of town Wednesday morning was ' ',1. the reason- for calling out the fire truck and blowing the siren. Lt. and Mrs William Frees and two children, Toni and Mi chael, of Imperial Beach, Calif., arrived Thursday for a ten day visit with her parents Mr and Mrs Giles French. SHANIKO By Mrs Maude Garrett brother in law, Mr and Mrs welcome by the junior Patjens. the Lang home. The Langs were Chas. Carrigan. ______ ______ _ Those present besides the honor Sunday afternoon visitors at An guests were Mr and Mrs Claus telope. Friday Volna Guyton of Clack Paul K. Keller M.D. Bardenhagen and daughter, Mar amas was an overnight visitor tha, of Kent, Mr and Mrs R. I. • Kinney of Madras, Mr and Mrs at the home of his sister and EYE, EAR, NOSE A THROAT Chapman Building W. A. Rees, Mr and Mrs G. H. We iuvite you to open an The Dalles Oregon Reeder and Mrs Alma Werner HOURS: # to 5, closed account. Come in and see us. of Shaniko. Thursday afternoon •Miss Yvonne Dupree of An Greta, The Dalles PHONE 2170 telope was a Saturday visitor at Mr and Mrs Andy Patjens were honored 'b y a Sunday dinner of Watch our special values i n the Value Bar. Greta, The Dalles t -s T. Lester Johnson LAW IK« . Shuffle Board WAKOO 1 »»K O - The newest thing in social games and a pleasant w a y to use some time w h ile w aiting for a stage, a w ife or one of our good lunchs. THEM Ken Zachary Bowlers know . . . $ a Case o f Enjoym ent” 9 «0 t Q L T M R IA B tB W IN O th e W a te r ” ____ C O ., O L Y M P IA , W A S H . « ~ “JO E A M O R B _.____ EIGHT & HEAVY TARPS Made to Order REBUILT ARMY SHOES The Dalles Second Oregon SPRAY PAINTING Adams Paint Store Third & Union St. The Dalle« « Oregon Paint - Wallpaper - |Venetian Blinds GENERAL PAINT |PB0DUCTH Heavy Kote - one coat finish Flex - Colorful decorator Rnyonite, washable smooth finish Vi off on all wallpaper in stock 20% off on special orders Les Hillman * Phone 3536 The Dalles Want Ado FOR SALE: Young saddle hor ses and chariot team. Vern Mobley. Kent. ■ < 35 tfn WANTED: Reliable man with car to serve 800 family route. We finance you. Write J. R- Watkins Co., 137 Dexter Ave., Seattle, Wash. 36-41c AT STUD: Pistol Higgins (AQ- HA) 3-y£ old registered quar ter horse, champion at Los Angeles county fair. Fee $50.- 00. Vern Mobley, Kent. 35 tfn FOR SALE: D-6 Caterpillar, Pet- era A Gi»n, 54SB SPETIC TANKS pumped and built. C. F. Johnson, Phone 613 White Salmon, Wash. tfn CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING — Meat cutting, wrapping, sharp freeze. Bring them in any dav but Sunday C & C Food Store, Grass Valley, Oregon. . 21tfs SPRAYING and DUSTING by air, weed control, fertilizer spraying. $1.75 per acre for plane and pilot. Barnett & Fridley, Wasco, Phone 282. tfn SHOE REPAIRING—Prompt ser vice. Leave shoes at Smith s Hardware, Grass Valley. Glenn > Perry. X * Xfiifc FOR SALE- Now available for immediate delivery W i l l y » Jeeps and four-wheel drive pick-ups. Complete Wlllys Overland line of panels, station wagons and Jeepsters now ¿ensationally reduced in price. Contact Willis Motor Co., Third and Lincoln Sts., The Dalles, Oregon. * ♦ See - - - IF. R. Reid & Son Ed’s Place ‘A T THE Wasco HEAVY BARB WIRE W hile it lasts. |7.95 a roll CHICKEN WIRE STOCK WIRE GALV. PIPE & FITTINGS AU sizes BATH TUBS LAVATORIES CLOSETS SEPTIC TANKS ____ hewer p ip e & "’ PLUMBING & WIRING CONTRACTORS Still have some good buys in floor model ranges, electric re frigerators, water heaters, etc. C A P IT O L C I T Y ” “B e e f o ” O ’M e a r a , p r o p . ................ • >■ ■ Orgeon p»..-— Eat, Drink and Be Merry a t “B e e f o ’s ” We Service Anythin« We Sell- Electric Pumps for any depth w ell. . Let experienced men ¡take OPENgSUNDAYS a ! v n n r w e ll MAKES A BUSINESS OF BICYCLING Thousand« of Seaside « annual vacationist! ride rented bicycle« enthusiastically a« a beach pas time. Energetic Gordon Shaw in 1933 th i. popularity; decided to serve th e jm b h e s fancy. H a quit law school and started hi» South Prom Bike Shop near Lewi» and Clark turn around. Business grew slow I v. but today Shaw must hire assistants to help m«et dssssads 10« bikes, tsndemi, tricycles and baby t»rollers. Shaw, active Seaside Chamber of Commerce official, also hnds time to operate his large "Prom” apart ment building. H e’s a long-time customer of First National’s Seaside affiliate, the Clatsop County Bank. o TU R N IN G JUNIPERS IN TO DOLLARS ' In 1930, Vesuri and Elsie Lehrman of Bend began making novelties from Central Oregon’s juniper trees. W ith » gift lathe, powered by their washing machine motor, Lehrman turned out colorfully-grained items of his own design. Today their Western Juniper Novelty Co. is in a new building, with living quarters, modern shop snd display room. They have mastered the individual istic wood, learned the public’s sou venir tastes and developed far-flung sales outlets. "Ours is a product typical of Oregon which First National helped us devd- op*” lehrm an says. I ' > i. » fesS r « b u il d in g OREGON TOGETHER In »11 parts of Oregon people are working to better themselves— » • and in the process keep our state growing. We introduce some of them here. In each case they’ve made »Sective use of the constructive services of our First National Group banking offices. We believe that bv helping individuals toward prosperity, we help build Oregon— family by family, farm by farm, business by business. Whether your 10 TRAFFIC TIO W LE i NO M K I M FIOBtEMO ” financial needs are large or small, with u i.—"Left Build Oregon Together." SHERMAN COUNTY BRANCH Frequent service, handy down town depot«, , and driving tension make «hopping or business trip« a pleasure by Greyhound. You can go a n d r e turn the same d«y. T he low fa r « gave extra dollar, for «hopping! Relax in perfect comfort . . . en joy sightseeing, or visiting with fellow passengers. See your Grey hound Agent about departure time« on your next trip ! . KLAM ATH I,O 8 PAL1R A NG EL«» PORTLAND, ORE- BOISE, IDAHO BUTTE, MONTANA I- 5.90 13.05 2J60 8.85 - 13.80 • H i THERH” Moro, Oregon . 'Old-timer has a special meanina at Standard FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PO RTLAND They say you’re n o t really an ’’old-tim er at Standard until you’ve been o n th e jp rb /r at least 20 years...an d at 30 years, there s a special company aw ard: a gold w atch and six weeks’ vacation w ith pay. T h a t’s appreciation o f a man’s service to his company, o f course, but it also il lustrates a principle we believe in for all e m p lo y e e s-g o o d people in good jobs serve you best, and we do everything we can to make jobs at Standard good. Security, good pay and w orking con ditions, advancement from w ithin, free, insurance, annuities at retirem ent are all p art o f making that principle a reality. T h e average length of service o f all our 17,890 p a re n t com p any E m p lo y ees is slig h tly m o re th a n 11 years. A nd the 2 0 -y ear ’’o ld -tim e rs ” ? Fully 4,85* are w o rk in g w ith us today M M B i t F iO IR A L O IF O S IT N S U R A N C I C O IF O IA T IO N MEET JIM THOMPSON, STAR FARMER Jim Tl.ompson of Salem was Star Farmer of America in 1942. In high school he ran a 120-acre ranch, starting by purchasing 50 acres. Sheep, hogs and cows brought him wofits. A prized memento of his Future Farmer of America title is his Oregon Bankers’ Association trophy. A fter FFA days Jim raised beef cattle. N ow he s de veloping an orchard and seed crop ranch in Salem s W aldo H ills district. Jim’s wife is his schoolgirl sweet heart, Eunice Johnson— and there are Donna, 6, and Dickie, 3. Says this topnotch farmer: " I especially ap preciate the help First National gave me as a youngster. f - w w H p IA4PT w c w r r v n / — I • • * ? .