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About The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1937)
Th« Beaverton Review FRIDAY, AUOU8T IS, 1937 e- TH E _ _ .J - - L M - J U -------- BEAVERTO N R E V IE W SNAPSHOT GUILD Entered a* second-class natter December 9, 1922, at tbs poatof- flee i t Beavorton, O reg»«, under the act of March 8, 18*9. ISSUED EVERT BEAVERTON, D O 'S A N D D O N 'T * F1UDAV A T OREGON The Well Came Back she helped her daughter celebrate her sixth birthday last ¡Sunday Robert Taylor was seen wear ing a patch im one eye. but IU.< only from uu affliction common to most common people—a sty! And chuckles are being crented over a North Hollywood shop sign: "Robert Taylor Draper-1 le s ” THE FARMER’S INCOME FARM INCOSSI AI ID Í4 J Í lO W |»J1 t fj» UVtl - WO* J. H. H U LE TT........ Wall Disney's cartoon pictures are paid u fine tribute by seen arist Gene Fowler in this month's (Vsiuopolltan t'omparlng them with the Hollywood egoists he said in part; "A fter these Dis ney characters have made their entrances and exits they retu'T to their homes, the little Ink bottles. They disillusion no on * with cafe brawls. They hold no PREVIEW PARADES In Zulu furs. They never can lie unmasked nor degraded Nor does their cre ator stund on the housetops to eulogize himself through a gilded megaphone." We applaud both Disney and Gene Fowlo . SI BS4 R1PT10N KATES Per year (in advance) . . . . 11.03 Not In advance ------ i l l l t.IRLN t t> HELP "Tw o young men and a girt,, aged 17 to 19. wore killed instant ly late last night returning from a dance, when their car crashed into a tree at a high rate of speed. The fourth member of the party is in a critical condi tion in a local hospital.” This news-item, differing only in minor details, has appeared a thousand times, and in papers in every state of the Union. It re flects one of the most tragic phases of the automobile acci dent problem— the reckless dri vers in their teens and early twenties. Out for a good time, they careen over the highways and byways and at regular in tervals death follows in their tracks Immature minds regard it as an act of enviable bravado to "see what the old bus will do.” The larger part of the blame for accidents that kill and maim young fWople must be put squar ely on the shoulders of their parents. The fathers and moth ers who permit their children to endanoer their lives with reck less driving, or are too lazy tr find out the true state o f affairs, are. to put it kindly.' derelict in duty. Even worse are the par ents who, when their children are arrested for dangerous driving practices, move heaven and earth to have them freed without pun ishment— thus, in effect, telling them to go out and do it again. But youth itself, in the form of young girls who go riding with their boy friends, can be of the greatest assistance in reducing this toll by bestowing a bit of praise and showing admiration for the safe driver ana simply refusing to ride with the reck less one— make safe driving the price of a date and watch said hoy friend slow down. N HI t k a i h : LEAVES H°M r. This morning we took from our box in the postoffice a 16 page circular advertising August sales in a neighboring town at the re tail store of one of the great mail order bouses. Page 1 featur ed mattresses, the next three pages living and dining room and bed room furniture. A curtain sale and blanket sale took up sev eral pages. There were refrigera tors and radio bargains, paints and varnish bargains, plumbing equipment, tires, shoes, washing machines and auto supplies. Tfce l ack pages described a woman's hat sale. A ll the ads are well written. The merchandise is de scribed so attractively and in such clear, concrete English that merely to read creates a desire to buy. All of the ads are pro fusely illustrated. It is safe to assume that a thousand or more of these eireulafis are being dis tributed this week to many box- holders in the Vale tradings ter ritory. It so happens that the retail advertising inchage by Vale m e'- clianes in this issue of the En terprise is lower than for sever al months. Thus prospective buy ers in the Vale trading area, go ing to their postoffice boxes this week receive but one invitation to trtiy—and that comes from an out of town store 40 miles a- •way. Is it any wonder that bus iness that should remain in Vale goes to neighboring towns. Looking over the out of 'own circular, we notice that all the merchandise so attractively ad vertised can be purchased In Vale stores; also thet the out- of- town prices are no lower in most instances than they are right here in Vale. But what good does it do to stock a wide variety of merchandise and sell It at competitive prices if pros pective purchaser aren’t told a- hout it? Tnis leads u to the point o f this editorial. Newspaper ad vertising carefully written — just any old kind of newspaper advertising won't do It—but skill fully written newspaper adver tising can be the salvation of the ■ small town, even of small towns located near larger ones Two distances come to mind Buhl. I dnho and Redmond. Oregon are not much larger than Vale. Bor’ i are about 20 miles from a good- sized town. Buhl from Twin Fall? and Redmond from Bf-md In ih's respect they are faced with kien er com|>etition than Is Vale. But bo'h Buhl and Redmond are thriving business towns, keeping a large proportion of their local Give your camera half a chance and you’ll get good enapahota. T'S really quit© surprising the It Isn't necessary and might scratch number of amateurs who go mer the surface. Taking It for granted that y> u rily along snapping pictures without giving any thought as to why their have a clean lens and that your snapshots appear somewhat smud camera Is in good mechanical con dition let's discuss some "do’s" and gy or cloudy. "don'ts.” If your snapshots can be classed With the familiar box type cant- with the above the chances are the era it is so easy unknowingly to trouble can be attributed to your have your finger extend slightly own neglect and not to faulty con —or more so— over the lens. The re struction of the camera. sult is obvious. You will have an un A dirty lens, for example, will attractive black smudge over part cause smudgy prints. A lens is the of your picture. So keep your fingers eye of your camera. Can you see away from the front of the lens. Another error is g double expo clearly If your glasses are smudged sure caused by failing to turn the by finger prints? Cleaning a lens is a very simple film roll to the next number after operation. All you need is a soft, un snapping a picture. If you fail to starched linen handkerchief and turn It you may find, when your perhaps a match or pencil. If the prints are returned, that quite mi lens is quite small. The rear surface raculously grandma is sitting in her Ot the lens can easily be reached by favorite chair out in the middle of removing the back of the camera. a lake. When using a focusing type cam If the camera has a double lens (one behind and one in front of the shut era be sure to set the lens at the ter diaphragm), the front combina correct distance mark, for if you tion may be removed by turning to don't the chances are that your pic the left, which will allow you to ture will be out of focus and blurred. Here’s another oue. Unless you work through the shutter opening when set for “ time." with the hand have an extremely fast lens and kerchief over the end of the match shutter don't try to take broadside or lead pencil. If the lens 1* quite snaps of fast-moving subjects. Mov dirty breathe on it and then rub ing objects can. however, be caught, quickly with the handkerchief. Be even with an ordinary camera, if sure, when replacing the front lens, taken from an angle of about 45 de to screw It back Into the shutter as grees and not too close up. Amateur "snapshooting Is reslly far as It will go. The suggestion to work through anything bnt difficult and It is quite the shutter opening also applies to safe to »ay that the majority of pic- cleaning the front surface of single ture failures are the result of care- lenses fitted to box cameras and cer lessness or lack of thought on the tain folding models. Work carefully part of the snapshooter. John van Guilder and don't exert too much pressure I irade at home. And to do it, oolh lean heavily on advertising in their local weekly newspaper; as a casual examintion of either the Buhl or Redmond paper., would prove. —From The Malheur Enterprise B-------------------------------- -si Here’s Hollywood -a ¡0- Most of Hollywood’s 305 col umnists, fan magazine writers and newspaper reporters for 2 weeks have been eagerly running down clues to rumors of a sec ret Greta Garbo romance. Now they are on a hot trail, discovered however by the actress' nelgh- . bors! Car tracks, packing a Path up an alley, have been found stop ping at Garbo's BACK DOOR. Garbo lias the Frenchman's “ Maginot Line” of defenses about her Carmelina street house, lo cated just north f famous Sun set Boulevard The alley is a litte noticed lane leading to a hich wire fence, which is also the first line of defense. Beyond that is a high solid wall, and topping this three feet of can vas screen A looked gate ln tut wire is partly hidden by thick shrubbery, and the car tracks which stop there indicate fre quent calls of a backdoor visitor. Such Is the mystery of a reputed romance which soon may be sol ved’ HERE’S HOLLYWOOD George Murphy, rapidly rising y nmy ac tor whom we have kniwn liked and admired since he first came from Rrondway four y-art ‘ici. says. “ Hollywo u is where stars pat themselves on the hack until they're forty After that they start patting themselves UNDER TH E IR C H IN S !” H U T S t M l F it.I RKS FROM F M ’ F ltlM F M \l VI t n o > N Exjieriences of branch experi ment stations in eastern Oregon with trying to develop rotations on Columbia basin wh> at lands have shown that considerable care must be practiced to make sure that the fertility and mois ture balance is not too seriously disturbed. It has been found, for example that if wheat Is grown Iniraedlately after alfalfa has be -n plowed down, there will be an ex cess i»f nitrogen, which causes the wheat to grow so rank that tt later burns for lack of moisture before maturity. Various crop combinations and practices to a- vnld such difficulties are constant ly being studied at the branch stations. Small shelters, made of either wooden slats or framework cov ered with cheesecloth, have prov ed practical in protecting tonia toes from curly top or blight when tried out on the Hermiston branch experiment station. When practically every vine outside of ,h<’ »hellers would ho badly dls- eased, those under the shelters thrived and yielded at the rale of from 15 to 25 tons per acre, Both kinds o f shelters were left open on one side, indicating that the leaf hopiwrs, w hich carry disease, are not excluded, hut ' they do not work enough in par- ■makeup on he was noticeably tial shade to cause damage. This pale from a week in bed. method is not recommended on a For Fay Wray's current picture commercial scale, but is consid- 'P a rk Avenue Dame,” a newcomer ered practical for home gardens. named Wilson Binge has to do a -------- scene in which he was to be very An intcresitng study being nervous when confronted by the made at the Union branch exper- actress Binge did it to perfec ¡mental station Is on the compar- tion. He had been in a three- atlve palatabilities of the various car crash coming to work; his grasses and legumes. Equal a- car was practically demolished; mounts of the different varieties an ambulance brought him to the of grasses, clovers and other for- studio; and the studio physician, age crops are fed to animals, and reporting he was not much hurt, the amount rejected is measured, said he was suffering from a se- The slender stemmed type of, vere nervous shock. crested wheat gTass, known os ______ the fairway strain, was relished Olivia de Haviiand, a California | b* tter ,han * ° nle Iw m e * . This born girl, appropriately has been 8train i8 recommended only where cast for the feminine lead in "Gold moi8lurP conditions are a little is Where You Find It” a typically t,PttPr ,han ln lhe drier eastern California story. She has gone to Oregon hinds, the Northern California mount- ains for a three week vacation, OSU Hop Circular Well Recoiled where she intends digging into The »«rond progress report on libraries of the “ Mother Lode” coat* and practices In hop pro towns for old pictures showing duction in Oregon, which was is- life of the ’49ers. sued in mimeographed form by the O.S.C. experiment station. Porter Hall, playing in another has recently been reprinted by a historical western, “ Wells Fargo,” j private firm of hop merchants In has added to his collection of I New York. Hugo V. Ixiewl, Inc. western relics a copy of the New ] asked permission to reprint the York Times which crossed the circular of information to give it country by pony express. wider distribution. Ella Logan is the gay and Officers of the company ex- rowdy comedienne currently seen pressed admiration for the facts in "Top of the Town” and "W o- developed by the Oregon State man Chases Man.” It probably specialists, who conducted the wilj surprise you as much as It survey. A final report of this did your columnist to learn th i! cost study, which includes three ON TH E SETS: Joan Bonnet and Henry Fonda laughed at the sun’s efforts to turn on a heat * wave this week They spent I wo » f three torrid days in the rain, making scenes in a big indoor set at United Artists Studios for “ I Met My Ixtve A gain .” With both in evening dress. Fonda chases the a-tress through the w< ods :n n heavy rain Between scenes 1 he removed her lavender satin and chiffon e w n , but Fonda said ■ t was too much work to get bark Into a wet shirt and tie a wet how tie So ’¡e kept his sopping clothes on, amusing himself wod- ing In the mud puddles with a toy mot r boat. Playing grown up hoy. I ankv 'rut popular JitT.^s Stew art after a week’s idleness, came hark In play Ginger Hoger's lead ing man in “ Vivacious Ix t ly . Stewart generally wears a heal thy tan. but before he got his AFTER THE HONEYMOON VtMtMT 19 »4 |9J4 ____ — rosACCo 71« ________ _ sox A4« IV7» líVH - 100* i — ------------- liv i s to a t S t* = = j Y r | •» Mllk proved a more dependable source ot farm Income during re cant years than most major farm products. according to the Federal Trade ('»miniaston's recent agrlcaF tnrml Income study During 1982 when groes farm In come sagged to Its low eat point, dairy farmers received 54 per cent an much for milk as In 1929 Farm era received only 40 per cent at tbs 1989 total for llreetock. Ja per cant for tobacco, 84 per osat far sod 28 çsr can! for wheat. years <>f records b> Oregon grow ers. will soon tie Issued In bul letin form by the oyperlment sta tion. CHUHCH y V N O I N C Diesis Si St. CtM-llia'* ( liurch iti i Re». 4». I,. O'kcrle, I’attor | æ----------------------------------------■ Sunday Services 7:20 and j:30 A M. m--------------------------------- a t Naze rene Uhurrh Julius Hiller, Fatter ffl- COTTON a ra \ ' W *€A! a 43« Stilb Istwiry r.eeitatwe Chart By 1984 when groes farm Income recovered substantially, milk was well ahead of other major farm products with a gross of 84 per cent Livestock was 51 per cent and wheat 45 per cent. Only one non feud crop was higher— tobacco at 78 per rent of the 1929 figure. Cotton was 48 per ecul of the pre depression Income. From 1989 to 1984. the average Income to the producer from milk baM op better than any farm prod WSt reported Owensboro, over on the Ken tucky side of the Ohio was al ways a stirring little city. Buck In those days, with each heavy rain. Main street grew to a ri ver of deep and gooey mud. But necessity Is the mother of Inven tion and so came the simple do Vice Hull lei mule teams and tobacco trucks go back and forth unhindered while we fool pas- seugers made It across dry-shod That little device was those stone blocks spaced far enough apart to let wagon wheels Ihrinigh and set' high enough out of the mud to keep shoes In the dry. I'ut those Oweushoro stc|ft»lug alones Inlo lhe old hymn HTAN- DING ON THE PROMISE* OT 000 Uka Ho- s t e p p i n g on THE PROMISES You ripe sslnls of the Almlglilly who huvn searched out the Fremlaes; res: ed on them; laid them tiefore Hod and with Indy Itoldneas reminded him of them; told him he could not fail his pledged word You know You could tell us how they held you up In the day of trial Like the time the well went dry Miss MavDonuld of the fa mous Fatih Orplutiiage lu India was asked If there ever catue a duv when prayer failed lliem and they found themselves In need. She suid never, but there eume times of testing Take the year of the long drouth when the stones tu the bottom of lhe bl„ well showed a coaling of dust at lust the smaller well also failed What then for lhe Son widows und orphans til this faith home* What now for this sta tion where every need was laid before God In prayer and no *|>- | m - u I ever made to man? When the word reached Hnm- ubat she went upart und was a- way for some hours to lay the case liefore the laird When she returned It was to tell Miss Mac Donald to go and look. Wondct- Ing. this English Secretary peer ed over the edge Mvlng water not only In the one but In both wells! Mo we ask. Is there any thing lhe Mighty God will not do f. r his own? Has he uot pl''d- ged to perform It for the redeem ed who look only to Him? faiok away from self, you hi* people and live by the promis es. "My God shall supply all your need according to his riches In glory by Jesus Christ.” Phil. 4:19. Mldweek prayer-meeting ** : 30 Wednesday nights. Come anti worship wIRi us. We « e Ironie nt rangers. f l --------------------------- M llethel t i>»grcgstliiiial Uhurrh | I Harper U. Burns, I’ssfor | ■ ----------------------------------------1« Bible school— 9:45 a in. It. C- Doty, superintendent Good class es for all ages. Morning worship at 11:00 a.m. Special music by Vested Junior clmir. W I, Cady, Director.. 8e.-- m»n by the Fastor. Theme, "The Fearlessness Of Jesus,” Note: You will greatly enjoy a discussion on this subject. We do so much appreciate the many who are helping to keep the church going during the sum mer months. We will be most huppy to see i Btwverfon. Oregon, you and welcome you to our scr- vices Sunday morning. Sundny School— 9:15 a.m. Bring your family for religious wor ship nr.l stay for the morrlng Morning Worship- 10:45. Sub ject. "Keep the Sabbath Day- Holy.” Evangelistic meeting— 7:45 p.tn. The Pastor’* subject will be, Miss Katherine Desinger left on •'How to be Wise. Live I » n g and Saturday for a two week's vaca Happily, and Get to Heaven.” tion at Tillamook where she will Good congregational singing, Visit at the home of Mr. anj .Mrs. and special numbers are a lw ays' Thayne Smith (Oenrdeve John part of our service. .-on). 1 Ui Pd. adv. in em B sim a a u teN N n ^ ^ . Business Places ToPatronise. IN BEAVERTON ■ ■ m STUDIO BARBER SHOP H i . ■ ■ H i I a I ■ Beaverton Barber Shop E. D. Van METER, Prop ONE HUNDRED UNION W. PER CENT SHOP E. PECO UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER Grange Building Beaverton O PTO M E TR Y Glasses, Fitted or Repaired Our Specialty DR A. E. W ILSON C. J. HTKVK.NN, FRO FH 1 ETON SATISFACTIO N G U ARANTEED •’ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ J S QJijr dDrpgmiian S After mure thaw i_ ot suffering from a merit, Mias Glivar ussd D r.; Nervine which gave twr splendid results that she us an enthusiastic If you suffer ffrr from fron» "Jfa "Nera as." If you “ __________ •tart at •ajttiy, art era*ky, blue «aJ pr oJx& v’S T a / " •inlet and relax < ■ J Great Newspaper mt the Northwest " ■ ■ H m m AKTIICK MM.MOLLATI» ■ I work” tor this Colsrtfe gbL Auto Rout* and Agency Beaverton Ora); on ■ For information regarding.. ■ .. service or subscription« ■ Phone Beaverton 7303 J Residence and office: m Corner, Second and Hall HI ■ ■ ■ * a ■ ■ »m e medicine that “did tfca Whether pour "N areas* haws troubled you for houn or flea you’ll find thte tested remedy effective. At Drug Storm U a amd OR M IL C R Y IM By Geoff Hayes