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FRID AY, JA N U A R Y The Beaverton Review 4. 1931 The Beaverton Review SNAPSHOT CUILI E U L 'G D E V E R Y F R I D A Y A T B E A VERTON , OREGON J. H. Hulett UNUSUAL ANGLES ' Editor Entered as second-class mall mat- , ter December 9, 1932, at the postoffice at Beaverton, Oregon, under the act of March 8, 1879. * v\\ — V| S lB M l u n i O N RATES P m year tin advance) . . . . fl.0 0 1.60 Not in advance ....................... D A D S STORY w e K for I was* »handing rather unnecessarily clow to her when the picture was taken The next spring I took the county teacher*' exain- iration (a secuaut attempt) and got through I had no idea at the tint* c f making any u*e o f the docu. ment. W n just sort of drifting a long and went to the exan)'nath>n because t'la ri*.» Knapp was going. She did not quite make it. Hut in June she gut through. She got a school oarly that fall ami went to teaching early in September. It tickled me to take her to her board mg place on Sunday night and than bring her home Friday aft©, school. There wore a lot o f big girls at tending and not any young man anywhere near my calibre It m i Jones who brought word to me that over in the Rridaon district they wanted a teacher. He would give me a recommendation and thought I might land the job. I took his credentials and visited Dick H idson, the director, f ather of Jennie BrnUon who was attending Butekman school and with whom I had become rather friendly. She got word o f what wa* going on, 4>nd told her father to hire me. He did. For that two month* o f school I got >40. Twenty dollars a n onth, a dollar a day fo r the time I was in school I boarded at the Hridaoii home, a fog shack. There were eight children including Jennie, who for sook the Blackman arfcool and went to school to me. I think it was 61.60 per week I paid than for board, counting twenty one meals as a week. Then» I saved m. ney! The boa id gave me very high recommendations when the two months were over, hut thought I was too strict, that I exacted too close attention to discipline. Per. haps I did but for one thii^; D irec tor Bridson had a boy who never _ had obeyed the teacher ami he and I had a set to before I was there long. But Dick never said a word about my cu ffing his boy to s peak and then knocking the peak off. Perhaps that hail nothing to do with my not getting the school for the spring term. There were plen. ty o f other things that might have beer, the reason but I alw iys hoped ht did not know about the other things, and publicly charged my failure bo he retained to my mak- .ng the director’s boy mi mi the tcacher. With what I saved at that term of school I got the only high school ___ Uj M. of »aid day, at th* blast door, I I being tho front door o f the Court I I House in Washington County O r«. ® Bon, proceed to »ell at fllU ll n u Basketball games continued a>t ttun to the highest bidder f<v cash U .'IS . through the holiday*. in hand, and according to law, tho December g l, Beaverton's first following divM-nbcd parcels of real team lint to Vernonia's first team pro|u>rty, situate in Washington The atvond team was eic'uriou* County, .Stale o f Oregon, to.w iti however, 17.16. Portion» o f ttiv South half December 27 Franklin played (S lii) o f Section Seven (7 ) and With the Beavers anil lust to the of tha NorU*w«»t quarter f.'.'it team, 3I-2H, but took the (N W k i) and o f the East half second team game, 17-16. ( E l i ) of Section Eighteen (18), December 2H, Beavonhm played Town»hip One (1 ) South, Range Commerce and took the game, Two (2 ) Went o f Mi* Wiliam- 26- 14. ette Meridian, particularly da- December 31, again the two scribed a»; teams clashed, bringing a one point Commencing at a point 3.34 victory to t’-oinmerce, 16-14. cliain* blast of the Southvaat This Friday evening, January 4, Corner o f the S gter Donation Clatakanie come* here to play. I aim J Claim No. 42 in raid .Section», Township and Rang« NOTICK OF SH ERIFF'S SALK for a place of beginning, and UPON FORECLOSURE running thence West 3.34 cbalaa NOTICE IS H E R E !,Y GIVEN to the Southeast corner o f »aid that by virtue o f an execution, ik . Sigler Donation Land Claim, ere* and order o f sale issued out thence North and along the East of the Circuit Court o f the State line o f »aul Sigler Donation of Oregon, for Washington County, Land Claim, a distance of 40 on the 11th day of December, 1934, chains, mor« or less, to the South in a cause therein pending where line o f Ivan Kuingan land to cast in The California Joint Stock Land window weight, thence North 81 * Bank o f San Francisco, a corp ora 36* West 2034 feet more or lea» tion, is plaintiff, and Joseph C to the center o f the Tualatin Hare (som etim es known as J. C. River, thence down said river H are), Elinor C. Hare, William B. tracing the center line thereof Har« (also known as W. B. Hare), to a point in the Northeast Edna A. Hare, Commercial National quarter of tha Southeast quar. lfc.uk o f Hillsboro, Oregon E. !.. ter o f said Section Eighteen Johnson, Trustee, K. L. Johnson. (18), due South o f the place Etta L. Johnson, d e n n H B Below, o f beginning, thence North 30.61 Vernal Bigelow, Lloyd K. Bigelow. chains to the place of boginr.ing Etta Bigelow, Margaret Ruth Link and containing 322.27 acres later, Francis W. Linklater, Mar. more or leas; together with all garet Linklater, Samuel Edward and singular the privileges, ap l.inklater, Ethel Linklater Frank purtenances, tenements, heredlt. lin, Donald Franklin, Kenneth A. amenta, «euements and rights o f Linklater, Kenneth A. Coveil. Ken way thereunto belonging or us neth A. Cowell, Jr., Thoma* Edward ually enjoyed with said promia- Coveil, Kenneth A. Linklater a* es or any part thereof, and the Administrator of the En täte of Dor levereion or reversions, remain othy Linklater Covell, deceased, der and remainders, rents, is . l\*'n*letb A. Linklater as Guardian sues and profits thereof; of the person* and astate o f Ken A N D A LSO a » the ealate, neth A. Coveil, Jr., and Thoma right, title and Interest, heme, Edward Covell, Minors, Kenn«th A stead or other claim or '«."»and, Linklater a* Executor o f the I,a*i aa well in law aa in equity, Will and Testament and o f the Es which the m ortgagors had Au Late o f Zula W. Linklater, deceaned, gust 2, 1920, or thereafter ac Haitrick and l,aura llattriek, quired, of, in, or to the said fT® defendant*, in f»v o r of the premise* or any part thereof. Plaintiff* and againat the D e fin . And also together with all danta» 10 m* d'rM led and deliver .-1 other rights o f . every kind and *'nd commanding me to make «ale nature, however evidenced, to of property hereinafter de- the use o f water, ditch»* and ecribad, th ' In order “ to satisfy »*- canals for the irrigation of sum o f 615,727.77, with interest said premises to which the m ort. thereon at the rate o f six per cent xagors o f said premises had August 2, 1920, or thereafter . , * nnu™ fr o m *h® <Uy ° f A pril, 1933; and interest at became entitled, and al<o to per the rate o f eight per cent gether with all »hares o f stock ar.num on 6230.76 from the 16th or otherwise attached to said day o f October, 1933; and interest land for the benefit thereof, nn the further sum o f $230.76 at then owned or thereafter acqulr. the rate of eight per cent per an ed by said mortgagors. num from the 16th day o f April, A rd said sale mads subject to re 1934; and the further sum of demption a* per statute o f the $^04.78 pa)d out by plaintiff »* State o f Oregon. with Interest thereon at the Dated the 13th day o f December, * * ht .Per__cent P " /n n um 19S4r ¡J® » Ju" e J. W. w . i-onneu. n e n u or «a sn - Connell, a Sheriff o f Wash- i-gton County, Oregon. By Riqhani ^ K S l Deputy. * J * "* * Francis E. Sturgis, Attorney for Jj* ¿ J A adv c2.C 1836, at the hoar o f ten © click A. Plaintiff. m High School Notes i ----------------------------------------------------- 8b When we Set to the mess hall, there were hundreds of men stand ing at attention waiting for us. We marched around our table and sal Individuality can be down at a command, I never knew shown In your snap» shots by taking eom* fiom where or whom, but that whole o f them at odd angles. regiment of men iat down at the same time. Men were detailed at Such pictures are often each table to wait on table. We much mors sttrsetlvs had soup, and then more soup, and th a n c o n v e n t io n a l. b’ ead. The remainder of the bill of mm atralght-on views. fare has quite slipped my memory rOU will be amazed how an odd will get s fantastic and attractive but the memory of that soup, slum, w slant or angle will make an In effect as tha watar splashes b lg l the old timers called it, w>ll re teresting picture ot a commonplace abova tha occupants. Slides In swim* main as long as 1 live. scene. Like so many other thlugs we mtng pools or at the beach offer tha Company K, to which I was as do day after day, we can easily get same opportunity as tha bathers signed, a skeleton company, varied Into a rut in taking pictures. Usual strike the water. But if you era cloaa greatly in numbers from day to ly we take Just the normal, conven up. be aura and don’t 1st tha watar day. At times there were a dozen tional view— straight at the subject ■plash on tha l*ns of your camera. or more, and then it would dwindle —as If It were a sacred rule o' pic Winter offers exceptionally One down to three or four of us. Time ture-making to do this. It Is not at came for me to wait on table Not all necessary to take pictures that opportunities tor picture taking at moch to <jo only to stand at th - way every time. Variety la the spice odd angles. For Instance, there la the old mill and tha mill pond hidden end of the long structure and watch of live photography! In tha summer by tha foliage of tha and see that all the center dishes S t r e e t scenes—the scurrying willows. You can’t gat it at any a » (I guess that is what you call them) Crowds, the repair gang at work, the gte. But In tha winter from high up were full. Coffee was in a big pit traffic Jam—are usually more strik on the hill you can gat tha full p i» cher and I had to keep ‘ hat full. ing If taken from a high level. We tnre. Old Jack Frost and King Win Soup was in a tureen and breaJ are, of course, familiar with the re ter solve many picture problems by on plates. The regimenal cook had verse view—the pictures of sky removing the leaves and tbs chances lots of help in the kitchen and all scrapers with the camera pointed di for getting arttatlo effects era often we had to do was to present our rectly up. The buildings appear to much more In your favor than In tha empty dishes and they were prompt be leaning backwards and about to summer. ly filled. topple off their foundations. Such In suggesting that you ' • soma It was in the kitchen here that pictures are frankly Intended to be o f your pictures from hi*. vela. It I raw my first bread sheer. It bizarre distortions, but If you 'like does not necessarily mean that yon looked much like a kraut cutter them, by all means "shoot" them. should be on a balcony or on top of to me. And the operator ran i back Some of them will at least be funny. a building every time. You can perch and forth over the loaf each time Parade scenes are effective I f the on a chair, a fence, or the top of your shaving off a nice, even slice of camera Is held low. or on the ground, automobile, and get perspectives bread. I had expected to have to for you will get the efTecl of feet that will make attractively disttho- cut the bread. I guess the fellows marching Into th* camera—realism. tlve pictures. had been spoofing me a little But This applies, too. In taking pictures But all pictures do not lend that» if they had I have forgotten. It is of running or trotting races. selves to this type of photography so nice to forget some things as well Swim mine picture* ar* better If don’t make It a habit. You would ge| as to renumber others. the camera is at a high level and you some queer results sometimes. Just After a long two weeks writ the •‘shoot" almost directly down on the as a good newspaper reporter deveV second day of examinations came subject. From this angle you get opt a "nose for news" that tells him e d u c a tio n I e v e r re ce iv e d . I w en t and our corporal called me into the the ripples of the water and the light what Is and what It not news, ao tha to Traverse City high school for office and told me to get ready for playing on them. Another out of the successful amateur photographer six week*. Prof. Cobb was our examination. He directed a bath, ordinary picture l3 that ot action on should develop "an eye for pictures.* pflysrics teacher He was a' the and other necessary preparations a toboggan-slide such a* you see at It Is that which Instinctively tells Mount Pleasant Normal for years and requested me to await my turn bathing beacbr» and amusement him tha subjects that make good C. T. Grawn was tihe superinten I would be the last one to go in. park*. O t set with yonr camera at "angle" shot* and which should bs dent and I liked him an much as Two men were in the examination a high level within range of the spot taken in the conventional manner : it is possible to like any stern dis room when I went in. The or.e go v.diere tt.e Icbogran strike* the w-a "Keep shooting" does it ciplinarian. It was said of him that ing through his paces was ac tor. Wie n you snap the picture you he kicked a higb school bov out JOHN VAN GUILDER. copied and another, a lad about my of his office, down one flight ot age who was \hinking o f making Here the short fellow went out ty eight years ago. ___ _____________ stairs and ou t ____ into _____ the ________ ntr.et. . I tre army a career got along fin? until he pat his foot up for exam- _____ Wlt, h pieni.y o f , to °,d The folks did not seem special- * d >»t see him d o i t , but one look mation for corns There he came , ■ ^ ree He certainly ly pleased to see me. I soon found 1,no those steel Kray eyes and one to ................... a stop, ^ ------------- walked ~ kntW _hls stuff ^wrhen it came to out Hie reason. Father had ..way» ?™ld a>™>* behave anything i W The lieutenant around him c^efoTy."then sc'n T n ea^ ’ ' V'e wal*‘ ed £ m y ‘ Hem Uugbt General history, ami orderly fer the captain. He came t? wn and ^ another througn ry Seegmiller had shown h.m the 11 * , ^ ver my first high eri at at the th*. foot fnr.r still »nil cn thr city limit*, limits, letter letter from from the the recruiting r e v o l t offiew, , * c h o o l history leaeon. __ f l i g h t near the north cltY in. looked chair, walked around the young ? c 00 J ntent,on °*> being j,n(j |je penned a letter to tbc — ■ — man once, muttered, “What a fine ^ 10 the cops’ , 1 Columbus barracks informing them Mrs. W. J. Alexander ha» just ‘ he has!’’ and waved his hand d»y we got sometvha- ac. j i was not ynt twenty one and that returned from spending the hoH- body He was sworn in. q sinted. The bigger man I uo no, ^ he would start proceedings to have days with friends in Portland _____ from my enlistment My turn was next. I kicked 11s. remember muoh about. He was old me released ______________ _____ ______ __ _ e r: and J® J*” ™ exUt* the guiding And" there I was and now, peihaps, tened to the watch tick, called the colors as they were shown, then sp*nt the P&r}y I and the ; they mig’ht be after me for swear- NOTICE k.cked some more, sideways this y(U^ el‘ man hit it off rather well ir.g that my age was twenty one. time, and was waved to a c h a i r . 1 , . *1,nl my name and .,e told jt a p>nK time before I could No. 262 I. 0 . 0 . F. meet* every M on. I did not get by. And there I was, me his_ * » .^ e n* eT , ,M e 4 stranger I had vision* of hailed from York State. ’ —' day evening at 8 three hur deed miles from home, d,re vengeance of the Army and hardly a dame in my jeans, and it evi-.nng we ioum. thought they would su p m . in their Hall. L. J. Foster, was December. I tried to sell my ^‘e about a foot deep, and amated for perjury, J. H. Huldtt, Noble Secretary, Grand. clothes brush but got no offer. I f°S J a‘l to r s! eltcT’ they were not caring had nothin »' else to sell so boarded J ^ °^ _C ^ li,d trying fco get into the army --------- 1 the phy,jJ a train. Before they kicked me off us in, had us turn over everything arK, who C(nlkl m<t Benvuten Rebnkah I was out wie of the city. Ti en o- in our pockets and asked if we cai examination. Anyway I nor Fa- Lodge No. 248 meets thtr train - came along and I rode Were hnugry. We were not, for ad. th«r, so far as I know, ever hoard the ftret and third W . E. PEGG the blind baggage. Finally I g o t to ' ? ! * * :ttformation suppiie<l by o«r 8 .,ything about the natter. Tuesday evenings at r . x» ° f l i ' l n r r member r r f* m r i# ir i i f the t Ka n n r t t r Vi had a H le i. j older of party in- Winchester, Indiana. 8 P. M In the 1.0.0 7, That winter I drove one of Fa ■ j at 1 .. „ , . . . . h a l l . Mrs. S a r a h U N D E R T A K E R A N D E M B A L M K R .Here was the G. R & I., and I formed .. . . . . us that if they fed us L ther s teams m pleasant weather Chamberlain, seore- got on and locked myself i„ the 1)010 work on he and went to school when it was pile in the morning. So Wt_‘ Mrs. Rose Stevens, Grange Building Beaverton toilet, and when they opened the stormy, back in the old school I t* ry» and N. O. p-tf doer I was behind it. But it was p,°!it®ly <* C J ined t0 ¿ hfX1?h the hed . . . . attended as a* a a first nrst grade• gra,s^. ». J V Business Places To Patronize IN BEAVERTON! Spend Your Money in Beaverton not long before they found me ana Put me off. At Fort Wayne I g0-. into another toilet and --------- this tim , . . ----------- — I tucked a string in the key hole se the trainmen could not get a kty into the lock to get in. They ti-ok me quite a long way but be- tween stations they kept trying tnat door. Finally they drove a f!Ur“ L ^ ; ld ^ wc‘cwne . Laura Wiley was teaching. She was FdVW W W VW U VV supper •----------• •• -• • a couple of ' years older than I, • but 1 Next morning we were . . . . . . . . . . aKain that did not make any difference. Grain Feed; as>ked to eat but declined as we f or j began to take her out to ¡Hay par ™ re ln a hurry t0 He,v ties, church, etc. At other times, Parted company. The freigrt for ph ,,ip g Rose wou]d tak<. her out Rolling, Grinding Traverse City was made up here, no^ know which »he liked °^'lers rvo^ wish bo best. But J thought majdhe he ha<1 Cleaning bcfrd 5t but got on ^ a freight . the jnaide track. S i8*1 ¡1 the door ^ d When ¡n Michigan last f „ l one t £ ^ beg? \ runn'a g ,t; down 10 r\uAP f nth iy ^ S e d ‘ 2 o t the Students showed me a pic- wards the lock. It cracked and I ^ an 1 * d toT 1 dl,cbcd at ture of the school taken that win- ,L ,* ri ld ‘I W0Uld brtak and 1 M ar^n stall 20 miles from home 1 fer ^ forgotten t.hat called bo them to take their w? lk« d dow" / he to ^ e st- „ thi 'was in f.xiHtence. But chisel out and I'd open the door. m ? nd from there on home ^ Mere they mad! 1511 say they were a )rmng just about dark on that a3 We had a big laugh o. and when they put me off that Wlnrter day, just a little over thir- brakeman aimed a kick at my face — “™ — that had it landed would have dis- j ‘M ICKY” AND HIS GANG figured me for life. That hapepned just outside of Sturgis, Michigan. At the tower' r.ouse there I ran into two other) bums. They were going north and! knew the ropes. They offered to P lot me around. I was more than Willing. ‘ ‘Had I anything to eat?” they inquired. I had not But some way, I did not feel hungry. One of them, a short, heavy set lad i little older than I, went out and aeon return«! with a big pork «and- wish. I ate it, and never did food taste better. We stuck around that tewer house until that evening and then boarde i a through freight the watchman had tipped u8 0f f to. We got into a box car near the caboose, one that must 'e going clear thiough, m y companion« informed me. It landed us ¡n Grand Rapids the next morning. i ¡BEAVERTO N FEED Co.| Berthold Building Near S. P. Depot Chas. Berthold, Mgr. Beaverlon, Phone 360* STUDIO Beaverton Barber Shop C. 1. STEVENS, P KO PRti.TO B S A T IS F A C T IO N 9 BARBER SHOP F IR S T C LA SS W O R K A T R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S K. I>. Van HETKH, Prop. BEER ON DRAUGHT 5 1 and 10< Glasses Express Office Stage Depot Western Union Phone 1080!) OBEYHOUND COFFEE SHOP Rossi Building Beaverton. Oreeon OUARANTKED- OPTOMETRY Glasses, Fitted ar Repaired Oar Specialty DR. A. K. WILSON Heavertoa Oregen Alt Try Heidelberg Beer On Draught us for Chicken Dinner* Barbecue Sandwich#* FREE DANCING OLD HEIDELBERG PARK By Sam Igw and