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About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (May 29, 1903)
THE W A S H IN G T O N C O U N T Y N EW S . FOREST GROVE, OREGON, MAY 29 Page Eight D ER W A L D ’ S ” THE BAZAAR Forest Grove, Oregon tia* cen btlected as distributing point for Washington and Yamhill Counties for the famous Wheeler Wilson Sewing Machines <8b The manager of The Bazar, Mr. K. N. Staehn. has received Instructions to sell T h e First T e n Machines at $10 Discount Ea. r»ih i»D V n rr l)f > D a in tie r nr M ore ta ztb lm K atlettiff. 3 y calling at once or writing to Mr. K, N. Staehn, you are sure to J. P. Wagner. Hines & Wagner’s Dili Store An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, but we sell in either small or largo quantities, and can furnish either. Prevention That's having medicine CURE handy to ( Your physician prescribes what you check sickness at Its first symptoms, need, but his efforts will be vatu un- Standard remedies whose worth has less you get the proscription filled by been tested, at right pricess. wise keep them on hand. The a competent pharmacist, from fresh We sell drugs. That's our description. You'll them; had rather sell than keep them, j save money and gel the best. P ER F U M ES, SOAP, T O I L E T A R T IC L E S , for your use. Cost low—worth high. floods that are good, bought You wouldn’t image the worth tl'l you see them. Don’t Forget ! Come in Anyway Hines & Wagner’s Drug Store Forest Grove Oregon Don’t Forget' Peterson Kelsey’s M E A T MARKET Fish for summer eating, fresh and fine meats—the kind you Ilka to sat, full of Juicy excellence and tender enough for any one. all kinds. Cared meats of Beef, pork and mutton. Best lard at lowest good-lard prices. _ r Main S t . Thone your order. Prompt delivery 1» any p«rt o t the city, F orest G rove K llit-I Snayth anil H er Ilf-m n rU - a b le A e h ie v e iu e u t. Surely fashion never devised any thing daintier or more enticing than An interesting event of the musical the materials now offered for und In season of 1!KI3 1ms tn-on the perform the shirt waists for the season. Linen ance for the first time in America of is produced in styles of weave and de j Miss Ethel M. Smyth's opera, "Per grees o f coarseness, roughness and also Wald" ("The Forest”). Thus it cannot delicate fineness never before thought of. The linen knlckerliocker effect Is be longer said that no woman has ever entirely new and makes up Into suits composed u successful opera. More with the blouse Instead of shirt waist. over, a distinguished musical critic said This comes in severul shades and col xf It after Its liist night In New York, ors and looks exactly like wool knick- "To the opera's credit. It can be said that discussion of it may proceed upon the broad plane of contemporary mu sic without reference to sex or nation ality ." This is very good, considering it was written by a man concerning u wom an's musical composition, which gener ally receives more sneers than pats on the back from masculine critics. In deed. even In tills case the critic, like a man. Involuntarily claims what is best In the opera—that Is, the style of be one of the lucky ones. , The machines are sold on easy terms and fully warranted to gt\e perfect satlafaction. Old machines taken as part payment. Dr. C. E. Ulne M iss COM POSER. N E W W A IS T S F O R W A R M B A Y S . ft FAMILY WOOING C H A R L E S E. NINES, M. Physician and Surgeon. j Office over Hines & Wagner's Dru” Store, Mucdun* passed over his coffee cup Forest Grove, Oregon. for the second time aud helped himself to a third biscuit from tbe enveloping C. L. LARGE, M. D., folds of the napkin on the tuboret. The gas log was purring cozily. Aro Physician and Surgeon. ma of the rich Java berry permeated the room. The soft light threw shad Diseases of women a spocia ty. ows, the kind In which Cupids love to nest. Forest Grove, Oregon. The room itself was one of those dream places calculated to woo a bach elor away from his sordid self—silky E. B. RE N T2, M. D„ curtains, delicately tinted walls, books Physician and Surgeon. that looked us if they had rare tales to tell und chairs that Invited with arm« Office over Abbott's Jewelry Stör«. outstretched. (Roth ’phones.) Macdune inhaled the fragrant atmos phere of content and was happy. With forest Grove, Oregon. out Intending to make an Inventory he l . l , La ngley. permitted his eyes to wander from one W. M. Langley. thing to another. His glance eventual L A N G L E Y A SON, ly gravitated to the girl. Ah. here was AUorurjr» ami Counselors at Lai the piece de resistance! What other ' Notaries Public Upstairs could have worn so pretty a gown or , Real Kstatt* and Wagner B ill* worn a pretty gown so well? Who but Conveyancing Fores a genius feminine could have arranged every fold nnd flounce just where It J. N. H O FFM AN , would most favorably set off tbe charm ing figure? Miss Wright was looking at him Attorney sno Counselor at liaw. and tbe victory, almost complete, wu.i Upstairs, Caples Block. won by her eyes, like masked batteries behind the drooping lashes. He asked Forest Grove, Oregon. u hesitating question that brought a reasonably prompt reply. The coffee W. H. Hollis. Earl B. Hfewks urn and the gas log blinked knowingly H O L L IS A H A W K S, at one another. Four months from the day that Mac- LAWYERS dune went from the golf links into the Rt-al Estate and Corporation Law Sped Hies Wright home for u bit of conversation Office over Hines & and u sip of coffee he was riding west Wagner’s Drug Store Fores Grove ward with her on a Pullman, looking happy indeed. C I T Y BARBER SHOP, Mrs. Macdune beamed over tbe din ing car table at him. She poured the A. J. Wirtz. coffee and plunged a sugar loaf Into Laundry Agency. its umber bath with a merry little Ba^hs- smile aud ail air of domestic proprie Pacific Avenue, Forest Grov torship. “ Claire,” he said, "do you know that little luncheon over tbe gas log that C. E. GEIGER, M. D„ October afternoon was one of the Homeopathist Physician and Suf^eor things that convinced me you were the Office, over Wescott's Store* signpost pointing me along life's high way? The coffee and the flaky biscuit, Residence, east of M. E. Chur ut h. you know. I thought any girl who Forest Grove, Oregon. could set a little repast like that was worth a prince's ransom.” DR. R. NIXON, The bride thoughtfully snapped a few bits of rice from her traveling hat. Here was a strong temptation to be Dentist. met and conquered and she only three hours a wife! Forest Grove, Oregon. “Jack,” she said at last, “ my sister Edith made that luncheon. I am so MISS ROSA GERRISH, sorry. I know no more about cooking than I do about Arizona politics.” Fine Dressmaking Fitting and Clittli ■Tack laughed reassuringly. ” 1 was going on to sny that the cook Call and see me At ing was a comparatively small matter. Dr. Nixon's reellem -. Forest qjr.i You see. the pretty little den was ar ranged with such exquisite taste. I M. L NOBLE. knew a girl who could hang those pic tures In Just those places would make The Most Successful Real Estate i in Washington County. any mau on earth a wife worth hav Reliable in all his dealings, ing.” She looked out of the window. A farm s. City Property. Houses Ran Office west Brick Livery Bari . haze obscured the flash of forest and Forest Grove, Oregon. meadow, and when she turned to him again her lip was trembling. But hon MILLS & HINES, I esty won again. “ Oh, Jack, I am awfully sorry! My Expert Horse Shoers, sister Flo arranged that room while I 25 years’ experl was tn Buffalo last spring. They all say my taste Is despicable when It Next door north Buxton's Mai comes to arranging things." Shop. Forest Grove. Macdune seized her hand. “ Forget what I said. It was only J. T. BUXTON, foolishness. You know, Claire, that the real motive was yourself; your General Blacksmithlng, gowns too. Why, Claire, you are the Farmers' work a special envy of all the girls In town. How could a plain old peasant like me fail Forest Grove. to fall head over heels In love with you?” J. B. MATTHEWS, “ Jack, don't; oh. don’t!” she pleaded. “ Gh, Jack, my sister Ethel makes all Artistic Paperhanger and Painty my gowns and plans them too." Haring indulged in the brutal care Varnishing. Sign lessness of being specific, Macdune work a specialty. Forest Of would have protested that he loved her for herself, her personality, her sweet R p sympathy, her smile, her voice, but he M. F. Nixon feared she would arise and say. "Alas, THE NIXON FOREST they, too, are all borrowed!” Here h" GROVE LAND CO. was, a poor man, wedded to a girl who could neither cook nor sew. Good Frmers, Large and Small 1 “ It seems. Jack,” she said after a dence and Business Property. Tin painful silence, "that you have married my sisters by mistake.” 8he made a Lands for Sale. Loans negotli pathetic attempt to smile. Main Street, Forest Grove. The tear In her voice melted him com pletely. J. J. WIRTZ, “ Claire!” he exclaimed. “ I feel like a prisoner at the bar," Confectionery, Cigars and To she hurried on. "The charge is obtain bacco. Fancy Soft Drinks, Ice ing a husband under false pretenses. I must assure tbe Judge and jury that Cold Soda Water. the only thing I can do Is to say I am Fine New Ice Cream Parlor. penitent and promise to make restitu tion. I shall learn to cook better than Forest Gruí Sister Edith, sew better than Sister Ethel and hang pictures better than J. S. BISHOP, M. D. Bister Flo.” Jack brought bis Judicial fist down Physician. •n the table. “The prisoner Is discharged.” he said. Office Hours; 1 to 2 a. m. 2 to 5 p. It was only the other day that Clairs Caples Building, Forest Grove. won first prise at a housekeepers' exhi bition. FREDERIC A. SMITH. (C opyright. 1902. by T. C. M cC lure.] erhocker suiting. Linen Is so well liked that one finds it In every quality and every degree of shade from the natural M I S S S M Y T H B IN G IN G A T T H E P IA N O . flax to the bleached batiste, which Is (F rom a d r«w ln n by John S. Sargent. R. A.] so fine that it Is a wonder It Is ever wo ven. Many beautiful and dressy bouse composition and Its basic philosophical frocks are made of pure white linen and Intellectual Ideas—us “ masculine to In such weave as best pleases the wear an astonishing degree.” From the in er. They are trimmed with rather tellectual standpoint praiseworthy, heavy lace In ereani and sometimes therefore they must be “ masculine!” even In butter color. The liuens are which leads one to observe once more shown In all the season's best colors, that there Is nothing small al>out the and they are fast, so that the wearer male mind when It conies to claiming need not fear to put us much trimming things. Miss Smyth Is English born and rear as she will on them. The tints are blue, pink, heliotrope und sulphur yel ed, the daughter of a British artillery low. These are all beautiful when general. The military social set into which she was born Is one of the most trimmed with lace. Lace In small separate figures called conventional among all mankind in its medallions Is set along the front fold notion of what is proper for a well on yokes and among tucks wherever born and bred “young female.” So they seem called for. They are very Ethel Smyth found It when, nspirlng dainty and are used on so many of the and longing, feeling within her a grow waists and skirts that It would be un ing Impulse of power which she must express or die, she at the age of twelve profitable to mention them In detail. A long list of materials especially announced to her family that she was adapted for waists for summer are going to Leipsie to study music. The little girl's family checked her, shown, und it seems that nearly every thing is mercerized. Tills means that meddled with her natural longings ami the fabric has been made frosty and sought to kill them. Her work, ad lustrous by some treatment with silicu mirable as it Is, shows trnees of ground to an Impalpable powder. It is Urundyish interference. It is colorless certainly handsome, but so far as my In the passages where It should be experience goes will not survive the warm and passionate, the critics say. laundry. So let whoever buys It be as though the young woman could not careful and keep it out of the water. burst her stays and be entirely natural Everything, even the stiff swlss mus and full in her expression of what lins, is mercerized. The new silk and Mrs. General Gruudy disapproved. linen batistes are exquisite. They Btlll the young lady's opera is so strong show lacy lines and lines where there and musical in other ways that the are swivel woven blossoms In natural critics may forgive this defect. She colors on a natural grass tint. Silk will probably learn better In time. Ethel Smyth was persistent She and cotton woven together make an other very delicate and dainty fabric, kept declaring over and over again for the most part in tints with Pom that she Intended to study music nnd compose music as well. It required padour figures. Quite a number of the light materials ■even years to overcome the family. have a border of embroidery woven Then the girl went her way to Lelpslc along the edge so that It can be utilized rejoicing. The seven years, however, as trimming. Some materials are were not wholly lost, for she developed shown With quite wide stripes of open a fine, graceful physique through exer work like lace or embroidery, and be cise In doors and out. She is fond of golf, horseback riding and dancing. tween them the plain linen. The Smyth family gave her permis Shirt waists are made of all of these and many more, but the shirt waists sion to remain In Lelpslc a year. By of this season are marked by neater ef that time they believed the nonsense fects than they were—that Is, they are would be taken out of her and she built more compactly. Few of them would be willing to return home and have that ugly and obstreperous exten take tbe round of life suitable to any sion to go under the belt. These have well regulated army girl. But she did the finish of a belt, and very many not return at the end of a year. She waists have a snug lining stiffened remained lu Lelpslc, on the contrary, with featherbone, which washes like four years, studying with enthusiasm. She began musical composition while cord. Almost every waist has the bishop there. Leading performers In the city sleeves, with cuffs narrow or deep, as of music gave at different times a suits the wearer best. Many have yoke string quartet and a violin sonata by effects and are trimmed as fancy dic her. After Lelpslc the girl still re tates, but In a close and neat manner. fused to drop Into nonentity, but con All have high collars more or less orna tinued working In Dresden, Munich mental. Quite a new fancy is to have and Florence for severul seasons. Then a yoke In a sort of berths shape, with she studied la Borne, whither she still long, pointed ends which reach down Journeys from time to time to breathe like the front of the bodices In the pic In the thrilling atmosphere of art and tures of Queen Elisabeth The blouse music lu Italy. It la Interesting to note that It was a shape Is modified somewhat and the point tn front Is accentuated. One man, and a musical authority at that, made In this style was of soft pale blue too, one with a contempt for woman In loulslne silk. The yoke was tucked musical composition, who first suggest across and the berths had two rows of ed to the girl to write an opera. He fine Insertion and a narrow ,-dgtng to was Herman Levi. During her years matek. Medallions of lace were set all of schooling Ethel Smyth had been around the bertha and on the stock. writing symphonies, sonatas, a mass Tbs sleeves to this came but to the el and chamber music with more or lesa bow. It Is Intended for a dressy occa success She herself playa her own MAYNE A B B O TT H e D id n 't O e t t h e T a r t . sion. The belt and'bands around the compositions with rare skill and pow Graduate of Parson's Horologieal In A well known novelist tells an amus sleeves were of dark, green velvet An er. One day Herman Levi heard bar ing story o f his father, an English rec other pretty waist of chiffon foulsnl play and said to her: atitute. tor, and 8lr Henry Thompson, tbe sur was open in front like s veet and the “ You must write an opera." EXPERT OPTICIAN. front was closely tucked and of s shade She has now written two. She her geon end authority on food. Sir Henry was called In and prescribed a certain Byes tested and fitted lighter than the silks In the embroidery self composes both music and words. which ran down each side. The waist The first opera was “ Fantaste;” the diet. particularly warning the patient Forest Grove, Ore. had sleeve rape; so did another made second la “ Der Wald.” which was re against apple tart, for which tbe rever Of figured silk. This bad a simulated ceived with favor tn Covent «larden. end gentleman had a great partiality. BALDWIN A KINO, yoke outlined by a skillful application London, before It was brought to Amer “ Oh, but, 8lr Henry,” pleaded the pa tient, "mayn't I bare a little—Just on Real DaUte Exchange. •f lore and medallion. One pleasing ica. Its leading Idea Is from Schiller's Sunday 1 We always have it for dinner •»yle kas fuckt along the shoulders linen: Choice Homes and Lands In every par then.” “Sir.” replied 8lr Henry In se and down the outside of the sleeve«. Art thou afra id o f d s a th f Doet desire te <4 the County. vere tones, “do you Imagine that your While three embroidered straps add to live fora v sr? stomach 1« any different on Sunday Pacific Are., off Church Square. U n la the s h o t s ! W hen thou art || M will «a d e r a from what it la on other days? Good H K K E l t T T B R0US3KAC. Forest Oro»- morning “ —Loodeo Outlook. MARCIA CAMPBELL.