Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1933)
ma »Ü1MM4N vuuNtv ioummau momoi umsuün , »« mv , nut u, m ITT—............ SI A berta will b4 serious Y joi V. N o mor«' flirting. no mort^ attempting to work her wiles on yon to see jfou squirm ar* xiHiatp. her a Uh a sense of her S4hool picnic. Several from Moro I 88ERMAN COUNTY OBSERVER, Established Nov. 2, 1888 GRASS VALLEY JOURNAL, Established Oct. 14. 1897 . VONROUDATED, MARCH 8, 1981 I * WASCO NE WB-ENTERPRISE Established 1891 CONSOLIDATED MARCH 4. 1982. [ Graw Valley and Grass Valley also attended. N«Ili« Wilson is spending this week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R J. Bob Madaris and family vMtod Harbin near Grass Valley.. here last wwk with relative and Theo. Justest n of Portland is visit frbnda. They are living at Longview. ing at the home of his parents, Mr. Miss Sylvan* Edmonds and mother and Mrs. Fred Justesen. left for Seattle tHis week, but ex Mr. and Mn. Walter Wilson spent Managing Editor pect to return to Portland soon. GILES L. FRENCH Saturday evening and Sunday at the Paul Muller and Willis BriUian home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lyons. were here from Tygh Valky Tues Mr. and Mrs Guy Walton spent day selling «little wood. last week visiting in The Dalles re Mi«. Vern McGowan returned from turning honft'o Sunday afternoon. Entered a« «eeoad-claM matter at th« ¿oatomoa. at Moro, Oregon, under Act of the hospital Sunday with her small Congress of March 8, 1879. * daughter and to staying at the home of her parents, ^r. and Mrs. Chas SUBSCRIPTION RATES—PAYABLE I» ADVANCE. Lemley. Continued from page one. ’ On« Year................................................................................................................ Mrs. Charles Ruggles is at the Six Months.................... .............................. V*. . ............. -......... “ * • • 1 W Holmes home, lying tn after the birth wheat or $9000 for tho throe years- | Any figures on the outcome of the of a baby daughter the 7th of this scheme are of courso merely estimates month -*** FRIDAY, JULY 14,1931, for no one knows what the price will _ IfrsJPauline Wilcox and Mrs. Erma be or what the ' yield may be for 0^ spent afew flays in Portland any one of the three years- Also THE ALLOTMENT PLAN this week shopping and visiting. th« payment nrom the government Published Every Friday at Moro. Oregon. By « MEEime Stavice- power over you. JBheni begin to study you then, to appA?dnte the fact that you have «jue lilies she mt nit respect; : he’ll feel grateful to you, but owing lo the fa<-t that she secured your loan the obligation will be more mine than liens. N«» love. Business. Ti>en love will hob up of its own accord/' Glenn llaikett looked genuinely dis tressed. Crooked Bill rambled on: "1 want RolnTta to go to Texas to look after that estate. She has a Jolt com ing to her when she gets there, and i m the little boy that knows it. Twen ty five years ago I was in the cattle business myself, In Las Cruces coun ty, Texas. I owned the Rancho Ver dugo an«) sold out to a chap name«! Bill Hobart. 1 know this Hlguenes l’family. 1 don't" know Don Jaim« • ; Miguel Hlguenes, but I did know his father, and a grand piece of work' he “ was. Spanish with a broad streak of Irish or Irish with a broad ¿treat, of j Spanish, I forget which. I remember ; the old man had an Infant son named Jaime, so this chap xtho killed Tom Antrim must be that boy.” "Hlguenes says a man named Jim Higgins killed Antrim. Roberta told me over, the telephone^” To be continued “I’m not her man.” Thpn oyt with “You follow my lead und you will be. Ypu’ve given her one li< kim and now mid the family fortune.’^. Tm giving her another, “The (dan.’’ Glen Hackett dpn!:imJ« *K she's figuring ways and nmiins of •voiding all her old friends. Slo.’ll i Crooked Bill’s old eyes fairly popped never place herself In the ]>os:tio» of being pitied by her set, of bein« pat j with delight ut the part he w. plny- ronized, of being the ‘ recipient of . tn^* 'Wlu h 1 1^4 Jumped Into the favors «he can't repay.- She knows market, Glonn. 1 sold twenty-li e hun The explanation given here yesterday of the new plan for may be changed. her set—knows that money is king, dred of a certain stock short. Then the Ait Bibby has returned to Grass ■tock started up grade, so I sold out, farm relief undoubtedly gave farmers a clearer idea of what may Valley to remain for an indefinite I As the purpose of the plan is to ' and that those who cannot hnl<1 their took my loss and—immediately bought place in tbe riice must fall hehlnd period having- stopped the selling raise th* price of wheat to a figure double the amount 1 had sold, and and be forgotten. My boy. a change that 5rtll pegmit the farmer to buy of fortune is going to make that girl spread It as thin as ( could oh mar- game. of the farmers during the continuance of the piin for reduction of Talkative Lady: A big man like Young Gordon Cochran is here as much as be could in the 1910-14 do some solid’, constructive ihiiddng.” period the payment may vary. In “ StHI I do not quite fodow you." , you might be better occupied than in acreages and surpluses. , to ( from Portland to spend a part of the Well. “ I ’ m not surprised. Whrcr Roberta case the price of wheat goes so high I cruelly catching little fish. Its From present appearances it seems that there will be few far summer on his uncle Eben’s farm. fell that the plan is not in force the is concerned you do not thin” very 'me 1 Angler; Perhaps you’re right. But mers tn the eounty who can profitably remain out of the new L. 8. Logan, a nephew of Gus Sm farmer will be receiving a fair price clearly. Now, listen to me. my boy to «Io is t<» ¡•ell five thousand shares if this fish had kept his mouth shut Roberta’s going dowu to Texas to look or vveii ten thousniul. You’ll pul up set-up. There may be some who have fed so much of their past ith, is here from Oakland. Cal., for any way J after her interests. She didn’t want the margin for me. Assure me there ho wouldn’t be here. three year crops that their quota would be too small for profitable his first look at the wheat country Whether of dot the government can to go if she could avoid It. Imi notv 1 h no jlsk, that the stock will drop a Patronize Journal Advertisers. of Oregon. He seems to like it. or will change the payment during she’s beginning to think it is bor luty hundriM) points within sixty days. cooperation with the government, but for those whose major in to go. She must be on the |oh to You can cite any number of stocks Alva Stone and son drove to Um*^ the year or whether the farmer will protect every dollar com ins to her ; come is from wheat the plan will be helpful. tilla county Friday for a few days be required to maintain the same rate from Tom Antrim’s estale. She's the ; that have droppe«! that much—some of them In a week. Here is a list to re It has been announced that $356,000 will come to Sherman business trip to his former home. of acreage réduction is not definitely Little Mother now. Got to take rare । fresh ypwr memory: Remind me that of jkoor . Uncl*.-BHl Lath**», or else I George W dcox *nd Art Bibby drove known so far. .Rulings, on .many for a while «luring the post war panic county in case alt wheat growers join and this sum is approximate to Portland Friday returning Satur questions must still come from Wash poor old Uncle tilII will never raise Liberty bonds sold away below par. ly half of the entire income for some of the poorer years we have ington. Some of them depend on the his bead again. I’m going id give you Advise me to make the gamble and day aftapoon- • been living through. The insurance feature of the plan will result of the wheat conference now a chance to be a hero, to put llobeHa assure me 1 will not be calle«! upoir ‘ R. A. Stow and wife left Sunday being held in London and some of under obligation to you. ’joniglit, at fo* any more margin, that the price appeal to all who have suffered ffom poor crops. morning for McMinnville to attend of my stock I kis now reached a point i Bsth National theip are yet to be decided by the dinner, this sad story I’ve just told The fact that the government expects to give payments for the funeral of Mr. Stew's mother secretary of agriculture and the ad- you Is going lo come out. You re go that Is unhealthy, wildly speculative, not backed up by assets. Pretty soon and State three years as compensation for two years of acreage reduction I | who passed away at her home late । ininistrators of the adjustment plan- ing to suspect something and start It will begin to slide, and when It has probing me—and when you discover Answering a question regarding thé all is over youTe going t«> suggest slid far enough all I have to do Is makes the plan profitable to practically everyone One must ■ell out my line, clean up and be back 5^ Fresh Vegetables at Low Prices. horse and tractor problem the speak saving me.” where I started, less the sums Lowe figure crops and prices beyond the range of probability Jo show Earl Olds. 1 “How?" - ers explained that a mans allotment Crooked* BUI rubbed hls .hamls to you. Point out that by this method greater anticipated income through remaining outside the allot Guy Vintin a nd family are here j will be based on the amount of wheat gether ami smiled a coyote smile. of .proce'hire I cun, at least, get back ment venture than may be had by joining in the attempt to reduce from Willamina to visit with rela I he actually threshed. Crops used for "YouTe going to tell me that this rise a million dollars, but -Insist that when I do you must have my solemn word “ the surplus. At this date it seems that the farmer must embrace tives for a few weeks and maybe take hay will have no bearing on the sit is, undoubtedly, one of the greatest of honor never, never, never to do any uation any more than if the hay was bull nmvements ever qpted In the mar more Stock gambling.” every straw the government throws his way or make a definite in the harvest. ~ alfalfa or some other crop. The grain ket, but that from sources ofdirforma- “How will you receive this philan ^LltCfiON L. R. French and wife drove to I threshed, regardless of how it was tlon you cannot, in honor, divulge, stand against all forms of federal relief. We think that a large Portland Sunday expecting to remain thropic offer, Mr. Latham?” you happen to know that the bears I used thereafter, will be the basis- “I shall be overcome again at this . JULY 21st majority of the farmers will cooperate with the administration's a few days comparing the bustle and aren't licked, that they have the bulls * However, it was explained, the pur in a light corner and that «ecuritiea •xhibltldn of your friendship and gen- 1 haste of the metropolis to that of eroilty, but I shall refuse to borrow "new deal” pose of the plan is to reduce the are due to crash. Then you rawhide money from you on my worthless note Grass Valley. • amount of human food. If the ground " me for not camlug. to you with my —and 1’11 give Roberta another mean It must be remembered that although the price for wheat is * Fred Cox and family drove to was used to raise crops that were to troubles when the going got slippery. ing look. Thon, do you know wlrat much higher than it has been for several years the increase is due Hood iRiver Sunday. Ellen remained be fed to stock or otherwise used for You tell me I was a tarnation oh! she'll dtf?" As Follows to the fact that the 1933 crop will be far below normal. There is _ in the apple city to visit with her food, the plan would fail and no fool for pot doing so;, that If I could _______________ T _ - only have held on a little bit longer “She'll get you off in a corner, pri still a surplus of wheat in the United States that will not be entire- cou.in, Charlotte, now Mrs. Edw*rd benefits would be derived from it. The the tide would have turned and that vately, and.make you figure out for crops a _ farmer will not be permitted you would have been delighted to have ly wiped out by the low crop of this year Fanners, therefore, Miller. her Just how much monby win be re to grow will be ■ — specifically enumerat- loane(] me a million to carry mo over. quired to margin five thousand shares. w o * - have a temporary advantage. No one can authentically prophesy Florin Coon appear» to h*v® * yen Then she'll ask you, secretly, to make ed in the contract it was said- Dif- Sabe that?” “Yes, sir. Then what?" ferent groups of producers are con the deal In her name, and. accept an what the crop will be next year, but it will certainly be larger than c*t for a couple of •‘Why, I’ll be overcome with emo stantly petitioning the government tu tion and say: ’Glenn, you ought to assignment of her interest in Torn the one raised for 1933 and the price will be lower unless the gov- or untu it became too famii- have their particular crop protected know I’d be the last man In the world Antrim’s estate at something less than ernment’s acreage reduction plan meets with the approval of a tar with n.££r;» It would bring at a sacrifice sale, as and i« may be that the alternativo to suggest a Jean from you, of all security for the money you will put men — under the circumstances. ’ And up for margin. She will Insist on this large part of the farmers. hasaspraddly legged spedman pen- crops will be rather limited. So far, barley and oat* are still permissable I’ll give Bobby a look that will be— and reluctantly you let her have her It may be regarded as certain that the plan, being devised for ned in the rear Of hi* barbershop. well, significant. She’ll be grateful to and crops for 1934.* me for not having placed her in posi an entire nation, will not satisfy all the demands of any one small j w. Shepard and wife returned “ You two will now have a delight Briefly the contract will be one in tion of having to be grateful to you V OTE FOR ful secret together. You will have a area. There will be some things about it that will work a hard- from Portland Tueeday eveni^ which the farmer agrees to reduce j for Iieil ,llls me. iUV. But ----- --------- at the same — time community interest—my abject, hope helping ship on farmers in some sections, but the advantages that may be I _____ acreage to th* percentage asked by ghe.n be grateful to you for suggest- less self. While this mythical deal is (not to bo over 20 mg It. Well. I'll tell you If. too Into on, not a word of love to Roberta. gained from it if it works as anticipated outweigh the disadvan-1 . • ' 1 the government *\ and .nJ to Are, ,t and There must be no sentiment in this percent) to take take care care of of his ms land, i , । । now, that the fat s In (hat the R Un business, or you’ll spoil everything. Who and to ero” only those crops allowed | r "You J prance ■---------- 11 tages in most cases. up and down ilio the <1 «lining ’’Well, In the fulness of time when by the administrator- The government j I room, thinking hard. Act like a the market breaks—as you and I know The simple declaration of purpose of the plan • is to raise the I -• • “Personally Favor the agrees to pay to the farmers that j । movie actor. Show Roberta, viho will Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Wil«n and part of a processing tax not used for be watching you fascinated, that In an blamedwell it will—you make the myth farm price of wheat to a profitable level and no farmer will quanel 1 ical clean up, hand me back the deed to . Adoption of the emergency nobody nee«! look b«»yond Hillcrest ami a fake check for my win with the justice of that aim. And all should cooperate in an at-1 daughters Clarice and Mrs. Dick administration-expenses, to be deriv you. Prove to her you are a strong nings—or rather, let Roberta do It, Reckmann attended the funeral of ed from a tax on the wheat milled Article of Amendment” man—a quick-thinking, bold, adven so she'll feel that the credit for the tempt to make the aim true. Sidney Wisner of Rufus which was in the United States. The size of tho turous, brave fellow, but be careful to coup Is all hers—remind me of my held in The Dallea Wednesday after tax may be « hanged ; the crops to be -o word of honor to quit stock gambling, | grown on th« ground taken out of county will be a unit. The appointed shake hands all around, bid Roberta a "Pussyfoot” Johnson has stated that his speeches in the north- rtaAam- । wheat production may be changed ; secretary will remain for a short fomcwjiat suppressed good-by and an- »' h.lio.'i Again1 : The west did no good From local reports of his talk we • believe nis in an Automobile ¿iituth/n Amen«’ .'nt still the farmer will receive the bene pediod after which he may be sup- I nounce you are off for a trip around planted by a man elected by the coun- th e WO rld, to be gone a year. And at fit of the processing tax and will get observations to be correct. Furthermore, unless his speeches are Juiy 4 are reported recover Cru t’,ut moment, old son, If you play your a price for his wheat that is nearer tv board- better than his hearers here thought they were, they will do no ¡ng. Counties will have an allotment cards with the skill and Judgment igue Fur <>l The parity than without it. That is the »«. u- k thair five which a lawyer of your provvd ability • <Mrs. Id* Davis, and daughter Eighteenth Amendment given them whjph equals their five Robertft will go with you or 1 good in the future, Pauline Clarice Wilson, Luriine plan- year average production. Farmer s insane asylum.” Women’s Organization For •• -------- o-------- Within a few weeks a man will be Smith, Marguerite Mitchell, and Ha quotas will be based on their three । not so certain your plan will । National Prohibition Reform appointed to supervise Sherman coun Wheat $1 15 in Chicago; 75c here. Sounds pretty good sel Decker spent Thursday at the ty in this work. Soon thereafter a year average production. Sherman wor|( out ns perfectly as you appear I (Paid adv. by Cameron Squires, home of Mr. and Mrs. W. O Smith. county’s quota is 2,036 695 bushels to think, Mr. Latham," Hackett re- I H04 W.kox Bldg Portland, Ore.) compared to thirty cents. A small wheat crop in 1893 is sup' series of community meetings will be which it may receive 1356,000 if plied doubtfully. 1 Miss Winifred Vogel who spent tho on 7 I ‘‘Of course it will, "by not? Ro- | posed to have been the beginning of the end of the depression of past two weeks visiting in Kent at held in each community of the coun all of the farmers join- ty. At these meetings delegates will The men from the extension sen’- ~ the nineties. It can happen again. the J. R. Dellinger home returned to be elected to form a county wheat ice were not engaged in signing con- her home In The Dalles Tuesday. production control association- This tracts, they ^ill not be out until Matthes left Sunday mom board will elect a president and a vice The government may be about to dam the Columbia, v e ing Velma for Portland where she will at-1 president and a board of three men August 15. They were merely ex- venture the statement that the paralleling railroads have been tend business college during the sum- I who will be the county board that plainii I: the plan and acquainting tho farmers with the provisions of it. mer months. ' I . AJ actually makes the allotments. Each doing that for years. TO i-iitaox Kent News m ------0------ food " •Mir. and Mrs. W. G. Helyer and family returned home Wednesday "Students get kick from Swimming lesson”, is a headline. evo^ng after having spent the past two weeks visiting with relatives in They do say you get out of anything just what you put into it. the WUamette valley. They were ac -------- o-------- companied here by Mrs. Leroy Dan One thing the new deal might beneficially i bring is a stop to iels and son Cecil who will visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. C- Hel kidnapping . J* . —O-------- yer. * •”*” - . * ' 1 ~ ’ »•-. .. /. ■<.. .-------- o-------- Kent Grange No. 688 held its regu Organizers of nude colonies these days may be suspected of lar meeting Saturday evening July 8 with about twenty five members being in the employ of the cold cream companies present. During the lecture hour Eu gene Mann played two cornet solos- -------- O-------- At least the economic conference is showing what the nations The next meeting will be held Sat- ur^ay evening August 26» think about a number of things -------- o-------- Back in the dim distant past a president was elected on this platform; more business in government, less government in business. - Six girls of the Intermediate grades sang a song “In My Heart There Rings a Melody’* at Sunday School Sunday. After Sunday school a num ber of the church folks motored to Grass Valley and held a Sunday | VOTE GROCERIES 317 A. complete stock of all staple gxoc T - ies always on hand. Clothing for all the family. Eve thing staple and guaranteed eati«factor y Reliability is our watchword H. Zeigler’s Grass Valley : : Oregon ON JULY 21 PROTECT YOUR POCKETBOOK FOOD-TAX LEAGUE