East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current, September 11, 1919, DAILY EVENING EDITION, Image 1

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DAILY EVENING EDITION
DAILY EVENING JDJIIPjl
The East Owgontan la KastMTi Or.
son' greatest nnwApapcr and an
selling fores rfvesi to It adwUW
over titlit U circulation In lcartl
Kin and I matllla cooniy'of any oiiXMf
newspaper, .
Kumbor ooploa prlntnd of yesterday's
iNiily Kdition.
2,825
This paper la mo-tinn ana audited
by Uie Audit Bureau at Circulation.
aooia
CITY OFFICIAL PAPER
- -- - - l.J
XREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON. THURSDAY,. SEPTEMBER 11, 1919.
NO. 9834
a
WHS. '
1 -TT Ving rffiTSTJ
VOL.31 T)ATTV T
E WEEK MORE
TILL ROUND-UP
Former Secretary of Treasury,
Director of Railroads, and
Now Movie Magnet Wires
He Will be on Hand.
WESTERN SPIRIT TEEMS
WITH SHOW 7 DAYS OFF
Westward-Ho Procession to be
Strictly Replica of Early
Day; Carload of New Horses
Trying Out New Twists.
. William Olbbs McAdoo. former sec
retary of the treasury, director gen
eral of railroads, at present a movie
magnate and son-in-law of President
Woodrow ' Wilson, has wired the
Round-Up Association that he and
Mrs. McAdoo will be here for the
Kound-Up next week without fait
They will be guests at the Hotel Pon
dleton and will be among the honor
guests at the show.
Mr. McAdoo promised several
months ago that he would attempt to
lie here for the Hound-Up and now
that he Is enjoying life as a private
vltlsen, he is enabled to come. Consi
derable Interests attached to Mr. Mc
Adoo, Inasmuch as his retirement
from government offices at the close
of the war led to the belief that lie
would organise a campaign to run for
president on the democratic purty
ticket. Up to the present little has
! h.nr.1 r hi. nlan. Mr. Mi- A tin
was, before her marriage Miss Jessie
Wilson.
Kvery Man Wrktifjr Haiti
Every member of thfl biff Koiind
TTp family In working1 night and dny
to perfect bl particular part of the
how. Kvery man realixe that one
eek from today marks tho opening
of the tenth, and tho greatest. Hound
l"p of thorn all, 80 far prosrrewi In
brad of the schedule and Indication
for the complete micceiw qf their
greater il;mn were never more rosy.
for the parade and race at tho lo
cal blacksmith ithopa and the races
will be apeedier than ever the word
ffoea out. All the parade equipment
U being put In ihfjnhnpe and the dee
oratlona will be all atruna hy Satur
day, tt waa promised today.
Farmer who have been naked for
borwea and mule for (he great West
ward Ho parade on Kntujduy have
responded In every InMtancet From
four to to animals have been loajied
by all who have been asked and hun
dreds of fine animate w!)I tnke part
In the mile-long- procetwlon which
teem with the aplrit of the west
which the Kound-Up Keeks to revive
with each year.
Spirit of Went In Parnrto
The parade thin year will, as al
ways, typify the pioneer dya of the
ON
M 100 COMING
west, the days before the coming of . that state officers, so long as they
tho railroads, the automobiles and the . aro under the Jurisdiction of this office
airplanes. plainsmen, cowboys and shall tolerate no disloyalty In their
cowgirls, pioneers, stage coaches, In- ! employes an-1 shall demand the high
dfana and the animals of the plains est sense of loyalty and patriotism
will wend their way through the from all whom they may employ. A
streets of Pendleton, a faithful re (man who would tolerate disloyally In
plica of the scenes that greeted the i his employes in a nr!vn canaHtv 1
early settlers In the Organ country, (have reason to feel mitfht tolerate
Contrary to the report which was
erroneously spread In a Portland pa
per, no Industrial exhlhlts of any -nature
will appear In this parnde. not
even the request of the navy recruit;
insf officers to have a flout being
granted. The parade committee de
sires the procession to be truly and
Absolutely western and western it will
be.
New Attraction Added
Numerous attractions have ' been
added to the parade which are Intend
ed to make It blKner and better than
Its predecessors, J. II. Estes. chairman
of the committee, said today. There
will be five first class bands in the bin
parade, featuring the Pendleton
Bound-Up band on their horses and
attired In boots, rhsps. .sombreros
and the regulation cowboy outfits.
Campbell's 35 piece concert . hann,
from Portland, has been obtained to
furn'sh muslo durlnff the entire three
days, while hands from Milton, Wesl
ton, Haker and other nearby towns
will be here for one or more days.
Another carload of bucking horses
arrived from pasture this morning
and they were unloaded and taken to
Bound-t'p park where they were given
a chance to limber up. Tryouls have
been hold almost dally for a week and
the bucking horses are showlnft all
kinds of new twists. They are doln
well In iryquts but when they are out
to perform before SB. 000 wildly howl
lng spectators they are expected to
outdo themselves.
Listing of rooms for the throng of
visitors expected here are continuing
to come Into tho accommodation bur
eau but the word Is again sent out
that more and more rooms are going
to be needed. Persons are reminded
that there Is but OAOjWeek remaining
until the opening davs and that If -the
quota Is (o be filled at leas't 100 rooms
must be offered each day now.
Former Experiment Farmer Her,
R. W. Allen, of Umatilla, formerly
of the experiment farm at Hermlston.
Is In Fendleton today on business. Mr.
Allen to now farming Independently,
CHICAGO AUDIENCE i WILD NJUn mr CPflRF
ACCLAIMINGOPPOSl i iN FORCES.
WOULD IMPEACH PRESIDENT
' BIT FRED FKRGUBON. they left the platform the three ten-
(United Pruss Staff Correspondent.) ators crawled upon the fire escape,
CHICAGO, Kept. 11. Chicago Id In- ( repeating- their speeches to the crowd,
forested In the nonate opposition to . Johnson recited each of the principle
the peace treaty hewllnKly Interested, j enunciated by WHon,' which he de
Not since the days of 1SI2 when the cleared were beaten and abandoned
big auditorium here Haw the birth of in Paris. He mild they were Ameri-'
the Hull Moose party has such a vast, can principles.
excited, wlldly-c-heorliKt throng Jam- I As he proceeded and shouted. "But
med that place and shouted encour- as Clemenceau grimaced or Japan
aKcment to the speakers as It worked ' shook her head, who quit?" the
Itself into a dripping perspiration last crowd jumped to its feet and yelled
night In greeting the tspeech.es of Ben- ! tack, "Wilson.'
ators liofah, Johnson and McCor- fries of "Impeach him," ' "Don't
mick. The (light was swcltcrlngly hot, ive him any more power," arose as
but the men took off their coats and : Horah told of 7000 Americans in Hi
women wielded fans and they jumped ; berla, there without the authority of
to their feet demanding the Im-1 congress or the peonle. Itesnondlnu
peaehmont of Wilson and shaking the
whole house as they tagged him a
"iiulttor."
Senators Confident.
Bonator Johnson left today for In
dlanupolis, l.'orah and McCormlck
following different routes, confident
thut If the enthusiasm met In Chicago
continues the senate will have com-
plete backing In making the' amend -
menu and reservations to the treaty
that the foreign relations committee
recommended. ,
Address Crowds OulNlde,
A crowd twice as big as that pack-
Ing the auditorium was outside. As
E
WITH LEGION IN WAR
DN ALIEN SLACKERS
Calls On Astoria Man to Dis
charge Employe or Resign
From Position on Pilot
Board.
PAI.KM. Pept. 11. Unless Thomas
Nelson, manager of tho t'nlon Fish
ermsn'a Cooperative Packing com
pany of Astoria, can explain away
charges preferred against him by the
American LRHm, his resignation a
mmtwr of (he state board of pilot
f commissioners will be demanded by
' Governor Olcott. The governor so !n-
formed Nelson In & letter today. In
(which he declared it to be his desire j
I to hear Nelson's side of the story be- j
fore taking any definite action. i a thunderstorm last night caused
The American Legion of Astoria, In a total of .14 inches of rainfall in
ja letter received by the governor last Pendleton. F tful showem fell dur
j week, had charged that Nelson as n(P tne day. The maximum tempera
manager of the Union Fisherman's I fure la ftnd tne minimum &2. The
Cooperative Packing company, had
refused to disehHrfre an "admittedly
open and disloyal alien.'
3nlly Is luqiiirtMl
"Of eourso I have no Jurisdiction
ovr the emploympnt of persons by
Individual or pityate corporations,"
tho ffovernor wrltos,'"hut it Is my of
ficial duty and privilege to determine
surh disloyalty in those whom he em-
ployed to work for the state.
"If the charges lodged against you
ore true. I feel it Incumbent upon me
as chief executive of the slate to re
quest you to submit to this office, at
an early date, your resignation as a
member of the state board of pilot
commissioners for Oregon.'
Witxl Out TTiiriiHirahlcA
'If you have any statement to make
in the way of rt filiation of these
charges I will be pleased to give it
careful consideration, as I desire to
condemn no man until he has been
given full opportunity to make his
Position clear when charges of this
character are lodped against him.
"I feel it the bounden duty of every
citizen to protect this nation as far as
be may from again allowing to grow
upon this country the ramfilcntlons
of disloyalty and alien employment
which were discovered during tho
greatgre't conflict just closed.
"I will go further and declare it
my firm hollef that those alios who,
during tho struggle from which our
nation has just emerged, demonstrated
their disloyalty to the country from
which they have gained their susten
ance, should be deported, to never
again return,.
T have spoken strongly upon this
suhpect, because I feel strongly upon
Ftmrtwn ot Diplomas.
Fourteen diplomas have been grant
ed to those who passed the eighth
grade examlnat'ons given Thursday
and Friday of last week. The succes
ful ones now entitled to enter high
school are: Leslie A. Thompson, Uma
tilla: Thelma Crablll, J. Delbert Head.
Audra VVInship and Mildred Stanton,
of Athena; Christine Moody and Mary
Olbbons. Milton; lva McKinney,
Helix; Mable Kauffman and Ray Ol
son, Stanfleld; Flela Alice Wachter,
Nye: Sarah Vaughn, Uklah; Lyla
Josephine Montgomery, Weston, and
Henry Ross Moon, Walla Walla R. F.
to this latter cry, Horah shouted:
"Lt's say this; 'Hefore we try to take
any power out of his hands, let's re
fuso to put any more power Into his
hands.' "
cinonKtration Illir.
This brought the biggest demon-
stration of the night. Several men
ran. up and down the aisles, waiving
1 their hats and shouting. The entire
j vast throng, from the orchestra pit to
, the roof, rose en masse, shouted.
whistled
I innuuu, jciicu, ni.iiijreu aim wjntftj
ineir nsis ana coats ana wnn ine aia
j of a few strains from the band kept
it up for several minutes.
HOW WOULD YOU BT7
BEATON AND WINN ARE
DEFENDANTS IN SUIT
You men with a sporting in
mtlnct, here's one for you to
ponder over.
A suit was filed In circuit court
yesterday against John lieat'in
and Claud Winn, Heat on and
Winn. George Forth is, plain
tiff. Now, the point is, ' who
would you bet on, with the de
fendants standing a GO-SO chance,
Heaton and Winn?
Forth sets forth that Heaton
and Winn turned stock into his
grain and that they did damage
amounting to $oo. Forth ex
pects to win and forthwith the
defendant are of the opinion
they will not be beaten. It's
grumbling chanCi. far Ifeose so. i
rllned. Haley, Haley Ste
have taken the case in hand
Mr. Forth.
llninrall Is .11 Ini-li.-s.
wind i8 (n the W(mt sentle, and the
weather cloudy.
Ijifllati CrHiidt! Get IJconso.
William N. Stevens, of I-ipwal,
Idsho, and AIlss Emma Jones of Ven-
dleton, were Issued a marriage license.
today. Both are Indians and are 20
"years of ase. Mr. Stevens is a farm-
er. -
"V uuuia
ARE WOUNDED IN
RENEWED RIOTS
Boston' Turned Virtually toj
Armea uamp on secona uay
of PoIicettrike; 6700 State
Guards Patrol Streets.
GIRLS AMONG INJURED;
CLUBS, STONES HURLED
Intermittent Rains Through
Night Fail to Keep .Crowds
Indoors; Looters Felled by
Bullets of Guardsmen.
BOSTO.V. Bept. 11. With more.
than 67O0 state guards patrolling the Tne street romnl.t-w. n!cn has
principal streets. Boston Is virtually ; charKe the flusmng of ctrccls
an armed camp on the second day of promsed to speed up 'heir depart
the police strike. The dry is quiet i ,nent aB to have tho principal
fol;ow!ng night rioting In which two ,hroiiehfares .in Dresentable Shane.
j nwaTa wwre Hnui to oeain ny guaras-
; men. More than a score of persons.
! including two girls, were wounded.
j Ualns which fell Intermittently
throughout the nJght failed to keep
i the crowds indoors. In the riots in
which thousands of men and boys
clashed with the military, hurling
stones and using clubs were frequent.
Sailor is Shot.
HOSTON, Kept. 1 1. Hioting was
renewed here today when state 'w
iittompted to break up throngs of
gamblers on the Hoston Coi.,uiOi.
Kuymond .Barnes, sailor was shot
j when he led an attack on the guard a-
iiu'ii.' Koldiers were marchr
: than a score of gamblers along the
i street when a crowd attempted to re
! leae the prisoners. Shots fired in
1 Ik.. ..im. 4,. Dtnn 1, n elLbj
I Bayonet charges finally dispersed the
crowd.
No Setth'nnt.
There are no indications of early
settlement of the strike. Mayor
Peters declared restoration of order is
the first object to be obtained and
that the strike will f taken up when
(the city is under control. leaders of
It s a ' itne -r;knff police declared the mn voraniy upon the city's cleanliness. J
J:4:' vletermti3Vd as ever to hold out UequesU waa also made for a watch
eiwe- tf0" ril'0i;nlU&l of lh uul,m L V'nian to be placed at the Main street
d for f " rv'm. it crossing of the O.-W. R. & X. Co.
J'0? W- . tracks during Round-Up as a protec- (
HOSTdN, S pt. 11.-
rovcrnor Cool
Id-e loJay (Hspatchpd
the following i
u-H'K'-um to tlie secretary of war an.l
ivy:
-', !-- tntire stats fruard of Massi
jhusetts lias been called out. At
present the city of Boston is orderly.
There are rumors of a very g-eneral
strike. I wish you would hold your
self in readiness to render a-ssiNtance
from forces under your command im
mediately on appeal which I may be
forced to make to the rpesident."
IINDOX, Sept. 11. A Cologne dis- ',
patch today reported that more than !
200 persons were injured and an un- '
known nuniher killed i na munitions
explosion at Neuwied, near Cohlens.
Many hiilMing-a weer demolished.
WAITING! ' , '
CLEAN ROUND-UP CITY
Residents Asked to Assist in
i
Improving Their Premises, I
Street Flushing; Committjh
WU1 Speed up Work. ' j
. leaves are falling, tut. - i..
mud from the hills I.- -.sih-r-n v
the level streets belc, H''i. . i
coming, thousands r' V-!tr.r- '
here atid I'endleto-i tt.UH. :ti
other things, be clean.
Buch Is the plea fi' tt t'vv. j.
which last evenlrii; ue!iej liiv n.h
and city council to is:er zt
paign to clean ira i;i sl'y t,.
before the Round- l.'i.'. i u cjiv t
ernlng body pro-.i.l1 " isnoi
hearted support ai,it a-ksfl r.t
, newspapers held to tl 'It -or I
The equipment which the city has,
however, is not sufficient to handle
!all the paved streets In the city in
such a short time -and property own
ers, therefore; have been asked ' to
apply their garden hoses to the
streets in front of their premises as
an .aid, -" " "
I- Attention has been called to vacant
lots upon which are stored dilapidat
ed wagons, autos. farm implements
and what-not. Persons owning these
eyesores have been requested to re
move them to their final resting place
and allow owners of the occupied lots
J to clean them up for the Round-Up.
' Leaves which have ' accumulated
; upon sidewalks and near curbings
'and have become watersoaked should
be removed, not only for better ap-
: pearancea but for safety, the petition.
ers point out. These leaves are a
menace just as mucn as ua.m.u
or otner emmery .rw
The Civic club members are proud
of the appearance of Pendleton and
are anxious that the greatest coopera-
tion be forthcoming Xrom citizens so
that visitors, -too, may
vorably upon the city s cleanliness.
'trscks rturinp Round-Up as a protec
tion to -visiting peaesirians
i toisis.
M WEATHER
FORECAST .
Tonight and
Friday prob
ably showers
and cooler.
' - ' I
MINORITY
MEMBERS
iiMncDUAMnrn
UMULIUIMMULU rtl IflUIVO UUL IU i
DETERMINATION TO KILL TREATY
GHI UMAT1LA CO.
PEOPLE GEI TICKETS
m mm speech
rr.ti:.fc county people were
k', , the President .Wii
tt i'ortland municipal
vi ;,.ftj night by means
'jt;- r it-rcjgh which names
. v C regon children from
- h - t'ekets submitted.
fr--re ve.'4 Ltwu tickets to be dis-r-wuted
by the .cmmiitee, 3720 of the
tickets entitling the holders to seats
for the address and 2870 tickets for
rft.inding rocm. Jt was thus necessary
for the committee to opportion the
tickets out according to the number
of applicants. Each county having
five or less applicants entered was
granted ail five tickets, while in the
cases of those havtng a larger number
of applicants the figure of 21 per cent
was used. Thus Umatilla received 21
Per "cent of the 38 tickets requested.
The chances of each applicant receiv
ing a ticket to the address was thus
slightly better than one to five.
T
YIELDS $1 00 AN ACRE
. This year has witnessed the coming
- lnto ts Qwn of tne Heririiston project
l&nd accordim? to word Drought to
Pendletcn today by John WCamp.
, Mu & young and progressive farmer
Qf thfi projecU After geveral years of
, fair auccess. farmers have actually
made excellent croos on their land
and are becoming more and ' mor(S
optimistic of the future.
The alfalfa hay crop on the Hermls
ton land this year has been partlcu-
, lariy valuable. With three of four
J crops, many acres have yielded five
j tons for the season, which brought an
average of $20 in the stack or $100
an acre. The best wheat land in Uma
tilla county has not yielded more than
$100 an acre this year with $2 wheat
and the land has a crop only once in
two years.
1 Fruits have also shewn a tendency
j to bear more freely this year than
j before and the pear, peach and apple
crops will produce thousands of dol
lars, predictfons are freely made that
Hermiston will quickly take its place
i with the older and more developed
sections of Umatilla county as one of
the garden spots and "gold mines" of
tnis already rich county.
ALL CONTRACTS FOR
.ELKS' HOME SIGNED
i
All
contracts' for the new Klks'
home, from that of the main
lodgre
building to the ssma'Hest sub-contract,
were signed last even-ng by the trus-,
tees of Pendleton lodge .o. 2SS in a j ed States must sacrifice all the bene
meeting with the building committee, j fits to be derived from the treaty if
Work on the excavation has already' t u amended and rejected, the report
been under way 10 days and is pro- I asserted.
greasing rapidly. ! , '
As soon as the Round-Up is over, .
members of the lodge will start out Attends Walla Walla Institute.'
to sell the 154,000 In second mortgage
bonds which are expected to be taken w- W. Green, county school super
by lodge members as a part of the ! lntendent, today attended the morning
scheme for financing the new build-
ing. .
MONTANA CROWDS SLEEP
REACH WILSON AND HEAR NEED OF LEAGUE
THIS TREATY OR NONE, SAYS PRESIDENT
By HUGH BAILLIE
i
(United Press Staff Correspondent.) -
Press Staff Correspondent.) 1
BILLINGS, Mont., Sept. 11. Thou-
sands of Montana ranchers and their I
folk, some of whom had driven In
mud -spattered automobiles for miles
and slept on the r'-'mls enroute. crow-
ided to hear President Wilson explain
the treaty in Hillings today. When
the president stepped from his private
car this morning he heard a cheer ewosd and the nation's youth must be
that brought a broad smile to his face, trained to arms." He declared ttjera
The tewn was filled witn people in i must he industrial democracy as well
holiday spirit ami was flag decked, las political democracy, calling atten
A crowd nt Woren. 20 miles outside of ition to the labor feature of tho treaty.
Billings, where the train stopped for
some time, made such a noise outside
of his car that Mr. Wilson arose and
went out to shake hands with the
scores of people.
"It Is this treaty or none." Mr. Wll-
! son declared here, speaking to his
j first Montana audience, be warned
E
ATme nnr. w
Hold Obstructionists Knew
Treaty to be Invincible In
Fair Fight, Listed Charges
as Interpretations, j
AMENDENTS ARE EQUAL
TO TREATY REJECTION
Report Deplores Delay, Injuri
ous to U. S., Decisions Be
; ing Foregone Conclusion of
Majority Out-of-Harmony...
' BT J. W. T. MANX.
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
WASHINGTON. 8ept. 1 1. Six
Democratic members of the foreign
relations committee today presented
the senate minority report on the
peace treaty, urging unqualified adop
tion of the pact. The report repllee
to statements made In the majority
report filed yesterday and It charged''
that senators opposing; the league of
nations, knowing it is Invincible in a
fair fight, are trying to defeat It ,"by
indirection" through reservations.
Thes proposed reservations, the re
port said, have all the vices of am
endments "and the additional vice of
pretending to be what they are not"
interpretations of the covenant lan
guage. - , . rf
Aimed at Destraction.
The document states: t
Delay In reporting the treaty baa re
sulted in "government by obstruc
tion." . ..... .....
American trade shows the effects
of this delay.
Adoption of the majority amend
ments and reservations means the
United States will lose all the conces
sions It secured from Germany by a
dictated peace.
The league of nation Is the world's
only hope of preventing International
chaos. ' ... - v ; .
The reservations are the work of
senators determined to destroy . the
ieaue ana aeieai me treaty.
Delay Deplored. - r ''
"We deplore," said the report, the
long, unnecessary delay to which the
treaty has been . subjected while
locked up in a committee whose ma
jority decisions and recommendations
were from the start a foregone con-
! elusion. The Industrial world la in
ferment and commerce halts while
this great delay in peace settlement
has been caused by the majority of a
committee known to be out of har
many with the majority of the senate,
and the jnajority of the people. This
is a government by obstruction as well
as by a minority."
Not Practical.
"As far as the proposed textual
amendments are concerned, they have
no merit," said the report. "None of
them could by any possibility be ac
cepted even by grfeat nations associ
ated with the United Ctates in the war
nd none of them could by any pos
sibility be dictated to Germany. To
adopt any one of them, therefore is
equivalent to rejection of the treaty."
The. suggestion that the amend
ments would not necessitate reassem
bling cf the pueace conference, be
cause it Is still in session, has no
force, the minority said, because the
conference has acted finally on the
treaty. Nor could the German dele-
gates be recalled to Paris and forced
to accept the amendments. The Unit-
sessrons of the Walla .Walla county
teachers" Institute.
BV ROADSIDE TO
that It is "unwise for parliament of
COnffr.SK.." to tamn.r with Ih. tr.alv.
nd .ih th. ..,-.
say It is too hard on Germany were
outspoken against Germany during
the war. and he characterised them as
'pitiless then and pitiful now."
Play ie Hand.
"If America stays out. she plays a
lone hand," said Wilson, "and that
hand must be on the handle of the
Mr. Wilson said monopoly must be
wiped out to Insure Industrial demoo.
racy and he repeated his warning of
bolsheviam spreading to America un
less world conditions are stabilised,
"There are apostles of Lenin In our
midst," he cried and a niurmtl swept
over the crowd.
CHARG
1