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About Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923 | View Entire Issue (April 23, 1914)
MT. SCC )TT H EK A LD Entered as >eixni«i Clax» Matter February 19, 1914. At poetorttoe. IzoU, Oregon. Under act of March S, 1*7» Published Every Thursday at l«nt», Ore., by the Mr. S cott P tbusbixo Co. H. A. DARNALL, E ditob ixn M axaobb . Office Phone: Home B-6111-1111. Residence Tabor >»13 of the NiwnnUi farm at Rickreall, yrt Polk will aid by boosting a little now and then "Pat.” as the names know him. «ears a number eight hat, and it covers got al Oregon brains that should be of «ervice to the »tote lx< k in the capitol The Monitor hope* to see him win the race — Imtopendencv Monitor Mr. McArthur has a g»»>d rvceord in the < Iregon U-gislatuie. He comes from a tine line of people. He is a graduate of the I'liiverrfty of Oregon and a bright, prugmwive young man with a very wide cirele of personal friends throughout the state. — Oregon City Enterprise C. N. MoArihur, who recently announced himself as a candidate for Congre*» for the Third District, is a gramtoon of James W. Nesmith who was an early pioneer of < »regon and United State« Senator from thia state during the Civil War period. McArthur is a young man oi considerable ability and ought to he able to beat Lafferty, the prevent incumbent, who will make the race sguin. — Newberg Graphic. Mr. McArthur is a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress from the Third Oregon District— Mult nomah County.—Paid Adv. them on the walla. Sometimes Rosa waa not to be found at school, and alter some Marching, waa located and would be found drawing pictures in ths duet, ; Th* nuns or looking at aom* gay sign soon became out of patience with bar and sent her home. was art. Rosa's great «st talent Her first picture that was exhibited waa called "Rabbita Eating Carrots” and waa exhibited when she was nineteen vaare old. Her pictures were annually exhibited after that. Hsr 1 master piece, "The Horae Fair" was R C. Bonder, candidate fcr HE only note of opposition placed ou exhibit whan she was twenty county surveyor on the Republi that has been advanced by a eight. Tbia picture brought her amon* Portland publication on the Pub can ticket, is well acquainted soma of the most famous artist« that lic Market proposition came out with the position he is seeking. aver lived. Her Iasi days were «pent on tier farm at Fountainbleaux. She this week from the Spectator. He has been first assistant to the had a very dear American friend by th* Just why the Spectator should present surveyor, Mr Holbrook, name ol Anna Klumpke. Mademoiselle stand between the great mass of for several years and is known Honheur willed all of her property to all over the county as a careful people and their desires is unex tbia triemi, and asked her to share her and competent honest, and plainable unless the Spectator is tomb. Her greatest deeire was to have as many animal« a« sh- wanted and in a class by itself and a few of efficient engineer. He is con servative in his attitude on the this desire wa* granted to her. She the upper crust The editor of died at the age of seven'«'-even after matter of piling up county ex that sheet says a lot of things leading * very happy '.it* that would look better unsaid. penses, or in his relation to the Roe* Bonhenr mutt have hren inven As a matter of fact we took par citizens whom he may meet in a tive and artietic to portray such a a- n- derful picture There are many differ ticular attention to notice that business way. ent breeds of horses shown The two at present there are not a larger dapple gray toraaa look very geutle «nd proportion of vacant buildings in , The bpectetor think, that so steady, while there to the bla> k bora* Seattle than there are in Port- long as the Oregonian is going to who seems very high spirited. There i__u TV. L. T C. Smith building select Legis- land. The -*lect the members of the Legis Being a member of the House Com- is the fine black race hors*, and th* ts not occupied and neither is the “ ™^t as well be the mittee on Interstate and Foreign Com- little peevish pony who seems very Yeon building all in use. There Oregonian s editor who shall be merce, CongTaaaman Lafferty, from disagreeable becau«* be 1« not ax large are several other office buildings Ë?«*" rePf^enlt the thi« district. was in a position to make as the big draught horse*. In the beck a minority report against the 1‘reaident'a ground to «een many other horeea. Thi« more or less vacant in Portland. ThatJ8 *hy >«'’• ‘ middle- repeal measure. Mr. Lafferty made beautiful picture is eight feel high and In the down town districts there man • _______________ It took the artist good use of the opportunity, filing a sixteen feet long. are not manv vacant store build strong report against repeal, which eighteen mouth* to «elect her animals ings in Portland, but if you will State Press Comment On Candidacy furnished the foundation for the speech for the picture. When the picture was es of several Member« who opponxi finished «he offered it to her home town get out into the suburbs you can 0- C. N. McArthur For Congress on the floor of the House. A for twelve thousand franc*, but they find a “few.” And this cannot I repeal part of Mr. Lafferty’s minority report thought that waa loo much, so England be due to the Portland public tlifton X. MeAnhnr. who ma.to .uch came forward and bought it for forty . A *n excellent record x« speaker of the follows: markets for there are none. How of 14 "Prof Emory Johnson, of the Uni thousand francs Then a rich American Now aS to the Japanese who B ,-andidate for Congrcaa in the Third versity of •t-warnd ante, has just stated bought it for fiftv-five thousand dollars participate in the Seattle District with a good ctiance of being the that if the united States exempts and placed it in the Metropolitan makets and groceries. It is m-xt Congressional repnwentative from coasting v ease is from the payment of Museum of Art in New York City. The literature for this sketch waa probable that the Japanese would Poland He is a stanch Republican, tolls the Government will lose thereby found in two copies of "The Ladle* in canal revenues the sum of 120,000,000 . . a j ai_ o a^.1 talented, and haa riven full demon- PH oim - s Tat«ir 9RH ; Home 3112 1 Block Eart <>i Main St. on Porter Kohl not have invaded the Seattle 9?r>bon a of fau word <nd in 10 years. From an economic point Home Journal’ and the Encyclopedia, business fields had not the peo- faithful to the letter to tf*e people a of view can not the people well afford Book about Famous Artists, and from pie of Seattle offered them cer- interwn« Added to his many enviable to lose $20,000,000 in revenue from the picture, "The Horse Fair.” K. SMITH ba« taken the Shoe Repair equitable in the premi «ex. Gretchen Merrit, Woodmere Thia summon« is published by order tain attractions. The same holds qualifications is hi« well-known common canal tolls in 10 years if. by so doing, School, 7 A. ing Dpt., of Nygaard« «tore. In future 1 they save in the same period $100,000, of the Honorable T. J. Cleet on, Judge section of the *" rw Hi * platform should appeal to let a Shoemaker do yoar repairing. true in this of the above rntitlcl Coart. duly made every voter of Portland, and the large 000 or more in freight rates. and entered therein on the 11th day of country. The Japanese fore- majority should ___ unhesitatingly _ 'The people who have already put give him Spring Laxative and Blood Cleanser March, 1914, and aald order directing 8UMMONH runners of the present represen* their support, for Oregon needs a tuan into the canal $400. 000,000. equal to $4 Flnah out the accumulated waste and publication of thi« «utnmon* not leee In the Circuit Court of the State of. than one« a week for ait succeaatv* per head of our population, and no one tatives were brought here for of hie calibre and impresión» in Con poisons of the winter month«; clean« Oregon for Multnomah county. weak«, anti that you «ball so appear and proposes to get that back. It is only vour stomach, liver and kidneys of all servants. They found their re- 8^ S. 8. Thomas, P aintiff, vx V. Vlaggal an««er on or before the «aid 2nd day ot Hie strong endorsement of natural proposed to charge tolls to maintain impuritiee. Take Dr. King’s New Life Jonm and II. I- White, liefendents May. 1914. lations less satisfactory than in : resources, reclamation of arid lands, a the running expenses of the canal. The Pills; nothing better for purifying the To V. Vincent Jone* and II. L. White, Date of first publication March 12, dependent workers and so took ’ fair deal to both capital and labor, $20,000,000 that we would lose in canal blood. Mild, non-griping laxative. the above named defendents In the 1914. up farming and business con I woman suffrage, and a six-year Previ- revenues in 10 years by exempting Cures constpation; makes you leel tine. name of the State oi Oregon, you and Date of teat publication April 23,1914. each of you are hereby required to ap and A. li. Tanner, nections. What they are in re- dential term and fewer elections, From coasting vessels would be only 20 cents Take no other. 2Rc, at your Druggist. pear and answer the complaint tile«I John Van Zante Attorney« for Plaintiff. per head of our population. By that Bucklen's Arnica Salve for All Hurts. against you in the above entitled suit, lation to our economic relations «n*13/ pearto of Mr McArthur’s on or before Saturday, the 2nd day of BUM MONS we have made them ourselves Platfo,m u\h1ls "The drift of popu- policy no citizen would lose in canal May, I9!4, and if you fail so to appear revenues over 60 cents in 30 years—a sod answer, for want thereof the In the Circuit Court of th« State of and there is no one to blame but wriooi prohkœi œnfroDt.ni{ the generation. plaintiff will apply to the alxive en Oregon, for Multnomah County. ourselves. They are here and i American people and it can only t>e ‘ 'Now, while each generation would titled Court for the relief prayed for in Laura I Down, Plaintiff vs J. L. Down, •aid complaint, to-wit: Defendant. they are going to 3tay here and solved by awakening a nation-wide lose in canal revenues 60 cents per head For a decree ascertaining the amount To J. H. Down, the above named de the fact that they can look after ‘“tore« in country lif* *nG the «wwai by exempting coasting vessels, due the plaintiff from the defendant« fendant: In the name of the State of . A decrease in much would they gain therebv? under the contract set out in the said Oregon: You are hereby required to themselves is rather to their br>och«’ the size of the non-producing clasees in the tolls would be $1.50 per ton. complaint, ami requiring the «ai<l de- j appear anti answer the complaint filed credit. fendants to pay the amount found to lie against you in the above entitled Court the great centers of population and a that rate lumber shipped from the due plaintiff, within «nch reasonable anti cause, on or before April 24, 1914, It is to be hoped that the out- corresponding increase in the number Pacific coast to New Orleans or New time aa the Court may fix in such de and ¡1 you fail so to apfiear and answer come of the market movement of producer* on farms will add to the York would pay $2 25 per thousand feet gree, and that if they fail to make said said complaint, plaintiff will apply to payment within said time, that they ««id Court for the relief prayed for in in Portland will be closer rela volume of foodstuffs and lessen the cost for passing through the canal, as a and each ot them, and all person« ' «aid complaint, towit, for a decree of living”.—Woodburn Independent. thousand feet of lumber weighs tions between producer and con Those who have leen closely awxiated practically a ton and a half. That for painting fobs. Are you looking claiming the real property deocrilwid in netting aalde anti annulling the bonds of for a painter' Let us get together the said complaint or io the «aid i on matrimony heretofore anti now existing sumer, a reduction in the annual ' with Mr. McArthur know him to be a would make Pacific coast lumber coat and have a talk, I can tell you tract therein »st forth, by, through or between vou and plaintiff, ami that amount spent by the city mer- man abeolutely fair and square in all his in the Mississippi Valley or on the what it will amt you can -uggi-xt nnder the Baid defendant« or either of plaintiff'« maiden name, to-wit, luiura color xclieme» and will tell you what chants for delivery purposes, and dealing« political or otherwise. The Atlantic seaboard $2.25 more per materials I use I mix my own paint them, be forever barred and forecloxcl I.. Hilton, l>e restored to her, and for of all right, title, intereet and «qsltlag further relief a« may lie equitable if it really comes to be true that taci that the chair of thousand feet than it would coat if we after studying the conditions of tlie of whatever name or nature, in or t<> such in the premixes. the surfai-e U> lie painted. Tlwee condi exempt our coastwise trade from the »aid real property, under or by' Service of this summons is mails up it effects the small grocer, that '!^ker of 0regoD tions have a direct liearing on Un payment of toile. On this one item virtue of «aid. contract or otherwise, on you by publication of the same, in say the paint «honld t>e mixeil. the result Will be a reduction in more highly respected each time, is proof of lumber alone each citizen east of which «aid real property is particularly pursuance o(ean order oi ttie Honorable I USE PIONEER OR I described a« follows, to wit: wit: Lota num T. J. Cleeton, Judge of the above-en rentals in the congested districts that he is a man whom the people can Kansas City who builds i house during Selby “Dutch Boy” White Lead bered Nine (9) and Ten (10), in Block titled Court, made on the 12th flay of of the town by many institutions trust in the conduct of their burineax hia life time would profit by free canal and Nine (9), Ivanhoe Addition to the City March. 1914, directing publication pure linseed oil. I consider paint of Portland, County of Muhnomali and thereof Io tie made in the Mt. Scott made from these material« to tie now crowded at the business, If_morT men ot were elected to tolls from $25 to $100. while he would State of Oregon, and now within th* Herald for six consecutive weeks. ttie bert. office there would be a higher respect save by charging tolls only 60 cento. center that may find it profitable ' for corporate limit* of the City of Portland : Date of first publication March 12, te m ' w m Its test 9** s M T m »«I « ■«* our public official«.— Klamath Fall« Savings in food products and other i and restoring the «aid real property and 1914. to seek outlying locations where Herald. TABOR 4TB2 heavy freight from coast to coast I the title and po**e*«ion thereof to tlie Date of last publication April 23, RALPH P. LAWRENCE rents are not so high. While McArthur is a young man. lie would be in like proportion. ¡plaintiff; for the roxtx and diebiirse- 1914. KALAOMISt!«, and PAPKHHAMGISG T LAF f ERI Y libili S FOR fRFF FOUS Hay, Feed and Grain Washed Gravel, Sand GET OUR PRICES Cement, Brick, Lime, Wall and Land Plaster mckinley & bundy I’m on the Lookout : is recognized ax one of ablest men of 1 public affairs in the state. He has rPHE unfortunate turn rela- occupied position« of trust and responsi A tions with Mexico have bility with credit to the state and honor taken within the past week will to himseli. He is thoroughly familiar be regretted by every peace lov with the needs of the Third District and entire state—8t. Helena Mist. ing. right thinking citizen of our the Mr. McArthur is a man with a record country. It seems to have of capable accomplishment. By dint been one of those unhappy of hard work, backed by ability and things that could not be avoided. political sense, be has won his way to a That being reasonably certain it leading position in state legislative is better that it be now than , affairs. An able lawyer. hi« experience, ’ political and professional, has brought later. A dirty piece of work | him in close contact with general con will be no better by delay. And ditions throughout the state—Bend appearances indicate that delay Bulletin. would have only added to the McArthur haa a good idea of affairs in state, is honest in his intentions, other fellows’s resources. The I I the capable of making a Congressman of real question for anxiety now is I worth to the district and to the nation. what will be the relations be ■ —La Grande Observer. tween warring factions in Clifton N McArthur, twice Speaker of Mexico. If the rebels are sin 1 the Oregon House of Representatives, cere in their desire for better ; and one ot the cleanest and ablest young I inen in hi* native state, has announced social conditions and civil rights J himself a candidate for the republican they will continue as opponents nomination for Congress in the Portland of the Huerta regime. If they district. In recognition of merit and are merely contending for for the honer of Portland and the state plunder they will endeavor to ; he ought to have no trouble in winning. Mr. McArthur will make a valuable prolong hostilities by uniting member in the national halls of legis with the Federáis. Second, lation, where his grandfather. Colonel when the American soldiers win Nesmith. «Iione with such distinction 50 what will be the status assumed? years ago. Harney County News. Will Mexico become a dependent, Polk County take« more than a casual interest in the anr*un*rnent that C. N. a ward, or again allowed to con McArthur is a candidate for Congress to tinue it dubious course undi succeed A. W. Lafferty. While Polk I will not get to cart a vote for the owner rected? “The secret of this great economic advantage is that canal rates will effect transcontinental rail rates, and thereby the saving to the American people from free tolls in forcing reductions in rail rate« will be millions, while the saving in revenues by refusing to exempt our coasting vessels from the payment of these tolls will be negligible.’’-Paid Advt. Juvenile Department The Horse Fair (It i* the custom of the teacher in thi« grade to give a story relative to the topic, make a «tody ot the artist« pro duction, etc., then a abort outline is prepared and the pupil prepares the composition from that—Ed.) The name, "Horae Fair,” almoat describes the picture itself. It show* that the artist has taken very much paint in «electing the different mooda of action. The horses are at an exbibt, and are very excited. R osa Bonheur's lather, Raymond BonLeur, »»> an artiat of French deecent. Her mother wax a musician, who helped V» earn the meager thing by giving mnsic leeaona. Marie Rotalie Bon hen r, wax born in Bordeaux. Franc«, October 22, 1822. She waa very happy in her early home with all ¡her beloved pete. When the wax about eight year« of age her parent« moved to th>- large city of Paris, to of court- Ria received mott of her education at a convent. Hbe wax very unruly ax a child' 81.« would cartoon the teachert and hang i ment« of thia suit, and for such other | and further relief as may be just and M. H. Carter and John Van Zante. Attorney* for Plaintiff. Ten Electric Generating Plants Widely scattered, have been built by the Portland Railway, Light & Power Company for the purpose of pro viding Where Located Portland (2) Oregon City RELIABLE ELECRTIC SERVICE Silverton Cazadero Estacada Bull Run to its patrons. Through high tension transmission lines, each of these gen erating plants are inter-communica tive, so that the service is insured against unforeseen interruptions. Boring St Johns Salem Portland Railway Light & Power Company Broadway and Alder Streets PHONES: Marshall 5100; Home A-6131