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AVERTON ENTERPRISE
THE
Established 1927
PUBLISHED
SECOND
Y E A R — No.
45
m s K otes or
13378216
Clubs Hold Most
Successful Meeting
Sherwood Saturday
Powell who has been
past month with his
A. W . Butterfield, re
A nutrition meeting wtl! be held
home on Canyon City, by Lucy A. Case, nutrition special
ist, Saturday, January 18, from 10:00
a. m. to 3:30 p. m. at the Grange
Mrs. F. R. Schoene entertained Hall at Sherwood under the aus
the Tuesday Bridge club, Tuesday. pices of the Grange. M t s . R. W.
Mars. J. W. Barnes «winning high Rasmussen, Master. About 25 kinds
score.
of salads are to be made and sam
pled by everyone, and about 12
Mr. and ^rs. Walter Scott left fancy salads for exhibit. Everyone
this week on a trip . Mr. Scott on present will be given free recipes
business in Idaho, and Mrs. Scott is of 100 salads and 6 kinds of salad
spending 2 weeks with her father dressing. Each person is asked to
and sister in Wyoming.
bring a sandwich or two, a large
bowl or pan and a sharp paring knife
In the afternoon discussion wall be
Stop
that cough with
Brown's
Quick Cure Cough Medicine, Brown’ ! on “The Feeding of Mothers and
! Children,” the most important sub-
Beaverton Drug Store.
I ject in nutrition.
Invitations extended to anyone in
CHURCH OF CHRIST
tcrested.
Bring an apron and an
appetite.
George W. Springer, Minister
Twenty one members have enroll
ed in a Teachers Training class
Six Sprays Necessary
which begins this week. The class
for Apples and Pears
will meet every Thursday evening at
the Church at eight o’clock.
Thi
class will take the regular course of
Six to eight thorough and well
study prescribed vy Herbert Moni- timed sprayings are required in this
ger in his text book “Training For locality for the production of high
Service.” This systematic course of grade apples and pears. The grower
study will be very beneficial to all of these fruits locally cannot expect
who take it and those who complete to grow first class fruit with a less
the course satisfactorily will receive number of sprayings. Weather con
a certificate.
ditions must be watched and espec
Any one wishing to enroll in this ially in the spring it is disasterous
class may do so whether he be a to delay sprayings then due when
member of the Church or not.
the weather is right. Delay might
Next Sunday
Mr. Springer will carry the grower into rainy weather
speak on the following subjects— lasting until it is too late for ef
Mornin, “The Work Of The Holy fective spraying for a particular dis
Spirit,”
Evening, “The Dawn Of ease or pest. For the various spray»
The New Day.”
and directions for use get in touch
with your county agent.
Wes Baney at her home last Tues
day afternoon too celebrate the an
niversary of her birthday. There
were thirty-nine ladies present. A
feature of the party was a beautiful
birthday cake baked by Miss Annie
Rigert. Mrs. Baney was the recip-
ent of many lovely gifts.
P U B L IS H IN G CO.
F R ID A Y , JAM. 17. 1930
P R IC E
United W est Side
n ail NUBLES
HAZELDALE
P IO N E E R
BEAVERTON , OREGON,
The United West Side clubs met at
Beaverton high school last Tuesday
and even tho the w-cather was most
svere there were more than two hun
dred and fifty persons present,, which
The fire department responded,
Monday night to a call from the Os goes to show that the interest taken
car Hamburg place. The fire turned in matters pretaining to the better
out to be only a flue fire and no ment of the Tualatin valley has the
wholehearted support of everyone.
damage was done.
Remarks were nude at the open
ing
of the meeting by the President
Mr. and Mrs. Ora Anderson of
guests at the home of his sister Mr. Leo. W. Lippert and the minutes of
the last meeting read by the secre
and Mrs. W. A. YanKleek
tary, H. L. Davenport. This was
Tbe curd party which was to be followed by many reports by the
given this Friday evening is being special committees, which include one
postponed a week, to January 24, from A. E. Melin on transportation,
on account of th«i cold weather. Re a subject Mr. Melin expects to have
n»ore enlightning data on by the
member the date.
time the next monthly meeting is
There will be a basket ball game held. Addresses were delivered by
between Tigard and Baverton Fri Ben Riesland on the progress of the
day evening for both girls and boys tunnel and Washington County Com
missioner Livermore talked on roads.
at the Beaverton high school.
R. S. Dulin, superintendent of the
city
paving plant, gave information
Tuesday evening Beaverton high
school defeated Newberg high school relative to further improvement of
at Newberg in both girls and boys the TerU'illlinger boulevard. Allen
games. The girls score was 7-31 and Bynon, of Portland spoke on de
velopment.
the boys 16-18.
i Mr. McAlear, of Hillsboro, dis
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cushman and cussed the transportation problem
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hamel of Cedar and bus service with Mr. Letnen,
Mills visited a number of their ■manager of Oregon Stages Inc., who
wras present. It is hoped that in the
friends in Beaverton Sunday.
' near future this highly important
problem can be worked out satis
Miss Catherine Beach is spending
factorily for the transportation com
several days «with her grandparents,
pany and the people in this large
Mr. and Mrs. Janies Pinder in Ore
area which they serve.
gon City.
J. F. Branson explained the eradi
cation of gophers and moles.
Mrs. Lewis Allyn is teaching in
The social side of the meeting was
the Midway school near Laurel.
very well handled by Ivan Swift,
She will be there for several weeks
chairman of the committee in charge
as the teacher at that plac is under
and those attending report it as one
quarantine for smalpox at Portland.
of the most inttresting meetings ever
held.
Mrs. Frank Lindsey of lone, Ore
gon, spent the week end visiting in
the home of an old friend, Mr. and
Nutrition Meeting at
Mrs. W . R. Petch.
Herbert W.
sending the
mother, Mrs.
turned to his
Tuesday.
BY
DAVID KOTH
The funeral services were held this
week for David Koth. aged 61, who
was injured last week when his auto
plunged over an embankment near
Beaverton, due to the icy pavement.
He is survived by his wife, who
was with him in the car at the time
of the accident and was taken to the
hospital with a broken arm and body
Sherman Rhodes who has been vis bruises, and was the father of Mrs.
iting in California for the last month Marie Wilson, Fred and Clifford
has returned home.
Koth, all of Portland,
othlhrtoffof
wi oeoiilnihittiho cemt
Asa Griffitts left Monday for a
two weeks trip by way of Salt I.ake,
D. STOLLER
San Diego and Los Angeles.
D. Stoler, aged 62, died suddenly
He is sur
Mr. and Mrs Griffitts entertained Thursday. January 17
Mr. and Mrs. Blootnquist and family vived by one daughter at Aloha, Mrs.
John Winniger, and two daughters in
at supper last Sunday evening.
Portland. The body lies at W. E.
Hazeldale school closed Thursday Pegg Undertaking parlor. No ar
and Friday owing to the inclemency rangements have yet been made fot
the funeral.
o f the weather.
Weekly
IMAGINATION
1 surely must have some awful disease,
I’ve aches iti n\y hack and pains in mjf knees—
My liver is off and my heart is not right,
For 1 hear it beating almost every night
,
My kidneys are failing, my stomach is bad—
If suffer from headaches till just about mad—
My tongue is all coated I hardly can see,
I wonder just W HAT is the matter) with me—
My nerves are a jingle—I’m worried to death—
My lungs are affected, I can't get my breath—
My teeth are all aching—I’m losing my hair—
There's something inside me, 1 /cel it is there—
I dare not go walking for fear 1 will die—
There’s a cataract forming upon my right eye—
My joints arc all swelling—my blood is too thin—
’Tis truly a terrible shape It am in—
I’ve \haunted the doctors, no mote will I go,
My case is beyond them, 1 certainly knotw—
My friends are against me. O, what will 1 do—
I surely can’t stand what I have to go through.
Can’t you sec, my good friends, such peopla as these
Are victims of ear, so the prey of disease—
Of troubles and cares they are their own) makers,
Easy marks for the doctors and wise undertakers.
For Xmas Windows
SIDEGLANCES”
“ Snowbound”
State College Man Find# No Sub The "Yellow Peril.”
stitute far Service of Town
By Harold L. to o k
Publication
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Kiwanis Award Prizes
U
Powerful Factor
------Bill Stinger
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Paper is
5 CENTS
.
Chamber of Commerce
Plan Valentine
Dinner
Without its weekly newspaper, the
typical American community would
be like a school without a teacher or
a church
without a pastor,
said
Charles D. Byrne, head of the de
partment of industrial journalism at
Oregon State, college, in a recent ad
dress to country correspondents giv
en over radio KOAC.
•In the aggregate
the country
weekly determines the outcome of
more elections, exerts a greater in
fluence for constructive community
progress, is read longer by more
members of the family, and with its
combined circulation of 15 millions,
constitutes one of the greatest na
tional reading mediums in the Unitd
States,” he said.
“The country weekly is at the
same time one of the most special
ized and still most universal in its
appeal. When properly conducted it
cultivates so intensely its home news
field that ,city dailies, farm maga
zines and general periodicals become
only secondary influences at best.
"W here the city daily is probably
read for 15 minutes to half an hour
before it is trampled under foot in
the street car or thrust aside after
supper, the country weekly is prr-1
used for at least a couple of hours
during the week for its personal
Ernes, country correspondence, the
lu.rney editorial and the equally in
teresting news of the bargai t sales
at the local stores.”
Professor Bytne believes that the
so-called “ passing” of the counry
weekly is instead a mere consolidat
ing process resulting in fewer and
better weeklies.
’"There was a period during which
the small town newspaper seemed to
be smothered under the increasing
circulation of the large city daily,’’
he pointed „ut. ’"But the city dail
ies do not and cannot devote space
to matters of immediate interest to
small towns and surrounding country
In this field the weekly has no com
petition.”
Whenever the wintry blasts spread
a great white mantel of snow over
the community in which I live, 1 am
wont to delve into Whittier’s “ Snow
bound,” after having snuggled down
amidst the cushions in the great arm
chair, and read how
“ Ihe sun, that brief December day.
Rose cheerless over hills of gray—”
It’s a habit, born of love for des
criptive poetry, and as 1 read the
master’s description of the outside
world of blizzard and snow, a great
comforting
appreciation
of
the
warmth of home and fireside is re
newed within me. And so tonight
I’ll warm my shins at the glowing
warmth of a red hot stove,'while the
blizzard rages unabated through the
night and flurries of snow blow
across the window pane, and I enjoy
again Whittier’s picture of a mid-
western winter evening.
In the morning I'll search the
newspaper for news of the storm,—*
to find what communities were visi
ted by the lowest temperatures, and
how deep the snow is lying over the
state—and look to see if anybody
holds any hope for an immediate
cessation of this cold weather.
The Beaverton Chamber of Com
merce at their regular meeting Fri
day night, discussed plans for a ban
quet to be held Valentine Day. The
We read that two million Chinese
purpose of this dinner is to foster
a closer relation ship between the
have died from bitter cold bud star
vation, and that two million more
people of Beaverton and the sur
will freeze to death and die of hun
rounding territory, therefore special
ger and exposure before a change of
invitations have been sent out to the
seasons will bring relief. W e wish
Granger^ and others to attend this
we could help, someway. 1 presume
affair and become better acquainted.
everybody wishes they might help.
Another most important piece of
It is mighty awful easy, just now,
business brought up for comment
to visualize the suffering that one
and suggestion was the publishing of
reads about in the newspaper. Walk
a pamphlet to advertise the resour
to the Postoffice and back, and take
ces and advantages this part of the
your imagination along, and if you’ve
county has to offer those settling
a heart you’ll wish you might share
here....... No definite decision being
the warmth to which you will return
reached.
•with someone else who might not
A committe composed of R. Rossi
have a place of shelter. If we could
and Geo. Seller was appointed to se
more clearly visualize times like this
cure estimates on 9 lot iu Beaverton
during the Red ( ross roll call, we
suitable for the construction of a
might
be
more generous in our
conununity club house and report the
response.
complete cost at the next regular
meeting.
Because we dislike very much to
Due to the fact that the United
even read of little children «lying of
West Side Clubs hold their meeting NEXT MEETING OF
torture, in fear and agony, we praise
on the clubs regular night, Tuesday,
TEACHERS INSTITUTE
the powers that be that 450 of Port
the Chamber of Commerce have
AT BEAVERTON land’s little ones were spared from
changed their day to the second Fri
the fire that consumed the old W il
day of each month.
A special meeting of board of
Wahington County Teachers Insti liams school Monday.
ficials was held Monday night in tute was held last Saturday in the
Judge Hedges office.
Forest Grove High School Building.
Thre’s one thing sure, a lot of
In attendance from Alohti were Prof feet that customarily are used in
and Mrs. Lchnherr, Mrs. Mack and1 the manipulation of an automobde
Did you ever eat one of those
Mrs. E. Barker. Mrs. Barker pre are doing a lot of unaccustomed
First Year Cooking
delicious 35c dinners at the White sented an exhibit of primary work 1
walking these days.
and made a talk on “ Free Activity" |
Class Elect Officers HaI1 Re#tauranl?
before the teachers of the primary I
department.
Information of Value
County Farm Loan
The
next
meeting
to be held
The first year cooking class of the
in Old-Time Scrapbook*
March the first will be at Beaverton '
Association Hold
Aloha-Huber school met in the base
Keeping a scrapbook la nothing like
ment of the school last Tuesday and
Annual Meeting
as common as It once was, but still
elected as their officers for the com
a lot of folks cling to the old-time prac
Electric Company
ing year: Jean Lewis, president;
tice of preserving newspaper clippings,
At
the annual meeting of
the
Making Extensions bits of poetry him ] other Items of In
Helen Reynolds, vice-president; and
of
the
Washington
Esther McKeown,
secretary.
This stockholders
terest in ibis way. How the scrap
County
National
Farm
Loan
Assoc
class is under the leadership of Mrs.
book liobby started no one appears to
The Portland Electric Power Com
iation held in the Chamber of Com
know, bat for generations It bus been
J. O. Larson.
pany
are making several much need
customary to save things for ready
The girls learned to make toast at merce rooms last Tuesday, the fol
ed extensions into this district. A reference.
their lust meeting and at the next lowing Board of Directors was re
power line has been strung down
elected tor the ensuing year:
Tlie time was when nearly every
one will have a lesson on cereals.
Stacey
Avenue and one on the old body kept a scrapbook, and no doubt
J. A. Kirkwood,
Keedville, Mar
Mrs. C. E. Chaney, of Oswego, and
Farmington road tc*vard Hazledale. many tilled volumes could be uncov
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Schiffner, tin C. Larson, Beaverton, R. 2, Thos.
The
local representative Ivan Swift ered. hidden away among things sel
of Los Angeles, visited with Mrs. Williams, Forest Grove, R. 2, D. G.
of
Beaverton,
has been given Aloha, dom seen or used. Tbe old time
Amelia Isaacson at the Lippert home Lilly, Forest Grove, R. 2, F. L.
Tobias,
Recdville
and Huber in ad scrapbook was called upon to settle
Brown, Laurel, R. 2, Win. Hansen,
last Sunday.
dition to his regular district of Beav many an argument, for often the
Hillsboro, R. 2.
erton eo look after.
scrapbook contained matter of a con
The
Board of Directors
elected
troverslal nature
In tbe old days .f
Cars Stalled on
Martin C. Larson, President, Thos.
was nothing uncommon for a public
FARM REMINDERS
speaker to run afoul of a chrome
Terwilliger Blvd. Williams, Vice-President and J. M.
scrnpbwk keeper.
_______
Person, Secretary-Treasurer.
The so-called binublefoot of chick
Often the ke» per of s scrapbook
The
annual
report
of
the
Secre
ens
is usually caused by some in specialized In preserving matter of
It is estimated that more than 1000
cars were stalled on the Terwilliger tary-Treasurer brought out that there jury to the foot, such as a bruise or certain kind, atnl the practice still I-
boulevard Wednesday on account of had been loaned in Hillsboro and a break in the skin caused by a kept up. Scrapbooks of that type mat
Infec be filled with n lot of valuable Info»
the severe ice, sleet and snow. This vicinity from the Federal Land Bank nail, «wire or other object.
one thing furnishes a splendid ar over $1,187,000.00 to 350 different tion develops, and the foot swells. motion pertaining to a specific aid*
gument on the need of a tunnel to borrowers. The year 1920 'was not Treatment requires considerable time Ject. Often a scrapbook kept for a
a good year due to the fact that the and attention, and is seldom prac lifetime Is an Index to tbe charset* 1
the Tualatin valley. YES—NO?
bond market was so badly demoral ticed unless the fowl is valuable. De of the keeper, and In that wHy <J«
ized that the Federal Land Bank tails of the procedure may be ob scendants hnve learned more of the «
Final Arrangements
was unable to market its bonds. Now tained from the poultry department forebears.— Ixmlsvllle Courier-Journal.
Underway on Tunnel that the stock market has collapsed, of Oregon State college.
there is every indication that this
Diamond Splitters
year, the bond market will improve AGED MAN INJURED
The business of the diamond "split
F'inal plans and arrangements for and ample funds will be available.
IN AUTO ACCIDENT ter” Is a dying trade. By an Intimate
In spite of these conditions over
the tunnel are being completed «with
knowledge of the stone’s construction
in the next thirty days, and it is which the Association had no control
Another most serious accident was this person was enabled to split s din
hoped the construction work will be it increased its total loans and added
unavoidable last week when the car ismnd as a preparation for economical
commenced at least by mid-summer to the surplus.
of L. C. Tobias of Aloha, skidded cutting, and when this was done stt<
giving employment to a large number
Martin C. Larson, President, re landing in an embankment. Mr. T o cessfully a considerable saving on la
of men. A report due soon from the
ported that the local Association has bias, who is 80 years of age, was bnr and materlul resulted. At one time
engineering company will include de
every establishment where diamond-«
the highest rating with the Federal injured to such an extent that his
were cut had one of these experts, bet
tails of the tunnel and suggestions
Land Bank and has been placed on recovery is doubted py attending
modern methods hare dispensed with
on methods of financing this project.
the Honor Roll among Farm Loan physicians. His wife, however, was the hand-splitting operations, uni
The tunnel will no doubt pass from
not badly injured.
Associations.
while there are severnl diamond cut
the head of Sixth street to a point
ting plants in New York there are hut
west of Dosch road and north of the
$2 Hot Water
Bottles, 98e
at three splitters and there Is Dot work
Hess read on the other side1 of the
Do you know that Thyng serve*
enough for this trio.
hill.
Brown’s Beaverton Drug Store.
Hot dogs and light lunches ?
In spite of the unusually cold
weather a goodly crowd turned out
for the Kiwanis club meeting held
at the Beaverton high school, last
Wednesday. A most delicious din
ner was served after which a very
interesting program «was given which
included M. C. McAlear of Hills
boro who gave a talk on “ Commun
ity Cooperation” and Miss Hooker
and her brother who submitted sev
eral numbers on the accordian and
banjo.
*
However, the main feature of the
evening was the awarding of the
prizes offered by the club before
Christmas for the best decorated
•window both in the business house
and the hpme. The first prize $25
went to Mr. Stampolis, who had not
only the best decorated window but
the most original one, the second
prize was awarded Dewey Dror-
baugh. Raymond Rossi
won the
first prize for home decoration and
Mrs. M. C. McKercher second. This
Christinas decorating contest created
much of the Christmas spirit about
Beaverton and we hope
next year
to have the club again offer prizes,
in order that more may participate.
The Beaverton club meets with the
McMinnville club next «week.
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