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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1915)
I s SI VOL. XXVI HOOD MVEK, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 21. 19i: No. 34 A Keep money in lifetime, it will 11 A few dollars is frequently sufficient to take advan tage of an opportunity which may mean your fortune. We are always willing to advise our customers re garding a contemplated investment as we are in a bet ter position to pass judgment on its security than a single individual. At least our opinion will be helpful. Bring your money problems to us. Be ready for an op portunity. Open a Bank Account with One Dollar or more to-day. 4 Interest Paid on Savings FIRST NATIONAL Capital $100,100 BA-JK. Surplus $36,000 Bank Advertisement No. 41 Our letter of a few months as?o on the im portant matter of drawing your will was so well received that we now want to quote from our former advertisement as follows: . "It is not our purpose to divert any busi ness of this character from its natural channel. If a member of your family is capable of prop erly taking care of the business of your estate and is not averse to the cares and responsibili ties incident thereto, you will have no trouble in selecting your executor. In many cases, how ever, either the ability to handle an estate to the best advantage or the inclination to do so is missing, and we are led to believe that many of our customers will be pleased to know that this work is included in the service we are now pre pared to render. There are several advantages in having the Trust Department of this bank act as executor of your will. Outside of your own family, the man who could perform this service as you would have it done is probably very much en gaged in his own affairs. You have the com bined ability of the officers of the bank, and the system and facilities which are available to them insure every detail of your estate having the at tention it requires. Unlike an individual, the bank is always well, always at home, of un questionable integrity, never dies and has a complete record of all its transactions." BUTLER BANKING COMPANY 1200 Pocket Knives Scissors and Razors Late arrivals for the Holiday trade. These are factory samples and very fine; will be offered until Inventory, February 1st, at most attrac tive prices. Manicure sets, carving sets. Toys At the prices we made broke our stock so badly that we conclude to help out your de layed present list by contin uing the sale at 1-2 price on what is left Our 28 erec tor sets were all sold but we have lots of interesting toys for 1-2 price. Furniture, Rugs A clean up sale regardless of cost will continue through out January. Our expenses are light, cost is low. All odd pieces must go. Prior to February 1st, In ventory, we shall offer prices on odd china, porcelain, glass and pottery, 1-4 on" on the choicest pieces, will replen ish your cupboard at low cost SEEDS -We are sole agents for Burbanks wonder pro ductions and their full line of staple seeds and have our usual full stock of Burpee's Seeds. Stewart Hardware & Furniture Co. Satisfy Yourself We want you to thoroughly investigate the claims made by our bank. Measure us up any way you choose and you will find we can meet any claims made as to the ability of our officials or as to their business integrity. Any officer of our bank is worthy of your trust. Any business intrusted to any one of them will be attended to with promptness and fidelity. We pride ourselves on be ing able to measure "up to the banking requirements of this community. Take pur measure any time and test our ability to make good. Hood River State Bank Ford, Bodg'e Bros., Cadillac FraxiKlin MOTOR CARS Columbia Auto & Machine Co. ill liljfm Kodak and Let the Children Kodak We carry the Genuine Kodaks and supplies. Come in and see the New Autograph Kodaks, the very latest in kodakery. Date and title your negatives any negatives permanently at the time you make them. The great est advance in photography in twenty years. We have a com plete stock in Autograph kodaks and films. Victor Victrola's and Records Kresse Drug Co .rW& js 11 12 r 10 LARA WAY g K9 ,8 The More You Know About Watches the more you will be pleased with what we have to show you. We sell watches that stand for year in and year out service. We will give them to you at the lowest possible price, combining both service and quality. 16s Thin Model Elgin Movoment, guaran teed, nickel case, only $5.50. Others in proportion. LET US SERVE YOU W. F. LARAWAY, Hood River, Oregon Satisfactory Titles arc demanded by the wise buyer. Our work is unquestioned and guarantees protection. Satisfactory Insurance i deemed a necessity by the wire property owner. We represent 10 strong companies and have millions of insurance in the Valley Satisfactory Bonds may sometime be required of you, contract, court or security. When in need of such service inquire of us. Hood River Abstract Company This is the Ham with the surplus salt left out. Mild, sweet and juicy, 8 to 10 lbs. in size. Buy one today and taste a real ham. They can't be made better. GROWERS WANT AGENCIES FAIL TO GET RESILTS At Mass Meeting Growers Express Dissatisfaction-Delegates Will Be Sent to Seattle Conference The strong dissatisfaction among growers with prices that rave ceen received foi the apple crop this season was emphatically expressed here mh urdsy afternoon at the mass meeting of growers called together at the Com mercial club by Truman Butler, Hood River's member of the northwestern by-products committee. Growers were present from White Salmon, Under wood and Mosier. The purpose of the meeting was to select delegates to meet tomorrow with the by-products committee in Seattle just previous to the conference of that committee Sat urday with the heads of the north west'! six selling agencies, a doner co operation of which ia aimed at. In explaining the meeting Mr. But ler, who was elected chairman, said: 1 be members of our committee are unanimous in their belter that the growers of the northwestern apple box districts are not getting the return that they should, not only because of the competition existing between the different districts, but because of the competition between agencies in the districts themselves. Hood River ap ples are competing with Hood River apples, and the same conditions prevail in Wenatchee and in Yakima. 'We believe that the six large sell ing agencies can tie brougnt tugemer and that a plan for the betterment of cooperation can be worked out. We have called on growers lor suggestions and for their moral support. The six large agencies which control the majority of the tonnage of north western box apples and the coopera tion of which is the aim of the Seattle meeting are the North Pacific bruit Distributors, the Narthwestern Fruit Exchange, the Horticultural Union of Yakima, Hiehev & Gilbert, of Yakima, the Wenatchee 1'roduce Association and the Wenatchee Fruitgrowers' As sociation. 1 am of the opinion," said E. H Shepard, "that if we growers want harmony among the apple selling agencies it is up to us to voice a Btrong expression or our sentiment, i ne ran road companies never mane any tnori to change their rates unless there is a demand by the people. We can see the effect of the voice of the people in our recent prohibition laws in Oregon and Washincton. In the present case the apple growers are the people, and they must make demands beiore tney ci what they want." Mr. Shepard outlined the proposed operations of a league that has just been formed among the Wenatchee growers, and which will prevent its members from shipping through cell ing agencies whose rules of marketing do not conform with those laid down by the league. He said he did not be lieve that orderly control of the major ity of the apples of the northwest would be obtained until there was a solidification of units composed of closely cooperative local districts. Dissatisfaction with the North Paci fic Distributors was expressed by a number of growers. "1 have been a member of our local union since it was organized," said J. L. Carter. "We have progressed and each step seemed for the better. We thought when we organized and be came a member of the Distributors that we were going to arrive at results that you are proposing to bring about now. 1 do not know that anybody is to blame, but we have failed and 1 am now ready to do anything toward get ting together at home. Ihen wo can atiiiroach other districts and ask their rnnneration." A similar sentiment was expressed by W. W. Kodwell and J. 11. Jeffrey Kemresentatives 01 an selling con cerns expressed themselves as desirous of obtaininc better local cooperation. "The Northwestern fruit exchange is not brimzintr me enough money said A. I. Mason, "and yet I think it will return me about 10 to 'ib cents more tier box than to the growers of the distributors. 1 don't believe any thing will result from our Seattle meeting, for before we can ever get on the right basis we must get together at home." A number of suggestions were made as to the choice of delegates for the Seattle meeting: finally after collab oration beween Mr. Mason and Mr. Shepard, the former put the following motion, which carried : that two del elates be selected by each of the fol lowing, the respective organizations to pay expenses of delegates: Apple Growers Association, Fruit Growers Exchange, Hood River Apple & Stor age Co., Independent Growers, and the associations or Mos'er, wnue nan on and Underwood; that delegates must be actual growers and not paid officials of anv oreanization. As the meeting was breaking up a motion to the effect that it be the sense of the meeting that no delegate be a member of the board of directors of any organization was carried. However, after consid eration those present at the meeting declared that the latter should not he effective, since it will eliminate dele gates from the Hood Hiver Apple & Storage Co. And on this account, it is stated that the motion's effect will be void. METROPOLITAN PAPER TELLS OF SK00KUM The Star Grocery, Perigo & Son GOOD THINGS TO EAT" (From the Tammany Times) There ia no denying that the North western Fruit Exchange has made the word Skookum quite as famous as the mystic "23" became a few years ago. About this newly coined specimen of American nomenclature is a some thing that attracts us rivets our at tention, sets us to thinking. Some have said that it is novel and unique, but it is mora than that. It is magical. It falls upon tho ear with a forceful pleasantness provocative of smiles and good humor. Its combination of conso nants and vowels being responsible for this, even orth'orgaphers and philolo gists who ordinarily rebuke attempts to coin new words and names have ca pitulated gracefully to Skookum. School children who never fail to grasp a phrase or word signifying that which is good to eat. that which means d e light to them at all hours of the day. have feized.Skookum with such a te nacity as to make doubtful the rcba Lility cf the word apple leing ever again used very generally. A specimen of this popularity cf Skookum is contained in the story told by a teacher in one of the largest put -lie schools of New York. A few davs ago she detected an tlevin-yoar-uld girl pupil in the act of chewing. "Elizabeth , remove the gum from jour mouth!" he commanded.' "I'm not chewing gum," replied Elizabeth, smilingly. Well, if it is not gum, what is it: ir.quired the teacher. Skookum ! replied Elizabeth, mer rily, while the room rang with titters. skookum ! cried the teacher now much embarrassed. "Bring it to me immediately." Little Elizabeth .tripped gailv up to the desk and from her pocket brought rosy apple a Spitzenhurg that was indeed ,a beauty, a perfect ;: n i le t f the wonderful northwestern fruit. Ev ery eye in the room was on that apple. W hat would happen to Elizabeth was not nearly as important i.s the fwte of that Skookum. Betcher the teacher cats it," said a little ft How in the back. He hud hardly finished the sentence when, to the wild satisfaction of the class, the leather proceeded to devour Elizabeth s Skookum, promising her that she would replace it the next day provided Elizabeth would not attempt again to eat in the class room. Io a newspaper reporter this teacher. whose name is withheld for obvious reasons, admitted the fascination of the apple was too great for resistance, that she just had to eat it and like lit tle Elizabeth and many of the school children, she now takes a Skookum to scnooi un ner every nay. I his little episode furnishes an idea of the swiftness with which Skookum has taken hold of young and old in New York. Most of us have always eaten apples, and all of us have known an apple when we saw it, but seemingly to the lot of the Northwestern Fruit Exchange has fallen the ait o making us eat an apple when we are not aware that we want or need it. That's where the magic of the name Skookum comes in. It is a sort of allurement, an awakener of imagination, an exciter of our curiosity and our wonderment, while a Skookum itself is a balm to the optic and olfactory nerves and con sequently a stimulator of the stomach icumcua. In other words it creates hunger as well as appetite, therefore benefiting both the body and tho mind and making it a boon to mankind. That the enormous consumption of these wonderful Skookum apples is go ing to work a very important and de sirable physiological change in the American people if persisted in medical science has perceived. A well known New York physician whise practice is extensive on the upper W est Side, re cently expressed the opinion that ap ples of the varieties sold under the name of Skookum niv t 'the constant changes of the tissues of the body ad mirably, that from month to month these chances are such as to require equivlunt changes in tho proportions of of chcir.icul combinations in un Hpplc ii maximum ot lood value, is to be miiiiituined and the veiy important lax ative quality of the fruit is to be pre served. In other words, iiinn can make no mistake follow ing nature, unil na ture has given to man different apples for different periods of the sear to meet the demands of this system. The human system, this doctor said, re quires in February nourishment differ ent in cliarcter and constituent propor tion from that it needs in November and that this change must prevail in the fiuits we eat as in the nitrogenous substance we consume. Hut while na ture provides for us seasonul fruits of all kinds it seems she has ordnined that the apple shall be a fiiend to us in all seasons. And it seems, too, that nature Iihs ordained that tlie.ternperiite zone of North America shall produce for mankind the bulk of this inde spensable fruit, for the recurd shows that American apples have superseded native fruits in popular favor in must of the civilized countries of the world. Twenty veais ago American apples be gan to find their way to all purls or the woild, but not until the seienlinc prowers of apples in the northwestern part of this country began to produce varieties f uch as those sold under the brand name of Skookum, did the popu larity of this American fruit become what it is today everywhere on the a lobe. 'I his ia attributable to the fact that there is no fruit in the woild so de servedly popular as the Skookum ap ple. Skookum apples ate picked when ripe in their seasons. They contain abundant uotassium and sodium salts as well as those of lime and magne sium : also a truce of iron, all of which are essential in tho making of healthy blood. The acid of tho Skookum, while termed malic, is in reality a combina tion of several vegetable acids, includ ing gallic, and the mixture of these makes a mild and agreeable vegetable acid the presence of which adds much to the flavor of the fruit. Dr. W. Gilinan Thompson, professor of medicine in Cornell University Med ical College, in New York city, a few years ago issued a highly instructive work called "Practical Dietetics in which he (poke of the value ot Hpples to man as follows : "I hey also contain salts such as ma lates, citrates and tartrates. They al so contain lime phosphates, plant albu min. gum and chlorophyll. I hey are good anti-scorbulic remedies and are laxative esneciullv when taken into an empty stomach. There are many dys nentics who thrive upon apples even i eaten raw and who can rcgulute the action of the bowels w ith them tffec tivelv." From this the deduction is justified that the cause of ailments from which a very large percentage of New Y'oik suffers can be removed by the eating of Skookum apples. Were this valuable information from the pen ')fvso learned a man and bo competent an authority as Dr. Thompson in the possession tf the millions whose livea are made mis eiahle bv constipation, what a demand there would be for Skuokums! What a quick end there would be to doctors and drug stores. liut even if the pos sibility of abolishing doctors and di us stores seems at first glance ridiculous it is not aboslutely so. The people can be educated up to the full value of ap ples and may the day be hastened whsn they will. "A Skotkum a day keeps the doctor away," is a song that may sing the world to freedom from ills and pills. I The origin of the apple dates back to the wild crab apple tree of Europe. MEETS MONDAY MAYOR Dl.MCLE APPOINTS OFFICERS Except for Slight Passage at Words First Meetiug Passes Without Any I'nusual Interest (Continued on Page Two.) With the exception of a little good r.atured bandinage, pointed and yet creating no ill feeling, between t'oun ciln.en Hell and Culberlson, who with Dr. Scnbee form the hold over mem bers of the city fathers, the initial meeting Monday night of the newly organized city council passed off with out excitement. Couneilmen Bell and I'lilteitson locked borna on the pro posed acceptance of the verdict of the jury in the case ct W. I.. Nichols Hgmnst the city, Involving the condem nation of a portion of Mr. Nichols' lot at the corner of Ninth and Sherman avenue. Mr. Pell declared that it would cost the city too much money. lie urged that the street improvment tic turned down, especially this year while business conditions were de pressed. Councilman Culberlson stated that a former city council had offered Mr. Nichols the sum of $h00 for the same prnpci ty, and that deed had been made ready for execution, when the city attorney had apprised the council that the property could not be pur chased except through condemnation proceedings. Mr. Culbertson further stated that he supposed Mr. Pell was against the proposed improvement since it was not in his end of town, cit ing an instance when Mr. Bell had strongly supported the proposition of securing lots for street improvement. Councilman Bell then stated that the cau referred to by Mr. Culbertson was when he had supported the im provement of Railroad avenue by ac quirement, of lots belonging to the Ap ple Growers Union. "No improvement was ever made of more value to the city," said Mr. Bell, "but in this case, 1 think we will be called on to make many other similar improvements." City Attorney Wilbur stated that the city, if it ever expected to make the street improvement, should take the property ; for so low a figure would never be secured again. A motion to accept the jury verdict, allowing Mr. Nichols the sum of $550 for the property, was carried. Immediately afterward Councilman Bell placed in nomination Councilman Culbertson as president of the council. and Mr. Culbertson was elected to this position. Mr. Ue.ll then suggested to the coun cil that the city should provide for the appointment ot an electric wiring in spector for the city. "In case we do not take such steps," said Mr. Bell, the Portland board of fire insurance underwriters are going to find It neces sary to send a man here from Portland, and it will be a great deal more expen sive to those who are building or mak ing changes in wiring of buildings now standing," At Mr Bell's suggestion, an ordinance providing for such an ottt cinl in the city of Marshfield was read. The council, however, thought that it would be well to include in the ordi nance provisions for a general builidng inspector, whoso duties it woulud be to supervise installation or wiring ana plumbing. It was suggested that the city engineer bo appointed to the office, fees by property owners form ing his payment tor services, the mutter was referred to the judiciary committee and city attorney for in vestigation. The matter having been called to the attention of the council by Councilman Scobee. the fire and water committee wus given power to act in the installa tion of a light on the hill steps where they cross the Serpentine road. Coun cilman Scobee stated a dangerous place existed there, and that unless a light was installed, some one would be' likely to sustain an injury from falling. The matter of repairing sidewalk at the corner of Front street and Sher man avenue was referred to the street committee. At the present time the council has no ordinance providing for the maintenance of the old wooden sidewalks. It was suggested that this matter should ue thoroughly in vestigated and such an ordinance pusstd. Mayor uumuie maue ine louowing committee appointments: Street- Franz, Culbertson and Nickelsen; Fire anJ Water Bell, Scobee and Butler; Judiciary-Culbertson, Nickelsen and Franz; Police Scobee, Bell and Cul bertson; Finance, Butler, Bell, and Scobee; Health Nickelsen, Butler and Frutiz. No change was made in the city force of officers, with the excep tion of the Heights policeman, Harry Bsiley succeeding W. D. McCrory. Allan Hart was the former regular ap pointee for the Heights. He, however, recently left for a visit in Kentucky and Mr. McCrory was made tcmpoiary ap pointee. Tho full list of city officials are: J. K. Carson, marshal; night officer, H. B. Smith; Heights officer, Harry Bailey ; city engineer and water super intendent, P. M. Morse; city attorney, Geo. P.. Wilbur; health officer. Dr. J. Edgington, and T. B. Chambers, street commissioner. Since the Pacific Telephone Com pany's long distance office was re moved from the Brosius building to the exchange building of the Oregon & Washington Telephone Co. there has been t o provision for operating the red light :U the corner of Second and Oak streets for calling the night officer. At the Monday night meeting ot the council, the matter was referred to the police committee, who will make ar rangements for such a service with the Oregon-Washington company, who un der their franchise have agreed to op erate such a light for the city. The telephone company has notified the council that it is ready to follow the instructions of the city officials in again maintaining the service. Since the Home Telephone Co., the predecessor of the Oregon-Washington Co., moved from the Brosius building, the light service has been maintained by tho Pacific company as a matter of courtesy, it is said. The new members of the city council are M. H. Nickelsen and Truman But ler. E. A. Frani was reelected to office. Talk with Heed & Henderson about nsti ranee. Money to loan on iann laudi. tf ii 1 1 K1 i 1 tl