3f ood-iyer Slacier. FRIDAY, KOVEMBER 15, 1895. THE MAILS. The mall arrives from Mt. Hood at 10 o' clock A. M. Wednesdays and Saturdays; dei fart.si same days at noon. For Chenoweth, leaves at 8 A.M.; arrives at P. M. Saturdays. For White Salmon leaves daily at 1 P. M.j arrives at 8 o'clock P. M. From White Salmon, leaves for Fulda, Gil mer, Trout Lake and Olenwood Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. . SOCIETIES. . Canby Post, No. 18, G. .V. R., meets at Odd Fellow's Hall, first Saturday of each month at 2 o'clock p. m. All G. A. R. members in cited to attend. C. J. Hayes, Commander. A. 8. Blowers. Adjutant. Waueoma Lodge, No. 80, K. of P., meets in their Castle Hall on every Tuesday night. J. A. Soksbe, C. C. Geo. T. Pratheb, K. of R. & S. Riverside Lodge, No. 08, A O. TJ W., meets first and third Saturdays of each month. W. J. SMITH, M. W. J. F. Watt, Financier. H. It. Howe, Recorder. BRIEF LOCAL MATTERS. Town election, December 8d. Sturgeon are plentiful iu the Colum bia river. Fashion Books for sale at Mrs. C. J. Hunt's.' C. H. Rogers and family returned from Portland last Friday. Lou Morse is authorized agent for all newspapers and periodicals. Henry McGuire returned last week from a ten-days' visit in the Willam ette valley. Binhop J. S. Mills Will lecture in the U. B. church the night before Thanks giving. Subject, "Sociology." Saturday and Monday of each week will tie our grinding days throughout the fall and winter. Harbison Bros. Mrs. Pealer was delivering turkeys for Thanksgiving last Saturday. Order your turkey of her before they are all gone. , Wednesday, e. K. Bartmess, Will Rand, F. H. Button and Prof. Nauman started for Camas Prairie on a wild -goose hunt. Mrs. D. H. Hill found a ladies' shoe in the road, Saturday, that had been newly half soled. Owner can get it at the Glacier office...- - The heavy rains Wednesday and luripg Wednesday night, and the hinook winds, caused Hood River to boom all day Thursday. . A ny thing you need in the line of doors, windows, window glass, mould ings, thresholds, casings, etc., you will find at the Box Factory. , Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Bone will start East about the first of December. They" will visit the Atlanta exposition and expect to remain in the East all winter. At thp fiPHnlmi nf Mia pnimtv nnmniia. fioneis, last week, a bounty of $1 was ordered to be paid for each scalp of a vyote, wild cat or cougar which may be brought in. Good advice: Never leave home on a Journey without a bottle of Chamber lain's colic, cholera and diarrhoea rem edy. For sale by Williams & Brosius, druggists, Hood River. Mr. Grant McGuire and wife of Woodburn, Oregon, are visting his pa rents and brothers here. Mr. McGuire has been in the butcher business at Woodburn, !ut recently sold out. F. G. Miller came up, Tuesday, from Sertoli's Ferry. He Is here to look after his apples on the Morton ranch, and will snip them to Portland and store them in the Multnomah Fruit Union's warehouse. . . , eeded in raising the money for a handsome flag, 10 by 10, which they .have received from Jersey City. . The directors are now asked to erect a suit able flag-stHff, and then Old Glory will ii gain float over the school house. . Judge Soesbe returned from a trip to The Dalles Thursday morning. While in the county clerk's office be learned mere was a gooa many tiooa Kiver citizens having unpaid claims against the county for which no. warrants have been issued, some bills dating as far back as 1879. . The circuit court for Wasco coun ty convened at The Dalles Mon day, Judge Bradshaw presiding. The following grand jurors were drawn: -A. S. Blowers, foreman; W. L. Hinkle, Wm. Heisler, M. B. Zumwa.lt; James Xi. Kelly, Hans Lage, Thomas Leate. John Cates was appointed grand jury bailiff and J. H. Jackson court bailiff. The U. B. church has recently re ceived a new coat of paint. The mem bers of the congregation desire to re turn thanks to Mr. O. C. Bartmess and Prof. Nauman for their diligence and the good taste displayed in. the work. They were engaged about three weeks, and although not professionals, have One day last week . some parties en tered the house of Cbas. Rogers, on his homestead on Bald mountain, by breaking down a panel of the door. They destroyed furniture, pictures,etc, and overturned about everything left in the house. Mr. Rogers says he has a clew to the perpetrators, and he now. asks the" parties to come .and settle damages and save themselves further trouble. ',:.',....-,, m O. D. Crane of The Dalles was in Hood River Sunday. Mr. Crane is an old printer. He came from Nebraska, about a year ago, where he published a paper but was driven out by the drouth. He came to The: Dalles with his printing material and started a populist paper last winter, but it soon failed for want of support. He has ei nee been traveling over the country looking for a location to move his ma terial and start a paper and thinks he has found a good place in Northern California. ; At the apple packing contest, Satur day, George Macintosh got away with the prize of $10 given by the Oregon Fruit Union for the best packed box of apples. The prize box were Baldwins, grown on Paradise farm. The com mittee appointed to award the prize consisted of Mr. Mansfield of the Ore gon State Union, Emil Sctaanno of The Dalles and Mr. Triplow. W. A. Slingerland's handsome box of Vande veres got second prize. The prize box was sent to the Oregon Fruit Union at Portland. Mr. Mansfield bought D. G. Hill's box of Baldwins and Henry Prigge's box of Spitzeubergs, paying $1.50 each. As announced in last week's GLACiER,..w.e.are selling only for cash. We make no exceptions.- The richest .man in Oregon could not get goods from us on time. We treat all aiiKe. We will sell as cheap as anybody.- Did you get a price list from The Dalles? Consider it ours; we will fill your orders from it. May be you got one from Portland. Don't send there for your goods, you can get them just as cheap of us. We want your trade. Patronize home. Come and see us, you'll find our latch string out. Yours tor Business, uanna & wolfard. Last Saturday a large shipment of truit trees was received at the boat landingand after they had been near ly all hauled away and scattered over the valley, it was fouud that they were affected with wooly aphis. The trees had been inspected and certificates in- sued, liood Kiver Has Heretofore oeen free from this pest, which is considered one of the hardest to get rid of. The first snow of the" season fell Tuesday morning, November 12th. At daylight the ground was covered with the beautiful snow, but it soon turned to rain, and by 8 o'clock the snow bad disappeared. Wednesday there was a heavy rainfall, which was welcomed by everybody. . Premiums awarded at the Hood River fair remain uncalled for at the store of S. E. Bartmess for the follow ing persons: H. C. Cce, J. A. Wilson, Charles Chandler, M P. 'Anderson, M.KIsenberg, Mrs. Dr. Watt, M. V. Rand, F. H. Button, D. R. Cooper, E. Locke. C. R. Coller, one of the publishers of the directory for Wasco county, was in Hood River Wednesday, delivering the books. It is a very creditable work, printed by the Portland Priming Co., 204 Stark street, Portland. , Mrs. E. Brandan of Portland re turned to ber home on the Sunday af ternoon train, after a week's visit witli her daughter, who . is boarding at Mrs. John Parker's. . Three spuds, weighing 3' pounds each, raised by J. Koburg, on the old Stanly place, are on exhibition at Han na & Wolfard's store. : Col. Hartley started this morninir for Sherman couuty with a bandvf 80 horses from Hood River to be wiutered iu that country. . Freight rates on apples from Hood River to Portluud by the O. R'. &N. Co. are now 10 cents a box on Ave boxes or over. Miss Moilie Dunlap's school in the Crapper district closed Wednesday, and today she left for her home at Wasco. ' ; : Rev. J. W. Jenkins came down from The Dulles on the afternoon train Thursday. - ' . : Dallas sold a bath tub Thursday for the new house of Wm. Foss, on the East side. - Geo. T. Prather is working the roads inside the corporation, assisted by Robt Husbands. There are only six teachers, all ladies, at the teachers' examination at The Dalles. , Lela Hershner has been quite sick with a fever for the past ten days. Don't forget the stereopticou lecture this evening at the U. B. church. . : Fishermen report the Columbia river above town full of sawdust. - ; ,:; 'Perry Taylor and wife went to Was co Thursday on a visit, .;. Dr. . Brosius had two colts in' the pound Thursday. , . .,, '.'. J, , , Tucker Items., Milton Odell has moved into his new house, which is very comfortable. ' Mrs. Kemp has been dangerously sick with erysipelas, but is slowly get ting better. ' Mr. Tucker also has the erysipelas. ' '' '. : V; " : Mr. Wm. Ehrck is plastering John Tucker's new house. . , - There are several in this neighbor hood who will go up to Davenport's mill to work. The Odell boys got a fine bear last week. ' , '. ( Mr. Boswell has sold his farm to Mr. Baird, father-in-law ' of Mr. Boyed. Mr. Boswell will move to Eastern Oregon. ' ' ' ' Candy Pull. The Busy Bees of the Crapper school district held an old-fashioned candy pull at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Crapper, November ; 8th. "A good time was enjoyed by all.: Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Crapper,' Mr. at:d Mrs. C. E. Mark ham, Mr. and Mrs. E; Lyon, Mr. and Mrs. King, Mr. and Mrs. Buck, J. Wickham, I-uke Blount, Harry Hack ett, Mrs. Hattie Hanson, Misses Ella Reed, Moilie Dunlap, Emma Cuuing, Lewra Wickham, Nellie Wickham, Lena Kiser, Emma' Lyon, Mamie Wickham, Nettie King, May King, Ruby Chandler, Pearl Crapper, and James Kiser, Roy Shoemaker, Fred Chandler, Lester Wickham,' Willie Miller, 'Ashley Miller, Guy Crapper, Roy Crapper. - Council Proceedings. ; ' At the council meeting, last Tuesday, all the members were present. A bill of A. S. Blowers & Co., for $1.75, for hardware, was allowed and ordered paid. - - ; The principal work of the .council was to consider ordin-anee No. 14, pro viding for town elections. The ordi nance was completed and passed at an adjourned meeting on Wednesday, and will be found printed elsewhere in this issue. ; : i :...-' The Langille house was designated as the place for holding the election, on December 3d, and L. Henry, O. C. Bartmess and G. T. Prather were ap pointed judges, and L. N. Blowers and F. C. Krause, clerks of the election. The wife of Mr. Leonard Wells of East Biimfield,.Mas8 , had been suffer ing from neuralgia for two days, not being able to sleep or hardly keep still, when'Mr. Holden, the merchant there, sent her a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and asked that she give- it a thorough trial. On meeting Mr. Wells the next day, he was told that she was all right, the pain had left her within two hours, and that the bottle of Pain Balm was worth $5 if it could not be had for less. For sale at 50 cents a bottle by Williams & Brosius, drug gists, Hood River, Oregon. . AT I have signed a contract to buy the only harness business in LaQrande, and must move in January. I shall not carry shoes there, so in the short time intervening, must clouse outmy entire stock of shoes . Keg'ardless of Cost! UTninTVnj 1 If -Portland isn't in it with mv prices, not to mention any little burgs XVXilU.JLliXLJDJA like Mosler and The Dalles. Don't Fail To call and get prices before the assortment is kick ii you aon i Duy. tn tne meantime x win sen HARNESS AND SADDLES Cheaper than they can be bought elsewhere in all of my property In Hood River. All the best variety of Apples, including other kinds of nursery stock kept constantly your trees at tne nome nursery ana save expense ana aamage. we are nere to stay. m. j WEST KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND Choice Fresh Meats, Hams, Bacon, Lard, And All Kinds of Game. .. . ALSO, DEALERS IN . FRUITS AND VEGETABLES HOOD RIVER, - - ... - ... . OREGON. A Fifty-cent Calendar Free. The publishers of the Youth's Com panion are sending free to the sub scribers to the' paper a handsome four page calendar, 7 x 10 inches, .litho graphed in nine colors. It is made up of four charming pictures, each pleas ing in design, under each of which are the monthly calendars for the year 1890. . The retail price of this calendar Is 50 cents. New- subscribers to the Companion will receive this calendar free, and besides, the Companion free every week until January 1, 1890; also, the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's double numbers free, and the Companion 62 weeks, a full year, to January 1, 1897. Address The Youth's Companion, 195 Columbus avenue, Boston. CHCRCH NOTICES. ' There will be Sunday school at the M. E. tabernacle at 10 o'clock, the usual hour. A welcome to all. Supt. M. E. services in Hood River every. Sabbath evening, and in the mornings of the first and third Sabbaths of each month; at Mosier on the mornings of the second and fourth, J. M. Denison, Pastor. U. B. church Sunday, JNov. 17. Sunday school at 10 a. m.; preaching at 11 a. rn.. Junior Endeavor at 4 p.m.; Senior Endeavor at 6; preaching, with song service, at 7 p. m. All are wel come. F. C. Krause, Pastor. Services will be held in the Valley church on Sunday as follows: Sunday school at 10 a. m., preaching at 11 a. m., Endeavor sot-.iety at 6:30 p. m., and preaching at 7.30. Subjects, "Loyalty to Christ," and "The Cause We Plead; its Origin, Aim a-id Growth." Married. ... In Hood River, at the residence of the officiating clergyman, Rev. J. L. Hershner, November 12, 1895, Mr. Perry McCrory and Miss Jessie Ingalls. The numerous friends, of the happy young couple unite in wishing them abundant happiness and piosperity through life.- ' r Electric Bitters. Electric Bitters is a medicine suited for any season, but perhaps more gen erally needed when the' latlguid, ex hausted feeling prevails, when the liver is torpid and sluggish and the need of a tonic and alterative is felt. A prompt use of this medicine has often averted long and- perhaps fatal bilious fevers. No medicine will act more surely in counteracting and freeing the system from the malarial poison. Headache, indigestion, constipation, dizziness yield to Electric Bitters. Fifty cents ami one dollar a bottle at Hood River Pharmacy Wagon for Sale. A srood second-hand wagon for sale or trade. Apply to . . E. D. CALKINS, nj uooa tuver, ur. WM. T1LLETT, Proprietor. Grower and dealer in choice Nursery stock. He has the only stock of the Yakima Apple, The best of red apples, and as long a keeper as the Yellow Newtown. I have about 20,000 apple trees of the best va rieties growing in my nursery. All standard varieties are grafted from the best stock in Hood Kiver, Jel5. broken. No trouble to show goods and no the state. Make me an offer on any part or D. F. PIERCE. Yakima. Gano. Arkansas Black, eto.. and all on hand. Prices will be made satisfactory. Buy ba i c.ri Arvi, uoiumpia Nursery. BISOS., How to Prevent Croup. Some reading that will prove inter esting to young mothers. How to guard against the disease. ' Croup is a terror to young mothers, and to post them concerning the cause, first symptoms and treatment is the ob ject of this item. The origin of croup is a common cold. Children who are subject to it take cold very easily, and croup is almost sure to follow. The first symptom is hoarseness; this is soon followed by a peculiar rough cough, which is easily recognized and will never be forgotten by one who has heard it. The time to act is when the child first becomes hoarse. If Cham berlain's Cough Remedy is freely given all tendency to croup will soon disap pear. Even after the croupy cough has developed .it will prevent the attack. There is no danger in giving this rem edy, for it Contains nothing injurious. For sale by Williams & Brosius,drug gists, Hood River, Or. RUF T UEE Instantly relieved and permanently V CURED : ( Without knife or operation. Treatment AteoIutGly Painless. Cure effected in from three to six weeks. Write for terms. THE E. O. MILLER CO., Offices: Rooms 700-07 Marquam Building, PORTLAND, OREGON. oct2o GEO. P. CROWELL, Successor to E. L. Smith Oldest Established House inthe valley. DEALER IN Dry Goods, Clothing, ' ., ' ; '' '' AND '' .- General Merchandise, Flour and Feed. Etc., , HOOD RIVER, OREGON. Fruit or Grain Land. Forty or Eighty Acres of unimproved good fruit or grain land for sale cheap. Call on WLTl-Il I.TMP J'5 Mt. Hood Stage Hoad. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. I.ahd Office at Vancouver, Wash., Sept. 24, 1893. Notice is hereby given that the following-named settler has filed notice of his inten tion to make final commutation proof in sup port of his claim, and that said proof will he made before C. G. Green,- Clerk of the Supe rior Court of Skamania county, Washington, at Stevenson, Washington, on November 19, 1S3, viz: WILLIAM INGLES, H. E. No. 8160, for the east northeast '4 souttrwest northeast and northwest southeast 4 section 13, township 8 nortn, range H east, W. M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of, said land, viz: John P. Gillette, Nels H. Nelson, Morone Morby and Samuel H. Eccles, all of Urano, Wash, GEO. H. STEVENSOli, Register. soS.'nol A. S. BLOWERS & CO., DEALERS IN Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, FLOUR AND t FEED, Country Produce Bought and Sold. AGENCY FOR IBRADLEW'ETGALFCIE HI SIGCEST SaOT IN THE WORLD MARK COPVRIGHTir ONE GIVES RELIEF. T. C. DALLAS, DEALER IN STOVES AND TINWARE, Kitchen Furniture, PLUMBERb' GOODS. Pruning Tools, Etc. Repairing Tinware a Specialty. Fcait Bancli for Sale . Cleap. Situated 4 miles west of the town of Hood River, on the Columbia. Free from late frosts. Full crop of all kinds of fruit now on ranch. Fine irrigating facilities and water for that purpose belonging to place. Call at Glacier office or at ranch. F. B. ABSTEN. J. H. CRADLEBAUGH, . Att orney-at-La w, (Special attention given to Land Office prac tice) Rooms 44-45 Chapman Block, THE DALLES, OREGON. O.. FREDENBURG, Notary Public, ' MOUNT HOOD, v- - OREGON. . DENTISTRY. DR. E. T. CARNS is now located in Hood River. First-class work -at reasonable rates. All Work guaranteed. Office in the Langille House. . jy!9 C. J. HATES, SURVEYOR. All work given him will be done cor rectly and promptly, ' He has a few good claims upon which he can locate parties; Doth farming and timber lands. February, 1894. LECTURE COURSE AT UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH, Hood River, Oregon. 1 STANFORD MANDOLIN GLEE CLUB, - Dec. 27 Single Tickets. 35 cts.; Course, $1.50. for the FOR SALE. ... Forty acres unimproved land, on the east side of Hood river, 5 miles from town. Price $10 per acre. Inquire at Glacier office. G. T. Pbathkr, Notary Public. H. C. Coe. PRATHER & COE, Real Estate anfl Disiirance, 93 Oak St., bet. 2d and 3d. We have lots, blocks and acreage in the town of Hood River; also, fruit, hay and Derry farms and timber claims in the most desira ble locations in the valley. If you have any thing in the real estate line to sell or rent, or if you want to buy, give us a call. Deeds, bonds and mortgages promptly and correctly executed. We will also attend to legal business in jus ticks' courts We are also agents for SOUTH WAUCOMA property. PRATHER & COE. ap27 ! Brick for Sale. 50,000 Brick, at $10 per thousand delivered, or $8 at the kiln.. '!'. C, Dallas is our agent in Hood River. COX & MONROE. FOR SALE. House and corner lot In Hood River for sale cheap. Inquire at the Bakery. set) For Sale or Trade for Land in Hood River. 100 acres of good improved bunch grass land. Part in wheat crop. Near railroad station, in Morrow county, Oregon. Will trade for land in Hood River valley. Address Box No. SI, Arlington, Oregon. se!3 Bargainsin Land. 200 acres of unimproved land for sale, on the East Side, 6 miles from town, S7 to 810 an acre. Other land, about half cleared, S20 an acre. Well improved land, S30 an acre. Plenty of water for irrigation. Will sell in 20 or 40-acre tracts. Inquire at Glacier office. Je2J VWVI CELEBRATED :iUB00TS&SHOES THE "REGULATOR LINE." Navigation Co. Through Freight and Passenger Line. t. All Freight Will Come Through , Without Delay. PASSENGER RATES. One way ....,....;.............,. ...$l 89 Round trip....,. - , 2 50 Freight Rates Greatly Reduced. , V. C. ALLAWAY, General Agent. THE DALLES, OREGON K. .McNEILL, Receiver, To tlb-e . Bast, Gives the choice of TWO TPANUnnNTTTVW.NTAT. 33 O TJ TE S Via Via SPOT?" A'MU! TVFNTVTTR Minneapolis OMAHA AND AND ST. PAUL. Kansas City. Low Rates to All East . em Cities. OCEAN STEAMERS Leave Portland very five days for SAN FRANCISCO. For full details call oil O. It. & N. Agent, Hood River, or adlie. W. H. HURI.I1URT, Gen'l IW. Agent, . Portland, Oc CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT ? For prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to HI UNN fc CO., who have had nearlrflfty years' experience In the patent business. Communica tions strictly confidential. A Handbook of In formation concerning l'ntenta and bow to ob tain tbem sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan ical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through. Munn & Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public with out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far th largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free. Building Edition, monthly, $150 a year. Bingle copies, Z cents. Every number contains beau tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., New Yoiik, 361 Broadwat' , R-I-P-A-N-S . ;.,. 1 The modern stand ard Family Medi cine : Cures the common every-day ills of humanity. Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment Is unequalled for Eczema, Tetter, Salt Rlieum, Bcjilil Head, Sore Ivipples, Chapped Hands, Itching l'iles, lUirns, Frost jiites, , ClironicSore Kyes and G i-iiniiliited live Lids. For sale by druggists at 25 cents per box, to horseTowneks. For pulling aliorse in a fine healthy con-, dition try Dr. Cady's Condition l'owdera. They lone up the svsteni, aid digestion, cure loss of appetile, relieve const fpiitu n, correct kidney disorders and destroy worms, giving new life to an old or over-worked horse. 25 centj per package. For sale by druggists. For sale by Williams & Brofcitis. gr COPYRIGHTS. TMADC T'?"!v