Image provided by: Beaverton City Library; Beaverton, OR
About The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1930)
rcH Kr! FRIDAY. AUGUST BEAVERTON ENTERPRISE PAGE 4 bard College, the school in which) T W O N E W BUSINESSES TO T ig a r d U n ion H ig h Paul J. SchinTet of Oregon State O P E N IN T IG A R D SOON lo llc g c coached before coming to School Opens D o o rs Oregon. Mr. Stamps bus had two Septem ber 8th yea.s of teaching and coaching cx- Two new business concerns will open in Tigard in tlm very near future. 1 lerience. j Th e high school schedule is ar- A restaurant man from Ctilifornia Titfird Union Hi. ti S d v ' 1 will I ranged so as to offer ihc subject» plans to establish an eating house open on September with the ' t ecessary for the following course« • in the Johnson budding, just as soon lowing staff: Mvrtlc Mnlltn. ' » »» I General, College-Preparatory, Scieu a» the Rankins move into their net niatics and Public Speaking; Alice home and release the store »pace to tific and Commercial. GrfKg. F-nglish and Dean of GirU: New busses have been provided for be used. A new uptodatc bakery will Nellie Wcsch, ( otnmeTce; Christen* the transportation of the student» also be settled in ihu Johnson build Maybach. Home I The route» will be announced in the ing. These two concerns will be an , nee Hunt Girls’ P h v ^ i l F ducatton. ; next wlick’s issue of the paper. / addition to Tigard’s already thriving Music and Stodv Hall; Glenn Linn. Mr. Fowler will be in his office on business center and will be heartily Scitnce*; Fannie Weaver. Latin and i September 2, 3, 4, and 5 from 10 a. welcomed. Spanish: Wendell Stamps History : m. to 4 p. in. for the purpose of reg- and Bovs’ Athletics, and T h o u *« | istcring any student and helping . ‘ Fowler, Principal. I them plan their year's work. He will G ran gers Basket Picnic The two new members of the staff be glad to (Confer with any of the Set fo r L a b o r D a y are Miss Weaver and Mr. Stamps. parents. . _ The Tigard Grange will hold a Miss Weaver is a gmduate of Lin- basket picnic Labor Day at the home f n Id College and has been teaching -passiut ¿[tca-iS ojjm Xaqj sc uieSrs of Mr. and Mrs. \Y. A Root on the in Wasco, Oregon, for the 1 ast two years. She was elected to fill the jpeq uwqi 3AK4 oi Xddeq paapui Fields place. AH Grangers and their vacancy left bv Miss Maynard who aje sroqqiljajsi >jaaM isc[ auioq pa.vu friends are invited to attend. Rain 1 jb bubiuoj ^ ut 8 utt(SiA uaaq *.\eq *r shine, you will be protected an*F resigned in July. assured a good time. Mr. Stamps is a graduate of Lom oq.w 'u iJpiiqa pue XuaqjpJ l y sjj \ — _ --------------------------- ----- ■ >............ I f women only hid »« T" in their husbands as thev^v * beauty treatments there „ S ' number of new citizens arrived tewer divorces jn this count^ N e w A rriv a ls Wooden Cannon Uaod by Japs Against * ' j s s :~r,t In the mitnmor <t IN»", relate. j A Trims-1’m ill lievi* w. when h f> \t in our community this week. A A super-salesman 5 ° ne wk0 British wi. r 1 I . I h In ;rlil in Ilia daughter was born to Mr. and Mrs sell a 1930 w ife a 1 sewing wnrers neer Kyi: h j. the «no t Fd Boltnan, Tigard, and on August i and a genius is a husband iT Siitsucia. s • * !ng li e ships wore <>Ut *f 23rd a sen was born to Mr. and Mrs s»et ber to run it. gtiinsho’ fr..«i ll.e shore, put out to t *» j ,h j ohnson ut W ilcox .\ Memoriali —---------------- - with several eunnon A m ' ? h< |ta, 3 daughter to Mr. and a Mrs T h e hardest job of the wi-hm ranee, hoy fir.* . I it the s - t G ,Q Freeman Tigard R, 1. I)r. Ma-1 motorist nowadays is that 0f V**“ fallen to reach the ship. They w r a ....... . .. son was the attending physician. the wolf from the garage d a lilt!** eonfllsoil imd fired nt r ml it but none struek. The Ka.llsli wiUo:«, looking from th**ir »hip. luueho-1 S u p r e m a c y in A ll L o c a l Newspaper heartily ut them. Suddenly u thunder U n d i s D u t H ing boom of cannon was heard from C h allen ge C om parison. the British shl; s and In a few nvi- cu lation .- W e p nf.< the .Tii|iarr'se ship was seen no il. >re except her cannon, which wera floating In the water. Those flouting cannon astonished the Kngllsh sailors. ‘ They were nu de o f wood hooped with , j bamboo. In the Russo-Japanese war M O R T IC IA N tie wooden cannon were amt In us* 1 to blow oT the enemy's wire entan BEAVERTON, OREGON glements. W. E. PEGG WE SERVE RF.GARDLESS OFTHE TIME DAT OR NIGHT JSA U !» “Low Oregon power rates meet enabie eastern competition FI . . . says W. F. PRIER, President Oregon Brass Works H O R S E fa M ! nr r*.jCvAy.*> \ I. 4 ê \ ,/ a » v V , • ♦»-.y.: v ' :\: â ■ « ¿ ■ ■ I •1 '■ b r " e v 'W ft*.: ¡.„ A -I f , ' . •I''. v V •fv -, K v • ^ , i f f y " - . ,* ■ ■»’ (v jR S .. ‘ % V ' , f - t \ •->» I •>. ; . ' ” ' ,V .S r T «. • • «K " k ■ I * l V«. ' m *. ly IA- ^ K * à * V • ^ If ' / ' » «b . il ♦ - » ■ ¡ ¡ N O . 3 are perfectly satisfied with our power rate, other- ▼ V wise w e would not have invested our money in electric furnaces. : ,|u-r . - - ■■ . >* s^s il* »Ok Conservative, fair tnind.'d and deeply interested in Oregon’s welfare. Mr. Prier and his sane opinions are worth more than all the empty arguments and fallacious reasons of sincere but impractical idealists. We quote him ... v • 3 v ; recently wrote an open letter telling why we are satisfied wTith our rates. “ W e were the first brass manufacturers west o f Chicago to install electric furnaces, and now have the largest electrical installation o f any company in our line west o f Chicago. These furnaces cut our shrinkage in melting— the biggest waste problem in our business— about 5 0 per cent under our former oil burning equipment system. Then, too, electric furnaces produce a much finer grade o f metal and reduce our rejections to the minimum, which is a great advantage in the cost o f production. FOR IFOR s Multnc naduct I FOR S. box. It boxes, road, ! 0203. IGOOD l Frank ing Be |F0R SA Tract alttc I AUTO b crtption. I • V .»■, yjr : * > ^ ^ * * 1 * ' * »? ; ' S E R I E S . “ These one-sided discussions about high power rates are doing Portland a lot of harm. The people who are doing most of the talking know least about the actual facts. I felt so strongly on this question that I "•fyh,, . f ÿ i ’ ,■*» I * »,-» ■ fB S ENS E -'-v here to give you another example of good Oregon horse sense. Civic and industrial leaden throughout the state join with Mr. Prior in this view of the Oregon power situation. Pacific North west Public Service Co. ("Pepco” ) “The privately owned power company enabled us to take early advantage of electric furnace develop ment b y keeping us informed of that development. That was just one evidence of efficiency which has been demonstrated so many times. Could we expect that efficiency from a municipally operated power plant? W e could not. Furthermore, a municipally oper ated business cannot operate as economically as a privately owned enterprise. I \\ ould very much dislike to see our city enter the brass manufacturing business. Similarly I think the power busi- ne^> should be lett in the hands o f the privately owned companies who have become expert in their line. . “ A numb^r o f our products are distributed nationally, in competition with the largest eastern manufacturers, where quality and price only are considered, and such items a.> cheap electric power enable us to meet this competition.” u e r l in c I BRoadwsy SPINAL I Office Phi I Stacoa 9 DR. 510 Broad Spin ADVAN i S I Aithma ( PORTLA Ml » * > *1 ^ W aha : g u it a r BOOST FOR OREGON AND EVERYTHING IN IT! IT’S GOOD HORSE SENSE