I
FRIDAY. A l’OlM T 81, 19-16
1." — --------- !---- ■ M l -j-
TH E
B EA VE RTO N
The Boaverton Review
•
r
R E V IE W
Entered as second-class matter
December 9, 1928, at the j-uatof-
tlce M Beaverton, Oregon, under
^ S N A P S H O T GUIL
the act o( March 8, 1879.
•>
A muli wlu» h“d run olii of
ras oli Ibe ouliAHrt» of a coun
try town snw n boy coni'lui a
long thè rouil carrylng a Mg
Hit «un.
"Hay, boy," tic velici!, "I bop»
IImi's vuiMiliiio >011 liavo tu thal
cun.”
•Well, 1 ho|N*
Il «In i,' r»-
turneil Cip boy, "Il wnnld tante
llkc Ilio dickeus 011 ma'* pnn-
V/HEN THE CHAFF GETS IN HIS EYES
u a o a D K v n T v s io a t a t
BEAVERTON, OREGON’
J. II. HI UKTT..................l l' liOK
SI list R1P110N M AILS
Per year (In advance) . . . $1.00
Not in advance ....................
1.50
ruke.."
jfa ■ ( ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ b a j
ft)-
S din' (0 m unì imi j
MOM S STORY
t t - ------------------ ---------------------------a
Two uf the oldest o f the eight
living children
in our
family
worked out. bul each o f the rest
o f uts had our
work to do al
home, from She oldest to the
youngest. We had our fun. too,
for with so many brothers and
s.sters we had plenty of play
mates. The older kids used to
hide eggs, one or two at a time,
and then when our parents were
gone we'd have a big Teed; w e
would kill and cook a chicken,
make pies, cook the eggs and
have a big time- One time, .Mo
ther and Father walked in, in she Rolling down to Rio? No. an example of what happens when you don’t
hold your camera level.
midst o f our celebration.
One day
when
our parents
4. Letting the finger tip slip over
,VE of the Mtlafacttons .>f ama-
were gone,
my oldest
sister. < T ' ur photography is that Lady the edge of the lens. Result: silhou
Alary, chased us youngsters all Luck will so often play you the ette of fiuger tip.
upstairs, and shoved a <runk in kindest o f tricks. Much oftener than
5. Giving a time exposure with
fion t of the »tairwav door so •hooting an arrow aimlessly and hit out resting the camera on sqme
that we couldn't get down and ting the mark, you may shoot a pic firm support Result: blurred pic
find out what she
» « .. doing. ture w thout precaution or thinking ture. (A shaky fence is not good
After we found that we could o f focus, exposure time or diaphragm for a time exposure, neither is the
n ’t get out, we quietly cl'mbed opening, and. nevertheless, when the hood of an automobile wheu the en
into the attic above the kitchen negative is developed, find that you gine is running !
6. Trying to take a snapshot after
where we knew there was, mound have obtained in all respects a goini
a time or bulb exposure without ie-
photograph.
Dumb
luck
it
is.
really,
the stove pipe, a hole through
adjusting the shutter. Result: a
which we could peep into <ho but a tribute also to the capability
much jumbled up image or perhaps
kitchen. Down there we could o f modern photographic equipment.
Modern cameras and films allow so no picture at all.
see Mary boiling eggs— at least
7. Forgetting to turn key that
much latitude for careless and inex
a dozen of them— and fixing her
pert use that, while they are not moves the film. Result: jumble of
self a little private feast, but
robots in their performance, they do two pictures on one negative.
just as the eggs were ready to
8 . Iu focusing, wrongly estimat
cover up a lot of picture-taking sins
eat Mother and Father drove in
Fortunate as that may be. it is ing the distance between camera and
to the yard. Mary ran to the certain that the amateur who de subject. Result: fuzziness.
woodshed with the eggs in her pends on luck entirely will get many
9. With fixed focus cameras, tak
apron, and then dashed back to poor pictures and waste a lot o f film. ing pictures of subjects nearer than
let us out
so that
the folks There are some sins which he can 8 or 10 feet without a portrait at
wouldn't suspect anything.
not commit with impunity. Here tachment. Result: blurred, out-of-
focus image.
Just a few minutes after they they are:
10 . Using a large stop for distant
arrived, someone drove up and
1. Tipping the camera v- h the re
wanted Mary to go to work for sult that in the picture . iii iin- ■ views. Result : loss of distant detail.
11. Attempting broadside shots of
them right away,
and
it the appear to be toppling, and rivers
movement too rapid for the shutter.
general excitement oi seeing her run uphill or dow nhill.
2. Allowing the camera to move as Result: blur. 1 Moving objects can
off, everyone forgot about the
eggs until one day, when Mothe: the shutter is snapped, or jerking be “ stopped” by an ordinary camera
(perhaps I’c be’ ter say hobbled
if the picture is taken from an angle
was cleaning out tae woodshed, the shutter release under the im
in) he said, 'You’ re \lr llu lell,
and not too close.)
pression
that
it
can
thus
be
made
to
she found a "neat" o f eggs in the
Of course I re
Yes. even in photography, brother, aren’t you?
oven of a stove there. l>t course move faster: Result: biurred picture.
plied in tb ef fir mallve. "When
3. Dirty or misty lens. Result: your sins will find you out.
we knew what they were, but
will (lie truck b here >0 w e
JOHN* VAN’ GUILDER.
we had a sort of unwritten law picture hazy. Indistinct.
1 an »’ art loading Ibis thing?” I
n ot to tell on each other, and
1 old him that the truck was ex-
bo we never said a word, and me atteruoon. Every mornii g we
peeled inomeniari r. “ I'll gut it
course; anyway it got better.
carried
out
something
l.ke
a
as
Mother sold them in town
1 be
hn
During the time Dr. W aller» taken apart, then," ant h
fresh eggs. Tears after we told peck of apples for us to eat, and ;
gan dismantling I'he thing. * Welt
was
giving
me
treatmenls
there
her and laughed about it lo- every day when we came back | came word that if I wanted that j I'd lielter see about getting It
to the house they were a’ ways
gether.
linotype I should gel busy, as turned over to us," 1 remonstra-
But he paid no nttention
In the spring all of our chared gone; now I can’ t eat 2 apples there was another buyer look I led.
nd kep* on taking o ff part*.
ground was planted, mostly to We made bouses and played ing at it- Now, I guess I have
I did not wait for Kessler's
wheat and corn, and the cattle games as we watched the cattle, told you how I knew nothing
Oregon
were turned out to hunt f u d in and had lo.s of fun, particular about printing when I wemt in arrival but boltrxl for
When I came to T 00 re's
pasture. Northwest o f our place ly one year when Father planted to tile Bank- Herald shop.
Of City.
(what
we called
"b elow ” itj clover in one of the pot boles. course, knowing nothing
about otflce be was cx|ieci*.ing me. He
it came time to watch printing, I knew
were miles and miles
o* oi * When
nothing.
or said he had told the «'anby mutt-
] ager to let Nelson take Ihe ma
‘•pinery” , land which had been the cattle the clover had grown next to nothing of linotvpee.
thick
and
luxuriant,
and we
timbered off, with no trees left,
Some way some one told
me i chine down,, a- irt. would have to
be taken down anyway, no mat
but covered with stumps
and children used to lie down on the! about a
machinist
tint
was
and roll
over
and over,
sticks and green grass and wild top
working fo r the Journel at that ter who took it-
When I got buck to the hotel
iberries and fruits that we used down the hill in the soft, sweet
" ’ I time but who now works for
clover,
until
we reached
His name ¡th a t evening I was one tired
to gather when they were ripe, bctr.om. One day Faiher saw us the News-Telegram.
I got biro on | body. Tooseg ivad his notion of
and use fresh, on the tab'c, or doing it. "L ittle ladies wouldn’t is George Nelson
mode
I
:he
phone
and
he
told me
he he. w papers had to be
canned. The cattle used to wan do that,” he said, and hat end
Had a lawyer write then;
der down to the old pinery to ed that fun; we never rolled j could eo (o «'anby and loo k he ! out.
date 1 out and were they voluminous!
certain
get both food and water, some down hill any more in the rweet | thing ov<er at a
About forty different places to
the
imnii'Otate
was
in
I
which
times
going as far
as three clover. All Father ever had to
Ï:he next thing was -ign and then gave my check for
miles from heme in a day. It do was to say something once, soonne.'s.
t h c something I did not 1 mve, cash
to gelL t ran 4 «porla tion for
was usually the job o f Emma, and we acted accordingly
He thing to my shoi > in Bank
I iu t.ie bank. But Mr Gallowoy
Will and me to go after the cat
never punished us.
they
would
got hi • id o f Chari es Ke»»!er w ho tift.ii told me that
tle in the late afternoon and
hauling
from hold the check tf it got in be-
some
wa»
(ioing
S
-
bring them home. I always loved
Portia nd for me and he agreed : fore I got Hick. 80 I felt safO
DADS STORY
to go anywhere, and as « o c n as
! on ’ hat »core.
in Canby
my legs were
long enough
I £ ------------------------------------------------ ffl fo meet us there
I don’t remember much more
The
whole
thing
seems
sort
of
I don't remember how
thev
would toddle along, leaving with
hazy in my mind, possibly from ! only that when I got home they
got
out
(he
paper
while
1
was
Emma and Will, at four o'clock
the lapse o f time and part if- be I just abou.’. had the machine set
in the afternoon to start Enough ill with lumbago, but gue.-s that
cause*
of tile physical condition ! up. I got .1 gasoline engine lo
the mile and
a half o f deep Garber must have lx-en (here to
run it. and .before Nelson lnrued
in -which I was at the
time
help.
I
know
ihai
for
ten
days
v/oods which
lay between our
, il over to lue we had set sev
Thai
lumbago
was
»till
going
house and the old pinery. It or two week» I was flat on my strong, I)r Watters was .'living eral lines on It. The first on -
was dark
and
lonely
in the back, what w ilt the deal in for me treatments, I was staying at | set that went into the imper
woods, and the older ones would Ihe linotype, (he getting out of : h»> Multnomah hotel, I
sue.-: vas "This is Ihe first line of
iiurry
to get
through,
often the pa|K-r, and negotiations with Garber must have been
there •Imight reading matter set on
leaving me behind
because my the bank Ihert* to get a loan to gelling out Ibe »heels. Anyway ■ ur new linotype since set I in i
short legs couldn't go so fast, make the initial payment, . i t the i’lc Went» I have just related it up In our shop." And if I had
tbut Rover, who always went a- just seemed more than I could are quite clear in mind, but the ’ a copy of "T h e Banks Herald"
lm g with us, would lae lehind stand.
means by which I made all the here now I could show you I ha’
Dr. G. F
Via was cal ltd in
with me as if lie couldn't walk
line printed among the locals
contacts
is nazy, run it seem
any faster than I. A s soon as hut be gave me a cathartic ami
1
on
Ihe back page.
that I must have done consid-
we ran and caught up with the nothing else, Finally Mrs. Hulet!
It was «u r idea tlvat Gladys
e.a
b
le
phoning,
for
I
never
saw
others, he would run on ahead, thought of a i>r. Raymond Wat-
Nelson until be met me al the should operate the linotype and
until he saw me behind again, lers who was a cousin of. one
was that Garber did not know any
ot her friends in Nespelom. and print ((hop in c’anhy. He
when back he would come.
c o r e about the machine than I
looking
Hie
machine
over
when
He kept, moving the ad
The eatlle had bells that we she called him up. He told C e r got there. He
had ulieadv 1 did.
lia
thal
if
I
could
be
bn
uglit
could hear for quite a distance.
way
and
made up his mind lo tell me to justment a certain
»0 that we usually found til of 10 Portland he thought that he l,0y i t ; he must have, for , as things kept going from worse to
the cattle and were back home could relieve me.
soon os 1 walked in the door worst they were bad enough an
At that time there lives across
by seven o ’clock ; if we didn't
find one or two, they’d con n Ihe -tree! a family by the name
They came from
back by themselves about eteven of Mar.sfleld.
at night. Only once while we Michigan just a little north of
were after the cattle were we where we had lived. She heard
molested by wild animals, and that Dave, the man, was going
in to Portland and she got him
I wasn't along. When they came
to take me in
They carried mo
upon the cattle they found them
to Ihe car and then in Portland
frightened
by a bear in their
they carried me lo a bed al -the
midst;
the cattle ran, and wo Multnomah hotel w here Dr. W at
did the children, grabbing onto
ters was waiting for me.
He
the co w s’ tails, and sticking close took me in hand and had that
tp them.
None o f them
were 11 inbaro on Ihe run Ihe pecon 1
hurt.
day. Perhaps it is like they say
When the crops
were
being o f Ihe common cold, " I f you lei
taken off, the cattle were let a cold run 11 » natural tour e it
It to the fields, with four if us will get better In I wo weeks,
and but if you employ the really up-
children to watch
them
keep them away from tie crops l o “date medical nr.an and follow
which hadn’t been harvested. We his advice he will cure ycu In
stayed in the fields with them Just about fourteen days.” Now
from about »even to twelve In perhaps il's like that with my
It may have run !**
the morning end two to six in lumbago.
«
m
m
|
a
a
\ k i i i i
J
m
"
m
Auto Koute and Agency B
llciivertoli
(>r«| ni ■
l ur liifnriiiailiiii ngivnling - B
■
b
ri i i i o i i i n i »
■O' m I,-«' or aliharrlptlwnn
■
■
l ’hone llravarltin 7.103
•Residence and office:
J Corner, Second and Unii
"
B
■
■ ■ ■ «■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ a *
/ R » y . I. N . D e m y u y i '
/ hut’« found nothing in the
pujf 20 yeora that can taka the
place of L>r. Miles Anri-Fain
Fills. T h ey or# a eure rrlie/ for
ih\
Al
— Reproduced by Courtesy of liuiTal« New»
my headache.“
Sufferers from H e a d a c h e ,
No lira lg ia. Toothache, llackacha.
Sciatica, Khrunuitism, Lumbago,
Neuritis, Muscular Fains, Ferl-
odic Fains, write that they have
used Dr. Mile» Anti-Fain Fill»
wi<h better rceults thun they had
even hoped for.
Countless American house
wives would no nmre think
of keeping house without Iir.
Miles Anti-Fain Fills than with
out Hour or sugar. Keen a pack
age in your medicine cabinet and
save yourself needless suffering.
Hie Unie
I finally told him he the police court, "they've caught
was moving the adjustment the a pretty tough lot fit* morning
wrong way, that if tie
should haven't ttiey ?’’
move II. Ihe other way tilings
At Drug Store»—25c and $1.00
"You're looking nt the wrong
would get better.
But tic ar-
. iu*d with mu that the laws of lot,” said his neighbor. "T h o»«
r
D R
(vs I l_ a S '
machines inauriteli Huit Ine ad aren't U»e prisoners. They’re the
Justinen! should go that way
lawyera."
Well, I gave Gladys, who
wan
Im o
-I set type, a nudge an!
next time she quietly spoke to
uii and I riiilc Ihe change in
..be direction that -ccm cd mdl-
n . ’ id tiy the performance of I he I
machine. It did better. I gave
I a little further ai d it worked
pit right
Twice I’ve inculo the|
-s me adjustment since, and
1 I
always move it Ilio opposite w.tv j
(m m the
direction
Indicated 1
And it works. So I let Garbe.
—
BUT B a r m tB a u B ..m a a ?
in Ihe middle of the winter I Signal Battel ics Ig e Tiru»&Tubes
job
on
Ihe
Astoria
I
gol a
I uinpctltive Prices
Beaverton Barber Shop
Igel.
ANI1-IHIN PILLS
Business Places 1 oPatronise
BEAVERTON
Alexinder's Super-Service Station
s ig n a l
gas
and
o il s
"My goodness," exclaimed I he
A -l Lubrication, $,',0
si run-or
who luid dropped into Sterling and
_______ Beaverton. Ore. Pennaoll
C hcìrup . D ig B o y . D ont Be S ick
A lKA SeiT?ER DOES THE TRICK
j
“ MICKY" AND HIS GANG
Gleni Nrwnpaper nf Ih«
Northwrnl
ouarantkko
&
UNDERTAKER AND EMtlALMKK
(•range Building
Beaverton
Why don’t you try Alka-Scltzcr
for the relief of—
HANGOVER
BE WI5E-ALKALIZÉ
s a t is f a c t io n
OITOMKTKY
VV. E. PEG«
At your drug More, «I Ihe xndn foun
tain. and in 30c anti 60c packagra tur
home use.
STKVK1 » , r i t o i ’ itr r .T o it
FIRST CLAMS WORK
K. I». Van METER. Prop
1 ■■ '
Alk -a-HHtz« r lias a til«-n*.int. r e f r e s h
lug , t a i i g y t a s i r it c o n t a i n » un a n a l
g e s i e I A c e t y l - » a l i i ylute. a HnUltmi
Halt o f A s p i r i n ) w h i c h r e l i e v e * I s in
h rol d i s c o m f o r t , w h i l e Its v e g e t a b l e
and m ineral a lk a llz *m help t o cor-’
r e r t t h e #-ause o f t h o s e m i n o r all-
n ienls a s s o c ia te d with h y p e ra cid it y
o f t h e stornai h.
j
STU D IO B A R B E R SH O P
AT REASONABLE PRICES
Stomach G .vi. Headache. Arid Stom
ach. Colds. Neuralgia Fatigue. Mus
cular, Rheumatic and Sciatic Pains?
('
Alt
Heidelberg
licer
Liasses, I tiled or Repaired
Our Specialty
HR A. K. W II.SON
E. I*. HOWARD
Agent For
THE OREGON JOURNAL
I’bttne lien vert on
P irsi - C las* Wood & Sawdbk
On Draught
Try un for Chicken Dinner nod
Prompt, Courteous Serv.ee
OLD GROW I II YKLLOM I IR
Barbecue Hu ml wiche»'
L E O S A M S , Beaverton
OLD IIKIDKI.IIERG PARK
FREE DANCING
Bl V THE III ST
Order
Vuiir
'till,
CREgfDÂIsE
From
DAIRY
Onlter Seluillherger A Sen
Beaverton, Rt 1
phono OHIO
Plume 11205
Matisfiiet itm G uu rim te rd
carpenter \\„rk
Remodeling
Poof I nig
Bnllt-lnx
Screen Door» nnd Window 9«reena
Kensoniihle Prices
B E A V E R T O N C A B IN E T SH O P
R. L. WAtJ-ACfJ ’
Hull nl 1 s t ,
Beaverton Ore
By Sam Iger