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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1908)
— Excursiont0 FAIRVIEW TROUTDALE e GOLD WATCH FREE ! Fairview, Ove., Oct. « A quiet home wadding took place last Bunday st tbe e home el Mayor G. E. Shaver, when hie leave Portland at I :X a. m. only daughter, Miss Ethel G. Shaver, ON JANUARY 1 was united in marriage to R. O. Davey, jr.. second son of R. G. Ilsvey of Clato- Sw the Country, Ita Producta and Opportunltlaa hanie. Rev. O. A, McKinley performed tbe ceremony in the preeence of the im Mias Morita returned to her home at mediate relatives. The couple left on Dayton, Ore., after several days visit tbe evening train for their nee ltoiue st with her uncle here. Marshland, Ore. Misses Georgia and Malwl Reynolds ( has. Fisk and wife left last Friday of Portland spent Hunday sod Monday for Hpokane, where they expect to make a with their parents here. CLEONE OR FAIRVIEW their future home. a J. M. Edmonson and wife, who left It. W. Wilcox had a visit from a hero sometime ago for aa overland trip j childhood friend, Wallace l arsons, of over the alate have settled at The Dalles Kansas, last week. Mr. Pareone is here Firet-clnas acconimixlationa ' for the present. visiting tbe coast cities and taking in Commercial trade solicit*! the eights. Clean Inula and good tuaala Mrs. Macoritsah visited her parents Rev. Mr. Creesy ami wile arrived here here last seek FStable ia C mmc T im last Katurdajr evening from Dilly, Ore., Mrs. Wtn. Mscontssh snd son have and have assumed charge of the Meth returned front a few days visit with rela CAMPER JUNKER, Prop. Qriat Taken at any Time—Quick Delivery. odist church here. M r. Creesy preached tive st Hostile. his first sermon last Sunday evening. Sandy, Oregon Miss leone Htillaun has returned from j Mrs. B. Towneeth anil son of Portland several weekr* visit with relatives io have tjeen visiting tier parents. Win. Wisconsin and in Diamond, Wash. WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF MILL FEED Teg* rt and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Htilleon will return boros Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson of Port- SANDY from their farm at Diamond in a abort land have been spending a few days with Mrs. Pridsmore. after an extended time. Market Price Paid for Grain relatives here. visit In Heattie, has returned. Mrs. Musis Timms of Portland visited Mrs. ljee Sbaw snd children have Miss Alice McGugin enjoyed a vary friends here last Friday. been visiting Mrs. Shaw's parents at pleasant trip through Washington and H. Voss and family and Mrs. Voss’ Damaarua * while enroute attended the state lair at sister, Miss Morrison, from Beaverton, Rev. W. T. Scott and A. L. Stone and Malem. are here with Mr Voss' mother. They wife attended presbytery in Portland FAIRVIEW, OREGON TIMBERS Mias ftorcaa Hedin was recently the expect to locate in Troutdale. tins week. guest ol Mrs. McKinney . F. D. Hubbard returned on Sunday ROUGH LUMBER Fairview people are turning out in Miss Caroline Vaeretti left Monday front several weeks' visit with friends large nundiers to tbe fair this week. oooooooooooooooooooooooeoooooooooooooooooooeeoeoeeeo» SIZED .«■> DRESSED LUMBER for Portland where she will spend the and relative in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas Rev. G. A. McKinley snd daughters. 1 Rl'HTK winter months. and Wisconsin Miesa-s Alice snd Muriel, <4 Zena, Ore., Emil Beck, with hie picturesque ox Mrs. J. Allred 1 str son and Mrs.C. H and A. P. McKinlay of Portland were FUtoRING team, was recently in Handy. Larson a|*nl Bunday with relative at Bunday guests at the home ot Rev. W. VEILING Vcrn Boger» bus a position in Monta- Latourell Falls. T. Scott. Mr. McKinlav preached ini FINISHING MATERIAL —SUITS— —NORBA— Charles Kane and wife o> Portland the Presbyterian church Sunday morn- I villa ing and evening. Work is still In progress for the bet visited relatives here Bunday. $10 to $35 $3 Hat terment of our roads, which have been Mr. and Mrs. Bert Edmonoon have re Buildie Cree, who has l>een very ill, vastly improved under the able super turned from a visit with relrtives at is now thought to out of dauger. j Scio, Ore. A'ew and Complete Line of vision ol F. E McGugin. Mr au<t Mrs. Vssburg of Portland 1 > Next meeting ol Artisans wiU be on A. Estes ami wife, who have lieen vis were Sunday guests at the home of A.T. i I i» last Munday in October. iting relative bee for some time, left Axtell < ► i > Bunday services were held in tbe last wek for California, where Mr. Catholic church. There was a large at > Kates will enter business. Fine Line ot WMKWOOD Phone, til. Mill mile east Kelso tendance. Rev. F. Herchtold delivered Robert Hunter baa returned from . W If Hall, who has been working at a very instructive sermon. several weeks* trip Up on tbe sound. I ► Jonsrud's mill, is home for a short stay. Miss Florence McElroy was in Port- James latham baa sold his interest in The now minister, Mr. Gearey, gave a 1► land last week attending the Hpitsner ths blacksmith shop hers and has left abort sermon veeterdav afternoon to an Philharmonic Hociety of which she ie a j , Troutdale. appreciative audience. member. Market Price for All A. B. Kendall has resigned his posi Everybody interested in having church tion as O. R A N. agent here and ie pre services at Rtickwond are invited tn at paring to move away. KtLM) tend a meeting in the church Thurdaay "Americas Clothiers'* Successors to Welch & Co. • » Born—To the wile of W. A. MscMillsy evening. The new addition to tbe school house ; 213 MORRISON STREET PORTLAND,' 'ORE. J I on Oct. fi, a son. Geo. Cox is on the tick list. is nearing completion. SUNDAY, OCT. IS,—SOUTHERN PACIFIC Troutdale, Ora., Oct. S. Jobs I .arson l sod Mice Lyddia I arson lately of New , York City, were married Io Portland last Saturday ami returned to their new home here Munday. Mr. lareon has i purchased a furnished bouse from E. Q. Bowen oh Mandy Bottom. Excursion Rates, $25 Round Trip J.W. BENECKE liSlSandy Hofei CHOPPING AND ROLLING LUMBER SUN-DIAL FEED MILL CLOTHING STRAUS LUMBER Fall and Winter Goods COMPANY Shoes and Furnishings ORE. ORIENT, Norris-Baker Co GRAIN BOUGHT BORING ROLLER ANO CHOP School opens on October 12. MILL Alfred Hers hss completed his new shoe shop IMPORT OF GOOD ROADS. Feints In Legitimate Support •* Build Ths moving picture exhibition st the ing and Maintaining Them. Lutheran church Saturday evening was Good roads are a tienefit to tbe farm ON HAND FEED well attended and appreciated. ers tiei-aua* they render transportation Attention ie called tn the free travel- of farm products easier: they facilitate ROLLING AND CHOPPING IMINE . lug library at Kelso, which is kept at the travel aud shorten the time to and | home of Robert Jonsrud. Thia library 1 from town or city markets; they are humane In that they lighten the draft is supported by the elate and it is the for bones; they make driving on pleas right of all tile people to make aa much I ure or business trips more enjoyable: ORE. DORIMI, use of the liooka aa possible. Tbe hooka they foster a uvlghtiorly spirit through j are on varioua subjects snd were select communication; they are an aid to tbe eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ed to suit difierent ages and tastes. All • federal government In establishing will find something of interest The free rural delivery mall routes; they T. HENSLEY present library contains fifty-nine vol are business promoters and a credit to umes. At tbe eml of six months they will be returned to Belem and a new set : of books sent us. Tasseti Gasoline Wood-Saw 50c a Cord Oregon Troutdale, Phone Farmers Julius Leets has gone tn Washington to attend to some business. 3.'>x2 woeoeeeeoeooeeeee Torn Day has Iwn doing considerable blasting atunqis since he returned home J. A. CARTHON Mrs. Earl White ia pnite sick. Mr«. Basler, who was staying with her sister, Mrs Snore, went home Bunday. B* Horseshoeing Tom Day, wife and daughter returned from Washington Saturday night. General Repairing Mr. Bobbins brought in a load of hop pickers Bunday. Wagon and Carriage Work «• FAIRVEW. OREGON Mrs. Will Mathews has been quite sick but is belter again. POWHL VALLEY Mrs. Emanuel Anderson entertained ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ; the Young Ladies' Hawing Society last sny community, state or nation and, finally, are an Index to the Intelligence, < • week. Steam prosperity and activity of the people. H M. Steffanson sold his farm to a All these points are in legitimate man from Aberdeen, Wash. Considera support of the construction and main tion M,(MMI. tenance of good roads, says the South I Mrs. C. A. Johnson and daughter ern Cultivator. Many other reasons TROl’TUALE, ORE. Hertha left last week for the hot springs might 1» cited In their favor. It does in Washington. Bertha has suffered seem anomalous that, amid all our boasted national progress, this great for some time with rheumatism. FIRWOOD 50c. necessity of modern civilization should Miss Sophie Magnuson and Om-ar be kept no far In the background. Tboreen were quietly married in Port- The nation needs better and more I land Saturday, Oct. 3, at the home of substantial highways, snd It Is hope Rev. C. A. Tolen. Mr. and Mrs. John ful to nee Indications that thia subject will noou receive more attention from ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ son gave a dinner last Sunday in honor of the newly wedded couple. Those nnr national and state lawmakers than heretofore. The Importance of good present were P. A. Johnson, A. C. rural rlghwaya Is being more thor Sward, P. N. Almquiat and their fami- oughly recognised by bnalneea men snd lies, Miss Esther Magnuson and A. legislators than ever before, and tbe Carlson of Portland, Mr. and Mrs. farmers need no argument to coot Ince Thoreen will make their home in Port them that better roada will Improve DIAMOND SWEEP their business materially. land. 2 to 0 HORSE POWER Dr William J. Rolfe, the eminent Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Lindgren enter- i tained P. Balquist and family and Rev. Shakespearean scholar and critic of Cambridge, Maae., recently celebrated , B. B. Nystrom for dinner last Sunday. the eightieth anniversary of bls birth. Aug. Carlberg was a visitor at P. N. While a teacher In Wrentham, Maae., Good Condition Almqnist'a last Friday. He expressed be created tbe idea of an English de himself well pleased with Powell Valley. partment In echools and colleges, R. P. Rasmussen He will go to his home in Duluth, Minn., which has been universally adopted Corbett, - Oregon snd sell hie property and may locate throughout the country. | locate here. I Wood Saw W. F. GREER CHOP MILL for Sale at a Bargain I Smallpox patients are all convalesc ing. Bock wool school ie progressing finely under tbe tutorage of Prof. Lents, with Mies Ellen Taylor as assistant. Grandma Bolton is quit poorly. J. Richmond is giving bis new barn a coat of red paint. Mrs. Msry Bpear of Rueaelville called on Rockwood friends last Monday. Jleurning Vagaries. GRASS CULTURE tertal. and tbe surface made as smooth as possible. Then It is ready for sow- tag One of the best mixtures for the Great care should be taken by tbe gardener with his lawn. It Is tbe can lawn la four parts Kentucky blue grass vas upon wbicb be will paint bis flow-; with one |>art of white clover, sown er bed pictures aud landscape effects not less than five bushels to the acre. To be successful be must prepare bls Equally good results are usually ob tained by the use of redtop in place canvas well. parts The first thing is to grade tbe of the blue grass or with equal ground, smoothing rough surfaces, of redtop and blue grass and a little making projier level stretches and gen- , white clover. When moisture is p’.en- tie slope«. If possible, the lawn should tlful the blue grass forms a softer turf slope from the house. The grading than tbe redtop. but does not seem to In shady should tie done so as to distribute > endure drought so well. evenly all surface water, avoiding the places tbe blue grass mixture is beat formation of little runs which might Nothing but pure seed should he sown. It is well to be liberal with the seed, produce washouts. The soil should be enriched with a not to scatter It too thinly and to re liberal supply of well rotted manure. seed portions that come up poorly. Forethought and Intelligent Super vision Insure a Gs»d Lawn. "Mounting is uot what it used to be." said an undertaker, “la fact. I expect to see It go out altogether la tbe next century or St Perhaps it la Just as well. No young widow, I've beard say. can wear mourning without looking like an adventuress But in the seventeenth century widows not only wore mounting, but their lied This Is essential where the soil Is lack curtains were black, and the sheen» ing in humus: otherwise hone meal or and pillowcases bad a black edging, other good fertilizer la useful, and ma like stationery. Eveu their lingerie nure often coutalus tbe seed of weeds. had a mourning band. In Italy the The ground should be plowed or spad uobles of tbe renaissance carried thetr ed not less than eight Inches deep, re mournlug as far aa their knives snd moving ell ttie stones and similar ma- forks, which bad ebony instead of Ivory handles. Gray cloth superseded black for mounting in the eighteenth ceufury. Tbe fashion lasted about twenty years. Then It died out, as it had sprung up. mysteriously.” — Los Angeles Times. A dozen bills of pumpkin planted among the bills of corn and potatoes iu the garden will provide a tine sup ply of good food for the cow next fall when th«* milk supply begins to fail. While a large majority m tV p*onie of the United States are in a position to congratulate themselves, if they so desire, that they are native born, it is an interesting and somewhat surpris ing fact to know that since 1820 over 24.000.000 people have l»een added to our population through immigration. Whan Divers Ost Angry. "One of tbe strange effects that div ing has u|»'n those who practice It.” said a veteran diver. "Is the invariable bad temper felt while working at tbe bottom, and as this irritability passes away as soon as the surface is reach ed again It Is only reasonable to sup pose that It ia caused by the unusual prvaaure of air lusjde the dress affect ing the lungs and probably through them the brain. My experience has been that while below one may fly Into tbe most violent passion at the merest trifle. For Instance, the life line may be held too tight or too alack; too much air or too little or some Im aginary wrongdoing on tbe part of tbe tender or the men above will often cause the temper tn rise. I have some times become so angry tn a similar way that I have given the slgnsl to pull up with the express Intention of knocking tbe heeds off the entire crew, but as tbe surface was neared and the weight of air decreased my feelings have gradually undergone a change for the better until by the time 1 reach ed the ladder and had the face glaaa unscrewed 1 had forgotten entirely what It was I came up for."—New York iTsaa, CTURE-PROOF <1 ! A SAMPLE PAIR It to miftoouce. oner