FOREST GROVE F HESS, FOREST GROVE, OftËGÔti. ÏH U R S D A Ÿ , JÜNiË 19, 1913 RAILROADS IN GERMANY. F in « B«oaua* E m p lo y «« « A r* All Ex-Army Man. It is well known that practically all of the railway employees o f Pruaala have served In the army. When they enter the railway ranks from the army Mrs. C. H. Olmstead and chil­ certain credits are allowed for their dren left this week for an ex­ military service, and certain positions are reserved for army men. This mili­ tended visit with her sister, Mrs. tary experience shows its Influence on Kennedy o f Portland. * their depottment and discipline In rail­ Philip E. Bauer, chaplain o f way service. There is a noticeable or­ derliness and precision about every­ the Oregon State Penitenitary, thing connected with German rail­ visited with Stephen Blank and ways. In respect for authority and strict observance o f the rules the Ger­ friends Tuesday. man railway employee has no superior. Mrs. Stephen Blank is mourn­ | The traveler will not fail to notice the red cupped station master stand­ ing the loss o f her aged brother, ing at attention on the station plat­ James McMillen. who was over form ns the train passes through each ninety years o f age. He died at station. He will also And the senior Elgnalmnn, gatemen and other em­ his home in Adamsville, Ohio. ployees connected with the train serv­ He was a pioneer, crossing the ice always In evidence, standing like plains to Oregon in ’45, and re­ sentries as the train passes. The op­ erating official, while riding over the sided for some years in Portland line, can thus take a census o f all em­ before going to Ohio. ployees In positions o f responsibility. Mr. Frank Hoype left for Kan­ When be alights at a station his rank is at once recognized. The station mas­ sas the latter part o f last week. ter immediately salutes and gives a E. W. and L. R. Barker, from verbal report o f the situation at his station. I f the official goes Into a sig­ Oak Park were business visitors, nal tower the signalman In charge Tuesday. salutes and reports. I f he goes Into an Mrs, Howard and children, of engine bouse the foreman salutes and gives a brief report o f the work in Red Bluff, California, are visit­ progress.—Hallway Age Gazette. Miss Anna Staehr, who has been attending school at Mon­ mouth Normal, has returned to her home in this city for her summer vacation. Bill Morley, who is working in Portland, spent tne week end with friends in this city. Bill recently returned from a trip east. He contemplates locating on a homestead in Southern Montana, where crops grow by merely looking at them —when they have water. Bill will prob­ ably take his old * crony, George Reynolds, with him. Read the announcement of the new store’s opening June 25. B. C. Dennis, of west Gas­ ton was transacting business in Forest Grove Saturday, his son LeRoy of Hoffman & Co. accom­ panied him home and spent Sun­ day at the farm. ing with Mrs. A. C. Gardner. Ezra Wright, of Thatcher, has Miss Kate Roe, who has been moved to Forest Grove where attending Pacific University this he and his family will make winter, le ft for her home near their future home. Wapato, Wednesday. Notice the change in name, Mrs. B. F. White is a visitor the Forest Grove Pharmacy to the seashore this week. will be known hereafter as Mrs. Colindyment visited with U ittler ’ s P harmacy . Mrs. N ettie Austin, Sunday. Clarence Hoyt, o f the Wilson Mrs. Stewart visited last week R iver country, was in the Grove Saturday, after a load o f house­ in Portland. Master Donald Misz returned Wednesday from his visit to his Mr. and Mr. C. Dennis, o f grandmother in Canby. Scoggins Valley, were in this Mr. I. C. Emmerson, who has city, Saturday, to attend the been touring in California and Homestead lodge, o f which they Mexico, has returned to his are members. home in Dallas, after visiting W. W. Ireland was in Port­ here. land, Saturday. O f particular Misses Hazel Barber and Ruth interest to him was the high Austin were visitors in Portland, water and Uncle Sam’s sea fighter that has been in the Sunday afternoon, harbor during the rose show. Mr. W. C. Emmerson is im- Geo. Hancock, cashier o f th e ; P a v in g after his illness. First National Bank, went down Mrs. W. H. Barber and Mrs. to the Carnival, Saturday. W. L. Keesee, after visiting in Geoige* promised to keep a Portland for a week returned parental eye on the many Forest! Monday. Grove young people who were in N oah K ing and w ife are con- the Rose City the last of the templating a trip to Iowa, Ne- w eek. braska, Kansas and other states A fancy work department w ill, o f the middle west next month, be one of the features of the While Mr. K in g was telling the new store. FREE LESSONS wilL Press editor o f their contemplat- be given every Thursday after-' ed trip, a middle aged man pass- noon by Mrs. E. C. Jay, from 2 ' ed. and pusing a moment he re- to 5 o ’clock. marked: “ Pardon me, but there Mrs. McBride, mother o f Mrs. is no Kansas; what the cyclone A. B. Craft is very ill at her left the cinch bugs have finish- daughter’ s home in this city. j ed.” He looked like he might Wm. Haines, o f McMinnville, have e ° ne through it all, but the was seen on the city streets the 0 re£ ° n climate was beginning to past week Iwear bis weariness off in spots, hold supplies. Herman Moore, o f the State D eaf and Dumb school at Salem, is visiting his uncle, D. Parsons, o f this city. Miss Ga.vlord, sister o f Ruth Gayload, o f the college, is visit­ in g her sister here. a' reat^y’ ye*" Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Kennydy, o f the W att district were pleas­ ant callers at this office Tuesday. Rev. C. H. Hilton, formerly pastor o f the local Christian church, sends the Press a copy Frank Doan made a trip to o f the Healdsburg Tribune, a Portland last Saturday evening. paper published in Healdsburg, California, where Rev. Hilton is Notice the change in name the. now in charge o f the Christian Forest Grove Pharmacy will be church. The Tribune is an eight- known hereafter as L ittler ’S page, six-column paper, and is P harmacy . filled with newsy items o f Healds Miss Helen Chandler, o f Port- ^urg and surrounding territory, land, an alumus o f Pacific U n i-. ^usincss m e n o f Healdsburg versi t y , attended Commence- liberally patronize the advertis- ment exercises in this city this jng column3 o f the Tribune. week Rev. Philip Baure, Chaplain of Thomas Adams, graduate of the state prison at Salem, at­ Pacific University and now presi­ tended the Commencement exer­ dent o f a bank at Vancouver, cises o f Pacific University, this Washington, visited his alma week. Rev. Bauer is an alum­ mater this week. nus o f the University. William Weston, former resi­ Andrew Philip and family left dent o f this city, now o f Port­ this city Tuesday for Vancouver, land, was greeting friends here B. C., where they will make this week. their future home. Andy has Mrs. B. Britten, o f Ranier, ia been agent for the Carter Car visiting her sister, Mrs. Dilley, company in this county for sev­ in this city. eral years, and the management Everett Nickerson, o f Ver- nonia. was a Forest Grove visit­ or, Monday. Mr. H. E. Witham, o f Port­ land, is in Forest Grove this week. Mrs. Dan McCloud, o f Kelso. Washington, is visiting with her mother in this city, O i«c ip lln « has appointed him salesman for the Canadian city. Attorney and Mrs. Dyke at­ tended the closing exercises of McMinnville College, last week, o f which institution they were both students. Mr. Dyke is a trustee o f the McMinnville col­ lege. I FORKS OF TREES. T h «y THE MAHOGANY M IL L S tay W h e n T h e y D « v «lo p and N ever G row A n y H lgh ar. Some people through careless ob­ servation believe that the fork of a forest tree will gradually grow higher from the ground. I f they would I d vestlgate It would be found that the forks and “ heads" o f fruit trees are at exactly the same point where they were when first noted. The state forester In inspecting lo­ cust and catalpa groves throughout the state has found owners who have uot removed one part of the fork of those trees that have formed forks below the feucepost length, believing that In years the fork would grow up and a feneepost could be cut below the fork. This erroneous belief is the cause of so much of the delay and neg­ lect of pruning in early life o f street and roadside trees. It should be remembered that the base o f a fork or a branch o f a tree will always remain at the same dis­ tance above the ground. The side brunches o f some trees, such as the elm, usually continue to grow upward, while those o f other trees, such as the maples, Incline upward when young, and us the tree grows older the weight of the branches gradually brings It to the horizontal. The latter often makes the removal o f large branches neces­ sary. which not only spoils the sym­ metry o f the tree, but usually starts decay, which soon kills the tree.—In­ diana Farmer. T h « W ide, W ide W o rld . “ It's awful bow easy some folks get weighted down with a new experi­ ence,” began the postmaster o f Wo- brook in the Hills, with a significant glance at “ Boosey” Frazer’s bowed form In the Concord wagon at the door. “ That’s what bent him over like that. Yes.” after a glance o f Interrogation from the only listener who was really listening. “ H e began to bow over soon's he realized the size o f this globe o f ours. You see. from one o f the northern counties up ’bove here Boos­ ey went all the way to the state capi­ tal. When he come back he looked solemn with the weight o' what he'd garnered. “ ‘I tell you what,’ he says to us right here, scarcely speakin’ above a whis­ per, ‘if the world's as big t’other way as 'tls this It’s a whopper!’ " —Youth’s Companion. T o o k H im Dow n. A supercilious lawyer, cross exam­ ining a young woman whose testi­ mony was likely to result unfavorably to his client. Inquired, “ You are mar­ ried. I believe?” “ No. sir.” “ Ob—only about to be married?” "No, sir.” “ Only wish to be?” ’’Really. I don't know. Would you advise such a step?" “ Oh. certainly! I am a married man myself." “ is it possible? I never sbould have thought It. Is your w ife deaf or blind?"—St. Ixntis Republic. D id n 't H ave to Lean. Perhaps one of the best stories which I .ml.v Dorothy N’evlll has told aliout Disraeli Is that concerning the occasion when a photographer asked him to pose for a photograph leaning on n chair. This at once aroused the indigination o f Mra. Disraeli. “ I soon settled th a t" she said afterward to Lady Dorothy when relating the in­ cident. “ for I said, ’Dizzy has always stood alone, and he shall continue to do ao.’ ” A Good 8 tu d «n t. “ la your boy a good student?” “ Yes.” replied Mr. Wealthy. “ T o a certain extent bo *«. The way be gets bla mother and me to pat up with bis expense accounts shows that he is a wonderful student o f human nature” — Cleveland leader. T h « Modern Ritual. Mr. Meekly—Then you would bare the “ obey” omitted from the marriage service? Miss Htrongmlnd—Not at all; merely transferred so that the man will say I t —Boston Transcript Jam es Begin Now! Lick M ad« Good H I« Boaat W h a n Scorned as a Suitor. The story of "Lick's Folly, or the Mahogany Mill," has to do with the remauce o f tbe Hie o f James Lick, the Jonor o f the Lick observatory. There is considerable discussion about Education hut In early life youug Lick fell In love with tbe daughter o f a well td do there is no doubt that a good general college course taken right miller for whom be worked. Wbeu be made kuown bis love, which was re­ is in the long run the practical thing in Education. ciprocated by the girl, the miller was augry and Is said to have replied: "Out. you beggar! Dare you think A school we,I equipped to do first class general college of my daughter, who will Inherit my riches? Have you a mill like this? work is Have you a single peuu; In your purse?” To this Lick replied that he had nothing as y e t but one day be would Forest Grove, Ore. bave a mill beside wblcb this one would be n pigsty. In 1854 tbe quiet parsimonious This school begins its 60th year of successful work in such James Lick surprised everybody by building a magnificent flour mill near general college lines September 17th, 1913. Term s reasonable. Sun Jose. Tbe mill was finished with­ in In solid mahogany, highly polished, R ecord and equipment good. Come and help us help you. aud was furnished with the best ma­ chinery possible. He made the grounds about the mill very attractive nnd be­ Come in and talk the matter over or address for Catalogue gan early to set out trees both for fruit and ornament. and further information TJck caused his elegant mill to be photographed without and within and PACIFIC UNIVERSITY, Forest Grove, Ore. sent the pictures tc the miller who bad scorned him In bis youth. Nineteen years after Mr. Lick built his mill, Jan. 1(1, 1873, be surprised tbe people o f Sau Jose again by giving It NAPOLEON’S ARMY EAGLES. to tbe Paine Memorial society o f Bos- HAD A TART TONGUE. I tou. half the proceeds o f sale to be They Were Patterned After th« An­ N o rth co t«, th « P ainter, W a l N ot O v e r­ used for a memorial hall and half to cient Symbol of the Caesar«. sustain a lecture course. —Exchange. powered by Royalty. Eagles lasted only from 1805 to .lames Northcote. the Eugllsh portrait Waterloo. Before tbeu It had been the painter, said tine things and malicious FIERCE ARAB DOGS. custom in unities to carry huge un­ things almost In tbe same breath. “ He wieldy flags mounted ou poles which, Is a bottle of aqua fortls,” observed Easy to P u t the Big Brutes to F lig h t if while they afforded a rallying polDt for some one to tlazlltt. the first critic of One K now s the T ric k . their corps, also drew the enemy’s Are. his day. “ that corrodes everything It The village dogs o f Arabia are a real It remained for Napoleon to revive the touches.” danger to strangers, whom they attack ancient symbol o f the Caesars. “ Except gold." said H azlitt “ He on sight without provocation. By A t first an eagle was presented to never drops upou Sir Josbuu or tbe strangers I mean any one except their every battalion o f Infantry and every great masters.” own immediate owners, whether na­ squadron of horse. But owlug to the “ Well, but Is he not overflowing," tives or uot, writes Lady Ramsay in number of eagles captured this allow­ persisted tbe other, “ with envy, butred the Sunday School Times. They are. ance was cut down. All battalion and all unchurltableuess? He la as as a rule, great, powerful brutes, often eagles were withdrawn and one eagle spiteful ns a woman—ayd tbeu his nig­ very haudsome, extremely tiered and was carried by each regiment o f foot gardliness. Did be ever give away capable o f defending the docks from and cavalry. In 1812 a still further anything?” wolves and other marauders. I have reduction was made and In some cases "Yes. bis advice,” said Ilnzlltt, "and often been told thut when attacked by line regiments were ordered to leave very unpleasant it is.” these ferocious aulmnls the proper their eagles In their arsenal. These This Is uot the picture of n charm­ thing to do Is to sit down quickly on stuudurds were also taken from all ing man, and yet Northcote was not the ground, when they will at once de­ regiments of light cavalry and one without his redeeming virtues. For sist. ettgle sufficed occasionally for an In­ one thing, be was refreshingly free But for my part I never bnd tbe fantry brigade. from the worship of mere prestige In courage to try this plan and had never The ettgle itself was eight Inches In an age when men were cureful to ap­ seen It done during nil my years o f height and ulne Incites ucross the portion respect according to rank UDd travel till Inst year. W e had stopped to rest and ent our lunch in a village wings. It stood on a brass block three station. Inches square and welgbed three and a The Prince of Wales, when he was odn, and I was looking out from an a young titan, met tbe painter and was open balcony and saw an elderly Turk half pounds. coming along between some bouses op? Modern colors, cumbrous as they are, much pleased with bis conversation. “ What do you know o f his royal posite. are as nothing compared to tbe old Suddenly two huge dogs, barking fu­ ones, which were us difficult to bide as highness?” Inquired Sir Joshua Key- riously. dashed at him from an open the big drum. Thus there existed a uolds later. gateway. Instnntly be dropped to tbe “ Nothing,” answered Northcote. regular system for saving eugles. “ Nothing, sir! Why. he says he ground In a sitting position. For a Sometimes, when tbe tide o f war ran moment I thought be bad fallen and adversely, they were unscrewed and knows you very well.” “ Toob!” said Northcote. “ Th at’s expected to see the dogs on top o f put into bnversacks or great coat him. T o my astonishment they turned pockets. At other times they were only his brag.” The president of the Royal aendemy and fled, their ta Ils between their legs. burled, thrown Into ponds or rivers, Before they could return. If they broken up. hidden In hollow trees, and. smiled. "Bravely said,” he muttered, would hnve done so, a couple o f vil­ most humiliating of all. stuffed Into "bravely said!” lagers appeured. helped tbe old fellow some dead horse, to be battled out to his feet and accompanied him out subsequently. — Uariter’s Weekly. FACED SEVEN LIONS. of the rauge of my vision. to plan for that College Course. Pacific University COULDN’T SEE THE JOKE. And Th ro e of Th e m Got ■ D o « « of Load In S h o rt O rder. N o t M ysticism , but M atham atlcs. Mrs. Madison, whose latest bobby Is the psychology nnd the esoteric Influ­ ence o f colors, was deeply gratified when her husband admitted without urging that there might be something In her theory after all. “ Dawson put me on to It today at the farm,” Mr. Madison continued. “ Dawson?" questioned Mrs. Madison, amazed, for Dawson Is the manager o f her husband’s stables and unknown among psychologists. Mr. Madison nodded. “ H e say» the bays eat more thnn the grays.” "R eally!” It was a humble victory, but Mrs. Madison’s face glowed with triumph. “ How does Dawson account for It?” “There are ten more bays than grays.” snld Mr. Madison.—Youth'* Companion. Captain U. A. Wilson has written a record of “ Service uud Sport In Equa- It was a rainy afteruooD. and Mr. torla" In “ A British Borderland.” He Longfellow was obliged to go out, leav­ relntes a thrilling encounter be bad with ing Sumner stretched on tbe sofu read­ seven lions ou the Mura river when In ing Lowell’s volume. Wbeu be re­ pursuit of roan nnd accompanied only turned be asked Sumner bow be liked by his gun heurer. Five o f them were Ihe poems, and Sumner replied: “ They lionesses. They were nil full grown are admirable, very good Indeed. But and occupied with their kill—a cow They were feeding slowly, why does he s|>ell his words so badly?” giraffe. Longfellow said that be attempted to their first hunger appeased, pushing explain that Ihe poems were purposely and Jostling one another playfully, their low growls distinctly audible: written In tbe New Eugland dialect, “ For a couple of minutes I wolfed, but Sunnier could uot understand. watching them; then, as the biggest One sumuiet at Nabunt I dined at lion, a fine, black maned fellow, turned Mr. Longfellow’s with Mr. Sumner and sideways to me, I raised my rifle nnd some others. Sumner was a collector let drive at his neck. I heard tbe thud of cbltiu. about which be knew a great o f the bullet on flesh, aud be dropped (leuI, us be did about many other in Ills tracks like a stone. With a things. He told ns a story about simultaneous growl every head went going to see Lord Exmoutb's collection up. nnd the Ilona swung round, facing Going In F o r Methuselah’« Record. and bow floe It was. When be was the noise of the shot I let fly a second An ambitious new citizen, with the taking his leave Lord Extnoutb gave bullet at the chest o f the second male, him two rare plates and offered to send nnd. with a deafening roar he bounded habit o f taking literally the every day them to bis lodgings, but Sumner high In the air, dashed a dozen yards expressions o f Americans, obtained n would not be parted from his prize and forward and fell dead to earth Just as position aa train caller at the Union insisted on taking (hem home with him I was drawing a second bead on blm atatlon. One day he had Just called, ‘‘ All-I-I In bis cab. When be had concluded afresh. abonr-r-rd for Kansas City, Den-ver, hla story, which was interesting, but “ The remainder, all lionesses, turned long In narration, Tom Appleton, Mr at my second shot and walked slowly Salt Lake, New Or-rleana, Chlnehln- laHtgfellow's brotheriD-law, who was away with much tall lashing and a natl, Buffalo, Baltl-more and Nil present said. “ A pleasing tale, lllus chorus o f growls. I was Just In time York!” A man ran up to blm and almost (rated with two plates.” Everybody to get a snapshot at tbe hindmost as laughed, and Sumner, looking about she disappeared Into tbe sernb. Tbe breathlessly asked, " I want the last most good naturedly. said: “ What are ‘tell’ o f the bullet and her answering , train out for Cleveland!” The perplexed caller exclaimed, you all laiigltiug at? I suppose Apple- snnrl told me that I bad bit her. which “ W h a t you should live ao long?” —St. ton Is up to some mischief, but my blood spots on the leaves confirmed.” Louis Post-Dispatch. story 1» quite true.” —From “ Some Ear­ ly Memories.” by Senutor H. O. Lodge. H « Couldn’t Plow. The Limit. In Scribner’s Magazine. A certain Incident connected with It was an English ship with an tbe great Napoleon while he was in ex ­ Removing Paint Stains. ile In Elba Is commemorated In the Is­ English crew and an American passen­ Taint la one o f tbe most naual o f the land to this hour by an Inscription a f­ ger list T w o stewards were having unavoidable stains which afflict the fixed to the wall of a peasant's bouse. a heated altercation and pouring forth -klrt worn out o f doors. “ Freab paint” A man Darned Glaconl was plowing anathemas upon each other’« heads, signs are all very well If they are seen when the famotia exile came along one when ns n crowning Insult once said to in time, but they have an Inconvenient day and expressed an Interest in bla the other, ‘Aw. you eats Just tike a way of appearing boldly before tbe work. Napoleon even took tbe plow­ passenger.” —Argonaut. eyes after damage bas been done. The share out of tbe man's band and at­ Th« Culprit. sooner a paint stain Is removed tbe tempted to guide It himself. But the “ tlad all my money taken last night. easier tbe task o f removal will be. oxen refused to obey him, overturned Spread a little dry laundry or corn­ the plow and spoiled the furrow. Woke op hearing some one In the starch around tbe spot to keep tbe The Inscription rnna thus: “ Napoleon room. Reached under the pillow fo r paint when moistened from spreading. the Great, passing by tbla place In my revolver, but didn't «hoot.” “ Why didn’t you?" VfDCCCXIV. took In the neighboring Then wet tbe stain with turpentine. " I ’d be a widower If I bad.” —London A f'e r a few minutes moisten again. field a plowshare from the bands o f a Scrafe tlte paint up with a dull kDife peasant and himself tried to plow, but Telegraph. or a spoon handle and wet again with the oxen, rebellloos to those band« Moat Intensive. tnrpendne. When there la no trace which yet bad guided Europe, head­ "D o yon believe In Intensive garden­ left o f the pelnt rub tbe spot dry with long fled from the furrow.” ing. Mra noerake?” asked the visitor. a rlestt rtotb and brush off the starch. — Wa*b'ngton Star. "W ell, rather,” said Mr». Iloerake. F or S a l e —O ne open buggy ” 1 spent all last winter raising one good as new $60. Also one cart geranium In a aoap bog.’’ — Harper’s An ad in the Press brings Result and harness $20. Inquire this Weekly. Charlaa Sum nar'a W oeful La ck « f Sen*« of H u m o r. a office. 32ft,