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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1921)
HOOD RIVER (jLACIER, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1921 'mm 1 1. -..I The OLYMPIC Line includes every fit m ily'a furnrite cereal sani tarily milled, parked, wrapped and sealed. You'll know it by the never failing f lavorsome results. IN kitchen or camn-kit. Olympic: Pancake Flour is indispensible for good pancakes or waffles. Simply add water or milk, mix ana cook. rz At Your Grocers Along With Olymi-ic Flour PANCAKE FLOUR WHEAT HEARTS F A R I N A C A K E AND PASTRY FLOU R BUCKWHEAT FLOUR HEALTH BRAN whiti com H CAL YELLOW CORN MEAL ROLLED OATS STEEL C UT OATS WHEAT FLAKES l-"" S I mm, ft . UN A JM -Jilt? mmm YOU CAN WATCH BABY and iron at the same time when you own one of our electric irons. No run ning hack and forth to get hot irons from the stove. No scorching of your lin ens. Electricity will solve your Ironing problem. MOORE ELECTRIC COMPANY PHONE 1782 Farmers' Week and Homemakers' Conference A Week of College Life at 0. A. C. Co-operative Conventions EXCURSIONS LET'S GO! CORVALLIS, OREGON The Modern Barber Shop Will be opened the first week of June in the Hunt build ing now occupied by the Hunt Paint Shop just opposite Blowers Hardware Co. All work will be strictly sanitary. Specially in shampooing, scalp massage and children's hair cuts. JOHN CALANDRA Now is the time to get your PLANTS for Flowering Beds ami Porch Boxes We have plenty of plants on hand. Come and see them and pick out what you want. Also plenty of vege table plants Tomatoes, Pep pers, Cauliflower, 25c a doc. Cabbage, Celery, and all kinds of other plants. Send in your orders early for Dec oration Day (lowers. HEIGHTS GREENHOUSE GEO. HASLINGER Tel. 3393 BEAUTY I-" ijH ryN ! rs ; i ) - ili m f TWENTY-Elc;HTH BUaJJll duoccssf 11 Year OlI SLOAT PUZZLES OVER PORTLAND INCIDENT Glenn R. Sloat, yooug deputy sheriff of thin county, who WU arrested on Wednesday niht of last week charged b Cortland poli''e official with the theft of $100 at a home being'searched on a moonshine ran!, returned Friday with a stolen automobile, recovered in Cortland, which he liaii been detailed by Sheriff Johns' n to I t i nj- back here. The car belonged to .1. C. Hay ward. Officer Sloat maintains that he ij inno cent of the charge preferred, and local oflicers and citiz. ni in general, who declare the joavg nan's previous rep utation above reproach, offer to back him in clearing himself of the charge. Mr. Sloat continues on duty, wealing his badge of deputy sheriff. He says the recent Cortland incident! accom panying the accusation against him re main unsolved by him. Mr. Sloat tells his story as follows : After locating the stolen automo bile and attending to official duties connected with my visit, it was natural that i should visit police headquarters and talk shoo with ollicers with whom I bad become acquainted through asso ciation in local and Cortland work. While I was there the call came to go, armed with a search warrant, to a res idence on the Kabt Side, under sus picion. 1 offered to escort Officers Huntington, Russell and Smith to the place in the automobile. We found the residents away from home and entered, making the March. In the course of investigation the trunk was pried open and the sum of monev revealed. 1 only saw it when the trunk was first opened, and remember a remark of astonishment at the sum. The resi dents of the place returned while we were there and it was then that the charge was mad" that the money was missing. The oflicers agreed to leave the premises unmolested until superior omcers might reach the scene and check up on matters. They searched some time, using flashlights in a dark ened room, where the bill, according to the charge, was found. Uniformed Officer Kegan announced that he had seen me slipping the money from my shirt to the floor. He called out: 'Here's the money, and here's the thief.' "In a half-minute I was under arrest and on my way to the police station. There I was deprived of all my poses sions, except a hunch of keys. 1 was suffering from poison oak, contracted recently in official work that carried me through Hood Kiver Columbia jun gles. The police officials took from me a box of salve that I used for the rash and refused to give it back when I requested it. They denied me my plug of chewing tobacco and refused to allow me to telephone to friends. Such was my status Wednesday night and Thursday forenoon. C. ft. Castner, 1 learned later, tried to get to talk to me and get me released on bail, but was not allowed to do so. Finally At torneys Elton Watkins, J. K. Carson. Jr., and S. B. Bandefer were permitted to see me and interest themselves in my case. Mr. Sandefer was sent by Sheriff Johnson. I was released on $2.r0 cash bail, furnished by myself and my mother, Mrs. W. C. Sloat. "I can't figure why I was victimized. It is difficult to believa that the three Cortland officers, whom I had always considered frieiuh, had anything to do with the case. The residents under suspicion of violatinhg the prohibition law may have desired to put the off t cers in bad. Cut why Officer Kegan charged me with acts I never com mitted is more than I can fathom. The incident has taught me one lesson. I am certainly going to keep clear of Cortland police officials hereafter." Mr. Sloat says he has been greeted by over 100 citizens since his return home and that practically all offer to aid him financially and otherwise in clearing himself of the charges, Mr. Sloat lives with his widowed mother and two smaller children. He is their main support. Mr. Sloat at a preliminary nesrwg in Cortland grand jury. bound over to the AN Sheriff Johnson, whose deputy, Glenn It. Sloat, was arrested last week in Cortland, declares that he considers the episode an insult to his office. "1 do not wish to be taken as up holding my deputy in a crime," says Mr. Johnson. "The circumstances as related to me and accompanying news of the Cortland police shake up are conclusive to me that someone other than Glenn Sloat was guilty of wrong doing with regard to that hundred dol lar bill. If it can be conclusively shown me that Sloat tried to steal the money, I'll see that he loses his star at once. The manner in which he was handled by the Cortland police was an insult to the rights of an American citizen. It smacked of methods of Russia. Sloat was not even allowed to telephone to me or anyone else. I am going to see., that the matter is thoroughly probed. As it stands it is a reflection on my office." The accused deputy, who faces a Multnomah grand jury charge, has a reputation for strict honesty. Promi nent citizens have offered to raise a fund to aid him in clearing his name. The following appeared in the Mon day Oregonian : The raid in which Deputy Sheriff Sloat participated was headed by Ca trolmen Russell and Huntington of the liquor squad, who have since been re duced to uniform and placed on beats because of negligence and poor judg ment at the time. Chief Jenkins de clared that the Cortland officers should never have permitted an outsider to go with them on the raid, and becauee of the incident the chief has issued in structions that hereafter none but au thorized officers shall participate in any police raid. There has always been some doubt expressed at police headquarters as to the guilt of the Hood River deputy. One theory freely expressed was that the man whose home was raided "planted" the .$100 bill to cast suspi cion upon the officers. Sloat was standing in the corridor of the police station when the local olli cers started on the raid. He volun teered to take them to the place in his automobile. He had had no previous knowledge of the intended rail until the moment the men started. Willamette Apple Prospects Good J. C. Naumes and W. R. Woolpert of Dan Wuille & Co., apple exporters. who have just returned from Sheridan, where they maintain a branch, state that the prospects for an apple crop there indicate an increase of 100 per cent in tonnage over last year, when the firm handled in excess of 100 car loads. The growers of the Willamette valley section, according to Mr. Naumes, have learned during Jthe past several seasons how to properly grade and pack their apples. He says they show improvement in methods of cultivation and spraying but room for great im provement in this side of the orchard business still remains. Why Suffer From Rheumatism J Do you know that nine out of every ten cases of rheumatism are simply rheumatism of the muscles or chronic rheumatism, neither of which require any internal treatment? The pain may be relieved by applying Chamberlain's Liniment, which makes sleep and rest possible, and that certainly means a great deal to anyone afflicted with rheumatism. STRENGTH POWER. COMFORT Experience Skill These have combined to pro duce the sensational light Six 0: l H AYN ES fifty This is the car that is the center of attraction at the show. Until you see it, and study the big-car superiorities it embodies, you cannot believe such a car could be pro duced to sell at WHS F o. r KOKOVO Now exhibited, with the other beautiful Haynes ofierinps in our space G-l-X. at the Coliseum. Every motor car enthusiast is urged to inspect it. O 11 rT n . Co. 7l J 1893 TH'E HAYNES IS AMERICA'S FIRST CAR. I 921 E. A. FRANZ COMPANY FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Sunday, June 5th f PASTOR J. C. HANNA Bible School Convenes 9:45 a. m. Children's Day Program 10:00 a. m. Communion 11:15 a. m. Solo, Marybeth Blagg Sermon 11:30 a. m. "God's Call to Me" Christian Endeavor 7:00 p. m. Sermon 8:00 p. m. "Standing The Test" THE UNIVERSAL CAR FORD FORDSON Buy the economy of service, plus re-sale value not the false economy of Price. Dickson -Marsh Motor Co. HOOD RIVER, OREGON Phone 1111 Your motor will be properly lubricated if you use WAVERLY OILS MT. HOOD MOTOR CO. 11 1 Leave Your Order for our coal here and it will be delivered promptly. It will be good coal, too the finest and cleanest to be had. The latter fact means coal economy. There is more h at in it. less waste and conse quently less labor and trou ble. Order today and your coal troubles will be over. TRANSFER & LIVERY CO. Telephone 4111 R. C GLANVILLE E. D. KANAGA attorney it law , Physician and Surgeon Boon. 1 UH nal 1'pk Baiklinc phoD , , ,ffice 42, , offi(t. Flkt Uuod River, On! Ret. MAI Bailding )