Sherman County journal. (Moro, Or.) 1931-current, August 01, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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PAGE 4 SHERMAN COUNTY
JOURNAL, MORO, OREGON
FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1952
Mks. Art Schilling, Mrs. Herman
Ziegler and the honor guests anti
the hostess.
(By Mrs. A. F. Baker)
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Martin,
Mr. and M rs.. Melvin Fulker­ Mr. and Mrs. Gene Reynolds, MV.
son an d ’ children of The Dalles and Mrs. Boyce Blaylock, Mr.
left Friday for their home after and Mrs. Donald von Borstel, Mt.
spending several days visiting and Mrs Ted ^Trimble, Robert
at the home t>f her brother and Holmes, Mrs. Kenneth Hattrup
sister in law, Mr. and' Mrs. A l­ Peter MacGilvray, John Scott,
Mr. and iMrs. Bob Marvin, Mr.
fred Payne.
Mrs. John Rust and daughter, and Mrs. Floyd Lane and Mr.
Phyllis, and Mrs. Bert Cox were and Mrs. Ralph Busse went to
Tygh Valley Saturday night to
business visitors in The Dalles
attend thee,'square dance party
Saturday.
for Buck Brown of Tygh Valley,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Perry and who is home on leave from the
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. John
navy.
Rust and (Mr. and MYs. H. O.
1
A demonstration party
was
Dugger drove to Rock Creek dam
Sunday and spent the day pic­ held at the home of Mrs. Orville
Ruggles Friday _ afternoon with
nicking.
Mrs. Marie Smith of Golden- her sister, Mrs. Roy Llllard of
Beaverton as demonstrator. Pre­
dale arrived Wednesday to visit
sent
were Mrs. Arzell Lemley,
her brother and sister in law,
Mrs. Eileen Cooley, Mrs. Earl
Mr. and Mrs. Tommie Barnett
Oldp and Mrs. Donald Clodfelter.
Mts. W. F. Schilling was host­
Refreshments of cookies and
ess at a party at the hpme of
Mrs. John Engstrom Monday iced tea were served. *
Mr. and Mts. Bill Ford drove
afternoon honoring her 80th bir­
thday anniversary.
Mrs. W. C. to Vancouver and spent the week
Todd was also honored on her end with her parents, Mr. and
birthday.
The afternoon was Mrs. H. F. Wedding, who cele­
spent visiting aqd later refresh­ brated-their 50th w e e in g anni­
-
ments of caks, cookies, ice cream versary., -
John Alley drove to Pullman
and coffee was served by the
hostess. Those present were Mrs. and spent the week end with
X «M. Rolfe, ^Mrs. Roy Welis, friends. -•
Mrs. 8am Stark, Mrs. Amelia z Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Balzer
Peterson,
Mrs, ’ Ted Peterson, speht Sunday at Wasco at the
Grass Valley
Beefo’s
Bee/o’s
Hot, ain't\\it? That it, every
place but in here. It’s* coo t here,
lots of things^cool here&but not
the welcome. That’s warm.
home of the G us Hartmans.
Don Cox went to Goldendale
Sunday and spent the day with
Mrs. Charles Forrester.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Crews
and family, 'Mr, and Mbs. Orville
Ruggles and son Dean, Mr. and’ - '
Mrs. Roy Lillard and daughter
and Mr. and Mrs. Max Brown and
daughters were in The Dalles
Sunday where thé Crews’ met
her mother, Mrs. Henry Roth,
who arrived from Olympia, Wn.,
for g visit. They all went to the
city park in The Dalles and en­
joyed a picnic dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. August Wassen-
mlller and fam ily of Tygh Valley
spent Sunday with his mother,
Mrs. Lydia WassenmiUer.
All
attended the Lutheran church
services in the afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Martin
and daughter Deanna and Mr. A .
Mrs. Donald von Borstel and
family enjoyed a picnic dinner
in the city park in Thé Dalles
Sunday.
- Milk as a low'cost food has main­
Mrs. L D. Pike returned Mon­
tained its rscord despit« the fact
day from Herml/ston Where she
that wages, operating expenses and
raw product costs nave been at
spent the week end with her son
high levels, according to Frank
in law and daughter, Mr. and
Hettwer, of M t Angel, Oregon, a
Mrs. Louis May.
- member of the executive ^committee
of the American DairyUssociation.
Mrt. H. §. Rogers and children
. Milk, including dairy products, is
of Hillsboro
and Mrs.
E. E.
the most widely used food in the
Barnum of Moro spent . Monday
country, comprising more than 20
visiting at ‘t i e home of Mr. and
per cent of the foods purchased an­
nually by the average American
M?s. Marcus Esllnger.
“ A quart of milk is more than
Mrs. Edith Say*rs of Moro and
two pounds of food,” said Mr.
her daughter, Mrs. Gordon Lem­
Hettwer. "and milk is a bargain
ley and son, Kenneth, went to
because there Is no waste, every
Portland Wednesday on business
drop can be used. A mueh larger
food budget would be needed in the
and also visited the former’s dau­
average home if the vitamins, min­
ghter, Mrs. Ross Hart and fam­
erals and calories supplied by milk
ily at Beaverton, returning Sat­
had to be secured from other
urday^ Janice I^m ley stayed with
sources.
her aunt Mrs. Lamer Sayrs in
“The United States is the lead­
ing dairy nation in the world and
Moro while her mother was gone.
dairy farmers are making tremen­
M t . and Mrs. Edward Rice df
dous efforts to answer the Govern-
Portland and Mr. and Mrs. Art
Mlss LaVerne W ilke of Gold
Bibby spent the weekend on the
Deschutes fishing. The Rices re­ endale and her nephew, Tommie
turned to their home Monday. Morran of Portland spent Sunday
visiting the former’s aunt, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Marth
day afternoon at the J- W. Blagg
and son, Ricky, of Hood River
home.
spent the week end with her par­
Mr. and Mrs. Marlon Crews of ents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clod
Stevenson and his father, F. M. felter. Her brother, Wendell Clod­
Crews’ of Moro were Sunday din­ felter went'home with them.
ner guests of her parents, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Adams and
apd Mrs. Dell Olds. Mrs. Crews sons, Jerry and Ronald, returned
stayed' to help hec^mother dur­ to their home this week.
ing harvest
\
—
Paul and Wayne Gordon of
iMrs. T. M. Rolfe, Mrs. Roy Bremerton, Wn.,' spent several
Wells and M!rs. John Engstrom days last week visiting relatives.
Mrs. Ross Fields and Dennis
spent one day last week visiting
Mrs. Bud Brinkert and Mrs. Alta Andersen were business visitor
in The Dalles Monday.
Crowley.
D
iscover the taste that has
made it
$2.60 pt
91.10 F ifth
ment’s call for more milk produc­
tion. Milk is considered the nation’s
Number 1 food.”
That milk is a low cost food is
indicated by a U S. Department of
Agriculture studg, which shows that
an hour o^^ahory Tabor todiy will
buy almost tnree times as much
milk as the same hour bought in
1914 and almost twice as much as
it bought in 1929. A worker could
buy almost seven quarts of milk
for one hour’s wages in 1951.
In order to keep milk in the top
bracket as a low-cost food the in­
dustry through the American
Dairy Association is making con­
certed efforts to increase sales
through promotion ' financed by
dairy farmers. The dairy farmer is
also making new efforts at soil
conditioning, better feeds and im­
provement of his output. New
methods of production and distribu­
tion help to make milk and its
products the best food buys.
C. R. Andersen.
Mrs. Clem Esllnger and her
daughttr, M ri.'H . 8. Rogers and
children of Hillsboro visited Frl-
©ooooooooooooorooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooc
Starting Friday, July 25
and continuing to
BEEFO’S
Monday, August 18
At the CAPITAL CITY, Moro, Oregon
Beefo’s
the slaughter house will be closed
at Grass Valley
Beefo’*
_ - •
We remember a car full of
Californians who stopped in one
day having seen a sign down-
towh. See a country fair, ha-ha,
sez they.
But having crowded
Into the bunch around the stock
Judging so they could see the
beef cattle they rushed back to
their car and brpught- out cam­
eras and first thing they were
right In the arena breathing
down the Judge's - neck taking
color film by the yard.
I t used to 1 * that a horse was­
n’t any good unless yon had a
ro w to punch.
D iffe re n t now .
W h a t a cow puncher used to do
fo r 930 a m onth and
board, a
b an ker does fo r nothing and buys
bis own horse.
*
has been discovered through con-
.U » t
People w ill come to * Portland
from all over next October to see
cattle lik e the ones exhibited at
the Hherm an County F a ir. T h ey
w ill be the same ones. O nr cattle
alawjrs go and they alw ays w in,
not alwaytf firs t (although often)
but rig h t up there w ith the best.
You can see ’em here and better;
you can get rig h t up to ’em; feel
of ’em, run your hand over th at
big, fat loin. Get acquainted, sort
of.
In the old days a man who
handled cows was a thin, lean,
cow Bo much „
,
ted. Yea, good.
W e’re
tallslng,
of
course,
about the kind of cows you eat,
not the kin d you m ilk . You only
have to eat ’em 'once w h ile the
m ilkin g Wind re q u ire d ally at­
tention.
T h a t steady
business
doesn’t d raw much w ater In a
one crop county even though It
Old fashioned cows made you
think of a horse, a rope and a
corral; the kind you’ll see at the
Sherman County Fair make you
think of rib roasts and the con­
tented feeling of a belly full of
beefsteak.
«ha. .
,, 8eems
Calves are better milkers than
*he cattle at the fair
men, even better than women * “ * W
eatln«
>,larld’
and they don't mind it nearly k ,” d- tendrr muscled, hard fat­
hard sort of a guy who some­
times acted as wild as the cows
he tended. We don’t know »whe­
ther man tamed the cows or
cows the man. W e do know that
the modern cowman isn’t often
thin or lean and is almost never
wild.
Mebbe they both got
civilization.
week end of Heptember 12-13-14.
Range cowa often looked upon
The horses don’t chase the cows;
a man on foot as a m ortal enemy;
they chase one another around
these modern row s
look upon
the track. The cows don’t , chase
h im aa a servant. Good reason.
an yth ing , being too fat.
.xpertm .»«.
w ill 11». and
m ilk a lte r . (h, lr p|e
fashion i f m ilked but once a day.
_
T h e re ’s counties
th a t
have
more cattle than Hherm an, and
some counties th a t claim to have
better c a ttle ,, but very few th a t
have, more good cattle. In fact,
all the cuttle we have ore good
cattle T h e y ’ve got ancestors th at
have l»een eaten
In the
finest
too. H e packs them th e ir
feed, restaurants and
orogeny
th at
carries th e ir hides, trim s . th e ir w ill be.
horns, washes and curls th e ir
hair, cuts th eir hooves. W h a t It
the Cow c ritte r does w ind up on
a fo ur dollar
platter;
It was
w orth It wasn't It? *
So horses and cows don’t go
together like ham and eggs any­
Things are that way.
more. One Isn’t necessary to the
other. A horse is a way of tak
But Sherman county Is old
ing exercise without walking
fashioned along with a lot of
new fashioned stuff and* it has and a cow is a way of taking
prizes without being pretty.
cows for the horsemen to chase.
But you do see ’em
together
Although If a horseman chased
quite a lot.
Especially at the
fcne of these expensive critters
Hherm an County F a ir, w hich this
very far he'd be in trouble. No
year, la going to moke a holiday
longhorns these. .
KENTUCKY BLENDED WHISKEY • 86 PROOF • 6 5 * GRAIN NEUTRAL
BPIRITS^THE OLD SUNNY BROOK CO.. LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY