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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1920)
SALVATION ARMY OPENS STATE RESCUE Our Grocery and Meat Shops ask that all telephone orders for the morning delivery in Hood River be in by 9 o'cloc" With the usual morning rush in a busy home there is only a few moments to spare in placing the order. A delay of five or ten minutes often causes trreal nM a th inoo e u LttU8es Kreal inconvenience and the loss of the chance to order often upsets the house wife's plans for the day. As nearly all of the resident telephones are on four-party Hnes we ask that everyone rfrain fron, unnecessary lengthy mversations between 8 and !) in the morning This will give each of the four parties on the line plenty of time to transact their business with the markets. HOME FOR UNFORTUNATE GIRLS OF OREGON Oregon-Washington Telephone Co. hh f , , II4.; ifi MOORE ELECTRIC CO. 406 OAK STREET AGENTS FOR Thor Electric Washers AND Royal Vacuum Cleaners The Cleaner you have been looking for Our terms for these household necessities are very liberal. Call and see. HOUSE WIRING THE LITTLE BEAR Specially Adapted for Orchard WorR Four Horse at the Draw Bar. Forty-Four (44) Inch Track. Fifty 1 50) Inch Wheel Base. Fifty (50) Inches High, over all. Turns in a Ten Foot Radius. Weighs only 1800 Lbs. All gears enclosed and kept dust-proof by a device used on no other Tractor. Roller Pinion: The spool is cut and machined from steel bar-the rollers and pins hardened. "Bennett" Air Cleaner is furnished to clean the air en tering the carburetor, keeping the cylinders and pistons free from grit and dust. Ford Motor and Tnmsmission used, which means you can ?el FORD parts for repairs. Time and money saved by this feature alone. FORD parts are cheap in price, high in quality and obtainable anywhere and everywhere. Cooling System: We do not use the Standard FORD Radiator Our own special cooling system does the work. 90'. of users of "Little Bear" Tractors do not consume over a quart of water a day in nine hours run. The Fenders are made sufficiently low and wide to pro tect the fruit and low lying limbs in the orchard. A wide platform, special hitch with swinging draw-bar for close-up work around trees and an electric light for night work are all included in the price of the Tractor. The "Little Bear" will work in the open field as well as in the orchard. PRICE $795.00 F. O. B. FACTORY The Transfer & Telephone 4111 for Demonstration ::.:::::.: " ' ii" Salvation Army Rescue Home and some of its babies The Salvation Army, as one of the btg features of its Home Service Program tor 1920, has taken over and opened tho White Shield home in Port land a3 a rescue and maternity home for unfortunate girls, it is a state wide home, where, under the most pleasant surroundings, with export medical care the young mother is helped to shape her life anew. Last year, in the west alone, 1948 girls turned from the nightmare of despair to such Salvation Army sar.ctuarie:i as this. Of these, 900 were returned to the h mea they left !u their shame and, through the offices of the Salvation Army workers, were weleomtd and their burdens lightened for them. The Portland home nursery now echois to the delighted cooing of more than a score of uabics whose mottiers are sheltered under its roof and taught how to go out into the world and win a clean living for herself and her baby. SALVATION ARMY MAKES MEN OF SOCIAL OUTCASTS Following a well known rule the Salvation Army, in its industrial homes, is taking the class of man who early finds his way to the poor house nd rehabilitates him, makes him over, gives him confidence in himself and turns him over to employment that enables him to sustain himself. The County Government makes 'ta down and outs" habitual indigents. It makes them a monthly allowance f money or goods for which it re quires no service. The Salvation Army takes the same man and gives him, not money, but work. It pays him money for his work, and renews in him the knowledge that conscious and directed effort is entitled to and will bring him commensurate return. It bathes him and wins him again to clean habit aud thought. It builds up hit strength and his morale until he is fit again for the fight with thi jrld. Then it finds him employment and sends him forth to work that he is fitted to do. Here in a nut shell is the story of the Salvation Army's Industrial Homes and the story of the Industrial Home in Portland, where scores of men from iil over the state have found themselves. SALVATION ARMY RESCUE WEEK MAY 1 TO MAY 10 Following the ineetiu,, of the ad visory board rep. eser.tatives in con vention in Portland March 17, John L. Ethertdge, appointed to the post of state president of the financial phase of the Home Service program of 1920, started to form his commit tees under county presidents through out the state. The dates of May 1 to May 10 were picked for the financial campaign to meet the budget of 2S4,u00 approved bv the convention, at whiah were representttives of nearly every county The neriod was designed as Rescue Week because all of the funds raised during the period will be devoted to the work of rescuing Uie poor from their poverty, the unfortunate and downfallen from their slough of de spond and the girl mothers; from their betrayal. The work is carried OD among peo pie in all walks of life, among chil dren, among young men and young women wlo have fallen behind In the race of life, among old men and old women wl ose years are drbwing to a close. The work of the army Is always constructive. Throughout forty years of work ii the slums of larger cities the organization has developed lines of service that no other organization would or could enter upon. TRANSFERS OF REAL ESTATE (By Hood River Abstract & Inv Co.) August C. Hageman and wife to Ho mer A. Kogers ana wire, tract near Parkdale. C.E. Swanson and wife to (Just Holm and wife. blk. 3 in Leavens' Heights, adjoining Cascade Locks, also a trian gular tract lying south of said blk 3. united Brethren church to C R. Bone and wife, lot 7 blk. 19, Hood River proper. Pearl I,. Coryell Havener and hus band, to Martha A. Douglas, lot 51, ilk. 3, Stianahan's 2nd add. Martha A. Douglas to M. O. Down ing and J. 1. downing, lot Di blk. 6, Stranahan s 2nd add. J. T. Coit and wife to W. S. Dowd, 32.9 acres in Parkdale. May E. Simons and husband to Arvo Hukari and Wm. T. Hukari, 40 acres. together with tools, machinery and live stock. Oak Grove. Thomas W. Smith and wife to Edith M. Wallace, 5 acres in Barrett. Wm. J. Cederson and wife to R. B. Cunliff, 8.54 acres. Dee. Just Little Stories It almost came to pass one day last week that a popular traveling sales man of Portland, who makes the mid- Columbia towns by automobile, was forced to seek bail from friends. The visiting commercial traveler was pok ing fun at the new concrete monu ments, just placed in the center of business street intersections. The im pediments, about 40 inches high and of solid concrete imbedded in the harcUur faced streets, form a serious danger to 1 the nighttime driving of strangers in I the city, according to the visitor. 'What are those things down the street there, asked the C. T. of man ne met on leaving a store point ing as he asked the question to ane of the big cones. 1 hat s a silent cop, was the reply. "Cop, thunder," quoth the C. T., "I j knew cops were solid on top, but never ! heard of 'em being solid all the way down. And then the fireworks began. The C T. had addressed a town officer who doesn't wear a uniform. The C. T. ar gued that the city would probably. have to stand a damage suit in case anybody ran into one of the concrete cones and damaged his car. The officer gave warning that he would arrest ariv mo torist who ran into one of the silent coE?- . The C. I. in a "TM mortem of the incident declared that police officers of small towns should be required to wear uniforms. everybody slept soundly. Then he went to the barn and securing an old pan that had been used to water chick ens got gas to drive him to town. The Collies probably do not kr.uw yet that their gal tank was tipped. "Then 1 thought 1 bad better slop in town for more gas, " says Mr. Scott. "I visited a sales place and found the night man on his back snoring beauti fully. 1 considered that it would be a 1 shame to disturb so perfect a sleep, and I helped myself. It makes things merry to get caught out after mid night without any gas. A fellow just naturally cusses himself. Clipped Here and There 444444444444444444444444 They are saying that the cigaret must go the path of the dodo and that, mayhap, the entire brood of Nicotina shall accompay the pale paper cylinder of the corner lounger at the after din ner orator. If it is kismet, well and good- but in the meanwhile incidents such as the recent affair at Aurora, III., most ineptly handled, will go far toward delaying the day when the "coffin nail" no longer is driven. There is a young women's seminary at Aurora, with a clientele of just such 1 girls as prevail in normsl, sensible, even-paced America. Girls with a I giggle or two in their systems, no doubt, and fondness for pranking and a delicious delight in breaking rules to see the fragments fly. The seminary superintendent, when she discovered that certain of her youthfnl wards were smoking surreptitious cigrtes, was horrified to such an ex'ent that four of the naughty misses were sent home in disgrace. There isn't anything to be said for the cigaret, as applied to higher learn ing in a modest sectarian seminary not a syllable of excusal nor condon ment. But there is less to be uttered in praise of the prudiahess which se verely penalized four girls for their prank, and thus perpetuated a tradition that to smoke on the sly is essentially wicked snd therefore delightful. As a matter of fact, it is ordinarily produc tive of nausea and headache Prohibition of alcoholic drink was retarded many years by reason of the ultra-virtuous attitude of its propon ent, whose sBDgthened Puritanical faces drove from their cause the re cruits essential Id victory. When the idea grew, of its own accord, that it was the effect and not the act that was pernicious and wicked, the legions of common sense arose and SJnote John Barleycorn to such purpose that he perished utterly or almost. Reform ers would do well to sjatern their cam paigns thereby. The Oregonian. The other night R. E. Scott, accom panied by his wife and parents, at tended a card party on the East Side. The party lasted until after midnight. The MM were on the way home, and the car was busxing along up the grade at the Maxwelton orchard when suddenly it sputtered and died. Aa elimination showed an emrty gas Unk. Mr. Scott scratched JOB PRINTING AT THE GLACIER OFFICE j l'W'S&Z"? ,iS. iS The quick action of simple glycerine hnckthorn bark, etc., as mixed in Adler, i-ka, m sarftritfaf. Owe spooalul re lieve ANY CAME gas on stomach or soar stomach. Adler i ka acta on BOTH upper and lower bnwel and re move all loo I accumulated matter whir poisoned staanarh Often C I H 1 - -on t 1 not ion Presents appendicitis his head r,e ladv report sh has no more nam Colli in back ol head or ess 011 stomach since using Adler-i-ka. A. 8 Keir, druggist. H I MAKING Si ill I r" ' 0mK ' il GIVE WHAT YOU FEEL ABLE TO GIVE ill TO HELP 11 The Salvation Army 1 Home Service Campaign j May 1st to 10th Hood River's Quota State of Oregon's Quota $3,000 $285,000 HELP A GREAT WORK ALONG I The Money Stays in Oregon For Oregon's Benefit For Oregon's Good WILL YOU FORGET P YOU WILL NOT! Ijj! THE BISHOP SCOTT P , , USED CAR BARGAINS 1 916 Ford Touring $250.00 1916 Maxwell Roadster 1918 Maxwell Touring 1918 490 Chevrolet - 400.00 600.00 575.00 1919 Baby Grand Chevrolet 975.00 1917 Six Cylinder Velie 780.60 1918 Chandler Touring - 1400.00 BENNETT BROTHERS Phone 1501 ? s t