f i .5; i , . . i' VOL. XXVIII HOOD RIVER, OREGON, THURSDAY, MARCH 29. 1917 is; No. 44 Burpee's-Seeds Grow The most complete assort ment we have ever shown from this world famous grower, is now on display and at growers' prices, with permit to exchange or return your over purchase. Our stock of Spencer Sweet Peas include the latest novelties. Crockery, China, Glassware Broken lines in thousands of choice pieces at prices be low factory cost Your china closet can be restocked at small outlay by taking ad vantage of this less than one-half price. No Trading Stamps But All bills subject to 5 cash discount or 27c if accounts are paid at end of the month. Stewart Hardware Attention Orchardists! Our warehouse will hold only a limited supply of spray materials. In view of the serious car shortage situation and a possible tie up from a railway strike, we urge that growers begin to haul their spray, in order, that we may refill the ware house and thus secure enough stock to supply the needs of growers for 1917. Your co-operation is needed to prevent a possible bad situation. Your purchases of spray may bemade through Gilbert & DeWitt, Kelly Bros., Fruit Growers' Ex change and Apple Growers Association or direct. J. C. BUTCHER. ASK US TTfcYPTOIf IVglasses JL. THE INVISIBLE Do you really know how conveni ent and attractive KRYPTOKS are? They combine near and far vision in one lens. Yet they have no lines nor seams to blur your vision give you a freakish appearance or , accentuate your age. And they free you from fussing with two pairs of glasses. We invite, you to come in and see them. W. F. LARAWAY, Optician Jeweler When In Portland Stop at the Palace Hotel One of the best liostelries of the Rose City. Washington Street at Twelfth The cleanest rooms in the city, first class service,' fireproof, strictly modern, free phones, large ground floor lobby, steam heated rooms, with or without bath, hot and cold water, in shopping and theatre district, 50 cents per day and up, and special weekly rates. An inspection will convince you. Dan Wuille & Co. Supplies its Growers with Spray, Boxes and Paper Go to Gilbert & DeWitt for Spray Material A. E. WOOLPERT, Northwestern Representative Prices on Garden Tools & Ranch Tools And steel goods generally are high. But our contracts were in excess of the year's needs, so we are able td of fer prices that show a large savinx. A wonderful line or orchard tools. Furniture Is always odd if desir able and this department is overloaded witru goods at prices we can never hope to repeat. The best bargains we have been able to offer in years. & Furniture Co. ABOUT DIFOCALS KODAK TIME Always use Autographic Films with Autographic Kodaks We always carry a complete stock of Speed and Non Auto graphic Films. If it isn't an Eastman, it isn't a Kodak. Bring your films for developing and printing to us as we do it right and promptly. Kresse Drug Co. THE REXALL, STORE Come In and hear the latest March Records Eastman Kodak and Supplies Victor Vlctrolas and Records, $15 to $40 : CONDENSED REPORT OF THE First National Bank of Hood River, Oregon v at the Close of Business, March 5, 1917 RESOURCES Loans and Discount. ,$l!82,887.P9 United tates Bonds. . . 100,000.00 Other Bondg and War rants 34,504.14 Bank Building'and Fix tures 51,250.00 Other Real Estate 3,400.00 Cash t22,84T.29 Due from Banks 185,5(8.75 108,412.04 1680,454.17 Gain in Deposits Over a Year Ago, $65,000.00 Attest: E. O. BLANCHAR, Cashier. Board of Directors: A. D. Moe, C. Dethman, O. H. ; Rhodes, C. E. Copple, E. O. Blanchar. How About that rE have a LARGE NEWEST FABRICS on the Market. Place your order now for Easter MEYER, The Tailor 108 Third Street Groceries of Quality I .'SJU'-li L .' 1' , i 1 i ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' " i ' : " "mi i i i Prompt service and satisfaciion for our patrons, j These are some of the things that we incorporate in i the principles of our business. We invite your better acquaintance during the ! year, 1917. ARNOLD The StanleySmith Lumber Yard ON CASCADE AVENUE Is still doing business, and we wish to announce that we have on hand a fair stock of lumber. The opinion that seems to have prevailed in the Valley that the yard was closed is altogether erroneous Give us a call or phone us your wants. Yardlhone 2171 Office Phone 4 121 Abstracts accurately made. Our re cords are complete and to date daily. 7 per cent loans. All kinds of insurance. 1 Hood River Abstract & Inv. Co. oibtf LIABILITIES Capital ... 1 1100,000.00 Surplus and Profits. . .V 14,438.39; Circulation 100,000.00 Rediscounts............ None Deposits 366,016.78 $580,454.17. Suit for Easter? ASSORTMENT of the Delivery. GROCERY CO. Please vonr wife. Mr. Citiien, by tug' sestine Sunday dinner at the Oregon, for 80c, that you may avoid the worries or Sunday cooking. . j-O-u DR. M. E. WECH KNEW STEVENSON AUTHOR S ECCENTRICITY RECALLED 'Doc" Welch, Physician to Han's Animal Friends. Was Long in The Racing Game For more than the past decade in the Hood River Valley and other neighbor ing communities of the mid-Columbia, when anybody's horse has overeaten of green alfalfa or has fallen a victim of an injury or the ailments peculiar to dumb beasts of burden, it has been the universal custom to summon Dr. M. E. Welch, veterinary surgeon and county veterinarian. Through the days of all the lour seasons of the year Dr. "Mike", as the physician to man's best friends, does, cows and horses. has become familiarly known, is ever ready, and be the call to the barnyard of a neighboring farmer or to some locality that requires a day s ride he goes. . Somewhat like, the oldtime country doctor he has grown into an established institution. In speech Dr. "Mike" is all but abrupt and his re plies to the questions of newly arrived ranchers, seeking his professional ser vices, have at times provoked resent ment. His more lovable traits are displayed when he is thrown among children. Dr. Mike loves children and animals, and how his eyes light up when he talks of the fine points of horseflesh. " As the duration of an ac quaintance with Dr. Welch extends over a period of considerable time it is almost sure to ripen into a friendship, that is, if you measure up to the old man s standard. You may swear in ordinately aud even chew tobacco : you may never have donned a pair of kid gloves and your best suit may be a woollen shirt and overalls pants ; your use of language and lack of knowledge of approved etiquette may be such as to brand you as one who has never en tered the door of an institution of learning ; but if you can look your fel low man straight in the eye and are on the square, displaying no evidence of an affectation then you are ace high with Doc Welch. His is a. character that improves with age. liut Dr. Mike is not just a common. ordinary village horse doctor. If he were this sketch would never have been written. The foregoing reference to the subject under discussions as an old man may bring the writer the threat of cudgeling. Doc Welch is 61 years of age, but even those who have known him for 10 years would never know it. and he has spent at least 40 of those years traveling down the stretch of life at a fairly record gait. Yet he is a young man, despite the fact that little crow-feet wrinkles are settling around his eyes. His face is covered by a beard somewhat browner than nis hair, a beard, as well as hair, that seems not to know how to turn gray. When men have reached the age of three score years they begin to talk about how old they have grown and they like to tell about the good old times or the days that have passed. Doc Welch, whether from a natural desire or from policy, abstains from the fomer old man's hobby, although he likes no occupation better, when he knows there is no stranger present, than to hold an audience, spellbound with his reminiscences. Still, in the prophesies of the time honored veter inarian, the days that are coming are going to be even better than those that nave passed. Doc Welch saw the first pink dawn of summer in Medina county, Ohio, on June 15, 1856. When he was nine years old he was a circus boy. For two years he rode in the sawdust ring of Dan Costello's famous road circus. "Old Dan," you may hear him say, as he calls up those vivid pictures of boy hood "I'll never forget him. How kind he was to us children with the circus." Dr. Mike might have grown into a veteran of the big tent but for an injury that forced him to retire to a lite less strenuous. Kecuperation, however, was fast, and in 1867 he was at Dexter Park, Chicago, a jockey, riding thoroughbreds. "There at Dexter Park, says Dr. Mike, I first saw Bud Doble drive Dexter, the forerunner of the great days to come for trotters." Names of great race tracks, oi famed horses and the owners come as readily to the tongue of Doc Welch as the personnel of a municipality's prom inent citizenry to a veteran city editor. He has ridden in races at bheepsneaa Bay, at St. Louis, at Cold Springs Park in Milwaukee, at New Orleans, at Syracuse and Chicago, not to men tion scores of other places. He can recount incidents of a personal nature connected with such noted owners as General Withers, Dan Mace, L. L. Dorsey, McKern, Chas. ureen and Mc K in non. "The greatest aggregation of trot ting horses that I ever saw at one place, says Dr. Welch, "was at bt. Paul when May Queen, Hopeful, Lulu, Santa Claus and Woodford's Mambrino vied for honors. Bonesetter, the 8100.000 stud, was there. "In 1894 I saw Bud Doble drive m, . of . T l a VT V l nomas jenerson ai nocnesier, i. i. And bv the way. Bud Doble, who is now 75 years old and who was recently seriously Hi, as 1 noticed in the papers, is one of the greatest drivers oi trot itne horses the turf ever produced. For several years the veteran has been in charcre of Hammet farm, which he established in southern California. His sires have been famous." From a rider of running horses. Dr. after he left the big circuits of the east he drove on Pacihc coast circuits for about five years. He has since been a prospector. While mining in California in the 90s he became for a time the boon companion of Robert Louis Stevenson. No man living today is a greater admirer of the author of Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde, and Doc Welch is just as familiar with the other characters of btevenson. "Stevenson and his wife. Fanny. were ensconced in an abandoned bunk house of the old Calistoga mine in Nana county when I had the good for tune to meet them,' says Dr. Welch. The old riddled shack, with the rubbish left by miners cleared away, seems to me today rather a funny place in which to find a man who has since grown so famous. But Stevenson was there on the high side of Mount St. Helena for his health. The bunk house consisted of three rooms, so set against the mountainside that the rooms were set on top of each other with the en trances on different levels. The first story formed the kitchen and Steven son's studio, or at least the place where he wrote, while the upper stor ies were sleeping chambers. "I used to visit Stevenson there in that kitchen and we would take a glass of whiskey together or split a bottle of wine. He talked with a broad Scotch accent He didn't seem to take any great fancy to the Calif ornians. 'Let me have the Samoan Islands,' he would say, 'that's the place where a fellow can do as he pleases without regard for any conventions. They say I'm sick, up here for consumption. Bah, a man's not going to have any consumption as long as he has any of this, and he would pat fondly a bottle of whiskey. He was very fond of onions, and Mrs. Stevenson, Fanny, as he always called her, as we talked would often be called on to produce some of these favorite vegetables. "I have seen Stevenson engaged in his, writing there in his kitchen study. His long fingers cramped over the pen would fairly fly over the sheet of paper and each sheet, as .fast as he had fin ished it would be cast upon the floor. Fanny was kept busy picking up and putting together his manuscripts. When we would talk Stevenson would always keep a pad before him, and sometimes in the midst of some out burst of speech he would abruptly stop snd jot down some pleasing thought. The author seemed very fond of a daughter, who was then in a Catholic convent, Notre Dame, I believe it was, at San Jose, and often would tell me how he longed to see her. "I wonder what Stevenson would think of California today. I have juBt been reading of the purity campaign in San Francisco. The City of the Golden Gate has indeed changed almost beyond comprehension since those days of the 90s. They tell me that California is going dry when another election comes along. I am made to recall the words of Stevenson in Silverado quatters, where he said : 'Some of us, kind old pagans, watch with dread the shadows falling on the age. His fear, as ex pressed there, however, was not one of prohibition. That contingency was then undreamed of perhaps. Instead it was a protest against dilution of the wines given by nature. The entire par agraph of this protest in a chapter entitled, 'Napa Wines,' was: 'I was interested in California wine? Indeed, I am interested in all wine, and hayje been all my life, from the raisin wine that a schoolboy fellow kept secreted in his play-box up to my last discov ery, those notable Valtel lines that once shone upon the board of Caesar. ' "Some of us, kind old Pagans, watch with dread the shadows failing on the age; how the unconquerable woim invades the sunny terraces of France, and Bordeaux is no more, and the Rhine is mere Arabia Petraea. Chateau Neuf is dead, and I have never tasted it. Hermitage a her mitage indeed from all life's sorrows lies expiring by the river. And in place of these imperial liquors, beauti ful to every sense, gem-hued, flower scented dream compellers behold upon the quays at Cette the chemicals ar rayed; behold the analyst at Mar seilles, raising hands in obsecration.' "These words may have been more prophetic than we believe. The ereed of the seller of liquors, his array of chemicals, the distilling of poisons. He sinned away his day of grace, and in many parts of the land the prohibi tionist with his ballot has arisen more destructive even than the worms on 'miniiiiiiiinifi ini m : MAKE IT UNANIMOUS ! ; 1.,.,t,..,lH;;,.l.,1tl.l.H..i,,.,n.lM.. the sunny terraces of France to sound the knell of John Barleycorn and with that sinner those imperial liquors of btevenson." Dr. Welch is very ODtimistic over the future of the horse in America. "Horse racing." he declares, "is the sport of kings, and all of us here in the land of Columbia are blessed with a liberty that makes each of us a king. in my opinion the climax of racing the last century reached a state of climax for the trotting horse in 1890. In 1895, it was first realized that the pacer as a money making' proposition was to the front, Bookmakine and the thor oughbred, ever the gambler's little white marble, caused the temporary downfall of horse racing. But mark my words the great sport is coming back. "I still like to get my horse journals. It is my greatest delight to read of the exploits of fop beer. There is a man for you. I do not know Ed Geer very well personally. I have merely met him. But I have seen enough of him to know, coupled with what I read, that he is a true gentleman." There's perhaps one topic that Dr. Welch likes to discuss better than his reminiscences of Robert Louis Steven son and his days spent in following the big racing circuits. That topic deals with his son, Frank M. Welch, editor and publisher of the Stillwater, Minn., Messenger. I he paper, is one of the thriving journals of the state of Min nesota, It is semi-weekly, and Dr. Mike knows well the days when the issues will arrive at the Hood River postoffice. He experiences no prouder moment than when showing copies of that well set up and edited paper. The aggressive spirit that the Messenger breathes even at this distance to an utmost stranger to the son is an evi dence that it has a host of satisfied subscribers, but none of them reads its columns with greater test than Doc Welch. EXCHANGE MEETING NEXT SATURDAY The annual meeting of the Fruit Growers' Exchange will be held at Libray hall next Saturday, when direc tors for the ensuing year will be elected. W. F. Gwin, general man ager of the Northwestern i ruit Ex change, with which the local orasrniza tion has renewed its contract, will be here for the session. The following fruit growers are mentioned as Exchange directorate candidates : H. H. Hann, of Park dale; F. W. Buff, of the Oak Grove district; J. P. Naumes, of OdelL The members of . the present board of directors are: J. 0. Mark, F. P. Fri day, W. R. Warner, 3rd, O. M. Bailey ana &enneia nc&ay. HOOD RIVER ISPATRIOTIC HUNDREDS OF FLAGS ARE UNFURLED Climax of the Week's Celebration Will Be Reached Tomorrow Evening in Meeting at Armory Hood River is unanimous this week in an expression of patriotism. Men of Company 12 initiated a movement ior a local expression or loyal feeling even before the proclamation of Gov ernor Withycombe was announced and the plana of the artillery men for all mercantile establishments to enter into a patriotic window decoration contest met with a most hearty response, and as early as Monday morning win dow decorators might have been seen at work. Men got busy with saws and hammers and many new flagpoles were erected. The March winds that blew with equinoctal fervor up the Columbia gorge from the Pacific rippled hundreds of flags, unfurled from every place of business in the city, both in the lower town and on the Heights. Nearly all residences displayed the colors. Hood River windows have never been more beautiful than today, when prizes will be awarded following he judging to be done by Messrs. Blanchar, Mitch ell and Butler. In a number of the displays are seen relics of Civil and Revolutionary War days. The week's patriotic demonstrations in Hood River will reach a climax to morrow night, when a great mass meet ing will be held under the auspices of the artillery company, the members of which before the assembling at the armory will participate in exhibition drills on the street. The meeting will be presided over by Rev. R H. Long brake. Short talks will be made by the following: Capt, Wilbur, Mayor Dumble, Judge Blowers, Major Bro sius, Roy D. Smith, J H. Hazlett, S. A. Mitchell, Truman Butler, EL O. Blanchar and Dr. Guttery. A musical program will be partici pated in by Mrs. C. H. Sletton, J. A. Epping, Miss Lillian Brock and a cho rus of high school girls. A dance will follow the program. Each couple will be assessed the sum of 25 cents to pay for the music. All Civil and Spanish-American War veterans, members of the city council and county commissioners are invited to sit on the stage. The artillerymen are preparing an exhibition, one not to compete in the contest, however, at the former Kaes ser store in the Jackson building. OLD UNION MAY CEASE TO EXIST The Hood River Apple Growers' Union, through the agency of which the fruit of the Hood River Valley was given a prestige in world mar kets, may cease to exist after the an nual meeting of the stockholders of the cooperative concern on Saturday, April 7, on which date, according to present plans it is proposed to sell the properties of the Union to the Apple Growers Association and dissolve the older corporation. The Union ceased active participa tion as a sales agency in 1912, when the Association, an amalgamation of all extisting snipping agencies of that time, was organized. Practically the unanimous membership of the Union became affiliated with the larger snip ing concern, which leased the ware iouses, refrigeration plants and a water system of the Union for a period of 10 years. The total Union proper ties are valued at approximately $125, 000. The proposed purchase is made on a basis of paying a sufficient amount for the property of the Uinon that the stockholders of the organization will receive the full face value for their stock and seven per cent interest from the date of June 1, 1913, when interest payments were discontinued. While the terms of the proposed sale and all details will be left to the board of di rectors of the organization, the resolu tion for the deal will provide that not less than $10,000 be paid down on the purchase price and that a minimum of the same sum be paid annually on the principal. The annual election of members of the board of directors of the Associa tion will be held on the same date. Nominations have been made as fol lows : E. W. Birsre. P. S. Davidson. W. b. Dickerson, A. G. Lewis, J. R. Nunamaker, U. a. Nye, J. U. Porter, C. A. Reed, E. H. Shepard. R. H. Wallace, A. F. Bickford, C. Dethman, W. L. Nichols, C. W. Reed, W. F. bhannon, A. c. Staten and H. M. van nier. W. J. FURNISH GETS MILLARD INTERESTS W. J. Furnish, a capitalist of Port land, has secured through an exchange all of the local holdings of A. Millard and sons, A. Millard, Jr., and Hugh Millard. Mr. Furnish has transferred to Messrs. Millard properties at Esta- cada and at Seattle. The valuation of each of the properties figuring in the exchange is placed at JSU.wu. One of the Millard tracts, compris ing 160 acres, is located in the Upper Valley south of Parkdale. It is crossed by a fine mountain stream which furn ishes water for the modern dwelling. The farm is partly in orchard, partly in alfalfa and partly uncleared. The other tract, of 110 acres, is on the West Side. Of this place all has been cleared and planted except 30 acres which has been left a natural park for a homesite. Mr. Furnish and son, W. E. Furnish, were here over the week end looking after their property interests. Henderson Gets Commission Louis A. Henderson, who served as a civil enigneer in the employ of the government at Mindanao, P. I., has received notification of his appoint- ' ment to the commission of first lieu tenancy in the Engineers' Reserve Corps, U. S. A. Other local men who have recently received appointments as reserve officers are C. M. Hurlburt and Charles Steinhauser. Lillian Gish at the Electric Sunday and Monday in "The Children Pay'