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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 25, 1919)
9 HOOD RIVER GLACIER. TIU'RSDA Y. DECEMBER 2;,. 113 ODELL Clifford Haron, of Alexander, Iowa, arrived in (AMI Monday. He will visit j tt the home (f L. C. Weinheimer. A J H. VVeiiihetmer ar.d Willis Sheitb r. ar.d t Mrs. Josttyb ;-re:rbon. j O. H. Khn-k went to Portland Mon-1 day. He will s'i,d the holiday eason visiting his sisters. Mrs. J. L. ilendon mid Mrs. Jas. MoKurlane. Mrs. J. H. Etgert ard son, Fred, ex pert to tper.d a Dart of the holidays visiting Mrs. Kggert's sisters in Port land. They will also visit Elmer Kg gert, who for the past year has been with the Eggert Young oe Co., of Portland. Curtis Gould is at home from O. A. C. for the Christmas vacation, accom panied by his friend, Mr. Francisco, of San Bernardino, Calif., who is also an O. A. C. student. A special meeting of the Grange will be held Monoav nignt. r.lectioii or officers and such other business as is necessary will be considered at this time. Born To Mr. and Mis. Lee Allen, Saturday, leceniber 20, a son. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tompkins and daughter, Dorothy, have gone to Ma cleay. Ore., where they were called by the death of Mr. Tompkins' brolher-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Asilell and their small daughter are enjoying a holiday visit with relatives in Califor nia. H. S. Caughey has gone to San Diego, Calif., where his wife arul little daughter have been spending the past few months. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Miller.with their j trein recently states that they are youngest daughter, have gone to Los Roving their visit to Montebello, Angeles, Calif., for the winter. Calif., very much. They are picking Mrs. E. H. Harris, who is in Port- oranges from the trees which at this land for the winter, Buffered from a time carry sweet scented blossoms, lacerated hand which was drawn into a grten and ripe fruit, power wringer recently. Several stitch-j Mr. ad Mrs. Geo. VV. Mathews are es were necessary and the injury proved j )l.njinK 8me time in Portland, having quite serious. J ol;e tnere the first of the week. Mr. A party of surveyors engaged in sur- and Mrs. F. J. Engleke returned Thurs veving for the Loop Highway, expect day from a visit in Portland, to make their headquarters at OJell j jhn (). Beldin was a business visitor after the last of the week. Pievious i ;n iwrland connl of davs last week. to this time they have been surveying in the vicinity of Parkdale. Miss Alice Clark is now with Slocom & Cantield. Mrs. Yeates has pone to Fossil for the holidays, Miss l.ila Chase spends the holidays in Corvallis, Miss liukari at the home of her parents in Uak drove and Miss Jones in Hood Kiver. School closed Friday at the Grammar school. Next Sunday at the Methodist church, Sunday school at 10 a. m. ; E worth League at 7.30 p. m. ; and church service at 8 p. m. At the morning church service Kev. E. C. Newham will preach Christmas sermon and siecial Christmas music will be given by the male quartet. Mrs. L. C. Weinheinier will lead the League meet ing with the subject, "How to make next year better than this one." New Year's eve will be a big event at the Methodist church. The Ladies Aid Society will serve an old fashioned baked bean supper at fifty cents a plate, from G to 8 p. m. The Epworth League will give a program of music, readings, etc., from K.itt) to 10 p. m., and a social from 10 to 11.30 p. in.. Following this Kev. E. C. Newham will conduct a New Year's watch night service that will end exactly at mid night, when the year KttO will be greeted. The Methodist Sunday school gave its Christinas entertainment at the church last evening. The auditorium was embellished with a Christmas tree and other seasonable decorations, and a program of music, recitations and addresses was rendered. Over 150 pu pils of the school were remembered with packuges of candy and nuts. The Ladies Aid Society of the Meth odist church held its annual bazaar at the church last Saturday. Despite the fact that this affair had been postponed on account of the weather and that the supper was omitted, the society cleared $1(H in the few afternoons that marked the duration of the event. The regular hours of service will be observed. PINE GROVE On New Years afternoon from 2 until 4 o'clock the Sunday-school will give a children's party at the church. All the children of the neighborhood are invited to attend. Mr. and Mrs. .. J. Andrews left Monday night for Spokane for an ex tended visit w ith Mrs. Chas. Ham. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Lage spent several days in Portland last week. Miss Ida Turney, of LI. of ()., is spending her holiday vacation with her sister, Mrs. P. 11. Laraw ay. Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Laraway enter tained at dinner Saturday evening in honor of the sixteenth birthday of their daughter, Ada. It is reported that C. K. Benton has sold his home ranch to Clyde Cochran and plans to move to his Barrett ranch in the spring, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Maas, of Goble, are spending the holidays at J. E. Mal ay's. Mrs. Joe (Yzad returned Sunday from two weeks' visit in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Pooley and sons left last week for Palrn Beach, Fla A little son was born Monday morn ing to Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miller. Miss Anna Krussow came from the normal school at Ellensburg, Wash., Sunday evening to spend the holidays at home. Lavona Peterson has been the guest of Myrtle Jarvis this week. Ned Van Horn spent last Sunday in Portland with his parents. He reports Mr. Van Horn a little better. MOUNT HOOD. Merry Christmas ! Miss Cloy Smith went to Hood River Tuesday to take the teachers' examin ation. Miss Merle Narver substituted in Miss Smith's room during her ab sence. Wrn. Manna had a tire eiulv last Tuesday morning. The fire caught from the fire place and burned ijuite a hole in the Moor beforeit.was discov ered by Mr. Hendricks. " Neighbors were called and soon had it under con trol. E. C. Miller was a Hood River visit or one day last week. Wm. Manna was a Portland visitor last week, going there to purchase a bobsled. Misses Gladys and Blanche Auhert arrived home Wednesday from Mon mouth for the holiday .vacation. ' Mrs. A. C. Jordan and daughters, Viola and Vera, left Monday for Seat tle to spend Christmas with relatives. C. W. Clark was a Hood River visit or Thunduy, C.- v. Mtehel and son, Cecil, and holly wreaths. The First National se Miss Mabel Lott went to Hood River I cured some exceptionlly fine wreaths Wednesday, returning home Thursday. ' for decoration. Trie regular church services were held h3re Sunday Burning by the pas tor. Kev. benthin. Vm Malwd Narver and family went to Hood Kiver Mor.day to upend the; Christmas vacation. J. C. 8!id W. 0. B. Davidson made veral trips to Hod R.ver last week, haulinu- freiirht for. the Mount Hood store. The Christmas prceram was given at the church Saturday evening to a large audience. Under the able supervision f Mrs. Natver the program was ry Ae:l rendered. HOSIER. The present stormv condition, makes the su.-uensionof all work on the High way compulsory. A good many of the employes, together with some of the. foremen, have eone to spend tee Ron-, ja)8 wlttl relatives at different places. Much trouble is being experienced, by tow n and country tieople alike w ith tne condition of water supplies, frozen , pipes, etc. No way out but to wait for i moderation and a thaw, then w ill come : the Hood. ! At a rcial meeting of the school board Tuesday afternoon it was decided not to hold school sessions until the tir-t Monday after Christmas, when it j is hoped the weather conditions will be j more favorable. It is impossible at pr t Kent to have school because of f roz-; en w ater pipes. ' There is much activity now in the i way of removing burdens from snow ! laden roofs. No damage as yet has i been reported from rave ins. tVYini rocfivt'it from Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Strauss attended to business in Portland a few days last week. Miss May Shogren was a passenger to Poitland Thursday'afterncon. . ,,, Mrs. C. G7 Nichol went to Hood Kiv er Thursday. . . ...... .. Lamb and J. Hads were'attending to business in The Dalles Thursday. Mrs. J. W. Yonish was in Hood Kiver Thursday. :; ' - i ..; Mrs. Jno.O. Beldin and children were in IJood Kiver Friday. Mrs. C. G. Nichol, accompanied by her daughter, Mildred, and Misses Ruth Higley and Thelma Johnson, was shopping in Hood River Thursday. Mark A. Mayer spent the week end in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Shinn and little daughter, Mary Josephine, are spend ing the Christmas holidays in Corvallis and Portland with relatives. P. A. Knoll left Friday for a visit in Portland and Seattle. The American Legion has secured an orchestra from The Dalles to play for the dance to be given.'.by them on New Years Eve. As the dance is to be held in the packing house on the M. & A. Shogren ranch there will be plentv of room for all who come. All are welcome and it is hoped to have ar even better dance than the one on Armistice Day. The Mosier Valley Bank received a large box of holly Pent with the com pliments of the officers of Ladd & Til ton Bank, Portland. It has been used to decorate the banking room and give it a Christmas like appearance. VV. E. Huskey visited his daughter. Miss Florence, at the hospital in The Dalles Friday. We are pleased to report Mrs. Hattie V.. Bailey as improving very satisfac torily at the hospital in The Dulles, where nhe recently underwent a seri ous operation. She is now able to be up and move about the room for short periods, and hopes to be allowed to return home in about two weeks. Messrs. Hennett and lernll were transacting business in The Dalles Saturday. Someone tied a horse by hitch chain to the big electric and telephone pole at the postofhee Saturday afternoon, and owing to the wet w-eather the chain evidently served as a conductor, bringing the current down the pole and shocking the horse, which caused him to fairly dance a jig around the place before he broke loose. The wires were broken, burning out the trans former, which caused an explosion like a rifle report. The consequences were that the town was cut off from long distance telephone connection and also left completely in darkness. VV. E. Chown and family are spend ing Christmas with Mr. Chown's par ents. Mrs, Mary Chatfield, of Portland, is spending the holidays here with her son, R. I). Chatfield, und family. H. M. Parry left recently for Pasa dena, Calif., to spend the winter. A Merry Christinas and a Happ New Year to all ! Family Reunion at Stranahan's But for the delay of Lieut. Roy F. Dean, w ho has just been mustered out at Washington, D. C, after nearly two years' service, the family circle would lie complete at a reunion to be held here today at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Stranahan. Mrs. Dean, who is en'route here with her husband, is a sister of Mrs Stranahan. Other guests who will be present are: Mrs. Stranahan's sister, Mrs. Chas. Lamm, and three children, of Sedalia, Mo.; her sister, Mrs. C. C. Currin, and hus band, of Portland, and her mother, Mrs. C. M. Fowler, and brother, J, S. Fowler, and wife, of Rufus. Lieut. Dean on entering service was manager of the P. P. & L. Co. at 1'omeroy, Wash. Mt. Hood Line is Open While 'the line of the Mt. Hood R. R. Co. has been opened all week, no new loadings of apples v II be made until next week. The company has been busy clearing the congestion of freight accumulating when the deep snow came and tied up traffic. While the Apple Growers Association is not receiving apples at local shipping sta tions, conditions of roads would limit deliveries if no ban were on. Deliver ies .will probably not begin, it is said, before the first of the year. Banks Are Decorated The banks have been handsomely dec orated the past several days with wreaths of holly. The Butler Bank received yuletide greetings from its Portland correspondent, the Ladd & ITillon Hank, in the form of hard uZ-F0t!3TH WORLD'S WOMEN IN CHINA Seventy Per Cent. Employees in Shanghai Cotton Mills Wom en and Children Working Twelve Hour Shifts. One-fourth of the women In the world are "IdDese 2W.WKU.mi of them. They are going Into industry in large Lumbers to work long hour and for little money. In -Shanttial, for Instance, seventy per cent, of the employees In the cottou mills are women and children. Working hours for spinners are from ix In the morning until six at night and from sis at ulglit until six in the morning. Weavers work from 5 :"0 In the morning until seven at night and the wages are from ten to twenty cents a day. Hundreds of women are em ployed in silk filature mills, standing hour after hour washing cocoons In ba-ilns of boiling water In the ei eesoltely hot rooms necessary for apartments where tine silk is spun. In Canton alone, there are l.VUM women In factories at a maximum wae of forty cents a day for women and of fifteen cpihs a day for girls. As part of Its program of world service for women the National Young Women's Christian Association Is ex pecting to put on Its staff of sec retaries In China au expert on In dustrial conditions who will develop social work in factories, and work to Improve conditions for women em ployees. This work will include the Introduction of recreation and social life among the workers and of health lectures and educational (hisses. Y. W. C. A. STUDENTS TEACHING IN CHINA Physical Training School Main tained in Shanghai. The vnst majority of Chinese men remember their mothers us cripples. Many a girl wanders Into n mission school who has uot had her own feet hound, but has never seen n woman of her ow n class who could walk, and, therefore, she walks In a most ungain ly fashion scarcely conscious of her nniurnl feet. The Chinese Medical Association an Association composed only of Chi nese physicians mostly graduates from American nnd English Institutions have nsked the entire educated commu nity of Hie country to co-operate in better health for the children of Chi na. All the Mission Boards operating In China felt that one of the greatest contributions the Young Women's Christian Association could offer to the health of China would be to es tablish a normal school for the train ing of ph steal directors. Accordingly, In Shanghai, which Is the greatest port In China, the nation al committee established such a school In l!Mf. The school has won favor with all educationists, both missionary and government. There have already been nine graduates from this school. Miss Ying Mel Chun, a graduate of the Wellesley School of i'hysicnl Edu cation, has been donn of the school. Graduates of the school are scattered from Canton (o Peking, teaching with conspicuous success in twelve mission and government schools. JAPANESE DOCTOR IS OF(-tAL. Y. W. C. A. Dr. Tomo Inouye of 'IV.kyo, Japan, treasurer of the National ( 'on.mittee of ho Young Women's Christian Asso ciation in Japan. Dr. Inouye has been Dr. Tomo Inouys of Tokyo, Japan, a delegate to the Six-week International Conference of Women Physiciant called by the Y. Vr". C. A. particularly Interested In the piddle health mid recreational plans of her j city for some time and Is medical I inspector for girls In the public schools I "f Tokyo, as also In several private schools In the city. There are ap- proximately ."(H) women physicians in Japan now, she says, and 400 women I medical students. Dr. Inouye was the only delegate from Jnpnn to the Y. VV. A. International Conference of Wo j men Physicians, in session during Sep tember and October. Brazeau Buys Home Hood River folk, in order to find liv ing quarters, have to buy property. For two weeks I.. F. Brazeau has been 1 trying to lease, rent or buy a home. The quarters he was occupying were sold to G. A. Molden, whose own home I had been sold by the landlord to L. L. ! Pierson. While Mr. Brazeau, who the first of the week bought a bungalow : on the Heights from Bert Stranahan, j was trying to locate a place towhich : he could move, a chain of six familias, all ready to get new places, were be ing held back. When he got out mov j jng vans were kept busy. (US. COON TELLS OF ERLY WEATHER Mrs. T. R. Coon, historian of the Ho d River Pioneer Society, says that 1 ;he winter of lsl-t2 set a record for ; Oti gon, although it was not as colli . du;ir,g December, lMd. as durirg the ;rsent month. Mrs. Coon has given! iht (ullowirg temperatures for the pio-! :er severe winter, copied from the iary kept by the family of Nathaniel! Cve. Hood River's earliest settler : I December 21, latl, 14 degrees above ' itro; January 16, 62, 24 degrees be-; low zero; January 17, zl degrees below zero; January HO, : degrees below zer . Durirg that winter famine threat ened early settler of the valley and L. A. Turner and William I'dell. pioneer settlers, both of whum are now dead, walked to The Dalles on the Columbia riv-.-r, solidly frozen over, returning ilr; wing tluur and other supplies on na.,usleds. : 1 MR. PRATHER TELLS j OE COLDER WEATHER' Geo. T. Prather is authority for the statement that the low temperature of the recert cold weather did not break the recoid of 1S4. "That ear," says Mr. Prather, "the irr.undheg saw his shadow in Hood Kiver, and the week before St. Valen ui e's day we were all but frozen out. it reached 25 degrees below zero at the city level here. With an Indian helper 1 cut several tons of ice, 16 inches thick, from Hood liver. The river was frozen between the O.-W. R. & N. bridge and the old county bridge. Oth er Indians cut a hole in the ice m-ar where we worked ami speared many salmon trout through it." Mr. Prather says the winter of 1887 was verv cold. He was postmaster then, and the mail was carried across the river from here to W hite Salmon. The carrier, Giant Evans, made the trip on the ice. r tequently he had to jump from h'oe to floe. "One day," Mr. Plainer says, "Mr. Evans was lost the most of a day. In en suing the Columbia w ith his mail s.k it, he became marooned on a big ice flue and Coated several miles down sprain before he could reach shore." (hinooks A silver thaw prevailed over the mid-Columbia Friday nigth. A steady rai'i fell throughout the night, a, large I portion of the precipitation freizing as jit struck trees, power and telephone I lines and the snow blanket's surface, j alicady heavily crusted. The rain eon j til. ued Saturday, but the temperature I v, as above freezing. While the earth ai ! all objects above it were solidly i encased in ice, a thaw began before the deposit was heavy enough to cause damaged fruit trees. Wires of tele phone and power companies resembled strands of silver. Even the leaves that remained on oak trees wtre encased with the silver crust, and when one happened to be come dislodged its fall in no wise re sembled the tossing and whirling of which autumnt.nie poets are fond of w riting. Heavy as a bullet it dropped like a plumb, bringing with it all other irozrn foliage on lower limbs. The rain and thawing snow turned scores of basements i.do chambers of horror. Water, backed up on roofs, leaked through, ami water pipes, cracked by the frost, thawed out and iiffjan to spout streams. Indeed, Hood !!ier was like unto glacial fields on Mount Hood on a July day. 1 o permit passengers to get break fast at hotels anil restaurants, O.-W K. k N. train No. 11, westbound from Sp ikane to Portland ami ordinarily due in Portland for breakfast, has been .-topped here the pat week about 80 minutes each mornii g. The train was crow Jed with hungry pa sengers Tues ila,.'. Local eating places were taxed to feed the hungry multitudes, and son-e had to wait for sec.oi.il tables. 'lie last to get their short orders liihd were just poking down the re maining crumbs of hot cakes and the last drops of coffee when the locomo tive whistled a warning and the con ductor shouted "Bo-o-a-a-r-r-rd !" For an ordinary speed of pedestrians, the grades, pome of them snowcovered, leading from the business district dowu to the passenger station, are easily negotiated. But Tuesday some of the tardy passengers gained momentum as they tied trainward, slipped in snow slush and made the grades on back bones or seated. With the weather warmed to a point where out of door exercise was a pleasure, Hood River folk, adults as well as children, got their fill of coast ing last week. The city council adopted a ruling prohibiting vehicle traffic on State and Ninth streets dur ing the hours of 5 and 10 p. m., and the steep treets during these hours were lined with fleers and big bob sleds. Some of the big sleds carried frcm 12 to 15 passengers and they attained express speed down the long slopes. Spills were frequent when curves were reached. Some of the larger sleds traveled from the corner of Eugene and Ninth streets to the centre of the new con crete bridge. Residents of the Upper Valley, here laFt week, tell of a strenuous trip made by F. L. Rosebrough, a homesteader, whose nlace is at the edge of the na tional forest and one of the most re mole ranches of the district. When the storm came on, Mr. Rosebrough made preparations to move out. He started out in one of the heaviest snow storms the district has ever experi- i enceti, and he and his team, blinded by I the mow, had difficulty in keeping the road. Mr. Rosebrough after 12 hours I of buffeting had made three miles He finally left his team and walking to neighbors' secured help to return and dig out the horses. After an interruption of about a day the line of the Pacific Power & Light Co., supplying the Upper Valley was repaired Monday. The line was broken near the Mount Hood school by a fall ing limb. Falling limbs and the weight of snow on service connections caused interruptions in a number of rural com munities. Manager Law, however, says that trouble has been remarkably small for the weather conditions. The interruption of telephone ser vice was remarkably small also. One of Hood River's veteran oak trees helped prevent a fuel famine here. The big tree, standing on State street back of the residence property of P. S. Davidson, was turned into three cords of fine wood. The tree was sacrificed because it was about dead. A crew was just beginning to fell an cak in front of the Methodist "church when the pastor, D. M. Helmick, inter- . poued. lold that the tree was dying I Mr. Helmick replied that it had a fair PENNY WISE-POUND FOOLISH There are very few power sprayers that will not do some sort of spraying, BUT any cheaply made old combination of a pump and gasoline engine, even at bargain prices, cost you more than m THE HARDIE KVU il it a vlrxTi Operating costs and the loss from ineffective spraying more than pay the differe.ice. But the worst of it is that this loss con tinues each year. Come and see these rapid working, effective Hardie Sprayers; see their freedom from complications that hinder and delay; see their time and labor saving devices that are part of them; then you too will see that it is better to pay for a Hardie and have it than to continue to pay the price in fruit and time losses yearly and not possess it. The new Hardie, with Axh horse power engine, improved Big Three Triplex pump and two Hardie guns gives the maximum of efficiency and reserve power. ORDER YOUR HARDIE NOW Gilbert Motor Car Company HOOD RIVER, OREGON crop of leaves last September when he came here. Mr. Helmick, who visited! Mayor Scobee and secured a reprieve : for the oak, said : I "I want it to die a natural death." i Fuel conservation was hard on print- i ing establishments. Printer's ink, like molasses, gets motionless in cold weather. With buildines rendered cold by the frigid weather and allowed to remain at low temperature as a result i of lack of a full supply of fuel, unusu j al measures were necessary. j In the Glacier office electric hot I plates, were set under each press in order that the ink might, be warmed. Compositors worked in their coats and wealing toboggan caps. J. M. Culbertson takes exception to the weather bureau's recording ther mometer's temperature. Mr. Culbert son, too, has a thermometer that en ables him to tell his friends how cold it got the night before without getting out on the hack porch in his pajamas. While Mr. Child's" thermometer regis tered 24J degrees belwo zero Mr. Cul bertson 's showed on'y 12 degrees. Maybe it was n good, warmblooded Democratic thermometry. A coil in a range at the Hicks res-: taurant exploded during the cold spell. Patrons were unable to get their usual ; lunch. Short orders, however, were i served. Kenneth Hicks has added to j his accomplishments. No plumbers j were available. The versatile young j man found the right length of pipe. ; threaded it himself and repaired the; range. This all done, he sat down and . played, "It's a Hot Time in the Old Town Tonight," on his banjo. . The recent low temperature caused frost to penetrate the earth to a record depth. Although a snow blanket cov ered the earth, water pipes, running a foot beneath sidewalks, were frozen, j Plumbers remain busy. Scores of I outside fauuets and lawn hydrants, j burst by the freeze, are now beginning i to thaw and spout geysers. The frost pictures painted on store windows and those of everv household j were things of beauty. We now know w here the womenfolk, who make such i beaut'ful designs in embroidery or lace, plying their needles and bobbins, get thtir desiuns. The E. A. - Franz Co. last week re sumed deliveries by motor truck. The bed of the car has been weighted with spools (if barbed wire. Thus, given plenty of traction, the commercial ear plows through the snow-covered streets without trouble. Citizen meeting tdumber who car ries water pipes and tools "Still at it, eh?" Plumber-"Yeh. Won't he through till next Fourth of July." E. R. Moller helped feed the multi tudes over the cold spell. He drove in on his bobsled last week with a load of fat hogB. Mrs. It. W. Caldwell is Dead The body of Mrs. R. W. Caldwell, who died in Portland Monday from an operation for removal of a goitre, w ill be brought here for funeral services and interment. Mrs. Caldwell came here from Vancouver, B. C, year be fore last with her husband and small daughter, residing for a short time be fore going to Portland. Mr. Caldwell came here to develop West Side orch ard land. Funeral services Vvill be held Friday afternoon at Riverside church, Rev. Boddy officiating. LWi, -V Si V it- V ir j tS$.: IHr Wish tlmt A Incorporated BG HO On a half carload of Pianos and part of a car of Phonographs which were ordered before the last advance. We have some of the best Standard makes in PLAYER PI ANOS, at a saving to yon of at least $50.00, and alno some of the latest designed Straight Pianos at almost what you would have paid a year ago. Also the very best makes of PHONOGRAPHS and a few of the famous BRUNSWICK at prices less than you would have to pay in Portland today; in fact, a saving on some of these models of from $15 to $25. These lower prices do not apply on the ones that are arriving now you will never see them again on any Standard Phonograph - but they apply to those we had on hand before the prices advanced this last time. On these, of course, we will give the public the advantage of these former prices as long as tire instruments last. Come in, and let us demonstrate the one Perfect Machine that plays any and all makes of records without having to fuss around with two or three dilTerent reproducers, chang ing them for different records, and so forth. All yon have to do with a Brunswick to play your favorite record is to turn the reproducer over and you are all ready to entertain your friends. Come and hear them; it will cost you nothing to compare machines. Reed -French Piano Co. Latest Columbia Records- Everything in Music J. P. DARNALL, Local Agent Telephone 1212 Hood River, Oregon Rubber Stamps jfygjctgw;-wr.aag-fliagaama - lsf -. 5 J (Dvx auft All Hrry G7 I L1DAY SALE AT THE GLACIER OFFICE