The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, December 21, 1934, Image 2

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    The Beaverton Revlei
FRIDAY. DECEMBER 21. 1934
The Beaverton Review
Making The Home More Livable
I U S D E V E R Y F R ID A Y A T U E A -
VERTON, OREGON
J. H. Hulett
The Co meet Living Room Tabic Lamp Docs 1 (s Share
Editor
Entered as second-class mall mat­
ter December 9. 1922, at the postoffice
at Beaverton, Oregon, under the act of
March 8, 1879.
s u b s c r ip t io n
rates
Per year (in advance) . . . .
Not in advance .......................
$1.00
1.50
DAD'S STORY
-w
The conference meeting through a: (
last,
" |
We boys around the entry waited
To see the girls come tripping past
Like snowbirds,
willing
to be
mated.
Not braver, he who leaps the wall
Beside the levelled musket flashes
litten
Than 1, who stepped before them
all
Who to ile d to see me get the
mitten.
V
r
'* < * _ * .-
‘
: : : : ! ‘ ^ H P-rii"': ' '
But no, she blushed and took my
arm.
W e let the old folks
have the
highway
And started towards the Mapl* farm
A long a kind o f lovers' by.w ay
I can’t remember what we said.
T w as nothing
worthy
song or
story
But that rude path
by which we
sped
Seemed all transformed and in a
g lo r y ...................
• ■
By Jean Prentice
ISN ’T that husband or wife is
I T selti-h—but
sometimes when they
'
>;;ySH iH iy
v
'1
softness of the light, so necessary to
easy seeing. Too many table lamps
are so small that at best they are only
ornamental, and entirely inadequate
for the major task of properly lighting
two chairs. The lamp needed here, as
illustrate 1 ab ve, should have several
sockets since the spread of light is thus
greater and the actual amount of light
to the page is usually more. If there
arc two ie.kets they should hold 60
or '3-watt bulbs.
Particularly good for the table is
t ne of the Better Sight Study and
Kcaditq Lamps, manufactured by
many concerns in a wide variety of
styles and bearing a tag of approval
showing they have been built according
to the wi e specifications of the Illumi­
nating Engineering Society, national
lighting group.
Scientists have designed its lamp
standard and 'hade of correct height
and spread. The shade is white-lined,
thus eivnonucally reflecting more light.
A glass bowl holding a 100-watt bulb
distributes soft and glarcless light up
and down.
Golden hours of reading beside a
table have a good companion in a well-
designed lamp like this one 1
with a pick and then thrown up as
high as possible
ami
from there
relayed to tbv surface. I worked in
tlw bottom o f that ditch until 1
thought every muscle ill my body
would crack apart. Peck, peck, ami
then hoist that black muck as high
as 1 could heave it. I’m glad there
arc only sixty minutes in an horn
and that the day is only 12 hours
1- Df
When I got on the train at O
hio City. 1 hardly knew when« I
was Komg hut I soon got o fi and
determined to stay in that pluce u
little longer. It must have bout in
\ an Wert I disembarked for | found
out there was a recruiting station
in Columbus, Ohio.
From my informant I
learned
tnat 1 had to have references if l
wanted to got into the United States
Army. No one knew me there where
1 was and my closest acquaintance*
were at Allendale, west o f Grand
Rapid*, in Alicgan County, Mich­
igan. Through sons' means. I have
R invest forgotten
hew,
but some
way I got north as far as the junc­
tion o f the C. J. & M., the rail­
road I wwa favoring with my ;ui_
troi age just then, with the Grand
Rapids \ Indiana. 1 guess I must
have ridden the bumpers. 1 really
do not kn w.
I had little n oney,
and was stopping and working a
little along, as I got a chance and
boarding it out.
One day walking along the rail
road
I saw some fellows
hauling
manure. I bumped the boss for a
job.
It was just about dark.
ll<
took me on and 1 stayed there for
supper and breakfast. There was no
one about,
no task had been as
signed me and I made up my inmd
that mine
hoot was a philnnthro.
pist and had just taken me in an.:
kept me for the night out of the
go< d n e « o f his heart! I donned my
oid gray overcoat amt started dow.
the track. A fter getting some rods
away I beard footsteps back * f me
and turning around found inv 1st
host and his son pursuing me. a c­
companied by a rifle
that koked
big enough to knock the sire out
o f a barn Boy, but my knee* shook.
No use running and I stopped. A f
ter reading a long list o f cxple-
t.ves he had at his tongue’* Up.
my late host informed me that I
had tried that (running awny) on
the wrong party, that 1 should ac­
company him back and get to work
pitching manure. (H e had the team
out all ready to go to work when
we got back. It must have (wen
ready when he left but I bad not
seen it.)
I went to wr«rk all right but that
afternoon it rained
too hard
for
the edd fellow to work out !n. There
was nothing t o do but lay around,
he answtred
my inquiry,
and 1
told 1 im that I preferred moving
along
He asked me, did he ow.>
me anything. Not a sou, or if
did he could keep the next bum that
Cf me along
and not
chase them
down
the road because
they had
no* wanted to wait around idle. I
felt very virtuous over t s at reply.
I got to my Uncle Albin’? at AL
lendale and stayed there a few days.
He readily signed .-,ome recommen-
d at'ors I had written out and with
them
in my pocket
I star ten to
Colcmbus, Ohio,
to enli it
in the
A rm ;. I ’ll tell you about that n a t
wr ek.
(j
of »aid day, at the K«»»t door,
tlie front door o f the Court
LOCAL NEWS
House in Washington County O re.
- ■
i« gun, proceed u> sell at public auc­
Mrs. liuhlu King
of
Cortland tion to the highest bidder f-v cash
»1 «lit
thiw week at the boms of ill hand, ami according to law, the
Mr. and Mr» II. IF. Waite.
following deocnlMsi |Ntr»xds t f fo il
situate
in
Washington
Mr*. J. F. Felaher attended tn- property,
luncheon and Christina* party
of County, State o f Oregon, t‘> w 't;
Portions
of tli«' South half
Lie Associate Matrons o f the O.E.8.
( S i t ) o f Sociion Seven (7) ami
o f Cortland and vicinity
al tlu­
of
the
Northwest
quarter
ll» atbman h o ld In Cortland, Sut-
m oay.
(N W 1» ) and o f the Ka»t half
(E H ) o f Section Eighteen (IH),
Mrs. C. C. I each, Mis* Katharine
Township O ne ( 1 ) South, Kuna'-
und C-orl Curtis J,r. arrived from
Two (21 West o f the Willam­
Omaha, Neb., Tuesday to visit with
ette Meridian, |>erticularly de-
relatives
ami friends
in Oregon
scribed *»:
City, Cortland and Beaverton dur
Commencing at a |>olnt 3.84
m g the holiday*. Mr. Reach will
chains East
o f the Southeast
Jo n his fam ily Sunday.
Corner o f the Sigler Donation
lutnd Claim
No. 42
>n aid
-Sectiona, Township ami K.tngc
NOTICE OK SIIKUIFK’S SALE
for a place of beginning, and
UPON FOR ISC LOS IK E
running thence West 8.84 chains
NOTICE
IS 1IKRE U Y GIVEN
to thv Southeast corner o f said
that by virtue o f an execution, «1*.
Sigler Donation
l,an<l
Claim,
ere* and order o f sale issued out
thence North and along the East
of the Circuit Court at the State
line
o f said Sialer
Donation
of Oregon, for Washington County,
(.and Claim, a distance o f 40
on the 11th day o f December, 1931,
chains, m or» or less, to the South
in a cause therein itomiing where­
line of Ivan Konigati land to cast
in The California Joint Stock I .and
window weight, thence North 81*
liank of San Francisco, a corpora
85' West 20.14 feet more or less
tion, is plaintiff,
ami Joseph C
to the center
o f the Tualatin
Hare (sometimes known as J. C.
River, thence
down said rivet
H are), Elinor G. Hare, William H.
tracing the center line thereof
Hare (also known as W. B. B are),
to a point
in the
Northeast
Edna A Hare, Commercial National
quarter o f the Southimst quar.
Bunk o f Hillsboro, Oregon E. L.
ter o f said
Section
Eighteen
Johnson,
Trustee,
E. L. Johnson,
(18), due South o f the place
Etta L. Johnson, Glenn II H gelow,
o f beginning, thence North 30.61
Vernal Bigelow, Lloyd E. Bigelow.
chains to the place of beginning
Eita Bigelow, Margaret Ruth Link
and
containing
832.27
acre*
later, Francis W
Linklatcr. M sr.
more or less; together with all
garet
l.inklater, Samuel
Edward
and singular the privileges, ap­
Linklatcr,
Ethel IJnklater Frank­
purtenances, tenements, heredit.
lin, Donald Franklin, Kenneth A.
amenta, «siscmenU a»d rights of
Linklatcr, Kenneth A. Covcll. Ken
way thereunto belonging or us­
neth A. Coveil, Jr., Thoma* Kdwar
ually enjoyed with said premis­
Covtsll,
Kenneth A. Linklatei
a
es or any part thereof, and the
Administrator o f the Estate of Dor
leveraion or reveraions, remain­
othy
Linklatcr
Covell, deceased,
der and remainders, rents, is.
Kenneth
A. Linklatcr as Guardian
auas ami profits thereof;
of the persons ami estate o f Ken
AND ALSO all the estate,
neth A. Coveil, Jr., ami Thoma
right, title ami interest, home
Edward Covell, Minors, Kenneth A
stead or other claim or demand,
I. inklater as Executor o f the la»«’
aa well
in law
as in equity,
W ill ami Testament and o f the Es
which the m ortgagors had Au­
tate o f Zula W. Linklatcr, de eas I
gust 2, 1920, or thereafter ac
J. K llattrick ami I.aura llattriek.
quired, of, in, or to the said
are
defendants,
in favor
of tin
premises or any part thereof.
Plaintiffs and against the D efen.
Ami also together
w'th all
dants, to me directed ami deliver« t
other rights o f every kind *nd
and commanding me to make sale
nature, however evidenced,
to
o f the real property hereinafter de­
the use o f water, ditches and
scribed,
in order to satisfy
th
canala
for
the irrigation
of
<um o f $15.727.77, with
interest
said premises to which the m ort.
thereon at the rate o f six | ht cent
gagors
o f said prrm*ae* had
per annum from the 15th day of
August 2, 1920, or thereafter
April,
1933; < and
interest
a'
became »»»titled, ami al»o to­
the rate o f eight
per cent
per
gether with all shares of stock
ar.num on $230.75 from the 15th
or otherwise
attache»! to said
day o f October, 1933; and interest
land
for the benefit thereof,
nn the further sum o f $230.75 at
then owned or thereafter acqulr.
the rate o f eight per cent per an
ed by »aid mortgagors.
num from the 16th day c f April.
A rd said sale made subject to re­
1934;
and
the
further
sum c f
demption
as per statute
o f the
$704.78 paid
out by plaintiff
»*
State o f Oregon
taxes, with Interest thereon at the
Dated the 13th day o f December,
rate o f eight per cent per annum
1934.
from June 20th, 1934; and the fur
J W. Connell, Sheriff o f W’ ash-
ther sum o f $1000.00 as attorney’s
fees; and also the costs an»1 ex­ irgton County, Oregon. By Richard
Poach, Deputy.
penses o f said sale, I will, en Sat
Frmncia E. Sturgis, A ttorn iy for
u’-iiay,
the 12th day
of January.
adv c2-6
1935, at the hoar o f ten o’clcck A. Plaintiff.
i « i
M.
U'lng
settle down in their cliairs beside the
When I get to thinking o f the
living room table for an hour or so of
good
old times,
of
the singing
reading, one or the other unconscious­
school and the debating clubs, the
ly reaches out to pull the lamp closer.
ponderous discussions o f such mter-
And their mate is left out in the
dark!
csting questions as: "Resolved thar
We'll have to blame the lamp. For
there Ys more pleasure in anticipa­
that doesn't happen to the persons who
tion than in participation,” or “ Re­
inhabit the living room sketched above.
solved that Washington did mors
When the two chairs are occupied, and
fo r this country in
defending it
books or newspapers are opened, this
than Columbus did in discovering
lamp is as kind to the eyes of the one
it” , and then
“ Resolved that the
as to the other’s, and serves each
reader equally well. It “stays put” in
en is mightier than the sword” .
the center of the table.
A ll the training
I ever
got m
I wonder if the lamp on your living
getting along
with my
fellows
room table has the Rood traits of this
seems bo have been rceived in that
one ? Your tape measure or ruler will
sort o f organization.
help tell you. Height of this lamp is
For they were highly organized.
from 23 to 26 inches and the bottom
Constitution and by-laws, regularly
diameter of the shade (which, by the
way, is of course open at the top) is
elected officers, form al discussions,
between 16 and 18.
presentation o f the drama, or per­
And how important are the height
haps o f comedy or of tragedy made
of the standard and the width of the
up the programs. Judges wert du_
shade, ;ay lighting scientists! Upon
1> appointed
and
deliberated as
them depend the proper spread and
solemnly as ever did jurist on the
supreme court bench.
But o f course, to the young fo lk s 1
Knapp’s sister, Clarissa, I think i did. But not much.
there was the attraction o f com ­
mentioned. But though C laris's was
One evening I took Clipper to a
pany home. O f course I ca r only the brightest, most easy to learn
social
o f some sort at George T ay­
speak fo r my own experience bu* c f any o f the Kiris in -the commun­
lor's place. Clarissa, who was a
it seems that the young folks took
ity, she was quickly forgotten by niece
o f Mrs. Taylor was there.
life much more seriously than the me
when under
the influence o f And it was
scandalous
the way
present
generation.
We
perhaps
Lottie, who even though young had Clipper
amd
Clarissa
performed.
went into company sooner but the grown up in the city and knew the
C. pper teased Clarissa because she
company was o f those with whom way to make g o o -g o o eyes and a t.
we were acquainted. Often the coun. tract the attention o f any male. thought she had come with Claris­
sa’s beau. And though Clarissa had
t r j school teacher took an active W ell, I took Lottie to parties, and
refused to g o anywhere with me
part in the community affairs.
to dances, fo r she forgot her reli­ since I had returned from Old M is­
Phillip Rose was teaching in the gion when she got out on the farm. sion. Still she could not let Clip-
H atchett school
that winter.
He For several months we played a. pc>- g e t away with the thought
was walking along with me and round, but the time came when she tnat she, Clipper, was putting any­
a party o f young folks when the must return to her City home. Of thing over on her, Clarissa. Th<
subject o f music was mentioned. I course, I went to see her but soon upshot o f the matter wa> that I
stated that I had a fiddle an 1 was found that I was only playing third took Clarissa home
that evening,
trying to learn it. Something Phil­ nr fourth fiddle to the accomplished and we were close friends for years
lip said intimated
that
he knew city girl.
NOTICE
after that. Clipper went home with
something o f tht instrument. I ask­
Beaverton I.odge
That fall I left home an-* tried W ill Hill, and later she married him
ed him if he had one, and he sail to get work in the city, but coulJj but soon
No. 252 I. 0 . O. F.
divorced
him.
It was
hr did but that he had given up find nothing.
. — r r. meets every M'»n.
A t Old Mission
1 Clarissa who talked me out o f tak­
~
day evening at 8
learning as he had come to the con. got a jo b picking and sorting ap­ ing
the phonograph out to give
elusion that he never could become ples on the old Ellis place. Ber. ccncerts writh it.
p m. in their Hail. L. J. Foster,
a master perform er.
The
remark Ellis had a saloon in Traverse City,1
Secretary,
J. H.
Hukstt,
Noble
Things were
not
at ail to my
someway brought out the
asser­ on Front street near the cer.'er o f |
taste
that
fail at home,
.-toon I Grand.
tion that I never expected to be­ t ;,e town and he hired several boys i
found myself on the way south and
come a .master
at anything,
but to go out to his farm to work. 1'
fo r a time I worked husking corn
Beaverton Rebekah
that I could learn the rudiments of picked and sorted apples until some .n Van Wert county, Ohio.
Beaverton Barber Shop
Jus
Lodge No. 248 meets
anything to which I set my hand. time in November. The apples were
w . K. PEGG
the first and third
south o f there lay Mercer County
B is scoff
at the remark
a'way- all taken care o f and I had noth­
Tuesday evenings at
C. .1. STEVENS, PROPRIETOR
and at Rockford, my sister, Lucy,
stayed in my mind, but yo’ i car. ing to do. Also, what perhaps meant was living. She and her husband
8 P M In the I.O.O.F. UNDERTAKER AND EMRALMER
see the difference now betweer us. more to me Lottie had given me
hal l . Mrs. S a r a h
had sold their farm and weie liv­
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Chamberlain, secre-
lie the editor
o f an international to understand that while she might
ing at the edge o f the villege. 1
Mrs.
Rose
Stevens, Grange B u ild in g .................Beaverton
magazine, I the editor o f a village p'ay around
with country
boys went there after the corn was busk,
p-tf
newspaper known to a very limited while summer-resorting on the fartr.
ed and James, her husband, soon
clientelle. Phillip’s magazine
get- she had no time for country hicks
W .V W J W k V Y V W W U W Ä V
gave me to understand that it was
thousands o f dollars a page for its when she could get lots o f a com-
all right for me to come for a vis­
STUDIO BARBER SHOP
advertising, ithe lifeblood
o f any r'ished city beaus.
it, but he was not keeping
a re­
OPTOMETRY
- Grain - Feed;
publication, while I can hardly sell
Youth does not take things too treat fo r idle relatives. He took me
FIRST CLASS WORK
Glass«*, Fitted or Repaired
a page a week fo r a $25 bill. Phil, hard and I went home and tried to
to Ohio C ity one cold morph g and
Our Specialty
lip knew he wanted the best. I was go with Clarissa. But she would
AT REASONABLE PRICES
there I took the train, I did not
Rolling, Grinding
DR. A. E. WILSON
content with
just what came my not listen. However, Emma Bowers,
E. 1». Van M ETER, Prop.
know where to. While at Rockford
Beaverton
Oregon
way.
Cl pper, we called her, lived just a I had worked a little as a laborer
Cleaning
I think I’ve spoken o f Dolly Wall. little east and across the road from helping put in a water system.
Alt Heidelberg Beer
She told me one time
that I was our home and she was glad to go
BEER ON DRAUGHT
I think
I’ll never
forget
the
BEAVERTON FEED Co.
On Draught
smarter than Phillip. I believe she out with me. 1 did not take too
work
on that
pipe
line. Places
Berthold Building
meant it and I probably
at that kindly to Clipper but any port in r. |
Try us for Chicken Dinners and
5
f
and
lOf
Glasses
where it seemed we must be dig.
Near 8. C. Depot
time could have learned witn less siorm and I was definitely in bad,
Bnrhecue Sandwiches
Express Office Stage Do pot
g ng a ditch
ten feet under the
Chas. Berthold, Mgr.
Western Union
Phone 10605
effort than Phillip would have been having been thrown over by a city
surface o f the ground. The ground
DANCING
Beaverton, Chone 3603
GREYHOUND COFFEE SHOP
obliged ito exert.
But what
are girl, and in the minds o f my as«o_
OLD HEIDELBERG PARK
Roasi Building
Beaverton Oregon
those words o f W hittier’s, “ O f all dates, due to learn something. I was hard, had to be pulled apart
SV W M V W W M M A M M M
aaJ words of tongue or pen, the
saddest are these, ‘It might hav-
been!” ’
AFTER THE HONEYMOON
By Geoff H ayn
The next summer
after
Phillip
taught school
at Matchett’ s
and
from the back part o f the room di-
IT NO KlDOIN POP
[W t P it ' s s c x -
I T H I N K I'VE
' l KNEY1 ( T - 0 0 0 - O O N F m !
Teited the activities o f ‘ ‘The Met.
OOT S 0 M F
[A P P E A L .P O P .^
IIrNHAT IS I T 7
SAY, IF s t x -
M Y F t E T A RE FULL
chett
School
Debating
S o cie ty ’
IT 'S SOMETHING
APPEAL F1U2.
O F \ T .T F 1 0 d a m e s
T H A T MAKES T h F
there came to live with us at the
M ONEY. Y O U ’ D
FGTLL OW T H E M T O -D A Y
farm a girl by the name of Lottie
0
F AM A R T I S T
Hodge. Father had served on jury
duty during the winter and for eve­
ning diversion attended
the meet­
ings o f the Salvation Army. One of
the converts was
Lottie
Hodge.
How she cam e to know my Aunt
Millie who lived ithen in Traverse
City,
I never knew.
Put
Millie !
wanted a hired
girl
and Lottie
came to work fo r her. She was
taken sick there and people thought
»1« was going
into
“ Quick Con­
sumption.” She came to our home
on the farm to live. Just about my
age and fu ll o f life and fun when
feeling herself, she fascinated me.
I
had been
sweet
on
Justus
Business Places To Patronize
IN BEAVERTON!
Spend Your Money in Beaverton
ran