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8 E i i r ’ UV J 1 4thS ’ ‘ ’ ’ '3‘ :r u y . ec s on .ee y E)“ Read each item carefully-«they mean exactly what they say---the money we save you might come in handy. as] k i - , i 3. d Read. This Read This ‘ Read This Read This Read This '(é‘ pg] Our fine new lawns and Good selection of new Men’s extra good union Boys’ finest union suits, Ladies’ fine, wide kid :7 :3: voiles, 25 pieces to se- middies, in white and suits, ,Porosknit or dim- Porosknlt or llke B.V. belts, very newest style L 53 3” lect from, 25c to 30c medium or wide stripe, ity like B-V-D; a sl-00 D, a 75c quality for 75c values, sale price it“. ‘3} values, sale price, 19¢ $1.25, $1.50, $2.00 quality, only - - 75¢ only - - 50¢ 50¢ I‘3l m » n ¥ Read This . ' . _' . ‘ Read This ‘ 5 i 2 Boys’ Shirts and waists, All our Shoes at SpeClal LOW Big line suit cases, hand- 3‘ - ' new styles on sale at o, , ' , . - bags, telescopes, spec i only + - - 50¢ Prlces for the Fourth of July selpessserprpsprse 5. Read Thisl , All are the very neWes’t and. best styles in Read This 2 Men’s finest $2.00 dress Blt.hel' hlgh 01' 10W Cllt,’ ' The sale 18 for only Ladies’ fine gauze union 8 {.7 r shirts, new styles, all Fflday, Saturday' and Monday, SO hurry, suits, full size, will go lg: sizes, special sale, $1.50 . ' . for only - 45¢ » I‘LL Read This Read This ~ - Read This ' . Read This - Read This ll?" Men’s sport shirts, just, Closing out shirtwaists Big line new collars and New hand bags for the Full assortment of new T I'3 ‘ right for a 4th of July and white skirts; SI.OO collar sets, for July 4, Fourth, splendid selec- parasols, white or col- . rt; lii , picnic, will go - 75¢ to $2.50 values for 50¢ 25¢, 50¢, 75¢ ' tion, 75¢, SI.OO, $1.50 ored - 75¢ to $2.50 [S “Mi. ’ “7————— , _‘ 'f 7, t’"*"’i _,_—_—_==__~___—_———__gg' ' _. _ ____________..__———————-—-——m- «——-————-——-.—--——.—-—————l'~* . a r the point of destination and shipments are feceiving thé"same’ treatment in ¢Portland. . . , -.. Thishas forcé'd the three early po tato states out of the Northwest mar ket and the Kennewick spud has al most as clear a field as does them newick strawberry. ~”- , '“What is happening to the southern potatoes should he a striking object lesson to the local growers," said Mr. VanAlstyne this morning. “If they will "be careful and play falr‘iithey have a chance to make a good cle’hn up this year. But the very firstofime ‘ CENT-A-WORD ADVS .For Sale ' FOR SALE—Goodl family horse. R. 1 FOR SALE:New extracted honey. Hull: Terri], phone 51'. 10-13 FOR .SAfE—huroc-Jersey. pigs, over , six weeks» old. 'Ph'one 41:41. 13-14 fiur‘,“ -_5._v......_...._.,.__.._ ' 1 FOR COLONIAL RAG RUGS go to 1 Mrs: H."'W.-Felton. Phone 42x8 4p W FOR SALE-=—Good Jersey cow. In- : quir’e Mrs. M. R. McCleverty, phone ' 17x3. _ 12tf 1 FOR SALE—Registered short horn 1 Durham bull; tubercular tested. ‘ Wm. Young, Richland. 12—13 FOR SALE —,Two driving horses, ‘ buggy and harness, cheap. Inquire a E. H. Mann, phone 1617. 81:! 1 FOR SALE OR TRADE—Three Jer- J sey heifers to trade for pigs. See I W. B. Paulson at old F. V. Hoyt ‘ place. 136 ' FOR SALE—Second-hand, five pas- ‘ senger Franklin in good condition. . Bargain if taken at once. W. G. 1 King & Son. 41:1. FOR SALE—Cabbage, tomatoes and : aster plants, also dahlias, cannas and gladiolas. Home Nursery 00., f Richland. 7t! . FOR SALE—Two 6-months-old —hei- ‘ fer calves; one 16-months-old hei fer; will trade for steers and pigs. ‘ Call H. W. Felton, 42x8. ' 13-4 p LINCOLN CO., 160 acres, partly im proved, six miles from Elk City. Good stock and dairy place. Par ticulars, Box 40, Pioneer, Ore. 13p NINETY acres, 30 partly improved, balance good timber. All tillable when cleared. On county road be tween Kings Valley and Blodgett. Particulars, Laura Dalaba, Corval is, Ore. 13p FOR SALE OR TRADE—I6O acres, about 5,000,000 ft. good timber, 20 acres cleared, land practically level, some good buildings; price S4OOO. Klickitat county. Archie Hewett, Snowden, Wash. 13-17 p FOR SALE—We have full line of feed and grain and are prepared to make attractive prices to buyers in ton lots. If you wish to buy in “car lots” delivered at any adjacent sta tion, see us for prices. We compete. Empire Grain Co., by R. E. PratttL FOR SALE—Gould Triplex plunger , deep well pump; will deliver from J 200 to 400 gallons per minute at 29 to 58 revolutions, 200-ft. lift. 60% of original cost. Also a ten-horse power electric motor. Enquire M. A. Mitchell, Kennewick, Wn. 14ptf $14,000.00 FOR EXCHANGE—CIear business property in Spokane; Want a producing alfalfa ranch close to Kennowick. Owners only. Address Courier-Reporter. 14p TO TRADE TWO DEATHS IN SAME - FAMILY WITHIN AN HOUR Father and Brother-in-Law of Mrs. H. A. Bier Pass Away Within Few Minutes of Each Other . Ferdinand Ebener,..father, and Ju lius ' Nelson, brother-in-law, of Mrs. H. A. Bier, of this city died almost at the same hour Saturday eVening. Telegrams announcing the deaths of the two relatives were received by Mr. Bier within a few minutes of each other. Mr. Ebener, age 73, died at the home of his daughter near Cheney. He was a pioneer resident of Washington, coming to Ritzville 33 years ago from Baaden, Germany, where he was born January 11, 1843. Three years‘ ago he gave up his trade of black-j smith and went to make his home :with his daughter. He was a veteran of two wars, having fought in the German army against Austria and Bo }hemia in 1866-70 and during the Franco-Prussion war in 1870-71, being" awarded several medals for valor. ' ' Mr. Nelson, who had been in poor health for some time, died suddenly at his home in Lead, South Dakota. Mrs. Nelson was formerly Miss Edith Ebener, of this city. The ”two became acquainted here when Mr. Nelson was employed by Edward Sheppard in the Columbia Pharmacy nearly ten years ago. Mrs. Bier was at her sister’s home near Cheney at the time of her fath er’s death. o Miscellanea f IF YOU have old rugs of any kind you wish made over, call H. W. W HEATING, PLUMBING and gen.“ repair work done by L. H. Raymond. M?“- SEE or phone Ben Bergen (2082) when you want heavy hauling or day work done. 46:! _r_______________.__._—-——— ANY |,LADY MACCABEES living in the community are requested to communicate with Mrs. Carl Mey-' W THE NETHERLANDS - AMERICAN BANK will again loan on irrigated lands. Lowest ratesz prompt at tention. Address FRED M. WEIL, White Bluffs or Walla Walla. 911 DO YOU WANT TO TRADE—Give me description of your place. Tell me what you want. I’ll get it for you. W. S. Haxton, 1717 E. Roman, Spokane. ' 11-16 p _______________..___———— IMPERIAL Self-Heating flat iron— burns kerosene or gasoline. Dem onstrated by agent, Mrs. Thomas Marriott, Section Nine. Phone No. 35x12. 111;! THE COURIER-"PORTER. KENNEWICK, iflmNGNN HARVESHNG Dam woon ‘ WITH ALFALFA DERRICK Valley Farmers Operate Ingenious Device for Laying in Their 1 Year’s Supply of Fuel :' The annual wood harvest is in full swing. All along the Columbia river which threatens to refuse to stay put within the confines of its banks, lit+ tle parties of farmers are to be seen daily fishing out the drift wood which is coming down in plentiful quantities. Already many of the farmers Who live .at the more advantageous points have more than a year’s Supply of fuel safe on the banks. . Of the 'many i‘novel contraptions ‘employed by the farmers for harvest ‘ ing the wood perhaps the most ingen ious 'is one‘that is in operation at the boom of W. E. Campbell about two miles down the river. The hay der rick of E. F. Reese has been stationed on the bank near the boom. An im provised barge and men with pitch forks complete the equipment. The barge is floated out in the eddy and after it has been piled high with small drift it is hoisted by the derrick and dumped into wagons. In two days, Mr. Campbell, assisted by Mr. Reese and A. E. Dague, has harvested more than fifty wagon loads of fuel. It is -no difficult matter {to losso a log and haul it out, but this method lands the smaller stuff which has the superior quality of being al ready split. ____________ . When‘ the town of Grifenburg 23‘ burned to the ground, Frederick e Great rebuilfthe whole place. out :of his private purse. ' In deep gratitude the inhabitants sent a delegation to the king to thank him for this benevolent proof of his favor. The reply was worthy of the man: “You have no reason to thank me,” he said. “It is my duty to ba sist my subjects in distress. For no ‘ other purpose am I king.” , ________,_____ “him 'a typical American?” “Yes; ‘ he likes baseball, has a motorcar, owns a mortgage, pays alimony, and thinks " the moving pictures have grand opera ’lbeaten a mile.” ' _. WANTED—Customers for pure Jer ‘ sey milk; 15,quarts for SI.OO, 'de livered. B. G. Zwanzig. 13‘: WE HAVE taken over the Breithaupt greenhouse and will handle a full ‘ line of cut flowers, floral designs, potted plants; also a line of roses, flowering shrubs, perennials, aspar agus, rhubarb, grape vines, berry plants, etc. Kennewick Greenhtuao, J. B. Slaugenhaupt, proprietor, suc cessor to the Breithaupt Green house; ‘ 13-14 Wanted THREE A-WKWARD SQUADS PUT THU MILITARY PACE Thirty Men Turn Out for First Prac tice of Local ~Drill Corps— Everybody Eligible. About- thirty men, whose marnmasl didn’t raise them to be soldiers, but who believe that every citizen should be familiar with the rudiments. of military drill, reported for duty at the Knights of Pythias hall last Mon day evening and took their first les son. The 'men were/divided into three squads and for three hours were put thru marching maneuvers under the direction of.;Drill Master F. R. Jef frey. '9' ‘ I " In the bunch.w'ere' several men who have had military training either in the national guard or in school and thru their efforts all serious accidents in the ranks of the raw recruits were prevented. The squads will drill regularly ev ery Monday night from 7 until 8 o’- clock and the ranks are wide open to every man in the community between the ages of 16 and 96. There is no membership fee to pay and no ’oblir‘ gation to take. All who wish to drill] ,may and all who don’t want to; need? lnot. ‘ Present plans contemplate nothing further than drilling just for exer cise and amusement, but if the boys show sufficient interest it is the inten tion of Mr. Jeffrey to conduct a school for non-commissioned oficers' and to later organize a squad sufliciently of ‘ficered .and disciplined to meet the re quirements of r¢gular army service. ' As one of the teachings of the Knights of Pythias lodge is patriot ism, and believing that the drill corps will tend to stimulate patriotism in the community, the local Knights are making no charge for the use of their hall. ‘ ' OUTLOOK FOR SPUD PRICE . IS BE'l'l‘Eß THAN USUAL Tuber Moth Has Clem Markets of Northwest to California, Texas and Florida Snnds _ The Kennewick - Richland - Finley Marketing Union shipped its second car of new spuds today, the first car going out earlier in the week. The first shipment was made to Idaho and the other to Seattle. W. V. VanAlstyne, who is receiving and inspecting the potatoes says the market outlook is excellent. Idaho has closed its doors absolutely to pc tatoes from California, Texas and Florida because of tuber moth and this state and Oregon are enforcing al most as rigid restrictions. Two cars of Californias were padlocked in Se attle this week and shipped back to KODAK FINISHING _______._.___———___—_=__——__————————-——*—‘ , Let me develop and print your snapshots— - Any size roll developed, 10c; Packs, 15c 2ix4 (or smaller) prints, 3c; 3+x4‘}, 4c 3ixs+ or post cards, So each. ' ° , q I prepay postage anywhere. ° J. H. MENDENIIALL, Pen and Kodak Specialist .‘ t N. W. Corner Second Ave. & Pike St., Seattle, Wash. -' _ .7 . .J-llli M " m _ ; ,'_l:l!1. lt--J" v w-.a H . ...:s‘n-A .... _. . 2’2: - a _ s;!“wa . 19‘ ‘ ! ~ ~_wel: a, , ~ ‘L ‘ml min ..- ‘ . .'L ’l‘ i - ' o>e e ‘ The Lily is a Sunple Cream ; ‘Separator- . 0 IF you ever owned a cream separator befqfl . you knew the Lily, you will appreciate Lil! ' gmplicity. It used to be mafia and mm M - —adjustments that you never felt quite safe in malmg cur-self. Although even a wasteful separator was In“ tter than hand skimming, you were far from samfiOdo, Most of those adjustments are now done awe: With , There is only one place where wear afiects the war .of d” ‘ Lily and that is on the hardened steel point that capes th' 1 weight 0f the' whirling bowl. And since this point as mtd. ‘ d finest tool steel. tempered like a fine razor, you een 0" . ’ that the adjusting will not take much of your time. go to the Mghu‘ihm this ieetutr; and the mugom e sun e ' era .... of diam? n 1 L'ififi’i’rfi a‘ifSSZeZEma. , International Harvester Company of Amelia w Mattecheck Hdw. (30., KennerCk Thursday, June 29. 191; a any scab is allowed to slip thru it’s going to be all off and we will be in the same boat with California, Texas, and Florida.” The potatoes are being marketed in bushel lug boxes, a style of package which seems to meet with favor with the city trade. . . .' w“: :71; I r 73; w. First Convict—The doc tolling I; I did not quit sinoking I'd croak wifih two years. Second Convict—Guilt to ' quit? f-nFirSt- Convict—Nopng! going tQ-be-hangod and month. ' Ll