Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1935)
■IH i ’ • •• • *• • . ♦ ■ •* ' * * t t t k BjikRMAN COUNTY JOURNAL^ iioAo, oitRGON FRIDAY. AUGUST 23, 1936. Moro Man Judge Chary« . Slaughter, youthful minister will preach at the Pull Gospel church next week. Brother of At Fair In Grass Valley Man Morrow County Shot In Hold-up Community Presbyterian Church Both Sunday school and the morning church service will be held Sadie W illiam i Married To in the Wasco Methodist church in connection with the meeting of tih« M ankfied Man In Stevenson , Sherman County Sundad school association. There will be no ser vices in this church Sunday mom D. E. Stephens and Merrill Ove- ing. All who have cars are asked son left Thursday s morning for to meet at the church at 9:30 a. m. Heppner where'Mt. Stephens will to furnish transportation for those judge the field crop exhibits at the who could not otherwise attend Morrow county fain Later they the Wasco meeting* 10 a. m. Sundaysohool; 11 a. m. will go to Pendleton to confer with government officials on the estab morning worship with the Rev. lishment of a weed control station Sydney W. Hall, D. D., District superintendent, as speaker; 1 p. m. in the northwest. basket dinner; 2:16 p. m , meeting Miss Sadie Williams, daughter of Sunday school association of Mr. and Mrs. George Williams, with the President R. C. Byers, presid was married Saturday afternoon ing. Special music at all services. at Stevenson, Wash., p» Robert 6:46 p. m. Lois Flatt will lead Dunlop They ^rill make their home the Junior Christian Endeavor .in MarshfineldzL . meeting at Moro. Mrs. A. O. Ramsey was taken to Christian 8<Unc< T'ue "Dalles hospital Saturday with Subject: MIND S?' an ailment that has not been diag Golden Text: I Corinthians 2:16. nosed. She is getting along very Who hath known the Mind of the well and is expected home within Lord, that he may instruct him? a few days. But we have the mind of Christ. For sale or trade, cash or terms, Responsive Reading: Ephesians make offer. Home and acreage, 4:7, 11, 12. 14, 17, 18 20-23. also four room house. W. E. Tate. I Full Gospel Assembly iReedsport, Oregon. Sunday School .......... 10:00 a m. Mrs. A. Douma underwent a Morning Service ....... 11.00 a. m major operation in The Dalles Mon i Evening Service .......... 7:45 p. m. day and is reported as renting j You are invited to hear the BOV well. . . I EVANGELIST, CHARLES A. W. H. Ragsdale is working in SLAUGHTER. Good speaker and Wasco county this week for the violinist, well known over the Federal I .and Bank. nortiuwe&t. Meetings every night, For Salé' a good Jack. B. E except Monday and Saturday Daugherty, or Arch Russel, Grass nights, at the Full Gospel Assem bly. starting promptly at 7:45. Valley. Roscoe Moore and Marius Douma You are Welcome». Moro Methodist Church finished their job of gathering and On Friday evening at 7:30 there t . ’reshing bunch garss seed at Shaniko last week They had near will be a Quarterly Conference ly 1000 pounds of seed when the meeting at the IM. E. church tc job was done, enough to seed quite which all members and friends are a patch of land back into bunch cordially invited. Dr. Sydney W Hall tbe newly appointed Distric4 grass. L. H. Nahouse, accompanied by Superintendent from Salem will his wife and daughter, Genevieve, be here in charge of the service. Rev. R. T Cookingham of Wascc were in The Dalles Thursday. 'For Sale: Progressive Library will accompany Dr. Hall and would set. Brand new. Half price. 10 be glad to meet the official mem bers of our church at Moro. years free service. See Journal For Sale: 90 head of coarse wool r.iireka Lodge No. 121 A.F. & A.M ewes. • Douma Bros. Moro, Oregon Miss Rachael Bayne, sister of Meets the 1st and 3rd Mrs. C. L. Poley. is visiting here Thursday evening* oi for a few days from Salem. each month. Visiting Ernest Eslinger was here Wed members cordially in nesday * afternoon from Forest vited to meet with us Grove where he is farm ing.'*’ | C. Sparling, W. M. “Seed Wheat—Pure Oto Turkey, C- V. Belknap. Secy the highest smut resistant wheat. Dalles price at my ranch. E. E. Moro Lodge No- 113, I. O. O. F- Burtner. Dufur, Ore. « Moro, Oregon J. B. Adams ws in Portland Meets 1st and 3rd last week end to visit his wife Tuesdays in the and daughter who live there. I O.O.F. hall Tra: Quite a number of local cit sient and visitmi izens spent a large part of last brothers are cordi week in The Dales taking part in ally invited to mee the egion convention Qr at least with us. watching the events there. L. © Rice N. G. Mrty Giles French returned ¡ Joe Truit, Secretarj Sunday from The Dalles hospital Lupine Rebecca Lodge No- 116 where fíne had been for three Moro, Oegon weeks after an operation. I. Owen Thom pson of C a m p ! Meet-* 2d and 4th Tu- S herm an has been very ill w ith e days of each month pneum onia hut is reported to be> Visiting members wel recovering in a hospital in Red come. mond. Florence Martin, N. G. Fred Pickett is expected to ar L ila B u ll. S e c re ta n rive next wee£ to aid in putting on the coneesions at the fair and to visit a bit with old friends., . , ? Harvest being about over in th is section of the county t/he far mers are in town oftener to look at the wheat market and catch up on their summer visiting. t LEVER Herman N. Bundesen. nation. Lnown medical health author nd president of the Chicago I of Health, made the follow- ta te m e n t in ¿peaking of the >fidi tioned trains: iis contribution to the health omport of the traveling pub- ould give real encouragement >se who in the past have suff- bccause of the atmospheric tions associated with cross- rv travel, especially those af- 1 with hay fever’’ j may forget about the heat jollen-ladcn dust of all forms rir a '’ trawl, forget all fear avel from past discomforts, anger of highway hazards and ?nts. Union Pacific has ban- all of that with its safe air- tioncH coaches on the Port- Rose. Pacific Limited and oth- íe transcontinental trains, ah in the Spokane. You don t what travel comfort is un- >u aré on one of its new air« tioned trains enjoying cool, , quiet, health-giving comforts ven found at home. u h and tourist car patrons on ’ortlnnd Roso now enjoy new •ost meals in ak-conditioncd ►rt. only 25 cents for break- 30 cents for luncheon and 35 for dinner, and free pillows, kinking cups, and, free porter e. Ask your Union Pacific , for full information. IN ION PACIFIC Local Woman Hurt In Car Accident on Hignway naires warerin The Dalles the last of the week to see the events of the state convention of ex-service men. 1 John McNeil has moved his fam ily into the old Hollis Wilcox house this week. Bud Eslinger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clem Eslinger of Hillsboro, is visiting hare with his grandparents Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Barnum. Bud Coon, V. A. Baker, Tom Kaufman Mnd Henry Clements are working Under J. B. Burton as car counters this week. This is the second weeks counting the first be ing last m^nth when much the same crew worked. Mrs. Matt Simon had her tonsils removed at The Dalles hospital Wednesday. Camps Expected To Be Going By October . 1 Big Program Being Started I i Soil C on rvaiion Charles Lemley and wife return U. S. Department of Agriculture, ed from Rosalia, Wash».. Monday, Siol Conservation Service. Pullman, night after attending the funeral Washington, Auguirt 1935—Fol of Bert Lemley, Mr. Lemley s lowing the announcement last week youngest brother, who was killed by Northwest Soil Conservation by bank robbers while acting in his Service, officials that the enrollment official capacity as marshall of , of men for work in Washington, Rosalia during the recent bank BROTHERS UNDER Oregon, and Ida/ho COC camps en robbery there. Mr. Lemley says his THE SKIN gaged in soil erosion work has been brother was shot while standing A bond salesman temporarily temporarily halted until the har on the steps of the bank and try out of a job ran into a friend who ing to fire- at the robbers who were owned a circus and asked him for vest crews are fully manned, came the statement today from Robert inside. The one wiho fired the fatal something, to do. Fechner. Director of Emergency shot was dressed in woman’s “Well,’0»e gorilla recently died,” Conservation Work, that more than clothes and stationed in a car on said the Triend, “apd if you want 46,000 CCC are now actively en a street corner^,,'-. ¿ j . , ' ! to get intd bis skin, swing on the gaged in soil conservation duties. Chris Thomsen of Antelope was trapeze, growl a bit and frighten a visitor in Grass Valley Tuesday. the children, you can have the job.” It is expected that all of the camps Viggo Haufelt, former resident j The man filled the bill well in Washington, Oregon and Idaho of this- county, was here Saturday. I until one day the rope on which will be occupied by full companies He has purchased the dental equip he was swinging snapped and he of men around October 1. There are now 230 erosion con ment and location of Dr. Butler was catapulted into the lion’s trol camps in operation in thirty and will move to Wasco this week. ’ cage. states, according to Fechner. When Mrs. Haufelt will be remembered The lion, seeing him, let out a the expansion program of the CCC as Isabelle Duncan, a former school lusty roar to which he offered a is completed, a total of 112.000 men teacher of the county. timid yelp. The lion roared more Born: To Mr. and Mrs. Arch menacingly. The pseudo-gorilla and 542 camps will be engaged in Fortner, Friday August 16, a boy. lost his nerve and becoming entire this work under the direction of Mr. and Mrs. Matt Simon drove ly human, backed into a corner the Soil Conservation Service. to Portland Saturday returning I yelling, “Help - Help!” Under the new allocation, nine Sunday evening. teen’ states, mostly in tihe South The lion thereupon came closer George Wilcox and family were * 1 and said in a hoarse whisper: and Central West will receive in Newberg Wednesday morning of “Shut your mouth, you fool, you camps. These will be distributed last week and returned the same are not the only bond salesman over farming regions where the day soil has been impoverished through out of a job.” Vem McGowan and wife were —The Cackler. here until Wednesday of tihiis week while on their way home to Pendle He: “They tell me the Colonel is ton from Eugene where Mac has a sexagenarian.’’ been attending summer school. She: “The old fool! And a t his Mr. McGowan will teach in Pendle age too!’’ ton again this year. * W. Ray Blake and family were Phone 345 The Dalles, Ore , Lifeguard (with girl in arms): visiting in Portland Sunday driving “Sir, I have just resuscitated your down Saturday. daughter.” ’* •’ _ Henry Tetz and family have gone Father: ‘'"Then, by gad, you’ll GRASS VALLEY PHARMACY on to Rufus after spending a few marry her,”____________________ Phone 222 • days here with Mrs. Tetz’ parents. Mrs. Alice McGuire was injured Sunday night when she either fell or jumped from an oil truck being driven by Darrel Altermatt, ac cording to information received here Monday. She was taken to tike Mid-Columbia hospital in The Dalles where she is receiving at tention. Bruises and cuts about her head are the major part of her injuries. The accident occurred E A T W IT H W A L T R U G G L E S near Stiles on the Deschutes». Harvesting is about over in tikis section of the county and while some more wheat will be delivered to the houses before that job is ended the cutting of grain is his tory on most farms. Vere Pike is back from the music camp at Wallowa lake where she has been for the past two weeks taking music instruction. F. C. Simpson was one of the teachers. Several local citizens and legion- j ZELL’S PAGE THREE water and wind erosion. “Many of these camps will be operated in connection with large- scale erosion control demonstra- • tions,’’ H. H. Bennett, Chief of the Soil Conservation Service, said in describing the work to be dope by i the new camps. “On these water shed projects a coordinated attack of land-use planning will be carried forward under the supervision of technicians of the Soil Conserva tion Service. Civilian Conserva tion Corps enrollees will assist in the construction of check dams, diversion ditcibes, and other gully control methods, in the construc tion of terrace outlets, in reforest ing and reseeding slopes too steep for safe cultivation and in other approved methods of erosion con trol. “Where camps are operated a- part from a demonstration area, these same conservation measures will be carried out on as large a scale as possible Results thus far obtained from the millions of trees planted and the thousands of gul ly control structures built ¡have shown conclusively that soil ero r /tf A sion can be cured.” * ‘ Benefits similar to the two and three bushel per acre increase from pea and wheat residue utilization have been obtained by adding ten tons of strawy manure to the stub ble before plowing. Officials in the Wildhorse Creek area expect still greater differences than were measured at the Pendle ton field station because of a higher precipitation. The utilization of crop residue is a necessary part of the program to check soil erosion on cultivated lands, Conservation Service officials pointed out. Maintaining this trashy, absorptive layer of topsoil aids in reestablishing soil struc ture and also establishes favorable mechanical barriers to soil erosion that will absorb the rain and lesson run-off and aid ravine and gully control. “ Ie th is t’?.e F idelity Insurance Company” ? “Yes, ma’am, it is. What can w’c do for you?” “I want to arrange to have my husband’s fidelity insured.” i me to g e t y o u r w o o d a n d c o a l fo r w in te r S p e c ia l P rice on S la b W o o d R ig h t o f f th e C a r Tum-A-Lum Lumber Company Grass Valley P h o n e 93 FUNERAL HOME D o n ’t B r in g Y o u r L u n c h A T T H E F A IR G R O U N D S Groceries--------------------------- Trust us to have the m ost com plete stock, not only o f staples, but o f vegetables too ^ S p r in g P rin ts fo r y o u r neu) house d re ss O vera lls, J u m p e rs, S h irts, a n d a ll k in ds o f D R Y GOODS T ra d e A t H . Z e i g l e r ’s Qsu,S I y Vhen Your Shoes need repaii send them to W E R N M A R K ’S ÏOOD SHOE repairing ’64 Second St. THE DALLES T hank Y ou W e w h to e x p re s s out appr< clcfic n c f i l e c o n ' s d r'itio n , c c o p e r a tir n a n d n c ip h l o ilir.t fs phewn by o tr custom ers during the recent in terru p tio n of service cr.vsed I y the i re 1 e tv te r. T1 e D a P e s a n d H ood R iver. Interruptions of this sc rt are regrettable end nt times unavoidable. When they occur, the duty cf the organization is to restore service at the ear liest possible moment. In our opinion, the men of Pacific organization who rebuilt practically a mile of line in less than twenty-four hours did an out standing job. We express publicly our sincere ap preciation of the work done by these men. Loyalty and efficiency such ns they displayed are indispen sable elements in the maintenance cf Pacific Power & Light Company service. We share in the public gratitude to the men of the Forest Service and the CCC and SERA work ers for their valiknt efforts in controlling the fire. Pacific Power & Light Compar.y A lw a y s a t y o u r se rv ic e & ljj), I Licoarr a M yua Tosxxo <“***