Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, January 20, 1950, Page 2, Image 2

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    V
PAGE
2 SHERMAN. COUNTY JOURNAL, MORO, OREGON
FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1950
is a surplus crop already is some R U F U S H E CLUB M EETS
thing to specualte on'
The Home Economic club met
fireplace when all othe. topics
tbe home of Her.
Published Every Friday at
of conversation are worn out.
with Mr«? Atlee
Mon», Oregon
'h l m ° inaVteheanb’ nltolCUSUtes Wilson as co-hostess. The club
Uilcb I- French
-----
Editor
second elasu ¿ n a tte r
but it does not stem
b „ Uy T h e Pd u ^ w M
R 2 î « i e e ’ «t M o r o . 'o ’regon. un d er A ct a already
lre a d y
......................
.................................from
lack of production. It com- ¡°r *
. . „ ran„ e Droeram
ot < CeiiHTes«
o f M arch
3. 1S<9
OFFICIAL COL'NTV PAPER es from supiwrt prices of crops " «
8
8
Fields is
°
’
that become surpluses all too M " c h 16. Mrs Tracy Melds is
soon.
Were we to develop an
of ^ e new year
SUBSCRIPTION K A tE S
lcultural policy that would «ne oiscussu” ‘
“ “ ’ " '" / T Z i
agricultural
policy
that would
anoointed
ONE VKAK
•_____ « .W
X
.
farmers
lo
produce
the
books.
Chairmen
were
appointed
•°® cause farmers to produce the boo^®'1I5?®.lrn^ Xebruarv^
Mrs
— things nations need instead of a as
.
Elizabeth
♦
e r . f
- 01 A t
surplus of things we already C. A ^ T om and Mrs. ^ lia a b e th
fUATI O fl A t
have too much of, it would make ^ U3^ er®’ .. M ’ Top Morris*
I j
unnecessary this t aPfprg°aP[iation JJay ’ Mrs/ Tracy Fields; June
j^Ijrrman C ounty ^Journal
University Shortens
Graduating Service
The university will this year
comblne lts baccalaureate and
commencement services. It was
announced today. The combin.-
ed ceremony will b e h e ld at 2
o’clock In the afternoon,
Approved by the Board of
Armroved hv the 1
Dean8, th e mbve Is being made
to encounrage larger attendance
Qf gtud(mts and of parentSi
alumni and other friends of the
university.
Holding a combined
ceremony
in
the afternoon stu-
-
forRef^ h ^ w o i ^ seem more Mrs. Andy Engberg; Sept. Mrs
¡¡JpS dents and parents will be able
sensible to apply tne money on Ronald
Byrd,
Octo r,
to get home the seme day where­
the national debt, as meager a Sadie Rich; December, M .
as with an evening commence­
tient as it would make on that ,an(3 McDonald,
ER
O beg
ment it was necessary for most
of them to stay over.
'I AT I 0 ft momentous pile of lOUs. But it
P lIL IS H iE R
isn’t surprising for did you
The
baccalaureate address
even know an indigent in your
will be retained and will become
JA N U A R Y 20, 1950
life \ who wasn’t full of ideas
the principle speech of the com­
that would make him rich? If
_______
___ _ program.
_
bined
An outstanding
BLIZZARDS
he could just get money enough J
national religious leader will be
for a meal and a drink to build Troni the Grass V
y
obtained to make the address.
Old timers, alas there are so
January
,
•
«p|ie president's charge to the
up bis strength.
few to remember, recall the big
Two horse buyers arrived _ In.
duatlng cIass w lll
eUmi„ .
blizzard of 1884— when the snow
town and w e.
ated to keep the combined cere-
was piled high over the few fen­ SH E E P If ERDERS
the horse market is looking up mQny
approximately the 8ame
ces and crusted so that a man
Papers are telling the story a Httle
u
„
former commence-
could walk over it. The horses,
of a ' Washington ,sheepherder
\
™
ment exercise.
»
we are told, ate all thé «small who wandered with his band of sold at $1.45i and $1.50.
The move has been dlscussed
limbs from the brush that pro: 1200 sheep for several day:& . ’ A Jfheat con
l h campus and local church
truded above the snow and then through the worst of the recent sent«}, to growers soon for a
The ceremony w lll be
ate off each others manes and northwest storm and was finally marketing agreement.
heW tWg
on Sunday, June
in Days of Old
tails. Cattle froze to death stand­
ing in the snow and their bodies
remained
there until
spring.
The method of feeding through
cattle
Wiih a couple of b o a lS
ha c X
the
and let the stock follow up, and
?at the uncovered grass.
iter on
it was a tough winter
Ihp
homesteaders
who
had
not
the nomestcadcr.,
an., n u no
had tune to bet on# established
in their, new homes Wood was
hauled from Goldendale and
Tygh creek in those days and
hay was cut a n d ‘ piled carefully
from the few tilled acres.
The
loss of stock was serious and
many a man started out in the
spring southward to get a load
fqpnd
almost
frozen
n ear\his p roni tbe ob serv er, Jan. 20, 1911 11.
sheep.
.............
V
Local capitalists have incorpor-
Ernest Woods
That is in the tradition of ated the Prineville & Eastern
sheepherders who were original- 1
d will build 18
miles
of * in
town and he
IO
I1 1 1 IC »
**
*
of such loyaity that they ^ a™ , oln the H ill ar^
-
and - Harri-
nights watching
they lamb.
never left their sheep.
It was rnan lines.
understood between
owner
and
Hon
c
w
Moore
has
been
---------- -
noil. k . »V • AMwaa.
~ -----
herder that the herder st»yed elected president of The Dalles
wlth hisMiand.
Special laws
were Con,merclai and Athletic club,
(he gubiect
o f sbeep.
w
erders
The McKean company
has
evolved something new in this
vicinity. A small wheeled tractor
is equipped with a light bulldoz­
er blade and it runs on the side­
walks clearing them of snow.
w
. .
has a few ewes
is spending his
—
«*em
over
them as
T. Lester Johnson
M.WTRR
2=
HEARD, BUT NOT SEEN . , . “Children should be seen, not heard”
does not hold good for Kathryn Beaumont, 11, British yoonrster who
will play the movie voice of ‘‘Alice In Wonderland,” a Disney all­
cartoon version of the Lewis Carroll classic. When she isn’t deliver­
ing lines in the filming of the story, she Is m aklnf another kind of
delivery on the tennis court. Kathryn Is a daughter of Kenneth Beau­
mont, British sinter and radio performer.
Custom Curing
L et us do yours
Law rence T id y m an
~
From the Oberver, Jan. 16, 1931
At Marshalls, The Dalles
OLD
'
fesglon_ o r is it j„b ,
At the annual high
school
c)ear Qn such thlngs conference the Moro Optimist
Rbeepberdlng bas suffered won first as the best mimeo-
ch
(he hands of w riters graphed school paper,
preferred the recently more
The Dayton plan for control
antjc business o fcow s. A cow of surplus wheat advocates that
fg
entdd aS a gaily be- a quarter of the crop be kept on
in(livida51 with perhaps the farm. Contract have been
banjo while the sheepherder signed for some farmers in
pictured as an inarticulate Washington.
. a >winrf,
____________
' X ’t great thtags arc e x p e c t e d ^
'
.
\
>
of sheepherders and more of-
a
t r l }ian not tbev produce them. M Z z j r i» '
3
lnt0 the mPouhtains with
MORO
WAJ9OO
IllinilTVG E
Kentucky Whiskey
-A/klend
•FOI
O INKRATIO N t
A O IIA T
KIN TU CKY
FAVORITI*
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
• All persons having claims
against the estate of Walter A.
Medler, deceased, are hereby
notified to present them, in pro-
per form, to the undersigned,
the duly appointed, qualified
and acting
Executrix of
the
Last Will and ' Testament of
the above named deceased, at
the office of Geo. G. Updegraff,
Moro, Oregon,
within
s i x
months from the date of this
notice, to wit: January 13, 1950.
F ay Helmick Medler
Geo. G. Updegraff
Attorney for Executrix « 11-14
NOTICE OF
M ENT
F IN A L S E T T L E ­
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
That the undersigned Executors
of the Estate of W. H. Carlisle,
deceased, have filed in the Coun­
ty Court of Sherman County,
State of Oregon their final ac­
count as such Executors, and
that the 30th day of January,
1950 at the hour of 10:15 A. M.,
has been fixed by said Court as
the time for the hearing of ob­
jections to said report and the
settlement thereof.
Horace S. Carlisle
Maravine Carlisle
Executors
Gavin & Gavin
Attorneys for Estate
The Dalles, Oregon
NOTICE Ofr
M ENT
F IN A L 8E TTLE-
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
That the undersigned Executor
of the Estate of Mrs. Louie Da­
vis, Deceased, has filed in the
County Court of Sherman Coun­
ty, State of Oregon, his final ac­
count as such Executor, and
that the 30th day of January,
1950, at the hour „of 10:00 a. m.
has been fixed by said Court as
the time for hearing of objec­
tions to said report and the set­
tlement thereof.
Sam Davis
Executor
Gavin & Gavin
Attorneys for Estate
The Dalles, Oregon
of wool with horses almost thin
enough to crawl through a collar.
Then there was the blizzard
of March 1905 that; f r o » a P™;.
*3.60 F IFT H
mi sing c r o p o f wheat and every
$2.30 PIN T
lines a winter
that does much damage although
not so
....... often
....... ” as in pioneer days.
, 1000 sheep and that many lambs R E L IA B LE man with car want-
This present sno^v will probably and
dg tbe ^,ummer there
’ Sher-
~
ed to call on farmers in
result in“ mofe . tienefit than nlone
.
___,
____
—
man county. Wonderful oppor-
except for a packer, who
damage for the moisture is need He comes out in the spring .with
tunity. $15 to $20 a day. No
urtooF
e<i and the frost is not deep.
Looking .lik e a
mav or mav not l»e of assistance.
experience or capital required. WANTS OUT
Two and three feet of sbo™ iambs fat enough to ship and
Permanent. Write today. Mc- m an w ho h a s Just bld on a new
___ in good shape for tbo
are maximums here although ewes
W illiam
the win.
win
Ness Company, Dept. B, 2423 lt a s e on life.
drifts get much' deeper and of­ ter. That is a triumph of a stock-
Magnolia St., Oakland 7, Cal. O’Dwyer •! Neu ' . k ?-.>scs al «Hy
ten in the roads.
As for cold
NATIONAL DISTILLEBS PIODUOS COHOIATIOH, N. Y. • «X 6IAIN BEUT1AL SPIK1TS
12-13 hall ' *’
man.
the lowest the thermometer has
In the meantime the sheepher­
registered at the station since der has cooked his own food, FOR SALE: Cedar pq^ls, 27c
1912» was— 20 below back in made his own trails, read what­
ea On Evergreen highway at
1919. There was a ''tremendous ever came to hand and amuse«l
Underwood Store. Ph. 3711,
snow that winter too. Unofficial 'him self without the hid of other
Underwood Merc. C o .,.. Under­
thermometers have dropped low­
wood, Wn.
10-21c
persons.
er and many people can remem
But loyalty was the cardinal
c h IX — Order early
for
her cold winters.
virtue of sheepherders. a loyalty
__f
»
Hrvilnn
layers and fryers.
Dryden
In the 38 years since the re ­ like that
exemplified by the
White Leghorns,
Parmenter
cords have been kept by the man who stayed with his sheep
Reds Rock-Hampshire Cross
government there has been zero day after day in the northwest’s
and New Hampshires. Parm.
weather or lower .in 22 of them. worst storm in 20 years' Perhaps
Red and Leghorn ckls. during
The longest *spell of warm win­ it is too late in our national
Feb., March and April. Hatch
ters was recently being 1914, economy to hope for more
every
WED. year
around.
1945, and 1946. when there was sheepherders, hut it isn’t too
Prices and circular available.
no zero temperatures.
late too hope for more loyalty
Harts
Hatchery,
Beaverton,
After the real blizzard of
Oregon
10-tfn
Friday Sherman eountians would ____
agree that the best place for
FOR SALE: The City of Moro
them is in history where tl}ey NO FISH
will sell 100 sheets of 4 x 8 Fir-
• give the ancients an opportun­
tex; 42 sheets 4 x 1 2 Firtex;
We might as well get used to
ity to hold the floor for a brief
and 10 sheets 4 x 8 half inch
it.
recital of times long agone.
The new tentative regulations
plywood.
ahoyt fishing in Oregon sent,
N. W. Thompson
out by the game commission
PO RTLAND’S PROBLEM
house in I Moro, 6 rooms, full
tells in detail where one mav
house
basement, oil furnace, hot wa­
The troubles of Portland about not fish.
Listed therein are
ter heater, fireplace, tile gar
getting enough tax money to creeks and rivers certainly un­
age, chicken house,
$4750.
operate the city in the manner known fifty miles away from
Giles
French,
Moro,
Oregon.
to which it would like to he ac­ their channels. Whitefish and
customed
are seriohs to that city grayling arc now included in CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING —
---------------------
Other cities will soon be facing
regulations and they were
Meat cutting, wrapping, sharp
the same ' problem. w
What
they <-corned unUl recently.
b a t thnv
freeze. Bring them In any dav
do Is of statewide Interest.
The list is very positive proof
hut Sunday. C & C Food Store,
Portland now can levy a pro that things are not like they
Grass Valley, Oregon.
2ltfc
perty tax hut no other kind used to be when a traveler could
This should tx* changed. There stop along any little creek and FOR SALE— Now available for
is no reason why property own catch
cau.n a
niesB ui
iiuui while his
Immediate delivery W i 11 y s
a mess
of trout
Jeeps and four-wheel drive
ers should be the only game of wJfe Qr partnPr built the fire
pick-ups.
Cdljnplete
Willys
the tax gatherer. Income taxpay and boiled the coffee. Them days
Overland line of panels, station
ers might share that burden as is definitely gone forever. May-
wagons and Jeepsters now
well. and the city might well l>e
we shouid remember that
sensationally reduced In price.
permitted to levy other taxes when boasting about how much
Contact Willis Motor Co., Third
also.
the state has grown recently.
and Lincoln Sts., The Dalles,
isn’t poor, -pbere are
So far the
---- city
—
—
Oregonians
^ho
Oregon.
# 22tfc
enough to seriously contemplate would prefer the fish to the
economy and little can he done company.
E u re k a Lodge No. 121 A .P. A A J i
about taxation until that point
Meets on the 1st and
But we were talking about
3rd Thursday evenings
is reached.
fish and fishing. The number of
each month. Visiting
persons holding licenses has in­
members cordially in­
creased tremendously and it. Is
vited to meet with us.
PRETTY SALTY
well nigh impossible to find a
C. S. Bennett, W. M.
The president has an Item In stream free from others of like
H .B. Pinkerton, Secretary
the budget to make fresh water mind and direction.
Moro Ixxigc No. 113 I.O.O.F
out of sea water, or at least, to
Furthermore
there are
not
Meets 1st and 3rd
provide a million dollars for many fish in the streams ? any- Tuesdays in I.O.O.F.
engineering and the solid comfort and safety inside! The
T h ere’s b e a u t y , b e a u t y , b e a u ty e v e r y w h e r e y o u
purposes of experimenting on more, that is compared
Tn Tn< hall. Transient and
extra headroom, legroom, shoulder-room! The safer visi­
look! And it’s all brand-new beauty inside and out!
that problem. The votes of New halcyon days before the
popu vlglung
visiting uruUiciBBic
brothers are
bility! The chair-height seats! All the extra convenience
Chrysler for 1950 is boldly and dramatically re-styled!
York City and southern Callfor- lation <BP).
The game com m it cordially Invited to
o* stake.
t-tiVn
slon grows more trout
and meet with us.
nia may k
be « at
of the easiest of all cars to enter and leave! See and drivo
Deliberately re-designed to be the Beauty Queen of the
It may he possible to provide plants more trout hut it never
Leo
Watkins,
N.
G.
this great car at your Chrysler dealer’s today. I t’s tho
road, a classic of the long, low, and lovely. There are
irrigation water by some process catches up’ with the demand,
John
DeMoss,
Secretary
smartest, most comfortable car we ever built and the
of changing sea water into fresh it Is easy to blame the commts-
wonderful new nylon fabrics . . . smart new trim. M ost of
and then pumping it the bund- -fdon hut it isn’t indicative of a B ethlehem Chapter No. 78. 0 .B .8
sweetest performing with its wonderful Spitfire Engine
all you’ll be impressed by the fact that Chrysler’s kind
reds of miles necessary to wet factual background on the sub-
Meets every second and
with the completely Waterproof Ignition System.
of beauty— unlike all others— truly reflects the sound
the desert sands. The scientists ject.
fourth Thursday in each
month; visiting members
may figure it out, but the next
Fishing trips are going to he
invited. Moro, Oregon
problem will he for the econom- for the purpose of getting out
ists to figure it out.
It runs in doors, away from the dally grind
Olive Young, W. M.
1
the memory of most that areas or for the taste of camp grub
Naomi Van Gilder, Secretary
near the ocean are pretty well and the smell of wood smoke, Lupine RebekaET
watered already and that the use They will not be seriously taken Meets 2nd and 4th
for water on arid land is a prob- for fish.
Tuesdays of each
lem of interior sections. They are
month.
Visiting
often several
hundred miles
Can you imagine the deepset members welcome,
from the ocean. The Job and cost resentment that might come Helen Kruger, N. G.
of pumping sea water to the from publishing Hawaiian pic- Lucille May,,Sec.
deserts to irrigate cotton which In the midst of a loocal storm.
1
Ge n t Zemans WhiskeyJrorn Kentucky
Yew, Yew, 1950 Styling r
IÌEAUTIFUL
1050
TODAYS NEW
STYLE CLASSIC
PRATT MOTOR '■ COMPANY First A Biggs Sts. WASCO, OREGON
.1.. .
* M
K