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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (March 16, 1911)
HOOD RIVER GLACIER. THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1911 S33BSESB23SHS!,S prirkd Undermuislin Sale A Unique White Event An Occasion Unusual The scope of the selection is almost unlimited. The money-saving advantages are many and important. We invite your attendance to this sale in the enthusiastic belief that its extraordinary opportunities here offered will appeal to the taste as well as purse of every thrifty woman. Come and investigate. mm $.75 Gowns $.48 $ .35 Drawers.. $ .23 $.75 Skirts $.48 $ .258verI $.17 1.00 Gowns 63 .50 Drawers.. .33 1.25 Skirts 88 .35 23 1.25 Gowns 88 .75 Drawers.. .48 1.50 Skirts 98 .SOggvSS 33 1.50 Gowns 98 1.00 Drawers.. .63 2.00 Skirts 1.33 .75 48 2.00 Gowns 1.33 1.25 Drawers.. .88 2.90 Skirts 1.98 LOOSES 63 2.50 Gowns 1.63 1.50 Drawers.. 1.13 3.90 Skirts 2.92 1.50 Eft, 98 3.00 Gowns 2.32 1.75 Drawers.. 1.32 5.00 Skirts 3.63 Children's Drawers 3.75 Gowns 2.92 2.00 Drawers.. 1.63 6.00 Skirts 4.42 from 17c to 33c 1 if SEE WINDOW Long Kid Gloves and Long Silk Gloves FRANK A NewSpringSuits. New Plorsheim Shoes ItlilKF I.OcAI. MKM IKN. Shoes made or repaired at .JohiiBen's. P. S. Davidson was in Portland last week. A. J. Ahola was in Portland last week. G. J. week. Uessling was in Portland last Geo. Johnston was in The Dalles Friday. C. A. Richards was in The Dalles Friday. Wyoming lump eoal is the bent and the most economical. For niile by the Transfer Company, phone !. Dr. M. F. Shaw is in Portland on business. C. K. Marshal was in The Dalles Tuesday. M. H. Hutford, of The Dalles, was here Sunday. J. W. Green, of Paonia, Colorado, was here last week. B. G. I.indeman, of The Dalles, was here last Saturday. C. E. Kilgore, of Spingwater, Ore., was here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clarke were in Portland last week. Members of the baseball aggregation have begun practice. S. H. Soule wa. in The Dalles last Fariday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Kay were in Portland last Thursday. C. A. Bell, a Portland attorney was here Saturday on business. Special delicious hams. See Holman on the Heights on Saturdays. J. 0. Kountree came up from Port land Sunday and inspected his ranch. Chris Ranley has purchased the shoe shop of John Cowley on Second street. S. C. Wills, of Skamania county, Washington, was here last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Gilliam, of Portland, spent Sunday with relatives here. Members of the Epworth League met Monday evening with Miss Hazel Smith. C. L. Lemon, of Puyallup, Washing ten, was here Friday looking for a location. Mrs. Ella Lamberson returned from Portland Saturday to her ranch on the West Side. Get your Sunday meats at Holman's on the Heights. Special prices on Saturdays. Madame Carroll, of Portland, spent the week end here visiting her son, Phil Carroll. Christian Science services are held in Reading Room No. (1 Davidson Building, Sunday 11 a. m. and Wednesday 8 p. in C. K. Marshal attended a banquet of the Scottish Rite Masons in Portland last Friday night. See the new up-to-date ownership map of Hood River Valley, for sale by Hood River Abstract Co. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Heilhronner and Mr. Heilhronner's mother were i'i Portland last week. Wm. Fraser, of Rochester, Minn., was here last week looking over the Valley lands. Harry Cash, who has spent the past four months in California packing oranges, has returned. Now is the 'lime to buy coal, when you need e good, steady, hot fire. Call up the Transfer Company, phone 5, and give them your order. J. R. Shelton has arrived from the east to spend the summer. Mrs. Shel ton will come out later. Miss Bessie Stranahan left last Fri day for visit to her sister, Mrs. W. L. Carlyle, at Freehridge, Oregon. A. M. Gooch and family have re moved from Portland to the Copeland ranch which he recently purchased. 3 (Automobile insurance written by Hood River Abstract Co. Louise, the little daughter of Geo. D. Culbertson, is ill in Portland, where the family is spending the winter. Hat frames and spring models at the 5, II) and 15 cent store. Hairdressing and manicuring. Switches made from combings. Mrs. Pierce at Hotel Oregon. Inquire at desk. For Sale - Residence of J. H. Os borne, 921 State street. Inquire on premises. m2i Mr and Mrs. N. M. Tallant, of Duluth, Minn., were here the first of the week looking for a location. P Three of them in town prop- jllaPS f.r,v rKllpy ,fiTr Pl? , p G.. LmvAHiis A Co., Agts. H. C. Coshow left yesterday after noon for Scappoose, where he will join a surveying party. C. C. Taylor has been looking over the Valley land. He is interested in the manufacture of tobacco dip as a tree spray. Chris Ranley has removed his shoe shop from the Model Bakery building to the Cowley shop on Second street, op posite the poptoffice. First-class work guaranteed. Prices reasonable. Mrs. Ben Theyson, a former resi dent, who is now living in Portland, has returned to her home after a short visit here. For Fire Insurance see Tweedy. He is agent for the Horticultural Fire Re lief. A saving of 40 per cent to you. This is one of the strongest com panies in Oregon. m23 Dr. Harry Keenan, of Rosland Washington, was here last week visit ing the family of his brother-in-law, E. O. Blanchar. Will do cleaning at your house with vacuum cleaner. Also have the Peele Lava on hand for pale, and will clean with it if desired. Phone 2K4-K. Morn ing or evening. Mib. M. Morris. mSl Chris Ranley has removed from the bakery building on Fourth street to the Cowley shoe shop, which he has purchased, on Second street opposite the postoflice. I'tah laud plaster at Whiteheads. G. W. Brown was in The Dalles Tuesday. John Ewald, of Boise, was here the first of the week. If you want shoes that don't go wrong go to Johnsen's. IRoy Slocom, of White Salmon, spent Sunday here with friends. W. B. Christianson, of Stevenson, Wash., was here Tuesday. Millinery flowers and straw braid at the 5, 10 and 15 cent store. Insure your automobile against acci dent. See Hood River Abstract Co. Millinery Mowers and straw braid at the 5, 10 and 15 cent store. Although Lent is not yet over Marshal Lewis has donned an Easter suit. Residence of J. H. Osborne, 921 State street for sale. Inquire on prem ises. m2i Sheriff Johnson's two year old child, who has been very sick with pneu monia, is recovering. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Smith have re turned to their home after a visit with Portland relatives. When you get ready to sow that clover field, do not buy old feed, go to McDonald and get fresh seed. a-0 E. J. Sinex and T. Fisher have opened a plumbing shop on the corner of Cascade Ave. and Second street. Special ham and lard sales on Satur days. Holman on the Heights. I can also furnish ground bone for poultry. If interested in an S00 acre tract of raw fruit land near Portland at per acre. Telephone L'77-M. Will bear the closest investigation. m'Si Prof. E. J. Krau.se and R. W. Reeves, of O. A. C, werej here last week making pollenization experi ments. Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Haworth and Brooks rHaworth have returned from an extended visit to Los Angeles, Calif. Geo. W. Blodgett, of the Upper Valley, who has been spending the winter at Longbeach, Calif., returned Tuesday. Miss Tena Jorgcnson has gone to Olympia, Wash., to spend the Hummer with her brother, J. L. Jorgenson, of that place. The first of the 1911 Model Q Max well has arrived in the city and has been delivered to J. J. Knapp, its purchaser. We have a limited amount of fertil izer in stock now, but would advise or dering at once as Portland supplies are already short and we may not be able to till l roken lines later on. See Stran ahan & Clark. m-HO Wiliam R. Warner and wife, of Iliil adelphia, have been spending the win ter in California, are here visiting F. B. Kimball. William R. Warner III has been with Mr. Kimball for the past month. After a short stay they will return to their home in the least. corw-urrHES ONT depend on the other fellow for style; make him depend on you. Don't think you've got the smartest looking clothes in town un til you've seen all the clothes in town. Don't think that because a suit is at tractively priced that it will wear satisfactorily find out first. Be certain you get quality. Quali ty clothes can't be any other way than attractive and they've got to give satisfaction. We'll be more than pleased to display these clothes for you. They're mighty good and smart. $5.00 to $20.00 (SEE WINDOW) J. G. VOGT Utah land plaster at Whiteheads. L. E. Swan, of White Salmon, was in the city Tuesday. Wire hat frames, spring styles at the 5, 10 and 15 cent store. Just received a car load of wmd pipe. ml6 Jos. A. Wilson. Millinery Dowers and braid at the 5, 10 and 15 cent store. " Wire hat frames, spring styles at the 5, 10 and 15 cent store. M. A. Walter and wife, of Portland, was here Tuesday on a visit. M. J. Van Vosrt, of White Salmon, was here Friday on a business trip. Born -To Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. Rogers, of the Upper Valley, a little girl. Wire wound Bpray hose will stand your power pump. Buy it from Mc Donald, a-ti Free Employment Bureau. Baiitist parsonage, cor., 11th Pine Sts. Address S R. llargreaves. Phone l'42-I. All of Hood River's citizens of Irish ancestry will wear the Shamrock Sat urday in honor of the great St. Patrick. A house and lot on State street, east of Ninth street, for $1,500. Terms one-half cash. G. Y. Edwards & Co. Mrs. R. T. Newhall is in Springville, Utah, where she has gone to attend the wedding of her brother, Albert Eugene Wright. The play, "The School Ma'am," which recently proved so popular at Odell, will be given tomorrow at the Pine Grove hall. Miss Margaret Witte, who was here nursing a patient at the Cottage hosnital. returned to her home in Port land last week. J. B. Lockwood, consulting engineer for the city of Portland, and Mrs. Lockwood were here last week visiting the family of J. A. Epping. C. L. Shirriff, district manager of the Woodmen of the World, who is located at Portland, was here this week in the interest of his order. A young man of the Upper Valley, who has been boasting to his friends of his thirty fine hens, recently dis covered that 12 of them were roosters. A. B. Coombs, who is interested in the inurance business in Portland, has been spending a few dayss here this week looking after his ranching interests. A local teacher's institute will be held here in the high school building April 8. L. R. Alderman, state super intendent, will be the principal speaker of the meeting. Lou Morgan, who is now ranching near Oregon City, came up Monday accompnied by his little niece, the daughter of W. A. Morgan, of Port land, whose wife is very sick. If you have anything in cabinet work, door and window frames, screens, re pairing or anything in the carpenter line call H0i-X. Wright's Carpenter Shop ot the old Armory building. All kinds of house painting and in terior decorating, tinting and paper hanging. Paper at Portland prices. Frank Dayton, Cascade and Second streets. Phones LW-M. and 342-L. Geo. I. Reeves, who is with the United States department of agricul ture at Vancouver, Washington, was here "this week, visiting Dr. J. D. Himebaugh and W. H. Goodnough, Jr. Frank Dayton, the painter, is now prepared to do all kinds of sijrn work, also carriage and automobile painting, in bis new quarters on Cascade and Second streets. Phones 208-M. and 342-L. Stanley Clemmons, of the Chanselor Lyons Automobile Supply Co., one of the largest supply houses of the Pacific Coast, was here last week took a large order from the Tip Top Motor Co. A. Lindis, of Silverton, was here this week attending to business. Mr. Lindis says that he is well pleased with his new home, but states that Hood River looks mighty good and is showing great progress. Among the first of the tourists to arrive here from the cast after the inauguration of the rates were Ernest J. Richter land family and Geo. H. Keagle and family, who come from Illinois. They wil locate on ranches here. H. R. Allen, who was returning to his home in Illinois from California, where he spent the winter, was here last week visiting Capt. J. H. Dukes, under whom he served as Orderly Sergeant during the civil war. This was the first meeting of the two men in thirty vears. Hunt Paint & Wall Paper Company . New spring line of Wall Paper. Everything new, no old stock. Remnants at big reductions to make room for new stock. R. K. Eaton and E. B. Ayers have been here this week on business. The Hunt Club will meet Saturday night with Mr. ami Mrs. Walter C. E. Smith. R. R. Hoge, of Portland, was here yesterday to lo"k after his ranching interests. Will Graham, of Portland, was here last week visiting his brother Bert Graham. He attended the K. of P. convention Saturday. Miss Beth Edgington, who is attend ing the St. Mary's Academy at The Dalles, where she is studying music, spent the week end here with her parents. Capt. and Mrs. C. P. McCan were in Portland yesterday on their way to Pleasanton, Calif., where Dick Wilson is training some of Capt. McCan's horses. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. L. Smith, who have been spending the last four months in Iowa and California, return ed to their home on the East Side last week. The Loyal Bereans will give a social in the parlors ot the first Christian church Sunday morning. Admission free. A small charge will be made for lunch. Geo. W. Cheseboro, and Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Simth were here this week to attend the funeral of Phil S. Boyd, the unfortunate young man who ended his life last Thursday night. The Upper Valley Progresisve Asso ciation will hold a special meeting to morrow night. J. C. Skinner, secre tary of the Commercial Club will he in attendance and will give an address. Arthur Clarke and Clarence Gilbert received much applause from the knights Saturday night, at the meeting of the K. of P. convention, when they gave the Dutch skits recently given by them at the Valentine Village fete. VfC 'i:iVe over Miolieautiful I"1' V& terns to select from for Ladies' and Gents' suitings. It is a lileasure to show them. J. C. Thomas, Ladies' and dents Tailoring. Frank McFarland, of Portland, whs here Sunday. Mr. McFarland, who was formerly a resident of this place, is in the real estate business in the Rose City with offices in the Yeon building. Cheap Building Sites Residence lots in the new Middleton Addition, one block Bouth of High School. Price $250 to $:i50, 10 per cent down, easy install ments. John Leland Henderson, Inc. Accompanied by his brother, Lafe Keith, of Lake City, Minn., ('has. J. Keith, of Omaha, Neb., was here last week visiting Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Lvnn. The two have been making an exten sive tour of the southern and western fruit sections. "The Champion of Women's Rights" a study of the character of Deborah will be the sixth of the "Pictures of Womanhood" at the Congregational Church next Sunday Evening. All are invited. The morning subject will be "The School of the Burning Bush." W. J. Wilson, who has charge of Capt. C. P. McCan's horses, will leave for Salem next week with the Patchen Hoy, Oregon, the big Percheron stal lion and a yearling filly which he will train there. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Sleddon were in Portland Tudesday. Mr. Sleddon made I arrangements with the distributing department of the Maxwell Automo bile Co. to have his shipments increas ed. He also arranged to handle the Hartford tire. Burleigh Cash has returned from Eusrene. where he sold the house and lot occunied bv the Bachelor Club. composed of a number of Hood River hoys who were attending the univer sity last vear. The lot was purchased for $125. He disposed of it for the sum of $100. Mrs. Morton, whose husband is pres ident of the Ottawa bank at Prince Albert, Canada, accompanied by Miss Shannon, one of the 70 nurses who served during the Boer war, decorated by King Edward for efficient service, have been visiting in this city. By my 18 years of experience I am able to produce plants of exceflent quality. 30,000 spring plants, shrubs and ornamental bushes on hand. 800 roses in stock. I take any orders for planting in town. Seed for sale. Phone 284M. Geo. Haslinger. Valentine Nehrbauer, a pioneer of the Valley, who moved last fall to Beaverton near Portland, was in the city last Thursday and Friday 'attend ing to tax business. Mr. Nehrbauer reports that he is well pleased with his new home on account of the proximity of the city s conveniences. Dr. .1. F. Watt. W. S. Montgomery and James E. Montgomery attended the Alumni banouet of the Siema Chi fraternity held in Portland Friday night. W. S. Montgomery was in Eugene Saturday night to attend an initiation of University of Washington chapter of the fraternity. Particular People ...INSIST ON... Whiting's Stationery Why not as particular in your Stationery as in your Dress Both make the same impression There are lots of Papers, but only one WHITINGS. The Home for Whiting's Stationery .Slocom's Boc'r. and Art Store.. Fresh Flower Garden Field vSeeds I Franz Hardware Co. ANNOUNCEMENT A TTENTION, CUSTOM KItS ! The main question of the day is, "How to reduce our living ex penses." In order to aid in this work the Central Meat Market will, on April 1, go on a cash basis and take off its free delivery, thereby reducing expens es, and thus enabling us to cut prices, and you will gain the benefit of this reduction. Hoping this plan will meet with the approval of the public in general and that all can see the feasi bility of it, we will always be ready to welcome you 1 at our market, and by prompt and ready attention to your requirements will endeavor to merityour patron age. We are adopting this plan to enable our regu lar customers to procure their living necessities at a much lower figure. Central Meat Market P. C. YOUNG, Proprietor