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About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1911)
THE NEWBERO QRAPtllC, July I j, 191I Locals and Personals A. C. Seely was in Eugene on E. B. Sitton was over from business the first of the week. Carlton last Monday on busi Prank Duncan was over from ness with J. L. Hoskins. Hillsboro on business last Satur Miss Ida Woods came out day. from Portland Saturday for a County Assessor Martin Miller visit at the home o f her mother. was down from the county seat Miss Jessie Angus has been up Wednesday. from Wilsonville for several days Herman Smith was up from visiting her friend, Miss Jessie Portland Sunday to spend the Britt. day with his parents. Mrs. W. E. Terrell and children Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wrage returned home Monday after a were up from Portland visiting week’s visit with friends in Salem. with friends last Sunday. Mrs. E. A. Newby and son Mrs. L. M. Parker visited in Salem with her daughter, Mrs. were guests o f relatives at Rose- dale and Salem during the cherry J. R. Pemberton last week. - Miss Amy Harger returned’ fair last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hurd, of home Tuesday from a visit with friends at McMinnville and Yam Sandpomt, Idaho, are in New berg, visiting their sons, H. C. hill. and G. A. Hurd. Dave Coyle has been up from Miss Margaret Hodge visited Portland during the week visit- ing with his sister, Mrs. J. B. at her home in Salem Saturday and »Sunday and -saw the finish Mount. Miss. Laura Blair came out o f the cherry fair. J. Carl Nelson is shipping his from the city and spent Sunday at the home o f her parents, Mr. crop o f Royal Anne cherries to Lang & Co., o f Portland, for and Mrs. A. T. Blair. canning purposes. Mrs. C. A. Crabtree, Mrs. W. Several Newberg people went Boyes and children visited last Friday at the country home o f to Salem to. see the close o f the cherry festival Saturday night, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wight. Wm. Brooks came out from which proved to be a bedlam o f Portland the first o f the week for noise more than anything else. Mrs. Irene Heater spent tw o a visit with his son W. B. Brooks, days last week with one o f her foreman in the Graphic office. Mrs. N. N. Nonken, o f Port daughters w ho lives in Port land, is visiting at the home of land, and w h o is afflicted with her mother-in-law, Mrs. B. M. cancer. A called meeting o f the Ladies’ Nonken, at 415 West First Street. Auxiliary to the College is an Mr. and Mrs. P. Laplante, who nounced for 3 o'clock, Saturday are spending the summer in New berg with fcfeeir son Isaac, left afternoon, when important busi- last M onday for a few weeks’ ess is to be transacted. The band boys have decided visit in Puyallup, Washington. on the date o f July 29 for mak Miss Blia Macy went t o New p o r t Tuesday where she will re- ing their trip to Bay Ocean Park morn during the summer. She where they will play for the Park has leased the Miss Inglis’ cot promoters tor tw o weeks, dur tage at Nye Creek and will take ing which time they will be enter tained free o f charge. roomers. Oncle George Sykes, the veteran G. A. Graves, former owner o f promoter and speculator, was the Enterprise, who is now traveling as organiser for the up from Portland on business Maccabees, spent a day or tw o Saturday. Just at present he is in Newberg last week, visiting boosting a coal mine proposition up at Bucoda, Washington, one with the home folks. Prof. Oliver Weesner left here hundred miles north o f Portland. George M. Bales went t o Port on Monday evening for a trip to the home of his mother and land Wednesday to meet his sister near Mooresville, Indiana. sister, Mrs. Mary Patterson and He will return in September to her daughter Nellie, o f Kan resume his work as teacher o f sas City, who are out on a trip mathematics in Pacific College. visiting relatives and seeing the Northwest. Mrs. Laura Terrell and son Mrs. Ella Pickett, ol Waits- Robert, o f Oskaloosa, Iow a, and Miss Beulah Robinson, o f Colo burg, Washington, who came rado Springs, Colorado, are in for a visit in her old home com Newberg visiting with Mrs. W. E. munity some weeks ago, left Sat Crozer. M rs. Terrell is a sister-in- urday afternoon. After a short law and Miss Robinson a niece visit in Portland she expected to return to Waitsburg. o f Mrs. Croier. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Madson Louie Adolph, a former resident of this section who is now located started Saturday morning in at American Falls, Idaho, has their machine for Springfield to been here this week visiting with visit Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Shirley Before returning friends. In answer to the ques and family. they expected to spend a few tion as to how he liked his loca days fishing. tion he said it was a good coun Will Heston came over from try but not as good as this. H. R. Morris and family ar Hemlock, Tillamook County last rived home the first of the week, Saturday, he having been a H. R. coming from the hot resident o f that county for the springs of the upper Columbia, past tw o years or more. He is while Mrs. Morris and the little back to stay and will rent a one came from Baker where they small place in the country if he visited with her parents, Mr. and can find one to suit him. Mrs. C. J. Hoskins, ofMcMinn- Mrs. J. D. Carter. ville, spent the early part o f the Mrs. Helen D. Harford who has been spending her time at week with relatives in Newberg home in the Chehalem Center and on Tuesday took her old' neighborhood of late, responded place at the postoffice window to the second call from Mrs. Hen in order to let her sister, Miss rietta Brown, of Albany, on last Jessie Gardner, have a day off tor Saturday and went to that city shopping in Portland. H. R. Morris, who has been a to aid in the W. C. T. U. Chau sufferer from chronic stomach tauqua program. Dr. Bowers, having concluded trouble for several years, has de to remain here, has purchased cided to take the advice of physi the Charley Baker home located cians and submit to a surgical a half mile northeast o f Newberg operation which he has been pre and will complete the new resi paring tor by a course of treat dence which Mr. Baker had be ment at the mineral springs. The gun. After trying California he operation will be performed at and Mrs. Bowers are content to St. Vincent’s Hospital in Port land on Saturday. remain in Oregon. A. Smith, who was working in a w ood camp on Chehalem mountain, died Wednesday. J. D. Kelty, o f Polk county, was in Newberg the first o f the week visiting his son. George L. Kelty. Postal Inspector C. E. Clement came in this, Thursday, morning without previous announcement as his custom is. ^ Moyle B. Hurd, the little son o f Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hurd, died last Monday at the age o f three years and nine months. Mrs. A. G. Kelty and little son, the latter having been born in old Mexico, were in Newberg a day or tw o last week visiting with Mr. aud Mrs. George L. Kelty. The husband o f,M rs. Kelty is a brother o f George L., who has been located in Mexico for several years where he is in terested in mining. Miss Clara Frossard came out from Portland Friday evening and remained over Sunday with her sister, Mrs. J. L. Parker and family. On Sunday morning Miss Frossard favored th e Friends’ congregation with« a solo, sung in clear, sweet, high soprano voice. Mrs. David Martin received a telephone message from Hills boro Saturday telling o f the death o f Arthur Lyons, a pupil o f hers here some fifteen years ago. He died at the open air sanitarium in Portland where Mrs. Martin had visited him a few weeks’ previous. Mrs. W. S. Bean and Mrs. Arthur Hodson spent last week visiting friends at Joseph, Wal low a County, and on the Fourth they attended a -celebration where Mrs. Hodson entered her baby boy in the baby show, tak ing first prize, thus upholding the standard for Yamhill prod ucts when put in competition with those o f other sections of the universe. , On Wednesday "afternoon a heavy smoke floated over Che halem mountain from the north side, coming from the direction ot the Pinney sawmill and caus ing apprehension lest the mill was burning. It is learned that a fire started in the brush where timber had been cut off im mediately surrounding the mill seriously threatened its destruc tion, but a favorable wind car ried the flames in the opposite direction and the plant was saved. Anniver’y Corset Sale Friday an d S a tu rd a y , July 14 a n d 15 H IS is the fiftieth year for the Royal Worcester Corset Company and they have put on the market a C O R S E T and marked it “Golden Anniversary Special’’ which they instruct us to sell at 9 8 C e n t s . This corset is made of batiste, good length, well stayed, has extra good fiose supporters and is a $ 1 .5 0 value. These corsets are just in from the factory at Worcester, Mass., so you get new, up-to-date goods. W e have only 10 dozen of this special and when they are gone can get no more. W e can supply only 1 2 0 ladies so come early before they are all gone. Will, the well-known pi ano tuner o f Portland, was tun ing pianos most o f this week in Newberg. His next trip here will be in September. Architects S. E. Watkins &Son are busy getting out plans for the proposed Carnegie Libraiy for this place place. Also a brick busi- ness building to be erected at Sherwood. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Taylor and a niece o f theirs are here from Mapleton, Minnesota, and are visiting with Mrs. Taylor’s brother, Dr. Cornell and calling on the other former Mapleton people who are now residents o f Newberg. Besides being pres ident o f the Mapleton State Bank, Mr. Taylor is an extensive stock buyer and shipper. This is his second visit to Newberg and he notes many changes that have taken place since he was here some eighteen years ago. > E. U. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Flaugher, o f Anderson, Indiana, who are out for a rest and a change o f climate, arrived in Newberg Monday, coming here from Spokane where they spent three months. They are visiting at present with A. J. Palmer in the Chehalem Center neighborhood, Mr. Palmer and Mrs. Flaugher being cousins. They are pleased with the country and will re main for some time. Prof. Fred. C. Jackson, o f the class o f 1899, Pacific College, who holds a position as public school principal in Seattle, is in Newberg visiting his brother Er nest, and sister, Mrs. C. N. Ter rell, and will remain for some time. Mrs. Jackson and the babe are visiting her father, E. Soper, in Portland at present, but will come to Newberg later. Fred’s many Newberg friends are glad to greet him again. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Baker and* son, Morris, o f Sheridan, were- reported as fatally injured in & railroad wreck on the Oregon Trunk road, which occurred last Monday. The passenger train while running at 40 miles an* hour struck a spread rail and* went over a 40-foot embank ment. Mrs. G. W. Baker came out from Portland the first of the week for a visit with her moth er, Mrs. Mary Morris. She with Mr. Baker and the children left Newberg a year or more ago and made the trip overland with a wagon to Illinois and later drifted down into Florida, but they failed to find any country that pleased them as well as Oregon and they'decided to re - turn. They say the Florida soil is poor and unproductive with out the aid o f fertilisers and ir rigation. A Delight to the Home! O F IN T E R E S T T O A LL H O M E F U R N IS H E R S Nearly y man, woman and child in Newberg, and people outside the city as well, are keenly interested in W . W . Hollingsworth & Sons store's handsome Jittchen Cabinet and ^Dining Uabte which will be given away absolutely FREE on our Opening Day, Aug. 12th I Solid Quartered Oak Dining Table, Golden Oak Finish, 6 foot Every Man, W om an or Child Has Equal Opportunity Johnson’ s Famous Kitchen Cabinet You have until August 12th to try for these beautiful pieces o f furniture. IF YO U H AVE NOT A TICKET C A LL A T O U R STORE FOR ONE. Detailed information. W. W. Hollingsworth & Sons •‘T H E S T O R E OF Q U A L IT Y “ 4 0 0 F IR S T S T R E E T . NEW BERG, OREGON 0