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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 4, 1920)
noon nrvr-n ; lacier, Tiirnsnw, November & 1020 Why man we made this cigarette for you 1 1 Mgf I CAMELS fit your cigarette de sires so completely y ou'll agree they were made to meet your taste! Unique flavor, fragrance and mellow-mild-body due to Camels qual ity and expert blend of choice Turk ish and choice Domestic tobaccos are a revelation! You will prefer the Camel blend to either kind of tobacco smoked straight! With Camels you can go the limit without tiring your taste. They leave no unpleasant cigaretty after taste; no unpleasant cigaretty odor! To get a line on why Camels win yOU SO COmDletelv mmnom tl,Qm j "fi uicin cwsarf soWeveo,wWeM pun-ror-purr with any cigarette in S T TTTitolJ J.. - - . HKk TyZZZ fer quality to coupons or premiums! f upply or when you travel R- J- REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO Win. -1 ...iiqiuu-.i,,,, IN. L We will be open to receive Cull Apples at factory until 6 P. M. each day HOOD RIVER APPLE VINEGAR CO. PREFERENCE IS PROFIT "CARO" Wrapped Fruit is Preferred Most of the fancy packed Pears bringing such splendid prices were wrapped in ''CARD" Give Your Apples A Chance To GET TOP PRICE. WRAP YOUR APPLES IN "CARO" FOR SALE BY HOOD RIVER FRUIT COMPANY HOOD RIVER PRODUCE COMPANY GOOD 100 PURE American-Maid Bread FRESH DAILY AT YOUR GROCERS Glacier Office Makes Rubber Stamps for Apple Boxes; WATER F13ST AID SAVES LIVES QN WlST COAST I Ro,l TrosR first aid aotivitie3 in tho Northwett li ision this year have been chiefly devoted to "water first aid Instruction and organisation. Several units on tho BOUhd ami Wi stern rivers, and rescues have alreadj result' I ed from the Red Cross work. PUBLIC OPPOSES GOVT OPERATION Canvass of 5,154 Editors Shows 4,466 Communities Against Socialistic Experiment. Fruit Men: OPPOSITION GROWING P I L .. . . uniy-seven Her Cent in 1920 as Against 83 Per Cent In 1919 Think Public Is Opposed to Radicalism. DISASTER RELIEF PROVES BEST NATIONAL HiSUiUFJCE When the man oi ed for his annual $1 during Roll Cal 11 to 25. ho will 1 that dollar stays In ty. If he has done ; of Red Cross read that a small slico o ci'.'its is appropriati ".I i; aster re world durlns v enough of them, In the Northweste after time the relief met its crisis and ha Twice In Oregon in I at Mosier when I destitute and auuin i field chapter cared I rei overed bodies of ti wrecked schooner test was met. In 1I):J slide at Juneau, Alm-1 firo at Klamath Palls people learned that means things in the 1 in the 38 years lln tion up to Juno of 191 Red Cross had partiti; aster relief axpeditlo the expenditure of ap .merlcan zo what if there in, time tlon has fun llirou. Martini qt I others. Long if m tho suffer! famine, fun national oa And now, Isation of c th( me In mltigatic id by pestilenr and other irre; SPECIAL RED CROSS SUNDAY SCHEDULED HERE IN NOVEMBER Arrangemen according to li headquarters the observanc Roll Call Sun. organ Sund. activities of the somewhat detalle ing future work i ned. No subscrij unless special a be made by offict ter. here nation a day 'rmons. IHM of peace-time I ' ross, including Information regard del has been plan ions will be asked, : nu-ments should The American public In mnr In. I tensely opposed to Government opera tion than it was a year ago, according to the newspaper editors of the coun try. Out of 5,154 editors, replying to a questionnaire sent out by the Press Service Company of Now York, 4,460; or 80 per cent, gave It as their Judg ment that the poople of their comma nltles were overwhelmingly against the Government competing In business with Its own cltlzena. In 1919 the Press Service Company conducted a similar canvass of editors on the government oDeratlon of rail roads. That questionnaire showed that J per cent of the editors considered tnelr communities against Govern nient operation of nubile utilities. Apparently, then, If editors estimate putuic opinion accurately, that opln Ion In a yenr, considered bv commu nltles, has swung 3 per cent farther owny rrom socialistic experiments. Eleven Million Circulation. The combined circulation of the pa pers whose editors replied Is 11,428, 817, which means, according to the usual estimated ratio between circula tion and readers, a constituency of at least 44,000,000. And this constituen cy Is pretty evenly scattered through out the country, no considerable sec tion of any state bSlna unrepresented. The estlmato of opinion based on this thoroughly diffused 44 per cent of the couutry's population may, therefore, be considered a fair representation of the people as a whole. Another feature of the result la Its evident lack of partisan bias. Tho major political nfllllatlons of the pa pers represented nre fairly evonly di vided, being 1,857 Hcpubllcun and 1,350 Democratic. There are also 1,485 Independent and 462 miscellaneous, including labor organs, etc. How little the results nre affected by the politics of tho papers Is shown in an analysis by sections. In the Southern secMon. for instance, where replies came from 05 Republican pa pers nnd 389 Democratic, the per centage agnlnst Government operation was 88; In the Great Lake section, with conditions reversed, 478 Repub lican nnd 155 Democratic, the oppo sltlon was 87 per cent Replies from the West, Middle West and Southwest show that It Is a mis take to consider those sections vnsth I more favorable (o radical Government I experiments than tho Baft The rad icals can get little comfort out of the 89 per cent of thumbs down 2 per cent above the average in the South west, Including Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Knnsns, Oklahoma and Tex as. Texas, once supposed to be much given to Government regulation ex periments, returned 92 per cent of un favorable roplles. Out of the 244 edi tors replying from that state only three edited Republican pnpers. The 82 per cent opposition of the North west, Including Iowa, Minnesota, Mon tana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming, and the 83 per cent veto of the Fur West group, In cluding Arizona, California, Idnho, Nevada, New Mexico, Orogon, Colo rado, Utah and Washington, nre sig nificant of the prevailing conservative sentiment on this question even In : the more radical sections. Judgment Apparently Unbiased. The questionnaire closes with a re quest for the editor's personal opin ion on certain concrete cases a Ink lows: "Do you personally believe that th Federal Government should own nnd operate compeiitlvo Industries to pro- ! vide: (n) Fertiliser? (b) Clothing? tcj Automobiles? (d) Furm Imple ments? (e) Foodstuffs? Substantially all the editors who gave estimates of their readers' opin ions also expressed their own by re plying to this Inst question. Proof of considerable effort to avoid personal ct that In many Bred from the opinion he credited to his community. The percentage of "nos" ran: (a) 76; (b) 83; (c) SO; (d) 82; (e) 79. While the questions were based on general principles Involved In the Government participating in competi tive business, the so-called Muscle bhonls Hill now before Congress used as a concrete example of a erument operation scheme. Under bill a Government-owned c bias Is found In th cases the editor Novels From Serial Stories. would b ate and and pro Muscle : ucts and producer "atlon y or men is at Boise th inerchan irth of fer- s!tIon to nt Mai service hospitals t like to read serial maga s week by we-k, they are lrrent serial! and binding providing after publication 1, novels for the tho replies from Alubama, w Muscie Shotls war plant Is nn of course, there Is Intense and local pride In getting Its peace-time operation under wi earliest possible dnts. Fifty ftom that stoe replied, of v were opposed to Governmen Hon. 8 in fuvor and 4 A,,ut.if, Card of Thanks mm thanks and who assisted us nent. Also for art Washington Apple Notes iee apples h: arket. This f d th sit. est each pr e, stove si , Frans Co. Yakima'a to date this seaso last year. Ii you arein need of Farm Help, Married Farmer, Men to Work in Your Orchards, Apple Pickers, Teamsters, Tractor Men, or ; ay kind of Help, order from us. Phone or Wire our expense. Contracts Wanted For Grubbing, Clearing Land, Wood Cutting Now is the ti We have the f of work quick!1 short notice. et this work done. X men on this class experienced men on General Farm Hand Get your tean ers Prom (he where twenty Nffgefit farm farmers make sters, stock men, plow men, and herd oldest employment office in Oregon, one years of service has built up the clientele in the Northwest, and where their labor wants their headquarters. WE HANDLE MILL HELP, MECHANICS, STORE HELP. STENOGRAPHERS, OFFICE HELP. AND HOTEL HELP. Our Mill and Logging Department is under the super vision of a first-class mill man, who knows mill and togging conditions and who has operated mills in Oregon, and who knows the employers' needs his servu OUR SERVICE FREE TO EMPLOYERS Write us for any information needed in our line. Office Phone, . . , Broadway 2278 Residence Phone, Automatic 230-23 PIONEER EMPLOYMENT COMPANY The Oldest Office in Oregon 14 North Second St PORTLAND, OREGON ,,. AVERY TRACTORS Place your order NOW, for on December 1st the price advances $90.00. Orders which are placed so shipment can be made prior to December 1st will be taken at the present price and the purchaser will be protected against a decline in price until May 1st, 1921, Clark Cutaway Discs Vulcan Plows Mitchell & Dayton Water Systems Farm Lighting Plants Lowden Potato Diggers Gas Engines and Farm Machinery Diamond Tires -special prices mmm B. G. DAVIDSON SHOP PHONE 4686 RESIDENCE PHONE 4639 BOWL -and be healthy Installation of the BLUE DIAMOND ALLEYS has begun and they will be ready just as soon as they can be made ready RIGHT. In th i . HIGHWAY AUTO GARAGE 416 OAK STREET We are selling Schillings Best Line with a Money Back guarantee if you are not satisfied after using them. Kaesser's Grocery Grocery of Quality E. fc. CESSER, Proprietor Phone 312