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About Beaver State herald. (Gresham and Montavilla, Multnomah Co., Or.) 190?-1914 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 9, 1911)
V FALL NEEDS FROM THF DEPARTMENT DRUG STORE X This Clock, $2 25 JAP-A-LAC Will make that old chair or table look like new. We have all color». Call and »ee color card» and get particulars. Paint! Paint! Paint! “Q THANKS ARE LOVING BUT REQUESTS. Uy He* Ur Kt SHELL II CON WELL of Phllsitelphla 4) rotuuulliik us to thanks, and all tils row mnri<U are but directions to <lo I lune thing* wbl> h are for our good III* commands are in real Ity but loving requests. 'l'huuksglvlng day I* but a re minder of the great privileges nml of the blessing which all re ceive who train themselves to give thanks. It I* of far more benefit to the recipient of a Christmas present to be grateful than It la to re celve a gift Itself. It Is very wise to lx* grateful for last year's Ctiri»tma* preaeots. Cultivate a habit of uilud which will make you grateful to God and to all your frlemlx and ancestors, for with a grateful heart you will appreciate much more and be In every way a better and happier man. O..................... Mr. Houseowner: That kitchen floor is getting to look like the Dick ens. Take an evening off; let u»sell you a can of floor paint and a brush, and get busy on that floor and you will have an improvement pleasing to the eye. I-et uh show you color cards. IN RECORD IIME. It took 1,600 memtM-rs of the Ama1- gatnated Asaociation of Strwt and elect ric Railway Employees tens than a day ■ to bring th«- United Railway Company .it Ih-troit, Mich., to time. Trie men were getting 2!, 25 and 2» o-iio an hour and wanted 25 and 30 cent» an hour. Tin- company refused to concede the de mand* of the union and a* a result not a »tnetcar ran until the trouble was <*) settled. The settlement was reached in side of two hour* through arbitration, and the men were awarded a scab- of 23 cents an hour for the first tax months, ' 27 4 cents for the next year and 2»S cents an hour thereafter. The strike was well conducted. There was positively no disorder and not a man was arrested. AN INDIAN THANKSGIVING Mr. Buggyowner: Don’t you think your buggy need» a new coat of paint? We have the Sherwin-Williams Buggy Paint the best made and costs no more than inferior grades. Di<l you get up late yesterday morning? Did you miss your car today? Get a good Alarm Clock and you will get to work on time tomorrow. We have Clocks on hand from 90c to $6. The Wireless Alarm Clock same as cut, guaranteed for two years and will run from 5 to 8 years. It can't be beat. Regu lar price $2.50, our price $2.25. Kodak Films We now have a stock of Kodaks and Supplies and can supply you most anything you want in this line. Prescriptions Filled Correctly Where do you gel your prescriptions filled? Are they tilled by a competent pharmacist? Our store is in charge of a Registered Prescription Druggist from the moment it ojiens until it clones. Save $25 Spend 25c Take your old last winter’s suit, dye it and it will look like new. We have the Diamond, Dvola and Rainliow Dyes. Dyalo and Rainbow Dyes will color either cotton, silk or wool. Very easy to use if you follow directions. Come in and let us help you select the proper colors. 1 'hanksgiving Postal Cards We have a beautiful assortment this year from lc to 10c each. Come in and look them over. Your Thanksgiving Day Toilet Will Is- exquisite if you make use of our per fumes. creams |H>wdera ami other toilet helps They arc so dainty am delicate that their use is a pleasure ami a sign <4 gisal taste a« well. Come ami provide yourself with what your dressing table lack- Migpt in clude some <4 our diges tive remedies too They are good after dinner. MT. SGOTT DRUG CO A. GEISLER MAIN AND RAILROAD BOTH PHONES LOCAL SPORTING NEWS HUN I f KS RI I URN LAKEN Willi GAME Corbett Young Men Report Abundance of Game In Cascades. A party of four Corbett resident» re turned laat week from a very success- ful hunting trip in the Cascades near Bonneville. Those in the party were: Clarence Deverell, Louis Benfield. Alvin Kinney and Young Evans. They were only out two days but re turned with four deer. They say there is still abundance of wild game in these regions but that the ground is very rough and perilous. Mr. Deverell killed one of the biggest deer that ever camo outof the Cascades. He is having the head mounted to keep as a momenta of the trip. Mr. Evans killed a fine five-point buck which he will mount. Rub • eon* throat with BALLARD’S KNOW LINIMENT. On.* or two ap plications will cure it completely. Price 26c, 6o, ami <1.00 j>er bottle. Sold by lent« Pharmacy. THE AUDOBON SASSIETY. They met to talk agalnit the eats That kill th» birds so sweet That warble In ths cherry tree And all the day go "Tweet!” "Th» cats must go!" yelled Mrs. »now Those women nodded hills All trimined with pretty bhdle wings That WWW not k. Hl .at». "Yes. kill them all!” cried Mrs Small. "They kill the birds, they do!" ■ he wore n lovely bird greveynrd t'pon her false hair SM And thus those Audobons. enraged. Were making cat fur fly When Mrs Snow glanced down below And there a mouso did spy. “Help!” • Murder!" "Call ths cat!" Those women—where were they? Borne perched upon the chsndeller: Borne fainted deed away. INTER-CLASS GAMES FOR NOV. 13 AND 14 0. A. C. Arranges its Sched ule—Will Take Both Days to Play. Oregon Agricultural College Corvallis, Ore., Nov. 4. —The schedule fur the inter- cla»» football games this tall baa just I»•en arranged. Since th*.* varsity and second team» have lieen selected, from the 50 candidates in the Held, there an* now available a large number of good inen for the class teams, and some interesting games art* expected. Each gaine will take 2 days, one half to la* played eac* 1- day, so that there will I* no interference with the practice of the regular freshmen team or with college work. Thursday. Nov. !*, the sophmores and freshmen will meet, fin ishing the game next day. Nov. 13-11 the juniors and seniors will clash, and the final contest for class championship will take place Nov. K as a preliminary to the college game against Willamette. A LESSON IN IRISES. The commissioner of corporations has been delving into the history of to bacco trust. In lKWi, one part of the trust, the Duke Sons’ comparer, was worth <250,000. By the mere process of joining the trust it swelled to <7,500,- <100 and. later, wu treated to a further ; does of <22,000,000 in “securities,” anrl | ’‘earns” 10 per cent on that. And in 23 years the Duke property, a <250,000 proposition, ha* “earned” <39,000,000, or 15,500 per cent. How long will the American public stand for the game of 1 watered stock, industrial monopoly, rising cost of living and commercialized politics? GOD’S COMMANDS FOR Pueblos of New Monco Oo the “Rabbit Hunting Dance." idly anil violently, and then they give a yell nnd trot around the square, one following in the other’s footsteps in time to the song and music. After making the round they break Into cir cles nfter the manner of a quadrille, and the square is filled with parties of dancers. The men forming the circle do not Join bands, for they need them in executing the movements with their guns In Imitation of the bunt, showing how they will kill the rabbit on the morrow. The circles dance In a diree tlon opposite to the course of the sun that Is. from west to east. This cere mony Is repeated several times. At first the dance Is fast and furious, but finally decreases to a mere "hippe- ty-hop" movement and then into the primary movement. The Indians con tinue their chant and dance as long A9 strength and breath remain Dear Old Thanksgiving Day. I remember. 1 remember Thanksgivings long ago The day was always criSp and bright. The ground was while with snow Neath buffalo robes we nestled close In our big double sleigh And dashed away to grandmamma's To spend a happy day. 1 remember. I remember The farmhousn Kitchen clean. Upon whoae shining, painted floor No speck was ever seen And. oh. the appetising sights The pantry shelve» would show. Where pick lea doughnuts, tarts cheese 8tood tn a tempting row! WANTED WANTED—W<»»l fft.isi per cord, coal ♦».50 per ton. Plowing and moving. W. A Hall A Sons, Foster Road, D-nte, Talmr WANTED— Boys tnav be had and sometimes girls. The older ones at ordinary wages and others to Im M-h<xde<l and cared for in return for »light services rendered. For particu lars address W. T. (Gardner, superin tendent lUtyti ami fxirls Aid Hociety of Oregon. Portland. Ore. tf WANTED—Teams to car cordwood at Kycamort- station. Enquire of O. N. Sager or Fred Oleson, Sycamore, Phone 71. Gresham. Ore. F«»H HA1.K FOR SALE—One half acre, fenced, east front, some orchard, gocxi location. <10 down, <10 per month Enquire at Mt. Scott Publishing Co’s, office. FOR SAI.E—One fourth acre, cleared, in Walden Park. Five dollar payments. Enquire at Mt Scott Publishing Co's, office. COC’KRELS FOR SALE—We have »0 tine White Leghorn cockrels for sale. These bird* are pure white and have tieen bred by u* for the past ten yean, for eggs and show purposes and have won firwt prises at all the leading shows. Our stock has been kept up by the very beet birds that money could buy. A fine lot of them at <2.50 a piece if taken now. Will guarantee satisfaction Address, Calkins Poultry Yard, Lents, Ore., R. F. PUTTING IT ON MOSQUITOES. D. 1, Box 5!», Gilbert Station, O. W. senator Gore of Oklahoma, while P., Ry. Home Phone 2924. addre-eirig a convention in Oklahoma One-acre tract—% mile east school, City recently, told thi* story, illustrating % tucrv in fruit, 14x2» house goes with a point lie made: it. <1300, <450 cash, balance 12 per 0 “A Nortliern gentleman was being per cent interest. Enquire, Simonsen, i entertained by a Southern eolonel on a Reporter office. I fishing trip. It wa* his first visit to the FOR SALE OR TRADE: Five by . South, and the mosquitoes were so seven Premo, rapid rectiinear camera, ' tiothersome that he was unable to sleep, in fair condition. Bargain for buyer. i while at the same time be could Lear Owner has a larger camera and wishes I his friend snoring audibly. ‘‘The next to dispose of this to get a pocket else. Tripod an<i plate holders thrown in. i morning he approached the obi darky Call Herald office,)iresham. See sample I who was doing the cooking. of work. "Jim.' lie said, ‘how is it the eolonel POTATOES 60c A SACK. I is able to sleep so soundly with so many I have 25 sack» of good feed and feed I mosquitoes around?” potatoes left I they are sound and goal "I’ll tell yo’, boss’ the darky replied, lor table use, but small). If you will I de furst part of de night de kernel is too take 5 sacks or more, I will delivertbem. I full to pay any ’tenahnn to de skeetera, Cail at my residence E. »»th and E. Davis St., 2 blocks South of the Mt. : an’ de last part of de night de Skeeters' Hood Montavilla station. W. E. Cox. i is too full to pay any tenshun to de MISCE1.I. AXEOt'S kerne).' ” UB Pueblo Indians of the new state of New Mexico have a day for thanksgiving and pray er contemporaneous with that of the paleface. Their prayer Is a dance. That 1» the I’ueblo Indian method of praying to the Great Spirit The prayer dance 1» held in the lat- ter part of November, according to the phase of the moon by which their day* are reguluted. The festival la known us the "rabbit bunting dance.* Each village bus a festival. There la a generous attendance of Pueblos, and whites ere admitted us spectators The villages of Zuril. Arora« and Taos, tielng remote, are seldom visited by white i>eople on these festivals, but the one at Isleta. a few miles from Albuquerque, is more generally at tended. esi>e»*lally by tourists GREAT PHOSPHATE DEPOSITS. When the chief of the village has of Wtien the great coal deposits of Penn- ficially designated the day the official crier mounts to the top of the "es- ! sylvania, West Virgin», and other tufn." or place of worship, and an i States <4 the Appalachian region were nounces that the prayer dance of the 1 being formed, many millions of years rabbit hunt will begin at daylight ' ago. in what the geologists term the Car- on the stated day. Runners are sent I boniferous age. there was also being out to notify the Pueblo ranchers. ' accumulateli in the Rocky Mountain The dancers are dressed In white region enormous mineral deposits w hich cotton pantaloons and cotton skirts of are of a widely different character but all colors, and some wear loose cotton gowns reaching to the feet. Crown which may nevertheless play an econo- hats with broad colored bands are mie part in the industrial development most generally worn, yet some wear of the United Stat. - comparable even to the paleface hat. Others are hatless that of coal. These are the phospate and lot ttiefr hair hnng down over their deposits of Wyoming, I’tah, Idaho, and bni ks Each dancer carries a gun Montana, which are now known to con - Thrw or four tnen are standing at the tain hundreds of miliums of tons of head of the line, and they are given phosphate rock, constituting a most im the signal bv striking on a wooden portant artificial fertilizer. Until recent- drum, rattling gourds partly filled with pebbles and singing the song of the ly it had been generallv assumed that the rabbit hunt, a slow, monotonous chant phospate deposits of South Carolina. pnnetunted with an occasional grunt. Florida, and Tennessee afforded an “in When the music starts the line be exhaustible" supply, but recent esti gins to sway, the men at first moving mates by the United Mates Geological only their bodies. Then they put their Survey show i hat at the present rate of foot In motion, raising each alternately increase in pliospate mining these without moving from their position eastern de|x>sit» are likely to is* exhaust Later they chant the song and thump the ground with their feet more rap ed within a generation. T CLASSIFIED ORANGE DIRECTORY [Granges are requested to send to The Herald Infomation so that a brief card can be run free under this heading. Send place, day and hour of meeting.] PLEASANT VALLEY GRANGE No. Mt Meets second Saturday at 7:30 p. in . and fourth Saturday at 10:80a. m every month. ROCKWOOD GRANGE Meets the first Wed nvsdav of each month at 8 p. m. and third Sat urday at 10 a. m. MTI.TNOMAH GRANGE, NO. 71 Meet* the fourth Saturday in every month at 10:30 a m., in (¡range hall, Orient. EAIRVIEW GRANGE—Meets first Saturday and the third Friday of each month. HI SSET.LV1LI.E GRKNGE.NO.3M Meets in the schoolhouse the third Saturday of each month. EVENING STAR GRANGE Meet* in their hall at South Mount Tabor on the first Satur day of each month at 10 a. m. All visitors are welcome. GRESHAM GRANGE Meets second Satur day in each month at 10:30 a. m. PAM ASA I S GRANGE. NO. M0.— Meets first Saturday each month. LENTS GRANGE Meets second Saturday of each month at 10:80 a. nr CLACKAMAS GRANGE. NO. .W - Meets the first Saturday ip the month at 10 30 a. in. ami the third Saturday at 7 30 p. nr SANDY GRANGE. N o . 8W. Meets second Saturday of each month at 10 o'clock a. m. < Oi l MHIA ORANG* NO J67 Mevt» In *11 day session first Saturday in each month in grange hall near Corbett at 10 a m. CLACKAMAS GRANGE meets first Saturday of each month at 10 30 a. m . and third Satur day at 7:30 p. nr NOTICE TINAL AGCOLNl In the County Court of the Stats of Thsn mammy cat came bouncing In and Oregon, for Multnomah County. And nipped up mousey slick In the Matter of the Estate of J. D. ■he bors him to her kittens Drin kail, ili'eeaseii. They gobbled him down quick. Notice is hereby given that the un- L remember. 1 remember Those females came down off the perch. ilereigneil, I .eop B. Hirsch, as admin The turkey of great else. And each one voter! aye— The squash and turnlpa. homemade bread istrator of the estate of J. D. Drinkall, That rather than have horrid mice deceased, has filed his final account in And golden pumpkin pies. The puaay cate may atay. above Court and matter, and that said Grandpapa's bent and hoary head Court ha* fixed Monday, the flth day of 1 never c«n forget Thank God that we men «ren t htrda (I wonder If the dear old man November, 1911, at 9:00 o’clock in the With fancy tails and wings! Can be a-llvin« yet!) These women slick would kill us quick forenoon of said day, and the County For millinery things court room in the court house of »aid 1 remember. 1 remember— C. M BARNtTZ Multnomah County as the time and Oh. 1 true«» that's enough! place for the bearing of objections, if I really can't write any more any, to said account, and the settlement Of this old fashioned stuff, of said account and the discharge of The O. A. C. football eleven average I only know of It from books. FOR MALE—One «hare of Multno said administrator. But this thought gives me Joy— lew than 16o jmiinds to each man, while mah and Clackamas Telephone Stock. First Publication October 6, 1911. We're further from that sort of thing the Washington University eleven ha« an Than when 1 was a boy John Van Zante, leop. B. Hirsch, Herald. Lente. Ore. —Judgs. Attorney. Administrator. average of al»>ut 17» pound«. LUMBER—At our new mill miles southeast of Kelso. We deliver lumber. Jonsrud Bros. (• EXECITRIX- NOTICf Notice is hereby given that the un- der-igned has been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Ore gon. for Multnomah County, executrix ot the estate of William H. McDowell, deceased. Now, therefore, all persona having claims against said estate are hereby required to present the same to me properly verified, as required by law. at the office of Kennedy A Kline- man, I^nts. Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated at Lente, Oregon, this 19th day of Octob r, 1911. Mary A. McDowell, Executrix of the Estate of William H. McDowell, deceased. W. F. Klineman. Attorney for Executrix. SIMMONS In the Circuit C urt of the State of Oregon for Multnomah county. Philip Holmes, Plaintiff, vs. Armina llolmee, Defendant. To Armina Holmes, Defendant: In the name of the state of Oregon; you are hereby required to api>ear and answer the Complaint tiled against you in the above entitled court and cause on or before the 2nd day of December 1911, that being the time fixed by the court for you to appear and answer herein and more than six weeks from the first publication of this Summons, and if you so fail to appear and answer said Complaint, the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief therein pray ed for, to-wit:—That the bonds of mat rimony now and heretofore existing be tween plaintiff and defendant be dis solved on the ground of desertion. This Summons is published by order of the Honorable. W. R. Gatens, Judge of the above entitled court, duly made and entered on the 16th day of October, 1911. George A. Hall, Attorney for Plaintiff, 6522 Foster Road. Date of First Publication, Oct., 19, 1911. Date of Last Publication Nov. 30, 1911. SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for Multnomah County. James H. Bush, Plaintiff, vs. Addis B. Bush, Defendant. To Addie B. Bush, the above named defendant: In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff filed against you in the above entitled suit and Court, within six weeks from date of the first publication of this sum mons, and if you fail to so appear and answer, for want thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief de mand»! in said complaint, to-wit: For a decree forever dissolving the marriage contract now and heretofore existing between plaintiff and defend ant, and for such other relief as the court may appear equitable. This summons is served upon yoa pur suant to an order made and entered in said suit on the 4th day of October, 1911, by thellon. W. N. Catena, presiding Judge of the above entitled Court, which said order requires you to appear and answer the complaint in said suit within six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons. W. F. Klineman, Attorney for Plaintiff, lente, Oregon. Date of first publication, October 5th 1911. Date of last publication, November 16th. 1911.