Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19??, August 20, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    MH TWO
.WANT ADS rOK ORBQOMIAM
May be left it The Ttan otflee
or telephone then to K. H. Jeoao.
MM Ford, MM Velie, MM Oak
land, 1920 Ford truck, MIT Ford.
All in good shape and olf ond at bar
gaai prices. Loall 8chlottmnm,
Highway Garage, Beaverton, JStf
PEARL OIL
(KEROSSNB)
HEAT
C0MT0RT iunu 00. coinunr
WAurauui)
NEW GRAIN SACKS
for sale
CHAS. BERTEOLD
feed store
EDUCATION FAYS
FOB THE INDIVIDUAL AND FOR THE STAT!!
A person with No Education hie but One Chance in 160,000 to
Bender Distinguished Service to the Public
With Common School Education 4 Chances
With High School Education 87 Chances
With College Education 800 Chances
Are You Giving Year CUM Hia Chance?
THOSE STATES ARE WEALTHIEST THAT HATE INVESTED
HOST IN EDUCATION
Oregon Agricultural College
Through "Liberal and iWtieal Woestton" pre
pares tne i oung man nnai
umzetutnip una dpi
AGRICULTURE ENGUiEERIN
VtiniPDT DD A lU AfV Vt"lBl
The training includes PHYSICAI JBUCATlOrl MUSIC, ENGLISH,
MODE5N .LANGUAGE, AlA, and the other Essentials of
a Standard Teetam
FALL TERM OPENS BEPTBM
jaRjerenBtiaTaON mm to
THE VOSIW. Ontti AjriUnl tOm Ctfnfc, Ore.
F. H. JOHNSTON, Special Agtri,
REAL TRUCK SERVICE
We have made a specialty of doing hauling for Dearer ton fn&a.
We have two good trucks and a good team and they are handled
by careful and reliable drivers who will serve yon to your advan
tage, whether it ha a amall parcel you wish handled in a hurry, or
freight in ton lots to ar from Portland. We will make trip any
where at any time.
Beaverton Livery Stables
i
PHOTOGRAPHS
D. Peri-y Evans
Portrait PhotofTakr
Pfcoat Main
270H WfdiiiirtaB St,
POBHAND, OREGON
THt MA VI II TON TMM
gneared at the IwM (Oregon)
FoMomo u
auaaommoM mtii
la advance aioaat of
wMk the aahUalsr.
jb. year by anil ..
advertising ratea an applleeUe.
Good nada mat money thaaa daye
hut they are worth It
Try trading with Boavarton mer
chant. Yonll like tkm.
Some of our contemporaries are
joke. We are inclined to think that
the joae WW oe on uwiu mn
constituents if they remain idly at
ease anu aiiow wu m -
be infested with this latest menace.
It would be vary convenient for the
farmer to be able to borrow money at
five per cent, as the tamparers with
our legal rate propose, but it would
I borrow no money at all. which will
doubtless oe we result u ua mc -ure
carries.
I Reports of George Aiken, of the
I Ontario Argus, who went back to
! tinna.nt tlA the DakfltlU tO inVOB-
j tigate personally, given before the
UJ
JtTNIKQ " HOME ECONOMICS
IER M, HM. TUITION IS FREE.
- y An all -refinery
" gasoline with a
f ! , :. .. continuoug chain
! of boiling point.
STANDARD on. ctx
(Crfebnria)
Standard Off Co., Btavtrion 09
..
75M
0
Bute Iditnrial Asaodatioa, show that
Uw doctrine of the league it m gospel
of bate. Discontent la never conalies
thro and fail findings go to prove
that the N on-Partisan League ia ao
exception.
There ia a suggest! on contained hi
an artiest cunli nailed to the Tineas
this weak that ia worth considering.
We refer to the union high school
susmatiea. Than are two sides to
the Question and it should be weighed
well before action ia taken. The 14
districts in. the West end of the coun
ty did not, aa our contributor infers,
decide to form a onion high school.
The vote waa a tie and it ia probable
that a new election win be bald in
the near future. There ia, however, a
union high school at Banks and
many localities in other parta of the
state have tried the experiment with
varying results. A careful survey of
conditions should be made before the
plan ia put forth.
Renorts continue to com to us of
this or that one of the former student
body of the Beaverton High School
who is going in to the Portland high
schools this coming winter. We do
not take these reports seriously, for
mgn scnooi pupils, line tneir ewers,
often talk much with little seriousness
of purpose for the thing they say.
But to any who may be seriously con
sidering this course, if there are any
such, we offer this thought for con
sideration. It is not the school, or
the course, or the teachers that get
results. It's you and upon your ef
forts alone will depend the result
The courses of the Portland schools,
while more numerous than those of
fered at the local high school, are no
better and graduation will give you
no better nor more . dvanced collese
standing. The worth of the Be&ver
ton school, like the worth of the
Beaverton community, depends upon
the loyalty of the individuals who
matte it up. Experiments which have
been made in the nast in thiB and oth
er communities, of sending toe pupils
away from the local school to a larg
er city school, have proven expensive
and have not proven successful in the
majority of cases. There are influ
ences there of a character with which
vou are not familiar, which are de
fecting. The best students in our
big colleges come from the smaller
high school8.( This statement is for
average, not individual cases.) The
lamp of experience is a good one to
be guided by. It is not likely that
you will react differently from new
environment to the average student.
The average of results in the past is
apt to be your average chance. It
might pay to investigate.
A STATE ROAD PROGRAM.
Many people in Oregon are wonder
ing wny tne state uignway uimnua
sion is not proceeding with the road
nroaram that waa hud out for this
year and also that planned for the
r - iw .Pk, pi. the as
cent spring election voted Don as, oy
a very large majority, to complete
the highways of the state as planned
ana everyway, witnout exception,
supposed that the work would pro-
ceeo, nut k seems tnai ue uignway
iromnuasion taxes tne nana mat ow
imr to the fact that the money mar
ket is not as favorable as it murht be
and in order to sell bonds they must
oe aiscountea, tne nrogtam ior Diiua-
ing state roaas snouia oe ueia up
until a more favorable time when
labor is cheaper and the money mar
ket is easier, hence the road building
program is not proceeding as it was
expected that it should.
We believe the people of Oregon
want good roads and that they realise
they cannot get them without paying
a reasonable price for them and are
not only willing tnat tne roaas saouia
be built, but that they are anxious
that the road program should be pro
ceeded with, even if it is necessarv
to discount the bonds in order to get
ue money, u is sxaiea tnat a wouia
be necessary to discount the bonds
somewhat to secure the ready cash.
It is estimated that with all the dis
counts that may be necessary, it will
only oring ue price 01 money to a
fraction over five and one-half per
cent. Surely the people will not
object to this, as they are the ones
to profit by the good roads invest
ment and they are the tnes to get
tne oeneiits 01 tne roads wnen uey
are completed.
When the special election was held
last spring the voters were assured
that the roads would be built if the
neonle voted tao bonds and thev v ted
flthem by an overwhelming majority.
- rtoDoay eue is owttinn business
because money, materials and labor
an mgn.
ine printer who now pays iz cents
a pound for print diaper where he
formerly paid three cents a pound, is
not quitting business because of that
lact. Neitner ia ne quitting the job
DnntinsT business because everv bill
he gets for stock is higher than it
was. No merchant is Quitting busi
ness because prices continue to soar.
None of us are refusing to eat be
cause oreaa is mgn, or meat ana tne
other products continue to go up.
We believe that if the people of
Oregon could rote anon the question
today they would say to the State
Highway Commission to proceed
with the work in hand, fill up the
gaps and give the taxpayers suitable
highways for the transaction of busi
ness and the pleasures of motoring.
The road program carried out wul
place millions of dollars -n circula
tion, rivinr thousands of men
ployment at good wages. Let the
good work go on.
A textile manufacturer issuiUy
had ft rather interesting demonstra
tion of the baneful influence of ui
ism on the efficiency of the average
worker. Hie plant was affected by a
strike, in which 72 per cent of hie
employees walked out He waa sur
prised to find out that with this 28
par cent of loyal help ht waa able to
turn out more than 60 per cent of
the plant's average production.
mzu citp
lm I tat Oitti i 9nm
Tattoos, Mi of The ftaaa
The Oregon Normal Softool win
Its doors for the yearn work oa lop-;
tember M.
Three l
Knights of Pythias held their annual
picnic at Woodburn.
The Increase la freight rates will
cost Hood River apple growers an ap
proximate 1100,000 this year.
The Krioc 4 Hlggona wanhoaaa,
oatod in the railroad yards ofLeoanon,
was oompletoly destroyed by Are.
During the six moatha praeeolng
August 1 deaths in Klamath Falls num
bered IS. The number of blrtha re
ported waa 62.
Apple box snooks will coat Hood
River growers 28 cents a box this
season. The prloe of last year ranged
from U to 33 cents. i
Jabes H. Gwtnn, of Pendleton, was
elected supreme master of arms tor
the grand lodge, Knight of Pythias,
In sesaton at Minneapolis.
Plans are being made at Pendleton
to entertain 300 delegates to the an
nual convention of the State Federa-
on of Labor, September 10.
Tinder the auspices of the Multno-
ah county farm bureau, a series of
poultry meetings and culling demon
strations will be held this week.
After six weeks of drilling through
lava rook, an abundant flow of water
has been reached at the arises Lum
ber company's mlU In Klamath county.
There are 1491 lmrme In Linn county
and 106,449 acres devoted to agricul
tural and horticultural crops this year,
according to a survey just completed.
Samuel UinchlD, who lived on a
farm between Dundee and Dayton,
was struck by a Southern Pacific elec
tric passenger train and was instantly
A SO par eont dividend is being re-
eelved by stockholders In the Cottage
drove flaming company. Gross sales
of the company In 1910 amounted to
160,000.
With the awreary hovering around
N degrees, Roseburg last week faced
an lee famine. The two local plants
stated that the ammonia shortage was
responsible for the condition.
W. O. Bhoup, of Marshfleld, about
31 years of age, was killed by the
Davis slough logging train when his
foot caught In a railroad frog and he
was thrown beneath one of the wheels.
H. L. Plumb has been appointed
auporvlaor of the Deschutes National
forest to auoeeed Noman L. Jacob
aoa, who has resigned to accompany
the Irvtm B. Cobb expedition this fall
The record for all the 46 years of
Attriartu which have been tabulated at
the weather bureau In Portland was
Broken Thursday when the tempera
ture climbed to 98 degrees at 8 o'clock.
Melvln Ollnger, 13 years old, son of
Jasper O linger of Milton, was accl
deotly shot and killed by Mansford
Brtttattt a companion, at Bailing's
camp In the Blue mountains, east of
M. H. Harlow, Lane eounty aommls
doner, who has one of the beat cherry
orchards in the county, said he gather
ed 64 tone of cherries off his eight
acres this season, this being the -rec
ord crop.
All work on the construction of
pier t at the port terminals at Astoria
waa stopped temporarily when the
laborers and carpenters, totaling about
Iff men, struck, and the other em
ployes wore laid off.
Two hundred men employed In oon-
itroction of the Wlllamlmvarand
Rondo rallaoad, a ten-mile feeder be
ing built from Will mine into the Um
ber districts west of there, are out
oa strike for aa eight-hour day and
more pay.
The Inland Highway association win
grre a picnic at Manning, in Washing
ton eounty, August IS. The association
is advocating the building of a state
highway through Forest Grove, Banks,
Moaning, Buxton, Vernonia, Mist and
Jewel to Astoria. . .
Approximately (,000,000 young Chi
nook salmon are to be rcleaaed from
the BUsakanlne river hatchery daring
the coming few weeks. These young
fkth, which range la length from three
to seven inches, will be turned loose
in tola of about 100,000 each.
Following an order from the state
uny1 1 of banks closing the doors
of the bank of Jacksonville,. H. John
son, the president, was put under ar
rest by rieassutlng Attorney Roberts
and planed in Jail charged with per
jury la misstating the true condition
of the hank to the state bank ea
mar. ..
Agflleation to appropriate 26 second
feet of water from Wilson creek for
municipal power development has been
filed with the state engineering de
partxeent hy the city of Bandon. The
application la preliminary and does
not Indicate the proposed tinannlal ax
penditure or the nature of eoastrue-
8ee our new liner column this week.
Tea acres of
two 1M4DB silos mo fUtai with
yteki It waa at first toseaioi
the sunflowen saooid sufflssfaeat
yield waa obtained that the aUoa ware
Afisr tf you la the employ of the
atato hospital tor the Insane, avast of
the thao as femer, D. T. Brawa has
been eompoOed kg age mad 111 health
to realga. Bo m nearly N years old.
The state board of control has adopted
reanlotlons In anitnetatloa of Mr.
Brown's long service. He entered the
employ of the state in IMS.
Sheriff Orr mad Depoxy ttarlff
Hooker unearthed one of the most
In Polk eounty while looking for boot
loggers In Independence. The still,
patterned after those of the mountain
pactions of Kentucky and Tennessee,
waa declared capable of turning out
one quart of whisky every six minutes.
. Qearge A. White, adjutant general
of Oregon, soon will receive from the
swat a record showing ovary
Oregon soldier who was wounded In
the war, and a similar list will be fur
nished by the navy department- It Is
said the hat will run well Into thou
sands and will contain names repre
senting practically every community
In the state.
Foreign lenkn oannot lawfully adver
tise their business In Oregon news
papers nor by means of circulars and
letters seeking patronage from resi
dents of this state with the Intention
that deposits shall be mailed directly
to the bank. This Is the holding of
Attorney General Brown in an opinion
prepared for Will fL Bennett, atato
superintendent of banks.
Unless means for controlling or ex-
termhiatlng the pine beetle are discov
ered tt will be only a few years until
western pine forests are wiped out,
according to Klamath Falls timber
men who have boon investigating the
stent of the destruction In Klamath
oounty In the last two years. Bo far
warfare against the armies of tiny
rers has been Ineffectual.
The exceptional warmth of the water
in Rogue river this year la keeping i
the fish from entering the river at
Odd beach, according to fishermen
who have lately returned from the
mouth of the river. Many Utousands
of steelhaada are reported to be ly
ing at the mouth of the river, but re
fuse to come up the river on account
of the warm water. As soon as the
r-eoota, ene of the gxeattitit runs
of small steel heads and salmon ever
experienced may be looked for, accord
ing to old timers on the river.
By resolutions adopted at Its session
la Astoria the convention of the Ore
gon State Baltoflal aasoclatlon pledged
its members to tight any attempt to
establish the non-partisan league In
Oregon. It also condemned the 6 per
cent Interest hill, indorsed the north
west riven and harbors convention,
favored the establishment of printing
departments in the schools and urged
oongrosa to enact laws limiting the else
of the metropolitan papers to 60 pages
on Sundays and 34 pagea on week
dags as a moans of conserving the sup
ply of news print
The .Union Fishermen's Packing
company of Astoria filed with the su
preme court an application for a tem
porary restraining order in an action
against Carl D. Shoemaker, former
state game warden, to prevent enforce
ment of the law prohibiting any per
son or firm to possess or sell food
fish caught outside the three mile
limit opposite the mouth of the Colum
bia river between the dates of August
2lfanar September 10. The application
waa placed In the bands of Justice
Burnett who will Lave It under advise
ment until August 31.
Dr. H. B. Armstrong, federal Inspec
tor, reports that dipping of sheep in
Klamath county as a means of eradi
cating scabies is virtually completed
and he believes that the disease has
been effectively stamped out. Since
June 1, 361,295 sheep have been dipped
In Klamath county and In the north
ern part of Siskiyou county. Cal. Forty-six
thousand ahejp were dipped In
Siskiyou, the remainder at various
dipping stations in Klamath eounty.
In addition. Dr. Armstrong states that
16,000 Jackson county sheep were dip
ped In the vicinity of Ashland, and all
other sheep in Jackson county have
boon carefully inspected.
A committee of 11 Oregon men has
bean appointed by Governor Oteott to
represent this state In the Constitu
tional league of America, an organisa
tion of leading citlsens of the natioa,
formed for the purpose of keeping the
people Informed relative to the fed
eral constitution, and preserving and
upholding the constitution. Jerome
A. Myers, national director 4f the
league, requested the governor to ap
point' a committee for -Oregon, and
asked that ft he nonpartisan. The
governor has appointed the following:
Richard W. Montague, Portland, chair
man; Char Its H. Carey, Portland; C.
B. Ingalta, Corvalila; Oscar Hayter,
Dallas; Bd Wright, I Grande; 1. 8.
Smith, Med ford; Dexter Rice, Rose
burg; 0. a Qlbbs, LskevlewrVlne W.
Pearee, Madras; Daniel J. Boyd, Bn
terprlae; Frank L. Chambers, Bugeae.
trues, thm at jnnal eawwa aa hv
ereaaa of more than l par eaat
hooo the oatpat of a yanrofa, tM
it aonw swreetpnteatt assi anal avam
oattna hmnstry bscaona of the hoawy
Are yon
. th ada? . fe at
i:C DAKEGY
FOB
Tel
rraefcaVeaaDaflr
MryeiAlKava.
a a yen, ft.
Listen to That
I will offer a peranum of Two .Dol
lars and fifty cents for the beat three
pint cans of bait in rlaes Jam, noma
lyt atrawberriae, cherries and fee,
-berries. And one dollar and tuty
cents for second boat of the sasao
varieties.
Those wiahinc to enter the u unseat
will bring in the fruit on or before
Saturday, August 21, 1U0, and on
the following Monday three disinter
ested judges will decide on the wm
nor. I shall be much pleased to bat
anyone come into my office and ask
the particulars, which can be given
much better verbally than by letter.
. E. Swenson
The Bealtar of Beaverton
KrllllSe JLEa CwwewZal
- Teaehar of Pleas)
Testimonials from Paris and Lstfetg
Conservatory. Authorised teacher of
Godoweky Progressive Beriaa.
GARDNER PROCU88IVE SCHOOL
OF MUSIC
CADT BL08."
Beerertoa
: Taoradeya .
Experienced teachers of niaaa, ansa.
H. WOODFORD
Old ar New Work
Bent. 4. BsK M.'
Beaverton, Ore.
Cssvtiti Fisl Ca.
Ofttoo for the tiase eatag at CMg
Delivered in any eeaattty, any
where, anytlnte.
Coal for sale
In ton lots or by the sack.
an WOLF
The Beaverton Fuel Co. baa Dole
wood for sale. Oct your order ia on
time.
Refers Ais Tizrfx
271 Taylor Stmt
Daily tripe to Beaverton, HiUabaro aad
pores i urov
fass net, All 10. ftae. BUM
r ialeig I sag in Massag
Beaverton oSee at Btipo'a Garage
C J. STEVENS
Barber '
Agency Peiaee LajnaVy Oa.
8bop equipped with Modern nUasaTj-
cal
aarpuianeaa
equal to the bast say-
where.
tzizx Tvz2
est -
Chas. DerthdLi's
twwtoei Ftaatl Stawa
X1MM
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