Kood Iftver Slacier.. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1S94. THE MAILS. The mall arrives from Mt. Hood at 10 o'- ulock A. M. Wednesdays and Saturdays; de parts "ie sivme days at noon. For Chenowcth, leaves at 8 ArM.; arrives al e r. ivi. Mauiruavs. For White Halmon leaves ddtjyat 1 P. M arrives at 0 o'clock P. M. From White Halmon. leaves for Fu Ida. Gil mer, Trout Lake and Glenwood Mondays, Wednesdays ana Fridays. , SOCIETIES. Canby Post, No. ID, G. A. R., meets at Odd Fellow's Hall, first Saturday of each month at 2 o'clock p. in. All U. A. 11. members In vited to attend. . i M. B. Potter, Commander. C. J. Hayes, Adjutant. BRIEF LOCAL MATTERS. T. C. Dallas has apple-box nails. J. H. Gerdes has furniture for sale. Tin cans and wax strings at Dallas's J. N. McCoy took a trip to Portland Monday. . C. E. Markham has some fine young pigs for sale. - Santa Claim will have his goods at lil, il. JNiekelseirs store. fit " Ti. ' TtuptrviaQa lai arronr. fiT tVtA Hrl; dal Veil Lumber Company. ' Get your horse and mule jewelry at l'ierce's new Harness shop. I ou Morse is authorized agent for all newspapers and periodicals. Dr. G. E. Sanders at the Mt. Hood hotel November 23th and 29th. ' For fine Yellow Newtown apple trees, eee Tllletl at niKingtoii nursery. Stranoban & Wilson want 150 dozen of egg, for which they will pay 20 cts casli per dozen. Leave your orders for thanksgiving turkeys, peese, chickens, etc., witu . Hartley & Langille. If you haven't cash to pay for trees, what. Have you to trader see mien, at Pilkington nursery. J. R. Galilean has two fresh cows. one full blood and ihe other half Jer- wf, atid some pigs for sale. . Don't miss the chance of getting some of Tillett's winter apple trees at Pilk ington nursery. Cheap. The Portland Sun is for sale every day at the post office upon the arrival of the noon train from Portland. Dr. Sanders Is provided with a den tal chair for his Hood River office. Also prepared to extract teetli without pain by the use of narcotized air, called gas. When you want any fruit boxes go to the Hood River Box Factory. ' They keep all kinds of rough and dressed lusher. Grain rolled any day. For sale or trade: One team well bred. 1050. mures, for stile or trade for : cordwood. Applv to : , . - v For Sale! Forty acres unimproved land, east side of Hood river, 4 miles ' frnni fnurn Will aoll n er 10 ai.ro tmets olioap; . Inquire at GLACliiR office. Philip 8. Malcolm, A. F. and A. M. grand master, will "fie in Hood Uver on the 19th, when there will be a spe cial communication of Hood River lodge. , ... If you wish to fence your farm or door vnril.. irn to the Hood Iliver Tvix factory and see their samples. They are Hire fits for the East Portland Fence Works. In Vases where dandruff,' scalp dis eases, falling and grayness of the hair appear, do not neglect them, but apply .. .. i.. , ...!-. ( : 1 . T T .11... n (jijfci iirmruv aim minis jmu xiun o Hair Renewer. Saturday and Monday of each week willfe.Mr grinding days during the tall Kifyfi'' "r. Our "Whole Wheat "GrahaVf w sale at the stores as rruit trees, nur, trees, ornamental freest-small fruit bushes, plants and vines of forty Meveri different, kinds and varieties, at the Columbia- nur sery. , H. C. Bateham. Circuit court convened at The Dalles . Monday . niornlng.V The grand jury 'chosen is win posed of the following: ,J. M. Benson, foreman; J. M. Elliott, "A. McLeod, John Cates, Robert Rand. J. W. Ingalls and Peter Trand. H. F. Davidson caught a large owl on his hen house a few nights ago. It measured four feet frerm tip to tip. The trap had been set for three months, but liis patience and perseverance were at last rewarded. T IM.a "lntl nlaiia nraB loot uroolr f r Mr. Tate Roberts, a cousin of C. G. "Roberts of Hood River. The price paid, we learn, was $3,000. Tne purchaser is a resident of Scotland, where lie will return ior me winter, oui expects w come back to Hood River next spring. Alvey -j Hershey4 resolved" lately to move ins nouse out near 1110 uaru, so lie would not have to go far to do chores In the winter; but when he got about half way his wife 'evidently decided things had gone far enough and hitched the house to a pine tree and hung out her wash. And there the house stands. Wm, Tlllett of the Pilkington nur sery has finished digging his trees, and has 5000 standard apple trees, which he is willing to exchange for cash at low 1 irtiAa 1-f a ira tit oroH rka antnnm lilmaolP from the-" orchards of E. Locke, B. warren, ai. v. Kana ana vvm uwvta eon, did the grafting last, spring, and can warrant them all true to name. Call around and examine stock. There was a scrapping match at the Oregon Lumber Co.'s mill one day last week, in which another one-armed man got In his work and the other fel low came out. second best. The van quished had the victor arrested, charged with ufnautt. . He pleaded guilty before Judge Soesbe and paid a fine and eosts. The other party was then arrested, charged with using profane language, and he also pleaded guilty and paid a fine. , The Glacier this week received a communication from Arthur Disbrow of Mt. Hood, in which he gives his oide of the story about the affair with Frank Ries. - It' Is a full history of the case from the beginning of the quarrel. we aecmie 10 puoutiu it ior iue reason tnavireiw no K""" io lesiuu in.iu . i pul.lieHtion, and the general public are not enough Interested in neighbors1 quarrels to want lull particulars. Mr. Disbrow feels aggrieved at the account of the fight which appeared In the Glacier at the time, and which we acknowledge might have been a little onesided. We wrote the item from the best information we could gather at the time. Both men are strangers to us, and we did not mean to injure the character of either. The affair made a good item, and we could not a ll'o id to lose It. . Allie Welds, a little son of C. Welds, the shoemaker, met with a severe acci dent Tuesday. He was running down lull In play, and stubbing bis toe against a small oak stump, fell with full fort against a larger stuui. He fell with his left breast against the stump, striking aim just uelow tlie heart, and was knocked insensible. His mother picked him up and carried aim to the iiouse. Dr. Jirosius wus called, but he found no bones broken. Next morning the boy 6eemed better, but Thursday morning he was in great pain and the doctor was called for again. A few days ago a citizen of Portland noticed in a show window a box of big red arples marked "Hood River apples." He was surprised, not know ing probably that we could raise such fine fruit here. He immediately wrote to our townsman, George T. Prather asking if such fruit was plentiful here and if it was for sale, tie might get fifteen or twenty curloads of first-class apples here, if he is willing to pay the price they will be worth when the time conies to sell. Rev. J. W. Jenkins returned Thurs day from ' Heppner, where he held a series of meetings, during which nine uew members were added to the church. The Christian Church of this valley, which was organized through the ef forts of Mr. Jenkins, are negotiating for the purchase of the Valley Congre gational church. This house of wor ship has been offered to the new con gregation for the sum of $017.63, and it is likely the purchase will be made. - : Mrs. Heald's musical rehearsal, lust Saturday evening, was well attended by the lovers of music. Mr. John R. Nickelsen volunteered two songs, and the pupils all did well at their difficult pieces On the piano and organ. They show marked improvement at every rehearsal. The community Is iu luck to have such an excellent instructor as Mrs. Heald in our midst. A week ago lust Sunday Mrs. Henry Wilson of the East side fell down stairs and broke her arm. Dr. Brosius had just paid a visit to her husband, who lias tlie dropsy, atid Dad started for town. When he readied Tucker's Mill he was overtaken by a boy and called back to attend the old lady's in juries. . Mr. Wilson is still improving. The vast forest fires In Wisconsin dest roy ed h u nil reds of acres of era n berry marshes, consequently cranberries are higher this year. The quality is better than last year. We have just received a barrel of fine cranberries and some Jersey sweet potatoes; also, some tine sweet tickles. ; HANNA & WOLFABD. , Tuesday evening, while George T. Prat her was itoinir down town after dark, iu nassimr Blowers' store be ran agaiust the hitching post li if ion t of tne store. He was pretty badly -liurt. and since the mishap has not been able to work. ' Rev.l. L. Hershner has been confin ed to his house for two weeks with a very stubborn attack of sciatica rheum atism, but is now improving. He ex pects to be able to fill the pulpit at the Congregational church - on -.; Sunday morning. P. F. Bradford of White Salmon: while hunting on this side of the Co lumbia, one day this week, saw a lot of quail, ubout twenty in number, prob ably the increase of those imported by uie iuu ana uun ciuo. . A Earty consisting of Captain Coe, ibiigille, S.H.Coxand M.V.Rand Jas. of Hood River and C D. Moore vof ! t this morn- White Salmon, will start lug for Camas Prairie duck and goose Hunting. . Mr. Zellar, one of Che contractors ou the school house, came up from Port land Thursday. The carpenters will commence work ou the buildiug next week, if the weather premits. The masons have completed the work of laying the foundation for the new school buiise and gone home. The lumber is being hauled for the erection of the building. - V . The sheriff Thursday sold lot D, Hood River, and lots 14 and 15 in block 23, Hood River property, being tlie ptoperty of L. H. Prather, to A. 8. Blowers; $445. . v Elder J. W.-Jenklns will preach in the Valley Congregational Church Sunday morning and evening, and Monday eveniug at 7:30 o'clock. There will be a meeting of the East ern Star lodge Saturday evening, Nov. 17th, at 7 o'clock. . Annual election, etc. All members take notice. ; Mrs. Charles Early, who has been visiting her parents, Captain Blowers and Mrs. Blowers, returned to 'her home at Cheuowith Thursday. W. C. Stranahan is clerking In Geo. P. Crowell's store in the absence of Mr. Sheets, who is visiting in Portland. Capt. Blowers went to The Dalles Wednesday to attend an adjourned session of the commissioners' court. : W. H. Allen returned Thursday from Portland where lie hud been confined iu the hospital with typhoid fever. S. E. Burtmess will have a car of Bridal Veil lumber the first of the week. Send in your orders today. Judge Soesbe went to 'Portland Thursday ou a business trip for a few days. .- 4 '.- Judge Louis Davenport of Mosier was in town Thursday. ' Sharp frost yesterday morning; ther mometer 28. - Miss Ann Smith is visiting iu Port laud. Dr. E. T. Carns, Dentist. Dr. Cams arrived from Portland on the 1st and is prepared to do all kinds of dentistry work examine, fill, ex tract, regulate and make new teeth; also, crown, and bridge work. Prices at II anna & Wolard'.s. We hear that some of our competitors ,.1,1 tori ovw thf pWtlnn rptni-n ,re 80 elrtte(1 ,tr the election returns that they have already raised the price of their goods. We still sell as cheap as ever, for cash, as witness the follow ing: Ladles' fine dongola kid button shoes SI 25 Ladle' spring-heel kid button shoes. 2 to (I, 1 15 Ladles' tine Kid, cloth top, button shoes, good value at 82.50 : ; 2 00 Men's oil grain buckle shoes 1 25 Boys' oil grain buckle shoes 1 15 We carry a full line of Buckingham & Hecht shoes and Woonsocket rub bers. We also have a fine line of hats and caps. . Our grocery line is com blete. We sell d. e. sugar at 6c per lb. roast coffee from 20c per lb up. We have flour, feed, oats, chop barley and hay for sale cheap. If you hear of any body selling goods cheaper tuan .we sell, please let us know. Yours for low prices, Hanna & Wolpard DIED. At Camas Prairie, Washington, Tues day evening, Nov. 13, 1H94, Kev. J. 1'. Richards, aged 70 years. Mr. Richards was a resident of Cuj. cago, and bad been in the ministry of the Congregational Church forty years. At the time of his death he was visit ing his sister, Mrs. -W. K. Cole of Camas Prairie, whom he had not seen for twenty-two years. His wite, , a practising physician, accompanied him on the visit. Deceased was generally a healthy man, excepting that lie was troubled with diabetes, and this disease caused bis death. The body will be shipped to Chicago. 8. . E. Bartmess went out to Camas Wednesday to pre pare the remains for shipment. . S0TICE. There will be a meeting of the stock holders of the East Fork Irrigating Canal company at the Odell school house on Saturday, Nov.17, at 1 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of making ar rangements for working on the ditch. to sell stock, and to transact any other business that may legally come before the meeting. , Joseph A. Knox, President. Age Improves It; The Youth's Companion is soon to enter upon its sixty-ninth year of pub lication, and as one says who has been a constant reader of its columns for more than thirty years, "It has stead ily improved year by year." Its arti cles, today cover the whole field of life and - experience, furnishing a vast amount of valuable and entertaining reading of a character not found else where, and of so great a variety that the Companion interests alike each member of the family. The prospectus for the volume of 1895 announces an unusual array of attractions; fourteen serial stories, a wealth of short stories, anecdotes, humorous sketches, adven tures, science and home articles, timely editorials on all important questions, and more than two hundred original poenis of the highest class. Full pros pectus and specimen copies sent free ou application. New subscribers who send $1.75 now will receive the paper free to January 1,: 1895, and one year from that date. It comes every week, finely illustrated. ' Toledo Weekly Blade. Of the now nearly twenty thousand regular .publications In the United States, there are but two or three week ly newspapers published for general cir culation iu every state and territory, and of these the Toledo Weekly Blade is the most popular of them all. For more than twenty-five years it has been a regular visitor to every portion of the Union, and it is well known at every one of the sixty thousand odd post of fices of the country. It is made espe cially for family reading. It gives the entire uews of the world each week, in i finish onnritnurl form sin u-ill sa.ve read- jg scores of pages of daily papers to get ipsa infriimntinii. Renubhcan in nol- itlcs, temperance in principle. Serial stories, wit and humor, short stories, household department, question bu reau, farm department,'camp fire, Sun day school and young folks are a few of the many other prominent features of this great paper. A specimen copy will be mailed free to any address on application, and the publishers invite any person to send in a long list of ad dresses to whom they will mail sample copies. The Weekly Blade, is a very large paper, and the price is only $1 a year. Address The Blade, Toledo, O. Written for the Glacikk. To the Columbia. Placid river, much I'd love thee Didst thou flow through sunnier climes; . Yet thy beauties oft enchant me, 1 'Mid thy somber rocks and pines. ? . ' -1- '.1! Oft I've watched thy changing shadows; v. ; - , Pft I've seen thy surges roll, .. Wondered at the varied beauties ' ' , "Penciled on thy living scroll. , Tls a pleasure thus to view thee - On a calm, still autumn day; . . .. Note thy smooth transparent current's Silvery windings far away. -. - . ' Every peak and crag reflected, - All thy beauties mirrored there; , -Gleaming sails that glide aboTe thee, , , And the steamer's trailing hair. Towering firs that grimly guarcUthee, . Constant as their changeless green, piotbe thy jugged bluff's In grandeur, , Weird as a phantom dream. Whlte-wlnged gulls above thee soaring, With their wild and plaintive cries, In the distance fainter growing, Whore thy boarders reach the skies. ' ' S -l'lnoswAH. Primary Election. ; Notice Is hereby given that primaries will be held at the school house lu District No. 8, Saturday, November 24, 1894, at 7 o'clock P.M., for the purpose of placing In nomination can didates for the following named offices, to be voted forat the election to be held December 4, 1894: . ' . . .. One mayor, , : ". Blxaldermen, One recorder, , ," ' One treasurer, . ' ' : One marshal. - ' . ' . ' COMMITTEF. HORSES FORUNCLE SAM. Animals for Cavalry Service Obtained Very Cheaply. " The government has been picking up horses for the cavalry and artillery service very cheap in Washington and Oregon this summer. The average price paid was seventy-five dollars for each animal, which is unsommonly low when the style of animal required for the army is considered. A government purchasing agent says: "We inspected recently at ,The Dalles, Pendleton, Walla Walla, Ellensburgh and North Yakima, and at each place found about one hundred awaiting examination. I selected such as met the requirements, Which are that they must be bays and grays, fifteen hands high and upward, and from four to eight years ' old. These were passed upon by the gov ernment officials, and, if found satis factory, were . accepted. They were . purchased at a very low price, as the sellers had but little money, and were anxious to dispose of their stock. The animals bought are of fine class, and especially suited for cavalry purposes. The lowness of the cost of horses this year may be attributed to the small demand, which is insignificant when compared with the supply. ' Never be fore during the fifteen years or so that I .have been Inspecting horses for the government have I seen times bo dull in the stock regions, or the stock deal er so anxious to sell their animals at a tinall price. The small demand is, of course, flue to the supplanting of horse cars by electric and cable railways, the shutting down of logging camps and lumber, industries on Puget sound, and the general dullness of trade. In Port land cars which would require thirty five hundred horses are operated by cable and electricity. Then the freight cars operated on these steel railways have shut out trucks and delivery wagons on which a large . number of horses were used." 1 SONGS OF THE BATTLEFIELD. What Peculiar Associations Produce , ' These Powerful Auxiliaries. Association, which has so large a share in the operations of the human mind, often contributes much to the effect of music, says Laura A Smith in Lippincott's. . Some airs possessing no intrinsic merit owe their influence on the destinies of nations almost entirely to this principle. The making of a national song is one of the things to be attributed to happy accident; it can not be accomplished by taking thought orby any amount of burning of the midnight oil. Monarchs have no power to command it, and often the greatest poets "and musicians are most in- capable of producing a truly national hymn. . No, the great popular lyrics of the world have been the result of acci dent and the vent-hole of fiery feeling long confiTTed. . . .What but accident caused the song of "My Maryland", to prove the chant to which thousands of the soldiers of the confederacy kept time during 18(51-05? And could any thing be more fitly credited to chance than the. extraordinary- popularity of the "Malfrrough's s'en va-t-en guerre," Vhich was due to the fact Of a, provin cial nurso having lulled to rest the lit tle .'dauphin, the son .ol Liouis avi., With tbisair? Had he not written his one.Tindying lyric, the "Marseillaise," probably Rouget do Lisle had never been heard of. And who speak of Max Schneclcenburger when they talk of "Die Wacht am Rhein?" Verily, the making of a war song is a deed of arms, not a mere effort of the pen. ." : i ' V OUR LEGS TO VANISH. In the Coarse of Another One Thousand .i Years Men May Cease Walking. - Dr. Emil Young, professor of physi ology at the University of Geneva, is in great distress concerning the future of our legs. He suggests, in an essay in the Scmaine ' Litteraire, says the Westminister Gazctte,that in the course of one thousand years the human race may have lost tho necessity of the uso of legs, and retain those members of the body solely as ornamental survivals. Men refuse more and more to walk, though walking is the wholesomest of physical exercises. . Steam, electricity, the rope railways, tricycles, and bicycles have changed tho wholo aspect of Swiss touring, as he says, in his " own generation. "Everybody seems anxious to get everywhere any way except by the use of his legs." In another generation, he supposes, our traveling balloons will bang outside our windows, or our electrical coaches stand outside our doors. They will be produced so cheaply that every man will have his own chariot. Hence our legs will become superfluous, ' then they .will be crippled, and shrunk to hideously small dimensions, until at -lastthey will finally disappear.." Our 'ftrms, on the contrary, 'will correspond ingly strengthen and - lengthen. fTVWhile' : our legs remain," ;. says Dr. xbungi "let us march all we can." -!!! . .SCIENCE IN COREA. It Explains Phenomena in a Way Peenllar . , : ., ly Its Own. - . ' Education in Corea is of the Chinese order the committal of whole books to memory. On all other subjects than knowledge of Chinese, says the Boston Transcript, ignorance is tne fashion when it is not a reality. Philosophical speculation is stated to be common, but Corean notions of natural science are indeed very chaotic, if the following story may be accepted: "A well-known merchant of Chemulpo was asked by one of his native employes a man of some education whether or not he had ever secna sparrow which had died a natural death. The person questioned did not, remember that he had. He was then asked how the for eign servants accounted for such a phenomenon, for such it was, consid ering the vast number of 6parrows in the world and the huge families they raise every " year. The -answer to this query being unsatisfactory, the Corean gave his explanation, which was a popular one. He said that dying sparrows betook themselves to the sea shore, dived into the mud and became clams ' 'How else', he triumphantly added, 'could you account for the num ber of clams along the coast?' . CLEAR ' fj( " (LONG I SKIN, I LIFE I MENTALll M I STRONG NERVES: y - 'i Isi -jy r J Sarsaparilla " M. nanitnerly, a well-known business man of Hillsboio, Va., sends this testimony to the morits of Ayer's S.irsaparilla: "Several years apro, I hurt my lejt. the Injury leaving a sore which led to erysipelas. My sufferings were extreme, my leg, from the knee to the ankle, being a solid sore, which began to ex tend to other parts of the body. Aficr trying various remedies, I began taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla, and, before I had finished tho first bottle, I experienced great relief; tlie second bottle effected a complete cure." Ayer's Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Moss. Cures others, will cure you GEO. P. CEO WELL, Successor to K. L. Smith Oldest Established House lnthe valley. DEALER IN Dry Goods, Clothing, ' ' AND ' ' ' General Merchandise, Flour and Feed. Etc., . HOOD RIVER, - - - OREGON. GEO. T. PRATHER, Notary PaMc ana Ins. Agent. I represent live of the best Insurance com panies. . Collections made and real estate handled on favorable terms. Office in Prather Block, Oak St., HOOD RIVER, OREGON. c. welds; BOOT AND SHOE SHOP First Door West of Post Office. Boot nnd Shoes made to order. Repairing neatly done, and a -. . Bedrock Prices. " ; " i - All work first class. Satisfaction guaran teed or money refunded. se. . . " C. WELDS, Proprietor. T. C. DALLAS," - DEALER IN STOVES AND TINWARE i Kitchen Furniture, PLUMBERS GOODS. Pruning Tools, Etc. Repairing Tinware a Specialty. FOR SALE. I have ftir sale two line Fruit Farms and the best hay farm In the valley. Plenty of run ning water on all of them. Will sell any or all of thein. Also, fine residence and, lots 1 1 different prices. Call on or address . i A. S. BLOWERS, ' J aulS '. -; J, Hood Itlver, Oregon. ! A S. BLOWERS & CO., ' DEALERS IN "i Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, -j FLOUR AND FEED. : Country Produce -Bought and Sold. AfiFNrv rnp rlBRADLEY&METCALFCOY jj " - CELEBRATED ' ; B00TS& SHOES I" , - ESTABLISHED 1843 "THE BIGGEST BOOT IN THE WORLD THflUt MAW COrrKnjnTtr ' . THE- " REGULATOR LINE." l8Mes,rWaM I Ate Navigation Co. Through Freight and Passenger Line'. . The steamer Regulator vvill run tri weekly trips, leaving The Dalles Mon days, Wednesdays, and .Fridays, on--necting with steamer Dalles City. . Re turning, will leave Portland Tuesdays Thursdays, and Saturdays, connecting with Rtpflmpr T?p(Tiilrttn nt. Hi T.u.; All freight will come through without delay ' ; . ;. ' . PASSENGER One way.. Round trip.... v, RATES.- Freight Rates Greatly , : - jtecmcecu - : Shipments for' Portland received at any time, day or. night. Shipments tor way landings must be 'delivered lt-. fore 5 p. m. Jjive stock shipments so licited. Call on or address; "' ' J' ' V. C. ALLAWAY, ' - General Agent. B. F. LAUGHLIN, v General Manager, ; . : THE DALLES, OREGOM u. k. ana n. lu. E. McNEILL, Receiver. , ' TO THE 1 " i ' Gives the choice of ,WO TRANSCONTINENTAL Via .Via SPOKANE, DENVER, Minneapolis OMAHA ;'" AND ' t AXI ST. PAUL. Kansas City. Low Rates to All East ern Cities. EAST BOUND PHOii HHH KIVKK No. 8, Freight -lenvw m 11.45. A;Al No. 2. Mail 10.08 1'. M WKST HOUND FKOM HO;J KIVKH, No 27 , Local, leivvt-x at !!. 15 P. M No. 1, Mail . - 4:12 A. M L OCEAN STEAMERS Leave Portland every live dnys for SAM FRAN CISCO. For fall details call on O. V. & N. Agont, Hood River, or address W. II. IUT1U.1U7RT, Gen 1 1 ii !s. Agi'ilL'.' .. l'orllund, (it. TTTT T f T" . j-. A INTERNA TIONAL 1 Abreast ofiht Times.- Entiretv N. DICTIONARY urana n ducat or. Successor of the ' a Inabridged." JJ . Standard Tf the TJ. S. 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