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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1935)
Tht* Beaverton Review F R ID A Y , J U N E 21. 193$ TH E BEAVERTON REVIEW t£nter«<i a. sec-nd-class mall mat ter December 9. 1922. at the poeto((ice at Beaverton. Oregon, under the act of March 8. 1879. C '» S N A P S H O T G U IL D , I NEW ANCLES ISSUED E V E R Y F R ID A Y AT B E A VER TO N. O REO O N J. H. H u le t t ... E d it o r S U U M 'K iriT O N R ATES Per year (in advance) . . . . $ 1.00 Not in advance .................... 1.60 I tfc- TEN YEARS AGO -k From the Beaverton Review of June 19, 1923 Three marriages of local interest took place «hiring the week. Miss Gladys Haines, daughter of Mrs. Myrtle Haines, and Lawrence ’lu c k -1 or of Portland were ntarneu at the Hatr.es home; Miss Orma Lemmon and Clifford Prink were married at the Aloha parsonage; and Miss Genevieve Mashbum of Beaverton and Arthur Poterson were married u* Grand Mound, Washington. • • • J. J. Fleming Productions Co. were busy on a new root .or. pic ture, "Youth’s Highway”, fealur.ng F Schuroar.n-Heink and V id a La Plante, at the local studio. Madame Schuraann-Heink, the famous sing er, visited at the studio during tht week. A1 Ferguson had left for ! California to film several pictures there. • • • Over the top! Eleven days before the date— June 30— sot for a thou- j aot*d volumes, the new I eaverton library had a total of 1350 books: j 200 belonging to the State Library, aid 1156 of the looal library's own. | A ne>w murk of 1200 was set for June 30 and 1500 by July 31. • a • A party of climbers from Bea- i verton were making arrangements to climb Mt. Hood Sunday, June 21, | the longest day of the year. They were to leave Beaverton Saturday sftennocn. L. A. Kennedy was i>. : charge of the climb. • • • It's the unusual that attracts attention people have the notion that S OME only pictures worth taking are those of unusual things. They take a camera along when they travel but seldom use it at home, unless some thing special Is happening. But. be lieve it or not, some of your greatest picture possibilities are around and near your home. "But.” you may say. “I have already made good snaps of the house, the family, the pets, the garden, and the new car. What else is there to shoot?" It’s a safe wager that there are dozens of other picture possibilities, and all of them as interesting as the ones now In your albnm. The secret of finding them is stm- ply a matter of keeping your eyes open. Get the habit of looking at things— everything— as though you had never seen it before. It’s Quite amazing the way this habit will sharpen your interest— now dulled by sheer familiarity— in even the most commonplace things. Not all of us are interested In photography as an art— and if you don’t believe it Is an art, visit one of the salons or study some of the pictures in the advertising appear ing In the better magazines. Is there any reason why we should not strive for artistic snapshots? Back of every fine, prize-winning picture Is some one who has kept his eyes open for tta unusual. Don't be afraid of doing things In unusual ways. It’s really a spring tonic to take pictures of old things and scenes from a different view point. "Candid’’ photography and taking pictures at unusual angles were discussed in a recent Snapshot Guild, but perhaps some of you missed It. The point made in that article was not to have people In stiff, unnatural poses when taking snapshots. Snap them when they are doing something, or at least appar ently doing something. Instead of having them stand as stiff and straight as a totem pole. Study your various subjects for unusual angles from which you may snap your pic tures for unusual effects. At the present time, take It for granted that present-day cameras, films, and modern photo-flood and photo-flash lamps give you unlimited scope for unusual, fascinating snap shots. Today almost any picture is possible— and at any time. Vou are progressing In your use of a camera when you reach that stage when your friends say, "W ell, look at that picture! I’ve seen that spot every day for the last ten years and never dreamed It had the making» of a picture like that.” Such praise will surely thrill yon. Maybe you have heard those words already' I! you have— congratulations! A t the annual school meeting, j F. W . Cady was elected director to succeed himself, with no oppo sition. Little enthusiasm was cre ated. The clerk’s report showed <the schools in healthy financial condi tion. • • • Sunday was children’s day at the Bethel Congregational Church In JOHN VAN GUILDER. the evening a program wa? given by the children of the Sunday ■ school. ( well liked, being young, agreeable, where he saw me taking my horse ¿j---------------------- .------------------------------¿g, or-d in a community remote from into tbe barn. the residence of any physician of Bui Dr. Fenton’s face was long DAD'S STORY k any considerable ability. when he came out to where I was My brother-in-law, C- H. Barratt, . r.ae e ^ wa» suffering from still ministering to his team. He ted made quite a success of rer.-t- ®--ol£ra infantum and the doctor or- shook his head when I asked him ing his acreage out on shares. He «^rtd ice, had it broken up and bow Lila was. “There is one chance would furnish the seed and agri- Piiced lhe sick girl in ice packs, in a thousand she will come out convulsions,” he si-id. I cultural implement« and receive halt Almost instantly she went into Of those the crop for his share. I tried convulsions. She never regained silently handed him the reins to bnat method but never was able to consciousness, and died ir> a little his sweating team and he drove out of the yard. This happened a get any returns for my investment. ni°re than a day. The renter would not get the crop Tom Robemtson came after me little after noon. Some way I sent in, he wtruld not cultivate the crop, the next morning. By the time I word to my father and mother of of Lila’s Lila’s condition. or something would come up that arrived Lila seemed resting easier the seriousntew seriousness* cf condition, made him more of a liability than ar.d I went to the nearest tele- ' ^ . ■•L night. Mother and an asset. j phone and called Dr. Fenton. It was rather arrived the next morning I tried renting several times, b u t ! five miles to the nearest phone, I a el*fht o clock, always got the short end cf tht and five miles from there to King-1 lhey drove mto the yard and I deal. One time I rented the whole sley. I urged speed and Dr. Fenton wi'I*t c,ut 10 meel them. Mother farm to one of the Dells. He had told me he would come as quickly have read the story on my a team and seemed to be qu te a as possible. I fucv ^ar turning to Father as I crr.ecier.tions chap, but he did not Molly the thr<^ w , l . “ me UP th®, o t ,heir buggy, stay. While he was getting the J f S t i ^ & T h e °c“ Id t S i i 1 ' V i S k T l “ T springs work dene, the school a ¡n a ijmie over f OUr w; , M h m, a . ln * * board in the district where I lived utw r . hiu lh^, • t f - h h.M>f»*ey cemetery, the first of our was without to take the was in the might have ific -TV. a teacher. job. I did. spring of been 1905 I waa asked could ‘ take^juat a tiifle" slowed" gait I think that arw, l for w T rw 1904 tut it “ , Z , f ° r h Tl'aver*ie or possibly » ’ * Z .Z Z Z , 1 w„ Iour m.Ies away was a matter of it one of the most difficult jebs 1 ever undertook. There were two girls, Maud Days l .!1 and Maud Woodward, who had / t * d not S‘ t ^ th r f£ml y 40 * ^ there’ Now Lhere are stvt’ral member* of the family and most of them lie right C!.0Se 40 the libtle * Tave WP ma<k that hot summer «lay when liti le from the 6a,y when ht‘r mother hac h* r fe4f ’ raced Sam in the huckleberry patch. ¿n ' * *1 was n0<t *on*T before my sister, Robertson home that Irene, was laid away. Then another V - ll«llli«lr ulll|' tif III«' « u l u l e o l W l u f l s l i l 1 kv Miylliing." (Seuil Mpurk*. d**'*ua«ui, lo soli al That fall we moved' to Traverse p r i v a l e » « l e ih«- r e s i ca la li - |icl««na- Inu l>* »ulti e a t a lr N'«>ll* e lu h«'te City, where 1 went to w««uk for D t*y al ve II l i m i r r o i n uu«t « I l e i Ilio 11. VN ynkoop who wa- poatmawter In Sili <|.iy l'I J o l y . IDSS, I alm ll !>'»* , . , l i o aell ut p r i v a l e « « l e tu Ilio Kingtiley at one time, but when wr li lati« ut Militer f o r eueli In Imiu l « I l uum d to Traverse was malinger o( thè |it|P>w in a ileui'riheil p m p e r l y l>o the Farmers' ¡Supply Co., selling «rtNt« nil 11» m 1 h tnhlr, lia VPIII •• 11. enything that funnel's needed from K»*«** ti» Mr, 4 1 IlHll M, 1 room ihnltiH windmill» to P>ns and needles. My rot u m,. chutr. lo tit Inu •luvt . J firs* sale w a« a Superior Guam rm»u«\ ! kit» tu*n • ■ml»». m 4 drill sold to Christian Schuster. (liriMir'r mul h»*d*»tcnd ntl«’- I ih II of l«»t 4, outli < All«»». H The-n 1 sold and asaembled a wiml- \\ i nil IlhM’k 17. K«» 1 • ut Omv nxill, set 11 up and got it pumping Inuton »*ounly. ( h ruoli, IIA l»> th«* duly re L'iirdrd pini IM rrof water. T«’f in« ••r ah i» , ,.««, It ln hniKl lit Ko |.l«l 111"« »*. Ol «go Uhtrd KrtmMin Given Attention 11 m r»th «t my of June. 1» 'iU lleppner—■ Mom»w county farmers T II 1.11 ilrhalea. Ailmlnlalralur *»f are invaiiving increasingly conscious , \\ infield Memi Mpnri«« r»i«i> li l> lUimp. Allorney fui I :••«»*• of the desirability of emit i idling Kureat 1 Itovi-, II|I||||I adv e I7 - li That house was a long I ini* both wind ami w a h r erosion 1 » gix>wing. hYom bhc sheathing 1 the county, re|Hirta Joe Belanger, sorted out the better Isiaidc« atu county agent. Most of the work hitiyl Ma tit Geiger to make tht ti>ut lout Iwen «tone along this line window an*) door frames. I think in the county so far hus been lor i CE h r ( í r r a m ú a n ! it was $1.25 per frame 1 paid him, the controlling utf water ero ami though he made lititle enough ■ Great New«pnper of the m sion, but, sa was emphasized in a 1 had a hard time finding monry Northwest s recent tour of the erosion district ■ L pay him. Just think, taking at Athena, lumic control is the ■ A R T H U R M U L IIO IX A N D ■ r* ugh lumber, planing it by hand, same for w in ! as for wafer erosion. ■ Auto Routs und Agency m rabbeting out the jams, ripping ■Beaverton O rego n * out the parting stops and I he blind , For Informallon H C A L L FOR BIDS stops, mortising out for the sash The B« wj O o f !>m vt«u» of School ■ regarding service or auhacripliom■ pulleys, ami the accurate work of Phono Beaverton 7303 |K*avt*rton, Wush getting the things together, all for District N «. 4H, Oregon, ndi for ■ |;, i ern e and off ' ■ a dollar amt a quarter. Well, Matt irgton County. ■ di«l not get rich hut money was biifcv on 150 conili of No. 1 and No. • Corner, Second nml Hall wvkh I, bi*la to In* in hand* ■ _ _ _ _ _ _ _• scarce in that neck of the woods 2 fir ami things were much different of the clerk by July 1st, 1935. ■ ■ ■ * ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ Wood to be dulivtired W o r e open- — — u^— then from what they are now. W e moved into the new house iivg data- of school. Approved June 10, 1935: Dr C. the following spinig. 1 hud rented the farm again, this lime to a E. Mason, Clvuirman. Attest; A. Hauler» bock, D i-t'V '1 1 brother-in-law, Ohcs. Lutz. Charley #<lv c29-30 t«d needed u team and 1 signed a Clark. note with h in. The. note came due \It vi i M s r i i u i i h ' s m u h f thait full and 1 hgd ¡1 to |>uv. But o K h %i.i: Ol** 1*1101 i n i \ 1 uul get my shar«« of a crop. Dur ing the summer I worked ot* the III Ihr 4 nunt > f'uurl of 1 hr Mm r of Origon for \\ U k ll| («Ml ( «»»in « house while living in it. When we In III»* M lit t«*r of the P.MMIA \vi»»ri •*lil Scott S|>(|| Jx H i|ni moved in, tiheru was a paleh of 1 KV V rtur* “I mi ord**r ant) «»«•»T« r shingles on one sale of the roof, Ihr c'ounty t**»urt of W ail »ngt«>ft jost u small |wlch, not enough so •►r unt y. ( M « K<>VI. mini«* aiid « ntrr«*«1 but that the rain drove in on us •>r rrc* rii J uiia IMI, •mi 1» »rUlmt (lirt'cllnir ili«* un«l«*ralgnr(l ml- • ml at times. green tin lw r. August Lick handled the breed axe an«j 1 snaked them to the* site of the- buikhng and got them framed and pul together. I think I did that work myself hut I hardly know. I «lid all the fram ing of the studding, the joiata, the ruftivrs amt the c«>tka'r Iwams. I had to have help when it came to raising (lie studding and Celia Lelixsi mo for the no -t |mrt. 1 trad««! laay for shingles at tiihbs's null, taking over a losut of loos« Imy on the hay rack and bringing hack with me what the load *ain fo in shingle«. Sv’imi of the hay 1 sold out of the fiekl but some ol it cante from the barn. Gutting the roof on, getting it lath«*! and plastered. ami a ..ice hu*rd maple tloor laul, gitting the Rev. I. N. Demy says: doors windows set, and uhe chimney built took until late in the I have found nothiny in the past 20 year» that can take the full. We 1 a«l three rooms plastered, the flcor laid in the Idtchen, the place of D r. M ile » A n ti-P a in Pills. They are a sure relief fo r windows in, when one of those things my headache.“ happen which make one w -rder Not having had any experience Sufferers from H c n d a c h e. $ 1 3 0 Th is arte* L yin g chimneys, m>r mixing ee- Neuralgia, Toothache, Burknche, 1 Include# IN JKC TO K w ith Sciatica, Khcumotism, Lumbago, mmf, I hired a fellow by the name 20 | ,.!e# Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Peri of Henry Wilcox to lay the chim odic Pains, write that they have ney. But as we were building i: used Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills fiom the bottom of the cellar O T S of blades coma wilh lha naw with better results thun they had through the two floors to -he , Sehlck IN J K C T O K K ««o r. Tha even hoped for. r'dge of the roof I thought to save IN J K C T O K which you gat w ilh lha some brick by making the bottom Countless American house razor comas loaded with 20 umouchad out of a solid block of cement. I' wives would no more think blades. T h e r e ’s no u n w rappin g of bad gotten cold evening* tjefore I paper. You merely inaart Injector anJ of keeping house without Dr. Pull-push, And what a ahava you got the black p<>ure«i. But about a Miles Anti-Pain PilLs thun with gat! Smooth, quick, and so comfortable w «*k after pouring it I got Hen out flour or sugar. Keep a pack M A G A Z IN E R K P K A T IN G R A ZO R CO. ry and we ran the chimney througn age in your medicine cabinet and U0 Park Avenue. N ew York, N Y. the roof in just a short time. save yourself needless suffering. S m J ob Kmprmmmtitmtt rwa Harold K Ritchie A Ctx, Inc., 40 K. Mil* 8« N Y (Hie finish«*), that is he laid up A t D rug Storee— 25c and $1.00 Schick the last, of tihe brick* one forenoon and I took him horn«« to Kingsley. DR . M I L R 3 ’ That summer our boy Lynn was I m e e t o i * barn. Ho was a bright little chap ^ •’ R A Z - 0 « r and we thought a lot of him. Ce lle had done up tihe morning work, ha<l scrubbed h«r nice new maple floor, had set the cream on tihe reservoir of the l«ig cook stove wc bad. The cream wa* Ln a three gallon crock. The baby’s cradle wa* right beside the slova; *t being cool weather, the little chap slejit with his feet to the stove. Having things about all done and thinking she would make a brief call on my sister, Laura, who at the time ■ w gr1 em m et w . u 1» was living in the old log house, Celia picked up the little one, STUDIO BARBER SHOP Beaverton Barber Shop wrapped something about him arul FIR ST CLASS W O R K had just got out the door when she C. J. STEVENS, m o r i C K T O U hear«) some strange sound and look AT R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S ing up saw the new chimney tot K. I). Van M ETER , Prop. SA TISFA C TIO N G U A R A N T E E D tering. When she got back into the house the cream jar was full o f ___________________________________________ bricks from the falling ehimtir", the cream was spiillcdf all over the florr, the cradle broken into kind- J rBS Lots of BLADES I AN TI-M IN MILLS Business Places To Patronize IN BEAVERTON! HnX, and brick and mortar lay in a heap all over the three rooms we had 1»«on getting ready to live in that winbeT. List Your Property With us NOW! BEADERTOn OPTOMETRY Clause«, Fitted or Repsir«*d Our Specialty I»R. A. K. W IL S O N Beaverton Oregon F in A n c E c o m P A n y practically run the school. Miss Z T I li8ter’ Ijaura’ thCT 8 brother-in- She closed the door and went on Day’s father was treasurer of the ' • law, John Telford, and lately they district and Miss Woodward's fath- j His horses were as dry es could have been laid away so swiftly that her way. But Laura ha«l heard the ei was director. And what those had never turned a hair ir. that even I have lost track of I he racket and came running. Charley, two could not think of in the way ^ m ',e run- Doctor threw me sleepers in that City of the Dead, her husband, was gone alt the time, BE ER ON DRAUGHT W . E. PE G G was I. When I got home an«l of mischief is not wouth mention- £he linos and asked me where the , It was hard to pick up the ar ing. They would entice practically baby was. I took *he team an ! j strands after laying our baby a- had viewed the wreckage I wa* so !)< and 10< (Masses the whole student body out fo r a v,aIked them around while he mad* way. The old house did not seem trankful that the baby had been UNDERTAKER AND EMBAUMER E xpress O ffic e S tage D ep ot W estern Union P h o n e 10fl0f> walk and not return until from half examination. Before he came the same. So we began more ear- spared that I took litttle account G R E Y H O U N D C O F F E E SH O P the wreckage. When I got a- Grange Building an hour to an hour after time for ^rom the house the sweat was run- nestly the plans fo r the new home o* Beaverton Rnssl B u ild in g 1le»vertn n O regon school to begin. They would plan n:r‘& from those horses, rur-rirg in which was slowly becoming a re* round to it I law! the chimney up the most atrocious plays and in- down their legs, in big ioun«l ality. I had dug a little baaement out of the brick« that were sal Goodrich Tires Battery Service vaged, only having to buy a few nocently explain that they were drops from their bellies, and ev- and got some corners laid. Alt Heidelberg Beer Accessories Greasing “just playing” when taken to ac- ery *P°t touched by the harness The building was to be twenty t«i get it through the roof. But On Draught FORD S A L E S A S E R V IC E count for their conduct. vvas ' ^ h deep with lather. Had fcet by thirty six feet, sixteen fee* Celia evnn to this day laments Die . Try us for Chicken Dinners and BOB .JOHNSTON About a month before school was they run? I ll say they nad. Doc- high with basement. It would hava Barbecue Sandwiches loss of her nice white maple floor Auto Truck, and Tractor Repairing to close two girls came down with j ^0T bo^ me afterwards that they (o be built cheaply, from material F R E E D A N C IN G for she "never did get that cream General Petroleum Phone 0103 small pox in school. O f course as came out of his yard on the lope so fa r as could be from timber OLD H E ID E L B E R G PAR K sc-on as the health authorities and thait they never broke their that grew on the place. The gills cleaned up so that the floor looked Products Beaverton, Ore heard, they came and' closed the ■— ------------------------------ school. This happened abou« ten j the rvext morning. There were AFTER THE HONEYMOON By Geoff May e» wholesale vaccinations but no * e r - ! k u s epidemic. But it released me 1 from a job that I was ar.xious to ^ -H O T -D lC K C T r ! ! D A N t E U get out of. The work of teaching j ] TSY GOJ.tr« - H E R E ’S THM " \ -L O O K A T T H F M U N J E S . J FAVORITE OLD SUIT OF was difficult there, and then m y ; A U LY ? * • MINE. THE WIFE MUST renter had deserted and! gone to i HAVE THROWN.IT HERWir. fields that promised greater returns. Well, I hired a man but he wa* I? » ' ---------------------- not worth hi« salt. I have forgot ten what wages I received, but what ever they were, they probably ex ceeded the value of my services to the school at that particular ‘ ime. One hot day during the summo- when Lila was about a year old, Celia went home with her mother for some occasion, I have forgot- j ten just what it was. When they arrived, Lila was sick, and the Robertson famly sent for Dr. Pur dy a>t Buckley, a new physician i who had come into that vicinity ana set up a practice. He was I 1