THE . BEND BULLETIN Probably Know Tonight and Tomorrow. DAILY EDITION VOI, III iu:m, dehuiutlh colniy. orlgon, tim icsimv ai ter.voov, novkmiskk is. iimu Nil. Mil I. W. W. SKULKER, SHOOTING rDny a flUUGH OF SOLDIER 60I06E GUARD Bullet Pierces Fails to Kill; Big Posse Searches in Vain OBJECT LESSON PRISONERS IN CENTRALIA JAIL Uody of Murderer Executed by Crowd Displayed in Cell Undertakers Refuse Services Burial. Will He in Trench at Outskirts of City, With No Fun eral Service Hound-up of Radicals is on Thrc J.2ut the Northwest. CENTRALIA, Nov. 13. George Paxton, ex-service man, and member of the patrol which is guarding the bridge between Chehalis and Centralia, narrowly escap ed death early this morning when he was fired on in the dark by a man hiding on the banks of the Chehalis rlvof. One of six bullets fired, passed through his clothing without harming him. Paxton with -his companions, made for the brush whence the shots came', but the skulker escaped in the darkness. A posse of nearly a hundred is searching the vicinity in hopes of finding the supposed I. W. W. A cell in the city jail here presents a striking con trast to the solemn scene enacted at Pier No. 4. at Jloboken. There all honors in which lay the bodies of as many soldiers killed m bat tle. In the cell hereJies the body of the I. W. W. lynched here Tuesday night following the American Legion. It was dragged through night, then placed in jail in I. W. W.'s wh'o are confined the neck cut by a' rone, and Chehalis river, it is a terrible object lesson, not only to the prisoners huddled in their cells, but to all who fail in respect to the men who fought for the United States. The body will be taken tonight and buried in a trench, without burial services. Undertakers here persistently refuse to touch it. Chief of Police Hughes the man lynched was Wesley radical "wobblies in the state of Washington. ROUND-UP RADICALS ON. PORTLAND, Nov. 13. Several hundred alleged radicals are in jail in the principal cities of. the North- vest, according to reports received here. A round-up of "wobblies," and seizure of anarchistic literature is being vigorously pushed as the result of the Centralia massacre Tuesday, SPOKANE VWOBRLIES" TAKEN. SPOKANE, Nov. 13. The police today swept down on every known I. W. W. and radical hangout in the city, beginning a round-up which every vestige ot industrialism, beventy-livc were taken iii the first skirmish, a raid on pool halls. SILESIA VOTING NOT RECOGNIZE Illy UnH.il Phm ti Thollend Bulletin I PARIS, Nov. in. Thu Supremo council of tlui poaco cnufuroncQ bus decided In notify )ermiiii' that thu ulectioiiH In Upper Kllesln are void, ami will nlnn notify Itinniinlii of the C0llS(-(UI)tl(.'('H 'III CIIHO Hill) fllllK 1.0 comply with allied demands regard ing her occupation of parts of Hun gary. RULERS OK BELGIUM BACK IN BRUSSELS lly United Penis to The llend Bulletin I BRUSSELS, Nov. 13. King Al bert and Queen Kllssuhoth arrived in the capital lotlay,, completing their trip to America mid return. City and court oIIIcIiiIh welcomed thorn nnd escorted them to Lurken palace. UD GU ILL IdlU'LLIld LIIL Clothing, But GIVEN WOBBL Y were paid before 113 coffins the massacre of members of the streets of the city last plain sight of the alleged here. Riddled with bullets, sodden after hours in the to the outskirts of the city told the United Press that Lveretts, one of the most is intended to rid the city of ..'DEATH PENALTY IS ADVOCATED NEW YORK LAW AMI ORDER UNION WOCIil) SHOW .NO MERCY TO CRIMINAL ANA IV CI1ISTS NOW AWAITING TRIAL Illy United I'rew to Thu Rend llullctlnl NEW YORK, Nov. 13. The dentil penalty should bo sought for the "redH" held hero for trial on charges of criminal anarchy, a lettor written by the Law and Order union to the Senate Judiciary committee, asserts. It also contains a protest usnlust the "loose manner" In which the De partment of Justice Is conducting the campaign against bolshevlsts, anar chists, and traitors. ARREST SAVES RADICAL FRi CENTRALIA CHIME 4S UPHELD BY I. W. W. OTHER CHARGES MADE Oim' at Albert Liiiik, liinp-d Willi Allllll lllsllc III ! JIIIIIW to III' Turned Over to T. H. DIM. rli't Alliiincy. JiihI lit time to Have Albert Lang, mill employe, from a severe heating, mid possibly from lynching, Officer Tom Carlon answered a cull from ibn Rogers boarding bonne shortly afternoon yesterday, urrvsled Lung, and 10 minutes litter had him safely locked In the county Jail. .Mr. Cur ion reported that be found Lung surrounded by u crowd of mill workers who were highly enraged over remarks Lang Is said lo have pussed upholding I be murder of American Legion men at Centralia on Armistice Day by I. W. W's. "It serves them right for mon keying with I lie I. W. W.,'-' Lang Is alleged lo Have said ufter declaring' tbut be was an I. W. W.. and proud of it." Lung bus also been instrumental In distributing quanti ties of the ultra radical literature, thu officials say, and they declare further tbut when the llrooks Scunlon Lumber Co. roundhouse burned a few weeks ago, bo was an Interested spectator at the fire, und was heard lo remark that "all the mill ought to bo iMirned." Despite the fact that-he was res cued from very probable violence ut the bands of other patrons of the boarding house, Lung was un willing to uccompany Mr. Carlon, and did so only after the officer had told him In plain terms that ho would take' him lo jail In an unconscious condition If there were uny further talk of reslstunce. Sheriff 6. E. Roberts, in whose custody the prisoner now Is, will advise I ho l 8. District Attorney in Portland, of the arrest, and of the circumstances prompting It. CLOTURE RULE OUT OF ORDER l TMMIXS RULES AGAIST MM I IXG DERATE OX TREATY. AND KKXATK VOTE UPHOLDS HIS HKC1SIOX. Illy United Prau to The bend Bulletin I WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov 13. Senator Hitchcock today presented a cloture petition to limit debate on the peace treaty, but Senator Cum mins, who was in the chair, ruled it out of order. '.holding it tolbo an attempt to regulate the Senate's fu ture course of procedure. Mitch cock moved an uppoal. nnd on the motion or Senator Lodge, .tho chair was sustained by a vote of 44 to Sti. Bend Legion Post Approves Measures for Law and Order Percy A. Stevens Post, Amt'riciin Legion, through Its board of directors, (oiluy endorsed the art Ion of the Legion members of t'on tralla following the UUIiiiji of rour ov-soldiers by I. W. W.'s, and made public the following; resolutions: "To the Grant Htxlge Post of the American Legion or Centriilin, Washington, tho Percy A. Stevens Post Xo. 4, of the .American Legion of Rend, Oregon sends Its heartfelt sympathies for the recent tragedy perpetrated by tlieJj.W. W. resulting in tho death of four members of your post. "Tho Percy A. Stevens Post commemls-your post upon your ac tion to l id your community of the undesirable element, whose trait orous acts of last Tuesday have scarcely a parallel In the history of tho country. This post believes that your conduct has been fully jostled. Your .Members are martyrs to a better standard of Ameri can citizenship for which the American Legion stands, and to obtain It, every menus consistent with good citizenship must be employed to rid tho nation of the element whose principle aim Is to destroy the Institutions of American government. "Tlio IVrry A. Stevens Post of tho American Legion may bo counted upon to lend its force for tho maintenance of law and order. CHARLES W. EliSIUNK, Chairman." H's a Poor Hole That VCU-, fve GOT A, lot 1 ; To F. WiWrUI- Fok Wis s Wartime Drouth Is Set Aside By Order of Court tly United Prm to The Bend Bulletin ' LOUISVILLE. Ky.. Nov. 13. A temporary Injunction pre- venting the federal government from Interfering with two dls- tilling companies in the dis- posul of their stocks, was grunt- ed today oy Judge Evans, ot the United States District court. The injunction temporarily frees the distilling companies In certain sections from . the provisions of the wartime pro- hibltlon act. HONOR IS PAID NATION'S DEAD IMI'KKKSIYK SKItXICKS HKI.I) OX HOtiOKKX PIER FOR SOL DIKRS WHO i.VK I.1VKS IX HATTLK OVF.RSKAS. Illy United TreM to The 11,-nd Hulktin NEW YORK. Nov. 13. Rain rat tling on the tin roof and dripping from the eaves of Pier No. 4 in Ho bokeu, sounded a solemn requiem for 113 of America's warrior dead today.- In evou ranks on the dock stood 113 simple wooden coffins, each flag-draped, and plied with flowers. Representatives of the American government, the army and navy, the Russian enibnssy. and the state of Michigan, where most of the soldiers hud enlisted.' were gathered for Impressive military funeral services. v v r Don't Work Eol!i Ways ' ELECTION WILL BE DECEMBER 2(1 SKTTLF.RS ON Tl'JLUXJ PROJECT TO VOTK ON ORGANIZATION OK AN IRRIGATED DIS TRICT. Hearing in tbe matter of the peti tion signed by A. J. Hartcr and 73 other ranchers in the Tumalo sec tion asking that a date be set for an irrigation district organization elec tion, was held by the Deschutes county court yesterday afternoon, re sulting in the announcing of Decem ber 20, as the time at which the bal loting will take place. Sam Macart ney, George Sandel. and A.' J. Gon nason were appointed Judges of the election. No objection to he peti tion were filed with the court. The contemplated district includes the lands now within the boundaries of the Tumalo irrigation project. CRIME ANGERS BEND CITIZENS DEATH OF WARRKN GRIMM IN t'KXTRAl.LV AROUSES INDIG NATION. OF MANY FRIENDS AND ACQUAINT At'KS. News of the killing of four mem bers of the American Legion in Centralia by I. V. W.'s, was receiv ed in Bend with indignation which boded 111 for any "wobblies" who might be found in this vicinity. Not only was this due to tho nature of the wanton crime, but also to the I fact that one of the victims of the i Centralia anarqhists. . Warren j Grimm, was Intimately known to a i number of Bf.id .people, while many others who bad seen him in action ;on the igridiron when he played for ! tho University of Washington, felt ja sense of real loss. Warren Grimm was a close per ' sonal friend of Fred A. Woelf len nt the university, and In officers' training camp at the Presidio, where the two wexe 'ibunkies," Elmer Ward, of the Urooks-Scanlon of fice force, knew him intimately at Centralia, and Frank Chitty, recalled the time when the murdered man then practicing luw in Centralia, had performed a legal service for him. nnd had refused compensation giving as his reason that he too. 1 was planning to enter the service at an early dute. Ray Canlerbury, vice-president of the International Tlmberworkers Union, ' formerly of Chehalis, knew him In his high school football days, and spoke .feelingly of his high character as a man and his ability as an athlete. ROAD ROLLER CHARGE FAIR ' SAYS EASTES HOUR BASIS IS AID TO CONTRACTOR CITY . TO COOPERATE Should Work Willi County, is Mayor's llellcf .fudge Humes Renews Offier to Oive Henil I'se of Roller Free. ' Under 'existing "conditions, the charges made by the Deschutea county court for tbe road roller which Is being rented to contractor Joe Rock, are entirely fair, was the declaration of Mayor J. A. Eaitos last night, after a tour of inspection of city street Improvement jobs, madd in company with J. C. Rhodes, chairman of the streets committee of the Bend council. Mr. East.es found that the roller, for which the contractor is obligated to pay $3 an hour, has been Idle the greater part of the time, being used from two to four hours a' day. and being held from road work outside the city be cause of this. "I don't blame the county court a bit," Mayor Eastca said. Farts Not Formerly Given. Mr. Eastes explained that whea the matter of the county agreement came up at a recent council meet ing, be had objected to tbe rate charged because he had understood that tbe roller was to be used dally for a full eight hours. Now that all the facts are at his disposal, be sees only one objection remaining In the agreement between tbe city and county regarding the roller, and that lies in the clause which would make Bend guarantee the contractor's ob ligation. "The city recorder and I will be glad to look after the 'county's Interests and see that col I lections are made, but I do not con sider that the city should be quite so closely bound," the mayor said. He emphatically declared that he is anxious for a policy of the most thorough cooperation between city and county, and bad no intention of creating any feeling of antagon ism. He will ask the court, he says, that the roller be used on county roads until enough work has accum ulated in Bend for several full days thus, eliminating part time work on the city streets. Court E.vphiins Kate. County Judge W. D. Barnes and Commissioner C. H. Miller, In com menting on the arrangement made with the contractor, showed that county roads are waiting oh the con tractor's pleasure, and city streets are being given all the advantage. "As a 'matter of fact, if the city It self were doing the work, the roller would be turned over to Bend with no charges whatever'for rent," Judge Bafues'said. "That is tbe way It has been handled in the past, and the offer still -holds . good." Rent charged by the company selling the roller, when one of the machines was shipped from Portland to Camp Lewis for a lengthy job, he quoted as $250 a month, charges being as sessed from the time the machine was shipped to the date- on which it was again In the hands ot the agents. - Commissioner Miller mentioned work done last summer on Wall street, when he personally operated the roller for two days. No charge was made even for his own services. While the roller is now being tied up by part time work in Bend, roads near the city. Including one mile just east of BeuW, and three miles In the Grunge Hall district, are badly In need of rolling. VOTES PILING UP IN MOOSE CONTEST Increasing interest in the Moose popularity contest was shown today in the following report of the stand ing of 'the candidates issued by George. Stokde, of the Moose carnl vul committee: Miss Lela Stutsman. 15,000 Miss Bessie Vaughn, .v 14.000 Miss Effle Petermun .......11,000 Mrs. Bcrnlce Carlon, ....... :.,.. 11,000 Miss Fern Allen, 0.000 Miss Florence Downing 5,000