Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, August 14, 1913, Image 5

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    FOREST GROVE PRESS, FOREST GROVE, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 14, 1913
TRAVELING SCHOOL
Steam Laundry
COMING SEPT. 5-6
PLEASANT BAKING DAYS ^oresl Grove
when the cakes and bread-stuffs
turn out “ just right” are an ev­
ery day occurrence when you use
tr=
W ood ,
CR ESCEN T B A K -
Coal,
Cold Storage
ING P O W D E R
and Ice.
Its action is sure and
uniform. It does not
cause the dough to
raise up suddenly and
fall, but works surely
and evenly until the
food is baked.
MERTZ & LATTA
Cor. 5th Ave.
and 2nd St.,
Forest Grove,
Ore.
25c per Pound
Ask Your Grocer.
Crescent Manufacturing Co.
Seattle, Washington
BUTTER WRAPPER
PRINTING
Notice.
The Sunrise Grocery will pay
cash for all
farm products,
Eggs, Butter, Veal and pork,
the best market price paid and
all goods sold at the bottom
price. Pacific Avenue at Third
street. JOHN DODGE. Proprie­
tor.
23tf
C o n tra c to r
FOREST GROVE PRESS
100 for $1.25
2 5 0 for $ 1 .75
500
for $ 2 .2 5
House Moving
and Repairing.
We have the best equipped
outfit in the county.
E. A. DIXON
Phone 876
at the
Brick, Stone and Concrete Work
Forest Grove, Ore.
Let us figure on your work.
Spend August at “ Nature’s Playground’
Tillamook County Beaches
New hotels with every modern accommodation, cozy cottages
and camping grounds at nominal cost.
The trip down there
Through the Virgin Forests of Tillamook County
Is one that should not be missed.
Tw o Daily Trains— Chair Buffet Car Service
on the afternoon train
Low Season and Week End Fares
from various points on the Southern Pacific
Splendid fishing along the Nehalem and Salmonberry rivers,
as well as on the briny deep.
Call for our new folder “ Tillamook County
Beaches,” it contains full information, or con­
sult with any S. P. Agent.
JOHN M. SCOTT
General Passenger Agent
Portland, Oregon
A man o f insight, after a long
journey through seven western
states, returned to Washington
with this opinion:
“ The folks hack yonder are
GEN ER AL W E L F A R E SUB watching Wilson and are saying,
‘ Why, that’s the man we’ ve been
JECTS T O B E DEM-
looking for.’ ”
O N STR ATED
Only five months in office and
see what he has done:
Got the tariff on the toboggan.
O. A . C. Professors W ill Visit
Canned the lobby.
Many Oregon Towns
Called Wa!! street’s panic bluff
Started currency reforms.
This Summer
--------- -
And handled the Mexican mud-
Word has been received here die as if he had been doing such
that the traveling General Wei- things all his life,
fare school sent out by O. A. C. ! These specific things aren’ t,
will visit Forest Grove Septem- however, the biggest of his
her 5 and 6.
achievements. The biggest is
Corvallis. The two traveling his taking hold of a rusty and
schools, general welfare and discredited party machinery and
agricultural, now’ being conduct­ making it work for the common
ed in the Willamette Valley by good.
We do not print the above so
the extention division of the
Oregon Agricultural College, left much for its own merit as the
Albany on a six wreeks’ educa­ fact that it appeared as the lead­
tional campaign throughout Ore­ ing editorial in a late issue of the
gon. The instructional force in Portland News. It is so ever­
these schools is composed of six­ lastingly seldom that that sheet
teen 0. A. C. professors, assist-1 praises anything we could not
ed by members of the State help but reprinting this optomist-
Dairy and Food Commission, ic little article.
State Grange and the Oregon :
The Peoples’ Exchange.
Social Hygiene Society. Equip­
ped with portable laboratories, | There is no part of the news-
| demonstration and illustrative Paper that comes closer to the
apparatus and material, these hfe ° f the people than the classi-
schoola are carrying to the peo- rted advertising. The news dis-
ple o f Oregon a valuable stoie of patches tell of things very im-
knowledge of the most approved portant, but distant. Thcdassi-
methods of home and farm hed advertising tells of things
management. The State Libra- that closely effect the daily lives
ry Commission, represented by
home people, lhe housewife
its secretary, has also joined in 's anxious to see who is adver-
the movement. And the Feder- tising, „ / ‘bargains, ” trades and
ated Women’ s clubs, through swaps Working people want to
their president, Mrs. Sarah A. know who desires help. People
Evans, have fully endorsed the who own, or who want to buy or
movement and are lending as­ sell real estate, are interested in
the transfers that are going on.
sistance to it.
The itinerary of the general This advertising uncovers very
welfare schools includes eighteen closely the lives of the people.
cities and towns. There will be It is the throb of the town pulse.
! six programs in the two days’ 1 lt is astonishing how many an-
session in each place visited, swers one cai1 often « et froni a
made up o f lectures—many of s*mP'e little notice in the ‘To
them illustrated—demonstrations Bent,” l o r Sale or Wai.ted
and classroom discussions on the columns.— Exchange,
subject of home economics; lec­
Aerial Rural Delivery.
ture on hygiene by Secretary |
Cummins of the Oregon Social
An aerial railway for carrying
Hygiene Society, and display of mail on rural routes from the
the exhibit which was a feature mail box to the house is describ-
of the world conference in Port- ed, with illustrations, in the Au-
land; the exhibit of a model trav- gust Popular Mechanics Maga-
eling library by Miss Marvin, in- zine. A small truck, designed
eluding lists o f hooks for home to run on cables, is equipped
study courses; a series o f lec­ with motor and drive shaft, and
tures on the bacteriological fea­ a basket is hung from this truck.
tures o f household sanitation, ! The truck is propelled Ly cur­
disinfection and impurities in rant supplied through the wires.
j milk and water, by Professor T.
S ociety stationary of correct
D. Beckwith; and illustrated ev-
ening lectures on landscape gar- style and neat appearence may
j dening by Professor A. L. Peck. he obtained from the P ress job
The work in home economics is department,
of the most practical kind and its \ ;.v .v » V .V i V * W A ,.V .V .V .V .
various fases will be discussed 3
by Mrs. Lulie W. Robbins and 5
Miss Edna Groves, o f the 0. A.
C. domestic science staff, assist- 3
ed by Professors Tartar, Brodie
and daughters. The schedule is
FRATERNAL
DIRECTORY
aS f o llo w s :
Red
Help F ig h t the
Great
Plague
Citizens o f the state are urged to inform themselves regarding this
plague which is causing great suffering among boys and young nv n and
especially among the innocent girls and women o f the state. Parents are
urged to protect their children, and provide clean, wholesome information
in place o f the unclean misinformation they cannot now help getting.
Such instruction will be found in the following
Free Circulars
For Young Men
Circular No. 2 - The Four Sex Lie*.
Circular No. 9 — Sex Truths for Men.
For Older Boys (13 to 18 yrs. of age)
Circular No. 8 — Virility and Physical Development.
For Younger Boys (10 to 13 yrs. o f age)
. Circular No. 7 - The Secret o f Strength.
For Girls
Circular No. 4 - A Plain Talk with Girls about their Health.
For Young Women
Circular No. 10 -
___ .
Physical Development, Marriage and Motherhood.
For Parents
. .. .
Circular No. 1 - The Need for Education in Sexual Hygiene.
Circular No. 3 — When and How to Tell the Children.
Circular No. 5 — A List o f Books for Use in the Family on Sex.
Circular No. 18 - How One Boy Was Instructed in Sex Matter* and
What Happened. Illustrated
Send 2-cent stamp with your address to
Department D
The Oregon State Board of Health
720 Selling Building, Portland, Oregon
Annlteant* .r e kindly K ked to .elect only thoee circular, for which they hare .
definite at*. Theee will be f?l»'lly »*nt-_____________
_________
Wilson and His Job.
Ashland, August 11-12; Med-
ford, 13-14: Grants Pass, 15-16;
Rrtseburg, 18-19; Cottage Grove,
20 21; Eugene 22-23; Indepen-
dence 25-26; Dallas, 27-28; Me-
Minnville, 29-30; Newherg, Sept-
ember 1-2; Hillsboro 3-4; Forest
Grove, 5-6; Hood River, 8-9; The
Dalles, 10 11; Pendleton 12-13;
La Grande, 15-16; Baker 17-18;
Huntington, 19-20.
Ü
OREGON
A G R IC U LTU R A L
C O LLE G E
B E G I N S its forty-fifth »cliool ye»i
S lP T E M B E fl
IS.
1913.
DEGREE COURSES in m .n y phase.of
AGR ICULTURE
EN G IN E ER IN G .
HOME
E C O N O M IC S . MINING. F O R E S TR Y . C O M ­
MERCE. PHARMACY.
t w o - y e a r
C ourses
.
HOME
EC O N O M IC S.
a r t s , f o r e s tr y . C o m m er ce
tu r e
J ames B. M athews , Post No.
6, G. A. R .—Meets first and
third Wednesdays at 1:30 p. m.
in K. o f P. hall. Chas. Knapp,
The Agricultural School.
Adjutant; Patrick Cronin, Com­
Following the methods of in­ mander.
struction pursued by the general
welfare schools but substituting
W oman ’ s R elief C orps No.
subjects peculiarly related to its 11. — Meets second and fourth
special service, the agricultural Thursdays at 2 p. m. in K. of P.
school will hold its sessions in hall. Louise Butler, President;
about thirty rural centers of the Sophia Smith, Secretary.
state. The teaching staff con­
sists of Dr. James Withycombe,
D elphos L odge No. 36. K. of
Professors E. L. Potter and G. P .— Meets every Thursday even­
Samson, department o f animal ing in K. of P. hall. W. C.
husbandry; Alva B. Milam and Shuts, C. C. ; J. S. Buxton, K. of
Mrs. Orla Buxton, domestic sci­ R. and S.
ence and art; A. G. Lunn, poul­
W ashington L o d g e N o . 48, I.
try husbandry; H. D. Scudder,
G. R. Hyslop and W. L. Powers, O. O. F. — Meets Monday even­
agromony, and M. S. Schrock, ing o f each week. J. H. Shear­
Deputy State dairy and Food er, Noble Grand; R. M. Taylor,
Secretary.
Commissioner, dairying.
a g r ic u l ­
M ECHANIC
pharm acy
T EACH ER’S C O U R S E S in m«nual
training, agriculture, domestic science
and art.
MUSIC, including piano, string, band
initruments and voice culture.
A BEAUTIFUL BOOKLET entitled
“ T hk E n rich m en t of R ural L i p s "
and a CATALOGUE will be mailed free
o s application.
Address H. M. T enn an t , Registrar,
(tw-7-lS to »-♦)
Corvallis, Oregon.
Time
Put that Property You
Want to Sell
To have us
make
the
Kiddie’ s
Picture
“Under the
Spot-Light ! ”
Now
ADVERTISE IT ! Not once,
timidly and penny-wise ! But
as often as needed a n d a
showing of FACTS about it
which will unfailingly interest
the probable purchaser! Make
i t the best advertised r e a l
estate in the city—for a little
while—and your buyer will
seek you out and quickly close
the transaction !
Forest Grove
STUDIO
N Main Street
Absolutely Safe and Reliable
The Bankers & Merchants Mutual Fire Association
O f Forest Grove, Oregon
Conducted on Economic and Business Principles.
Company That Has Made G ood. Insure
Business or Dwelling in
Bankers &c Merchants
The
The Home
Youi
Main Street Garage
Auto Repairing, Vulcanizing and
General Machine W ork. Storage
and Supplies. Phone Main 6 2 X
W . A . CHALM ERS,
Main Street, Forest Grove.
WASHINGTON - OREGON
CORPORATION
will
> (Open to all organizations holding regular meet-
in«‘ in *htocity•*
H olbrook L odge No. 30, A.
F. & A. M .-S tated communica-
tions first Saturday evening of
each month. All visiting Masons
welcomed. J. W. Hughes, W.
M.; H. C. Parker, Secretary.
in
Beginning June 1st give to its
patrons in Beaverton, Elmonica,
Orenco, H illsb o ro ,
Cornelius,
Forest Grove, Gaston, Dilley and
all country lines a
4c.
Electric rate
on all cooking and heating ap­
pliances
and
small
domestic
motors.
Phone Main 9 2 2 Hillsboro for particulars and
our representative will call.