Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1920)
Ci penili ve This is the nxfnth when all our Spring and Summer Good» most be closed out regardless of ooct or profit, as it is our policy never to carry over (goods from, one season to another. __ __'___ _ ____ .... * . ... . _ on seasonable goods, and lines that we are closing out. Wash Fabrics and some Worsteds, Silk« and Satins, Dress Kate rials. Waists, House Dresses, Underwear in Muslin, Knit and Silk. Hosiery, Drapery and Scrims. SEDUCED FROM 10 PER CEHT TO 25 PER CENT • *' s' ' Hundreds of pairs of Shoes for die whole family, reduced • ---" from 10 to SO per cent Hundreds o f Men's and Young Men's Suits formerly sold from $30.00 to $50.00, ro A « a . to be dosed out from............. |Z0.00 10 Come early while we have a complete stock aa $35.UU Get our prices <Ju work clothes, only first class makes axe sold by us, at the low est prices. - Entire Stock of Ladies’ and Hisses’ Spring Coats, Suits and Dresses to be dosed ont from 25 to 50 per cent less than the form er selling prices. Ton wQl have! to hnrrjoto take advantage o f these bargains. Y ou will find an unusually varied supply o f floor coverings in all grades at our store. If you want on e o f the rich, soft, beautifully colored Oriental rugs for your parlor or hall w e can put it there. A n d quite as readily w e can give you the simpler w eaves in rugs o r carpets— strong, elegant, long-wearing goods of Am erican man ufacture. In fact, we specialize in dom estic materials o f medium price and highest quality. at Chehaiem Center, the occasion being Mrs. Palmer’s birthday. Be sides the Dundee visitors some of the Chehaiem neighbors were gueeta for the afternoon. Mrs. Palmer re ceived many beautiful flowers, let-. I ters, cards and little gifts from her i many friends. On the mornlng of the flfth of I July tbe Allan grave on Lover’s Lane was the scene of a pretty wed- ding. Miss Ethel Lois ft>gg, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Fogg. of Dundee, and Harold A. Dimlck, of Salem, were the happy couple. *Rev. J. W. McDougall, pastor of one of tbe Methodist churches in Spo- kane, performed the ceremony in the presence-of-fifty-relatives and friends from Portland and v Salem, also Rev. and Mrs. J. H. Giles pie, of Dundee. Little Helen Peck, a niece of the bride, was tbe ring bearer. After tbe ceremony and a little social hour, the guests ad journed to the Fogg home where refreshments were served. Both the bride and groom were attendants at the Willamette University tbe past year, Mr. Dimlck graduating in Jun^ After a honeymoon, most of which will be spent in the country. Mr. and Mrs. Dimlck will be at home at Tillamook where Mr. Dim lck is to be one of the instructors In the high school. Congratulations and best wishes of Dundee friends attend them. hla key note a4dr< at San Fran cisco. it v u ftidoed. Ita direct coat to the United States waa nearly aa much aa to France— $22.000,- (»00,000 for the United States and $26.000,000.000 for France, accord ing to the official calculation of our war depai tment. But France was In the war four years and three months, and fighting every minute of that time, while the United States was technically in the war one year and seven months, but on the firing line only a few months. The war ended In the armistice in November, 1918. When the Ger man offensive started March 21 of that year we ha* 2,600 men on the western fiont. When Foch assumed the offensive on July 18 we sup ported him with 240,000 men. The United States was really on the fighting line about four months, and that four months of fighting coat us about as much as France ex pended in four years. If Chairman Cummings should want to dilate on the edit of the war to the American people. we eommend to him a little official booh published by the war depart ment. with a preface by Newton D. Baker, secretary of war. From that official publication wo extract the following comparisons: The figure is 20 times the pre- war national debt. It la nearly large enough to pay the entire cost of our government from 1791 up to the outbreak of the European war. Our expenditure in this war waa aufflcient to have earrled on the Revolutionary war contlnu 9 ualy for more A a n 1.000 years St the rate of expenditure which that war ac tually Involved." Great Britain, too, waa in the war four years and three months, the same aa France. It supported the rntgl^ieat navy In the world and enlarged It tremendously during the war. It raised vast armies and threw them early into the fray. But the total war costs o f Great Britain and all Its dominions, in cluding Canada and Australia, was The other day a man lost tw o hours because his bat tery suddenly w ent back on him. He could have saved delayby keeping that battery shipshape. , Sidestep trouble by stop- * ping in. A sk aboutThreaded R u b b e r I n s u l a t i o n — the kind selected by 136 manu- , facturers o f cars and trucks. Hewberg Telephone Co. If we had had one year of real fighting, such as France and Great Britain sustained for nearly five years, undoubtedly that year would have coat us aa much as was spent by Great Britain and all her domin ions.— Spokesman Review. Grace Leone Worden, Newber*. to Lawrence Oliver Boyd, Newberg. Goldea Lorena Everest. Newberg, to Donald Navarre Matthews, Sa lem. Clara Melissa Kimber. Dundee, to Cecil Leonard Chapman, Newberg. Mali* Brown, McMinnville, to Roy Everett Wells, McMinnville. Maude Everest. Newberg, to Leo nard Dewey Llchtenthaler, Marsh field. Erva Ruthena Shank McMJnn ville, to James Oak Denham, Port- land. Edith Elolse Pleasant. WilLamina. to Emil Wicktor Gustafson, Wllla- mina. Nida Gladys Hanning, Yamhill, to Elvin Dillard Hickson, Marcóla, Oregon Ethel Lots Fogg, Dundee, to Har old Arthur Dimlck. Salem. Floesle Geraldine Wataon, Dayton, to’ Frank J. Randall. Dayton. Hazel Anna Hall, Newberg, to Al bert C. Case, Newberg. Maudle Heider, Sheridan, to Ro- *encrans Stevens. Sheridan The Greer family., accompanied by Rev. Greer's sister, Mrs. Robert Howe, of Dallas, Oregon, attended the meeting of the Oregon Pioneers at Portland on the first of July. elder members of the family are Our W ord i» a Guaranty o f H on ett Value* The pioneers of ’ 52 and enjoyed meeting many old friends. Did your re porter say old? It is a mistake. The Graphic reporter saw but two old ladles and one old man in all that large assembly. It 1» true that Father Time had sprinkled pnow very freely over ihe heads of most A number of Dundee and Red of the company, except where his Hill families helped Newberg cele- little Imps of Mischief had fooled rrs. BarBouf, Of Portland, spent Urate on "Monday! out so there would be none to tell OM holidays with Mr. and Mrs. families from Dundee spent tales o f passing yt-ais lint a little E lizabeth Marie L in k s . Y a m h ill week e nd at the eoaat.— ------ whiteness more or Less does n o t! Frederick Herman Knope, Yamhill, A young lady from Minneapolis The Dundee Woman's Club held ent a few days at the Dearborn its regular business meeting on count when the spirit remain.- titttttttt young and that was the beautiful j B H R R lllnni,.“ - lllllllll^ ” SPw M |3 home last week. Thursday, the first of July. After thing among all those old friends. 8 /Z fr A 7 / v / x fu h iliJ tA c d ; 8 Ofcerry - pieklag hae begun la the the meeting a social hour - araa-an». O T ^ ~a11W ~ w ^ r ö m~ TI I 'l Ö RplIMnnn nr‘,h ,r<| nrw " Joyed. The next meeting will he these of ' 60, the date when Oregon Thursday, the fifteenth of July. As to be a better one than usual became a sfate, were noticed but this ts the dite for the annual elec thetr wearers w en as bright and tion of officers It Is hoped there will Jovial and most of them as spry as lighter, Vera, have returned from be a large attendance. you would find in any company of a visit with relatives at White Sal When Mr. middle aged persons And dress! Well, If any gathering of younger Miss Laida Milla, of Portland, and Jessie Clark, of Wichita, Kää at Forest Grove on the Fifth where were Friday and Saturday DICTIONARY is aa all-know they were to w M i i t e with Mrs. its at Otterbrook. ing teacher, a upiversal question Jergena, Mr. Bennett’s sister, they answerer, made to meet your Mr. and Mrs. Toms, of Cedar Kap- found another sister, Mrs. Nichol needs. It is in daily use by M s ,to w a ,w h o came west with the son. from Des Moines, Iowa, whose who was an old, old lady at sixty- t hundreds o f thousands of suc- Mwfal B S and W D M th e world ov»r. Sbrlners excursion, have been guests presence at the family gathering five, and a grandmother very old at at Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Olmsted was a complete surprise. sixty-three, ye Graphic reporter Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Hillslnger, MY On Friday evening a Jolly picnic wonders how people nowadays keep Award) and Mrs. F. C. Little and Miss May party of the Intermediate and high so young. It is hard to believe that Wethe rail, of Portland, were Sun er classes of the Dundee Sunday It is all the difference In view point day xnd Monday guetta at Otter- school bad a ‘‘ weenie roast" at the as we advance In years. There cer picnic grounds at Otterbrook. Games tainly seems to be something in the bigness of the West, the more free Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Herring aad were played on tbe tennis court un dom from provincial reserve, and family and Mr. and Mrs. Newtea til dark then the luncheon enjoyed the good will engendered by sharing Bailey and family had a picnic dln- around a bon fire. Mrs. White bad ode’s Joys and sorrows that tend to a cr on the bank of the Yamhill charge of the party ably assisted by keep the heart young. The younger members of tbe Young People’s Bluer near Carlton. visitors to that meeting of the Orte- Mr. nod Mra. George Howland gon Pioneers came away with hearts and two sons. George and Keither, aglow from the beautlul spirit of game out from Newberg Sunday aad fellowship and affection displayed ttodfc dinner with Mr. and Mrs by those boys and girls of tbe 40« | Bswelskl and family. Sunday was and 60s. May they all be there to I Mr. Pawelakl’a 60th birthday. N ew berg, O regon He Never Had Time Black Republican and other varieties o f Black Cherries that are sweet. Quality Counts 5 Models 1 to 5 Tons 8 CONTRACTORS LUMBERMEN LOGGERS FARMERS d airym en We can now make the mbst liberal tetros to parchasen of tracks, fog) all kinds of contract work, fourteen to eighteen « months to pay up in ; no payment to be made while tracks are idle during w inter months. own use. Put your boy or hire someone to Immediate delivery if you order a “ GARY. New Location GARY COAST AGENCY, INC. Tenth and Hoyt Sto PORTLAND. ORE Removed to 811 First St., Duncan Building, first door west of Spaulding Logging Co. office. Phene Blue 19S. We will he glad to snoot all eur old friends and hope to make many new ones. E. L. EVANS C. A. EVANS