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The Sunnyside Times from Sunnyside, Washington • 8

Location:
Sunnyside, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE EIGHT THE SUNNYSIDE TIMES, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1920 Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lichty spent the week end in Yakima. Miss Bess Tallman is the house guest of Mr. and Mrs.

Harry Tallman. Brief News of Sunnyside Mr. and Mrs. W. P.

Ructenik and the Misses Irma and Dorothy Friend of Seattle spent Saturday in Yakima. Dr. J. L. Walker was a business visitor in Yakima Tuesday and Wednesday.

Miss Austa Stackhouse is visiting her aunt, Mrs. A. A. McDermid of Yakima. Mrs.

Walter Baker and son Frank are here visiting from Oregon. They formerly lived in Sunnyside. Mr. and Mrs. E.

E. Ferson and daughter, Blanch, were guests of friends in Toppenich Saturday. Arthur Warren of Selah was the guest of his cousin, Mrs. W. E.

Fordyce on Sunday and Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. W.

Day and Edwin Day of Yakima spent Sunday and Monday on their ranch near Sunnyside. Mrs. R. G. Page, Miss Mary Louise Chapman and Russell Page motored to Yakima Saturday.

Mrs. Elmer Gochnour and two sons left Saturday for a vacation to be 'spent with Mrs. Gochnour's relatives on the sound. Frank Vetter and family and Mr. and Mrs.

Chas. Vetter and baby were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Vetter on Monday.

Randall Tuttle spent the week end with his mother, Mrs. Ella Tuttle. He is working for the Reclamation at Brewster. Mr. and Mrs.

John Thayer of Seattle were guests of Mr. Thayer's parents, and Mrs. I. P. Thayer of North Sunnyside last week.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schader and family accompanied by Mrs. A. M.

Landon and Mamie left Wednesday for a week's camping at Rimrock. Mr. and Mrs. Luke Sealy and family were guests of Mrs. A.

M. Landon last week. Mrs. Sealy is Mrs. Landon's daughter and lives in Ellensburg.

Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Geiter and son, Sumner, are making a trip to Seattle and Portland, by way of the Columbia Highway.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Duell, Mr. and Mrs. D.

I. Martin and son Kenneth, and Mr. and Mrs. C. E.

Van Winkle and baby of Grandview, spent Sunday and Monday at Rim Rock. Mr. and Mrs. F. A.

Kemp and family of Tacoma drove over night and are visiting at the Dr. Fordyce and Ray Tallman homes. Mrs. Kemp is Mrs. Tallman's sister.

Mesdames. L. A. Search, Grant Cady, Shaffer and children and Marshall Search and Donald Rodman enjoyed a picnic at Blaine Park Wednesday. Mr.

and Mrs. S. S. McCague entertained at dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs.

Neil Bridgman, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Newkirk and James and John McCagua.

James McCague, who has been attending Stanford University at Pala Alto, California, for the past winter, arrived home Saturday and will spend the summer with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. McCague, he will return to Stanford in the fall.

Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Chapman and family motored down from Yakima Sunday and were the guests of their daughter, Mrs.

H. A. Bowen. Mr. and Mrs.

Bowen returned to Yakima with them and spent Monday in that city. Mrs. D. B. Rueter and son of Baltimore are guests at the A.

0. Rader home. Mr. and Mrs. Rueter were in Sunnyside 6 years ago and have made many friends here.

Dr. Rueter is a professor in John Hopkins University and Goucher college at Baltimore. BASE BALL Sunday, July 13 PASCO VS. SUNNYSIDE Game Called at 3:00 P. M.

Sunnyside Grounds. Mrs. A. B. Snider was a visitior on Tuesday.

F. M. Ingraham and family spent last week end camping at Rimrock. Mrs. C.

M. Paul left Wednesday morning for an indefinite visit with friends and relatives in Denver, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. H.

A. Bowen have moved in the Reese apartments. Robert Turner of Outlook was a guest at the James Henderson home Sunday and Monday. Misses Evelyn and Gladys Taylor left Tuesday for a visit with friends in Seattle. Mr.

and Mrs. Taylor left to-day and are driving over, the girls will join them on a trip thru the western states. Mr. and Mrs. A.

S. Hillyer and two sons left Thursday evening for Seattle. Mr. Hillyer will go to Vancouver, B. on a business trip before returning home.

Miss Marin Henderson of Yakima and James L. Brown of Seattle were guests of Miss Henderson's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Henderson Sunday and Monday. Mrs.

C. W. Gano with a party of friends from Grandview picnicked at Rimrock the Fourth. Theo Brallier returned to her home in Grandview Thursday after visiting friends here. Miss Josephine Hebb is spending a month visiting friends in Tacoma and Seattle.

Mrs. J. S. Anderson's family of young people spent the Fourth at Rim Rock. Those in the party were Ruth Tuttle, Florice Nicolai, Theo Brallier, Mabel Treasher, Lena Hughes, Mrs.

Tuttle, Mrs. Anderson, E. F. Keyes, Barney Wilms, Ellis Taylor, Warren Granger, John Robertson, and Herbert Baird. The entire party made a trip up the mountains to Clear Lake.

A large number of Sunnyside people spent Sunday and Monday at Bumping Lake. Among them were Mr. and Mrs. V. O.

Nichoson; Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Lichty, Mr.

and Mrs. R. P. Haney, Mr. and Mrs.

Ira Kneeland, Mr. and Mrs. Thad Hall, Mr. and Mrs. A.

B. Snider, Dr. and Mrs. C. H.

Schader, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Cloud and Dr.

Delta Rowland. Some nice strings of fish were taken by the nimrods in the party. Ethel Alberts was the week end guest of Miss Lillian Lail. Frank Graves spent the Fourth in Sunnyside. He is engaged in business for himself in Boise.

Roscoe Sheller went to Seattle last week and drove back with two Ford coupes. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Lichty accompanied him and drove one of the cars back. Yserman returned with the party.

Mr. and Mrs. James Henderson entertained at dinner the Fourth, Miss Miss Marion Henderson of Yakima, James L. Brown of Seattle, Robert F. Turner and Mr.

and Mrs. Hubert W. Arrowsmith. Sense Nonsense. In a prellminary school examination a question about the senses was answered by a bright pupil in this fashion: "The five senses are sneezing, sobbing, crying, yawning and coughing.

By a sixth sense is meant an extra one which some folks have. This is -Boston Transcript. Municipal Playgrounds. Calgary, Alberta, has municipal baseball diamonds, soccer fields, golf links and grounds for other sports, There are 5,000 golfers in the population of 75.000. Kuppenheimer er Suits At Reduction Low Wages in Colombia.

Wages of the native washers and placer miners in the Tigui region in Colombia average from 25 cents to $1 per day. The earnings of the native miners depend on whether the ground is worked before or after a flood, which causes natural riffles to form in bars along the stream. Miss Flora, Opal and Lester Wheaton spent the fourth at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D.

E. Wilson in Benton Mr. and Mrs. G. E.

Davis, Georgia Davis and Atha Price drove to Grandview and Prosser on Monday. The girls conning club began work Wednesday, under the leaderchip of Miss Ethel Scott. Professional Cards DR. W. E.

FORDYCE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Sunnyside, Washington Office Hours 3 to 12 a. m. 2 to 5 p. m. 7 to 8 p.m.

DR. JOHN H. SCHUTZ Physician Surgeon. Successor to DR. J.

R. SHUMAN Office at the sidence. Phone 72R. STEPHEN E. CHAFFEE ATTORNEY AT LAW Office Over Sunnyside Bank.

Osteopathic Physician Surgeon DR. C. A. HUGHES Associated with Dr. Walker DR.

0. N. FARLEY DR. J. D.

NEIDIGH REGISTERED DENTISTS Office hours 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. Evenings and Sundays by appointment J.

L. Walker, D. O. M. D.

Osteopathic Physician Surgeon Office and Hospital over Cline Young's Store. Phones: Office 862. Residence 774 COLE HALL ENGINEERS Sunnyside Washington Certified members American Association of Engineers Preliminery Investigation, estimate surveys, plans and specifications. C. M.

COLE G. D. HALL Phone 84 Phone 624 V. O. NICHOSON LAWYER Office in Sunnyside Bank Bldg.

MRS. A. P. WEBER Teacher of Singing. Phone 163 New York Life Insurance Co.

H. N. Dryer, AGENT Phone: Office661 Res. 103F6 Mrs. Clarence Cole TEACHER of Singing Voice Training and Development Singers Coached for Vaudeville Church and Concert Pupil of Arthur Alexander of Paris.

Phone 84 $100 Reward, $100 Catarrh is a local disease greatly enced by constitutional conditions. therefore requires constitutional treatment. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE destroys foundation of the disease gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. $100.00 for any case of Catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE fails to cure.

F. J. Cheney Toledo, Ohio, Druggists 75c. an Testimonials free. Fresh-Air Fiend.

Katie wanted very much to go outside the yard. which was inclosed with a wire fence and gate. By and by she ran into the house and said: "Oh, mother, if I cannot go outside, can't I just leave the gate open to let in a little fresh air?" Famous Statue of Liberty. In 1886. on the 28th of October, the Statue of Liberty, presented by France to the United States and placed on Bedloe's island in New York harbor, was unveiled.

The total height of the colossal statue is 306 feet. The pedestal rises 155 feet and the statue towers 151 feet above it. Origin of "A 1." "A 1" is a symbol originating in the Lloyd's Maritime Insurance association denoting a ship that has been found first-class in construction and equipment. The is for good construction and the "1" for good equipment. Copyright 1920 The House of Kuppenheimer No use giving a lot of reasons, you know about the cold springnow forgotten--and the high cost of clothing.

Suffice it to say we need the money and are putting on sale our entire stock of new suits--not an old one in the lot. Splendid materials, best of tailoring and up-to-the-minute in style. $27.50 to $80 at a saving to you of 20 per cent. Hot Weather Footwear At Attractive Prices Stylish pumps in the better grades, kid and brown calf, strapless, pumps with Louis heels. Values $8.75 Oxfords and Pumps in white, broken in sizes but good in style Cool Fabrics For Summer Flowered lawns in dainty fine.

55-cent values at, per yard45c patent, vici Shoes for the colonial and tie and 98c. up to $13.00 at black and brown, and material Wear Many choice patterns, sheer and on the saving is Children at $3.90, $3.45, $2.98, $1.98 Boys' and men's strong brown duck hike shoes, rubber heel and auto com1 position sole vulcanized at $2.98 Remnants pieces can be found remnant counter and the considerable. CLINE YOUNG.

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About The Sunnyside Times Archive

Pages Available:
2,917
Years Available:
1919-1941