Forest Grove press. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1909-1914, January 15, 1914, Page PAGE 2, Image 2

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    PAGE 2
FOREST
THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1914
FOREST GROVE PRESS
GROVE
TR AIN SCHEDULE
or for less worthy reasons. And by offering
employment to all, at least sufficient to insure a
living no man could give excuses for his idle­
ness and all such could and would be made to
earn their food and shelter. Most idle men do
not enjoy their position, neither do they want
charity. They want to help themselves but
they want the chance. That must be given
them.
PRESS
GEORGE HUNTINGTON CURREY
E D ITO R A N D O W N E R
^Published every Thursday at Forest Grove, Washington County, Oregon.
C atered at the Forest Grove, Oregon, Post Office as second-class matter.
IT G H K N
C upboard
VEGETABLE
O f f ic e on M ain S t r e e t .
Six M onths........... 75 Cent^
P hone M ain 502.
“ Imitation is the sincerest flattery," as he
who reads the signs of the times may see.
This week Washington
A SITU ATIO N
county has been sub-
TH A T IS R A P ID L Y jected to an unusual
BECOMING CRITICAL experience the like of
which it has never en­
countered before, although we are told of its
commonness in the great cities. We speak of
an organized demonstration of an army of desti­
tute, hungry men, strong men who claim they
cannot get employment and who demand the
necessities of existance. We have seen a band
of 100, not so very large when it is compared to
the total of several million idle men in America
at this hour. Only one band of tens of thous­
ands like them,that is if all the idle men were
so organized.
Why are these men out of work and with­
out the means of purchasing a living? They
may have squandered their summer wages, they
may refuse some conditions of possible employ­
ment they may not have the intelligence of fore­
sight to provide for the future, they may be un­
reasonable in their demands; yet to so condemn
them neither betters their condition nor solves
the problem of employment and unemployment
in America today.
The labor situation is not
A PROBLEM much longer to be ignored.
1 0 B E SOLVED Something must be done. If
the people as & nation do not
make provision for the successful handling of
this problem, present conditions point to a series
crisis that will be no joking matter.
It is not a problem for one
A PRACTICAL city, neither for one state;
SOLUTION but for the entire nation. So
considered a great deal can
be done to eliminate the present unsatisfactory
conditions. In the summer there is work in
the harvest fields, there is work on big con­
struction enterprises and in many other lines
that the winter season does not offer. How­
ever if the federal bureau of labor conducted a
gigantic government employment bereau ?>d-
justing road work and other employment so as
to furnish work to all who need it at the time
when no other work was to be found, and keep­
ing in touch with all employers everywhere so
as to know the actual demand of labor, it would
be in a position to intelligently judge whether
men are idle from lack of a chance to work
“ A representative of all the people in Forest
Grove and Washington county” is the slogan
of the P ress , and in as far as it is possible to
do so it lives up to that standard. However it
is only with the realization that the P ress is
the Peoples paper, and as such you make free
use of its columns will it be able to represent
all of you. 1914 is to be a political year. Many
issues and many more candidates will be before
the people. The P ress has no intention of doing
any balancing acts on the fence of indicision;
but will remain absoutely independent favoring
what and whom it believes will be best for the
the g r e a t e s t good of the people. If its
policies do not agree with yours do not hesitate
to express your views by an article to the edi­
tor. The columns of this paper are always open
to all sides of any question and all articles that
refrain from slander are always welcome.
In behalf of the citizens of Forest
M A N Y Grove the P ress wishes to thank
TH ANKS the good people of Hillsboro for
their generous attitude expressed
b v their contribution toward the caring of the
company of “ unemployed” that recently
marched through the county of which that set­
tlement claims to be the governmental seat.
Modest to the degree that they refused the
least attention for that army our neighbors
“soldiered” them with all possible dispatch to­
ward this city, in order that we might have the
honor and pleasure of as an extended a visit as
possible. We greatly appreciate their kind con-
siderance of our welfare by our related towns­
men and wish to assure that honor is due to
Sheriff Reeves, Mayor Sanford and others who
had the situation in charge, for the sensible way
in which they handled it.
$2500MACHINE ™ e. ne" ^ t y p e arriv-
IN STALLED SOON ed m Forest Grove this
morning, and in all prob­
ability will be in operation next week. This
new machine is probably the most intricate
piece of machinery in Washington county. One
and all are invited to call at their convenience
and look it over as soon as it is in operation. We
sincerely expect that next week’s issue will be
set on the machine.
OMELETS.
:
M E L E T S In w hich herbs or vege­
tables a re Ingredients are quickly
am i easily m ade and often in an
em ergency will give a touch of novelty
to an o therw ise com m onplace meal.
A lm ost any cold vegetables may be
used fo r the omelets.
P arsley O m elets. — T ake four eggs,
break them into a bowl w ith four table
spoonfuls of cold w ater and beat until
lig h t M ix w ith tw o tablespoonfuls of
chopped parsley. P u t one teaspoonful
of drippings or b u tte r into a frying
pan and w hen hot pour in the eggs.
W ith a fork or sp atu la lift the edges so
th a t th e thin portions will run under-
neutb, and fry until th e eggs a rs set.
shaking the pan q u ite often.
O
A H om e ly Vegetable.
C abbage O m e le t—T ak e a sm all boil­
ed cabbage, w hich has been allow ed to
become cold, and chop finely. Add a
tablespoouful of m elted b u tte r and
season w ith pepper an d salt. S tir in
th ree beaten eggs and a half cupful of
cream . M elt a large tablespoonful of
b u tte r in an om elet pan and turn the
m ixture Into i t S tir till brow n and
then tu rn o u t into a hot dish.
P o tato O m e le t—T h is may be m ade
w ith cold cream ed potato.
It you
have som e le ft over put it into the fry ­
ing pan w ith a teaspocuful of b u tter. I
a little g rated onion and heat through, j
stirrin g all the tim e. B eat th ree eggs
w ith tw o tablespoonfuls of cold wa- ]
te r until well m ixed and pour over the
potatoes. F ry the sam e as an ordinary
o m elet liftin g the edge w ith k n ife un-
tll done. Fold over and serve w ith
chopped parsley.
»Lv P ortland
A r F o r e s t G rove
8:05 a. m.
6:45 a. m.
8 05 a. m.
9:25 a. m.
11:45 a. m.
10:25 a. m.
2:45 p. m.
1:25 p. m.
5:05 p m.
3:45 p. m.
6:40 p. m.
5:15 p. m.
7:55 p. m.
6:35 p. m.
9:35 p. m.
8:30 p. m.
11:40 p. m.
12:45 p. m.
Lv F o r est G rove "A r P or tla n d
6:10 a. in.
7:30 a. m.
8:05 a. m .
6:45 a. m.
' 9:50 a. m.
8:30 a. m.
10:35 a. m.
11:57 a. m .
2:25 p. m.
1:05 p. m.
3:40 p. m.
5:00 p. m.
6:00 D. m.
7:20 p. m .
9:25 p. in.
8:05 p. m.
10:50 p. m.
9:45 p. m.
"Jefferson S treet Station.
HOLLAND.
a d v e r t is e r
,
you
yourself. They should em ­
body your personality, your
rep u tatio n and your aims. Do
not say anything in an ad ­
vertisem ent th a t you would
not say face to face w ith a
custom er.
Your ad v ertise­
m ents a re a p a rt of your busi­
ness, and they should har­
monize w ith your business
m ethods. If th e goods you
a re going to sell a re part
cotton d o n 't ad v ertise them
as all wool unleap you Intend
to m isrepresent and a re will­
ing to look your best cus­
tom er In th e face and insist
th a t the goods a re all wool.
If you a re building your
business on deception—well,
th a t Is your affair. B ut If
your w ord Is recognized as
good In your neighborhood
then
your ad vertisem ents
should su stain your re p u ta ­
tion. and you will lose noth­
ing by telling possible cus­
tom ers in cold type tn a t the
bargain you offer is only
h alf us good as it looks.
One of the most successful
ad v ertise rs In the country
once advertised an article
th a t he w as selling a t an
absurdly low price as being
“as poor as can be m ade for
th e m oney.” H e m ay not
have sold m any of those artl-
eles. but any th a t be did sell
did not m ake him any ene­
m ies, and the ad v ertisem en t
fran k ly sta tin g th a t th e
cheap article w as of little
value m ade his declarations
of th e high quality of other
goods sound effective.
SO U TH ERN PACIFIC
Lv P ortland
A r F o r e st G rov
7:15 a. m.
8:40 a. m.
3:30 p. m.
5:32 p. m.
5:40 p. m.
6:58 p. m.
Lv F orest G rove
A k P ortlan
16:40 a. m.
8:00 a. m.
10:20 a. m.
8:24 a. m.
*8:40 a. rn.
10 00 a. m.
4:38 p. m.
6:20 p. m.
"Sunday only
tDaily except Sunday
UNDERTAKING
Embalming
and
Funeral Directing
FOREST GROVE UNDERTAKING CO.
J. S. Buxton, Manager
Phone No. 642 Forest Grove, Or.
S. A. WALKER
M a in
S treet
H. LIDYARD
W a KLER & LIDYARD
G arage
SHOEMAKERS
Auto Repairing, Vulcanizing and
General Machine W ork. Storage
and Supplies. Phone Main 6 2 X
1st Ave. N., near Main St.
We are prepared to do
the very best of all
kind of shoe work.
FORD A G E N C Y.
W. A. CHALMERS,
Main Street, Forest Grove.
3
UP-TO-DATE MACHINERY
Special attention given
to crippled feet.
r0
"
This LATEST MODEL LINOTYPE
25 ^ V
be Installed in the cPrintery o f the P R E S S about
JA N U A R Y
r .
O REG ON ELECTRIC
should inuke your adver­
M
tisem en ts rep resentative of
M inced C hicken.
T o m a to O m elet.
P o ta to e s H ash e d an d B row ned.
M uffins
C ream Cheese.
C ra c k e rs.
Iced Tea.
Do not fail to plan to attend the luncheon to
be given by the Commercial Club on .Friday eve­
ning January 30th. The directors nope to for­
mulate a definite policy for the advancement of
this community as a result of this meeting.
Farmers, business men and all who have at
heart the welfare of this locality are urged to be
present and to take a part in the discussion.
7 he Last W ord in Type Composing Machines will
By
LUNCHEON MENU.
S ubscriptio n R a t es in A d v an ce .
One Y ear...................... $1.50
G iv in g C orrect T im e o f t h e A rriv a l and
D ep a rtu re o f A ll F o rest G r o v e T rain s
W rite as
Y ou T a lk
REDUCTION ü
15th, 1 9 1 4
A ll M e n ’s an d B o y ’s Suits an d O v e r c o a ts
This machine fully equipped has cost
the P R E S S $2,500.
Its installation is
made necessary by our increasing business.
A s compared to other machines in this sec­
tion it will have twice the speed and four
times the variety of type faces.
W ith this addition the P R E S S Printery
will be most complete and modern of any
printing plant in Washington county. Our
entire plant is brand new and up-to-date.
Call after the first of the year and inspect
for yourself.
Also our work speaks for
itself.
T h e Press can handle all manner of work such, as
Booklets, Catalogues, Directories, Annuals, Reports,
Legal Briefs, and as in the past will be able to serve
your printing wants with promptness and satisfaction.
J llso W e H ave the Largest Assortment o f Type Faces Suitable for First Class
L E T T E R H EA D S - EN V ELO PES - STA TEM EN TS - PO STERS
IN V IT A T IO N S - C A R D S - P R O G R A M S - E T C
A ll L a d ie s’ Suits an d C o a ts
All Sweaters for Men, Women and Children
122 REDUCTION ON ALL LINES m
O
%
Shoes
Underwear
Dress Goods
Hosiery
Men’s Shirts
All Dry Goods
Rubbers,
Overalls
and
Groceries
are
the
only
articles excepted
BAILEY’S BIG STORE
Phone 5 0 2 F O R E S T G R O V E P R E S S Main St.
JOH N
L
E. B A I L E Y
Forest Grove
Oregon