THE KHERWAN COUNTY JOURNAL, MORO, OREGON
rACB TWO
Legion Dance, tonight.
Rareka Ixxige No« 1- H A-F. & A.M.
John Foss is driving a shiny new
M >ro, Oregon
Meets
r»
Meets the
une 1st
ibi and 3rd
mu Studebaker, an up to the minute
Thursday evenings of model.
each month. Visiting
Mrs. Hugh McIntyre returned to
member® cordially in
Moro
Monday afternoon for a
vited to meet with us.
brief
visit
to see about her prop
C. Sparling, W. M.
C V. Belknap. Secy. erty here.*
Moro Lodge No. Ill, L O. O. F.
Alfred Kock took a truck load
Moro, Oregon
of sheep to Portland last week end,
Meets every Mon returning Tuesday afternoon.
day evening in the
Rain has fallen for a couple of
LO.O.F. 'hall- Tran
sient and Waiting days but it is not of the blustering
brothers are cordi kind of rainfall that fills the pores
ally invited to meet of the earth in haste. Rather, a
7 with us.
a sort of drizzle, what might be call-
। ed an Oregon mist in places where
Lloyd Rice, N- G.
Joe Truit, Secretary.1 western Oregon rains are known.
Lupine Rebecca Lodge No- 116
The Rebekahs initiation has
Moro, Oegon i
been postponed until March 12 and
T»ets 2d and 4th Tu- win
held that date instead of
^davs of each month February 26 as originally propos
Visiting members wel ed. There will be a social night.
come.
W. F. Pigg, tax examiner for the
Viola Hi sen, N. G.
u. . 2nll, Secretary. government, was in town Wed
nesday to make out tax blanks for
any one who had earned enough
money during the past year.
f
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 193&.
¿y^ADAjR^MAYNE
f l^ON <WURY COUNCIL
’ ^7 ¿vi
........ i f
The best diet for the normal are good with cream sauce or with
milk gravy, or baked or creamed,
Human being includes a certain
or scalloped in milk, as the case
variety of the common foods.' Poor may be, or served with milk to
lets are not poor because of what drink at the same meal.
hey include but of what they lack.
Then there is always someone
They are poor because they are not
worried
about sour fruits and milk
omplete; that is, not balanced.
Keep these points in mind and you together. “Don’t they curdle in
will not be worried by the fallacy the stomach?” “And if they do,
which tells you not to eat fish and the nutritionist calmly interjects,
milk together, or milk and toma “what of it?” The first process of
toes or acid fruits. You will serve the digestion of milk is curdling.
fish baked in milk if you like it, The gastric juice, in the stomach,
and you will drink milk at break does that. The curd that results
’s st or lunch or dinner along with from a mixture of fruit acids and
your orange or grapefruit. You milk is much finer and therefore
may even add lemon juice to the easier to digest than the milk curd
baby's milk, or combine his orange ordinarily formed in the stomach.
There
juice and milk.
_____ is no reason to __ $4 afraid of
The fish and milk fallacy is old curdled milk, but quite’ bhe contra-
and persistant Perhaps it started ry. Buttermilk, you hnow and
with somebody who blamed this a lot of kinds of curdled milk, are
combination of foods for an illness . often recommended for the delicate
Quite a number of Sherman that was really caused by a bit of digestion. And some authorities
countians attended the symphony spoiled fi^h or crab meat which on child feeding recommend adding
K
-'J
.
concert given by the Portland would have made him sick any- lemon juice to milk to help the
Any
.................
i baby to digest it.
orchestra in The Dalles Wednes how, with or without
milk. '
one has
Do not let anyone persuade you
day night
Yet Jthere are people who will
Died
eat
fish
chowder,
which
is
made
|
that
any one food will save your
Eloped
Card of Thanks
with
milk,
who
are
afraid
to
drink:
undernourished
or ailing child,
Married
We
wish
to
thank
our
many
milk
at
a
meal
where
they
have/
Build
the
child
’
s diet on a mi
Divorced
friends who in our sorrow express say fried fish. They may not wor foundation. Add the food mater
Left town
ed their sympathy and sent the ry about crab or lobster or shrimp i ials milk does- not provide, or in
Had a fire,
many beautiful floral pieces. They when served a la Newburg, but which it needs to be reinforced.
Had a baby
I share with us the loss of a true
they shudder if ice cream is served Give him, for one thing, a cereal,
Come to visit
*
friend
and
helper
as
well
as
a
be
after any sea food. There just but give him also orange juice or
Bought a home
loved
wife,
mother,
and
grand
-
isn’t anything to the notion, pro tomato juice, with vegetables and
Committed murder
toother.
Fallen from an aeroplane
vided of course, the foods them- meats prepared in ways that suit
Her
work
being
finished,
we
That’s news—Telephone us,
selves are all fresh and in good con his needs, for he, like you. should
The Sherman County Journal num know that her rest is a reward for dition. Fish, crabs, shrimp, lob- have variety.
the good she has done others.
sters. oysters and clams are pro- '“In other words, each class of
ber is 102-
The family of Mother Hockman. tein foods, like meat and eggs and food has its part to play. And
cheese, and far from being “poison- each does its best work only when
Mr and Mrs E E Barnum were
ous” when used with milk, they the others are present. This does
in Thé Difles Friday on a busi-.
(ATcwnTalk
ness trip.
CUCHES
Worth Tate was here Wednesday
from La Center, Washington to Community Presbyterian Church
transact business with W. H- Sunday School
10:00 a. m.
Ragsdale
Christian Science Church
Milch cows for sale. Bert Mich
Subject: MIND
el, Moro.
Golden Text: Job 28:28. Behold,
the fear of the Lord, that is wis
••••
Lee McGinnis and daughter, and dom ; and to depart from evil is
his mother. Mrs. Tom McGinnis understanding.
were here to attend the funeral
Responsive Reodeing: Proverbs
of R- J. Ginn Wednesday, coming 8:1, 3. 4. 5, 6, 8-10, 14, 17, 20 21 3$
from their home in Corvallia
All aye cordially invited to at
tend th®’ church services and to
C. F. iRedmond was in the coun make use of the reading room in
ty this week taking photographs ol the rear of the churdh building,
individuals and families in their which is open daily where all au
homes
*
thorized Christian Science litera
ture may be read, borrowed or
George Melow. sr- has moved out purchased«
to the home of his son, George jr.
and is reported to be somewhat im
Full Gospel Assembly
proved since making the change.
Su
nda
y
School ............ 10:00 a. m.
••••
,
Preaching Service ..........11:00 a. m.
The Moro firemen were out Sun
Evening Service ............ 7:30 p. m>
day morning testing the water Prayer meeting Wed. .... 2:30 p., m.
pressure in several places in town.
Grass Valley Baptist Church
Water was thrown on the elevatoi
Revival services continue next
and all over the roof of the school week at the Baptist church. Rev.
house during the tests.
S. L. Boyce pastor, Evangelist Ed
The TELEPHONE
makes it HOME
On Saturday, th® 16th day of
March, 1935, at the hour of ten
o’clock a. m. at the front door of
the Courthouse in iforo, Sherman
Coimy, Oregon, I W|ll *dl to the
highest bidder for cAsh. the fol-
lowing described real property
located in Sherman County, Ore-
gon, to-wit:
S The West Half of the South
east Quartier of Section 34,
Township One North, Range
17, East of the Willamette
Meridian.
Said sale Is mafie under execu-
ion issued out of the Circult Court
of thto State of Oregon for the
County of Sherman to mio directed
fn the case of State Land Board of
the Statb of Oregon, plaintiff, vs.
Homer B. DeMoss and Elizabeth
DeMoss, husband and wife; Sher-
mn county, a municipal corpora
tion; Walther-Williams CompÄiy,
a corporation; and Harry B. Pink
erton, defendants.
HUGH CHRISMAN
Sheriff of Sherman County, Ore.
Publish Feb. 15, 22„ March 1, 8.
Jobs Available
of the Stat* of Oregon for he Coun*
ty of Sherman, to me directed in
the case of State Land Board of
thle State of Oregon, plalniff, vs.
Aurelia DeMoss, a widow; Elbert
DeMoas and MaybeUe DeMoss,
husband and wife; Henry S, De-
Mosa,
ainglle man; Sherman
County, a municipal corporation;
Harry B. Pinkerton; the unknown
heira of George G. D^Moas, de-
cea^d; also all other persons or
parties unknown claiming any
right, titte, estate, lien or Interest
in the realestate described in the
complaint herein.
HUGH CHRISMAN
Shriff of Shrman County, Orgon.
Publish in Feb 15, 22, March 1, «.
Corvallis—The spector of a job
less commencement at the conclu
sion of their college career does
not confront most of the seniors
of the technical schools at Oregon
State college this year, a check-up
on the employment situation show*
In the leading men’s technical
schools of forestry, agriculture, en
gineering and pharmacy the deans
report conditions greatly improv
ed with actual shortages of pro
spective graduates for waiting po
sitions. All through the depres
sion there has been considerable de
mand for technical graduates, but
1—-’L7
conditions now are distinctly im
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
proved over a year or so ago, re
All persons having claims B-
ports show.
gainst the estate of Margaret
“We could place three times the
Dennis, deceased, are hereby noti
forestry »graduates this spring,”
fied to present them, duly verified,
said President G. W. Peavy, who
the undersigned at Grass Valley.
retains his position as dean of the
Oregon, the duly appointed, qual
forestry school. “Our hardest job
ified and acting executor of the
is to keep them till they are grad
Inst will and testament of Mar
uated, as many are tempted by
garet Dennis, deceased, within six
jobs available even before they NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S- SALE months from the date of tips no
finish.’*
OF REAL PROPERTY
tice. to-wit:
-
Agricultural training covers such
On Saturday the 16th day of | February 15, 1935.
,
a broad field that conditions are March, 1935, at the hour of teh I
Fred Kru^ow
mixed, but there is a distinct short o’clock a. pi. at th«* front door of Geo. G. Updegraff,
age of prospective graduates this the Courthouse in Moro, Sherman Attorney for Executor.
year in many branches, says Dean County, Oregon,;I will gell at pub Last publication March 8. 1935. '
W .A .Schoenfeld.
.
lic auction to the highest bidder
“A big demand now is*for men for cash, the following described
trained in soils, agricultural en real property located in Sherman
gineering, farto management, and County, Oregon, to-wit:
some phases of plant and animal
The Southwest Quarter and
industries fitting them for work in
the East Half of the South- -
the new grazing service, soil ero
east Quarter of Section Thir-
HOME OFFICE, WASCO
sion work and rural electrification,”
ty-four, Township One North,
DENTAL X-RAY SERVICE
explained Dean Schoenfeld. “More
the East Half of the North-
requests are coming for graduates
wost Quarter, and the North- •
in the others fields of agriculture
east Quarter of the South-
as well, but there is a real short
In Moro the Firat Week
west Quarter, and the ,North-
age of available men with spectai
(Vast Quarter of Section Three,
In Each Month
training”.
Township One South ;the North
Pharmacy graduates worthy of
recommendation by the school have
all been absorbed in the past by
For your convenience I have
When Your Shoes need repan
the industry and will doubtless con
arranged for you to leave
tinue to be. is the terse summing
send them to
your Shoe Work at Walter
up of the situation given by Dean
A- May & Son. Pick up
A. Ziefle.
and deliver twice a week at
Better times in the “heavy indus
no cost to you.
GOOD SHOE
REPAIRING
tries’’ will cause a big pick up in '
_ Joseph A Mee
204 Second St.
: THE DAl^.F?
engineering employment, and mark
ed improvement in the outlook is
The Wasco Shoe Man
already apparent, reports Acting
Dr. L A. BUTLER
DENTIST
WERNMARK*b
"RENOVISED or new, ’
modern or old, the home
of today calls for ample
telephone facilities. No
home is complete wilhoat
the telephone.
C. Cofer preaches each night at
W. S. Powell returned Monday 7.30. Sunday morning sermon at
night from Spokane where he at 11:00. ‘The Consumation; at 7:30
tended a meeting of the board oi gospel message, “What Next.”
directors of the Northwest Grain
Growers.
MORO SCHOOL NOTES
By Anita Kenny
Mrs. M. H. Stephens drove to
The cast which Miss Biggness
Bend Monday and remained over selected for the Glee Club operetta,
a few days in that city.
“Quest of the Gypsy.” is: Gypsy
boy—Genevieve Nahouse; Myra—
Mra Huntley, mother of Mrs Mary Pinkerton; Country boy—
Collis Moore, Is visiting her daugh Betty Powell; Barbara (fortune
ter here this week from Tacoma.
teller)—Dorris Thompson; Isabel-
Vivian Fuller; Rhoda—Melba Tho-
Elmer Barxee is driving a new gerson; Dorothy—Irma Mae Mor
Plymouth car this week.
gan; Ida—Gertrude Gillmor; Jean
—Winifred Belshee: and Lillian-
Grace Cothran is working in the Marie McLeod.
superintendent*® office making out
The public speaking classes have
the detail shaets on the recent taken up the study of parliamen
county testa.
tary practice and intend to spend
some time upon it. Today there
Mrs. George Vin tin left Wednes are so many club organizations that
day night for Portland for medi everyone needs a knowledge of the
cal treatment.
. .
rules and regulations of correct
procedure so that the business of
They have a freak lamb out at an organization can be carried on
the Omer Sayrs ranch. It has one in an orderly manner. Each ®tu-
front leg that was put on ba,ck-
dent is to take part in every meet
wards or at least the knee joint
ing, thereby gaining full value of
bends backwards like an elephants
the practice.
It gets around under its own
The 4-H club members will be
power, however.
entertained at a banquet at Hotel
Moro Saturday night. This ban
Moro Woman's Club will meet quet is an annual affair and is spon
at the home of Mrs. W. A. Ruggles sored by the Commercial Club.
March 1st. Department of music
The Moro girls team defeated
in charge.
the Warriorettes by 17 points last
The husbands night scheduled Friday night on the Wasco floor,
for February 23 has been postpon the final score being 29 to 12. The
ed indefinitely.
score of the boys game was 26 to
27, the Moro team losing by only
W. L. Dalby was a visitor in one point/?
Moro the first of the week from
This Friday night the Moro
Portland.
teams will play at Rufus. Monday
night Wasco will play her®.
Mcidamei L. L Peetz, Margaret
The band is busy practicing for
Peetz, Mane i^ainun. M. Bull, the band concert which is to be
W. J. Martin. J. C. Freeman and held March 6. Tn addition, stu
Carroll Sayr» all assisted in giving dents not in the band are rehears
a dinner to the Hockman family ing for skits that are to be pre
Monday afternoon at the L. L. sented the same evening.
Peetz residence.
Helen Morrison returned to
school Wednesday after an absence
Work on the courthouse base of two weeks during which time
ment is nearing completion with she was confined to her home.
the floor run and the stairs being
Sevsrral of the students from
finished this week. A closet was Moro attended the play entitled
built in the assessor's office to “Het Copy” which was given Sat
replace the under the stairs closet urday night by the Grass Valley
which was used as a pls« for the teachers
J basement stain.
west Quarter of th^ North
not mean they must all be present Dean R.' H. Dearborn, in charge of
west Quarter of Section Two:
at the same meal, though they us- the largest school in the college,
Township On<&
South,
all
ually are in a well planned lunch The Bonneville dam. bodge build-
Range Seventeen, E. W. M.,
or dinner, and maybe breakfast as I ing and similar projects have taken
containing In all 577 acres? re
well. Belt it is not a good idea to scores of OSC engineers, and the
serving from said mortgage a
outlet
to
private
industries
is
allow more than a day to elapse
ode acre tract on said prem
without checking up on the balance improving steadily» he says.
ises used for a cemetery, all
of your family diet to see whether
in Sherman County, Oregon-
you have all the classes of food you NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE
Bald sale is made under execu
need-
OF REAL PROPERTY
tion issued out of the Circuit Court
T he P acific T elephone
and
T elegraph C ompany
95 cents
ï
Specials
Extra >
Ladies
Dresses,
Broadcloth
Regular $1.95 vatuesto Close at..V.: .95c eac£
Sizes 14 to 44
. »
Ladies and Misses Sizes
6 to 18 years
—$2.50—
•Rubberized Coats
Misses 14 to 20, Zipper or
Button Front, Wind and
WaterProof. «Special to
Close at • $2.50 ea.
■MV.
• Pants
• Vests
CATERPILLAR’
Service
what it means to you
very “Caterpillar” Diesel owner has the assurance of fast
competent repair or replacement service The Loggers &
Contractors Machinei^Company employs a full time Factory
Trained Service Man at The Dalles who is ready at a minutes
notice for repair and replacement work or for general counsel on
the operation of “Caterpillar” Diesel tractors in this area.
Even more important than the^ repair and service department is
the complete stock of “Caterpillar” parts carried at The Dalles,
Portland, and Spokane. Here, parts <> for every “Caterpillar”
model made are available. Shipments aie made within a few
minutes after orders are received — giving every grain fai wer
in this area a fast efficient replacement service.
take advantage of this
Complete Service Department
“Caterpillar” Service is just another cf the advantages uhich are
a part of the efficiency and economy of owning a “Caterpillar”.
With a factory trained service man to advise you ard with a
complete stock of parts available right in your own area, you
netd not fear costly breakdowns or delays
Extra Special 35c & 40c values
~ >19c each
Knitting Y arm
Embroidery Thread
Six Strand
3 Skeins.... lOc
Mint Work SOX ..
New Stock — all colors
Ask about our “Caterpillar”
Diesel Service Department
at our The Dalles Office.
617 East Second Street
The Dalles, Oregon
Skein____ 1 Oc
15c pair
Good Weight lor Spring Wear
J. C. Freeman & Co. Moro
WGGEQ5 Ä CWAACW
MACHINERY
COMPANY
1