Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1939)
< , arfS?"'”4v PAGE FO U R THE SHERMAN GGUNTY, Mrs. F. Ford and children from tx.s Angeles visited here w ith her parent«», Mr. an d M rs. W. E. T .to. M rs. S. A. Roe of C orvallis j a v isito r-a t the hem e of her si: .or, lrs. Ira F ridley. • Guy A ndrew s of T h . Dalles . is- isted here from S atu rd a y i ntil Thursday. A group of children spent a Miss Mabe] Adeline Thom as pleasant afternoon a t the Mai am foim eriy of Klondike, and M arvil locum home, the occasion be.ng Merle O verholts of P ortland wer her eighth b irth d ay wihich was urzited in m arria g e on Ju ly 2 a July first. G uests were Pat.’ icia 6 oclock a t the C entral Methodis H ilderbrand, S hirley “and Jean church in P o rtlan d by Dr. Georfe M cIntyre, S h irley and B ev .rly H. Bruce, p a sto r of the Methodis ocum, Joan B urres, Ann C lothier church in The D alles. The bridi uu Jean B riggs. given aw ay by her brother, Ma; Mrs. L oretta B urres is visit- vin Thom as, wore a w hite satii ng in Gilliam county w ith her dress w ith a tra in and a long bri on. da! veil. S he carried a very pret M iss Beryl S h eets spent S a .u r- ty bouquet. Maid o f honor wa? ’.ay evening a t the home of H sel her siste r, M ary Thom as, • aru ia rie W atkins. bridesm aids w ere M rs. K lam hai Mr. and Mrs. A rth u r Sarg nt, sist«i of the groom and Miss Gen Bryan Van Gilder and Raymond evivve Hill, a friend. They w on visited over th e holiday w ith M rs. long w hite d resses w ith gardenia: Inez Nash. in th eir h a ir and carried bouquet; Bob Collins from Pasco, W eth- W illiard Overholta, b ro th er of th ¡gton is spending some tim e here gioom was best m a n ” and Cec ith friends. Schaefer and Dave CKpstren w en Mr. and Mrs. A ir hie Gosson and the ushers. The ring ceremon hildren nd Mr. and Mrs. Leo was used. W atkins and children enjoyed a A fte r the wedding a receptioi picnic lunch a t W ilson park Tues- war held a t the hom e of - th *>• groom ’s p aren ts w here lunched Mr. and M is. G lin W allace and was served. G uests included Mar hildren were in P ortland over the vin Thom as, and m other Mrs tcliday. Louise Thom as, Mr. and Mrs. Or Mr. and Mrs. T ilbert B arn ett mand H ilderbrand and fa m ih ind children from P ortland spent M rs. Flossie D eaton, Mr. and M rs Lhe holidays w ith TiM&rt’s fa th e r, F. M. Scott and d au g h ter Je a n e t' T>afe B arnett. of P ortland, form erly of Wasco Mr. and Mrs. V allingham and Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Seeley o hree children from Oklahom a, and W’lxdburn, anil th eir daughtci d late from C alifornia, cam e here Zella B allinger. ’or th? harvest season and are Mrs. Roy B rlshee was in a t •enting the B row nlee house. Mrs. tendance a t the home of Mrs Vallingham and Mrs. B u rn ett are John Foss, w here a p a st nobl< listers. grand p arty was given last weel Mr. and Mrs. P res Bo ice and at Moro. hildren and Malcolm McDermirt Mrs. S tan ley w as listed in Th' ipent th e F o p rth a t L ost Lake. Dalles F rid ay on business. Mr. and Mrs. Bob B erni spent Mr. and M rs. H arley D uttor ’h e holidays a t Redmond a t the left S atu rd ay evening for a visit ’x>me of Mrs. B erni’s parents. with th eir children in Fossil and Mr. and Mrs. B. H. G rady left to a tten d th e celebration there. S aturday for W alla W alla to *ne Mr. and Mrs. N ick Scinto from heir son and d au h g ter-in -law , Mr. Tacoma stopped in W asco Sundr end Mrs. Ed G rady. They re tu r n at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ed W ednesday. We*le^ Wilde. Beryl S heets, whe Mrs. Max W illiam s helped Mrs. is related to th e Scintos, and Vs I McQuillen Tuesday a t the Max dis Wilde accom panied them t< ?sfe. Bend w h e v a m idget au to race A rth u r W atkins w as em ployed was held Sunday, w ith Mr. SciiV placing an en try . Mr. an d M rs. H enry Richeldin fer accom panied by Jam es Maddc* went to the lake S atu rd a y evening for canning a t Sunday H a rry R iehelderfer o' C o lu m b ia F r u it G ro w e r« W hite Salmon joined them os ar additional g u est of Mr. Maddox (Old Libby C an n ery ) The D alits. W inifred and M ary FortneT visited in P o rtlan d , Mrs. Lewi H astin g s ta k in g them down ti B iggs W ednesday evening. Mrs. F red Cole retu rn ed honv rtc e n tlv accom panied by Mr. a tv Mrs. W illiam M cKinney of lArl ington. They have been on r m otor trip o f several weeks whic1 a j N e w ru b b e r took them to the w orld’s fa ir u r Q A L l t-T a g i t a t o r s to p s to o th er p oints in the eastern Unit ^ ■ J **> * w r i n g e r r o lls . ed S tates. Mr. and M rs. K enneth F erg u ro r •nd children re tu rn e d from P c - ’ fend F rid ay evening. They lef Trade your old washer a» ag ain T hursday. They are fi r down payment. Phone 161 Alaska. M iss G ertru d e H ansen of Port for trial land, visited here recently w * 1 h er p a re n ts, Mr. and Mrs. Ove Hansen. Mr. and M rs. H arland Johnson came from Spokane S atu rd av t The Dalles, Ore. visit hfe p aren ts, Mr. and Mrs J. T t Johnson until the la tte r par* of th is week. Gordon is here alsc for a v isit w ith relatives. Mr*. Helen Dingle sp en t w s r - al days in tow n before re tu rn ng agnin to P ortland. M r. and M rs. Owen B arnett Mr. and Mrs. 0 . G. H ilderbrand and Mrs. HiDcs m otored to (Port land Sunday and J e r ry B arn e t’ ixturned home a fte r a b rief visit in the city. G uests a t the Clyde F ridley home recently w ere Mr. and Mrs F. D. Hill of P ortland. Mrs. Hill and Mrs. F rid ley are siste rs M rs. Belle C lothier enjoy d a weeks visit with her children. W’m Clothier and Mrs. D iebert J< in- sw»n, from her home at Longvi<*w. W ashington. Miss Belle C lothier was also here fo r a visit. Jean Joyal from Condon came Monday fo r a visit w ith Mrs. Joyal, re tu rn in g & his place of business T hursday. Overholtz Thomas Wedding Held In Portland Tree Ripe Apricots EASY WASHER HAMPTON FURNITURE KEEP Y O U ? RECORDS a c c u ta tz T. Lester Johnson JOU RNAL, MORO, OREGON FRID A Y , JU L Y 7, 1930 this week a t the Atwood store. ' th e low est fo r an y year since 1915. (Mrs. K atjherrne Jo h n so n , who “T he ra te s of incidehce per is v isitin g in P cX land, cam e home 100,000 population by S ta te s wat W ednesday and rem ained over u n iform ly low,” says Dr. Dauer, r ig h t. She w as accom panied by ‘‘One s ta te , Nevada, rep o rted nt M rs. M icheál, and A u trey May; c a s ts ; two states, New Hampshir» also Mr. and Mrs. Ben P aulen ex and W yom ing, only one each.’’ Independence, K ansas. Mr. Paui- The incidence by counties wa: en is a nephew of M rs. Johnson, , also u n iform ly low, according tc also is ex -g o v trn o r of K ansas. He i the rep o rt, and there was no largi .and his w ife a re m aking an ex jg re u p of counties with high ra te : tended v isit in C alifo rn ia, and l as had been th e case in the five- cam e to O regon to v isit the rel 1 yeai periodim m ediat<ly preceding atives here. j • 1938. T h ere were 57 counficr Mr. and M rs. F ritz L utje had I how ever, re p o rtin g cases in 193? as v isito rs over th e week end Mr. [ which had not reported cases in and Mrs. R obert C ooper and M r . j th . previous five-year period. In H iatte from L a C e n ttr, W ashing I these co u nties Jhe^rate. was nearly ton. j ten tim es th a t for Jthe co untry as ' Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Guy and f a whole. children, Mr. and M rs. C h a rk s I Only 16 counties hud incidence E v erett, and Mrs. F. S. Lam born enjoyed a no host d in n er Tu<-ih, v j la te s above 30 per 100,000 popula- a t the home of Mr. and M rs. Ed ! tion. Eleven of these had sm all ; p o p u lations; consequently the high McKee.,« * The Hines reunion was h t ’d at H a te s of incidence result ;nj* f om W ilson park W ednesday, m em bers j one o r two cases cannot be reg ard - m eeting a t th e park included ‘ ed as significant. Hou'.rh i ' un- F ra n k F enton, fo rm erly of G Id- ' ty, S cu th D akota, fc r c” ~ n - ’ re- endale, Roy Brown and frm ily , ( ported five Cases in 1938 givi •'» it Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hines. G rass ja ra te of 70 per TOO,000 .jr>: n a Valley, M rs. Ida King. Mr ar. ! tion. I T w enty cas *s of recogn zed Mrs. Alvin W est Rock C’ fek. Donald Dolan, of P ortland amp : r e l w v f l i t 's v-h’-h < *c*•“ ur in S u rd av for a sevcrel w ork v i'p s ! ‘ k? c it”. of • ‘‘•om with J e rry B a r n e tt.. , Ju ly 23 to S j)tc ,r.';e “ 1, *i; -;b:d F red F o rtn e r was home fo r the t one in te re stin g clinical fe a tu re of | the R eport. In 13 out of the 20 holidays. cases, definite bulbar p araly sis was observed, and 12 of these coses term in ated fa tally . T here w re a definite geographical gro u p - | ing of cases in the city. Ten of i the cases occurred w ithin a rad iu s W ashington D. C., had the h ig h of th ree city blocks, and all but e st ra te of incidence of piliom ycl- ! N ia g a ra riv er and no point in the itis (in fa n tile p araly sis) in the j city is m ore th an 15 or 20 blocks nation in 1938, 4.8 p er 160,000 two occurred in persons residing population, and was closely,... fob. w ithin ten blocks of the N iag a ra lowed by South D akota w ith four river. How ever, this did not con- cases for each such population s t :tu te a definite co n centration of cases n ear the w a te rfro n t. b - .a u ’ C group. W ith final sta te and county fig the population of the city is d is ures in for last year, according to trib u ted about two arm s of th ? Dr. C. C. D auer, epidem iologist of N ia g a ra riv er and no point the D istrict of Colum bia H ealth city is m ore than 15 or 20 brocks D ep artm en t, (P ublic H ealth R e fioni the river. No h istory of di p o rts, M ay 26, 1939,) previous rect contact ’jetw eea cases was evidence is corroborated th a t the obtained, b u t in a num ber of in num ber of cases o p th ? disease re stan ces frien d s in common w ere ported for the whole country was found. No m ultiple cases occurred in households, n o r were th ere any suspicious illnesses am ong con tacts. “ D uring the year 1938 there w ere no o u tstan d in g advanerm enta in the epidem iology of poliom yel itis,” say s Dr. D auer. “ P rogress in th is field ap p ears to depend up on finding m ore su itable or sus^ ceptible anim als for experim ental in v estig atio n s th an those nvailabl; a t th e p resen t time. Disc »wry of a m ore susceptible anim al t h ir the m onkey, and on? wh'.<h v-n h be available in sufficient nun- ' and a t a com paratively low c ‘ would be a g re a t aid in ?-)lv:’!- num ber of epidcm 'n’ogb il p ’< lem s..’’ Winds Corroborate Dead Woman’s Story fit M aking it E asy Schm idt was doing 70 when the traffic lig h ts were at red, and was ev en tu ally pulled up. V C onstable;— W hat is yuut nam e? Schm idt: — K alonspaniotossky- w itz. C o n stab le:—'How do you spell it? z* S ch m id t:— W ith o u t an H. > WHAT! 5 0 EVE? ■•so; W P ••'V yz i ■ *-*5' 4® z < - <- « ì W e - ’ Dead for three years, Mi s. P attie Tillett once testified In a land suit th at one boundary m ark —a cem etery—existed near the fam ous Seven Sisters dunes in D are county, North Carolina. There was no trac e of the cem etery and the case was dism issed. > Now a storm has swept the banks, and shifting sands exposed the bones of M rs. T illett’s ancestors. Attorneys have moved to reopen the case. Hitler Entertains First Rovai Visitors Paralysis Worst In Washington D. C. KT -Lx. S After waiting years for the right moment, the right mood and the right piece of stone, Jacob Epstein, m o d e rn ist s c u ’p to r,. crea ted “Adam,” which he considers his “greatest work.” The huge alabas ter figure was completed In 18 months, without benefit of model. AOA^R<-M a y n O R ÌC O N < D A IR Y HOM E M ADE QUICK BREADS Sum m er is officially here again. And problem num ber one in the m inds of m eal p lan n er’s is “ W h a t’s som ething ap p e tiz in g to serve th ese h o t d a y s ? ” O ne answ er to th a t question is “ hom e-m ade quick b read s.” F or even when rt is ninety in the shade no fam ily is satisfied with all cold m eals. Bread, fresh from the oven, ia one way to w ork a necessary hot dish into th? menu. M ade-to-order for sum m er b ak ing a t hom e are quick breads, which can be s tirre d up in a h u r ry, baked quickly.- For these breads b u tte r m akes a sa tis fa c to ry shortening. B est liquid for food value, flavor and te x tu re is milk. In any quick bread but pop-overs, sour m ilk m ay be sub stitu ted cup fo r-c u p fo r sw eet. r A lw ays of course when sour milk is su b stitu ted ' for sw eet, th e re m u st be a change in the leavening agent. Each cup of sour milk needs one h a lf teaspoon soda to neutralize the acid in it. O ne h alf teaspoon soda equals in leavening power 2 teaspoons bak ing powder - and ta k e s the place of th a t m uch of the b aking pow der in the original recipe. . Q uickest of all the quick breads are muffins. S ecret of th e ir suc cess lies m ostly in the m ixing • and the know ing when to ; top. T horeforie,stir muffins enough to m oisten the ingredients and leave th e m ixture w ith a rough a p p e a r ance. Do not mix fo r sm oothness. Muffins a re a t th e ir best served hot from the oven w ith plentv nf e C O U N C IL ibutier. B u t some cooks purposely m ake up m ore th an th eir fam ily can e a t a t one meal. Then these “ left o v er” muffins are cut in slices, b u ttered and to asted. M uf fins also lend them selves to ta s te ful v ariatio n s. To a recipe calling fo r 1 cup liquid - add one half cup chopped dried fru it with- the dry in g red ien ts or add one fo u rth cup chopped nuts. C ornm eal m ay be s u b s titu te d for all or p a rt of all-purpose flout HL muffins or griddle cakes. H ow ever, for the m ost p art, oernm eal works best in recipes designed especially for it. A nd for all the dishes m ad? from corn meal one of the fa v o r ites since th e Indians sta rte d it h as been corn pone. Follow ing is one good recipe fo r core p o ne.. R eichsfuchrer Adolf Hitler plays the gracious host to Prince Paul and P rincess Olga of Yugoslavia during their recent trip to G erm any, bidding them a tem porary farewell as they left Berlin to visit the estate of Field M arshal H erm ann Gacrtng. They were the first royal couple at the head oi a state to pay a otote visit to G reater G erm any. S tam p Series C om m em orates B aseball C en ten n ial Corn Pone Two cups corn meal One teaspoon salt Two tablespoons m elted b u tte r One an d a h alf cups m ilk ______ Two teaspoons baking pow der Mix the m eal, baking powder and salt. Add the b u tte r and warn* liquid and mix well. Shape into sm all cakes or pones. Place on well b u ttered pans and bake in hot ov.*n for about th irty m inutes. CH IR O PR A CTIC PH Y SIC IA N S Dr. H. H. P crrato n , C h iro p rac tic P h y sic ia n of Chicago, 15 years experience. Painless non surgical rem oval of tonsils* vericose veins, foot troubles, sinus, colitis, scia tica, a r th r itis etc., F ir s t N ational (Bank Bldg. Phone 101. The D alles, Oregon. The sale of a stamp series commemorating the founding of baseha'l got off to a flying start in Coopers town, N. Y . , recently when Postmaster General James A. Farley sold the first stamps to Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, baseball commissioner. There Abner Doubleday founded baseball 100 years ago. Fuzzy-W uzzies Aid B ritish in O m d u rm a n ‘B attle’ IGCOSOSOCOCOO OO OO GOO OO OO OO &T Announcement A full General Electric line of Standard on all "C aterpillar" D iet si 1 LAWYER j WASCO * Tracton Is the hour motor. It supplies an accurate basis lor servicing and MORO < The hour meter gives you a means oi checking the long hours o( eco nomical Ills your “Caterpillar" Diesel Tractor w ill deliver. • AIR CONDITIONED ' COLD STORAGE LOCKERS Y mt PatTMife Appreciated Stove», Refrigerators, W a te r Heaters, Washing Machines, Roasters I A n d A ll Small Appliances Ask lor a Demonstration os Your O wn rarm . Groceries—Meats—Fresh Fruits and Vegetables in Season l j figuring hourly operating and upkeep costs. It eliminates guess work. WASCO MARKET E lectrical E q uip m en t Display Room In Yates Store O’MEARA Supply & Imp. Co John Deere Y o u a r e i n v it e d to s e e th e s e a p p lia n c e s W a y n e Darby Caterpillar W «tcoz Oregon » I 000000000000c«©cc0<>i>0*c00c0©000<>000000<x50000000co& In the welding of the “ life line of the B ritish em pire/* Lord Horatio k itc h e n e r’s famous victory at Om durm an. Anglo-Egyptfen Sudan;, on Septem ber 2, 1898, over the fanatic dervish hordes of the Khalifa stands as one of the most im portant m ilitary conquests in England’s history. Stem ming from this trium ph was G reat B ritain’s complete m astery of Egypt. Now a British movie com pany is rem aking history, filming the battle with the aid of the Hadendowah tribe, known as the Fuzzy-Wuzzies, a nam e given them by Rudyard Kipling. Left: Natives relaxing before a “ b attle.” Circle inset: Makeup men create dum m y heads to bo •trew n on the battlefields. Right: Hand to hand encounters between the natives and ths soldiers,, I 1 * ♦ * V \ x.