Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1920)
TWENTY PAGES PAGE EIGHT DAILY EAST OREGONIAN, PENDLETON, OREGON, SATURDAY FEBRUARY 21, 1020. . - ; SAYS TOURIST TRAVEL DORT DJYS CARRIAGE TO CRATER LAKE WILL PLANT AT KALAMAZOO BE POSSIBLE BY MAY1 Warden finds Hiph Hills Al ready Practically Snowless and Customary Driits Few While Cl.ver Covers Slopes. MRI'FoHn. Feb. The predlc- tioa ma;i Patrick II Ually. lo cal gajna ul fili warden "i f lurn from an at"mobll trip to Union creek, about l :. m:l 'hi side of Cra ter lase thai tinrihia much more snow falls In Ihf Crater lake rcgi. n tourists ,i,:,v ,-.,-: driv 10 the lake by May 1. According to : itly. the high hilts In that ndi'D are practically snowless. anil on the "tenth Hopes la green growing rroaa, !evrl ihches Ionic, wild onlon ami wild clover. L!ttle snow wa tanad in the low open places where usually at this time of year there are hun'e oi banlra. Because of the little snow In the mountains ni.d the protracted dry spell the ftoKue river has seldom. If ever, been so low at this time of year, old timers say. To keep pace with the demand for i i ' tx -on septan and coupe models the boii Motor Oar company, of Klint. has taken over the extensive pliant , the Lull Carriage Company at Kal.iniaaoo. This entails an expenditure of about a half million dollars on the part of the Dorl company. One of the Lull bulKUnga has boon turned over and pOMMBlon of the other will be secured May 1. the whole adding 150,000 square feet to Dort manufacturing ac tiv Hies. i oiiipleto Ko.ulincm. In the building now being put In hap will be installed complete, wood working i-quipnu-nr, band saws, plan ers, dry Kilns and new hollers in the power heu). All machinery wfll be of the latest pattern and so nrranged that the production of from 160 to 200 Ma of body parts will be the daily sihedule. The other four-story building will be devoted entirely for the assembling, painting and trimming of closed bod ies. At the Kalamnioo plant, which will be operated as a compete unit, the wood parts for open bodies will be made., but the assembly of these will continue at Flint. "i W ill Kmjaoy SSO Men About i:Et' men will be employed lit Kalamazoo and there Is a distinct ad vantage In taking over this propert aa It gives ha the, Dort company ca pable artisans In woodwork. The ftalamaoo deal does not in any manner afreet the lort company's building program!)! Flint, where work Is being rushed on the new plant In the east end or the city. The extent of these plans and the scarcity both of material and men made It out of the question to build a closed body plunt, and the company in fortunrtte in being able to buy the Kalamazoo property, which is ideully fitted for the purpose. AVIATION AND GAS WILL RENDER NEXT Second of Scries of Predictions by Experts Declare Latter Factor Will be Enlisted Against the Raiders. MEDAL FOR BRAVERY IS POSTHUMOUSLY AWARDED riTULMAX. WiiPh.. Feb. 21. A 'nrnewie medal for bravery has been 1 osthunmusly' awnrded to Timothy Kmerson, son of Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Kmcrson of this city, who lost his life n a vain attempt to rescue a drown ing ifiri. hss Sheioria Witter, in the Snake river, near Lewlston, on June 1918. The medal was awarded bv the Carnegie hero commiswion. A imllar medal was awarded in recog nition of the bravery of SUas Milan of Iewiston. Idaho, who also gave his life in an effort to save the youni? lady STUDEBAKER The Big Six THE SERIES 20 BIG-SIX, with its 60 H. P. motor, 126 inch wheelbase and seven-passenger body, gives to the mo torist a rare combination of actual power, range of speed, hill-climbing ability, beauty of line and appearance, genuine comfort and operating economy. Owners get 14 miles and more per gallon of gasoline and over 8,000 miles per st of tires. Truly a big car in size, yet it is comparatively light in weight its 3125 pounds being s &Mf$ distributed, and its chassis so perfectly balanced that ar assured of perfect riding comfort at two miles an hour r at a-mile-a-minute. Equipped with a beautiful straight-side slanting wind shield with artistic side lights and r o i i-pioof ventilator base; glove box and extension light in tonneau; large plate glass window in rear of Gypsy top ; genuine hand-buffed lea ther upholstery ; silver-faced jeweled clock and recording in struments ; walnut steering wheel with instrument board and glove box of the same finish ; cord tires and shock absorbers. Body and hood are a Brewster green with gold striping on the wheels and louvres. WALLACE BROTHERS 812 Johnson Phone 74 Rough Roads for Wheels Are Smooth Reads for Passengers TTTATCH Overlai d 4 on VV rough cobbles or un paved roads. The wheels fol low surface inequalities, but the new Triplex Springs give car and passengers remarkable riding steadiness. They give 130-inch Spring base to a car of 100-inch Wheelbase. This makes for the gently buoyant road action of a large, heavy car with the economy in upkeep, fuel and tires, and convenience of handling of a scientifically dcsigncdlight car. Auto-Lite startingandlight ing, door -opening curtains and dash light give tut a hint of the completeness and qual ity which characterize every thing about Overland 4. 1 KI.ANO SAI.r.S CO. I .. Omirt and TIkwiijihoii f K, D. Knylor By iKN'HUAl DEBKN'K V (.Director of the French College of War.) "Should war begin again now. avia tion and especially gas, would play one of the most Important parts. The progress of aviation would make the rear of each front, and very far In. extremely dangerous, and the progress of chemistry would permit to use gas on zones of such an extent that it can not be imagined. "Hut this would be the sense in which the war would develop, much mcTe than the Immediate effect that would more than take place from the beeinnln of WTatilltiep. "Muking gas is naturally readily done Ucause nil the manufactures o chemical products still so numerous in Oermany can be requist ioned j but to make airplanes is nim h slower. "Thus, while there will be people at work to prepare ways of attacking. It It evident that others will be prepar ing ways of protecting themselves, and that means once ngain the race be tween the novice agents and the de fence against those agents. "The defense against gas seems to be more difficult than against air plays. I believe that, against . air planes the ant!-"rtcr.ift rr.-tillory is susceptihl nfr.'k''' rap'd progress, fetid perhaps, fr i ' ' "rv Instance gas will be one o' the best ways If with apnronr'rt the ifr can be poisoned alt armn d thi attacking air- rtiuch more ef- oj implfi a i mile around .f trying to hit With bits of the plane. It would h fcetive to c-paJ". sphere of v,,I?" " the airplane, ! s fl the machine din I ly shell. "Concerning the rl T expect that our eh"" some' anti-gas' no oM'i; But until further or In iore of gas than nf i t h Is, beca use t here a rf which can he so easily i "We will be able to c non and ammunition many, but it will be the worst job to j watch the inanfactores of chemical products. A laboratory secret a pro cedure carefully kept secret, and these manufactures become tomorrow war toxic products makers. This is the main danger. "As regards strategy, it could not he much modified, as long m have not improved our transportation sys tem. "We can expect airplam a ip carry hundred of men, but not yet whole divisions, it may take pines some da. but we have not arrived there.' i Re against gas Itn will find Ins other gas. I I am afrai 1 j i:i planes, and no products I iade in secret. I ntrol the can- j rks. in Ger- i Only one zvord-Ekgant c can describe this new CHALMERS EVERYTHING in this Chalmers is ' new-except the chassis. It has a new bonnet line, new coach line, new windshield, new top, new seat and seat springs. They catch your eye, those lines, though they are marked by a reserve of rare good taste. But in those multitudes of little details the real elegance is expressed door handles, square doors, low sitting posi' tion, deep tilt of the cushions, the mo -" rk r-rrw-jiii flnor. A volume easily may be written about them, and .my one of tlu'iu may alone tempt you to jui,ty h.u ownership. Then when you've had your first ride, when you've felt the influence that Hot Spot and RamVhorn have on the action of its master engine, when you've noted the utter silence, easy starting, the ready response, the easy effort "up underneath the bonnet" you, too, will say Chalmers is one of the few great cars of the McLEAN & SNAVELY Main St., Opp. Hotel Pendleton. Phone 222 MM WANT LEAGUE T CHICAGO, Feb. &l. The League of Women Voters, in closing ittj session here, approved the league of nations without reservations. The resolution wa adopted after a bitter debate on n motion urging "adhesion of the United .States to the league of nations with such reservations as are considered necessary, but with the least possible delay." The phrnse, "with such res ervations,"' was eliminated before adoption. STUDENTS APPEAR IN PATCHED GARMENTS IN PROTEST AGAINST H. C. L. mm Recti r r The Kano.. !: J illl ftllowinK recif" 'w tr over fails If faith'!!)'' "Don't look on th- ! thing. THn't have a your trrinu; brother or have any of the milk sde har ster. MM the harJly S out: if any ty for If you nesH ii! your heart, curdle it in ftomo completely miserable ami unhappy it U because you hare not yet o.uenche4 the Inst vital Hpark of love in your b. ng." ' way, lielie.tj i'limi nil men and -women, too, are liars, and the truth Is not in them. Find fault with your follow man. Kay mean things ubout your neighbor, envy her, hate her, seek your own, scrap ir you aon i gei n, inoii Who learns and learns, but acts not what he knows. f human kind- cvel, rejoice In Iniquity, endure noth- I Is one who plows and plows. but lug, believe nothing, and If you are not never sows. Selected. SEATTT.K, Feb. H. Students at i Lincoln high school arrived at "books" today arrnyed In worn and patched i suits as a protest against the high cost I of living, and of clothing Ih partic ular. Boy and girl students announced they had pledged themselves to carry i out a dress reform. .1. F. Adams, principal approved the old clothes program. PUTS WIFE IN ASYLUM TO MARRY HER FRIEND i MOTOR OAKLAND Feb. 21. Details of an alleged plot by Franklin Williams by which he placed his wife In an insane asylum, and then married a woman whom hi wife befriended, were dis closed in a suit for separate mainten ance which .Mrs. Williams filed today. Relatives secured hr release through habeas corpus. The. complaint says Mrs. Williams took Miss Catherine Specula, an attractive young woman. Into her home and treated her as a daughter after the 19u earthquake made her homelewi. She avers the friendship between Williams and the lrl ripened Into love ami that they forced the wife to give up her room to the gill, who It is alleged enter tained Williams. WALLA WALLA WIDOW SUES FOR $10,000 FROM MAN WHO BROKE FAITH W'Al.l.A WAIJW. Feh. 21. Mm. Elizabeth Young- today sued O. Som mers of Cnlege Place for $10,000 for alleged breach of promise. She de clared she was a widow with two chil dren, and that Sommers was a man of social prominence who made love to her, hu' refused to ritrry out his promises to wed. Sommers Is now in California. 1oVT)tN'. The air commuter has arrived, the Handley-Page London Paris service can te booked for a ser ies of twelve trlpa at a total cost of $C00, a saving of 5 on each trip. May need repairing. Are you giving it the attention it deserve; ? The time will never be better to have it bvrhauled than right now. Spring will soon be here and your car should be in first-class condition if motoring is to be enjoyed. Our expert service men can assure you of the very best work. There arc no "comebacks" here. liuicks and Hudsons are our specialty, but every make of car receives our careful attention. (Billy) W. L. CUMM1NG 614-16 Garden St, Between Alta and Webb Sts.