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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1919)
iiooirmvEU ;lailu. thi kj-day, .n ly it. mu no "holes" in it .s rttoine f quality G. W. PEFFER, Special Agent, Standard Oil Co., Hood River, Oregon Red Crown's uniform chain of boiling points gives easy starting, quick and smooth ac celeration, high power, long mileage. Mix hires have "holes" in the power chain. Look for the Red Crown sign before you fill. STANDARD OIL COMPANY LADY BIG MAX VISITS HOOD KIVER Strawberry Crates Odell and Hood River Delivery International Harvester Tools and Machinery McCormick Mowers Hood River Fruit Company DAVIDSON bui.dim; Permanency and Durability are combined with beauty in the JEWELRY offered for sale by us Alter i lid-time in tin' business we hove become iK qu. tinted w ith the best, nnd only the best is ottered to our nitrons. W. F. Lara way SLABWQOD There hits been little cord wood cut last season and the out look is that there will he a scarcity of wood for next winter. We will have a limited amount ol'.slrihwuod to distribute in Hood River this season, havimr the cut from the Oregon Lum ber Company's mill at Iee. Place your order early and we will supply you if possible. COAL We are amiininir to handle a tine coal product and see us for prices be I ore placing your order. Building Sand and Gravel We can supply you with what you want for plastering and concrete Work at right prices. HOOD RIVER FUEL CO. Phone 2181 THE FOURTH and SUMMER WEATHER are fast approaching Get out those White Garments and bring them down for a cleaning or perhaps- YOU'LL NEED NEW ONES WE'LL MAKE THEM Meyer & Wood noil i okfcov iu ii .dim; TFL. 1124 J. I Dumas, I'avton. Wash., fruit pn.wer, the man who made the ladybuu famous, was here Monday en route by ' automobile to OUnwood, Wash., to in-' fpect sawmill property. Mr. Pumas was the first man to put lady-bugs in cold storage and keep them for niobil-' ization in the springtime against ' aphids, destructive pests for tfrain : growers and truck Kanleners. He in augurated nearly 2" years ago a plan that is now annually pursued by the : government in capturing the little ' bugs and putting them on ice for use j the following year. j Mr. Pumas says the Cienuood mill ! was purchased by himself and fellow i Dayton orchardists in order that they ' might have lioxts to pack their fruit crops. , i "We felt that we had experienced ' enough trouble trying to get our box ! supply," says Mr. Dumas, "so we i ended it all and bought our ow n timber j and a mill." USE OF KEROSENE MEANS COOL KITCHEN Most women dread hot summer days w hen the kitchen becomes as Stirling as a furance. It is plain, hard drialg ery to hang over a coal stove as the j thermometer mounts higher and higher. ! Many women have found by putting 1 in a kerosene stove that their kitchens are kept cool and comfortable even in j the hottest days in summer. i Hut the use of a good kerosene, such ; as the Standard Oil Company's Pearl; oil, has many other advantages than j that of keeping the kitchen. cool. It is I easy to handle far easier than either ! coal or wood. Furthemore, it makes no dirt or dust which must be cleaned up continually. It lights at the touch of a match, so there is no waiting for the fire to come up. I'earl oil burns up clean and produces no odor. It is re-refined by a special process which removes the impurities. Wherever it is bought in the city, in the country, in the mountains, or on the seashore- it is always the same high quality kerosene. It can be bought everywhere in f gallon cans, or in bulk at a slight saving cost. 1- H 1 I M I"I"M' M ! M"I"I"H"1"1"1"H4 Letters From and About Soldiers . t , , ...... ,. i ., . , . . . t . . , ..I, .rill ri 1 1 i i . i i Lieut. (!eo. I.. Batchelder has re turned to Hood Kiver after receiving his discharge at Camp Lewie. He'will remain here w ith his parents, Mr. and ; Mrs. .1. t . Hatehelder, until this fall, when he will leave for New York City to enter employ with one of the coun try's largest financial and bond insti tutions. When he entered the service he was w ith K. H. Rollins & Co., large bond brokers. ' Lieut. Hatehelder was for nearly two years in the United States Air i Service. He saw IN months of foreign service. Hying the most advanced types j of Kritish ami French aeroplanes. He 1 w as a member of the lith Aero Squad ron, -Ith Pursuit Group, stationed near Tout, flying a 220-horsepower Spad scout plane. This squadron lias iiO offi cial huns to its credit, and three of its pilots were American aces. Hobey Hakey, the well known hock ey champion, was a member of the same group and was killed ii t he Toul aerdrome. Lieut. Hatclit'lder was not only a pursuit pilot in the American service, but he was breveted by the French F'lying Corps as "Pilot tie Chasse," and is a member'of the Aero Club of France. All of his Hying has been done overseas. He trained with the F'rench. Lieut. Hatehelder has flown 14 dif ferent types of planes, including not only the preliminary and advanced training machines and larger bombing machines used over the front, but also the small, high-powered, single-seater fighting scout planes. In his Spad Lieut. Hatehelder Hew over Verdun, St. Mihiel, along the Meuse and up the Moselle into Germany. a first lieutecnt in trie dental corps. has been stationed at ditTerent poir.M of the 13th naval division for the prt year. Fur a time he was an aiiie to kear Admiral Gltnnur,. who was com manding the Northwestern division un til reientlv. E. F. Monroe, who has resumed work of rehardmg on the W est Side, has just returned from a serv ice of nore than a year overseas. Mr. Monroe, who was a iiitmlT of the "'.7th Eng., was stationed at Coblenr for several months before sailing for home. I Steve Ebv has received a message anrmunciong the arrival of his brother, Earl Lby, who has been on the Rhine with the armv of occ puation, in New York city. Mr. F.by is a member of an engineers' truck company. I 1I1H HI 1 I Ull H I III 1 I I'M FINS, II RS A1 FF.ATIIFUS J. Writing his mother, Mrs. A. I). Moe, Mark K. Moe, just back in America after 21 months' service overseas with an aero squadron, says his discharge was delayed by artival of the big Hrit ish dirigible, the K-.'il. Members of the SSth Squadron, Mr. Moo's unit, and other recently returned aviation units, acted as a guard for the big lighter than -air machine after her remarkable Might from England. "Hut all of us," Mr. Moe writes, "were eager to see the visitor depart, for the longer she remained the longer our discharges were being delated." Arthur C. Lewis, w ho went overseas with the 157th Infantry, a unit that was disbanded on arrival in France, its men scattered through different com bat divisions, has received a request from the 157th Infantry Association, Kittridge Hldg., Denver, Colo., ask ing all Oregon and Washington men who were with the outfit to report their present addresses. Mr. Lewis says many Portland men and residents of towns in neighboring parts of Oregon and Washington were in the 107th. An effort, he says, is being made to secure a historical record of all the men. Mr. Lewis was transferred to the 110th Regiment of the 2th Division. H I I I I I 1 I 1 III ! 1 I M 1 I 1 -HH Representative Nick Sinnott of Ore gon is famous among his colleagues for his jackrabbit hats and for his promotion of the use of jackrabbit fur in the manufacture of headgear. One day he was visiting Representa tive Kennedy of Rhode Island, and Hob Thomas of Kentucky was listening in. Kennedy lamented the fact that while hunters of his state formerly had many cottontails to amuse them. the supply is almost exhausted and the hunters are languishing. "Say, Sinnott," he remarked, "why can't we get some of those jackrabbits from Oregon, and let 'em multiply for our hunters in Rhode Island'.'" "Aw, Kennedy," drawled Sinnott, "jackrabbits like they have in Oregon would be clear outside of Rhode Isl and in two jumps. " Kennedy turned the conversations to other channels and gave up the project. Since time immemorial Indians jour neyed to Uist Lake to angle for the wily mountain trout. The outlet to the crvstal elear body of water, how-1 ever, is subterranean, and since white: disciples of Sir lzaak Walton in recent years have journeyed to the lake in annually increasing numbers the trout have been taken from the pools faster than propagation. Fearing the lake speci s of trout, not found in other streams of the valley, might become ; extinct in case unrestrained fishing! were permitted, the State Fish and Game Commission has ordered the in let of the lake, where the fish go for spawning, closed to all angling for an indefinite period. The inlet will be closed August !. The Hood River fish anil game com mision has been instrumental in hav-; ing the remote pools closed. It is j thought that trout have been deei- j muted there as a result of net fishing. A trap was recently discovered at a point on the shore rarely frequented, ! and local residents, members of the gnme association declare, are under suspicion. .1. H. Fredricv stands vindicated. Mr. Fredricy, after a fishing trip up i ii, v, iminij, i'.i.v'i .iihiiuin a lizard with a blue tail and a red and while striped bodv. Many and varied i stories were written about his "v ic tory Saurian," and Mr. Fredricy re ceived letters frem all parts of the country, asking him what brand of beverage he used. Hut Mr. Fredricy is happy. Last Thursday George Chamberlin, an East Side orchardist, brought a real red, white and blue lizard to the city. He found it catching codling moths in his orchard. It is being displayed in a milk bottle, wider! bears the label, "Fredricy's Lizard." The forested and burnt-. ver areas in the southwestern parts of the county are a lure to women as well as men folk of the family at this season. Vhile the men whip the trout stream, the women pick wild blaekberris. The fruit is being found on the tributaries of Hood river in the Green Point sec tion in large quantities. Plenty of moisture on the higher altitudes is re suliing in berries of tine size. Sunday while their husbands were landing nice basketsful of trout, Mrs. Norman W. Mays and Mrs. L. H. Aplin tilled buckets with tine blackberies. The Brunswick Individual High Class -Superb i ir-: hi ft.. " - ffyyi Word- cannot explain the won ders of tins beautiful lalkin Ma ihme, it urns' W seen and board to be appreciated, it ba the all wood amplifier which icproducts the toiic-toloi of :ll makes of rec ords more perfectly than the l'le n -'graph they are made fur. J. P. I) ARXALL, local M,r.. Coi-on Mu-ic Store. 3u:; Oak Mieet. l'lioiie UIJ. Reed-French Line of Pianos. Will Sharpen Your Lawn Mower 1 have just ivtvivetl an Knipiit' SiiarpciHT. t harut-'s Reasonable". Satisfaction (luaraiiti-i'il. Phone 3302 S. G. EGBERT Cor. 8th and May Streets jir?! Mm Oik DERBY & STEARNS Lawyers HOOD RIVER, OREGON. An exhibit at Slocom & Canfield's of pictures of Coblenz on the Rhine sent to his father, A. I). Moe. by Mark F. Moe, who was stationed for several months at Treves, about12 miles dis tant from the larger Rhine city, has created exceeding interest. The pic tures have not only been viewed by home folks, but returned soldiers who were stationed along the Rhine have reviewed panoramas of the occupied town and have pointed out places of prominence to friends. Numerous Hood River county soldiers artjhaviiig their discharges from ser vice recorded at the office of the coun ty clerk. A recording fee of 50 cents is charged. Deputy Clerk Shoemaker, himself in service, is encouraging sol diers to record their discharges, w hich will become more valuable as Jtime passes. The recorded documents, in case of loss of the original, will make easier the task of securing a duplicate. J Capt. John C. Wood, aide de camp to Maj.-Gen. Hurnett, commander of the United States Marine Cor lis, has been here this week on a furluugh vis iting his sister, Mrs. O. H. Nye, ami family. Capt. Wood, who was u stu dent at Stanford University at the outbreak of the war.will visit relatives at Santa Cruz, Calif., before returning to v ashington. Dr. R. C. Swireburne, of Seattle, ow ner of IochI orchard tracts, is here on business. Dr. Swinebrune, who is "While the roads were good, the fishing in the White Salmon river was ioor over the week end," says Fiail I Franz, who with his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Franz and Miss Ellen Mc ' Curdy returned Sunday from a camp ' ing trip at Michigan City, a commun I ity on the White Salmon about 17 mites I from the Columbia. "We drove aa far as Husum Satur day night and had supper there," con tinued Mr. Franz, "continuing the journey through the big fir forests by moonlight. It made a beautiful drive." "They are biting so well at Crescent Lake," declares Col. Waugh, who has been spending a vacation in Oregon I iiMti 11.1011. itDuiniii inn ii .alloc i here, "that we hated to leave. The two of us caught 72 beautiful trout Saturday afternoon." Col. Waugh was accompanied by his nephew, Chester Scott, of Cleveland, O. The lattetis the son of L.E.Scott, who for hia work in organizing the munition board of the country, was recently awarded the Distinguished Service Medal. With T. J. Craig in charge, the State Fish and Game Commission's distrib uting car, the Rainbow, arrived here Mondayjjver the O.-W. R. & N. line and was taken to I'arkdale over the Mt. Hood Company's road. The car carried 150 cans, approximately 12(1,0011 rainbow trout fry, which were hauled by Upper Valley ranchers to the East and Middle F'orks. of Hood river and their tributaries. Week before last the distributing car brought a quota of steelhead fry here for distribution. The annual run of Hlue Hack salmon is now on in the mid-Columbia, and fishermen are supplying the local mar kets and) shipping the small species in quantities to canneries. Heavy catches are reported by Ed. t . Wright and C. Larson, the latter's nets and traps lo-! rated near Underwood. j Many housewives, with whom the small salmon are favorites because! they are fatter than Chinook or Steel ! heads, areengaged in putting up their ! i winter's supply. i Bass fishing in Columbia sloughs i i north of the city is attracting many ! ; anglers at present. The fish bite eag- j erly at sunset and towards the close of day. Live minnows are used for bait. ' i E. J. Middleswart, dean of local fish-; ermen, and his son, Frank Middle-; : swart, of Mosier, each landed a fine string of bass last week. j , An inspection will convince you that (the service of the I'alace Hotel, l'ort-: i land, Oregon, Washington and Twelfth ; , street, is icouid to none. Gt'iivenicnt j to shopping and theatre districts, clean-1 est rooms in city for 50 cts. and up. j Stranahan & Slaven Contractors & Builders HOOD RiVER, OREGON. R. C. GLANVILLE ATTORNEY AT I, W Room 1 National Hank lluilding Hood River, I rregoli DR E. O. DUTRO PHYSICIAN AND Sl'Ri.EoN Ollice; Hall Hldg , Phone U71 Honrs, 2 to 5 p. in. Resilience; Odell. 1'lmne, Odell I lours -. ;i to 1 1 a. ni. J. F. WATT, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Equipped for X Ray and Electro-Therapeutics. l'eli'ilioQcs: nun mi l l'l H. L. DUMBLE, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. i'biIs promptly answer d in town or eouui' j Pay or NiK'it. Telephones: Kesi.lenre, lir.fl: OnVe, I 'll Office In the KronliiH Buiklin? E. D. KANAGA Physician and Surgeon Phones: Office 421 1 Res. lsll Office in Kliol Piiiildin DRS. ABRAHAM AND SIFTON PHYSICIAN'S and SURGEONS Rooms K, lit, l'O Hrosius liuilding Res. Phones : Dr. Abraham 4152. Di. sifion 54 is. ( Mlice 4151. DR. F. C. BROSIUS PHYSICIAN AND SI RGEON Ollice bonis for Summer, before 10 and after 5. Rooms 1, 2 and.". Hrosius Bldg. Phone ISM. Calls answered from Dee, 12 to 5. Phone, i (dell Hi:-!. Dr. William Mofton Post Dentist Rooms 1 and 2 Hall lildg. Phone 2401 HOOD RIVER, OKKOON G. H. JENKINS, D. M.D. DENTIST Telephones : Office HW1; resident'.' UUS1 t Ulice over Butler Bank E. L. SCOBEE, D. D. S. DENTIST Telephones : Office ."D-l ; residence 5412 Olli' in Brosius Biiildiu Dr. Carolyn Underhill DENTIST Smith Building Telephone 2021 Used Cars For Sale Dodge Touring Car, 1017 Model. Dodge Commercial Car, 1919 Model, driven only 400 miles. GILBERT MOTOR CAR COMPANY PHONE 4444 HOOD RIVER, ORE. DELIVERIES MADE ANYWHERE ON THE WEST SIDE The new owners of the Oak Grove Store, believing that the busy strawberry grower or orchardists will appreciate a delivery service, have instituted one for their patrons. Step to the telephone and order from us. Goods of identical value, purchased at prices' lower than those of city stores, will be delivered to your door at once. OAK GROVE STORE Telephone S582 C A. I EM Ol I- F. FF.NWICK, JR. i v "wji r rAi m bji Never have we seen the Hood River Valley more contentedly busy. Optimism Is reaching all the way down the line. It is a day ol ood things, amon them ood roads and remember our Good Groceries CONSOLIDATED MERCANTILE CO. Automobile Service to all points of Mid-Columbia Regular Stage to and from Parkdale As follow s : 'cave II 1 River daily, except Sunday, at 4,:iU p. ni. Leave Paikdale daily, except Sumlav, at '.. I."i, and on Saturday een inns at ii l'i p. in. PORTLAND-HOOD RIVER MOTOR STAGE LiiaMuis; jm tn -ee the Wonderful Columbia River Highway at a nominal cost. FASHION LIVERY COMPANY I'HONF. 12111 MOOD RIVFR, OREGON THE FISHERMAN WILL TIM) EVERYTHING AT Pat's Place Everyday, and Sunday, too NEW LINE OF TACKLE SALMON EGGS CIGARS, TOBACCO, CIGARETTES PIPES, ETC. When you foci a touch of Spring fever, try a schooner of our ROOT BEER l52s53. o l-ff;'''iy.sifV: Storage Battery All new batteries registered at the VVillard Service Station are covered by our 90-day Service Policy. EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL Moore Electric Co. 4O0 OAK STREET Kf snlcncr Plionp, 2043 Office Phone, IT 83