JIOOD RIVER GLACIER. THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922 i 1 Jf(MV ICORVALLIS fS CITY OF VAST INTEREST The Baking Powder that Gives the Best Service in Your Kitchen T1 rm nr n n nnnr f f t i i 3 I I I i II lit U if 1 u The Economy BMSURI PGDWJUDEffi '7711 11 aai? astcl WlaolecoEae FesaHc M Failures When a "Big and Cheap" can of baking powder is offered you LOOK OUT. Every can of Calumet is the same keeping Qual ity Perfect last spoon ful good as the first. The World's riiuMi f llfi No Waste The moderate cost of Calumet combined with the highest merit estab lishes the greatest of baking powder economy. You save when you buy it DEST BY TEST MVC Hiici1 uo u Greatest Baking Powder PERSONAL SHOPPING o Personal shopping has advantages over ordering from the homo. Some think only of the trouble, but they have a change of mind after they try personal shopping on account of the sav ings. It's enjoyable, brightens up the week like those big red apples brighten up the sideboard gives the table a touch which the home shopper misses. hoc Consolidated Mercantile HOOD RIVER ODELL Co. Successful Graduates Arc the Best Recommendation of O. A. C. This institution offers a thorough, practical, and standard education at a cost within reach of the hih school graduate. It offers training for colltniate decrees in : Mint $ Agriculture Commi rcc. l'nyiiiu ring and Earrntry Home Evonomwt Mechanic Art It offers training alao in : cation, Iinlustiinl Journal)?!!!. Pharmacy I 'tici'itnrtl Education 'hnnical Engineering Military Science and 'j'actict The School of Music, riiy&iral Klu- Fall Term Opens September 18. For circulars of information and illn-trit.-d iM,..klet write to The Registrar, Orcpron Agricultural College Corvallis, Oregon 17 TUM-A-LUM LUMBER CO. O u DC U3 CQ J r- D -J c5 D We just some new received PLAN BOOKS of late de signs of Interior Fin ish. Come and look them over before building. H C 5? r c r G m jo o o We are at your service for all kinds of MEATS A fresh and complete stock always on hand. TWO DELIVERIES DAILY The Hood River Market A. r. DAVENrOKT, Prop. Phone 43H Our Motto: 'SERVICE" Call That's 11 our self-starter. 4121 Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. LUMBER BILL, Manager Because of the interest the Oretron Experiment Station and the depart ment of horticulture of the Oregon Agricultural College have taken in the development of the fruit industry of the Hood Kiver valley and because of the annual large attendance of local boys and girls at the great state col lege, Hood River folk are probably as well acquainted with Corvallis. the home of O. A. C, as the population of any county in the commonwealth. O. A. C. is a name so freauentlv heard here and so often are faculty members and experiment station officials among the apple growers of the valley that most local citizens, even though thev nave never been near the thriving Wii lamette valley city or browsed on the great campus, think they know all about the town and college. Jt takes a lournev down into the heart of this creat Willamette valley. with its o.OOO.WO-aere agricultural em pire, to eret a real comprehensive idea oi the magnitude of the landed wealth lying in northern Oregon between the Cascades and the Coast range or to know from personal touch the import ance of O. A. C. or the progressive enterprise of the residents of Corval lis, among whom for nine months each year nearlv 4.000 of our own bovs and girls and those from some 38 other states and 15 foreign territories and nations reside. A leisurely visit to the campus of O. A. C. strolls ud and down its wide avenues and an inspec tion of its lecture halls, laboratories and workshops will cause us to read with an understanding the following foreword of a recent booklet issued by the college. 'What charm and color the old fa miliar campus gave to our college life I What memories it stamped upon the parchment of our minds I L.1KO mirrors, men ana women re fleet their surroundings. Mind and body give back the impressions of the immediate environment. The Greeks grew beautiful in the midst of natural beauty. The Italians, under limpid BKies ana in a clear, soft atmosphere. developed a genius of line and color. the New bnglanders, on their stern and rock-bound coast, evolved a char acter of relentless and substantial no bility. The people of the vast plains acquire a freedom and breadth of movement unknown, and often uncon genial, to the dwellers in more crowd ed quarters. Aspiration clings about the mountain top, and majesty inhabits the drapery of the shore. "A college campus often becomes the dearest remembrance of a life time. Like home, it calls to the imag nation or the youth who has once learned to love it; and through all his later years becomes a hallowed shrine of recollection. With the change of season his heart goes out to it; and in times of annual teunion his steps turn toward it as the sailor's toward the sea. "The Oregon Agricultural College has a beautiful campus. Though only thirty-five years have passed since the campus knoll wsa selected and the cor nerstone of the first building was laid, those years have been rich with the associations that make a campus inter eating ana with the changes that give it dignity and charm. Honest sacri fices have made its acres precious, The losses of two wars have sanctified it. Dramatic crises that have threat ened its existence as a campus have reared up noble champions in its de fense. And thousands of ittidents, having blessed it by their best en deavors while they lived here, have successively gone forth from its gate- wsya dedicating their lives to the pur poses for which it stands and the ideals it has taught them to uphold." A visit to this great seat of learn ing, which is by no means just a cow college, as so many, who have no real acquaintance with its curriculum or purpose, seem to think it, should be taken by every citizen, and more es pecially by those who are taxpayers, An earnest, close study of the history of O. A. C, will reveal that it is one of the leading institutions of its kind in the nation, and that its affairs have been administered with exceeding economy, despite the onsalughts that have been made in recent months bv demagogues scouting to arouse antip athies and secure votea of the unwary, The 15th annual convention of the Oregon State Editorial Association was recently held at Corvallis. it was really an 0. A. C. affair, for the visit ing newspaper men were billeted at Snell Hall, a magnificent new woman's dormitory, and the sessions of the meeting were all held in the college library, the visitors were dined and feted at Waldo Hall and in the banquet room of the Domestic Science building. They had an opportunity to move for a time in the college atmosphere Manv of them inspected laboratories and shops, cow barns and poultry yards. I hey saw how O. A. C. com bines practice and theory. They began to realize why it is a center of learn ing that inculcates a higher and more serviceable form of citizenship. Ihey returned home determined to help fight its battles. Corvallis owes much to the state at large because of the circumstances that have placed one of the nation's greatest colleges in its confines, but no citizens of the state realize this more keenly than do these selfsame Corvallis people. When one stops to give analysis to the situation, it will tie seen that the task, for a compara tively small city, to keep pace with an institution of higher education of the magnitude of O. A. C. naturally pre sented some problems in local taxation and finance. Corvallis citizens were beneficiaries of the huge annual sum spent from state appropriations and by students, but they might have been selfish : thev might have taken as much as was available and have given a min imum in return. This was not the Corvallis wav. The town, without os tentation but in a subntaitial manner has built along with the college. It is the second fastest growing city in Ore gon, its tiulation now reaching 6,000. Corvallis has no slums and the for eign clement is conspicuous by its ab sence, mojt of the retidentt being na tive Americans of the better class. In addition to the usual business enter prises, then are 11 churches, four of which have vry large buildings; a high school with over 50 students; three grade schools; three banks, with combined deposits of over f 2,000,000 ; three creameries; a sawmill, brick yard, cannery and flouring mill; a semi weekly and a daily newspaper; 10 miles of paved streets; pure sprirg water pijed from the mountain; auto park; live commercial club; strong fraternal societies: women's club with ;00 member ; and the best fire depart roent in the state. Lint year the college erected two! large tu,!d;r.gs and extensive additions to three r ther ; one is no in the course f construction and others planned to accommodate the ever widening stream of students. A $75, (. theater. J".(HX bcepitsl, three buires 1 locks and scores cf substan tial residences complete the year's building (rc gram. One hundred, thous and dollars is being expended to im prove the water system and a dozen blocks of streets are being paved. The Methodist church is to construct a $100,000 edifice and the Church of Christ one costing around $40,000 next year. All these public and private im provements, together with others be ing planned for, will increase the price of property there and the desirability of Corvallis as a place to live and en gage in business. Provided the local motorist travels by way of the Base Line road, Gresh- am Jand Powell Valley and thence to Oregon City, Corvallis is less than 150 miles from Hood River. A jaunt down to this seat of learning is a journey worth while for any Hood Kiver motor ist. Lxcept for about a mile and a half on the Base Line road and the 12 mile distance from Albany to Corval lis, the entire 150 miles are now paved, These macadam stretches, a little rough, especially after the fine driving over paved highways, will soon be improved. A journey to Corvallis, which will carry one across the finest section of the Willamette valley, extensive berry tracts near Salem, hopyards, where the trellised vines will soon be filling with blossoms, wheat, oat and barley neias and dairy farms on a scale im possible in the mountainous valleys, such a trip, by its very contrast with the wild grandeur of our own high ways, is soothing and restful to the local resident. Just as the Willamette valley resident, although he may know of the superb quality of the Hood River apple, will never have a compre hensive idea of our intense methods of cultivation, until he comes here to feel the real appeal of our charming small valleys and the closeness of our mountains ; just so will we never sense the magnitude of the Willamette val ley or the greatness of its actual or potential wealth until we tour there among its residents. Instead of hieing olt to seaeoast or mountains for the entire time, it will profit us to spend at least a part or the vacation period studying the state s biggest valley. Ice general idea seems to be that the Willamette valley grows hotter than our local summertime climate, In reality it is cooler. During the week of the editorial association con vention, when.it was almost too hot for comfort here, it was cool enough at Corvallis and Salem for an overcoat when motoring after dark. Oregon s great system of motor highways, it is true, have been built as a lure for the motor tourist from other states, and they are finding these paved boulevards, too. If you do not believe it, pet out and count the for eign cars. You will run out of figures on the California visitors alone. But we of the home state have not bene fited by them as we should unless we put them to full use, visiting around among ourselves. Such journeys are leavening, lhey take the conceit out of us. We learn that ours is not the only hospitality, that our industries may be dwarfed by those of citizens of Hume inner counties, we snume out from under the cloak of sectionalism and learn how to consider state prob lems from a broader statewide view point. The Corvallis convention of the Oregon btate Lditorial Association in a large measure exerted just such an influence. And besides, the members of no state organization ever had a more enjoyable time, for the Corvallis citizens and members of the faculty of O.' A. C. seem to know how to make their guests fill to overflowing each moment of their stay. Thev were quietly and unobtrusively busy all the time supplying entertainment features, and that Oregon city, at future con ventions, that allows the state's edi tors to depart for their homes after greater pleasures than were theirs at Corvallis is going to merit a SDecial decoration. Hot Weather Diseases Disorders of the bowels are extreme ly dangerous, particularly during the hot weather of the summer months, and in order to protect yourself and family against a sudden attack, get a bottle cf Chamberlain's Colic and Di arrhoea Remedy. It can be depended upon. Many have testified to its excellence. Notice of Sherirrs Sale In the Circuit Court, of the State of Oregon for Hood Riverl County. The First National Bank, Hood Riv er, Oregon, Plaintiff, ;vs. Oscar Van derbilt and Barbara Vanderbilt. De fendants. Notice is hereby given that in ac cordance with an execution and order or sale issued out of the above entitled court by the clerk thereof, dated the Ath day of July. 1922. to me directed. on a decree or foreclosure in favor of the plaintiff, 'lhe First National Bank. Hood Kiver, Oregon, and aeainst the defendants. Oscar Vanderbilt and Bar bara Vanderbilt. entered the 26th riv of July, 1922, wherein the said plain- tilt recovered judgment against the above name defendants for the sum of $4,000, with interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum from the 14th day of December. 1921. together with the further sum of $250 attor ney's fees and for plaintiff's costs and disbursements, taxed at $12.50. and for the foreclosure of plaintiff's said mort gage in said suit described ; 1 will on Saturday, the 2Gth day of August, 1922, at 10 o'clock a. m., at the front door of the court house, in the City of Hood River, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder. cash in hand, all the rieht. title and interest which the said defendant!. Oscar Vanderbilt and Barbara Vander bilt, had on the 14thday of June, 1921, or have since acquired in and to the following described real property in Hood River County, Oregon, to-wit: The west half of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, and the west half of the east half of the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of Section 23, Township 2 North. Range 10 East of the Willam ette Meridian, containing 30 acres, more or less, with 75 shares of the capital stock of the Vanderbilt Orchard Co. ; said property will be sold subject to the usual right of redemption. Dated and first published and posted, this 27th dav of July, 1922. jy2724 Thos. F. Johnson. Sheriff, Hood River County, Oregon. Notice of Final Account and Settlement of Estate j Notice is hereby given that the un-! dersigned R. C. Glanville, Administra- I tor with the will annexed of the estate of I'M ward N. Cook. Decemed. filed in the County Court of Hood River ; County, Oregon, his final account ard report as such Administrator and said court has by order named and fix! ; Kridav, the 11th dav of AucusL l'2i at the hour of 10 o'clock, a. m.. at the 1 county court room in Hood River. Ore-! gon, as the time and place for bearing on said report and account and objec tions thereto, if any there be. Dated Hood River, Oregon, July 11. ! 1322. R. C Glanville. Administrator. C T. A., of the Es tate cf EJward N. CooH Deceased. jjlS10 "WE'LL MEET YOU" AT TILLAMOOK COUNTY BEACHES OR NEWPORT BY-TIIE-SEA Pleasure seekers, by the score are going, the merry throng? Why not join MM I (li'nes j ROUND TRIP TICKETS ONLY COST $8.45 HOOD RIVER TO TILLAMOOK CO. BEACHES $11.45 HOOD RIVER TO NEWPORT BY-THE-SEA Go and enjoy the delights of these charming seashore resorts. Write for copy of onr beautiful folder "Oregon Outdoors." It is brimming full of details about resorts including hotel und cottage information. For further particulars, ask local agent, or write SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent, PORTLAND, OREGON 1V27 HAVE you tried the Grange Store-"Your Store ?" If not, better give us a call. We satisfy the most paticular and our prices and goods are the best. Special for the week- Carsten's T. C. Lard 5's 95c - 10's $1.85 Premium Hams 10-12 36c lb. Grange Co-operative Store Telephone 2151 D aily Service THE IIARKINS TRANSPORTATION CO. STEAMER SERVICE FREIGHT AND PASSENGER Portland to The Dalles STR. MADELINE IRALDA !v JXiKfl? EXCEPT M0NDAY AT 7 A-M- LV. PORTLAND DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY AT 7.15 A. M. Fare to Portland $1.25 one way. "SaJ'fc?- D0ck T,IE DALLES-Wharf Boat broad ay 6343 Main 2m 10 ! I I I D a S,l?rT J''?1 HousAwife. ever stop to think that Inon rip i. ar, a Inwirur n trtc-, . 3 . ... cii t ou'''-l bailie eas y prepared r shelves. Just trv thi, trl p tufcfcluuil uut. meal from L. H. HUGGINS Phone 2134 I Office Supplies of All Kinds 'ILL LINE EVLRY1IUNG OF 50CIAI VTA-nrwr v . i v uij,i ir I IOR THE DI5CR!.MIATlr. dfaVifd II we iMVon't you. ot It, we'll $ct It for The Book and Art Store HOOD KIVER. OREGON Rubber Stamp Ink at Glacier Offi ce