Weston ? Leader VOLUME 42 WESTON, OttEGON. FRIDAY. NOV. 14. 1919 NUMBER 24 OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST Principal Evintt of the Week Briefly Sketched for Infor mitlon of Our Readers. It will coat 11.171,000 to operate (he Portland public tchoola during th. coming y.ar. Bernard A. Nathmao. resident of Oerval for mora than 40 yeara. died tbera at tha age of 74. C.aetructltia f a 115.000 plant by tha Concrete pip company of Tort land haa alerted a tlend. Tha 20,000 road bond latua alec tloa held In Crook county met with alatoet unanlmoua favor. Tha Weetern Walnut association will hold Ita annual meeting at Port laad Kovambar II and II. Action haa been taken by. the Bap tlata of McMlnnvlll to erect a new church building tha coming year. Mr. Nenoy Emily Tharp, on of tha eldaat and beat-known resident of folk county, died at Corvallla, aged year. Smtlt frnrln. pioneer dentut of Oregon, died suddenly In Salem at the home of hla eon. Ellla Purvlna, at the age of to year. - At atomlag special elecUon In Roe- burg a bond Issue of probably 1500.000 win be voted on tor a municipal ugni and water plant Tha Springer ranch, thro raltee ,cr,ury 0f stste for the past n liT nl membership above Larson Inlet. In Cooa county. ,sht yMrii h. announced hlmwlf aa ,0 l'. 85 l- Viv dm- waa destroyed by a great landslide , c,ndldate for the republican notnlna- crate-Senator. Reed (Ml.wurl). Oore during the recent rata. Uon lor ocrelry of state at the neat (Oklahoma). Smith (Georgia). Walsh While wading la Thomaa creek, near primary election In May. 1920. (Ma.aachusotts) and Chamberlain Tboma. Arthur, lyearld aon of AU record for cattle ahlpmenta (Oregon l-voted In the affirmative. Qulntla Underwood, got beyond hla from the Rogue river valley have been hH 8-ntor Shlolda democrat (Ten depth and waa drowned. broken thla year, from the Apple- ' P' or of the Douglaa Laren of Cove haa been (te district alone 1000 cattle have reaervatlon. convicted and fined 1100 for refusing been .hipped to Portland tiila fall. The reservation. flr.t of 14 proposed to help fight a foreat fir In the Grand which bring, a cash return to the cat- "" out a pro- Rond dlatrlct laat aumm.r. tlemen of approalmately 1100.000. " hln u 'P0,"n h" r hr..M l. imm It. H. Stle n.n.'. .i.ni.... rn tm min.1 bMa pledged to a safe majority gert of Bend haa received from the ,ii. ,a a. fens a British military medal of silver, Dka.n ahlnm.nl. fmm lUltllt ere the heaviest on record. Two hundred and ality four carloada already have been aent oat and IS more car are con- tracts Two winter short courae. dairy manufacture and tractor operation, will be offered this year by the Ore- gon Agricultural college achool of agrl- culture. Governor OJeot la urged to call slate meetlna ! auaiest remedies for tha high coat of living, In reaolutlona adopted by the Yamhill county Po- mon sranae mona grange. inn . ncklnc record were broken .tTood l Pear. 8..,, man. who packed 140 boxea of fruit on the E. E.P U.e p.ac. In four hour, ana m niinu..s, rarmera weat of Eugene ara signing n a ... ).. of their lands for a oil and gaa lease of their lanna ror a term of three yeara. for which they ar. to rec.lv. 1100. About 6000 acre. . m . . nave oeen leasen. A total of 13.114.J79 acrea la em- braced In feder.i foreat r.aorve. in Oregon, on which th. .Ut. dr.wa for apportionment to th. countl.a In th. reserve, iiimolt.. ueorge i, uenaon, game wr0u, haa been Informed that no permlta will be given thla aeaaon for trapping on th. Lake Malheur bird reaorve. owing to low water and acarclty of feed. Th. rmw .::tamtte Paoer com- paay haa announced that a new mill ahlpped to Oklahoma, wher. a new fntiier burst Into loud, mnnlucnl laugh will b. .reeled Immediately at Weat railroad la being built In on. of th. ter. . . , L ... I A . ..U.m.nl All H 1 tf If t Linn, wniso win pru'iu. iuiuu.vm. - for about 200 more men continuously. "u"u"vr".r... Happner la reeling me eiieci. 01 mo coal .trlk.. th. .hortag. of fuel hav . .. . . ing forced H.ppner wgm vv.r company to cut Ha light and power arvlc. from 24 hour, a day to .Ight. OD.ofth.blgge.thor.e.how..ver held on th. Pacific coa.t will b. .t.gcd during tha annual .xhlbltion of th. Sic international Llve.tock ...o- elation at North PortUnd. November "Helton farmer, hav. petitioned th. county court for authority to form th. Hermlaton IrrigaUon dlatrtet for Improvement to tneir tanaa. An eioo- tlon to vol. on the propo.al will b. h.M rur.mh.r is held December IS. ... Only on. of th. 461 acc dent. i re- ported to th. .tat. Indu.trl.l accident comml..lon during tb. week ending November we. fatal. Th fatality K ofIV. a"" ' tZto'Si. mi,., .outh of Bend. hav. completed which, a now proposed, will in.-iui a.ipr' iin('ly 44,000 term. Ti" ti ! run inn of a railroad ltij mlle.i l iik frmn Mi ilf rl In a point In tha vicinity or Kuroka. Cel., It the avowed purpoM of the Moil ford Coast Railroad company, which recently filed ni-tlde of Incorporation. A. ('. Allen of Med ford, former atate horticultural commissioner, annouiirea nil Intention of tenting, the eonstltu llonallty of the Oregon vehicle law providing for the taxing of automo bile (or g od roada maintenance. The 147.000, reinforced concr.t. bridge across Rogue river at Rock I'olnt, three mile below Gold Hill, under conduction Jointly by tha high way commission and Jckon county, I nearly SO per cent completed. Tboniai Cunimlng, engluner; N. Ileltner, fireman, and Fred Sherman, timber feller, were erlouly Injured when a donkey angina In togging oper ation of tha Willamette Valley Lum ber company, above Ulaok Rock, ex ploded. A summary of the activities of the aoldlera' and aallor' commission of the slat of Oregon alnce that body wa created by tha last legislature how that a total of 119.521 4 lie been expended In tha Intoreat of for mer service men. There will be no mora traveling Mrn,Ti, corowmi,, Medford If the city council can help It. At Uie ... .... .... ...... . """" ,...... - wfte iucb MrnW,u wnicn ( t. MrlwI prghlbltlve, 8am A Kol,r d(,pul, c.ry of undnr nen w. oicott. who haa covered M.715 mllee and located 12S ., ... ... .,. ,... the foreat fire aeaaon thla summer, ac- Atln. . n a Mn.r4 tA with Pnlti...! ,. II. Arnold, head of the air aervlce In the western department of tha army. Two airplane were used. At a special election In Warrenton, ISOO.000 of municipal bond. In two aeparale block, were authorlaed for ealenlve Improvement of the har- bor and the purcbaae of 100 acrca of 1nJ bordering on the Sklpanon and Columbia rlvera within the city limit for the erection of docka and plera. The Silver Lake Irrigation district haa filed an application with the irrl- gallon aecurttlea commission, request- ,.,,,. ini-rest ng the state to guarantee interest 1300.000 In bond, of the dlslct for a term of five year. Thla Irrlga- t.on di.tr.ct I. located at Silver lak. and covers approximately S000 acres. - . - Coyote, aro doing moro damage m Oregon at the preaent t me than tor " " .;.., t0 D. w - many yeara. according to Dr. w. . Lytle. .Ut. veterinarian. Becau.e of th. aarlmia l.u.A. r..llltllliT rrnitl 111 .,.. , -nimm. the stste actlvltlea of theae anlmala the slat. now ha. .even experienced hunter. In th. timbered districts, each of in. .nrinn. iim.A. reauiuiifcT rrom iua wnoin araw. '"9'- " -Xl ":rZ ... -......... .-- west la an order Juat received by the Valley Tie and Lumber company. wholesale and manufacturers of lum- bor, with headquartora in fcuKene, ior 250 carloada of Douglaa fir Ilea to be The newly-constructed concrete dam ,. 'a,.,.,.- u. - , home, near th. mouth of Lake creek. .ulu n..... ur.thn hari .hnllt fin. " b (shed and which wa. to have been u.ed In connection with a large .aw- mill there, wa. washed out by the high water. The dam wa. over 100 feet long and Mr. Warthun had expended over 17000 upon It In an attnpt , for th. Cty of Ro.eburg ha. ordered a considerable quantity of government food.tuff. .hipped there, to be placed on .e v cm.-" .. .. by mercantile house., me cur wok. thla atep experimentally, ana u me ;"" worka aatlsfactorlly larger Innovation worka " '"rolorU' wrer quantltle. will b. .hipped In All countlo. In Oregon which failed to aend to the .late trea.urer their ;."w;K P.T interest on the delinquent re- mltUnc.. wni nu t Blind Man's Duff SENATORS ADOPT FIRST RESERVATION Washington. A reservation propo- ,n ,0 aafeiuard tha nation right to withdraw from memberhlp In tha league of natlona wa adopted by the ... , enaie who every repuuuean senamr and lx democrat, voting for It or paired In Ita aupport The final count waa 50 to 35. and pair announced for the absenteea tl'rouRhout the reservation, provides "The United bute so understands and and construe article 1 that In case of notice of withdrawal from the league f "V'T' M .V the United Statea ahall be the sole Judge as to whether all Ita internation al obligation, and all Ita obligations under the said covenant have been fulfilled, and notice of withdrawal by the United Statea Hay be given by a concurrent resolutpft of the congresa of the United Statea." CHINESE DIE OF CHOLERA Honokona Oeth. Occu r In Honokona, Shanghai and Manila, Seattle. Wash. Cholera la causlug ..... , . , SileJc mJT'l by U, CM . The e mnA ,eQ ,,.th. in .-.a1t - - Mnv "eatha nave also occurred in Hongkong and Shanghai. No whitea , h d d howBVer ,llhn0"" r ' . ...rr..., .... fhe authorttlea were hopeful of hav- disease In check when the n chk when the .med tor thla coast nrntlvel ea.y tlme, when the most conspicuous foreign aou (he country had to worry e Ultle FIUl)n0, ARuinaldo. Ano(hcr ..,, for the high price of gUoM wlW (0 be tm, failure of the .,. croll i im(i, hearing which, ,hi-i, h.va hot vet remitted incluuo which have not yet remiuea inciuae Benton, Gilliam, Harney, jacKson. .,,.,,. M.rinn and Polk Malheur J"J JJ; SO rapiQiy OBB OB l So rapidly haa the state highway commission developed and carried out d JJ Jf ava,lttDl8 up t0 tw. ' c-ssitatea a .low- J".1' for alx Ir ng down on new project. ZT l Z tZ ou! -Ject. JJJ JSS S?lS Uve beyond j time when ne eral "JJjJj;,,,, AUyilVnMUll r.ro ant 1anl In th AntfllODfi unit - - - - - received by the state deeert land boar The ,ppllcation atSlg. that all w- h iana c U ,ed " to" .Tor. .ufflclont water for Irrlga- jlon of the U th STb. S2?t Pro't U Lied SIBERIAN TROUBLE ' AVERTED BY JAPAN Toklo. Tha conciliatory and dignl- fled nature of Japan a reply to tha American not of laet September, com- plaining of lack of cooperation of Jap- i. ,k. .r ik. w wy- m VF.w - .... trane-Blberian railway, la believed here to have relieved any danger or serious complication between Japan ana me United 8tatea over conducting the rail way. In effecttae reply ratlflea the ar rangement reached ht Vladivostok by Roland 8. Morris, United States am bassador, and General Ol, commander of Japanese forces In Eastern Siberia, and commlta Japan to co-operation In the future. Under the circumstance It I considered unlikely here that the United 8tatea will further pursue the matter. CROP ESTIMATES ISSUED Corn Yield 2,910,250,OOt Bushel. 89.1 Per Cent Waahlngton. Crop production ee timatea Issued by the department of agriculture In Ita November crop re port include: Corn, 2,910.250,000 bush els; buckwheat, 20,120.000; potatoes, 352.025,000; aweet potatoc. 102.946. 000; tobacco, 1.316.553,000 pounds; flag .eed. 9.450,000 bushels. Other estimates are: Pears, 13.62S.000 bushels; apples. v (total). 144.429,000; apptea (commer cial). 24,416,000; sugar beets. 7,298.000 tons; Kafirs (li Utes), 123.343,000 bushels; clover seed. 967,000 bushels. Joshua, who made the sun stand still, niny noon have some near rival In the persons of men who. It will have beeu proved, mmle the moon ahlne. In England a school for husbands la being agitated. The danger would be, of course, tlmt with men better posted there might be fewer husband to achool. Those Madrid dnncera, who have organised a union should rcnlhse that In case they strike anybody could be a Sp8nl8h llancor who can get a set of castanets. The extensive ndvertlslng of the hiKh cost of living Uoea uot prevent a number of nations from desiring to turn their affairs over to Uncle Sam under a mandatory arrangement -W-8-j-t WASTED The National Association of Wast. Material Dealer estimates that Amerl- Cana throw away J700.000.000 worth of foo(J ,f on)y oM ounM Qf food la wasted or .polled In each of the 20.000.000 homea of America, the total loa. I. 1,300.000 pound, a day. A. much co 1. wasted annually a. all the mine. .country could produce In-two ,t and .vlng needed not S'e'dlvld dS bmmM 0, pr0. ductlon and consequent fall In price of hn Ht,,.lA.l 41r.nn. I. a . . . . .. eaa an obstacle to tn. reduction or i.v- j" n m.u uuuuu iuicucm. mai re ,in,ons ot doura Idle In the United State, through lack of proper wh,ch shou,d m put t0 work would constitute th. new jff" 0sew,vJwt.y food val- Nation-Wide Raid on Radicals Wnsblngton. In a general warfare on radical alien advocating forcible overthrow of the government, agent of the department of Justice, alted by the Immigration bureaa, rounded op nearly (00 men and women In raid In more than a ecore of clll, includ ing the capital. Primarily the raid, which occurred In practically every industrial center In the eat and middle weat were aim ed at the Union of Rulan Worker. ' Attorney-General Paimor described the Russian union aa "even more rad ical than the bolahevlkl," and declared Ita purpose wa to amalgamate all of tha Russian group In the United Statea Into one organization. Mass action. Including armed action in time of "great national strife" la the prin cipal function, he said. Plan of the Union of Russian Work era to bring about an overthrow of the government through a general atrika waa revealed in document Belied In the nation-wide raids. With the government overthrown and everything "wiped from the earth that la a reminder of the right to pri vate ownership of property," the Rus sian workers, according to their mani festo, looked forward "to the magnif icent, beautiful form of man without a God, without a master and free of authority." Edward Cooklngham. Oregon War Loan Chairman, who aende Armistice Day greetinga through local Liberty Loan Committee. Permit me to extend greet- logs to yourself and your citl- sens, and to join with you in a the celebration of the first an- niversary of that day destined to become memorable in hla- tory, which commemorates the glorious victory of our country and Us allies In the great world t) war. I again congratulate the people ot your community upon the overwhelming success which they achieved in the several Liberty Loan campaign. The record, of your district la a last- ing monument to their Belt- sacrifice, and will be an tnsplra- ' tlon to Americana whenever their country again stands In : peril. On thla occasion ahall we not pledge anew our lives and for- tunes to our country and ita in- 4 Btitutlona and resolve to bear 4 our obligations of citizenship today with the same serious and highminded enterprise that was shown in the dark days of the war? Let us not give lees ' freely to our country now In the face of domestic peril than we gave when It confronted foreign enemies. On thla anniversary we cele- brate the fulfillment by our sol- dlera and Bailors of their obll- gallons, but our citlten army Is not yet discharged. It haa aa- aumed obligation, which must be paid In full. ' Your record during the war 1b undoubted' assurance of quick response to every call of your country for financial support. t 1 tm sure It is only necessary to remind your citixens of the deficit in Oregon a War Savings quota to make certain its prompt subscription. Oregon haa never failed. EDWARD COOKINOHAM, Director War Loan Organixa- tlon tor Oregon. A trade Journal reports that under wear will be one-third higher next Bum mer. Georgettlcally speaking, it could not be expected to go any lower. It Is said the ex-emperor of Austria wants a home in England. The royal fugitives are getting rather too un popular lu the small neutral nation. 'J V " ' "s-A"'r .' -' 'it , ' : w " ; g f - ' '.-X. Y ; i. 4 EX-SERVICE MEN. KILLED BY RADICALS Local Secretary of I. W. If. Lynched by Centralla Mob. After the Shooting. Centra!!, Wash. Tor foraer rv 1c men (lain beoaua of their activity la opposing L W. W. propaganda: eecratary of th. "red" organisation lynched; aoldlera guarding tb. eity t prevent a renewal of th. rloilng tal la th. I mined late remit of the attack on th. armlatic day parade. " On of th. victims of tha dragnet, Barnes Lamb, an L W. W. follower, haa confessed that th. (hooting of tb f ea rner soldier had been plana. lav week. Dead and Wounded. Th. dead are: , . . Warren Orlmm, Uaivriry of Wash ington football star, lieutenant In tajs Siberian expeditionary fore, ot tka American army and commander t Grant Hodg. poet of th. Anuria) Legion. . ; Dal Hubbard. 2 year old. waa af R. P. Hubbard of thla city and a vet ran of It month. in Franc. Arthur McElfrMb, manager ot Pr4 more V Sear pharmacy, wa an eretv seas veteran. - - Ben Casagranda, 27 year old, aa . oversea veteran. Th. wounded are: . , Earl Watt, condition eertoua. . Eugen. Phi tier, Chehalla, over veteran, allghtly wounded. William Coleman, ex-oldler, (light ly wounded. - .- v Company F, Third regiment Nation al Guard of Waahlngton, arrived her early Wedneaday from Taooma, a ad went on patrol duty In many part of ' th city. , . . The firing started when th para, proceeding down Tower aveaa. Cr tralla'a main street Passed th corner ot Second avanu. where the I ff. W haU Is located. Nineteen Placed Under Arrest About nineteen alleged radicals wer arrested, whit, their hall was wreck, having been raided by a mob after the shooting. ' , The crowd ripped out the front t th balding and mad. a bonfire of th furniture and paper found. . - T Among the men In Jail was Elmer Smith, Centralla, attorney for th. 1 W. W. Smith waa arrested In his of fice by W. H. Grayum, principal ot th high school. 3 All night long the Jailed radicala paced their cells, Jallera aald. fearful of the lynch law that waa applied la the case ot their secretary. Former soldiers stood on duty outside th. Jatt throughout th. night Lamb. wh made the alleged confession, was tak en to th. Chehalla jail Tuesday. Lynched Man Shot Hubbard. 4 . Brltt or "Brick" Smith, secretary of the I. W. W.. waa, according to observ ers, th. man who ahot Dal. Hubbard after Hubbard and several other f ea rner soldiers had chased Smith lnt a river bed near her. . Smith was taken from the Jail when all th. light , ot th. town .udd.nly mapped ui at 7:30 o'clock Tueaday night In aa a tomobile without lights and ertt by several' other dark machlnea, hw was taken to a bridge on th. edg. of ' town on th. road to Chehalla. Palmer Saya Law Will Be enforced, t Washington. Warning waa given the United Mine Worker of America by Attorney-General Palmer that re lutlon ot conventions and order ol officers ot organisation are not abovt th. law. Describing th. strike as a violation ot the federal statute, Mr Palmer, speaking with full authority ot th. government announced that alt th. power ot th. United Statea would, be exerted to enforce th. mandate. Victor Brgr la Unaaated. Washington. Victor L. Berger, M1K waukee aoclallat was denied his seal in th house by an overwhelming vole th. house holding h. waa Ineligible for membership because ot his open op position to th. war with Germany. Th vote to unseat Berger waa 309 to JU Representative Volght. republican, Wisconsin, being the only member as) support (he Wisconsin socialiit Terrific Blizzard Hlta Middle W Chicago. A severe atom) sweji. over the north and mtddl centrr atates Monday.' Train were dlap;i from four to 12 hoar. Snow was I high on the track running &rV4 Nebraska, ani Colorado. .- --- -