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About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 19, 1908)
FARMERS R E A D THE When the Spanisb-Amertcan war came on Milton Forester was a lieu tenant In the national guard. He re ceived u captaincy In the volunteers I A K ir t and marched away «vtth his regiment Tender, Juicy, Steaks, amid the plaudits o f tbe throngs who lined the streets. There was one face R oasts a n d S tew s, at an iip|>er window which absorbed all tbe young soldier’s attention, tbe Sausage an»^ Bacon face of his fiancee. Mary Mills. The look of pride In him and love for him Ail kinds ol Fresh that (»earned in her eyes might have i exhilarated another, but Forester was I peculiarly sensitive man—a man to dread a possible failure. He knew there were «'ertaln men whose coustl- i tlonal makeups unfitted them to he | soldiers, and no man can tell w hether he Is one o f these till he comes to face I shot and shell. He dreaded lest he might prove unworthy Should he falter under the terrible strain of bat tle he would never see Mary again. Forester thought too much of this j It Is well for one to realize obligations I he has taken upon himself, but he should not permit himself to brood at over the matter. Forester worried all the way to Florida, from Florida to Cuba and during the campaign until | the final fighting, which was the first time he was under fire. Everybody knows that It was during this contest about San A ROYAL F U N E R A L tiago that his regiment was ordered we keep the best Meats 6 tra n g e C erem on ies T h a t M ark the | forward In the face of a terrible fire. One’s first fight Is the most trying of B urial o f a S p anish K ing, to be had, but this is to hi range aud almost weird Is tbe cer- all It Is then that the soldier for the -uuailal will: h accompanies the burial first time hears the ugly stinging sound remind you to give us a of .Spanish kings. The pantheon, or of bullet", the rattle of machine guns royal tom b., ls at the palace o f the and the screech of shells, to all of call. its, urial, situated 3,U0U feet above the which there Is tbe background of In cessant roar o f cannon. Forester looked let el o f the sea and some distance A . S A ELEIN S from the capital. Only kings, queens a little pale, bet pressed resolutely on. All o f a sudden he beeame eonselous and mothers o f kings are buried there, F orest d ro v e , O r«. the coihns of the kings lying on one of a dizzy, nauseating sensation, his side, those o f the queens on the other. foot struck something—or he thought After lying In state for several days It did -and he pitched forward. The In the throne room in Madrid an enor regiment pushed on. Another line of mous procession ls formed, accompany battle came up and was p-essing for ing the body to the Kseurtal. A halt ward when Forester was awakened, ls made on the way, aud the corpse as It were, by the sound of a voice. Nathan Burge, an old and tried friend, rests there for one night. had seen him. recognized him and In the morning the lord high chain berl iu stands ut the side o f the coffin stopped to succor him. “ Nate.” said Forester. “ I’ ve fallen and says In loud tones, "Is your majes ty pleased to proceed on your jour out of the rnuks. I hadn’t the physical ney?" After a short silence the pro ability to go on. Write to Mary Mills cession moves on and winds up to the and tell her that I’ll never see her grand portal o f the palace. These again. She has loved a coward!” “ III. you th-re! Move on!" cried an | Puts up all kinds doors arc never opened except to ud- mit a royal personage, dead er alive. officer who was marching In rear to of Prescriptions When the casket containing the re drive on stragglers. Without a word mains Is at last placed in the vault Burge hurried forward, leaving his with the best and the chamberlain unlocks It and, kneel friend to his own regrets. When tbe fight was over Rurge ing down, calls with a loud voice: PUREST DRUGS sought Forester, hot. not finding hi in. "Senor! Seuor! Seuor!” After a solemn pause he cries again: supposed that he had hidden his •Ills majesty does not reply! Then It shame by devprtlnn. He waited for a time, thinking that the coward might is true, tile king Is dead!” lie then locks the coffin, gives the turn up. but he did not Burge's regt key to the prior and, taking his staff ment was ordered to the coast at the That’s what you get of offi. e. breaks It In pieces and flings close of the war and was one of the them at the casket. The booming o f first to embark for home. When he when you deal at the guns and the tolling o f bells an- reached Mon’ attk Point the first per son he met v i s Mary Mills She had noum e to the uatlon that the king has come ns a nurse. She Inquired eagerly i,-one to his final resting place. for her lover. Burge prevaricated. He could not F J R Ï S T GROVE, O 'E S O N QUEER T ELEG R APH POLES. bear to deMve'- the message with which he had lieen charged. But Ma with M ade o f A d ob e In B oliv ia — G row in g a w o ir -i's quick eye where love Is T re e s U sed In A fr ic a . concerned, saw- that he was concealing The most original telegraph line In something and assumed that her i lie world ouce extended from the cap fiance had been killed. Burge would ital o f Bolivia, Da Par, to the town of much rather have broken such news Oruro. In tills part of Bolivia there to her than that he had turned out a "Pioneer Harness M aker" are no growing trees, and wood Is so coward. At Inst he told her the truth. difficult to find that even the ordinary Mary Mills went home bowed down household furniture o f the nntives ls with grief. Invariably made not o f wihh I, but of This is the time of year The next morning she heard one of dried mud or adobe. her sisters reading from newspaper when heavy work begins So when the war broke out between dispatches from Santiago She was Chile and Bolivia and a telegraph line about to leave the room, dreading lest and you will want good became urgent It was adobe that was «he should hear that her lover had strong harness. We not chosen for the queerest telegraph poles been ordered liefore a court martial to 111 existence. These pillars were built he tried for cowardice, when his name only have the largest on stone foundations and measured was mentioned, hut In a different way stock in the county but about five feet square at the base, with from what she had expected: a height o f a (tout fifteen feet. our prices will convince Milton Forester. wounded In the stom - They were placed at Intervals of ach. Operated upon and expected to re you that we about til’d feet aud thus held the wire cover Pro -toted to be captain, vice John at a height sufficient to clear the only Kellogg, killed. animals o f the country, the llama and Fores te- after being left by Burge SELL THE CHEAPEST the donkey. The total length of the tried to rise. His object was to push line was 156 miles. forward with a view to getting himself | Among other curious telegraph lines killed. But he found himself too weak Our Store is overflowing with all Is the growing pole line erected In to rise. At that moment a surgeon kinds ol harness, both light and Pgauda by an Knglisli engineer, who with an ambulance corps came hurry- I heavy, Buggy Whips, Robes, could not find any dead wood which Ing on. making hnsty examinations of would withstand the white ants and the wounded lying on the field. Com- | Rain Curtains. In fact every hit upon the kiea o f transporting grow Ing to Forester, he saw blood on his thing you want. Ing bark cloth trees to the side o f the clothing, tore open his coat and said: roads and using them as poles. “ A bad wound.” In the Dutch Fast Indies growing “ I? Wounded r D A N IE L PARSON3 trees are turned to account also, but “ Yes: in the stomach.” there a wire Is stretched across the “Thank G od!" road between the trees on either side, The surgeon looked at him with a and the Insulator Is suspended In Its puzzled expression, but there was no 6 0 YEARS* middle, aud the line Is thus over the time for words, and after ordering a EXPERIENCE road and clear from vegetation.—Chi rescue party to take him to a hospital cago Tribune. pushed on. When the boys of '61 were shot In ^ Watch Spring*. the stomach there was nothing left for j The watch carrle«l by the average them but to pass the dark portal. Not j By that ttms man Is composed o f uluety eight pieces, so In the Cuban war and Its manufacture embraces more snch progress had been made In aur- j T r . de M . rss D e s ig n s than 2.000 distinct and separate oiiene gery that Forester's stomach was lalJ j CoevniGHTs Ac. lions Imre, tbe wound sewed up. tbe atom- 1 Anvon# tendlng a * ketrh and deeertntlon may ujeertam on r opini«-» free w hether an Hairspring wlr«> weighs one-twentl ach put back In place, and In time tho ! qnlokly Invention ta probably pnientai*!®. Communio*. tloiia tl rt«t ly roiifldoiitwl. MANU BOOT on P»«nta eth o f a grain to the Inch One mile of patient was as well as ever As soon — Tre«. Oldest aaem y for securinit ratina patents, p ‘ as It was safe he was put on a trans- | wire weighs less than half a pound “* Patent* taken tnrour*" through Munn â * I'O. receive ttptrUU notice, w ithout charge, lu th « port and sent north. When as a con The balance glv«»s five vibrations ev ery second. ’Jut» every minute. IS.000 valescent he walked slowly down the every hour. 4.32.000 every day and 157. gangway to the dock his friend Burge A tl«naw>m»lr llln .tr.».-1 tTMfclT I.artM t rtr- W S t lw i " f u n , r.-tentlûc Joiirnnl. T em i» « , a and his fiancee. Mary Mills, were there IPS 1,000 every year rwtr: f.'ur num tb,, $L Sold b y .lt n r * . 1 . » Irr». The value of springs when finished to meet him. "What did you mean.” said the for and placed In watches Is enormous In Branch Office, CS F SL, W ashington. D. C. pro|»irtlon to the material from w hich mer. “ by putting np a Job on me like that?" they are matte A ton o f steel made up ell. I'll tell you. Nate 1 once ask Into hairsprings when In watches 1» worth more than twelve and one-half ed my father, who commanded a bat ti o* the table o f the same weight In tery In the civil war. how he felt on gotug Into a light. He said It mads pure gold BUSINESS COUEOE blru sick at his stomach. I felt sick, » » ■ • » I N d T O . .N O TSN TM S T S and I didn't know I’d been struck.” Everybody Pleased. » O O T L .N O . O N I O O N Deacon \re yon willing to go? Dn- Mrs. Mary Mills Forester, now a ma §_T\* School Otei w m TEFO R c a t a l o g rt+ '— Timms « m 4 r - i t a popnlsr t’ lthten tdtlng>-Oh yes: I am tron of thtrtj-two, says she believes Deacon Well. Pm glad yon are. for there Is a good deal of hnmbug about "the fearless heroes of war.” that makes It unanimous. -Judge Biiley will buy your Wool and UlkKRICK AUGER. WEEKLY OREGONIAN D A D T O r f PORTLAND 1 For ror the tne general ^enercii news o f the v" ~ World also for informaxion about kow to obtain ik e bes^ results in cultivating the so il ,$ toe k R aising,F ruitG row in^ e tc. Y o u c a n se c u r e this excellent n p a p e r an<j News, for one year for $ 2.25 have been one o f our greatest cenerifs: ;nd his life been sparet he might have •ieen one of our most Illustrious presl !ents. Concerning these things we can >n!y speculate. But It was his great ness as a man that was felt by the world rather than his especial accom plishments In any field o f endeavor. Here Is or.e saving of Garfield’s that is typical o f the man: “ Poverty is uncomfortable, as I can testify, but nine times out o f ten the liest tiling that can happen to a young man Is to he tossed overboard and (impelled to sink or swim for himself, in all my aenualntanee I never knew u man to drown who was worth lie sav- ng.” James À. Garfield. B y J. St. E -D C E -R T O M . From the tow- path to the pres idency is a long ascent. A R isk y S u b je c t. "D o you think, sweetheart,” queried O tiie poor hoy looking for an in the young man with the evenly divid- spiring example the career of led hair, "that your father will con- James A. Garfield furnishes un I sent to our marriage?" Ideal and an Incentive. From “ W ell." replied tile fair one. "o f the towpatli It* the presidency is a long ; course papa will be sorry to lose me, ascent. He bad no outward helps ! blit” — In making that climb, but rose only "But.” Interrupted the rash youth, through the strength of his own char •1 will remind him that instead o f I os acter. Not only did he rise himself, but ! Ing a daughter he will gain a son." be formulated n gospel o f taccess and "D earest." rejoined the wise maid, gave it to the world. Ue was not with I "If you really want me you mustn’t out the qualities that appeal to tin1 In I ' l l anything o f the kind. Papa has tellect, hut ho was supreme In the ihrce such sous boarding with biui qualities that appeal to the heart. Gen erous and warm hearted, vet cool and I now, and he’s a little touchy on the unlmpassloneil. strong without harsh subject." T ness, self reliant without boorishness, righteous without pharlaeelsm, roll glens without prlgglshncss, witty with Plays and Players. out wounding others, possessing good "Strotigheart" ls now belng u-»ed in fellowship without letting himself down to things Ignoble or unworthy. Garfield thè stock compnnles was great In his goodness. While pos John C. Ilice aud Sally Cohen «vili sensing much will power, he was not j star In a new farce called "Just I.ike rigid and by some was considered a Man.* weak. He did not overawe others and The revival o f “ The Bride of denteo." force his way by sheer ability, tint «chicli James K Iluckeit niaile thls rather drew men to him and won Uls season, ha» tieen must snccessful points by |ierauuslve arts. His nature Marie Duro has achleved a decide»! while rugged, was not rough, but was succi's* Iti I.omlon Bolli |iersonally mellowed by a great kindliness. Ill Ills nini profet-sionally she ls exceotlingly presence men felt li^m to ls> greiter popolar. than the things he did or said. There Felice Morris, thè daughter of tbe was In his very atmosphere that Inde finable something which inspires con lille Felix Morris, «vili appear In vaude ville In a one aet comedy called "The fidence anil esteem. Without lieing das r.iing or superemlnent In any line he Old. Old Story." did »11 things well. An Inspiring tench er and minister, a brave and resource C om p reh en siv e. fill soldier, a winning and eloquent “ Ilubby, Is my hat on straight?" speaker, a broad minded and efficient "W ell. If your hat Is, your hair Isn’t, legislator, hp was far above mediocrity ■ind If your hair Is. then there’s some In every field. Had he remained a sol dier to the end of the war he iniglii thin'' askew about y ju r hat.” —New '’ ork Journal. F U R S iH ID E S W E BUY fo r «pot c**h. II At h<mift IO to ftO'T morv montty for you to «hip Haw Fur* And Hid»»« to UNthAn to “ ritt* for Pri«'«> List. Market lioinirt. Snipping Tato«, an.I n l> o u t o u r H U N T E R S ’ & T R A P P E R S ’ G U ___ I D ____ E • i H " I.M " M ””~ tl U.H,h I A | « , n lM lh » > I - miiii I, H— l t h in e uw t h . .» h iM - t . v . f w h .t o n l l l i i « t r » t m , *11 P u r A n im a l. All • U n it . S m t f lA I V , , , , . T r . p . , I H „ w A n d w h . r . A . I n p , A nd A , t - r o m . A iu c - AAA.fnl OAPP-T II . A rACnlAr i:n ,-,rl..| w d ,A P»t<-». Ti, o lir r i, . A , , , , . — I ! JA H id A ata n n A d in «., •-------- - O n , S a . n d i , S a i i And I V m , A llr n rU » n i M . U *•» I r .p a . SI I d nnr hnltlA. S p i n ,n u r H idna A nd r u n fe»UA A nd f « l StAhAAlptu-AA. A e d v r e r h H r u n , I V | , I- T 1 . a in n c A p o llA .X k v S a v e O u r M o n e > « B u y I ’ r lc u M l itlk . W a k w tn ll u t D ir e c t \\ h o l u M i i l « : W r i t « f o r H M tim iitvM o n W i n d o w s . D o o r s , H e a r d w a r e , P a in ts T H E R O S S C O ., 87 6 rand A«.. PORTLAND, 0 RE 6 . hA . . • «A n k A m a__^ Mk ____ k__ - W a S a S M A A Dealer m F L O U R Forest Grove. Ore., «n tl K E E L ) • Pacific Ave. V e g e ta b le s ¡j California has been called the “ M ecca of the winter tourist ” Its hotels and stopping places are as var ied as those of all well reg ulated cities. Visitors can always find suitable accom modations, congenial com panions, and varied, pleas ing recreations. G r o c e r ie s W. F. S C H U L T Z Good Eatables Low Prices r. A MODERN “X PHARMACY HINES' DHÜ 6 STORE DANIEL PARSONS Scientific American. MUNN & Co.36,Br“dw New York I OLMES r l J TIMES R A S M L S E M When summer has passed in these northern stales, th-» sun is only mild ri der the bright blue skic* of Southern Falilornia This is one of nature s happy provisions— eternal sum iller lor those who cannot endure a more severe cli mate. Mohair. SOUTHERN PAGIFIG CO, Will be glad to supply srme very attractive literature, describing in detail the many de lights of winter in California. Very low round trip excursion tickets are on sale ¡a j California. The rate from Forest Grove to Los Angeles and return is $ 5 6 . 5 0 . Limit six months, allowing stop-overs in either direction. Similar excursion rates are in effect to all California points. For full informat:on. sleeping car reservations sc4 tickets, call on, telegraph or write W. BROWN, Agent. FOREST GROVE, OREGOI Wrt. MtliURRAY. Gen. Pass. Agt. Portland, Oregon j IV. H. HOLLIS Altornev-at-Low Forest Grove, Oregot Dr. Geiger Homeopathist and Surgery Ore Forest Grove, Moutton it Bogan B A R h E R S HAIR CUTTINb A SFECIALTT Posto finer Row Foiest G iovi W o o d Saw ing ALBLK1 Forest Grove D IX O N • Ore" Misner & Gordon F a s h io n S t a b le s Siyiish Turnouts P CIFIC AVE FOREST CM» D R . J. M . K IN O X V 'c t c r l n a r l u n County Stock Inspector Office, First Street and Pacific Avw«| Both Phones at Office and Reside! flonam ents i v t ; ; /r s 30 / itch s t . go . P o r t l a n d . Oro. u h a x it e T o r IK s i g n * «inri P r i c e s * c c V . H. LIMBER L o c a l A Q en t A. F o r e s t Gref* B A LD W IN Real Estate Exchange •louses Rented and Rente Collect^| Forest Grove P E R F E C T P R IN T IN G PLATES IN O N I OR MANY C0t-0**j L A R G E S T FACILITIES! IN T H E W E S T FOB T H E PRODUCTION 0 I H IGH G R A D E WORM '