HOOD PTVPfiTnT.ACIEIt, THOBSDAYliULY 25, 1912 LADIES' SUITS HALF PRICE $40.00 Suits . . $20.00 35.00 30.00 25.00 20.00 . . 17.50 . . 15.00 . . 12.50 . 10.00 CLOAKS HALF PRICE u SUMMER i GOODSj MUST i GO See Us for Your Vacation Needs, You Will Save Money and Secure FirstClass Goods. fl if II, 1 lip $10.00 SKIRTS Now $3.85 Wash Dresses $4.95 Values. $3.92 4.90 3.50 2.40 1.75 it it 3.12 2.80 1.92 1.40 Boys' Suits $1.95 Worth $3.75 Genuine Government Khai Kahi Leggins, Hat and Knapsack to Match $1 .95 STRAW HATS HALF PRICE $3.50 Hats $1.75 2.50 " 1.25 1. 50 " .75 PANAMAS $10.00 Hats $5.00 8.50 7.50 MEN'S SUITS S35, S30, S25 Suits $15.00 $24, $22.50, $20 Suits $18, $16.50, $20 Suits 12.00 8.00 EVERY SUIT REDUCED THE OUTING F-derheimer, Stein & Co. MUHI ; ' j v 1 a v s LADIES' OXFORDS $3.50 to. $4.50 $1.95 NK A. G - FLORSHIEM OXFORDS Your Choice $3.95 BRIEF LOCAL MENTION H I I IIWI'IWH"H"WWt Go to Soule's for sheet music. Chas. Haywatd haa been visiting at Tillamook. Miss Eula McCully is visiting friends in Portland. L. E. Morse was in Portland Mon day on business. Shoes made or repaired at Johnsen's Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Huelat were in Portland last week. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Kier are visiting friends in Portland. ( Now is the time to buy cheap slab wood. A. C. Lofts, phone 310.X. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. King spent the week end in Portland. N. C. Evans was a business visitor in Portland last week. Plenty of good roses for cemetery use at the Oakdale Greenhouse. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Reed were with Portland friends last week. Born To Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ordway on Monday, July 15, a son. LIME and SPRAY KELLY BROS. Phone 227-M. Myron S. Smith, of Underwood, was here on business last week. Miss Mary Dabney is with friends at Vancouver, Wash., this week. If you want shoes that don't go wrong go to Johnsen's. L. E. Taft was in Portland the latter part of the week on business. Misa Mae Smith is spending the summer with friends in Wasco. Mrs. E. L. Hoot, of Portland, spent the week end here with friends. Now is the time to buy cheap slab wood. A. C. Lofts, phone 310-X. J. W. Morton, of Salem, was here last week looking after business. BornTo Mr. and Mrs. C. S. True on Tuesday, July 16, a daughter. Get a 75c whip free. Ask McDonald about it. H. G. Miller, of Spokane, Wash., was here with friends last week. W. W. Stevenson, of Mosier, was a business visitor in the city last week. Chicken dinner 50 cents at the Hotel Oregon from 1 1 :30 to 2 o'clock Satur day, tf Miss Florence Wienheimer is here from Buffalo, N. Y., visiting friends. Geo. W. McCoy, of Portland, was here attending to business last week. If your shoes have gone wrong take them to Johnsen. Edward McGregor, of Portland, was here on business the first of the week. Misa Melissa Hill, 'of Portand, is here visiting her sister, Mrs. L. II. Huggina. Now is the time to buy cheap slab wood. A. C. Lofts, phone 3111-A. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Frazier, Sr., are at Dufur visiting their daughter, Mrs, Galligun. Born To Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sagers on Tuesday, July 16, a daugh ter. Joa. A. Wilson haa returned from Tillamook, where he spent the week end. $2004, $3000 and $5000 to loan on im proved ranches. G. Y. Edwards & Co. Frank Wilcox, of Chicago, was in the city last week visiting friends and on business. Born To Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Rob ertson Monday, July 22, a nine pound girl. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Blount were in Portland over the week end visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Chapin, of To ronto, Canada, were here over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. O'Neil and little daughter, of Portland, spent the week end here. Miss Carrie Copple, who has been two years abroad, has returned to her home here. Don't forget that Soule is selling sheet music at 10c per copy, 12 copies f 1.0.'. Lawrence Gerdes, who is now in The Dalles, was here on a visit to his par ents Sunday. Dr. H. D. W. Pineo spent last week on a vacation with his parents on their Upper Valley ranch. Clover, timothy and oat seed for sale KELLY BROS. tf Mr. and Mrs. Bumette E. Duncan and little daughter are at Tillamook spending a vacation. C. - D. Johnson, who has teen spend ing the winter in California, has been in the city on business. Chicken dinner 50 cents at the Hotel Oregon from 11 :30 to 2 o'clock Satur day, tf R. Samuels, of Portland, came up over the week end and joined the Ma- zamas at Cloud Cap inn. Geo. W. Baker, of Parkdale who has been visiting in Portland, returned to Blodgetville last week. $2000, 3000 and $5000 to loan on im proved ranches. G. Y. Edwards & Co Prof. W. H. Lawrence is in the Willamette valley making studies of horticultural conditions there. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Pittock, of Portland, spent the week end at Cloud Cap Inn and with the Mazamaa. Miss Hazel Cartan, who has been tak ing the Domestic Science and art courte at O. A. ., will do neat dressmaking by the day, at a very reasonable price. Phone or leave word at 255-M. Dr. F. C. Brosius has leturned from southern California, where he spent the past several weeks on business. 'Miss Gretchen Calkins, who has been visiting friends and relatives in Portland, has returned home. Sheet music 10c per copy at Soule's Music Store. M. E. McCarty is in the eastern markets to select the fall and winter stock of goods for the Paris Fair. J. C. Oakes, superintendent of the Columbia park playgrounds in Port land, was here with friends Tuesday. Jonh W. Weaver and Frank Potter Lucas were in Bend and other central Oregon points on business last week. Burt Jayne has returned from the eastern Oregon grain belt, where he journeyed to participate in the harvest. Mrs. M. A. Wright, of Olivet, M1ch., is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Robert T. Newhall, at Prospect Point. The Ladies' Aid society of the Con gregational church will meet with Mrs. Chas.Castner at 2:30 Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Larson, of Mount Hood, were guests of Mrs. Larson's parents, Mrs. J. W. Hinrichs, last week. Mrs. M. H. Dorsey, who spent the winter and spring in Indianapolis and other eastern points, returned last week. Mrs. J. W. Smith, of Portland, was here the first of the week on business. Mrs. Smith was formerly a resident of the city. Miss Hattie Coosc, who is with the Pacific Telephone Co., at The Dalles, is here with her parents in the Barrett district. Mrs. Rose Coursen Rcid, well known in the musical circles of the country, is visiting Mrs. Horace Butterfield at her ranch. R. W. Caldwell and family, formerly of this city, have located at Victoria, B. C, where they will make their fu ture hotne.- Chas. Castner has returned from Cove, Ore , from which point the Davidson Fruit Co. shipped a quantity of cherries. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Manning, who were returning from Bend to Portland, where they now reside, visited friends here Monday. Miss Bertha Cannon, of Portland, is here spending the summer with her father, L. W. Cannon, and sister, Mrs. Mabel Carter. Several troops of Idaho militia passed through the city last Thursday morning on tne way to an encampment at Gray's Harbor. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Davidson have been in eastern Oregon, where Mr. . Davidson has been attending to ship ments of cherries there. Any one interested in holding an Iowa picnic meet with us Saturday afternoon-at four o'clock at Laraway's store. Laraway & Noble. B. D. Yarrian, of Portland, where he is connected with the Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co., was here th,e first of the week on business. Miss Ruth Weidrick, of Portland, who has been visiting her Bister, Mrs. C. D. Hinrichs, for tliepast fortnight, returned home Saturday. Clarence F. Gilbert, Miss Anna Vannet and Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Cul bertson left Monday to spend a couple of weeks at Canon Beach. Mr. and Mrs. William Yates and family have removed from PorUand to Dee, where Mr. Yates is employed with the Oregon Lumber Co. 480-acre Wheat Ranch In the Big Bend Country, Washington, to exchange for Hood River property. L. Ii, Hug ging. I have a client who desires to sell or 3700 shares of stock in a local manufac turing plant. What have you to offer? S. W. Stark. Phone :508-M. j25tf H. A. Powell, of Shelbyville. hid., accompanied by G. E. Sherman, of Emmett, Idaho, was here the first of the week visiting his cousin, Frank P. Lucas. Everett Sterling, of San Francisco, was here the first ofjthe week vis iting his old friend, Carl P. Ross, with whom he was associated in early rail roading days. Miss Cowie, Dr. Luther, Dr. Mulkey, Marshall N. Dana, il. V. Newlin and R. R.' Routledge.all oi Portland, joined the Mazamas at their camp near Cloud Cap Inn Sunday. fMrs. Willis Van Horn entertained with a dancing party Saturday evening in honor of her guests, Misses Eliza beth Jones, Doris Smith and Lorraine Bean, of Portland. ( Money to Loan In amounts f."00 to fl,50( on first class real estate security. W ill also buy mortgages in like amounts. Reed & Henderson, Inc. Superior Price Markers at tl. is office After a visit with the family of Mr. and Mrs. Willis Van Horn, Misses Elizabeth Jones, Doris Smith and Lorraine Bean have returned to their homes in Portland. Mrs. C. R. Dewis, of Calgary, Al berta, is in the Upper Valley with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ceo. E. Pineo. II. D. Pineo, of Victoria, B. C, is also visiting his uncle. Mrs. Horace ButterlielJ, who with her daughter, Miss Genevieve Butter-1 field, is spending the summer on their i ranch, entertained the Misses Jones, I Smith and Bean Friday evening. j I. R. Acheson, of the Butler Hanking Co., had as his guests last wek hit brother, J. L. Acheson. of the Third United Presbyterian chuich in Poit land, and his cousin, Rev. J. Willaid Acheson, and wife. Paul Human, of Salem, arrived here Monday to join his parents, who are spending the summer vacation on their ranch in the Pine Grove district. Mr. Homan, Sr., is president of Willamette University at Salem. A social dance will be given at Park dale tomorrow (Friday) night An ex cellent orchestra will disrenso music and supper will be served t twelve o'clock. All are cordially invited to come and have a good time. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Kichardson and Miss Dorothy Rifhardson. of Winnipeg, Canada, Bpent the week end here. Mr. Richardson declares that he missed his Hood River strawberries this year. He was delighted with the community. Mr. and Mrs.' David Eccles were here from Utah last week. Mr. Eccles spent several days inspecting.the lum bering plant of the Oregon Lumber Co. . and the Mount Ib.od Railroad, both of which are managed by Chas. T. Early. William Baker, who whs taken ill at Camp "Dew Drop Inn," whew his family is spending the summer, was brought to the city Monday morning by Harry T. DeWitt. He was accom panied by Miss Fisher, a nurse, who has been cut at camp. Miss A. M. Spring and sister, Miss E. D. Spring.jwho have been on a tour nf Alaukn arrived here last Week to remain until after the apple harvest on the old Booth place purchased by h.m Inst vpnr. Thev were accom panied by Miss Alice A. I'armalee, of New York. A neat inh nf sien nainting has been executed by two tramp printers for the liu Jou Auto (Jo., placing me name oi the company in neat design over the entranceway to the garage on Colum bia (street Tho ninter3 gave their names as Ash Can Sam and Denver Fat. Mrs. J. H. Koberg is recovering from severe bruises received last week when Bhe and one of her children were victims of a runaway accident. The horses ran down the old grade traveled by the Koherg family during the high water period, and the injuries were sustained when she was thrown from the rig. As I have been forced to vacate my i-tore building bv August 1, which will be occupied by the Hxd River Public Library, I have decided to close out everything in stock regardless of price Seventy-five to $100 off frm price of every piano during the next nine days flUU.to iiwi trom an interior piano plavertt. All small goods at nalt price. Sheet music every piece in the store 10 cents per copy, 12 copies $1.00. Organs at iroui tiu.uu up. xerms on pianos SILAS II. SOULE H. II. Taylor and wife, of Crescent, Pa., who hae bsen visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Waldie, who recently re moved fiom this city to Washougal, Wash., returned to their homo last Thursday by this city. Mr. Waldie, who was furmerly their neighbor in Pennsylvania, accompanied them here. Dr. 11. A. I.athrop, who is pastor of the Methodist church at Creston, la., I and who ,ih spending his vacation here witn Mi, l.amrup visiting nm sou, Albert Luthrop, of the firm of Morlan & Lathrop,' and daughter, Mrs. E. O. Hall, has been appealed to by local citizens and will dliver another sermon nere next Sunday at the Methodist church. The following 'oflicers were elected at the meeting of the local camp of vVomeri of Woodcraft held at the K. of '. hall last Thursday evening: Mrs. uiia Wall, guardian neighbor; Mrs. Katherine Slaven, advisor; Mrs. Mary liby, magician; Mrs. Helen Horton, aplain of guards; Miss l.enora Wall, nusician ; Mrs. Maine. iNieKeisen, at tendant; Mrs. Anna Anderson, inside sentinel. Mrs. Geo. Lawrence is reported sick ut their home in ;Portland. The Law rence family have been spending con siderable time at intervals in their home on Avalon Way and were just preparing to again leave Portland lor Hood River when Mrs. Lawrence was taken suddenly ill. The Lawrences are one of the old business families of Portland and rank among its finest cit- zenB. George Sunday, son of Rev. "Billy" Sunday, who is spending the summer on his ranch here, became seriously ill last Wednesday while climbing to the summit of ' Mount Rainier, which is 14,500 feet high. lhe young man became violently ill, but after a rest proceeded to the top. His campanion, Jensen, ot (Jeuar rails, la., ieu unconscious when the summit was reached. ' The ladies missioary circle of the Baptist church gave their annual lawn social Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. Marshall Hill, on the Heights. The lawn was beautifully lighted. through the courtesy of Mr. Day. Miss Ida Bryant, Miss Edgington and Miss laylor rendered oengnuui musical se lections. Miss Jewei Taylor gave two splendid readings. Cooling refresh ments were served and an enjoyauie evening spent. Grace U. B. church, Oak and Sixth streets. Sunday school at 10 a. m. Sermon and morning worship at 11 a. m. C. E. at 7 o'clock. At 8 p. ui. the pastor will speak on "The Testimonies oi Two converts to t-nrisuamiy one a Pharisee's of the First Century, the Other a Unitarian's of the Twentieth Century." Special vocal music and a violin duet by two or Mood raver u musicians. Everybody welcome. .1. B. Parsons, minister. The following guests have been at Mrs. Alma Howe's this week: Mrs. i Charles Chamberlain and family", of Portland; Mrs. Frank Kerr and two children. Portland ;Miss Susan Smith, Boston, Mass, Miss Marian',Thun, Se attle, Wash., Mrs. Osmun Royal, Port land; Mrs. U. P. Thompson. Portland; and Bert Anderson, chief electrical in spector of Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Harry McCall and child.who have been here for the past several weeks, have left for their ranch in central Oregon. Rev. Frank Spaulding. who was pas tor of tbe church 14 years ago, deliv ered'! strong sermon at the Methodist church last Sunday morning. I Geo. T. Farther was a business visi tor in Portland yesterday. R. II. Bennett is spending a vacation in New York with his parents. H. S. Lewis, of Portland, is here visiting his son, Ralph Lewis, at Odell. Mrs. Willis and Mrs. Woodward, of Portland, are visiting the O. P. Dab ney family. J. E. Ferguson left Tuesday to vieit friends and to attend to business in the Puget Sound region. R. W. Pratt yesterday shipped a small crate of apricots grown in L ih yard to his father in Maine. The fruit is as large as peaches. G. Y. Edwards &. Co. have made the sale of the Howard Parker residence on Cascade avenue to W. R. Multord, who will remove there with his family. Harry Farrell, shipping clerk at the Apple Grower' Union, is in the en campment of state militia at Clatsop Beach. He is a member of Company n. C. B. Chesterman, who was a dele gate from Sioux City, la., to the Elks' convention at Portland, after a visit with Mrs. J. H. Osborne, has returned home. C. E. Forkner hnd P. F. Arnes, of Marshalltown, la., arrived in the city the first of the week to look over the valley. Burt Bragg, of Colfax, Wash, was called to the is city Saturday because of the death of his cousin bordon Bragg. Mrs. Ethel Waterman, of Daven port, la., and A. A. Baker and A. C. Baker, of Deborah, la., spent the week end here with their cousin, E. A. Baker. We Clean and Press Clothes By keeping your suit cleaned mid pressed you add much to your personal appearance. Spaulding's Tailor Shop Basement Brosius Bldg., Phone 13x Buy - Where - Prices - Are - Best Beds, Mattresses, Tables and Chairs. Indeed all articles of Furniture, both new and second-hand I'll buy your old furniture. . My motto is: small and quick sales O. L. HENDERSON 1215 Twelfth St. The Heights Phone I47-X : N Show 'Em Where You Live An Ideal Souvenir of Hood River Valley A Photograph 40 Inches Long of Hood River Valley, Showing Both ML HOOD AND ML ADAMS Also Your Orchard and Home SHOW YOUR FRIENDS The Finest Valley in the World EVERYBODY SAYS They Arc the Best Pictures Yet TEN THOUSAND ACRES OF GROWING APPLE ORCHARDS 75c and $1.00 Slocom's Book & Art Store ' : I