PAJÛI TWO
THE SHERMAN COUNTY JOURNAL. MORO, OREGON
FRIDAY, JULY U , 19S0
■ * >
■PDHW*1 '
fr'b rrm a tt C a n n i » 3 l» n t n a l | HAl-VESTERS
first
of Ju ly of each ‘S t f t t c i l O l l S C
t ----- * , . .
. out t t the
h f
i
ytii! the stre e ts are . suddenly
Sherman County Observer
a ’iv: w ith now faces as roughly
Established Nov. 2, 1888
d ; e ; *ed n u n com e in to do the e x -i
Grass Valley Journal
ti a work of cutting, th resh in g ,
Established Oct. 14, 1897
IONSOLIDATED March 6, 1931 sitek ng and hauling - the w heat.
Then in a week or so they are as
Wasco News-Enterprise
I
ai enly gone, eith er hired and
Established Nov. 1891
! a' work or discouraged for the
IONSOLIDATED March 4, 1932 lack of it and moved on to other
plac s.
Published Every Friday at
T here used to - be thousands
Moro, Oregon
Giles L. French
Editor who eas th ere are now but hun-
dror's. They know alm ost unerr-
E ntered as second-class m a tte r a t
the proper tim e to arriv e
the Postoffice a t Moro, Oregon a* d seldom can the sam e m an b ’
nnder Act of C ongress of M arch fou. d for over three days at a
tim -. Like th e robin th ey know
5. 1879.
wh n th e ir - season fipena.
H irvest hands now often come
b i t ’, to the sam e job y ea r a fte r
yen • and relatives and friends of
f ; i rie rs m ake up a larg e p a rt of
OFFICIAL COUNTY PAPER
the sm all crews th a t a re used
the*“ days. Even now, though,
SU B SC R IPTIO N R A TES
they are practically indisp^nsibk,
Payable in Advance
th w e roving w orkers who come,
ONE YEAR ...........................11.50
s it on our s tre e t corners a few
days and go into th e country to
JULY 14, 1939
h arv est the crops we live by.
THEY HAVE HEARD O F IT
M any have noted th a t m ore cars
from C alifornia and W ashington
and o th er sta te s are trav e lin g the
S herm an highw ay sector of H igh
way 97 this year th an ever be
fore and the fa ir cannot be given
cred it fo r all the added trav el. We*
th in k th a t the road itself is en
titled to m ost of the increase.
F o r those who a re really going
som eplace and w an t d readfully to
bt th ere y esterd ay , th e
long-
s tra ig h t stretch e s and easy curves
m ake it a highw ay on -which one
can g et out of a c a r about all the
m an u fa ctu rer p u t into it in the
way of speed. W hile we like o
have to u rists slow down fo r our
tow ns, he can tune 'er up on the
high road to suit his own fe a r of
d eath and d estruction.
F or those who have m ore time
or more esth etic sense th ere are
com pensations aplenty. T here is
the view of the w h<at fields which
• gives a th rill to those who have
not seen it before.
W hen they
come to the top of a hill and see
before them our irre g u la r ch e ck er
board of w heat and fallow spread
over thousands of acres it is some
th in g not often seen and always
i < iiu-inb. red.
Then there are the m ountains.
No place in the s ta te a re so many
peaks visible as from th e Sherm an
highw ay. Down in the valley on
e-’nnot see the m ountains for the
trees, fa rth e r east th e Cascades
are too fa r aw ay for clear visibil-
iay. T h r u is A dam s, St. Helens,
R ainier, Hood. Jefferson and the
T hree S isters lining the w estern
sky ns b rig h tly outlined as if
painted on the w indshield.
So they are com ing in g re a te r
num bers, these people fro m 'o th e r
s ta te s —and from o u r own as
w ill—because some one has told
them of the ad v an tag es of this
ri aii, some one has talked about
the view o f the m ountains, the
glory of the ever fru itfu l w hen’
fields, the speed of th e stra ig h t
level rqad. We are glad to see
them come for we know they are
going to enjoy it and if they take
tim e to really look, th ey will sen
som ething they will rem em ber a
long, long tim e.
ENTERTAINM ENT
Some y ears ago some one, as
yet unidentified, o rig in ated the
theory th a t people had to be en
tertain ed . Maybe it waa B arnum .
He had several Original ideas
about people, anyw ay. The idea
grew until those who w ere in
ch arg e of the young people took it
up and really developed it to a
s ta rtlin g degree.
When youths in g ra n d p as tim e
had tim e to g a th e r to g e th e r they
w restled and boxed and jum ped
and swam and— poor old fashioned
souls— th o u g h t they w ere having
a good tim e. T h a t w as before the
days of en tertain m e n t.
Now youths m ust be en tertain ed
by som ething outside them selves,
shows, m otors, circuses, etc. They
have been train ed to be dependent
ju st as g ran d p a was tra in e d to be
independent.
Schools in those
s te m days w ere places of s tric t
discipline where a boy learned his
th ree Rs fo r fe a r of the rod; now
a boy digs into his lessons to keep
from being p u t off th e football
team ,, which is well nigh p erfect
except th a t few are on the fo o t
ball team .
Sunday school used to be a
school th a t ta u g h t Bible sto ries;
now it is ju st a bit of Sunday en
terta in m en t w here different prob
lem« th an those encountered by
Biblical ch a rac te rs are discussed
for Sunday schools have also jo in
ed the en tertain m e n t group and
are su g ar coating the lessons.
Some m ay construe th is te n
dency to be a sign of w eakness on
the p art of schools and churches,
an adm ission th a t the lessons were
b itte r medicine th a t needed a coat
ing of sw eet stuff to m ake them
palatable. And then it m ay be th e
process a t civilisation is a process
of softening and the m an is m ost
civilized who has the m ost things
done fo r him ; th a t hard and tough
m uscles and hard and tough mind«
a re th e m ark o f the b arb arian .
Mebby so.
How anyone can strik e on a job
of m ade work is hard to im agine.
W I’A ers are doing things th a t are
incom petent, irrivelent and un-
necessary, as they will find out
if the strike continues. Som e
th in g should be done to encourage
the m.
In Other Days
From the Observer July 13, 1900.
A lbert Woods and’ wife, accom
panied by Miss Mc-Lachlan, paid
this office a v isit last week. A1
In ought us in a sam ple of oatc
that was so nice looking we had
it photoed by R aym ond.
M isses Rose and Daisy Stanley
r?tu rn ed W ednesday from a splen
did excursion of th ree weeks into
V • co county, g uests of Mr. and
V
M arquis on Chenowith.
Wm. H enrichs and w ife, Mrs
R J G.inn and Miss Cqjem an lef'
W< dnesday for Collins Springs
*' tames L. K. Moore and W. C
W illiam s leave the last of _ this
. k.
'
’ ;...
?J. J. Finlayson of Antelope
p aire d through on the 9th to The
G o S S ip
i.outinuud from page one»
IVi’ZZiam McKinney Tells O f
Trip To New York Fair
G re ater em phasis on th e “con-
tro l” fe a tu re of the Knox liquor By William McKinney
acc is expected to follow induction , Did you ever try to tell a fiiend
into office of the new L iquor Con-' ab out the v ario u s shots from a
trol B oard ju s t appointed by Gov news re el? My wife, my m other
ern o r (Sprague. It is known th a t and I are having ju s t th a t kind of
G overnor S p rag u e has alw ays re-, experience try in g to present pic
•gerded the Knox a c t a s a m easure tu res, little happenings, and ad
designed to prom ote tem perance v en tu res fro m our recent trip
in the use of alcoholic liquors, which took us into p arts of sixteen
la th e r than one designed to p ro s ta te s and a sm all way through
fit th e s ta te thro u g h a monopoly C anada.
on liqpor sales. In ca stin g about
Ort the w ay east, by bus, our
for three new m em bers fo r this di iver drove slowly by the place
board, it is to be assum ed th a t he w here “B oy’s Tow n’’ w as filmed.
nought men whose views on the The se ttin g is located ju st a little
liquor question closely harm onize to the w est of Om aha, N ebraska.
\ ith his own.
It is a p re tty place and a person is
T he old liquor com m ission had really im pressed w ith the fine
alread y sta rte d a cam paign for buildings. T h e little town is renlh
more rigid regulation of night run by the boys.
clubs and re s ta u ra n ts w here liquor
v d s mixed an d consum ed and of Ford E xhibit In terestin g
beer parlors and other places dis
One of the things thht i'liptcss-
pensing th is beverage and it is
-ed
us, while driv in g our own cm
expected th a t th e new com m ission
v.’ill continue thjs cam paign with uh ough M ichigan, was th a t every
liitlc way th e re woulij be fn ir.v't-
added im petus.
¡r£ raadsrds i l l r ’v v * * - ‘h >’•
• * •
of
e l r r r e t.c
V/h I • » e w
T he B oard of Control plans tc
th
is
s
ta
te
we
w
n
» l j ’. *n‘
ask th e S ta te E m ergency Board
born.
H
ere
H
enry
Ford has
for an appropriation to finance
pu rch ase of flag poles fo r the cap- gath ered to g e th e r one of the finest
itol and lib rary buildings and for collections of early A m rican. cul
the landscaping of the lib rary site. tu re.- The village blacksm ith, th;
F unds made available by th e legis town hali, th e little church where
la tu re fo r construction of the capi- an organ p lays m ost of the day
tol and lib rary buildings w ere not are som ? of the th ings re p resen t
adequate to cover these item s, the ed. The whole collection is known
Board explains, and unless an a p as Greenfield V illage and it is
propriation can be -had from the grouped around the museum. In
m useum Mr. Ford has aikkd
em ergency board the»? projects .
oth
er
exhibits which f r y to show
n.ust be carried over until an o th er
session o f the law m akers. One of the developm ent of a certain p ro
the arg u m en ts in supp o rt of an duct from its begining to the p res
em ergency appropriatio n is the ent tim e. An exam ple would be
fa ct th a t PW A funds would be the histo ry o f the autom obile
available fo r 45 percent of the cost from the ox-cart to the present
of th e p ro jects if they can be put day car. E v ery piece in he m use
um is said to be in ru n n in g condi
through a t this tim e.
tion. T h ere are supposed to be
♦ W •
h '”tr-'n acres of polished teak
A to tal of $31,849.36 in liquor
wood floors upon which the display
taxes was distributed am ong the
is ilaced.
cities and counties of Oregon by
The cro ssing of the boundry be
S .c re ta ry of S ta te Snell th is week.
tween the
U nited S tates and
The am ounts ranged from a low
C anada w as w ith as little fuss a
of 33 cetits to the little m unici
going over a toll bridge and with
p ality o f iCornucopia in Beker
less red tap e than crossing som<
county to a high o f $10,078 to the
s ta te boundaries. The Canada in
?ity of «Portland.
were frien d ly and pleasant. We
<i o
th?
K ing’s
high'wa
Population at the Oregon sta te followed
w
b
'h
was
well
m
arked
and
very
prison continues to show a steady
easy
to
follow.
r
It
was
especially
-lo w th w ith a total of 1113 prison-
we’! m arked with flags and bunt
•? s in the in stitu tio n S atu rd ay , to
e sta b lish a new
all
tim e high ing because the Royal p arty had
passed along the day before w
record.
did. We w .re interested with th
• ♦ •
S enate P resid en t R obert
M. load m ark ers which were shaper
like a shield with a crown on the
top.
N eu York Traffic F rig h ten in g •
Yes, we did g el into New York
traffic!
It happened so quickly
too. We were ju s t approaching
J -rs e y City and not being able tc
find a city m ap we were driving
along looking fo r signs. We fol
lowed a sign which said ‘‘keep tc
your rig h t” an d overlooked a sign
across the road which said “J e r
sey Cily.*’ W e w ent up "a "ails
incline and a sign said .“ On the
Skyline bridge*— No tu rn in g back,”
this road is a d irect a rte ry from
New York C ity and it was taking
us in the opposite direction from
the way we wanted to go. The
traffic carried us over two rivers
and a sm all town or two until we
finally g o t off the overhead ram p
six miles from w here we got on
We were then a t the N ew ark a ir
port. A fte r a h air-risin g attem p t
we got into th e line of in-going
raffle and landed back in Jersey
City, a little dizzy from the zipp.
zipp of p assing New York cars.
Follow ing rig h t a fte r a quiet
day in u p state N w York, w hen
we had roasted wieners in the Ad
irondack m ountains, the City o!
New York and New Jerse y , the
New Y o r k 'F a ir , the subw ay and
he rush of people left us a little
dep;eased and tired.
Holland Tunnel O utstanding
A D A J l^ M A Y N E
OREGON <DAIRY COUNCIL
D uring these sum m er m onths
m any a young g ia d u a te will s ta rt
c u t looking (for his or h er first job.
A personnel director or em ployer
is quick to ap p raise an applicant
by his appeal ance, before ever
g e ttin g down to his special fitness
fo r an y p a rtic u la r -work. How
m any of th ese young people, as
they approach prospective em ploy
ers will pass th is app earan ce test
—good p o stu re; clear, fresh com
plexion: sp ark lin g eyes, good teeth
a well nourished body, but not
over w eig h t?
E m ployers are looking fo r a
w o ik er th a t will be a le rt and keen
in a busy, crowded office. The
h ab its th a t d isre g a rd ‘‘body needs”
m ay prev en t a young person from
building th e h ealth which should
be a p a r t of youth, and th e lack
of which m ay keep him from suc-
c e e d in g jo the ex ten t of his capa-
bilities.
A wise m o th er will help to
estab lish good (food h ab its early in
life and will continue to encourage
young people of high school and
college to d rin k milk, eat plenty
of fru its and vegetables, an d in
clude whole g rain b ria d and cer
eal? in th e ir daily m eals. Such
h ab its, to g e th e r w ith plenty of
fresh a ir and sunshine «nd long
h o urs of sleep will givi boys and
girl? th a t look of keenness, fre s h
ness, cleanliness, and good health
th a t should com plim ent his or her
special tra in in g fo r a job.
P erh ap s not enough young peo-
pl? ap p reciate the im portance of
poarance. Some g irls, in th eir
We th o u g h t the Holland Tunnel
which we used to cross under the
Hudson from ' Jersey City to New
York, was one of the outstanding
lungs about this p art of the coun
try.
The tunnel i.-. Wi lled w iT
w hite tile like a bathroom .
On our trip down the eastern
seaboard w : th o u g h t th a t “ the
Q uaker C ity ” Philadelphia,
was
the m ost beautiful of the cities
hrough which we passed. The
approach from the north was by
i fo u r lane - highw ay in which
’ e e ’ divid.d erch lane. The’ trees
form ed arches w ith th eir houghs.
On the w ay th rough V irginia we
passed so m any historical m arker?
of b attles and fallen g enerals th at
wc felt th a t th e w ars of Am erica
Kent school closed la st F riday.
m ust b? ganged up on th a t state.
1 i
children were tre a te d to
It was wild stra w b e rry tim e in
’> . lies and c ream . T h? trim m ings
N o rth C arolina when we visited
I v the kindness of Mesdame?
h e i’i r.nd the hillsides were plen-
C raig and P atterso n .
fully supplied with this fra g ra n t
\ \ . L. McCaleb is once more a
’ uit.
The m ountain laurel was
tip- owite.
’Iso in full blooni. One of the
Em m the Observer July 15. 1910 Duncan of B um s who cam e
to
hirtgs th a t stru ck us was the
S xty-six young people of Moro Salem to pinch h it fo r G overnor
lum ber of sm all herds of fa t,
and vicinity w ere en tertain ed a t S prague while the la tte r was rep
w hite faced Hereford* throughout
? 1 wn p a rty given by th e YPB of resen tin g Oregon a t the San F ran-
hir m ountainous country.
This
Mi ro S atu rd a y evening a t the ?;<?co fa ir last week said th a t he
country has green pastu re, ru n
h m e oif N. IP. H ansen.
lid not find the job of governing a
ning w ater, and shade n early all
Tom Van Landingham was a vis- Treat sta te such a strenuous one.
h-- y ear around. T.V.A. has
oi from G rass Valley th e day of Duncan said he spent m ost of his
)!aced electricity in about all the
A. G. B oesen’s fa rm sale.
t:rr\e ju s t “ holding down the office.”
hom es in the n o rth ern p a rt of the
Ju n e w as reported as a little
* * *
state apd fine highw ays have open
to* cool, on an average, but as a
Ralph M itchell, veteran P o rt
'd this once ra th e r isolated coun
•cm indcr th a t n atu re evens it up land new spaperm an, has succeed
try .
' 1 I is to be said of J u ly ?
ed Miss Ella BliDr as secretary of
W hile in Knoxville, Tennessee,
E uold Reece arrived W dne? the public utilities com m ission.
we
visited th eir S tate A gri«*lturaD
1'i.v on a visit to his b ro th er T. C
.MiiSJBliler is being retain ed in the
’ollogc.
It w as ra th e r in tere stin g
•Dhn and Dan S te w a rt passei d ep artm en t as priv ate secretary
‘o g et views of men w orking in
thro u g h Moro S unday w ith 150< to C om m issioner O. R. Bean.
Italian art valued at $ 3 0 ,0 0 0 ,0 0 0
he Smith-»Hughes field. They
'i •( p, beaded for th e m ountains
has been viewed b.v thousands at
have been doing some very fit}? the C alifornia W orld’s Fair, and
It was 102 a t R ufus Sunday.
the relics released by the lib ra rj
The
W
orld
W
ar
V
eterans
S
tate
vork am ong the farm boys in th at w ill be seen by many more th ou
J -m e s Syren bought a hog of
and placed in a m arble-gold shrine section and the resu lts can b
V
d
com
m
ission
is
now
in
the
real
sands, for all of the fabulous col
' . H unter.
built especially for them. J u s t a leen. T heir s ta te is roughly divi lection w ill rem ain on Treasure
*<tcte
business
to
the
e
x
ten
t
of
a
A I county court m eeting for
until the Exposition closes.
little inside politics with the Con
ded into th ree geographical divi- Island
Tuly $112 50 of w a rra n ts w en '3,129,545 investm ent, according
ic t u r e d is th e w o r ld -fa m o u s
sli ution and D eclaration a s the tric ts from east to west as is P
to
Jerro
ld
Owen,
executive
secre-
bronze Statue of David, w ith the
v ib red draw n on th e scalp bounty
i'ty . Included in the com m ission’s pay-off. F o r a century these doc our own sta te of Oregon. These head of G oliath, by Verrochio, lent
’-'u unt.
um ents knocked' around in d u stj d istricts
____ ____
m u st be
. . _______
handled differ-
____
the F irenze N ational Museum.
G rass Valley Journal, Julv 16, 192r holdings are 460 farm s and 940
K° dh*ect to Italy from
d raw ers and th e ir existence was ently because they have different I Z ?e a rt
city
properties,
all
acquired
th
ru
Ed S ta n to n arriv e d W ednesday
a ¡m ost fo rg o tten until they were 'a rm crops and problem s to‘ > be !
t
,CMre
foreclosures
to
protect
loans
evening to m ake a v isit w ith his
lWet
r
according to Italian decree.
accidentally found one day.
m ade b y th e sta te .
in te rs , Mrs. C. H. Coon, M rs. Loit
* M
,
Illinois, Iowa and N ebraska left
Ri m ington and Mrs. F ra n k French
While tak in g his final look
S
ecretai
y
of
In
terio
r Ickes is us w ith the general im pr ession
Much headw ay is being made
in th e s tre e t im provem ent, much round the park ju s t a fte r dusk, the still lobbying to have control oi 5f “ Corn, corn, everyw here and
rock has been placed and ready keeper saw a man stretch ed out Bonneville power. He com plains lot an e a r to e a t” but ju s t because
o.i a seat. S h ak in g the man by th a t while the a d m in istrato r is re t . i s too early in the season and
for the crushed rock.
A tto r n e y A t L aw
the
shoulder he said: ‘‘Hi, you! I’m sponsible to the secretary, stil
'ot from any lack of prospect«.
Mrs. C lara S tevens, form erly
O ur im pression of Wyoming
the a d tn in istrato r is a
agent
Clara Schilling, arriv ed here Mon iv.st about to close the g a te s .”
IV o r o a n d W a » c o
The man blinked w earily. “1.411 and does w h a t he w ants. Ickes is ind Idaho was one of gray -g reen
day fro m , O akland, O regon on a
rig
h
t,
old
sp
o
rt,”
he
replied,
“but
age
brush
and
beautiful
irrig
ated
ask
in
g
congress
to
change
thi
visit.
alleys.
Bonneville a c t and maxe the ad
- At the L iberty th e a te r S atur- don’t slam them , will y o u ? ”
m
in
istra
to
r
tak
e
orders
from
the
It is said th a t once the trav eler
lay night, W allace Reid and Ann
S ecretary . Im plying th a t Bonne s headed for home his foot on the Bethlehem C hap ter, No. 78.O.E.S.
L’ttle in “ Less Than K in.”
VETERAN SHOWS ’EM
Moro, Oregon
ville has been poorly adm inistered- 'a s feed seems to press a little
At th e baseball gam e betw eer
M eets E very Second and
>.ard:r
and
his
ey
e
td
peer
a
little
Ickes
says
t
h
a
t
’t
h
a
l
l
e
in
te
re
st'o
.
M aupin an d Condon, Condon w as
F o u rth T h u rsday s in each
art her in th a t th rill of exp ecta
good m anagem ent th ere should b;
th e victor 2 to 1 in a very close
M onth. V isiting m em bers
tion
of
ju
s
t
g
e
ttin
g
back.
Each
m
ore
closely
k
n
it
ad
n
^
p
istra
tio
i
and exciting gam e. The g a te re
Invited
m
e
of
our
p
a
rty
experienced
a
relatio
n
s
betw
een
th
e
p
ip
ject
an<
ceipts to talle d $328.
eai joy when snow capped Mount Rose Amidon, W,M.
th? d ep a rtm en t of the interior.
R H. G uthrie was up from Port
R uth S p arlin g , S ecretary.
♦
»
»
Tc-od
rose in the w estern sky. Of
land this week looking a fte r hi?
1
1
the
places
we
had
be;
n
with
Baseball is celeb rating«its lOOtl
farm in terests.
heir b eauty spots and o th er Lupine Rebekah Lodge No. 116
birth d ay and rem ains tops o
From the O bserver. July 16, 192C
Moro, Oregon
m
ints of in terestxT one had iiecm-
iAmerican gam es. Only one foi
S lig h t shower a t K ent and Wil-
M
eets
2d
&
4th Tues
I
to
fill
the
spot
th
a
t
our
own
c ’gn nation has taken to the spor
c tx on M onday washed the dust
day
of
each
m onth.
now
covered
m
ountains
did.
and in a big w ay - Jap an . Its i
from the air, but did not provi
V
isiting
m
em
bers wel
common occurance fo r a colleg
of m uch benefit to the w heat.
come.
O. E. B aker started hRrvestinr
gnm e to a ttr a c t a crowd o f .£0,00
Tver Lin:ng
Rebekah W ilson, N.G
neople. - Sand lo t gam es are popu
M onday on his farm east of Monk
The cook-general »was carry in g Florence Johnsfori.Sec
lsnd, w orking on Turkey Red. ,
la r w ith the kids in ever;
m t a loaded tra y la st n ig h t a fte r
L ightning «truck the Roy A x t 1
m n er when h er foot slipped and E ureka Lodge No. 121 A -F & A-M
barn in two places d uring th
’ S an Francisco fa ir has been auc'
M eets on the 1st and
vith an ap p allin g crash she and
electrical storm F rid ay a fte rn o o r
a financial flop the m a n a g .ite r
3rd
T h u rsd ay
eve-
he dishes m et th e floor.
One bolt w ent through the ro o '
will ask congress fo r an appropri
nings of each m onth.
Scram bling aw kw ardly to her
sp lin te rin g the side of the bari
a ion of $600,000 - When an em er
V isiting m em bers cor
eet she surveyed the rem ains ol
and made kindjing of larg e foun
??ncy oceured, such as th : death o
dially invited to meet
he dinner service, then tu rned to
dation tim b rs under the m angei
S e c re ta ry o f the Navy Sw ansor
w ith us.
>er h o rro r-stru ck m istress.
A nother bolt w ent through th«
the operato r a t th e W hite Hous
“ Oh, m unf,” she gasped., “ w asn’t A. B. C hristianson W. M.
roof over th e lo ft door, followe
sw itchboard connects all press as
a m ercy they w eren’t w ashed'” _______ ___ jC. V. B elknap, Secy.
down the wall and se p a ra te d ,.p a r
s.'ciatio n s and news bureaus qm
Moro Lodge No. 113, I. O.’O fF .
continuing to the ground and par
when all are on the line Stev
She— I heard som ething about
Moro, Oregon
follow ing a w ire to th e opposit
F a ily ,
p resid en tial
secretary
ou today which le ft me speech
M eets 1st and 3rd
side of the m anger from the firs
'l a ’e-s the inform ation. Owe state
es». '
T uesdays
in the
Loren D. Dickinson, Sv-ycar-ind
m entioned w here it proceeded tr
rre n t reaches th e en tire ni^RLCôrp-
He— W hat a pity! Now I shall
I.O..O.F.
hall
T rai
governor
of
Michigan,
shows
pres
m an u fa ctu re more kindling.
-- E llio tt Roosevelt, who has bee>
ever know w hat it was.
sien t and visiting
V. E. Cushm an has bought thr ent-day upstarts how baseball was 1 costing Jack G arner for pre»iden
b ro th ers are cordi
O ic a r Loomis farm of 480 acres played in his day. He struck thia ’n 1940, invited listeners to hi
“ W henever I am in the dumps
ally Invited to meet
catching pcse when he participated
21 m iles e a s t o f Wasco. This is
iust get m yself an o th er h a t.”
in the Old Tim ers’ baseball gam e in b n ad c ast to w rite him a thir«
w ith us.
ra te d a s one of the very best > t * t r o lt recently.
term . He says 70 percent A>f thi
“ I . w o n d er.<1 where .you got Vv non M iller, N. G.
fa r m s 'in the coun|y.
J
le tte rs are fo r Papa.
hem .”
* Joe T ru itt, S ecretary.
job.
‘ ____
A rt At s.F. f
GEORGE G. UPDEGRAFF
i
good n u tritio n »in im proving ap-
effort to rem ain slim deprive them
selves o f food necessary to p ro
tect h ealth . The d ay s w hen it was
considered) s m a r t to be “ju s t n a tu r
ally th in ” are a th in g o f the p ast,
and the match-s«tick figure« o f a
few y ears ago a re definitely out«:
Going w ith o u t b re a k fa st, or lim it
ing it to to a s t an d black coffee
w ith p e rh a p s o th er m eals, of sim i
la r n atu re , produces m alnourished
tissu es and fa tig u e which m akes
good
po stu re
im possible, m ay
cause teeth to decay, and gives a
tired , sallow look to the face.
Y oung people n a tu ia lly do not
put th e sam e valuation upon health
th a t ad u lts do. B ut don’t let th is
indifference w o rry you - ju s t check
i- off to lack of experience.
B ut if you have s ta rte d early
enough in your cam paign for good
hab its of e a tin g you may be sure
th a t
young g ra d u ate will have
th e qu ality of h ea lth and a p p e a r
ance w hich a re even m ore im por
ta n t in holding th an in g ettin g a
• *
•SH ER IFF’S SA LE
In virtue of an E xecution is-
. lied out of the C ircuit C ourt up-
, i’ i a decree in favor of B erth i
L n iise Bolton r.nd ag ain st E. Fred
^.l u ik ett ot al m the sum of $5000 -
0 ) w ith in tere st thereon a t the
r iu of eig h t per cent per annum
from Ju n e 15, 1933, and $369.75
w ith in te re st thereon from Ju n e
4939, a g a in s t the sam e defen-
«'•.nts, I will sell a t the C ourt
House door in Moro, O regon, on
Ju lv 29, 1939, a t the hour of 3:00
o’clock p. in. a t public auction foi
ciikh, th e follow ing prem ises:
l ots 6 and 7 of Block 2 of
the original town (now city )
ot Moro, in Sherm an C ounty, "
Oregon.
Tog th er w ith the
tenem ent's,
h r r r d ’.ta m e n ts’ and ap p u rten an ces
‘b ^ - u u t o belonging, or in an y
wise ap p ertain in g .
C. C. W IL S O N
Sheriff
C 30: 7-7-21
NOTICE OF F IN A L S E T T L E
M ENT
NOTICE IS H ER EB Y GIVEN.
T h at the undersigned, H arvey F.
S o r ., A d m in istrato r of the E s
ta te of Grace ,G. Isaacs deceased,
h rs filed in the County C ourt of
the S tate of Oregon, his final ac
re unt. and th a t Tuesday, A ugust
1st, 1939 a t 10 a. m., has been fixed
by said C ourt as the tim e for h e a r
ing objections to said rep o rt, and
' h ' s e tt’ m e n t th e re o f.
H arvey F. Stone,
A d m in istrato r of the E s
ta te of Grace Q. Isaacs,
Deceased'.
G v n & Gavin,
/»‘ torneys.
-
«
N O TICE OF A D M IN ISTR A
T R IX 'S S A L E ,O F REAL ESTA TE
. Notice is given th a t Elva A.
D iy an t, ad m in istra trix of " the
e sta te of W illiam C. B ry an t, de
ceased, will sell on and a fte r July
29, 1939, to the high.ist and best
bidder and upon the term s and
conditions h e rein after m entioned,
and a t p riv ate sale subject to con
firm ation by the County Court of
the S tate of Oregon for Sherm an
County, the following duscribed
real p ro p erty ’belonging to the
e sta te of said deceased, to-w it:
.. The S outherly H alf of L ots
4 and 5 in Block 1 of the o ri
ginal town, now city, of Moro,
• Oregon.
Block 1, 2, 3, and the e a s t
erly 35 feet of Lot 4 in Block
6 of Rollin’s F ir s t Addition to
th e -C ity . • of G rass Valley,
Oregon, all in Sherm an Coun
ty, ,Oregon.
Term s and condition of sale:
cash «upon delivery of th e deed of
said* a d m in istratrix and a fte r con-
fin m ation of sale by said court.
Bids m u st be in w ritin g and may
he left w jth the county clerk of
Sherm an County, Or !gon, a t his
office in the co u rth o u se ;n M ojo in
Sherm an Countv. Orp<mn
Dated Ju n e 22nd, 1939.
Elva A. B ry an t, A d m in istratrix .
33-36