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About Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 4, 1913)
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1913 FOREST GËÔVE PRESS ; • •4 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • PAGE 5 • • • • • • • Nearby News Notes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :ooo: Correspondents Wanted — the desire of The Press to secure a live, boosting correspondent in each town and community in this county. No m atter 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. If your section is not already represented in The Press by a regular correspondent, we will be pleased to have you send in your name 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 . XX SNAPPY NEWS NOTES FROM COUNTY SEAT S888SS88SSSS8SS8S8SS3S8SS8888888SS8SS8SS88SSS8SS8888 ¿S Jt GALES CITY. ¿SSSSS8888S88SS88S88S8S888888S888K Drs. Ward and Brookbank operated on Mr. L. B. Cox, of L inden-K ibbe C om pany D o Gales City Sunday. Mr. Cox is getting along fine. ing Cood W ork in People are going to the hop Hillsboro yards by the dozen. Messrs. W. E. and Frank Boy Holds Perfect Record for Parkin started to picking in their School Attendance, for vard Monday, and the other yards will follow soon. 27 Months Mrs. Davis and daughter Minnie of Portland are visiting a few weeks with Mr. E. J. Shot well and family. Mrs. Charles Miller and daugh ter Margaret returned to this city after a pleasant two weeks outing at Tillamook. Clarence Rice and Jay Austin, who are working in Portland vis ited over Sunday in the Grove. Miss Myrtle Jones of Portland visited her aunt Mrs. Colin Dy- ment in this city last week. list should be purchased by the eigh th B- or beginning class: Complete Arith metic .68, Civil Government by Reinch .66; Mace’s School History .90; Kim ball’s Elementary English, book 2 .45; Elson’s Grammer School Reader, book 4, .60; Agriculture for Beginners .70; Champion Spelling Book .23; Palmer Method of Bus:ness Writing .25. The new books have been received and may be purchased at the Bazaar Books of the old adoption will be re ceived in part payment for the new ones. Pupils who know the grade to which they belong are urged to pur chase their books early in order that more may be ordered should the pres ent supply be exhausted. By doing this the inconvenience incidental to a lack of books in school will be avoided. A list of materials needed in drawing music, etc., will be furnished by the teachers at the beginning of school. School begins September 22. 6odd* BE do PiTcneC. T o - PA/. id THE H¿>óPiTi4i- AV HAWS 6i>r a e & ooò r e c & r e t f io d - l I He- HE- WE HAp THE id'STeHL To Did d e n , { d E s r e n p A V - * a - ha - a W - \?AW- Tg -Mg' pAvÿ _ JÆFL L I N E R Y Beginning Sept. 11th and 12th, North First Avenue, between Main and “ A” Streeta; phone 863. Rasmussen’s Feed Store D ealer in Flour, F eed a n d all kinds of G a rd en S eeds in season............................ J. RASMUSSEN, Proprietor P a c ific Ave. [ W EdT HÛME MAW ‘ whp T 6 t h e MATferR O id c H E iL S T O ? - i'ó E E K i E V ik I YA?'* ' k e p t fiSKid' H/M TÔ * o d £ m o is ffaAsr' Nothing so good to keep you well. 35 cents Tea or Tablets.— Vankoughnet and Reder. FALL MR. HENRY PECK AND HIS FAMILY AFFAIRS IZ. T u s Wfii/L ‘‘preventative for thirty years. 1913 Opening of John E. Bailey W ô E B IT Rocky Mountain Tea has been HOTEL LAUGHL1N SHIRT WAIST SALE $1 L6& u d o e n THE V6EF, A«f- re , H E—T H E Y To >*IA C £ H I * \ 5TZ>? HN-1 W a SHT A dV ft\ô£E LEFT/ \ * e e ,? ai V .- ah ’ BUT h e 'd o u u p d T , k S7Z>(? a V AF75P THE) Forest Grove, Oregon By Gross r i pip H r feel do o d e Tte - H e - Hts - HAP--THKT d v z THE F O d d i p h £ T k OF \T.-H E - HA-r v \ a w w u z tfCiClN' id 'lS T E Z fjiNisTefc t h e t tm e .' I I I 1 l .v worth a pound of cure Hollit&er's MRS. A. E. DIXON BAILEY’S BIG STORE u œ d t F o L K S , “ftcY /VNT' ’‘An ounce of preventati rt is The exchange price for these books averages about 40 per cent of the retail price. The high school books adopted, with the retail price, are as follows. Agriculture: Warren’s E 1 e- ments of Agriculture, $1.10. A Full and Complete Line of Tailored Hats, Algebra: Wells’ and H art’s New High School Algebra, $1.20. Trimmed Hats and M illinery Novelties Arithmetic: Wells' Academic Arithmetic, $1.00. Biology: Hunter’s Essentials of Biology, $1.13. Bookkeeping: Lyon's Book keeping in two parts. Complete MAIN STREET FOREST GROVE text, $1.00; Part 1, with outfit, j $2.00; Part 2, with outfit, $1.25.! Botany: Bergen and Caldwell’s , ' P ress Job Printing Satisfies $1.30. A. A. K I R K W O O D Chemistry: McPherson and Henderson’s^ $1.25. CIVIL ENGINEER AND SURVEYOR Civil Government: Foreman’s t American Republic, $1.10. Municipal Engineering English: Stratton’s two Com Surveying and Subdividing position Books, 68 and 90 cents. Phone 482 Kimball’s English Grammar, 45 FO R cents: Long’s English Litera ture, $1.35; Abernathy's Ameri Abbot Building Quality and Service can Literature, $1.30. Geometry: Wentworth's, $1.30. FOREST GROVE, OREGON German: Werner- Span hoofd, Sunday Dinners $ 1 . 00 . History: Botsford's History of a Specialty the Ancient World. $1.50. Myer’s WM. W EITZEL Mediaeval and Modern History, $1.50. James and Sandford’s American History, $1.40. City and Commer Physical Geography: Hopkin's, T inning an d Plum bing, S h eet $1.35. cial Trade Solicited M etal W o rk an d R e Physics. Millikan and Gale’s, p a ir Shop. $1.25. Physiology: Conn and Buding- R. D UNCAN tcn, $1.10. P ro p rie to r Pastor Exonerated The county judge, county clerk Rev. H. W. Kuhlman returned (continued from page 1./ and assessor make up the trio from Portland Sunday evening, . 20 . who will handle the equalization ' and after the sermon by Rev. i Third grade: Numbers Step by Step board which will meet in Hills Hiriam Gould of Forest Grove, .35, Wheelers’ Third Reader, .45, boro September 8, for hearing who preached at the M. E. j Champion Spelling Book, .23, Writing Lessons for Primary Grades, .20. objections to the 1913 tax roll. Church that evening he made a Fourth grade: Numbers Step by Step Hillsboro will soon have a big statement in regard to his late j .35, Kimball’s Elementary English, lot of permanent hard surface trouble in Portland. His state-; book 1, .36, Primer of Sanitation '45, Wheeler’s Fourth Reader .45, Cham streets. The cement base is ments were backed up by strong pion Spelling Book .23, Palmer Method completed on Third and Jackson testimony by Rev. McDougal, of Business Writing .25. streets and is now ready for the Methodist district Superinten Fifth grade: Complete Arithmetic .68 dent of the city of Portlind; Dr. World Geography 1.00, Kimball’s Ele top coating of bitucrete. Tr imble, Pastor of Centenary mentary English, book 1, .36, Primer The new concrete Imbrie gar M. E. Church; and Rev. Hugh, of Sanitation .45, Wheeler’s Fifth age in process of construction on editor of the Christian Advocate; Reader .55, Introductory American His third street will be ready for oc all of whom heard all the testi tory .60, Champion Spelling book .23, Method of Business Writing cupancy in October, and will add mony in the case and state there Palmer •25. another to the many substantial was not one thing to show that Sixth grade; Complete Arithmetic .68 buildings of our town. Rev. Kuhlman had done any World Geography 1.00, Kimball’s Ele mentary English book 1, .36, Graded Hillsboro merchants were es thing wrong.—Tillamook Herald. Lessons in Physiology and Hygiene .60 pecially busy Saturday supplying Wheeler’s Fifth Reader '55, Introducto The Fly prospective hop-pickers with the ry American History .60, Champion As soon as the fly comes out of Spelling Book -23, Palmer Method of comforts and necessities for his shell he is full grown and Business Writing .25. their camping outfits. starts out to make his living. If Seventh grade: Complete Arithmetic, A little boy writes one of our your home is not clean he knows .58. World Geography 1.00; Mace’s local Editors as follows; “ I will it by the odor. They can discern School History of the United States .90 write you about an interesting an odor of filth for miles. As Kimball’s Elementary English, book 2, .45, EJson’s Grammer School Reader, article recently in the Argus, much as they like filth they dis book 3, .60, Agriculture for Beginners tilling of a boy attending school like other odors. A pleasant .70, Champion Spelling Book .23, Palm 24 months with out being absent smelling substance, the fragrance er Method of Business W riting .25. Eighth grade: the advanced class in or tardy. The queston was ask of flowers, geranium, lavender, the eigth grade in the Forest Grove ed, ‘Who can beat it?’ I have or any perfumery, will drive schools añil continue to use the same attended school 27 months with them away. books used I ,st year The following out missing a day or being tardy. Now don’t you think that is beat ing it? I am from Hillsboro and I think Hillsboro is holding the record.” —Harold Bruce Carlisle. A fine bungalow is being erect- ee on Fir street by county re corder, E. L. Perkins. The house will contain six rooms, bath and den. The structure will be finished in rustic and 200 Shirt Waists reduced from values up to $2.50 be modern in every way. Saturday, Hugo Nord, who Entire stock listed for the week at $1.00 each. was arrested for forging a check, Are forced to make room for shipments of Fall Goods. was brot befare Justice of the Peace, W. D. Smith, and waived Forest Grove examination and was bound over Oregon to the Circuit Court. Fold is a man about 40 years old. $1 II taken just what you feel as though you were going to be sick you will never know what serious illness is. It purefies the blood, drives out disease before it gets a foot hold; such is Hollinger’s Rocky Mountain Tea. None other so effective and sure. 35 cents Tea or Tablets. —Van koughnet & Reder. f i l i l i