DA!IY EVEH1HG EDITIO'I P.'JLY EVENING EDITIO'I Number copied printed of yesterday' Dally Edition. 2,833 This pnper la a member and audited by the Audit Ilurcau of Clrculatloiw. If hulioll heh ty bw ftlrtaiw ni all It may be nan Uironn an a, Oresunlan ad. The waul method la a -Tea Una aa-r. , V CITY OFFICIAL PA.-ER NO. 96-10 COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER VOL.30 DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, THURSDAY, JAfyf 16, 1919. PROHIBITION BECOMES LA Wf;F THE LAND 36 ST A TES HAVE RATIFIED ORY AMENDMEN T " " """""-1 -' f- .in, ''&&ym .:-p1"m,1ll"'l''"lll''lW f CONSTANTINOPLE BOND WORLD CAPITAL GREEK'S DESIRE PLAN IS ONLY HOPE FOR HAVE $250,000 ROADPROGRAM CAPITALIZATION Premier Declares llope in Case Own Country Can not Hold Strategic City. WOULD SOLVE TWO PEACE PROBLEMS Advocates Control Over Ter ritory Adjoining Dardanelles, PARI. Jan. !. If Greece rannot liave OunxtaiitiiHHO for IU own km of government It wanW Uto anck'iil 1ty act BHldu aa tho pmnanont cap ital of the league, or mttlonx. Tills do. veliied during a dlxrumion hy Pre. mler Venlzejox In preMsntiiw Uie K. Iltirml territorial aqlrnUmm of V.nm-e. SOIA'H OAIIDAXKUMCS IKOBI.F...I fireek dnlrttatra pointed out that the rtatllliinMit of) Constantinople as capital of tlie league would automat. Irally result In Ita Internationalization together with tlio Dardanelles He fnrt lier auKKtwted that Iiiiiiin1I.uo land on both sides of the strait should lie placed under control of the league. Thus freedom of the Itai-dunelle mid the elimination or Turkey fr')m I '.n- j rope, two Important problems of the peace settlement, would bo sellli-d almidtanemmly. j liond Issue Suggested as Means of Securing Big State Aid in Near Future. DELEGATES DISCUSS TOPIC HERE TODAY Wide Interest Shown in Get ting construction Started. FLUGETS HARD KNOCK. ONLY 3 FLAGS LEFT Influenza conditions In Pendleton are the best today since the first de. veloplnl of the epidemic here tfrreo months alto. The number of quaran tinea la now down to three. and today makes two days without a new case belnff reported. Quarantine was lifted today from four homes as follows: Ben Colvln. 1016 E. Court; Henry Brewster. 30& Madison; Roy Pandrum, 901 13- Rail road; Hazel Chllders, 212 Garfield. In a tulle before tlie road delegate this afternoon W. I Thompson, mem. ber of tlie Ktulo Highway OonuniMslon. wild tluit Chairman IlenMon of tlie commission had Informed him that If I'niutllla enmity bonded or otherwise urraiiKcd to flnnace Ita end of road coUKtruiUlou work tlie state would match the money dollar for .dollar. Mr. Thompson thouitht this expondl. lure mlajht not bo made In one year but would cover several years. The elrenlt court room Is filled, with four foot Intervals between delo- Hlra. hy farmers and others m at tendance from over the county. Discussing the proposition of how to secure state aid for Important highway work In I'matllla county delegates from the various commu nities of the county are assembled at the court house this afternoon In what promises to be a meeting fraught with I big consequences in the way of road development. ' Among the delegates present thl afternoon are the following. Milton H. M. Cockburn. S. A. Mil ler. ToiHArimtu-ung- . . . I'mapine Lou Hodgen. I-nne Hoon. Rtanfield Ralph Holte, M. C. Bar agar. Hermlston Frank Waughman, Walter Blessing. Umatilla A. E. McFarland, D. R. lirownell. The following were also appointed, W. J. Dobler, F- U Jewett. Formal Anhouncem ent Made Today Concerning New Lical Financial Institution. C. E. WAILES TO BE CASHIER IS SAID Bank Will be State Institu tion With Reserve Membership. 17 LEST WE FORGET Herman Bchnke, Vmaplne far mer, refused to contribute to the United War Work Fund. Nick Groscebaurer of timaptne, whose prune crop last year was worth til Uie neighborhood of $10,000, contributed only $3.00 to this fund and that reluctantly. Ied Melliorf of I'mapine re fued to give money to the aon dea heJpltur our bosa In amis on the grounds that he had to send money to rclutlvoa In (ierniany. Willlnm Nwssh of I'mapine. said to be worth $30,000, refused to contribute to (tie l'. W- W. fund. J. h lliHin of Milton refused to contribute to this same fund. CENTRA!) 1YAI,TV COMMITTEE. Continued on page six.) SCHOOLS TO OPEN FOR CONSULTATION HOURS Pendleton high school .will bo open next Monday under a plan that will not be In violation of the health ordinances but in a way that will be a help to the students. The teachers will be at the high school during school 'hours where thono desiring to consult their teachers can make appointments phone when they can meet with the teacher and receive the In struction necessary to help them over difficulties. In the meantime the home work will be carried on' the name as It has been Klnce the first of the year, and regardless of the en forced vacation it will bo found the work Is going ahead. Super intendent Austin states sumo of the classes have every member doing home work and that the number handing in papers In ful ly up to the attendance of the school, also their papers show the work being done well. CENSORSHIP OFF: VERNE BOYNTON TELLS OFJMARNE AND ARGONNE VICTORIES, WAS WVUIVULU A I bl. Ml HILL That his division was cited three times for gallantry and that It was one of Its companies which succeeded In brldglnK the Vesle river are some of May 12. On May 11 we encountered submarines In the Ray of Biscay. Several shots were fired from our transport 'Martha Washington" and the battle detulls contained In a letter depth bombs were dropped by the do from Sergeant Verne Hoynton of the I at rovers. It was reported later that medical department who la with the 'a sub was destroyed on that date in Fourth Bngtneers on the march Into Germany. He declares that Napoleon was right when he said, "It is easier to win battles than to occupy con quered territory," for they are on the march soon after sunrise and -.even the Bay. We were In a camp near Bordeaux for three or four days then took a train for Ciitais. a city In nor thern France. There we were equipped with gas masks. On the way to Calais we had so much as a -button left unfastened at to pass near the German lines at A 1 feview la reason enough for court- j bert. It was there we felt the sensa martial. Extracts from his letter fol- jetton of being undir fire. An aeroplane low: flying In the direction our train was Just got a bit of good news. The moving dropped bombs. One hit orders for lifting the censorship are 'about fifty feet from the car I was in. In division headquarters se we will joff to one side. The train stopped with probably get them tomorrow. :a jerk that upset every one and made I am going to tell you a few things, us think we were hit.- then another that I never could before. bomb struck about fifty or seventy t'-Ws Balled from the U. S. or to be five yards "ahead of our engine, more-exact, from Hoboken, on Apm ' , , )iA.snrt landed In Bordeaux. France on The Inland Kmplre Bank Iw to be the title of Pendleton's new financial institution; it will have a capitaliza tion of $250,000 and will be ready for business about March 1- Announcement to this effect was made today by J. W. Maloney, who has been one of the important men in the new organization and -the an nouncement verifies news stories car ried by the Kast Oregonlan relating to the new bank. 4250 4MHI Capital. The quarter million capitalization 1 classed by the organizers as making the bank one of the heaviest capital ized banks ever formed In the state. There are 60 stockholders, according jto the announcement and It is said all the stock will besheld locally. J. W. Maloney will be president of the bank and C. K. Walles, until re cently of Sand Point. Idaho, cashier, (according to reports in circulation. The election will not occur until the permanent directors have been offi cially chosen. Articles of lucorpora.t Ion are being lorwarded today and the following men appear as the Incorporators: Will M. Peterson. K- L. Smith. A. W Rttgg, William Blakeley, Douglas Belts, II. J. Taylor and J. V. Maloniv. These men will serve as temporary board of directors. A S-tate Bank. The bank will be a state bank with a membership In the federal reserve system. It Is announced that W. H. Bennett, state bank exajniner, has In vest iga ted the organisation and has agreed to approve it. Will M. Peter son and S- A. Lowell are attorneys for the new bank. The location of the bank has not yet been determined upon. It Is stated, but several available locations are be ing considered. Mr. AVhIIch Ilocord. Mr. Walles, who la said to be slated 'f thf caMiiershlp of the Inland Em pire Bank, Is a native of Missouri and tor seven years was executive head of I a bank at Sand Point. Ho Is said to have been very successful in his work there and elsewhere. He came to Pen dleton with strong recommendations from Spokane bankers and other peo ple of Influence.' BARLEYCORN DIES BY 18THU. S. AMENDMENT The prohibition amendment Is the eighteenth added to the federal constitution. Provisions of the 18 amendments with the length of time taken for ratification follow: . First ten amendments known as the "bill of rights" provided guarantees such as free speech; ratified In nine months. Eleventh amendment established sovereignly of states; ratified In four yesrs. Twelfth amendment, manned method of presidential elections; ratified in one year Thirteenth amendment, prohibited slavery; ratified In slightly less than a year. - Fourteenth amendment, mads negroe citizens; ratified In . two year. Fifteenth amendment, enfianchlBe4 negroes, on same basis a.- whito persons, ratified lu one year. Sixteenth amendment, allowed congress to levy income lax. rati fied in three and a half years. Seventeenth amendment, provided for 'popular election of sena tors, ratified lit slightly less than a year. Eighteenth amendment, makes country dry; ratified In one year, four weeks and a day. About one hundred amendments have been proposed in congress but only four besides those ratified were submitted to the states. NEBRASKA VOTE FATAL TO JOHNBARLEYCOHfJ HISTORIC FW ON LIQUOR S SALOONS ALLIED DELEGATES SCRATCH HEADS OVER KNOTTY POINTS OF FINAL PEACE CONGRESS BY FRED FBRGirsO.V delegates, determination as to whether (United Press Staff Correspondent ) the Russian soviet government shall PARIS, Jan. 16. Inner allied con-! be represented and the decision aa ferences were continued at 10 30; to the manner of acquainting the o'clock this morning. The same rep world with what transpires in the resentatives who attended yesterday's l conferences. meetings were present. Time Is Short. BY WILLIAM PHILLIP SIMMS (United Press Staff Correspondent.) PARIS, Jan. IS. Associated dele gates are working 'at full speed to get everything in readiness for the for mal operting of.the full peace con gress Satr-7,'ay afternoon. Several of the most . important problems upon which the initial session hinges so tar remain unsolved. Among theseilt was explained that only were the acceptance of the French , formation would be omitted outline for the method of operation, ; be considered prejudicial to the in fixation of the status of Montenegrin, terests of matters under treatment. May issue Official Statement. Although the five principal pow ers have adopted a resolution to limit the news of the session to official communiques, it is believed due to protest that matters will be reopened and posBlbly modified. The French proposal that the conference be of the star chamber order and that all In formation be confided to a ckJ!y offi cial communique, created consterna tion among newspaper correspondents. such in as would CLOSES 300,000 I. S. ' BY JANUARY -1R 1820 IN L ROADS COMMITTEE FAVORS $10,000,000 BOND ISSUE AS RECONSTRUCTION MEASURE : MlSSOtHI KATIFIF-S JKFFEISSOX CITY. Jan. 16. Mis souri today ratified tlie federal prohi bition amendment. HUDSON BAY PEOPLF ASK $500,000 BONDS FOR ROAD BUILDING Continued on rage six.) (Kast OroKonian Special.) I'M A PIN H, Jan. 1 6. Concerning Rood roads In Unmtllla county, at' a special meeting of Interested Hudson lluy taxpayers held Tuesday evening resolutions were passed which embod ied the sentiment of this community upon the road situation. The resolutions provide that we recommend to the county court at a iiipecial meeting on January' 16th thai Umatilla county be bonded to the ex tent of $500, 000. provided that tlie court building th following mails In th east end: Ten miles of gravel road from Hud son Buy to Freewater; pave the ronu between Mate Iine and the Iee place on Dry creek. Huild an Improved road over Hasket mountain. Huild an Improved road for Fern dale and Tum-a-Lum residents. l.ou HoUgen and Line Hoon were rhosHii to represent this district at the. meeting of the county court next Thursday. At present there Is not In existence a first class road in the entire east end of Frtiatilki county. In winter time roads are almost impassable and; considering the amount of taxes de- j rived from this end of the' county, tax-1 payers feel they are entitled to thej roads as outlined and considering the; heavy volume of traffic of all descripj Hons it U not more than fair that duel recognition, be given these people 4 WOULD EXTEND BAN TO COONIRY COMMUNITIES If the health officers and city council of Pendleton have their way the ban acainst social and other Rath-, critigs and the quarantine of Influen za cases will bo extended It the coun try communities. A meeting has'beett arranged with t bo cit y hen It h of f I -rcrs and tlie county court and Dr. J, 1. McKall, county bnalth officer ami district attorney for determining what can bo done in tho matter. ! Tho complaint is made that peoplu from Pendleton are attending dances and social gatherings in tho country, going out in autos, and from those j parties many cues of the epidemic are being spread through tho town. They! are asking the county to cooperate j with the city In the effort to curb thej d isease. f The county authorities have exj pressed a willingness to (Jo all pos-, sible to help ia stopping further spread. . SALEM. Jan. 16. A bond is sue or 910,000.000 for building highways, in Oregon has been ten tatively agreed to by the senate committee on road. Tills t be lieved to be the only practical means of aid big returning: soldiers, as It would provide adequate em ployment for them. The money would mH bo limited to iwveiueiit but used for building new roads ttlo. The committee favors flmibline automobile license taxes ami -would tax gasoline a cent u the gallon The romlri eoinmittco would prohibit the payment or royal ties on any pavement laid. The Pacific highway through the stale from north to Noulli boundaries, a ut I the east and wCM. highway from lortlaud to the Idaho I Uie, would he huilt first, trunk linen MMiuid. and feeders third. Sen ator ititncr ricolnred it a m trio tie duty to put a hill that sizo through. LINCOLN, Jan. 16. Nebraska today ratified the pro hibition amendment, being the thirty sixth and final state necessary to make prohibition a part of the consti tution of the United States. AMENDMENT BECOMES LAW. WASHINGTON, Jan. 16. Prohibtion became part of the basic law of the United States today. Ratification of the federal' amendment by the Nebraska legislature makes that measure the eighteenth amendment to the federal constitution. . All but a half dozen of the 48 states are expected to ad opt the amendment in the next few weeks but the action of Nebraska today gives the ratification of three fourths of the states, the number necessary to administer John Barleycorn the K-0 punch. One year from today every saloon, brewery, distillery and wine press inthe land must close its doors unless, as now seems likely, they are already closed at that time by war nrohibition which eoes into effect next Julv 1. and Itays i until completion of demobilization. COUNTRY BOXE DRV Tlie amendment which, outlaws ii-i Distillers are already planning a quor in this country reads: j fight on the amendment In the courts "Section 1 After on . year from ' on the grounda that It was not adopt tho ratification of this article tim ed by two thirds of the whole con manufacture, sale or transportation of gress and that the seven year limlta.. intoxicating; liquors withinl, the im portation thereof into, or the exporta tion thereof, from tho United States and all territory subject to tlio Juris diction thereof, for beverage purposes are hereby prohibited. "Section 3 The congress and tli several states have tlie concurrent power to enforce this article by ap propriate legislation SKY I L" YEARS AULOVEI "Section 3 The article shall be I na tion ,ln it Invalidates the measure. Drya say they are confident' that neither of these contentions 'will hold and on their side are preparing leg islation carrying heavy penalties for violatien of prohibition. A special agency In the- Internal revenue bureau will probably be asked. 36. STATES SnTKIKXT The first 36 states ratifying th amendment are: Mississippi, Virginia, Kentucky. little mw.: ocrauve unless it snan me Deen;N-ortn Dakota, South Sarolina. Mary ratified as an amendment to the con-.,.,. iviu. Drkwari. south stltutlim by tlie legislatures of the Dakota, MassachusPtts. Artxana. Mcveral states as provided by the eon. Georgia. Louisiana. Klorlda. Mlchl. stltution within seven years of thclBan ohlo Oklahoma. Maine, Idaho, date of submission hereof to the states, West Virginia, Washington, Tennes ny congress." I -m-. Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana,. North This Is the amendment adopted by Carolina. Alabama Kansas. Oalifor- congress December 18. 117. and rat-!nfa Iowa; Colorado." Oregon. New itlampshire, ',al anl 'Nebraska. Missouri., Miystsyr i.V race - WASHINGTON, Jan.' 1 A rax-i was on this morning for tlie credit of putting over tlie prohibition amend mciit Thirty five states had already ratified the amendment and only one iMre was needed to give the rcqulrcdl three fourths vote to make iwoliibitlon an art of the liasic law of ttr land. Nchraska, Mimrt and Minnesota ified by thirty-six states than one year later. CIXXSES SOO.OWO SAIOONS And here are some of the things. that the amendment will do: Wipe out at a stroke 23K distiller ies; breweries, uml over 300.00) saloons and wholesale liquor cstab. lishnients. forcing their employes to. cek other jobs. Cut off from these persons annual' income tolnlinff more than $70, otto,-: ooo in pre-war times. t Cuts olf from the United Mates lll lil.lN FIGHT tXJXTIXl'KS. AM.STKIf 1.M. Jan. 10. Street fighting continued iu Itcrliji yesterday according to advices from Berlin to day. Kjwrtacan forces attacked the Stettin ruiluvy station., hut were re pulsed. I 1rMU'KS HIM, PASSED. SALKSi, Jan. 16. The senate toila I passed Diniick's criminal syndicate ism and sabotage Mil by a vote of 29 to 1. The one vote against it was (Continued on rage 1 ) WYOMING COMICS IX . .t'HKNl'.V. Jan. IB. Without a dis. sentilig vote both houses of the Wy oming legislature today ratified the federal prohibition. CHAS. I. HUMPHREY DIES OF INFLUENZA were In the runnliijc fr t'wi thirty tteasiiry u nource of taxation counted , t upon for an ewn mlnon dollars In tho UXfOLV. Jan. 16. Thfc ratified the MineiMlnieiit. OH U 0. (.; tier joint resolution it went, baric to the senate for concurreiK'P, tho orfjr inal resolution having -teen -MuictMleti hy the house. The nation goes dry i:mler this amendment a year from today. S RED CROSS HAS SUM OF $19,000 ON HAND r , 1 1 HE WEATHER FORECAST Tonight and Friday rain- i thai1es Frank Humphrey died this morning at 1:30 at I'ilot Koek of pneumonia following influenza after a sickness of two weeks. Mr. Hum phrey was a prominent farmer of Pi lot Rock and had heeu a resident of that place fop iil years, having conic to Orenon from Mercer county, Penn sylvania. He was thirty years of age. He is survived by a wife and three children. Norma, five years; Em. a, three: Virginia, one. N. A. Humphrey of Pilot Kock is an uncle of deceased, i-iient that swept the country. Funeral arrangements are vet to be- "('OU-Ji.VCK" VI JLKAOY made, however. Interment will be at Onlney cemetery from tho Folsom un- But 'dertakinff parlors, stage first drafts of the new revenue bill ! and millions in additional hi comes to stute treasuries. M-X'ltKAKKS UV VIOLATIONS Remove the liquor question from national, state and city politics for all time and keep decreasing- city, state and federal expense by decreasing law. violations. The fight on liquor, triumphant t" day is as old as the const! U raised Its head early teenth century and was looked upo as ' another crank notion." ' But It gained strength. Churches took it up, doctors followed and then cenie organizations of anti-lliiuor m-, cieties and the unti-Saloou league and others. f The report of the I'maillu ' count' MAI X K WAS I'lOXlvKfl 1 chupter :ed Cross fot; the uiontk t In the middle of the nineteenth December shows an expense of century Elaine went dry. Kansas fol-; in fighting the ifnluenzu epidemic l.i lowed. At the end of the civil war the county. According to Hecrvtarr the little band of anti-sktve agitators' Koosevelt most of thin expense wo4 who had won their fight seriously incurred at Adams and tn Pendleton, considered turning to the prohibition The Pendleton bills have not Hit beet battle. Their number included Wm. paid owing to the fact the executive Lloyd Garrison and the poet. Whit-j committee has not been meeting. The tier. 'sum of $279 w paid out for nursing About ,1900 came the "militant" during December, stage In the person of Carrie Nation' The monthly report show th eurn of Kansas, probably the most pl j "f $19..r7J.3a on hand January 1, Th trresque figure "the fight ever devel- Hound-L'p contribution of $00tfS.7 r oped. i was included in tn December re Ten years later the crusade against ceipts. liquor had grown from thf "ravings - of cranks"' into an irresistible move-: lTlf IXIAXTIt' AUKIV-i NKW YORK, Jan. . Th irlUb John Barleycorn i "comeback,' Mi-amlil IU'ImIo lia arrltnl with aJ or l"f 40th imnu-j aboard. 1 will try tojbruimlit a total of altt trvufm, to a4. V