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About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1920)
V FRIDAY. MAT a, 190, 111 BBAVBKMN TI"8 MM THBn THE CAPITOL New of Owen! FaeUc In taral at the Coturty Seat Miss Mary Harbison has gone to Morgan, Oregon, where she expects to spend the summer on her father's ranch.; , Mrs. Victor Pehrsson, who has been spending the winter in Califor nia, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J, F. Gardner, on return to her home in Buffalo, North Dakota. H. C Peterson reported on the Hos pital question at a meeting of the business men recently and it is that Hillsboro stands a fair show of get ting the Portland Sanitarium locat ed hare. So far there have been but three sites offered and this city has offered one ofthem. The question is to be decided June 1st. Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Hahn, of Port land, have decided to make this city their home and moved here the past week. They are the parents of Mrs. Hoffman, of this city, and Stanly Hahn, of Mountaindale. The assistants in the county of fices are to receive an increase of $10 a month on their salaries, by order of the court.1' The deputy clerk and deputy Bheriff will each receive an increase of $25 a month. James Townsend, a resident of this city for many years, was viBiting his brother, and while there died. He had been absent about a month. His age was sixty-two years. The fune ral took place at Salem. Wade Lull, of this city, sustained the fracture of both bones above the ankle of his left foot, by a log roll ing upon it. He is receiving every care, and while the accident was a very painful one, is getting along very well. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Garrett, Mrs. Scotch and Mrs. Wells were in Cor vallis last week calling upon their young people who are attending 0. A. C. Mr, Gantett improved the opportunity by taking a little fishing trip while in that part of the coun try. Grant Mann, who has for many years been a resident of Cornelius, 1IIIII1III1I1IHQ (KEROSENE) COOKSTOVES See Our Display . of White Material for SKIRTS Invisible Plaids and Stripes 75c and 98c per Yard New Ladies' Waists Made of White Voile, splendid quality, lace trimmed, very stylish BISHOP BROS. for quality Dry Good, Groceries, Job Printing riotico In order to enable my newspaper friend, 0. D. Hamstreet, of the Sheridan Sun, to take a much-needed vacation, I have gono to manage hie paper for two weeks. Any job printing that i needed soon may be sent me at Sheridan, Ore., and will be promptly done and returned. Those who have work that will keep are requested to hold the same until my return, and oblige, - - A. G. CArJTII, Ths Jcb Printer was brought before the County judge here last week and tried for insanity. Mr. Mann was taken into custody on a complaint sworn to by his wife and at the hearing many witnesses testi fied. He was takes to the state iaati tution at Sales, ., D. W. Bath, who soma twelve ago, was the editor ef the Indenen dent, called apoa friends hen she past week. His home is In Cereal lis, where Us wife is operating a millinery atom. He was oa his way to Goldendale, Washington, to visit his son, Irving. T. G. Brownleewe, wife and child, who were on their way to Portland on the train the day of the wreck and who were all more or less bruised and mlured, were brought home, unable to continue their journey to Portland, where they wen going to be present at the bedside of the former's father, who passed away that day, at tthe age of eighty-five years. The resignation of E. L. Moore, president of the Hillsboro club, was accepted at the last meeting, Mr. Moore giving as his reason for want ing to resign, that it was impossible for him to attend, as his business called him away from town, and he would be unable to be present at the meetings. The vacancy will be .filled by the vice president, Mr. Weil, and M. P. Cady was elected to the vice Presidency. , Henry, Beavertan's old faithful cow, is now ready to supply all milk demands at 12 cents a quart. Thos. B. Harris, Vincent Place, fiea verton, Oregon. 7tf FOR SALE Six weeks' old pigs. F. H. Schoene, Route 8, Beaverton, Ore, IStf VETERAN RECEIVES LETTER FROM GENERAL WOOD W. J. R. Beach, of this city, has received the following letter from General E. Wood: Indianapolis, Indiana. May S, 1920. Dear Mr. Beach: I have your letter of the twenty second. Thank you for the suggestion. In all my talks I have made it clear that I have the greatest respect and ad miration for the veterans of the Civil War and the Spanish War and the veterans of the Great World War. It has been a particular pleasure to me to meet so many veterans of the Civil War on my trips through the country, and I need hardly tell you that I have the greatest admira tion and respect for them. The country owes them a debt of grati tude which will never be paid. Sincerely yours, LEONARD WOOD. Mr. W. J. R- Beach, Past Commander, Department of Oregon, G. A. R., Forest Grove, Oregon. Teacher "Well, how stupid you are, to be sure! Cant multiply eighty eight by twenty-five! Ill wager that Harvey can do it in less than no time." ' ( Abused student "I shouldn't be surprised. They say that folks mul tiply very rapidly these days. Men' Furnishings OREGON NOTES vuttM m f ru mm. to toarset travel throat too Wlh tanette valley Is under way already. The Union Livestock association will sold Ms muffin annual show at Union, Jam 1-4. The ninth annual oonferoaat of the Deschutes Baptist association was held at Redmond. It Is reported that hop vines In the Independence district are making ft thrifty growth. A large cougar v last week killed ft ealf on the farm of George Leedy, four miles north of Toledo. A dairy and sheep extension ashool was held at the North Craft farm In Douglas county Friday. McMinnville Elks to the number of 600 will attend the state convention to he held at Salem In July. A gain of $1,616,869.36 In deposits la the three banks of Eugene has been made during the past year. The high price of sugar has caused a slump in the demand at Hood River for strawberries and cherries. Under the auspices of the Jack son county farm bureau a two-day dairy -school was held la Mcdford. Merlin Gold was instantly killed at Hammond Lumber company, Camp No. 10, near Clatskanlc, by a flying log. Union high school district of Madras has voted to issue $60,000 in bonds for immediate construction of a building. Both bondB and special tax for a new high school gymnasium carried In the special election held at Mon mouth. Three airplanes will be sent to Eu gene from Mather Field, Sacramento, for the air circus to be staged there May 20. In order to conserve fuel for spray rigs the Hood River Apple Growers' association Is urging conservation of gasoline. ' Because of lack of patronage, service of the Portland Navigation company between Salem and Portland has been discontinued. The Alaea River Lumber company has shipped a carload of fir logB to New York to test their adaptability for ve neering purposes. Scores of small flrei In the hills around Eugene have raised a pall of smoke. The fires are caused by farm ers burning brush. The Corvallis Commercial club has gone on record against the specific gravity teBt for gasoline and In favor of suspending the law. The laying of the six miles of sub marine telephone cable to connect the Tillamook rock lighthouse with the shore, has been completed. A tract of 34 acres partially within the city(limits of Albany was purchas ed by the Linn county fair association for permanent fair grounds. The Astoria board of school direct ors Is calling for bids for a new gym nasium for the high school to cost when equipped about $60,000. The twenty-ninth annual session of the Southern Oregon Medical associa tion was held at Roseburg. It was de cided to bold the convention at Grants PasB next year. The state land board has recelved'a total of $644 in royalties from three Portland sand and gravel companies for sand and gravel taken from the bed of the Willamette. Albert MeaderB and W. f. Jenkins, who escaped from the prison wood camp last Saturday night, were cap tured at Mill City by Cherry James, a guard at the penitentiary. More than 160 plumbers and their wives, from all sections of the state, gathered in Salem for the nineteenth annual convention of the Oregon State association of master plumbers. Will R. King of Ontario, former dem ocratic national committeeman for Oregon, has resigned as chief counsel for the United States reclamation serv ice, to become effective June 16. Shortage of gasoline Is becoming acute at Klamath Falls and may result in the closing down of all sawmills which are supplied with logs direct from the woods by motor truck. A movement has been started among Marlon county taxpayers to Introduce a bill in the legislature at Its next ses sion prohibiting -the catching of moun tain trout during the spawning season. . The state desert land board will ask congress to extend the contract be tween the state and federal govern ments relative to the Walker Basin Ir rigation project In Deschutes country for a period of 10 years. Statistics show, according to the war department statement, that Oregon's enlisted strength for Its national guard is 2152 men, of which 1346 have been enlisted. During the month ending May 1 there were enlisted In Oregon two companies of Infantry, two com panies of coast artillery, one company 9f engineers with 117 men and four officers, and one quartermaster detach ment of 24 men, composed mostly of commissioned officers. BISHOP BROS. For Qtuf.tr -DryGoods, Groceries, lsa'sFraishlngs Fred Carver, 11, and Herbert Dor), It, who ran away from the boys' and girts' aid society home in Portland Monday, walked Into the police sta tion at Salem and surrendered. They said they wen hungry and wished to return to Portland. Testimony and evidence relating to the train wreck at Bertha station May 9, which resulted In the death of nine persons and ths injury of 40 others, will be taken at a hearing by the Ore gon public service commission In Port land Monday, May $4. Complete investigation of the sugar situation as it affects the entire state of Oregon will be made by Hall 8. Lusk, chief assistant to United States Attorney Humphreys, who left last week for San Francisco. Mr. Lusk will be in California for at least a week. Daniel McCarthy, 102 years of age and the oldest patient at the state hos pital at Salem, Is dead. Ha was com mitted to the old Hawthorne Institu tion In Portland In 1868 and remained there until 1883, when, with other pa tients, he was transferred to Salem. The Dalles will build a civic auditor ium at a cost of $125,000. ' This was de cided when cltlsens went to the polls and gave the project a majority of 154 votes. Six hundred and twenty-four votes were cast General obligation bonds to the extent of $60,000 also were voted. By defeating both the Marsh field and Salem teams in the finals of the Oregon High Behoof Debating league tournament, the Corvallis high school debating team won the championship of the Btate for 1020 and possession for one year of the University of Oregon cup. Business men and college students are urged in a letter received by Will G. Steel, secretary of the Eugene cham ber of commerce, from the secretary of agriculture, to Bpend their summer' va cations working on farmsju order to Increase the food production of the country this year. Twenty-seven bridges and two over head railroad crossings on the route of the Pacific highway between Salem and the California line, for which con tracts have been awarded by the state highway department, have been com pleted during the past week, are under construction or contemplated within the next month. Percy Cupper, state engineer, will leave this week for Sacramento, .where he will confer with W. F. McClute, state engineer of California, with re gard to the proposed appropriation of water from Warner lake In southern Oregon for the irrigation of lands em braced In the Surprise valley project In northern California. The last step to insure prosperity for the Rogue river valley within a year, with Irrigation of 10,000 acres of Its best orchard and farm hmds, was taken when contracts were signed by the board of directors of the Medford irri gation district and the Rogue River Canal company for the sale of $1,250, 000 of district per cent gold bonds at 99 and for the complete Installation of a system of Irrigation to be completed in time for the season of 1021. That black volcanic cinders, Inex haustible deposits of which are found In the immediate vicinity of Bend, may BOlve the problem of finding a light aggregate to take the place of gravel In bridge concrete, which has been con fronting the Btate highway commls-, slnn for some time, is the belief of Dis trict Highway Engineer Stebblns. Mr, Stebblns has sent samples of the oln ders to the office of the state, engineer in the hope that they may be found satisfactory for this purpose. Bonds issued by the Grants Pass, Medford and Ochoco Irrigation district will be certified by state Irrigation se curities commission as soon as the records of each project are completed and filed with the state engineer, ac cording to a decision reached at a con ference held In Salem. The Grants Pass district. In Josephine county, has voted bondB in the sum of $184,000, the Medford district $1,250,000 and the Ochoco district $100,000. The three projects are now under development. The state highway commission has a legal right to make local changes In the roads to eliminates curves or grades and to bring about other Im provements, but It Is not empower id by law to abandon routes already es tablished by the legislature, according to a decision handed down by Judge G. F. Skipwortb of Lane county, In which he held against the commission In the case brought by B. II. Rock hill of Riddle to restrain the state from proceeding with the construction of the so-called Canyonvllle cutoff sec tion of the Pacific highway. The state board of control, acting upon statements contained In telegrams received from the three members of the state highway commission, lndl eating that there was urgent need of fund with which to meet obligations already Incurred by the state through the awarding of contracts for post and forest roads in Oregon, disposed of fir 000,000 of bonds under the soHsalled federal aid road law passed at ths spe cial session of the legislature last Jan uary. The bonds were purchased by the Lumbermen Trust company of Portland, which submitted the most satisfactory bid of 89,09 In behalf of the Continental Commercial Trust A Savings bank of Chicago. ( REAL TRUCK SERVICE we have mad, m specially ox ooina; aauung ror neavervn mam, ' We have two good trucks and a good team and they an Bandied by careful and reliable driven who will serra you t your adnav tan, whether It be a small reel you wish handled In a hurry, or freight In ton lota to er treaa Portland. We will make tripe any where at any time. , Beaverton Livery Stables j PHOTOGRAPHS D. Perry Evans Portrait Photographer Phone Maln7C'J ' 270 V, Washington St, PORTLAND, OREGON IflfiS F.05t-,ii.A,fL ortelej)towihmto PEARL OIL (KEROSENE) FOR OIL HEATERS' COOKSTOVES AND LAMPS rnxivwD oa company ICAliroRMtAl MRS. A.E.GARDNER Cady Bldg. Beaverton. i Thursdays Branch of Gardner Progressive School of Music, Eilers Bldg, . Portland ' H.WOODfORD Contractor and Builder . Old or New Work Route 4, Boi 20. Beaverton, On. HOME BAKERY FOR HOME COOKING Ice Cretin Tobacco Fresh Bread Dally Peitry of All Kinds . R. D. YOUNfl, Prop. Facts You cannot deny them. Motorist, buy Zerolene because it Is good lubrica ting oil i because it roakea the car last longer. Mora than half the mo toriatsof the Pacific Coast ' Mates Use Zerolene. Such approval is never an accU dent; it is given only aa reward to products of highest quality. Use Zerolene for Correct Lubrication of your auto mobile, truck or tractor. STANDARD OIL COSWaHT oootfooawMoaooooaooocoooo STROUD & CO., Inc. Real Estate Loans Insurance j Beaverton, Ore. each type of engine F. H. JOHNSTON, Sptdil Agtnl, ;ORliGON ELECTRIC TICKET OFFICE Commutation tickets, and local tickets to all points on ths Oregon Electric Railway an now on salt at Dean's Drug Store, Beaverton. Pas sengers will find time tables and full information regarding trains at this store, and no doubt will appreciate the convenience of securing ticket there before boarding trains. VM CLOVER and mixed hay for sale. B. R. QalbrsJth, Route 8, Beaver ton. M FOR SALE A Ford, 1916, mod condition for sale at a i.argaim. High way Garage, Beaverton, lOtf X P. U. CLUB en Joy 8 GATHERING ON CAMPUS On the campus last Thursd ty there gathered a host of xormer Pacific University students of long ago. They partook of a feast of good things to eat as well as enjoying a flow of soul, recounting old-time remlnis censes of former days and mingling together as in the years of youth. Composed of "girls" who attend ed school at Pacific University thir ty and more years ago. Most of these attended at the same time. Mrs. Emms, Wooley-Chandler President. . Mrs. Fannie Rolston-Russell Vice President. Dr. Ethel Gray Miss)flecrtary Treaaurer. Mrs, Mary Johns-Jacobs! Mrs. Daisy Stott-Bullock, Mrs. Ella Gel ger; Mrs. Mary Brown-Lewis; Mrs, Cora Wells-Soden: Mrs. Ida Thoraaa Caplesj.Mrs. Nellie Woods-Adamaj Mrs. Flora Lebo-Brobst: Mrs. Alice Denney-Brownj Mrs. Kate Gurvin Fannoj Mrs. Gaghen Bobbins, vMrs. Edith Tosier-Weat burred. Guests with the X P. U. party were. Mrs. Mary E. Hoxtsr, Mrs. Charlotte Woods, formerly of Forest Grove; Mrs. Frank Graham, Mrs. Joseph Hoffman. . Barnett Y. Roo and wife (Julia Brown) were schoolmates of most of the Club, also Mrs. Lillie Hampton Buxton, Mrs. Carrie Buxton-Harrison and Mrs, Annie Roe-Goff, all old students were present, an were also Pacific University faculty, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Scott, and W. H. HoUls, President of the Commercial Club. Members not present at Forest Grove, May lath were: Mrs. Adit Clark-Brown, Mrs. Caples-Robbins. Mrs. A. Kingsley. I oreH uruvc news-tiniM. ! Sktniui OH Co., Antrim, Ortg TV fg WW