■Si D raft says Take a day off, get one of those little 25c picnic lunch sets at the Larkin*Prince Hardware Co., let’s go have a time. They save your, dishrags—don't have to wash them. *,:- W - , • Thomas A. Patterson and his son Fred made a business trip to Bend a few day^ago. ' Prof. W. L. Arant is spending the vacation season doing car­ penter work in Polk county. Seth Dodge is back from his vacation on the Sound, pounding letters in the postofflee again. Mrs. Ruth Burk, who is spend­ ing the summer with a family at Beaverton, was home last Sun­ day. Master Kenneth Woods is here from Portland visiting his aunt. Miss Ida M. Woods, city re­ corder. Last Saturday was the fifty- eighth anniversary o f the wed- ding o f Milton and Mary Jane Newlin. M is s S ib y l Woodward has gone to Hood River, hoping the change may give relief from the Ross Miles motorcycled down from the capital city on business Monday. .. . In preparation for his depart­ ure tor Oskaloosa, Iowa, Rev. Charles 0 . Whitely is arranging to hold a public sale of his per­ sonal property on Saturday af­ ternoon, August 19, vat 1:30 o ’clock. Mrs. H. W. Stephenson and son Richard and hertister’s son Robert, o f Pasadena, are here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P Dunlap, 105 Fourth street. Mr. Stephenson, who is manager o f the F.W . Wool worth & Company Pasadena store, ex­ pects to come up later. Enos Ellis recently bought up tw o carloads o f cows and heifers for a man in Montana, and the first of the week he started through with them. They are to be sold out on their arrival at their destination and he expects to stay with them until they are closed out. About twenty of the lot were bought of Joe Ego, on Chehalem Mountain. New berg quarterly meeting of Friends church will be held at Sherwood pext Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. L. B. Brown and children are out from Portland for a week’s visit with her sisters, Mrs. Wesley Boyes and Mrs. T. L. Cummings. Rev. O. F. Goettel increased his Belgian hare herd Wednesday morning to the extent df a pair of monsters received bv express from San Jose, California. Mrs. Helen D. Harford, W. C. T. U. lecturer and organiser, will h* one of the speakers tor the citisens’ conference c a m p a ig n meeting at the park Friday even­ ing. Charles I. Baker, who went South as a "soldier boy’’ and who was rejected under the rigid examination pf the army sur­ geons, arrived home last Sunday evening. **4 Miss Dorothy Hull will teach near. Sacramento the coming year, and will (cave here the lat­ ter part o f this month to begin work, as the California schools open early. C. J. Hoskins, who took a va cation hike over the C o a s t Mountains to the Trask river, returned the first of the week with a good coat of tan and is back at work in the bank again. The Sunday school classes of Pres. Pennington and Mrs. L. P. Round, Rev. and Mrs. Cbas. 0 . Whitely and some others o f the Friends Sunday school, met in a social way at the J. C. Colcord residence on Wynooski street Tnesday evening. __ j Frol. F. W. Perisho left here Wednesday morning for his form­ at boms at -Neg Providence, fo w l, lo r the purpose o! assist ing Ms mother in the settlement of tl>e estate of hi* father, re­ cently deceased. He 'will return in time for the opening of college, September 18. Frank Haskins, who bad been baggage and expressman at the S. P. station here tor a long time, has gone to Ballston to take charge o f the station. His place has been filled here by the appointment of Lester I. Dickey, who came here from Sheridan, where he grew up Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Moore, in company with Mr. and Mrs. H. Stone and son Roy, o f Gresham, in the latter’s car, and Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Crocker and son George and Mrs. A. N. Logan, in the Crocker car, started this morning for a trip to Crater Lake. They expect to be gone about ten days, and oi»course a pleasant t r ip is anticipated. They may return by the Eastern Oregon route. Mate U m tf ywr Autographic Ftatanw It msts no mors and tbs rsmembrancs is worth lots to yon. Bring your Kodak work to us to finish. Our work guaranteed. The boat «quipped dark room in the county. When in trouble corns and see us, we will gladly help you out. Kast—sa Kodaks aad Camaras are leaders throughout the world. Let us use tbs boat, it costs no mors. Coma in and gat catalogues. NEWBERG DRUG COM PANY . Or*. >1» L F. Moore and family and Mrs. Yarns and children, of Salem, are spending the week at Newport. Anderson, who bought the Amoth (teach crop in West Che halem, says he thinks there will be 500 boxes for market. Mrs. Lowell Bristow and little son are here from Tillamook vis­ iting with her sister, Mrs. Harry Patterson, and other relatives. Josiah Rogers, eight - t h r e e years young, bale and hearty, was ont from Portland the first of the week visiting his sister, Mrs. M .J. N ash.; Ben Evans, who spent tw o months with Swan Benson’s railroad construction crew iq Eastern Oregon, Washington and Idaho, is at home again. A. P. Oliver, whose death was announced last week, left a will in which he named as executors P. H,'C. Bennett, Lynn B. Fer- guson and A. C. Seely. I. H. Hutchens finished thresh­ ing his grain last Monday and was the first to briog in new wheat, which be sold at a dollar a bushel. His wheat averaged 30 bushels to the acre. Miss Alice Schrader who sets type in the Graphic shop has gone t o the McPhillipps camp at the beach in company with Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Baron, erf Spring- brook. Mrs. S. M. Calkins was called to Toppeni*h, Washington, last Saturday, on account o f the ill­ ness of her father, Cephas Maris, who was a resident o f Newberg yveral years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Allan and son Forest have gone to Prince­ ton, Idaho, their home before they came to Newberg, where they will remain daring the har­ vesting aeaaon. They went by boat from Portland to Lewiston, a four-day trip, to see the upper Columbia and Snake-rivers. Col. and Mrs. M. B. Peacock and little daughter, Ruth, here from Canary, Alberta, Can- risitiog with tfie 'R . M . Thurston family. Mrs. Peacock and Mrs. Thurston are sisters. On Wednesday morning the two" families, with the exception of Mr. Tbunlton, left for a trip to Newport. tojMjto A n fca l and o f Pas- 9:08 11.-02 6:28 6:58 2:05 *12:65 ay night only. ILoop Special Saturday A A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M. P .’ M. A. M. ' Sunday George Sykes and son were ont from Portland on business last Saturday. The Misses Ella and Gu Crawtord are in town visiting with the W. B. Terrell family. Miss Alice Halt, an aunt of Prof. Alexander Hnll and Miss Dorothy HaH, is here from Co­ lumbus, Ohio, on a visit. Rev’s. S. H. Upton and N. Welter have been attending the Free Methodist camp meeting in Portland during the week. Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Tallman, who were in tow n Tnesday, said they would move into their new bungalow within ten days. Mrs. Chas. E. Fuller, of Port­ land, has been in town during the week visiting at the home of her father, Dr. B. A. Romig. W- H. Woodworth, M. H. Galt, Miss Jessie Britt and S. P. Timberlake went to Portland Tuesday night to hear Billy Sun­ day flay booze, and they say be did some flaying. The Hull'family and Mrs. Pos­ ter arrived home from their trip to Port Orford last week, and tb*T latter left at once for her home at Columbus, Ohio, fearing delay on account of the promised railroad strike if she remained longer. , Daring the past ten days the stock o f the Newberg Feed & Seed Store has been pretty well out of house and home while a new floor for the building has been in -the coarse o f construe- tion, made nece^ary from lack ventilation underneath the taOdiag. Prof. W. L. Arant, who goes to Oregon Citv the coming year to take the principalship o f the hi?h Bchoo]< a8ki fo r the correc- tion of the statement made last week to the effect that S. Ed er would teach in the Ore­ F. E. Hobson, of the contract­ gon C ity schools, which he says ing firm o f Hoskins & Hobson, is not true. of McMinnville, Who are putting Kir*. C. H. Eggers who went in the concrete culvert for the to San Frandsco a few months Rex hill road improvement, was ago has now gone t o her former a caller at the Graphic office t o ­ home at Marshall, Michigan, fo'r day. When the Graphic was a visit. She became a reader of young in years Mr.' Hobson, the Graphic with th< appearance then a Newberg lad, learned to of the first number, December, set type in the office. 1888, and the paper has followed F. B. Baughman has traded his farm near Newberg, which is a part o f the David Ramsey do­ nation claim, to a man named Smith for a stock ranch near R iv e r s id e , Okanogan county, Washington. The ranch be gets comprises 1000 acres, and asso- (dated with him in the deal is a Dakota man. The land is well watered by three lakes, from which water is taken for irriga­ tion, making alfalfa growing eaisy and profitable. Mr. Baugh­ man lets practically all o f his stock go with the place here and he gets the stock on the Wash­ ington ranch. The exchange in places will be made in Septem­ ber. The community will lose an enterprising ritizen and a nice family