0 float VOL. XXXIII HOOD RIVER, OBEGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1921 No. 22 THE TAX EVIL Bankers, more particularly than almost any other roup of business men, see the menace of the grow ing tax evil. They realize that deposits and savings which must be drawn to pay exhorbitantly high taxes mean just that much less money for invest ment in productive enterprises in the community. A biinker has of necessity been trained to business principles and ways of thrift, and he knows that In creasing demands of taxation are dissipating the savings and discouraging investment in productive enterprises. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK has every interest in conserving the real interests of its customers and the community. USE ALL OF OUR SERVICE FIRST NATIONAL BANK HOOD RIVER, OREGON Let your next pair be Walk Overs and, if properly fitted, your shoe troubles are over. Most Styles, $8.50 J. G. VOGT Nationally Known Merchandise. SPECIAL KODAK ALBUMS We have just received a new shipment of Kodak Albums, regular $2.00 value, which we are offering at this special price: $1.49 each. These are Just the thing to put your past va cation snap-shots in, Or start a Kodak Story of the children. KRESSE DRUG qo. The tl&XajULtiSare Come in and hear the October Victor Records. 81 BUSINESS OUTLOOK jj One of the leading Portland banks Just issued a report on the general busi y ness conditions In the State ot Oregon. y The report on Hood River County is one of the three best reports in the state and it is gratifying to know that we are well in the vanguard in working out the many post-war problems. RING COAL Clean :: Hot :: No Slack :: Best Coal obtainable in Utah. Special rates direct from car. Emry Lumber & Fuel Co. Successors to BRIDAL VKIL LUMBERING CO. Phone 2181 Fourth and Cascade II' u BUTLER BANKING COMPANY Member Federal Reserve System t mm MM "v I I VJI Of MM BfSl flmmTTriiinmiimTTT When ordering FLOUR insist on getting BLENDED PURITY FLOUR Made at home and guaranteed. HANDLED BY YOUR GROCER YM AN HIGHLAND MILLING CO. Mill Phone 1751 Store Phone 3881 Does a moment's happiness over cheap price outweigh the lasting satisfaction of a good job? YOU DON'T GET BOTH I am turning out od jobs at a fair price day after day. Bring in your troubles and let me help you in any way I can. Satisfactory Service is what you need : why not get it at Shay's SERVICE Shop AT THF. FASHION STABLES Shop 121 Res. 2772 WAVERLY OILS Our FREE CRANKCA5F 5FRVICE In combination with WAVERLY OILS is very attractive to an ever increasing number of car owners. Drive your car in. let us drain the crankcase. flush It, If desired, and fill with Waverly. The charge will be one for the materials used. MT. HOOD MOTOR CO. COMPARISON OF HIGHWAY COSTS EARLY HIGHWAY COST NOMINAL Only $5,000 Spent on Old State Road Mosier Stretch of New Road Costs $600,000 With completion of paving of the Columbia River Highway betweer Mosier and Hood River Wednesday last week it is interesting to compare the old hill road of dangerous and tor tuuus grades with the new boulevard graceful in curvature and of easy grad lent. The old road was constructed a the way from The Dalles to Mitchel Point, a distance of nearly 30 miles for $5. OCX). The cost of cutting the 6.5 miles of new grade, between hei and Mosier and the paving of th stretch in round figures reached $600, 000. Over 160,000 was required building less than a quarter-mile new grade at Mitchells Point, where the open-window tunnel was bored Since the old mountain road between here and Mosier was'completed in 1874 but little improvement was made in it The grade was never changed, and the curves remained hazardous tor drivers of large cars. At points the ehar curves occurred on heavy grades, and the elimination of the old road has brought sighs of relief from ever motorist who has ever negotiated it The onlv material improvement that was ever made In the nine miles highway was the betterment of a short distance lust west of Mosier. The late John Marden.of The Dalles was in charge of construction of the original road, known as The Dalles Sandv road. 1 he late h,. Smith was engineer in locating a part of it James Wallace. Civil war veteran and local pioneer, whose son, Charles Wal lace, now resides on an Oak Grov orchard place, was associated with Mr Marden in the construction work. Th Oak Grove orchardist worked on the route with his father. The most ex pensive part of the old road was tha portion built around Shell Kock moun tain near Wyeth. Here the pioneer road builders constructed, about 100 feet above the grade of the new High way, a dry-masonry wall. J he wes end of the thoroughfare was swept awav by slides of the mountain made up of a mass of loose stones. The east end, however, remains a relic of pio neer davs and a monument ito the en terprise of men of those early.t imes. The old roadbed is overgrown with hazelnut bushes and dogwoods, with their leaves in autumn a vivid purple now pay nature's tribute to the mem ory ot progressive pioneers, i oreu pines and digger squirrels have Pur rows under the old walls and chip munks chatter there from safe recesses as a stream of molnr cars speeds each way over the famed boulevard below. But the old grade, where slides have left it intact, has stoodjhe t;st of di ades. and could the rtrusn ne cleared away and an automobile be raised to the height of the old road, a driver would have no difficulty in negotiating the remaining smooth surface. The old state highway was aban doned on completion of the O. it. & N line, the railway tracks having used portions of the original wagon road's right of way. Ihe newly paved (.! miles 01 the l.o lumbia River Highway between lu re and Mosier make available new seen ery for the motorist out for a spin over the scenic route. With the surfacing placed on through to the V asco county fruit section, Mosier, instead of Hood River, as has been the case the past year, will be the goal oi many parties out for the day from Portland. It new stretch leaves Hood River and climbs to hi approximate half-way oint of the Columbia gorge east of the city bv a series of graceful loops. At present these loops, where gravel pits are being worked on the interven ng property and other portions being farmed, are somewhat an eyesore. It proposed that eventually the state take them over and landscape them. The Highway breaks out on the Co lumbia about a mile cast of Hood River at an elevation that provides many charming views of the river and the lowland farms of the Bingen sec tion in Klickitat county, Washington. A maximum elevation of more than 500 feet is reached at the summit just east of the Hood River-Waseo county line. A turnout has been provided at the summit, and here the motorist may drive to the side of the protecting parapet walls and look for many miles, both east and west. Twin tunnels have tieen bored through a promontory jutting out into the gorge about a mile east of the county lines. It has been suggested that these tunnels should be named Gateway tunnels, for they real ly mark the dividing line between eastern and western Oregon. Travel ing to the east the motorist, when be leaves th bore and reaches an eleva tion that gives a view up the river is at once struck with the brown hill sides, the barren expanses of the north bank of the Columbia. He haa left the tir-clad bills of the raid-Columbia, and instead of green shrubbery hug ging every fold of the gorge, brown or gray areas greet his eye. A new phase of Oregon's scenic attractions is opened up. CORPS AND POST HOLD CELEBRATION son, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson, of Oregon City, was shipped to Chehalis, Wash., Saturday. Funeral services were held Sunday. The young man died Thursday night from injuries sustained the previous Wednesday when two sets of trucks of a logging car of the Oregon Lumber Co., by whom he was employed, passed o"er his abdomen. The boy fell between the trucks while riding at the end of one. It is considered remarkable that he was not killed instantly, but the spine was apparently not injured, and he remained conscious up to five min utes before death came. In addition to his parents, young Mr. Johnson is survived by the following brothers and sisters, George, Rudolph, Luther, Marie, Fredolph and Herbert Johnson. He was a native of Pike county, Ky. The family has resided in Oregon and Washington for the past nine years. S. E. Bartmesfl shipped the body to the Washington town. CALIFORNIA MAN FLOATS DOWN RIVER ' Like the bateaux of days of the French voyageur, when the region's fur bearing animals attracted hardy hunters and trappers, a rowboat, occu pied by M. J. Lorraine, of Alhambra, Calif., moved with the swift current down the Columbia this week. Mr. Lorraine, who is 68 Jyears old, has traveled by his boat, of dory type, all the way from Canal Flats, B. C. He is taking the long trip, whichwill end at Astoria, as an outing. During the entire trip he hasnegoti ated more than 100 rapids without a single mishap. He has taken to dry land during the 1,200 miles of descent to the ocean for about I) miles, where portages were unavoidable. Surprise Rapids, the rapids of Kettel Falls and Rickcys Rapids, where boatmen have often met with disaster, were negoti ated by him without trouble. While Mr. Ixirrame haB stopped fre quently to study the country and towns along the river, he camps on the beaches. His boat carries a complete outfit. CIRCUIT COURT TO BE CALLED NOV. 14 WATER DECREE FILED MONDAY FIVE LITIGANTS ANNOUNCE APPEAL Decree Covers 130 Pages Appeal Notices to be Mailed to All Parties to Rig Suit Following filing of a decree Monday by Circuit Judge Wilson notices of ap peal to the supreme court were form ally announced hy the Pacific Power & Light Co., the Oregon Lumber Co., the Fast Fork Irrigation District, the Mt. Hood Water Co. and the Glacier Irrigating Co. The decree wj S ne of the most lengthy ever filed in .9 local case. It covered 130 pages. 1 o The decision of the case, a I ; irma tion of the findings of the Sta Vater Board, is a decided victory r the Last Fork Irrigation Co., the S hts of '- regon i case g .y for o one to i as re ts tt the y irisdic- H estiga- Judge Wilson haa been instructed to go to Portland to spend two months holding cases. The regular November term of circuit court will be presided ver by Judge Parker, of Condon. The grand jury will be convened Monday, November 14. Those called to serve on the jury consist of : A. J. Graff, Chas. F. Barnes. Her man Dethman, C C Cutting, h. 11. Gorden, G. W. Thomson, J. C. Porter, Jos. R. rrazier, Vernon Crow, ( has. Stranahan, F. S. Aiken, E. W. Cibbs, E. F. DresBer, Frank Dethman, John R. Crosby, Aug. Guignard, W. H. Harney, W. T. Wvatt. J. F. Hendrick, w. T. Forey, Geo. L. Howerman, Geo Chamberlain. A. A. Overland, F. S DeWitt, A. J. Grow, J. P. Naumes, J, M. Culbertson, Albert Hodge, Mill Downing, I'hilip Roberg, Robert Taz well. FURTHER LOOP CON TRACTS EXPECTED Countv officials express a confidence that the State Highway Commission at ts November sitting will take form"! steps toward letting contracts for grading the entire vullev trunk line of the Mount Hood Loop Highway in this ounty. Five miles are now being onstructed over Booth Hill. Officials have been urging such action on the Highway department for the past sev- ral weeks, and engineers of the office have recommended that the contracts be let. Members of the county board of commissioners went to Portland yesterday to further press the case be fore the Mate Highway Commission. The county rerentlyjsold at a prem- um Jfl.'iti.tMKJ ot the $;iiiti,ouo Pond issue voted I;. -I June for financing the coun ty's half of the road construction. In ase the othtr work, an approximate 5 miles, is awarded at onee.ga suffici ent portiotfof the bonds to meet the expense will be sold at once hv the ounty. Because of the decrease in cost of construction, however, it is ex acted that the county will be able to save in the neighborhood of $75,000 of the bonds. RAIN FINDS APPLE CROP WELL PICKED t. Defiance Gets Snow i . - -- ... a sure narniner oi winter, snow haft- covered the oeak of Mount Defiance, thehigh wooded point to the west of the valley. Annually nowstorma pre vail on the vallev level ithm fi weeks after thev have covered the top of Defiance. New snow, too, aper on some of the higher foothills eur- With a larg' delegation of the mem bers of Canby Corps, W. R. C. and most of the surviving members of Can by Post, G. A. R.. present, the two organizations held a joint social meet ing Saturday afternoon, following bus- ines!isensions. 1 he auxiliary organiz at ion regaled the old comrades of VI and '66 with refreshments. MYs. Floyd L French sang a solo and led in congregational singing oi patriotic hymns. S. F. Blythe told of his interesting experiences at the re cent Indianapolis national encampment of the Grand Army from which he re centiy returned. BOV SI ( ( I MBS TO LOGGING ACCIDENT It's here! buick Four. Hood River Garage. The body of 19-year old j. hi The steady rain that prevailed Mon day found practically every orchard- st in the vallev with apples picked. and the inclement weather in nowise retarded progress of the apple harvest, further along for the season than dur- ng any year since the valley's tonnage as reached material proportions. rews J continued packing work at warehouses and practically all apples will be boxed in the next two weeks. Sufficient rain to soften highways how- ver, may retail' apple hauling. The countv court has announced that motor truck loads will be further limited, when roads are softened, and in rase sucn precipitation as to result in iamage to roads, thev will be closed temporarily, the court states. Finish the Season's Sprat ing (By M. D. Armstrong) Many orchards have not yet reived their fall application of deaux. In order to successfully com plete the season's work it is of prime importance that this spray be applied soon. November has a record of being a very rainy month here, which not only makes it difficult to apply the pray but makes the anthracnoee very active in causing new cankers where the spray has not been applied. Every available hour good weather should lie used in completing this work soon. which were attacked by th Lumber Co. eight years ago, at that time resulting favo the irrigation concern, havir the supreme court. The case manded with instructions State Water Board assume tion and conduct a thorough tion for the baais of a complete adjudi cation of all claims on the watershed. The Pacific Power & Light Co. attacked the rights of all irrigation concerns, maintaining that through rights inci dent to riparian ownership it was en titled at. times to the entire flow of the river. The decision denies the right of riparian ownersip. The appeals of other litigants in the big case are based on claims to prior ity rights to use of waters of the stream. The case, as it will set a precedent in Oregon supreme court decisions on riparian ownership, is being watched by irrigation attorneys in all parts of the state. A host of out of town at torneys was here Monday for the ses sion of circuit court. The parties to the appeals have joined and will fur nish but one abstract and transcript. As this document will be voluminous, a saving of mrre than $1,000 will be thus effected. It is not expected that the case will be at issue before the su preme court before next summer. A decision is not expected until about January 1H2M. The Oregon irrigation laws require that notice of appeal bonds be sent to all parties directly named in the litiga tion. This will require that attorneys for each of the five appealing contest ants mail within the next few days their formal appeal to Bome 2f0 orch ardists of the valley. The law requires that such action be taken in order that all parties may be given an oppor tunity to approve of the sureties. At torneys, however, state that the no tices of appeal in this case are a mere formality and that growers when they receive the docunmts may simply drop them in the wastepaper basket without further attention. NO EMBARGO GIVES HOPE TO SHIPPERS The fact that no embargo has been placed by rail lines on apple shipments is taken bv shippers as a real indica tion that the strike announced will not materialize. Last week shippers, fearing an immediate embargo began appeals for additional refrigerator cars and many box cars were loided out. Reefers and as many box cars as can be secured, are still loaded out, but shippers declare that they believe no strike will prevail, or that if it does it will not be serioua enough to tie up movement of trains loaded with perishable products. Up to Saturday night the total of apple shipments from the valley had reached 571 carloads, with the Apple Growers Association leading with 318 cars. I hese shipments represent less than 25.per cent of the valley's ton nage. Apples are moving into storage warehouses here at a rapid rate. The Association up to Saturday received 801,190 boxes, an approximate 50 per cent of the apples picked by its affili ated growers. Other shipping concerns report receipts in proportionate per centage. During the coming week, with picking over and packing crews augmented to the limit, apples will be rushed to shipping points in greater volume than ever. BOYS IN TOILS FOR TAKING AUTOMOBILE re-Bor- Andrew Imrie, aged 20, of Good- enough Hills, Wash., was bound over to the grand jury Saturday by Justice of the Peace Onthank on a charge of ap propriating the automobile of Wm. Rush, of Mount Hood. Joseph Car roll, 17, who accompanied Imrie, was remanded to jail to await action of the juvenile court. Imrie stated that he made use of the car in order to make a trip to The Dalles to see a brother. The machine, acording to his explana- ion, was wrecked in the Twin Tunnels of the Highway between here and Mo sier when the lights went out. Both boys were slightly injured in the wreck. Sheriff Johnson .arrested the boys. Carroll claims that he was on the eve of leaving for California to join a sister in a motor trip back to Chicago, where he expects to reenter high school following the holidays. Indeed, a telegram from California relatives, advising him to hasten south, waa re reived Saturday. Imrie's bail was fixed at $500. Young Carroll's brother was expect ed to at rive here last night from Cali fornia. It is anticipated that he wilt be paroled to the brother. Apple Cargo Leaves The steamer Northumberland cleared through Portland customs Monday afternoon, declaring a cargo of 75,24 boxes of apples, 43 boxes of fresh pears, and a quantity of canned goods. The big freighter started down the river at daybreak Tuesday morning. Wet Heather is Carnival Dampener Indications Monday pointed to a poor week for the Amerii an Legion carni val. A crew of men engaged on a soggy and wet lot at the corner of Tenth and Cascade streets in setting up tents and entertainment features for the week of fun. A heavy rain lasted throughout almost the entire day. The concessions and shows are furnished by a traveling carnival out fit. The Legion Post haa taken charge of the event for a portion of the gate receipts.