Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1903)
HILLS tenir ews W ILL FRENCH, A U STIN JOIK) ms l ia LT S. S. CDS VLN- 1400—G eoffrey Chaucer, the poot, dlcfi U\ O F F IC I A L P A P E R O F T H E C I T Y O F F O R E S T G R O V E . eonneeiion with lh< I Ixl>KI*KXI i k n t I liHve Imd iiittny. ii'v-l pltH-mii sssoeiHlion-, yet liier* By Mrs. JOHN A. LOGAN c ]() MEN W O M E X DRESS FOJI M EN O il WOM T.N’ ? There i* no doubt that women dress principr.llv to please men, but ill tlie same time they try to avi Id the criticism o f women, who art- sure to pick flaws in each other’s attire if there is the lightest f.mudution upon which to base their critic;-m*. SI, ME W'O.ME.N H A V E T H E H A D T A S T E T O IM A G IN E T H A T A DM IK E “ STI X X I X G C L O T H E >” i f gaudy coh n and evening decollete gowns. This is a very givnt mistake. .Most mei ere cluw iui d by quiet colors and by mode, tv in d..- ■ . I'iiev arc i’a' ini.u^^P'ly to comment upon the style and perfectiou o f tlm lit o f : g n w t liim upon its texture and color. Mr B iwman spuke on “ The Biid SIMPLICITY OF DRESS, AFTER ALL, ATTRACTS THE ATTEN a the Sunday Hchiad.” It'V. J. V TION ANiJ ADMIRATION OF BOTH MEN AND WOMEN, AND ONE lilligan, D I) of Portland Ireat*'• WONDERS W H Y SOME WOMEN MAKE S'JCH AN EFFORT TO OUT he opic “ H om i U i p a r m e i t ami ; SHINE OTHERS IN THE GORGEOUSNESS OF THEIR COSTUMES AND thè Cradle Itoli,” ahuwing how DAZZLING BRILLIANCY OF THEIR JEWELRY. hrough their iiistruinentality, per In ittc;.ii hi to one’s appearance— S L O Y E L 1 X E S S IX W’ O j J- *ona bave been hrought inlu Ilo- S»! alti 8 hool and ehurcli. I le atrongly ¡’ \ . in p adouahlc and J l ’ S T L Y E X C IT E S D IS G U S T , K S l’ E- irged all achools who h-ive not thè*, f'lA L i. V IX -M EX, while a well dressed woman is the admiration epartmeut* io adopt Ihem at onci ■1 all men o f ;•'linem“ iit, and when a woman is heard to complain An Intcresting 1 1 leation Box wa* .lull her Ini-hand admires another woman on account o f her good ■ indulti d hy thè Coni ty Preaiderd Ri le ; ini .- yli.-h <l>vs you may lie sure that she i* careless o f her own 't»*v, A II hiuson, and Ihe wotk f . ¡ c a u l C A N N O T E X P E C T T O W IN H A C K 11 IS A D rgai ■/. tlon waa cumuliteli hy tir» i i'tl'in of Helen* S J dii a. n a* *i e- MI K A T IO X m ii¡1 she makes an appearance equally attractive ai- e iry and irea*urer f r h dia'rie-. that o f her rival. The old adage that ‘'fine feathers make tiui Il -pri *enalivea were pre*enl fron Die : ■ is not. alwa s strictly true, but the plumage is an addition, al! early all Ihe acliool* in thè «li*»rif being ecind. My theory i* that A L L W O M E N S H O U L D DRESS ’he convention closed wiih a hynn AS W E L L AS T H E Y C A N consistent with their mean* und » ! a ad thè la r.edic ¡un. "Where Rolls the Oregon." | natural province is Hillsboro and 1 he Lewis and Clark Centennial and the county seat happenings, news American Pacific Exposition, ' equally in demand among the oiti- Furtland, 1995. j /.ens o f Washington county but in no way encroaching upon the pr< • iu ml ws itKAm:its. [ serves of the other. Every eflort „ . . ,1 will lie exerted to make each grow The change nitimated last week 1 . . . . . , . , , , along its own line as fast and as far is probably best explained by tlie * . , . , , . . , as energy and enterprise can ac- clippmgs below trom this week s .... ..... . e _ . . . .... eomphsli. 1 he two papers will Hillsboro Independent. J he ever- . . , ,r , , ,, . neither he counterparts nor one increasing business of the Portland! .. . . , , I lie shadow of the other but those printers, which had kept them una- , .. . . . , ,, , whose mimes are on both subscrip- ble to get out work punctually, has . ... , . , .. , ■ , , , . i tion list* will find no otner change been complicated with labor troub- , , , . . . . ... apparent than lhat a lessened “ “ les and a shorter working day,while . . .. . . . 1 j reuse by the combination o f the me the demand upon them seemed to .fidili en, I ( chanical departmen s will make ] k > s lentil of ■It flVi • o » be growing all the time. Excuses (Il ou eoe. sible some improvements in et.c'\ ' for delay would not remedy the dif The Independent office is in the! Died h i h'UiiH “ l hi* mu' her, M ik ficulty, and so no mention has been Crandall block, Hillsboro, anti tlieie X ne\ J di iihuii , of ii«*nr Glencoe, Jel- made, although the management the people o f Hillsboro and the r.-on Johnson, Hgtd -U year*, A was keenly aware o f the discomfort county will always be welcome I f in.nth* ami alx'cpn »lays. He bail to its patrons when they were dis you have news, it will Ire glad y ecu fal'n g lor «bout Ibrec year* appointed in the arrival of '1 lie heard, if you want printing, here is ill hnl uni been eoi tl ied to III* be News on its promised day. til Ihe Hat two uvi k*. mid on Fri the best equipment in the county The present arrangement solves • y allt riiooli O . Hi, at Iwelvi for good work which will be deliv the problem, but in no way alters ii,ii'tea of two lie i xpioil II* ered promptly and done at a rea the character o f The News, whose i luen al waali'-lil ii. Ihe M E el urcl son able price from a card to a big office will continue to be in the A b i hi* place, It v. Mr. Wilkins, ol poster. Ami when in any way the bott Building, Forest Grove. The orneli u* i tli"outing. iuh riucni interests of Hillsboro or vicinity can va* in the II irrison grave yard. 11- change in printing place has neces Ire advanced, there will not be lack •avi-a a large circle of friend* an" sitated an immense amount o f e x i(jg an active,, presistent advocate 'Mowing brother* ami ais’ors n tra work for the printing for -e, who in its oldest paper which (or a iniurii hi* death. Mr*. Alherl llab, have been handicapped I y having third o f a century has been fore I Odamlcr, Wa*h . Mr*. Frank Hoi the machinery overh aV H at the mi'i, of B Mirny, Mr*. Ida Beilin but ______________ the reducing s a m e time, ____ , ___ „ o . f the .... | mosl 1,1 championing its cause. , r, Frank William and It , Iph John regular eight page issue to six this A TL'IM l.\ IIIE i(0All n, week affects mainly the publisher, Fdlie r 1)-*iin rai*, wlm*p ili-iagree who has cut out nearly two pages With the l»ginnirig rrf Iltis veeel nei.t with the new Bi*hnpnl K siern ot advertising. It seems hardly •uv eonneetlirn witli the I x i r PKN Oregon al Biker C (‘y w'aatheau'j o HUNT eetiW. Mr. Freneh o W »sh worthy o f notice, but lest some may •f *“veral sensational new*paper *to ifigton County N -ws in*il" m » m r ml see a conflict in the statements here •'P*, now i If. r* to drop the cod ' o - given with those published by a lo vsnliigenu-1 hii < Iler Ihnt I did in t 'hink ¡1 gootl |n<|iey in ihclii.e i» . veray if Archl'iahop Chri lie will tip cal paper in an alleged interview oim him to aa good a |a>aitinn in VoiimcT men will emitinuo the « n ' l with Messrs Gault and French, it I I tank up eh ven y “«rs ogo . BGnp .Vealern Oregon a* hi* Biker City may be said neither gentleman ever •arUll. The ilemenled si-t r when ! »outrifer mul truiued puhlitliers th») authorized any such statements as * ill Im rinle Io »Io niori« u ill.oic ie i i * i - b d on kteping with h n were printed there. g*in*l the inalruetion of hiasuperio; vorkieg so Imrd . DSOEIt SE IV MANAGE HEX I'. —----- • WOMEN DRESS EOR MENS EYES C R A I G , EOITOR. Trio Sunclny School Convenlii n i the Hillsboro District was belli in t Issued Every Friday in the Year M. K. Church, lu lliilsnoro, O.jl. H i , # 1 .0 0 a Y e a r Office in Abbott Building 'tud was opeot il wiili alevo'lniml ex <rcUe*, c nidiicted by M r C. T ilb u r». Mrs K O . Crandsll pteriiliil. FOREST GROVE MAIN STREET, : : Many valuable soirg- ations wer. made by Mrs. 1‘erkins on “ U n w l> Entered as Second-Class Matter July Correspondence is desired from every , . , reach and hold children for the Hun neighborhood in Washington county. j 20, 1903, at the postofflee at 1 orest Staniii s,' addressed envelopes are day school. H'V. Mr A uirneriuai drove, Oregon, under the Act of furnished regular correspondents, spoke on 'he “ Il lation of the |*a«Mr Congress of March 3, 1879 . Teachers' reports are wanted and 1 •u thè Sund iy Schoul” . Afleran ex Business Communications should be clergymen are urged to give notice addressed to the proprietor. of their service* and physicians to •'elicili and t omi'itili lunch had r»< r report their cases. Mail so as to «ervod al thè noon-honr by ih* l*dti* Matter for Publication should be dl reach Forest Grove not later than f Hillahoro, llm busineaa of Ihe Con reded “ Editor Washington County Thursday morning. News." ,n Writing for The News use only one ventimi wa* resumed at I ;)<) o’eloek Advertising Rates: Display, CO centr side of the paper ami write length Fir*t ea ne a ali.ut *o'>g S e r v i c e , then an inch, single column, for four in wise of the sheet. About 0x9 Is the ltrv. Mr. Corrati gave an ad.lri -* o< sertlons; reading notices, always most convenient size for the copy- •K**enllal Puiiii* in tlie Sinulay starred (•). one cent a word each holder of the typesetting machine. insertion (nothing less than If Jcstrrasters and Rural Delivery Car Achool", *pe,tk ing of Ilo» re|.*iioo o cents); professional cards, one inch riers me agents for The News and -Hhhalli .Setolili feaeliera tu Ilici $1 a month; lodge cards. $5 a year authorized to receive subscriptions payable quarterly (notices and reso •las*t * and ahuwiog thè ucci! of c o i - and advertisements. lutions free to advertising lodges) icieiitimi*, con* Tra»pd leaenera I» i r i r - m v Oct. 25 In History. P u blish er i* now in Ihe *tete lioapital for tin itsane. Father D 'smerals,bimself i.- ,ow Mill ring with III rvou* pro*I th l HI. He ol j cled to Ihe f.iund itioi f ihe new dioeereof En-ti rn Ore »> , laiming ilial it ii tie« d a tiard*hi| upon all it* ch-rgv and appealed b i be api *:<ilie ilelegaie al Washing lo in >m ihe deeiaiotia of Arelihiahn) t'hrialie and B aliop OTteidy. Bo Ii B aliapO'ltellly am: Fiihti lhamarai* formerly bail charge of the 1'igarJ vil'e Cainolie t'liurch. ti. ii iii life, but if they would please men avoid being overdresse«! oji any occasion. Take the same pains to look well and to BE A f A IM’ K O l’ K 1A T E L Y D RESSED A T H O M E FO R H U S B A N D S fat'icis ami brothers as for strangers and company, who are less like! to apj r.ei-'.lo your efforts to be attractive. r.CN'3 APPROVAL OF THE DRESS OF THE WOMEN OF THEiR FA LIES 3 MORE OFTEN EXPRESSED BY SMILES THAN WORDC WO.VCN " A Y BE QUITE SURE IF THEY ARE GREETED WITH SMILE? V.o; ! THEY PRESENT THEMSELVES THAT THEY ARE GOWNEf RA RFACTORILY. THERE ARE SURE TO BE THE MADAM MAL ’ n . I ilr EVERY GENERATION, BUT THEY ONLY SERVE TC L P H A ilZ L THE GOOD TASTE OF MOST WOMEN. jfoim-j Men Should have a Sense of Duty By Rev. Dr. EDWARD EVERETT HALE ¿ ¡T M liF i .-ml» nf nur public school education with the average bov LU i 1* T O I N S T I L L IN H IM A GROSS O Y E R E S T I k . . -i A T K Ok H IS O W N IM P O R T A N C E . The city gives '••ni Iks to tli oks, paper to write upon and ink to write with. The t i, I V LEASES THE BOY’S SELF CONCEIT, largely be- ; c f ,!: .): termination of the public to provide for him, and in i- j. ¡-!:i"i ;i bov or girl gets into that frame o f mind in that pro- ■i r I'd !•: Di T Y as :> central light I.O ST S IG H T OF. M AE *: • R8 O F B IG E N T E R P R IS E S SE E K more and . r r , v.o Dt’ T V . ■s i: v r SI < I »•! " MEN W H O H A V E A K E E N SE NSE O F wi'l -uv to themselves, ‘‘The success o f this enterprise . ' r “ The purity o f this thing is my business,” or “ 'I T II OF THE R E P F B I.IC A N * W HAT CAN I G O V E R N M E N T IS DO T O F U R T H E R IT ? ” MY ihe V a lu e Technically Educated Men By R. T. CitAIVE. Chicago Manufjcturer ^HE TECHNICALLY EDUCATED MANUFACTURER IS NOT With tliis issue the management j m.ve Ireen ilims u h* n sleep ha* no* Lj NECESSARILY THE SUCCESSFUL MANUFACTURER i.*en K * iii'il. il*>uev*r the hitler o f The Independent passes into IN FACT, EXPERIENCE HAS PROVED QUITE THE new hands but with no radical will I k * fnriroUpn while J iys will h* REVERSE. k* pt In n'l*i*!* A r m l word Is be changes in policy. As before it -l*ok* n for my “iieisnsor. I have had opportunity to study the value of will be Republican in its politics, 1). V. c. G a u l t technically educated men, and I have no hesitation work for the upbuilding of Wash Lumber.— V .’e aro prepared to de iu asserting that, aside from electricity, mining and chemistry, only ington county and especially its an extremely small percentage o f this country's progress in manu- comity scat and endeavor to gel liver all kinds of undressed lumber ou sfori nolhe. Sterk on hand at price* out a clean, neat and newsy paper fucttiring bus been due to such education. Iu fact, 1 think it is safe rnasnnablB. Call or wrilo Shipley fit to enter every home and whose Mills, Hanks. Or, Winter evenings will sewn be lierc, to say that most o f it was gained before our manufacturers knew * and to enjoy them you should have weekly visits will be welcomed In wliat technical education was. The Peiermin Idnck is r e v iv in g « uue of those nice arm rocking chairs all members o f the family. Some Much i* being said just now about the demand by manufactur at Roe & Buxton's. ■ familiar features may be absent, a cori of psint «ml vcneril rep Ling ers for graduates o f technical schools, and no doubt they are being Oysters of all kinds, eocktails, stews, rearrangement and novelty appar i hut giviis |i quiii* s (I Ifcrent ap|ip.<r tried in some establishments. But where one concern can be found • M *. fries, at the Pacific Restaurant. * ent in make tip and style, but it is ocooooocooococooœoocoocœoooooociooooooooooooocxxooo that is - eking this class of help no doubt there are at least twenty hoped all will l>e noted as improve that are not d< ing so. It is simply a fad. ments which are always possible IF THESE SAME BOYS HAD UPON LEAVING GRAMMAR SCHOOL and entirely desirable in every pa GONE TO WORK IN A FACTORY AND RECEIVED REASONABLE per laying claim to l>e progressive ATTENTION THERE THEY WOULD HAVE BEEN WORTH A GREAT and iu that class The Imle]<emleut DEAL ICDRE TO THEIR EMPLOYER THAN THEY ATE AFTER CO.NC aims to lie numbered. Perhaps the THROUGH A TECHNICAL SCHOOL. most radical departure will l»e the 1 . u inclined to think that the effect o f these schools is muck' predominating o f the news over the ihe *;,me . * in the ease of the regular colleges and universities— editorial department, especial at that is, that upon leaving them the students are so certain o f their tention being given to full and re own in ¡' rtan«!' that it takes them a long time tn realize that they liable reports ol courthouse matters have human limitations. which ought to la? found in the columns o f a county seat pa|>er. T o he suoco >fnl in a manufacturing business a man must pos Publisher and editor, in taking s<-s not <nlv mechanical ability, but also executive and business np this new work, feel that they anility. Wli to i iu* technically educated man is found who ha- •re merely making a necessary step made a siieei**.* no doubt there are a hundred who have been sue forward; for five months they have (c-sful wiihoe: such education. been before the people of Washing ) KNOW O N E CONCERN THAT TRIED TWENTY ton county III a similar capacity CKA'H'.V! ES OF TECHNICAL SCHOOLS AND AM TOLU with another publication whose 111 A r OF THIS NUMBER SEVENTEEN PROVED ABSO phenomenal growth has seemed to LUTE f a i l u r e s , TW O WERE INDIFFERENTLY SEC endorse their efforts with the great CKSSFUL AND ONLY ONE TURNED OUT TO BE A DU seal o f public approval. The field C'lDED SI’Cl ESS. o f that newspaper iias l»een Forest Grove and the country news of Hot (amale* at Paci««- Restaurant j eaVe your orJers for milk at the — Niw York Time*. the county. Th e Independent's • baz*».-, • XXXOCOÛC DOOJOÇC ACCOCCO DOC Ü Saturila)- ntgbt. London. 1415- Battle of A«lncourt. Henry V. of Eng;laud won a famous victory. The forces of the English king numbered only 15,000, but he almost destroyed the French army of £0.000 after t bat tle of four hours. After the French cavalry had been lured into a swamp the English archers mowed them down without mercy. Nearly all the French leaders fell; also 120 princes and no bles, S.4U0 knights, squires and g utie- men of birth. liW—William Hogurth. painter und cari caturist, died at Chiswick. tM 06--C>enerul Henry Knox. Wnsh!:ur*on*:i secretary of war, died at Thomaston Me.; born 1750. 1894—Commander William E. Hopkins. Ik S. N., retired, died in San Francisco; born 1822. 1899^ Grant Allen. English author, died lu Eondon; born 1848. Oct, 26 In History. 17C3—Sir Godfrey Kneller, who painted the por traits of all the mwi- trcliHand noted habitue« of the court from Charles II. to George I., died; born 1G48. 1759—George James Danton. the famous French rev olutionist, was born at Areissur-Aube; guillo tined at Paris. April 5. Adelaide Phil 1794. While minister of lips. Justice Danton announc ed that in order to stop the progress of the Prussian army of invasion “ we must strike the royalists with terror." Acting upon the suggestion, the mol) broke into the prisons and engaged iu dreadful massacres. It was Danton who said, speaking of the captive king: “ We have no right to be his judges, it is true. Well, we will kill him.’ ’ 1883—Adelaide Phillips, celebrated slrx'or. born at Stratford-upon-Avon; died 1882. 1902—Frank Norris, the California nov*‘l- ist. died at San Francisco; born lSd9. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, woman suf fragist, reformer and philosopher, died in New York city; born 1815. Oct. 27 In History. 42 B. C.—Marcus Junius Brutus, most noted of the assassins of Julius Otesar, fell on his sword at Philippi. 11582—William Penn landed at Newcastle. 1728—James Cook, English navigator, was born at Marton. Yorkshire; killed in the Sandwich Islands Feb. 14, 1779. UE4—Confederate ram Albemarle destroy ed in Ronnolie river by Lieutenant Cushing's torpedo. Cushing reported to his superiors after reaching the fleet by miraculous fortune that lie was happy to say the Albemarle* was at the bottom «»f the Roanoke rlv< r After examination the carpenter re ported that the Yankee torpedo had knocked a hole in her “ big enough to drive a horse and cart through.“ 1901—George* W. Carleton, well known New York beuik publisher, died in Sar atoga; born 1831. Oct, 28 In History. 14C7—Desideriu3 Erasmus, scholar and forerunner of the reformation, was born at Rotterdam; died 1530. 1492—Columbus discovered Cuba. Marshal Grouchy, the commaneler blamed by Bonaparte for his loss of Waterloo, was born at Paris. Grouchy was a brigadier general when the rev olutionary convention cashiered him, among others, because of his royal blood. Re-enlisting as a private, he won his baton by deeds of extraor dinary personal valor. At the battle of Novi he received 14 wounds. Alter the battle of Waterloo Grouchy foi .1 asylum in America and resided iu. a time in Philadelphia. j 1770-Battle of White Plains. N. Y ; Amer icans defeated. 19C0—The Right Hon. Friedrich Max Mul ler, professor of philology at Oxford university, died at Oxford; born 1823. Oct, 29 In History. 1G18--Sir Walter Raleigh be headed at Westminster. 1740—James Boswell, noted biographer of Dr. John- , son, born in Edinburgh; died 1795. 1783—Jean le Rond d'Alem bert, a French found ling with a romantic history who became a noted man of letters, mathematician and en cyclopedist, died in Paris; born tker«? 1717. 1790—John Keats, poet, born; died ivk 1829—Thomas Francis Bayard, states.-*tan, the first United States ambassador (appointed under that title) to Eng land, born in Wilmington, Del.; died 1898. 1886—General George Brinton McClellan died at Orange, N. J.; born in Phil«.« delphia iv2t5. 1899— Florence Marryatt (Mrs. Frcncis Lean), English novelist, died at Bright on, England, born 1837. Oct. 30 In History. 1823— Edmund Cartwright, Inventor of he power loom, died. 13U2 Ormsby MacKnlght Mitchel. astro .- otner and soldier, died at Beaufort. S. C .: born in Kentucky 1809. General Mitchel established at Cincinnati ».he first large observatory built in the United States. He was in command i i the Federal department of the south nt the time of his death. 1867—Governor John A. Andrew of Massa chusetts. known as the “ war gov ernor,” died in Boston: born 1S!S. 1891—General Truman Seymour, a veteran of the Mexican and civil wars, died l:i Florence. Seymour was an of!! r at Fort Sumter in April. 1SK1. He com manded the division which stormed Fort Wagner. S. C.. In !So3. JPK—General Louts Botha’s Roer column defeated the British under Colonel Benson near Brakenlaagte. eastern Transvaal, inflicting heavy loss in killed and wounded. Oct. 31 In History. 1735—J"hn Adams, second president of the United States, bom; died July 4. 182». 8873 The Cuban flliburtar ing steamer Virg’nlus captured near Jamaica by the Spanish gunboat Tornado and taken to Cuba. The Virginias had been fitted out In the United States se- V ^ *retly and left Kingston. tJ w Jamaica. O ct 23. with Mooxer. a large party on board. The chief of the expedition was General Washing ton Ryan, an American residing in New York city. Ryan and the Cuban chiefs Bembeta Pedro Cespedes and Jesus del Sal were summarily execut ed. Three days later Captain Joseph Frv of the Virgtnius. 3»J of the crew and 12 Cuban volunteers taken on board were executed at Santiago. Out of It? men in the party only IS escaped punishment In s**me form 1JC8- General Jos* ph Hooker died at Gar den City. N. Y ; born 1814. -The state di-partmvDt made pubflP the indorsement by the United States of the Anglo-German agr'-^ment to. preserve the Integrity of China and« maintain the “ open door.” j Downs' best popcorn, •