1 VOL. XX XI I HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 28, 1923 No. 0 When you need a third party pending final payments and ar rangements on contracts, place them in ESCROW WITH US. We will act as the third party and hold the contracts in safety until the fulfillment of the provi sions stated in them. USE ALL OF OUR SERVICE. Mm ilSHS liMl I'D 7 The First SATiOXALBaXK IHoodRiver.Ore. FREE! Cake of Klenzo Toilet Soap with each purchase of the New Large Family 50c Size KLENZO DENTAL CREME Next Saturday and all week until the next Saturday July 2nd to July 9th--you can buy Klenzo Dental ( Verne in the new, lare family size for 50c and receive one cake of the new Klenzo Toilet Soap, full size, FREE. This Economy Offer is mabe to introduce to you this convenient new size of Klenzo Dental Creme and to acquaint you with the new Klenzo Toilet Soap. KRESSE DRUG CO. .Store Come in and hear the July Victor Records See us before buying Arsenate of Lead We handle "CORONA DRY" The Universal Insecticide Orchard Supplies and International Harvester Supplies The Hood. River Fruit Co. j yV " f j I Ti7iTTrrmTTTriiiiTiinTKiujiiannnnmHiiinnrtnnniiunm.:iiii:n-ini7TiTnrp BUTLER BANKING COMPANY Member Federal Reserve System m Resources Over a Million and a Quarter Established 1900 l.liiiiinrrrFrnr.-;rmH,nmuilm,illl SLABS Now is the time to place your or der for slab wood so as to allow time for proper seasoning during the summer months. We handle the entire local output of the Dee mill. Special prices on car load lots of ten to twelve cords. F. 0. 1. car shipments to ranchers at points on Mt. Hood Line. PHONE 2181 Successors to HOOD RIVER FUEL CO. FOURTH AND CASH MM BIG DOUBLE BILL AT Wednesday and Thursday Wallace Reid LIBERTY A,, Q A nug. o in "The Love Special" a sennett Comedy: "The Fireside Brewer" and VAUDEVILLE M EMRY LUMBER & FUEL CO. DUCK WALL BROS. SERVICE WITHOUT SHAM Unfortunately, in must business, so-called "servie' if largeiv a atals. From the half-hearted whiskhroonnng of the Pullman porter to the final inflection of tlie auto mobile tester, service seems to lie more a matter of appesr ances than bnlpfelsjQH Yon will put up with anv kind of service in a pirn h. hut you are going to become the permanent MtlMMW dI the man who gives yu tsreatest satisfaction All. THK TIMK. That's the one thing I have for sale. C'orm m and try it. SPECIALIZING ON BUCKS AND STI DKBAKERS SHAY'S SHOP At the Fashion Stables Phone 1201 John C. Duckwall Wm. S. Duckwall Wish to announce that they will be cash buyers of the principal varieties of apples and pears this sea son and load from all points in the Valley. We furnish growers' supplies and materials. Apple and Pear Boxes Spray Materials Paper We will have a small supply of the specially prepared oil paper to prevent scald on the late keeping varieties and recommend a limited use of it this season. DUCKWALL BROS. I'honc Odi ll INITIATION TO BE FEATURED CANDIDATES WILL GO TO HOOD TOP Governor Olcott and Other Notables Participate in the American Legion Ascent of Mount Hood to NAME SOCIAL" FRIDAY, AUGUST 12th. is the date Now pk .is. don't be too late. At eight o'clock sharp, we will assemble all, In the M. E. CHIRCH, just above the Library Hall. Kor admission we warn that we'll sue. For each letter in vour name pennies two. Then will be a program sedate. Following which we will tat ICE CREAM AND CAKF:. Tho Society of 40 Hommes ami 8 Chevaux, secret organization of the American Legion, will participate in an initiation on the summit of Mount Hood next Sundav as a feature of the first annual ascent of the snowpeak staged hy the legion Post. Candi dates, who will be put through a part of the performances required of neo phytes knocking at the door of the order, at the big camp to tie estab lished for the party, Saturday night, will ascend the peak with the hikers. Once on top, however, the candidates will be led to the depths of the sulpha pits, where they will receive their ob ligation in the unusual 2-mile high crater. While the party of climbers will not be as large as anticipated because of the interest displayed in the announce ments two weeks ago, it will approxi mate in size and enthusiasm some of the recent Mount Hood activities of Mazamas and friends. Governor Ken W. Olcott has written to Kent Shoe maker, chairman of the arrangement committee, that he, .Secretary of .Matt Kozer, Adjutant General W bite and Lyman (!. Rice, the latter of I'endlt ton anil member of the Oregon Huniis Commission, will be present. General White will be accompanied by his wife. Mr. Shoemaker has received letters from a number of Legion posts In oth er parts of the state announcing that delegations will bo tent here for the recreational event. An interesting feature of the moun tain party will be a reunion of many members of old Twelfth Company, Or egon Coast Artillery, called to the olors in IS) 1 7. Leon roust, original mess sergeant ot the unit, will be in charge of providing fojd and supplies for the camp. Harry Sines, the old company cook, who was finally located at Salem, where, following his mar riage, he had settled down on a farm. has written that he will be here to cook for the party. Walter I!. David son, veteran packer for the Forestry Service and sergeant of a nack trsin during the war, will be in charge of transporting the camp equipment from the homestead place of J. O. Hannum the mile and a half distance into camp. Saturday night will be spent in a grove just below the snowline. A huge bontire will be lighted, and the ex-service men, their families and friends will join in songs. They will be led by Mike Hrennan, of Portland. 1 he following instructions have been given for those who expect to psrtici pate in the climb : Every member of the partv, male or female, should dress just as if they are going on a hike or fishing trim 1 hey should wear good stout shoes, piefer ablv high top, with flat, low heels These shoes should be studded by tht local shoeman with cone-htaded Hun garian tacks, not calks. A pair of 00 oted glasses, preferably amber, must be worn above the snow line. Tool who possess ice axes or alpenstocks should bring them ; others should pro vide themselves with a stout stick feet long. Climbers are asked not to wear heavy underclothes, because these may cause fatigue, but all should carry with them a mackinaw, heavy sweat) or leather jacket, which should be strapped to be carried from the back or shoulder. A nair of common cotton or canvas gloves should be worn. An other useful hint is that all should wear woollen socks or stockings on the climb, and a dry pair should be left at the base of the mountain with the blankts for a change as soon as tht limber descends the mountain. APPLE CROP ESTI MATES ARE CUT As the 1021 apple harvest approach es, the estimates of all mid-Columbia fruit districts are showing further re luctions irom those made tiy growers luring the blossoming period, when reports from all sections of Hood River and Wasco counties, Oregon, and Ska mania and Klickitat counties, Wash ington, indicated the heaviest yield in the history of the sections. The early estimates on the ROM River valley crop placed the year's yield at 2,o00,- 000 boxes. Today conservative ship- MH :nd growers report the aggregate for all districts not to exceed 2,5Ki,(nn boxes. The highest estimates do not exceed 2,7.r0,000 boxes. The average estimate for the Hood River valley places the 1921 yield at about 1,800,000 boxes. The shipers and growers of the mid-Columbia sections, however, were justified in their heavy estimates of blossom days. Never have the orch ards borne such a profusion of blooms. The fruit, however failed to stick. The set was not up to expectations in many instances, and later the June drop thinned fruit Beverly in many tracts. The yield, except in areas of higher elevation, will be generally spotted. Some growers will harvest bumper yields, while their neighbors will pick crops sh rt of normal. The condition, according to the ob servations of growers arid market men in all sections, results from the heavy freeze of December, IfttV Many trees were uprooted last year, entire tracts having been killed in areas of poor area drainage, or wherp the soil was abnormally wet. This year certain varieties continue to show frost damage. Observers everywhere, however, re port that the crop of the year will be very clean and of high quality. Grow ers have not been one w hit discouraged liy the damage resulting from the freeze. They are reported to be con tinuing scientific methods of spraying In most cases they diligent than during hen laUr was scare' Fruit tracts are well heard of renewed ef iig a grade and pack trict receiving conditions at. railroad yards will be bettered. The Apple Growers Association will construct new warehouses at Dee and Odell. Its Van Horn storage space will be in creased. The same condition of bet terment is noticeable In the White Salmon and Underwood districts. While growers anil marketer are alike optimistic over sales prospects the coming season, the market remains indefinite. It is not likely that buying to any great extent will be made until after the convention of the International Apple Shippers' Associa tion at Cincinnati in early August. The number of independent buyers has heen largely increased here this sea sou, out meir activities are not very marked. Some growers are heard talking of $2 per box, but it appears to be the general opinion that the market will start at a considerably lower figure. Growers generally did not av erage more than II. BO cents, net, per oox tor apples last year, in instances, where orchardists produced fruit than ran to good sizes and high grades at an economical figure, they made money last year, but such instances were rare. The chances for prolit this year are much better. With a light crop ovre the large commercial sections of the middle west and east, and the gen eral, barnyard fruit eroB of nearly ail sections eastfof the Rockies negligible, local expectations run high for sub stantial profits this season, in spite of the lowered purchasing power of the consuming public. Labor costs have been materially reduced over last year. Boxes will cost. less. The average re duction of labor and materials, as enm nared with Ia9t year, will reach about 80 per cent. The freight reduction announcement by fail lines has not aroused any en thusiastic comment on the part of grower! and shippers anywhere. The actual reduction per box, it is said, will be six cents. The demand was for three times as much. Agitation for increased water shipments is heard in every section, and shippers in nu merous instances are signing up ref, o. crated steamship space, as fast, as it is available. Some of the growers of the Hood River valley declare that the yield of this district for the year w ill not ex eed 1,600,000 boxes. C. H. Snroat. formerly manager of the Hood River Apple Growers' Union and later man aging director of the old National Ap pie Co., puts his estimate under this figure. J. P. Naumes, purchasing agent for Dan Wuille & Co., London importers, who maintain Northwestern headquarters here, figures that the crop will run about 1,600,00V boxes. f. h. Clark, recently arrived sales manager of the Apple Growers As sociation, who formerly headed the Yakima Fruitgrowers' Association, tigures that the yield will reach about 2,000.001) boxes in the Hood River val- y. While he is not displaying an over-optimism, Mr. Clark declares that he looks for a hea thv demand for Northwestern apples throughout, the season, lie declares that the Associa tion has determined to grade with the usual rigidity. In view of the clean ness of the crop and the present size f the fiuit. he anticipates that the pack of 1021 will be as good as the dis trict has ever put out. H. F. Davidson, owner of large orchards here and operator in the do mestic and export trade from a New York City office, says he is well pleased with the harvest outlook. Mr. Davidson says that his own indi vidual tracts will yield a bumper crop. He anticipates a yield of about 2,000 noo boxes. One of the most carefully analyzed estimates made on the 1021 crop for the Hood River valley has been com piled by Leroy Childs, superintendent 01 the Hood Kiver Experiment Station Mr. Childs Fays : "There has been much speculation on the part ot various writers relative t the size of the 1921 apple crop'in the Mood Kiver valley. I best? estimates have run as high as 2,500,000 boxes. I consider them entirely too high. .mi i ... . . incre is present in the valley a much smaller number of apple trt than was present during the bumper yields of 1 !!!, at which time there was actually produced on the trees close to ,700,000 boxes of fruit. Of this fig lire lujly 40, 000 boxes were lost and did not enter boxes, due to labor short age am) due to the fact that much of the stock was frozen before it was picked. The actual box shipments of 1919 reached approximately 2,:!n0,oon boxes, Of these slightly over 2. lion. 000 boxes could be considered rummer ial pack "Th - year, 1921, is the year when the 1919 record should have been stir passed, and doubtless this would have taken place had it not been for the -c y. re damage caused by tht; extreme ly low temperatures of 1919. A large number of tries in the heaviest pro- Jucing section of the valley were en tirely wiped out as a result "of the weather condition, eliminating an area capable of producing fully 300,000 boxes. Th: damage, in mi.der form affected a r. maining large acreage, de- maaing the production at east 25 er ent as compared with the 1919 yields. "In uninjured orchards the yield is not so consistently heavy as it was luring the record reason. This irregu arity is somewhat offset by the fact that trees arc a little larger and a few oung orchards are now coming into bearing which did not produce in ". I hese condition, however, are not of any great importance. I he actual number of apples produced on the trees will be less than 25 tier cent of the 919 crop, or a box production of m-o ooo boxes, quality at the present time i: excellent and the size;, that tin fruit have attained at this time is greater than the average. The leaf roller h.is caused some damage as has j the drown apnis. l-odling moth and scab infection are of little commercial importance in the Hood River section this season. " "The apple crop prosfieets in Hood Kiver county are very good this year." ssvs M. D. Armstrong, county fruit inspector. "Total production will con siderably exceed that of last year, and the quality will be much f etter. The fruit generally will be large and clean. SpmI, will not ho flnr in th- . . m. CONVENE HERE VALLEY DEMONSTRATIONS ARE HELD Four Box Apple States and British Co lumbia Represented at Plant Specialists' Sessions With over 50 plant specialists from Oregon, Washington, Idaho, British Columbia and Utah, the annual con vention of Northwestern entomologists, pathologists and horticulturists, whic g began its sessions here Tuesday, bid .2 fair to to draw a record large attent g ance. While the year's meeting, it is said'r will result in no startling discoveriei in behalf of fruitgrowers, the clearint -house of experimental results and con elusions from observations in the provj ince and four states will present t S growers of the box apple sections varb 3 ous evidences of a steady progress in 7j methods of culture and for combating diseases and pests. j Tuesday's program was thrown open to the general public, and the high school auditorium was crowded with growers of the valley and adjacent mid-Columbia Oregon and Washington sections. C. 1. Lewis, formerly horti culturalist of the Oregun Agricultural College, who is now assistant manager of the Oregon Growers'' Conierativ Association, in an address on phases of marketing, declared that the agricul tural interests are paying an unjust stiare of the nation s burden. Mr. Lewis, however, asserted that the farmer himself is to blame for his con dition. He declared the onlv remedy for the condition would be found in advertising. Announcing that an en deavor will be made to conduct a co operative campaign with five big coop erative fruit concerns subscribing, Mr. Lewis said : "Never have the apple nrrowers of the Northwest had such an opportun ity. The apple c-ops of the states east of the Rockies will produce the smallest crops in our generation. In quiriee are reaching us daily for our product. Hy the use of adverising we have an opportunity of gaining friends who will stand us in good stead, per haps, in future years when Virginia, Missouri, New York and Canada pro duce a huge apple tonnage." Mr. Lewis stated that the five big concerns tentatively engaged to form an adveristing pool are: The Skookum Packers Association, The Wenatchee Fruitgrowers' Association, The Yaki ma Fruitgrowers Association, the Hood River Apple Growers Association and the Oregon Growers Cooperative Asso ciation. The session was opened Tuesday af ternoon by W. S. Brown, chief of hor ticulture at the Oregon Agricultural College. Addresses were delivered by the following : C. C. Vincent, horti culturist of the University of Idaho, "Kffects of Miscible Oil Sprays on Fruit Trees;" E. W. White, assistant provincial horticulturist of Victoria, B. C, "Apple Tree Anthracnose or It lack Spot Canker Control;" "Experi mental Spraying Results in the Hood River Valley," l eroy Childs, director of the Hood River Experiment Sta tion." and D. F. f isher, plant pathol ogist of the United States Department of Agriculture, stationed at Wenat- c.'iee, "Oilel Fruit Wraps and Apple scald ( ontrol. Registrations of visiting specialists and out of town orchardists include: Clayton L, Long extension horticul turist, C, K. Schuster, assistant pro fessor pomology, L. I'. Wilcox, horti cultural instructor, H. Hartman, as sistant professor of pomology, W. S. Krown, chief of horticulture, E. M. Harvey, professor of horticultural re search, U, II Fulton, assistant ento mologist, A. K. Murneck, a.-sistant professor of horticultural research, S. M. Zeller. associate plant patholo gist, F. J. Rinolde, assistant pomolo giat, R. H. Rob i neon, chemist, all of Oregon Agricultural College; F. C. Rcimer, superintendent of Southern Oregon Experiment Station, Talent; Leroy Childs and Gordon (J. Brown, &aperfntendent arid horticulturist of the Hood River Station ; Ralph H. Smith, entomologist of the Twin Falls, Ida., experiment station ; W. Downes, assistant entomologist, Victoria, B. C. ; A. II. Steinmetz and E. J. Cum mins, growers or Underwood :Karl H. Zeller, ef White Salmon; W. T. Hunt er, assistant horticulturist, of Vermin, B. C. ; J. E. Slade, Husum; E. K. .lackman, county agent of Wasco coun ty ; F. K. Luck, assistant horticultur ist. University of British Oilumbia; M. D. Armstrong, Hood River County fruit inspector and Chas. A. 1'ark, of the Oregon Horticultural Commission, Salem. The only other address Tuesday night was delivered by Mr. Rcimer. an inter nationally recognised authority on the propagation of blight-proof pears, who told of his travels in remote sections of ChuiH in search of blight resisting stock. The specialist spent yesterday partly in demonstrations in Hood River orchards. The programs . sterdav afternoon ooveted all phases of cultivation and pests and insect.- attack. A banquet was staged last night at the Columbia urge Hotel. hollowing a program this morning the visitors will be taken on a tour of I pper Valley orchards this afternoon. A part of them will remain over at Cloud Cap Inn for an ascent of Mount Hood, while others will return here to leave tomorrow for a tour of Wasco county orchards. While Salmon Team Defeated r.d cultivation. iave been more he war year The Hood River baseball team, ac cording to local fans, who have wit nessed game throughout the season, has made a steady advancement, end the aggregation is now playing as good ball as any of amateur standing throughout the state. The locals de feated the White Salmon team at White Salmon Sunday, score 11 to 2. White Salmon will play here next Sun- ner. mce. Other pests are .letf Bell. Sunday's pitcher for Hood iver. struck out 12 men. He had rrfect support. For the last four imes the local team has averaged 13 ts in each game. Ixval bell player turned from White Salmon exprese g praise of the sportsmanship of the hite Salmon players. Atlhough the game was very one-ided, it was de- tered their harvesting conditions the pact summer. In nearly every dis- C ntmued ou Last Page; clared, because of the clean to have been one of the ing of the. playing. intrrt. 1