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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1933)
h»* \jti T he B ea verton R eview The Only Newspaper Devoted Exclusively To The Interests O f Eastern Washington County. VOLUME XI, No. 34 S in g le Aged Citizen Goes To Last Reward M ru W ill L o r ,VIIS. Walker t 4/, Ck«« times to Ore- gon As Bride, Sixty- Odd Years Ago HAS FIVE CHILDREN Her fl win Brother Present Recent Birthday Gathering At Kachel F’. Coffey wus horn in Pettis county, Missouri, July 8, 1848, one of a (pair of twins, bro- ther and sister, the youngest of u family of eleven children born to Col A. M. und Mary Bradford Coffey, u direct descendant of Governor William Bnaufud of Ply- mouth Colony, Mass. Governor Bradford came to America in the Mayflower, the famed ship which brought the Pilgrims to Amen a C o p y , 5 C en ts Beaverton, Washington County, Oregon. Friday, July 21, 1933 NOT ALL CHAUFFEURS have new l ic e n s e s “ BACK TO PRIMITIVE” HARVEST METHOD T Formal notice to state p o lic e , untl city enforcement authorities concerning the failure of some 4,000 chauffeurs to clbtein their new badges, will be made this week, | A “‘•«-■“ «■dins: to word just received A scout meeting was held Tues- fron, llal E. Hoss, Secretary o f d*y evening July 18 with four scouts State, O f the i:i,H28 registered two visitors and one leader in at- chauffeurs in Oregon on July 30, ' tendance. only 3,133 have applied for licen- Flans were made for going on ses for the current period as com- 8,1 overnight hike to. the Bfoy pared with 7,3113 issued at this ;Sctmt cabin Tuesday, July 25. All same time a year ago, it was said. Bc°uts are invited. Kach scout may To avoid action from enforce- krmg one visitor. There will be ment officials, all persons driving u‘stH Passed at the cabin, motor vehicles for compensation i Bring food for two or three should attend to the renewing of meals and blankets for the night Robert Jackson, leader of the chauffeur’s registration at Floss suggested. Such registrations Flaming Arrow patrol is taking can be completed in u minimum of charge while the troop leaders time under present arrangements are away. Go to him for further which provide for n waiver of all arrangements. examinations for chauffeurs regis- I tered during the period ending POINTS IN BUYING June 30, 1933. Newly licensed chauf- C O T T O N A R E G IV E N .curs will he required to submit ______ to a test, ... , . . .. a r f H i f 1 Po“ lbly never befolc the ( ia| o ~ ™ to r * can he secured^om e,onRUmer buy**r *uch a usual training of the young lady rectly to Hal K Hoss at Salem before the South left the Union. A similar drive ajruinst delin- However some of her relatives ccn- i l » quent prrvote operators will be in ducted a young* ladies seminary so ' i a , > 0 , , it is. eUBU11„ i i 4 to assume a . . stitnted T>y police Tier it is nni«, only reasonable that . . . after Septem '.... , ..... operators. Miss Rachel received as thorough 1st, at which time curds issued before July 1, 1331 u training as any in her time. $ 1 .5 0 Sager cl^ th W “ wrililirt at o “ t ^ager nothing spenn ist at i .M anc a aie n 1 lua -v cr’a _ W<,U.yf , A fu -' ilno’i** ‘ ' jLg service, 1 1 „ ol says Mrs. Sager. Re- Elects Otficers j Mrs. I Hugh ,,, C h o s sen en . A S A McGilvra A “ back to the primitive move ment in seed harvesting methods appeared to have been inaugurated at the Oregon Experiment station at Corvallis the iirst week in Is July — . . . 1 r e s id e n t for Coining Year N EW MEMBERS ENTER — Dr. O. E. Mason Will Be Second Vice-President For Organisation At a meeting of the Washington county health association held at Tigard Tuesday at the close of the quarterly meeting of the county iederation of women’s clubs, Mrs. Hugh McGilvra of Forest Grove was elected president, succeeding Mrs. Fltz Abendoth o f Hillsboro, health association president for two successive years. Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, corres- .. .... At 4 n o I I r i- ir A P bewi’* pMl..in* a when farmers from T T . .a ....... V - l / ' a __ Y em Short Items About People We All Koow five Sorrento Club Hears In counties were seen carefully strip teresting Talks On ping by hand the seed from the heads of grass on several acres. Yellowstone Trips The explanation is that this grass is Meadow F’oxtail, a new and valuable sort developed at the VISITORS PLENTIFUL 1 experiment station that has been ______ increased from year to year till now it is ready for more general Congregational Sunday School Has distribution to growers. No machine Annual Picnic-Dinner has been made, however, which ------- — will harvest the seed of this grass Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hoover Harry Schoth, federal agronomist spent the week-end at Taft, at the station, made county agents the proposition that if they cared ^ r‘ , ani* Mrs. F. H. Schoene to bring in some farmers and strip !,pent Lht' week-end at V achats, the seed, he would assign certain Miss Marjorie Morris is visiting parts of some six acres of the with her sister, Mrs. A. E. Oiesen grass then ripening, and they could in Sorrento. have all they could strip. His of- V r an(1 Mrs. ^ Ereiten of fer was accepted by farmers from Sewport, Ore., were visiting with I A/io I onl/fl m n ncnir i* ♦ \ A secretary of the \A Oregon Coos, Clackamas, Washington, Yam- „ 7 " o am mi the county health association i. primitive methods of harvesting affiliated, spoke on the opportune followed. t;es for community sendee that are The erass has keen grown ex- presented women’s clubs through perimentallv for 15 years and is organized publr health work. now known to be one of the most 01p Others officers elected weie: Mrs valuable wet-land grasses yet de- . ' P er ■■ la, f\aa d 1 ” . * , . . . ■' 1 . 1 la, -a »M V t o i l 10 Dr. and Mrs . F L Howard took a business trip to Seattle over Sat- Ul'day and Sunday. Jimmy Miller is spending two weeks at Camn Camp Meriwether, .the Boy Scout camp near Tillamook. O As u child she lived with her parents neighbors to the Walkers and one o f her early recollections recalled the time her mother lifted her up to see the covered wagons aie quai i i <t . i at ... e..,en.ial j I ill s,t>0 ro a time and still come out all right. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Scott and or «migrant train as they were « If you ,an to serve hc,me of X m a K ™ ' V k e n ‘ “ hreLds, Retiring officers were: Mrs. C. Along the coast last year it was daughters Margaret and Marjorie called whsrh beanng to Ore- canned fruit three times a wee,: Wells Hilldboro, vice president: still growing when other grasses returned Tuesday from their va- gon the Walkers i U next . winter ■ . i C spring, rough places where an uneven or _ E. I VA t M 111 w o 1 M 1 I c i T J ' I 1 1 1 I M I I U J \d U I — A T ' u,, their „ .. neighbors, “ “ K and und your Brock Cornelius, sec- were killed by the cold. It is the cation at Yachats. When the ISoutli lost in the o f fo o , pontons, ^ “ ^ . 0“ “ ^ ■ Ä l T i . 'l S i t ä r H «b- .1,.. . K - r . to do struggle, many of the old families Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Tuttle and you will need to fill ul>out 120 on the heavy adobe land. moved away, some to one place and in the fabric when it is used or boro, treasure* daughters Dolores and Maryalys, quart jars with Cru it tnis sum sonv to another. Some of the Eleven new members were elect- j are enjoying a two weeks’ motor mer,” says Lucy A. Case, extension laundered. Cottons with coarse or Walker’s relatives moved to Mexico. ■ ■■ . heavy warp threads and lighter or ¡r ^ membership and plans laid ( O . 4 - H trip in British Columbia. CLUB PIC foods and o itrition at Then during the fearful yellow *P«c,al,Bl 1,1 org-anization of community I ho is the author of a fir.er filling threads or vice-versa, for NIC W ILL BE HELD> Little John Whatley Huson lost fever days of 1870 and ’71, Ro- 1 1 w are only as strong as their weak- groups ¡n numerous centers of the : lew leaflet entitle 1 Ca-nul ana ______ _ a 'purse this week, containing the bert H. Wnlker who hud gone to ti a • est threads. Heaviea- threads tend county to assist in a county-wide ' money he bad received for the Oregon In the emigrant train of the j St^ ed / , ood B.ud* et, to cut weaker ones, especially where edu.aticn and disease pre- I xhe annual Washington County This foldar also shows that such v” ----- “ " T ’ -------- ' , ’ "11' 8«aitn euui.au.« aim g * y ; t he annual Washington County magazines he had sold early '50’s started to visit his re- ----- *' ................ * * fiimilv fomilv of .,t four four could could he he exnected expected there there is ls any “ ay rubbing, rubbing, as as under under the the vention ventjon service service in in co-operation co-operation with with 4.H 4.H cirfb cirfb picnic picnic will will be be held held at at Mte"ourl ’ , . N® r Orleans lyon . "f , „ „ . « 1« ^ »„.! arms, at the elbows or at the side 1)r j o . Dinsmore, county health ^ i m Grove on Sunday. July 30. Mrs. Stella Chalmers of Santa and Mexico, one o f his first stop- l<> UiiC 90 ^ a r t« of tomatoes and officer, and Mrs. Hazel Foeller, The 4-H club picnic committee, Monica, talif., is visiting with her ping places was in Pettis countv tor"“ to i ub* “ r‘i ‘i5 Pints of county health nurse. Homer A. consisting of J L. Batchelder, O. 30n, Clyde, at the home of Miss where he called on the Coffev’s or th‘‘ SBnie amount dried. About LOUISE E ILE N E HO Chamberlin, tuberculosis association 3 Kraus, Supt. o f schools, Joseph Lettie McKay at Whitford. Here the voung child who had :,0° pints o { U‘“ ns’ corn’ peail Belanger, assistant county agent, Mrs. W. H. Boyd motored to WARD HAS PARTY field representative, presided. watched the emigrant train so spit**«b • and other greens and Mrs. McGilvra. wife of the pub- Mrs. E. M. Bowman and Cecil (The Dalles Friday evening, with long ago hear away her playmate 8° up mixtures will provide the , , Usher o f the Forest Grove News Heyndrerickx, met last Friday night friends from McMinnville to attend again met, and this time fell in family o f four with vegetables five Wednesday afternoon, Louise Li- 7?meg ¡s the former Camp Fire at the county agent’s office and the State Rural Mail-carrifers’ con- love with one of the passengers of tim *8 8 week next winter und lene. little daughter of Dr. and idrs. ojrls Executive in the Portland made final plans for the date, ' vention. They returned Sunday eve- the covered wagon train. In 1871. spring F’ F . L. I. Howard, Howard, celebrated celebrated her her tenth tenth gh<; ^ Miss Louise Nunn, place and program of the picnic. ning. Rachel became the bride o f young besides being a canning guide. birthday with a lovely party for — ------------- Marshal Dana, associate editor of ri... . . .. Walker, and came to make' her the new leaflet also gives budgets gixteen InaBtt from ceaverton anu sixteen friends from Beaverton and H IL L S B O R O CLUB the Journal has been ^ ^ home of Mra. H s t o 'o n 'S lw t' home with his people near Beaver- i« r drying or storing vegetables j,ortland Gameg on the lawn tfm. and fruit and for preaervmK meat a lovely cake decorated with ro se ! HAS MEETING HERE ^ . i ^ a S T s “ » wiHb” afternoon. Mrs. W. H. Boyd, When Willie Graf, as he was then ‘>»'1 Dsh. It is free to residents of laN and ten pink aIid biue can. ______ , club leader, and his family will be and Mrg Ray FoxU)n gave inter. called, a young boy. came from Oregon either from county or state ^ on # white mblt, with four I The Service Club of Hillsboro ... . . . . . . . ««ting talks on their trip through Gennany his people lived near the extension offices. white tapers, and pink rose petals met at the home of Mrs. H. R. A ball game Wl l ^ he d at e,' a: Yellowstone park. Old Meadow Farm and the young --------------- - ----------------------- were enjoyed, followed by music Kellington at Sixth and Main Streets ^ ^ „o w e i by Mervel and Elgus Frank returned bride took great pleasure in teach- EVELY N A LE XAN D ER and singing. | Wednesday evening. speaking, games ar.d swimming. l-b«*r home in Garibaldi, Monday ing the youth the English language ENTERTAINS FRIENDS * - - - 34 j A pot-lui.k dinner was served on ggj---------------------------------------- y after a two weeks' visit at the Rev. G m f is pastor of the Beth- ______ S I L E N T L Y P A S S I N G | the lawn at 6:30 o ’clock. CARD OF THAN KS ! borne of their une'e anu aunt, H. uny Baptist church now, und Miss Evelvn Alexander an tor. — - — ------ !S Tliose present were >iis. Hadey, R. Kellington, and relatives in -a Hillsboro. preached the funeral sermon for , tained a grout') of friends with a Swan Anderson, 74, of Reedville Mrs. Anderson. Mrs Brandaw, * ls his former instructor. We wish to express our sincere swimming party at Roamor’s Rest died Sunday, after a three weeks’ McDowell, Mrs. Far.cis. an' ? :rs gratitude to our many friends for Mrs. R, D. Young of Oakland, Air. and Mrs. Walker were on F’riday in honor of her 15th illness !n the hospital. He was un- Stannard. a ! of Hil .-«boro, and . rs. the kindness and sympathy extend- Calif., spent Saturday in Beaverton blessed with five children, four ol birthday. A delightful dinner was married and had lived in this Stevens of Beaverton. -Irs. ed us in our recent sorrow, and for visiting with friends. She was din who.111 have answered the uull to the table being community the past ten years. The Denney was a guest. . tavelv fbxwern ner guest of Mrs. M. C. McKer- “ The beautiful Beyond” where they served at noon, The evening was spent in social many loteiy nowera. cher, Saturday evening, remaining uwail with their tuther the coming made festive with a beautifully funeral was held at Donalds n and Mrs. Agnes^Morgan Sewell’s Chapel in Hillsboro on conversation and planning f i r the over until Sunday morning of the w ife 'anil mcithar”^ Lauretta b Fhtt,<1 b‘ rthday cake. C. A. Hagoes The guests were lthoda Thyng, Wednesday with burial at Tuala- furtherance of their i-eriiti. Walker Olds, Mrs. Samuel Olds, Mrs. C. J. Bielman The Congregational church Sun is the only remaining child. She LaMerne Dean, Ruth Ruynaul, tin Plains Cemetery._____ Hv'tvitterr ifuilt*which will be soldi Violet Hagoes day school picnic was held at t.'ves with her husband on the Old Georgia Bella Kamberger, Harry * . ,, , eetjg w n t,,, placed in Kenneth I). Hagoes Roamer’s Rest on the Tualatin Donation Land Claim settled in M<»gan. David Mason, Henry Kam- It is reported that Wmstroms the’ ‘ ' ' L. A. Hagoes river Saturday evening. A large berger. John Mason, Theodore have sold the Beaverton Auto Camp. • the l lub treasury. crowd was present. A pot-luck din Her husband was killed in 1916 Hetu, Mrs. K. K. Summers, and ...« ner was served at 6:30 in the eve at St. Mury’s station on the l>.^ Mrs. Alexander ning. received many gon Electric by one of the electric Miss Alexander trains. He hud spent practically MRS. FRANK REID ull his life at Old Meadows, the ~ j""’ ” . "T Kirin which he wrested fiom the MASONS AND LAS 1 - IS GIVEN SHOWER lorest by his own efforts. ERN S lA R S PICNIC When recently several o f her A lovely miscellaneous shower numerous friends guthered to help was given at the home of Miss Alice Masonic und Eastern Star The her celebrate her birthday, only Lundgreu for Mrs. Frank Reid (the was held at Avolon she knew how cloae to the iparting plcn,t " ‘‘i c ' ' former Katharine Smith of Bea ualatin river was .1 >1....... ... .a .................. l a r k on the I o f the way they were. Her twin verton) recently. Mrs. Reid is biothcr wus one of those present well uttended by menlbers, their well-known heie, having attended families and friends. A bounteous nt that ueuasiun. Beaverton High School. Mr. and was served at 1 o'clock Mrs. Walker wus a member of dinnei Mrs. Reid will make their home in the Presbyter.un church and went and plenty of ice-cream which was Portland. to her rest firm in the faith that HorwUcd by several of the member.. Those present at the shower He who notes the sparrow's fall Swimming was Cue main amuse were: Katharine Reid, Mildred Two- has prepared a pluee for her There, meut Mrs. ... . Lawienie, 1,1 hy, Catharine ami Dorothy Mark Her funeral was held from !»er old tby Mutron of B eam ,i|HV ’ ovich, Pearl Dudley, Jean Sivard, pupil's church and flowers several was honored with a special birth-. Jean and Dorothy Lewis, Ruth Wis- fi*et deep rested on her new grave. i:*U' CBbc w ’A1’ V w>? Pr«««n ‘ • > mer, Margaret Diekman, Annabella showing mutely the love and es- Mrs. H. A. Nielsen, / ssoi 111 1 . a Benson, Virginia Robertson, Rosie teem of those who knew her bast. tron. __ Chiamili, Wilma Scott, Betty Bu She died of cancer from which ____ , „ ,.,,,.,» 1 1 0 chanan, and Ruth and Alice Lund- she had long been a sufferer. Her VVHITI* O K I ) W O M E N S gren. passing will be felt long in the vi- C L U B H A S M E E T IN G cinity where she has made her M. CRAIG IS IMPROV home for more than sixty years. ! , , r,,„, _______________ The Whitfoul Womens Club met ING FROM ILLNESS 1 1 F N R Y H U N T IS I N - Wednesday at the hall with nine J ......... a it b w members present. J U R E !) BY AUTO Measures to lie voted on ut the Friends will be glad to learn - ■ | electioi were discussed. A straw that Mason Craig, son of Mr and Henry E. Hunt, 83, of Beaver- vote wus taken on the repeal ques- Mrs. C. W. Craig of Los Angeles, ton. Route 3. had the misfortuna tion in which the drys won out. is improving and returned home to have his right leg fiactured at Mrs. John Johnson gave an inter- from the hospital the first part of the knee when he was struck by esting travelogue on Holland as last week. Mas-n became uncon an automobile driven by Eustaohe told to her by a cloae friend who scious owing to a ruptured appen Klinger, of Hillsboro. "Mr. Hunt had recently made a trip to that dix while at his work in a store in Pasadena and was taken to a had just alighted from ar, auto-, country. mobile driven by Arthur Olsen of Mrs. E. G. Perkins was the hospital in Ix>s Angeles where he Route 3. and stepped around it, hostess fer the afternoon, was critically ill for some time. The Craigs were formerly from almost into the path o f Klinger's — . taken to the Good Workmen have been working on thia vicinity. _ 1 car He was Short Street this week. Samaritan hospital. i j j j 7 - * T aU of Missing M en