The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Or.) 1903-1931, July 11, 1918, WEEKLY EDITION, Image 1

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    WEEKLY EDITION
The bend Bulletin.
cJ
ce:
V()l. XVI.
HKNI), DKHCIIUTEH COUNT V, OREGON, THl'IWDAV, JULY 11, 1M1H
No. 10
tl
v.
wv
'4
mcu iqc nnnuiucn uiu i c
FISHING IN CRESCENT LftKE
i
f ,
BODIES OF HEN ARE
yi AForbes and Ralph Poindexter are
fv Victim of Sunday Tragedy.
(CnnviiH Boat with Evinrudc Motor Attached Believed to
Have Broken in the Middle, Sinking at Once
Cries Are Heard by People on Shore
Prominent BusincsH Men.
..-
- Hugh Hrntly, fllty grnpplor of
Portland, arrived l Bond "
- Thursday morning's trnln nml
left Itiimuillntnly for Crescent
- lnk, whom liu will nmko nn
effort to find tho bodies of tho
ilrownml men. Mr. Hrndy ban
Kpimt tho greater part of hi
llfo In rcsouo work, nml bos ro-
covered mom than 2D0 bodlon.
(From Monday's Dally.)
Vernon A. Forbes, Bond nttnr
moy nml Joint representative to tho
uluto legislature from thin district,
unit Ralph Polndoxtor, proprietor of
tho Owl I'hnrmncy, woro drowned In
Orescent Inko about 7 o'clock Inst
uvonliiK, whon tho boat from which
ithoy woro fishing filled with water
nml sank. Watchorn on tho nhoro
who hnil neon tho accident hastened
to tho spot, but arrived too Into to
tlnd moro than a hnt, n pipe mid
fishing tncklo which, .had floated
jiway.
Word of tho trogedy wan tele
phoned to Ilrml ly B. O. Ilourko
about 10 o'clock mid nt midnight
tltrco carload of mon with KrnpplliiK
iippnrnttiH worn hastening to tho Inko
to begin nt dnyllRlit on tho work of
illndliiR tho bndlon.
Hnir Men Rci-cmim.
A. M. I'rlnglo, who drovo 0110 of
tho cars, returned onrly thin morn
'Iiir with tho llrst factn of tho acci
dent a reported by Crescent rosl
luiitM. AccordliiR to hls nccount,
thu two won woro fishing from it can
van boat In which thoy had Installed
tin 80-pound Bvlnrudo motor. Ilnlf
f tho boat wan said to bnvo been
Sound llontliiR, tho othor bait bnvliiR
unk with tho motor, tho Inforonco
timing that tho boat broko In two.
."People on tho ahoro nrsl know of
Alio accident wliuu.Uyjy board tho two
anon Bcroum and naw thorn In tho
(Wiiter v
Another account tojophonod In tblfl
morning by J. II. llnnor, who with
Clyde McKay drovo down tho two
ilhor cari last nlr.ht, Is to tho effect
that tho, boat did not break, but ap--parontly
llllod with water and wua
mink by tho weight of tho motor.
Tho location was on tho oaat ahoro
of tho lako, about throo-fourthfl of a
suit" from tho lnndliiR.
'& tolopbonltiR tilts morning, Mr,
'irancr naked for further equlpmont
tfor ubo In tho search and thlB Is bo
Iiir taken down thin afternoon by
Hhorlff fl. B. Koborts.
Iniiu.t Will Ho Held.
ArrniiKdinontB havo boon mado In
Crescent o bold ttn luquosi iib booii
ua tho liodloH aro recovered unil thoy
will then bo brought to llond and
cunoral arrangoinoiitB coinplotod.
Nowh of tho nccldont wna tolo
lihonod ItiHt night to relatives of MrB.
.Forbes In Portland, with whom hIio
was vlHlting, and word cmno back
Jator thnt alio would return to llond
todtiy, aiOHHafioa woro uIbo Bont to
Mr. Polndoxtor'H rolntlvea In Prlno
vlllo and olHOwhoro. Mrs. Polndoxtor
was proBtrntod when told of tho Bad
Jmpponlng lunt night nml bad to bo
Kilucort under n phyHlcIan'ii euro. Mr.
l''orboH' mothor, who baa boon nn
Invalid for sovoral yonra, la alao
tmfforlng greatly from tho Bhock.
Mr, Forbes hau boon n rosldonttot
31911a ainco 1010, coming lioro after
ji Bhopt roaldonco In 8poko, follow
ing bis graduation from tho Unlvor
alty of Mlnnoflotft law nclioo,n 1008.
Oponlng a law offlco horo nt,,pnco, ho
Ijullt up a largo and successful pro
tlco, numbering among bl cllonts
moat of 'tho largo bUBlneas JlitqroBtH
NOT YET RECOVERED
of thin soollon. At tho tlmo of his
locating In llond his friend and clniw
inoto, T. B. J. Duffy, now circuit
judgo, nettled In Prlnovlllo, tho two
young men having come west to
gether. In 1912 Mr. Forbes wbb elected, to
tho OroRon leRliilntiiro nn onn of tho
two rnprcnentallveH from this dis
trict, IIo wan rcoleotcd In 19H and
again In 191C, but this year wan not
a candidate. While a member of the
liouno he wan very prominent In login-
latlvo affnlrn, In tho last ncnilon act
ing an Itupubllcnn loader and IuvIiir
a number of Important committee as
signments. Aiiioiir tho Important mcasuron
which ho wan Influontlal In gottlng
through tho legislature for tho bono
fit of this section woro the Tumalo
project bill and in 1917 tho bill for
tho croallon of Deschutes county,
following tho division tanglo at tho
fall election. For his nuccenn with
this bill citizens of Hund presontcd
Mm "with' a bandsomo Rold watch on
bin return aftor tho closo of the sos-
slon.
Mr. Forbes was born on October
17, 1883, at Ht. Croix Falls, Wlscon
sin. Ho attended the public schools
In Ht. Croix and was graduated from
the high school In Oicoola, Wiscon
sin, Lutor ho attended McCalllstor
coUcro In Minneapolis for two yearn
and In 1908 coinplotod tho law course
In (ho University of Minnesota,
lie wan married on April 23, 1914,
at Tho Dalles, to MIm Ann Markol of
llend, and tbora has boon born to
them 0110 son, Vornon A., Jr., bolter
known to all Mr. Forbes' frlondn as
"Olc." Uoth theso survive as well as
Mr. Forbes' parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Smith 11. Forbos, and n ststor, Miss
Gall Forbes.
Mr. lNiltulovlcr Horn In IHttl.
llnlph Polndoxtor, one of Mr,
Forbos1 -most Intimate personal
friends, wn,n hqrn In Prlnovlllo on
AuRunt 111, 18S3.J Hu wan educated
In tho Prlnovlllo public schools and
at tho Oregon Agricultural collego at
Corvallls, taking a special courso In
pharmacy, lie moved to Uoud in
1911, llrsl noting as dork In a drug
storo and later opening bin own ntoro,
tho Owl Pharmacy, In which ho has
nchlovod marked matorlnl success,
He wan married 011 Suptombor 5,
101C, to IMIss Bdna Conway of Port
land. They Jiuvo no children. IIo
sides his wdlow tbero survlvo lits
fathor, Porry 11. Polndoxtor, a promi
nent renldont of Prlnovlllo, thrao sis
tore and two brothers.
Ilolh Mr, Forbes and Mr. Polndox
tor .wore utonibors of 4ho BIka lodgo,
Mr. Forbes also bolug a KulRlit of
Pythias ami Mr. Polndoxtor a Muuon,
(From TucBdny'fl Daily,)
Luck of success ban ao far attend
ed tho work of recovering tho bodlos
of Vornon A. Forbes and Hnlpli
I'olmloxtor, drnwnod In Orescent lako
Sunday ovonlug. Now apparntua for
ubo In tho work wua tolopiiouod for
tills noon ami with it, nml u moro
dollntto location of tho placo of tho
nccldont, It ia hopod that tho bodtoa
will, bo brought to tho aurfneu.
Moro cars with mon to aid In tho
work loft for Croscont last night and
voluutoors, rontly to go down to ro
llovo tho mon now nt tho Inko, havo
como forward, bo that tho search will
bo prosooutod uuromlttlugly until tho
bodies nro found,
Further dotalla of tho tragedy, as
gathered by T, II, Foloy, who ro
turned last night aftor spondlng all
day in tho search, show that whllo
(Continued on Puga 4,)
Soldier in France
Thanks Contributor
For Tobacco Sent
J. Hlack, otio of tho contrib
utors to Tho Itulletlu'n first to
bacco fund, has received a card
from Prlvato Oeorgo K, Cooloy,
with tho American expedition
ary forces, thaukltiR him for tho
tobacco sont. Thin In onu of tho
first cards to bo received In an
swer to tho largo amount of
tobacco sont out by Tho Iiullo
Un. Mr. Hlack has mado an
othsr subscription of $1 to tho
present tobacco fund which Is
bolng handled for Tho Ilulletln
through tho American Ited
Cross.
BOOTLEGGERS AID
IN SWELLING FUNDS
Over ?1,00 Alrrwly Turned In I)ur-
Injr I'nJit Hlxiy I)n T Cusch
to Onind .Jury.
(From Wednesday's Dally.)
Over $1,000 In fines has been
turned Into tho county funds during
tho past sixty days on bootlegging
convictions from Judgo Bastes' court.
This Includes 1300 nt 0110 tlmo from
Honl on tho first offense chargo and
I2C0 from Antonio, Honl'a confedcr
ato, In tbn second attempt to soil
whiskey In tho city, and tlio $S00
from B, Heath this week. Ilenldcn
this, there are two cases which havo
gouo to tho grand Jury, that of Mike
Murge and Paul Hong. Hon! Is now
In Jail serving out a sixty-day sen
tence. WILL DISPOSE OF
TEAM THIS WEEK
Over 9IOO lit Tlckeln Already Kotd
91 It lUilwil ut Clwiutuuiua
1-n-t MrIiI.
(From Tuesday's Dally.)
Over M00 worth of tickets havo
boon disposed of by tha Hcnd chap
tor of tho Ited Cross on tho team
donated to tho chapter by John B.
Hyan. O110 hundred and fourteen
dollars' worth of tickets woro sold
at tho Chautauqua last night. Tho
committees In chargo of tho salo of
tickets are working tho downtown
suction of tho city today and tomor
row, and it Is expected that tho team
will bo disposed of by Friday or
Saturday.
SCHOOL BOARD
DONATES MACHINES
(From Tuesday's Daily.)
Four electric driven sewing ma-
cninus, 1110 property 01 ino scnooi
board, havo boon donated to tho
Hod Cross chapter for tho summer
months and aro now In ubo in tho
sowing room of tho chaptor In tho
now Kooppen building.
THERE IS NO FEAR
OF FOOD FAMINE
WASHINGTON, July lO.Doflnlto
assurances that there Is no danger
of a sugar famine hns boon given by
tho food administration, and tho food
altuatlou generally Is doclarod to bo
bottor than ut any tlmo slnco America
undertook tho foodlug of tho allied
world. . .
The Signal Corps
of United States
May Handle Wires
(lly United Trvsi to TI10 llrml Ilulletln.) -
f WASHINGTON, July 10.
Comploto data on tho nation's -
tolograph and tolophono linos is
bolng compllod by tho United
Stntos ulgnnl corpa. Tho com-
pllatlon IncludOB prlvato and
leaaod wlros and it 1b bo- -
- llovod that It Presldont Wilson
boIzos tho llnea nB a military no-
eoaslty their operation will bo
undor tho dlroctlon of tho U, 8,
signal corps, tluia ollmliiatlng
-- tho objoctlona of both union
mon and congressmen to giving -
tho control to dlurloson. -
--
NEAR-BREWERY
IS DISCOVERED
POLICE GRAB NEARLY
F " FIFTY GALLONS.
.Vonieglniin Living In Pirk Addition
Jiikeii u ltd Hoverogo In All
A HtaRiM of Making
'J Homo on HUtrc.
a (From Wednesday's Dally.)
Over 100 quart bottles of beer and
CO 'pints bottled and ready for con
sumption, ten gallons moro on tho
ntovo making and ton gallons of
malt, together with several pounds
of iiops and malt extract, woro un
earned by tho pollco at tho homo
otjKnuto HJorgu, a Norwegian In
Park addition, yesterday afternoon.
UJorgo and his son wero placed under
arrest and tho boor, together with the
mnjt extract and hops and vessels In
which tho bovcrago was being
hrowod, woro confiscated by tho po
lled, loaded onto a truck and ia now
at the county Jail.
Word of tho noar-browery first
reached tho officials of tho county
when nclghborn In tho vicinity of
DJorge's placo roportcd that men
went to and from tho house dally
wfh suitcases. Yesterday morning
thrj pollco In a car drovo to tho vi
cinity and watched for somo time,
and satisfying themselves that all
was not nn It should bo at tho placo,
secured a search warrant and per
foctcd tho raid.
UJJorgo, whon questioned, dis
claimed that tho beer was being sold,
but declared that bo was making It
for bis own consumption. He stated
that In Minnesota, whero be had
bocn previous to his coming to llond,
ho had mado a practlco of browing
his own beer each summer, and
drinking It Instead of water during
the .months whon tho water Is warm
And likely to contain disease erms.
Ho Is an invalid and makes his way
about In a wheel chair.
HJorgo and his sou were arraigned
beforo Judgo Bastes this morning on
tw6 different charges, ono of manu
facturing 'Intoxicating liquors and
tho othor of having tho liquor in
their possession. They woro ro
loasod on $250 hall each, their at
torney, W. P. Myers, moving for a
Jury trial, which la sot for 10 o'clook
tomorrow morning.
COUNTY SPUDS
ARE LEADERS
()XIjY ., vovsm ov nxw MA.
TKIUAlj NKBDBD TO I'HODUCK
POUND OF HVAPOHATKD PHOD
UCT AGAINST 7 KLSKWHKHK.
(From Wednesday'a Dally.)
DoBchutoa county potatoes havo a
hlghor ovaporotlng value than any
potato yet trlod In tho stato, accord
ing to a roport from 11. H. Parsons,
sales manager of tho Doschutes Coun
ty Potato arowors' association. Sixty
cars of potatoes woro shipped out of
Doschutoa county during tho year,
land of theso 26 cars woro shipped to
tho . Wittenberg- King ovaporatiug
plant a, Tho Dalles, ,undor govorn
mont contraot. Hero It was proven
that 'for each four pounds of pota
toes'troatod ono pound of tho evapor
ated product was secured, whereas
from other Bccttoua of tho stato
bovoii pounds of potatooa woro needed
for ono pound of tho product.
Two and a quarter million pounds
of potatoes woro Bhlpped out of tho
county during tho year, anil of this
amount 0110 and a half million
pounds woro O ratio 1 potatoes, soil
ing on tho market at nn average, prlco
of $1.25 por hundred.
With tho association moving CO
carloads of potatooa out of tho valloy,
durlug a year whon potatoes woro
not bringing nbovo tho nvorago prlco,
hns boon bonellclal to all of tho
farmors in tho district, County Agri
culturist Ward statod this morning.
Had not tho groat tounngo been
moved tho local mnrkota especially
would havo 1)0011 Hooded and tho
farmers would not havo boon nblo to
ronllzo moro than one-halt what was
posslblo,
SUBSTITUTE
PRICE TO FALL
SHOULD NOT EXCEED
WHEAT COSTS.
I'immI AriinlnlMtratoi-H to Take Action
to llrlnjc Price Down to Lcvd
Wlirro Only Just I'rot
In Mado. .
'(From Wednesday's Dally.)
Prices of wheat substitutes
throughout tho nation, Including
Oregon and Deschutes county, must
bo forcod down below tho prlco of
wheat flour, according to a telegram
received by tho food administrators
from Herbert Hoover, federal food
administrator.
Substitutes for wheat flour should,
under no consideration, .exceed the
prlco of wheat flour, the telegram
states. At tho present prlco of corn,
barley and oats, millers should be
offering meals and flours manufac
tured from theso cereals at less than
wheat. Corn meal should bo at least
25 per cent, below tho wheat flour
price, and oat meal even lower than
this. Wblto corn and barley flour
should bo selling at from 10 to 15
per cent. lass.
H. C. Hartranft, county food ad
ministrator, stated yesterday after
noon that steps would bo taken Im
mediately to rcgulato tho prices In
Deschutes county. At tho samo tlmo
tho Btato food administration will
commenco a vigorous campaign to
dctermlno It tho millers aro making
an excessive profit, together with tho
Jobbers. Tho retail profit has al
ready been set at 16 to 20 por cent.,
and this ruling will bo strictly en
forced. During tho first tow months fol
lowing tbo food administration's rul
ing regarding the 50-50 basis for
wheat flour and .substitutes, tho
millers were pormlttcd profits In ex
cess of normal conditions because
the chango of milling from wheat to
tho other grains necessitated tho In
stallation of much additional machin
ery, tho expense of which had to be
mot, and tho government permitted
the profits for this reason. Now that
this machinery has in tho major part
been paid for, tho foodiadmlnlstrn
tlon has decreed that tho prices must
como down, and all food adminis
trators aro Instructed to act at once
In enforcing tho orders.
Allowance must bo mado tor ex
cosslvo freight rates, and this will
bo done In Deschutes county, accord
ing to Mr. Hartranft, who declared
that a scale of prices at which tho
merchants could and must sell sub
stitutes would bo Issued by tho food
administration offlco within a short
time. v
HOOVER WANTS
PROFITS TAXED
fiOVBHNMBNT 1'ltICH FIXING
Wll.Ii XKVKlt KUM1NATK THE
PHOF1TKKHING, 111) DKOLAKED
IN LETTEIt TO SIMMONS.
(llr United PrfM to The BmJ Bulletin.)
WASHINGTON, July 10. Govern
mental nrlco fixing will novor elim
inate profltoorlng, Horbort 'Hoover
has declared In n letter to Senator
Simmons, chairman of tho finance
committee. In hla lettor Hoovor
urges n heavy government tax on
nroflts U8 tho only moans of return
ing to tho publlo tho money which Is
bolng taken by tho protltcors.
Ho declared that tho prlco fixing
policy must bo continued as thoro Is
now existing a sbortago in nearly
every commodity.
Senator Simmons had asked
Hoovor to wrlto a lottor Informing
tbo Bonato of tho probable effoct of
tho government prlco fixing on tho
proposed war tax. Ho feared that
tho prlco fixing had reducod proiits,
making tho Increased taxes Injurious
to business.
HoovTrTdpclarod that sugar would
bo solllngWt 20 conts per pound It
tho government bad not flxod tho
prlco, and yet Bomo woro willing to
now wager that tho sugar producers
wero making a profit ot 100 per cent.
FEW PETITIONS
ON THE BALLOT
PEOPLE OF STATE WILL
NOT SIGN.
Emergency War Fund Hill, Whleh
Fell by Wyldc, Wan Honest
Ktubnror Nq Iroytofoa
for Added Expciwo.
(fljUl to Th Bulletin.)
SALEM, July 11, It must hava
been an awful Jolt to our friend Dill
U'Hcn, erstwhile of Oregon City,
when ha awoke one bright July morn
ing to And but two Inltlatlvo peti
tions had found their way to the
general election ballot for November
and that apparently his littlo brain,
child was becoming puny and sickly
from lack of proper nourishment.
And then the sad Irony of fato!
It cost Sam Jackson, so report
sayeth, somo $3,000 easily earned
bucks or so to get those two measures
onto tho ballot. Ono ot tho measures
Is for the protection of tax Ilea
sharks, having for ltn purpose the
discontinuance ot newspaper adver
tising of delinquent tax lists and
thus shrouding thoso Hats with the
veil ot mystery and possible subter
fuge. Tho other .would do away with
a law fixing tho prlco of legal publi
cations. ThoJaw was designed to
designate a price so that Jobbery and
price rigging would bo curbed by tho
law ot the land, but Sam Jackson'n
bill evidently desires to do away with
any ot such.
And the Irony fol fate comes la
with tho 3,000 simoleons or ao
which Drother Jackson was required
to pungle up to get the proper num
ber of signatures for his petition.
As Brother Samuel was Drother Dill
U'Ren'a pet pal In putting over the
Initiative and referendum, and bow
meditate upon the sad uses to which
thos6pure 'measures' havo fallen!
Many Fall by Way.
Brothor Sam with his roll succeed
ed In putting over two fairly insig
nificant bills, while a wholo raft of
othors fell by tho waysldo. Some are
Inclined to blame upon a law ot the
last leiglslaturo tho sad fiasco which
attended Initiative measures this
year. Tho law In question compel
county clerks to check up all signa
tures upon petitions with (ho signa
tures on the voting registration lists
In their possession and because ot
this, somo say, It was Impossible to
get by with the signatures.
But -others say, and tho others
havo tho right dope, that It Is be
coming dreadfully bard to Interest
voters in the signing ot potitions and
It was all a Ilttlo host ot paid potltloa
peddlers could do to scrapo up the
roqulslto number ot signers tor the
(Continued on Page 4.)
POTATO CROP NOT
AS GREAT AS IN 1917
(From Wednesday's Dally.)
Tho potato crop In Deschutes
county this year will bo much lighter
than during the year 1917, accord
ing to R. A. Ward, county agricul
turist, who was In tho city today on
his wookly visit. F. L. Ballard, ot
tho government bureau ot markets,
who ia compiling a record of crop
statistics In the stato, will be In De
schutes county within a short time
and -will aid Mr. Ward In estimating
tho acreage In the county.
BERG BOUND OVER
TO THE GRAND JURY
(From Wednesday's Dally.)
Paul Berg, who with B. Heath was
arrested on Saturday night on a
chargo of bootlegging, was bound
over 'to tho grand Jury In tho sum ot
$500 when his hearing came up bo
tore Judgo Eastes yesterday aftor
noon. W. H, Myers, appeared for
tho dotomlnnt and H. 11. Do Armond
for tho stato.
CHAUTAUQUA FOR
1919 GUARANTEED
(From Tuosday's Dally.)
A Chautauqua engagement for
1010 was guaranteed by tho Chan tan
qua committee last night when the
contract was slgded with the EUIsobt
White company upon the close ot t
ongagomont here.