The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, January 03, 1935, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T H E
Page Eight
Social News of
Local Folk and
Their F riends
H IL L S B O R O
A R G U S ,
H IL L S B O R O ,
O R E G O N
ra th e r small margin of profit when limited quantity of this »train of Is correct but on the other hand
the freight 1» addl'd to the local seed in that region where IhlM ills Il should be remembered th u t the
I» a limiting factor in clover
pi I. a
ease la
farm er Is not operating hl» farm
Vetch I m i eases
production
for charity purpose», th a t he ran
\< tih
. m i p io ilu i lion has been
Milk prices have advanced and a«
continue to grow crop» or
Increasing locally the past few years dairy product;, are now about the only
maintain livestock when that live
and 1934 saw quite a pronounced largest agricultural source of In- slot k or farm can prixluce crop« or
Increase and at the same time the come In Washington county this products which can be folil at a
grower received a fairly good price I means th at the Increased retu rn la price high enough to return
profit
felt Feed prices huve abo ad over wliut It rout to produce
It
While the yields in seed were not being
vanced along wllli the price of Even though tlie t o t a l production
in all cases as gixxl as in some nth- ,u tlk In spite of the Increased cost may I»' no greater than what
er seasons, yet this was a crop of prixluctlon. dairymen generally should be consumed, a» long as It
th at generally made a little money) are feeling better.
Is Hilt consumed tlie effect on tile
for tlie grower who had p lan ted 1 Tlie federal abortion control pro- funner Is the same us though tlirre
It o n wood la n d a n d h a d t h e n e . e s - Kr«m, stalled locally In November, was being produced much mote
•ary equipm ent to handle the crop
i f ’i'acU i'm ainmaU Ilia n . o u ld possibly be eon unit'd
effectively
in W ashington county herds Is not
Hairy vetch made up the greatei large Returns to dale indicate |e
part of the vetch acreage Unit was ttitt»» ■» Per cent reactors. Removal
I cut for seed. There was also an ,,r
«’acting unlinuls does not
P„.
* o i, H
, l “ ' tl1'' Production of milk as the re
v itih and A ustitan field peas. Llk> acting animals are generally not
everything else, when there Is a i the good producers. Problems c o n - 1
go.’.i year aim the growers make a fronting the dairymen In respect to
tittle money, there will usually be lh l'* Pr°«raiii are m replacing the
an increased acreage the following herd “ " 1 ““ “ rc rem w ed ,n u " U,e |
NEW 1931
i*‘in and sometimes this will be u ut, (t) y le Increased price of milk
carried to the point where the price, unit the disease control program
because of too heavy production. . both here and In California, cow
will be forced down to u fig u re) Pr,ccs have udvuneeil and the dairy-
where it becomes unprofitable. This nuul Tinda it difficult and In
M,I»c cases almost impossible to re-
In turn results in decreased J,,'
Gullet lib lient wtUi purchases This
lion and the price goes up P p * not , j disease
control work ts Important
im portant
sort of thing is inevitable In tlie and will eventually aid tiie dairy
Mod.l
production«' of some of these seed business If generally accepted so
crops but regardless of th a t fact th at tlie plan of control really be­
66 B
there ts a good demand for Hits comes effrctvle Control areas may
develop out of the program that has
seed, a dem and which so far as wc been
started.
! can see now is not going to lessen
Surplus Hit
1 but rath er ts going to increase.
Criticism ts occasionally directed
O n ly
The dem and for this seed Is In at some phases of agricultural de­
| the cotton belt where it is necessary velopment on the ground thut tin-
to grow cover crops preceding the proved farm practices in crop pro-
’ growing o f c o t t o n As the nnu-tire ducUon, belter bred cattle, cllmtn-
' o in isiug
i n irops
. os
41 oi
and
using the
tin re
v iu e n ies
.s lor
ii>r covei
i'g
Drouth, Labor Troubles, Anti-Crime
Drive— High Spots of ’34
M o u n ta in d a le Y o u th * B ack
Mr and Mrs. Charles Lange of
P ortland were dinner guests New
Year's dav at the home of Mr. and
Mrs Elmer Johnson. In the eve­
ning, Elmer J r left for Palo Alto.
C
a l. to resume his studies at S tan -
MOUNTAINDALE—W alter Matlll-
2& °« d
s s 'i W
k r t M4 e , ^ r^
turned
to
college
Monday
after
>'ad
^been
spcndlng^Uie
Jio lld ay s at
IIUU V*.'
-------
, .
parents.
spending the Christm as vacatiou at tn e nome
their
homes.
_
_
.. | Mr
Mrs H arrv Mackroiit
__________
___ and
________
Dinner guests Thursday at the , Evelyn Gossett) and Bill Balter of
Frank Corey home were Rev. and Silverton were Friday guests at the
Mrs. Howard Rusthoi of LosAn- home of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Sewell.
les, Cal., and Heroert and Louise M ra Mackrodt will spend a few
aurer of Hillsboro. Rev. and Mrs. wet'ks at the home of her grand-
Rusthoi are on iui evangelistic tour parents. Mr. and Mrs. Sewell. Her
and left Saturday tor Denver, Colo, husband returned to his work In
Chris Pieren of Portland was a Silverton
week-end guest a t th e F rank Corey
, „ „
.
. I
home
Mr. and Mrs. J E- Brooks and
Mrs. Clara Vickers of Portland his m other of Portland were Sun-
visited friends in this vicinity last day guests of Mr_ and Mrs. H. R.
week Mrs. Vickers was formerly Chantler. Mr. Brooks mother is
Miss Clara Lund, who taught at from Madison
K ansas boyhood
the Harrison school thirty years home of Mr Chantler. O ther Sun-
aiO
day guests were Miss Opal Smith
Mr and Mrs. P. A. Hutchens and alld Z E C hantler of Portland.
family of Blaine. Miss Mildred
Mr. and Mrs. John Peters and
Hutchens of Forest Grove and Mr. family of Portland and Miss Lottie
and Mrs. J. J. Hutchens of Banks Peters, librarian at the S tate Col­
were Wednesday guests at the Ar­ lege at New Mexico, who spent the
chie Thompson home.
holidays in Portland, were New
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Wescott of Year's guests of Mr. and Mrs. R.
Hillsboro were New Year's Eve guests F ran k Peters.
a t the Archie Thompson home.
Louis Sohler and Will Delplanche.
Thursday dinner guests at the
J. L. Van Domelen home were Mr who arrived home December 21 A VOTHER NATURE collaborated
and ' Mrs. F rank Dooher and M k from Menlo Park. Cal., where they
with public enemies and poli­
Dooher's m other and sister of Cor- attend St. Patrick s college, and
nelius.
Muriel McCoy were guests Friday- t i c 1 a n s. dissatisfied American
Mrs. Elizabeth Harms is ill a t the evening of their form er classmate, workingmen, aud disgruntled Eu­
home of her son Harold H arm s of John Seus.
ropean citizens to make the year
North Plains.
Bert B ennett of Portland is a
Miss V emita Raifetv spent a holiday guest of bis brother-in-law 1934 one of the most eventful In
InY du r S
f
' 111111 slslt'r Mr. and Mrs. W M the last decade.
N ature's contribution was a cat­
t „ C' R ai‘etJ- Smith. Sunday guests of Mr and
Mr. iLiici A irs. E d L e m in g enter** \ i r «
iv prp \ t r s F n ip » t R o n
astrophic drouth. One of the
i S S « U T e S \» d
worst dry spells In history cost
A. C. Olson. Mrs. Stella Brown.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Manning left the country's farm ers hundreds of
Mrs. H enrietta Short of K lam alu Wednesday for their home in Chico. millions fn livestock, crops, and
Falls and Miss M artena Olson of Cai . after spending the holidays topsoil.
Silverton.
with Mrs. M anning's parents, Mr.
Politics mingled with economics
Mrs. Sam R affety has Deen quite and Mrs. Charles Stone, and other
and aviation to produce many
111 the past week.
relatives.
headlines. In January, the U. S.
Bernice and Verna Dillon of Hills- »ri.„
.,,,. „ .
boro were Thursday- night and F n -
i S ? a” d
day guests of M argaret Mathtesen. training a t St Vincent's Vmsmra?m dollar was revalued at 59.00 cents.
Miss Eleanor Jesse was hostess
at
New YeTrA ri i In February, suspicion of fraud In
the aw arding of airm ail contracts
for a New Year s dinner Tuesday £ lth M r aJid Mrs J I im d
'
noon. Guests were Rose, Anna. Joe
M
d Mr J ' u Auid-
brought the aviation Industry a
and Biel Bernards, M artha W itt
M rs- H attie H arte of McMinnville spanking.
Loretta Vanderzanden, Louis Spier- retu r!led
home
S aturday after
ing. Ravmond Vandomelen ¿uid
the ChristmHS holid&y^
.. President
.
. Roosevelt cancelled
W alter .Edwin and Eleanor Jesse
wllh her daughter. Mrs. E. A. Shu- »“ Private airm ail contracts, turn-
Mr and Mrs. Fred Jesse were New
411(1 other relatives.
ing the Job over to the army. This
Year's guests a t the P O. Wade
Mrs. Anna K aufm an of Wood- proved a federal "hot potato.”
home in Portland.
bum an d Mr. and Mrs. Veo Hob- when several arm y airm en died
Mrs. Qualls to Entertain
son of Lewiston. Idaho, were guests In smash-upa. After a tem porary
Mrs. P. A. Qualls will be hostess during th e holidays a t th e home of shutdown tn the service, contracts
for the Banks-M ountaindale 500 Mrs. Rose Prickett.
th°;
w n
Mr and M rs- Donald R. Jack- were again awarded to private
HoU^n ^ ck son ' M argaret Rood» left Wednes- concerns.
A rS nrC m S iS ? ,SanHr ?wM r’»ain d
dav ior th eir home m Oakland. Cal.,
In other political headliners, the
C£ ± f ei1 oi after spending th e holidays here 0 . 0. P. named Henry P. Fletcher
Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jan - and in Beaverton
national chairm an, and Donald
sen and two children. Mrs- Echo
/- i t »,
Willis, the host and hostess and T o ^ s l n d MMr °an d Mrs™»?
Rlchberg supplanted NKA's Uen.
in the evening
evenino ipotas an
and a Mr and Mrs. h
H. . l L. . Hugh Johnson (resigned) at the
son Howard .Guests In
were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hollenbeck
a i?d family of Portland Rooseveltian right band. A land­
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert S m ith and \,e,re ‘V ’ r YeiShS ?uests o i M r- and
slide In the November elections
son Earl. Helen Hollenbeck and Mr°' A L' c h a se -
Sydney Connolly.
Mrs. Ella Ireland and Junior gave Democrats complete control
Miss B ertha E rdm an of Portland Ireland of Portland visited last In House and Senate.
was a Christm as Eve visitor of week a t the homes of Mr. and Mrs
her family, Adoiph Erdm an ana Adolph Malchow and Mr. and Mrs. 'T ’HE year marked a new terh-
sons.
Hallie Ireland.
-*• nique in the handling of pub­
Christm as guests at the J. L.
Miss Flora Wick, attending N orth-
with coddling
VanDomelen home were Mr. and western Business college in P ort- lic enemies. Done
-
------
Mrs. Tom Nielsen and family of land, spent the holidays at the outlaws, federal, state, and city
vt’ihiio Adolph & d m an and sons, home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs police cooperated In a drive
Wilma and M arjorie M arr of M. Wick.
Lui u
j
•
h^e
a‘
O. S w earing.n of Irrigon
hoSm ^ b e V^ ° rL ad“f e
&
^ ¿ t^ T b e ^ c ^
Police bullets ended the careers,
for Instance, of John Dilllnger,
Miss Lena Crop and*Miss M argaret
X'
ot h er latner
M auher of Portland, Henry Baker . . “ T w ,ulona P utnam returned "Baby Fare" Nelson, "Pretty Boy”
of Mt. Angel. Mr. and Mrs Joe J 1011^
lrO1“ a w eeks visit with Floyd, Clyde Barrow, and Bar­
Schmidlekoter and sons of Hillside her grandparents. Mr and Mrs , row's "moll ” Bonnie Parker
Marjorie Meek of North Plains and H' C' Von Bellren. in Salem.
Despite these object lesions,
Mrs. Prank Moore of Roy.
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Clayton and big-time crime persei-ered. A ma­
Christm as guests a t the Philip two children of Oregon City were chine gun gang In Brooklyn
H ergert home were Mr. and Mrs. C hristm as guests of Mrs. Clayton si
robbed an armored truck of >12?.-
D an Schuh and children Vemon. mother. Mrs. H attie Davidson
Gilbert and Forrest of Portland
Miss Jan ette Cady attended an i 000. Kidnapers swooped at St.
and dauk-ht^’
°PP®nlander Alpha G am m a Delta’ soronty dance I Paul. Minn., where Edward Q.
Portiaxfd, » a y ®
.
ClUb>!
a t O re g o n
. k L' ‘ ■
fir
Thursday, January 3, 193ft
a
S tate
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■»a»
C liine-ut
J t f a Wotddl
G
Wit/ t/lt*
PHÍLCO
’39 '
PripK« in amaiinffly low prie«,
here*« • new 1955 PH,I.CO
mean th at there will be tui un- m eni there i» no Intention, thought.
lhal provides
reven«
Imuteil increase In demand. Home or ’“•'»'‘»uraKenient to Increase n in ti-
lion of foreign suiions in addi*
caullon should always be observed ¡V r?i> V1 ra1 . i
<ir »errs
lion lo your favorite American
n, expanding the acreage of any-
' m ‘‘elop
programs! Lstrst feature» give
UnnK-
null so th a t fewer annuals or few- j marvelous performance. < ahi-
The d routh, strik e violence, and the anti-crim e drive furntxheil
net of matched woods, raejui«
Clover Grown
>'r ai-re.s mil be used to produce a
much of IHiig’a new». At left, above, » farm fam ily »uppllea Its
sitrly designed. A Bpectacular
CrUnsoti clover was grown as a certain Income Tlie acreage thus
value!
own " r a in ." Top right, “ Baby Face" Nelson a fte r his death from
seed crop last spring on some r*1*“ased from tlie production of any
seven
e l o h t f a r m in t h e
may then of be some
dl-
federal bullets. Below, clubs it) In tlie .Mtnneapolla truck driver»’
stv m o or r tig
h t farm.« in the county, KlVe“
verted Con>»>‘XfUV
to the production
CAooie
N .» fO J
llie acreage, while not large and other crop in which there Is not a
strik e.
froi
PHftCOS
while not enough of it was grown burdensome surplus
1.90
to
huve
very
much
effect
on
the
When
the
marginal
prixluctlon
Is
was held for >200,000 ransom ; In
JPURIOU8 Farlslan riots, upset­
total form income, yet It was euf- rcmo' ed. tl>«* surplus problem be-
Canada, where abductors of John
ting two cabinets; a Nazi up­
flclcnt to hid,cate th a t the crop
s u ^ u s “if.M
EASY TERMS
Labatt, Toronto brewer, demanded
rising In Austria, lu which Chan­
offers possibilities on certain farms the lim itation on production la un-
>150.000; and at Louisville, Ky..
cellor Dollfuss was kilted; H it­
wliere it may be planted nt the Justified as long as people are
where Mrs. Berry Stoll, society
in------
le r s rise to supreme power fol­ ) right time. Yields of tills seed aver r. nungry.
m atron, was "snatched" by an al­
Phone 21X
Looking a t It purely from the tin t Third St
lowing Hindenburg's death, and
aged somewhere between 500 and
leged maniac.
standpoint of humanity. Huit Idea
000
pounds
per
acre.
his
"purging”
ot
the
Nails,
In
National Indignation flamed
Crimson clover Is purely u seed
which 77 were reported slain; the
when June Robles, 6. Tucsou,
crop proposition and to be sure th at
assassinations of King Alexander
Arix., was found chained to an
a seed crop will be obtained tile
I of Y ugoslavia aud Louis Bar-
tron cage In the desert 19 days
clover should be in the ground with
thou. French foreign m inister;
after her disappearance.
enough moisture to sprout not later
and the wedding ot Prince George
than the latter part of Beptember,
ot England and Princess M arina
rtEN O U E M E N T S of two long-
preferrably two weeks earlier In
tim e news stories of Import­ of Greece—these were outstand*
the fall of 1933 some seedings were
lug European events during 1934.
made well m to October and these
ance—the Insull “chase" and the
late seedings produced a good seed
Thousands died In disasters.
search for the kidnaper of the
crop in 1934 T hat wus possible only
Typhoon* killed 630 Filipinos, and
Lindbergh baby — came In 1934.
because of the very mild winter
6500 Japanese. An Indian quake
Turkey shipped the aged Chicago
which perm itted the ciover to
brought death to 1000. Yugo-Slav
one-time utilities magnate home
grow throughout the winter season
This requirem ent of early seeding
and Welsh mine blasts reaped a
for tria l; and Bruno H auptmann.
m eans th a t there are some years
total toll of 400 llvee. Over here,
German im m igrant, was arrested
when we catuiot get It seeded due
135 passengers died when the
In th e Lindbergh case when ran­
to lack of moisture.
liner Morro Castle burned 13
som money was found in his
Quite a number of older farm ers
•
miles off the Jersey coast.
of the county have commented on
garage.
the
rath
er
large
acreage
of
red
One of the biggest human In­
Celebrities who died during the
clover th at was cut for seed last
BETTER shoes
terest stories ot the year was the
year were Mrs. Samuel Insull, Jr..
summer The large total am ount of
EXPERT FITTERS
birth ot girl quintuplets to Mrs.
Melvin Traylor, Chicago banker;
seed harvested was due to u large
Ovila Dionne of Corbell. Out.
acreage rath er than to heavy yields
King Albert of Belgium; John J.
per acre. Generally those fields
Hillsboro's Exclusive Shoe Store
Labor troubles created much
McGraw, N. Y. Giants' ex man-
th a t were clipped early or pastured
news. Violence brought deaths to
ager; Lllyan Tashman and Marte
and then clipped and let go for
scores in strikes at Minneapolis,
Dressier, film stars; William H. ’ seed produced the heavier yields ol
Toledo. San Francisco and Kohler.
Woodln, form er secretary of the
seed. Where a lull hay crop is ta k ­
en first, clover seed ya-lds the past
WIs. A textile strike In east anil
Treasury; Janies Itolph, J r . gov­
few yeurs have generally not been
south involved 400.000 workers.
ernor of California; Mine. Marls I heavy.
In Cleveland, O., the Atlantic A
Curie, co-discoverer of radium ;
Growers obtained more money
Paelflc Tea Co. dosed 42S stores
House Speaker Henry T. Italney
for clover seed th an lor three or
following labor difficulties, but re­ and President Hlnilenburg of
four years due largely to the fact
tuag there was almost no seed pro­
opened them later.
Germany.
duced in the middlewest and some
sections of the clover belt in tlie
J«
Pnc-nllm
— rH~ _ D* <4
, . c from an appendix operation,
re-; Alexander Chalmers, of near Roy.
Corvaih^ i„
iQ ¿ruTnHf/re
opei
east. There 1» considerable opposi­
a t th#> ffn n ip
J Î f î holidays turned to G ladstone with h er T ues-; and other relatives.
tion to Oregon seed ui some sec­
M r ^ J.*EmL Othehr œ enU ’ Mr-
day ior a vUlt'
tions of Uie eastern clover belt;
Mr and Mrs. M. M Cohn and
objections
which we are attem pting
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Erickson and granddaughter. Nancy Goldberger
Miss E sther Hasselblad of Mich-
to overcome by bringing in eastern
igan arrived
of the
. ’ ,and
Miss H enrietta Mr&
Kroeger
P ort-
of Spokane.
are r^
spending
arnveu the
m e last
last ot
the -,
wee,.
A rthur of R ro,
Rer (he
h^ lidays Wash.,
wlth
aUveS.
(Continurvl from i»au* one)
strains of clover or a hardier type
lor a lew m onths’ visit
vi,v v *
oTiri family and
exneC Miss
\ftcc B ertha Kroeg-
r-riaser _ 4 the
Vm Messrs. Weil
tlfnil and families
I ìak *
local price might have perm itted It. than our native stock. Success with
M B. u
- Anderson home
’
antj
R O T - ^ V “£toreth 7 * v 7 n d ^ le le n
a n d M r a R. C. Busch and 7nd m S H ^ M e r 8“ ° f
M r and Mrs. T. W McDo,
but apparently this has not oc­ these has not been pronounced but
one strain, th e Tennessee A nlhrac-
was pleasantly surprised on h er dauBhl* r Evelyn spent Christm as
p ,.,„ and children and Dr. and Mrs W curred as authentic Information
nineteenth
birthday
anniversary
ML “ d Mrs. A. B. Clark of
sf zsowi.n^
lh l. “ I H. • Plerc;
— cy and daughter spent New from Middlewestern state» where proval and recently
»ir v ie ?v
°L.P?r
»Vi1.5 Year s day _ w n h u.Mr. ^and Mrs B this has been shipped indicates re- t wo carload , have beet, ‘o ld 'to Unit
Sunday with a party given a t the
Grove.
week
of
Miss
Behling’s
aunt.
Mrs
g
MaJing at W hale Cove.
; sjDes to middlewestern consumers section of the east
a L Mlo . and Mrs- p ' J - V an" ? Ir ' 111(1 Mrs Fred Amaeher and Sd Schulmer?ch
here clover
derzanden Present were Mr. and chzdren were guests New Year's
anthracnose is a serious problem.
Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Havens were at
Mrs. Ed Sm ith of Portland, Mr. dav a t the Ernest Amacher home
Mrs. Chester Wohlei hosts for a New Year's Eve dinner | —
While the premium received was
and Mrs. Albert Spiertng of Hills- 111 Portland.
were Christm as visitors of her par- party. Guests were Messrs, and
ef iyn Ua h h u rey ntot , sell u "let ‘th<1 the V 0* 1'1* a ^ T f f S S w M w m
bero, Mr. and Mrs. p j V a n d e r -
L e sfe r « „ a
. ents’ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Everest, Mesdames
Verne Curry. E. L. Ross are
zanden and son Robert, Mr. and Sunday. Monday and T u e s d a ^ a ’ 111 P ortland-
t e u V d ^ t ^ n t ^
i f aw ^ hent^
r' ^
and
F.
C.
Holznagel.
M ^ .Reney Vandehey, Mrs. Isadore Rockaway. They w S eg u estT o ? Mis«
Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Fox of La-
Vanderzanden, Mr. and M rs WU- Betty Erwin
8
s iayette ar.d Miss Irene Heintz spent
Jam es Robert Whitelaw, a student the Hillsboro Argus prove Its ability represented u program was^nunrov-
ham Vandomelen. Mr. and Mrs.
m t «
.
the week-end at Eugene w ith Mi rs. a t University of Washington. Seat- as a speedy and efficient s a l e s ed which If carried out ■ Fe.iild
r
.
HILLSBORO. OREGON
«
M artin
Vanderzanden and
son w ith ' „Ca??2w
" 3 1 entertained a . Miller.
-
tie. Is spending
the holidays w ith , medium.
mean a continued m arket for a
Wayne, Lynn Vanderzanden. Dor-
„
Ye? i s dinner, the
»»-. Ed,,h Toz er W eatherred and 1113 parents. Mr. and Mrs. J a m e s ____ ___________________
othy Vandomelen and Mr. and Mrs. i n l a n d
8ht irlends iro n ‘ Albert T ra er of Aurora spent New Whitelaw.
ra n n e
A I » > m » y y y-y X-» y ■ xnY rrr y <ynryyy y x y r» rx Y v rrt v m - » <-< v,
Aioralus Mid6rS ? o r,S and “ “ t“111'
Mr and Mrs Ed
. k ” 1’ 3 at the T ' S' W eatherred
Mrs. McDonald. Miss R uth Me
Aioysms and Delores-
., W . and „Mrs. E<1 Schlegel and home.
Donald and Miss Peggy McMaster
ennnlv
."49
22 UP
Selfridge Bros.
Clearance Sale
SH O ES
TL_Jf P ’C
II1LC
O
s
A L
Optimism Keynote
1935 Ag Outlook
Birthday Honored
at Roy on Sunday
! T
January Clearance
o ,„
Vv,^ D O \ v
O W E’ S C LO TH IN G SHOP
M S.h^ t o ? t o . and
G
and
Born, to Mr and Mrs George
Spiertng, December 30 a bov
8
William Delplanche. son of Mr
and Airs. Eugene Delplanche, who
in San Francisco,
h S narents
J’5 VUiUng With
Miss M artha Vanderzanden spent
last week with her brother and
sister-in-law , Mr. and Mrs W alter
Vanderzanden of Gales Creek.
ii J e^.enr a tat>le!, ot cards were in
play
lay a t the card party given a t the
Roy hall
hall New
New Year's
Year's eve.
eve. F
F irst
Roy
irst
v»SdnmWie re a '£1a rded to William
Vandomelen
and
Mrs
Nick
Sm
ith,
.KU„ ! “ a klrs- W1CK sm ith .
c?” d to Edmund Vanderzanden
and Mrs. P. J. Vanderzanden
^
p
W
^
e
M
W m £ U C. F Jesse and son
«... it C hrlstm as“ d a y ^ i t h nM ^ ed
M ; Harvey Jesse and son a t Hiils-
1
rv ...----- r r ----- ---------
_ Quality Job printing—Argus.
^ X
^ j E T ^
^ t h 0^
3^
"
^
^
5' 1
7°™
Prescription
^ M r ' s C T B u T " 6' J
MrS
al
M cW n^U ie“ were w e e k - e i ^ e s L ^ e '
h ° HdayS 8t
h ° mC
of Mr. and M rs J. W. BaUeyK
„
Mr and Mr« r» rietn n
.
Cedar Mill local Farm ers Union
children^ were Met, ^ ? ? ,.Harlde anci wln meet Tuesday evening.
Mr. daFnd M rs' T t o m K n & r *
, Ml5s Elma Mae Brown «P™1
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Miller of
a l M t ' Hood'
Salem were week-end guests of Mr vi?,I,££irVi«.K?un3 was a Bonnevllle
and Mrs. Donald Megargel
m iU)r F ^ y -
Marlon B. Siron of G resham 1«! M rs'
A. W att and little
spending
the
week
at
the
home
-c
5(111
are spend-
hts unefe, sheTman Hyre H mC * IS* of Dayton,
»‘^ y a Wash,,
with her
Jlster,
T y p e w r ite r R ib b o n *
Mrs. Carlos Johnson and d a u g h -:
°
W“ ey' a" d her iath er
ter - spent several days
clays the
tne past
Sr66.» a t Jthe B w - ° ° x home. Miss
Mattle Cox. who is convalescing
»■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■B
ONION SKIN
Chica«°
grand pa ren™ M ? a S ? M™ » c- sp tn t New Y ears day Wlth Mr and dlvol’ce ??u rt Jud«e lh a l sl" ce 192'J
Brown
d
*• C Mrs. Wayne Goff a t Bonneville.
«he has thrown her husband out of
Miss Wilma W itt n# PnrtbnH i 1 M rs- Rose D- Tison of Portland tVe house sixty-five times, but he
a guest this we -k ot
i'S ls a house guest of Mr. and Mrs always came back,
^ r e n u Mr and Mrs F T s S e d; L 1 Davis “ uth of Hillsboro.
Mr and Mre A w Haven
, M rs Emma K tm arl ° f Portlaild
?fc'
¥ H i b f - plle attendee
T ' h Yp n m a ^ ay W“ h Mf “ nd
S tate Capitol News L etter—G iv­
the Messiah" in Portland Sunday
,
. . .
ing the highlights of official ac­
K enneth Linklater o i U. of O w eek°with M r ^ ln r, JMr«SIrSH eron tivity a t Salem.—Every week in the
Eugene, is spending the holidays' n ln d e ¿thK l^ 'r r o ? d M
Carleton Argus.
tf
wnh Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Barnes. Ht ? t r
„
» » ».
Doris Anderson so e n t th e hoii
Henry Wilson of Cascade Locks
days at
f t the
the home
home of**Mr and
was a„ week-end guest of Miss Jan -
days
L. L. Graves a t Vancouver Wash )ette Cady
—
»<-_»«a«uver, waan. v | Mls
Mis «°w
R/ra en a Herm ann spent the
Mis.,
M arv el P re n e x
is a guest this weekCf °th^Ih ^ e k£» C hristm as holidays in Southern
*ue«i « J b week a t the home of Oregon
2 ^ -
“
FINISH
Filling
Is Not a Side
Line wih Us.
CARBON PAPER
Hillsboro Argus
□ R
START
RIGHT
We are H eadquarters
for
M AYTAG
I t’s O ur
Specialty
us. <rT
repair your
MAKES GUARANTEED
reasonable
RATES
ii
We Take
Subscriptions for
All Magazines.
W ASHERS
Said Little Audrey, aged eight:
Mrs« Smithers is Certainly
a Dumb Bunny”
And little A udrey’s m other ju st laughed and laughed because she knew
WAS a dum b bunny. But she said, “ Hush, A udrey, you m ustn’t say th a t! ”
Mrs. Sm ithers
But M other, insisted Little Audrey, “she is dum b. She asked me if I’d be in Miss Blank's
room a t school this year, because she didn’t know Miss Blank got m arried last summer.
She tlidn t know th a t daddy was in the hospital, and never went to see him. She said
she didn t come to club m eeting because she d id n ’t know when it was being held. She
missed the special program a t the church because she didn’t know about it. And you know
when you bought those groceries nt the sale, and saved enough money to buy my new
school dress, Mrs. Sm ithers d id n ’t even know the store was having a sale.’
Poor Mr«s* Smithers!
Little A udrey d id n ’t know w hut m ade Mrs. Sm ithers so dumb, but Little A udrey’s mother
knew. Mrs. Sm ithers w asn’t keeping ab reast o f the home town news mid advertising in
iZ ills b D n tfiK V r g u s
D on’t be a Mrs. Smithers!
$ 1 .5 0 fo r a y e a r ’* s u bscrip tion , o r 85c fo r 6 m onths, a m o u n t* to
an d P a rt*
S qu are
T u b .....
R ound
T u b .....
$ 7 £ .5 O
Z
Z
Z
Douglass
$69M Radio
Service
LESTER IR E L A N D & CO.
Selfridge Bros.
PHILCO
!■■■■■■
THE DELTA
DRUG STORE
LESS
THAN
3c A W E E K
S U B S C R IB E
NOW !
Phone 21X
DEALERS
if i s a K
S i t : i:
t i i t ; tr ;: