Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1958)
PACK 4 SHERM AN « <>l N T I JO U RN A L, G rass V alley By M ik A. F. TVdzer . Mr Hermar i Peters was host- her brhb :e club at her home July 24 with dessert luncheon lOW W(>d< by bridge at htree tibies. { •oring honors were held by Mrs. Joe I ‘¿»tern ami Mrs. A. A Dunlap. Mr J. Jack Adams won ti e traveling prize. Others pre- sent were Mrs. D. I.. Reynolds, Mrs. G«ne Be.vnolds, Mrs. Bill I‘a use b, Mrs. Harold iE akin, Mrs. Alfre 1 Kock, Mrs. Efsen Kee and Mrs. A i a -11 I,cm ley. Mr and Mrs. A. F. Balzer re tur nei 1 home Saturday frain a va- cation trip to Chicago, where they visitei 1 his brothers in law and sister.»i, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Felt and Mr. and Mrs. E<1 Treabess, and nephews and nieot?a and fam- Hies. They spent a week at Pell* (•an Ixike, Wls., visiting another brother in law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Elm er Lucke at their sum mer home. Mrs. Gene Reynolds was host ess at a party at her home S atu r day celebrating the fifth birth day of her daughter, Shelley. Guests Included her sisters Julie and Debbie and brother, Mark; Bill, Brem.'a and Phyllis Younce, Bill and Patty Jean Sprinker, Shelley’s grandmother, Mrs. D. L. Reynolds, Mrs. Betty Yourue, Mrs. H arry Sprinker of Tacoma, .Mis. Bill Pausch and Jeannie and Susan Baumgartner. The children played games outside and later refreshm ents of decorated b irth day cake, Ice cream, candy and MORO, OREGON favors wen? w ?rved on the patio by the hostess Mr. and Mr s. H arry Sprinker and children Marilyn, Bill and Patty Jean, ca me Thur ■<day from Tacoma to vlt it Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Reynolds till Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Martin and Deanna were business visit ors in Portland last Monday, Tues day and Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ix?n Garland took their son, Howard, to The Dalles where he took the train for For bes air base near Topeka, Kan., after spending 27 days here with his parents. Mrs. John Rust, Mrs. Oran Raven and Mrs. Phyllis Richards were business visitors in The Dalles Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil O ltmanns and daughters of Goldendale were visitors Sunday at the Harold Owens and Joe Hammond homes. Mrs. A. A. Dunlap and Mrs. Verne Mobley and children left Tuesday for High Rock to spend a few days picking huckleberries. Herman Peters, Arden Peters and Henry Jaeger w ent to High Rock Sunday picking huckleber ries. Among the visitors in The Dal les Friday were Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Bayer, Mrs. Frank E. Bayer, Julia and Helen, Leslie Perrlgo, David Bayer, Mrs. Jose phine Parkhurst, Mrs. H arriett Wells, Juanita McClain and Mike, F it! DAY, A I G I ST H, 195« Ar. 1Me Cantrall, Mrs. ,Jim Bodda and children, Mr. and Mis Har- old Eakin and family, Je rry Kel- ley, Mrs. Alfred Payne,. Alfa Jean and Lots, Mrs. C. W. Fields and Mrs . Sam Alixirty and daughters. Keith Bayer arrived Sunday from Novato, Calif., to visit his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank T. Bayer and other relatives. Mrs. Josephine P ark h u rst re turned here Friday from Missouri where she visited relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin P arkhurst and sons of Roseburg came Saturday and took his m other home. Mr. ami Mrs. Harold Eakin and family are spending most of htis week at Camp Sherman. Mrs. Eben Kee, Mrs. Alfred Kock, Mrs. H erm an Peters and Mrs. A. A. Dunlap went huckle- •iierryng on Shearer Burn last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pausch has ixjught the G rover Young house in G rass Valley. The Youngs are living in a trailer house. Mr. and Mrs. Frank von Bor- stel were dinner guests Sunday at the A. von Borstel home. Af ternoon callers were Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Sayrs and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sayrs and Tony of Moro. Mr. and Mrs. Myrle Smith had as weekend guests Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Marquisdbe and his m oth er Ollie M arquissee and a nephew Buddy Probascoe, all of Ellens burg, Wn. The M arquissees took their son, Jim , home after spend 'lair Balzer ing three weeks with the Smiths. Oran Raven, who has been J. W working for H arry Hooper at the Bi Cnion Oil Station, took over the M.r and Mrs. Donald von Bor Chevron Station Saturday. Carl Kelley had the station over a stel and family and Carol Nich ols w ere in The Dalles Sunday year. to attend services at St. Paul’s Mr. and Mrs. Orville Ruggles Episcopal church and had dinner and family took Roger Brooks to with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. his home in Salem after «pending Ted von Borstel. the harvest season w ith them. Gary B rinkert pent Wednes- They drove on to Portland and spent the day at the home of her <‘ay night and T ìrsday at the mother. Mrs. S. L. Boyce, visit Bill Todd home s a guest of ing with her brother in law and their son, Scott. sister, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice de- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cox accom Vires and children who arrived panied by their gran children, from New York, N. Y., on a vaca Rodney and Linda Roberts, drove tion trip. to Bend Sunday and met their Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Blagg, son in law and daughter, Mr. and and Mrs. Ivan Blagg and family Mrs. A1 Roberts of Corvallis for Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Blagg and a picnic dinner in the park. Rod Mr. and Mrs. Jim m y Blagg, San ney and Linda returned home dra and Michael of Pendleton, had with their parents after a visit dinner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. with their grandparents. Mrs. George Radamer- Mrs. Cal Shodoll (Alvena West- sing, Mich., were vis- erfieD) of Ixxs Angeles was a vis- Tuesday at the Fred ¡tor at the home of Mrs. Fred Cox Monday aftiernoon. OLD KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY YEARS O LD HARVEST B A L L ♦ | Grass Valley Pavilion ♦ August 9 • OLD HERMITAGE BRAND UMTL CK Y STRAIGHT BOURBON W R ISM Y w nn i» f t IBI O l» H llN iT A t l C»«»»'» I H ’ ' ♦ P erfection in cry service R h y th m aires ♦ $ 1 .0 0 per p erso n E x p lo rer S cou ts: S p o n so rs J «1 reasonable cost to find a greater bourbon anywhere! the OLD HERMITAGE COMPANY, LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY DiSlRIBUTED BY NATIONAL DISTILLERS PROOUCTS COMPANY • 86 PROOF Funeral Service Leonard A Wilma Smitl ro..»., »mail »tuapa Slr»Uta« „Nul.«! wir» I . •I’*“«» «"'• Uba tato«. rUmp, »»«wwto. Am.un« ,uU. Dick Rankin on his New Ford 4-whccl drive Bulldog' Tractor - Dick lias a hilly cherry orchard and says this Tractor will go anywhere - He says conic o ld and watch it work - This tractor with with 4 wheel drive, is the greatest development since 1 he Build in Hydraulic System and 3 Point Hitch. Available in SDH series, gas and diesel or the big Major - amwa «»ilk». quoftMt. blliiig «tallona Remember Ford Is - The Line That’s Great For ’58 Director» Phone The Dalles CY 6-3133 I FT» . F U L L S -F U S M E S «,000 lb». C a p a city mww ' MsU W«- »7 Ita. UUAOAMTMKt» # S ot By A L (.H A S S V a ' \\ e like to trade - TRI-COUNTY TRACTOR The Dalles, Oregon FO X VA LLEY, OREGON A n O PE N LETTER to th e peo p le of P ortland, MAINE In 1445, two men Hipped a coin in a tiny town in the wilderness Oregon Territory. Francis Pettygrove, from Poitland, Maine, won the toss, and the community on the banka of the Willamette (pronounced u il-lan i-et) River became Portland If Amo» Lovejoy had won, it would have l>een Boston, and who knows what might have happened to us then! Twenty years later, a group in Portland, Oregon, applied for the first national bank charter on the Pacific Coast. They asked for the name "First National Bank of Oregon,’’ but for some reason the charter came Hack from Washington, D. C., reading “First National Bank of Portland. (In 1865, with Pony Express communication, Oregonians settled for what they got It took years to conduct a simple discussion') Wc re writing you m our sister city across the nation to let you know that we still like the name you loaned our state's largest city and our Isink However, from now on, we w ill be known as "First National Bank of Oregon," the name we asked for 9J yents ago. There aie many gtn>d reasons for getting bock to basic pi inciples, and using the name ' Oregon" •long with “First National Bank For r ripie, the best describes the kind of t>an er\ ice we . . . real, genuine statewN/e sen g offices in Oregon commumt r service is rrally urs gor« in Oregon 25 TON MILES PER GALLON 1958 43 TON MILES PER GALLON -- » - Can you think of any liquid that costs less than gasoline. . . except water? Today's gasoline has fa r m ore value. An "bm nnl, < y * o f 'm ik s s ^ gallon of gasoline w ill move a ton of car. Average» performance in 1930 was 25 ton miles j—r gallon. Today it’s 43 — or "0% more work |x>r gallon. S a ll° n > liq U id y ° U b u y C0StS more than gasoline . . . and gasoline performance todav costs less than it did in 1930. PER TON MILE /.Í.C our OS«N u n i s TO IVIR VB O O T l i s t It*« • rwwnf pftd? >'» ISM to bon« you th »her» in th« world Foal cast par ten-mi la Is down 1 8 \ since In spite of higher operating costs in the 1930. To move a ton of car a mile took worth of fuel Modem gasolines move today’» heavier can a ton mil«? for about When you remember you art* buying perfonnaea, gas«time coats leas today than in 19T0. oil industry, gasoline prices have been held down through research and intense com petition. S in ce 1930 the price of gasoline (excluding taxes) rose only 23%. D uring tiie same period the general cost of living went up 70%. \x STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA The taxes on a tankful of gasolino would buy between four and five extra “tax free'* gallons. Combined state and federal taxes, which help pay for better roads, add about 9c to the price of every gallon . . . nearly .K>% of your gasoline dollar buys no gasoline at all. plans ahead to serve you better