The Redmond spokesman. (Redmond, Crook County, Or.) 1910-current, July 30, 1914, Image 1

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    Redmond Spokesman
Published at the “ Huh City" of (’entrai Oregon
No. -I
REDMOND. ( KOOK COUNTY, OKKOON. THURSDAY. JULY 30. 1014
$1.50 PER YEAR
'jTRUESDALE SISTERS ARE ACCIDENTLY SHOT IN SHE HAS GOOD WOODS
TACOMA; ONE KILEED ANO OTHER WOUNDED
I** »It'll. I M I
I.XliX
KKYIKXIM III*»
« il i n i a i : i i i n T i <
VIOI-A TKFESDAI.E OK POWELL HI TTK. DEAD. AND SIS-
¿*
Ï 0
TKR PACI.INK WOUNDED IN STRANI.K ACCIDENT RY
MIOT FROM A DEPUTY SHERIFFS (il N— HOY PUSH-
I
-
•I»*
ED WEAPON
FROM
CASE— DEPUTY
ASIIH Y
Mb»
Kn»t<-rn
and
for
fitr
NO! M l HI HINK nn METHOD*
h
I entrai
Hiniiilil Vote Holld
AND
ToheBANK .
PERSONAL SERVICE
llrrgiai
Him
I'. H. senator
PAULINE TELL OF ACCIDENT— PAULINE IKIES NOT
Iti.AME ASHHY—TIIOUOIIT SISTER W AS PLAYINC—
! ..
W« ,
IIAD KEEN HAPPY ALL WEEK— MOTHER IS IN INK)«
I
HEALTH— VKTIM W AS HORN IN ( O L O R \IK)
VI.
IV M i l
Vsks
P I.A IK
OS
PHOOKVM A T P O R T L A N D
•s
f 1
Depurai I » G ran ici anal Mr
• •44*1
Ta m m s l# > li* t of July 26
(h r f o llo » Ina account of llm *c
NI
i
j|al klllltiK Of OM " I O"' TrtSM
(latera and the wounding of » I»«-
» i»
lhal happened In Taroma laal
I«
1 aftarnoon
« M
* l t > Und. I'm » h o t ! "
< <*
wil l l b . rry upon her upa. Viola
!!*■ j T r t t f i 1 *•
I f . of l*o»all Itoti.*
r
Or*., formerly of T*romii. dropinol
to tfc* ■hlrWEll» At Tltlciw lt«*«rtl
, t * v < * » afternoon and r i y l r n l In ill.
X
liar alalar I’ aulln«. Iloth had
'» t t
I* j^^^RvIctlma of a atnala bullet.when
* r*v< ver .arriad by ttepuly HharlfT
'«• *
Valili» of Tamms. accidently
r* •
■I lo lha aldawalk and >■> dia
•Is
1 In lha mldat of a rrowd of
about In ani. I all aii'o N f l
>4 O v < ' "Ri*
Tha Iraaady «M-rurrad
11 "aborti tiafora & o'clock
’*■ * A ft' r Indiatine two wounda In tha
‘ ' * M i #1 Mlaa 1‘ aullna Trueadale. lha
*
b*ltOI »titered lha nark of har alalar,
lha Junlar rain and paaaad
'tha brain, causing almost In
daath. bafora those alandlna
raalllad « h a i had hap|iana.|
Had llrrn on • «oline Trip
T b . fatality, on« of lh « •tr$n$i»«l
If r fo fd m l In thla city, t a i the
. w e andine of a «a ia 'lim trip tha
* ~ 'c tbf* (l»tcra had naan an]o»lne In Ta
1,1
aa lha (noeta " I Mr and Mr»
K I »»ana
B
lha laal f a « daya lha elrla
»O ha.ii vlaltln* Mr and Mr» A
, (..interinan of llor»ahaad Ila».
Nttn* *.* y«otarda) aftaraooo o * tbo
h il in ha. k In riilllpan« «U h
and Anna Hlmrhen. Gladys and
<>«an. all relative» Tha happy
lauehine and alnelne.
«ara
ne on lha aldawalk al lha
« a llln e . « U h a n uni bar of
I, lo amar lha Taroma bua lhal
|U»I arrived •
ne Ihoaa maklne Ihalr exit
lha bua « a r a Sheriff It
VV
Ini
mn and l»apuiy Hharlff Aahliy,
ara on ihalr « a y lo Vatiehn to
r<* a lawbreaker. and « h o had
terrorising lha nalehhnrhood
*
I* u »lin t
\V p m | m iii K m m
l 'a » a
|hh* r arriad a lare*' i l 1 o fa
)r in a holster Inalila hla roal.
la* ha waa about lo alleht a
I boy rrowdad hla « a y undar hla
| puahlne lha revolvar from Ila
| Ila ralaaaa « a a unnollrad hy
I» until II struck Ih.- « a l k . halli
flrat
Even than lha nol»a « a a
f i l i n i lo a lira blowout until
Truaadala, who had barn aland-
k f a » faai away lauehine
and
ne with har alalar and rala-
thrrw har arma lo har haad
«U h a loud rry. rollapanl
A t lha aania mnmanl a allnelne
ilion, followed by blood
that
lad from har hip», n i n n i lha
IBP i f
nlalar Paulina to r r a lli«
• ha. loo, had barn almi Kilt un-
^ a p a l ' u l <>f har own Injuries.
»ha
. boot ovar har alalar whlla lha rrowd
,iJ(M * 0d Npallhouiiil
With hnr banda
tbo young elrl triad vainly to atanrh
^ tb o Flood that waa dowlne from a
ur * ( ( » - '' wound. Jual aluna lha collar
boot, on tha rleht aide of lha nark
,
j ,
Hulla« Prnalrnta» llraln
HU "Viola. Viola,” Paulina rrlad. aa
4 , ubo r alani har alalar tenderly with
I*, ono bruì
Tha ilylne elrl opened har
ojfuo, anil har lipa parlad aa If aha
,1 ,;, wool'I a|i.‘ak, hut tha «o r d a « a r a un-
,h. Uttar* I Thoaa about them rarrlail
, >bort<> i» alora nanrhy, and averythlne
pOMthlr «na dona to atop lha How of
Moots, bill without avail. Whan a
rtm
pbytl**lan arrivai! ha stated lhal tha
b o ll»'
had probably antarad lha
brain and that daath, whlah
had
nlmoat Inatant, waa due to tha
id In tha hand ralbar than to
blood! ne
Nti until lha phyalrlan hail pro
ntMn< ad lha etri dami did Paulina,
had rafoaad to laava Vlola'a
tall o f har own Injuria», and un­
ii haaaunr tha loaa of blood had
|ght har altnoal to tha point of
paa
It waa found at ftrat ax­
ial Inn that
ona alleht
flaah
d had baan raralvad In tha
, hut lutar In veal leal Ion allow
at the bullet had twice pene-
rt the floah
Hhe wax removed
to the Owen» home, where It waa
aald laat nleht by the attendine phy­
alrlan that lha only daneer of the
wounda are from poaalble Infection
l.ymli
Will Talk About Thla I II»
»n
V up ai» t
I si
Pauline Tall» o f Trapa.!»
ItaatIne on a pillow in bed. with
a»aa rad and awollen from waaplne.
Paulina lol.l laal nlehl lo a l e d g e r
reporter lha alor» of tha tragedy
"t»h, ll waa terrible, terrible." aha
rrlad. " fo r wa had t><-an havlne au. li
a line lima alnre wa arrived here
three week» ago
Viola had baan
louklne forward to thla trip for
many, many wneka, and every min­
ute waa an enjoyable
"O n our trip today on the boat
from llnraehead lluy bark lo Tltlow
llearh, Viola had bean lha life o f lha
parly, and ahe waa ao llphl hearted
that wa rould hoi help but enjoy lha
tflp
Kvan whlla wa ware walllne
for the bua ahe waa lauehine and
Jokinp all the time
Tbouplil HI.lar XV a» l i a ) Ine
" Y o u never rould tell when aha
waa In aarnrat. and whan aha threw
up har hunda I did not reatlxc that
waa really hurl unlll ahe fell and I
aaw the blood flow Ine from her
throat
Aa I beni ovar I fall a »harp
pain In my hip and l rould feel lha
blood trlrkllnp down
Than I real­
ità.] lhal I. loo. hail bean wounded
H u t I <1 lilI. ( itiltid
t b it.
(or
I
fbotipht only of poor Viola, and I
tried and tried to atop the blood
Whan I rallad to her ahe opened har
eyea for a moment, but aha rloaad
them apaln. and Ihouph I kept work-
in* and work Ine I aotnehow realdad
It waa the end
M.»ll.ee In Poor llaalih
" I »Imply ran't bear to think aha
la dead, for throueh all Iheae year«
aha haa baan ao very pood to me and
haa looked after me. and we ware al-
waya topelher.
Mother haa been In
III health for aome lime, and I know
Ilia ahork will ha awful for her to
bear Wa had written har only a day
nr two apo that wa were cornine
home next Friday.
"V io la would have eradualed next
year from Ih» hlph arhool In Prlne
ville. Ora . where ahe waa taklnp a
normal and commercial ruurae to flt
her for a loarher
Hurlne the aum-
mer ahe had been worklnp aa a tele­
phone operator, and waa wall known
and loved by everyone
Hha hail
baan telline all of her frlenda of her
trip lo Taroma. and had written tell­
ine of the various piare» ahe hail vla-
Ited
I ».» »n 't lita n ie V»liln
" I did want an much to aee Mr
Aahby after the accident and tell
him that I know II waa not hla fault
Poor fellow, I have been told ha
feela ao very hail ahoul It. and aa
aonn aa I ran pet up I am pnlnp to
vlalt him and expreaa iny aorrow for
him
" I remember now that I aaw the
revolver fall lo (he aldewiilk. but I
did not aaaorlate It at the time with
the accident
Viola waa atanilln*
near a poat on the walk, and I waa
between her anil
the
revolver,
which I rerall waa a lone and unus-
tial looklne one.
Viola «vaa about
four yarda away from It. and there
were |ieople all around ua.
When
the explosion rame I felt aure It waa
an automobile tire and I looked
around at Viola, who hail Juat atari-
ed toward me to Ret Into th» bua,
and laughed
" A t arhool. whenever there waa a
aharp i-raah of thunder, we uaed to
throw up our handa and rry out that
we were hit. Often.too. when an au­
tomobile tir would blow out, Viola
would throw her handa over her
heail and rry. 'My timi. I'm shot.*
Hhe iiae.t to do It entirely In a «pirli
of fun, and we never paid nny atten­
tion to It.
When ahe uttered the
Mine rry thla time my Aral thought
waa that II waa one of her pranka,
and the renllxnllnn of II all did not
come to me until ahe had fallen at
my feet.
" I t will he hard, ao very hard for
me to po bark to Powell Hulle now.
Continued on pane 8
M A Lynch. of l.ynrh A Robería,
penerai iiierrhaiidlae. Redmond, Or ,
la I he Aral proapertlve vlaltor to
Portland durine Huyera' week who
haa written lo
r Chapman, » e r re­
tar» of the Jobber» * Manufactur­
e r » - Aaaorlatlon. aaklnp for a piare
on the Ad Club luncheon proeram,
Wrdneaday, Aupuat 12, for a one
minute talk hooatlne hla home town.
aa»a the Portland <»reponían of the
ISlh
Aa Indicated by hla letter,
whlrh la aa folluwa. Mr l.ynrh did
not wall for offlrlal notification of
the event to reach him
" I notice by the Oreponlan that
you will pive aome of the bush­
whackers a chance to make minute
talka for their reapertlve localities
on Aupuat 12
If not too late I de­
aire to have one of theee minutes to
tell about Redmond."
Aa It waa aereed that the first 20
who rea|>onded were to be ptven
preference on the propram. Mr
l.ynrh ta uaaured of an opportunity
to do hliuaelf proud in Informine
member» of the Ad Club, the Job­
bers A Manufacturera’ Association
and hla fellow buyer» about Red­
mond.
IN AIL PROBABILITY
I.HOI SI» H AH III »1.1 A »XX HOI VI» IS
C U R T A IN
PLACHI
Indication» Are Thai
Vast
Cavern»
Could He Found Hy Horlne
a lew
Keet I »own
There aeema lo he little doubt but
lhal there are several ravea under­
l i n e the rlty of Redmond, but aa
lo their extent no one ran furnish a
solution
In the rear o f both
the Hotel Redmond and thn Hotel
Oreeon ra ve» have been »truck at a
depth of about 25 feet, whlrh are
being uaed as reus pool* for these
hotels
South of Redmond are located
large ravea that ran be entered
from the outalde
These ravea both
have outlet*, and one of them la of
aufltrlent rapacity to house a pood
alxed herd o f cattle.
In the northwest part o f the rlty.
on the Hlanrhard block of lota that
are hounded by A. It. 8th and 9th
streets, there are undoubtedly ravea
underneath
In sr.me part* of the
property a hollow aound ran be no­
ticed by persona when their heel«
strike the ground In walking along
the road which runs throueh theae
lot*
Thla haa been commented on
by numerous people, and If boring»
were made It Is prophesied that a
rave or caves would he found.
Probably a «elution to the dlspo-
sal of the sewerage of the city could
be worked out If such caver exist.
HKTTKK THAN
A I.K TTK II
In moat big fanilll«« where there
Is spirit enough to make good mater­
ial, there are squabbles
I wouldn't
give much for a family that didn't
have a squabble In It once In a while
These aplneleaa. spiritless, meaning­
less. gray, pasty sort of famlles
that never squabble never do any­
thing else that requires any spirit
llut It la alwaya the way. that
the harder a big family squab­
bles
among
Its
own
members
the tighter they atlrk to earh other
when one of them la III or In danger,
and the prouder they are of him
when the world arrords him honor
Mr Hanley Is a member o f thla
big. spirited, fighting, doing, full-of-
elnger family known aa Kastern Or­
egon
lie's fought hla way up from
boyhood, rutting hla wisdom teeth
on the ring of Kastern Oregon’s
problems
He's ridden her range,
farmed her land, dug her canals,
forced railway activities, and known
and loved her people
He haa lived
days and nights together under her
open sky. sleeping with only a blan­
ket between him and Mother Karth.
lie's nourished himself on her crops
and her streams
He Is a native son
In more than being merely born on
her soil
he Is by nature and chem­
istry, by every Inclination of his be­
ing. an Oregonian
He couldn't be
anything else If he tried, and he
wouldn't try any more than you
would to be some other woman's
aon than your own mother's.
He’s put his money straight back
Into Oregon
development.
every
cent of It. w hen he could have put It
elsewhere with more Immediate re­
turns
He believes In Oregon and
backs
this
belief
with
every
dollar he own*
The big world out­
side of Oregon haa acclaimed him
Oregon’s greatest man. her most or­
iginal and Inspiring son; be Is solid;
there la nothing the least visionary
about William Hanley.
When you
send him to the I'nlted State* Sen­
ate you will send a man whom you
know like a brother
Maybe you've
got mad at him sometimes like a
brother, but you know him through
and through: It Is no shot In the
dark
You know that though
you
may differ with him In theorlea of
government or matters of detail In
management, still he Is sound and
solid, and the business Judgment
that has built up his own fortune
unaided, from a beginning of a
horse, saddle and bridle, lo the gen­
erous proportions It bulks today,
will be used In the affairs o f the
state of Oregon.
This business
Judgment has never found it neces­
sary to tread on the weak or take an
unfair advantage of another's hard
situation. . He has won. honestly,
hy clear headedness. coolness, and
hard work.
He will be a* clear
headed, as cool, and work as hard
for Oregon's Interests.
It will mean the greatest stroke of
good luck that ever befell Kastern
and Central Oregon to have William
Hanley, one of its own family, in the
I'nlted Senate.
Work and vote sol­
idly for him In the general election
In November
A N N K S H A N N O N MONROE
Portland Ore
Dr. Hosch Performs
A Delicate Operation
Tr«|utnne.t a Man's Skull Who W a»
Hurt in \n Arriderti on the Timi-
ilio Irrigai ion Project
Jake Knnff. a laborer at Camp 8
on the Tumalo Project, wa* hit on
the side of the head July 18 by a
crank on a steam shovel, cracking
hi* skull In e a o i a manner that a
part of tt pressed on the brain The
brain pressure developed paralysis
In bis left arm. making that useless
On July 18 l>r Hnsh trepanned the
skull and removed the pressure on
the brain, the result being that the
paralysis left the arm. and the man
Is getting along nicely.
It was a
delicate surgical
operation
Or
llosch was assisted hy his wife and
Or. J. Harr of thla city.
Send The Spokesman to your
friends who want to And out about
Redmond and this section
It Is bet­
ter than a letter and will keep the
folks posted all the time about what
la Koine on here If you do not want
to send It for a year, buy It for three
months, 50 cents worth
The paper
la well worth the price, and your
Spokesman Classified ads bring
friend* will he pleased to Ret the
results— try them— don't cost much
new*.
P
The Redmond Rank of Commerce
has ever stood for sound business
methods and followed a road of
Hafety First — and Always
That la why we ran give you assur­
ance that your fund* deposited here
are aa secure as you can possibly
wish them to be
It Is also the reason that our hun­
dreds of customers have no hesitancy
In recommending their bank to tbetr
friends as often aa occasion may
arise.
This bank Is a safe bank for you.
9
REDMOND BANK OF
COMMERCE
IN T E R E S T PAD) ON DEPOSITS
BACK POUR ILLINOIS MAN HAS
YEARS AGO IN REDMONO FAITH IN THIS CITY
T i l XT
WAS
TlXIK OK R A I L R O A D HAYS P K O P L K HKItK AR K St K K .
CONHTRI'CTIO N
HKItK
L Y L I V E W IR E S
Some Item » Tliat XX ill Itring Item- Compare» Redmond W ith Hi* Town
lection»
Hack
to
Tliune
Dooming Tim e«
of
30(10
to
the
Latter's
Disadvantage
The Spokesman. July 28, 1910.
The following letter from a sub­
At a meeting of the City Council scriber of The Spokesman will show
Tuesday night an application was re­ what outside people think o f Red­
ceived from the Odin Falls Power mond and predict her future will be:
Co. asking for a franchise to furn­
Sullivan, 111.. July 18. 1914.
ish the rlty with power and light.
Editor Spokesman * Enclosed find
check to balance my year’s subscrip­
! have indeed
A representative of the Crook Co. tion to the paper.
Water, Light A Power Co. appeared enjoyed reading the paper, although
before the Council, presented plans coming from a strange city and a
showing how and on what streets strange land, yet It is interesting.
I was in your city last summer,
they would lay water mains, and
stated the company would present and while I was there only a short
an ordinance at the next meeting time I saw a lot o f the country, and
asking for a light, water and power your paper has given me a good idea
of the conditions prevailing there.
franchise.
Your people are surely live wires.
The need o f a street sprinkler In They do things. That water system
Redmond becomes more apparent ev­ you have ts a credit to a city many
times larger than Redmond. In fact,
ery day. It ts understood that a suf­
ficient amount o f money rould be our own beautiful city of 3000 peo­
raised here to keep a sprinkler In ple are afraid to go after water the
way you folks have, yet we have a
commission during the dusty season.
rich farming country all around us
and could get water If we spent our
The 10-round boxing contest be­ money like you fblks do. but I rather
tween Messrs Cuff and King last think your future holds more in
Saturday night lasted only four store for you than we have to look
rounds. King declaring himself all forward to.
In In that round.
With the water power in the Des­
chutes River Redmond should, and
A deal «ass consummated here no doubt will be the center of a
this week whereby Carl Khret sold great manufacturing district, and
out his Interest In Klltnger's Addi­ when all your land is reclaimed it
tion In Redmond to 0 W Uoltra, a will be a beautiful country, as well
capitalist of Knld. Okla.
as a rich farming district.
A'ours truy,
DAVID B ALL.
The tank that was recently install­
ed at the city water works plant is
Just half a« large as the one ordered.
The present one Is a 5000 gallon af­
fair, and the original order called
for one o f 10,000 capacity, but a
mistake was made in shipping The
present tank will be used until the
larger ones arrives.
'la tte r Ha* Keen ('a iled to Atten­
tion o f State Humane Hocirty by
Owing to the increase In the num­
a Kedniond Xian
ber of school children in Redmond
and the district adjacent. It has been
found necessary to add two addition­
al rooms to the present building.
News was brought to this city last
The latest business enterprise for Saturday that L. Thompson, a renter
Redmond is a clothing and gent’s on one of L. K Smith’s farms near
furnishing store to he established by the city, had killed a horse by beat­
K. L. Rapp, a leading merchant of ing it to death. Witnesses o f the in­
human deed say that Thompson be­
Shaniko.
came angry at the horse because it
Business at the Redmond postof- balked, and beat tt to death with an
flce during the past four quarters Iron bar.
The matter has been taken up
has shown a great Increase. Money
order business has more than doubl­ with the State Humane Society at
Portland by a resident of this city,
ed in the last t»*o quarters.
and it is expected that a stop will be
Market gardeners in the vicinity put to this kind of Inhuman treat­
of Redmond find a ready sale for all ment o f dumb animals in the future.
their garden truck at good prices
F A R M E R S ' MEETINGS
Balky Horse Beaten to
Death With Iron Bar
The machinery for the Redmond
electric light plant, dynamo, genera­
tor. etc. Is at Shaniko. and Is expect­
ed in here In a few days. As soon as
It arrives work on wiring the city
will begin.
A. K Lovett, county agriculturist,
stated at the Commercial Club lunch
Monday noon that he had made ar­
rangements to have three men from
the Agricultural College at Corval­
lis come here the latter part of Au­
gust and hold farmers’ meetings In
T ry our Classified Ads— l e word. different parts of the county.