Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1932)
PAGE 1 THE SHERMAN COUNTY Born: To Mr. and Mrs Ar|har J Osborn at The Dalles a seven pound son Tuesday, August 9th. - Mr and Mrs- Lou Isenberg and two laughters in law have moved into the Ellsworth building. Mr Isenberg is a brother in law of Alfred Fuller and has come to Moro from Hood River for his health. Bethleham Chapter No. 78 0. E. S. Moro, Oregon Mrs G. C- Akers is suffering from Regular communica tions each 2nd and 4th a alight clot on the brain that caused Thursday evenings of a temporary paralysis last Tuesday each month. She is recovering under the care of Mrs. Irene Fras«r, Worthy Matron her daughter. Mrs. Lloyd Hennagin and Mrs. Hattie King Andrews- Nana Barxee, Secretary. Walter May spent a few days of Moro Lodge No. 113 I. O. O. F. this week in Portland on business Moro, Oregon Meets every Monday Mrs Paul May is home from the evening in the 1.0.0 F hall. Transient and hosDital since Sunday with her infant visiting brothers are I son. cordially invited to Mrs. W Wz Knighten returned meet with us. A. Douma, N. G. home from Portland Sunday evening Joe Truitt, Secretary. bringing Miss Christine Folda with her- Miss Folda win stay until Mr. ne Rebecca Lodge No. 116 Knighten has improved enough to be M oro, Oregon Meets 2d and 4th Tues &' le to leave the Veteran’s hospital- days of each month. L. W Rakes and wife moved this V’isiting members wel week to Rufus vacating their house come. for the Knightens who have bought Florence Johnson, N-G- I ila Bull, Secretary. Mrs. J. C. Freeman and son Neal, Chris Schuhs Post No. 71 are still at La Grande with Greta Auaricaa Logiou who is slowly improving from her Meets at Legion hall on illness- . 2nd and 4 th Wednesday J. B Adams is getting about on evenings of each month. crutches for the past few days on W. T. Johnston, Commander. account of a little accident with a Vernon Flatt, Adjutant sharp knife- Grass Valley Lodge No. 131, L. L. Peetz and wire returned home I. O. O. F. meets every 2d and from The Dalles Wednesday night- 4th Thursday evenings of the month in Lou has improved rapidly since get the '.Md Fellows hall. Sojourn ng ting out of the hospital a week ago brothers are cordially invited. Vern McGowan. L. K. Smith NG. Beey. SCHOOL AUDIT Ke ©Ibe Will DANCE The Dalle« SATURDAY NIGHT AUG. 13 YE OLD MILL BAND Admission 50c Ladies Free (.^Town lalk J. B. Lester, of Portland, was a call, er at the court house last Friday. W H. Noyse and wife, of Hood Riv er, visited the Otis Baker family Sun day. Leonard Cox, of The Dalles, was looking after business matters in Sher man county Monday The Dorcas Society will hold an all day quilting at the chinch Wednesday August 17th. Pot luck at noon. W. Langille, of the Oregon Highway Department, was in Moro Monday on business connected with his office. Mrs Truman Strong entertainednine tables of bridge players last Friday afternoon at her home north ^of town Miss Jane Boyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Guy Boyer of Eugene, is vis- ting a few days this week with Jane French. Wes Fuller lost a valuable cow last week when in some manner she ran a hoe handle into her flank. She had to be shot Dan W. Thurston, of Reding, Califor nia, is visiting here with Rev. McRae on his way to Klamath Falls wheie be. expects to located Miss Viola Hansen left last Friday for Bellingham, Wash , where she will visit with her uncle and aunt Mr and , Mrs. C. H. Larsen. Mrs. Margaret Peeta left Tuesday for Coquille where she will attend the state meeting of the assessors for the remainder of the week. C. M. Bently, who has become pretty well acquaint- d here as examiner for autodrivers* licenses, will be with us again on the 17th, next Wednesday. Frank Ainan and family, of Port land, visited Tu“sday with Mr and Mrs. Otis Baker. Mias Gladys Baker accompanied them home for a two weeks vacation. Mrs. Hugh Chrisman left Tuesday morning for Portland where she ex pects to spend a few days visiting She drove down with her daughter from Arlington. E. O McCoy and son, of The Dalles, were in Moro Tuesday on business and visiting with old friends of the days when Mr. wh vr»e vf >herm«n county's best known citizen« Johnnie Walker is running the Nish warehouse for the Farmer’s National corporation this year—getting ready for the hard work of handling the high school next winter, presumably. Mias Georgia McKean, • ho has been employed in Waaco for the paat few weeks came home Thursday to spend a few days with her parents before go ing to The Dalles, where she has em ployment with Mack w Oaf«. Continued from page one. These figures show a reduction of oVer half on the part of Rufus, a re duction of |46 for Wasco, a reduc tion of 316 for Kent, a raise of 312 for Moro and a reduction of 32« for Grass Valley over last years figures. The average cost of educating a high school pupil in 1931-32 in Sher man county was $162 56 compared to an average cost of $197 83 in 1930-31. In the elementary division the country schools showed average costs of 3172.69 whereas the other schools had an average of >181.18- MORO, OREGON FRIDAY, AUGUST 12,1932. ' round two thirds of the total Russian I crop, prospects have been materially to the Summer Dress 1 lowered by recent hot, dry weather. Touches of lingerie or lace at tin1 Harvests have been relatively abun- .neckline give the 1932 kwk to suiunwr dresses. Blas folds of organdie are dant in the important deficit areas one favorite lingerie touch and are used on soft types of dresses as weii of Western Europe and milling reg- ns tailored ones. Pique gives contrast ulations in these areas have been to tlie new eyelet cotton dresses. The Italian harvest is tightened- Starched lace is extremely smart In now placed at 252,978,000 bushels as round Peter Pyn collars ending in a against 248,101,000 last year. Mill Idg bow in front and are most effec ing regulations for bread wheat now tive on dark-colored sheer dresses. Also smart on the dark dress Is the require utilization of 95 per cent wide, double, circular collars of or native wheat in railing mixtures- Trade estimates indicate a French • gandie. And just a large white or gand:« flower is a fine thought for the crop of around 290,000,000 bushels print dress over the 1931 crop. The French mill- ing quota for native wheat has been raised to 97 per cent. Germany, We Almost Passed Out with a record harvest of 183.500,000 Imagine our embarrassment the bushels has extended the milling other evening when, at dinner in a of 97 per cent for native wheat to swell Portland cafe, - the waitress August 15, but permits millers using IV ben the snow Ues deep on the range the Bar 2 ranch tn central Oregon uses a homemade snow plow on grain imported, in exchange for Its “caterpillar” tractor as a means of clearing runways for stranded sheep la order that they nay exercise. Tk< ' wheat exports to use up to 30 per tractor Is also used to haul feed to the herd as shown above glass cent of foreign wheat. Spain has a harvest.-of 161,700,000 bushels or 27*00 000 bushels more than last and is gaining strength- -The Undesired Conviction ( World Wheat Crop Subject: “Soul." Koebcke- of Francesville, F. First Lawyer; “Did his speech car Golden Text: Hebrews 10.33, 30.J ry conviction T”-*< / Smaller In Places Indiana, was here this week. He is *' 7 the owner of the farm where Dell Now the just shall Hve by faith: bat If Second Lawyer: “It did! His client Munger is living and is looking after any man draw Lach, my soul shall got five years-’’—Case and Com* have no pleasure in him. Bat we are his business interests. - Crop prospects remain .a dominant ment _ • not of them who draw back onto per factor in the general wheat market dition; but of them that believe to situation-. Winter wheat outturns in saving of the soul. Summer Boarder: “Oh, I’d» juat the U. .8- are now fairly definitely Responsive Reading: Paalma 27rl,4- love to be a farmer, to live with the known, but the ofitcome of the spring TK) TRADE—A horte, for wheat or 9. 13, 14. blue sky overhead!” wheat crop is still uncertain. Pri Church services every morning at Farmer Jones: “Yes, that would vate estimates as of August 1, fore hay. J. G. Dixon, May St Road, ^lood Community Preabyteriaa Church 11 o’clock and Wednesday evening at be all right if the blue sky was the •River, Oregon- * cast a crop of Spring wheat in the 8 o’clock. farmer’s only overhead.’’ U- S of around 275 000.0Q0 bushels FOR SALE—Three full blood, four 10 a m. Sunday School All are cordially invited to attend or about 30,000,000 leas than the July year old O. J. C- sows, with young 11 a- m. the church services and to make use Morning Worship official forecast Such an outrun if pigs- L. W. Amick. Kent The Reminder Subject: “When G<>d Curses to of the reading room m the rear of the realizied would be about 170,000,000 church building, which is open daily Wife: “I’m toasting my toes by the Bless “ bushels more than last season’s I have some Farms in Willamette 7:45 p. m- where all authorized Christian Science camp fire-’’ Evening Service harvest Private etimates place Valley that can ■ be exchanged for Subject: “When Reproaches are literatured may be read, borrowed or Hubby: “Be careful, dear- Y°u the Canadian wheat crop this season Sherman or Wasco County Farms. purchased- Riches ’’ can’t scrape toes ” 1 at around 450,000,000 bushels or L. R. French. Grass Valley, Oregon The Community Minister may be about 150,000,000 bushels larger than found in the study of the public library ' the 1931 crop. The Canadian crop AUCTION SALE OF HOGS—Sat A Fish Story every morning of the week except B ud ery Busy ’ suffered materially from hot, dry urday, August 13, in Goldendale. at the biggest fish I ever “It was day If anyone in the community has Twenty seventh Vice President: weather during July and rain is still 1:00 o’clock- 250 head of hogs.224 Religious or Scientific books, or Bio hooked—and before I kenw it I was So you were very busy ysterday?” । urgently needed in many sections. feeder pigs and 26 brood sows to graphical, or Historical books which pulled out of the boat,’’ said the Twenty eighth Vice President: “I Wheat harvesting will soon be gen- farrow in September. G- H. Gouch- you are willing to loan, will you not fisherman. certainly was I didn’t get out to J eral in the Prairie Provinces and ner, auctioneer; Bill Phipps owner “You must have got thoroughly please leave them at the library and threshing and combining have al the golf club until nearly noon”. they w II be loaned to readers who de wet,” said the innocent bystander. ready begun “ Not at all, ” said the fisherman. sire them. Then too, if you have (hem, In Europe, crops in the lower Dan- . * will you not leave on the reading table “I fell on the fish.’’ ubiaq countries have suffered severe Just a Pun your religious or popular, magazines damage and latest advices indicate “Those Arab acrobats twist them and papers, so that others may have ‘ An independent survey reveals the an outturn of only 257,203 000 bush Attorneys At Law the use of them. best method of keeping white flannels selves into all sorts of hapes ’’ els against 367,834,000 bushels pro Everybody always welcome “ Ah, they ’ re regular folding Bed clean for any length of time is to duced last year- Heaviest reductions Moro Allan A. Me Rea, minister. dye them black. L . ouins!” —Pathfinder. have occurred in Rumania and Yugo slavia, , although countries in the Danube Basin shows losses. Harvest ing in Russia has been delayed and jr your convenience I have ar the area harvested to July 25 was ranged for jon, to leave your placed at about 49.000,000 acres as Fhoe Work at Waller A. May & against about 72.000.000 acres to Son. Pick up and delivery twice i that date a year ago. Conditions of 1 e § S-g - a week at no cost to jou. J the Winter wheat crop in areas near «a -c E 3 X E c <Z) cZ £ z £ 3 m O Black Sea ports are reported to be JOSEPH A. MEE fairly good. 1 In the Spring wheat 522 04 The Wasco Shoe Man 1567-02 575.00 30-20 108.40 42-82 areas, which normally produce a- 102-16 20387.79 641.28 138.92 13445*4 438.64 65.1 > 5021.45 22-3 • Ah 1 1011 20 724.25 275.00 4 53 101-26 11-95 1834-31 312 60 39 26 110.92 1071.53 2152-95 1848889 5887-45 187.24 3402.87 K 15208 6405.30 82.5 48.4 60.00 612.54T 3936*7 9604-91 3520 23 101-17 128-14 646-74 41.5 19.2 908.03 1.00 210.00 106.01 9.06 102.62 179 44 MORO, OREGON 1231-72 391-35 426 34 10-57 102-94 6.5 -52 22.84 230 00 946-95 274.81 15.10 ‘ 104.20 INDEPENDENT CASH GROCERY 922.89 287-25 13.59 103.78 218.27 . A Few of our Special« For 732 41 1579-53 235-30 27.18 107-56 177-08 63 15694.71 2840.81 2.40 3699.96 5468.81 175.16 148 72 3558.82 FRIDAY, SATURDAY and MONDAY 69 1 1542 21 42-90 14700 446*3 13.59 103-78 48817 1868-71 809*7 57948 10-lbs 44c, 100-lb sack $4.27 109.66 . 34.78 35-47 10-4 . SUGAR, eure Cane, : 5120 781-85 315.9« 103-36 12.08’ 5.44 43 .....-.. ... . . *. 3-lb tin .52 108*17 25.00 324*0 28.69 107-98 236.20 .14 CATSUP, Yolo Brand, Hoz bottle 12740*1 227-92 4871 92 8107 59 2991.6« 116-27 132-34 2202.91 683 43* 1631*6 < ? 4-05 888 63 147-54 í .25 58.89 116*8 t TUNA FLAJOp.cte^ter.:...... 2 large cans 15-7 11587 1720*1 A 442.35 270.73 27-18 107-56 573.09 4.8 « - , '.i • - i-.44b loaf 7c. 1 12 lb loaf • -09 «92.94 16-61 255.69 402.62 21602 POWDERED SUGAR, bulk-' 4 ibs .26 1547.77 382.07 19 63 M • «8ÍMRI 105-46 101.0« 330*0 122751 304.76 104*0 15.10 ¡Bliss, Vacuum packed tin............... 1-lb tin ,25 173-43 z 79 biw l«3104 1 . 5*0 571.32 21-14 105.88 27643 r L I .- J- ___r• «.A ■ • . i?’ 835.00 4100.48 1243.78 208 82 31*1 1490-17 - h « ; w7i.«o •• 1989.48 21.1* 100.84 302 7.19 ‘ ÚVT.1Í 108287-92 w "J®1 ■ 177.5 382.4 23255.91 3220.04 1150-62 37818-81 13019.59 18482-45 I Luce at Neckline Aid “Caterpillar” Comes to Aid of Snowbound Sheep W®^ CHIDES UPDEGRAFF & PEPPER RECEIPTS 1 * . 3 la H Hi c Ill < w Q Biglow Rufus Emigrant Locust Grove Wasco Kent Webfoot Gorman De Moss Gordon Ridge Erskine Moro Monkland Harmony Fairview Boardman Grass Valley Rutledge Liberty Michigan Wilcox Klondike Rosebush Buckley Dobie Point Totals Tuition Moro, Oregon Meets the 1st and 3rd Thursday evenings of each month. Visiting __ members cordially in- vited to meet with us Hugh Chrisman, W M. r C. V. Belknap, Secy. JOURNAL WALTER A. MAY & SON 1-, 'i! . ■■ “W ................. DISBURSEMENTS « Biglow Rufus Emigrant Locust Grove Wasco Kent Webfoot Gorman De M om Gordon Ridge Erskine Moro Monkland Harmony Fairview Boardman Grass Valley Rutledge Liberty Michigan Wilcox Klondike Rosebush Buckley Dobie Point Total n 35-00 11-66 7435-00 309 61 131*5 7.47 - 37-50 37-50 346.09 151-20 11080.00 5940 00 151 33 60 0« 60 00 22.48 1035.00 1000 4.M 33*0 3-86 f 36.50 4668 1035 00 «2.50 166.58 9307.48 199.49 836 36 00 23.61 1305.00 «0 00 22 02 945 00 66.00 14-28 36 00 173.71 148 50 8730-00 5857 1215-00 30.00 15.47 900 00 35 00 30.00 9.00 , 1500 990 00 25.00 1679 7 50 60.00 18.12 50 00 300 60.00 1502 14 49917.48 1440 15 1252.62 460.25 10.00 9 00 1138.00 752*2 52687 624*5 144.35 116*0 1055 112 60 175.95 163 94 * 83.92 172.25 163.13 416 23 19-15 8-55 61 43 4.42 1000.00 670.26 3293 86 900 00 19.67 972 17" 69*9 237.50 825.00 516.80 900.00 1000 00 23-15 717-76 21 35 810.35 62.92 335 58 22.91 187 62 18.00 178 65 42.80 114.00 1000.00 24.13 90.00 14.25 93.69 98.22 10.00 ’ 7325 624.99 977.61 81.10 103 03 867 34 140.87 52-20 42.80 12 50 * . . 121.27 10.00 5289.81 2890 59 254.14 3000.00 7 40 15-53 7000 394.22 1000.00 66.75 106.70 101.90 80.50 96 00 24.76 172 50 7650 95.35 361 00 8 49 9.02 251 " 1 50 1535 581 05 539 03 «27 8« 489 40 5000 150.00 525 00 1080 00 69.24 80.40 28-00 95 21 127*0 825.00 70.00 2293 63 ’ 400.00 720 00 50.00 1136*3 15677-99 2823.28 13300 726.99 2151-67 16544 70 1567-02 969-77 1495.29 875.00 16082-98 8892.07 607.30 '893.70 15 8-6J j Í * 1222 45 224 939.10 758 11 1368-98 10-22 724.92 15367.61 1069-20 ■08 1709.57 8 89 1479.02 -3.50 770-62 872.49 12882-21 1410-29 4.63 1230.06 3 11 664.24 1467.84 -44 1177.69 101.59' 2670.15 165.55 3831 50 1313 36 30-36 6166.39 97777.53 2000-00 232.12 5.13 655 52 97 87 779.26 750-00 450.00 7182 26 L m if 2 a-g 198.70 3607.16 161-03 J >• 95.95 123-45 816698 3768 75 148 49 196.25 7142-35 160.86 188.01 217.30 11759 164.40 344.70 98.29 89 19 256-25 14907 18029 28854 34 162.56