Mt. Scott herald. (Lents, Multnomah Co., Or.) 1914-1923, September 02, 1921, Image 3

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    The 4 F5
Films, Foto Supplies
Finishing and Free
HERMITS LIFE HiS CHOICE
Man Who Hao "Floefcod by Himself"
tor Twenty.Five Y»ara Will
Have No Other,
A hannit lead» ■ fascinating life.
No W I*. Clark »ay», and he ought to
know, for he ha» been a hermit tn the
■retie wllderne»» nearly a quarter of
a century.
1 Films Kastman nnd Dafsndst.
“Once a hermit, alwaya a hermit.**
2. Foto Supplies l’up«r, develop­
■ays Mr. Clark. "A hermit wants no­
er. hypo, etc.
3. Finishing- Th» equal of unv
body'» pity, lie enjoys his solitude
■ml »uptu-Ur to mutiv.
and wouldn't trade It for the pleas
I Free Enrh iluv our dark room
urea and exi-ltemeiit of citlea. I have
will select t lu> best nigativv
been In clvllixatlou a year now and
appearing during the day «ml
I am going hack home to the wilder
in nkc n 10-lnch enlargement
lie»» a» quickly a» I can. There are
frw of charge.
no faklra, »windier» and thieve» there."
Bring your foto work to
Mr. Clark*» home cabin 1» <>n the
headwater» of Peel river, 1*) mile»
from llernchel lalnnd and 110 mile»
from Fort McPherson. HI» neareat
nelglihor la .’41 mile» away. They see
each other mice a year. With the ex­
ception of thl» man, Abe Hclmfer. Mr
Clark 1» the mily human being« In n
thousand square miles of country. The
it» »11 right or your money bark
Indiana do not go that far north and
the Eskimos do not come that far
Bertha I ahiìhc Kissner
south.
Teacher of Piano
"I have ar.-n 10.000 caribou In a
RÜMMER CLASSES BEGINNING herd,** Mr. Clark »aid. “They go to
the arctic coast In the spring to have
15-Minnle I^ msom fl
Pupil of Lillian Jeffery» Petri
their young and In ■aptemtier they re­
Auto 614 94
4710 52nd St. S. E. turn (outh to the edge of the timber,
where they can find »belter and moos
on which they live."
D. J. O’CONNOR
The mercury goea 75 degrees below
tn winter. Mr. Clark aaya. but It 1»
the meet healthful climate In the
world. Old-timers up there, he de-
Cor. 92nd and Woodstock Ave.
dares, do not know what alckneea
LENTO STATION
mean».
Phone «24-75
Curreys Pharmacy
Grays Crossing
REAL ESTATE
WORD HAS MANY MEANINGS
When On» Mention» “Fish,” th» Sylla­
bi» la Susceptibl» of Mor» Than
On» Construction.
Phone 633-60 JC£
A. C. VON LEE. Prop.
LENTS ICE CO.
Lents, Ore.
WE COOK
"All la not tisli that swims” reflected
the sapient philosopher ■» he beheld
a summer girl taking to the ocean.
The sapient philosopher was formulat­
ing a great truth when he cam» to
that conclualon.
The whale, for Inatnnce, although it
unquaatlminldy swims, 1» more closely
reluted to the cow than to the minnow.
The nenl la closer kin to the dog than
to the fluke.
To a gnat many tl»hermen the word
“tilth’*—»««e Latin "plscia” and Dutch
“vlacb" (the aanw word)—possess«»
only the verb form, “to fish." Catrh-
Ing fli<h la not a neceaaary part of the
pt ocean of n»hlng. The thing la “to
flith," and la not primarily to
catrh fish. (Nee fishermen on the
banka of the Heine In Perla, "flailing"
nil day without even getting a bite
from a minnow.)
A famous Engllnlimnn by the name
of lanak Walton was <«ie of the moat
|a-nil»tent patron» of the verb "to
fish." The word “fl»h" was also ex­
tensively u»ed during the war In an ef­
fort to »are meat for the lighter».—
Exchange.
Bigamy for a Lodging.
A 1st Mun» signalman has just been
condemned to two ye« re' Imprison­
The Rind You Like to Eat
ment for bigamy which, he avere, he
Our kitchen is clean ar.d sani
committed In order to find In the pres­
i'-irv. Our fo” < I« n-r name.
ent “critic de Logement" somewhere
U e irn e von a k’ood meal and
to lay hl» head.
give von utuad *ervir
He la a man of fifty-five and he re­
Ihr tert of ai| cooking I* in the
cently married a widow of aeventy-
enting. i'rat US He nr night.
five who offered him a room In her
cottage on the firm condition that he
should marry her. Thia he did. de­
N. W. Cor. 92d and Foster Road
V_________________ _______________ / claring that his wife was dead. One
of hla wives was dead, but the police
tracked down another, who deserted
him mime time ago. The unfortunate
man lias now had "crlae de Lngement”
solved for some time, at least.—Paris
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
Figaro.
Good Meals
Ml. Hood icc Cream Parlor
A. 0. Kenworthy & Co.
Service Given Pay
or Night
Cloae Proximity to Cemeteries
Enable» Us to Hold Funerals
at a Minimum Expenae
Phone 618 21
First-class
FORD’S OFFER NOT FAIR TO
PUBLIC—GIFFORD PINCHOT
Former Progressive Leader Writes Mt. Scott Herald, Urging That People's
Interest» Be Protected—Muscle Shoal» Nitrate Plant Project Meri-
torious, He Saya, but Government Would Not Derive Revenue Equiva­
lent to Liberty l-oan Interest R ite and Ford Would Have 850,000 II.P.
Waterpower Free—Offer Should Be Modified, Correspondent Says
Mr. George A. McArthur,
Editor, The Mt. Scott Herald,
Ix-nta Oregon.
Pear Mr McArthur:
The recent offer of Mr. Henry Ford
to take over government property at
Muscle Shoals on the Tenneivee river
is so important that 1 take the liberty
of laying certain essential facta be­
fore you.
The first part of the Ford offer i»
to learc the Wilaom dam and Dam
No. 3 for 100 years, with indefinite
renewal», provided the government
will complete them and install mach­
inery to produce 850,000 horsepower.
Mr. Ford offer* to pay 0 per cent on
the 128,000,000 which he estimate»
will be neceaaary to complete this
work, or 3.4 per cent on «48,-
000,000, Mr. lord’s own estimate of
the whole government Investment in
dam», lock», and power houses. Even
if we add ail other annual payments
(the so-called amortisation payments,
und payment* for the repair, main­
tenance and operation of dams, gates
and locks), the total would be equiv­
alent to interest at the rate of only
3.« per cent. Mr. Ford offers also to
give the government 300 horsepower
to operate the lock».
Please note that for the water-
power itself Mr. Ford would pay
nothing, and that he would be free
from all taxes on the property. Other
lessees of waterpower rights from the
govrnment not only bear the total
cost of building their own dams and
powerhouse« and pay taxes on them,
but they also pay for the waterpower
in addition.
The Ford offer is like
offering a man 3.6 per cent on the
cost of his factory' as rent, and then
asking him to throw in a coal mine
to supply fuel for the engines for
nothing.
There is no allowance for deprecia­
tion and the government would be­
yond question have to pay the cost of
injury to the dams or locks from
floods or other causes.
Moreover,
there is nothing in the offer to indi­
cate that the government, in order to
protect its own property, would not
have to bear the expense of replacing
enormously costly machinery when it
had been worn out in Mr. Ford’s ser­
vice.
The second part of the Ford offer
is to buy Nitrate Plant No. 1, which
cost the government in round num­
bers fl.'t.UOOJMMI, Nitrate Plant No. 2,
which cost the government in round
n imbers $70,000.000, and other prop­
erty which brings the total cost to
$s j ,000,000, and to pay $5,000,000 for
it all. The property for which this
offer is made includes steam machin­
ery to produce 160,000 horsepower,
which alone is worth far more than
Mr. Ford’s offer for the whole. In
uddition, the government is to buy
from the Alabama Power Co. the land
upon which certain of the foregoing
ftructurex were built, and to turn
that over to Mr. Ford also.
In return for the lease, for he pur­
chased property, ami for the water­
power without charge, Mr. Ford of­
fers in addition to the payments men­
tioned above, to do three principal
things:
First, to "maintain Nitrate Plant
No. 2 ready to be operated • * in
time of war for the production of ex­
plosives,” and in the event of war to
turn it over to the government for
that purpose.
Second, “to operate Nitrate Plant
No. 2 to approximate present capac­
ity in the production of nitrogen and
other fertiliser compounds,” and in
this business to limit his net profit
from the manufacture and sale of fer­
tilizer products to eight per cent
Third, the offer as written sug­
gests producing, but contains no di­
rect proposal to produce, fertiliser
for the benefit of American farmers.
That could, of course, be corrected in
the final contract, for I have no doubt
that Mr. Ford desires to make fertil-
Blackbird Fed Thrush.
A lady of Petixance who Is a great
lover of birds, say» Mr. W. H. Hudson
In hla recently published book, "Ad­
ventures Among Hirds.” noticed that
a blackbird and a thrush always cams
together to her lawn where ahe waa in
5802-4 92nd St.
Unta Sta.
the habit of placing food for the birds.
— Then she noticed thst the blackbin!
oatantmtaurmmmr^wntraMMMtimo fed the thrush, picking up the crumbs
of bread and putting them Into Its BUSINESS MEN WANT MUCH
■ When You Want to Move ; mouth. IxMiklng more closely, ahe dis­
covered that the thrush’s beak had Some Qualities That Applicant for a
IPhone 622-22
Job Had to Show In a Char.
been cut off close to the head, prob­
actor TesL
ably by n steel trap or a sudden-death
spring trap, such as the children In
A New Torker who, for reasons of
Cornwall commonly use to catch or
kill small birds. The thrush waa In­ delicacy, must be nameless, was re­
capable of feeding Itaelf.
cently gratified with a tempting offer
of employment
RESIDENCE
£
The firm which sought his services
Oamlrldulm In Tasmania.
Recent exploration and develop­ required from film a scientific char­
ment have revealed enormous de­ set or reading by an expert He was
S posits
and gold-bearing referred to a local psycho-analyst re­
9649 Foster Rd. Lents, Ore. J gravels of In oanilridlutn
the valleys of the large tained by the concern.
The expert rated him high on latent
rivers of the western division of Tas­
»» war r *uuuu* st» St f •» * •»>• » »*» st*» **» » mania, which Is the sole producer on ability, but deficient In the essential
■ large scale of point metal ostnlrld- business qualities of “self-esteem and
f“No Sign too Large or too Small”!
lum. For the first half of 1920 the pro­ selfishness.”
He did not get the job, says Les-
duction was 1,003 ounces, valued at
£41,042. In March, 1900, the local price lie's "Sorry,” he was told, "but your
7rv
reached £42 10s. per ounce, states the character shows there Isn't enough
Iron In your makeup.“
London Times Trade Supplement.
Ho, for the good old days when a
I I’hone Col. «.It
711 Rnrllngton St. I
mean
man was still an "ornery cuss"
A Super-Hero.
"Anything unusual In the court of ■nd generosity was yet respectable.
Time was when a man's kindness rec­
domestic relation» thia morning!”
”A young woman who married a bo­ ommended him for a job and gave
him rensonnble hopes of advancement.
gus war hero wanta a divorce.”
Now, a grovrin* number of employers
“That has happened before.”
"Hut this fellow has large Ideas. Insist that hla worth be weighed tn
Gregos'* Higher Invtitatloa of
He claims to have won the battle of advance with a pair of apothecary’s
the Marne."—Birmingham Age-Herald. scales and gauged with a machfnlst’s
micrometer. And Ik-oe to him if the
acute psycho-detective discerns In him
Reward of Merit
a tendency to meekness or human
Eight School*; Seveaty Department*
"What's the most attractive feature sympathy I He suffers the besetting
FAIX TF.RM OPIiNS MPT. 19. 1921
of farm life)" asked the city dweller. business vices of modesty and unsel­
Far inlmmaonn write In Ito g.tinlrar
“Knocking off work on Saturday and fishness I
Oregon Agricultural College
going to town In the flivver," said the
How deeply, we wonder, have the
CORVAU.lt
truthful agriculturist. — Birmingham doctrines of these latter-day prophets
Age Herald.
penetrated the collective buajueas
FETTY’SlKANSftRi
and Express Aulo Truck :
Me
Globe Sign Co.
□ AC
TECHNOLOGY
izer at a total net profit of eight per
cent. Nitrate I’iant No. 2, however,
is not adapted to making fertilizer,
but only cyunimid, one of several ma­
terials used for the production of fer- i
tilizer, but not one of the best at
that.
The fact is that the Ford offer is 1
not mainly a fertilizer proposition, it
is seven parts waterpower to one part
fertilizer, even if the fertilizer pan
should work out.
For, if Nitrate
Plant No 2 were to be permanently;
employed in the manufacture of fer • j
tilizer it would consume but ltXI.OOti
horsepower out of the 850,000 instal­
lation. This is the heart of the whole
matter.
. A* p waterpower proposition, the
Ford offer is in every important
point directly contrary to the Roos' ‘
velt waterpower policy, which after I
15 year* of struggle was finally en-1
acted into law last year.
The Roosevelt policy provides that
all waterpower leases shall be limit­
ed to fifty years.
The Ford offer
asks for 100 years with indefinite re­
newals.
The Roosevelt policy provides for
return of the government works at
the end of 50 years. The Ford offer
provides for indefinite private pos­
session of the government works.
The Roosevelt policy provides for!
regulation of the price to the po ver
consumer The Ford offer, so far as
the United States is concerned, pro­
vides no check on what the power
consumer must pay.
The Roosevelt policy provides that
public waterpower taken for pront
shall make a return to the public. The
1 ord offer asks for many hundred
thousand horsepower for nothing.
The amount of power Mr. Ford
could develop, under his pt fer, is
greater by half than all that is now
being developed at Niagara Falls If |
Mr. Ford were to pay for it at the
rates charged by the government to
other companies that build their own
works, as Air. Ford would not, it
would cost him about $150,ov0 a year.
Beyond question Nitrate Plant No.
2 ought to be maintained in condition
for producing explosives in case of
war. Most certainly it ought to be
used for making fertilizer ;or Amer­
ican farmers. The wisdom of devel­
oping the waterpower on the Tenne-
see and its tri bu tar is is beyond ques­
tion. But all these things can be
done with fairness to the public.
1 do not believe that Mr. Ford's of.
fer should be summarily rejected. !
do believe that it should be changed:
F’irst: To make it fit the Roosevelt
waterpower conservation policv, now
the law of the land;
Second: To make it pay for the
property of the people something ap­
proaching what that propertv is
really worth; and
Third: To make what it offer* to
the fanners clear beyond doubt.
It is said that certain Wall street
magnates who hate Mr. Fond are anx­
ious that his offer should be reject­
ed. What these men think about Mr.
Ford and his offer is surely no reason
for giving him public property of
enormous value for a consideration
wholly inadequate and on terms ut­
terly unfair to the public.
I should be glad to see Mr. Ford
make money, and plenty of monev,
out of taking over the property of the
people as he proposed to do. but not
such perpetual and gigantic profits as
his offer would assure. It is fair to
consider the public also, and to re­
member that ali the annual payments
Mr. Ford offers to make would
amount to only one-third of the year­
ly taxation necessary to meet the in
terest charge (at the Liberty Loan
rate of 414 per cent) on the govern
ment s net investment in the proper­
ty he proposed to take over, and that
he would get the waterpower for
nothing.
Sincerely yours.»
Gifford Pini h.--
mind of the country nt large! Must the i
model citizen who listens dutifully on
a Sunday morning to a sermon on the
brotherhood of man hurry hom® to a I
learned treatise on how to despise his
neighbor?
What a theme for G. K. Ches'ertofi
—or Nietzsche I
COMING EVENTS
Lane County Fair, Eugene, Sep­
tember 13 to 16.
Clackamas County Fair, Canby,
September 14 to 16.
Northwest Hay and Grain Show.
Pendleton, September 19 to 24.
September 22, 23 and 24. Pendleton
Roundup; fast relay strings, lively-
young steers, bucking "bronks” whose
deviltries will try the mettle of the!
cowboy.
Multnomah County Fair. Gresham.
September 19 to 25.
Gdumbia County Fair. St. Helens. ’
September 21 to 23,
Oregon State Fair, Salem, Sept.
26 to October 1.
Linn County Fair. Albany, October
3 to 8.
Wasco County Fair, The Dalles.
October 4 to 7.
Oregon Methodist conference. For­
est Grove. October 5.
polk County Fair, Dallas, October
6 to 8.
Royal Arcanum, grand council
Portland, October 13.
Knights Templar, grand command-
erv La Grande. October 13.
National Grange meeting, Tort­
land, November 8-18.
Pacific
International
Livestock
exposition, Portland, November 25.1
2«.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
No. 19881
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for the County of Mult­
nomah, Probate Department.
Notice is hereby given that the un­
dersigned, Max Bergner, ha» been
appointed by Honorable John Mc­
Court. Judge of the Circuit Court of
the State of Oregon, for the County
of Multnomah, Probate Department,
aa the administrator of the estate of
Wiliam W. Riggs, deceased, and that
he ha» duly qualified as such.
All persons having claims against
■aid estate are hereby notified and
required to present the same under
oath with proper vouchers therefor
attached, within six months f rom
the date of this notice, to the un­
dersigned st the office of H. P. Ar-
neat, 1210 Yeon Building, Portland,
Oregon.
Date of first publication, August 12,
1921.
Date of last publication Sept. 2,
1921.
MAX BERGNER.
Administrate- of the estate of Wil­
liam W. Riggs, deceased.
IL P. Amest, 1210 Yeon Building,
Portland, Oregon, Attorney for
Administrator.
fconomy Furniture Store
L. A. BARKER. Prop.
NEW AND USED FURNITURE
Lawn Mowers, Hose, Accessories
601.-. 92d ST.
-
LENTS STA.
Notary Public
-
Life Insurance
Fire Insurance
AMERICAN FOOD SHIP
SAVES 18,000 BABES
FROM STARVATION
PROFESSIONAL
CARDS
Phone 625 23
Yott Bldg.
DR. C. S. OOSBURY
DENTISTRY
Office Phons «15-10
Heroic
Yankee
Women Risk
Service of Near East Relief
DR. P. J. O’DONNELL
EXODO NTIA
Cor, 92nd and Foster Road
J. HUNT HENDRICKSON
Attorney-at-Law
Spalding Building
5829 72nd St. S. E.
Portland, Ora.
Main 421
Phon» Automatic 613-33
Portland
MT. SCOTT
Camp No. 11650, Modern Woodman
of America.. Meets every second and
fourth Wednesday of each month at
Woodmere Hall, 7630 60th Avs. S. E.
F. B. VOL IS, Clerk.
J. BURDETTE
Oaiiexrm«»»«
uairyman
LENT8
DR. NEWCOMBi:
Cable Realty Co.
STATION,
Res. «13-1«
Constantinople.—How the prompt
DR. A. G. ATWOOD
action of Charles V. Vickrey, General
Secretary of the Near East Relief,
DENTIST
and Harold C. Jaqulth, representa­
Rooms 4 and 5, Yott Bldg.
tive of that American relief organi­
9207 Foster Road
zation In Constantinople, saved the I’hone 620-20
Ilves of 18,000 orphan children and
seven American relief workers in
AlexandTopol, Armenia, is what all
DR. A.C. LUNDBERG
the representatives of the Allied na­
CHIROPRACTOR
tions In Constantinople are applaud­
ing today.
Phone 620-20
For five years the Near East Relief
Yott
Bldg.
9207 Foster Road
organization hid built up a work of
mercy throughout the former Turk­
ish Empire and Transcaucasia, to a Phone 640-73.
point where 54,600 little children
were being housed, clothed, fed,
given medical attendance and taught
DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN
and over 56,000 others being sup­
Manual Manipulation
plied with food. Then suddenly, on
Magnetic
Therapeutics
February 5, last, there came hurried
LENTS
cable reports of renewed fighting in 9207 Foster Rd., cor. 92nd.
Armenia and Transcaucasia, where
75,818 of these little ones were loca­
HOWARD P. ARNEST
ted under the protection of the Near
arroaxar at law
Main 8308
Suite 1210-1217
Yeon Building
HELP!
Portland, Oregon
Lenta Office: 9133 Foster Road.
Auto 646-26, 7 to 9 p.m.
“We Have the Beat Bays“
TREMONT
Portland, Oregon
Lente Station
Phone 632-87
49i»-99th st.
P. G. Wilson
k . c. Wilson
WIESOJi'S AUTO SERVICE
All Work Guaranteed and Done at
Lowest Putodble Prices
Your Satisfaction—Oar Advertisement
614-45
5919 82nd St. 3. E.
WE SELL THE BEST
NOT THE CHEAPEST
PLUMBING WORK
Done at Peace Time Prices
loans
JOHN LILES
rkntaijs
LAUER REALTY CO.
6021 72nd St.
Auto 613-57
East Relief. Consular representa­
t________________________ _ _______ j tives left the country. All foreigner»
piled onto ships and fled.
War
threatened to scatter the work and
render vain the long, patient efforts
Repaired
of the Near East Relief to salvage
a whole nation's children.
Get Mj Pricet ind Sen Monej
But the American men and women
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
who had cared for these little ones
OTTO HECKEL. Cor.55lHit..S.E.& 111 th St were undismayed. They refused to
leave under bombardment, with
Phone 641-35
hostile armies sweeping through the
streets where the Near East Reliefs
great orphanages had been estab­
Phone 629-."9
Res, 629-71
lished, with all supplies cut off and
no communication with the outside
E. R, BRADBURY
world, or with that far American
homeland
whose
representatives
PLUMBING. GASFITTING AND
these heroic men and women are.
JOBBING
they stuck to their posts. The last
(¡337 Foster Road Portland. Ore.
food from America had come in on
November 6, 1920.
It was not until four months later
I
■
that the new governments of th>
rranscaucasian states were estab
j. D. M c F arlane
lished on a solid basis. But famine
threatened. An appeal was made to
American philanthropy: "Critical
need for food products in Caucasus,’
the cable read. "No limit to need in
Walks
Armenia. New government promises
better facilities for relief activity
Foundations, Etc.
than former government.” A few
lays later, a further piteous plea fol­
Phone 628-40
lowed: "Total orphans in Alexandro-
pol 18,000. Supplies in Alexandra-
pol allow half-rations, >pril 3rd to
5231 Fortieth Ave, S. E.
30th. After May 1st. nothing.”
But this splendid American relief
■ rganization had not waited. Food
was already on the way. On April
We are Headquarters for
22, Charles V. Vickrey, general sec­
retary of the Near East Relief,
cabled: "Expect ship first week in
May: 1,000 tons rice; 1,000 tons
wheat flour; 600 tons cornmeal, corn
FISHING TACKLE
flour, hominy; 30 tons sugar; 500
AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES
tons beans; 5,000 cases corn syrup,
Bicylcle Tires, each. ... $2.75
from New York and New Orleans
direct to Batum. Additional 1,000
Rubber Pedals, pair .... 1.60
tons wheat flour from Pacific Coast
Horns, each............................. 1.00
June 1st.”
REPAIRING
The seven American relief workers
in charge of the 18,000 little ones in
Alexandropol cabled a last sppeal:
food at any price. Four days
5907 Foster Rd, Portland "No
more and we are finished.”
But
when the first relief ship "Que-
quen” entered the deserted harbor of
Batum on May 1, there were just ten
bags of flour left. The food ship bad
In Business 30 Years
come in time. America had saved
the May—and the 18,000 little or­
phan children, who had suffered so
CALL
much and lost so much in their short,
war-clouded lives, never knew that
gaunt hunger in the robee of death
had knocked at the door of the or­
phanage at Alexandropol—-and that
America had thrust the bony band
away.
Phone Tabor 3392
"It is the great heart of America
that made this work of salvation pos­
sible," Mr. Vickrey declared. "The
THE SAW with the RED TOP
money that sends the bread to these
children comes from ten million
home« throughout the United States.
It comes from the hearts of the most
generous people In the world, who
cannot bear to know that half a
world away, little children are facing
hunger and death, without helping
them to lite and happiness."
?
FOR
Mr. Vickray Is making a nation­
wide appeal to the people of the
United State« to keep this great work
going. Contributions may be sent to
Cleveland H Dodge. Treasurer. 1
Mndlson Avenue. New Vn-V Cl»v
FORDS &
REAL ESTATE
CITY PBOPKKTI and VAKMB
Phone 624-34
5018 72ad Straat
riRLANII STATION
Res. 4822 90th St.
Auto 661-11
Stand Phon. Mareball 2HU3
Mt Scott Transfer Co.
J. S. Miller. Prop.
Piano and Furniture Moving
Baggage and Express
Daily Trips to ML Scott and Bents
Agt. tor Rock Spring» and King Coal
Stand: First and Taylor
Portland
Cement Contractor
BICYCLES & SUPPLIES
C. A. NORWOOD
HARRY SEARLS
Pioneer Wood Sawver
af 622-28
Job Printing
A hearty appetite is a choice pos­
session. it helps the grocer along.
Phone Automatic 621-71.
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P. CHAUSSEE
Team Work and Excavating
/
House Moving and Wrecking
3929 70th St., S. E. Portland, Orej
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LADIES’ and GENTS’
TAILORS
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9134 Foster Road
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Next door to Poatoffice
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LENTS
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Phone 622-28 for
Job Printing