THE PAM CH KONI«'I E rni ▼ uc t K C i /U T nur The Cascade drug >l‘*rr •» * I I surprisingly Urgí volume ol businr*, i n A ^ i w n r rHE PAM t UKOMC11 W . P. M’CRACKEN, JIÎ. DRESSMAKING • . 1 >4. WING . . 7 ; j Years In Cascade Locks Union Pacific Stages, In HV J \CK MiCR\HY «1 Prompt attention given all work. M ending done ovet !>v jws'jile who wrtv sr ing In«" for men. MRS. JESSIE MOHR Opposite Cascade Food Store in Cascade Locks BON NY VILLA One-half Mile W est of Bonneville ICE C R EAM — C A N D Y - CIGARETTES BLITZ, W IN E H A R D and HOP GOLD Beer on Draught and Bottled Beer Jt .< LUNCHES Jit and Sip by Our Open Fireplace” £<> Y O U R LOCAL DRUGGIST is a r rtain satis- action in knowing that is a drug store at in the Bonneville Dî& A i 1 an vfhere pre­ parations ai d favnûte ' rem. lies may be ob- I tain^d. | We : ' p ride in the j ivcvjlhat Ae have been bl- vp t FOREST WOOD AT BARGAIN PRICES; SHORT TIME ONLY •* iblic ■aC tna ma avail the ser T hie#« pt-*p)e ex- irom th“ T local f t u rq ggtc* - ¿U rug Co Wmm .u£R cr Jloireight rU»LY .iJtVICE BF P ’ POP LAND AN V/Af In these da> * people l**"k ha* k and wo.il The ground «low« where the wonder how the early settlers >•' fho j district around Bonneville and to»- (o\ farm 'land« was all heavily tint jeade lawks managed to live, and I Iwred at one time. In 1S74 D.»k Woodward who is j suspect l o t o f folks feci furry for t h«* still living in l AMa.Ie l . i k s , taught pioneers. Still, life w.ixnt nearly a« .« k J hard as one might think, for while , | 4 who,*! out near where the auj»*it there were no tr.uns, automobiles, ha« l>een built l hat *a> the fust airplanes, highways *»r picture shows, « h o o l in what 1 « now Hood River we had good Iimo and everyone had county He had to go to t he Dalles to pass an examination. I »1***» t »up ! enough to rat and wear, i Settlers in this (»art of Oregon ¡».«e he was more than 17 yrar« old I hr river was tarrying more ami were running wood scows on the t ol- unthi.i river when tny parent■* came more tralln all the time, ami alter here in I Sol, and the sawmills, the the gold ru«h wav over the movement sleunilioat* and the pirtag« railroad of wheat down the river Iwgati to tn furnished work for men who wanted create. People grew alarmed and be to!)*. Nearly everybody worked in came nervous when a line of business William I* Mot'rucken. Jr.. arua « the wood* i*r on the river. Muncy ; in whuh they arr engaged falls oil or victory In the I »strict >f I'olutnh.s was fairly easy and the settler« raised |ietm out I often thmk of that when O*ort of Apfw-als when that tr.tomai enough crop* to fees! thei rfannltcs 1 read the nrw^iaprrs tn thesr time« ruled that the ¡tonal* lu.I no |«>uor to I he t beg*‘it Meant Navigati -n and livestock. •entonen him to Jail for rami mpt. The !coni|uny grew rich hauling sut«|dlrs Joe I^itourell, for whom the falls senate sought to punish him for with holding certain papers in connection down the highway were name»!, was up«iream to the mines ui the hds j one of the best known owners of a About 1870 this tra*!e fell o ff ami with the air mall Investigation. wo,id scow on the river. He hauled nuny people thought the co n g o n » our household g'uls up from Van­ was finished, but the g<>l»l «ceker* FIVE ESCAPE FROM couver when returning ui*strram after had learned that wheat i *01111 lie JAIL IN WOODSTOCK having been down to Portland with grown in Fa»lcrn fMnp*n ami Wash wood. ington. and in the tnuklle 70* thrrr Captain Amos Underwood ran a was a rudi to take up land in wtul Saw Through Steel Bar» and wood scow, and so did Felix I man everyone thought j worthies* coun­ Pick Locks. who owned a sawmill ju«t belowr the try rxcrjrt for cattle. The river trade really never began Woodstock. I1L — fiv e prisoners mouth of Rock creek on the Wash­ I escaped from the county Jail at Wood- ington >ule After I was grown ami until the movement *>f wheat got un stock leaving behind them a series of got to doing for myself I ran a boat der way, and the heaviest t ilia saweil steel bars, cut »creens, hroken for years up and down the river, be­ flowed down the Columbia after the doors, and the other prisoners who tween the Locks and The Halles. public thought the Mcarnliuat turn didn’t care to break out. Those who The settlers could get >I.?S a cord were going to starve I u i| p > v there e*cai>ed are: John Knos. alias Kvano. thirty one for their wood, and the owners of the wrrr 10 years when the boats pawl years old. of Springfield, accused of wood scows sold for >4.50 a cord at tfie best. 1 he steamers did thru brsi robbing banks at Huntley and Union, The Dalles. In those early day« The business brtwrrn 1872 ami l * s j and whose alleged accomplices are Dalles offered a big market for our Those were the lush day's of the rivet •ervlng penitentiary sentences. cord wood.. Charles Taylor, alias Terry, fifty Some of ihe boats were larger than three years, who, with his wife. Kinuia. others, but the majority carried about was brought back from Oregon to be tried for the theft of Jewelry from the 100 cords. The prevailing wot wind Crystal Lake home of John fturrett. furnished ¡user to carry the boats International Harvester company offl i upstream and the current swrpt rial, by whom they were employed. them downstream. They earned Kllsworth Fowler, twenty-six years around 150 yards of canvas ami it old, charged with automobile larceny. was quite a trick to navigatr them. Henry odlnbrelL age forty two. However. I don’t recollect that more awaiting trial for check forgery, ¿oseph I^voian, forty years old. In than five were ever lost. At times for arson. there were as many as 14 o[irrating !nos and Taylor are ex-convicts. on the river. L'ne or two could carry Sheriff Lester Edlnger of McHenry 200 cords. You may find it hard to county complained that Knos had been believe, but I once ran a wood boat his bands Mac* January w J-roo -lit a v. We want to keep .*ur truck* busy the river. Jim Thompson's mill on You are going to nerd plenty of * . . a| cent S. Lumley. The prosecutor explained that this this side of the river, anti the mill on before next winter is over Buy now (►lay was due to the fact that Enos Eagle creek were all closed down by and save from J5 to 510 And re- was represented by Attorney William 1870. I he Inman mill operated for tnemlier you may not t*r able to get Carroll of Woodstock, a member of many years. woml when you want it after thr the state legislature, and formerly by A* work in the mills petered out weather gets lad Representative Roland IJbonattl of Chlrago. Under the state law a de in the late oOs, more and more set­ We cut this w*»id ourselves It i* fendant who has a state legislator f.*r tlers turned to cutting wood. They lune dry. Sawed any des.rrd length Ills lawyer may not le forced to trial sold the wood as they clearned their We suggest you art promptly. while the legislature Is In session. places. This whole country was cut * t5CKS AND AL. J Id ucl. a quick, of getting To escaj»e, the prisoners first sawed a hole In a steel partition one-«juarter inch thick l**tweeri cells, and through this were able to get into the hull p^n and then to trie top of ti e cell bl<*ck Next they cut a wi-e mesh and picked a lock Into an oliice. Saw ing bars on this il or let them to the basement, where they cut the bars and lock away to gain freedom. Milwaukee. Wls —Seven House of Correction prisoners sawed their way to freedom through a dormitory base ment window. uîiog done promptly, no . ed ta, it. Kansas City Gambler Is Slain by Machine Gunners A TERM INAL: Water Street EAst 780C ».«Store Telephone 121 IP YOUR GOODS FREIGHT .P L E A S E Ik 4 '° D N c e M ENT f.rlck. Ok la.—Two hank rol.hers »ere killed by pursuing Texan officer. In it motor car gun battle near Sweet- waler Their frail waa picked op by , " n,fPr J" nf*, *nd Deputy Sheriff Jee oney of Hemphill count r i exns, following a fj-o rohfiery o f the i irst State Bunk of Allison, Tevas Wt WMllT WaS burned ou t* but .1 ; l ^ , ,n a * * •“ « « in on announce - Went text week t h e " LUCILLE b ea u t y s h o p f t f a f a g fc Henderson, Prop. °P with the latest nd <*Tpef»enced *nrs. Noted Chemiit Killed ' i Halts i J i Walker, t T f ^ »Ixty-fl,,.. . of . ; »V am |*..IK „ iiu !vI,a " 1n'1 j high oifir-er Lhp r*l,,rnlcnl division o f fbe *'* kin d:\r‘nK the u "rl" »f* ' Into n till! " ‘ ’ RUtoinobll« r rs«l,ed into a tr«. near » « b r o o k, N. H. ttn ,NU? PrU***r Lynched M, l^PodTuU r ^ year l*n^l,P,, Andrew aiLeod.twenty.rtx old negmfarm- // (t A t «M i/t f: It* a \\| Si Hot ND 5 4n A M 9 15 A M 12 15 P M » IJ P M X 45 P M 9 il P M MU *« I ’ mi 1 5 'I tuu VV4 ^ I • K) F t « ¿ 1 » t i * il i >l U i 1 -i 1 1 i.ute* diH eten.r in time l«< H*«mr .illr ami H a ^ J I* r W alleluiale BUY C O M M U T A T IO N BOOKS Atui Save Money HOLLYWOOD DAIRY JOSEPH A. BUCHER, Prop v morning and - *• ,» milk from our ow n in u p id ld henl of GurrMnJJ ■ W . < th I*hoi H qi villi', or leave* word at meat market Cu'cad* La MILK CRE/VM BUTTERM ILK BUTTEI Our milk ia on u lv at all the store» EIMER ELECTRIC P. 0 . Box 96 "'• *r contract at ' ! a nv,r,,k rht p ano Cost $550 when new. The totdition of this piano is like new agd fully guar antee.1 lyr Mil ■»formation and where it iiwy be s< « , address Mr. j (Meson, A flfir .^ n e CASCADE LOCKS M,!lii' / Upl'" c '.,n,rrv*'iv<, growth «„ured. Modern con.en.ence., elec.nci.,, .elephon. water, etc. One .nd „„e -h .lf m il« H i.h w .y B u .;„e .. F r o n t .,. ( i " I ’ SALE Waters eltctrk ... Balance due >85 Keep Y o u r E y e O n (■„ Osor .00 d U . With b e . „ , ifu, , iew o f , he river * nd lh« mountains. ■