Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1917)
Mt Scott Het aid Pagt Four LOCAL BRIEFS W.C.T.U. NOTES SPECIAL! O. J. Sherman, of Sunnyside, paid ' A meeting of the state executive The Herald office a call on Monday, of the W. C. T. U. is called for , Mt. Scott union Is Have.you subscribed for your lo- ___ _______ Tuesday. | especially interested as their corres cal paper? One dollar a year. Every community needs a local pa ponding secretary is a member of • that body. per. Subscribe for the Herald. The work of the sailors' and sol The Mt Scott Herald delivered at Tiers' department is being vigorous your door for *1.00 a year. ly pushed. The making? of house Did you tell your merchant you wives’ comfort bags, as well as the 1 saw his ad in the Herald? work for the hospital service is go Mrs. Harbon. of Lenta, is entertain ing on rapidly in nearly every lo- ing her sister, of Forest Grove, who ar-, cality. Mrs. Mortrude is the superintend I nved yesterday. Many plots are being discovered, ent in the Mt Scott union. Mrs. Ella Hoover Thacher, of > but few of them are treasonable. Washington, D. C., is National leader They are mostly gtAnd plots. Many a man is carried out feet of this work and for many years has efficiently planned and promul Often do more harm than : first because he rushed in head- gated the most splendid work among j long. Safety first. soldiers and sailors. Her printed no glasses at all. You want To the public: When calling up ■ plans have gone into every section your glasses RIGHT. Jl’ST ; advertisers please state that you saw of the country. They include the RIGHT, and that’s the way . their ad in this paper. making and filling of comfort bags. Fit, near-fit and unfit candidates, I the establishment of rest rooms at I fit them. I 25 in all, are to have their names on training stations and mobilization the June ballot.—Exchange. camps, instructions as to what to Benton County fanners are keep- I do for soldiers and sailors while RIGHT-PRICES ing traction plows going night and | they entrain and afterwards, how day, and Sundays. i young people and children can help, Columbia Engineering works, of , how to knit vests, mufflers, wriat- Portland, launched a 170-foot aux I lets, etc.,» what supplies to send and I where to send them; religious and iliary schooner recently. One of the best gravel plants in social work, and how to co-operate DR. GEO. B. PRATT. the state has started operation at , with the Red Cross, yet using our Optometerist own machinery. I Oregon City. The state headquarters is a lively 326 Alder St. between 6th and Broadway Floyd Murohy, the barber. iias place these days at 607 Dekum Ittdg. thoroughly renovated his place during The Flower Mission department fur the past week, painting it ouUide and nishes plans for general relief among ! families of enlisted men. This de- Preliminary work on the establish-; ‘ partment is in charge of Mrs. Al- i me nt of a big shipbuilding and bert Fankhauser here. equipping plant is now on at Mil- The labor department of the Na POR TLA Mi i waukie. Must advance, stand tional is engaged in definite work still is to go back. Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Tamplin at- under the United States Labor De tended the “Peace bay" services at partment for the establishment of Sunnyside Friends Church Sunday | employment bureaus for women who PUT | will have to take the place of the evening. our Portland where men called to the army. Beside all land belongs. Word was received this week from this the W. C. T. U. has taken up W. A. Burns, of Lents, that he and the Americanization work in co-op Elect his party reached Alaska May 1, eration with the Federal Bureau of having left Seattle April 22. Immigration and Naturalization and If your mail is going astray since the Naturalization of the National the installation of free mail delivery- Chamber of Commerce. The Get-together The part of the W. C. T. U. in let us print you some letterheads and Candidate the work of Americanization of envelopes. aliens, made more than ever neces When patronizing the merchants FOR who advertise in “The Herald” just sary on account of the war situa let them know that you saw their tion, is among the women and chil- 1 dren. Mrs. Black, the National su ad in our paper. perintendent, asks that every white Mr. Bloyd, of the Multnomah State ribboner do at least two things: (1) Bank of Lents, bad his first application Establish friendly relations with at for a Liberty pMn yesterday. A lady least one alien family; (2) induce ' of the district purchasing bonds to the one non-English speaking woman to amont of *2> •'. learn to speak English. The W. C. Twohy Bros., Sixtieth and Sandy T. U. publishes literature in 20 dif Blvd., have the contract for building ferent languages. All the above will 300 cars for the Southern Pacific show the great activity of the Wom Railroad, which are to be delivered an’s Christian Temperance Union in in the fall. answering the call of the country in Wanted—Subscription solicitors to this hour of dire need. No organ take subscriptions for Mt. Scott ization is better equipped for patri Herald, Will give 50 per cent com- otic serviee and the “Call of pa JOHN M mission, Call at office any day triotism” has been sent out from after 8 o’clock a. m. the National headquarters and is be B. S. Cook and family, of Pied- ing responded to in the most effi mont; Mrs. Marion Gilbert, of Al cient and practical manner by 20.- bina, and Rev. M. F. George, of 000 local unions—one-half million Candidate for " OF TNI IVY PMM — Sunnyside, were in Lents Monday, women. An urgent appeal is made to all patriotic women to join the CITY COMMISSIONER MEMBER 1917 LEGISLATURE attending the Coe funeral. union here and help make it a power Has had ten years’ experience Mrs. Swanson and her son, Emil, for great good in this call for pa Business Man's Candidate for from Rayburn station; Mr. and Mrs. triotic service. as City Auditor, and as such he Special meetings ' Eddie Adams and little daughter. w ill be held with an instructor pres-! has conducted the affairs of his I Caroline, and Miss Vera Lull were ent to get the work for the soldiers office in a most economical, effi 1 He stands for strict economy, sound guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Bar- and sailors better understood and . cient and courteous manner. business principles, protection of the ! ker, of Lents, S unday. more earnestly pushed. industries we now have and the en The general principle of a pri The : Millard Ave. Presbyterian couragement of new ones, which Again we ask any one having i vate business is to promote effi means more pay rolls and the de I Sunday School will repeat the de waste paper or books to let us know. velopment of the natural resources cient employes, and as an em i the “Carnival of the of Oregon, making a bigger, better I lightfu) cantata, ploye of the city, Mr. Barbur is Flowers,' at the church tomorrow and more prosperous Portland. (Friday) evening, The price of ad- asking the people who employed Church Notes mission will be 15 cents. him as Auditor to promote him (Continued from Page 2. » The Kansas Legislature has passed their monthly meeting at the church to the higher position of City a bill forbidding “the sale, barter, 1 on Wednesday evening of next week, •f Commissioner. He has made good as City giving away, or advertising of cigar the 30th inst. At this meeting R<v. Auditor and will cantinue to ettes, or cigarette papers in Kan \ Homer L. Cox, of the First Friends ' sas” A fine of 125 to J100 is pro Church, will give an address on make good as City Commissioner 22 vided in the bill. — The American ' “How to Study the Bible.” Every (Paid Adv) I ress. one will be welcome. The annual conference and camp Large delegations of the Epworth j meeting of the Seventh Day Advent League attended the district League I ists will commence on Tuesday of convention at Centenary Church Fri-1 Who gave the city of Portland 170m next week, the 29th inst., and will day, Saturday and Sunday, greatly horse power of water, is desirous of a continue to .June 11. It will be held enjoying the sessions. City Comtniseionerahip to devi-e means at Creston station, on the Mt. Scott The service Sunday morning was of breaking the thralldom of light and car line. of especial interest. Mr. Brock gave power the city now endures at the Miss Lona Crandall, of Lents, an a short address preceding the ser employe of the O.-W. R. & N., left mon on the “Value of the Denomin bands of buccaneers, who charge more the first of the week for the home ational College," paying a high than three times higher than a fair re of her parents in Clackamas County, tribute to these schools for the edu turn on honest capitalization. Horse a threatened breakdown necessitat cational advantages which they af- power which costs at rental of |2*».(l0 in ing a few days’ rest. Her many , forded as well as to the place which Tacoma is taxed *102.«» by the Port friends hope to see her back in a , they fill in the building up of char acter, quoting statements made by land Railway Light A Power Co., as short time much improved. eminent educators of the country one instance. The Northern Pacific Railway Co. The telephone is another iniquity, to the effect that presidents of state have announced that they will dis : universities rejoice when students bleeding thia city for over one million continue the serving of the “great big baked potato” on their trains ! come to them from these denomina two hundred thousand dollars annually, until after the war, in the interests tional schools, knowing that they rep- of which at least eight hundred thous of food conservation. Hereafter no 1 resent the highest type of character and dollars is pure extortion; a rate of passenger will be served with more and will wield a wholesome influ fl. 00 in the house and *1.50 in the ence in the student body. The ser- than he can eat. mon by the pastor was on “Chris- office will yield over *2*0,000 yearly, CIVIL ENGINEER Last Wednesday afternoon eitnc tian Education," the thought being 35 Years* Experience burglars gained an entrance through a emphasized that true education em more than interest on bonds for ligiti- cellar window into the home of Mr. and bodied physical, intellectual and spir mate cost and upkeep. Candidate for • Paid Adv. e. 21 i Mrs. W. H. Harker, of 85th street and itual development which should cul CITY COMMISSIONER Woodstock avenue. Fifteen dollars minate in one harmonious whole, “Watchful waiting ’’ may have Believes in doing that well with one was taken from a purse in a bureau j Secular colleges were too materialis- dollar which any bungler can do with drawer. No cine wa* left by which to 1 tic in their tendencies to provide been al right in dealing with two dollars after a fashion. This is the identify the robbers, but it is presumed this three-fold education, which Carranza, but it isn’t worth a true purport of an engineer. that it was boys as the cellar window i could only be found in the denom buggy bean when dealing with 23 was small. (Paid Adv) inational school and colleges. the price boosters. ONE WEEK SALE MTTU Middies, Work Skirts, NT1U White Canvas Shoes, NLW HOSIERY, UNDERWEAR Wrong Glasses GLASSES The Stevens* Cash Dept. Store Near Foster Rd. Brings Experience as Mayor Tax Payer Employer of Labor Allen G. Rushlight For MAYOR Release Portland from Com mission Form of Government RIGHT WHY? Too many Laws Too many Mayors Too many Inspectors Too many Bond Issues Too much Extrayagance The Optical Shop GEORGE L. BAKER Tab. 3581 GIVE TO PORTLAND WHAT? Representative government from each ward Freedom for hobbled industries A release from home-consuming bond issues A free people, laboring in a free I’d ad field 21 Trade Conspiracy Ordinance I>o you realize that we have no move-on ordinance in this city? San Francisco found it necessary to pass an ANTI-PICKET measure, after the bomb outrage during the preparedness parade. Ix>s Angeles waited until some of her buildings were destroyed. Shall we wait until w*e pay the price in destroyed property and perhaps human lives? MAYOR VOTE X 14 MANN A. L. BARBUR CALLAS', »W«H Northrup -t . Portland. Or»-. WILL H. DALY If Elected MAYOR OF PORTLAND " ill so readjust the operation of the various bureaus under his direct supervision as to ELIMINATE DUPLICATION OF SERVICE SIMPLIFY MODES OF PROCEDURE AND PROMOTE HARMONIOUS CO-OPERATION To the end that each bureau may expand without increased test to the tax payer, or reduction in waves. ( Paid Adv) 21 COMMISSIONER A RE l OH D OF PREPAREDNESS GEORGE GA RRE T T civil. KNGINKKK The Man Mho Know the Job ('.indid.it.- for CITY < OMMIMHIONI I; Completed the Commercial and Civil Engineering Cotirmw at the Ohio Xorthw. M.-rn I niverwity. Had several y. ar-' practical exp'ri-nce in Fed eral and Municipal engineering work Ila« been employed in the City En gineer* office and tin- department of Public Work» during th.- pa-t 7 year« And I ,i- made an • «tensive «tody of mnnh ipal administration ai <1 affair« Ao. 20 On The Hallot ................ . . . Impartial. I tli. i.-nt >er\ie.- Paid A'lvw*rttat*inent .»« CHARLES P. CHURCH JOHN A. McQUINN 4