The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951, September 27, 1946, Image 4

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    BEAV E R T O N EN TERPRISE
Friday, September 27, 1946
CLUBS ACTIVE IN
PE A C E AS IN WAR"
'
M
om i
Above illustration shows Stanley Brown, of Carlton, Oregon.
With Champion Fat Lamb.
During the war years, the boys | Frank Brown, Jr., Stanley's
and girls of the 4 - H C l u b s father, is also well known and
throughout America formed one j nationally recognized as an ex­
Of our first lines of defense.
cattle. He has been a judge at
Now that peace has returned to International Livestock shows at
the world, these youthful farmers hibitor of sheep and shorthorn
•re performing uuties which are Chicago and at Toronto, Canada.
equally important. They are help­
Stanley’s successful career as
ing to keep up the nation’s food a 4-H Club member and as a
production at a time when starv­ prize winning exhibitor has been
ing people the world over need duplicated by many boys and
help and need it badly.
girls residing in the P a c i f i c
As in past years, the Pacific Northwest. These young people
International Livestock Exposi- j w ill be much in evidence at th e
tion w ill work very closely with forthcoming show of the Pacific
4-H Clubs, encouraging them to International Livestock Exposi­
greater efforts when these efforts tion.
•re sorely needed. The Pacific
In addition to these popular
Northwest holds an enviable rec­ 4-H activities, there w ill be num­
ord in number of such clubs. Here erous exhibits at the Exposition
In this section of the c o u n t r y including those featuring Beef
there are about 5000 4-H Clubs and Dairy Cattle, S h j c p and
which boast a membership of Goats, Hogs, Horses, Poultry, Pet
■ome 40,000 active boys and girls. | stock. Dogs, Land Products and
Pictured above is a typical 4-H ] Industrial Exhibits. In addition to
Club member, Stanley grow n of these w ill be the usual number of
Carlton, Oregon. Stanley has par­ special exhibits which w ill prove,
ticipated in club„work for some as in the past, of great interest.
ten years— the maximum period * In all, there will be nineteen sep­
■ boy may remain active under arate and distinct shows.
•xisting club rules. The photo­
Entertainment features t h i s
graph shows him with a champ­
year, according to T. B. Wilcox,
ion fat lamb exhibited at the
1937 show and the smile on his Jr” Presidt>nt ° f the Exposition
face indicates the pride he feels I wiU include the customary bril-
in his accomplishment. Stanley liant Horse Show and thrilling
has also received high recogni­ Rodeo, the Calf Scramble which
tion for his showing of beef will be of very special interest to
4-H boys, Carol H e n r y and
•attle.
‘
Stanley’s grandfather, Frank Sweetheart," America’s premier
Brown, is one of the original or­ High School horse, and the fam­
ganizers of the Pacific Interna­ ous Portland Police Band.
tional Livestock Exposition. To­
This year’s show, in so far as
day he is one of the trustees of entertainment is concerned, w ill
the organization. During his more unquestionably set a new high
active years, he was a widely standard. A t least such a result
known exhibitor o f aheep and is confidently anticipated by W il­
•horthorn cattle.
cox and his associates.
Seym our T o U S D A
For Year; Alien
Aeiing 4-H Head
Harry C. Seymour, Oregon 4-H
Club leader for the past 30 years,
will be
loaned to the
United
State department of agriculture
for a year to be field representa­
tive for the IX western states for
the federal extension seivice, F.
L, Ballard, associate director of
the Oregon State college exten­
sion service, has announced.
L. J. “ Doc" Allen, assistant 4-H
leader for 31 years .will become
acting state leader effective on
October 1. Headquarters for the
western field represntative will fce
moved fro mWashing'.on, D. C., to
Oregon State college, making it
possible for Seymour to devote a
third of his time to Oregon club
work as consultant, Ballard said.
Seymour, along with Allen and
Miss Helen Cowgill, assistant state
leader for 32 years, has developed
one of the most outstanding 4-H
programs In the
United States
during the more than 30 years the
| three have worked together. Ore­
gon has a higher percentage of
its rural youth enrolled In 4-H
work than any other state
in
the country with one exception
and ranks fourth
nationally in
completions of club projects. Ore­
gon’s annual 4-H summer school
likewise is the only one in the
U. S. that is held for as long as
ten days and its pre-war enroll­
ment of around 2200 youngsters is
also a national record.
As chairman of the extension
service sub-committee on 4 - H
club work, Seymour will be In
charge of the 25th anniversary
National 4-H club congress In
Chicago In December.
He has
seved two previous terms on this
Important national committee and
has held many other national 4-H
club positions.
Because of his continued part-
time connection with the Oregon
4-H office, Seymour will be able
to assist with plans for Increas­
ing Oregon’s 4-H membership by
15 percent this coming year, Bai-
lard pointed out.
The Low D ow n
From Hickory J
Grove
I just see where in Dakota the
Oovt. is busy as a bird-dog on
another dam and which is cost­
ing another 100 million as a start­
in’ ante. Also I see where it is on
a Reservation and according to an
old and legal treaty, the Indians
living there, cannot be up-rooted
or moved off. They do not choose
to leave. But that Is not stopping
the dam builders. When the waters
start to rise and the Indians must
be evicted the Govt, will evict
them. It may cost an extra 100
million to do so, but dams is what
we must have- legal or not legal
—Indians or no Indians. That Is
Sambo—in the dam business.
And when the power business is
in the Govt, fist —Sambo will have
more time to devote to takln’ over
other kinds of outfits like maybe
the barbers or the milliners, etc.
But Uncle Samuel as a barber or
a milliner, I reckon he should be
as good as over on the river, mak­
ing kilowatts.
Folks siltin’ In the bleachers
and watching the Govt, as It scuf­
fles with electricity, they will not
be so unruffled when some bur­
eau Big Chief gets over on thelt
side of the street and starts'fumb­
ling with their own door-betl.
Yours with the low down,
JO SE R R A
Thomas Jefferson was the first
President of the United States to
advocate Federal aid for education
roads, rivers and other Internal
Improvements.
ïfatcÿtfcdm ej.
SUGGESTS
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C H R IS T M A S
Greeting Cards
Originol
In
Design
Beautifully Finished
Business Firms . , ,
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I tg p lra p o o n a
C reen pepper
t tablespoons
c e le rr
chopped fine
Soybean
crackers
By PILGRIM
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mustard-
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•n lo n minced
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S E N D OUT TEA SA M PLE S (MUCH
WERE U n ion 'S SEHT UJ COSTI IEJ?
TIN CON TRINEOS).
NEWS IN THE WORLD
OF RELIGION
By W. W. Reid
A family in Georgetown, amid
the mountains of California, was
burned out some time ago.
It
was not a family that could stand
such a loss, or could rebuild in
days of high costs. But the Rev.
Paul Mekkelson, Methodist pas­
tor, and some of his parishioners,
went to work on meeting the fam ­
ily's need. A lumber yard donated
two-by-fours and other material;
merchants gave nails and other
necessities; church folks hauled
logs and shaped them. And on a
Sunday morning, Pastor Mekkel­
son called o ff the worship service
while the church members went
to work to build the family a new
home. The women of the Woman’s
Society of Christian Service of the
church
supplied
the
workers
with “ eats”. Before Sunday was
over the fam ily had a roof over
their heads.
Economic
deterioration,
civil
strife, and political ineptitude and
corruption are the "m ajor factors
in China’s present crisis,” accord­
ing to President Henry P. Van
Dusen, of Union Theological Sem­
inary, New York who has just re­
turned from visiting China in his
capacity as president of the As­
sociated Boards for Christian Col­
leges in China. "American policy
toward China should follow two
guideposts;
persistent,
whole­
hearted and plentiful aid to the
constituted government,, and in­
sistence that the leaders o f China
put their own house in order,” he
said. “ China in communist hands
would be the most probable, one
may almost say certain, prelude to
World War III. What happens in
China is of more immediate and
vital importance to the security
of the United States than what
occurs almost anywhere else in
the world.”
• a •
Almost everything “ from frying
pans to heifers” —with
candles,
dolls, textbooks, carpenter tools,
feed bags, clothing, and bedding
somewhere in between—has been
shipped during the past couple of
years to the needy of Europe and
Asia from the eight centers of
Church World Service the largest
being in New Windsor, Maryland.
From New Windsor alone, during
the first half of -946, there was
shipped overseas 2.000.000 pounds
of clothing; 3,500,000 pounds of
food .and 13,000 pairs of shoes.
Twenty-one hundred dairy heifers
were shipped to Europe. Practic­
ally all this material was contri­
buted by church people In Amer­
ica. and most of it is being dis­
tributed by Christian pastors ov­
erseas;
but the distribution
is
made "without regard to race col­
or, creed or politic».”
• • a
Better health, better food bet­
ter sanitary and economic condi­
tions, and an Increase in literacy
in the villages: these ’are some of
the “ basic need*” missionaries of
À
all faiths are trying to give In­
dia's people. New efforts are be­
ing made in a number of these
fields in the post-war period. The
Methodist Church,
for example,
from its “Crusadd for Christ” mon­
eys, is providing $160,000 for the
development o f the All-India Med
leal College in Vellore—with hos­
pitals, mess-training, and doctor-
training;
$11,000 for
an added
equipment for Madar Union Tu­
berculosis Sanitorium; $10,000 for
a new building and equipment for
Clara Swain Hospital, Bareilly; and
$9,500 for the establishment of
seven “ centers" for rural and vil­
lage development—each center to
have a native-style church, school
and clinic.
• • •
During the ten years and more
of
H itler’s control
in Europe
4.000. 000 or more than one-fourth
of all the Jews in the world
have
been liquidated—gassed, cremated,
or worse,” says Dr. Conrad H o ff­
man of the International Mission­
ary Council. "O f the more than
5.000. 000 Jews in continental Eur­
ope, it is estimated than not more
than 1,600,000 remain. Ninety per
cent of Polish Jewry, 50 per cent
of French Jewry, 75 per cent of
Belgian Jewry and 83 per cent of
Greek Jewry have been extermin­
ated Of all his mad objectives Hit-
let came nearest to success In his
ai mto completely annihilate the
Jews of Europs. And those Jews
who have survived are far from
normal. Bodies are broken, nerves
wracked, and minds warped and
distorted. All are In need of food
and clothing, but even more so of
friendship and sympathy, and the
reassurance that they still count
as men created in the image of
God.”
• • •
Fifteen of the principal foreign
missionary boards of Anterican
Protestantism have united, thru
the Foreign Missions Conference
of North America, in the purchase
of $3,000,000 worth of war surplus
commodities from the U. S. Gov­
ernment to aid In the replenish­
ment of stocks and the reconstruc­
tion of buildings and equipment
of missions destroyed during the
war period. The bulk of the pur­
chases is drugs, hospital and med­
ical supplies and equipment, but
there Is also building and office
supplies and automotive
stock.
Most of the material was purchas­
ed from “ dumps” in the Philip­
pines, and most of It will be used
in replenishing and rebuilding in­
stitutions in China.
By an act of Parliament In 1880
England was the first country to
extend the liability of employer
to employee beyond the common
law Interpretation.
The first express company In
America was established In 1847.
It operated between Boston and
New York.
CLEANS TEETH THE
SAFE LIQUID WAY
WITHOUT ABRASIVES
0E A N Y KIND
MEDIUM
LAUGC
uni
yon na > «
n in . s t a r d » ith
horseradish onion and salt with
real mayonnaise Spread on rye
wafers and top each with a slice
of hard-boiled egg and a small
•prig of paisley.
Yield 24 servings.
BEAVERTON
W AVS-
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For O IL
or SE R V IC E
call
Beaverton 3361
H. V. JO HNSO N
Beoverton, Or.
We Give S&H Green Stamps
A VEGETABLE
DINNER IS
<00 G O O D /
T R Y IT
TO DAY/
-N Y O U
J R EA LLY
W SHOULD/
CO N TA IN
B it e s
D a sh
FUEL CO.
The combined length of the Mis­
sissippi and Ohio rivers is about |
4,200 miles.
VALUABLE
cut In fa nc y
shapes
S ird m t
Beaverton
O F C U B A 'S S U S A R
Blend cheese, onion and celer»
with real mayonnaise Spread on
soybean crackers and top with a
piece of green pepper
Yield: 24 servings.
1 H c u p s sn ritln e s.
Aloha Grange will have a pot
luck supper Thursday evening at
the Grange Hall after which its
members will all help paint and
redecorate the interior of the hall.
This will be the first of several
such meetings to be held before
the National Grange convention,
which opens In Portland in Nov.
All Grange members are asked
to wear old clothes and help get
the hall in shape.
Ray Mathis will plaster the din­
ing room with a number of gran­
gers assisting him.
euy 5 ABcor 5 0 %
«na vnnnaise
radish
Attractive Quantity Discounts
I he
•nappy Cheese On Soybean
Crackers
IH n i p * A m e r i ­
J tnLlespoons
c a n che ese,
rest
m l need
• tablespoons
BEA VERTO N ENTERPRISE
Betty«
•horts are the standard gear and
cokes and pop furnish sustenance.
But every once In a while some­
one suggests a real party to ahow
off tha summei formats And that
calla for real refreshments. For
•uch an affair. Nancy Holmes of
the Best Foods kitchens suggests
a thirst quenching fruit punch and
these attractive canapes which are
May to make.
T a aty
See the display
at
gathers
T house every evening borause
she owns a phonograph Slacks and
»»ton minced
Suitable For Family,
Professional Men or
THE POCKETBOOK OF KNOWLEDGE
I f you want to buy—sell—trade,
T R Y A CLASSIFIED.
ALOHA CHANGE HALL
TO BE REDECORATED
PHARMACY
llro a tiicay p re s c rip t Um D ruggint
P H O N E 2.111
Closing Hour on Week Day« — 9 p. in.
FRESH/
K
Make Our Produce Department
YOUR PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
Just Right For Baking NOW
DANISH SQUASH
It's Stew Time Too
BOILING ONIONS
5
17c
lb. b o g
Klamath Falls, U. S. No. 1
SPUDS
2 5 e 25
$1 19
lb SACK
DON’T FORGET YOUR LOCKER
•
9
•
FROZEN FOOD C A R T O N S
LOCKER W RAP (for DEER or BEEF)
C H IC K EN or TURKEY BAGS
It's A Good Morning with—
APPLE JUICE Nt. w-
TOM ATO JUICE
29c
L IB B Y 'S
46-oz can
GRAPE FRUIT JUICE
46-oz can
21c
TEXAS VALLEY
For FALL Cleaning
NuBora BLEACH
/2 gollon 1 2 c
Sun Bright Cleanser
•
Can 4 c
W E C A R R Y A COMPLETE LIN E OF W A X E S A N D POLISHES
LAMB, Breast, Neck, Shanks 19c
,b
FOR BRAZING or LAM B CURRY
SALMON Fresh Caught
>b39c
lb
TRY IT BAKED IN M ILK!
By the Piece
Armour's VITALOX
4 Vi oz jar
THE BEST BEEF SEASONING FOR SOUPS OR GRAVIES
33c
B&T MARKET
W ATER WELL DRILLING
PAUL E. ROSS
Rt. 3, Box 1100 Beaverton
Aloha, Oregon
phone 6380
SPORTSMAN'S
DANCE
Beaverton
RO D and G U N C L U B
Huber Hall
Saturday, Sept. 28
9:30 to 12:30
Vote Fish Bill 312X YES
Y o u r T ic k e t» fro m the R e a v e rt on
M erchant *
-•on $ 1 . per C ouple. In clu d in g Tax
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