hatt VOL. XXXIII HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1921 No. 2a i If IDLE MONEY One can hardly pick up a newspaper that he does not read a list of robberies of individuals in sums ranging from a few dollars to thousands of dollars. The man walking home is held up ; the clerk carrying a suitcase containing payroll money is held up; members of clubs are relieved of their roll while sitting in their easy chairs. Women are robbed and children are no ex ception to the rule. No man knows when he may be next. It seems folly to carry large amounts of cash when a banking account and a check book would serve the same purpose. It is claimed that three billions of dollars are hidden around houses and carried in pockets by the people of the United States. All this is subject to almost instant de struction by many causes. If this were deposited in banks, it would afford the depositor a source of protection and income. The FIRST NATIONAL BANK, HOOD RIVER, OREGON, can safeguard its customers against losses from robberies if its services are taken advantage of. FIRST NATIONAL BANK HOOD RIVER, OREGON SPECIAL KODAK ALBUMS We have just received n new shipment of tCodftk Albums, regular $2.00 value, which we are offering at this special price: $1.49 each. These are just the thin to put your past va cation snap-shots In, or start, a Kodak Story of the' children. KRESSE DRUG CO. The tt&XaJULgSfare Come in and hear the October Victor Records. Wonderful showing of Leggings and Outing Clothes Every weave that is being worn in breeches, including Wool Gabardine O. D. Wool . Corduroy Moleskin Whipcord and Khaki. $4.00 to $12.00 J. G. VOGT Nationally Known Merchandise. Conservative Optimism lli I CALENDAR I I I I. I RENT DUE There's a Profit in Renting But You Don't Get It Ten years rent won't get you anywhere you just pay rent, then you pay some more rent. Of course, you have a place to live between times but the house isn't yours, it never will be and it's not exactly as you would like to have it anyway. Sad but true, so there's no use arguing. A little extra work is required to get a home. But if home owning didn't require some individual effort the saying, "There's No Place Like Home," would be all bunk. Let's get busy and select your new home from our col lection of over 500 modern designs. Emry Lumber & Fuel Co. Phone 2181 Fourth and Cascade Exclusive Representative of the National Builders Bureau Ji 1 111: : ,1 n 1 1 uriTfi A writer in a recent financial jour nal uses the term " CONSERVATIVE OPTIMISM" as characterizing the men tal attitude of thoughtful men with refer ence to the immediate future. His conclusion was that while our business problems will not vanish with the oln of the year, there Is &ood ground for the belief that conditions ore steadily improving. 3 I1 BUTLER BANKING COMPANY Member Federal Reserve System I mHttvii 'mm - - iiiiiiiiiimTniTTmTmiiffinniiiinimmnrmfl When ordering FLOUR insist on getting BLENDED PURITY FLOUR Made at home and guaranteed. HANDLED BY YOUR CiKOCKRYM A V HIGHLAND MILLING CO. Mill Phone 1751 Store Phone 3M81 Does a moment's happiness over cheap price outweigh the lasting satisfaction of a jrood j0i,? YOU DON'T GET BOTH I am turning out jobs at a fair price day after day. Bring in your troubles and let me help u in any way I can. Satisfactory Service is what you need; why not get it at Shay's SERVICE Shop AT THF. FASHION STABLES Re 2772 WAVERLY OILS Our FREE CRANKCASE .SERVICE 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. Relwf Corps Fair ! "We feel" nyi Mrs. S. E. Bsrt , a mess, "verv fortunate in securing Mr. 1 he annual bazaar, or fair, of the Blowers" tore. We werejgoing to bold Woman'? Relief Corps, which original- the bazaar at the Lotus Grille, bat y-nnounr-d for the I-tM Grille, these plans were upset when the big will be held instead at the Blowers place was lease! to Ctum. Gumm tor a Hardware store November 19. restaurant." AUTO TRUCKS MOVE APPLES HORSEDRAWN TONNAGE IS SMALL It is Estimated that 90 Per Cent of the Valley's Huge Tonnage has been Moved This Year by Motor Power Moving the Hood River apple crop from packing houses to shipping sta tions, with the tonnage grown this season in excess of 2,000,000 boxes, would prove an almost physical impos sibility but for the prevalence of mo tor trucks, it is conservatively esti mated that U0 per cent of the apples of the valley have been hauled this year on motor trucks. Records of the office of the Secretary of State show that Hood River county had, up to July 1 201 motor trucks, K4 of them of 1-to capacity. Since that time, however manv trucks from l'ortland and neigh boring in lints have been brought here especially to participate in apple haul ing. Estimates place the number o trucks engaged in hauling fruit fron orchards U shipping stations at 350. With weather conditions favorable Hood River growers this season have by utilizing trucks, been able to ge their crops indoors and to storage warehouses earlier than any former year, despite the magnitude of the crop, up to this week end the Appl Growers Association had already re ceived from its affiliated growers 784,- 201 boxes of apples, lhe estimates of the organization's total tonnage are around 1,Z!0,000. utner snipping con cerns have received a like proortion of their growers tonnage. Hut for the faHt movement of Hpples by th trucks, some of the fruit would be certainlv caught by frosts and ruined in unprotected warehouses. Motor truck freight charges range from 12Jcents per box on apples trans ported the entire distance from tht Upper Valley to the city to four cents, and in some instances less, on fruit hauled short distances to shipping Hta tions. Shippers who have observed the trucking of the apples closely say that the average truck freight charge on a box of apples w ill reach . cents. On 1,800.000 boxes, the total freight charge would reach a total of $81,000. Many growers, however, own their own trucks, operating them exclusive v in getting their own apples to ship ping point. 1 he introduction of the motor truck as a means ot transporting the valley s apple crop to shipping point has re sulted in the necessity of hardsurfaced mam trunk roads. During the past two years the county has utilized its market road fund in concreting the surface of roads at Van Horn and Odell, the two main shipping points on the line of the Mount II I R. K. Co. ntil the approximate two miles of roads, running by warehouses at these shipping points, were hardsurfaced, they became veritable quagmires dur- ng the fall and early winter months. The construction of the new valley trunk line of the Mount Hood Loop Highway will furnish the orchard dis tricts with an admirable market road. A straight trunk, which will be fed. by numerous laterals from all districts ot the Upper Vallay ami East Side, will e formed. stated that he persuaded the state or ganization that any local drive should be postponed until this fall. But now, ne declared, the county is facing a campaign to raise 11,700. All other counties of the state have presented their quotas. Mr. Blauchar praised the Salvation Army for the charitable work it is en gaged in. He called attention to the fact that it was working hand in hand with an advisory committee, of which Governor Olcott is head. He stated that not long ago he met Brigadier Commander Hays, who is in charge oi tne lund lor trie Army. He charac terized him as an honorable, broad minded man, whose heart was bent on aiding the needy of the state. j. n. iiazieu ioia or me coming campaign to renew memberships for the Red Cross. He cited how the local ( hapter had brought about the estab lishing of a public health service and the administration of a public health nurse. The Chapter has contributed $!)00 annually toward paying the salary of Mrs. Glendora Blakely, health nurse. It has aiso purchased for her use an automobile. During the past year $500 was appropriated for the relief of the stricken peoples of 1'ueblo, Colo., and $421 was spent in buying materials which were manufactured into clothing for European children by local wom en's organizations. Dr. L. U Murphy, who was in Albany last week as a del egate to the state Red Cross conven tion, declared that he was impressed with the character of the men and women who are devoting their time whole heattedlv toward Red Cross work. He asked that every local man, who can, subscribe $.r toward Red Cross work when the time comes stead of $1. the regular yearly fee. half of the annual dues, it was stated will be left at home. C. H. Vaughan made some remark about the Associated Charities, whi he said, worked in cooperation wit me puniic health association, lie eh dorred the community chest plan. ihe chairman outlined plans of th Y. M. C. A. At a meeting to he held at thehalis next Saturday, he said, is proposed to unite the Y. M. C. A organizations of Portland and Seattl with the state organizations of Orego and Washington. Kev. w. II. Buddy gave an impas sioned plea for the renewal of funds wave me starving children ot the Nea East. It is too late, he decalred, to d anything for the adult population bu Americans can help the little childre of Buttering Armenia. He cited the age-long conflict in the Near hast. where the T urks have persecuted thi first of all Christian nations. 'You ask me," said Mr. Boddy "when will this appeal for aid for Ar menia end. It will only end when America has the courage and backbone to accept a mandate for the protection of Armenia and of driving back into the hell, whence they came, the Turks." Other November chairmen for the Lunch Club as announced by Vice I'res Murphy are: H. G. Cooper. Novem tier 8: Dr. H. I,. Dumble, Novembe 15; Fred W. Donnerberg, Novembe 22; Nelson Emry, November 29. THIRD BIG CRAFT IS AFTER APPLES HIGHWAY PLANS PLEASING LOCALLY County officials, who have been urg- ng tor the past several weeks mat me State Highway Commission take ac- ion toward awarding additional con racts on the valley trunk of the Mount Hood Loop Highway, expressed gratification Thursday on learning that he plans of the commission call for etting all of the grading between Booth Hill and the Oregon National orest bounds at the November session f the body. This section comprises bout nine miles. Officials here ex ress the hotie that the commission will also award the contract for con structing the approximately six miles f new grade between the city and the north end of the Booth Hill unit. The alter is already under construction. Proposals for road work received ast week were as sensationally low as those of Tuesday. A seven inch con- re te pavement was offered for $21)5 more than a five-inch bituminous pave ment on a four mile job. It was the owest price ever offered the commis- lon for concrete. As the two types were offered for practically the same urn, the commission made the award concrete. This is the second con crete pavement job let this week. pparently the cement interests are determined to get a substantial share the paving business, for the bids at this letting have been far under any previous concrete proposals. On the Mount Hood Iiop road the commission directed the engineer to prepare for advertising the nine-mile section from Booth Hill to the forest boundary. This will.adjoin the section now under contract. A petition was received from the Hood River county court that another section be let, in order that work can be provided for residents of the county, now that the apple harvest has been disposed of. The clearing of the proposed section can be carried on through the winter with little or no interruption from snow. COMMUNITY CHEST PROPOSED BY CLl I! The big British steamer Cardigan- hire docked at Portland Monday morn ng to load a shipment of apples for Inited Kingdom iKirts. Ihe vessel he third to come to l'ortland within he past two weeks for fresh fruit. The Moliere, a Royal Mail Steam Packet line steamer, and the Isthmian line steamer Northumberland took out about 140,000 boxes of fresh apples last week. The Cardiganshire, which is a Royal Mail Steam Packet line vessel, was here in 1014 for cargo. The Oregon-Pacific company is hand ling the vessel. Dan Wuille & Co. are loading out on the Cardiganshire, 4,000 boxes of Hp pies. The company shipped 21,000 boxes of apples aboard the Northum berland, the first boat to call at Port land for an apple cargo. The Moliere carried 10, 000 boxes for the English concern. Bookings have been madt for a further 40,000 boxes by the wat er route. The Apple Growers Association ship ped 21, (MX) boxes by the Northumber land and 12,600 by the Moliere. While the Association did not secure any space aboard the Cardiganshire, the organization has 40,IHK) boxes of apples at Portland terminals ready to be load ed the latter part of the month when other refrigerated steamers call. The Association will ship about 40,- 000 Poxes i f apples to hngland aboard vessels that will sail in December from Portland. The cooperative concern ex- iieets, according to Sales Manager ( lark, to export hv direct water ship ments a total of 125,000 boxes. M. A. MAYER GIVES STATE PARKSITE Otl highi r I With Leslie Butler chairman,'' the Tuesday Lunch Club devoted its cur rent weekly meeting at the Pheasant to charities, and the plana for deelou wg the community cbest idea here were launched. The Commercial club, it was stated, will undertake to com bine drives lor all worthy lunus. under one head. On motion of E. O. Blsnch ar the Lunch Club voted unanimously to track the Commercial club in tht community chest proposal. As was revested at the session Tues day, drives will soon be under wsy here for the Salvation Army, Red Cross, Near East relief and Associated Charities. Mr. Blanchar, who last spring was appointed to take charge of drive for the Salvation Army, I rhe State Highway Commission last week was presented by Mark A. Mayer, Mosier orcbardist and capital ist, with a 25-ncre parksite, iucluding a tract f land overlooking the Rowena I .oops of the Highway. E. M. Strauss, as mayor of Mosier, presented the commission with an automobile camp ing park on Mosier creek. Two other campsites were presented the state, one by J. Hemy Booth, brother of the 'hiii- n.s ' commission, and an other by hi -. VVHithers, of Medford. ormsals for beautifying the were received. Ihe town of Harrishurg, for instance, proposes planting walnut trees along the Pacific Highway in that vicinity. No action was tsken on this as the trees cannot be planted until the pavement is laid, as the saplings would be destroyed luring road construction. It was not specified as to who would be entitled to collect the walnut harvest of the future. From Scappoose, on the lower Columbia River Highway, I arrived a ; ian for making the High way more ornamental by planting rose bushes. Herbert .sunn, state highway engineer, bad a proposal of his own- -he suggested the planting of English ivy to bold lopes. A delegation from the Portland Chamber of Commerce presented a re quest that the highway commission build the proiosed WalluU cut-off. which would run along the Columbia river from Umatilla to a junction with that mad on the the line. MANY CHINAS 1 FALL MONDA I SCORES 0FfNIMR0DS AFTER BIR 'u. Parties Arise Before Daybreak and Mo to All Parts of Valley -Fusilade Sounds Like Battle Perfect weather prevailed for China Pheasant season, and hundreds of City and valley nimrods, in order to take advantage of the first day of the 10 day open season, were out at sun up. Hunters visited every part of the valley, and the bombardment from nearly every ranch and from every copse sounded, for the first few hours, like a battle was in progress. China cocks were killed by the scores. Before 10 o'clock proud hun ters, some of them having bagged the limit, were back in the city displaying bigbirds with gaudy plumage. Pheas ant will form the piece de resistance at numerous private dinners the (rest of t he week. While most of the hunters Tuesday were out at daybreak, other parties ilited haunts of the pheasants throughout the (lav. Shooting was heard toward sunset. the incidents of the week of open season on pheasants will furnish stor ies for months to come. Msny are the tales of alibi of some of the hunters who returned empty handed. While the shooting will last for a full seven days, no fusilades will be so heavy as that of Monday morning. The hag limit of pheasants is five for any one day or 10 in the seven days. A feature of the week of open sea son on pheasants will be the first an nual pheasant banquet to be held Fri day evening at the Columbia Gorge Hotel by members of the Hood River Gun club. This dinner, it is expected, will be a memorable event. APPLE MARKET IS EXPECTED TO RALLY Apple men here seem to think that Ihe market has reached the zero point. While no heavy sales are being re ported, there is soma movement of Spitzenburgs at $2 for extra fancv. $1.75 for fancy and $1.50 for C-grade. A maximum price of $1.75 for extra fancy Newtowns is being quoted, but no sales are being reiwrted. This late keeping variety is going into storage chiefly, either being held here or being routed at once to eastern storage quar ters. I Local shippers express the opinion that the market will rally, as soon as the low grade eastern product, which was marketed in larger quantities than had been anticipated, is cleaned up. Every farmer of the eastern states who had any apple trees," says Walter Woolpert. of Dan Wuille & Co., "har vested and marketed his crop this year leeause of the good demand and price. Normally the big apple crop of eastern immercial points discourages the farmer who has a few trees that pro- luce mediocre apples from taking any f them to market. He has harvested all of them this year, however. An other element that is hindering us in ur marketing red varieties in the middle west is ;the big shipments of Idaho Jonathans there. These apples. mcked in bushel baskets are being sent in large volume to the middle western towns that ordinarily take much fruit from ub. " SANDING OF HIGH WAY IS PROPOSED Agitation from various sources has een started here to secure action on he part of the State Highway Depart ment in sanding the Columbia River lighwav this winter. Already, it is leclared, rainy days have resulted in several bad accidents from skidding. "1 believe that some plan of sanding uld be devised that would not be very expensive and that would make the Highwav safe," says E. W. Birge, head of the Commercial club roads committee. "Such work might save some bad accidents and probably pre vent loss of life. It is likely that the I rector. tS of our organization will take the matter up and urge that the ighway department consider sanding he slipiierv surface." ARMISTICE DAY PLANS DISCUSSED A delegation of The Dalles American egion members motored here Ust hursdsy night to attend a carnival being given under auspices of the local ost and to arrange with a committee the local body for the program of Armistice Day, which will be cele brated jointly at The Dalles by the two posts. A large number of Hood River folk, is anticipated, will go to The Dalles ith the Legion men and their fami- les. lhe legionairres of Hood Kiver are training for a football trame ir a mtest with The Dalles. The Hood iver and The Dalles Gun clubs will ilu s joint tournament at The Dalles Armistice Day. FEW NOW STOP AT AUTO PARK The fall rains of the nast week have cleared the city's free campground for motor tourists of almost all campers. Na cars stopping overnight at the campgrounds now bear the license plates of this state or nesrby points in Washington. A few parties of far eastern motorists, trickling through on their way to California, still stop here. As the Iocs) camping park has no registration book, no way of determin ing the number of motor parties who who hive used the grounds the past summer is available. It is estimated, however, that an armrniimata 2. 000 Washington side of , automobiles have camped in tha park I since June 1.