This Penney’s ad ran on Nov. 26, 1964, in The Dales Daily Chronicle. A boys’ printed cotton flannel shirt, at a “Penney Days” price of $1, in a “wide selection of handsome colors and patterns.”
This Penney’s ad ran on Nov. 26, 1964, in The Dales Daily Chronicle. A boys’ printed cotton flannel shirt, at a “Penney Days” price of $1, in a “wide selection of handsome colors and patterns.”
Football is over for this year. We had expected to play the Hood River second team at Hood River this week but find they have disbanded, so we decided to call it a year and will start basket ball practice at once. Looking back over the games played we find the best ones were the Stevenson game here 0 to 0, the second half of the Dufur game here in which we scored 7 to their 6, and the second half of the Centerville game there win which we held them to 14 points, but our Jonah in all our games was the first half. The worst beating came from the Goldendale team which we were forced to play too early in the season or not at all because they had their schedule complete and not a single open date later than the date we played, according to their coach at the meeting at The Dalles, where the schedule was made out. We wonder how they account for the two or three week ends in which their team remained idle?
— White Salmon Enterprise, Nov. 21, 1924
Metolius bandit eludes pursuers in Wasco County
Uncertainty as to the whereabouts of the bandit who held up the cashier of the Metolius state bank yesterday afternoon and escaped in an automobile with another man and a woman, was expressed today by both Wasco and Jefferson county authorities.
Until noon today the highwayman was believed hemmed in on all sides in the Criterion section of Wasco county, where he had, it was believed been driven by armed posses in automobiles and an airplane.
The Metolius bank was robbed at 1:20 o’clock yesterday afternoon the bandit forcing E. G. Saunders into the vault and escaping with about $2,000 in cash. According to reports he escaped in a machine in which were another man and a woman.
Tex Rankin, commercial aviator, was engaged by the Jefferson county sheriff to search for the robber and reports received here last night indicated that Rankin had traced the bandit machine to the Criterion road, where it was lost in the dusk of the evening. Armed posses began closing in on all sides and at 10 o’clock this morning, in the belief that they were close upon the heels of the trio.
Thought Near Prineville.
That the Metolius bank robber has been tracked across the mountains from Prineville, and is now making good his escape through the John Day river valley was the belief of Jefferson county officials this noon, it was reported from Bend.
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