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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1935)
The Beavertun Review fJU L)A Y, JU N E 7. 1936 THE BEAVERTON R EV IEW Hints' for HomeniAkers C|VSN A PSH O T g ü i l o * Entered as second-class mall mat ter December 9, 1922. at the postotftce at Beaverton. Oregon, under the act of March 8, 1*79. By Jane Roger* DON'T BE EM B A R R A SSED ISSUED EVERY FRIDAY AT BEA VERTON. OKEOON J. H. Hulett Editor SlBM Kim ON KATES Per year (in advance) . . . . Not in advance .................... * ten years ago $1.0« 1.60 ? 8É-------------------- to Prom The Beaverton Review oi June 5, 1925 A bus:ne?« meeting* o f the Hi kers Club held in Mr. Cochrane’s looms was followed by a “ Flapjack Carnival , at which each member •had to fry hig flapjack, flop it, ai*U eat it. They all mar.agvo the “ flopping" after much preparation and extraordinary contcrtione. • • • RESSED WOOD, especially Hu P tempered grade, ha« almoet ua limited ueee In home Improvement r 2 Don’t let crowds Interfere with your picture taking for there are too many picture possibilities to overlook. time you want to conceal your cam day we learn more about as much a* pos E VERY amateur photographers and. sur era and sible. for to get the results, Ground was broken Friday for the office building immediately east o f the building, then known at the llaulenUck building, occupied by the local bakery. A . M. Hocken, who did much of the building a- bout Beaverton at that time, was ii. charge o f the construction. • • • Among the things accomplished as a result o f Chamber of Com merce activities were the gathering up of rubbish and old cans, the cleaning and sweeping o f the streets and the display of flags arranged fo r Decoration Day. • • • The Portland Hunt Club installed a polo grounds at Garden Home. The first practice game was pro nounced full o f thrills by those who watched it. • • • Among the stars featured in the still silent pictures appearing at the Beaver Theatre were Billie Dove, Reginald Denney, Lon Obi- ney, ami Patsy Ruth Miller. • • • Donations to the new library were coming in each week. A shipment c f 200 books was being sent it by the State Library for temporary use. • • « iDtentions prising as It may seem, find that many feel somewhat embarrassed taking pictures In view of the public eye. They shrink from the attention they erroneously believe they at tract. To feel that way is really ah surd. That type of self-consciousness will be the cause of your missing many Interesting pictures. You can rest assured there Is no thought of ridicule on the part of those who may be apparently watching you snap a picture. Nine chances out of ten the spectator is envious and wishes he owned a camera or had one with him. There are times, however, when you may want to conceal your cam era—and your actions—as much as possible: not because of embarrass ment but for the sake of an unusual, human interest picture. Everywhere you go in a city, whether it is on the aristocratic parkways where millionaires' babies are perambulated by French nurse maids. or in the gloomy slums where some immigrant mother bangs out the family wash while ragged Uttle urchins play perilously on fire es capes, you can find dramatic, story- t e l l i n g pictures. As you walk through the streets and parks there are countless opportunities for snap shots that are really unusual, and such pictures breathe new life into your snapshot album. When you come upon a good pic ture possibility in the form of a per son or persons In action, that is the Six thousand dollars was being appropriated by the Highway Com mission to repair the Terwilliger Highway. DAD'S STORY Little time has passed since I wrote that I would tell you more o f the lawsuit, but the fact is that I have forgotten what I had in mind. Perhaps it is well, fo r I was considerably worked up about the matter. However, we never asked Sefton to hand the paper back to us. He insisted on getting “ out of it” as he expressed it. Well, there was nothing we could do about it, only take over the management again. So we did on the 29th o f Decem ber, 1933. Tnere must have been owing the Review about that time some eighty to a hundred dollars fe r advertising, job work, etc. There were outstanding bills a- gainst the paper to a somewhat similar amount. I expected to take t.'c money owing the business and settle the accounts against the paper. Mr. Sefton had other ideas. lie immediately stared out ■.<>■- Ic-cting the bills which were owing »he paper, notwithstanding* be had signed over to me, lock, stock and barrel, the whole affairs of the plant. Then he came in and insisted that I pay the bills the Review owed. I failed utterly to get his point of view. I f the money com ing in was his, the bills were his. According to my way of thinking, the fellow who collects the money should pay the bills. But not so with him. He collected the money, then sued me because 1 failed to pay the b.lls he had contracted. Some of the bills were for stuff that still was in tr.e shop. He went »< Hillsboro and started suit charg ing me with conversion of his property. Much of the new stuff he had put into the shop was of no use to me. Some o f it I could use. But he nad sold my biggest motor, one that I needed ligh t a- long, had taken out some e-ight hundred pounds of stereotype met al which he admitted 'he sola for 2r a pound an .1 had utterly des troyed my “ morgue” , the mater ial I had used one or more times, and was keeping in case it should be needed again. This included pic tures of people, etc., and other material, things that have uncer tain value but wfcidh are kept a- bout a newspaper shop indefinitely. Well, the whole affair has raised my estimation of myself as an ed itor. Sefton had years o f exper ience. I with little in this particu lar line when I came to this place. He failed inside o f three months. I have kept at it now some thir teen years, with short (m ighty short) vacationst He lost much of the busine**« ) had built up through the years, I have some of it back, not yet entirely but it is gradually building back to where it was in 1933. But lest yon see the tear in my hat band. I think I ’ll just forget about the whole matter. Back in the time when I was a lad, we used to go to dances. "Dance all night ’til broad day light and go home with the girls and decoration. A friend recently - ull.'il to my attcutlon two uset that may he of Intereat to others She used It oSectlvelf to replace (he bottom of a piano boar* tl had fallen oat taag ago; and no the must* la no (oncer eeatten window •HU aad oo i > » > i tbc also uead U «• ewer the eaelchl# (op of a f — arel i f t j taMa. Made entirety of » n t aad bain« warp* proof and m alntara-realetanti presaed wood te Murdy; it ytaldn easily to the saw and does not chip or crack under prasesrs of nalle or screw*. in the morning.” Lately i've been to a few- and the difference is so striking that I am constrained to mention it. O f course, the steps a<re dHftr- ent. Time was, a few years ago, two or three years ago, that any thing not right up to the split second was frowned on, scoffed at as something “ laughed at when a baby” or referred to as “ raving fallen out o f my crib when hear ing grandmother relate that” . But gradually the old steps are getting back. Last evening I listened to the strains o f “ A Hot Time ik tfr.e Old Town” and methinks that ‘‘Kingdom’s Coming” , “ Golden Slip pers” , or “ Little Annie Rooney” might tickle tihe toes o f the pres ent generation just as they did in yeirs gone pest. BUT— and it is quite a big one. The girl I took to the tlar.ee ex pected me to dance with her the first dance, the first .lance after snipper, if there wa- a snipper, and the last dance before leaving for home. Those, and they were all, she asked or expected. She went fo r a grod time. I f she wanted to have my arm about her all eve ning, we did not go to a nance to do that. The fam ily parlor was much more accessible, cheaper, less effort, and all-in-all prefer able where one enjoyed only one other person’s company. How different now! Girls dance with the fellow they come with all the time. TT.e married man dances with his wife, if she is at the dance, and hardly ever with another man’s w ife ami it seems as though rr ver with the girl sitting along the wall waiting for some one to ask her to dance. Often there were better lady partners to my way o f thinking than the girl I took to the old t jok * dance. Sometimes the girl I teok was the best dancer there. But that made best your subject should not be conscious of your presence. On approaching such subjects, it is best to set your focus ing scale at a distance from which you believe you will get the best re sults. Judge your light and properly set the diaphragm and shutter speed. When you are "all set,” approach your prey quite nonchalantly and when you reach the proper distance to take the picture you are after, shoot without further delay and your unsuspecting victim will have un* knowingly furnished you with good snapshot material. This kind of amateur photography can be employed in so many places. This is especially true In the sum mer. for If there is any place to get informal, candid camera pictures, it is on picnics, at your local swimming pool, or the favorite old swimmin' hole, at the seashore or summer re sort. And. speaking of summer resorts, have you noticed the number of na tionally known people — stage and screen stars, members of socially prominent families, and even great business leaders— who are pictured In newspapers and magazines with their cameras In action. It has really become the smart thing to own and use a camera. So sally forth with your camera with all the abandon of a sailor strolling with one of his manv sweet, hearts and get the kind of r ' -tures your friends will talk about and praise. JOHN VAN GUILDER. B i^ Quo*.lion Settled Notice ia hereby given 'hut the undersigned, Mdee ( ’. Burdin and I aniel Ellis 1'urdrn, have been by the county court o f the tale ot Oregon f i r Washington County, duly apiMiintcd joint executors of the last will und testament of Me* liées» avilan. IHlila, Os vsll|.ol I. i m i l l a ro o m table, t chaira, I lissa J. Jackson, deceased, ami have rot Ulna vhnir. t iv s lin g alovt, 1 duly qual'ticd as such. A ll persons idi, k it c h e n ■ su«.-, i hav tig claims against said « d « t , ■li veaer nini bvdaieail A la** Mouth on e.h alf o f lot 4. are hereby required to present tin Illoi'k »7. f e r r a i 11 rove, W ash - same to us, with proper vouchers, I n a t o o Coun ty, O i e g o n , as by the at the law office of M. U. Rump, tint) r w o r d e . l p is i t h e r e o f T e r m s o f sale, vasti In hauti. It' Hillsboro, Oregon, within six H aled si F o r e s t G ro v e. O re go n , months from date hereof. this Mh day o f June. ItHlii. Dated ami first published, May T II l.lttli'hslea, Vilinluleirnlor of W i n f i e l d 8* o l I S p a r k s esta te 17, 1936. O O Hump. A t t o r n e y for Ratal* fatal publication, Jun« 14, t’JSii flirre t d ro v e O iegon adv vlT-S.i Daniel Ellis I'urdin & Miles C. ' i'urdin, Joint executor* of the Inst will und testament o f Melnea J. Jack on, Deceaaed. M. B. Bump, residence »mi ad dress, Hillsboro, Oregon, attorney • Great Newspaper ef the J for said Estate and Executors. • Northwest a adv c24 28 ■ A R TH U R M I’ L IIO L I.A N D ■ ■ Auto Route and Agency g Oregon^ NO TICE OF F IN A L S E TTLE M E N T J Beaverton For Information ■ In ih«> County Court of Ute State a of Oregon, tor Washington ( mint) ■ regarding servire or subscription) J I’hone lleavarton 7303 ( In the Matter o f the Last Will ■ and Ton lament and K tat* of J Residence and office: ■ Nettie Hoffman, Deceased ? Corner. Second and Hall ■ * Notice is hereby given li:ul the ■ undersigned executrix o f the laid ■ ■ ■ « ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a will and testament of Nettie H off man, deceased, has filed net final account and report as such vxrcu- trix In the County Court ot the state o f Oregon for Waihir.gton county, and that said final account and report has been set for final hearing and settlement bet to sal.', court at the county court room in Hillsboro, Oregon, on Monday June 1«, 1936, at 10 o’clock a.in. of raid ■ C 2 H|r (Pmjonian : “ S in « Number 84!” n voice from among the men. It was on a recent night here *t tlie Mission. Tne tirst part of the service over, the speaker of ilie evening wus getting to •his fix*: te udshess them and this broke in. Number 84— "When the Roll Is l ailed ’Up Yonder” , and we naked d»y. fivm the platform, ” l>oew this mean Dated and first published May that you have settled the big ques It, 1936. tion?” • lo s t publication, June 14, 1935. "That's what it nieana,” ram« Emma Pitman, Executrix of the the answer. La*t W ill *mt Tvstanwm! * ! We knew the man; fresh from tate o f Nettle Hoffman, deceased. the dust-storm* of Kansas. Let M. B. Bump, residence m 1 ad him say it— “ W ife and 1 were the dress, Hillsboro, Oregon, A'tor* <•>* head o f the society crowd in the for said executrix. adv c24 2s little town. They could not have u dance or car.I party except we le i M i l li K tllH IM S T H t r o i r » off. Then came the depression, and O K • Al.ftC o r * r i t o r n i t i * she left me with tire two little In Ihe* i « u n i y C o u r t o f I h r » t « l r o f Hrt-Kun f o r \% M*hlitK t « n C ount* ones. 1 put them with my people r il,. ICet nt* of M u tter and came on here looking for III W l lit** ' t S p i l i kit. tie*'«*« «it'd n ftn ! work.” Ity v i i t u e o f ■ n ui d e r «int! » l e r n « * no difference— until I had dwreed with each and every girl in the room I need not ask my girl friend to dance with me unless she. hav ing been more active than 1, had danced with every one o f the men present. Now, don’t g**t the idea that I'm finding fault, nor that 1 am doing any different than those a- round me for I 'hardly remember dancing with a w* man other than niy w ife since coming to live a- mong you. But bhat does r.ot a l t « the fact that probably I am not being as courteous to so mo deserv ing lady who would like the oppor tunity to trip the light fantastic as I should be. Perhaps some young girl is there for the first time anq would like to straighten up and step a little. But blandly follow ing the custom I neglect my so great opportunity to gladden one path, to throw a ray o f sunshine where only .'harfows dwelt before. Perhaps some bitter thought in ters a head where none but inno cent and pure concepts dwe’ t be fore, because I have not been as gallant as ie possible. Some inno cent Ia?s may became imbued with the idea that i f she w ire a little more lipstick, or her cheeks were a little redder, or that had she the exhilaration o f a sip o f beer or wine she too might attract the graceful beau to seek her ou* and dance with her. Quien sabe? as the Spaniards say. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. McBreen en tertained tb# officers o f Beaver Chapter No. 106 O.E.S. at their home, Friday eveni ng. They were insisted by Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Ferrey. The evening was »pent in playing “Court W<h.ist’’ . The ladies prize went to Mr». Raymond Lacy and men’s prize to J. F. Felsher. Refreshment* 0f strawberry f*hort- cake and coffee were served. He had been in for the meetings oi. several nights; had been per sonally dealt with and hod put off the decision Imt agreed to read the Gospel o f John given to him. AH day he hue ties. We use the word HU STLE, for he goes after any and every job und goes hard. “ I have two children ami must have money to send them,” he explained. And so we sum it up— Country town leauer; depression; family break-up; Wostward-Ho; big city; bread-line; Gnnpel services; his (Kcision urged; Gospel o f John; and then salvation. “ Oh, the depth o f the riches both o f the wisdom ami knowledge of God” --H e puts men on the biead-line, and out o f it, becomes their everlasting portion. “ As far as the east is from the west, so far hath He removed our trans gressions from us.” George N. Taylor, Beaverton, Or egon. nd. adv. o f tit- « *ount) « N»urt <»f \v « « h i r i K t o n 1 '• u n i ) . 1 -i* < >rei?on. and »ntered *»f r * n » r d lim i .S. int h»*r Is i n ii !• I>«1 <11 r uct lti K t h<* LI ll*t* m l l t n e d ad- W O N D E R FU L DINNER 40c G A M R R IN U S BEER Every Day, Including Sundays H IG H LA N D TAVKRN restau rant 815 S. W. Broadway, opp. Journal! — Open 24 Hours » Pa>- IN VITED \ l H O W ; v MR R \T 2 DE L < CAN 1 | HULSE OVER TO ] O S T OUT , /SPEND THE EVEN IN G } OF T H I S ’ f T I 1 -“ » -------- rl1 V iö R e v . I. N . D e m y ta y t: I have found nothing in the past 20 year» that can take the place of D r, Mile* Anti-Pam Pills. They are a sure relief for m y headache.” Sufferers from H e a d a c h e , Neuralgia, Toothache, Backache, Sciatica, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Peri odic Puins, write that they have used Dr Miles Anti-Pain Pills with better results than they had even hoped for. Countless American house wives would no more think of keeping house without Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills than with out flour or sugar. Keep a pack age in your medicine cabinet and save yourself needless suffenrgg A t D ru g Stores— 25c and $1 00 o r . AN TI-M IN P I U S Business Places To Patronize IN BEAVERTON! Notice of Annual School Meeting NO TICE IS HEREBY G IVE N to the legal voters of School District STUDIO BA R B ER SHOP No. 48 o f Washington County, State Beaverton Barber Shop of Oregon, that the ANNUAL M R S T CLASH W ORK SCHOOL M E E TIN G of raid Dis C. J. HTKVENH. I'liO I'ltU T O H AT REASONABLE PRICES trict wdl be held at Beaverton; to begin at the hour of 8:00 o’clock K. I». Van METF.lt, Prop. SATISFACTIO N GUARANTEED* P M. on the third Momlay of June, being the 17th day o f June, A . D. 1935. This meeting is called for the purpose o f electing ONE DIRhX'- TOR ami CLERK and the transac OPTOMETRY tion of business usual at such BEAUERTOn Glasses, Fitted or Repaired meetings. Our Specialty FinAncE com PAny In districts o f the second ami DR. A. E. W ILSON third classes the ballots shall not Beaverton_________ Oregon be counted until one hour after the time set for the meeting to begin. Until the count begins, anj legal W. E. PEGG BEER ON DRAUGHT voters of the district Rhall be en titled to vote upon any business 5 <f and 10 f (»lasses U N D E R T A K E R AND EMBAUMER Express Office- - Stage D«|iot before the meeting. Western Union Phone tOflOJS Dated this 27th day of May, 1935. GllKYIIOt'NI> COFFEE SHOP Attest: Althea Haulenbeck, Dis Grange Building...............Hcavertun | Rossi Building B e « vert on O re c o il trict Clerk; C. E. Mason, Chairman Board of Directors. advc26-27 Goodrich Tires Battery Service Alt Heidelberg Beer Accessories Greasing On Draught NO TICE TO CREDITORS FORI) SALE S & SERVICE In the County Court of the State Try us for Chicken Dinners and BOB JOHNSTON Barbecue Sandwiches o f Oregon for Waahington County Auto Truck, and Tractor Repairing FREE DANCIN G In the Matter o f the Last W ill and General Petreleum Phone 0103 Testament and Estate o f Melissa OLD HEIDELBERG PARK Products Beaverton, Or» J List Your Property With us NOW! By Geoff Haye» AFTER THE HONEYMOON T\ HW E am * maniai rotor of «li« esiste of Winflslil Svoli Sparga. U» t • nani, lo aell at pilVKlr aule |he reni vaiai, bvl-nia- I ou lo aulii vatnte Motive la bere i.) alvini itisi front and »iter ih» Siti Us) of July, lti.16, I aliali pro- vwil lo aell «I privale aule lo Ilo* lilshval IthMvr for .'sali In limili sii Ihe follow Ina described properly be. Iona In« io asid esiste: J. Jackson, deceased. Y E S -G R ftN O - L i HOW DO YOU DO ^ rMOTHER HfSD T h r MR. SOUSE SAME TROUBLE BUT IN THE £PINE /£ i V'/TV FOR SIX WEEKS SHE HAD PAINS IN THE BACK.SHE WAS UNABLE TO DO A BIT O F HO USE-W O R K THEN IT W E N T TO HER LEO AND WE AD T O SHOOT HER “ I ETC. ETC r y 4 A4. : (V oPF H d / e r -