Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, May 16, 1952, Page 2, Image 2

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    PAGE t
SHERMAN CO UNT! JOURNAL.
MORO, OREGON
FRIDAY, M^Y 1«, 19$2
^Fi{ermsn C o u n ty J o u rn a l
W H A T GOES ON?
TTie statement
by General
tre ry M t e y at
Hoyt Vandenberg that the Unlt-
More,
4x1 SuteB a ir force to unprepared
(.lie» L. F r e n c h --------------- M a r
defend the nation o r carry on
an extended battle over Europe;
htMefflca rt Mt.ru, Orervr.
far A m that the fighting in Korea is in­
«T CoärrM« «rf Harto t, litt.
efficient
because
of obsolete
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER planes, must and w ill be a shock
to. American taxpayers.
W e have appropriated billions
to achieve an adequate defense.
I t is true that a lo t of money
to still unspent ant) that more is
being held u ntil contracts " are
completed. But nevertheless that
NIW SPAPIR
mtony
billions
fchould
have
k PU8LI1H 1RI
brought security if it is possible
^ASSOCIATION
to bring security at all.
O f course the general's state­
ment oome6 at a time when there
SUBSCRIPTION RATHS
to debate in congress over the
ONE YEAR .
slae of m ilitary appropriations
and may be considered a political
MAY 10, IMS
«kxmmeru
H ABTO LN OREGON
The 88 percent o f Oregon that
Uee east o f the Cascades totals
42.788,840 acres according to the
federal census which msana that
K to larger than most of the
states. In tact there are counties
larger than as many as five
states The federal government
' owns 83 percent of eastern O re
«on. Oddly enough there to no
accurate survey o f these lands
and figures disagree as much as
700,000 acres as to the extent of
federally owned land.
County mssasors have 15,480,>
992 acres ltoted 00 being in
terms
A few acres are In city
lorn, but not many in eastern
Oregon. The state and counties
own some land although a small
proportion.
In Shennan county ttierc m
531.200 M T e . r f w ilc h 402J93
are In n ™ , . very high per
carnage. The govemnwn, o w n .
the remaining 33,000 acre, but
according to figure, r f the Bu-
to
that
extent
It
comes nearly every year. Tax-
payers will also wonder at the
jo in t chiefs o f staff who have
been putting off the year of pro-
bable security w ith great regu-
tority tor some five years now. It
was in recent times 195^, 1953,
and' to now 1954. N ext ye»r, we
prophesy, it w ill be 1955.
I t seems likely that the dollar-
paying, peace-toving American
taxpayer (to also going to be a
question-asking person w ith the
kind of treatment he had been
getting.
~
*
He m *? want to know why we
are continually unprepared, why
d* t« of ««curUy to constant
postponed, w h y the chiefs of
always need more and more
for *«**• and k * 8 An<l naturally
h * H118^ request throuh his vote
U » t If * e prw ent nUUtary head.
" bU hl “ ™ rity
* *
b e * ‘v* n *
T '
* u* 4c‘° n «*“ * mUl'
“ 2,
i? " *
retoftM* i ln OI^*er Ul *“ * them
urday, June 14, 1952, at ten
o’clock a. tn. of said day, at the
County Court room in the Court
bouse at' Mbro, Oregori, has been
fixed b y -th e Court as the time
and place tor hearing of object-
I oml to said Pinal Report and
A«xnlnt and the settlement of
«aid estate.
,
- <
Mabel Holmes
Cassie Holmes
Geo. G. Updegraff,
Attorney to r Executrices. 28 31c
Scholl, deceased, are hereby noti­
CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING — trlx w ith W ill Annexed of the
fied to present them in proper
Meat cutting, wrapping, sharp Estate of Christopher Thomas
form, to thè undersigned,* the
freeze. Bring them in any da? Taylor, Deceased, has filed
in
duty appointed,, |quuidied and
but Sunday. C 4 C Food Store, the County Court of the State
2 life of Oregon for Sherman County,
acting Administrator, with the FOR S A LE — 3-bedroom, 1-story * GrasZ Valley, Oregon,
w ill annexed, p f the estate of Bis-
(house, completely redecorated FOR SALE: Old make violin, her Final Account and the Court
mark Scholl, deceased at his of
Inside, complete w ith electric
fine* tone. Case Included. $100. has set the 10th day of Ju nl,
flee In Moro, Oregon, w ithin six
range, water heater and part­
I f interested see M^s. Davis at 1952, In the office of the County-
ly furnished. See Paddy O’Mtoa-
months fro m th e date of this
Union Pacific depot.|
26-30c Clerk in the Court House at
ra, Wasco, Phone 761; after 5 FOR SALE:
notice, to wit: M ay 16, 1952.
1950 Chev. 1-ton Moro, Oregon, at *10:00 o’clock
' p. m . call 173.
28-9c
Pickup w ith
4-speed . trans, a. m. as the time and place for
Geo. G. Updegraff
28^31c
L IB E R A L IN C O M E , G R O W TH
stock rack. B. McNeely, Grass the settlement of said account­
& S A F E T Y for spare m|oney
Valley, Oregon.
13c tfn ing and for hearing objections to
through high grade stocks, mu
In two years the canning of
N E E D AN A L L P U R P O S E CAR? the same, if. any.
tual
stock
and
bond
trusts,
prunes in Oregon ha.-, risen from
N O T IC E TO CREDITORS
,
D O N ALDA K N IG H T E N
Then see the W illy« Station
which
have unbroken d iv i­
All
persons having
claims 28 iperecent of. the . total crop
Adm inistratrix ^vith W ill
dend records since 1924 and Wagon on display at W IL L IS
*:
ag iinst the estate of Bismark grown to 52 percent
2fr9c
earlier.
MOTOR CO. All-steel body, over­ Annexed.
le a r n why millions of investors, drive, plenty of carrying capacity J. Tracy Barton
large and email, yipung and means safety, economy and prac­ The Dalles, Oregon
old, have been MORE than sa­ tical transportation. Also New Attorney for the Estate
tisfied w ith past results. MJany Four Wheel D rive JEEPS, P IC K
N O T IC E OF F IN A L H E A R IN G
tax advantages possible In es-
G IV I YOUR HOME A'BEAUTY
Notice Is hereby given that the
tabtthimg estate-building and UPS and S T A T IO N WAGONS.
education funds fo r the future. Contact W IL L IS MOTOR for W ll undersigned Jhas filed in the Coun­
TREATMEMT, T©<
W rite, call on J. W. DODD, lys-Overland Sales, Service, Parts ty CourL-Of , the State of Oregon
T Y G H V A L L E Y , ORE. Agent. and Accessories. West Columbia
Co
W j j v J. Collins A C o, U. S. River Highway, The Dalles, Ore­ Report and Account as Execu­
Bank B k & , Portland.
, 28tfc gon.
23-tfc trix o f the Last W ill and Testa­
FOR SALE: Spinet Plano. W ill W A N T E D :
“W<ant your
own ment of W alter A. Medler, de­
sacrifice for quick sale. Gash
busirtess? Start w ith
benefit ceased, and that Saturday, M ay
or tern|B. Can be seen In MJoro
of our 84 year old national SI, 1952, at ten o’clock A. M.
..Write Tallm an Plano Store,
reputation and on our capital. of said day, at the County Court-
365-395 South, 12th Street, Sa­
800 fam ily route open in i?her rdbin, In the
Courthouse,. at
lem, Oreon
28-30
m$n county. tV rlte J. R. W a t­ Moro, Oregon, has been fiyed by
S
A
L
E
S
M
E
N
W
A
N
T
E
D
IMRROVEMEN1
kins company, 137 Dexter Ave. the Court as the time and place
F A R M E R —- L U M B E R M A N —
Seattle 9, Washington.
23-8c for hearing of objections to said
D A IR Y M A N — H O U S E W IF E
LOANS FOR YOUR HOME
or anj| qualified person— I f
Final Report and (Account and
ANNOUNCEM ENT
you have a car and spare time
D on’t put ofl needed repairs that would
the settlement of said estate.
I
hereby
announce
that
t
am
w rite for information how to
mean greater expense later o n .. If you are
Fay Helmick Miedler
earn $1 to $3 an hour »apply­ a candidate for the office of
short of "ready cash” come in and talk over
26-9c
from the Geo. G. Vpdegraff
ing users near you w ith R a y ­ State Representative
your problem with a Loan Officer.
Representative
District Attorney for Executrix
leigh flavors, spices,
foods, 22nd
Money to put up an attractive fence. . .
house and fa rm supplies. Free comprising
Gilliam,
Wheeler,
lx»okiet and information witn- Sherman and Morrow Counties, Moro lxMlge No. 113 1 .0 .0 F
improve your lawn and garden...repairing
out obligation.
W rite
Sales subject to the w ill of the Demo­ Meets 1st and 3rd
and modernizing your home can be easily
Manager, Hawlleghs, GaAland cratic voters at the prim ary Tuesdays in I.O.O.F.
arranged through a Home Improvement
20, Calif.
28-30c
ball. Transient and
election May 16, 1952.
visiting brothers are
Robert Smith
cordially invited
Cqpdon, Oregon Floyd I,ane, N. G.
Want Ad*
N O T IC E OF H E A R IN G
ON F IN A L REPORT
Notice to given that Cather­
ine M. Anderson, adm inistratrix
of the estate or*Cheeter R. A n­
dersen, liai filed her final re­
port and ocoount of her admin
i»tnation of «aid estate and that
Saturday, June,14th, 1952, at the
hour o f 10 o’clock, a. m. Stand­
ard time, o f said day and the
courtroom o f the above entitled
court in the courthouse in Moro
In Sherman County, Oregon, h a j
been fixed tas the tim e and place
fo r hearing all objections to said
final report and the settlement
thereof.
Catherine M . Andersen,
Adm inistratrix
Carlton L. Pepper - ~
Attorney for Adminis-
tra trix
•
,-
28-31 c
SHERMAN COUNTY BRANCH
F l k S T NATIONAL BANK
OP PORTLAND
¿ J
™ .o Of Lend Management that
agency controls 53.951 acrea In ^ “ U ? t , e<~<*X ’n y .
w ith
the
thia county end the state has U lrw “* d*PrM rto " « ”* ««ner.il
1400
f i^ T X
™ “ • ~ ™ t t M t u r : ul>1
balance. In feet they batanne for ^ ° W
¿2 ^
no Fastern Or»snn nra.intv
fenee materiel«
b S T lh e ’ t l i ^ .
■ . / ' ‘J ? * on'y tW£
scale natural In sc m t « t \ r e o
* ration
Eastern Oregon has many til-
toWe acres, about its proportion
the *tates tilled acre«; 1J73,-
000 acres to take the census ft-
natl° n *“ • * *
2.7 tillable acres per person, and
OragPQ hut little oyer three, eas
hZT? 2 I' 7 ° n ha* 29 acres til
toble land per person, enough to
®n ever increasing popu
uatdon There to wide variation
among the counties and Sher
man county has 129 tillable acren
per person, probably as large as
any county in the land.
I f the efficiency of agriculture
to to be judged bythe number of
persons engaged in raising food
Sherman bos a most efficient ag­
riculture, for a «mail number
produce o great deal.
Nations
where
three-quarter»
of
the
peeople have to till Jand In ordpr
_ to live ore poor nations.
Income from agriculture In
’ oaotern Oregon io greatest from
field crops which accounts for
over $62 ndllton. Next Is live­
stock W h $51 million followed
by1 fru it, dairy and vegetable
crops. I t 1s estimated that half
the livestock production comes
from non-tlltoble land. >
I t 1s still an expansive land,
one In which the people, like
their pioneering ancestors, are
3 «till reaching for more land to
Irrigate and plow, new crops to
plant, wider markets. Seldom
can one find a community that
wants to settle down and con­
tinue In th e same channel. Some
cltiseno may be old; the spirit
to young
Even w ith all these agricultu
ral resources the development of
eastern Oregon to not likely to
he on the to ftil|T h e vast amounts
of comparatively cheap,
clean
easily transmitted power should
bring industry to the north
west— when and If Industry can
ho made free to expand. N ow it
to held down by reotrictlons, Jby
taxes, by uncertainty.
The natural market for north
west products to in the Orient
Where millions are without auf
flclent food, without machinery,
almost w ithout clothes. In tact
the market fo r the world is
around the Pacific, fo r there is
Where the need is greateoL They
have tin. rubber, copra, other
things we can use In exchange,
maybe not much at present, but
great potential capacity In raw
materials.
•
Gould we but teach ten .per­
cent of them to sat wheat In­
stead of rice we would have a
m arket for years and It would
take more cattle than roam the
western ranges to furnish th eir
need N they were to eat ten
pounds o f m eet a year— • mere
six percent o f what wo e a t
How to do it is the question
and It Isn’t so im portant that all
the details be worked out in a
blue p rin t Immediately But i t Is
im portant and the direction of
the nation turns toward the
west, toward the northwest for
Industry and food and toward
the O rient as a n w rk e t
This is
not only fo r o ur own economy
but for the peace of th e world.
ln* *
and hiring men
* -
tha' .
th.e a.<lml"
THE G A Y SHOP
i
* * * w Inn,n* * :
on
taxpayer,
____________
N O T IC E OF F IN A L H E A R IN G
Notloe is hereby given that the
undersigned have filed in the
County Court <* the State of
Oregon
for
Sherman
County
their pin^j Report and A c c o u n t.
M Executrices of the Last W ill -
arxj Testament of Samuel B. ’
Hoimos, deeeMed> and
8at.
lovely new dresses and Lingerie
W hite Stag, Lazy Susan wrap skirt
Clam Diggers, Levis, N e\^ Blouses
Gay Shop
W asco
O re g o n
Bjmmgartnrr Hdw« A Eh
(¿roMM Valley, Oregon
NOTICE OF FIN A L HEARING
>
Notice is hereby
Donalda Knighten,
ITS W HAT’S INSIDE
That Counts!
given that
Administra-
Leo W atkins, Secretary
Laptne Rebekah lxtdge
No. 118
Meets 2nd and 4th
Tuesdays of each
month.
Visiting
members welcome
Josephine Gentry
N.O.
Helen Martin, Se€.
Rareka Ix»dge No. 121 A.F. A A .*
Meets on the lo t and
3rd Thursday evening*
each month. Visiting
members cordially In­
vited to meet with us
Clyde Gillmor, W. M.
If. D. Pinkerton, Secretary
Bethlehem Chapter No. 78. O.B.8
Meets every second ano
fourth Thursday In each
month: visiting members
Invited. Moro, Oregon
Bonnie May, W . M.
Gwen Ross, Secretary
supposed to be
glad you’re big?”
So Investigate
Before You Invest
Many people w rite us ntch comments as
this: ’ I've heard people talk against big
companies like you. Lately I've been read­
ing yo u r statements about bigness. A m I
supposed to be glad you're big?"
,
Hohner Accordions
Are World Famous
The answer to this question depends on
y o u r answ er to certain others. Some people
h av e com e to feel th a t bigness itself m ay
be bad. C onsider the good th a t comes from
th is sam e bigness.
For Tone Quality and Beauty
Hohners have more sets of Bass and
Treble Reeds than other Accordions
priced much higher . . ♦ Bass and tre*
We Switches for tone changes.
—
80 Bass, 34 Treble Keys
3 and 5 sets Reeds
2 Treble Switches
120 Bess, 41 Treble Key«
3 and 4 Sets Reeds
3 Treble Switches
96 Bass, 34 Treble Keys
3 and 5 Sets Reeds
9 Treble, 3 Bass Switches
120 Bass, 41 Treble Keys
3 and 5 Sets Reeds
9 Treble, 3 Bass Switches
120 Bess, 41 Treble Keys
4 and 5 Sets Reeds
13 Treble. 6 Boss Switches
140 Boss. 41 Treble Keys
4 and 5 Sets Reeds
13 Treble. 6 Bans Switches
SPECIAL
OFFER OF
JQ% O ff
Tλ“
The Music Box
308 Washington, one-half block south Granada Theater ~ Phone 2091
The Dalles, Oregon
D o yo u lik e a b a rgain ? You’re getting one in
gasoline. Except for taxee, gasoline today coats
just about what it did in 1925. (And it’s batter
gas; 2 gallons now do work that then took 3.)
Why? Largely because of competition among big
oil companies.
Do you w a n t to k e e p your co u n try strong?
It takea big companies to back our fighting men
and keep defenae goods in full supply. Standard
is at work for our government on aviation gaso­
line«, atom ic research, synthetic rubber, and
v<her vital projects.
D o you lik e n ew and b e tte r thin gs? Standard
has spent over $35,000,000 on research and tech­
nical service in the last 6 years, developing new
or improved products, and new raw materials
for other companies. Yet only when allowed to
«row big, by eerving you better, can we take on
the work and risk involved.
A re yo u g la d you h a v e th e c o n v en ie n c es of
this machine age?” They depend heavily on oil
You re assured an ample supply of oil by the en­
terprise of big companies like Standard We seek
out new crude reserves, in this country and
lir
exPl° r>tion that may coat naUions
before the first gallon is found.
Obviously, there are countless ways to express the benefits you gain by our bixnesa
countless
could
ask, bign^s
to which
you’d then
probably
And if you questions
like the we
thing,
that
brings,
^ c ^ anawer“ves’’
g t e d w . ^ b “ . ^ ^ * ’
STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA
‘ to sorvo you bettor