it The Lurc r k," a story of the most THE HOOD VOLUME 6, NUMBER 1 Hall Brothers Secure Control Home Phone Are Elected Directors at Annual Stock holder's meeting, After Getting Fifty one Per Cent of Stock--riay Raise Rates The iiiintial meeting of the stock holder of the Hume Telephone Com pany which was postponed last week through an error In calling the meet In ir was held Monday with 32 of the 4V) shares of stock represented. In the election of directors, an hud been expected the Hull brothers were voted Into the control of the com pany's affairs, they having recently secured 51 per cent of the Htock. The new board consists of Chas. Hall, E (). Hall. J. K. Hall, C. E. Copple and E. C. Smith. It In stated ty Chns. Hall that the reaHon he and his brother acquired the additional stock In the company wan because they were already heavily Interested and considered the purchase neces sary to protect their Interests. The meeting was called to order by President E. L. Smith. After the reading of the minutes and some dls CUhhIoii the reports of the secretary DOLL SOCIETY GIVEN SWEURECEPTION A very unique reception was held at the Mount Hood hotel Friday afternoon when about U." little girls gathered there with their dollies at the Invitation of Mrs. ('. A. Hell. The occasion was the entrance Into doll society of the aristocratic young lady recently won by MIhh Anua Dart la the contest at Cram's store. Her debut Is said to have leen the most elaborate ever given a society doll at Hood ltlver, and was attend ed by ST) of the awellest doll set In the city. Mrs. Hell was assisted In receiving by Mrs". T. J. Klunalrd and Miss Mae Davidson. The costumes were too elaborate for description. All the types of American doll Iteauty were represented and It Is whispered that veral dolls of royal lineage were present Incognito. The coming out of the charming new addition to so ciety Is said to ha ve been most suc cessful and It Is Intimated that she will make a brilliant match, as her rare beauty and charming manner won all hearts. During the afternoon Miss Lillian Hrock entertained with a song. Miss Suzanne Kay rendered an Instrumen tal selection nnd Mlsess Anna Mae Chipping and Klda Jackson also con tributed musical number. Refresh ments were served but owing to the fact that the doll smart set Is dieting through the winter season to pre serve Its complexion the dainty vi ands were disposed of by their guardians. The only Incident to mar the occnslon was the rumor that one of the most attractive dolls In attendance had had her face disfigured by being left too near a radiator, but the report proved to lie without foundation. A ripple of excitement was also created by the announcement that a doll ts'longlng to the most exclusive set on the heights had lost her diamond broach. On Investigation, however, It was found that she left It home. At leave taking the dolls and their guardians thanked their hostess very heartily for the most enjoyable social event ever accorded doll society at Hood Hlver. After such a delightful afternoon doll society was startled and shocked Saturday morning to hear of the tragedy which befell the beautiful and accomplished ward of little Miss Cram, who sustained a fatal fall on the way home. Just how the accl ejent occurred Is not known, except that there was a dull thud on the sidewalk and the life sawdust of the beautiful young dollle ooied out on the pavement. Friends on hearing the lamentations of Miss Cram ran to her assistance, but It was all In van. The mangled remains were tenderly carried to the store of the young latly's father, where funeral arrangements were completed nnd the deceased was quietly laid to rest amid the tears of the sorrowing fam ily. It Is understood the grief of Miss Cram was finally assuaged by the adoption of another haniNotue dollie who Is exHcled to enter on a bril liant social career as soon as the per iod of mourning Is over. and treasurer were read. The for nier shows thut the net earnings of the company during the period of Its operation are about $12,000. With the exception of capital enough to operate the. plant, this amount has ls-en utilized In making extensions and Improvements. It was stated by Mauager Hardinger that the net earnings of the company for the past two years would not much more than cover the depreciation In the plant. It Is figured by experts, he said, that telephone plants had to le en tirely replaced about every twelve years. The plant now had more than twice as many telephones as It had when It was started, 1.12. being In use the first of January and sub serilsTs were now getting service to twice the number of phones they did when the present rate was made. Mr. Hnrdlnger also recommended the expenditure of a considerable sum In further Improvements and extensions which he said were absolutely nec essary. J. W. Kolerg said that the stock had never paid anything on the in. vestment nnd thought the new board of directors should do some thing to make a return to the stock holders In t lie shae of dividends, even If It was necessary to raise the rates. II. J. milliard gave It as his opin ion that this would have to lie done very carefully and the financial con dition of t tie company's affairs mak ing a raise necessary satisfactorily explained to the subscribers. A resolution was then Introduced by E. C. Smith In the form of a rec ommendation to the directors, ask ing them to Investigate the financial status of the company with the end In view of putting It on a paying basis to the stockholders with the possibility of raising the rates. On motion of E. O. Blnuch'ir seconded by J. W. KolM-rg the resolution was unanimously carried At a meeting of the directors held Tuesday the new olllcers of the com pany elected are: Chas. Hall, presi dent and manager; E.C.Smith, vice president; E. O. Hall, secretary; E. O. Hlanchar, treasurer. GRAND JURY AND COURTJN SESSION The January term of the circuit court oS'Ued here Monday the grand jury meeting in connection with It. The business of the court was taken up Monday with arguments lu a iiunilier of civil cases of minor im portance. The most Important case brought to the attention of the grand Jury was that of W. H.Thompson who the coroner's Jury recently charged with lielng responsible for the wreck at Cascade Locks. In addition to the examination of the grand Jury In the charges against Th inipson, the state railroad com mission conducted an Independent Investigation, with a view, It Is stated by commissioner Altcheson, of securfng better protection for rail road trainmen nnd patrons. Testimony In the Commissioner's hearing was taken from Conductor, Hlltierry, Hrakeinan (ieorge Hrown, A. II. Me Keen, signal engineer, and J. C. Shay, traveling engineer, who was on the engine with Thompson, at the time of the accident. According to Shay, Thompson did not apply the emergency brakes as soon as he should have done. His testimony was also to the effect that Hrown, who was flagging the rear end of the freight was only tvocar lengths back of the caboose, and that there were no other slgnnls to warn Thompson that his engine was so near the danger mark. McKeen testltld that when engineers were running close to the expiration of the time allowed them to work by law, they somest lines ran by the block In order to gain time. The grand Jury Tuesday brought In a report dismissing the charges against Thompson. Three Indictments were returned by the grand Jury against H. S. Da vis for passing fraudulent checks. HOOD RIVER, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY Japanese Consul Wants Countrymen To Be Good Sends Word to Them Through Represen tative to Drive Undesirable Japanese Out of Hood River ValleyHass fleeting Held Determined If possible to have the natives of Japan who reside lu Ore gon be good citizens J. Takahashl came here Sunday as the representa tive of the Japanese Association of Oregon and V. Numano, the Japan ese consul at Portland to Investigate the ease of Vashlnarl, who was ar rested for selling whiskey and keep ing a gambling place. Mr. Takahashl, In order to have a full discussion of the matter among the many Japanese at Hood IUver, called a public meeting which took place in the opera house Sunday nnd at which 00 were present, Mr. Tak ahasha presided and explained to his countrymen that Mr. Numano and other prominent Japanese In Port land looked with disfavor upon the misbehavior of Vashlnarl. They wanted, he said, that all .Japanese obey the laws of their adopted coun try and to formulate a plan thut NEW YORK CITY'S FRUI1 Where It Comes From And What It Costs : : $225,000,000 Would Not Cover Orchard Products And That Means Only a Portion of the Quantity of Fruit Used. From the New Pineapples come mostly from Cuba, but the best are from Florida. To anyone traveling through that state there seems a pinkish haze all over the landscais? which the natives ex plain as pineapples growing In the sand. It looks as If Florida had pineapples enough to deck every table northward to Maine, but such Is apparently not the case. "Them Florida pines ain't a drop In the bucket," declared a dealer emphatic ally. In fact. theFlorlda pineapples go largely to the high grade dealers. 1 while the rest get aloug wit h Cuba 11 products. It was rather a shock to hear as a reason for the unpopular-J Ity of Porto Klco pineapples that they are too sweet. It seems that sweet pineapples do not keep for ex port and dealers fight shy of them. So If you really want a good pineapple it Is still necessary to go to the West Indies In person. However, the Por to Kicaus are coming along and may produce something satisfactorily acid some day. It Is darkly hinted that brotherly love has not followed the flag on that favored Isle, but en terprising business met hods have. s. It doesn't matter. As for Hawaii, the pine apple trade there Is simply jumping. Before annexation they exported 4,000 cases of the fruit, but that trade has grown to STiO.OOO now. Oranges come from California at j the height of the season at the rate j of 220 cars a week. Each car has :i20 boxes aud each box contains on an average nealy 200 oranges. So there you have fourteen million oranges poured Into New York weekly at the height of the season. This gives an Idea of the extent of the orange trade. Florida, of course, sends a great many, though not as many as California, and there the seasons do not conflict to any appreciable ex tent. The Florida crop this year Is of 0,000,000 boxes, which, at $."i or il a box, brings the money spent b r Florida oranges alone up to a tidy sum. California takes In far more than that, getting half a million dol llars, more or less, from New York alone at the height of the season. Hut of course all this takes a sec ond place beside the figures for the apple trade. There Is more money Invested In wheat nnd cotton, but npart from these apples form the most Important crop in the country. fills Is a bad year, yet the crop In volves l.'i0,(kK),000. The American Pomologlcal Society will tell you that then1 are 2!M! kinds of apples, but for commercial purposes the Haldwln and the Greening are far and away the best. Speaking by and large, the Haldwln Is the nice red apple, "two for five," you buy from pushcarts It gets more aristo cratic at times, but It Is the good old apple of childhood Just the same, New York can point with pride to alluring character in fiction, is proving popular RIVER NEWS V9 would eliiuluate the undesirable Jap anese element from Hood IUver and the stute at large. The best element of the Japanese residents of the state, said Mr. Taka. hashl, would not tolerate gambling and Illegal whiskey selling, and he wanted the help of those who resided here In driving such Japanese away and keeping them away. Hood IUver, lie said, had the largest Jap anese community In the state with the exception of Portl.-.nd nnd they wanted to make It the best. At the conclusion of his talk the meeting was addressed by many of the Japanese In attendance, who ex pressed a desire to work along the lines suggested by Mr. Takahashl. The result was the appointment of a committee of ten who will endeavor to lie responsible for the conduct of the Japanese population at Hood Hlver In future. York Time. Its npp'.a orchards. It takes four tc .years for a tree to War fi nit, bill when it liegins it caii be depend ed upon for a hundred years. They say New York is the only state In 'which this statement Is true, though It would seem to a mind not too strongly biased by local pride that the West has not had a fair chance to demonstrate on the century pro position. Anyway, even a century I a conservative estimate for an apple tree In this state. There nre apples trees up the state twice that age, still bearing fruit that is emin- 'ently eatable. The first apple tree planted in this country was brought from Holland by Gov. Stuyvesant lu 104" aud put where Third Avenue nnd Thirteenth street now Intersect. It stood there until 1m;g when a dray backed Into ir and knocked It down, no patriot having thought of putting a rail around it. So Xew York started the apple business In this country. Un happily the state Is not keeping nt the head. Apples, complain the deal ers, are less and less planted. The -llrlt of the age Is against waiting fourteen years for a crop, even if It i a good crop when It comes and l ists for a hundred years. America N very little Interested In the year J.nOit. Hy that time we may lie Im porting apples from China or some other place where an Immediate re sult does not seem that which. is pre 1 ulnently to be desired in life. All this has lsen about deciduous and citrus fruits. Deciduous means that It has a kernel and a thin skin. If It has a rind It immediately be come, citrus, whether it has a kernel r not. (irapes are deciduous, too. though why they call the seeds ker nels Is hard for the layman to under stand. What Isn't deciduous or citrus Is "berries." Mention the ber ry trade to a fruit dealer ami he will express contempt. If you try feebly to point out that berries have virtues of their own, highly considered by many resiec table citizens, you will get nothing in reply except that ber ries are unorganized", and anyway they don't amount to so ery much. It is sad that vhls social prejudice should obtain against the harmless, necessary hucklclierry. to say noth ing of the strawberry, but the melan choly truth Is that there seem to lie no facts or figures as to the trallle In small fruits. One thing Is certain, you can't speculate In strawberries to any extent. It is risky enough In f r ill t that keeps tolerably well, but With strawberries It would Is1 out of ilcstlon, aud the big dealers take only a mild Interest iu so uncommer cial a fruit. The unorganUed Iwrry, now held up to the scorn, Is only In the condi tion common to all fruit as late as even ten years ago. This whole gi- 1910 Something Stirring In Auto Road to Portland Petition Signed By Property Holders Rep resenting $80,000,000 Presented to Hult nomah County Court Asking for Highway Active work by William Wenime, president of the Portland Automo bile club makes It look very much as If the long talked of wagon road be- tween this city and Portland will become a reality In the near future. Some of the most prominent and wealthiest residents of Portland have K'tltIoned the Multnomah county court for the road and It Is Is-ing considered favorably. The fact that It will open up the eastern Ore gon country by wugon road Is a strong factor In its favor. J. P. O'Hrien, general manager of the O. It. & X. Is said to lj heartily iu favor of the road aud promised the com mittee that the company would stand by Its agreement to restore any part of the original wagon road that had been destroyed or preempt ed by the railroad. In an Interview In the Oregoulan Lewis Russell of Portland, one of Its strongest sup porters, remarks: "The men whose signatures appear on the petition represent In t lie ag gregate $so,0tt0,0o0 of taxable proper ty In the county." The petition asks that the county construct the road from Bridal Veil to Cascade Locks, the dividing line between Multnomah aud Hood Kiver counties. The distance Is 17 miles and the estimate of cost, according to an estimate prepared by Frank T. Walsh, of the engineering firm of Gosset and Walsh, Is approximately $41,000. This road, when completed, will THE DALLES MAY HAVE GAS PLANT At Its mid-monthly meeting, Janu ary IS, the city couucll will be asked to grant n franchise to J. I). Wilcox, of Portlaud, who represents capital ists who desire to erect a gas plant In this city. In an Interview with Mr. Wilcox yesterday the Chronicle wnsluformed that nothing will lie asked of the city except a franchise which will make It possible for the Portland men to build a $.0,(KH) plant iu The Dalles for the purpose of selling gas to local people, both for cooking and lighting purposes. A city Is some times asked for a bonus when it Is planned to build an Institution of this kind In a municipality but Mr. Wilcox says that the thing he wants Is the permit to lay mains aud pipes along the streets of the city. The Dalles has long needed gas facilities and the news that the same may be acquired will be welcomed by the citizens, housevlves In particular, who will be glad to have gas for cooking purposes during the hot summer months. Two rival light ing concerns will have a tendency to lower the cost of lights In the city. gantlc business has been revolution ized since the West began to com pete with the East and found that In order to bring the fruit over the con tinent In good condition there had to be Improved methods In picking and packing. Without the greatest care and the most complete system the fruit was ruined before it reached the market. One thing has led to another. Fruit has lieen graded dif ferently and a higher standard set throughout the country. Eastern men are going west to study the methods In use out there that can bring In a revenue of $1,000 an acre. There Is no doubt that Eastern fruit Is as good as, or better than that which comes from the Pacific Coast, but It Is less skillfully grown and less carefully marketed. Apple sec tions up the Hudson can prodme apples as fine as those that come from the Hood IUver Valley, in Ore gon, anil sell at ..1 cents aplive, only it isn't done. And of course, no amount of organization and Im proved methods of transportation can alter the fact that fruit Is sweeter if It Is eaten fresh. Out West they are always on the ukout for new ideas, and they co operate. 1 he growers of the Hood Valley only five years ago got M cents for a box of apples. Now, by Im proved methods, they get from Jl 7.'i ICVmtiuucti im t'atfv tfl SUBSCRIPTION, $1.50 A YEAR give Portland a highway Into east ern Oregon. It will start along the Base Line road, crossing the Sandy river above Troutdale and continu ing up the Columbia river. In Hood River county arrangements already have been completed for building the road to the county boundary and the road to The Dalles Is completed. If this road Is built it will be the most picturesque highway In the world, not excepting roads along the Hudson in Xew York or th Rhine In Germany. It has been pro jetted many months. An additional feature Is that it will provide an au tomobile highway to Mount Hood ty way of Hood IUver. will dbTe1rack tojwntington What Is understood to Is) the first step In the double tracking of the O. It. & X. Hue between Portland and Huntington was taken Thursday, when authority was given for double tracking the road between The Dalles aud eschutes, a distance of 17 miles. Recently the O. R. & X. let the con tract for straightening the line be tween the two points and It Is pre sumed that the decision having been reached to double track to Hunting ton, both the line change and the ad ditional track laying could be ac complished at a saving of expense over construction of the two Im provement separately. The line change and double tracking will cost considerable more than $1,000,000. A part of the double track system also will be the St. John-Troutdale Hue, authority for the construction of which has also been given. Work on this line will begin as soon as the weather conditions will permit. When completed practically 20 more miles of the route will have been double tracked at a cost of 17,000,000. The new Troutdale Hue is not to ls double tracked In Itself, but will offer a second track entrance to Portland. The dlstnnce between Portland and I'matlUa Is 400 miles and while estimates of the cost are not obtain able it is probable that a sum repre sented by eight figures will be ex landed liefore the work Is completed. The greatest congestion of traffic on the O. R. & X. lines Is between Portland and I'matlUa. At the lat ter point the lines of the Washington division diverge and the wheat of the Pn louse country, O.mas Prairie nnd all the Spokane and Idaho traffic reach the main line. In addition from this stretch of the system, the Condon, Heppner nnd Shanlko branches diverge, all serving big wheat producing areas, while the new Deschutes line will also deliver Its traffic to the main line between Portland and I'matlUa. Five passenger trains dally pass over the line each way In addition to one fast mail train each way dally and the regular and special freights. It Is understood that the stretch of road is carrying practically the limit of t rattle In the operation of trains on schedule time, while there exists a certainty of increase as the country Continues its progress in develop ment. It Is also hinted that mall con tracts nre nt stake In a contest now waging lictwecn the Great Northern and the llarrlman Northwest sys tern. The Great Northern Is said to be asking the government for the Portland mall. Intending to divert It from Its fast mail train now In oper ation nt Spokane and via the North Hank to Portland. The Great Northern, according to reports, has declared that the Puget Sound mall tonnage alone Is not suf ficient to warrant the continuation of the fast mail train. The llarrl man Hue 1 also operating a fast mall train, but It is recognized that Im provements are iitvcssary to keep pace with the strenuous competition that Hill Is now giving on mall car rying and other service. The double tracking of the O. R. & N It Is also understood, Mill be car ried on In conjunction with other Hue changes, which will eliminate many curves and grades and shorten the Hue.