Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 18, 1952)
PAGE 3 SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL, Mol«». OREGON FRIDAY, JANUARY 1«, 1932 Flm Wilson of Portland was in Sherman county this week vh ting and looking after busl- ity it s interests here. He states Mr¡ i. Wilson is not very well and spent much time in a hospi- tai this winter and that he is 1 learning about cooking a n d mg sons of Mr. •r Barnum have been housekeeping. lout with the chicken State Representative John P. Hounsell of Hood River was in E X I M IN F R Moro Personals The Blum family moved to Miarysville. Washington, l a s t week by Flatt Truck. It is aliout 40 miles north of Seattle and Mr. Blum expected to work in a mill there. Bill Hal, is at Pullman, Wn., where he is assistant to Dr. Barr- more investigating methods of testing the baking qualities of w heat. with small samples. The procedure speeds up wheat test ing so varieties can be classified before they are put to field test. There will be a joint installa tion of new officers of two Re bekah lodges here Tuesday even ing, January 22. Ixxlges of Was co and Moro will install at that time following a potluck dinner at six o'clock. Odd Fellows and HO PES F O R R E L E A S E . . . Re families are invited. , Mr. and Mrs. George Martin lease of Archbisbop Stepinac from have been transferred to The prison is expected in Belgrade, Dalles where he is working with Yugoslavia, within a month. The agency says Tito has the U. S. Engineers. Mrs. Martin official news to settle the case of the is again employed at the Georg decided form er p rim ate of the Catholics. Wernmark office. Fred Hennagin has written us a lette» boasting about the beach at Waikiki and his galli vanting around in the sun with the Charley Fultons. Jodie Mor risons, etc., and has asked us to send him his Sherman County Journal from this snow splash ed to his sun splashed land. ■ Evelyn Kirkelie is following her custom developed while she was a student at Moro high school; she is on the honor roll at Eastern Oregon College of Education at La Grande. Mrs. Charles Adlard received word fro m M r. and Mrs. Floyd Flatt that they and friends from California flew to Hawaii, Janu a ry 6th. Miss Gloria Douma and Miss . VW . . i» Anajean Knighten, both teachers ... in« the Hood River schools, spent W A N 1 L D . . . The F .B .I. has the weekend wiih their parents, issued an a la rm for George A rthur Mr. and Mrs. A. Douma and Mr. lle ro u x , suspect in two bank rob and Mrs. Wily Knighten. The beries netting $86,000 in Missouri Knightens ieturned them to and Kansas. llero ux has been Hood River Sunday and found placed on the **10 most w anted" Ust. He is arm ed, extrem ely the road very slick. dangerous. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kirby Weather has been lesa plea were here for a few days visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. sant this week than last al Lawrence Kirby. He was re though th<i difference has been The snow cently discharged from a hospi but a few degrees. tal in The Dalles after an oper quit rhc!t:ng Friday of Iasi wreek as the T ercury dropped back ation for stomach ulcers. its three week old habit of A shower was given Wednes to ti .venty or lower day afternoon at the residence dropping each night climbing to a of Mrs. Anna Moore in honor of little above s i ctzing in the day- Mrs. Orville Butler and her time, usually aided by,a bright, small son who was recently dis but cool sut charged from the incubator -at a hospital in The Dalles. Mrs. W. W. Gearhart was joint host ess with Mrs. Moore. About .25 women attended and brought gifts for the little boy. The small daughter of Mr. and Mrs, William McLachlan is reported us being very ill in u Portland hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harring ton of Madras stopped here to stay overnight with her mother, Mrs. Mollie McLachlan Wednes day night. They were on their way home from Portland with two new' Willys cars for which they are agent at Madras. CONI I NG -'■■ rV iJtW W sa n n n w ì N w w S2.6& Dt. S4..10 fifth By Wink i w “X The first Beefo’s Beefo’s Cold? 1 ' - r Got wet feet? In danger of à « a • getting a cold? Having chills? Feel rocky all over? This is the place. BEEFO’S A t th e C A P IT A L el Us Plan a California cation— Including Hotels, htseeing, and Round-Trip Transportation. »rget work and worry— gel out id get under the sun! Stop -er in historic Salt Lake C.*>, y Las Vegas . . . sec mighty oover Dam-Lake Mead. /V<> iving strain by Greyhov...t. ik for FREE F O L D E R -se e ,ur Greyhound Agent today. OTHER LOW FARES* One Way Round trip $2.60 (land (ene II i Dalle« kane 6.50 3.35 .95 6.05 , , tu tn e ih in g abou t d th a t tn a b ft it d ’ e $ 4.55 10.40 5.40 1.55 10.00 G rC J' rirndlf u a r Io t 'a t ci GREYHOUND BUS DEPOT DINTINCTIVK F I’ N ERA L WITHIN THE MEANS OF ALL SMITH-CALLAWAY GHAPEL R. S m ith T here is no better tim e th an N O W to rem odel that attic and m ake it into a bright and cheery bedroom or sew ing room . C arpenters are available now. C om e in and let us "show you th e m any pleasing wall treatm ents. A nd it costs so LITTLE, LET us h elp you plan. MAUSER LUMBER CO. Everything To Build Anything The Dalles, Oregon Phone 3133 ff The Dalles, Oregon C I T Y , M o r o , O re g o n B eefo’s B ee fo ’s T H E 1952 CHEVROLET It’s Big, Bright, Beautiful IQ m Way) foday’s besf tra vel buy I semester of school L eo n a rd LO S A N G E L E S $15.35 I,, GREYK3UNB t r g sti I k gi receh ficate «on < , plus i Saturi annnw M AN W IT H O U T C O U N T R Y . . . Lifetim e of roam ing In search for a country which w ill accept him is faced by Rom anian refuge« Peter Dario. Because U .8. refused him , Mexico, India, Australia and Cao- tda have all refused him ad- n ltlnnee. SERVICE Saturday, Jan. 19th •uiiiz/./i'i ! / m 8 6 PRO OF • K E N T U C K Y W H IS K E Y - A B L E N D • 6 5 x G R A IN N E U fR A l S P IR 1JS • TH E OLD S U N N Y BROO K C O M P A N Y , L O U IS V IL L E , KEN TU C K 1 N E W X» s g R o g e r M ille r C^eer/a/ as ifs A/ame” SE E •X. comes to a close Friday anu semester examinations are 1 ing given Thursday and Friday un til noon at which time igh school students will Ite dismiss- iss- ed; however, busses will run at the regular time. All high school students are required to take the exams as no exemptions are being given. A regular Red Cross first-aid course is being given to all high Moro School News ■ M ' Moro briefly Thursday on bus- In c i sheriff Jack Franey of Klain- math county died Tuesday night afler an operation and sheriffs from this area expect to attend ^is funeral Saturday, flying down if necessary. Norman Fields, Sherman county sheriff is president of the Oregon sher- iff’s association. The Only Fine Cat Priced So Low ’’P ole atubbera" at work: Inspection haa revealed a pole which shows damage ut the ground line. Now, reinforced with a short length, it will be strong as new, and we’ll have saved much of the cost of a new pole. we stop telephone trouble- LINE PATROL| How before it starts! ’’Will it work when I want it? ”—that’s perhaps the most important thing you want to know about your telephone. That’s what we want to be sure of, too. And that's why repairmen, testers, inspectors and many other telephone specialists are constantly at work to make sure your calls go through. The term we use^is preventive maintenance. And it simply means testing and inspecting thou sands of miles of lines and cables, and check ing switching equipment constantly—on foot, in trucks and electronically— to find and fix any part of our complex system which might cause future trouble. MORE PEOPLE BUY CHEVROLET THAN ANY OTHER CAR See It A t Frank Pike’s CHEVROLET DEALER Grass Valley, Oregon Your telephone is one of today’s best bargains ’•Trouble detective”: If our electronic test ing equipment spots possible line trouble, his testing devices locate the difficulty—and a repair crew is dispatched to stop the trouble before it can interrupt your service. All over our system, we are alert, ’round the clock, to make sure you’ll have the world’s most de- Deudable telephone service. Few of the thing« you use in your daily life have gone up lean, in these inflationary time«, than the rate., for telephone service. Even though our coats of providing service have skyrocketed, your telephone calls re main one of today’s hest buys. Pacific Telephone