lilPXt .1?. VOL. XXXII HOOD RJVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1920 Xo. mite? CONIM.NSEO R K PORT OK THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF HOOD RIVER, OREGON AT. THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS JUNE Nth, W Resources : Loans and Discounts $579,772.44 United States Bonds and Other Securities 294,120.25 Bank Building and Fixtures 51.50Q.00 Other Real Estate 1,000.00 Cash and Exchange 227,396.42 $1,153,789.11 Liabilities : Capital Stock $100,000.00 Earned Surplus and Profits 19,578.32 National Currency 93,800.00 Deposits 940,410.79 $1,153,789.11 Come in and hear the latest July Victor Records u in in mil Kresse Drug Co, The H&XGsJUL Store USE nuREXform 4 Arsenate of Lead IT IS JUST A LITTLE BETTKR Full stock on hand. - Convenient four-pound packages if wanted. ALSO LIME SPRAY HOSE SULPHUR "FRIEND" SPRAYERS SPRAY MATERIALS "FRIEND" SPRAY GUNS Hood River Spray Company Phone 2421 No Special Sales But our prices every day of the week and every week of the month are at the lowest possible level consistent with the needs of our business.. We put to practice our motto, that our customers will get full value for every purchase made. We invite the closest scrutiny of our price on any sale a customer may choose. CZIOEZD DAVENPORT & STEELE Hood River Market Telephone 4311. Kuppenheimer Clothes If Kuppenheimer Clothes were not the best that you are offered at the price you are asked to pay, then most assuredly they would not be what they are The Most Popular Clothes Made Air-O Weaves - - - $22.50 Other Weaves - up to $70.00 Other Makes $35.00 to $45.00 J. G. VOGT fj A NY person now that wants to progress lias to adopt at one time or another radical. K.uws and stand by it, no matter what the conse quences are ; and when the cry went out, "Back to the Farm for Americans," we resolved that we would do our bit in the line also, and we have been getting along with American help. There arc now twenty-four full blooded Americans, big and little, on our truck farm of that many acres, calling it their home, getting their living and helping others to live, surely the most densely pop ulated farm in Hood River, and when we ask the Hood River people not to forget their buy at home pledge, we are asking nothing unreasonable. Ask "for Koberg's Vegetables, they are grown under American business principles and are NONPAREIL The 20th Century Truck Farm JOHN KOBERG, Owner. WE ARE AGENTS FOR Leader Water Systems AND Quaker Pipeless Furnaces Shipped complete and easy to install by anyone who can use a wrench. WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY PINE GROVE STORE A. F. BICKFORD, Prop. SLAB WOOD Now is the time lo buy vonr net winter's rappl? of slab ml We ran deliver single rords or car loads of first ijuality ( tar foot elale These slabs contain plenty of heavy wood and also aome small stock just right for the kitchen range. Can be sawed into t rt lengths at your home by portable saw at low rate. We hand1 entire local receipts from Oregon Lumber Co. mill at lM. Hood River Fuel Co. Phone 2181 Fourth and Cascade Revere Cord 1 ires are no Experiment Sold by the The Heights Garage J. F. VOLSTORFF, Manager CORNER OF TWELFTH AND C STREETS Telephone 3151 CELEBRATION GREAT SUCCESS JURY RETURNS NO INDICTMENT Illinois, was drowned Friday morn ing in sediment in a large vinegar vat at the Hood River Apple Vinegar Co. plant. Mr. Dutton and William; Chapman, son of Robert Chapman, su perintendent of the plant, were pre- paring to clean the tank, when the lat- . ter, failing to observe eompanv instrue- CARNIVAL SPIRIT SUPREME HERE tions that interior of vats be tested' R. f. CRAWFORD WINS ON HRARINP. with a lighted lantern, was being ! w-i ered from a manhole. His young com panion states that he protested that the . Grand Jury Returns Four Ind'ctments gas was too strong to be borne, but Mr. Dutton was endeavoring to hasten 10 Tien Head bUllty and Are American Legion Clears About $1,000, to Be Used in the Construction of Proposed Home his work and had placed a hose in his mouth, expecting to draw fresh air from outside the tank In this manner. Carnival snirit was an DM ma Mondavi He had only been lowered a few feet in the windup of a 3-day celebration in i when he removed the hose and called charge of the American Legion. Aug-1 to young Chapman to rnie him. Al j merited by 1500 out of town merfymak- j moHt instantly he fell from the scaffold era, families of the city and valLv laid , " wnicn ne was sitting, aside care and patronized with a mark- ' R- Norton, vice president of the ed liberality games, port! and conces- company, attempting a rescue, was sions of the ex service men, who were overcome, and Joe Lybarger, a fellow made richer hv a thousand dollars. I worker, who, with a rope around his Sentenc d which will b.i used in the construction of a home. Keen rivalry was displayed in a wa ter tight between ex-representatives of the army and navy. The most unique float ever entered in a local parade was filled with 60 children of all sizes. It was entered by Mrs. W. K. Shay, who several years ago, turning her home into a maternity hospital known as the Morksnest, has welcomed more than 100 boys and girls into the world. Judge of the floats at the morning parade were C. H. Vaughan. C. H. Castner and Hugh G. Ball. Mrs. Shay, whose float created universal plaudits, won first prize on decorated floats. The Franz Hardware Co. won second prize. Other awards on the narade were as follows: Decorated automobile, Mrs. A. S. Keir, firt Truman Butler, second ; Mrs. F. E Kaesser, third, and Geo. W. Thomson, honorable mention : comic automobile Sumner 1). Cameron, who represented the Gump family. The same judges rendered daemons on the following athletic events: 100-yard dash, Dig ging, Button and Anderson ; boyB' race, Avery, Allen and Cooper; girls' race, Ruth Kean, Helen Jones and Anita Hamann; sack race, Fleming, Higgins and liutson; potato race. Higgins, Hut son and Anderson, and roller skating maraton, .Stewart Heath arid Leonard Thomson. The baseball game drew a far larger crowd Sunday afternoon than a union patriotic religious service held at the open air theatre in Chautauqua park. Those attending the meeting, however. were rewarded hv a strong appeal for oldtime Amer ea tism by Judge Robert I ucker, of Portland. Judge Tucker prefaced his address by declaring that an age of Jazz is pre vailing and a period of rubber-like in flation, in whose reflected glory, he de clared, the nation now lives. "but the time is coming," declared Judge Tucker, when the Fourth of July celebration will mean more than it does this afternoon. Some effort should be made bv the people of all communities to get hack to earth, hack to ftnda' mental principles. Judge Tucker, however, expressed a faith In the common people of America, when he contrasted them with the soviet-ruled Russians. It is the duty of parents of today, l.e aaid, to instruct their children in such documents u the Declaration of Independence, the Con stitution and the Farewell A.ldre-s of Washington. He cited Washington's warning against entangling foreign al liances. He recited the prophecy that the next great war would he fought out no the Pacific coast, and pointed to the Monglian problem. Then Judge Tucker called for a return to sturdy Americanism to meet this and great ecmoomic problems. He ended his address by an appeal for more industry. "We are leaving our farms and seek ing the pleasures of the land." he said, "while foreigners are coming in. for-. eigners who are willing to submit to hard work and who are reaping our fruits. We must return to work such as our forefathers did." Dr. Pineo presided at the Sunday af ternoon meeting. The Declaration of Independence was read by Rev. Boddy. Rev. Helmick pronounced the benedic tion. Sunday night a meritorious con cert was given at the open air auditor ium by the Royal Rosarian quartet, as sisted by Mrs. C. 11. Sletton and Miss Bernice Matisen, Portland violinist. Miss May Van Dyke was accompanist. The mosquitoes, it is said by those present, al?o celebrated Sunday night. BILLY SUNDAY DY NAMIC ON DIAMOND Rev. Bill Sunday was the snappiest and the star player of the baseball game here Monday between the local American legion team and the Mult nomah Guards, of Portland, the visit ors winning by 8 to 4. The Rev. Billv was umpire, and his decisions were quirk nut sure and decisive, tie is as dynamic behind the diamond mound as in the pulpit. It was a red letter sports day for the Apple Valley, for a boxing bout at the open air theatre followed immediately on the ball game, and a thousand of the baseball fans apeared as frantic as delegates to a national political con vention in the last minute of the last round of a 10-round mill between Chick Rocco, of Portland, and Billy Ryan, of Chicago. The 1. '10-pounders pre sented the best scrap ever seen locally. While their fighting till the last mo ment was fieice. it was coolly scien tific. During the last moments each seemed to forget rules and trv for a telling blow. The bout was declared a draw by Referee Mike Kelley. of Parkdale. Harry Sonniksen and Kid Morse, local 175-pounders, fought a fierce 3-round bout o a draw. James Fenemore, Canadian army regimental champion, easily defeated Jack Davis, local boy, in a 3-round fight. A. Gar lock, of the Portland Olympic Athletic Club, refetved the Sonmksen-Morse fight. The official timers were Mayor Sco bee and City Attorney Smith. The K. of P. band lent zest to the occasion by concerts lefore and between fight. 0.uips of Irish-witted kida kept the bleachers in an uproar. Sunday the local base ball team was defeated by the Honey man team, of Portland, by a score of 6 to 3. body, recovered the body, was rendered unconscious. After he had been drawn to the manhole, where he delivered Mr. Dutton's body, he collapsed. His body bent double, a larger hole had to be sawed In the tank to recover him. Al though he was in the tank less than a minute, artificial respiration was re quired to resuscitate Mr. Lybarger. Mr. Dutton was in the tank for 15 minutes. A call was sent uptown to Marshal Frazier to rush a physician to the scene and Dr. V. R. Abraham was found almost immediately. He worked for an hour with the man before giving up hope. Mr. Dutton is survived by wife and three children. His mother, Mr-. Man O. Dutton, is a resident of Oklah. The following three brothers and sisters survive: Ohas. Dutton, of Park dale ; Nuke Dutton, of Woodward, Okla. ; John Dutton. of Webb City, Mo. ; Mrs. Lucy l.ightfoot. of St An drews, Fla. ; Mrs. Nellie Tolly, of lli noilj Mrs. Mattie Wilhite of Oklahoma, and Mrs. Margaret Bolt, of Michigan. A coroner's jury Saturday attributed the death of Mr. Dutton to his own negligence or overconfidence. The for mal verdict was : "Frank W. Dutton came to his death by not taking proper precautions and not following instructions previously given him by the superintendent of the Hood River Apple Vinegar Co. before going into a vat to clean same. Death was caused by being overcome by fumes and gas of which deceased had previous knowlelge; and that immediate death was caused from drowning in a liquid or semi-liquid in bottom of the vinegar tank." An autopfiy proved that. Mr. Dutton's lungs were filled with the liquid sedi ment wheq he fell face downward after being overcome by the gas. The members of the coroner' jury were: G. R. Castner, C. A. Bell, .1. H. Fergusou, W. J. Baker. John A. Wilson and Commodore I lean. The funeral was held Sunday after noon at the Anderson chapel. Uev. Lin den Leavitt. former Christian minister, who is now located at Eugene, officiat ing. Interment followed at Idlewilde cemetery. MAZAMA PARTY VISITS LOST LAKE For the first time in history the na tion's birth was celebrated Sunday at Lost Lake, where K5 Mazamas shot fireworks and listened to an Oration, Sixty of the recieationists, arriving here aboard the O -W. express Satur day morning were taken to Dee bv special train over the Mount Hood, About 20 others. finable to leave busi ness, headed by Pres. K. 0. Sammons, motored in to the Lost Lake country Saturday evening. All baggage of the party was hauled to Lost I. like and the camp arranged Friday by Mis Harriett Monroe, who with Miss Margaret Ptt-raon. led of the party to Wahtum Lake Sunday, returning Monday to the Columbia Hibgaa down Herman cre'(. The first party arriving hiked in the 14 miles from Dee to the Lake. - MM avan 1arvorv to la -ma. rjt.(l r"V that Cra HOTELS OVERFLOW WITH FOURTH GUESTS Hood Kiver Sunday and Monday re sembled on a smaller scale Portland during Shriners' week. The city has never entertained so many guests. With the Highway opened to trafli automobiles parties arrived in continu ous succession Irom Port land, ny noon Sunday the commercial hotels and val ley summer resorts were sound ire dis tress signals, and 0. A. Bell and F. W. Chindlund organized themselves into a committee to find quarters for visitors in homes. Lven the ' no space sign was out at trie new e.ty auto park. Wau-Guin-Guin hotel win opened to guests after having been closed for several years. Mr. Bell states that If guests were billeted at private homes. Still many slept in hotel lobbies or in their cars in garages. PAVING DOES NOT INTERRUPT TRAFFIC The grand jury Tuesday afternoon returned not a true bill in the case pi II. C. Crawford, former instructor of athletics at the high school, who was recently arrested in Minneapolis and returned here on a charge of securing rnonev under false pretenses from W. R. Bailey, principal of the school. Al legations of Crawford s offenses, a cir cular be iring his photograph and de claring that he had defrauded students and others out of about $1500, proved 'an exaggeration on his return here. At the time of his preliminary hearing be fore a justice of that city was stated that he would probably face a second charge of embezzlement of funds from Buford Class, high school student, the money secured for purchase of a cor net. Young Glass, who had left for Juneau, Alaska, has cabled thtft state ments to the effect that he had made an affidavit declaring that Crawford bed defrauded him on such a deal were erroneous. The cablestates that he had evinced Crawford funds prepaia- launching vaudeville-acrobatic no other install' e was it found U...1 . 1 t 1- uioi v lawiuiii iinii Heturtu iuous irom students. 1 he aum 01 JBW was secured from Mr. Bailey through the latter having signed a note to secure funds for promoting a partnership aeroplane passenger business. Suspicions at tached to Mr. Crawford when he mys teriously disappeared, after leavin.; for Spokane in late February, avowedly to return in a cross country flight an aer oplane that was supposed to b" shipped from the east. While he admits his in discretion in failing to communicate with local people. Mr. Crawford de clares he became absorbed In huntirg down a former business associate wl o held a mortgage on the machine and who secured its sale without his knowl edge. The grand jury returned three indict ments as follows: Robert McGrillis, for obtaining money from a local store by a fraudulent check ; Clarence E. I'ullen, on a charge of pe idling drugs without a license ; W. G. Schoene, for a recent burglary of jewelry and cut lery at the store of Yauui Bros. Pol len is a resident of The Dalles. He bis not yet been arraigned. McGrillis nd S.heone pleaded guilty. Judge Wilson sentenced the former to 6 to 24 months in the penitentiary, and the lat ter drew a sentence of 9 to 3(i months. The grand jury consisted of the fob lowing man: A. W. Meyer, foreman; i. C. Durkwnll. K. B. Loving. Geo. I. Slocom, Oscar Vanderbilt, S. B. Car nine and J. O. Tompkins. The grand jury has also returned an indictment against A. Perkins on a charge of assuult and battery against F. Karihara. The assault, it is said, resulted from a dispute over wages of Perkins and hij family for the straw berry harvest on Karihara's Willow Flat ranch place. The Japanese man suffered a brain concussion, accorJiog to charges, hav ing been struck over the head with a strawberry carrier. He was brought U the Cottage Hospital, where his con dition was cons:d;red serious up to Tuesday night, v. hen he began to rally. He was reported yesterday to be mak ing a rapid recovery. The charge against Mr. I'ullen is a technical one, it is said. PORTLAND PROTEST COMES AS SURPRISE A. I). Ramsey, who returned last week from a visit to Seaside, making the trip bv motor, declares the High- 1 way from Portland to the coast is in fair condition. Local citizens, learning of the pro test that has been filed by the Port land city council against the Lost Ijake Highway now under construction, through a letter from Acting Forester B. A. Sherman to Senator Chamber lain, Cipro SS surprise at the Portland action. The Lost Lake H ighway was begun last year, a portion being con structed by county appropriation, and the national forest portion of the high way being built by the fori stry ser vice. The Hood River Game Protec tive Association, which instigated plans for the new highway, has secured about $2,000 by private subscription. A large portion of this fund wa sub scribed bv Portland citizens. J. H. Fredricy, president of the as sociation, which is now engaged in raising $1,000 to be used in CI mpleting the county's link of the new highway, says that the Portland council is pro testing against the construction of a road, all plana for which were aban doned six years ago. It was tentative ly planned to build a road through from Leet Lake over the Lipid pass to connect with the old Barlow road. As a portion of the proposed road crossed the Bull Run reservation, it was defin itely abandoned on protest of city authorities. The report of Forester Sherman is in part as follows : "The road is outside the Bull Run reserve and the engineer of the Port land water bureau has stated he has ; no objection to it. The Portland coen cil has evidently confused it with an ! other road started several vi-ars ago I and abandoned upon receipt of prote-t I ftnnt l,.,lluMjt frr.ni fpar that it mtuht "We struck 40 miles of unpaved ! ead , en(.n,aehment upon the Bull rWl,. Jl T . ,."Vt'-9. re r Hun res rve. The project has not been ing all the time, but tourist, are never nviveA but is Stained es a trail fej R fn K,rt1 ,er'th kf..l,Te; for protection against fire. There is Slight interruptions occur while hot , lkeijhood of trespass from the mull in ticii'f; , .v. i in, ,rui no nvoii a a vicinity of Iogt Lake than along the northern route e the BjII Run route of the Mount Hood loop, as List Ijike ; is well below the elevation of the Bull Kua watershed and drainage from it doee nut affect Portland water supply." FRANK W. DUTTON DIES IN VINEGAR TANK Frank W. Dutton, aged 3fi. native of roller makes a track cars are allowed across. It is very different from the Highway work between here and Son ny, where motor parties may be de layed for hours." Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey, accompanied by Mr. and Kir- H jfti Bell, of Pm mn, ..... nri,, down i f t.' iJi (i IV rii HrKk (ninPor1 JVIM UL1TC11 nciiD land. Defective Brakes Cause Trouble 'Vrs. Amos Perkins, Upper Valley matron, sustained a broken arm and broke a collar bone Friday when a truck driven by John HilNtrom skidded down a 15-foot embankment from the road at a curve on Tucker hill grade. Fire other boys end men, returning from the strawtrry harvest in the truck, escaped injury. The accident, it is said, re u I ted from defective brakes. ON INSPECTION TOUR John Oliver. New York Citv and ex port represents rve of Dan Wuille A Co.. has arrived here for a visit at NoSlBwest head inarterpof the concern. In the rtmpany of A. E. Woolpert, Northwest manager, he will visit new nlants at Odell. Parkdale. Sheridan. Underwood and Lyle. Befoasye turn ing to the Fast Mr Oliver wiffvieit ell Northwestern districts to secure crop cstiojtftcs. t