Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 5, 1932)
/. «p^.. '■■■"<.'* I tween two ana three thou**na men. part or active members for it was necessary to pay some expenses oIeo industry employ* fewer than and the nieetings wAe held on about the banquet board occasion* I thirty people in Oregon. irifriMiiq:costs. It will be a very sad mistake to allow the I '• community ek>b4odie because of a temporary desire on the part turing and other;we pay out in this of the members to cut out sll unnecessary expenses. The club I country every year between fiv* xim I ' . , . _ . ., x . Uli —J | *ix billion dollar* more for thing* w* C«n bi maintained with leas coat to member, for a while and .till buy on w, Jslprnum (Hountg Journal render • great service to citizens of this •HERMAN Established Should OUÜNTY be kept OBSERVER, up, ready.and anxious Nov. to GRASS VALLEY JOURNAL, Established Oct. 14, , i «■ « i mu xu • > thia vicinity in all of MARCH the little CONSOLIDATED, 6, matter, 1881 GILES L. here. county. An organization I do this because we want our p*ople 2, 1888 further the interests of I to enjoy better living condition« than 1897 . * । ski I our foreign competitor*. BA we that are only I ,ubject our d.irym.n to dlr«t com- Florence Young, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Young, is in! the Mid-Columbia hospital recov- • through some sort of concerted effort. . _ I petition without protection against ______ O , | th* lowest form of humanity on earth Published Every Friday at Moro, Oregon, By ■________________________________ I the people who produce th* coconut*. Managing Editor FRENCH Oleo competition ha* forced butter I eying from an appendix opera tion. Rachel Poley has been ill for WAR. several days this week and un - Batared a* s econd Thia eia— matter at the warbetwe -’ootoffice, at Oregon, under I ••Hwred tram hither and FStoB week the -n Moro, the Japanese and Aet the of Chinese that Coogreae of March 8, 1879. ’ last I ^ legislator* by almese bM heretofore been tomostof us merely a Feri >us quarrel Our between veS iso pound* of fat in ayear I able to attend school. two slanteyed tribes aerps* the Pacific became actual and opefe I This mean* that a man mute tak* car* SUBSCRIPTION RATES—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. tion of drifted roads and cold pound on warfare. If one might judge from this distance and without any all oleomargarine told in rf • 641 Oregon. In order to stave this tax weather Monday and Tuesday of great understanding of the psychology of the nation* I breaking even oleo at inter- such figures. 8ix .... fighting 1-90 off as long as possible, ths this week. uses that type of civilisation repres- —It seems to be another example of the old story of a nation’s de-1 Consequently, there isn't a dairy herd ----- esta have filed a referendum petition; I The Multnomah Club of Port . . - . . .. . _ so ar* I holding in Oregon today that* and H »P until tho paying expen- FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1932. sire to expand and gam more territory for settlement. - I ms The dairyinen broke J . • regular election next November. la «11 walk» of lit. can w«U Ilal the Zebras last ■ The Japanese have for their excuse that the factories and I moving to town to walk the street* afford to back th. dairy industry, ''•eanesoay evemr.g cn the local COMMUNITY CLUB. XT XX business of their nationalals in China have not been protected in competition with the ones *lr*ady No otlwr type of farmin, builda for big' scboci gymnasitiRl IkiOl whV . . | there. One of the greatest cteami- For’Mvsrai years Moro has had^a commercial club that has to about twtev* cento ¿ pound sa.sU the future The iocul as they would like to have them protected by the Chinese I country of to agriculture ** does dairy j the Score of 49- 36 bwn • nwttore/aoms loealprids. organization brought wMeh corate tato of ing. it* . peopl* Cow* thrive on leguminous j boys were able to hold the visit- government. It is quite This likely that this is has true when it ir is J^c<m con-I Ut to oil have large number* it Ors d wn until the last quaiteri •idered that the Chinew not like th, Jap. very to well prùtafnint ipHakitf tb the county to do explain different matter! thi* «nyw.y country R^£^^^ duty ptte and'to ear- plant* which are soil builder*, haa been the history of every dairy - but in that period they got away ••r eitisefto'Og te expound views on controversai questiona. \ It I ®f . another section that the soil grow* richer and and the Chinese have no strong central government to enforce I the in the industry until for»nough points to put the *' . . ... I reason why farmer* should favor richer with year* of use. There is •Isp held atrictly local meetings in which problems of >community mdependencs» r game on ica. and ¿tonifyIqtaresfs were discussed and plans made for the up- Late year 5,ooejMO pound* W oleo r pad constantly for over 2000 year* Checkers Contirmee tfie popu - - ■ ■— ■■■ 1 Ya —aràVte ! Vicinity. lar game hereabouts with the* » V« t , v, due to the prevailing mood of discouragement, this ex-1 of’ butUn to rate* toM, tak* championship remaining in the1 lav*- In*ur* him a fair price for — " «Jlenti .. . on seems to be on the way to the discard. As it care of tho** cow*, and make th* bot- de produete and he will immediately 831116 hands as last yew For a w<gpreviously managed it required a small financial outlay on the Ur would the. make some improvement tltot vsiit few days it looked as if marbles Y Fire Insurance The Rosebush school bus was unable to cotpbat the combina build up th* community and put the money in circulation. Ho aeldom hoard, mow, or buy. Mock, or bond. By reason of th* foregoing, I hope that next November every qualified voter tn Sherman county will go to the poll* and cast hi* vote to back up thi* old fo»ter mother of our race and giv* her some protection from would supercede the* winter game among the business men but the fnow stopped ail that rrg Mrs. J. H. Wilt entdrtairted the Grass Valley bridge club last ednesbay. f — Mrs. Doris Blake entertained At i Net eavinf ef 25*1. Hrs erft«. Id im »; ... ill •oro brain Growers , Assop»a*icn announced for order anyplace. made Also Japan ha* rather heavy loans to I she now claims a goodly shar* of th* cow* ”• Chifiathat have not been repaid nor has any attempt I big dairy products show* Oregon butr- I ter and cheese triumphed over that to repay them. a valid ex I of Wisconsin which is considered the It may be doubtful that non repayment of debt i* v, . . premier dairy state of the country- case for attempting to take by force another country, 1 e I But- Unless some relief is given soon this substantial industry is facing came a precedent it is possible that the United States would havi I utter ruin- a large part of Europe on its hands within a fe* year*. . .. . - I Few of us realize the great rol* the ‘ Sines Japan has entered other parts of China than Manchuria dairy cow haa and gU11 plays the has lost much of her favorable position in thee\e* of it el in the progress of civilisation, world. Now she i* simply an aggressor nation seeking to captun I st*rtmg with neolithic man In ths dim I vistas of the far distant past, she has land and public utilities of another nation for her own gain. I been man’s friend and companion all been made * Perhaps a general attack by the Japanese will draw the fac tions of China together and will result in that country It becominv I ths grea’sr nation that her resources and numbers make possible. I I If Ibis should ultimately be the result the war will have done some I service for an awakened China, combined into one governmental I Quit, would be one of the best things that could happen to the I I I -F------- ~ ----------- O----------- * • a I I j. THAT HAWAIIAN MESS. • The attempt* of a minority group, such as the American* are in Hawaii, to force their custom* and moral* upon a much larger population always result* in crime* like the one that haa so stirred up the Hawaiins and the American*. According to American standard* Massie was within the un written law to murder the Hawaiian, but according to the code of the islands, if they live up to their reputation, was entirely too severe. *uch punishment In any event it is one of those crises that arise out of changing or attempting to change the custom of the people to conform to those of another. ... _ t J- . - The question among democrats, now that what looks like a democratic year ha* at last arrived, is whether to follow those who have campaigned in the face of defeat for so many years or to try some dark.horses in the lead. — j 0----------- Well, well development! Attention all you exponents of Columbia river The Portland city council has voted in favor of the Umatilla rapids project so the question may be considered settled. ----------- 0----------- ' Mellon going to London. They didn’t dare fire the chief en gineer and fired the mate instead. Truly, politics makes strange resignation* and appointment*. ' —iO-------- Not a single observer of hog milt* warned us that there was white spots on them along aboutJanuary 30th. —O———— ' Portland may have a dust storm, but they didn’t get it from this county. Our dust is all wet and frozen down. manufacturer* has junked the tractor a oro next On his own farm. That's the way the tractor folks reason. Ford’s extm. lo has certainly put them in an en^bar- When You Trade With Yourself I_ Hodgen-Brewater Milling Co'e Dairy A Poultry Feeds If we do not have what want in «tock, we will order It far foul È JILL RUN per sack.. » 1.00 HORTS per tack.... ROLLED WHEAT per sack.. ROLLED BARLEY per sack. 1.00 2.10 2.00 LAYMORE MASH per sack. CRACKED CORN per sack.. OYSTER SHELL per sack... 1.20 1J5 CALF MEAL................................ ALFALFA MEAL....................... 1.» BRAN.......................................... ECG PRODUCER........... SCRATCH ‘«ED SALT HtíkoUND, 60lb. Sack................... -..............G0e BLOCK» PLAIN,«) lb................................... ;....«.» BLOCK. SULPHURIZED, 50 lb.................. SULPHURIZED BLOCK 6 lb 15 cents, i for • : ,. . . ; 21c À SheWnanCooperative Grain Growers WAMO. «ODEON VT'' Kent News The tractor people have been tell- u* their machine would releasemen from farm work so they could engage Tate Justensen, of Portland, in mors gainful pursuits. Judging from the present multitude of unsm" has been visiting at the home of ployed, it looks like they went too ar. his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred down the age* . Her effigy and that of her brother, the ox, were used to adorn the earliest coinage of the world, and in such esteem and ven- eration were they held that they wore worshipped as symbol* of Diety in the dawning religious consciousness mits he ha* scrappad Ms machines to create work for men who need it- of humanity. * Thu* it is evident that the scheme of The cow has accompanied man in all his migrations and wanderings as the tractor folk* haa not worked out he has multiplied and replinished th* in practice a* well as it did in their earth, nursing her own offspring and theory. his also. In times of famine ehe has been man’s preserver, his comfort and aid in times of prosperity, the bearer of his burdens and the cultivator of his fields, the bread winner of the poor and the pride of the weH to do. 8he is a vital factor in human welfare as the producer of an indispensible and the only perfect food. From the dawn of history she ha* beep associn- ted with the conquering and dominant peoples; she is the most ancient, the mist universal, the most used and the most useful of al animals domesti We Handle next Saturday ionday evening. POPULAR MECHA1 MAGAZINE Put The Profit in Your Pockt the monkey* and heathen* of the a group of friends Monday night at her home with bridge, f South Sea Islands. fit T. M. Rolfe v Thdi Grange danCe that »at Wasco, Oregon. To the Editor) Present conditions are bringing the night has been postponed on ac hor*e back to a great extent in farm count of the enterUihmsnt of the Kiwanis Qlub of The Dalia. work. This from the Spokesman and Books containing iht Alic® of Harness World is interesting: the road may be obtained from In addition, to being our leading automobile manufacturer, Henry Ford Tom Garrett and the examiner must be classed also as one of our will stop here February 17th on really big farmers. He owns and ap his way to Madras from Moro, orates a 12,000 acre farm in Michi to give examination to those gan. Of course re has been using who want official permission to' tractors and modem machinery as drive a car. ». ■ < much a* possible to do the work on Last Thursday evening the lo his farm. With his great acreage it would seem that Ford would be ideal cal 1.0 O.F. lodge received a ly fitted to make a big success with a fraternal visit by a large delega “horseless farm,* if any body could. . tion from the Kent lodg*. Th« Now it leaks out that Ford has Rebekahs also seized upon the suddenly decided to discard his mod occasion to pay a visit to the Odd ern machinery and return to those methods which his farm experts con F> Hows, so came up and surpris ed them with some viands for sidered antiquated- That Ford’s action has stunned his the inner man. After lodge all fellow tractor manufacturers woulc engaged in cards’checkerA and a be putting it mildly. How can they general goon time. ; hop* to go out and convince a farmer .... _ .. he ought to mortgage hi* f.rm tobuy | ^rass Valley Odd Fellows ara a tractor when one of the big tractor | planning a • old time Visit tO FOR A PRIZE Less Cost ' WHITTLE we have needed io hitch to the horse movement to make it mere appealing to the farmers. Wo believe a a very effocthre cahpaign eight bo waged now with a slogan, such as “Use Horsoe and Help Banish Unempley- Justensen for the past Mrs. Volna Guyton, week- ' who has been visiting relatives andfriends here, returned to herhomita Van couver, Washington, ’ Tuesday. Mr and Mrs. Paul Wfoon en tertained a number * of their friends at cards Monday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Wily Knighten and daughter/ Ana jean, visited in The Dalles Saturday. Ana- jean accompanied by Miss Helen MacGreggor went to Portland Sunday while Mr Knighten re started the movement in that dirae- turned to Kent Monday’having! been delayed on account, of the snowstorm. * Jake Crocker took a truck load of his furniture tb'Goldendale| F. O. R. Prosperity cated by man- Saturday. The man of the stone age already Mr. and Mrs. Wily Knighten poseesed her- Her «bones have been are receiving congratulations on found among the spiles which suppor ted the aquatic huts of tho Swiss lake the birth of a fine eight and one dwellers, along with stone axe*, ham H. A Sommer is having trou- half pound baby bov who arrived mers, and spearheads. Archeological Sunday night. January SI. research ha* shown that in the eeriest ble with erysipelas at his home age* of civilisation horned cattle al- < ready were known and used both as producer* of dairy products and as boasts of burden. Milk was peddled in the streets of ancient Thebe* 4000 year* ago. Agreat Pharaoh, Mw tuhotep, wishing to record what gbod care ho had taken of hi* young queen Aashait, had painted on the wail* of her tomb a cow being milked by one attendant and tho milk being handed to the queen in a bowl by another. One of the Egyptian gods, Apis, is represented in the form of a bull and th* mythology of tho Hindus, the Greek*, and the Roman* bear tes timony to the high regard in which I Gran VaBey Y J- ¡THE JOURNAL $1.50 A YEAR «MM