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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1934)
The BMViyfr. Itojgff, FRIDAY. SEPTEMRFR 21. DM4 1 1 — knew w bother they intended to stay i'ou.1 light in front of Jim W ,g * Je,| YVheut lumblilig Ut front uf The Beaverton Review for supper or not when they came, plan' .iii.i III« beat it ton » of ua thè bvum ami huvmg Ih« aled tuli not budge him. Jim over him, and thè way that atecr they were urged to stay and ns it boy» could was only hulf a mile to then .tome aluod in hia yard mat watched u.i tuo* h>* mute and me down thè I S S l ' K D KVERY F R I D A Y A T B E A V E R T O N . OREGON I they could do thoir chores after foe u time and than came out and rumi luwuida boni# fumi a piclurv eating at our home. It was rain- proffered hia aaalatane*. "D o you that wilt rumali! in my mimory , ing. too, and that perhaps had want niv to get him up for you T ’ unti! this old head resta bci.eatn Editor J. H. Hulett l he sod. some influence on their decision to iio inquires!. living aaaured that we wanted I stay. Jed s foot wa* hurt in thè me Ice a ù ilv r e U o a » e c o u U -d u a * lu m i u lu l At the supper the usuai good j nothing else but, he gut a sack that but otherwise there wus no harm i c i l A ' w H u l w i ü , i l ' « , a l It ili lA M W U t C v m u t ^ u i i o i i , o i t ' i u i i , u i u u .'r m e u c l t u things weie placed on the lablej waa partly filled with hay, which dime and that ateur nvver bawkud alai Cu », i»,S*. and l noticed that neither trank we had used as a seat cushion, agam for me, althouah 1 drove him nor Ed took any of the cake or and placing it in front of the I ahout until Esther aold him for a i u a t a a i * i iu .\ u t t l a pie. 1 won.ered at the time why steer'a «yea where the hawky fellow i becf thè next fall. Per year (in advance) . . for 1 knew they liked good tilings lay in the road, Jim held it close Whut surprised me, titoligli, in A Ol U1 4^(1 Y iLllCC ................. | to eat and I sort of noticed their an that the steer could not see for rvgard to him wa* that Kulher, * ■1 "■ — 1 mother look at them meaningly, a time, it seemed minutes to us though not s i i ox teamsler, could ÜL hut dugee that I was. I never tum hut perhaps it might not have been malte that yuko o f steer* xnake » U A .U J5 M U M bled. Glad to get a piece of pie many second*. Then directing one log that they could noi, or would 1 : or a fried cake, I took them when of us boys to hold Ute sack tight not, for me. i£j But that happenad the dish was possed. I noticed Fa whilo clearing butd, and ia another until he gave the directions, and ia « Alias iisiiv-reo may bv ther's look when I took thq second to do what he sakt, Jim got down »tory. l-.V . Y vi y V v u U k i ' sa i L ( jt ü lU ' a i u C | fried cake but did not think much on his hands «nd knees and dir ta. t u n Utitui me putw*ii*.u -ii mat of it. Then it fell to me to carry ected Ute ateer’a head to la« turned .’■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a L ■ t -o .t iju t t tii time it* t'ti at i a the lantern to light our visitors to face towards him Then he hold it )l 01 U llt g :, U n it g l '. i O i 'g O l t l i l , j home. I have almost forgotten hut the boy to jerk the luos awny from # mm nut to iiiitition the "torgoU ou I think that Alma went along. We in front o f the steer's eyes. The ■ Great Newspaper of thè M Xian ' oi the Ute lamented ib> mi T w o picture», of the same subject «nd setting; one mode w ith the lens “ Northwest ■ lighted the latvenders home all animal’s eyes opened with a sort lt-puolicans) piisiueniiiu oiuii^atoU. wide open and the other with the lens d ra stically ‘'»topped down." Note right and without mishap. But the of tlazod look, then as soon us the ■ a ARTHUR Ml'l.IIOI.I.AND T..i lii.ng mat burners me just uow that there it no detail at all In the background of the snap made with wide happenings started when we got P steer seemed to be able to recog open lens, w hile the other show s the distan t bridge ve ry w ell. If it'e detail is that i have forgotleu a Cilia in * Auto Kouta and Agenry E home. Thnt is they started on nle. nise objects, Jim gave a leap on J Be.iverton you w ant, cut down the lens openingl man s m.t.als. Oregonp There hsd not been enough pieces all fours right at the steer’s head. RACTICALLY all cameras, witn ►RACTICALLY with t:\nce. Obviously M l Is a smaller ■ Fur Information 8 j ** i tt goi tiack to my story. The o f pie nor enough fried rakes to Did that fellow forget ull about >t.„ . exception . „ n i h i l nf n extVemelv ■ regarding servire or suhsrrlption*^ the of a a i few extremely opening than f.6.3 or f.1.5. Some Ci. K. » i, t us a name to conjure go around and I had taken a se refusing to go? I’ ll »ay he did. T l ’ Iio iie It e s » e r t o l i V i n i simple models, have some moans of cameras have extremely "fast" *>itn in tile nays of the eighties, cond helping when our little neigh and down the road we went, I 2 I I II,-,. rii , l! || varying the amount of light passing lenses, with f.t or f.2 ratings, but tin nineties, and the first u«e«ne bors ha 1 gone without having cor holding onto the rope around the you're perfectly well off with a lens _ Corner, Seenni) and Hall ■ of uie p n s.n l century. During uie through the lens. Why? rectly interpreted the glances of ... . 1 i a .-„ a 1 « rated at f 6 3. And there are many horns o f the other steer, Ed Lav winter, however, there were many U ell. w hy do you tend to squint In #tho|> ,eMW lhat are entlrely satl their parents. W o unto n»c. Ami did ender aatraadle o f the beam on the a a m i a a a a a w a a a a a a a ? ' ! times when the trains had much hr -it sunlight. Simply because (aftory for snapshooting despite they “ proceet to give me a !“ sson sled, and Jed Wheat, who had come difficulty in getting through the there is so much light in the open thetr ,ow c iassttlcation. in manners!’’ Father hadn’t even to play with us rolling o ff in front snow. Floods or other tenestial sun that, unless you squint, your j Familiarise yourself with the varl- gone out to do the nightly chores, of (he sled beam and getting hanged disturbances had no terrors for the eyes rannot distinguish details; in ous openings ("lens stops." if you but sat there near the taMe wait up quite considerably an I Will and dweller in the northern part of the the d rk your eyes distend in order j want to be technical about It). Many ing mv return. I ran'* tell ail the Johnnie Taylor laughing fit to split lower peninsula of Michigan, but to take advantage of every available j cameras have built-in exposure Information I received hut part of their sides! the snow! 0 gee gosh! rav of light. ! guides which indicate the proper It includr» a statement o f mv oar Jim kneeling down in the snow, Cameras anil eyes are much alike, opening for various light conditions. It must have been in the early enta’ humiliation And «a s mv face Unless you control the amount of | Cut you will almost automatically eighties that Mother took her trip red? I’ll het vou could have rea 1 the boys standing aroun 1 waiting. | light entering the camera lens, you set your lens properly if you let your back to her old home. It was in things on o'her nsrt* of mv ana the withdrawing o f the blindfold | from before the steer’s eyes. I jiv - w ill almost certainly overexpose eves be your guide. If you find your- the winter, and returning from the tomy for a spell following that in shots made In bright daylight and self squinting, stop the lens down; ender sitting astride that sled beam 1 train that was to bear her east. cident. Dr. Mile« underexpose when the light is low, if your eyes open wide, without a with a «cared look In his eyes. Father remarked that he had for Frank died soon after that oc Get out your camera and look at sensation of glare, use a larger stop. NEK VINE gotten to tell Mother one thing, currence. Some aort of fever took Its lens. If yours Is a simple box cam Stopping down a lens has another that she should always ride in the Did the work* era. you will find that the lens open consequence. It Increases the sharp him. probably typhoid for thal wi< hind coach of the train for there says ing. or diaphragm, has two possible ness of the image and deepens the ever present in that vicinity. But was less danger there. On our in settings, one for average shots and [ field of focus. But, you say, how can he was my playmate, and friend, Mixi Glivar quiry as to why there was less one for use when the light Is very I do this if the light Isn't very bright? and there I met Death face to WHY DON'T danger in one coach than another brilliant. In certain other cameras Simply by increasing the lime of the face for the first time. I had been he went on to explain that rush diaphragm settings are arbitrarily exposure. YOU to funerals lota of times. There numbered from 1 to 4, giving you ing ahead at such a tremendous It is the canny juggling of lens TRY ITT being no undertakers in that earlv that many opportunities to adapt openings and exposure times that speed, the engine would be the day, father often acted as pall After more than three months your snapshooting to light condi marks the experienced snapshooter. first to encounttr difficulty- if a hearer and mother sat no with the of suflering from a nervous ail tions. set/A- But don't let it bother you. If It bridge had gone out the engine corpse frequently Fd Wall always ment, Mias Gllvnr user! Dr Milaa The best known system of di seems a little confusing. Set your would light at the bottom of the took charge of direction of the Nervine which gave her such aphragm control Is the " f system, camera at about f.S and l/25th— pile and each succeeding car would burial; it seemed that he must have splendid results tiuit she wrote used on more advanced cameras. In and blaze away. Chances are you'll pile on top of the heap until the been experieoend when coming in us an enthusiastic letter. this system "f" represents the ratio get the picture, and that is the im- last car would have less distance to that country, hut I never Vr.cw If you suffer from "Nrn<es.m between the lens opening and the portant thing. If you're using modern to fall. He went on to tell that In I can’t remember what Frank’s If yru lie awake nights, distance from the lens to the film j film, it will automatically take care running into an obstruction the start at sudden noises, tire coffin looked like, nor where he When some one says that he took a 1 of a lot of variation from scientific UN *i engine would always contact the easily, are cranky, blue and picture at f.ll, he means that his accuracy in exposure. Happy hunt- was hurled, hut I can remember fidgety, your nerves are obstacle first and it would be most lens was adjusted so that Its open - 1 ing! being surprised crying several time« probably out of order. affected while each car towards the ing was l/llt h of the lens-to-fllm dis- [ JOHN VAN GUILDER immediately following the funeral, %}uiet and relax them with the rear would be in less danger than PORTLAND,OREGON and having mv ingenuity taxed to smile medicine that “did th« the preceding carriage. Probably that the limit to find some exeme of O c t o b e r 6 to 13 w ork" for this Colorado girL train travelled as fast as 20 miles s.ie of the seat in such a fashion sons are now living in southern whv there were tears in mv eves. 19 S h o w s in O n * — I I ocr«« u n d «r on« that the legs croosed about half California, but I never saw' any of Whether your "Nerves” have per hour! T believe the reason that I remem ■ roof E xh tb ift of p u r« b rad l«v«»rock. troubled you for hours or for Railroad smash-ups have been way up to the s'-at from the floor, the three. her nothing of the funeral >n tha* Dog«, P o u ltry, Pat Stock W ild l i f « , la n d years, you’ll find this time- I have seen hia wife, Mother’s his disease was pronounced conta out of my line mostly. However, the two narrow strips forming the Products, M a n u fa c tu re d Products 4 H testod remedy effective. back chair legs and the two legs youngest own sister, several times, C lu b an d Sm ith H u g h « « V o ca tio n a l Edu when Mother was to return fiom gious an-4 that there wss no pub At Drug Stores 25c and $1.00. catio n W o rk , C o m b in a tio n H o rt« Show the east she was ex.pec.ed on a at the end of the wide board but neither her features nor her 1?C funeral. a n d In d o o r Rodeo OR. MILES forming the front legs of the chair. behaviour made any such an im train through Kingsley one evening. “ Oh. call mv brother hack to me, The telegraph operator tn’ u us at This made a very serviceable high pression on me. Uncle will would L X R G I P R E MI U M LISTS I cannot play alone; » the depot that her train would not chair and was in the family many sit by the hour with us youngsters The summer comes with flower R ES- ALL LINFS L IQ U ID years. and spin yards and yards of yarns get in until the next day. We went and bee. of rogues and knaves, of thieves I could go on and tell you of home and then again to Kingsley Where is my brother gone?" the next day. Finally an engine many other conveniences and things and pirates, of robbers and demons Many a night I repeated that with a snow plow came down the Uncle W.ll fixed for Mother and j until the cat creeping slily across couplet, from my school reader at track from the south, but it had ut kids but I have made such a I the bedroom after we went reluc the time, when getting into my only the snow plow and a caboose, j bu..gle of telling you o f sje'n a tantly to bed would cause the cold bed, and then I would cry until It stopped at the Kingsley depot simple thing as that high chair shivers to run up and down where I fell asleep. But boylike, I never and then attempted to go on to that I just haven’t the hear! to our spine should have been. expressed my grief nor do I be Traverse City, the end of the line. inflict any more exposition on my Orin, John, and Will were Old lieve that to this day that any The clear track at the depot gave readers at this time. In passing Frank’s sons. Orin in some way got of my people know of my loneli the engine a chance to gather speed I’ll just mention a clothes horse, a deed to the northwest quarter of ness and suffering. and away they went probably some an ironing board, numerous shelves Old Frank's homestead and built Will I-avender had made a min 250 yards to where the north end put up in different parts of the h m a little story and a half cot iature ox yoke for each of his o f the switch was about there the house, fitting and hanging the tage o f the regulation size. 16 feet hoys to use on their pair of calves. plow jumped the track, stuck its stairway and other doors, making by 24. But he did not live there Following Frank’s death his fath nose down over a bank and prac a wooden sink awl a wood box. I and a family by the name of la v er gave me his yoke and the limes tically stood on end. The engine could go on just enumerating the ender moved in. Will, Mary, and that I had with it beggar des pushing it was so badly disabled things ‘ hat Uncle Will’s, to us, their two sons Ed and Frank. cription. T do not remember what Beaverton Barber Shop W. R. PKGG (I believe it was a broken con magiv hands, conjured from the These boys lived only half a mile became of Frank’s yoke of calves necting or possibly a tie rod; that plain boards that lay profusely a- away and were the nearest to C. J. STKVKNH, r it o i'lt ' ; ; r o ll but Eddie still bad bis and he and it could not proceed. The whole rourtd the place, great wide, cork being playmates for me that I I had many lively times together UNDERTAKER AND KMMAI.MKK population of the town we^e look pine, 20 to 30 inches wide and ever had. For several years we until It became quite the fashion .S A T IS F A C T IO N G U A R A N T E E D quite inseparable though I in that part for every hov to yoke G ra n g e II,ill,H i,g - - . . . . llo a t e r lo n ing at the wreck when a smoke wider, but like Bridget and the were was reported to the south and we elephant, "You wouldn’t believe it went to the Blackman school and up a pair of calves and take trios they to the Matchett school be around the country with them. We ----------------------------------------------------- --- I ran back to the depot to meet the if I told You.” cause we lived, I on the one side never got more than five or sir train that was bringing Mother It was the dead of winter when from the east. With her came Un he came. It was spring when he and the others on the other side miles away from home with our STUDIO BARBER SHOP cle Will Newcomb, Mother’s young left, but he only stayed to see us o f the town line between Paradise teams for w<!' w e e required to be OPTOMETRY FIRST CLASS WORK est sister’s husband. I think he was get the sap buckets out and dis and Mayfield townships. (• lasse», Filled or Repaired at home every night, or at. lca»t AT RE ABONARLE PRICES the first of Mother’ s relatives that tributed Dur .Specialty One incident stands out In my not allmwed to stav out with our before taking the train DK A. K. WILSON I had seen. mind just now. They all were to K. II. Van METER, Prop. miniature oxen when on a trip ‘‘back to York state." Though ne lifu v rrton Oregon He had been injured, or had been just made that short stay with os, our place for supper. Mother was with them. sick or something and was not and I never saw him again. I’ll a good cook and usually had e- The yoke Mr. Lavender gave me supposed to be able to do much nough to go around or cookies or was of cedar and very light so All lleidellierg licer BEER ON DRAUGHT never forget him nor the many work. But he busied himself work fried cakes or pie or perhaps she that calves of various sizes could On Draught things he did to help us. A gentle 5< and lOtf Glasses would open up a jU8r 0f f rllit whr„ be used to hitch up and drive. ing on the house, which never has Try u* for Chicken Dinner» and E x p ro * « O f fic e S ta g e D ep ot been completely finished to this man and Christian if ever there company happened in. Put this time One time I got a hawky calf hitch- Barbecue Sandwiches Pluma io«o.r> day hut into which our folks moved was one though I never heard that the vMtors had come in late in ' ed up with one that would go a- Western r n i<,n GREYHOUND COFFEE SHOE FURR DANCING when there was barely the sheath he belonged to any church. His j the afternoon and though I never long all right. He lay down in the Roani B u ild in g R en vertn n O re g o n OLD HRIDELRKRG BARK log. the down stairs floor ani the ahingle« In place. Yes, it was sort o f cold to live in in the winter AFTER THE HONEYMOON hut it was thought in those days By Geoff Haye« that exposure made one hardy and healthy and tough. [ G o s h - i ' ll h a v e t o One of the things that Uncle WAIT H E R E LIKE NICE ( H A - H A ( TH A T jR M B W [ G E T n i D OF T H E S E Will built was a high chair for LITTLE GIRLS WHILE I T S N IP E S S O M E H O W my younger sister, Laura. He took GO IN HERE AND GET a board about a foot wide and YOU SOME C A N D Y a little more than three feet long and sewed a long “ v-shaped” por tion out of one end so that he had two left out of one end of the board. Then he fitted the seat by taking a short length of board the same width of the first one but short, maybe a foot long and cutting the end on a miter, it made a little greater than a right angle with the solid end of the longer board and a little less than a right angle with the leg end of the bigger board. Then two narrow strips were nailed on the sides, slanting backward from the front ■ (Ehr (Orriumiatt P LIVESTOCK EXPOSITION 5 fia „„ UT- ti HORSE SHOW R O D EO ERVINE Business Places To Patronize lit BEAVERTON! Spend Your Money in Beaverton ; 1