DAILY EVENING EDITION DAILY DEN EDITION TO ADVERTISERS. the Kast Oregoulaa baa tht largest paid otmuatlon of any psper Id Ortgou, east of .Portland ud over twice tbe circulation to tasdittun ot any otner newspaper. Forecast for EaMera Oregon, bjr th I'nltrd Stairs Wratlirr Obmrw t Portland. Rain or anow tonight am) WclnM. cay; cooler tonlicht. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER VOL 26 ILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1915. NO. 8121 ran to fight TO END FOII SHIP Hew Avenue of Discussion is Open ed in Filibuster in Discussion of Proposal of Senator Reed. REPUBLICANS SCORE HEAVILY lYtxIdont Not Convinced Vet TluU Extra KewtJon of Conirres Will be Necuwary Declares Tliat German War 7xno Proclamation Should not Influence raftav. WASHINGTON'. Feb. 9.Presldent Wilson Intend to fiKht to the last ditch for the ship purchase bill. This .Ht least, wasthe Intimation given White House callers today. The prc-a-nt filibuster In the senate haa not jet convinced the president that an extra session of congress Is necessary. Wilson aald the German, war lone proclamation should not have any In fluence In the bill's passage. ' WASHINGTON, Feb. 9. With the i.blcct of adopting a rule centering ih rountry'a attention on the flllbua ter. friends of the ship purchase bill tmlv succeeded In opening a new ave nue of discussion today. Following an all night speech of Senator Jonea of Washington, Keed proposed that members of the senate be kept In the senate constantly, unless personally excused aa long aa the senate la In aes inn since the evident Intention f the majority was to keep the aenate rn continuance session until a ote win reached, the adoption of the ruie would have forced a vote aa soon aa the filibustered were physically ex hausted. The republicans acored heavily when the aenate declined to debate the Reed proposal by a vote of Si to 3. Jonea held the floor fof If hours and 65 minutes. Tha republican retained Senator Kenyon and all the other bolter on their aide on thla vote and in addtl on gained Bryan of Florida. The democrats gained only one vote, that of La Toilette. Seeing the hopelessness of passing hla continuous attendance resolution Reed later attempted to withdraw it The republics objected. Reed the moved It be tabled, which would kill It. This was done without a rollcall. WASHINGTON. Feb. ".Adminis tration forces of the senate succeed- ed late yesterday In forcing the repuD llcana and Insurgent democrats back to the defensive In the flftht over the government ship purchase bill. Ac ceptlng the Inevitable, leaders of the opposition renewed their declaration of unrelenting war on the bill, to be continued If necessary until adjourn ment on March 4, and general debate was resumed In another protracted session which ahowed no slgna of abatement at a late hour last night. Jonea to Talk a Month If Necessary. When the night session waa aseur ed, Wesley L. Jonea of Washington, who had been preparing for auch an emergency for more than a week, took the floor and launched into a apeech designed to extend throughout the night. Senator Jonea declared he would talk until March 4, If physical ly possible, In order to accomplish the defeat or the bill. . (Continued from page 6.) FROM 1-15 VIS III PEIIITEII1II $500 Fine Also Given Young Indian Convicted of Manslaughter in Connection With Farmer's Death. YOUTH MIKES NO STATEMENT J iiclt; 11ielM Delivers Kindly Lecture Ilnrko Receives Sentence Un moved I'ndtT the Law He Will be Eligible) for Pardon at End of Year Provide! Ho 1 Good. Miners Wives Relate Tale of War J. I VATFR BUS Win rnniptc X iflll UULLii UL to nmiir Tnm Ann WHIM SETTLE DISPUTES Decree and findings of State Water Board Over Umatilla River Ex pected Within 10 Days. 3 YEARS WORK FINISHED One to fifteen years In the state penltentlury and $500 fine was the sentence Imposed this morning at 9:45 by Circuit Judge Phrlps upon Richard Burke, the young Indian con victed Saturday of manslaughter for the death of Kd Klrkpatrick, promi nent reservation farmer. Before panning sentence, Judge Phelps announced that It was his op inion, concurred In b'y the attorneys, thut the stutute does not permit a sentence of any definite number of years, a term without limitation of time with a minimum of one year and a maximum of flteeen years being the only possible sentence. In addition he was permitted to Impose a fine up to 15000. When asked if he had anything to say why sentence should not be pass ed or his punishment mitigated, the Indian boy answered in the negative and hia attorneys, Col. Haley and Will M. Feterson. also announced they had nothing to say. ' Prior to announcing hia sentence, Judge Phelps delivered a kindly lec ture to the youthful defendant "I do not have to tell you.'' he said. "how sorry I am to be obliged to send you to the atate penitentiary. I am more aorry that I would be If you were a white man for, in your case, believe that Inherent and racial weaknesses were partly responsible for your act I trust that your pun Ishment will not only be a lesson to you but will also show other young men that whiskey, a gun and sport ing women are a bad combination. 'The court and the attorneys have agreed that there Is but one sentence that can be Imposed under the stat ute and this court will pass that sen tence. Any clemency that you may deserve must be exercised by the .of flclnls at Salem. I want you to feel that when you get out of prison that you will not be lost beyond redemp tion. If you will leave liquor and 1 women alone, you can yet become a pood citizen." Burke received the sentence un moved. The sentence permits him to receive a pardon at the end of one )ear providing his conduct as a prtu oner Is good and other circumstances warrant him receiving his liberty. Prior to the passage of the sen tence, he was permitted to converse In the sheriff's inner office with Bll- lie Clifford, the woman who figured ao prominently In the case. She haa showed a warm Interest In the young Indian, an Interest that has substantiated the statements made by the district attorney In his arguments. And sometimes a man la misunder stood because there la nothing In him worth Investigating. 0 ON 1 IN RUNAWAY TAKEN 10 HOSPITAL Rev. J. M. CornelUon, missionary at the Indian church at Tutulllm Is con fined to a bed of pain In St Anthony's hospital as the result of a runaway accident yesterduy afternoon. He Is suffering from severe scalp wounds and a badly sprulned ankle but feels himself fortunate In escaplnR without more serious Injuries. He was driving In yesterday after noon from tho reservation and In tended catching the mlanlght train for Portland to attend the meeting of the home mlsnlon committee of the Oregon synod, he being the chairman of the mission In the Pendleton Pres bytery. . About 2 o'clock as he was ap proaching the eastern city limits, his team of horses took sudden fright nnd ran, Rev. Cornellson had a window frame In the front of tho buggy against the dash board, bringing it In to have a glass put In It, and tho lines were resting on top of the casing. The sudden lunge of the team Jerked him forward In such a way that his feet were , drawn through the window framo and over the dash board, his head and shoulders resting upon the seat. In this position he remained un til he worked himself loose and up over the seat. He dropped from tho back of the buggy alighting on hla head in the middle of the road near the Waugh place. His head pre sumably struck upon a rock as a long gash was Inflicted and part of the sculp peeled off. The first plunge of the team had pulled the tongue of the buggy out of the socket of the neckyoke and, aa the horses reached the Fee barn they broke loose from the buggy entirely. At the corner of Court and Franklin streets they fell and were caught by passing men. One of the horses was badly cut about the legs and bled profusely. They were taken to a livery stable where Dr. McNubb dressed tho wounds. The men who caught the horses, after tying them up, followed their trail back and came upon Rev. Cor nellson In the road Just as he was recovering consciousness. He was helped to a neighboring house and Inter taken to Dr. Parker's office where his Injuries were dressed. After wards he was taken to the hospital where he will be confined for several daya. . J I ''-' I m Jt 111 At the left, Mra. Mary Petruccl, and at the right. Mrs. Margaret DomlnicL NEW YORK, Feb. . On th wit ness atand before the federal Indus trial relations commission sitting in the Metropolitan building, two coal miners' wives, Mra. Margaret Domin lc and Mra. Mary Petruccl, both of whom wera under fire throughout the Ludlow atrlke battle In. Colorado last year, told their etories to the commia a!n. During the labor war three of Mra Petruccl'a children were smoth ered to death in the "black hole at Ludlow, ' an excavation Into which they hud gone for' safety during the fight. Much Testimony Has Boon Taken and Kicry llight to the River Will be Determined A,l!roriatr .Must .Make Vkc of Water W ithin 5 Yearn or IMe Their ICIghm. m Petrograd Predicts Failure of At tempt to Capture Poland Strong holdKaiser is at Front. TROOPS BEING WITHDRAWN MU U HOLD OFFICE OF HIT) Jill SIX ins Kufan Movement Ams fjuit Proa- Ha Has Iteen Suoecrul, According to Report from .Slav Capital Or inn 11 Are lighting- Stubbornly KalT Reviews Forces. State Supreme Court Today Hands Down Opinion in Case Governing Length of Term. ALL 00OBTS ARE CLEARED UP Coni Decide Judges Holding Offlcw 111ir to January 1 J Jected for Terms of four Yean and Amend ment Adopted In 1910 AppUoa to Those fjeitej tjub-KuentJ. DEBATE OYER LEASE OF TWO LAKES IS UP IN THE HOUSE MF.MHKHS OF STATK Ii-D HOARD CALLF.D ON TO K-. PLAIN PROPOSAL. SALEM. Ore., Feb. 9. A debate on the ratification of a lease of Summer nnd Abner lukea lasted throughout the forenoon today and Into the after noon session. The house went Into a committee ot tne wnoie uner mv afternoon recesa so that membera of the atate land board might explain the provisions of the tentative contract tntered Into with J. C. Moore and as sociates for the development of salt deposits. The senate spent the morning de buting Moser's bill providing that the governor may direct the attorney general to go into any county and take charge of the prosecution of a case before the grand jury or courts. The debate continued this afternoon. The state accountancy board came under fire in the house when the question of passing the house bill am ending the accountancy law came up. defeated on the giound that It allows counties to au rtrvise the biennial audit. LOOKING FOR GERMANS ft . i N i - " '5 i Within the next ten days the de cree and findings of the state water board In the adjudication of the wa ter right of all the users of water from the Umatilla river and Its prin cipal tributaries will be handed down and filed with the county clerk, ac cording to information from well In formed persons. The final adjudi cation will not only be Important In determining the amount of water all appropriators can use but will also mean that these appropriators must make use of their water within a per iod of five years or lose their rights. The prospectus of the decree of the water board has been prepared, ac cording to reliable Information, and the final form of the decree Is being prepared. When filed for record, any holder of a water right who Is not satisfied with the board's decision will have thirty daya in which to appeal to the circuit court and later may take appeal to the supreme court which Is the final authority. Amended Section 8630 of Lord's Oregon Laws provides that after wa ter rights have been finally approved that actual construction work on lr rlgation projects or other work look ing to the perfection of the water right must be begun within one year and completed within five years. However, It is further provided that an extension of time may be. granted providing the holder of the water right can show good cause. In de terminlng said extension, subdivision ( of Section 6585 provides that the water board shall take into consider ation "the cost of the appropriation and application of such water to bene ficial purpose, the good faith of the approprlator, the market for water or power to be supplied, the present demands therefor, and the Income or use that may be required to provide fair and reasonable returns upon the Investment." This law in conjunction with the fi nal adjudication will act. according to local irrigatlonlsts. in preventing the holding of water rights for specula tive purposes and It Is anticipated that here in this county It will result in considerable development work or else the loss of water rights. The adjudication of the Umatilla waer rights has been under way for three years during which1 voluminous testimony was taken. Every right on the river will be determined and the writer master of the county will then become a very active official Inas much as he will be required to see that appropriators use only the amount ot water allotted to them. In case of disputes or when he has reason to believe that some approprlator is us ing more water than he is entitled to, It will become his duty to regulate the headgates governing the flow ot water. PETROGRAD, Feb, 9. The col-! lapfce of the German drive toward' Warsaw is believed . imminent. The 1 Russian movement across east Prus- sia has been successful and the Ger- mans are said to be withdrawing large j bodies of troops from positions along, the Vistula and hurrying them into J 31ARSH WILL HOLD OFFICE HOU YEAR.? A3 A CONSEQUENCE OF THE SUPREME COURT DECI- SION HANDED DOWN TODAY Prussia to meet the Slav advance' COUNTY JUDGE CHARLES which Is threatening the Konigaberg and the Thorn fortresses. Although the remaining Germans In Poland are fighting stubbornly, the Russian general staff believes tho H. MARSH WILL HOLD OF FICE FOR A TEi:ll OK SIX YEARS. THE CuL'UTH DE CISION 13 THAT JUDGES HOLDING OFFICE TRIOR TO Russian movement will result in that JANUARY 1 HAD BEEN expulsion of the Germans from Po land. GRAND ARMY HEADQUARTERS OF FIELD MARSHAL .VON ,HIN DENBERG, IN POLAND, via Berlin. Feb. 9. The kaiser. Inspecting the troops In the eastern theater of the war has been received with unparal leled enthusiasm. Today he reviewed the main German army along the Rawka river and the Slleslan Land wehr battalions. Addressing the vari ous units, the emperor congratulated them on their achievements and de clared ultimate victory for the Ger man arms is certain. The kaiser U in excellent health. His condition ahowed conclusively that recently circulated reports that he was breaking down from the strain of directing the campaign are ground less. He hold a conference with Von Hindenberg and his staff and later Inquired regarding the people In these parts of Poland held by the Germans. Under his direction an effort Is being made to revive the Industry in this section under direction of German manufacturers. It was generally be lieved here that as a result of the Kaiser's visit a new German offensive shortly will be developed. EIECTED FOR FOUR YEAR TERMS AND THE AMEND MENT ADOPTED IN 1910 AP PLIED ONLY TO JUDGES ELECTED SUBSEQUENT TO THE 1910 ELECTION. WHEN INFORMED BY PHONE THIS AFTERNOON OF THE SU PREME COURTS DECISION JUDGE MARSH REPLIED, "I AM SORRY TO HEAR IT." WHETHER HE INTENDED THE REMARK IN EARNEST OR HUMOROUSLY THE TELE PHONE COULD NOT REVEAL. INOIINCAMP MEETING AT TUTUILLA OPENS TOMORROW SALEM. Ore.. Feb. 9. The su preme court decided In the cas. of IF. & Ivanhoe against John a Hodgln. involving the office of dlatrict attor ney tn Union county, that Ivanho. who was elected to the office la 1919 chall continue In office until January, 1917. ' In the case of J. F. Phy against Ed Wright, involving the office ot county Judge In Union county, It was held that F. C. Henry's term expired January 4. 1915 and that the court !s Justified In ignoring a decision In the case ot the State versus Holman from Multnomah county. Phy. who was elected last fall, U declared en titled to the office. The court held that the amendment (assed In 1910 changing the terms of judges from four to fix years was prospective and meant officers there- alter elected. In the district attorney decision the court held the 1911 legislature never Intended to abrogate the terms ot d's- MANY RED PEOPLE ALREADY CAMPED IX READINESS IXJU COMMEXCE.MJKNT. , , , trict attorneys In office w hen It paaa- Beginnlng tomorrow morning the .. ... nr. ' f ... Indian congregation of the TutuUla: lnrn.v. k. church will hold Its annual evangells- ,; I ";, I" I , " . Intended to reduce the area of each tic campmeeting and already there . ., . . . , . , . ... . ones district to the county of which - " r- . w . .. . J.U.I (ie miupeu auuui me I'uurcn in an ticipation of the services. A large number of Indians from other reser- 1 l 1 -A in fttf" 'il'liA.titii)iili1lil1l?ii-,-flffl)f "A ' T ' ' 'in nf f .V V.V A Belgian motor cycle dunes aouth of Ostend. scout on observation duty among the sand DAMON LODGE I OF P. WILL INITIATE A GLASS OF 108 ;HAM CHANCELLOR. AND t.'RAXD KFJCPEU OF RECORDS TO HE PRESENT. With the grand chancellor and the grand keeper ot records and seals present to aid in the initiation of a class of 10S candidates next Monday evening promises to be a big occasion for Damon lodgo No. 4, Knights of Pythias. The above number ot appli cations for membership had been re ceived up to last evening when a membership contest was brought to u close. The lodge had been divided 'nto two teams, one led by Judge J. V. Muloney and the other by J. H. Gwinn. The Moloney team camo oft victorious. Dr. A. E. Wrlghtman of Silverton Is now grand chancellor of the order and he In company with L. R. Stln son, grand record keeper, will be special visitors next Monday when the large class will be Initiated. On Thursday evening of next week the members of Damon lodge and their families will observe the 51st anniversary ot the founding of the order with a special meeting In the EuRte-Woodman hall. There will be a program followed by a banquet. LA GRANDE, Ore., Feb. 9. (Spe- vatlons will be present to attend and cial to the East Oregonlan.) The e.sslst In the meetings. county judgeship case for Union coun- Among the visitors will be Rev.'l' was identical with the case In James Hays, the noted Indian van-1 - nat;Ilj tcunty In that It hinged on p.'iist ot Kamiah, Idaho, Rev. Moses how ,0" ,he former county Judge Montelth, pastor ot the second church 8nou,d huM ottlce. Judge Henry, for at Kamiah, and Rev. William Wheel-; nier J''""- was elected In 1910 and er of Achahka, Idaho, and formerly h' question arose over whether his pastor at Tutuilla. They will all as- trm fxplred the first of thla year or sist In conducting the services. Rev. continued for two years longer. In J. M. Cornellson, missionary at Tutuil-; th- 'ecthn last fall IKnry was de la. Intended to conduct the services Seated cy J. F. Phy. After the su but the Injuries he received yesterday : rreme court's decision in the Mult- it. a runaway may prevent him from "'""a" oumj case juuge nenry re- attending at first. The campmeeting will continue through Wednesday, February 17. White people as well as red will be welcomed. ! NEWS SUMMARY 1 - 1 fu.-etl to quit office and consequently a friendly suit was brought by Phy against the county clerk. Kd Wright, to lequiro hi n to issue 4 certificate of election U Phy. It la held here that Phy will serve for six years s will all otrur county Judges elected last Nove'nbcr. The more dollars you get together the louder they talk. (Jcneral. German advance In Warsaw said to bo failure. Wilson 1U fight to end Tor ship ping biU. Tiocal. " Jndse Jilarsh will serve for six years by ivurt ruling. Rk'honl Hurke gets one to 15 year and $500 fine. Water adjudication decree to bo filed soon; rights mast be uxl wlUi Itt five years. Rev. Cornellsn, Indian niisnlon nry, seriously Injured In runaway. Ilium-he Mcaughey, Round-up cowstrl. quits riding to become bride. W. It. lUmlsby resist Judv;nieut of Nlleo etnirt by attacking Dyer's rlslit to be ntayor. Al Lodell, nuuiagtY of PeiulleUui Imll team, rdeoxxl on own nvjmxt. VILUSTA TROOPS SAIO TO HAVE BEEN BADLY BEATEN cai:i:an.s ixij.owi iw dk ciared to hold .most of important points. WASHlNtlTON, Feb. VllHsU troops throughout Mexico have met a scrlts of dlaytrous defeats, acurrl tng to weid p-celved by the t'.irranni axer:cy. One report declared the .'r rur.a femes have forcej Villa uii porters to ubandon Quereturo and that the rupture of Mnn(rrty Is ex pejted liiuly. Vlllxt.i fuiten whPh recently uilvuiiced ngitlri.it Meiliu City are now declared to ! retreat ing. Cardura's representatives as sert be now controls all tnrrltory south 0 Agtu$ CuIleiitcS kitd Un Luil Putonl.