The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, January 08, 1932, Image 2

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    THE BKAVRRTON «K V H W
1 ■ '
----------
Beaverton Review
. T X 1?!
When these terms reach the body
Issued Every F rida, at Beaverton,
'
■»
" lu“ ’
. - . - r n _rL-
******* . 11 _
% *7
P * " ° " th'>:
««»-
ble of causing pneumonia.
Definite steps in the control of
FRIDAY. JA N VA R Y 8, 1932
^
p
a
t
i e
n
—
Entered as second class matter
December 9, 1922, at the post office
at Beaverton, Oregon, u^der the
Act o f March 3, 1879.
”
~
— ------------- ■--------
*»—■___ u „
J II. Ilulett
ss Manager
•
“7
»“ ? * ! ar*
of **“
and a modified quarantine
of the patient. Primary pneumonic
infections are not only prevented
by this procedure, but the patient
himself is protected from compli- ,
cations. Pneumonia must be consld-
er*d a dangerous communicable dis-
p *»« ■» direct con uct or close in-
direct contact with the case spreads
the infection. A person with good
resistance may throw off an infec­
The Strength of (.'»-operatives
Fred H. Sexauer, in a letter to tion received by him from 4 pneu­
the members o f the Dairymens monia patient, and the infection he
receives not produce in him a typ­
League Cooperative Association, ol
which he is president, said: ‘T he ical pneumonia but symptoms of a
strength o f League leaderahip, as common cold with or without a
bronchitis,
susceptible
o f transmis-
an organization depends on the
.
.
port that you. as a member, build
,
*n7 h<T P*™00 w’ th **“
for it among your friends, neigh- 7 * UUnCe' Wh° \*! tUr" woul<1 ,ulT*r
bom, and other producers.-
*
* more " VM* ,lln« M’
Had Mr. Sexauer been general-
Pneumonia is usually transmitted
izing he could have changed his from *
o f pneumonia
first phrase to “ The strength oZ C o- ° r
/rom ■ healthy car-
operative leaderahip," and spoken PWr PPevicusl.v >" contact with a
with equal truth. The success or pn*umoni* P«tient.
Isolation
ano
failure of the
farm co-operative <lu*r* ntin« when rigidly enforced
movement in this country will na- re<*uces
number o f cases of
turally be decided by the support P"eumoni» ««d consequently lessens
or lack o f support given it by tar- i *"* mortality
o f this dangerous
mem.
.
communicable disease For this res
» ■*"' K *•* son all forms of pneumonia are re­
This does not mean support in
times when prices are low snd a g ­ portable. The patient should be I-
io ul tu re is facing a crisis. ia suen solated and visitors prohibited. All
times, almost all farmers are will­ discharges must be disinfected im­
The physicians, nurses
ing to flock to an organization wnicn mediately.
may save them. The most important snd others in contact with the case
thing, and the necessary thing, is should exercise the preautions tnat
^
t
to build a
sound ¿«-operative
b*‘ " « in'
structure and then
stand by it f7 t*dt op » f r“ d,n* >ii«fction by any
through good times and bad.
°J. th* J * n* * " > « , communicant«
I*
a
*
diaeases. There should be a complete
t
7 l , 0ft* n .
sanitary cleaning o f the premises
that one farmer, dealing with a dis- before the patient i, released
tnbutor, is at an inescapable dls-
.
,
.
advantage. He takes what he is o f- , Av0‘d thi d* n* i r o i P"«*™0" «
fered. or fails to make a sale. But b>' “ 0t
F*
sons suffering with colds, bronchitis :
when ten or twenty or fifty thou-
“ their
V < products
« - " »-•
the
i» « i
on the
shoe is
other
foot.
They
esn
bargain
make terms— exactly as can power­
ful
purchasing and
distributing
organizations.
No miracle is going to solve the
problems o f agriculture. The far­
mers’ own efforts, own loyalty, own
intelligence,
backing
up
strong
co-operatives, will take them out of
the depths.
*
¡ z s z r fit t and
. S i living
s L r an r s ou * t­
by keeping
door life. Do not allow your body
to be chilled or feet to get wet
especially when you have a cold.
If you have a chill or a fever go
to bed promptly and call a doctor.
Pneumonia is always a dangerous
disease but modern methods of
treatment if applied early improve
the chances of recovery.
m—
LETTERS
“
f*
:
CIMARRON
By Edna Fcrber
Cop». I«
U m
W N U » * r\tc *
r» it» r .
Thirty-ninth Installment.
Dinner.
White servants and
negro servants to wait on them. A
lung table seating a score or more,
and many such tables. Howls and
plates piled with food all down the
length of It. Piles of pork, roasted
lu Indian fashion over hot embers
sonk in s pit In the yard, snd
skewered with a sharp pointed
• tick. Bowls of dried corn. Great
fat. black ripe olives. Tinned lob­
ster. Chicken. Put's of dead ripe
strawberries Vast plateau» of nil
gel food cake covered with snow
fields of lelng.
Sahra went through the motions
of eating.
Sometimes she put a
morsel Into her mouth and aetuall.v
swallowed It. Tha n was a great
clatter of knives and forks and
dishes. Everything was eaten out
of one plate Platters and bowls
were replenished. Snhra found her-
s« If seated beside Mnf Big Elk
On her other side was Yancey. He
was eating and laughing snd talk
ing Mrs. Big Elk was being almost
comically ;a»llte. solicitous
She
pressed this tidbit, that dainty, on
her stony guest.
Down Hie center of the table, at
Intervals, were huge howl* piled
with a sort of pastry stuffed with
forcemeat. It was like a great
rarioll. and piles of It vanished he
neulh (he onslaught of a|>preclative
guests
“ For God's sake, pretend to eat
something, Sahra." Yancey mur­
mured. under Ills breath. "It's done
now. They consider It an Insult.
Try to eat something."
She stirred (he
pastry and
chopped meat that had heed put
on her plate.
“Good." said Mrs. Big Elk. be­
tide her. and point ml at the mass
with one dnsky maculate finger.
Sahra lifted her fork to her Ups
and swallowed a hit of It. It was
del ielouo—spicy, rich, appetising.
"Y e s," she said, snd thought. I am
being wonderful. This Is killing
me. “ Yes. it Is very good. This
meat— this stuffing- Is It chopped
or ground through a grinder?"
The huge Indian woman l»-side
her turned her expro shades» gaze
with here a buffalo wallow, there
an Indian encampment, you now
i-»w n twenty story hotel: the Sa-
voy-HIxby. The Italian head waller
hent from the waist snd murmured
In your car Ids aevrvt about the
veal saute with miiahnauna or the
spaghetti Caruso du jour. Sahra
Cravat, rongreaawoinan from Okla­
homa, lunching in the I-oula XIV
t-ooui with the members of the
Women's Slate Itepnhllcan commit­
tee, would any, looking up at him
with those Intelligent dark eyes.
"I'll leave it to yolk Nick. Only
quickly. We haven’t much tim e"
Nlrcolo Mazrarinl would Bay yea.
he understood. No one bad much
time In Usage, Okla.
Twealy live ycura earlier any.
hody who was anybody In Okla­
homa had dilated on his or her
eastern connection*. Iowa, If nec-
• •ssnry. was East.
The» had been a little ashamed
of the linn. Bragged about the
•q.lerdors of the homes from which
they had come.
New It wa* ronalilcrvd the height
of ••Me to he able to say that your
parents had come through lu a
covered wagon. Gruudpareuts were
»till rather rare In Oklahoma. A»
( 1 the Uun of 'S9— It was Osage's
Mayflower
At the huge dinner
given In Sahra Cravat's honor when
«he was elected congresswoman
snd from which they tried In c\
elude S»»l levy over Salnu'a vigor
o i i s (and triUMphant) protest, the
chairman of the commute«» on nr
rangeuieUt* explained It all (o Sol
patronizingly.
"You see» we’re luvltlug only pen
pie who came to Oklahoma In tlu-
Uun."
"W ell, aune.” said the former
peddler, genially. "Thai's all right
I walk«-d.”
The Ia.-vy Mercantile company's
budding now «H-cuplevl an entire
square block aud wu* fifteen sturlea
high. In the huge plate-glass win
dews on Paw hmha avenue |K>»tured
ladh-s waxen and co«|uettI«h, as un
Fifth avenue.
The daughter of Mrs. Put Leary
(nee Crook Nos«») ulw.iv» caused
quite s flutter when she came In.
for accustomed though Osage was
(o money and the spending of It,
the la-ary s' lavlshnesa was some­
thing spectacular. Hand made silk
underwear, ihe sheerest of cobweb
French
stockings,
111 ,»del hats.
drraae l well. In tlve matter of
gowns It was no good trying 10 In
fluence Maude I .»-ary or her moth­
er. They frankly wanted bends,
spangles, and paillettes on a foun
datum of crude color. The aalea-
wm m m were indite and scgthsi
but they cocked an eyebrow at one
another. Squaw stuff. Now thut
Utle Cravat girl— Felice Cravat, Ci­
marron Cravat’s daughter— was dlf
ferent.
She In-daled on plain,
smart tailored things.
Oklahoma
state woman tennis champion. She
always said she looked a fr«-:ik In
fluffy things— like a boy <lress«'d
up In girl s clothes. She bad long,
lean, muscular arms and s surpris­
ing breadth of shoulder, was slim
flanked and practically stomuchU-ws.
She had a curious trick of holding
her head down and looking up at
you under her lashes and when she
did that you forgut her laiylshnesa,
for her lushes were like fern
fronds, and her eyes. In her dirk
face, an astounding ocean gray.
She was a good sport, too. She
didn't seem to mind the fact that
her mother, when she accompanied
her, wore the blanket and was bat­
less. Jnst like any poor Kaw, In­
stead of being one of the richest
of the Ganges
She was rather
handsome for a squaw. In a big. In-
soleut, slow-moving way. Felice
Cravat, every one ngreed. was a
chip of the oid block, and by that
they did not mean her father. They
were thinking of Yancey Cravat—
old Cimarron, her grandfather, who
was now something of a legend in
Osage aud throughout Oklahomu.
% ,*R
Yonng Clui and hla
had a second child—« bog- ead
they had called him Yahroy, after
ihe eld hoy. Young A ancey waa a
bewildering!/ hamlaeiuo udiluro of
a v I oimi typos and forbear#—In­
dian. Spanish, French, Southern,
Southwest. With that long narrow
face, the dollchoe<>phallc head, peo­
ple said he looked like Ihe king of
Spain without that drendful llapa-
burg Jaw. Others anhl he waa the
Image of hla grandmother, Sahra
Cravat, still others content!«»«! Dial
he was Ivla Indian Mother over
again— liisoitMice and all. A third
would come along and any. "You're
crasy. lie's old Yancey, horn ara'u.
I guess you don’t remember Mtu
There, look, H al's wtinl I mien I
The way lie clea«»s hla eyes ay If
lie w«-re slt-epy, and lh«-n when he
does look at you straight you fc«»l
as If lou'd tnm atimk by light-
nlnr They soy lie's so smart Dial
the !>»■■!gee believe he'a one of lheir
old gods come hack In enrth."
Mis Tracv Wviitt (she who had
been Ihun s ( ’rural) hail irleit to
adopt one of h»»r hrotlier’a ehlldroii.
being herself »hlhll«<as, Ivul Clui
"TÿlajniledÀdwetîW t^
Advertisements In this column I
cent a word. Minimum charge 26c.
i
Is there
anything
which dis­
tinguishes your offer from others of
its kiml? Then that is the point to
emphasize in writing a classified ad
for the column* o f the Review.
Family man with wife snd
throe
rhikiron, having had only throe
days’ work slnrc September, ia
take wood rutting or anything.
ITvo boy* old enough to work. II
F. Amis, on
Chas.
Jasperaon
pla.r, Beaverton.
Adptf
The Review
will «’arry
free of
eharge listings of situations want­
ed, in or»K>r to help the un«m
pioyment situation.
Wanted— General exmstructlon work.
Handle any work relating to the
W O M A N 'S D A Y
A Chip of th« Old Block.
and I i I m wife lluhy llig I lk liml
!'bllM>llll>ll to ttllrt. Silt) n IH
tk case, that
t’ rnviit. «»*»la
hoimt waa utriMil m I huu that S!u*
<*oul(l Kct a^i».v Midi thifitf* tlidt
any other woman vtouhl he ahnt
for. VN lo n t*L| Tr.u > Wyatt hud
divorced ti:a wife to marry this
girl haul feellliii had been very
much again*! her livery one had
turned to the u hum lotted middle
u;;ed wife with attention* and ayiii*
|uithy. hut »he had met their
warmth and frlettdllnt ;* with hu « h
vitriol that the> fell lm< k In ter­
ror and finally cniue to Udlevo the
tlulifH of how »he had «levlled imd
twigged old Trarv nil throiti:h their
tnarrtugv. 'Jhey urtiutlly caiue to
feel that he had been Justified In
deserting her und taking to wife
thl» young »ml fuNiliiuthig girt.
Certainly he seemed to tnke n new
lea.se «*11 life, lord five Inrhe» around
the wiil«t line, played polo, rw
gained something of the high color
and good spirit* of Ids old dray-
driving days, und m ule a great hit
In Iromloti during (lie »enson when
[kvma was presetted at court« Uo-
shles. there wu* no withstanding
the Wyatt money. Kven In a roan*
try hluse of milllonnire* Tracy
NVyutf* f«»rtune wu* s«miethlng to
marvel at>out. The n..:ne of Wyatt
•A*eni«*d to l>e everywhere. A§ you
rode in trains you aw the shining
round Mark dank» of oil ear*,
thousands of them, and painted
on them lu letter* of white, "W yatt
Oils.** Motoring through Oklahoma
aud the whole of tht Southwest
you pBMBi miles of W>;itt oil
tanks, whole silent cities of mono­
liths, like something grimly Kgyp-
lion, i«|uatting eunuch like on the
prairies.
IlC ltM
FOR HALE
Milk contains all the food value*
\\ VN I I I)
Wanted— To buy Vaughn wood saw
at a
reasonable price.
Phone
Beaverton 2456 or write Huber,
Box 12.
Adv pfi
V*h
building trade*. Can fix the kids’
toy«. Glad to talk your proposi­
tion over with yim. Phone III»«
verton 7tl6l, K. Strickland. Ill I.
Adv p 6
so essential to a child's growth and
development If you will hut phone
4526 our wagon will deliver dally
at your home the very best uf milk.
Beaverton Sunrise Dairy, A. t'amen-
timl, pi opt let or
adv. e-39 f
For Sals»— Fating potatoes 70< |ier
aaek, and Buriaink seed potatoes,
title.
U. Leunetti,
Farmington
road.
Adv pti
For Sale -O ld Newspaiier*. Generous
bundle, 6e. Call Review ofllre.
TKADKH
»»ant to Swap |M site, 21 Jewelled
Hamilton wateh for p«<ultry or
cow; also horse an«| a half gas
engine, Fairl»anks-Morse, for what
b a n »on H
I, B n H i C. R
Foss,
Adv 0 11
SPRAY NOW TO CON­
TROL LKAF CURL
The moat favorable aeaaon for
rontrul uf pra»h leaf curl la now at
ham!, according bo »warning iaaueil
l y O. T. McWhorter, extension ape
cialial in horticullure at the »tale
• •■liege
Growers who make uae of
the mu! winter months t r Hua task
ami who spray with good quality
iMtrilrauz mixture ami rover every
twig have been getting satisfactory
control.
IVarh leaf rurl is caused by a
fungus that winters over on I k t
twigs, waiting for the first alight
swelling of the bu»la to invade the
new growth
For this reason it I*
fatal to put o ff spraying till late in
the winter, for even in February, in
western Oregkin at least, the bud*
are so far advanced that infection
hsa taken place on unsprayrd trees.
Bordeaux 4 4-60 is the standard
spray for this disease. One appli­
cation is sufficient providing giant
material ia used and if the tree is
Hawoughly covered. This spray may
be obtaimvd commercially or a goiai
quality can be iiwm I c on the farm
from dirsa-tions obtainable from any
county agent.
a ---------------------------------------------------a
With characteristic
insight Into
Dere Sur—
public psychology,
Governor Meier
e >••»»••
I hereby offer my resegnation as
appropriates
the
credit
for
tax
re-
. .■__
r .
,
,
- - | being a subscriber to your paper; it
C1IICAOO -W om .nl »rr.lc.l Cen­
duction as being the result o f his £ £ a pamphlut o f such ..ni.Il kon-
tury of PrugrrM will come In lb* n*sl
IU0 par» sccordins lo Mil* Mans*
policies and hi. tax lesgue.
sckwence ,s not to benefltt my f.m -
Huuin*t«in. cwlebrauu Parisian OMUiy
, J ? ' ere. “ 7
00U ,that 5“ e ,d - bly «o r nobody taking it out of the
•pciaii.i who rvcently vi«iu-u Chi-
ership braced up a lot o f fellows box
cagu* Century of Prngma nullrting*
who might have advanced to the
what you needdin yure shete is
fur the purpose of planning an ex­
Hood River- Isidino
clover ha*
or i * ! ,' * *ln^lrE heart. They branes and someone to russlc news
tensive oeauty eshlblt al (he IMS
continued to increase in popularity
are lacking the aggressive asser- and Hte editoriuls on live topicks.
World’* Pair
*
in this county until at present there
tiveness possessed by the governor. No mention has been maid in your
"During th* pa*l century. Ui* women
In the absence of this spirit, there rag of me butchering a pelan Chinese
of virtually all nation* h*v* mad*
are
approximately 100
acres in
trrmrtplou* atridc* In Dualnrae. *cl-
is little doubt but that a less con­ pig waying 169 pownds dressed or i
fields varying in size from less than
•nc*. the arte and *v*n «UilsUca.*
certed effort would have been made. gapes in the chickuns out this way.
an acre to 16 acres, says County
Mila Kumnatem *ald
*Bui In m*
But
neither
Governor
Meier
nor
Agent A.
L. Marble, J. E. King
nest 100 yrar*. woman will really come
. ■ .
,
iv a *6h
miv lavi
inai a
You
iggnore 1 the
fact that
I vvuftt*»
bought
pastured 14 rows and several calves
Into lhatr own and anil mak* greater
yet hu lesgue did the real work a bran new 2nd handed car for 333
relative progreae than men *
o f the tax reduction. The work was (dollars), and traded in my blind
on five acres during the past season,
MU# Rubin*lem la a alaier and an-
done
by the
budget committees Mule on the deel to say nothing
and A. J. Hrunqulst o f I’arkdale
worker of Mm» Helena Rublnateln.
working hand in hand with pres­ about Ro Roberts jersey Calfe break
pastured four cows, two horses and
founder of a gl0.000.000 International
ent officials, scanning every item o f ing his front leg falling in the well
several hogs on a new two-acre
bualaca* In coam.Uca
expected expense,
all feeling the and 2 important shiverees have been
field.
y «
pressure o f necessity and spurred on utUriy ¡ ^ o r e d by your sheet and .
by a public clamoring for less taxes. colunm Qbichuary notice I writ was
Take our own county
fo r in- ! left out ^
nothng o f an original
«Unce Who can name the budget
m my dawter coppied out of an j
committee? Yet it was they who old reader. This u the reason that
“ Tbs Covered Wagon My Folks
worked out the budget and cut off
is ^ unpopular out hear
Crossed tbe Prairies In.”
every item
they considered
they
hel
you «fent want news ,
rould
dispense with.
The Tax from* out hear in yure old shete we '
on Sahra. Ponderously she shook
League steps in and insists on a dont want ynre paper.
her head from side to side In ne­
further cut of approximately 20'*
gation.
You sed you wanted co-respond­
•’Saw," she answered, politely,
as what they want.
As for the Wyatt house— It
ents and I am one.
“Chawed."
wasn’t a house at all. but a roca-
You sed you wanted News and you
The clatter of a fork dropped to
9
An Editor's Epitaph
blnatlon of the palace of Ver­
9
tbe piste, a clash among the cops
dont print it.
Insure With The
satile* and rtie Crnud fVntral sta­
$
An
editor
recently
died
in
_____
^
_
_
^
__
BEAVER W o o d c o m p a n y
and saucers. Sabra Cravat had
Now who is fooling the people?
9
tion In New York. It occupied
Farmers’
Mutual
Bridgeport, Conn., whose sentiments
„"f'mwd 7 whoTs a deceit "and
fainted.
0
Dry Wood----- Any l.rnglh
ground* about the size of the dochy
0
transcended those of the ordinary who is a liar? I am, yours truely,
of Luxembourg, and on the ground*,
0
Fire Relief Ass’n
KNOTS FOR FIREPLACE
0
mortal.
He was Richard Howell.
John Smith,
once barrou plain, b.id been set
McMinnville (formerly of Portland)
Osage, Ok la., waa a city.
0
HARD and 8 0 I T COAL
fo r 40 years editor the Bridgeport
p. g
j f you print the obichu- 1
great trees brought from Lngioad.
9
Mutual Itatea Coat l.e-»*
Where, scarcely two decades ago,
0
Herald. (Mr. Howell wrote his own | ary in
next 1 TOay sine a note |
Agent
for Eastman Furnaces
prairie and aky bad met tbe eye
K. I.. Maprs
Route 2, Gaston
ITC DJI OOMINl KO.)
0
epitaph. It is simple and radiates s for ^
price o f yure „hete.
J. S. I
0
I’honr 6702
Beaverton, Ore.
u
great mind with an intense love of __Exchange
nature: Here it is:
STUDIO HARDER SHOP
“ I want no crepe to hang upon the
v n a v clash w o r k
Governor Meier seems to be get­
clods mixed with the hay when it
door when I die;
AT REASONABLE PRICES
Meats and Groceries
ting the credit for a kit o f tax re­ CAUSE OF DUSTY
is mowed and raked. Any amount J IN OREGON HOMES
I want no bell to toll the way to duction. The New York Times states
E. I). VanMeler, Prop.
H
A
Y
IS
DISCUSSED
o
f
salt
added
to
such
hay
is
not
where I lie;
m-------------------------------- ---------------- - a
that the Governor “ gave real es­
likely to affect its dustiness, HyslOp
I want no sorrowful prayers raised tate owners o f Oregon a 34,500.000
Redmond— Five home
economics
“ Wonder what makes this hay so believes.
to Him on high;
F. W . mSlIOF
units were organized in Deschutes
Christmas gift by announcing there
I want no heart to sob nor any would be no levy for operating the plagued dusty this year?”
But where hay is put in the stack county during
1931, according to
PLUMBING and HEATING
How
often
has
this
question,
ex­
heart to cry.
or mow a little too moist, there may Ella Miller, .home
demonstration
state
government due to
funds
Hardware, Paints
pressed with greater or less vigor be oust develop that was not pres­ agent. These units are located at
I want the flowers, the bees, the raised by income taxes.”
llesvertm «
been heard et this time of year as ent at all when the hay was made. Lower Bridge, Cloverdalc. Tumalo, Phone, 2003
birds to be around the day I go;
NAPES & SON
clouds
o
f
dust
arose
as
feed
was
I want a bird to sing his song of
Oregon State News f dug out o f the mow or stack for This is caused by development of and Shevlin llixon, cai/.p» I and It.
evening, soft, and low;
RESTAURANT
mold on the hay, whi.h later flies In addition,
home
demonstration
”
® j the stock.
I want a bee to buzz aroqnd the ®
off when the bay is handled. I n meetings were sponsored by home
W . E. PEÍJG
MEALS
SHORT ORDER
E.
R.
Fatland
is
the
new
owner
|
G.
R.
Hyslop,
head
of
the
farm
place I rest:
such cases application of salt
at economics clubs
Cigars, Tobnccos
o f Granges
and UNDERTAKER snd EMBALMER
! crops department at Oregon State haying time might prevent develop­
1 want a flower to bloom upon the of a La Grande tire agency.
other groups in Terrebonne, Pleas­
Confections, Soft Drinks
lleavertoi.
mound atop my breast.”
Charles Schroeder has
installed ™1,eKe’ *** « « " t l y had thfs quea- ment of such molds and hence keep ant Ridge, Pine Forest, Eastern (•range Building — :—
Cady
Bldg
— :—
Watson 8C
an ambulance service at Bandon.
I tl0n Put * him’ together with the down the dust, says Hyslop.
Star, Alfalfa, Sisters, Re«lmond,
I query as to whether salting would
PNEUMONIC DANGER
Use o f salt with hay that has to Bend, Pinehurst and Plainview.
The Lewis shingle mill at Wheel- prevent dust developing. Professor
Pneumonia is a dangerous com­
Phone 0411
Kambenfer’s Confectionery
er may resume operations about the flyglop »ays he has never run any be stacked while too moist has its
municable disease and necessitates
limitations, however. Hyslop warns.
St. Helens—Clothing renovation
first
o
f
February.
experiments
on
tfhe
matter,
but
he
JOE KF.MMF.R
the same precautions as the other
continues to serve you
Moisture within the hay may be and pattern alteration constitute a
Plans are underway in Medford to has handled a lot o f hay in his
contagious diseases. Recently there
overcome in this manner, perhaps, continuous clothing program in tho
For
nny Kind of Wood
were two deaths and three otuer expend 320,000 in remodeling work time, both before and after stack- but if there is any dew or other free home economics extension units of
with pleasure
l.imb
Wood Cut to Order
at
the
Nash
hotel.
in*,
and
would
say
from
experience
persons infected by a single case of
county.
Twenty-seven
,
.
that no one cause can be blamed for water on the outside of the hay Columbia
pneumonia. Two more deaths in tne
A two-story stitcher room
has
there is grave danger that it may made-over dresses and four chil­
DEW EY
past week have demonstrated the been added to the Rotary f~iit Box
dren's remodeled
garments were
q m common cause is overflowed heat and cause what is commonly
Beaverton Barber Shop
virulency of this infection. Physi­ factory at Gresham.
THE PLUMBER
, meadow8 that leave a deposit of known as spontaneous combustion reported on at four meetings held
cians, nurses, and others who come
For
this
same
reason
a
leaky
roof
recently.
These
clothing
project*
Work is under way on the Gil- mud that turns to fine dust on the
Our work 3peaks for itself C. J .STEVENS, PROPRIETOR
in contact with this infection do not
liam county portion o f the Heppner- hay, he says. Another is late-sown has been known to set a bam on arc directed by Mrs. Sarah V. Case,
seem to realize that they should
Beaverton, Oregon
Phone 7702 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
home demonstration agent.
Eight Mile-Condon road.
j fields o f grain hay that will have fire.
take the same precautions that they
would in a case of diptherla or
scarlet fever. Pneumonia takes over
By Charles Sughroe
IV «
35.000 lives
and causes at least
350.000 cases of illness jn the
OUC6 t WAS IU A « t o ® « AMO A UeVJSPAPER
" t h e samacìe D o cs iir believe im qoo ,
United States annually. Pneumonia
c a m s H4 a m o t u b m c r c m a m t s a i o , " h o ,
not only disables during the period
t h e CHILD DOES MOT BELIEVE, THAT PIRE
\ p o r r wA»rr a u v ao im nog «, papcr . s ads
will , hurt ir.
f o r . celcturie « people
of acute
duration but frequently
oovrr p o AkN eooOm. \ D o u r B ru ev e »u____
leaves affections of the heart, kid­
HAMS B EL I EVE 0 IH PAUSITI«« AUD OOVJ0TEO
A0V€Wn«'W«l* IM' MÖWSPAPeR. MAH UAFFV0
neys and blood vessels.
In 1931
TRUTHS. NOUtt OHBSLIEF IM PU0UCITV
AMD SAID, " WHAT DOCS IT AAATT6R WHETHER.
there were 1951 cases of pneumonia
0 0 BE MOT AFFECT THE VALUE OP
reported and 658 deaths in this
Ñ00 aeuEve wrr o* wot ? ”
AOVCRTifllHO 1 ”
<t>o £ * O o
state. Thirty cases of pneumonia
were reported in one recent single
week. In the United States and
Oregon pneumonia ranks first in the
list o f acute communicable diseases
as a cause o f death.
' thc auesnou ib , will advertibujo
From a public health standpoint
ADAMI DlOMT BËUEG6 f f MATTER«.») E* HE M S
ÔOOO01 * AMD T H * ANSWER I« THAT O u*.
It really makes
little difference
TH « APPNE » U O A H í MBIGMBORS OI DUT
0OMT VUOAKV
whether or not a case is lobar
B«9T 0USIMÍ6S MED Vy»V* PROVED BSTOMD
B e u r w IH TV46 FtOOO - CrAi-ltEO'fi ARtCUDS
X»OGT «MglkS*
pneumonia, or broncho pneumonia,
T H « SHADOW OR A DOU«T THAT IT W ill,
010UT 8EUEVS TW EARTH WAS ROO HO *
rannen, tu a
primary or secondary, due to pneu­
fiO TVtAtfc TMAT I 1
&XUMBUS UVEO AMMO PtOPUE WHO Dl OHI*
mococci. streptococci, or any other
«JS RIA «SU. LOOK
BELIEVE HC COLAD RIMO HAMO 8 T «AILIUvJ
pathogenic organisms. These germs
una tm « . o a
WB«T. ”
are being continually thrown out
B u sin e ss Places T o P atro n ize
IN BEAVERTON!
Holboke Bros.
MICK1E, THE PRINTER’S DEVIL
eex