The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, June 13, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    Thin utay, June 13, 1940
HILLSBORO ARGUS. HILLSBORO, OREGON
Hop Agreement
Considered by
Local Growers
BANKS
W
this
Swiss Family
To Present
Concert Here
1940 Motorlog: Two Santiams
Monn.
VíNir
Inilthw
Reformed
Mi Moon- .md Ford I
tended a hop gì uh ri .'
drug store In rural sec-
Argus cook books special at 35c
t Union .-.tore, Wo.t Un­ for limited time Each regular
Rock gus subscriber is entitled to one
William Fuegy •tore
r.-, H-I'.etia; free book
Mr
William Wilken North Plains.
Cur
ortland: Henry Fr
Real Estate Transfers
□ 1 Market, flou-
Tickets
ale for 35 cents
R -»II
for adults and 20 cent-. for
1
children Binkley f ux
TIS
RI
W
age of 14
M...I B M
«I
to
I.
n
F nmly
Frauenfelder
Block 15 I .y.
n summer or
the Red-
HamiL
path collegi
he North-
western univ
Mad.
Wisconsin urn ver
We
Wn-shinzton < ounty to City of
fvr. Lots 1. 2, {, I Block 1 Cu
Family F uenfelder ha
ion of the
us imunmioii.ls
the agrvvinent
mg songs and Al-
al music will do
tick« ts in tune It
ig to be remember-
on Jim«* 13, on which to
final vote on th«* agreement
Berry picking in I ho
•s will continue
I line but valley mi-km
nmg
Pnge Thrp¿
presented R Frau-
maeatro of the
mountain
begin
Emil A
shut down a?
Worthless Check
Passed in Store
Dalia
Mrs
wtih I
Tiny lakes abound in the area crossed by the two Santiam roads. Hero vacationists pilot a
crude raft on a tiny lake near the summit of the Cascades.
of
Mi
II«‘Ix'i I Young
Piirtlaml. Mr
anil
Mr ami Mrs ('hurlin Brown
hiM'biirg, Miss Camille Bell »»f
Kupin Mi and Mi
Charle Maw
hmniv and the boxt« i ,*f Hank
<’hff«»rd I’annely, .1 former Bank
boy. was gi adiiuhd from () S (’
lust wick H«* is the non of Mr and
Mi
Phil Pnnnvly and grand on of
Mr and Mr <*harlea Shipley
The baby daughter of Mi
and
Mi
William Peppard wa . brought
home from the J i B h ’. s hospital Tues-
BY JALMAR JOHNSON
THIS IS a road report on the
North Santiam and the South
Santiam highways —newest
links between the Willamette
valley and central Oregon -
with an excursion or two off
the main road and the main
subject for a dash of human
now
Kumini: tutuin
a ; are beginning In
Farmers report pros-
Mr
und
Mi
A Slnph v of
Mr
I Mi
Erwin
of Hillsboro spent Satm-
day .i
Tillainook visiting Mr
H
I' Hopkins nnd other relatives
Thry lepmt that Mi
Hopkins n
not improving from her recent ill-
II I. Jansen is in the Veterans'
he pital in Portland He became
now under observation at the hos-
dny nnd n»iM)rtod him improving
Allrtkl ('ommrnrrmrnt
Mins
Murn*
H h I nmi
attended
commencement exercises at Ore­
gon College of Education Inst Tur* - i
Thci «
and
mem
B< ri Friday Injur~.il
Bert
Friday
received
several
brokvn ribs, when he tripped and
fell while walking through the
The dain, which will be a before had turned to an un-
part of the Willamette valley seasonal snow during the night
flood control and
and four inches of wi t snow
other purposes, has been au­ covered the ground. A projected
thorized, but no money has boat ride on the lake was out
been appropriated for it. Whi n
of tho question, but a visit to
they get the money the United
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Green’s
States army
engineers
will Circle M dude ranch on tho Me­
build it.
tolius river was only a matter
Meanwhile tho highway must of a few minutes over a good
be relocated at a higher eleva­
tion, as the dam will flood the
Hack to the Santiam highway
present route. The engineers
and on east through Sisters—no
will furnish enough money to
snow there-—and on to Red­
mond and Prineville, lumbering
the present one, and other and agricultural cities much
agencies, the federal bureau of
benefited by the new Santiam
public roads for one, will con­ roads. Then to B< nd for the
tribute more money to con-
rest of the day and that night
struct a good, modern highway
at the Pilot Hutto inn.
while they are at it.
The South Santiam highway
The dam at first will be a
low one for flood control pur- an uneventful but scenically
Tho following article, pre­
sented in co operation with the
Oregon State Motor associa­
tion. is one of a series designed
to promote travel in the Pacific
northwest. Today's article has
been condensed from a motor­
log appearing in the Sunday
Oregonian May 19.
Mr
th
Portland Heitfhl
W Shnrrrr rt
W
HkK'k
Ruth Tks.U
1 ’S Hl W
R
W
A
ns Kiw
PAINTING
John-
Hilliiboro.
M. W. BENNETT
Pho. Scholls 1451
Hillsboro Rt. 5
B
- EASY COME
It looked like rain when the
motorloggers left Portland two
weeks ago, and it still looked
like rain when we turned east
nt Salem to follow the North
Santium river into and over the
Cascade mountains to central
Oregon. But the rain held off
ns we moved swiftly over hard-
surfaced highway through
Aumsville, Sublimity, Stayton,
where we first glimpsed the
North Santiam river, and on
through Mill City and Gates.
Just east of Gates the oiled
highway ended and we started
up through the foothills over a
road which in places was good
and in others quite rough, nar­
row and crooked.
The .speedometer mileage re­
corder read 046.4 miles when
the first rough road was en­
countered and it stood at 963
when the rough road ended at
Detroit. It had taken the bet-
Mi and Mn Charles Shipley it
tended the eighth grade gradua
lion exercises nt Yamhill i'hurs
night
Their granddaughter,
Juanita Shipley was a member of
th«* g rad n nt mn <
stretch, but the rugged scenery
l.illiun Miu* Bvncfkd is sending
more than made up for the cau­
th
werk with Mr and Mrs Oral
tion required of the driver. The
Varley at Buxton.
highway skirts the river, which
Mr and Mn Heinlt* Olson of
tumbles majestically through a
Portland visit» «! at the home of Mr.
deep canyon, the sides of which
and Mrs (' B Carstens Tuesday
arc heavily timbered, A ra li­
evening Mr Olson formerly liv<\l
In Banks when he was a boy.
road hangs perilously on the
Miss Connie Lou Van Dorn vis­
river bank.
ited all lust week with her uncle,
Some day, probably in the
Grorge Levick. and family in Port­
near future, the Gate- Detroit
land
part of th«’ highway will be as
l.arry Nelson of Santa Barbara,
good as the rest of the broad,
at the Louie Win-
well engineered route to the
ters home
Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Munford
other side of the mountains.
of Corvallis visited his mother,
Ini^rvemwit of the stretch
Mrs Flor,। Munford, from Friday
hinges on a
ted dam some
until Monday. Kenneth will be in
charge of the city recreational pro­
gram for Corvallis this summer.
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
I. E Gordon.
Aloha Huber
Mr and Mr- C J. Stickney and
lu’o R
Mrs
Arthur Gaunt is still digging a son Allen. Mr and Mrs
well ut West Slope, on which Job Pearson. Mr. and Mrs. M E. Meyers.
In- has been for two months He Mr. and Mrs W G. Turner, and
has now reached a depth of 375 feet Mr. and Mrs. Malt King were party
and will keep going until he reaches guests Sunday at the summer home
525 feet. The owner of the place on Dairy Creek near mountaindale,
has n large area of shrubbery to ir- of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Connell,
of Rei dville. It was a sort of filbert
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Nault of Seat­
tle were guests over the week-end
The Grange Home Economies club
of the A J. Nault family Miss Bob­ meets nt the home of Mrs. W. H.
by Ubben of Helena. Neb . was a Hing at 2 p. m. Wednesday. June 19
guest of Catherine Nault Sunday.
Mrs. Lucille MacLeod of Seattle,
Weather Appeals
was a week-end guest of Mr. and
Mrs Walter Tibbatts has returned Mrs. A. W Buchanan.
after two months’ stay with her
Mr and Mrs. Harley Raney of
son in Portland, her health much Portland were recent guests of Mr.
improved She and Mr. Tibbatt.s and Mrs. A. W. Buchanan.
were born in Birmingham. England
Mrs Tibbatts has visited her birth­
place three times. They came to
Canada in 1875. In that year they
passed through a very hard winter.
They received a letter from friends
ill Portland. Ore., saying that they,
(Continurd from nnne 1)
without coats, were sitting on the
bers were also Ilie active crew in
grass in January. "That's where we
Hobby Halvorson,
this venture
are going." promptly decided Mr.
with individual sales amounting to
Tfbbatts, which they did in 1903.
A.
fas. won the $5 posted b'
Mrs. Tibbatts lias lived in this com­ Anderson for the boy selling the
munity for 35 years, and was the
most buttons.
first resident on what is now Stacey
avenue, then • path in the woods
We specialize in quality commer-
Mrs. A. Leuthnttr of Portland is
visiting at the home of her son-in- rial printing. Argus.
Hillsboro Float
Earns Mention
»
beautiful 200 mile drive from
so that it can be used for power Bend to Portland. The snow­
generation, and when that time capped Three Sisters. Mount
conies the town of Detroit will Washington. Three- Fingered
be submerged. However, the
Jack and Jefferson started tho
highway will be placed high
scenic parade.
enough at the beginning so that
Tho South Santiam, which
possible heightening of the dam
relocation branches off the North Santiam
will
not
require
been com- 12 miles west of Suttle lake, is
plctcd for the new route nnd completely gradili, the last
some construction may be un­ stretch being finished last year.
It was still dust free as a re­
dertaken this year.
sult of recent rains and only in
At Detroit the motorloggers
a few spots where winter slides
made a side trip of 12 miles to
were being removed was
M. D. Bruckman's Brcitcnbush up of the throttle nccc ssary.
hot springs resort. Mr. Bruck-
Three miles west of the junc-
man was getting ready for open­
tion a road turns south to Clcar
ing of the hotel on May 28, and
lake and on to the McKenzie
the more than 100 hot springs
highway.
on the place were gurgling
Deep canyons, tall timber,
busily. The store is already
open, as arc the cabins. The rushing streams are attractions
Brcitcnbush road was rough in on the South Santiam road in
: pots, due to winter wear and the upper stretches, but soon
tear, but will receive a going one finds oneself in the fertile
Willamette valley with prosper­
over before the busy season.
From Detroit to Suttle lake, ous farms and busy cities such
past the junction with the South as Foster. Sweet Home and
Santiam highway and through Lebanon dotting the level land­
the 4817 foot high Santiam pass, scape. At Albany the highway
is 43 miles and can be covered joins the Pacific highway.
The state highway depart­
in about ns many minutes over
a road which is partly oiled and ment in co-operation with fed-
agencics lias been improv-
elsewhere
well
graded and
smooth. At Suttle lake wc put iing the South Santiam high-
up for the night at J. E. Rcnt- way sincc the cnrly lV20s. At
not a grc.it dcal tJ moncy
schlar's brand new knotty-pinc
lodge, which replaced the old was appropri.itci but t!:c Inst
0 to $200,000
lodge destroyed by fire last few years
been spent on it.
August.
g lin: '.md, surfac-
Next morning we found the With
ing and oiling will be pushed.
rain that hud held off all
Reedvillc Opens
[ '/J z’zl / » z) ti Sl'hdol
r
1
Daily Vacation
REEDVILLE
i Bible school opened Monday with
32 children enrolled. The beginners
and primary departments will feat­
ure singing. Bible stories and scrap­
books with pictures illustrating the
stories The junior and intermediate
departments will
include group
singing,
Bible,
missionary
and
character stories, notebook work.
Bible memory drill and handwork.
An award will be made for per­
fect attendance. William Lindsay,
local pastor, is directing the work,
assisted by Mrs. Edward Hooper,
Misses Doris Rae Harrison, Virginia
Sampson. Dorothy KirkWbod, and
Bill Churchley.
Mrs. Dan M. Woodward of Spo­
kane. Wash . arrived last week to
visit Miss Margaret M. Imlay for
several weeks.
Home From Fair
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Brownlee
and family returned Saturday fol­
lowing a fortnight's vacation trip
during which they visited the San
Francisco
and many other
points of interest in the south.
Mrs. Ralph Snipes, accompanied
by her aunt, Miss Margaret M. Im­
lay and the latter's house guest,
Mrs Dan Woodward, of Spokane,
Wash., visited Salem and Corvallis
Tuesday. They also visited Mr and
Mrs. Earl Anderson and family at
Audited Circulation
A member of the Audit Bureau
of Circulations, the Argus gives the
Advertiser proof of authentic, p.iid
up subscribers. To the wise buyer
of space there can be no substitute.
USED
CARS
The Best for Less
1QQ7
luu/
P,ymouth 4-door
Touring Sedan
1937
Radio,
Chevrolet 4-door
Town Sedan
Radio, he
blue finish.
paint.
I Kitchen Thrill!
GIBSON
J. T. (Jack) FOSTER
Electrical .Appliances
126 S. Third
Farm Machinery
HILLSBORO
Telephone 1011
heater
beautiful
n e u
and
1QQ7 Ford Coupe. Origiii-
UJ/ al black shiny fin­
Driven
ish.
1 QQß
UJO
only
19,000
We also have a very good line
Do drop in and see them.
SPENCER
MOTOR CO
Plymouth-Chrysler Sales Service
227 S. 3rd Ave. Hillsboro
Phone 751
HOME LAUNDRY & DRY
CLEANERS
Phone
Hillsboro,
Oregon
H n
DUCHESS
UftfSK f RUITS
/' and VEGETABLES
Piedmont
NEW POTATOES
PEANUT BUTTER
Real Roast
Shafter Whites.
10
25c 2
lbs.
( H I MBERS
thouse. large size.
5c
TOMATOE
Field grown.
Pound
R WISHE
Fancy
Quality-
10c
GREEN ONIONS
2
ONIONS—Wash
13c 3
ORANGES
Sunkist 288’s
dozen
3c
29c
VT HTTP
r LU UH
29c
BEER—Brown Derby
12-oz
for
(Case
S2 15)
29c
White
King TOILET SOAP '
bars
14c
CRYSTAL WHITE
Giant bars
for
15c
PEETS Granulated 8OAP
Medium
Pkg.
17c
TOILET SOAP
23c
Dated for freshness.
QQr»
UUV
(Pint jar 21c)
QCx®
Quart jar ......... OtJvz
Kitchen Craft,
49-lb. sack .......
Ç î TDTTTJÎJ Granulated Soap
uUrUnDl 24 oz. pkg., 1 8-oz.
lie
GRAPEFRUIT Commander
daiw .
pboduck
lb.
TOMATO JUICESunny D,wn
DAp
MEADOW DEW
Grade B,
lb
No. 2
Cans
15c
6c
15c
HAMS‘"’VX1’““”"1“' 171C
MILK, Cherub
PICNICS S'L. ..e 141C
SLICED BACON
19c
Brookfield Vintage Spread.
Close Out.
25c
Tall Cans
Baby Cans. 3 for 10c
Edwards Coffee
39c
AIRWAY
35c
(WIERBIKY TEA
-lb.
Orange
Pekoe
49c
46-oz. can
% Our MEAT DEPARTMENT
29c
CHEESE, mild lb.
Battle Ground
18c
CHEESE
2 pound loaf ... 45c
lbs.
2
8-oz. can
Lucerne, grade A UVV
-1b.
can
a
-LtzV,
pkg., both
piNEAppLE Libby's or Stokely’s
^^7
BUTTER
MAYONNAISE
*1.39
SUGAR ( 10-lb. bag 52c ) 100 ^.’5.04
CORN
No. 303
PEAS " Industry
3 Cans 20c
JELL WELL 7 flavors
2 pkgs. 9c
an Camp’s
SOUPSv ’ 303
2 for 19c
tall cans
CHOCOLATE HÄ,2 for 25c
MARSHMALLOWS 1-lb cello pkg. 10c
BLEACH Whl,e Mae,c./S Gallon Jug 15c
29c
CAMAY
LEMONS
Sunkist. 360 s.
Dozen
10c
CORN—Country Home
Golden Bantam, cream style.
U. S. No 1
WATERMELONS
Ripe and sweet.
Pound
( Pint jar 19c)
Quart jar
PEAS Sugar Belle
No. 2 can
for
NuMade
MAYONNAISE
23c
BEANS
Briargate. green cut.
No. 2 can
5C 3
21c 3
11«.
2
-lb.
jar
bunches
CABBAGE
New. green.
Pound
quart jar 25c
Here's a salad dressing that's fresh and costs you less! Rush­
ed direct from Northwest kitchens. Duchess has no
'in-between'' costs.
Prices are for
FRL. June 14
thru MON. Ju. 17
y and Saturday Only
Plymouth 4-door
Deluxe Sedan
Heater, very low mileage.
It's disgustingly easy to get your clothes spotted or
soiled .
and its pleasingly easy to have them made fresh
and spotless with our modern methods. And. best of all,
you get our MONITE MOTH-PROOFING
extra cost.
in the sheriffs
for the
last announce- week J W Allen. Dilley, reported
no showing of the loss of his flat bottom boat
sound motion sometime ifter May 25, 1940.
be impossible
Clyde May. superintendent of the
Reeher CCC camp, reported tools
to come early in were -mien from the Buxton and
good place at the Green Mountain lookout. A num­
will begin at 3 ber of attempted prowls in private
residences on the day of the Rose
d tickets at Hills- Festival parade in Portland were
Fred Atnacher's reported from the vicinity of Gar
K iratli and Warner. den H ,
difflcultie
lo I eu< li al IMll.t«*
were Ml
H2W
Ine..
Interior - Exterior
FREE ESTIMATES
sheriffs office this week that he
cashed a $15 worthless check this
a man who signed his
of Cali­ name on the back of the money
draft as G < urge Franklin. The man
purchased $7 worth of feed and had
Pile send it to a fictitious add re.'
avenue. Sheriff Connell
said.
in W « hington
The usual number of petty theft
•y have many
eoqpeiiurc delegati' am
rial’. at w Inch time ai
giade in
25 Sylvan HUh
Lamkin t.> rhai
B F Pile, proprietor of the Farm-
ci n 11 y
night
ighth
Il anti 12 WibMtv A.Miti.-n
H
the ap
their strike
vili*
Special Meat Prices for Friday and Saturday Only
n A PAN
DA LUU
Morrell's Sugar-Cured
By the piece Lb.
4 „
Iwv
Morrell's.
Lb.
FRVFRQ
1 II I Lillij
COTTAGE CHEESE
Lb.
Rich and Creamy.
SHORT RIBS
CATT
DARV Fine for
w
A m 1 1 uni\ soning.
MUTTON ROAST
10c
sea-
Lb.
Lb.
Choice quality.
Spring
Tender, meaty
3
for
23c
SALMON Äk:
PORK SAUSAGE
PORK STEAK Lb
LUNCHEON MEATS c , 25C
Assorted.
Large variety.
SLICED HALIBUT
Fresh caught.
Lb.
17c
9c
Lb.
7C
15c
17c
LIVER SAUSAGE
Weiners, 1
Roinana.
lb. ■ vC
Bologna, lb
SAFEWAY