EASTERN CLACKAMAS BUNKER HILL FOREV ER SACRED GROUND NEWS THURSDAY, JUNE 24. 102«. THE WHOLE STORY LOCALS AND PERSONALS Lila McKinney left Sunday for Monmouth where she will attend Now the Oregonian is jumping Mrs. C. F. Gosset is confined to the Normal during the summer. hurdles in an effort to find why the her home with the mumpS. president and Bert E. Haney disa­ greed. While attempting in one U. S. Forest Service held a three- Mr. Russel Betts o f Gladstone breath to deny that the fight was was visiting his children and Mr. oay meeting ut Clackamas Lake for over shipping policy, the Oregonian and Mrs. Reagan, Tuesday. the purpose o f instructing rangera .ays that “ while shipping board pol­ 111 tneir duties for the coming fire icy started the affray, the ultimate K. T. Carter, Asst. Marvel Deal who is now staying season. issue concerned good faith and ver­ Supervisor, was instructor. in Portlund visited her parents in acity.” Springwater, Sunday. The whole story o f the disagree­ A family reunion wus held Sun­ ment can be told in a nutshell. The Myrtle Detering of Chehalis, day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. shipping board wae created by cong-1 Wash., is visiting Miss Betty Wal­ F. H. Schultz of Eagle Creek. Those ress to administer the affairs of the | lace. present were Mrs. Schultz’ mother, United States merchant marine a-1 Mrs. M. Gilmore of Gresham, T. long lines laid down by law. The i Miss Betty Wallace has just re­ LauderbacK und family of Gresh­ 1 policy outlined was to “ develop and ' turned from Scuttle where she hu» am, Sherwood Davis and family, ! encourage the maintenance of a been employed as nurse. Billy Knight o f Greshum and Mr. merchant marine.” anil A irs, ruy Duvis of Corbet und There was no intention and no I Mr. Donald Drake with his as­ Bessie Schultz and family of Col­ ! statement that the board should bo sociates, Messrs. Wyman and Voss orado. under the control or supervision o f j o f Portland spent the week-end at Say you saw it in the News. i the president. It was intended and Log Labarre. stated that the shipping board should ! be the final authority in shipping i matters, and several provisions, ; such as regional representation, { six-year terms and non-partisan Municipal Terminal , Sixth und Salmon Sts.—-Phone Main 7733 I membership were placed there to LINN S INN, Estacada, Uregon. I keep control from the president. DAILY Mr. Haney was made a member (A ) A, M. P M, P. M. •A. M. M;P.M. P . M P .M o f the board. Mr. Coolidge, thru . Portland 2:00 6:20 Lv. Estacada 3:00 4:30 3:30 his power o f appointment, so exer­ Lott for year«, John Trumbull’« famou« painting, "The Battle of Bunker Hill," ha« been found In Wash Clackamas 2:30 6:00 4:45 3:45 Eagle Creek 8:15 Ington and now hang« In th« office of Secretary of the Treasury Mellon. cised control over certain members Carver 2:40 7:00 Burton 4:55 3:55 3:25 — ° f the board as to get his choice, Barton 3:05 7:25 Carver 5:15 0:15 3;4o Eagle Creek 3:15 7:35 Clackamas 3:65 5:25 0:26 | Admiral Palmer, in the position of '. Estacada 3:30 7 :50 Ar. Portland 0:30 6:00 10:00 the English threw red-hot shot that was the feeling that thlR was merely j head o f the emergency fleet cor- * Dully except Sunday (A ) Suturday only. ffred the village, and while It burned, a civil war, like that between the poration, and obtained the grant of SUNDAY— Leave Portland 10 A. M. Leave Estacada 4.30 P. M. to the accompaniment of cannonading parliamentary and royalist forces in very wide powers to that official. o f the fortified height by the English Cromwell’s time, and was not an vessels and the batteries on the Bos­ actual revolution for severance from There was no trouble yet between ton shore, the redcoats marched up the British empire. On June 10. the Mr. Haney and the president. But Admiral Palmer quickly un­ the hill slope three times, only to day before Bunker Hill, Washington be mowed down each time and routed formally accepted the election, utter­ dertook a course that would have \ temporarily by the musketry of the BO tí ¿ BARBER SHOP ing as he did so words worthy of all | wrecked the merchant marine as patriots, Thousands of Boston citi­ remembrance ns a vivid and vital reve- j well as Northwest lines. He re­ AND MARCEL SALON zens watched the fight from their lation of the spirit of "the greatest ¡ duced trade routes. He reduced the ! housetops. man on that floor": number o f ships in operation t0 an I STRICTLY SANITARY SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Great American Victory. Lest some unlucky event should j absUrd limit. He refused American happen unfavorable to my reputation, ! „hinnor. a Ui „ . • The defenders were driven out I beg It may be remembered by every i shlppus American ships for Am en- j Haircutting 35c ¿have 15c finally owing to their shortage of am­ gentleinnn in the room that I this day j can cargos when the shippers were j MASONIC BLDG. ESTACADA munition. but the effect was that of an deelnre, with the utmost sincerity, | PIeaa*nS for ships. He recom m end-1 A R T . S M H H , P r o p r. American victory, and an Important that I do not think myself equal to j et^ an aPPropriation so small that one. It taught the English what they the command I nin honored with. As j the fleet could not possibly live. N THE seventeenth tiny of had not before realized, that the Col­ to pay, I beg leave to assure the con­ As gress that, as no pecuniary consider­ Then he threatened to get rid of .Tune, 177,")— 151 years ago— onists were In deadly earnest. during two hours of a hot Sat­ one historian says: "From that mo­ ation could have tempted me to ac­ the Seattle and Portland lines. The urday afternoon, was fought ment there was no possibility of a re­ cept this arduous employment, at the Palmer policy was wholly in contrast the first battle of the wnr that made turn to a colonial position, and though expense of my domestic ease nnd hap­ with the expressed policy o f encour- America a nation. There hnd been more than seven years of battle fol­ piness, I do not wish to make any aging and maintaining a merchant CUTS MORE preceding skirmishes and bloodshed, lowed. this battle of the beginning, profit o f it. I will keep on exact ac­ marine, a policy to which the coun­ but the engagements at Lexington and the most bloody of all, and the most count of my expenses. Those I doubt try had agreed. SLICES Concord were merely the unorganized sharply contested, has proved to be not they will discharge; and that Is Meantime Mr. Haney's term ex- ! resistance of a suddenly aroused coun­ also the most critical." all I desire." pired. He was reappointed. Concerning Bunker hill the same tryside, a mob, lighting in self-defense. TO THE LOAF Mr. Haney had already taken is- j The sequel to his mob of Minute writer says: "The height on which the Colonial Army Inadequate. sue with the Palmer policy when it men was a mobilized army with an battle was fought had no distinctive The next day, at the very hour when aggressive plan, and its engagement name before that time, but was known the battle was raging at Bunker hill, became evident that it would wreck with the troops of England on tills as pastures belonging to different men, the congress, all unconscious of what the fleet. When the Seattle and i An ideal slice-size for toasting, sandwiches and «lute was a battle in the military j Breed being one of them. After the was happening at Charlestown, for- j Portland lines were to be jettisoned ! sense, that committed the Colonies be­ children’s between-meal snacks. mnlly approved (he forfn of cotnmls- j Mr. Haney took very sharp issue i yond recall to open war. It was fa­ slon to lie given to Washington; on j He demanded the removal of Ad- j miliar to every one ns the battle of i June 10 the commission WOO signed I miral Palmer. ! ECONOMICAL FOR LARGE FAMILIES Bunker Hill, nnd perhaps not one in and delivered to him; and on .Tone 21 . „ • thousand are aware that it was not he set out on horseback from Phil- .p a a mes8aie from The same Holsum quality that won the Harry M. ndelphla for Cambridge. Four days , prcslc‘ ent demanding Mr. Han- fought on Hunker, bill, that the fa­ Freer Trophy the second time in two years. The mous monument bearing that name later. nt New York, he first learned s res‘Knation, a message which doe s not stand on Hunker hill, and i of the bottle which had been fought ¡ c" arged the Oregon member with same price as the regular large loaf. that Bunker hill has little more to eight days before: whereupon ho violating an agrooment with the cy. Palmer moved to wreck by the Charles, rose here and there ' I nor more than 14,500 were fit for ' the fleet and get rid o f Northwest Into hills that if fortified would com­ duty. The pitiful Inadequacy of equip- lines. Mr. Haney stood for the mand the wntor on three sides nnd ment may be estimated from the fact I Northwest lines and the future of also the town of Boston. These etu- | j that there was enough powder to pro- | the fleet. The president stood with Inences were known us Hunker hill. I vide only eight cartridges to each man. - - 00 w,ln Breed's hill, Morton's hill, Town hill, I No wonder that Washington’s first two Palmer. The people of Oregon and , Haney. •to. Town hill probably took its j letters to congress were urgent pleas the Northwest stood for Congress stood with Mr. Haney. It j name from the village of Charlestown, ' for more ammunition! which stood on the peninsula; who or refused to accede to the requests Proved Colonists' Caliber. what Bunker's hill was named for the of the executive to give him con-1 Such were the circumstances of historians do not say. trol o f the fleet. The Oregonian ! ¡ Bunker H ill: a battle of an hour and stood with Mr. Haney. Intrenched on Bunker Hill. a half. In which the patriots never had The difference between the presi- ' Bunker hill, its crest nhout ten ! New view of Bunker hill monument, more than 1,500 men engaged at once, feet above the water level, was the looking up Monument etreet from yet which, according to n great Brit dent and Mr. Haney was over wheth- : EFINED Star Four— a more pronounced highest, but Breed's was within easy Medford etreet. Charlestown, Mass. Ish historian, "exhibited the Anted- er Mr. Haney was to stand for his k-value than the high gear champion Star fun range of Boston. When the cans to all the world as a people to state and the fleet or to allow the of 1925— wins new plaudits, new popularity American army Invested the citr the battle thp hm wag caI]ed Br„ed> h)|] he courted by allies, and counted with merchant marine to disappear and » f the th o P liiir ln e f n t r n n o n. , . , , h f L o c *’ fortification r of Charlestown pen­ these new Spring months! but n» the detnehment wae sent to put by foes. the Northwest lines to vanish. insula was a matter o f military linpor I-T the end of the Middle nges to up fortifications on Bunker hill, that As for the alleged agreement, tnnee to botti belligerents, and the del,|(rn.„|on r|ang t0 the ñ itM j|etlC(, the close o f the Thirty Years’ war in N ot only refined in every part, but lowered certainly there was a difference of fl en i i n / » i n 1 iin m i.iiw l f.n.natn I I ,wl lm IP. IV *1... ....... « ..............« .. .. . O' provincial e command forestalled t the the confusion of names wldch puz­ 1643, i lie most important conflicts to a new value level in price, Pacific Coast opinion. Mr. Coolidge, believes ap­ British in Its possession by sending a zles every reader out of Massachu­ were religious In character. For the motorists look to the Refined Star Four as force to intrench itself on Bunker setts." next hundred years, struggles were parently, that Mr. Haney agreed to hill, the first eminence after crossing ! dynastic or colonial. From Bunker keep Admiral Paler as head of the the master buy among low-cost ca ri A n d an Washington In Command. the Isthmus. The commander of the Hill to Waterloo there raged the emergency fleet corporation. Mr. important list of Refined Star Four value detachment, after consulting with Ids It was on June 15, two days before grapple of opposing political ideas. Haney is just as insistent that he points bear-out the judgment of these ever- •dicers, chose the next elevation, a Bunker Hill, that the congress elect­ In nnotlier way Bunker Hill 1« not­ made no such agreement. That was coming hundreds of Star buyers. half ndle nearer Boston, and there ed Washington to be commander In able. It was one of the eurliest bat- probably a misunderstanding. built tlie redoubt. T ie work was chief of the Continental army. This j ties in which marksmanship showed ____ _____ __ on ___ the night ^ _ of the __ __ ___ ____ __ ___ ........ „ „ „ ...__ „ 1 „,rnll,lc why was the president asking Refined Star Four and its comrade car, the mostly done slx- was done on the initiative and strong Itself a factor of possible decision. (tenth, and the first Intimation that - urging of John Adams of Massacliu- 1 Twice the dendiy fire of the colonists lc^ an a* r<,ement. if he did? What N ew Star Six, are built on this Pacific Coast (he British had of It was soon after setts and on the motion o f Thomas * broke the stubborn British infantry flic* **aVe to do the merchant in a $5,000,000 Plant at Oakland, California. daylight o f the seventeenth, when one Johnson of Maryland, and the vote and drove them back, nnd would have marine? Congress put it under con­ Torrents of practical power for power-drain­ •f their frlgstes lying In the harbor was unanimous. We should remem­ done so a third or fourth time had am­ trol o f the board. On what ground •pened fire on the fortification« where ber, too. that the army thus created munition beet) supplied In proper did the president seek to intimidate ing Western travel conditions! (he provincials were still busy, it was called not the American but the quantities. Almost for the ftr«t time the board? On what ground did he (ook from then till noon for the Eng­ Continental army, while that of Gen­ flreHnne. Unassl ted by either bay­ More Value Points try to direct its action. He had no lish to organize the attack. In eral Gage at Boston was referred to onets or maneuver.', showed what they more right to interfere with the af­ •M illion Dollar Motor. —Easy diac traffic clutch. eensed by sniping from Charlestown, as the Ministerial army; so general conld do when rightly used. fairs o f the shipping board than he •Built in four popular body —Gjneroua- cushion full-si*« •tylcsi touring, sport touring, had a right to ask for the unsigned balloon tires engm?rred as a Coups tar, coach. resignation o f commissioner Lewis unit with toft cradling, long -Longer, lower body lmta. and flexible eprincs and *8 of the tariff commission befor, he -Feddera radiator for efficient to 1” easy «touring ratio. would reappoint him. cooung. But meantime, even that misun­ derstanding, difference, or whatev­ er it was, had its inception and its complete being in, tnd was entirely I T 4 t e t e :v concerned with, whether the Palmer policy o f wrecking the fleet and getting rid o f the Northwest lines was to continue, or whether the Northwest and the rest o f the coun­ try should have a fleet. The pres­ PAi ' 'C COAST 1 ’ > _ ' _A*." ■ M l RAMI ident stood with Mr. Palmer. Mr. C ARY MOTOR COM PANY Haney stood with the fleet and his state. Estacada, Oregon »«m s That was the controversy at j A preeent-day p»ctyrg of tho •rangywlne, at Wilmington, Dal„ whtr# the Marquig da Lafa/atta, at n ------ W asbiug to n .— J o urns!. th« M M Of A meneen tr*