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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1935)
AJtoJfK THI BCAVKRTON R E V IE W Entered ns necond-daa* umll mat ter December 9, 1033, at the |H>stofftce at Beaverton, Oregon, under the act of March 8. 187». Bright Fresh Fashions For Summer Can Be Easily Enjoyed By Everyone ISSUED EVERT FRIDAY AT BEA VERTON. OREGON J. H. Hulett ...... M I I'. K il l K IN Editor li \ I I ' Per year (in advance) . . . . Not in advance ................... $1.00 1.60 DAD'S STORY Perhaps some of the things that happened before leaving the farm which have not been related may 1 be o f interest. One thing that I remember was my little difference with Chas. Caswell— not the Cas well of coffee fame bi»t just one of those fellows. It has been related how Byron Hulett bought the section of land lying to the east of our farm. When he had cleaied a patch on it he put up a log house and into it moved Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Caswell from Manton. Charley was a dis reputable looking sort, giver, to bragging and sitting around while his wife did most of the work. 1 suppose there are lots of such men, not very bad, but irritating. Old Lady, our standby mare, had raised us a mighty fine colt and this gave me the idea that rais ing horses might be a profitable endeavor, i had traded around with tie other of the team I had pur chased from Father and at .hat j time I had a gelding I was work ing with Lady, Old Frank we called i him, a good enough worker, but slab-sided (whatever that means), J7AVORED fashions at the Winter sort of mul:sh in temperament and sunshine resorts set new say unreliable. He would work, would standards for Spring and Summer. pull all right, and for a farm Never before have fabric-makers chunk was a good enough animal. and stylists worked together so suc Byron had brought over from cessfully for those who want to the Manitou Islands a mare, about dress effectively, yet economically. 1400 lbs., blocky, and might y good Regard these cotton costumes. looking. She was blind but that One is green plaid seersucker, with would have no effect on her ma wide sleeves, pleated skirt and yel ternal ability. So Byron and1 1 low blouse. With it are shown a traded, he claiming that h's mare small white panama hat of new was in foal, and I wanting to lines, white alligator handbag, raise colts gave him Frank even white cotton gloves and white-and up for the mare. And did I get j brown opera pumps. stung! The mare was not in foal The other is cotton pique, a two- and Byron, realizing that she was not, got rid of Frank by pretend- .......... .. ' icg to sell him to Caswell. Of vest on the back forty, course, in the hands of a third in- Celia and Ann were picking in nocent (? ) purchaser I could not d u stn o*ly away one summer af- teplevin my horse and deliver the t£rnoon when they heard some- mare back to Byron. The mare lhl lumberi through th, , usr„ was balky, would not puH a set- ^ . lt3 a £ „ th Ann and f ”■ U1,y »** women started. Leading to the worthless for an arumal £ work fie,d ^ 8n oW ,umi)er road tye I itched to a load she wouW juat sides wn to brueh but an stand there and refuse to go un- down V middle so that ti. the thing moved off b y j e oth- Qne „ couU trou gh . Th To Try N e» Spud Varieliea Prineville Three now vai ietto« of |H>latoea n w » l ly revived for trial at the Oregon axperiment 'lattoni,, armi ii a limite«» way in dt-monatrationa In the counties, -re being trust out this year by George C Truccatale, certi fust se«'l |«ita4o grower of IVtwell Butte, in e»K«p •ration w»lh W. H. Tucker, county inert. These arc t hipin wa, dobl en ardi WaiiÌM. Wiitl-n t» an ex- tromely «ari y \-arioty. resiwlar.t to miUi mosaic. i'h«p|K<wa is somewhat oar I ier than kalahdm ar.d in anme tests lata Ison fourni to prodia-e lH»ttor, is resistant to mild imisah' and yields a h'gh pruportiin of nuintwr once. Gokla'n is a yellow- fltvsh,«) variety alM»ut which theie is little information to date, hut it is also .-asl to givi* a high yield ol first grade |»ota<<M-s. liis passing was sweet and simple, ua hia life, Without a blar« cf trum|>et. Only a rustle of angel wings. To join his wife. the woods to pick berries this gum mer. And what will we do for can ned fruit r.ext winter?’’ Like a good scout 1 agreed with him am. teki him that he could tell the story before me of what we had found and I’d second the motion. He related very forcibly and with convincing ge.stuLations that there was no bear in forty miles -if there. Tre women had jue?t hoard a squir rel rustling the leaves and hafi imagined the big noise. So, in a day or two the women went hack into the woods ard picked lots of berries andi we bad a big supplj of canned fruit that winter! Charley Geiger came to live with ue one winter. I think I have mer tioned him as a confirmed klepto rntriac. one who had stolen from tl.e postoffice and put postage dm stamps on letters to semi out. The authorities soon located th sender of the letters by the simple ex pedient of opening them. Charley had given some of the .damps a- way ami so three or foil" young men got hauled in but Charley took the rap. Charley liked Gladys who was two years old ait that time and would play with her for hour»-. It may seem strarge, but we felt perfectly safe with her in fcij care. Celia’s oldest sister died quite suddenly. Afid we, Celia and I, wer.* U Lao Ru.-fvell's house and took care of hi» family for a month or six weeks in the dead of winter. Celia did the cooking and I work ed with Lao loading logs at Kar lin. We put thorn on flat ’ ars. Ai first I drove team in the cross haul. While we were there with Lao, another sister, her favorite, died quite suddenly with diphther ia. It was rather a gloomy- house hold. And the winter that year war. I think, the coldest I ever exper ienced. For almost a month the mercury never got above 30 below. It got down to 45 ami 48, although I do not think it ever touch«d f i f ty below. In thait climate and thore tem peratures, the air becomes satur ated with frost. There is no »row hut the air can hold little mois ture at those temperatures and the precipitation takes the form, of 6: ,,h° rn her ^ along ^ 1 ° ^ ; or two. made for this old road pullmg a , step . , ,. that D led She would not pull enough to our f ,e1^ A r .n tea* p*\ But , - * she was short and rather heavy * /? 0W' „ , j . .. aet and the probability is that Ce- Weil Caswell had my horse, the ,ia waa close, crowdir.p on htr one which should have been mine heehj An|l tripped and fell riffht but it was a herse tra^e and 1 ¡R ^ mjdlile. There was no way never whimpered to either Byron or around ^ but ^ chj t(J Ce_ Caswell, though I knew that Cas- Ha.s skirts and ^ , heP nM t0 well was just keeping Frank ant )eiave claiming him as a means of pro- ' tecting Byron. Sounds somewhat ^ hen the women emergen into complicated as I write it but per-j fc‘ e John and I were putting haps you car. get the drift. J* oats- We heani th*m J^11 and That happened the winter before lo<* ad UP ^ them break il* ° I went to teach the Day school. «* * * • Jfjhn laugn* every time he Caswell had Old Frank and he ar.d thinks uf the episode and to this Byron brought over from tie Man- da-v solemnly swears that Ann was itou some three and four year old jumrp-ng four feet nigh every bound steers and put them in the woods ai ^ Celia, who is taller, rigr.t be- and on ithe section to the east of hind her, jumping higher; the botn curs. These steers were brerohy, of them were yelling. They came no fence we had there would hold to where we were ar.d tdd us them and every night they would there was a bear in the bushes come down the length of our farm, ar-d that they were not gong back almost half a mile, breaking down to pick any more berries. So John any fence they came to ar.d go 2nd I went to investigate, oat on the road to a salt lick Cas- We found where they ha 1 beer, well maintained near the log house picking and not more than twenty he lived in. It get to be an old f ^ t away, but in a thicket toe story as night after night that dense to see into, was an old log flock of steers came down through whose bark had recently been torn v-’hat crops were growing, eating a off. From what we could figure little but knocking down and des- out, Sherlock-like reconstructing troying much more. One night, eve- the scene, we thought the bear had ning rather, it was just before been on the log, had scented the dark they came down and I herd- women and had raised on his haun- ed them into the road and drove cves to look around and the bark them up to Car-well's house and on tbe rotten log had given way, asked him if he was looking after making the noise and of course the them. He was just inside h:s fence bear was conspicuous by his ab- and I was in the road as we jawed at.nce. However, search revealed back and forth. several unrm-takable signs that the Finally he made some remark that y ^ ^ jty had been inhabited by bear, if I ’d throw my gun away he’d Well, John recommended that we come cut and punch my head for ^ h in g to the women of what me. Well, I did not have any ffun we found for, said he, ‘T f and e sured him of that and’ he wt gtve ¡,t away that there really came out. Really I do not reroem- waa a ¡n those bushes we ben much of what happened. We won*t get th(>se women back into were down in the dirt of the r o a d , ______________ __________ then Charley was trying to get a- way. Finally he did geit away and AFTER THE I clung on to him till he got to the house where his wife hclpeo him in and »hut and locked the door. Pi * '| Well, that was that. Caswell soon left that part and John ard Ann Folkersma came to live on Byron’« place. They were Holland Dutch,; and the boys called him Dutch John One day, while raspberries were ripe, Ann ard Celia went berrying in the woods to the south. John had lumbered a forty belongir.g to Dake which lay drirectly south ot my eighty and after the timber was gone I bad bought the forty for $200. In the second growth that covered the lumbered off area wild r « i raspberry bushes grew luxuriantly. The berries were ripe and the women, who in tha* coun- | try almost always picked the ber ries for canning, found a rich har- | HONEYMOON Ulti I tJ m ii il Hll t ti« y U h » feti Iti n % I iim »•> lii'rii « ««Cai lo li ili hrut N • » 11 « dirti or .lu ly, r « Il I r 1 1 i*|H ti ini tirili I I h I» r I i u II III«« | i m » Mt |»l I n «1« Riti»* lo Ut»; loi crr I i H i lutitti ttll tlcuci i brìi |»ro|>rrly lo» I«'11M Hl|a lo Militi VUlNli IC rmc V R<*(| u II, tllbl«*, tlM Yt’|||.<l||, «liitiitK («•olii i tt i»l r. I chair«, 1 rockiitit eh li Ir. h<uiinu iluvt, lo ti MlfHtU. kllt'li««tt i ilnitt', | tllt'RRt I litui hi» il «I ««il Al»" H"Ulh "lo-hriir or l«»l I. ni". U J », l«‘«»rcRl (Il ove, \\ a«h I t i u l o n i ' o u n l y . O i r u o n . hr b y I h « «lu ly i pitti t h « r « * o l T e rn i« or «al««, «a*h in h am l. D u in i al K on »| l i t o t i ’. O r r | ff » n . dii« Uh «hiy of .limi*« 1936. T II I .Il i Ichitlr*, A(fmlHtRtr«tor of Winriehl HpurkR rRliilt I» l> Munii», \llorney f«»i Katnlr. For« «t ilio v c O i t ’i c n a »!v ci7 I » âlir (Ü)ri'iumiuu Great Newspaper of the Northwest A R I MI It M C I.111)1.L A N D à a ^ ■ ■ Auto Route and Agency a 5 Beaverton Oregon^ g For Informal ion ■ ■ regarding servire or subarriptlon»« 1 ALL FOR BIDS Th«» lloaisi of inrxs'turs cf School Distrlot N»>. 48, Beaverton, Wash- irgUin County, Oregon, ask fur bids on 150 cor<ln of No. t and No. 2 fir wood, hid* to lie in hamin of the clerk by July 1st, 1935. Wood to !>«• «Miverixl tsd -re open ing «hut«* of school. Approvali June 10, 1036: Dr C. F. Muson. Chairman. Attest; A. lluuh-nlKK-k, DistiSc' Clerk. adv c29-3P IN MEMORY O f I. L. Morelock He has gone— he psss.sl through the open door, l>f which the pasrtor told us, into Eternal Life And a sun-kUstKi shore, piece dress with high button blouse and four mannish, serviceable pock ! ets. all In the much-discussed Reg ency manner and Regency blue. The hat matches. Comfortable and practical as these simple styles are, with all the smartness they have In addi tion. they gain much in value to any wearer because of the ease with which they can be kept spic- and span throughout the summer. A quick swishing In the family wash ] er. an ironing Just as brief, and such costumes are as attractive as ever. li tini «Im i-i of U,« ,iu i , .i WlMll-lil ‘itoli NpurR« il# ivhr $ j U I v • • * 11 ut plUul* r . i U littg * <wt I * *1 *t* !»• I"»i» examination«. A t th# teacher«' ax- ami nations, thn< vvei e mor< thaï forty apiilieant*. • • • One of tho features at the liilla- buro Fourth of July celidmution was all old-time dance. fr o * vryaWL | '.Utor a week or t>\ .> of (hiving bum in tire cro«» haul they put me on top of the our, top Voiding i. W called there. Say, the find log 1 saw rolling up the skids U> waivk* me I feilt mightily 1'ke tur- jung hail and getting off that ear pronto. Hut I sot*Uiod my natural inclinatnins and stuck it out as long as I staytsf there. We had two good ground loaders and they helped a lot. Very fow logs can noned- I hardly remember that e- ven one did. Will Hicka and Is*wi* Wilson were the ground haulers and whtMi they threw a hinik into a log and reefed on it, the thing just natur ally straightened out and went where it was su|>|K>scd to go- Hut Will Howeran nnvt death by the ground men letting the log get CM.-erwise on the load. Will turned and ran. just why we never coul 1 figure out. The log came after him and dropped on him liefoic he could get away from where he had jumped off the end of the car. Such is life. Will was a much l»et- ter top loader than I but 1 never got a scratch and hr« met death. You never can tell. ■ I’hone Beaverton 7303 2 Kesiileiice and offu-e: S Corner, Second and Hall m a g ■ m «■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ »R » O l t t l M U T K X T O M ’a U t i li dK s t i l i .»»' r i l n l ’K H T t The door -wings outward, leaving only faith in lonely hearts; There is no glimpse o f Heavenly beauty ^ hen the curtain (girts. ■ n ili«’ « '«»uiif > ( uuri iit «hr ^« m «*- In <»f Urrgon for \% ii »I i I iiu ««»* i I ••uni« li; th«* Mattar dì (hi l**«t ni a nf W i n fi«« Iti S c oli Sp nrltR. «!«•< c i ia r d Uy virtù»* or «n ord«*r «mi .ircrr* «*f ih«* County (*ourt uf Wn«hlntft«»n s ___ « ntrr«*«1 Just emptiness <to those who mourn, ( ’ • u n ly , O r r fo n , nmil«* nml «»f rrc«*ri| Jun* 5, It3l lu ih n rls ln ff and yet we do not mourn un*l*t •lun**d n«l • n«t tlirrcdnK ih«* As those who have no hope. Just the vacant chair. His little house ia empty Ar.«l yet his home eternal, on the other sidle, Is filled with k>ve and )oy. Hia reunion with those w o have gone before. Rev. I. N. Demy sayt: He lovtd his neighbor, ami enjoyed the hospitality <>l those who welcc-mcd hint with in their gate« He Easy ^ to Shave talked of days gone by, of many things that happened In his life, when he was yourg, built a home and tilled the so;:. He loved the grocery man, the bankur, and those who touched H js life from every angle. Of this I know, because he told me. | " v . ,nis» his jovial manner, his joke, his pleasant smile; But orjy those who loved him, knew him Iwst. can urn'eratond the lonelinese. — H. K. • it ’ « « « i r io « h . v « w i t h t h r n e w S c h lo h I N J E C T O R Kaior T h trc 1$ no u n w r a p p in g ol blatlr«, no th in g to take apart. It ! a l w a y s read y to | iv a you that amooth aa tlafylng » h a v e . It • ca a y to Inarrt a n e w untouched blade I N S T A N T L Y A i k to a e« It. M A O A Z I N K R K P K A T I N O R A Z O R CO 110 Park A v t o a t , N e w York. N Y. .S eh « /\'»pr+m*ntmtirw9 HaroJd V Ritch ie A Co . Inc . . « i k 34th S t. N Y Schick I have found nothing in the past 20 years that ran take the place of Dr. Miles A nti-Pam Pills. They are a sure relief for my headache." Sufferers from H e a d a c h e , Neuralgia, Toothache, Backache, Sciatica, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Muscular Pains, Peri odic Pains, write that they have used Dr. Miles A n ti-P a in I*ilie with better results than they liad 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 suffering. A t Drug Stores— 25c and $1.00 DP I n i e c t o i * MILKS' AM 1 IHIM PIULS RAZOR i T E N YEARS A « 0 -------------------------------! from the Beaverton Review of i June 26. 1925 _ Hround broken Sunday, June J8, for the r.ew Congregational I church building. The Rev. E. S. Bollinger, State Missaontiry, was one of the speakers. He »a s the p-»tor who hai started the origin- nl movement toward the election of the new church, estimated to cost $12,18)0. Rev Llanchotte was the pastor of the church at the time STUDIO BA R BER SHOP cf b'Jil<ling. • • • FIRST CLASS WORK The General Gasoline Distribu AT REASONABLE PRICES ting plant, the third to I* heated E. I). Van MKT Kit, Prop m Beavorton, was being bu<h on .1 Miwty by two hundred foot lot pur- tlmseil from Mrs. Emnia flocken. A. M. Hocken had the contract for some of the buil-iargs. H. M. Barnes, formerly with the SUndard Oil Company, was named proprietor. BEAUERTOn • • • Airplane forest fire patrol was FinAncE comPAni] started for Oregon, Washingi«.n, California, Montana and Idaho, on July 1, 1925. Regular patrols were rv,t planned:; bases were at Eugene, vv. E. p e ( k ; Oregon; Vancouver and Spokane, Mash.; and Mather Field and Ross Field, Calif. Ten planes were as- U N D E R T A K E R A N D E M B A L M E R s gne l |x> the bases. • • • Orange Building - - - - - - Beaverton I eter I’an , from the story by J James Barrie, was appearing at the local theatre, with Betty Bron- j Alt Heidelberg Beer son in the title roll. Norma Shear- ' On Draught er appeared during the week in * Try us for Chicken Dinners and “ Broken Barriers” . Barbecue Sandwiches • • • FREE DANCING Three hundred ami seventy-five students passed the eight", grade | OLD HEIDELBERG PARK Business Places To Patronize IN BEAVERTON! List Your Property With us MOW! Beaverton Barber Shop C. .1. STKVKNH. I’ KOPKIKTOK SATISFACTION GUARANTEED - OPTOMETRY GI um . hcn , Fitted or Repaired Our Specialty DR- A. K. WILSON Beaverton Oregon BEEB ON DBAUGHT r>C and 10^ («lasses Express Office Western tlnlun Stage De|>nt I 'hone 10fln.4 OKKYIIOUNI) COFFEE SIMM* Rossi Building Renvertnn Oreeon Goodrich Tire* Battery Service Accessories Greasing FORI) SALES & SERVICE BOB JOHNSTON Auto Truck, and Tractor Repairing General Petroleum Phone 0103 Products Beaverton, Ore. By Geoff Haye»