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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 27, 1918)
HOOD UIYEIl GLAITE11. THl'KSDAY. JUSE 21. 101S Fancy AGAIN WE WANT Strawberries FOR CASH CALL US UP Produce Exchange Phone 1934 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. II! II: Fresh and Cpred Meats Fish Now is the time to get your fill of Royal Chinook Salmon. The season for Columbia River fishing is open, and this de lectable food, comparatively, is very cheap. Full Values and Courteous and Prompt Service Deliveries : 8.30 a. ni. and 1 p. m. daily, after 12 m. No delivery orders taken W. J. FILZ MEAT MARKET 1RIBUTE IS PAID NEWTON CLARK, P10- TO MR. SMITH NEER, IS DEAD 0 ! ft Last Thursday, when he delivered A telephone message conveying news 14 ' m session tit Portland, Jude Fred V'. Newton Clark, prominent Hood f?:ver Wilson, of The Dalles, paid a tribute ', pioneer, brought a shock to the get i to Hood River's grand old man, E. I. ' eral publie and grief to his lirand Smith. Judge Wilson's eulogy uf Mr. Army comrades. Fond of the out i f Smith follows: 'doors, Mr. Clark spent much time in One of my greatest pleasures comes j earl.v days in exploring the mid-Coin hen court convenes at Hood Kiver lumbia. Newton Clark glacier on ! and opportunity is given to pay respeet Mount Hood was r.amed for him. He and honor to a gracious personality. ! is J'ust commander of the lA'part the most revered man in the beautiful :. m f Oregon, Uiand Army. I valley of Hood River. E. I- Smith. A native of Illinois, Mr. Clark par iHefore coming- as a pioneer he had tuipated for four years in the Civil jseen and spoken w ith Lincoln in days " " Co. K 14th V iseonsm volun ! w ht-n that vrent mxn whs still Abm- teers. He was in 14 battles under nam Lincoln ana noi me rresiaeni or the United States. He had a personal i acquaintance with Thomas Starring, the patriot of early California, ami othr notable men. When I shake his ! hand, the same hand which touched h'1 engaged in sunVyin tl Lincoln's, and hear him speak of the , lan uth Dakota. Cla appearance and characteristics of the great president, 1 feel as though 1 were brought closer to the living pres ence of that ideal character. With the true spirit of the pioneer Mr. Smith came to Hood River while it was still untouched, save by the hand of nature, and is now. with but" few exceptions, its oldest pioneer. 1 cannot imagnie more fitting surround ings for youth to work and age to rest than in this favored valley. And here in the midst of a minature paradise he sits, cheerful and serene, indifferent to all doubtings for the future, spreading sunshine round today, typical of all that is best in the stouthearted family of the pioneers. oc 3C 3 tTT!Ji C3 0 HT. HOOD RAILROAD COMPANY Time Table No. 31 Taking effect 12:01 a. m. Sunday. July 15th, 1917. J T u ion (flO . 1 fev ' J t3c3 SOUTH HOCNI NORTH HOPNI) No. S ; No. 3 No. I Motor Mo101, ti),llly, Daily uallY H'nd'y 1'. M. A. M. As M. o.(H) 10.45 8. (K) ft. OH 10.4S S.05 5.12 10.57 8.15 fi.L'tl 11.10 M. 25 5.1'!) 11. 1H H.:10 ft. 1(5 11.18 8.40 5.40 11.21! 8.45 5.4.1 11.20 8.50 5.47 11.30 !U) 5.5(1 11. :W It. 0.5 ' 5.57 11.118 0.20 ti.02 11.43 0.25 .12 11.5.1 0.35 0.17 12.00 10 00 H. M. M. A. M. Steam. tMotor. Stations lv Ar.. Hood River . , . I'owerdale . . . . . Switchback . . . . . Van Horn . . . Mohr Odell . . . . Summit Hloueher . . . .llolstfin ... . . . . . Winaiis . . . . Dee . . Trout Creek . . . . .Wood worth . Ar. Parkdale Lv. No. 2 No. 4 No. 6 I No. 8 "TirttTy- I l'Kily Mntnr ' M","r Kxrept Kxcept '!JU!"' Satuiily Sunday Sutuliiy Daily Only l M. A. M. P. M. P. M. 3.00 0.25 2.15 7.45J; 2.57 0.22 2.11 7.41; 2.50 0.15 2.04 7.31J 2.40 0.02 1.52 7.22J 2.35 8.5H 1.48 7.18) 2.30 8.53 1.43 7.13, 2.2.5" 8.40 L.30 7.0(ij 2 20 8.42 1.32 7.02 2.10 8.37 1.27 6.57; 2.05 8.34 1.24 ft. 54, 2. IK) 8.30 1.20 0.50 11.15 8.25 1.15 H.45J 11.05 8.15 1.H5 0.35 11.00 8.10 1.00 6. SO J A. Mi A. M. P. M. P. M. Owing to limited space on Motor Cars all trunks and heavy bairgago will be bandied 011 the steam trains, either in advance of or following the passengers. Protect Your Surplus Crops T3EF0KE you harvest your fruit, grain or hay, provide a shed or barn in which to store it. And how about that surplus that you expect this year ? Maybe you '11 need some temporary sheds. There's no need to sacrifice your crop when we have so much GOOD, LUMBER for Barn or Shed Building, In our yard you will find every thing in building material. Make up your list and bring it in today. . BRIDAL VEIL LUMBERING COMPANY Yard West of Freight Depot-Phone 2181 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 FEUD OF NEIGHBORS MAY BOLD TRAFFIC A neighborhood feud may delay the lifting of the Highway blockade be tween here and Cascade Locks. It is proposed to connect the new Ruthton hill section of the Highway with the old state road bv a grade that will permit egress from the ranch of J. W. Morton. The Morton road will cross a comer of the ranch of 1'. A. Reed. Several years ago Mr. Reed, seeking a road from his. ranch to the county highway had difficulty with Mr. Morton. Now Mr. Reed has posted pigns, demanding that satisfactory ar rangement must be made with him before his property is trespassed upon. Only a twelfth of an acre of the Reed ranch is involved, and county officials expect an early arbitration. Unless the Reed-Morton controversy becomes serious, it is expected that the Highway will be open for traffic between here and Portland by July 4. ROBINSON SUC CEEDS Mclaughlin After the war Mr. Clark and h is j wife moved to South Dakota, where he j built the first frame house in Minne haha county. For several years he the public rk county of that state is nan.ej for him. He was a member of the South Dakota legislature. Mr. Clark and his family came here in 1J77, locating on a West Side place, a part of which the pioneer owned at the time of his death. He established many of the section lines of the mid Columbia country. The pioneer was a charter memlier of the local Ancient Order of L'nited Workmen, the first fraternal organiza tion established in Hood River. He bad been grand recorder of the organ ization for many years, and for the past several months had been in rort- and engaged in fraternal work. He was also a member ot the Masonic lodge and Canby Post, G. A. R., of this city. Members of the Masonic lodge and Canby Post participated in the funeral services held Sunday at 1 p. m. at Riverside Congregational church. Mr. Clark is survived by his widow. a son, W. L. (. lark, and a daughter, Mrs. W. B. Erazleton, of Portland. Members of pioneer families, (J. A. R. men and fraternal brothers of Mr. Clark crowded the Riverside church Sunday to pay their last respects to Newton Clark, HO year old pioneer. Rev. J. L. Hershner preached the fu neral sermon, assisted in the services by Rev. M. L. Hutton. With the exception of t,. L. Smith, Mr. Clark was the last of the charter members of Riverside Lodge, A. O. U. W., the first Hood River fraternal or- gnization, granted a charter in 1S8U. He was a charter member of Minneha ha Lodge, A. F. & A. M., of Sioux Falls, N. D. A party of the grand lodge officers of the Oregon organiza tion of A. O. U. W. were here for the funeral services. Mr. Clark entered the Civil war as a private, but soon reached the rank of rirst lieutenant. His command fired the first shots at the battle of Corinth. Because of illness, Mr. Clark's wife, who is at the home of her daughter, Mrs. W. 11. Brazleton, Portland, was unable to attend the funeral. The city school board last week elected E. T. Robinson, for the past eight years superintendent of Toppen ish. Wash., school, local city superin tendent, succeeding J. O. McLaughlin, who goes to Corvallis to take a similar position. Mr. Robinson is a graduate of Indiana State Normal and the IJ ni versity oi vvasningon. lietore going to Topieiish he was principal of a Seattle ward school for a number of years. You may tell anyone who asks you about Mr. Robinson," says Mr. Mc Laughlin, "that he is a line type of man and an educator of most excellent record." Bell Arranges Park Crews of men have been wrecking an old building on a quarter block at the corner of Second street and Cas cade avenue preparatory to turning the plot into a llower garden and park ing place for automobiles. One of the old structures on the plot burned sev eral weeks ago, and C. A. Hell, owner ot the property and Mt. Hood hotel ad joining, decided to make a park of the miarter block. Mr. Bell himself is a believer in the rule, "work or fight." Assisted by v harlie, a superannuated Chinaman, the veteran hotelman has grubbed out a lot of trees, ruined by the recent fire, and has otherwise been engaged in preparing the property tor a park Fire Threatens Clifton Despite the fact that he had spent the night before guarding his home against nre running in tne dry grass and underbrush ot the Columbia gorge M. R. Noble was among the most ac tive of Hood River county War Sav ings Stamps workers Saturday. A member of a soliciting team, Mr. Noble was receiving pledges amount ing to many dollars from his neigh bors. The brush fire was caused from sparks from a steam shovel engine en gaged on the Ruthtonjhill grade of the Highway. HERE WE ARE AGAIN wUh a fresh stock of WATER GLASS to supply you with, tor preserving the CHEAP EGGS. The U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, after exhaustive research, recommends WATER GLASS as the best preservative known. One quart of it makes preservative for from 15 to 20 dozen Eggs. 35c per quart. $ 1 .25 per gallon. Or 25c per quart if you furnish the container. A. S. KEIR Reliable Druggist AGENT FOR "THE NEW EDISON PHONOGRAPH " COOPER TO PROVE FAMOUS THEORIES II in Remarkable .Medicine Accomplish ing underfill Results iu l.cailliii; Cities MISS TOLLMAN DIES SUDDENLY One of the saddest of recent deaths in Hood River was that Wednesday of Miss Elizabeth Tollman, aged 25 years. Miss Tollman's wedding to Stanley J. Shere, former aijent for the Mt. Hood Railroad Co., was to have been an event of Saturday. Mr. Shere, who is at in the army at Vancouver here just in tune to see Miss Tollman, whose death was sudden, due to com plications following an attack of ton silitis, alive. The young woman, for several years in the ollice of the Iregon-Washington Telephone Co., is survived by her mother, Mrs. 1'. A. Tollman.a brother, William Tollman, who is in the navy, and a sister Miss Nellie Tollman. Funeral services were conducted Thursday afternoon at the Asbury Methodist church, Rev. J. 1). Lewellen officiating. Interment followed id Idlewilde cemetery. PARIS FAIR, KEIR HELP CAMPAIGN Cherry Harvest is On Following on the heels of the straw berry harvest, the Hood River cherry crop is maturing. The cherry crop here is limited, most growers having only a few trees for horr.ejuse. J. R. Nunamaker, who grows the fruit on a commercial basis, however, is seeking harvest hands. He expects to secure sufficient pickers from the strawberry fields. Mr. Nunamaker says his crop is of excellent quality and that, his vield. i except for Klaok Republicans, which are light, will be heavier than normal. Cholera Morbus This is a very painful and dangerous disease. In almost every neighborhood someone has died from it before medi cine could be obtained or a physician summoned. The right way is to have a bottle of Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house so as to be prepared for it. Mrs. Charles Enyeart, Huntington, lnd., writes "During the summer of 1911 two of my children were taken sick with chol era morbus. 1 used Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea Remedy and it gave them immediate relief." 1 S. K. BARTME6S Licensed with Oregon's first class of Embalmers. Phone 1381, 3821 HOOD RIVER, OREGOEj HAVE YOU BEEN SICK? Then you realize the utter weakness that rcbs ambition, destroys appetite i and makes work a burden. To regain your strength nothing has ever equaled or compared with Scott's Emulsion; its blood-enriching proper ties give energy to the body while its tonic value sharpens the appetite in ! a natural, permanent way. ! If you are run down, tired, nervous, overworked or lack strength, be suro ttfget Scott's Emulsion today, ecett & Beirut, Bleeofictt, N. J,. The Paris Fair and A. S. Keir are assisting with the War Savings Stamp campaign. These merchants last week subscribed for the half page space in the Glacier for making a W ar Stamp 1 announcement. Through an error their! names, however, were left off the ad- j vertiesement. i The 1'aris Fair and Mr. Keir received full credit, however, for their patriotic work. Snow Buys Out Forden W. Ci. Snow has purchased the entire stock of J. R. Forden in the Snow- Forden Motor Co. S. M. Dick remains treasurer of the corporation and Mrs. Snow becomes secretary, succeeding Mr. Forden. Mr. Snow, known for the excellency of his work for many years, will con tinue to operate the Cascade avenue garage and tne woodworking, Black smithing, repair and horseshoeing de partments will be operated along the customary high standards. Mr. Snow has become known in apple producing sections the world over for the perfect ed Hood River Apple Box Nailing Press. Mrs. Laraway's Cousin Writes Miss Mabel Erb, cousin of Mrs. W. F. Laraway, is now in charge of one of the large Red Cross hospitals in France. On a postal just received by Mrs. Laraway, the Red Cross nurse says : 'I have seen 600 wounded Americans today, and a troop train, carrying 2,(100 others to the front. They are the best ever." Miss Erb declared that she wished she was going to have one of those good Laraway dinners. Referring to the visit to Portland and other western cities of Mr. L. T. Cooper, the millionaire philanthropist and lecturer, who has commanded such widespread interest in the east with his health theories and celebrated med icine, Tanlac, E. C. Harris, his repre sentative, recently said in I'ortland: "Thousands of the most prominent people in Cincinnati, Cleveland, Den ver, Sal Lake city, Detroit, Louisville, Diillas, Atlanta, Memphis and other cities where his celebrated medicine has been accomplishing such remarka ble results are been more enthusiastic over Tanlac than Mr. Cooper himself. "As previously stated, Mr. Cooper contends that nine-tenths of the dis eases and ill health of the average per son is due to a catarrhal condition, which produces faulty digestion and improper asimilation of the food. "In a recent interview. Mr. Cooper was asked if Tanlac would relieve kid ney trouble, liver complaint, rlieuma-1 tism and a dozen other uilments. and in this connection said : " 'As I have repeatedly said; my med icine acts directly on the mucous mem brane, stomach and blood, expelling from them the impurities ami toxic poisons, and rendering to them a strong, healthy condition. I am con- I vinced that the stomach regulates the condition of the blood, and is the foun j tain head of health or disease, as the i case may be. My medicine is intended primarily for the regulation of the H,r,rlNet' i but it is no uncommon thing for per sons who have ur.ed it to come to me and explain that it has relieved them of rheumatism and many other ail ments, not generally recognized as having their origin in stomach trouble.' "The ingredients or medicinal ele ments which make Tanlac come from many remote sections of the earth the Alps, the Pyrenees, Russian Asia, West i Indies, mountain states near the Rocky mountains, Mexico and Peru are among the points from which the principal parts of the pieparation are obtained. In the principal laboratory of the Cooper Medicine Co., Inc., under the efficient direction of a chemist of note, those medicinal herbs, roots and barks are assembled in the rough and pains takingly developed so as to attain that high standard of efficiency shown by the uniform preparation Tanlac." Tanlac is now sold in Hood River by Kresse Drug Co. Adv. Ithi unialic ami kidney Ills Are you troubled with rheumatism, kidney or bladder ejections? Any such symptoms as swollen muscles or joints, backache, headache, dizziness, nervous ness, played-out feeling, urinary irreg ularity, pufliness under the eyes? You need Foley Kidney Pills. Mrs. Frank P. Wood, R. F. D. 2, Morrill, Maine, writes: "I found relief as soon as I ' began taking Foley Kidney Pills. My j husband also received much benefit from them. He was so lame he could not stoop over; now he feels no pain." Sold everywhere. p.. -i Correction In a report of the record made last week by a Heights soliciting team for the Armenian fund, it was erroneouly stated that the larger part of the fund was given by members of the Christian ' and Missionary Alliance. This was an; error. The church people were liberal i . ..;.. i,t v, f,,.,,i ..,o I in ineir CUIIU iuuiii'iiii,uub mc luim una raised from gifts made by all Heights families. Sour Stomach This is a mild form of indigestion. It is usually brought on by eating too rapidly or too much, or of food not suited to your digestive organs. If you will eat slowly, masticate your food thoroughly, eat but little meat and none at all Itor supper, you will more than likely avoid the sour stomach without tafnng any medicine whatever. When you have Bour stomach take one . Un.l '. TnUlota fs. rlirvaa. of Chamberlain Qtm. a Tablets to aid diges- K JRq Gasoline ofQuality Red Crown is a straight-distilled, all refinery gasoline, not a mixture. Its contin uous, uniform chain of boiling points makes easy starting, quick acceleration, power and mileage sure. Look for the Red Crown sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Ctlifornit) G. W. Pefer, Special Agt. I Hood River, Oregon. Oregon Lumber Co. Dee, Oregon ALL KINDS OF LUMBER, SHINGLES SLAB WOOD, ETC. CAN FURNISH CEDAR SHIP LAP, ANY QUANTITY Both Phones Estimates Furnished If we charged an admission fee ' it would bo worth it to see the splendid display of all that is new and good in seasonable Shoes. If you are an admirer of Quality or stickler for values you certainly will be more than delighted w ith our offerings. Come when yon can. Stay us lung as you please. To look ciists nothing. To buy costs but little. J. C. JOHN SEN "THE SHOE MAN" "STAR BRAND SHOES ARE, BETTER " When In Portland STOP AT THE PALACE HOTEL Oh i of the lk'st Hostterlcs of the Rose City 440 Washington Street FREE BUSS MEETING ALL TRAINS The cleanest rooms in the city, first clans service, fireproof, strict ly modern, lare ground door lobby, steam heated moms, with or without bath, hot and cold water, in chopping and theatre district, reasonable rates. An inspection will convince vou. THE CANNING SEASON IS AT HANI) Let us supply you with Jars and Caps Order early and avoid possible shortages in tin's line ol goods A BIG SHIPMENT OF WHEAT FLOUR SUBSTITUTES JUST IN. The combination of our Grocery with a firt-t class Meat Market mak.-n for convenience for your shopping. L. H. HUGGINS' SANITARY MARKET 12th STREET. PHONE 2134. Now is the time to buy your Spring Plants Plenty of Geraniums, Heliotropes, Salvia, Lobelia, Zinnias and hundreds of other different kinds of plants. Cabbage and Tomato Plants HEIGHTS Geo. Hasling'er GREENHOUSE Tel. 3393