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About Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 29, 1919)
mt. Scott herald Subscription price - lakeview is to have a new which la beyond control of man. But many of them are started who know the dangers. Oregon has Work is soon to begin on a $10.000 a start in the right direction. Its fire wardens have secured the evidence and brought charges against numerous prominent persons for starting dangerous fires of whom know the dangers, set fires by dry logs. etc., DR. KATHERINE S. MYERS immedi OSTEOPATHIC HIISKIAN .,. Otlice, Marshall 1276 I hones: FjU(, s7n Echo, sold $100.000 worth of alfalfa the falls has been started at Oregon thousand is ing to $40.000. sweep hun beginning to realise The public is that timber is our chief natural asset and a blow at our timber is a blow at and woman man. child should be taught to prevent fires and them report persons who are setting carelessly. our As The St. to population of make amounting to tion la constantly urging the public to J. H. Bradbury $97.920 for road work in the Yoncalla sec- : CORD WOOD AND COUNTRY SLAB tion has been let. Work is progressing on the high- I between Prairie City Portland. Oregon ------——-----------————-w antoiftit- improvements John an 1KAUTIOAI. HAIHCUTH VELVET HllAVES No matter where you }<o or whom you The Granite and Greenhorn mines, in front of Lents Library Phone Tabor 7823 in the Baker district, are producing large quantities of ore. built at Klamath Falls. operations there for the Building year will . j - -------------------------------------------------------- CHILDREN IIAKIIEHINU A SPECHl.TY meet, you canalways be sure that your feet are properly dressed if you buy your shoes from us. We keep right up with the times and start every season with the very same styles you would find in leading stores of the big cities. See I' hkstsh A limnuiK ____< — For Men, Women and Children J«««.»«M444»44e»44MM44««4»M4«M4»M«44e444«4«4M4M4*444»e4»44e»4*4 Still Moving ... We invite the patronage of all. One ROSE CITY VAN visit to our store will make you a steady cus tomer. Our prices are reasonable—our goods are right and our fitting service perfect. « Yard on Foster Road Day. in Grant county. The Sutherlin Fruit Products com- grows, fires become more costly and pany will handle 150 tons of pears dangerous and the man w.io starts them a greater menance to the com- ' this season. Eighty-seven Idaho hogs brought m unity. $3700 in the Portland market, the h’ghest price ever paid for pork in PAY YOIR DEBTS the northwest. Every progressive bank in the na A new $50.000 opera house will be get the habit of saving and paying off its debts. Contrary to the opinion AM TM Swettand Bld g Fifth and Washington St. Helens Lumber company A contract way the prosperity of the state. pounds milk is delivered daily to the con- ness with fire, but this same man will that may J) r i. V. S au vu at cannery. go out camping and think nothing of a fire company Newberg has bought the Springbrook Twenty-four dreds and thousands of acres of land. Office: Main 7 «7 TOM Dll Hours. s> • m <■ |> ni. . Ite» Will, ttoo Kvmiags i y Appolnlmeut City. Canning Portland, Oregon S bilinu B viuumi Work on the new fish ladder over densery at Scio. so begin Oltice: 9-*ti' Foster Road Portland Orv Resideiiev: 6314 S2d St., 8. B. ately on an armory at Marshfield. A man would be strictly dealt with who endangered lives and property in a city or town through wilful careless Every D E N T IS T A packing plant is to be operated Valley r IINTKH* Gr«*r«l Heu»« P b I i HIM* TI m |I$» i bm U Ma Urta I and Workmanship (luarnnb'ed I.KNTN. OMRUOM STHl-IAL ATTKNTIOS Tu I'IATSS i ’ iioxk : taiiok 0431 at Sheridan in the near future. is to FREY & ALLEN Letil.*, Orc. DR. A. Ü. ATWOOD The contract has been let for pav Construction Tuber «141 Our l-rlre. 1rs High« Lsa«e Order, at Hoggins' Hliuv Miura to ing Ferry street In Dayton. and endanger life and forests. setting is soon telephone exchange The tn the woods. These parties, all Res Thbor Cor. li-M and Foster Road. Ten ranches on Butter creek, near mado - DR. P. J. O’DONNELL DENTIST ning full capacity. campers, tourists and home people tiili.v Tabor 3814 A tract of IS»« acres of land near Oakland sold for 147.4?0 started by lightning, Rsaldence (410 Fiftieth Ave. I.KXIt. OKWUON 1 The Silverton cannery la now run August sees Increasing forest fires in Oregon and Washington. Some of negligent irrigation be installed at Reedsport. FINISH FIR*. STARTERS criminally lAke project has commenced. A ISIS Ninety-second 8treet by Sutter Cvinvnl Work. Plastering und Ccas pools DENTItolRY building at St. Helens. Phenes: Tabor 7114. Oil—till theae fires are on Work 4 ON TR MTORN DR. C. S. OaSBURY hotel. Bend is to have new paved streets. SI.SO a year - Thornton 4 Sowards MKltGM Ittnd Street Tabor 4764 ... - Proprietor ... - Manager Entered an second-class mall mat ter February 1*. Hit. at the poat- efflce at Lente. Oregon, under act or Cengreaa. March 1, 1$7>. CAROS NEWS items of interest Published Every rrlday at Unto Station. Portland. Orason______ J. S. UPDIKE C. W. SMITH PROFESSIONAL BRIEF STATE INDI STRIAI. I The One-Wav-Charge Company. Sec Ua For . . . GENTS’ FURNISHINGS Goggins’ Shoe Store WOOD AND COAL WSt Emder KI Tub. 1424 D«1 fjM»«aa4»»44«4«»e»*»»»44 ‘*»4**,,M**M,*******M **************** -- aggregate $1,000.000. Klamath Packing company, Klarn- .ith Falls, is going to build a $20.000 plant. Crops worth $100 per acre are common in this district. In one »stance $S00 worth of vegetables were grown on an acre. of many, a banker is not interested in having a customer loaded down with debts. Owing debts, and being a borrower TEN POINTS TO SEULE BEFORE YOU BUY ANY TRUCK at the bank are two different things. A banker extends credit enable to business to be earned on. In one way this is a debt, but it is a vastly differ from the kind ent debt, by a owed man who simply^ails to meet his ob ligations for lack of systematic sav ing. A bank must loan money to live but it wants to loan to people who saw. on rame The day of the Shylock is passed as the modem bank prosperous and munities. Geo must E. Roberts, vice president of National City Bank says: ’The banker' can render no better service to the worker than by advising him to use present high wages to pay off his debts It singular a is inancier from live bankrupt com not fact John Adams, second president of the United State«, won fame as a financier when be borrowed $2,000,000 from Hol- that people commonly go into debt in good times and pay their debts under pres sure in bad times. certain income A TRIE STORY A. year ago a man and his wife and three chidren arrived in Oregon. He rented 17 acres of loganberries from a prominent farmer near Salem, the owner to receive one third of the crop net. The man had 125.00 in cash. He MULTNOMAH STATE BANK Lents^Station - - Portland, Oregon his debts and put »1200 in the bank. This is not an exceptional story, merely the common run of what any man can do who will work and culti vate a tract of small berries in west ern Oregon or Washington. Thousands of additional acres of raspberries, loganberries, berriee Leg of Mutton black- must strawberries and be planted to fill the demand which is gowing than faster production. If we don't supply the market we have created somebody else will. no time to lose. There is ABOLISH LLXIRY TAX ~ The so-called "luxury tax” was de vised in haste to raise money quickly during the war. With the war over It falls far short of its purpose in that it taxes the public for the necessities of life by merely calling the article a "luxury”. It adds to the cost of living of every family and strikes the poor hardest of all as the extra tax in pennies they have to dig up eats J heavily into their Income. Everyday articles of use toilet supplies and drugs, such as Ice cream and candy, can hardly be called lux uries and yet the tax on these and similar articles adds materially to the cost of living today. lems can now be faced in an intelli and arranged over a period of years instead of heaping un necessary loads on the public. TEST BIASONAItl.i: i V viximkat 1 Don’t buy a truck that will depreci ate too rapidly to bo economical. You really rent a motor truck when you buy it. At the «nd of Ite period of uee It should have HubHtanfl.il "cash-in or trade-in” value. Investi gate the actual "after use" worth of any truck before you make your se lection. ECONOMICAL SI LI CTION If you want a nice leg, loin, rib, breast, shank or* shoulder of mut ton this is the place to get it. In fact, we carry only meat of the choic est quality. Our business has been built on square dealing and fair prices. We want your patronage and if we get it will do our best to keep it. 2 Eggiman’s Meat Market 6919 Ninety-second Street Tabor 2573 Truck« are mean» of economy. It I h not an Investment to buy a truck that will increase your transportation costs. Find out what It will actually cost you to transport your merchan- TEST 4 SIMPLICITY 3 Skilled experienced lalior costs money. You don't want to Increase yorir la bor hire because of your trucks In- viotment. Before making your choice lak' any worker In your delivery de- I artment, give him a few simple In structions, see whether of not the truck I h simple enough for his un skilled abilities. I QI ALIZI 1» BAI.AN4 11 From front fender to rear lamp bracket maximum efficiency of oper ation requires even distribution of wslght, work and wear. The motor must not l>o too light for Ite load— the frame must not be heavier than la necessary. Consider whether or not there Is proper co-relation of also and purls. OVER CARRIAGE TEST 5 Do not buy a one-ton truck and ex pect It to do a IH-ton duty. But the truckeyoU do buy should be built to allow for a reasonable margin of overload. Buy the »1*« truck that your business needs. I>o not Invest In n »-ton truck for I-ton labors. Nor should you buy u 1 Mi-ton truck to do I he work of n 5-ton truck. ( uvriM 11> oiu.itvrioN 6 -Ac c Idvnte will happen, nnd some re pairs lire Inevitable. Helect the truc k of a design so standardised that re pairs will never keep your frtick out of service. 7 A truck nmcle by a maker having limited resources Is a questionable Investment. Be sure that the maker of your truck will be able to continue In biiHlncHs as long ns you do. I STAIll.lslll.H MANI FACTI III DEALER DEPEN DAHIIcITY 8 TEST 9 The dealer Is the agency that Is di rectly responsible to you. Be sure that tbo dealer from whom you buy your truck Is as rellatde as your own banker. Do not buy a truck from a dealer that has a reputation of shifting responsibility. NON-RADICAL DESIGN Radical changes and experimental. principles are Do not buy an exper imental truck. Keep within approved design and principle. ■ EST f The war Is over and our tax prob gent manner GARY, "The Ten Test Truck,” invites every investigation every test or ques tion that any owner hiay advance. The GARY MOTOR TRUCK has l>een selected by some of the largest Truck users in America. They buy on a basis of FACT ONLY, and the Gary has satisfied these owneis in every one of the following ten vitally important points. SHERMAN HARKSON, Cashier cultivated his berries, kept his family, picked the crop, paid the owner of the land his third of the crop, paid The Motor Truck is established. Its util ity is no longer questioned. As a means of transportation it is definitely estab lished that a motor truck is incomparably economical, convenient, etc. So it is not a question of whether or not you need a motor truck. Your decision must lie WHICH TRUCK to select. It is a big question not to lie decided until you have every fact, every data of cost liefore you. On that basis ONLY can you make a selection that will justify the required expenditure. 10 MPEED POWER An emergency will arise where you will have to run your fully-loaded (ruck nt Ite maximum speed. Power should provide for speed to allow for speed when It Is necessary. GARY, “The Ten Test Truck,” has meas ured up to every test. I»et us give you the facts to prove it. Gary Coast Agency Phone Broadway 2162 Seventy-one Broadway PORTLAND, OREGON ■ ■ Ê ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 1 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■