flOOD RIVER GLACIER. TIHTtSlUY. Al'iirsT 21. "1 I 1 1 I I 1 I I i 1 1 1 I I I I i I 1 1 1 1 i I I BRIEF LOCAL MENTION 1 1 1 I I 1 h i I 1 I I I I 11 I i i ii i 11 1.. Hj-i.r hi k, Oi.T.,!hKrit. Ji.hn I'eere farm mac hints. Gii!-rt M 'tcr far Company. jL'l ' I'.r.rm vi.nr enidm an-1 milium to the Ii.ri i.in i Mii!;n' I'o.tt.s rail. l ' t"r! Lirt itiunt'iu, fin ..rk and r.; ltl.:l,I!i. let '.M i. u. 'Mi J J. H. Kredncv was indisooed the! Mrs. G. L. Schetky arrived Monday from New York. City to be with her father, ho :s serioutly ill at his home. Cha.. Kuri, Ci.-W. R. 4 N. auditor fr.m Portland, was here the first of the week on official business. H..rn-T.j Mr. and Mrs. William T. Bell, of (Mcll, Monday. August l!, daughter. Miss Lisa Salu'st spent the week i end in Portland v. it h ruiv r,ri nday I.r-t t the Week. Mr. T. i. I'rohn has returned from a v !Mt on the coa-.t. Karl Franz was in I'ortland M oti business. 1'. (I. Ki(r left Tuesday fi.r P;rt ia'.'i i'ti business. I'. I.. Manser has just finished large display s:gn on Cascade avenue. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. I'.ati helder have left fur a visit at coast point.. i hvtrical repairing at I'akiu Klectrii Wi.iks. u,sti We .U" 11"W prepared to saw Vn lr 1 titherlin a hay. Tel. :tC. jltf Baling w ire, both plain and cut. (lil bert Motor Car Company. jjl Arthur K'dstad was a business vis itor in Portland the first of the week. F. It. Pooley was in I'ortland the latter part of last week on business. llardie and John Peere orchard trucks, (iilbert Motor Car Co. yll i ..r electrical troubles and Mora."1 battel les, see l:ikin, 11115 ,".d ?t inSif Try Shamrock Bran I i rahain and wide wheat. Thev are the best. al K. A. Koch has recovered from an in , disposition of several days. I'. I!. Ilaynes, l'endleton automobile itiati, was heie last week on business. I.. M. Bent ley was in I'ortland the iatter part of last week. Columbia dry cell and Hot Shot bat teries. Gilbert Motor Car Co. j:'l vel! your wheat, oats and barley to the Highland Milling Co. a'.' Grant Brawn is spending his vaca tion at Yoncalla with his parents. The Hood River Garag-has sold to J. IC. Mct'uistioti a new llaby Grand model of Chevrolet touring car, ('apt. C. M. llurlhurt was a business visitor in I'ortland the first of the w eek . Fred Sprangler, of Salem, former loeal resident, was here last week vis iting friends. Tree Props We have a good supply of them. Fir Mill it Construction Co. Fhone :il2. jl Ire to West Side resident, delivered for cents per 1ml pounds, Hood River Rural KxpiesH. al I Highest cash price paid for your used furniture, stovesand runs. Call Mcl.'laili at K. V. Fraiu Co. h'.Mtl .) R. Norton was a business visitor in Portland the latter part of last week. Mrs. ('. H. Sletton and daughter, have been spending a vacation at Can non Beach. K. J. Melsaao, of Parkdale, was a business visitor in Portland over the week end. Chas. Sletton left Saturday for Can non Peach to join his family and to re main there until their return home. Mr. a id Mrs. Geo. II. I,. Sharp and daughter, Miss Catherine Carter, have left for l'.oston for a visit. Homer A. Rogers was here from Cloud Cap Inn the latter part of last wi ck, lie reports business good. Hurry Farrell spent the latter part of last week at Dul'ur looking over the apple situation. Mrs. A. A. (ishurn and children, of Astoria, are here visiting their Oak ( .rove orchard place. Pr. C. II. Jenkins and family are at Car uon Peach, spending several weeks at i heir summer cottage. I n.ne taken the agency or the Spir e al'otset. Call at Buelnw Tabor Shop. Mi-. Karl Buelow , Hood River, Or. tf llardie orchard ladders -- strong Jat (". ! point. Gilbert Motor Car Com pauy. All roads lead to R. A. Pock & Son's meat market on Third between Oak und Cascade. Phone -bill. aTtf A. II. Rogers has arrived from Ken : eu ick and is now with the J. G. Vogt toegery. Mi.-.- J'lbanne Creighton, of Port 'a: I, ha- been here the guest of re la in, s, . A. Richards is recovering at the tillage hospital from an operation ia-t Saturday for appendicitis. Recorder Ilnwe plans on attending a ion of the Sheiks in Portland Aug-u-t 2;. friends J. R. Kdgar has been in the city , from lee Klast this week attending to ! matters of business. H. C. Berrian, of Portland, is snd jing the summer w ith his sister, Mrs. j I.. E. ClarK. I Frank Yonder Ahe has n.tn.nut f ! Cannon Peach, w here he was on a va a . cation with others of his family. I A VI' I i... i i. : . . . .... miaou is spending a vaca tion m I'ortland and other Willamette valley points. Will deliver alfalfa hay in town for f-o per town when older is for two tons or more. L L. Clark, Tel. 4013. Frank Caddy was up from Greshman last week visiting old friends and neighbors. Corbett Alexander and C. R. Bone motored to Cannon Beach last week on an outing. Misses Gladys and Florence, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. l K. Clark, are at Berkeley attending the University ot California. Mrs. Geo. H. Lynn returned Monday from a vacation spent at Portland. Eu- i gene and other Willamette vallev points. Searches of records and reliable ab stracts made by Oregon Abstract Com pany, a. V. Ontbank, Manager, 305 Oak Street. Phone bV.'l. jyO-tf Hurry and ord -r your tree props while a supply is available at the Tiim-A-I.um Lumber Co , corner of Cascade avenue and sixth street. ti-P.'tf Mrs. John Templeton, of F'orest Grove, is here spending the week with her daughter, Mrs. V. K. Abraham, and daughter. Clarence Gilbert will leave next week for a tour.of California fruit dis tricts in the interest of the Hardie sprayer concern. "Each Pearl a Tear"-see Fanny Ward in this next Monday and Tuesday at the Liberty. You will remember her in "The Cheat." Mrs. Alice Williams and children, who have been residing in Alberta, Canada, for the past year, have re turned here to make their home. Mrs. Edna Dawden and children, after a visit with Mrs. J. A. Greenwood in the Upper Valley, left last week to re turn to her home at Kokomo, Ind. Mrs. H. A. Hussey. Mrs. H. W. Hamlin and Mrs. Al F'rederich, of Underwood, were here last week shop ping. Plume your paint and paper wants to Hunt Paint A Wall Paper Co., w ho will take care of email as well as large ones. jyl'Otf Cloaniiur and pressing. Next door south of Muggins' .Market. Clothes culled for and delivered. Phone 3101. F. T. Anderson, on the Heights. a'.'H Mrs. Alice Osburn, of lxs Angeles, has been here the guest of friends. Mrs. Osburn formerly resided in Hood River. R. M. Wood, of Salem, has been here spending a part of his vacation visiting the family of his cousin, Mrs. O. li. Nye. Next Wednesday and Thursday at the Liberty, "A House Divided" and a Mack Sennett comedy, "Never Too Old." Forrest Carter, graduate of the Mood River High School, has left for Ber keley, to enter the University of Cali fornia. V. B. Cram, former local resident w ho is now with an insurance company in I'ortland. was here last week on business and visiting friends. W. L. Rowland was here from the Upper Valley Saturday on business. Mr. Rowland and family recently moved here from Mosier. Robert Miller and son, Victor, left last week on a motor trip to Tacoma, w here they will spend several weeks engaging in building a home for Mr. Miller's brother. "The Forbidden Room" and "The Musical Sneeze" are on at the Liberty today. Clara Kimball Young in "The Road Through the lark" at the Liber ty Friday and Saturday. Puick urd Pan American, seven and five passenger touring cars for Hood River valley and Mid-Columbia auto livery service. J. C. Underwood, stand at Pastime poolhall. Phone 2521. s4 WEDDINGS The Industrial Editor Butman, of the Portland Telegram, was here the lat ter part of last week securing data for an article on industrial development in the valley. Mrs. Will David, after a visit here with her brother, A. E. Woolpert. and family, has left by way of Victoria and Vancouver, for her home in Super ior, Wis. S. E. Coffin, civil war veteran, who i has been residing at Yaquina Bay for the past several years, was here last week preparing to remove to his Heights home. A. G. Lambie, former New England hotel man, who has been in Portland for the past several years, has been hete the past week trie guest of the I tioiei uregon. Elsie Grant, of Spokane, and Mrs. j Mary Scheirly, of Salem, have been ; guests the past week of their old ; schoolmate, Mrs. F. C. Wittenberg, j and family. ; A fire started late last Thursday on t the Columbia the gorge just below the i Eyrie Summer resort on the S. P. & S. line, burned itself out without reach ' ing heavy timber a short distance to the east. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart J. Moore left aturuay to spend his vacation on an automobile tour of Puget Sound dis tricts and Southwestern Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Moore, while away, will visit Victoria and Vancouver. Mrs. Wm. Slavens and son and Mr. and Mrs. Terry, of Portland; and Mrs. Claude Baty and son, of Canby, Ore., returned home F'riday after a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Shull, of Oak Grove. H. F. Davidson, after a tour of Eu rope and attendance at the apple ship pers' convention at Milwaukee, re turned home lastlnight. He was met in Portland oy Chas. H. Castner, who motored down over the Highway. 1). L. Davidson, formerly a local res ident U'hn 1H nitw n-ith the Heun Ssnruv fr enmnunv heMilfiunrtprn ut I .a An. . L H 1 1 iust back from irelea miNReri thrmiah tliuul kiv luul I where he WHS week, tin receipt of a message from ! ar!lt'y ,n.tne Mr. Davidson Chas. N. Clarke met him at the train. Edwin C. Eberly and wife have left 1 for Bend, where they have purchased i a 5, 10 and 15 cent store. Both Mr. i and Mrs. Eberly have had merchandis ing experience here. Mrs. Eberly ; was for several years with a local store. j C. A. Higdon and son, Thomas, of Belleview, Ida., were here last week I visiting Mr. Higdon's parents, Mr. and , Mrs. P. G. Higdon. A merchant of ; the Idaho city, Mr. Higdon was en route to I'ortland for Buyer's Week ; activities. Oram C. Woolpert, son of A. E. Woolpert, local manager of Dan Wuille & Co., has left for Harvard U rover sity. Mr. Woolpert, following army service as a lieutenant, Bpent last win ter and spring at the University of Washington. Accompanying her grandmother, Mrs. A. M. Kelsay, who has been spending the summer here, Miss Georgians Slocom, daughter of Mr. sand Mr. Geo. 1. Slocom, will leave this week to spend the winter at Holt ville, Calif. Ms. Chas. H. Castner left for Salem Tuesday to meet with the program committee and outline activities for the approaching biennial convention of the Oregon State Federation of Wom en's Clubs of which she is president. The next convention will be held in October at Corvallis. Prof. Alon Bement, head of the de partment fine arts at Columbia Uni versity, has been engaged for the iiast several weeks doing 'Mount Hood in the nude. The beautiesjof landscapes fiom Cloud Cap" Inn caused Mr. Be ment to remain in the high altitude longer than he had anticipated. Mr. sndJMrs. A. C. Lofts and daugh ter, Miss Lillian, drove to I'ortland over the Highway Sunday. Mrs. Lofts remained over until Monday evening, and on her return here was accompan ied by Paul Keir, justback trom Can non Beach. Miss Lillian returned home Wednesday. .IX3E2K If You Need Corsets, Don't Wait This is just a quiet suggestion based on known market conditions. We have a Large Stock of Bon Ton and Royal Worcester CORSETS puce thsm Cil we will sell as long as they . We will be unable to replace for near our present prices last at old $1.50 10 $5.00 UTZ & DUNN Black Kid, Louis Heel, Dress Shoes. Full plump stock, clean Cft c as a hound's tooth, worth $15.00, our price p".b5 FRANK A. CRAM 3 kimball-Gillman wedding of Fordham P. Kim- hite Salmon Reports Activity Considerable activity in fruit circles lias been noted in the White Salmon, A a-h, district the past week. Grow lers have organized a packing associa : tion. Htnl mic hinerv is heinv installed service in Prance, ! , . (,,( warehouse of the White Sl- advanced to a lieuten-1 m.m Vwllew Kruitvmwerii' Association. heavy artillery, and Ml.sh'he fnllnviirur re nnrnniyers of the Alice Giliman, daughter of L. C. Gill nackinir concern: .1. S. Desman. man, tormer president ot the fc. 1 . & S. R. R. Co. but now director general of the Puget Sound Division of the I Federal Railway Administration, was ' held in Seattle, where the Gillmans now reside, yesterday. Mr. anil Mrs. Walter Kimball, tlie j bridegroom's parents, and a manlier of I other local people were preM-1,1 at the wedding, at which Rev. Gowan, pastor : of an Episcopal church of Seattle, olli .ciated. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Peters, ! Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Pooley, Stuait Kimball, brother of the prospective ; bridegroom, and R. W. Kelly, were I guests from here. Messrs. Peters, Pooley and Kelly and the brother weie j ushers. I Mtfabe-Shull I Cecil Clarence McCahe, of San Fran ; cisco, and Miss Gladys Shull were mar : ried at three o'clock Thursday, August ; 14, at the home of the bride's parents, I Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Shull, of the Oak . Grove district. The service was read in the presence : of a number of friends and relatives by Rev. J. D. Lewellen. rollowing the ceremony a luncheon was served, after which Mr. and Mrs. McCahe Ictt for a month's trip to Sacramento and Lt.ke Tahoe, Calif. Later they will make their home in San Francisco. First Church of Christ, Scientist i Services will . building, '.'t!i and ii, m. ; Subject : ! Sunday School lie belli in Chin Lunelle, Sunday, 1 1 Chi ist inn Science, at I I a. in. Wednesday service, S p. in. The reading room is open daily frmn to 5 p. m., in the Church. Congregational Church The church will not be open dmii the month of Atigu-'t. Sunday ! will reopen on September 7th. lb -yul ir Church Services will begin mi Sept. 11 L. E. CLARK OFFERS HIS HOME PLACE I will sell sixty acres or less of my ranch mostly in bearing apple and pear trees. Good income property and easy terms. If interested look this up. One mile south of Pine Grove school. jllltf L. E. Clark. First Baptist Church Sunday school at b) o'clock ; members' service at "i p. in. and P. I'. at 7 p. m. each Suielav. P.. V l'.ible S, Service, 1 1 Endeavor, to all. Christian Church hool, ;i. to a. iii. ; I'resicliit!; a. in. and s p. in.; ChriM'u.i p. in. Cordial welcoiie For Rent and i lacier ollice. For Sale signs at the Christian 4 Missionary Alliance Sunday Sclio.il even- Sunday no lin ing at ! Ai. Pleaching at II. Ymitii; Peoples Society at 7 p. in. Expusibuy sermon at 8 p. in. Everybody welcome Up Goes Tlhe Quirtain on America's Greatest Custom-Tailors' Style Show th Maybe you've had the idea that Vi . i i o wnoie count rv is tromjr inreaci- kuv this Fall. One would think so by the dark reports every where concerning' the scarcity of jrood woolens and the heart breaking prices of Fall clothes. Hut cheer up! There's a treat in store for you. We have lifted the curtain on Royal Tailor's Fas hion ami Fabric show for Fall, -the World's Fair of Men's Styles. Never not even in before-the-war days have wre seen such a rich and versatile collection of woolens and fashions. The Royal Tailors have again justified their title as America's largest and most resourceful tailoring house. We invite you to attend the formal Fall opening of the Royal Tailors' Fall Line at our store this week. You will not be obli gated to buy just come to look. Ready - made clothes makers frankly admit that stock clothes will sell at up to $100 this Fall. Yet we offer you the utmost in Royal Made-to-Measure Clothes at 35 to $05., Why be content with stock-size clothes (at a higher price) when Royal Service means built-to-your-taste clothes at a definite money saving ? Molden-Huelat-Sather Co. Authorized Resident Dealers New Hiits and Caps in Late Shapes and Attractive Coloriugs THIS WEEK New Dress Shirts Now Ready for You $1.50 $2.50 $3.00 Henry Peyrollaz. E. P. Wray 11. VV. Neednum and J. T. Thorn. Profits from samll fruits and veget ables will be greater in VV hite Salmon this year than ever before. A Japan ese lessee on the Keiran place has sold i:.",omi worth of strawberries from about nine acres. The Oriental ex pects several thousand dollars worth of v.'tretubles. S. C. Zcijjler hi'S received ill lit for his asparagus crop. Mr. Manly has already sold ifSi)U from an acre of Kverbearirn strawberries, anil he is still picking fruit. W. P. Pal siL'er rutted ibidO for three acres of strawberries, and Selman Burtiss re forts prolits of JtlltiO for acres of ('la k Seedling berries. Uahm IJt'calls Ludendorf's Flight Oeneral I.udendorf, of the (lerman hi(;h command, whose personal history of the Prussian trial at arms will soon appear serially in the Oreyoiiian, wrote a none I poition of his memoirs while in Sweden. Axel N.'Kahm who has just returned with his wife to resume his residence nerv alter living for 10 years at llel sinirbon?, Sweden, says the German leader lied to a faim near lielsinboi k at the time the kaiser escaped to Hol land. "For several weeks," pays Mr. Kahm, "the world did not know what ha' become of I.udendorf, but news of his t xile at the Swedish farm soon be came public. Then Sweden, to pre serve her neutrality, had to take cog 10 nice of his presence. The general, however, appealed for permission to reri.iin a month and write his mem oirs. " Canadians I'raise Valley A. F liarss, formerly f the Oregon AlTicuhural College, and 11. T. How an:, both now members of the faculty of th.; horticultural department of the I'mver ity of British Columbia, have left for home after a visit here with Gordon G. Brown and I.eroy Chi his, of the Hood , River Experiment (Station. Shown over the orchards by Mr. Brown the men were lavish in their praise for methods used by local grow ers. The visitors will return to the Province to teach methods of fertiliza t io.i used here. The British Columbia horticulturists and Gil! local men are all just back from u tour of eastern Washington and ! i.iho fruit districts. They attended meet tigs of experts at Pullman 'and .Mi scow. Ni ws (tf Government Supplies Late Pecau.-e of the short time in which to disseminate the news, Hood River will order but a limited supply of gov ernment surplus rations. Postmaster Keavis Monday received blanks and instructions fur ordering various food stulf.j, but he was notified that all otders must be made by August 2(). The tardiness of receipt of instructions here gives no opportunity for notice through local papers. Mr. keavis has spread the news per sonally and citizens have made up orders for several cases of bacon and other staple foodstuffs. The bacon, delivered here, is sold for the govern ment at a fraction less than ,'!() cents per pound. 1 Smith Loses Case A sow Berkshire hog, according to the papers of the case, formed the contention between VV. E. Smith, Oak Grove orchardist and Portland ship builder, and his neighbor, J. Goudier. Mr. Smith was suing Mr. Goudier for s-f)ll, the alleged value of the sow pig, which he declared had been wrongfully converted. Mr. Goudier and his wife, however, testified that the pig had been bought from Mr. Smith. A jury last week found for the defendant and the cot to the plaintiff will probably exceed the value of the hog. Hotel Man Looks for Help Automobile tourists are stopping with -uch frequency at the Fisher Hotel, at Madras, that the proprietor, Fred Fish er, has been making a personal tour looking for girls to wait table in his dining room and do other work at the hostelry. Mr. Fisher had hoped to se cure the needed help at The Dalles, but his search of that city was una vailing and he came here Monday. His quest here was just as vain, and Mr. Fisher left for Portland to tell pros pei tive maids and waitresses of the cli ma ic appeals of Madras. SAFETY AND LIGHT WEIGHT are two factors which have given The llardie Fruit Ladder thtir wide-spread use. The use of clear well seasoned spruce lumber, light and strong; a thorough rei dotcement under each step, wnle spreading sidelegs, make this the ideal pi. ving ladder. Your picker will work fa;ler on a llardie Ladder, for he knows its strength. Gilbert Motor Car Co. FOR SALE HOUSES 4 room Cottage in good condition, Lot "iO x hl on Heights, electric lights, city water, rented now -for per mouth. Prue ,"!). 00 1 acre no buildings, J share Fanners Pitch, set to strawberries in :rd year. Price $1"00 CHI Wry nice t! room bouse i lot oOxl'OO, reasonable t. m Sherman Avenue, rins. Pi ice ltiootKI R. E. SCOTT Agent Real Estate Farm Loans Insurance The average fruit grower would do well to protect himself w fth an Employers' Liability Pol cy this Fall. Mr. Independent Grower BEFORE SELLING YOUR APPLES and PEARS SEE L. E. IRELAND Phone 3682 Columbia Warehouse Oregon State Fair Salt-in , September 22-1:7. Splendid agricultural, livestock, and industrial exli'bits, high class amusements, a su perb racing card, binder and better than ever. A. II. Lea, Secretary, Salem, Oregon. sis Runaway far Wrecks Lamp Post Tom Cameron, mechanic at the Hood River Garage, drove to the Second street entrance of the machine shop Saturday and left the machine headed down the grade. The brake worked lonse and he was attracted by his ma chine rushing over an embankment down to the O.-W. It. & N. tracks at the west end of the passenger station. On its downward plunge the car w reck ed a garden fence belonging to John tierdes and snapped olf the steel (lost of an electric lamp lighting the way to the station. Cherries Net $26,640 Returns from the Hood River Valley cherry crop season handled by the Ap ple Growers Association this season will Rhow a total of $26,064. The or ganization made a record on eight ears of black fruit shipped to eastern mar kets in refrigerators. The cherries, packed in 16 pound boxes, brought the following average prices : Lamberts, $2.8; liings, $2,645; and Black Repub licans, $2 05J. Some of the Lamberts sold on the New York auction market tor 40 cents per pound. Judge Wilson to Set 'Em l'p Knights of Pythias of Waueoma Lodge of this city are anticipating a pleasant event next Tuesday evening, when Circuit Judge Wilson, of The Palles, will be host at the local castle at a watermelon party. Judge Wilson will charter a motor truck and import selected melons from his own Wasco county ranch. Oak Street Improvement Planned Before next summer the weBt end of Oak street will probably be paved. The council has initiated a movement for improvement of the thoroughfare. Business men say that motorists trav eling Cascade avenue, the present paved city extension of the Highway, pass up.the stores of the city. Board of Equalization The County Board of Equalization will meet at the court house, Hood River, Monday, September 8, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of going over the assessment roll and correcting such errors as the board deems neces sary. All complaints must be filed with the county clerk during the first week ot the session. e4 ' J. Wickham, Assessor. Prather Farm For Sale As I find it almost impossible to do the work on my ranch owing to my age 1 have decided to sell the place. No better farm in the valley. Will sell a part or all. Will give terms on a part; plenty of water. For further particulars address Geo. T. Prather, a21 Hood River, Ore. NEW NAME THE HOOD CONFECTIONERY will be known after May 1st, 1919, as THE PHEASANT No change in ownership are Ue Best Teas for Iced Tea Any variety to suit your taste is here. ORANGE PEKOE Ceylon and India ORLOFF (iv nuinc Formosa Oolong PRIVATE GROWTH Finest Japan BONITA GUNPOWDER Finest China Sold only at The Star Grocery PERIGO & SON