The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, June 18, 1925, Image 2

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THR nF.XH HUI.l.KTIN. HENH. OREGON. TIM'RS1AY. JUNE 18, 1025
TYPHOID GERMS
log, step by ittp, ot h js dealings, with
.shepherd.
PRICE $100,900 ByRoMlJuiFdS
Chief Witness On Stand
(Continued from page 1.)
body to voice the words.
Tl.-.t ,1... MmIm I........ .....(
. . , I OHIO
Against ohepncrd iupon him at team two weeks ago
t jdtacloaad iy oua of hla family today,
Small chlldtM were playing noisi
ly under hla window as he lay in hod
with tin- cold ihm ultimately brought
his death.
"A life is a wonderful thing. I'd
like to begin it all over again." he
said, "hut I think 1 have earned a
long needed vacation."
Robert Marion La (Toilette of Wis
consin was a symbol to tnanv bun-
Faiman Says Millionaire's
Guardian Planned to (Jive
Germs In Water
fitiMis'Ai. roritT. Chicago, Jan
18. "Dr." Charles C, Kaitnaii. start
witness for the state in its otfottsj
to prove that William D Shopherd 17, , . , 3 '
, , ,,,,, ., , . ilreds of iliousaiuls ot poop o of a
tuiirdorod Hilly McCllntoo, teatifled lk., hk i ,
, . I" " . . . , . that was lihcra.1 and progressive in
.American i,.' : ' lir.
thvwv v"v un "is nt.i iii io isiiii i iik I Hore thin
lo'ing Hciunioca wwo urnnoii
germs.
"I told hint I thought I should be
protected and that if he was going
to got Hillya $1,000,000 estate. I
should gel a fourth ot it 1250. Coo."
Ku'utan told the jury which Is t.
decide Shepherd's fate.
"Shepherd laughed and tried to
paw it off and so I Insisted on $Sno,
any contribution or
j definite achievement, his aggressive
leadership of American liberals and
J the tradition w hich gradually grew
I up about him served to make him the
political idol of a large section of the
voters of the middle west.
Was Destructive Perce
He attained the political power.
for which he strove so long, only late
In Ins career, and then it served
000 ut least. He laughed some more rather as a destructive force, for he
und we finally agreed on S100.000.' j was forced by his policies to play a
Kaiman spoke slowly in low tones nai of blockade and counter block
Ills words barely reaching the jury jade In the CMh congress, with the
box. laid of the little hand of "radicals.
Shepherd, who holly denies Fal-centering about him. he was able to
man's entire story, sat almost baton bold the balance of power because ot
him and eyed him sharply at import
ant points.
Repotted Plana Laid
"When Shepherd returned." Fai
man continued, "ho showed particu
lar interest in typhoid and tubercu
losis germs.
, the close uligmucnt between demo
crats and republicans.
Yet all his life was a fierce battle
for liberal legislation, which was in
i no small degree successful.
' Naturally, the course marked out
by I.a Kollette was bitterly resented
"He wanted to know how tvohoid I b a" conservatives, and he was both
germs could he injected into thci,ellred and denounced by both re j
human body so that a person would ' Publirans and democrats who pre
come down with the fever. 1 told
him they could be given the patient
In his food or water preferably
water.
"After several more conversations.
Shepherd told me his plans were all
laid that ho was going to give the
boy typhoid germs in water 1 had
told him that was the safest way.'
lerreu tne old ordei He was a:
I tacked as a socialist, even as a com
munist, both in public and private b
the classes he himself assailed. The
world will be compelled to await the
j verdict of history on his career.
Had the fates conspired to give I.a
j Kollette the proper kind of back
ground for success in middle west
ern politics, they could not have
,.,......, .. . . ' . (dealt more kindly. Born on Flag
-"J? '-LRT. Chicago. June 'da, 1S55. in a log cabin. "Bobbie"
1 ,.i " 1)arl""5 Shepherd, j was brou)th, np in the s(renRth und
whose life and liberty are at stake in vi(.or of ploneer traditions and pio
his trial for the alleged murder of!Iieor fe Self educated, he won his
Billy MeClintock. was faced today : way t0 honor8 ami wag graduated
by his chief accuser and was identi- from ,h(, fniversltv of Wisconsin In
fled as Billy's slayer. ls7!,. He wa, admitted to the bar
"llr.' Charles C. Faiman. proprie- U vear later and the same rear m
tor of the "National I'niverslty of ,.t.., ,.,.i ,i,.ir-,- n.-rnav r n, i
Sciences." took the witness stand and county, after nis initial fight against!
confessed giving typhoid germs to i machine politics.
Shepherd for -the avowed purpose of i From that day onward every mo- j
murdering young MeClintock. Shop-1 ment of his existence was spent In
herd's millionaire ward. I public life. Not once thereafter araal
Is (nun's Witness he out of sight of some portion of'
Shepherd, sitting ..laws' directly the public eye.
In front of Faiman. looked him wlf(. ,., ,.,
straight in the eye and smiled con- i . , . . i
fiiii.m ti,..i , .!, ... , .. , . ! One of the greatest factors In the1
be rejected by the Jury.
Faiman was called as
witness because Slate's Attorney
Robert E. Crowe refused to vouch for
him. but Crowe counted on Faiman
to "cllnch"hls case against Shep
herd. "The first time 1 saw Shepherd."
Faiman testified, "he came out to my
hospital and school. He wanted to
know If I could teach him criminal
bacteriology.
"I told him I coald but ho wanted
to see my laboratory first and find
out what sort of equipment I had. jr .-ia
1 took him alj over my school and
showed him my slides and all my
apparatus.
"Shepherd said he wanted to see
some bacteria and I showed him some
long fight which he has waged
. against monopoly control and the so
court s j i . i , .7
cuiieti . . . . - i i.i iias ueeu ine woman
he married while yet in the univer
sity. Belle Case of Baraboo. Wis.
Not once has she hesitated during
the course of his long career when
he contemplated a step which would
bring down merciless and scathing
publicity.
"Go ahead. Bob:" she would al
ways reply when, as he always did.
he asked her advice In regard to
some political move for. besides
family of four. Robert M.
Phillip and Mary, she has
played an active part in his political
life, going with him on many long
campaigns, often taking the stump at
his side.
From 1S80 until 18S4 he was dls-
on a slide. He left then, saying ne , trict attorney and they talk yet in
would come back the following day." Madison of this young firebrand who.
Faiman looked directly at the jury, by the sheer fire of his oratory, won
speaking in low earnest tones. He case after case. The next step was
went right, along with his story, tell-; congress, and after a fierce battle.
Extraordinary
Extraordinary standards and equipment for
manufaeture of the highest grade of paints re
sult in fVa.witi.sien Pure Paints.
Pure linseed oil, white lead, pigment other
time tested elements, and experience.
Rasmussen has made
paints for the Northwest
for 20 years.
Ask your dealer for color cards.
Ask your painter for an estimate.
An
Important Change
in Policy
OTUDEBAKER herewith announces the discontinuance of the custom of
O presenting a new line of automobiles each year. Instead of bringing Stude
baker Cars dramatically up-to-date once in twelve months, nve shall keep them
up-to-date all of the time with every improvement and refinement made avail
able by our great engineering and manufacturing resources. This policy not only
directly benefits present Studebaker owners, but it also enables purchasers of new
cars to obtain models that are always modern without the necessity of -waiting for
annual changes, and without the danger of their new cars becoming obsolete.
ii
rn
MjagjgjgggMjjdK A c K. of this new policy is an
amazing story or interest to
L everyone who owns or expects to
jf own an automobile.
f The dramatic success of the
Hi -- 11 c. 1..L.I
I'icmmi uuc ui otuueuaKCT v.ars
is one reason for this important
change. Month after month we keep breaking records
sales keep piling up. This year we will sell almost
four times as many automobiles as wc produced in
the big boom year which followed the wax.
Owners report endurance records, even beyond our
greatest expectations. Out in the rugged mountain
regions where Studebaker sells four times its normal
proportion of cars, owners talk about these models in
the most extravagant terms. In 1924 the Corporation's
sale of repair parts dropped to $10 per car per year.
Mechanical stamina under severe usageremarkable
performance under the most difficult travel conditions
these are the qualities for which Studebaker Cars hare
long been noted.
Surely, these significant facts prove beyond any
i-adow of doubt diat Studebaker Cars arc so soundly
engineered and manufactured and so cniin. ntly satis
factory in the hands of owners, that tin tic annual
changes arc not required.
Improvements anil refinements will be made from
time to time. New features will be added. When our
engineering department (maintained at a cost of more
than half a million dollars a year) devises an im
provement in any model, it will be made without
regard to die calendar.
As in the past, wc shall continue to pioneer vital
betterments thas have proved their merit through prac
tical use. Alert, aggressive, receptive to new ideas,
resourceful in executing them, guided by scientific
research and spurred by imagination, the Studebaker
organization proposes to build better motor cars dian
ever before.
Now you may buy a Studebaker on any day of the
year with the confident assurance that the sturdy,
thrifty, one-profit car you drive away will not be stig
matized by any act of ours as a "last year's model."
Today, in even more generous measure than in die past,
Studebaker Cars offer the utmost value for the money.
THE STUDEBAKER CORPORATION OF AMERICA, SOUTH BEND, INDIANA
STUDE BAKER
MOTOR CARS
This is a StudebakerYear
mr . , i: ', i A f
whirl. mark.l I tie. Iit-nlnnlnc nf tlie,lng that step. fr nidi I portion. TbflM Who tla-
attfl of machlna" poliUca In Wlacon-j Many tluaa during hit .long Mnrleelaarlid 'KiuhtitiK Bob" during tin
sin, he wax elected to loncresit In I In the senate he underwent featn of j win cam liai k heneath the La Knl
1S5 and nerved until lfttl. Al-'ltCtaal phynlrul enduranre Which letta bannarl,
nan lllinilllMll HIH1 lOOKIU WO'IHI 11111' I III I 111 I'lU 1 1 ' . 11 Hl.X-'UlV 1.1-
ii Don with stiHpicloiiB :ih i "radical." cycle rider. He malted fllllitinler
No man in American life ever hud
romi lioum of Hcrvlcc.
For parcel poat,
Kor federal Inheritance act.
For protection of women work
lanlaatlona front ami Unal law.
, .,;., , , ... ... Ki'-'iicr opiioriuniuc i,, iiinuer mi.
and b, en a place on an unimportant i,i,i, ,,,: hla' opponent and on Lrirat, rortunaa, hut I.a Pollatta
( omroittee, be
McKinley bill.
PAINTS &
VARNISHES
TRUCK, TRACTOR and
IMPLEMENT PAINT
Protects jour equipment
BR.iinst rust and rot. For both
wood and trie La I surfaces.
Dries with a hard, glossy
finish.
ftjimtM-'frt (f ('omviny
Portland .s ;((
whs iiciiv.' uurini; orc-tHinn ne amia tarn loot ii iik- ,,....,. , ... ...
two er,K prevent.nK a bfe hoow tor almoa three day, to cut.,, ,,. fiw . f,, Madl
ninber deal on the Indian reaerva- fadaral appropriations. ;.,. and tiic-e i a mortgage on thli
-ions and playing prominent par. Three timet, daring hi., political which he waa never able to ralae dur
in the tramlni and pan:.ae of theUareer his name went before the re-lliie hi,, lir,..!,,,.. i i, '
. publican convention for president. k'-arcelv able to keen the 'biilldlnn
La Kollette. upon bin return from it waB durltiK the world war thatjl" repair and one of the finest av.
ICOngraaa, awept out with the rent Of I "fighting Hob" met the Htipreme dOBCai of the affection which WIS-I
the party in the democratic landslide tat, and hla face became, lined, hla consln people bad for him wore the I
j ok 1S0H. turned the eye of a zealous ; hair Kray and bis atralKhl shohldera nnniial gathering! ut the Iji (Toilette I
gladiator upon the railroad! of htolsjaOPfd. "The Ion man of the Ken-If"r'. when people by the thousands
native slate. It took him six yearslste" no one will ever know, l,a Kol-1 from all over the slnli congregated I
to break down completely the control hette confessed in later years, what " 'be farm to sol HiIukh to right,
i , 'inn en,, i iniiineii inose aitoutitiK inontlia of Oil ra, -lam i f n iii 1 m (f . lepairniK anil even n
10 me govornorsnip, Then n was an- denunciation ami unification meant.
Other two years before lie lucceaded Vet he stoorl by the principles for
j in KalniiiK a legislature In Sympathy I which he bad fonghl so long, even
with progressive legislation, during the fever of war.
Bui under I.a Follelle'ii leadership Me opposed the entrance of the
taxes were equalized; the railroad lulled Stales Into the war.
were compelled to pay In more than Repodlatod by IT, of W,
y ( oo.oiii) more each year; u mate i,.i.i,i tu,.
PRKHIUKNT KITKN
WA8HINOTON, June is. Pn i
ra; of mother i children: laws ', ' "J" " Y,., ' "
I'ollelte today nxprensed bis syin
lafalnai child labor, for federal chll-lBathy r..r her herearamen) in the
dron's bureau, rtoatn of Benntor La (Toilette
; Redefinition o truttai eumptlon
or oooperntlve farmer and labor ar-J
''ut l; in The llullelln
m - v w v war V
Sold by
A. J. GOGGANS
148 Orcffon Ave Phone 36-J
the war dealt was Ibe allack made
upon him by his beloved stale uni
versity, a number of the professors pllance acts.
(!iwas burned In efflKy by the sludenl
body.
Hut In 1088 the stale IckIsIiiIiiic
rjmmifummtm.i
wide primary election law was He-
cured, which put an end lo conven
tion hall purchasing of votes; the
railroad commission was organized, inasuil r..ul,.M,. ,.,i,i t.
and railway rales were appreciably ,..e,.to for his war 'stand and he
lowered, ano Wisconsin oceanic.
known UtrOUghoUl the union us the
most proKresslve and forward look
I.... ..r ......
Byn. passed a resolution condemning 111'
Ment to the HonatC men who had censured id Kollelte
He resigned the governorahlii lo end In the elections of the prarloUl
become aenulor In January, 1806. year he had aniussed ibe araataat
though he hesitated Ioiik before tnk- majority ever given a public official land atule empl
btllldlllg Ibe 1 11 rni home ami I, arm'.
fought for itcfoiiiis
During tin eourn of hla long
career Senator i.a Pollatta lad tin
flKhl for the following meuiuircM:
For Hie direct primary und III"
dlraCI election of United Htalen sen
atora.
1'i.r workmen's compensation, k'-ii-eral
employers' liability, Hafely ap-
v'or regulation and blither inxn-
lion of railroads In Wisconsin, gov
ernmant valuation of railroads and
railroad rale classification.
Kor regulation of telephone ami
telegraph rates.
i'or publicity of campajgn expert
rl It it run.
i.i, i. hour law lor government
oyes and fixed rail-
HOUND TKI1' PARP8
St. Paul $72; St. Louis $81.50
Chicago $86.00
New York $147.40
Olhrr Point" In I'rop.rllnn
Hair Ma, 22 to Hrpt. II j Itctitrn l.lmlt Orl. 31
VOIIIt ( HOICK 09
Two of America's Finest Trains
Norlh t'onat l.liullrd ,1a H., I. A H., N. P C, II, Q,
Orkntal i.imiiiii via g P, a a., 0, n., c. n. a .
Tlrki'l.,, forthtr Drtiilla. Kir., of
.1 v.. witiriiiT
TrtTi rfl, AV I'aaa.AzI'
nrllana, ore.
A. V. HIIIKIKItT, Agrnt
Phnna A1
n. ,,,! Orrgnn
ORE(iON TRUNK RY.
j