Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923, March 28, 1919, Image 2

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mt. Scott herald
Published Every Friday at Iænta
Station, Portland, Oregon.
J. K. Ul’DIKF.
C. W. SMITH
• Proprietor
- Manager I
I
Entered as gecomlcluas mail mat­
ter February 14, 1914, nt the post­
office at l.cnte, Oregon, under act of
Congress, March S. 1879.
Subscription price
SI 50 a year
Phonos:' Tabor 7854. IK1—1111
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BUY AT HOME
If you need groceries, patronize
the local grocery. If you need bread,
buy it of the local hakery. If you
need drugs, patronize the local drug
store. If you need a suit of clothes,
buy it of the local tailor. If you need
tires for your automobile, buy them
of the local garage. If your wife
wants a new bonnet have her buy it
of the local milliner. If you need
a house, see the local real estate men.
If you need a doctor or a dentist,
call the local practitioners. If you
need shoes or shirts or furniture, buy
them of local dealers. If you need
hardware, buy it of the local hard­
ware store. If you have money to
deposit, put it in’the local hank. Not
all of these lines are represented
in the advertising columns of The
Herald but they are all here, and by
inquiry you will be able to locate
those who do not advertise.
Following out the same line of
reasoning, if you need printing or
advertising, patronize the local news­
paper. The busin< ?sa man who does
not patronize his fellow business men
shows that he is interested in the
district only to the extent that «the
district will pour revenue into his
pockets. He wants the other fellow
to boost his business but considers
that the obligation ends there.
Mrs. Valentine and daughter, Mrs.
Lewis, from Missouri, visited with
Mrs. J. L. Johnson Tuesday of this
week. Mrs. Valentine (the soldier
boy’s mother) has just returned from
I.os Angeles, Calif. Her many friends
will welcome her home again.
Rev. J. N. Speer, of Portland,
pent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs.
I.ennox, of Lennox avenue.
Rev.
Speer was a missionary on the Warm
prings and Simmasho reservations
for a number of years. With the
success he has had with his woik he
an look back over the past with
pleasure.
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Last Sunday Mi. A. Rlatchford
.'orrected his little daughter, about
hive years old, and even threatened
o spank her, when she replied,
'Daddy, you told me not to do things
on Sunday—don’t you do it.
*
TREMONT
Mrs. G. L> Hobson, of the Tremont
¡grocery, is now carrying a niet' line
>f drygoods and notions.
W. C. Eggiman. of the Tremont
meat market, will soon move into his
new home at 7528 Fifty-eighth ave-
nue.
Mrs. Ethel Hunsaker, of 6904 Six-
:y-second avenue, will entertain the
Friday afternoon 500 club March 28.
Sergeant and Mrs. R. J. Taylor, of
<>019 Sixty-first avenue, spent Sunday
vith relatives near Vancouver.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Repp have move«!
from Tremont into the new home
which thev have purchased at 5010
Sixty-third street.
GRAYS CROSSING
Since Eighty-second street has been
paved it has become a veritable skat-
ng rink for children. Young Mark
Holmes, of Fifty-seventh avenue and
seventy-seventh street, met with a
.ninor accident last Saturday while
nipping a vehicle. It is hoped this
will be sufficient warning to prevent
more serious trouble.
Helen Gifford, one of our very own
Mt. Scott girls, of Sixty-second ave­
nue, was married to Clarence Abley
a week ago Saturday at the Evan-
gelical church parlors.
George Howe, brother of John
lowe, former postmaster at Lents,
las arrived at C^mp Lewis en route
tome, and is expected to arrive some
;ime this week. His mother and sis-
er live at 6022 Eighty-second street.
KEPT MOTHER TONGI E
War revealed an astonishing con­
dition in many parts of the United
States, which the bureau of natural­
ization has just made public. A
statement by the bureau dealing with
the growth of foreign institutions in
this country says:
“Section after section of the coun­
try has been disclosed as being under
the domination not of American in­
stitutions of government, but of the
most inimical forms of foreign au­
tocracy. In many cities children by
the thousands have been found who
have not been allowed the inherent
right to speak in the English tongue.
They have been taught a foreign
language. They have been disciplined
for failure to use the foreign tongue.
They have been trained to sing the k
patriotic airs of countries other than r
the country of their -birth. They
have been taught so that they would
grow up to a firm conviction that
righteous government alone could be
achieved by some other form than
that which is created and carried on
by all of us.”
Get out your lawn mower and
garden tools and get busy before the
“missus” beats you to it. Now is
the time, figuratively speaking, for
the back garden to come to the
front.
ix.
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A. S. Pl-ARCt:, The Tinsmith
Foatar Hoad. Opp. P. O.
labor MM
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J. H. Bradbury
CORD WOOD AND
COUNTRY SLAB
Yard on Foster Road
in front of Lents Library
Phone Tabor 7823
The Herald Does AU
Kinds of Printing..»
SECRET
THE PORTLAND BUSINESS MAN
s
E
R
V
I
C
E
who 1» sucer »(ul »ipronnd» liiiu»el( with
every svallsbli modern devise for saving
hi* time and intmey The bu»uir»e man
who lall« t>> !>•<■
AUTOMATIC TEL­
EPHON E simply close» kisreublisiimrnt
Io thousands of po»»il>!>' customers lie
may never know the 'e«l reason for Ills
failure in business. THINK 1TOVKR
Lonjc Distan«1 Everywhere
CALL A 6221
Home Telephone and Telegraph Company of Portland, Oregon
Agriculturist S. B. Hall gave a
very interesting and instructive talk
at the school house' in district 45 last
Wednesday evening. Mr. Klinke was
dected chairman for crop improve­
ment, Charles Frankhauser for horti­
culturist, Mr. Allison for drainage
and soils, E. M. Calkins for poultry
improvement and Donald Furey for
lime ami fertilizer.
Why go to town and wear yourself
out looking for hats when Mrs.
Guliks has just what you want right
here at home at about half the price
you pay down town ?
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Guttering, General Repairing, Garbage Cana, Flour Bin»
W iih I i Boiler», Stove Pipe», Chicken Fountain», Clm keii liril
Fe^d Boxes and Chicken Feed Trough».
I
Agricultural Club Formed
TREATIES TO PREVENT WAR
“It is said that it is unconstitu-
tional for the treatv making power
to agree, on behalf of the United
States, noi to make war. If this be
unconstitutional, then the present
senate has violated the constitution
twenty times, for it has already-
agreed in twenty different treaties
with the other nations of the world
WOODMERE
not to begin war until one year af­
On Tuesday, March 17, Woodmere
ter the occurrence of the event upon
which war may ensue, and until after lost one of its oldest and most loved
a commission of inquiry’ into the sub­
ject matter of the dispute shall have
been had and a report made. Did
this violate tie constitution 7 Did
Plain Snails
this deprive congress of the power
Custard Snails
to make war in accord with its con­
Buns or Rolls
stitutional authority ? If * it did, it
violated the constitution, but it did
Raised Doughnuts
not do anything of the sort.”—Wil­
Filled
Doughnuts
liam Howard Taft.
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Call Tabor 7707
RED CROSS NOTES
A. S. Conner has opened a meat
narket at 7134 Fifty-fifth avenue
md is now ready to serve the public.
E. Burke, is now operating a ga­
rage at Fifty-fifth avenue and Sev-
nty-second street. His place is ar­
ranged so you can drive in and out
again without having to back your
car.
C. V. Belknap has opened a barber
hop at 5515 Seventy-second street.
Pies
Cakes of all kinds
First-Class ¿sheet Metal Work
and Repairing
When Tou Want to Move
Any person who has paid this
year’s dues to the Red Cross and has
heir button is entitled to the Red
Cross magazine for one year for $1.
Regular subscription to those not
having a button $2. The Red Cross
magazine is a very interesting peri-
xiical, keeping you in touch with all
Red Cross work.
Attendance at Red Cross meetings
every Thursday has been unusually
good of late and they are turning
out an average of 20 garments each
week.
MILLARI) AVENUE
BUILD HOUSES
Real estate men and financial in­
terests should lend all possible en­
couragement at the present time to
home building in Lents. There has
been a marked shortage of houses in
the district for the past two years
and many people who desired to lo­
cate here have been unable to do so
because they could find no suitable
houses to live in. Nearly every day
The Herald ha3 inquiries from people
who are looking over the town with
a view of going into business here, /*
as to whether it would be possible to
get a place to move’their families
to. People who have money to in­
vest in houses to rent should do so.
People who desire to build their own
homes should receive every assist-
ance possible, The more people in
the community the more prosperous
the community will be.
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residents when Mrs. Harriet Johrfron
followed her husband to the (iwtt
beyond within nine Weeks after his
passing. The Johnsons built the bun­
galow at the corner of Sixty-first
avenue ami Sevcnty-aeventh street 15
years ago. in which they have since
lived with their daughters, Nina and
Joella.
Mr. and Mrs. Volts, of the Wood­
more grocery, am rejoicing over the
•»•turn of their soldier son. Carl, from
b'rance.
BELLROSE-GILBERT
15c per doz.
a
20c
M
. 15c
M
15c
M
20c
15c and np
10c and up
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Sweet Doughnuts Saturday only 20c doz
WE TRY TO PLEASE YOU
We Can Save
You Money on
MT. SCOTT BAKERY
9131 Foster Road
J. ROSENAU, Proprietor
Eggi man’s Meat Market
BEEF
PORK
MUTTON
VEAL
SMOKED and SALT MEATS
FISH an POULTRY
If you buy now, and
how you can do it
HIGHEST QUALITY—LOWEST PRICES
5919 Ninety-second Street
Tabor 2573
EVERYTHING FOR
THE TABLE ....
Cranberries Celery Sweet Potatoes
English Walnuts
Oranges
Lemons
Apples
Grapes
Pickles Vegetables Canned Goods
Dried Fruit
WE DON’T KEEP GROCERIES, WE SELL THEM
Phone: labor 1141.
.
,5805 92nd Street. S. t
Lents Bicycle and Motorcycle Repair Shop
GENERAL REPAIRING
SUNDRIES
Second-Hand Motorcycles and Bicycles for Sale
Putting on Baby Buggy Tires a Specialty
9124 foster Road
We bought a large stock oí Goodyear
and Goodrich Tires and Tubes before the
5 per cent revenue tax was added to tires
and they will all be sold at the Old Price
Someone is going to save
Money, Why Not You?
THE LENTS GARAGE
AXEL KILDAHL, Proprietor
. 8919 FOSTER ROAI)
Tabor 3429
Home 1)61
Two boors West of lents Postoffice
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