M/XI« il 29, I92H. TH K HILLABORO ÄRGU» » PAGE SEVEN 9 hereby notified and required to pre­ Mrs. II Thornton of Portland are ----- ' I R anthracnose resistant r<-d Classified Sells More sent the same, together with proper . living with Mr. and Mrs. Thornton, I seed. This seed often sells vouchers therefor, to the undersign­ Than Advertised City Market and Grocery who recently purchased the Strubb ax one dollar per pound, bu ed at the law offices of Hare, Mc- place. strain much in demand in Alear 4 Peters, in the Shut« Sav­ All Kinds of Fresh Groceries A 25-cent classified ad was Mr«. Fl ings bank building, at Hillsboro, parts of the middle west. and Vegetables run under For Sale—Livestock, Oregon, within six months from ,the for u few by F. W. Walch of near New- , Chehalem Mountain, March 29—| John R. Pubolx, Jr., !s planting a MRS. STRACHAN, Proprietor date hereof. mund (Joi I». Mr«. Tyler rx j The new road grade from Sain I guaranteed hardy red clover ton station in the issues of Telephone 691 11 «2 Third St. seed Hated this 1st day of March, pacts to la for Kit-.coty, Alberta, Otto’s corner to the Mountain Top from Ohio. This was obtained by . March 15 and 22 as follows: Arcmlr, IWiirrh 29 The data for lifter un 1928. oil'll visit with relu j school is ready for the county grad j tho county ugent through the Mich­ “For Sale—Five good milk the |>h' xoCiiil to lie given at the lives mid VIOLETTE SPRANER RODMAN, Plant Grafted Frenqnette Walnets •nd« in Oregon und which has been brought here. igan state farm bureau seed service cows.—F. W. Walch, 1500 fei^ Executrix of the Last Will and Grange Hull bus been art for Sat California. j Work with It will be started ax i department. Tertament of Kathrine M. Spra- and Non Sprouting Filbert«. A com­ south of Newton station.” , urday, April 7. The social I« being plete line of all nursery stocks, for ner, deceased. ' soon ax the weather is favorable. This ad sold six cows instead given ax a benefit for the Better The county agent still has left ¡ess money. Try our money saving Hare, McAlear & Peters, Mrs. E. P. .Smith was In Portland ten pound lot of Ohio seed, and one of five ax advertised. Ifoipea campaign. Every one lx in plan. Sines 1890. Seo M. Mohr, Attorneys for Administratrix. 1-5 i last week visiting her daughters, I vited. Music and duncing will bo ten pound lot of hardy req clover 1812 Osk street, Hillsboro: tele­ (leorge Gould Mexdamex feature« of the entertainment. The and Victor seed from Lakot county. Reduction in baseball gloves and phone 1611. CARLTON NURSERY Schmidt. xocial wax planned for March 21, » The county agent’s office has a <‘, r - I.'irir' Hardware 2tf CO., Carlton, Oregon. * ---------- À but has been postponed until April i Mr, and Mrs. Ira McCormick and few copies of the Agricultural Out­ Mountaindale, March 29. — The llodxoh i McCormick visited at the look for seventh. tor me the United united States; »tat- ; a also jMO a Mf. anfJ Mrg f. p Syverson, Lois The W. C. T. II. met at the Bank« Mountuiridale "500” club met J. A. 1 York home at Reedville Fri- f<-w copies of th« Oregon Agricul- and Doris Syverson, and Courtney Grange Hall Wednesday and will ut the home of Mrs. ('ass Wilson , day. turn! Outlook for distribution. Syverson «pent the weekend with continue to meet every Wednesday last Thurxiluy. Mrx. E. Moyer re-| Elxworth Davis, whose hom« I» at Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Traver at Red­ Overland Whippet Willys-Knight c. ived first prize, Mrs. Carl Jensen, until the quilts are finished. All mond, Wash. Bandon, stopped a few day« laut members are urged to bo present. second, and Mrx. Fred Jesse, con­ week with Fred Haynes on his way AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES — VALVE GRINDING Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Kelly of The Mrs. George Sheppard and Mrs. solation. Assisted by her daughter, home from Cochrane, where he had Dalles have spent the past week GREASING — BRAKE RELINING Miss Evelyn Clark, the hostes- Florence Tyler of Canada visited with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McMillan. Those been working in a logging camp. UNITED STATES TIRES friends and relatives at Forest Grove served a lovely luncheon. Miss Maxine Seller of Monmouth Miss Bernice Finigari has been pre ent Were Mcsdarne« Ed Moyer, over the week end. Hillsboro, Jan. 16. — This town | spent the week end at the McMillan visiting her aunt, Miss Emma Fini- Mrx. John Loftis lx 111 with In­ Fred Jesse, Harold Whatley, Carl gun, of Portland. claims one world’s record for 1927. I home. ( J< narn, I*. A. Qualls, Fred Bovee, flammatory rheumatism. Mrs. Eva Bridges of Hillsboro is Mrs. George Saxton is u house It may not be the kind that gets In Mabel Wright is quarantined with I Earl Hollenbeck, C. Dodson, L. B. Telephone 191 Main Street guest of her mother-in-law, Mrs. the books, but it is certainly unique. visiting with Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Hollenbeck, A. E. Willis, L. Hetrick, smallpox at the home of her six-I J. W. Merrill, a local farmer, owns Griffitts for a time. Lucy Saxton, of Hillsboro. ('laud Lyda, Grover Rogers, Claud ter, Hi Ru •! Lotti Mrx. Etta Haynes and two sons, three fillies, al! by the same sire, I Mrs. Sause and daughter and Mrx. Mrs. Harry Thornton fell and Williams, James .Muthiexen and Mixa Raymond and Duane, of Scholls which finished first, second and third 1 Carl Magnuson of Portland were broke her leg last week. Mr. and I ' Lena Taylor. Mr«. W. Walker and were dinner guests Friday at the respectively in every race they guests at the Max Berger home Mrx. George Moss of Bank« were started in as two-year-olds in 1927. j Sunday. | guexta, Mrs. J. Ibach. Jr., and Mrs. Deford home. Two of these fillies, A. V. M. and Tom Miller and Ray Haynes were Buford Deford visited Claud Ste­ W. Walker were taken in ax new I members. Mr«. Earl Eurl Hollenbeck vens at Newberg Thursday. They Altagale, he bred and raised him- fishing on the Sandy Friday, Mrs. They are three-quarter sis- ! Mr. and Mr», McDonald and fam- worked together in Ur tern Oregon self. I will entertain the club April 20. tors, being by the same fire, Cava- | ily of Aberdeen, Wash., have moved Mrs. Earl Hollenbeck of Moun- last fall. Miss Pauline Brash spent the lier Gale 2:08'4, and out of full onto the Bassett farm, taindule entertained a group of Miss Muriel Stein of Portland achool mates foz her daughter, Hel­ week-end with home folks in Port­ sisters, Bonnie Ansel and Lottie An­ sel (2) 2:14'4. The fillies were spent the week-end with her aunt en, last Friday honoring her 13th land. Mr. and Mrx. I). M. McInnis and foaled 12 hours apart on the same and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. W. P. birthday. All had a good time pluy- ing games, and - Mrx. Hollenbeck Miss Alice and Kenneth McInnis day. Both are roans. They were I Brtmks. Miss Stein is secretary to visited friends and relatives at Reed- broken together on the farm on Rev. Farnum of the council served a dainty lunch. from your grocer The Hnrmonica glee Hub of the ville^Sunday, including Mrs. J. A. April 1, 1927, and driven around1 Aurches. Mr. York and son Robert the country roads until June 2,: First German Baptist church of York. it is healthful Get your paint, varnish, enamel, when Mr. Merrill took them to Sa­ Portland gave an instrumental pro- were at Seaside clam digging. kalsomine, brushes, at Percy Long’s * lem. Ore., where they saw their first Come to us with the rough idea of the sort of home grain before a packed house at the Hardware. 2-tf | racetrack. North Plains K. I*. Hali Friday you want, and we will give you the most practical and NOTICE TO CREDITORS Mr. Merrill did all his own shoe- ' evening. least expensive suggestions for building. » ing, training and driving, except jack damrwood, prop, where they started against each In the County Court of the State of Deep frying fat may be clarified Oregon, for Washington County. ! other» He drove each of them in telephone 1821 by cooking a dozen slices of raw In the matter of the Estate of pared potatoci in it until brown and The recent supreme court deci­ its first winning race. Before the creamery building Kathrine M. Spraner, deceased. / «training the fat through double sion fixing the responsibility for all season started he also bought an-1 Notice is hereby given that the ' rhwsr cloth. accidents occurring at railroad grade 1 other Cavalier Gale filly, Gaily Ver-1 undersigned has been duly appoint­ - ----- - • crossings on the motorist, makes the non, out of Vesta Vernon. With ed by the above entitled court as Second and Washington Streets this trio he went |hrough the North- Executrix of the Last Will and Tes­ following information of interest. ti as tament of said deceased, and According to the Oregon State I west circuit, sweeping the first three Telephone 301 % L. P. Stranahan, Mgr. Motor association, the number of moneys in each of the two-year-old duly qualified as such. Now, therefore, all person • hav- railroad grade crossings on class 1 I divisions of the .Western Breeders’ ing claims agairtst said estate are ♦ Altagale won railroads, representing 91 per cent Journal futurities. of the steam railroad trackage in five races and took a record 'of A. V. M. won one race, this country, increased in 1926. 2:27H. .................. of 2:32, and Gail^ 1 Grade crossings to the number of taking a record You don’t have to write 1,184 were constructed on these Vernon took a heat record of 2:33. | roadagduring 1926, while the num­ These futurity races were the first letters, pay mail order fees ber eliminated was 1,158, of which two-year-old events tried in the or waste postage stamps only 195 were eliminated by ’the Northwest in many years, and they to save money on tires. were an unqualified success—at least separation of grade. from Mr. Merrill’s viewpoint. There Right here in town we were 16 original entries, so the pick­ have exactly you»size in ing of first, second and third by genuine one man could not have been- so easy as it sounds.—The Trotter and Pacer. By O. T. McWhorter In order to retain the clover seed CHAMBER AIDS You see what you’re get­ market in certain parts of the mid- ' IN EVENTS OF ting. You don’t have to die west, it will be necessary for ' NEIGHBORHOOD the Willamette Valley to specialize j wait for the tire. We put on the North American hardy strain ! * it on for you. And we’re of red clover, and to eliminate some . (Continued from ptge one) right here where you can depend on us to stand of the less hardy strains now being a general _____ entertainment to be given back of every tire we sell. grown in the valley stated George ' by the Scholls Woman’s club at the I R. Hyslop, of the Oregon Experi-I Scholls school Friday evening, April ment Station, recently at the farm 6. Last night the two committees / crops meetings held in the county, arranged a program for a Hillsboro The middle west is discriminating | grange benefit, and Dr. Lamkin, 30x31.. Cl. (’ord Oversize $8.00 against the less hardy Oregon Red chairman ..jatfr___ of — the — community ______ . rela- $13.95 32x4 SS. Cord clover seed as unsuited to their con- tioml „jifl, says that they are ready and 29x4.40 Balloon $9.45 ditiona. willing-to aid any community in the $15.20 31x5.25 Balloon a It is planned to certify or guar­ county. A school benefit April 20 antee the origin of certain hardy' at the Jacktown school was an­ All other sisee in proportion strains of red clover seed being! nounced Friday night. The Jack­ Come in - gel the price on your tise started in the county at the present I town program is to raise funds for — SOLD BY — ‘ time. kindergarten benches and table«. ON MAY 25, 1927, when Henry Ford first announced hto Fred Beach, of North Plains, has Install Electricity plans for making a new car, he announced also that he would purchased a small lot of Tennessee A sum of $102.40 was netted at the basket social at ^Rosedale Fri- continue to make parts for the Model T Ford. He said: Third and Baseline 1144 Third Street day night for which the two cham- ber committees put on a program ’’The Model T Ford car was a pioneer. It blazed the and took a group of Hillsboroites wwy for the motor industry and started the movement for * along. • Proceeds were used for electrical installations at the school. good roads everywhere. It broke down the barriers of Mrs. Emma Bryant, county school superintendent, in a short address, % * distance in rural sections, brought people in these sections said parents should not begrudge doser together, and placed education within the reach of their children educational facilities, even if they didn't have such op­ everycBie. We are still proud of the Model T Ford. If we portunities. Other program num­ bers: Robert Kelly, Hillsboro, vocal were not, we would not have continued to make it so long.’* solo; Mrs. J. F. Benn, Hillsboro, Fdt- twenty years, the Model T Ford led the automobile violin solo; Hugh Naldrett, Hills­ boro, vocal solo; Mrs. E. Lemmon industry and it still serves more people than any other auto­ and Miss Mary Santoro, dialogue; Arthur Moulton, Portland, vocal mobile. Over one-third of all the automobiles in use today solo, and Mrs. Myrtlr Hoffman, Hills­ Insure in are Model T Fords — an indication of the sturdy worth boro,^piano solo. Dr. Lamkin out­ lined the work of the commitfee of the car and its value to people in all walks of life the and the desire to bring the people j of the county into a closer working | world over. group. Robert Day of Beaverton t The Ford Motor Company will continue to make re­ was the auctioneer. The sale of 25 children's baskets —ahd placement parts for these cars "until the last Model T is went through in less than ten min­ Keep Your Money irf utes. Sixty-three baskets were sold, off the road.” That is a part of Ford service. That is what the highest at $6. Arthur Soren­ Oregon * Henry Ford meant when he said: "We believe that when a son, district school clerk, was in I.» CHARLES WALKER Saturday, and requested that the man buys one of our cars we should keep it running foe Agent appreciation of the community to General Insurance him as long as we can and at the lowest up-keep cost.” the chamber of commerce and others Phone 1732 1164 Third St. who helped, be expressed through. HIS attractive and practical home design won the $2,000.00 the paper. I Because of this policy a considerable part of the Ford first prise for Otho McCrackln. of Ifutchtnnon. Kansas. In the recent nation-wide architectural JR. manufacturing plants is given over to the making of parts fl competition sponsored by Washing­ ■3Ej 3E ton Chaptar of the American Insti­ for the Model T Ford. These replacement parts are made tute of Architects and offered by the West Coast Isimtior Bureau. of the same material and in the same way as those from Two hundred homo destrnors entered this competition, and co­ which your car was originally assembled. operating with the lumbermen of the Pacific Northwest, created a Make it a point, therefore, to see the nearest Ford dealer ear las of original and beautiful home designs Nt> rUXJR TIAN Wn will bo clad tn h.avo you call at onr office for copy of booklet, ’’I*r1ze Homos of Wort Coast Woods,” with amliltocts' sketches and construction suggestions for Ulis nnd cloven other prise win­ ning designs—also booklet describ­ ing tho abovo four woods. Pool-Gardner Lumber Co W 12« DT bring commercial health to a cit^. A conservative saver is more of a community asset than a reckless spender. Buy what you need and save what you can today, and you can buy what you want tomorrow! ) 1 sands of miles of additional service, and at the sama rima protect the money you have invested in your car. 0 ft OPEN A SAVINGS ACCOUNT TODAY SHUTE SAVINGS BANK F ord M otor C ompany r Detroit, Michigan “The Oldest Bank in Washington County” 3E X T w