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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 3, 1920)
.HOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY. JUNE M. U20 Another Royal Suggestion MUFFINS and POPOVERS From the New Royal Cgok Book BREAKFAST is too often eaten as a duty rather than a joy. The suc cess of the day may depend upon the spirit of break fast. The Royal Education al Department presents some breakfast dishes that will send the children to school with a hip hip hur rah and his majesty man to his daily duties with the "up and doing" feeling which knows no discour agement. Muffins 2 nip." flour 3 teaipopni Royal Baking Powder l tablespoon suar teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 1 tablespoon shortening Sift together flour, b:;kintr powder, sugar and srilt; add milk, well-beaten eggi and melted shorleiiinp; mix well. Grease muffin t it: s and pi t two tablespoons of Latter in to each. Bake in hot oven 2U to 25 minutes. Eggless Muffins 2 cups flour 4 teaspoons Iicyal Baking l'owder 2 tablespoon! sugar 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons shortening Mix and sift dry ingredients, add milk and melted shorten- 1 POWDER A&z!ut&!y Pare ing and brat until smooth. Bake in greased muffin tins in hot oven 'M to i2." minutes. Cc-n Muffins c up corn rioai li Saklag i'm cups lioui :i uspoi n.s r rowoer t teaspoon1 salt 2 tables) nfffir 1 cup Bulk 2 tahlcspoon8 thortentnsr 1 cpg Sift forctlier corn meil, flour, baking powder, salt and su gar; add milk, melted short ening and well-beaten eff?rj mix well. Grease muffin tins ivo tablespoons of each. Bake about in hot oven. and drop t mixture in t ii5 minutes Popcvera 2 cu tei flc spec 2 cups Kiilk Sift together flour and salt. Make a well in flour, break eggs into well, add milk and stir until smooth. Pour into hot greased gem pans and bake 25 to 35 minute! in a very hot oven. If taken out of oven too soon they will fall. SENT FREE ivvw Rojral Cook Book con taining" scores of doll) htful. economical recipes, many of tii. in the most famous in use today, address SOYAX BAKigG POWDC3 CO. 115 Fnllmi N'.o.-et N'w York e'ily 44 Bake with Royal and be Sure SP1TZENBURG POOLS HAVE BEEN CLOSED The Apple Growers Association has closed pools and made final returns on the erop of Spitsenburg apples bandied for its members for last year's nop. The variety averaged $1 7 net to the ... 1 1 Vi I 'CU,. Association lor an inree grimes, niu net to growers is obtained by deducting 20 cents per box. The total returns to iIih Association reached 1748.700. Pools have not been closed on the j Newtown crop, the clean-up of which j lias been better than hail been antici pated, and the total receipts for this variety will exceed 1,1000,000. Chautauqua Dates Selected July 8-13, inclusive, are the davs scheduled for the annual Hood Kiver chautauqua. The junior Chautauqua, with young children from all parts of the Lower Valley participating and training for an entertainment of their own the last night of the event, will he featured. Lecturers who are billed for the coming chautauqua are: Eve lyn Bargelt, of the Chicago Art insti tute; Ng Peon ( hew. Chinese states man, humorist and editor, who is known as the Oriental Mark Twain; Kate Up son Clark, nationally known editor; James A. liurns. president of Oneida Institute; Sam Grathwell, inspirational lecturer, and Capt. Upton, nationally known for his mutational work. Paul ine Lucille Mayo will render Pollyanns In monologue. Musical features Include The Royal PhllipplravSextet, Taylor's Singing Band, The New York Artists' Trio. The Morrison Glrll and J, Walter Wilson Co, Last ( barter Meeting of Women The Woman's Auxiliary of the Amer ican Legion, which now has a -charter membership of no. is endeavoring to swell the charter roll to 100 before next Saturday, the last meeting before the charter list will he closed. MOTOR TRUCK BA IM AGE OVERESTIMATED "A better understanding of what good roads mean has come to the pub lic," declares E. A. Franz, of E. A. Franz Co.. local distributor of made In Chicago Master truckn. "and with this understanding is coming a realiza tion that to no class does road improve ment mean so much as it does to the farmer. "However, theie is a tendency on the part of those near the more thick Iv populated centers, who have not thought deeply on the subject, to fos ter the idea that the greatest wear to roads comes from the use of the mo tor truck. Not so many years ago the automobile met with this condemna tion, but it is now so commonly used that condemnation on this score is sel dom heard. The motor truck is rapid ly becoming the country s freight earner. has been some restrictive against motor trucks as a the attitude mentioned, with motor trucks hauling tons of farm products each eople can hardly sit by and ideas to hit at the very "There legislation result of However, millions of year, the pe allow false Coming to VANCOUVER Dr. Mellenthin & Co. SIM CIAI IS I S Do Not Use Surgery Will be at ST. ELMO HOTEL MONDAY, JUNE 7th Office Hours : 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. ONE DAY ONLY Where Do You Trade? Did you ever stop to reason out why you trade at some certain store? If you did it would resolve itself down to three reasons-Prices, Goods, Service Our Prices: We invite comparison. Our Goods It has taken years to estabiish such agen do Keon Kutter Tools, Spaulding Sporting Goods, Goodyear Tires and Accessories, Wear Ever Alluminum, Burpee's Seeds, Acme Paints and Varn ish, Valvoline Motor Oils, Billings and Spencer Wrench, Plumb Hand Forged Tools. Our Service The Best There Is "Service with a Smile." Try us and be convinced E. A. Franz Company FREE DELIVERY source of their life supply. Of all ve hicles using the roads the motor truck probably causes the least damage in proportion to the service it renders. "There are two things that cause road damage: One is the impact of weight; the other is wear to the sur face. With a substantial roadbed the impact of weight does little damage. If the roadbed is faulty, and there is much road mileage in this country that is faulty, weight tends to break it. but with hiird-surafoed road and moderate speed, motor trueks will not break the roadbed. "Perhaps the greatest destroyer of road surfaces and the least condemned is the steel tire. The steel tire hits the roadway with an absolutely ungiv ing impact. Us constant hammering crushes the stones and shatters all par ticles that project from the surface of the road. Steel tires are usually nar row and they wear and cut deep ruts. They pulverising the surface so that automobiles moving at moderate speed suck up the dust that is formed and scatter it to the winds. "The motor truck with its broad, Rat rubber tires and slower speed, causes practically no damage to the surface. Providing the road can stand the u'.oirht there is no alii'UMon and no suction to solid tires. I f the truck is equipped with pneumatics a regulated speed will cause less damage from suc tion than will an automobile moving at a higher speed. "As to the weight the truck imposes upon the roads, this is largely taken care of by the width of tires used. For example, take the Master 24 ton. Here the chassis weight is approxi mately 4, odd pounds. The truck is de signed to carry 6,00(1, but suppose the truck is subjected to an overload thai will bring the load up to 6,600 pounds the combined weight of the load and tiuck would be 10,000 pounds. The tires in front being 4-inch with 7-inch in the rear, and with a trille of over two inches of the circumference of each tiro touching the ground, WOUW distribute the weight over approimate- 15(1 souare inches, Kivmir a weight ol about 2U0 pounds to the square inch. "Any demand which arbitrarily um its the carrying capacity of trucks simply adds to the cost of transporta tion and increases the cost of livinir, hem e motor truck restrictions should be intelligently formulated." Committee Visits Forest Connection A committee, composed of C. A Hell, J. H. Predricy. E. W. Hirge and Jim Btranaban, returned last wed from an inspection of a proposed cub stitute route for connecting the Hood River county road with the national forest bnk of the proposed Mount Hood Loop. Estimates of construction of a grade up the Kast Fork of Hood river, as provided for in a survey made by engineers of the State Highway t'om n Ission, place the cost at .r.(l,(i(i0. It was suggested by J. 0. Hannum, who owns a homestead place in the district atid who is familiar with the country, that a substitute temporary connection might be made for approximately f 600, "1 believe that such a route can be made passable for less money," Hays Mr. Hell. "We can at least go ahead and open a road and make it possible for the forestry service to haul in euip ment and supplies." A report of the committee will be made to the Commercial club. Mjsterious Fire Saturday Morning A mysterious lire in the woodshed of VV B. Shute called the lire depart menl members from bed at 4.:ii) Saturday morning. The alarm was turned in by lir. Post, a neighbor of the Shute fam ily, and through a mistaken interpreta tion of instruction, the name Post hav i:g caused the confusion, it was thought for a time that the postoffiee was on ti re. It is suppo-ed that the woodshed was Bred by a tramp using the empty build ing for a lodging house. Compton Sells If Mtfammon C. B. ComptOB has sold his 1(1 acre lee Hat orchard place to C. A. Mc Cam moo, of Sheridan. The latter, formerly a resident of White Salmon, will move here at once with his family. Mr. Compton will go to Portland. He StpectS to return to newspaper work, he says. I uts No Chtfge For Kxaminalion The doctor in charge is a graduatt medicine and surgery and is been bv the state of Washington. He vi professionally the more important towns and cities and offers to all who call on this trip consultation and eam nation free, except the expense of treatment when desired. According to his method of treat ment he does not operate for chronic appendicitis, gall stones, ulcers of Stomach, tonsils or adenoids. He has to his credit many wonderful results in diseases of the stomach, liv er, bowels, Mood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney, bladder, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers, and rectal ailments. If you have been ailing for anv length of time and do not get any bel ter, do not fail to call, as improper measures rather than disease are very often the cause of your long standing trouble. Remember above date, that examin ation on this (rip will be free and that his treatment is different Address: MB Huston block, Minnea polis, Minnesota. jnll Notice of Sheriff's Sale In the Circuit C00t of the State of Oregon for the County of Hood River Ellon s. Cherry, Plaintiff, vs. J, Mar gulls, Bessie Margulis, W. Margu lis. Ida Margulis, The United States National Hank of Portland, a corpora tion. Clarke County Iron Works a cor porator Emma T. Corr and Frank ('err, Defendants. Hy virtue of an execution, judgment order, decree and order of sale issued out of the above entitled Court in the above entitled cause duly directed and dated the 29th day of May. 1920, upon a judgment and decree rendered and entered in said court and cause on the 10th dav of April, 1920, in favor of Ellen S. Cherry, plaintilf, and the uniea niaios national trail n ui in land, defendant, and against the re maining defendants for the sum 19. 153. 79 in plaintiff's favor, with terest upon 8.917.60 then rate of 8 per cent per annum An old friend in a nev? package VACUUM PACKED DEPEND T E CO09 "Juim Utui, tP futh"" ot iii-1 f at the. and with 1 interest upon $2:". 10 thereof at the rate of (i per cent per annum, and the further sum of $415 in plaintill s favor With interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from the 10th day f April, 1920. ami the luillier sum oi 110,626.81 in favor of the defendant. The United States National Hank ol Portland, with Interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent per annum from the ; 9th day of April, 1920. anil the runner sum of $500 in favor of defendant. '1 he United Slates National Hank ol fort- land, with interest thereon from the 19th day of April. 1920, at the rale Ol six per.cent per annum, and planum s costs and disbursements of this suit. (axed at $85.50 and defendant. The United States National Hank of Port land's, costs and disbursements of this suit, taxed at $11.50, ami the costs 01 and uain this writ commanding me to make sale of the following described real property suituated In the County of Hood River, State of Oregon, to Wlt : All that part of the southwest qusr ters of the northwest QUSrtef of Sec lion fourteen (I I) in Township two 12) North, Rang ten (10) Bast of the WIU la metis Meridian, lying east of and be low the county road running through said quarter section, containing SB acres, being part of the same property which J. A. lipping and wife acquired from F. 8. Perry anil wife, and heing the identical property which J. Margu lis acquired from Joseph William Cooke and wife by deed dated July 14, 1908, and recorded in Volume I of Heeds of s;dd Hood River county, on page 50 thereof ; and also the following described real property situated fan said Hood River County, to-wit : All that portion of the northwest qaurter of the southwest quartet of Section fourteen (14) in Township two (2) North. Range ten 110) Fast pf the Wilamette Meridian, lying west of (he middle of the stream of Hood River; and that said real properties shall he sold separately and that the liisl one above described shall he sold for the purpose of satisfying the I,, is of plain tiff and the defendant. The United States National Hank of Portland, ac cording to said decree, and that the second tract above described shall be sold for the porpoeeof satisfying plain tiff's lien in connection with the $400 mortgage thereen set forth in said de cree, and toward the satisfaction of the lien of the defendtit. The United States National Hank of Portland, as set forth in said decree, 1 will, in compliance with said execution, judgment older, decree and oner Of sale, on Friday, the 2nd day of July, 1920, at the hour of I. SB o'clock p. m. at the front door of the county court house in the City of Hood River, in the CoBWty of H od Kiver, State of Oregon, sell at public auction, subject to redemption, to the highest bidder for cash, all the right, title and interest which the B0OOS named defendants and each of them had on the 14th day of January. 1910. the date of plaintiff's BB.SB0 mortgage herein foreclosi-d, or since that date had in or to the above described teal pruerty or any part thereof, to satisfy said execution, judgment order and de cree, interest, costs ard accruing costs. Uated this 29lh day of May, 1920. First publication June Ilrd, 1920. l.a-t publication July tat. UtBL Thomas F. Johnson. Sheriff of the County of Hood Kiver, State of iregon. I, St. Mary's Catholic Church Service SendiU morning are S" fo mvi Ixiw Mass. H o'clock ; II isli Mas HU30oVI.s k. Instruction lor the chil dren at 0 o'eio. k, each FaMrday sors FOR SALE 5 acres, very attractive, with a good hoiiee, spring water pipe I toil. 3 acres of fruit, 2 acres uncleared, barn auf chicken bouse. LOSS than a mile from town on a go id road. The price ia 13,800.00 R. E. SCOTT AC.K.NT ANNOUNCEMENT uanu swssaHSBSBassBBmsavsHSBBBBBsaeasBBSBS This is to announce the purchase of the local branch of THE DALLES GARAGE, lo cated in the Mt. Hood Annex Building at the corner of Oak and First Streets. The Concern is now owned and operated en tirely as a Hood River concern. We wish to solicit your patronage. We will be glad at any time to demonstrate our popular line of cars. The Studebaker The Maxwell White Trucks i, - - - . i THE CAMERON MOTOR CO. Telephone 2431 Which Do f You Need Corona Dry Arsenate of Lead Black Leaf 40 Misciblc Oil Lime and Sulphur Alfalfa & Clover Seed Implements WE HANDLE THE FULL LINE OF THE INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO. HOOD RIVER FRUIT CO. Since the discount system has been done away with some of our patrons have been very negligent in paying their telephone account. Slowness in collecting our accounts moans a burger collection expense and loss. This is event ually paid by the user of the service. In fairness to those who do pay promptly we find it necessary to enforce cur collection ruits strictly. Delinquents will be required to pay the service connection for restoring service after it has been found necessary to disconnect them. OREGON-WASHINGTON TELEPHONE CO. i 0