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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1921)
0 v nOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 6, 1021 ONE BRAND' ONE QUALITY' One Size Package All our skill, facilities, and lifelong knowledge of the CAMEL"08 concentrated oa this one cigarette Into this ONE BRAND, we put the utmost quality. Nothing is too good for Camels. They are as good as it's possible to make a cigarette. Camel QUALITY is always maintained at the same high, exclusive standard. You can always depend on the same mellow-mild refreshing smoothness the taste and rich flavor of choicest tobaccos and entire freedom from cigaretty aftertaste. And remember this! Camels come in one size package only 20 cigarettes just the right size to make the greatest saving in production and packing. This saving goes straight into Camel Quality. That's one reason why you can get Camel Quality at so moderate a price. Here s another. We put no useless frills on the Camel package. No "extra wrappers!" Nothing just for show! Such things do not improve the smoke any more than premiums or coupons. And their added cost must go onto the price or come out of the quality. One thing, and only one, is responsible for Camels great and growing popularity -mat is LAMLL gUALlTY. amel R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. Tum-A-Lum Lumber Co. 5 1 0 Cascade Avenue PHONE 4121 HOE 1 AR W A AH We have some coming: and JLiD u UUli it is real wood. Good lare slabs, no edgings. Call us. PAOn UAAA ut rom ,are trees and VlIl Tf UUl best wood money can buy. f ( T Utah Lump, Egg and Nut J i I j Sizes. Let us deliver your Winter supply. ( IOC ) Everything: in the Building: Line C30S1 WE ARE ALWAYS "AT YOUR SERVICE" GOOD 100 PURE American-Maid Bread FRKSH DAILY AT VOL R GROCERS J. R. W ATKINS CO. Represented by GEO. WILDE. 1312 13th Street, Hood River. Or. Telephone 1923 Have you ever thought of the work the Telephone eliminates during apple hlnest? Oregon -Washington Telephone Co. The Stldebaker Line Cameron Motor Co. Tel. 243! DAN WUILLE HERE TALKS ON MARKET While the season is opening far less auspiciously than that of last year, Dan Wuille, head of the London apple firm, Dan'Wuille & Co., whose head quarters office of the Northwest is located here and who is spending two weeks with A. K. Woolpert, confident ly expects that sales of apples this year will net growers profitable re turns. "The apple prospects were entirely too rosy last year," says tor. Wuille. "Apparently everybody thought that England wanted apples. Indeed, the populace, fruit hungry, paid dear prices for the earlier shipments, and the shippers of producing countries fairly deluged the Bnglian markets. The resulting gluts proved disastrous. 1 he English apple market was spoiled last season by shipments from the Ty rolian districts and from Italy. We English never knew before that apples were produced in these districts, but shipments of thousands and thousands of cases began to roll in on us. The trial shipments returned the shippers good money, and they were spoiled, and as a result our markets were spoiled. Apples were dumived into the hands of all dealers. Home of whom iad never before attempted the mar keting of this class of fresh fruits. The Tyrolean apples were packed in extremely heavy cases, the care evidencing that the shippers cousidered their product of extreme value. Each case, 1 judge, contained about four times as much as the American apple uox. i.ast season r.ngiaiul. too. re eived importation of apples from France and Spain, and most other Eu ropean countries, "he lug American crop resulted in an oversuDDlS from this continent. The English market is hard to break, but the glut ruined it last Beason." inis year, Mr. wuine says, as a re suit of the severe losses sustained ulti mately last year, shippers from the continental parts of Europe will desist from any exports to England this year He cites, too, that the supplies that England is accustomed to draw annu ally from the barrel taction! of the eastern United States are lacking this year because of the severe frosts of last spring. "There are no Virignia Albemarle Pippins, closely related to your New town Pippins, or Virginia Hen Davis or York Imperials this year, Mr. wuine says, -ana naturally we are going to depend for a good share of the supply from the Northwest. 1 con fidently believe that the excellence of your trim and its proven popularity win result in growers receiving reason able prices, despite the present de pressed ouiiook. ine apples ol our own country were harvested this year a lull month ahead of the normal time. We have an unprecedented drouth in England. Even the grass dried up, and the fruit matured early. The shriveled specimens were marketed at ridiculous prices. "Apple growers think they have been undergoing difficult times, but they are far better off than farmers of other parts of the world. The western apple folk should not lose heart. This year, 1 think, will show encouraging results." Mr. Wuille points out that transpor tation charges this year will be sub stantially less than last season. Last year no direct water shipments from Pacific ports, via the Panama canal. were available. This season large al lotments of refrigerated space have been made by boat lines. His concern is already assembling shipments of Newtowns for loading on the Cardogan- shire, scheduled to sail from Portland STATION ISSUES HAR VEST PRECAUTIONS The Apple Growers Association has just mailed the following communica tion from the Experiment Station to its grower members: During the past few years more fruit has been lost as a result of care less handling during the lait few weeks that the fruit remains on the trees and while it is being harvested, than has been lost as a result of all in sect and disease affected apples com bined. More careful attention to the following six suggestions will save a vast tonnage of fruit in the valley this season : Watch your pickers closely. Counts of fruit show that often 2o per cent of the apples in every box are bruised, possessing from one to many bruises. Many of these apples are packed and are predisposed to many storage troubles. This severe injury can be reduced to a minimum if growers will watch their pickers more closely and fire the careless ones. Braised fruit alone costs Hood River valley $100,000, enough to pay the picking bill, It is dangerous to have apples out after the 20th of October. In years past severe freezes have occurred around this date, often causing a very severe orop ana aurmg some years actual freezing of the fruit. If the fruit is in the boxes it can be better handled if such a contingency arises. Chances of anthracnose developing in storage is greatly lessened by re moving the fruit before much rainy weather occurs. Rains cause the dis charge of (Hires from cankers on the treesjwhich are deposited on the fruit, giving much expensive trouble later on. Fruit in infected orchards should be, by all means, picked early. It will be in much better shape off the trees even though it is only stacked and cov ered in the orchard until it can be packed. Delay in picking fruit that was sprayed with Bordeaux this summer is dangerous. The familiar "red spot" develops most noticeably on late picked fruits that have been out in the rain. This trouble can be absolutely avoided by picking early and by keeping the fruit dry after it has been picked. County Fruit Inspector Armstrong's suggestions for the fall spray are timely. Every grower should follow up his picking with the sprayer. This is the only way in which anthracnose may be successfully combated. Help is plentiful. (Jet the fruit un der cover in good shape. The cost will be no more and it will mean manv dollars saved. A (.imiiI Physic When you want a physic that is mild and gentle in effect, easy to take and ertain to act, take ( hamberlain s Tablets. They are excellent. H-H I I I I I 1 I I I I I-I M i l l M' I T FINS, FI RS AM FEATHERS t H-M-M--M-M-M-M-I-1-I-1..1..1 I I October 15. Other shipments will fol low later in October and in November "Hut," says Mr. Wuille, "I think i note of warning should be sounded to shipping men on their proposals to carry, in view of past shipments, un limited boxed apples from the North west in their refrigerated apace. One shipping concern proposed to provide 200,000 cubic feet of refrigerated space, about 100,000 boxes of apples i he dumping of this amount of apples from a Northwestern port, in coniunc tion with the heavy shipments that may be expected from trans-Atlantic ports, may create a glut, and it is very difficult for a market to rally from such depiession. "The parity of exchange rates, much better than last year, will stimulate the market. East season, the exchange rate of the pound sterling ranged around &1.40. This year it will be $3.70. Thus we can figure on about 80 cents per box additional, which will be a great gain for the grower." Mr. Wuille, who was here two years ago, at a banquet tendered him, urged that Northwestern growers might gain a saving by strapping their apple boxes with steel bands. The sugges tion has resulted in the general prac tice oi Panning, instead ol wiring as was lormerly practiced. as a result oi tins reiorm, says Mr. Wuille, "the percentage of loss has decreased from 10 to less than 2 percent, but the nort liweatern grower must demand a better liox for his ex port apples. It should be slightly heavier and of better materia). I was in our warehouses today, inspecting arrivals of apples. 1 counted 10 boxes of apples, tne heads of which had been broken on the short trip from orchard packing plant to shipping point. Some of those heads are going to be broken open en route abroad, and certain loss will results. Australia haa absolutely eliminated this loss in transit through broken packages, and 1 do not see why American growers can not do likewise and thus effect a substantial saving for themselves." Dan Wuille & Co., who last year handled!22",(NK) boxes of northwestern apples and rho anticipate equal ship ments this year, i n-e established branches at Medfonl. Parkdale ami Udell in addition to the local central office. Branches are maintained at nderwood. Lyle and White Salmon. Mr. Wuille says his concern is one of the few that handle- apples direct from growers to the r. lesale trade of England. The chief executive of the irmiorting concern ns accompanied here by John Oliver, who heads the company s New York I thee. Mr. Oli ver, however, has pr eded east, Mr. Wuille states that his ncem plana an expansion of its domestic market are- Locks Votes fcM Budt School patrons of ' ascade Ixwka. who the first of the n th. hv small majority voted down the school budget ior me ensuing year, ai i meeting iat week, according to Mr. William Lane, prominent club woman of the town, adopted the list of - indituree for the cominir vear hv a te of Sh tn 37 The final budget was increased $100 over that voted down. The original action of voters, it is said, came aa a result of a factional fight in the dis trict and an alleged dissatisfaction on the part of one element with members of the board. The Cascade Locks school, delayed because of failure to vote the budget, opened last Monday with 90 pupila. A dog, engaged in his matutinal probings. precipitated a near riot on aesade avenue near the Emry Lumber Fuel Company's office last week. when he started a nest of yellow jack ets on the war path. The hornets, a colonv of Rooseveltian tendencies. judging by the swarm of angry insects millng around the base of the post, had apparently thrived unmolested throughout the summer. 1 he jackets took ther first vengeance on the dog himself. They became en tangled In his hair, and one apparently was driving home thrusts from his red hot stinger on the dog's tail, for the beast tore at his caudal appendage in a frenzy, rolling the while in front of automobiles and causing a near traffic blockade. Insist on genuine Ford parts when having your ear repaired. Dlckeon Marsh Motor Co. n2rtf O.-W. R. & N. Co. Time Card WEST HOUND No. 23, Portland Evpress .... 1 :10 a. m. No. 1 1, Spokane-Port. Pass... 6:66ft. in. No. 19. st.Ixmis, Kan. City, .. ... Denver, passenger r-,0a-m- No. 1, Pendleton-Port. UMftL.3 :20 p.m. No, 17, Chi., Omaha, Denver, i Kan. City, Salt Lake 6:16 p B to Portland, passeng'r ) EAST BOUND No. 21, Port. -Salt Lake, pasMl2:5-r a. m. No. 2, Port. -Pendleton L0CftL..9:48 i. in. No. 18, Port., Salt Lake, Den, Kan. City, Omaha, 10:.V a in Chicago, passenger... ) No. 4, St. Louis, Kan. City, ) Denver, passenger . . 1 No. 12, Port. - Spokane, St. t ,, , Paul, Chicago Pass..! !' :2r"'- '" 7:20 p. m. MAN'S BEST AGE A man is as old as his organs ; he can be as vigorous and healthy at 70 hs at 35 if he aids his organs in performing their functions. Keep your vital organs healthy with COLD MEDAL wm Q Tha world's standard remedy for kidney liver. Madder and uric acid troubles tnca 1696; correct disorders; stimulates vital organ. All druggists, three sizes. Look for lh Bam GolJ Medal on reery bam mad accept u BLUEST0NE Do not neglect the Hluestone Spray. Place your orlrs at once. KELLY BROS. CO. LENORE GREGORY TEACHER OK VIOLIN Kurnpean Training snd I- perienr Call Satnrdavs at Or-f.n MolH, or address Mi (irvg..r, Hi Hancock at, Portland, Oregon. Forbes Paint Shop M FOl RTH VI Ri l l Painting in all its hum h. -Tel m ATTEiNTION When Down Town Visit The TOGGERY Where Your Dollar Does Its Duty ( ion MERCHANDISE OF MERIT Announcement of Studebaker Light Six Price Reduction Touring, $1390 2-Passenger Roadster, $1365 Coupe, $1810 Sedan, $2130 All Prices F.O.B. Hood River. CAMERON MOTOR CO. Phone 2431 Hood River, Ore. APPLES For many years wo have served the Fruit Growers of Hood River Valley. .See us before marketing your Apples. We Inive ample ware house facilities at Hood River and Odell. Our complete line of Orchard Supplies Fruit Paper Apple Boxes Ladders Picking Bags Is at your service. If you want to sell your Apples let us know. KELLY BROS. CO. o27 Saturday Specials Our Very Best Bacon, per lb. 40c 44 Lard, 6 lb. 95c Lard, 10 lb. $1.90 M Compound, 6 lb. 65c " 101b. $1.25 Pot Roast Beef : : 15c Boiling Beef : : 10c Special prices quoted on Beef by the quarter. The Hood River Market A F. DAVENPORT, Prop. Phone 4311 Fine for the Picnic You have drunk our buttermilk at home. Had you evt-r c mMdored how refreshing a draught ot It would be on the hike or the camping trip. It would make an excellent beverage tor the motor trip. Just fill your thermos bottle with this delicious and wholesome drink the next time you start on an out!n. HOOD RIVER CREAMERY Rubber Stamps AT THE GLACIER OFFICE