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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1915)
HOOD ItlVEIt ULAC1ER, THURSDAY, AI'itlL 8, 1!)15 I MURRAY KAY REPORTS EAST SIDE SURVEY CAMPBELL WARNS APPLE GROWERS (Continued from First Page.) Main Entrance to Palace of Machinery at Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 1915 Having made a aurvey o the East Side niH'-adMin road. hich ii four miles lotiu, Mjrray Ky Rtt that he nmls the maximum grade on the Kant Side lnLell.fi fer rent, while a Krade at tie Slhde hill is l.'i per rent. The side diUhi's and culverts under the road and connerting privnte mads, he says are not sullintnt to care fur the water. With reference to a propped im provement of the road. Mr. Kay advina tl.e county court, which ordered the survey, as follows : A road required to serve the various kind a and qualities of traflic andto sus tain the tonnnge which this road car ries, fl.ould he of fairly hint) Krade con Klrui tiun as to foundation, hody and surface. No low cost construction for this road can fulfill Its demands. A hih cost, so called permanent, road is not warranted under present conditions. A rca.-onahly good road of fairly per manent type with a low maintenace cost woula he most economical in this situation. There is no method known of applying surface treatment to this road which will Rive satiafacory results at rcBflonatle coet. You are therefore ri-tpectfuly recommended as follows: 1. Some of the embankment on in aide .f sharpest curves should he re moved to provide better eight dis tances. 2 Additional culvertB should be pro vided and old ones replaced as required. 3 Ditching should be made effective and the ditches paved to prevent wash ing where necessary. 4 The fills at l'lctchtr'fl. Wells' and I'orter's should be protected by sub stantial wooden rail fence, painted white, on each side. 5 Changes in alignment and grade are not recommended at present on ac count of high cost. The alignment, however, should be trued up bo far as pussible without departing from present road lied. The grade ahould be trued up and made as nearly uniform as pos sible without taking off or adding more than a minimum quantity of stone. The crown or cross section should be made uniform. fi All dirt, gravel, etc., which is now on the original macadam should be removed and road surface thoroughly cleaned. The atone fchould then be broken up and respread true to align ment, grade and crown. Sufficient No. :i and No. 4 stone should be Hilded and the whole flooded with water and rolled with a 10-ton roller to make a water bound surface for the first or founda tion course. When this is entirely dry it should be swept clean and oil, the residuum of which shall contain from N5 to W per cent asphalt having at a temperature of 75 degrees Fahrenheit a penetration of 80 degrees, District of Columbia standard, applied at a tem perature above 225 degrees and at the rate of one-half gallon per square yaid. This is to be covered with one-half inch of No. 3 stone and rolled. As excess oil appears, it should be covered with No. 4 stone or clean, dry, coarse, sharp sanil and rerolled until the surface is cold, solid and reasonably smooth, lie sanding and rolling should continue at intervals during the first season. This wearing surface should give good service for a number of years at an annual average maintenance cost of about $200 per mile. Kstimated cost of this improvement complete is $7844, or $1!MU per mile. COUNCIL CONSIDERS HEIGHTS POLICEMAN At the Monday night meeting of the city council one of the chief matterB of buisness was that of retaining a police man on the Heights. 1'etitionB were received urging that Allan Mart be re instated as Heights policeman and an other asking that a night watchman for the district be retained. ,1, T. ilolman, a Heights business man, was irt'Hent, and declared that he tun iioi iniiiK a waicntnan necessary, except during the strawberry picking seasun, Hubbard Tavlor, another mer chant of the section of the city, took an opposite view and urged that the city maintain police protection for the Heights. The petitions were referred to the police committee for an tnvestiga tiou and recommendations. While no official statements have been made, members of the council, in discussing the Heights police matter, have o. pressed the opinion Hint a wulclmiuii i.-i not needed here except during the berry season. It is declared that if the lower city is well policed and undesirable characters kept on the go it will be impossible fur trouble to reach the Heights. The swimming pool committee, com posed of Dr. C. II. Jenkins, S. A. Mitchell, I.. N. Mowers, II. A. Mae Doniild, Mrs. Chas. II. Castner and Mrs. ,1. (). McLaughlin, met with the council, the members of which body gave their consent to the construction of a cement pool on the city property, known as the Chautauqua grounds, at the corner of Thirteenth and May Ft-eets. Subscription papers, asking fur dona tions to the swimming pool fund, will soon be circulated by the members of 1 1 io committee. MOUNT HOOD RATE MAY BE ABSORBED If the efforts of the northwestern fruit men avail anything, the rate uf Mount Hood liailway Co. on through shipments to eastern points will be nl loriied by the road making the ship ment to the east. H. F. Davidson has been working on the matter himself the past year and lias had the Distribu tors using their intluence to secure the absorption. At the present time it costs $20 to i;et. a carload of apples t'inin Odell to Hood Kiver, even though the our is routed to New York or some other eastern point. The O.-W. K. & N. Co. uli orbs the S. I'. $1 rate from Mcdford to 1'ortland on through eastern shipments of fruit, thus it costs Hood Kiver growers $20 a car more to ship apples from Udell to New York than it does the Medfurd growers. The cost from I'liikdnle is, the distance and the local charge higher, of course, in creased. Greek Roy Gets $500 (lust l'appns, an IS year-old Greek boy, who was plaintiff in a damage suit agamst the Mount Hood Kailway Co., claiming damages to the extent of Ji.ollU for personal injuries received last fall, when he fell from a push car, was awarded $,r00 by the veridct of a jury returned at circuit court Tuesday, fhe case was brought by .lames .Sour apas, guardian ad litem for the boy. The case was made interesting because of the necessity for Sourapas to act as interpreter, l'appas not speaking the English language very well. better. The difference was particularly noticeable in the case of Stay men Wine sapa and Mack Twigs. "My observation of market eondi tiona in the Middle West convinced me that had the North Pacific Distributors controlled r-0 per cent of thejtonnage of the Pacific Northwest our apples would have been aold at much less cipense than they have been and would hive returned the grower as mucn as co cents a box mure than we will receive, thia in the face of the fact that general conditions throughout the country were not as aupicioua this year as they might have been. And 25 cents a box means a lot to the grower, epecially in year like the present." LOCAL FRUIT MEN W. F. fiwin, manager of the North western Fruit Exchange, who had been at the annual meeting of the Mosier Fruit Growers Association, was here Saturday evening, when he discussed at library hall with a number of local growers various problems of fruit mar keting. In talking of last season's marketing Mr. (iwin said: "There has been a widespread notion that an otherwise fair market for northwestern apples was ruined early in the season by unnecessary cutting of prices. Kventa show so logically as to be undoubtable that the error in the marketing of the crop was not that prices were cut, but that they were not cut enough. Here was the situation that should have been clear to every operator in the northwest early in the fall." It had been planned that at this meeting the Friut Growers Exchange would conclude business begun on the previous Monday. However, a quorum was not present. The Exchange, according to tentative plana, which, however, have not been acted onby the members, will probably build a warehouse at Odell and a stor age building in the city. An endeavor waa made to lease the old Union ware house from the Association. Hut no agreement could be reached between the two shipping agencies. Davidson Resigns Distributor Presidency II, F. Davidson returned yesterday morning from Spokane, where on Tues day he resigned from the presidency of the North Pacific Fruit Distributors. "1 accepted a proposition from the lo cal association to handle the straw berry crop, and 1 did not think it would be consistent for me to remain as chief executive officer of the Distributors after becoming so aligned with another selling agency, he said yesterday morning. CHURCH SCENE SHOWN IN "THE CHRISTIAN" In the wonderfully acted nhoto nlav. the Christian, by the Vitagraph-Liebler t'n which is heinir nreaented hv the All Star Feature Distributors, Inc., at the FJectric tneatre today one or me appealing incidents is Been in John Storm's temporary church. Resemblng in character a mission room, it la never theless a more pretentious place. John Storm, in the clergyman's robes, is surrounded by the poorest congregation in London, suddenly a woman, faintins from hunger, receives the sympathy and care of those around her. lhe faces of this crowd, which includes several hundred iieoule. are in themselves an appeal to the whole world, for the influence of the real church among the poor. No one who tees this wonderful impression of hu man sympathy on the numerous faces shown in the crowd can fail tn be moved by the whole story of the Chris- nan. STUDENTS SPEND PROFITARLE VACATION A party of about 20 students, mem bers of the forestry class at Oregon Agricultural College under Prof. Pea vy, are spending their Battler vacation in the employ of the U. S. Forest Ser vice. The boys are working under a party of trained men of the forest service and will not only gain some practical experience in cruising timber, but will also help Uncle Sam in some work which has been undertaken on the lireitbenush river on the Santiam for est. The government is furnishing the instruments for the use of the party but the students are paying their own expenses, and inciduntly having a very good time. The Distributors' Markets F'ruit marketed by the North Pacific Fruit Distributors has'had a very wide distribution. A bulletin just issued by the central agency shows that its prod uct was distributed as follows: 1913 -r'luit was distributed in 243 cities in 38 of tho United States and :13 cities in six Canadian provinces, and 17H cars were exported to lti cities in 10 foreign countries. If 14 (to date) The distribution cov ers231cities in 3s;of the United States and 20 cities in six Canadian provinces, and 475 cars have been exported, so far," to lit foreign ports and hence to numerous interior markets. It is esti mated that 125 cars more are to be ex ported, making the total 000. The 15 foreign ports are: London, Liverpool, Hull, Manchest er, ISristol, Gottenberg, Cardiff, Glas gow, i Copenhagen, Swansea, Genoa, Rotterdam, Kuenos Ayres, Manila, Honolulu. Unitarian Church Sunday school at 10 a. m. Service of Worship at 11. Solo by Mr.Wedemeyer. Young People's meeting at 6.30 p. m. Subject, "Faith," by Miss Frances Littlefield. F.vening service at 7.30. Subject, "Is Christianity a Sign of In sanity." Mrs. Alberta Jackson Gillam will sing, and Miss Cora Jaegger, of Portland, will play a piano solo. lioys and girls chorus rehearsal at the home of Mrs. D. G. Jackson Monday evening at 7 o'clock. All are invited to these meetings. Miss Ilershner is Delegate Miss Leila Ilershner has been ap pointed by the Commercial club to rep resent Hood River at the ceremonies opening and dedicating the Celilo canal on May 5. Miss Hershner, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. J. L. Hershner, is a teacher in the city schools. Daters, Pads and Rubber Stamps of every description at this office. 1 ....,1p,s ,., hM'' ; ' i V.:! p i; Copyright, Itlt, by Fanama-Paclflo International Exposition Co. THE photographer waa stationed at the moat northern of the three arched portals constituting the main western entrance to the palace and turned bin camera to the north. The huge columns adorning this en trance are of Imitation Sienna and are In warm contrast with the creamish gray of the Travertine" plaster of which the walla are composed. The frieze at the base of the columns and the spandrels above the archwaya of tha veatlbule are the work of the sculptor Halg Patlglan. In architectural atyle tha Palace of Machinery U early Roman. The architect la Clarence H, Ward of Ban Frauclaco, Hood River Has Fine Easter While blizzards were raging over the eastern part of the United States Sun- .. . . , . . day, Hooo Kiver people were privileged to enjoy me oesi 01 easier weainer. The local population went on Easter Darade Sunday afternoon, and the val ley highways were fairly lined with automobile and horsedrawn vehicles, the occupants of which wera filling their lungs with the balmy air and I program waa rendered : Organ Prelude "Pontificale" .... - Gounod Call to Worship. Anthem "Unfold Ye Portals" Gounod Invocation and Lord's Prayer. The Apostle'a Creed I beliv In God. the Father Almighty, maker of Heaven and earth, and In Jrt.u Chriat, Ilia Only Son, our Lord, who was conceived by the Holy Ghoat, bom of the Virgin Mary. aulTerJ under Pontiua Pilate, waa crucified, dead and buried; the third day He arose from the dead; He aacemled into Heaven and aitteth on the right hand of God, the Father Almighty; from thence He ahull come to judge the quick and the dead. 1 tx lic-ve in the Holy Ghost, the Holy Catholic Church, the communion of aainm, the forgiveness of Bins, the reaaurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen. Hymn "Jesus Christ Is Risen" Number 125 Responsive Reading ...... Offertory "Spring Song" Scripture Lesson Solo "Resurrection" Shelley .... Violin Obligate), Mr. Chandler Prayer. Hymn "Hark! Ten Thousand Harps and Voices" Sermon "Brotherhood of the Resurrection" Hymn "Love Divine" ..... Benediction. Postlude "Largo" MRS. BRIGGS IS COMING TO TOWN "Mrs. Briggsofthe Poultry Yard," the play so successfully given by the pupils of the Oak Grove school Friday evening, will he presented here at li brary hall Friday evening. A large crowd was present at the Oak (Jrove auditorium last Friday evening depsite the rain, and all have the highest praise for the performance. The Oak Grove students displaying great histri onic ability are: Miss 11a Nichols, who was Mrs. Rriggs; John Annala, Ralph, her adopted son; Kvi Annala, Mildred Crapper and Ursel Cunning, remaining three children: Otto Annalla, bashful bachelor; Arne HukBri, Mr. Leu; Dathne Collins, his daughter; Vera Gano, an Irish girl; Elma Annala, Daisy, friend of Virginia ; and Hilja llukari, stammering Mandy. Riverside Church Sunday school 10 o'clock. Morning worship 11 o'clock. Subject, "Good News World Wide." Special music by the Cecilian and boys' choirs. Hood River chorus rehearses Monday evening at 7.30 o'clock. Every member urged to be present. Midweek service Wednesday, 7.30. Cecilian and boys' choir practice on Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Hoy Scouts meet Friday at 7 o'clock and go on a hike Saturday at 9 a. in. Methodist Church Sunday school at 9 50 a. m. Preach ing service at 11 a. m. Theme, "Oh, to He Like Him." Miss Hazel Stanton will sing at thia service. At l.'M p. m. a sacred cantata. "Victory Divine," by Christopher Marks, will be ren dered. Epworth League at 6.30 p. m. Prayer meeting on Thursday evening at 7.30 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to attend these services. Heights Baptist Church Sunday school at 10 o'clock. Preach ing service 11 o'clock. Young People's meeting (5.30 p. m. Preaching service 7.30 p.m. Morning subject "lhe As tounding Spirit of Jesus." Evening subject, "A Terrible Cry of Anguish." All strangers and those who do not at tend services elsewhere are most cor dially welcomed. Church of Christ Christian Endeavor begins at 6.-15 p. m. at the church at 8 o'clock now. Next Sunday our morning subject will be, "Church Etiquet," and the evening subjeet will be. "The Bible." Wednes day evening meetings begin at 7.30. Interest good. Come. H. C. Clark. Christian Science Services. Christian Science Services will beheld in Room 2, Davidson Building, Sun day, 11:00 a. in. Subject: "Are Sin Disease anil IVath Real?" Sundav School at 10 a. m. Wednesday service, 8 p. m. The reading room is opea daily from 3 to 5 p. tn., room 2, Davidson building Card of Thanks We desire to express our appreciation tj our many friends for their kindness and sympathy, and especially for the beautiful floral offerings during the sickness and death of our beloved wife, mother and sister. W. E. Hines and Family, Mrs. Nettie Depee, Mrs. Edith Sexton. looking upon the little white islands of cheiry blossoms. All churches were crowded Sunday ; mornlf)(( when BpeciH Ea8ter services were conducteil by all denominations One of the most interesting of the ser vices waa that of the local Commandery of Knights Templar at the Riverside ; Congregational church. The Knights j attended in full regalia. The following Number 65 - Mendelssohn Matthew 28:1-15 Mrs. C. II . Sletton Number 128 Matthew 23:8 Number 292 Handel $1 .10 l'1, ft 1 i j fijt A steel-cut, fresh-r oast 'ill Jm Coffee no dust no chaff ill 111 air-tight cans. Ill II .. 'il foia ny neuaoie iirocers. tw' J Devers j Ml The Oldea and Laraeat toffee W "i Rnutar In tha Northwel. titi s CHANDLER'S ORCHESTRA Music Furnished For All Occasions Wm. Chandler -Hana Hoerline -E. A. kinmiJ Arthur Clarke Violin Piano Clarinet Trape Telephones 3224 or 2703 W.J.Baker&Co. Dealers iu REAL ESTATE Fruit and Farm Lands Mr. Merchant, a price marker will save you hours of time when marking your "goods. Accuracy and neatness are its commendable features. A few cents buys one at this office. iG0LDEi ! li m m in ii THREE POUNDS . HI 17. We Are Right On Hog E. A. Franz I Hi ? DELIVER THAT PROMPTLY ITS A MIGMTT" IMPOATAHT PACKAGE I 1 CHEW THE DRAYMAN ASSURES THE GOOD JUDGE A little of "Right-Gut," the Real Tobacco Chew, gives you the tobacco comfort you are entitled to. Satisfies you better than any of the old kind. Richer, finer flavor. Lasts longer. Pure, rich, sappy tobacco seasoned and sweetened just enough. tobacco taste comet, much less you have to spit, how few chews you take to be tobacco satisfied. That's why it is The Real Tobacco Chew. That's why it costs less in the end. It is a ready chew, cut 6nc and short shred so thtt you won't have to grind on it with your tccUu Grinding on ordinary candied tobacco nukes yon spit too much. The Lite of pure, rich tobacco does not need to be covered up with molasses and iteorico. Notice bow tha salt brings out the rich tobacco taste in "Right-Cut." One smalt chew takes the placejoMwcj big chews of the old kind. WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY SO Union Square, New York (bUYTROM OEALER 0RrSEN0nO?STAMPSTOU$) J& ? FOR One of the beet equipped little ranches in the Upper Hood River Val ley. 2tl4 acres practically cleared, in clover and alfalfa, under Middle Fork Irrigating Co.'s ditch, cheapest water in the State. 20 share water Btock, room plastered house, hot aud cold water, bath, toilet and septic tank, electric light, telephone and all modern equipment of a city home. This place lies up against the town of Parkdale. Is free of any encum brance. New barn 42x48 with hay fork, hydrants at barn for all stock water. l!rn will accommodate ten head of Ftook ; plenty of room lor tn i chinery, wagons, etc. Will sell with stock or without. No trade. Will give reasonable terms. Want to quit nmching, cane for soiling. No agents, inquire of owner. Telephone 1 Mi Odel I. J. F.Thompson, P.O. Box 7, Parkdale, Ore. PEOPLES NAVIGATION COMPANY vSteamer Tahoma Down Sundays, Tuesdays, Thursdays Up Mondays, Wednesdays, Saturdays All kinds of freight and passengers handled. Horses and automobiles given special attention. Jack Bagley, Agent, Phone 3514 Fencin 26 inch High, 12 inch Stays, Wire No. 12 No. 10 Top and Bottom Wire 22 cents Cash 26 inch High, 6 inch Stay, Wire Number 12y No. 10 Top and Bottom Wire 2& cents Cash J -ITS J iACCOj DONT I KNOW IT- TME REAL TOBACCO Take a very small chew less than one-quarter tha old size. It will be more satisfying than a mouthful of ordinary tobacco. Just nibble on it until you find , the strength chew that suits you. Tuck it away. Then let it rest. See how easily and evenly the real how it satisfies without grinding, how SALE JZ? JZ? Co. u C: Guaranteed Used Atuomobilei On Easy Payments Seed for List af Prices sad Specificatisas J.W.LEAVITT&C0. PORTLAND Real Estate and Loans I will endeavor to have a bar pain always in all lines of Real Estate. Office hours from nine A. M. to five P. M. T. D. Tweedy Phone 2372 1103 Wilson St., Hood River, Ore. mm MAGAZINE I .WOMEN. 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