Image provided by: Beaverton City Library; Beaverton, OR
About The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1935)
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 13. 1933 BEA VE K TON ENTERPRISE PAGE t RPRISE U. H. JEFFRIES. Publisher Published Friday of each week by the Pioneer Publishing Co., at Beaverton. Ore. Entered as second-claae matter at the pontoffice at Beaverton, Ore. Roosevelt Has Proven Himself Unworthy of Continued Support Where Coast Tourists Will Cross M &W Ê The time has arrived when we must make an estimate of ¿"resident Koose- ________ . 11.00 Three M on th «----------------------- $ .35c One Yeaç _ velt at nis true value. We must for “____________ ,50c Subscriptions Payable in Advance Six Months get his winning smile and pleasing ra dio voice, nis wise cracks and his Bai- Beaverton O ffic e — Broadway at O. E. tracks, Phone Beaverton 7503 nuni-nke showman.,nip and make a Portland Office—40» Dekum Bldg., Phone ATwater 5014________ summary of him from the s midpoint mand, and sold it for what he wa8 of of his accomplishments in the past We are Death Takes a Holiday fered. The old-time farmer was at and his plans for tne future. of the opinion that the President lias the mercy of the middleman-the mod- an ex ateJ lnIon . . \ , of tiie bril- Charles H. Martin, as Governor of ern farmer, with nis organization do- y o n n n , und has been Oregon, and President of the Automo ing the talking and bargaining for him bile Accident Prevention association ha. applied proven business* methods ^ t 'm u U U u ^ 'h ^ “ ** achieving a better place in the . , ,, . . . ; , of Oregon, commends the motorists of toward ■ d “ r and oy the docility dein nstrated by a our state for their care and oonsidera- rooifrHtivm have have made made a ureat rec or*ty lh »*» hj congress as it wishes followed Cooperatives a great rec- maj bllndly f execuuves ation during the Labor Day driving, kn/ 0 resulting in no deaths, few injuries ord during depression—and when bet- m •«*» and iittle damage to property during w Î h the T c country o u n ^ ’Æ i l agilcul C c u l ° merity Velt” lo critl018t. the le w TE what r leal i n d nad e n t . tta One this period when there was more traf s snow fic on our highways than in any other j tural progress meane. a * by one his new governmental schemes period during the entire year. The j -------------------------- were started and with few exceptions governor feels that Oregon has a rec- j FAITHFUL SERVANT ithey failed entirely or halted the ad- i ord of whioh every citizen may well after 8 VttHce of business out of the depres- A. A. Schramm, retiring be pioud. He gives much credit for years as state superintendent of banks, “*on- Cntics began sniping _ I tiie multi- this record to the efforts of the ne - JeaveB behlnd a v^rthy record. Thru tude wi brain trusters who had been ^ i T w .r n ic l V * h T i n d r e d ^ o f thou*- the nM,8t tryin8 periods modern bank- assembled to attempt untried theories, , f r itnlia» w...lh of u n a ce to the in® has ltnown- be kept a steadying or progrums that bad been put into i i a» Vanrt m . rnimra to the nub band upon our state-chartered money operation by other government^ only education of and w arning to the pub etnporiums That Oregon's state to be discarded. The President him- Mobilgaa Scout Car Photos in iv a initiated*’aafety bank<i wrote a better record than those aelf continued a sort of demi-god, om Bridges under construction along pu ss has not only initiate a l y jarge majority of states was due nipotent over a majority of the elec- campaign., buthaa unselfishly « « t - , ^ r e ^ w h ich ‘ orate. The presidential critic was the Oregon coast highway are pro ed every organization and association regarded „ „ » d .n ^ rn ,,« gressing rapidly, as shown by the whose purpose has been t«o make our i above photographs obtained recent His department was Conducted of treason, willing to overthrow the line. streets and highways safe. .............. . , ... i ly by the General Petroleum re ■ The Chief Executive thanks the ! " ithou; scandal, even without suspi- government, scrap the constitution. porter. General products are play Dublic On March 4, 1933, Franklin Delano fr . press for its cooperation with the ?_‘° n_ 0? irregularity, althougn ing an important part in this work, moeramro il,theCAm0^ b U e Tccident’ ‘"tereVt at "lime« ' 'required"'common Roosevelt stood on the stone steps of he says, Mobilgas being used ex Prevention association of Oregon o f l 8ense “Retching of otherwise string- tbe national capitol building, the same clusively on the big Coos Bay span. Pievention assoc ion i>f eg n, or i rujes Long after Schramm has P*ace in which Jefferson, Jackson, (1) Coos Bay brfdge at North Bend. wh ch he is president, for without he 8- <^nce October 1 Sregon Lincoln, Garfield, Cleveland. Theodore (o i «W'J assistance of the press the association ^ " ^ m i n u e in debt to him for the Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson had __________________ ________ ( - ) Alsea bridge at Waldport which' could not have secured its forty thous- , , 1 stood there with one h.nd the will be completed by the end of and members He wlsnes wishes to to tnank thank good work he did.—Oregon „ , Bible ’ ,.ere and th n hdnd on the and members. He . . . Voter . . Holy the other upraised to the year. (3) Part of the Umpqua bridge at Reedsport which will cost $437,000. (4) South approach and qompliment all other organiza of the $1,207,000 Yaquina bay bridge at Newport. (5> Gothic style o f bents (piers) of south approach of Heaven he swore to “ uphold, protect tions whose efforts have helped to Coos Bay bridge. (6) Siuslaw bridge at Florence. Contract payments on all five bridges have been run Advertising on Banknotes and preserve" the constitution of the make driving and walking safer for ning about $350,000 a month with from 14 00 to 16 00 men employed. Chinese patent medicine shops in United States. A few weeks ago, less | the citizens of Oregon and urges them foi-Yi" Canton are using money as an adver- iban two and one-half years after tak- to continue their good work reahies"thlt"it,is o ' X bVhard work tl8,n>i medium. They stump their ‘ "g of his solemn oath, President cent of this level. The allotment year ary allotment. Approximately 6)4 iffortth a t automobile narm‘S. address, and telephone number Roosevelt urged congress to forget the Potato Control Program ljor potatoes begins December 1, so million farms in the United States re- accidents canbe^ madl excTtSon a" banknotes which pass through possibility that the supreme court Will be Launched Soon that the plan will take effect Decern- parted potato production in 1929, but their honds with a list of articles for n,1ght declare paits of his program ber 1 of this year, although it is un- only about one-fourth of these grew rather than the , „,|„ rule. sale. The banks have had to issue I unconstitutional and to pass the sub- derstood that all potatoes produced ! potatoes commercially.1 The new minds* of the^Oregon clTizens” the an order forbidding the practice.— i mit,ed measures speedily. “ I hope’ Immediate organization of the new prior to that are exempt from the con- program is to be concerned primarily minus or the Oregon Oregon citizens the Mf>ntrea, Herald B he said, “your committee will not per- trol plan. j with those who grpw potatoes for sale. need for their cqoperation with the • • • • mit doubt as to the constitutionality, potato production control plan adopt city, county and state traffic enforce- J The act was proposed by congress-1 -------------------------- ed by Congress has been decided upon Patrick Henry is reported to have however reasonable, to block the sug- ment officers who have diligently per-! men from commercial potato produc by the AAA, even though appropria We ge“tp<1 legislation.” The act was formed their duties, many times under said: “ Give me IJberty! etc." tion for its administration was held ing centers and was included in the Hillsboro Seeks $25,000 trying1*circumsUncea“ “ T h ^ ‘ men‘are | n 0n^ r. l fJ ^ . ^ ere ttllVe today lf he’d " K " senators and congressmen that they up in the failure of filibustered de- amendments to the Agricultural Ad Grant for New Armory say “Gimme” ? sincere in their desire to serve you. forget their own oaths, taken when f.ciency bill, accolding to word re- justment act asked for by the admin A direct federal grant of $25,000 has The Governor wishes to take this istration. Under the plan states will seated. Tf Herbert Hoover had is- ceiv« d Washington by the Ore- opportunity to warn the driving pub Protests sued such a statement a democratic ^tate ^College extension^ service, be given allotments on the basis of been applied for by Hillsboro for the construction of a national guard ar lic of the hazard which will be caused majority in congress would have de John B. Hutson director of the di- past production and acreage. In turn mory. Plans call for a structure by the early rains. The summer's ac such tax-free allotments will be given By Glide Wieder manded hi» Impeachment and many via‘° n o f ,tobacco’ 8U*ar- rice and Pea* 86x88 feet, including a drill floor 61x81 cumulation of oil on the highways and would have approved. ,nut3> ,w 1 ‘ have cha,'&e of administra- counties and individual potato farms. feet in dimensions. republicans the leaves that will fall with the rain On all potatoes sold in excess of al Apparently President Roosevelt is now lon t*le new act‘ will create a real hazard. Tires should Have you ever noticed that muen convinced that r°l'tical expediency is The purpose of the new act, which lotments a tax of one-half to three be inspected and lights and brakes of our own individual lives are a ser- fpurths cent a pound will be levie d as lmportanCe than oath of f ast8e<* Congress by a narrow margin, a means of practically restricting should bo adjusted. We should drive ies, of protests? Mostly protests a g a Z i “ L ™ ™ MON. carefully at all times, and death wili the rights of living natural and free. ° ff,Ce' F R I. Po- 118 to rernove surp,ua and ad^U8t acre sales to the pre-arranged quota. I usually avoid the person who is When our forefatners wrote the age sc. as, to )i nc.easem ^m e of potato | tatoes so,d for rt are to be ex_ TIIUKi take a longer holiday in Oregon. SAT. chronically protesting this, that and constitution they sought to protect producer* says Mr Hutson. Tnstead em,.t from the tax as are po,atoes the rther and I find the best possible peop e aKa,n8 tyra,my of being based on benefit payments sed under ceItain condiUons for Penalizing “ Little Fellow »» i way to get along with that person and that u“ u;‘ ^ With Claude Brereton and uwhti1n ‘ ° ° much “ " ® ,e acreage, the potaVs act manufacturinEf manufacturing into bv-moducts by-products or foi make him hunuv is to uaree with him pow‘‘r fulls into the hands of one man' ProP°8e8 ,he levVlnK of a heavy tax livestock feeding . His Music and sav nothing more A of checks nnd balances was u| on all tonnage sold in excess of the Many of !OUr lawmakers fail to un Approximately 95 per cent of the Sometimes w e r e a c h the provided by the establishment of three national sales allotment for potat,oe3. derstand the fact that when we levy The Lonesome Club here* we are forced to learn a gospel d‘8'i»ctlve branches of government The federal men figure that the state’s allotment will be available to penalties on the "big fellow," the “lit where yy(, ____ baye „ t „ ike tbe l®Rl*lative, executive, and judicial, present parity price on potatoes farmg on which potatoes were grtown of acceptance. ,_ v tle fellow” is liable to be hurt the most 821 S. W. 4th Ave. Portland On July 1 a new chain store tax Uw th,nS8 aB present themselves, just All seemed necessary and one as im- would be approximately 90 cents a in the 1932-34 base period while the .... i« r.... . nianu» .. like wo face the new day, the tn.sks POI^lnt afl ,he otheia. I he piesident bushel, while the actual ADMINSION ALWAYS 25c prevailing 1 ,-emainder is reserved for new produc- went into effect in Iowa, placing a * confronting us and the many human cou d veto acts o f congress; congress stiff graduated tax on concerns oper problems could hold the chief executive In cneck p ™ ' *y about 45 per ers or otheis ineligible for an ordin- ating n,me than one retail outlet. The results: Muny gasoline sta-1 Why can't we begin the day as the by refl*sal to approve of his suggested birds in the trees, bursting their leP'“'ition nnd the supreme court was lions have been permanently aban in song? ■' We to * - iven l,ower lost » l a m nro- throats 1 ,1 »'»'K vve really renny seem io • - to d8c‘- ,e unconstttu- doned, the state has lost DUiiiD tax every be tbat someone else is going to unal t,le acts of either. portion of it« annual ith a a single single ex- *crw/w we are happy, but as a matter Perhaps at the time o of its incorpo- large oil company, with tangled affairs of a cePtlon. has been forced .out *of the J - are ^ I l y , _ Interested «M oa marketing business in Iow a-an d 2.- whether we are or not. But there is growing bureaucratic form of govern- 200 worktrs have been dropped from P '« t y for others to talk about If we niem there was souie necess.ty for the «u . ,. - .« _ _. .. i are unhaunv NR A. Re that as it may, the vast punie«*y Many u n a ^ r t^ 'fta d pther1 « is late at night as I write this organization was formed, without due S o y m . n T mu.“ ^ on the a i i l d y I }»«'* missive. A pedestrian is pass- regard to constitutionality and ron- bulciiur relief rolls Ing my home—whistling the sweet , tinued in deration until the supreme The Iowa chain tax was put forward I atralns <* Mendelsohn's Spring S o n g - ! court declared it unconstitutional. as a measure to help the common peo- henutlful. More so, for T know This was a blow to President Roose velt, one that brought rorth comments pie—the small businees man and the ith8re. ls n« Pr,ot<,8t *n *hat person, worker. Its effect has been absolute- Nl,,'iie Is always full of a rhythmic from friends of the chief executive in- ly the opposite—it has hit the worker ? ow of elements that make things dicatlng that they believed the constI- I nm quite sure that therein tution a "horse and buggy" docu hardest of all, and has robbed the true. Btate of revenue that must be made up a **cred *° happiness nnd a ment that should be scrapped for something more in keeping with the by increased taxes on other business ; ll‘“cnrd of our protests, plans o f brain tiustlng New Dealers. and other workers. Furthermore, Recently fedeial judges in lower like all measures which let (Vwn bar courts declared against the constitu Hearing Regained riers to initiative, it will inevitably tionality of certain sectl-.ns of the frighten capital and prevent investors llt'a rtn g Aid O vercoim w I le a f ness Agricultural Adjustment Act, alpha from putting their money into pro It is Anyone who has lost his sense of betically known as the AAA. ductive enterprises that would provide hearing undoubtedly suffers one of the believed that the supreme court will new jobs and taxes. A number of other states are said greatest calamities possible to an in eventually fo.|ow the constitutional Many of us are suffering course taken in the case of the NRA to be qanslderlng similar chain tax dividual. The supreme laws. The example of Iowa should fron> impaired hearing but the change and nullify the AAA. make the voters think twice about i ,ltt« been so gradual that we are not i court stands as a safeguard against proposals to penalize the "big fellow" aware of the fact that we do not hear | possible dictatorial ambitions Presi lcsl they find In practice that it is well beewuse some friend remarks on dent Roosevelt may harbor. It clings again at the "little fellow's" expense the necessity of i epetitlon when speak to the theory of our forefathers that . . . tbe best way to make a ing to us. Repetition of course aggra thin land must be kept free from • • • • • vates the speaker nnd he generally is | kings, monarchs and unsurpers. perfect union o f two pieces Continued Next Week rather blunt in Informing us that we | Strangling Initiative _______ are not listening carefully, while in i o f m etal is by welding WISECRACKS OF TIIE WEEK «-in « „ . W1 , i fact we have been paying attention .1 Uigers.by his native ability and but no, awar, th(U HUp troub,„ them together. A republican remarked "Of course j hr.ft . eft an estate valued at be- directly traceable to Impaired hearing these are lean years, because more tween two and one-half and five mil- | Many of our readers who suffer I eoplo are leaning on (he government lion dollars. II bus been announced from impalied hearing will be relieved than ever before." tn.it state and federal inheritance tax es will claim some $U50,000 if tiie es to learn that four-fifths of all deaf- tate totals two and one-half million, ened peisuns may regain strain-free, or $1,716,000 if the estate totals five unembarrassed hearing through use of the New Nonotone, latest Improved million. Proposals to "soak the rich" through model of the world's first portable new and greater inheritance taxes, bone conduction hearing aid which is which Mr. Roger's family escaped, almost invisible when worn. So not one-Port land Company has of would go far toward destroying the fered to call and make free tests of savings of his lifetime On the savings nnd wealth-destroy- ®°n* ,intl Air Conduction models in ing path we are traveling, there Is less our readers homes, and will give nd- and less Incentive for Americun citt- vl(,e any readers who are suffering zens to exercise there initiative and ?r°m impaired hearing or who may be ingenuity as in the past on projects doubt as to their hearing ability, which create employment and pros- Representative« o f Nonotone may be perlty. If they are successful, their reached by calling BEacon 2611, or by property will be largely taken away visiting offices at 321 Falling Building Wi-'vc i brsnd new food service from them through tuxation. If they S°n°U>ne carries a complete line of I- * ( alifbnin bound travelers. fall, that’s just too bud the tax col batterles for all makes of hearing An aurniUnt serves you fresh, I lector does not share in the loss. He devices. c.i\i\ food at sour scat in the only takes the profits and savings. That is just what w e do in making coach or in Tourist Pullman together you get a combined flavor • • • • Never before such low prices. CHESTERFIELD Cigarettes— the three For example: coffee V. milk V. which is entirely different from any Revolutionized Farming sandn ichcs I Or, 3 do-nuts 10c, Walter C. Kenworthy types o f mild ripe home-grown to one type o f tobacco. etc. Next tin t try the train for I txonomt— plus comfort, safety. baccos, that is tobaccos grown in this Not so many years ago agricultural It is this w elding o f the right in his cooperative* were regarded with sus country, arc welded together. Then picion Nome believed that they amounts o f the right kind o f tobac new location could produce nothing worth while, they are w elded with aromatic Turkish. cos that makes CHESTERFIELD a milder they were needless "luxuries." as of W hen these tobaccos are w elded The cooperatives have slowly, quiet and better-tasting cigarette. ly, and effectively caused a virtual July 1, 1935 agricultural revolution. They have Mrs. Kenworthy Lady Attendant gone a long way toward taking the ...t h e cigarette that's M IL D E R See your local S.P.agcntor write guess-work out of farming wherein lose a. e . ntii I n J. A. Orimmlv,C>r». Tau. each producer raised as much as he E A 0075 H r* phone EA. 8998 | 7 Ot Pact In b U f ., Portland, Ore. Could. Irrespective o f markets or Ue- O >9». L u u n & Misas Insacco Co. . . . the cigarette that TASTES BETTER ttubeciiption K a te « v ; V * DANCE 1Welding NEW LOW Z) FOOD PRICES! Sou th ern P acific . . . and the best way to get a more pleasing flavor and a better taste in a cigarette is by w eld in g together the different types of tobacco . . . Chesterfield Chester field ê s\ •