Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, February 01, 1912, Image 5

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    DEALINGS IN
REAL ETSATE
EVERY ARTICLE IN MY STORE GREATLY REDUCED
GEO. G. PATERSON’S
REMOVAL SA L E
Lovegren Lumber Co to August
Lovegren 108.521 acres 25, 26, 35
and 36 1 S 5 $1.
Furniture, Rugs, Carpets, Linoleums,
August Lovegren et ux to Love­
gren Lumber Co 109.22 acres 25
m 26, 35 and 36 m 1 S 5 $1.
Oil­
cloth, Mattings, Paints, Oils, W a ll Paper, Etc.
A s m y lease expires January 1, 1 9 1 2 , and 1 haven’t se­
cured a store building to move into, have decided to sell
m y $ 9 ,0 0 0 stock of Furniture, Pianos and in fact every­
thing in m y store at a big discount— in fact some articles
below Cost— in order to make a quick turn.
Every
article will have the old selling tag on and the discount
price marked in plain figures.
The first customers will have the cream of the sale.
stock is exhausted the sale is off.
When
If you intend to paint in the near
future, it will pay you to take advantage of this.
Have
a good assortment of colors on hand.
My Entire Stock of Varnishes will be Sold
. . . . at a Discount. . . . . . .
I have a big stock on hand.
Hurry, it is yours
I have a beautiful prize in my window
for the one holding the correcct num­
ber.
A number will be given with
each $1 purchase, which gives you a
chance to win i t ...........................................
|Q ¥ L O Q
Great and
i t U I jO --
Small
consisting of Body Brussel, Axminster, Jap. Brussels, Velvets, English Art Squares,
Grass, Wood-Fiber, Ingrains, Wool, Half Wool, Etc,
Among other things too numerous to mention are IRONING BOARDS, PICTURES,
BABY WALKERS, BABY BUGGIES, MATTRESSES, Ostermoor, SEWING MA­
CHINES, PORTIERES, Table Cloths, Towel Racks, Clock Shelves, 4 Mission
Clocks, at cost; Hall Racks, Shades, Pillows, Paint Brushes, Trunks, Suit Cases,
Sulkies for the baby; Baby Jumper, Toy Doll Buggies, some Doll Furniture, Or­
gans and a thousand more things, all reduced.
Don’t forget to get tickets on the
Valuable Prize in the window
I Need the CASH, You Need the GOODS, and
I am Here with the Goods
GEO. G. PATERSON
Furniture and Pianos
Forest Grove, Oregon
No Terms on Prices
.
_
G. W. Barnes et al C. R. Hod-
gdon Lot 11 bl. 4 Oak Grove add-
Hillsboro $225.
Georgia A. Hughes, to Lizzie
J. Clark 1 acre in Forest Grove
$275
George O. Sloan et ux to H. B.
I Johnson et ux part of bl 9 Nay­
lor’s Add. Forest Grove $1800
Lewis L Hollingeret ux to Jesse
Nelson lot68 Cornelius Environs
$7000.
James W Baldwin et ux to
J C Wegner and Janies Brown,
part lot 2, block 23. Forest Grove,
$800.
Some trees appear cheap, but are really expensive.
Other trees appear expensive, but are really cheap.
You
cannot buy high-grade, productive laud for the same price
as poor land sells for.
You cannot buy Oak lumber for the same price as Fir
lumber.
19
It is Quality in Trees that Counts.
W e grow our own trees in our 1200-acre nursery. Our
land was selected specifically for nursery purposes. It pro­
duces the very choicest type o f trees possible to obtain any­
where, with stalwart tops, strong fibrous roots; in short,
strictly first-class, sound, healthy, fully matured trees.
There are none better grown, and they are Really Cheap;
because they are such as will “ Make Good.”
If you need any N. Y. Pippin, Spitzenberg, Winesap,
Rome Beauty, McIntosh Red, Jonathan or any other com­
mercial or home variety, just drop us a line stating your re­
quirements.
We also have some o f the* best peach trees in Early
Crawford, Elberta, Foster, Fitzgerald, Gillingham and other
good varieties we have ever grown.
If you want Peach Trees, you can’t get better.
Don’t Delay Ordering Too Long.
Why Not Now?
»us.
Address,
OREGON NURSERY COMPANY,
STEADY, UPRIGHT SALESMEN WANTED
Orenco, Oregon
W F Johnson et ux to T J
Force2.20 acres Tupper Cl. 1 S 4
$2,800.
Alice M Darling to Ina Win-
nifred Aldrich part lot 2 block 9
Forest Grove $500.
Paints £« Z£- Varnish
ly as possible at Cost.
The following transfers were
furnished the Press by the
Wilkes Bros. Title & Trust Co.
o f Hillsboro:
ORENCO TREES ARE REALLY CHEAP
Esther Leisy to Nellie M Rey-
craft 66.55 acres James Burston
Cl. 78 1 N 3 $8000.
Nellie M Reycraft et ux to Es- j
ther Leisy 4 acres, Section 32, 1
N 2 $4000.
G.ilty as Charged
Mrs. Jennie Galbreath, o f the
Tualatin section, was tried last
week in the circuit court on an
indictment and found guilty. It
appears that in August the road
supervisor, with a crew o f work­
men, was opening a road through
the Galbreath premises, near
Tualatin, when they were fired
upon from the upstairs window
with a shotgun in the hands o f
Mrs. Galbreath.
No one was
hurt, hut the excitement ran high
for a while.
T H E N EED S OF M A N Y :
C R E A M SE P A R A T O R S
Those o f you who milk cows
we have the remember
De Laval Separator
L.
IN C U B A T O R S
The P E T A L U M A is a first-class
Machine
S P R A Y PU M PS
The Hardie Spray Pump is simple
and durable.
Remembers Old Home.
G. M. Gilbert, of Moscow, Ida­
ho, who at one time owned a
farm just east o f town, sent his
cousin, Mrs. Emily Bump, a box
o f apples raised in his orchard at
Moscow. He also sent a photo
o f his orchard and surroundings,
and writes that he has named his
farm “ Forest Grove Farm.”
Adjudged Insane
L. R. Whitmore, who estab­
lished the Beaverton Reporter
May 25 o f last year and edited
the same until recently, has been
adjudged insane and sent to Sa­
lem where he will be able to
have proper treatment.
Mr,
Whitmore has paralysis o f the
lower limbs. He has been ad­
dicted to the drink habit for a
long time and o f late it has got­
ten the better o f him. He is
well known
newspaper man
throughout Oregon. He has a son
somewhere in the state, who is
well to do and in business.
Reputation Goes Ahead
W. B. Haines is an experienced
and successful banker and busi­
ness man, who as president was
one o f the principal organizers
and builders o f one of Washing­
ton county’s strongest and larg­
est banks, namely the Forest
Grove National which when or­
ganized made the third bank for
Forest Grove, there being in op­
eration at the time the E. W.
Haines Private Bank and the
First National Bank. Mr. Haines
has for the past two yearfl served
as postmaster at Forest Grove
which position he resigned upon
coming to McMinnville to cast
his lot with the United States
National Bank. — McMinnville
News Reporter.
W. 0. WAGNER & SONS
Home Baking Co.
Finest of Bread and Pastry Baked Every Day
W e sell 6 loaves of bread for 2 5 ^
Free Delivery to All Parts of the City
Pacific Avenue
Forest Grove
JCtie
G O V E R N O R W E S T ’S
Fir»t Illustrated lectu re on his Prison Policies and Death
Penalty, at
C R ESC EN T T H E A T R E
HILLSBORO, OREGON
IUS.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1912
at 7:3 0 P. M. Sharp
For the benefit St. Matthew’s Church
TICKETS BO CENTS
No reserved seats— First come first served. Lecture ends
in time to enable making o f trains. Special information
furnished by Rev. Mark Lappen, Hillsboro.
»