The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, February 24, 1933, Image 2

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    PF IDA Y.
The Beaverton Review
FEBRUARY 24. 19:«
The Beaverton Review
Issued every
ton. Oregon.
Friday at:
Beaver-
BELOW ZERO
A Romance of the
Entered as second-claw mail mat­
ter Dec. 9, 1922 at the Postoffice
at Beaverton.
Oregon, under the
act o f March 3, 1879.
J. H.
HuletC, Eduor A
NorthWoods
Publisher
“ Before you invest, investigate
is just as good advice to anyone
buying
advertising or
subscrip­
tions to a newspaper or periodi­
ca as it is to those about to bit'
stocks or bonds. It also applies to
the buying of cows as related in
a recent issue o f the Bulletin ul
the Oregon
lie part mem o f A g-
ncuKure.
Now when a young man. wholly
Under the head. “ Cow fo r Sale" mail, is out to show what he can do,
appears the statement that a fine and who lias had an opportunity of dig
fam ily cow has to be sold because playing his capacities dangled before
it cannot
be kept a t that part­ his eyes tantalizing!? for a day that
icular
place on
account o f the seemed like a week, he is bound to go
iietghoorg or c p y regulations e*r fast, once started.
Ellen Richards' new boss went like
some other plausible excuse.
A
small calf is found tied next the the wind, like Are. like s wild horse:
cow and the buyer is sold a fresh by day lie drove bis crew s: by night
cow at a good price. Judge ms he sat In the office at camp or tn town
consternation when the
cow
is and laid plans for further driving.
The winter's operation had been con
found wild, unruly, kicking, and
otherwise anything but a “ family flned to a tong, narrow ravine Into
which, because of the contour of the
cow.”
When
tile buyer goes back to country, steel could not he laid at
complain the
seller
cannot
be Justified expense. The haul was along
the bottom o f this sharp depression
found.
to its lower end and thence up a hill,
where a tow-team worked every hour
The
Washington County
Dec­ getting loads to the top. From there
lamation Contest will be held at the sleighs doubled back on the higb
HiUsboro Marth 17. 1933 at 7:45 land, paralleling the first part of the
P. M. This final contest will
be haul to reach the ia., ling.
held in the Baptist church. Second
Over three miles. It was. and at one
and
Lincoln
streets
(Northeast point the stee! came within forty rods
com er of Court Ho»ise Square.»
of the rim of the ravine
Division 1. Grades 3 A 4
“ We should be dumping right there!”
Selection o f 100 t s 325 words
John exclaimed to Saunders when he
saw the place.
Division 2. Grade# 5 A 6.
•’Yeah. But we don’t haul by air­
Selection from 200 to 475 words.
plane y e t!” the foreman growled.
Division 3. Grades 7 A 8.
John said no more but his mind was
Selection from 350 to 625 words
busy
In the mill-yard was an old
Complete p'ainly written or typ­
steam leader, long discarded. It was
ed copies o f all seleckms to be not In bad shape, and three days later
used in the Semi-final
Contest It was in the w oods: men were build­
mujt be filed in the office o f the ing a road through the deepening snow
County School
Superintendent on straight up the side o f that pot-hole
or before March 2. 1933. T^iis is and on to the adjacent steeL The Jam­
fo r Class B and C schools. Class mer was set down, skidded to the brink
A
schools must file their selec­ of the steep pitch and a cable bent to
tions on or before March 13th. the drum. Teams left off the tong
The exact number o f words
in Journey by Iced roads, took their
each stanza or paragraph to be sleighs down the pitch to the skid-
wavs. brought them, loaded, to the
stated.
In the preliminary contests each foot of the incline, unhooked and came
up ahead while the powe“ of the
school is err itled to one serious
Rapid's steam engine snaked the loads
and on humo.-ous selection in each
to the top.
division.
The tow-team was liberated for the
The winners in each
prelimi­ haul: each sleigh was able to move an
nary content are eligible to com ­ extra thousand a day; costs were cut.
pete in the semi-finals for schools Dally the size of the decks at the
o f their class o f school.
new landing increased; log production
No one who ha« won first place was stepping u p : a fundamental short­
in a previous county contest shall coming was being overcome, and as he
the same division at the follow-1 stood on the third afternoon following
be eligible to compete again in the initiation of his new plan. John
ing contest (F or example, n 5th muttered tightly.
. .
see what Fm wound on,
grade pupil who won first with a
humorous selection could not com­ T om ! See what I’m wound on, yet?”
Yes, the Richards operation had new
pete the follow ing year with a
life, new vigor as long as John had his
humorous selection but would
be
fingers on each phu t but a «man can’t
eligible to compete with a
ser­
be in more than oue place at a time;
ious selecion 1 A tie is the same each day has only Its allotted hours.
as a win.
He had had the train crew with him
from the beginninz and did not need
“ I was taking tea with a great to worry about getting the best out of
editor last Sunday afternoon when what equipment he had there Tucker,
his little daughter came hack from the roedmaster. was spry enough,
Sunday S hoo! with an illustrated eager enough. It seemed, but there
were time« when John felt that he
tew -ea nd ir her hand.
“ W hat's that vtm ,iave there. could not wholly trust the man. Noth­
ing he could put bis finger on ; no
It’tle on e?” the editor asked.
delinquency he could point ou t Just
“ Oh,” said the irtiie rirl. just
intuitive distrust.
an ad about Heaven.
”
He won Jack Talt, the barn boss,
as a stalwart friend by sitting up
Observing young lady stand­ through one bitter night to help min­
alone. the you’ -g man stepped up ister to a sick horse. The horse died,
to her and said. “ Pardon me. You but Its distress hid not been John's
look like Helen Black."
primary motive in going without sleep.
“ V es. I know I do. but I ’d look He needed the staunch support of his
men. as any executive needs the faith
fo r worse in white.”
and loyalty of those at his command.
“ A moth leads ar. awful life.’ ' No business will succeed unless di­
visional heads are i.ehind the manage­
“ How c o m e ? ”
“ H e spends the summer
in « ment heart and soul; the backbone of
fu r coat and the winter in a bath­ an army ts Its non-coms.
But the uphill pull commenced to
ing suit.”
show progress. Forty thousand a day,
“ W here’d you get the two bi­ John must put to the mill to keep the
c y c le s ? " a friend inquired
of
a band-saw fed. He began tn do better
than this: by holiday time the reserve
Scotchman.
decked in the yard had crept up a
“M v ginl and I were out for a trifle: a two-day cut was there, wait­
ride.”
said the latter.
“ and we ing for an emergency; a three, enough
stopped to rest
A fter awhile I fnr tour days.
kissed her. Then I po* m y arm a-
Not time, yet, for a long breath, but
round her waist and asked her time to let yourself hope . . . a trifle.
how that was. She said it
was
.
show you what I'm wound
ff" cat. So than I kissed hen and on !" he growled between set teeth as
squeeze-i her again and she said: be watched a load going on to the
‘ Golly. Angus! You ea- have any­ dock instead of directly into the hot-
thing T g o t.’ So I took her bicycle. pond.
MICKIE,
Harold
Titus
W MW
S I H V IC I
Tucker and John and two section
1 men were In the plow ; the first brace
1 tn rldo In the l-mftnut and watch
ahead; the others to man the hlg
wheel which manipulated the wings.
They were nearing the first had
point, and John leaned forward to see
better.
of dried apples in it, alternating
"Heau> there? . . . ripen your
THK CELESTIAL k i n g d o m
them with pitted pasteurized dates
; wings”' he called, and the men below
SENDS A NEW RECIPE
add the usual rinnumon. sugar and
bent on the wheel, turning It to force
Straight from IVsping come# a butter, put on the top crust and
the wings outward so they would toss
new recipe for a toothsome corn- bake.
*"
the displaced snow far to either side.
bread whiiffi is steamed instead of
An Immense, up-ending cataract
A B R E A K FA ST TH RILL
came over the front of the plow, abut­ baked hhe recipe ha# been some­
The process for canning grape
ting off their view completely. John what Americanized and is easy to
felt their speed diminish as though follow: Sift together \ cup corn- fruit juice has be«n recently im­
in-
relvet-faeed hrakeahoes had gripped meal. 1 cup flour, V* cup sugar. 4 proved and latest taste-tests
experts
teaspoon# baking powder uivd T dk«tte that not even the
the wheels and Tucker bawled:
“ l.et 'em In!"
teaspoon salt Mix this with 2 cup» ran tell it from the souirt-in - trie
A man nt the wheel kicked the trip; milk, 1 beaten egg and 2 table­ eye variety
lalm ratory teats prove
the wings were squeezed hack against spoon# o i l Stir in
is
ipkg. pas­ ithat the valuable vitamin C.
1 the sides of the plow ; they h»ld their teurized dates, quartered: pour in­ not lost in the canning process.
pace a moment longer and then came to an oiled pan and steam
have
for H4 Now the whole fam ily can
to u stop.
its morning grapefruit juice with­
hours. Srenve hot with -hunter.
John's snow fences had functioned
out even having ito own a squeezer!
and some of the cuts were easy to
SUP ON THESE SOME
traverse because of these harriers
FANS ARE FAN CY
SUNDAY NIGHT
which caught and held the snow tn
Moat !aosteases are familiar with
Ham Sandwiches are nothing new
windward, but In other places the gn-
'«Id
Ing was Impossible. A dozen times or extra-thrilling, but Ham Sand- “ pickle fan s" fur garnishing
and
salad platters.
lo w
the shovellers were out. tossing aside wichea iSaUte nrv som'Viinng else neat
j and smiting to shovel the plow free again! Slices o f baked ham are potatoes are so prepared, fo r rec-
when Tiny wedged it Into the drift.
put between slices of white bread, orarmg the meat or fish plat -er
potatoes lengthwise in
At five In the morning they gullied the sandwiches then
dipped into Slice the
slices.
fasten
five
the mnlnline creasing. Atop the ridge egg an milk mixture and fried in quart jr-inch
I as It was the snow had mostly blown oil. first on one side, .then on the slieei. together with a
toothpick.
i away but Tucker held the wings o|»en other. Serve with spiced p.acihee I trait., hake for 15 minutes or so
until they approached the lust swltrn
brown, basting
them fr e ­
ndd some hot coffee
and tiny until
"Bring 'em In!" he called, and cakes,
and your
Sunday
night quently during the cooking with
chewed briskly as they humped across
oil to give them a color.
menu is complete,
the points. It was the one plnce on
the line where cuution must he used
"L»TTLE 1*108’ FOR THE
GRANDMOTHER MADE
with the wings: the one standard
H0(. ONES
TUilS FIRST
switch-stand on the whole line was
Sizzling
aaisuige#
com e
in o
In
Grandmother's day
Dried
located there and to pass It with
The
wings extended might menu derail­ Apple Pie was a dish fit for even their own these cold days.
the visi'ing Preacher. A metro­ family will enjoy a Sausage F ate
ment.
cold noontime
Hake the
politan hotel served it recently in some
(Con’t Next Week)
its Early American restaurant ami sausage#, w rv » them with apple
with
sweet
potat i-.-s
it was so popular »* bos heenme a ring# anti
regular specialty
of
trie house. dipped in flour and fried in saur-
rut
Simple fo r you to dupli ate: just age fat; fans maple karo to
line a pie tin with pastry, lav slices with the cak»s.
—
Cabbage Salad
! u. on those two command#
1 cup diced pineapple
ih e big task in every life u tu
V» package pasteruized date«
ucheive
wholesome
unity;
and
Salad dressing
i .here is no power so greet as trie
Cabbage
drive o f a
unified
personality.
lettkiee
1 Tnis is the test of true maturity.
Soak cabbage in cold water until
| A man is never o f age until
he
has arrived at
the place where c ra p Drain thoroughly. Dice the
his life is dominated by a single pineapple (fresh or cunned) slat-
and
sincere 'purpose and motive the dates and add the French /»ress-
How can at be achwveJ ? This is |
°r mayonaiae. Toss w bh two
an interesting message and
you forks until well mixed. Rcrve
will want to hear the subject pre­ a cup of lettuce leave#.
. Not time. yet. for a long breath.
though. The night watchman at the
mill reported that In making his
rounds an unidentified skulker had run
1 out of the locomotive stall. A wrench
was found, dropped In the doorway,
and John put on a special man to
guard Tiny's old relic, their only hope.
Three days later, running for one of
the stiff grades with four loads of logs
bound for Knmpfest. Tiny Temple
looked back to see a car leave the
rails, to see the splintered ends of
ties pop up through the snow, to see
the car take the ditch and go orgr be­
fore he could stop.
Wrecking tools were In Shoestring,
and It was necessary to make the ran
In for Jacks and replace™. They got
the car back on and the track repaired,
but s day was lost and the margin of
safety for the mill shrank instead of
growing.
Way-Bill and Tiny came to John.
“ A brake beam on that car'd been
monkeyed with." the conductor suid.
“ Yon could see the fresh wrench niutka
on the nuts.”
“ What do you make of that?"
"They know we're doin' too well.
Fixed to spill us to nuike trouble
They care a d—n about getting their
logs moved! The Kampfesi yard’s
full, and if we keep on the main line
won't be able to clear out the switches
at the crossing. More dirty work !”
John called Tucker Into the confer
ence. hot the roadmnster smiled and
shook his head doubtfully
“ Fairy story!”
be said.
“ You
couldn’t tell within two weeks when
that beam'd been repaired."
Way-Bill spat and big Tiny eyed
Tucker with a look that was not Just
pleasant. John wondered, feeling a
bit uneasy. Thereafter, he kept wreck
tng equipment in the wav-car.
And now Corbel's men commenced
w
'
sented. Come at eleven o'clock and
dumping at two landings, which mennt
Bran Date Nut ^aizd
J^^huich
ji worship with us.
that it would be necessary tn spot two
'«cu p peanut) butter
strings of empties daily, more minutes
■» cup bran
Church of Christ
taken from the time of Ellen's train
1 pkg. pasteurise.) daBe#
Rev. G. W. Springer
crew. A man must take It and grin,
orange or lemor. juice
though. John knew that; he had read
lettuce
The first Sunday of every month
the old contract by which Richards
salad dressing
•he young people of the Christian
agreed to transport those logs.
Mix (peanut hutther and
bran;
Endeavor will h a-e charge of the
Ellen talked to him in detail of the
moisten with
orange or
lemon
coni|m% finances to point out the
evening service with the exception
juice. Stuff pitted dates with triis
of the preaching.
necessity of going even faster. Cars
Nazarene Church
mixture; arrange on bed o f crisp
of air-dried luniher rolled out of Shoe­
Next Sunday morning Mr. Sprin­
Rev.
W.llard
P.
Andersen.
Pastor
lettuce Serve with any favorite*
string: piles of green lumber grew.
ger w ill speak on the topic, "A n g ­ salad dressing.
New loans, with lumber as security,
ela."
T|ie church is starting
special
were negotiated in Milwaukee to care
Celery MoM
Rev.
h “ -^
for the curt demands of the Kampfest meeting, next Sunday with
1 pkg. lemon gelatine
Ethel M.
Arnold as
evangelist. Th,n<r’ Wh,dn Thou
L **™ *
bank.
*1% cups warm water
"But we're only one Jump ahead of There is a real revival apint a-
Congregational Church
3 tbeps vinegar
disaster!" she said. “These Milwau­ mong the folk. We are expecting
Rev. Charles F .Clarke, Du#tor
% tap. salt
kee bunkers have been so decent with a real time o f spiritual blessing
1 cup celery diced
us up to now. but there's no telling ,n d progress. We heartily invite j
'a pkg
pasteurized dates
when their good nature will give out the people o f Beaverton and va I W ell Friends: Next Wednesday
Dissolve gelatine m warm w il-
If we should shut down It would bring ciratty to take advantage o f tfits '*
Wednesday the beginning
them up here in a hurry. If we can opportuniny. Lets get our
soul# °* lAut, we shall prepare for this
Add vinegar and salt.
Chill.
Just keep going!"
warmed ~p
by drawing clone to »«“ a011 ■>! great
spirital
poasi- When slightly thickened,
fold
in
They had not got abreast of the the great loving
heart of God
hiliriss by a sermon next Sunday j diced
celery and
quartered dates.
situation again as y e t A four-day •He
Sunday morning on “ The Value and Qharm Turn >nto mold. Chill until firm.
careth
fo r
you
tie-up would leeve the mill hungry.
Worship". At 7:30 the
topic Unmold. Garnish with mayonai#«-.
school, «¡Ch special talk for child­ of
“ I.uck is with us," Ellen said that ren a t 9:45 A. M. Morning war­ w ill be "The Value and Charm of
night. “ We've had no blizzards since ship
these
11.00 A. M.
N. Y
P. S. the Christian Religion." In
LOCAL NEWS
you came. You seem to he able to meeting 6:3C P. M . Evening ser­ sermons as in all through. Lent
checkmate their moves, but you can? vice 7:30 P. M. Services every the pastor will endeavor to bring
New
candies
every week
heat had weather!"
mghr. at
7 :30 except "Saturday. true congregation« into deeper con­ Kamberger*.
“O n * your fingers " he sa‘d grimly. Re\ . Mrs. Arnold «till also give sciousness of God.
Right he was. The next afternoon a Bible Study at 2:30 in the after­
Mr. Geo. Imlay is seriously ill
The Bible school meets at 9:4o :
the placid western sky hazed up and
noon. Come see
what the Bible The a'tendance ha# increased lately at hi# home in Reedville.
the temperature, which had been mod­
says about trie questions -’ hat are and we hope it will continue to.
Mr. and Mrs David !*he!p anpent
erate for days, dropped suddenly. A
bothering you.
Parents, see to it that your child­ Saturday and Sunday with rela­
restive, puffy wind began to blow and
tives at Incfopendencu.
You will enjoy the singing as ren take advantage o f the quick
M ltM , tewaftfs dusk, to a moaning
cning
Christian life so manifest
breeze which carried fir , stinging well a# trie preaching.
Van Brown »pent the week-end
Everybody Welcome.
at this sacred season: and let not at his home here. He returned to
snow before It
the young people become careless Seattle 'Sunday afternoon.
Tiny Temple hmught the traiD In
in their attendance at their 6:30
an hour late, locomotive plastered
Methodist Church
Mr# Lou.se Carter and daughter.
meetings.
with snow, festooned with Icicles, and
George F. Grcdnn. Pastor
Genevieve ere spending the week
Jchn. who had been busy in town all
We are sorry to omit the m eet
in Seattle visiting with friends.
day. was there to meet him.
ing planned for Wednesday even­
“ Big Business" is the
sermon
“Get your suppers." he told the
R r i. A. a Oh inn who has been
ing, but, the Congregational
club
crew. "She's going to lie a buster’ •ubjec for Sunday at eleven o ’clock meets at trie Firat
Church, Port­ ill for the poet two weeks was
We’ ll run the plow tonight.”
We talk much about big b u si­
land at 6:15 with an inspiring ad­ taken to the hospital at Hills!.oro
T h a t's the way to lick It!“ a brake- ness and hear considerable
con­ dress .by Dr. Hugh Vernon Wnite on Tuesday for observation
and
man said.
1 cerning the subject. The message
and at 8 o’clock an open meeting treatment.
Two hours for food for the men and will deal with the real big task of
Clayton Mor­
Mrs. E E. Stipe was hostess
coal and water for the engine and to life. In Matthew 22 nd chapter we addressed by Ohas
rison. Editor o f the Christian Cent­ to the '‘ 500" Club with a one o '­
coupie to the wing plow that stood find trie
words: You must love ury, we hope even more will at­
clock luncheon at her home last
ready on Its siding. Men were there,
the
Lord
your God
with your tend these gatherings than would I nday. Mrs. Guppy was an ad­
a dozen of them armed with shovels,
ditional guest. Mrs. R. „ K OHm,
Summer#
sitting In the heated way car. waiting whole heart, your whole soul and b present had we kept to our own _______
your neighbor as yourself.
The I meeting place. These meetings are J won first prize. Mrs L D .Shell-
to give battle.
whole law and the prophets hang open to aU.
j enberger consolation
I
CHURCH !
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