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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1918)
HOOI KIVKK ULAfltit TULKMWY, F.'ittllUAKY 21. 191S MAZOLA This delicious cooking and salad oil from corn b wonderfully economical if Mazola is a pure oil, pressed from American corn, tor Jeep frying, suuttin, shorttum and salad dressings. LAUDER TELLS OF PRUSSIAN ATROCITIES i The ! ing of an addresa by Hurry Lauder to i Northwestern soldiers at the Heilig theatre Wednesday afternoon of last I week, U taken from the Oregonian. It was written by Ben Hur Lampman). A little man, fearless of front.whose eves twinkle right merrily behind the face of the earth as clean a i ti e floor I'm standing on. The hun k..ows no mercy! Those beautiful liitb vil lages, of rrom 2,000 to 5.UU0 people, wiped otf the face of the earth. The hun knows no mercy ! following stirring article, tell-! There was a soldier whom he met in dier whose terrible face was hidden in bandages. He had asked the soldier how he received his wound. In a cap tured German dugout, by a lighted I candle, the boy had found a fountain ' pen, and had placed it in his pocket. ( i eeh laier ne nas saiuuwu ui wnic ukJ Qier jvjin odor from one Mazola can be uad oter it- lnes not transmit taste or food to another. Since Mazola is a vegetable oil it enables you to follow the plans of the Food Adminis tration for saving butter, lard and suet. More economical than the old cooking mediums, too. Get Mazola from your grocer in pint, quart, half-gallon or gallon tins the large sizes are the most economical. Also ask for the free Mazola Book of Recipes, or write us direct. glasses-shrewd, good natured eyes, i that make friends at a single glance. ; The ears have taken their toll in I baldness alone. He is sturdy as any I lad of 2 years, in his Drown sack coat j and the plaid kilt. Soldiers of Oregon and the North-1 west, sends waiting you to for the France, word where to his mother, to tell her all was well with him. 'An"! when 1 tried to unscrew the pen it blew half if my face away," " was the explanation that Harry re peated. Now, men, he urged with earn- ! Lauder's son gave to England the su i preme sacrifice this is Harry Lauder Your MM Itua4c4 ii Mucli 4uts no t ' tntir Hlilxtiaa. Corn Products Refining Co, New York Stlfaf HtfwwutiM. Johnson, Lieber Company Prtlu4, Orcgta - An Opportunity of 1918 This Is to announce to our patrons a new schedule of business, a plan that otters yon mm-oial opportunities. Because e found interest in S. & 11. green trading stamps growing cold, we have discontinued them. This is the opportunit y : We give five per cent discount on all cash purchases; and on all bills paid in full on or In-fore the tenth of the month following, we give three, per cent discount. Owing to a change in our afternoon del-very, now starting from the ("tore at 4 :0i instead of 4 o'clock, kindly have your orders in before the automobile starts. W. J. FILZ MEAT MARKET 1YT. HOOD RAILROAD COMPANY Time Table No. 31 Taking effect 12:01 a. m. Sunday, July 15th, 1917. HOfTHHOi:.M) NOKTHIIOl'NM No. S Motor Daily r. m. 5.00 ft . IKi 5.12 fi.2 f.L'( 5.:if 6.40 5.4;! 5.47 5.5(1 t.,ii ti U2 fi.12 ti.n M. No. 3 Motor Daily A. M. 10.45 10 AH 10.57 11.10 II. IS 11. 18 11.21 ll.2ti 11 30 n.:s:i 1I.3S i 11.4:( j 1 1 .5.1 12.00 M. No. I Ulrtiiy Kxeepli Mtufy A. M. 8.00 8.05 8.15 8.25 s:m) 8.40 8.45 8.,)0 II. IK) il.iV 9.20 0.25 0 Mo HI .00 A. M. Stations . Lv. Hood River . . , . I'owei-lale . . . . Switchback . . . . Van I lorn . Mohr. .. Udell. .. Summit . . liloncher . . Ilolstein . Winnns . . I Ve . . . . . . Trout Creek . . . .Wooi 1 worth ..Ar. Parkdalt Ar Lv. No. 2 No. 4 i No. 6 No. 8 Tail.v- tl'ullyj u,.,nr Motor Sumliiy Smi'ltyj Dally i only 1- M. j A. M. I'. M. I'. M. 3. ml 8.25 i 2.15 , 7.45 2.57 8.22 ; 2.11 i 7.41 .'.50 8.15 2.01 : 7.34 2.40 8.02 1.52 7.22 2.35 7.58 1.4H 7. IS 2.30 7.53 1 .43 1 7. IX 2 25 7.4 I ! .3 i 7.0ti 2 20 7.42 i 1.32 : 7.02 2.10 i 7.37 i 1.27 i ti.57 2.05 ! 7.34 ! 1.24 ! fl.54 2. IK) i 7 30 ! 1.20 li ISO 11.15 j 7.2" 1.15 t-45 11.05 ! 7.15 I. o5 ti.35 11.00 I 7.10 1 (HI i li .30 A. M. t A. M. ! V. M. 1'. M. Steam, f Motor. Owing to limited space on Motor Cars all trunks and heavy baggage will lie handled on the steam trains, either in advance of or following the passengers. HOTEL BENSON PORTLAND, OREGON Headquarters for Hood River Valley Folk Ciet the custom of meeting jour home friends at The Rose City's most pretentious hostelry RAT KS RFASONABIF. S. HKNSUN, Uws-kr A. l.UNIiHUnU, Manacikr Anderson Undertaking Co, C. C. ANDFRSON, Sole Proprietor Licensed Embalmer and Funeral Director 312 CASCADE AVE. PHONE 1394 At noon yesterdav, and for an hour before, Vancouver barracks poured a steady stream tf olive-drab through the entrance of the Heilig theatre, until each feat was held by a soldier otticers and men who came to hear Harry Lauder speak of the world war. Pipers skirled airs of the highlands, their.shakoed heads nodding with the brave vehemence of the tunes. The drummer, in his leopard skin, twirled his wrists to the thunder that ran through the old airs. Then they sw ung to "Tipperary," to "Marching Through Georgia," aiid to '-Yankee Doodle," with an accompaniment of cheers. There was Harry standing before them, as the last piper tiled into the wings. He twinkled at them, stepped forward and raiBed his hand to check the applause. They were silent before the man who had given his son to the common cause. He jested with them. "1 hope you don't want me to sing and dance for you today," laughed Harry. "I hope you are not all Scotch, for a Scotchman always wants some thing for nothing.and usually gets It." The soldiers laughed with him. But there was little of the comic in the swift, moving address that fol lowed, and. for all thol iifc avc Harry Lauder srot good measure in return - for time and again they ihouted their approval or capped his vehement con viction with outbursts ot handclap nini?. From the Scotch comedian's address to the soldiers of the Northwest stand forth two integral factors - that it is a hnrh unvilege to tight for treeiiom. and that hatred, consuming and im nlacable. is the due of the hun until victory is achieved for democracy. "Well, now," began Harry, with the burr of Scotland clinging to his talk, "1 have been on this coast for three weeks, and 1 have met nothing else but an absolute, immediate resrxwse I'm expecting the same thing today. "I'm awfully glad mv audience is enmnosed mostly of soldiers, because I am here to add my word against any thinir and everything that is gome to imneile victory for the United States, All along the line 1 have insisted that the soldier shall have all the assistance the civil population can give him, "Yet, farther from the battle front, I have found a spirit of carelessness. We want to be inoculated with the se rum ot' sacrifice. We want to remem ber today that we are citizens of i ureat nation, and that you are what vour!forefathers made you, freemen ! "Does not the word thrilLyou?" he asked. "It does me - to know that 1 am a freeman and that 1 will never in any degree bow to Prussian miiitary rule! No man should lose his liberty but with his life. If there is a nation that should right for liberty, it is the United States, because thut is your symbol." ' At the entrance to America, sidd Harrv. stands a gigantic ligure of promise the Statue of Liberty rep rehentative of all that America litters in iimortunitv and ideals. "Men." he charged, "don't let yon big statue crumble down into the sea Liberty is the best word in any Ian guage. Liberty consists of respect for the riirhts of others, He made a parable of an experience, a talk he once had with a life-prisoner, whose sentence had been commuted and who saw, for the first time, the prospect of fields and water, and open uluces beyond the walls of his prison because his liberty was before him. "Kut the dull gray walls we stand behind today," sa'd Lauder, "are walls of cannon - cannon of the allies - and behind those gray walls are the best and bravest men the world has ever seen." Lamplighters of freedom, firemen of civilization, we are in the great war declared the comedian, holding a trust so hitrh that the children of men who fall, of men who return, will feel pride in the sacrilice of their fathers, "So that when the generations come after us," he said, "they will be able to walk erect, with smiles on their faces, and say. 'My dad lit that lamp Aye, and you're firemen, too. The world is on tire. Men, make no bones of nutting that fire out! Put it out as black as night! "Don't let us be war-weary, boys! he urged, his voice vibrant. "The man that stays at home, as well as the so dier.has a great responsibility hang imr on his shoulders. He has asked you to go and defend him, and he must look after you. "We mustn't take our bank roll and say, 'I'll see what I can do.' Ah, no We mustn t see what we can do- we must do! Do our best, our very best, When a soldier is ordered over the tori he doesn't say. 'Well, I'll see what I can do.' Ah, no! he does it-and he can't do aiw more than lay down his life. "So, I tell them, when you're asked for a war necessity, don't take out your roll and look at it; don't measure it by the lives of splendid men. Be cause Uod is a God of justice, and he will see us through!" In the Scripture, said Harry Lauder, his' voice taking on new enthusiasm, j tenseness, is an admonition to love thy neighbor, He did not wish to de ! clare his disbelief in it, an excellent ' commandment, but he asserted that ; some were beyond the pale of love, j human or divine. i "Yes, men, but I believe that God j does not expect us to love his ene jmies!" exclaimed Harry. "If the j kaiser isn't an enemy of God I don't i know. So we won't love the hun. ; We'll take him on his evidence, and we'll risk the rest. "The kaiser is no friend to anybody. ! When aman ceases to respect his fel : low man I don't see how he can have any respect for God Almighty! I don't i see it. It's impossible to me. The j kaiser is going down to the very depths of abomination. "The wake of the hun is abominable desolation !" he shouted. "He knows no mercy! No mercy prevails with the hun. I often wonder does he expect to get any when the time comes. Where there were villages in France there is no longer any habitation, nothing but waste and ruin to mark the spot of happy homes, said Harry. He had seen them, had marveled, as he hated, at the thoughroughness of devastation. "These towns don't exist today," he said. "They bave betp wiped off wnicn estness, "that is the enemy you re up Harry ; against. He knows no mercy. And when 'you re over there, and in a uer man dugout, should you see a fountain pen, don't touch it! Don't touch anything." As he passed through one captured trench, related Lauder, his coat caught ou a nail and tore the fabric. "This very coat 1 have on," he -amplified. Turning to an otHcer he asked why the nail was not driven in, out of harm s way. Uh, no, the officer declined. We did knock one in about two weeks ago, just over the line there, andwe buried .2 of our men. There isn't anything too hellish for the hun," exclaimed Harry, as he cau tioned against nail driving in rantntetl trenches. "The 'F.oche, the French man calls him. I rail him the vandal, the raper of women, the murderer, de stroyer of old men and boys. When you are over there you will see, as 1 did, little boys with ttieir right hands cut off. And when you' ask them who did it. they will tell you the Germans did, and when vou ask them why. they will say: 'So I will never be able to lift my hand against Germany.' 1 used to sit bv the tire and talk with my lad, before " his voice wavered, "before he went back to the trenches again. 1 asked him to tell me of these things.thcse unbelieveable things." Before Harry Lauder s son went back to the trenches, to die gallantly, he told the father of the fate of iiO capture! men of the Black Watch, butchered before his eyes. Taken in a night raid, they were stripjied and forced to stand in nakedness through the chill hours till dawn. 'In the gray dull of the morning," said Harry, "the Germans told them they could go back to their own trenches again. They crawled through the barbed wire, torn and lacerated, those brave men. 1 know of nothing more fiendish than German barbed wire. Halfway across No Man's Land the Germans opened with machine guns and mowed (low every one! Dad, my son said to me, it was an awful sight. 1 helped to bury them.' "What are you going to do men?" he challenged. "You are going to leave this building with the resolution that you will buckle on the sword, and you will stand at attention every moment of your lives until the sounds the blast of neace!" CCD 0 1 m u 0 EDISON IS BUSY in the service of his country. We hear of him at sea on one of his sleepless jro-yet-her campaipms ot exR rirnent-ttion. He is trying to scotch the tier man sea sni.ke- the submarine. Hut his I.ijr rhnnuKra;.h Plant keeps ever in ereasinir its i-iitput. In spite of the heavy National pi-'.l.lems with which Mr. Edison is wrestling, he has still found time to devote to perfecting The Edison Record His German supply of chemicals cut off, Mr. Kdison !ent his matchless mind to the problem of making all his ozvn chemicals, so now everything in the make-up of this famous record comes from his own plant. We are his Hood River agents, car rying a fine line of his Machines and Records for your inspection. Come and see. A. S. KEIR, Reliable Druggist 0 0 0 o DC DOC 3C REBEKAHS PRESENT H-I-1 H-I-H--H -i-v-H-H-H-H-h t--I- I - -I-I-I-l -I--I- 111 11 I- H 1.0.0.R WITH FLAG Members of Laurel Rebekah lodge;., made and presented last Thursday i evening to ldlewilde lodge, I. O. O. F., 1 a handsome satin service flag. The .. names of the following six Oddfellow ' soldiers annear on the banner: Dr. H. D. W. t'ineo. Will McGuire. Chambers. Louis A. Henderson, W al ter W. Shay and L'dwin C. Kberly. The presentation speech was made by Mrs. M. E. McCarthy. K. 11. llartwig accepted the tlag on behalf if the lodge. Rail 'Auto Derailed Striking a huge boulder that had slid down an embankment to the mid dle of the track, a rail auto of the Mt. H-xxl K. K. Go. was derailed Thurs day. Only the driver and one passen ger, an Upper Valley rancher, were aboard. The car proceeding; slowlv around a curve enabled them to jump to safety. He charged that the estrangement of England and the colonies was brought about through the reign of a Prussian Prince on the throne of Great Britain - a hun, he termed King George - and that Prussian propaganda had served through iany years to keep hatred against the motherland alive in the American heart. "The spirt of the Revolution prevails today," lie delcared, "the same spirit. You are revolting against the hun." Prussian propaganda had poisoned America for long years, declared Lau der, "with one arm around your neck, coddling you, stabbing you in the back with the other." He spoke of German rilles buried in American soil, asserting that a large cache had been uncovered not long ago the murderous instruments intended to repay American friendship and wel come. "Rows on rows of them, those guns, buried in American soil," charged Harry. "Who put them there? Your I When You Have a Cold It is when you have a severe cold that you appreciate the good qualities ;of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. Mrs. I Prank Crocker, Pana, III., writes: I "Our five year old son Paul caught a bugle j severe cold last winter that. settled on his lungs and he liau terrible coughing spells. We were greatly worried about him as the medicine we gave him did not help him in the least. A neighbor spoke so highly of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy that I got a bottle of it. The first dose benefited him so much that I continued giving it to him until he was cured." BLUE RIBBON BAKERY 1116 12th St. Heights IMione i.m Everything Good That's Baked i WHOl.KSALE AND RETAIL "7710 House of the Home Made Bread" i NOTICE j Notice Is hereby feiven thut the 'County Clerk of Hood River Comity, Oregon, will receive scaled propos i uls for the grading of the thirteen hundred feet (KIOOl, morn or less, of : County Road from the South end of ' the. 12th street pavement, South I across Indian Creek, in Section) ;!." ! mhi :t'i. Township i North, Range in i V.. W. M., over the. course specilled ' in the plat thereof now on file In I the office of the County Clerk of ! Hood River County. Oregon, by ox ! ch vat ion of cuts and placing of em j baiikments, all in accordance with 'said plans and specifications in said neighbor: O, yes, he s a very nice man. O. yes, he's a German ; you've ! Clerk's office. known him for 20 years. What ford-id! Also sealed bids will be received your nice neighbor do this: lo kill your wives and your bairns! "Bv God, men !" he exploded, "there isn't anything too hellish for the hun. ! He knows no mercy! He has shown me no mercy, and, tiy iiiu he 11 get none from me, either! For a space the speaker was silent, trembling, looking down upon the throng in uniform. Then he said : "This I do know, that thiH country, i the United States of America, had to j be guided by a noble mind and a steady j hand to come into this world turmoil ! today." With raised hand he held back the cheering. "It took a steady hand and noble 1 mind to guide this nation through the ; perils of Prussian propagana. And we, who appreciate the circumstances, thank God today fur President Wil son." The storm of applause broke. "I'm glad because my son was a sol dier," said Harry simply. "I'm glad because I know that he did bis duty. "There are three l)s for the soldier to guard against. The first is deser tion, the next is dirt and the third is disease. Guard well against these three Ds and give every attention to the other I) -drill. "Give your officers your conce.n trated attention, because an officer : can't be a good officer if he hasn't a; good platoon. And I believe, I know, there isn t an American officer whof would ask a soldier to do what he wouldn't do himself. "I may have an opportunity to meet; you again, when you go over there. . 1 hope you'll have a safe journey 1 across and that I shall meet you ! again," j Then Harry Lauder sang a lively j bit, written when he saw the first J American troops in France, something; to the effect that "We're going to do our verra. verra verra best, from the I north, soith, east and west." They b-ought him to his feet again ; and again, and he smiled at them af-j fectionately as he said : I know you haven t a thing to do When In Portland STOP AT THE PALACE HOTEL One of the lU'xt Hosllcrics of the Rose City 440 Washington Street I R I II HI SS MKK'I IS; ALL T RAINS The cWauest rooms in the city, first clans service, fireproof, strictly modern, large ground Hour lobby, ste.un heated rooms, it h or w itliout bath, hot and cold water, in shopping and theatre district, reaonahlp rates. An inspection will convince you. -.!, the office of said County Clerk for the construction of a concrete cul vert, according to the alternate plans therefor, said culvert to be constructed to carry the waters of I i.dian Creek through said fill In Sections 35 and "ii. Township ;i North, Runge 10 K. YV. M. llidders are required to hid on each type of culvert separately, all in accordance with said plans and spocirlcutlons in said Clerk's office. Also sealed bids will bo received foi the grading of nineteen hundred and fifty feet ( 1 ." . more or less, of County road on the Davidson Hill in Sections 10, 11, 12. 1.1, Township 1 North. Range 10 E. V. M., over the course I specified in the phit thereof, now on file in tho office of the said i 'flinty Clerk by preparation of a road bed, excavation of cuts and placing of embankments, till In ac cordance with said p'.ans and speci fications In said Clerk's office where the same may be seen and Inspected by proposed bidders or be mailed to ! tl-eir address on reipiest upon the 1 payment of $1.00 to the County ! Clerk. i- Rids will be received at the office of the County Clerk in the City of i Hood River. Hood River County, Ore ! gon, up to Monday, the 25th day of 1 February, 1H18, at the hour of 10 1 o'clock a. m., at which time or as ! soon thereafter as said bids may be ! checked, the contract will be let to ' the lowest and best responsible bid 1 der, therefor, the County reserving ! the right to reject any or all bids. Each bidder will he required to deposit with his bid a certified check tr five (5) per cent of the 'amount of 1 is said bid, which shall be forfeited t the County In case the contract is awarded to him and he shall fail. neglect or refuse for a period of five I d-avs after such award is made, to I enter into a contract and file a bond im by law provided. Said work will be required to be completed within APPLE FACTS. All liKl) varieties are now becoming very ripe and should go to the consumer at whatever price they will bring quality considered. New towns, Red Cheeks and lien Davis season is now here. We are in tho market for limlil Boxes FANCY NewtowiiH and CHn use a large pereentajjo of small sizes. Wo want Newtow n Cookers gia-led to size and placed in the Itox the same as wrapped Hint packed. Stock at .r to "5 cents the l!ox. Boxes paper lined. II you bave any small Spit,, Baldwins, or any other vaiiety that needs sellln-; ship them at once and get your money for them at once. We need 'em. tHFDinAU RFfKIFV fH Inr 12U Front Street, PORTLAND Reference Hiherniun Dunk. but sit there and clap all day. Kut i ninety days from the date of enter I've got to work this afternoon. So ! h.j, into such contract,. and the bond I'll say good bye to you, boys, and ! required of the successful bidder may the good fortune ot hauie he with v, (n be for fifty (50) per cent ot the i you when you get across. i contract price of the work, condition He stood at salute as mey rose to f.,i that said contractor will well and Oregon Lumber Dee, Oregon Co. ALL KINDS OF LUMBER, SHINGLES SLAB WOOD, ETC. CAN FURNISH . CEDAR SHIP LAP, ANY QUANTITY Both Phones Estimates Furnished their feet, those hundreds of American boys, cheering him, Worst Winter in Years Snow, wind and extreme cold caused more colds this winter than in past years. Foley s Honey and 1 ar proved its worth in thousands of homes. Men, women and children checked colds and coughs and prevented serious conse quences from exposure. It clears the passages, heals raw inflamed mem branes, banishes irritation and tickling throat. Mrs. Mward htrevy, rl 61, Clinton, O., says: Honey and Tar the coughs and colds and recommend highly." Sold everywhere. duly in a manner satisfactory to the County Court, and ,in accordance with the plans and specifications, perform the work contracted for and save the County harmless from any expense incurred through the failure of such contractor to complete said work as specified, within the time mentioned. And further that lie will promptly make payment to all per sons supplying labor or material for the prosecution of said work under said contract. Payment for said work will he made in accordance "I think Foley's! with Chapter 142 of the Laws of Ore- onlv medicine for I gon for the year 191u. Kent Shoemaker. County Clerk 8c By H, M. Francis, Deputy Dissolution of Partnership. This is to announce the dissolution of the partnership between myself and C. A. Tucker in conducting the Cas cade Garage. I have purchased the interest of Mr. Tuc ker and have assumed all liabilities and will collect all debts owed the firm. In order that the business may be settled at once will all who have accounts due the Cascade Garage please remit by mail or call at the Heights Garage where I am continuing in business. J. F. VOLSTORFF.