Image provided by: Washington County Cooperative Library Service; Hillsboro, OR
About Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914 | View Entire Issue (March 20, 1913)
FOREST GROVE PRESS, FOREST GROVE. OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 20, 1013 LOW COLONIST FARES Daily March 15 to April 15th, Economy hints held The at mothers meeting will be other command in the Bible is the C o n g re g a tio n a l more deeiinite or more explicit ALL POINTS ON OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY TO FROM Chicago $ 38.00 St. Paul $ 30.00 Peoria 37.00 Minneapolis 30 00 St. Louis 37.00 Duluth 30.00 Milwaukee 36.70 Kansas City 30.00 Little Rock 42.50 Omaha Memphis 42.50 St. Joseph 30.00 30.00 New Orleans 48.05 Lincoln 30.00 From other eastern points in proportion Tell your friends in the East of this oppor tunity of moving West on low fares. Direct train service via Burlington Route, Northern Pacific, Great Northern and Spokane, Portland & Seattle and Oregon Electric Railways. You can deposit funds with me and tickets will be furnished neople in the East. Details will be furnished on request. W. D. SKINNER, Tr.ff.c M.ntg.r, Portland, Ore. J. E. FARM ER, Agent- Forest Grove, Ore. Church on Friday, March 21 than, "Six days shalt thou labor, at 3 P. M. All young mothers then remember the sabbath to are urgently requested to be keep it holy. If we as Chris present. The subject: ‘‘Home tians, are striving to follow the HE problem of how to lighten Reading. What Should It Be?” example of Christ, his own ex the coat of high living Is a vital Everyone is welcome to these ample and all of his teachings one today, and especially is this meetings held under the auspices show the need of a right observ question absorbing to the poor of the W. C. T. U. We love to ance of the Lord’s day. m an's wife. H er household motto should surely l>e to make the best welcome of the teachers. Mothers, everything. Ituskln Bays, "ludustry come and show that you are in I am going to quote from sec without art Is brutality.” And th at Is Justly so of the homemaker. H er duty terested in the organization that tion three of our recent tobacco Is to make her home Just as attractive is striving to help the boys and law. "It shall be unlawful for as |M>ssllile, and to do that she must any minor under the age of eigh keep In mind that “a penny saved is a girls ail over this land. teen years, to smoke, or use to penny earned” and that every piece of The W. C. T. U. will hold a bacco in any form, in any public fViod throw n out Is money throw n away. Here are four things thut help much i week of prayer from March 30 to highway, street, place or resort.” in lowering the cost of high living: They are buy In as large quantities as April 6 for ‘‘Lord’s Day” all over Is the marshal not supposed to possible, thereby getting a reduction, j the United States. History has enforce this law? Use things iti season, when they are [ proven that a Sabbath is neces cheapest. When egg prices soar search sary for the state as well as for The opponents of women suf your cook book and household maga zines for "eggless recipes.” Muke a religion. It is the very founda frage when run down and corn system atic collection of economical nu tion of our social structure. ered, prove to be breweries, tritious dishes. Good citizenship and our social whisky trusts, food trusts, and Egg Substitutes. W hen eggs are high In m aking dough well being grow out of the ob special interests of all kinds. nuts boll and mash a good sized potato, servance of the one day in seven, Women, or the large majority, beat It in with the sugar and m ake the which man may spend in worship will vote for humanity rather doughnuts as usual without any eggs. to God and in spiritual uplift and than for property rights. in making pumpkin or squnsh pies In place of eggs roll crackers tine and use physical rest. This is the 35th Jane Paterson, in the Minne as much of them in bulk ns you would annual week of prayer for the sota Tribune, writes: "Since of eggs. You could not tell the differ Lord’s day. woman has come to realize her euce if you did not know. When you want pudding for dinner Dear White Ribbon sisters, no duty to her children, and her A penny saved is a penny earned.— Benjamin Franklin. T and have no milk try adding another egg and a few more raisins and use warm w ater In place of milk. Ways of Using Cheaper Cuts of Meat. Fresh Fish Forest Grove Fish Market Anything and Everything in Sea-food Cash Paid , Highest cash price paid for Fresh Eggs Telephone 216 — ...» Every Day STAEHR’S BAZAAR K. N. Staehr, P roprietor Foroat Grove. Oregon. Noxt Door to Poatofflce PIANOS, ORGANS, SEWING MACHINES, STATIONERY AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS Pianos: 40 different makes. Organs: any style, parlor or chapel. Instruments: for band and orchestra. Sheet Music, the latest popular pieces, 10 to 25c. Phonographs; Edison in all styles. Records: full Edison catalogue. Sewing Ma chines: latest improved makes. Needles and Extras; for any machine made. School Supplies: books and stationery. Notions: toys and birthday gifts. Watch and Use the Want Ads Beef loaf is a tine dish in which the cheaper cuts of m eat are never recog nized. To make It take one and oue- balf cupfuls of stale breadcrum bs or j cracker crumbs, two pouuds of ground beef, three teaspoonfuls of salt, season- I and you’ll not need lug to taste. Mix with w ater or w ater I and milk, using ns much as you can, I to be a mind reader and have the meat hold together. Bake about one hour in u bread tin. Thicken j the liquid left in the pan for gravy. The thought has often come Pork in batter Is another good way j to you perhaps, that you could to employ the cheap meat. Make a bat- j easily solve most difficulties if ter of one egg beaten with one-third you were a mind reader—if cupful of milk and enough flour to j you could for instance,KNOW make the consistency of pancake bat- | who would be glad to rent ter Fry some slices of salt pork until j your property, or to buy it; they look d e a r and are beginning to who would be glad to employ crisp, then dip In the batter until well I you. covered. Return to hot fat until well done. Serve with baked potatoes. Want advertisers, and those Lamb a la Creole.—This Is an at- i who watch the want ads, learn tractive way to serve up cold lam b and these things in a BUSINESS Is tasty and economical. Mince a W A Y—not through occult green pepper after the seeds are re means. moved and half a small onion and cook them together In two tublespoonfuls of butter for live minutes. Stir In four talilespoonfuls of flour. When It Is well P R E V E N T IO N OF SUMMER A I L M ENTS. blended add a cupful of stewed and strained tomatoes and a cupful of the The sum m er uilineuts of adult fowls liquor In which the lamb was cooked, are mostly digestive disorders and or, If It happens to be cold roost lamb, may he mainly avoided by simple u<e w ater or good gravy thinned a lit prevention. They are mostly caused tle. Cook till the m ixture Is smooth and by filth, vermin, had feed, ill feeding, thick, season to taste with snlt and lack of pure drink and heat exposure. pepper and turn In tw o cupfuls of cold Hot weather Is the great microbe and lunib cut Into small pieces. Stir and bug breeder. Heated tilth Is a hot cook for six minutes. Make a hollow bed of -deadly disease. Therefore In a mound of hot boiled rice and turn clean the henhouse and yards early, remove all dirty litter, droppings, the ragout Into and over 1C Beef Elver l.yonnalse. — Procure scrapings of floors and yards to the about a pound and a half of beef liver, field or garden, spray the whole outfit slice it thin and lay It in a wide frying with lime and make all things new. (inn, sprinkle with snlt and pepper and Old tim e lime is good for humans two talilespoonfuls of olive oil. When and for hens. It brightens nnd gives ready to cook, put the pan on n brisk n solar plexus to smells, bacteria and fire and brown the liver nicely on both to lings: therefore let more humnns sides Take the liver out nnd put on a Join the T.lmeklln club, wear fewer dish to keep hot. Add to pan two hugs and live longer. Treat fowls In onions ru t into thin shreds Toss them dividually for lice, furnish a hath over the fire till teuder. then add a where they may dust for craw lers tnlilespoonful of flour nnd a tnhle- and occasionally sprinkle oak wood spoonfnl of chopped parsley. Stir and ashes in the mash to kill the worms mix well nnd add n cupful of hot th at cause Intestinal troubles. WHter. When these are smooth nnd Ture w ater kept cool by shade Is ex bulling return the liver to the frying trem ely necessary nnd when colored pan and make It very hot Arrange It often with Venetian red helps to pre on n hot pVitter nnd pour the sauce serve hen health nnd prevent cholera over It and send to the table with a and kindred com plaints, ns the lime, mngnesln nnd Iron of the red are very dish of bnkeil potatoes. beneficial. Hens should lie kept from excessive How to Fluff the Hair. nnd heating food, therefore corn H air can be fluff«! and made to fat should fed sparingly. W heat nnd stand out well from the bend, even onts are be the grains. Moist without curling. r>y brushing It with nn mash should he sum fed m er often, outw ard tw ist of the w rist that lifts are an absolute necessity. nnd Grit greens nnd the tndr up from the scalp. should tie kept liefore the For this brushing, divide the hair charcoal nnturnl or nrtiflclnl shade Into strands and go over the head In s flock, nnd tie provided. circle, then begin further up nnd con should your hens from excessive bent tinue until all the hair has been lifted by Save day and night, for heat prostration and lightened many Ills to hen and men. If this style of brushing Is kept up brings If possible have free range. Its cool dally, or even several times a week, shade, herbage, natural ani the straightest and stringiest of hair mal food, tender exercise, pure air soon Incomes dry and easy to puff out and clean pleasant environm ent nre the alue fiom the fnce. qua non for success. How to Use Bite of Soap. The toilet soap ends of s household mnv lie satisfactorily utilized If cut Into thin shavings and dissolved In a small am ount of warm w ater Add to this soapy m ixture three tahlespoonfuls of eau de cologne and one tablespoon ful of lemon Juice Then |>our the mix ture Into any small moulds, such as the tops of linking powder tins The liquid will harden Into small, flat cakes. How to Add Flour to Cake. When liquid, as milk. Is used In cake the milk a.id flour are usually addid alternately simply tier a one the flour Is thus more easily Incorporated Into the m ixture If enke Is too porous proba bly loo much baking powder or cream of tartar and soda baa been used Good Moaturo. The following conversation once took place between tw o Quakers: "M artha, doea thee love me?” asked a Q uaker youth of one at whose shrine his heart's holiest feelings had been offered up “W hy, Seth,” answ ered she; "we are commanded to love one another, are we not?” “Ah. M artha, but doea thee regard me w ith the feeling the world calls love?” “ I hardly know w hat to tell thee, Beth. I have greatly feared that m j heart is an erring one. I have tried to bestow my love on all, but I may have sometim es thought perhaps that thee w u getting rath er more than thy •ha r«."—Ufa. country, equal suffrage has be come more of a religion than a fad. Good men and women are divided as to woman suffrage, but it is a well known fact that the vicious elements are solidly against it in all cities and towns. That the women in Washington should be treated so disgraceful ly by a vicious mob, is not any shame to them, but a disgrace that it should occur in an Ameri can city. But it will work for good to equal suffrage. Many, many converts have been made to woman suffrage just by this disgraceful exhibition in Wash ington.” I, as a white ribbon worker, was very much pleased to see that the track ordinance in Cali fornia was defeated by the votes of the women, and that a dis reputable office seeker was also beaten in seeking for office. The whisky element and others open ly acknowledge the votes of women caused the defeat of their well laid plans. Keep right on, sisters in the good work, and when we have accomplished a great uplift In morals and other good work planned, how some of you will regret that you did not have a hand in the good work. The Forest Grove Oyster House is now under the management of Ed. Boss. 81tf LACESj Jl 'CLE RACES Forest Grove, Oregon, March 22 - 23 Six fast events, including I l • • r n , feature and challenge races AQIIllSSlOn J U C tS . Certificate No. 596 Registered No. 3529 ONE OF THE BEST JACKS IN THE STATE BEECHER AGE SEVEN YEARS. WHITE POINTS AND STANDS 16 HANDS HIGH PURE BRED BLACK JACK £>tallum SUuustratunt Uliutrii STATE V OREGON LICENSE CERTIFICATE D atki OF » PURE BRED STALLION OR JACK, NO. 596 at C orvallis , O rkgon , O ctober 12, 1911 The pedigree of the jack BEECHKR, No. 3629 (American), register ed in the studbook of American Breeders’ Association of Jacks and Jen nets, owned by W. H. French, Forest Grove, Oregon, bred by John Bel- dinghrock, Heppner, Oregon, described as follows: Black, White points, Sire, Theodor; Dam, Queen; Breed JACK, foaled June 16, 19011, has been examined by the Stallion Registration Board of Oregon, and it is hereby certified that the said jack is of PURE BREEDING, is registered in the studbook that is recognized by the associations named in section nine of an Act of the Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon providing for the licensing of stallions, etc., filed in the office of the Secretary of State February 23, 1911, ami that the above named jack has been examined by the veterinarian ap|a>int>sl by the Stallion Registration Board and is here by reported free from infectious, contagious or transmissible diseases or unsoundness and is hereby licensed to stand for public service in the State of On K L Pot 11 n. [Seal] Secretary Stallion Registration Board NOTE This license has been recorded in the office of the Recorder of Conveyances of Washington County and must be renewed Oct. 12, 1914 A SURE FOAL GETTER All m a rcs left in my care will have the best of atten tion. If desired will furnish pasture for a few days. TERMS OF 1 i™ure a live coU • • * 20.00 P p » r \i\T ^ * or the season • • • • 15*00 ° D I\h .t.lJ liN L » For single service . . . 10.00 In case mare is sold or traded breeding charges are there and then due. Will commence breeding March 15th, close June 30th. Will make the season at my place Ave. North W . H I J . r D r M r U First Forest Grove, Ore.