The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939, July 08, 1938, Page TWO, Image 2

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    F R I D A Y , J U L Y 8, 19S8
T H E B O N N E V IL L E D A M C H R O N IC L E
TW O
CLASSIFIED ADS
Deadline Monday Night.
1-25 words .....................................One time, 15c
25-50 words ..................................... One time, 25c
50-75 words ..................................... One time, 50c
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Thereafter, 10c
Thereafter, 20c
Thereafter, 35c
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
FOR SALE—4-room modern house; PIANO FOR SALE—must sell quick­
garage, 2 lots; basement and fur­
ly, to save shipping expense ;
nace. $1400; $300 down, balance,
Bungalo size, like new, guaranteed.
$15 per month. Inquire Rt. 3, Box
Cash or $6 monthly. Address, Ad­
249, or Sun Publishing Co.
5-9-tf
juster, CLINE PIANO CO., 1011
S. W. Washington, Portland, Ore­
gon.
7-4-11-18
AN EXCEPTIONAL Buy—Farm and
home sites. 5, 10, 15, 20 or more
acres. A-l irrigated land, new mod­ FOR SALE!—13-foot sailing skiff.
Phone 5626.
6-27-7-4
em house, beautiful view, center of
valley, frontage on highway. Mra.
Louis Nex. Phone Parkdale 26X1. FOR SALE—No. 1 cedar posts, cedar
poles, and 16-inch wood.
Any
4-1-tf
quantity. Maurice S. Walton, Park-
dale.
7-4-11-18-25
FARM PRODUCE
FOR SALE—One 28-inch boy’s bi­
cycle; one 28-inch girl’s bicycle,
FOR SALE—Montmorency pie cher­
reasonable, or would consider pigs,
ries, now ripe, lc per pound. Phone
wood, or what have you? Leland
2801.
6-27-7-4*
Roberts, Parkdale.
6-27*
TIMOTHY HAY for sale from field.
David G. Glass, phone 4639. 6-27* FOR SALE—10% A Van Body Truck
with No. 1 P. U. C. plates—address
B. L. Cummings, Rt. 3, Hood River,
FOR SALE—Montmorency cherries,
Ore.
6-20-8-tf
lc per pound on trees. Fred Tem­
ple, 2 miles south of Oak Grove.
7-4-11* If the cost of your Automobile
Insurance is going up, see us for
better rates. R. E. Scott, phone
APPLES, Potatoes and Hay for sale.
2804.
5-30-tf
H. R. Harms, 'A mile south of
Parkdale.
4-1-tf
FOR SALE—Singer Sewing Machine,
treadle. $15.00 cash. In excellent
HAY FOR SALE—Baled oats, clover,
condition. Call Mis. Da'oy, 4533.
timothy or alfalfa. George Hanel,
Mt. Hood, Ore. Phone Parkdale PAINT FOR SALE—L. A. E. Clark,
35.
4-1-tf
Odell, salesman for Davis Paint
Co. If you want paint, drop me
a card and I will call and see you.
LIVESTOCK
FOR SALE—Fresh milk cows and
large separator.
Ladies gaited
saddle horse. Chas. Struck, Park-
dais.
6-20-27-4*
VPPLE CIDER, pure and sweet,
every day in the year at Par-
melee’s Fruit and Cider Stand,
four miles from Hood River on
Loop highway. If not open at gate,
drive right in to house.
FOR SALE—Perkshire sow with 9 FOR SALE—Wood and coal two-
pigs, and one sow to farrow about
oven range.
In good condition.
July 5th. J. G. Allison, Odell 95.
Reasonable.
Carlson’s Red and
6-20-27*
White Store, Cascade Locks. 6-27-4*
FOR SALE— Fryers. 3 for $1.00, FOR SALE OR TRADE—One horse
dressed. 4 for $1.00 live. Leghorn
w a g o n and ten-inch one-horse
Cockerels all ages, phone 372,
plow—sell cheap or trade for horse
Clark’s Poultry Ranch, 3 miles east
cultivator. Call Hood River 3701.
Casade Locks. Ore.
4-18-tf
4-25-tf
Would Keep
Beauty of
Highways
♦
Oregon’s wide-famed h i g h w a y s
that thread through majestic moun­
tains and along fertile valleys from
California, u p through Ashland,
Medford, Grants Pass, Roseburg,
Eugene, Albany, Salem, to Portland,
and adjoining roads that lead to
Crater Lake, Mt. Hood, up the San-
tiam and McKenzie rivers and to
other areas in the Cascade Mountain
regions, must be guarded vigilantly
by citizens of this part of Oregon to
insure their permanent scenic beauty
and steps should be taken at once to
preserve timber strips along its
route, and to take over and improve
burned and cut-over sections, it is
pointed out in a report of the state
planning board, "Preservation of
Oregon Roadside Timber.”
The report, which presents facts
and figures, for all highways of the
State, shows that a grand total of
590.5 miles of heavy travel highways
in the Cascade system, 250.4 miles
are through majestic merchantable
timber, 119 miles are bordered by
non-merchantable timber, 122.7 miles
are sided by second growth, cut-over
and burned areas, and 98.4 miles are
in non-forest regions.
To insure preservation of a sub­
stantial strip of permanent natural
forest cover along these heavy trav­
el highways would require a com­
bined investment on the part of the
national forest, state and O. & C.
lands of $1,171,660, of which the
state should contribute $225,110, the
national forest, $523,670, and the O.
& C. exchange, $422,880. Because of
the great scenic value of this route,
the sums would be an investment of
outstanding value to the state, the
report points out.
The heavy travelled roads in the
Cascade system included in the sur­
vey are the Pacific, Mt. Hood Loop,
Wapinitia, North Santiam, Santiam,
McKenzie, Willamette, Crater Lake,
Tiller Trail, Diamond Lake and
Green Springs.
The report, which is the work of
the planning board’s committee on
roadside preservation aided by a
special WPA project, points out the
grave and immediate dangers to
timber borders due to truck logging,
need of liquidation by owners, and
other factors, and urges that agen­
cies, organizations and citizens unite
to make permanent the present un­
cut areas, and to improve those al­
ready cut-over or burned.
France imported 11,269 American
600,000 rainbow trout eggs, and they
have already hatched into young and coin-vending machines this year.
hungry fish. The hatchery has a
total capacity of 3,000,000 fish.
While the only thing that they try
to hatch there is fish, the hatchery
is getting quite a name as the home
of other kinds of wild life. The
V E R Y OLD W IN E S
hatchery has holding pens on its
grounds, and yesterday a shipment
Matured and Mellowed
of Pheasants, hatched in Pendleton,
was received. The pheasants will be
M A R -V IST A V . O.
held all fall and winter, and will be
Q U ALIT Y W IN E S
released in this vicinity this spring.
When the pens are empty, green
grasses and grains are grown in
them, and the pheasants feed on
green feed while they are held there.
108 Third Street
The pens have a top capacity of
225 pheasants.
Mar-Vista V .O .
Bill Carey
Give Your Lawyer a Break
You are about to purchase a piece of real estate. You require an
abstract of title furnished to you, which you take to your attorney
for examination because he knows real estate law and can tell
you whether or not the title is merchantable. Make sure that the
abstract has been made by a reliable company, owning and main­
taining a complete set of abstract books, for your attorney has for
examination
ONLY THAT ABSTRACT WHICH YOU PLACE IN HIS HANDS
HOOD RIVER A B ST R A C T & IN VESTM EN T CO.
Established in 1908
Owner of the only complete set of abstract books in Hood River
County, Oregon
SUMMER
5
•xcutiion
Example of fare:
ROUND TRIP
COACH FARE
TO CHICAGO
RAIL FARES
NOW
IN E F F E C T
Prop ortion a teJy j
lo w fa re s to
p r a c t ic a lly
a l l p o in ts.
KEEP YOUR STOCK at home with
PERSONALS
a prime electric fence. Safe and ec­
onomical. Roy Kirby, R. F. D. 1, BRADFORD’S All-Purpose SOAP—
Hood River. Tel. Odell 108. 9-6tf
Used successfully in treating poi­
son oak. Free sample to poison
FOR SALE—Horses and mules. Call
♦
oak sufferers.
at my ranch, % mile wast of Odell
Give credit to the Hood River
Grade School.
Telephone Odell LAWNMOWER REPAIR SHOP— Hatchery, near the punch bowl, for
108. Would consider trading for
Lawnwomers, knives, and scissors fast work. On June 19, it received
cattle or hogs. W. I. Kirby. 5-1-tf
sharpened.
Saw filing.
C. A.
Swartz basement Duckwall Bldg.,
FOR SALE—Fresh Cow or would
Hood River.
For the
trade for yearlings or two-year
old cattle. S. N. Hill, Pine Grove DAVENPORTS and Chairs reuphol
District.
4-25-tf
stered and repaired, first class i
ty//cnf/i±
workmanship. We carry upholster­
BULLS FOR SERVICE—Guernsey
ing supplies. Egler & Moe, 1114
a new permanent wave is essen­
Jersey, Milking Shorthorn. We
7th St., just off of Pine. Phone
tial to comfort and beauty. In­
3443.
1-24-tf
bring bulls to your place. Also
dividually styled waves, machine,
O. I. C. Boar. Phone 5633. H. A.
$3.50 to $6.00 complete. Machine­
Bendler, Rt. 3, Hood River, one- RUG WEAVING—Rag Rugs and
less, $5.00, complete.
half mile northweet of Barrett
other fabrics woven by Master
Weavers.
Hood River Woolen
Store.
ma26tf
Mill, Phone 5481.
10-11-tf
Fish, Pheasants
Arrive at Dee Hatchery
Wilma Sherwood ;•
FUEL
ARE YOU BUYING PROPERTY?
Are you sure the titl» is clear?
1000 CORDS DRY WOOD, delivered
Don’ t take a chance. An abstract
is the only way of determining t*tle
or at yard- Al’s Wood Yard, Hood
to real estate. See Hood River Ab­
River.
j6tf
stract & Investment Co., 3rd and
Cascade. Phone Hood River 1331-
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOMS FOR RENT—with or with­
out board. Reasonably priced. 1006
Eighth St.. Hood River.
5-1-tf
FOR RENT
WE GIVE Guitar or Violin with
short lesson course. Private les­
sons. Ask about all other instru­
ments. Beatty School of Music.
Phone 6823.
2-1-tf
Beauty Shoppe;! UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
Phone 182
14 Hall Building < •
SHIP AND
RIDE
Vacation Time
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
FOR RENT Seven room modern
house, furnished. Call Odell 321. WANTED Mezzard cherry seedling
6-27
fruit in quantity. O. L. Creton.
Cascade Nurserys. Phone 5756.
FOR RENT—4-room h o u i c with
6-20
basement and fireplace, built-ins.
Phone Hood River 3141.
6-27 RELIABLE GIRL wants housework
during summer months. F’or par-
ticurals write to Mrs. Don Hanel,
FOR RENT -2 rm. furn. apt. with
Parkdale. Oregon.
6-20tf
private bath, kitchenette, heat,
hot and cold water furnished.
Laundry facilities.
Also furn. W A N T E D Good healthy calf not
over month old. Any breed but
private room with outside entrance.
Jersey. R. E. Sheldon. Mosier,
Call 3141.
6-20-27-8
Oregon.
6-13-20-27*
FOR RENT Large, desirable room,
2 beds, furnished, bath. 2 gentle­
LOST AND FOUND
men preferred.
Ivan Orr, 711
Montella
6-27-4* LOST Parkdale district, small dark
brindle Boston terrier bull dog,
FOR RENT Three room unfurnish­
male, white marking neck and feet,
ed house, $5 a month. Running
short tail, answers to name Scoot­
water, wired. See Frank Clark,
er. Reward. Mrs. Harvey Jones.
Cascade Locks.
6-13-20*
Hood River, phone 5429.
6-27*
Inquire about Schedules and
Connections from Local Agent
UNION
PACIFIC
is Here
Yours will he enjoyable if you are free of tire troubles.
tires arc always a hazard in emergencies.
W orn, smooth
You can avoid these hazards by
having your tires retreaded by our guaranteed process, which saves you much
money as compared with new tires.
Drive in and let us look over your tires.
PUDDY’S
Oak Street
TIRE SERVICE
"It's Time to Re-Tread”
Moore Electric Building