Image provided by: Hood River Library; Hood River, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1924)
HOOD RIVER OLA THURSDAY, JULY 81, 1934 At The Theatres Ette RIALTO 71 DEPARTMENT Richard Barthelmess These , are worthwhile savings at a time when you can use them. Every one of these items reflect the many savings to be found in this store. They prove beyond question that with our purchases for 571 stores we can give you better values for the same money or the same values for less money. OAK GROVE NEWS- TOPICS - FABLES Ladies’ Dress Gloves THRU THE DARK This is a genuine balbrig gan union of good quality. It is made with short sleeves, ankle length, closed crotch. This js a good suit for thé hot weather months. with 68 x 72 and 72 x 80 count pongee. There is a big difference as is found after two or three wash ings. With and without at tached collar. Herman Hukari and family are spending the week in Issaquah, Wu. vlaltlng frienda. lira. Z. Annala and son, John, wlio accompanied Mr. and Mra. M. Udell us on a motor trip which included Sea- aide and Astoria, returned hom&>-8un- day. A Thrilling Crook Story Tweed, 3 piece style, skirt, knickers, jacket A practi cal outing costume. A pure thread silk hose of good quality. Has good lisle top, reinforced heeTand toe. Comes hem top and ribbed top. Black ad wanted colors. Girls straw hats, sailor and poke shapes. Take ad vantage of these savings White and Ecru square mesh nets, plain and fancy patterns. Men’s Straw Hats greatest offering WOMEN WHO GIVE old Hoagland. Jlr. and Mra. Fred Gilcher and sons. Jack and Nick, went to the mountains Monday after huckleberries. Geo. Garrett and non, John, are In the mountain« aaaiating Mr. Sumner. Mra. Fred Gllcher returned home Saturday. She vialted relatives at Woodland, Portland and Ridgefield. Wash. Wm. Terrill vialted at the Griffith home Saturday night. Mr. and Mr«. Griffith accompanied him home Sun day. Mra. M. Chaney lost the top off her car Sunday while coming over the highway. Mr. and Mra. Clarence Woody and three children motori*d from Corbett Sunday to attend church at the Ad vent Christian church and to visit with old frlenda. Mr. and Mra. Crup per. They had a pleasant trip to the Pun< li Bowl where a picnic lunch was enjoyed. Suffering Shakespeare' GRANTLAND RICE SPORTLIOHTS COLLEEN MOORE The “Flaming Youth” Girl PINE GROVE “PAINTED PEOPLE ALSO MERMAID COMEDY “A Good Scout NOW! “THREE WEEKS is Monday and Tuesday Saturday-Sunday, Aug. 2-3 ALL STAR CAST “SECOND YOUTH” Leathentodùc” No. 4 “THE PALEFACE LAW tion will be held at the church Fri day afternoon at 2 o’clock. Mr. Penck, the general supervisor of the Portland division of the Wearever company, will give an interesting talk on Wearever alumlnnm and the kitch en. Mr. Johnson, local salesman, promises an interesting time and good waffles. Everybody is invited. Mr. and Mra. Ram Freeman left yesterday for southern Oregon. They expect to meet friends from Califor nia and conduct them to Crater lake and the Oregon eaves of Josephine <ounty and then to Hood River. Mrs. A. I. Mason will entertain the Ainicua club thia afternoon. Miao Myrtle Jarvis spent the week end at home. She has completed her practice teaching at the Children's Farm borne and will apend the rest of the summer at Monmouth. Do not forget the social grange Sat urday evening. Mlaa Dorothy Rami will furnish music for. dancing. The Hood River K. P. band will give a concert on the school lawn Friday evening, August 8. under aus pices of the Ladies' Aid society. Ice cream and other good things will be Thompson. of way to Van- Men’s White Barkalu, a fashionable rough straw hat that is a winner. ■, v Willie Dea sure and ■pent aeveral days at cently. Adolph Patereau has moved hin log- ging cfew from Jesse Davidaon'a tu the Gribble place. Sunday v Ini tom at Bremen's included Mr. and Mm. F. H. Blagg and daughters, Ruth and Mar garet. and Charles DeHart and daugh ter, Ik.rothy, of Hood River. Fred Hopper and family, of The Dalle«. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hopper, F. B. Hen« and family, and Frank Hanei and fuinily spent Sunday on a picnic up the Loop highway. A. M. Butterfield and family have moved to the W. 8. Gribble place. Mi«« Marian Wyatt came from 8a- leni Monday to visit her father, H. C. Wyatt. CENTRAL VALE Wyatt's store was broken into last Mr. and Mrs. Geo. F. Ogden are Tliurmlaay night and the safe blown «pending a abort time at Elk lake. up. Mina Perkin«, who han been visit ing her friend. Ml»« Ruth Reynolds, Chicken or salmon dinner«, for some time, left for her home at luncheons. The Rapide, Carcadè The Dallas Sunday. Breakfasts, too, are our specially. Mr. and Mrs. Llnkota and two sons, of Peotone, Ill., are viaitlng at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Fletcher. They are on their way to California. 8mok y and Smelly Oil Stoves Cured by Edgar Hagen returned home Sun using Eocene Oil. Try thia high trade day from Blalock, where he had been coal oil next time and see the difference. working In the harvest fields. Any quantity, gallon to barrel, at E. A. Mr. and Mm. Ray Gilkemon and Franz Co. t - m2»tf «on and Mm. ltedward. of Seattle, have vialted a conple of weeka at the home of Mr. Gilkemon'« parent«, Mr. and Mm. Frank Gilkeraon. They left for Seattle Sunday. (Continued from first page) The Mothera* club will meet at the lieach Is Neah-Ksh-Nie mountain, the home of Mra. O. A. Hoffmann thin afternoon. Please bring thimble and 1 highest peak in Tillamook county. needle and white thread. Everybody I directly on the aee shore. Thia in spiring mountain rises to a height of Mr. Schweizer met vyith an acci nearly 1,800 feet and concentrates dent lant week which might have nearly every feature of mountain t»een quite serious. In chopping prop grandeur and beanty — grassy and |X»lea hl« ax «lipped and mt quite wcHMled slopes, spring» and creeka, deeply Into one foot near the ankle., ragged gorges, high pinnacles, and The doctor had to take two stitches. awt*fu>n>e eilffs overhanging the ocean. South of Neah-Kah-Nie Inn la a Although Mr. Schweizer will be laid up for a couple of week«, he in get very pretty, clean -beach, with accom- inodationa to I m * had at Manzanita ting along nicely. and Claaaic Ridge. Garilaildi Beach includes that por- MIDDLE VALLEY t ion of t lie coast be tween the mouth of Nehalem and Tillamook bays, and is one of the most popular and ac Rev. Wilbur, our Sunday school cessible of the Tillamook county missionary. and family who are now lieaches, being directly on the rail living In Hood River, called on the road. Bayocean, situated on Tillamook B. J. Montgomery family Sunday. Bay. is destined to become a most Mrs. Merle Johnston, of Portland, popular' resort on account of the in visit Ing her sister. Mra. Roy Moni large amount of money that was ex gomery. ' pended there for improvements. It Mra. A. Havasty. of Seattle, la Ik built on a peninsula, overlooking visiting nt the J. Wilklna home., Tillamook Bay on the east. A large Sunday school Is at 10 o'clock ev and commodious hotel and a large ery Sunday and Bev. Pratt will natatorium are built there, also a preach at 8 p. m„ everyone welcome. bungalow city, consisting of a num- l>er of ooa-story bungalows, located in a moot charming nook. Rayocean MOUNT HOOD has mors modern bungalows than any July 24. 1024. other I »each resort. South of Bay (Mean is Cape Meares Mina Ethel Altig returned to her borne In Portland Thumday, after light station, bnilt on a high, rurged «pending several week» here with her prominence, aeveral hundred yards shove the sea level. It is reached friend. Mina Mildred Johnnon. Jenne Havldnon wan a Hood River from Bayocean and Netarts. Oceanside, on the north end of business visitor Monday. Netarts bench, somewhat resembles Mr. and Mm. Harry Bode, of 1,0b- Neah Kah-Nle. and it la hard to de anon. were here aeveral day« visiting cide which has the most charming friend«. and interesting attractions for those who delight to Investigate the mys- July 81, 1924. Mlaa Elizabeth Slate, of Fhttland. teriesnf the mighty ocean and the la visiting her aiater, Mra. W’. A. Iain rock« and caves that are to be found at Oceanside. Jutting out Into the gllle, and family. Mlaa Frances Itoggett haa returned from Pendleton, and Mlaa Helen Au bert from Monmouth, where they at tended aumnier normal. Mlaa Ktixalieth Lnogille la viaitlng in the Carroll* Hurlburt home in Ilood River. Boys* Sport Shirts and Blouses These make cool August garments. Loose at the neck and short sleeves. ----- tertsined the ladies of the conven- tkm at luncheon at lake I^rtle. The, visitors were taken on a. tour of cheese factories Saturday morning. The night before each publication repr<*aented at the convention was presented with a five-pound cheese. Carl Haberloch, salesman manager of the dairy organiaation, making the presentation. Hal E. goes, managing editor of the Oregon City Enterprise, WW re elected president of the aasociatidn in the dosing business session at the Garibaldi hotel, following luncheon at the hotel and a tour of the Whit ney Lumber company’s mill. O. Lansing Hurd, secretary of the Corvallis Gazette-Time«, waa reelect ed secretary-treasurer. Vice presidents elected to serve on the executive committee were: Ara G. Rae, Tilla mook Herald, western Oregon; Joe D. Thoiaiaon. Hood Rivey Glacier, central Oregon; ’ George Aiken, On tario Argus, eastern Oregon; Earl Richardson, I »alias Obeervor, Willam ette valley, and A. L. Ma Iler y, Oak land Tribune, southern Oregon. Granta Paas was chosen for the meeting place of the 1026 convention. A. E. Voorhees of the Grants Pass Courier tendered a personal Invita tion and telegram« were read from the Legion poet, mayor and cham ber of commerce, all welcoming the association. R. II. Jonas, of the Prineville Central Oregonian, moved the next convention be in Grants Pass and asked consideration for Prineville for the 1926 convention. Do You Want a G Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director 411 OAK STREET, ¿ÍT?