HOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2G, 1911 THE ORCHARDIST Security Ladder Not a nail in them. Absolutely the strongest and lightest made. Palmer and Burnett Picking Pails Most Complete Line of Supplies, Nails and Strippers MALTHOID ROOFING has proven its worth here for ten years. You buy right, because we buy in car lots. We have a carload of last year's Vitches. Compare the seed with this year's stuff before you buy on price only. The unusual conditions of the Furniture Market since September 1 induced us to buy several carloads, the second of which arrives today. Notwithstanding exceptional prices our regular terms will apply 5 per cent easfi or 2 per cent monthly settlement. Stewart Hardware & Furniture Co. FOR SALE Having no present iin for the following articleH we offer them for Bale, very cheap, for eanli or abort time mile: One Tubular Axle Milbiirn Wagon, wiile (rack, with double box unci eat, half truck wheel with 2-in. tire. In good condition uml pracl icHlly new, ft().(K). On set double Crunk l!o'ntcr, HpriiiK 1,500 poundx weight, $5.00. One I 1-8 in. Velie two-Heated canopy top Bide Hpring Wagon with storm curtninH and pole, S0. 00. One net of Chain I lame-pa wit h breech I iK, new, IL'0.00. One heavy tingle express wagon llurnoHH. but little lined, $ 15. 00. One Bet Studebiiker uieiliiiin liotwleda, f.'iO.IM. (tne No. 2 KaultleBH Htmnp l'uller with 100 ft cable, extra '.'0-ft. choker, Hleel grub hiHikH, I'.tO.fXI. l'uller has cleared but 'M acre. ne iMiornepower Inter national Harvester Co., air cooled (iaaolinft Kngine, good mh new, f75.(KI. One new Haiblle and liridln, 18.(M). One '.Mti-egg PeepO-Jiiiy Incubator, $12.00. Five 10 '.chick St. Helena outdoor liroodcrM, $10.00 each. One 100-chick St. Helens indoor Hrooder, fti.lMI. One KN.l-c.liit k IVIiiliihia in door lirooder, $1 00. Kellogg: & Marquis R. D. No. a Phon 3253-M HOOD RIVER BANKING & TRUST CO. extends a cordial invitation to you, personally, to call and open a checking account. Any amount will open an account in our savings department. We pay 3 per cent interest, compounded semi-annually. We promise, the best of service and satisfac. tion. " ' - -T- HOOD RIVER BANKING AND TRUST CO. Or'FICKItS A NO DIKKCTOKS M. M. Hil l,, lVemdent J. V. Coi-ki.anii, Viee-I'rea. H. W. 1'uatt, Cashier ('baa. G. 1'ratt, Wilfon Kike, Job. Copcliuid, (.!. II. Stranahan , CEMENT DRAIN TILE CONCRETE BUILDING BLOCKS I Becoming to be HE We make them in Hood River and in any quantity. BRADLEY BROS. Fresh Flour and Feed COPYBICrtT. A SUCCESSFUL ItAkINU Follows the nm of the While liiver and lies! ratent. Maltose-Cross Hour, When vim bak bread, pies, cakes or anv kind of pantry you will lin.l this Flour a safe and reliable standby. Try it once and you. will never one any other. STRANAHAN & CLARK HOOD KIVKH, ORKtiON. if WK HAVE JUST KKCKIVK1) n mu tut ui juuii. mui me hi n m kl y AND ALL KINDS OF FERTILIZERS CUMK T(i US DIKKCT FOR WOOD-FIBERED HOUSE PLASTER CEMENT AND LIME AS WK UNLOAD DIRECT STRANAHAN fl Hood River, ii iii iwi i m in mm: SHOULD SEE THE I Recognized as BEST The Celebrated White River & Maltese Cross Flour Made Prom Selected Hard Wheat A IRES1I Sl'ITI.Y OF M FROM TIIK OAKS f & CLARK 0 Oregon J) -! 1 1 I 1-1 t JTqj iSale f Ten acres near town, some bearing or chard, or will trade for Hood 1 liver city property or Portland property. Address C. S. TRUE f Hood Klver, Oregon A. "I 4t-H-H-H-l-H-!-H--:-I"I"I"H"H- NURSERY STOCK Non-I rrifjated Budded Trees, Guaranteed True to Name Spitzenburgs Newtowns Ortleys D. CURRIER, JR. Phon Udell 84 j- Hood Kivor, Oregon For Sale 1 5 Acres 1 .'5-1 miles from postodice; all in fruit, 9 acres in orcnaru: spring water piped into house and barn; team, tools, cow and pigs go with place: good house and improvements. Will sell rea sonable on easy terms. FRANK CADDY I'hone 333-L C. A. Richards & Co. Confectionery- and Amusement Parlors iiAZiawoon daintikk Full Lino of London Made Pipos See Our Line of Kauffman Bros. & Bondy Pipes and Duniuth Pipes. Bost Made Phone 64 Agency Oreu'nn Daily Journal. llootlif8 Kahtern Oysters. Bargain in City Property KlOxl.MI fill, on comer of Moutello and Thirteenth HtrcetL All in bearing' fruit. 10 Crawford peach been, 5 cherry trees and a row of loan berricM on gal vanized iron Irellia. A tine irrigating plant costing over f."i0O, connistinir. of gasoline engine witb pomp ami all t tacTimcntK uml pipe Iu'.m'xkV gallon tank, all in jrmid working older. A Pinall carpenter shop on t he properly. As I have no amenta, apply to owner on the premises. David Upton .A r Treat the horse Well and he will treat ymi well. Have your Horseshoeing nil dune here and you will be as Well pleaded as. our cither cuslomel'H are. We make liorseshneihg U bus iness ainl we make it a success, be eane it is dune right. 1 1 you want that kind, remember us every time ymi have any In be dune. PHONE 157X Shively & Driscoll For Sale by Owner 20 Acres Tluce acres seven-year-old New towns, two acres fiuir years old, 10 acres solid three-year-olds, f acres in hay, one acre loganberries, one acre strawberries between trees. Some small fruit' and small mixed family orchard. Seven room house, gnud barn and outbuildings. Two miles southwest of town. Half cash will handle this place. If interested Phone 3332-L, and owner will lake you to property in automobile. Will 'sell ,r or 10 acre's Slab Wood Cord Wood Coal Yards A. C. Lofts PHONK 310-X HF.LLY BROS. HAY AND OATS Rolled It.uley, Uran, Shorts and Straw rtlONK 1.1M t'uurih Sired Hctet n OA ami Slur "Ilk I .m " A AT II 1IMANY SALMON AT UNDERWOOD HATCHERY Seven million tingerlings, or minnow salmon, will be dumped into the White Salmon river within the next 60 days. For the past two weeks half a dozen men, under I). Winn, have been collect ing fertilizing them and placing them in the state hatchery one mile beyond Underwood. It is an interesting process, the col lection or these pmu eggs about as large as good sized pea. For some time great n hooks of salmon, mostly ehiiiook, have been beating their way up the tJolu 1 bia, even as lar as Idaho, lading out gravelly places for the throwing of their t-(?g8. Accornpan log the females are the males, whii when the spawn is thrown fertilizes them with a milky deposit, after which both drift awny and die. A salmon always dies after spawning, seemingly saeriiicing themselves lor tne preser vution of the race." The White .Salmon is a favorite spawning ground, where the state has devised ways and means for their cap ture. At the mouth of the stream a trap is built so the fish can get through but cannot get back. Some distance up the stream a darn is made, cutting olf farther progress. After dark the men muke a sweep with the net and dozens of big ones, sometimes weigh ing lit) pounds each, are hauled in and dumped into the killing pens. On the following morning the egg collectors pick out the females ripe for the kill ingfor the eggs must all be separate rap them on the tieaU with a club. chop off the tails for bleeding, open them and deposit the eggs 111 a large pun. A mule is then grabbed by the tail, pulled from the pen and his milk scattered over the eggs, which uuickly ansoru the fluid ami are thereby fer tilized. The deid salmon are given awav. both to Whites and Indians, 30 of the latter being camed on the river to provide themselves with winter meat and trade the surplus for other desir ables. The squaws grunt out their displeasure at the ranchers taking the lish, and will slap a youngster out of the way if necessary. It makes no difference to them if the salmon is yellow with fungus, or parasites, al ready so decayed that death would quickly follow after spawning, cut them up, even the heads, string them on poles for sun drying, the nroeesB being completed by smoking in huts. A small fire is kept going all the time in these salmondiung, fish smelling huts. families sleeping and eating amongst it. - " The cans of salmon eggs are cariied to the hatchery, where they are placed in baskets containing about 25.000 eggs each. These wire baskets are arranged in troughs on standards, so that run ning water from a large spring is con stantly passing through them. A man is kept busy picking out bad eggs, the percentage of which is intinitesimallv small. After a few days the eggs be come so tender for one week that the least jog is liable to spoil the whole basketful, but after that they may be handled without danger, shinned long distances, many of them havingeen sent to foreign countries evenjand ar riving in good condition. In about 70 days the great mass of pretty pink- eggs become little wrig gling "struma." Growing into fiBti shape they ore nursed at the hatcherv on beef liver and mush until about an inch to an inch and one-half long, when they are siphoned into pails and dumped mio me white baimon, .scooting for he protect!! rocks So quicklv that not one is left in sight, for they have their enemies, particularly the naughty trout. When large enough to feel their fins they strike out into the big river, down past Astoria and out to sea, again coming hack in four to six years to spawn and die that is, if the have been successful in running the gauntlet of the net and gill men and the fish wheels, for the salmon industry of the Columbia runs into the millions of dollars. ' It is believed by the hatchery neonle that salmon come back to the place where tney were hatched to spawn, which is onoc reason being that thev have the rocks for protection. Since the collection of eggs has been in prac lice there has been a very noticeable increase in the output of salmon, for the percentage of sucessfully hutched salmon to the amount of eggs thrown 111 the natural way is very small. White balmon Enterprise. ANSWER IT HONESTLY Are the Statements of Hood River Citi zens Not More Reliable Than Those of Utter Strangers? This is a vital Question. It is fraught with interest to rIlood River. It permits of only one answer. It eannot he evaded or ignored. A lloml liiver citizen speaks here. Mpeaks nf the welfare of Hood River. A citizen's statement is reliahle. . An utter stranger's is doubtful. Home proof is the best proof. William Fowler, General Delivery, Hood River, Oregon, says: "I suf fered from backache and other synip- toms of kidney trouble. The use of one box of Doan's Kidney Tills com pletely relieved me and in turn, 1 give this remedy my endorsement. For sale iiv all dealers. Price 50 ennta. FoHter-Milbiirn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents fur the United States. Heineinher the name Doan's and take no other. A Good Position. ('nil he had by ambitious young men and ladies in the Held of "Wireless" or railway telegraphy. Since the eight hiiur law became effective and since the wireless companies are establishing stations throughout the Country there is a great shortage of telegraphers. Po sitions pay tieginners from f 7(J to per nionih. with good chance of ad vancement. The Nalional Telegraph Institute of Portland, Ore , oierates six official institutes in America, under the supervision of railroad and wireless iithcial.s aii'l places all graduates into positioiiH. it will pay you to write them tor (nil details. n2 Apple Tree Brings $600. An apple tree near Albany has been sold for $tii. It is everbearing, ma turing fruit at all seasons of the grow ing period, with buds, blossoms and apples on the tree at the same time. A nursery company has bought the tree and will try to establish a new everbearing variety. You are not experimenting on your self when you take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for a (Sdd as that prep aration has won its great reputation and extensive sale bv its remarkable cures i of eolds, and can always be depended jupoii. It is equally valuable for adults iaud children and may be given to young I children with implicit confidence as it contains no harmful drug. Sold by all J dealers. I POVERTY NO BAR TO EARNEST YOUTHS Bums Powell, of Monmouth. Earl Joiiis, of Dallas, and Leon Ray, of Eugene, three of the most'pniiiiineiit Seniors at the University of Oregon, are demonstrating that any liiKh School student, who has the necessary ambition and energy can not only get a higher education without financial aid but also may win the highest political literary and forsenic honors of the col lege. Powell editor of the Oregon Emerald and President and Leader of the Clee Club, by playing in the town orchestra and doing other work in the summer has thus far kept the wolf from the door although he is entirely dependent upon his own resoures for his suport. Jones, President of the Student Y. M. C. A., and editor of the Engineer ing magazine, not being gifted with musical ability, has earned his way by the more humble vocations of clerking, store sweeping, and milking a family cow. Despite his somewhat burden some outside work, Jones finds time to lake part in student activities. In the summer time Jones digs sewers or does anything else that will turn him an nonest penny for use in the winter. Ray, President of the Student Iiodv. and a member of one of Oregon's cnumpionship debating teams, has fol lowed the adage, "A penny saved is a penny earned," and by batching in i little cabin out in the suburbs of Eu gene, has cut down living expenses to minimum, his hoard toll averages aDout n.i)o a month. PREMIUML1STF0R PORTLAND SHOW The Oregon anule show, to be held in Portland, at the Yeon Building, No vember 15 to November 18. has issued us premium list. I he two big prizes onerea are: No. l.-100-uox lots, class 100: total cash, fiOO. Not less than three varie ties and not less than 25 boxes of each variety must be shown. These should he in commercial sizes of from K8 to 112. First prize, cash S2.ri0. and gold- emoossed medal; second prize, cash $125, and silver medal; third prize. cash $75, and bronze medal ; fourth pnze, cash $r0. Wo. Z.-50-box lots, class 50: total cash, $275. Not less than three varie' ties and not less than 15 boxes of each variety must be shown of commercial sizes from 8H to 112. First prize, cush $15, and gold-embossed medal, second prize, cash $75, and silver medal; third prize, cash $,), and bronze medal fourth prize, cash $20. resides a long list of lesser nnzes there are purses hung up for 25-hox lots. Four prizes of $125 each will be offered on fallowing four varieties (first prize $75, second prize $50) : No. 3, Baldwin ; No. 4. Jonathan; No. 5. Spitzenberg; No. 6. Yellow Newtown Pippin. WHY HESITATE? An OFFER That Involves No Money Risk If You Accept it. We are so positive our remedy will completely relieve constipation,- no matter how chronic it may be, that we offer to furnish it free of all cost if it fails. Constipation is commonly caused by weakness of the nerves and muscles of the large intestine. To expect a cure you must therefore tone up and strengthen those organs and restore them to healthier activity. We want you to try Rexall Orderlies on our guarantee. They are eaten like candy, and are particularly good for children. They seem to act directly on the nerves anu muscles of the bowels. They apparently have a neutral ac tion on the other organs. They do not purge or cause other inconvenience. We will refund your money if they do not overcome chronic or habitual con stipation and thus aid to relieve the myriads of associate or dependent chronic ailments. Try Rexall Order lies at our risk. Three sizes, lite., 2-'c, and 50c. Sold only at our store -The Rexall Store. Oar I A. Plath. Country's Sale of Mineral Water. In 1910 the sales of mineral water in the United State amounted to $tj,357,5!)0, the product being (52,030, 125 gallons, as reported by George C. Mut son, of the United States Geological Survey. Minnesota was the greatest producer, with 9,!!ti2,370 gallons, de rived from 19 springs. New York was a close second, selling 8,78(),!)0:i gallons from 4(5 springs. Wisconsin, however, obtained the greatest income from her mineral waters, her sales amounting to $974,3ii(i; New York was second, with $858,635; and Indiana third, with $514,958. Minnesota's sales amounted to $281,009. Louisiana has only four commercial springs ; they produced 2,313,000 gallons. Maine'B output of mineral waters, from 29 springs, decreased 277,370 gal lons but on account of high prices in creased in value over 1909, the figures for 1910 being 1,238,171 gallons and $404,539. Of Wisconsin's mineral wa ters, 2,151,782 gallons were used in the manufacture of "soft drinks." Penn sylvania has 44 springs and produced 2,53(5,337 gallons, valued at $221,(585. The mineral water trade, says Mr. Matsou, continues to be prosperous, al though there was a decrease in output of about 4 per cent as compared with 1909. The future outlook is good. The importation of mineral waters in 1910 was 3,306,303 gallons, valued at $983,136. Don't t rifle with a cold is good advice for prudent men and women. It may be vital in case of a child. There is nothing bet er than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for coughs and colds in children. It is sate and sure. For sale by all dealers. Waggencr Will Open New Store. Jas. Wagener, Jr. who conducted a Book, Stationery and Music business in Vancouver, Wash., for manv vears. but who sold out there, about two years ago, will open up in the Heil bronner building, with a complete line of talking machines and records about November 1, or as soon as the fixtures can be placed. Mr. Waggencr, is also a scenic photographer and is an en thusiast in this work. He may later add this to his business, as he says it will be a mighty hard matter to break away from it in this beautiful lloml i River country. GIVES QUICK ACTION Chas. N.llarke reixirts th:t a SIN GLE DOSE of simple buckthorn bark. glycerine, etc., as compounded in Ader- i-ita, tne new l.ernitn appendicitis rem edy, relieves constipation or gas on the stomach, almost INSTANTLY. We get our meats in fresh everv dav. Our. price will ht your povkcthook at! Central Market. " I Mimjyq 'Always imMimm Front 1 tier. That's why the Sfudeibakc!1 Wagon has kept the lead from ox-team days down to the present day. Every Studcbaker wagon is made on honor. We sell the Studebaker Wagon because it is the kind that gives satisfactiou and makes friends. Come in and look them over. They are made in many styles, from the lightest farm wagon to the heaviest truck or log wagon. Call and get a Studebaker booklet. We want everybody interested in vehicles to have one. Gilbert-Vaughan Implement Co. Hood River, Oregon. .... ... Something You Should Know About Substitution If yon wanted to buy oak lumber and the man delivered yellow pine, vou would know the differenco. If yon wauled to buy silk and they sent yon calico, you would have no trouble In seeing the substitution. It is not tn eaKy, however, with medicine. A great many medicines look alike and taste alike, BUT THEY DON'T ACT ALIKE. .liiHt think thisoyer the next-time yon want medi cines. Keineniber that at our store you can absolutely rely on every drug we sell. The difference between buying medicines and merchandise is the difference between knowledge and be. lief. You know the one but you have to believe in the other. Yon will he absolutely safe w hen yon put your belief in us. CHAS. N. CLARKE The Glacier Pharmacy ::!3:voNif h under;- SAVINGS U.S. GOV'T ACCOUNTS I jjJW0 i SUPERVISIOH ;; 1 1 fcVTWr u2T A! 1 ' ' : ,'.'.'.'' ' .:. I Y ' SAFE AND PRODUCTIVE Your savings, when deposited with the First National Bank, are safe because of capital, sur plus and stockholders' liability of $222,000.00 which stands as security for all deposits. They are productive because they earn interest at the rate of 3 iter cent per annum, compounded twice a year. We give careful attention to all accounts regardless of their ri.e. ! Of I Heats From This Market are always choice. You may think that means prices are high. A trial will show you your mis ta'ke. HOOD RIVER MARKET S. E. BARTMESS Funeral Director and Embaliner Established lit Veart HOOD RIVER. OREGON means the best finality all the time. Every piece of lum!er iu the Stude baker wagon is air-seasoned four to five years; then inspected rigidly before being used.v Selected New Eng land black birch bubs; choice w bite oak spokes and felloes; the best butt cut, second growth hickory axles; spokes are slope shouldered and driven into the hubs under a hundred tons pressure; ironed I': and reinforced in every way that will add strength, with refined iron; painted iu a thorough and durable man- .. The Fragrant Steam ing Hot Roast that comes from the kitchen came from this market. And good as it looks and smells, it tastes even better. II