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About Beaverton times. (Beaverton, Or.) 191?-19?? | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1921)
" -TODAY, OCTOBEft 1, 1M. HARDING TAKES TO nunuaavA Kiuinu, ion j wiU "JAKE" to our way of doing bmtoeu! Seed, Bye, Timothy Seed, Clover Seed, Vetch Seed. ' OIAS. BERTHOLD FEED STORE BeaverMn, Oregon Near the S. P. Depot M YOU WANT A GOOD LAUNDRY? Send us a trial bundle and let our work apeak for itself, You will find that it has a finish that about reaches perfec tion. If you aond bundlea long enougr, you will perceive that your ineu is wearing better than it used to. Our days for calling are Mondays and Thursdays. Phone your order to 26-12 Beaverton. YALE LAUNDRY CO. MS PHD OF OUR MISSWT 61RLS "I was filled with pride in Oregon -when I found the splendid work being -done by Oregon Relief workers in the Near East' says J. J. HandBaker, Director of the Near East Relief, who has just returned to Portland from a 4rip through Armenia, Southern Rus sia and other famine sections. "The same pride I felt in the work firs from our own state I feel in. those from the other states, for after a careful investigation I can say that we are doing; a most remarkble work under the terrible handicaps due -to the constant warfare. 100,000 children saved is certainly something of which to be proud white at the aame time we are humbled by the fact that we saw children by the hundreds on the streets in rags and the most niter destitution. "Mrs. Amy Burt from Bend, Ore- iron, recently rescued 1,000 children bringing thorn to a place of Bafety on two trains which she herself! secured and one of which she conducted. "When I saw just one of the 47 girls for whom . .Frances Gage, of Portland, risked and gave he life, J felt that she had not died in vain. "Margaret Hinman, of Forest' Urove, nad a most thrilling escape from the Turks who compelled her and a large party of relief workers to leave Marsovan. She is now in Constantinople waiting for conditions to stabilize so that she can return to her chosen field in the interior. "Mrs. Ethel Long Newman, O. A. C. '20, who went with our party, was already installed as office manager at Alexndropol where we have 12,000 children. Her husband has been ap pointed to the agricultural work in1 that district. "Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Ram bo, of Baker, Oregon, helped care for morel than 200 children at Harounieh, until i the advancing battle lines drove them out. They made a most thrilling and dramatic rescue of the children, stay-! ing with them until they sailed for the Isle of CypreBS, then went to Con stantinople, from there to Batoum where they rescued thousands of Greeks who were marooned helplessly at that place. On account of the work Huber Mercantile Co. General Merchandise We expect a carload di rect from the mine with in a few days. tJOrder now and have delivery made direct from the car. It will save you money. Leave orders at office opp. S. P. depot. BEAVERTON WOOD AND COAL YARD of Mr. and Mrs. Rambo and others the Queen of Greece has written most hearty letter of appreciation and sent a liberal check for the workj of the wear uast Keiiei. "I was amazed to find that war conditions still nrevalled and that stories of Buffering which we have heard the last two years are still true. With my own hands I helped clothe some 20 children in garments that I carried out in my personal baggage. i was compelled to deny help to hun dreds, of others desperately needy. How many thousands there may be still outside our camps and orphan ages nobody knows. "Plans for the fall campaign are rapidly under way and will include the collection of clothing, of funds, both from the areneral nubile and irom organizations, from Sunday Schools and churches, especially at the ChriBtmas time. The doctors and nurses begged me, especially, to send large shipments of Oregon prunes. Flour, of course, is greatly needed and as Oregon has always been so keenl interested in the Near CiBBt i am sure toe response will be genrous both in clothing, food and money. Our Liner column will hefc yon sen your surplus larm produce. . There are a lot of people who half believe things that they know are not so and still wonder why they don't make much headway in thiB old world. W.E.PEGG UNDERTAKER AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ce.Ua amend day or sight Prompt Berries BEAVERTON - . Ore Beaverton Commercial Club ' -For ft Better Beaverton'' E. E. SWENSON, president. HAL T. BISHOP vice nrA.idxnt and secretary, DOT GRAY, Treasurer Join now while the Charter U Opea F. J. BRAL'ER, Owner Give III a Call Honest and Courteous Treatment HUBER, OREGON Things He Thinks He Thinks Elbert Bade tn hia Cottage Grove Sentinel phiiosophisae aa follow tn his column. 'Thing We Think, Things Otherl Think and What We Tnnuc 01 we 'inino uum iranm. Jt you nf man usutuiy w um wmv. girl hia salary is much greater than : ...Us. la kon tntawlH tn ksedarn A 11.. LI k.- Up Hat ippWKWW. A kid isn't always the son of buttinsky. When a woman marries she loses ber good name. Anyway a limburger cheese maker Isn't hnthawwl vara mtlfh hv Other people sticking their noaea into his business. While speaking of criminals who escape punishment, it might be well to remember tnat tne man wno com mitted the crime of '73 hasnt been apprehended yet Sometimes a ffirl who refuses to marry in haste lives to regret that she didn't jump at the chance, but not otten. Whether you are a shoplifter or a kleptomaniac depends upon whether or not you nave relatives aoie ana willing to pay lor wnat you steal, A kevhole isn't nearly as hard to find at 2 or 8 o'clock in the morning as it will, be to find in heaven Borne of thoBe fellows who spend so much sime hunting for keyholes at that un reasonable time. A Baltimore woman soys her hus band has thrashed her once every week for seven years.. There is nothing that a woman appreciates in a husband like regularity. No woman is- fit for the ballot who doesn't love her home; neither is a man, for that matter. The fragrance of flowers strewn upon the casket may rise with the spirit to heaven, but to the lifeless clay about to be returned to Mother Earth their beauty cannot atone for neglect suffered during its living hours. The man who depends upon the free lunch is usually in that position through his own fault. o A down east dairyman is trying the experiment of having his cows milked to the1 accompaniment of a phonograph. It's funny that the pure food department allows such goin's- Mrs. Fatty Carbuncle got S1800 a month a nd didn't have to live with him. What a tremendous figure she undoubtedly would have set to live in the same room with him. War may be hell and a few other things, but we know women who fiavt lemained silent while suffering to a greater degree than any man evei suffered upon a battlefield, The man who knows how and knows how to show others how is the "man whose services are in demand. Living is high. Well, we live higher than we used to. The greatest fault of the American people is said to be over-eating. Empty honors should make a robust nation. - o The thin excuse is the one that casts the largest sbadow of suspicion. After a casual examination of a flashheht print of a recent swell func tion we are inclined to the belief that the women present were trying to prove tnat iigures aont ne. A Seattle man claims to have found stock certificates worth half a million dollars between the paees of a fairy book, thus adding to the buppIv of iairy stories. o The year 1921 has been saddened. The last surviving relative of the oouyguard oi Washington nas died again. Half of Mexico is Buooosed to be in the torrid zone but insurgents are doing much to equalize ths tempera ture. Often the only difference between eccentricity and cussedness is whether1 we wish to express it politely or forc ibly. o Some men have such mean disposi tions that they find fault with the, presents received at a surprise party. Money will do most anything. A Pennsylvania man who had disap peared and had been declared legally dead, suddenly came: to life when he found 4518,000 had been left him. o- There are said to be men who en joy helping their wives clean house. It seems as if the most kickine about the actions of public officials done by those who wouldn't accept office themselves or who, if in office, couldn't Mo aa well as those they, criticize. Opportunity finds the man who is on the job. We mike fun of the way women hand)e mony. Give 'em a chance to become familiar with it and they may soon handle it in as business-l;ke a way as a man. i Thre are many noted fishermen who have a reputation for veracity in their every day business life. Sometimes it seems as if one court hunts around for an excuse to undo! wnat another court nas done. When you meet a friend can-vine a cup of sorrow, fill it with the milk of human kindness. The trouble with most folks who want to see things reformed is that they leave it entirety to the public officials. If a person could command as quick, reetoitiea when mate op as fc does when a squawking babe, what a pleasant old place to hang arommd this old world would be. There is no pla meddler and we ee on earth for the doubt if he is want ed anywhere else. A famous aviator is going: to start a school to teach flying by nail. Many-would prefer to do theirs that way. , It's dangerous to write good advice. Your wife reads it and asks why you dont live up to it It Is no credit to go forward with out making an effort to help those who are slipping backwards. An Iowa woman declare that wo men make ideal undertakers. They ought to they're used to laying out the men. There in but one mndshnient fitting the sins of the polygamist. That is to force him to live with all his wives in the same house. The Questions a wife asks her hub by when he comes home at 8 a. m. are not hypothetical ones, taougn possioiy seeming so, V,i k.i) luff Hint nitfrlaM' Vnl1i business unless your compeuior wm agree to neglect his st the same time and; when he does that you should tret husv which is nrobably -the same mea ne nas. The difference between a tramp and a millionaire is that a tramp worries over his next meal and the millionaire over his last. A French naturalist says that snails snore. That is something we've never heard before. Tt 1b vail tint tn sav tan much about your ancestors, for your neighbors may notice you are . anuwing uie strain to deteriorate. Did anvone ever think that bald- headed people may nave just mrneo their hair inside to brush the dust off the wheels? It In fortunst for-fiome wattle that they do not have to pay real estate taxeB on their castles in tne air. A match that is properly made will not strike fire after the marriage cer emony. The airplane has not as yet dimmed the luster of the good roads move ment. If you want to find out if your wile is picicing your pocKfis, cacne a love letter with your coiav No man really believes that he is as good as ne appears to the world. It seems like it raina pitchforks about the time the hay is alt down on the ground. A man often stands out as a model to pattern by because of the things his wile doeB not tell about mm. . It doesnt take nearly as much will nower to do things as it does not to do things. The person who is honest enough to refuse praise that he knows h e doesn't deserve nasm registered wito Diogenes yet.. The man who has no kind of an ex cuse ready when caught in a mistake. is either half-witted cr above the average human being. If you want a job well done, do it yourself, says tne egotistical sell made man. When a person doesn't ca e whether he lives or diea. he is not usually ns at peace with the world as he should be when about to pass on. We rather imagine Borne people get indigestion because the gall bladder crowds the stomach out if its natural position. The rebate is not such a bad thing, until we learn that our competitors are getting bigger ones than we are Some people would talk more -if we'd stop long enough to give them a chance to get started. The things you did yesterday do not relieve you of your duties of today any more than the tilings you plan to do tomorrow. WONDERS OF AMERICA By T.T.MAXET , WMUrn Nswapaptr Union. OUR LARGEST MUNICIPAL PIER CHICAGO'S municipal pier, one of the largest and most useful public structures, is likewise one of the stupendous engineering feats of the times. It not only provides 8,500 feet of dockage space and more than 460,000 square feet of freight storage pace, but is also a magtiet of enor mous proportions for recreational pur poses. This great structure Juts out Into Lake Michigan for 3,000 feet and Is 202 feet wide. In Its construction there were used 20,000 piling, 1,500, 000 cubic yards of sand and clay and 50,000 cubic feet of re-lnforced con crete ; 80 cars of steel sash and doors and 80,000 window panes. Although sub-divided into a headhouse (the shore end), a fretght-and-paasenger section, a terminal building and a rec reational section, It is all under one roof. Street cars ascend an incline to the second floor and run out to the terminal building. Foot traffic is accommodated by 16-foot-wide board walks, 2,340 feet long, reaching out to the recreation end of the building. In addition to spacious waiting and test rooms, thee is a hospital, restau rant, art room, auditorium used for dancing, concerts and banquets, -and roof garden. 01E60N NOTES Mews Brief, Gathered Prsai Vartsas Park, at the !Ma Two new business houses will opea 1ft Oorvallts October 1. Fir, which started in the City bakery, swept halt a block of Hermit ton's business buildings. John M. Uppold, aged M yean, was killed when he fell from a walnut tree on his premises at Salem. The trolling launch Red Bagle was totally destroyed by fin off the mouth ot the Columbia river. Enrollment In the university of Ore gon at Eugene this year Is 1184, an increase of 384 over last year. I Third and fourth assistant postmas ter, to the number of more than 75, held their annual convention at Salem. The state will expend 180,000 this fall and winter In the construction of a fish hatchery on the Neeanleum Approximately 20,000,000 feet or lum ber will be loaded at Columbia river mills for ports In the Orient by Octo ber 20. Walter 8. Gore, a hale and hearty resident of Medford, 68 years old, was the first white boy born In Jackson county. Production at the Redmond Juniper products mill, rebuilt since the fire which destroyed the first factory, be gan last week. During the last three months Coos county has paid $276.67 In coyote boun ties. The county pays 98 for males and 9 for females. Crews are now engaged In complet ing the six miles of new grade of the Mount Hood Loop highway on the northeast base of Mount Hood. More than 21,720 tourists stopped la Roseburg during the last five months, according to figures compiled by the chamber of commerce. Providing shipments of wheat come in fast enough, the Astoria Flouring Mills company will operate Its piaut 24 hours a day during October, Wesley Butler, a farmer of the Bagle Point district In Jackson county, was killed when a oar he was driving over turned at a curve on the BrownBboro road. The mint distillery on the Caledonia marsh, near Klamath Palls, is In op eration. The beat of the mint crop Is producing about 40 pounds of oil to the acre. The Newberg city council has passed an ordinance abolishing all unlimited franchises granted by the city, making It necessary for concerns to apply tor new charters. Ashland will hold its annual winter fair from November 2V to December 2 this year. Elaborate preparations are being made for livestock, agricultural and fruit exhibits. Crook county dairymen wbo recent ly purchased two carloads of Jersey .cattle in Linn county were so well pleased that they are seeking four additional carloads. As the result of what Is believed to be the accidental discharge of a rifle, Warren Garrett, 16 years old, was kill ed Instantly at La Grande, the bullet ! going through his heart, Andrew West, a Pinlander, at work In the Eel lake oamp ot the Buehner Lumber company near Marshf letd, was killed Instantly when a dead limb from a tree fell and crushed hit skull. The Oregon publlo service conunkv slon has suapended the application for Increased rates on the street-car lines of Salem, Eugene, West Linn and As toria, until January 1 of next year. The growers In Rogue rive valley will receive more than 12,000,000 irom their pears and apples this year, ac cording to Mark Montgomery,, agent for the Southern Paclflo at Medford. Up to date, 2831 exsenice men en titled to benefits under the so-called bonus law have filed applications for cash contributions, while 2682 appli cants have expressed a preference for loans. As the result of a tuition tee of $84 levied by the directors, farmers in the vicinity of Bend will make no effort to send their children to the Bend schools, claiming that the fee Is exor bitant, i Pear shipments to date from the Hood River valley have reached . 66 carloads. During the past week 24 car loads of apples were shipped, the Ap ple Growers' association leading with 10 cars. The greatest volume of wheat ever shipped abroad from Portland during a single month was exported during September, The total for the month, wbloh breaks all past records, wss 4, 720,280 bushels. Because of the wholesome conditions In Oregon, with little discontent and a satisfied people, the Ku Klux Klan has made little progress in Its efforts to perfect sn organization, according to a telegram prepared by Governor Olcott and sent to Herbert Bayard Bwope, executive editor of the New York World. Alex LaFollett, senator from Marlon county and a prominent orehardlst el the Willamette valley, has marketed more than 4000 boxes of peaches this season. The returns for the peaches averaged $1 a box. Ninety per cent of Deschutes county ex-service men who are applying for bonuses under the 1921 law are ask ing for leanB, according to the legal representative of the bonus oommle Ion In that county. Clyde G. Huntley of Oregon City, having been confirmed by toe senate as collector of Internal- rerecne for Oregon, will assume the duties of the Ours is a Ose Price Store Wo need not tell you what our answer ii.to the .common ques tions of new customers, "Can't you sell this for LossT" It's) merely a matter of explaining that we dont do business that way that no customer osn obtain a lesa price than any other. Isn't it heat when you can step into a store knowing that every value is good and that no item is over-marked? SEE US FOR . ' Blankets and Comforts We have an assortment In the neighborhood of Two-hundred to lect from , ' Range In Price from $2.50 Bishop FOR QUALITY. BEAVERTON, ORE. office is soon ss the necessary for malities are completed. Announcement was made at Medford by Harry U Walther, division manager of the California-Oregon Power com pany, that the home offices ot the power oompsny would be moved at au early date from San Francisco to Med ford. i Prunes In the hands of growers In The Dalles district have been cleaned up for the first time In II months. All ot the 1920 crop has been sold snd ths entire 1921 product has-elther been contracted for or delivered to pur ehasera. Registration figures reveal the fact that In point ot numbers ths women at the Oregon normal school at Mon mouth lead the men with ratio of IS to 1. There are Just 19 men In school of a total ot 301 students who have registered to date. . Estimates on ths Douglas county prune crop show that the county will produce half of tha prunes raised In the Paolflo northwest this year, Ths Douglas county crop Is exceeding early estimates and the predicted ton nage now stands at approximately 10r 000,000 pounds, The state Irrigation securities 'oom mlBBton, at a meeting held In Salem, voted to guarantee Interest for the next six months on $600,000 for bonds Issued by the Medford Irrigation dis trict; also the interest on $276,000 of bonds Issued by ths Payette Slope Ir rigation district. Lumber shipments by water from the Columbia river during September were ths largest in several months. Statistics oompiled by Deputy Col lector of Customi Kartnen at Astoria, howed that In the 30 days, 66 'vessels loaded at the mills In, the Columbia river district, and their combined car goes amounted to 69,092,871 feet of lumber. ' Charles Park, president of the state board of horticulture hss announced that it will bo necessary to quarantine Malheur county on account of weevil found In alfalfa tn that county, and that action will be taken at once to prevent the shipping of alfalfa Into other counties, A proclamation In line with Mr. Park's suggestion probably will be Issued by Governor Olcott, The Bear Creek orchard, on the out skirts ot Medford, last week received the highest price ever paid in America for a carload of pears, sold in New York snd bringing a gross of $4249. This oar contained 1000 half-boxes of D' Anjou pears which, sold for an aver age of $4.26. This meaos that these pears were sold st wholesale averag ing io cents apiece for the entire car load. Constitutionality of the Oregon bonus law will be passed upon by the supreme court of Oregon In a friendly suit which la to be Instituted in the lower courts Immediately, This ac tion was decided upon by the state bonus commission after it had been found that sals ot ths Initial bonds waited upon such action in view of A CHALLENGE One of the most difficult things to win U the other fellow's confidence. The higher and better our character the more confidence we wis. After confidence Is won It can only be maintained and enlarged by fulfilling all of too obligations that are made necessary through the belief and trust the other man puts in you. . . -v We have opened a Gent's Furnishings and Shoe Establishment in Beaverton to fulfill a need of this community. WV challenge any prospective purchaser to show us where h e can buy merchandise in the city at a lower cost than he can from as. PEGG'S r BETTER VALUES . . .-, -jyg BOTH WIN -.' to $10 Bros. -U . J. fgg the recent New York declslost sgslast the bond lasue In that state. . There were five fatalities In Ore&wa. dus to industrial accidents during the week ended September 2s, li i in iflag. to a report prepared by the atate t dustrtal accident commission. 1fts victims were Arthur Anderson, oar pentsr, Portland; James Fielder, log ger, Brookings: C. Atterbury, airbrake man, Grethiun; Robert Watt, log) IHItBnuwlr . Inhn LI l.l-..i. ster, Portland. A total ot 87 aoet-l dents were reported. I Jackson county, with a snore of 94V.4 but ot a possible 100, walked oft wttfc first prlie in the oounty exhibit aft this year's state fair at Balem. Jaea son county's exhibits specialise! la fine pears, although there were h oluded In the exhibit some chosM apples, small fruits and grains aa grasses typical of that section of Uw state. Coos oounty, which feaiovoi oheese and dairy products, obtained second prise with a score of 9S.I, whsht Douglas county was awarded third prise, with a score ot 39.7, That Industrial and business ecev dltlons In Portland are on the march to normal good times following the deflation from war-time prosperity Indicated in ths bank clearings for September, which showed a greater to tal than for any other month so far this year. Building permits also for the month ware nearly a million dollass) In excess of ths same month last yean, September also was a record moatfc to Portland's shipping and wheat expest for the "ports were 160 per eat greater than tor the asms month las yean x Let Beaverton people patroniae Beaverton merchants, A diplomatic man never admiree his life in a dress that hooks down tha back., R. S. JOHNSTONE , BARBKK Shop fully equipped with latest eleetrlcsl devices end everything thst a flnt-cUt. shop should have. tumi BiiiLOiNO " BBAVKKTON, ORMON Bwffton LUKDer Yard An Blades' MILDINS MATERIAL , i. m Mat . Vets . Met Shii Plaster meet -Una Ms. K a sUULBNBKI. PUT. "-I