FOREST G R O V E PRESS. FOREST GROVE. OREGON. T H U R S D A Y A U G U S T 14. 1013. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Nearby News Notes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :ocoo: ( .(YV'l'PQTiri'V) f\ O w t Q XT / n w t n r ! ' VopUll-UV/l-Lti VV U f U til !*■ >s the desire o f The Press to secure a live, boosting correspondent in each town and community in this county. No matter where you live you should be able to gather a few news notes each week. The larger your community, the more you should be able to find and write about. I f your section is not already represented in The Press by a regular correspondent, we will be pleased to have you send in your Dame as a candidate for the position. If you do not wish to become a regular correspondent we will appreciate an occasional news letter. T he E ditor . • • • • • • • • ed and was erected to replace the one destroyed by fire last winter. Prior to the burning o f the barn Mr. Withycombe’s residence with all its contents, which in­ cluded wedding gifts, burned. Last winter while driving in Hillsboro a valuable horse was killed by a live wire and Mr. ; Withycomde had a narrow es­ cape while endeavoring to en­ tangle the animal. Hillsboro In­ dependent. Hoppickers Wanted hoppickcrs for Bu­ chanan yard. Fifteen days pick­ ing. Cabins furnished campers. City water free. Wagon to and from Forest Grove. Leave names at the Bazaar or at my farm. J, A. B u c h a n a n . The P r e s s desires to secure a live correspondent in every community in Washington county. Send in your application at once. W an ted ‘ ‘An ounce o f preventati re is worth a pound o f cure Hollitser’ s Rocky Mountain Tea has been ‘ ‘preventative for thirty years. Nothing so good to keep you well. 35 cents Tea or Tablets. - Vankoughnet and Reder. When in need o f some more office stationary call on the PRESS job department. Envel­ opes, cards, letterheads, circular letters, bill heads etc. X X If taken just what you feel as in 1856, the family mov­ though you were going to be sick Since the new county road to ing to Kansas in 1871. In 1889 you will never know what serious Netrarts has been completed I they came to Oregon and settled ; illness is. It purefies the blood, hundreds o f people have traveled at Lebanon. Mrs. Phelps was a drives out disease before it gets it by team and automobile and member o f the Congregational a foot hold; such is Hollinger’s pronounce it to be one o f the fin­ church, and was an exemplary Rocky Mountain Tea. None est highways both as to con­ Christian. Her husband died at i other so effective and sure. 35 struction and scenic beauty there Lebanon in 1907. She leaves cents Tea or Tablets. —Van is anywhere through the hills in two sons, Purley Phelps, o f Leb­ koughnet & Reder. the western part of Oregon, says anon, and Anson Phelps, o f Orenco. the Tillamook Herald. P r e s s Job Printing Satisfies The remains were shipped to This road to the beach from Tillamook is a splendid thing for Lebanon for burial.— Exchange. New Road Popular. CORNELIUS : :A m y » > V i V .V i V * w .v .v .v . The thirty six by fifty foot ad­ dition to the Ingerbirgtfon ware­ house has received its new coat o f paint and is in perfect readi­ ness with its new scales for stor­ age o f hay and grain. Hay and grain are beginning to find their way into both the Buchannon Co. and the Inger- birgtfon ware houses. The pros­ perity o f the country around about is attested not only by the heavy harvest, but by the good horse flesh, which our farmers take pride in harnessing to their loads o f produce. Cornelius farmers have some fine horses. The tearing down o f an old barn and the removal o f the mass of the old lumber back of the Cornelius Hotel has given place to improvement that bears favorable comment. Mrs. M. M. Maurey o f Lewis- town, Montana, daughter of Mrs. Ella Reynolds, a former well known resident of Forest Grove arrived Monday with her infant son Melvin, called home by the illness of her mother. The United Brethern are pre­ paring to hold a camp meeting at the Cornelius parsonage next week. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sharp re­ turned Tuesday from their honey­ moon trip to the Tillamook beach. Cornelius wishes for these people all the blessings of old earth. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Lemmon spent the week end at Seaside. The first rain will be welcomed by the dust-wailers, but what about the subsequent rains. § j consin, Tillamook, as Netarts beach is the finest along the Pacific coast. The road practically makes Ne­ tarts a part o f Tillamook as it is only a few minutes run to the beach and with our improved ho­ tel facilities many tourists can make their home in Tillamook. Beside the tourist business this road opens up a large section of fine ranch country along the beach which heretofore has been almost inaccessable to Tillamook. It is predicted that in the very near future electric cars will be running along this highway. Name Carved in Early Day« This week while cutting a CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR large fir tree on his place for fire-wood Frank Holcomb cut off Municipal Engineering a slab 18 inches thick and saw Surveying and Subdividing underneath what appeared to be Phone 482 letters cut into the wood and cov­ ered with pitch. Upon examina­ Abbot Building tion it was found to be an in­ scription reading, “ H. Buxton, 1841.” An old witness tree was FOREST GROVE, OREGON known to have stood in that lo­ cality and this tree was cut in to a depth o f 12 inches within the past few years in an effort to find the mark, but the searchers Pipe Line Progressing. did not go deep enough. Henry J. L. Stannard, engineer for Buxton was one o f the pioneers the Washington-Oregon Corpora­ of Washington county and was tion, was in the city Tuesday, the grandfather o f Austin Bux­ FOR enroute to Sain Creek. He says ton o f Forest Grove. Old resi­ that the company expects to dents say the name was undoubt­ have the pipe line between Sain edly carved by him. The slab Quality and Service and Forest Grove completed has been preserved and it is sug- within six weeks, and at the | gested that the museum o f the latest by September 25. As soon state historical society would Sunday Dinners as the connection is made at For­ be a fit place to deposit it. The a Specialty est Grove with the Hillsboro growth above the name is an in- terminal there, water will be | teresting feature,as showing the turned into the county seat development o f the tree in 72 mains. The reservoir will be ¡years. Hillsboro Independent. City and Commer­ built this fall, but as the head gate, or intake, is over 200 feet 1 SSS88SSSS88S8^8SSS8g888S8888SS88SS888S8S88888S888SK higher than Hillsboro, there will | SANITARIUM NOTES K cial Trade Solicited ss ft be plenty of pressure.—Argus. | iftftftftftftftfti*ftftftftftftftftftftftftftftftft. HOTEL LAUGHL1N Harvesting is in full blast here now and threshing will soon be­ gin. Deer hunting seems to be all the rage here now. There seems to be plenty o f hunting but few deer killed. Mr. Peter Jacobson and family and Paul Lilly and wife o f Port­ land, accompanied by Daniel Pierce and family o f Forest Grove were visiting writh rela­ tives of this place Saturday and Sunday. A call to fight fire near Timber was sounded here Monday morn­ ing. Misses Katie and Ruth Lilly and Eugene Loving o f Forest Grove were Gales Creek callers Sunday. A special school meeting was called for August 11th, which re suited in the election o f T. P. Hines and Judson James as di rectors and Walter Sargent, clerk. The Gales Creek Union Ceme­ tery Association met in called meeting August 11th and elected Mrs. Bell Lilly president, J. L. Loving vice president, J. J. Ad kins and J. L, Loving trustees, Cornelius Hart clerk, J. L. Lov- ¡ing treasurer and Moses McCoy «exton. Ethel Adkins returned home last week after a month’s visit with relatives at Salem. Esther Pratt o f Salem is visit­ ing with relatives at Gales City. Hundleys and Mat Hines fami­ lies and Mrs. Marion Lilly start­ ed for the coast last week. George Culver and Charles Wilson who are working at Tim­ ber spent Sunday at home. Ottice Shearer and wife were Gales Creek callers Sunday. R E E T° EVERY WOMAN.. Bring this ad to our Notion Department not later than one week from today and receive absolutely free, a regular 10c card of WILSON DRESS HOOKS These popular new Dress-hooks are not ordinary hooks and eyes or snaps —they will completely overcome your dress fastening difficulties. The free cards are not samples but the same value for which you would regularly pay 10c. We make this most unusual and liberal offer as we are confident you will find Wilson Dress-hooks the very thing you have always wanted. They can’ t come unhooked or ‘ ‘ pop” open accidentally. They hold securely without bulge or gap, the you can unhook them with perfect ease. Guar­ anteed not to rust or crush in washing and ironing, and to outlast any garment; perfectly flat and never show. Don’ t neglect this opportunity to try the Wilson Dress- hooks you have seen so widely advertised in the leading mag­ azines and style books. Used by fashionable women every­ where and endorsed by leading dressmakers. CUT O U T THIS ADVERTISEMENT A n d present at our Notion Department. Large and small sizes: Gray, Black and W hite colors. One dozen on a card. None given to children. KING & C A P L E ’ S S T ORE Rasmussen’s Feed Store Dealer in Flour, Feed and all kinds of Garden Seeds in s e a s o n ....................... I. R A S M U S S E N , P ro p rie to r Mrs. Walter Burke came to the R. DUNCAN Hospital Saturday for medical Willamina, Ore. —Mrs. Amy J. treatment. Proprietor Pacific Ave. Forest Grove, Oregon Brown, wife of Tomas Brown Mrs. Haines who has been at and daughter o f Captain Charles Handley, and Sarah Burton the Hospital for a while is im­ proved enough to sit up. Handley, died here August 1. mmuii iPitinMuiiiiuiiMiiiiiiin .iiiiiiniimniiiiiiiiiiii uuniiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiii miiniiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiüuiiiiiiii Amy Jermina Hadley was born Richard Bush is recovering in Tasmania, August 20, 1845, from the operation of last week. and came with her parents to W. J. Bradley o f Portland has Oregon in 1850. She was mar­ returned to that city after a few ried to Thomas Brown of North days visit with Mrs. Cohen. Yamhill, in December, 1853. Mrs. Grady o f near Cornelius Nine children were born of this union, seven o f whom were pres­ [ is now in the Hospital. ent at the funeral. The husband The Surgery at the Hospital is and two daughters are dead. being renovated and calcimined. After a thorough study of conditions that affect your The children living are: Henry sales, namely the prospective trade and your stock of goods, C., Charles H. and Thomas D. Bad Luck Brown, o f Willamina; Mrs. Lil­ then your chief aim is to bring them together. You do this, Another link in the chain of lian Reifenberg, o f Portland; on the one hand by preparing your goods so that they may be Mrs. Edith E. Sdsby, o f Cottage misfortunes which have overtak­ easily presented, and on the other hand you must notify the Grove; James E. Brown, of Mc­ en Ralph Withycombe was added trade that you are ready to serve them. Minnville, and Mrs. Mabel El­ Wednesday night when the new liot, o f Tillamook. Three of the ! barn on his place south o f town It is not enough to simply notify the people in your sec­ seven brothers and sisters of burned with its contents. The new tion, you must argue with them, suggest to them, and convince Mrs. Brown are dead. Those building had just been complet- them that you have for sale what they need or what they de­ who remain are: Mrs. S. H. sire» That your store is the best place for them to trade, Robinson, o f Yamhill; Miss E. because of advantages of quality, price and convenience must C. Handley, o f McMinnville, be impressed upon your prospective customers. Mrs. Kate Burton Spencer, o f Thatcher, and Mrs. *M. H. Wil­ It is the psychological law of repetition of the same liams, o f North Yakima, Wash­ idea, that will finally causes the average customer to ''Catch ington. all of whom, except Mrs. the Spirit'' so to speak, and will be guided thereby. V\ i liaMs were present at the fu- neial. Now think for a minute, your store windows attract mere­ Mrs. Amy J. Brown GALES CITY. A. A. K I R K W O O D F W H Y ADVERTISE? The Best W a y to Reach the Trade W e Handle the Miller Piano Here Lose Little Daughter. Mr and Mrs. W. C. Jackson, o f near North Plains, lost their little daughter, Lillian, Tuesday afternoon, August 5. The child was between two and three years old. The funeral took place Wednesday afternoon. Betsy Ann Phelps. Mrs. Betsy Ann Phelps died at her home at Orenco, Wednesday. August 6, 1913, from general de­ bility. She was bom in New York, April 7. 1832, and was aged 81 years, 2 months and 29 days. She was wedded to Elias Phelps, at Sheboygan Falls, Wis- W e buy direct from the fac­ tory. Y ou save the agent's profit. Y ou can get them on easy terms. Pacific Drug C o. Forest Grove - - Oregon ly those who happen to pass their way. Your salesmen can wait on only those who find their way within your store. An advertisment in your weekly paper reaches out to nearly all the homes in your city, and to nearly all the farms and ranches for miles around» It is read by the husband, the wife, the children, the hired help and others» If it were not for the newspapers you would have to do a great deal of soliciting to attract your trade. But that the paper does for all business men. It keeps up its circulation for your benefit. By inserting in your advertisment, the message you you wish taken to nearly all the homes in your territory is promptly delivered, and if placed in the right kind of paper will be attractively presented, and will receive a good hear­ ing for it will be in desirable company.