The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, September 13, 1934, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE
Page Four
Ifillsborn^A.r o ti s
W ilk
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la C om bine d lb»
HUUI h ru A rg u » « t a b I S M
In d e p e n d e n t
M r K I N N B Y A M r K I N N B Y , P u b lis h e r«
T h u ra d a y *.
E n te re d an •<•»> ul-claaa m a tte r
p .« t o ffic e a t H illa b o ro , O reg o n
T u b lu h a d
W.
111 ll»b o ro
H ill» ! ’rx' In d e p e n d e n t «.»tab IKTS
V E R N E M r K IN N B Y
E ira t
M e m b e r— O r e g n S ta te EJ4-
t-^ria i A sso cia tio n and N a-
feional E d ito r ia l A a a o c ia tiu n
NEW SPAPER
S u b s c rip tio n
P ar year _
S ib m o n th s
_
eat
OF
A u d ite d P a p e r. L a r g -
A u d ite d W e e k ly C ir e u la -
tio n in O reg o n
W A S H IN G T O N
K a te s S tr ic t ly
11.50
.65
th e
M R S. E C M .K IN N E Y
A m x U U E d ito r
E d ito r
O F F IC IA L
in
C a sh in
COl NTY
A dvance
U . S. O u ts id e O ra g o n
F o re ig n C o u n trie s
12.00
5.50
T h e H ills b o ro A r g u s assum es no f in a n c ia l re s p o n s ib ility fo r
e r iv r « p ublish ed in its c olu m n «. b u t in cases w h e re th is p a p e r
Is a t f a u l t w i ll r e p r in t th a t p a r t o f an a d v e rtis e m e n t in w h ic h
th e ty p o g r a p h ic a l m is ta k e occurs.
A n In d e p e n d e n t N e w s p a p e r, W’ hose Services a n d P o lic isa
• r e Based on th e P r in c ip le o f th e G olden R u l < — “ A n d as ye
w o u ld t h a t m e n s hould do to you. do ye also to th e m lik e ­
wise.'’- M a tt h e w 7 : l t .
Forgetfulness
“ Let’s Quit K illin g "
A program is underw ay in Oregon that
should have the backing and support of
ev en individual in every section ol this
great state. It is sponsored by the Auto
mobile Accident Prevention association ot
Oregon and Governor Julius 1.. Meier is
president.
During the first seven m onths of 1931.
deaths from autom obile accidents in O re­
gon have increased 25 per cent, while the
list of injuries has grown 24 per cent over
figures for the same period in 1933. From
January to July, inclusive this year. It»-»
persons were killed and 2668 injured as
the result of careless driving in this state,
com pared to 132 killed and 2110 injured
in the first seven m onths of 1933.
That there is plenty of careless driv­
ing right in this community is shown by a
cheek m ade of autom obiles entering Base­
line street, the through highway street.
All ears entering this street are supposed
to come to a full STOP. Out of 100 go­
ing into Baseline iron the north only 5 1
stopped and 71 out of a 100 stopped en­
tering Baseline from t le south. These are
the kind of things that result in broken
bones and too often, death.
A program of statew ide safety educa­
tion and law enforcem ent, designed to ex­
tend over a 12-week period has b e e n
started. The Oregon State Motor associa­
tion. Parent-T eacher association. American
Legion and other groups are co-operating.
This cam paign is intended to lessen the
menace of autom obile accidents by pre­
senting to the public the need for greater
care in driving, and m easures necessary to
elim inate accidents.
This new spaper is happy to do its
small part in this program and is hopeful
th at such a cam paign will produce good
results. Let's take a few m inutes longer
and be careful. The price of 165 deaths
for careless driving is too great.
There is little question in the minds of
the great mass of Am erican people th at
conditions have improved a great deal
in the few brief m onths th a t President
Roosevelt has been in office. Black figures
have replaced red ones on the ledgers,
but some people seem to forget those
things. Selfish critics conjure up all kinds
of fanciful tales.
General Johnson has fittingly said.
“ There is an old tradition of the sea th at
any captain whose ship so m u c h a s
touches the bottom is done forever. It
would be a healthful rule in politics. If
it w ere in effect, nation w reckers would
not be heard to advise our people on any
subject under the sun.”
A program was laid down by o u r
national leaders more than a year ago
to help us on the road to recovery. It has
had results as everyone will admit. But
as m onths wore on critics became more
bold in their efforts to break down a pro­
gram th a t President Roosevelt has said
is intended to bring a more substantial
living fo r all Am ericans. A bit of the
spirit of co-operation and a wholesome
Sweet Land of Liberty
regard for the rights of others, individual
•'We
these truths to be self-evident. th at all
and property, could very well be taken on men are hold
created equal, that they are endowed by
by a lot of new deal opponents.
their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that
Advancing Anyway
Many partisans have been g i v i n g
Hoover credit for many of the good steps
taken under the New Deal. We have heard
stories of the NRA being in the m aking
long before Franklin Roosevelt took office.
T hat is all very fine, maybe they were thus
started , but they were not put in effect
for the public benefit in the battle for
recovery until Roosevelt became president.
Now Hoover w rites a long attack on the
New Deal policies and says they are in­
fringing on individual liberties. Does he
m ean the curb put on “ high financing”
through the securities act. which is intend­
ed to make W all street be fair with the
investor? At any rate we seem to be ad ­
vancing all along the front on the way to
better times.
Not All Veterans
H eadlines are often misleading, as for
instance “ V eterans Back Dunne,” in the
Oregonian. The story goes on to tell about
40 to 50 delegates being present at a
m eeting of the V eterans' Political league.
Many veterans shy aw ay from veteran
political groups. We imagine th a t when the
vote is counted in November hundreds of
Oregon veterans will have cast their votes
for a m an for governor th at served this
country in two wars, the Spanish-A m erican
w ar and the W orld war. T hat man is G en­
eral M artin, whose service as a congress­
m an in W ashington was outstanding in be­
half of this state.
Seeing Things
Senator Schall of Minnesota is having
a terrible time about the freedom of the
press. Some partisans have to rant about
som ething no m atter how silly it may be.
Schall is a great deal more worried about
it th an the new spapers are. Most press
leaders regard the criticism on this score
as a mere bugaboo th a t has no basis in
fact. The press code, contrary to Schall,
does not th ro ttle the press, but is intended
to elim inate some evil practices th a t in the
past have done much to create unwhole­
some conditions in the business.
■ i so a-
Have a Heart
Cannery workers probably do not real­
ize th a t residents along the streets where
they p ark th eir cars and eat lunch are
k e p t busy picking up palters and other
w aste from lunches if they expect to keep
th e ir property and parkings neat looking.
This could ea. ily be avoided if those e a t­
ing lunch in th eir cars would bring a
pasteboard box or paper sack for the re f­
use and leave it in the car until it could
be burned. A little co-operation would be
g reatly appreciated by property owners
along W ashington street.
Good Fair
among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of hap-
p “ss; th at to secure these rights, governments are
taf uted among men. deriving their Just powers
iro n the consent of the governed."
• • •
Brave words, these, written 158 years ago by
Thomas Jefferson and signed immediately by 54
delegates who realized clearly that they were risking
their necks by signing. The gentlemen were not
hunger! for their revolution succeeded. Liberty had
its dangers, even then.
How do their eloquent principles stand up in
the midst of these new revolutions through which
we and much of the world are passing? Life cer­
tainly is just as precious and the pursuit of happi­
ness is not less highly regarded. But how is liberty
rated in this year 1934?
In some European countries liberty gets no
cheer these days. Mussolini delights to speak scorn­
fully of liberty, which, to his mind is a sign of
weakness and confusion. Hitler's Germany jeers at
the thought. Brown-shirted young men are eager
to crack the head of anyone indiscreet enough to
mention the subject. The Russian Communists are
not less contemptuous. To them, liberty is a bourgeois
vice, and the man or woman who talks about It
courts exile or an involuntary trip to Siberia, if not
a firing squad.
Only France and Great Britain of the larger
European powers are still loyal to the ancient battle
cry The smaller nations. Switzerland, the Netlier-
lands. Belgium and the Scandinavian countries, also
cherish it; but wherever the Russian or Italian ideas
have followers, liberty is bitterly assailed.
• • •
Up to now nobody of importance in this coun­
try has had the temerity to attack liberty as the
Bolshevists and Fascists have attacked it. Many
Americans, however, both liberals and conservatives,
have been frankly willing to exchange certain specific
lloerties for other things th at they valued more
highly.
The most talked-of recent restriction of American
liberty is the Bankhead law, designed to compel
planters to restrict their cotton acreage. The Bank-
head law is the spearhead of the so-called regimenta­
tion. Previously, farmers were invited to co-operate
in the reduction of crops. The new law compels
them to reduce their planting or else take the
penalty of taxes intended to be prohibitive.
Beyond all doubt, compulsory reduction of plant­
ing is a restriction of the liberty of the individual
farmer. Also, undoubtedly, our recovery codes have
imposed definite limitations upon the freedom of ac­
tion of various employers. Hours and wages have
been fixed under governmental supervision, and
the individual employer may not ignore the rules.
Wherever liberty has been restricted, public opin­
ion has approved the restriction. The Bankhead
measure was not made a law until a test vote per­
suaded the administration that a majority of cot­
ton planters wanted to be regimented. They asked
for a law forbidding them to plant more than could
oe profitably marketed.
We have not surrendered anything that a ma­
jority of us did not want to give up. The Italians
and Germans, however, might say the same, and
so we might examine with open minds our own
course of action. What, concretely, have we sur­
rendered?
The essence of political liberty is the right to
think and to speak freely. Plainly, we have lost none
of that. Everywhere in the United States w> are as
free as we ever were to think and to talk wilnout
restraint. If we do not like the measures that our
government has adopted and is considering, we
have complete liberty to utter our opinions, and a:so
the opportunity at election time to vote in accord­
ance with our will.
• • •
Only in the economic field have we voluntarily
limited the Individual's freedom of action. There,
what we have done and are doing Is to forbid con­
duct injurious to the general welfare.
Under the NRA codes the right to employ child
labor 1s denied employers. Decent employers do not
want to handicap children by premature work. The
NRA code merely compels the unscrupulous to refrain
from do»ng what the honorable majority would not
do. So, too, in the matter of minimum wages The
codes restrain the heartless and the irresponsible
from creating competitive conditions th at destroy all
decent standards of life.
In a word, we have asked our government to
prevent a reckless minority from doing things th at
injure us as a people. Liberty to create conditions
that drive children into factories when they should
be at school, or that compel men and women to
work at starvation wages, can profitably be lost.
• « •
No one who takes the trouble to think about
O regon’s sta te fair was a worthwhile the liberty we have surrendered, or the regimenta­
we have demanded and obtained, need fear
exhibit of the s ta te ’s agricultural advan­ tion
that we have lost anything worth keeping. On the
tages. The m anagem ent is deserving of contrary,
our efforts, so far, have been to improve
congratulations for the type of show p re­ economic conditions, to make equal the chances of
life,
so
that
all (lasses may live better and have
sented. A H illsboro man, Ed. L. Moore,
fairer shares of the good things we are able to pro­
secretary of the local cham ber of com­ duce
so abundantly.
m erce, had no sm all p a rt in this big show
In no other way can we actually preserve the
as m anager of concessions. A ttendance political liberty that Is our historic ideal and tradi­
records were broken, but thousands of tion. For only those who are in secure possession of
material necessaries of life are able to exercise
W ashington county people missed a fine the
political liberty.
exhibition.
We have not gone Communist and we have not
turned Fascist. The constitution still stands., and so
does our Declaration of Independence. We are gain­
The A m erican Legion fo r years fought ing a greater liberty by refusing longer to tolerate
right of the few to hurt the many. This Is pro­
fo r the enactm ent of a universal service the
gress of the best sort —Collier's Weekly.
law to apply in tim e of w ar. Such e n a c t­
m ent by congress would do more to elim ­
Explanation: You see we spent ali the money
inate w ars in the fu tu re th an any o th er for the radio broadcast, so we have to get the news­
papers to print It free.—Ex.
action th a t m ight be taken.
H IL L S B O R O
A RGU S,
Norman A t ines ot
Forest Citóse Dies
H IL L S B O R O .
( ' l l W it 11 It«' I »1st • '
M i­
I M a c K c n /c
M em bers el All S a m is Fpiscopa'
W om ens C hurch S e tv te e l e a g u e
worked on baby Got lies te r th e
Red Unxvs Tuesday at th eir m cet-
it : Mi
IX m ald Douglas a n d M ■
8 It T liw ulte were hostesses
Mrs W I’ G ardner. M isses E'teda
a n d L en a K elirll. a m i A lbert K eluii
of n ear Q u.llam a a tte n d e d tile sla te
fa ir at Salem last week.
Mi>
A O. P itm a n e n te rta in e d
Mrs Fred Bowlin and d a u g h te r
a n d M i' lads lloldson of O n ta rio
at luncheon Tuesday
L illie Stanley Duyek, son o f Mi
and Mrs 1’ J Duyek. underw ent a
ta il'd operation at Jo n es hospital
Monday
Miss Florin«' W cbbei
retu rn ed
I'liursdai
irom
K la m a th
Falls,
w here she spent a m o n th w ith her
111» » lit I l 's
ll
N orm an Arm es 37 Forest G rove
business m an. died at Ins hom e
Septem ber 7 a fte r a n extended ill­
ness and fu n e ra l services were held
Irom d ie Forest G rave U ndertaking
company chapel w ith M a s o n ic se rv ­
lets .it th e graveside at Forest View
cem etery
Mr Arm es was well known am one
Hdtsboro people p a rtic u la i ly as one
of th e o u tstan d in g golf players at
the H 'rest Hills club.
He was born August 11. 1897. at
H am ilton. O n ta rio C anada, was
m a n tl'd to Floy llra d t at H am ilton
Mac 4. 1918 and cam e to O regon ltj
1918 Deceased is survived by th e
widow a n d two children. Hilly and
Norma at hom e A b rother. C lif­
ford. lives a t H am ilton. O n ta rio
father
P allbearers were George llau m an .
D r a n d M rs D. E Wiley and
Dr R alph Mills. R ichard F endall. children
sp en t th e w eek-end at S e a ­
W illiam M artin. Byron G oodm an
side
and F ra n k M iller
Mrs W aiter M iller ot W oodburn
yWiled W ednesday With Mrs N E
l.OLO t G IL PIN
H
aw
orth
FO R EST G RO VE Lolo C G ilpin,
88. died a t his home on F\>rest
Grove route one S eptem ber 9 a n d I'rite Erult Displayed—
fu n e ra l services were held from the
E rnest S cliaer of B ethany le -
FVrest G rove U ndertaking com pany eeived first prize at th e s ta te tail
chapel W ednesday a fte rn o o n w ith to r tile largest apple. 20 ounces;
Rev J R Jeffrey of Oregon City first tor a plate of 15-ounee apples
officiating. In te rm e n t was in R iver­ •uid th ird for a tra y of 14 apples
view Abby m ausoleum .
weighing 14 pounds (too large for
Mr G ilpm was born a t Belm ont. com m ercial lis t'» . These apples are
Iowa, April 1. 1888 m arried S tth a G rav en stein s a n d a re displayed in
Elliott at W m don. K an . D ecem ber th e Argus window this week Some
6, 1891. and moved to O regon ill huge O x h a rt tom atoes grow n by
1913. Deceased is survived by th e M ary W ilkinson. 12. of N o rth Planus
widow a n d four children: Mrs. Paul are also shown.
Pechin. N ew port. Mrs Lou Ju n ck er.
Forest Grove, a n d D ean a n d R u s­ Old Money O rder F ound—
sell Gilpm . P ortland. Two sisters.
An old U. S Express m oney order
Mrs Lillian L itts ot Miami. Florida, receipt for a n order se n t Novem ber
and Miss Zephy r G ilpm of Dea 21. 1885. w as found by Ed L. S cheldt
Moines. Iowa, a n d a b rother. E rn est m a n old book at t h e S c h e ld t
G ilpin of H utchinson, K a n . also hom e n e ar Rix-k Creek It is for
survive.
a n a m o u n t ot $1 10 sen t by Jo h a n n
Blaetgen of W isconsin. M r S cheldt's
MRS EDMUND SPOONER
g ra n d fa th e r, to Rev J. H Dubbs It
FO R E S T GRO VE Mrs Elsie May is displayed in th e Argus wmdow
Spooner. 48. died at her hom e here
W ednesday afternono. F u n eral serv ­ C elebrate 35tli A nniversary—
ices will be held at tile Forest G rove
V F W. a n d Auxiliary will cele­
U ndertaking com pany chapel a t 2 b ra te the 35th anniversary of the
p m Sunday w ith Rev C laud S abin foundm g of th e o rd e r on S aturday
officiating In term en t will be In n ig h t. Septem tx'r 22. w ith a b ir th ­
Forest View cem etery
day party at tlw ir h all 'The regular
Mrs S pooner was b o m a t Eagle m eeting will be held T hursday
Bend Minn M arch 12. 1888. m a r ­ night. Septem ber 20. a n d all m em ­
ried E dm und Spooner April 5. 1901, bers are requested to a tte n d
at C larissa M inn
a n d cam e to
Oregon in 1922 Mr S p o o n er a n d Home Econom ies' Club Meet»—
Home Econom ics' club of t I t •
seven of ten c hildren su rv iv e: Floyd,
M cM m nville; Elm er. Eunice, H a r­ Hillsboro G range will h ave a pot
luck
d in n e r Tuesday at 12 o'clock
old Joseph and Vera Forest G rove,
■uni F re d of C arlton H er m other, at tlie hall. W ork is tlie aftern o o n s
Mrs. Paul Clucky of P o rtlan d . N ' program , a n d a good a tte n d a n c e is
desired
D . also survives.
W a-K ee-N a G roup M eets—
W a-K ee-N a C am p E'ire girls lield
th eir first m eeting of th e fall s e a ­
Mr and M rs C W M iddleton son T uesday a fte rn o o n at th e J u n ­
and fam il) of S pokane a n d M rs ior high school a n d p lan n ed th e
J R M organ of P o rtla n d were m o n th 's program .
guests M onday evening of th e ir
relatives M r and Mrs H arry M or­ Loses T hum b—
R S heehan of n ear HiT. -bei > I- •
gan T he M iddletons had p lan n e d
to re tu rn hom e last week, but were his left thum b W ednesday a fte rn o o n
notified th a t th e schools would n o t while working w ith a silage c u tte r
open on account of in fa n tile p a r ­ Dr D. E Wiley a tte n d e d hint
alysis. so prolonged th e ir v acation It. I’. Club M eets 21st—
O th e r relatives visiting a t th e M o r­
Business a n d P rofessional W om ­
gan hom e th a t evetung were M rs
S A. Jo h n so n and h e r d au g h te r, e n 's club will hold Ils first fall
Mrs. Ja c k Enzell of P o rtlan d
m eeting F rid ay evening. S eptem ber
Mrs. Owen B yrnes of H elena. 21. a t llie d ia m b e r of conuiien. •
Mont., who lias been spending th e
sum m er w ith h e r b ro th er-in -la w
a n d sister M r a n d M rs H L M ac-
Kenzie. left T uesday for Spokane.
W ash From th e re she will go to
th e C entury of Progress F a ir at
C hicago a n d to New York before
re tu rn in g hom e.
M r a n d Mrs. Bascom D ingus of
M arshtow n T en n . were guests for a
few days last week of Mr. a n d M rs
R W Cox M r Dingus Is a cousin
of M r Cox T he visitors were en
route to C alifornia for a sh o rt visit
before going to Florida for th e
w inter.
M r a n d M rs L arry B e n n ett a r ­
rived last week from a few m o n th s'
stay in C alifo rn ia a n d are guests
of M rs B e n n e tt's p a ren ts. M r. and
M rs H C. V arner, a n d o th e r re la ­
tives
T hey will soon leave for
S e a ttle to m ake th e ir hom e.
Local Happenings
lliu rs ila \. Seplcm bci |:l,
OREGON
D inner will he seiued al 8 39 liy the
1» »-pliably com m ittee, w ith M l"
M arlon l.ylle as ch u trm an . and th e
program will l»c in ch arg e of tin'
tin a iu i- i om m ittoo. w ith M is Anna
Itown-cnd as ch u trm an
m e n t i s It. it tsso d a tlo n
K e n n eth L ln k la te r a tte n d ed the
O regon Bar association m eeting in
Eugene 1.» I week He reports th a t
W lluuiu II.tie a native ol lldlshon»
and who spent Ills lioyiiiHgl days
here . q uite a n a uthority on law
having w ritten s e v c a l books on
legal .subjects Ml Hale Us now dean
ol law at tile t'n lv e rsitv ol Soutli-
e m U alilornla 11»' Is a g ra d u ate of
U ot G and a tte n d e d the meet
mg th ere last week
I'vthlan S isters M eet E'rlday —
Phoenicia Tem ple, P ythian S is­
ters will m eet F riday evening at
th e K I* hull. T ills Us th e first
m eeting a fte r tlie sum m er vacation
and a good a tte n d a n c e is desired
O perated lo r A pprndleltl»—
Jo h n H are underw ent an o p e ra ­
tion last T h u rsd a y fur ap p en d ici­
tis al tlie Good S a m a rita n hospital
m P ortland, Dr W II H are o p ­
erating.
M ISS 1.1 ND I E M ES
FOR W ORLD TO I It
Muss Alice Lund, who spent the
su m in e r hero witli tier mot h e t. Mrs,
J 11 Lund, sad ist irom Han F r a n ­
cisco. I'a l . M onday on a world
tour Her first sto p will be at H ono­
lulu. Hawaii, a n d th e n to Ja p a n .
C hina th ro u g h the In d ian (sc a n
to India, th en to Egypt, Italy unit
Sw itzerland S he will spend C h ris t­
m as w ith relatives In Norway She
will also visit G erm any. F iance,
a n d E ngland.
Miss Lund Is a tea ch e r hi a
Los Angeles school a n d was g ranted
a y e a rs leave of absence to m ake
tlie trip
Orchardale
M r«
K ir h a r U
H u t it fr r )
I ..'tie B urnell Eizell of Longview,
W ash was a Sunday visitor ut the
hot! e of Alice Hudson.
Mr a n d M rs Ic v l C row therx were
- 1'.' r.- S u n d a y ol la s t week at the
a n d Mrs Tony K lann
M rs G erald H aris of W ren, was a
a e e k -rn d
guest of Mrs. Alvin
H unger
M rs R ichard H unger called on
M- W M S nipes ut Reedville M on­
day afternoon
We specialize In quality Job p r in t­
ing Argus.
A rizona,
MAC
a rriv e d
M on lav
fo r
n
Iwin'v, 1. piltllll»: III Ule ill 4 zcep tlc
Link built In W tudU tigtoii < <uiiitv
I Ifte e n
Y earn Ag«»
Argils Auglhd 2M. IDIU Bank*, on
eve of Mibst-anHul grow th, aeeordliig
to M ontgom ery ’T urner Big M m
pin mill goes In a n d new high
.school to I n * coirst I IK t«*d
(I.M tK N C E I NTAI.I.AKB
C láre n te E K t.thattl bit. died In
HllL.hoio Be ph i u I n i 1(1 a n d funeral
.*ieivice.« were held toduy «T hurs­
day» m P o itla u d C oncluding her
\ let's a t i e at Itlveiviea cem etery
L ocal B a k e ry O ffe r *
1 h t ea - 1| Is Murvlved by u widow
D e e r H u n tin g P r iz e * and th e following c hildren Buela,
Perleellou
Bakery Is offering Bonnie a n d Eugene of B I ic iw ih n I,
uiiiz.i-.s io deer h u n ters in th e ir ml and I.ukc B tallard ot Count'll Bluffs
y. IILseinenf In the Aimus tin- week l i
The season o|»en.. SepleinlH-i 20 All
< urreetloit .Matlr
e n tra n ts m ust register at the bakery
I’ll«’ drow ning of Jack M Ateven-
Ix'Iore going o n th en hunting (lip
Prizes are S3 i»o eaJie lor liutiter son. 2 -year old «on of Mr m id Mi
bagging largest 1111111» deer S'J 50 cake Dim* Hteven o n of n ear Forest
lor the gunner bringing in th e d e c i D rove (N-eurred at the old roek
with tin' m o t |Hiinta and S2 cake crusher n e ar P’o iest d ro v e insti*a«l
• ti li
lor the nltnrod killing the deer » d ll of at K lppllng W ati
the last Argus A It Erickson, p ro ­
the largest spread horns.
p rieto r at H lpphng W ater«, has a
life g u a rd o n t h e Job
Ir e la n d A p p o in te d L o c a l
D i*t rib u to r of M o n ta g e
D ivorce Suit Filed
Btggl Itoset tu Blggi vm boule
Iaxsler Ireland A- C om pany tiave
been muiM'd U k ’ h I itl>trlbuU*rb for Blggl
Ih f MohliiK e ln ulnloi hrutvi . t i n
O rvtton-iiuw r pim luil Pull rielalbt
are grtf'it In an iulvertlMiM*iU on
I W ANT TO SELECT
page five.
D e e r H u n te rs to V ie
in B ris to l's C o n te s t
A but k» deer slm oting content with
$200 in cash prises and o th er local
prizes h a s been announced by B ris­
tol H ardw are com pany Thoae e n te r ­
ing the contest m u st reg ister at
Bristol
1
|
■
■ rwllahl«* y nung m a n .
m»w
rm -
ph.yad w lth I t i l t i I I I
f a i r r .|
u c a tio n
a m i me» bau ir a i
in c lin a -
(la n a . wh>> 1« w illln g tu t r a ln «pare
• » . •
» r»« in » * «ti I I 1 ; b
1.
a«
I N S T A L L A t lO N
am i
S L K V IO
«»n a ll (ypga «»f
I r li
I le ir ig e r a to r a
I -r In te r -
v n w w r lt r g iv in g a ge a n d prgawtit
«M*cupatln«i
I 1 11 I 1 II
I \ ( . l \ l I ltl\(.
IN S T IT I TE
10 i
N
Bert O akm an .stabs and kills
F rank Bennett in rear of S o u th -
w orth saloou S atu rd ay night.
la d le s of county form I r w u Ac
( ’lark fair club O fficers are Mrs
A T Buxton. Forest tlro v c p re si­
d ent; Mrs J P Tam iesie. Hillsboro,
vice-president, Mrs W alter lloge.
Forest d ro v e, p resident. Mrs F J
Bailey, HtlLslioro. secretary; Mrs
W D H are Hillsboro ti»-asurei
and Mrs 1 O. B ath, Hillsboro, pre «
correspondent
E I*. McCormick will open inualc
store m Sholes brick oil Mam street
M ountaindale gets free mail dehv-
W e lls
HI
( b ira g e .
HEATERS
S e p te m b e r
S p e c ia l
•20-inch
E'lrr box
‘42 50
51
3S-ltuTi
Fi i r box
H o lili»
NEW COL! MIUA
t IIH I I ATINO ID ATER
Ir-toro yon buyt
Too Late to Classify
BURNS
WOOD
W K A N t.IN G
|*><a f<»r « a ir
If
Stan««.
a u r iM r«>a<l fr»>m Nha*ly |1r<»>k •« h*»«l. 1»
B nllt ln
tlir WrM
I>««1
an4
hitfh
SO
E lG IIT-«"«»m|»ar1 n tr n t ra b b it
but<*b,
w lr»
fltM ira and tra y «
flu
W ill tra d e fo r
fe n i r |H «t«
F m l Serpent. O rene«
w IN h
Kra|»e j i i i r r
.
|»er g a llo n . |>l
c o n ta in e r«
T u a la tin
V a lle y
W in e r y
li
• -
.
i.O S T . s tray e d or stolen
M a rk
H e fty
do«
G u y p o w e r«
So
Ili
Circulating
which i to drain several thousand
l u l l S A l.l-
C h ih t'a K<>ry
r h a lr .
I'h o r r I M I Z
for W extern Furl
Bullí to
I* a I
* llfrllm r
Bop
N O T H K Tt» < N K I I I T n R a
N o tic e I* hereby g iv e n th a t by v ir tu e
o f an o rd e r tna<le a n ti e n te re d on th e
>th day o f S e p te o ilie r.
b y th e ( ‘ i f - -
ty C o u rt o f W a s h in g to n C o u n ty O re «
th e unde rsig n e d ha« l*een a p p o in te d
m ln ia tr a to r
of
th e
ro ta te
of
W illia m
ll« w le y Ite ll, dereaawd N o w . th e r e fo r e a ll
lerw on« h a v in g c la ltn s a g fn a t the r o ta te of
W illia m ffa w le y H e ll deceased, a r e here
by n o tifie d to p resent th e sam e to g e th e r
w ith p ro p e r voucher« th e r e fo r to m e at
’ he law
ffi.-e of K I I T o n g u e , in H llle *
»M.ro. O re g o n ,
w ith in
a la
m onth« fro m
th e d a te o f th is notic e
W
STANLEY
C t iA IK H .
A d m ln la lr a -
t< r o f th e E s ta te o f W illia m H a w le y H ell.
B a re M a d
I-
It
raagw All »rwgy for
A d m in is tr a to r .
so.<
k»l
BRISTOL
HARDWARE
COMPANY
Next d«M»r to Y en e lla n T heater
ÿf.
Phone 761
HII.I.SItO K O , DKKGDN
WE PAY DIVIDENDS
on W hat You Spend!
One Roger's Silverw are < 'ertifiente with 2«) games
howled— either ladies or gentlem en.
C L E M ’S
C o n fe c tio n e ry
—
PLA CE
R o w lin g
A lle y *
' W here Ladle* «re f'o tirtroti ly TreaUvl und
C ordially Invited."
Hillsboro Monday with Mrs. Harper
on his wav to Forest Grove.
Dr. and Mrs J. C. T am iesie and
daughter of Eugene visited Sund ty
Hazel G oodm an of Phoenix.
.Inltll <’ot»l>el. euily I'ehlduit of
(iiu rtv ul>d (Mvll wur veleritu, dies
at Beaverton
T hirty Y ears t<<>
Argus. Septem ber 1. 1004 It will
mot be long before Main .street will
have to be phuiked and it 1» h(>i>ed
th a t tile im provem ent will be m ade
I h * fore the thorougtifare becomes a»
disgraceful as Second street w w
before it was repaired
Move on foot to have en tire coun­
ty vote on ¡»rohlblllon qucntlou
M a i tm Mead begin.* uork on big
M ountaindale and OreenvUle ditch,
Mr. a n d M rs. W A L eher of
M ountaindale moved M r a n d Mrs.
J. D. K in n e r by tru ck to Bend F r i­
day T hey re tu rn e d hom e Sunday
evening.
Frank Harper, editor of th e W est
B ridgew ater M ass, Herald, was in
M rs
Advertising hui krtl up with reul
y.iliit . |i.»\.- dis l.oi
. l a k e Wed ol
I Well
I lepai I t n e i i l store w ho I r
polls unusually heavy btl-.tne.ss dur
It g th eir 21st anntyi'isary -ale w h ich
s ta r tl'd F riday II»' st.il» ■ th a t neyer
n t (he s to re s history have so many
people res|s»nded Io Hie values ol
. feted llirongh III»' m edium ol sound
advt i Using A lull |wige advei tl»-
inent was ill Hie Argus last w»s»k
W ell say . t i n t a n in d lia llo n ol
1 belter tim es is th a t (xsiple are In n -
lug bettei inereliandlse
l_idies Aid society of M ountain
Home m et a n d quilted a t th e hom e
■1 tlie y a e -p resh len l. Mrs. 11 P
S trickler Thursday
E'rlday night
i s , i.d ixuusored bv the Ladies'
Aid was held at tlie home ol Mr
and M r s
R ichard Joyce G a n n s
were played on the law n und In
th e house
S.i' nday m orning the fam ilies of
H arold Aebiseher and R ich ard Joyce
left for B reltenbusli Hot Springs
t >i ,i few days' outm g
c F N ystrom aim family s|x 'n t
Thursday a t sta te la ir m aking th e
trip w ith tlx- Jo u rn a l Juniors.
Word has been received here that
Robert Patterson, who lias been
visiting relatives at Balboa for sev­
eral months, left th at place Sep­
tem ber 1 for home. He will enter
high school this year as a senior.
Mr and Mrs C. Coburn and
daughter Dorothy left last Thurs­
day for their home in Sacramento.
CaJ.. after a two weeks visit with
Mr and M rs C C Weber Mrs
Cobum and Mrs Weber are sisters
Mi-a Dulcina Brown moved back
to Portland last week, after spend­
ing the summer with her parents.
Mr and Mrs E C Br»»
Brown is in the office of the coun­
cil of churches in th at city
Wednesday morning for Pendleton
c i\ Ihm ic will .‘.lari mil «>í Cor-
nrliiut itnd cover big hccllon
A ( ’ B tiu lc. 1 lu th b r of I h e H h u te
Our Yesterdays
Local Banjo Artist on Road
w ith M iss M arie T am iesie a n d at
th e W illiam R eiling hom e
M r a n d Mrs. J o h n L aurs spent
th e w eek-end visiting w ith friends
a n d relativ es In P eE ll, R aym ond
and A berdeen, W ash.
Mr and Mrs. H arold Reynolds left
Advertising Pay*»
Declares Merchant
Laurel Ridge
illy
'¡I
12«« Main Street
lVr Rerre D I TM FIA
W ayne N ickerson, son of M r and M rs B R N ickerson ol Hillsboro,
leaves for banjo playing en g ag em en t a t S pokane next week. He
played on tlie radio a n d in S e a ttle th e a te rs last year, according
to his fa th e r. He «(M's by th e nam e of Nick W ayne on th e stage.
(-«« uriw y g g ligm nn H uu.o.
W a s te d
D ip lo m a c y
Illllxboru. Oregon
*nd WETNIIARDTg BEER
LIVESTOCK GROWTH-
Is prim arily d ep en d en t on tlii
n e of feed* th a t com bine the
elem ents of n u tritio n In co rrect­
ly halnneed proportions
O ur
feed* for c a ttle and poultry are
«elected w ith th is th o u g h t In
m ind and arc offered with our
unqualified endorsem ent. Every
» a n te d v ariety I* Included In
our Inrge »lock.