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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1916)
HOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 191& i 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 BRIEF LOCAL MENTION 1 llll Illlllll llllll I NiiiT go Shoe nade or repaired at Johnten'i R. B. BanMtt spent the week end at Cascade Loeki with friends. Peachet for Sale M. ArZeliaT Phone OdellX12x5. Go to Law it right You are right when yoo (to to La w, the Cleaner. jn29tf r Walker West, of Dee. was in the city last week on business. Go to "New York" at the Gem to morrow and Saturday. Get a vspor plug from Gilbert & De Witt and aave gasoline. ,28 Mn. Henry Serr apent the week end in Portland visiting friends. II yon want shoes that don't wrong go to Johnson's. Born To Mr. and lira. Allen Hart on Sunday, September 17, a son. Save 40 per cent of yonr gasoline with a vapor plug. OUbert fc DeWitt. s2l Bert Head, auto service to all Valley Points; call Ms. Hood Hotel, 4421. jyfitf Pathe News every Friday and Satur day at tne uem. For- a famous 25c lunch go to the Hotel Oregon. a6tf Eldon R. Bradley has' been suffering irom an attaca oi grip. Gray winter oats, vetch, rye. wheat, Kelly Bros., phone 1401. aSltf Dainty Ella Hall in "Little Eva Ed- garton at the Gem today. F. A. Cram was a business visitor last week in Portland and Seattle, If your shoes have gone wrong take them to Johnsen. H. M. Hosick spent the first of the week in Portland. almost b28 Peaches for Sale - M. A. Zellsr, Phone Udell izxd. Miss Betty Epping, who has been visting relatives in Astoria, has re turned home. Films left with us np to 4 o'clock p. m are ready for delivery the next evening. Sloconi & Canfield Co. m23tf Charlie Chaplin at the Gem on Fri- day, September 29, in his latest com eiiy, "The Count." Prof. L. F. Henderson returned Vapor plugs cut gasoline bills in hall. Uilbert & UeWitt. Tuesday evening from Portland, where he had been visiting. For special dinners on Saturday, Mr Orchard ist, visit tne Hon Brau in rear of Garrabrant's cigar store. jnlStf Mrs. E. A. Macnamara and son spent the latter part of last week vis iting friends at Cascade Locks. Insure your apples and hay. Hood River Abstract & Inv. Co., telephone 1331. jy27tf O-Cedar and Oil Mops made like new hv washing them. Price 10c, at the Hood River Laundry Co. s21 Fred Bell, of La Grande, was here over the week end with his father, C. A. Bell. Lois Weber in the powerful photo drams, "The Eye of God," at the Gem next Wednesday and Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Stewart motored down over the Highway to Portland Tuesday afternoon. Insure your apples and hay. Hood River Abstract & Inv. Co., telephone 1331. ' y27tf S. A. Mitchell was a business visitor in Portland the latter part of last week. William Desmond and Bessie Barris cale in "Not My Sister," at the Elec tric today. Fred Cooley, son of Dr. and Mrs. M. E. Welch, celebrated his 14th birthday with a dinner party Monday evening. Mrs. H. C. Deitz and her mother, Mrs. Schall, have returned from Port land, where they visited relatives. Mae Marsh will be at the Electric Sunday and Monday in "A Child of the Paris Streets." Insure your apples and hay. Hood River Abstract A Inv. Co., telephone J 331. jy27tf St. Mark's Guild will hold a meeting this afternoon at 2.30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. A. C. Lofts. Russell G. Pond, of the Upper Val ley, passed through town last week en route to Portland on business. ' Don't forget that Pauline Frederick will be at the Electric next Tuesday for one day only in "Audrey." ' After a visit here with Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Cowley Mrs. J. B. Jones has re turned to her home at Pasadena, Calif. Insure your apples and hay. Hood River Abstract & Inv. Co.. telephone 1331. jy27tf Mrs. Howard Hartley, of Tumalo. has been heie the truest of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Perigo. We wsbIi rues, rae and ingrain car pets at reasonable prices Hood River Laundry Co. st Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Davidson spent the week end in Portland visiting friends. Have your sweater washed np for the coming winter. Price 25c to 36c Hood Kiver Laundry Co. . Mrs T. N. Ravlin SDent the week end in Portland with friends. She wss also present at tha Tom Dobson recital. Arhtur Mnun J t,.i:. t . l 1 left Sunday for Walla Walla, where they will enter Whitman College. w. i. Euachede was In Forest Crova oyer tha week and to visit with relatives. Baczaee tranafarnul .I.Li PhOne. dttT 2fi21 raai.lan. 9A'9 L Carlton. tf Mr. and Mrs. Ralnh Rnnt ami u. and Mrs. F. X. Arena vara in Pnri)mnA foi the Tom Dobson recital Mrs. E. H Hartal mA ohiM... left last Thursday for Portland to visit mi ismiiy or M. C. McGuire. S. W. Curran. ViantA nat una,. visor, waa a business visitor in tha city last week. Let US do un vonr Brrim rnrtaina lull length 20c per pair Hood River Laun dry Co. ,21 D. C Eccles. nresident nf tha flra. gon Lumber Co., waa here last week irom ugden. Kodak finighincr-ornprt am m ww wa a n V aa lour hour service. Blocom & Canfield vO- m23ti Mrs. E. R. Pooley, after a visit with Portland relatives, and friends, re turned home last week. MISS Roth Blowers waa vinnar nf nrst prise in Class A of tha fancy work cAiuuiu at oaturaays scnool lair. Dr. David N. Roherff. atata haalth omcer, was here Tuesday visiting iuuiuy neaitn umeer fcagington. W. W. Stevenson is at tha Cottana Ti 1 i . . nnspiiai sunering irom a serious ner vous breakdown. . Mrs. W. L. Nichols and daughter. Miss 11a, and Mrs. A. O. Anderson were Portland visitors last week. - Bring us your films for development and printing. Prices the lowest for GOOD work. Twenty-four hour service Blocom & Canfield Co. m23tf W. L. Mason, of the Upper Valley. was in town the latter part of last week making preparations for the bar vest of his apple crop. Mrs. L. F. Hanel left last week for Lakeview, where she will spend the next two months visiting friends and relatives. Mr. ana Mrs. J. w. Parker and son, Charles, who have been in British Columbia for the past several weeks, returned home Saturday evening. Leroy, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ber nard Krohn, left last Friday for Cor vallis, where he will enter the Oregon Agricultural College. Donald Onthank came up Tuesday evening from Eugeno for a visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. On thank. Searches of records and reliable ab stracts made bv Oreeon Abstract Com pany, A. W. Onthank, Manager, 305 Oak street. Phone 1521. jy20tf D. McDonald, to the pleasure of bis many friends, is able to be out attend ing to business after a recent serious illness. Mrs. Richard Depee, who had been at Washougal. Wash., visiting ber sis ter. Mrs. Smith, returned home last week. Coming soon. Wm. S. Hart in the "Primal Life:" Blanche Sweet in"The Sowers:" Mary Pickford in "Ibe Eter nal Grind," at the Electric. F. H. Libby. an orchardist of Sheri dan, has been here this week noting methods of caring tor tne hooo Kiver apple crop. Miss Bertha Serr, after spending the summer here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Serr has returned to Port land to resume ber yocai studies. M'bsbs Nellie Tolman, Gertrude Nickelsen and Leita Bowerman have left to enter the Oregon State Normal at Monmouth. After a visit at the borne of his riaiicrhter. Mrs. J. M. Waueh. Dr. J. G - . 1 1 - I 4 Fraser has returned to nis noma ai Cleveland, Ohio. Little Miss Virginia Abraham.daugh- ter of Dr. and Mrs. V. K. Aoraoam after a visit with her grandparents at Forest Grove, has returned Home. Mra. I.ina Johnson and daughters Misses Lydia, Esther and bdna, nave returned from Portland, where they visited relatives. Rill Hsll. crack baseball pitcher.who haa hoan nlavins at outside noints this summer, is again behind the Hof Brau lunch counter. Tha inimitable Hazel Dawn, the beauty of the movy world, will be seen Isdv." at the Electric. Mioa aita Poole, who has been spend ing the summer on the coast, returned last week and has resumed her work as teacher in the city scnoois. Ravmund B. Early, who is now in tha firponn Lumber Co. office in Port iont aa a week end visitor in the citv. Mra n P. Dabnev. who was cslled t f ivinoHtnne. Mont.. recently because of the illness of her brother-in-law, has returned home. Oca tha vallev rieht. in Walter Shay'i Rijirtr tfiiirini? CUT. Special rates to patties bound to remote points and to Da- on st Anil at jut. HUUU liw tel. - 012 M..a F.i hot Turner Hand, of Baker, arrived the first of the week for a visit at with her granaiamer, uaviu n, Turner, and to be present for his birth day celebration toaay. fi"- irinnrir irjj Killing A Million A Minute Would you sleep with your face against a filthy germ laden articleP knowingly? Your feather pillow may contain millions of disease bearing g Jj put them through our Steam Sterilization and Hygemc Hot Air process at 50 cents per pair. . Hood River Laundry Co. C. N. RAVLIN Successor to J. H. Hellbronner & Co. Real Estate and General Insurance Heilbronner Building, Hood River For Every Man we have a Flor shcim shoe cor rect in style made over "Natural Shape" lasts.. English flat lasts, high toe models and con servative shapes as well The Imperial A blgh-grad gentleman's walking ahoa un or black $5.00 SHOE SPECIALISTS ALL STYLES $5.00&$6.00 A Full Line of NAPA TAN High Top Shoes Now Ready 3BBE 3E 3d allGodsHeire NEW WOOL SUITINGS I NEW FALL CLOAKS 50c to $2.00 $12.90 to $195 NEW FUR TRIMMINGS NEW FALL SUITS 25c to $2.25 $14.90 to $195 NEW FALL DRAPERIES NEW FANCY SWEATERS lOc to 45c $1.95 to $9.85 NEW LADIES UNIONS NEW DOWN COMFORTS SOc to $3.00 $2.9Q to $6.9Q NEW CHILDREN'S UNIONS NEW MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS SOc to $1.50 $1.5Q to $3.00 NEW WARM BLANKETS NEW SHOES for the whole family 58cto$11.90 SOc to $7.50 FRANK A. CRAW Misses Alma Absten. of the Viento school, and Miss Clsra Rand, of the Columbia school of the Frankton dis trict, spent Saturday here attending the school fair. Mra. W. P. McLaren and Miss Msry McLaren left last Friday for the bast Side home of Dr. and Mra. btanton Allen, where they will visit for sev eral weeks. Mr. and Mrs.Omer Day and children, en route from Portland to Pendleton, called here over the week end to visit the family of Mr. Day'a brother, Alva . Day. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Kendall and Miss Gladys Musser, of Chehslis, wasn., motoring here over me niKnway, ar rived the first of the week to visit Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Harper and family. The Ladies' Aid of St. Mark's Guild will hold a card party next Monday af ternoon at 2 o clock at the home of Mra. A. C. Lofts. All friends of the Guild members are invited. Floyd Gibbs, of the local Western Union office, has been tsking his vaca tion the past week. A part or tne time was spent at The Dalles visiting friends. W. E. Lefaivre and G. McBrinde, officials of the D. & R. G. R. R. t-o., were here last week, lhe visiting men were shown over the valley by Chas. T. Early. 1r. and Mrs. D. P. Gillam and their eight months' old son motored to Port land t idsy, returning ounaay. accom panied on the return trip by Miss Elda Jackson. A. W. Stone wss at Lewiston, Ida., last week on business. He reports that that section of Idaho was not so seri ously affected bv freeezs of the late spring as other sections. That their daughter. Miss Janet, may attend the local schools, Mr. and Mrs. F. siade. of Uusum. have aeain taken apartments at the Mount Hood Hotel annex. Mr. and Mrs. Ira E. Wililams have been on their West Side place the past week. Mrs. Williams being engsiied in eannins fruit. Mr. and Mrs. Williams are making their home at Laurel, Wn. Miss Irene Williams, a former stu dent of the local high school and the roommate of Mis Marian Howe at the Monmouth normal, is now teaching at Stevenson, Wash. Mrs. Flora Hartley, left last Thurs dav for Eugene with her daughter, Miss Katherme. wno win resume ner school work at the University of Ore gon. We will write vour Fire. Automobile, Life and Accident Insurance and Bonds in the largest and best companies; old' est insurance aeencv in the city. J. M CulbertsonA Co., phone 2483. tf A special meeting of Hood River Lodge, A. F. & A. M., will be held Saturday evenine. when work in the E. A. decree will tie conducted, mas ter J. 0. McLauehlin extends an invi tation to all visiting Masons. D. I. Stone, here from his place on the uooer West Fork the first of the week, says mat iramc to l.obi l-kkc has been extremely heavy the past summer despite the almost impassable condition of the road. Judge Samuel White, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, who had been at The Dalles to attend a maetino of the Woodrow Wilson league. waa here yesterday visiting local friends. Hugh Smith baa gone to Grants Pass, where be will work in the new auaar beet factory. Mr. bmith, an experienced sugar man, was formerly superintendent of the local municipal water plant. Accompanying the family home from Portland over the Highway by automo bile, Misses Olive Day and Mildred Camp came up from Portland last week for a visit with Mrs. Minnie Jaeger Vonder Ahe and family. Miss Margaret Reilley.who spent the summer at her home at Rock Valley, la., arrived last week to begin her nrW in the citv schools Monday. Miss Reillev will make her home with the V. C. Brock family on Oak street. J. Church and J. E. Hall gave most enjoyable dancing party in their nolv built ancle house at Uak drove last Wednesday evening. A large crowd of young and old people were there from all over the valley. W. H. Galvani, having accompanied eastern friends, en route home, this far from Portland, stopped in Hood River a short time Sunday. Mr. Gal avani la chief engineer of the Pacific Power & Light Co. William Walter returned last Friday from southern Wasco county, where he had been visiting the family of C. L. Loftons and attending the Tygh Valley fair. "The lair waa a good one, says Mr. Walter. Hans Laee was a business visitor in Tha Dalles the first of the week, hav ing driven overland to the neighboring city, tie reports tnai me wasco coun tv and or tne road over nm ranges 11 much better than that of Hood River county. A reception will be tendered the re turning pastor of the Asbury M. E. churcb. Rev. W. B. Young, and his family, at the church parlors tomorrow avenins. A basket lunch will be served. Long tables will be set in the church narlors and room Nicholas Hanlan. of Sitka. Alaska. who has been here visiting the family of his sister, Mrs. Ned Van Horn, left Monday evening. Mr. Hanlan will visit in San Francisco and go front there to Arizona. w. L. Hodges has purchased a new White touring car. Mr. Hodges and a party of friends will leave today for Pendleton to see the Round Up. The trip, however, will be made in Mr. ! Hodges ford. C. N. Clarke, who with his family Is spending a vacation at Cannon Beach, has been very ill. He is re ported much better. Mr. and Mrs. Clarke and children are expected home Saturday. After a visit here with her grandpar ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Blount. Miss Leone Steinhofi returned to her home in Seattle the latter part of last week. On the return trip Miss Steinhoff was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. Earl trans. While E. 0. Blanchar and J. E. Rob ertson, who were in Portland Monday to attend the funeral of the late Mrs. Fred S. Stanley, returned home Mon day evening, Mrs. Blanchar remained in Portland for a time with the Stanley family. Members of the Laurel Rebekah lodge entertained at a dancing party at the Odd Fellows Hall last night. Those in charge of the dance were; Mra. J D. McLucas, Mra. Ura Wiley. Mrs. R. K. Johnson, Mrs. Geo. W. Thomson, A. L. Vincent and B. F. Moses. The Ladies' Aid of the Asbury M. E. churcb will hold a 10-cent party at the home of Mrs. F. K. Jackson next hri day evening, Setember 29. All friends of the church are cordially invited to be present. Members of the church and society are urged to be present. A general good time is assured for all. Miss Lodesca Loveland. singer of New York city, who has given a con cert in Portland that brought much praise, will give a recital next Wednes day epening at St. Mark's Episcopal church. Miss Loveland is said to one of the foremost young soprano singers of America. "Preparedness" is not only applicable to national affairs, but to those of every private individual. Are your finances in case of sudden reverses in a state of "preparedness" for the protection of your own and your family's interests? John Golilsbury, Local Representative of Northwestern Mutual Life. jnl5-tf Mrs. A. G. Lewis and daughter, Jes sie, after a three months visit with relatives and friends in Fargo, N. D., have returned to their East Side home. Mrs. Lewis' son, who accompanied her east, has remained to accept a flatter inhg position with a Fargo mercantile company. Mrs. Lewis is much im- provea in neaua since ner visit. Miss Georgia Lynn, who has been in Portland the past summer visiting her grandmother. Mrs. R. B. Byerlee, un derwent an operation at the Good Sa maritan hospital Saturday lor hernia. Miss Lynn is recovering from the oper ation very rapidly. Mrs. Geo. H. Lynn, who was in Portland with her daughter at the time of the operation, returned home Tuesday evening. Miss Maud Carlisle, of Hood River, treasurer of the State Music Teachers Association, passed a few days in Port land this week on her way home from Chicago, where ahe passed the summer studying at the Chicago College of Music. She has been the guest of Miss Nellie Cornish, of the Cornish School of Music, in Seattle, for a week, and while there attended the concert given by Dent Mowrey on Tuesday evening. Portland Spectator. W. H. Weber, of Chicago, who has been at MoBier looking after business interests, was in Hood River last Fri day afternoon. Mr. Weber is inter ested in the East Hood River Fruit Co. at Mosier. Hans Kollandsrud. super intendent of the fruit ranch at Mosier, who recently left the Cottage Hospital, where he had received treatment for a broken leg, waa also a visitor here Saturday. Mr. Kollndsrud is much better. H. W. Bluhm and wife, of Seward, Neb., who were en route home from a tour of Colorado and California points. arrived here last week Thursday for a visit with Mr. Blubm's brother. P. W Bluhm, and family. After aeeing the Hood River valley. Mr. and Mrs, Bluhm left Monday for Portland. Be fore returning to the Middle West they will stop at Washington points. The visitors were delighted with the orch ards. While here they visited the Up per Valley and in the Dee region. Mr. Bluhm motored with them to Mitchell's Point tunnel, and a large number of photographs of local scenes will be taken back to Seward. CULL APPLES $6.00 Per Ton Our price this season will be $6.00 per ton for the same grade of apples that you have delivered us in former seasons. $400 PER TON If the above grade has been sorted and the best removed leaving dry rots, water core and imperfect apples of 175s and smaller, our price will be $4.00 per ton. You can deliver all your culls to us in sacks or loose in wagon box and no sort ing for grade. The $6.00 price delivered in sacks is a better price than $8.00 in boxes sorted free from worms, dry rot or water core, and imperfect shaped apples, as you will only be allowed $4 per ton for the latter grade. Kindly consider these figures before contracting with outsiders, at a supposed higher figure. We have five large hydraulic presses in operation and can take care of your de liveries without delay. Hood River Apple Vinegar Co. 1,i.,H,lH,,H..H..lHl, H,H mn m I FISS, FURS AND FEATHERS X I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 l'H'1 1 1 I I 1 M -H-H-l i Sheriff Johnson angled for the elu sive Dolly Varden Sunday. Daman Smiopft anil finv Millar anent Sunday in the Upper Valley fishing. C B. Harper and Russell Wilbur spent pert of Sunday fishing on the lower Hood river. Carl D. Shoemaker, state game war den, was in Hood River Sunday on his way to lhe Dalies. The State Game and Fish Commis sion Friday distributed 85,000 trout fry on the headwaters of the different forks of Hood River. The fish car, Rainbow, was brought here Thursday evening by an O.-W. R.& N. passenger train, and yesterday morning waa car ried to Dee and Parkdale, where the train was met by ranchers with wsgons and automobiles, by the Mt. Hood Railway company's regular steam train. The distribution of the nsh was in the bands of W. O. Hadley, of The Dalles, deputy game warden, and 0. H. Rhoades, a Valley rancher, who is a member of the board of trustees of the Hood River County Game Pro tective Association. Dr. Arthur Vial, of Portland, spent the week end here with his old friend, J. A. Epping, and the two caught a nice lot of fish on Hood River. W. L. Clark was accompanied on the Hood river Sunday by the, following men: W. J. McKee, Geo. I. Slocom, H. H. Larkin, and J. H. Fredricy. Walter Kresse accompanied H. D. Emery and family on a fishing trip to tha Trout creek section of the Middle Fork Sunday, where all caught a fine lot of trout. The next regular monthly meeting of the Hood River County Game Protec tive Association, will be held at the Library building Wednesday, uctooer 4, at 8 p. m. Since the cool weather of Indian Summer has come, the watera of Hood River, formerly made dingy by the an nual warm season of glacial erosion, have cleared, and fishermen on the stream are meeting with excellent sue cess. Hood river was lined with fisher men Sunday. W. L. Clark made the record catch of the day. landing a 20- incb Dolly varden. all. All friends of the eburcb are cor dially invited to be present. I Swkk Champion Pear Grower William Swick. whose acreage of bearing pear trees is the largest in the vslley, challenges any grower of the Northwest to equal the record he has made this fsll on an acre and three quarters of Bartletts. Mr. Swick haa harvested 1,670 packed commercial boxes from the tract. The pear grower has 17 acres of pears in bearing this year. Fifteen acres, onlv eight years old. are just beginning to produce. Thirteen acree of the place are set to d'Anjous. The totsl yield for this year is placed at provided for 1 2.500 boxes. Rubber Stamp Ink at this office. Mr. Morris, of the firm of Backua & Mnrria- of Portland, waa in Hood Riv er last week. Mr. Morris is very much interested in the propagation of nsn and game and seeing a membership re- a,'nlnn tha Mnntar nf tha Franz Hard ware Co., left $1 with Mr. Franz, wish ing to belong to sucn an organization to help the good work along. saaMBaaaaaaaaaa Dr. J. M. Waugh and family spent one day. last week on the West fork. They were accompanied by E. J. Mid- dleswart, Hood River's veteran fisher man. Dr. Waugh caught a large ateei head, and his daughter. Miss Martha, perhaps made the record eatcb for a Hood Kiver young iaay, isnamg uaa ketful of fine trout. Whila Mra FV R Snvricr aiaa ensaffed in housecleaning last week ahe was in- tarrnnteri. A parnet aaeener waa left on a back porch. On returninhg to her task the housewife round it impossinie to operate the aweeper. On investi gating aba discovered a garter snake coiled around a roller. Aa the. carpet sweeper was opened the family eat waa an interested spectator. laooy nas a ranntation for freonent rentilian catch es, and Mrs. Snyder haa concluded that the anake bad sought tne unique re treat to escape the claws of the eat. "Come home at once and kill a bear that is picking apples in the orchard," was the insistent message that Mrs. W. L. Hodges delivered Monday over the telephone to her buBband in the city on business. Mr. Hodges lost no time In motoring to his uak urove home. Men working on the orchard place tried vainly to keep the bear fright ened away from timber growing along a draw after be bad eaten his nil or Winter Bananas, but bruin escaped. Many reports of bears raiding orch ards are coming in. The scarcity of huckleberries in the mountains, woods men say, is driving them to the valley for food. Timothy Black, the half grown kitten of the William Frazier family, acquired knowledge and experience recently at the cost of a portion of bia left ear. In the trees on Hazel avenue, on which the Frazier borne is located, lives an old mother squirrel. The Sil ver Gray mother is the pet of every household, and many are the families she haa raised to amuse Hood River children. The kitten wandered from his usual confines in the Frazier yard and sight ing one of the members of the newest family of Mother Silver Gray proceed ed with disastrous unsopbistication to stalk the young squirrel. Barely es caping the claws of the excited kitten, the baby aquirrel barking frantic S. O. S. calls climbed a telephone pole. Timothy Black waa in pursuit up the pole when a gray thunderbolt struck him from behind. In tha administration of the severe punishment the mother squirrel sev ered a portion of tha black kitten's left ear. Woman's dub Activities to Begin The Woman's club will hold the first meeting of the year next Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 27, at 2.30 at the li brary. There will be an important business meeting presided over by Mra. W.F. Laraway, the first vice president, and Mrs. C. H. Castner will give a re port of the biennial convention held at New York last spring. Delegates to the state convention at Seaside will be elected. The afternoon will close with a re ception to Mra. Castner, the state fed eration president. This will be in charge of Miss Mary McLaren and the former presidents of the club, assisted by the staff of officers during Mra. Castner'a term aa president of the lo cal organization. Variety stamps, etc., at this office. NEEDY CHILDREN MUST HAVE CLOTHES Membera of the philanthropic com mittee of the Hood River Woman's club have issued an appeal to local folk to donate clothing for the children of a number of families whose lack of wear ing apparel is keeping the youngsters from school. "We have been asked to aid four such families," says Mrs. T. J. Kin naird, chairman of the commitee.which through the Associated Charities, ad ministers to local needy. "For then most part the needy have been left Btranded here following the harvest season. In cases children and mothers have been deserted by the husband." The philanthropic committee urges than to those desiring to make contri butions telephone at once to No. 2392. Gifts of new articles will be especially appreciated. Children's Commission Exhibits Under the auspices of the Woman's club tbe Children's Welfare Commis sion of Oregon, with headquarters es tablished at the Masonic building, is making daily exhibits this week. Yes terday Mrs. Robert Tait, president of the Commission, delivered an illustrat ed lecture at the local headquarters. INVESTMENT COLUMN - REAL ESTATE No. 109, : 8 acres 1 mile from town, all in young bearing trees and clover, (2500.00. No. 117 : 10 acres, 200 boxes this year, 6 miles out, Oak 3 rove. $2500.00, modern house, price (5000.00. Xo. 138 : 20 acres Oak Grove, young bearing orchard, beautiful building site, $1,500.00. No. 139 : 25 acres Oak Grove, 5000 boxes this year, good building, (10,500. No. 147: 10 to 25 acres Pine Grove, 11,000 boxes this year, full bearing, will make right price. No. 154 : Good ranch near Oak Grove to trade for residence in Hood River. No. 155 : Have exceptional buy on 30 acres near Riverside Park, Dee, with perpetual water right. LOANS Money to lend. INSURANCE Agents for Travelers Life A Accident and 24 good fire and casualty companies INSURE YOUR APPLES ABSTRACTS Our records are extended daily. They are correct. The title to your land de pends on yonr abstract Be sure that your title is good. Phone 1331 HOOD RIVER ABSTRACT AND INVESTMENT COMPANY