Image provided by: Hood River Library; Hood River, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 16, 1926)
VOL XXXVIII HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1926 >las and Orthophonie Records Orthophonie Eastman Kodaks and Cases 4 Karess and Fiancee Toilet Sets Pyralin and Fiberloid Toilet and Manicuring Sets •/ Christmas Tapered Candles and ecial Superba Dinner Tapers (24-in. Assorted Colors) ocolates—Xmas Wrapped, 1, 2, 3 and 5 lb. boxés Waterman’s and Parker’s Fountain Pens «nd Pencils De Vilbiss Perfumizers — Flashlights Cigars — Cigarettes — Ash Trays â A Beautiful Assortment of Christmas Cards Now On Display. Do Your Shopping Early ! Our Trust Powers Economy and Parsimony President Hall of the University of Oregon has some very definite ideas as to tbe inadvisability of substituting Parsimony for Economy, and one of our good friends in the Glacier office has suggested that the subject would work into good copy for this space. Trust Facilities, without obligation on such as we have just experienced there ency toward undue retrenchment. He is indeed a wise grower who can decide just how far he can economize and still keep an ’efficient organiza tion and such equipment as will enable him to produce his next crop at a minimum cost. small cost, could have reconditioned hie car so it would have served him for a couple of years longer, but he just naturally wanted a new car so badly that be thought he would be parsimonious if he didn’t get it—and you know the answer—he did. AMERICAN LEGION HONORS TEAM Business Meo Will Present Student Body The Hood River high school foot ball squad, accomiMinied by Coach Gar- her and F. 8. Knight, principal of the high school, will l>e honor guests at a banquet to be given by the American lx*gion |>ost au the Hotel Waukoma at <».3o tomorrowXFriday, evening. The 20 hammome Pendleton blan kets. purchased 'through J. G. Vogt by a fund subscribed by business men, will l>e presented to the student body by .lalikes H. Haslett. Tlie Mandolin club will make music for the festive occasion. Tlie footlMtll squad includes the fol lowing men : Wayne Mendenhall and Mayhew Carson, ends; Dale Fike and Robert Goin, tacklea^..Clayton Fore man uud Lloyd Wallace, guards; Tom Johnson, center; Lawrence Wright, quarter,- Victor Harper and Frank Htratton halves, and Victor Miller, full. Ray liathborn and Max Calandra, ends; Bomhard VonLubken and Jack Jones, tackles; James Carson and George Palmer, guards; George Wuest, eeatar; Russell Acheson, q nailer; Glenn Mendenhall and Wendle Hill, halves, aad Richard Hillis, fullback. The local team made a total score of 72 points in the seven games played last season. Twenty-five adverse points were scored. lows: Hood River 0, Grant 0; Hood River R>, Roosevelt 7; Hood River 31, HUI Military 0; Hood River 10, Bend 12; Hood River 21, Goldeudaie 0; Hood River 0, Wasco 0; Hood River 0, The Dalles 0. Hood River the coming season will lose the following players: Mayhew Carson, Dale Fike, .Clayton Foreman, lawrence Wright, Victor Miller, Jack Jones, George Palmer, George Wuest, anti Glenn Mendenhall. Tlie general public la Invited to at tend the bauqutt. Reservations, how ever, should be mad<> with the cham ber of commerce office Immediately. Plates will be *1. The fathers of tbe honor guests are urge«! to join In the .banipiet. A committee has been appointed to have complete charge of the arrange ments for the Imnquet, «^imposed of four members of tbe Legion and four business men, as follows: Cha rise Gunn, chairman; W. Ray Lee, Walter For«l, Wayne Poland, R. B. Perigo, L. 8. Boyd, Earl Welier and Rfiy Acheson. The Hood River friends and neigh bors of Rev. William A. (Billy) Bun day, who last week announced that he would become a “dry” candidate for tbe presidency under certain contin- genclee, have expressed the hope that Mr. Bunday may make a campaign. Rev. Sunday spends his summers on an Odell ranch place here. C. T. ~ Ba- ker,. secretary of the Chnmber of Commerce, said that that organisation, should Mr. Sunday develop"into presi dential timber, will ask the evangelist to designate sweet Hood River apple cider as hla official beverage. “All of us remember tbe prestige that was given grape juice when Wil liam Jennings Bryan was active in polities. Mr. Sunday might thus be able to give national prominence to the refreshing healthfulnesa of apple cider. Then we might see the culls of our apple crop crushed and pressed to as suage tbe thirst of a nation.” Mr. Sunday last week in a sermon at Yakima, Wash., where he is holding a serie* of evangelistic meetings, said he would certainly be a “dry” presidential candidate, should the Democrat* nomi nate Al Smith and the Republicana name a man of wet propensities. Butler Banking Company PUT THE BIBLE BACK IN OUR SCHOOLS! IT’S NOT the spiked shoe that makes the record, but Christ since it meant chance would he have of even approaching that mark? Same way with good appearance—it may not hand you success on a silver platter, but without it a man ia under a real handicap. MEYER Q, »SMITH QTY TAILORS SHOE REPAIRERS WE CALL AND DELIVER MUSIC LARGEST AND MOST ATTRACTIVE LINE PRICES TO MEET EVERYBODY’S LIKING Come in and see our Xmas Display PIANOS from $150 and up. SCHE’S JEWELRY STORE PYTHIAN BLDG PHONOGRAPHS $15.00 and up. We have a few yellow Canaries left— guaranteed good singers. We rent Pianoe and Phonographs for special occasions. Brunswick Records released every Thursday. . á sEES SPECIAL FOR MUMMEY’S MUSIC SHOPPE Everything in Music PHONE 3681 HOOD RIVER, ORE. Tlie creamery lias made many friend* with the ice cream «■ake* and pl«*. The new plum pudding is d«-*- tjned to further popularise the city's most active industry. Nothing has ever been found that is a grvnter delight to a child celebratlaa a birthday than one of the ice cream akea, carrying its unique ornamenta tion and greetings. “It certainly makes a birthday cake worth while,” a little boy.was lieard to say not long ago wlien Inf was ready LEGION AUXILIARY NOTES to blow out the candles ani start cut What better weather could one want ting the handsome cake. "Rut it does as a reminder that now la the time to seciii like a shame to eat nlythlng so get out that diacarded overcoat of pretty as thia is." <lad'*; that allghtly uxed, wool drees of daughter's, and son's last year's sweat ee, and lend to some ex-service man's family who may be Buffering from tbe effects of this cold weather? Every day cornea the plea from Portland for warm clothing, so today take your old clothing down to the Tum-A-Lum office Vai Bearson, local matchmaker, an where Mr*. Anderaon is filling a box, nounces a main-event go here next or l«oxe* if jtoaslble, to send to the wel Monday night Is-tween Young Rodgers, fare committee of tbe Auxiliary for lM*e hopeful, 153 pound*, and Mickey distribution among the needy ex-service Roberts, 152 pounds, of Pendleton. men. Don't put this off any longer. Rodgers, although youthful, has devel Do it now, not next summer. Mrs. Neal Nunamaker's address is oped a remarkable physique in the log ging camps of the Oregon Lumber Co. Box 27ft, Route 5, Phoenix, Arlr.ona, He has already won considerable note Let us send those Christmas greeting in the few fights in which he has par cards by the end of this week so that ticipated. Dee will lie well represented she will l>e sure to receive them in time at the Monday night smoker, which for Christmas. Do it now. Do it now! What? Pay your due*. will be held at Pythian hall under aus pices of the Knights of Pythias band. Have you responded to the little state Hpln McClaskey, 133 pounds, of The ment mailed you this week? Do it now. And now the most important of all Dalle*, will meet George Woolley, 131, of White Salmon. In a semi-windup. item*. The Auxiliary Christmas party Dean Hatch and Ernest Smith, both for ex service men's children and their well known local fistic artists, will go mothers is to be held at tbe Oriental (Mt. Hood dining room), Saturday, four rounds next Monday night Rolierts, who is training at A. La December IK, at 2 o'clock. Spread the Chapelle's gymnasium, mvmi confident good news for Santa wants to meet of getting Rodgers. At least his talk each and every ex-service man's child. Indicates a confidence. He saldr Children's Christmas Party “I have been waiting here in Hood Tbe American Legion Auxiliary re River for over three months to get this Rodgers Isiy. The matchmaker has ceived a radio message from Santa tried to get us together on every card Claus to have all of the children of ex- but for some reason or other Rodger* service men come to the Oriental cafe was never ready. Now he claims he is (Mt. Hood hotel dining room) next in tbe best of condition and that is Saturday afternoon, December 18, from when I want to meet him, so there 2 to 5 o'clock, for he has promised to will be no alibis to offer after the I m * there and would like to meet all fight. I never want to fight anyone of the children and their mothers. Plans are now completed which in out of condition, for they always have cludes n program for the children, giv an nlihl. “I have been training at Art La en by children, games and stories, a Cliapelle'R new gymnasium in the base Christmas tree and a visit from Banta, ment of the Davidson building, and and last but not least, eats. The Auxiliary members with birth never was more confident of winning h fight than I am this one. And I am days in December, under the leader not underrating Rodgers, either. ' I ship of Mrs. A. L. Anderson, will have have seen him fight. I know what he full charge of the party. Come early and stay late for thia is, I know he is a fighter and not a boxer; he I* a good stiff puncher who party will be interesting every minute. likes to wade in and trade hlowa» but Nature has surely done her Mt towards I think my boxing ability will keep me making the true Christmas spirit aa«l the Auxiliary will do the rest at a safe distance. "Anyway yon can tell the fight fans