The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951, November 19, 1943, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, November 19, 1943
BEA VERTO N E N T E R P R IS E , Beaverton, Oregon
Classified Rates
I
4
•
M ISC E L L A N E O U S
•
D e u d #toclc P ^ k e d up fre e o f
c h a rg e an y w h ere.
C all
co lle ct.
UN. 1221;
night ca ll
D EN LEY
R E N D E R IN G
CO.,
P o rtla n d .
T W O C en ts a word per Issue.
N O T H IN G L E S S TH A N 25o
C A SH M U ST A C C O M PA N Y
A L L C L A S S IF IE D A D S
NO A D S T A K E N O V E R P H O N E
W e P u b lish th e
B EA V E R T O N E N T E R P R IS E
M U LTN O M A H P R E S S
T IG A R D S E N T IN E L
ALO H A N E W S
C om plete E a s t e r n W ash in g ton
County and W e stern M ultnom ah
C ounty C overage
W e assum e no fin a n c ia l respon­
sib ility fo r e rro rs w hich m ay a p ­
p ear In ad v e rtisem e n ts published
In th ese colu m ns but In ca se
w here th is paper la a t fa u lt will
re p rin t th a t p a rt o f ar. ad v ertise­
m ent in w hich th e ty p o g rap h ical
m ista k e occurs.
F O R S A L E -G ree n slab old grow th
4 ft D elivered in B ea v erto n or
M u ltnom ah $8 in 3 cord loads, $7
del. to T ig a rd , Sherw ood or Aloha.
C J . S ta s e r, C arlton, O regon, B x.
373.
*1 42-43-44
---------a_______________________________
F O R M U M Head.
3-year-old
sheep, medium grad e wool, W . S.
B a u m g a rtn e r. B ea v erto n , R2, 1 ml
N of R eed villa.
41-42-43
H ID E S Jt W O O L, t'A S C A R A — A
sp ecialty .
L E E B R O S ., 25 SW
C lay. P o rtla n d .
A tw ater 5334.
F O R T O W C A R call V E R M 1 L Y E
M O T O R CO. P h o n e T ig a rd 3381.
•
|
F U R N A C E A Saw d u st B u rn e r se r­
vice
and
In sta lla tio n .
P hone
C H erry 1236.
41 t f
FOR SALE
D R Y S U B W O O D fo r S a le $12.50
per cord in 2 cord loads. R u b en
Jo h n so n , N ew berg, S t a r R ou te.
P h on e 193J.
42tf
W ANTED
W A N TED TO R E N T -P e rm a n e n t
g ov ern m en t em ployee, w ife and
sm all child .
Need 4 or 5 . room
house or fla t. B R o a d w a y 6124
43
W A N T —About 5 a c re s around Alo-
ha-H u ber or
B ea v erto n
d istrict.
P a rtly clea red .
W ould lik e high
or sloping ground, 5706 N. D enver
avenue, P o rtla n d , 11, O regon.
C O L L IE P U P S — F o r C h ristm a s de­
livery.
T h re e b atch es to pick
from
H oule's Collie K en n els. R t.
1, B x 85, T ig ard , L r. B o o n e's F y .
R d., nr. T u a la tin .
P h o n e T ig ard
3115, also
C O C K E R S P A N IE L S : 2 blond fe ­
m ales.
F o r delivery Nov. 26
47
W A N T E D —Used B oy s T oy s 2 to 8
yrs.
C all A T w a ter 1026.
42
Y ou ca n use cla ssified advs to ad­
v a n ta g e .
P la n t one in th is paper.
F O R S A L E B reed ing rab b its, R l . |
box 130, S ch o lls
Kd., B eav erto n j
2386.
42
Page 3
0
Imlay’s Fresh
Mixed Feeds
riSHER TH0RSEN PAINTS
F O R S A L E - B la c k co at, fu r col­
lar. size 18, b lack crep e dress, 18. i
M rs. M cN am ee, 520 S W
M ain,
B eav erto n .
42
F o r q u ality, fa ir p rice and
serv ice
FO R
S A L E — C otton
M attress,
double bed.
P. L Schu ltz, l'v m l
S. B eav erto n . R l . B x 203A.
42
F O R S A L E —L a rg e dining ta b le ;
sm all W ood H eater.
850 F a r m ­
ington rd, B ea v erto n .
42
l O R S A L E — P u lle ts 5 mo. old 1 *4
m iles W of T ig ard , on T ig ard ave..
R t 1, B x 384
42
FO R
th ree
l 'v mi
R t 1.
S A L E Saddle H orse, com ing
y ears, gen tle and weU broke,
W o i T ig ard , on T ig ard ave..
B x 384
42
PAINTS
J. B. Imlay & Sons
R E E D V IL L E
•
A LO H A , O R E .
RABBITS W A N T E D
B E S T P R I C E fo r R a b b it fry ers, D.
P . M acD onald, R 2, B x 218, B e a v e r­
ton.
P h o n e B ea v erto n 2260. W e
p ick up.
W A N T E D L iv e R a b b its, to buy
now. Top p rices paid. R a b b it M eat
C o , 8917 S E S ta r k S t. .P o rtlan d .
P hone S U n set 1722.
Open w eek
days only u n til 7:30 p. m.
F O R S A L E F am ily Cow Je rs e y •
HELP W A N T E D
G u ern sey $75.
See Cullen, B e a v ­
W A N T E D B o o k k eep er or
good
erton . F a rm in g to n rd.. >at Sp en cer
o ffice C lerk.
H. M. R arn es. Oil
m ile w est o f B e a v e rto n bank |
P la n t. P h o n e B eav erto n 3231 41-42 *
41-42
Henry Cadonau Purchases
Famed Eleo Dairy Farm
H enry C. Cadonau, p ro p rieto r o f
the A lpenrose dairy, S W 45th and
V erm ont stre e t, com pleted tra n sa c ­
tio n s fo r th e pu rchase o f the fam ed
E lco dairy farm , 6149 S W S h a ttu c k
road, w here he plans to m ove som e
of th e 80 cow s o f his p resen t herd
along w ith an ad ditional 100 produc­
ing an im als.
R ico b a rn s w ere em ptied o f sto ck
In F e b ru a ry w hen some 200 an im als
were sold at auction.
Cadonau’s move w as p artly b rou gh t
about w hen a larg e two story hay
barn w as destroyed Sep tem b er 22nd.
T h e E lc o farm has th ree larg e d airy
b arn s hav ing a cap acity fo r m ore
th an 200 anim als.
-------------------V --------------------
“T h e A m erican people respond b et­
te r to a sta te m e n t o f the need under
th e word 'please' and 'serve'
th an
they do under th e word 'v erboten' ",
— H e rb e rt H oover.
HOW TO HEAT YOUR
HOME WITH LESS FUEL
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V
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...a n d save manpower, transportation and
raw materials for Uncle Sam!
i
• T h e W a r Production Board’s Office of W a r Utilities is asking
small fuel economies each of us can make by the number of fuel
you to save fuel every way you can. For the service industries of
users in this territory alone, and you can see that the total fuel
the nation — that is, the producers of gas, coal, oil and electricity
saving possible is of gigantic proportions.
along with our transportation and communications systems —
are carrying a tremendous war load. W aste of any of these vital
T h e W a r Production Board together with your Gas Company
services involves the direct or indirect waste of manpower, trans­
and other fuel producers here greatly appreciate the way you
portation and raw materials urgently needed in the war effort.
have been conserving fuel for over a year. But now U ncle Sam
wants you to be even more careful — no matter whether you burn
y
briquets, coal, electricity, gas, oil, sawdust or wood— and thereby
Fuel conservation is a responsibility U ncle Sam is asking you to
assume now regardless of the weather. The unnecessary heating
save manpower and transportation. Put the practical suggections
of one room — or the escape of heat through a door carelessly
listed below into effect today, and you’ll save heat. A nd when you
left open— may seem of small importance. Y e t multiply the many
save heat, you save fu el!
\
Save
heat these
12 easy ways and your will save itself I
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1. INSULATE AND
WEATHERSTRIP
2. SET THERMOSTAT AT
65 DEGREES OR LESS
3. LOWER TEMPERATURE
WHEN YO U ’RE ACTIVE
4. CLOSE OFF UNUSED
ROOMS OR FLOORS
5 . CLOSE BEDROOM
REGISTERS AT NIGHT
6. CLOSE BEDROOM
DOORS AT NIGHT
Heat escapes from even the best
house through glass, walls and
roof. Insulation, weather strip­
ping, storm windows and caulk­
ing of cracks do much to reduce
heat loss. I f you have these heat
savers . . . fine! I f you can have
them installed now, by all means
do so. But in any event continue
to practice the other heat-saving
suggestions listed here.
The W ar Production Board says :
“Set your heating thermostat at
not over 65 degrees.’’ If you
have non-automatic heat, get a
thermometer and use it as a
guide in controlling your heat.
Every degree above 65 means a
consumption of more fuel— fuel
that must be sated to help the
war effort. Wear more clothing
if you are chilly.
Less heat is required when you
are active around the house than
when you are sitting down. So
keep the temperature at less than
65 degrees during the day and in
the evening, too, if you’re active.
Don't maintain more than 50
degrees at night or when you are
away from home. Use no heat
when the outside temperature is
above 65 degrees.
I f you have a room— or even an
entire floor— which is not abso­
lutely essential for you to use
this winter, turn off the heat in
it and close it off from the rest
o f your house. The best thing
is to close off a room that is hard
to heat. In a 6- or 7-room house,
this type o f heat conservation
will save as much as 10% of
your winter’s fuel.
Develop the good habit of keep­
ing bedroom registers closed at
night. If there is a cold air reg­
ister in the bedroom floor, cover
it with a rug during the night.
Remember to close warm air
registers when you air out a
room. D on't leave th f windows
open longer than necessary.
Walla and furnishings chill rap­
idly— re-heat slowly.
Don’t cool your entire house to
bedroom temperature at night.
Close bedroom doors, and, as an
extra precaution, place rugs
against the bottoms of the doors
to prevent cold bedroom air
from leaking into the rest o f the
house. A reduction in the amount
o f night ventilation you have
will also help save precious hear,
especially in sever* weather.
7. CLOSE OUTSIDE
DOORS PROMPTLY
8. PULL WINDOW
SHADES AT NIGHT
9 . CLOSE OPEN
STAIRWAYS
10. CLOSE FIREPLACE
DAMPER TIGHTLY
11. MAINTAIN CORRECT
HUMIDITY AT ALL TIMES
12. DON'T USE OVEN
TO HEAT KITCHEN
When a door to the outside is
opened, a great deal o f heat
escapes from the house.
This winter, make
—
it a point— par­
ticularly with
children— to
open and
dose o u *
side doors
quickly.
Considerable heat is lost through
glass— and the more windows
in a room the greater
the loss. So always
draw shades
and drapes at
n i g h t and
even during
the day, too,
wh e r e v e r
possible.
Close open stairways with a
heavy curtain or temporary door
during cold weather. The heat
loss up them is particularly no­
ticeable. Fasten window catches
securely . . . an abundance of
cold w ind enters if sashes are not
held tightly against each ocher
and frame. Close basement win­
dows as well as any unnecessary
ventilator openings.
Close the damper when jo u r firc-
ace is not in use and stop heat
ss up chimney. See that it closes
tightly, too. If your fireplace docs
not have a damper, make a screen
of waliboard or plywood to fit
the opening. D on’t use furnace
and fireplace at same time. More
furnace heat is siphoned up the
chimney than is produced by a
grate fire.
A lower moist temperature is as
comfortable as a higher dry tem­
perature, because ary air evap­
orates the moisture from your
body rapidly, making you feel
chilly. Keep the humidifier in
your furnace properly filled at
all times. Unless you know that
your furnace is in topnotch con­
dition, have it inspected and
adjustments or repairs made.
The oven o f your range should
not he used to best your kitchen
at any time. If a large number of
people do thia, the demand for
gas may become so great aa to
endanger the supply to war in­
dustries. Using a range oven at
a heater is inefficient and short­
ens the life of your range. Re­
member, your present range may
b* hard to replace for some time
GAS
\
IS WAR
MATERIAL
Use it
s w a wo ruta
w a a to w * Tovar
wisely!
C
PORTLAND GAS & COKE COMPANY
This odvertlsament is published In t o o p e r a t i o n with t h e G o v e r n m e n t-I n d u s tr y te m p a ig n to " C o n se rv e Crltltol he to u rtei 1 er W a r " , through ta roful use of tomi, all, gas, w afbr,
elettrltlty, tammunltatlans and transportation — port of »fia National “ U ght Wat l e " prog ra m .