Image provided by: Hillsboro Historical Society; Hillsboro, OR, and The Oregonian; Portland, OR
About The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1935)
P age Ten T H E Evangelist to Hold Meetings 11 I L L S B O R 0 A R G U S, H IL L S B O K O . Huge Sum Spent in C ounty for Relief Purposes W orld’s Tiniest Mail Train O R EGON lines as knee-aellon wheel*, auper- hydruulle brakes, ride stabilizer, center-control steering and all-silent synchro-mesh gear shlfllng. ae New Gld.Mimblle sixes and eights cording to Julius Whitelaw, loeal for 1935. featuring greater size, Gldsniolille and Chevrolet i i r i i n i In addition Ila- new car features power and economy, are now being the all-steel turret top body by sliown at the Hillsboro .Motor com i l , her, the whi-ellia.se has been In pany showroom nt Third and W ash creased to 115 Inches in the six and ington streets. Fourteen body types 121 Inches in the eight, and horse are offered, seven in tiie six and power of the six lias been step|M-d an equal number tn the s tra ig h t, up from 84 Io 90 and of the eight eight. from ini u> loo. Oldsmobile has retained such le a -' The sixes ooirtUllis- In the low 1955 O ld sn io b iles N o w B eing S h o w n le y ’s R iv al T ed d y Leavitt W ill B egin W ork H ere on Sunday T hursday, January Total of »95.635 was expended In j W ashington county for relief work during the last eight m onths of A very significant move among the 1934. according to report« of K. W Christian churches of the county is J Well, relief committee chairm an, being launched in Hillsboro Sunday. and W J. Mills, county SKUA man- Teddy Leavitt, state evangelist, and ' ager During tills time 706 persons noted evangelist of the West, has 1 from the relief rolls were given been engaged to lead the churches I work Oil the various projects. of Beaverton. Forest Grove, Gales Federal allotm ents to the county Creek. North Plains and Hillsboro during the period am ounted to »67,- in a five m onths evangelistic cam 1 305 and the balance of *28.330 was paign. the county's share of state liquoi The evangelist and representa funds. Payrolls accounted for »62,- tives of the churches will be at the local Christian church Sunday for 650 of the total expended. »30.600 was used in direct relief and »238.» j of the state liquoi- fund money was | spent for rent, mileage, m aterials for self-help projects, compensation insurance and other items. Projects approved during the post ) eight m onths in W ashington coun ty totaled 70. Of this number 2.i were completed. 33 were active and ' 12 had not been started. So-called I self-help projects, such as sewing, ! comforter niakuig. canning, furni- ) ture making and repairing, and A farm er living n ear The Dalles, Ore , uses his own "m ail tra in " wood-cutting were quite satisfactory to help out the postm an. W ith the aid of a few b atteries, this tiny and ap p aren t" worthwhile, the re engine daily m akes th e h a lt mile trip to the m ain road, w here th e lief executives declared. Tho latest "baby s ta r" to postm an fills th e "m ail box c a r." tu rn s th e engine around, and T h at the recent reduction of tin j s ta rts It back home. wage scale for those on relief roll, m ake gevd In Holly v en d la 3-j ear-old J u a n ita to the level of the going wage in vivacious the county has not reduced the "B aby J a n e ” Quigley, above, earnings of relief clients was the whose splendid work In a new opinion of Mills. He pointed out production earned ner a five- th a t work orders are based upon year contract, sta rlin g nt a »250 A popularity the bugetary deficiency of the. weekly anlary. clients. As a result those employed m atching «hst r ’ P’-'rley T em will receive the same am ount in; ple la predicted for Jane. Teddy Leavitt wages each m onth but will be re- < an all-countv fellowship for the quired to work a few hours longer, j W ater Firm O ffe r s purpose of organizing a county as Mills emphasized the fact t h a t ' sociation of churches and outlining the eastern section of the county a schedule of meetings for the A id Ltx'al H ea rin g evangelist. This meeting will fol had been particularly favored with low a pot luck dinner at one o'clock (Continued from pare one) works projects as several were in Evangelist Leavitt is to begin operation Iroui last M aj until the could not stand the Increased cost. his series of meetings Sunday to present time. Weil stated th a t e f Gross revenues from all of t h e ) continue nightly during the week. forts are being made to obtain more company's properties in Oregon were Mr. Leavitt is a team w ithin him self. He can go into a lumber camp work projects in the Hillsboro area less th an *300.000 last year, he said community or a big city church to care for local people on relief S tate public utility commission and preach the gospel with success. rolls. was represented by Claude Lester. I Before taking up the work as state T hat assurance of works programs commission engineer, and V. H evangelist, under the direction of extending over a greater length Dunkln and D. Schultz, assistant I the State Convention of the C hris tian church, he was a general evan of time th an In the post appears engineers, and Hillsboro by P. L. gelist and has evangelized in W ash probable under the new set-up was Patterson, city attorney. President ington and California as well as the declaration of Mills. He pointed Elliott. R. E. Wiley, local m anager, ] Oregon and has been called back out th at failure of assurance of a and J. T. Delaney. Salem manager again and again for succeeding works program for a definite period appeared for the water company. meetings. of time ra th e r th an from m onth to The hearuig was the result of a j Rev. Leavitt is not a stranger m onth has caused the suppression complaint filed June 16 by the I to W ashington county A number of years ago he organized the Beaver of many worthwhile projects. Local city council on behalf of 90 local ton church and nas since conducted political subdivisions have not felt w ater users. revivals a t N orth Plains and last Evidence of th e trem en d o u s im pact, cars of a local tra in Into justified in obligating themselves year held one of the best meetings Forest Grove church has held tn w hich an express crashed n ear D elaw are, O.. were strew n about like for any considerable outlay for RAY V. CARY years, according to the m inister. toys a fte r th e d isaster, in which th re e persons w ere k illed and 13 m aterials w ith no assurance tliat Funeral services for Ray V. Cary, Claude Sabin It Is because of this in ju red . In th is spectacu lar photo, one passenger coach is show n funds will be available for labor fact th a t he has been chosen to riled on top of an o th er. payrolls for a longer period of tunc 40, son of T. A. Cary, were held Sunday, January 6. a t the funeral lead in this new venture of the th an one month. chapel of W. E. Pegg in Beaverton churches. boundaries westward. Today ___ our Success of works program s depend with concluding services a t t h e The local minister, R. L. Putnam , B abson H its C uts doctrine is: “No One Must Be __ ... Al- Evangelical cemetery o n Cooper has had the evangelist in a p re lowed to S uffer!" T his Is being c ar upon local communities originating Mountain, under the auspices of projects, he stated, in th e last vious pastorate a t Salem and is ried too far an d is m aking us a in S c h o o l B u d gets dishonest, soft, and indifferent n a analysis, the work is done for the the Beaverton lodge. I. O. O. F. No glad to present his friend in a 252. series of meetings here (Continued from pare one) tion. Rem< -Tiber, real manhood and communities, not the SERA. Mr Cary was born near Rochester, i " It is impossible for me to de both the individual and to th e col-1 ch aracter come only through stru g Rapid work in putting through a Minn., February 1. 1894, and came scribe the character of the man lege gle an d hardship. with his parents to settle near project to protect the Forest Grove and his odd wavs of preaching the 4. Tendency to spread out too Independence Our Most Precious w ater pipe line was accomplished Beaverton In 1906. gospel message in his own inimical thin. By th a t I m ean trying t o 1 He died suddenly a t Clear Lake Vsset € way. You've got to h ear him again . crowd in too many subjects, some At noon Monday the lo- Wash.. January 3, 1935. leaving to and again to appreciate and to of which are inconsequential. The <KKi?}r Ca ° ^ lce received a call th a t Gales mourn his passing, hts father, tw o 1 understand Teddy Leavitt,” de result of this Is th a t no one thing curricihinv M l ’ h o m e V i S Creek was cuttm K lnto the hank brothers and two sisters. Ralph O. clared the local pastor. is learned well and the child comes voSthU£ « r « S a iu ™ 1 J in and endangering the pipe line A of Portland. W alter and Mrs. Je a n ““k r c W ^ T ® is not t X ^ ^ e c S ’T S t ’ ^ ^ f i to in s till ' r ^ p ” u U ette Purvis of Rochester. Minn . Sav you saw it in the Argus more education ^ to n g cfdtural linra ,n ot thern, J h a t Commun- the bank was immediately sane- and Mrs. Florence H eard of Ju n c tion City. Cal. but in the spiritual sphere Our no* I ani not Honed and 10 men were a t work standard of living will % llapse of deZi21?ln ? do Hrge T uc,day morning. ''We have to have courage andI its own weight unless our spiritual ‘ n tp u^der Another project approved this discipline S tart th e and vision to blaze the r S ’ ^ o w f h '^ e 'th d 'f a s h io n e d ^ u a j" ultlrnatelV - th e ones who will rule * ?ek Pr° vlded ¡ o r extension of the N EW YEAR RIGHT new trails in life; but underlying, i Ities of reverence .obed ien ce? ’will- Wl11 sure of ?obs arF Sh" wo«l-T onqum road one-half all our efforts Is the conviction th a t i ¡ngness to do hard and unpleasant i 1’0?18??1 sPJ3jt ually. mile. Work was started Friday men cannot live unto themselves alone.”—President Roosevelt , tasks, loyalty respect must . for be law, t a u integrity, g h t / ' and ^ e _ » ^ t % Above t ^ all. grading the county airport near IN SU R A N C E T od a y ! profit and loss report nrnvpm pnt is room these" for pariliG much im luies along ^The — thp«p rw T s t^ k lar Wit. who tS h o ld I extend to all my friends a h eart ? Ui g h t to ' d e m a 'n d ^ “ e “ 5’ ; have t n r iem a n rf 1» felt desire th a t nineteen hundred W hat Business Expects From and thirty-five may be a year abounding m Joy and Prosperity and in continued friendly relations. £ P lay S c a p p o o se Five cS? leges throw out cultural subjects and substitute bookkeeping, type- writing, or business topics. Busi- Farm In v e n to y ness men are demanding merely REAL ESTATE and INSURANCE th a t the colleges train men in the Can finance your insurance fundam entals of life by developnig W eek S ch ed u led premiums on a monthly basis. proper habits — habits of thrift, (Continued rrom from peire cuucciitraLion. n a ra work, integrity. »vonunoea p*ge one) concentration, h ard integrity, 1152 2nd St. Phone 171 and initiative. Mere knowledge can 's not a difficult task, particularlv i busine« *3600 a year !i su88ested forms are used Such almost any te c h n ia P su b je c V ^ rb its d u rin c * * m 8,de a v a lla b le t r e f of bS duri" 8 016 Present campaign. of character, character, however. however, 'c c a a n n n rw o t be purchased. Most business men a gree Grade Tests Planned Ii!at ..£ ? an with a d lPloma from th<L .foU ege of H ard Knocks" is County school students enrolled a better gamble th a n a business in the sixth, seventh and eighth school graduate with untried ch ar 8i ade.s wld h* given first semester acter objective tests Jan u ary 24 and 25 The sam e general Idea applies in according to O. B. Kraus, county Let the advertisem ents help you every walk oi life. There have been school superintendent. make your shopping plans. great changes in the social thlnk- “ 8 o i America in the past ten years. Thoes who believe in the "survival of the fittest" are in the 1934 Ford V-8 m inority today. Yet the latter D e lu x e C o u p e ........... .......... doctrine is absolutely responsible S r^ ric a 2.,deveL°P'n ent. It had Alrwheels, heater, like new. to be th e philosophy of every new settler along th e coast and of every 1933 Ford V-8 irontiersm an who pushed o u r 1 GRIFFITH USED CARS REDUCED D e lu x e Sedan Weil kept. 192 8 Buick S ed a n ......... Powers Grocery ’550 ’200 ’245 USED 300 C A R S 192 9 Buick C oupe ......... Ready To Wear - Boots - Shoes - White Goods Completely overhauled, refinished efinished 1926 O lds Sedan G ood v a lu e ........... B ou gh t and Sold 105 192 9 E ssex Sedan $ G ood s h a p e ..... 225 192 8 N ash Cabrio- $ le t, g ood sh a p e .. 185 1930 C hev Truck L ong w h e e lb a se ’275 1929 C hev Truck M otor o v erh a u led ’195 1928 C hev Truck L o n g w h ’lb ase, d u als ’175 1927 Ford C oupe ......... ’35 1926 Ford C oupe ......... ’25 W ill tra d e c h e a p truck for w o o d ! 1929 P ontiac Coupe 19.30 C hevrolet Sedan 1929 D urant Sedan 1927 C hevrolet Sedan O verland Sedan 1929 Ford Truck, like new . 1929 Ford R oadster 2 Ford T ourings A g en cy W illy* 77 C om e in fo r a dem onstration. CARS PAINTED c 36 and lil-inoli C U R T A IN IN G S— plain anti rull'led. 36-inch BRIG H T COL O R ED PR IN TS, 27 inch W H ITE AM O- SK EA G O U TIN G FLA N N EL, 36 1.« 50 inch FRENCH M A R Q U ISETTES in on«' Io five v«rd len gth s. 10 yd Chevrolet and Oldsmobile JAMES WHITELAW. Managpr 3rd an d W ash. P h o n e 441 Dog F^od 4 for SOAP CR Y STA L W HITE. . , S60 U3 T t XC 11 3 II ° PC 2nd and w «»b. P hone 2641 10 bars Tomato Juice Red & W hite. 3 for ........................................ BEETS Red & W hite. S liced . 2 for Wheat Cereal 2 8 -o z ........................................ Ga* - Oil - A ccesso ries HillsboroMoforC . „ .« Per pair f Q W OOL MIX SOCKS Men'«. R eg. A JrV 25c pair □ III R I J M en’* DRESS SHIRTS h l . to 17. Special 79c GET GAY! W INTER U N IO N S Men's. Size« to Bi. Now rerx c Je I /»JL ' Z iA " C olum biaknit” SW EA TER S > ,-PRICE Hill Hilly and Brushed W ool. All colors. Reg ular « .a s 93 .9 8 X u McCall 8130 REM NANTS SEW IT LIKE LIGHTNING WITH A A Big C learance ! A Table Full! At R em nant P rices! IN F A N T S’ ALL W OOL Tuques, B onnets, Cap*. \ alu.'s I.. each J 4 Q * «J g V 6 6 x 7 6 BLA N K ETS T h ey ’re plaid« and a big value. ffA x * Each PR IN TE D PATTERN t>«fC TK«r« i no futim g and fuming when you use a M c C a ll Printed PoWern. That's because noth ing ever goes wrong. Everything it printed for you to folio w - oven the cutting line. I M c C a ll ho« th a t gift-to-needlewomen pa te n te d !) And when your pattern tell« you to do so-ondso here and »uch-and-tuch right hare you do it of course. W h a t your pattern doesn't tell you your M c C o ll Cut and-Sew G uide does. Sc ♦here you ore— with a «mart little dress on your back before you know itl RIC RACS, BIAS T A P E 5c e 7 2 x 9 0 SHEETS F ull «ize, full value. P lain and Printed 49c -e f« ~ X «7V (Seam ed ) W e il’s January C learance P illow slip * 42x36 McCall Printed Pattern DRESS SILKS— Y ard ......................... 25c P eq u o t S h eets 137 81 x99 Here » a grand collecfion of the smartest, newest things in the print mode. Four yards or less will make you a dressl i 'T 7 72xl0K p j I S a le ’1 .25 pEQUQT k i T* sh uts a a « y • » j nuOwcAUs SUe 4 2 *3 6 p illo w ( M f s 27c A n n o u n c in g . . . (t The Car that Has Everything 99 N EW Solid -S teel “ T u rret-T op " B od ies by F isher N ew Streamline Heauty • Longer W heelbase • More Room More Comfort • Greater Power • Increased Economy and S o l i d - S t e e l “ I u r r e t - T o p ” B o d ie s h y F is h e r B uilt-In K nee- A c tio n W h e e ls R ide Stahiliz.er S p ecia ls for January 11 and 12 Red & W hite. ,ara W ashed and P olished a 1UC Safe prii <• P rom p t S ervice . . . CALO. $ B oys’ W OOL GLOVES Values to 35c yard M A IN STR EET PH O N E 81 Rumble esat, ru n s well 192 9 N ash $1 S ed a n ............... ........... ... _ _ Itay Tallm an of itaymoud. Wa h and i'a m i • Helen Shelve «I ’h coma. W ash . January n Our classified columns may have nor w ithout r rewards Is wvuifc being done by Just w hat you are looking for — v carelessness; t u c t w o iic M , n o r WUHOUl e w a r d s " — J week. ............ Work -.-* r x 40 f? r th "£ t and in dustry! Teach more hand » ‘th wheelbarrows Read them. ^ es and ‘he next era‘‘o n , Fan u erauon can toss V r l m e-silrve'ys ffto HoOpStCrS tO Hilhi hoopsters will tangle w ith 1 Scappoose Friday night on the lo cal court in the first m ajor home game of the 1935 basketball sea son. The McMinnville quintet will meet the Blue and W hite players here Wednesday evening In the: prac I game before the county play-off. Both games are called lor 7 p. m. p la v 11 Play in the county championship will open next Friday with the lo cals Journeying to Tigard for the initial game. Last night Hllhl first' and second team s played a t Mc Minnville. ’625 M arriage l.lenuM-s F A rthur Itavts of North i ’i»»i and Vera Mae Handford of lie, boro rutile 3. January 2 John O. Caublr and J. Margin, lie Ihinter. both of Eugene, j,,,,,, Weil’s January Clearance T rains Piled Like Toys in Crash 1935 C heck Up on Your pilee field while Ills eights h u e been reduced m pi ice iul iU1, cording in Whitelaw. SOUPS H einz. 2 for .......... H e im . Per d o zen 29c »«»to- CMMbr C en ter- C o n tro l S teerin g \| 29c ac. 4 h v C 25c 1 “C A N ew and Bigger 90-Horsepower S I X B igger, Super- H yd rau lic B rakes Syncro-M esh A ll-S ilen t S h iftin g THE - M O ST A N ew and Bigger /00-Horsepower E H H IT y o u w a n t in u 1935 c a r . E v e r y q u a li ty esse n tia l to m o to rin g satisfactio n . E v e r y fe a tu re y o u ex p ect in a c o m p l e te m o d e r n a u to m o b il e . T h is n e w O ld sm o b ile is c e rta in ly th e c a r t h a t h a a e v e r y t h in / } ! S o lid -S teel “ T u r r e t - T o p ” B o d ies v e r y t h in g E S ix fi f 6 7 i a n d up . . . E ig hn $ 860 an d up, H it p r i m a t Earning, lu bjtcl U> rhan^t •without n o tio . D um ptn -with g u a rd i, ¡ p a n lire , a n d r r a r tp rin g t o v t n bntit into a l l r a n a t the fa cto ry a t t x t r a rod. ConnirnirnlG. M . d . C, tim rpnim rntptan. A G EN ER A L M OTORS VALUE b y F is h e r —fe a tu rin g a seam - •C O M P L E T E L Y , S O U N D -P R O O F M any oth er item s sp e c ia lly priced for F riday and S aturday. T h ese p rices good Jan. 11 and 12 only. KNEK-ACT1 W H E E L S —b u ilt in to th e ch a a s an integrnl u n it o f all m od a t no e x tra co st. B ig g e r « u | h y d ra u lic brakes. A ll th e ot fe a tu re s sh o w n a t th e left. / t h e p r i c e is s till r i g h t do w h e re y o u w a n t i t . . . definit in th e lo w -p ric e field. » C A H , EVER » B U IIT OtALBR AO VIM T«BBM K »VT 27c $ * .5 9 le s s ste e l roof. H ills b o r o M o to r C o m p a n y Third and W ash in gton St*. JA M ES W H IT E L A W , P roprietor T elep h o n e 441