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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1927)
VOL XXXVIII HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 24. 1927 SPRING TONICS savings ac- These preparations are guaranteed to give satisfaction BANK We will appreciate your patronage. Our desire will be to please—giro good service and value received at all times. Hope to maintain the confidence held by my predecessor, who is going into a new MORE FREE DOLLS Dorothy Annabelle: Most anybody would, with the clothes she has. P. S. But Annabelle was quite wrong in crediting Grace with an unlimited supply of gowns. Grace merely sees to it that our dry cleaning keeps everything she has looking like new. HOOD RIVER DRUG CO MEYER »SMITH an TAILORS—SHOE REPAIRERS Quality Nursery Stock NO FROZEN OR FROSTED STOCK AU varieties of Apples, Pears, Cherries, Peaches, Prunes, Plums, Apricots, Walnuts, Roses and Ornamentals F. A. MASSEE LICENSED NURSERYMAN BASEBALL DANCE Saturday Night at the Pythian Hall A BIG TIME FOR EVERYONE ORCHESTRA ▲ record crowd for a local boxinc bout la expected here next Monday night, when the main event will be a 10-round go between Young Rodgers, of Dee, and Kid Roberts, of Pendleton. Rodgers, who will have the rooting rapport of the entire Dee community, is training -hard for the event, and bis friends are confident that he will win the bout. In l*eceml>er in what was characterised the hardest fought bout and bloodiest ever seen In the mid Columbia, Rodgers knocked Roberts to the count tn the seventh ronnd. Residents of Dee here yesterday eaid that half of the population of the saw mill town and the surrounding orchard section will be here for the fight. Other bouts on the card of next Mon* day night, when the event will be un der auspices Of the American legion poet, Val Beamon, matchmaker, will be: George Woolley, of White Salmon, and Spin McClaskey, of The Dalles, In the 6-round semi-wind-up; John Colvin, local boy, and Jimmy Hanley, of Stock- ton, Calif., in a 4-round bout. GROWTH This firm started shipping in a small way in 1916, with Wm. S. Duck wall selling the fruit in the East Our growth and the volume of our shipments has been gradual but steady. From a few cars sent to one market, we are now shipping to all parts of the United Stales, and to a number of foreign countries. Our brand is known in these mar kets, and our Trade Mark registered. This business to generally done direct, and this system tends each year to increase volume handled in this way, as the result of sav ings effected by buyers in distant markets. We are buying for cash. Are you interested? We are prepared to furnish necessary supplies till harvest and buy for cash before picking time. DUCKWALL piano accom-