Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1934)
PAGE J' IWU ÍHE bHERM Ah CUÜNfY JOURNAL,, MORO. OREüUN, hRÎDAY, MARCII 16, 1984 «a Women Patriots Give Flag to Roosevelt Meet* the l«t and 3rd Thursday evenings of each month. VisitioK members cordially in vited to meet with ur Elmer Hansen, W. M C. V. Belknap, Secy. • No. 113 I. O. O. F. Moro, Oregon Meet* every Monday evening in the I.O.O.F hall. Transient and visiting brother* are cordially invited meet with u*. Ralph Brisbine N.G. Joe Truitt, Secretary. »•cca Lodge No. 116 Moro, Oregon Meets 2d and 4th Tuet days of each month. Visiting mem I er* wel come. Gladdis Buch«4tz, N. G- Lila Bull, Secretary. Chris Schults Post No 11 America a Legioa Meets at Legion hall oi> 2nd and 4th Wednesday evenings of each month Gilesf L French, Commander Wily W Knighton, Adjutant ■ 1 . -■■in- . ■ ■ । ■ i ' f^Town Talk . which are probably of importance; high tension as in hard working busi ness or professional men who never or rarely relax; long continued stren uous physical activity or athletics; over eating of protein, rich food; heredity, syphilis and lead poisoning. Observance of the following pro cedures will help prevent tissue de generation. First- Infection of all kinds must bo prevented in ev far as possible- Second. Lead, alcohol, arsenic, and other poisonings must be prevented. Third. The nervous strain of mod ern life must be reduced- Fourth. Immoderate physical ex ercise especially extending over many years must be preventd. Fifth. Any excess in <ating should bo avoided, particularly an excess of protein food- Sixth. Acute diseases, no matter how mild, should have a carefully watched convalescence. Seventh. Disease must be dis covered in the earliest stages by per iodic health examinations; all reme diable defects must be corrected and good hygienic habits established to meet the stress of prolonged life- Women from nil parts of the country, lemlers In patriotic societies, presented President Repsevelt with nu Amer- lenti flag on behalf of the National Woman's 1: lief corps, auxiliary of the Grand Army of the Republic. Shtrman county and unless other so become my salvation, orders are received the work will con- Responsive Reading: Hebrews 10: elude on April 1, with the above num- 23-.5, 32-35, 38, 39. bers working until then All are cordially invited to attend ’L**' i . * , . • •••• the church services and to make use Mrj. Ixigan Gentry was taken to , of the reading room in the rear of the tho hospital Monday morning where church building, which is open daily she underwent an operation. She is 1 where a’.l authorized Christian Science The Reeses had as their guest1 for as well as can he I literature«! may be read, borrowed or the week Mr. Rance Niles of Salem said to be doing purchased expected Mis. T S. Reese and Miary mt at tained Saturday afternoon, with five tables of bridge1, in honor of Miss Lois Rothrock and her niece Louise Newquist of Pendleton, who were w?ek end guests at the Rieese home. an hour or two- “Oh, yes, it does,’’ replied Mr. Dumbly; “I’m very easily pleased.” । ( Cautious Gentleman: “What time do you have to be home girlie?’’ j Girl. “How much money have you got?” Gentleman: “Five hundred dollars.’’ Girl: “Thursday ” Read the ads In the Journal For Sale: First Growth large fir Bill Rader took a truck toad of i Sunday 10 a m. Sunday School) and pine. Deliver F. C. Fenwick 2t hogs to Portland for Homer Belshee Ila. m Fellowship meeting and scrip Corvallis Grange Vote Hood River this week. Some of them brought ture lesson. top price there. Auditor C- H. Logan is working on » For Sales Tax Prayer meeting every Wednesday the county books at the court! house at 2:30 p. m. at the home of R- J. R. J. Ginn, A M Wright and Hom- Ginn. preparing the annual audit. er Belshee were in Portland Monday Come and pray for a revival and Corvallis—By secreJ ballot, Mary’s business trip. on a little the unsaved of your household. 'River Grange meeting at Philomath C. V- Rusik, who is assistant to Every body welcome. voted almost three to one to support H. A. Lindgren in handling tlhe hog (Grass Valley) the Emergency 1 percent! Sales George Hermagin received 800 reduction plan in this state was here Baptist Church ' Tax at the May primaries on the Wednesday to confer with county baby chicks Wednesday morning and > 4» ..... 10 a. m grounds that it will keep schools go is going into the chicken business Church School .... agent Perry Johnston .. 6.30 p m ing and assure prompt tax reduc B Y. P U. ....... for a while at least tions on property which is row carry Mrs. A. H- Barnum was hostess for MORO SCHOOL NOTES ing 80 percent of the state’s tax Mrs Bart Burrell etertnined at a bridge party last Friday night at load. on The Moro girls will meet Rufus the Barnum rome southeast of town farm. The stand for the Sales Tax is in the ¡Mbro floor this Friday night to direct opposition U> the rtcommenda- play the last game of the season. Mrs. A. MacGregor, her daughter Mrs. J. C. McKean entestaned a ( tions of State Gange Master Gih. The fast movng Moro girl’s team large party of friends Tuesday after Margaret and some friends wer« here once more came home victor from ( Portland seed merchant, and reflects noon at her home assisted by Mrs- Monday and Tuesday from Portland a hard fought game at Rufus on Tue- the rapid swing to the Sales Tax visiting at the Knighten nome- Mrs. Hugh Chrisman. esday • The game was a bit more ( among Benton county farmers, as MacGregor is Mrs. Knighter’s moth- rough than usual but was thorough circulation of facts continues to “de- Mr*. George G. Updegraff returned ly enjoyed and fairly refereed High L bunk” tihe hysterical flood of condem- from California last week end after scorers were Lavon Sa yrs with t natio that has l>een used to beclouc the issue. spending the winter with her mother 13 ponte for Moro and Inez Thomp- C. L- Tallman, county assessor, in the so called sunny state. son with 12 for Rufus. Line-up: For estimates the tax will reduce Benton Sayrs. Pnkerton, Amdon. wards: county property taxes by $76,000 or Guards. Fraser, Nahou.'^A Johnson. Wes Fuller was driving to own CHURCH WASCO Substtutes: Thogerson for Sayrs- approximately 29 percent if the ref Saturday morning with a package of 10.00 A. M. erendum against the tax is defeated Church School Thogerson for Amdon kalsomine and plow beam in the back in IMay. 11:00 A. M. Church Worship Prefldent Dobbs of Pacific Univers- mat. He turned to readjust his load Epworth League .. ........... 7:00 p. m. ity Tty will Will speak to VVF the vllvr high school and — and drove off the road, just south of the patrons of the community Wed Infection May Be town. Wes was skinned up a bit, the Community Presbyterian Church nesday March 21 in the High School 1 car top and fenders were bent, glass Limiting Factor Rev. Williams of Portland will be was broken, the package of kalsomine here Sunday morning to preach at Gymnasium. was scattered in a dust over Wes, car the Community church at 11 a m. 'Reporter, to Statesman I think It and ground- The plow beam was the and at 8 p m. in the evening. The In the future when communicable would be interesting for the people only thing unscathed. diseases and cancer will have been girls choir will give some musical se- to know something about the mistak lections in the morning and in the es you have made during your poli eradicated, when accidents will have Dr. Butler, having more teeth to evening the newly organized church been abolished, when poisons will tical carver. I suppose you have made have lost their toxic action and when impair than normal, will be in Moro orchestra will play. mistakes? wars will have ceased, will man live Friday and Saturday of this week tn Statesman—Well, 1 have made some on forever? Or will there still be the addition t» his regular trip Chriatiau ScU«c« mistakes—but it would be the degenerative diseaas to limit human Subject Substance greatest mistake of all to admit it. life? If so. what may the causes be Golden Text: Isaiah 12:2 Behold, Elmer Barree is spending the week and how may they be prevented? No at home because of some aching God is my salvation; I will trust, and 1 ‘‘I’m afraid that my singing doesn t one knows the answer but there is not be afraid, for tho Lord Jehovah appeal to you,” said Miss Crooner, molars that need attention. is my strength and my song; he al- after entertaining young Dumbly for some hope for tho solution of this problem. Degenerative diseases are Phillip Ruggles is another victim the result of tissue degeneration in of appendicitis, having been taken to any organ or system. Arterial degen- the Mid-Columbia hospital Monday eration is the corp monest fundanUNn- after sudden illness. He is doing well tai lesion, resulting in turn in de- according to reports generation of the heart, blood vessels and kidneys. . The number of deaths from degenerative’ diseases has inc- Little Dickie Ovejón was taken to reased in Oregon from 33 percent ot the hospital Friday evening and af the total deaths in 1926 to 45 percent ter a diagnosis by doctors he was op- in 1932. (T Sit id on for appendicitis- He is Almost every i nf ection no matte» getting along very well. how mild is apt to damage tisBue. Typhoid fever, smallpox, scarlet fevleir Mr*. George William* -leceived diphtheria, acute rhumatic fever, word last week that her brother. syphilis, other general and local in John Smith, of Druid, Saskatchewan, fections produce degenerative chan had died suddenly of heart failure ges in the tissues of the body. Poi sons other than those produced by in Word has been received here by fectious diseases are a common cause the Foss family that Mr* Blanche of degeneration. Arteriosclerosis pro Cleek committed suicide in Spokane duces degenerative disease but what recently. In a fit of despondency she produces arteriosclerosis? What mak jumped into the Spokane rivr*. She es the arteries w«r out? If the ar wa* a daughter of Henry Spear who teries of every human being began was engineer on th!« railroad many to show definite degeiwratfive changes at sixty or seventy w« would have an even moe difficult poblem than we CWA is all done or so nearly so at prefient. J. Dnrsle (Foxle) Lloyd, proud fntber of the comedian, Harold Lloyd, la that it cannot be considered a fac The very fact that iu some people tor ui relieving dishreaa in this coun receiving four executive certificate« of appointments signed by Gov. Floyd B. arterial changes are found at forty, ty. Beginning Friday the county Olson, from State Commissioner of Purchase« Carl R. Erickson, who motored forty-five or fifty years gives us from St. Paul. Minn., to represent the governor at the awoarlnR In ceremonies quota will be 12 men and the follow held In the E! Mlrador cactus garden at Palm Springs, Calif. The certificates Rome hope that sonyething can be ing week the quota wrill be but five and badges make Mr. Lloyd sn honorable game warden, highway patrol captain, done in the way of prevention- What men It >« reported that some coun deputy state tourist commissioner and the official liquor tester of the Hate of particular factors in the lives of tiea were able to postpone the cut un Minnesota. these people make them grow old pre til later but such has not been ao in maturely ? Some may be mentioned CHIVIES Harold Lloyd’s Father Is Honored MOISTURE Woods place near Wasco 17.3 was found although 4 feet was the depJh taken, on the Deaton place near Klon dike it was 14.7 at 5 feet, on th» Lemmon land between Klondike and Hay Canyon it was 12 5 at 5 feet, on Clay Belsh’s ranch west of Harmony moisture was 14.8 and on the Henrichs place between Harmony and Moro the test showed 13 4 The average is 13.7. Of cours all means of prognosticat- ing the yield are a sort of a joke- Averages are never maintained, oth erwise they would be a rule instead of an average, but other things being normal, which they never are, we may expect a little better crop Ohan for several years. And in the words of a well known radio chadacte^. “Ain’t that ducky?” COURT Continued from page one. water bill 2.30 Frank E. Bennett, Tax Collec tor Taxes on Gilliam coun ty property 21.52 Zell’s Funeral Home Burial expenses for Wm. Biglow 50 00 Mrs. Alma Lundy Care of Biglow during last illness 50.00 j of The Dalles, was accepte! and ap - Urdon Oil Company Road 85 73 pointaient made. supplies | Claim of Mi s. Alma Lundy of Was Gus Smith Dra;age for 4.00 co for care of William Biglow during road supplies Mrs. C. M. Snider Rent for last illness allowed for $50.00- 600 road machineiy storehouse Claim of Zell’s Funeral Home for tR. H. McKean Rent for balance due for burial of R. C. Eakin 12.00 roadmaster’s office . I in December, 1932, disallowed- - Claim City of Wasco Roadmaster’s Rufus for 1.50 mailed to S. E. Eakin of water bills payment- O’Meara Supply Co. Road 2.64 Claim of Zell’s Funeral Home for supplies burial of William Biglow of Wasco Pac. Tel X Tel Company 8.45 allowed anl ordered paid claim for Road master’s telephone $50.00. Standard Oib Company Road 49.35 supplì?« County Clerk instructed to issue Milage and Hai R White warrant in favor of Gilliam County 22.45 and expènses Tax collector for taxes due on prop Homer S. Wall Rent of in- 17.50 erty in Gilliam County belonging to Strumenta Sherman County, Oregon Amount National Hospital Assoc Road of taxes $21.52. 16.96 employe^ contributions Treasurer’s balance for month of State Indus. Acc. Comm Road 22.86 February, 1934, accepted- employee^ contributions Shell Oil Company Road ' Report of Homer S. Wall, County 23 32 Surveyor, on Resolution to close a supples Tum-a-lum Lunmber Co. (GV) certain portion of County 'Road in 6.75 Road District No. 1. Report acrepted Road supplies Farmers Elevator & Supply and time of hearing set for May 2nd, 116 1934, at the County Courtroom in Co. Road supplies Wasco Pharmacy Supplies Moro, Oregon. Notices were ordered 1.35 posted- for roadmaster’s office 3.50 Geo. A Potter 'Road supplies Application of John Hood Hender Jdhn H. Wilt '& Co. Road son of Rufus, Oregon, for old-age 620 supplies 15.00 pension allowed at $ 10.00 per month. S. P Boice Road supplies Road Re: In the Matter of Dog License Gardner -Denver Co- 21.28 collection, pursuant to Section 20- supplies 6.82 2317, Oregon Code, 1930, as amend Road laborer Mark Henkle 15 00 ed. City of iMoro authorized to col Road laborer Purl Pierson County Court Proceedings for Term lect licenses according to said section as follows, for each male or spayed of March 7th, 1934. bitch $2.00: for each male dog $3.00 Recommendations for applications j of Liquor Licenses by Ida Carlisle I of Millers, Oregon, and Herbert H. I Willard of Biggs, Oregon, were pass ed by the County Court- The fee of $5.00 per recommendation was char DENTIST ged. to be turned into the General Fund bf Sheiman County. HOME OFFICE, WASCO Bid and application as auditor for ! 1934 by Charles R Ix>gan, Auditor, Dr. J. A. BUTLER In Moro the First Week in Each Month ZELLS FUNERAL HOME ----- AND ----- r AMBULANCE SERVICE Phone 345 The Dalles, Dre GRASS VALLEY PII a R ma CY ---- or----- When Your Shoesneed Repair, send them to WERNMARK’S GOOD SHOE REPAIRING 204 Second St. THE DALLES Phone 222 California Western States Life Insurance Co. Life - Accident -- Health - Annuities Claims Allowed Against General Fund for CWA (Road) Work- W. F. Rader Hauling sand and gravel - ' 264.70 A. R. Kessinger iRoad Laborer 13.27 Louis Schadewitz road laborer 28.23 COMPLETE COVERAGE — Get your insurance from a W. G- Armsworthy Road Sherman County man that understands your needs. supplies 168.63 Jim Howell Wasco, Oregon Tum-a-lum Lumlier Co., Road supplies 32998 Leave word at Journal Office H. B. Belshee Teams for 27.00 road work ipmmmmmmnmntnmttttnninxntHitnininttJtnnmnttttnttttttnnxttttittnutn Sherman J- Frank Supplies 254.73 _ for road work A. A. Dunlap Supervising CWA Work 36 00 438 Wm- Johnson i road laborer Harold Howell road laborer 14.30 7.80 road laborer Ernest Smith IT'Costs So Little To Own A Claims Allowed Road Fund NEW EASY WASHER Against County Hal Whte Acting Road mas 133.00 ter Lewis Hastings road laborer 7985 56.50 W. C. Weld road laborer 4.30 M- F. Duncan road laborer Geo. Fox road laborer 8.70 40.00 Andy Shearer road laborer C. A. Bargenholt road laborer 15.00 37.00 E. L. Weld rx>ad laborer 4.30 L. R. Walsh road laborer Teams for H. H. Bracket 15.00 road work 8-25 Monte Lundy road Laborer 7.60 A. C. Zehner road Laborer 8 80 road laborer Jas. Burton Road work Bruce Millard 46.20 and teams Pac. Power & Light Co., 1 25 Roadmaster’s office lights Howaxx^JCboper Corporation 41.38 Road supplies Feenaughty Machinery Com. Feb. acct- and balance due 506.72 M v UCI $1 1« The EASY is sturdily built and made of the finest material by a company who has been the leader for fifty-eight years. Millions of Easy Wa shers are in use -- and in every corner'of the country. iaiy And for homes without have the Electricity Easy with the finest Four Cycle Gasoline Motor ob tainable. This motor is fool proof — built like your auto mobile motor — and starts when you want it to months of Atlantic Monthly MAKE the moat of your reading hours. 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