Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 8, 1954)
o 2 S H E R M A N C O U N T Y | .J O U R N A L , > lirru i.’iu County jo u rn a l P u b lU h rd E v e ry F rid a y M o ro , O regon Giles L . F re n c h at E d ito r fc n l.r u l a * ■econd eluaa m a tte r a t tha F U iliir a at M oro. O regon, under Act < MB o f M arch a. 187>.____________ ~o7 " r i c i . C COUNTY I’A I’ KF H I WSPA PI R C?*á&íu‘uíHi“ A S S O C IA T IO N n a t io n a l e d it o r ia l m xm iucxiiJi Hl USCKIPTION RATHS »INK YEAR . . ---------- $2.0i JANI ARI «, i ' NOTHING BI T WHEAT .MORO, O R E G O N , F R I D A Y , J A N U A R Y 8. 1 M 4 such woolens «1»' he possessed there might have been greater welcome for the brightly colored propectus for gardens galore next spring. As It was It seemed or dinary. Anyone could have plant ed anything that day. Radishes or hardy lettuce would have sprouted and thrived that Janu ary morning anti even tomatoes or squash would have felt the thrill of growth although It may have been stilled later. In other words winter had been non-existent to the first of this week. Zero was a spot on the thermometer as unreached as a Russian promise. The sun had shone brightly or the rain had jioured down from cloudy and warm skies. One didn t thrill to a seed catalogue as one might if the ground were frozen and spring was a remote possibility to lie reached in some distant future. There is some loss from a warm winter. The suspense is lacking; the yearning for balmy sun, the free wind of spring. The winters thal are soft and warm do not make spring the season it should They do not give the back- groun(| for it. Pshaw, what Is the reason for spring if the winter has been mild enough to stimu- ¡ate the pussy willows and en- courage the violets? ¡ju^ anyway, here are the seed catalogues, not so much the har- hrlngers of spring as the sar- geantH calling us to work again, We need a winter between grow- ¡ng 8ea8Ons so that growth may seem new and fresh and prom- ¡sjng again and not just another ¡MJUt with the hoe and the spade, nee(j to ¡,e threatened with cojd with freezing, with violent death. only then are we happy with new life. ____ ___ Sherman county is the Oregon county with the greatest per- centage of income derived from agriculture. Its percentage is 82.4 and the average for the state is 11.7. For the present that is possibly a fortunate position. Agriculture has been profitable, and is yet. It does indicate that all our eggs are ln one basket. Not even the agri- culture is varied. It is wheat and not much else except a few cut- tie. That is specialization with a vengence. It is possible that the county can continue to rely solely on wheat. It has done so for years although with not the concen- tration of the present. There used to lx? some hogs, sheep, poultry and dairy cattle. Alxiut the only rule that Is safe to fol low Is that there will be chunge | , y , | I'VITKItNON and any change in wheat pro- due.ion, distribution or use would Governor Paul Patterson, as be felt in this county very quick- was expected by the political ob- Iv anil perhaps disastrously. servers of the state, has announ- lt now appears likely that the Ced that he will lie a candidate farm program will continue much for the Republican nomination as it has; that is that there will for governor at the May prl- be guaranteed loan values with marles. resultant acreage reductions. We He had served as a state senator now have hut two-thirds of a frolll 1944 until he became gov- crop seeded to whe.t, and while em or on the resignation of Doug- we may supplement barley that ¡as McKay. His Interest was par- will lie of short duration unless ticularily with roads and educa- someway is found to use a lot of tlon although as a lawyer he had barley. to work with many other phases it Isn’t that we ar « so Involved ()f state government. with wheat. That is our natural one of Patterson’s assets is crop and has been for years. It that he seldom speaks from preju- is worse that we think of nothing dice. His habit Is to listen to the else. Unless there Is wide spread arguments of proponents anil drouth It does not look as If there makes up his own mind. He Is will be much chance to grow a attached to no particular group big crop of wheat for s me years. In Oregon politics and Is not of The present farm pro.rran en- the disposition to become so at coinages every farmer 10 sow tached. His difficulty will lie in getting wheat; eventually we will be eliminated because we are far voters sufficiently acquainted from the primary , --------- market ---- and with him to realize and apprecl- we do not grow I bread wheat ate his excellent traits of charac ter that make him a good and anyway. Other places with less financial dei>endable public servant. ability have found an Industry t o ------------- - help stabilize the economy and some have found It without the D E A T H V A L L E L S < O T I Y aid of adjacent electricity or even An aged man, named Walter transportation as suitable as Seott, died at a lonely but impos ours. ing home In a narrow trllmtary canyon to Death Valley this week at 81. He had had a lot of fun, HTATK OF TIIE NATION spending money ---- and r........ pulling . the .... It seems only fair that we public leg and In general giving should do our share of worrying Vent to healthy imagination, about the state of the nation, |eor years he posed as a desert the welfare of the Republican character with a hidden gold party, the ambitions of the Dem- mine and unlimited funds which ocrats, the ¡xisslblllty of a depres- ¡u threw alx>ut recklessly on his slon, the danger of atomic obll trips to town—and town was the vlon. larger cities for Scotty. Having l>een told by a rellablt , 1IV truth was „„„ that ...... .... . The he .......... obtained banker that Ixink de|X)slts are his money from an eastern mil- higher than ever and savings are Uonnalre, one Johnson, an educa- growlng as danger of food lines ted and inhibited gentleman seems a little remote but nothing whose background was entirely Is Iteyond the Imagination of a different than Scotty’s. How these first rate worrier, especially one two men became acquainted Is who deplores with distrust and not known and is unimportant, dismay. The fact that the man with With every public cave full of money knew enough to let S.ot- publlc butter and cheese and with ty sp»>nd It is unique and rather the warehouses bursting with important as a social point. One wheat and corn It takes a resol- had Imagination and the other ute stomach to threaten hnme- had money; neither attribute was illate collapse and ours has just very valuable without the other reported that It continues to ex- and apparently one balanced the pect the usual trl-ilally stoklnrf other In thf partnership. By pool- with possibility of an Increase in ing their resources lx»th had a iirth. good time, lived in a home which Corporations have lx*en report- tourists called a castle, entertaln- ng big dividends during 1953 and p(, possessors of well known vlll lx* able to reduce taxes paid names and raised a modest brand mmediatcly and Christmas busl- ,,f discreet hell Ix'fitting their less was bigger than the hig age and self-made fame, lanta year of 1952, so except There are thousands of men or the man who worries be- with more money Jhan they know ause It wasn't as much bigger what to do with and thousands • there little nore who have fertile Imagina eason for concern from that tions that are Iwurcn without luarter. some funds. Money Is no good It looks as if the American unless you know how to spend teople are going to have a big jt and Johnson was wise In this SMI \ are in fine position to rwdlsatton Had he net been vl 1 iave it comfortably. The worst he would have tiled as the re hat could happen to them would pressed <ieaeon which he reaem* e to have to take an Interest in bled. And Scotty would have lx»cn ' ?lr own future and quit de- a bar-room braggart without nritng on the government. dignity. Together they were fam ous, happy and comfortable. RING? Average cost of educating high rlv this week the first seed ilogues came, on a morning school children In Washington tiout frost anti with a murky county Is announced as $199.33. that promlsetl enough tnols- Assuming that their education Is i for any garden crop. This of average quality Sherman coun- ns a little early but It Is the ty could send Its high school stu- oin of seed companies to lie dents to that county, pay tuition 1 to business. and board and get off a lot cheap- there had Iwen snow on the er than It does. It won’t, of course, ml and If the prospective because parents like to have their ener receiving the catalogue teen oge children around so been wrapped In furs anti they can absorb parental advice. For the program. Mr. Gardner. FOR SALE: House in Wasco,. 6 and Accessories. Uesl; Collurabia principal of the Arlington school bedrooms, furnished, upstairs River Highway. The Dalles Ore- apartment can be rented for gon. 23-tfc w Mrs. Gec.-g» tfas •< tbe piano and Frank Adams, revenue, 2 firplaces, 3 lots. WATKINS DEALERSHIP: Make IT A group of young people from Delbert Anderson and Ron Davis up to $500 a month and more Price $«>ooo, $3000 down Call * fl WWT)W1 Rufus went caroling at the three on their trumpets played “Trum 10c if you qualify for the Watkins Wasco. 622 / hospitals in The Dalles during peters Three” and “My Buddy”. Dealership in Sherman county. vacation and enjoyed singing to At the close Mrs. Lenoard Jor- ____ ...n u T P D iw n TO THE EDITOR: Car or truck required. No little the shut-ins. dan, Mrs. Joe Morris and Mrs. Le- CUSTOM SLALGHTERL 1 would like to add a Meat cutting, wrapping, sharp money required. Write J. R. Willis Barney received a letter land Medler served sandwiches, early history to your postoffice freeze. C & C Pood Store, Watkins Company, 137 Dexter from his chaplain friend in Korea potato chips and coffee to all. story. 47tfn Grass Valley, Oregon. Ave., Seattle 9, Wish. 6-1 lc Bill Bennett and Rosa Burrel saying the people there were ---------------- were small store need v* of warm clothing. w ere p partners a rtn e rs in a sm all sto re » greatly » « « j in sswu w arm uuumig. After a nearly perfect w eath er c a t v - a H«drnom house ITATE WIDE PAINT CO. com plete painting and decorating and postoffice at Deschutes where The Rufus Missionary society for the holiday season, it poured FOR bA LL 4 , sh service, spray or brush. Phone Carlisle lives. Bennett was com- wishes to send them a box of clo- down rain early Monday morning. 3 W ta. g arage, mltted June 1894. I worked part thing. Anyone wanting to help. The roads were quite soft when »lectric neater « a . J977 or 5293, 1205 E. 12th St. time for Fred Phelps carrying either with clothing or change the Rufus school bus made the heater & -»> g Vern Campell and Jack Null, goes for $4750.00. Ivan Klrkelie The Dalles, Oregon 38tfn the mall, herding cattle and tend- for postage may leave their gift rounds on the hill that morning. Moro, Oregon 26tfn at the parsonage. The bus made several tries before ing toll bridge In 1893. _ WANTED: HOUSEWIVES • Ad The office was transferred to R*v- a" d Mrs. Willis Barney it made It up the Striker hill. N F P n Aiq A. I PURPOSE CAR? dress advertising postcards, Dr. and Mrs. Frank Reid en- NEEL) . , w station the section house at Deschutes and children spent New Years Must have good handwriting. and Mrs. Mulholand cared (pr the evening In Arlington attending a tertained with a party at their disolav at WJLLIS LINDO, Watertown, Mass. mall till sometime in the year Watch party at the Nazarene home for the younger set w.th All-steel body, over- 9-13p 1894. Phelps’ office was located church. Three churches were re- their son David as a host. A six « y * « . carrying capacity at the end of the bridge one mile presented with a group coming thirty dinner was served to six- «nv . p y * and . y o u n o NOT have to know from the mouth. from Arlington, a f e t y e c non Also *’ New what is going t0 happen in the 110111 Ione- lune, Rufus n u iu x and anil A rlington, teen iveri boys ouys and aiiu girls. g in s. Mrs. m is. Allen ¡"«ms s • n«snnrtation The only ¡xistmasters 1 ever An interesting program was giv- Tom assisted Mrs. Reid in serv- ca ran JEEPS PICK- future to adjust Intelligently knew were at Riggs, Dixon Me- en and refreshments were served, ing. After dinner games yere * WAGONS. for it. Prudent diversification a n d Donald and Mrs. Lucius Ber- M r. and Mrs. Fay Brackett, played. I he young folks reported ‘ • WILLIS MOTOR for Wil- rian Clark. Clark and George Mrs. Herman Brackett and Ben- a very nice time and hope they service Parts balance is the answer. Berrlan operated a lumber yard nie Croff took Mary Brackett to can have more parties in the fu- lys-Ovei land b I>et us explain more fully the and ferry in conjunction with Stanfield Sunday afternoon. Mary ture. ----------------------- ----------- —-- many advantages and tax shel the postoffice which was located who ia a hi«h school teacher at The Rufus womens volleyball Moro ixxlge No. 113 I.G .O .F . ter in the right kinds of stocks exactly where Dinty’s station Stanfield spent the holidays here team will play The Dalles A team Meet3 l8l and 3rd .. and bonds; mutual fend shares; now stands The mall was most- with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. on the Rufus gym floor Thursday Tuesdays In I.O.O.F. tax free municipal and school ly the San Francisco Weekly Herman Brackett. night. hall. Transient and bonds. Examiner, the St. Ixiuis G lo b e Several new pupils have enter- v is itin g JOSEPH W. DODD, TYGH Democrat and The Dalles Moun- William O’Brien, president, op- ed Rufus school this week. The> cordially invited VALLEY, ORE., Eastern Ore. taineer. ened the business meeting when are Richard Carrol and Wiilia John E. DeMoss, N.G Mgr. Wm. J. Collins & Co. Na 1 might add further, our fam- the Rufus PTA met at the school Deana McCarty who are in the t eu waikms, Secretary tion-wide service. Long ex lly lived three miles up the river house Monday evening. fifth *rad®- And ( larice Carrol in perienced. 10-tfn for seven years on a fruit and O’Brien announced the next the e ig h th g ra d e and A nna . a \ L u p in e R e b e k a h Ix x lg e <>• 116 stock place from 1891 to 1898. meeting date will be changed to McCarty In the 6th grade, rhe 2nd and 4th LEGAL NOTICES Father, I and Jack Underhill the second Monday In February Carrol children came frornachool Tuesdays of each P U B L IC N O T IC E plowed the first sod on the Gor- which will lie February 8. This at Camas, Wn. The McCarty s m o n th . Visiting The annual meeting of the don Butte, 80 acres with two was changed so that Colonel El- were former y enrolled at Siletz, members w e t o r n t Sherman County Soil Conserva 12 inch footburners, horses bor- der of The Dalles, army engineers Heppner high school boys come Mollie McLachlan tion District will be held in the rowed from Walker and Pierre could come and put on » program ¡0 Friday nj8bt fi,r a bas' NG' ^ _ County Courthouse, Moro, Ore Coutoure. Thi ropers took about The D alles dam He will ketball game here. Saturday night ,elen Martin. Sec.___ the entire crop, killed the orchard show pictures as well as give us the Moro boys come to Rufus foi |Z1 AJO A.* gon, January 19, 1954, 1:30 p. m. Meeu An election to fill the expired and everything. Glanders killed some interesting facts. This meet- a £ame- ‘ on the - - 1st and - 41 head of Walker’s horses; black ing Is open to the public and any The Rufus boys basketball 3rd Thursday evening! term of A. C. Kaseberg, Wasco, leg and a spine disease took 73 one interested will be welcome to team was defeated by Dufur on each inontn. Visiting,,will be held.’The annual report members cordially in Fof the district will be presented, head of our cattle. George Ramey attend. There will be no serving their floor last I uesday evening, vited to meet with uh 10-1 lc moved the family, two saddle committee that night. The Dufur girls volleyball team Howard Ross, W. horses, three cows and two dogs The PTA discussed ways of get- was also winner over the Rufus H. B. Pinkerton, Secretary ^ADVERTISEMENT F O R B ID S ting sick children home from girls. back to Grant. W. E. Simmons Simmons or of 1 Portland is My lifelong friends were lx?vi school when the school can’t con- W E. orttanu is iv « - m . O IL S B Sealed bids w il1 received bY new. A. J. Price, Ada Fulton tact the parents. Mrs. John De- spending a few days visiting B e th le h e m c h a p te r No. | Mrs. Jean Brown> clerk of School Nine <...d Meeu every second ant,iD istriet 3-C, Sherman County, and Clothllde Love Lucas. Mrs. Figh, Mrs. Ray Brown and Mrs. friends in Rufus. He Is a house Rufus, Oregon, until Lucas passed to her reward last Harvey Hansen are willing to guest.of Mr, and MrMs. Bill Huck. - fourth *- Thursday tn eactiBQregon( month; visiting m e m b e r » qq o’CiOck P. M., Monday the year at Heppner, Oregon. take the children home If they Sunday they were guests; of Mr. Invited Moro, Oregor 1st day of February, 1954, for and Mrs. James Fox. Monday, have no way. C. A. Tom Mary O. Coons, W. M the construction of three (3) Simmons visited at Rufus school Gwen Ross, Secretary where he did the janitor work for dwelling houses to be constructed many years when the now pre for said School District at Ru sent school was first built. All fus, Oregon, and will then and iîii who have seen “Simmy” as he there be opened and publicly FUNERAL SERVICE Ezra T . n B en » „ houses and ,„,0 s.o.naehshy ™ caUe^hy . h e ^ d . U read. Bids received after the time fixed for opening will not be ac . . . with understanding Any effective solution of to- X / o ’f Sm e'com m wllties. We Michael OBrlen went home cepted. day’s farm problem must provide can pu8h forward In our research S? ”day after 8Pendin8 d ftxv Drawings, Specifications and methods for reducing our huge pr" g‘r amS to uncover new uses o h s school vacation at the home Form of Contract Documents for . . . responsible this work may be obtained from stockpile of agricultural commo for farm goods We, can throw of J mnjy F x dltles and at the same time pre our entire weight heh nd plans the Clerk of the District at Rufus, vlsltor o( lk,nna Wilson . . . reasonable vent further burdensome accum for expand ng Oregon, upon the deposit of $5.00 -rieaday ntght after her volley illations. or may be examined at the Office markets and finding new outlets J ° Getting rid of these surpluses overseas. ba ? am® al L)°nna wbo of the Clerk of the District. is only half of our problem. Even such methods, while they will ¡® ,? ,fres^m. t n V OSC 8P®nt the The amount of the deposit for If we were able to bring them not produce results as quickly as ho ida>’ at the bome of documents will be returned to down to manageable proportions, dumping or destroying foot!, of- Mr’ and . Wilson, each bidder upon the return of we would soon acquire new fer a far sounder approach to our Wayne and Gail Laton came to said documents in good condition hoards of wheat, corn, cotton and basic problems. spend part of the holiday season within thirty days after the date butter under the existing system Along those lines, I can report £ itb the‘r ,p are” t.s’ M r a”d ,Mr.8, of the opening of bids. »f Price supports. that oi r promotional campaign. ^ atO" . tWay?e ,wh° Ls ln Each bid shall be accompanied Leonard & Wilma Smith We already have approximately undertaken with the meat Indus- stationeil tbe 1 nlted near Sla¡® s east a*r force was the coast but Fh°ne The Dalles 3135 a cert. . e. c e c k , cashier’s $2.5 billions tied up in loans on try and food stores, is producing Rationed near the east coast but check or bid bond, made payable farm commodities, in addition to r e ,i results. We are consuming l^'n° w assigned to the wes^.coast., to School District No. 3-C, Sher — i an equal amount Invested in beef this year at the rate of 75 Frayie is working at an airplane man County, Oregon, in an good« which we own outright— pounds per person, the highest fact,,,y California. amount of the bid. Attention of $5 billions in ail. ,n Our history. Mr and M” ’ Geor8v Fox and bidders is directed to State laws Our present program does not Farm exports have turned up- ?°ns and Michael O’Brien their concerning wages, hours and oth encourage the production shifts war,¡ 8¡nce j u¡y ¡, reflecting our were New Years din- er conditions of employment. wlilch are required to meet the emphasis upon expanding trade. J>er guests of Mr. and Mrs. L rank Bidders are requested to fur changing market demands for Continued high employment at Weatherford of Arlington, nish a statement of qualifications various commodities. hoine| with national Income at Mrs Bee Macnah and daughter as required by the law-s of the Of course, we could destroy reeord levels, means a strong de- Jodn of The ttojies spent the week i State of Oregon. Forms for such some of our surpluses. Remember mand for farm goods In the Unit- vlsitin8 Mr. and Mrs. Bill statement may be obtained from the government’s potato fiasco states. Macnab. the Clerk of the District. “ f a few years ago? o u r population is growing at a*?d Mrs. Peter Paist re- The School District reserves the- Or we might plow under every a rate of more than 2,000,000 per turned home Thursday from a right to reject any or all bids, third row of cotton and kill little year, which means that by 1975 w ^ k s visit spent with Mr. and waive informalities. when you store and No to bidder pigs. Remember the mid-1930’s? there will lx* 200,000,000 Atnerl- M¿8, Norkoskl at Aberdeen, W n. may withdraw his Actually, we would not even can8t Our future farm problems *bey ai*e tbe parents of Mrs. bid after the hour set for the op it in a consider such wasteful practices. ,nav involve questions of short- 1 abd and were former residents ening thereof or before the award We are attempting to move ages, rather than surpluses. at Biggs when he worked for the of contract, unless said award is grain surplus food and fllx>r into for- \\’e cannot wait for an expand- ra*l,foad. here,_„ delayed for a period exceeding clgn markets, World prices, how- ¡ng population to solve our lm- < hristmas dinner guests of Mr. thirty days. ever, are well lx?low the figures mediate troubles, however. We and Mrs. Don Macnab were Mr. storage building DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD ¿it which we acquired these com- need an Interim program to en- and Mrs. John Addington of Du- Bask yssr arsln in a Butler grain stor District 3-C, Sherman County, modlties under our ¡»rice support courage shifts to other crops. fur and Mrs. Sarah Giannonatti. age building. Keep it safe, clean and Oregon, Mrs. Jean Brown, Clerk ojxiratlons. This means that we w e must halt further b«i|d-ups During the holidays Mrs. Sarah bright, fully protected from weather, ■will be forced to take substantial of government stockpiles now 1 a I SP®nt »everal days rats and mice. Keep your grain up NOTICE: The County Court of Josses on whatever we sell Our urgent need is for a price }db‘t,n« wlth fien d s #t I rosser, to Food and Drug Administration Sherman County, Oregon has ¿»broad. auoDort program which can lx» P; . .. __ . . ata2 d ard ’ for h ‘<h e ,t prices and appointed William Harry Rags- support Mr. and Mrs. Bill Macnab and pro^t« At the «am« time, we must adjusted in terms of production „„„.gw dumping, w hih which w,,i or I X * «’ m m 3 cx tu “"'r7 “M ht e ? , Z r\ V w i ‘?' would disrupt normal trade fpctlvsly reduce surpluses, with wbb Mrs. Francis I^ehaan and buahela, you csq have ■ Butler grain U IA M R . RAQSD^LE, Deceased. channels and bring down upon a minimum of government con- family at Dufur, Storage building ready for uae in days All persons having claims against us the wrath of other friendly irols Mr. and Mrs. Bill O'Brien spent — ahead of the crop. Our complata said estate are required to pre- countries. That Is our Immediate goal. Tuesday night at the Don Mac- “ nv, w i , « ri’on, " ” ' ' hi" * ' ro” pl“ ' ’* " * ,h e n ’ w t,h Pru f " - v o u c h e r, I here are these other alterna- Such a program will be offered to nab home viewing television- u - » ........... - When you, r . , » „ o"” lives. We can make a real effort congress by this administration < OUnty Clerk, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Metzgar marketed, uae your Butler butldina q ?3 io move surpluses out of ware- In January. for teed, feed, fertiliser, machinery ■ leI m an C o u n ty C o u rt H ouse, of Portland were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Gray and or any other warehousing need Get Moro, Oregon, within Six months the complete facte . . . get our prices f T °m December IN, J953. daughter Cheryl. now I Call or write today. W ILLIA M HARRY RAGSDALE Mr. and Mrs. John Kellogg and BEEFO’S BEEFO’S Executor children Shirley and Jack spent JOHN L. SEACY, Executor the Christmas weekend with Mr. PATTERSON, BUSH, & BRAD and Mrs. Htimer Fossbender at Coine in and let us wish you a “ Happy New Junction City. HALLIDIE MACHINERY 1 EY’ Attorneys for Executors. 7-1 lc Rufus Pei «onal* tv - PAGE Secretary B’ Tells Problemi Like putting your grain In the bank BUTLER Year” . Don’t think it is too late, the year is still young and ve’d like to do it. That ti what we run this place for—to give you t place to meet your friendi and enjoy yourselves- We like it too. BEEFO’S at the CAPITOL CITY, Moro, Oregon BEEFO’S BEEFO’S WANT ADS FXXJND: Pair of men’s gold fram ed rimless glasses on Starva tion point, near last gate. Call at Journal office. lOc A EQUIPMENT CO. 154.» S. K. I nion A v e n u e P o rtla n d 14, Oregon Phone: F illm o re T491 H A R ill K e lv in Phone T h e D a llr« »2M.1 Mortgage Loans To Meet Your Individual Needs ATTU AI-TI VE TEKMS I’HOMHTSKHVJOB Standard Insurance Co, A we-.tern company serving western agriculture HOME OFFICE 812 S. W Washington P o r te d , Oregon Phone ATwater 4331 notice of final hearing Notice is hereby given that I^onard Maurus Jr., Administra tor of the Estate ofc Arthur W. Spencer, Deceased, has filed In the County Court of the State' of .•Oregon for Sherman County, his Final Account, and the Court has set the 12th day otvFebruary, 1954, at 10:00 o’clock a. m., ln the office of the County Clerk of Gherman County, Oregon, In the f'qunty Courthouse at Mqro, Ore gon, {¡s thg tlpie af|d p|acg fop s«tt)emeot qf ggi^j appountlqa » and for hearing objections to the same, if any, O LEONARD MAURUS JR. . Administrator J, Tracv Barton The Dalles, Oregon Attorney for the Estate 9-i2e A © © &