The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, May 14, 1903, Image 5

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    Hosier Items.
Mower, May 12. Captaiu Minnie
McGregor of Walla Wallu la the guest
of bcr father this week.
The Mimes Ethel and Lois Taylor of
iui:i me vmiung lueir grand
mother, Mrs. M. J. Mosier.
The Friday Niglu club gave its final
up at me resweuce ot A. Root, on Fri
day night. ,
Charles Stark was a passenger on Fri
day for The Dalles. 6
Pete lleuuingxeti and wife relumed,
raiuiuujr, inpui roruanu via I He Dulles.
iney spent tne past month in the met
ropolis.
Mrs. E. Cobb returned from Hood
uiver baturuuy evening.
The Mosier base bail nine sneut Sat
urriuy afternoon in general athletic
piacuce preparatory for a uiateh game.
J. N. Mosier was a Dalles visitor
paiuruay.
Mrs. E. C. Shaw visited in Hood
River the hist of the week, returuiug
George Smith, who has beeu the
guest of h Is sister, Mrs. V. A. Vroniati,
for some time past, has returned to
iioou iviver.
Mrs. E. V, Phillips and daughters of
ruruuim are me guests or relatives.
Mrs. E. A. Gibert returned home from
Pine flat, Monday, afiei an absence of
several weeks.
Fred Evans has returned from a brief
visit in The Dalles.
Alice Guuuing of The Dalles is visit
ing at the home of her grandmother,
Mrs. L. J. Duvet) port.
The Regulator company hag a force
of men at work on their dock, which is
being built at the mouth of Rock creek.
Miss Maybelle Boorman spent Satur
day with her parents at Hood River.
Mrs. VV. Long of Portland is the
guest of her mother this week.
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Hunter have re
turned from Portland after an absence
of several weeks.
Mrs. Robert Deusmore and son Clar
ence were Dalles visitors during the
week.
Mrs. M. J. Mosier visited relatives at
The Dulles during last week.
G. L. Davenport of the Davenport
Thompson company spent Sunday at
home, returning to Portland Monday
morning.
B. Eben, sr., returned from Portland,
where he has beeu under medical treat
ment. '
Mrs. D. A. Sturglss returned from
Portland, and will make a brief stay at
home.
Mr. and Mrs. M. Dichtenmuller of
The Dalles were guests of friends on
Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dichtenmuller
were former residents of Mosier.
Mrs. A. Watt returned from Portland
on Sunday. Mrs. Watt has been a pa
tient at St. Vincent's hospital for the
past month, and returned much im
proved. Pine (jrovc Meanings.
II. D. Slater is expected home today
from Portland, where he has been vis
iting with his sou Charles and family.
Miss Church of Belmont is visiting at
Mrs. Hunt's and also with the Sproat
families.
A son of regulation weight was born
to Mr. and Mrs. Martin Thorn. All are
getting along nicely.
Mrs. MoC ill loh and children have re
turned to their home at Regina, Can
ada, after spending the winter here.
Mrs. McCulloh is a sister of Mrs. Boyd
Sproat. Her brother went with her
and will remain during the summer.
W. V. Johnson has let the contract
for building his new house to E. A.
S'Uile. He is going to build on his 40
acre ranch, opposite Peter Mohr's, and
will occupy the house us soon as com
pleted. Mr. Sieverkrop hus hauled several
loads of apples from Dr. Watt's orchard
to the Sehaetzle place and is having
them made into cider for vinegar.
Mr. Brock, sr., and family expect to
move upon the place recently pur
chased of S. H. Harbison. They will
try camping until a house can be built.
Dukes Valley Items.
May 11. We are having dry, warm
weal her for this time of year and would
all rejoice to see a good rain.
The farmers are all about done with
their spring work.
There has been aboutoOacres of clover
sown this ppring in our little valley.
Our school is progressing nicely under
the watchful care of Miss Norman.
J. F. Dodson and J. 8. Carnahan are
still tearing out the grubs, although the
ground is getting dry.
There will be a bnsket social at the
Dukes valley school house Saturday
night, May lb, and all are invited to at
tend and enjoy the evening with us.
There will be a short programme and as
line a supper as Dukes valley can afford.
The proceeds are to go toward a library
for the school.
Lust Sunday the good people of Dukes
valley met at the school house and or
ganized a Sunday school, and next Sim
day will be our tirst attempt to hold a
Sunday school in this place. We would
like to see the house lull of both young
ami old. 1 here is enough here to have
a Hood school and even body is invited
out next Sunday at 2:30 p. in. Come
ami join with us. 1. K. 1.
(Iiciiuwctli New.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tubba desire to
thank their kind neighbors w ho gave aid
and sympathy in their recent bereave
ment, in the death ol tlieir clulU LielDen
Merril.
A. J. Hay nes, the Cheuoweth mail
earner, was called to Portland Saturday
infill bv a telegram stating that his
father, L. S. I lay lies, was very low witn
heart trouble amt other complications.
During his abi-clic, Will Underwood is
currying the mail Irom Hood hiver.
Arrangements are being made for a
dance ami supper at the null camp on
the night ol -May oil.
Mrs. Eurl Kevs arrived last week from
the East to join her husband.
It is current report herethat the Wash
ington Lumber company has bought out
the Oreiton Lumber company. The
facts ju the case are not obtainable at
present, but it is the general belief that
i he transaction has been made.
Odell Notes.
An entertainment and basket social
will be given by the Dukes valley school
Saturday evening. May IS, at the Dukes
alley school hou.-e, proceeds to be ap
plied toward purchasing school library.
Kverylxnly cordially invited.
A camp has Iwn established at the
old James English place by the Idaho
ditch people. A small force is engaged
in cluaring the right of way, preparatory
to putting on a large force of men on the
ditch worK.
Dr. Whitney, who is connected with
. the Portland. "-anitarinni, is at present
the guest of C A.Wynian. She is accom
panied by a lady friend.
Mrs. Ivi D vis, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.Wymau, i also sojourning at Odell
The roa N arc lined a ith lumber Vag
ons and much improvement is manifest
here. A fine barn is just about com
pleted on the Charles Ehrck place, a
half-mile southwest of Odell. The
work wag done by Belieu & Rea of Hood
River. James Eggert has a five-year
lease on this place.
The new bridge which is being built
at V mans' across Hood river, proves to
, ou uaiaii Liai structure. Ine lumber
is oeing lurnislicd by Davenport Bros,
from tlieir mill near Odell.
A small wing was added to the little
w w store last weelc. Another wing
will soon be built on, and then if it does
not fly it will not be for a lack of wingx.
o ??VC" A- Wyman'a lectures on the
Sabbath are well attended, and are the
subject of much discussion. To the
writer it matters not so much what day
is observed, as how each day is lived.
It is fruit we need, not professions nor
promises.
W.II. Sears has recently done excellent
nui" lut-Ker nui. tie win take up the
wurn Mi' it i n rnmnrrnu; and nrhon ns-.r. ut
ed it will reflect credit on Will as a super
visor ana prove a comtort to those passing
that way. The grader should have
been rillf on lh.A rnnita a mnlK anAM
1 U1UU,U CI ".III. I l
I here are clouds of dust now, because
it was too ary when the roads were
worked. But that was not the fault of
Sears, but on account of the grader
being in use elsewhere.
A picnic will be given at the park at
the little white Htirft nnwitnv nof truck
See posters.
Manv f.lnvnr floUta hava Mmntlv Kaan
J ' " " ..H.w 1 VV.VIIV1J UWI
sown here and the work of irrigation is
nOW On. The recent, rlntnanrl and orvnH
prices for hay has prompted this. Clo
ver meauows pay.
C. L. Ropers has ointil 9( atroa nt ant
on Willow Flat to a gentleman from
Spokane, so report has it. Willow Flat
is far-famed and much development is
going on there.
Don't be a Knocker.
A well-known Portland merchant is do
ing some much needed missionary work
among the knockers this spring and
Bummer oy geiung out several thousand
"anti-knock" cards, says the Oregonian
note and comment man. He keeps a
supply of the cards on his counter, and
as the opportunity occurs, he passes
them out to people with hammers. The
cards bear his advertisement on one
side and the following pertinent advice
on the other:
"Don't Knock If there is a ch anpe to
boom business, boom it. Don't be a
knocker. Don't pull a long face and get
sour on your stomach. Hope a bit Get
a smile on you. Hold up your head.
Get a hold with both hands. Then pull.
Bury your hatchet. Drop your toma
hawk. Hide your little hammer. When
a stranger drops in tell him this is the
greatest town on earth. It is. Don't
get mulish. Don't roast. Be jolly. Get
popular. It's dead easy. Help yourself
along. Push your friend with you.
Soon you'll have a whole procession. Be
a good fellow.
"No man ever helped himself by knock
ing other people down. No man ever
got rich trying to make people believe
that he was the only good man on earth.
lou can't climb the ladder of fame bv
stepping on other people's corns. They're
their corns not vours. And
they're tender. ' Keep off the corns.
ah men are not alike. Once in a
while you may find one who is very
much alike. But some are different.
You're not the only shirt in the wash.
If vou don't like their stvle let 'em
alone. Don't knock. You'll get used to
it. 1 Here's no end of fun in minding
your own business. And it makes other
people like yon better. Better have oth
ers get Bltick on you than get stuck on
yourself. iNouody gets stuck on a
knocker. Don't be one. Be good."
Ten Helpless Liars.
Baltimore Herald.
Rev. Sam Jones on one occasion de
livered his sermon called "Wives and
Husbands" before an immense gather
ing in Birmingham, Ala. He dwelt
particularly on the beauty and utility
of mutual forbearance between hus
bands and wives, and then, as though
desirous of showing the rarity of that
quality, said:
it mere is a woman in tins vast
gathering who has never said an un
kind word to tier husband, she will
please stand up."
A woman arose, as though she had
been challenged, and Jones, beckening
her with both arms, called out:
"Come here, sister! Come right up
to the platform!"
The woman did as hidden, and when
she reached the preacher's side was pre
sented to the throng as the "most
lieautitul woman in liirniiiighaiu."
Joneb, continuing his address, asked
any man who had never spoken an un
kind word to his wife to make himself
known. Promptly arose ten big strap
ping, self-conscious chaps, who started
for (he platform without further bid
ding ami with an air that suggested
the anticipation or praise Irom the
preacher, who, as they neared him,
said:
"That's right, my men! Come right
up! I want everybody here to gaze on
leu of the most helpless liars in the
United States."
A Startling Test.
To save a life, Dr. T. G. Merritt, of
North Mehoopany.Pa., made a startling
test resulting in a wonderful cure. He
writes: "A patient was attacked with
hemorrhages, caused by ulceration of
the stomach. I had often found Elec
tric bitters excellent for acute stomach
and liver troubles so I prescribed them.
The patient gained from the first, and
has not had nil attack in 14 months."
Electric bitters are positively guaran
teed for dyspepsia, indigestion.constipa
tion and kidney troubles. Try them.
Only 50c at Chas. N. Clarke's drug store.
An Advertising Pointer.
Sun Jose (Ol.) Mercury.
A few years ago it was said that 40,
000,100 advertising calendars had been
given away in a single year at a cost of
?1. 000,000. This car, it is stated, most
of the lending establishments will not
distribute calendars, preferring to add
the sum they would cost to their news
paper advertising appropriations. Nearly
all Fchcme for publicity are worth
something, but it is undeniable that the
very best is newspaper advertising.
President KmiseVrlt at Portland.
For the aUive occasion O. R. & N. Co.
will sell round trip tickets to Portland,
trains 3 and 5, May 21, at one fare for
the round triji fl.tK.; good returning,
May '!. l'.H)3. Children between 5 and
12 years of age, 95 cents. E. W. Quarles,
Agent.
In accordance with the law passed al
the last session of the legislature, the
eoiiiiiii-f inner of hortietiluire has no
tified all nuoervnteii of the provision
of the law which requires theiu to de
posit n bond of $.1,000 with the state lie
fore they can continue to do business
in the state of Washington. The home
concerns may furnish the ordinary
bond required in such chs, but out
side nurserymen mint furnish a bond
as provided by certain approved secur
ity cnmimide. These Umds are re
quired so that the pommimioner may
take action avainst any concern tbat
may not comply with the provisions of
the nursery law. uiyrnpia Kecoraer.
A JAPANESE GARDEN.
Follow This Beclno a Yoa Will
Ban One Complete.
The classical garden, like a sonnet, ii
governed by special laws of harmony
and rhythm. It must have its five
hills, Its ten trees and its fourteen
atones. You can get along without the
hills, and yoa can get along without
the trees, but' you cannot get along
without stones. Indeed the perfect
type of the flat garden is notldng but
an archipelago of rocks In a sea of
white pebbles. The stones must be
the foundation; the rest are mere ac
cessories. Speaking stones are what
Is wanted stones that suggest moods
and passions for the Japanese recog
nize tbat there are sermons In stones.
Each stone has Its name and relative
place to the composition. There is
the guardian stone In the center and
opposite It the bellevlew stone. Across
the cascade is the moonshade stone
and so on.
The hills unmask each other by rule,
The principal bill has its two foothills,
Its spur hills, Its distant peak, seen
through a valley, and the low hill that
must stand on the op.ioslte side of the
lake.
As there are a principal stone and a
principal hill, so must there be a "prin
cipal tree," the shojin boku, around
which the Tree of Perfection, the Tree
of Evil, the Tree of the Setting Sun,
the Tree of Science and the Tree of
Solitude bow their lesser heads.
These are the essentials. Now, add
one pond, one Island, two stone lan
terns, three bridges and mix thorough
ly, garnish with lotus and serve with
goldfish and mandarin duck. There Is
a recipe for a Japanese garden. Wil
liam Verbeck lu Country Life.
A SMALL LIBRARY.
The Principle of Selection on Which
It Shoeld Be Baaed.
I think that a limit of three books
will usually allow a very fair repre
sentation of a novelist. For instance,
Thackeray is very fairly represented
by "Vanity Fair," "Henry Esmond"
and "Pendennls" and Dickens by
"Pickwick," "David Copperfleld" and
"Martin Cbuzzlewlt" Walter Scott
would not suffer by one choosing
"Ivanhoe," "The Bride of Lammer
moor" and "The Heart of Midlothian."
"Tom Jones" would suffice for Field
ing and "Pride and Prejudice" for Jane
Austen, "The Mill on the Floss" for
George Eliot and "The Ordeal of Rich
ard Feverel" for George Meredith.
Taking only the great outstanding fig
ures, Tolstoi need only be present with
"Anno, ICarenlna" and "War and
Peace" and Emile Zola with, say,
"Drink" and "The Dream." "The Three
Musketeers" and "The Count of Monte
Christo" would suffice for Alexandre
Dumas and "Les Mlserables" and "No
tre Dame de Paris" for Victor Hugo.
It is harder to say of the vast mountain
range of Balzac on what particular
peaks our choice should fall, but prob
ably here again the most popular books
will prove the most typical "Le Pere
Goriot," "Eugenie Grandet" and "The
Ass' Skin."
I am not, It must be understood, malt
ing a list of books "without which," as
the booksellers say, "no gentleman's
library Is complete." I am only taking
a few standard authors for the purpose
of illustrating a principle of selection
which must perforce operate In a small
library. If our library does not or can
not contain the best books, It must cer
tainly contain some of them, and, how
ever Idiosyncratic of its owner, It must
bear the stamp of a general distinc
tion. Richard Le Gallienne in Success.
BETTER THAN PILLS.
The Qrmnaalnm Hats Cared Many a
Cavse of Drepepslav.
William H. Evarts used to boast that
be had never even looked into a gym
nasium, which was his way of saying
that in his opinion gymnastics were all
nonsense. "People say to me, 'Mr.
Evarts, you're hale and hearty when
you ought to be thinking of your
grave, and they wonder how I do It."
Of course the secret of the haleness
and the heartiness was temperance
moderation, says the New York News.
No man who goes to bed on a supper
of mince pie and Welsh rabbit and
wakes up for a breakfast of sausage
and buckwheat cakes and then spends
most of the day twisting from one side
of a desk to the other can long avoid
the prescription of hot water thrice a
day before meals. "Temperance" is
one of the words that are ridiculed un
til they impress themselves upon giddy
humanity with the effect of a branding
iron.
Some happy mortals like Mr. Evarts
have no use for a gymnasium, for they
find gymnastic apparatus everywhere.
The street Is their half mile track; the
two flights of steps or maybe ten
flights are the lung developers; the
free and vigorous swing of the arms
and the throwing out of the chest are
as good as parallel bars.
There are men somewhat Intemper
ate In their temperance, displaying too
much of the good thing. They crack
your knuckles when they take you by
the hand; they pound you on the back,
as If a fishbone were stuck In your
throat, and say, "Brace up, old man;
you'll be round shouldered if you don't
take care."
But there is this to be said in favor
of the gymnasium It has cured many
a case of dyspepsia and to that extent
has made the world sweeter.
DOING A GREAT DEED.
How Phllltpa Brooka Sobered Down
n Too Aanlrtnc Yonth.
When Boston's great preacher, Phil-
Hps Brooks, was a student at college,
he decided to enter the ministry. HW
Instructors advised him against this
step because of an Impediment in
speech. "The professors had all the
argument on their side," said the fa
mous clergyman years after when by
patient effort be bad gained control of
bis voice, "but naturally I could not
protest, for words tailed me."
To this preacher's study there came
one day a youth, physically perfect,
ambitious for honor and looking for a
short cut up the road to success. He
Intimated that be wished to do some
great thing better than It could be done
by any one else.
Phillips Brooka wrote tepidly upon a
piece of paper while bis visitor was
speaking, sealed it In an envelope and
then uexeeted.uaijAf Bote be read
il he
Offers the
and Country Property.
80. Forty acres, finest of apple land; all can be cul
tivated, near Tucker's 4,000
79. Twenty acres, half cleared; house of G rooms;
free water; 120 three-year-old apple trees;
18,000 young nursery trees; good berry land 1,750
7o. 40 acres in upper valley; 5 acres in orchard and
clover; 20 inches free water; 5 room house.. 850
73. 160 acres oak land; fine spring; good apple
land; f 20 per acre.
. 72. Fourteen acres, with good new house, close in
on East Side; bearing berries and apples 2,800
00. 70 acres on Washington side; bargain at 800
67. 80 acres in Upper Hood River valley; 2,000,000
feet saw timber; good apple land G.'O
B. New house and barn, 10 acres of finest land for
berries or clover; all in crop; 3 miles out;
beautiful home for some one 4,500
4. House with 11 rooms; good locationjfor 10 days, $1,000
14. Two-story house and 2 lots; house plastered 900
3. Seven-room house on State street 1,400
22. House and lot close in, on Sherman ave 450
18. House and two lots, Blowers addition 1,500
30. Five-room house, two lots, Park street, close in 1,600
Lots in Coe's addition from .$175 up; finest resi
dence property in the city.
81. Forty acres, all under cultivation but 3 acres; 3
acres in berries; 4 acres in apples; rest in clover and
alfalfa; 4 miles out 6,000
The Man who SELLS
to
wnen rne man reached home. The let
ter read: "Stand in the moonlight and
you will cast a shadow. No man can
cast a shadow Just llktf It"
The young man realized that the
preacher had made his honest ambi
tion seem ridiculous, but made another
attempt On the original letter he
wrote, "Possible, but I desire that the
deed I do be of benefit to my fellow
men."
Back came the original letter, with
these words added: "Then stand in the
sunlight and permit the worklngman
to eat his lunch in your shadow."
All Happens In n Second.
A second is the smallest division of
time in general use, and when we con
sider that In one year there are about
31,558,000 of these periods It would
certainly seem as If it was enough for
all practical purposes. But, after ail,
a good deal can happen in the fraction
of a second.
A light wave, for Instance, passes
through a distance of about 186,000
miles in this length of time. A current
of electricity has probably an even
greater speed. The earth In Itself
moves in Its orbit at a rate of about
twenty miles a second.
A tuning fork of the French standard
vibrates 870 times per second to pro
duce the note A on the treble staff.
May mmi December.
Our great-grandfathers had a way of
announcing marriage ceremonies which
would hardly find favor nowadays.
The following cases in point have been
unearthed:
"On Aug. 22, 1782, at Bath, Captain
Hamilton, aged twenty-eight, married
Mrs. Monson, an aged lady of eighty
six, but possessing rank and much
wealth."
"Robert Judge of Cooksborough, Ire
land, aged ninety-five, to Miss Annie
Nugent, aged fifteen. Bobert Judge
was an officer in BUng William's army
and was wounded In the nose." Lon
don Express.
Oddltlee of Lots.
He I don't know how It Is, but I've
noticed it Is the girl who puzzles all
the other girls "what be could have
Been In her" who is the first to get mar
ried.
She And It is the man that the girls
say they wouldn't have if he were the
last man on earth who has his pick of
all the pretty girls In town. Boston
Transcript
tmaerstlTe.
Schoolmaster Now, Jones, give me
a sentence, and then we win see tr we
can change It to the imperative form.
Pnntl The horse draws the wairon.
Schoolmaster Now put it in the im
perative.
Pupil-Gee up! Chums.
Nothing more completely baffles one
who is full of trick and duplicity than
Straightforward and simple Integrity
Is another. Cotton.
Always the Mode.
Vrai Ann't pare much for disnlaTT"
"Not much," replied the very wealthy
man.
"Yet there is some satisfaction In not
beine wholly out of style,"
"That ! the Doint exactly. The
things that money buys go out of fash
ion In a few moaths, but tne money it
self becomes more siyusa every cen
tury."-WashIngton Star.
Real Estai
Following
LIST your
Foretells Death by Sense of Smell.
There's an old superstition tbat a
howling dog in front of the house of
an III person portends death. One
prominent physician believes absolute
ly in it This physician has a wonder
fully acute sense of smell. Frequent
ly, he says, he can foretell the coming
of death within forty-eight hours of a
patient's demise. Within two days of
death, he says, a peculiar earthy odor
becomes noticeablo about a person
about to die. lie tells of one case
where he became aware of the pe
culiar odor while talking to an ap
parently healthy man. That night the
man dropped dead of heart disease.
The physician Is far from attributing
the peculiar manifestation to other
than physiological reasons. His own
sense of smell is abnormally acute.
New York Press.
Hotel Bllla In Enartaad.
The author of "Portugal Old and
New" finds fault with English hotel
keepers for using a printed form of bill
on which the plain requirements of a
simple traveler are lost amid a multi
tude of Items. The result Is that when
a guest pays for a day's and a nlghfs
lodging he Is positively almost ashamed
at finding due registry of his having
wanted neither liquors nor stationery
nor warm baths nor douche baths nor
shower baths nor pots of Jam nor the
hotel hairdresser and is apt to reflect
what a poor shuffling impostor of a
guest he is to have had so few require
ments. Followed the Example of Cao.
In the first year of the last century
London affected great admiration for
Cato's suicide, the feeling being arous
ed by Addison's play. A gentleman
named Budgell, after witnessing us
performance, threw himself into the
Thames on his way home. His body
was recovered, and on it was found a
scrap of paper with these words: "What
Cato did and Addison approvea musi
needs be right"
Slightly Different.
"Dat were a very excitln' Jackpot I
won las night on a bluff," said Mr.
Erastus Pinkley as he tilted his cigar
and dropped his hat over his eye.
"Did you raise the opener?" asked
Mr. James Coliflower.
"No, sah; I opened a razor." asn
Ington Star.
She Helped.
"Did she help you to propose?"
"Well, rather! She asked how many
boxes of candy would pay for an en
gagement rtng."-Detroit Free Press.
Creel Perversion.
She Do you recall the day we were
married?
He I wish to gracious I couldl
fonkers Statesman.
Ratnral Seaaenee.
"Yes," concluded the medical racon
teur, "she became iusane through ex
cessive dancing."
"One might say she was bopping
ad, I supposer gurgled the cheerful
idiot Baltimore American.
A Difference.
The Friend Is your daughter hap
pily married?
The Fatner Well, happily she's mar
ried. Kansas City Independent.
Good ordet Is the foundation of all
good things. Burke.
Bargains
Property
Property with.
SEXTON & WALTHER,
The Dalles, Oregon,
Agents for the Celebrated
Smith Grubbing Machines.
We also carry the best Steel Wire Cable for Stump Pulling; Rope
Shorteners; Snatch flocks; Grubbing Hooks and extra Rope Hooks.
Write for Prices.
Free Delivery. Phone 571.
O. B. HARTLEY,
Hood River, Or.,
-DEALER IN-
Groceries, Fruits and Wood.
Ii. R JOCHIMSEN,
Real Estate Dealer,
Has Lands of all kinds in Hood River valley for
sale at from 5 an acre up to $400. Strawberry
land, apple land, Meadow land and Timber lands.
Also, Town Lots and Blocks.
See Him for
C. T. RAW80N.
HOOD RIVER NURSERY.
We respectfully announce to the public that we have for the
coming planting seasons a hue lot of trees of all kinds.
Thrifty, Smooth, and True to Name.
Orders are now being booked as received and varieties furnished
as long as they last. This season will witness larger plantings of
single sorts than any in the history of this valley, and to get what
you want will necessitate early orders.
We would also state that we are prepared to furnish for next
season's planting anv number and ANY VARIETY, GROWN
ESPECIALLY FOR YOU.
Long experience in the nursery business enables us to guarantee
satisfaction.
Nursery on East Hide, at crossingof Neal creek. Orders solicited.
RAWSON & STANTON, Hood River, Or.
THE NEW
FEED STORE.
On the Mount Hood road, South
of town, keeps constantly on hand
the best quality of
Hay, Grain and Fenl,
At Lowest Prlre.
dt l. f. LAM AR. Prop.
THE
Barber Shop,
On the Hill,
S. C. JACKSON, Proprietor. Will
do pirture framing In connwtion. Kxm
niolilingn and all kindaof ptmireand window
f lBcnilmly on band. Cll and Hm
pics of wall paper. Phone
THE-
New License,
Manahutored In Hood River by A. White
bee i. A better risar tb.n lit obtainable else
wbera !r tne money
TRY ONE.
iWlan,
in Town
is the Man
Bargains.
ap!
F. II. STANTON.
L. C. Ilayneg
James K. UeBor'i
BON TON
BARBER SHOP.
The place to get an easy shave, an
up-to-date buir cut, and to enjoy the
luxury of a porcelain bath tub.
L. H. RICHMOND,
Contractor
and Builder.
Plans furnished and Estimates given
on Buildings. Juyl
Contractor
and Builder
Plans and Estimates Fcbkishkd.
S. H. COX.