The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, August 31, 1922, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    o c: o
nOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 24, 1922
i
The 1922
1
Cutler Fruit Graders
ARE THE LAST WORD IN
PACKING HOUSE MACHINERY
.Arrrv rwcrto
UUY
NUMBERED SCALt
INDICATOR
CALC AOjUSTINO
THUMB NUT
" 4 . . -ww . N. ...... 3 f . , . i
- W nW CS
V- if' f BOATING-SIN BOTTOM J' apples me ocurtkiO iFRVH, - -
- '. vf 6Y CARRIER CUPS , V i
r
n
u I
U" I
1
Following are some of the changes and improvements in
the 1922 Models :
1. The New Spring Scale with numbered indicator.
2. Two-piece Carrier Cup of heavy construction.
3. Safety Friction Drive Pulley.
4. Automatic Carrier Chain Tightener.
5. Heavier construction throughout entire machine.
See demonstrating model at the HOOD RIVER GARAGE
and Phone C. M. SHEPPARD, Odell 16x
for catalog and full particulars:
CUTLER MFG. CO.
353 EAST TENTH ST., PORTLAND, ORE.
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
THE CALL FOR ECONOMY,
conservation, coupled with practical utility is
the demand that has resulted in millions of
sales of Ford Cars, Trucks and Fordson Trac
tors Wherever there is a problem of trans
portation that is particularly annoying because
of excessive wear and tear or because of extra-ordinary
road or weather conditions, a Ford
car or truck gets away with the job.
But even under ordinary conditions, when
there are no great difficulties to overcome,
when the matter of hauling resolves itself
in the transportation of a commodity over a
given number of miles, the small first cost and
the low up keep of the Ford Truck makes it the
choice of every careful buyer of transportation.
SEPTEMBER IS THE TRUCK MONTH
PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW
BART0L-MANSF1ELD MOTOR CO.
Incorporated
'The Home of Unusual Service.'
; At
i t i m
111 111 I '
The price of experience has always been high even when the
cost of living was low.
Trying to get Kelly-Springfield mileage out of low-priced
tires is one way of buying experience at the top price.
THE TIRE SHOP
214 OAK. STREET
RIVERSIDE SERVICES
TO RESUME SUNDAY
Riverside church, which has been
closed during the month of August
while the pastor has been absent, will
resume its activities next Sunday. The
Sabbath school will meet at 9 45. The
morning service of worship is at 11
o'clock. The pastor, William H. Bod
dy, will be in his pulpit. The evening
meetings at the church will begin the
first Sunday in October with the ex
ception of the Young Peoples' meeting
which is to be held next Sunday at I p.
m.
The 'program of the church again in
cludes the Sunday Evening club which
for two srears has been bringing men
to Hood River to speak on subjects of
wide social importance, lnis ciuD,
which is an activity of the men of the
ebufch. has already da tea some men or.
wid. experience in varjrius lines of so
cial and civic activity, in addition to
the semi-monthly meetings of the club
there will be evening services or wor
ship at Riverside church during the
winter at which the pastor win preacn.
Mr. Boddv returned from the sea
shore today. During his absence he
preached twice for Dr. McElveen in
the First Congregational church of
Portland.
St. Mary's Catholic Church.
Dailv Mass. ? a. m.: Sunday, 8 and
10:30 a. rn.; On first Sunday, only one
Mass, at Sa..m.f hrst iriday, Mass at
8 a. m.; Saturday at 9 a.m., instruction
for the children. General Communion
Day, first Sunday; Communion day for
children, third Sunday.
Parkdale Church Mass and Com
munion Service at 10 a. tn. each First
Sunday. Franciscan Fathers,,
Tel. 3132 709 Seventh Street.
DAHLIAS
Choice Blooms of the Best
Varieties, 50c and 75c per doz.
J. G. RUGGLES
1109 Prospect Ave., near 12th St
Hood River, Oregon
Entrance also on May Street.
Visitors cordially welcome.
"Hitting on all six!"
Let Westinghou.se
Attention keep your
battery full-powered.
Service for all makes
of batteries, based on
the West inghouse code
of sincerity.
WEST1NGH0USE
BATTERIES
GIBBS' BATTERY STATION
308 Cascade Avenue
Standard
Apple Box
Conveyor
$2.30 per foot
f. o. b. Hood River
MT. HOOD
MOTOR CO.
DO YOU KNOW THE
CULP PLAN STORE
carries the highest grade
tires manufactured? If not,
call in and get acquainted.
We will convince you. Here
is some of our prices:
Fabric 30x3 and tab $8.60
" 30x31 and tube 10.00
" 32x31 and tube 12 50
Cord 30x3 and tube 12,00
" 82x4 and tube 17.00
None better made. Call at 109
4th Street and examine Roods.
Bicycle Tires in stock.
109 4th Street
i
SCHOOL BOOKS ARE HERE
If you know what you need, come in this week
and avoid the rush.
AH books axe cash and no books are returnable.
The Book and Art Store
HOOD RIVER, OREGON
AD TO WOOD SAW
City and Country Work Solicited.
Will fry aay place.
Sutherland & Moore.
riir-t 3TiJ and 1713
RUTH SARAH
HOWES
Teachers of Piano
Accredited Phone J35J
Hiss Grace O. Furrow
TEACHER OF PIANO
HOOD R1VKB, OREGON mil
COMMENTS ABOUT
BISHOP R.L.PADDOCK
Because of his prominence and popu
larity here, tbe following, which re
cently appeared in the Portland Spec
tator from the pen of William Austin
Smith, prominent Episcopalian, ia re
printed: I had heard for years that something:
was wrong in eastern Oregon. When
the malady was hinted at 1 became
curious for the things which were
noted as signs of disorder seemed to be
symptomatic of a missionary advance.
No phrase in the office set for the
consecration of a binhop is so radiant
with the splendor of the apostolic tra
dition as that awful phrase, a bishop
in the Church of God. One's sectari
anism shrivels and is ashamed when
those seven words light up vistas of
the Church's hictory, past and future.
The servant who is consecrated to the
office which those words describe has
entered upon a spacious task. Whenjl
heard, from time to time, eritkism,
sometimes petty, sometimes sincere
but anxious, of what was being done
in the name.of the Protestant Episco
pal church in America's most rural
missionary district, it occurred'to me
that Bishop Paddock was, in very fact,
trying to serve hia Master like bishop
in the Church of God. 1 sought out
the story of his work. Some of it I
got from him as he lay on hia back in
a New York hotel; for 25 years of
missionary hardship and, of late,
wounds, which no missionary of Christ
ought to be called upon to bear at the
hands of his brothers, have broken
him. He will never go back to Ore
gon. Some of that story I shall try to tell
to Churchman readers. 1 cannot tell it
as I heard it and as it became patched
together from various sources, for it is
one of the two or three great musloa
ary romances in American church his
tory. In unheralded and patient hero
ism it has not been surpassed. Yet I
venture to say that not half a dozen
American churches have ever heard a
missionary address about the work in
eastern Oregon, and only a few score
of churchmen in the east know that
for 15 years on that bleak frontier
something like apostolic Christianity
was being tried 1by a bishop who has
been too busy to tell his own story and
too humblo to want praise.
We have read in the Spirit of Mis
sions and we have heard in our Auxili
aries the thrilling stories of what our
other missionary bishops are doing.
Tbe names of some of them are house
hold words. Their faces are almost as
familiar as those of our own bishop.
They come ,to us frequently and their
Freaence is a blessing. But Bishop
addock, when he was consecrated in
the city of New York a decade and a
half ago, had a conviction. When one
has seen Bishop Paddock's jaw and
looked into his eyes he will know that
conviction with him carries no light
ballast of determination. The convic
tion which this youthful bishop brought
to his missionary work was, 1 dare
say, in tbe minds of some members of
the Board of Missions quixotic and of
some of his fellow missionary bishops
almost a disloyalty to the fundamental
principles of the church's missionary
methods.
Bishop Paddock, at a luncheon given
in Brooklyn in his honor on tbe day of
his consecration, said : "I am not go
ing to take any money for the work in
eastern Oregon except my salary and I
am not eoine to leave my diocese to
talk about, my work." Some of the
clergy laughed. There was cynicism
in the laughter, there was also some
of the worldly wisdom gleaned from a
practical knowledge of the church s
missionary work. They said: "We
shall see."
So Bishop Paddock disappeared from
the city where he was born and bad
served his entire ministry. For 15
years he has not left his diocese, ex
cept to attend General Convention, to
attend tbe provincial cynod and meet
ings in neighboring dioceses, to go to
France as a worker during tbe war,
and at last, one is ashamed to say it.
he came last spring to New York to
plead hia cause and save his ministry
before the Presiding Biabop and Coun
cil. He has traveled much in those
years, but he has traveled as a mis
sionary in the hard, rough country
where the church sent him to convert
men to Christ. A good deal of tbe
time he has gone in khaki, hia blankets
on bis back. 1 have neard him criti
cized because he did not always carry
bishops' robes on hia journeys. And
for 15 years he has steadily refused a
dollar from the Board of Missions ex
cept his salary. He has also refused
Tift s from hia many friends in New
York, for Bishop Paddock was not a
stranger in tbe city of bis birth when
he was consecrated a bishop. About a
thousand dollars a year baa come to
him from a little fellowship, from men
and women whom he bad helped. That
sum was largely made up of widow's
mites. He couldn't refuse it. He
asked for their prayers. They insisted
upon adding money. He said that day
in Brooklyn at luncheon: "1 will stay
on the job and eastern Oregon will pay
for its own religion. lie baa kept
the promise.
A word about Bishop Paddock's
background. When on December 18,
1907. at tbe age of 37. young Paddock
was consecrated bishop, he was not a
stranger to the manners, spirit and
genius of our Communion. His grand
father was a clergyman, liis father
was a bbhop. Hia uncle had bea
Bishop of Massachusetts and bis cousin
was Bishop Bedell, of Ohio, lie, there
fore, knew something of the traditions
and the mind of the church. Ha moved
at eate within its borders and be was
not self-conscious about the proprieties
or the prescriptions of loyalty. The
church in which be was consecrated
bishop had bee a bis church by birth
and preference, and bis loyalty was
instinctive. It must bave amused him,
though I have not heard him say so,
that during his great experiment in
eastern Oregon presbyters, laymen and
bishops ho have scarcely become ae
climated in the Episcopal church ques
tioned his loyalty. It was because
Bishop Ikdauck was so much of a
churchman that he became so thor
oughly at bis consecration a bishop in
the Church oi uoa
Paddock was not an unknown man
when be was sent by the church to
eastern Oregon. At the pro-cathedral
on the East Side, the old Stanton
street mission, he had done for tbe
chore h. tt ta city ef Nw York, and
for the nation, a heroic piece of Chris
tian service, tmhop Potter s tetter to
Mayor Van Wyck, revesting the crim
inal rtes lect of the administration, is
a proud r(sion of the LHuceee of
New jork. isut that letter was mere
ly tbe drsmatic and rhetorical ebmax
of Us three years labor of yoorg Pad
dock, woo, in the worst sink of iniqui
ty that America has known, fought as
a priest to protect hia boys and girls
from the si. res with which the en
trtwbed poer of Tammany h1 de
bauched tbe streets of the poor. When
nbop Potter wrote that letter the
battle bad been foernt awl woo. rd-
dork k4 doo the wotk. It is a glori
ous chsr-ter in tbe history of our Amer
ican church. The man who was sent
as a bishop to the frontier diocese was
not a fledgling. He had shown pa
tience, courage and wisdom in trying
seasons.
From the pro-cathedral Paddock
went to the run-down church ia Old
Chelsea, the Church of the Holy Apos
tles. Here he spent the next six years
of hia ministry. He found 100 com
municants when he became rector.
When he left the parish to go to east
ern Oregon there were 1,000. And
here there begins to be revealed a
characteristic trait in Paddock'a pas
toral work. He has served tbe church
in three fields. Two of these lay in
the metropolis. Tbe third in the most
rural and, when he went there, per
haps the most primitive frontier of
America, But whether Paddock was
working in the slums of Stanton street,
or in Chelsea, or in eastern Oregon, he
identified himself completely with the
place in which he was called to work.
When he was at the pro-cathedral he
lived in slums and for the slums. It
was the sins, the needs, the opportun
ities, the limitations of that particular
field that determined bis methods. He
hitched his Btar to the humble little
wagon that needed to be drawn. Ev
erybody, every parish worker, aims, of
course, to do that. There is no orig
inality or heroism in that Isn't there!
All the opposition with which Paddock
has met, and it has been bitter at
times, he might have avoided if he bad
been willing to act in the Stanton
street mission like a Fifth avenue
curate and in eastern Oregon like a
bishop in some snug, well-groomed
eastern diocese. But Paddock was
enough of a Christian to think more
about bringing Christ to hia neighbors
than of being a 100 per cent conven
tional curate, priest or bishop. The
most dominant trait of his pastoral
method has been inspired by a sound
missionary principle. He has adapted
his method to the immediate problem.
He had one method in Stanton street,
another in Holy Apostles', New York ;
and another in eastern Oregon. But
the principle waa tbe same. He has
always conceived himself to be Christ's
missionary to men and women.
Bishop Paddock has been accused of
not building churches, of under-emphasizing
organization, of not talking
enough about the church. The amaz
ing thing is that this missionary, who
has been accused of neglecting the
fabric, has not always worn bishop's
robea and not talked much about the
Protestant Episcopal church, has sent
East Side gang leaders iato the min
istry of his church, increased the com
municant list of his first parish tenfold
in six years, and baa had the highest
percentage of confirmations of any
missionary bishop in the church during
the time of his episcopate. He has
demanded freedom aa & bishop in the
Church of God. No I That would be
a misleading statement. Paddock is
too unconscious about his methods to
demand anything. He has alwaya dons
the natural thing. He has followed his
Coristian instinct in bringing Christ to
the sinner. The method was merely
his natural way of approaching men.
Sometimes that method seemed to be
strange, uncouth, and uncharchly to
men sitting in a New York office, pro
nouncing upon missionary principles.
Paddock felt himself to be a bishop in
the Church of God. The needs and the
limitations of the people whom he was
trying to convert determined hia meth
od. His unconventional ity has shocked
some churchmen. There was a great
Missionary 1900jyears ago Who shpeked
some churchmen.
BAND MAKES CON
CERT TOUR MONDAY
The Knights of Pythias band made a
serenade tour of the valley Monday
night. Open air concerts from their
automobiles were given at Kocklord,
Oak Grove, Odell and Van Horn. The
musical aggregation was met with an
ovation at every valley center. Sev
eral addresses were made at tbe points
visited by citizens, members of the
band responding.
The tour won so much approbation
that other similar serenades may be
given later.
Christian Cbcrtb
September 10, the date of our evan
gelistic meetings, is almost here. Let
every member be ready and prayerful.
Brother and Sister Cole come to us
from a good meeting at Liberty, Mo.
There were 74 additiona in two weeks,
61 by confession of faith. Next Lords
day Bible school at 9.45 a. m.r A. B.
Cash, superintendent. Preaching at 11
a. m., topic, "Unmeasured Love."
Intermediate Christian Endeavor at
6.30 p. m. and Senior Christian En
deavor at 7 p. m. Preaching at 8 p.
m., topic, "Christ, tbe Carpenter."
Special music. A loving welcome to
all. J. C. Hanna, Pastor.
Asbury M. L Church
Minister, Gabriel Sykes.
Sunday school 10 a. m., public wor
ship 11 a. m. During the summer
months young people's service for wor
ship and conference at 8 p. m.
Seventh Day Adventist Church
Corner 15th and C streets
Sabbath school Saturday 1Q a. m.
Preaching service 11.15 a. m. Prayer
meeting, Wednesday 7.45 p. m. All
are welcome.
First Church of Christ. Scientist
Services will be held in Chnrch
Building, 9th and Engene, Sunday, 1 1 :00
a. m. bumect: Man.
Sunday School at 11 a. m.
Wednesday service, 8 p. m.
The reading room is open daily from 3
to 5 p. m., in the Church.
Riverside Church
Riverside church school opens Sun
day. A full attendance of officers.
teachers and classes is urged, school
opens promptly at 9.45. Be on time,
please. W. II. McClain, feupt.
Christian and missionary Alliance.
Sunday School 0:45 A. M. II. C.
Dwts 8ojriatendent. preaching at 11
A. M. sj ui 7.SI P. M. Young pw !-!-
meeting at s.30, R. C. Samiwl, Pres.
Prayer meeting Thnrs. at 7.30 P. 51.
Oar Motto, 1 Cor. 1 :30: "But of him are
ye in Christ Jesus, W ho of God is made
unto us, wicdom aod rightousn, and
sanctiiiration snd redemption." W. P.
Kirk, Pastor. Phone Zina. rndtf
Card of Thanks
We wish to thank our friends and
neighbors for their kind aid and sym
pathy durirg our recent bereavement
at tbe time of tbe death and burial of
our dear mother and grandmother.
Especially do we thank tbe friends for
their beautiful Sural tributes.
Edward Bond
and Family,
Florence liKins
and Family.
to Sportsmen
at
KELLY BROS. CO., Inc.
HARDWARE, FURNITURE
HOOD RIVER, OREGON
THEY'RE here ready for your next
hunting' trip the new Remington
Game Loads.
Just think what it means to you person
ally. You simply come in and tell us what
kind of game you're going after. We
give you the load that Remington has
made up especially for that game.
A new service which makes hunting a
lot more certain and satisfactory.
These new Remington Game Loads
are furnished iu the famous "Nitro Club"
Wetproot shells, known for years for pat
tern and penetration used by dis
criminating sportsmen everywhere.
Come in and let us show you
the newest thing in shells.
a., he kfMk
kvvHJlliJko 5hJ
PENDLETON, OREGON
SEPTEMBER 21, 22, 23, 1922
In th whole World there Is no con
tent M intensely exciting, and with
more thrilling and spectacular cll
maxm, than the riding ot "outlaw"
bronrhoa by eowboya and cowgirls.
Those contests, also the wild mors
races, wild steer roping and bulldog
ging, Indian dances and pow wows
are ail that remain of the young,
wild, vigorous, yet lovable Wtat,
GET FARES AND PARTICULARS FROM YOUR LOCAL AGENT
WM. McMURRAY, General Passenger Agent
Tortland, Oregon
SOLID LEATHER SHOES
i "STAR BRAND
h SHOES ARE I
1 I
Hi-Tops that will wear.
12-inch Hi Cut 36.50
16-inch Hi Cut $7.75
Tan Calfskin waterproof leather is used in
the construction of these Hi Cuts.
The soles are of selected sole leather, es
pecially treated.
"Shoes made of leather."
J. C. Johnsen