HOOD RIVER GLACIER, THURSDAY, APRIL U, 1921 o THE NEW United States Disc "SJ.P;11 Sf7Ccd Indicator Jo delight the Operator." Separator Bell i ho Aew Speed Indicator attached to the Crank is a sim ple device, cannot get out of order and assists in maintaining the slow speed (only42 turns per minute for tie larger sizes) without over exert ion on the part of t he operator. Tin: ringi while tpeedinf up the separator, .ut steps ringing when the required speed has Dew reached, also when crank is released. Many ot her improvements notably the perfected and simplified bowl with interchangeable, unnumbered discs are found in the New United States Cream Separator. Dairymen are invited to inspect and learn all abont this wonderful machine. Come and see KELLY BROS. CO., Inc. HOOD RIVER, ORE. 211 I i We offer QUALITY, SERVICE and GOOD WILL Our meats and groceries are of the best Phone your orders to SANITARY MARKET & GROCERY HOLMAN & SAMUEL Phone 1811 I " ill' BRUSH BURNERS to care for your prunings. Can now supply a limited number of these. Do not wait too late to have your old sprayer equipped with a CUSHMAN GAS ENGINE. Get power enough to operate your pump efficiently and break up your liquid in a fine spray. NOW is the time to have your FARM IMPLEMENTS repaired. Don't wait till the last moment. HOWELL BROTHERS Fourth and Columbia treets CLEAN ALLEYS Bowl and Be Healthy CLEAN GAME 410 OAK STREET Phone 1282 TUES. 7:45 Busncss Men's League. THURS. 7:45 Women's League WED. 7:45 Mercantile League. I RI. 7:45 Valley League Open 10:30 a. m. -12 p. m. Closed Sundays. LADIES W BLOOM B AT ANY TIME. Health ! 6 TOURNAMENT ALLEYS-: 6 E. E. HOISE C. J. KRUSE, Fun! CANNED CULL APPLES BRING TOP PRICES How the cull apples of the Faci'c Northwest, just as good in flavor as the extra fancy grades which are taken because of the color, size and shape, may be marketed to the world trade is explained by Gordon C. Corbalev', mar keting expert with the recently organ ized . Oregon-Washington tanning v Preserving Company, the 110,000,000 merger 01 the canning interests of western Oregon and western Washing ton which expects to be functioning by the opening of the forthcoming can ning season. "Virtually all the pies sold by baker ies and restaurants in the United States are made from canned apples," said Mr. Corbaley. "There is no rea son for using the finest grade of apples in these canned apples, just so they have the flavor and are free from dis ease. The bakers find it an economic advantage to buy canned apples be cause they do not have to pare them if they buy the canned product which is already pared. "Oregon and Washington apples al ready have a good name all over the world. The Pacific Northwest has al ready tried out introducing its canned apples and, with a good but limited marketing system behind this product, it was found possible to sell in carload lots to the eastern trade last season and to get a price based purely on quality. Canned apples were shipped last season to West Virginia, Florida and Connecticut and in carload lota to Cleveland and Indiana. ' These apples commanded a price of $5.20 a dozen cans, f. o. b. Pacific coast ! points. Yet they were sold in direct i competition with New York canned apples at a price of $3.50 to $3. 75 a i dozen cans, f. o. b. New York. That meant we were able to sell on a basis of quality. It is on quality that we intend to carry our marketing for all Oregon Washington products to the nation. Mr. Corbaley also told how jams made in the Pacihc Northwest had been sold in the Everglades of Florida for delivery in Dayton, Ohio. "Salesmen for a well established Pacific Northwest organization," he said, "had been working on a pretty wide scale in the east and south. They sold last year six carloads, that is 180, 000 jars, of jams in Florida alone. The people of the south especially relish jams and cannot get their own, because their fruits have not the necessary punch to give the necessary punch for jam purposes. these salesmen had found a good sale for jams in the groc ery store which have cropped up along the tourist routes through the Ever glades of Florida. "One day, while one of the salesmen was present, a business man of Day ton, Ohio, who was touring the Ever glades, stepped into a grocery store and asked where he could get a cer tain loganberry jam, a jar of which he held In his hand. The upshot was that he ordered four cases sent to his home at Dayton. That man had never heard Of loganberry products until he reached the Everglades. " Churchill Will Not Intercede J. A. Churchill, state superintendent of education, in response to a petition from citizens of Cascade Locks, who asked that he intercede in the case of J. H. Dunn, recently reinstated as principal of the Cascade Locks school, following his acquittal by a jury here of a statutory charge, has written the petitioners that sole authority in the mater of appointing a principal rests with the Cascade Locks school board. Mr. Churchill states that the law gives no authority either to himself or to the county school superintendent. "If the people of the district are not j satisfied with the management of i school affairs by the members of the school board," writes Mr. Churchill, "then the qualified electors of that dis trict have their remedy only at the time of election for school directors in June. While 1 deplore, very much, the i situation at Cascade Locks, and would j be quite willing to assume responsibil- ! ity there, provided 1 had any author-! i ity, 1 do not have any authority, and i sholud 1 go there for the purpose of making an investigation, 1 would only ' further aggravate an acute situation, ' and nothing could possibly be accom- ; pished. " Ferry Street Case Reversed Because the resolution of the city J council, in appointing viewers to inves tigate two streets connecting the bus- I inefrg district with the Columbia river, failed to mention that viewers were i freeholders, the supreme court has re versed and remanded the case of Mrs. E. E. Chapman versus the city. The plaintiff asked for a writ of review in ! circuit court, her petition having been denied. The city planned on opening the street to the water front in order to provide a thoroughfare to and from the landing of the Hood Kiver-Under- wood Ferry Co. "NO W-A-DA says the Good Judge A man can get a 'heap mor 2 satisfaction from a small chew of this class of tobacco, than he ever could get from a big chew of the old kind. He finds it costs less, too. The good tobacco taste lasts so much longer he doesn't need to have a fresh chew nearly as often, Any man who uses the Real I Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put ih fflf fr-tn cfvj W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco kasaishi Estate Admitted to Probate S. Kasaishi, pioneer Japanese rarch er of the Dee Flat district, who re cently succumbed to an attack of ap pendicitis, left an 18 acre ranch valued at $7,000. The place is developed in orchard and strawberries. M. Inukia, a JaiBnese neighbor, has been ap pointed administrator of the estate, one of the first of a Japanese to'be ad mitted to probate here. G. L. DAVENPORT Grower and shipper Apples. Pota toes, Onions. Sscd Potatoes true variety " I lit Best that's Grow n" nil S.M. 1 A TSADt ARK All kinds of Produce solicited. 147 Front St PORTLAND. ORE. THE FASHION STXBLE'S Parkdale Auto Stage Phone 1201 Leaves Hood River daily at 4.30 p. m. L. r.'.fs I 'ark. la'.' lai!y at s a. m. (except Suntiav). Every Saturday Leaves Parkdale at 6 p. m. Miss Hawkes Makes Phi Beta Kappa NeVs was received here last week of admission of Miss Helen Hawker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edw. Hawkes, to Phi Beta Kappa, an honor 1 society requiring scholarship qualifica tions, at Whitman College. Miss Hawkes is a graduate of the Hood Kiver high school. She is the first student of the local school to make the j honor scholarship fraternity. Portland Man Bays Prt&e Ranch S. L. Baker, who for the past 20 years has been employed by the Port land Railway, Light & Power Co., has just purchased from L. W. Pregge the iatter's 84 acre orchard and ranch , plare in the Oak Grove district. He Mill move with his family to the plare at once. I r'armrr (nit-d f Rheumatism "A man living on a farm near here came in a short time ago completely double! up with rheumatism. I handed him a bottle of Chamberlain's Lini ment and told him to use it freelv," says C P. Kavoer, Patten Mills. N. Y. "A few days later he walked into the store as straight as a string and handed me a dMIar saying, give me another bottle of Chamberlain's Liniment ; I want it in the house all the time for it cured me." Tht fictnriiqut $U Cliff Dvitllingi tiling the historic xAfcht Trsil mr Rfievelt, 7 Cjic Gasoline tywdlings of a bygom Day cXlONG the Apache Trail in Arizona the motorist can see the dwellings of a race now believed to be extinct These cliff dwell ings are at least 404 years old and if their walls could speak they would tell a most dramatic story of romance and conquest. Arizona has more than its share of interesting places to lure the motorist. There he will find many Indian reservations the homes of Apaches, Navajos, Hopis, Mo haves and other tribes. There, too, is the famous Roosevelt Dam and the incomparable Grand Can yon of the Colorado River. And wherever he goes the mo torist can be sure that his motor fuel will be right because Red Crown Gasoline is sold every where. Look for the Red Crown sign on service stations and garages. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (California) SPECIAL SALE Saturday, April 16th See Window Display For Prices CZZIOEZD REMEMBER WE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK OF Pearson's Cement-Coated Box Nails OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT KELLY BROS. CO., Inc. Phone 8411 ACREAGE TRACTS One acre or more either just inside the corporation or just outside, out of Lots 6 and 9 of Adam's Paradise Acreage. Single acres, $425 to $650. Three acres $1400 to $1600. Good soil; surpassing view. Country life with city advantages. Hood River Abstract and Investment Co. J. W. CRITES, President. K. W. SINCLAIR, Secretary. RKl BEN F. FRASIKR W. T. FRASIER We have just purchased the business of the Ar nold Grocery Co. W. T. Frasier, who has been with this business for several years will remain in active charge. We offer the people of Hood River a service of courtesy and goods, staple and fancy, at prices just as low as conditions will permit. Come in and give us a trial. t:n 4 cirn o. eriXT tel. riair,i x ouii 2121 O. L. Iavenport will handle ship ment of apples and produce. 147 Front ttreet, Portland, Ore. mlStf R. C. GLANVILLE ATTORNEY AT LW Room 1 National. Bnk Building Hood River, Oregon , L. L. MURPHY, D. D M General Dentistry Rooms 11-15 Brosiue Bldg. We carry a complete hue of GARDEN TOOLS as well as Builders5 Hardware, Carpenters' Tools Ranges, Etc. We have recently added to our stock a line of PAINTS and FRUIT JARS. Prices and quality always right. BLOWERS' HARDWARE CO. QUALITY QUANTITY Ask for BUTTER-NUT Delivered Daily to Your Grocers IS OUR SUCCESS Remember We have the largest stock of lumber in Hood River County to select from. You will save money by letting us quote on your require ments. Yours for prompt service. w OREGON LUMBER COMPANY DEE, OREGON We will be glad to furnish the fuel for clean up week. Keep the inner man well supplied and you can work better. Our shop is always prepared for building operations. Well-fed workmen perform their tasks efficiently. The Hood River Market A. F. DAVENPORT, Prop. Phone 4311 FAST AND FINE is the motor truck transfer service offered by us. It is dependable service that will not cause you loss from de lays, breakages, wrong; ile liveries, etc. Call us up (Phone 1111) and get the particulars. Ask for our fig ures on any special job of hauling or regular daily or weekly service. TRANSFER & LIVERY CO. Telephone 4111 MEATS OF ALL KINDS AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES You can have meat on your table daily from our mar ket without "busting the bank" to pay the bills. Try us and see if our price and our quality of goods is not what you have been longing for. All meat is government in spected. T. H. BROWN Phone MM. THE HEIGHTS. I