Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XXX HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THTILSDAY, JlTXE 13, 191 S No. 2 (or EVERY DOLLAR invested in WAR SAVINGS STAMPS is a SILVER BULLET to help end the War! This Bank is an agent for the sale of Government securi ties. am FIRST NATIONAL BANK Member Federal Reserve System HOOD RIVER, OREGON SAVINGS STAMP COMMITTEEMEN TO MEET SATIRDAY A complete stock of GOODYEAR TIRES AND TUBES together with our ser vice, makes this an ideal place to pur chase your tire re quirements. DeWITT MOTOR CO. iiii "The Laddies Who Fought and Won'.' Harry Lauder's own song! And a cheery one it is, as it pictures the return of the troops from the greatest war in history, amid the ringing of bells and the songs of victory. Harry wrote it, and he sings it in a way that nobody else in the world could do it. VictorDmceRecords m'ililots ofuJai2 Two numbers by the original Dixieland Jazz Band that not merely invite, but almost compel you to dance. Doth distinctly differ ent, yet each abounds in rhythm and melody. At the Jazz Band Call One-Step Outrlth Walk - Fox Trot Come i i tt.nl let .s r y i tSei fit ctions, or any of lh New Victor Records for June THE KRESSE DRUG CO. LAUDER 7 he Store Come in and hear the latest June Records tiny 3 Urgent Call to Orchard ists Eight Cents Cash for Field Pick STRAWBERRIES We can use all you have FRUIT GROWERS EXCHANGE Telephone 2221 . THE HIGHLAND MILLING CO. Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of Poultry and Stock Feeds We extend a cordial invitation to the orehardists of the Hood River Valley to visit our new plant, now open at the foot of State Street. J. P. & L. B. APLIN Proprietors Telephone 1751 HOOD RIVER We again urge you to make up your mind whether you are going to need an IDEAL FRUIT GRADER this season. For it will be impossible to get help to harvest your crop as you should. By using an IDEAL GRADER you can cut the cost of packing greatly, and expedite your work to such an extent as to make up the cost of the GRADER, which is less than one half the price of others. And the IDEAL has given perfect satisfaction to all who have used it on past seasons. We have a machine all set up and ready to operate at our packing house any time. We will be pleased to have you call and see us and allow us to place you on our list; for we are not going to be able to fill late orders, on ac count of lack of help. Ideal Fruit & Nursery Co. GUIGNARD & ROSIGER Proprietors OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS. Orchard Hay Rakes, Mowers, Disc Plows. Harrows. Winona Wagons. Orchard Trucks. KELLY BROS., Distributors. Phone 1401. HOUSE PLASTER, CEMENT ARSENATE OF LEAD SPRAY BOX SHOOKS Give us your order at once so that you can depend upon your supplies for this season. Kelly Bros. Phone 1401 n order that Hood River county will attain pledges for her quota of War Savings Stamps in the sum of $1(0,IU0 before June 28, a campaign will he waged, beginning next week, with as much ginger and enthusiasm as that characterizing the recent Liberty bond drive and other patriotic activities. Chairman v aughan, in charge of ounty saleB of the small securities. declares that he expects to le able to announce that Hood Riv,er has gone over the top several days before June 28. Mr. Y'aughan has railed a meeting of district War Savings Stamps com mittees, composed of more than M citi zens, at the Commercial club rooms Saturday afternoon at one o'clock, when final plans will be outlined. Already, says Mr. Vaughan, a renewed interest is being shown in the War Stamps. Purchases are picking up right along, despite the fact we have not yet started our solicitation. One man came in Monday and purchased stamps to the value of $200, declaring that he wished to do this much toward bringing Hood River to her full quota." A total of more than $:)2,000 stamps have already been sold through county postotiices and banks. Merchants are helping materially wjth the work. R. 15. Pengo is in harge of an advertising campaign be ing published in the county papers. Appealing copy was paid for last week by the papers and the banks. This week Perigo & Son and E. A. Franz Co. join the papers in making possible the advertising. TOTAL ECLIPSE WAS VERY IMPRESSIVE And Saturday afternoon, w hen the moon's shadow came in contact with ; the sun, Mr. Child s. instead of gazing f 1 Ifri i I1T TiTf 1 n tuw'J tne western heaven, was ab I A III PA lll l r A It sorted in noting the effect of the w;,rj Vnilll niUll nLillll intr daylight on the insects. Just as the approaching darkness sent the chickens to roost, Mr. Childs says the moths observed the eclipse by immedi ately becoming active and beginning their deposit of eggs. He was in his cage again at nightfall, and again, he says, the codling moth female resumed her activity, interrupted a few hours before, when the sun's rays again broke forth in startling radiance. An application of spray Sunday, Mr. Childs thinks, would have destroyed a record day's deposit of codling moth eggs. Interest in Campaign is Already Shown, Purchasers Buying in Larger Quantities Being A thin film of downy clouds, almost invisible until the sun's eclipse was total, flashed forth in a brilliant color ing from the corona when the moon's shadow totally obscured the sunlight Saturday afternoon, Stars, above and below the cloud patches, became visi ble for the brief moments, and the wight was impressive. Night birds were brought from their retreats and swished through the air in pursuit of gnats. W hen the shadow contact was total, rooster crowed and the call was taken up and sent back and forth over the valley by other rulers of barnyard harems. When the visible sun s area had decreased to a tiny crescent, crews of men engaged on the Ruthton hill section of tihe Highway fired a series of mighty blasts. They had been pre paring for days to herald the notable event, and the opposite crescent marked the waning eclipse before the echoes had ceased reverberating up and down the Columbia's gorge. Manv thought the eclipse was being accom panied by an electrical display. More than 00 fort landers were here to witness the phenomenon. Preceding the eclipse the visitors were enter tained by a motor trip over the valley. HOOD RIVER IS TO CELEBRATE THE RED CROSS WILL HAVE CHARGE Eclipses Numerous amusing incidents accom panied the total eclipse. Celilo Indians, engaged in the berry harvest, had not been informed of the phenomenon, and when the heavens were darkened by the approach of totality the Redskins sought the aid of an old buck, known for his prowess as a medicine man. Despite explanations of the w hites the Indians are still perturbed over the eclipse. A Japanese berry grower was deliv ering his day s pick Saturday night at the Apple Growers Association. "What did you think of the eclipse.' asked A. W. Isbell, of the receiving station. "What you say?" inquired the Nip ponese rancher, his interest still un aroused because of his ignorance of the word. Mr. Isbell began an explanation and the Japanese's face fairly shown. "Oh," he said, "I wonder what mat ter with him about four o'clock." PORTLAND BOYS HELP WITH HARVEST prominent part in the harvest of the strawberry crop is being played by members of the United States Roys' Working Reserve Corps, of Portland. The first camp was established Thurs day in the Oak Grove district, w here the enthusiastic youths, who aro super vised by officials of the Portland V. .L C. A., without loss of a moment's time, pitched their camp in a beautiful wooded grove. The following day the volunteer workers were engaged in saving one of the fruit district's chief crops. With a labor shortage prevailing, the arrival of the Hoys' Reserve has prevented growers from suffering pos sible heavy financial loss. While a semi-military discipline is enforced at the camps of the boy work ers, all rules, with the exception of a few general laws pertaining to conduct and safety as established by the Y. M. C. A., are made by the youths them selves. The camps are strictly self governed and the first duty following the establishing of the camp was an election of officers. Respective leaders were named as follows: John Piper, governor; Arthur Clark, judge : Jacob Holznian, prosecuting attorney; Emilio Piluso, sheriff; Tom McMullan, deputy sheritr ; John Thomas, Charles Bennett, I. eland Chapin, Newton I.angernian and Robert Hoggs, council. The camp was established under su pervision of H. D. Huggii;s, of the Portland Y. M. ('. A. Raymond Cox has now taken charge, and Mr. Mug gins has left for Dee, where he estab lished the second camp. Mr. Cox'is assisted by ('has. Holmstedt and E. Bumniert in his supervision of the hoys. It is now planned to establish a total of five camps of Hoys' Reserve work ers in the fruit districts, three of them to he in the l.'pper Valley. The num bers at the camps will average 25, it is stated. WOMEN ARRIVE TO HARVEST BERRIES The labor shortage alfecting the Hood River strawberry districts will be felt most actutely by growers who are indifferent to the comfort of their pickers, according to (). K. Baldwin, here Monday establishing camps of Oregon Women's Farm Rosen e Corps. It is said that some of the Portland people who have come here recently, at a great personal sacrifice, have been so disappointed at conditions on ranch es, that they have returned. Some growers, it is asid, want to hold their pickers all the tune, and yet only fur nish them with a few hours of work per day. We are going to forget the tele- hone numbers of those fellows who don't want to treat their help right," said Mr. Baldwin. Forty-one girls, in charge of Mrs. A. Ella S. Stearns and Mrs. MaithaWink lenian, of the Oregon Women's Farm Reserve, arrived here Monday and were taken to a camp established in the Dee Flat district. Twanging uke leles and singing, no happier lot has recently been seen in Hood River than the pretty young girl harvest bands. BIG MAIN CRUSHED WATER SHORTAGE ON After the eclipse was on, an educated Indian man in charge of a crew of strawberry pickers on at the Staten place in Frankton, spurned a smoked glass for viewing the phenomena. "Come here," he told one who prof- ered him a piece ot opaque glass, mo tioning toward an irrigation ditch. The Indian pointed to a perfect re flection of the moon-curtained sun made bv the water. Smoked glasses lost fa vor with observers in that spot after the incident. A series of photographs was made of the eclipse by Joe D. Thomison. The roll of films was left on a table in the living room of the Thomison home Sunday morning a sad after chapter was played when Mr. and Mrs. Thomi son 's elder daughter, Becky Ann, ap nroached her mother and called on her for an explanation of the peculiar roll of pauer she had found. She had un sealed the undeveloped films and had exposed them to the light. Methods adopted were meant to impress on Becky Ann's memory that children should carefully avoid an investigation of unusual packages. While leading figures in the world of science were busy Saturday engaged in perfecting the last details of arrange ments for observing the total eclipse of the sun, Leroy Childs, who has recent' ly won marked recognition for his study of the codling moth, one of the most destructive of orchard insects, was just as busy, not, however, preparing for a view of the obscured sun. For a week Mr. Childs, who has found that the female moth, at this sea son of the year, begins her daily egg laying at twilight, had been construct ing a screened-in cage around a small fruit tree in his backyard, in order that the little ligh't-mauve colored moths might be watched in natural surround ings. Saturday morning he completed the arrangement of entomological par aphernalia, magnifying glasses and cameras. Pad and pencils were at hand fur note. The break Monday of a main from Tucker's Springs, furnishing a million gallons daily and Hood River's chief source of water supply, has brought a temporary water famine. With the hottest days of the year on, an official warning has been issued, placing a ban on irrigation. Mayor Humble, in order that sufficient water may be conserved from the old city spring for fire protec tion, has appealeu to citizens to use a little water as possible for household uses. The main was crushed by the set tling of an earth fill that is being thrown across Indian creek gorge by J. G. Faitfowl, doing the work under con tract from the county. The break destroyed nearly 1,0(1(1 feet of the big wooden-stave pipe main. While the city kept on hand repairs for sections of the pipe, the destruction was of such extent that Supt. Price had to go to Portland to secure addi tional pipe. He thinks that the repairs may be completed by Saturday night. Supt. Price says that some do not realize the seriousness of the damage. and are continuing their irrigation, de spite the official warning. 1 he city is now getting absolutely no water trom Tucker Springs, and the Heights sec tion for a part of the time is without water for household purposes. Unless the requests of the city officials are complied with, arrests may follow. Chief Athletic Event Will Be Tug of War, With Teams from Neighboring Logging t'amps Contesting With the Red Cross Chapter in ex clusive charge. Hock! River is already preparing for the town's most glorious Independence Day celebration. Invi tations have been extended to neigh boring towns of the mid-Columbia, both in Oregon and Washington. AU concessions have been granted the Chapter by the city council, and it is expected that the Chapter will be rich er by more than $1,000 following the event. The big athletic event of the cele bration w ill be a tug of war. A plat form will be erected on the main busi ness street, and teams fom all adjoin ing logging camps, the city and orch ard communities will participate. The committee has made the follow ing announcement : The celebration will be under the di rect supervision of the Hood River Chapter of the American Red Cross, assisted by every civic and fraternal organization in the community. It will be in the form of a big carnival, in cluding a children's pageant and sports, patriotic exercises in the forenoon and a blood stirring championship tug-of-war contest in the afternoon. In the evening there will be the various at tractions and dancing at the al fresco pavilion. Last week the ways and means com mittee of the Chapter issued an invita tion to all the various organizations in the city to appoint delegates to assist the Red Cross committee is perfecting an organization to take general charge of the celebration. This resulted in the formation of the following general committee: John R. Norton, chair man, representing the Red Cross ; I). G. Cruikshank, C. F. Gilbert and C. D. Hoyt, representing the Commercial club; Mrs. C. O. Huelat and Mrs. C. K. Marshall, representing the Wo man's club; U. P. Dabney and Alva Day, representing the Odd Fellows; J as. H. Hazlet, and C. C. Anderson, representing theKnights of Pythias; Harry Farrell and Peter Mohr, Jr., the Knights of Columbus ; H. F. Davidson and J. K. Carson, the Masonic Lodge; Marie Berry and Katherine Baker, the French Orphan Relief club. 1 he chief event of the day will be the tug of war championship between specially picked teams from among the timbermcn and loggers of the various lumbering centers in this part of the state. E. E. Ellsworth, manager of the big mill at Cascade Ijoeks has tele phoned that his team would outpull "anything that walks on two legs. S. Morgan, who is organizing the team at Wyeth, modestly proclaims that the Wyeth team will "at least outpull Cascade Locks," so there you tie. 1 he big camp of the Oregon Lumber Co. at Dee is preparing to en ter six giants as championship contend ers, and the Phillips mill in Post Can yon notified the committee Monday that they would have a team ready to pull all comers on the Fourth. ! long, narrow platform five feet in height will be erected on Oak Btreet between Fouith and Fifth, so that the struggles of the teams will be in con stant view of everyone in the crowds. It is expected there will be eight teams in the contest. To accommodate the crowds from Cascade Locks and Wyeth a special ex cursion has heen arranged with the steamer Tahoma, coming up from the Locks in time for the forenoon events and returning in the evening at 8.30. The round trip fare will be $1.10. Among the carnival attractions will be a minstrel show staged under the per sonal direction of 0. F. Gilbert of the once famous teamnt Llarke & Gilbert; special show will be staged by the Odd Fellows: the Fish Pond, where suckers will be hooked ad lib by pretty maids; the rerris wheel; Soak the Kaiser" shooting gallery; "hot dogs" and many others now m process of in cubation by the committee. The entire proceeds of every show and concession will go into the funds of the Hood River Red Cross Chapter. The city council has granted the Red Cross the exclusive use of Oak street between Fourth and Fifth streets and has further authorized the closing to all vehicle and motor traffic of Oak street from Second to Fifth streets and from Cascade to State street between the hours of 7 a. m. and 12 p. m. on the Fourth. Parkdale on I p Grade Parkdale, terminus of the Mt. Hood R. R. Co., in the l.'pper Valley, con tinues to grow. J. M. Demmon, who has operated a machine and blacksmith shop at the chief Upper Valley town for the past several years, has com pleted the construction of an ;up-to-date garage. Because of the splendid scenery of the community and the easy access to Mount Hood, Parkdale is the goal of scores ot motorists from many outside points as- well as Hood River during the summer season. Japanese Baby Buried The body of Ray, the infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Yochichi Nishioka, was buried Sunday afternoon at Idlewilde cemetery, following services held at the Partner" chapel. A Japanese priest ftfom Portland officiated. The infant 8?ed Saturday. JOHN CLUCK HAS GIVEN RECORD SUM Proportionate to his earnings, it is likely that no individual in the United States has contributed more heavily to the Red Cross than John Gluck, aged 50 and one time soldier of the Austrian empire. Gluck, who earns his living as a laborer on county roads, Saturday gave Secretary Ravlin the sum of $3H, bringing his total donations since the war began to an even $100. Many have attempted to get the story of this man, but he is marked by his reticence. His few expressions dis play an abiding loyalty to and faith in the principles of his adopted country. He says, too, that a strong love re mains with him for the land of his birth, whose peoples, he declares, will receive the greatest blessing of their national existence when America makes possible the decisive defeat of the armies of the Central powers. CHAUTAUQUA COM MITTEE APPOINTED Preparations are being made for an elaborate Chautauqua here this season. At a meeting last night, the following executive committee was appointed to arrange for the event, lasting through the week of July H-Ri : R. E. Scott, A. F. Howes, G. A. Molden, S. E. Bart mess and A. G. Lewis. Mrs. Ifwis will appoint two other members of the Woman's club to assist with the work. The Chautauqua will be held at the open air theatre "in the city park, o