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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (May 10, 1917)
t HOOD 1(1 VER GLACIER. THURSDAY, MAY 10. 1917 WEDEMEYER PRAISED VETERINARY PRACTI TIONERS NEED LICENSE DC 3C30C DC DC 0 0 FOR HIS SONGS W M A mm 1 ' - 1 ssssssl sssr- i m -as m -sr m Rjbr power o'mjlwt Determine of Gasoline "Then I might just as well throw my grav ity hydrometer away?" "You said it, Mr. Motorist.' "Listen, the boiling points of gasoline ab solutely control its suiting qualities, accel erating qualities, power - giving qualities. Gravity has nothing to do with it. "To get the most out of your motor, your gasoline must have the correct series of boiling points in a gradually rising, un broken chain low boiling points for easy starting, medium boiling points for quick and smooth acceleration, high boiling points for power and mileage. "And only straight distillation can give this. No mixture can embody all the hun dreds of intervening fractions necessary for a perfect motor f ueL "To be certain of straight distilled, un mixed gas, buy RED CROWN Tht Gtuolinm of Quality STANDARD OIL COMPANY tcunmtf We are selling Schillings Best Line with a Money Back guarantee if you are not satisfied after using them. Kaesser's Grocery Grocery of Quality E. E. KAESSER, Proprietor Phone 3192 Oregon Lumber Co. Dee, Oregon ALL KINDS OF LUMBER, SHINGLES SLAB WOOD, ETC. CAN FURNISH CEDAR SHIP LAP, ANY QUANTITY Both Phones Estimates Furnished AG ES Shadows have come falling on the ages for the soldier of fortune who would have sold his prospec tive chances jn Heaven for four aces. The stock of accessories, apparatus and supplies kept on hand by the Apple City Electrical Supply Co. have a value to the Hood River buying public relatively as high as those four cards would have had to a participant in a poker game. The goods we carry are time-tested, are nationally advertised and bear the guarantee of known labels. They are Ace high. Let us supply your needs and do your electrical wiring.- E. S. COLBY. BEANS Get ready to phot henna. Plant enough acreage to make it pay. We will have a BEAN THRESHER and growers can arrange with us to thresh their crop cheaper anil quicker than flailin.' it out by hand. Beans are a staple article of food. Prices are high and will remain up and it is the best opportunity the farmer has bad for years to make a ptolit. Get your seed at once. We have a limited amount of Lady Washington eeed beans and are taking orders. Phone 1401. Warehouse 7th and Raitroad Street. KELLY BROS. The Purity Dairy Co. Yours for prompt service and Good Milk THOS. D. CALKINS Otto Wedemeyer received unstinted praise from all Portland musical critic on the work he did last week at the A Dollo club concert. The following it- taken from the Evening Telegram : "Otto T. Wedemeyer. baritone, the soloist of the evening, sang Schu-1 mann a 'BeUhazzar and Tschaikow sky's 'At the Ball,' and in response tc the encore cave a love toner of the an cient Greeks. Mr. Wedemeyer is one of Portland's most popular soloists, and bis reception last evening was a triumph." Commenting on Mr. Wedemeyer c work the Oregon i an says : "The soloist was Otto Wedemeyer. baritone, an Apollo club member, and he was quite a sue cess. Mr. Wedemeyer was fomerlv en gaged professionally in opera in tht east and last night he was easy, nat ural and vocally satisfying, ilia dic tion ia splendid. He is a great vocal acquisition. He showed dramatic fire in the 'Belshazzar' solo. His extrt number was equally delightful in dain ty grace and finesse, 'Mopsa,' a love song sung by the Greeks, before the Christian era, and arranged by Villiert Stanford." University of Washington News Jack Sutthoff received the highest honor that the University of Washing ton can give to a son of hers, when he was electei to membership in the Junior-Senior honor society, Oval Club, last Friday. He was one of four men elected , out of the sophomore class. the announcement of the Uval clut pledges comes as the climax to camput day at the University. Jack ia presi dent of the sophomore class, was i strong contender for a place on the base ball team till war times causec the dropping of athletics, and has as sisted General Manager J. Arthur Younger in managing plays and theat ricals for the past, two years. His election was unanimous on the first ballot and was strongly endorsed by the crowd gathered to witness the pledging, as was shown by their dem onstration when his name was read off. ' Estelle Mae Rich, former grade teacher in the Hood River schools, who is now teaching in Seattle and attend ing the University of Washington in leisure hours, was a member of the lo cal sorority Alpha Delta which was installed as a chapter of Alpha Delta Pi last Saturday. J "Scoop" Phillips, Jack Sutthoff and John Allen enlisted in the coast artil lery when war was declared and are waiting to be called into action. The company to which they belong, 3rd Co. Washington Coast Artillery, was re cruited from the University students and has University men as officers. When called out it will be sent to Fort Worden near Port Townsend, Wn. Ninety-five juniors and seniors from the University are to go to the Pre sidio to take the officers reserve work. Their education in military informa tion started the next day after war was declared when they were allowed to drop all school work, getting full credit for the same, and register in military work. The course will be continued until they leave for San Francisco. An ambulance corps of 80 men is be ing trained and equipped at U. of W. to leave for France the middle of June. This is the twelfth college in the United States to supply an ambulance division for Red Cross work with the Allied armies. The University of Cal ifornia corps leaven May 5 and about one month later it is expected the one from here will be called out. Benefit dances are being given to raise $10,000 to uniform the men and buy two am bulances and necessary equipment The men are being taught first aid and instructed in carrying wounded men. Dorothy Baker, Jessie Howes. Ruth Phillips and Helen Sutthoff are all present and accounted for on the cam' pus here. There may be other Hood River people here in college, but if so they are hibernating in out of the way places. This University has shown a marked growth under the regime of President Henry Suzzallo. Since he took the helm here two years ago money for three new buildings has been appropri ated. One, the home economics and journalism hall, is now in use, a second is nearing completion and work will commence on the third next fall if it is deemed advisable to incur the added expense at that time. President Suz zallo is a graduate of Stanford and lat er was on the faculty of Columbia Un iversity, coming to Washington from there. Over 300 students of the University have enlisted in the ditterent depart ments of the army and navy. The men were granted withdrawals from school with full credit for this semes ter. Most of the recruits are from the two underclasses and are men who were not eligible for commissions, on account of age, under the officers' re- BC1VQ W Ul IV. Conrad Jacobson, ex-'18, who has been teaching school at Gib Harbor, is mentioned among the men who will go to the Presidio training camn from Ta. coma. J. W. A. Spence Helped Says Stevens En route to eastern Oregon points, J. D. Stevens, of Portland, spent Mon day canvassing Hood River county ' to determine the sentiment of local vot ers on the $6,000,000 road bonding act. "I find that the recent visit of C. E. Spence, master of the Oregon State Grange," says Mr. Stevens, "had no apparent ettect on the sentiment of local voters. Instead of!turning votes against the proposed good road move ment, it seems, from expressions of numerous citizens whom 1 have inter viewed, that Mr. Spence helped the bonding act" Peironnet Bays in Lower Valley J. S. L. Pieronnet. who recently Bold his orchard place in the Upper Valley to Charles Steinhauser, has purchased from W. J. Baker an eight-acre tract located on the West Side. The place was formerly owned by James Rimmer, an Englishman, who returned to his native land last year. A Symbol of Health The Pythagonians of Anctent Greece ate simple food, practiced temperance and purity. As a badge they used the five pointed star which they regard as a symbol of health. A red five pointed star appears on each package of Chamberlain's Tablets, and still fulfills its ancient mission as a symbol of hearth If you are troubled with indigestion, biliousness or constipation, get a pack age of these tablets from your druggist. You will be surprised at the quick re lief which they afford. Obtainable every where. CofflQjercjal Printing at Glacier office. It has coma to the authorities that several men are practicing veterinary surgery in Hood River county without licenses. The law is strict on this point. The following is quoted from the Veterinary Medical Laws of Oregon: Section 4811 Licenses to be Record ed. All licenses, as aforesaid,, shall be recorded in the office of the county clerk in the county where the holder of such license may reside. (L. 1903, y. 164, Sec. 9. Section 4812 Practice Contrary to Provisions, Misdemeanor Vacancies in Board. Any person practicing veterinary n edicine and surgery, or dentistry, in the state contrary to the provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misde meanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be fined not less than $50 nor more than $250, or by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding six months, or both. The fine collected under this act shall be paid over to the president of said board and become a part of its fund. All vacancies in the board shall be filled by the governor by appointment for such unexpired term. (L. 1903, p. 154, Sec. 10.) v , District Sealers Warned District Healers of the state were re cently warned as follows by the main office, of Salem : Shipments of strawberries are being made in the state and I would call your attention to the law governing the sale of same. First, that the berries must be sold in standard boxes, in quantities up to and incluidng a dry quart. Second, that the boxes be well packed. The purchaser is entitled to a box of berries well packed and level full. Last year this office spent consider able time and money distributing about 6,000 copies of the Weight and Measure laws, visiting growing sections in the state, calling the attention of the mer chants and growers to the law, and in sisting on the boxes being level full when sold to the consumer. . Feeling that the department has ex hausted every effort to acquaint the merchants and growers with the law, I am determined that the consumer, when buying berries, shall get berries in a standard box, well packed and level full. , I would request you to prosecute vigorously any violators of the law, which is as follows : "The standrad boxes or baskets used in the sale of strawberries, blackber ries, loganberries, raspberries or simi lar berries, shall be of the interior capacity of 67.2 cubic inches (drv quart)or 33.6 cubic inches (dry pint) or 16.8 cubic inches (dry one-half pint. And it shall be unlawful to offer or ex- Dose for sale or sell strawberries. blackberries, loganberries, raspberries or similar perries, in ooxes or baskets of other than the standard size ; pro vided, that nothing within this sec tion shall be construed in anv wav pre venting the sale of.stawberries, black berries, loganberries, raspberries or similar Derries oy the weight or in boxes or baskets of greater capacity than 67.2 cubic inches.'' . Another List of "Howlers" The latest list of queer and conse quently humoristic answers written on examination papers comes from the University or the State of New York, at Albany, which grants Reerents' cer tificates. Among those who wrote the replies were candidates for teachers' positions, for qualification as law or medical students and for admission to college. Here are some of the an swers : ' There was no Chistians among the early uauis. ihey were mostly law yers. Climate is caused by the emotion of the earth arounsd the sun. The skeleton is what is left after the insides have been taken out and the outsides have been taken off. A blizzard is the inside of a hen. George Washington married Martha Custis and in due time became the father of his country. The stomach is just south of the ribs. The alimentary canal is located in the northern part of Indiana. The rosetta stone was a missionary to Turkey. . A vacuum is a large empty space where the Pope lives. The government of England is a lim ited mockery. Georgia was founded by people who have been executed. The qualifications of a voter at a school meeting are that he must be the father of a child for eight weeks. Achilleswas dipped in the river Styx to make him immoral." (This is a vari ant on the classical story that "the mother of Achilles dipped him in the Styx and he became intolerable. ) Men Give Carson Problem City Marshal Carson is at a loss to know just what was the game of three men, who after he began his investi gations slipped quietly from town last week. The men registered at a local hotel as follows: John Levinsky, Portand, and W. E. Miller and Chas. West. Berkeley, Calif. Levinsky vis ited the marshal, posing as a private detective and soliciting work. The man stated that he -was alone. The hotel records show that he and the other two men occupied a common suite of rooms. West and Miller, ac cording to the city marshal, were working fsome kind of a photograph came. Thev solicited Dhotosrranhs. offering to enlarge them, bringing out detail, but reiusea to accept pay for the work, declaring that it was done simply to show what the process they represented could bring about Marshal Carson warned Sheriff Chris man, of Wasco county, to be on the look out, as tne men were neaaed to wards The Dalles. Shepard Has Early Corn E. H. Shepard will probably estab lish a mid-UolumDia record tms season for early sweet corn, despite the back wardness of the season. Mr. Shepard has several rows of corn across the garden at his West Side place six inches high. The corn was started in the house in cans. Trouble Entirely Disappeared Fathers and mothers worry over a child with a chronic cough. Knudt Lee, Wannaeka, Minn., writes: "For several years my daughter had a bad chronic cough. Every time she caught a little cold, it aggravated the trouble. We tried many medicines, but not until we Wed Foley's Honey and Tar did any thing produce any great relief. In a few days the trouble entirely disappear ed and has never returned." Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough. Sold everywhere. 0 w 0 o Prepare for High Prices Now is the time to prepare for Next Winter's HIGH EGG PRICES WATER GLASS Is Recommended by the Department of Agriculture as the Best Pre servative. We have a New Spring Supply on hand and are ready to serve you with the best quality we can buy and at the same old price. A. S. KEIR, Reliable Druggist. Agent for famous "New Edison Phonograph" 0 0 o DC 3 DC DC HURLBURT CALLED TO TRAINING SCHOOL Carroll M. Hurlburt, county engin eer, who was awarded a commission of first lieutenant in the Engineers Re serve Corps, U. S. A., last week re ceived a telegram ordering him to re port Tuesday at the officers' training school at the Presidio, San Francisco. Mr. Hurblurt is a graduate of the Uni versity of California.where hereceived his military training. The county court will hold open Mr. Hurlburt's position. During his ab sence his duties will be performed by his deputy, Al G. Cruik shank. Allen Issues Water Bulletin "Suggestions on Irrigating Practices for the Hood River Valley," is the title of new bulletin just issued bythe Oregon Experiment Station. The bul letin was compiled by R. W. Allen, of the Hermiston branch station, who has spent a considerable time at Hood River the past three years making a study of orchard irrigation. In his bulletin Mr. Allen says that conditions are very backward, and that a more economical use can be made of the water available. Instead of a con tinuous service to all patrons of a cer tain amount of water, Mr. Allen sug gests that patrons on different laterals rotate their use of the water, securing large volumes on certain days of the week. Aged Man Dies from Injuries Joshua Slutts, of Winston, Mont., uncle of E. J. Slutts of this city and brother of C. A. Slutts, passed away recently at Helena while sitting in a chair at a restaurant eating his supper. Death is thought to have been caused from slight injuries and the shock of an automobile accident. Mr. Slutts, who was S3 years of age, was in Helena to attend the funeral of a friend, John Broad. Mr. Slutts was a veteran of the Civil War and a member of the Grand Army of the Republic. Enoch Bra ford Now Policeman Enoch Brayford, formerly a local minister and merchant, who several years ago left for his native land, England, writes to local friends that, despite his three score and 10 years he is now engaged in night police duty at Walsall, Eng. ,, "My work is not the easiest in the world," writes Mr. Brayford, "as no lights of any kind are permitted at night because of fears of air raids. All of the younger policemen are away in the trenches. " Roy Dean Off to Train Roy F. Dean, formerly in the local office of the Pacific Power & Light Co.. but who was promoted to the manager ship of the Pomeroy, Wash., office dur ing February, arrived here last week for a visit with Mrs. Dean before leaving for San Francisco to attend the officers' training school. Mr. Dean re ceived a commission in the Engineers' Reserve Corps about the time of his departure for Pomeroy. Mrs. Dean is one of the leaders of the local chapter of Honor Guard Girls. "Chamberlain's Tablets Have Done Wonders for Me." "I have been a sufferer from stomach trouble for a number of years, and al though I have used a great number of remedies recommended for this com plaint, Chamberlain's Tablets is the fl ret medicine that has given me posi tive and lasting relief," writes Mrs. An na Kadin, Spencerport, N. Y. "Cham berlain's Tablets have done wonders for me and I value them very highly," Ob tainable everywhere. What's the Reason? Many Hood River People are in Poor Health without Knowing Cause There are scores of people who drag out a miserable existence without real izing the cause of their suffering. Day after day they are racked with backache and headache; suffer from nervousness, dizziness, weakness, languor and depres sion. Perhaps the kidneys have fallen behind in their work of filtering the blood and that may be the root of the trouble. Look to your kidneys, assist them in their work give them'the help they need. You caa use no more highly recommended remedy than Doan s Kid ney Pills endorsed by people all over the country and by your neighbors in Hood River. Mrs. J. T. Holman, Twelfth and B street, Hood River, says : "I don't hes itate to speak a word in praise of Doan 'a Kidney Pills,. for I have always found them to be all that's claimed of them. We aim to keep them on hand all the time and whenever it is necessary to take a kidney medicine, they never fail to give satisfaction. For backache and and kidney disorders, Doan's Kidney Pills can't be equalled. " Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for kidney remedy get Doan's Kid ney Pills the name that Mm. Holman had. Foster-Milburn Co., Props.. Buf- falo, S. Y. ' Go to Law, The Cleaner. M-l MM M l.M..M"M"i....H"Mi M-H-I-H-I-I-I-H-M'J H IIMIilll 1 1 ll'i i ForGoodnessSakeeat BlueRibbon BREAD 1 Made from Unbleached Flour 1 i-M"I"I"I"M"M"I"I"H"I ! I .M-M-M-M"! M UM- COAL AND WOOD Rock Springs and Utah Coal Best Grades Only. Wood of all kinds special quotations on carload lots. Crushed Rock add Sand and Gravel. STORAGE Remember we are always at your service for any of the above items or for the transfer of your trunk or any other hauling. Transfer & Livery Co. TELEPHONE 4111 ITT. HOOD RAILROAD COMPANY Time Table No. 29 Effective 12:01 A. M. Sunday, March 11, 1917. 80UTIIUOUND NORTHBOUND No. 5 Daily Rail AutoJ P. M. .5.00 6.03 ;5.10' J5.20 ,5.23 .5.28 .'5.33 5.3(1 5.41 5.45 5.50 5.55 6.05 6.10 P. M. No. 3 Daily Rail Autol A. M. 10.45 10.43 10.55 11.05 S 11.08 g 11.13 I 11.18 g 11.21 11.26 11.30 ' 11.35 11.40 fi ll. 50 11.55 A. M. Daily Sttam A. M. 8.00 8.03 8.12 8.25 8.30 8.40 8.45 8.50 9.(K) 9.05 9.20 9.25 9.35 10.00 A. M. F Stations ..Lv, .Ar, Hood River Ar. . Powerdale. . . .Switchback.. . . Van Horn. . . ....Mohr ....Odell . . Summit ..Bloucher .. . . . .Holstein ... . .. Winans .... .... Dee Trout Creek . . .Wood worth .. Farkdale Lv. FM. No. 2 Daily Steam Daily Daily Rail Auto Rail Auto P. M. 3.00 2.55 2.45 . 2.35 2.30 a 2.25 2.20 ti 2 15 g 2.10 z 2.05 a 2. IK) 11.15 11.0 11.00 A. M. No. 4 Net A. H. 8.50 8.47 8.40 . 8.30 ; 8.25 5 8.20 2 8.13 g 8.01 g 7.58 7.65 7.50 7.40 7.35 A. M. P. M. 2.15 2.12 2.0-5 1.53 1.48 a 1.45 1.38 1.33 g 1.26 1.23 I 1.20 1.15 1.05 1.00 P. M. Owing to limited space on Rail Auto all trunks and heavy baggage will be handled on the steam trains, either in advance of or following the passengers. Whenever possible we buy home products in preference to all others. U As a Hood River business man who buys at home, I solicit the patronage of Hood River people. W. J. Filz Meat Market We Give & Green Stamp