Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, June 21, 1935, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
A—- *
Hildebrand Wins
Place In Shoot
New Roof And Gym Floor Voted
Upon Favorably
TH B MH EKMAN COUNTY JOURNAL. MOROK OREGON
town guests attending were: Mes
srs and Mesdames W. R. Copeland,
Henry Copeland, Henry Kaseberg
and sons Alfred and Howard, Mrs.
Mary Eubanks, Elmer Stockdale
and daughter Jacqueline, all of
Walla Walla; Ed Kaseberg and
wife of Portland and their daugh­
ter Barbara; J. R. Kaseberg and
Ben Peterson of Portland; Albert
Kaseberg, L. E. Kaseberg, Floyd
Root and G. H Root and families
were local persons present
Homecoming of Mason and East
ern Star members was held at Fra­
ternity hall Tuesday evening with
a seven o'clock dinner and a pro­
gram given by members of the
two orders.
Curtis Tom is around again after
suffering serious burns a few
weeks ago.
Ormand Hilderbrand and Tracy
Fields were in Medford for the
state trap shoot and Ormond won
second to the renouned Frank
Troch in one of the matches
It was decided to lay a new
Kjm floor and put on a new roof
on the Wasco school house at the
meeting held Monday for school
matters. The same officers were
elected for another term.
Notice of Taking up Stock
(Mrs George Potter received club
Notice is hereby given to whom1
prize and Mrs. Stephens of Moro
gueet prize Thursday afternoon it may concern that the undersign­
when three tables of cards were ed has taken up and holds for th«
played at the home of Mrs. Hildred cost of taking up and the reason­
Zell
Mrs. A. B. Christensen of able charges and expense« of keep­
Moio was an invited guest.
ing. tlhe following:
One Hereford steer, coming 2
Mr>. Eliza Dingle and Mrs.
years old, with both ears cut
Richie D■•»’He and Ed Smith drove
off, and branded on the left hip
to Camp She man Thursday. Mrs.
with
an uncertain brand
Richie Dingle returned after a
Unless redeemed prior to Mon-1
short visit.
After visiting with sons and, day. July 8, 1935, at 2:00 o’clock
p. m., said steer will be sold at the
daugtiters and families at
Gatos and Freeno, Calfomia. Frank I. E. Fields ranch near Biggs. Ore- ;
gon, to satisfy said coots, charges
Stanley is home again.
and expenses.
Members of the contract club
Datel this 21st day of June, 1935.
including their husbands met for
Cecil Fields.
a seven o’clock dinner and bridge
Wednesday evening. Hostess for
the evening was Mrs. J. T Johnson.
Guests played at four tables with
Mrs. W. H. Burres and A. S. John­
son winning high scores.
Mrs. Floyd Root was hostess to
members of the junior bridge club
Wednesday night. Mrs G. H. Root
and (Margaret McKee won the high Man Knows Little About Him-
scores after which refreshments
Self, However
were served by the hostess.
Myron Haise and wife are plan­
However much the progress of
ning to spend the week end at
Trout Lake, Wash. They will at­ public health owe« to the past, tihe
tend the wedding of Charles Brown, achievements of the last quarter
century have been amazing both
brother of Mrs. Haise.
in quantity and in their ability to
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bauer and
combat
the foes of the fletAu ’Re­
sons Harold Jr. and Donald and
search
workers
have advanced and
Mrs. Margaret Eaton, all of Port­
are
continually
advancing the
land, visited at the home of Mr.
scientific
frontiers.
and Mrs Harry Sawin, Mrs. Eaton
Insulin for the treatment of dia­
remaining.
betes,
liver as a remedy for per­
House guests of Mr. and Mrs.
nicious
anemia, cortin as a potent
Everett Watkins over the week end
were Mr. and Mrs. John Kaseberg enemy of Addison's disease, heel­
ing gases, vitamins and new drugs
of Portland.
are
a few examples of the barriers
Mr. and Mrs. Da verport and Mr.
against
disease and premature
and Mrs. Owen Barnett of Oak
Grove visited with Mrs* Marie death that have been successfully
Cooper. Jerry Barnett accompa­ and in many instances spontane­
nied his parents home after spend­ ously raised.
Indeed, it truthfully can be sai(
ing a short vacation on the farm.
Lavelle Guy is visiting her aunt that these modern agents for the
Mrs. Frank Bowman, and grand­ alleviation and cure of disease plus
mother. Mrs. E. H. Haley at Golden the mass control over water, milk,
sewage disposal and communi­
dale.
cable
diseases, represent an ach­
Mary Marshall of Portland is
ievement
the magnitude of whidh'
visiting her aunt, Mrs. E. D. Mc-
was not even imagined fifty years
Kea
Mrs. Ed Thomas accompanied by ago.
But while the public health
her children drove to Portland Fri­
day visiting her daughter Mabel, has marched magnificiently on
and Mrs. Sherman Whitney, sister- what about the man himself? True
in most fields of endeavor he has
in-law.
given
a most splendid account of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilhiam Nisbit
were in Portland to attend grand himself. The radio, the airplane,
lodge They also visited with Mrs. the automobile, the skyscraper and
Nisbit’s mother. Mrs. Shaw at all the rest of the machines and
factors that have formulated pres­
Gresham.
Norma Feldman has l>een home ent day civilization eloquently at­
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs*. Ed test to his resourceful and un­
Feldman after completing her conquering advancing spirit.
Externally at least man has been
beauty culture course at Portland.
She returned to Portland Sunday. an amazing success. Unfortun­
Mrs. Emma Hines and son ately, however, the study of man
George of Lookout, Cal., have been himself lags. Eliminating tlhe re­
visiting their daughter and sister. search and professional men, the
science of life and disease preven­
Mrs. Vernon Van Gilder.
tion
has thus far failed to capture
Hal Shelton, Jame« Maddox and
A. B. Riddell were on a fishing trip the general imagination. Thus one
finds not even a year added to the
over the week end.
Mias Betty McCafferty is occu­ average life of the individual of
pied these vacation days assisting forty-five or older.
Thanks to man’s supreme indiff­
at the local telephone office.
Art Smith and wife and Mrs. erence to himself the present mas­
Anna I^ee drove to Walla Walla ter killers such as heart ailments,
Sunday to attend a family reunion. diabetes, cancer and nephritis car­
Mr. and Mrs. Carghill of Idaho and ry on their lethal work compara­
Mrs. John Henrich« were among tively unhindered by scientific
progress. They are beyond the
the guests.
Frank Reid of The Dalles was a pale. No health officer can con­
dinner guest of Mrs. Elizabeth trol them. They thrive on the com­
plete disregard of the individual
Fuller Wednesday.
I^adles of the Christian church to a real interest in his physical
met at the home of Mrs. R H. welfare. Therefore, until the ave­
McKean Thursday afternoon of rage individual realizes that the
last week.
main business of life is to live and
A new coat of paint has been
spread over the front of the Tex­
aco service station making a de­
cided improvement in the appear­
ance of the town. Change« will be
made to the interior of the build­
ing giving it a more modern de­
sign and making it handier for Mr.
McKean.
The firemen have been burning
weeds on vacant lots and prepar­
ing for the dry and dangerous per­
iod« for Area
The Kaseberg reunion was held
Sunday at Fleck’s orchard. Out of
Public Health
Advances Fast
Buy
the *
genuine
“Caterpillar”
the wringer and the peas fall back
and are caught on a clean cloth
in the tub. Even If shelling by
hand, the task is easier if dipped
in hot water first, Miss Case says.
For canning peas, and all other
non-acid vegetables for that mat­
ter, packing hot into the jars and
using a pressure cooker is the only
method recommended for safety,
according to Miss Case. Bring the
peas to boil in water to cover, she
says, and in the meantime boil the
jars, lids and rubbers. Fill the jars
while they are sitting in boiling
water, to within one-half inch of
the top with the boiling hot peas.
Then fill the jars also to withdn
one-half inch of the top with the
liquid in which the peas were cook­
ed. Add one-lhalf teaspoon salt to
each pint of peas.
Containers larger than pint jars
or Nci 2 cans are not recommended
for peas, she points out. Most
types of modem jars can be seal­
ed immediately after filling with
the hot food before processing, she
says, but wire clamp jars seems
to be exceptions to this rule at
times. Sealing before processing
keeps the liquid in the jars. Screw
band jars Should be retightened
after processing.
* Place the hot jars in the pressure
cooker with boiling water one-half
inch over the rack and the pet cock
open, she says. Fasten the top of
Me cooker and leave the pet cock
open. Let the steam escape for five
minutes, then close the pet cock
lowstone river rush unharnessed through the Grand Canyon of the
and bring the pressure to 10 pounds
Yellowstone, plunging over the sheer edge of a precipice in a welter
Process pint jars 45 minutes, quart
of green isln foam, roaring defiance midst the wilderness, untamed
jars 55 minutes, and No. 2 and 2i
until they splash mildly into the headwaters of the Missouri. Photo
cans 45 minutes at 10 pounds pres­
by Union Pacific Railroad.
sure. When the time is up. turn
governs himself accordingly, tht picked-
off the heat and let the pressure
enormous dividends that acienti-
Use only young, tender peas, she return to zero, and then wait a
fic progress has been made it pos­ advises, and wash them carefully, minute or so before opening tlhe
sible to pay. will not be declared. many find it quicker to dip them in pet cock gradually. When the
A fortune in health, happiness and They may be shelled by hand, but sound of air going into the cooker
longevity is frozen by man’s un­ hot water and run them, stem end is no longer heard open the cooker
reasonable lack of reasonable con­ first through the wringer of the When boiling stops inside the jars
cern for himself. And so. quite log washing machine, or through a . remove them from the cooker and
ically the peminent and personal special sheller. The pods go thru | cool away from a draft.
question: Science Marches On—Do
You?
Hi -M ay / to H ealth
LAND BANK HEADS HERE
Henry Mathews, vice-president
of the Federal Land Bank of Spo­
kane. and Peter Croisen, formerly
of Hillsboro but now connected
with the land bank, were in tlnte
county Thursday afternoon on an
inspection trip to acquaint them-1
selves with conditions in this ter­ Saving Food By Careful Handling
ritory. They drove on to Shaniko
What may be economiy) in the
and from there to Fossil and Arl­ buying of food, often depends on
the means and space for keeping
ington later in the day.
food, and also the care in handling
it, after it is bought. With a good
refrigerator in the house, many of
the food keeping problems are solv­
ed, but the home without a refri-
S*™1™ has its troubles. There
I’lvUlvui) 1 VIU are, however, some foods that
। never should be kept in a refriger­
ator. but must be cared for in some
With the pea canning season about other way In any case, care in
at its height in the homes of west- handling, a knowledge of the pre-
em Oregon, Miss Case, extension cautions against contamination of
specialist in foods and nutrition food are necessary to protect the
at Oregon State college, offers a .family’s health as well as its
few pointers for handling this task pocketbook,
in the easiest and most successful
rr1
-- v housekeeper
—
The
must guard a-
manner.
Two hours from garden to can
is a good rule to follow in canning
green peas, Miss Case says. The
shorter the time the more of the
sweet natural flavor will be re­
tained, because the sugar in peas
We have installed
soon turns to starch after they are
OREGON <DAIRY COUNCIL
Pea Canning
Mrtf l| ft fl C TnlJ
O’MEARA
SUPPLY CO.
gainst different kinds of spoilage.
Some foods change texture, some
lose flavor, others actually become
harmful.
Green vegetables wilt
because their moisture evaporates.
Crackers and cookies, on the other
hand, take up moisture from the
air and thereby lose their crisp­
ness. Light affects some kinds of
food. It hastens the ripening of
fresh fruits and vegetables, and
it is bad for fats and oils, which
become rancid in the light and
warmth.
Milk presents a special problem.
The milk item in the household
food supply has two important
aspects. Not only must it be good,
safe milk—which really is not
difficult to get in these days of
rigid milk inspection—but it must
be kept good and safe after it com­
es to 'the house. This requires
knowledge and care—care which is
all the more important in the house
holds where milk is needed most
The household where milk is
needed most is one where there is
children, and where there may be
little variety of other kinds of food.
Milk safeguards a restricted diet.
It Ihas so many kinds of food value
that it can often make up for the
lack of other foods. But milk spoils
easily, and that is the reason- of
course, for the rigid inspection of
milk by public authorities. But no
amount of public inspection, no
amount of care and precaution on
the part of the milk producers and
milk dealers, can prevent spoilage
of milk after it leaves their bands.
It is up to the consumer then.
A good general rule for the house
hold is to use milk within a few
hours after it is delivered. Or if
it is bought at a neighborhood
store, don’t buy it until just before
using, thus leaving it in the store
refrigerator, as long as possible.
With a good household refrigerator
of course, milk can be kept longer.
Without a refrigerator, various de­
vices will delay souring, such as
keeping the bottle under a ijlow
drip of tap water, or covering it
with clean, damp cloths in some
cool dry place. In any case, to­
day*« milk will be better for drink­
ing than yesterday*« milk, and yea-
terdaor*« milk, if any is left over,
can be used for cookings For the
care of milk, then, in general, and
let us put it in capital letters.
‘KEEP MILK CLEAN. COVER­
ED, AND COLD.”
The drought with its swirling
clouds of du«t is over, and during
the next three to five years normal
rains in tlhe Middle West will bring
bumper crops and new contentment
to the farmer«.
Try Journal advertising, it pays.
RHEUMATIC SUFFERS
GET RESULTS
Williams R. U. X. Compound
Effective and Quick
By helping the important organ,
the kidneys, largely responsible for
rheumatic conditions, Williams R.
U. X. Compound gets at the seat
of your trouble and rids you of
those terrible pains.
By dissolving out the pain pro­
ducing poisons and helping the
kidneys get rid of these waates
which may cause Rheumatic pain.
Neuritis, Neuralgia, and Gouty
pains, Williams R U. X. Compound
scientificly relieves your condition.
Moreover, it contains a kidney
antiseptic that protects this vita/
organ from diseases caused by
harmful germs that collect in a
sluggish system.
Ask your druggest for Williams
R. U. X. Compound. It is a liquia
—It Works Faster. It is sold on a
money back guarantee by the
Grass Valley, Moro and Wasce
Drug Store«.____________________
F. R. FORTNER
Real Estate License No. 859.
CELEBRATE
July 3 & 4
at Wasco
WHEAT FARMS, LOANS AND
INSURANCE
Agent for Pacific Coast Joint
' Stock I^and Bank and Oregon-
Washington Joint Stock Land Bank
Wasco, Oregon.
Rodeo
Smoker
Dances
FUNERAL HOME
County-wide Celebration
Phone 345 The Dalles, Ore
ZELL’S
Wasco Firemen
------ or------
GRASS VALLEY PHARMACY
Phone 22Z
UPDEGRAFF & PEPPER
Attorney» At Law
Moro, Oregon
Coid Storage Lockers
When Your Shoes need repaii
send them to
60 cold storage lockers
various sizes for the storage of perishable fcod
products. These will be kept at right temperatures
constantly insuring safe keeping of stored products
WERN MARK’S : Medium size rents for $1Oper year
GOOD SHOE
2<M Second St.
REPAIRING
:
THE DALLES
L o o k !
The Financial Res­
ponsibility Law takes
effect July 1.
Do
not sacrifice your
Drivers License and
Plates on car from
lack of Insurance.
insure your
Repair car Let to me
day.
I will
Parts
SAVE you one-half.
We have a most complete stock of
parts for “Caterpillar** Tractors.
Holt and “Caterpillar’’ Combines—
at regular factory price«—and they
ar« genuine “Caterpillar” parts—
made by “Caterpillar.”
FRIDAY, JUNE 21, 1939.
Geo. Moon
Wasco, Oregon
Meats are to be cut in desired pieces, wrapped S
and stored so they may be procured quickly and easily :
by the locker renter.
J
Safe Sure Refrigeration
HAVE YOUR OWN MEAT FOR HARVEST
The Atwood Store
Sherman Cooperative Grain
Growers : : : Wasco, Oregon
See us for your Grain Insurance
PORTLAND PACIFIC
LIMITED
ROSE
Ar. CHICAGO . «:50 A.M.
Ar. CHICAGO. «JB P.M.
Air-conditioned Coaches, Tourist and
Standard Sleepers, Diner, Observation-
lounge car. Barber, Valet, Bath. Porters
in Coaches as well as In the Sleepers.
Air-conditioned Coaches and Standard
Sleepers. 1 night te Salt Lake City, Den­
ver. 2 nights to Kansas City, Omaha,
Chicago. Convenient local schedules.
YILLOWSTONK- GRAND TITON NATIONAL PARK« 1
[
Through standard sleeping car service in oporetlon daily, I
Portland to West Yellowstone on The Pacific Limited.
J
Al«o for Established Lines of
Mill Feed»
»
Grain Bags
Dairy and Poultry Feeds
Twine
Rolled Grains
Concentrates ‘
Flour
”,
Salt
All kinds of Insurance
Safety Deposit Boxes for Lease
_ ■______
. .
""""
■—^1 IK1 ■HU I
■■W
-,
.2'
* * *
'r1
I
1 1
-
■
— CITY Or POnTlAND
NOW IN SERVICE
NO EXTRA FARE
39H hours, Portland to Chicago. SI m ''sailings'* monthly. lv.
Portland 1st, 6th, IIth, 16th, 21st, 26th, 3,45 p. m. Lv. Chicago
3rd,8th,l3lh, IBth, 23rd, 28th, 6,13 p.m. Diner-lounge, conch
buffet, three standard Pullmnns. Completely elrconditioned.
ÜNI0H PACIFIC