The Hood River news. (Hood River, Or.) 1909-current, August 21, 1912, Page 10, Image 10

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    THE HOOD RIVER NEWS, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21. 1912
10
Social
Unrest
of (he
World
By
THFOnORE
N. VAIL
V
S3
Lies
Only
on the
Surface
Capitalist
of
New York
o
UR SOCIAL UNREST IS ONLY ON THE SURFACE. AND IT
IS NO DEEPER ABROAD. THERE IS NO FUNDAMENTAL
DISTURBANCE OF THE SOCIAL ELEMENTS HERE OR IN
EUROPE.
t ?
There 13 no doubt that the people, the common people farmers
an.l workers in Europe are better employees and better oil materially
than a generation ago. CONDITIONS OF LIFE ARE VASTLY
I! FITTER.
It is onlv by measurement with the standards of physical comforts
which have become everyday necciitie9 in this country that there is
anv apparent lack of the things that make life comfortable.
There is no sign in the temper of the people of Europe that marks
real social unrest. The development of transportation, the returning
emigrant with his new ideas, the passing cf landlordism and other fac
tors which have done away with the old prerogatives of class have
killed the attitude of servility in the working classes. Consequently
there is a transition state, one of questioning and experiment.
BUT THIS CONDITION CALL IT UNREST, IF YOU WILL IS
NOT SOCIAL FERMENT IT IS AN ADJUSTMENT. THERE IS NO
VITAL DISCONTENT. THE TEMPER OF THE PEOPLE IS NOT
THAT OF INSURGENCY. THERE IS TOO MUCH PROSPERITY FOR
REAL UPHEAVAL.
This Brass Bed, $22.5
2 inch posts, 58 inch
fillers guaranteed Lac-
jlj T)
L I Iff- -.-V C
OH
quet finish; will not tar
nish under any condi-tion.
tolls Man
ho poes at his task in the morning
ith vigor and vim, and...
who
w
We9 II Jhot& you..
one who has had a restful, refreshing sleep on a
good bed! And that means a
Spring and Mattress
suited to your individual taste and requirements.
That time is past when a spring was a spring and a
mattress a mattress. Ve"fit"you with a bed as care
fully as your tailor does with clothes -and insist ev
ery bed be taken on trial with the privilege of ex
changing should it not be absolutely satisfactory in
every respect. If you're not getting the benefit you
should from your night's rest, consult our Bed Spec
ialist. Ask him to show you the bed that will sim
ply compel you to...
COUNTY TEACHING
FORCE COMPLETED
fiinnty Si-hoot Supfrlnteiiileut ('.
1. Tlioitiit)ii imumiiH't'tf that the
ti'iiehinic forre fur the coining .vt-tir I
how eoiuj'U'tt'il with the exception of
t wo tem-)iern, i-.iie for dlntrlrt No. 3
ami anotlierfor the Mt. Hood ni'hool.
it In expected that both of thee va
canelei will lie tilled before whool
opeiiM. The llt of teacher U tm
follow h:
DUtrltt No. 111. C. Ilarter, prln
clpal; (irace Ilarter, Kitty May.
No. .' .1. I". StiildiH, principal; Klnle
M. Smith. lrn. V. V. Clm intern,
I'earl Sendee, Mrn. (. A. VVnjjner,
Columbia hc hoot.
No. :!.!. O. McLaughlin, enperlg
tendent; I.. H. dibxou. principal; J.
V. CriteH, It. N. Anhinun. Ilaftle L.
I'.niiHiulrtt. Flora K. Furrow, Celia
Hauer, Alice lloinlu. hlli tcliooI
teachern; Mm. Amy Gove, Anna
Heath, Mi Welland, Helen Ureen,
Maud Howard, Nellie Crocker, Krnn
ceM ItrajTK, Henide (ioyetti, Frances
Kvann, Allle Forry, Lulu HIcKh. Alta
I'od', V.raV, Clapp, Leila Hershner,
tone vacancy I.
No 4 George Tonkin, principal;
Mary Frazer, Kmma Sweneon, Mrs
Clara H. Steele, Murtha Struck. Kant
Barrett
Ni ."i Delia Kuaili, principal; F.lnn
K. Love. Bell Iteed. F.UIe Bell.
Xo. Ii O. V. Furcell, Kdena M.
Clark, l'arkiiale ochool; Hat tie L.
Bailey, Mt. Hood Hchool (One va
cancy )
No. 7 C. K. McCoy, principal; An
na C. iodlleroii, L'velyn Turney,
(irace Turney.
No. s Blanche K. Shahan.
No i) Mary Montgomery.
No. 10 Mrn. Myrtle Sander.
No. 11 Hazel M. Stanton, princi
pal; Flora Wilson, Gertrude Irwin.
No. 12 Lizzie Kldlr.
No. 1:1 F.llzaleth Moss, principal;
vim Miller.
No. 14 Anna Wilson.
No. l.'i Querudo Llerle.
No. lti F.lxle Wells.
FAST GAME PLAYED
IN UPPER VALLEY
A flint name of ball wan played in
the I'pper Valley Sunday when the
IIWuhtH team defeated the I'arkdale
ay:ure);atlon by the score of 2 0. T!
I'pper Valley boyn put up a strong
lame, as wan evidenced by the uar
row margin by which the Hood Riv
er boys wod out.
A remarkable feature of the game
wan the fact that Hart, twlrler for
the Height, pitched a no hit and no
run name, not a single member of the
I'arkdale team being allowed to
reach the Initial linjj. The Meld work
of the Height hoys wa alo excep
tionally good, not a Mingle error be
ln made. Not a Mingle battel ball
went to the Height' oiltlleld.
Koontz, I'arkdale' 17-year old
pitcher, put up an exceptionally
strong game, alio wing only fourhlt.
two of which were Heclired by Hall.
The team played a follow:
I'arkdale Brouaugh.c; Koontz, p;
DrcHscr, lb; Hood, 2nd; Gordon, 3rd;
Shockley, m; Thoma, If; Baker, cen
ter; Twelve, rf.
The Height Hall, c; Hart, p;
Mooney, lb; Tate, 2nd; Butterlleld,
3rd; Gei.iig, ss; S.imuel, If; Moore,
center; Iavl, rf.
Sleep and
Rest...
LA
ranzCo.
Plione 14
RARE TREAT AFFORDED
BY CHAUTAUQUA PROGRAM
(C mtinurd from Pare 1)
Dr. Jame Wlthycomb, director of
the Oregon Kx pertinent Station.
On Satuiday evening "The Whang
doodle Minstrels' will holi) the cen
ter of the tn W. F. King acting
ii Interlocutor. Thorn who will take
jpart Ini-liide Mr. I', S. Iavldmn,
! Arthur flurke. Mrn. I. McCan, .
j I: Wilbur. C.K. Ongood, Ml Kva
I Brock. Mr. Cha. Ilenney. ( apt. Me.
Can, Mi Hendernon, C. N. Clarke,
ami Calvin Skinner. A rare program
of Soul hiTii melodic will be a feat
ure. Thl w ill Ih- followed .bv .1 vaude
ville skits which are mire to make a
big hit.
Painless Dentist Coming
Dr. Carter, palnle (lentlt, I com
ing to Hood Itiver at Mt. Hood Ho
tel Monday, Augut 2'!, one ny only
Introducing the new liquid air sys
tem for palnle dt-ntistry. Absolu
tely palnle and afe for young and
old. Returning In W day.
Free extracting !l to 10,1 to 2.
1
The NEWS For Printing.
"UP-TO-DATIH" JOB WORK
1 Picnic at the Punch Bowl
Mr. .1. M. I'.oyce and little nephew
I of Seattle are vlltlng Mr I'. L.
j Smith. Ml Clara Burke, who ha
alno been visiting the Smith, return
ed to Portland yeterday. A parly
which Ii. eluded the foregoing and al
ho. I. K. Bo.vceaud family enjoyed a
fill-it Ic at the Punch Bowl Sunday,
Commercial Club Luncheon
The iiiial Sat unlay luncheon at
Hie Commercial Club will be omitted
Oil week on account of the(. hautail
ijiia.
FIRE DANGER AT SEA.
Hew Flame Can Swaap th. Insida of
Evan a M.tal Ship.
The danger from fire on a transnt
In title liner U more neiloua tlmo is geu
erully believed. It U much greater
thiiu the danger from collision and la
becoming more and more dangerous
with the Increased outlay upon luxury
and display. The main structure of the
bill and moht of Its essential parts are
of metal, but many of the fittings, near
ly every feature of ornament and every
trapping of luxury, are highly Inflam
mable. No one who has not been aboard the
Spanish wrecks at Santiago can con
ceive how Ore can sweep the Inside of
even a metal ship. Admiral Cervera
described to me the experience on
board the Teresa In these words: "The
second shot that cume on board set us
n Ore. The Ore main was damaged.
Soon we were unable to cope with the
fire. It swept through her from bow
to stern. There was not a space as big
as the palm of your hand where life
could have been sustained. An Insect
could not have lived on board. We bad
to get overboard or be burned."
It is true the Spaniards had not cut
out their woodwork and thrown over
board all unnecessary Inflammables, as
we had In the American fleet, but the
Inflammability of one of their war
ships was much less than that of a
luxurious ocean liner. Captain Rich
mond Pearson Hobson In Engineering
Magazine.
PINEAPPLE PLANTS.
Th.y Do Not Dia Aft.p Fruiting, but
R.produe. Th.mt.lv.s.
Pineapples do not grow on trees. Im
agine a plant four feet In extreme
height from the ground to the tip of
leaves, a single stalk at the surface,
but dividing at once Into swordlike
blades or leaves, fifteen In number,
from the center of which appears a
stiff, upright stem, at the top of which
Is the fruit This stem is short, and
the crown of the fruit when fully
grown Is a foot or more below the
points of the leaves.
At the end of a year and a half from
planting each plant produces a single
fruit, even as a cabbage plant produces
a single head. But the pineapple does
not die after fruiting once. Down on
the stem below the fruit and among
the long, narrow leaves a sucker ap
pears. If allowed to remain this will
soon become the head of the plant, and
within another year It will yield an
other fruit This process may go on
for a term of years. In the meantime,
however, other suckers will make their
appearance.
Those are broken off, and when stuck
Into the ground they put out roots and
become other plants. Thus a single
pineapple plant may produce a dozen
or more others while it Is yielding
fruit from year to year.
The Intruder.
A certain boat coming up the Mis
sissippi one day during a flood lost
her way and bumped up against a
frame house. She hadn't more than
touched it before an old darky ram
med bis bead up through a hole in the
roof, where the chimney once came
out, and yelled at the captain on the
roof: "Whar's you gwlne wld dat boot?
Can't you see nothin'? Fust thing you
knows you gwlne to turn dls house
ober, spill de old woman an' de chll'en
out In de flood an drown 'em. What
you doln' out here in de country wid
your boat, anyhow? Go on back yan
der froo de co'nfleids an' get back
Into de rlbber whur you b'longs. Ain't
got no business sev'n miles out In the
country foolln' roun' people's houses
nohow!" And the boat backed out
Life. The Larg.st D.tcrlb.d Snaks.
Speke in his narrative of the Jour
nal tn th source of the Nile descriles
the largest snake that has ever been
seen by man. "I shuddered, he says,
'ii I lnnkd nnon the effects of his
tremendous dying strength. For yards
around where he lay grass, uusues ana
nnllnfra In fact, everything except
full grown trees were cut clean off.
is if they had been trimmed wltn an
Immense scythe. The monster when
measured was fifty-one feet two and
one-half Inches In extreme length,
while around the thickest portions of
Its body the girth was nearly three
feet"
Looking Ah.ad.
It was the first night of a new play.
"I say," remarked the author to the
manager, "that scene shifter over there
Is a most peculiar looking fellow."
"Yes; he's an Eskimo." said the
manager.
"An Eskimo! What on earth made
you take him on?"
"Oh, I thought it would be a com
fort to see one happy face if the play
turns out to be a frost!"
Cihi In Point.
Rivers Brooks, that's the second
time I've beard you use the phrase
"ocliln void." I wish you would tell
me how a void can ache.
nrok-Vell. not to spenk of a hol
low tooth, don't you sometimes have a
headache?-London Telegrapu.
In the Mountains.
rtimh th mountains and get their
ru-wi iMinr Nature's wace will flow
Into you as sunshine flows Into trees.
The winds will blow their own rren
ness Into you. and the storms their
energy, while cares will drop off Ilk
autumn leave" John Mulr
Punishmsnt For Whom?
floss Rarber-Whnt? You have cut
the t'entlemnn four times? Well. Just
for pnnishmett you must share him
all over again right away!-Fllegnd
Blatter
.ij!"
12 I
Buy I H C Wagons for True Economy
YOU cannot farm without a wafjon any
more than you can keep house without a
stove. You use your wagon every day
and work it harder than anything else on the
farm.
Buy a wagon that lasts longer than the aver
age. It is an easy thing to do, even though
all wagons which are painted alike may look
alike. The difference in wagons is underneath
the paint. It is the material and workman
ship entering into the construction of I II C
wagons,
Weber New Bettendorf Steel King
which make them the best wagon investment.
We tell you how our wagons are built, and
we want every purchaser to convince himself
before buying, that when I II C wagons are
advertised as having oak hubs, hickory axles,
and long leaf yellow pine box bottoms, these
are the materials actually usad.
When an I II C wagon reaches a farmer's
barn, that farmer has one of the best wearing,
easiest running farm wagons that skilled labor
can make or that money can buy. There is
no need to speculate in buying a wagon.
I II C wagons are made for nation-wide uses,
with special features adapted to local condi
tions. Weber wagons have wood gears. New
Bettendorf and Steel King have steel gears.
The I H C wagon dealer in your town sells
the wagon best suited to your neighborhood.
Ask him for I II C wagon literature, or write
International Harvester Company of America
(Incorporated)
Portland Ore.
I H C S.nric. Burua
Thi purpose of this Hureau is to furnish, free
of c I. arte to all. the bei information obtainable
on better (ariuini. If you have any worthy Ques
tions concerning soils, crops, land drainage. Irri
gation, fertilizers, etc.. make your inquiries specific
ami send them to I H C Service bureau. Harvester
building. Chicago, US A ,
fowgk ARROW
CLUB
Sleel Lined
SHOT
MQHFITQ
Ul 1 LLiLiJ
The Reniiatnn OtiLi
cut into a uod uue
j Each and Every One a Speed Shell
The speed that breaks vour targets nearer the
trap. That's why Remington-UMC Steel Lined
Shells have woo 13 out of the IS Handicaps held in
the last three years.
The speed that (jets that mile-a-minute "duck" with shorter
lead that's why it takes over 50,000 dealers to handle the demand
lor Remington-UMC Steel Lined Shells.
The Shooting fraternity are speed wise. They know loose
mokeless powder won't drive shot. They know that the drive
depends on the compression.
The powder charge in Remington- UMC shells is gripped In
steel. This lining is designed to give the exact compression
necessary to send the load to the mark quickest. It insures
speed the same speed in every shell.
The steel lining is moisture proof no dampness can get through.
Jar proof no powder can get out. Waste proof no energy is lost.
Shoot Rtmington-UMC Arrow and Nitro Club Suel Lined Eaitcre
fictory loaded shells lor Speed plus Patlera in may make of shotlua
Remington Arms-Union Metallic Cartridge Co.
299 Broadway New York Gty
You'd Like Running Water
throughout your house and grounds, would you not? And
not being in close proximity to the city water mains, you'r j
wondering how to get it? Well thats easy, for a
Leader Water
Supply System
will furnish at all times, an ample supply
of hot or cold water for your house, your
lawn and your stable if desired.
The Leader System ia of unegualedeffi'
ciency and economy In operation, and
guaranteed to give complete satisfaction.
Ask your dealer to tell you all about the
Leader System or write to us for booklet,
now l Solved the Water
Supply Problem."
A-
l .asaataaaajaavasai
apple Laijd & Orchard Conjpay
Offic! No, 9 Oak SI, Phone 26 or 2 0 0 2-K
The Quality fiore
THE STAR GROCERY
"GOOD THINGS TO EAT"
Perigo & Son
"wiF,'""r
HOOD RIVER POULTRY YARDS
J. ft. MCHtlStN, Proprietor
Breeder ol S. C. W. Leghorns. W. P. Racks
and S. C. Rhode Islind Reds.
Indian hunner Ducks
H,etJ(ni and young- stuck for nalo. Or
dere booketl now. Poultry yards IS milea
wi-Ht of city ai Krmnkton. l'houe 32K2-X.
12 ACRES
6 acres in Apples and
Tears; house and barn; on
two county roads. Abun
dance of good water with
place; 1 mile from town.
EASY TERMS
Would consider trade in city property
H. M. PR1NDLE, :: P. 0. Box 357
I CP. SUMNER
jo Opposite tha Post Offlci
K Home I 'hone' 20
09-
1
aC W aVfk affc aTk taTIV 4
dray diiu
Garden Hose
Plumbina
Blacksmithing
and Wagon Work
Farm Implements and
Logging tools repaired.
Plow work a specialty.
Howell Bros.
J Two doors east of Fashion
Stables
Hood River, Ore. Phone 22 7-X
Wire Wound Continuous Stave
WOOD STAVE PIPE
Ki:i.l.Y BROS., Agents
4th St. Bet. Oak and State
I'hone 227-M Hood River, Ore.
The Trim Looking Team
shown in the picture, are evi
dently Rood roadsters. In order
to keep them so, no pains
should l3 spared to keep them
carefully shod. As
Experienced Morseshoers
we know the importance of
keeping them carefully shod,
Ix-t us do your horseshoeing:
work. You wont rejfret it.
SHIVELY & DRISCOLL
Phona.6a-X