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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1907)
BEAVER STATE HERALD, 4 FAIRVIEW •: Who is Logan? < > ;; I > ; I Why he is the man that came here fourteen years ago and started a peanut stand. Now he is dealing in anything you want to buy or sell from a needle to a threshing machine. o GARDEN SEEDS—ALL KINDS—GARDEN TOOLS, o ONION SETS, FLOUR and FEED. HARNESS EXTRAS, FURNITURE—ALL KINDS—PATENT MEDICINES, ! ! STOVES, RANGES, CROCKERY, FURNISHING GOODS < > The Store that Sells Sunflower Shoes for style < hi J wear S. S. Logan, tu sin umbut FAIRVIEW, Ore., March -'»th—Au entertainment and shadow social »ill bs given by the school on Saturday I evening March -'kith in Axtell's hall. 1 The ladies are requested to bring bas kets. J T Stillion is building a wire fence for W. Ellison. A. H Me Kuhue «hipped a earlord of hay to Portland. J. I*, lietdin is having his house retir ed and renovated. Mrs. Howard D.vvis visited relatives in Poitland this week. Major II. W. l<ove left a few days ago for several «lays sojourn. J. O. I low n i ng has rente»! the old Moller farm west of town. Mrs. John Cook recently entertained Mrs. C. Jack of Portland. J. M. Davis of Terry unloaded a car* load ol feed here the first of the week. DeWit Shepard ami wife, of Portland, ■pent Sunday with his parents C. Shep ard ami wife. Mrs. Anna lleinev, of Portland, has been visiting her |>arentaJ.P. titfellU ami wife. R. Hunter has been making general improvements to the interior of t he Home Hotel. FL Smith and wife, Frank Axtell and w ife and Mrs. G. O. Dulph ami children were recent Portland visitors. Mrs. J. M. Ashcraft entertained the ladies Society of Smith Memorial Church last Thursday afternoon. Ernest and Rodney Hall, Earle Teg- art, Chester Kronenberg and EL M. Stone spent Sunday with relatives here. A private telegraph line lias I »veil put in by several of the young men about town for practise purjMises. Roy An derson is instructor. John Shoemaker of Portland has moved into the C. E. Cree cottage in the southeast |>art of town and is em ployed by Grant Shaw. S. P. and W. II. Osburn were hereon business the latter part of lust week. The Osburn brothers have gone into the real estate business in Portland. J. I’. Murphy of Port*and and Miss Helen Moller, daughter of Mrs. A. It. Moller of this 'place, were married by Dr. A. Tompson at the Methodist par sonage at Gresham on Wednesday eve ning, March 20th. They left for their new home in Portland on Friday. Mrs. Peter Peterson, who was liadly burned at her Lome here last week, is recovering as fast as can lie expected but will be confined to her chair for several days. The position ot her wounds, being on her beck and sides, maker it impossible for her to lie in be»I. Her hands were also badly burned in her effort to put out the flames. TROUTDALE, ORE. A Fierce Job. THE WANT ADS. BRING RESULTS. NOTE LARGE number on page 8. The people appreciate their usefulness. Others would read your ad. as you are reading now. “Now. Demostbenes,” «aid the pro fessor. “was a peerless orator, and be had to contend with great difficulties. Perhaps, Mr. French, you can tell ua what the principal difficulty was.” "Sure." replied the freshman; "he bad to apeak In Greel*.”—New York IJfe MARCH 29, 1907 F/ty A ■ Troutdale VAl I .... OREGON Goods Sold Here at Saving Prices 10 lb. sack Graham, 2 pkgs. Grape Nuts, • • Lea & Perrin’s Sauce, • Baker’s Cocoa, 1-2 lb. tin, 3 pkgs. Bon Ami, • Sapolio, • 10 lb. sack Com Meal, • 1 lb. Postum or Figprune, • Dement’s Best Flour, • 3 cans Tomatoes, • 3 “ Com, • 3 “ Peas, • Star Tobacco, 1 lb., . • Deviled Ham, • Pork and Beans, 3 for • • Carnation Cream, 3 for A. & L. Oysters (special) Golden Gate Baking Powder, K. C. Baking Powder, 25 oz., • 4 lbs. A. and H. Soda, 9 bars Swift’s Soap, • Every I )av • • • • • • • • • • a • • • . • $ .25 .25 .25 .20 .25 .08 .25 .20 1.25 .25 .25 .25 .45 .05 .25 .25 I .12 .39 .25 .25 .25 I ’owclei I )av FULL HTOCK OK HARDWARE. TINWARE, BOOTS. SHOES. DRY GOODS. GROCERIES AND EEED •••••••«•■••••••a MILLINERY Spring ami Summer Hats for Ladies and Chil dren at Lowest Prices. Call on Mrs. Cora Anderson FAIRVIEW, OREGON ••••esseesaesesss ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ We are Prepared • • • To 1K) Blacksmithing Promptly and at reasonable rates SPECIALTY Of HORSESHOEING Jas. H. Latham, ¡I TROUTDALE, OREGON z tin* business of market gardening alone would support ami make prominent n much larger place than Troutdale. A h an evidence of tin- faith the farmer ami business men of thia district have in Troutdale's future take the matter of telephones alone for the construction of which hundreds of dollars lire Is-ing spent. 07Ö APR. 2 HARLOW, BLASER & HARLOW Troutdale, Oregon GENERAL MERCHANDISE D 5.00 V A L L A B L E ASK IS Return to our Customers the entire HUMOR OF THE HOUR A Capnclons Wolf. Richard luitourell linn returned from the hot rpringi*, much improved in health. if Coupons are Presented between the 1st and the 10th of the succeeding Month WHY The I’nion Ment Co. have just com* pleted a private line from Troutdnle to Portland. The library entertainment recently given scored another big financial suc cess for that enterprising association. Decks A Beech have completed the concrete work on the new O. It. A N. bridge ami the steel gang will commence work in a 'lay or two. James Allison, formerly ol the Cliff House, Bridal Veil, has purchased Hotel Troutdale of Mrs. Lockyear. Mrs. Lock- year will move back to Forest Grove, where she will enjoy life on the old farm. HARLOW, BLASER & HARLOW General Merchandise TROUTDALE, OREGON The farmers on Staggerweml mountain 1 and vicinity are buildinga trunk line in to Troutdale. So are The Multnomah and Clackamas County Mutual Tele phone company pushing their lines in to this thriving little city. Then we have a city residence line carrying thirty- nix phone, which will h > h > ii I h - connected up with the pr>»>|H-roua farmers ami business men of every w hen-. ¡Several months ago thecroackers were heard to say Troutdale is doomed, when ; the va'da are moved she will die a nat ural death. Troutdale never had better prospwta than now for fiitnn- growth. On r^ery hand is evidence of permanent improvement, liacked as -I" i* bv Home of the richest liottoui lands in the state " The most exciting chase I ever had." said n red fn<-ed Muucliniisen to t little group of listeners, "happened a few years ngo In Russia. One night, while ah-lghlng over the «now clad steppes, I discovered, to my intense horror, that I was being pursued by n pack of fierce and hungry wolves. I tired blindly Into the pack, killing one of the brutes, and to my delight saw the others stop to devour It Their meal flnlshed, however, once more they set after me, and Inside of five min utes they had more than made up the distance lost by their delay. Again I tired, and «gain they paused to devour a fallen comrade. I kept on repeating the dose, killing one each time I fl red. and each time the ever decreasing pack stopped I took advantage of the opportunity to whip up my fast flag glug steeds. Finally there was only one wolf left, yet on It came. Its tierce eyes glaring like balls of Are, Its Imn gry fangs gleaming cruelly In the cold moonlight, Its”— The man sitting In the corner could stand It no longer. “Why. man,” he protested, "by your wny of reckoning that last hungry wolf must have had all the rent of the pack In him!” "Ah,' anld the rod faceti Munehnu- sen without a tremor, "now that I think of It, he did wabble a lilt."— Rid» way’s. Pl Itèrent. "Then Mr. Rlchley didn't really giva according to bit means T* «aid ths mln- later'« wlfa. "No," replied the minister; "merely according to hla meanness."--Philadel phia Presa.