The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, August 31, 1934, Image 2

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    FRIDAY, AUGUST 31. 1934
The
lilt Beaverton Review
Review
■ Ü ÎS h m L
fiopulatam which
la all
persons
between the age of five and twen
ty-one.
That state ta divided into coun­
ties, the counties Into townships,
and the townships into school dis
tricts and road districts The school
which my sisters
first
attended
was located about two and a half
tnilea north by northwest of our
home. The school where 1 received
my education was located two miles
southeast of our home. The condi­
tions in the one were much as in
the other, there being little differ­
ence in the systems of education
or methods of instruction through
out that section.
From our home to the achool
house was solid woods. The road
through the woods consisted o f the
^ h u ith I
tracks left by wagons
travelling
that way
numerous
times.
The
track dodged around between trees
up hills,
through valleys, across
streams, ¡f they intervened, and |
as nearly as physical objects would
permit straight for the destination.
In these instances the school house
was the destination. All roads led B J— ----------------------------------------------------
to the old log school house, and
there the little chap, just as soon | K1NTON ( IIURCl!
Kev. W. K. Simpson, Pastor
a.s he was counted strong enough
;gj
to toddle the distance was dis­ Ufl---" 1 '
l*reaching service at the church,
patched, sometimes with a primer,
Sunday morning at 9:4f>, by the
and oftener without.
I can't remember my first .lay pastor, Rev. W. K. Simpson Bible
«t school. I had been in school be­ school at 10:15. All are moat cor
fore I can remember. But so great diully invited to be present at these
is the
impression
made on the services.
—*
young mind by the instructor that a ------------- ------------------
Church
of
tin*
Nazarenc
my first
recollection
of
her is
when she came to Father 1 1 hi re
Rev Willard |V Anderson, Pastor I
out to teach. She was lately from , iff
“ outside" meaning a trifling eighty
Have you attended
the TENT
or ninety miles, but *.> my youth- MEETING on First and Washing
ful mind it was fi vn: a country t°n St*.? They close
next Sunday
that seemed
much
more foreign
2. and this opportunity will
than Soviet Russia or Lower Con be gone.
Rev. J. G Bringd.xle 1«
K° does now I was oU* playing and ‘ be evangelist.
Mrs
Grace Few
one of my sisters ran hrmtHesslv less, song leader and soloist,
out to where I was and announced
The meetings thus far have been
that the ‘‘ new teacher" was in the v«ry gratifying with good at'end
house, and did
I
“ want to see a nee and definite results. Services
her?'' I surely did.
And when I:
SNAPSHOT CUIL
ISSUED E VER Y FRIDAY AT BEA
VERTON, OREGON
[ CHURCH I
4 VNOmCIMENl5
FLO W E R PORTRAITS
J. H. Hulett ......
Editor
Entered as second-class mail mat
tei December 9, 1923, at the postoffice
at Beaverton, Oregon, under the act of
March 8, 1879.
M I tM liim O N HATES
Per year (in advance) . . . . $1.00
Not in advance ......................
1.60
UtJ-
Go ¡
■M
DAD'S STORY
To/
every night at 8 pm . Sundays:
Sumiay school, 9:46 a.m. Morning
sorvice, 11 ¡0« am . N.Y.I’ .S., 7:00
p.m. Preaching 8:00 p.m
Next week Wvncsday prayer ami
Bible study, M:04> p.m.
You are cordially Invited.
■ -------------------------------------------------- BB
CATHOLIC < III K« II
Rev. J. M O’ Neil, Pastor
■M ------------- ---------------------
IB
Sunday Mass, 7:40 and 9:40.
Weekly Mass, 8:20.
Saturday Confession, 3 6, and
7-8:30.
dB--------------------------------------------------■
Methodist ('hureh
|Rev Bruce B- Groaseclose, |>astor|
-Ml
10:00 a.m. Church school.
11:00 a.m. Morning service.
No evening service.
Everyone welcome,
I---------------------------------------------- "bU
Sf-
Following the sugar making time
caine the time for cutting and
getting in the wood for the sum­
mer. The maple and beech of that
northern clime made fuel which is
Church of Christ
seldom surpassed for quality There
G. W. Springer, mini »tor
I
was no burning of pine, only to
start the fire, nor of hemlock, nor
There will be the régulai ser­
A T re e P e o n y p o rtra it, m ade on a d u ll M ay m o rn in g , at 1/10th secon d
of spruce, nor fir, and not much
vices « t the ChUreh of Christ next
w t h the lens at i.22. A " p o rt ra it a tta c h m e n t” m ade the clo se -u p p o ssib le .
of elm or basswood or linden a.-
Sunday morning. The Sunday school
it is known in other parts o f the
h e ItE are few more tempting
Of course, you'll have to adjuat
begins at 9:45 o’clock and the
world.
There
was cedar
in the
scei
and operate yonr camera according
morning church service at M o'­
swamps but it was used only for
bloom About this time of year stiap- to the light Working in the ahude.
clock. The topic of the morning
fence posts and no one thought of
sermon will be “ Atonement." The
shooters by the thousand are sue- your camera naturally needs a little
gathering it for fire wood.
topic of the evening sermon will
cumbing to garden lure They snap : e*,r» “ me to do Ita work, partlcu-
There came a time when the ma
be. “ There la Joy.”
shoot avidlv, long shots, close ups larly
•• *• " ‘•«—you use a small
pie buds had started sufficiently to
and in-betweens.
And the miracle
opening If your cam-
The young people of the Chris­
give that unpleasant tang to the
tian Endeavor will take charge of
of it all is that so many of them get era's lens has a variable aperture,
sap which is known as “ buddy” .
ranging front f 6 Î down to f.S2. for
the evening service with the ex­
pleasing results.
Then we gathered the buckets and
ception of the sermon.
For. frankly. It's not the easiest ,
,,
hied forth into the woods to cut
............. • .......................................
.
,
like f.32 and an exposure of 1/5 or Vi
thing in the world to get a good secon(1
wood. Perhaps the snow would bo
all gone and perhaps there might
flower picture Flowers are "tern-
(By the way. don't forget that
Oregon Form ers
be spots of the white mantle
.........................
peramental subjects Like some of you'll need a firm aupporl for your
but the ground was not yet quite
Coquille—'Trial plantings of lima
Hollywood s darlings, they make camera when the expoaure time Is
in a condition for the plow Then
hoan* to determine
whether this
good pictures only when the light­ longer than 1/25 of a second.)
we cut wood and got it up to the
crop will do well in Coos county
ing is tailor made to suit their spe­
You will doubtless want to take
house, with ours usually piled up
were established this summer on
cial requirements.
close-ups of some of the flowers. If
outside the kitchen door, but the
the farm of Henry George of C o­
your camera will not focus closer
But
don't
let
me
discourage
you
more provident of the neighbors
quille, in co-operation with County
For. after all. the trick of making than ten feet, or thereabouts, get a
had wood
sheds constructed
in
Agent
George Jenkins.
Successive
portrait
attacbmen.
ta
simple.
Inex-
good flower portraits is not hard to
which they housed their fuel.
planting» were made weekly from
master and. once you ve got It. your I P',n*‘ v« lens that “ ts over the regu-
At the time of
which
i write
June 15 to about the middle of
results will amply repay you for the lar len9> W,,h 11 y°u can **‘ very
the selecting of a specimen to cut
July, to find the proper lime of
extra care Involved.
| close to your subject, for striking
for wood called for quite a keen
planting to have the matured beans
The
first
rule
of
flower
portraiture
and
beautiful
shots,
judgment of what the characteris­
is Avoid harsh lighting
| Here s another trick. To make a
ITr hNo ‘» i o “ neTdry Z '° V#
‘ hey returned. I « I « . , , felt grate-
th" mltWlr
tics of the tree would be when o-
her- No. she never became Mr». fu, to tholI(. , il(t#r„ th„ t th,.y nev of October
By this. I mean that flowers sel- Particular flower or plant stand out
pened up. First the grain must be
Hulett.
she
having
had
the
bad
er told on me for dire would the
doni make good pictures under a vividly, get a big sheet of gray card­
straight so that it would split eas­
faith to get married long before
consequence» have been had Father
direct, midday sun The light be­ board and aland It up back of the
ily. We used only the single bit
I
was
of
age.
But
I
asked
her
t
•
or Mother learned of my truancy
tween ten and three of a summer's flower, far enough away so that—If
axe for both chopping and
plit-
«a it for me. Just what she said
W. L. KELLY
One time a neighbor's wife spie I
day Is so intense that you get an you are using direct sunlight—no
tmg. Nobody used a wedge except­
I
have
forgotten
but
SHE
never
shadows
fall
on
It.
me
and
after
«
week
or
two
told
overabundance of chalky highlights
ing in splitting rails and there wore
let me forget
having asi-td her.
To catch the color values of flow­
on me. Well, there are many things
and Inky shadows To catch the sub­
few of those made for the tim­
Meeting her at a social gathering
ers. you II need to use the new pan-
Agent
I have forgotten and forgiven that
tle
beauty
of
flowers.
It
is
better
to
ber which w'as of such a nature
or
party
with
one
of
the
belles
of
h - — . ' i
I'honr Beaverton 5010.
jj
in my youth, but thn t jj
work under the slanting rays of the « hromalk- film for amateurs. "Fan-
that it would rot in a couple of
the countryside years after when ™ PP
1
M
sun In early morning or late after- i chromatic means the film la capa-
woman never found any warm *l>ot t " ___ ____ ____ ____ ____
years or would last not to exceed
I got to “ going out with the girls"
noon.
ble of recording. In monochrome of
ten years when made into rails for
*he liked nothing better than to "" ."V , ”.'c
c"~ c '
Even
better
flower
pictures
can
eour9“
•“
"
‘de
r»
nKe
of
colors.
Your
a fence. Of course some farmers
get the girl aside, but not so far Pr°
bah,y
<hf,U'rh,
"hP
Hn'" * too.
™
a
kindness
and
mv Wa’
parent»
V W . ‘ »%"»*.,.W»*»*»*»’ .
be made In the shade, on bright pho,,’
* m h“ lp you *elec* *h*
made rails and laid up a fence in
that I couldn't hear the conversa-
I cannot say that she ever awsk-
days, or out in the open on dull
flln‘ for your »P«*
“ «eds.
the regulation snake trail fashion
hut we had few rails on our firm.
dil>'8
*
!
JOHN VAN GUILDER.
W g in g n,1h erP ,Ald».° t o '" " w ^ 'u n T l P" Pd * " y ,0VP 5n my h” rt
It was late in the eighties that
The firewood was cut into stove
he was twenty one and he was go
the Germans began to come in and
ing to marry me!”
lengths in the woods, there being
the brush away a little fling and the atuff would
Alda. »y,„ i
, , .
settle on the land in that neigh-
no one who liked to buck un wood a:
_,, Line»
. -. "v to , clear l,c
ground
and •«
lie —
evenly
her ' rew.ra,
reward. A splendid tea
tewher.
borhood 0t” ' of ,h" fir"1 W8S Matt
nor had they the time when fnr‘-
He
rP™ k* th°a, ^
ia“ A° the
..............
..
» / oer
Geiger
who purehosed
some agri-
m:ng operations
got under way
, ‘
-d remark t a. it was spaced as though he had ineticu- good wife to her hn.land
f .
— ...............
«------ —
Eic-hteen
!» » ...
... .....
.
nard u enough
for him
to draw me
nie j lously
louslv placed
n laced
.ai-h
tiny
morsel f r end end n e tJ ltl.
°
f " e eulural college tend on the opp«
Eighteen,
twenty,
or
tweniy-tw-o
* *or,
hlm ta
morsel friend and neighbor, she surely de- ^ '„U' comer of the section on which
t o r u o i
F
k a
k
ss.A
X
L - c
rn -
inches
w« s the regulation
length
mf ba^k and forth with- ; carefully at accurately
measured serves
the
best
th«r
V»
p , .
* " * '
CI,rnrr 01 lne •wr‘ ‘“ '. on
-
-
-
-
^
out
havmg
brush
for
my
toes
to
distances.
My
efforts
usually
only e.n provide.
P
F,ther homesteaded. He lived there
for the cutting of wood The stoves
, 0„ „ i „ j „ „
k n /coL c
t
—
» l
.if
__L
.
■
*
a 1 _ _
ima
. n l
enaraJ
kilC
f f t nt .
brought forth
guffaws
or _ what
was
...
a long A time
and
reared a big
fam-
there all had fireboxes
two feet * v ^ h a t P ‘
r
'
v . pr,mt‘r; which was thel Uyi »omc of whom " ‘ ill live in
long or longer and the wife 1-ked
,
SOrt
remark ni*-v almost as bad, words of criticism
Authorized Dealer
carried to school to that vicinity. But it is of the old-
to have
a rtick
long enough so nevTr ‘ to o k '“h'ld^nf
Wh° on my endeavors which conveyed c/-*1
that it wonld “ nn* Coll ,_
never took hold of a saw tc run to me the idea that Fathci did not
ÏDKWEY, I ho PUI.MBKR
__' e*erv**
more than t(|^ tKsxt I have the most vivid re
Phone Beaverton 77U
the ashe, on ^ h e hearth” ^ " ’’
‘n h ^
*
he f *llow who has pulled think I was trying to do anything h a p T * ixT'*'page!,’ W
.?v "n oh '
collections. Charley Geiger jailbird, Ü»
except get the manure off the wa-
J . y .Pn,fe*' "•* inches by t _
_
___.
___,
Í
Enter
Your Slogans at our Store
And that reminds me that tks a "d *h° V?f1 at 8 cross-«u‘
rohber,
mail
nine.
The illustration*
wcie all juvenile delinquent
stove, u i
„ „ . l . „
* day i‘ will have a pertinent appli- gon.
TZJ ^
a much differently con- oation If the tool runs true ” nd
line drawings, probably made from and yet a likeable sort after all V / . V . , . V V . V . V / / . V A W / / m W 1
When we first started to haul
wood cuts. The first was a title ________________ ___ _
the modern6^ *
“ l i “ 1 ° ^ in smoothly through the kerf it han-
the fertilizer out Father wa, .1- £ £ ^
the'T gulV r pmfacè 'àn'l
n o l T u n . raT S aT COO,k sL0VeS d1* '
easier
than when the
T e folA d ein tthej m0der" k!tchens'
bends and one side runs tight a very heavy load. "There'* more
f i r ^ T b ttrr8nffed
four
J™
eleVated ° Ven typfc ° ! against the end o f the log
horses balked at the manure pile aînhTh^' ' X
T
<* P » .Roman
mv limited WT . | Unu U? a,nd
Getting ¡n the summer wood vvo.s than in any other place" he al-
the .»"î“ "
th^ni
i • vP5abulary
1 do not closely followed by hauling out the ways contended and in Uuer years . f r,,Hm-« pit* 1." , »"d on
S i n t n1 Tbable 1° attempt the manu^ ' This was thrown out to I learned the truth of the saying.
tH*
',Cnpt
DeF^dP wrn The t 00k stOVe1of that the side of the
barn throughout
Perhaps I am getting
a little * " e c lr"‘ page consisted of one
of not
more than
o7 t?e modemUCk I ^
^
' l * the W,nley inUj a
pile, ¿ome ahead of my story chronologically ¡es8on. words
b»d 1 T d^ Ji kitchen range but times we used a wheel bariuw to for by the time « youngster
is twp, ¡ie“ eri'-
“ I fo up." "He g i
had several differences ever, from run it out
of the stable.
One of
cutting wood, making maple sugar up'
I. *m
i‘ ” These
Tbl ° ° k - l , ° VV „ 0f reCent years' my
regular jobs around the and hauling manure he has usual- are *alr samples of the six or
tb* fn,.i V 1*
difference was that barn was
"cleaning
out stable.” ly been in school for a tei m or *<?ver' or eight sentences
in the
♦bo t v k 3y
0n.
bottom of This was done not so much to two. You will perhaps
notice the ■e-|lson-
Then there came lessons
i ^ e ox, enclosed on four sides savg the manure, though goodness
phrase, “ term or two” . That is just with words of not more than three
n solid iron on the top the stove knows the soil in that sandy sec- what it was.
letters. Just think of the pleas-
sl^,o+an ln i °n^ two. ,d°urs. or tion needed the fertilizing the ma-
As
most
of
the
older
generation
UrP
‘ be young idea must have re
♦ 'i-5 s only ° ne wi‘ b openings nure provided when spread out on
Beaverton Barber Shop
w . k
P E r .i;
and
slides
to
cover
them,
know,
school
in
the
eight.es
was
Pe!Ved
fpam . ,h”'t tyPe of ‘,n,er-
/i
—, ,
------ ’ called the ground. But the idea seemed to
1'tcrature!
K,
There was no open grate be the same then as the farmers little like what we now call by that
C. 4 HTEVENH, PKOI'lt i.TOK
This
especially
to I hardly know for
how long
he bottom and front. If there practice now, get the stuff out of name.
-------
,—
-------* f applies
- r - - ........
.
- I UNDERTAKER AND EMRALMKR
was, by chance, any grate at all the wav So through the long win- | the rural or co «n‘ ry school. True was obliged to read from this prim
SATISFACTION GttARANTEFtD
it was a supplemental arrangement ter the manure pile grew and in 1 «>e Ordinance of 1789 had state,I
My parents thought me a pre-
.........
- - - I L a vert on
placed at the front. The pipe went the spring as soon as the summer ,that
religion, morality and know ' j * 10“ 9, <>h,ld as * ran " ' " “ mber Grange Hull,ling
up from the middle of the back wood was in, the team was nitch-
being necessary to the hap ‘ h«™ bragging on how well I got,
*me of the stove proper.
There ed to the wagon, the regular wa- P}ness
and good government
of aJ°ng in school. If any child got --------------------------------------------------------
may have been or there ma> not gon
box taken off
and planks mankind, schools and the means of
14 nm*1 have been in spite
U A D D D D C II/4 H
have been a “ reservoir” at the back placed in its stead, and then spread- education shall forever be encour- of
character of the material o l U N H J U A j t l i U K M I U I
OPTOMETRY
aged.” And the Congress of the tbe teacher had to work with r e ­
and in that case the pipe usually ing manure began,
FIRST CLASH WORK
Glasses, Kitted or Repaired
ascended in front of it.
Now such operations seem to me united States of Amarica had set ‘ ber than on account of the qual-
Our Specialty
So much
AT REASONABLE PRICES
^he material,
for the stoves
that quite natural, but when I see the aside certain sections of land in
DR. A. K. WILSON
served for cooking- or baking. In man or boy take hold of a fork every township, the proceeds from
The long journey to school was
K. I). Van METER, Prop.
| Beaverton
•>
Oregon
many cases
in the eighties
that and attempt to give the required which were to be used for public always a burden to me.
Though
was *11 the stove there was
in flip that scatters the fertilizer o- schools. Michigan in her Consti- accompanied
by my sisters
two
ne house. But when there was an- ver the greatest surface possible tution had made the fund derived mile* through that forest peopled
Alt Heidelberg Beer
BEER ON DRAUGHT
other for heating purposes it wa* I am reminded that perhaps I war from the sale of this land a re­ with bear, deer, wild cats, and all
On Draught
the box tyPe- The tall, round type a* awkward at my work when volving school
fund.
the income the lesser animals never did ap­
r»C and 10? Glasses
Try us for Chicken Dinners and
emg called “ bar-room stoves"
ano learning as the youth of today is from which is used to hire in­ peal to me, and many’s the time
E xp re s s O f f l c s Klage Depot
Barbecue Sandwiches
?* coar*e had no place in the farm "This is the way to do it,” F'a structor* in various public schools, I hid my dinner pail and strayed Western Union
t-none
Phone n
10805
home.
FREE DANCING
GREYHOUND COFFEE SIIOI
ther would say and taking x grea* each school
district drawing
its off to play not too far from home !
The maple held first place as a gob at the end of his fork give it proportion
OLD HEIDELBERG PARK
Reaverton Oregon
based
on the school so that I could see the girls when Rossi Building
fuel. When dry it burned with an
intense heat, made B fine t e j of
coals which held the fire well and'
M ICKY” AND HIS GANG
By Sam Iger
had more “ body” t0 it than the
urp Miiinrun ...................... Uirr« m '» r ------- -----------— ------------------------------- ----- —
lighter woods. The "body” is equiv­
alent to what is probablj now
known as calories, heat units.
A cord of wood was a pile eight
feet long by four feet high with­
out any regard to the lengtn the
wood was cut in. Two men usml
ly cut the wood.
They
chose a
likely tree, cut it down, measured
it into proper lengths and proceei-
ed to cut it up. It is no snap to
cut wood. If you think it is iust
try ft sometime.
The
regulation
saw used in those times had no
“ raker” teeth, just the pointed teeth
like one sees on a hand saw such
as carpenters use. By the time f
was able to drag one end of the
saw there were raker teeth insert­
ed hut they did not make the tocl
run any easier. Father used to
come over on my aide of the log
T
r
j (Orrium 3 lmirual
a
a
a
¡FAIRBANKS^
M ORSE
W ATER.
SYSTEM S
Business Places To Patronize
IN BEAVERTON!
Spend Your Money in Beaverton