Image provided by: Newberg Public Library; Newberg, OR
About Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1922)
7iiii1 * . »■'i l i '■*' ■ * nw BM »I, UM graphic , T hursday , J ¿ FALL . ~ Largest Circulation In Yamhill County • WING O f Wonderful New Stylish Garm ents in Ready-to-Wear W e do not stop with the mere invitation, but we urge you to com e and see the new fall lines o f Ladies’ Dresses, Coats and Suits. If we do not show you better values than you can get anywhere else, then we will not ask you to buy, but we do ask you to buy at home when you can do better than you can away from bérne. W e have the largest and best stock of Ladies’ Coats, in all the different cloths from which coats are made, that we have ever earned. They range in price from $12.50 to $56. You will never know what you can do at home unless you give us a chance.^ W e w ish to caU your attention to the line w ea re featuring at $18.75. Values in this lot up to $22.50. - ~ FA M ILY HOSIERY Yet, far the entire family, from the “biggest and oldest” to the “lit- tlest and youngest” member of any household. Ladies’ fine silks____ $1.68 to $3.68 Ladies’ heather wools 88c to $1.48 Ladies’ heather mixed. 85c to $1 25 Ladies’ silk and wools..............$2.68 Ladies’ cotton and lisles. 38c to $1.18 GIRLS’ AMD BOYS’ Girls’ or boys’ wool heathers-----88c Gills’ or Boys’ cottons . ,33c to 65c Misses’ A Children’s cotton 80c-89c Our heavy hose are made sturdy fo r sturdy boys and g i r l s . -----— Infants' hose....................88c to 85c - 1 ' WOOL MIXED PLAIDS Thirty-six to 54 inches wide; very desirable for hard school wear. Priced 88c to $1.75 per yard. y wno Duys ror eacn or our stores, and he keeps goods o f the latest styles com ing in every week, and buys at the same prices that the large department and chain stores buy, thus enabling us to sell cheaper than they because our selling expense is less than in the cities. I- v" 1 '— ' - . O’ HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX CLOTHING Priced from $1 2 .5 0 to $ 4 0 .0 0 Job Lots on Sale This Week and Pants, 49c In all cotton, linen and cotton, silk and cotton and all silk. Plain sad fancy handles. Ladies .............. $1.50 to $8.00 Children’! .......... $1.00 to $8.50 SCHOOL SERGES You'll find that good clothes are always m ore profitable for you. They wear longer mm I fit better, but m ore important, they make you look more stylish; m ake you fe d more com fort able and better satisfied. Get into one o f these Fall H art, Shaffner St M a n Suits and you'll have a new respect for clothe*. If you want a cheaper suit, w e can furnish you with one. A good assortment o f Boys' Suits with tw o pair of pants, ranging in price from $ 5 .9 5 to $15. O VER C O ATS—-Thirty now Overcoats just in. UMBRELLAS Prendi and Clay i ■eaves, of all wool and wool mixed. Thirty-six to 40 inches wide. Priced $1.35 to $1.75 yard. UNDERWEAR Our underwear has now begun to come in direct from the big mills. Kunsingwear is among some we are receiving. Ladies Unions.. .$1.19 to $3.50 Children’s Unions $1.50 to $8.69 ^ MILLER MERCANTILE CO. FIRST STREET Agee, is getting the rock on the road leading Just west from the School will open In thiB district school house. This has been a very on Monday, October 1 Lydia Glle from Woodland, Wash., j bad piece of road in the years past, has been visiting friends in this dis and all are feeling very grateful to Mr. Agee for the improvement. The trict. Mr. and Mrs. George Haney from great trucks o f rock are coming eastern Oregon are visiting relatives thick and fast, and the road looks as if It would endure for many here this week. Again we breathe many, Mrs. Wallace Jonea and daughter, years Kuth, from Eugene, are visiting with many thanks. -----------o----------- Mrs. C. L. Jones. Miss Beryl Deford from Laurel, CHEHALEM MOUNTAIN Oregon, spent Sunday evening with Mr. Maynard was a Newberg vis Mrs. E. O. Jonea. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Thurston and itor Tuesday. E. V. McDougall Is building a Miss Fleta Thurston were guests of Mr. and Mrs. U. S. Bryant on Thurs new tank house. The Haynes boys were Newberg day evening. Mr. and Mrs. George Smith and visitors Monday. Miss Beryl Deford was a visitor children, Howard and Dorothea, were dinner gueets o f Mr. and Mrs. at Monmouth, last Sunday. - The hop pickers are going to their Tom Parrish on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cox and R. G. homes now from Mettler’s yard. W. R. Davis is helping George Stewart, son of Mrs. Cox, motored to Salem on Tuesday to visit the Wenger harvest his crop of prunes state buildings, and enjoyed a pic and walnuts. Dolly Melnnis, who is In the hos nic lnneh on the way. pital following an operation, will be at home soon. CHEHAUKM CENTER Floyd Hoffman and wife are pick O. I. Morgan has built a new wood ing prunes at the Boyd orchard at Ribbon Ridge. shed. Mr. and M m John York from Benny Shires expects soon to enter Reedvllle were Sunday guests at the Newberg high school. L. H. Meyer spent the week end W. H. McCormick home. Don Melnnis from Albany has with his daughter in Portland. Charles Shires built an addition been visiting his parents and other on to their barn some little while relatives on the mountain. Mrs. J. A. Messenger from Mc ago. George Crocker is back in the Minnville spent (Sunday with |her high school at Oregon City this sister, Mrs. Melnnis, and family. L. I. Halit and wife from Newberg week. Mrs. Josephine Hyde and John were seen on the mountain Sunday. Penner were visitors at the home of They were enroute to Hillsboro. J. P. Jonea and daughter, May, Mra. Marie Tangen over Sunday. Rev. Herbert Crocker reports the and son, Wayne, are working at the new prune dryer giving good re Oakley farm In the prune orchard. Merle Cady is hauling his dried sults. He Ik well pleased with It. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Hollenbeck prunes to Newberg where he has returned their young folks to Port sold them to the Glle packing com pany. land schools the first o f the week. Lorin McCormick gave a water The gravel placed Just west of the bridge at the foot o f the Graves hill melon and mttakmelon feed for some will he highly appreciated this win of his friends. Lorin raised the mel ons himself. ter. I. O. McCormick and G. M. Mc Miaa Marion Cuppiea and Mrs. Cupplea are enjoying the fine new Cormick are hauling their prunes to Steinway piano installed in their the cannery at Hillsboro where they have sold them. home last weak. Mr. pud Mrs. Ben Haynes and her ‘ L. Lounda, who purchased the Hutaea tract, la erecting a very nice son, Elswortl), of Ban don. Oregon, residence. They have not completed have beea visiting relatives on the mountain this week. the building yet. Roy McDougall aad family spent JB. J. Ford and family have moved into their new home. They are so Sunday at Dayton with the home busy with the apple harvest they folks. Marie remained there for a expect to finish op the Interior after few days to pick prunes M rs J. P. Jones left Saturday for the rash of work is over. O. I. Morgan sad Master Harvey The Dalles whore die will be some and little Bonita motored to Port time with the family of her daugh fimeltser. Mrs. land last Sunday. Mr. Morgan went ter. Mrs. Frank la to visit a cousin and family late •moltsor was taken tft the hospital ly from Canada They are well Friday for an operation from which she Is recovering nicely. pleased with Oregon. On to the county fair. All this fie this is the prune harvest every available person is pressed into ser talk o f the fair at McMinnville vice. either in the dryer or orchard brings back the days of our youth work. Let the good work go on. when we went every day to the fair mopl a who art at if we could go, but this Is a busy sea as o f the good old son with us, getting berries cleaned out aad cultivated oaee more before ad to thorn, mnlsalooor. John it rains, to save work in the spring. PERHW00D U GOOD GOODS” GRAPHIC’S TWO-FOLD CONTEST UNDER WAY NEWBERG, OREGON HOUSEHOLD HINTS HELICOPTER IS VIEWED The usual temperature for baking layer cakes to 400 degrees Fsrenheit BY U. S. IUVJU. EXPERTS and they should be kept In the oven TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ESTRAY— A small bay horse w as taken up at my place 1 H miles west of Newberg. M. Hutchens. filt l for 20 minutes. Dip new brooms into boiling water FOR BALE— Furniture; call after (Continued from page one) shako well and dry. Hang thexA up noons; 128 Illinois street, cor. Wash and you can use the old ones for the ington. Phone White 71. T h » No influence ia as powerful as the porch and sidewalk. Misses Craig. 5 1 tf press in any community to exploit If cabbage to cooked In an open its attractions, so of course, our FAIRBANKS-MORSE 9 h. p. w ood vessel no odor will arise, as that Is Graphic should grow In influence and caused by the generation of gaa saw outfit, mounted on good truck, circulation. Its local news Items are for sale; will sell cheap for less than Under scrutiny o f experts from the when closely covered. comprehensive, ably written and Navy department the helicopter. In worth of engine. Blue R182. 61t2 — — o ------------• generally well arranged. Its church Mrs. Mabel Hill returned today vented by Emil Berliner and his son, news is commendable. Its editorials FOR SALE— Cadillac touring ear. (Thursday) from Anacortee, Wash., good— what there is of them. Let’s successfully underwent n aeries of where she has been visiting for sev This car to In A1 condition, newly have more, without fear or favor. trials near College Park, ltd. Rising eral weeks. painted; can be had at an unreason ably low price. Inquire Commercial Now, for my suggestion. Why ! steadily to a height o f seven feet, the Hotel. f i lt l not have a “ People’ s Page,“ with let helicopter, operated by Henry Berliner, NOTICE ters from whosoever w ill” among us I poised in the air, motionless. Its Our store will be closed Satur REAL ESTATE is movinf. list on the current issues of the day. motion was neither forward nor back Political, economic and any thing ward, and the operator was apparently day, September 2Srd, on account of your farms or town property with that Interests the community gener able to make it rise, toll or remain holiday; w ill be open from ( to 9 o ’clock In the evening. D. M. Nay- os. If the price is right we will ally. Questions like the proposed steadfast, at wllL berger, McMinnville, Oregon. mere them for yon. W. E. White A school bill, the bootleg menace, the Three times was the experiment franchise licenses, ete.f Might not Co. 51tl such s free discussion make the tried. Then, not content with having CARD 0 7 THANKS Graphic so popular that no Yamhill shown the mala features of the craft, ELECTRIC TRAIN SCHEDULE I desire to thank those who pre county family would be complete Berliner drove it around the half-mile sented floral pieces and in various The follow ing to the time o f etoe without it? Sincerely, Mra Florence course. The big craft circled the ways sought to lessen my sorrow at trio train arrivals at the elty ticket track several times and than cam# to the death and burial o f my husband office at Newberg: Adams, 41i sooth School street. rest at the feet o f a crowd o f on- and would especially thank Rev. Lee To Portland From Portland for his kindness. Mrs. Lee LaDu. September 14,1922. S:06 a. m. 8:68 a. m. J. a Hansaker. In As for the Graphic, I like It fine. ,ft ft r r ’ 9 :0 5 a. m. 11:82 a. m. FOR RENT— 5-room house with In fact I couldn't get along without the natal experts, refused 1:21 p. ss. 2:11 p. m. it. I read a recipe in It telling how on the experiment in ad- bath; 2 acres of land. Phone 29A6. 8:60 p. a . 5:50 p. m. 61tl* to get rid of ants, which was worth 4:58 p. m. 7:01 p. m. race o f his official report to his su ten times the price of the paper, be n-tors. sides all of the other good news we i Twenty years the eider Berliner has get out o f it. I am a booster for the Graphic.— Mrs. Neal McCoy, New striven to complete bis invention. He gave up the work and his son took up berg, Oregon. when- the father had left off. The o fundamental principles as they had Adams Apple been worked out by the senior Ber When our forefathers read the liner were correct, and the sou com Bible they were fond o f pursuing the pleted minor details stsndlng la the stories and incidents contained there Poultry raising is mere profitable when the hens aie property in even farther than the scriptural way of a successful helicopter. protected. A mere powerful engine, • few explanations. Where the Book of Genesis, for ex minor alterations, and the Berliners A good hog house will pey for itself cut of the feed it saves ia 01 ample, merely relates the episode of expect to have a machine to carry winter. Eve and the apple In the brlefeat and them any piece under all conditions. most concise language, legends go I .ending places on roofs aad small open An implement shed doubles the life of you machinery. It savi much farther— connecting various ■panes will permit the operating of its oest in upkeep and repairs. kinds of animals and birds with the A scientifically designed ban will pay for itself ia a few years. fall of man and introducing scores t'n m b o d y « t the"h3eopter is some of trimmings which do not appear in what similar to an airplane. In the These are facts proved by the experience of successful farmers. ] the original version. front on either aide are the lifting demonstrate that good farm buildings are not an expense, but n One of these legends Is respon sible for the name “ Adam's apple,“ propellers, 14 feet long^Tbese operate Investment. ■s applied to the thyroid cartilage of BUILD GOOD YARN BUILDINGS the larynx, a projection which us ually is much more apparent in men t o e T o M l ie driver's seat The for This office is prepared to rapply you with practical working plans, than in woman. ward motion is accomplished by means specifications and the right kinds cf material for any type o f building. This legend states that Adam o f a small tilting propeller In the rear when he attempted to swallow his o f the fueeUge. Callus. They are free. bite o f apple from the tree of life I f the tilting propeller is inclined choked, and tha fruit stuck In his o f 10 degrees there to a throat. All males since Adam have o f a little leea tom*ln lifting bad this protuberance as silent evi This, however, dence of the indiscretion of their an 1 o f 28 per cent cestor. o f th# lifting power. I k e engine to Airplane Remains Stationary in Air and Then Speeds Around Course. Good Farm Buildings Pay Fass Named for Pone In tribute to the prowess of Pope Plus XI as a mountaineer, one of the Alpina pasees in northern Italy was named for him some years ago. Plant a want ad In the Graphic. your eerim curtains get I and herders tede, dye them ip dye a darker color, old any shade that matches the teme o f the room. ... ■ iS CHAS. K. 8 Spaulding LOGGING CO