Image provided by: Sherman County Historical Museum; Moro, OR
About Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current | View Entire Issue (June 20, 1941)
PAGE 3 SHERMAN COUNTT JOURNAL. Sherman County Red Cross Needs Work Done The Sherman County Chapter, American Red Cross, have sent 215 bedside bags to Fort Lewis J.is week, these bags having been made by woman’s organizations of the town. The chapter is desir ous that those who can aid in do ing sewing and knitting. Materials are on hand to make many gar ments if the work will be pledged. Mrs. H. G. 'Harrington (Lucile McLachlin) and husband were up Saturday and Sunday from Eu gene, and Mrs. A. W. Chamness and son, Wally, were here until the- middle of the week, to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan McLachlin. Elmer Dillinger was here brief ly to visit his mother, Mrs. Stella Dillinger. Mss Miss Zora Morgan is here foi a visit w’ith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Morgan. She ex pects to remain until after the wedding of her sister, Irma Mae, which will be an event of next Sunday. 0 Mrs. Gladys Morrison, accompa nied by Mrs. Stanley Coelsch and Mrs. E. J. Belshaw were in Port- k.nd Friday to see one of the Rose Festival parades. Helen Morrison was one of the Booster girls of The Dalles who paraded. Mrs. Ross Hart and two chil dren of Beaverton came up with her parents, Mrfc and Mrs. 0. G. Sayrs, Wednesday of last week and will remain for several days visiting here. Jane French returned to school at LaGrande Sunday evening after spending a few days here. She was accompanied by her sister, Patty who will remain with her a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Collis Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Van Gildei spent the week end at Paulina Lake on a fishing trip. Upon the return of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hennagin and family from their vacation Mr. and Mrs. Ray Blake left for a couple ol weeks touring the states of Ore gon and Washington. The telephone construction crew having completed the job of string ing two additional wires between Crass Valley and Moro, left Thurs- d’iv for other jobs. The Woman’s Missionary socie ty will give a social Wednesday, June 25 from 7:30 to 9 p. m. in the city park. Proceeds will go t(w»rd the repair of the auditor ium of the church. Everybody will be welcome to come and partake of heme made ice cream and cake. Charles Wilson returned from the hospital Wednesday after spending several days there. It may be some time before he is able to be about regularly. Started Leghorn pullets on hand. Hart’s Hatchery, Beaverton. Ore. Mr«. H. E. Beard, known here as Mrs. George Dugger, now 85 years old, is visiting her son and daugh ter in law*, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dugger. - 'W . Saltie Douma/ Mrs. Peg Hanson. Mrs. Josephine Sayrs, Mrs. Gladdis Bucholtz and Miss Louise Roth spent Monday in Port land, going down in the early hours of the morning and return ing in the evening. Collis Moore burned his right hand Tuesday evening while filling the brooder stove and will carry it around in . wraps for several days before it is ready for use. —— MORO. OREGON. FRIDAY JUNE 20, 1941 A shower in honor of Miss Irma C H U R C H E S Mae Morgan will be held Friday jChristiap Science Society, Moro: night at the Woman’s club build ing with Mesdames E. H. Moore, Sunday morning service at 11 Elizabeth Schaeffer, Robert Hos- o’clock; subject “Is the Universe kinson, Margaret Peetz, E. R. Including Man, Evolved by Atomic Barzee and C. P. Moore acting as Force?” Sunday school at 10:00. hostesses. She will be married Testimonial meeting every Wed- nesday evening at 8 o’clock. Read- Sunday to Donald. DeMoss. Earl King returned to Califor ing room is in the church building, nia fast Friday after,attending the where Christian Science literature funeral of his cousin Glen King. may be read, borrowed or pur Mr. and Mrs. E^ Sidney Mercer chased. All are welcome to the and. Mrs. Gladys Van Sicklen re services and to make use of the mained until this week before reading room. driving back to their home. Sunday Schools of Sherman R. S. Besse, assisant director ot the experiment stations of the County in Convention. Beginning at 10:00 o’clock this state, was here last Wednesday while on a trip about eastern coming Sunday morning at the Wasco IChurch * of Christ, the Oregon. Cliff Cully is back for the sum Sherman County Sunday School mer and is working at the station Convention is to hold its activities. Basket dinner is in the Beautiful agaih. Prof. .C. M. Ryncik and wife City Park. Bible classes begin their study w’ere visitors at the Clarence Spar at 10:00. Come bring your New ling home. They come from Chi Tertament, Dinner and Good in cago where Prof. Ryncik is chief tentions. bacteriologist for the city. Lets make this One Convention A group of grangers are attend Worth While! ing the state convention in New F. Claude Stephens, minister. port this week among them being Will Huck of Rufus, Millard and First Baptist Church, Grass Val Doris Howell of Kent and Joe and ley: There will be no Sunday Josephine Bryant of Rufus. School or preaching service dur W. T. Balsiger and wife and ing the morning at Grass Valley, Clarence Sparling and wife and due to the County Sunday School Mr. Balsiger’a mother, who is vis Rally to be held in Wasco at 10 iting here, returned Tuesday eve o’clock. Those going and desiring ning from Spokane where the or having transportation facilities two men attended the meeting of are asked to come to the church the North Pacific Grain Growers, at 9:30 a. m. and bring your lunch. balsiger was elected as a member 7:00 p. m. B.Y.P.U. of the board of directors and later 8:00 p. m. - Evening service with to the executive committee. feltographs Thursday at 8 p. m. Joe Ritner and wife, Mary and will be Prayer, Bible Study and Jessie Kenny, Kathleen Stout, monthly business meeting. Gedald C. Dryden, Pastor. Dorothy Miller, Clifford Kenny, Lawrence Kenny and George Martin drove to Frog Lake Sunday for a day in the mountains. While ONE CAR TO 2.7 PEOPLE there they saw Mr. and Mrs. Oregon has one registered motoi James Warnock (Vivian Fuller) vehicle for every 2.7 persons re who were also visiting the moun siding in the state, it was disclosed tains. ■today by Earl Snell, secretary of Marjorie Schroder is visiting State, who announces a registra here at the home of Lois Melzer. tion of 394,284 vehicles at the end Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Moore re of May. This registration is an increase turned from Portland . Monday night after spending a few days of 8.8 percent above the registra- 4ÍO2. for the same period last year. in the city. Mrs. Balsiger, mother of W. T. Registration fees totaled $2,873,- Balsiger, returned to her home in 379 compared to a total of $2,590,- western Washington Thursday af 385 for the corresponding period last year. ternoon. There were 323, 911 private It has been reported that Mrs. passenger vehicles registered in Passmore, mother of Mrs. Doro Oregon at the end of May, compar thy Johnston, had fallen breaking en to 298,139 at the same time last her hip. Mrs. Passmore is 94 years year. of age. Registration of motor vehicles is expected" to exceed the 400,000 mark in Oregon this year, Snell said. The 1940 registration was just 187 vehicles short of 400,000 and at the rate of increase shown to date, it is expected this mark will be passed before the year is over. Baseball W ASCO VS Warm Springs Wasco June 22 Fire Alarms Alarm Wasco e . K p C lfip flfc I bvw IU V IIW Fire alarms were sent in twice lately, the first being caused when the firemen themselves were work ing near the Methodist church arid the second when the Mee children started a fire in the grass which was soon extinguished. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hazlett and daughter, Carol, of San Jose, Cal., and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hazlett spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Mt Ivin Walsh. The former is a bi other of Mrs. Walsh and the Howard Hazletts are her parents. Miss Catherine Richelderfer .is in Oakland, California and is ex pected home any day. She attend ed the graduating exercises at Mills college where she has been a student. Miss Gerturde Cannell is home for the summer from Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cannell of Merrill, visited their parents, Rev. ami Mrs. Cannell from Saturday untli Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Child and Miss Williams of Bend were church visitors at the M. E. church Sun day. Mi. and Mrs? Bruce Grady and Ruth Ann drove to Bend to visit with friends there. Members of the Mary Elizabeth Sunday School class met with Mrs. Dick Yocum Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Neville of Berkely, California came Thurs day evening for a short visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. So i gent. Mr. and Mrs. I#aVern Porter of Salem were in the Bryan Van Gild er home Sunday. Started Leghorn pullets on hand. Hurt’s Hatchery, Beaverton, Orc. Ralph Williams of Pope Valley, California is here, where his wife is staying at the Van Gilder home. Mrs. Paulen Kaseberg and son, Lee went to Eugene to spend Father’s day with her father. Mr. and Mrs. Otis Royce accom panied by Mrs. Art Barzee spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Royse from Fossil. Miss June Wilde is employed at the Atwood store. Mr. and Mrs. Coin Rostad and son, Donald, were week end guests in Portland visiting his mother on her birthday anniversary. Fossil won the baseball game here Sunday from theWasco team by a score of 4 to 2 putting the Masco team out of a tie for first nlace in the Wheatland-Timher h ague. J. C. Hesseltine from Minneap olis-Moline imjplement company and Mrs. Hesseltine have been here this wek. Mrs. Clara Davis and daughter, Etta Mae Graham of Doris, Cal., are visiting here at the T. L. Fields home.’ Week end guests at the T. L. and Cecil Fields homes were Mr. and Mrs. Packard and children and Mrs. Ada Wing of Centralia nr> ! Charles Robinson of Camas, Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Johnson find Gordon Johnson returned from Settle Lake Sunday having been gorie since Wednesday. Mrs. Eliza Dingle left last week for her summer home at Gamp Shedman. Leo Watkins was busy moving Mrs. Arthur Sargent, Mrs. Ted Anderson and Mrs. Frei| Cole a t New Speed Law tended the morning services of the Methodist church ih Grass Valley Now In Effect calling later at the home of Tom Alley, Mrs. Cole’s brother. Oregon’s new speed regulations, Mrs. Fred Fortner accompanied the new law pertaining to the by Mrs. VanDoern of Hillsboro, ’ operation of farm • tractors and spent Wednesday night in Wasco. trailers along the highway, the re Mrs. Cyril Kruger is in the pea’ of non-resident registration hospital in The Dalles where a law and other changes in motor daughter was born to her last vehicle regulations become effec Friday. tive Saturday, June 14, the day Mrs. Anna Lee returned home which marks the end of the 90-day fi.om a m onths visit w ith relatives period following adjournment of in Nez Perce, Idaho. She visited tue 1941 session of the state legis her sister, Mrs. Robert Caldwell and husband a t C larkston, Wn., and saw h er sister, Mrs. Hendricks and returned by way of Pendleton visiting there with a brother. M r^ a n d Mrs.- Hal Shelton of Hood River were week end guests ol' Mrs. S helton’s p aren ts. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Feldm an were in H erm iston Sunday with their son in law and d au g h ter, Mr. anil Mrs. W alt Maffei. Mrs, Clark Dunlap, m other ol Mrs. E.~ D. McKee, has been ill for several days and Mrs. C. R M arshall, an o th er d au g h ter, is here to aid in c a rin g for her. C harles Fulton was brought heme from the hospital this week much im proved from the result of his accident a couple of weeks ago. lative assembly. A fte r th at date, the designated p’ im a’ facia speed lim it on O re gon highw ays outside municipal Ureas will be 55 miles per hour instead of 45 miles an hour indi cated speed. In cities, the desig nated speed lim its are 25 miles' an, • h ur in residential areas and 20 miles an hour in business districts while the speed past school grounds I a.-- been raised from 15 to 20 miles an hour. - 'lb ; designated speed* may be changed by action of the newly created speed control board in the case of areas within city lim its or o.i country roads, and by the state highw ay commiesion in the ease of sta te highw ays. The speed control board, consisting of the secretary of state, the su p erin ten d en t of state police and the chairm an of K Producers Studying ___ W ant A ds Egg Classification the highway commission, may-act when consulted by city or county officials in connection with chang ing designated speed lim its in cities or on county roads or upon their own motion a fte r traffic engineer- t ing surveys. The sta te highway commission will make Changes only on a basis of traffic engineering studies. A bulletin by Dr. Ira N. Gabriel son, director of the fish and wild-,, life service of the U. S. department of the interior, has just been pub lished by the Oregon State college extension service. The bulletin, entitled “Controlling Rodents and other Small -Animal Pests in Ore gon,” is a reprint of an earlier bulletin prepared by Gabrielson when he was in charge of the U. S. biological survey in tKis state. The r< print carries the author’s present title. So It Seemed Girl— All he talked about was Socrates, Pericles, etc. Roommate—Isn’t it strange that men are so fond of wrestling matches? COOSOSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOl W want Eggs! B ring yours 4 ‘ T h e Friendly Store t t M A N TED : Hay Chopping, $2.00 a ton for over 10 ton lots. Phone Leonard Fields, 464, Was Where you can trade at low E gg producers and handlers in co, or notify C. W. Fields, G rass prices every day . . . several sections of the s ta te have not Valley. been learning m ore al>out the care1 just week end specials . . . of eggs and the s ta te egg daw in a FOR SA LE: F ry ers. N otify me ay you get highest market prices series of m eetings conducted jo in t 6 p m. Friday if w anted by S un for your eggs. ly 'by the s ta te d ep a rtm en t of day. Gladys M orrison, Moro. ag ricu ltu re and the s ta te college. Main purpose has been to coordi TWO gas pumps fo r sale cheap W e advise you buy at C arlisle’s, Miller, Oregon. nate g rad in g so the Oregon house wife may buy eggs with full p ro May, June B etter It. I. Red Chix now for harvest needs. tection th a t she is g ettin g th at $8J»0; pullets $14.00; Ju n e l e g for which she pays. horns $7.50; pullets $15.00-100 Only th ree grad es of eggs may S tarted Leghorn pullets on hand. M cH ale’s Grocery be sold a t re ta il. Grade A A. H a rt’s H atchery, B eaverton, Ore. grade A and B.. All these m ust "Jim m y’’ M cH ale , O w n e r be-clean eggs. D irty eggs may be FOR SA LE: One 22xfl3J H arris 422 E. 2nd St. The Dalles sold, hut only as grade It, soiled. combine. Floyd Huy. RFD 3, The Many housewives do not realize Dalles. - 31-4 th a t A g rade eggs are very tine eggs and th a t actually the g rad e r B K ttw ninnn A A egg, held under norm al co n d i-' tions for 24 hours, usually develops a larg e r air cell than the law allows and so drops to a g rade A egg. R etailers m ust candle and grade Com plete Service in every departm ent eggs, but farm ers or poultry raisers who produce eggs on th e ir BODY & FENDER WORK FAINTING, WELDING own prem ises may sell these eg g s MOTOR TUNE UP VAI.V E EQUIPMENT on the place w here they were p ro GAS ANALIZER duced. w ithout candling or grad ing. □oscoooccooooooooooooooo 6 PONTIAC 8 SERVICE • Texaco Marfa k Checkchart Lubrication GEORGE G. UPD EGRAFF A tto rn e y A t L a w M o ro an d W asco For a good dependable m echanical jo b a tria l will convince you th at we give genuine service Peterson Motor Co. Nov Cars 217 East 3rd St. Used Cars 4th & Union St. EV ER Y % SECO ND SO M EO N E SAYS: the dairy equipm ent and household furniture to the Murchie place this week. Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Stanley were guests Friday night of Mrs. Esther Stanley coming from their h'me in Los Gatos, California. r » Hi ■ W ay / to H eauí ? Ay^AD A ,R «^M A V N E O R E G O N ^PA IR Y COUNCIL JUNE IS DAIRY MONTH Make America Strong by making Americans Stronger is the official slogan for the annual June Dairy this year. It is a timely slogan too, for in the National Defense picture the nutrition of our people is of paramount importance. The nation is talking and thinking in terms of diet for defense and we need to stress the fact that to “Make America Strong we must Make vAmericans stronger” by in creasing the consumption of the protective foods. The daily meals for all - adults as well as children - should be built around milk and milk ‘pro ducts, fruits and vegetables, eggs, and whole grain cereals to provide generous amounts of the minerals and vitamins. These are- the pro tective foods, including meat and fi.<h, fats and sweets, which help to round out a welLbalanced diet and to make interesting, appetiz ing meals. Milk and cheese hold a far more important place in maintaining the health of adults than is commonly recognized, because no other foods supply a large enough amount ot calcium for the daily needs. Cal cium is necessary for the normal functioning of all body processes. It is important in body building, too, and if reserves of calcium are not constantly renewed, fragility of the ibones occurs. This is one reason why the bones of some elderly people ¡break so easily. When the home maker is re minded that milk is one of the first foods to be called “protective”— that it is the best single food source of calcium and therefore should be a part of everyone’s diet - that in a quart of milk she receives more food value and in a wider distribution than she receives in any other food - then she may look upon milk products, not only W HEN A N D WHERE Y O U NEED THEM freedom, comfort, coolness —anu as an important food for her fam smart tailoring, too—you'll find them ily, but as ^.definite 'budget saver. all in this new Ensenada. Has pleated dr Y o u ’ve p r o b a b ly seen this The generous use of dairy pro slacks, matching fabricoid lined belt sig n h a n g in g on o u r b u ild in g . ducts is a year-round program but with prong buckle, and flap pockets. •JCa t e r p i l l a r ” O w n e r s lo o k with June officials Dairy Month it * A perfect match for a matchless sum mer of tennis, golf, picnicking, or u p o n it as a s ig n t h a t s a y s is a good time for a check-up. Are carefree lohfing. In Blue and ’’P a ils and S ervice — a lw a y s the children getting the equivalent r e a d y b u t s e ld o m n e e d e d .” of one quart of milk every day; Green. Sizes 29 to 38 are the grown-ups getting as much 'Residual •hi.nk«gc le»» than 1%- as one pint? This full measure Tailored by Reliance t standard should be met by drinking milk and using it generously in Makar» o f "Big Yank" Product» cooking if the home maker is doing her share in "making America A. M. Williams & Co. strong by making ; Americans Caterpillar John Deere THE PALLETS, OREGON stronger.” PARTS & SERVICE O’MtARA Supply & Imp. Co r » w H V to# V. »