The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, March 14, 1935, Page 8, Image 8

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    H IL L S B O R O
T a g e E ight
Progress ‘‘Douoieu at Norris Dam
Schedule Set
Sunset Loop
B ill Joo» N am ed M anager
o í H illsboro Team
F irst local game on the 193., S un­
set baseball league schedule is
slated lor April 14 when the Hills­
boro team clashes with Aloha on
the home diamond. The schedule
of games for the entire season w a s
released this week by league meii-
ben,
All teams have been strengthen­
ed, especially the weaker teams ol
last year, according io League Pres­
ident Clinton. Leaders ol the var­
ious teams this year are: Hill Joos.
Hillsboro; Roland Watkins. T uala­
tin : Lewis Garfield. Orenco; Ole
Olson
Cornelius: Ted Emerson.
Aloha: George Solder. Bank.-. .Arn­
old Stryffeler, O aston: und W. H.
River w aters which, harnessed by N orris Dam. will co n trib u te u n ­
McNay. Laurel.
told power for fu tu re generations of so u th ern ers here offer an o th er
Schedule Is as follows:
kind of magic. Dam progress made on Clinch riv er 25 miles n orth-
P in t H alf
April 7 -O ren co at T ualatin. Gaston at west of Knoxville. Tenn., is revealed in th is picture, even If it is
A loha, Laurel at L «'m elius, Hillsboro at
**pp«(He down M
A pril 14 Cornelius a t O renco. Tualatin
« «-»«
at la u r e l Ai h i at Hi M r
B ank, at H O O U
C O lltr O l F la i l
Gaatom.
A pril 21 I-aurel at A loha. Gaston at
T u alatin . Hillsboro at Cornelius, O renco |
at Banks.
„ A pril ZS -A lo h tt at Orenco. Tualatin at (
(C ontinued from p a r t one)
{ h h -b o n t C om eiiu , . t u a .to n . B an k , .t <age and a ^ re s p o n d in g am ount
He’ll Try to Row
Outlined at Meeting
Atlantic
j in ordinary years.
g X. M cGrath, association pres-
predicted th a t funds would
be available for flood Control AS
Orenco.
• soon as congress passed a bill now
¿ l X \ t ^ ^ ? f c n U b<7 ? :P ent‘m g _ to provide funds. He de-
I clared flood control to be second
C ornelia
May m — Open for all team , to play ( only in im portance to the Bonne-
poatponni ‘r,n,^ rojid H>|(
ville dam for Oregon O ther speak- I
.June 1 T ualatin at Aloha. Oreneo at ers included Robert M. Stewart of
Hillsboro. Laurel at Gaston. C om eiiu . at the U. S engineers. K enneth TlllOt- I
B“, Ju
nk"
o
L.
n e - • —Orenco
at . i Laurel. i uni.k.,«
Hillsboro at son oi Forest Grove, Dr. W.
_
May 6—H illsboro at Laurel. Orenco a t
Gaeton, Tualatin at C om eiiu». Aloha at
“ m m 12 B an k , at T ualatin. C om elu;»
at A loha. Gaston at Hillsboro. Laurel at
G astoa. A loha at
B an k ..
Cornelius.
Tualatin
at POWCrt ftn d
PrdfCSSOr M .
R
LCUlS
of Oregon S tate college. J. E. Reeves
Hillsboro. L. J Heesacker of
Forest Grove route 1. R. R. Easter
of Hillsboro. J. M. Pltmftn Of Sher-
w ood
C o u n ty A g en t
William F
C jTU S a n d L e n W. Guild Of Hills-
boro route 2.
ARGU S,
H IL L S B O R O ,
OREGON
Solons Pass Bill
II. S. Government Aids Students At II. Of 0.
County Warrants
(ConO inm l from v im . un«>
bill. Tilt1 first of these increnst*.
the tax on beer from 63 cents 'o
$130 a barrel and Is expected to
increase revenues from tills source
by $30O,iX)O a year, approximately
$140,000 of which will go to the
cities of the state on a population
basis. The free bridge bill autlior-
laes tlie highway commission io
lift the toll charges from the five
Coast highway spans, and the inc­
est land acquisition makes pro- i
vision for the purchase of timber
land adjacent to forest reserves by
the national government It re ­
quired the interference of G over­
nor Martin to persuade the lions-
' Io accept this measure as it came
aver from the senate wttliout the
tax payment provision which was
insisted upon by the courts.
A number of measures still re­
maining in committee when the
session resumed this week w e r e
i dumped into the legislative scrap
heap as the lawmakers cleared the
desks for final adjournm ent. Among
these was the Thomas bill lncreas-
mg income tax rates and lowering
the exemptions and the M artin bill
i which would require medical cer­
tificates from both applicants for
| a m arriage license.
No one was more anxious for
adjournm ent of the session ihan
the lobbyists. Nothing could be
more monotonous and wearisome
th an the task of riding herd on a
bunch of lawmakers day and n ig h t'
for eight weeks or more.
Governor M artin has promised
an investigation of relief adniinls-
1 tratlon methods. But it will be a
dignified investigation conducted
by the new relief conimtssion and
; the governor promises th a t it will
go to the bottom of any charge
th at appears to merit investigating
Aloha.
Ju n e 23 -O ren co at Aloha. Hillsboro at
C ornelius. Laurel at
Through an allotm ent of $3250 per month, approxim ately 300
students are being aided by the federal governm ent at the U n iv ersity
of Oregon. Students are assigned w ork on m any projects about th e
campus, and earn from $10 to $15 per month each. W ork ranges
from assisting w ith landscaping to research In variods fields. Above
are shown two students typing in one of the un iversity offices,
w h ile below a group is w orking on the grounds under the direction
of an expert gardener,
Kansas Tornado Makes 1935 Debut
IS
Advertising Read?
tbp rifP witb millr in
rtn ih i? h J ie r /n tu .o u d lr
double boiler until tender and dry.
Separate the eggs and add t h e
yolks, well beaten: add the but-
ter and codfish, which has been
freshened by soaking in w a t e r ,
W hen the mixture is somewhat
cool, fold in the egg whites, beaten
stiff. Bake 30 minutes in mod­
erate oven (375 degrees). Serve im ­
mediately, garnish with parsley and
accompanied by a butter sauce.
B utter Sauce:
Put ',-c u p of
butter in a bow! and work until
creamy. Add
-teaspoon of salt,
’¿-teaspoon pepper a n d ’-i-tea-
USED
CARS
B ought and Sold
1929
1925
1927
1926
1931
1929
1927
4-door D urant
D o d g e T ouring
Ford R oadster
Ford Coupe
Ford R oadster
C hevrolet Truck
D od ge C oupe
J u s t received carload of
new W illys automobiles!
Agency
G ra h a m -P a ig e Sedan
$ 8 4 9 D eliv ered H ere
W illy s 4-door Sedan
$ 5 7 9 D eliv ered H ere
Come in for
D em onstration.
CARS PAINTED
G as - O il - A ccesso ries
C ars W a sh ed and
P olished
the SUn’S
f° r P0WeI* a n d ^ eat
Lenses and blackened boilers are
— j
---- ■
—
—--------
spoon finely chopped parsley, then
p , tablespoons of lemon juice verv
slowly.
Used Car Exchange
P h o n e 2641
fCDCe P0«1*-
“The American people h a v e
I learned to know deceit from hav-
Ing met It. They have suffered too
much to be intim idated by mongers
of fear.”—President Roosevelt.
Powers Grocery
M A IN STREET
PH O N E 81
Prom pt Service . . .
Cocoa
H ershey, Vfc-lb. tins.
2 for
W ax
Johnson’s Paste.
1-lb. tin
Soap
IVORY, medium size.
Soap
CAMAY. 2 bars
CoStee
MANNING’S. 1-lb.
Crisco
5 bars
r p H E word halitosis lay buried in
the widely “rea d ” dictionary of
the English language scores of years
until set in ordinary type in an ad­
vertisem ent it became a by-word of
the millions.
deep into the text of the ads. Kotex
headlines perforce had to he more or
less indirect. No person could get
the im port of a Kotex ad without
reading virtually every word of the
ad itself.
As a result, a product 40 years on
the m arket with m oderate sale be­
came a world leader. Bad breath be­
came alm ost a fashion.
T hat women did, every one who
follows advertising knows. Over 80
per cent of the better class of women
in Am erica today employ Kotex. The
m akers of this product would be
quick to answ er w hether or not ad ­
vertising is read.
On the other hand, yeast was some­
thing m erely to make bread w ith—
u n t i l Fleischmann advertisem ents
said otherwise.
S p ecia ls for M arch 15 and 16
3-lb. tin ..........................
2nd and W ash.
trge*
1 .5 c
59c
Now we gain fair skins, robust
health, cure ourselves of many of the
common ills of mankind, arid even
look forw ard hopefully to Eternal
Youth because of it.
For centuries women used m ake­
shift hygenic pads. The subject itself
was a d m itte d ly -a forbidden one. A
subject no one spoke about, much
less wrote about, except in medical
practice.
Thus Listerine, F le is c h m a n n ’s
Yeast and Kotex— at least three of
the most notably successful products
of the day — must he regarded as
Simon Pure Advertising successes.
All had their basic selling stories,
not in the headlines, hut in the text
of their ads. And readers had to
read th a t text to he “sold.” All stand
as indisputable answers to the ques­
tion, “ Is Advertising R e a d ? ”
27c
Then came Kotex. A sanitary pad.
A product no woman had ever heard
about. A product th a t adm itted no
definitely descriptive words in h ead ­
lines to describe it.
If people didn’t read ads as care­
fully as news or feature m atter, most
of the successful concerns w h o s e
names are household words would
be virtually unknown to the reading
millions.
9c
Thus to learn w hat Kotex was in­
tended for, the reader had to go
Men who have made money through
advertising know how true this is.
25c
59c
Many other items specially priced for Friday and
Saturday. These prices good March 15 - 16 only.
reddened skin, a blanching occurs,
il the disease be scarlet fever
I Bcarlet lever antitoxin i, also
used in treatm ent and undoubted­
ly shortens the roiiise of the dLsease
and prevents coiiipllcullnns Henous
leaelams. however, at (lines follow
the use nt this serum.
■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■
WK KNOW
CHEVROLKTS
— YOU KNOW US!
Lawn Weeds, Moss
Can he Eliminated
SCARLET FEVER
IM M I’XIZATIOX
The Dick test ls a reliable test
to determine w hether an Individual
Jnne 30— Aloha at Laurel. Tualatin
i is susceptible or immune to scar­
at Gaaton. Cornelius at Hillsboro, Banks
let fever. The percentage of sus­
ceptible persons in different age
“ ju lT T o r r n c o at C om eiiu ., Laurel at
° ' ‘“l
a^
S’
groups decreases with age.
T ualatin, Hillsboro at A loha. Gaston at t lo n , P r e s id e n t M cGrath, VlCe-PrtS-
1-5 years ................. go per cent
Banka.
ident Reeves and Secretary-Treas-
5-10 years
35 per cent
Jtrfy l < T ualatin at °renc«». Aloha at urer George McGee. were re-elected.
G asloo, Banks at Hillsboro. C om eau s at
*
_.
- __ ,, ,
. _ __
10-20 years ..............20 per cent
Laurd?
W. G. Ide of Hillsboro and G. B
Over 20 years . . . . . . 15 per cent
Joiy f i — P layoff between winners o f Buchanan Jr., of Gast-on w e r e
Dick tests also show th a t there
fir st and second halves.
elected to the board of directors.
1 is a higher percentage of suscep-
tibles among school children for
O ther directors included Johnston.
FISH IX THE DIET
rural districts th a n there are for
Guild. Heesacker. John G albreath
Oregon D airy Council
I cities Members of the same fam - I
of Sherwood route 5. J. A Irm ler
By A da K. M ayne
iiv tend to react alike to this test
As the Lenten season Is here we of Cornelius. Pitm an and F. E.
In the early stage of scarlet fever
find the m arkets stocked with many Rowell of Hillsboro route 2
In a 12-foot rubber canoe-lika the Dick test is positive but it
varieties of fresh fish. Pish is c o n -'
craft, fitted witb mast and sail, becomes a negative in most cases
sidered one of the low-cost foods,
MRS. LEEA M. WOODS
or later during the period
because in most localities tish oi
Leslie William Falrnte, above, sooner
of recovery-. One attack of scarlet
Funeral
services
will
be
held
at
some kind are likely to be cheap
of London. Eng., plana soon to fever usually confers immunity for
a t any time of the year. Fish has the M E church a t Cornelius this
cross the Atlantic. If successful, life. Susceptible persons can be im ­
high food value too, which means afternoon (Thursday) a t one o’clock
he'll win more than *20.000 In munized against scarlet fever by i
more th an being a mere item for [?,r Mrs. . Lel® Mae Woods. 36. of
subcutaneous injections of scarlet
low-cost meals.
Blaine, who died a t Cornelius Tues-
prize money.
fever toxin. Three doses are given
Along with other anim al foods,
evening. Rev. C. M. Reed will
at weekly intervals. It is estim ated
fish is a protein food. It is rich in officiate and Young s Funeral Home
OX OREGON’ FARMS
th at about one-half of those re-
minerals, and salt water fish and ha^. charge of arrangem ents
i ceiving this dosage would be com­
To P lant T. A. R. Clover for
shell fish furnish iodine, which is
Mrs. Woods w’as born at Bridge-
pletely immunized. Two weeks a f t­
Seed
im portant ip sections where the m an« Mich.. M arch 11. 1899. and
soil and ______
water __________
are poor ______
in ths „ married Earl Ray Woods March LAKEVIEW—The first Tennes- er the injections a skin test should
_______
mineral. A num ber ol varieties ot **• 1920. During the past eight see Anthracnose Resistant r e d be given Those who are found to
fish, as salmon, halibut, cod and years they h a w lived a t Blaine, clover to be planted In Lake coun­ be still susceptible should receive
a second series of two or three
herring, have been found to be She came to Cornelius two weeks ty will be seeded this year by
W hirling furiously tow ard W lrblta. Kan , thia aerial maclatro
good sources of vitamins A and D. ‘i g0. to J 1®11 her mother, Mrs. Edith George Stockburger
of the West toxin injections.
of destruction, heralding the opening of the Sunflower s ta te ’e tnrnm
The reactions following th e in­
I t is well then to use all of the Burbank.
Side community, according to Vic-
a-ason. waa »napped by a daring cam eram an before II »wept iliroui
oil from canned fish in order to
Surviving Mrs. Woods are her tor W. Johnson, county agent. Mr. jection of the toxin are usually a
and
retain the full vitam in value.
widower and two children. Lyle and stockburger h a s
obtained
200 slight redness, induration
the suburbs and reduced a group ot homes and business buildings
tenderness
a
t
the
site
of
Injection,
1
There are innum erable ways of “ \th a of Blame; h er mother, Mrs pounds of the seed from a grower
debris.
serving fish. We are all fam iliar Edith Burbank, a n d a brother, m the W illamette valley, wliere It but in some sensitive persons, how­
with baked or fried fish, but cream - John E. Burbank of Cornelius.
has become a profitable seed crop ever. there may be fever, nausea, a i cial emergencies It may be used against scarlet fever with one <
ed or escalloped, in baked loaves, I
----------------------
and plans to sow 30 acres for seed rash and sore throat. These reac­ as a control measure. At the pres- two doses.
tions usually subside within forty-
chowders, patties or croquettes it
GEORGE E. STREETER
production.
. !o *S nOt fra ’slble to U5e I Scarlet fever antitoxin Is o
eight hours.
is equally delicious and are aH
George E. Streeter died Sunday
immunization as a general protec- .
It has been dem onstrated con­ tlve
measure.
*
F
talned by Immunizing horses by r
ways of using left-over or canned hi Portland and funeral services Ready to Poison Squirrels Again
varieties. Fish form s the basis of » ere held Tuesday a t Finley's
DALLAS—A ton o f noison vrain clusively th a t children can be im­
A method has been devised for l)<’a h1d Injections of toxin
T
many interesting salad and sand- chapel, with commitment at the for the innual battle ^'aunst^T he munized successfully to scarlet fev­
wich combinations too. These rec- Portland crematorium.
a£ £ ual
V ? er but health officials arc not gen­ the concentration of scarlet fever prophylactic adm inistration ofanl
ipes are. both favorite ways of pre-
Mr. Streeter „was bora In^ Illinois ^ red £ . c o un ty Agent J R B « k . erally recommending this procedure toxin without Increasing the nitro- tox*n *s an emergency mcasu
for two reasons. One reason Ls thp gen content. This concentrated tox- which acts Immediately but cai
paring fish.
t e U V h M
e t t d to M r B ect advlS€S P“« ™ the balt number
Injections required to in may ty so detoxified that suf- not be relied upon to protect f
Baked S tu ffed C hinook Salm on
the First N au ^ ial b a i T m tha? out M 300,1
the squirrel comes produce of
Immunity and the other
2 salmon fillet
citv for th e S i t 20 « a n He
out of
wlnter Quarters, as he reason Is the severity of the reac­ to produci“m im i? X S ln’ t h r « <& £? n,orp tl,an tw° or thrM> ’reekg 8®»
H i tablespoons lemon juice
survived bv
1 wirioV ? Cm-olme ls very hungry a t th at time M. C ,
When, however, a serious epi­ This detoxified toxin Is still In the let fever antitoxin has been foul
Salt and pepper
Brown ^Streeter a brotherC W B Findley has obtained 76 pounds of tion.
demic occurs, or the disease breaks exeprlmental stage, but it ls hoped valuable In the diagnosis of sea
2-3 cup buttered crumbs
Streeter of Portland, and a sister. b*je
th e ^ B e th e l Heights out in a child-caring institution th a t It may be so perfected th at let fever When a small dose
2-3 cup cream or milk
Mrs John W. Bailey of Hillsboro. S u t r i ^ w h f c h Mr. Beck £ y s to or persists in a family, or in spe- It will be possible t o immunize the antitoxin is Injected Into tl
Mushroom stuffing.
Brush fish with lemon juice and
Rise in Jan n arv Bnildinr
the lar«est single purchase of squir-
sprinkle with salt and pepper. Put
NEW YORK -Despite the f a t h e r Sffjc?5“ 0" ever made thr0Ufih hto
one fillet in buttered pan or on
oven proof platter. Spread with severe w eather conditions which
. . .
stuffing, cover with rem aining fil- prevailed during January, (he vol-
.
let. pour over cream or milk and ume of building perm its showed a Manv trees n a m e d in snerm an
bake 25 m inutes in moderately not marked increase, as compared with
MORO — Many Sherm an county
oven (375 degreesi. Sprinkle with December and the corresponding farm ers are taking advantage of
bread crumbs and bake until crumbs m onth of 1934.
the fact th a t young trees of many
kinds are available a t the Oregon
are brown. . Remove
fei
to hot serving
S tate forestry nursery a t Corvallis
dish and strain liquor remaining
W ages Restored
_
_ over _ it.
W a s h i n g t o n _nf I^r cost of transportation, and are
in _ pan
Stuffing Mix ’--cup b r e a d back wages to employes arranged Planting windbreaks and shelter
crumbs with 3 tablespoons melted through NRA field offices and the b®lt3lv re?ornti w ? 7 , ii,n „Jo„hntL'n '
butter and 1-3-cup mushroom caps, newlv organized regional comnli- county agent. Mr. Johnston esti-
cut
Dieces.
salt and ance• according
co u n c ilsh a to s Exceeded
>3 0W
few in
grains
^ p p ’.-teaspoon
e r.
f S s r K
d - m ates th a t some 15 000 of th e v
lo d fish souffle
by the Director of Compliance and i?ruo,:y
% cup rice
Enforcement
G rass Valley is co-operating wi
2 cups milk
isniorcemcm._____________Johnston in the planting
'-i
cup
salt
codfish
R u s s ia i s m e e t i n g w it h r n n slrf
to
P . tablespoons butter
erable ‘t uc‘cessnlin efforts to utilize a n a c r e o f b la c k lOCUSt t r “ e ’ e s K™*
at
Thursday. March 14, 1935
Weeils and moss in I hi1 lawn ean
be eliminated to ixmslderahle rx-
; lent In the early spring by use of
a number of elieinlenl preiMirutlona
which may he mixed at home. An
effective weed formula Is being
il.-a’d a! Oregon Stale college, where
It Is applied I o dandelions a n d
oilier fleshy rooted plants bv means
of a pointed stick
As described by A 1 Peek, head
of the landscape an hlleetine de-
i p.u tnient the matt-rial is made up
as follows 'Dike one-qnarter ounce
of while arsenic and one-half gal­
IT STRIKES US
lon of stilt water and boil well Add
another gallon of soft water ami with i'i»iisi(lei-iil>l»‘ force thnt
one-third ounce of caustic stsla bccaum* puppicB were born
and txill again. T i l l s forms a stork
solution used straight for killing in mi nirplnii«' llicy are not
individual weeds, but which may SKY loriiorH or AIKednleg,
l>e diluted with four parts of water nny more thim n boy would
io sprinkle on gravel walks or
drives to keep down weed growth
be a STEP ladder if ho had
Caretakers tin Hie college campus a STEP father.
put a long wire ball on a tin run
" h u h holds the solution. They dip However, it strike« ua th at
ihe point of a sharp soft « n o d
stick in the soltulon and then if yon will let Chevrolet
plunge the stick down into the specialists at this shop doc­
crown of the dandelion, which dies tor your Chevrolet you'll
In two or three days The solution
Is highly poisonous and Is treated thank ns for the Hugjrestion.
accordingly, the surplus being stored We don’t experim ent with
In glass under lock
I your Chevrolet at your ex
Moss may be eradicated by rak­
ing It well to remove the thick pense. We go right to work
patches, und then spraying with a and we know where we're
solution o f ammonium sulpiuile
dissolved at the rate ot 22 ounces headed lieeause «‘Very Che«
In a gallon of water. The most ef­ rolet is an open hook to our
fective way is to apply (luring a skilled ntechanies. Depend
period of d e a r weather, using a
pressure sprayer, tliouyji fair re ­ on this shop for guaranteed
sults may be had by ell her sprin­ workmanship.
kling It on or even scattering the
material in dry crystalline form.
Ammonium sulphate Is a com ­
mon commercial fertilizer available
from most feed anti seed dealers
It helps the grass while discourag­
JAMES WIIITEEAW, M anage,
ing weed growth. If upphed too
strong it may cause some brown­ C hevrolet and O ldsm obile
ing of (lie grass temporarily, it is
P hone 441
not as satisfactory for use on clover 3rd and W ash.
lawns us some other fertilizer-.
■■■■■■•■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■a
Hillsboro MotorCo.
AT LAST A SHIRT
WITH COLLAR THAT
NEEDS NO STARCH.
The Genuine
Head This Way for
"Van Heusen”
Won't shrink!
Won't sag I
Won t wild
Won't wrinkle!
••CRAVE.-NE’ri'E '
SALE NEW TIES
59c
2 , . ’l
Moisture-f^roof
S Q .9 8 and
O
up
Spring Styles are Here!
KNITTING INSTRUCTIONS ° BALCONY
” OUR