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Olathe News from Olathe, Kansas • Page 3

Publication:
Olathe Newsi
Location:
Olathe, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1922. THE OLATHE MIKROE, OLATHE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Mr. and Mrs. Graham, Albana, Mo. are visiting their daughter, Mrs.

F. G. Graham. Mr. Graham, who is 6 Rev.

Claude Lorimer will be here Friday, from Sumner, to visit his mother, Mrs. J. C. Lorimer. and the whole Lorimer clan.

In the day time he will be in Kansas City, OLATHE DRY with -the Hadley Mill, is on a busi-J ness trip to the south. Mrs. J. T. Franklin, Kansas City, who has spent the past month with her daughter, Mrs.

C. V. Frey, went to Colony, Saturday, for a visit with two other daughters. GOODS A JT. 1 UVjJVrIV KANSAS The Store of Quality "THE CAMP FIRE GIRLS" Outfit of Khaki Coats, Pants, Skirts and Khaki colored Pongee Twill Shirt Waists to match at the following prices: Waist $1.75 Skirt $2.98 Pants $3.98 Coats $4.25 Save money by repairing now -with Beaver Board We are offering the following Special Values in Ladies Canteen Bags, 2 strap handle, in Black Grain or Brown Ooz Leather fitted with large Mirror, Pocket Book and 3 Vanity Cases.

$2.25 Values for $1.48 at the National Sunday school convention, but he will be here at nights and on next Sunday, when he will preach at U. P. church. Marvin Ebert Lorimer, three weeks of age, came to town Sunday, bringing his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ebert Lorimer, to spend the day with his grand parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Carver.

The boy was named Marvin Ebert Marvin after the family name of his great grand father, and Ebert for his father. This is the last year that W. J. Cook, southeast Olathe, will raise strawberries. He is past 81 years of age, and not as spry as he was 43 years ago.

He had a mighty fine little patch this year, which, in season, yielded four crates of extra fine berries daily. Rev. Ira Barnett, Riverside, Calif, spent the latter part of the week with his brother, Roy Barnett, the Delco Light man. Rev. Barnett is pastor of the Calvary Presbyterian church, with a membership of 1600.

He was on his way to Des Moines, Iowa, to the World's Presbyterian meeting, and then will go to Nashville, for a big church meeting. The latter part of next week Mr. and Mrs. Will Ekengren will start to California for an indefinite visit possibly lasting one year. This is the first vacation Will has had since 1901.

The longest he has been away from his work being three days several years ago. While they are gone, Mr. Graham, of the Hadley Mill, will occupy their house. Ross Hazeltine returned recently from his farm five miles southwest of Princeton, and he reports the crop very good. He will move to his new farm next year.

Mrs. M. C. Nelson returned from the Island at Holliday, Saturday, after a visit with her son, Cleggy. Cleggy came up Friday evening with two big catfish, one weighing nine pounds, and the other seven.

Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Smith, who have been living with her uncle, W. E. Zimmerman, and keeping house for him, are now living in the C.

F. Hurst property, second door north and keeping house for him. Among the visitors at the home of Mrs. Hamilton, and her brother, James Aikin, on Sunday, were Mrs. Grace Oliphant, Mrs.

Bessie Funk, Mr. and Mrs. Campbell, and Mrs. Flora Morrows. Earl Reding has fitted up a nice little restaurant just west of the Olathe gas office.

He opened up in the east side, but his business grew so rapidly that he was obliged to take over the whole building. Ladies Canteen Bags, single strap handle in Grey or Dark Blue Ooz Leather fitted with large Mirror, Pocket Book and 3 Vanity Cases. $1.25 Values for 79c Han- Don't put off making needed repairs because you fear the expense. Use Beaver Board. For about $15 we can supply you with enough genuine Beaver Board to remodel the average room walls and ceiling.

Nail Beaver Board over old plaster or directly to joists and studding. Paint it if you want a decorated job, add the finishing strips and the work's done. You have a comfortable, good-looking room, and a job that's as permanent as the outside walls or the flooring. In your home, store, factory or office, you can doubtless use Beaver Board to great advantage to save time and money in repair and remodeling work. No muss no waste.

Phone us for an estimate of the Beaver Boarding you want to do. Our prices are right. Little Tots Beaded Purses with Chain dies, in fancy colored beaded designs. 75c Values for 39c Mr. and Mrs.

I. H. Hershey and Mary Jane, Miss Gladys Hershey, Mrs. Loulella Jones and son, Jack, and Mr. Clendenning, Chicago, spent Sunday on the farm with Grandpa Huston.

Mrs. McShane, Gardner, visited Olathe friends Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Busch, Lenexa, visited friends Saturday.

Mrs.Maud Robinson visited friends in Kansas City, Monday. a new Ford Percy Wlaker has touring car. CowleysFrye Lumber Col Coal and Building Material Store" Dave Wagner came home the first of the week from near Fort Worth, Texas. Dave had the flu this winter and is not well at all. Miss Lucile Ewing and Mrs.

Lela Adair Acker spent the first of the' week at Gunn City, visiting Mrs. Acker's sister, Mrs. Clyde Leslie Mrs. Earl Carver and three children, and niece, Miss Geraldine Heien, spent the week end in Zarah with her mother, Mrs. W.

S. Axtell. Mr. and Mrs. O.

G. Carroll, East Loula, announce the birth of a son, Saturday. Mr. Carroll is the printer at the State Deaf school. Mrs.

Claude Lane and daughter returned to Kansas City last week, after visiting an uncle and aunt, Mr. James Aikin and Mrs. Hamilton. J. C.

Fish left Monday for his home, Alamosa, after spending two weeks here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Fish.

Miss Florence Lyon and Rev. M. E. Gaddis were entertained at 6:00 Howard Payne, student at K. spent the week end with home folks.

He usually spends his summers here but as his brother, C. has moved to Meade, he will stay in the drug store at Lawrence this summer. Been a long seven weeks for W. H. Rosenbury.

His wife has been in St. Louis that length of time visiting her daughter, Mrs. Lyle Johnston. But she will be home soon although she must stop in Carrollton, to visit twins, great nieces. Mrs.

A. B. Childs is back from a seven weeks visit in California. At Redondo Beach she visited a brother at San Diego, another brother, and in the Imperial Valley, a sister. She was in Los Angeles just for sight seeing.

Milo Moore is home from K. and is delivering ice for J. S. Hartley. J.

H. McCarthy, Leavenworth, spent Thursday here with his sister Mrs. J. W. McCarthy.

Williams and Lyons, Dodge Dealers, delivered a fine new car Friday to Fred Scoville, De Soto. i Mr. and Mrs. W. C.

Hayes and daughter, Helen, Lockwood, spent the week end here with his brother in law, J. R. McGee and family. They were returning home from a 700 mile automobile trip to Springfield and St. Louis, their destination being, Rohcelle, where his parents and all his relatives re-side.

Mr. Hayes is a rural carrier out of Lockwood and when the Mc. Gees lived there, they were on his route. There will be a community picnic Friday night, at 6 o'clock, at the Central school grounds for everybody. This is given for boy scouts and the Camp Fire girls, who will have a joint ceremonial.

Of course the parents of the boys and girls will be there, but as it is to be a community affair, everyone is invited to come with proverbial full basket. J. R. Musselman, the pop corn man, is back on the corner of the Mrs. C.

A. Pennock, Chicago, is in Baldwin, for the summer, where she still maintains a home. Her Bister, Mrs. Ault lives there. She was in Olathe Monday on her way from Lenexa, where she had visited her sister, Mrs.

George Brown, and mother, Mrs. E. J. Mcllwain. The Pennocks formerly lived here.

Her daughter, Delia, teaches English in Billy Hyer has a brand new Mar- mon, of the very latest type. He traded in his used Marmon on it. Rev. Merrell E. Gaddis will preach at the Methodist church next Sunday morning.

Miss Edna Swift spent Monday in Gardner, visiting Misses Ella and Sarah Reed. E. R. Gooding has been ill the past tew days and his daughter, Mrs. Joe Chaney, Stanley, has been here most of the time.

Miss Christine Ashworth, Gardner, Patron's bank, with a fine new pop o'clock dinner Wednesday night at The new car, as well as the old, is a cherry red in color. Those who the G. A. Roberds home. the Racine high school, Lois is studying music, while Florence teaches business English in the have used Marmons, usually buy corn machine, a Peerless, which is small in size, but very convenient.

It is not much larger than a womans hat box, and is wheeled from place another unless they buy a Ford. Mrs. Jess Harness and daughter Anabel, Wellsville, spent the first of Miss Lois Kimball is back from the week with her mother, Mrs. W. to place easily.

Saturday morning, he initiated it by giving away dozens Neodesha, where she has been at spent the latter part of the week in the 31st, he purchased three of very fashionable breeding, tracing direct to a $60,000 Jersey bull. He will attend many of the pure bred Jersey sales and restock. Sam says that one pound of butter fat can be produced very much cheaper than a pound of beef, for it is raised entirely on grass and is worth very much more. Down at Hershey's Cleaning Service, "Polly" a genuine Mexican double yellow head parrot is on exhibition. Polly is 35 years of age and expects to live to be 60.

Polly is the property of Jack Jones and has been in the Jones family ever since a squab. Polly plays with the children and when they are playing ball she gets jealous and says distinctly "throw that bail Polly Long years ago sang quite distinctly, the song "After the Now she is getting classical and sings "Tra la la la" stuff. Each morning she says "Polly wants breakfast and after saying it four times, if breakfast is not forth coming, she will say "poor old Polly, wants her breakfast this and here's one thing to remember, Polly does not swear. She has never uttered a of sacks of corn to children, and others. Kansas City with her sister, Mrs.

Punches. J. Q. Workman, Lrickwood, Mo Rev. M.

E. Gaddis, of Denver University, and the Iliff School of The South End High school. Mrs. Albert Betts was here the latter part of the week, from Los Angeles, a guest at the H. O.

Woodbury home. They had as their at luncheon, Friday complimentary to Mrs. Betts, the G. A. Roberds family, and at breakfast Saturday, the Blankenbekers.

F'rom here Mrs. Betts went to Baldwin for Commencement exercises at Baker University, where she graduated in '18. She will return to Little Rock, where her parents live, and where she left her little son, Albert, while making the trip up here. The rest spent Saturday and Sunday with his old neighbor and friend, J. R.

Mci- ology, Denver, visited friends here tnc latter part of the week. For this month he will be in Kansas City Gee, south of town. Mr. Workman is a Ford dealer in Ms home town. tending the high school for the past two years.

She will stay home and attend O. H. S. her last two years. While away she was with her grand mother.

Mrs. Dresker has sold her property, towards the end of East Loula to Mr. and Mrs. Brand, parents of Mrs. J.

J. Allen. Mrs. Dresker will build on the lot Just south of the C. C.

Hoge residence, which her son, H. M. Dresker, purchased last week. A little man, Raymond Wiswell, aged 11, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Arthur J. Mclntyre. Mrs. Kate Hormuth received the news of a new born grand son, to Mr. and Mrs.

F. P. Hormuth, of Lawrence. Misses Ola Rose Alnsworth, Gladys Miller, and Freda Shahahan, Stilwell are at the Pittsburg Normal. All three have schools for next year.

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Divelbiss drove to Kansas City, Thursday, to get their daughter, Miss Merle, just home from Manhattan. Mrs. Otto Timmons and baby.

Spring Hill, visited last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Rowland.

C. F. Thompson, Lackman station at the home of his mother. Mr. Gaddis, in addition to his work at school, is the pastor of the Methodist church at Snyder, 90 miles from Denver.

He goes down every Saturday, and returns Monday morning. Mr. Gaddis is taking a three years' course at this double institution. Nathan Miller, south Olathe, received by express Saturday morning, of the Betts family likes California fine. Albert Is a teller in the first National Bank at Hollywood.

Wiswell, gave us a deserved "rolling" Saturday afternoon, for we had used the name of his cousin, Clayton, in curse in her long life as most parrots are popularly supposed to do. She calls Mary Jane Hershey, "Lo- Sam Simmons, Spring Hill, just a writeup, of the Wiswell stock farm last week instead of his own name. Clayton is the son of Mr. and Mrs. can't keep out of registered Jersey cows.

Last summer he dispersed the entire herd, as fine as in the state, a pure bred Jersey bull calf, three months old as large as most Jerseys at seven months. He is a very retta', for over in Sedalia, where she comes from she had a little friend-by that name. handsome animal, with the prettiest Frank Wiswell. Saturday morning's Santa Fe train head, eyes and neck that you ever was recently judged sane, by Judge J. T.

Simms, in probate court, Wyandotte county. The trial was on May 16. Why Not a nice FOLDING TABLE for Games of all kinds Serve Lunches, Take to Picnics, etc. Easy to carry Easy to put away When not in use. with a little care they will last for years.

$4.00 Each thinking that he would go out of the business entirely. He missed his cream check twice a month, and so decided to get back into the game. At the sale of pure breds at the Patterson Jersey farm, on Wednesday, The regular Ministers meeting was postponed until next Tuesday, the 13th. Important business, and each minister is urged to be present. brought in by express from Aurora, 111., four large crates of about 200 racing pigeons, from a sporting club at Aurora.

They were to be let loose Sunday morning, at 15 minutes until saw. Mr. Miller is milking six cows now, mostly Jerseys, and he intends to have Jerseys exclusively a little later. Two of his very best are from Mrs. Fisher's stock never have finer Jerseys been in eastern Kansas, than the Fisher Jerseys, of which Willis C.

Keefer, hardware man, has been sending his new red service truck to the country, almost every day, and several trips each day, with farm implements. 6, and the time carefully noted when Mrs. Will Losh left for Kansas City, Wednesday, to enter St. Vincent hospital, 23rd and College, to go in training for 18 months to be come a nurse. they had many a few years ago.

The Rebekahs will have a great time tonight, Thursday, June 8, for their contest has closed and the losing side will furnish a big feed for the winners in the old hall at 6:30. On account of the size of the crowd it will be for Rebekahs only. Miss Maude Carver is captain of the losing side, and Miss Pearl McKee of the winners. This popular lodge has just added 100 members S4 by initiation and 16 by reinstatement. each should arrive home.

Friends are mighty glad to know that Dick McAllister has about recovered his usual good health. He has 'been at his home and most of the time in bed for the past four months. You will notice a slight change Dick has lost 43 pounds in weight. Twins, a boy and a girl, the boy weighing seven pounds, and the girl eight, arrived Thursday, June, 1, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Si Moore, four miles west of Olathe, on the Mickie farm. The boy has been named Franklin Perry but to date a suitable name has not been found for the liitle girl. Julien's IST Things are booming at the Olathe Creamery. During the month of May they sold 13,148 pounds of butter more than twice as much as any month since they began business here some years ago. ueorge H.

Houges is oacit irom Miami, Florida, where he spent the ii'infa, avtA foil ATr Unrlpoc ia 9Q Everybody Knows Come Out of the Kitchen! after your day's cookery with frocks as dainty and fresh as the morning. PAINTY, fresh frocks and kitchen work! that happy day has arrived. In the Estate Electric Range vc offer a cooking appliance that doesn't overheat the kitchen; that keeps pots and nans dean; that cookes with the pitfision of an adding; machine, a range that takes the disappointments and the drudgery out of cookery. The kitchen stays as cool as any other room in the house. And baking failures never happen, because you cook by Time and Temperature the way of today in cookery.

Estate Electric Ranges brown as a berry and looks to be in mighty good health. Friends are glad that he is making such satisfactory strides in return to health. He has been in swimming just a few minutes daily for the past few weeks On Wednesday evening of last week the Covenanter church people met before prayer meeting, about 150 strong, and enjoyed a bountiful supper together. At the close of the supper and before prayer meeting, the pastor and wife were presented by Dr. Tippin, in the name of the congregation, with two valuable Thermos bottles to be used on their trip west.

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar take this opportunity of publicly expressing their gratitude to the best people on earth. We appreciate our good people. Rev.

Edgar's family left Monday for Colorado, where Mrs. Edgar and children will spend the summer. Rev. Edgar will return earlier. Mrs.

Edgar goes with the hope of getting some relief from rheumatism in the Colorado climate. Rev. Samuel Edgar, of Latiakia. Turkey, will preach most of the time during Rev. Edgar's absence, i THAT IT IS NECESSARY TO PLANT IN SEASON THAT ONE MAY REAP AT HARVEST TIME.

A NEIGHBOR'S PLANTING WILL NOT PRODUCE OUR CROP. EVERYBODY ALSO KNOWS THAT IT IS NECESSARY TO DEPOSIT IN A BANK THAT ONE MAY DRAW HIS CHECK THEREON. A NEIGHBORS DEPOSIT WILL NOT FURNISH FUNDS TO MEET OUR CHECK. IF YOU WISH TO CHECK IN THE FUTURE NOW IS THE TIME TO ESTABLISH A BANK ACCOUNT WITH. Patrons Co-operative Bank Mrs.

Ernest Crist is here from Goodland. visiting her parents Mr. and Sirs. Phillips. They live in Sherman county, 13 miles from the Colorado 32 miles from the Nebraska ine.

She reports that farmers say that with one more rain the wheat crop will be the best ever. Mr. and Mrs. W. H.

Lattner gave a dinner Sunday, for the following guests: Mr. and Mrs. S. McKinley, Mr. and Mrs.

B. Hurley, Mr. and Mrs. P. Lattner, Mr.

and Mrs. L. W. Aent, Mr. and Mrs.

W. H. Lattner, and their young son, W. jr. the 3rd.

J. M. (Dad) Dickson, who is employed on the Marysville, Advocate, is in Olathe on his vacation. "Dad" is making headquarters, as usual, at the Avenue Hotel. He was employed at both the Register and Mirror offices years and years ago, a long while before the present management of each and he's as welcome as a great uncle with lots of money.

Olathe Elec. Light Power Co..

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