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Fresh Bakery Goods Bread, Loaf .06 Rolls, Dozen .10 Buns, Dozen .15 Cinnamon Rolls, Dozen .15 Doughnuts, Dozen .15 Sugar Cookies, Dozen 15 Fruit Bars, Dozen .15 Pies, Each .10 Angel Food Cake, Each .20 Chocolate Cake, two layers .20 Sugar j Beet Sugar $ 9.85 Cane Sugar 10.35 Teas & Coffee Schillings’ Teas, per lb .85 Solitaire Teas, per lb. .85 Schillings’ Coffee, per lb. .45 White House Coffee, per lb. .45 J. S. B. Brand Coffee, per lb. .45 Hills Bros’. Coffee, per lb. .47 j Gallon Fruits Apples, Columbine brapd, can .55 Peaches, solid pack, can .70 Pears, solid pack, can .95 Crushed Pineapple, can .95 Loganberries, solid pack, can .80 Blackberries, solid pack, can .80 Gallon Tomatoes, can .65 Swift’s Premium Hams, per 11/. .34 Swift’s Premium Bacon, per lb. .42 Good Smoked Bacon, per lb, ,27 Soap Crystal White, per box $5.60 Crystal White, 18 bars 1.00 Petrolene Soap, per box 6.45 Denver Best, box 120 bars 4.50 Denver Best, 6 bars .25 Fels Naptha, 5 bars .45 Palm Olive, 5 bars .45 Creme Oil, 5 bars .45 Grain Bran, per 100 lbs. $2.20 No. 2 Yellow Corn, 100 lbs. 2.75' Fine Ground Corn Chop 2.85 Cracked Com, 100 lbs. 2.85 Choice White Feed Wheat, 100 lbs 2.76 Heavy White Mt. Oats, 100 lbs 3.00 GUNNISON, tOLORADO Salt If you salt your hay we have it. 100 lbs. $1.45 Jorgensen’s CASH GROCERY & BAKERY Do Your Feet Trouble You About nine adults in every ten have more or less trouble with their feet. Tired aching feet take away your ambition. We can he 1 P YOU. FOGG S CASH STORE Gunnison, Colorado —THE— LADIES APPAREL SHOP —or— MRS. ANNA TREVARTHEN Dainty cool silk underwear in the latest shade and designs. Hemstitching and Picoting Done . The Manila Cafe 11. T. ItAA(«AS, Proprietor. Don’t roast over a hot stove in weather like this. Come to the MANILA and get a real good Dinner. EAGLE No. 174 For Sale at your Dealer Made in five grades ASK FOR THE YELLOW PENCIL WITH THE RED BAND EAGLE MIKADO EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK Somerset Squibs 1 M Hnmmond hn? been in be. all week with an infected foot. The I>.dt*e car raffled off by Per; Williams. Tuesday evening, was won by Matt Gloviana. Kir and Mrs. D. T». Walker and children and Janet Neeshnm spent several days at Ouray last week. Miss Sofie Mraule arrived last week r £rom California. She will stay until her mother gets hack from the hos pital. j Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clark wel comed the arrival of a new habv the i past weok. Both mother and babe are doing fine. Sheriff Hanlon was in town Tues day and summoned several of the men from here as jurymen for the I next term of court. Mr. and Mrs. John Jurcheck and .children and Mr. and Mrs. Evan Thomas motored to Tellunde last Wednesday and returned Friday. A letter received from Mrs. C. E Dock, by the W. B. A. states that she |is having a lovely time at the coast, and does not know when she will be ba^k. Charlie Lawrence, who had his leg amputated at the hip joint at the hospital in Salt Lake recently, has been very low, but is some better at this writing. Mrs. Estella Bauer, who was oper ated at the local hospital for appen dicitis last week, is getting along fine and will soon be able to return to her home. Mrs Mary Mraule left Mondav for a Salida hospital, where she will un dergo an operation for the removal of a goitre that has bothered her for quite a time. Miss Lucile McDermaid of Hia watha. Utah, who has been visiting friends in Bowie, accompanied by Miss Tihby Snedden. visited friends and relatives here Tuesday Mrs. Arthur Boultbee and Mrs. Charlie Kraut wash 1 motored un to the Valin ranch Tuesday. Mr. Valin is very low with miner’s consumption and no hope is held for his recovery. The ladies of the W. B. A. held a meeting in the Miakka hall at Bowie, Friday evening to elect a new com mander to fill the vacancy left by the rosignation of Mrs Dock Mrs. Sylvia Neeshnm was elected to the office with Mrs. Martha Boultbee as past commander, for the remainder of the .term. After lodge, refreshments were i served. About forty ladies attended, going down in cars. The “Girl Scouts”, chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs D. B. Walker, left Sun day for a week’s outing at Lake Ir win. The girls expect to hike to Crested Butte The girls that .composed the party were Lillian and Janet Neesham, Minerva Louma, Lau ra Schmidt. Nellie Krautwashl. Mar tha Sutch, Inez Davis, Annie Mlakar, Agnes Hunten. Annie Jurcheck. Ma mie Gregorich. Hazel Davis, and lit )tle Olive and Bennie Walker. “What is your nationality?” asked the doctor, examining the recruit. “Durned if I know, Doc, but my father was a Democrat.” Gunnison and Pitkin Items Culled From Gunnison Empire and Pitkin Miner GUNNISON ITEMS Mrs. C. G. Davis of Waunita, was in town Tuesday of this week. Clair Hadley of Paonia. was in town a few days this week visiting Miss Hazel Nelson. Ne's Simpson, of Lake City, was in town the first of the week visiting at the A. J Giibbin home. The Hugh Wilson family d?bve to Durango Tuesday. They will make it their home in the future. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. VanAken went to Delta Wednesday to visit their son Ray and family for about a week Lawrence O’Leary went to Salida Sunday to have his tonsils removed. He was under the care of Dr. Kurf man. Mrs. Jorgensen, Miss Josephine Zu gelder, and Miss Avis Eells drove to Denver last Sunday to be gone a week or two. Walter Haymaker is back from Denver, where he has been for some time, Mrs. Haymaker being in a hos pital there. Dr. Harold Watson and Frank Hatch of Denver, who have been here on a pleasure and business trip, left for their home last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Clack, who hjve been here for the past six weeks, left for Delta. Utah. Tusday, where Mr Clack is going to make a picture. Thursday night of the week was student night at the Unique theatre. The faculty condescended to allow the students to see “Where the Gunnison River Flows.’ A lareg and jolly party of Normal students went to I.mko City last week end and had a keen time, the only drawback being that they didn’t catch any fish. Mr. Gibbs took Misses Rachel Mc- Giffert and Effie J. Loader of Topeka, Kansas, up to the Buttes last Friday and the girls were going to spend the week-end there. Mrs. H. T. Hatch of Des Moines, lowa, and Mrs H. K. Caffidy of Wich ita. Kansas, mother and sister of Miss Helen and Thurston Hatch, arrived in town this week to visit for some time. Dr. Edward Devine, who is a prom inent sociologist in New York, de livered open lectures at the College all this week on the subject of soci ology. The lectures were fairly well attended. Miss Ruth Garnette, a sister of Miss Maude Garnette, who teaches vocal music at the College, who has been in Gunnison for some time, re turned to her home in Garber, Okla homa, Tuesday. Miss Buelah McNemar, an accom nlished elocutionist, read the ever popular “Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch” Friday night at the College. Saturday night she gave a varied pro gram of entertaining readings. The auditorium was well filled. A near serious accident occurred at the Endner mill Inst Monday morn ing. A belt slipped off the wheel, breaking a casting which it threw clear across the room. No one hap pened to be in the way, so there were no injuries and very little damage done. Everyone wns scared for the time being. Rev. and Mrs. E. H. Robinson and daughter, Miss Eugenia, of Ft." Mor gan, are in town visiting Mrs. Mary Lawrence. A camping party consist ing of Mr. and Mrs. Robinson, Miss Eugenia. Mrs. Lawrence, Harlow Law rence, Charlie Robinson, and Miss Marguerite Besse, went up Taylor river this week. Mrs. A. J. Gribbin entertained at n charming three table bridge party Monday evening as a farewell tribute to Mrs. Hugh Wislon, who is leaving Gunnison to make Durango her home. Mrs. S. J. Miller won the first prize, i bridge set of pads and pencils. Mrs. John Wolfe took second prize, a set of aluminum jelly molds in the de sign of playing cards. When Oscar Doyle’s flivver burned Sunday night it created quite a sen sation. All of Gunnison (nearly) turned out at the sound of the fire alarm. The trouble started when a drop of gasoline spilled out of the tank onto the exhaust pipe. Accord ing to bystanders the flivver jumped two feet into the air when the explo sion occurred. Oscar was under the car at the time, hut he was not hurt. The Ford was almost totally burned before the fire department arrived on the scene. The loss was appreciat ed by one young lady who exclaimed, “Oh, now I can sleep in the morning.” Mrs Sarah Jane Davis of Salida, t who has been here visiting her daugh- ( ter, Mrs. K. H. Miller, died last Mon- ; day from the results of influenza, which she suffered some time ago. Mrs. Davis was born in Terra Haute. 1 Indiana, on April 24, 1846. Her hus- 1 band died two years ago The body, 1 in charge of Undertaker Adams, was 1 shipped to Salida Tuesday, Mrs. Mil ler accompanying, to attend the fu- t neral which will be held at Howard, . about twelve miles east of Salida. Undertaker Stewart has charge of the j body there. A bevy of three fair damsels from f the College, feeling particularly am- , bitious, hiked to Waunita Hot Springs j last Saturday for the mere pleasure j of it, leaving before the peep of day. , Personally, we can’t see it that way, , but “every man to his own humor.” They started back Sunday morning, but thankfully acccepted a ride back to town when overtaken between Doyle and Pari in. Dr. Quinn returned from Stlida Monday, where he had been with Mrs. Quinn and Miss Patsey, who went ' there to have the little girl’s arm re set. Miss Patsy broke her arm when she bad a bad fall last week. She is J doing well nowand will be home soon. Mrs. Quinn remained with her. Alumni and students of the Uni- ' versity of Colorado at Boulder, who are in this neak ’o th’ woods, had a dinner-dance at the Sportsman’s club at Cebolla, last Saturday in hon or of William Gaunt, who represents the University. Misses Wilma Doig and Esther Arterberry entertained at a delight ful shower at Miss Doig’s home Thurs day after, oon in honor of Mrs. Geo. day afternaan in honor of Mrs. Geo. Whitehead. About twenty-five guests attended. A. P. Nelson, daughter Pauline and their guest. Miss Linnea Lindquist, of Kansas City, w r ere in town Wednes day from Pitkin. Miss Lindquist is spending the summer with the Nelsons and having a grand good time. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Andrus flivvered over from Denver this week, to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Thornell. Mrs. Andrus will be remembered as Miss Lillian Blake, who lived in Gun nison some time ago. Miller’s Orchestra will play for a dance at Pitkin this Saturday night. The dance is expected to attract a larger crowd than usual as there will be chicken sandwiches and what goes with them. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harrison and daughter of Loveland, and Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Tomlin and two daughters of Buena Vista, spent last week-end visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Delo. Mrs. James Meeka and Misses Mary and Margaret Diver of Middleton, Ohio, returned home Tuesday morn ing after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Louis Miller and Miss Evelyn. Miss Elsie Lankford, who has been at the College since the summer term started, left this week for her home in Grand Junction. Miss Catherine Beaton, who is a student at the College, has taken over the agency for Remington por table typewriters. George Ruck sold his house on the corner of San Juan avenue and Tay lor street, to Mrs. Cynthia Steele of Lake City. Pat Hanlon and Misses Jennie Han lon and Susan Stephenson returned to Gunnison after a few days’ visit in Marble. Miss Ruth Spencer went to Denver Tuesday to spend some time with friends at the Y. W. C. A. there. Miss Agnes Murphy arrived from Pueblo Wednesday to take a position at the D. & R. G. W. offices. Miss Elizabeth Nourse will give a party at the Nourse camp up the Gunnison, Friday afternoon. Mrs. H. E. Mitchell will return to her home in Pueblo Saturday af4er a long stay in Gunnison. Mrs. Arthur Miller and Mrs. Pauline Thulemeyer went to Denver Tuesday for an extended stay. Edgar Blide of Hotchkiss, was in town this week visiting Miss Gene vieve Wilson. Hugh Hetherington is taking Miss Genevieve Wilson’s place in his fa ther’s office. Father Cotter went to Denver last Sunday afternoon to be gone a week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Arch of Salt Lake are visiting here this week. Mrs. Cotton Sievers went to Salida Tuesday to visit her sister, Mrs. Luke Dailey. C W. Martin went to Denver last Wednesday on a business trip, ex pecting to return Sunday. Mrs. W. W. Brown and her daugh ter, Miss Katherine, are here from Grand Junction, visiting Mrs. Tre varthen. W. B. Crose of Montrose, who is interested in the Good Hope mine, ar rived here Tuesday to have a look at the mine, with John Fox, super. He returned Thursday. Dr. McDonald, summer teacher at the College, went to Denver this week and returned with his mother. At the close of school the two will go to their home in Fresno, California. Supervisor Kreuger of the forest service, and F. D. Mendenhall, dis trict engineer in the district office in Denver, made a short trip out from town the first of the week in specting the roads. Mr. Mendenhall went back to Denver Thursday. "PITKIN ITEMS Clif Tipton of Ohio City, was noted in town Wednesday. Jay J. Jones and D. L. Gray of Gun nison, were Pitkin visitors a few hours Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. BonDurant are entertaining relatives this week from Salida, who flivvered over. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Anderson and son Billie, of Sargent, and Mrs. Dr. Shaefer of Salida, were in Pitkin a few hours Wednesday. The P. T. A. ladies are planning on j n large crowd at their dance tomor- j row evening. The Miller orchestra insures a good attendance Every one invited. Good supper. Mrs. Cora Gard and son of Merido sia, Ohio, are here, guests at the Frank Clarke home. Mrs. Gard is a sister of Mrs. Clarke They are very much enjoying their visit here. M. B. McLain, who has been haul ing for the Reynolds people, went home the latter part of last week, having finished taking lumber up to the Tennessee, in Chicago park. Quite a number of our folks went to Gunnison this week to see the movie, “Where the Gunnison River Flows.” The picture is fine and well played by home talent and all greatly enjoyed looking at the grand old river and all incidental scenery. J. L. Trickle went to Salida Satur day afternoon, returning next day with his daughter Irene, . who has spent a month at that place. Miss Margaret Tonney of Salida, returned with Miss Trickle and will visit her sister, Sara, here for a time. The Ladies Aid met Thursday at the home of Mrs. M. E. Williams, who with Mrs. Roy Whitehorn, entertained them. The afternoon was pleasantly passed with sewing The hostesses served delicious refreshments and all voted the meeting one of the pleasantest of the season. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Monk arrived Wednesday from Montreal, Canada, and will visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clarke for a time. Mr Monk is a railroad man and has been inspector of the Canadian Grand Trunk line for over forty years. Mrs. Monk is a sister of the late Thomas Huxtable. WHERE CAN YOU FIND A BETTER PLACE TO SPEND THE WEEK-END THAN AT Waunita Hot Radium Springs best accommodations— reasonable prices Stitzer Bro«., Proprietors WE NOW HAVE A FULL LINE OF PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS All Styles and Sizes. Call and See Them. ‘The Colorado Supply Co. >^** * fft D . . . / • • The Miller Funeral Home Mils. SUSIE MILLER mortician ami undertaker Peter Campbeii, Agent Creeled Butt., Colo. Next Tuesday has been set day of meeting of the Stockholm for the Roosevelt Mines & Elect company. The general manner"!' P. Nelson, is expecting a number the stockholders to be present f Kansas City and other place, jn™" 1 very interesting meeting has bJ planned. Each year many of ~ stockholders come to Pitkin combined business and pleasure t •* and are always enthusiastic over both their mine and the beauty of „ ur tie town. W. S. Henderson returned Tuesds, from Gunnison where he went ' Monday to take in the Gunnisl “Movie” picture. As Mr. Henderso was a member of the ’Blers he bsd more than a passing interest in th picture. We also saw the movie J were quite gratified to see the f arnil iar face of our mayor among the pioneers of the county, whose kindl. old faces were seen plninly i n ttl ! picture. A subscription to this paper j, worth far more than it costs. S2OO Flowers DESIGNING A SPECIALTY Mrs. Jack Wilson “ Phone 168-W CLARENCE ADAHS funeral Director and Embalmrr Will ro anywhere et any time whea called. Lady Assistant At Adams’ Fnrnltnre store, GUNNISON. COLO. NOTICE Don’t buy stale box choclates! The KANDY KITCHEN in Gun nison makes fresh every day Visit our Fountain and Ice Cream pnr lor when you are in town. The Kandy Kitchen Send Us Your and address on a PloUlC post card or in a let ter and we will mail free and postpaid, a sample copy of Popular Mechanics MAOAZINB ! the most wonderful magazine pub lished. 160 pages and 400 picture* every month, that will entertain every member of the family. It contains interesting and instructive arti cles on the Home, Farm, Shop and Otfice —the newest developments in Radio. Avia tion, Automobile and Garage. Each issue contains something to interest everybody. We do not employ subscript km solicitors so you will not be urged to subscribe and you are not obligating yourself in the least in asking for a free sample copy. We gladly send it to prospective readers. If you like it you can buy a copy every month from any newsdealer or send us your subscription $3.00 for one year. 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