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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 1, 1922)
nOOb RIYER iGLACIER, THURSDAY, JUNE 1, 1922 PREST-O-LlTE Quality Up ! PREST-O-LlTE Prices Down! Here is a double-barrelled reason for buying the Prest-O-Lite Battery: Quality: The backbone of Prest-O-Plates. The plates with peculiar por osity, combined with un usual hardness. Ready, dependable power in coldest weather; great non-buckling heat-resisting strength in summer. Price: Our 1922 prices, lowest in years. $20.90 is the trade-in price for a battery for popular makes of light cars. Prices corre spondingly low on batteries for every make of car. These are not special mod els; they are regular Prest-O-Lite batteries, backed by the regular Prest-O-Lite guaranty. A definite, gen erous obligation, plus a spirit that says the car owner must be pleased. Prest-O-Lite batteries are specified as original equip ment by 87 leading manu facturers, and this list is growing. If your battery shows signs of weakening, no mat ter what make, come around and let our experts diagnose its trouble. It costs' you nothing. We'll do everything we can to wring the utmost ser vice from it to prolong its life. We never tell you that you need a new battery un til you do. That's an un variable rule of Piest-O-Lite, the oldest service to motorists. HEIGHTS GARAGE THE OLDEST SERVICE TO MOTORISTS Ate price Pull ap where you net thig lgn Headquarters for Prest-O-Lite's special battery for radio purposes! B. & P. W. C. STATE MEETING SUCCESSFUL Q Whatever You Are Looking For In the way of groceries, canned goods, preserves and anything else that a first class grocery carries, can be found in large assortment and at lowest prices at our store. Our quick service, low prices and high grade goods have made the casual buyer a steady customer, duality and efficiency are our watchwords. If you aro not getting grocery satis faction SEE US. 1" " IOC Consolidated Mercantile Co. HOOD RIVER ODELL Phone 1124 We Call and Deliver Spring Suits We have a wonderful line of New Tweeds, Cassimeres and Worsteds. Made to your in dividual measure by tailors who know how. Cleaning Pressing Dyeing Ujq City Tailors BEAZEAU & NICKELSEN In Basement under Coolidgo Jewelry Store. fr ft s GOOD 100 PURE AmencanSlaic! Bread FRESH DAILY AT YOUR GROCERS The annua meeting of the state fed eration or the BuBtnesa and Profession al Women a Clubs in Portland last week .was very successful, according to Mrs. SuBie I. Lynn, delegate of the local club. The delegates took lunch at the Seward Hotel grill with the I Women's Ad Club. A further report is given by Mrs. Lynn as follows : Routine work was transacted, such aa reports of officers and committees. nans are already being made lor en tertaining the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Ciuba in 1923. The delegates to the Chattanooga convention expect to bring the next convention to Portland. Ihe following officers and directors were unanimously elected : State nres ident. Miss Adelia Pritchard, Portland ; nrst vice president. Mrs. Glendora Thompson, Portland ; second vice pres ident, Miss Cornelia Marvin, Salem : corresponding secretary. Miss Margar et Fleming, Portland ; recording sec retary. Miss Lutie Cake. Portland : treasurer. Miss Vivian Cooley, Port land. Directors: Mrs. Bessie F. Col- well, Mibs Louise Hacker, Portland; Miss Mae Davidson, Hood River; Miss Eiiien KUdnaa. Marsnneld. Mrs. Susie Lynn, Hood River. Mrs. G. J. Frankel. retiring state president, was given an ovation, her term of office having been very har monious and very successful. "At 6.30 Wednesday evening the Business and Professional Women's Club and their friends had dinner in the Chamber of Commerce rooms. Guest of honor was Miss Lota Kelly, of New Mexico, vice president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women, who gave a very interesting talk on The Six Is.' in dustry, integrity, intelligence, initia tive, inspiration, intensity. She is a very forceful SDeaker and one who doesn't tire her audience. "Mrs. Ann S. Richardson, assistant editor of the Woman's Home Compan ion, was also Present and gave a short talk. She is surely a wonderful woman and is enthusiastic about the North west. It is her first trip to the far west. Also Miss Kelly's first trip to the Northwest and she expressed enthu siastic admiration over the Columbia River Highway. coth women were rjresented with lota of roses and, of course, they were wonderful to them." CARL J. BERRY, VET ERAN, BURIED SUNDAY Hood River folk Sunday crowded Riverside Community church to pay their last resDects to Carl J. Berry son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Berry and Canadian great war veteran, who died Friday night from tuberculosis con tracted while in service. Rev. Boddy officiated. The bier and altar were banked high with floral tributes. Full military rites were accorded the Canadian veteran by Hood Kiver American Legion. Members of the Legion and Company C formed a uni formed escort for the motor van which bore the body to idlewilde cemetery for interment. The Knights of Pyth ias band accompanied the funeral cor tege. Songs were rendered by the Riverside choir and a solo was sung by James Fenemore. Canadian com rade of Mr. Berry. Mr. Berry, who was 30 years old, served as a lieutenant with the Royal b lying Corps. He was married short ly after the war to a Moose jaw, Sauk, girl. His widow and an 18-months old son. Carl J. Jr.. survive as do two sisters. Miss Marie and Mrs. Neal Nunamaker, and a brother, Arnold Berry. Morrison May Locate Here George Y. Morrison, accompanied by Mrs. Morrison, has just arrived from Casper, Wyo., by automobile. He states that he found the roads of Oregon ex cellent as compared with those of other sections en route. The only bad roads of this state, Mr. Morrison stated, are over tbe Blue Mountains. They are indeed bad there. Mr. Morrison, an old friend of S. J. Moore, contemplates locating in Hood River. In 1915 Mr. Morrison was a passenger in one of the balloons parti cipating in a Rose Festival race. Prepared to saw wood in the country as well as in the city. Sutherland ami Moore. Tel. 3763 and 1713. a20tf DAN YUILLE AVER AGE, $1,452 PER BOX Sk Notice of Stockholders' Meeting or Grange Co-operative Store The first meeting of the stock sub scribers and holders of the Grange Co operative btore will be held at Library hall in the City and County of Hood River, State of Oregon, on the 3rd day or June, li)Z, at 2 o clock in the after noon, for the purpose of electing di rectors, adopting by-laws and for the transaction of such other business as may be brought before said meeting. We, the undersigned, being all the incorporators of said corporation, here- Walter Woolpert. of Dan Wuille & Co., states that final returns have been made to growers, the general average on 300,000 boxes of apples handled from various Oregon and Washington districts reaching $1,452. About 45 per cent of tbe apples were exported to England, the export average reach ing $1.55. The export Newtowns were on sizes ranging from 138 to 252, while the red varieties exported were 175s ana smaller, ine general average re ceived on export Newtowns ranged from 125 to 252 was $1,624 per box. Mr. Woolpert says that the apples from the Hood River and White districts brought growers better money than those of other districts. Mr. Woolpert will leave this week for eastern commercial centers to make a personal survey of conditions. He will also visit various eastern dis tributing points and endeavor to instill interest among buyers in the Seattle convention of the International Apple Shippers Association to be held in late July. ; NEW DELICATESSEN m4jl Wm. Munroe. Jas. R. Forden, John C. Duckwall, Frank C. Dethman, W. Farrell. Notice of Bond Sale Pursurant to the order of the Com mon Council and the provisions of Ordi nance No.629 of the City of Hood River, passed by the Common Council Mav 16, 1922, and approved by the Mayor May 18, 1922. notice is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received bv ine undersigned uty Kecorder at his office in the City of Hood River, Ore gon, up to 8 o'clock p. m. on June 5. 1922, for the sale of Four (4) improve ment bonds aggregating the sum of $1,510.44. Division No. 3. General Sewer Dis trict No. 2, Ordinance 629. Date of Bonds March 11, 1922. The above bonds are issued by auth ority oi statutes or the state of Oregon under the Bancroft Bonding Act due ten years after date, or at any semi . I A. nullum inieresi paying period at or after l year from date, upon giving due notice as required by law. Said bonds will draw interest at rate of 6 per cent FTA nnri! frillO ttrrT'TT' p " unie oi cona, interest 111 OPKN THIS VVKKK Paybe emi-annually at the office of i vuoui 4 ui HIO VILV Ul HUUU River, and will be sold to the highest responsioie Diaaer tnereior for cash. and no bid will be considered for less than par and accrued interest, the Council reserving the right to reject any and all bids. All bids received subject to the right of the bidder to examine into the regularity of the issue of said bonds 1 his notice is published in the Hood River Glacier for two consecutive is sues thereof, the date of the first pub- iicnuun ueing may 20, vso. H. L. Howe, m25jl City Recorder, The Laurnell Cash Market and Del icatessen will open here this week, the first delicatessen store ever established in the city. The store will occupy a remodelled building on Oak street op posite the First National Bank. A new ice machine has been installed and the place equipped with all the most mod ern containers and shelves for display of delicatessen ware. The new place will be managed bv Herman M. Saling. native of Weston and Bon-in-law of Mrs. M. P. Isenberg, pioneer of the valley. Mr. Saling is an experinced meat market man. He started in raising cattle. For a num ber of years he was engaged as a buver for Swift & Co. He has had experi ence in large packing plants and in the retail business. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Golf Coarse Surrey On Hood River golf tyros will soon be pairing for their first experience on the new links to be constructed on the 150-acre Oak Grove tanch place of Herman Pregge, purchased by the Hood Kiver Golf Club. The first course will be of nine holea. A contour sur vey of the ranch now under way by L. L. Newell will provide for the con- structon of 18 holes, and later the other nine fao.es will be developed. The location of the golf course has attracted much attention of apple blos som visitors here the past month. The grounds are declared ideal for the de velopment of fine links.- H. Chandler Egan, of Medford, ex-champion, has charge of laying out tbe course. Mr. and Mrs. Maaroe to Visit Europe Mr. and Mrs. William Munroe will leave next Monday for Washington, D. C, where they will spend a few days before proceeding to New York City, where on June 17 they will sail aboard the eteamer Lapland for Europe for a three months' vacation. Mrs. Munroe is retiring president of the Woman's Club and prominent in valley grange ana c:ub circles. Mr. ar.d Mrs. Munroe will visit Eng land and Scotland. They will spend some time at the childhood home of Mrs. Munron in Germany near the Swim border. They will visit portions of Switzerland and other European poir.ts lefore returning. Highway Construction, Hood River Coun ty, Oregon Sealed bids will be received by the County Court of Hood River County, Oregon, at the Court House in the City of Hood River, Hood River County, Oregon, at 10 o'clock a. m., on the 7th day of June, 1922, for construction work on a section of rosd beginning at the City limits on 12th Street and run ning South. The work involves ap proximately t mue or concrete pave merit, 16 feet wide, excepting 350 feet iflj feet wide over Indian Creek fill, and approximately 860 cu. yards dirt grad ing. No bid will be considered unless ac compamed by cash, bidder's bond or certined check for an amount equal to m ieasi nve per cent of the total amount 01 the bid. A corporate surety bond will be re quired lor the faithful performance of me contract in a sum equal to one-half or tne total amount of the bid. Plans, specifications, forms of con tract, proposal blanks (same as used by the State) and full information for bidders may.be obtained at th nffircnf County Clerk, Hood River, Oregon, upon the deposit of $5, which will be returned upon return of plans and specifications before bids are opened. The right is reserved to reiect any and all proposals or to accept the" pro posal or proposals deemed best for the County. By order of the County Court. ncm oQoemiKer. m25jl Clerk. J. D. McLUCAS CONTRACTOR Practical worker in Pt-ir,, Concrete, Brick an. I P!f ;r. Eieptiliss, tiraJ.ng, Etc. Hood Eirer, Orvg q. LENORE GREGORY TEACHER OF VIOLIN Eiirojn Training anI Eijrinr Call f-'atoHart at Owgon I (ntl, or a.lJr M;s Orfgory, t Hanrcck SU, PortUnl, Vrgoa. vis We will be glad to Bee you and your friends at any time at THE APPLE BLOSSOM CAFE Christian Cnorth Next Lordsday is the second mountain-top day in our summer program and it is to be a hiph'day. Oi' aim is to have 275 cresenL A. B. Clan, su perintendent We can do it if you help, l'rearhing at 11 a. m. Topic "God and My Neighbor." Tbe Mod ern Woodman and Koyal Neighbors are to be our guests of honor in a Meroori- a service for their dead neighbor. Christian Endeavor at 7 p. m. Tbe j Children's Day program at 8 p. m. j Come and hear the children in their 1 message. J. C Hanna, Tastor. j F.iJs F r Wool Sealed bids for forty 1 (40) crds of holy fir wood will be re-: eth-l l y School Dirt. No. 4. The wool it to I ,'iflive at the Barrett School ' by Nt-ft. 1st. All bi.ls mart be io not later it an Jane 10th. A. G. Wing, Clerk I't. N. 4. jl I STANDARD LUMBER CO. NOW OPERATING Anything can be had in the way of dimension timKro etc., on skort notice. Deliv eries will be made on orders of 3000 feet or more without ex tra charpe. Call us for any thing in the lumber line. HORN BROTHERS Phone ZZSl tl 1 tt the result 01 compkUyaporiiation m -" ..... .- i 1 It isn't gasoline that explodes in the cylinder of your car ana makes power. It's gas air, mixed in the car buretor with gasoline to form vapor. Red Crown gasoline vaporizes completely. It forms a homoge neous mixture with 12 to 16 times its volume of air. That mixture explodes cleanly and powerfully, leaving comparatively little car bon residue on valves, spark plugs and cylinder walls. That's why you get better mileage out . of "Red Crown" and a cleaner, sweeter-running engine. Fillatthe Red Crown sign at Standard Oil Service Stations, at garages and at other dealers. , STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) 5 llr 1 Gas Engine Surgeons Machinery, as well as men, grow old and wear out. Alan, when he feels himself slipping, seeks aid of his doctor or surgeon. The automobile owner goes to his machinest. . The gland specialist renews will give new youth to your cylinders. And why stop with your automobile engine. The cylinders of your spray engine, indeed, of any kind of a jsaou me engine, wm respond witn renewed vigor if you nave uiv cyiinuers auenaea to. the youth of men. ,Wre motor by reboring its General Blacksraithing, Springs and Piston Rings HOWELL BROS. FOURTH STREET Tel. 2551 THE BUSY DAYS These are the busiest days that orchardists experience -the early Spring, when Spraying and Cultivation de mand all the time of the man who grows Apples. Weath er circumstances have made the orchardist especially busy this year. - . If your time for shopping has been cut to the mini mum, let us help you with your meat ordering. A tele phone message to us will result in the preparation of the roast, the steak, lard, fish, etc., that you want. We are here to serve our rural patrons as well as those in town. WE WANT TO SATISFY The Hood River Market A. F. DAVENPORT, Prop. Phona4311 IIEIGHTSJ1TNEY Fare 15c each way Lee Heigliij al Hart Hold. Leare dowi lowi at Dectric FJlc&en. Other drivet at reasonable prices Office: Dectric Kitchen. Phone 1191 GEO. F. PTRANAHAN HI. 3715 M. 8I.AVEN Tel. u Stranahan & Slaven General Contractors and Builders HOOO RIVER. OREGON. Hood River Abstract Co. Real Estate and Insurance o Accurate Abstracting of Land Title ARTISTIC MEMORIALS of Original Design b Granite and Marble Write for IllOhtrtd Booklet Otto Schumann Granite and Marble WorRs East Third and Tine Street PORTLAND, ORE. OlOwt Monomot Mtoatkctnrer A. J. DERBY Lawyer WOOD RIVIR. CRieOH. n