PAGE 5 SHERMAN COUNTY
J° l K N A I.,
M ORO. OREGON
F R ID A Y
JUNE
13,
IM S
Moro Personals
in Corvallis Saturday and SurP
day to attend graduation cere
monies at OSC where their grand
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Busse and daughter. Patricia Kaseberg, was
daughter Vee spent the week among the graduates.
end in Lakeview visiting Mrs
Mr. and Mr» Giles ' French
Busse’s father A .M . Zevelv; were in Salem Monday where he
They brought Paul Cool^ home attended a meeting of tlie state
from Bend where he had spent interim tax committee, of which
the week visiting his father.
he Is a member.
i M t . and Mrs.
Raphael ’ Ray Bob Hoskinson is home again
mond were down from Pendikton for a short furlough from army
Saturday and Sunday and were duties in California.
Tei ry Bucholta came home
accompanied by their son and
wife.
from Pullman, Wn., last week
George Frey, engineer for the " here he has been attending
soil Z conservation service, was Washington State college.
here Tuesday and took a look at
Mrs. Andy Paulson and infant
the city ditch which he will map son, Jeffrey Andrew, returned
and give plans for making safe. home last week. Mrs. Paulson s
W . J. Sterling and wife of mother, Mrs. Helen Eikanas of
Amenia, North Dakota, stopped Richmond. Calif., is here to help
I K E ’S P U B U C IT T M A N . . „ W .
here Monday to visit his niece, for a • time.
Howard Chase, U p public relations
Mr. and Mrs. Archie McCrae man,
uMYs. Jack Lawrence. The St«/-,
w ill handle the publicity U r
and
family
l^ft
Friday
for
their
lings were on their way to Seat
the Eisenhower cam paign. Chase
tle to deliver a new car for his new home at Lorane. He will at recently returned f r • m France
brother in law who is a Lt. Col. tend summer school at Ebgene where he has been with the general
before starting his school . work since the day a fte r the New H am p
stationed in Japan. C
this
fall./
s h ire p rim a ry .
Mr. and Mrs. Carrel Bennett
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Town
and son are free fot a couple Clarence Mtorrison, now well
of weeks as Carrel is taking his on th^ road to recovery from a send will leave next week for
annual vacation from the bank. heart attack last fall, was in Greeley, Colorado where ' he
, will attend summer school work-
Lou Simpson came up from Moro Thursday on busineaC
Mrs. Maggie Barnum return *n8 for an advanced degree.
Portland to handle the work in
ed this week frotp a trip to Mt.
Bennett’s absence.
SYNOPSIS OF ANNUAL
STATEMENT
There will be. divine worship Vernon to visit her brother,
Sam
Farra.
She
returned
by
way
in the Grass Valley Methodist
mado
church next Sunday afternoon at of Pendleton.
3 o’clock, June 15.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Coons are
A group of interested persons on a weeks vacation, going to
met Friday at the library to Ontario.
Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Roberson
learn from Archie McCrae how
•a or un-
I « _- i 3.S44.M0.0S
to catalogue library books. Pre were hosts last week at a din
sent were Cecil Hockman, Nina ner given in honor of the engage
=
.« m il
Pinkeifton, Alice Arnher,, Zella' ment of their son, Bob and (Miss
Total admlttod u m U >28 0 ' . «2ô «w
Dyer, Gene Bennett, Grace Zeve Dorothy Wilson, whose wedding
will be an event in August. Bob
mABII.ITULX. aURFL US AND
ly, Marjorie Marvin, Bill Hall.
OTHER F üm M
Mr. and Mrs. John Foss were expects to return to school this
fall and use h|s GI educational
F e n c e Pont» 8c?, B a rn e y ’« G . V. benefits.
Total
UablUtlM.
MORE
IN T E N S IV E
“Two blades of grass where
only one grew before'’ may be a
solution to one of Oregon's
mounting farm production pro
blems.
More intensive production must
come from ^the state’s 5,000,000
acres of plow land if farm output
is to ;keep pace with increased
demand created by swelling pop
ulation, said Ed McCanse, La
Grande, at the recent statewide
agricultural conference held on
the Oregon State college campus.
He was chairman of the confer
ence soil and water resources
committee.
McCanse said the state’s agri
culture is based on from 4,500,000
to 5,000,000 acres of plow land.
There is little prospe t of increas-
ing that acreage.
'Demand on this limited area
of cropland is real. The efleet on
the individual farm is becoming
only too apparent,” he* said. “The
cost of owning land in purchase
price, taxes and interest is
mounting. These are accompan
ied by increased material, labor
and supply costs. The individual
famer, by necessity, faces the
problem of increasing the volume
or business from the same acre
age—so it is for the state a s .a
w hole.”
The committee which McCanse
headed pointed out ways through
which a production increase
could take place during the next
15 or 20 years: y
By bringing an additional 800.
000 acres under irrigation in the
Willamette valley.
>-
W h irlp o o l W a s h e r» , B a rn e y ’s G V
W h irlp o o l D ry e rs ,
TO
AG
PROBLEM
Beefo’s
•
Barber Shop
DORIN WILBURN
NIGHT, JVNE 13
WELL DRILLING
MILL BE CLOSED HAT^iDAY
JVNE 14 AT 5:00 P. M.
. TEE DALLES, OREGON
Phone 3729.
ANDY
518 W. 7thSt
B a rn e y ’s G. V .
BARBER
*
ATTRACTIVE TERMS
<
•
H E R V IC E
a
S ta n d a ' rd
In su ra n ce Co. *
*
a
A w estern c o m p an y serving w estern a g ric u ltu re :
HOME OFFICE
HIS N. W . W a s h ln K lo n
Phone A T 4331
VETERANS
don’t let the Bunco Artists
get your BONUS
D o n ’t gamble with your bonus check. Remem
ber, the pea is never in the right pod when
you’re playing the old shell game! Hold on
to that bonus and consider carefully any plan
to use i t
If you are planning a purchase or invest
ment,
p ían»
•nt, first come in and talk over vour
]
with a bank officer fo r accurate, dependable
information based on sound hanking prin
ciples. Deposit your check with us so you
“ ‘ ’• available cash when you need i t
ax-
»00.000.00
P o rtla n d . O regon
W h a t D o c s G o d R e q u ire o f Y o u ? ”
000.00 -
* •
H e a r thia im p o rta n t s u b je c t discussed b y
E. C. KENNEDY
S p e c ia l R e p re c e n ta tiv e o f
W a t c h t o w e r B ib le and T ra c t S o c ie ty
JU NE
15,
1952
3 :0 0
'
Trie
THE
M o rtg a g e L o c i « to M e e t Y o u r In d iv id u a l need» ;
PROMPT
^ e a p T t a l ------ S 1 1 .M 4 .I1 S M
Beefo’s
Extend water supplies in cast- 000 acres of wild meadow hay-
crh<and southern Oregon to ben laqd.
__ .
efit 1,000,000 acres either through
better supplies on land now irri M a n ila R o p e ,
B a rn e y ’ m . G . V.
gated or to land now dry farmetj.
Improve 800,000 acres of land
by drainage.
Step up production 25 to 50
per cent by intensive and proper
use of commercial, fertilizers. y
Double production from 500,-
WILL BE OPEN FRIDAY
SHERMAN COUNTY BRANCH
I.O.O.F. H all Grass V a lle y
ST N A TIO N A L BANK
other night a guy looks at a steak
i
O F PORTLAND
our goodlooking waitress hacf brought
w i
A ll W elcom e
roomssr .
suld o m o o n
p.m .
c
- -
N o C o lle c tio n
him and he said, "That s thed)iggest piece
of beef I ve ever seen that couldn’t walk *
THC
W O R L D ’S
t o " p o ll« /.
P IC T U K t
p r e s e n ts ..? !
u. (nk) ——
•- *”
úS?.“ í ,
SSKi Ä Ä fifd *
m m ii
i.
REDD HARPER ... C IN D Y WALKER
C IT Y , M o ro , O re g o n
Beefo’s
W ESTERN
te r iS ä S
B E E F O ’S
A t th e C A P IT A L
C H R IS T IA N
d l w ^ ^ ’rxea.lvea^**.
Incurred n — ■■ ■ ■ ■ ■
Not inoom «______
*
F IR S T
Beefo’s
u
I
Insurance
(I
Ifc T E X A S
“* ■ * -
ADlflTTKD ASXCTX
B o n d . ---------------------- « «.a«« 804 58
S t o c k .---------------------- <,»31.000 00
A i’ n T d b '! u n c o P° " li ?
f
.S lS ii'® ,d!S S "S S
re.l M tat. Ir.fx m .d u «
and a c c r u a l_______
Other asM t. -------------
4» ' -i.l 20
BM .3M .4S
in GLORIOUS SOUND-COLOR
Total adalttad a a a t. S i« 4 29 <87.03
AND
All other Rabil
In Sherman county $ 1 0 ,0 0 0
hail insurance costs $150,
When you need it,
it’s too late to buy it.
Get it now from
Toi
Total
Uahilltto» «x-
c a p ita l.----------- S10.71I.S82 SS
Cpaí.
000000 °°
fu n d . ( « ir -
r iw )
<C71S,I
.424. S»
• 8 S S Ä * * ! Ä
S.71S.424.M
T o t a l---------------------- S lS .4 3 S .3 S 7 .tt
XT A T I MB NT OF INCOMB
ta . aarnad ___.
in c u rred
B illy G ra h a m
____.
torturad
AJT«,IRUT
Total und.rwrttln« da-
« f a u . , sa? •
InvàSmaat Irom« ___
m
w
- w
C liff B a rro w s
i
tocara, taxa. —
Fadaral toaom. taxa.
« gNNNSfW_______
WM
J ***
/
1B1.1M .0S
5^4««^
' a
____ -— -
" S ..H
100.000.00
W. T. Balsiger
Insurance Agency, MORO
M usical setting— Sons o f the Pioneers
"C h a n t o f the W a n d e re r”
•u rp lu a(n «t) ______
Total
. Pto. _
XncrMM
racarda
<h£)’ 7_S
170.S0S.SS
Famous H ardin-S im m ons U n iv e rs ity C ow bc -**
.____ _ - “ f ™
BC BIN ISS XN ORBOOtt
FOB TH«
Redd H a r p e r . . . “ W id e R o llin P lains”
TK a M
C in d y W a lk e r . . . "B eloved Enem y”
-Ar World Champion Rodeo Riders
irom the Texas Panhandle.
C in d y and R e d d . . . "Each Step of the W a y ”
—■
G eorge B e verly Shea. . . “ Just a Closer W a lk "
F o rt W o r th 1000 V oice Crusade C h o ir
EINHARD
FOR ME!’
bat
"T h e R a ilro a d Song”
z
H o u r o f D ecision C h o ir . . . "W o n d e rfu l Peace’
Production
S lu t
t
IIL E A S ID SY
GRAHAM IV A N O d lS T IC
' _
A SS O C IA TIO N
•»♦Hr
D ate: T h u rs d a y , J u n e 19, 195
-
- T im e : 8 :0 0 p .m .
P lace: M o ro C o m m u n ity C h u r c h
■