Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1931)
wick and Mr. and Mr«. B. A. Grady “Uncle Abijah,” he says—they all night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Huekins of The Dalles were visiting and children of Th« Dall«« were din called Abijah uncle—“I know how Weedman. On Sunday they drove in Wasdo this week with hiends. ner guest« fit the B. H. Grady home on to Camp Ringwah and brought Mr , and Mea< j e w Wilson and son you can get this plowin’ done.” f * were guests at the Dick Sunday. “An out of the mouth of babes home Bobbie Farrell, Leon Smith, Donald MeDermid and Francis Wat- g c hunke home Sunday. quoted the sire, shall come wisdom,” Delmar Smith and Ways« Darby “Speak and deliver us from our kins who had been camping the past Mr. and Mrs. Ed Felman, Norma returned Sunday from Idaho where two weeks. troubles.” •‘,- . Feldman, Janet McQuillan and Miss they worked during harvest. Principal Events of the Week Alex "and John Montgomery of the. Ermeth motored to The Dalles Sum- - “W«ll, now Uncle,” said the young Miss Jeanette Scott entertained man, “if I tell you how to plow the Joint Stock Bank of Portland were Assembled for Information Miss Ermeth went from there Sunday evening in honor at her As Dave Brannon drove up to the tend along our creek what shall I get busines« visitors in Wasco Monday |to her home in Portland, after having thirteenth birthday- The following of Our Readers. and .Tuesday. ‘ < visited some time at the Feldman postoffice in Valley City with the semi for it?” girls were pfeedBii: Dana Jean Mc Master Robert McLaughlin of home* weekly supply of mail and papers the I “U «re a member of the group and Millan, ' Margaret Johnson, Gene Salem is visiting Stanley Jones for THE MARKETS Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Flora and Spencer, Jean Wall, Emma Ella and th« first publication of thio notice, group of loungers drew themselves yu will share with all the rest.” “ Yu know, Uncle Abijah, I want to two weeks. * 7' Portland son and daughter of Portland were iMbell Fortner, Naomi Grady, Evelyn which «aid ddte is August list, 1931. inside the building so they would lose Wheat - Big Bend bluestem, hard no time in getting their portion of marry Polly an I got a liken’ for a Woods home Olson and Irene Beardsley. CARLTON L. PEPPER Dave Reid of The Dalles was a guests at the K. wheat, 55V4; soft white and western the contents of the ‘ little sack he house of my own.” Administrator of the Partnership business visitor in Wasco Wednesday. Thursday. “When yu are married the group Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hennagin were Estate of WUltem C. Bryant A Carl white, 45He; hard winter, northern carried. Miss Nellie Hatfield of Portland^ Among those seen in The Dalles will build yu a house, ” returned the business visitors in The Dalles Mon- ton L. Pepper. and western red, 42Hc. ** Within a few minutes Lem Busby spring was a visitor st the Doll Hull home Saturday were Miss Zella Sulley, Mrs. ? began putting letters into the boxes head man. Hay -Haying price, L o. b. Portland Mondsy. 4 ’ , Fred Fortner, Mrs. Grant Garland “Uncle Abijah it’s my idee an I’m Alfalfa. >15.50 > ralley timothy 115.60 that formed the partition between L. L Peetz was a business visitor and Mrs. W. J. Farjell. goin* to keep it unless the, group Oregon timothy, >180 eastern the inner sanctum of the postoffice 01«; in Wasco from Moro on Monday A. M. Macnab was a business visi BOARD OF EQUALIZATION 18 50 clover, 111; oat bay, >11: °®tB and the portion given over to patrons gives me somethin for it,” said the last. '4 * tor in Wasco Saturday from The - MEETING and vetch, >10010.60. Those whose boxes opened from the Miss Janette Medler is employed Dalles. . « “ The old man was plumb wrotby NOTICE; There will be a meeting Butterfat—2«O22c. outside immediately took from them at the telephone office during the ab Lqster-Emerson of The Dalles was of the County Board of Equalisation Eggs—Ranch, 19O>3c. the precious missives and read them and he wanted to run the young feller Washington at Ffftb Street, sence of Elna and Etta Huston. a busines visitor here Tuesday. Cattle— Steer«, good, >6.5007. for Sherman County, Oregon, at the while leaning against the walls on the out into the hills, but some of the PORTLAND. ORLGON Hogs—Good to choice, >.1.7507.60. Mrs. Pari Jones and son were visi- John Clark was a business visitor Court House on the second Monday formal documents posted there. I others were curious about how they Ijinibs—Good to choice, ¿5 65 0 5.75. in September, that being the 14th “Yu don’t ever git no letters, Uncle could get all that plowin’ done so tors in Portland thè firat of thè- in The Dalles Tuesday. Seattle Emmett,” »aid Wabash Joe as he they held a meetin’ and decided to week. - Mrs. Dunlop of Portland is visiting day of September, 1931, at Moro, Wheat — Soft whit« and western finished reading another dreary look take the young man’s offer of the Mrs. at the home of her daughter Mrs. Ed Oregon, to publicly examine the white. 46c; hard winter, western red ing document and replaced it in its secret for one tenth of the hay they a guest at the McKean horns this Assessment Rolls, correct all errors McKee. and northern spring, 44c; bluestem. container. in valuation, description of lands or week. I cut that year providin’ it worked. Frank Scott went to Portland on “Me? No, I never monkey with I “This Jasper took ’em out behind Mrs. Hugh Walker motored to business trip Sunday returning Wed- other property assessed by me, and it Butterfat—27c. shall be the duty of persons inter petty pusonal affairs,” said the sage. I the blacksmith shop where he had Portland Wednesday on business. netd.y. He w«« accompanied home appw a£ tllB, Bod pUce Eggs— Ranch, 15026. “I recon tho that when Lem gets done been workin* and showed ’em his in Mr. and Mrs. Leo Dumler of Salem Cattle—Choice steers, >608.75. |nUd- AU petitiona mu* b. readin’ the postcards he’ll give me a vention. He’d took three of them old were week end visitors of Mr. and by Mra. R O. Scott who haa been» visiting with relatives for the past made in writing and verified - by oath Hggs—Good to choice, 17.50. paper so’s I can find out all about walkin’ plows they had an fastened Mrs. Frank Medler. Mrs. Dumler Lamb« Choice, >505.75. three weeks. / ’ em together. Simple warn ’ t it, but what the important people of the , of the applicant and Hl«! was formerly Miss Dora Medler. Spokane Miss Mildred Williams returned Boar<j within fifteen day» from the it got their plowij} ’ done with less world is doin ’ . ” s. Chas. Grey who has just grad- to her home at McMinnville after a Cattle—Steers, good, >707.50. it is by law required to meet, “Yu don’t mean to say yu are ac Hogs—Good to choice, 17.5007.76. uatej 1 from Oregon State Normal is three weeks visit at the G. W. Far- “ An, Wabash, the next winter that Margaret W. Peetz. quainted with the great, do yu?” Lambs—Medium to good, >4©4.75 vacai >ioning with her parents Mr. and rell home. . young inventer got a bunch of cattle County Assessor. asked Wabash. Mrs. [George Drinkard. 1 B. H. Grady was in The Dalles on “Wal, I recon I is, but they am t from old man Stevens on Botter Shipments of fresh salmon from none of ’em acquainted with me. I creek on shares and ztarted to build Mrs. Beulah DeMaris of Prineville business oa Saturday. Oregon cities to the middle west by knows ’em from reddin’ of ’em every up a little herd for himself.” has been a guest at the Drinkard M b , Kenneth Woods spent Friday. . NOTICE TO CREDITORS air are contemplated in the near fu-. time I can.” “What become of tl New ranch. in The Dalles. - -. • NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN. ‘ . ' That Wayne M. Akers has been ap- UNDER THE turn “Yu don’t git much personal touch Thoughters?” asked Wabash Mr. and Mrs. Max Schwendel and Miss Mary Macnab of Wasco is pointed administrator of the estate PERSONAL MANAGEMENT OX ‘ They couldn ’ t stand the gaff ong thataway, ” remarked Wabash. With only 111 boys noW in the state Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sheetz motored to spending the week in The Dalles the of G. C. Akers, deceased, by the sage. “The training school at Woodburn, the popu ’ “No, M«bby not so pusonal as a after that,” said Edward C. Holt Lost Lake for a week’s outing. guest of the Misses Betty and Lillian DountyCourt of Sherman County.^AU lation at that institution is at the low cow and her calf, Wabash, but on the younger ones stole off by themselves ¿Miss Mildred Butler and. Clinton persons having claims againsi Heinz. •state are required to present them, other hand I always know they’re and some of ’em took cattle with est point for the past 16 years. Brock were visitors in The Dalles on Room with bath privilege, |L up Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Scott went to with the proper vouchers, within six ’ em, Did Abijkh died tryin ’ to hold The Vale Lions club sponsored a Sunday. Outside room with private bath, ’ em together. Bend Sunday and spent the day with | at dance recently in an endeavor to raise 31.50 up Miss Marjorie Ginn of Moro who “This feller Stqlin or the next guy sufficient funds to keep / the city Uncle Emmett. “I know as much just returned from Los Angeles has ton is a brother of Mrs. Scott. ' Miner Building, Eugene, Oregon. Special rate« where more than two about what Hoover is going to aay after him will do the same I recon. library open this coming winter. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Glen Maurer. persons occupy one room. MfS. Emma Dutton of Fossil spent L. L. Ray, Attorney for Estate. Not many men will set up all night about prohibition as I do what a cow - Jack McChesney, 11, of Baker, was Let ns show you otr with the birth pains of new idees just Miss Etta Huston and Ben Mar- Saturday m Wasco. I Admini.tr.tor of th. E^aU of G. C. seriously injured when a dynamite cap is goin’ to do when yu pull her out Accommodations to see his neighbor that didn ’ t miss o ’ the mud, which yu ’ ll admit is con ford are visiting in Prineville. t exploded in his hand. He had placed M»«. N. V. Grady and dau,hter'of Aken, deceaaed. a wink o ’ sleep cash in on ’ em. An I a lighted match in the cap which he siderable.” " ' Mrs. Guy Pound and Mrs. Agusta Goldendale, Robert Strahl of War-' Lem Busby stuck his wooly head says, Wabash an I been livin’ a right had been carrying for several days. long spell if people eat and breath Rev. T. I. Kirkwood, pastor of the out of th« window in the wall of boxes and called to one and all to I like animals, as the long faced per- Clatsop Plains Memorial Presbyterian fessors tell us they do, they’re goin’ church for two years past, the oldest “Come and get it, she’s all out.” to fight just as hard to get the best and the waiting men cameTup to re Protestant mission west of the Rock end of the feed rack. If yu could ies, was drowned near Astoria recent ceive their portion of news from the I world at large. Uncle Emmett drew I confine men to just so many wants an a large pack of papers to refreshen I fill them wants every day, yu might Some 'wheat is being trucked to mind on the doings of the world make it, but humans are just like Wallowa warehouses, but some of the his during the otherwise dreary hours oil a Preachy cow, they always sees some farmers having large lots of wheat say thing else they’d like to have. they will store the grain at .home and watching Valley City grow, and I - “Now yu young ignoramus, yu run moved outside to peruse them. attempt to sell it locally for feed pur As he leaned against^the tree that I along and quit readin’ over my poses. - ------- —-------- —« adorned th« corner by the Farmer’s I shoulder. 'Mebbe Lem’ll sell yu a Construction on a >10,009 hay and and Stockmen’s Bank and inspected I paper of yu’re own.” grain warehouse at Tule lake was the front page of a metropolitan started recently. The building, which daily Wabash looked over his shoulder | POPULATION OF COUNTY will bo 50 by 200 feet in size, will be and read a few headline« for himself. completed by September 30, it is ex- “Ther’s one guy yu can’t prognos Continued from page one. pected. ticate, Uncle Emmett,” he Mid as he tire county this class accounts for 13 Harvesting;.of thajarge peach crop pointed to the name of Russia’s dic per cent of the population. from the foothills on the south slope tator in black type. In the next class, that from 25 to of the Rogue valley is now under way “Him? That ain’t so tough, Wa 34, Grass Valley has 21 per cent of in many orchards. Despite the dry bash as yu’re youth and ignorance | its people, Moro has 15 per cent and season, the peaches are reported to might lead yu to persume.” Wasco has 11 per cent showing that be of good size. “I suppose yu are entirely too I ten yean ago Grass Valley, had quit© R. E. Jordan, 50, Lithia park care young to recollect the doin’s over on I taker in Ashland, is in the Commun Squaw creek when the country was I a few young folks. ity hospital suffering from serious in firs settln’.up, ain’t pe?” he asked. I I centage of residents from the ages of 35 to 44 as 11 per cent of the people juries, received when he was charged “Yu mean White’s ranch on Squaw I are between those ages. Sixteen per three times by a bull elk, one of the creek?” asked the younger man. cent of the total county population park attractions. “Yea, it’s White’s ranch now, but are between this age which probably More than 100 milk producers oi it wasn’t settled by no White,” an-1 means that this is too young an age Ijine county met in Eugen« recently swered the sage of V alley City. I I to retire from farms and too old to be j and took step« to incorporate the local “When I fust come to th« country I living in town. association Into a legal organisation there was a flock of New Thoughters I Those from 45 to 64 make up 13 similar to the Portland Co-operative there that had come out from Illinoi’ I per cent of the population ofGrass Dairymen's association. to capture the west with their idees. I Valley 25 per cent of Moro and 20 Great swarms of grasshoppers have It was sort of a fad them days.” A I p©r cent of Wasco. Of old folks, if denuded the western slope of Hum hull wagon train of ’em settled on I those above 65 will allow such classi- bug mountain in Curry county of. all Squaw creek with old Abijah Jeems I flcation, Grass Valley has 10 per cent, vegetation, leaving th« ground aa bare as their leader. Nowadays he’d pass Moro the Mme and Wasco only 7 per as a concrete floor, Vern Engle, ranch fer a purty fair dictator, but such I cent. Most of the old folks live in er of Brushes creek reported. fancy names wasn’t used in them I the towns apparently for there is only Picking of cluster hops in the larger days. He was a right likable old chap I a little over six per cent on the yards in Marlon and Polk counties at that but he shore told his flock I farms. got under way thia week. . Growers what to do an* when to do it.” Th« towns all have the same per said that approximately 15,000 persons “Hi told ’em on week days and would be employed in picking hops preached it into ’em on Sundays. in the Willamette valley thia year. They was all to share and share alike. By far the tafleat and fineat gladioli Yu younguns can think if yu wanter plant and flower ever grown in th« that this Communism they’re preach Brownsville community, so far as in’ is somethin’ new, but there was a lot of such idee« back afore yu was Miss Elna Huston left this week Howe this year in her garden. The hatched.” for Prineville to visit her mother. plant was 6 feet 10 inches in height. “It’s a right good idee too if hu She was accompanied by Miss De A general alarm is felt in the Salem mans had been built to fit it, but they meris who has been employed at the vicinity over the cloverseed situation. ain’t, as fur as I can see. Yu got to Drinkard ranch during the past Examination of fields discloees that make yure system fit th« people see- several weeks. seed has failed to form, and a gen in’ as yurs to late to make th« people Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Tuel were visi eral shortage of seed is anticipated. flit the system. Now these Russhins tors in The Dalles on Wednesday. Heavy rains and absence of bees are different, than ascribed as two factors In the case. Thoughters, I dunno ’bout that, but Mr. and Mrs. Tildon Barnett are The bee is the only insect that pollen I recon that they want things about guests for a few days at the Lafe ises the clover. like yu do,’Wabash.” j Barnett home. “Now this Abijah, the boss of this Mr. and Mrs. Ted Everett of Aber The new co-operative creamery at outfit, was havin’ one devil’s own deen Wash., are visiting with Mr. Redmond is making a big gain. Man ager McKenzie states that there was • time when I fust heard about ’em. Everett’s parents Mr. and Mrs. H. E. gain of 2000 pounds of butterfat in the Yu see they had brung some plows Everett. last month over the previous month, and farmin’ gear with ’em, enough to Mrs. Leo Watkins and son shopped and that the butterfat is of No. 1 work what land they had taken up I in The Dalles on Wednesday. guess, if there hadn ’ t been so much q entity. Mrs. Harry Sawin is reported quite Some of them Construction on the Great Northern other stuff to property east of Bend, where a rail young bucks just had to go off fishin’ UI at her home. Mrs. E. W. McQuillan and Miss road repair shop and terminal point and some of ’em had to herd the cat tle, an some of ’ em had to dig the Ette Huston returned the last of th© Is to be located, will begin soon. The terminal will be built at a cost of litches tin there wan’t enough left week from visiting relatives and a boat 1200,000. Great Northern off! to plow. They was plowin’ every friends at Toppenish, Wenatchee and day, but it was slow with them foot Yakima. eials said. burners they had. When the old man Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Kasebrg and Nine of the 38 counties in Oregon parcelled his crew off at the first of daugAer were visitors at The Dalles in 1030 were able to dispense with the the week an sent some to herd th© Wednesday. cattle, and sort of tend the sheep and levy for both bond principal and In some for the other chore« there * Mr. and Mm Harry Van Gilder lerect. and five of these counties had were guests at the A. M. Young home wasn’t many left to till th« soil.” no bonded debt on which to make pay Saturday. herders Wabash, meats in 1231, according to a state meat completed recently by Rufus C. would tell him it took a lot of men to . Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hennagin were Holman, state treasurer. Counties keep the Injuns from stealin’ the visiting at the home of Mrs. Henna- whU-h ha< po bonded debt are Jose stock so’s some of 'em could go gin’s mother, Mm G. C. Akers in pblne. Lian, Polk, Umatilla and Wash Achin’. They didn’t want to plow. Moro on Sunday. “Well one day one of the young lagton. Other counties which were Mr. and Mm E. W. Watkins drove not required to levy taxes on aeeotmt men of the New Thoughters hid a to Redmond Saturday and were Oyer of «xtetteg bond obligations were Ben bright idee, an he went to old Abijah tea, Douglas, Jackson and Marion. with it. . ' * " OREGON STATE NEWS RUSSIA MAY NOT BE SO DANGEROUS OF GENERAL INTEREST NtW PERKINS HOTEL IMPOSSIBLE? It is not impossible, as the pessimists say, to keep Sherman county business at home. But, to do so requires the same effort others use to attract it. advertising Wasco IS THIS MEANS THE MAN WHO ADVERTISES CONSIST ENTITY HELPS HIMSELF AND HIS.COM MUNITY THE SHERMAN COUNTS JOURNAL Sherman County columns makes a Paying Investment jn Increased Business and Communi ty Goodwill.' LEI IS HELP YOU WITH YOUB ADVERTISING