yVVWVVlV THE BEND BULLETIN TIIK WKATIIK.H Fair tonight mill tomorrow; DAILY EDITION VOL. v. IIKND, DUM 'IIITKH COL'NTV, OHKGO.N, Till 'ItHD.-tV AKTKIl.NOON, JINK 2;2, 11121. No. 10. BUDGET NEEDS FREE HELP OF BUSINESS MEN machinery pitiful" kays director four men provided I'nlrlollam of Civilian ltu-.iica Mi n Itellcil Oil ly Diihi-4 To 1 1 -1 1 Put tcuvcriillicill On llii.lucaa lliil lllll-ll II) December. III t'nlted l'rM tii'lh lU-nd HulUlln.t WASHINGTON. D. C. June. 23 A lurge forrn of thn mil inn's IcndiiiR bualueaa men will tit "coriacrlptcd.' to K'lvn without pay, lit pill thn gov ernment on huslneaa baals, Charles (1. Dawea. of Chicago, new director of thn budget, announced today. "Tho pitiful iimi 111 hit y provided by I he budRet law iiui km volunteer hlp nereaaary." said Imwri. "It Kl t I y four men under thn law. "You inlRht aa well try to tunnel Pike's peak Willi a tooiliplrk." ha de clared. "I m depending upon thn patriotism of civilian buliit men to aid In thn work. Jut they aided four yarn ago, when til government needed such Imlp. Otherwise the situation l hopeless." Duwrs conferred ' with thn presi dent, then announced hn expected to v .h. K,..i..t rtr.n hv lkrritiliiT I. Iln Ufa. will then return to private SHOOT WANTED BY PORTLAND TOI HWMI NT OK TH tl"fHolT MM WO I Ht l!l.D .titlST STIIOMi tiri'OMIION t.iMill m iiti s m tin:. "Wn Rot what we ent after." aald It N. Iliirliwalter. member of th Hi-mi ti .inhootiiia leuiii. which re turned lust IllRht from .1 IH.R the'tal lIIO.n0O.OOtl when all Is collect atutn nli not t A.torla "In r-i i Inn ' - - -rJIHK to the treasury depart thn toui iinnieiit fur leml iiet year, j metis. we ran up uRiilnst slroiiR opposition from rortlond. but the final ute was 4 to I for Hend." 1 he dale for the shoot was not set, but It will be n bo ut the middle of next Juno. "This louriiiiment will brliiR to Ilend a fine bunch of sportsmen, many of whom will be mukliiR their first trip. We will have an oppor tunity to show them the advanlaRes of this country for buiitliiR and flah IliR," Ilurhwaller aald. Inexperlenre In touiniuiient shoot -InK was Riven by the niomhera of the team as the reason for their scores belnR below those made at the home traps. They were also handicapped by the fact that rain fell constantly after their arrlvol until Tunesday af ternoon. As It wns, Rood scores were innde by tho Ilend men. On Sunday, 8. T. Fox scored 87 and Ilurhwaller HB. Fox mndo 88 on Monday, tills belli the hlRhest score made by a Ilend en try. II. I). Inula scored 84. On Tuesday V. A. Smith iimde 84 and luchwalter 82. CLAM DIGGER'S HODY FOUND AT SEASIDE (Mr United Pre toTh. fend tltillrtln.) SBASIDK. June 23. The body of nn unidentified man, roughly dress d, 50 years old was found wed Red between two rocka on tho edge of the aurf near tho south end of the board walk, lie lind evidently been dig ging clams and hud died but short time ngo. COMMISSION MEETS ON NEW RONUS LAW lllr United r ' to The M. nd nullctln.) 1oilTLAND. Juno 2.1. Clovornor Olcott, Secretnry of fitnlo Koier, Ad luliint (letieral While, Arthurs Spen- eor of Port In ml nnd Lyimin Hlco of Pnndletoii, members of tho bonus commission, are hero to confer on I hi" now litmus law. Jackass Speech Report Ordered By Navy Chiefl WASHINGTON', II. ('.. Jinn) 2.1. Hi-rintiiry Dmiliy today or- derail Adiulrul HI inn to miikii u complete, report of hi London "Jacknaa" speech. Any action lii'iihy ronteiiiplute will await KIinh' repoit ii to th accuracy of hi remarks concerning Irlnh sympathizers In thn I'liltcd Htalea. limiliy'i liiNtrurllona Riven tho udinirul when Hi in m reported, were In accordance with tho or- id-ra sent to l.ouilon to bring Klin back home. REPUBLICANS WILL CONTROL . I roNGKKHMIONAL I.KADK.IIH UK IDK TO T.tKK I lllMKIt MOLD OV I.K.GIKl.ATIVK. IILLM KIIK.Ak MK.t.Hl ItKH TAIWMI. lllr tlnllal PrwInTh. M.n.1 Rullrtln.) WASHINGTON. D. C June 23. lli'publlran congressional leader to day decided to take a flriuor hold of thn legislative helm, senators Pen rose, I.oiIk", Hinoot, Watnon and oth er aro firm In their derUlon to curb (rotipn ailTocatliic apfclal Ifitliilulliin ; to limit h'Rlitlullve quvntlona to mat- tern of fimt Importance, to dlncour mil rmtrlctlvc. rcRiilatory li-nlalatlon f ti-rtltifj bualucM. ! anlda "freak" ini-amircii, and to advoculo i-conoiny In li-flnlulion aa bclnrt a Important ua vrtiiioiny In tax KprmllnR. FORTUNE IN TAXES ALREADY TAKEN IN Mure Tbnn SITo.immi.imhi (olli-cteil In Kum I't-itltli And Income liisr, l III Hirl. lllr t'mt I'rM luTI IWnl Hullvtln.) WASIIIMiToV. I). C. June 23. Over $17 4.0110 baa been collected In exceaa profiia and Income luxe, the aeciiud lualull lit of shlch wua pay able June IS. Inatiillnieiita will to- MUST DIP SIIEEI' IN LAKE COUNTY itiile t elerlmirliin KinN I'onferrnrr tt Itli Kon.t Men Owners In Sil ler Luke lelrr Onle? Itevokrsl. Sheep owners In Lake county will have to continue having their sheep dipped If they wlih to grsxe them on the national forest this summer, said Dr. W. II. Lytle, state vetcrlnarlnn, who left List night for Astoria after a conference with the forest officials ami with Lake county sheepmen, who protested against being held undc& the provisions of the dipping law, on account of the expense. "The trouble Is that sheepmen In Lake county are not used to dipping their sheep. It Is much better for thn lambs Hint the eyes be dipped, to oradlcale the ticks, as well aa scab," Dr. Lytle stated. At Astoria he will attend a meet ing of the Guernsey Cattle- associa tion. RARY SHOW NOT TO RE HELD ON JULY 4 The bnhy show, which was sched uled for tho Fourth of July as a part of the celebration, has been called off, It was announced todny. The committee decided that tho Fourth would be nn Inconvenient time to hold such a competition, as ninny peo ple will haye visitors from out of town. A show may be held nt a later time. POOR HEALTH CAUSE OF ASTORIA SUICIDE (Ry United Treu to Th Rrnd Rulletln.) ASTORIA,. June 23. Jnck Hilton en of Hamlet committed suicide to dny. He wns the father of seven children. He leaves a widow, lie hud been lif poor health for some time. BARRETT HERE ON INSPECTION HIGHWAY CONDITIONS LOOKED INTO M.iM.-r In ininr Hon With Kt n hloii fiom Allen Kuiii It lMkr Into ( miiuiUhionrr To Miikit 'I hoiouh lriHM(-tl(iii letter. On IiIh flint trip Into Central Or Kon hlnce IiIh aji(iolutinent to the Htate hlKhway riiiniiilHHlon to aurceed the lute Kd K. Kiddle. M. II. Hum-It. of lleppiier, arrived here yeNtetday af ternoon, airoiiipaiileil by lllKhway KiiKiueer Herbert Nunii, on the lint lup uf a trip of liiKpertlon over the rouila of eantern and Central OreKon. I'lurllrully all xertlona of utaie IiIkIi- wnya In lienrhutea county on which tft-iirU In tuiiar lu.liiir ftntiM or liliitined. were Kune over by the two nfflclala before paaaliiK Into Jefferaon county on their way to Thn Dullea. KtiterliiK thu county In tho morn li.K on the new road from Itedmoiid to the Crook county line. Mr. liar retl and Mr. Nunii went on to Klatera turnlnK back from thut point to come to ilend by wuy of Tumalo. In the evenlnr. accompanied by Kepreaenta tlvn l(. J. Overturf and JudRe Saw yer, they went over the Mouth line of The DalleH-Cullfornla highway to ex amine the condition of the cinder aurfaclna; and conalder other muttera In connection with the propyaed ex tention of the hlKhway from the Al len ranch to the Klamath Hue. A little later In the aea.ion Mr Hiirrett and Comnilanloner Yeon plan to come here for a loiiRer atuy and morn tborouKh Inapectlon of the county hixhwuya. Aa a reault of tlila vlalt It la opected that muttera of Importance In Hie county road work will come out at the next meetlnK of the commiHiiliin. TEXAS STORM COMES INLAND Kiillli: OK tJ.tl.K. hPKVT. INI MILK tiD puk.dictkd hv tvi:tTH- K.K I'.l ItL.tl' K tlLIMi TO M.t Tl ltlM lK ON til I K COAST. I II; tnitl I'm t.. Th BVnd Hull. tin.) HOl'STON. Tex. June 23. The tropical storm which threatened the gulf coast passed Inland today with Its force nearly spent. Wires are still down to south Texas mid It is Impossible to obtain full information of the extent of the damage. Small towns are reported flooded. The 90 miles an hour wind predict ed by tho weather bureau for lute yesterday failed to materialize. The duuger Is now passed and the gulf waters, bucked against the seawalls, are subsiding. 500,000 FOUNDS WOOL SOLI) AT SHANIKO Wool to the amount of DOO.000 pounds was sold yesterday at a sale held at Shiinlko, according to G. II. Webster, traveling freight and pas senger agent for the mrugo, .Mil waukee A St. Paul, who was In Ilend yesterday evening with J. H. Mc Laughlin of the New York Central. nfter attending the sale. Tho price was 17 to 20 cents, Web ster stated. . NITRATE REFINING PLANTS PROJECTED Small refining plants will shortly be Installed at Sheep mountain and Stinking lake by the Oregon Nitrate Co., J. II. Morton, manager, said to day. An estimate of tonnage at Sheep mountain Is now being made ns a basis for deciding the size of the plant. PAINTER COMMITTED TO INSANE HOSPITAL On a complaint signed by his wife C. N. Hardy, local painter, was ex amined yesterday afternoon by Comi ty Physician K. V. Ilendershott nnd adjudged Insane. An attendant Is on tho way from Pendleton to accom pany Hardy to the state asylum. Sick Must Recover Hope For Strong When Volstead I fir I i I I'mvIiiTI Ik-ikl lljIMIn.) WAKIMNt.TO.S', I. V... June 23. Hope for medicinal beer la ahat lered. I'.epreaentatlvo Volslead, chairman of the hoH'uj Judiciary committee, today broke bin 10 day alienee and iiKret-d to accept the No Explanation Available For Vanishing Ships lllr t.'nltxl Iv. biTk IWrul Bulletin.) WASHINGTON, D. C., Juno 23. The fale of the "vaiilBhinK ahlpa" I L tea t in h to ko down 111 hlatory aa one of the unexplaln- inyateiiea of the ea. Officlala of the department of commerce admitted today that the search lor 2 tt i century plratea, under- taken after all other theories to explain the disappearance of half a dozen boats off Cape Hat- teras had fulled, have so far produced no result a. NO QUARTER IN IRELAND'S WAR NO IIKSKKCT PAID hh'X OK .ttiK K.tt II SIDK t H tKfiK.S AS SASSINATIONS AtJAINST TH K OTHI It'S ItKC Oltll. I!) (Iiarlew MiK'ann. Ua!u4 Prraa Staff Correspondent! LONDON. June 23. la there a se cret murder gang In Ireland that. Ig noring every law of warfare, or even civilization, adds terror to the fight between Sinn Fein and the Hrilich government? P.oth sides of the war In Ireland thej have charged for a year that other Is enguged In assassination. Kvery few days in Ireland some one is found dead, often mutilated. in a fir id or on a road; or someone is taken from his or her home at mid night and left a bloody corpse with in guiiKhot of terror-stricken rela tives. Assassination in Ireland Includes men. womeu and children every stage of life, from girlhood to old age. There Is never a murder but one side or the other sometimes both denounces the crime as a final proof of the other's brutality. Armed men recently took a young l ister woman from her home, in the middle of the night, and shot her. leaving on her body a sign, "Convict ed spy. Traitors beware. I. R. A." A fake Sinn Fein "Hulletin" was published giving what purported to . be a Sinn Fein apology for the crime. Armed men also recently took couple of southern Irish Sinn Fein officials from their wives' arms and shot them. Sir Hamnr Greenwood, In a sub sequent speech in the house of com mons, charged that the men known to be republican leaders were shot by their own men because they were peaceable A week ngo. two women were killed when automobiles in which they were driving with their hus bands police officials whom Sinn Fein was known to have blacklisted were ambushed. The authorities denounced the acts ns atrocious. Sinn Fein, in an official statement, de clared the police and military In Ire land, "waging a ruthless war, which the British government has publicly acknowledged to be a war," cannot fight Sinn Fein In the morning and at night, and ride about openly in au tomobiles with their wives in the af tercoon. There Is no other term than war for the fight In Ireland. Rut It Is war without a parallel consisting of open fights, open lootings, open, official Incendiarism, ambushes nnd cold-blooded murder thut respects neither age nor sex. Kar'h side can explain without ap parent embarrassment its own acts or If it cni'.not explain them, discred its them. Without Beer; Medicine Killed Ends Long Silence! ('ampbell-Willla anti-beer bill at a Hiibatltiite for hla own aupplement al prohibition bill. CoiiKreaa enpecla to pans the Campbell-Wlll'a bill before the treaaury department can laaue rcic ulatlona permitting the rale and manufacture of real beer. BIG MARKET IS PLANNED HERE INVESTMENT OF $50,000 PROBABLE til CIushchi of Koo4lturTa To lie Hamlleil Su) Head of Karm I'roil uctn DbttrlbutlnK i 'o Knfclnerr inn tYork on ISoilillng Kinlhed Ilend will in the near future have a general market, handling practic ally all classes of foodstuffs, and rep resenting a minimum first Invest ment of $45,000 to 150,000. A fire proof structure, covering 100x140 feet,, on Hond street, just north of the De Armond & Gilbert building. will bouse the new venture, which Is being financed by the Farm Products Distributing Co. The company , started operations recently In the small shop on Oregon which had been purchased by MeUger & Son only a short time before. From the very start business has been so good that J. M. Janssen, head of the new marketing organization, quickly realized the need for larger quarters. With this in view, the Moose lot on Bond street was purchased, and ten tative plans made for a 50xl40-foot building. As the possibilities be came more apparent, however, an other 50 feet on Iiond was acquired, and now the general market Idea Is definitely outlined. Preliminary en gineering work has been completed and plans for the building a one- story structure are virtually fin ished. Plant Wins PraiM. Several departments for the mar ket are planned, including fruit, fish, meats, poultry, confections, groceries, bakery and dairy products. The venture1 Is being made pos sible, chiefly, by the stock subscrip tions of farmers and laborers, Mr. Janssen says. He is convinced that the new venture will greatly benefit not only the farmer, as the seller of produce, but the consumer as well. With this in view, he will ask an even more general subscription, he said, In sneaking yesterday of the company's plans. The business will operate on a close margin of profit, making high prices to the producer and low prices to the consumer pos sible, Mr. Janssen says. The present plant of the company was given high praise bv L. S. Leach, representative of the Oregon dairy and food commissioner, following a thorough examination of the shop yesterday. NO REPLY IN BRIEF TO DELAY OPINION All Papers Xow In Kor Supreme Court's Action On Appeal of A. J Weston Murder Cae. No reply In brief to the state's brief in the murder case of A. J. Wes ton Is to be filed. E. O. Stadter. one of the attorneys for WeBton, stated today. This fact should greatly ex pedite the supreme court's final ac tion on the case. Mr. Stadter be lieve. Weston, who was tried last Novem ber for the murder of Robert H. Krug at Sisters, is now serving a life term in the penitentiary. WORK OF ASSESSORS IS NEARLY COMPLETE Four reports from deputy asses sors are in. County Assessor August Anderson said today. Claud Vande vcrt. In charge of Harper and La Pino, C. S. Towne of Lower Bridge. Frank Perclvall of the High Desert country, and Frank May of Bend, nre the deputies who have finished their work. Three others, whose reports are not yet In, will be finished in a few days, Mr. Anderson said. MANY FAMILIES COME TO BEND TO SEEK WORK DESTITUTION RESULTS WHEN JOBS FAIL AID OF COUNTY ASKED lleport of itoai Work anil ISVnhara Kails Development Keoponsible Kor Influx of Job Hunters Ilelief of Officials. Destitution, the result of Immigra tion to Bend In search of work which doea not exist, la on the increase, say county officials, who, during the past two months, have had many appeals from strangers, camping near Bend, for assistance. During the past week the officials have been swamped with appeals of this kind. No funds are on hand, either county or Red Cross, for as sisting these people. In the most urgent cases food and clothing have been given by one or the other agen cy, in case there are no relatives who can assist. The most serious phase of the sit uation is than many of the families which have been here for soma lima, and have the prior claim for help, will need assistance during tha com ing winter, unless the employment situation improves. There are heads of families who have not mors thaa a week's work since November. It is stated. Work Sought In Vain. Only yesterday s family with sev eral children, camped on the road outside the city, came to the Red Cross and asked for assistance. They were given clothing, but when asked in regard to their relatives, would tell nothing. The condition of tha children was pitiable, officials aay. There are six families in similar sit uation, who have come this week. Word has gone out through the eountry that conditions here are bet ter than in other places, and ihia is blamed for the influx of people seek ing work. Reports of road work and work on the Benham Falls reservoir and rumors of more work at the mills have brought numbers of unem ployed men, many with families. As a matter of fact, say county offi cers, there is not a day's work to be had under present conditions. JAPANESE SEEK CHINESE FAVOR IUSINK.SS MKN'S ASSOCl.VnO! PRKSKNTS A MEMOfUXDCM KKCOMMKXDINtS JOINT COS TItoL OK SHANTI NG RAILWAC (Br Unittd Praa to Th Bnd Bulletin.) TOKIO. June tZ. The Chinese Japanese Business Men's association today presented a memorandum to the cabinet recommending that the Shantung railway be placed under Joint Japenese-Chlnese control, that Japanese guards be withdrawn from the railroand and that the Japanese garrison be withdrawn from Hankow. The moves are designed to Improve Chinese-Japanese relations. SLANDER ALLEGED BY BEND WOMAN Damages In Amount of $.1,000 Are Asked In Case Against Mrs. I.yda Kelly Hearing Monilay. Damages In the amount of $5000 are being asked by Mrs. W. O. Bal mont In a suit for alleged slander against Mrs. Lyda Kelly. Argu ment of a demurrer will probably tie heard Monday In circuit court. CLOUDS CANT STOP RISE OF MERCURY Despite a partly overcast sky, the mercury in the offtciul government thermometer reached a maximum ot S9 degrees at 3 o'clock this after noon. It was the hotteut afteruooa recorded thi year.