HOOD KIVER GLACIKH, THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 1914
BARGAIN WEEK
Beele Dog Spray Hose that will last 4 years under 250
lbs. pressure guaranteed, is a bargain at any price, and
we have it for
20 cent a foot
Spring will find your machine looking tired -take
a line of this week's bargains. Spend a day of waste
time and fi.fup.
1 gallon Metal Polish, reg. $1.75, this week only $1.10
1 quart Metal Polish, reg. 50c, this week only . .30
1 Kit. Soap, reg. $1.00, this week only - - .75
Brake Lining, all sizes, this week only - 1-3 less
SAMOLINE
The great cleaner of wood, metal, glass or leather.
We want you to know it.
1 pt reg. 30c, this week only 20c
1 qt. reg. 50c, this week only 34c
1-2 gal. reg. 90c, this week only 60c
1 gallon reg. $1.50, this week only $1.00
Oils, waste and glass, plain, colored and plate.
The store that sells good goods cheaper.
Heating stoves; are on the bargain counter this week.
Stewart Hardware & Furniture Co.
Hardware, Furniture and
Orchard Supply House
Hood River - Oreg'on
F. B. SNYDER
Hood River Plumbing Co.
SANITARY PLUMBING
AND HEATING j& j&
Tinning and Sheet Metal WorK, Gasoline En
gines, Pumps, Rams. Repairing Promptly
Attended. Estimates Furnished.
Phone 1544
Cor. 2nd &
ffe
E. M. HOLM AN
THE SANITARY MARKET
White River
Flour
Makes Bread Having the
Old Bready Flavor
AT YOUR GROCERS
HEIGHTS GARAGE
J. L. VOLSTROFF, Prop.
General Repairing Autos and Gasoline
Engines, Plumbing and Plumbing Sup
plies, Tile and Pipes
Fisk and Goodyear Tires and Tube
in Stock
1216 C STREET,
Near Hotmail's Market
PASHIOIT STABLE
..Livery, Feed and Draying..
Hunt Paint & Wall Paper Co.
Complete line of PAINTS, OILS, BRUSHES, Lie.
MHtillOMW af
D. B. POWELL
Cascade, opp. Hotel Oregon
During This Year
you will naturally want the bell
niPBlH or poultry you ran obtain.
You'll be doing; ju-t riglit to ln
tire that result by ordering tliom
from this market where quality in
always the hightt and prices the
lowest possible. Start the New
Year right by a trial order here.
THE HEIGHTS
STRANAHANS & RATHBUN
Hood River, Ore.
Horses bought, sold or exchanged.
Pleasure parties can seoure'ft rat-class rigs
Special attention given to moving furniture ana
pianos.
We do everything horses can do.
Heath & Milligan Mixed Faints
Glidden's Varnishes
Room Mouldings
Bulk Calcimine Mixed to Order
Plate and Card Rail
Dry Paste
ONE MAN WANTS
. 1000 CHILDREN
Charles Page, multi-millionaire oil
man of lulsa, Ok., has "U adopted chil
dren and wants to adopt 10UO.
In addition to 1000 poor boy and girls
be is preparing to care for 100 pour
widows.
For the care of the 70 children he
has built a large home on a wooded
hill. It is crowded to its capacity with
boys and girls. He ia getting ready to
build this winter, another home that
will house 200 childten, and when that
is finished he will begin building more
homes until he " accommodations
for 10O0.
He has already built eight bouses tor
poor widows, has four more under con
struction and will have 100 built thit
winter. Kch house will have two
rooms, furnished, with free gas fur
heating and cooking, free water, free
electric light and a garden plot.
Tbe 70 boys and girls have an 80
acre park for playground, a lake of
14 acrea for swimming and boating,
a wading pool for the smaller ones,
lawn swings and all sorts of contriv
ances for their amusement, a hospital,
a toological garden, a kndergarten aid
a grade school, and a $40,000 high
school, in which they will finish their
education when they are old enough to
attend it.
In addition to this Mr. Page has the
plans drawn and will build this winter
a hospital that will be in charge of
some of the greatest surgeons and
specialists in this country. He plans
this hospital to be as geod in eviry
way, and as famous, as that of the
Mayo brothers in Rochester, Minn,
those who are able to pay will do so;
hut any person in America who is too
poor to pay may come to this hospital
and be operated upon by the greatest
surgeons in the world, and nursed back
to health free of any cost whatever.
To maintain these institutions and
keep them going forever Mr. Page has
created a great endowment fund, the
foundation of which is nearly all of his
vast holdings of real estate, gas lands,
oil wells, railroad and other properties
aggregating several milllion dollars in
value.
And who is this man Page who haa
dure adopted children than any other
man in the world'.'
Forty-five years ago, when Charles
Page was a boy of 10, his father died,
leaving a widow and seven childten.
His father had been in the teaming
business in Stevens Point, Wis. He
was sick for a year beforo he died and
in that year his teams were sold to pay
doctors and buy medicine.
The widow, with the house full of
small children, hud a hard time of it.
One day while she was doing the
washing for a neighboring family and
had stopped a minute to rest, the
toy who is now a millionaire stood bc
fure her and watched the tears running
down her cheeks.
"You just wait, mamma, till I get
to be a big man, and rich, and you
wont' have to wash any more, nor any
other woman wont' either. I'll take
care of all the poor widows and or
phans," the little fellow said.
Edward Page, brother of Charles,
says he remembers well that incident,
and of how his mother grabbed Charles
in her arms and hugged him to her and
wept all the more.
When he had grown big enough
Charles became a messenger boy for
the Wisconsin Central Kailway, and
then he became a brakeman, and later
on a railroad tiieman. Every dollar he
earned, above living expenses, in those
days went to his widowed mother and
her fatherless children.
Charles drifted west to the Pacific
coast, worked in the gold mines in Ida
ho, was hungry many a time, and pen
niless for weeks.- He drifted eastward
to tne oil fields of Colorado and, seven
years ago, came to Chandler, Ok., with
$5,000 in cash, which ho soon lust in
the oil fields near Chandler.
Then oil was .discovered in the fa
mous Glenn Pool field, south of Tulsa,
and Page went to a spot near there
with 13,000 he raised by moi tgnging a
piece of property in Colorado, tie int
an oil lease on a small tract of In id an
land vn what is known now as the la
neha field, and put down a well. T he
drill sank day after day through the
different layers of rock and shale und
sand, and almost every chug uf thu
drill meant a dollar of Page's small
hoard gone. If his well should turn
out to be a "dry hole" he would b
broke again. Hut one duy, when he
had about made up his mind that there
was no oil thete, he struck the oil
sand. He knew that a few feet more
of drilling would reaoji oil, and he
stopped the. work, told his workmen
that it was undoubtedly a "dry holu
and paid them off and let them go.
The next day Page went alone to the
derrick, set the machinery going, am
drilled down through a lew teet of oil
sand, when, suddenly the rich oil camo
gushing out. He pulled out his drill,
"plugged" the well ko the oil would
nut flow, and apparently abandoned it
The next few weeks he spent in get
ting oil leases on the land surrounding
his well in all directions, and when he
had secured these he went buck to his
well, unplugged it, and invited every
one to come and see it.
It was a wonderful well. It flowed
2000 barrels of oil a djty and every -liar
rel of it worth 35 cents in cash at the
well, art income of $700 a duy for Pago,
minus one-eight of the product, which
went to the owner of the land as his
share.
He drilled other wells on the land he
had leased and they were good produe
era too, and one day a syndicate of
financiers of Mew Turk, leu hv Com
moore llcnedict, James King Duffy und
Clifford li. Harmon, offered him a mil
lion dollurs in cash for his leases
Page asked a half million more and
the sale whs finally made fur li million
dollars cash, which was paid to rase,
Page's mother was dead years before
this wealth came ; but in all the time
that he had been wandering over the
west, working at first one thing und
then another, he had never forgotten
the promise he had mude her that
some day, when he giew big and rich
he would lighten the burdens ut poor
widows who hud to wavli to put tireud
in the mouths of their hungiy children.
and that he would take care of the or
phans, too. Now he was rich, and
that plan began to take definite shape
in his mind.
The Arkansas river flows over its
sandy bi just south of lulsa, and its
north Uank is a low, level Hut spreud
ing back to a line of sandhills. Page
believed there was oil beneath that
flat. It was a jungle of brushwood
and big trees, owned by Indians who
did not live on it. Page got an oil
lease on a tract of it and put no An a
well. The drill pierced a layer of coal
four feet thick and tnen dropped into a
an immense pocket of natural gas.
Again Page plugged his well and
quietly went and bought outright 7000
acrea of that land, extending from near
the city limits of Tulsa seven miles
out along the river. He built an elec
tric railway out from Tulsa through his
7000 acrea to point seven miles away,
and there he decided to kuild'a city of
his own and to put upon the summit of
hill his orphans' home.
Before the horn, was begun Page
came serosa family cf eight orphaned
children in Tulsa who were destitute
r.d homeless. He bought tent,
pitched it on the summit of the bill,
furnished it, hired woman who loved
children and could cook, and placed tier
with the eight Davis children in the
tent under the big hickory trees.
Then he built the orpkana' home and
other children began coming. Kansas
City Star.
WIDOWS' PENSIONS
AGGREGATE $142.50
Working under the new Widows'
Penison art, this county expends
monthly the turn of $142.50 in widow'
pensions. Since the law became effec
tive last year but six widows have
been granted pensions., the entire num
ber having a total of 17 children. The
greatest number of children of any one
destitute widow is five. Six of tbe
children draw $10 each per month.
while 11 are each given $7.50.
1 can see how such a law would be
abused in populous cities," soys Judge
Stanton, "but here we find it working
all right."
Mrs. J. P. Lucas has made an inves
tigation of the eases of widows apply
ing for pensions.
Wonderful Cougb Remedy.
Dr. King's New Iiixcotery is known
everywhere as the remedy which will
surely stop a cough or cold. I), r. Ijlw
aon of K lison.Tenn. writes: "Dr. King's
.New I'ltH-overy is the most wonderful
cough, cold and throat and lung medi
cine I ever sold in my store. It can't be
brut. It sells without any trouble at
till. It needs no ituarantae." This ia
true, becnuHC Dr. King's New Discovery
will relieve the mod (.bstinate of coughs
I. ung troubles quickly helped by its use
You should keep a bottle in the house
st ail limes for all the memliera of the
fain ly. 50c and $1 00. All dniggisteor
by mail. II. E. liuckleu & Co., Phila
delphia or St. Louis.
Dealers Want Limited Varieties
Western fruit growers ship too many
varieties of apples east and put in
grades that are too low, according to
eastern dealers. Instead of growing
65 varieties in quantities sufficient for
shipment in carload lots they should
confine themselves to about 16 vari
eties, choosing from this number the
kinds best suited to their diatricts.says
an eastern exchange. And the only
two grades that should be shippeud are
fancy and extra fancy.
The varieties most favorably named
by jobbers and retailers ore as follows,
according to Dr. Hector McPherson, of
Oregon, who made a careful investiga
tion of eastern apple mai kets, as the
Oregon representative of the American
commission :
Winesap, Staymen Winesap, New
town Pippin, Delicious, Spitzenburg,
Rome Beauty, White Winter Pearmain,
Arkansas Black, black Hen Davis,
Gano, Jonathan, Grimes Golden, Win
ter Uunnna and Mcintosh Red.
On the question of grades, however,
Dr. McPherson thinks the rigid exclu
sion of ail but the two. highest grades
may be a little extreme.
Ills Sloinacli Tumbles Over
Mr, Dyspeptic, would you not like to
feel Unit your stomach troubles were
over, that you could eat agy kind of food
vou desired without injury? That may
seem so unlikely .to you that you do not
even hope for an ending of your trouble,
but permit us to aseure you that it is
not nltliogcther impossible. If others
can be cured prrmantely and thousands
have neon, why not your John Jt. tsar
ker of liattlt! Creek, Mich., is one of
them. Ho says, "I was troubled with
heartburn, indigestion, and liver com
plaint until I used Chamberlain's Tab
lets, then mv trouble was over." Sold
by all (IrugiNts.
JVliss Ilobbs Didn't Come
Great excitement prevailed here last
rriduy morning when it was announced
that Miis Fern Hobbs, Governor
West's private secretary, who has been
cleaning out the saloons in eastern
Oregon cities, was here and had reg'
istered at the Oregon. The hotel re
ceived numerous calls from parties
wanting to know the mission of the
young lady to the city, and the clerk
was kept busy the entire morning cor'
recting the error. Since the lid has
gone on on gambling, local citizens
wonder wtjut the governor's secretary
cuuurcio toward cleaning up the city.
Ilest Cornell Mullci'ie for Children
"I am very glad to say a few words in
pruiH ! ot l.hHinberlnin s cough remedy
writes Mrs l.ida Dewey, Milwaukee, Wis.
"1 have used it for years both for mv
children and myself and it never fails to
relieve and cure a cough or cold. Ao
family with children should be without
it as it gives almost immediate relief in
eases of croup." Chamberlain's Cough
Keuiedy is 'pleasant and safe to take,
winch is ot great importance when a
medicine must be given to young chil
dren, for tale ty all tlr
ruggists.
Williams Weil Pleased With Valley
"I 'am well pleased with the Hood
River valley," savs Ira E. Williams.
who year before last purchased from
G. A. Hawnrth his handsome tract
west of the city. The place makes an
ienl home locution, having on it one of
the prettiest bungalows in the valley,
und a fishpond stocked with eastern
brook trout.
Mr. Williams also owns a large farm
in the Camas Prairie district, on which
he spent the sum of approximately
$2000 in improvements during the past
'car- .
Cob,! to lie 1 aken gerlously
Intelligent people realize that conv
mou colds should lie treated promptly
It there is sneezing, with chilliness and
hoarsliiiesa. tickling throat and cough
ing, the latter especially annoying at
bed time, use Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound. It is effective, pleasant to
lake, checks a cold, st-ips the coughs
which causes lofs of sleep, and lower
the ital resistance to disease. Remeni'
her the name, Fol-y'g olloney and Tar
Compound and avoid substitutes. For
shU by Ciias. N. Clarke.
, Notice
Notice is hereby eiven that the part
n;rship heretofore subsisting between
J. C. Porter, Nellie Foster, Amanda
Sears and Gladys W. Brock under the
firm nume of Sears & Porter, was dis
solved on the hrst day of August 1913,
by mutual consent.
J. C. Porter, ;
. Nellie 1. forter,
Amanda Sears,
j!5 Gladys W. Brock.
The liver loses its activity at times
and needs hep. Ilerbiue is an effective
liver stimulant. It also purines the
bowels.strengthens digestion and restore
strength, vigor and cheerful spirits.
Price Me. Sold bv Chas. N. Clarke.
Hood River Dinting School
Deadae 1am. aoder the iaetrsctioi
of Mrs. J. W. CrttM and Mrs, O. f . Stra-
nahaa, will begin the flm week ia Jaav
nary la Uaiitaroeaer ttalL
On Saturdays. bedBnlaf Jaaaar 3rd.
from t to 330 p. m , claea for children
np to 14 rears, la ballroom and tancr
dancing. From 3:30 to p. mclae
lor thoee over li years, la brclanini
ballroom dancing aad the CotilJioa.
On Monday evenings, beginning Jan
nary 6, from 7 to ;30, adult daea ia
beeinning ballroom dancing.
from f.30 to 10 a. m.. classes ia the
Tango and aad other new dance.
Charges for Claseee in new dances
$1.00 per leeaoa or 5.00 for sries ot six
lessons. All other Clsssss sight lea-
sons for $5.00.
Private lessons by appointment.
MRS. CRITF8 MRS. BTRANAHAN
Phone 2088 Jltf Phone 3633
Rubber Stamp Inks and Pads at this
office, also stamps mad t ereer.
Somaoni.
In tbs Circuit Ooort aflkaStala ef lima
tor Hood Kl Tar Cottn ly.
Amy t. Crarsllnf, PlalnUS
a.
Geo. D. ColbcrtaoB as Mary Carolina Cot-
tertaoo, bis wlla, oA K. K. RoOlnsoa Sa4
.Una Doe Hobtnanabla wile, eatoodaat.
To E E. Roblnaoa an Jim Dm
bla wite, abov uai deaaadaalac
la IhsDamecrt tbaRUtaat Oraaoa. tm axa
barcby required to appesr and aaawar tbe
oomi lalDl Bird anlmat yoa In tbaaaovaaa-
llllad ullOB or before tba Sttth dvnf Vefar.
nary. Hill, aald data bains' nore Utaa all weeks
eiicrnro puoiumuoa of law nouea,aaie peri
od of all weeka being tbe time preeortbed In
tbe order ftr lb publication of lb la eummong
and If you fall ao to nppear and answer tbe
piainnn win apply lo tba urart tor Um
relief demand in uereomplalnl, Wwll:
For judgment and decree of aald Court
against yon hir tba anaa of Sim aad Iniereat
t Hereon at tne rata of nine per cent par annum
from tbellibdayof Apr, Mil; fctrlbe tanner
sum of IJUO atloreev'e fees, and feir hirmu
and dleburaeinenta la aald ao.lt; and Mat tba
mortgage given by Uao. I. Cnlbartaoa aad
Mary Carohoe Colbert, bla wile, lo plain
tiff on tbe ma day of May. UUk to aeeure tba
paymrntoraald lama, and tbe obligations of
wlitcb mortcage were Manned by you In a
ded of conveyance from aald Geo. D. Cnlbert-
acm and Mary Caroline C'albertaoa dated Jan
uary 10th. liS, be soracloaed aa by law provld.
ea aou tne premiaea taenia described and
noriagea, town:
Hfnlnoly at Ibeaontbaaat earner of Blaek
eight Itl W man 'a Addition lo tne Cite of Hood
niver, me uounty oi nooa mvr, male oi
Oregoo.runnlng tbenoe aortb fifty faet;tnenee
went eevenly-Bve feet; tbenea eonta Iwobnn
dred and fifty feet: tbenee ""t eeveaty.fiva
faet'.thenoe north fifty leei: tumna east fifty
feet; tbenoe bortb one nnndred and fifty feet;
tbenee west fifty feet lotb pleof beginning
be aold according lo law ui tba nroeaeda
prising therefrom be applied u tbe payment
tne aaio eon), iniereat, attorney ' reee, eoele
uu uieuureemcuie. ana lor ftuen omer ana
furtber relief aa to tba Court may aeeaa Jim
and equitable, and tbat ai'CuUoa taaue for
tbe enforcement of aald decree.
Thin Hummona la aerred upon yon by pub
llcatlcm I hereof In tba Hood Hirer Ulae ler in
accordance with an order of tba Honorable
W. L. Bradabew, prealdlng In the abere en
titled Court, which order la dated beeember
a, wis, ana reqnlrea you to aopaar and ans
wer tue commaim nerein witntn aix weeaa
from tbe data of tba nrat pubuoationof tbla
Male of drat publication Jitnnary a, 114.
Data of laat publication Kebruary 19, ll.
UKU. L. MASTKN,
Attorney far Plaintiff.
Notice of Sheriff! Salt
Notice ia hereby given: '
Ht virtue of a Writ of Attaehment-Kxeroiron
iMiied out of and under tbe aaal of the Circuit
Court ot tbe State of Oregon In and lor Hood
Kiver County on December Slat,. 1913, upon a
certain Judgment rendered and docketed In
lue aaia court on December Slat, IMS, In a ear
lain action therein Dendinr wherein Anna
Crlup la plaintiff and W. H. Rodenhlaer la de-
ieuuut. in tavor or tne aald nlainun and
aimUmt the aald defendant, for. tba inn .of
b, wiin interval thereon at tbe rate ore
per cent per annum from December Hat, ISiS,
and the furtber aum of tw to, ooata and dla
buraemenU, wblcb ateontlon waa directed
and delivered to me aa Bberlfi of Hood Hirer
county. Oregon.
I will therefore In eomnllanea with aald
Writ aell all of tbe right, title and Iniereat of
ineaaiu derendanl. W. H. Rodenblaer, ia and
to tbe real property hereinafter described, to
the highest bidder, f r oaab, at publie auction
at tne iront aoor or tne court bouse In tbe elty
of Hood River, Hood Ktver County. Oregon,
on Saturday, January Slat, 191 , at 11 o'clock
In the forenoon of aald day, to aatiafy the aald
execution (leaa the aum of 1198.76 already ap
plied thereon, being money received from tbe
aale of livestock taken and aold In the aald
action,) together wltb accruing lntereau, coat
and dlaburaementa.
The real property to be ao aold la deaenbed
aa fnllowi. towlt: Lot 1. the Hontheaat oner.
ter (SE';i ot the Northeast quarter (NKM), the
ouuiu iiitiiinftKH tue nortneaat quartertH K)
of the Houlbcaat Quarter (8EUI.and theHontb.
eaat quarter (HKC.) ot tbe Boutbeaat quarter
(HE'.), all in Hectlon alx (6), Townablpone
(l) South. Range ten (101. East of tba W 11 lam.
ette Merldan; also, one acre local- d In the
Nor Ih weal corner of tbe North klf(N)of the
South half (H!,) of the Houtbweat quarter
(SW5-4). of Section twenty-eight (2). In Town
ahlpoiie (i) North, Kangelen (10), Kaatortbe
Willamette Meridian; all la Hood Hirer
County, Oregon.
Iaud DeoemherSlst, 1913.
THOa. r. JOHNSON,
HherlrTof Hood River Co., Ore.
UEORUK R. WILBUR, Eaq
Plaintiff's Attorney. jst
Summonj by Publication
In the Circuit Court, Stat of Oregon, for
Hood River County.
Ira E. Williams, Plaintiff,
va.
William U. Rodenhlaer and D. H. Kile,
Defendants.
To William H. Rodenblaer, Impleaded with
D. A. Kile, deiendanu.
In the name of the Btat of Oregon:
Your hereby notified tbat the defendant, D.
H. Kile, haa filed his answer In above entitled
action praying for a Judgment against yon
in tbe aum of jkW.tO wltb Interest from the tb
day of November, 1913, for balance remaining
due and nnpald for work and labor perform
ed In the clearing and Improving or certain
lands hereinafter described; and for tba aum
of 16.00 Dfcld for ver mention and recording of
lien; aud for tbe further sum of Ie0 reasonable
attorney'a fees in tbla action. Defendant also
prays for the lorecioaure of a laborer's lien,
wblcb said lien waa duly filed In tbe office of
the county clerk of Hood River County, Orev
fon, November 6tb,191S, an recorded in Book
of Mechanics Lien Record st page H2 by vir
tue of which a Hen la claimed by this defen
dant, for work and labor performed la and
about tbe clearing and Improving tbe same,
upon the following described real estata.towlt:
Beginning TtKtcbaiue south from tne North
weat corner of Lot 1, Section 6, Township 1,
South Range 10, K. W. M. running tbenoe east
.ttl cbalns;.tbence,aoutb 62 east J.7S chains:
them e south 80 aaal 1 29 chains; tbenoe south
1 weal S.76 cbatna; tbenoe north 87 weat 2.64
cbalna;lhence south 5 west 2.00 chains; tbenoe
south 82 east g.ftfehalna; thence south Is weat
6.22 chains; thence due wrsl 1.7 chalns;tbenee
south 8V atr west 32 chains; thenc nortb
M i chains to tbe plaoe of beginning, contain
ing 10 acres of land.
Also beginning At tbe northwest corner ot
Lot I, Section 8, Township I, South Range 10
east, W. M. tbenee east lO.ttl chains; tbenoe
south 4 chains; tbenee south M west ( chains
thenoe south 69 weet i ebainat tbenee north
to the place of beginning, containing acres
of land.
Den fondant praya that said lien may be lore
closed accord Ing to law and tb practice of
this ooiirt.atid tbe landa therein deaorlbeJ mar
be sold by the sheriff and the proceeds tbere-4
irona oe applied in eaiiaraciton or bis Judg
ment aa this defendant shall obtain In tbla
suit; defendant also prays for deficiency Judg
ment and for sucb relief to which be may be
entitled.
You are hereby required to apnear and ana.
wer tbe opruplalnt filed herein tty this defen
dant on or before tbe Tlh day February, 114.
and If you fall to ao appear and aoswer, for
want thereof, defendant will apply to above
described court for the relief demanded in bis
said answer.
You are berebyawrvad with this aommana
by order of the Honorable K. K. H tan ton,
county Judge of Hood River County, Oregon,
made and entered on tbe 17th day of Decem
ber, 19IS, wblcb order prescribes tbat you
auall ai.fwar and anawer the complaint act
out mrr,lot yon bv tb defendant, D. A. Kile,
In his answer herein, on or before tbe expira
tion of alx weeks from the date of tbe first
mbllcation of this summons; and you are
lereoy notified Ibat tba data of the first pub
lication of tbls summons is December 18, l I.
JOHN BAKKR,
Attorney for Defendant, D. A. Kile, suit 18.
Bros! us Bidg., Hood River, Oregon. . dlS-Jgy
Rich Hair
Long, thkk, heavy harr. Want thit kind?
Ayttt Hatr Vigor proaaotcs frwwth.
Does not color tb hair. '
As Year Dactar. tJHtt:
Does Your House Need
PAINTING?
NOW IS THE TIME TO PAINT
WE HANDLE
Sherwin-WiHrams Paint
"The Best Oi Earth" '
THATS ALL
CHASk N. CLARKE
The Glacieff Pharmacy
The Scenic Columbia
See it at it's best from
Dalles, Portkad St Astoria Navigation Company
Steamer Bailer Caatert will leaye Portland on Funday, Tuesday and
Thursday, and will leee Hood Eirer on Monday, Wednesday and Vriday.
Her arrital at Hood River being about 4 .30 P. M., and departure
boot 8:30 A.M., tame depending on the amount of freight we are
carrying!. Portland Dock at Foot of Alder Street
lo Diss, MM k
Wejatlntfhouae Heating and CooRinoj Apparatus
Electric Irons Frying Pans Disc Stoves Toaster Stoves
Always In Stock at Moderate Price. Let Us Show Yoi.
Bartmess Bidg. BAILEY & COLBY Phone 1524
ILECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
For Rent Apartments
in New Telephone Btdg.
Call Telephone Office.
Oregon Lumber Co.
Dee,
ALL KINDS OF LUMBER, SHINGLES
SLAB WOOD, ETC. CAN FURNISH
CEDAR SKIP LAP; ANY QUANTITY
i Both Phones
THE QUESTION BEFORE EVEBY WOMAN
is: "Where can I find a Grocer whose service is
satisfactory; who will deliver what I send for
.without substituting an inferior article?"
OUR ANSWER
is: "Here we are! Give us a call, or send along
your order. You'll never need'to ask that ques
tion again."
"THE BEST TOXSft&S T EAT "
WOOD'S GROCERY.
J. M. WOOD, Proprietor.
Phone 1221 Free Delivery
HERE IS YOUR CHANCE!
53 acres about 25 acres in cultivation frontfog on Col
umbia River. 71 miles east of Portland on S. P. & S. Ry.
(North Bank) fair improvements on place. This land is sim
ilar and equal to places on the river near White Salmon for
early vegetables, fruit and berries. I am going to sell this
place; if interested write or call on
F. W. DEHART,
Hood,
1
ttte River Steamer of the
Attni. Miiali Co.
Oregon
Estimates Furnished
Washington
I