flOODiRIYER GLACIER, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1913 i L 3C DOC DC 3 Have You Bought These Lately? ICRADLEBAUGH MITES OF PIONEER DAYS HOT WATER BOTTLES A new'seamless one.Wer&uaranteelfor two'years. FOUNTAINSYRINGES A guaranteed article ABSORBENT COTTON The Red Cross Brand. Bath'Sponges, Castile'Soap. K. C. Lemon Witch Hazel Cream, The great'Cream for chaffed'or rough hands. , TOOTH BRUSH That holds its bristles. Good Toilet or Bath Soaps. Hair Brushes and Combs. K. C. LINIMENT For sprains, burns or rhumatics. K. C. Belladona and Capsicum Plaster For lame backs, cold on chest or strains. George Crowell, Jack Luckey, and neither last nor least. T. C. Dallat.who could have been bigger hearted, if na ture had given him a bigger boo; to bold it. It all seems now but a dream to me. and the five years of my atay in Hiimi River, hut the hfltinenines of a Salem, Ore., June 15, 1913. dy. I do not remember the coming of Editor Glacier: Your request that 1 any, but S. K Bartmess. Williams & write something of Hood Kiver s ear-1 Wolfard and the others, as far as 1 can tier daya ia thoroughly appreciated, lor recollect, were mere an togemer, ai- my recollections or. me ricnesi ana ways. most beautiful little valley in the Mrs. Jennie Champlin for a large world, are indeed pleasant to recall, portion of the time was the local Naa- and to put them on paper, indeed a la- by, and "Joe Aleck" the venerable Dor 01 love, inere are iwu uuiicuiuei laoorigine, carricu umic ooui man m in the way of complying with your re-1 White Salmon. Those five years were quest, however. One, that with all I pleasant ones, .tnougn i realize now i the pleasant things thai come trooping gave nve oi me ueai years or my me to the front as memory beckons, one to aid in the upbuilding of Hood Kiver, knnw not where nor how to bei;in : and left it considerably poorer than WE AIM TO PLEASE KEIR . CASS WE GIVC S. L H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS 3C3C30C and the other that once started there is no good stopping place. Added to this the fact that you have still with you those who found Hood Kiver valley, as it were,' a wilderness and have made it an orchard, who know it irom its baby hood, makes it presumptuous on my part to speak of it other than of my own too brief stay there. I first went to Hood Kiver at the re quest of Georee I. Prather. At the when i went into it. 1 realized what Hood Kiver would some time be, but 1 could not hold on. Sam Blythe, who had helped so materially in getting out the paptr, and to whom 1 was indebted a hundred or more "sesterces," con sented to take the paper otf my hands, and carried on the work of boosting Hood Kiver, how successfully one only has to look at the magnificent valley, now an orchard, to realize. May it time 1 was editing a newspaper in The I continue its good work. As for myself, nl . the n 1 Wasco Sun. II mv mem- 1 have been in the newspaper business ory strves me right, and Prather sug- so long that I have but little hopes of vested Btartin? a little paper at iioou neaven ana leei mat i nave uone ien Kiver. I visited the little town nesllea ance enougn nere to lei me steer ciear under the hill, like a lone chick under of the other place. If 1 can, however, ta mother's winir. and took a trio out strike some place as a compromise as through the vallev. 1 was deeply im- beautiful as Hood Kiver, with as nice pressed with the beauty of the valley a lunch of "folks" in it, I shall never as all must be who see it, and was regret the gold paved streets, nor the struck bv its immense bos.sibilities in divine music promised the faithful. 1 the wav nf fruit ffrowintr. but I must never cared much for gold, and have a confess that when it came to looking poor ear for music besides. Hood Kiver at it as a newspaper tied, it did not I is about my size, my lueai ior a nere THE FIRST NATIONAL BAM ffiq! HOODRIVER'OREOOHI '6 J 3 ON CAVING I YOU CANNOT AFFORD UMOU U.S. GOVtRNHENT JUPH VISION to take any unnecessary risk with your hard earned savings. The temptation to invest in some form of speculation is often very great. All sorts of inducements are offered and, un less great caution is exercised, errors are likely to be made which will prove costly. The shrewd investor does not put his money into every scheme presented which promises large returns; rather is he satisfied with abso lute security such as is afforded by the Time Certificates and Savings Department of this Bank. YOUR ACCOUNT WELCOME fCAPITi'-SSURPLUS $132,000 res 14 Read This Before you buy. We ask you to call and inspect our complete line of New and Second Hand Furniture, Stoves and Ranges. Everything in house furnishings We will take your old furniture or stoves in exchange for NEW GOODS. O. P. DABNEY & SONS Guaranteed Cheapest Outfitter Agents for Charter Oak Stoves and Ranges PHONK 3281 Cor. Fourth anu State Sts. Stanley-Smith Lumber Co. Wholesale and Retail LUMBER Lath, Shingles, Ete Lumber Delivered to Any Part of the Valley MEAT goes a long way from the stockyard to the butcher's block. Its the Pf$$ quality that tells in the end. Meat may be fresh and yet not be first quality. FRESHNESS AND QUALITY is the standard we set for our customers. We buy the best, and sell at prices within the reach of all. HOOD RIVER MARKET strike me as being ideal. I'rather, however, had the courage of his con victions and, while he was not then in the millionaire class, guaranteed the payment of 20 a week. With this understanding and a sort of quasi part nership arrangement the first issue of the Hood River Glacier was gotten out. It wasn't very large, a sort of cross between a postage stamp nnd a Ittter head, but small as it was, through Prather's hard work, it was subscribed for by practically everyone in the val lev. In a month or two it was "en lamed" to a five column quarto, and later to a metropolitan sheet oi six columns, two pages "patent. The first ten or a dozen numliers were printed in The Dalles. Then a Wash ington hand press was secured, and when it reached the six column site it was nrinted in Hood Kiver. I did the writing, proof reading, etc., all by my lonesome, some five or six columns a week. Mrs. C. "jerked the antimony for a few columns from the one little case, and s. r. uivine came in inurs davs to keep hi hand in and worked one dav at the case. I pulled "the devil's tail." on the hand press with Johnny (his name has slipped my mem ory, Henningpen, I think) running the ink roller. Ihe subscription list ana exchanges required 306 papers (Grant's number) and 820 were printed. The Hood Kiver lownsile Company was organized soon after this, being composed, as 1 remember it, of the Hon. K. Ij. Smith. Jos. A. Wilson ano Sherman La France. The company- very generously presented the Glacier the lot on the corner of Oak Bnd Third and this alone kept the Glacier from the hospital, if not from the graveyard that yawns so hungrily for young newspapers. About the Bame time Henrv Coe laid out Waucoma, and an Notice of Street Improvement Notice III hereby given pursuant U Ordi nance No. 4'. muwecl by the Common fmiuoll June Kit ti, WIS, and approved by the Mayor June imii, wia. proviuing mr ine improve ment of May Htreet Irom the weal line l l-wv em li Street weal to the weat line of Twelfth Klrm hv Ihe emrilnir of a roariwav on aaitl street from curb line to curb line between aald polnta and the construction on both aide of aaia atreei oi a au-to-iooi eoncreie aiuewaia Blared two feet from the property line. Ihe construction of cement curha and Riitlera be tween aula poinle on Doth aides oi hhiu atreel where aldewalka, curka and nutter are not now la place: Twelfth f treet by coiialructlnii aalx-foot rouciele aldewulk ou Ihe eant aide thereof letween June and May Hlreeta, and construction of a nvc(5rroot concrete walk on Ihe weat aide oi Tweiitn direct in iron of Lot 1, Hlork .H. Mowers' Flint Addition lo the t'lty of Hood River: that sealed hida will be received by the uuderHlaned City Recorder al hid office up to 8 o'clock f M., July", l'.n: for the Improvement of M reels aa et forth above, except In trout oi aucn proiieny aa per mlla lor the Improvement of which uuder Ordinance No. 4t( altaii nave been laauea. The Common Council will at 11 next regu lar meeting alter the completion of Ihe (nihil calion of Mila notlee, to-wlt: On the 7th day of July, 191 :t, proceed lo open and consider all blda for aald work, which la ordered by the Common Council by aald Ordinance No. tt aa above spec I lied; that the linprovemenl will be let In oneconlra. t.aiid will be required lo be completed within M daya from the date of the awarding of the same to the Hucceaalii bidder, who will be required to furnish ft bond lo the t'lty of Hood River, In a sum ol not less than 2f per cent of the est! mated coal of the contract for the faithful pcrtormiinoe thereol: that complete 8ecl neat lona are on tile In my olllce ooverliiK the Improvements lor which blda are called, winch may lie ex anilned bv prospective bidder upon appllca lion or copies thereof will be furnished Usn the deposit of .'. to Insure the safe return thereof to the City of Hood Kiver niter Ihe awarding of the contract, and aald contract will be awarded to the lowest and heat bidder upon aald apecincatlona. The City reserves the right to reject any or all bids, or lo waive any delect l Herein ior ine oeuem ui me , uy ol Hood River. The term of the hpccIIIch tlonaahall be notice to prospective bidder ol Ihe requirement demanded ny aaia uuy in the performance of aald work. Pmnoi'tv ournem urfMctcri hv Ordinance No. ' shall have five (M daya from the date of I a J carried by him swelled the Glacier's SF.RTC.'Sr? ri,S.T..uiS.7,;uJr;S.'T, ncome 2.50 a month, aiding material- uo llie wora in iroui Ol inuir property, wmui permit ahall be required to be completed within the time provided ior completion in accordance with the provisions of Ordinance NO. 44li. This notice la published In the Hood Kiver Glacier for two consecutive issue thereof, the dale of the first publication thereof be inn lath day ol June, mis. 11. Ij. II' ,n r-i. JIB 2ti City Recorder and a hereafter. I would like to men tion the old timers out in the valley, who helped provide something, when the fire of love was kindled in the kitchen stove, and who in a thousand ways piled up obligations which 1 can never repay and don't want to, for that would spoil some of the sweetest memories of a rather illy-spent life. My time, your space, and their dillident modesty all forbid; but God bless them and theirs, one and all, and the Glacier, lotig may it slide. J. II. iradiebaugti. F. S. As h sort of hooker up the back of this rather rambling story let me recall another nameFrank Hut ton, big, generous and jolly, with a whole card of little pearl Muttons. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of iiood Kiver. Mildred Eatella Fenlon, Plaintiff, v. Henry Alexander Ken Ion, Defendant. To Henrv Alexander Ken Ion. Defendant: In the name of the Hiate of Oregon, ou are hereby required to appear aud answer the Complaint filed agalual you In the above en titled Court and Cause on or btfore the expir ation of alx weeks from the date of the first publication of this rlummons, which la Ihe 2and day or May, li:i, and if you ran so to np near ana answer for want thereof the Flalntlll' will apply to the court for Ihe rellel demanded In her Complaint, to-wit: A decree dissolving the bonds of matrimony between J'laintiff and Defendant; a decree that Plaintiff may take her former name of Mildred Estella Pullen: for her costs and dis bursement and such other ellef a the Court deems eoniljihla. This Kiimmnni shall be published In the Hood Kiver oiacier, a newspaper oi general circulation, published at Hood tilver iu Hood River County, Oregon, for alt consecutive weeks In compliance with the order ol the Honorable O. R. Cast ner. Judge of the County Court of Hood River County, Mlale of Oregon, dated the MWi day of May. 1D1.1. The day ol the first publication of this Summons Is the Wild day oi May, iui.i, ana ine aay 01 ine iai publication thereof will be the 3rd day of July, IK 1:1. KRNKHT C. SMITH. m'JJy:i Attorney lor I'lalulill Notice In the Circuit Court of Hood River County, Oregon. In themstter of the Petition of the Board of Directors of ICast f ork Irrigation District for the Indicia! examination and judgment of the Court as to the regularity and legality of the proceedings for Issuing bonds of aald District, and other acts affecting said Dis trict. Notice Is hereby given that the Hoard of Dl rectors of East Kork Irrigation Dlsli let. have, by Petition filed with the clerk of the above euilliea coun, commence, pnn-eeuuigs iu said Court, praying for the Judicial examina tion and Indgrnent of said -Court as to the reg uiarlty and legality of each and every of the various acta and proceedings of the original petitioners for said District, the County Court of Hood River County, Oregon, and the Board of Directors ol said oisirici, relative 10 ine or ganizallon of the District and the authoriza tion and Iseue ol bonds of the District, aud any other matter or proceeding affecting the Icialltv or validity of said bonds so atilhor- l.ed. that all of the same may be approved and couflrmed, and said authorized Issue of bonds adjudged and decreed to be legal and valid. Hearing on said Petition has been fixed by the Judge l said Court for the 15th day of Julv.-A. I). al 8 o'clock p. m., al the Court Koom 01 saiu court, in me i ouri noune iu me City of Hood River, Hood River County, Ore gon, on or oeiore which saiu uay any jieraon rntereated In the organization of said District. or In Its proceedings for the Issue and sale of bonds, may aemur 10 or answer sum reui iou. (liven under my hand and the seal of aald Circuit Court this 12th day of June. A. D 1U13. W. E. HANSON, fHKALl J12Jy3 Clerk. Summons In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Hood River County. C. D. Mckelaon, Plaintiff, Mary La Monte, Defendant. To Mary La Monte, Defendant above named: In Ihe name of the Slate of Oregon you are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint of the plaintiff herlu tiled In the above entitled action on or before Friday, the 1st dav of Auaust. WIS. and if yoa fall so lo an. awer aald complaint the plaintiff will take liiriu merit anal tint yon for the sum of f a 00 WHO interest luereon iron, me iuu uuy 01 Xent. 1MI2. at the rale (per cent per annum, and plaintiff's costs and disbursements made and exuended in tha above entitled action. Tbla summons is served npon you by publi cation thereol once earn weea ior six (ft con secutive weeks in the Hood River Glacier, a newspaper of general circulation published in Hood Kiver. Hood River County, Oregon, once each week, by virtue of an order of Oeorge R. cast tier. County Judge or Hood Kiver Count v. Oreg n. made and entered on the lHlh day of June, ll:i The date of the first publication of thl summons In said aewspaper is Thursday, June 11Mb, ISIS, and the dale of the h at publication of this sum mons In aald newspaper Is Thursday, July 31st, wa 8. W.FTARK, Jljy31 Attorney fur Plaintiff, ly in keeping its little bottle supplied with milk. Col. G. E. S. Wood, and Portland parties, completed Cloud Cap Inn, and the road thereto that year and Charles Hone and Lou Adams put on a stage line. An armory was built in Waucoma addition and Hood River began to lick itself, wax fat and like Jeshuron, kick. Hood Kiver at that time was not oi the mao verv largely. J. H. Middletoi had a general merchandise store, 1'ra ther had a little store. Uncle Hub Kand owned and ran the hotel, and 1 recall now that his advertisement in the Glacier, a stereotype made when the Glacier started, read ail through the next winter: "Neat, Cleun and Cool." The Glacier home was built by 'Jim Langille,". Hare old Jim, with a tongue tinned witn vitriol ano a heart of solid gold, who said the mean est things publicly and did the most generous and charitable ones privately, of any man 1 ever knew. Will Lan gille, now a prominent Alaskan, was a guide from Cloud Cap Inn to the sum mit of Mount Hood at this time, and shortly after the Glacier arrived K. K lA'tle took charge oi the U. It. & IN. telegraph and depot work. He is ralroad owner now, building the road to Tillamook. Dr. Adams, who had at tended to the coming in and going out of the world events for the whole val ley up to about this time, now shared this line of work with Dr. Urosius, who came from the east, from having read of the valley in the Glacier. Mart Harrison had a store too, and later bought out Middleton. He also owned a fine bull, known as Tippecanoe, who roamed the streets at will, smashed fences and did about as he pleased. He furnished enough news for the little Glacier to entitle him to a salary, but well, he didn t get it. The Glacier owes its name to the hu morous side of events. Its size and re- sistelss force, suggesting the big Gla cier. However, the name was a happy one, for the nine banning nas uvea up to its name and grown weighty As I stated in beginning this article. there is no place to atop, I recall so many of the old settlers, good warm friends, both of mine and the paper s, to whom both owe much, and which 1 have stored away in. my memory along ith the countless other pleasant things, the only kind, thank God, that memory keeps fresh and green and fra grant for us, and let us live over again, while the sorrow and pain, the ills and suffering she blots out. The "forget- ery" branch of memory is one of her most pleasant attributes, and my re membrances of Hood Kiver are of such a nature that I have none I would will ingly forget. Her people, like her fruits, are, Al, first class, the best in the world. Just a little word more of the Glacier. From its first number it has worked for Hood River's interest, energetically and steadily. It boosted strawberries, but from the first took the position that they were but the means to an end that the apple was to be Huod Kiver's great product, it advocated irrigation. when most opposed it, fearing that the statement that irrigation was needed would deter homeseekers coming to us, but the editor felt he was right and stuck to it at considerable financial loss to himself. Subsequent events proved the correctness oi his opinion and jus tihed his course. I think 1 may say without being accused of egotism that the Glacier on propositions per taining to Hood River's welfare was nearly always correct, and in this con nection I want to express the keen ap preciation, which I still have of the material assistance of practically all Hood Riverites. Hon. E. L. Smith, beside with the townsite company do nating a lot, more than once helped out with a little needed donation : so did J. 11. Middleton and many others. Uncle The Old Tramp Printer (l!y J, II. Cradlebuugh, early editor of the Glacier, anil read at a recent meeting of the printers and newspaper men of Salem.) 'Tis meet on such occasions as we honor here todav. That we forget the daily grind and give our fancies play ; Let Memory for an hour recall the things of long ago And bless her that the pleasant ones are all she lets us know. For all the sot row and the loss, the bitterness and the pain She hides with gentle tenderness but lets the sweet remain. She takes us from these strenuous tirres to those less ardent days He fore Humanity evolved along such speedy wavs. Hefore the Motorcycle took the riding horse s place : Before the Automobile came, annihilat ing space ; Before the wizard, man, and made his pictured self to walk ; Before another touched these with his wand and made them talk : Before we canned our music, tele graphed without wire; Before Professor Langley proved that he could be a nier; ceftue wise Luther f urbank grew his corn without a cob ; Before the Mergenthaler took the old-time printer's job. The old-time things are passing, giving place unto the new, And Memory alone can bring them once again to view. The beautiful old sailing ships have given place to steam : The Indian of Cooper'a time is these iIhvs but a dream ; The pioneer who led the way across the continent. No longer is the real thing, but just a sentiment. The long haired hunter of the plains has leu them long ago And vanished as completely as his hertls of buffalo. The picturesque gold miner has aban doned pick and pan. The "Sooner" is a banker now down in Toneka. Kan. The iong-horned herds of Texas, now are Herefords, and tame. The cowboy with his woolly "chaps' no longer plays the game. The canvas covered wagons are almos forgotten thingB. The years have borne them all away upon their tireless wings. And surely the most picturesque lias vanished with the rest. In the passing of the printer the old-timer -from the west. No Beduoin of the desert wandered further than did he. No pirate of the Spanish main was any whit more free. Not even Rockefeller could lay claim to greater wealth, For the old-time tramping printer had both appetite and health. He would not have changed places with a Morgan or a Schwab When he got "the price" advanced him and was ready for his job. For as he followed copy as he stood before his case. His mind was like a Christian's on some far-off, future place. He could tell us cub reporters of the stunts that he had done. Perhaps for Murat Halstead, of for Henry Watterson, Or explain in forceful English of h toughest piece of work, When he got a "take" of Horace Greeley s copy in New York He could teach L. Murray grammar, and tell Webster how to soel . Could punctuate correctly, and could criticize as well. He could Oh, well, God bless him he has vanished with the rest. The Isat one of the old things most picturesque and best. -the FATHER TIME is a firm believer in the "Survival of the Fittest" Under his stern scrutiny and relentless sifting that of little merit is short lived. It is our policy to handle goods that have estab lished reputations have stood the test of time, and mention with pardonable pride that we are agents for the great Majestic Ranges Mitchell Wagons 8 A VSA M X V-Uft 111V Paroid Roofing Over 100 Years Back of It Yale Locks Known All Over the World Cattaraugus Cutlery Every Blade Warranted Blowers Hardware Co The Firm That "MaKes Good" Phone 1691 Oak and 1st Sts. if mmmm i V: f Jl Weitinhouse Heating and CooRing Apparatus Electric Irons Frying Pans Disc Stoves Toaster Stoves Always lit Stock at Moderate Trices. Let Us Show You. Si rtmess Bid. BAILEY & COLBY Phone 1524 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS T. J. KINNAIRD Groceries Fresh Vegetables and Fruit in Season Flour and Feed Phone 2121 Hood River, Oregon The Purity Dairy Co. - Yours for prompt service and Good Milk THOS. D. CALKINS UPPER VALLEY NOTICE List Your Places for Special Attention With WARD IRELAND CORNELL Upper Valley Real Estate Insurance Improved and Unimproved Orchard Land Phona Odell U37 Hood River Connection Guy Y. Edwards & Co. U. C. M. RANCH Parkdule Upper Hood River Valley Davidson Uses Toy Typewriter H. F. Davidson, president of the North Pacific Fruit Distributors, who must necessarily spend a great deal of his time on the road, has a small toy aluminum typewriter that he slips in his handbag and carrieds alone with him. "The telegraph operators declare that they cannot decipher my chirog raphy," says Mr. Davidson, and I purchased the little machine one day just to carry around and write tele grams with. The woman of today who has good health, (rood tenuier. irood sense, bright eyes and a lovely complexion, the result of correct living and (rood digestion, wins the admiration ol the world. 11 your digestion is faulty Chamberlain's Stom ach aud Liver Tablets will correct it. For sale by all dealers. EXCELLENT FRUIT LAND FOR SALE BY HOOD RIVER GREEN POINT ORCHARDS COMP'Y Tracts can be Purchased on Very Reasonable Terms For information consult H. L. DEAN, Local Superintendent 1313 Thirteenth St. Hood River, Oregon Or apply to General Offices 622 Plymouth Bldg. Minneapolis, Minn.