Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 1, 1932)
PACB TH* BMKKMAN COUNTY JBVRMAL, 2 MUBU. UKKOON FRIDAY, JUIL1, IMS. ■ Linnie Belsbe Married 1 ernor M«iu to the effect that the To Irwin Hart overage ooet par vtudent in eonsoii- soon Meets the 1st and 8rd Thursday evenings of each month. Viaitiug members cordially in vited to meet with us Hugh Chrisman, W. M. C. V. Belknap, Secy. Bethleham Chapter No. 78 O. E. 8. Moro, Oregon Regular communica tions each 2nd and 4th Thursday evenings of each month. Mrs. Irene Fraser, Worthy Matron Nana Barzee, Secretary. Meet« every Monday evening in the I.O.O.F hall. Transient and visiting brothers art cordially invited to meet with u» A. Douma, N. G. Jo« Truitt, Secretary. ¡16 Moro, Oregon Bl Meets 2d and 4th Tue. days of each montl. Visiting members wel come. Leona Domna, N. G- Lila Bull, Secretary. line Rebecca Lodge No Chris Schults Post No. T1 Meets at Legion hall on | 2nd and 4th Wednesday evenings of each month. W. T. Johnston, Commander.' Vernon Flatt, Adjutant_____ Grass Valley Lodge No. 181, 1.0.0. F. meets every 2d and 4th Thursday svenings of the month in the Odd Fellows nail. Sojourn ng brothers are cordially invited. Vern McGowan. L. K. Smith Hoey. NG. f|Town Talk May’s store is receiving a coat of paint at the hands of Jack Noonan. Miw Leora Peetz is home again from Hillsboro after being away for a week. Al Kirtley is here from The Dalles thia week and expects to remain until after harvest , Roy Kunsman and wife spent Sunday here from Arlington where Roy dia- pen set groceries Mrs. Sadie Rasmussen visited here this week with her brothers and sisters of the Ruggles family. Mrs Mary Schwartz. of Heppner, visited in Moro with Mr- and Mrs. Reavis last week- Mr. and Mrs- A- C. Pope visited at the Reavis home this week- Mrs* Pope is a sister of Mr. Reavis. Miss Katie Belshe is home for the summer after spending the last school year in Joseph, with the Searcys. Mrs. G. C- Akers is in Wssco car ing for her grandaughter while Mrs. Lloyd Hennagin is away from home. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Samuels, of Hood River, visited here with the Na- house and Smith families last Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Al Busch and family arrived in Moro Thursday from their I dated schools to |47 higher por year home in Hillsboro- On Saturday they and that in ( will go to Camp Sherman accom i the average.coat dent is $91 Is panied by Mr* and Mrs- N. W* Thomp On the tenth of June 1906, twenty states. in schools in son to remain until after thq fourth six years ago, two prominent Sher I An organization will bo perfected Last weekend Mr* and Mrs. A- S* man county young folks, May Robin in Sherman county to fight the bill if Johnson had as guests Mr and Mrs- son and Lonnie Belshe, were united Carl L Stamey and family of Sil in marriage at the home of the bride’s on the ballot 1 b November which to parents. Mr. and Mrs. J. C Hockman verton. near Moro, by the Rev- Abbot. fight that is batng made by pi Clifton Benson returned to Moro On the tenth of June. 1932, their this week after spending most of the daughter, Linnie, celebrated their an winter and spring months in Portland. niversary with them at Olympia. Wn. The thermometer ascended to a where she and Irwing Hart of Seattle record high for the year thto week when it reached 95 Tuesday after noon There is considerable specula tion as to' how the wheat to going to church, of which ho to minister* Only immediate friends and relatives being stand it* present- Everyone likes to see youngsters Farmers are cutting hay around The mother of the groom eerred aiM on the Fourth of J>eir fields and in other ways getting u inviting luncheon to th. portici- JoJ to ready for the big doings that are ex panto and relaUvM of the heppy cou- thta b, „f „eh pected to start between the 15th and pie. who later left for their homo to „.rmanent injury or death does th 20th of this month be. in Seattle, Wash., where Mr. Hart r„uit. The old fashioned Fourth John Engstrom and wife were in is employed in the Seattle hotel. | been abandoned in moot cities Moro Thursday from their Grass VM- Mrs. Hart has besn raised fa this Ut thses are still many accidents community and is weU known and that could be nvvUed W the wo of a Several of the German born people loved by her many friends who wish litu, foralght. A little time «ent of this county were in Portland last thwo young people s^happy end sue- > ta ptannto< ohidrmi s eolebratlon week to see the German ship that Tho" who attended front hero would undoubtedly save them many visited the harbar there- were: Mr. and Mr. Lonnie Belahe, hours of anxiety. Every year there is a a loss loss of of life because the ^Gior* yuior- is Mrs. 'Dayton Henrich« returned ceasful life together. early this week from a trip to Camp mother and father of the bride; Mr. iou> Four^*» to celebrated not wisely and Mrs. Darrel Belshe, brother and but In Edition to this Sherman. “JVhen I see you I always think of wife; and Mrs J. C. Hockman, who there are burns and disabling injuries Smith*" The boys are getting considerable formerly lived at Olympia, about “But I am not like Smith " enjoyment out of the swimming hole thirty five years ago, and Mr and many times more numerous than the fatalities, while the number of minor *Oh, yes* You both owe mo |1M. in Grass Valley canyon during this Mrs- Tom Lee. and aunt and her hus- burns and injuries are «hniteWtely warm weather and a group of them Jmnd of Portland- greater- Thto wijl always be the case are either going or coming all after so long as fireworks are made ax they noon. are and aa carelessly used. r Many of our cities have ordinances preventing the sale of fireworks but there are many “fly-by-night" deal ers looking for a little easy money Kenneth McKean chairman for Sher who establish booths at the limits of man county in the organization of every city having a restrictive or pro Community Presbyterian Church Oregon students who are grouped hibitive ordinance Some of the fire Community Sunday school 10 a. m. together to help defeat th« proposed works so handled will swell the total ECK RORICK’S Morning worship Ila m Subject: plan for consolidating the University of the to-be-expected casualties, in - BLUE DEVILS “Our Natan’s God ” spite of the law. with the State College, to mapping Ladies Free Admission 60c This will be a Patriotic Independence out his campaign for getting inform Users of fireworks, and especially D*Y Service, to which all American ation to the people about the costs parents should exert every precau Legion members are especially invited. of the merger to the state’« tax tion to prevent injury to them selves and to others. Many Americans cel There will bw no evening Mrvioe, payers for your convenience 1, have neither will there be any Bible Study AU alumni of the University and ebrate Independence Day by expos ' ranged for yon to leave your and Prayer Meeting next Wednesday all others who are mteiwated in see ing their children to the ravages of bhoe Work at Waiter A. May & evening. ing the plans of the State Board of fireworks. Parente should do every thing in their power, both to mini Son. Pick up and delivery twice Everybody most cordially invited. Higher Education given a trial before a week at no cost to you. Allen A. Me Rea, Minister. they are thrown in the discard will be mise the use of explosives and to en given an opportunity by Mr. McKean force all necessary safeguards. More to assist him in disseminating the over, ; inthese times of economic . ChrUtUa Saiaaaa The Waaco Shoe Man arguments for the continuance of the stress it would seem the part of good Subject: “Ood.” state’s educational institutions under citizenship to devote the family funds to the things that are essential, which Golden Text: Exodus 20:2, 8. I am the present head. might welt include a holiday trip or “ Since Geovernor Meier has made the Lord thy God, which have brought picnic, rather than to do something thee out of the land of Egypt, out of so careful an analysis of the proposed which dissolves in noise, smoke and the house of bondage. Thou »halt have initiative petition and opposes it, and smell and may leave a horrible death since the state tax league has come no other gods before me. in its train. \ Responsive Reading: Psalms89:4, 6, out against the sponsors of the con Fourth of July accidents ara par solidation". said Mr. McKean, M H to ------ AND — 8, 9, 16, 16. 18, 52. .. ticularly likely to result in lockjaw or probable that voters will think twice Church services every Sunday morn before aligning with the forces that tetanus- There is no cure for tetanus ing at 11 o’clock and Wednesday even or lockjaw; it can only be prevented-n would destroy the University*** Phone 845 The Dalles, Ore ing at 8o’clock. GRA88 VALLEY PHARMACY All are cordially invited to attend the church services and make use of — or----- the reading room which is open daily Phooo222 whore all authorised Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased. Brace Barton, author of "The Man Nobody Know*," J mm written- thia tribute to Oregon for the "Parade of the Btatee" Monaag dight grogfan^a of the General Motore Corporation, part of an educational plan to make the country ae a whole better acquainted with the individual etaleo—their hietory, scenic beauty, induttrice and people. Sunday Services REGON, what brave memories you bring us! Firework» Sometimes Dangerous Playthings Kenneth McKean Leading Student Fight CH D. E Stephens was a visitor in the city of Portland the first of the week returning Tuesday night Harry Blough and wife ar« here for a few days from their home in Portland where Mr. Blough to a prin cipal of a school. Mrs. Blough is a sister of Howard and Lester Conlee Mrs. Boren Hansen is at Wasco looking after son Ove while Mrs* Ove recreates with relatives at Camp Sherman. Wiley Knighten, school superin- Tuesday afternoon from Kent i " Ho A DOLLAR’S WORTH Clip this cowpea and mail it with |1 for a »ix weeks' trial wbreriptinn to THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR ZELL’S isnnM Socnrr inter «su. FUNERAL HOME Station. Boston. M am AMBULANCE SERVICE A Tribute to Oregon <TWn) E.a.a Lasting Quality at Low Price Baptist Charch (Grass Valley) Morning worship.* Church school 10 Preaching 11 a. m. Subject: W. H. Ragsdale and son, Harry, Evening worship: B Y. P. U. 1 Lloyd Johnson and Lamer Sayre were at Camp Sherman a few days this week p. m. Preaching 8 p. m. working around the Ragsdale property there and trying to. find out how the Prayer meeting and Bible study. Thurs- fish bite. 8. L. Boyce, Minister- Harold Sexton, sheriff of Wasco county, was in town Tuesday evening accompanied by his father, Field Sex CALL FOR BIDS ton and Rev. Hartman. The elder Sealed bids for driver of school bus Sexton visited with old friends here for for District No* 22 Boardman, will several hours. be received by the clerk until August Ralph Brisbane and family left 1st. District reserves the right to Wednesday morning for a visit to Washington county where Ralph's Tom Fraser. Clerk relatives live- W. H. Helyer was down from Kent and Antelope countries Wedtoeaday for a little word with his cronies of this city. ■w JOSEPH A. MEE Sunday school 10 a. m. Morning Fellowship 11 a m. Evangelistic 7:46 p. m. Tuesday, Praise and Prayer, 7:45 p.m. Friday, Bible Study, 7:45- A welcome to extended to you. Come Mrs. John Searcy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ragsdale, to visiting nod find a church home with us L M. Tracy, her parent» here. John is still bank Evangelist-Paetor. ing for the state examiner to Joseph. Marvin Miller has gone to ®ed- for his mond where he will father on a ranch there for a few weeks He Slbe fitti DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT JULY 2 Mrs- Robert Highfield, a sister of Mrs. Stanley Reavis, spent several days in Moro last week with her sister. Evangelist, L. M. Tracy, of Van couver, B. O., has token temporary charge of the local Full Gospel Assem bly while here. She will be a guest in the home of Mr. end Mrs. R. J. Ginn. The surest preventive to to avoid use of or contact with fireworks; but in case of a fireworks burn immediate action to vital. There should be no delay in administering antitoxin, be cause 'Where diagnosis to certain it to usually too late- For purposes of prevention a relatively small amount, of antitoxin is required. Recent ex periences indicate that 1500 units ol antitoxin may not be quite enough to prevent the development of tetanus. It to,better to give 3,000 units as this dose increases the duration of im munity and in this way becomes an effective preventive agent- The long er the incubation period the milder the disease and recovery may take place, without specific treatment 70 to 90 percent are fatal, A physician should be consulted in all Fourth of July in- jurtos so that proper means of pre vention can be taken in time- Other accidents in which deep seated wounds in which dust and other par ticles have been crushed may also canoe tetanus and the same proeau- siona should be taken to prevent their infection Everything should be done to pre vent Fourth of July accidents but if an accident do«« occur a competent physician should be called Immediate ly op that proper treatment administered And lockjaw or tetanus pre vented. O Memories of Captain Gray who rounded the Cape in the 1790’s, to claim tbs "River of the West" and it« borderlands for the Stars and Stripes; of Dr. John McLoughlin, empire builder of the Hudson*« ^ay Com pany; of the dauntlee« missionaries who first opened America's eyes to their little known Paradise at her western doorway. Here Astoria recalls John Jacob Astor's traders and trappers, and a monument at Sea side marks the spot where Lewis and Clark saw the sea. You are a worthy workman, Oregon—busy packing salmon, weaving textiles, making paper, building ships, delving for the earth’s store« of gold and ail ver, copper and lead. You are a mighty fanner—raiaing fat cattle and thick-wooled aheap and reoord-breaking hena, «hipping wheat and oata and potatoes, picking apple« and pears and prunes, garnering walnut« and Alberts for the tables of the nation You are a sportsman. Winter long or summer long, <me may ski and one may swim, one may golf or scale mountains. Bear and deer and cougar match wits with the hunter, and there's always a thrill for the flaherman. Clean, vigorous, prosperous are your cities. Portland is a world port a hundred miles inland, our largest lumber center. Hero roses bloom at Christ mas time as roses bloom in Jun«. Th« capitol «tends in Salem, th« State College in Corvallis, ths State University in- Eugene. On a lofty shaft at the top of Astoria’s Coxcomb Hill, pioneer days live forever In immortal stone. Hero engineers have carved, from hundreds of mile« of living rock, the matchless Columbia River Highway, that you may drive along the base of sculptured cliffs, glimpse Multnomah Falls and hundreds ' ol of other cascades. and follow the river through the rugged Columbia Gorge. Hore enowclad perfect blue a mile nearer the sky than the waters of the sea, Is the loveliest of all enchanted mirrors. Crater Lake. r Go to Oregon now, for R om Festival Week in Portland. Go in September for the Pendleton Round-Up, when the old West lives anew. Linger long in Oregon's tonic air, drink deep of the magic of the Skyline Trail—vistas of lakes anAglaciers and forests and streams. You'll find it all a page of vivid beauty to store in your book of memory. Oregon has a stirring motto, "She flies with her owa wings." Far indeed The NEW 1i-Ton, 4-Speed INTERNATIONAL $ A Model A 2 ■ ■ ■ f 5 in progress, a future rieh in promise. General Moforo salutes you, Oregon ! for &e 136-lnch wheelbew cheiiit, f. o. b. factory RATES REFUSED A RE you in the market for the one best truck investment? Then come in and get acquainted with the brand new I j-ton International—the Model A-2. Here is an ell-around truck, high in quality qnd low in price. , Look over this good-looking truck in detail, inaid* and-out. It has 4 forward speeds, and its powerful engine generates plenty of power with unusual fuel economy. Tbete arc 22 bag und roller bearings in this trut k. The ribf^tion^Tes dutch. cAm-and- lever steering ?eai, and 4-wheel tnechani al brakes arj among the features you >*U appvtciate. Step into the corrfortaM» cab. Continued from page one. H. V. Smouse, Ione; E. M- Hulden, An Intentsite Commerce Commis sion will bo held in Seattle on the IS. 14 and 15 of July and another hear- MORO, OREGON INDEPENDENT CASH GROCERY FOLKS: will be held shortly thereafter- The bus waa full but a lags lady elbowed bar way in. Lady—“Two ticksta. please* O sb for ms and one for my husband out side" Conductor— “Can’t your husband get your own ticket* How am I to know which it your husband T* plain to the company.* Conductor—ICalm yourself, WALTER A. MAY & SON We are greatly pleased with the response you have, giv en to our now plan of SELLING FOR CASH ONLY AT CASH PRICES Wo know now that you agree with no that cash only to thé better way and that we are aaaured of your support and that you prefer to spend your money at a HOME STORK when you get real Cash pneee. Whan wo sell for cash we can have no credit losses (which must bo ab sorbed] consequently we can sell for much less and save you money. Wo are sure you appreciate that we are making you price« that you have never had before In Sherman County. 1 0 SEE OUR WEEKLY HAND BILLS.-end visit our stope for nA* ma- take the wheel yourself,and tryout its speed and power on the roads. The A-2 will th* you performance that you enn realize only through a demonstration. Don’t be content with less than Inter national quality in a truck you will want to drive for years. ’ Now wo are nblc to offer it to you at a very low price. The new A-2 assures you dependable hauling.low upkeep expense, and remarkable opr rating economy over a long period of yearr—¡4 is the r«ost economical truck investment or. the market. It is built in two wheelbase«—136 inches and 160 inches. Bodies for hauling every kind of load are rvaiiable. • 1 v SUNSET MOTOR CO tow priest, on everything to oor stock. . The Dalles, Oregon . band is like.” i T 1