The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, May 21, 1937, Image 2

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    The Haarten K «*'
▼Ml
BKAVKRTON
cw u rn lia
R E V IE W
u ii %
itered a* Mcoud c l* « * B atter
ir S, 19*2. at th* poetof-
ftca el Beaverton, O re»»«, under
the act of March *. l i t 9.
1M UED EVERY
BEAVERTON,
T h e Shape of a Picture
H orizontal or V e rtic a l?
?
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Par year (in advance) . ... |1>00
140
Not In advance ................
Increase
A study o f newspaper .*1» ;u-
lu|tioi*> throughout the
Let ted
States shows a steady
upward
turn during: the past throe ycara.
Evidently thousands o f
people
have turned o ff their boisterous, 1
Jasiy radios, and g*'ne bark to
their newspapers.
That makes
fo r sense.
Attention is attracted to the
joint sponsorship by educational
authorities and industrial .earlers
o f a new movemen|t intended to
supplement the work o f
the
schools Its primary purpose is
to encourage youths in a study
o f the crafts, something that is
conceded to be o f vital import­
ance. yet may easily be missed
b y the average hoy. The great­
est stress naturally must be plac­
ed on academic
subjects with
the over-crowded
condition of
the nchoole end the shortage of
teartiers that exists in
many
cities.
The
new
youth
movement,
which obtained its start in cue
o f the
mod-western
states, is
gradually reaching out into o-
thers. Unfortuately, there
have
as yet been no la rge rewards o f­
fered to stimulate th ■ interest of
boys as in the case o f the risto-
e r Body Craftsman’s Guild after
which the
organization s pat­
terned. This educational founda­
tion continues to grow as a re­
sult o f its worthy ideals and able
management.
Cunyou t'lly bua iei|iu>»t*xl that
ivnlit/nl
business
m «n
rai»o
fâtKH» to lx> lined u* mulch money
for a fund that the federal ov-
erument
would
uppro|uTale for
re-builiRiu; the town
foHowIntr
the recant disastrous fire.
F U N -F A C H
When th* principal lines of a
subject are horizontal, don't
forget to hold the camera hori­
zontally. Composition may bo
further improved by enlarging
and trimming.
/
m i
Cove» ( rop Plowing
Re«t|
D A LLA S - -leavin g the orchard
cover crop
above
ground too
long often results in serious toss
o f moisture to the fruit .ro p If
the rainy period does not contin­
ue, says County
Agent XV. C.
Leth. T h e
best time to pk>W
OLD MEN
under a c o v e r crop is when the
Thom as Rdiaon «rnrtte-d .nirftet-
soil has the highest amount of
e* in his 8 0 V Cleimemccau at
moisture that It can hold for
79. d irected th e destinies o f the
the summer fruit developement.
French Republic.
le t h points out, and holding o ff
H in den bu rg a t 86 g ivin g V n ‘ because the crop has not at­
b llity to the German Reich. The tained satisfactory growth is poor
g r e a t GtedsGroe a p olitical pow ­ practice.
e r nil 97. Lloyd George art 74.
gtlD go in g strong.
Cooper
Mountain ladi«s »hth
S ocra tes studying music a t 70. met last Thursday at the home
Moses alt m ore then 100. ’ ending o f Mrs. Charles W eaver. Seven­
th e children o f Iarael out
o f teen ladles
w ere
present.
k
n
Place a clean, dry saucer or plat
ter upon a table. Take a pencil,
eraser eud down, aud hold It agutuel
the platter at an angle of about 45
degrees. Push ftrtuly in su endeavor
to move the pencil across the plat­
ter. You will find that the platter
moves and may even push the table-
covering or table Itself.
Place a small quantity of water
in the platter and rep«<at. You will
find the pencil eraser now moves
across the platter ulth very little
effort. W e might say that it "skids"
across the platter There will be no
tendency to move the dish.
Imagine the waste of margin,
if this picture had been taken
with the camera horizontal.
sure that the lines which givt
length to your subject parallel th«
long edges of the fllrn. thus avoidini;
an overbalance of margin above an<
below or to the right and left, a>
the case may be.
So much for planning the shap«
of a picture before you take it. but
composition can be improved. In
deed often much improved, by shap
ing the picture after you take it
There are two ways of doing it. You
may reduce the margins and. in
seme cases, also cut out distracting
objects by trimming the print; or.
still more effectively, you may mask
the negative so as to leave a se­
lected portion and. from this por­
tion. have an enlargement made.
Thus, a vertical subject in a verti­
cal panel that has cut ont detail on
the sides becomes much more Im­
pressive; Its height and importance
have been enhanced. Similarly, with
a horizontal subject a horizontal
panel w ill emphasize its “ repose"
lines and accentuate its sweep.
Most good pictorial work, such as
finds a place in salons because of Its
artistic excellence, is usually the
combined result o f choosing the
right camera position, masking the
negative and trimming the prin t
JO H N V A N GUILDER
TH E PA C T S
On a clean, dry pavement, you.
tires exert a very atroug push. It is
thla puah which moves your car (or
ward When the pavement la wet.
your tires have a tendency to repeal
the eraser and wet platter perform
ance This may prove to be danger
ous It you try to stop quickly or
change your direction suddenly
Other conditions which tend to
cause similar results are wet leaves,
car tracks, oil. ice aud snow. Under
such circumstances, whenever you
feel Impatient, Just remember the
wet eraser.
An Open Letter to
A Boor on Wheels
Christ
Jesu».
Ì *
I leu ver liai. Oregon.
I’d. adv
E.1 S T
What a Big Boy Am I!
—
Think on (halt until you run
to Christ; lay hold on
Dim:
choose H im ; vote for Hint, elect
Him ; name Him un yo«tr Deliv­
erer. Now look bark 2000 years
to C alvary and see the death-
sentence carried out agulnst Him
an«| you made free. Then iixik
Into this present hour and sea
Him us the Risen lo r d In mat­
ing heavenly strength to curry
you through "Ute next sixty <ti*«v-
ute.v and the next and the next
Next look ahead to the
gieat
dhy when H e routes with a stout
to open the gruyc and lift you
Into eternal glory. That In the
ages to edme Gist might »Is »
the exreedlr.K riches iff His g 'a c e
in H i» kindness to us Ihr >ttgh
#»4» r «I/« /«/♦:
On vim .rip • hi. <«* j» -vrum
litro t «l'1 'iciti *,ir "MS ■«,«ti
tier r« »..«», it r 11»» »»mm On« si
*»,« ttklitl viti mil t ire See S.m
I rate tv \ -vlier» lie world'»
two tergevi -»ridge« meet Rule
-Ite -lent beautiful train in
M am et, our new ure-amlmrd
*•»*/igbl lo I n» Angelet Con.
.nine lavi thru the advenmr-
.»it« Southwest and Old South.
Urtur nun unirvi», mi voi north-
rrn line train«. ( Imago and
ha»I«,»« low a« JU, i». For de­
tail« «re «our linai S I*. Agent
or writ- J A. O K M A N D Y ,
(mirra/ U.iiirwgrr A g m l . ( ì l i
l’an.n ilhtg.i Uoalatnl, Ore.
lYes s ir— From away Isacl’. VottX-
dcr II bus been W H A T A BIG
BOY AM I! With "Don't I pay
whut I ow e? Iksn’t I play square?
If your God is ns kind as they
say I ’ll get u glad hull I over
Didn’t know you l<s>kefl thnt
wny In the lllb lo photo of your­
self? Then see yourself attain.—
The word o f the 1 o rtl m ine to
the great
Apostle Until te ting
him to go out to the nations to
open their
eyes and to
ittm
them front darkness to light and
from the power nf Bulan ‘ o God.
There you are It lint led and 1» unit
I hy the Enemy part aw l parcel
: of
a world sunken In sin.
So
the Ttlhlo snap »In*.» yon.
Then what? " A il have slneixl”
and "T h e s a g e « o f sin Is de "th .“
So says th*1 Hook. 'When
yon
see yourself through God» eyes
you arc ready to think on J e s t»
j Christ as slain for your -bn*.
Fo
the stern law o f God
de­
mands ttuvt sin he pttnlshcd by
ilenth. Only then can 0->d for-
' give you.
A death must take
! place. And Gte Word says that
the lotrd bt w illin g to accept Je­
sus Christ, the Son as yttttr sub­
stitute.
H e stepped into your
»hoes and died for you. If you
w ill have It so.
th r u
C A l t f . T O a N l A
U t ile Jack Horner »at In n
corn er— Eating his Christmas pie.
lie stuck In hla thumb and pul-
let! out a plum utxl said Abut
a big hoy aiu 1!
____
.> s v f h e n i P a c e ' s
Dr. Milas
N E R V IN E
'Did (Aa uxwV
aaya
Mias GUvar
WHY D O N T
..
TOU
«
. T R Y ITT ..
more than three months
nf suffering from a nervous ail­
ment, M m GUvar uaad Dr. Miles
N e rv in e w h ich gave her such
splendid result» that she wrote
us an enthusiastic letter.
If you suffer from "N e r r a s *
If you Fie awake myhtz,
start at sudden noises, t»re
easily, are cranky, blue end
fidgety, your nerves ere
probably out of order.
gfuiet and relax them with ths
same medicine that “did ths
Work” for this Colorado glrL
Whether your “Nervaa" ha vs
troubled you for hours or tern
years, you 11 find this tens*
tested remedy effective.
i4t Drug Store» 2Sc and fJ JA.
\
T
0»
MI LES
\ ERVIN L
*x
»
li
a u to
-
K now Your Language
Business Places 1 o Patronise
B y C. L . Bushnell
IN BEAVERTON
School of Kagtish.
International Correspoedeoco
Schools
U L E T ID E " and "yule log” are
terms as fam iliar to us in con­
Test Shows Inoculation X alue
nection with Christmas as they
OREGON
C I T Y —Although no
were to our ancestors. The word
farm er ever thinks seriously any­ “ yule” has had an amazing vitality,
for its history stretches back beyond
more o f planting alfa lfa
with­
the mists o f antiquity. In Medieval
out first
inoculating the seed,
England the form o f the word was
Park
CofMetd ' I
Curnnsv.l'.e
“ yol” ; in Anglo-Saxon times it was
last year left just a small strip
“ geol," akin to the Icelandic “ jol/*
through his field on which the the great mid-winter feast o f pre-
Christian days. It is probable that
seed was not
inoculated. The
" jo l” is also the ancestor o f our
seed came up he
reported to
word “ jolly,” and that then as now
County Agent Inskeep, but the
“ Yuletide” meant “ a jolly tim e ."'
plants soon disappeared and the
• • •
Mrip is barren ar.d must be plant­
W rong: "Y ou are not as old as
ed over, while the
inoculated him.”
plans on each side form a vigor-
Right: “ You are not as old as
mis stand which w ill be reody he.”
“ Is” is understood— “ You are not
to be cut m June.
as old as he is.” It is easy to avoid
J such mistakes in the use o f the per-
Linn fa rm ers
Vttark Thistles i sonal pronoun when making a com-
ALBANY*— Canada thistles and I parison. if it is remembered that
wild morning glory are doomed some form o f the verb “ be” is al­
to a tough summer if Linn eo. ways understood.
farmers carry out presen' pians
of weed control, reports F. C.
Wade C raw ford, Klam ath Falls
Mullen.
County Agent.
More Indian «'ho ha» been ousted as
than 146 fanners have signified superinterdert
o f the reserva­
their intention o f controlling 1454 tion is un his w a y to XX’ashing- 1
acres o f these weeds by summer ton to in»ist upon a hearing. He
fallow methods, he says. Most says he doesn’t want the Job
o f this land has been entered o r ­ hack but he does want a -‘hance
der the agricultural conservation to tell his side o f the s t»ry .
program, fo r which compensa­
tion o f *5 per acre w ill he paid.
Early
O iie»t*
the O. XV. ttM terlfO
home Sutuluy were Xlr. und Mm.
S. A. I » ' » l s uixl fuinlly of Slier*
wtxxl, Mm. S (I Doughty and
daughter of Am ity und
J tuie»
Klrxdiel.m
ther»* In the glory.*’ So you fig ­
ure It. Hut tile atrcut God 'toes
not s«*e It that way. "W e nre
nil us un tWH-lenn thing nmt our
boat human efforts nre ns filthy
mgs« In his h oly eyes” nxest.i I-
sglnh 64:6.
F
ROM the standpoint of arttstle
composition the shape of a pic­
ture makes a lot o f difference. This
C A L L IT W H A T TOC W ISH
statement may seem axiomatic but
The c ritic s o f the neutrality
how often do we snapshooters give
bill call it "selfish nationalism.”
thought to it in usiug our cameras?
We all know that most cameras
No m atter what they call it. it
is an improvement over that old- are so constructed as to give us a
sfy le stu ff which kept the IT. choice between horlsoutal and ver­
tical pictures, depending upon the
S. on the brink o f w ar when
position in which we hold the cam­
we t ran led the insane na..<ms
era. but in the business of taking
o f Europe who pride themsetves
pictures there scents to be a sort of
on their "internationalism .”
psychology of laziness that makes
us choose the way most convenient
l e a d in g d o u b l e l iv e r
to our hauds. W ith some cameras
The average d river behind the
the vertical position seems easier,
w-th others the horizontal, and to
wheel frequently todts h ij horn
and sputters at the pedestrian ( change to the other position seems
to require an effort. Too many of us
who ’‘doesn't know any oetter.”
Them, the d riv e r becomes a pe­ don’t make the effort, when w e
destrian. and presto-change his should.
So. we go right on taking pictures
♦sears shift into reverse psychol­
ogy anti he bawls out some d ri­ the easier way without bothering
about the shape of them, when a lit­
ver who warns him o f la rg e r. tle thought and little more than a
That’s not an unusual person
twist o f the wrist would make all
Things happen
all-of-a- suuden the difference between good and
in crowded streets and highways. bad composition. Remember that
And so, we should a ll drive a- the lines enclosing a picture are al­
long with
every
intersection, most as much a part of its composi­
walker, tra ffic light, signal and tion as the lines inside.
Snapshot albums show all too
every car under suspicion. A ll
too often, when an accident hap­ many pictures o f vertical subjects,
pens. there is a quarrel aoout including persons in full length
who is to blame. But. is d ri­ poses, with a vast waste of margin,
vers. if we are sufficiently alert right and left, because they were
taken with the camera in horizontal
we don't let the other
person's
position. This is bad. because, for
mistake get us in trouble.
one thing, the excess o f margin di­
Expert drivers tell us there is minishes the importance of the sub­
just one th in g to do— 1 1 give ject and for another, distracting ob­
ourselves a margin o f sa'ety, a jects are usually present on one side
reserve o f space and a reserve or the other. That snapshot of
Mother picking flowers in the gar­
o f time.
T r a ffic accidents
furnish evi­ den is an excellent likeness, but
dence that most o f us lead double why the corner of the garage on the
left margin and clothes reel on the
lives. Become an
“ expert d ri­
right? These ugly objects would
v e r” and you w ill grow away
have been eliminated if the up-and-
from the weakness of "le a lin g a
down view had been used.
double-life."
In the case of scenic pictures, a
spreading landscape and such sub­
TOI'TH MOVEMENTS
jects as a flock of sheep or a herd
Forward-looking educato -s. a- of cattle almost always call fo r the
horizontal position, but no less
ware of their
responsibility m
often does a picture o f a tree, a
peparin? the youth o f the fla­ waterfall or a skyscraper demand
tten for happy and useful car­ the vertical. It la simply niaking
eers. today are turning to the
in d u * ial world fo r
assistance.
W ith budgets that are little bet­ their wilderndss.
ter than those o f depression Jays,
The dangerous njen o f history
on the one band. * r d the growing have been the younger oc.es—
com plexity o f
industry on
the Nero, Napoleon. A lexan der, Ben­
other, they realize that a ser­ edict Arnold. And shall we add
ious situation
confronts
teem,
H itler, Stalin and Mussolini?
one in which they must depend
upon outside agencies fo r help. ■ ---------------------- ---------------------2
| O n O rego n F a rm s
B ig business, let it be ^aid, is
rising to the occasion, in a .reat
m ajority o f cases without
the
slitditest hope o f m aterial gain.
One large corporation
reports
that it is spending appoximately
*100.000 a year in the dissemin­
ation o f technical data to scliools
and colleges making sp ecifx re­
quests fo r
information o f this
nature.
with
The Hi>»xi River Grower* club
Idaho » new name warden ha»
has takon up seriously the study
o f Ute elate tnh problem. Mem­ ctwu'elled the preuous death o r­
Engles. A*
bers <g the club are giving *|iec- der for O ddon
tal ntlenion to the »a le » tux a* reaul.t the rugged peak» of the
tire
it ha* beon
employed In the Gem » t a le s back country
attain safe fo r the king of b'rd».
»tu te o f XX'a»tiluist>»n.
F R ID A Y A T
OREGON
Circulation*
celebrate
»-hî«»f feature of the program.
lb®
J. H . H U L E T T .................E D ITO R
Newspaper
w ill
Its tuinitul I'lottcer Day» August
6, ? and 8.
ttceordkn« to an-
uouncemeat from the usnoots-
tion board
A rndmi w ill I k . the
Y
OME day, my ill-mannered friend, you are ffoinjf to ro
too far. Some day, when you sxverve around a street
STUDIO BARBER SHOP
comer, you are ifoinjf to clip the buttons off the wrong pedes­
trian’s vest, and he is going to catch up with you, haul you
F IR S T Cl.ASS W O R K
off your comfy upholstery and deal you the smacking-down
A T R E A S O N A B L E P R IC E S
you deserve. You’re a veritable titan of self-assurance,
aren’t you, when you’re behind an eight-cylinder engine?
K. D. Van M E T E R . Prop.
But how do you look on your feet? Are you the same dash­
ing, imposing, self-assertive personage for whom the rest
of the world must make room? Would you dare shove an­
w .
E.
p e w ;
other pedestrian aside; would you jostle a six-footer? You
would not, for you’re just a grubby little inferiority com­
U N D E R T A K E R AND EM BALM ER
plex who’s been sublimated by a shot of gasoline.
And what's the reason for this breakneck rush of yours,
(,rangt< Itulldlng
l> a «M to ti
anyway? You’re in an automobile. You’ll arrive at your
destination, 10, 15 or 20 times quicker than the pedestrian
you’re crowding back onto the curb. The best he can do is The Only Newspaper D e v o id E x­
clusively to the Interests of
five or six miles an hour. You are going 25 or 30, perhaps
W ashington County
10 miles an hour. Is your business ten times more urgent
— *1.00 a Y ear In An van r* —
than his? My, my, what an important fellow you are! What I
IF IT'S PRINTING
vast designs, what momentous projects must occupy your
W E CAN DO IT
waking hours to justify such impatience.
TH E B E A V E R T O N R E V IE W
The automobile, it seems, is the devil’s gift to the I.itOe
r pen ter Work
11 «-modeling
Man. Put him in control of a motor car and he’s cock o’ the
U oofinc
Built-In«
crosswalks. But if you suddenly yanked that ton or txvo of Screen Doors and Window S> reens
iron and steel out from under him, you’d find him just a
Henoonable Prices
measly nonentity with the mental setup of a grammar BEAVERTON CABINET SHOP
school bully.
R. I - W AIJoACB
S
(Trm m m U rd S m fe ty 5 e r n e « ,
H all a t 1st
Beaverton
Beaverton Barber Shop
c.
j
S A T IS F A C T IO N
TO N Y VlL F L IP A
I K N O W 'J
A
HOW
W|AY
DR*
K IN GC.T A N A P P LE
^ F tft
; Clip (Drriumiau
G reat Newspaper « I
N orthwest
F t G TH' A P P L E J j"' /
S ho w
n tr
the
A K i ll I R MUI.HOLLAND
Auto
Route
Beaverton
and
-;-
A gency
Orogoo
For information regarding.
»(’ rvlce or siilm rriptlon»
Rhone Beaverton 7503
Residence and office:
Corner, Second and Hall
..
Ore
M iC K Y
I PAN TOO D O U B LE)
N O T H IN ’/ r - r i
Our Specialty
A. K. W IL S O N
By Sam Ifier
C O IN IF IT'S HEADS
DASSO
I C t ET A N a p p l e ^ \ G o ! «
F R E E I f IT S TAILS V ^ L f S
I V.
G U ARANTEED
O P T O M K T K Y
Glasses, Fitted or Repaired
“ MICKY” AND HIS GANG
SNOOKT
STEVENS, rito rn i i ron
—
'
_\
w e il,
•
h a v e
),
A N O T T H Ne R ) > -
store
•>
« * 1 y
'& P
S nooky )
AH'S FrtOFl
M
is s o u r i
H mm
M