The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, August 14, 1919, Image 1

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    HOOD H1VEU. OREtiOX, THURSDAY, Ald'ST It, 11!
No. 11
r ARL III 1 IMNC; OIR CtSLOMIRS IX)
MILT Hit 1LMM Of Till
PRESENT
AND ARL ASSbllNCV 'I HEM IN IHTIR
PLANS I OR lill.
FUTURE
L IWIII VOL R ACCOl NT
; Interest on 'lime and Vi inij Deisits
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
HOOD V.W v r, our(,()
r
Jonteel
The Glorious New Odor of 26 Floweri
J.mtet-1 Cold Cream, a delightful cleanser -r'0c
Jonteel Comb. Cream. fr sunburn, and a j:k.! base fur powder 50c
Jonteel Fate Powder, in three shades, very adherent and invisible. .5GV
.Jonteel Fai e 1'ow K r Compacts, in three shades uOo
Jonteel Rouge, in three shades We
Talc Jonteel, a very tine Title with a delightful odor -5c
U'ior h.nt.-el l.2-r
Kresse Drug Co.
The QoxjCxSJL Store
Come in and hear the latest Victor Records
MKE YOUR SAVINGS
GROW
Become an Owner in this
PUBLIC UTILITY
INCREASE YOUR INCOME
This is what
Pacific Power & Light Company's
1 Cumulative Preferred Stock
will do for you.
DIVIDEND DATES
February First
May First
August First
November first
Stockholders receive their dividend
checks by mail.
THE SPECIAL SAVINGS PLAN will
interest you. Ask any of our em
ployees to explain it.
FACTS AND FIGURES
The August numk-r of the National City Bank
Bulletin will be ready lor, distribution about the
time this notice Is published.
This number is replete with up-to-the-minute
information on topics of reat Importance to
the people of the United States and we will be
lad to add to our mailing list the names of
those who would be interested in receiving
this publication regularly each month.
BUTLER BANKING COMPANY
MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE. SYSTEM
I Srruil No. H
Fvunhiallv Win; Mar Nnw?
LIT IIIIUUIIJ llVt llUli
Yihi will want to own your own home in Hood
You arc Koint;- to liml IhiIM:!;' very expensive.
There arc still several nl l,,iv-.; for sale a! much
less lhan tiicy ai'e Wniili ; and en ionns that will enahlc
anyone to buy. Tit ilenian.l is iiinva-in.u. Tin- supply
will not last lony;. Let us sh.y yuu some ot' tln'sc:
(1) Five rooms and bath. Comparatively new
and entirely modern. Wei! located. $1600.
(2) Another exactly fitting above description.
Terms on both.
(3) Excellent two-story house, five rooms, bath
and sleeping porch. Hardwood floors down stairs.
Fine furnace, fireplace, garage, two full lots, flow
ers, shrubery, cherries. $4250.
(4 1 Unusually good two-story seven-room house
on Heights, Newly painted. Large lot. Very cheap
at $2000.
I 5 1 Three-room house on fine lot. $400. Snap.
And several more very good buys. See us soon.
HOOD RIVER ABSTRACT AND
INVESTMENT CO.
J W. ( HI I I V Pu-M.t. in
k. MM I A IK. Sivnt.iry
mm
K
Every Saturday Night, 9 to 12
at the
Open Air Pavilion
Fourth and Oak Streets
Kolstad's Orchestra
l3QEl
Hood River Volunteer Fire Department
Owners
APPLES
We want more TianspaivtiK Atrucnans. Early Har
vest anil Hell .lure iliis season. Our liemaml is i;ooi and
should you hae only ten to it teen lmes ve want you to
ship them tons, for every lev. hoses add i'ur volume and
permits us to sell m nuautities at a satisfactory piicc for
the gnwver. Ship ahout three-fourths ripe, n-anlless
id' color, faced and lilied.
Sheridan BecKley Co.
l'.'o Kro- S'!v..t, I'OUTI.ANIh ORE.
Reference: Hibernian Lank.
You 1'iui nlwavs iM sin ..Mivs M:ttn free bv m liiii: at Ola.-ier Oll'iiv.
Hood River, Oregon, Au. 4, 1919.
To Whom it may Concern :
This is to certify that 1 have used a
Hartford Tire on the rear wheel of my auto
mobile that I run on my mall route In this
County, and that betw een October 20, 1918,
and July 17. 1919, I ran that tire for the
distance ot 8310 miles, making about 200
stops each day. During that time 1 wore
out two sets of chains on that wheel and
the tire was still in usable condition when
removed and may be seen at the Blckford
.Store at Pine Grove, Hood River County.
OLE NELSON.
on
3
GROWERS KEEP
Other are aking that contractors (five
the public definite information. Mrs.
i H. F. Davidson, who is just tack from
-vf-TT f AITfir I'StW wile tour of California, declares
III rl H Pi that the highway snouia remain open
ORCHARDISTS GREET N. Y. PARTY
m
! Ill
I
i
i
i
PINE GROVE STORE
A. F. BICKFORD, Prop.
Brook!) n Eagle Tourists Pleased With
Reception Tendered Here and
Sing Praises of District
Hood River orchardists kept open
I house last Thursday for the 126 tourists
peeing toe national parka under aus
pices of the Brooklyn Lagle, and when
the party left immediately after lunch
tl ey were sinking the praises of the
orchardists and their families as well
a- F. W. Chindlund and C. A. Bell,
r pective hosts of the Oregon and Mt.
Kod hotels. The party was split and
I'm two hotels with each other vied in
serving the visitors breakfasts and
li.ichea. It was declared that the
kiches approached banquet propor
t.; ns.
Hie Eagle party, three fourths of
ti.em women, following the breakfast
h ur, were taken for an inspection of
o. 'hards, i, rowers opened their homes,
e .'orted the visitors through vistas of
fi iit-laden trees and allowed them to
ci,. lose for themselves the ripest of
p. aches and plums. They were taken
fi r an inspection of packing houses and
refrigeration plants. The hosts made
no story about the scenery, but the
visitors could not help noticing Hood
a id Adams and the surrounding fir-clad
hills. They thought they were fed up
on Bcenerv. they said, after a visit to
Glacier and Yellowstone parks, but
that of the Valley intermingled with
the pastoral orchard scenes, was de
cidedly refreshing
Hilly Sunday spent the morning
si owing the easterners over his Odell
ri nch, and it happened that the Rain
bi w, distributing car of the State Game
a id Fish Commission, was here with
1 0,(K)0 trout fry for Lower Valley
streams. T. J. Craig, in charge of
the car, escorted the visitors through
the rows of cans and showed them how
the state is restocking its streams an
unally with millions of young trout.
"All aboard for 'Boneville,' cried
some member of the party as the 12i
comfortably tired New Yorkers. He
meant Bonneville, of course, but he
pronounced it like a cullud gentleman
does his favorite gaming implements.
That mispronunciation, or the New
York version of them, of Indian names
seemed even worse than the metropoli
tan twist of the O.-W. R. & N. sta
tion. Still the New Yorkers had the
time of their lives.
"We are U6ed to Hood River apples,"
said a woman member of the party,
"but now that we have seen the beau
tiful valley where they grow they will
taste even better. We are going to
have a kind of personal -interest in
Hood River apples hereafter as we re
member the hospitality of your orclv
ardists.
after hours of work each dav.
"We traveled over numerous roads
on our tour," says Mrs. Davidson,
"where paving and other construction
work was under way, hut traffic was
never completely blocked. Since there
is no alternate route, except one of
great inconvenience and expense by
way of the North Bank Highway, I do
not see why authorities should take a
definite stand and announce that the
road w ill be open at some time every
day."
Apple growers, who fear that the
losing of the road will prevent many
apple harvest hands from coming here
this fail, are joining in the protest
against closing.
UPPER VALLEY IN
LOCATION CONTEST
OREGON LUMBER CO.
BUYS FIR STUMPAGE
WICKIUPS FOR
VACATIONISTS
RECREAT10NISTS GET CONVENIENCES
Forestry Service to Build Leantos on Lost
Lake Road and on the For
ested Shores
2 T. 11. Sherrard, supervisor of na
tional forests, was here last week en
route to Portland from the Upper West
Fork of Hood River.where he had been
engaged in details of a sale of 3t5,
000. 000 feet of timber in the national
forest to the Oregon Lumber Co. The
tract, the largest body of Douglas tir
ever sold bv the government, was
awarded to John W. Palmer, who sev
eral vears aeo retired to a West Side
orchard here from the presidency of
the Westport Lumber Co.. operating a
mill on the Lower Columbia.
Mr. Palmer, soon after the big ileal
suffered poor health and he assignee
his interest to the Oregon Lumber Co.,
which intends to log the big tract and
haul the timber to its Dee plant for
cuttinir. lhe timber involved in the
sale covers an area of 7,340 acres. R'
tape of the original sale dragged out for
nearly a year, following announce
ments of the forestry department's
plans for disposing of the big stump
age, a protest was tiled by orchardists,
who expressed a tear that the grea
denundation would result in spring
freshets and a shortage of irrigation
water in summer. These fears were
finally dissipated when the high offi
cials of the forestry service came here
and informed apple growers that the
area under discussion formed less than
a third of the Upper West Fork water
shed and that the stream was fed
chiefly in summer months from Mount
Hood glaciers.
Thetotal sale price of the big tract
of fir will reach more than $350,1)00. It
will take about 20 years to cut the
area. The sale of the timber has done
more than anything else to stimulate
construction of a highway connecting
county roads with Lost Luke. Ten per
cent of the funds from sale of the tim
ber will go to the state for construction
of roads or trails in the national forest
in any part of the state. Twenty-five
per cent will be apportioned between
Wasco. Hood River and Clackamas
counties, within the borders of which
the national forest containing the
stumpage is located. The sale has made
available funds for the construction of
the Lost Lake road.
The base line forms the north boun
dary of the timber belt, and the Ore
gon Lumber Company has already
pushed its logging road into the new
holdings.
INDEFINITENEST
AROUSES PROTESTS
While Hood River citizens have been
wrestling with the problem of locating
a new home for the postoffice. Upper
Valley men and women have been con
tending among themselves over the
merits of sites for a new $12,000 grade
school to rise soon. Two factions have
come to the fore and the right has cen
tered around two proposed locations.
One element of the school's patrons
desires to erect the new house on the
site of the old school, while those op
posing contend that it is at the section
of crossroads used more by motorists
than any other intersection of the dis
trict. Those opposing the old site
would have the new building erected on
part of a hve a"re tract purchased by
the school district for a new Upper
Valley Union High School. The old
school property was donated to the dis
trict but will revert to the original
owners when its U9e for school pur
poses is discontinued.
lhe faction tavoring the old location
do not wish to lose the property, and
they say that the grade and high schools
should be located on adjacent plots.
They have secured a letter from Hopkin
Jenkins.principat of'the Jefferson High
School, of Portland, in support of their
argument. Their opponents, however,
declare that Mr. Jenkins would view
the situation differently if he knew
that the Upper Valley High School site
comprises hve acres, equal, they say
to hve city blocks, and that the two
schools can be erected thereon without
hurtful crowding.
maciiineexhibTts
PLANNED FOR FAIR
A feature of the approaching .Hood
River County Fair will be exhibits of
labor saving ranch machinery and ap
ple harvest appliances. Farm imple
ments will be exhibited by local mer
chants and by Portland and Seattle
manufacturers. The committee has
offered a special premium for the best
display of labor saving devices. Orch
ardists are asked to demonstrate pet
schemes of labor saving.
Fine exhibits of cattle, hogs and
dairy cows are planned, according to
R. V. Wright, Hood River High School
agriculturist. As a result of increased
entries, it will be necessary to increase
display space. The fair will require
two tents, each 50 bv 100 leet and a
shed 30 bv 100. The high school ath
letic grounds will be used for the fair
and the entire high school building will
be used for displays and for meetings
of orchardists and ranchers who will
be addressed by members of the Ore
gon Agricultural College faculty.
COUNTY AWARDED
TWO MOTOR TRUCKS
The forested area around Lost Lake,
to the shores of which the United
States Forestry Department, its crews
armed with tons of "T. N. T." des
tined at the time of manufacture for
blasting a way through the fortifica
tions of Hindenburg but salvaged from
war supplies and its force turned to
peaceful development, will be a vaca
tionist's paradise by next summer ac
cording to Warren M. Cooper, in charge
of national forests in Hood River county-
Mr. Cooper, here yesterday seeking
men for work on trails and for con
structing wickiups on the new Ixist
Lake road and in the forests around
the shores, says that his crews will
build numerous shake leantos in vir
ginal groves on the road, and a dozen
of the structures will arise in the vi
cinity of the lake.
"1 would like to find a half dozen
men, who know how to erect log houses
and to split fir shakes to take back to
the woods with me," said Mr. Cooper.
The huts for vacationists will be sub
stantial. Three sides will be enclosed,
and the fourth open to a fireplace.
Thus we will make it possible for
vacationists going into tne lake to
eliminate heavy tents from their
packs. In case of rain they will find
shelter in our houses. The fireplaces
will not only be convenient for outing
parties, but they will serve a gxxl
purpose for the forestry service. With
them available, the amateur woodsman
will not be tempted to build afire
against the first log he discovers and
thus perhaps starting a forest tire.
I can also use some men for trail
building. We are threading this sec
tion of the national forest with narrow
trails, which may be used by vacation
ists and which will aid our rangers in
guarding against the spread of tires."
HIGHWAY BLOCKED
PART OF DAY
Paving crews between here and Cas
cade Locks have begun pouring "hot
stuff," and the road is closed during
working hours. The highway will be
opened in the mornings until 8 o'clock
and traffic will be allowed to pass at
the noon hour and after work in the
evening. Later continual Bhirta may
be worked, and the road may be per
manently blocked, it is said. Grading
crews are progressing between here
and Ruthton hill. They are now work
ing on a cut just west of the city.
The formation is of cement gravel and
necessitates frequent light blasts.
About 50 charges were set off Monday
evening.
A local opinion that the road will not
be closed permanently at any time is
growing. S, lienson, here bunday, de
clared that the road would not be
blocked all day and night, unless it
became absolutely necessary. He left
the the impression that the commission
would endeavor to keep the route open.
The county has repaired the old route
between VVyeth and Cascade Locks,
and this can be used as a detour while
work between the two points progress
es on the new highway.
SEALS REPORTED
OFF HOOD'S MOUTH
As the result of observations of
Countv Judge L. N. Bloweis, who
noticed in press reports that Pacific
county had been awarded trucks, the
State Highway Commission has award
ed Hood River county two government
motor trucks of the Nash-Ouad make
for use in highway construction
County RoadmasterW. L. Nichols and
Commissioner J. O. Hannum lett on
Monday for Salem to return over the
Columbia River Highway with one of
the big vehicles.
On noticing the dispatch Judge
Blowers immediately showed it to his
fellow court members, and with their
cooperation wrote at once to State
Highway Chairman Benson, of the
State Highway Commission. The
awards soon followed.
TOWN MEETING MAY
DECIDE LOCATION
Indefinite statuB of the Columbia
River Highway at the time of the
Hood River County Fair has necessi
tated the board of directors calling off
plans to rush an exhibit to the Salem
State Fair. The local fair will be held
on September 19 20. It was proposed
to collect a unique exhibit of all Hood
River products, and after their diBplay
here rush them to Salem over the Co
lumbia River Highway by motor truck.
"But we are afraid if we make our
p ans they will sll be upset with the
Columbia Highway closed between here
aid Cascade Locks." says R. V.
Wright, a member of the Fair commit
tee. The indefinite highway situation is
leading to numerous protests. Many
doclare that the road should remain
oen at certain hours each day, even
while paving work is at its height.
It is likely that Hood River citizens
in the near future will attend an old
fashioned town meeting for the pur
pose of settling on a site for a new
postoffice home. The matter has been
taken up with Oregon's congressional
delegation and the postoffice depart
ment, and the reply comes from Wash
ington that the will of the local ma
jority shall rule in the matter. The
comparative good points of different
locations will be threshed out at the
proposed meeting and the matter set
tled once tor all.
C. A. Cass, whose bid for a new
office home at the corner of Fourth
street and Cascade avenue, has decided
to withdraw his proposition, leaving
the matter free for future decision.
The Hood River Game Protective
Association has declared war. Three
serais sighted off the mouth of Hood
River in the Columbia by W. R.
Greene, local manager of the Western
Union Telegraph Co., has aroused the
sportsmen to action. The presence of
the seals, it is said, indicates th run
of salmon, and the ocean-going ani
mals, it is thought, have stationed
themselves at the mouth of the smal
ler streams, where they feed on Chi
nook salmon and salmon trout as they
enter Hood river. This is the first time
seals have ever been reported above the
Cascades and it is likely that the State
Game and Fish Commission will be
asked to assist in eliminating the seals.
If they persist in their hunting at the
delta of the smaller stream, it is de
clared that they will prevent fish from
entering the local river
BANGS LECTURE
IS CALLED OFF
TELEPHONE HEARING
PROBABLY AUG. 25
President J. E. Smithson, of the Oregon-Washington
Telephone Co., has re
ceived notice from the Public Service
Commission that the body will meet
here probably on August 25 to hear
protests against an applicaction of the
telephone company for an increase in
rates.
The concern filed an application for a
raise last October. The application
was revised several months ago, the
company declaring that costs of labor
and materials have increased since the
armistice was signed.
The application states that an in
crease in earnings mut Le allowed or
the company will have to apply for a
receivership.
The lecture of John Kendrick
Bangs, writer and reconteur, scheduled
here for next Sunday afternoon, has
been called off. The local committee
communicated with Mrs. Robert Treat
Piatt, in charge of raising funds in
Oregon for the reconstruction of de
vastated France, announcing that a
very large percentage of local residents
were away on vacations. Orchardists
and others, it was declared by Trmuan
Butler, chairman of the committee,
had planned Sunday outing trips before
hearing of the coming ot Mr. Bangs,
and the noted writer would be greeted
by empty seats Sunday.
The committee has invited Mr. Bangs
to come here and spend Sunday on an
outing.
PARKDALE TO GET
NEW WAREHOUSE
The board of directors of the Apple
Growers Association has granted an
appeal of Upper Valley orchardists,
forty of whom appeared in a body
Thursday and asked that a new ware
house be constructed to handle the
district's bumper crop of 1919. The
Association's plans call for a new
stucture of hollow tile that will cost
an approximate $15,000. Negotiaions
are now under way to secure trackage
facilities from the Mt. Hood K. R.
Company. Work will be pushed on the
new structure, in order that it may be
available for the approaching harvest.