The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951, May 10, 1929, Image 2

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    ' Mr. and Mrs. B. I G riffins wert-1
;..;.. x -. x -< k *- x -<-- x -*X"X-%**X"X~ x ~ x ,*<*- x ~ x -* x -.:-.;..-..-....,
• • • .
RICH FIELD O IL COMPANY
and Mrs. J.|
dinner
guests
of
Mr.
IN C REA SES EARNINGS
i Kittrell in Portland on Sunday
J
E
F
F
R
I
E
S
.
P
u
b
l
i
.
h
y
H H
The net earnings of the Richfield'
-----------
Oil
Company,
of
l
alifotniu
for
tbc
Mr
Sherman
Rhodes and freddici
and
Oregon
State
Editorial
Association
M ember
National
Ednoriil
Headquarters for the Famous
first quarter of 1929 after all cv Ga.sner spun Sam.day at the I'oun-J
Association
jenses and dividends had been de i'er’s I lay cdebiaiitai at ! liUmpoeg.
u d
w . t t . r o
M u ll-
C o m p le t , u n i r t i , o í M * U r a
W .a h in g t o «
cou n ty
ducted ova- $1.927,2(>2 which showed
Bonith county.
a decided increase over that o| 1928
Mrs. J. A. McMillan and faiiul Y Recognized as the uebt werk bhoe made, Built.
How much disturbed market condi­
*
and
Mrs. 1 >ick Kelly oí 1 he
Published Friday of each week bj Pioneer Publishing Co. at Beaverton,
Wear
‘
tions effected the Richfield's poten­
busi
were
in
the
ncighborhoou
on
■
tial earnings is shown by comparison
. x *-:-:~X"X'*:”X'- x ~>*:*- x **: *:-:":-*:-^* x -<-- x -:*- x ~ x ~:~ x - x ~ x *-:-^ h ^ I
Oregon. of gasoline qullonaqe which totalled ness on Friday and Saturday.
fc ulori'd a > ser >ud ;lass matter at the postolfice at Beaverton,
under tiie act of Congress of March J, 1479.
98,592,(00 gallons in the first cpiarter
of this year compared with 50,102.
Mr. and Mrs Thomas Young *vho
Subscription price. $150 a year in advance; advertising rates on application. 075 gallons in the sain* period of were living on the Taylor farm for
1928 and 31,000,128 in 1927.
the l<ast 2 years and lately moved
--------------- ——
| to Orenco, were visiting friends in
O FFIC ES
Fact* About T h . Telephon.
;hi neighborhood on 1 uesday of llit
„ V •
Tigard—Tigsrd Pharniaoy- Phone Tigard \4J
week.
m
Beaverton-Brondway near O. E. tracks - Phone 7501
New York City uses the telephone
_______
Aloha—Aloha Lumber Co.—Phone Beaverton 4252.
to
the
extent
of
8,000,000
calls
a
Portland 40« Dekum Budding Phone Atwater ->914
Courtney Syverson ami Raymond
day
Mniluomah Multnomah Insurance Agency Aavater 5914
Heard are working in a logging campi
at
Valsetz, Oregon.
More than 284,000,000 local call
THE BEAVERTON ENTERPRISE
Directors Woolen Store
Buck«Hecht Work
Shoes
s Special Offer
SPRING AND CLEANING
Q,„.aK and cleanliness are twin sisters. This is a fine
time of the year for dealers in lumber, paint, wallpaper
soap and kindred industries; but it is infinitely better
for the users of these goods.
Cleaning up in the springtime is an instinct hard to
down. It is something that dwells in practically every
human breast. It finds expression everywhere- and there
is no season (piite so joyous as that of Spring, when
everybody is working either to make new things or to
make things new.
The urge to clean up is not confined to particular age
or to sex. Iti home, in stori and office, on the farm, or
wherever people live, work or travel, this process of re
newal goes merrily onward. There is something in clean
ing akin to the spiritual, for “Cleanliness is next to God
liness.”
A NEW VERSION
and h.fiPOOOO out-of-town calls were
made during 1928 over the Bell Sys-b The Hazeldale and Cooper Morn*
tern wires in the state of Virginia.
tain school boys in a joint basebtl
-----------
team defeated a team from Albert i
T H E B R U T E . $6.50 Work Sh*
In 1910, there were 3rt),000 tele
Sunday 5 to 4 at Hazeldale school!“
Oiled tan leather, Up to|
phones in service in Now York City grounds
Now there are over 1,700,000 and
telephone engineers anticipate that J Miss Jean Smith entertained with
the 3,000,(XX) mark will be reached
a party (it her home on Saturday
by 1945.
afternoon for the 1st 2nd 3rd and
4th grade pupils of Cooper Mountain
On New Year’s Day of this year i
school. The afternoon was spent
Tap
»9 50 Hi Cut Shoes 14
$11 03 Hi Cut Shoes U inti I
Fred Delye of Monroe, Mich., at th<-
with indoor anil lawn games then
Soles, leather oiled in
Double Soles, Oiled bislW I
age of eighty-nine, made his first
lunch was served to the children.
telephone call
The call was over
The guests «were Stella Itnlah, Mary
d.ong Distance with his daughter, j
iWol*
Margaret Gassner, Virginia
Mrs. William Palmer in Toledo, O.
and Margaret Miller, Frank Leon-
-:* v -:-:-x -:" :-> 'V * v x « x -x < ~ :..x -> -x -:-x -x -x -x -x -x ~ :~ x -x < ~ x -4 -s l
The private ytìcht of W L. Met­ ette, Howard Riley Otto Leopold, |y
ri, Pittsburgh banker ami nephew Owen Riley, Clarence Rainier and 2.
of Amlrew Mellon, Secretary of the Joe Berger.
$7.48
This lady certainly has the wrong conception of gov
eminent, especially of the police power of the state, when
she makes the comparison of physical strength between
herself and government. Such a statement not only bor
ders onto the ridiculous, but appears as a weak alibi for
something lacking in her defense.
The rij^lit attitude toward one’s government is not of
its ability to crush the individual, but of its great pur­
pose and capacity to protect its citizenship as a whole.
Individual liberty is a proper subject for governmental
attention and guardianship, hut only insofar as the in
dividual does not violate the code prescribed by common
consent as a rule of action among the people and en
forced as the result of national or local administration
power.
t
-
More Than One Kind of “Alcoholic” Death
A battle over the a lieget right of possession of * jug
of moonshine caused four deaths in a Kentucky town
and the wounding of two other persons, If this incident
serves any purpose it is to cause us to remember that
litpior can cause deaths other than by drinking it. Be
sides, the tighting was lor an impossible cause, as neither
side had the right of possession of a jug of moonshine.
Maybe the good die young, but it usually isn’t th eir
fault.
As a life insurance man Mr.
to talk himself out til a sale k
oolidge won’t be likely
And won’t it be great tor a lot td thirsty people when
passenger airplanes can get up above the twelvemile
limit ?
Treasury, the Vagabomlia, has its
own complete telephone system, with
a telephone in every room.
Miss Evelyn Hite
days with Lucile in
week.
RB o ! £ T3EN D O R PS BULB & PLANT S S d ENS
-VVVWVW.V.VVV,- •
Children
49c to 79c
❖ 4~X“X ~ X ~ X ~ X "X "X "X ~ X "X "X -X ~ X --X ”X ~ X -*X ":-’X":~H":-X":-H
229-231 First St., Portland, Ore.
bari Drahlie is feeling bad over
the loss of his dog which was killed
Fltz Eugene Dixon, who him been
by the Beaverton school bus last named captain of United States Davis
•week.
I cup team. Me succeeds Joseph W.
Wear, who was temporarily placed In
Henry
Mctzentine,
Harvey and charge in France last summer afrer
Helen SchmeJtzCr spent the week \\ llllam T. Tilden had been declared
t Ineligible.
end visiting relatives in Tacoma.
I
Between Salmon and Main
.
,1
Mail Orders Filled
Open Evenings 9 p . m .
- L iti 1
Postage Sxtn
Sunday 9 a. m. to 2 p. m
• X "X ~X ~X K ~X ~X ~X K ^X »,X ~ X ~X "X *v«X ~X **X **X ~X *-X “X "X -> ,W,'Wi
Mis. Lena Olson and sons Carl
ami \ inccnt and Mrs ( ora Metzcn-
tme and son* Henry and Floyd en-
ioycd the Benson Teck show- Thurs­
day evening.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
E.
D.
Hite and
Buddy were calling at the Struthers
home I hursday evening.
HAZELDALE
W ith a cigarette
NEWS
as good as Camels
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haynes and
family spent several days last wick
in Eastern Oregon with Mrs Hay­
nes’ parents, Mr and Mrs E
J-
Allen.
the simple truth
Mrs J Gassner and Mrs. Wes
Dbney spent a day last week in
iM oliala "■«h Mrs. Mae Pi/er
--
— m
is enough
C amel
26 Years
Po rtland
Headquarters for
MEN’S and LADIES’
HIKING BOOTS
Gladiolus Bulbs
Catalog Listing 125 Varieties on Request
For Men, Women and
%
&k • •
EN TIRE FAMILY
Let us Fit Your Feet
This extraordinary mixture comprises 30 fine
arge bulbs, no two alike, well balanced in colors
to give you a wide selection in plain, ruffled and
primulinus types, all hand selected but not labeled
r
•'Z j '
spent several
Portland last
Before criticising the farmer too much, remember that
a lot ot wealth, of which the land is the source, must
go hack into the land to produce more wealth.
Irade where you please, but do it where the profits ARCH SUPPORT SHOES
i make posihle for somebody else will come hack ti
FOR THE
\on as your profits for serving him.
30 Assorted Bulb, for $1.00. Postpaid
x -< ~ x ~ x ~ X "X ~ X ’< ~ x -X " X -x ~ x ~ x ~ x x ~ x ~ x ~ x -X " X ~ X ”:..H-:">fc|
TENNIS SHOES
The Graff milk truck of ScholU
went off the fill on the new market
road 1 hursday and a wrecking car
was called from Portland to get it
out.
IN
Ì
:
Mrs. Emma Drahlie spent Thurs-
day afternoon with Mrs. Struthers.
A silly technicality of the law suddenly becomes one
of those great bulwarks of liberty wh ten you get into
a little jam anti have to use it.
tine mixture is not a cneap
cht
«his .me
mixture, hut a
collection of 20 different varieties, one to five bulbs
each o in all. Will bloom splendidly and make
extra large bulbs for next year.
50 feet Guaranteed Hose $2 98|
25 feet Guaranteed Hose $]g()
Don’t forget ihe community meet­
ing at the school house Monday eve­
ning May 13 at 8 o’clock
Open Saturday Evening*
75 Assorted Bulbs for $1.00. Postpaid
U. S. RUBBER CO.
HEADS TENNIS TEAM
m
I t’s going to he awful on somebody when the farmers
get so much relief they won t bother anv more about
going to the polls.
Getting together is all right but getting results to­
gether is the reason tor getting together.
$7.98
G A R D E N HOSE
HITEON
A new version of the phrase “strong arm of the law”
was rendered recently, when Mrs. Mary Ware appealed
from the decision of a New York court in fining her
$3(X) for sending sex phainplets thru the mails. She said
she would go to jail rather than pay a fine, because “tin
government is physically stronger than I am.”
|
We Give
S A H Green Stamps
GOODYEAR
SHOE CO.
145 4th Street
Rubber Heels Put On
While You Wait 25c
CIGARETTES
WHY CAMELS
ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE
Camels are m ade o f the choicest to­
baccos grown — cured an d blended
with expert care.
Camels are m ild an d mellow.
TZv taste o f Camels is smooth an d
uitisfying.
Camels are cool an d refreshing.
The fragran ce o f Camels is always
pleasant, indoors or out.
vY
They do not tire the taste nor leave
any cigaretty after-taste.
05C
Ç »««. t J
B a m M . Tabarra
Cf » « w . V aU M jtlM . N. C