m Mil VOL. XXXI IIOUI) MYEK, ORKUOX, THURSDAY, JANUARY Xo. .H A VALUABLE ALLY The business m.ui who enlists the cooperation ot an iilert, leieiKtal!e Umk provides hinivelt itli a strong ean ciMinst adv ersity. Our itrons soon listoer that this is iut merely an institution exeieisin the functions of lejxsit. discount and loins, but a very hu man oif'anintii n sincerely interested in their w elfare ind advancement. Our Ofrers w i.v.j; " eot-vi'ms. n rb;- THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK HOOD RIVER, ORM.ON For Small Orchards FRILND SPRAYERS with ',V-j h. p. online and 20) gallon tank. For La rye Orchards FRIEND SPRAYERS 4 h.p. with 2a0 jral. tank, or 10 h.p. with .'3u0 pi. tank BEST IN DESIGN. Absolutely Reliable in Operation. Remember Kxpert Mechanical Servvo l.v L. K. I'Ol'ST WLriit'ver NYfieil. FRIEND Users are FRIEND Boosters. Hood River Spray Company State Distributors Phone 2421 EVERYTHING FOR SPRAYING We would aain t all attention to the people of Hood kiver that in so far as Is possible the products offered at our maiket are prepared at home. Cattle are purchased in Portland and brought here for packing. It Is our endeavor to serve Hood River folk with the best FRESH AND CURED MEATS FISH AND POULTRY RI.OKCAMI I) PlllVl KV SI UVICF. VV. J. FILZ MEAT MARKET NEWTOWNS We want all .yrailes'. Our requirements for the Portland Market is about 'JO, (Kit) boxes tin- balance of the season. We can use v our slightly chilled at more favorable prices net to the growers than it is possible for you to obtain on any Mast em market. We see quoted : Extra Fancy New towns, large sizes selling $1.75 to $2.25 the box Quality and tirade make the Price. S H E R I D A N B E C K L E Y CO., Inc. 126 Front Street, PORTLAND, ORE. Reference: llihernia Saving Hank. 1'IIONK: MAIN' :t07. (lot marking stencil at this ollice free. FOR SATURDAY JANUARY 31 ONLY 1 OO lb. Bags of BEET SUGAR for $12.50 Cash PINE GROVE STORE A. F. BICKFORD, Prop. SATURDAY SPECIAL HARMONY ROSE Cl.YCF.RlNE SOAP f Rg,ar HARMONY VIOLET ClACF.RINE SOAP 15 Saturday Special lOc per Cake Not more than Five Oakes to a customer. ThSk' Soaps are nicely scented and of hirh quality. Fach Cake pneke'l in a net carton. (y S;."l . . -i . . .. Kresse Drug Company The axaJUL Store Come in and hfar the 1900 BUTLER BANKING COMPANY Mrmtwr Fv4ei.il Reserve Svstcm Service If for any reason it is necessary for a subscriber to c all the operator back after giving a number, do not shake the switch hook up and down a number of times. Pulling down and releasing the switch hook once w ill cause the signal to operate showing the operator that you are calling. By moving the switch hook a number of times you are very likely to disconnect yourself, or the operator thinking that it is a line in trouble will release the call altogether. 30C Oregon-Washington Telephone Co. Another FEDERAL MOTOR 1 to 5 A Size For Every Business Service ' For Every Ozvner Send for Prices and Specifications THE HEIGHTS GARAGE J. F. VOLSTORFF, Manager CORNER OF TWELFTH AND C STREETS Telephone 3151 lie , h . ?! or-.-. latest January Records B Security TRUCK Tons A "good name" is buiU by years of making good. The strength of the name of FEDERAL as applied to Motor Trucks lies in the good will of Federal owners through a decade. FEDERAL means more than just a Motor Truck it is a guarantee of Haulage Service. You get value re ceived from every FEDERAL. PHELAN GETS LOCAL SUPPORT SECRETARY SCOTT SENDS MESSAGES Oregon Senators Asked to Support Con stitutional Amendment Against Japanese Citizenship R. E. Scott wired Senators Cham berlain and McNary Friday, asking their support of the Phelan" resolution which calls for a constitutional amend rr.wt Vnvirtr cimersrin ? uH Japan- t.:r. ft. AnxnWi M,l. Mr. :-.'oU's tt ;eg;Mr.s v e: : "ioi!htur I'helaia piui.o9vd ttr.stitu tional amendment denying citizenship to American born Japanese has unqual ified support of Hood Kiver county. The problem; here la fast becoming what Senator 1'helan describes it in California. We will appreciate your help." The AnU Asiatic Association has called for a special meeting tonight, when committees will be appointed for considering the proposed local gentle man's argeement with the Hood River Japanese Farmers' Association. The Japanese, who assert that they are feeling a prejudicial effect from the activities of the Anti-Asiatic Associa tion, offer to prevent further immigra tion or purchase of land by Japanese if the organization will temper its work. While the proposed agreement is re ceiving the serious consideration of some of the association members, offi cials do not believe in any comnrtimiBe, and it is thought the offer will fail. Under Senator I'helan's amendment only persons "whose parents are white, Africans, American Indians or their descendants and all personsfnaturalized in the United States and stibiect to the jurisdiction thereof would lie eligible for citizenship." "In a short time," said Senator Phe bin, "the Japanese will own all the best lands in California unless r strained. It is necessary, therefore, to deny citizenship to Japanese bom on our soil and discourage their prts 1 ence, thus preventing race conflicts and the saving of the white population from deterioration." J "This gentlemen's agreement prop osition," declares Geo. R. Wilbur, "is really unfortunate. It may lead out siders to think that the existing Japan ese population and the whites here are at sword's oint. This is not the case at all. We are not concerned about the Japanese now here, but we do want to prevent a further inroad of Japanese, not only to Hood Kiver but to any other American community. We are living very peacefully with our existing Japanese population, and we have nothing against them as individu als, but we feel that we must continue our agitation for an amendment to the national constitution that will withhold citizenship to Japanese babies born in this country. The question is a na tional one, and one that we must con sider in the abstract. The proposed local agreement isjabsurd." Leroy Child holds a similar opinion. He points out that a charge of stilish ness has been made against orchard ists forming the Anti-Astatic Association here, in that it was alleged kthat their activities .were born of a fear of the competition of Japanese farmers. He points out that the charge might cer tainly be sustained if the orchardists, thinking they might end their own problems, entered a local gentlemen's agreement, permitting the rest of the country to take care of itself. K. E. Scott, who wired Senators Me Kary and Chamberlain asking their support of the Phelan resolution, re ceived a reply from the former Friday. Senator McNary telegraphed: "Am in sympathy with Senator I'helan's resolution denying citizenship to Amer ican born Japanese." LEHEROl FROST M. B. Waite, pathologist in charge of the bureau of plant industry at the Washington office of the United States Department of Agriculture, in reply to W. C. Keck, who asked his aid in car ing for orchards that may have been damaged by the December cold wea ther, states that I). F. Fisher, a plant pathologist of his office, located at Wenatchee, will be asked to give aid. Mr. Fisher, the letter states, will make observations at different points in Washington and Oregon, to get data and records concerning the freeze and to render all possible assistance. Mr. Waite, who discusses the frost damage exhaustively, writes : "In answer to your question about apple orchards being killed by freez ing, it may surprise you to learn that this is a chronical condition near the northern border of apple culture in the eastern half of the United States until the lee side ot the tireat Lakes is reached, it is an occasional condition as far Bouth as central Indiana, central Illinois and corresponding parallels in the Mississippi valley. In New York and New England thev had a terrili cally severe freeze, particularly in the Hudson valley, in 1904, which killed many old apple trees. It nearly killed out the peach orchards, yet where fav orably located with good air drainage thev survived a number of years. While the buds were killed the first season they bore an unusually heavy crop the second season. The great blizzard of 1889 injured a large part of the peach orchards of northern Michi gan. Frost hurt a great many fruit trees over the eastern half of the United States and as it went south ward it caught peaches in the central ueorgia region at six degrees below zero with the pink of buds showing. Of course this resulted in serious in jury. This freeze occurred about the thirteenth to fifteenth of February. "Eastern horticulture is full of in formation of the sort that applies to your condition. In fact, they have in their history many occurrences of this sort. As a rule the entire Pacific coast, extending as far back as the Kocky mountains, has been exception ally free from these northeastern bliz zards. The modifying influence of the Pacific is of course the reason. "There are so manf things to be considered regarding frost injury that it is scarcely possible to cover all within the limits of a letter. Certain important things, however, should be pointed out. In the hrst place the de gree of injury to the trw varies enor mously with the variety and, species, the age and conditions of the tree. The condition of the tree will depend very largely on the soil, the subsoil, drainage and moisture conditions, as ; well as on location and air drainage, j It also depends Upon the kind of cover i crops, cultivation, irrigation, etc. I "Another important thing 1 should state is that the wood of the trunks and larger branches may be severely I olackened without the tree necessarily being ruined. If the cambium layer is killed and the bark remains alhe the tree may continue to flourish and bear, even more heavily than normally, for a few years. These severely injured trees, of course, will have a tendency to become rotten hearted and short lived, but they are far too valuable to destroy. The bark and the cambium are apt to be the last structures killed I t 'xi -ve. tierf-ctly dorr: ri', ;,rii , Hi' I-,- i !4:i to evess ve moisiuie conditions, setpage, nitrogen or mild winter weather. We have in formation about this feeze from other sources, andjour understanding is that your trees were in a thoroughly dor mant condition, at. least were generally so. Strange to Bay, when the trees are not thoroughly dormant the cam hium is one of the first things killed. The effects in other words are exactly reversed. This may come from the trees not being ripened in the fall, which is possible, but not probable in your case, or from their being started into growth again by mild winter wea ther. The cambium ia an extremely thin line in cross section. It forms a layer as thin as the thinnest tissue paper. Right under the cambium is the youngest of the apple wood formed the previous summer. These layers are easiest killed and often show a black streak which deceives one into thinking that the cambium is killed while it is this young wood instead. "In general 1 want to caution you that the trees may not be as badly injured as they appear. There area great many types of frost injury, in cluding the killing of the water sprouts and young tips, down to root winter injury. If you had 30 incheB of snow on the ground that removed root injuv and in fact injuries at the base or col lar of the trunk from consideralinn. Snow is a great protection. I should expect on your trees that you would find the worst injury on the trunk just at the snow line, extending a few inches below it but mostly above the snow line and diminishing upward to ward the tops of the trees, except in the case of young, unripened wood. The pith of one year wood and younger branches or little rings of wood im mediately surrounding the pith are the first things to blacken and;discolor. This, however, has little effect as it appears chronically in the northern Mississippi Valley apple orchards most every winter. "Frost injured trees make such re markable recovery that 1 feel like cautioning you to give all doubtful cases an opportunity to show what they can do. If the bark and cambium remain alive, the orchard should be given only moderate or normal prun ing, should be given extra good culti vation and horticultural care next spring and summer, ami the decisiun reached as to how badly the trees are hurt should as a rule be postponed un til next June or mid-summer." Leroy Childs declares Mr. Waite's letter cheering to local growers. Loc al effects of the freeze seem to have been limited to the trunks and larger limbs around the snow line. Observa tions have shown the trees to be al ready recovering from the blackened effects of the frost damage to the young wood under bark and cambium. Kalph Hinnchs, West Side orchard ist reported Sunday that he did not consider the damage to pears or cher ries as or any consequence. Mr. Hin richs immediately after the freeze cut branches of both cherries and peHrs. He has forced these in a hot room, and they have bloomed as on normal years. TELEPHONE RATES ARE DISCUSSED Members of a committee of city bus iness men and rural orchardists met last Thursday with officers of the tele phone company to ask a revision of a rate increase recently granted by the Public Service Commission. The com mittee asked for an elimination of a toll charge of five cents for each call between the Hood Kiver and Odell ex changes. It was proposed that a rate of $2 per phone be charged for service in all parts of the valley, with a dis count of 25 cents on all bills paid be fore the tenth of the current month. At present a charge of $2.25 is made for city phones and $1.75 for phones of the Odell exchange. The representatives of the company, however, declared that it would be im possible to accede to the demands. The protesting delegation was asked to postpone their activities until the new rates were given a fair trial. When asked if the telephone concern would sell its stock, in case citizens started an agitation for taking over the line, Manager Smithson replied in the af firmative. "The application of the five cent toll charge," declared M. I). Odell. "has resulted in an ostracism of the Odell district. Unless the call is for some thing very urgent or important people who have to pay the five cent charge simply do not call. The charge is a discrimination against Odell. Mr. Odell cited instances where Odell residents, living on opposite sides of a county road are connected with different exchanges, one with Hood River and the other with Odell. When they talk to each other the five cent toll rate applies. In one case a rancher has to pay five cents every time he talks with his tenant, be cause their telephones happen to be on different exchanges. The telephone company shows an in crease of 180 subscribers in the past year. AVIATORS MAKE" SAFE LANDING FIERE R. S. Clark and Walter Lees are the first aviators to dare a landing at Hood River. The men, representatives of the Liberty Motor Corporation, flew from Portland Friday in 55 minutes, landing suscessfully on a field1 rear Alma Howe's Cottage Farm. Mr. Lees, who piloted the biplane, says the field can be made excellent with small work. An automobile brought the avi ators to the city, where they discussed future air routes with business men before flying back, to Portland,. INTEREST IN BRIDGE GAINING BITLER ASKS All) OF MR. SiNNOTT Congress Irged to Hold lp fascate Locks Proposition for lull Investigation HikxI River people are taking a kei interest in an interstate bridge to cut -nect the Columbia river and Nurtt. Hank highways here. Agitation f. r such a bridge whs launched t a meet 'i e "! t. n !.- i : .- Us,.' V.;, J.A. 'lt.tr v tn : ' , ;n iwUs by :,i-r.u'.t..-i.'.-i.i 1 a; r,ah individuals were seeking congrcssion..' authority for building a bruige aero-.-, the Columbia at Cascade l.i.n ks. Sn I information was recently received t v the Commercial Club from Representa tive N. J. Sinnott. who, in response to inquiries from C. W. McCullagh, preM dent of the club, wired and w rote hi n on the matter, enclosing in the lettei a copy of the Cascade Locks bill. Mr. Sinnott's wire follows: "Private parties are applying fir ritiht to construct bridge at their u n expense below Cascade Locks. Chv ernment had nothing to do with mat ter except grant privileges. Suggest you confer with W. W. Ranks, of I'oit. land, and A. L. Miller, of Vancouver, Wash., parties interested and endiavor to get them to change location of pro posed bridge." It has been ascertained that the en abling bill has passed the senate, and Truman Kutle r.mcmhc r uf a committee appointed to investigate iho Cascade Locks matter, has wind l!eito-eht:i-tise Sinnott to use his influence in holding up the bill until a full invest - gation can be made. Measurements that have recently been taken of the Columbia here, sh iw the distance between the tracks of the O.-W. R. & N. Co. and the S. P. & S. R. R. Co., crossing the Columbia just west of the Hood river't mouth and striking the Washington bank just east of the White Salmon river, to be tiooo feet. It is said that all except about 2, 5 0 feet of this distance could be spanted with earth and sand embankments. A deepwater wharf both for Hood River and Washington points, Under wood and White Salmon, it is said, could be constructed w ith the bridge. Hood River people argue that the construction of a bridge at Cascade Locks would probably end the possi bility of securing an interstate bridge here. The location here is declared the logical one for the mid-Columbia, because it would be more utilttar an. A highway, crossing the Simce Indian reservation just north of dlenwood, Wah., and giving Oregon a direct con nection with the Yakima country has been proposed, anil a local liri ge would serve traffic from eastern Wash ington points. HOOD RIVER PLEDGES FUND FOR ARMENIANS "If the United States had a few more Oregons," declared Mrs. O. F. Lamson, a native born Armenian and the wife of a prominent Seattle physi cian, who addressed citizens gathered at a luncheon Tuesday to organize for raising $'2,t;(HJ for Armenian and Syrian relief, "the Armenirfn problem would soon be solved. " Mrs. Lamson based her statement on the act of the state in routing u cargo of her products next Saturday, the foodstutls to be supplied the famine stricken land by the United Slates Grain Corporation on the credit of the Armenian nation. For an hour Mrs. Lamson spoke on Armenian suppression through iul the ages, bringing teprs to the eves of lier hearers, and w lien she finished the meeting voted unanimously Cor tele grams to be sent to Senators Chamber Iain and McNary asking their suitnort of the Lodge-Williams resolution, which provides American guaranty of Armen ian independence as an outcome of the great war. Recent senatorial discus sion, Mrs. Lamson declared, has cost Armenia 100,000 souls. Except for America offering to share responsibility for the indenendenee.she said, Armenia would be no better oil' than before the war. The committee of men and women present at the luncheon pledged that Hood River county redeem herself for the poor record of last year, when but $ti00 quota fur Armenian relief was raised. The deficit has added to this year's quota. Samuel C. Lancaster, in charge of the state drive for the Armenian fund, was unable to be piesent. Mrs. Lam son was accompanied bv Mrs. J. 1. Ihi rand, of Seattie, and S. S. Hruce, of Portland. Mrs. Lamson, following the luncheon, addressed an auuitnie of women. W. II. Roddy, campaign manager for Hood River county, appointed commit tees to handle details of rawing the fund. Mrs. Wm. Stewart, Mrs. A. (i. Lewis and Mrs. (has. fuller were named to select solicitors to cover the residential districts. A committee to solicit the business district is coiiqinsed of E. O. Ulanchiir, F. A. Cram, J. 11. Fredricy. J. II. Hazlett, Hugh (I. Hall and Joe D. Thumison I. R. Acheson will be treasurer. Representati . es of ruial districts have been appointed. That those at the luncheon might visualize the hunger of Armenian chil dren, a small glass bott le, showing the daily ration of the children, exclusively rice, was set before each plate. AUTO PARK IS BEING PREPARED W. T. Price, who has charge of im proving the three acre automobile park donated to the city by the Commercial club and Volunteer lire t depart merit, states that the free camping place for visiting motor touri.-ts will be itady for eariy spring travelers. Water and light connections have been made and numerous conveniences for the travel ing public are being installed." The commercial club and liromtn purchased the plot with funds raised from concessions last Fourth of July. The plot is at the west edge of the 'city, a part of it shaded with oak trees.