Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1935)
tHB SHERMAN COUNTY JOVMNAL. MOHtf. OREGON FRIDAY, JUNE 28. IMS PAGE THREE Twenty Camps little outing and fishing. f Miss Laura Ruggles motored to Now is come ralvation and strength Mr. and Mrs. James Rae of New Portland Monday, returnings Wed- and the kingdom of our God. and port are here to visit with Mrs. nesday bringing with her Miss the power oi his Christ. R B. Webb, a niece of the Raes. Mary Louise Kistler^/who will Responsive Reading: Revelation D. E. Stephens left for Pendle visit for a short time. i 10: 1-4. 8-11 ton Wednesday night to attend the Blaine Damon and wife stopped field day at the station there. Tuesday night at the Clarence Community Presbyterian Church Mrs. Harvey Wood and Miss Sparling home on their way from) . -Another Road1 will be the »ub- Loan Office Moved To Give Room Josephine Johnson entertained two a trip to Yellowstone National To Doctor ject of the sermon by Rev. Law days last week each giving a Park. rence H. Mitchelmore, at the 11 shower for Miss Marjorie Nahouse. Lieutenant B. C. Price and Mra Mrs. Grace Rutherford and her o’clock service. Price and Lieutenant C. A. Rich- who is to be married today.. daughter Mrs. Morton stopped at Awarding of diplomas to all boys Mrs. Bull gave a surprise party the Knighten home last Thursday ardson arrived Monday evening and girls who have attended the for her niece. Miss Meloy Tuesday from Vancouver Barracks to Uke for a short visit Mrs. Rutherford Vacation Bible school at least eight afternoon, the occasion being her charge of the local SCS camp. Lt is a sister of Mrs. Knighten. days, will be a feature of the open Richardson is the commanding offi-1 14th birthday. cer of the camp. Eight shots were put in the Polqy Eureka l odge No. 121 A.F. & A.M ing exercises of the Sunday school at 10 a. m. Samples of work done Lieutenant Price is a graduate basement Tuesday in an effort to . Moro, Oregon in tihe school will be shown. This of Oregon State college and Lieu- break up the rock found in the dig Meets the 1st and 3rd includes hymns. Bible memory tenant Richardson is a native of process. Thursday evenings oi work, etc. New Jersey, who was recently sent1 ^or»8 Fortner and Scott Fortner each month. Visiting * *• _ G> the — Pacific Coast for army are here this week visiting from members cordially in Junior Christian Endeavor at Portland with friends. service. vited to meet with us. 6:45 p. m. with Gene Brisbine, Howard Conlee entertained Mon- leaden. All children of the fifth, U. Sparling, W. M. W. H. Ragsdale has moved his federal loan office to the rooms up day night with a lawn party after C. V. Belknap, Secv sixth, seventh and eighth grades welcome. stairs above thte bank as his former the band practise. Moro Lodge No. 113, I. O. O. F. Mrs. I. N. Lemon was in Moro office space is being Uken by I>r. Moro, Oregon last week while Poley for a reception room. । ... returning , - to her Meets 1st and 3rd o u h - i a s . home in Corvallis from near Bend Qua 80tullin<Ja doing the brick where she had been visiting with Tuesdays in the am licensed and rock work at the Poley houae her brother Milt O’Brien* Mrs. LO.OF. hall. Trai thus week. Some blasting was nec- Searcy accompanied her home to sient and ri'-iting essary for the basement. i Corvallis. brothers are cordi O regon to soli Harry Schloth, of Corvallis, who' Darlene Schadewitz, daughter of ally invited to'meet with us. is in charge of the forage grasses Louis Schadewitz. is here from San cit . A utomobile L. O, Rice N. G. for .this section, was here Wednes, Francisco to spend the summer for day to inspect the forage nursery with her father. Joe Tiuit, Secretary I nsurance - the aetna I nsur at the experiment station. Harry Ragsdale and Susanne Lupine Rebecca Lodge No- 116 Mn and Mrs. E. E. Bailee re- Searcy left Thursday morning for no, Oegon ance turned fihte first of the week from a sojourn at Camp Sherman where 2d and 4th Tu- I Newport where they have been for they expect to meet Mrs. John I INVITE YOU TO CALL a few weeks on a pre-harvest va- Searcy and friends from Hillsboro, of each month cation. | The Jolly Dozen, bridge club met isiting members wel AND GET OUR FIGURES Joe Truitt and L. L. Peetz were with Mrs. Bessie Belshee. come. ON AUTOMOBILE -INSUR Viola Hansen, N. G. in (Redmond the first of the week Mr8- Althea Burnett entertained for couple of days. younger bridge set Thursday Lila Bull, Secretary. ANCE BEFORE YOU BUY Mr. and :Mrs. J. O Freeman left afternoon. Wednesday for Vancouver to at-1 Miss Gladys Wright, who has tend the funeral of W. T. Barnett, spent the past six school years a brother in law of Mrs. Freeman’s, teatthing in the Corbett schools, who died in that city Tuesday af has returned to spend the summer Full Gospel Assembly vacation with her parents, Mr. and Sunday School .......... 10:00 a m. ter an illness of several months. AEtna Casualty - Surety - Bill Snoderly left Tuesday for Mrs. Dell Wright. Morning Service ....... 11.00 a. m. Disability Automobile Insur Miss Leora Peetz went to work Evening Service .......... 7:45 P- m. Prineville to remain a few weeks ance. Monday for McKean and Searcy, in that city. Christian Science Mrsi P. H. Buxton and Mrs. G. C. learning the bookkeeping work in Subject: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Huis were in Tacoma the first of that firm. Golden Text: Revelation 12:10 the week to attend a meeting of the gospel church members. Art Bucholtz is contemplating improvements to his confectionery store in the near future. They will include some new booths and a new floor covering. Mrs. Clarence Huis is in Siletz to help her father for a few days whJile he is arranging his affairs after the death of Mrs. Huis’i mother. George Vintin is still confined to his home but is feeling fine again after his illness, Mes dames w. J. Martin, George Meloy, M. A. Bull. Charles Adlard and Mn and Mrs. Vernon Flatt. | Mr. and Mrs. Wily Knighten and Neal Freeman, W. J. Martin and Giles French attended the Legion and Auxiliary meeting in Kent Monday night. Stanley Reavis and wile and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wheeldon drove to Badger creek Saturday night for a Í Army Officers Being Put Up Here For Duty For Soil Work Grasses, Soil Handling, Tillage Methods and Rodent Control AU Possible Oregon Has Seven Camps Camps Will Be Operated On Year Around Basis • ,U. S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service. Athena, Oregon. June 28, 1935—As a part of their program for intensive work within type areas, Soil Con servation Service officials announc 'd tociy that 20 CCC camps would be eiteter constructed or occupied this summer in Oregon. Washing ton, and Idaho to help safeguard the Northwest against the destrue- tion of our greatest natural re- source—the soil. These plans which include the preservation of farm. range, and forest lands, were announced sim ultaneously with the occupancy of Camp SCS-Washington’2, the Soil Conservation Service’s second oc‘ cupied camp, near Pullman. Wash’ ington. I Co. THE WALL STREET OF BRYCE CANYON: It’s 1500 feet straight down from the top of the spires of these towering “skyscrapers’’ tree lined “street” which marks the floor of this remarkable national park in southern Utah. No cluttering ticker tape, no scurry ing messenger boys, no ^r.rill cries of .excited brokers d| turtj the Work Now Paramount impressive silences. One hears only the chirp of fluttering birds, dis Washington will receive SIX turbed perhaps by enraptured exclamations of touring strangers. All camps, two of which have been p re- the colors of the spectrum—brilliant in the sunshine, soft pastel in viously constructed; Idaho, five the Lazy shade—are represented in these time-eroded formations. camps; and Oregon, seven camps Easily graded trails lead to the bottom of the canyon from the Union As well as affording employment Pacific lodge on the rim. Photo byUnion Pacific Railroad. for unemployed boys between the ages of 18 and 28, Soil Conserva I afternoon and re-elected the officers tion Service work will add a lasting | who have served for the past year. and permanent benefit to the North I II. Schilling is president, Luther west through soil conservation. Davis, vice-president. R. J. Baker, Directed by the Soil Conserva secretary and J. W. Shepard, mana tion Service and governed by the ger and treasurer. U. S. Army, the camp^, will follow Matt Simon and family were in construction plans similar to other Karl Eaton In Pullman For Portland for the week end to visit CCC camps in the United States i with Agnes who is spending the Superintendent Instruction and provide office and housing • summer there. Mrs» Chas Abel and quarters for Soil Conservation ■ son. came up with them to spend . Service officials assigned to the | Sam H. Baker and . . wife werei ft i - cw dfivs here a day or so to visit with broth- camps. Each are to accomodate) (... j ii er Roy and look over the coun- । r, Mr. , and Mrs. . Alfred ... Kock. „ Mrs. 200 men. i left ok * to move; „ Earl ___ Olds and Mr. Henry try they 25 years ago . and Mrs. t j The camps are to be active the d « c n i I Barnum were in Kent Monday to Grants Pass. Sam Baker was I • .. . .. , ., ., year around. CCC men working ’ , night to . attend the meeting and < . ,. . .. . . j under the direction of Soil ConserT the manager of the Citizens Bank listen to the sUte commander of vation Service officials will furnish in 1 the early days Since that time the Legion. labor for erosion control practice®. he has been a successful banker of Virgil Schadewitz and wife are The Soil Conservation Service, I southern Oregon, president ,of the leaving for Battle Ground (having which is sponsoring the camps, is I bankers association and first sold their farming outfit and de a bureau of the Department of Ag-1 citizen of his town. cided to leave the farm. . ri?ulture established to assist the Three boys. Don Smith, Henry The two sisters of J. W. Shep farmers of the United States in a I Roth and Ivan Gervais, spent a ard and their sons, left last week program to check the billions of i couple of days at Bear Springs to after spending several days touring dollars lost annually through ero- represent the co-operative fire the northwest with their brotiher. sion of topsoil by wtnd and rain, fighting unit of Grass Valley. They drove along the coast country This is accomplished by retiring Karl Eaton is in Pullman since to Canada returning by way of submarginal grain land to grass the first of the week learning the Yakima valley. and grass-legume mixtures; restor. w.’iys and wherefores of soil ero Roy Barnett’s truck had a close ing soil fertility; reforesting de sion in preparation for his job as call Wednesday night when a can nuded mountain slopes, regulating supervisor of the CCC erosion samp vas came in conUct with the ex grazing, and practicing gully con at Moro. haust pipe and caught fire. trol and rodent control measures. Bill Roth is working for Carl The directors of the Grass Val Project 6 is one of 40 similar ley Grain Growers met Saturday Melzer east of Moro during haying. projects in the United States lo Masons and Eastern SUrs ihield I cated in representative type study their annual picnic in the Grass I areas in which there has been ser Valley park Sunday afternoon with ious accelerated erosion. Project a good crowd in evidence. FREE 6 comprises 100,000 acres in the Palouse wheat belt and a sub-pro Swap advertisments will be SONKIST r ject of 32 000 acres in the Wild published in this column FREE “Last night I was kissed thirty horse Creek watershed, Umatilla of charge during May and June times in thirty minutes,” boasted County. Oregon. to subscribers of the Journal. Sylvia Wollenberg. Sand Study Proposed Write out your ad telling what “By the same man?’’ asked Mrs. In Oregon a special study will you want to swap and mail or Al Stern. be made by Soil Conservation Ser- i jt in early in the week, “No; he was a changed man af for Dress and Sport Wear vice officials on the sand dunes near ter the first kiss ’. WarreNton, in Clatsop County. I For Sale: 16 inch dry pine and MISTAKEN IDENTITY. where one of the State’s seven new Ar wood. O. R. Hulse. Mosier. “You see the old boy over there? camps will be constructed. Results Must now be employed, have fore He thinks in terms of millions.” will be of widespread application,. gjg-ht, fair education, mechanical in- “He doesn’t look like a financier.” since it will make possible the re- clinations, and willing to train in “He isn’t. He’s a bacteriolo habilitation of sandy areas. 1 spare time or evenings to qualify gist.”—Mutual Magazine. Plants will be cultivated to hold as INSTALLATION and SERVICE • One hundred and fifty the sand dunes from shifting and expert on all types of Electric Re will be developed in Clatsop Coun frigerators and Air Conditioning Styles to select from, only the ty to preserve federal, state, and equipment. For interview write, two above prices in this line, resort property from the drifting giving age and present occupation. DENTIST and in style, quality of mater sand. 1 Box 551, Beverly Hills, Calif. ial and tailoring there are Other CCC camps will be located HOME OFFICE,. WASCO in Malheur County, near Beulah; For Sale: Ford Coupe, also hea- none better for the money, DENTAL X RAY SERVICE in Sherman county, near (Moro; in vy Stock Saddle, |25.00 apiece. and are sold at the same price Wasco county, at Simnasihto; in j Dell Munger, Grass Valley. in every city in the state. ,'n Moro Ilie First Week Umatilla county, near Pendleton; — * —- — and in Morrow county, near Hepp- leaner Pigs For Sale: Gordon in Each Month ' ner . Fraser,-23F12. Former Resident Visits In Ccunty Joe Truitt I’ I. Hollywoc d Dresses Smocks Classified Ads. $1.95 and $2.95 Dr. J. A. BUTLER ^811! COME have soit e Until July 15lh you can get an extra pair of Pant« to match with an or der for a suit for only- FUN $2.00 SO BUY A NEW Groceries Trust us to have the mo^t complete stock, not only of staples, but of vegetables too QSpring Prints for your new house dress Overalls, Jumpers, Shirts, and all kinds of and save DRY GOODS Trade At H. Zeigler’s Quality Store R k >®° ¿th. IVIEITI l L ; ALL nakeà it ! * TANK or TRAILER BODIES ♦ FULL ar SEMI-TRAILERS * FUEL STORAGE’TANKS * WELDED STEEL PIPE ♦ CORRUGATED CULVERT |^TAU.fln0N B/REE! i PRICES ARE PURPOSf - • ' H CULVERTS SUU P|BE> ROPR PUMPS SiPTK TANKS TRANSPORT TANKS iwnnw troughs DRAlWACf SUPPLIE S IRRIGATION JUWIK extra. QGit a new Straw or Panama Hat at our Clear ELECTRIC RANGE J lÜAÜB FOR INFORMATION HEIL HOISTS AND DUMP BODIES KIOAM TRAHtO AND SEMI TRAILERS aturday, June 29 MORO LlGU N Hall Dancing Starts at 930 J. G. Fieemrn &Cn. r; BEMKL ~PÙtC AND Qank CORPORATION IMBIA BLVD. 5 TATION, ,OREGON SEE ANY DEALER IN ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT er PACIFIC POWIR A LIGHT COMPANY