Image provided by: Hood River Library; Hood River, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1926)
MRS. STEWART IS REBEKAH CHAIRMAN AN APPRECIATED SERVICE At the instance of the Hood River and The Dalles chambers of commerce, the circulation department of the Ore gonian has inaugurated a truck ser vice that brings the late edition of the metropolitan dully to inid-Columbia subscribers. Now the Oregonian read er in Hood River and The Dalles has for breakfast a newspaper containing all the news of the foregoing day that lias broken up to near midnight. It is a service that Hood River and The Dalles folk appreciate. CLOSE RY YAKIMA Few of u« realise JiiafiRtow close the great inland empire, the Yakima valley, is to Hood River and Portland. And. too, we do not realize the magnitude of the agricultural products harvested and marketed just over the mountains I Cabled communication received yes each year. I-ast Thursday Marshall terday from England by 1’ F Clark, N. Dana, of the Oregon Journal, who The P. P. 4 L. office, Mr. Hunter, we Pacific Coast manager of Maynard A for several months has been making a «urmixe, the iMMotennor of the guiding Child, indicated that Oregon Newtown« study of Yakima valley resource«, en are bringing top price« in United King lightened the members of the' Progree-I hand«, ha« again Hilivened us with an dom piarkets. The cabled quotations intereating show window thia week. were as follows: give BuHiiiess Men'« club in Portland. Liverpool and Ixindon, no new re Mr. Dana told just a simple story of I The dummy rail linen and highway« ceipts and market unchanged. have caused many to atop and study what has been done In the past quarter! Hull, The Gothic Htar cargo selling — of a century in a district, where water! them. Our attention la called to the Newtown«— Extra fancy, $2.40 (4 3.00; ... $2.40(4 S—i __ 3.30. ._ ). Wlnesape— Extra was applied to a fertile soil, blessed I need for early work on the new bridge I fancy, highway. Nothing la more needed than I fancy, $2.40 (4 2.80; fancy, fancy, $2.20 (4 with a lieneflcent sunshine. About I thia new road and the preliminaries I ® 2!i5 Spitz- $18,000.000 have been si»ent on Yakima I Glasgow - Newtown« - Extra fancy, irrigation project^. A total of 340,0001 should be <-arried through immediately acres have received water. Today the| and actual work atarted at the eariieat I $2.40 (4 3.40; fancy, $2.40(4 2.90. Wlne- «ape—Extra fancy, $2.86 (4 8.10; fancy, assessed valuation of the city of Yaki ptMBible moment. 1 $2.65 @ 3.06. ma alone readies $28,000,000. It re Manchester The London Merchant The Oregon statute, making it man ca rgo «elllng. Newtowm quires a freight train a mile long each Extra fancy. datory on judicial officers that they $2.90 (4 3.40. — Wipesap«—Extra fancy, day to haul away the agricultural products. An additional 300,000 acres assess a fine of at least $100, apply a $2.40 & 2.90. Rome Beauties— Extra fancy, $2.40 @ 2.06. will soon be brought under the water. jail sentence of not less than 00 ds yr and deprive the one found guilty of The agricultural products of this won SeJohe Camp Fire News derful district will then be worth each driving a motor car while intoxicated Two weeks ago the Belobe Camp year around $100,000,000. A ranch of hia driver’s permit for a year, It Fire Girl« enjoyed a very pleasant out specializing In Ilubiiard squashes sold oue of the state’s liest laws. It is ing at Ijeslle Butler's ranch. Although it rained a greet deal of the time, nev $800,000 worth of tills product lsst i lieing enforced. It lias public con ertheless the girls thoroughly enjoyed sclence l>ack of it. year. Indeed, these figure«, supplied themselves. A weekly meeting Thursday evening by Mr. Dsna, are enough to make one It’a beginning to look aa though Mus was held at the Riverside church. Es marvel. He gave other«, but the above telle Mays was accepted as a new mem will suffice to impress on one the Im solini will have to have lii» liat burned ber of the group. Inez Young was ap portance of Yakima as a banner horti pointed editor to see that the Camp Fire events reach the lo»-al newspaper« cultural and agricultural belt. A "helpful hInters' box,” which is to The shortest way, by rail, to Yakima encourage the girls, was suggested by1 at the present time 1« by way of Puget the guardian, Mias Louise Knoll. Tbe Sound. The distance is 302 mile«. meeting ended with many a Camp Fire The di«tance from Heattie to Yakima is | «ong and the girl» left tbe church hap 108 inilea From Portland to Yakiina I A wrestling ■natch here last Friday pier and more inspired to perform their humble duties. by way of ths 8. P. A 8. the distance night iietween Prof. Takahashi, Japan esc JiU JltSU champion, and Henry is 321 miles, and the Union Pacific Jones, M. W. A. Makes Growth of I*rovo, Utah, western welter distance is 314 milea. The highway weight champion, went to a draw and Deputy I). W. James has been here distance, by Goldendale, la 217 mile*, [»roved an uninteresting event. Taka for the past several weeks supervising and by Arlington, 244 milea. When « hashi took the first fall, both men a memlierahip caiiqiaign for the local camp of Modern Woodmen of Aimer new short cut highway is built, the wearing jackets and wrestling accord ica. Thirty new mem tiers have been ing to the prescribed rules of Jiu Jitsu. travel time will lie cut from about 181 He threw Jones with a Jaitanese wrist taken into the order since the first of bouni to six hours. lock in six minptes. The second stanza January and fit) more will go in before The Indian bureau of the depart was American wrestling, catch as catch the first of March wlien the drive ends. Local Woodmen will go to The Dalles ment of interior has been asked to can. Jones took it in 12 minutes, get next Tuesday for a tianquet and initi ting a head scissors and arm lock on appropriate $760,000 for constructing the Japanese. atory work. The banquet is the prize the link of the new highway acroaa the Having won his fellow in shorter won by the local camp for defeating Yakima Indian reservation. With time, Takahashi chose that the third The Dalles in a memliership contest. every civic organization and chamlier round should be with jiu jitsu, but the Mr. Martin Entertained men seemed afraid of each other. of commerce in Portland and Yakima They spent the full 20 mlnut»-« mostly J. E. Martin. mo«t Illustrious grand and citie« and town« along the way sparring with each other. master of the Oregon Council of Royal back of the petition for thia approprla and Select Master«, high Masonic or tlon there seem* a fair clianoe that it | der, here Tuesday night from Portland for an official visit to the Hood River will be granted. Council, was guest of honor st a ban Till« great highway will not merely quet Memliera of The Dalle« Council be utilitarian. It will open to the motored ben* for the reception ten dered the grand master. Edmund F. motoring public one of the moat scenic Carlson, grand principal conductor of sections of the Pacific Northwest, that There has come or will come a time work, was present for the meeting. vast, pine-clad, lake-dotted area around In the life of every man or woman Monnt Adams. It will mean as much when he or she ba« or will ponder over Mortensen Met Kruse Last Night to Portland and Hood River as the the imortality of human soul. Belief Fred Mortensen met Robert Kruse the Immortality of the human soul. Mount Hood lamp highway. Belief in immortality has been the staff In Portland last night in a preliminary that lia« aided human« weighed down to the Edwards-Meeske match. Mor SAVED BY POISON under yoke« along life'« mortal high tensen will wrestle in a nnjnlier of other northwestern cities thiivreek. Poison has saved an industry for way from time immemorial. Next Sunday “Immortality" will lie the inld-Columbla. The poison liait, the «Object of tbe 11 o'clock sermon of MERRY MORAINE the formula of which was perfected Dr. James A. Fraser nt Riverside by a fruit man of the Puyallup, Wash., Community church. (By Will 8. Batea) district, has revived the Clark Seed I’h, Huh, YV Right, Girlie_____ Ung »4 re wherry bnsi nese in Hood Btver Dne MustorThg'day last week one of (By Frederick I). Stricker, M. D., the teach<*rx In the White Salmon and other mid-Columbla point«. For the past bnlf diM-nde the acreage of I eollalMirating epidemiologist of Oregon grade school, in a««igniiig topi»« for I State Board of Health, in cooperation an exercise in English composition, strawberries was gradually declining. I with the United States Public Health Hiiggeated that the pupils of the pri The tonnage was «lipping to a mini I Service). mary cla«x might give their impres- mum. Today fruit growers, with small While it is not cause for serious «ion« of the weather. One of the little tracts adapted to berry culture, hnvc 1 alarm there is an increasing numtx*r scholars was olwrved to gaze pen sively out of the window for a long a new hope. New lierry acreage is be I of cam*» of influenza lieing reported time iH-fore putting her |>en<4l to pa I from all parts of the state. Influenza ing set. and the king of strawberries I in a mild form is constantly present. per. Finally. I’ncle Wee Wee paused! will licgiu to «how an Increase In ton I Tlie world-wide parldemlcx have usu- hi hi« Hennery. At last «he under I ally l>een preceded l>y a nnmber of took the irksome task, and In a Jiffy nagr. had completed her »■»imiiosition. When And speaking of strawberries, never I ■‘mailer epidemics which passed un- she handed It In the teacher was much | has a variety l>een discovered that has | noticed. Influenza ha« lieen hailed by flucccw Rurpri«ed by the laconic but v such quality characteristics us I the I Hive generation« as a new disease. It h H ouh humor of It. The effort Clark Seedling as grown in 1 Hood I is, however, an old disease, and ept- a» follows: “Tha world River valley or across the Columbia In I demira are recorded a« early a« 1500 I A. 11. Except in time of epidemics it the southern Washington section«. I is difficult to distinguish between ease» . Yum Yum ! Commercial cannern and housewlv»*« I of true Influenza and severe colds or Dear Bill-yus«: How do you pre will i»ay a considerable premium for I mild infections of the nose, throat and Bounce c-a-a-t-o-r-i-a? the Clark 8»*edling, for one crate of I bronchial tnliee. The dl«eane is, liow- HI School Girlie. I ever, ca«lly recognizable when it oc- The doctors pronounce It “liaitmleas. thia fruit is worth about two of or t-urs In epidemics. The diagnoatic dif- dearie. dinary berrie«. flcully in connection with the disease 1« It is good to see the Clurk Needling <lue to the fact that the disease only coming back. It means more prosper occur« in the uncomplicated form dur ous small ranchers and ii greater pros ing the early «tag»« of an epidemic. For Male-Whits leshorn pallets, he laval Uncomplicated cases are almost never cream separator. practically new cream nana, pcrity for city mcrcliant and business («till. two purebred Plymouth Roes roo t-ra, two rm man. Influenza Is an acute, extremely con-1 Pakin Orakas. K. W. Perry, Tot Mil. tagioua disease resembling a severe cold, with fever, pain in the head, eye«, THE (TTY Al TO PARK I earn or mtincles. It romts on nuddenly The city council hereafter will oper I mill Hie general -weaknews 1« entirely ate the municipal automobile park out of prop»>rtion to the other ayinp-1 strictly as a city-managed institution toms. The disease 1a extremely Infec tloll«. it ia tranaipitted __ by saliva and With a custodian constantly In charge, inuciiH thrown out by coughing, «pit the city government will lie the man ting mid «neezlng, and can probably be aging force. indirectly transmitted by contact with The council, too, lias decided that no fating utensils and perhaps, to some by dust. The cau«ative agent groceries or gasoline or other products extent, of Influenza 1« not known. shall he sold at the park in conflict Susceptibility sertus to ho unlvwaal with the business of grocery store or mid the di«ca«e spread« through com- other concern And thia was a wise munition with speed and ease which in move. The park is being placed on a dicate« that tli«*re 1« very lltth* natural reHiHtnnce In the normal individual, basis where its administration can and i'he real menace of influenza is due to should have unaninfous support. It« complications, because It lowers the imtient'a nwbitance. enpecially his re Within six weeks the Pasco-Elko air sistance to respiratory Infections anil thus make« hhn an ea«y prey to puen- mail service will be in commission. It monla. will speed up the delivery of importsnt The common cold ahould be regarded mall. Letters posted in Pacific North as « HeriouH matter. The prevention of western cities in the afternoon will influenza is largely a personal matter. Effective measures depend on the vol reach Now York City two days later. untary subjection of the habit« of the Eventually we will see plains of the individual to the public good. Everyone «hould realize the neriou« air mail service slipping along under the dome of the sky up and down the nature of a "cold." A cold may»be almost anything from a trivial "cold Columbia river canyon. In the head" to pneumonia. The in fection may vary from the very mild Hsriceforth on« must apply for his to the most virulent known to medical automobile license through the sheriff's science. office, Ut 11 izing • temporary license plate until the new one arrive« from J Whatever You Wiiht for.Spring is Here! HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX MADE CLOTHES $29.00 and up For dress or Sousette, Madras, patterns. Collar match shirts—or out-door wear. Broadcloth, Flannel. All the new Spring attached style—collars to neckband styles. The largest assortment of new patterns in the city to choose from. thing want New Spring Oxfords All the newest lasts and leathers at prices to suit your pocketbook. We will fit your feet properly and perfectly which means good looks and satisfaction. Amazing suit values for Spring. Hart, Schaffner & Marx Suits, latest in style, highest class workmanship. Satisfaction guaranteed. New Spring Hats MISCELLANEOUS WANTED Yes, save on* the staples, the necessities of life, the things you must use every day— like foodstuffs—and you’ll have enough left over to purchase the luxuries. This plan is simplicity itself —BUT IT WORKS! Start now; start saving on these TUNA FISH—“Curtis” or “White Star.” JELLO Any Flavor. Package.9/ TOILET PAPER. All white meat. INSTANT POSTUM Large can 39/ Halves, can DATES—“Golden Hallowi” In bulk. 2 pounds —„I 9/ 1000 sheets of soft Sanitary Tissue in a roll. LESLIE SHAKER SALT 2 pound package________ 9/ 3 rolls . SHRIMP—American Beauty Lateat Pack. • No. 1 Cana. 2 for. 25/ BLOOKER’S COCOA. Delicious, rich, creamy Dutch Cocoa. Direct from Holland where making Cocoa is an art j pound tin 28/ Pound can CROWN FLOUR 49 pound sack------- 32.29 FISHER’S BLEND, sk. $2.39 BOOTH’S SARDINES. Biggest food value on the market 1 pound cans. 2 for OYSTERS—American Beauty 5 ounce can ’---------------- 15/ JtTH CENTURY COFFEE, from our Roaster to you. 'All that’s Rood in Coffee is in 20th Century.” Pound 47/; Three pounds, $1,38 ORANGES Per dozen________ GRONER’S OREGON BUDDED WALNUTS. Na l’a 3 pounds Direct