PAGE S
SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL,
Jhl|trm au County .lourttul
Ultra !.. F ir u tli
T "7 E d ito r
t'ublotbrd Every Fnduy at
M oro, Oiegon
K n te it d a * ••r o n d cla*a m a lta r at
P v a tu ilir a at .Moro, O re to n , under
o f ( o iig ra M of M arch J, 1Ü7».
N A T IO N A L
Ilia
A rt
E 0 1T O ft IA L
I a W 1?"
m u m i « i m i a
■
NEWS FA P i t
PUB LI S H IR S
ASSOCIATION
O í FK 1AL ( «»I NTY PAPER
SURM lUPTIO.X KATES
ONE 1E A R
$3.00
At G l ST 31, 1002
V ORR
There i.
ood uefinlt'on of
work. Io
it may lx.* what
they have
j an opposed to
what they want
do, which
w o u ld l x p la y . B u t m a n y p e o p le
lik e t h e i r w o r k so t h a t w o u l d n ’t
iq p ly . W o r k in t h e s e d a y s is n o t
n e c e s s a r i ly o n e r o u s o r l a d g u i n g
a s m a c h in e ry
does
t h e iie a v y
w o rk .
i o tlie w i t t e r p u n c h in g a t y p e
w r i t e r is a s h a r d a s p ic k in g u p
w in ,it s a c k s a n d w e e x p e c t v a s t
d is a g re e m e n t
w ith
tli a t
s ta te
m e n t , m o s t ly
from th o s e w h o
h a v e d o n e n e ith e r. N ow r u n n in g
a ty ix * w r ite r i s n ’t s o h a d it t h e
ci py is I x d o r e o n e , b u t it Ite c o m e s
s l o w e r a n d m o r e d i f f ic u l t if t h e
m a i n lia s to he in g e a r a lo n g w ith
m e l in g e r s .
W r it i n g a n d t a l k i n g a n d a r g u
in g o r m a k i n g a c a s e f o r s o m e
t h .n g is a ll h a r d w o rk o f th«* n e r -
voiu, v a r i e t y th a t r e a l ly w e a r s o n e
u w n a n d b e s id e s h e h a s to u n
w in d h e l o i e h e c a n g et to sle e p ,
i h e h u s k y w e ig h t l i t t e r h a s n o
s u c h p ro b le m .
W e e s p e c ia lly d e c r y th e f e e lin g
o n d ie p a r t o t s o m e th a t a ll w o rk
a e q u a lly t i r i n g w h ic h is c a r -
liU idy n o t t r u e . P e r h a p s t h a t id e a
c o n e s f r o m th e n a ti o n a l h a b it o f
p a y in g
lo r w o rk
by th e
hour
w in c h a, u n t l r e l y
u n f a i r to t h e
i • n ip e ic n t w o r k e r s a n d th o s e w h o
o i n e rv o u s
e x a c ti n g
w o rk . An
h o u r c o m jH Jsin g a p o e m w ill p u t
a lo t m o r e f u r r o w s in t h e brain
fla m t h e s a m e lim e s h o v e l in g d i l l
a lt h o u g h tlie tin t m o v e r w ill g e l
m u re c a l l o u s e s l e a s t w i s e w h e r e
ll.e y s h o w .
A n d , of c o u r s e , t h e o t h e r fel-
1« w , w o r k is a lw a y s e a s y .
N IIP P P I N G
he i ity w e
lit In th e
sh o p p in g
i d e s i r e l<
p u rc h ase
i*d r e p a ir ^ .
J lie
to u r
I.lo v d ('e m r w h ic h is
w h ic h tin ' s o p h i s t i c a t e d
io p r o v e t h a t thc.v a r e
l 'h i ñ e s e c h e c k e r s
and
tai
s e e m s to
le r c h u n ts
d goods, in
undard peo-
to I k * stand-
hut w om en,
•d along (lie
f purchases,
in an aisle
»lei ar? they,
d one differ-
her. I'eilHipt.
,»t till1 WOUUd)
■ a lew vvcic
a s s e ll
found
I
It (1
IBB R U I I K
MORO, OREGON,
FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, IM2
b’c urs of work have been going
down and w ages of work going up
until a laboring man does very
L u ll labor in a day. Industry has
had to develop autom atic m achin
ery to stay in business.
To us it seems that a man who
w orks but 40 hours at a job out
of the 168 hours a week Is barely
putting in enough tim e to m ain
tain his interest in the work. If
the hours drop to 35 any am bi
tious can go out and get another
Job.
The main thing it will do is to
make a job an incidental thing,
so n eth in g that one could take or
leave alone, nothing to worry
about. Actually the governm ent
will provide w hether a man works
o r not.
The nation could not compete
with more am bitious foreigners
who are often better w orkers
than Americans and as a nation
we could go broke and find that
we would have to go to work with
no thought alxjut hours, only
a lx u t food. Such an end result
would be a fine thing for A m eri
cans and if th y insist It will.
1 erhaps nothing else will make
thi in respect a job and the pay
ti at comes from it.
H4 HOOL HTARTM
The sta rt of the fall school term
usually brings some articles about
education in the magazines, often
to jxise new problems for those
who are charged with teaching
the young.
An article in the Atlantic
Monthly says that there is noth
ing in the curricula of New York
schools that ap|ieals to the negroes
and Puerto Ricans who must a t
tend them. An article in the Farm
Journal tells of 1 Delaware school
that provides som ething of in ter
est for every pupil. Both, natu ral
ly, are exaggerations.
But results at the local school
would convince almost anyone
that there are pupil« who do not
respond to much that Is taught.
When the m aking of the course
o f study got Into the hands of the
state that condition became cer
tain. If and when curricula gets
into the hands of the federal gov
ernm ent, it will become more fro
zeu, more sterotyi>ed and less use-
in'. We are certain that the local
school txiard could devise a bet
ter course of study than 1. t.ow
used.
Certainly e v e r y youngster
should lx* urged to learn enough
about English that he or she is
al le to converse and w rite with
leiirned jx'ople hut that is an ideal
many resist successfully. Some
children do not care to know the
opinions of the philosophers who
have told hum ans how to live,
pri Terring to go blundering thru
life w ithout such advice. There
seems to lx» no help for th at sit
uation and all the talk about tea
ch« is who are able to interest
evi i .v pupil in Shakespeare i« just
talk Such teachers will always
!>« in short supply.
N either do we think there is
any school that can interest all
pupils even in vocational subjects,
lor that it would qualify as educa
te a 1, If «lone.
\\ e have given the job of edu-
1.uing th«* young almost exclusive
ly over to schools. Parents have
ahd'cated from this responsibility
an I to a degree the schools ate
at fault for It. It is at least par-
tii lly true that no «»tie can be e«lu-
rated, that, he must do for himself
Arousing interest may lx* the only
furetton of the teacher.
Si schools go grinding on (ak
in? credit for successful pupils
anh evading, as well as possible,
the failures They are handicap-
ped by too much responsibility
a n d too much reguatlon and we
suppose that under the clrcum-
sumces they do as well as can lx*
exix'cted I iix r I luck.
HOUSEHOLD hints
lia rd work, in itself, w 'll win
you no prizes or praises. If you
feel you’re an overw orked home
m aker, take a long look at your
standards. Maybe you’ve set them
t j j high, considering all you have
to do. A fter all w hat is most im
portant to your family? in a day’s
work there are many unexpected
situations to knock a perfectionist
housekeeper right off her well-
dusted pedestal.
“Yellowed” or "grayed” clothes
th at are supposed to be white are
definitely an undesirable stand-
aid. W hat’s wrong?
There are
several possible causes.
Iron in the w ater may 'x- one
of the problems and it might come
from the w ater heater, pipes or
the source of water, if this cause
Smith Callaway
Chanel
vnapei
funeral
service
Leonard Ft Smith
Pfcore UY 6-3135
'Ih r
Hallett, O regon
seems likely, use a packaged
w ater conditioner— the type th at
does not leave a scum Don’t u*»e
liquid bleach in w ater containing
iron. T his Intensifies the yellow
o'" sometimes leaves brown specks
unless you use a w'ater condition
e r Of course, an automatic w ater
softening system is a good solu
tion, too.
Other causes of dinginess are
oiten too little detergent, or lack
of hot water. Sheets, underwear,
shirts, and o th e r cloths soiled
with natural body oils need hot
wt ter and sufficient soap o r de
tergent. Otherwise, oils are left
in the fabric and turn yellow
when cloths are exposed to the
heat of a dry e r or Iron.
Sometimes too much detergent
causes yellowness.
This Is be
cause is isn ’t all rinsed out and
discolors w ith heat. The moral is:
Measure detergent according to
your w asher’s instructions.
11 you’d like more information
aliout new washing products
w rite OSU for your free copy of
our bulletin, “Today’s SoaD and
Detergents.”
Sherman Theater
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 31 — SEPT 1
A TERRIFYING WAR OF NEJWESLj
NO ONE ADMITTED OÚNING TtNAl 10 M IN U T t S f 7 F \
,
W
LOgf MARTIN MARTIN BALSAM JACK KRUSCHiN TELLY SAVALK-IMM CMASt
SUNDAY & MONDAY. SEPT. 2—3
o^LADD - Wfe* WINTERS Ttrif
ASKATCHEWAN
ROBERT DOUGLAS • J C A R R B ll NAISM
RUCH 0 BRIAN
RICHARD 10HG
’ • i
ANTONIO MORÍ HO
ALSO
a W orld Y o Ü ve M e V er known !
&
™
A O Q
'Its the Water
r~ - *
_ »
f 11/ A W T
und Marie O’Hara, in the sum» of
T venty-eight Thousand One H un
Thursday
evenings
.
WANTED: Year around work. dred Tw enty and 09-100 Dollars
nonth.
Visiting members
Contact Slim Thompson, Moro. <528,120 09), the sum of F o u r H un
cordially invited to meet w »3 in
43-4c dred Ninety-five and 58-100 Dol
Bill Hall, W. M.
lars ($495.58) the sum of Five H un
WANTED: Girl or woman to wait dred Sixty-four and 26-100 Dollars
Irving H art, Secretary
tables, 40 hours week. Roy and ($564.26) and the sum of One
Taylor LODCB A. F. & A. M
Lillie Rayon, Moro.
44ctfn Thousand F our H undred and No-
Wasco, Meets the first
FOR SALE: J. C. Freem an resi 100 Dollars ($1,400.00) attorneys'
Tuesday of each m onth.
yGV
dence.
If interested • contact ftes, bearing interest at the rate
Visiting brethern welcome.
V. N. Freem an, 1431 E. 22nd, of six per cent (6%) per annum
F rank D. Reid, W. to.
Eugene, Ore., or Mrs. C. S. fxom the 8th day of August, 1962,
\ ernon Root Secretary
Wiley, 1035 Logan Drive, H er and the fu rth e r sum of One Hun-
miston, Oregon.
44-7c dieu Sixty-one and 18-100 Dollars
l.uplne Rebekah Lodge No. UR
Meets 2nd and 4th Tues FT)R SALE: 3 bedroom house, ($161.18) costs and disbursem ents,
x i'V ' Jays of each month. Visit
w ith 1 H lots on highw ay in anu commanding me to make sale
ing members welcome.
Moro. Virgil A rcher Ph. JO 5- of the real property In said decree
Cecil Hockman, N. G.
ttt.
44-5p and execution, I will on Monday,
Clara Houston, Secretary
F'CR SALE: 3 bedroom house in the 17th day of Septem ber, 1962,
H A R I, A N I) VIE to G It A NG E
Moro with liasement
$600f. at 10:00 A. M., Pacific Standard
Meets first and third Saturdays
Call JO 5-3277.
42tJ Time, at the front door of the
Ccunty Court House in Moro,
at 8:00 p. m.
STATE W IDE PA IN T CO. com
Sherm an County, Oregon, sell at
Max Belshe, M aster
plete painting and decorating
Agnes Benson, Secretary
service, spray or brush. Phone public auction to the highest bid
CY 6-3977 or CY 6-52U, 1205 der for cash all the right, title
and interest which the above
E. 12th St. Vern Campbell and
named
Charles O’H ara and Marie
ind Jack Null. The Dalles, Ore.
O’H ara jointly and severally had
1
-1
-6
3
The
LIVESTOCK Men • Do it yotu i.t the following described real
secret of
self • "A ncnor B rand" Anlm: property on F ebruary 14, 1961,
the date of the execution of the
itcdiui rroducts, penicillin, and
Olympia’s
mortgage upon which said decree
instrum ents are available at
and judgm ent is based, and all
your Co-op Oil and Supply at
refreshing
the right, title and interest, which
The Dalles.
20c tfn
the said defendants o r any of the
difference
WANTED- To lease w heat ranch other defendants herein o r an y
Have equipm ent; will furnish one holding by, through or under
is one
references; 15 years experience. them may since have acquired
priceless
Clair K rm errer, Condon. 3l-tfn therein, o r as much of said pro
W INK - GOLDENDALE
SALES perty as shall satisfy said decree
ingredient:
iu rd , Goldendale, Wash has and judgm ent, costs and accruing
tur< auction every F riday a t one costs, and the costs of sale, said
o’clock We have the m arket if real property being situated in
you have the livestock. Guar Sherm an County, Otegon, and des
anieed top prices F rank Wink cribed as follows:
A tract of land in the Southeast
bo BED OREGON state approved
q u arter of the Southeast q u ar
nursing home located in beau
ter of Section 31, Tow nship 3
tiful Hood River Valley, witl
.North, Range 17 E ast of the
lovely fenced grounds. We ar
W illamette Meridian, in said
•,'ept all types ot elderly case*
county and state, described as
- s well as room and board care.
follows:
L & E Paint Shop: Interior and
Beginning at a point located
exterior Decorating — Spray
South a distance of 41.2 feet and
Painting. ED 3-2273 Grass Val
E ast 243.9 feet from the South
ley.
42-tfn.
east corner of Block 5 of Rufus,
Sherm an County, Oregon; ru n
CUS’l'OM SLAUGHTERING five
ning thence N orth 75* 20' E ast
day’s a week. Custom curing.
a distance of 150.3 feet; thence
Meat cutting, w rapping, shaip
N orth 12* 30' W est 403 feet to
freeze. K enny’s Market. Grass
the southerly right of way line
Valley. Call ED 3-2315 for ap
of tlie Old Columbia R iver
pointment.
23C
Highway; thence along said
right
of way line southw esterly
uEGAL NOTICES
159.3 feet; thence South 12* 30'
IN THE < IIUT IT COURT OF
E ast 355 feet to the point of be
THE STATE OF OREGON FOR
ginning, containing 1.30 acres,
THE COUNTY OF SHERMAN
except the north erly 200 feet
CLAIRE B. RYVN,
)
thereof and the rig h t of ingress
Plaintiff,)
and egress over the easterly 20
VS.
)
feet of the northerly 200 feet.
CHARLES O’HARA, et ux,
)
Said real property will be sold
et al,
)
M’bject to a lien for real property
Defendants
)
taxes thereon due Sherm an Coun
NO. 3 1 1 4
ty, Oregon, and will be sold sub
NOTH E OF S H E R IF F ’S SALE ject to confirm ation and redem p
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tion as provided by law, and the
il,at by virtue of a w rit of execu purchaser will be put into Imme
tion issued out of and under the diate possession thereof
seal of said Court on the 13th
DATED this 13th day of Au-
day of August, 1962, in favor of gust, 1962.
Claire B. Ryan, plaintiff, against
JLÎWPW B O IX G JO . Olympu, Wuh. «Oh * 4 62
U Roberts
the defendants, Charles O’H ara t-u
. beriff of Sherm an County, Ore.
Eureka Ixxlgr No. 121 A.F.AtA.
Meets on
the l<t
1 at a a ?’
Meets
on the
a
' I
£
Fruit« fromTheHorthwest
move to market dependably. . .
automated
rail way
notk e to <’REI>ITORN
having Claims again-
•y the E state of Leslie E. Webb,
deceased, are hereby notified to
Present them w ith the properly
sntned vouchers and duly verified.
1 » ’he undersigned, the duly aD-
Pointed, qualified and acting Ad-
" ¡ " ¡ h / p wl; h W1"
f the E state of Leslie £ . Webb
tPr ^ T ’ at the office ° f T. Les
tei Johnson, A ttorney a I ^ w
f ' “n U h e T ; " ’ 7 “ hin “ix " lon,n8
Of th?, K r ' hC flrSt PUbl‘<-!"
10, 1962h N°
•
Au«o»'
v i « r ' L ester Johnson
A n S M ra,1° n - " llh W1U
£ L ester Johnson
Moro, Oregon
FALL
The nights have Ix'eu chilly re-
p a r t.' c e n tly , c o ld to t h e w e a r e r o f lig h t
sum m er clothing and the night air
| S damp The wheat is in the bln
.in,| ih«' garden shows the signs
age and m aturity. The l«»cust
loaves are trailing their green
color for a dingy brown that
heralds the w inter gauntess of
that awkward s{teciea of tree.
I'', in .1 Tlie air does not yet have the
uni th«* .mell of vegetative decay that
wiio tom es with fall and m arks the de
s’ carry finite end of summer. Spring and
•-'1‘unsl sum m er are tlie grow ing seasons
on jwo- and fall is the tim e to bring in
ad hap- th«1 pumpkins, pull the last of the
then I x t U s and hope the late corn will
fu r m ature before a killing frost. It
i. lia of 1. usually a quiet season when
m tv ice
the wind, too, m atures The late
>y with summer sun still w arm s the air
ie mei m the daytime and helps to make
il they everything lazy, plants get ripe
Pie « »-lowly, the lawn grows w ith less
the vigor, the livestock stantl along
th«' fences like drones, even man
feels like resting F'all fever is as
bad as spring fever.
>»’ we
A good day in any season Is a
\q sse d delightful experience if noted in
rough the busy round of duties. But a
wages spring «lav is different from a fall
g man. »lay. alm«>st as different as a win
and
u miner «lay One
of t
'ars grow
>1 th
1er
a mat vv n
van s loll
tange
perhi
xiuld
hit»ert
with
ir seed- m re
s
II and
i'K saps
giving
'pers to
lot that
aic al
ei talk
ture«!
?
S
'?‘‘5 of
?
»
w
tern her, ^ ^ « a t
account and thZ r™ent of sa,d
Cham bers at v
( °u n ty Court
Place n Z l Moro'
„ Ihe
A<imln to r » to r 'o f N<tS ,Rv
? d ] ck "' ng P r
■>.CK
A« ° £ ? r > o ? T P
A wide variety - of Northwe
picked, process ed and packe
vorful best. The n they are ru:
erator cars wh ere constant
are maintained wt
they ai
Laste
markets.
>t fru its are
1 at their fla-
hed to refrig-
temperatures
e speeded to
Electron.
ltr.
mt, com-
mumcations and data process 3, super-
vised by skilled employees, m itor each
shipment. Giant turbine and di< H locomo-
tives keep freight rolling dependably on
Union P acific-the automated ra lk w y .
U N IO N
P A C IF IC
Fo
T9 ght or Passenger information, call:
u.n<!«rsl(me<l ‘
th a t the
{• xecutrlx of the
^ 'n t e d
B e n k e rt, deceased
/ ¡ i Winiam
having claim s a m
A Persons
of W i l l i e B rin k ?« a th*
required to
' decea9ed. are
' k 1 '- v « X
?X '
i*
a'
III. G r a J V .“ n,l««l<ned.
within sl, m < ^ . ' ? Uey' Oreson.
Of the fir.,
fr°™ th e date
notice.
Publication of this
Da
list H w . n " ‘ p u b lw >'<. Au.
E'»'e E. Brinkert
*'h'PP«. Phlpp, . rk E le c u ,t1»
A It«
August *24
■.
,
' •'" I H,
i>nPgon
X t £ Xecutrtx
and 31
e
I96J ' ' !*'2 Septem
*
ber