The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939, November 07, 1935, Page SEVEN, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    --- — — - ° S N K V 1 L !< K
P O S T A L -F E D E R A L
IN SU R A N C E
A M CHKONITLK
ASSN.
I* Ml ÜOVKHKHKNT KMJ'UlYKKH
BONNEVILLE
INQlilHK AT WEHT IX)UNOE AUDITORIUM
TUKHDAYH -11 A. M. TO 6 I». M.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wonderly
•'I'd daughter, Gloria June, were
in Portland Saturday visiting
Mrs Wonderly’« sister and hus­
band, Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Rob.
erts.
a n n o u n c e m e n t
CRAIGMONT HOTEL
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hurt enter­
tained at dinner Sunday Mr. and
Mrs. Howard L*eete of Portland.
Mrs. Laura Wick man and son and
daughter of Gladstone and Mr.
and Mrs. R. A. Gay of Oregon
NOW U N D ER
City.
Albert Waller and children
moved from Cook’s addition Wed-
nesday into Portland.
Mrs. Gilbert Chandiey and Mrs.
William Bobo motored Into Port­
BOARD AN D RO OM FOR M EN ON DAM
land on a shopping tour Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Brett
Phelps
GOOD R A T E S — GOOD FOOD— GOOD BED S
spent Friday In Portland visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lewis.
Free Drying Room For Patrons
Archie Cook is ousy from dawn
till dusk with his team trying to
keep up with the orders for wood
off his place.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor McCul­
lough of Hood River moved into
Cooks addition this week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R.
Mofflt
moved from the Roosevelt Inn to
Cooks addition.
Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Thomason
were dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Golden Tuesday
night.
J. D. Kyle of Cascade Locks
spent Sunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. L>. T. Wonderly.
Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Moffitt vis­
ited Mrs. Moffitt’s mother, Mrs.
L J. Non is In Portland Thursday.
Saturday will see Paul Flegel
of Bonneville Super Service and
Roy Sinner of the Brandes dairy
head out of the district for Cali­
fornia. They are leaving on a ten
day trip to see the world through
a Ford windshield. Los Angeles is
their southern objective.
Got a house to re»t? Or a piece a word and you reach practically
Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Collins spent
furniture to Mil? Use Chronicle all the homes in the district. Most Wednesday in Portland visiting
Mrs. A. M. Collins.
ant Ada. They are only one cent everyone reads them.
NEW MANAGEMENT
There is No Finer, Purer, or
Healthier Milk than
Brandes Grade
Raw or Pasteurized
iiiiiiiiiiiiiin iM iin iu iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
C E N T R A L LUMBER CO.
Akron, Ohio.—Miss Bernice
Elakna, twenty-one, of Akron,
failed to “get her woman." While
eating her lunch in a South
Akron restaurant. Miss Elakna
noticed a girl climbing into her
automobile. Rushing up from
her lunch, she darted outside
and leaped onto the running
board of the moving car. But
after a few blocks, clinging to
the wildly careening car, she
lost her hold and fell oft, suf­
fering cuts and bruise*. The
feminine thief escaped with the
car.
QUITTING WHILE THE QUITTING IS GOOD.
Flooring
.
Rustic
•
.
.
•
$25 M Ft.
$14 M. F t
W hen C ou gh s
Hang on-W orry
. . $25 M Ft.
Don’t fool with sweet syrm y
inunctions. Get busy at once and
ut that tough old hang-on cough
ut of existence.
And there's one real way to Jo
his put an end to all j c r
o; ; y.
,o to Bonneville Drug
• -s-
; d got a b o O l e of s '-. m :
t effective. Bronchuline Em ,
And all Building Materials Drastically Reduced
LOTS $50
0 ON T H E M A R K I
S E AN D CONTRACT
upr
rOUIPM ENT.
viUO. L.U JH IVIL.iv i »
SES
OFFICE
FIXTU
it ot rli
trottoli.
n L.V
................................................................................................................................... ............................
^
Good Drinks
Tasty Food
Congenial Atmosphere
W ITH —
Hal
Rolph and
Jimmy
AT T H E —
Bonny Villa
T avern
DRUGS AT
A SAVING
$1.00 COD
C * f\
L IV E R OIL . . . .
O t/C
.75 A N T IS E P ­
49c
TIC SOLU TIO N
.50 A N A L G E SIC Q
B A LM ...........
Q
^
O Z /C
.50 N O SE
D RO PS ..
29c
$1.25 C R E 0 -
M U L S I 0 N .......
98c
.75 0 V A L T IN E .
57c
$1.20 S. M. A ...
90c
.50
ST A T IO N E R Y .
29c
CLEANEX
2 FOR ...
25c
.50 M IL K OF
M A G N ESIA .
H
a
u
s e
39c
r *
i
^ «
T frrr ■"
I
Enjoy
right at the
d.
FOR SALE.
All Transactions Cash
^^illlllllllllllllllillülllllllllllllllilüllllilllil
Miss Arlene Sawyer, who has
been helping out at her uncle’s
store at Odell returned to her
parents home Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Sawyer en­
tertained Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Friedman and Mr. and Mrs. Ern­
est Slnnett of Portland, at dinner
Wednesday. In the evening they
attended the oldtime dance at the
auditorium.
Mr. and Mrs. Brett Phelps
moved into Cook’s addition this
week.
Cecil Abbott, who works for the
United
States
engineers
and
drives to and from his home in
Portland, is in a hospital with a
back injury, which he sustained
last week when struck by the
General-Shea highline skip, or
box, while employed in running
lines with a survey crew down at
the ship locks. Fear was felt that
his back was broken, but an x-ray
failed to disclose any broken
bones.
Children in the Bonneville
school are now protected in their
play on the school grounds by a
high wire fence, which prevents
them from running out on the
highway. The fence was built at
direction of the school board. It
enables the teachers to employ
closer supervision over younger
children who thoughtlessly run
out of the grounds.
Frank C. Linton, government
safety engineer on the dam and
a member of the Bonneville
school board, is home from Louis­
ville, Ky., where he attended the
convention of the National Safety
Congress. He was gone two
weeks, reports a pleasant trip,
says everybody was kept busy
while at the convention.
Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Bogu»- and
daughter
Adelia
from
North
Powder are new residents in
Cook’s addition. Adelia has en­
tered the Bonneville grade school.
The Bonneville Women’s Com­
munity Club will hold its regular
meeting November 14 at the club
room with Mrs. Frank Ewen. Mrs.
Frank Linton and Mrs. George
Linton as hostesses. After the
business meeting the course in
“ Practical English and Effective
Speech” will be taken up. All
ladles are cordially invited.
Girl Motor Thief
Takes Girl's Car
WITH THE PROSPECT OF HAVING TO PAY EXHORBITANT T A X E S W E ARE
Common Lumber
SEVEN
*• ' * 1
1 > .-.‘ ‘ vt* .-v; : >
"P\ tsHiv t\
b**? L>vLr ¿ i
on the high ;ay a t Bonneville