Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 20, 1934)
THE SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL, MORO, OREGON, FRIDAY, JULY M, 1934 A ...... : Gherman Counfg journal SHERMAN COUNTY OBSERVER, Established Nov. 2, 1888 GRASS VALLEY JOURNAL, Established Oct. 14, 1897 CONSOLIDATED, MARCH 6. 1931 WASCO NEWS-ENTERPRISE, Established 1891 ___________ CONSOLIDAI EEL MARCH 4. 1932 PAGE THREE ----------------- « J- 1?. Norton home ware ML,- Freda and Kinnie Culp, Antoine - te and Harva Wood, Henriet ’ i Muirhead and Mr. and Mrs-Lou i. Powell, the occasion being Alt a Norton’s and Kennie Culp’« birth 1 cay anniversary«. | John Decker was painfully bu . Just a Little Canine Harmony, Folks Grass Valley P. N- Lemmon of Albany was here Tuesday to find out about his crops in this county and to transact other business. MEMB c R ned Tuesday while removing th • Tom Garrett andfamily were in xad’ator cap fiom the engine < Bend Sunday because of the ill- the combine- Mrs- Decker im nesa of Charley Garrett who is mediately took him to Grass Va’- in a hospital there- Published Every Friday at Moro, Oregon, By ley wfcere Dr- Poley dressed th • ♦ GILES L. FRENCH- ~ Managing Editor Mr. and Mrs. George Wilcox bums and pronounced them no’ drove to Newberg Sunday to .\erious _ Entered as second-class matter at the PostofTica, at Moro, Oregon, have the doctors took over Jun under Act of Congress of March 3, 1879- ior again. They returned th? same Ray Blak:. of Grass Valley was at Kent Friday taking sam day- SUBSCRIPTION RATES—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE. pies of the new wheat. Mrs- J. B-- Burton enteitatri One Year .............................................. $1 50 ed Thursday evening of last Wheatland R 'hckaK lod^e ■ N week for a group of friends- .83 and I O O F lodge No. 18 of Kent went to Arvtelope Sat JULY 20, 1934 A daughter was born to^Mr urday< July- 14 where they he!' and iMrs- Gaylord Davie« Satur- joint installation SUÍPIVT aK Left — ’ I-oiks. I ’ m going to treat you to a bit of real musk. Don ’ t you know me? I ’ m TufTy, a Welsh Mr- ¿ay July 14 in Portland. dancing was enjoyed later in th terrier, and 1 live In Chicago. ” Center — “ Just half a minute and I ’ ll he tuned up. ” Right — “ Owoo-o-o. How LET ’ ♦ EM STRIKE Davie« is a teacher here- * ** ' do you like that call of the wild? What, no applause! I’m doggone chagrined. I guess my master Is right. I evening. Every school boy remembers the stern edict of Cap Mir. and Willis Brittan have can’t sing worth a dog biscuit Well, I tried my best So long. See you at the show.” Mr Del? Parks of California i moved in to town as Willis is em- tain John Smith, the leader of the Jamestown settlers, to the ployed visiting at the home of his niec' in the warehouse again effect that those who did not work should not eat That this year. Mrs- G L Barnett r HEAD OF X BIC JOT ainst 170,000.000 bushels, last sea ported in coastal provinces of economic rule might well be recalled by labor leaders of the Mrs- Art Bibby returned Monday Mrs Belie Hogue and daugZ-tc son and soft winter at 153,000,000 China- Japan however reports a present day. from Maupin where she had as compared with 147,000,000 in record wheat crop totaling about Gertrude and son Lyle went to Dufur Wednesday and spent tlh> In the city of San Francisco where a general strike is a been visiting relatives for a few 1933. A crop of only 57,000.000 43,000,000 bushels. days- day with Mr and. Mrs. Eime bushels or hard red spring was in reality and in the city of Portland where a general strike is Swett- I' I prospeçt and less than 7,000,000 left Miss Marguerite Morrison at this time contemplated the great majority of the people of durum compared’ with 104.000 Tuesday for Arlington fbr a J. L- Davjs was a business vis are laborers of one kind or another Suppose they all strike short visit with her farther be 000 and .*7,0004)00 búhete res itor at Moio Saturday afternoon and the ordinary jobs of distributing ard preparing bread, fore returning to Kelso. pectively last season- White Lyle V Hogue., left Friday fc wheat production was estimàteld his home at Oakland after visit - butter, bacon, gasoline, gum, cigar» ttes and face, powder — KENT - Miss Gene-vive Beardsley left at 63,000.000 bushels against 89, Mr- and Mrs. Max Pluemke had ing his mother and sister her. to mention only a few of the things most essential to city for The Dalles this week after 000,(100 bushels a yearago. Farm as d¡nner quests Sunday Mr and for the past two.weeks- life — cease to be preformed. Who is hurt first? and a visit with Grass Valley friends stocks of old wheat July 1, tot- Mrs. Grover Young and children | Jess Beardsley was up one day Edna Lyons is assisting Mr a led ouly 60,000,000’ bushels again worst? while he recovers from his ap- Mr. and -M.s- Will Patterson < Gari Schadewitz with her harve^i st 82-000,000 bushels im 1933 and of Wasco were guests Monday of The baker on strike can quarrel wiih no one but him- pendicitis operation. housework during the season market stocks 81,000,000 bushels Mrs. Belle and Gertrude Hogue self if he finds his children without bread; the striking but was Miss Mary Alice Morrison J B Adam” of Moro was • compared with 124,000,000 bush Sunday dinner guest” at the business caller at Kent Frida. cher will be one of the first to fret about the absence of here with her sirter, Mr. George els Julj' 1, a year ago- Data on morning- stocks in country elevators and meat and the trucker’s car will be as useless without gasoline Wilcox for a few day last week- country warehouse. ” and mills are Mr. Pauline Wilcox was; hos J- U- Leonard of Hood Rive- as will the capitalists. A majority of the inconveniences will not yet available but indications tess to the bridge club Wednes was at Kent Friday selling ap- fall to those who are striking — to the workers themselves. day afternoon at her home here- are that t^c total carryover of pies old wheat would be around 100 The hated capitalist may be sunning himself on the peace- Matt Simon and family drove 000,000 bushels below that of a . ful shores of southern France anyway, if he be cne of the to Portland Saturday returning year ago-- larger sort of capitalist. If he be a little business owner he Sunday. Mrs. B- F- Strange, mot Foreign wheat prospects show- is probably in worse financial straits than are the workers her of Mrs. Simon returned with ! ed little change during the week AMBULANCE. SEKViCE and daughter Agnes remain Good local showers arrested crop and his business may be wiped out leaving some men perm them ed in the city- ;<»r i <;’r1 temration in some aroa% but 301,‘a E. Second St- Phone 345 The Dalles, Ore anently out of employment. The Dalles, Ore. Tom Garrettt has purchased h ----- or----- in general are drouth continued The comparative security of the farmer in these period new car instead of;, having the ”rrelievea’ and outums well under GRASS VALLEY PHARMACY PHONE 211 W ic industrial disturbances is most comfprting and this espe wrecked one repaired for his fur- Phone 222 ¡on those of last year are indicated- OPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN In Canada the condition of spring cially applies to the wheat farmer. If the striking city folks tlher use- wheat July 1 was officially pla the cted to turn Imporla] valley Arnold Sharp has bought don’t want his wheat — very well. Every farmer knows was into a nioCi rn "Garden of Edon,” ced at 82 percent and winter at akery and market where he I: that the most stubborn calf will bend his neck to the buck formerly employed in Olympia, 45 percent of average. Basted on be under construction soon. the intended acreage of spring et when he gets hungry enough Meantime the wheat Wash, according to reports com- We can supply your wheat anr*’ the offical estimate of will keep. True, the farmer can’t sell it, but it isn’t worth ing here this week- winter wheat remaining .for har Crup Forcasting much anyway, less than the cost of production. And if Mrs- Orlow Martin of Moro vest, those prospective yields in turned home'Sunday with her inr- the farmer can’t sell it the city man can’t eat it. dicated an outturn of 332,000, Smallest In 40 Years the f anl son- She was confin ’ d at 000, bushels. Trade agencies how The farmer may be short of some things, of course He Holmes residence- ever have estimated the Canadian Economically may run out of coffee and sugar, for instance, and most The release of the official crop crop of 350,000,000 bushels- Dry W-. H. McNeil, mail carrier of assuredly he will be out of gasoline. The first two are rath The Dalles, stopped here briefly repor! forecasting the smallest weatlVier is again causing appre er important to most of us, certainly. As for gasoline, we Monday while on his way to Eu United Stateswheat crop in over hension in Manitoba, Saskatch forty years with a total of on ewan and British Columbia, while have enough to finish the harvest with. Besides this coun gene on his vacation- ly 484,000,000 butshels was the in northern Alberta moisture Edison Sutherland is now em- outstanding feature in the dom supplies ranged from ample to ex try was farmed for hundreds of years before gasoline was * ’ Trade At mar- ployed in the Fraley meat heard of or needed. Grandpa was fifty before he ever estic wheat situation- The condi cessive- Drought continued over ket in Maupin- tion of spring wheat Ju’4y 1, was a large part of Europe^ pairtic- smelled the stuff and a hale and hearty man he was, too the lowest on record for that date ularily in northwestern countries, It might be aq excellent thing to have a general strike Quality and indicated a crop of only 89, the lower Danube and parts of IN MEMORIAM often _ say once a year — perhaps some day after the pro Store Russia- Serious damage is threa- 400.000 bushels. Winter wheat production was estimated at slight ; tened to 'Rushan spring wheat- from per number of new deals we can arrange it. Then city Walter O- Smith passed ly over 394,000,000 bushels- The Oriental countries are also siuff- dwellers can have an annual demoi straticn of the precan this life on June 25th, 1934- gone hard winter wheat harvest was ering from extreme heat and con- The light of his life has ousness of their daily existence. They might learn of the out, his ashes are strewn on the placed at 204,000,000 bushels ag- sidcrable crop deterioration is re- long string of apparently necessary moves that must be waters of the river which flows m made to bring food to crowded humans cooped in cities; they past his boyhood home- All that might even take some steps to reduce the number of those was mortal is gone, but immortal is the memory of his good deeds steps and thus cut down the cost of distribution by simplify and noble heart- He has gone to ing the system; they might find how far they have gone “the land where the rainbow never from nature’s font of life: the soil, and realize their danger fades” and where we hope to meet him when our final call has come if they choose to fight among themselves. From a loved one ——— —..W . . — , —— - -- -- -, Kent News % ZELL’S FUNERAL HOME Dr.F.A. Perkins Harvest Grocery Needs Best of Quality, Best Price H. Zeigler’s Grass Valley : : Oregon Let ’em strike. Let the tailors strike until it is popular to wear wrinkled pants, let the bakers strike until every girl has learned to bake bread, let the dock workers strike until cargo carrying ships cease to bring in their stores, let the truckers strike until their families are out of necessities, let the clothing workers strike until everyone is out of raiment Who is going to be hurt? The owners and opera tors have lost some business and some profit, but the work ers have lost things: food, shelter, luxuries because no one produced them The law doesn’t work so simply now as it did in the days of the redoubtable John Smith but it still works You cari't have bread without making it. --- O---- Perhaps that story about the birth of sextuplets in Ru- mania was started by a proud father. ---- O---- . JULY STATION RESULTS (Continued from page one) made between 17 and 20 bushels which is low for that variety- Win ter sown Fedefrtaton had a par ticular! ly fortunate year ¿Ue to Jhe warm winter that made it possible for a good stand to come through tjo spiring^ This is| not exceptional but it often suffers from cold weather whether enk nely frozen out or not- The above yields arte for winter wheats only- SUN v MON 2 1 Us: "Boss, would yu give us a dime fer a sandwich?” Crone: "Let’s see the sandwich.” --------- O--------- : ’ It looks like the president may have to row his own boat when he comes up to Bonneville. 9 15 22 ' 16 23 30 29 North Dakota with two governors should divide with some states that practically have none. The strike enters a new period when the police begin arrest the reds 8 WED 3 IO 17 24 31 11 18 52 THU 5 12 19 26 FRI 6 13 20 SAT 7 14 21 27 28 V t lt indites you \ to the all Oregon e/xc. i OREGON TRAIL 1» -A. <2 12 X N T CAiT Information About the County Schools Roadsand Crops. News About the People You Know « 0 J « pluA I-PIONEDI PAftADE. k PARADE/PaOSWi k-v MANY OTHER,... Let us hope that that feared European war stays then this time if it comes to earth at all. TUE kTHRILLING EVENT/... i The Oregon Journal has a favorite’ edit- rial head “Brains qr Bullets” under which the editors write of strik< questions. Realize tl at at least the contesting parties have bullets “Children use the fist until they are of age to use the brain” said some psychologist who might have been th» man who said that adults’ mental age was about 12 years. 1 » Write Ore. Trail Hdqta. r for Rea. Seats at SI.65 and $1.10 Tax Inc. EUGENE JULY2¿?Z?6 X SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL i .• I