The Hillsboro argus. (Hillsboro, Or.) 1895-current, December 08, 1927, Page 3, Image 3

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    DECEMBER ». 1927.
THE HILLSBORO ARGUS
PAGE THREE
i
Helvetia Ladies
Aid Bazaar Very
Profitable Event
Helvetia, Dae. 8,—Proceeds from
the Ladle*' Aid bazaar which was
held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Abe Youngvn. netted over |K0. The
ladle* disposed of all their article*.
Mr*. Marie Christner and Mr*. John
Gfeller entertained with .Swi»» yo-
dellng.
4
The sun condescended to shine on
Saturday afternoon when the Sun­
shine club held their bazaar. The I
ladies hail an unusually large as­
sortment of articles offered for sale
and sold nearly all of them. Mr.
Wharton auctioned off the article*
itnd 1160 was taken in. A concert
ATTENTION
FARMERS!
U. S. No. 1
Potatoes Wanted
Best cash prices paid for
Poultry and Egg*
of all kinds
Nobody ever turned down
See Us First
Steady hennery shipments
wanted
Joseph Fossati Co.
Wholesale Produce
Dealer* in
Poultry - Egg* - Potatoes
Veal — Onions
«
1120 Second Street
Pk.«. I631Y
*■» also given,
Burnham
furnished coffee for tin* lunch.
Mr*. II. E. Kchrau I* visiting her
parent*. Mr. and Mr*. Davidson.
Abe Hager ha* moved to the
Webster house neur the station.
Mr*. Heller returned to Portland
last week after an extended vi»it
with her daughter, Mr*. Dapp.
Mr*. Helen Skibbe motored to
Salem last week to visit her hua-
Imnd, who ia very ill.
Pete Lulich had to have a piece
of bone removed from hl* cheek last
week, a* u result of having hi* face
frozen while in Ala*ka.
Revival Meetings
Being Conducted
The Itev. I). I,. Fenwick of Port­
land 1« conducting revival meetings
nt the Free Methodist church at
Fifth nnd Oak street«. Evangelist
Fenwick is said to be bringing a
|
'
Methodist Bazaar and
Dinner on Wednesday
I
I
The ladies of the Methodist
church will hold a bazaar and cook­
ed food sale in the basement of the
church next Wednesday, beginning
at 12 o'clock. There will be aprons
and fancy work for sale, Come and
let us show you something that you
will like. For those who have a
sweet tooth there will be home­
made candy. Mrs. Santa Claus will
be there at 4 o'clock with toys to
sell to the children. We invite all
the little people to come and buy
a toy. Dinner will be served from
6:30 to 7. Adults, 60 cents; chil­
dren, uruler 12 years of- age, 26
cents. Every one is invited.
i
stirring gospel message each eve­
ning to the people.
The Rev. J. N. Wood, pastor of
Kamuel Arthur Frrar, 83, dir<i the church, extends an invitation to
Friday at hi* home at F<>re*t Grove all to attend these services.
and wa* buried Monday in the For­
est View cemetery. Mr. Frrar was
a Civil war veteran, and came to Motorist Has to
Forest Grove only a year ago. The
Observe Lanes of
widow, Mr*. Margaret Frear, a son
and a daughter survive. The daugh­
Motoring Traffic
ter, Mr*. A. Benjamin, lives at For­
est Grove.
Traffic lanes are new, novel and
A 1 I community correspondence interesting, as well as being slightly
should bo in the newspaper office intricate. The Hoover conference
by Tuesday.
tf recommended them, the traffic de­
partments of many cities are strong
for them and the Oregon State Mo­
tor association, in conjunction with
the other groups forming the Ore­
gon Automotive conference, brought
them to the attention of the last ses-
. *ion of the legislature of Oregon.
The legislature passed the follow­
ing law on the subject: “8 (a) Ex-
i cept as otherwise provided in this
section, the driver of a vehicle in­
tending to turn to the right at an
intersection shall approach such in­
tersection in the lane for traffic near-
SAMUEL A. FREAK
hand side of the road want* to turn
to the left and the man on the left
ha* just the opposite idea.
Another advantage of thia rule 1*
that the man turning to the left ia
out of the way quicker, thus per­
mitting through traffic to go ahead
in the left lane of the street into
which the turn has been made.
The illustration accompanying this
article shows the exception referred
to in paragraph 8(a) rather than
the rule there laid down. The ex-
caption, paragraph 8 (b) of the
rules of the road, provides that local
authorities may modify the rule re-
quiring vehicles in the left lane to
travel to the right of the center of
the intersection by clearly indicating
by marker* (the circles in the illus­
tration) the course to be followed
by vehicles turning thereat. These
markers are to be placed as near the
center line of the street where it
meets a prolongation of the prop
erty line as possible.
Actual tests have shown that
where a vehicle is driven beyond
one of these property line markers
and turned obliquely so that it will
pas* beyond a similarly set marker
on the street into which a turn is
being made, such turning can be
made with greater speed and safety
to all concerned than if the yehicle
is compelled to pas* beyond the cen­
ter of the intersection.
The provision of green feed in
laying houses in Oregon is impor­
tant as some of the birds in the
flock will not go outside for it.
Indisputable Answer
The word halitosis lay buried in the widely “read
dictionary of the English language scores of years,
until set in ordinary type in an advertisement, it be­
came a by-word of the millions.
As a result, a product forty years on the market
with moderate sales, became a world leader. Bad
breath became almost a fashion.
On the other hand, yeast was merely to make
bread with — until Fleichmann advertisements said
otherwise. Now we gain fair skins, robust health, cure
ourselves of many of the common ills of mankind, and
even look forward hopefully to eternal youth because
of it.
All this has been brought about by advertising, and
it must be regarded as Simon-pure advertising.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT
In the County Court of the State of
Oregon for Washington County.
In the matter of the Estate of
Mary E. Horstmann, deceased.
Notice is hereby given, that the
undersigned, duly appointed Admin­
istratrix of the above named estate,
has filed in the above entitled court
and cause, her final account and re­
port as such, and the Court has
fixed the 6th day of January, 1928,
at the hour of TO o’clock a. m. of
said day, and the court room of the
above entitled court in Hillsboro,
Oregon, as the time and place for
hearing objections to said final ac­
count, and fo? the final settlement
of said estate.
Dated this 7th day of December,
1927.
IDA STURM.
Administratrix of the estate of
■aid deceased.
Hare, McAlear & Peters,
41-45
Attorneys for Administratrix.
All advertising has its basic selling stories, "not in
the headlines, but in the text of the ads, and readers
have to read that text to be “sold.” This stands as
an indisputable answer to the question, “Is Advertis­
ing Read?”
$
:---- —
Basket Ball Keds
a iot
Crepe Soled Bals
Tv***
eat to the right-hand side of the
highway, atid in turning shall keep
as closely as practicable to the right­
hand curb or edge of the highway,
and when intending to turn to the
left shall approach such intersection
in the lane for traffic to the right of
and nearest to the center line of the
highway, and in turning shall pass
beyond the center of the intersec­
tion, passing as closely as practicable
to the right thereof before turning
such vehicle to the left’’
In other words, when one ap-
proaches a corner intending either
to turn to the left or right, the ve-
hide is guided into the lane of traf-
I fic on the side which one desires to
turn. .By this means traffic can be
speeded up as double lines of traffic
can be run along the street without
the usual corner congestion which re­
sults when the man on the right-
Good Goods
HILLSBORO, OREGON
Genuine Springsteps !
Built-in cushion and
arch; no jars to the
heel and foot; rein-
forced throughout.
Brown—
Sale Prices Will Continue
$3.75
On Items In Last Week’s Event
While They Last
A long-wearing, light
weight, athletic shoe;
white trimmed in
black; 6 to 10—
Talking Dolls Ladies’ Coats Reduced 25%
New Styles in Sport and Dress Materials!
Formerly marked low, but at the new price
ALMOST A GIFT!
33 1-3% Off On AH Millinery
An opportune time to get a new Hat. The
selection is good, and the styles are of the
latest!
DON’T DELAY!
With the advent
of colder weather
Stock will require feed containing a higher Carbo­
hydrate content, if proper production is to be main­
tained. CORN furnishes this highly desirable food
element, so more of it can be fed to good advantage.
»
Both our DAIRY and POULTRY FEEDS are milled to furnish
PROTEIN and CARBOHYDRATES in proper proportion.
That's
why scores of feeders are getting highly satisfactory results.
A complete assortment to
suit any taste; new pat­
terns—
50c, 75c, $1, $1.25
The Poll Parrot shoe peo-
pie are putting out this
doll as an advertising
feature. When your pur­
chases here reach $10.00
you get a doll for 99c;
regularly sold for $3.00;
long hair; 25 inches in
height.
Don’t buy feeds just because they are cheap! ! To build FOOD
the kind of a
VALUE into feed requires certain ingredients. Get
C
blend you want and then buy as cheaply as consistent with prevail-
ing markets. It pays in the long run.
We mill a feed for every feeding purpose and they cost no more
than most of the ordinary mixtures—because—we buy our raw ma-
terials right, therefore can sell right.
Rogers Silverware Premium Tickets distributed
to our customers. They are worth saving!
Imperial Feed & Grain Co
Telephone 511
745 Second Street
Christmas Boxes
Any Man Can Use
Sox
Assorted sizes and de­
signs; from 2x4 inch up
to 9x12 inch; selling
from—
Theme Hose
We have the best values we
have ever seen ; beautiful
new patterns—
Nothing more practical or
more appreciated than Silk
Hose; no better made than
Theme—
50c and $1.00
$1.50, $1.65, $1.95
5c to 12c
Slippers for the Whole Family
Real
Leather
Purses
A great variety of styles and colors at excep­
tionally low prices—
Price starts at_____
Lingerie
Gifts
Pure Silk Crepe
de Chine
Dance Sets
$3.50
•
rich, practi­
cal gift and un­
usual values;
hand made.
Gowns at $6.00
Rayon Vests at
98c
Bloomers at
98c and $1.89