The Beaverton review. (Beaverton, Washington County, Or.) 192?-1941, August 21, 1931, Image 3

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    THE B EATETI ON REVIEW
Beaverton Review
Issued Every
Friday at
Dragon,
“" F R I D A Y ,
AUGUST SI, 1931
rrotv
B»av»rton,
Edna Ferher
KnUnd aa aaconil cln»s mattar
IWvmlwr V, 1922, at tha postoAlc»
at liaavaiton. Dragon, umlur t ha
Art of March », 1879.
J
II. Ilulatt
A
Mr»»a«e
Business Manager
N O R M I OR
to
American Huainaaa
Man
You ara depressed.
You think
you ara crippled
You ara afraid
of tha future You ara full of fear»,
Cepij
You have half tha gold of tha
world and half of the machinery
"M 's ti 1 1 .mst lime for III* Je w ,”
and most o f the automobiles and Mnlira Mould *.iy. looMttu up from her
all the skyarnipars.
sewing. "I need home number forty
You have tha greatest horns, mar
sewing. mac blue needles."
kata In tha world, an I tha largest
And then perhaps neat ihiy, or the
corporation* that tha
world hai day after. C l in playing In thu yard,
ever saan.
would Mw a fam iliar ligure Inml alinosi
You are rulad more by Idea* and donhlv. gnnmelllie and grotesque
leas by tradition chan any other ugnili*! Hie w id e r li *ky
II was Sol
people in the world. You have us
Levy, (lie peddler, the Alsatian Jew.
ually dona what you thought you I Mahra would fold up her work hrusli
could do.
Ihe thread* from her apron; nr If her
How cast It be possible thskt a hand* wore In the dotigli *he would
progressiva nation o f
120,000,000 hastily mold and crim p her pie crust
people ran be wrecked
by the ■ »<• a* to be reudv for hi* visit.
speculations of a little handful of \ Kul Levy had cuius over an linml
fools in Wall Stroot.
grunt In the noisome bowels of some
Tha prices that ware forced too dreadful slilp
Illa hair was blue
high had to come down. Today black and very Ihlek. and Id* face was
while In spile of Ihe* tinnitili; south
all the prices are too low.
A Idaek si ubbie of beard
There Is now a golden oppor­ west sun
tunity for every man who has ayes Inleilhllled lids pallor. lie had dell
esle blue veined hand* and narrow
to see It.
Dollars are now being sold for arched feel lie belonged III crowded
piares. In populous piaci**, tn III» rotor
thirty rents.
Practically every security in the uud glow and swift drama of Ihe
United States Is now being sold at . lairaar*. Cod knows how he bad
leas than Its value.
found Ills way to this vast w.ldern ««
The way to create a fortune is ! Perhaps In I'bicugo. or In Kuiisua C ity,
to buy from pessimists. I'ay your or Omaha lie had heard of this new
\iUtny \at|d taka the risk. iKrlrk country und Ihe rush of thouruiidu for
started his rarrer by buying
coke Ila lumi. And lie had hummed Ills way
ovens in the slump of 1H73 Car­ on find. lie had started lo («M illo
negie made 9.100,000,000 by buying
with an ulliiotleeovered pack on bis
buck. Th rou gh the Utile hot weslern
steel plants in the slumps.
Hundreds of fortunes have been towns In summer. Th ro u g h Ihe b ille r
made by buying from pessimists. Cold western towns III winter. Th ey
T h e children
Ye Gods! What a chance there l* turned dogs on him
cried. "Jew I Jew !" lie was only a
at thia moment!
Five years from now, most A - boy. disguised with tbul «nibble of
He would enter the yard of
marican business men will belong beard.
s farmhouse or a dwelling. In a tovvu
to the "I-W ish-1 Had Club".
Then it will be too late to buy such as Osage. A wary eye uu th «
dog. Nice Fido. Nice doggie. l>own.
a dollar for thirty cents. The op
dow n I Ping, sew ing machine needles,
portunities will be gone.
rolls of glnghaiu and calico, and Iasi,
When a horse balks the balk i*
craftily, Ids Ham burg luce. He brought
In his head, not in his legs. He Hews, too.
moves on when he think* ha will
" T h e bridge Is oul below G ray
And when an American business llorae. . . , T h e Usages sre having
man is depressed TIIE SLUMP IS a powpow at Hrnnlny. A ll night they
IN HIS HEAD. There 1» nothing kepi ms aw ske with their drums, those
serious to prevent him from ms
savages , , . 7'lie K id Slid Ills gang
king money If he think* he will I held up the Santa Fe near Wetoka
When Fear rule* the will noth- j and got ih lrty -A v « thousand dollars;
Ing can be done, but when a man but one of Itim i will never hold up a
twits Fear ouk o f h*» m ini the train again. Shot In Hie head. Verdi­
world becomrs his oyster
gris lloh hy name. W ould he u feath­
To Uwe a bit of money Is no- j er In tliui shell IT s cap, to catch
•thkvg. but to Vise hope—op lose (lie K id ! . . . A co u n try! My fore­
nerve and ambition —that is what fathers should have lived (o see me
here !"
make« men cripples.
Ills beautiful, civilised face, meddle
This silly depre<sion ha* gone
a* an actor's, was u( once e x p re s iv a
an long enough Get rid of it. I
of despair and bitter amusement. Ills
Is inside of you. RISE AND WAl.K
long slender hands were spread In a
gesture of wondering reslgunllon.
The Wsy O f All Flesh
He aoniellmea talked lo D ixie Lee.
A massive cer comes to a stop
Th e re existed between these two a
at the curb.
Out steps the owner, »w iftfoot- sinnige relation of understanding slid
edly heading for a man arandtu* aoiiirihlng resembling respect. O u t­
with A bundle o f papers under hi* en*!«. bo|h of them, he because of Ids
arm The driver wishes to buy a
morning patter and lie off for home
He hand*
the paper seller the
usual nickel and is Just about lo
step hark when by chance he W»p-
pens to glance Into the fac* of ,
d .M I I I i I
the supposed new* vendor. To hi*
utter
astonishment the car-owner
And* himself face to face with a
close friend of long year* »tand- ,
"H ow’d you get here? Why are :
you selling papers?" The
w ow .
rome snxiously from the car-owner
as hs looka sharply into the eyes
of his old friend.
The newsdealer quickly explain*
He had been given a corner ny
„ certain daily paper, and as he
was penniless he hsd gladly trans
formed himself into
a
That way, hn explained he oould
get enough pennies to huy coffee
and".
»!
Who i% tht> nogt. still young,
found by his friend in the umx 1
peeled role of news-vendor? Only
a few short years »go, in Portland,
“ A Sm art G irl Lika You, What Do
he had been able to sign hi* name
You W ant In Such a Business?"
to cashable checks for thousands of
dollars. His property holding* were race, »lie because of her calling. “ A
substantial and very valuable III* smart girl like you. vvluit do you vvunl
list of personal acquaintance* ran In such a business
“ I've got lo live, Solly. God knows
Into the thou »and».
In »hort, the “ nwaboy” had been why I”
“ You come from n good family. You
one of the moat prominent Aguie*
in the city*» life, well known and nre young yet. you nre «m art. Th e re
reapected in bu*inc»» circle*
In are oilier wav*."
fact, hi» name w h s familiar to
* y -e e e s ?
I tried a couple of
things.
Nix, n ix !”
mon* of u*.
In a year or two lie opened a little
He waft iin nth’ete of w ait-w do
ropute, and •'.hr fact that he had »loro In Osage. II was. at tlrst, only
several tims* been publicly hailed | a wooden aluirk containing two or
a* « "hero", together with hf* re- | three rough pine table« on which Ids
markable success in business made ; wares were spread He was Ihe town
his name » common down t.-vrn by- |
word. Hardly » vlay passed that j
his name was not mentioned m
the paper*, lie wa* universally ac­
claimed a* one of the men who had
made good.
a
If we dared to print the name
4VÍT POOUCMMCSt
of thi* man, whose swift ups and
downs make such a colorful story,
" CAU t S«U-NO U
not a man tr woman hut would he
a
euMa,
surprised—and startled.
Hut we’re
MAiWAty "
going to keep his name a secret
'•JJC*
MAVC HO
It wouldn’t ¿ o the man any good
VACUUM lb
and he deserve« another chance
OvSAU *•
There's (ill) hope for him.
Hut if we did dsre to print the
name
rtf thW unf rtulnat charac­
ter, it might serve «* » " eye-
opener and a warning to some or
our cocksure rHixenry and more
particularly as a STORM WARN
ING to some whose egotism an j
vanity are SLOWLY hut SURELY
engulfing «them.
f o r here’s the fact whatsoever
RISETH must in time come DOWN.
^ (o m c
Snap
MICKIE,
U lt i» t r a t io iv s
S
bq/
i r w i t v M i j e i 'i
WÆ U "
Jew . lie wu* a person apart. Home-
times Ihe ru w h o )* deviled h im ; or (lie
saloon lounger* and professional had
■lieu. 7 hey looked upon him as fair
game. He thought of llicm as «avnges.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
In the three and u half years of her
residence In flange H.ihru had yielded
hardly an Inch. It was amoving
It
wus heroic. She luid set herself cer­
tain standards, and those she had
maintained In «p ile of almost over­
whelming apparition.
She had been
tired mi tradition. If she hud yielded
nl all II was In m inor matters and lie
cause In do no m u * expedient.
Once only In II io j c three yeur* hail
she gone hack lo Wlchltu.
At Ihe
prospect of the journey she had h *en
In u fever of anticipation for day*
She had taken with her C lin and
Donna.
She wa* so proud of them,
so Intenl mi oiilAltlng them with n
wardrobe lulllelenlly splendid In m >(
oiT (h e ir rlutrm*. thnl she neglected
the m ailer of her own costuming an I
found herself arriving In W lehlla with
a trunk rnntuliilug Ihe very clothes
with which *he hud departed from it
almost four year* earlier. Prominent
among these was a green min'* veilin'!
with |i!nk ruclilng*.
She had laid
little rnuiigh t i e for II In these punt
years.
T h e visit wa* unt a success. T h e
very lldng* she had expected to enjoy
fell, somehow. Aul
She missed the
pace the exhilarating uncertainly of
Ihe iiklahotnii life. T h e teacup con­
versation of her girlhood friends
seemed lo la< k tang and menulng.
T h e ir existence wa* orderly, calm, ac­
cepted.
F o r herself and Hie other
women of Osage there wa* everything
still (o do. Th e re lay a city, a coun­
try. a whole vast territory to he in e p t
and garnished hy an arm y of RUtihon-
nets. PiinidoxIcHlIy enough, she was
trying In Implant In the red clay of
Osage the very form* tind Inrilltilhm *
Hint now bored her In Wlchltu. Y cl II
was, perhaps .a very human (ra il
It
was Illustrated literally hy the fact
Hint she wss, on her return, more
thrilled lo And that (lie scrawny elm,
no larger than a baby's arm. which
she had planted outside ihe doorway
In Osage, actually hud found some
moisture for Its thirsty roots, and was
now feeldy vernal, limn »he had been
at sight of the eool glossy canopy of
cedar, arbor vitae, sweet locust, and
crepe m yrtle Hint shaded the Kunsa*
garden.
T h e n Hie children.
T h e visiting
Venables Insisted on eiilllng C lin b.v
Id* full name— C im arron . Subra had
lieurd ll so rarely since the day of his
birth llial she now realized, for Hie
tlrst time, how foolish site had been
to yield lu Yancey'* whim In Hie nam ­
ing of the hoy. Cim arron. Spanish;
wild, or unruly. T h e hoy hud mude
►uch tin olixlrcperou.v entrance Into
Ihe world, and Yancey luul shouted, lu
delight, “ Leo!, al h im ! See him klek
w ith h's feet uiul strike out w ith Ills
fi is ! lie's a wild one. llc li. C l m ar
ro n ! I'eceno G llu no ."
( ’Iin a m m was almost eight now
If
ll Is possible for u Imy of eight lo he
rom antic In aspect, C im arron Cravat
was llial.
tils head was not large,
like Yancey’s, hut long and line, like
Sulim 's a Venable head,
P. Is eyes
were S.ihra's, loo, dark and large, bin
they had Ihe ardent look of Yancey's
gray ones, und lie hail Yancey's ale
stirdly long and curling lashes, tike a
hcuiillful girl's.
Ills speech was strangely adult.
T h is , perhaps, because of Ills close us*
»-octillion with IPs eldors In those IV'ri
form ative years In Osage. Ilis skin
was bronzed Hie color of his father's,
lie looked like a little patrician
Spaniard or peril ips (Ih e Venables
thought privately) part Indian. Th e n,
too. there had been few children of
Ida nge In Hie town's beginning. Sa­
lm i had been, nl first, too suspicion«
uf Kin h ns there were,
lie would,
pro|mhl.v, have seemed ii rather un-
pleiiKunt and priggish little hey II Ills
voice mid manner hail lint been en­
dowed tiilr:iciilo;i»ly with all Ihe charm
and magnetism Unit Ills father pos
se-sed In »tlcli iIlKiiriulng degree.
Even little Donna was not much of
a suercas.
T h e baby was an eerie
III 1 1«> elf, ns plain ns the hoy was
handsome. She resembled her grand-
m oihcr. Felice Venable, without a
trace of that redoubtable m atron'» for­
mer benutyr. All In all, Salmi found
herself Joyously returning lo the bar­
ren burning country to which, four
years earlier, she hud gone In such
'•"ml and terror
She resented her
THE
PRI
tuoi h e r'» fto-llijg. do thill.
> II- - t .
l ’elice Voluble now, no longer a » a
power, an authority In i l l matters of
Importance, hut as a sallow old lady
who loitered on be«l* Ihnf were loo
high slid who hs she «al talking,
pleated and tinphuited w ith tremiitmiM
Anger* (lie many runic* of her white
«Utility wrapper. T h e m atriarch hud
lo*l her crown. Rubra wa* m atriarch
now of her own little kingdom ; and
already »he wa* planning lo extern)
Hull realm beyond and beyond It
present coniines Into who knows wluii
varine** of dcmc*ne.
She had tiietinl, al Hie lari, to And
occasion to Inform her mother and
the m inor Venable* Hint It was she
who Ironed Yancey's Arie w hile lln si
shirts.
Hut *he was not a spiteful
woman. And »lie redacted Unit Ib i»
m lghl he construed a* a criticism of
her husband.
Ho, gladly, eagerly. Huhru Went lui ci­
to Hie w ilds *he one» had dcxjil eil.
(continued
next
pric«. and modern
methods.
~JÿÎmtiled Aehèriiftt^
B .irg boxes.
(!a!e Store.
Advertisements In this column 1
cent s word. Minimum charge '¿He.
The
Enquire at llazet-
p38
ïr* 7
Lost and
FOR SALK
Found.
merchandising
co m b 'n a L o v
w ill hu Id busi­
ness for any merchant who u n d e r­
takes it aeriouvly aid gives It in-
telligent thought and effort.
I wonder if we still have an
old-fashioned kingdom where th» ru­
ler can die a natural (hath?
Lost— O ff 'Meier and Frank truck, j
Milk contains all the i-od values
Monday. 2 rolls linoleum, between : Beach pajama» »r« nothing but
so essential to a child s growth and
Cedar Milts losd to Peaverton. short skirt» with baggy legs on
development If you will but phone
out Watson St. to Greenbush. Re
the bottom.
4r>2!> our wagon will deliver daily
ward.
p -3 8 1
at your home the very best of milk.
Ueaverton Sunrise Hairy, A. Camen-
FOR RENT
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
xind, proprietor-
adv. c-39-tf | —
In the County Court of the Htaie
—
For Kent— House on Hyland Ave..
of Oregon For Washington County
Choke Cunning
Peaches. Reason- Ah ha. I^rge garden, fruit, elec-
able. ( has. Eiler's peaih orchard.
trie pump. Near school. Inquire a( In the Matter of the
Estate of
B ig r d lo r n .
Cross free ferry t Review office or * r te Mrs. Eva
Theodor During, deerased
at W;la nvillc
Follow signs. Kt. \ Bra ken, Multnomah. Ore.
c.38
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
3, Aurora, Phone 28. Bring con-
that the undersigned, duly appoint­
For
Kent
4
room
hou*et
modem,
tainers
p36-39
of
the above
go d gar. ge, at Aloha on Blan- | ed Administrator
ton A ve., cl-ise to school. In­ named estate, has filed in the above
or Hale 1 Jewel «name! range
quire of O. M. Taylor, Hazel- entitled Court and cause, his final
co v e , 1 libriiy table, 1 r und ta­
dale. Phor.e 0314.
p38-39 account and report as such, and the
ble. 2 yourg Jersey heifers, 6 and
Court has fixed the eighth day of
8 mo the old. Leo Novlelli, Bea
September, 1931, at the hour of
ventcaq Ore ,
Rt. 3, JA>x 372, ‘
10:00 o’clock a.m. of said day. and
Schol's Road.
p-3'. Ei---------------------------------------- — M
I You and your friends are eor- the Court room o f '.h^ above en­
titled Court in Hillsboro, Oregon,
For Hale Klherta peachc,;. ripe next diallv nvit* (
to attend a card
week. A. Mills, Beaverton, Rt. 1 party given hy the Ladies’ Auxil- as the time and place for hearing
final account,
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
iarv at. -the Huber Club House. objec'ions to raid
Ha-urday evening, August 22nd at and for the final settlement o f '»»id
8:00 n.m. Children not
«layin g estate.
cards. 0 to 18 year*. 10c admission.
Dated this 7th day of August,
Adrni sion 2-r>r. Prizes and Lunch.
Entertainment.
adv. 1931.
Doy Gray, Administrator of the
estate of raid decease I.
Built On Advertising
Hare, McAlcar, & Peti-rs, A ttor­
No merchant ever failed because
j of the money he spent for adver­ neys for Administrator.
tising, but the business history of
, this country is filled with instances
MAPES & SON
of men who have made brilliant
successes in business by means of
RESTAURANT
advertising.
MEALS
SHORT ORDER
; A well written aivert’sement in
Cigars, Tobaccos
the colu m n of a local newspaper
Confections. Soft Drinks
is an invitation to every reader of r>J, T
W,f.o n Si.
the paper * to visit the sti.ro ana
see the m erha-dise displayed there,
week)
G ra te d
orange
and lemon
rind
are used by the best cook* to fla
v o r cake*, pies,
bread*, dexsertx,
frosting*, fillings, inu re s, and other
food*. G ra te o n ly 'Ihe yellow p o r­
tion w hich contain* the oil cells.
Use fresh o r m ix w ith su g a r and
keep in a tig h ty covi r< d ja r.
1 ANNOUNCEM ENT
“ Eat Wheat” Campaign, to Offset War
Propaganda, Urged by Ohio Governor
Am erica»
problem" la not
the involved, complicated, abstruae
proposition It haa been pictured In
the judgment of Oovemor Oeorge
While of Oblo
In a brief terte
•idirment which prmented this »Jtua-
lion in ample fundamentals Oov
While recently told hie fellow Rover -
uora attempted at Krtncb Lit* ind .
wont he belle vee thould be done ea a
nrat constructive practical Rtep to-
r » r d the summation of our trouble*
tome an»at surplus
Uricfly White showed that ou* do-
m**uc consumption of this cereal wa»
icJared from about Ovc and one-ball
tiu b tl* per capita per year to aoout
four ouahei* a* s direct result of the
governments ’S-ve Wh*«t~ propa-
during the war
II* :r.ff led the public awa> from
t.Ueat however no official steps ever
tia\e 0 c 4 .it taken to restore our old
ruiio of rational conaur.iption
H<
re.i«».menu* euppori oy the r.ft»icnui
g'^em inent in u the states of an ’Cat
Wucai* ratrpshgn co:n;.craoie u tlve
<T J»/ G c o /?G k * M i T£
r *i u n e campaign which cut acwu
(i.i *.icat consumption
Rest' ration
r-rcs tt.on tfc»t ta 1930 the average
cl ju i old-time ra’.io of contu»:*^ticn
... •
ing ixhc 4 2 buabel*
tu v?v* would a:d inrr.edlitel) about
’If oui wnc: t consumption today
1 ^ 0:0 C^o otuhels ol our snnuni no-
r p*r .-¿n wat at the pre-wai ever-
n M e
'trr-m fnu No other mere
■r me I .m C^ard would oot now
teV a
c*-1'-
c:*-
°* , c* hr Id. nr. a curry-ever of mere than
adu*e our wl;eat cur- : j 0 00<> O w bushels at a heavy .o&* to
f i r;.I t y
tr«v.
:*■ . t.d crltb the price to farm«
u ii c i.v d pro .»Ierr r.^» recently »•r» at u>e icu : et point in a genera*
i t ?. •
to
-.* a weric prun-
n
Our o’zm domctUc demani
i. m at*:c*b must depend ou • wcr.d wc
c* . c expand oy about 150.*
! .....i n
lie io.w the geveruura
Cut 000 000 tusiielr yearly
• «krr«/i tnitir. n .n turn depend» on
* lv. Strut more than ml Iron«!«
m .. it ;is4lv:di:ally t*y ihi van-
•trei 1 « the real indei ol oui na-
it,-
t .; pi.xui ;.v: nat o .» in uii*
t . m l » r ! l-t i r ln (
It la the uell*
r\
■ i
rflc m i«
n :i'e
....ili:n of Ihe whole farm '«»m -
• . 4 i!,r '
:t!vt:cn ol ou» p rt-
n I<f •»« which in turn in -
v r
i . -.a » ;taunptioi) of wheat
•,:i ir :ii pro*perlfj largely re>to.
' • i » r «•. t. • ! . ii. - uz*i|»tion i> «tur
ri:r rewtoral »on nr our old-time
|M*aI- n ii.V f J
f|-»rU ita! ratio n( coriwn nipt ton there-
1» *« »• > ic li.r
li: f!i* cu 2i tu
1 • r ‘ n r 1
H ip
* s r \. h r • r u l l i II 1 * fi, r . M»
tnc -
•
»»
»
u
.
’
ilîl
i
;
ruiircrii
mal
t fi» ’ "1
tìr^
r . i '» *1 i*>:*«
^u» avrrr.se annuo?;
n ul « b e ll wa?
i « i.» !» Uue u. i . r (government * •
(
jup.rvaiiot m
: m •• .ii t Y| «¡«(Ist
rin ws»/ r « l u rtd •
> ì :.-
i:
.■*# per rapita {
riinu;&sà
Govtrnnicof
l ...
r.’iu]
ih? i
U«
re i
p rr-
% i :
rrlie
tr^ »We.L W
nSnTO in U r ^ n d ‘ cro" STUDIO BARBER SHOP
ates desire. Desire once created, it
is but a step until the purchase is
made.
A well written advertisement is
the best employe any merchant can
put on his pay roll.
An advertisement to be effective
must be backed by goed merchan-
dise, an attractive store, the right
FIRST CIJVSS WORK
AT REASONABLE PRICES
|
R. D. VanMeter. Prop.
P. W. BISHOP
j
j
PLUMCfING and nEATING
Hardware,
Paints
r'hone. 2003
Washington
iieavertns,
Beaverton
C. J
County Fair
Barber Shop
STEVENS,
PROPRIETOR
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED
W. E. PEGG
UNDERTAKER
HILLSBORO, OREGON
and
.'range Building
Day and Night
Sept.
:n o f l î l l î aiid 1918— fro m
i l* «>f wtt’. r h » f now %urter— :
•Kat W heat* r u m p d le o >n
ri:r
|
|
EMBALMKR
— :—
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Phone OUI
JOE KEMMER
For any Kind of Wood
Limb Wood Cut to Order
Adv. c-26-tf
10 , 11 , 12
mere reeovery of nur
Livestock, Agricultural
A. E. HANSON
WOOD and COAL
4-H Club And Industrial Exibits ''orH Wood or siab-any length
any
Delivery
Prompt
Entertainment
S K
rO
McCREADY'S
Our work speaks for itself
Beaverton, Oregon
Day Admission 25c
E S T IM A T E / THEY'LL
H E L P YOU SAVI A S
W E LL AS BUILD HtO KW f
I on Real Estate.
Season Tickets 75c
I
Meats and Groceries
é
Í Holboke Bros.
t
Practy Cal says:—
i?
I.ow inler-
esl cost, repayment privi­
leges.
f
Phone 7702
LOANS
Night Admission 25c
W
Write
for
details.
WASHINGTON
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Savings & Loan Assn.
Slink n id g .
Hillsboro. Ore.
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"So tell your dough— the place to go— for Perfe t Satisfaction—
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to
tion.
this
place, to pleace they race. Their middle nume is ac­
Estimates a‘re free
at
Me Crcadv’s."
HAY, GRAIN & FEED
for
EarIV‘ CrisP Vegetables
feed them this com plete,
balanced diet
Baby Chick Food oi all
“ Our Red Trucks Deliver”
Kinds
W . J. McCready Lumber Company
F. D. Peck, Sales Agent
Phone 4603
By Charles Sughroe
€ T«m Nnn^w U m »
V IG O R O
CHAS. BERTHOLD
PRONE
BEAVERTON 3603
150«
THE PLUMBER
Drum Corp, Rides Shows
R .
Phone
DEW EY
Dancing, Fireworks, Bands
A
kind
Residence Phone, 3602
A Natural Error