Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, July 17, 1913, Image 5

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    FOREST GROVE PRESS, FOREST GROVE. OREGON, TH U R SD AY. JU LY 17, 1913.
R E A L E STA TE TR A N S FE R S
★
TH E
S T A R
T H E A T R E
Motion Picture Exhibition
The Best Pictures Obtainable
Every Film A W inner
Drama, Comedy, Laughter and Pathos
How About
that
New House
The Forest Grove Planing Mill Inc.,
General Contractors, deal in lumber, shingles, lath
cement, lime, sand and p aster; building and roofing
papers.
A ll finish lumber kiln dried.
W e make a
specialty of house buildir.g and carry a full line of
sash, door frames, mouldings, glass, paint and every­
thing required in the building line.
Call and let us
figure with you.
Forest Grove Flaning Mill Inc.
General Contractors and Builders
Council St.
Foreit Grove, Ore
Transfers for week ehdibg July 7,,
1913.
• .V .V .V .W .V .W .V .V V .W A ’»
Hillsboro Garden Tracts to Regine
R. 0. Stevenson’s brother, J. Mesuse lot 31, blk 4, Garden Tracts
G. Stevenson, from Eugene, was Add to Hillsboro $200.
Georg j J.Hauschcn and w f to Benja­
out last week and spent a few
min A Shaver lot 8, blk 19, Pattlson
days with his brother and family. and Mo an’s First Add to Hillsboro.
Victor Bailey and family have
moved to Cherry Grove, where
they expect to remain until the
spring at least.
Ivan is living
with Mr. Holscher for the sum­
mer.
Mr. and Mrs. McCoy drove to
Forest Grove Monday to do some
shopping.
I’earl Stevcnson now visits
town twice a week for her music
lessons, Mrs. Showers being her
teacher.
Mildred Campbell returned to
her home in Colville, Wash., a f­
ter a two months visit with her
uncle', D. A. Kennedy, and fam­
ily.
We understand that Frank
Welch has been elected principal
o f the Watts school for the com­
ing term. We have not been able
to learn who the primary teacher
will be.
Mrs. Holscher was a caller at
the Elk Horn farm Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Olson,
relatives o f F. Bleid, who form ­
erly lived in this vicinity, motored
out from Portland Sunday to Mr.
Reuters’ , They, with the Misses
Reuter, also called at R. 0. Stev­
enson’s. Mr. Olson returned to
Portland Monday, but Mrs. Ol­
son stayed to spend the week
visiting old friends and scenes.
C. B. Campbell, w ife and niece
Miss Christina, from Portland,
visited at Elk Horn farm a few
days ago.
Geo. Barrett will soon be seen
out in bis bright new auto.
HOME
B A K IN G C O .
Finest of Bread and Pastry Baked
Every Day.
We
sell 6 loaves of Bread for 25 cents
Free delivery to all parts of the city
Pacific Avenue,
Forest Grove
Mr. Holscher, family a n d
Grandma McCoy spent the 4th
at Banks at the home o f a broth­
er o f Mrs. Holscher.
Mrs. N. A. Frost attended Cha-
tauqua Saturday and Sunday at
Gladstone Park, motoring into
Portland Sunday lo visit the
family o f Mr. Russell until Mon­
day.
Mr. and Mrs. I ongworth have
rented the house to the south o f
Mr. Frosts’ for the summer.
The Approacli of Spring
is the signal for greater effort
in all lines o f endeavor. Warm­
er and dryer weather means
greater activily in b u i l d i n g
operations. Now
Is the Time to Start
work on your new residence,
store building, barn or other
structure. When you are ready
to start
That N ew House,
get our estimates on all the ma­
terial you will require.
Willis-Place Lumber Co.,
Fhom 024X. So. A St., Forest Grove.
The Christian Endeavor society
has discontinued meetings until
next October when they will be­
gin again on the first Sunday o f
that month.
Emma Busch spent Sunday at
Dilley.
FOREST GROVE, OREGON
Capita! 3s?d Surplus
$ 60 , 000 .
U. S. D E P O S IT O R Y .
B o a r d
of
D ir e c t o r s :
T. W. Sain
W. K. Newell
Geo. Mizner
John Templeton Geo. G. Hancock
L. J. Cori
H. T. Buxton
Chri3 Peterson
H. G. Goff
E. W. Haines
W. H. Hollis
1100 .
TO MAKE EXPERIMENTS.
SCOGGINS VALLEY
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Wahl and
son, Howard, from Groveland,
were visiting their parents the
Wahls last Sunday.
The ditch work for the Hills­
boro water will commence at
once. Several men are putting
up a camp.
‘Befnger 30 acres In James H Reid
GLC sec lfr, 1 S 1 $10.
Christ Oefinger to Anna Kaufmann
and hus 30 acres in James H Reid
DLC sec 19. 1 S 1 $10.
Harrle A Davies and w f to W H
Hollis and L M Graham 1 3-20 acres
•n sec 31, 2 N .3 $10.
Georgia A. Hughes to W E Miller
I acre on Base Line road and 7th St
Forest Grove $500.
Peter Amacher to John
Amactaer
20 acres in sec 25, 1 N 3 $1800.
Joseph N Miller and w f to William
L Mast and w f 30.34 acres In Noah
Jobe DLC No 50, 1 8 3 $10.
Samuel C Jaggar and w f to Louise
Wells SW>4 o f S E * o f the SW 1-4
?ec 34, 2 S 1 $10.
A t It Often Happens.
Mrs Jipes - How do you like your
new girl? Mrs. Gumleigh—I don't
seem to suit her at all —Chicago Trib­
une.
Humility kneels
gazes at tile skies.
In tbe dust,
but
The worst education wblcli teaches
self denial Is better than the beat
which teaches everything else and not
that.
Labor and Genius.
The common Idea Is the more labor
the less genius—In other words, the
grester the lals>r the worse the art
The truth Is exactly the opposite.
Aspiration set* hut one side o f every
question, possession m any.- Lowell.
R<«om In the Winter Palaeo Where
Emperor Nicholas I. Died.
The Winter |aitace o f tbe esar sur­
passes auy other palace in Europe. It
I Is on tbe banks o f the Neva and owea
Its existence to tbe Empress Catherine
II.. that most extraordinary woman,
extraordinary lu ability and In vice,
the surprise o f all her contemporaries
and the wonder o f all who have stud­
ied her character. Tbe building la four
stories high, of n light brown color and
highly ornamental In architecture. It
Is a wilderness o f halls, stairways and
apartmeuts. The Nicholas ball and the
St. George's hall will never be forgot-
teu by those who have seen them.
One of the most Interesting rooms Is
that where Nicholas I. died. It Is In
the upper story of the northeast corner
of the building and Is approached by
four doors nud finally by a narrow
passage.
It Is a small room, only
about eighteen feet long and twelve
feet wide, with two small windows,
nnd Is the place where tbe emperor
spent most o f his time when not offi­
cially employed.
It Is the room in
which he died, some say by |x>lson ad­
ministered by himself in a lit o f melan­
choly Induced by tbe outcome o f the
Crimean war.
The room remains Just as he left It.
Near the center la n plain Iron bed-
atead. Some chairs and a few cheap
pictures adorn tbe room, and a dilapi­
dated. down at the heel pair of slippers
complete the furnishings o f the attic
room in the palace.
EQUAL TO OCCASIONS.
A
Man of Quiok W it and Prompt
Action Waa Lord Whitworth.
I.ord Whitworth, who held various
posts o f honor In English diplomatic
circles, was a kindly, gracious gentle­
man us well as a wit and a man o f
the world. He had Indeed almost meas­
ured «words with Napoleon at the
Tuilerles when that despot railed at
England for not having evacuated
Egypt nnd Malta, accused her o f hav-
lng violated treaties and ended by
flourishing a cane dangerously near the
face o f the English ambassador.
I.ord Whitworth put his haud on tbe
hilt o f his sword.
"W h at would you have done If tbe
etn|>eror had struck you?" be waa a ft­
erward asked.
“ I would have felled him to the
ground,” was tbe quiet answer.
Perhnps the best story told o f him Is
one showing how his quick wit dis­
posed o f a rival. When he was at the
Russian court, Fox sent there as a sort
o f umbossador o f his own a man named
Adair, the son of a surgeon..
One day the empress, speaking la
French, said to Lord Whitworth:
“ Is be a very Important man, this it.
Adnlr?"
"N o t so very, madame.” replied Lord
Whitworth, "although bis father wss s
grand snlgncur," a remark which read­
ers o f French will recognize as a very
good pun. for the word used by Lord
W hitford means “ blood letter,” while
by Its sound It also meant a greet lord.
—London Standard.
"Discovery.”
According to some wonder mongers,
whenever you tell a atory asserting the
existence o f something new and aston­
ishing you “ discover” it. But that la
not the sense In which tbe word la naed
by sclentlflc Investigators. Wben Pro­
fessor and Mme. Curie “ discovered” tbe
wonderful element “ radium” they plac­
ed It. so to speak, "on tbe table,” and
Ferocious China«* Intact Now Baing every one baa been able to examine It
Propagated to Fight Peat.
and to prove that the statements made
Philadelphia Is to get rid o f Its mos­ about It are true. When Dr. Larerau
quitoes by using the praying mantis, of Purls ''discovered” that malarial fe­
u ferocious looking Chinese hug of ver la due to a parasite In the blood he
four Inches In length, wbieb Kutomol
showed the pnraslte nnd showed how
ogtst llornig Is cultivating In tbe one can always And It. and thus he en­
southern section of that city.
abled any one und every one to see It
Recently he started 200 nests of the and to exnmlne Its relation to malarial
mantes, nnd each nest has produced fever. Those ore instances o f “ discov­
300 of these bluck beetles, which the ery."
Mere guesses and assertions
mandarins use like lighting eocka, and without proof are not “ discovery.” —
those which have been placed lu trees London Telegraph.
In mosquito Infected sections have
devastated that region o f all the mos
Pretty Useful Shoes.
qultoes. which have become their prey
It would he difficult to realize what
llorn ig has asked the citizens not to the Frleslnnder would do wlthont his
kill the mantes when they see them or klompen, or wooden shoes, fo r they
think they will do harm, for they are hnve a hundred uses. With them he
only carnlrorous and feed upon mos
halls out Ills Imat, corrects his chil­
qultoes.
When this new Implement dren and scoops up a drink o f water
o f destruction is recognized ns the offi­ wherever he may be. He places In
cial exterminator of the plasmodlum them Ills worms for Ashing, uses them
malnrlne, the city's bugologlst be­ ns missiles in n free flgbt. digs with
lieves that he will soon have the city them, measures dry goods with them,
dear o f the pests.
and n hundred other things.
The
The mantes propagate rapidly.
klompen nre cheap: they coat about
HISTORIC DOCUMENT F0UND7
WAY
As Usual.
Muggins How changed W igwag Is
•toce he lost all his money! Biiggtna—
Yes. It has altered him so that lots of
his old friends fall to recogulie him —
Baltimore American.
A CZAR IN AN ATTIC.
BUG HUNTS MOSQUITOES.
$ 10 , 000 .
G E Westinghouse and w f to Mabel
seasxg,
Poullry and Hogs Bought Hers
For Breeding Purooses.
Robert
Anderson et al to Edwin
Tatro a: d wf 40 acres in S E cor R
F Tupptr DLC, secs 13 and 14, 1 S
4 $10.
Tualatin Mill Company to J J
Boone 3140 sq ft In sec 24, 2 S 1 $50. j
Edwin Tatro and wf et al to Rob­
Dr. Walter Pruce, Chief of Government
ert Anderson et al lot 4, blk 31, For-,
Breeding Station and Experimental
eat Grove $10.
Poultry Farm at Pergamino, Argen­
Portland Trust Company to G 11
tina, Considera American Strains Beet
Riggs lot 2, blk 2, Valley Vista $550.
In the World.
Dell Sinclair and bus to Lilliau
Cochran tract In NEV* o f SW*w see
Hogs uud ebb-kens o f American
11. H S 1 30 acres $3850.
strains will be distributed among the
Ruth Realty Co to Henry George farms In the Argentine Republic, Dr.
Walter Pruce, chief of the experimen­
lot 11, blk 10. Wilkesboro $700.
Spring Hill Land Company to M tal station and poultry experimen­
Van Alstine
and
Herbert
Gordon tal farm at Pergamino, Argentina, de­
Dr.
Tracts 15 and 16, Spring Hill Farm clared In a recent Interview.
Pruce. who Is now on his way to Ar­
$7000.
Ruth Realty Company to E W gentina. has with him a cargo o f bogs
Barnts let 4, blk 41, North
Plains and chickens of various breeds which
be has collected from the farms of
$150.
Indiana, Ohio, New Jersey, Illinois,
Jjtan Ijoftis and wf to Washington New York and other states and 300
Grange No 313 tract in WV4 o f SW*4 tons of American built sheds, ben-
aI sec 24,. 2 N 3 $1.00.
houses, Incubators and other farm Im­
Eugene J Hulbert and w f to Albert plements Incident to the breeding of
Por.delicek 11 acres in sec 31, 2 S 1 poultry and hogs.
"F o r some time the Argeutlne go v­
$2400.
ernment has considered Introducing
W. Clarke and w f to Jacob Lesser
Into that country certain strains of
I 46 acres in DLC of J D~$tlchardaon American live stock and poultry which
and wf $10.
are raised so successfully h.v American
James P. McFarlane and w f to The farmers." said I)r Pruce. “ A fter con­
Du.ining-Frentzel Lumber Co lot 3. sidering the matter carefully and be
blk 10, Pattlson & Moran's First Add lug advised that American farming
methods were In advance o f those In
to Hillsboro $10.
any other country of the world 1 was
Spring Hill Land Company to C E
commissioned to come here and buy.
Hulten tract 23, Spring H ill Farm
Purchased Much Stock.
$1400.
" I hnve purchased more than 500
Spring Hill Land Company to Frank
chickens, representing Hfty-one varie­
Juifington tracts 22 and 24. Spring ties o f breeds, a ml forty -six hogs of
Hill Farm $2800.
six different breeds.
I also hnve
W alter L Miller or.d w f to L
H grounding and feed mills. Incubators,
Siege 16-ft strip for road in secs 15 hog sheds and other equipment and
six experts who are graduates of lead
ind 16, 2 S 1 $50.
F W Emerson and w f to Felix Ver- Ing American aj¡|-lcult urnl colleges
whom 1 expect to scud throughout Ar
hoeven 40 x 100 ft in blk 2, Halls Add
gentlnn to explain stock breeding to
to Forast Grove $200.
our farmers.
E A Wright and w f to Louise K
"W e expect to arrive In Buenos
Brace lot 8, blk 1, Kingston $10.
Aires near the end of July or eurly In
E A Wright and w f to David
K August The poultry and stock will
be shipped from there to Pergamino,
Brace lot 3, blk 3, Kingston $10.
E A Wright and w f to David
L where It Is proposed to establish a
breeding station.
Brace lots 5, 6, 7, blk 1, Kingston $ lf.
Wilt Giva Lecturas.
E A Wright and w f to Harry Court-
“ W e will Invite the furmers to call
neoy and wf lots 5 and 6, blk
3.
at the breeding station, where lectures
Kingston $800.
will be given on the proper manner of
H Haverdale to Charles D Staley raising chickens und hogs. Later we
lot 7 blk 1 Knob Hill Add to Forest may Introduce certain strains o f Amer­
Grove $10.
ican cattle. A fter we have raised a
Luigi De Santis and w f to Pasquale sufficiently lurge number chickens and
Giaoommozzi % int in tract in sec hogs will be given by the government
to the poorer farmers, and our ugents
3 3 S 1; 4 acres $1086.
will go through the country and tell
Frank Duerst and w f to E I Kurat-
them o f the proper methods o f bous
'l and J C Kuratli part o f lots
7 lng. breeding nud caring for their
and 8, blk 22, Hillsboro $10.
stock.”
John Detblofs and w f to Washing­
Dr. Pruce said he had Berkshire,
ton County 0.62 acres for road
In Yorkshire, Poland China. Duroc-Jer
soy and Tnmworth hogs and White
T B Speake DLC Con $77.50.
E A Kreider to J D Rode part of and Brown Leghorns, Wyandottes and
other well known breeds o f chickens
'ot 2, blk 7, Forest Grove $1.
J D Rode and w f to S D Stoufer
‘ wo tracts in block 7, Forest Grove
A fine attendance was observed E Minto lot 5, Timber Townstte $186.
at Sunday school last Sabbath.
A C Alexander to Orval Hutchens,
Mrs. Rose Vermilyea a n d '00x50 ft In lot 4, blk 4 Naylor's Add
daughter Gladys, spent the week to Forest Grove $550.
Anna Kaufmann and bus to Christ
end with Mrs. N. A. Frost.
Mrs. Ida Goeing from Wood­
land, Washington, spent the last
week with Mrs. R. A. Herring­
ton.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
$
ARGENTUM BUYS
U. S. UVE STOCK
TO KEEP BABIES W E L L
Guard Againat Hast and Bad Foed,
Experts Tell Mother#.
The District o f Columbia health de­
partment has sent out printed Instruc­
tions on "H o w to Keep the Baby
Well.” It ad rises:
Be sure o f the milk you purchase.
See that milk Is pure and wholesome:
then keep It clean and cold.
S-ald the nursing bottle often and
thoroughly; do not tolerate long tube
attachments.
Give the child as much cool water
as It will tike.
Keep the child In tbe open air of
parks, bnt not exposed to the snn'a hot
rays.
Tlie clothing o f tbe child should be
light nnd loose.
Children should be bathed two or
three times each day during hot
weather.
At the first appearance o f physical
ailments call a physician.
Improper food combined with high
tempera tore la the great destroyer of
babies, causing 96 per cent o f tbe
«•«•• b e
May Be the Original Draft of Lecomp-
ten Constitution of Kansas.
In looking over a bundle o f papers
which belonged to nu uncle who died
In Kansas. Justice of the Peace Joseph
A. Headley of Mllltown, N. J.. found
what appears to him to he the original
drnft o f tbe famous Lecompton con
stltution o f Kansas, a document for
which the authorities of Hint state hnve
been looking for tbe past bnlf century.
Mr. Headley has written to the seore
tary o f state o f Kansas telling him of
the find.
The lecompton constitution was the
flrst organic law of Kansas nnd pro
Tided for slavery
It waa recognized
by President nucha nan. hut afterward
supplanted with a new Instrument that
forbade slavery within the state.
Buy Back the Tarra Neva.
The Scott antarctic expedition's ree
acl. the Terra Nora, will not. contrary
to expectations, be sent to tendon for
exhibition purposes She has been re
purrhssed by Messrs Bowring, the
original owners and will proceed short
ly to Newfoundland, where she wilt
•gain be employed In sealing.
fifteen pence a pair, man's alas, and
Dutchmen's feet are not Cinderella-
like by any means.—W ide World Mag­
azine.
Usad to Dodging.
“ You never hear o f a wealthy bache­
lor being run over by an auto.”
'T h a t’s so. I wonder why It la.”
“ T o a man who Is need to dodging
mothers with marriageable daughters
dodging automobiles la merely child's
piny."—Houston Post.
A S ti c kle r F a r Good Ferns.
"O f course you looked up the new
girl’s references?”
“ How could I. dear? They were
from n lot o f women I don’t know."—
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Estimating It.
•T hope I haven't kept you waiting
too long.” gushed the girl.
“ Only about $3 worth.” estimated
the .voting man with the taxicab oot-
ilde. — Pittsburgh Post.
An Incentive.
Mrs Crawford—I thought yoq said
roo weren't going to tbe sewing circle?
Mrs CralMhaw—But. my dear, I didn't
know then shoot the things yon ha?«
told me.-Judge.