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HOODMTF.Hf:OLACIER, THURSDAY, JCLYH3, 1911 VETERANS HONOR NEWTON CLARK At the recent convention of the C. A. K. held at Ashland Newton Clark, of thii city, ws elected De partment Comrnandt-r of the Veteran' organization of this Ua'.e. ile enlisted in the Fourteenth Wisconsin Infantry, Company K, at the beginning of the war, as a private. lie served in the Army of the Tennessee, hifi reKiment taking part in all of the battle of the West under Generafirant. At the battle of Corinth, October 3 and 4, 18C2, nil company, of which he was then orderly sergeant, consisting of 29 men, oiened the battle on the morning of the 3d. 1 he company was sent out to locate the enemy's advance. The whole of the second division of the Army of the Tennessee followed, and were aoon engaged in battle and held the field all day, retiring to Kopen cranr's breastworks in the evening. Of the 29 men who weH out that morn ing with Newton Clark but seven lived to join their regiment. This day'f work won for Newton Clark his com mission as lieutenant. After the Vicksburg compaign the 14th Wisconsin went with the ill-fated expedition under General Hanks up Ked River, La. The regiment then returned north in time to take part in the battle of Nashville in December, 18(14. In all the hard marches and severe fighting of tne Wisconsin regiment Clark was a participant. In civil life Mr. Clark is a man who f n HE m Those Tired Feet I Penslar's Tread-Easy ft SMITH BLOCK fMMMMMM mm d Don't Chase out u that is Foreign has the confidence and esteem of bit fellow-citizens. Coming to Oregon in Is?, he located at Hood River. He is a charter member of Can by Post, G. A. R., Hood Kiver, and was its first commander, for 20 yean he was grand recorder of the A. O. U. W. lodge for Oregon, resigning three years ago to retire to his home at Hood Kiver. The full list of officers for the G. A. R. chosen for the ensuing year is as follows: Newton Clark, of Hood Kiver, department commander; A. C. Spen cer, Ashland, senior vice-commander; (J. I'urcell, Union, junior vice-commander; Dr. J. E. Hall, Portland, pott No. 3, medical director; Rev. J. S. Smith, Ashland, chaplain. The W. K. C , elected Mrs. Josphine II. Crocker, of Ashland, department president; Mrs. Eliazbeth Adair, of Salem, senior vice-president ; Mrs. J. Ivers, of Portland, junior vice-president; Mrs. May Divit, of Ashland, treasurer; Mrs. Amanua Wiliiams, of l.iiicohi-Gartield Corps, chaplain. Mrs. I.izize Wyatt Kmuii, retiring president, was presented with a department gold pin. Ninety-eight W. K. C. delegates were present. At Ashland over 200 veterans of the civil war signed the register. The en campment had 10 votes. During the past year the Department lost 99 mem bers by death. Those from Hood River in attend ance at the encampment were Newton Clark, John A. Wilson, O. II. Baker and S. F. Wythe. At the W. R. C. convention Mrs. O. H. Baker, Mrs. John A. Wilson and Mrs. Newton Clark were in attendance. Best of Blessings is pure, clean, Wholesome Bread. We along Without some of uries as long as the "Staff of Life is all right TABLE QUEEN BREAD, the per fect product of the famous ROYAL BAK ERY, of Portland, is not only absolutely clean; it is nourishing; it is palatable; it is crisp and delicious; it is always the same, and always good. Yes, madam, it costs the ROYAL BAKERY more to make bread as good as TABLE QUEEN; and it costs your two dealers more to handle it. Their profits on a loaf of ROYAL BREAD are smaller than they would be if they handled an inferior article. But the makers and these two dealers are willing to make less money in order that you shall get the Best Bread Made. It costs them more, but it doesn't cost you any more. Royal Table Queen Bread is Always Five Cents the Loaf You can get it Down town On The Heights WOOD'S GROCERY FRED E. DEAN THIRD AND OAK 802 PINE ST. Why suffer during the warm days of summer from the dis comforts of tired and aching feet? A simple remedy is A guaranteed absorbant and deodorant powder. A little of it sprinkled in the shoes each morning does away with all that burning and aching. SOLD ONLY BY EIR CASS oc of n..A .1 k dui mi vour j me uiacier Fred Deitz was elected at th con vention as delegate to the National Encampment to be held at Rochester, N. Y. Mr. DeiU will meet four broth ers at Rochester. All of them are old soliders who fought throughout the war. Mrs. O. H. Maker, president of - the Canby Women's Relief Corps, was honored by the new Department Prea ident and appointed Department Patri otic Instructor. Chas. S. Holmes, who has been spending several months here with friends left Monday morning on the return trip to his home in Montclair, N. J. He was accompanied as far as Sandy by John Weaver and F. Potter Lucsb, who returned here Tuesday. Mr. Holmes willjvisit Seattie for the Golden Potlach and spend a short time in Vancouver before leaving for the Fast over the Canadian Pacific. He says that he has got the Hood Kiver hug and will probably return here later. W. A. Davis, of Mosier. was here Monday on bsuiness. Mr. Davis re ports that the Mosier fruit crop will make as good a yield as last year's crop. Mr. and Mrs. William Neilsen, of Portland, were here Thursday. Right in your busiest season when you have the least time to spare you are most likely to take diarrhhoea and last several days' time, unless you have Chamborlain's Colic, Cholera and Dia rrhoea Remedy at hand and take a dose on the first appearance of the disease. For sale by all dealers. can get the lux Reliable Druggists rtLi ri . Kuooer Mamns at r Mamps wonts Sm CHEAP PERFUMES. . Mad From Musk Supplied" by Many Variti of Civat Cats. Most women who Indulge freely in the use of cheap iierfuine do uot know of what Uiey are compounded. Tue principal Ingredient of low priced perfumes is musk, auiiuul uiusk, wbk-h is obtulned from several creatures. The muskrat is probably the bet known of these, and a few decades go the wires and gweetbeartH of uu;i who set traps around ditches aud ponds In the countryside carried proud ly the bags of musk obtalued from this source. As ao article of commerce the musk supplied by several varieties of civet cats is probably the best known today. The odor is strong and sweet The strength la the particularly no Uceable feature and la the reason why It Is the foundation of the per fumes. In the small mammal house at the zoological gardens are two sizes of civets, and any one with an inves tigating turn of mind may stand near the cages and catch the musky odor. The musk la used iu the cheap per fumes, aa only a little Is needed to give a most lasting odor to an ounce of perfumery, but the musk Itself is not cheap, and it is one of the duties of the attendant of the mammal house to collect It. It is then sold through reg ular channels and in one of the sources of revenue to the zoo, although a small one. Philadelphia Record. SHIPS THAT KICK. 8amtn Don't Lika Them and Dodg Thtm if Thsy Can. When sailors join a ship almost the first question asked by each one as be lakes the wheel for the first time is, "Does she kick?" Kicking, as it is called by the sea men, is due to the action of the water under the lee of the rudder when the vessel's stern, which has for a mo ment been borne skyward on the crest of a wave, falls back again into the Jrough with such terrific force as to make her tremble fore and aft ana perhaps wrench the wheel from the grasp of the steersman. Sometimes it huppens that be is taken unawares and, being unable to let go lu time, Is dung right over the wheel to the other side of the deck, often receiving serious injuries. Some times a man will be pitched right overlioard into the sea, and a recent case is known of a man who received a blow under the chin from one of the spokes and died a few days later from the effects. In some of the worst types of kick ers kicking straps nre used regularly in nearly all weathers, aud many sail ors refuse to go to sea in ships which are known to be confirmed kickers. London Tlt-Blts. Dumas' Riot of Extravaganeo. Dumas' Monte Crlsto villa was a lordly pleasure house, tropical iu its taste aud its extravagance a weird confusion of Bohemia and the Arabian Nights. The spoils of the bazaars of Algeria and Tunis lay about the house, commingled with costly treasures of home manufacture, lu a supreme dis order, aud there was every embellish ment which the caprices of a luxuri ant and undisciplined imagination could suggest gothlc turrets, pavil ions, minarets, an artificial lake with an island and a cascade, a picture gal lery, a studio, an aviary, a monkey house, a Htuble, a bijou theater, a kiosk with a blue ceiling studded with stars to serve as a workroom for the mas ter, who bad the titles of his principal plays and stories graven conspicuous ly on the stones of his dwelling. "PasRlons of the French Romantics." Old Tim Smoko Nuitanc. We are accustomed to think of the smoke nuisance as a modern phenome non, but I'rofessor V. B. Lewes shows that it raised so much indignation in England COO years ago that a decree was made forbidding the use of bitu minous coal for fuel. Such fuel was then a new thing. In the time of Queen Elizabeth an other attempt to use bituminous coal was defeated by public opposition to the smoke. The third effort attained complete success in the nineteenth cen tury, and now the quantity of smoke belched into the air is so great that Professor Lewes likens it to a cumu lative poison which aids iu shortening life, killing vegetation and begriming and destroying bulldlugs. Youth's Companion. A Story of Daniel Drew. When Sir Morton Peto visited this country with a large assortment of railroad schemes in his head he gave a grand dinner, at which old Daniel Drew was present. When the com pany were In good humor Sir Morton developed his plans in detail and did It very plausibly. Drew listened to the end and then, turning to the gentle man stttini? next to him, remarked, "We ain't goln" to do none o them 'er things." That ended it. Quito a Criminal. "I suppose there's none of us better than we should be." "Indeed, no! I was thinking it over last night. Why, only yesterday I was guilty of killing time, murdering a tune, smothering a yawn, stealing a kiss, cutting a creditor and breaking Into a perspiration." London Tlt-Blta. A Candid Suitor. "Can you support my daughter In good style?" "I'll do my best, sir. I must admit, however, that we shall have to buy the furniture upon the installment plan." Washington Herald. i . Impatience and pride have destroyed more souls than wickedness. Mazrinl. Qavo Him Tim. "Judge,'' walled the prisoner, "cant you give tue a little time to think this thing over?" "Certainly," replied the magistrate. Slx months." Philadelphia Record. Practical. The Deck Passenger-1 notice all of the steerage passengers bolt their food. I wouder why. The Steward They bolt their food to keep it down. Chi cago News. Rnbber Stamps to order. Glacier. AND YOU'LL J. Valley Christian Church. The , Christian Church Endeavor society will give a grand ice cream festival on Friday evening of this week. Many other good things will be on sale also a little surprise party. Don't miss this. Everything will be on a fine Ecale. The members and freinds of the Vlley Christian Church have decided to begin a Forum. The following committee was chosen to procure speakers. J. J. Gibbons, F. M. Peugh, Roy D. Smith, J. H. Shoe maker, G. H. Robins, Isaac Peart and E. J. Meyers, ex officio members assisting. The following is a partial list of speakers who will address us from time to time on Sunday evenings at the Valley Christian Church : Leslie Butler, J. R. Wilbur, E. H. Hartwig, Dr. Dumble, Ernest C. Smith, Dr. Brosius and Kev. Harris. The Forum begins next Sunday evening, July 16, with Leslie Butler as the speaker of the evening. Be sure and come and bring your neighbor and be well and profitably entertained. Roy D. Smith. Advertised Letter List. July 10, J911. Beatty, Mrs. Andy; Castner, Mrs. J. H. ; Clark, Mrs. E. D. ; Clark, Mrs. May: Cooper, Mrs. D. J.; Frietch, Mrs. E. A. ; JHamilton, Mrs. Mary Martle, Iona; Johnson, Bessie; Johnson, Clara E. : Jones, Edna; Kautz, Mrs. Fred; Kyser, Gussie; Marshal, Mrs. Bessie (2) ; Seifert, Miss; Shultz, Elizabeth; Smith, Mrs. A. F. ; Staconc, Matilda P. ; Thrapp, Mrs. Ailie, (2): Turner. Beulah; Webb, Elsie L. ; Aikin, Henry; Arthur, C. A. (2) ; Bickford, C. H. ; Boggs, J. C. (2) ; Broekington, Will ; Bromley, H. C. : Collins, A. J. ; Davidson, Henry W. (2) ; De Lacey, Alex J.; Dolan, Joseph; Drucken miller, Rev. E. ; Friend, John B. ; Fully, Albert; Goettinigj Friancisc: Green, E. H. ; Helms, A. C. ; Hofbergor, C. ; Jack, A. F. ; Jacobson, C. ; Krohn, E. C. ; Linden, Herbert; Mayl, Edward J. (4) ; McCuistion, Florence; Neumann, A. ; Orton, Jack; Persons, Clarence; Priester, Alfred C. ; Schrader, Edgar ; Scott, Chas. W. ; Watkins, D. H. (3); Whitcomb, Knowell. Wm. M. Yates, Post Master. Glacier Ownership Maps. Up to date blue print, present owner ship maps of the Hood River valley are for sale at the Glacier office. This map is in two sections, the lower and the upper valley. It has the roads and stream marked and the names of and owners written over their tracts. The price of the map complete is $1. will be sent to any address postpaid upon receipt of the price. Don t ride miles out of 4 vnnr wav tn apt Ruh- - ' : i J ; : . mr oer stamps, nuc arive direct to the GLACIER STAMP WORKS For Your Perfect Printing Rubber Stamps. We Have a Customer For forty acres of clear ed hay land in the mid dle or upper valley. PROPERTY MUST BE A BARGAIN Guy Y. Edwards & Co. - Agents Office Hotel Oregon Building PHONE 228-K Blankets and Quilts Laundered in a thoroughly sanitary manner by the Hood River Laundry Co. Phone 123 A TIP Stylish Suits L oxfords 4.00 flofe The newest of the season, and a naiS "Gordon," too Cliii.c What's.better than the "Cluett?" C A jIllllO Anybody knows the answer Underwear S 1.00 Socks ? Uk' in CoIors' 50c; Silk Finish .25 PASS ANYTHING G. VOGT Monday, July 11, the Piano Contest Stood as Follows: Florence Carson Baptist Church Olhe Mayes Pine Grove School Tressie Hickox -Mrs. R. E. Jewel Nola Radliff -Eunice Odell WOOD'S GROCERY The Best Pavement CRE0S0TED WOOD BLOCKS Durable, Sanitary, Noiseless Horses Won't Slip Least Expensive and Most Easily Repaired We are Now Taking Orders for Itrawberry Crates Having only a Limited Supply Would Advise Ordering at Once Stanley - Smith Lumber Co. Phone 124 Hood River, Oregon . Drop into the cool and cozy corner at the Blue Ribbon Bakery on the Heights, after the ball game. ICE CREAM and CONFECTIONERY Piano for Our Patrons Hood River Heights, 1107 Twelfth Street HAY & WEISEL Manufacturers of Rough and Dressed Lumber Boxes and Strawberry Crates Parkdale, The Purity Dairy Co. Yours for prompt service and Good Milk THOS. D. CALKINS ON THE ROAD 2560G6 198956 - 151306 - 94440 43880 - 47890 14540 - 2400 Oregon