THE BEND BULLETIN TTTV WKATHKH Ilnln or Snow Tonight and Tomorrow. DAILY EDITION VOI 1 BEND, DKHCHUTBH COtNTY, OHKOON, TIF.HDAY AKTF.R.VOOX, DK( KMIll.lt 4, 1017 NO. 81)3 IDLE SHIPPING IN THE PORT OF HAMBURG CONTROL ARMY GENERAL DUKHONIN IS KILLED. BOLSHEVIK! 0 WILSON, IN MESSAGE, ASKS 1WATI0N AGAINST NATIONS HELPING KAISER OTHERS POWERS TOOLS OF GERMANY. ALIEN LAWS NEEDED I'mlibut Advlwn Tlmt Kiinnlf llr ( miftiic-d In lViill'iillrt olulloit to WliUn llir Wur Hconf In InlnMliirisl. Illy Unltnl I'rtm to The Ilend Bulletin.) WASHINGTON. I). C. Dec. 4. President Wilson In bis nuiomgn to Cmigrens today miki'd a diirlnrutloii of war against Auntrlu-lluiiKury. Hn dm lured that Austria. Turkey otiil llulgnrln nro only tool of Hut Ur in. in government. Pledging America will fight on to victory, tlm 1'n-nltlotit linked that Austria bo for m.illy Hnied a an enemy of the 1'nlcd Slut"- In order to remove cm arrannlna obntnelcn now In the way of llio prosecution of successful war fare. Ho dnclnred Hint itny peace A miT li a Makes mtul Include, tlm delivery of Aiintrlu-Huiignry, Llio Iliilknim, mid Turkey, u well im northern France hi: I llclglum, frntn llio (iirinun do minion. . Hi'ifUluwwa Hliortatfc 1'auM'. - Ho KiiKKtd romcdlnl legislation to meet riillrond nnd food price, con JAtlons. (Ii'rliirliig that Hut stringency iho food lt un I Ion In dun to self ishness. In nddlllon. th" President awni'slml legislation fur the full usn of nntlonnl resources, InrluilliiK water power, nnd asked mora drastic lawn to punish nlli't) enemies. In this con iii'i'tlon, liu Intimated Hint nil niuoud nirnt to Ini'ludo women under lliu al.cn enemy ml migni no iitinsniiio. Ho advised thut alien enemies be n;i f I nitil -In penitentiaries. Instead of rnnifiirlahla Internment lumps. Tin- prcHldcnt suggested I lint n nln lili' ho ii no committee prepare nil up lirnprlntlon IiIIIh, no tlmt wastefulness ) limited, mid responsibility lie ren te red. VIII ( 'utile .Mi-.k. Til" Presldont'H request fur II di v!.ini(loii of wnr nun timl nthor of the Ciutrnl powern wiih embodied In n Joint resolution Inlroilu I by Sonu- tor IMtttniin, of Ni'Viiiln, linking Con gress to docluro wnr on Auntrlii, Bul garia nnd Turkey. President Wilson's mcssngn will Im cnblcil to nil tlm nntlonn. excepting 1lm Control powers, Auicrlcnn nnd iilllml nvluiors will drop copies of tho apeech Into Unrninii trenches. CoitgrrN Itcnily For Wnr. Congress pinna to moot tho ro--qui'Htn of tlm President, nnd to dn olnrn wnr on Austria Inimoillntely. Tho Hnuso .foreign affiilrn, nnd the fiennto forolKn raliitlonn com mitt cos will moot tomorrow nnd prepare n ro- port on a Joint resolution for n lo vlnrntlon of wnr. Bnnntor HUnum's Ti'dolutlon will ho rn-drnftod to idlm Inntn ri'foronco to Turkey nnd llul Kiirlu, ii.KiilMnt whom tho Prenldont lfien not wIkIi to deolnro wnr. Boys at the Front Craving U. 5. Tobacco; You Can Help "One, I wish I had ft nmnke." That'B whitl our boya nro anylng, ivho nro "ovor horo," (IrIiHiik bo Hint this world mny 1io a bottor place to live In. Will you supply your Boldlor Mr ml with his fuvorlto smoko and niitlufy lila lousing? Ho Is doing his hit will you do yours? Bonding tobacco to our boys Is almost ns Important ns rolling bnndn.nes, or producing mu nitions, ns fnr as their comfort Is nonnornod. Tho Bond Uullotln tohncco fund has boon stnrtod to help supply tho I'nltod States aoldlors In Franca with Fight in Congress to be on Suffrage and Liquor Issues (llr tlnltr.1 I'rnui In Tlio U'nd llullflln.) W AHII I.NtJTO.N, 1). C, Dor. "4. 'llio Jiidloliiry nomuiltton niinoiinri'd toduy Hint It will nturt u for mill roiiHldi-rullou of the (iiii'Htlon of wiimiiu nutfniK" nnd niitlonnl prnlilhltlon nnxl Tuenilny. Thu roinmltloe'ii no Hon m i'u n n thut tho flrnt IiIk roiiKn-Hiiloiiul fixlil will probub- ly bn over theno two Imiiui b. VOTING 10 BE ON IK ISSUE now aiti:koox to diiciuk OX 9.YI, 1.1.1 III IKJKT SKT hv TIIK KCIIIMII. IKIAIHI. Wliellier or not Hi" Hend nuliool dlHtrlit kIiiiII h-vy tnx of ,'.ir,r. to cover ixpi limn of tlm next mhnol yenr, will be derided tomorrow after noon mIi"I a npetiul election will be held to ratify the budcet compiled by tho nrtiool lionrd nt n rocent meeting. Thu polln will be III tile council chumbern of he O'Knno lnillclliiK. and will bn open from 1 o'clock In tlio nf toniooii until 7 o'cloik nt nlchl. AllhouKh tho Inw hn been ('banned no tlinl tho property (imillflcntlon doen no apply In tho election of dis trict orflclnlH, It I pointed out thut In order to volo at tho election to morrow afternoon, tho nninn of the voter must nppeur on tho Innt tnx roll. The election In necennnry because the tux found necessary In morn than six per cent In excess of tho lust year's lax. If the decision of Hie school board In confirmed, the K4.1ti!i tax for the coin I it k yi'iir will bo levied on prop erty valued nt J2.OOil.4or.. This Is exclusive of public utility values The chief Item which the tnx In Intended to cover Is that of $;l.',.onu for tenchern' nnlurlm, tho amount be I n K based on the salaries now beliiR paid, with 1 ho nildltlon of 10 per cent. A consldernbln number of Items Included lu the hudKot nro estimntea, nlthoiiKll wherever possible tho amount for any Riven purposo was calculated on tho basis of tho expense Hi la yenr. COUNCIL WILL TALK ON FIRE PROTECTION Qnontlona which will probably come up tonight In tho ineoUiiiK of the c'.ty council will bo In roKiml to tho pur chase of alio flro Blron, which linn I been hero on trlnl several weeks, and pnnaliiK on petitions for extra street lights. II In likely that stuns provis ion will also bo niudo fur tho care of tho city flro truck. tlmlr fnvorlln amolten, and you can help mnko the movement a success. ArniiiKemeiitB huvo been mudo to send 4B cenls' worth of tolmcco for ovory 25-cont contribution mndo. It should ho onougli to suy Hint the plnn linn tho full endorsement of tho United Stntcs government. Tlio stnokors' kit which your 2B cont donation will buy contains two packages of cigarette. Hired sacks of cigarette tobacco, plonty of papers, nnd ft can of tobneco equally Biitlufy 1 11 k lu 11 pipe or clgurotto. Donations, If mntlo by mnll, should bo son t to Tho Ilulletlu Tobneco fund, caro of The Dond Uullotln. 'Ill Is pbotoKrnpb ninne recently In They bnvo been tied up since llio duel P 0 EE WOMAN DIES AT TUMALO MIW. M AltTII A All.M.HTItONt; III' II IKI) TODAY MVKD OVKK 70 YKAIW IX OKWHX WAS IX KTATK DlltlXti INDIAN WAIt.S. O110 of tho oldest residents of Ore gon, 'Mrs. Martha Juno Armstrong, wus burled this afternoon at Tumnlo, her dentil occurring Sunday night from un uttack of pneumonia. Mrs. Armstrong was 80 years old and crossed the plains at tho ugo of nine with a group of 'JO wagons, of which her father wus captain. Her pnrontB nettled down near tho mouth of the Willamette river, near whioh spot she mndo her home until 12 years ago when sho came to live with her daughter, Mrs. J. V. A. Scoggln, of Tiimalo. Kho cume originally from Springfield. Illinois. Ilefore her inurrliign In 1 8 5 r , the doccitscd was Miss Marthu Denser. Her husband cume to Oregon two years previous to her arrival and the yoiuig couple were In the state during tho many Indian wars In tho early days. Mr. Armstrong died in 1S9G. Mrs. Armstrong la survived by two sons. A. V. Armstrong, of Tumalo, and Krnnk Armstrong, of Powder Itlver, Wyoming, and a daughter, Mrs. Scoggln. Sho was a grand mother of Mrs. Louis Bennett, of Ilend. EDITOR OF TELEGRAM CALLED BY DEATH John I', ( nmill, Well Kniuvn Xeivs paperiunll, I'iii-mcs Auiiv nt I'ortliuiil This MoruiiiK. I llr lnltnt Prn loTh Ilrn.t Kali, tin.) I'OKTI.AND. Or., Dec. 4. Johu F. Carroll, inanuglng editor of the Ev pnliiig Telegruni, of Portland, died this morning. Mr. Carroll lias been connected with n uuinber of western newspapers nnd la well known in Journalistic circles on tho const. Tho deceased wns born in St. Clulr, Pennsylvania. June 15, 1SG.S, and en tered newspnper work In 187fi, when ho started work on tho staff of the Missouri Republican, nt St. I. mils. For eight years ho was editor of the Chey enne Lender nnd for six yenrs manag ing editor of tho Denver Post nnd Inter general ninnnger or tho Denver Times, the last paper ho was connect ed with before Joining tho Telegram staff. Mr. Carroll last visited Ilend In November, 1914, when ho made n trip with tho Portland Ad Club and apoko lu this city. BRITISH MAY ADOPT AGGRESSIVE POLICY (lis- Vnlte.1 Prms to The Hend llullelln.) WASHINGTON', D. C. Dec. 4 The Hrltish nre being forced to adopt n moro nggrosslvo naval policy nnd It Is believed Hint till allied nnvlcs will soon depart from tholr present defon bIvo program. Younigor Atnerlcnn officers claim Hint action consisting of a single blow struck by tho llrltlsh, French nnd United Slalea nnvloa might knock out Oerninny, RAIDER ELUDED BY U. S. CONGRESSMEN (By UnlM Prwt to The tend flullptln.) PACIFIC! POHT, Doe. 4. Twenty Congressmen, returning from Hono lulu, todny reported tholr dodging a mysterious ship believed to bo a Oor man rnidor. A Jnpnnpso warship convoyed tho Congressmen's vcssal. Hie Iori of ilniiiliurK shows the great unit I on of wnr. II OI'KXIXO ASHKMHI.Y BY IX HA I, TAI.KXT S 'HOOI, I'KOHLKMK AND DKI'A HTM KXTA I. WOKK KACII DAY. Complete outllnea of the program for each day of teachers' Institute to begin Monday morning, December 17. have been prepared by County School Superintendent J. Ahon Thompson and Superintendent Meyers, of Crook county. The gathering will last three days and will feature eight speakers, a number of them active In stale-wide educational work. At 9 o'clock on the first morning an assembly will be held for the pur poso of organization. Musical num bers and a program by local talent will bo rendered. Professor F. L. Stetson, of the 1'nlverslty of Oregon, will give tho opening address. The latter part of the morning will be di vided Into departmental work, the groups going into separate rooms for tho lectures. A Blmllar schedule will be carried out In the afternoon. H. C. Seymour, state club leader, will give an illustrated lecture on industrial clubs In the schools at 3:25. A re ception for the visiting teachers will tako place in the evening. Tho play given by high school classes will be the attraction Tuesday night. A problem which will be discussed tho lasl day of the session will be "Tho Attitude of the High School During and After the War." .Mr. Gooding and City School Superin tendent F. Thordarson will take part in the general discussion. Mr. Daugb mau win act as chairman. RESIGNATION WENT TO GOVERNOR IN ERROR The mystery In the matter of Coun ty Commissioner Mackintosh's resig nation has at last been solved. He resigned, or nt least ho thought he did, but h!a letter of resignation was sent to Governor Withycombe and not to the county court. The mem bers of ithe court had been advised by Mr. Mackintosh that he Intended to resign but without the actual resigna tion they have been unable to act on tho appointment of n successor. Now that ho has returned from h:s stormy sea trip, he has explained that the resignation went to tho governor. Mr. Mackintosh will be in Ilend to morrow, coming up from Portland to sit with the court on the regular De cember meeting nnd net on the 1918 budget. It Is understood that the resignation will now be filed with the court. COMPANY PROVIDES FOR FINAL $10,000 At a meeting last night of the Uend Holding Company, directors author ized tho borrowing of $10,000, Hie balance needed tor flnnnclng the Hend Alhlelc Cllib building. Of the total sum of $40,000, which the structure Is costing, nil but the above amount has been raised. The recent campaign conducted by Dend business men resulted In loans amounting to $7000 being rocclved. ROUMANIA SOUNDS PEACE SITUATION (Ky United l'mi to The Rend Bulletin.) AMSTERDAM, Doc. 4. Roumanla has sounded Borlln and Vienna re garding n proposed armistice and othor peace preliminaries, according to a report, which lias circulated In the Ketchstng. INSTITUTE PKOGRAm READY! TO German ships lying Idle at their piers COUNTY E ItKD CltOSH MF.MliKR.SHIP DRIVK WILL HKOIX AS KOOX AS ORGA NIZATION' IS ARRAXGKU IX DF.SCH I'TKS, Twenty-five hundred members of the Red Cross In Deschutes county are to be enrolled before Christmas day, according to plans outlined at a conference In Portland yesterday at which a membership drive was dis cussed. Campaign managers from all over the state were present. Nationally it is expected to enroll fifteen million members, Oregon's share beinb 240,000 or practically 30 per cent of the population of the state. On apportionment among the counties he Deschutes allotment is about 2500. R. W. Sawyer, cam paign manager for Deschutes county, attended the meeting and will ar range for a county organization at once. VICE-PRESIDENT OF BANK IS MARRIED Hugh E. Bran Returns From Port land With Bride, Formerly . Miss Sybil Hager. Returning Sunday morning from a flyina trip to Portland, Hugh E. Bran, active vice-president of the First National Bank, brought with him his bride, formerly Miss Sybil C. Hagcr. The young couple were united at a simple wedding Saturday evening at the Roduey Avenue Chris tian church, the ceremony being per formed by Rev. J. Carlos Ghormley, at one time a classmate of Mr. Bran's while at college. Miss Hager formerly resided iu Ileppner, from which town Mr. Bran came to Bend. Recently she had been in Portland studying music. The wedding was a complete sur prise to the many friends of the groom, who has become well know n during the short time he has been in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Bran are now established in their new home on, the west bank of the river. HOME COMPLETELY DESTROYED BY FIRE Fire at 8 o'clock this morning com pletely destroyed the home of A. B. Taylor, in Kenwood, and endangered another dwelling next door, which only the use of the fire department's ehomical saved. The burned home was a five-room, one-story frame house, recently purchased by Mr. Tay lor, The cause of the blaze Is unknown. 0 2500 Cleanliness is Principal Concern of U. 5. Jackies Cleanliness in the navy seems to have Impressed W, E. Sanders, a Bond boy, now stationed aboard the battleship Nevada, anchored off Nor folk, Virginia. Mr. Sanders enlisted last May and was sent to Bremerton, Washington, later being transferred to the Atlantic fleet. In a letter to his parents recently, he says: "Yesterday was Mother's Day, and I spent it at the Y. M. C. A. at Nor folk and thought of home, but that was nil the good it did me. It seems pretty tough to be on a 10-day fur lough and unable to come home to seo you. Tartar Republic Formed In Crime Ministers of Wur anil Justice Klected For Xew HtateKryn lenko Entorii Moheleff, (Bjr United Prna to The Bend Bulletin.) LONDON, Dec. 4. Wireless mes sages received here today asserted that Ensign Krynlenko, Bolshevik! commander, has formally proclaimed his entry into Moheleff. From Rus sian army headquarters it was learned that General Dukhonln was thrown from a train and killed. TARTARS FORM! REPUBLIC, PETROGRAD, Dec. 4. The local Workmen's and Soldiers' Council has Informed the railway union that the allies are negotiating to afford Rus sia the right to conclude a separate peace. k. The establishment of a Tartar re--publlc of Crimea has been formally announced. It is reported that Cos sacks have elected ministers of war and Justice for the new Caucasus state. The official news agency has an nounced that Ensign Krynlenko, the Bolshevik! commanded-in-chief, has reported that the general staff of the army surrendered, thus indicating that the Bolshevik! control of the army Is complete. MANY ENTER NAVY TO ESCAPE DRAFT Thousands of Young Mien In Pacific Northwest Crowding Recruit ing Offices In Portland. (By United Preaa to The Bend Bulletin.) PORTLAND, Dec. 4. Thousand of young men In the three Pacific Northwest states, Oregon, Washing ton and Idaho, are enlisting In the navy to escape the selective service . armies. The local recruiting office of the navy, whose territory includes a largo part of the northwest, is unable to handle the great number of men ap plying for enlistment. Every chair is taken and even standing room Is at a premium in the recruiting office. Hundreds are applying daily. Recruiting officers are advising men to apply for any rating In order to be accepted. Later they can b transferred to the rating most de sired. It is expected by navy officers that Congress will enact a law whereby drafted men can be transferred to the navy, as the navy needs a large number of men since the merchant fleet has been placed under the con trol of the Navy Department. AMERICAN ENGINEERS AGAIN IN SERVICE By William Plilllip Slmms," (United Press Staff Correspondent) BRITISH HEADQUARTERS. Dec. 4. American engineering units are again in action in France, with ser- -eral casualties reported. The Ger mans attacked the British forces In waves 15 deep yesterday. Thousands of Germans were mowed down by machine guns, fired almost point blank. West of Bourlon, one ma chine gunner fired 70,000 rounds of ammunition in a single day. "I am very glad that I am on good boat, one of the best In the navy, and the work is nothing on It. U Is an oil burner and requires no work at all to fire It. You can go down in your white suit and put In a watch, or as we call It, a shift, and not get your clothes dirty. I wash my clothes twice a week, on Wednesday and Sat urday, and am getting to be an ex pert laundry man. "You have no Idea of how clean we have to ba In the navy. A bath twice a week and clean clothes all the time are required. There wus (Continued on page 4.)