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About The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1920)
THE BEND BULLETIN H V w w w w ttt! VTVVVVVviViVVVTIVfVV " TUB WHATIIKR. Filr Tonight uml Tomorrow. "DAILY EDITION f l l l I I I I II - I II " tOt IV UK NO, DEHCIIUTCS COUNTY, OIIKOON, WKONEHIMY AKTEIl.VOO.V, MAItC'H JO, 1920 . No. T FEW OUT FOR NEW SECKBTARY OF STATE AT CAPITAL POWERS FAIL TO RECOGNIZE RUSS SOVIET HEROES OF '61 NOW OLDEST IN CONGRESS BISBEEI.ff.ff. CASE STARTED COUNTY SEAT QUESTION TO BE VOTED ON AT PRIMARIES PICKING JURY TAKES FIVE WEEKS NOMINATIONS SEEKERS FOR OFFICE ARE COY DEMOCRATS SCARCE Ofrlrn of t'lerk I'iiVohIimiUhI -Klmikcy Urchins llenoiiiiliiitlmi IYiimi Needed tp (jive City Place mi Tlt'knt, With t.rlniBll.n ' lltlln nun 4 than n iiiniitli distant, seeker uftor id n i. uml riiuiily off ! aid iiiiuhii ntly uriii'co. a survey of llm political It mil Ion, dntil!'t',cl tmluy. revuals. line lit the reasons advanced I tlia uml ir of reniiinitiiilloii, which, It Ih IhiIiiIimI tint. has failed to keep pace with salaries 11 ml fee In irlvutu luminous uml professions. A few, It In trim, uru lencllnx 11 II attentive ear to tli volen of tint iriii!v, bill political miililtinnii urn apparently 111 ii- h li'H keen than In former years. Another feature of note Ih tlm extreme reliii'lanco of demo cratic candidate to avow llnlr in tentions, virtually all who huvo liinilo either definite or tentative on nounrnment ho Inn of llto repulill i'an ponuuiiloii. Few Out for l-eulsliiture Candidates for llm IcKlslaluie ara JiiKt a scarce a thoso wIIIIiir U accept county offices. Jay II. I'p ton, of I'rliievlllii, has definitely an nounced that lis will aark a soat In tlm state senate, anil W. B. Wiley, Klamath Knit attorney, la prominently mentioned a an oppo nent of lh Crook county legislator for tho repuhllcan iioinlnntlon. II. J. Overturf, Of llend. who Hinted rarller In Hie anaHim that ho eruvd tlio tank of assisting In tho lawmak ing at tlm next so.wlon of the leitls Inliire, la mill underlded aa to whether ho will be out for house or itemize, and Uenlon (!. Ilurdlck. republican, Itcdmond member of t tin ho ue. may or may not outer the rare line 1 11. II. A. Ilrnttaln, re publican, of l.akovlew, former nt 11 to reireiieiiliitlve, la willing to alt in the hoinio once morn. For tho dlstrldt attorneyship. A. J. Moore, Incumbent, will try for a ' place on tho republican ticket, uml W. P. Myers, of Ilond, will aeek the endorsement of the aaino party ' for thin office. Hoss Karnham hna been mentioned a democratic candlduto for tho nomination, hut ha made' no statement of Ills In tentlona. Ttlli-e Would Ho Klleilff J. II. Hanoi', republican, county clerk since the formutlon of Des chutes county, will bo out for re election, and no far no opponenta In cither party hnvo boon unearthed. 1 .Clydu M. McKay, repiihllcnn, comi ty treasurer, so fur u Ih now known, Ih tho only ciuidldata for hla otllco. What look k at IIiIh stngn of tho 8. B. Roberta, who opened tho of fice n llltlo over throo yours ago, has no 0110 pitted against him for tho republican nomination, but two democrats, H. II. Fox and George Slokoe, ara ready to- make tho at tempt. With the exception of tho race for tho district attorneyship, thls In tho only instnnco whore democratic candidate ' Uuvo- boon jgjontlonod. ' ( 1 -'i ; J. Alton ThonipHon, county school auporintondont, will bo In the run ning again, and Mrs. Gertrude Wbltla, of . Torrebonno,..,wlll alao figure In th o republican primaries. The office of county Judge, held by W, D. Barnoa, and of asaoaaor, filled by W. T. Mullarky, carry over and will not appear on the ballot, , . j One county commissioner's term will expire, and it ia known that . 0tath Stookoy, Incumbent, will not try for another, term, t Two.ropub Henna, J, B, Minor and' Charlos Cur roll, are being montlonod promi nently .aa primary SuiiuTiUtos. .; " City Situation Peculiar In city politics ft ponullAr sltua .ilon prevails.- According 'to 'state law, nomination!! aro made at tho primaries in cites of 2,000 popula tion or more, but tho only' official Index of population rooognlzod ia the U. 8. census. Tho 1920 enum eration has not boon made public, ond according to the 1010 oensus, Bond la a vllluiro of a little over (Continued on Puge 2.) G mm. .")iwt-fjn5i. '5 '''-'a4ar4J S 1-. r ! DralnbrldKe Colby of Now York, now aoc rotary of auto to auod Ilobert Lanaina, photographed aa ha doparted fraia the WhIU Houae after receiving tba appololineDt from PrealdoDl Wilaoa. Centralia Murder Trial Testimony Nearing Its End ' Illy Dultrd l'r toTh. Brtxl tlull.lln) ' MON1KSANO, March 10. Ilii plil progroaa wua made hero toduy In tho examination of .wlmeiiHoa' for tho pronecutlon 4 In the C'entrullu murder trial. Attorney for both aides expect 4 4 that tho c.vldanco will be com- pletetl toduy. More soldiers who partlclpat- 4- ed In the Arinlhtico Day purado 4- Instilled corroborating previous rluliiia'of tho prosecution that there was ho rush on the ball 4 before, the shooting. PLANE FALLS, PILOT BURNS M.WI, II.IKIt, AlKHIIll' AND C A It (J O C O N 8 V M K D UY FI.AMKH WIIKN- (JAHOI.INK TANK KXII,OOKR. (Ily Unllrd Pru to The Drnd Dullrtlal I'HjKH AHT, Iud., March 10. I.leulenant Htono U. 8, mull pilot, en route to Chicago from Cleveland, wua burned to doath toduy when hla plane full to til 0 ground near' Now Purls, Indiana. A gaa tank exploded when tho machine hit tho fcround. Thn plnne and Its cargo ' of mall was destroyed, and Stouor'a body was virtually consumed by the flames. EnKlno tron bin was apparently tho cause of tho nccldont. VILLISTAS MURDER v WEALTHY CAPTIVE EL PABO, March 10. A roport from Chihuahua City received today statod that a rich Torreon merchant of Arabian birth, who was captured by VUlistuB when they dynamited a trnln near Corralltoa'laat Thursday, was murdered by his captors, Joseph Williams, the Amorloan taken at the same time, la being taken Into tho Durango mountains to be held for ransom, . , ... '. '' BLAME FOR LOSSES IS FIXED BY SIMS (By United Prcm toTli Bond Bulletin) WASHINGTON, D. C, March 10. Blame for loss to the alllos of .500, 000 lives, 2,600,000 tons of ship ping, and $15,000,000,000, was laid at the door of the navy department by Admiral Sims today. This torrlble cost, ho aafd), resulted from tho fail ure of tho department to tnko prompt action ngiilnst tho German submarine monuco. MILITARY MENACE IS POINTED OUT URGE DEMOBILIZATION Cumuli of I'lemli'is, III Note on World Keoiioiiilr (iiiiillllonx, Makes no ItecolillliendllllollH Itejcurtlliiif ItuHxiu, II)' INI I,, hii-li. ( Ily 'tlnlUtl Vrnut HlaTf C'AjrtfK;.on'I-nll LONDON'. March 10. I'olllleal oh- Ki'rverH here consider It BlKiilflcant Unit the derlnriitlon on economic cou (lliii'iib lu tho world, ua drawn up by llm council of premiers and inudo public last n I K lit . niiikr.s no speclflc rerniiinieiidutloiiH renanlliiK Ituslu, uml mentions tho soviet uutioii only by pointing out that it bus armies of more than 1.600,000 in tho Held, demobilization of which Is a primary condition of Ruropeun peace. It had been dellevcd that the note would trout Ittisnla with considerable detail, amplifying the council's ear Her recommendations for resumption of I rail a. The council agroea that thc.ro are no short cuts to Europe's' economic rehabilitation, or to price reduction. It believes, however, that general de mobilization, particularly in eastexn K 11 rope and Russia will be a vital atop toward this end. , . PKACK OWKU lOXOIlKI). TOKIO. March 10. The diploma tic advisory council has decidod to ignore the ptjace offer recently made to all major powers by the, soviet gov ernment of Kuasiu. GUNS obsolete; BANKERS AVER CONVKXTIOX KAVOHS S1ATK CONKTAIU'LAKY INSTEAD OF HAWED OFF SHOTCit'X TO WAltD OFF HOMH'PM. CHICAGO. March 10. Abolition of the sawed off shotgun as a means of preventing bank holdups, and sub stituting in Us place state constabul aries,' was advocated here today by delegates who are attending the an nuul conference of the, Central States Hankers association. Bank robberies lust year, accord ing to officers of the association, net tod greater loot thnn In any previ ous year. It is believed that tho use of weapons to provont bank holdups Is obsolete, and thut the only way to stop lb em la for every state to have a constabulary like Pennsyl vania's, equipped with horses, molorcylcs, and automobiles. MEXICO IS NEW FRONTIER IN WORLD'S RUSH FOR OIL Story of American Push Told in Development of Tampico 'Fields v- By RALPH H. TURNER , ; (United Press Staff Correspondent.) ; TAMPICO, March 10. The oil frontier is moving southward. , Where it will be tomorrow neither the magnate nor his scout in the field will hazard an answer to that, question but today the frontier lines are at Tampico,. down in the semi-tropical, malarial lands of Mexico's east coast. And the same types who blazed the way . at Sistersville and Bradford, on to Robinson and Independence and down to Tulsa, Beaumont and Shreveport, are here today pioneering with the zest and persistence that have always marked the explorex. The story of Tumplco Is a story of oil and In writing that story the American has pluyed tho moat con spicuous part, a part which cannot help but bring a sense of pride to tho American who sees for the first time the magnitude of the enter 'rd- pZi ' 1 m mm Thoy fonrht In uniforms of liluo and Gray when Lincoln was in the Whlto House. Now they are In' Congress, the two oldettt members In the iloure. On the left, Geiiernt Isaac ft. Kherwood of Ohio, 85 years old. fought In 45 battles and 10 times cited for gallant conduct under fire: enlisted as a private In 1861, mustered out a brigadier general. On the right. General Charles Manley Btedman, North Carolina, 7 years old. Three timet. wounded and brigadier sea eral at the close of war 9 . Girl Loses Optic When SheSneezes; Eye Is Replaced (Br Unllrd PraUTh Bend Bulletin) WASHINGTON, D. C. March 10. Marjorle Pryor's right eye popped out today when she blew 4 her noso. A maker of glass 4 4 eyes put It back. ' 4 444444 4444444 BONDS MIGHT CAUSE PANIC KEPUESIjXTATIVE M O X 1) E L L TELLS WAYS AXI MEANS COMMITTEE THAT SOLDIER AID PLAX IS INADVISABLE. (Br United Preu to The Bend Bulletin) WASHINGTON, D. C, March 10. A large Issue of government bonds to aid the men who. fought in the world war, might cause a financial panic, Republican Leader Mondell told the house ways mid means com mittee today. He said that such an issue would greatly depreciate the market value of securities, inflate credit, and send prices skyward. He also aaid thut be sees 110 means thy which additional taxes could be Imposed to obtain the revenue neces sary for any of the soldier aid pro grams proposed. prise .which his country mon are carrying forward today in tho greatest oil fold of the world. Tampico ia hbout six miles up the Pamico vlver, which . empties Into the Gulf of Mexico at the south- (Contlnued on Last Page.) TukifiK Of TeNtiniony in Case Arls ' Iiik Out of Industrial HlruicKle of IIII7, lle;lns in IliMoiir ' Miiihi Town. Hy M. D. Triiiy. Sy United Vrcn Huff Orreei-'rfideml ' TOMBSTONE. Ariz.. March 10. In a little red brick courthouse In the middle Of the, Arizona desert, evidence Is being taken in cue of the great court battles of the present day industrial struggle. Krom the windows of the court house, looking out across Tough Nut street, the dreary vista takes in a view of Mexico, and closer np one sees abandoned , but still yawning shafts of the copper mines. .The steady drone of court procedure, like the monotony of the view. Is broken only occasionally by flashes of Inter est. U14 underneath the monotony lies all the bitterness engendered by one of the historical episodes of class struggle done on a gigantic acale, as only the west can do It. Jury Completed. After five weeks of bickering, a Jury was completed for the trial of the so-called Bisbne deportation and kidnaping case, and the introduction of evidence was started today. Gathered into the accusation of kidnaping are a total of 211 mine owners, public officers and business and professional men of Bisbee, War ren, Lowell and Douglas. Officials of the Copper Queen, Calumet-Arizona and the powerful Phelps-Dodge company of New York are involved. They are charged with having loaded 1186 striking miners and their sympathizers into box cars and shipping them to Hermanas, N. M. From this place they were taken to Columbus, N. M., and cared for ty the United States army. Daybreak, on July 12, 1917, saw thq deportations. This trial picks the Industrial struggle up out of the big centers of population and moves it bodily to tl e frontier, setting it down again In a land of cowboys, miners and men in the rough. - , Patriotism Dofense. On the bench sits Judge Sam Pat tee, a small man, whose mouth Is hidden beneath a heavy moustache. He is shajp-eyed and quiet. With him patriotism and love of country are a linos t a fetish. His attitude, often expressed from. the bench, h.is caused the defense to Intensify its effort to Inject the, issue of American Ism as against alleged revolutionary doctrines of the I. W. W. The defense will contend that the Bisbee strikers were starting an In cipient revolution to cut off the cop per supply necessary for a sudceslful prosecution of the war. The prose cution, on the other hand, has an nounced no I. V. W. will go on the witness stand and no man will be prosecuted for putting .an I. W. W. aboard the "deportation special." Question Is Vital. Tho fact that depositions have been taken in Chicago, New York, Butte Senttle and at almost every center of Industrial conflict indicates the, wide ramifications of the case. . VThe outstanding point in this trial," said one man, whose neutral position In the case prevents use of his name, "is that until the case Is tufed and the people of the country are told the, whole story of the de portations, what happened at Bisbee will be an ugly ulcer on the Ameri can Industrial situation, WILLARD HAWLEY, JR. IS GRANTED DIVORCE Temporary Custody of Child and $230 a Month Alimony, Is , Allowed Wife' " (By United PreM to The Bend Bulletin) ' OREGON CITY, March 10. Judge Bagley yesterday granted a divorce to Willard Hawley. jr., In the suit brought by Marjorlo Hawley'. She is given temporary custody of the. child and $250 a month or its support, but Hnwley Ia given permanent cus tody. . "' 1 : ' . FINAL DESIGNATION IS DESIRED FAIR TO BE SOUGHT Appointment of Committee Author. ImmI to End 1 .011 j Period of Inaction Itone Fiesta Rep resentation Planned. To change Bend from the tem porary county seat to the official nermanent center of county affairs in Deschutes county will be the ob ject of a measure to be placed on the ballot at the November general elections, it was. decided today by the Bend Commercial club at the regular weekly meeting of that or ganization at the Pilot Butte Inn this noon. The fact that this city. temporarily selected as the county seat by the county court shortly aftor the division of old Crook became effective, has never been finally chosen as the seat of county government, was brought up by J. P. Keyes, and the motion of J. A. Eastes Vr tbe appointment of a. committee to see that the question is placed on the ballot, carried unanimously. A. Whisnant was named to head the committee. To Try for Fair Bend vs. Redmond as tbe loca tion of a county fair was a question which claimed tbe attention of tbe club during the greater part of the meeting, and which was terminated by the carrying of a motion put by C. S. Hudson that a committee be appointed to "go out and get the fair." ' Sentiment was crystal lized by remarks from E. L. Clark, of La Pine, in which Bend was ad vocated aa the logical place for a fair because of its central location, and the plan of forming a fair as- ts.iclaton of 100 members, each to take $100 worth of stock, was sug gested to finance the undertaking. In opening the question, President D. G. McPbersou pointed out that the club had een at fault in allowing the matter to drift after Redmond had been prevented from getting the fair by legislative action early in tho year. He declared that the club should take definite action, either in attempting to secure tho fair for Bend, or in the aiding Redmond. Action Counseled. - J. A. Eastes declared for immed iate action, and R. W. Sawyer point ed out that if tbe policy of inaction hitherto followed is pursued, that Bend is not entitled to the fair. T. H. Foley mentioned that Redmond has already a fair fund of '$6,000, and doubted the ability of Bend to prevent the smaller city from land ing the prize. He suggested -that the farmers of the county be consulted, and that the fair be located according to their wishes. A. Whisnant asserted that if the matter lies in the hancs of . the county court, "Bend might just as we.ll kiss the fair good-bye." If Redmond is considered! the ideal place. Bend should get behind the movement there, he said, counseling action either one way or the other. Silo Expert Coming. ' R. A. Ward announced yie coming next Wednesday of a silo expert from O. A. C. He will be a guest at tbe next fneeting of the club on that date, and farmers in this end of the county who are interested in silos and en silage are invited to attend. All who intend to be present are asked to send their names to Mr, Ward, as club secretary, before Tuesday. Resolutions introduced by C 3. Hudson, asking Oregon -senators and representatives to favor legislation to increase the salaries of forest service employes, ' were .' passed without opposition. Mr. 'Hudson declared that proper forest' admin istration' Is ot , vast importance .' to (Continued on Page' '3.J' K',f". SENIORS TO WEAR CAPS AND GOWNS Seniors of tho Bend high school will wear gray caps and gowns dur ing commencement weekthls year, according to a decision reached by the class, it was stated by City School Superintendent S. W. Moore today. ,